Daily Reflector, June 7, 1895


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" i;

GREENVILLE, N.

C., JUNE 7, 1895.

No. le

Local Trains and Boat Schedule.

Passenger und mail
north, arrives 8:22 A. M.
arrives 6:37 P. M.

North Bond Freight, arrives 6:45 A.
M, leaves 1U:15 A. M.

South Bound Freight, arrives 1:51 P

-, leaves 2:11 P. M.

Steamer Myers arrives from Wash
ington Mondyy, Wednesday and Friday
leaves for Washington Tuesday, Thure
day and saturday.

train going
Going South,

"

A Large Family.

. A day or two ago Mr. Jesse
Speight received a letter that he
prizes quite highly. It was writ-
ten by his aunt, Mrs. Elizabeth
Speight, of Dayville, Mo-., who is
84 y:arsold. With her husband
Mr. James Speight, she left
North Carolina fifty years ago,
going from Greene county, and
located in Missouri. Her hus-
baud died two years ago. In her
letter she said she had 63 grand-
children, 92 great grand-children
aod 6 great great ,rand-children.
Of this number of descendents
113 .re new living. ~So you see,�
addet the aged lady, oI have
quite a large family.�

Bethe! Items.
Berue.. N. C-, Jane 6th 1895."
Maj. H- Harding, of Greenville,
spent yesterday in town.

Prof T. C. Manning come home
last Saturday from Rome, Gaua.,
where he had been tesching pen"
wauship for some time.

Dr. R. J. Nelson, of Roberson-
yilie was in town to-day.

Johnie Staton, son of Mr. Robt.
. Staion, stuck a pail thruugh his
foot Tuesday. His wound is said
to be doing very well.

Mr. Guilford Andrews lost a
horse last Sunday eyening. It
was killed by an ox.

Mr. J. R. Overton, a well tojdo
~farmer, died at his home in Martin
county, about six miles from
Bethel, Tuesday. He was former-
lv of this county, but has lived in
Edgecombe and Martin ever since
the late war.

Bicycle: racing was the order
of the day in town yesterday
among our young men.

Shame on the Boys.

We are told that a number of
beys, some of them nearly grown,
were guilty of some very ugly and
ungentlemanly behavior while
bathing in the river, just below

town, Wednesday afternoon.
Some ladies were being brought
In a row boat to Greenvilie from
their home a few miles down the
river. When they had approach-
el near epough to see that boys
were in bathing between them
and the wharf their boat was
stopped and word sent up to the
boys to please withdraw from the
river until they could pass. The
boys not only refused to comply
with this request but began to
make such indecent exposure of
themselves that the ladies had to
leave their boat and walk neariy
a mile through fields in order to
reach town. S ch conduct on the
part of the boys was disgraceful.

& Word to the Boys,

If you have anything to do, do
it at once. DonTt sit down in the
rocking chair and lose three quar-
ters of an hour dreading the job.
Be sure that it will seem ten
times harder than it did at first.
Keep this motto: Be on time,
in small things as well as zreat.
Habit is everything. The boy
who is behind time at breakfast
and school, will be sure to get
oleft� in the important things of
life.

Be a power in your own little
world and depend upon it, then,
the big world will hear from you
some day.

The WeatherTs Own Way.

AinTt it fanny, the-kind of items
the newspaper folks print some-
time? Less tnan two weeks ago
it was going the rounds that such
cold weather so late in the sea-
son had never beén known, and
the last few days it has been such
warm weather so early in the sea.
son was never before experienced.
Well, we eipect ifthere were any
records available it would be

THE KING

VV4Es. (WEATHER oWESE

Percale, Noglicee, Whit,

oWith & Without Collars.
S37

FRANK WILSON

CLOTHIER...

F

Have Your Eyes Examined.

Prof. P. D. Mahoney, specialist in
lenses for the eye, is at the Ricks House
for one week. where examinations for
all forms of defective sight will be
thoroughly and scientifically made.

If your sight, either distant or near,
is imperfect; if.your eyes water or burn
after reading, sewing or any o her kind
of work, if your visionis blurred when
looking at an object fifteen feet or
more away; ifafter prolonged use of
your eyes they feel strained and your

es, and should not for a day neglect
their use.

If your defective sight can be im-
proved by glasses. the proper one will
be selected for you; if on the other
hand the defect epends upon disease or
such abnormal condition of the eye that
glasses will not help, you wiil be frank-
ly so informed and so saved a useless
ense.

guarantee every pair of glasses or-
dered to be satisfactory, and expect to
win your confidence by the skillful and
accurate manner in which they give you
improved and comfortable vision. Ali
examinations free.

FONTRY HOME ===

In the Mountains of Virginia will
take a few

SUMMERE

per Month. Highest references.

Come wherethe eool breezes blow.
Come recuperate and rest.

found that somewhere in the past

~there were seasons just like this.

Address . F. WILSON

head aches, you certainly require glase- |

SSIS $20 ss

Cotton and Peanuts,

Below are Norfolk prices of cott
and peanuts for vesterday, as furnish
by Cobb Bros. & Co.,, Commission Me
chants of Norfolk :

COTTOR.
Good Middling
Middling
Low Middling

Good Ordinary
Tone"dull.

PEANUIZS.

=

7 1-
6 5.

Prime

Extra Prime
Fancy

Spanish

- Tone"steady.

B. E. Peas"best, 2.50 to 2.76 per be
+ damaged, 1.50 to 1.75.
Black and Clay, 90 to 1.00 per bushel.

90c. 1

Greenville Market.

Corrected S. M. Schnul a t
Old Brick rac hl =

Butter. per lb
Western Sides ;
Sugar cured Hams
Corn

Corn Meal
Gab

Flour, Femily
Lard ~

~Montreal, Nelson County, Va. sic







= Minister Ww. M. Kansom has

Jeave of absence and is now in
Esko North Carolina mountains.
eee a

3 oA few weeks ago there was a
bureau report as to the coiton
oacreage whivhsplaced the de-
crease for? this year at only
about 2.percent, At the, time
_ that report was believed ta..be
far from correct. Now another
report -has been made- which *
- places the acreage at seventeen
omillions acres for- this year
_ against twenty millions for fast
year. In-consequence ; of this|
ag was am adyance in price

pof several points on Thursday.

a
THE 8 TO 7 DECISION.

-~Jastce� Clark Dissents moa Powerful
and Convincing Opinion,

2 oWe print below the dissenting
opinioa of Jastice Clark in the
- case of Wyatt vs manufacturing
_gompany which embraced the
_ question of fraud in haying the
presiding officers ot the Legisla-
ture siga a bill which uever pass
ed the lLegvisiamre. Justice
Avery concurs in the dissent, but
the fasionists agree and there-
fore the law cannot be reviewed
: afd any court.
_~ o[his case resembles much that
of Carr vs. Coke, at this term, an
investigation of the same fraud
being asked, and itis unnecessary
to repeat the reasons given in the
dissenting opinions filed in that
case. In this case the plaintiffs
rclaim under an assignment exe
cuted i im accordance with the laws
retofore in force in this State
d which legislature after legis-
~e, including the present one,
g declined to alter. The plain-
contend that such assign-
nt is valid, and that their
ts are noi affected by the pre-
ad oassignment law� whieh
eing defeated on its pas"
a the present General As-
y was surreptitiously fraud-
oLovsimgias to be signed by
lec practiced on the

3
=
a
2

[Speakers The. ~actin was� dis-

returned from =Mexico --op- a.

missed below on the ground that,
taking the allegations to be true
"and indeed they were not seri-

er, |Opely coéntroverted onT the ~argu-

|ment"the Court had no jurisdic"

ition to right this great whoag on
fraud.

Tt ~would seem that certainly
the Speakers of the two Houses
should Lave been allowed to- tes-
tify that. thig fraud had beeu
practiced on them and that their
signatures had not been know-
ingly and intentionally placed to
a bill which they Knew.--had not
been passed, but which had been
defeated. Fhis was due to them,
itp the Legislature and to the peo-
ple. The people are entitled, as
a saeredjand inviolable right, to
be- governed ty no laws» save
those enacted by their represen-

jtatives duly and legally assem-

bled. Theact of a corrupt and
~hiredwillain, whose preper place
is in the penitentiary, should by
no process of reasoning or re-
finement of logic be imposed on
the people, in express contradic.
sion to a vote of their General
Asssmby. The power of. consoli-
dated, wealth, acting through the
channel of a purchased and _hire-
ling lobby, is a growing evil ino
all American legislation.- The
solemu and unmistakable issue in
this case, brushing aside all teci-
nicalities, is simply this: Shall
the law be what the representa-
tives of the people declare it
shall be, or shall the will of pow-
ertul and menacing combinations
of capital acting through the
lobbyists, with which they every
where assail legislatiye action,
override and be substituted for
the popalar will? To a fearful
extent this has beeu the result in
Congress and in many State leg-
islatures, but by more devious
methods. This is the first in"
stance in which ~one of these
combinations, failing to secure its
end by infiuencing legislation in
thé usual mode, has boldly: and
cynically defied the action of the
General Assembly and set aside
its negative vote by fraudulently
substitutang | the defeated bill as
& @énuine one, and procuring the! .
unintentional signatures of the
Speakers. Forthe first time in
American histery accumulated
capital aad its ohirélings have
dared to take so bold a step.

We are asked to say that such

have ono
power to call the legislature to

gether, and they may be unable
to satisty the Govervor that their
wrongs, great as they are, are suf-

ficient to-tax the public with the
expensive precedent of . re-sum-
mouing the legislature whenever
the fraud of a lobbyist is discov

ered. There isan easy, a cheap
and speedy remedy by setting
aside the signatures, as _" fraud-
ulent, apon the testimony of. the
Speakers to that effect and the
verdict of a jury» Uponthe ver-
dict of ajury, every man is de-
pendent for the protection of hig
property, his reputation, his ilb*
erty aud his life. Surely it is a
compatent tribunal to decide
whether the signatures to a piece
of- paper were knowingly and in-
tentionally affixed by the Speak-

ers with the assent of their . re"
spective Houses, or whether the
bill had been defeated on its - at-
temptea passage and notwith

standiug such defeat the signa-
tures and certificate of ~he Speak:

ers had been thereafter procured
by a hold and shameless fraud:

Reduced to ite last analysis, the
question 1s simply whether Leg-
islaturers shal legislate, and
whether. time honored institution.
of otwelve guod men and true�
shall be:tensted to declare, upon
the testimony of the presiding of-
ficers of the two Houses, that a
gross frand was. perpetrated on
them in procuring their signa-

tures toa bill which had not been
enacted by the two Houses, but
had beer tabled.

It-is not an occasion when pub-
li¢ policy or individnal rights can
tolerate the suppression of an in-
vestigation. The investigation
should be full, free and searching.
oThe lights should be tarned on,�
not off. Nothiog that 1s honest
and pure and of-cood repute, need
fear. an investigation. Others
have no claim to be pro tected
from it.� 7

Avery, Jd. concurs ip this diasent.

eee

DEATA UF DR. C, T. BAILEY.

Rev: Dr. C. T. Batley died at
his residence in this city -yester-
day morning: at 8 o'clock, aged 60
years. Dr. Bailey was-one of the
in the State. He wae for nearly

Comte p besa

twenty years editior of the Bidli-

"_"

bal Kaabii the fadibg Baptist
journal of the State, and one of
the foremost expuxuents of that de-
nomination in the Soath He was
an able, original and interesting
writer and nado of the Aecorder
a great pewspaper as well as u
popular denominational vorgau.
He occupied a bigh piace in tire
councils of his church, and was a
safe. conservative and wise leader.
During his twenty years resi-
dence in Raleigh he endeared
himself to onr people generally,
aad was held in the highest es-
teem by them. He was a pro-
found thinker, a scholar, an able
preacher, a fearless, pungent, in-

teresting editor, an honest, up-"
right man and a genial amiable
friend and neighbor. Dr. Bailey
was borp 1n Williamsbarg, Va.
He was educated at William and
Mary and atthe Richmond Col-
leges of Virginia, he entered the
ministry immediately on tue com-
pletion of his education, but was
during the last two years of the
wer, @ private in the Confederate
army. ter the war was over
he re-entered tho ministiy, and
after serving. several leading Vir-
ginia churches, he was called to
Edenton, N. ©. Fiom bere he
weat to Warrenton, and was pis-
tor of the Baptist Church there,
when calfed'to. the editorial chair
of the Biblical Recorder. He was
avery charmiug man, was full of
good humor and good cheer. It
was his nature to look on the
bright side of life, and although
his latter days have been filled
with inténse suffering, he has
born, these sufferings with Chris -
tian fortitude and characteristic
patience.

Dr. Bailey was stricken with
paralysis on March 6, 1892, from
which he never fully recovered
althoagh up to a year ago he was
able to look after his work. Dur-
iag the past year he has been
gradually growing weaker, and
the fact that his valuable life was
fast ebbivg awav has been
known to his family and friends
for several months. ~The end
came yesterday morning aud one
ofthe brightest ininds went out,
one of the noblest hearts ceased
beating aud one of the States
best citizens was no more.

Dr. Bailey leaves a widow, who
was Miss Aunie 3S. Briley, of Vir.
ginia, three sons, Messrs. ©. T.
Bailey, J. William Bailey, who
succeeded h~s father as editor of
|the ecoraer, and E. L.: Bailey;
and one dau; hter, the wife of
Mr. Wesley N. Jones, of tinis city.

In the bereavement with which
these good people have been
stricken thes. ha ave the. sympathy
of @ very wide circle of friends in
Raleigh aid throughout the
State."Raleigh News and Obser-
ver 6th.







LOCAL DIRECTORY.

COUNTY OFFICERS.
Superior Court Clerk, E. A. Moye.
sheriff, R. W. King.

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

Coroner, Dr. C. OTH. Laughing-

ouse.
Surveyor,

Commissioners"C. Dawson, cbhmTn
Leonidas Fleming, T. E. Keel, Jesse L.
Smith ands. M. Jones.

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

Cuunty Examiner of Teachers." Prof.
W. H. Kagsdale.

TOWN OFFICERS.

Mayor, Ola Forbes.

Clerk, C. C. Forbes

Treasurer, W. T. Godwin.

Pulice"J. W. Perkins, chief, Fred.
Cox, asst; J. W. Murphy, night.

Councilmen"W. H. Smith, W. L.
Brown, W. TI. Godwin. T. A. Wilks,
Dempsy Ruffin, Julius Jenkins.

CHURCHES.

Baptist. Seryices every Sunday (ex-
cept second) morning and nigiit. Prayer
weeling Thursday night. Rev. C, M.
Killings, pastor. Sunday School at 9:30
A.M. �,�. D. Rountree, SupTt.

Catholic. No regular services.

Episeopal. Servicesevery fourth Sun-
day morning and night. Rev. 4A,
Greaves, Rector. Sunday School at 9:30
A. A. W. B. Brown, Supt.

Methodist. Services every Sunday
morning and wight. Prayer meeting
~Vednesday night. Rey. G. F. smith,
pastor. Sunday xchool at 9:30 4. M.A.
BK. nllington, Supt.

Presvyterian. Services every 1st and
3rd Sunday morning and night. Prayer
meeting ~taesday night- ev. Archie
MecLauchlin, pastor. Sunday School at
¥:30 A. M.,B. D. Kvans, SupTt.

LODGES.

Covehant Lodge No. 17. I. O. O, F.,
meets every ~Tuesaday night. Dr. W. H
Bagwell, N.G.

Grechnvulle Lodge No. 28t A. F. & A,
M., meets first and third Monday nights
Ww. M. Kiug, W. M

© NEATHESS 5 -UIGRESS

"SEND OUR "

JOB -:- PRINTING

"TO THE"

REFLECTOR OFFICE
"IF YOU WANT"

$ First-Class Work.
HE aw scmacs scartsossosscazce

:
|

}| JoHet, TH,

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

Gathered From All

OF thea
Country aud AT Seopians of

IN THE NOKTH.

Forest fires are raging in seyeral sec-
tions of the Adirondacks, New York.

Distinct earthquake shocks were felt
at Brattsboro, Vt., Tuesday forenoon.
No damage was done.

Dr. Robert W Buchanan, the New
York murderer, has been sentenced, for
the fourth time. to die.

On May 29th Rhode IslandTs twenty-
seventh governor, Charles Warren Lip-
pitt, was inaugurated.

The Knights of Labor headquarters
will be removed from Philadelphia,
Pa., to Washington, D. C.

All records for heat on the first day
of June are smashed Saturday by the
temperature in all parts of the north.

New York merchants and chamber
of commerce have sentan appeal south
asking that a stand be taken for gold

The chamber of commerce of the city
of New York have decided to enter up-
on a crusade against free silver coinage.

The Bethlehem, Pa., Iron company
announces an increase in the wages of
furnace men from $1.26 to $1.40 per
day.

The opening gun of the campaign in
the east ayainst free silver was fired at
a meeting held at Philadelphia, Pa.
Tuesday.

The cost of the late trolley strike at
Brooklyh, N. Y. has just been made
public. Altogether the sum of $13,789
was expended.

A large portion of the business cen-
ter of Dalton, Pa., was destroyed by
fire early Sunday Morning. The esti-
mated loss is $50,000.

That the minersT strike in the Pitts-
burg district which has been stubborn-
ly fought for the past twelve weeks, is
at an end, is a foregone conclusion.

The strike at the wovlen mills at
Taft, Murdock & Co., Caryville, Mass..
has ended by the firmTs conceding the
10 per cent. advance in wages asked.

On being asked Monday afternoon
what he thought of Chief Byrnes re-
tirement, Dr. Parkhurst said: ~~The re-
result satisfies me and gratifies me.�

The Carnegie Steel company at Pitts-
burg has voluntarily increased the wa-
ges of tonnage, day and time men 10
per cent. About 20,000 men will par-
ticipate in the increase.

It is announced that a wire nail trust
at Pittsburg, Pa., is in rogress of

formation. It is'said that all the plants|°

in the country will bein the combine
except the Philadelphia and Joilet
mills.

Last week, for the first time in two
years, the extensive Jocomotive shops
at Susquehana, Pa., and all of the shops
of the New York, Lake Erie and West-
ern system were in operation ten hours

~| per day.

The widely known wholesale and
retail hardware and iron firm of Hum-
phrey & Dodge, of Concord, N. H., an-
nounced its insolvency Monday and has
issued a circular calling a meeting of
their creditors.

The Consolidated Wire and Nail com-
pany, operating mills at Lockport and
St. Louis and Allentown
and Pittsburg, Pa., has notified its em-
ployes that

The great detective and chief of po-

| lice, Byrnes; of New York City, was

Manday afternoon retired on a pension

eir wages will be advan-
ced ten per cent.

ESTABLISHED 1876.

S:.N7. Sehultz

AT THE

OLD BRICK STORE

ARMERS AND MEKUHANTS BUY
ing their yearTs supplies will find
their interest to get our prices before yo
chasing elsewhere. Ourstock is comp
n allits branches.

PORK SIDES&SHOULDERS, |

FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAk

RICE, TEA, &c.
alwuys at LOWEST MARKET PRI
TOBACEO SNUFF & CIGARS.
we buy direct from Manufacturers, ena

bling youto buy at one profit. A com
plete stock of

FURNITURE

always onhand and sold at prices to suit
the times. Our goods areall bought and
sold for CASH thefefore, having no risk
to run,we sell at a close margin.
tfully,
8S. M. SCHULT2,
Greenville. N.C

sleep caeeeanieienianicceemam

Professional Cards. _

iene:

os F. TYSON,

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

Practices in all the Courts.

Ciyil and Criminal Business Solicited.

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

Prompt and careful attention given
all business.

Money to loan on approved security.
Terms easy.

J. H. BLOUNT. J. L. FLEMING

LOUNT & FLEMING
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
GKEENVILLE, N. OC.

eee Practice in all the Courts.

L. Cc. LATHAM. HARRY SKINNER.
@& SEKINNSEKK,

ATTORNEYS*AaT~LA@,
GREE- VILLE. N. C.

THOS. J. JARVIS.
JARVIS & BLOW,

ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,

GREEN VILLE, N.C.
«@ Practice in all the Cenrta.

John E. Woodard. F. ©. Hard
Wilson, N.C. Greenville, .

OODAKD & HARDING,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
Greenville, N.

Special attentiongiven to collections
nd settlement of claims.

ALEX: L. BLOW

Barbers.

AMES A. SMITH,
TONSORIAL ARTIST.
GREENVILLE; N. ©.
Se Patronage solicited.

ERBERT EDMUNDS,
, FASHIONABLE BARLER.
@& Under Opera: House.
Special attention given ~to. cleaning

Gentlemens Clothing.

You every day

in the month of

June that if
you have
your Printing dane
at the.
REFLECTOR
- OFFICE,

JOB -:

It willl be done right,

It will be done in styl

and it always suits.
These points are
well worth weighing
in any sort

&
of work, but

above all things in

Your Job Printing.

&





~he

YOUR--ATTENTION

IS CALLED 10 THE ELEGANT
"LINE OF "

HD

DRESS COONS, SILKS, LACES,

Ribbons, Gloves, Mitts, &c., carried by

J.B CHERRY & CO.

"this season. Our Stock of "

»-F1.O-E.5,

"AND"
Ladies & Childrens

oSLIPPERS !

ts the largest and cheapest ever of-'
Jered in this town, come and see for;

yourself and be convinced.

BABY CARRIAGES, FURNITURE,

Mattinys, Window Shades and Lace!
Curtains.

Goads sold on their merits and| |

priées made accordingly.

J.B. CHERRY & Co.

A WAR
GROCERIES.

Just received and to be sold Ic~w'
""a complete line of"""

FLOUR, SUGAR, COFFEE,
Larp, Meat, MEAL, Mouasses, OIL!

and everything kept in
first-class grocery store.

BOB WHITE & SPORTING CLU

Cigars, the finest in the State.

D. S. SMITH.
H. G. JONES,

ARCHITECT AND BUILDER,

Greenville, N.C.

Smaart

Gentracts taken for modern
Je brick and wooden buildings.
bid ehouses changed to any plan
esire Plan and specifications
tally made at short notice. All
gua -first-class in
~made very

-

. DROPS OF SWEAT. : -

That tlieReBector Lost Hunting
Thesé Items. °

a

=a Warming up again.

here again.

Boys, donTt forget LangTs Wash
Suits, they keep you couil.

Fishing parues are making
gvod catches.

The young people had a dance
in Germania Hall tast orght.

Some of the hook and line fish-
ermen are briuging in pice
strings.

To keep cool buy summer Coats
and Vests at-LangTs..

Several of our ycung men went
down to the commencement at
Ayden last night.

James Brown offers his
chine shops, foundry, &c.
sale. See notice.

ma-"
for

Ladies, now is the time to buy
Siippers, at LangTs.

DonTt forget the moonlight ex-
cursion to-night. A good time is
jiu store for ail who go.

Some of the farmers are brag-
ging on their tobacco. It bas
| grown rapidly the past week.

| Finest N. Y. Fkresh Butter. The

| Best Blended Tea 25cts per lb.

ut be Old Byick Store.

A frieud in need is generally

ithe friend who strikes you tor a
,quarter or -half_a dollar.3

The smail boyTs pocket bulges
~out in away that gives unmis-

itakable evidence of green apples.

Many a man can do muvre in
~four hours when he feels like it
than hecan do in twenty hoursT.
i'when he dvesuTt feel like it.

For thin, cool Dress Goods. go
to Lang's.

| There is some satisfaction in
~the breaking of the hot speli"it
stopped people from asking ois it
~hot enough for you?�

| Cards are out to the marriage
of Mr. E. E. Harper, editor New-
bern Journal, and Miss Vivia
-Wood, of Newbern, June 12th.

Mahala Brown, wife of Jim
Brown, colored, disappeared from
home Wednesuay. After a long
search she was found next eyer-
ing in the woods tn a demented
condition.

While haying his Wikidénce in
the hands of varpenters the editor
and family got their meals at the
King Houss,Tand ~we feel like say-
ing that no'town has a bett
kept hotel. Certainly there is no

more pleasant and accom modat" a

ing hostess than oKing.

The colored Salvation Army is

(JUNE BUGS. |

at One Outing.

Miss Maud Moore} 1s ay

Miss Lina Sheppard.

Mr. L. Heilbroner, of Tarboro,
spent last night here..

Mrs. M. R- Lang went to Tar-
boro this morning to spend a few
days.

Messrs. C. S. Forbes a
Erwip bave returned hb
Trinity Coilege.

. W.
e from

Misses Jennie and Vinie Ward
have been spending a few days
with friends here.

Mr. J. B. White went to Peters-
burg yesterday to meet his sis"
ter and accompanying her hom

Mrs. D. Abrams,

of

ening to visit her daught
Ss. M. Schultz.

Messrs. J. H. Blount and L.
C. Latbam returned from Wash-
1Ipxton to-day where they had
been attending court.

Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Proctor re-
turned Thursday evening from
their bridal tour and went out to
their home at Grimesiand.

Had you ever thought what a
monopoly the bee has in the hon-
ey wakiovg business? In his pe-
culiar line he is fiee from the in-
fringemenis of science and. the
molestation of trusts.

For SaLe."A_ well equipped
Machine Shop, Foundry, Black
smith Shop and Wood-working
Shop, with all necessary tools and
machinery. For terms apply to

_o AMES BRowN.
Greenville, N. C., June 7, 1895.

The town authorities are hav~
ing some ditches cut and plank
sewers put down on Dickerson
Avenue. We duubt if making
excavations for the hot sun to
shine on is the most conducive
thing for health that could be
done just | now.

New Officers-
Greenville Lodge No. 284, A.
F.& A. M., at the meeting held
Tharsday, elected the following
officers.

Zeno Moore, W. M.
J. M. Reuss, 8S. W.
QO. L. Joyner, J. W.
D, J- Whichard, Sec.
J. E. Starkey, Treas.

-HE KING HOUSE,

Mre. W.M KING, Prop,

-QUISINE SUPERB.

The Refiector Duck Caught These

My entire stock of

DRY (00S, NOHONS

noes, Hats,.
CLOTHING,

GentT Furnishings at

25 Per Cent.

Reduction.

These goods must go.
I intend to push them
for all it is worth and
this means the entire
stock. |

===, 1, MUNFORD,

~GREENVILLE, - =H: C:

Next Door. to. bank,»


Title
Daily Reflector, June 7, 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.) - June 7, 1895
Date
June 07, 1895
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microforms
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