Daily Reflector, January 9, 1895


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]







Vol. 1.

Greenville, N. C., January 9, 1895. :

Local Trains and Boat Schedule.

Passenger and mail train goin
North, arrives 8:22 A.M. Going South,
arriyes 6:37 P. M. }

North Bound Freight, arrives 9:45 A.
M., leaves 10:15 A. M.

oSouth Bound Freight, arrives 1:51 P.
M., leaves 2:11 P. M. |

Steamer Myers arrives from Wash
ington Monday, Wednesday and Friday
leayes for Washington Tuesday, Thurs
day and Saturdav.. . .

ee

Weather Bulictin.
Thursday rain.

teres

Superior Court,

The criminal docket was taken
up Tuesday morning and the fol:

lowing cases disposed of up to
noon to-day : ,
James Foreman, carrying con-

cealed weapons, plea guilty,
" $10 au costs.

enry Harrington, carrying con-
cealed weapons, pleads guilty,
fined one penny and costs.

Abram Barrett, affray, pleads
guilty, 10 days io jail to be releas-

on payment of costs.

Sidney Hester, Tom Hester and
Anderson Hester, assault with
deadly weapon, guilty, each 30
days in jail and costs, with leave
to commissioners to hire out.

Reuben May, Wm. Williams,
John Williams and Joshua Wil-
liams, affray, plead guilty.. Reu.
ben May and John Williams each
$10. and costs, the others $5 each
and costs. |

Joseph Cox, affray, not guilty.

G. A. Vick, carrying concealed
weapons, pleads guilty, judgment
a on payment of costs.

- A. Vick and J. ©. Weathing-
ton, affray, plead guilty, judg-
ment suspended on payment of

G. A. Vick. sci fa, dismissed on
payment of coats.

Sampson Harris, carrying con-

-cealed weapons guilty.

Walter White, assault with

deadly weapon, guilty. | boda

THE LEGISLATURE.

&|}BOTHHOUSES DULY ORGANIZED

Walser Made Speaker of the House.

(Special to the Reflector.)
Rarricu, N.C, January 9th.

at noon, all members present.
Those of the House were sworn
in by Judge Walter Clark. No-
tices of several contests were giv-
en. .Only four colored members.
Attendance of spectators very

large. :
Lusk, of Buncombe, nominated
Z. WV. Walser, Republican, of

Davidson, for Speaker and Peeb-
les, of Northampton nominated
J. F. Ray, Democrat, of Macon.
Vote" Walser 72, Ray 43.- Wal-
ser voted for Lusk.
L. P. Satterfield, of Perscn,
elected Principal Clerk: J. M.
Brown voted tor by Democrats.
John W- Chapin elected Reading
Clerk ; Democrats voting for H.
A. Latham.

Lt. Gov. Doughton called Sen-
ate.to order. Chief Clerk"W. G
Burkhead and H. E. King nomi-
nated, King elected.
Clerk"Spencer Blackburn and
Wiley Rush nominated. Biack-
burn elected. Door Keeper"T.
N. Halliburton and W. V. Clifton
nominated, Hallivurton elected.
Asst. Door Keeper"Hon. Mr.
Babb elected. Engrossing Clerk
"Wallace and Blair nominated,
Wallace elected.

Message was sent to House
notifying that body thke- Senate
was duly organized and a com-
mittee appointed to wait on the
Governor and inform him the
Senate had organized and ready
to receive any communication
from him. " ,

T.

-- Solicitor Shaw is an able pros
ecutor, and considering that he
came here and took hold of a
docket with which he was entirely
unfamiliar his success so far is

Sicily continues to be troubled

: * 7
gee aes
# ge Se ee

remarkable. He and Judge Co-
ble are both making a splendid
im ptiession-

Both houses of Legislautre met|�"�

Reading}

Remarkable

[] Cutin Ff
Clothing. |

((o))
Must reduce.
[] Stock for [].
Spring Goods. "
((O)) |
Goods,
[] Notions, [|] -
: Shoes, Hats.
((o))
Reduced oe
[] Along with []"
The above.
((0)) |

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RANK WILSON... 4





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DAILY REFLECTOR.)

John Wanamaker has pent
oyer half a million dollars in ad-

D. J. WHICHARD. Editor. ~ | vertising and stijl keeps it up,

Subscription 25 cents per Month.

Entered us second-class mail matter.

oma
=

The Legislature meets to day.
Many predict that it is to be a
truly radical body, otherssay that
it will be conservative. The next
sixty days wil verify one of these
predictions. Thetone cf thefirst
issue of tne Da?! Cansasian would
indicate that it is to be any thing
but a conservative body. It does
not believe in going slow. We
shail see what we shall see.

In the absence of Vice"Presi-
dent Stevenson and Senator Har-.
ris, who was speaker pro tem
of the Senate, Senator Ransom
has been elected Speaker pro tem
of the United States Senate.
This is an hosor worthily be"
stowed. Senator Ransom has been
in public service for a long time,
and richly deserves any honor
that can be conferred upon him.

Last year John Eckman. of
Lawrence County, Pa., killed a
couple of skunks and sold their
hides for $2 each: He concluded
that at that rate it wonld be a
profitable business, says an ex-
change, to raise the animals for
their hides- He built an enclos-
ure of some two acres, arranging
it so that the animals could not
burrow under the walls, and tiap-
ped some thirty skunks to stock
it. He now has 330, and expects
next year to haye 3,000. The
skunk breeds twice in the year
and produces seven to nine at aT
litter, so the rate of increase: is
kept down by a habit the animals
have of killing the first litter
when the second one is born. Mr.
Eckman feeds the animals with
offal from the slaughter house,
refuse meat and milk. He says
that his pets are very tame and
inoffensive, and never emit their
characteristic. odor save when
fightine. He thinks that his
skonk farm will soon make him

independently rich.

advertising in papers in all sec

known than bis. Mr. Wanamaker
is the man who recently refused a
$50,000 presidency -of a railroad
because he didnTt have time to
spare from his business. The
merchant who canTt see the moral
in this should immediately invest
in some double barrel specks.

Oat of 731 blind children, who
are said by the census reports to
be in this State, the authoriiies
were able to get the names cf
Ouly 125. and of these only 49
could be induced to enter the in-
stitution at Raleigh. Tbe igao
rance cf their parents and gvuar-
dians is the cause of their not
availing themselves of the great
opportunity.

This thing of a man taking
oath when he wishes to sign an
~official bond that he is worth so
and so aboye his liabilities snd
exemptions by law, when bis
oath he hus taken before the
tax hster shows to the, contrary,

somewhat dangerous proceding.

The
claims
championship of the State on big
hogs. The porker which it thinks
wins the prize weighed 907
pounds gross, 830 pounds net, and
produced 204 pounds of lard.
That is a big hog, sure.

Henderson

It isnTt easy to shake off . habits
contracted. There is an old lady
in Eastport, Maine, who years

ing crazy quilts, and it still clings

to her at the age ot 83. She has

aa nine in the past year and a
fe. ,

The report of Postmaster Gene-
ral Bissell. giving the operations
of the Postoffice Department of
the United States for the fiscal
year ending June 30th, 1894,

been received.

_ Governor Fishback, of Arkan-

States Senate, to succeed Mr.
Berry- | me?

is rather in consistent and a

Gold Leaf
for Vance county -the

ago contracted the habit of mak~

! Fancy

sas, 1s a candidate for the United

~There are thirteen papers in
this country over 100 wee rs old.

ight of them are in New Eng-
land. four of them in New Jersey

=

tions of the country, although no|jand one in Georgia, the Augusta
jhouse in the country -is petter

Chronicle, which is the siath- old

jest in the United States. ,

The New Jersey court of errors
and appeals has-decided that the
heirs 4 parevten killed by a mail
pcuch thrown out a passing train
could not recoyer damages from
the railway company. They
must leok to Uncle Sam-

According to astatisties four
out of five suicides are men, from
which it may be inferred that wo-
men do not follow the men so
much as some people say they do.

A German philosopher says :
oT know of but two lovely things
im the universe"the. starry sky
above our heads and the sense of
duty within our hearts.� :

No town can prosper unless its
citizens endorse and work for en-
terprises that give employnent to
home labor and develop home re-
sources.

oHettyT Green, the wealthiest

eollection of diamonds in the
country but never a gem does she
wear. ree

It is proposed to construct an
underzround railway in New
York city which will cost %66,-

Cotton ana Peanuts,

Below are Norfolk prices of cotton
and peanuts for yesterday, as furnished
by Cobb Bros. & Co., Coninission Mer-
chants o! Norfolk :

~ OOTTON.

Good Middling 5 9-16

~Middlivg 54

Low Miudling 4 181%6

Gord Ordinary 43

Tone"steady.
PEANUTS,

Prime 12.

has|Extra Prime 2k

: Tone"Dull, a

Egys" steady at ISto 19 ets. * oe hs

b. E. Peas"best, 1.75 to 2.00 per bag.
. as damaged. 1.00 to 1.76.

B ack and Clay, 60 to-75 per bushel.

woman in America, bas the finest |

24.

pees ay ; ; ais f
ER SO a EY 2 PEE TR OER + cde Poa: aE +







VISE. TEXA -lemember:
Ons Haws a Capi Guide Low Poe to get the very best.
A stranger from Texas - sauntered |. | and freshest
into: the capitol a fell into, the].

hands of a guide who offered to
show him the. sights, of the building,
says the Washington Post. ~
~Good enough,�. quoth the Texan.
~o~Before.we begin, olet's takeadrink.�.
Being of an accommodating na-
ture, the guide consented, and the
two quaffed a couple of quaffs right
gayly. The guideTs eyes bulged
when the Texan drew from. his pock-

et B big: fistful of bills: in paying

for the. liquor, and he seénted a
handsome fee. He led the Texan all
over the building from the erypt to
the dome, and into both houses. . He
pointed out all the celebrities, and
then, by. way of a wind up, took his
victim to statuary hall and placed
him on one of the whispering stones.

oStay there,� the guide said,
otill you hear me speak.� "

Then the guide disappeared in the
crowd to the other stone. A lady
was standing on it, and the guide
waited a moment for her to leave.
The Texan, who was getting uneasy,
looked round, and) 1tiotT seeing ~the}
guide, set to thinking. Just then he
saw a young girl look at him and
smile, and later two boys did the

samy, fr drres ge

petently: le aa ae

liceman:
~T may be from Tésas, and some
green about city ways; but I reckon

I'm a-leetle too wise to be caught |

holding-the snipe bag again.�
And then he and the guide's fat
fee vanished together.

-. WILEY BROWN'S.-.|

o""is the place. for"

CHEAP SHOES i

: 2445 ; wit
ina ~= 4 Peg
15 cent iB
= * 2 E ake A oa ae
a cath Pere 2

"and also have acompiete } lineo of

t suddenly brok :

3 ; ~ * Practices in all the Courts,

nd start ~big door, 5. L. FLEMING,
he mattered ~in the hearing of a. po-{e

Family GROCERIES
and Confections
: isat :

D. g SMI T H g.
Prices always low.
S. E. PENDER & CO.

- ~'TINNERS |
And Stove Dealers.

Repairing promptly attended to
| "DEALERS IN"

?

Lamp Goods, Bicycles, &c.

Agent for Rambler and_ Creséent
Bicycles. "

~Professional Cards.
D* D. Le JAMES,

DEN TIST,
w« H. LONG,

GREENVILLE, N, C.
ATTOR N EY-AT-LAW, T
GREENVILLE, N.

eta

C.

~ ATTORN EY -AT-LAW
* ~ Greenvil.e, N.C.
Prompt attention to business. Office)
at Tucker & MurvhyTs old stand.

THOS. J. JARVIS,
jarvis & BLOW, .

ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
GREEN VILLE, N.C.
= Practice i in, all the Conrts.

ALEX. L. BLOW

LiC.LATHAM� .
ATHAM & SKINNER,

_ AtTrounrys-at-LA¥,
GREENVILLE. N.C.

ae | oBarbers.

Mi ESA. MiTH et
ay otk. ARTIST.

D NDS, _ ?
a TEOMUNI BARBER,

rt wu nder ~Operk Hvuuse..

=the :- ~Place

PAINS, OLS, GLASS AND PUTTY

HARRY SKIPNER}

+to rane e sell at a close margiv.

The Place to Sell your
TOBACCO! |
THE

EASTERN
TOBACCO
WAREHOUSE,

O. L. JOYNER, Prop.,

Greenville, N. C.

ESTABLISHED 1875.

S.N7- Schultz

AT THE

OLD BRICK STORE

ARMERS AND MEKUHANTSBLY
ing their yearTs supplies will find -
their interest toget our prices before pu,
chasing elsewhere. Ourstockis complete

n allits branches.

PORK SIDES&SHOTILDERS, -

FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
RICE, TEA, &c.
alwuys at LOWEST MARKET PRICES.
TOBACEO SNUFF & CIGARS
we buy direct. from Manufacture?s,*

bling youto buy at one searT
plete stock. of

FURNITURE

always on hand and seld at prices tosni

ena

ithe times. Our goods-are all bought and

3011 for CASH. therefore, having no Tisk :

=
uM. SCHULT2:

| Greenville. N. co ee :







a

len

PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY.

Faces Caughtas They Passed Before
the Reflector.

Mrs. Annie Burch has moved: to
Mrs. HorneTs. :

Agent J. R. Moore wént to Elm
City to-day on business.

Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Quinerly re-
turned to Grifton last night-

Mrs. Dr. H. Johnson and child,
of Grifton, spent yesterday here
with relatives.

Mr. B. R- King and family left
this morning for Goidsboro, their
future home.

Mr. J. BH. Blount, of Hertford,
ex-Solicitor of the Firss District,
is attending court here

Revs. G- A. Oglesby and L. H.
Joyner left for Bethel and Rocky
Mount this morning.

Miss Cornelia Manning, of
Bethel, was visiting Miss Carrie
Coovb and left for home to day.

' Mrs. William Hellen and Miss
Ida Dawson. of Grifton, spent
yesterday here and returned on
the evening train.

Mr. W. R. Hyman, of Luling.
Texas, spent yesterday here with
his brother, r. R. Hymae, and
left this murnoing to visit relatives
at Pal myra. .

Sheeting But no Damage.

A few days ago @ negro who
works for Mr. W. B. Ricks,
about 9 miles from town, became
so insolent that Mr. Ricks order-"
ed him to leave the place. While
they were talking he made a
motion like he was going to
drawa pistol when Mr. Ricks
ocaught him and threw him down.
The negro begged to be allowed
to get up, dsclaring that he did
uot have a weapon. Mr. Ricks
got up and was walking off

, towards the house when the ne-

gro fired three shots at him, but
ortunately did aot strike | him
with either shot. Mr. Ricks
went on to the houseand armed
himself but was prevented by
his a from going back out
where the negro was. Mr. Ricks
fired one shot at the negro from
" porch but was too far to hit
him.

Se

« - = a
~ ~ St =
0. 22 ee 7

LITTLE BITS:

Local News Boiled Down
for Busy Folks.

Cream, of

Rainy and disagreeable to-day.
Prayer meeting in the Metho-
dist church to-night.

For Seed, Second Crop Bliss
Triumph $3.50 per bbl., for ten,
days only, at the Oid Brick Store.
Avother large crowd was pres-
ent at the Chick concert in the
Opera House last night and en-
joyed it immenselr. The trapeze
performanceby the ladies was fine-
The north bound :
train run over and killed a color-
ed man five miles south of Wel-
don Tuesday afternoon. The
man wasdrusk and got on the
track.

The train is certainly a gr
convenience to the people living
down the road, especially such
weather as this, and saves many
of them taking a di le
driye coming to court. umbers
of them come up cn the train
every morning andreturn home
in the evening.

- _HeTs a Prophet.

This cold wave today reminds
us of something we heard County
Treasurer John
Monday. A _ gentleman Was
speaking about the weather turn-
ing warm and said he was

to see it, as he had planned to kill

remarked : oNever mind that.
it will be plenty cold to kill hogs
Wednesday.� And he struck it
right.

The Greenyille Dany REF iEc-
TOR comes to ue regularly. Itis
a hustling littl paper-"Wash-
ington Progress.

25, 25, 25, 25, 25, 25,
Per Cent.
Off Regular Prices

Gors Oays aly atip
HIGGS BROS.,|

LEADERS OF LOW PRICES,

@QREENVILLE, N. C.

Fianagan say):

hogs Wednesday. Mr. Flanagan |.

|J. B. CHERRY & CO.,

""DEALERS IN"""

MREY SELL CBEAP POR CASE.

_"Call on them when you need"

iba
ih

ware. Piows, Farming Implements,
'. FURNITURE.

Ce cool

Prices Reduced ontall Lines to Meet the
Hard Times.

men omens:

Do not fail to call on us.

ues AN

On Saturday, Jan. 12th,

at our stables in Green-
ville, we willsell

50 HORSES & MULES

* At Auction. _ They
will be sold to the high-
wardto price. Nostock

ut up will be taken

downor bought in for
as .butwill pe nocked
offto the highest bidder

~Tucker & Edwards.

FIRST -- CLASS -- GOODS.

Notions, Shoes, .

Hats, Hardware, Guns, Crockery, Tin-

bidder without re- |

| lg Te Sate RT, es cee Oe a ee a eae ee aes


Title
Daily Reflector, January 9, 1895
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - January 9, 1895
Date
January 09, 1895
Extent
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NC Microforms
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