Daily Reflector, June 12, 1895


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







Vol. 2.

GREENVILLE, N. C., JUNE 12, 1895.

No. 158

Local Trams

Passenger and mail " train
north, arrives 8:22 A.M. Going
arrives 6 :37 P. M.

North Bound Fre

oat
+ arrives 6:45 A.
M; leaves 10:15 A.
Routh.

Bound t, arrives 1:51 P
«, leaves 2:11 Evga

Steamer Myers arrives from Wash
ington Mondgy, Wednesday and Friday
leaves for Was lingtou Tuesday, Thure
day and Saturday.

Weather Bulletin.
Cloudy. Thursday..

- COMMENCEMENT.

PITT FEMALE SEMINARY.

A Successful Closing Entertainment"
Distinctions and Scholorship"Prof

It was a large and well
haved audience that assembl
the Opera House,
ing, to witness the closi
cises of Pitt Female
This institation has given a num-
ber of very pleasant entertain-
ments to our people, and this
closing one fell behind none of the
others in interest.

~The following programme was
rendered with utmost precision
and in perfect order :

PART I."PRIMARY.
Ho! for Carolina, Chorus Sehoo).

Piano olo"SoldierTs Joy, Bissell
Misses James, Rawls and G. Forbes,

Piano Duet"Schottiche, Bellak.
Misses Proctor and Muvore.

Character Song"Tommy Tompkins,

Primary Class.

Piano Solo"Summer, Lichner.
Miss Rawls.
Recitation"Little Saowdrop, Bradley.
Miss Berthu Patrick.

Piano Duet"Alpine Waltz, Mack.
Misses Rawls and Neil Skinner.
Piano Solo"Flower Song, | Lange.
Miss James.

Metion Song"The Owl, Primary Class
Piano Trio"Norma March, Bissell.
Misses B.Patrick, K. Proctor, M. Tucker.
Dumb-Bell Drill, Class.

- PART ti."LVFERMEDIATE.

Pole Drill, Physical Culture Class.
Piano Solo"La Traviata, J. Ascher.
Miss sheppard.

Searf Drill, | Physical ~Colcure Classi,

pues 8. Bur Jackson.
Misses B. ieee ae ene

and Boat Schedule. {

Recitation"Aux Italiens,
Miss Sheppard,
Pidno Solo"Les Rameaux, Leybach.
Miss mesewen

Panto7oime lTs Serenade.
M'seee B, Patrick ant M. Hines,
Study in Attitude, Class.
Tambourine Drill, Smal] Girls.
Valedictory, Miss Blow.

Announcement of Distinctions.
Sweet aad Low, Chorus Class.

Every piece was full of interest
and presented ina faultless man-
ner. Theaudience was especial!y
delighted with the drilis and ex-
ercises by classes. It was almost
marvellous to see the smaller
pupils go through their parts so
accurately, but it shows what can
be accomplished by thorough
training. It was evident on every
hand that the work at the Sem-"
inary has been of the very highest

A

order.
ANNOUNCEMENT OF DISTINCTICNS.

Jast before the last number on
the programme was rendered

"| Prof. Goode made the following

announcement of distinct.ons for
the term, none of those mention-"
ed falling below 85 on exam-
ination :

Latin"Ist class, Maud Biow;
2nd class, iAAddie Johnston.
History"ist class, Ellen Par-
ker, Mamie Hines, Pat Skinner;
2nd class, Mamie Tucker, Bertha
Patrick, Sallie Galloway, Janie

~| Tyson.

Arithmetic"Il1st «class, Mamie
Hines, Daisy Tucker, Bruce
Forbes; Ellen Parker, Bessie Pat-
rick; 2nd class. Ella Anderson.
3rd class, Bertha Patrick.

Physicial Geograpy--Ellen Par

ker.
Analysis"Bessie Patrick, Pat
Skinner, Mary Harris, Daisy
Tucker, Ellen Parker, Mamie
Hines, Maggie Ormond.

English Grammer"Ellen Par-
ker.

Algebra"primary, Ellen Por-
ker; higher, Maud Blow, Addie
~|Johnston. "

Rhetoric-Addie Johnston,Maud
| Blow.

Higher History- Mand Blow,

O. Meredith

oSKEETERS.�� _
Are alive to the fact that I carry a nice iine of

SPRING--SUMMER
CLOT EIN CG

S22 AND 3e"=:-

FIDE Gents FArMishing bans,

Prices within the reach of all.

FRANK WILSON,

Patrick, Bertha -Patrick, Mamie
Tucker, Nina James, Velma
Rawis, Lina Sheppard, Leta Mc-
Gowaa.

PBIMARY DEPARTMENT.

Arithmetic"l1st class, Mamie
Tucker, Nina James, Georgia
Anderson: 2nd class, Helen

Forbes, Burt James, Walter Pat-
rick, Bailey Moore.
Grammar"Janie
mie Tucker.

Geography"Daisy Tucker, Ma-
mie Hines, Pat Skinner.
Elementary Geography"Geor-
gia Anderson, Nell Skinner.
Spelling"Lena Anderson, Ben
Brown.

Primary Spelling -Hennie Rags-
dale, Bailey Moore, Burt James.
Reading"Nina James, Velma
Rawls.

The scholarship for higest
average in all English studies
was won by Miss Addie Johnston
by only one and a fraction over
Miss Maud Blow.

assistants returned thanks to the:
patrons and announced that this

Tyson, Ma-

ait Fichvee Acithaolic- Addie Jéhe-\beve,- a8, he had decided to go
"ston, Maud Blow. jelsewbere. ihe reason given for

THE KING CLOTHIER.
: oln nn Bessie | this decision was that a aren

here did not draw patronage from
elsewhere, and that the local pat-
ronage was not sufficient to sus-
taip it. |

The ReEritEcror believes the
people of Greenyille are malang a
mistake in allowing Prof. Goode
to leave. There has been no bet-
ter teacher here, and no better
advancement has been made by
the pupils than under his in-
struction. Heis justthe kind of
man needed to carry op a good
school, and that the patronage
given him was not. sufficient to

| Maintain it does, speak well
for the town. -

Cotten and Peanuts,
Hp rtabiewre a prices of cotton

and pean for yesterday, as furnished
by Cobb. Bros. & Co., Cantatenicn Mer.
chants of Norfolk :
COTTOR.
Good Middling 71-16
Low Middling 6 a .
Tone"duli. ot
PEANUTS,
Prime 4 2
Extra Prime 34
0c. but
Tone"steady.
"10 cts." Firm.

- Peas"best, 2.50 to 2.75
pian Der bags
Black and Clay, 90 to to 1.00 per bushel-







ptdocipucms 28 cents ~per mn
_Batered 4s second-class mail matter.

" ~EVERY iat (EXCEPT acta

« = &
. =
Latent = =

_ That true Odd Te aaa e -

ofalse i in the opportunity. for doing
| S good and following the .princi-

ples. as .atght inrogr= order; 73) .

-ghown by the. following. whiéh|

_3we notice in ene National _ fe-

; de the. ;
Odd Fellow living in Eaglewaod,

IIL. happened on an evening i e

October. She was left alone with
her baby boy; whea in attemptingT

ot to Fabtia kerosene lamp it ex-
=p setfing firgto ber. cloth-
~ing. In an instant she ran
screaming from the housé,
- After yunwing a few rods she re-

membered her baby, whom inthe,
- first moments of fright and agony
she had forgotten, and retracing
her steps she entéred her home,
now almost deyeloped in flames,
and catching up a blanket she
wrapped it about ner baby, but
oupon looking around she found
the door had closed upon her
and there remained nothtne for
her to do but to jump. from a
Window to the ground, several

we able tobe about | the ,

rag, therclere =
call upon - them, then almost
strangers; for so-¢reat oa favor.
But as soon as the doctor's desire
as -knoewn,;-a bundred Odd
F P-preséntedt ~thomeelves,
we obrother, even to give
their flesh and blood.

'The oWwonderfal operation oof
skin grafting has been going on
in this Gass) ever. siace October,
and thé BrotfrerTs~ wife-is now

til far ffom we :
spared, throughT é-noble déeds
eOdd. Follows. Over 5,000
pieces of skin have been = grafted
upOa the ~arms, sh
back of the suffering sister; taken}
from nearly~ea¢ hundFed persons.
oBrother Fitzgerald hasT been
obliged to.give his.entire time in
attending his beloved wife, and
the Odd. Fellows have dene all inT

{their power �,�o aid him darisg the

long months of anxiety. Who
can; ~being cognizant of such
facts, and itTs only one of many,

say that Odd Fellowship amounts

4o nothing." Three Links.
=

The Word ~~Wiefe.TT

amie minite

What do you think the beaati-
ful word owife� comes from? It

- feet below, which she did ana was}is the great word with which the

_ picked up by sympathizing
friends and neighbors.

English and Latin languages con-
quered the French and Greeks.

The baby was found to ~avell hope the French will one day!

escaped unharmed, but the poor
mother was most horribly burn-
ed, nothing remaining of hér'
clothing but the bands of her
skirts around her waist and parts
of her corset which aided in pro-
tecting thespine, to which it ~is
claimed she partly owes her fife.
; Bro. Fitagerald has been a
member of the Second Regiment,
National Guards, for sometime,
and when the doctor who had
charge of the case, and who took
a special interest in it, said that
if a sufficient number could be
feund that would volunteer he
-_- would attemp the difficult opera-
fron of skin grafting.
.~ Among the members of thé
- Second regiment none could be
found. Bro. Fitzgerald had been
member of the Order of Odd
_ Fellows-but a short time, and
during that time he had been

get a word for it instead of . that
of ofemme.� But what does it
come from? The great value of
the Saxon words is that they
mesh something. WifeT means
oweaver.� You must either be
housewives of house moths, re"
member that. Inthe deep sense,
you must either weave mén's for-
tunes and embroider then,� or
feed upon and bring thém to de-
cay. oWherever a trae wife:
comes; home is always arouod
her. The stars may te oyer her
head, thé ~glow-worm in © the
night's cold grass may be the fire
at her feet; but home is. whereT
she is, and for a noble woman, it
stretches far aroutid ~her, better.
than houses ceiled with cedar, or
painted " with | ~ vermiltion, shed=

ding ite quiet life for headreaeds
are homéless:T- This I Believe:ois|/ Dt!

elected sécretaty of his lodge, but

wonlanTs true place and power=«

Gulderg and|

ay m4 er:

we F

r4¢imépgibary-) |

wrong.

the politician would be called fa-

religious world.

od.

the light of heaven.
(Sip) 5 SSS SRIRESSA eee ce

SamTs Salary.

Se tema

that Sam Jones

ooliakl

other excitement.
Ee

are harrying themselves to

seem to be laboring under the con.

ou

eir finishing what th
take

in hand. Who sha
life?

at. least. supremely impo
cannot slight it without ferteiting
some part of his self-respect an

Shuman spirit but

~| ti detertiont ja irartageon

Maey-0 of our roatost sconedes

It is easier to do Tight than to
find plausible excases for doing

The enthusiasm ~displayed by
fnaticism in the religion of the

Men who spend their time in
talking about the faults of their
=a | {neighbors make poor servants of

life is|'
y Men who are realty in earnest
about serying God never quit be-
cause somebody else does wrong.
The man who serves God alt
nis life will at death pass out of
the shadows of this world iuto}

It pays to be an evangelist, af-
ter the order of men. It is said
conducted a
meeting in St. Louis three-weeks
and in that time collected nearly
$6000. After paying all expen-
ses he netted a trifle over $1,100
per week. It. will thus be seen
that.there is big money in evan"|!
work as.conducted after.
the methods of Sam Jones. Buatj,
omy, my,� poor sinners, how that
amount woald have helped out).
the.tocal fellows who have to hus-
tle around to get. up their salary.
before Conferesce. Bat people)
ge wild in times of religious. ex"
citement as much so as in any

Nensis all the best. men we know.
get
thr ough some kind of tagk. They|

viction that a great deal depen ds
ey here | corn prepaien reap

Bay John E. Woodard,
this isnot a woble view to: take Of

~The very-soul of daty isin~
it. Every manTs.work is:for. bine

d

wees Pe

aT THE

oOW BRICK STORET

PPABMEES AND MEKUHANTS BUY
ing their yearTs supplies will om
their.interest.to get our prices before

elsewhere. Durstack ls comp te
n allits branches.

PORK SIDES&SHN I1LDERS.

~FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR "
_ RICE, TEA, Oe a:

ways at Low REET PRI
oTOBACKO 5 UFF & GARS:
we buy direct from Manufacturers, ena

bling youto psy at one ~profit. A com
plete stock of

FURNITURE

always ~onhand and soid at prices to suit ~

the t ioe ret te: nav and

sold tom yg norisk
to run,we sell at a close ~margin.

data ye eo

Srecdivile. N: Cc

Professional Cards.

B. F. T¥SON,

Attorney and Counselor at-Law
Greenville, Pitt County, N.C.
Practices in all'the Oourts ~
Ciyil and ¢@rimimal Business Solicited.
+ Makes a special of fraud diyorce,dam-
ages, actions to recover land, and col-
ections.

Prompt and careful attention given
all birsiness. -

Money to joan on sbirercs eon wite

Terms easy-

J« He BLOUNT
LOUNT & FLEN ING -
ATTORN aT-Law,
: @HERN VILLE; N. C.
ar Practice in all the Courts,

LC. LATHAM. - HARRY SKINNER.
po arias & SKIN Nik,

ATTORNEYSaT-LAW,
GREED VILLE. N.u. ©

iin
"

THOS. J. JARVIS.
pasvis & BLOW,

ATTORN EX8-AT-LAW,
GREEN VILLE, N.C
ow Practice i in sil the Courts

F.2D We Harding,
Wilson, N.C. Greenville,

OODARD & HARDING,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,

Greenville, N

Special attentiongiven to collections
jud settlem ent of claims. °*

AIL&Xx.- L. BLOW

Cc,

a.

o�,�,

losing to e degree the -favor =

of friends. Bat-let ns wat get too Barbers.

busy with Shaan at ~he end i seu AMES re Sr = ;

[rai to m ake us Bias + fine Steet
ore activity o ab aimless 7a ale aes

MUNDS..
NABLE BAREER.
gow ind dg Et�

oSpecial nlon given to cleaning









oe "

OvH. Laughing-

en
. Dawson, chmTn,

-T. E. Keel, Jesse L.
on .

erkins, chief, Fred.
furphy, night.
"_* ith, Ww.

SIME, Ms
eo od in. T. A. Wilks,T

. cHuRCHae om.

9:80, " Aldermen Howell and,;Colvin, at At-

~4 G
pastor.
»_2B, Ellington, Supt. %&
imme, Presbyterian. Services e and
3rd Sunday morning and ni ayer

b=" meeting Vesey ni

Happenings of Interest in This and

~tist University,

. -_ ae ee : a |

4. Congressman Charties Grosvenor, of

y| council meeting

.F. Smith,
9:30 A. M.A.

o| Wednesday, nominated Colonel William

_|:,. Professor W. 4, Shephe .. professor
of chemistry at Randolph-Macon col-

+| store in Ashland late. Monday evening:

in Other Oountries.

THROUGH THE SOUTH.
The Southern railway is going to
equip all its cars with air brakes.
The Atlanta & Florida road was sold
Tuesday to the Central Trust Company
of New York City for $275,000, -

The first car load of peaches shipped
in~Georgia this season was loaded at
Tifton, Tuesday. .

Postmaster General Wilson delivered
the annual cOmmencement address at
the University of Mississippi, at Oxford,
~Tuesday

Postmaster General Wilson addressed
the students of the Southwestern Bap-.
located: at Jackson,
~Tenn.,/Wednesday.. es ee yu,

¥F. B. Reddish. was. shot dead while
plowing in Appling county, Ga., Mon-
day. There ts no clew t6 the assassinTs
motive or identitg. er
Information from, Pocahontes is that
the situation is more serious. The Fitz
Lee company from Lynchburg has been
ordered to the seene.

~Semator Jehn-B, Gordon is out in a
card announcing his permanent retire-
ment from politics at the end of his
present term of office.

_/'The Union-railway will be sold at
Chattanooga, Tenn., June 17th, by or-
der of the ttnited States ~court. The
upset ptice is $100,000.

T Dedforges,the New - Orleans boodle
alderman, goes to. the, pen, for three
years. The supreme court failed to
give hima net trial ~

Ohio, arrived in -Memphis..on June
2nd, to spend several days fn the inter-
for president. "

lente, Ga,, hada . ht Monday,in the
_ mm uring an election.
oThe council prified thent epart.
~J. B-Poend, ~ofthe Kuoxville Senti-
nel, has, purehasedTcontralling -interest
in the Knoxyille ..Tribune, and will}
ohereafter inanage voth papers.
The Kentucky republican state .bon-/
vention, which convened at "Louisville

O. Bradley, of, Laneaster,.for governor.

lege. Ashland Va., died suddenly in a

~Phe egronorTé jury found,a verdict of
murder against the fireman, ~Thomas

Pounder, who shot - and &illed ex-Fire-
man Frank Keenan at: Savannush, Ga.,
last week. ..

-_ -_ ne te a ae -_
er a

-
7 Te

S a 0 wv .

ra ae a. =. & * ae. . a
ae 7 es ee eee a ee Fe .

im,
~~

8 | 3,326,641 bales - and.:2, 835,441 bales re-

4

2
8
4
'
A)
4.

@}urday end.closed it A shortage of fif-
§| teen hundred dollars is reported
| new man will be put in.

BiT Atinost every mine along the Norfolk
Biriver to the.:Elichorn. region went to
© \ work Saturday with yery. near their

| $2 septs of con! diamer
: OU WANT" | - The: court -of New Orleans
* %, th a s refused a rehéaring in the ease of
, t ' ~ » Fh OF a SS Work. ? 4 the Olympic club, in which, .glove con-

The total visible supply of cotton for
the world is 8,674,553 bales, of which
:3.808,35% - balesT aréT Ameri¢an oagainst

spectively last year. |
' Export Scruggs , investigated the
local dispensary at oLaurens, 8. C., Sat-

and 8

S| and-Western ~railread from -the Ohio

tests were declared illegal. This puts

This Keminds. -

You every day

in the month of

June that if
you have
your Printing done

at the

WILMINGTON & WELDON R. B.

~= AND BRANCHES. | ~*
AND FLORENCE. RAIL ROAD.
Condenaed Schedule.

Dated?) 1} wo]
Apl24 - at
i895. I &

Leave Weidon:|;

Ly Rocky Mt 1 05/10 20 6 00
Lv Wilson 2 03\11 03

LvwSelma = [vo 2

Ly Fay wevplle 4 1a s3t: -

Ar. Fioren ~ 3-167 BOul4 ~

_ REFLECTOR
JOB -- OFFICE.

It will be done right, T

It will be done in style

and it. always suits.

These points-are

well worth weighing

in any sort

of work, but

apove all things in

an end to glove contests in that ety.

~

j Your Job Printing.

. ASE.
: AG ; Ae pi..f
Ter? , * M,. P. M.
Ly Wiidiingto alts oe) 4: 7 00
dons nolia }2 0 rd
A Wide La este a
Fae 5 FERS : esyit! Fest:
oa 5
Jaa pqay� 2 ;
Pp. M. P. w\P. M,
Lv Wilson 1 30 11 3g) 10 32
Ar Rocky Mt ,|.2:33|___|12.07), 1 15
Ar Tarboro ap
Lv oTarboro | : :
Lv Bocky Mt 2 33): [12.07
Ar Weldon 1 :3 48 12 60! |

paves Weldon 3.40 p. m,,.. Hau 4.00
p. m., arrives Sco d Neck at 4.55

w., Greenville 6.37 p.m Kinston 7.35
dy me; ee ves Kinston 7.20
a. vithe 98 Am. ! rriving

Halifax at 11:00 a. m., Weldon 11.20 am
dally extept Sunday. -

Trains on
Washington 7.00 a, m,, arrives

8.40 p. m., Tarboro 9.50; return
leaves Tarboro 4.50 F m., P : i

.p. m,, arrives W
~Daily except Sunday.
trains on Scotland Neck Branch.
Train leaves taxhoce N.C, via Al
marie & Raleigh R. R. daily exceptS
day, at 500 p. m., Sunday 8 00 P. M;
arrive Plymouth 9.20 P. M., 5.20 p. m.
~Return
Sundsy, 5.30 a. m., Sunday 9.90 a. 2,
arrive Tarboro 10.25 a, m_ and 11.45
a. m.

JOHN F. DIVINE,
General £c

J. R, KENLY, GenTl -
T. M. EMERSON, Trafhe Manager.

%.

leaves Plymouth ax except

Washnigtom Branch leave "

armele 6.10
ngton 7.35° ""







YOUR -- ATTENTION

IS CALLED 10 THE ELEGANT
__"LINE OF "

- DRESSED, SILKS, LACES

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

dD. OHERRY & Gf,

"this season. Our Stock of"

S-H.O.E.S,

"AND_
Ladies & Childrens

oSLIPPERS

is the largest and cheapest - Jer or-

True,

JOTTINGS.

BY O. L. JOYNER.

Messrs. J. W. Morgan and
B. E. Parham will not spend
the summer off this year.

Crops are beginning to need
rain. Tobacco is suffering least
of any other crop, while corn
especially needs rain.

Just such weather as we have
been having this spring is the
right kind to cause tobacco to
grow up spindling and button
out before it is much more than
half grown. Some will say,
oOh, well, mine is buttoniug
with twelve, fourteen and -six~
teen leaves and that isa plenty.�
that is a sufficient num-
ber to leave on the plant but

Jered ia this town, come cand see fox+you can be very sure when you

yourself and be conv:nced.

~ BABY CARRIAGES, FURRITURE

Maitinys, Window Shades and Lace
Curtains.

Goods sold an their merits
prices made accordingly.

J. B. CHERRY & Co.
H. G. JONES,

ARGHITEGT AND BUILDER,

Greenville, N. C.

Contracts taken for modera
style brick and weo7en buikdi:. .
Ola houses chanzed tc rnv p22
desired. Plan and s,ec icaticr ~
oarefully made at short notice. A"!
work guaranteed first-cless in

every respect. Prices made very

1{07. ,

and

7 Greenville Market.

Corrected by 8. M. Schultz, at the
eo Old Bricx stere. .
_ Butter. per Ib

Batter kept in refrigeratorp at
See e|J- L. Starkey &O0oTs. LZ.
- Western Sides 6.60 to 73| Masonic lodge. Mr. Larry Moore left morn-|
_ Sagar cured Hams bed Mrs. J. F. Speight has moved|ing for Whitakers.
- Corn Meal 50 to 80|ut0 the Eborn house near the To keep cool bay summer Coats
ab 525 tos ee pererr "_ ~ land Vests at LangTs.
° or thin, cool Dress zo
6 to 10 ri Rev. G. F. Smith returned yes-
oain|O lara 5 an terday from Durham. ?
Miss Blanche Barde y- : Seen
~0 month ots neg been vAigog tho, Minas Mrvile and Lillie. Wa.
20 to 25| family of Mr. W. B. W fe"! Bethel to-day to attend the com-
10 turned home to-day. ndiitieesent. - ,
| Meeting of H ) :
134 ° = to-macerow sighs pi heen : Rev. L.-L. Nash, D. D., of New-
3% son Mrieetett en tee ee Methodist|
20 00 a y : of Foreman B beasic greene . ! wes ad

early that it is not ina healthy floor inside the st showing

Newbern this morning.

into the Cory house near

see tobacco buttoning out this

condition and when any crop is
not growing in a healthy state
the best results canTt possibly
be expected. One of the best
tical for early buttoning,
we have heara old and expe-
rienced tobacco farmers say, is
to absolutely change its growth.
Check it so to speak, which
can be done in several ways,
but the best is by deep and
close plowing. By doing this
you up-set the top roots and at
the same time loosen the dirt
and form a new and mellow
dirt for the feelers to start off
in. A great many times such

deep plowing is so socessary
that really the tobacco looks

like it is ruined, but donTt tear

up the roots and it willdo the
work.

Ladies, now is the time to buy

Slippers, at LangTs.

Mr. L. Hines returned from

Finest N. Y. Fresh Butter.
Best Blended Tea 25cts per Ib.

at be Old Brick Store.

Policeman Fred Cox has mo

The |Forbeston. Apply to A. Forbes.

MORE FLAMES.

INCENDIARIES BURN ANOTHER
HOUSE.

Store Broken Into and Attempt Made
toe Burn That also"Negro Arrested. |

[Special to Reflector.)
Kinston, N. C., June 12."This
morning about 2:15 oTclock the
honse of Mr. Sol Oettinger was
discovered on fire, and in forty
minutes it was burned to the
ground. It was set on fire and
the flames had made such head-
way when discovered that they
could not to extinguished. The
house was worth $3,000. Most of
the furniture was saved, but in a

badly damaged condition.

While the fire was in progrees
at Mr. OcttingerT's the store of P.
BR. Borden was broken into.
Blood was found on the ground
outside the window and on the

that the party breaking in the
store had cut himself on the
broken giass of the window.
Some burned paper inside the
store indicated that an effort was
also made to fire this building but
it was not successful. No goods
were missed from the store except
some Cigars and cigarettes

A negro boy named Henry
Sanders was arrested last night
for breaking in the house of Mrs.
H. Cummings on Saturday night.
He was given a hearing before
the Mayor to-day and held in a
$500 bond. The bond was not
given.up to 2 P. M.

Boys, donTt forget Ts Wash
Suits, they keep you 2

Mr. F. J. Corwin went to Bethe
¥ «

For Rentr"House and lot in

y Rey. A- McLauchlin went to
Parmele to-day.

oO LV

S.Cq@YwourwNoWw ib

'$G009 ONIHSINUNS


Title
Daily Reflector, June 12, 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 12, 1895
Date
June 12, 1895
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/68050
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