Vol. 2. vO ‘GREENVILLE, N. RE C., AUGUST 8, 1895. Local Trains and Boat Schedule. Passenger, and mail north, arrives 8:22 A. M. arrives 6:37 P. M. North Bound Freight, arrives 9:50 A M, leaves 10:10 A. M. South Bound prelght, arrives 2:00 P, M., leaves 2:15 P. M Steamer .Myers arrives from Wash ington Monday, Wednesday and Friday leaves for Washington Tuesday, Thure day and Saturday. Weather Bulletin, Sanday : fair, followed by show- ers in afternoon. train; going Going South, STATE NEWS. italian Record of Matters of General] Interest There are eleven prisoners in Madison county jail to be tried for murder. October 7th has been set apart as North Carolina dav atthe At-— lanta Cotton States and Interna- tional Exposition. A big fire started in the Reams warehouse at Durham, Thursday morning, end destroyed buildivgs and stock to the value of $100,- 000 before it could be checked. It ie said that Charlotte has a city ordinance requiring . people who have beby carriages on the streets to go siagie file, prohibit- ing murses from forming in bat- talion or by plateon auc reckless- | ly. charging dows the streets forc- ing pedestriuns from the side— walks. Mr. Jacob Klutz, of Locke town ship, iost a very fine mule Mon- day under peculiar circumstances. He rode it to a neighbor’s house and hitched it near a Les hive. The hive was turned over and the bees stung the mule so bad that it died —Salisbury Zerald. While a newspaper -may print) column. after column’ eulogis- tic of ite own tewn, its very brightest sayings will be received with a grain of doubt if ite adver- tising columns do not bear the impression of true enterprise.— Albion, (Neb.) Caliope. GENERAL NEWS. A Prince Edward Island 84-year old tailor has become the father of five girls all at once. Three hundred skeletons have been found in a cave near White River, Ariz. Ninety thousand farmers in the Dakotas and Minnesota are said to have combined to force up the price of wheat. Church Services. Methodist church.-—Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Preaching at1l1 A. M. and 8:15 P.M. by Rey. G. F. Smith. Episcopal church.—Sunday School 9:30 A. M. Baptist church._Sunday School at 9:30 A- M. Preaching at 11 A. M. and 8:15 P. M- by Rey.C.M. Billings. Presbyterian.—Sunday School —_— 9:30 A. M. Guess Again, In answer to our puzzle about a plow being operated without the services of either man or horse, the Henderson Gold Leaf says: “Guess it must have been a wo- man plowing amule. Or was it a dude plowing a donkey? But come tojthink about it the dude might answer for both, except a dude isn’t good for anything and so does not piow.” That don’t fill the bill exactly, Thad. Pushing Forward. We spent a few minotes at the Greenville Lumber OCo’s plant Friday afternoon, and were sur-~ prised at the changes going on out there. The additions to the storage and planing buildings are completed, the new building for the eleyated saws is almost ready for the machinery to be put in, and the improved brick and steel dry kilus are well under way. The mill and surroundings prosperity. present a busy scene and we are jglad to see much evidences of ANNUAL CLEARING SALE FRANK WILSON'S Commencing , NENESIY Ng TARY ws wWLY My loss, Your Gain seston A. &M.> - Conlege Examination. Prof. Ww. H. Ragsdale, County Examiner, held the examination to-day for the appointment of a‘ county student to the A. & M. College. Messrs. J. M. Moore and J. K. Stokes were the contestants. The questions for the examina- tion were furnished by the faculty of the College and the papers will be forwarded to President Hola- day for examination and decision as to who is the saccesafal con-— testant. Encourage the Editor. _ The editor can always write more cheerfully of the business interests of a town when.-his_ col- umns are liberally filled with the advertisements of the business houses- No editor can advocate the doctrine of buying from home merchants unless the home mer- in catering to the home trade by advertising in the columns of the local newspaper. It 1s depressing to the editor to) Ee find business men patronizing ev- ery advertising fake that comes along, and at the same time the names of those business men_ are} rarely, if ever, seen in the adver- tising columns ofthe local news- .—Salisbury Herald. paper chants show they are interested. For that dall, tirei feefir about trade try a few doses of a vertising. Greenville Market. Corrected by 8S. M. echults.. Butter. per Ib 17 te Sugar cured: Ham batt: cu ams dle Corn 40 ti Dore Meal 50. t sabbage ‘ Flour, Family 5.25 tod Lard 6 ti Oats ae suger 4+ Coffee 16 t | Salt per Sack 80 to Chickens 1 20t Eggs per dog vay Beeswax, per lb : Kerosene, 133 t Pease,per bu ee Hulls, per ton a Cotion Seed Meal = wa Hides ot Cotton and Peanuts, . Below are Norfolk {prices of cot and peanuts for yesterday, as furnisl by Cobb Bros. & .Co., Comiatssion: ™ chants of Harte 3 ae ie yee ee ae, ae See = D. J. WHESMARD. Wetter. — , 25 Cants per Month. LEARN TO RUN. : EVERY AFTERNOONS (EXCEPT SUNDAY) Dee't Go Fist-Focted—TheOld Injunction Helplessness of Men in Court. me mens Seneve’~4. Gunso ! ~_— : ime cn Referring recent Massey- | : Pilot libel Saale Norfolk, e Rusning ts odeol the beat of exer- _ Landmark of that city says that cises for the whole body, It rounds accounts of outa hollow chest, drives the oxy- the wwosee amsination of Rey. gen into the farthest gir-celis of the John E- Massey by Capt. Jobo S lungs, wonderfully increases Wise, and Capt. Wise's speech, capecity and develops the leg, thigh, must haye been struck by the stemach end waist museles. But it very extraordinary license wich took. It continues: “i Lose who heard the examination and > wuamieg aod bicyding have to be learned, and there are two things . the more than those who which must be kept in mimd by the Dp, Were impress d by learner. The first is—whetber in ity eed ebeolate dis- sprinting, distance or cross-country of the delicacies of eqert decoram. We thougi.t rice togethers bo Jigit tle whice a may aseuwe of su-~iu- ocutraging # witness or prin rupning—to run entirely on the ball of the foot, or, as they say on the track: “Get upon your toes!” By s'riLing on the ball of the foot, runoer takes a longer stride, and the spring that be gets enables him to lift bis foot more rapidly and repeat when under the protection the stride more quickly than the runner who goes flat-footed. As ” It is very rare indeed, (Adis cach Da |W often aod jength and rapidity of stride are ‘af be pepe wie reee ®P-' what give speed in running, it fol- paeting to court for sbanget lows that a flat-footed runner can B against the mercilessaess Of |. be a fast one. Another reason anon Pens faxheet revels Over against pounding away flat-footed a ae the rules iD are _is that the delicate mechanism of the iewould sesur that the litle nt or} See tees ayy S.-i ean lonme witnses hea vo hope exesps ia the! The second poist for a runner to Spee ias at Abd She ore | orierve is fis inethod of breathing. will not perm a Breathe throagh both the nose and feir~mioded wan take vao- ) 80 entiher | mouth. Nearly every boy when he mer og yh cipcamsteaced jbst he “tt Hegins te run has the insane cannot speak for himself, to sag ‘eA that all the breathing must be 2 hye hi@ things whieb the facts 400¢ through the nose. Therp was . pet werreast aud which offead "*Ye" S greater mistake. When @ i eG: CR Re = the decoram of couits sud the OY runs His beart beats much faster Propristxs of |. f-.—Chailotie Of teen it does ordinarily, and pumps server. (OMb- just so much more bleod All this must be sersted or purified by air from the lungs. The that one feels when beginning to run | is due to the lungs demanding more " besbeud with beg most of /,. the extra quantity of blood | Shetweawsy from home, 80g which the heart is sending out. Ee epelecuex | the ars Hew | Nature bas looked out for this and 5 Sher th ties paar roe be Provided s way b which air can be F ihe can't do th eS -* to Ureished to the lungs very rapidly. — ee Th It is very simple way, and consists e wife was for trial. ——_ Eee The new womsn bas appeared & Mew York court, charged by —oig es is os i q of merely. opening the mouth Breathe, then, through the pose ja ordinary life as mach 9s possible, bet when you are rugning or exer- | ¢sioe violently open the mouth aod take in air im deep rapid breaths, pot guiping it im through the mouth slone, bat letting the mouth and Miemeceneseeien Hon. Jobe 8 Hendersc» says poopie of Nerth Carohua are Wie ere strewtonu to the es ‘to of cumen wills thas 'y are to police. Theat is what: | e0se have each their share. . Take as longa stride oa possible, but without overbalanciag the bods. : the Bend the body pipette t the + Trans § Jearped, joss a3 skating, | which is @ natural springboard, the oppression | tired d, being stiff; let itswing as easily and lithel y. POSYs’ Io Bprinting the stride o rterand more rapid than in tong-distance running, and a sprinter usually runs with body thrown further back, in quite differ- ent form from the long, easy lope of the distance runner.—S. Scoyille, Jr.. in St. Nicholas. FIRST FLAG INTO RICHMOND. Massachusetts Cavalry Carried It Upon the Confederate Evacuation. | Charies Wheaton, retired captain United States army, referring to a ‘flaw which was Jeated in Detroit on last Memorial day by Capt. Foster, says there is an error in crediting Capt. Foster’s flag with being the \first American flag earried into flag was floating from the steamer Commodore Perry, as she led the advance of the fleet up the James river and into Richmond on April 9, 1865. Gapt. Wheaton says the con- federates evacuated Richmoed on the night of April 2, 1865, and that about half-past seven on the morn- ing of the 84 a part of the Army of the James, commanded by Maj. Gen. G. Weitzel, entered and occu- pied Richmond, carrying American flags. This was nearly a week before }Capt. Foster reached there on the Commodore Perry. According to |Capt. Wheaton, the first American flag entering Richmond was the colors of a squadron of the »First Massachusetts cavalry. commanded by Sfaj. Atherton H. Stevens, pro- weet marshal. AROUND THE WORLD. | How a California Couple May Win a Tidy Sum. | W. T. Wilfiams, Ir., and his bride have left their Los Angefes home on & eovel trip around the world. They without luggage or money or left |food, with nothing but the clothes (on their backs and a few things in their pockets. Mr. Williams is # son of District Attorney W. T. Williams. tite tis father, be is a big, stalwart mun. capable of withstanding all égorts of hard- ships. Some three days before his wedding he surprised his friends hy announcing his intention of getting married and then turned up with a lovely bride and spent bis honey- mooe 8t the Russ house. The story }BQwW goes thet be made a wager of five d<¢ rs witb his uncle that his wife had courage enough to eres undertake a journey about the world without either of them baving any @eney or luggage. — 4a The condition was imposed that Bot re than two years should be occu in the trip, and that the Richmond. Cept, Foster said the) cent