Daily Reflector, May 8, 1895


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rau C. "MAY 8, 1895.

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WEWS OF? THB WIRE.

aseénger ead iT omatt T

train gol
Sana. a. £

M, agp 10:15 A. M.
y Pad, Eres Ereight, Pring 1al P

vied

day and perurdaye ue

Ee Fa m

"

A NEVERMIND FELLOW: |

oy ave ahd SAO SABE Ties

ing-time,-many a tree

Is shakinT downy its Dysgenins, iu a ~show-

er over ine;

AnT I know the girls are géinT where

| : anT Deethnehigert oy are

iTm fur trom snow.

mer, w li, i.

To pull myse f tidefiier: anT jest dream, |

anT dream, anT dreain !

For "" roses rollaruuud me in a perfect

AnT the goo

see tried� runs t2e weather, an.
ts PF anke to me! .

well, 1 see

A oten m Weuby faces tow the, fireside
AnTl ow pon oche kettles steaminT, an, [

know the fireTs bright. _

AnT I see th; blue eyes a-bsa.ninT, *
Pmata hom: at night. =
"Auanta Constitutio:.

They Ate wua Oniens

The Observer several days ago|:
reported the death of three chil-

dren of a negro named Black, in

Steel Creek, and the illnesg of
oshers, swuting that the deaths

The
wother and one of the children

were in a dying condition yester-
is lame and
ent
ot wild pee =
the dish bave

were dae

to poisoning.

day. The father
very poor., The. children we
cut to get somath hing td coc
ovreens,� and
Ali who ate o
_ died ur will die."Charlotte Ob
perver.

A Dog Chews Gum,

is uwned by a family in Greens

boro. He has_been watched _to
see what he did with it and itT is

at ~he
like

one

claimed ie } teralthe we
chews away. ¢ wer
the young lad :

steals it and bere when te

rene arr Guiug soatt,
2 Eye Freight, arrives 6:45 A.

Steamer petaT 4 arrives from oWash

na eo ea

ab: Jad gina

1 pever iniud the ¥atse ar itTs sam-

blushing, othey are all

A pet dog thatT steals all the
cl ewing gum he can find around

ng Berved by our Sie tates

AN frie: ite in the! Soir
section of Virginia: are teported.e
little late.:

*lanti Prise. Fight obiill.: It - now
goes tothe Heuse. where it. will
meet,ao opposition,

OT Donnell and. Kulrain had 4 a
vicious fight at Coney Islaud-
The later was knocked out in the
PA at)

A Baltimore woman, acting. as
her owa. dentist, ..gu _ Oat, a
troublesume touth with a pair of
scissors. She died of ~lookjaw.

Two men fella distance of 60
fest while cleauing out a faraace

thew escaped unhurt. The other
was badiy bruised.

Nearty One Mi~1ion,
Daring the latter ~ part ~of Lest
weex the catch of «fish here was
unusually large. ~The steamers

carried into the factories ~about
One million fish that were ground
up aod made into serap.: This is

a very nice catch und we aro glad
to see os fish run."Beanfort
Heraid.

i Trey Were Roosters.

- The following is said to / heyé
occarredT not a thonsand r
from here: - -«

A bashfal coantry girl came).
into a cértaim grocery store the
Other day carryiug some © live
chickeus. . The fowls -had their
feet tied toeether to prevent their
escape and the young woman in
her coafasion placed them on the
eoaater Now the young clerk is

noted for his polite mauners, but} ©
he is not always grammatical,.



and be.smilnogly inquired: o
yeu sure. will lay there ?�
L, n-n no, sia,� she stammered,

roosters,�
and the clerk hasnTt recovered
yet.

A. well-known - minister. sent
South to labor amoung tue colored
people was received with many
demonsirationa of At the
first mestitig which efi held, one
colored

preacher preyed for. -hiur

" comes tired kh nts it away, but} | esrnestness, thus: -O.
1s ot sated whether tas cks|Lord! ~bless dis yer bradder
it sneer: 28h saeepeity gre has come down fram de NortT.
he Seether eo a ce

yey as the erceene ile of saly
oIebass, and set bim op fire.�

TheT Florida Bériate Vielised the -

stack at Roanoke, Vu., and one of!-

The capi

iary to

e a "~ Frank Wilson. His me-

ess

FRANK WILSON,

__The King Clothier...

off somone
_,, Senese.

a: orlag Suit you will hit
the mark by buying of
- dium priced Suits can-

not be-equaled in price,
durability, omake ~and

style... You.can: see. for
yourself by:

givi him
ten minutes� of your
time. . He will be. glad
to show you hin ahoclT

2*3 534

In NORTH cantina.

lnnstnemmmamanl

What is Happening Over the State. .

rN

Wilmington i is-ship ping atraw-

berries by the car load.

Comptroller Eckles has écathor-

Washi

inpd tle Miaat National Bank. of

ngton to in bnusiness-
selaicek io an0;b08.

John B. Hussey, private secre-
Senator

Marion Batier
and who is the Washington car-

respondent cf the Caucasian

brought a suit for criminal rien |
against: the News and Observer.

Dr. D. M. Bowie, of Washing-

Wilson and Weldon.

ton, ~D. C., dis i very suddenly on
Areithe northbound mail between

~He was in

|

Cotton and Peanuts,

' Below aré Norfolk Gietes Et cotton

oe Cobb ies ide om as Bervncgg-
nts ot Norfolk .

Good Middling 6

Middl: 65-1

Low Middling 5g

Gord Ordinary 5}

Tone"lower and quiet: ~
PEANUTS.

Commor . A ltol

Prime 1

Extra Prime 2 wt

spacwh. 2%

Dpan

rider ll ¢e Firm. --

BRE et: itd tO 2:75 per bag.
1.80 to 1.75.

Bleck: and oly te 1.00 ber bnehei.

Greenville Market. .

.. -

Corrected by §, M. Ychul ;
O14 Brick Steve.� ta, at the

Butter. per Ib

19 to 25
company rb his daughter Mrs.| Westen Sides. 6 60.to 3
Geor Walker, was. returning | 5°28" cured ie I1tol
from Florida, where he had been tose: Meal " ta 60
on accosnt of iffness. Cabbage a? ko #0
Mr. Washington Duke, who is os Femily nasi
» member of the board of trustees | Oats . 50 to 40
of Trinity� who has }-Potatoes Irish, per bb! 308 to 350
heretefore made such magnificent | Fotloes oweet,per bu 3) to 40
wo ive $a0t00 tonerT he oedeee |Site as
ve Ww e endow- ,
ment fund of the college Regret Sinden 124 630
dation that $75,000 be Tateed frets | Bate per dos Og
other sources within the. State-| ; er lb ~i Rg
\ His. ay en spihe nade. the, , 100
ae COR ion : 5 00
fivetingT ot othe� 20 (0
oe 7 S05 TE 2104
i 24 ot 75

SNE ce EEL POR a EE eee ae
EP ee ee ee a ee Le ph a ee eee eo ee







7 eclame nig The Record
is a hustlingT paper and ~shows

neptinin Boers meronnde

: In, the; elections Monday the
Democrats seem to have almost

tedé a dléan sweep | of" ~the|

State. sven. in): the. idwas

where the Legislature; changed
the charters a

were victorieus., Major tirant
Worked day and night to put

Goldsboro under _ Republican :

Tule when he ~was gettiug his
hee spronab ~the, Legislature

St still re
? oon as Shia Young
Dut she too isa emocratic city
still, and so on throughont the
~State. This is a pointer for
1896. Our people will not stand
such government as has been
put upon us by a fusion Legis-
lature.
[Sa

MENTAL IMAG@2S.

oA man conversing in earnest,�
says Emerson in his essay ~on
oNature,� oif he watch: his in-
tellectual processes, will find that}
@ material image, more or Jess
luminous, @rises iu bis mind. con-
temporanedas with pe des thought, |!
T which furnishes the vestment of
the thought.�

This power of forming mental

a@ppears to vary ir strength | gTowt
among individuals to a consider:
abie degree. Naturally we should
_ ©Xpect to find it powerfu! in poets!

and artists. Charlies Dickens has|

himself told us that he actugil
osaw� his creations as he wrote, pt
and M. Taine mentions & painter! t
who only looked at an object
_ while he sketched its outline ~and
was able to fill in the colors. from

the other hand, there are people|s

and bhilesoahees iu
aptto weaken the capacity of
formiag mental pictures.

Minn,, an exgerime otal paxcholo-
isa Reries of: obser
tt j@ henoysegon with

ly thageés " _ The

~out, pad the

eee ul!

Mr- Kirkpatrick of Winona, a

rters and there was a/~
fighting chance | the Democrats|."

n thas poet
Co. | of

thought, under the ~sameT ~tule, |

ftion.�

y investiga
t the maj ~tity

Res af ae ie eorrespond

ing « words, and the rest,
form is inctjmages, with�"� a.
few e to have
indal; i $hiloeoptieal abutrac

tidus, encom obook,� for ex-"!
ample, Called up ae gta Bi

tionary T novel,
dlacee
for the ad

thoughts of some alll � The
some kid ~of tree, miore especially
the illustrious cherry tree which
George Washington ~cat down.
The word ochurch� usually evoked
@ picture of some church in ~the
vicinity, but some of ~the hearers
theught of a ~religious onganiza-
~It is evident from ~his. re-
salts that most people are
lizers� in thinking, while a ~tew
are osonvieualizers.� ~Tre. ten-
dency to form distinct images
was very conspicuons among the}
female students, and in both sexes
~it reeghes's0 abnormal develop.
ment about the ages of ldand 15
or during the period of adjoles
cence, which, it has been other-
wise observed; is also one of ex.
aes ane health ~end ~rapid:
The ten is , igiark
eeeT or | i ae: italy ak

eapations in te Canal� 8 oy

growt

~azine.

| Acoording to = ~sabie recently

propertion ivo all, of i
Beenie Union for the years.
1893 and ~1894, there was a tre-|is

toT his mind, sp ri iad her

" Momsiaw. Eo Contina, South
'Garolina.. Florida. and / Louisiana
showed an increase, but.-the - iar!
gest gains were in the Middle
States and in New England, the
States~in those sections showing

an increase being Pennsytvania,|
New - York, - MasenchasetteT ~@na|
Maine. oO

WRINKLES on N NO: WRINKLES.
One Gan Be. Sreceth and Yat. Nos

You

oSome of the new oelectrical T roo,
esses for removing wrinkles do. O-
duce remar'iable results,� said a
| York physician the other day, bu:
|| they are too dangerous to receive the
t| commendation ef any -reputable
¢| physician, and asa matter. of fact.
the resylt. though so remarkable, is
pot at all what the. victim hapes.
~There is Mrs.."", she has really
bad her wrinkles removed, but yau
wouldihardly notice it, excent as she | "
tald | you. so.. The-cusious thing is
that sha does not Jook a yearsyoung-
er. I say curious, but it is only a0
to a persea-"-who has not correctly
analyzed the look ofTage: oWrinkles
may be the. most abviouws.- tiling
}sbemt it, bat they are. not the main
thing. What makes anyone: look
ald: is first, the change, the decline of
all the echicf modeliags ofthe face,
the fabling-of: the cheeks, the heavi- |
~mess or the -seragii:ess of the

i threat, the settling of tReflest ~about | .

~the mouth. The: pata that isigiven
4b removing wrinkles increases all
this,-and is likely otoT-countT more
than the ameliorative provess. Cleo-.
patra ~says, in ~the play, that she is
~wrinkled, and Shakespeare was prob-
abty pose: judge of beauty tara)
tal, so
~| Well, ~so ~alive, tint oBer Tace liad the

fulnessT ecduséT she was

ne
7 fT TE

_" oF ;

A Bhy Authorees...
7zE Witkins,t is Wbey Witter,

Na.90 aby ta ~eee octeny, that, it
arateT oe ~the: Regret ston adi

am intelligence who,T ~being

when spoken to.

Ene Pere

general contours of youth. Women)...
are on the wrong road when they do}.i
[way thing: patane tormake® shens. looks
5. yourg.� a

4


dat prices before ue

AMD WEEK HANTS B
supplies will
to getT

PORK $DES&SHOMLDERS. |
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGART |

_RICE,TEA,&.
alwuye at LowEsr MaRKET PRICES.

TOBACEO SNUFF & CIGARS

a buy direct from Manufacturers, ens
bl pana steh of buy at one protic. A com
rt of

FURN ITU RE

lalwa s onband ana sold at prices tu suit
so tor Gane Merton, haviagins roe
so ore. nor
w |to run,we sell at close ~margin.
Respectfully,
8. M. SCHULTz.,
Greenville. N.c

B.* TYSON,
*
Attorney and Counselor at-Law.

Greenville, Pitt County, N. Cc.

Practices in all the Courts |

-Civil and ©riminalT Basiness Soticited.

_Makes a spevial of frxud diyoroe,d

ages, actions to recover land, . and ~cal-

eee d ful attenti give
rom an care atten on n-

all Dusiness.

Money to lean on epproved security.
~Derma eusy. .

4. H. BLOUNT. ~J. b. FLEMING

PROUT a PING

GREENVILLE, Mw. C
" Practice. in all the Courts.

~a C. LATHAM HARRY SKINNE
i. ATKAM & SKINNER,

Aa a w,

a 7 ae Le

THOS, s.yarvis.
|, JARVIS & BLOW,
oAT EY S-AT-LAW,

"GRRRH VILLE. Wc.

testPricties i, oaie | Courts.

. San

a

5d

lwo } & B

2h:

[soma Sg

oo" Gréentilie, N. &»
Special attention tees to ~¢eilections
and settlement ef claims.







LOCAL DIRECTORY.
COUNTY OFFICERS.

_ Superior Court Clerk, E. A. Muye.
Sheriff, R. W. King.

~ Register of Deeds, W. M. King.
Treasurer, J. L. Little.

Coroner, Dr. C. O°TH. Laughing-
couse,

Surveyor.

Commissioners"C. Dawscn, chmTn
Leonidas Fleming, T. K. Keel, Jesse L
Smith ands. M. Jones.

SupTt. Health, Dr. W. H. Bagwell,
SupTt. County Home, J. W. Smith.

Beard E:lucation"J. R. Congilelon,
chmTn, F. Ward aud R. C. Cannon.

SupTt. Pub, Ins., W. H. Ragsdale.

TOWN OFFICERS.
Mayor, J. L. Fleming.
Clerk, G. E. Harris
. Treasurer, J. S. Sinith.

Police"W. B. James, chief, T. R.
Moore, aset; J. I. Daniel, night.

Coupcilmen"J,. 8. emir h,
Pearce, L. H. Pender, W. J.
A. Wilks, Demwpsy Ruffin.

B. C.
Cowell, T.

CHURCHES.

Baptist. Services every Sunday (ex-
eept fourth) u orning and night. Prayer
meeting Thur-day night. Rev. ©. M.
Billings, pastor. Suuday Schvol a; 9°30
A. M. U. D. Rountree, SupTt.

Catholic No regular services.
Episcopal. Servicesevery fourth Sun-
day morning and night. Rev. A,

(sreaves, Kector.
A. M. W. B. Brown, sSup't.

Methodist. Services every Sunday
morniug and wight. Prayer meeting
oWednesday night. Rev G. F. smith,
pastor. Sunday xchvol at 9:30 4. M. A.
B. Ellington, supt.

Presvyterian. Services every Ist and
3rd Sunday morning and ni ht. Prayer
meeting !uesday night. Rev. Arciie
MeLauchlin, p stor. Sunday sSchvol at
9:30 A. M.,6. D. Kvans, SupTt.

LODSEs,

CovenanT Lodge No. 17. I.
mects every ~luesday night.

Bagwell, N. G.

(Jrecnville Lodge No. 28t A. F. & A.
M., wv eets first and third Monday nights
w. M. Kiug, W. M.

ae 4 ACES.
:

0. oO. F.,
Dr. W.H

"SEND youR" j
JOB -:- PRINTING
"-TO THE"" ©
REFLECTOR OFFICE
"lF You WANTS

- First-Class Work.

sansc8scescSrInss

Sunday School at 9:30

xjat the Elysee.
Tikept on longer than they might
® i have been, because it would be so
| difficult to find men so fit for their

NO MONEY IN THEM.

Sculptors Can't Sell Sell Their Busts of

Popular Frenchmen.

The portrait of M. Felix Faure,
president 6f-France, has just. been
vommenced by Bonnat, the celebrated
painter, and as this is a semi-official
work, there is no doubt of the artist
being fully compensated forit. Such
is not the case, however, with the
many painters and modelers in
marole or clay who at each change
in the French presidency have made
mauy pictures or busts of the new
chief executive or of other promi-
nent men, on the ready sale of which
they have built their hopes of for-
tune.

The sale of pictures or busts does
not seem to follow any fixed rules.
Even the individual popularity of
the occupant of the presidential
chair apparently has little to do
with it. President Thiers, for in-
stance, was not particularly popular
with the Parisians, yet images of
him sold better than those of any
succeeding president. On theother
hund Gambetta had an enormous
and enthusiastic personal following,
vet his likenesses are not salable.
Even though France has been and is
fervent in its praises of Russia and
her ruler, the statuettes of the czar
are a druy on the market.

A young woman modeler, whose
work has several times found a plaee
in the Salon, has at this moment on
her hands an even hundred busts of
Casimir-Perier. The ~~deplorable
inspiration,� as a Frenchman would
'call in, came to her last fall to fash-
ion these images, and she finished
the last of them two days before the
resignation of her model, and his fall
from public favor.

Until President Carnot was as-
sassinated copies of ChapuTs bustof
him were little in demand; but the
Alay after the tragedy at Lyons forty
| were sold in that city.

| Free Medical Aid.

M. Felix Faure has decided that
all the state and other domestics at
the Elysee and their families are to
receive medical assistance gratis,
says the London Daily News. The
cost is to be paid out of his own
purse. All the ushers and other
servants employed there by the
state have been nearly thirty years
They have been

places. They cannot be dismissed
before a certain number of yearsT
service has given them aright to a
pension. Since influenza visited
Paris, in 1889, they have often suf-
fered from that illness, and, being
old, aad often to seek medical as
sistance. As their salaries are not
high, they thought this was hard,
and so also thinks the president.

og || M. Faure has named Capt. Bouchez|-

to look after them and: to be their
spokesman.

-

PUBLISHED _IN_ MID-OCEAN,
A Ne That Is Printed © on
. an American Cruiser.

A novopeperittntc® on shipboard,

on the rolling decks of a man-of-war,
out at sea, beyond the reach of tele-
graph wire or post.

An editor whose desk is in the
narrow space below decks, known
to sailors as the port brig, whose
glimpse of the outside world is
through a little round glass port in
the shipTs side, locking out over a
waste of waters.

Such is the Ocean Wave, pub-
lished ~~in the interests of all good
men-oT-warsmen around the world,�
and for the particular instruction
and amusement of the officers and
men of the North Atlantic squad-
ron. The paper is.edited and print-
ed on the flagship New York. Sub-
scriptions, it is stated in big letters
on the first paye, are payable in
gold, silver or jewels. No potatoes
or garden truck are taken in ex-
change.

The Wave has six pages, each of
which contains three columns of
reading matter. It is printed in
four colors"red, black. green and
purple. A fine photo engraving of
the flagship Baltimore, of the Chi-
na station, is printed, showing that
vessel lying off a Corean port. Cop-
ies of the paper just recefved in this
city were printed while the squad-
ron was at Port-of-Spain, in the
island of Trinidad. The features are
a story of the West Indies, some
original poems coutributed by mem-
bers of the shipTs company, a story
of the visit made to Santa Cruz, de-
scribing the hospitable manner in
which the islanders received the
Americans and showed them over
their sugar plantations, and an ac-
count of the international regatta
beld at Barbadoes, in which boats
from the American ships New York,
Cincinnati, Raleigh and Essex took
part. .

The jolly tars on board the ships
feel proud of their little paper, and
every issue is carefully preserved to
send home to friends. There is a
humorist on the staff, and the funny
column is full of salty jokes which
smack of the sea.

For the printing of this little pa-
per the shipTs printer, Michael
Quinlan, of the admiralTs staff, is re-
sponsible. He is a thorough-going
seamun, as well as printer, and can
keep his sea-legs and set type-at the
same time. Most of the work is
necessarily done while the ship is
at sea, and at such times the press
has to be lashed to prevent it from
breakin-r away. SN. Y_ Recorder.

Barbers.

JAMES A. SMITH,
TONSORIAL ARTIST.

GREENVILLE, N.C.
ol Patronage solicited.

JERBERT EDMUNDS. .
. | FASHIONABLE BARE ER.

« oUnder Opera Huuse.

You every day

in the month of °
May that if
you have
your Printing done
at the

REFLECTOR

JOB -:- OFFICE:

It will be done right,

It will be done in style
and it always os
These points are -
well worth weighing
in any sort

of work, but

\

above all things in







A Few of the Rays Caught Before

IS CALLED 10 THE ELEGANT
"LINE OF"

DRESS GOODS, SILKS, LACES,

Ribbons. Gloves, Mitts, &e., curries by

4.8, CHERRY & 60,

They Faded.

Another very rain« day-

Flies have put in their appear-
ance in large numbers.

-The weather made a hard effort
jat cieariug off this afternoon.

A man is never too meant be
loved by a dog, and never tos

_ Our Stoek of "

. 1 1-©):|

"AND"
Ladies & Childrens

"this season.

is the largest and cheapest ever of-.
fered in this town, come and see forT
yourself and be convineed.

BABY CARRIAGES, FURNITURE,

Mattinys,. Window Shades and Lace|

Curtains.

Goods sold on their merits and
prices made accordingly.

J. B.. CHERRY & Co.

" ee

ANNED GOODS!
Peaches, Pears,

Apricots,
received aud extra fresh.

"Also a nice assortmeut of "

Evaporated Fruits.

BOB WHITE & SPORTING GLUB

the crack Cigars in town.

~Family Groceries.

D. S. SMITH.

) | poor to own Cne.

=.S,

Tomatces, Corn, just

50,000 N. C. Fresh Corned Her-
rings just received. J. J. CHERRY.

The Good Weather prisige More of

FACES BRIGHT.

Them Out.

| ete RM

Mr. R. J. Cobb went to Noitdt
this morning. (

Mr. F. G. James went to Parm
ele on the morning train.

Mrs. W. M. Lang, of Farmville,
is visiting Mrs. J. A. Lang. |

Mer. Rosa Baker, of Saff lk,
visiting at the King House.

Mrs. A. C. Tucker is visitin
ber sister, Mrs. Alfred Furbes.

Mr. L. I. Moore left this morp-

is

Servicesinthe Methodist church
to-night will be conducted by
Rev. Archie McLauchlin.

Gov. Elias Gare wadeticions Bat-
ter, 25 cents per pound. Come
quick to the Old Brick Store.

Since they did get a good start
potatoes have grown rapidly. We
ihave seen some as large as wal-
puts.

|

|

Two colored women, Mary
Jones and Mollie Staton, had a
iscrap and were fined $2 and costs
aay by Mayor Fleming.

that Begianet the tast few days he

tration.

Company, Tuesday evening.

about the engine and hose.

of Horner Military School, at Ox

3ist. The RFFLECTOR acknowl.
edges an invitation.

work in great shape here,

look after.
Housekeepers are ~ having

H. G. JONES,

ARGHITEGT AND BUILDER,

Greenville, N.C.

ee bal

2 Comrade taken -for

modern

tyle brick and wooden buildings.

Oli houses changed to any plan
Gesired. Plan and specifications
earefally made at short notice. All
work guaranteed first-class in
Tee respect. Prices made very
Ww:

time getting edibles just now.
it is most too soon for vegeta-
bles and the market is frequent

fresh meat and fish line. About
the only ones strictly in
present are the lovers of corned
herrings.

State who fell from the sixth
story of a new building, and in
his descent crashed through an
oak floor, disfigured an engine
which was in his way and then
got up and refased the tender of
an «umbulance to baui him to the
hospital for repairs.

Some one has said this would,
be an awfully dull world if all the|
fools were killec.

|

SLIPPERS!"

ister of Deeds King says}:

has been rushed with mortga,zes
and other documents tor regis-

At the meeting of Hope Fire

Foreman A. J- Gziiffin assigned
the members to their positions

The commevcement exercises

ford, will take place Friday. Mav,

The spirits are getting in their

and
some remarkable things are be-

ing told abont messages from the
dead. Living spirits will givethe
ordinary human being enough to

ly empty of everything in the

it at

A Wisconsin paper tells of
man in one Of the towns of that

ing tu spend a week at Whit kerr.

Mr. Whecler Martin, of Wil
liams:on, spent last night here
and left this morning.

Miss A-idie Johnson, daughter
of Mr. Frark Johascn, living just
below town, is very sick.

Mr. P. G. Howe, who svld ths
town the fire engine, left this
morning for Scotland Neck.

ington, President of the Eureku

Y
~GOODS.

Mr. George L;2ache, of Wash-'

Lumber Co., is in town to day.

Miss Aunie Hardiug, of Juobu-
son's Mills, came up this wornuing
to visitT the family of Maj. H.
Harding.

Mr. W.S. Rawls is confined to
Lis home sgain. » Was quite

sick yesterday but 3s reported
better to-day.

CURSED THE THUND R.

-*

And Was Sudd:nly Stricken Down
; With Apoplexy.

Some weeks ago a white man
named E:iward Eggleston, with-
out friends, was taken sick aud
having n» place tu go. was sent
tothe almshouse He was able.
to wa.k about his r.om and con-
verse with those who visited him
and a tended to his wants-

On smurday, April 27th, Eg-
glescson was setting iu a chair inp
the dvor of his 100m, when a
thander stormcameup. At every
peal he was very profane and

ursed the thunder. Suddeuly
Egglestopr tuppled over frum his
chair and on the floor as though
he nad been strack duwn by u
thunderbuit. When assistance
arrived the unfortunate wan was
found to have sustained a stroke
of apoplexy. He wastuaken to his
bed, where he Jxay until Monday
nig bt, when he breathed his last,
uever having spoken a word from/
the moment of ths attack.

Eggleston was an Euglishman
by birth and had beer ia this
community about six years, and
is said to have been a mill opera-
tive. As stated above, he had no
relatives in this city, but it is re-
ported thac he has a. dsughter
erg inT Eagland:"Dauy ite |

.

and

Summer

Black and Tan
"& OXFORDS

es for Ladies, Mis-
es & Children.
Calf, Cordoyan

Kangaroo Calf
and Tan Shoes
forMen & Boys

1

Porcalles & Swiss
DIMITY.

SCOTCH,

TRISH,

VICTORIA

and INDIA -

{LINEN LAWNS,

Check, Nai:sook

and Sattines.

(Quality and prices
right.

H000 Hae

PRP WR ee

The finest line of
MEN & BOYS

ever. shown in the city

b. I, MUNFORD.

et t Door to bank,


Title
Daily Reflector, May 8, 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.) - May 8, 1895
Date
May 08, 1895
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microforms
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