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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>
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                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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A , <lb/>
JOB PRIMING. <lb/>
The Reflector is pro- <lb/>
pared to do all <lb/>
of this <lb/>
NEATLY, <lb/>
and <lb/>
STYLE. <lb/>
Plenty of new mate <lb/>
rial and the best <lb/>
of Stationery. <lb/>
The Eastern Ref <lb/>
D. J. WHICH Editor Owner. TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY <lb/>
NO <lb/>
Two Papers for <lb/>
We have made <lb/>
to furnish- <lb/>
the Reflector and <lb/>
North Carolinian <lb/>
above amount, is <lb/>
campaign year <lb/>
should, take the two <lb/>
leading papers. <lb/>
WE <lb/>
HISTORY <lb/>
OF A YEAR. <lb/>
of all to <lb/>
anyone ear advance I n- <lb/>
for MM It contains <lb/>
Mi Pew it are. <lb/>
. Ratty C etc. Yon <lb/>
my- <lb/>
with Hi- pianola a are pay- <lb/>
hill our price. Drop <lb/>
a our money-saver. <lb/>
lines V Son <lb/>
Baltimore, Md. <lb/>
O, TIME. <lb/>
Tin- bring forward <lb/>
who oft <lb/>
in minutes, <lb/>
tarn backward, <lb/>
flight ; <lb/>
V ad aw on gruel <lb/>
for <lb/>
I n<lb/>
abed cake ; <lb/>
In <lb/>
Baser at <lb/>
A Goliath of ; <lb/>
Wean <lb/>
For what I don't eat, <lb/>
up <lb/>
And ailing <lb/>
Backward, mm <lb/>
For wear; I am <lb/>
Give in- a v hack <lb/>
At grand wider ; <lb/>
Lei ate milk <lb/>
Thai baa been skimmed. <lb/>
Let me batter <lb/>
has been trimmed; <lb/>
L -t one more <lb/>
Have an pis, <lb/>
Then I'll be ready <lb/>
To up <lb/>
STATE BOARD OF <lb/>
The State Braid Charities has <lb/>
the annual Secretary <lb/>
Den.-i-ii. exhibits Ike details <lb/>
the and additions to <lb/>
Slate ii during the year. <lb/>
show the of the capacity <lb/>
the insane asylum 1880. There <lb/>
rate cores at and <lb/>
number <lb/>
ream at Morganton <lb/>
SI per of the <lb/>
r d. At there <lb/>
were cares and percentage <lb/>
recovery was upon <lb/>
admit d. death rate <lb/>
about p r a per <lb/>
cent, at and over at <lb/>
the bones in Ike wen- <lb/>
reported as good, bad and the re- <lb/>
as Bight s <lb/>
homes. the jail <lb/>
l-l bad and the remainder <lb/>
The new school the <lb/>
deal and dumb at ace. mi- <lb/>
In the at <lb/>
both there are <lb/>
Oxford Orphan col- <lb/>
asylum State Penitentiary <lb/>
which there are ill <lb/>
, tiers are in convict <lb/>
The report ions <lb/>
the important questions, such as <lb/>
it Slate school, care the in- <lb/>
sane asylums, <lb/>
in and reasons <lb/>
tor. n ml in <lb/>
details connected with the <lb/>
charities. It also includes a state- <lb/>
the all the <lb/>
Souther- Stales giving the <lb/>
Sir veteran <lb/>
and homes, which <lb/>
North Carolina maintain <lb/>
her home at per cent, less cost than <lb/>
other. letters and report <lb/>
have been and filed <lb/>
use of the legislative com lets in- <lb/>
in these subjects, and the en- <lb/>
tire is the most <lb/>
t matters ever ban d <lb/>
in North t <lb/>
Penitentiary Pays Its Way and <lb/>
, . <lb/>
ti the penitentiary <lb/>
rill again S to <lb/>
en ml d n <lb/>
The of tin- <lb/>
end till December SI. local <lb/>
year the institutions <lb/>
Novell;, r tO. <lb/>
Sup will make a <lb/>
showing this year than ever <lb/>
a loss <lb/>
by <lb/>
on th Slate be have <lb/>
o . hand after paying all the <lb/>
of the <lb/>
a dollar o the <lb/>
per year made by As <lb/>
This appropriation was to <lb/>
cover run-ins it <lb/>
revert bark to the <lb/>
New Observer. i <lb/>
Review of the Leading <lb/>
Events of 1896. <lb/>
FOOTPRINTS OF TIME. <lb/>
Havoc of the Dread <lb/>
Cyclone. <lb/>
A LONG DEATH ROLL. <lb/>
of Important Events Arranged <lb/>
Consecutively by <lb/>
Act l i ill--, t i <lb/>
at Home and Abroad. <lb/>
The earth has made another <lb/>
round the nun. f seasons <lb/>
have swept past, and Time, the <lb/>
measurer and the discloser of all things, <lb/>
hap turned a page of eventful <lb/>
Oar own country saw the most <lb/>
and bitter presidential in <lb/>
its history. It culminated, in a <lb/>
quiet election and in a dis- <lb/>
position on the part of d <lb/>
party to by the will of the <lb/>
The great European powers have <lb/>
at peace among On <lb/>
the British lion roared <lb/>
the bear growled. Tho <lb/>
phlegmatic German and the <lb/>
Frenchman had their periods of <lb/>
bellicose patriotism, but nothing more. <lb/>
The Cuban insurrection en <lb/>
continuously. At this writing no <lb/>
can foresee the end, pt as it will re- <lb/>
in the certain n groat <lb/>
island of fabulous natural <lb/>
riches. Our with <lb/>
over the Venezuelan boundary <lb/>
is in a fair way of speedy solution. <lb/>
Tho death roll includes many names <lb/>
of worldwide prominence. Among them <lb/>
are those of Sir John Mil- <lb/>
la.-, two of the Harpers of publishing <lb/>
fame, Stowe, Gail Ham- <lb/>
Austin Kate Field and <lb/>
Mrs. Scott. <lb/>
Disasters have frequent, but the <lb/>
more severe calamities cannot be <lb/>
ed to the neglect or carelessness of man. <lb/>
The cyclone season opened early, and <lb/>
the tho <lb/>
crops, buildings animals have been <lb/>
extremely heavy. It is estimated that, <lb/>
from May to May 1,200 persons <lb/>
their lives in storms which in <lb/>
a radius of miles of Chicago. But <lb/>
the force of the wind in the locality <lb/>
was but as <lb/>
which Sherman, <lb/>
May During Hint terrible paroxysm <lb/>
of nature more than persona were <lb/>
killed and several times that number <lb/>
maimed. <lb/>
Special mention may also be made of <lb/>
the business failures, notably that of <lb/>
Hilton, s Co., the great dry <lb/>
goods dealers of New York. The bank <lb/>
failures also numerous, especially <lb/>
during the period just prior to the <lb/>
election, when at one time <lb/>
money .- loaned at per cent on <lb/>
call in Wall street. Thus it will be <lb/>
seen that the year has been one of <lb/>
eventful interest. A classified review of <lb/>
the more important events <lb/>
Alfred Ely Beach, editor <lb/>
in New York aped TO. <lb/>
H. . i famous <lb/>
Fin-1 At Fla.; <lb/>
County at <lb/>
loss, <lb/>
la.; <lb/>
Central hotel <lb/>
i l . Ail <lb/>
II. P. <lb/>
in Ck aged Col. <lb/>
W. Knox, author, in New York <lb/>
W. R. Marshal of Min- <lb/>
at aged At <lb/>
Paris, Paul Verlaine, French pout; aged <lb/>
II. In St. Louis; km, <lb/>
U. Wright, ex U. <lb/>
tor and ex-chief of Iowa, at <lb/>
Moines; Francis Channing <lb/>
Barlow, war veteran and lawyer, in <lb/>
New York ; aged <lb/>
a pioneer capital- <lb/>
of aged OS. <lb/>
Martin noted <lb/>
philanthropist art pa- <lb/>
in Boston; aped Charles A. <lb/>
noted in <lb/>
Pa.; aged <lb/>
Matthew Brady, one of the <lb/>
pioneer photographers of the States, <lb/>
in New York city; aged <lb/>
E. B. Fowler, noted veter- <lb/>
an of the Federal army, in Brooklyn; aged <lb/>
OB. <lb/>
Crescent City Rice mills burned in <lb/>
New Orleans; loss, 11,000.000. <lb/>
Obituary Charles Thomas former <lb/>
premier of France. <lb/>
large apartment houses burned in <lb/>
Chicago; loss, <lb/>
Obituary Bernard lam, noted cartoonist, <lb/>
at N. Y.; aged <lb/>
Rev. Dr. Thomas a <lb/>
noted Baptist preacher, at N. Y.; <lb/>
aged Prince Henry of died <lb/>
at sea; aged <lb/>
Thomas Ewing, In New <lb/>
York city; SB. <lb/>
B. Judge Charles B. Elliott, <lb/>
famous sporting man and builder of racing <lb/>
shells, in aged <lb/>
Lard Leighton, noted British <lb/>
artist, in Mac- <lb/>
of A Co., British pub- <lb/>
in aged <lb/>
C. Shipwreck steamer J. W. <lb/>
Hawkins wrecked on her voyage from New <lb/>
York to Bermuda with men and material <lb/>
for Cuba; drowned. <lb/>
John son of the late Pres- <lb/>
Tyler, In Washington. Theo- <lb/>
Runyon, a war veteran and U. S. em- <lb/>
to in Berlin; <lb/>
Joseph H. Porter, a New York war <lb/>
In New York city. <lb/>
r r deaths in a coal mine disaster <lb/>
Shaw, founder of Shaw <lb/>
university. North Carolina, at Wales, <lb/>
Mass ; . George <lb/>
a t Philadelphia artist, in that city; <lb/>
aged Ir. L. A. Harris, a noted public <lb/>
of Atlanta, in that city; aged <lb/>
Gan. Alfred Baker Smith, at <lb/>
N. Y.; Sir Joseph Barnaby, <lb/>
well known in London. <lb/>
Senator the <lb/>
gist, at Home. <lb/>
A F. founder and <lb/>
of the Iowa college, at Grin- <lb/>
Ii in Rev. Dr. William H. <lb/>
Furness, noted Philadelphia; <lb/>
aged <lb/>
FEBRUARY. <lb/>
Stephen B. French, noted Re- <lb/>
publican politician, in New York city; <lb/>
aged Butler, a pioneer settler <lb/>
on Puget at Seattle; aged <lb/>
a ii w <lb/>
I . of New <lb/>
Orleans in that city. <lb/>
Prof. teacher of men- <lb/>
In San <lb/>
Disaster; Bridge river, <lb/>
near washed away and work- <lb/>
men drowned. <lb/>
John Gibbon, U. A., re- <lb/>
in B ill more; aged Harry How- <lb/>
ard, chief of the old volunteer fire depart- <lb/>
of New York, In that city; aged <lb/>
William English, well <lb/>
known capitalist and politician, in <lb/>
aged Charles the <lb/>
world's greatest paleontologist in <lb/>
at Burlington. la.; aged . <lb/>
Bound Brook, N. J. swept by and flood. <lb/>
West Virginia state normal school at <lb/>
West Liberty burned. <lb/>
Jean distinguish- <lb/>
ed French sculptor, in Paris, aged <lb/>
LL. D., a high authority in <lb/>
oriental literature, in London. <lb/>
Sanford Hunt of the Methodist <lb/>
Book Concern, In Cincinnati; aged <lb/>
aged <lb/>
years, died at Ontario. Isaac Murphy, <lb/>
a famous as a jockey, died at Lex- <lb/>
Ky. <lb/>
Allen worth, noted New York <lb/>
at Cal.; aged <lb/>
Charles Louis Thomas, <lb/>
musical composer, in Paris; aged <lb/>
IS. drowned by the sink- <lb/>
of a at Brisbane, Australia. <lb/>
Rev. Theophilus Jones, the <lb/>
Welsh Baptist minister In the United <lb/>
States, at Pa.; aged <lb/>
At N. C.; loss. 1150.000. <lb/>
i l; k. r <lb/>
i m van <lb/>
city. <lb/>
Factory burned at Troy, N. Y.; <lb/>
working girls killed. The Buckeye <lb/>
Glass works burned at Martins Ferry. O. <lb/>
at Over miners killed by an ex- <lb/>
at Colo. deaths in a <lb/>
Arc at a masked ball at <lb/>
gal. <lb/>
Mrs. Amelia Reeves Chanler, the <lb/>
American novelist, married to Prince <lb/>
of Russia. <lb/>
Hundreds of houses wrecked at <lb/>
Johannesburg, South Africa, by dynamite <lb/>
explosion; over deaths. <lb/>
. Sir John Everett elected <lb/>
president of the Royal academy. <lb/>
Edgar Wilson Nye, tho popular <lb/>
American humorist, near N. C.; <lb/>
aged j. George D. Robinson of <lb/>
Massachusetts, at aged <lb/>
Q. Fire deaths at the burning of <lb/>
a in Baltimore's fashionable dis- <lb/>
Hon. George Davis, who was at- <lb/>
general of the Southern <lb/>
in Wilmington, N. C.; aged <lb/>
C. Bowen of The <lb/>
pendent, in Brooklyn; <lb/>
A blaze at Binghamton, N. <lb/>
Y. Street Baptist church burned at <lb/>
Richmond. <lb/>
Gen. David Morrison, a Federal <lb/>
war veteran. In New York city; aged <lb/>
Rear Admiral Joseph U. S. N., re- <lb/>
tired, at Pierce, Neb.; aged <lb/>
JO. celebrated <lb/>
French writer, in Paris; aged <lb/>
business places burned at Flor- <lb/>
. C.; loss, 1100.000. <lb/>
Gen. Miller, veteran of <lb/>
the Mexican and civil wars, in St. Louis; <lb/>
aged <lb/>
MARCH. <lb/>
la The village of Mono <lb/>
Cal., wiped out by fire. <lb/>
Riotous demonstrations in Spain against the <lb/>
States. <lb/>
Charles Carleton Coffin, war <lb/>
respondent and author, at <lb/>
Mass.; aged Baron <lb/>
ex-senator of France and diplomat, in Par- <lb/>
lot mm.-A CS. U m <lb/>
pioneer lawyer on the coast, in San Fran- <lb/>
buddings burned at Danbury, <lb/>
Conn.; loss, <lb/>
Dr. P. Palmer, antiquarian <lb/>
and writer. In <lb/>
Prof. John a pioneer in <lb/>
kindergarten work, in New York city; <lb/>
aged Pet or former <lb/>
archbishop of St. Louis, in that city; aged <lb/>
Dr. Hiram a specialist <lb/>
writer on medical at Plymouth <lb/>
Montgomery county. Pa.; <lb/>
Gov. T. of <lb/>
Lowell, Mass.; aged <lb/>
Sons, <lb/>
rice dealers, suspended in New York city. <lb/>
I Philip J. A. Harper, retired sen- <lb/>
number of the firm of Harper Bros., <lb/>
at N. V. ; aged <lb/>
n. veteran <lb/>
theatrical manager, in Chicago; aged <lb/>
Rear Admiral H U. N., re- <lb/>
tired, in aged <lb/>
John Hoey, famous shut, died at Long <lb/>
Branch. <lb/>
The American team won the in- <lb/>
match by cable; score, <lb/>
t games. <lb/>
Col. H. Nelson, ex-U. <lb/>
minister to Chile and to Mexico, at Torre <lb/>
Ind.; aged <lb/>
The A Rand <lb/>
works at N. Y-, by the <lb/>
explosion of pounds of powder; <lb/>
employees <lb/>
The Masonic building burned at <lb/>
Providence; loss, <lb/>
a. Richmond, portrait artist, died. <lb/>
Plant of the Pennsylvania Salt works, <lb/>
at Pa., loss, <lb/>
Isabel Burton, widow of <lb/>
Capt. Sir Richard Burton, in London. <lb/>
Hughes, author of <lb/>
School at aged <lb/>
houses burned at Colon, Colombia. <lb/>
Jennie R. manager of the Kimball <lb/>
Opera company, died at St. Paul. <lb/>
Mine miners killed by gas ex- <lb/>
I in the mine at <lb/>
Pa. <lb/>
Gen. Thomas L. U. S. A., retired, <lb/>
in ; aged <lb/>
President of Haiti; <lb/>
aged U H. Wray, inventor, at <lb/>
Nashua, N. H.; aged <lb/>
At Waterbury, Conn.; loss, <lb/>
I Pleasure Ridge distillery burned near <lb/>
Louisville; loss, <lb/>
Weston, W. Ya., suffered to the ex- <lb/>
tent of nearly <lb/>
D. Ex-Gov. Thomas of Ala- <lb/>
at Greensboro. Rabbi Aaron Wise, <lb/>
in York city ; aged <lb/>
APRIL. <lb/>
j deaths in a burning tenement In <lb/>
Brooklyn. <lb/>
killed and several wounded <lb/>
by a boiler explosion at Greenville, Miss. <lb/>
The loan <lb/>
of closed in London. <lb/>
Docks and warehouses valued at <lb/>
barned at Brunswick, Ga. <lb/>
Benjamin T. Tweed, educator <lb/>
and author, at Cambridge, Mass.; aged <lb/>
Augustus H. well known <lb/>
tor and cartoonist, at Flushing, N. Y. <lb/>
Michael Sullivan, one of the old- <lb/>
est and best known engineers in the Unit- <lb/>
ed ; in Chicago; aged <lb/>
Ex-President Benjamin Harrison <lb/>
wedded Mary Scott Lord in New <lb/>
York city. <lb/>
f. Fire At Douglass, Ga.; loss, <lb/>
Fire At Savannah; loss, <lb/>
tO. Col. John A. the well <lb/>
known American journalist, at Cairo, <lb/>
Egypt; aged Gov. John E. Jones of Ne- <lb/>
at Ban Francisco; aged <lb/>
Count mortally Baron <lb/>
in a pistol duel at Berlin. <lb/>
Ex-Gov. Thomas M. Holt of <lb/>
North Carolina; aged <lb/>
at. Pits Hugh Lee, the noted <lb/>
Confederate veteran and former governor <lb/>
of Virginia, nominated consul general at <lb/>
Havana. <lb/>
V Oliver Caswell, widely known <lb/>
blind deaf mute, at Newport, R. I.; aged <lb/>
Baron Constant in de Grimm, <lb/>
well known cartoonist, in New York city; <lb/>
aged <lb/>
f. James Rich Steers, one of the <lb/>
builders of the yacht America in 1850, in <lb/>
New York city. <lb/>
. Dauntless Bicycle company <lb/>
out at Toledo; loss, <lb/>
Judge Arthur J. the first <lb/>
governor of West Virginia, at Parkersburg. <lb/>
D. Baron Maurice de Hirsch, nosed <lb/>
financier and philanthropist, at <lb/>
Hungary; aged <lb/>
B. M. Jean Say, <lb/>
statesman, in Paris; aged <lb/>
B. Gen. Noah L. a Federal <lb/>
veteran and a lawyer of distinction, in <lb/>
Washington; Ci. <lb/>
a. <lb/>
at Flu 11.11, N. Y-; <lb/>
veteran Shaker, Harvard, <lb/>
M. . <lb/>
ii. David H. <lb/>
m V <lb/>
if. . a wed <lb/>
American dentist, at Indianapolis; aged <lb/>
46- At Cripple Creek, Colo.; business <lb/>
blocks valued at burned. <lb/>
Clay county, Kan., devastated; <lb/>
people killed and many injured. <lb/>
leaders of the national reform commit- <lb/>
tee, including the American, John Hays <lb/>
Hammond, sentenced to death for high <lb/>
treason at Pretoria. <lb/>
D. Ills., the block and <lb/>
other properties burned; ls, <lb/>
British sunk by <lb/>
collision with the near <lb/>
; Europeans and drowned. <lb/>
MAY. <lb/>
f Persia assassinated. <lb/>
Residence of Senator Hale at Ells- <lb/>
worth, Me., burned. <lb/>
Obituary W. H noted on the <lb/>
can turf, in Philadelphia; aged O. <lb/>
M. Poe, noted veteran engineer, in Detroit; <lb/>
aged <lb/>
Andrew Fuller, noted <lb/>
ail near <lb/>
wood, N. J. <lb/>
i. Many lives lost by the collapse <lb/>
of a story lodging house in Cincinnati. <lb/>
At Somerset, Ky.; loss, <lb/>
At Laure, Mich., lumber and ore <lb/>
docks valued destroyed. <lb/>
Capt. J. D. a noted <lb/>
val veteran, in Savannah; aged <lb/>
At Ashland, Wis., feet of <lb/>
lumber destroyed; loss, nearly . <lb/>
H. C. editor of Puck. <lb/>
at N. J.; aged <lb/>
6th annual convention of military Bur- <lb/>
opened in Philadelphia. <lb/>
Nora Perry, author poet, at <lb/>
Dudley, Mass.; aged <lb/>
Sherman, Tex., devastated; over <lb/>
deaths. <lb/>
Obituary Rear Admiral Thomas H. Stevens, <lb/>
U. N., retired, at Ind.; aged <lb/>
At Painted Post, N. Y.; loss. <lb/>
At Blue Island, Ills.; buildings <lb/>
burned; loss, nearly <lb/>
In Washington; loss, fire- <lb/>
men killed, missing. <lb/>
Mrs. John S. C. Abbott, widow of <lb/>
tho at N. Y.; aged <lb/>
Otto noted Prussian <lb/>
at Berlin; aged <lb/>
Kate Field, lecturer and <lb/>
at Honolulu; aged . Archduke <lb/>
Charles Louis of Austria, at Vienna. <lb/>
The Amalgamated Association of Iron and <lb/>
Steel Workers began its 21st annual Session <lb/>
at Detroit. <lb/>
JO. sentence of the reform <lb/>
leaders commuted. <lb/>
Nelson, s veteran <lb/>
ton journalist, at Cambridge, Mass.; aged <lb/>
Clara Schumann, widow <lb/>
of tho composer and a noted pianist, at <lb/>
aged Gen. <lb/>
Martinez, celebrated soldier of Mex- <lb/>
The 108th general assembly of <lb/>
church in the United <lb/>
States opened in Saratoga. Tho Southern <lb/>
Presbyterian assembly opened Memphis. <lb/>
B. Gen. Lucius in Mad- <lb/>
Wis.; aged <lb/>
M. Iowa, Michigan Illinois visit- <lb/>
ed ; heavy loss of life. Steamer swamped <lb/>
by tho gale at people drowned. <lb/>
Gen. John Confederate <lb/>
veteran, at Va. <lb/>
At Dallas; loss, At Fort <lb/>
Worth. Tex.; loss, <lb/>
Oakland county, Mich., devastated; <lb/>
many deaths. <lb/>
H. An electric car crashed through <lb/>
a bridge at Victoria, B. people <lb/>
At Cairo, Ills., people were <lb/>
drowned by the capsizing Of a <lb/>
Nicholas II crowned czar aft <lb/>
Moscow. Tho 71st anniversary of tho <lb/>
American Unitarian association opened in<lb/>
Southern Illinois and eastern <lb/>
Missouri devastated. In St. Louis the dam- <lb/>
age amounted to buildings <lb/>
were totally destroy, d, partially and <lb/>
1,200 slightly death- in St. Louis <lb/>
Mark M. Pomeroy, the journal- <lb/>
In Brooklyn. <lb/>
M. In a crush at the of the czar's <lb/>
coronation at Moscow 1,200 <lb/>
killed. <lb/>
Dr. H. M. V. Miller, U. <lb/>
tor from Georgia, at Atlanta; aged <lb/>
Will nit Taylor, a veteran of the war of <lb/>
1812, in Baltimore; aged <lb/>
daughter of Chief Seattle of Washington <lb/>
and a heroine of the plains, in Seattle. <lb/>
H. Roper, inventor of a steam <lb/>
died while riding first machine <lb/>
Cambridge, Muss. <lb/>
Prince of <lb/>
won the Derby. <lb/>
Judge O. P. Stevens, <lb/>
from at San Diego, Cal.; aged <lb/>
SB. Gerard German traveler and <lb/>
explorer, <lb/>
Sir Waller won tho Brooklyn <lb/>
Austin Corbin, the railway mag- <lb/>
Newport, R. I.; Ernesto <lb/>
Rossi, distinguished Italian actor, at Pus- <lb/>
earn; aged <lb/>
Ex Gov. of Michigan, at <lb/>
Flint; aged <lb/>
Frank Mayo, tho actor. In Ne- <lb/>
aged Jules Simon, distinguish- <lb/>
ed statesman, formerly premier at France, <lb/>
In Paris; <lb/>
HO horses burned in New York <lb/>
loss, <lb/>
Isaac H. <lb/>
tho court of appeals of New York, in Al- <lb/>
Harriet Stowe <lb/>
her BOth birthday at Hartford. <lb/>
Severe the New Jersey coast; great <lb/>
damage at Atlantic City and Cape May. <lb/>
George H. president of <lb/>
the New Amsterdam bank, in New York, <lb/>
totally shot by George H. who de- <lb/>
money. <lb/>
Lie Kin and Hobart nominated <lb/>
ID. Death of mother of the emperor <lb/>
Of China. <lb/>
Goth anniversary of tho accession of Queen <lb/>
Victoria celebrated in England. <lb/>
Hon. Benjamin H. ex- <lb/>
secretary of the treasury, in New York <lb/>
city; aged <lb/>
Henry of <lb/>
urban Handicap in Brooklyn. <lb/>
J. K. C. Forrest, veteran Chicago <lb/>
newspaper man, in that city; aged <lb/>
Acquittal of Mrs. Mary Alice Liv- <lb/>
Fleming of the charge of murder- <lb/>
her mother in New York city. <lb/>
Kip, well known so- <lb/>
club and sporting man, in New York <lb/>
city. <lb/>
Louis Charles Philippe <lb/>
leans, duo de son of Louis Phi- <lb/>
in Paris; aged Lyman Trumbull, <lb/>
ex-U. senator, in Chicago; aged Gen. <lb/>
W. Smith, a noted Confederate <lb/>
soldier, tn New city; aged <lb/>
John W. Kelly, enter and <lb/>
song writer, in New York city. <lb/>
fit Mine miners entombed by a <lb/>
cave In at the Twin shaft, Pittston, Pa. <lb/>
6th annual reunion of <lb/>
federate veterans began at Richmond. <lb/>
L Daniel De Foe, a lineal descendant of the <lb/>
great author, died in Francisco. <lb/>
Harriet Stowe, at New <lb/>
Haven; aged Gen. A. R. Lawton, a <lb/>
veteran, at Clifton Springs <lb/>
sanitarium; aged <lb/>
Anson D. F. Randolph, the well <lb/>
known book publisher, at West Hampton, <lb/>
N. Y.; aged Charles Howard Johnson, <lb/>
artist, in New York city; <lb/>
Dr. George famous sporting man, <lb/>
known Price, in St. Louis; <lb/>
aged <lb/>
Leander crew beat in trial <lb/>
heat at the regatta. <lb/>
Gen. Young, a dis- <lb/>
Confederate cavalryman, in <lb/>
New York city ; aged <lb/>
T. Mrs. Ward Downs, once a <lb/>
noted Kentucky belle, in Louisville; aged <lb/>
Sir John Pender, cable magnate. In <lb/>
London. George Law, eccentric million- <lb/>
and son of the more fa- <lb/>
George Law of Panama fame, in New <lb/>
York city ; aged <lb/>
San Luis Cal., suffered to the <lb/>
extent of 1250.000. <lb/>
Leander won tho final heat at <lb/>
Henley, defeating New college. <lb/>
M. William Jennings Bryan <lb/>
ed by the Democrats at Chicago. <lb/>
persons killed and Injured <lb/>
In a railway collision near Logan, Ind. <lb/>
Business block burned in Nashville; <lb/>
loss, <lb/>
Ernst Curt ins, LL. D., a well <lb/>
known German Hellenist, In Berlin; aged <lb/>
Gen. John veteran of she Fed- <lb/>
army, at Detroit; aged <lb/>
Walter O. Lewis, a to <lb/>
i-a. j <lb/>
M. Peter Gerard, author, inventor and <lb/>
close, died in N w York city. <lb/>
Mgr. Monaco la senior <lb/>
cardinal bishop of the J. man hierarchy, <lb/>
at Rome; Luther Whiting Mason, <lb/>
famous teacher of music, at <lb/>
Me.; aged <lb/>
MaJ. Jacob a noted German i <lb/>
of the Army of Potomac, died <lb/>
at N. Y.; aged <lb/>
Ex-Gov. William E. Russell of <lb/>
Massachusetts, near Little <lb/>
sped William Hamilton Gil son, artist i <lb/>
and author, in Washington, Conn. <lb/>
The car barns of the Chicago City <lb/>
railway burned; loss, <lb/>
Ex-Gov. Joseph Hart well <lb/>
at Gen. j <lb/>
Andrew K. z. a Booth Dakota <lb/>
pioneer, in Dead wood. Gen. J . K. <lb/>
Siegfried, a Federal Veteran, at i . . <lb/>
Pa.; aged <lb/>
SO. Park theater and Barrett House <lb/>
Henderson, Ky.; h. s, <lb/>
Fair;. . M at <lb/>
Fordham Heights, N. em Ba. <lb/>
Nay s Opera and other <lb/>
buildings barned at Terre Ind.; <lb/>
lass, <lb/>
Mrs. widow of the <lb/>
late president of Adams com- <lb/>
and a s-. at Long <lb/>
Branch, N. J.; Charles Dickens, <lb/>
Jr., son of the great <lb/>
ton, England; aged Joseph Wesley <lb/>
per, one of the family of publishers. In <lb/>
New York city ; aged <lb/>
Centennial anniversary of <lb/>
the death of Robert Burns celebrated in <lb/>
Dumfries, Scotland. Cloudburst near <lb/>
Frankfort, Ky., drowned <lb/>
troops stormed and captured <lb/>
hills, stronghold. <lb/>
Gen. George W. Jones, ex-U. <lb/>
senator, at Dubuque, la.; aged <lb/>
Horace artist, died a Denver. <lb/>
damage in a <lb/>
Belfast. <lb/>
28- Jameson, the Transvaal raider, and his of- <lb/>
found guilty. <lb/>
Robert ex-president of the <lb/>
more and Ohio railroad, died in Baltimore; <lb/>
aged <lb/>
Montreal exhibition building <lb/>
nearly loss, <lb/>
Obituary. Kirkland, <lb/>
noted educator, hi Chicago. <lb/>
Grass Valley, Cal., partially destroy- <lb/>
loss, <lb/>
AUGUST. <lb/>
Dr. Joseph Toner of Washing- <lb/>
ton, well known philanthropist and col- <lb/>
at Springs, Pa. <lb/>
a. Calvin E. Pratt, a Federal veteran, a <lb/>
Buzzards Bay. Mass. Gen. E. R. Colston, a <lb/>
Confederate veteran, at Richmond; <lb/>
aged 71- <lb/>
Moore Bros., speculators, suspended in <lb/>
Chicago. <lb/>
Explosion and Are at Swift <lb/>
packing plant, Kansas City; loss, <lb/>
Several persons injured. <lb/>
Judge Samuel noted <lb/>
lawyer and public man in Washington; <lb/>
C. H. Fargo Co. boot and shoe <lb/>
Ann, assigned in Chicago; liabilities, <lb/>
killed and injured in a <lb/>
accident Columbia, Pa. persons <lb/>
drowned the capsizing of a pleasure <lb/>
bout en the at Philadelphia. <lb/>
William J. Gilmore, noted Ohio <lb/>
lawyer, at Columbus, O. Judge A. J. Ed <lb/>
ex-U. S. senator from <lb/>
at Sioux Falls; aged <lb/>
Lady widow of the late <lb/>
at <lb/>
Business The Murray Hill bank, <lb/>
of tin oldest state banks of New York <lb/>
city, closed its doors. The Security bank <lb/>
of <lb/>
it. C. A., a famous Canadian <lb/>
painter, died at the age of <lb/>
The Man has--t Shelter is- <lb/>
land, N. V., destroyed; loss, <lb/>
George old railway engineer <lb/>
on the slope, in San o. <lb/>
John president of <lb/>
the in London; aged If. <lb/>
Dr. Hanson, the tie ex- <lb/>
d an island Nor- <lb/>
way. by cl at <lb/>
Pa.; missing. <lb/>
Tout r won the national <lb/>
championship race at Louisville L. A. <lb/>
W. r <lb/>
Olin L. Warner, sculptor. In Now <lb/>
York aged Sister Irene, mother <lb/>
superior New York Foundling <lb/>
a dry sister of charity, <lb/>
in York city; Dr. William <lb/>
of the University of Missouri, a <lb/>
prominent at Columbia, Mo. <lb/>
o. Borne A Co., <lb/>
dealers II. M. wool <lb/>
and the and Western Soap works. <lb/>
three close <lb/>
ties, The Chicago <lb/>
dated Iron and Si.-el company <lb/>
s, about <lb/>
noted New York banker, <lb/>
died Great Mass. <lb/>
burned <lb/>
The laboratory <lb/>
of of Illinois at <lb/>
Champaign kins, <lb/>
Mary Abigail <lb/>
at Ma.; aged about <lb/>
telephone linemen killed and <lb/>
workmen seriously injured by a dynamite <lb/>
New Holland, Pa. <lb/>
IS. The yacht down <lb/>
by the M- or in a race at a, Eng- <lb/>
land; owner of the <lb/>
Isolde, killed. <lb/>
Pr if. William Crouch, <lb/>
r of at <lb/>
the ago of in Portland, <lb/>
Prof. Joseph of <lb/>
Harvard at w London, N. <lb/>
H-; aged <lb/>
Dr. C. C. <lb/>
physician, author, in <lb/>
aged <lb/>
The Exposition building, Buffalo <lb/>
Driving park, named; toss, <lb/>
Sister Stella, widely known for <lb/>
charitable at Dallas. John <lb/>
n. ii- eat. at Sara- <lb/>
toga. <lb/>
Obituary; Hamid Bin Said. <lb/>
or Zanzibar; Prof. Nicholas <lb/>
celebrated German <lb/>
at Bavaria. <lb/>
The town of Mich., <lb/>
million dollars; the <lb/>
company's plant, valued <lb/>
at among the properties burned. <lb/>
Business Co., j <lb/>
successors to the as of A. T. Stewart . <lb/>
A Co., made an assignment and closed their <lb/>
liabilities over <lb/>
Harry Hill, once a noted sporting i <lb/>
In Raw York city, died at Corona. N. Y. <lb/>
LI Hung Clang. Chinese statesman, arrived . <lb/>
in New on the St. Louis. <lb/>
The Iowa State Institution For the , <lb/>
Minded struck by lightning and <lb/>
burned; lass, <lb/>
Wordsworth <lb/>
genre painter, at N. J.; aged <lb/>
Stanley the artist. <lb/>
In New York; aged <lb/>
Business The Kings County <lb/>
Railway company of Brooklyn placed <lb/>
in tho hands of a receiver. <lb/>
SEPTEMBER. <lb/>
Masonic hall burned at Winston, N- <lb/>
C.; loss, <lb/>
The thirtieth national en- <lb/>
of Q. A. R. opened at St. <lb/>
Paul. <lb/>
Daniel the hank <lb/>
president in the United States, at Fonda, <lb/>
N. Y.; <lb/>
Obituary Niles Fowler, <lb/>
1- and writer. In West Orange, <lb/>
J-; <lb/>
Rev. Francis A. D. D., <lb/>
of University of the South, a veteran <lb/>
Confederate at Columbia, Tenn.; <lb/>
If. <lb/>
Dr. Gallagher, the <lb/>
Irish political prisoner, arrived In New <lb/>
York. Maj. T. S. of Omaha elect- <lb/>
ed commander in of the G. A. It. <lb/>
Business The First National bank <lb/>
of Helena, Mon., with heavy <lb/>
Opera House burned Boo- ; <lb/>
ton Harbor. firemen killed. <lb/>
Dr. Brown Goode of the i <lb/>
Smithsonian institution, a American <lb/>
at Mount Pleasant, near Wash- j <lb/>
a. Gen. R. C. veteran of the <lb/>
Mexican and civil wars, died at Mount No- <lb/>
Ark.; aged <lb/>
Ex-Senator Henry Payne, <lb/>
Cleveland; <lb/>
noted Italian <lb/>
at Rome; I <lb/>
Lewis, comedian in Daly's company, I <lb/>
West K. <lb/>
n. of Harvard <lb/>
died at Cambridge, Ma--. <lb/>
James D. Morgan, ran <lb/>
of the Mexican and civil wars, in <lb/>
Ills.; aged <lb/>
Delaware OH works burned <lb/>
Chester. Pa.; loss, <lb/>
Col. Norman <lb/>
and Inventor of guns and <lb/>
tiles, at Reading, Pa.; aged <lb/>
Charles L. an old <lb/>
who aided the <lb/>
in Europe, at aged <lb/>
Gen. Edward K. <lb/>
sin war in Chicago; J. <lb/>
deaths In a fight between the Young <lb/>
Turkey party and at <lb/>
If. Tornado wrecked many towns in eastern <lb/>
Pennsylvania. <lb/>
Enoch Pratt, banker, merchant <lb/>
and philanthropist; aged <lb/>
Utah, damaged to tho <lb/>
extent of by a violent <lb/>
Prof. astronomer of <lb/>
the institution, Bay Head, <lb/>
N. J.; Kl bridge G. Blunt, a Kan- <lb/>
pioneer and in aged <lb/>
Katharina well <lb/>
known i at Hamburg; d <lb/>
John Erie Eh; n, <lb/>
nary to died at Folk -ion <lb/>
England; d <lb/>
Bessie a noted <lb/>
in London, in that city. <lb/>
Prof. Sir George <lb/>
author of Doted work-. In <lb/>
London; d <lb/>
M. Bus. in Wolf <lb/>
In Little , k . . . , it- <lb/>
Tie- <lb/>
National bank of Springfield, N. Y., sub- <lb/>
Mount Holyoke college, South <lb/>
Had Mass., destroyed. The n <lb/>
elephant at burned. <lb/>
J. a Mi- <lb/>
in aged <lb/>
i ;. burned La.; <lb/>
loss, <lb/>
At N. J.; a knit goods <lb/>
damaged to the extent <lb/>
William Morris, Doted English <lb/>
in London; aged <lb/>
deaths In a wreck on tho A., <lb/>
T. and s. F. It. R. near E up Kan, <lb/>
Conventions; The annual <lb/>
of the United at <lb/>
Falls, Wis. The lath annual <lb/>
convention of the National of <lb/>
Book. Hers. Newsdealers Stationers <lb/>
opened in Boston. <lb/>
Tho Car and Lumber <lb/>
company of fail -i <lb/>
ties estimated at John M A <lb/>
Co., millinery, f. d in Mont- <lb/>
real; B. L. <lb/>
Co., failed to New <lb/>
York; liabilities. <lb/>
T. The First National bank <lb/>
of Ithaca. failed. <lb/>
Gen. Louis noted <lb/>
. soldier, at Tours. HI. <lb/>
M. Victor de Lesseps, bod of the <lb/>
and in Paris; d <lb/>
a grain r <lb/>
at Corning, la.; <lb/>
George A. Sheridan, noted <lb/>
Federal veteran, at Hampton, Va.; <lb/>
Silas Mis- <lb/>
at St. J i <lb/>
the Australian Melbourne; <lb/>
d Do Manlier, artist and <lb/>
In London; C. Minnie Con- <lb/>
way u once American <lb/>
England. <lb/>
IS. Towner w. ll known mu- <lb/>
sic In Chicago; <lb/>
Levi K. Vermont, at <lb/>
aged On noted <lb/>
and woman In Philadelphia; <lb/>
John II. Williams, tho <lb/>
ff th Norristown <lb/>
town. Pa.; <lb/>
Tho Right Hon. and Most Rev. <lb/>
Edward White r. neon, archbishop of Can- <lb/>
primate of Lon- <lb/>
don; <lb/>
A West India hurricane swept the <lb/>
r. a from Kw England to Now <lb/>
Jersey. <lb/>
Bruckner, mu- <lb/>
of all in Pow r. latest U. S. Report <lb/>
in d <lb/>
encamp- <lb/>
; l I V ran , m began In <lb/>
a, f tho <lb/>
Tr h Ho -i <lb/>
of A u l i h N. Y. <lb/>
t id the National <lb/>
Board of Strain Navigation began <lb/>
Louie. <lb/>
and Injured by a <lb/>
. t I. in. Pi. <lb/>
Business ll Marine <lb/>
ban; D I I <lb/>
r s. ; Thomas W. Fur- <lb/>
hi I i, Mich.; I BO. <lb/>
Bu-. Bank of Commerce <lb/>
of BuT. to email It- t. <lb/>
I ; ; . <lb/>
Joining . In <lb/>
lo.-s, ; n killed, <lb/>
linnet Holland, loss, <lb/>
National bank of <lb/>
Atlanta f The army <lb/>
memorial d t at inland. Ml. <lb/>
Oar formerly <lb/>
envoy to the d States, bailed from <lb/>
New York for Italy. <lb/>
Henry E. Abbey, theatrical man- <lb/>
ager, in N York By. <lb/>
Horace distinguished <lb/>
journalist, in <lb/>
fir. <lb/>
. Business New York <lb/>
company at by <lb/>
the for liabilities, <lb/>
Charles B A merchants of <lb/>
., failed, with liabilities of <lb/>
William A. Richardson, noted <lb/>
chief justice of tho court of claims In <lb/>
Washington Rev. IV <lb/>
prom Mien t Odd Fellow, In Indianapolis; <lb/>
aged <lb/>
Stoneware works burned tn East <lb/>
Akron, O.; lass, <lb/>
The U. cruiser <lb/>
captured the -1 big steamer Daunt- <lb/>
less and her sender, the ft. L. Mallory, on <lb/>
the Florida Dr. Henry S. Tanner, <lb/>
once noted as a day burned to <lb/>
death Akron, O. <lb/>
Gen. F de captain <lb/>
general of Madrid, died in that city. <lb/>
James H. a <lb/>
engineer, in England; aged <lb/>
Charles F. Crisp, OX speaker of the house <lb/>
of representatives, Atlanta; aged <lb/>
Columbus Delano, ex of the In- <lb/>
at <lb/>
Rev. J. M. known as <lb/>
the oldest priest in point of service tn the <lb/>
United States, in G <lb/>
Cotton warehouse in <lb/>
damaged to tho extent of <lb/>
houses in Tex. <lb/>
yard and dwellings burned at Mil- <lb/>
Mich.; loss. <lb/>
killed and injured in ahead <lb/>
near II Mo. <lb/>
Morton C. Hunter, a <lb/>
in Bloomington, Ind, ; aged <lb/>
Train elevators burned in Chicago; <lb/>
loss, A factory fire in <lb/>
Brooklyn. <lb/>
The annual missionary council of tho <lb/>
Episcopal church opened in <lb/>
Castle, a Cali- <lb/>
in Baa Francisco. <lb/>
miners killed by an explosion <lb/>
In shaft No. <lb/>
Dr. H. Martin, formerly <lb/>
of Johns Hopkins university, a noted <lb/>
gist, at <lb/>
Money per cent on call in <lb/>
Wall t. The County <lb/>
bank at Big Rapids n led. <lb/>
coffee and works <lb/>
burned in San Fran loss, <lb/>
Ht a German <lb/>
prince, ranking member of the Sacred col- <lb/>
in Rome. <lb/>
Gen. Joseph T. Torrence, a Fed- <lb/>
and an iron in t <lb/>
aged <lb/>
NOVEMBER, <lb/>
ft. Tho theater burned la St. <lb/>
Louis. <lb/>
Fit Hugh <lb/>
Havana, all lead in Washington from <lb/>
a. <lb/>
Ansel L. a veteran <lb/>
Island et <lb/>
Mr. W H. at Sear- <lb/>
bore-on-1 <lb/>
t. Tb- company, <lb/>
Cambridge port, burned out; loss <lb/>
goods store burned <lb/>
in <lb/>
u the well known <lb/>
r, in New York <lb/>
Smith, n and <lb/>
landscape painter, at <lb/>
John <lb/>
rated astronomer, Stockholm; aged <lb/>
Joan Y. Poster, a ad <lb/>
it r of New Jersey, in New- <lb/>
o. <lb/>
of th <lb/>
rs of Notre university, at <lb/>
Bond, Ind.; aged <lb/>
14- Coleman E. Bishop, s noted <lb/>
v r and editor, at Pa. <lb/>
burned <lb/>
-n, loss <lb/>
Frank a noted <lb/>
Inn and patron of music darts, In St. <lb/>
; d <lb/>
. P. Captain Alfred T. <lb/>
writer, retired from the United <lb/>
States navy after service. <lb/>
Judge J. Parker, a noted Ark <lb/>
Fort Smith. <lb/>
Hon. Eli II. Murray, ex-govern- <lb/>
or of Utah, in fowling Green, Ky. <lb/>
The British steamer <lb/>
went to pianos OB English coast; IS <lb/>
lives lost. <lb/>
Mrs. Scott the reader <lb/>
and actress, in Paris. <lb/>
The First National <lb/>
of Sioux City, la., fulled. <lb/>
U. Obituary; Benjamin Ward Richardson, s <lb/>
English and author, <lb/>
in London; aged <lb/>
defeated at foot- <lb/>
ball Now York; score, to <lb/>
Obit George W. G. Ferris, Inventor <lb/>
and i- . th r of the F. In <lb/>
burg. Amos a Chicago pioneer, <lb/>
that city; <lb/>
San <lb/>
the coast of California; deaths from <lb/>
drowning and exposure. <lb/>
Obit t greatest tenor <lb/>
bis time, well known the United <lb/>
Slates, at Italy. <lb/>
Benjamin Gould, well <lb/>
known scholar astronomer, in Boston. <lb/>
The at Tex., <lb/>
loss, <lb/>
lie steamer City of K am burn- <lb/>
ed at South Haven. Mich; don Ins. <lb/>
Tho Missouri National <lb/>
bank at Kansas city panned into the hands <lb/>
of the comptroller of the treasury. The <lb/>
First National bank of Tyler, Tex., failed. <lb/>
Ira Shafer. a noted figure of the <lb/>
New York liar, at William <lb/>
head of piano firm, in New <lb/>
L At Mason City, la.; loss. <lb/>
shock Cairo, <lb/>
Ills, Gage and brokers, <lb/>
failed Boston. <lb/>
At St. <lb/>
The National Council Women bean its <lb/>
annual in Boston. <lb/>
Capt. William B. a California <lb/>
pioneer, at San l <lb/>
Date reported for the death of the <lb/>
Cuban loader. <lb/>
John B, Fellows, the noted <lb/>
p in York city;<lb/>
Shipwreck The North German Lloyd steam- <lb/>
red off the of <lb/>
about BOB and lost. <lb/>
Fire; At Bay City. loss, <lb/>
Drury, hove been <lb/>
the i. United Stales, <lb/>
in New Boston, Ills.; Kl. Nathan <lb/>
a of tin war ISIS and of <lb/>
the v in New York city; aged <lb/>
; favoring Cuban <lb/>
in tho United <lb/>
States Ben Face a <lb/>
tho Canny died on <lb/>
the r. ration in the Indian Territory. <lb/>
At Winston, N. C.; loss. <lb/>
Obituary; Alfred Noel. Inventor of <lb/>
at Daly. <lb/>
The German slop Rajah <lb/>
In Bristol sailors <lb/>
drowned. <lb/>
U. Gen. N. L. Beal, <lb/>
Me.; d Felix G. de Fontaine, a Con- <lb/>
federate war correspondent and <lb/>
known Journalist, at Columbia. S. C.; aged <lb/>
Mine, of <lb/>
on of a New <lb/>
A York <lb/>
in of a woo an in <lb/>
who went to South <lb/>
. i from <lb/>
her <lb/>
both the <lb/>
ac- <lb/>
quired after the are legal <lb/>
laws of <lb/>
Stare South paid the <lb/>
judge ii; his decision, the <lb/>
lawful wife State of the <lb/>
second husband. By Hie laws of <lb/>
the of New Turk is the <lb/>
lawful wife of It is <lb/>
therefore, plain that while Wes- <lb/>
tern divorces not valid in the <lb/>
East, although in the <lb/>
la which they were <lb/>
a condition of <lb/>
result in <lb/>
be <lb/>
The with t wife every <lb/>
has held up us a <lb/>
horrible example, but if de <lb/>
of the N. w York court <lb/>
the ladies may to <lb/>
torn the tables on teen and have <lb/>
a husband in <lb/>
Union without <lb/>
the- penalty of the law. It. <lb/>
no r that thorn many <lb/>
advocates of a national divorce <lb/>
law, and view of <lb/>
if the New York it will be <lb/>
b mid that the Western divorce <lb/>
mills Actually encourage <lb/>
a House. <lb/>
ordinary polite inquiry <lb/>
do yon calls for <lb/>
but a polite <lb/>
response, but if a man is past <lb/>
and a philosopher <lb/>
. s, it ii reply <lb/>
full and worthy of <lb/>
When John was <lb/>
So old he in tie <lb/>
of Boston en old friend who <lb/>
shook hi trembling hand and <lb/>
morning, and how <lb/>
John r <lb/>
was the <lb/>
Mine. . . . <lb/>
s answer. <lb/>
Now well, I thank <lb/>
a any record <lb/>
you. in lie <lb/>
M. Pa.; <lb/>
i- .- r. a German <lb/>
suitor, in M. Louis; <lb/>
f it. <lb/>
Tho Marie <lb/>
in <lb/>
Hit- actor, at <lb/>
in Wales. ma <lb/>
N. Y. <lb/>
G. <lb/>
at M. . <lb/>
that big will r. .; <lb/>
in r of <lb/>
the of the at Val- <lb/>
Forge in Philadelphia. The National <lb/>
M 1.1 annual <lb/>
in Cincinnati. <lb/>
Some Startling Figure <lb/>
Nebraska, <lb/>
n iii which, <lb/>
If carried, is likely to-open to <lb/>
at with <lb/>
The <lb/>
oil's nine lo be elected by <lb/>
tin- a coma to <lb/>
into the of money in p <lb/>
Upon reading the re <lb/>
Senator Allen to t c <lb/>
mi an paper <lb/>
to for <lb/>
president in the pivotal <lb/>
paper on to <lb/>
carried in <lb/>
1802 by l . and <lb/>
more than Cleveland re- <lb/>
vi i carried <lb/>
carried i <lb/>
and Bryan received <lb/>
m re than anal received <lb/>
yet <lb/>
earned Indiana <lb/>
in 1892 by and Bryan <lb/>
more than re- <lb/>
Indiana. <lb/>
Cleveland in 1892 <lb/>
by Bryan <lb/>
more limn Me- <lb/>
Kentucky. Harrison <lb/>
carried Iowa in ISM by and <lb/>
Bryan more <lb/>
vet earned Iowa. <lb/>
i at <lb/>
dated- It upon <lb/>
Time and I lie <lb/>
i to- nearly destroyed it. <lb/>
is iv worn out <lb/>
Its walls are <lb/>
it a with every wind. Tho <lb/>
old almost <lb/>
and I John <lb/>
Will have to move <lb/>
out of noon; bat he himself in <lb/>
quite well, an, quite <lb/>
It no loop that <lb/>
h- had his second fatal stroke <lb/>
capitol at <lb/>
is the last <lb/>
of he said. I am con- <lb/>
Companion. <lb/>
Campaign <lb/>
The late presidential <lb/>
lent additional piquancy to a <lb/>
Ii anecdote of the Montana <lb/>
c. two rests <lb/>
Mr. was the Democratic <lb/>
did and Mr. Smith his Pop <lb/>
It appears that <lb/>
one day, in their campaign, they <lb/>
traveled i short distance in com- <lb/>
a very <lb/>
and in <lb/>
Mr. Smith was compelled <lb/>
to ave the car hurriedly when <lb/>
his station was reached. He <lb/>
can i up one of the two <lb/>
in the seat front <lb/>
out. A few <lb/>
on A left the <lb/>
L He reached <lb/>
hi any- <lb/>
v . The <lb/>
i waiting <lb/>
in- <lb/>
I have tho wrong bag Con- <lb/>
plug of <lb/>
six -shooter Demo- <lb/>
Michigan to WM I <lb/>
and more k <lb/>
voles than ,<lb/>
carried <lb/>
vole, Illinois was <lb/>
nearly in the vole of <lb/>
el <lb/>
From gained <lb/>
so lamely in lour- <lb/>
I, too have wrong bag. con- <lb/>
Treatise on <lb/>
tore of Mary Ellen Learn and <lb/>
bundle of hay marked<lb/>
CORBETT.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019131_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
fa <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
at the post e t <lb/>
r Ilia, C. mail <lb/>
January C, 1896 <lb/>
NOTES. <lb/>
Wilmington merchants are <lb/>
together with a view of <lb/>
bringing suit against city for <lb/>
venting the side of the stocks of fire <lb/>
works they had on Land. <lb/>
The number of bank and other <lb/>
failures occurring in the cities over <lb/>
the country does not argue well for the <lb/>
prosperity boom. One can- <lb/>
not pick up a city paper without read- <lb/>
of several big failures. <lb/>
was chairman of Board when <lb/>
that splendid institution was <lb/>
opened for reception of pa <lb/>
In 1834 be was elected <lb/>
State of Public <lb/>
and was re-elected in <lb/>
1888 Since bis retirement <lb/>
that office in 1893 be bas devoted <lb/>
himself to. bis private affairs <lb/>
taking deep interest as a director <lb/>
in the Greensboro Normal and <lb/>
School, and in late <lb/>
campaign taking an active part in <lb/>
the contest in bis county. <lb/>
Maj. Finger was married early <lb/>
n life. His wife survives <lb/>
no children <lb/>
was an ideal life, and <lb/>
thy of a large circle of friends <lb/>
goes out to bereaved widow. <lb/>
He was a consistent and <lb/>
member of German Re- <lb/>
formed all <lb/>
of public improvement, a <lb/>
good citizen, and a patriotic <lb/>
Christian man. <lb/>
this State, has recently <lb/>
been much excited over grave yard <lb/>
robberies. Twice during the past <lb/>
week graves in the city cemetery have <lb/>
been and in one instance the <lb/>
body of a child was taken away. <lb/>
The secret service division of the <lb/>
Treasury Department reports the dis- <lb/>
of a new ten-dollar national <lb/>
note. It is a photographic <lb/>
i-f a note issued by the Union Na- <lb/>
Bank of Detroit, Mich., check <lb/>
letter series signed by W <lb/>
S. Rosecrans, Register, and X. <lb/>
Treasurer. Chief of the <lb/>
secret service, says it is the product of <lb/>
the same hand as a counterfeit note he <lb/>
recently discovered the National <lb/>
Bunk Commerce, of New York. <lb/>
We stand upon the an- <lb/>
other year. A few hours more and <lb/>
1896 will have gone into the past t <lb/>
to return. This is a time that should <lb/>
bring solemn impressions to us all. It <lb/>
is a fit time for examination as to <lb/>
whether we have lived as we <lb/>
the past year. Doubtless every life <lb/>
is marked more or <lb/>
can dare boast of having <lb/>
come up to the full measure of duty <lb/>
and opportunity. Still many have <lb/>
done what they Let us profit <lb/>
by past experiences, forgetting the error <lb/>
that are behind, and with faces to <lb/>
rosy new year resolve to turn over a <lb/>
new leaf and make it the best of our <lb/>
life. <lb/>
Train wreckers got in some of <lb/>
dastardly work near Raleigh on Wed- <lb/>
morning. About two miles <lb/>
from the city they misplaced a rail on <lb/>
the track of the Seaboard Air Line <lb/>
with the intention of the <lb/>
train from Atlanta when it should <lb/>
along. From some cause this <lb/>
train, which bad on a large number of <lb/>
passengers, was more than an hour late, <lb/>
and a freight train was permitted to <lb/>
run on the of the vestibule. <lb/>
When the freight reached the place <lb/>
where the wreckers had the rail <lb/>
the engine struck it plunged over <lb/>
an embankment into a cut. ten loaded <lb/>
cars piling ever on top of it. The en- <lb/>
and cars were <lb/>
The engineer was badly bur <lb/>
and the tin-man. a man, was <lb/>
killed. Had it been the train <lb/>
to come along first the result would <lb/>
have been It that the <lb/>
hand of was shown to <lb/>
he lives of those whom the n s <lb/>
had to kill. <lb/>
Major Sidney M- Finger died at <lb/>
Newton on Dec. 26th. He had <lb/>
not been in good health for some <lb/>
time but his death was a surprise <lb/>
to his many friends in the State <lb/>
whose esteem and affections he <lb/>
shared to a very large extent. <lb/>
Mai- Finger was born in Lin- <lb/>
county, May 1837. As <lb/>
a boy he worked with his father <lb/>
on the farm and in the tan-yard, <lb/>
and went to such public schools <lb/>
as neighborhood afforded. At <lb/>
the age of eighteen he entered <lb/>
Catawba college, acting as tutor <lb/>
daring his last year there- In <lb/>
1859 he entered the junior class of <lb/>
College in Maine, grad- <lb/>
in 1861 with A B., and re- <lb/>
his A- M. in 1865. He en- <lb/>
the Confederate army, and <lb/>
was made Quarter Master <lb/>
geant, promoted to and <lb/>
to collection of taxes <lb/>
in kind in the Charlotte <lb/>
district- In 1864 be was <lb/>
promoted to and put in <lb/>
charge of the collection of <lb/>
in kind for the whole State- <lb/>
After the close of the war he <lb/>
entered profession of teach- <lb/>
and was associated for nine <lb/>
or ten years with Rev. J- C- <lb/>
in conducting Catawba college, <lb/>
the leading educational <lb/>
of German Reformed <lb/>
in State. He was an <lb/>
excellent teacher and manager, <lb/>
and from the active work <lb/>
because of ill-health in 1874 in <lb/>
which year he was elected by the <lb/>
Democrats of bis county to the <lb/>
House of Representatives. He <lb/>
was elected to the Senate in 1876, <lb/>
and re-elected in 1880- After re- <lb/>
tiring from Catawba college he <lb/>
became engaged in <lb/>
and in cotton manufacturing- <lb/>
In 1882 he was appointed a <lb/>
of the Western Hospital, and <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb/>
Our Regular <lb/>
Washington, Jan. 1st 1897. <lb/>
No President, not even Andy <lb/>
ever held a New Year <lb/>
reception that was attended by <lb/>
fewer Senators and <lb/>
fives than were at White <lb/>
House today. The President gave <lb/>
no sign indicating that be noticed <lb/>
their absence, but it is <lb/>
less certain that be did. Other- <lb/>
wise the reception was a great <lb/>
success. Mrs. Cleveland never <lb/>
looked better, of lady <lb/>
assistants never displayed more <lb/>
elegant costumes, the diplomatic <lb/>
corps never made a more nor- <lb/>
showing and the army, <lb/>
navy and marine officers were out <lb/>
n fore in and span new- <lb/>
uniforms with gold lace and brass <lb/>
buttons galore. <lb/>
The Cuban question is awaiting <lb/>
the of <lb/>
next week, although there are <lb/>
daily, almost hourly, reports of <lb/>
steps being taken either in Spain. <lb/>
or by Gen. or by Seen <lb/>
and the Spanish Min- <lb/>
which will result in placing <lb/>
it where there will be no occasion <lb/>
for to act upon it. That <lb/>
most of these rumors are <lb/>
by persons who are either <lb/>
friendly towards Spain or at least <lb/>
opposed to any action by the <lb/>
present is generally be- <lb/>
in Washington. The <lb/>
ion is growing that they will be <lb/>
successful, at least to extent <lb/>
of postponing action until after <lb/>
assumes office. In <lb/>
act, that purpose was practically <lb/>
accomplished when <lb/>
can leaders of House decided <lb/>
that nothing should be clout- <lb/>
The Democratic National Com- <lb/>
makes secret of using <lb/>
ail the influence it can <lb/>
la winds bringing about re- <lb/>
election of Sun of <lb/>
Idaho, who is being by <lb/>
his crowd, because be <lb/>
followed his an., sup- <lb/>
ported the Democratic platform <lb/>
and ticket in the late campaign, <lb/>
and because they think his defeat <lb/>
would result in frightening other <lb/>
silver continuing to <lb/>
act with the Republican party <lb/>
Democrats who know <lb/>
active part took in fight- <lb/>
for Bryan endorse Senator <lb/>
Blackburn's owe <lb/>
a debt and <lb/>
nothing should be allowed to <lb/>
stand in way of its <lb/>
It is a debt of honor, and, like <lb/>
all debts of honor, should be paid <lb/>
in advance of all other <lb/>
Gen. Wheeler, of Alabama, one <lb/>
of Democratic members of <lb/>
House committee on Ways <lb/>
and Means who is carefully at- <lb/>
tending tariff bearings now in <lb/>
progress, although he knows that <lb/>
be and his Democratic colleagues <lb/>
will not be allowed to have any <lb/>
baud in making tar ff bill, is <lb/>
always emphatic in and <lb/>
dramatic- Nobody was <lb/>
prised, when Mr. W. <lb/>
Craig, of Mis;., as <lb/>
representative of the cotton grow- <lb/>
of the Mississippi Valley, <lb/>
before Committee and <lb/>
that a duty of cents a <lb/>
pound be put on Egyptian cotton, <lb/>
to see wiry old soldier stiffen <lb/>
up and to hear say <lb/>
South would be selling its birth- <lb/>
right for a mess of pottage to ask <lb/>
for thin protection <lb/>
thought to Gen- <lb/>
Wheeler when he asked him. <lb/>
do you <lb/>
Without a hair Ala- <lb/>
free trade, free every <lb/>
Senator term expires <lb/>
March and the Florida <lb/>
which will elect bis successor <lb/>
dues net meet until April, so that <lb/>
if calls the extra <lb/>
together in March, Florida <lb/>
will for a time have only one <lb/>
Senator. According to a member <lb/>
of the Florida legislature, who is <lb/>
now in Washington, Senator Call <lb/>
will certainly be his own <lb/>
notwithstanding red hot <lb/>
fight which is being made against <lb/>
him- gentleman <lb/>
only <lb/>
be defeated for re-election is to <lb/>
cede State back to Spain or <lb/>
abolish the office. I am a <lb/>
of the and <lb/>
as a great majority of the <lb/>
of the are Farm- <lb/>
men, and not law <lb/>
I know what I am <lb/>
about. <lb/>
At a meeting of the <lb/>
Kt ale v and Hobart Club of this <lb/>
city ex Commissioner Douglass <lb/>
said be club <lb/>
would be kept up for the purpose <lb/>
of supporting and Ho- <lb/>
in When a friend told <lb/>
Speaker R about that speech <lb/>
his only comment was Mr- <lb/>
Reed know s that it isn't the ticket <lb/>
of 1900. but the offices of <lb/>
the and the other members <lb/>
the club are worried about. <lb/>
thing has been made very <lb/>
eh by first week of the tariff <lb/>
bearings. That s, the men <lb/>
who have for higher duties <lb/>
the ground their business <lb/>
under the present tariff is <lb/>
profitable, must have had a big <lb/>
surplus draw upon. None of <lb/>
iIi look like men engaged in <lb/>
occupations. On <lb/>
contrary, to a man they <lb/>
well-dressed, well-fed and <lb/>
prosperous, if haven't <lb/>
been mating money the must <lb/>
have rited They <lb/>
look like men who <lb/>
were <lb/>
and <lb/>
The Washington Star says ac- <lb/>
cording to a prominent North <lb/>
Carolina Republican in city <lb/>
the senatorial situation clown <lb/>
there ban developed a new <lb/>
unexpected <lb/>
Harry Skinner, Populist, has <lb/>
been in favor th- election <lb/>
Senator Pritchard from the <lb/>
ginning in event Pritchard <lb/>
would pledge himself to act with <lb/>
the silver men on <lb/>
In case of re- <lb/>
has had an eye <lb/>
place himself, He is now <lb/>
said to have become <lb/>
ally in favor of the election of <lb/>
Pritchard, and is all he can <lb/>
for his This it <lb/>
has lea to <lb/>
notify Senator <lb/>
that if he persists bis <lb/>
to he, Skinner, will <lb/>
oppose the re-election of Butler <lb/>
four years from now and will be a <lb/>
himself. If Butler will <lb/>
cease hi tight on <lb/>
will let Butler come back to <lb/>
the Senate without Populist op- <lb/>
position- <lb/>
There may be some truth ti is <lb/>
story, which will North <lb/>
Carolina politicians until the el c- <lb/>
is settled. If the populists <lb/>
vole for <lb/>
this time it will doubt with <lb/>
an understanding that are <lb/>
to have the four years <lb/>
from now. Not even <lb/>
would to the populist <lb/>
voting for unless with <lb/>
a clear understanding this <lb/>
point. If Skinner sticks to <lb/>
J and helps to pull <lb/>
through the supposition is that <lb/>
Pritchard will back four <lb/>
years from now with republican <lb/>
aid, this the chances <lb/>
of Senator Butler, who has array- <lb/>
ed himself strongly again-1 <lb/>
republicans this time, and who <lb/>
has incurred their ill will- An <lb/>
arrangement like this, it is said, <lb/>
would t-e almost a <lb/>
Skinner that he could succeed <lb/>
Butler. <lb/>
Skinner has the pop- <lb/>
in North to defy <lb/>
i the leadership of Butler, and for <lb/>
tins Butler <lb/>
it is known that would not <lb/>
consent to the of Skinner <lb/>
this if he could help it <lb/>
The altogether is said <lb/>
to be the knottiest that Senator <lb/>
Butler has cackled. If he loses <lb/>
this time, with an understanding <lb/>
Pritchard, <lb/>
will probably have lost his seat <lb/>
the If he succeeds in <lb/>
defeating bis hold on <lb/>
will <lb/>
become and he will o <lb/>
able to succeed himself- Know- <lb/>
log facts Senator is <lb/>
said to to working every <lb/>
nation be can to defeat <lb/>
victory is the undoing <lb/>
of the former, unless he should be <lb/>
able to a powerful re <lb/>
populist <lb/>
which would for its ob- <lb/>
bis slaughter. <lb/>
Columbus Durham of Wake, John I <lb/>
H. Watson of Orange, George <lb/>
Bit of Wilson, David <lb/>
of Catawba, Rev. Harris, <lb/>
D- 1-. of Col. L <lb/>
Steele of Richmond. Alfred <lb/>
of Wake, -j. A- Womack of <lb/>
Chatham, Col. Duncan Shaw of <lb/>
Cumberland, Dr. John T. I inlay <lb/>
of A- K. Pierce, of Mali <lb/>
fax, Edgar W. Nye N. <lb/>
Buncombe, Dr. Hanks of <lb/>
Chatham, Hon. George Davis of <lb/>
New Hon. Charles W. <lb/>
of Pender, Maj. John <lb/>
Cox Wake, Rev. <lb/>
of Halifax, Col. Win J. <lb/>
Martin of Mecklenburg, Rev. W. <lb/>
R. Warwick of the North Carolina <lb/>
Conference, ex-Governor Thomas <lb/>
M. Holt of Edward M. <lb/>
of Wilson, Col. E- <lb/>
Brown of Hon. <lb/>
John H- aid of Greensboro. <lb/>
Win. B. of Rev. <lb/>
Thomas U. Pritchard, u. D., of <lb/>
Mecklenburg, Col. William John- <lb/>
cf Mecklenburg, Dr. John <lb/>
D- Bellamy of New Hanover, Maj. <lb/>
A- M. Lewis of Wake, Rev. J. B. <lb/>
Bobbitt, D. D of Wake, William <lb/>
W. Vass of Wake. Rey. W- W, <lb/>
Albea of Forsyth, Dr. B. A- <lb/>
of Dr. W. G. <lb/>
Stephens of Caswell, Dr. L- L <lb/>
Sasser of Johnston, Col. Paul P. <lb/>
Faison of Wake, Rev. R. B. <lb/>
ton, D. D-, of Wake, Rey. W. B. <lb/>
of Durham, Rev T. W. <lb/>
of Richmond, Dr. D. T- <lb/>
Mallard of Buncombe; George M- <lb/>
Sr-, of Robt- <lb/>
Carr of Dr. Robert D <lb/>
DicKson of Richmond, Dr. Wm. <lb/>
B- Meares of Davidson, E. D. <lb/>
of Edgecombe, Wm. B, <lb/>
Boyd cf Craven, L. L- Hen <lb/>
of Craven, W- P. <lb/>
of Wilson, Maj. A. D. Crudup of <lb/>
Col. E. D. Hall of New <lb/>
Rev- of the <lb/>
Carolina Conference, <lb/>
C- M. D. of Union, <lb/>
John L of Brunswick <lb/>
Rufus Galloway of <lb/>
Rey. J- B. Bailey of the North <lb/>
Carolina Conference, J. W. Goslin <lb/>
of Forsyth, Prof. R. M. Browning <lb/>
of W. Thompson, <lb/>
Sr., of Chatham, Maj. Sidney <lb/>
M. of Catawba- <lb/>
These men others, whine <lb/>
names we do not now recall, have <lb/>
been among the Stales foremost- <lb/>
sous every d- of life. <lb/>
They will sadly missed the <lb/>
years that are to come when the <lb/>
roll is called patriotic action <lb/>
and useful service <lb/>
Boil of 1800. <lb/>
The has lost heavily of its <lb/>
strong men all vocations <lb/>
the year- It is a pad <lb/>
reflection that comes to one <lb/>
miming over the files of a paper <lb/>
o note passing away of useful <lb/>
patriotic many of <lb/>
them in prime of life, others <lb/>
gathered like ripened sheaves. <lb/>
Those most widely known whose <lb/>
this paper bas recorded in <lb/>
the year that was rang last <lb/>
night William G- <lb/>
of Wake, Dr. W- M. Clark of <lb/>
Capt W. F. <lb/>
way Senator Call can of the Seaboard Air Line, <lb/>
Wm. H, Smith of Halifax Dr. <lb/>
TAMPA, A. <lb/>
lie my reward, <lb/>
place in pitch lent. <lb/>
or vine <lb/>
hum I may sit above sea <lb/>
And ill ink the wind, drinking <lb/>
The charm of romance <lb/>
The death of Barney Wilson was gotten ender control and <lb/>
sadness to many hearts b-side bis family j to two buildings named, <lb/>
and relatives, for bis were The losses m as <lb/>
It also breaks the chain of a large and j. . Mobley, two stores, ; <lb/>
family circle. This is first covered by insurance, <lb/>
bereavement that has A. J. ; <lb/>
in many years, and to bis aged parents <lb/>
is sore indeed. Four brothers i K. K. lodges and II. Cowan, loss <lb/>
and four sisters are also left to mourn no insurance, <lb/>
his death. The family have the <lb/>
of y in mob <lb/>
burial will lake place in Cherry <lb/>
Hill Cemetery Wednesday morn <lb/>
Little Annie Lynn age <lb/>
months, infant of Mr. and <lb/>
Mrs. L. Joyner, died it the <lb/>
Hotel at o'clock. The <lb/>
death of child was unexpected, <lb/>
ere having been sick only two or time <lb/>
days, the shock sends a s. <lb/>
to hearts of the <lb/>
parents. extend sincere <lb/>
to them in and <lb/>
mend for comfort lo who <lb/>
said little n to come <lb/>
to <lb/>
The interment look this r- <lb/>
noon at Mr. Joyner's home place, three <lb/>
miles from town. <lb/>
Taken From the Record of Proceed- <lb/>
Before His Honor. <lb/>
Up lo the recess for today the <lb/>
cases bad been called and <lb/>
disposed <lb/>
Fernando assault with dead- <lb/>
weapon, pleads u <lb/>
months in county jail. <lb/>
Abram Brown, larceny, <lb/>
judgment suspended upon pay. <lb/>
costs. <lb/>
L. M. and W. Ii. Baker, <lb/>
fray, plead guilty. <lb/>
assault with deadly <lb/>
on, pleads judgment suspended <lb/>
upon payment of <lb/>
Van Harris, with deadly <lb/>
on, pleads guilty, judgment suspend up <lb/>
on payment of costs. <lb/>
J. S. carrying <lb/>
pleads guilty, judgment <lb/>
pended upon payment of <lb/>
failure lo list poll tax. <lb/>
guilty, judgment suspended upon <lb/>
payment of <lb/>
Alonzo failure to list poll <lb/>
tax, pleads guilty, judgment suspended <lb/>
upon payment of costs. <lb/>
Frank Fleming, failure lo list <lb/>
tax, pleads guilty, judgment suspended <lb/>
upon payment of costs. <lb/>
Will Manning, carrying concealed <lb/>
weapons, not guilty <lb/>
Van assault with deadly <lb/>
weapon, pleads guilty, judgment <lb/>
pended upon payment of costs. <lb/>
Almore Hill, burglary, pleads <lb/>
sentenced in penitentiary. <lb/>
Henry carrying <lb/>
weapons, pleads guilty, sentenced to <lb/>
months in jail with leave lo <lb/>
to hire out. <lb/>
Silas Knight and Kiln Tucker, <lb/>
cation, nut <lb/>
King, breaking in guilty, <lb/>
sentenced ; years in penitentiary. <lb/>
Percy Williams, assault with deadly <lb/>
weapon, guilty, sentenced t <lb/>
CHERRY. <lb/>
J. R. <lb/>
J. O <lb/>
Superior Court. <lb/>
January term of Superior Court <lb/>
d this morning. Judge W. S. <lb/>
Robinson presiding. Judge Bob <lb/>
bas been oil bench for two <lb/>
years, but this is his first court in Pitt <lb/>
county. His charge to the g and jury <lb/>
was a good one, he spoke very <lb/>
plainly and in such as <lb/>
are degrading and <lb/>
to society, and urged the jurors to use <lb/>
their best t. put down such. <lb/>
The moral tone of the Charge ought to <lb/>
have a good it is well that <lb/>
Judges sometime, talk i <lb/>
virtue and sobriety, as I he <lb/>
of people often stand sorely need <lb/>
instruction on these things. <lb/>
The juries for this week are as <lb/>
lows <lb/>
v. It. Berber, Foreman, W. II. <lb/>
Adams, Mills, L. <lb/>
C. C. Case, Sherrod White. J. S. <lb/>
Oscar Johnson, J. J. J. T. Tug- <lb/>
well, W. II. Jenkins, Langley. <lb/>
II. II. Hardy, M. C. Manning, J. II. <lb/>
John Q Taylor. N. Stokes <lb/>
and George Mooring. Officer of the <lb/>
jury W. S. <lb/>
David Hymen, W. <lb/>
Tripp, James M. M. Stokes <lb/>
W. J. S W. <lb/>
O. Barnhill, B. C. Council, J. H. Star- <lb/>
key, A. K, Harris, Fred Cannon, L. II <lb/>
lowest price any object to you Are the best qualities and <lb/>
inducements f If no come aid tea our stock <lb/>
which have just received. Our store in <lb/>
full of New Goods and prices <lb/>
wore never lower. <lb/>
To <lb/>
Indies we extend t examine our of <lb/>
Dress Goods <lb/>
Trimmings <lb/>
We have a bountiful and up-to-date line. You will <lb/>
styles and know we can you. Oh, now lovely, how <lb/>
beautiful, the prettiest line I have ever seen, is what our friend <lb/>
say of them. We have a both in colors and blacks and <lb/>
an please you. <lb/>
a sin <lb/>
To a pin, <lb/>
It is a greater <lb/>
To steal a <lb/>
And he who a CO <lb/>
Is guilty B whopper <lb/>
We <lb/>
hive a car of ; S I it <lb/>
C. Conn A Si is. <lb/>
See J. C. CoWl <lb/>
in ices on Hour. <lb/>
for <lb/>
M. <lb/>
forming <lb/>
he <lb/>
I pound <lb/>
Horses, two Mules. Good <lb/>
team. For sale on credit <lb/>
U. W. <lb/>
In Hi Dates <lb/>
Currents Seeded Nuts <lb/>
Apples and -it <lb/>
S. M- Shultz. <lb/>
h Tampa. suggests the i <lb/>
poetry of motion, the wonderful, lustrous, I months iii jail. <lb/>
dark eye.-and wine of a Perry V carrying concealed <lb/>
famous chief the s of j weapons, pleads guilty, judgment <lb/>
it Wei i not history or I co-Is. <lb/>
the oldest can tell us, except in <lb/>
a VagUe, yet imp man- <lb/>
about these tail acres, over which <lb/>
the light-footed S-mini i; warrior used <lb/>
t. roam. to this day there is every <lb/>
sign remaining would suggest why <lb/>
came to tent among tin-palms in d <lb/>
Howe s and enjoy the freedom tot which <lb/>
race is so <lb/>
There are and all <lb/>
life the lizard <lb/>
paled on the by he murderous <lb/>
butcher bird to the poetry high <lb/>
things, the acquisition of the great re- <lb/>
of life, the marvels in original <lb/>
thinking, that has taken Tampa trim <lb/>
the embers of the past <lb/>
t reeled a palace to her memory, <lb/>
and unsurpassed. There is a <lb/>
lofty and ethical significance in the pro- <lb/>
of humanity, and it is a wonderful <lb/>
thing to find in any mortal man the <lb/>
upwelling spirit of such as is <lb/>
the possession of Tampa's <lb/>
i-t, Mr H. B. Plant, his ideas -re <lb/>
high and nob , he is an original think, <lb/>
and has, I- ii of <lb/>
gathered . <lb/>
and fraternal f A a id new <lb/>
have blossomed and the <lb/>
traditional bay tree, which seem to <lb/>
been reach of any <lb/>
other man's save own- <lb/>
He bus terraced the uplands, built stone <lb/>
made ponds and planted <lb/>
orchards of oranges, and the <lb/>
veritable is over all. <lb/>
is a a poet's thou-hi ; <lb/>
beautiful and practical. <lb/>
And Tampa is the <lb/>
crowning glory, the Moorish <lb/>
with its wonderful finishings, <lb/>
tin lushing both from the I <lb/>
aim new, of <lb/>
latest touch and lamb. <lb/>
gob. <lb/>
At o'clock Ht Mr. H, <lb/>
S. Wilson, aired died at <lb/>
home his parent; in this town. He <lb/>
had been sick several weeks with <lb/>
d fever, end ring the past two <lb/>
week bi condition was I <lb/>
for the last day or it had been <lb/>
lb <lb/>
better. this hope and the <lb/>
careful attention given hire the dread <lb/>
not be checked, and his <lb/>
spirit gassed quit a; the hour <lb/>
above stated. <lb/>
F. . AT <lb/>
Two Brick Stores and Contents <lb/>
Do <lb/>
to <lb/>
Williams ton, N. C., Jan. <lb/>
Lately several alt have been made <lb/>
to hum buildings in Williamston, <lb/>
the tire fiend paid the town another <lb/>
visit early this <lb/>
Just before o'clock the night watch. <lb/>
men discovered lire and gave the <lb/>
alarm. The lire was torn d a block <lb/>
two brick stores owned by J. Ii. <lb/>
Mobley and occupied by A. J. Mizell <lb/>
and F. K. Mizell kepi a <lb/>
grocery bar, and I lodges Kept a toy <lb/>
store and restaurant in the roar. <lb/>
The lire originated the <lb/>
and is supposed to be the work of <lb/>
an incendiary. The flames spread <lb/>
to the other store and both were <lb/>
entirely consumed budding was <lb/>
situated in the heart the <lb/>
the town and it seemed id- <lb/>
impossible to save the remainder, <lb/>
heroic work of fire <lb/>
Brown Hooker selling their <lb/>
entire at New York cost. This is <lb/>
no take, It warn aH <lb/>
oil them. <lb/>
Much in Little <lb/>
Is especially true of Hood's Pills, no <lb/>
cine ever contained o great curative power In <lb/>
So small space. They are a whole medicine <lb/>
Hood's <lb/>
chest, always ready, pk <lb/>
ways efficient, always sat- E C <lb/>
prevent a cold <lb/>
or cure all liver <lb/>
headache, Jaundice, constipation, etc. <lb/>
The only fills to take with Howl's 1.1. <lb/>
Have opened up a new <lb/>
and large stock <lb/>
STOVES, TINWARE <lb/>
BICYCLES, <lb/>
the new store next <lb/>
door to j. c. and <lb/>
Son <lb/>
call onus ever <lb/>
we are selling goods <lb/>
very cheap <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
STOCK <lb/>
be <lb/>
Owing to the death of of our firm <lb/>
during the past year and in order to settle <lb/>
his estate we find it necessary to close <lb/>
out our entire stock <lb/>
or <lb/>
and to close out as early as possible we have <lb/>
marked everything down to <lb/>
FIRST COST. <lb/>
From such a stock at the low prices the goods <lb/>
will be sold you can get genuine bargains. <lb/>
Come early if you want benefit of these <lb/>
bargains. <lb/>
The entire stock will be closed out as fast as <lb/>
possible <lb/>
HOUSES. INT. O. <lb/>
In Ladies and Gents <lb/>
GOODS have a <lb/>
splendid line. <lb/>
In CLOTH <lb/>
we have just what <lb/>
In Men Boys <lb/>
GOODS we the best <lb/>
stock to found pried were <lb/>
never lower. <lb/>
FIXTURES, TINWARE, <lb/>
WOOD WAKE <lb/>
HARNESS COLLARS. <lb/>
TRUNKS, GROCERIES, <lb/>
PROVISIONS. FURNITURE <lb/>
CHILDREN S CARRIAGES, <lb/>
CARPETS, CARPET PAPER, <lb/>
BUGS, LACE CURTAINS. <lb/>
CUR IAIN POLES. <lb/>
and any goods need for your <lb/>
family come to sue us. <lb/>
Our is to sell hon <lb/>
SHOES. In sham at Hie lowest <lb/>
or to buy snob n will the <lb/>
the prices Shoe are <lb/>
much lower hut season, <lb/>
is trial when you tie. Shoes <lb/>
for or any member of <lb/>
your family. We lit the small- <lb/>
est or foot in the <lb/>
L. M Reynolds shoes <lb/>
have a of <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
you yea <lb/>
may need at the lowest prices <lb/>
ever beard of. Come and see our <lb/>
hi Men and Rove are warranted Oak Bedroom Suits, <lb/>
service. We have To puss us by would be <lb/>
years experience with <lb/>
line know them to nil <lb/>
we claim for them. <lb/>
In HARDWARE, GUNS, <lb/>
GUN <lb/>
LOADED SHELLS. CROCK- <lb/>
HALL <lb/>
LAMPS. LIBRARY LAMPS, <lb/>
PARLOR LAMPS, LAMP <lb/>
disable injustice to your pocket <lb/>
book. This is not so been use we <lb/>
ho, but because our <lb/>
pi ices it so Here is a <lb/>
fair If <lb/>
not hint-, us but if <lb/>
you our goods prices <lb/>
acknowledge it with <lb/>
Hoping to see <lb/>
you our best <lb/>
to make your coming <lb/>
profitable, we are <lb/>
Your friends,<lb/>
To the Sports. <lb/>
are now for, all kinds<lb/>
and defy all competitors as to price <lb/>
and high grade goods. <lb/>
cents per box. <lb/>
in abundance and low price. <lb/>
Special Inducements <lb/>
on <lb/>
GUNS.<lb/>
J. W. Cashier Maj. At Cashier. <lb/>
THE GREENVILLE BANK, <lb/>
D. W. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Br. <lb/>
STOCKHOLM. <lb/>
Representing a Capital More Thar a Hall <lb/>
Million Dollar, <lb/>
Win. T. Dixon. President <lb/>
Bank, Baltimore. Md. We the <lb/>
The Scotland Bank, Scotland affirms, individuals and the general <lb/>
Neck. N. C. <lb/>
Noah Scotland Neck, N. C- am, <lb/>
R. R. Fleming, N, C. ed on <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
Horse Exchange. <lb/>
For Horses ard Mules <lb/>
to Dr. old stand, rear of Hotel Ma- <lb/>
con. I have just returned with a lull line <lb/>
from Richmond, at prices to suit tho <lb/>
Call at once, to sec my stock before buying <lb/>
elsewhere, it will pay you. <lb/>
E. WHITE, Manager. <lb/>
For Baggies, or Norfolk Trans <lb/>
I can save you per cent. Nothing but <lb/>
class vehicles sold and guaranteed. <lb/>
ii<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019131_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
FRANK <lb/>
WILSON, <lb/>
The King Clothier. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
place be-ore you <lb/>
grainiest display <lb/>
week. <lb/>
Far-well <lb/>
Feel like <lb/>
Year. <lb/>
All Ike glad New <lb/>
Th- meets <lb/>
have not learned to <lb/>
yet. <lb/>
Let Year resolutions be <lb/>
good <lb/>
M like this <lb/>
UP. <lb/>
Holiday Being Are <lb/>
ting R for <lb/>
Miss Olive Daniel it visiting at <lb/>
ii <lb/>
Jaw <lb/>
looser. <lb/>
The log <lb/>
in be It. <lb/>
era <lb/>
thick <lb/>
has <lb/>
J. A. Dupree Thursday <lb/>
i r <lb/>
C. Foy h is moved his family to <lb/>
ilia- Georgia James returned Thurs- <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
Ham went to Kinston <lb/>
I d y evening. <lb/>
W. Owens returned Friday <lb/>
from No. <lb/>
B. Hart returned Friday <lb/>
from <lb/>
Mrs. W. C. I lines is <lb/>
mi <lb/>
arrived Friday evening <lb/>
from sit. Olive. <lb/>
them the Same <lb/>
Places- A Tew Changes. <lb/>
When baying be eve- wise. <lb/>
Aim trade with those who <lb/>
went lo Kinston <lb/>
I. F. Goodrich <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
J. R. from Raleigh <lb/>
On the I a Tuesday evening. <lb/>
was by fee <lb/>
home <lb/>
Let your first new year be <lb/>
to take the i . <lb/>
S returned Monday even- <lb/>
Five Fridays, five Saturdays and five . lag from Wilson. <lb/>
Sundays in this <lb/>
Willie Bo wen returned Friday even <lb/>
gilts and <lb/>
are out date now. <lb/>
K. D. Well returned Saturday <lb/>
There are very few workers for <lb/>
Street Walker Co. around <lb/>
You can't I bl is in- <lb/>
pure, but you may have and <lb/>
good health by Hood's <lb/>
W. R. of this <lb/>
county killed a pig that w <lb/>
The i mi Co., f <lb/>
made an assign in--.; <lb/>
SHOES, <lb/>
HATS <lb/>
Notions, <lb/>
in Greenville. Our <lb/>
prices are the lowest-- <lb/>
compare quality and <lb/>
prices. That's the test. <lb/>
A Mrs. Hopkins <lb/>
Being the largest buy- <lb/>
or tine Clothing, <lb/>
Shoes, Ac, in Green- <lb/>
ville we buy lower than <lb/>
anybody else. Being <lb/>
Largest it <lb/>
naturally follows that <lb/>
we can and do sell low- <lb/>
than anybody else. <lb/>
Plain English enough, <lb/>
Frank <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
a o i the <lb/>
Sun Jay in the year and a leas <lb/>
tomorrow. <lb/>
v Warsaw. <lb/>
A. A. returned from Dur- <lb/>
Saturday evening. <lb/>
W. T. <lb/>
veiling from Nashville. <lb/>
P. II. Gorman returned from Rich- <lb/>
Tue. evening. <lb/>
T. Harrison returned Saturday <lb/>
evening from Richmond. <lb/>
R. W. returned Friday <lb/>
Miss Mary L. Lacy <lb/>
day evening Oxford. <lb/>
J. II. Cherry, Jr., returned Thurs- <lb/>
day evening <lb/>
The s Hew Year <lb/>
Come in <lb/>
name tin oil. d. j. W. U returned <lb/>
The Hit Mount- <lb/>
may lie a and N <lb/>
Monday <lb/>
one. <lb/>
G. A. Co. ban <lb/>
ck s- d the John Flanagan Co's <lb/>
business. <lb/>
lit men wan tin ledgers and <lb/>
day books fur the new year should call <lb/>
at the Book tore. <lb/>
When you come to town call at the <lb/>
i and let us till you <lb/>
out a lotion receipt. <lb/>
On while at work in the <lb/>
woods near his home, W . <lb/>
Jr., lost a pocket book containing <lb/>
Thursday night the entire plant cf <lb/>
lbs Street <lb/>
was destroyed by lire, loss about <lb/>
We have now launched the new <lb/>
yaw. Let th watchword every <lb/>
one be upward onward Green- <lb/>
ville <lb/>
Contractor W. H. Barnes returned <lb/>
Suffolk Wednesday night. <lb/>
of or , arrived <lb/>
M evening to attend <lb/>
Ii. R. Aiken and family returned <lb/>
W evening. <lb/>
Mrs. T. and little sou <lb/>
p-turned from Wilson Monday evening. <lb/>
Miss Leta returned Fri- <lb/>
day a to <lb/>
ii. E. and J. Hugh returned <lb/>
S; evening from their holiday <lb/>
Mrs. and Mrs. and <lb/>
children went to Wednesday <lb/>
night. <lb/>
Jesse and wife, of <lb/>
are the fondly of J. B. <lb/>
reporter made a <lb/>
among the merchants to see what <lb/>
changes bad taken place among <lb/>
tor the new year. There not many <lb/>
changes and with few exceptions the <lb/>
at the stores remains the same <lb/>
as last year. <lb/>
Wyatt Barber remains with D. W. <lb/>
M. L. Starkey and T. B. Moore con- <lb/>
with S. T. White, <lb/>
T. F. Christman takes a <lb/>
with W. H. White. <lb/>
J. B. White, will soon go in <lb/>
for himself. <lb/>
James Long an O. S. bar <lb/>
Do extra clerks. <lb/>
No changes take place at Mrs. Grit- <lb/>
fin's millinery store or at <lb/>
jewelry store. <lb/>
K R. Tunstall continues with J. S. <lb/>
Tunstall. <lb/>
Miss Bessie <lb/>
Mrs. Higgs. <lb/>
Miss Lucy Cox and Bob continue <lb/>
at their lather's store, or in other <lb/>
says the continues with <lb/>
them. <lb/>
No changes take place with J. B <lb/>
Cherry Co., J. A. Ricks, M. <lb/>
Jones and W. T. Lee all <lb/>
with firm. <lb/>
J. S. Congleton and J. White con- <lb/>
regularly with J. C. Son <lb/>
Charley Briley continues with fie firm <lb/>
for a few weeks longer. <lb/>
No changes take with S H <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
A. B. Hart continues with Baker <lb/>
Hart. <lb/>
No change in the force at the Green- <lb/>
ville Bank. <lb/>
S. M. A. B. top, D. D. <lb/>
and J. W. Brown have no ex- <lb/>
help at present. <lb/>
No change a. J. G. jewelry <lb/>
Ed Matthews continues with W. C- <lb/>
Hines. <lb/>
W. Owens and Ed Smith continue <lb/>
with M. <lb/>
John Home and J. M. I i i . con- <lb/>
with El II Co. <lb/>
J. I. Smith with his lather, <lb/>
J. S. Smith. <lb/>
Mrs. M. M. Nelson, Mrs. T. B. <lb/>
Cherry and J. S. It -i i at <lb/>
Lang's. Of course Mrs. Lang i- also <lb/>
indispensable about lac store. <lb/>
Charlie Wilkinson continues with 11- <lb/>
M. V. I. also take a <lb/>
p a, there in -A Ed <lb/>
resigned. <lb/>
Brown Hooker now have no <lb/>
A T. for tee ids j a. <lb/>
Te Ad it <lb/>
The he r takes <lb/>
to to <lb/>
liberal during <lb/>
the past year, them we feel For the last half of winner K. <lb/>
of the is largely due, of issued <lb/>
it could not live without advertise f while and <lb/>
incurs. We all will <lb/>
with us through the New Year, <lb/>
that new patron may be add.-d to Herbert a d Sal lie Haven <lb/>
We Extend Thanks<lb/>
list. We wish all a happy New Year <lb/>
On Tire Again <lb/>
Some on must have <lb/>
the Dam y building on the cornet <lb/>
Evan and Fourth street, as another hi- <lb/>
m bum it Tue -light. <lb/>
About o'clock people par <lb/>
their mail saw flames leaping up by a <lb/>
front window the second <lb/>
There were a few cries fire but no <lb/>
general alarm, and the flames were <lb/>
quickly bOOM and <lb/>
trash saturated with oil M found be- <lb/>
tween the roof and ceiling of the porch <lb/>
where the fire was homing. <lb/>
G. P. returned Saturday <lb/>
-go burglars entered from a trip t-<lb/>
J. II. Pan am, Jr., and J. G. Bow- <lb/>
i returned from Oxford Monday <lb/>
A nights <lb/>
the bar room of <lb/>
taking some and about <lb/>
money. <lb/>
J. L.- and Miss <lb/>
both Kinston, were married that <lb/>
low ii eve. Mr. Ellis is a <lb/>
native ct I'm com <lb/>
year ought to be our of much <lb/>
tor Greenville. Our <lb/>
can make it So it they start out with <lb/>
the right <lb/>
The boys have been getting <lb/>
fun out roller skating in the tobacco <lb/>
v. l- .- since sales tut been bus- <lb/>
the <lb/>
Drinking much Christmas whiskey <lb/>
I i for the taking off of a colored <lb/>
man at and one at <lb/>
Leila found lo death. <lb/>
Fewer railway have been <lb/>
in the States during <lb/>
he <lb/>
like to.- a decade. <lb/>
hat pal. of the collapsed <lb/>
Warehouse I hat tell over the street <lb/>
U be It it dangerous <lb/>
a. way. <lb/>
It's curious Kit many <lb/>
Will point the to riches <lb/>
And tell how lo <lb/>
their <lb/>
that the i C ii Book <lb/>
More has a full line of ledgers, day <lb/>
note, and receipt books. <lb/>
Get your supply for new year's <lb/>
business. <lb/>
he Run i. . l- C. T. <lb/>
doming dry . , .,,,. <lb/>
some very <lb/>
They are the we have <lb/>
Who says for Greenville <lb/>
year i Put some early talking <lb/>
and acting along we be- <lb/>
some can be secured before the <lb/>
year has grown old. <lb/>
D. D. is wearing one hand <lb/>
in ii sling, lie stuck a big in <lb/>
his band and it i- giving him much <lb/>
pain and inconvenient <lb/>
Owing to the hi of on.- member <lb/>
of th firm, D. E. House Bro. at <lb/>
House, N. C, will dispose their en- <lb/>
tire stock of general merchandise at <lb/>
cost. See advertisement. <lb/>
The Horse Exchange has <lb/>
a good lot of horses and at Dr. <lb/>
old stand in rear of Hotel Ma- <lb/>
can. hey also sell all kinds of riding <lb/>
vehicle. See advertisement. <lb/>
W. B. moved into bis <lb/>
new dwelling on corner Fourth and <lb/>
Mrs. Hooker, Greene <lb/>
will more here and occupy the <lb/>
ea avenue vacated by Mr. <lb/>
Will Celebrate Tin Wedding. <lb/>
The i i fur. acknowledges re- <lb/>
of a ticket of invitation <lb/>
and Mrs. W. J. lo b. <lb/>
present at ilk tin of <lb/>
daughter-. and Mrs. E. C. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Tues- <lb/>
day evening, Jan. at half <lb/>
past o'clock, Concur I, N. C. It <lb/>
would give i very pleasure to <lb/>
l able to attend. Mr. is <lb/>
of the limes, and were <lb/>
and treasurer of the North a <lb/>
Press Association, <lb/>
What the Old Han <lb/>
One day last week a number ,, <lb/>
Kin; went out to the <lb/>
County Home to take some <lb/>
s and serve a dinner lo the in- <lb/>
male. One of the ladies not <lb/>
the opportunity for some <lb/>
w along other <lb/>
deeds, ask d an and <lb/>
dated c-1-ired inmate if he knew win <lb/>
we every year. <lb/>
The amazement ladies can be <lb/>
will mi a i when old man r- <lb/>
i -i it- f -r pub <lb/>
pa <lb/>
Away. <lb/>
Mr. James L. who <lb/>
w-.-ks ago ii.-d a stroke of <lb/>
sis, died at o'clock Tue Jay <lb/>
at bis r on street <lb/>
He was years old <lb/>
a resident Greenville l <lb/>
He haves a widow and three <lb/>
the Inter J. E. y, <lb/>
d Mr. II. B. CU-k mi -Mi- <lb/>
Maggie of I <lb/>
these and oilier s of the family <lb/>
our I sympathy. <lb/>
be took place at I <lb/>
afternoon in <lb/>
clerk, the lime W. J. Hem- j Cemetery. <lb/>
by expiring with the close of the year. <lb/>
port. <lb/>
M. <lb/>
ft L. Martha J <lb/>
UM F. Evans and M. ft Path . <lb/>
Arnold and II. <lb/>
L. Smith and Sarah <lb/>
Ed Carraway and S.;, <lb/>
and <lb/>
J. Spier and <lb/>
and Emma I, . <lb/>
T. ft Hooker and lone May. <lb/>
J- C. Can a, Ada Co. <lb/>
W. J. Jenkins and Mamie Mm n. <lb/>
I s mid <lb/>
Hales and Arnold. <lb/>
W. Roberson and M. <lb/>
Nichols and C <lb/>
Luther and Maud Mayo <lb/>
Dudley Lillian C. <lb/>
R I <lb/>
in r. <lb/>
Ed Wilson and <lb/>
Brown and Martha Hardy, <lb/>
John and Smith, <lb/>
Jane . <lb/>
Me. Wiggins and Emily I <lb/>
and M n , ,; <lb/>
W . . ., <lb/>
Ad ma, <lb/>
Mumford and Hi tin Daily. <lb/>
and <lb/>
All-ii Stoke <lb/>
John Joins and Eliza t m. <lb/>
Irvin i and . <lb/>
and <lb/>
Henry and Mils. <lb/>
he total number lie UM <lb/>
month was I r <lb/>
The <lb/>
I was <lb/>
his <lb/>
with J. L. <lb/>
At Baptist Sunday School last <lb/>
Sunday morning, were awarded <lb/>
to little Misses Irma and Eula <lb/>
for the largest number <lb/>
E. T. Savage i in to see <lb/>
bis daughter, Mrs. L. W. Lancaster <lb/>
who is very sick. <lb/>
George J. Woodward <lb/>
evening from his holiday <lb/>
visit to Durham. <lb/>
Root and S- M. Daniel <lb/>
went to Ayden Friday night and <lb/>
ed next morning. <lb/>
Rev. N. M. pastor of th <lb/>
church, .- tum-J from E l.-n <lb/>
ton Friday evening. <lb/>
Mrs. D. Rocky Mount, <lb/>
arrived evening to visit <lb/>
daughter, Mrs. S. M. Schultz. <lb/>
i. V. Johnson, who been sick <lb/>
with lever several week, has so far re- <lb/>
. as to able lo be out. <lb/>
Policeman Fred Cox has in n- -1 back <lb/>
down town and occupies one the <lb/>
Elliott lion- Fifth street. <lb/>
Dr. Johnson and Bryan Gardner, <lb/>
of was here Monday and both <lb/>
called at the office. <lb/>
B. Drew, of Georgia, arrived here <lb/>
Thursday to <lb/>
lake back lo bis turpentine farms. <lb/>
Mrs. Tunstall and <lb/>
W ;. e. <lb/>
in Mr. T. A. n- . <lb/>
h J. in Bearer township, i- <lb/>
a The cause is <lb/>
peculiar if certain <lb/>
SHOW Wells i-i <lb/>
have <lb/>
over th of lb i <lb/>
like a <lb/>
. in in.- n th <lb/>
In.; same the exception of V. J. , some distance away fro- <lb/>
L e. j from the wells. The m I- <lb/>
With the exception of W. B. s, on a <lb/>
term expired at the close of the <lb/>
Louis Meyer <lb/>
brother, Morris. <lb/>
J. II. -talk-; <lb/>
Starkey A Bro <lb/>
J. L. i- arm; and R. B. Le id <lb/>
continue with II. IS. Clark. <lb/>
P. Crawford continue; J. L. <lb/>
Woolen. <lb/>
At Ricks A the <lb/>
year, there is no change Frank <lb/>
son's. <lb/>
Bo. Cherry. Z--b and <lb/>
Sugg Continue with C. T. <lb/>
The Bank of Greenville force con- <lb/>
as b lore. <lb/>
ft A. Tyson takes the place of Z mi <lb/>
Moore with Alfred , Mr. Moire <lb/>
because of poor health- J. <lb/>
E. Starkey and C. S. Forbes continue <lb/>
J. B. Randolph continues with <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Dr. Ernul continues to manage <lb/>
bis drug store and without <lb/>
the aid of a clerk. <lb/>
W. T. Fleming continues with J. A. <lb/>
S. A. has at l- <lb/>
C. Hooker A Co's, end the firm lakes <lb/>
no one his at present, Simon <lb/>
goes back to his home in the to <lb/>
try farming. <lb/>
ii. A the <lb/>
New store for the present. <lb/>
Burch he and his <lb/>
neither no; <lb/>
muddying it. Some t <lb/>
know what to k the well- <lb/>
and are getting <lb/>
lay alt-moon at home <lb/>
A- C. Miss hi <lb/>
was to Mr <lb/>
Rev. Fred <lb/>
tor the marriage bride and <lb/>
for the borne o the , <lb/>
Mrs. Margaret Nichols, where a <lb/>
most enjoyable r-past was given in <lb/>
honor A III-; couple to tin- <lb/>
delight of those who <lb/>
The attendants on long . <lb/>
for were m-ii y the i <lb/>
of th bride and <lb/>
hi d s- em to <lb/>
roost universally hi <lb/>
d joy, and whenever u <lb/>
iii eM home risen i- a <lb/>
gain n. -r. No on- <lb/>
is lost at home or abroad but all is <lb/>
in w; <lb/>
with lamenting, if any <lb/>
be, we and <lb/>
faces an- <lb/>
A e and <lb/>
Thus, old year is <lb/>
A at <lb/>
Lit- Monday a <lb/>
. plan- <lb/>
Wilson. we e v <lb/>
ill th- cell, and Ma II <lb/>
turned them out in t r <lb/>
a to have some I d u <lb/>
-ells. Alt-r the work <lb/>
In-d f rise prisoners re- <lb/>
lo but <lb/>
There M one to <lb/>
i-l the -r, and el the <lb/>
,. held him. one the <lb/>
rum hi- <lb/>
lie- crowd made <lb/>
-ii <lb/>
w n were th <lb/>
the jail and gave eh- <lb/>
V the m r-, were limning in <lb/>
ill direction After an elm <lb/>
w. re all who <lb/>
r.- till t l win had shot a <lb/>
at Creek re- <lb/>
d and p- -ion lo g t <lb/>
t-. , id T MM <lb/>
E Several d--, crate <lb/>
d aid are ,, The <lb/>
. w. n- ban i-; tie- over <lb/>
e lb-- j <lb/>
Ii r. <lb/>
year's in North <lb/>
i- Stale <lb/>
Eel a r lour <lb/>
is r gain <lb/>
-f per lit s. <lb/>
The r in to advertise <lb/>
is the h <lb/>
J. m- i, m . i-i lie <lb/>
l.-i.-r. The high <lb/>
will I brow a T <lb/>
all of the in <lb/>
Tin stall, of in changing, especially hi away the r-r in, a . d <lb/>
a -.- of J. S, Tun- cold her, and you can find at u ii.- in-. , <lb/>
Midi. <lb/>
II. I Coward is moving his t <lb/>
here from He will <lb/>
the on Dickinson <lb/>
avenue. <lb/>
Maj. Henry Harding, assistant cash- <lb/>
of the Greenville Hank, is suffering <lb/>
from a very painful carbuncle on hi <lb/>
right hand. <lb/>
W. B. Rick has moved his family <lb/>
lo town and occupies the Clark house <lb/>
on Washington street, better known <lb/>
late years as Ricks house. <lb/>
Andrew from Whit- <lb/>
evening. He reports <lb/>
Mrs. Joyner as having suffered a re <lb/>
lapse bat pronounced by physician <lb/>
out danger. <lb/>
Louis of New York, <lb/>
r red Thursday to visit M R. <lb/>
Lang. is with Berliner, Strauss. <lb/>
D--i z.-r, a large New York firm He <lb/>
shows very little change since last here <lb/>
and his is yet <lb/>
Rev. E. C. the new of <lb/>
Central Methodist church arrived in <lb/>
the city yesterday. Mr. Glenn is a <lb/>
y Ming man of pleasing personality and <lb/>
of the most girted divines in the <lb/>
c inference. The More bead City <lb/>
gave him up with reluctance and <lb/>
you i <lb/>
his usual place in the U <lb/>
when he goes to eat. <lb/>
Some M may have been <lb/>
looked in i. op ill- list, if so k <lb/>
will be cheerfully if our <lb/>
on is called to it. <lb/>
The extend happy new <lb/>
year to all the business <lb/>
and clerks and wishes they have <lb/>
a prosperous year all through- <lb/>
Last week Brown purchase <lb/>
a horse and carried the animal home. <lb/>
Tuesday morning he hitched up to a <lb/>
at baggy to come town. About <lb/>
two miles away the bone took fright <lb/>
at something and jumped off a ran. <lb/>
The baggy struck a stump and Mr. <lb/>
was thrown out. Being thus <lb/>
treed any one to hold him the horse <lb/>
took the middle cl the road and run all <lb/>
the way to town, lie kept right on <lb/>
across the bridge, dodging per- <lb/>
sons woo tried to stop him, and to k a <lb/>
course for Smith A <lb/>
stables, running inside and <lb/>
hi. on accord. The <lb/>
thing about the runaway is that Mr. <lb/>
Brown was not hurt, the horse sustain- <lb/>
ed no injury, and the damage <lb/>
whose n-, <lb/>
as yet d, this happy couple has <lb/>
com.- t front lo a <lb/>
lite. In one they bell <lb/>
another is lo and love, <lb/>
in all r-t true -s and h may <lb/>
it continue. N. <lb/>
We had a good trade daring the <lb/>
have a k to select from. g <lb/>
show you latest in T <lb/>
Dress Shoes, <lb/>
Notions. Hats, <lb/>
AND GENTS FURNISHING GOODS, <lb/>
prices that are way down. Come and sec uH <lb/>
we will give you m re goods for a <lb/>
bill than any house in Greenville. <lb/>
G T<lb/>
Fine Staple and FAncy<lb/>
There's no need to go anywhere else when <lb/>
you<lb/>
I have a complete line to select from and in- <lb/>
your inspection. fresh and <lb/>
new and bought to sell low. Come and sec<lb/>
g pg <lb/>
i-. <lb/>
2-J <lb/>
Z- <lb/>
Good <lb/>
I to a <lb/>
nook C <lb/>
and corner of the WU <lb/>
TUm is reached blood, on <lb/>
j every de- <lb/>
pend. Good blood mean strong nerves, <lb/>
good robust Impure i <lb/>
blood means <lb/>
catarrh or other disuse. <lb/>
way to Mood is to take Hood's <lb/>
vi- <lb/>
and enriches blood, and sends <lb/>
element of health and to <lb/>
every nerve, organ and tissue. It create <lb/>
a good appetite, <lb/>
and core that tired feeling. <lb/>
Hoods <lb/>
the Rood <lb/>
mm ,, f-,. em W ID; easy <lb/>
S PHIS take, easy to operate. Be.<lb/>
1897. <lb/>
r NEW f III. <lb/>
to see us and we will make you still <lb/>
happier by selling bargains of <lb/>
Winter Goods which must go. <lb/>
hi welcome to i most cordial . . , ., ,., .,.,. <lb/>
Sir. Glenn was a banker in to the boggy was a slight <lb/>
but pave up his the axle when the was <lb/>
new scholars during past year, interests to enter <lb/>
The were <lb/>
RICKS <lb/>
The glamor of Christmas <lb/>
has faded, the holiday <lb/>
spirit and are wan- <lb/>
there is less of shine <lb/>
and shimmer to the mer- <lb/>
displays, gift <lb/>
goods are not so <lb/>
or important, the <lb/>
regular stocks figures as <lb/>
features and they over- <lb/>
flow with val- <lb/>
Dress Goods and <lb/>
ons. Hats <lb/>
Shoes, underwear, and <lb/>
Clothing are thick <lb/>
bargain chances it lie <lb/>
that prudent can't <lb/>
to ignore. Come this week<lb/>
RICKS TAFT <lb/>
The Ladies Palace Royal, <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019131_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
AM. M, <lb/>
PORK <lb/>
their supplies will <lb/>
their interest our prices before <lb/>
u all its branches. <lb/>
RICE, TEA, <lb/>
AT LOWEST <lb/>
Tobacco, Snuff <lb/>
we bay from Manufacturers en- <lb/>
to buy at one A com- <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
ham and sold at prices to suit <lb/>
the times. Our are all bought and <lb/>
old tut CASH therefore, having <lb/>
run, we sell at a clone margin. <lb/>
S. M. Greenville. <lb/>
ON B. I-. <lb/>
AND <lb/>
AND FLORENCE Ho All, <lb/>
Dated <lb/>
Weldon Ar. M. M <lb/>
i u. <lb/>
Rocky Mt Wilson Sol ma Ar. Oil a M o <lb/>
Wilson Magnolia Ar M. OS i IS P. K<lb/>
Dared Nov. <lb/>
r Ar M. Id H <lb/>
V v Magnolia r M. fl It. ; <lb/>
-M, <lb/>
Wilson Ar Rocky P. M l; <lb/>
Ar Tarboro Rocky Mi At i <lb/>
Train on Scotland <lb/>
eaves Weldon 3.60 p. n, Halifax 4.10 <lb/>
p. in., arrives Scotland Neck at 4.56 p <lb/>
p. ., 7.45 <lb/>
p. m. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.2 <lb/>
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m <lb/>
Halifax at . <lb/>
ally except <lb/>
Trains on Branch leave <lb/>
Washington a. m., and 3.00 n . in <lb/>
arrives a. m., and 4.40 u- <lb/>
m., Tarboro 0.46 a. m. <lb/>
Tarboro p. m., 10.20 a. m. <lb/>
and 6.20 p. arrives <lb/>
11.60 a. m., and 7.10 p. m. Daily ex- <lb/>
Sunday. with trains <lb/>
flay, at p. m., Sunday P M <lb/>
Plymouth 9.00 P. M-, 5.25 p. m. <lb/>
6.00 a. m., Sunday 9.30 a <lb/>
Arrive Tarboro 10.26 and <lb/>
c- leaves <lb/>
daily, except Sunday, a <lb/>
m. arriving a. m Re. <lb/>
turning leaves 8.00 a m . <lb/>
rives at 9.30 a. m. <lb/>
Trains on branch, Florence R <lb/>
A, leave 6.40 pm. arrive Dunn, <lb/>
LaO p m, 8.06 p m. <lb/>
daily except <lb/>
Train Branch War- <lb/>
a. m. and 8.50 p, m- <lb/>
leave Clinton at 7.00 <lb/>
No. makes <lb/>
Weldon points daily, all rail vi. <lb/>
at K Mount mi <lb/>
Norfolk for <lb/>
n- all points North via folk. <lb/>
JOHN K. DIVINE, <lb/>
T. Manage- <lb/>
J. R. LY. . l am . -r. <lb/>
The ate, iT <lb/>
Bruise. -alt <lb/>
land-. <lb/>
Chi urns, all kin r mi. <lb/>
lions, cures Piles. no <lb/>
required. It is guaranteed Is <lb/>
or m <lb/>
i -ox. Put gal., b. <lb/>
John I. <lb/>
A Town on a Spree. <lb/>
The of Connecticut <lb/>
is to be in and so- <lb/>
the town cf Manchester, <lb/>
in the entire <lb/>
of which, almost, is said to <lb/>
be on a cocaine Some <lb/>
time ago an enterprising Man- <lb/>
chester commenced to <lb/>
pat up an asthma snuff composed <lb/>
of cocaine and menthol. The <lb/>
preparation was not long in be- <lb/>
coming both popular and <lb/>
and despite the efficacy of <lb/>
the snuff as a remedy for <lb/>
or other the <lb/>
to have spread with start- <lb/>
ling rapidity. The manufacture <lb/>
of the snuff also proved lucrative, <lb/>
and soon the other druggists of <lb/>
to put it <lb/>
on the market. Now everybody <lb/>
in the town is th e <lb/>
Persons be <lb/>
on the streets at night, at <lb/>
entertainments, hosts guests <lb/>
will go off into quiet cornets to <lb/>
enjoy a sniff, the vice has <lb/>
oven gone so far as to become a <lb/>
treating habit- Moreover, the <lb/>
remedy has returned to plague its <lb/>
and all others who were <lb/>
not content that he should y <lb/>
a of its manufacture <lb/>
and sale. The drug- <lb/>
gists are waked up at all hours <lb/>
of the night by men and women <lb/>
and made to deal out the snuff <lb/>
under penalty of their <lb/>
wrecked if they refuse so <lb/>
to do, and there is no peace for <lb/>
the of the mortar and the <lb/>
spatula- Some of the victims of <lb/>
the preparation consume worth <lb/>
of it a week. Moral suasion has <lb/>
entirely failed to work reformation <lb/>
and the spree has assumed such <lb/>
proportions that it has been de- <lb/>
that the only way pulling <lb/>
the town together is to have the <lb/>
pass a law <lb/>
restricting the sale of cocaine, <lb/>
From the accounts the <lb/>
give of the ravages of <lb/>
the habit and the of <lb/>
its victims, it the Legislature re- <lb/>
fuses to take the action referred <lb/>
to, the alternative will be to build <lb/>
a wall around Manchester <lb/>
turn it into a lunatic asylum <lb/>
Richmond Dispatch. <lb/>
Stands at th Head. <lb/>
Aug. J. the leading druggist <lb/>
of La. <lb/>
New i the only thing that <lb/>
cure it is the s. Her <lb/>
J. r, merchant Of <lb/>
King's <lb/>
New discovery i all is <lb/>
for It; it never fails, is a sine cure <lb/>
for Coughs aid Colds, <lb/>
I cannot bay enough for Mi <lb/>
Dr. King's <lb/>
Colds is not an <lb/>
It been tried for a <lb/>
quart r of a and to-day stands <lb/>
at head. It never disappoints. <lb/>
Free at Joan L. <lb/>
Stoic. <lb/>
There seems Io have been less <lb/>
drunkenness, and s <lb/>
disaster, in Carolina during the <lb/>
holidays, than is generally re <lb/>
corded a port of the Christmas his <lb/>
but it does lint <lb/>
W is less Season. The <lb/>
tact i that with increasing <lb/>
our people are learning <lb/>
is nut the correct thing. It is no <lb/>
long r in as it once <lb/>
Not -lily public is not as <lb/>
t rant of it as it was. The <lb/>
young man who gets drunk these days <lb/>
goes out with a mark on him ; employ- <lb/>
do not want him ; ho is <lb/>
capped in the start the race lite. <lb/>
Society is regulating matter fur <lb/>
itself much more than it <lb/>
once did. and while it is not to be <lb/>
Imped that drinking, or even KB- <lb/>
will soon cease, there is much <lb/>
reason the belief that both evils are <lb/>
undergoing the process abatement <lb/>
Statesville Land <lb/>
Here is a diamond there a Bluer o <lb/>
charcoal. y <lb/>
them stand the mightiest Io <lb/>
Nature. The food on your la and <lb/>
your own body ; the same, <lb/>
between the two stands the <lb/>
the arbiter of growth or declines <lb/>
life or death. <lb/>
We cannot make a diamond, we can- <lb/>
not make blood and none. No. <lb/>
But by means of the Shaker Digestive <lb/>
Cordial can enable the to <lb/>
digest food which would otherwise fer <lb/>
and poison the y-t m. In <lb/>
forms dyspepsia and eon- <lb/>
with weakness, of <lb/>
thin blood, nervous n the <lb/>
dial is the successful remedy. Taken <lb/>
with food it relieves at once. It <lb/>
and assist nature to nourish <lb/>
to show Its merit <lb/>
cents, <lb/>
is the best medicine for <lb/>
d-en Doctors recommend it in place <lb/>
of Castor Oil. <lb/>
Scold <lb/>
Never permit in <lb/>
IO give WU to lira very <lb/>
inclination to comp your goods to <lb/>
those of competitors. You may <lb/>
have a better stock, and your store <lb/>
and your business m may be <lb/>
better, but talk it in your ads. <lb/>
It looks us if you Hurl jealous, or were <lb/>
losing ground, 01- something that <lb/>
The best way is to go <lb/>
and tell all about a. <lb/>
if you weren't aware the fact <lb/>
was <lb/>
cure dyspepsia. <lb/>
its <lb/>
To the Editor have an absolute <lb/>
remedy for Consumption. By timely <lb/>
thousands of hopeless cases have been already <lb/>
permanently cured. So proof-positive am I <lb/>
of its power that I consider it my duty to <lb/>
two boll Us to those of your readers <lb/>
who have Bronchial or <lb/>
Lung Trouble, if they will write me their <lb/>
express and address. Sincerely, <lb/>
T. A. C Pearl St. Sew Tort. <lb/>
at <lb/>
The Business <lb/>
we are almost pleas- <lb/>
ed that Mr. Bryan was not elected <lb/>
President, for if he had bet n the <lb/>
imprecations would loud and <lb/>
prolonged that the financial em- <lb/>
and business fail- <lb/>
have taken place and <lb/>
that are likely to occur in the <lb/>
present and future would a I be <lb/>
attributed to his election. <lb/>
The New York says <lb/>
that south shows gratifying <lb/>
signs of business <lb/>
with sense enough in some <lb/>
to recognize that it the re- <lb/>
of Republican <lb/>
The Richmond Dispatch ex- <lb/>
There has some improve- <lb/>
in business in the south, but <lb/>
this is due to the election of <lb/>
Mr. but to a cessation <lb/>
of political excitement, and to the <lb/>
fact that the people have settled <lb/>
down to business. <lb/>
The industrial revival that was <lb/>
promised in the event Mr. <lb/>
bus not mate- <lb/>
yet. He has before him <lb/>
the greatest responsibility over <lb/>
undertaken by any of his <lb/>
lie has contracted with <lb/>
the American people to restore <lb/>
by a revival of <lb/>
and a of values. <lb/>
We wish the Republican <lb/>
abundant success in its <lb/>
undertaking. All patriotic <lb/>
citizens should pray and wort, for <lb/>
this consummation- We feel con- <lb/>
in he ability of the south to <lb/>
meet and surmount any <lb/>
that may confront her <lb/>
within the next four years. She <lb/>
looks to tin with courage <lb/>
and <lb/>
Under Times Not Necessary. <lb/>
At this season of the year, it <lb/>
to in order to do as lit- <lb/>
business as possible; and <lb/>
what is more to even look with <lb/>
suspicion upon the poison who <lb/>
talks business, if such <lb/>
anything that requires effort and <lb/>
push. <lb/>
The people of a town or city <lb/>
are themselves responsible <lb/>
dull times, for by their efforts <lb/>
trade come to them, and this <lb/>
age business does not come <lb/>
it is sought, industriously <lb/>
The merchant who finds his <lb/>
Sales falling off and does not <lb/>
look to it and find the remedy for <lb/>
it, will soon be at of his <lb/>
rope, and the capitalist who <lb/>
his loans a dull u- <lb/>
one that is not reaching out <lb/>
for business, is going to rind his <lb/>
investments grow poorer <lb/>
poorer each year. <lb/>
Dull times are as the of <lb/>
a suffer them t be- <lb/>
come so, and it is of vital <lb/>
for the preservation of <lb/>
commercial life of a <lb/>
that its citizens watch con- <lb/>
guard against any slug- <lb/>
which may en- <lb/>
its city. <lb/>
The interests of a city demand <lb/>
constant preset to th <lb/>
world. A town with industrial or <lb/>
commercial advantages will <lb/>
see these improved and develop- <lb/>
ed their benefit they <lb/>
are pushed and kept before those <lb/>
who can will assist in minting <lb/>
realities of what was simply poss- <lb/>
Globs Sights. <lb/>
It is a good thing not to live to <lb/>
too old. <lb/>
An man who earns <lb/>
a speaks of his in- <lb/>
stead of bis shirts. <lb/>
A woman does not consider a <lb/>
man a perfect gentleman unless <lb/>
he apologizes pretty of. n. <lb/>
It is surprising what a case <lb/>
can be made out by the gossips <lb/>
against the man who is not guilty. <lb/>
A woman who owns a horse <lb/>
and buggy is a great autocrat <lb/>
with other women and she knows <lb/>
it. <lb/>
, A boy who has time to mate <lb/>
calls week need <lb/>
not expect a job. No wants <lb/>
him. <lb/>
A man succeeds in go- <lb/>
Ma believe he ii impound <lb/>
upon when he cannot make him- <lb/>
self believe it- <lb/>
There is more satisfaction in <lb/>
loving work than a woman. <lb/>
There is one person in the <lb/>
world who is not afraid of a <lb/>
wife. <lb/>
Some people do not think a <lb/>
physician knows his business if <lb/>
his office does not have a <lb/>
smell <lb/>
An man says he has <lb/>
kissed a thousand girls not one <lb/>
of whom ever gave consent or <lb/>
got mad. <lb/>
There never was a blackguard <lb/>
who did not have a great deal to <lb/>
say about other people not being <lb/>
gentlemen. <lb/>
A man who has dissipated by <lb/>
overworking is as pitiful a wreck <lb/>
as a man who has dissipated <lb/>
drinking <lb/>
Globe. <lb/>
The less a talks about a <lb/>
grievance the greater chance that <lb/>
he has one. <lb/>
Lew Wallace's Suggestion. <lb/>
Even the freight department a <lb/>
railroad has its humorous incidents. <lb/>
The Chi-ago Times-Herald narrates <lb/>
When Gen. Lew Wallace was <lb/>
as territorial governor New Mex- <lb/>
a few years ago, he shipped home <lb/>
Indiana a of for his <lb/>
friends. The collection the most <lb/>
part of boxes of minerals, furs, <lb/>
Indian blankets and <lb/>
with them was included a <lb/>
Mexican or donkey intended <lb/>
a neighbor's child as a pet. <lb/>
When the ear reached its <lb/>
the freight in up <lb/>
contents cf I he ear <lb/>
the word and ii <lb/>
all. <lb/>
literate railroader to spell <lb/>
was to Ii d any pi.-e; <lb/>
t fit the bill lading. On the <lb/>
other hand, he found the car a long, <lb/>
eared donkey not included in the <lb/>
According to rust m, whenever <lb/>
are discovered, he <lb/>
telegraphed back to the shipping <lb/>
No. con. <lb/>
signed Wallace, arrived, minus one bu- <lb/>
plus one jackass, <lb/>
and <lb/>
General Wallace himself dictated the <lb/>
places with the <lb/>
GOOD STOCK AND POULTRY <lb/>
is <lb/>
pare especially for stock, as well as <lb/>
man, and for that purpose is sold in tin <lb/>
cans, holding one-halt pound <lb/>
cine id cents. <lb/>
Lambert. Franklin Co., Tenn., <lb/>
March <lb/>
Electric Bitters. <lb/>
Hitters is a Suited <lb/>
any season, but perhaps more gen- <lb/>
needed when the languid, ex- <lb/>
feeling prevails, liver <lb/>
is torpid and the need of a <lb/>
tonic and attentive is felt, ii prompt <lb/>
use of this has often averted <lb/>
long and bilious fevers <lb/>
No medicine will act more surely hi <lb/>
freeing the system <lb/>
from the poison, Headache. <lb/>
Indigestion. Dizziness <lb/>
yield Hitters. and <lb/>
per at John L. Drug <lb/>
It appears from the State <lb/>
Treasurers report that his <lb/>
mate of expenses for the next two <lb/>
years is 9825.860 a year, which is <lb/>
less the expenses for the <lb/>
two years past, that, owing <lb/>
to the depreciation in the value of <lb/>
taxable properly present tax <lb/>
rate will raise only <lb/>
No one need delude himself with <lb/>
idea that the expenses of the <lb/>
have Mod all kinds of but future will tie less those of <lb/>
I would nut one package of Black the past. the contrary they <lb/>
all the others I ever be This is the his- <lb/>
It is the horses or cattle t of all the pop- <lb/>
the spring of the year, and will cure , , , <lb/>
time. and enterprise of which <lb/>
. are m astute progression. So, <lb/>
I then, it may be accepted ad- <lb/>
as a fact the <lb/>
appropriations will be in- <lb/>
creased, and a another fact <lb/>
the tax rate will have to be <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
It. <lb/>
The Atlanta <lb/>
more music a <lb/>
little blown by a rosy- <lb/>
boy there is in a <lb/>
But yon <lb/>
look at it from the right <lb/>
point of and <lb/>
of view must be about seven <lb/>
miles from whore the <lb/>
boy in <lb/>
Di patch. <lb/>
Catarrh Cm Ct . -red <lb/>
with LOCAL, a <lb/>
hey cannot the the if is <lb/>
Cat n is a blood or <lb/>
disease, order to cure i <lb/>
you must take Internal remedies. Unit's <lb/>
Ca arm Cure is internally, and <lb/>
acts on the and <lb/>
Hall's Catarrh Cure is not ck <lb/>
ft Was prescribed by one of the <lb/>
best in this country <lb/>
year-, and is a It <lb/>
is of the best t known, <lb/>
With Hit bet Mood <lb/>
acting on the mucous <lb/>
The combination the two <lb/>
i is produces such won- <lb/>
results curing Catarrh, <lb/>
S. J. Toledo, <lb/>
sold by druggist <lb/>
The Georgia Nugget says <lb/>
the man in the world <lb/>
resides in He <lb/>
not only a <lb/>
teen cents tendered a bill for <lb/>
to his sister for a sack flour <lb/>
and lard used while <lb/>
and neighbors were sitting up <lb/>
with corpse of his father at <lb/>
house not long since, besides <lb/>
charging his twenty-five <lb/>
cents for what she alt visit- <lb/>
him on <lb/>
TASTELESS <lb/>
There are Missionary Hap <lb/>
this Slate, <lb/>
Primitive Tree Will <lb/>
Church of Christ <lb/>
Disciples, Seventh <lb/>
Baptist, Old Baptist, <lb/>
Episcopal South, <lb/>
dist Protestant, <lb/>
Associate <lb/>
Reformed Re- <lb/>
formed Church cf United States <lb/>
Evangelical Lutheran, Pro- <lb/>
Episcopal, Moravian, <lb/>
i Salvation Army, <lb/>
lb Adventist, <lb/>
lie is, i Jewish, and Roman <lb/>
Catholic. Total white <lb/>
preachers. supply <lb/>
u all . <lb/>
members- inure . <lb/>
of eleven <lb/>
who supply <lb/>
es with 296,779- Thus, of <lb/>
people in the State <lb/>
are church members- This is <lb/>
said to be a very large percent- <lb/>
age The Baptist Almanac as- <lb/>
sorts that North Carolina is the <lb/>
best evangelized tin <lb/>
world. <lb/>
TONIC <lb/>
AS GOOD FOR <lb/>
WARRANTED. PRICE etc. <lb/>
a, Nor. <lb/>
r Co. Mo. <lb/>
rear, <lb/>
TONIC <lb/>
prom In nil our r <lb/>
o In <lb/>
hat <lb/>
a loam truly, <lb/>
Wanted-An Idea <lb/>
thin, <lb/>
is a vigorous feeder and re- <lb/>
I well to liberal <lb/>
On corn lands the yield <lb/>
increases and the soil improves <lb/>
if properly treated 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/>
All rank as by SB, <lb/>
lb. bra. In United Slam Ii <lb/>
old book will <lb/>
IO my In W k. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
dent of the Oxford Orphan <lb/>
gives some interesting iv- <lb/>
it are <lb/>
children, of whom are girls. The <lb/>
this year is <lb/>
less of the asylum <lb/>
are about State <lb/>
gives and the Grand Lodge of <lb/>
Masons During the year <lb/>
there were eases measles aiming <lb/>
the pupils hut not a death resulted. <lb/>
wore only two deaths during the <lb/>
year. The industrial feature <lb/>
ii n is being well looked altar. <lb/>
die farm, shop, bin in <lb/>
factory and printing office. Five new <lb/>
buildings I been erected this <lb/>
year, J at a total COll <lb/>
with a complete sys- <lb/>
N. Duke, Durham, <lb/>
made the asylum s cash gift <lb/>
for buildings, and the Masons raised a <lb/>
amount. <lb/>
A Chicago man has been <lb/>
scratching around and discovered <lb/>
that there are differ- <lb/>
kind fleas. It might in- <lb/>
from this that that would <lb/>
be a good town to flee from in flea <lb/>
time.<lb/>
Hard <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LA W, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
In all t <lb/>
M X B. W. W F I<lb/>
Sh <lb/>
to A <lb/>
u. c. <lb/>
Too Big to Advertise. <lb/>
When a concern is in the heyday of <lb/>
its prosperity, when business is good <lb/>
is felt, it is no mi <lb/>
thing for the tining <lb/>
to be informed that concern is so <lb/>
well known and its business already so <lb/>
extensive that advertising in a u-eh-.-s <lb/>
expenditure of money. We <lb/>
known a number to argue in this <lb/>
In almost every instance where this <lb/>
has happened We have seen <lb/>
competitors, by judicious ii <lb/>
and push, them in the rare for <lb/>
business. Then thus concerns <lb/>
too well known Io advertise would <lb/>
awaken to the mid their ad- <lb/>
would again appear ; but <lb/>
while were sleeping wide. <lb/>
awake must <lb/>
hive mud inroads into s <lb/>
t bu n. r <lb/>
bk they hold. Let y <lb/>
in any line stop <lb/>
aid in what .-h rt E. Woodard. K. Harding, <lb/>
space f time a larger business will lie <lb/>
built up by who <lb/>
they sleep. Art you <lb/>
Wheel. <lb/>
How av, B. <lb/>
Snow Hill. N. M. C. <lb/>
GALLOWAY A TYSON, <lb/>
AT It K V -AT-1 -A W, <lb/>
in all the <lb/>
yO<lb/>
oil x <lb/>
S-N-V-d-I-U <lb/>
JUST RECEIVED <lb/>
------A fresh line of----- <lb/>
Lard, <lb/>
Meat, Coffee <lb/>
Meal, Sugar <lb/>
which am <lb/>
selling so low <lb/>
that it <lb/>
surprise. <lb/>
Come see me <lb/>
and I will <lb/>
treat yon fair <lb/>
and square. <lb/>
HUM B SCH <lb/>
Will open Cottage, <lb/>
Oct. 2nd a Homo School Oil <lb/>
row to years of age. <lb/>
bet limited to Address <lb/>
Sirs. AL. Whelan, <lb/>
Norwood P. O Nelson C <lb/>
Wilson, N. ;. Greenville, N. C <lb/>
WOOD A i Kin m;, j <lb/>
, S, , <lb/>
attention given to <lb/>
and of <lb/>
m.-de on short time. <lb/>
John W. H. Long, <lb/>
W N. C. Greenville, N. C, <lb/>
Attorneys and Counselors Law . <lb/>
in all the <lb/>
fa <lb/>
i Pt-J<lb/>
I . . . . i u <lb/>
from ;. <lb/>
I Scud model, drawing or <lb/>
lion. of n t. <lb/>
Our -1 i S <lb/>
of in the L. b. and <lb/>
free. <lb/>
d. C.<lb/>
SMITH EDWARD. Props. <lb/>
At the late store <lb/>
Court <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Administrators Notice <lb/>
Having this day E <lb/>
A. Clerk of Superior court of <lb/>
PHI as administrator -f cs- <lb/>
state of Christ -eased. <lb/>
notice is to the c-. <lb/>
s estate to their claims <lb/>
duly to me for pay me t <lb/>
on or before tin- day December, <lb/>
notice will be plead in bar <lb/>
their All per ons indented <lb/>
o at ate make <lb/>
payment and thus -ave <lb/>
expenses. <lb/>
This tin nth day of <lb/>
J. II. <lb/>
of Christie T. <lb/>
Sale of Real Estate. <lb/>
and of decree of tho <lb/>
for the Ea- <lb/>
of North <lb/>
entered in ca-c of the Marine <lb/>
Bank of Norfolk. against <lb/>
I will noon on Fri- <lb/>
day, January Bl the Court House <lb/>
door in Pitt county, <lb/>
expose to public sale <lb/>
tract of la in av-r <lb/>
townships emit lining four hundred <lb/>
seres- more or less, the lands <lb/>
Alfred Forbes, V. T. Cannon, <lb/>
heirs and others situated on <lb/>
sides the road from <lb/>
lards Cross Boa to Adam's bridge, <lb/>
and known as the May place. <lb/>
II <lb/>
Terms cash, Dec. <lb/>
The XI of the I ill <lb/>
open en <lb/>
SEPT. Mi <lb/>
and i ll-. <lb/>
be terms a e a- loin s.<lb/>
-ft I <lb/>
Higher . MOO <lb/>
Languages <lb/>
The work and discipline <lb/>
will be as heretofore. <lb/>
We ask a of your past <lb/>
liberal patronage. <lb/>
v . II. <lb/>
and in <lb/>
of <lb/>
NEW <lb/>
AH kinds of done <lb/>
V labor Bud <lb/>
u and prepared to give <lb/>
you <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N- C <lb/>
IN--------- <lb/>
MARBLE <lb/>
Wire and Iron Fencing <lb/>
sold. work <lb/>
prices reasonable. <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE. <lb/>
---------IS STILL AT THE FRONT WITH A LINE---------<lb/>
YEARS EXPERIENCE has taught me that the best Is tit e cheap <lb/>
Hemp Rope, Building Pumps, Farming Implements, and every <lb/>
ting necessary Millers, and general house purposes, as well a <lb/>
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Dress I have always on hand. Am Mad <lb/>
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and jobbing agent for Clark's O. N. T. <lb/>
Cotton, and keep courteous and <lb/>
ALFRED <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C- <lb/>
C. C. COBB, Pitt Co. V C. <lb/>
Pills <lb/>
Cure All <lb/>
Liver Ills. <lb/>
Doctors Say; <lb/>
Bilious and Intermittent Fevers <lb/>
which prevail in dis- <lb/>
are invariably <lb/>
by derangements of the <lb/>
Stomach Liver and Bowels. <lb/>
The Secret of Health. <lb/>
The liver is the great <lb/>
in the mechanism of <lb/>
man, and when it is out of order, <lb/>
the whole system becomes de- <lb/>
ranged and disease is the result. <lb/>
Liver Pills <lb/>
Cure all Liver Troubles. <lb/>
Old Dominion Line, <lb/>
SERVICE <lb/>
Steamers leave Washington for Ore <lb/>
and Tarboro touching at all <lb/>
bigs on Far Rivet Monday, <lb/>
and Friday at A. M. <lb/>
leave Tarboro at S A. M. <lb/>
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturday <lb/>
Greenville A. M. same days. <lb/>
These are subject to stage <lb/>
of on Tar River. <lb/>
Connecting at Washington with <lb/>
fr Norfolk, Baltimore, <lb/>
Philadelphia. Hew York Bo-ton. <lb/>
Shippers -old their goods <lb/>
via Dominion <lb/>
York <lb/>
Nor <lb/>
Baltimore Steamboat <lb/>
from Miner <lb/>
JNO. Agent, <lb/>
J. Agent, <lb/>
V. <lb/>
His Worst Enemy Defeated by <lb/>
P. P. P., <lb/>
Great Remedy. <lb/>
ME <lb/>
HARDLY BREATHS AT <lb/>
FOR years. <lb/>
A. M. of <lb/>
s sufferer Catarrh worst <lb/>
Trail, bin of <lb/>
of f <lb/>
lie to H wit <lb/>
that another loan, Witt <lb/>
fill asS n Io was <lb/>
lie eon Id steep on <lb/>
aide for two year. P. P. <lb/>
him Id <lb/>
to <lb/>
f th f;<lb/>
it to <lb/>
T. J. Co <lb/>
COBB BROS CO. <lb/>
Stock, Cotton, Grain and Provision Brokers. <lb/>
II ill an I Water Street. <lb/>
Bagging, Ties and Peanut Sacks at Lowest Prices. <lb/>
and Consignments Solicit <lb/>
All editions Codes used in ten <lb/>
life, Fire <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
AT COURT HOUSE. <lb/>
All placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-C ASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowers current <lb/>
I AM FIRE PROOF <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
By virtue of the power vested in Be <lb/>
as Commissioner by a decree of Pitt <lb/>
Superior Court made at Match <lb/>
case of M. Stokes <lb/>
again-t W. G. -tokes. J. L. Perkins <lb/>
and J. P. W. L. Elliott <lb/>
John nailing as <lb/>
Brothers. I shall offer for at the <lb/>
Co door Greenville, to Hie <lb/>
highest bidder on Tuesday the 6th day <lb/>
of a tract of land <lb/>
In a deed ill trust If. O <lb/>
Stokes mid wife to John Nicholson, <lb/>
KI <lb/>
the II I <lb/>
page in the <lb/>
an in the <lb/>
in the i ed as follows. <lb/>
the hunts Alfred <lb/>
on the south, lands J. B. <lb/>
pa rick i u the nest, Ian s of Cal- <lb/>
the north, and lands <lb/>
K. u on the . a.-t eon- <lb/>
acres in r or Less <lb/>
seres Of said and <lb/>
G. a tokes and wife to Isabella stokes <lb/>
by deed d January 1802, <lb/>
recorded in Book . ii page MM and re. <lb/>
leased the operation of He afore- <lb/>
aid deed in trust by John <lb/>
I run tee. deed release from him to <lb/>
Stokes d the 12th. <lb/>
i recorded in Book SUB, <lb/>
rm <lb/>
Wm. II. <lb/>
Runs. us. <lb/>
I four <lb/>
of P. P. P. I was from rS <lb/>
of my head to of Tour <lb/>
P. P. P. baa coed ray of <lb/>
T t <lb/>
me of all <lb/>
win closed for tea years, but saw I <lb/>
tan a <lb/>
I hare not aide for two <lb/>
Io I to night <lb/>
Now I soundly la any all <lb/>
am SO old, bat <lb/>
be aids to take hold <lb/>
I feel that I <lb/>
P. P. P., I bear . <lb/>
my and the <lb/>
Yours <lb/>
A M. <lb/>
or of <lb/>
on thin day. <lb/>
A. M. who. Mr <lb/>
my on <lb/>
made by him rs <lb/>
of P. P, P. l tn <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
to . . ma this. <lb/>
ISM. <lb/>
J. M. N. P. <lb/>
Catarrh Cured by P. P. P. <lb/>
where all other <lb/>
t failed.<lb/>
and feet. Us are <lb/>
but speedy relief and a <lb/>
la the nae of P. V P. <lb/>
otherwise, be run-d a- <lb/>
op P. P. P. A <lb/>
a woman. <lb/>
Pimples. <lb/>
sf akin n d <lb/>
by P. P. P. <lb/>
P. P. P. will yam- <lb/>
and fa <lb/>
say. P P. P. th u <lb/>
In <lb/>
For Blotches and <lb/>
take P. P. P. <lb/>
for <lb/>
take P. P. P. <lb/>
Remedy, and <lb/>
SOLO ALL <lb/>
BROTHERS, <lb/>
NU <lb/>
Black. .-t. at. <lb/>
For silo by J. n. <lb/>
THE MORNING <lb/>
lie st i, <lb/>
in <lb/>
Carolina. <lb/>
The FIve-D Daily of <lb/>
Its lo the Stats. <lb/>
Favors Coinage <lb/>
Silver and repeal <lb/>
of the Ten Per Oral. Tax on <lb/>
State Hanks. Daily SO cents <lb/>
per month. I pet <lb/>
year <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
at <lb/>
curb <lb/>
cure had <lb/>
gives relief. <lb/>
ears<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00019131_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
ISSUE <lb/>
MISSING <lb/>
.- <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>