Daily Reflector, January 8, 1896


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







TRUTH IN PREFERENCE 70 FICTION.

4

GREENVILLE, N. C., WEDESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1896.

~SQINST. UL0}}0q, 3B

Q B18 IOF OUL 99G

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Bes

een aye gaan aia

GOOD NIGHT"I'M TIRED.

ee RE

JAMES BUCKHAM. |

My little girl, at grandmamaTs
One Summer, to thie dusty town
Was wont to send, each night afresh,
A childish letter posting down.
"Twas brimming full of brooks and
T fields, s
And all the joy the amity yields,
But soon the writerTs lids would fall,
And then would come a straggling
scrawl,

oGoodnight"ITm tired.�

Dear little one !"so thoughtful she
Toshare her pleasures pure and sweet,
To make each day, so glad to her,

In wider blessing more complete.
What though the weary pen would lay,
And sleepy thoughts at snailTs pace

drag ?
Until she could no longer write,
She spared the crooked words, oGood-
night,
Goodnight "ITm tired.�
To higher use called,
And when the

Sweet Heart !
She passed from us.

sun
Was setting of her little day,

And heavenTs dawning had begun,
In restful peace she turned her eyes
To the blue fleece-besprinkled skies,
And whispered, as she passed away,
oIt has been such a happy day !

Goodnight"ITm tired.�
HarperTs Bazar.

IN NORTH ~CAROLINA.

e

* =e o
Matters of Interest Over the State.

There is a movement for the settling
of a number of people from the North-
west, some of them Scandinavians, on
the line of the Seaboard Air Line be-
tween Raleigh and Weldon.

The people of Charlotte and Greens-
boro will make extensive preparations to
receive the Liberty Bell on its way to
Philadelphia.
dependence Square ~in Charlotte, and on
Guilford Court House battle-ground.

Dr. W: R. Capehart. reports that on
the Albemarle sound alone there is in-
vested $150,000 in steam and_horse-
power seines, and the yearly outlay
is $30,000 in keeping up the plants,
| which employ 900 persons, and these in
fifty days get over $40,000 in wages.

The product , in iced fish is $175,000, |

and of salt-packed fish, yet, 000.

TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS.

In descending a mine at Shamokin,
Pa,,four men were thrown from a bucket
and fell 600 feet. foe

A fertilizer factory at Williamsburg,

N,, Y., was blown up and five men ace
supposed to be in the mines.

~The schooner Jennie C. Stubbs, from
Wilmington, N. C., to Cape Haytien,
was wrecked; the captain and crew were

rescued. }

Mohday the thermometer went to 11
|rlegrees below. zero at Waterbury:
3 below at New York and o26 b
Rome, N. Y.

Democratic pelt of the Ken, |

ow at

tucky Senate ~have decided to expel a
Republican Senator for every: Democrat | '

ms Republicans unseat in the House.�

"k free fight took place at Indianapos | ;
{lis on , _ Monday, Patrick Galvin shot

Samuel: Paugh fot § oMra, ~Molly MarT
, phy a and in turn, was shot with his own bs §
ws [pistol by Mr, oMurphy. ~Galvin was
es pkilled, and theo

ther two a hed A
family ued was the eausd,

(MOT BULL,

. ha ennai ina vines
es

seen 4 ss able WA

Set

Ington. »

«

It- will be placed on In-

Conn. |

| sete

ry the 7th, 1896, pursuant ~to ar ad-

the 12th, 1895, to take proceedings in
reference to the death ot the honorable

| LC. Latham, Hon. Jas. E. Moore, the

chairman being® absent, Capt, Swift
Galloway was chosen to preside, after
which Mr. & L..Fleming, chairman of
the Committee on resolutions, reported
the following : 3

Wuerzas, The unseen hand of
death has been ~stretched forth in our
midst, and grasped for her own one of
the brightest ornaments to our profes-
sion, and, whereas there has at_all times
existed among our members a fraternal
feeling toward.each other, and which
was fostered and encouraged in every
way by the acts and words of our de-
ceased brother. Now therefore, be it

Resolved by the members of the bar of

County ~and their visiting brethren as-
sewmbled.
First- That we have heard with
profound sorrow of the death of Hon.
Louis Charles Latham, which occurred
in the City of Baltimore, on the 16th
day of October, 1895.

Second. That in his death the State
and County are deprived of one of her
ablest advocates and faithful friends, and
the Pitt County Bar one of its. bright-
est minds.

Third, That as a mark of respect
to the memory of the deceased and re.
cognition of his eminent public life and
character, The Honorable Court be re-
quested to devote one page of its min-
utes to the enrollment of these resolu-
tions.

~Fourth; That the Secretary ot this
meeting furnish to the Clerk of this
court a copy of these resolutions.

Fifth;
structed to transmit. a copy of these res-
olations to the bereaved family of the
deceased.

J. L. FLEMING,

F. G. James,

L. I. Moore,

J. H. Brount, ,

Swirt GALLOWAY,
Committee,

The above resolutions were wnani-
smously adopted, and it is requested that
they be handed to the Solicitor and
that he asked the Court to have the
sume spread upon the minutes.

Speeches were made by Messrs. J. L.
Fleming, L. I. Moore, T, J. Jarvis, F
G. James, Hacry Skinner. and Swift
Galloway, ~all paying the lamented
dead many high tributes and testifying
to his high character and intelectual
aind moral worth as friend, husband,
futher, citizen,
statesman.

Ww. Il. Lone, Secretary. |

Original Observations.
| The awoar-off is already wearing off.
A xel-fish int 4 is hot eg ed a fish
woina.
oPhe ocean is. ealled treacherous. bei

. ioe it is full of craft.

ress ~The quickest, way to get rid of some
friends js to do them a fuvor.

The man who never made a: mis-
take i in his, life. Ahever omaile ears
~the most iprosalaig: sien in this}

E04 Fa

country are thiose \ who never, py ~anys})

va * There are many men who are gener

bed ~ous 40.0. fault, but it is generally to inte
hy own faulty, 1
, ~Wuckuon aes toothache rel |S oe ath an,
: {bud he genefally goes to the dentist at | te th ms

a thotb-hiarty Sue Chena (Va.) 0
server. aay
3 ned iM Oy Aid ie Hoe ~

At a meeting of the bar held JanuaT|

journment of a meeting held December | -

That the Secretary be in-

®

soldier, | lawyer and

Swirt GALLOWAY, Clasbeensis

"When, the scales fall from a munTs
eyes then he can see a long weigh.

Stylish Gentlemen

are finding it profitable to buy their
varments ready-made, more and more
so every year, because Ready-made

CLOT ELLN:

isnTt what it use to be.
just as much care and attention as
custom-made Clothes.
is used, the best cutters are employed

and the best. tailors put it together.

FRANK WILSON » and Outfitter

Now it gets ss

The best cloth

The Clothier

we will close out

This is notify ¢ our customers isi friends that

in order to open Bank about January 15th ing
, Same store we now pconpy 3

our entire stock of

ORERNVILLE, ® 0.

oOn the Back Fence.

oIt's strange,� said the Maltese
cat, ~~that in this life nobody seems
to get what he really needs without
diffioulty.�� 3

ITve heard that before,� said the
tortoise shell cat...
ws, but I've had more cause
than ~ustial to ~notice it. If I wore
~ghoes,' I: wouldn't: have. anything
~like the collection, of. beotjacks .and

~blacking: brushes: that. come now
en the Ris � Washington
tar

a amma sec,

wee

" Bronoho no Bills,
t'roat. |

oWoolly West"What done it?

BronchoT BilDe rope twoke~-
Chicago Record, .

Res the present ratio of inoresse j in|
antithoturt is keptT up for 25 years, |
| tha Ota ~States will bé asT impor.

e's got a sore |

oh eiaaad oe
Se ee

oWh 7" citable vee

5 Oe
YOU.
HAD
A
LOAD
OF ,
WwooD
TO.
SELL |
oand told every
man you met that you had'a load of "
wood to sell, and every min you ~met

oT would i in turn tell every ~man he met. i

1 that you had a loud of wood to sell "
and every man you met would in~ turn "
tell every man he met that you had a +
ond of wood to sell, it would, in course
Tof time, becotte prettyT well circulated
tht you Had a Toad of wood to sell;

| but! Why� hotT eut it short--not theT
jan wad, but théT miéthoduand� place a

due abit ad i in'a ~good newspaperT and: tell

everybody at Onigp | Delays are dane
f | gorous,�* andT a gdod ~newspaper: would
start if where the-dast-man left oft and

ii; | keep.on, telling everybody, that you had

ie a a lage of wood to, sell; or oanything:
py cle Try the columns ne the Reino

oak eos
iD

a
:
:
ae
a
a
i







Delivered in town by
extra cost. "
Advertisng rates are libera
had on application to the edit

2 Me desire a live corre
: ~postofiice in the count}
: end in brief items of awe Pe ~it Oe
- Gn each neighborhood. ro p

and ony on one side of - paper.

4
ioocome

Liberal emtiothe on F Reaptto-
tion rates bl to agents. ;

roe =

3 ite Woke ay, Santas lots, 1896. |

-

" i

ysis ie

ey

- And, there is to be nother bondi issue,
this: ~time "$100, 000, 000. ~Secretary
Carlisle has issued ~a circular inviting]
-_ bids for bonds. aggregating the
opbove amount, t the purchase money pay- |
ale in gold or gold certificates. oThe
bonds re to run for thirty years and
bear interest: at theirate of 4 per cent.
""""""""""
_Everywhere and everybody looks on

in amazement and admiration at the |

struggle in Cuba. It is reported that
| Spills hag placed 175,000) ett", an: th

~-ped with the: latest: improved. firearms
and the brave. patriots are poorly equip-
ped, with only 12 000° in line, wider

| 1 Ma ,geem now to be� on

a fair soa to success. They have ap-

: peared almost in sight of Havana,

where the Spanish General. Cambos is

shut up and unable to advice or even
in any way communicate with his army
in the field. » It is a strangepredicament |
Yor the Cubans and may ~prove dis-
_"astrous | to them. Some think this not}
a likely and they may at last conquer and |
be.as free as~our blessed country, Ha.
oana is the city that Cubans are thak. |
ing for and they are likely to burp it Up
at any time. We only, hope they may |
conquer. It was ~reported in the News
& Observer of Tuesday that the ,Cu-
bans had captured the city ofT HavanaT
and was a free country. We haveseen
nothing of itin any of the other papers
". and donot know bow toT believe it.

f : Pk,
_,..War Talk in Billville,

Just fatten up your pullets :
We'll have a feast some dayT,
When we fight with paper bullets
And settle things that way !

We donTt want any more war, in
ours; we had to live four years in a
stable loft to keep out of the last one!

_ The men who do the fighting never

have a word to say about the war,
The colonels who look after our homeT
interests, do all the talking.

: _ Assoon as they began to talk abour
War, men who hadnTt used crutches |!

~since 1865 discovered that their old

wounds were troubling them, and hol.
ored for the hospital ! |

8 our private opinion that Eng.



we live m brick houses and eat three
are meals. Weare. not the bar-|,
uns we Were When we starved out

ta caret o

sn on eee

~ } their lives ~in Chatham county, is"UD- |

6
vad, all thoroughly nrined ~nnd ate

ad doesnTt want ta fight us, now that!� Oné of t

ali ida hickory-nuts. And sweet | he

Set

phans of the miners who recently lost |

questionally grave. They were depend-
ent upon. the daily labor- of the men

they are réduced to a ocondition ~of beg- |

r. | gary... The charity. of the community
| has supported them thus far but the

burden: has become too great. Solicitors,
have gone abroad in the State asking
ibations for them, and these ap-
uid.meet with ready response.

~orth Carolina must not

ye needs are sities plans can
be devised for sending them to theix

-| homes. if ~possible, providing some
im meatis © ons for them here. In

that the: we aa of the State open

cr ptions ~for the benefit of these |
people. This paper, for its part, will be
.| glad to receive and forward any funds
"| that may bé left. with it forthem.,... Col-
l1ections tor theirT benefit should be taken

up-in the churehes. ; ~We repeat, they

must not be ~eft to starve. "Charlotte
Observer. 2
oAny one in-Greenville wishing to
contribute anything to the reliel of these
widows andTotphans can� hand ivin at
the Rertycror ~Office, and their contri-
butions will be acknowledged ~and for-
warded. ..
"_"
| Advice to Young.

Don't mistake, notoriety for fame.

Do not let others spend the monéy

ou Speci
@ i ;

oDeh'é he wh ~inwotiy roe you ~it

you can avoid it.

Bh

wed i

DonTt say oI am a gentler » it is

never 7.

& Ck ReG
¢ get

te 9 you.

When you assist the needy, don't ilo
it ostentatiously.

In ninety-nine cases in a hundred,
the man you wah dead ont-iires ae

Don't inthdllucd a indyT 8 ~nibs where
you would not introduceTthe lady.

DonTt count much -on friendships
nbd in cafes, They ~never turn out
rel

� Remember ~impertinened isnTt wit,
| any more than insolence is brilliancy.

Ifyoung:: emen will not believe in
themselves, no man or woman can be- | y
Hye in them.

* Don't indidesin in the Veaner of strong
Satay in the presence of your elders

and and betters.

* Don't talk atiout! harhint you are ogo-
ing� to do, then, if you fail to accom-
plish it, nobody will know.

7. 4

she Did, it.

»\ Uvaninister ita vernal ecantey village
who was noted for his absentminded

ness was Once observed to Sto excitedly
in the midst of his sermon ~and. ~heard
to ~mutter; oI knew. she. would! I
knew she would!� AfterT the: ynervice
~was over somé one asked the | néison,
oDent me,� said he, odid 17° Well} you
o~Tknow, froni thé pulpit T dan fst bbe old
Mrs. AdamsT garden, and this morning
she wis cuit pullingT | oeibbage, and I
thought to myself, oNow, if that cab-
bage comes up sheTll, govover,T oand just
}then ~it came up! and aver she want |
Hartford Times, synced! evgaint |

~

Sage j is ~thas, when a gy Eo fe
ped a bill nearT him, sin. order to, draw|
his attention from ~counting some money
a eas Sage aq
feist

Portion eueiciaetammenaen nine mmr

| ~The condition of the widows and or-

now dead, and their support heing gone |

\etate of ~things is set up. If you

.| servation that the crater surface,T

| found to be literally honeycombed.

|tain quantity of heat to pass off

Wn say pT,

-| fal to the whole nce sil
oy wea sh ED b ty

Bre a. 4 a i ye " o oe = : e ; " de s i Se
~ eae: a ~a gene -~ f- oe
a ea ae an) fl! =a? y LE GHaACCD
tour BOIL. = es Hi at pa 8 " -. eu CS
o4 3 ; ll : ie oe ae Se 3 es a REPORT. fe
pa pus light, ~with its in- careers ore

tense, ~steady brilliancy, is now: 80
familiar an object that few stop to
think. how. wonderful a thing it
really is. Here is light enough to

"gee

lumjne many sq .
as well as ~dayli weeding
from tha points of. tno little carbon
rods as large as oneTs finger. What.
is the stateT of ~te carbon in that.
}smal} spot?T Professor 8. P. Thomp-
.son;,in a recent Cantor lecture be-.
fore the Society of .Arts.in London,
tells us that it has actually melted
there, sometigng that was until re-
| cently thought : ble. * More-
over; he says that when: the light
hisses, the liquid ;carbon is really
| boiling... The faots that lead him to,
these conclusions are quoted� below:
from the report of his lecture that
~appears in Industries and Iron:

oCaptain Abney had: found: the
_ | ~white surface of the luminouscrater
to be always of an. equal degree of
H whiteness, which , obviously means
that it is always of an equal degrea
of temperature. The only thing that

temperature ~for the crater surface
was the fact, that carbon is. at the
surface ina state of volatilization;
that the carbon is evaporating off
from. ~the positive carbon into theT
atc Or'flame. ~At that surface you
necessarily must have the tempera-
ture at, which carbon evaporates,
just as you cannot have the surface
of ioe under ordinary. conditions
either hotter or colder than the tem-
~perature whieh is takenT.as zero of
the Centigrade. deale.. |My ~present. |,
view of the physical state of the aro
crater is that the solid catbon below
is. covered with a layer or film of
liquid carbon, just Bolling or eraty
orating off.T

. oWhen hissing takes nisin: a new

watch a short, hissing aro, you will
see a column of light. concentrating
itself on a narrow spot, and the spotT
keeps moving about and is very tn-
stableT in positionT as well as in the
~amount of ::light:it' gives out,
~contracted spot from. which light
seems to start pits deeper into the
carbon. Mrs. Ayrton made the ob-

~after the are has ~been: hissing, is:

When the'aro is hissing, you can seo
| little bits erupted out, and the hiss-
ling seemsT to be comparable to the
hissing which ~takes place in water
| just when it is beginning to boil. ' If
you have some water being heated
in such a way that there is not more

en off from the surface, you have
the water evaporating quietly, but
you éannot get more than a certain
quantityof heat given off per|
square inch of top surface of the
water in that quiet way.

If you force more than 4 cer-

per top square inch of the water,
you find the waterT begins to break
up internally, and you have bubbles
formed below the surface; the sur-
face breaks up, the bubbles are
thrown out, and you have a noisy
phenomenon. I think you will find
there is exactly the same kind of
difference between the silent arc and
the hissing aro as between quiet
evaporation and noisy boiling.
There is a sort of decrepitation, as
the solid particles are being torn
asunder to make way for something
none out, when the aro is hiss-
ing. Literary Digest.

They Dropped It. .

Here. is an, unrecorded ~~minute�T
concerning a certain woman's club
in New York city. Following the
example of all such organizations,
the club, when first organized,
pared an elaborate constitution and

bylaws. oThese were duly printed
a copy chanced to fall into

the volume, the entire edition was ab
once recalled and a new one pre-
. The sedond edition, however,
diteT but in pai
first. It Siege lowed the|
advice of the aforesaid ~meriberTs
husband and omitted the following |

bylaw, ~! No.¢wo.mem bers shall oo0a-

3. t the. Leute
we ~York St - shiva: Ah
a ari ie Pi ibosat, nd

| gives peers {0 the ~Galurtiny ~before |
| he knows its truth is scene |

ioRViekeddndstay ae ~seopetiy ae

i OC VORS ara ad 3
ae | ~ished, -éa:disgraceful, only, to, the |
| offender. Unpunished, itis disrace- era oi Ont DotA A RAR

Be ce at sites wee eee ere

| months) of

could ~account for there béeing'a fixed |-

The | P

than a certain quantity of heat giv- |

=|OBS

and bound.; Soan ~after, they. ap-|

~the hands'of the husband of ~one of |T
the members. After he had perused).

~an Education,

(4 ath ¥y: ee ae
And The Eastern Reflector 1s
Going'to'help one -Boy in
that diréction-

We will pve absolutely free of charge,
a scholarship ering the holder ~to
free tuition in all the

nglish, mo
for the entire spring peeved 1896 _

Greenville Male Academy.

This is the best, ~school tor boys in
Eastern North Carolina, and the boy
will wih sine is who wins this prize.

¢

oCONDITIONS. |

oPhisT5 months scholarship. is to be
given to the boy who will get the Jar-
Rest number cf yearly subseribers for

between now and 6 o'clock P.M. on © ;
~Vth, 1896. Two: subseribers, for 6
months or four subscribers for 3 months
wi'l eonnt the same as one yearly sub-
scriber This is no catchT penny deviee
but a bonad-fie offer, and if only one
subscriber snould be brought buring the
~time specified the boy who, brings it
will get the scholarship Of course wo
expceet more than one subscriber to be
bought in. for this isa prize worth win
ning and many boys will work for it

In order that there may be ah fncen-
ive for every boy wno wishes to ~erterp
this contest, we offer a cash commissioh
ef 10 per cent on all & ibscribers, 10
that those who ofail to get the schol-
arship will be paid for, their work, hut
the one who wins the scholarship will
not zet the commission. ~Now boys get
fo. work with the determation to win
this prize... You can get as many sam-
le copies of Che REFLECTOR as.you need
by applying to the office. If \ou decide
to enter this. contest send. us your namie
~ag We wish to know ~how muny bovs a e
working for the prize. ~We will publisi
théT result of the cuntest withothe [pane
ot winner detheissns of the REFiC-
TOR of dau. Toth, 188, ghving thT 8 ¢-
~cessftl bey ale to vniterseiool On Ale
pening day of spriug term wouday,
Jan, 20th.

Address all letters to

THE EASTERN REFLECTOR..
Greenville N. ¢

earner necantnintt.

GREENVILLE, N. C.. Oct. ~25th, 1895.
This to certify that I have at ranged
with the publisher of THE EASTERN
the English branches, for the 5. ~months
term beginning Jan, 20th, 1896, the boy
to whom he may award the scholarship
in the above abtnestipen ~contest,
W.. H. RAGSDALE,
Principal Greenville Male Academy.

Advniatworekors Sale
of Land for Assets.

By virtue of a deer ee of the ~Superior
Court inthe case of W. B. Wingate ad-
pinistrator of J. L; Wy. Nobles, I will

sell tor cash at-the-Court. House door in

Greenville on Monday, the 27th day of
January, 1596, the jullowing tract of
land, to wit: A tract of landT situated
in Contentuea ~Township: adjoining, the
lands of Amos G.Cox, W, H. Stocks,
Redding ~Trip aud: others. containing
forty eight.acres, more or less, .Sab-
ject to the Sawer of Mary Nobles,T wid
ow of Ji 4s W. Nobles.

Dec. 26th, 1895.

w.B. WINGATE,
Adur. of J. L. W. Nobles.
I. A, SUGG, Atty.

The Obarlotts

+H MELE wal? ha. ey pete,
; VE R
~ We ao ee A oa 3

a0 ee

a

rn
-%

ae eee
| etd

North Carolina's
oFOREMOST ~NEWSP APER

areas io?
AND,

ae oe es
" _"

hey |

to, the home,
Teta Si oF the work room,�

| oR A DANE. ie one: ~om

A Paton on

ai

~ a

He
~gicuecod

~Wants.or should want,

The Eastern Reflector ,

REFLECTOR to teach free of charge in|

li ndent Ada fearless ; + bigger and
ny fo ft e than éver, it! wi rer and ~
brat da y Tas

lete
out sad nae a a '
THE WEERUY. ~OBSERVER. 4
All the :

bY 0. ti SOINER.,

e. ee "

Tors."Green.... ety}
« oBright.... ere a) |

Lvss"Common. "ouere a 6

o ae
ort o..6toll
re deeb
o Fines. sasees .- tO

he #8

lew

be

ated

Cotton Se Peangi,
| Below. ~are Norfolk ~priees of cotton

and p $ for yest erdayyas furnished
by Col » & cher - soma Mer
cpaceS *Norbic
i a Corl ON.
| Good aiding St
~| Middl 7 15-16
| Low M Ding 7%
| Good Ordinary 6 13-16
Tonesteady.'.
, pRANUTS.
| Prime . 4
Extra Prime
ancy . 3}
Spanish,, T $1 bu
Tone"easy.
Greenville Market.

* Corrected by S. M M, Schultz.
Bntter, per lb 15 to 25
Western Sides . 6 to 7
Sugar ¢ured Hams 12"to 18
Corn 40 to
Corn Meal 50-to 85
Flour, Family 3.75 to 4.25
Lard 54 to 10
Oats © 37 to 40
Sugar © 4 to6
Coffee* 16 to 25
Salt per Sack 80 to 1 75
Chickens | 12} to 20
Eggs per doz 174
Beeswax. per 20

oSP. KING,

it 1 Silt AAD FEE

osTABLte.
On at int: ~Street year Five
Ppinte,
Pagsen ers. carried to any
ointTat Bora le rates Good
Horde a8. Cdmfortable Vehivles.

" with six cents




& mugled to our Head

aw, ant ties St., Boston,
.: ot , ring you a full lin

r Petouruort geyqna niles for self
eee 4 of So ier! fa-
ei Sparits ; Suits. ;
rs 4 yh cata 25, and up. Cu t
Y ad p Ag ordey Te ts wanted every-
OARS New en Rock Co.

Ves

in

in
Meer ay 8

othis

The next séonlon of re School will

OU i) begin da
iY of a ), 9,
andi . mtinuel ten m svt :
The course embr the branches. "
usu ily tau an my. a
~petins, for tuilion and board

ble. '







Sg ieee Melph ait Race hsp siding ee. ae

""" SR ==
_-000 "_ OLD ONES.

AND ~FLORENCE RAIL ROAD.

= Polly, Annia, ae Pog.

Couuenseu acnedule, } bLLOWAY & MY SON, : gie, Nancy and Nan are as much in =:
: co AE ORER EAS SAA 0. vogue today as in the olden Hime, AT Salen aeect se
ea ph : and in all probability will vontinue | Sovran,

300" 1 th rts. re
TRAINS GOING SOUTH. et x ye RRIR | toT be given as Christian ~namesT to " eorved YOU THE N NEWS FRESH EVERY -
~s sr fo a) baby girls for all time. . AFTERNOON (EXCEPT SUNDAY) chek
Dated | THos. J. JARVIS. ALEX BLow. peg
Nov. i7th 33 J ARVES @ BLOW, ~ _ We do nét find, Frenchwamen tak- ~)-": WORKS FOR THE . otail
1895. Rial ing their ancestors to task for be- : "INTERESTS, OF aH pls
Oty TS waasale lay ATTORNHYS- ATLA Ww. stowing upon them tngainly names, :
fienve We Nan 2 | 551 9 , GRERNVILLE XS | for'the.taste of'the French in names |
Ar oo ; 10, 4G he 6F Practics ini 41) the: bine is proverbial. There is no Peggie ial |
dc Baek eles! meen abou ese ONE the French tongue, When they tiredT eee
Lv Tarburo 12 20 J.H. BLOUNT. .., Jsdu,¥LEMING | of. Mary, they changed it to the ,
i t?7 Galival | 6 wo virtaters & FLEMING! sweet name Marie, Ann became eae
lt in ~lS osliro} | MPM GMEENVILLE, Neo. | Anette, sprightly and bright. GREEN VILLBRERST PITT COUNTY SECOND,
~by Sela, SL es s@y�. Practice in alkthe Courts,° Some parents refuse toT give first ~PSLLUVUNLLE
Ly FayT tteville 4 3U 12 53 ; * ES r i ome names to their ~children, ~preferring OUR t. ¢ OKE BOOKTHTRD: athe
Ar. Florence 7 20} 300 ee "_ " th Gidea daneteaedal © PO 4
ones emia opamp | mm a om HARRY SKINNER ~H. W. WHEDBEE. that the : pa) cal sei
| bos ~ae aikISNER & WHEDBEE, |} choose their own names. It is often
¢@ re a . Syecessors. to Latham & Skinner. a positive handicap to a man of ; :
ee Se da "" ee eT sett cme eel parts to have an ineuphonious name, a ere
pUSR? fc BM. lA.Mopom ee =YILLB. W.0.-"~ | In many cases ignorant parents have :
. a elne Z © a --- |gone wrong in their selection of
vGoklsboro | 3 10 . John E. Woodard, F.C. Hardi ~names for their offspring, and more
re oo ee 43 o06 Wilson, N.C. Groenville%. | than once ~a gitl-baby has been called sSuBSsC RIPTION 25 Cents a ~MONTH.
cee. M. A.M OODAKD,&, HARDING, | Jezebel and a: boy. baby. Ananias. Pale oovet oh
"p WV. rep PANY, . . |The: Rev. James B, Walely, a Metb- | | :
. a ee Siow Greaves N. | odist. minister who preached many
: ING NOTRH. ; ¥,, ;
= ~ Special attention given. to collections | years in New York, told, with great (0)
Dated 212 ZG. | and settlement of claime. | enjoyment, ~of a lisping mother: who
Oct. 6th é6alé ae) SS a | took her baby to the font in the ve :
1896. aR 1A a |B ij church. tobe christened.. .When i a Maries
ae A. M. P.M es: aa sabia ar urs. - | the worthy divine took the child indi] EE ADTTHID Ti a id
ee ne 8 15| 733 a fe ; . his arms, preparatory to christening, oginte
Ly Fayetteville 10 33 9 33 j fala A. SMITH, - | it, he asked the lisping mother what | J
a Selma i a on a he should name it. oThe: parent re-
» iY ilsc n 2011 3 » N. OQ, re o%hir,T? : the
hatte ope ". | er Pattonage soligited, - arate ae: Indignantly
7 ~
eo ..!Dacifer! Leifer! Never will I
75 ! meee ees ARERR. name a child that.'T ~Then he con-
en eh ""+- eZ Under Onert + Whee. j tinued, as hé sprinkled the water 7 |
~Ly. Wilmington] 9 26 P.M. | Special attention given to cleaning | tipon theT brow ~of ' theT girl baby,
ae Maguolla 10 36 - By ~Gentlemens Chottiing. " | oGeorge Washington, I) baptize
oLirGoldebore |12 03| | 49 an thon," te, and the. gis as there, One. Dollar Per Year.
at Wilson 1 00 oAO 27 , an after socalled... + feral
Ly ~farboro bid dase . \ |: It is a fact. that fasbion in names :
' : rena cena f "~- changes in ~cycles of less than a cen- 1 " i i
fe| Be 1 toby kh Get hers oben toe his Js, the, PeopleTs AV e.
Za oaa ~a tendency toward odd names. Some
~~ mM Pulp '| [of the popular ones:are Dorothy, |
aye aa PMc. a ~| Bhoda, Edna and Angeline. , Ada is THE TOBACCO DEPARTMENT, WHICH
Ar Rocky Mt | 38s ig ui) 4 15 quite, iguana and Alara ones 1s arene FEATURE OF i: RE PAPER,
na | =| down, if would appear. from, the 18 ALONE EW
At Teche maf country towns to~ adorn ~city beau- alt SUBSCHIPDION PRIOR TIMES THE
aces te ona ae Bi'\ties, Apetha, Viola) Madde; Jessie, |
Arawelbon | He 8B Ht} Olga, Odette; Olivey: Inez, ~Isabel, |
" " Hortense; Rosalind, Beatrice, Nao- :
~Train on Scotland Neck Branch Roe coh ME a feohie 88 S iM TM

oaves Weldon 3.55 p. m., Halifax 4,13
Pe M., arrive es Seotland Neck'at 4.55 p| |
Wi, Greenvi le 6,47 p. m., Kinston 7,45~.
o"p. li. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20)
&. ., Greenville 8.22 a. mi. Arriving | fetes,
~Halifax at 11:00 «..m., Weidon 11,20 2% | i

" Jaily ee aie ei nS

ae ~ ~Gabriella, Henrietta, Edith, Felice, ;

meee | Fedora; Frederica, Eunice; Florence, : ~When. you need J;

7 Effie, Doris, Eveleen, Cora, Cynthia, |
J Cloe, Cordelia, Beulah, Bertha,
a 7.30 ps a CPA Sabt 6.20 } names, chosen not. only for their| | OUR ate en aacitdinl aoott hid cad acs bs aS ~
Wu i 7.45 p. m. § AM: McSCHULTZ, oddness, but for their euphonious- oi
eats, ects with| © as ness as well, while,.their meaning 2
wia Albe | ~tirden oftheir'weightan edsy' load
roe pt Sun- Me fs petty SULT NG be ei to carry.

trude, Gladys, Grace, ~Genevieve,

Eloisa,T Emeéline,. |. Eleanor, |. Elsie, | :
it rs mi leive) Sin sve 3 : ~Blanche, Ruth, Veronica, are among | JO P i INTI ! , ue
40,0 A ina "- ESPABIISHED 1875- the hundreds of uncommonly odd} . UA Vis dg Nea ok Ne gL ND AG :

) essa i J
soil PORK SIDESG@#SHOTLDERS adds interest to therh ind makes the Rael Don't. forget the
py nog erase atic rain. pad A mother sometimes delights in R ©fl e ct or, ° Peal ce
i

ed
NS on
as Oba?

P ing their yearTs supplies will ting
O ideals adie their interest toget our prices befere pu. | perpetuating the name of her grand.
ay 9.30 a ~n., | Chasing elsewhere: Ourstock iscomplet+ | mother, who. berethe name of her,

10 AE 5 oh and 11, 45| 9 allits branches. great-grandmother, and thus these

a £16, branch leaves FLOUR COFFE, SUG Ak very old: names~ descend by the | ""-0- :

spt Sunday, 6.05 a ae choice of the parent. Ann nowadays
aithtield 7°30. a, m. Re- RICE, TEA, &c. sounds harsh, and Betsy seems com-
Smithfield 8.00 'a. m,, ar- mon. » Betsy comes to. be Bessie and WE HAVE.AMPLE FACILITIES

~sivenat | am. ~| always ut Lowesr MARKRT vargas Ann Annie, and an instance is known FOR THE WORK AND DO ALL T
: rok in Nushvitie branch leave | indwell having the audacity to ei lal poll Sc a my ee lal age .
Pa ees Ne wre TOBAGEO.SNUFE.ACIGARS | oan herself Minnie. Jorasha bas ") ORINDS. OF ~COMMERETAL 4ND
05 ope } } { f ¥ 7 ¥ : . { 3
p.m. Returning leave Spring Hope| we buy direct from Manufacturers, ene printed. on pp Aer (Visiting. cards gen- | arin: / _
8,000. m., Nashville 8.3) a m, aitive at| bling yowto biy'at one protit. A com | Die, and Meh table loves to héar her- ) ee !
Books Mount 9.05 a m, daily exeepty lete stock of self styled Hitty."New York World. osme
unday. { he Ure J, 4 one : :
Treing on Latta breach, Florence R,, Burial Alive. , a i ! . i ree
a eat teats FURNITURE | swinislttr ison some /Our Work and -Prices Suit.our Patrons,
4 Dn i a es Wane os
leave Chiot6.10 a m, Dhar 6: uta : always onhand sad soldat prices tusurt | COMMON As We like to believe. Un- ene . :
arrive Latta 7, 60'w m. daily oxenT no-| the times. Our goods areall boughtand | der the present laws of Great Brit- ie
day coas ye is sold for ip oe Hering norisk | ain no sworn certificate of death jis ~ee
~Drain onClintonT Sivan seven War- pitadr-abeh eer ist chet ilbondid required. A physician must declare ' Hd Pe
saw for Clinton caily, except Suuday, 8. M. SCHULIz.Greenville. N © | Sint he believes to have been the Rea Oe Msg ie od -
ene ion %.0 ime aaerena = cause of the death of a patient, but teh
4 «af pm.| the fact of death need not ea Pr ae
i No dated aia THE MORNING STAR {sum norso oct ay aceraizes in} Pd ~HE*RE LECT OR: BOOK: ~NRE.
fe eldou forall Points dally. ail rail via Bé cml Srnartechlt | subs ba \ orp: ys WMT corte vette th ie jl
Norfolk a eptee! at Fog ae Mount with The | 01 ~wit N81 pride al des vl eee. . oe ! vig a
Norfolk an Noriolk ae
"ane Ml pointy North vie NOMtOU ey - aa THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN GREENVILLE FOR" .
JOHN F, Mga wi Ally
M: EME Bene pert lt patio! | . iit bhp die er mb ime as AG AEE
oF R oKENL a tote fe a me a ee ns Sar: i ,and urge delay i in burial whien | bid , Kk Ks, STATIONERY, OY,
Oc g : er ait doe o\iittiere Ja, room for doubt. ~As a Ger. | 7 More

, MY ae daylit M1) Ao hail Vandy & :
TLANTIC- oe OR ~chika IN " writes ne gentleman, " oyy - ' a c
R. R, TIME TA te. J 4 | tl an (} {i bedia't dhold tata tojdid: ini Bughand, A fulk dine: of Ledgers; D Baoks: pened 4

In Effect December 4th, 1898: LL sey: ox) for fear of be- | Memorandum and Time 300ks, all sizes and a

ae SR SEE be ha! ie iye.}'-t}ondon Tit-Bite: | ~ wi edetD tS Dritt iad *Note | ° ~sbyles)(Handdome bee
Books, Lega! Cap,Fools an BosssP enetasibes' from . mar

age ee

ter ap



ducks oP d Pent 14} we ; o
~ee Tcstbik tue rat.) hat TWD BY Ot Mont a» 8
ello Quoc ulna
take the lead, Falt tite Pot s Nos els bition vt
nope}; Celebrated ,Diamepd Inks,» Ib ieoborayi eect Gream |

Medien: ere ambi iA | a hapd NAAR i)
y sole agent 1 r the 4 a mPen-, y ep
thousands hero adeno of bast. |": cvs vod every: brow fibes uh Ne ho oa ve ae
ness colleges would starvo."Lawis- te : ah Frotiers, 1 jet Bat as

Ni ' ton (Me. \ Journ Re aa _Orget 8 when you want anyt o:Atatic

Sac L an LAUT DAR LI NES Be PlWI LAE itr o ila E Pte ORR Oa ULE Cure ec eT Tp, sone Share 5
~ /









en

a

:

a
% :

5

a 4



@ oo

north, arrives 8:22 A. M.

oS 2 will be transacted.

a

bie rata he
sti Sou ane .
; rt x

aa a) ieee

some apvenmsine

Creates many a new ew business, ,
muny an old business,
Fee es ae
oe gee many adu
Rescuee many a lost business,
Saves many a failing business.
oSeeures success to any enon

et

20 oadvertise judiciousiy,�. use the
columr REFLEOTOR: wey

a oaD Ma Hones ial
~lies ie:

M. 0: Paik, of Bethel, was in town

Miss Lillie Carmer is visiting Mrs.
J. B. Cherry.

trip on the road,
J. W. Grainges fof Kinston, came

any oi Vee icoasnec Caos

ebaty Collector H. W. Stubbs, of|

|W illiamston, i is in town.

Passenger and mail train going

Going South,
arrives 6:37 P. M. :
North B ound orale, arrives 9:50 A

| My deavesl0:10,A. M

South Bound Freight, arrives 200 P.
M., leaves 2:15 P.x,

teamer Myers arrives from Wash
: n eoadey. Wednesday and Friday
eaves for Washington Tuesday, Thure
ay and saturday.

it ai I ei Pasay fain

Squibs Picked up With Cold Tonge.

- The temperature has lowered some,
today.

Ollen Warren went to Conetoe to-

day to act as best man at a wedding.

Miss Ray Dupree, of Edgecombe}

pooun ty is. .visitings Mrs... Lou, Roun-,
}tree and has entered school at the Col-
lege.

W. C. Proctor has moved. his family |

to Greenville and occupies the Cory

house on Second street. He will engage

in business here.

W. AT ~Pollard, of tert Pant

: township, lost a little child, eighteen}.
months old, with: membranous croup
" evening.

Coming Back.
More terrible than an army with

bauners, more exciting than the expec-
ted.war with England, more depressing
}than the financial: ~stringency is the

Three qualities of ~Tobacco Cloth at blood-curdling report that the bustle is

Cink 8.

|to be revived. In its incipient stages

Dheks pm tid to be oSpebtita down | it has already appeared."Durham Sun.

on the sounds.

[still carry the Southern Leader, the
, best 5 cent cigar mvde. D. S. SMITH.

When the Negro Was Created.
The Mexican Indians, as well as

those of most of the Central American

News."The best flour is Proctor republics, have a superstition to the
Knott sold by S. M. Senile: Try a effect that the negro was made before

24 Ib bag.

Prayer meeting in the Methodist
church to-night.

DonTt forget Lang is selling at cost
~to get ready for moving to another
atore.

either the white man or the Indian or
even before the sun was created. They
account for his color by declaring that |
he was made and dried in the dark.
Their own race, they say, was made, 1 in
the yorning of the first day between
daylight and sun up. On this acéount

The cold weather of the last few days they delight in a term which they apply

made, oygters very seared. -

will you heed a ledger for the new.
"yearTs business? The Reflector Book.
Beare has all sizes.

ek of it has oly a by. .
DonTt borrow your neighborT s Re,

ELECTOR, but subscribe yourself.

The Greenville Lumber Co., have
let the contract for the poles upon
which to put up the electric light

. ~wires.

For tabléts, school : paper, pencila,

pens and inks, ete, (Reflector Book

Store is headquarters.

The merchant who began the new
year with a resolution to do less adver-
is already beginning to see the necessi-
ty for reform."Darham Sun.

It is time to oswear of�"that you
will stop smoking common cigars. Go
to D. S. Smith for the Southern Lead-
er and you have something good.

oMe aids Aid See of ithe

Mrs. ML A. Jarvin tomorrow pra
at 3 o'clock. All members are request-
ed to be present asT important business

| le the wea her i Gia ee ;

E. Pender & CoTs. Just " a
new supply,

It is said that about ~the only po- |
Iitical aspirations that Gov. Altgeld, of

tax, submits, judgment suspended nyo

hoseT pearTs Self Feeiling Stov mide

aye te ne

| to each other atid which sigitifies odawn
~people. The white.man, #jho féars
darkness and cannot stand heat,TT was
made, according to their belief, at noon}
on the first day of creation. "St. Louig 4
Republic. .

Superior Court,

The fol'owing cases have been dis-

posed of since last report :

Thos. Buck, larceny, not guilty.
Wade Owens, nuisance, not guilty.

Richmond | Little, Mozella Littler.

Jacob Little, affray, not guilty.

John Fields, assault with deadly
weapon, submits, fined $10 and costs, °
M. R. Turnage, assault_and battery,
submits, judgment, stispénded upon pay-
ment of costs.

Elias Sutton, trespass, not guilty. .
David Bridgers, larceny, not guilty.
Enoch Turnage, fuilure to list poll

) cantiad gl he

he

oOpen. not yor loot
of | kwookit

; adversity. avand fh

The | ahaa husbands | make
~ | stormiest wives,
Send not for a hal

alee iat

Fogger

osk, Dupree left this morning for a}.

: | forbidden her to write.

Tony Hines and Reuben Exum, af-|
fray, submit, fined $10 each and costs. :

ae mw. Burton Absa
oant Cause to, ree

seacabea

oWhite visiting her undle, Re. s.
ical Selinbery, last Mareh, Miss

Z ~2

'| Florence Love, of this city, made the

acquaintance of man who was ~em-
ployed to sell the Encyclopaedia ¥ which
~the Charlotte Observer was selling
~throughout the State. He called him-

self Rev. HW. S. Burton, ~and said
he was from New England. ~He seem-
ed a successful, book agent, and was

a.nicelooking enough man, Nothing
was-known of his antecedents, but Miss

| Love became infatuated: with him, and

permitted him to; persuade her into. a
hasty marriage, against the wishes of
her relatives.

Shortly after the marriage, theT cou
ple came to Raleigh on a visit to the
brideTs father, Mr. E.H. Love. While
here lie addressed the Y. M. C. A,, and
preached, once at Central Methodist
church, He oworked� Whiting Bros.
for a suit of clothes, for which he never
paid.
After~a short stay in North Carolina
the oRev.� book agent and wife went
into another State... For some, months
Mr. Love: heard: regularly from. his
daughter, but for some timg nothing was
heard from her, oRev.� Burton having
He went from
place to place; living by his wits, bor-
vowing money; here, skipping his bills
there, ahd generally swindling oin a
ipibus way,� those who. believed: his
slick tales. At length, at Metropolis,
Ill, he actually was guilty of plain lar-
ceny, and was then put in jail. A few
days before: Christmas, Mr. Love re-

ceived a ~telegram from his daughter,

asking him to send $50. He knew
nothing of the dire calamity ~that had
befallen her. Instead of sending the

who found Burton in jail. He permit-
ted his sister to go by the jail to tell
Burton ogood-bye,� and she acconipa-
nied her. brother back to her fatherTs
house. There is great sympathy for
the young. woman, who shas been so
~cruelly deceived."-Raleigh News & Ob-
~Server: °

mony aa

eereremeet

Lovit Hines,
Sec. & Treas

eee es oe ee

P, H. Pelletier,
_ Prealdent.

EBB co

Always in the market
for LOGS and pay

Cash at market orlees :

Can also fill orders
fur Rough & Dressed

Lum ber ~promptly.

Give usyour orders.
Ig. ©. HAMILTON, Jp. Manager.

~Six thes of earth make-all' men: cul
when the devil ey

Pride ny dee to iy nj.

ing

ra
vat

spe i tae |
he

| hesitating?
it as a valuable medicine to all who suf-

~sehrofulous

money, Mr, Love wisely sent his son, |

Hig? sae ae x ally
to | Remo al off

MSooosmors to eye | ty
ame n :"This 1s to. tify that I

fer from indigestion. "
� WHLIAM ELLIS, -
¢e Mayor City of New Bern.

TAX NOTICE! .

Those who fail to pay their taxes by
the 20th of January will pay cost. I
shall have no collectors in any of the
townships and those who fail to pay by
the above stated time will be visited by
myself or a deputy and levy made and
tax collected at once.

'R. W. KING,
oSheriff of Pitt Coaals.

Pp P, P,
cures all skin

and

blood diseases}

o-§. LC.� for indi rand
| obtained refiet after other remedies had | Ven. your shonin turn
~failed and Tun yr q|to the many, many things

that you will have to buy "
this winter for the comfort
of yourself and family tarn
your footsteps toward the
store of

* s e

Where you will find
displayed the largest and
best assorted line of the
fellowing goods:

DRY GOODS,

Physicians endorse P. P. P. as al:

splendid combination, .and prescribe it

with great satisfaction of the cure of all}.

forms and stages of primary, secondary
and tertiary syphilitic. rbumatism,

Poo Pk.

Cures RheumatisM.

ulcers and sores, glanduler swellings,
rhenmatism, malaria, old chronic ulcers

that have resisted all treatment, ca-| ©

tarth

P. P. P.

Cures Blood Poison.

_ diseases, eczema chronic female

Be fl a mercurial poison, tetter
head, etc., etc.

P,P. P. is a powerful tonic and an

excellent
P. : P. P.
Cures Scrofula.
: ae building up the system rap-

eT adies whose systems are polsoned
and whose bloud is in an impure condi-
tion, due '

P. P. P.
(Cures Malaria.

to menstrual irregularities, are peculi-
arly beuefited by the wonderfcl tonic
and blood cleansing properties of P.P.P.
Prickly ash, Poke root and Potassium.

P. P. P.

Cures Dyspepsia.
Lippman Bros., Props.
- DRUGGISTS, LIPPMANTS BLOOK.

Savanhah, Ga.

Book on Blood Diseases mailed free.

of many and yviied kinds.

Dress
Goods and

Furnish-

TrTmmi'gs
Notions,
Gentlemen

wo ing Goods,

Shirts, |
Neckties,
Four-in-
Hand
Scarfs,

Hosiery,
Yankee
Notions,
Hats and
. Caps t
4 neatest
im nobbiest
styles, La-
moee dies, Boys,

and Childrens Fine and Heavg

Shoes and Boots in endless

styles and

kinds, Carpets, Rugs

Collars,

Foot Mats, Mattings, Flooring
and Table Oil Cloths, Lace, Cur-
tains, Curtain Poles and: Fixtures,
Valises, Hand Bags, and a stock
of FURNITURE that will sur-

a Sait

| prise and. delight
to quality and price, Baby Car-

~ ae

» Lard, Su
Salt "Bagging a
Sacks. and. Twine.

uw both as |

eavy Groceries, Flour,
ugar; Molasses,
Ties, Peanut: .
We buy

¢

bia re fi market prices

them.

ReynoldT: SHOES for

yee es ath iW

ries a ce gf
i Tv

~eRers

Ape any

Ke " o + : me

rks omer oy

Men and. BOE, cant be |


Title
Daily Reflector, January 8, 1896
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - January 8, 1896
Date
January 08, 1896
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.
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