Daily Reflector, May 15, 1895


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







_ THE

DAIL

REFLEC

~Vol. 1.

GREENVILLE, N.

C., MAY 15, 1895.

Local Trains and Boat Schedule.

Pissenger and mail
north, arrives 8:22 A. M.
arrives 6:37 P. M.

North Bound Freight, arrives 6:45 A.
M, leaves 10:15 A. M.

South Bound Freight, arrives 1:51 IP
-, leaves 2:11 P. M.

Steainer Myers arrives from Wash
inyton Monday, Wednesday and Friday
leaves for Washington Tuesd: ay, Thurs
day and satur dav.

train going
Going dSvuth,

Weather Bulletin.
Thursday ;

"

fair, warmer.

THE LATEST LULLABY.

Rock a bye, baby, my little swe t man.

Go to sleep darling as fast at yot Can:

For mother must hasten to dun a new
gown,

And put in a vote for the good of the
town.

Yo ~r motherTs a voter; now, man-chil |
bes ill,

And hush your screaming, so piere'n
and shrill:

For be 1 known, man-chilc, the time
has come when

Your mother can vote with the mannes
ort men.

Now lie where I put you all safe in bed,
And donTt you dare wriggle a hand ora
head,
While I go with my new silk and stylish
capote,
Oh, man-child, the rapture! to cast my
tirst vote.
"M. Phelps Dawson.

%

%

%
orangi

Two oFormulas for Getting Rid of
Bores,

~William Dean HowellTs father,
who emigrated to Ohio half a
centnry aud more ago, used this
. formula to get rid of an intrusive
v.sitor who had worn out his
welcome. He would b3 called
«ut on some busin: ss, aid would
tay to the guest: oI suppose
you will not be here when [re
turn, sol wish you good-bye!�
This was not bad, except in com-
jarisou with the superb strata
xem ascribed to Gerrit Smith in
soch emergencies"as that he
nsed to say in his family prayer,
ufter breakfast: oMay the Lord
also bless Brother Jones, who
leaves us cn the teu o'clock train
this morning.�

New Barns.

Dr C.M. Joues, cf Grimes"
Jand, tells usa great many new
t. bacco barons are yzoing up in
that section. Onthe road from
Grimesland to GreenvilleT he
counted twenty six new barns in
four miles and says they are ai-
most as thick oyer the rest of the
way.

THE ROOF FALLS IN.

A Frightened Woman Jumps Through |
a Glass Door.

Workmen commenced to-day
removing the brickwork prepara-
tory to adding another story to
the store building recently pur-
chased by Mr. S. Mf. Schultz. As
the brick were taken from the
wall they were piled back oa the
roof, and about noon the weignt

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|
H
|

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became so heavy that the middle
section of the roof crushed
through to the floor. A colored
woman had just gone into the

|

building to carry dinner to one
of the workmen, and was so bad-'
ly frightened at the falling mass)
that she did not stop to cpen the:
door but jumped througha glass
panel and fell out upon he side-
walk. Fortunately -he was only
slightly cut. None «wf the work-
men were On the roof at the time,
having just come down for dinner.

The Grand Herald.

The Greensboro Aecord in rub-
lishing the list of officers of the
Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows, in
session in that city, with a brief
sketch of each, says the following : |

oWyatt L. Brown, the Grand
Herald, isa successful business
man of Greenville, where he has
built up for himself a nice. repa-
tation as well as lucrative busi-
ness. Heis one of the most Zeal-
ous members of that live, progres-
sive Lodge, Covenant No. 17. He
was appointed Grand Herald at
the last session of the Gran
Lodge which 1s his first office in
the Grand Lodge.�

Struck by Lightning.

Dr. swcManaway was in Roa
aoke, Va., befure going to Wash
ington last week, and while there
a young man, Mr. Joe Kasey, was
struck by lightning while riding
his bizycle. Mr. Kasey was out
for a ride and seeing asmall! cloud
coming up, he was hurrying home
on his wheel when he was struck
and instantly killed. This is the
tirst case uf this kind on record.

It is dangerous to ride a bicycle
during a thunder storm as the
steel of the wheel and the friction
that is made in ridiug fast araw
lightning.-"Charlotte Observer.

The Durham Sur traty says:
No good neighbor will knowingly
allow a nuisance on his premises.
That which offends the neighbor

may s00n be the cause of disease
at home.

Sa e"" S23 3e""="

If You Are the Man

Who want a

or Furnishings
ed to buy else-
have seen the
You cannot af-
less you have
We can help
hard-earned
$12 Suit is the

i

wr ee

DD

SAVED |

new Suit, Hat
donTt be induc-
where till you
values we offer
fordtodosoun-
money to burn.
you save your
dollars. Our.

kind you have

~Vinced. Our D
~Straw Hatsares

sey1

~been paying $18for. Comeandseeitand becon-
Goods, Notions, Shoes ae
ish and cheap.

FRANK WILSON,

THE KING CLOTHIER.
eS es SSSBVie-"="

Work It Out.

Newspapers sometime have a
way of grabbing up a handful of
big figures to throw at their read-
ers, thinkin, that just because the
uumbders reach away up ic the mii-
lions or to a billion the reader
will walk around the pile without

investigating whether the state -
ment made is correct. For in

sen

Cotton and Peanuts,

~

Below are Norfolk prices of cottou
dnd peanuts for vesterday, as furnished
by Cobb Bros. & Co., Connunissiou Mer.
chants of Norfolk :

stance, we recently saw this etate-
uent in ao exchange:

oA billion is so much that a
an who can ccunt three every
second would haye to count day
and aight for 10,000 years to get

, shrough with it. "

Now that is a stunner, and the
fellow who wrote it may have his
eye on the chair of mathematics
in some college, but any school
boy who bas studied half thruugh
tre multiplication table can work
it out in two minutes and see
that in eleven years a man -eaw
count more than this item says
he cau get throagh with i. ten
thousaud years.

The Shelby Aurora says that
Mr. Thomas Manning, a clever
and aged farmer three miles
southeast of Forest Cit, was cut"
ting lightwood from a pine stump
last Wednesdsy morning when
his axe slipped and he cuta se"
vere and deep gash in his leg.
He severed and artery in his leg
and died iu less than half an hour.

eee

nee

OOTTOR.
Good Middli ~ 6§
Middling us 6 5-16
Low Middling 5f
Good Ordinary 5}
Tone"dull, .
PEANUTS.
Common ta .3
Prime 1¢
Extra Prime pte a
Fancy 2}
Spanish 24

Tone"steady. ~

Eygus"10 cts. "Firm.

_E. Peas"best, 2.50 to 2.75 per ~bag.
= damaged. 1.5) to 1.75.

Black and Clay, 90 to i... per bushel.

Greenville Market.

Corrected by S: M.
Ol! Brick store,

id,

Ychultz, at ithe

Butter, per Ib 19 to 2)
Western Sides 6.6.) to 7}
Sagar cured Hams 11 to 12
Corn 4) tu 6)
Corn Meal 5) to sv
Cabbage -
Flour, Family 30) to 340
tuare 6 to 10
Oats 50 te 60
Potatoes [rish, per bbl 390 to 40
Potatoes Sweet.per bu 30 to 40
Sugar 3 tod
Cotfee 16 to 20
Salt per Sack 80 to 200
Chickens 123 to 20
Eves per doz - 10
Beeswax per Ib - 20
Kerosene, 15 to 25
Pease,per bu 1 00
Hulls, per ton 5 &0
Cotton Seed Meal 20: 0
Hides 2 2to 4

Minks 25 te AT

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DAILY REFLECTOR.

PD. J. WHICHARD. Editor.

Subscription 25 cents per Month.

Entered as second-clas+ wiail matter.

EVERY AFTERNOON (EXCEPT SUNDAY)

ee ___
Samuel L. Rogers, Chief Pep
uty Collector under Col. Carter
has been appointed to the
Western Collectorsnip He is
not widely known but is said
to bea fine business man and
will make a good officer. It is
thought that Kope Elias had
the suggesting of the successor
of Mr. Carter and that it was
through his saggestiou that he
was appointed.

7 "

A Washingtou corre-:pondent
of the Richinond Dispatch giyes
avery near correct opinion of
the sentiment in North Crro-
lina in the following:

From what can be gleaned
here ther~ is scarcely a proml
nent Vemocrat in North Caro-
lina who is in full sympathy
with the administration finan.
cial policy. The State is over
whelmingiy in favor of free
cuinage of silver, and for years
the members of Congress from
North Carolina have so voted.

EEE EEE

Extensive preparations are
being made for the unveiling of
the Confederate monument in
Raleigh ou next Monday, the
20th. More people will proba-
bly be in that city then than
has been for alongtime. Miss
Julia Jackson Chris~tan, the
grand daughter of Sronewall
Jackson, will pull the cord that
will unveil the monument.
saverybody ought to be there
and by their presence honor the
memory of the brave heroes
who died in defense of thei
loved Southland.

LOCAL NOTES AND TOBACCO
JOTTINGS.

BY O L. JOYNER.
OLD VIRGINIA WRAPPERS.

(ete

The Danville. (Ya) Tobacco
Journal of the 27th says: oIt is
estimated that there is lesa than
100 packages of old wrappers op
sale in this city ranzing iu va!
from $12 50 per hundred up.

=
oe aig
lar

eer

~number of packages of the like small quantity into Spain and

.class of

listed in Richmond
is reported at 1,500, making a total

of 1,400 packages, which practi

|

|

eally covers the vld stock of
wrappers now to be obtained by
anufacturers. Takin «into co,
sideratiou these facts, the position
of new stocks is not ouly de-
cidedly strong. bat the question
of fiuding a sufficient supply to
meet toe most economical de
mands of the manufactariug in-~
terests are becoming serivus-�
The following clippiug ap-
peared some timeagyu in the Dau
ville Zobaceo Journal. It was
sent to us by a friend in Rich-
tnond, Va, with the words from

wrappers.� Since it first ap-
peared it has been copied in q ute
apnumber of Northern agricul-
tural papers and several ib thi-
State. Much siguificauce seems
io be attached to the fact tha)
oearly all old wrappers have
beeu used up and that wrappers
in fature will be in strong de
mand.

This is only a natural sequence
when we take into consideration
that there bus pot been & wrap-
per crop since T90, meauwhile the
consumption cf wrappers has even
increased. Take warning ; and
grow wrappers this year.

EEE

Antiquity of the ~Weed Divine.TT .

the first voyage of Columbus,jsaw

herbs or leaves rolled up in tubes
which they ca'ied tobacos. A =
cording to Calvigerv the word
was one of the names of the plant
used in Haiti. Acecordiug to Ban-
bin (1596) and to Minshen (1617)
tobarco was so called from the

it came from Tobikkar, a division

once lived in whatis now known

conjectured.
The Century Dictionary says.

of America, that it was introduc-

Z Ed
ey : :
Be a EME pi a Ea A a ee a

him oUrge your farmers to make

According to Carleyoix, in his
oHistory of Dominique,� says the
Century Dictionary, the pipe used
by the Indians was called Tubac-
co, and not the plant. Accordiug
to Las Casas, the Spaniards, iv

the Indians in Cuba smoking dry

Portugal, whence it found its way
into Italy aud France; and that
Sir Francis Drake first took it to
Euglaad aboat 1585. Another uu

thority states, very emphaticall),
that tobacco was first int: oduved
into Europe about 1560, by a
Dutch merchant, who offered the
plant to John Nicot, French en-
yoy to Portuyuai ; that Nicot pre-
sented it to the Grand Inquisitor,
aud ou his return to France, to
Queen Catherine de Medicis, owho
tovk an immediate fancy to it.�
Bat be believes that tobacco was
swoked in Persia and in China
three or four centuries before the
discovery of America.

Jobn Stow, in his oChrsinicles
of Eugiand,� states that otobacco
was first brought snd made
kuown by Sir John Hawkins,
ubout the year 1563, out not used
by Euglisumen in many years
after.� Nevertheless, he says
elsewhere that oSir Walter Ral
eigh was the first that brought
tohacce to use, when all men
wondered what it meant.�

Caley, ia his account of the last
bonrs of Sir Walter Raleigh,
proyes very conclusively that the
smoking knight was not ashamed
of the weed, which he used if he
did not introduce. oHe was very
cheerful the morning he died,�
says the historian, oate his
breakfast, and took tobacco, and
made nv more of death than if he
had been to take a journey.�"
Uawrence Hutton, in Harpers
Weekly.

Our Share of Happiness.

ey, as we may buy a vard of cloth
or an estate. Wecannot take iff
by force from another, as we may 4
steal his coat. Nur can we gaine |
it by wheedling or cheating an-- Jt
other man out of his rightful 3
share, expecting to make it our.
own. For happiness 1s but the
delicate perfume arising from the _
sum total of all humaua delights. * 4
Each manTs share of it is the same |
and can never be greater than auy
other manTs snare. As it caunot
be bought, so it cannot be paid
for. But those who refuse to add
tu the general stock of happiness
while expecting stillto claim their
share, will find themseives out-
witted by nature. Their inner
Senses becoine dull, and then
cloxd entirely. They become
incapable of perceiving happiness
They never obtain not because it
is not there, but because they no
longer see that it is there." Har
pers Bazar.

ee

The Song They Sing.

The following is the personal
experience of some men: oSing a
song of penitence, a fellow full of
rye! four and twenty serpents
dancing before his eye. When
his eye was opened, he shouted
for his life, wasoTt he a_ pretty
chump to go before his wifs?
His het was in the parlor, under-
neath the chair; his boots were
in the hallway, his coat was on
the stair. His trousers in the
kitchen, his collar on the shelf,
but he hadnTt any notion where "
he was himself. Wher the morn
was breaking, some one heard
him cail; his head was in the ice-

Each human being, from the
moment conscioasness awakes un-
til the day of his death,
stinctively that he has a right to
happiness. When he is young he

feels in-

Island ot Tobago, aud according
to other guessers it gets its name
from 2 province of Yucatan. That

of North American L[udians who

as Southern California, no one but
the present writer seems to have

also, that it was unknown in the
Old World before the discovery

ed into Europe about 1559 by a
The Spanish physician, who took a

confidently expects to get it. Fur-
theralong in life he begins to
have a baffled feeling that he has
somehow missed it. Later his
feeling sinks into a settled dispair
of ever getting 1t, or else intoa
furious protest against fate, that
he of all human beings was ap-
pointed to lose his inheritance.
Bat when we are young we are
ignorant of the fact, and when we
get older we perhaps forget it,
that happiness is a spiritual qual-
ity, and to be obtained only ac~
cording to spiritual laws. We can-
not purchase happiness with mon-

ET ee
ek ff a eee

box and that was best of all.

"""""""
A Substitute for the Shawi Strap.

A parcel carrier for the pocket is.
being usedin England. Itis a little:
urticle that can be carried in the)
pocket when not in use and is always
at hand when wanted. It is-nickel-.
plated, contains lengths of nickel-
plated steel chain, is twenty-four:
inches long, and will allow a weight
of twenty pounds. It can be used "
for books, parcels, umbrellas, etc.,
and is said to be specially patronized
by shoppers and school children."
Hardware.

Decline with Thanks.

~~Can I write my name under the
received payment on this bill?� asked
the collector, who likes to put things
as delicately as pussible.
oNo, thank you,� replied Mr..
Brokely, oITm no autograph fiend.�
"Washington Star.








bd

Surveyor,

» Commissioners"C. Dawson, chmTn.
onidas Fleming, T. KE. Keel, Jesse L.
mith and Ss. M. Jones.

ealth, Dr. W. H. Bagwell.
unty Home, J. W. Smith.

- Board Edueation"J. R. Conglelon,
-ehmTn, 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. Smith.

Police"W. B. James, chief, T. R.
_ Moore, asst; J. LL. Daniel, night.

Councilmen"J. S. Smith, B. C.
, Pearce, L. H. Pender, W. J. Cowell, T.
A. Wilks, Dempsy Ruthin. .

a

CHURCHES.

Baptist. Services every Sundav (ex-
cept fourth) n-orning and nigint. Prayer
meeting Thursday night. Rev. C. M.
Billings, pastor. Sunday Schvol at 9°30

A. M. U. D. Rountree, SupTt.

Catholic.
Episcopal.
day morning

No regular services.
Services every fourth Sun-|
and night Rev. A.!
(zreaves, Rector. Sunday School ut 9:30 |
A. M. W.B. Brown, pup.

Methodist. Services every Sunday
morning and ight. Prayer meeting
*Vednesday night. Rev G. F. Smith,
pastor. Sunday Sehvol at 9:30 A. M.A.
B. Ellington, Supt.

Presbyterian. Services every Ist and
3rd Sunday morning and night. Prayer

THE INQUISITIVE CLERK.

He Finds a Customer Who Is Too
Much for Him.

The inquisitive clerk is every-
where and everybody has had an ex-
perience with him. One of the genus
was ~~called down� in a remarkably
funny manner in a West end drug
store recently. A tall, solemn-
looking man came in and asked fora
half dozen six-ounce bottles.

*~Bottles?� asked the clerk.

~ooYes, bottles,�
man.

b oWith or without corks?� asked
he.

oWith corks,TT was the response:

oWant Tem empty?�

*Certainly.�

~And new?�

~~Do you suppose I want bottles
you've been keeping strychnine in?�

The clerk said such an idea had
never entered his mind, and then
asked:

~ooWhat do you wart them for?�

~To break,TT responded the impa-
tient customer, promptly.

~*What?�

The customer beckoned to him to
lean over the counter and caught
hold of the lapel of the clerxTs coat
and whispered:

~*T wouldnTt want the neighbors to
get onto it, but I rather like to hear
~em crack. Just a whim of mine.
ItTs better than breaking windows
and gives me just as much pleasure,
but my supply has given out and I
want a few to hold me over until the

| next car load arrives.T

The clerk looked at the customer

| doubtfully.

oOh, well, of course; itTs nothing
to me.� he said.

oThen what made you ask about
it?T demanded the customer.

The clerk made no reply, but got
the bottles. As he was making
change, however, the spirit moved

meeting tuesday night Rev. Archie
MeLauchlin, pastor.-

9:30 A. M.,Bb. D. vans, SupTt.

o LODGES,

Covenant Lodge No. 17. I. O. O, F-,
~meets every ~Tuesday night. Dr. W.H.)
Bagwell, N. G.

Grecnville Lodge No.28t A. F. & A.)

M., meets first and third Monday nights

Ww. M. King, W. M.

Qe een ce taint asco tabetal� ?

+ NERTNESS I UIKNES. 3

t JOB-- PRINTING
aoe IG) TPIS Se

REFLECTOR OFFICE
"IF YOU WANT"

: First-Class Work.
¢ Bacssss aa aucras eared an

aaangeaanaaeitt

j

Sunday Schvol at;

him to ask:
oWhat do you do with the corks?�
~*Chew Tem,�T was the reply. ~~ItTs
good for the digestion. Try it some
time.�T
Then the customer walked out and
the clerk shook his head and tapped
his forehead, but he asked no more
«nestions."St. Louis Post-Dispatch

* No Longer Veal.

An fk
jing ina country church in Scotland.
'He had as his subject: ~The Prodi-
gal Son.� ~~And the prodigal son
/-went away from his poor old father
~and remained in a far country for
years and years and years, and his
~father mourned his absence for
~years and years. But after years
and years he came back to his poor

iold father, and his poor old father
sisaid unto his servants, Bring forth

the fatted calf which has been kept
for my som these years and years.�
Ancld farmer i: the audience could
contain bime:if nolouger: ~*~Yer a
~eer, it wud ha bina coo,� he ex-
c taimed. = RamT s Horr.

responded the.

|

1

ish clergyman was preach-

ithe times.

~ESTABLISHED 1875.

S-N-Sekultz

AT THE

OLD BRICK STORE

ARMERS AND MERUHANTSBUY
ing their yearTs supplies will tind
their interest to get our prices before pu.
chasing elsewhere. Ourstock is complete
n allits branches.

PORK SIDES&SHOTILDERS.

FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAh
RICE, TEA, &c.

alwuysat LOWEST MARKET PRICES.

TOBACELO SNUFF & CIGARS

we buy direct from Manufacturers, ena
bling youto buy at one protit. A com
plete stock of

FURNITURE

alwavs onhand end seldat prices tosuit
Qur goods areall bought anda
sold for CASH therefore, having no risk
to run,we sellata close margin.
Respectfully.
5s. M. SCHUI
Greenville.

sTA.

Professional Cards.

Pt F. TYSON,

@
Attorney and Counselor at-Law
Greenville, Pitt County, N.C.

Practices in all the Courts

Civil and Criminal Business Sol cired.

Makes a special of fraud diyorce,dam-
ages, actions to recover land, and col-
lectious.

Prompt and careful attention given
all business.

Monty to loan on approved security.
ferms easy

J. H. BLOUNL. J. L. FLEMING
LOUNT & FLEMING

ATTORNEYS AT-LAW,
GKEENVILLE, N. C.
gsa@s~ Practice in all the Courts.

-.C.LATHAM HARRY SKINNE

i ATKAM & SKINNER,

ATTORNEYS- 2 T-TAaW,
GREEO VILLE. NC.

THOS. J. JARVIS.
pAkvis & BLOW,

ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, N.C
far Practice in allthe Conrts.

ALEX. L. &:

ee

Johr E. Woodard, F. ©. Harding.
Wilsen, N.C. Greenville, N. ©

OODARD & HARDING,
W ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,

Greenville, N.

Speec~al attention given to collections
and settlement of claims.

_ Barbers.

AMES A. SMITH,
TONSORIAL ARTIST.
GREENVILLE, N. 9
al Patronage soliciied. ~

ERBERT EDMUNDS.
FASHIONABLE BARE GR.

Under Opera House.

"

N. a

|

your Printing done

REFLECTOR
JOB --
It will be done right,
It will be done in style.

and it

These points are

well worth weighing



This Reminds

You every day

a

in the month of:

May thatif

i

you have ~

yn ~

at the

OFFICE.

alwavs suits.

In any sort

of work, but

above all things in

| Your Job Printing.

Pe
rae







MAY MOONSHINE.

_ YOUR--ATTENTION

IS CALLED 10 THE ELEGANT
"LINE OF "

~ Thi ¢9 eons SILKS LACES There wasa big ring aronnd

ithe sun to-Jay.
Ribbons. Gloves, Mitts, &c., carried by |

££ ae

A Few of the Rays Caught Before
They Faded.

a

ge ed

"

rat gs ey Sl

LADIFS come to see LANG for

4 your commencement oatfits-

s | ,

| J.B. Cherry & Co., are placing
= ja pew awning in frout of their
- j . o, | Stores.

Paris Green at 30 cents a pound

B ___ There was 12 inches of snow in
a Michigan Monday. Come South,

young map.

"this season.

a Our Stock of "

-S.H.O.)

"AND"
Ladies & Childrens

This cold snap is accounted for
~by asoow storm that is raging

~SLIPPERS !:

~away up borth.

Nice oranges, two for 5 cents, at
~Morris MeyerTs.

; Spring and Summer. Clothing
is the largest and cheapest ever of- Less than Cost at LANG'S.
fered in this town, come and see for)

yourself and be convinced.
| Vertising.

BABY CARRIAGES, FURNITURE, verison comme ser

Mattinys, Window Shades and Lace Tings just received. J. J. OHERRY.
Curtains. |

_ There is but one way of cbtain-
ling business"-publicity; but one
\way of obtaiviug publicity"ad

Five rafts of logs passed by

Goods sold on their merits and|yesterday going dowa ~he river.
prices made*accordingly. Last night another raft got hung
~in the bridge.

J. B. CHERRY & Co. You can get ice cream, muk

_ \sbakes, piaeapple sterbert and
\lemonads at Morris Meyer's.
Apricots,

received aud extra fresh.

ANNEDGOODS! |

| There was not avy frost in this
Peaches, Pears, section this morning, but it did

Jomatces, Corn, just | pot miss far being cold enough
for it. Mulberry leaves and
| beans looked just a little sick.

| New Meuntain Batter 20 cts
'\Cream Cheese and CarrTs Butter
~at the Old Brick Store. =

'

BRB WHITE & SPORTING-CLUB

the crack Cigars in town.

"Also a nice assortmeut of "

Evaporated Fruits.

All members of Hope Fire Com-
pany No. 2, are requested by the
Foreman to meet at the engine
hcuse at 4:30 o'clock to-morrow
evening for practice with the en"
~gine in throwing water, reeling
iand unreeling the hose.

Shoes, Slippers and Gent3 Fur--
nishing Goods"at reduced rat.
at LANG'S.

| Master Hugh Sheppard is now
delivering the papers on one of
the Dariy REFLECTOR routes. If
he overlvoks auybody while be-
conring familiar with his list
please let us know promptly and
any paper missed can be sup-
plied.

lide bas

i ie

- Family Groceries.
D. S. SMITH.

H. G. JONES,

ARGHITEGT AND BUILDER,

Greenville, N.C.

ee

ae eam as a a

Good Gardens.

Oar little item the other day
Contracts taken for modern | about Mr. W. H- SmithTs garden
okg brick and wooden buildings.|ig about to make us take water.
Oid houses changed to any plan| Mr. L. H. Peuder says if we see
desired. Plan and specifications|see his garden we will take Back
carefully made at short notice. All|all said befcre, while Mr. Henry
work guaranteed first-class in|Sheppard suys he will pat his
St respect. Prices made very
w-

aguiret any in town for being the'*
best.

f

Faces Were Caught.

Just This Many
Rev. Archie McLanuchiin went
to Parmele wo"day.- .
Rev. A. Gr
Kinston last pig

Mei J. Chapman, cf Qa

*
*,

S returned to

ly speut to day here.

Col. I. A. Sugg ieturned
Kinston this morning.

bas beep in town to-day-

Dr. ©. J. O'Hagan returned
yesterday evenlug from Golds-
boroi

Mr. Mark Cherry, Jr., came over

wheels

Mr. B. S. Peterson, represent-

is in town to"day.

Mr. W. J. Whiteburst came
over from Bethei this morning
on his new Victor bicycle.

Mrs. Rosa Baker, of Suffolk,
who was visiting at the King
House, returned hume to-day.

Mrs. A. L. Blow and littl !
daughter Alice left this morn\n
tor Kichmoud to visit relatiyes:

Dr. C. M. Jcnes, of Grimesiand,
took the train here this morning
for idsboro to attend the Med-
ical Couventioun.

nev. J. O. Guthrie and family,
of Kinsiou, came up from a visit
to Hyde couuly this morning on
their way home and spent the day
here.

Miss Annie Harding, of John-
sous Millis, who has been visiting
the family of ber uncle, Maj. H
Harding, returned home ~Tues
e¥onlug.

ington, arrived on the boat to-
Gay ard will conduct services this
afternoon and to-night aad on
throagh the week at the Metho-
di st charch.

weut to Goldsboro last en v
be present at the Med?21 Con-
vention to-day. He is chairman
on the section of Anatomy and
Surgery and read a paper this

gery up tv date.�

A Blizzard, &

This cold wave has d one incal-
culable damage through the
north. Snows and blizzards have
prevailed in Michigan, New York,
Indiana, Iowa, Pennsylvania ana
her States. Garden track

rom |

wi

Mr. F. M. Davis, of Farmvil |

from Bethel this worning on bis| §

ing the North Carolina Sapizst,|

day

Rey. R. J. Mourman, of Wash-

r h
Dr. Charles Laughiaehe e-

morning on oSomething of Sur-

|
|

pe

The Cat is compelled
to smile at the rare bar-
gains you can obtain

Tt
mean business ladies |

by dealing with me.

and gentlemen, all. My
business is to sell Dry "

Goods, Notions, Shoes
Clothes in express train
style; yours is to buy
them, if you'reT wise.
I'd like to have theT
contract to dress you
right"best clothes, the -
best hats, best dress:
goods, best furnishings�
"you won't have to
buy often. Everything |
offered at prices that
will bring you to me if
you have money saving
at heart.

U. 7. MUNFORD.

Next Door to bank.


Title
Daily Reflector, May 15, 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 15, 1895
Date
May 15, 1895
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microforms
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