<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<mets:mets OBJID="17529" ID="wordcount29806" TYPE="textjp2images" xmlns:mets="http://www.loc.gov/METS/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:mix="http://www.loc.gov/mix/v20" xmlns:amd="http://www.loc.gov/AMD/" xmlns:vmd="http://www.loc.gov/VMD/" xmlns:oai_dc="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.loc.gov/METS/ http://www.loc.gov/standards/mets/mets.xsd http://www.loc.gov/mix/v20 http://www.loc.gov/standards/mix/mix20/mix20.xsd http://www.loc.gov/AMD/ http://lcweb2.loc.gov/mets/Schemas/AMD.xsd http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc.xsd http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3 http://www.loc.gov/standards/mods/v3/mods-3-2.xsd http://www.loc.gov/VMD/ http://lcweb2.loc.gov/mets/Schemas/VMD.xsd">
  <mets:metsHdr CREATEDATE="2011-07-11T03:04:29" LASTMODDATE="2012-05-25T11:53:14" RECORDSTATUS="Complete">
    <mets:agent ROLE="OTHER" TYPE="INDIVIDUAL" OTHERROLE="CATALOGER">
      <mets:name>Vinogradov, Amanda</mets:name></mets:agent></mets:metsHdr>
  <mets:dmdSec ID="DMD0001">
    <mets:mdWrap MDTYPE="MODS">
      <mets:xmlData>
        <mods:mods>
          <mods:titleInfo>
            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 13 January 1892</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="bib">558892</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="doi">17529</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="job">834</mods:identifier>
          <mods:originInfo>
            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18920113</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
          <mods:language>
            <mods:languageTerm authority="iso639-2b" type="code">eng</mods:languageTerm></mods:language>
          <mods:typeOfResource collection="yes">text</mods:typeOfResource>
          <mods:physicalDescription>
            <mods:form authority="aat">newspapers </mods:form>
            <mods:extent></mods:extent></mods:physicalDescription>
          <mods:subject authority="lcsh">
            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
          <mods:subject authority="fast">
            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">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.</mods:accessCondition>
          <mods:accessCondition type="rightstatement.org">http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/</mods:accessCondition>
          <mods:relatedItem type="host" displayLabel="Collection">
            <mods:titleInfo>
              <mods:title>Eastern Reflector Newspaper Collection</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
            <mods:identifier type="doi">eref</mods:identifier></mods:relatedItem>
          <mods:location>
            <mods:physicalLocation>Joyner NC Microforms</mods:physicalLocation></mods:location>
          <mods:relatedItem xlink:href="http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/encore/ncgre000/00000018/00017529/00017529.pdf" type="PDF" displayLabel="View PDF">
            <mods:titleInfo>
              <mods:title></mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
            <mods:identifier type="doi"></mods:identifier></mods:relatedItem></mods:mods></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
  <mets:dmdSec ID="DMD0002">
    <mets:mdWrap MDTYPE="DC">
      <mets:xmlData>
        <oai_dc:dc>
          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 13 January 1892</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
          <dc:creator></dc:creator>
          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
          <dc:coverage></dc:coverage>
          <dc:contributor></dc:contributor>
          <dc:date>18920113</dc:date>
          <dc:type>Text</dc:type>
          <dc:format>newspapers </dc:format>
          <dc:publisher>J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University</dc:publisher>
          <dc:language>eng</dc:language>
          <dc:identifier>17529</dc:identifier>
          <dc:rights>http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/</dc:rights>
          <dc:coverage>United States--North Carolina--Pitt County (N.C.)--Greenville (N.C.)</dc:coverage></oai_dc:dc></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
  <mets:dmdSec ID="DMD0003">
    <mets:mdWrap MDTYPE="OTHER" OTHERMDTYPE="TEI">
      <mets:xmlData>
        <tei:TEI xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd">
          <text xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0">
            <body>
              <div type="dirtyOCR">
                <pb facs="00017529_tn_0001" n="1" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
-HAS A- <lb />
Job Printing Room <lb />
That can be surpassed no <lb />
where in this section. <lb />
Our work always gives <lb />
faction. <lb />
New I <lb />
Best notarial <lb />
SEND US YOUR ORDERS. <lb />
WAITING. <lb />
BY HENRY S. <lb />
Beside a river the Puritans knew. <lb />
In the primitive day of yore, <lb />
A man and Ins wife hive worthily lived <lb />
For fifty years, and more. <lb />
From the house, which was built before <lb />
their day, <lb />
They can follow the winding stream <lb />
Through meadows as fair as ever beguiled <lb />
A poet in his dream <lb />
They can ban the hum of the waterfall <lb />
And voices from over the lea. <lb />
And the distant stroke of the woodman's <lb />
ax, <lb />
And of the sea. <lb />
seldom within this quiet retreat <lb />
The face of the stranger is seen; <lb />
A stillness, like that of the Sabbath, rests <lb />
Upon its fields of green. <lb />
The house as its time-worn door. <lb />
Has M air of unruffled repose. <lb />
Like hush of a dreamy autumn day <lb />
When Hearing to its close. <lb />
It speaks of a harvest of gathered sheaves <lb />
Of reapers with tolling all <lb />
Of hand in hand for a little while yet, <lb />
the nevermore. <lb />
We feel we arc heading on hallowed <lb />
ground, <lb />
And reverently bow the head. <lb />
As we count the years of wedded life <lb />
They have together led. <lb />
They wait for a few more morns, <lb />
a few in- re smiles and tears, <lb />
When, the hands of the Clock will cease <lb />
to move <lb />
In numbering their years. <lb />
It is said the house in their early days <lb />
Was known for its music and mirth. <lb />
When laughter and song kept time with <lb />
the roar <lb />
Of fires upon their hearth. <lb />
But tears would Start should we venture <lb />
to speak <lb />
Of those who have parsed away. <lb />
And we with folks tenderly <lb />
In all we have to say; <lb />
For long as the years of life shall <lb />
last. <lb />
And memo y throne. <lb />
They will muse on scenes the buried <lb />
past <lb />
While living Here alone; <lb />
And fain would know, as through faith, <lb />
the bliss <lb />
Of the heavenly land appears. <lb />
If they'll love each oilier so loudly <lb />
As here for endless years. <lb />
We may wander some day along the <lb />
banks <lb />
Of this river quiet and fair. <lb />
And at the door, but And no more <lb />
These folks <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1892. <lb />
NO. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb />
A FORTUNE <lb />
THOUGH HIS CREDIT WAS POOR. <lb />
What Having Credit Refused Him Cone <lb />
for a Man. and Vice Versa. <lb />
The following letter is from a <lb />
farmer near Gadsden, Ala., to the <lb />
Age <lb />
Every one you may meet a <lb />
few has something to <lb />
say about hard times, tight money, remainder, namely, <lb />
RAILWAY MAIL SERVICE. <lb />
The statistics below were copied <lb />
from official records by one in the <lb />
service for the information of RE- <lb />
readers. <lb />
At the close the fiscal year <lb />
June the mails were car- <lb />
on miles of railroad in <lb />
the United States- Postal clerks <lb />
were employed in the distribution <lb />
of the on j service on <lb />
NEW FANGLED IDEAS. <lb />
Durham Sun. <lb />
The county institutes of New <lb />
York have brought out some new <lb />
ideas it would be well for the <lb />
to think about. <lb />
One orator wanted the school <lb />
children furnished with a warm <lb />
midday lunch, to be paid out of the <lb />
school fund. <lb />
The plan is brilliant and <lb />
and we have no doubt that as <lb />
far as the children are concerned <lb />
there would be no objection what- <lb />
ever. With roast turkey and <lb />
mince pie for Monday's luncheon, <lb />
stuffed veal and plum pudding for <lb />
Tuesday, chicken <lb />
ice cream for Wednesday, venison <lb />
steak and wine jelly for <lb />
and fried oysters and <lb />
for Friday, the average <lb />
school boy or girl would, we opine <lb />
be well content. Under such cir- <lb />
as these schools would <lb />
be a picnic and truancy would lose <lb />
its delights. There would be no <lb />
yearning to cast away ones books <lb />
and be a man when a school boy <lb />
should reach the mature age of 12- <lb />
The girls would not fret over <lb />
their and say they would <lb />
rather go home wash dishes, <lb />
if they had view the rich, rare <lb />
banquet that was to follow their <lb />
labors. The school room <lb />
would be crowded to its utmost <lb />
capacity, and even great big boys <lb />
and young girls be <lb />
tempted to abandon the workaday <lb />
world, with its prosaic noonday <lb />
sandwich and sour and revel <lb />
in the roast duck of <lb />
the school house. <lb />
But while these new and highly <lb />
admirable educational wrinkles <lb />
are being introduced, it would be <lb />
a pity to stop right here- <lb />
A never failing fountain of <lb />
de cologne would add to the gen- <lb />
attractiveness of the school <lb />
room, and if a string orchestra, <lb />
varied occasionally by an Italian <lb />
organ grinder, should emit <lb />
melodies from an adjoining <lb />
room the effect would be sublime. <lb />
Peanuts and sour balls might be <lb />
passed round every half hour, and <lb />
a tub of lemonade would sate the <lb />
thirst of restless pupils much more <lb />
successfully than the old oaken <lb />
bucket or weather-beaten hydrant. <lb />
dull and uninteresting things <lb />
as geographies, arithmetics and <lb />
spelling- books might well be sup- <lb />
planted by fairy tales and blood <lb />
and thunder novels, and then, with <lb />
a few minor improvements, we <lb />
would have a truly ideal school. <lb />
There are evidently no flies on <lb />
the progress of the 19th century. <lb />
miles, having been performed by <lb />
means of closed pouches by lines <lb />
in car of baggage masters. The <lb />
rolling of the railway post- <lb />
office lines consisted of whole <lb />
cars in use and in reserve <lb />
apartment cars in use and <lb />
in reserve, making the total <lb />
under the control of the De- <lb />
There were added during the <lb />
present year, miles of new <lb />
service, being an increase of <lb />
per cent. On June 30th, 1891. there <lb />
were Postal Clerks on the <lb />
rolls. The distance in <lb />
the performance of their duties <lb />
21,124-102 miles, and handled <lb />
814.562 pieces of mail matter. <lb />
the year under review 8.- <lb />
564.252,563 pieces of all classes of <lb />
mail matter were handled and <lb />
errors were checked by <lb />
those opening the packages for <lb />
redistribution, showing that <lb />
pieces were correctly distributed <lb />
to each error made- <lb />
There were pieces of <lb />
registered matter handled during <lb />
the year. <lb />
It appears from tabular state- <lb />
hearing the above heading <lb />
that the quantity of this matter <lb />
etc., and if you were to <lb />
to the complaint you would <lb />
about as gloomy as the most of <lb />
the e appear to be- I have a <lb />
short faithful story to tell in your <lb />
paper and hope it may aid the <lb />
wise men in our State to arrive at <lb />
the cause and the remedy for hard <lb />
times among the farmers <lb />
In 1867 I found myself on a fair <lb />
average farm just where I am now <lb />
writing to you, with one good <lb />
mule, a broken down army horse, <lb />
a fair set of farming implements, <lb />
mostly second-hand, but without a <lb />
dollar of credit and just in <lb />
cash. It was the last week in Jan- <lb />
and time had come for us to <lb />
our for the year. I <lb />
had a small quantity of corn, <lb />
about enough with economy to <lb />
feed my stock and give my family <lb />
for four or five months. <lb />
Times were then hard with me <lb />
sure enough. My near neighbor <lb />
was a little better off, but not much <lb />
as I thought him to be at the time. <lb />
We were talking over the matter <lb />
when he informed me that he was <lb />
going to Gadsden the nest day to <lb />
some arrangement for credit <lb />
to enable him to make his crop, <lb />
and asked me to go with him and <lb />
see what I could do. We went to <lb />
town. It wasn't long before I consisting of letters etc. not ad- <lb />
neighbor had secured his dressed to any post office, or other- <lb />
with a note and mortgage, which wise so illegibly, incorrectly, or <lb />
during the insufficiently as to <lb />
their proper delivery <lb />
without additional information <lb />
as the intention of the sender, to- <lb />
with the number of pieces <lb />
withdrawn from the mails in <lb />
sit on account of the non-payment <lb />
of postage amounted to 7.250,156 <lb />
pieces. Of that number <lb />
first-class matter, second <lb />
class, 2,618.259 third class, <lb />
fourth class, all of which <lb />
he was to trade out <lb />
year. <lb />
I tried to do the same, it <lb />
no go. The merchants did not <lb />
know me I couldn't make the <lb />
security they demanded. Well we <lb />
went back home together, my <lb />
neighbor with B smart load of <lb />
bacon, flour, coffee, dry goods, and <lb />
shoes for the children, with a dress <lb />
his wife, and a Sunday coat <lb />
for himself. My wagon was empty <lb />
and I disconsolate with nothing to seat to <lb />
take to my fireside but a heavy post-offices for proper disposition. <lb />
heart and a will to work. I told j Of this large number of pieces, <lb />
my wife all about my failure to get which represent in part the errors <lb />
credit and we talked the matter made by the public, were <lb />
over until said returned to the sender, <lb />
she, we have got two good j e corrected and forwarded, L- <lb />
cows. hens, and a few pigs, a were sent to the dead letter <lb />
good garden, the best of j office, were held for post <lb />
health. So we will stay at home j age. and the remainder, being <lb />
and get our living from our pieces of third class matter, <lb />
Bless her soul, she was the wisest, m disposed of as waste- From <lb />
woman. I that ever lived on , these figures it <lb />
earth. and among the best that j 994.163 or per cent, were <lb />
went to heaven. I took her either corrected forwarded or <lb />
and at the end of the year, I had , returned to sender. It may not be <lb />
seven bales of cotton, ; out of place to mention in this con- <lb />
bushels of com, and saved 1,200 <lb />
pounds of bacon, banked up snug- <lb />
bushels of sweet potatoes <lb />
while my good wife had <lb />
made from her eggs, chickens, <lb />
butter and honey, and had bought <lb />
herself a summer dress bonnet <lb />
and cloth enough to make the under <lb />
garments for all the children. <lb />
best of all, I did not owe a man on <lb />
earth a cent. <lb />
My neighbor, who had the <lb />
it I could not get, made eleven <lb />
bales of cotton, a small corn crop, <lb />
no meat, and had until <lb />
he was several hundred dollars in <lb />
debt. I met him Gadsden <lb />
the month of January, 1868, <lb />
after he had settled with the mer- <lb />
chants and had sold his cotton. All <lb />
that the number of errors <lb />
committed by the public, as shown <lb />
by the above statement, <lb />
the number of errors made by the <lb />
clerks of this service by or <lb />
a fraction over per cent. <lb />
A Postal Clerk. <lb />
Things That Hurt <lb />
We sell cotton by the bale and <lb />
buy it by the handkerchief. <lb />
Our wool is sold the bale and <lb />
I resold to us b the yard. <lb />
The material of which our <lb />
clothes are made is grown in tho <lb />
South, but we prefer to pay the <lb />
people of the North to sew this <lb />
material together. <lb />
We would import our wives and <lb />
he had to show for his year's work I if we had to pay any more <lb />
was a new buggy, that ha really <lb />
did not need, and about in <lb />
We rush our products in a bulk <lb />
cash. In 1872 my neighbor sold on a crowded market and buy by <lb />
to pay his debts and keep the I when the dealers have <lb />
sheriff away and moved to of the surplus we have <lb />
where he came to want- The same ; upon them, <lb />
year I had loaned out and We have this year- <lb />
drawing a good interest, well but be buying <lb />
cured, and I have never borrowed our in North. <lb />
We would buy our biscuits in <lb />
New England if our wives were <lb />
not more enterprising than we are. <lb />
We buy the education of our <lb />
children in the North when we <lb />
have a better article at home. <lb />
Subscribe a year. <lb />
a cent, or a thing, or had my name <lb />
on a merchants book for a <lb />
credit. I have often thought and <lb />
believe most firmly that the lest <lb />
thing that ever happened to me <lb />
was my failure to get credit in a <lb />
1867. Nearly years have passed I . . ,. , <lb />
since I had my disconsolate ride A has found its <lb />
back to my humble home from j way into the manufacture of table <lb />
Gadsden. I have since reared a hardware. The handles of table <lb />
family of seven children, given now in j to <lb />
education the country could. . . m, <lb />
offer, have built a large house i match There are sets <lb />
barn, and have enough, thank tho or course. Those for poultry <lb />
Lord, to keep me and my family in have heads of the victims and it- <lb />
comfort as long as I shall live. I tie fluffy chicks and ducks upon <lb />
sub-treasury and never them those ft <lb />
wanted it but once and then, thank; , . . . . <lb />
God, I could not get it. There is have nights of par- <lb />
not a farmer in Alabama, worthy triage and miniature long-legged <lb />
the name of a farmer, who cannot j snipe painted on <lb />
do as I have done. W. T. Mod. <lb />
THE HOMESTEAD. <lb />
IT HAS SERVED ITS DAY. <lb />
And Should no Longer Remain in its <lb />
Present Shape on the Statute Books. <lb />
Record. <lb />
Shall the homestead exemptions <lb />
be abolished or reduced T This is a <lb />
most important question, and <lb />
should most carefully consider- <lb />
ed by the people of North <lb />
and we would respectfully <lb />
that it be fully <lb />
by the members of the <lb />
Farmers Alliance at their meet- <lb />
this winter. It is a very <lb />
question and one that affects <lb />
them very seriously. <lb />
While the homestead clauses of <lb />
our State constitution were very <lb />
popular at the time of their <lb />
in 1868, and may have been <lb />
of great benefit to many persons, <lb />
yet now public opinion is <lb />
in favor of their abolition or <lb />
amendment. Those exemption <lb />
clauses wee incorporated into the <lb />
State constitution shortly after the <lb />
war, when nearly everybody was <lb />
in debt and had not sufficient prop- <lb />
to pay with on account of <lb />
their losses tho war. If these <lb />
exemptions should be repealed or <lb />
reduced, they should apply to <lb />
existing debts, but only to those <lb />
debts to be contracted the <lb />
Therefore persons now in <lb />
debt not be affected, but <lb />
only those who might go in debt <lb />
hereafter. <lb />
The Record favors a reduction <lb />
of the exemptions, and not their <lb />
abolition. We think that <lb />
of laud at pres- <lb />
and worth of <lb />
personal property are too large <lb />
exemptions. In the first place <lb />
very few persons own that much <lb />
property. statement may ex- <lb />
cite surprise, but it is none the <lb />
less true, at least in this portion of <lb />
the State. In this county <lb />
Chatham may be cited as an aver- <lb />
age in the hardly- <lb />
one taxpayer in every twenty owns <lb />
HOW worth of land and <lb />
worth of personal property. This <lb />
is ascertained by reference to the <lb />
tax lists of the county, and is not <lb />
a mere guess or conjecture. So <lb />
that, in aider to give a possible <lb />
benefit to so small a minority of <lb />
our citizens, these excessive <lb />
with their resulting <lb />
are still allowed. In or- <lb />
that one of the tax <lb />
may have a possible and <lb />
very doubtful benefit, are the <lb />
other willing <lb />
to submit longer to the evils and <lb />
inconveniences resulting there- <lb />
from <lb />
What are some of those evils <lb />
and inconveniences t <lb />
In the first place our large ex- <lb />
are the cause of so many <lb />
mortgages being given. No man <lb />
doubts this, and all seem to admit <lb />
that the prevailing mortgage sys- <lb />
is a It is <lb />
needless here to dwell upon this <lb />
evil, for it is known of all men, <lb />
being felt and seen in every day's <lb />
business. Why not then root out <lb />
the cause of it <lb />
In the next place it frequently <lb />
causes much inconvenience to per- <lb />
sons when they wish to get sure- <lb />
ties on bonds- For instance, a <lb />
man desiring to qualify as a <lb />
or administrator is frequently <lb />
unable to give a small bond, be- <lb />
cause his would-be not <lb />
worth anything over their legal <lb />
exemptions. <lb />
But the chief evil caused by our <lb />
excessive exemptions is the con- <lb />
traction of credit. A very great <lb />
deal is said nowadays about the <lb />
of tho and <lb />
much complaint is made about it. <lb />
Many schemes are suggested for <lb />
stopping this contraction. But <lb />
while so much is said about the <lb />
contraction of the currency, very <lb />
little is said about the contraction <lb />
of credit, and yet the latter is a far <lb />
greater evil than tho former. This <lb />
is readily perceived when we state <lb />
that ninety two per cent of all the <lb />
business of the country is done on <lb />
credit, and eight per with <lb />
actual currency. Therefore it is a <lb />
forcible illustration of the old say- <lb />
at the spigot and <lb />
at the when so many <lb />
scheme are suggested to <lb />
stop the contraction of the Mann <lb />
and nothing is being done to <lb />
stop the contraction of credit I <lb />
In large business and in <lb />
the dealings of commercial men <lb />
very little money or currency is <lb />
handled. They a large ex- <lb />
tent drafts, checks and other com- <lb />
paper based on credit <lb />
But this is not the case throughout <lb />
the country generally, because of <lb />
the scarcity of credit. Hence, <lb />
wherever credit is contracted more <lb />
actual currency is needed, and <lb />
when the people have no credit <lb />
and nothing with which to obtain <lb />
the currency the times must <lb />
be <lb />
No man can deny that there <lb />
would be more credit among our <lb />
people in their daily business <lb />
therefore less need of act- <lb />
if our <lb />
were abolished or reduced <lb />
and a man's property be made <lb />
for his contracts. Why then <lb />
not remove this chief cause for the <lb />
contraction of credit in North Car- <lb />
Is not this question worthy of <lb />
serious consideration <lb />
North Carolina Dead for 1891. <lb />
Wilmington Messenger, <lb />
B. Hawkins, Paul C <lb />
Cameron, Dr. Walter Brodie, Rev. <lb />
Daniel Culbreth, Rev. William C. <lb />
Gannon, Col. Robert F. Webb <lb />
Rev- Israel Hard- <lb />
Dr. Robert W. King, Julius <lb />
A. Col. Lot W. Humphrey, <lb />
J. <lb />
Gen- Thomas P. Dray- <lb />
ton Judge Charles <lb />
R. Thomas, Rev. Joseph M. <lb />
son, D. D., James K. Hall, Wiley <lb />
D. Jones, Col. William L. <lb />
Gov. Daniel G. <lb />
Fowle, James P. Col. <lb />
A. Cameron, Dr John R. <lb />
Ellis, Col. Julius A. Gray, <lb />
I. L. Wright, Dr. F. <lb />
Major Lucius W. <lb />
Robert H. Henderson. Dr. <lb />
G. G. Smith, Capt. John <lb />
Dr. James W. <lb />
Alston, Dr. Frank M- <lb />
Major William A <lb />
John C- Capt. <lb />
Edward R. Stamps <lb />
Dr. Gray Sills, Dr. Phillip Koonce. <lb />
H. H. Tate. David A. <lb />
Owen C. Ferrer, Gen. James M. <lb />
Leach M. Dr. Albert T. <lb />
Rowe, Henry E. Bond, ex Gov. <lb />
David S- Reid, Rev. George W. <lb />
John M. Moring. Dr. J. M. <lb />
George Rev. J <lb />
J. T. Judge Henry <lb />
Dr. Eugene T. Speed, R. j <lb />
W. Dr. L. S. Flow, Hugh <lb />
F. Murray, Dr. L. P. Waldo, Dr. <lb />
Milton G. Folger, Prof. H. W. <lb />
Rev. J. M. Garrison, <lb />
Hollister, Rev. Brantley <lb />
York, D. D., Col Walter L. Steele <lb />
Jones Watson. Rev. <lb />
Joseph D. Bond, E. F- Beach- <lb />
am. Rev. W. H. E. W. <lb />
Sr-, Dr. B- N. Culpepper, James <lb />
Simmons. Dr. R. L. Beall, George <lb />
W. Thompson, Dr. H. Z. Cosby,; <lb />
Prof. Green Wade, M. D. <lb />
Thomas C Moses. Dr. <lb />
Plummer and Dr. Wm. A. Hayes. <lb />
Some of these were distinguish-1 <lb />
ed and able men. Others were <lb />
local reputation only, but men of i <lb />
of usefulness, and some , <lb />
of fine talents and culture. North j <lb />
Carolina was indeed sorely be- <lb />
in 1891. <lb />
Wisdom. <lb />
If you would make a thief hon- <lb />
est, trust him. <lb />
Words sometimes wound more <lb />
than swords. <lb />
A pound of care will not pay a <lb />
pound of debt. <lb />
A good book supplies the place <lb />
a companion. <lb />
The simple flowers are sociable <lb />
and benevolent. <lb />
Fortune can only take from us <lb />
what she gave us. <lb />
Youth looks at the possible, age <lb />
at the probable. <lb />
Charms strike the sight, but <lb />
merit wins the soul. <lb />
Faith and hope more dis- <lb />
eases than medicine. <lb />
It is a very proud horse that will <lb />
not his oats. <lb />
The industrious thinker is <lb />
lonely, discouraged or miserable. <lb />
Might does not make right, but <lb />
right in the long run makes might. <lb />
Works Like a Charm.<lb />
you take any <lb />
day this season V <lb />
of course- <lb />
did you <lb />
your while you were <lb />
away <lb />
I just took my ad- <lb />
out of the papers <lb />
I returned, so there was no <lb />
business to Capital idea, <lb />
wasn't it <lb />
OUR STATE. <lb />
ALL OVER NORTH CAROLINA. <lb />
Happenings Here and There as Gathered <lb />
From our Exchanges. <lb />
There are about post <lb />
offices in North Carolina. <lb />
The Grand Lodge of Masons <lb />
met in Raleigh yesterday. <lb />
The town of Lenoir had a <lb />
fire on the night of Dec. 30th. <lb />
The Greensboro says <lb />
has been for an <lb />
endowment fund for Col- <lb />
Alfred Dawns, the Charlotte <lb />
burglar, will not hang. Gov. Holt <lb />
commuted the death sentence to <lb />
imprisonment for life in the State <lb />
Penitentiary. <lb />
Senator and Mrs. Vance have re- <lb />
turned from their European trip. <lb />
They left on tho 27th of May and <lb />
have visited Great Britain the <lb />
continent, going even as far as <lb />
Egypt. <lb />
Tho State Commissioner of Ag- <lb />
says that already is <lb />
an active demand for fertilizer tax <lb />
tags, and that the fertilizer <lb />
are preparing for heavy <lb />
work this year. <lb />
Mr. Ed. Chambers Smith, Chair <lb />
man of Democratic <lb />
Committee of this State, was mar- <lb />
Raleigh yesterday, 12th, to <lb />
Miss Annie Badger Faison, <lb />
of Col. Paul F. Faison. <lb />
We re- <lb />
to learn of the death of Mr. <lb />
Chas. A. of Carthage, last <lb />
w talented member of the <lb />
Moore bar, and a member <lb />
of one of the leading families of <lb />
that section of the State. <lb />
The regrets greatly to <lb />
learn of the death of Mr. Elias <lb />
Smith, a young farmer of Shine. <lb />
Greene which occurred at <lb />
the home of his father Mr. Joseph <lb />
Smith, yesterday morning of <lb />
consequent upon an attack <lb />
of the grip. <lb />
The Detroit Free Pratt says an <lb />
architect in that city is drawing a <lb />
design for a beautiful hotel to lie <lb />
built in the mountains of We <lb />
North Carolina. To a friend he <lb />
said the hotel would named. <lb />
because <lb />
would be open all the year <lb />
Wonder if it is to be put up in <lb />
Asheville. <lb />
Raleigh Mr. Waster <lb />
Tate, of is mayor of <lb />
tho town and on the day before <lb />
Christmas put a man who was <lb />
drunk in the guard house. When <lb />
the man got sober on the next <lb />
day ho was released in the <lb />
afternoon while the little boys <lb />
were tiring crackers, the drunken <lb />
put a dynamite cartridge <lb />
under Mr. Tate's office, and when <lb />
it exploded Mr. Tate was seriously <lb />
injured and died the same night. <lb />
Raleigh Newt and <lb />
Gov. Holt commuted the death <lb />
sentence of Henrietta <lb />
in December. 1891, in <lb />
Superior Court of <lb />
de sentenced to hanged <lb />
January Her sentence was <lb />
commuted to seven yours in the <lb />
penitentiary. The commutation <lb />
was granted upon the statement of <lb />
the Judge, the Solicitor, the <lb />
who tried the case a number <lb />
of citizens that the condemned <lb />
woman was of unsound mind <lb />
that there was a grave question as <lb />
to whether she was responsible <lb />
for her act. <lb />
Free <lb />
Bryan, a half-wit who lives about <lb />
Kinston and drinks all the liquor <lb />
given him. was presented with a <lb />
now suit of clothes, shoes and hat <lb />
a few days before by a <lb />
kind-hearted citizen. Christ- <lb />
mas morning about o'clock a <lb />
persuaded to go <lb />
with him to the river and on <lb />
riving there induced him to pull off <lb />
his new clothes by telling him he <lb />
was going to put him to bod. <lb />
When got his clothes off <lb />
the throw him into the river, <lb />
picked up tho clothes and skipped. <lb />
was sober enough to catch <lb />
on to a canoe and after remaining <lb />
in tho water an hour was rescued. <lb />
The was arrested and is in <lb />
jail. <lb />
Lamp Light Mr. Calvin <lb />
Tucker killed a month old <lb />
Monday, which tilted the beam at <lb />
pounds. That is than <lb />
raising at cents. <lb />
Objected to Separate Ticket Windows. <lb />
Greensboro <lb />
A select party of colored people <lb />
from this place went to High Point <lb />
a few days ago and gave an enter- <lb />
It seems that High <lb />
Point has a different ticket office <lb />
arrangement than prevails here <lb />
selling tickets for colored people <lb />
at one window and to whites at the <lb />
other. This party of colored <lb />
applied at the white office win- <lb />
for tickets and were directed <lb />
to go to the colored ticket office <lb />
window. This they refused to do. <lb />
So when the train came they got <lb />
on without tickets. The <lb />
tor demanded increased fare, and <lb />
they refused to pay tho extra <lb />
charge. the nine <lb />
were put off the train, and had to <lb />
walk to Greensboro. The other <lb />
four paid and came on in good <lb />
shape and on good time. There is <lb />
some talk of a suit against the <lb />
railroad. <lb />
OUT IN BEAVER DAM. <lb />
follow- <lb />
composition was read in the <lb />
school at Smith's school <lb />
that was taught by Miss Fannie <lb />
A- Smith last winter and spring. <lb />
Through my neglect it has not <lb />
been for publication until <lb />
now, but thinking it will be of in- <lb />
to the readers of the Re- <lb />
I send it along now. <lb />
OUR NEIGHBORHOOD. <lb />
I guess you all know about <lb />
neighborhood, but I will give you <lb />
my ideas about it. <lb />
It is a very notable neighbor- <lb />
hood, for one reason that it is <lb />
thickly settled, for another that it <lb />
produces good crops, and for an- <lb />
other that it possesses many <lb />
pretty girls. <lb />
On the west side of us is uncle <lb />
Little and wife who have <lb />
two boys and two girls. He is <lb />
looked upon as being somewhat <lb />
like the but very sure. <lb />
He good farmer, a mule <lb />
a plow, a hog and a cow, and <lb />
a barrel of molasses. <lb />
Between here and <lb />
lives Mr. C- D. Smith who has a <lb />
wife is the proud father of a <lb />
little one. <lb />
The city of a place of <lb />
much importance is owned by <lb />
Messrs. J. C Cobb Son. The <lb />
clerks for this firm are Messrs. W. <lb />
L. Cobb. C L. Tyson and C- D. <lb />
Smith, the latter being the only <lb />
one married. They all are very <lb />
attentive to business and much <lb />
liked by all who deal with them <lb />
On farther is my sister Nellie <lb />
and brothel R. A. Nichols. You <lb />
can imagine my interest in them <lb />
without my saying more- <lb />
Now on the the first dwell- <lb />
is owned by Mrs- Pattie Smith, <lb />
a widow lady- Her husband died <lb />
about six years ago leaving her <lb />
with five children. She of course, <lb />
like all other widows, has had a <lb />
bad chance, but I think she has <lb />
done remarkably well. She makes <lb />
plenty to eat and a plenty of cloth- <lb />
for her family, and is giving <lb />
her children a good education, <lb />
one of them being our teacher to- <lb />
day. <lb />
The next farm is owned by Mr. <lb />
R- A. Willoughby. who has a wife, <lb />
four sons four daughters- <lb />
One of the latter is married, the <lb />
others all single. He is a good <lb />
and raises more corn and <lb />
meat than any man in the neigh- <lb />
Northwest is Mr. J. C Cobb, <lb />
one of the best and most success- <lb />
farmers in the neighborhood. <lb />
He owns a saw and grist null and <lb />
a good deal of other property. <lb />
all this, girls, he is a <lb />
Tho next dwelling is occupied <lb />
by Mr. George Allen, who has a <lb />
wife, five boys and one girl. He <lb />
is a poor man but one of the most <lb />
intelligent and in <lb />
our community. I don't think his <lb />
neighbors would like him any bet- <lb />
if he was worth his millions. <lb />
I forget to tell you that I <lb />
am getting in Smith town. The <lb />
next farm is owned by cousin Ivy <lb />
so of course I will not have much <lb />
to say again. <lb />
The next farm is owned by Mr- <lb />
Jesse L- Smith, who has a wife <lb />
and three children. By looking <lb />
at him you could not tell whether <lb />
it is winter or summer, as ho never <lb />
wears a coat- He has twenty-one <lb />
hogs but eighteen of them are <lb />
small. He raises corn, fodder, <lb />
potatoes, molasses and tobacco, <lb />
all the same, and if nothing hap- <lb />
pens will raise more of them this <lb />
year. Ho has a barrel that does <lb />
not and sometimes tells <lb />
on, don't sop it all I <lb />
want some in my <lb />
From pine log swamp to the <lb />
is Smith town, but to tell <lb />
all about it this time is more than <lb />
I can do. <lb />
Nellie A. <lb />
loots. <lb />
Good looks are more than skin <lb />
upon healthy condition of <lb />
nil the vital organs. II the Liver lie In- <lb />
active, you have a Billions Look, if your <lb />
stomach lie disordered yon have a <lb />
peptic and if your be <lb />
you have a Look. Secure <lb />
health and you will have Rood looks <lb />
great alternative <lb />
and Tonic act directly on these vital <lb />
OHMS, Pimples, Blotches. Bolls <lb />
and gives good complexion. Sold at <lb />
John L. Drug per <lb />
bottle. <lb />
My wife had been a sufferer for some <lb />
with pain In the back; Salvation OH <lb />
US used and I to say my <lb />
wife suffers no pain. <lb />
W. B. Baltimore Ma. <lb />
In colds of great obstinacy and hacking <lb />
chronic coughs use Dr. Bull's Cough <lb />
the favorite. <lb />
The <lb />
A whole year for <lb />
only One Dollar; but <lb />
In order to get It you <lb />
must pay In advance. <lb />
I If you find stamped <lb />
just after your name <lb />
on the margin of the <lb />
, paper the <lb />
Subscription <lb />
Expires Two Weeks <lb />
This <lb />
It is to eve you 110- <lb />
that unless re- <lb />
, newed in that time <lb />
the will <lb />
cease going to you <lb />
j at the expiration of <lb />
the two weeks. <lb />
THE SILVER <lb />
There's never a day o sunny <lb />
But a little cloud appears ; <lb />
There's never a life so happy <lb />
But has had its time of tears ; <lb />
Yet the sun shines out the brighter <lb />
When the stormy tempest clears. <lb />
There's never a garden growing <lb />
With roses In every plot ; <lb />
There's never a heart so hardened <lb />
But it has one tender spot; <lb />
We have only to prune the border <lb />
To find the <lb />
There's never a cup so pleasant <lb />
But bitter with the sweet; <lb />
There's never a path <lb />
That bears the prints of ; <lb />
And we have a Helper promised <lb />
For the trials may meet. <lb />
There's never a way so narrow <lb />
But the entrance is made straight; <lb />
There's always a Guide to us <lb />
To the wicket <lb />
And n.-gels will be nearer <lb />
To the soul that Is desolate. <lb />
There's never a heart so haughty <lb />
Hut will some day bow and kneel; <lb />
There's never a heart so wounded <lb />
That the Saviour cannot heal ; <lb />
There is a many lowly forehead <lb />
is bearing the hidden <lb />
ABUSE. <lb />
Times. <lb />
Under this head a valued ex- <lb />
change says that men mistake <lb />
abuse and invective for argument. <lb />
They are arbitrary and think that <lb />
if others do not agree with them <lb />
and quietly submit to their dicta- <lb />
they are totally wrong. This <lb />
spirit is often manifested in pol- <lb />
in society, in the domestic <lb />
circle and in religion. It is, how- <lb />
ever, a fatal mistake- It cannot <lb />
do good and its tendency is con- <lb />
toward that which is evil. <lb />
You cannot control a man's mind <lb />
or bring his will into subjection to <lb />
yours by abuse. Abuse is a repel- <lb />
ling force and makes the gulf that <lb />
separates you from your fellow <lb />
man wider and wider. Every man <lb />
who is worth a picayune has a will <lb />
of his own. He does his own <lb />
thinking, forms his own <lb />
ions from the light ho possesses <lb />
and has as much to his <lb />
ions as you have to yours. <lb />
By physical power you may <lb />
compel a man so submit to you, <lb />
but his will and affections are still <lb />
unsubdued. Before you have sub- <lb />
a man in the full sense of the <lb />
term you must get control of his <lb />
will and affections. Then and not <lb />
till then will he work harmoniously <lb />
with you. You cannot make a man <lb />
think as you do except by the force <lb />
of logic. Fair candid affectionate, <lb />
overpowering, convincing <lb />
is the only weapon that will <lb />
accomplish this. <lb />
No one conversant with human <lb />
nature, that desires to accomplish <lb />
uses the weapon of <lb />
Every man and woman has a will <lb />
and affections- These cannot be <lb />
controlled by force or abuse. You <lb />
cannot force a person to love you <lb />
or think as you do and to try to do <lb />
so is as foolish as to endeavor to <lb />
dethrone the Supremo Ruler of all <lb />
things. <lb />
would have a poor opinion <lb />
of any person who could con- <lb />
trolled by abuse or force. We <lb />
to see every one guided by his own <lb />
free will and affections. Then we <lb />
know that he is honest, sincere and <lb />
true- If you could by force <lb />
a man to do as you wish him it <lb />
would an service and <lb />
would detract from his manhood. <lb />
The man who is governed by fear <lb />
is no man at all. He is a cringing <lb />
coward and cannot command the <lb />
respect of his fellow man- <lb />
Mildness hence the <lb />
gentle yet positive influence of Dr. Bull's <lb />
Baby Syrup overcomes so quickly the dis- <lb />
orders of babyhood. <lb />
Don't waste time on untried remedies. <lb />
Old Saul's Catarrh Cure has stood the <lb />
test of years. <lb />
Business for 1891. <lb />
News and Observer. <lb />
R. G- Dun Co. report <lb />
business failures for 1891 against <lb />
for 1890. This is tho high- <lb />
est number reported since the <lb />
agency was established in 1857. <lb />
is a brighter side in the <lb />
however, as the total <lb />
ties for the year amount only to <lb />
or almost precisely <lb />
the same as last year. The average <lb />
liability to each failure, which in <lb />
1890 was in 1891 is only <lb />
The distribution of the <lb />
loss shows an in <lb />
gain in the Eastern States <lb />
and a corresponding loss in <lb />
South. The Eastern liabilities are <lb />
as against <lb />
last year, but in the South they <lb />
are against <lb />
in 1890. The changes in the other <lb />
sections amount to from <lb />
to showing that only in <lb />
the East and South is there My <lb />
marked change in business cons<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017529_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
D, J, Editor <lb />
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY <lb />
Entered at at Greenville, <lb />
N. C. as second-class mail matter. <lb />
Publisher's Announcement. <lb />
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb />
I The is 81.00 per <lb />
Advertising Rates.-One <lb />
one yew. ; one-hall column one year. <lb />
one-quarter column one year, <lb />
inch <lb />
lie week. two weeks. 81.50; one <lb />
month one week, 81.50, <lb />
two weeks, one month, <lb />
Advertisements inserted in Local <lb />
Column as reading items, cents per <lb />
each Insertion. <lb />
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad. <lb />
and Notices- <lb />
and MM, <lb />
Summons to Non-Residents, etc. will <lb />
be charged for at legal rates and MUST <lb />
BE PAID FOR IN ADVANCE. <lb />
Contracts for space not mentioned <lb />
Above, for any length of time, can be <lb />
made by application to the office either <lb />
in person or by letter. <lb />
Copy tor N v Advertisements and <lb />
all changes of advertisements should be <lb />
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday <lb />
mornings in order to receive prompt in- <lb />
the day following. <lb />
The Reflector having a large <lb />
will be found a profitable medium <lb />
through which to the public. <lb />
Judge Bryan arrived in Green- <lb />
Friday evening and went <lb />
down to Grimesland Saturday to <lb />
visit his sister, Mrs. Bryan Grimes. <lb />
He opened Court at <lb />
Monday morning and after <lb />
his charge to the grand jury <lb />
adjourned Court until o'clock so <lb />
as to give time for the legal sales <lb />
that had to take place before the <lb />
Court House door. The judge is <lb />
suffering some from a severe cold <lb />
the bad weather bas given him. <lb />
Solicitor is at his post <lb />
representing the State. The <lb />
is troubled carbuncles <lb />
his leg that cause him to limp <lb />
in walking. <lb />
The County <lb />
Vance county <lb />
license to the <lb />
Henderson in <lb />
bars had to close, <lb />
no notice of the <lb />
Commissioners of <lb />
refuted to grant <lb />
liquor dealers in <lb />
consequence the <lb />
They had given <lb />
action in- <lb />
The State opened <lb />
Thursday with students, a very <lb />
large number for the opening day <lb />
Speaker Crisp is still confined to <lb />
his room- Mr. of Ten- <lb />
has been elected Speaker of <lb />
the House <lb />
One of the pick pockets arrested <lb />
in Wilmington during <lb />
has been given seven years <lb />
in the penitentiary- The other <lb />
was found not guilty- <lb />
the of is <lb />
dead. There are reports in <lb />
that his sudden end was <lb />
from poison. Instructions have <lb />
been given to have the <lb />
thoroughly investigated. <lb />
tended to take and some of these men <lb />
had bought their stock rented their <lb />
houses, and hired their clerks for <lb />
the coming year- The <lb />
and Leaf condemn very <lb />
strongly the action of the Board of <lb />
Commissioners for the above <lb />
son, and also from the fact that it <lb />
was done by two members of the <lb />
Board, there being only three <lb />
present and one of th the <lb />
acting chairman, stating that he <lb />
would have voted for license. <lb />
Counsel was employed on <lb />
sides. The Commissioners said the <lb />
fact of a man applying for license <lb />
was sufficient evidence that he was <lb />
not of good moral character and <lb />
upon this ground they refused the <lb />
license. The bar-keepers have <lb />
taken steps to compel the Com- <lb />
missioners to issue the <lb />
final decision will be awaited with <lb />
interest as the law seems to be <lb />
compulsory if the good character <lb />
is established. <lb />
WASHINGTON <lb />
The Harrison men are shouting <lb />
told you because of a slight <lb />
attack of nausea that Mr. Blaine <lb />
had this week, and the present in- <lb />
are that a concerted at- <lb />
tempt is to be made to drive Mr. <lb />
Blaine from the Presidential field, <lb />
using his health as the principal <lb />
weapon. It may succeed too, as <lb />
Mr. Blaine is a on <lb />
that subject, and been ever <lb />
since that notorious sunstroke, <lb />
away back in the seventies. <lb />
Andrew Jackson's birthday is <lb />
being fitly celebrated to-day by <lb />
the democrats. <lb />
A joint resolution authorizing <lb />
the Secretary of the Navy <lb />
charter a vessel to the <lb />
grain which has been contributed <lb />
for the famine stricken Russians <lb />
to that country, was adopted by <lb />
the Senate, but defeated by the <lb />
House- The constitutionality of <lb />
the resolution was doubted by <lb />
some of the ablest democrats in <lb />
Congress. <lb />
Senator Morgan spoke yesterday <lb />
in favor of his resolution directing <lb />
the Committee on Foreign Affairs <lb />
to procure additional information <lb />
concerning the canal. <lb />
He strongly favors the guarantee <lb />
of bonds asked for by the <lb />
but unless there is a change of <lb />
sentiment there is no probability <lb />
of the bill passing the House- As <lb />
one prominent member of that <lb />
body puts favor the build- <lb />
of the canal by this Govern- <lb />
if necessary, out am opposed <lb />
to any guarantee of bonds issued <lb />
by a <lb />
piers, a machine shop and round- <lb />
house are to be built by the Nor- <lb />
folk Western to accommodate <lb />
its heavily increasing business, <lb />
there, while at Charleston <lb />
wharf property has been <lb />
chased by Northern capitalists. At <lb />
other ports the of develop- <lb />
their trade goes on <lb />
steadily. In the industrial line <lb />
there has been a fair amount of <lb />
activity, and among the new enter- <lb />
prises reported for the week are <lb />
a coal mining company in <lb />
Alabama with the full capital sub- <lb />
scribed ; a coal milling <lb />
company in <lb />
car works company in Florida; <lb />
a brick company at Cedar- <lb />
town, Georgia; a <lb />
company in Florida; a <lb />
clothing company at <lb />
Georgia; a land <lb />
company at Fort Worth, <lb />
Texas ; a hotel company <lb />
at Dallas, Texas ; a loan <lb />
and immigration company in South <lb />
Carolina ; a kaolin <lb />
in South Carolina; a <lb />
improvement company at Dallas, <lb />
Texas; three large tobacco facto <lb />
at Louisville, Kentucky; a <lb />
canal building company at <lb />
New La.; a dis- <lb />
company at Texas; <lb />
a street car motor building <lb />
company at Pensacola, Florida ; a <lb />
phosphate company in <lb />
Florida ; a 8100.000 machine cont <lb />
at Baltimore, Mel. <lb />
The Ledger of Oxford, N- <lb />
C has entered upon its 5th vol- <lb />
It has also been enlarged <lb />
eight pages. This is evidently <lb />
the best and most widely <lb />
paper recently published in <lb />
county. It is worthy of <lb />
an increased patronage, and we <lb />
trust that Britt may realize <lb />
this during the present volume- <lb />
Governor Holt has commuted <lb />
the sentence of the burglar Dawns <lb />
of Charlotte to life imprisonment. <lb />
There were numerous petitions <lb />
before his Honor the case was <lb />
given a careful investigation with <lb />
the above result. The Governor <lb />
also commutes the sentence of the <lb />
woman of sentenced to be <lb />
for infanticide to <lb />
for seven years. He de- <lb />
to interfere in the case of <lb />
the woman who her <lb />
band as there was no plea but the <lb />
sentiment that a woman ought not <lb />
to be hung. <lb />
There were seven true bills <lb />
found against Davis of <lb />
ton for forgery. Ac. His counsel <lb />
first asked that his case be <lb />
ed to adjoining county for trial, <lb />
but when it came up for discussion <lb />
they read letters from his brother <lb />
stating that he. Davis, was not <lb />
sane, that insanity was <lb />
in the family, citing several <lb />
instances. They also read letter <lb />
from Dr. Murphy of the Western <lb />
Asylum saying that he could not <lb />
be present and testify as expert, in <lb />
consequence the case was post- <lb />
until the next term of the <lb />
court. <lb />
The reports in reference to the <lb />
operations of the revolutionist <lb />
do not seem to agree. Some <lb />
days ago it was said that he had <lb />
been hemmed bi on one of the <lb />
ranches in Texas and was at the <lb />
mercy of his pursuers. It appears <lb />
though that he has not been <lb />
as the Mexico a <lb />
has been discussing the propriety <lb />
of asking to allow their <lb />
troops to follow him into the <lb />
United States. If the request is <lb />
made it would hardly be granted <lb />
in safety to those who live upon <lb />
the border of the United States and <lb />
Mexico- <lb />
There was loud denunciation on <lb />
the part of the Republicans when <lb />
the Democrats <lb />
the of Ohio so as to give <lb />
that State a majority of Democrats <lb />
in v This extended all <lb />
the way from the President down <lb />
to the township countable. Now <lb />
the Legislature is Republican and <lb />
about the first bill introduced was <lb />
to gerrymander the State so as to <lb />
give the Republicans the same if <lb />
not a greater advantage- It is real- <lb />
said that President Harrison <lb />
will send in a message to Congress <lb />
in which he will denounce in strong <lb />
terms this outrage. This must be <lb />
a mistake- Just wait and watch <lb />
and see if it is not. He talked <lb />
very nicely in his to Con- <lb />
when it met on this principal <lb />
of gerrymandering. What will he <lb />
do now when this Ohio <lb />
proposes to the <lb />
State that they will elect seven <lb />
teen out of twenty one members. <lb />
This is even worse than they did <lb />
before when they only had fifteen <lb />
out of the twenty one- con- <lb />
etc. <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Jan. 8th. 1892. <lb />
Speaker pro <lb />
who was elected without <lb />
to preside over the <lb />
until Speaker Crisp who is still <lb />
confined to his room by the grip, <lb />
shall be able to resume his duties, <lb />
presides like a veteran, and is <lb />
complimented on all sides for the <lb />
ease with which he has taken up <lb />
the onerous duties of presiding <lb />
the House- <lb />
Notwithstanding the <lb />
dented appropriations of <lb />
lion dollars Congress, the cry for <lb />
deficiency appropriations has <lb />
ready begun. The list is headed <lb />
by Porter, of the census bureau. <lb />
through the Treasury depart- <lb />
has asked for a <lb />
appropriation of SI to <lb />
complete the work of that bureau, <lb />
and there are those who doubt <lb />
whether that amount will be <lb />
if Porter is to be allowed to <lb />
do it in his own way. He may get <lb />
the money, but it is not certain <lb />
and in any event he will probably <lb />
be asked some questions <lb />
as to how lie has spent some of the <lb />
previously appropriated <lb />
for the Census. <lb />
The attack on the <lb />
law in the House resemble <lb />
lie firing of sharp-shooters. Bills <lb />
have been introduced placing the <lb />
following articles on the free <lb />
Jute, jute bagging, iron ties, bind- <lb />
twine, lumber, tin plate, salt, <lb />
agricultural implements. wool, <lb />
coal and iron ore ; and bills have <lb />
been introduced to repeal the sugar <lb />
bounty clause of the law. and so <lb />
much of the law, and so much of <lb />
the reciprocity clause as gives the <lb />
President authority to restore the <lb />
duty upon certain products of <lb />
countries which fail to make re- <lb />
treaties with the United <lb />
States. These bills will all go to <lb />
the Ways and Means committee, <lb />
which will decide which of them <lb />
shall be passed. <lb />
Representative Mills, who has <lb />
gone to Texas, has been granted <lb />
an indefinite leave of absence by <lb />
the House. The object <lb />
of Mr. Mills in going home at this <lb />
time is to regain his health, but it <lb />
is probable that while there he <lb />
do some talking about the <lb />
Texas Senate <lb />
A meeting of the Executive Com- <lb />
of the National Association, <lb />
of Democratic Clubs has been call- <lb />
ed for Jan., by Representative <lb />
W. L- Wilson, of West Virginia, <lb />
who is chairman of the committee, <lb />
and it is desired that every member <lb />
shall be present or represented by <lb />
proxy, as important matters will <lb />
be considered. <lb />
The Democratic vacancy on the <lb />
Interstate Commerce Commission <lb />
has been given to Judge W. M. <lb />
Lindsay, of Kentucky, a gentle- <lb />
man of whom nothing but good is <lb />
and the Republican <lb />
to J- W. of Iowa, <lb />
who has been Congressman. Sena- <lb />
tor, and several other <lb />
things with official salaries. Col. <lb />
W. R. Morrison, whose <lb />
expired Dec. has been re- <lb />
appointed. <lb />
The silver question has already <lb />
shown a ready disposition to bob <lb />
up serenely in Congress at any and <lb />
all times. Several bills <lb />
introduced in the Senate <lb />
for free coinage, and although <lb />
there has been only one day <lb />
in the House, four bills of the <lb />
same sort were introduced, besides <lb />
several others having a more or <lb />
less direct bearing on silver. One <lb />
of them provides for the repeal of <lb />
the purchasing clause of the pres- <lb />
silver law. Senator Stewart <lb />
maintains that there is a law <lb />
ready in existence he <lb />
free coinage of silver, enacted in <lb />
1837 and never repealed, and he <lb />
offered a resolution instructing the <lb />
Judiciary committee to inquire <lb />
into the matter and report <lb />
he is or wrong. Senator <lb />
Morrill delivered a very able and <lb />
conservative speech this week <lb />
against the unlimited free coinage <lb />
of silver, in answer to Senator <lb />
Stewart's recent speech- <lb />
tr <lb />
r- <lb />
CD <lb />
u. <lb />
WHOSE <lb />
TOURNAMENT AT FALKLAND. <lb />
Mr- was my good <lb />
fortune to attend the tournament <lb />
at Falkland on the 8th. It was an <lb />
affair that reminded us of those <lb />
held in olden times, when every- <lb />
thing was carried out on a grand <lb />
and magnificent <lb />
was here left undone to make <lb />
it perfect in every detail- The day- <lb />
was peculiarly favorable for the <lb />
occasion, just cool enough to be <lb />
health-giving and bracing, while <lb />
the soft, mellow rays of the sun in- <lb />
rited every one to come out and <lb />
make merry. The site chosen for <lb />
the contest was a <lb />
very large, open field where the <lb />
beautifully decorated arches and <lb />
grand stand showed off to <lb />
did advantage. I arrived <lb />
M-, and found an immense <lb />
throng from far and near, who <lb />
were anxiously waiting for the <lb />
orator, Senator Williams. He was <lb />
presented to the audience by Mr. <lb />
J. H- Smith in a very neat speech. <lb />
It would be difficult to do the <lb />
of Senator Williams justice <lb />
ornate, chaste and was de- <lb />
to hear and instructive to <lb />
remember. At its close the riding <lb />
commenced. Ten knights entered <lb />
in the charge of Marshal J. <lb />
K- Newton, assisted by handsome <lb />
Messrs. B- J- Pulley, A- R. Dupree <lb />
and P. G Mayo. The knights <lb />
were all in full costume and <lb />
mounted on splendid steeds <lb />
especially for this occasion.<lb />
a.<lb />
ft. <lb />
and decorated with the hand- <lb />
trappings possible. It <lb />
was indeed an exciting scene. The <lb />
knights treated us to some of the <lb />
finest riding I have ever witnessed. <lb />
Mr. Jas- Corbett took nine rings <lb />
out of a possible nine and crowned <lb />
the queen. Messrs. Cad well <lb />
and Chas. Mayo tied on first <lb />
maid of honor, and so perfectly <lb />
did they perform that rode <lb />
six compete the tilts without a <lb />
decision. Then Mr- Mayo, with <lb />
that unselfish and magnanimous <lb />
spirit which characterizes Falk- <lb />
land people, withdrew in favor of <lb />
his visiting rival. Messrs. C. H. <lb />
Jenkins and Lyman Cotten tied <lb />
for the third maid of honor. In <lb />
the trial Mr. Cotten <lb />
won. The decisions of the judges, <lb />
Messrs. Cook. Harris. Newton, <lb />
Peebles and Smith, gave universal <lb />
satisfaction. The ladies on whom <lb />
the crowns were bestowed were as <lb />
Queen. Miss Addie Smith, <lb />
of Falkland; first maid. Miss Fan- <lb />
Knight, of Edgecombe; second <lb />
maid, Miss Harriss, of Falkland ; <lb />
third maid, Miss Ada Tyson, of <lb />
Farmville ; and a lovelier <lb />
never graced a ball room floor- It <lb />
was not my intention at first to be <lb />
present at the hall, but abut nine <lb />
o'clock the dulcet strains of the <lb />
violin and harp greeted my ears, <lb />
and it was Wending <lb />
my way to Smithsonian Hall, <lb />
which, by the way. was planned <lb />
especially for public entertain- <lb />
a vision of <lb />
loveliness met my gaze. Never <lb />
have I seen a more select, genteel <lb />
and refined gathering of ladies <lb />
and gentlemen. Promptly at nine <lb />
o'clock the royal set was announced <lb />
when Chief Marshal Newton in an <lb />
exquisite five minutes speech, <lb />
presented the beautiful crowns to <lb />
the successful knights, who in <lb />
turn placed them on the fair <lb />
brows of their lady loves. The <lb />
arrangement for the hall was <lb />
ply perfect. The floor mirror-like <lb />
m its smoothness, the music divine- <lb />
I would be glad to report some of <lb />
the distinguished visitors and de <lb />
scribe some of the costumes, but I <lb />
know your valuable space forbids <lb />
it. Dancing continued until a late <lb />
hour when all went home highly <lb />
pleased. Great credit h due the <lb />
managers, and if there is ever an- <lb />
other tournament at Falkland, I <lb />
intend to be present, provided I <lb />
get an invitation and a living in <lb />
the U- S. A- Jones. <lb />
Editor Reflector <lb />
ed letter having fallen into my <lb />
hands, and every to discover <lb />
either party concerned in it having <lb />
failed, it is sent you for <lb />
I trust this explanation will <lb />
show sufficient excuse for making <lb />
the matter public. <lb />
Truly, W. H. <lb />
Joe Starkey, <lb />
Dear any little <lb />
propriety urge you to give this let- <lb />
other than a kindly <lb />
it must devolve upon the <lb />
writer not only to convince you of <lb />
his utmost regard for every de- <lb />
of but to assure <lb />
you that that wouldn't <lb />
write this for anything if it wasn't <lb />
for a calamity in. <lb />
My most vital organ, my heart, <lb />
Joe, is at your disposal. Without <lb />
that vital organ, I am nothing as it <lb />
were. Ugh sigh in the con- <lb />
it. <lb />
Miss Joe, forgive me. should <lb />
have wired you to get out of the <lb />
way of this horrible confession, <lb />
but II simply couldn't. Oh Joe <lb />
Dearest, I didn't intend to have <lb />
to do this. I didn't mean to full <lb />
in love with you. Sweet one, will <lb />
yea pity me I didn't go to do it- <lb />
Joe, it was that Leap <lb />
Year Party. When you came <lb />
down stairs and called for me I <lb />
I took your <lb />
arm sweet, and when you <lb />
spoke those silvery words I flew <lb />
off the helve. Joe, it was my <lb />
heart. I held soft white <lb />
in mine, and I get <lb />
back on the helve, and yet, <lb />
darling. And all that night, yon <lb />
know how devotional I was. I could <lb />
not help trembling when I heard the <lb />
light rustle of your multifarious <lb />
and promiscuous costume- Oh Joe, <lb />
that pillow-case you so. <lb />
I had no idea of such a thing in <lb />
that sense. But it was awfully cute. <lb />
Now darling, it is about over <lb />
with me. I sit in silence and <lb />
dream of a vision <lb />
The hum of my little kazoo is <lb />
about ceased. Could I but hope <lb />
but no ; ambrosial sweets are for <lb />
the gods. While you are bestow- <lb />
smiles on others, I, denied such <lb />
favor, have the consolation of sub- <lb />
scribing myself, <lb />
Yours in Misery. <lb />
Smith's Shaving Parlor. <lb />
JAME A. SMITH, Prop. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
We have the the easiest <lb />
Chair ever used in the art. Chan towels, <lb />
sharp razors, and satisfaction guaranteed <lb />
every Call and be con <lb />
Ladies waited on at their <lb />
Notice Notice <lb />
On Monday the 11th day of <lb />
1892, I will sell at the Court <lb />
House Door in the of <lb />
to the highest bidder, for cash, <lb />
tracts of land in Pitt county de- <lb />
scribed as follows <lb />
A tract of land known as the <lb />
Fanny Avery land, adjoining the <lb />
G. T. Tyson, the Pollard <lb />
land and others, in Beaver Dam town- <lb />
ship, containing sixty-five acres. . <lb />
A tract known as the Starling <lb />
Avery land adjoining the Fannie <lb />
Avery tract, the lands of Charles <lb />
Harris, G. T. Tyson and others, con- <lb />
fifty acres or in <lb />
Heaver Dam township. <lb />
A tract known as the William <lb />
Burnett land adjoining the lands of <lb />
B. F. Crawford, W. G. Case and <lb />
containing about fifty acres more <lb />
less, in Beaver Dam township. <lb />
A tract of land whereon Silas <lb />
Nichols now the lands <lb />
of W. G. Case <lb />
fifteen acres more or less, in <lb />
Dam township. <lb />
A tract of land known as the <lb />
Move land, adjoining the lands of Geo. <lb />
Crawford, Silas Frank Allen <lb />
others, containing one hundred <lb />
and eighty acres, more or less, in <lb />
Beaver Dam township. <lb />
One other tract known a the <lb />
Joy Mr land adjoining the last named <lb />
tract containing one hundred and <lb />
twenty-live acres, more or less, in <lb />
Beaver township. <lb />
To sundry executions in <lb />
my hands for collection against <lb />
William Whitehead and which have <lb />
been levied on said land is the prop- <lb />
said William Whitehead. <lb />
J A. K. <lb />
Sheriff of Pitt County. <lb />
December. <lb />
WE COME AGAIN <lb />
To enlist your attention and claim a fair share of patronage. <lb />
We are determined that if square dealings and honest <lb />
of our will secure you as a customer, <lb />
they shall not be lacking on our part. We go into <lb />
------the Northern Markets with the------- <lb />
is <lb />
and buy for the CASH, getting every possible advantage that <lb />
to lie offered to first-class therefore we are enabled <lb />
------to give you at all times the------- <lb />
Benefit of Purchases Made <lb />
for Cash. <lb />
We have bought this season the stock of <lb />
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb />
ever handled by us. The ten days spent in by our <lb />
were not idle ones, as an inspection of our <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The Superior Court Clerk or Pitt <lb />
County having issued I <lb />
to me, the undersigned, on the <lb />
1st day Dec. on the estate of John <lb />
I. Lewis, deceased, notice is hereby <lb />
given all persons Indebted t the es- <lb />
to make immediate payment to the <lb />
undersigned, and to all creditors of laid <lb />
estate to present their claims properly <lb />
authenticated, to the undersigned, with- <lb />
in twelve after the date of this <lb />
notice, or this notice will be plead in bar <lb />
of their <lb />
This the 1st of Dec. 1891. <lb />
B. <lb />
on the estate of John I. Lewis. <lb />
j The Newest <lb />
Best. <lb />
For all classes and type furnished at <lb />
lowest prices. Planters raise tobacco <lb />
for the money it brings but only the <lb />
Finest Varieties produce First class <lb />
Tobacco, that pays. Start right, order <lb />
the best for your locality and thus real- <lb />
the largest returns possible from the <lb />
crop. free on application, <lb />
R. I. CO., <lb />
Va. <lb />
UR. I,. <lb />
-3 DENTIST, t <lb />
1.6. <lb />
A GOOD NEW YEAR'S <lb />
The Record, of <lb />
Baltimore, January in reviewing <lb />
the industrial progress of the <lb />
South, <lb />
is too early in the new year <lb />
to expect any very great activity <lb />
in new enterprises, but <lb />
standing this the past week shows <lb />
a healthy growth, with a decided <lb />
tendency of capital to seek invest- <lb />
in the South more freely <lb />
than for many months. Very large <lb />
sales of Southern municipal <lb />
have lately been made in the <lb />
North and the West, and the out- <lb />
look is promising for increased <lb />
confidence in Southern securities <lb />
of all kinds. Active efforts for the <lb />
building up of Southern ports con- <lb />
and at Newport News <lb />
shipping facilities are to be <lb />
Norfolk huge <lb />
FROM THE NORTH TO FLORIDA- <lb />
The Atlantic Coast Line's Special <lb />
vice for Tourist Finest <lb />
Trains in the World. <lb />
On January 4th, 1892, the Atlantic <lb />
Coast Line will put on another <lb />
train from New York to Florida, <lb />
leaving New York at A. M., <lb />
riving at Jacksonville 7.00 P. M. <lb />
next day one night <lb />
three through fast trains per day, <lb />
with through Pullman Palace Sleep <lb />
Cars from Boston to Jackson- <lb />
New York to Tampa and Put <lb />
Tampa, for <lb />
New York to <lb />
New York to Thomasville; New <lb />
York to Savannah. <lb />
On January the magnificent <lb />
New York and Florida <lb />
running through to St. Augustine, <lb />
Flu., will also be added, making in <lb />
all twenty four trains each way per <lb />
week, the most service ever <lb />
offered to Wilmington, Charleston, <lb />
Savannah, Florida and Cuba- <lb />
The equipment and general <lb />
of train service over this line is <lb />
by and excelled by none, <lb />
while the is <lb />
out doubt the finest train in the <lb />
world. beautiful <lb />
cars, the and will, <lb />
as heretofore, from part, of the equip- <lb />
of these trains. They arc the <lb />
complete drawing room ever <lb />
built, and are run exclusively with <lb />
Atlantic Coast Line. <lb />
A BLOW, <lb />
ALEX. L. <lb />
A W <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
hi all Courts. <lb />
J. <lb />
B. YELLOWLEY, <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW <lb />
N. <lb />
i. a. b. r. TY SON <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Prompt attention given to <lb />
J. MARQUIS, <lb />
X. J, <lb />
Office In Skinner upper Pol <lb />
opposite <lb />
ii. long, <lb />
Law, <lb />
n. o. <lb />
Prompt and careful attention to <lb />
solicited. <lb />
LATHAM. <lb />
MARRY <lb />
SKINNER. <lb />
Attorneys- at-Law, <lb />
n. c. <lb />
g. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Practice in all the courts. <lb />
a Special <lb />
Greenville FEMALE School. <lb />
TO BE OPENED <lb />
ON MONDAY. T <lb />
1892. <lb />
Quite a number of of this <lb />
section left for turpentine farms in <lb />
South Carolina and Georgia. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
At o'clock P. M. on Saturday the <lb />
day of January at the work <lb />
shop of B. L. T. A Sons in the <lb />
town of Bethel, Pitt county, the under- <lb />
signed will sell to the highest bidder for <lb />
cash, at auction, the following de- <lb />
scribed personal property, viz ; two pair <lb />
heavy wagon wheels, two iron <lb />
wagon pole and ill other fixtures belong- <lb />
to said wagon, to satisfy a lien <lb />
which the i B. . t. Sons <lb />
bold upon property for work and <lb />
labor performed on said property by <lb />
said B. L. T. Ba Sons, in <lb />
of a contract made with He. G. <lb />
Manning. . <lb />
This January 12th <lb />
B. ft Son. <lb />
By I. H. Attorney. <lb />
of the Board of Com- <lb />
mi-sinners for Pitt County. J <lb />
The following is a statement of the <lb />
of meetings f the Board of Com- <lb />
missioners for Pitt County, number <lb />
of days each member hath it-tended, <lb />
number of miles traveled, and <lb />
amounts allowed for services as Com- <lb />
missioners for the fiscal year ending <lb />
December 1st, <lb />
number <lb />
Council bath attended <lb />
G. M. Mooring <lb />
T. B. Keel <lb />
c. V. Newton <lb />
Fleming <lb />
Ain't allowed Council <lb />
for days as i <lb />
per day, <lb />
Fur ten days as <lb />
per day. <lb />
For miles traveled <lb />
80.00 <lb />
SB <lb />
93.30 <lb />
allowed G. M. Mooring for <lb />
as Commissioner S- <lb />
per day. 184.00 <lb />
For six days 12.00 <lb />
For miles traveled 19.30 <lb />
allowed T E. Keel for <lb />
days as -f day. <lb />
For ten days as <lb />
per 20.00 <lb />
miles traveled c 34.00 <lb />
allowed C. V. Newton for <lb />
days as per <lb />
day. <lb />
For days as <lb />
22.00 <lb />
For miles traveled Be 38.00 <lb />
carried in double stores will prove. You cannot help but B <lb />
interested if you will call on us. We take pleasure in showing <lb />
you what we have to sell There never be a business of <lb />
magnitude built upon a falsification of fact and startling statements <lb />
of untruth. It is to our business interests to deal fairly by at <lb />
our customers, and by such means to merit their continued pat- <lb />
We have now open ready for your inspection the largest bes <lb />
assorted line of General Merchandise that was ever brought <lb />
to this market. Consisting of <lb />
Dry Goods Dress Goods, <lb />
Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, <lb />
Hardware Cutlery, Tin- <lb />
ware, Crockery, Queen- <lb />
ware, Groceries, Wood- <lb />
and <lb />
and Whips <lb />
AND THE LARGEST LINE OF <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
that has ever been brought to this county. We are headquarter <lb />
for all goods in our respective lines. Also we have a lot of <lb />
AND TIES <lb />
which will be sold at lowest prices. <lb />
Come one, come all and see us. <lb />
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb />
Ain't allowed Fleming <lb />
for II days as per <lb />
day, <lb />
For S days as <lb />
ppr day. <lb />
For miles traveled <lb />
Total Ain't allowed Board<lb />
10.00 <lb />
0.10 <lb />
4.1.40 <lb />
State of Carolina, <lb />
County of Pitt, <lb />
I, David I. Clerk l <lb />
the Board of Commissioners r the <lb />
county aforesaid, do certify that the <lb />
foregoing is a correct as doth <lb />
appear in my office. Given <lb />
my hand and the of said <lb />
Board of Commissioners, at office in <lb />
Greenville, this 21st of December <lb />
1801. <lb />
II. <lb />
for Pitt <lb />
NORFOLK ADVERTISEMENTS, <lb />
Believing and desiring that <lb />
should have a Female School. <lb />
He the undersigned have employed Miss <lb />
Nicholson, who comes highly re- <lb />
to take charge of school <lb />
room work, and Mrs. A. D. Banter, who <lb />
is already well-known, to take charge of <lb />
the Department, and we most <lb />
respectfully solicit the patronage of <lb />
those desiring to patronize a strictly- <lb />
first-class female school. Those desiring <lb />
hoard can secure the same at reasonable <lb />
rates. of tuition ere as follows <lb />
to be paid monthly <lb />
Primary, <lb />
Intermediate, 2.00 <lb />
Higher English, 2.50 <lb />
Higher English and Latin, 3.00 <lb />
Other Languages each per month <lb />
extra. <lb />
Music. month, <lb />
For further particulars call on or ad- <lb />
dress either of the <lb />
C. A. WHITE. <lb />
a. d. hunter, <lb />
c. d. <lb />
K. A. <lb />
Committee. <lb />
K. A TYSON. Treas. <lb />
THE NEW YORK <lb />
WEEKLY WORLD, <lb />
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
virtue of a decree of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court made at Sept. Term by His <lb />
Honor II. G. Connor Judge, in the case <lb />
of P. E. Dancy vs J. D. Murphy, <lb />
and Trustees others, the under- <lb />
signed Commissioner will sell before the <lb />
Court House door in Greenville on Mon- <lb />
day the 1st day of the fol- <lb />
lowing lots of land situated in the town <lb />
of <lb />
Beginning at a point on Evans street <lb />
feet from the K coiner of Lots No. <lb />
in the plan of the Town of Greenville, <lb />
the same being the corner of J. S. and <lb />
W. H. Smith, and running thence with <lb />
said Smiths line feet to the line of <lb />
Lot No. thence with the line of <lb />
No. in the direction of <lb />
feet, thence at right angle and <lb />
led with first line ft. to street <lb />
with the line Evans street ft. <lb />
to the beginning being a part of Lot <lb />
No. in plan of mid Town. <lb />
Terms of cash, except the <lb />
sum of which amount must he <lb />
secured by Mortgage with per cent in- <lb />
payable annually. <lb />
This Dec. 1891. <lb />
P. E. DANCY, <lb />
Commissioner. <lb />
L. W. DAVIS, <lb />
-------M 1-INK------- <lb />
HAVANA CIGARS <lb />
Roanoke Avenue. <lb />
NORFOLK. VIRGINIA. <lb />
AND OTHER TO-- <lb />
ALEXANDER MORGANS CO. <lb />
COTTON FACTORS COMMISSION <lb />
TUNIS NORFOLK. VA. <lb />
Guarantee highest market prices, quick sales and prompt returns. <lb />
S. B. HARRELL CO., <lb />
COTTON FACTORS AND <lb />
Corn. Cotton, Peanuts, Stock. <lb />
and Sawed Lumber will <lb />
special attention. patronage <lb />
solicited. <lb />
NOS. T AND fl COMMERCE <lb />
VA.<lb />
R J COBB, <lb />
Co N. <lb />
C C COBB, <lb />
Pitt Co <lb />
T. H. <lb />
Co. N C <lb />
Cobb Bros., Gilliam, <lb />
Cotton Factors, <lb />
AND- <lb />
a. l. <lb />
B. B. <lb />
Wholesale and Retail <lb />
Mi <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
of <lb />
Dealers <lb />
Mule. <lb />
Contains the bet features of an weekly <lb />
printed. late of the <lb />
t t free write a page of <lb />
matter every week. <lb />
SEND FOR SAMPLE COPY <lb />
TBS WORLD, lit Tr. Sit. <lb />
V Subscriptions taken at Reflector <lb />
Bookstore, Greenville, . V. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
virtue of a Decree of the Superior <lb />
Court of Pitt county In the special pro- <lb />
for the partition of the land be- <lb />
to Sarah Spain I sell <lb />
for cash Monday the 11th day of <lb />
ISM at the Court House door in the <lb />
town of Greenville, the tract that <lb />
hi HI Sarah lying In <lb />
Township adjoining the lands <lb />
J. j. Hathaway, W. A. at d <lb />
others containing about more or <lb />
lea. <lb />
10th day December 1891. <lb />
W. A. Hyman <lb />
Commissioner, <lb />
SALE AND FEED <lb />
I have removed to the new on <lb />
Fifth street In rear Capt. White's <lb />
Store, where I will constantly <lb />
keep on hand a flue line of <lb />
Horses and Mules. <lb />
have beautiful and fancy turnouts for <lb />
the and can suit the most fast id- <lb />
I will run in connection a DRAY- <lb />
AGE ft share of <lb />
your Call and be convinced. <lb />
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb />
A Supply Always or, Haul <lb />
Horses a specialty. <lb />
Ha <lb />
No. and Union <lb />
We have had many years ex <lb />
i at the business and are <lb />
; prepared to handle to <lb />
j the advantage of shippers. <lb />
All business entrusted to our <lb />
will receive prompt and <lb />
careful attention <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By of a decree of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court made at March Term by Ills <lb />
Honor K. T. Judge In the case <lb />
of Wiley Pierce and vs William <lb />
Whitehead and others. The undersign- <lb />
ed Commissioner will sell b fore the <lb />
Court House door in on Mon- <lb />
day the 1st day of 1892 the follow- <lb />
described tract of land situated in <lb />
the County of Pitt. In Falkland Town- <lb />
tract adjoining the lands of <lb />
Dr. P. H. Mayo, Martha E. Lewis and <lb />
others, and known as the Robert <lb />
place. same on which <lb />
Pierce and wife formerly resided, being <lb />
all of the said tract of land lying on the <lb />
North side of the main road leading <lb />
from Greenville to <lb />
acre more or less, one half <lb />
an acre land In the Town of Bethel, <lb />
being one half of said lot and <lb />
same purchased of A. MM <lb />
to Wiley Pierce and . F. Bryant <lb />
as appear of reference Is given <lb />
third cash, balance In <lb />
one and two year, secured by <lb />
on the land, with per cent interest <lb />
payable annually. This Dec. 1891. <lb />
F. G. Jambs, <lb />
Commissioner.<lb />
For <lb />
t q On <lb />
I- My <lb />
I home. look la a <lb />
atom. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1876. <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ, <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD MUCK STORE <lb />
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUY <lb />
their year's supplies will And <lb />
their Interest to get our prices before <lb />
complete <lb />
n all It branches. <lb />
PORK SIDES <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb />
RICK. TEA, o. <lb />
at <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF A <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, en. <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A coat <lb />
of <lb />
alway on hand and sold at prices to <lb />
the times. roods are all bought and <lb />
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb />
sell at close margin, <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
i, M. SCHULTZ, <lb />
N.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017529_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE <lb />
A whole year tor only <lb />
Si. ONE <lb />
Hut in order to get it you <lb />
PAY IN t ADVANCE. <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
A- <lb />
JOB <lb />
Department that can be surpassed no <lb />
where in this section. Our always <lb />
satisfaction, <lb />
orders <lb />
STATEMENT <lb />
OF PITT COUNTY, FOR THE <lb />
CAL YEAR <lb />
BER 7th, <lb />
The Following is a List of Orders, To- <lb />
With the Number and <lb />
as Allowed by the Board of Com- <lb />
missioners, From December <lb />
1890, to December <lb />
7th, <lb />
Paupers. <lb />
The <lb />
Reflector. <lb />
Mm <lb />
B INT <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb />
TRUTH IN TO FICTION. <lb />
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb />
mi <lb />
SO. TO WHOM <lb />
John <lb />
Winifred <lb />
Mar-jar et <lb />
James <lb />
Mayo Patsy <lb />
H D <lb />
Nancy <lb />
John <lb />
Alex <lb />
Frances <lb />
David <lb />
Martha <lb />
Jacob <lb />
Asa <lb />
Henry <lb />
Julia <lb />
Susan <lb />
William <lb />
John <lb />
Winifred <lb />
Margaret <lb />
James <lb />
Ivey <lb />
Patsy <lb />
H D <lb />
Jehu <lb />
Alex <lb />
Daniel <lb />
Martha <lb />
Jacob <lb />
Asa <lb />
Henry <lb />
Julia <lb />
Susan <lb />
William <lb />
Susan <lb />
J Z <lb />
pauper T A Thigpen. <lb />
Charles Dupree, <lb />
pauper J A K Tucker, <lb />
pauper John <lb />
Winifred <lb />
Margaret <lb />
James <lb />
Patsy <lb />
Nancy <lb />
John <lb />
Alex <lb />
Daniel <lb />
Martha <lb />
Jacob <lb />
Asa <lb />
Henry <lb />
Julia <lb />
Susan <lb />
William <lb />
18- Susan <lb />
J G Taylor, burying <lb />
C J baying <lb />
per J A K Tucker, <lb />
paupers to <lb />
2-29 John <lb />
Winifred <lb />
Margaret <lb />
James <lb />
Patsy <lb />
H D <lb />
Nancy Moore Alex <lb />
Daniel <lb />
Martha <lb />
Lydia Bryan Jacob <lb />
Asa <lb />
Henry Harris Julia <lb />
William <lb />
John <lb />
Alley <lb />
John <lb />
Winifred Of <lb />
Bryan James <lb />
H D <lb />
Alex <lb />
Martha <lb />
Jacob <lb />
Asa <lb />
Henry <lb />
Julia <lb />
Susan <lb />
William <lb />
Susan <lb />
John <lb />
Polly <lb />
John <lb />
Winifred <lb />
Margaret <lb />
James no <lb />
Patsy <lb />
H D <lb />
Nancy Moore Alex <lb />
Daniel <lb />
Martha <lb />
Lydia Bryan Jacob <lb />
Asa <lb />
Henry Harris, <lb />
Julia <lb />
kins <lb />
Susan Briley <lb />
William <lb />
Susan Norris <lb />
John Baker <lb />
Haddock <lb />
John Stocks <lb />
Winifred Taylor <lb />
Margaret Bryan <lb />
-lames Masters <lb />
Patsy Elks, <lb />
H D Smith <lb />
Nancy Moore <lb />
Alex Harris <lb />
Daniel Webster <lb />
Martha Nelson <lb />
Lydia Bryant <lb />
Jacob <lb />
Asa Knox <lb />
Julia Dunn <lb />
Susan Briley <lb />
William <lb />
Susan Norris <lb />
John Baker <lb />
Haddock <lb />
H B Turner, burying <lb />
Stocks <lb />
Winifred Taylor <lb />
Margaret Bryan <lb />
James Masters <lb />
H D Smith <lb />
Alex Harris <lb />
Daniel Webster <lb />
Martha Nelson <lb />
Lydia Bryan <lb />
Jacob <lb />
Asa Knox <lb />
Julia Dunn <lb />
Susan Briley <lb />
William <lb />
Susan Norris <lb />
John <lb />
Haddock <lb />
Moore <lb />
Pattie Lance <lb />
David <lb />
John Stocks <lb />
Winifred Taylor <lb />
Margaret Bryan <lb />
James <lb />
H D Smith <lb />
Alex Harris <lb />
Daniel Webster <lb />
Martha Nelson <lb />
Lydia Bryan <lb />
Jacob <lb />
Asa Knox <lb />
Julia Dunn <lb />
Susan Briley <lb />
William <lb />
Susan Norris <lb />
John Baker <lb />
Haddock, <lb />
Nancy Moore <lb />
Pattie Lance <lb />
Luanda Smith <lb />
John Stocks <lb />
Winifred Taylor <lb />
Margaret Bryan <lb />
James Masters <lb />
H D Smith <lb />
Alex Harris <lb />
Daniel Webster <lb />
Martha Nelson <lb />
Bryan <lb />
Jacob <lb />
Asa Knox <lb />
Susan Briley <lb />
William <lb />
Susan Norris <lb />
John Baker <lb />
Nancy Moore <lb />
Smith <lb />
Pattie Lance <lb />
John Stocks <lb />
Winifred Taylor <lb />
Margaret Bryan <lb />
James Masters <lb />
H D Smith <lb />
Alex Hams <lb />
Daniel Webster <lb />
Martha Nelson <lb />
Lydia Bryan <lb />
Jacob <lb />
Asa Knox <lb />
Susan Briley <lb />
William <lb />
Susan Norris <lb />
John Baker <lb />
Nancy Moore <lb />
Lucinda Smith <lb />
Pattie Lance <lb />
Minnie Fleming <lb />
John Stocks <lb />
Winifred Taylor <lb />
Margaret Bryan <lb />
James Masters <lb />
H D Smith <lb />
Alex Harris <lb />
Daniel Webster <lb />
Martha Nelson <lb />
Lydia Bryan <lb />
Jacob <lb />
Asa Knox <lb />
Susan Briley <lb />
William <lb />
Susan Norm <lb />
John Baker <lb />
Nancy Moore <lb />
Lucinda Smith <lb />
Pattie Lance <lb />
Winnie Fleming <lb />
Polly <lb />
Patsy <lb />
David <lb />
Julia Dunn <lb />
W A burying pan <lb />
per <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
B Sheppard <lb />
W H Wilkinson <lb />
Keel <lb />
J H Hodges <lb />
O Farrar <lb />
ST Carson <lb />
J A Harris <lb />
John Tripp <lb />
Jas A Harris <lb />
Jno T Mobley <lb />
D C Moore <lb />
David Smith <lb />
J T <lb />
E A Bland <lb />
J A Hudson <lb />
Abram Baker <lb />
Jarvis Pollard <lb />
H B Tripp <lb />
Adam Daniel <lb />
R L Davis <lb />
J W Carson <lb />
S A Gainer <lb />
C P <lb />
H C <lb />
V Lewis Lang <lb />
Stocks <lb />
David<lb />
Robert Worthington <lb />
Sallie Worthington <lb />
L H Wilson <lb />
William Crandall <lb />
Ed Chapman <lb />
Warren Bell <lb />
W D <lb />
John Greene <lb />
John Evans <lb />
D D Haskett <lb />
B O Clark <lb />
James Teel <lb />
B S Sheppard <lb />
W G Smith <lb />
H B Turner <lb />
Wiley Bullock <lb />
J T Abrams <lb />
Abram <lb />
Martin Black <lb />
Henry White <lb />
Adam Daniel <lb />
Moses Daniel <lb />
B S Sheppard <lb />
j Edward Campbell <lb />
E C <lb />
u s <lb />
Virgil Wilson <lb />
Fernando Ward <lb />
Hooker <lb />
j John R Forbes <lb />
J T <lb />
AD Hill <lb />
J A Harrington <lb />
1392 B S Sheppard <lb />
B F <lb />
1396 R <lb />
E L <lb />
M Luke E <lb />
D H James <lb />
W M Mobley <lb />
Me G Mobley <lb />
Moore <lb />
Witnesses Superior <lb />
NO TO WHOM ISSUED. <lb />
E E. Hart <lb />
J H Jackson <lb />
George <lb />
T E Randolph <lb />
W G Carson <lb />
J W James <lb />
Porter <lb />
James <lb />
Delia James <lb />
Frank Hart <lb />
John Bell <lb />
J A Thigpen <lb />
Henry <lb />
W M Lang <lb />
G W Edmondson <lb />
Moses Cox <lb />
J A Coward <lb />
Iredell Moore <lb />
Warren Tyson <lb />
C D Rountree <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
D H James <lb />
J P Downs <lb />
James Teel <lb />
James Robins <lb />
J S Warren <lb />
j Charles Harris <lb />
J J Frizzle <lb />
j R M <lb />
Jason Joyner <lb />
Charles Harris <lb />
j B F Wooten <lb />
001518 R A Parker <lb />
F G Sutton <lb />
j S A Gainer <lb />
J B Galloway <lb />
James Adams <lb />
R S Gaskins <lb />
Richard Smith <lb />
D Smith <lb />
Smith <lb />
E A Jr <lb />
Johnson Mills <lb />
Moore <lb />
Catharine Tuft <lb />
Laurena Daniel <lb />
Laurena Daniel <lb />
Isaac <lb />
B S Sheppard <lb />
J J <lb />
Caroline Ward <lb />
Wiley Bullock <lb />
Fernando Ward <lb />
Allen Finch <lb />
Puss Finch <lb />
Isaac <lb />
Anderson <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
John Gay <lb />
J J Dancy <lb />
H A Rountree <lb />
H Para more <lb />
J R Jolly <lb />
j Rhoda Barnhill <lb />
Booth <lb />
Tobe Mitchell <lb />
001649 B S Sheppard <lb />
I W A Hyman <lb />
George Gay <lb />
J J Rogers <lb />
J F Tyson <lb />
G W Edmondson <lb />
Amos Wilson <lb />
John A Manning Jr <lb />
John A Manning Jr <lb />
W J Teel <lb />
Moore <lb />
Henry Campbell <lb />
H F Keel <lb />
B S Sheppard <lb />
J Higgs <lb />
R T Gaskins <lb />
Thad Spain <lb />
Joe Chapman <lb />
C E Boyd <lb />
John Brown <lb />
Sidney Spain <lb />
J M Corbett <lb />
R M <lb />
D C Adams , <lb />
J W Williams <lb />
R M <lb />
Abner Smith <lb />
W B Strickland <lb />
John A Wilson <lb />
W T Godwin <lb />
James Adams <lb />
James Adams <lb />
H W Smith <lb />
Booth <lb />
H C <lb />
1200<lb />
800.00 <lb />
AMT.<lb />
aw <lb />
E C <lb />
D A Moore <lb />
J C Taylor <lb />
W A Taylor <lb />
J C Savage <lb />
W M <lb />
Eddie Barrow <lb />
George <lb />
E D Barrow <lb />
A J Smith <lb />
David Davis <lb />
John Gray <lb />
John Hearne <lb />
G W Venters <lb />
H A <lb />
G M Tucker <lb />
JO Proctor <lb />
R M <lb />
Alfred <lb />
B S Sheppard <lb />
B S Sheppard <lb />
J B Williams <lb />
R W King <lb />
JR Warren <lb />
J R Warren <lb />
C J H Stancill <lb />
Robert <lb />
Frank Vines <lb />
S I Fleming <lb />
J J Harrington <lb />
John Sparkman <lb />
Court Cost In Superior <lb />
H. TO WHOM ISSUED. <lb />
E A <lb />
J A K fucker <lb />
R T Hodges <lb />
E A Move <lb />
J A K <lb />
E A <lb />
Town Police <lb />
F G James <lb />
E A <lb />
J A K fucker <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
E A Move <lb />
J A K f ticker <lb />
Town Police <lb />
F G James <lb />
E A <lb />
E A <lb />
W T Knight <lb />
W J <lb />
E A <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
E A bond books and <lb />
expenses <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
E A Move <lb />
J A K fucker <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
E A Move <lb />
J A K fucker <lb />
J W Crowell <lb />
E A <lb />
Commissioners. <lb />
WHOM ISSUED <lb />
Newton <lb />
G-M Mooring <lb />
MS Keel <lb />
HO <lb />
G-V Newton <lb />
Council Dawson <lb />
Newton <lb />
1200 Keel <lb />
G-M Mooring <lb />
lei Leonidas Fleming <lb />
C Dawson <lb />
TO Newton <lb />
G M Mooring <lb />
TE Keel <lb />
Leonidas Fleming <lb />
E Keel <lb />
Leonidas Fleming <lb />
Newton <lb />
G M Mooring <lb />
T E Keel <lb />
Leonidas Fleming <lb />
C Dawson <lb />
G M Mooring <lb />
C V Newton <lb />
C Dawson <lb />
Keel <lb />
C V Newton <lb />
C Dawson <lb />
T E Keel <lb />
Leonidas Fleming <lb />
Newton <lb />
G M Mooring <lb />
C Dawson <lb />
G M Mooring <lb />
Leonidas Fleming <lb />
C V Newton <lb />
G M Mooring <lb />
T E Keel <lb />
C V Newton <lb />
Leonidas Fleming <lb />
C Dawson <lb />
C Dawson <lb />
C V Newton <lb />
T E Keel <lb />
G M Mooring <lb />
C Dawson <lb />
Newton <lb />
G M Mooring <lb />
C V Newton <lb />
G M Mooring <lb />
Leonidas Fleming <lb />
C Dawson <lb />
Leonidas Fleming <lb />
T E Keel <lb />
C Dawson <lb />
C V Newton <lb />
C Dawson <lb />
G M Mooring <lb />
Fleming <lb />
Roads. <lb />
Mo. <lb />
TO <lb />
T C Hi van <lb />
W H Wilkerson<lb />
G W <lb />
W Smith <lb />
W B Burnett <lb />
J A <lb />
W U Wilkerson <lb />
E O <lb />
W F Newborn <lb />
J T <lb />
Bridges. <lb />
NO. TO WHOM <lb />
J H Smith <lb />
B H Hearne <lb />
W R <lb />
C P Gaskins <lb />
B H Hearne <lb />
G T Tyson <lb />
C P Gaskins <lb />
AMT <lb />
Elections. <lb />
NO. <lb />
TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
J A Lang <lb />
E E Powell <lb />
J R Congleton <lb />
C C Vines <lb />
D C Moore <lb />
A L Blow <lb />
W F Evans <lb />
J R Johnson <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
County Attorney. <lb />
NO. TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
A L Blow <lb />
A L Blow <lb />
A L Blow <lb />
A L Blow <lb />
Constables. <lb />
NO. TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
W G Carson <lb />
W H Wilkinson <lb />
W H Wilkinson <lb />
George A <lb />
W P Buck <lb />
W A Hyman <lb />
W H Wilkinson <lb />
D J <lb />
G Carson <lb />
John W Leggett <lb />
W H Wilkinson <lb />
J L Pittman <lb />
W P Buck <lb />
W H Wilkinson <lb />
G A <lb />
Hodges <lb />
D J <lb />
W P Buck <lb />
P M Leigh <lb />
C A Bland <lb />
G W Edmondson <lb />
W P Buck <lb />
AMT. <lb />
9325.00 <lb />
AMT<lb />
936.411 <lb />
Register of Deeds. <lb />
NO. TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
D H James<lb />
NO TO <lb />
J A <lb />
J A <lb />
J A <lb />
J A <lb />
J A <lb />
J A <lb />
J A <lb />
Jail. <lb />
WHOM ISSUED <lb />
K Tucker <lb />
K Tucker <lb />
K Tucker <lb />
K Tucker <lb />
K Tucker <lb />
K Tucker <lb />
AMT<lb />
Tax List. <lb />
NO- TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
J W Smith <lb />
R L Joyner <lb />
A J <lb />
R J Lang <lb />
C P Gaskins <lb />
G T Tyson <lb />
J S Norman <lb />
R G Chapman <lb />
J B Galloway <lb />
L H White <lb />
N R Cory <lb />
J J Hathaway <lb />
J R Rives <lb />
W H May <lb />
5-6 Allen Warren <lb />
L A Mayo <lb />
William Dawson <lb />
R M Jones <lb />
Little <lb />
Gotten <lb />
F G Dupree <lb />
James A Cobb <lb />
GT Tyson <lb />
A J <lb />
J S Brown <lb />
Fernando Ward <lb />
W Wooten <lb />
I Fleming <lb />
W H Williams <lb />
Wiley <lb />
John <lb />
C P <lb />
B H <lb />
John <lb />
C P <lb />
M R <lb />
John I <lb />
B H <lb />
William <lb />
C P <lb />
James <lb />
B S <lb />
B H <lb />
C P <lb />
B H <lb />
J B Cherry <lb />
C P <lb />
Bryan Tripp B H <lb />
John <lb />
B H <lb />
Jacob <lb />
Cornelius <lb />
James <lb />
R L <lb />
H C <lb />
John <lb />
G W <lb />
N R Cory W L Smith <lb />
B H <lb />
C P <lb />
R L <lb />
R L <lb />
B B <lb />
J L <lb />
J J B <lb />
Robert <lb />
C P <lb />
William <lb />
R H <lb />
A J <lb />
B Sheppard Reuben <lb />
Marshall <lb />
AMT<lb />
A Gainer <lb />
Jesse Cannon <lb />
I Fleming <lb />
J H <lb />
R G Chapman <lb />
J R Rives <lb />
J W Smith <lb />
J R Forbes <lb />
J J Hathaway <lb />
C P Gaskins <lb />
D H <lb />
AMT<lb />
Superintendent Health. <lb />
NO. TO WHOM ISSUED AMT j <lb />
Dr B T Cox <lb />
Dr F W Brown <lb />
Dr Samuel Morrill <lb />
Dr Morrill <lb />
Dr B T Cox<lb />
Dr B T Cox <lb />
Dr B T Cox <lb />
Dr B T Cox. post <lb />
examination <lb />
Dr B T Cox, post <lb />
examination <lb />
Dr B T Cox <lb />
Justices of the <lb />
NO TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
B S Sheppard <lb />
D Moore <lb />
M Z Moore <lb />
B S Sheppard <lb />
S I Fleming <lb />
G Holliday <lb />
J A Lang <lb />
E O <lb />
D C Moore <lb />
B S Sheppard <lb />
E O <lb />
R L Joyner <lb />
R L Joyner <lb />
C P Gaskins <lb />
R Chapman <lb />
B S Sheppard <lb />
A L Harrington <lb />
John Fleming <lb />
W R Parker <lb />
F G Dupree <lb />
82.1 W B Moore <lb />
B S Sheppard <lb />
C P <lb />
T Carson <lb />
D C Moore <lb />
J J <lb />
AMT<lb />
Home of the Aged and Infirm. <lb />
8357.38 <lb />
Insane. <lb />
NO. TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
B Sheppard and <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
J C Chestnut <lb />
Dr B T Cox <lb />
W B Moore <lb />
Henry J Williams <lb />
W B Moore <lb />
W B Moore <lb />
W F <lb />
L B Cox <lb />
J C Chestnutt <lb />
J F <lb />
J F <lb />
Coroners Court. <lb />
NO- TO WHOM <lb />
W H Harrington <lb />
W L Brown <lb />
W M <lb />
L H Wilson <lb />
W H Smith <lb />
H F Keel <lb />
T Hooker <lb />
Babe Perkins <lb />
Jane Perkins <lb />
Winnie Perkins <lb />
HF Keel <lb />
Lawrence Lang <lb />
Nancy Perkins <lb />
H F Keel <lb />
J R <lb />
W H Smith <lb />
Oscar Hooker<lb />
W B James <lb />
E S <lb />
H F Keel <lb />
James <lb />
Allen <lb />
J C <lb />
W i <lb />
B D Cherry <lb />
A J Moore <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
HF Keel <lb />
W H Smith <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
Printing. <lb />
Reflector <lb />
Solicitors. <lb />
SO. TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
D Worthington <lb />
John E Woodard<lb />
AMT, <lb />
1200<lb />
AMT <lb />
NO TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
J J<lb />
W B <lb />
W B <lb />
W B <lb />
W B <lb />
W B <lb />
W B <lb />
W B <lb />
AMT <lb />
A MT <lb />
Jury Tickets. <lb />
NO- TO WHOM <lb />
John Flanagan<lb />
Prisoners to Jan. <lb />
NO. TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
John H King <lb />
W J Hardison <lb />
W H Wilkerson <lb />
G A <lb />
W P <lb />
W F <lb />
R W Smith <lb />
W B Brunette <lb />
W H Wilkerson<lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
D C Barrow <lb />
W P <lb />
F W <lb />
Richard Moore <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
C A Bland <lb />
W H Wilkerson <lb />
J T Hodges <lb />
C A Bland <lb />
G A <lb />
J A K Taster <lb />
AMT<lb />
NO. TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
Western Union <lb />
graph Co. <lb />
William Mann Co. <lb />
Edwards Broughton A Co. <lb />
Oct Coke <lb />
James <lb />
R M Kennedy <lb />
R L Davis <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
D J Whichard <lb />
Western Union Telegraph <lb />
Co. <lb />
Dr. C J- <lb />
D S Simmons <lb />
Kenan <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
William Mann Co. <lb />
D J Whichard <lb />
D J Whichard <lb />
R Williams, Jr <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
D C Moore <lb />
J A K Tucker <lb />
D C Moore<lb />
Summary. <lb />
Paupers <lb />
Witnesses S C <lb />
Court cost in S C, <lb />
Roads, <lb />
Bridges <lb />
Commissioners <lb />
Tax List <lb />
Coroner's Court <lb />
Printing <lb />
Elections <lb />
Attorney Board Comm <lb />
Constables <lb />
Supt. Health <lb />
Insane <lb />
Solicitor <lb />
Jury Tickets <lb />
Conveying Prisoner to <lb />
Ferries <lb />
Register of Deeds <lb />
Jail <lb />
Justices of the Peace <lb />
Home Aged Infirm <lb />
Miscellaneous <lb />
rs <lb />
Jail <lb />
Ferries. <lb />
NO. TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
Andrew Robinson<lb />
Latham Fender <lb />
Andrew Robinson<lb />
AMT<lb />
1298 <lb />
1203 <lb />
1274 <lb />
Special Notice. <lb />
In adopting He f ash in Advance <lb />
for this Tin. will <lb />
continued In no one for longer <lb />
than it Is paid for. II you <lb />
just after your name on the margin <lb />
Your ex pi in to <lb />
front <lb />
It Is to give you that unless re- <lb />
newed in that time Tub <lb />
will cease going to you at the i pi ratios. <lb />
of the two weeks. <lb />
sheriff on tax of <lb />
It. Mail of A K MM <lb />
-Ii.-i on tax of <lb />
Jan reed of J A K <lb />
sheriff on tax of <lb />
Jan reed of JAR Tn.-k-i <lb />
on <lb />
reed of Fernando Ward <lb />
jury tax due B W <lb />
Brown <lb />
Jan reed of J A K Tucker <lb />
k. of Daniel <lb />
for hire of A <lb />
real of J A K Tucker <lb />
sheriff <lb />
reed of J A K Tucker <lb />
sheriff <lb />
reed of E A <lb />
clerk for jury tax <lb />
Mar reel I A K Tucker <lb />
Mar reed of for <lb />
hire of Jr <lb />
Mar red of J A K <lb />
sheriff- <lb />
Apr reed of J A K Tucker <lb />
reed of Daniel <lb />
for Alonzo <lb />
Apr reed of J A K Tucker <lb />
sheriff. <lb />
Apr of J A K Tucker <lb />
May A K Tinker <lb />
May Teen of Win- <lb />
field 1st or <lb />
May of J A K <lb />
sheriff <lb />
May for <lb />
hire <lb />
June I <lb />
for <lb />
July of R A for <lb />
jury lax <lb />
July a. of E A Move for <lb />
jury tax <lb />
July feed of John Flanagan <lb />
tax for list <lb />
for MM <lb />
July reed of J A K Tucker <lb />
Sept reed of N it Cory for <lb />
sale of old lumber <lb />
Sept of Daniel <lb />
for Mrs of <lb />
reed of J II for <lb />
over charges in taking tax list <lb />
reed of II for <lb />
hire of Daniel Dupree <lb />
Nov reed of f; B Whir field for <lb />
hire of Davis <lb />
Vet o.-recd of J H Brown for <lb />
on <lb />
Nov reed of J A K Tucker <lb />
for taxes <lb />
Nov G. reed of E A clerk <lb />
for Jury tax <lb />
Nov reed of J A K Tucker <lb />
sheriff for taxes <lb />
Nov. reed of J A K Tucker <lb />
sheriff for taxes <lb />
Nor reed of J A K Tucker <lb />
sheriff for ISM <lb />
Dec reed of J A K <lb />
sheriff for taxes <lb />
Dec reed of E A clerk <lb />
for tax <lb />
. <lb />
IS <lb />
MM<lb />
nu <lb />
Mara <lb />
1.71.1 ; <lb />
inn <lb />
1,610 no <lb />
1,20.-. no <lb />
-i <lb />
0.1 <lb />
1.000 <lb />
on <lb />
Total. . . a. Ami of disbursements Ann transferred to fund of II M <lb />
Total, <lb />
on 1801 <lb />
State of North Carolina <lb />
County. f <lb />
I. II. James, f <lb />
the Board of for I'll <lb />
do hereby certify that the lore- <lb />
going is a true statement as <lb />
of record in my office. under <lb />
baud and the seal of said <lb />
at office in fir on the 7th day <lb />
December, <lb />
D. H. <lb />
Clerk of Board <lb />
John Flanagan, Treasurer, in <lb />
with the County of Pitt from December <lb />
1st, 1690, to December 7th, <lb />
1890. DB. <lb />
Dec Amt received of J B Cher- <lb />
former treasurer <lb />
Dec Amt reed of for <lb />
hire of Jr, <lb />
Dec mil of W A James for <lb />
hire of Bill Hopkins <lb />
Dec reed of for hire <lb />
of Jr <lb />
1891. <lb />
Jan I, reed Langley <lb />
for hire or Randolph <lb />
Jan reed of Daniel <lb />
for hire of A <lb />
reed of W M King former <lb />
sheriff on 1,572 <lb />
reed of A R Tucker <lb />
sheriff on tax of 1890 <lb />
Jan . reed of J A K Tucker <lb />
Stock Law, <lb />
SO. TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
J B Cherry <lb />
Eastern Reflector mi <lb />
J R Johnson <lb />
Walter Harris <lb />
Harris <lb />
Dawson <lb />
E E Powell <lb />
John Worthington m <lb />
Henry <lb />
James Dawson <lb />
Shade Jackson <lb />
W F<lb />
Jerry <lb />
Samuel <lb />
Dawson <lb />
W E <lb />
F M Kilpatrick <lb />
W F <lb />
L B Cox <lb />
James White <lb />
Dawson <lb />
Jenkins <lb />
Edward Jackson <lb />
T H Fleming <lb />
Dawson <lb />
D H <lb />
W J Kilpatrick M <lb />
Henry Jones r-1 <lb />
Dawson <lb />
Greenville Stock Law. <lb />
SO- TO WHOM ISSUED <lb />
D H James <lb />
State of North Carol <lb />
Pitt County. <lb />
I, II. Clerk <lb />
the Board of Commissioners for Pitt <lb />
county, do hereby certify that the fore- <lb />
going la a true statement as doth appear <lb />
of record in my office. my <lb />
hand and the seal of said <lb />
at office in Greenville on the 7th day of <lb />
December, 1801. <lb />
D. H. JAMES. <lb />
Clerk of Board <lb />
Is one which is guaranteed to brine <lb />
yon satisfactory result, or la or <lb />
failures return of purchase price. On this <lb />
safe plan you can bay from oar <lb />
ed Druggist a bottle of Dr. King's <lb />
Discovery for Consumption. It U <lb />
to bring relief la <lb />
when used for any affection of Throat, <lb />
Lungs or Chest, such <lb />
Inflammation of Bronchitis, <lb />
Asthma, Whooping Cough, Creep, etc, <lb />
etc. It is pleasant and agreeable U taste <lb />
safe, and always <lb />
rial free at J. L. Wooten's Drag<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017529_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
. OLD <lb />
Back as the of tat M <lb />
Bar kindly her mo, <lb />
. . . <lb />
enchant me. sad tin <lb />
Of parcel <lb />
Bright of Um morn arm <lb />
To the eight at erst <lb />
How w there of an the old j <lb />
that <lb />
Bat in the I behold i <lb />
She lorn ma Infant heart , <lb />
That troth divined, <lb />
Ere jet her manage could impart <lb />
to my mind. <lb />
Mr Joys she shared with me, <lb />
Hy youthful <lb />
She me heartache . . <lb />
aha never spared. <lb />
If tolled to upon bar knee. <lb />
She nodded while I slept, <lb />
I laughed she laughed with <lb />
And when I wept aha wept. <lb />
Beast by harms, <lb />
and seeking rest, <lb />
know no choice mother's arms <lb />
And breast. <lb />
What eared I her skin was <lb />
And brown of hoar <lb />
For me this troth was quits enough <lb />
a warm and true. , <lb />
grew a man, she old and gray. <lb />
And me from her aids; <lb />
Bat many a day. and oft. they say. <lb />
She called name and cried. <lb />
And when she want, whose years were <lb />
spent <lb />
In servitude below. <lb />
Death from its tenement <lb />
Released a of snow. I<lb />
Black m to blackest of her <lb />
featured, yet <lb />
My second mother's kindly face <lb />
can forget. <lb />
in Tooth's <lb />
ion. <lb />
Work of Vigilance Committee. <lb />
The vigilance committee was a new <lb />
departure In the of <lb />
world. It may be called a compromise <lb />
between the regular course of law and <lb />
the action of the people without regard <lb />
to officers of the law. It was seizing <lb />
upon the forces of a mob, arresting <lb />
them in their mad course, harnessing <lb />
quietly and utilizing their pow- <lb />
in regular form, systematically, <lb />
coolly and deliberately. It was a <lb />
that had never before been <lb />
made, and it was left to California to <lb />
make the law was lying <lb />
on the one hand, and trampled <lb />
down and disgraced on the other, <lb />
power of all government <lb />
in our to execute <lb />
in legal what their servants had <lb />
neglected or ignored. While they loved <lb />
and revered the law, respected, upheld <lb />
and applauded its faithful servants. <lb />
they contemned the faltering and <lb />
scorned false and faithless <lb />
1831 it cleared the country of <lb />
Sydney ex-convicts and all the worst <lb />
elements of the criminal classes. In <lb />
it saved Sail Francisco from the <lb />
r;. a mob of political outcasts, <lb />
t box stutters and a recent <lb />
ti m of other criminals. In 1877, in the <lb />
place, same people under <lb />
conditions, and yet in some re- <lb />
finding danger from much <lb />
elements but on a more for- <lb />
determined to act under <lb />
The state government was <lb />
r hands than in 1851 and 1856; <lb />
government was in better <lb />
the country generally was in <lb />
r condition. <lb />
of the vigilance coin- <lb />
of had continued and <lb />
ell the time. The ethics of the <lb />
of a higher order than at the <lb />
date. The early experiences <lb />
up valuable to individuals as well as <lb />
. tin- masses, and when called up for <lb />
the people again <lb />
capacity that has few <lb />
T. Coleman in Century. <lb />
STORY Of THE HA <lb />
How a Clover French Doped<lb />
When the French were Bret <lb />
in Africa a new sort of fa Bade it <lb />
there, called the <lb />
having, long <lb />
The sale of a specimen by one of <lb />
the soldiers to an enthusiastic natural- <lb />
gave rise to an action at law. Said <lb />
the plaintiff in <lb />
has cheated me out of <lb />
francs. He knows that I am much <lb />
Interested in natural sciences. I have <lb />
collections of fossils, of shells, of rare <lb />
animals, of curious plants. One day <lb />
he called upon me and I <lb />
have a kind of animal which has never <lb />
been mentioned by any naturalist. It <lb />
Is a trumpet rat, and has a trunk like an <lb />
elephant's. It is alive and well. If <lb />
you wish to see it yon have only to <lb />
come to my <lb />
was very anxious to behold this <lb />
strange animaL We arrived at his j <lb />
house and he showed me In a an <lb />
enormous rat, very lively and in good . <lb />
condition, which really had on its nose <lb />
a slender excrescence more than an I <lb />
inch in length. The excrescence was <lb />
covered with hair like the body of the <lb />
animal, with vertebra in it, and <lb />
most extraordinary larger at the <lb />
summit than at the contrary <lb />
to what it ought to be in the usual <lb />
course of things. To convince myself <lb />
that it was not a dope and a j <lb />
into the trumpet. <lb />
MAKING CLOAKS. <lb />
Each Passes Many <lb />
Hands Before It Is Beady far Wear. <lb />
In Ilium days when well fitting, <lb />
comfortable and Jackets of <lb />
good material may bought to very <lb />
little money, compared with the prices <lb />
of cloaks of materials that may more <lb />
costly, bat not more stylish in cat, the <lb />
wonder is that the styles are not more <lb />
varied. The styles are more varied <lb />
than those of the garments for <lb />
men, but hundreds of cloaks of the <lb />
same pattern may be seen in the streets <lb />
any day. <lb />
Cloaks and Jackets are garments on <lb />
which women cannot show much orig-1 <lb />
in making them at home, as <lb />
they can on dresses, and the styles are, <lb />
therefore, fixed by the designers em- <lb />
ployed by In many in- <lb />
stances the style depends on the mate- <lb />
rial to used, as it would be useless <lb />
to design a style with many puffs and <lb />
folds for thick; and heavy material. <lb />
Besides, if a style be good it Is accept- <lb />
able to many women, no matter <lb />
It be unsuitable to their figures or <lb />
out of harmony with the rest of their <lb />
costumes <lb />
In -making cloaks, where the demand <lb />
may be sometimes for of a certain <lb />
style, each piece of cloth is thoroughly <lb />
examined by experts in regard to meas- <lb />
text are and and then It is <lb />
sponged by machinery made especially <lb />
for that purpose. All smooth cloths <lb />
. with finished faces are <lb />
I stuck a pin into the trumpet j , ,, ma. <lb />
The animal cried out and a drop from the time <lb />
blood came from the prick. The ex- , m <lb />
was conclusive. J <lb />
a trumpet forming part of the rat <lb />
was amazed. I asked this man if <lb />
he would sell his rat. He said yes, and <lb />
I paid him fifty francs for it. My <lb />
friends and servants all admired it, and <lb />
I was enchanted. My rat was a male. <lb />
Some one said to me that I ought to <lb />
procure a female. I asked the <lb />
If he could procure for me a <lb />
male, and he said he had two. <lb />
I saw and bought one of <lb />
them for fifty francs. Some months <lb />
afterward the female had young. I <lb />
looked at them and they had no <lb />
pets. I said to myself, will <lb />
I waited one month, two <lb />
months, six months; every day I <lb />
looked at the noses of my rats, but the <lb />
trumpets never appeared. <lb />
it is folded dry it is not touched by the <lb />
operator. The cloth is then ready for <lb />
the cutters, with all its Imperfections <lb />
marked. Each cutter has a separate <lb />
check on which have been entered the <lb />
particulars about the cloth, style and <lb />
proper patterns. If the quantity be <lb />
large enough for the machine <lb />
it is marked and laid in folds, bat small <lb />
pieces cut by hand with shears. <lb />
After the cloth has been cut accord- <lb />
to the provided patterns, bundle <lb />
are carefully compared with the orders, <lb />
and then a ticket is made for each gar- <lb />
on which is a place for each <lb />
worker to put his or her so <lb />
that a complete record is kept of every <lb />
hand that works on the garment The <lb />
garments thou go to the who <lb />
are employed the year round, to seam <lb />
In a house where I go frequently i , them specially adjusted for <lb />
made the acquaintance of an officer <lb />
who had served a long time in Africa. <lb />
told him about my trumpet rats and <lb />
he laughed as though his sides would <lb />
split When he was calm again he <lb />
told me that the trumpet rat was not a <lb />
freak of nature, but an invention due <lb />
to the leisure moments of the <lb />
This is how they make take <lb />
two rats and fasten their paws firmly <lb />
to a board, the nose of one close to th <lb />
end of the tail of the other. Then <lb />
with a penknife or a lancet you make <lb />
an incision into the nose of the rat <lb />
which is and you graft the <lb />
tail of the first into the nose; you tie <lb />
firmly the muzzle to the toil and you <lb />
leave the two rats in this position for <lb />
forty-eight hours. <lb />
the end of that time the union <lb />
has taken place and the two parts are <lb />
grown together; then you cut off the <lb />
tail of the rat which is in front to the re- <lb />
quired length and let him go, but still <lb />
keep the other fastened to the board <lb />
with his head loose, and you give him <lb />
something to eat At the end of a fort- <lb />
night the wound is perfectly healed and <lb />
the eye of the most curious investigator <lb />
would not see a trace of the grafting. <lb />
This is the way the make rats <lb />
with <lb />
On the part of the defendant it was <lb />
urged that lie had certainly made up <lb />
the rats as stated, but he affirmed that <lb />
he had not sold to the plaintiff as <lb />
being with trumpets. Verdict <lb />
for the Star. <lb />
The Way They Got Air. <lb />
each of whom rides the <lb />
m hobby with great zeal, found <lb />
spending the night in a <lb />
i hotel, put there by a <lb />
Failure to catch a connecting train. <lb />
scarcely put the light out <lb />
when it was realized that the window <lb />
had nor been opened, and one started <lb />
to attend to it. The room was very <lb />
and the matches were not at hand, <lb />
but after groping she found the <lb />
pane. <lb />
can't budge she said, tugging <lb />
to do so. <lb />
from the bed; <lb />
shall before <lb />
The next instant there was a crash <lb />
in the darkness. put arm <lb />
through this wretched it was <lb />
explained; at least, we'll have air <lb />
So they went contentedly to <lb />
sleep. In morning the window was <lb />
found tightly closed, but the door <lb />
of a big bookcase which stood in a <lb />
corner was shattered. This only ex- <lb />
old law that is as <lb />
good a medicine for fools as <lb />
Her Point of View in New York Times. <lb />
Our Disgraceful <lb />
In spite of the wonderful commercial <lb />
end industrial progress of United <lb />
States we are still to a large extent <lb />
using the same soft, dusty, muddy <lb />
roads that served for our re- <lb />
mote ancestors. No organization has <lb />
done more to remedy this surprising <lb />
state of things than the League of <lb />
American Its secretary, <lb />
Mr. Isaac B. Potter, of New York, con- <lb />
that the cost to the farmer of <lb />
carting his produce over the <lb />
streak of that serves us for a <lb />
highway is no small factor in the exist- <lb />
agricultural depression, and point <lb />
out that the cost of maintaining proper <lb />
public wagon roads, though great, is <lb />
more than repaid to the community in <lb />
the enhanced value of adjacent prop- <lb />
alone. This position he supports <lb />
by statistics. It is to be hoped that Mr. <lb />
and his will succeed <lb />
in rousing our rural communities to the <lb />
disgrace of a condition of things which <lb />
makes us the laughing stock of <lb />
travelers in this country. <lb />
Forum. j <lb />
. Strange Antipathy. <lb />
A strange antipathy is related by v <lb />
young doctor. <lb />
I had ordered a pair of new and <lb />
fashionable when I was taken <lb />
ill with a attack of jaundice. <lb />
garments were made and sent <lb />
home, Jut I was too sick to wear them, <lb />
and after looking at them and seeing <lb />
that they just as I ordered them, <lb />
I laid away. When I was well <lb />
was abbot to wear them, when I re- <lb />
called symptoms of my illness, <lb />
and not endure the sight or <lb />
touch them. I tried again and again <lb />
with status There is no law <lb />
i to account for such <lb />
Value of a Name. <lb />
A famous name in literature <lb />
counts for something is <lb />
right that it should. Fame is the re- <lb />
suit of the work of years. <lb />
j It carries with it a commercial value of <lb />
which no fair minded person can doubt <lb />
the justice. But that it is the es- <lb />
a manuscript is utter folly. <lb />
And the best evidence of this fact is <lb />
that each week sees the articles, stories <lb />
and poems of our best known authors <lb />
rejected in the editorial offices through- <lb />
out the country. But of i his the young <lb />
author knows naught. She judges <lb />
only from what she sees printed. She <lb />
is in ignorance of the fact that <lb />
scripts are often returned to the most <lb />
famous W. in <lb />
Home Journal. <lb />
The confusion which foreigners make <lb />
of our geography is well illustrated <lb />
a German poem which appeared <lb />
years ago. The poet, with utter <lb />
unconcern about locations and dis- <lb />
makes such amusing blunders <lb />
that its literary value is entirely lost <lb />
The argument is something as <lb />
a palm tree on the shore of <lb />
Lake Erie the hero is devoured by an <lb />
alligator. The heroine, hearing of his <lb />
fate, rushes from her home in the <lb />
everglades of Florida on the of <lb />
Lake captures the alligator, <lb />
extracts tin- hero's body and buries it <lb />
with magnificent pomp in Greenwood, <lb />
in the city of New York, in the state of <lb />
St. Louis. Youth's <lb />
that particular work, being provided <lb />
with a fixed that insures a per <lb />
uniform seam. Expert <lb />
can work at machines that make <lb />
stitches a minute. <lb />
For the detection of any possible, mis- <lb />
takes and imperfections in the tit, th <lb />
garments are tried on figures before be- <lb />
sent to the trimmers. The collars. <lb />
cuffs, facings, ate,, of each garment are <lb />
cut according to the and <lb />
with the main part of a garment sent <lb />
to a workman who particularly <lb />
in a certain After leaving the <lb />
finisher the garment is Inspected again <lb />
by the foreman, and if It be not <lb />
factory it goes back to the workman <lb />
for alterations. <lb />
After the making of buttonholes and <lb />
the newing on of buttons and <lb />
the garments go to the presser, <lb />
and from him to the final examiners, <lb />
who are responsible for the fit and <lb />
workmanship, and who see that the <lb />
materials and trimmings are and <lb />
that any changes that may been <lb />
ordered to suit certain customers have <lb />
been properly made. Then they are <lb />
ready for packing and shipping. Rec <lb />
of the shape, cloth, trimmings and <lb />
buttons, or any other parts of the gar- <lb />
are kept in duplicate, so that a <lb />
copy of any can be t <lb />
any time. Sometimes garments that <lb />
are in fashion in this part of the <lb />
try for a year do not reach some states <lb />
until a year or more afterward, when <lb />
style may be favored <lb />
more another, and the orders for <lb />
it be larger than those for any other. <lb />
By turning to the records <lb />
of any style can be made at <lb />
time, provided the material be in the <lb />
York Sun. <lb />
Inventor That Have Popular. <lb />
In what might be called and <lb />
novelty inventions there is required <lb />
little study, discipline and experiment, <lb />
and most of the so called accidental In- <lb />
have been made in this line. <lb />
A glance around the house, in the kit- <lb />
at the close, and ornamental and <lb />
useful novelties scattered on every side, <lb />
will give a faint idea of tile field <lb />
opened to the inventor. Every boas <lb />
is a small museum of small inventions <lb />
which have made fortunes to their in- <lb />
The small toys and playthings, game <lb />
for parlor entertainment, sporting <lb />
goods and useful pocket goods, all rep- <lb />
resent the product of the <lb />
forethought and happy invention. The <lb />
and most universally used <lb />
articles are generally the ones that <lb />
have brought in the most money. <lb />
E. Walsh in New York Epoch- <lb />
in <lb />
European today U based <lb />
on the idea that war la not only an <lb />
possibility, but probability, <lb />
and a great class every country has <lb />
been trained to look <lb />
ding as its proper vocation. The great <lb />
prises are reserved honors, <lb />
fame, position and the monarch's favor <lb />
go to the sons of stars. The military <lb />
budget exceeds, many times over does <lb />
it exceed, the appropriations for public <lb />
instruction. The salary of a colonel is <lb />
earned by few professors. The <lb />
cost of the shot wasted in <lb />
Europe between any dawn and dusk <lb />
would probably pay the running ex- <lb />
of all her public hospitals. In <lb />
government whether it be <lb />
or autocratic, the army may, <lb />
with be said to direct legislation, <lb />
for the legislatures, willingly or <lb />
vote the appropriations demand- <lb />
ed by the war department. <lb />
if a legislature dares to <lb />
or protest it la quickly frightened <lb />
into acquiescing by an alarming report <lb />
from the minister for war. Thus the <lb />
military class controls government and <lb />
has laws passed to suit itself, and <lb />
vents all attempt to cut down or to <lb />
abolish its power. It intimidates the <lb />
state not less really, though less openly, <lb />
than the guard intimidated <lb />
old Rome. Kings and do in- <lb />
deed assure the public that they chiefly <lb />
endeavor and desire to preserve peace, <lb />
but in the next breath they call for <lb />
larger funds and more recruits. Kaisers <lb />
meet and kiss each other on both cheek. <lb />
They extol the sweetness of brotherly <lb />
love, they attend each other's grand <lb />
maneuvers, and then they increase the <lb />
garrisons along their respective <lb />
tiers. A strange method, this, for <lb />
to their peaceable intentions <lb />
William R. Thayer in Forum. <lb />
Bow Stonewall Kept Sunday. <lb />
The religion of Stonewall Jackson is <lb />
an enigma to many who study the life <lb />
of the great soldier, while to others it is <lb />
a scorn and a derision. To those who <lb />
seek a subject for caricature, the <lb />
in which he carried some <lb />
tilings to an furnish plenty <lb />
of material for small <lb />
was his rigid observance of the <lb />
bath- Wot only he refrain from <lb />
all worldly occupations on that day. he <lb />
would not even a letter, nor read <lb />
one if he received it even though It <lb />
was from her who was to be his wife. <lb />
He was sure that it would keep its <lb />
sweetness till the next day. and mean- <lb />
while he had the pleasure of <lb />
Nay, more, he would not post a let- <lb />
Saturday, lest it should travel <lb />
on Sunday. One exception, however, <lb />
be was compelled to make. Sometime <lb />
he had to fight a battle on that holy <lb />
day; but that he looked upon as <lb />
work of if not of <lb />
and then he would keep Monday So <lb />
scrupulous was he not to defraud the <lb />
Lord of his Just due that he would <lb />
sometimes keep two or three day run- <lb />
to balance the H. <lb />
M. Field, D. D., in <lb />
WEE CANNIBAL LOBSTERS. <lb />
Homer. Horace and Algebra. <lb />
A Hastings street man, not classically <lb />
educated, sent his boy off to college <lb />
and the young man wrote home about <lb />
his studies, his living and so on, and <lb />
proud father was telling a friend <lb />
about it on the street the other day. <lb />
boy of mine Is a <lb />
he said enthusiastically. <lb />
away at college, isn't her <lb />
queried the friend <lb />
he is, and he is doing tiptop. <lb />
Got a letter from him yesterday, and <lb />
he's right in the swim. He's studying <lb />
Horace and Homer, he says, and he <lb />
wants to know if he shall take up <lb />
what did you tell him to <lb />
yet; I wanted to see yon <lb />
about it Then <lb />
see you are better posted than I <lb />
am on these points, and I wanted your <lb />
advice. I've heard of Homer and <lb />
see, but I'll be darned if I know who <lb />
Algebra is. Do you think we ought to <lb />
be studying him with the rest of <lb />
The friend cautiously gave <lb />
and the young man will probably <lb />
be Algebra also. Detroit <lb />
Free Press. <lb />
The I'm in England. <lb />
The date of the first manufacture of <lb />
pins in England is shrouded In <lb />
but it U authentically recorded <lb />
that as early as when money was <lb />
extensive com- <lb />
their to accept, in pay- <lb />
for their work. girdles and <lb />
unprofitable wares instead of <lb />
The march of improvement <lb />
had begun and kept on steadily until <lb />
toward the middle of the Sixteenth <lb />
century pins began to win appreciation <lb />
so high that statutes were enacted pro- <lb />
their manufacture, and rigid <lb />
laws were passed prohibiting the <lb />
of numerous minor articles, <lb />
including pins, gloves, knives, <lb />
shears, scissors and irons. Up to this <lb />
period female dress was fastened with <lb />
ribbons, laces, clasps, hooks and eye <lb />
and skewers of brass, silver and gold; <lb />
the latter were in fact pins without <lb />
beads Table Talk. <lb />
Effect or the <lb />
The slow of many poisons <lb />
changes in some or less modified <lb />
form the complexion, but arsenic and <lb />
ammonia show their effect about a <lb />
quickly as any. The popular belief <lb />
that arsenic the complexion has <lb />
led many silly women to kill the nisei <lb />
with It In small, continued doses. <lb />
It produces n waxy, appear- <lb />
of the i during n certain stage <lb />
of the but its terrible after <lb />
effects become too well known to <lb />
take it of as <lb />
Tribune, <lb />
the of It. <lb />
is it that so many <lb />
American cities are complaining of bad <lb />
water Is not the water supply under <lb />
the direction of city officials <lb />
are not those <lb />
elected by the people <lb />
it appears to me <lb />
you have not been careful to select <lb />
officials who are good judges of water. <lb />
New York Weekly. <lb />
The Literal Infant. <lb />
what agency do count- <lb />
less thousands attribute their downfall f <lb />
Tommy <lb />
New York Truth. <lb />
Growth in Dark Cellars. <lb />
That it is not really light, but maybe <lb />
some power usually co-existent with <lb />
light, which gives the tendency to go <lb />
upward, is demonstrated by growth in <lb />
cellars or dark places. In the total <lb />
of light growth is still upward. <lb />
Recently, in England, there have been <lb />
made some curious observations on <lb />
growth in coal mines. Posts driven in <lb />
the earth of en sprout and grow as if <lb />
they were rooted trees planted. Some <lb />
of posts, used as props In <lb />
mini .-. a thousand feet below the <lb />
face, have sprouted, yet though in <lb />
darkness, th shoots have <lb />
gone up as perfectly in an upright <lb />
i as if in full sunlight in the open <lb />
h, <lb />
ledger. <lb />
The Light That Temporarily. <lb />
The electric car was full and a <lb />
tan young man was forced to sit quite <lb />
close to the young woman who was <lb />
with him. and this was all very agree- i <lb />
able to him. When the cars go under <lb />
the railroad bridge on entering Hallo- i <lb />
well from it is customary to ; <lb />
pull down the trolley, and in the even- <lb />
the lamps, as a consequence, go <lb />
out What an opportune time I Click <lb />
went tire trolley back to the overhead <lb />
wire, the lamps glowed once again and <lb />
the passengers got their eyes <lb />
to the change of light Just in <lb />
time to see the lips of that young man <lb />
and woman glued together. The blush- <lb />
couple were very glad to step off <lb />
the car at the next<lb />
One Bold Stroke. <lb />
This story is told of one of the lead- <lb />
dry goods men of New York i He <lb />
was carrying a heavy stock of fine mil- <lb />
goods when the round topped <lb />
derby hat for women became suddenly <lb />
fashionable. The market was flooded <lb />
with them, and they were regarded <lb />
the only thing to be worn on the head. <lb />
Tills merchant foresaw a great loss on <lb />
his stock of millinery, and decided to <lb />
prevent it He first bought up all the <lb />
derby bats be could and then <lb />
them extensively, offering them <lb />
for sale at ridiculously low prices. <lb />
The result was that the derby fell <lb />
Into disfavor among fashionable women <lb />
at once, and he saved his market for <lb />
bis more expensive goods It I <lb />
strokes such as this and the careful <lb />
watching of the market and feeling of <lb />
the popular pulse that fortune are <lb />
made by the few extremely successful <lb />
merchants. Brooklyn Life. <lb />
do not know who secured the law <lb />
go establish township libraries in In <lb />
the Dig In Saul. Thar <lb />
lama to Do Fearful Rattle. <lb />
By invitation of a wall known <lb />
bad not long ago an opportunity <lb />
to witness a curious sight in an aqua. <lb />
In which about a hundred young <lb />
lobsters had been placed. <lb />
Young lobsters are cannibals of the <lb />
very worst type, and can give points to <lb />
the most terrible in all Africa. <lb />
The lobsters had Just passed out of <lb />
toe stage and were seen <lb />
crawling in the tank. The tank <lb />
bad glass sides, giving an excellent <lb />
chance for observation, and it bad a <lb />
capacity of about fifty gallon of water. <lb />
At one side of the interior of the aqua- <lb />
had been piled large stones, with <lb />
Bat sides, resting on sand. The sand <lb />
was two deep, covering <lb />
the bottom <lb />
My informant said that the first per- <lb />
of the young lobster when <lb />
put into the tank were very Interest- <lb />
They around aide <lb />
of the rocks, with their <lb />
almost against the stone, crossed their <lb />
claws in front of them and moving <lb />
backward dragged of sand <lb />
away from the stone. This re- <lb />
again and again until a hole <lb />
had been made big enough to hold the <lb />
little lobster with space to spare. <lb />
Then the climbed over <lb />
the heap sand into the excavation, <lb />
and. turning his tail to the stone, pro- <lb />
to push the particles from the <lb />
bottom of the bole to the top of the <lb />
heap by placing its two claw together <lb />
with the tips lapping so that the sand <lb />
not slide back. In effect the <lb />
claws served as a shovel. <lb />
the lobsters had In this man- <lb />
built for themselves caves for de- <lb />
purposes planted them- <lb />
selves with their backs to the stone <lb />
and kept their little black, <lb />
eyes roving outward in every direction. <lb />
When I took my place to watch <lb />
was stirring <lb />
Now and then a lobster would climb <lb />
out of his retreat and explore the <lb />
mediate neighborhood <lb />
Suddenly, finding lob <lb />
the adventurer, would as- <lb />
sault it. Then would ensue the biggest <lb />
kind of a rough and tumble, catch-as- <lb />
catch-can contest It was a fight to <lb />
the death. <lb />
When the struggle was between only <lb />
two lobsters the result was usually a <lb />
drawn battle, each retreating to bis <lb />
hole with the loss of a claw or of <lb />
or two antenna <lb />
But when two or three lobsters at- <lb />
tacked one In his shallow cave the <lb />
fight was soon over The miserable <lb />
victim was dragged out on the arena <lb />
by the sharp pincers of the besiegers, <lb />
and in a trice lie was killed. It re- <lb />
quired but a few minutes for the can- <lb />
to dismember and eat up their <lb />
victim, dragging the bits to different <lb />
parts of the aquarium, as dogs would <lb />
hones. <lb />
These attacks are always made at <lb />
night I was so as to see an- <lb />
other raid, but it was not like that de- <lb />
scribed above. One of the lobsters <lb />
that had emerged from his lair in <lb />
suit of food was himself pursued in <lb />
turn. Caught napping away from hi <lb />
castle by three or four enemies, it <lb />
over the sand toward one corner <lb />
of the aquarium. After him went the <lb />
pursuers and while th <lb />
pursued resorted to dodging tactic <lb />
bat would be admired by a football <lb />
rusher, the pursuer separated and <lb />
closed in around the doomed creature. <lb />
It is by a curious instinct that th <lb />
pursuit is made in the because it <lb />
is evidently to the advantage of the <lb />
pursuer, on the principle in war that <lb />
night attacks are more successful than <lb />
those by daylight <lb />
Marks of these midnight forays were <lb />
to be found in the morning in the <lb />
of The result of <lb />
among the young lobster <lb />
that out of a hundred about twenty- <lb />
five survive, a demonstration of the <lb />
Darwinian law of the survival of the <lb />
fittest <lb />
In the cannibal stage of their ex- <lb />
are about three-quarters <lb />
of an inch in length. when the <lb />
grow to be two and a half inch <lb />
In length from the tall to the tip of the <lb />
claw they have outgrown their blood- <lb />
thirsty instincts. New York Herald. <lb />
B. <lb />
with me in the Undertaking business we <lb />
are ready to serve the people In that <lb />
a pacify. All notes and accounts due <lb />
me for past services h been placed in <lb />
the hands Mr. n <lb />
JOHN <lb />
A B. K <lb />
and Schedule <lb />
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb />
No So No <lb />
3rd, dally Fast Mall, dally <lb />
dally ex Sun. <lb />
I Weldon 12,80 pm pm <lb />
Ar Rocky am<lb />
Tarboro It am <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar <lb />
Warsaw <lb />
Av Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilmington <lb />
We keep on hand at all a nice i <lb />
-rock Cases Caskets ll Wilmington <lb />
kinds can furnish anything , i- Magnolia <lb />
from the Cage down to <lb />
county Pine Coffin. We <lb />
up with all conveniences and can i <lb />
satisfactory to all who p<lb />
ft <lb />
FINE IT AND VIEW <lb />
Views of Animal. Churches.- <lb />
Family Gatherings, Ac., taken <lb />
Notice, i from <lb />
to life in Inks, Crayon or <lb />
Head quarters for tine Photographs. <lb />
Call <lb />
R HYMAN, <lb />
N. O <lb />
Seville <lb />
Ar Selma <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
D M pin<lb />
con <lb />
NORTH <lb />
No No No <lb />
dally dally <lb />
ex Ban. <lb />
fl am 2-3<lb />
am<lb />
mm fa <lb />
Whig-hard, <lb />
mi ESTATE.-. <lb />
o. <lb />
i a<lb />
WATCH-TOWER, <lb />
Published <lb />
A YEAR <lb />
to Apostolic <lb />
Cation. Send <lb />
fur Sample of <lb />
Greenville. N, <lb />
K Office. Wash- <lb />
N C <lb />
I. r. <lb />
I. <lb />
Wilson am It Ron pm <lb />
Mount H <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro M am <lb />
Ar Weldon I H pm W pm <lb />
except <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Halifax 4.18 M. arrives cot <lb />
land Neck at 5.15 I. M., Greenville <lb />
M. p. in. Returning. <lb />
it. Greenville <lb />
8.10 a. m. Halifax n. in. <lb />
Weldon 11.25 a. m. daily except <lb />
Local freight train <lb />
7.00 a. in., Scotland <lb />
. m., Greenville 3.00 p. in., <lb />
p. m. Returning leave <lb />
8.00 a. in., arriving 10.50 <lb />
a. m., Neck 2.40 in., Weldon <lb />
0.15 l. <lb />
Tram leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
Raleigh It. R. daily except Sim- <lb />
P M, <lb />
N C, P M, V M. <lb />
Plymouth 8.80 p. m., 5.20 p. m- <lb />
leaves daily <lb />
m. Sunday a. ml <lb />
N a tn, 9.58 a . <lb />
arrive Tarboro, N OB A M 11.20. <lb />
Train on Nashville Branch leaves <lb />
M, arrive a ill <lb />
V Hope P M. Returning <lb />
leaves Spring. Mope HI no <lb />
M, arrives Rocky Mount II U A <lb />
except <lb />
on Clinton leaves <lb />
f-o except few <lb />
. M <lb />
A VI, M. <lb />
ink at Warsaw with mil , <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch <lb />
I except Sunday, A M <lb />
N C, a M. <lb />
leaves S C A M <lb />
arrive N C, A M. <lb />
Southbound train on <lb />
ville Branch b No. Northbound is <lb />
No. Sunday. <lb />
No. will stop only . <lb />
H Magnolia. <lb />
I rain No. makes H <lb />
all North -laity. AI <lb />
ill VIM I. HI I <lb />
via . <lb />
HAVE d parcel of real <lb />
estate for sale. Look over the list <lb />
below and call on or write <lb />
A lot on Third street below Co- <lb />
in the town of Greenville, <lb />
two-story house with four rooms <lb />
kitchen and smoke house convenient <lb />
large -rallies on the premises, <lb />
Iota in Skinner- <lb />
desirable <lb />
location. <lb />
O A lot on reel. <lb />
Front Second, has nice house of <lb />
rooms, good well of water, large <lb />
plot and stables. <lb />
A acre lot in <lb />
single story house <lb />
rooms, cook and dining rooms at- <lb />
all necessary nut buildings and <lb />
ankles, good water <lb />
A line farm containing acres. <lb />
bout I miles from Greenville on Mt. <lb />
Pleasant road, has gin house, stables, <lb />
bums, two room tenant houses; ah <lb />
acre cleared, balance well wooded, <lb />
water. Tim bind is excellent for <lb />
the cultivation of Hue tobacco. <lb />
f One. farm on branch of the <lb />
W I . about halt way l- <lb />
and Kin-ton and within <lb />
mile of a new depot, contains n acres, <lb />
balance heavily timbered <lb />
with pine. oak. hickory, and cypress; <lb />
has tenant railroad passes <lb />
nearly through of thin farm. The <lb />
land subsoil with inly <lb />
is in good state of cultivation and highly <lb />
improved is line trucking land. <lb />
A farm miles from on <lb />
I. Kin-ion mad known as the Jackson <lb />
farm; contains acres, cleared ; has <lb />
good dwelling house mill all necessary <lb />
out This is a first-class <lb />
A mill lot in on <lb />
corner B. and W. S. <lb />
BaWls, now occupied by Hie family of <lb />
the late W. A. house contains <lb />
rooms, kitchen convenient, is convenient <lb />
location, hall a block from main <lb />
street of town. Possession <lb />
can lie given January 1st. <lb />
A good i lot on <lb />
street, between Third and Fourth <lb />
streets, splendid <lb />
house and lot on Pitt <lb />
street near Avenue, <lb />
good house of rooms, large lot <lb />
stables out budding. <lb />
The house and . on <lb />
Pitt adjoining the lot of B. <lb />
S. and the lot in No. <lb />
large, one story dwelling <lb />
of four loom-, dining cook rooms, <lb />
plenty of room for garden. <lb />
Terms on any of above property <lb />
can be bail on lo <lb />
-n A WHICH <lb />
it <lb />
K.-. <lb />
Vi, <lb />
. School ill be- <lb />
MOM <lb />
i term of <lb />
, e 7.75 <lb />
I a. so 3.00 i in all of I nil lime. Ill-a e and <lb />
allied i e l-s ill half of <lb />
mil e o the <lb />
n B., <lb />
on a Cobra. <lb />
An old gentleman living in India said <lb />
to his one <lb />
dear, I have had a very <lb />
dream. I dreamed I was sleeping on a <lb />
was her retort, <lb />
could that <lb />
my he responded meek- <lb />
did dream it, and I only hope It <lb />
wasn't <lb />
The next night he had the sun <lb />
dream, and in the morning announced <lb />
the fact, only to encounter his <lb />
on the score of his weak nerve. <lb />
Nevertheless be had the same dream. <lb />
once <lb />
Thereupon the mattress ripped <lb />
open, and there, snugly coiled in it <lb />
middle, was a cobra. He bad entered <lb />
one day through a rip in the covet <lb />
while the mattress was lying in the gag- <lb />
den to air. Probably his <lb />
writhing beneath the sleeper had given <lb />
rise to the dream. Youth's Companion, <lb />
A Waterloo <lb />
A farmhouse with an orchard <lb />
rounded by a thick hedge, formed a <lb />
most important point in the British <lb />
position at Waterloo, and ordered <lb />
to be held against the enemy at any <lb />
sacrifice. The hottest of the battle <lb />
raged around this point, but the Eng- <lb />
behaved well and beat back the <lb />
French again and again. <lb />
At last the formers powder and ball <lb />
found to be running short; at the <lb />
time the hedge surrounding the <lb />
orchard took Are. A messenger <lb />
sent to the rear for more powder and <lb />
balL and in a time two loaded <lb />
wagons came galloping down to the <lb />
farmhouse, the gallant defender of <lb />
scanty fire <lb />
a. ; all <lb />
office la<lb />
e an I-.--U. <lb />
can in , <lb />
more i <lb />
-ell <lb />
advise a- M i <lb />
we make nu i-h g<lb />
We <lb />
-opt. of Mi <lb />
tin I . Pi <lb />
i- . <lb />
o. <lb />
address, <lb />
., <lb />
V K <lb />
i HAVING i <lb />
nu i i <lb />
.- ,<lb />
P FIRE <lb />
FACTORY <lb />
lit. I toll i <lb />
id I II M M Mm <lb />
t , which were keeping up a <lb />
but may every blessing rest on through the flames which surrounded <lb />
him, for he did a wonderful work, and the poet <lb />
ha Taking Mann. <lb />
In a pretty up town a newly <lb />
rived Hibernian was installed parlor <lb />
Urn 8------at homer asked <lb />
a whose ring at the door she <lb />
had an <lb />
-he mistress said Biddy <lb />
ilia S . is she out asked the <lb />
visit or Mir. she's in the tab <lb />
was the unexpected <lb />
and ready response New York <lb />
the man or committee who selected the <lb />
books bad a genius for the task which <lb />
rote to an inspiration How many <lb />
days, now many long winter <lb />
evenings, how many noon hours did I <lb />
spend in poring over the Abbott hi <lb />
the narrative of travel, and <lb />
those book tn which scientific <lb />
were popularly explained I <lb />
The recollections of the vast benefit <lb />
and pleasure I derived from that little <lb />
mere handful of <lb />
which I trudged a long distance through <lb />
rain and wow to get an occasional <lb />
volume, leaves the firm conviction <lb />
hi my mind that the and <lb />
wisdom of man cannot devise a <lb />
than <lb />
general scheme whereby and <lb />
entertaining books may be made <lb />
u the youth of rural <lb />
portion of oar <lb />
The driver of the first wagon spurred <lb />
hi horse through the burn- <lb />
heat, bat the name rose fiercely <lb />
around and caught the powder, which <lb />
exploded, sending rider, horses and <lb />
wagon in fragment through the air. <lb />
one Instant the driver of the second <lb />
wagon paused, appalled by bis com- <lb />
fate, the next, observing that <lb />
the name, beaten back for a moment <lb />
by the explosion, afforded him on <lb />
desperate he sent his horses at <lb />
the smoldering I reach, and amid the <lb />
cheers of the garrison landed his cargo <lb />
safely within, New Recorder. <lb />
with a Spanish lady <lb />
eating grape, she I <lb />
never swallow grape seeds I I should as <lb />
soon think of swallowing so much <lb />
In Spain one swallows of <lb />
. . <lb />
Riv. <lb />
Ill's ha- men In <lb />
years, and wherever known h.- <lb />
in Steady It been en- <lb />
by Hit physicians ll over <lb />
and cures where <lb />
all other r the attention <lb />
the most physician, have <lb />
for years failed. This Is <lb />
long the high reputation <lb />
which It bus obtained Is owing entirely <lb />
to its own as little effort <lb />
ever en made to bring it before <lb />
public, line of this will <lb />
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. Sample The usual <lb />
discount All Cash Orders <lb />
promptly attended to. or- <lb />
and communications to <lb />
T. F. <lb />
Sole Mat and Proprietor, <lb />
N. C <lb />
court House <lb />
OF <lb />
. mm, darts <lb />
r well with the hurt . put up nothing <lb />
keep up with the times and ., Improved style. <lb />
Re used . all work. All styles of Springs re . you -elect from <lb />
Brewster, Storm, oil, Horn, King <lb />
Also keep on hand a full of ready <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb />
he year round, which we will soil A AS <lb />
Attention Given to REPAIRING <lb />
Thanking the people this and surrounding counties for past w <lb />
merit a continuance of the Mm, <lb />
.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017529_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
LANG'S COLUMN. <lb />
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Again it is our pleasure to <lb />
sent to our numerous friends <lb />
and patrons this, our <lb />
w gear <lb />
And <lb />
again we <lb />
rejoice with <lb />
you that our <lb />
country is in <lb />
such a <lb />
condition, and we <lb />
thank you for your <lb />
kind and liberal patron- <lb />
age in the past, and by <lb />
the same fair and honest <lb />
measures that have marked <lb />
our dealings heretofore we hope <lb />
to merit your future patronage. <lb />
Our stock was never more com- <lb />
with stylish and reason- <lb />
able goods than at present. <lb />
No matter what you <lb />
if it is and first- <lb />
class we have it. In <lb />
Fine Goods <lb />
and Trimmings <lb />
we show the <lb />
most c o m- <lb />
and <lb />
stock <lb />
in town <lb />
All the new <lb />
and <lb />
from the <lb />
fashion of <lb />
the country are <lb />
in endless variety <lb />
on counters. In La- <lb />
dies and Misses Fine <lb />
Wraps we show the most <lb />
able and stylish gar- <lb />
of the season. Our trade <lb />
on this line of goods has been <lb />
such as to require a second sup- <lb />
ply and we have to suit <lb />
everybody. In Men's and <lb />
Youth's Clothing we <lb />
are the leaders. Fine <lb />
Tailor Made Clothing <lb />
that comprises all <lb />
the advantages of <lb />
are a <lb />
specialty <lb />
with us. <lb />
In fit, <lb />
styles <lb />
and ma <lb />
our <lb />
goods cannot be <lb />
surpassed An <lb />
elegant line of light <lb />
weight fancy overcoats <lb />
In Boy's Clothing, <lb />
usual, we always please <lb />
both parents and boys and <lb />
this is what has made our boys <lb />
clothing department such a <lb />
that we do <lb />
not handle second hand and <lb />
shoddy In Footwear <lb />
for Ladies, Misses, Boys <lb />
and Children we show only <lb />
the standard and reliable <lb />
makes. In Men's Hats <lb />
we have all the new <lb />
blocks and shapes <lb />
in the most <lb />
grades. Our <lb />
Carpet and <lb />
House Fur- <lb />
Department was never more com- <lb />
Long experience in this <lb />
has learned as just what is <lb />
needed by our people. Carpets <lb />
in all grades. Floor Oil Cloths in <lb />
all widths, Rags and Mats, Lace <lb />
Curtains, Curtain Poles, Win- <lb />
Shades and Drapery effects <lb />
are all shown here in quite a <lb />
variety Every department is <lb />
complete. Come to see us and <lb />
we will send you away satisfied. <lb />
All goods warranted as <lb />
and shoddy goods sold. <lb />
M. R Lang. <lb />
Reflector Advertisers. <lb />
. The comes before its <lb />
readers for the new veer with this lilt of <lb />
advertisers who solicit your patronage <lb />
in respective lines of <lb />
Dr. L. James, <lb />
Dr. J. , Dentist. <lb />
Jar vis A Blow. Attorneys. <lb />
J. B. Attorney. <lb />
Sugg A Tyson, Attorneys. <lb />
Wm. H. Long, Attorney. <lb />
Latham A Skinner, Attorneys. <lb />
F. a. James, Attorney. <lb />
J. L. Wooten, Proprietary Medicines. <lb />
Blood Balm Co., B. B. B. <lb />
Bros., P. P. P. <lb />
Co., <lb />
James Pyle, <lb />
King's Royal Co., <lb />
W. S. Powell A Co., <lb />
A. B. Ellington. Greenville Works <lb />
Cully A Edmonds, Barber Shop. <lb />
James A. Smith. Barber Shop. <lb />
D. D. Haskett, Stoves and Hardware. <lb />
Glasgow Livery Stables. <lb />
Stables. <lb />
Cobb Bros. Gilliam. Cotton Factors <lb />
Commission Merchants. <lb />
S. B. Harrell ft Co., Cotton Factors <lb />
and Commission Merchants. <lb />
Alexander, A Co. Cotton <lb />
tors and Merchants. <lb />
L. W. Davis, Wholesale Tobacconist. <lb />
S. M. Schultz, Grocer at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
J. B. Cherry ft Co., General <lb />
Alfred Forbes. General Merchandise. <lb />
M. K. Lang, Dry Goods and Clothing. <lb />
C. T. Dry Goods, Clothing. <lb />
Brown Bros. Dry Goods, Shoes and <lb />
Sewing Machines. <lb />
Moore ft Parser, Pumps, Door Alarms, <lb />
etc., etc. <lb />
Carmer Co., Home <lb />
J. A. Andrews, Heavy Groceries. <lb />
G. E. Harris, Hay, Grain. Fertilizers. <lb />
Adolph Colin, Pianos and Organs. <lb />
W. H. Male Academy. <lb />
J. L. Sugg, Life and Fire Insurance. <lb />
J. D. Williamson, Buggies. Carriages <lb />
and Harness. <lb />
School Committee. Female School. <lb />
T. F. <lb />
Edwards A Printers and <lb />
Binders. <lb />
Atlantic Co., <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Weather is in order. <lb />
Ice nearly every day last week. <lb />
The academy have lots of fun <lb />
at loot ball. <lb />
Large land at the Court <lb />
House door Monday. <lb />
Court is in session this <lb />
Judge H. R. Bryan presiding. <lb />
The best gold fountain pens can be <lb />
bought at Book Store <lb />
week, <lb />
LANG'S <lb />
The New Home Sewing Ma- <lb />
chines for at Brown Bros- <lb />
The new year is slipping right on <lb />
away halt a month <lb />
gone. <lb />
Cash given for Produce, Hides, <lb />
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
Leave your subscription tor the <lb />
Reflector before you go out of <lb />
town. <lb />
The New Home Sewing Ma- <lb />
chines and all parts at Brown <lb />
Bros. <lb />
is lit by of <lb />
and can see to get home some <lb />
sooner. <lb />
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads <lb />
and Mattresses at the Old Brick <lb />
Store- <lb />
The for a few days has <lb />
been extremely dies and <lb />
inclement. <lb />
inD. M- Ferry Cos <lb />
new Garden Seed, at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
The County Alliance will meet <lb />
here Thursday. A large attendance <lb />
is expected. <lb />
The female school taught by Miss <lb />
Nicholson new pupils Monday, <lb />
increasing the number to <lb />
Since Christmas the days have <lb />
been gaining a little in length. The <lb />
difference is now quite perceptible. <lb />
Fob Dancy house <lb />
on Pitt street. Apply to <lb />
Mi. B. has opened a fancy <lb />
grocery at the Store <lb />
pied by Mr. Ed. Randolph. <lb />
Boss Lunch Milk Biscuit will <lb />
your appetite when nothing <lb />
else will. At the Old Brick Store. <lb />
The says that Rev. R. <lb />
Stancill, late Slate Evangelist, has <lb />
accepted a call to the Disciple church <lb />
of Wilson. <lb />
Where Food has been <lb />
used hogs have never been known <lb />
to have cholera. At the Old Brick <lb />
Store <lb />
Jesse Baker, dealer in liquors <lb />
doing business under the firm name <lb />
of Jesse Baker ft made an assigns <lb />
one day last week. <lb />
folks had a dance in <lb />
Hall Wednesday night of <lb />
last week. An Italian orchestra from <lb />
Washington made music for them. <lb />
Mr. Glasgow Evans baa moved bis <lb />
livery business from Fifth street to <lb />
the stables formerly occupied by Mr. <lb />
H. F. Keel. Mr Keel will go out <lb />
the business. <lb />
We saw a rope going down the <lb />
street the other day, a man holding <lb />
one end and a sorry looking dog <lb />
hung to the other. First-rate picture <lb />
for hard times. <lb />
The trial of F. C. Martin for killing <lb />
M. G. Manning has been set tor <lb />
Thursday. A of men <lb />
from which to select the jury is be- <lb />
summoned. <lb />
A man with a row of numbered <lb />
figures to throw balls for <lb />
a crowd around bis <lb />
quarters most the day. Some <lb />
waste money on very silly things <lb />
and then cry hard times. <lb />
Prof. male school had <lb />
new pupils last week, raising the <lb />
to This starts out <lb />
the new year and we are told <lb />
other pupils have engaged <lb />
to begin at the opening of the <lb />
session. 20th inst. <lb />
n Saturday Mrs. J. L. <lb />
received a check for from the <lb />
Atlanta which was the <lb />
fourth prize in a word contest offered <lb />
that for the most words <lb />
made out of the letters contained in <lb />
I the word <lb />
A Bad Showing. <lb />
A large majority of the crop <lb />
being given this year, if one can <lb />
judge blanks sold, are the <lb />
kind that carry a note with them for <lb />
amounts of indebtedness brought <lb />
forward last year. It will be a <lb />
when this crop lien system <lb />
can be abandoned <lb />
Personal. <lb />
Rev. U. A. ha moved his <lb />
family to Rocky Mount. <lb />
W. B. Jordan representing the <lb />
Wilmington Star, is here. <lb />
Miss Minnie of Tarboro <lb />
is visiting Mrs. M. R. Lung. <lb />
Mr. J. Nobles is attending <lb />
School, near Warrenton. <lb />
Miss Lillie Cherry has been visit- <lb />
friends in Washington since <lb />
last Thursday. <lb />
Mr. Eugene Cox has taken a <lb />
at the depot to learn telegraphy <lb />
and railroad work. <lb />
Mr. Harry Harding has a position <lb />
with Hon. in the Superior <lb />
Court Clerk's office. <lb />
Prof. T. C. Manning, a skilled pen- <lb />
man, is teaching classes both at the <lb />
Institute and Academy. <lb />
Dr. P. B. editor of the <lb />
Grifton Lamp Light was in town <lb />
yesterday and made us a call. <lb />
Rev J. G. Nelson regained health <lb />
sufficiently to be able to go to <lb />
in last week. <lb />
Misses Annie Sheppard and Flor- <lb />
Williams left Thursday to <lb />
visit Mrs. Eva Satchwell, at <lb />
ville. <lb />
Miss Mattie Abrams, of Rocky <lb />
Mount and Miss Cohen, of <lb />
Tarboro, Mrs. S. M. <lb />
Schultz. <lb />
Mis Lucy Nobles recently returned <lb />
to Kinsey School, LaGrange, after <lb />
spending the holiday vacation with <lb />
her parents near Greenville. <lb />
Mrs. John Flanagan went lo Kin- <lb />
sum last week to spend a few days <lb />
with her daughter, Mrs. Florence <lb />
who is under treatment at <lb />
Waverly Sanitarium. <lb />
Miss Myra has issued <lb />
invitations to her friends to a <lb />
masque party at Hotel Macon, Friday <lb />
evening, complimentary to Misses <lb />
Lucille Owens and Aileen Latham. <lb />
Mr. J. E. Langley, of Richmond, <lb />
has been in town for n few days <lb />
visiting his parents. many <lb />
friends learn gladly that he has <lb />
recovered from the severe illness <lb />
with which he was afflicted here last <lb />
miner. <lb />
Mr. P. of Wilson county <lb />
has moved his family to Greenville <lb />
and occupies the house in <lb />
Mr. Phelps is the in- <lb />
of the Phelps Patent Tobacco <lb />
Furnace and has associated with Mr. <lb />
E. O. in the sale farm <lb />
rights to use it. Every tobacco grow <lb />
should put one in each of his <lb />
barns. <lb />
A Working Board. <lb />
he proceedings of the last meeting <lb />
of the Board of County Commissioner <lb />
will found on fourth page of this <lb />
issue. They did an immense amount <lb />
of work in one day, as the proceedings <lb />
show. Any one who attends a meet- <lb />
of the Board can see what hard <lb />
work they have to do, and how ear- <lb />
the county's inter- <lb />
est. The office of County <lb />
is not as easy a place as those <lb />
who know nothing about it might <lb />
imagine. <lb />
Juries. <lb />
following compose the Juries <lb />
at this term Pitt Superior <lb />
Joey. W. W. Little, <lb />
Foreman, W. C. Butler, Cox, <lb />
J. J. Tucker, James H. Mills, S. B. <lb />
B. A. Davenport, W. J. H <lb />
G. W. Gainer, B. W. <lb />
James, J. B. R. L. <lb />
W. L. Smith, H. B. B. B. <lb />
W. S. E Smith, J. L. <lb />
Roberson, Luke <lb />
Coward, Henry <lb />
Harrington, L. C- Moore, Silas Lang- <lb />
A. C. Tucker, J. W. Smith, A <lb />
S. Congleton, James R. Johnston, <lb />
W. J. Henry Taylor, E. S. <lb />
Jacob Joyner. <lb />
Wire Walkers. <lb />
Since the slack wire walker was <lb />
here Christmas some of the colored <lb />
boys have put up a wire near Sara <lb />
Cherry's blacksmith shop and are <lb />
practicing. Some of are get- <lb />
ting so they make a right good stand <lb />
on the wire and can take a step or <lb />
two. <lb />
Quick Adjustment. <lb />
Eubanks Ward's gin at Bethel <lb />
was partially burned on December <lb />
They had it insured in the <lb />
New Fire Insurance <lb />
of J. L. Sugg is The <lb />
damage was assessed and in two <lb />
had a check for their <lb />
money. That's quick enough. <lb />
Just Around the Corner. <lb />
Allen Nichols, the candy man, has <lb />
discarded the use his tent and now <lb />
occupies a room under the Opera <lb />
House, first room from the corner <lb />
facing the Court Douse, where he <lb />
makes fresh candy every day and <lb />
also carries a nice line of fruits. <lb />
Nick did not forget the Reflector <lb />
boys when be went around the <lb />
corner, but remembered then with <lb />
an assorted package of candy <lb />
day. <lb />
Tobacco Seeds. <lb />
People who will plant tobacco this <lb />
year read the advertisement <lb />
of the R. L. Seed Co. To <lb />
make a successful crop it is <lb />
lo have best seed that can <lb />
be had. Ragland is prepared <lb />
to furnish these. He has made <lb />
several years study at selecting seeds <lb />
for soils, and now offers the <lb />
benefit of his large experience to <lb />
others. He knows just the kind of <lb />
tobacco best adapted to Pitt county <lb />
lands and can furnish yon seeds ac- <lb />
Married. <lb />
On January 6th at the borne of the <lb />
in Marlboro, this county, Mr. <lb />
W. L. Tucker and Miss Mamie Joy- <lb />
were married, the ceremony <lb />
being performed T. Tyson, Esq. <lb />
At the home of the bride in Green- <lb />
ville, on Wednesday afternoon 6th, <lb />
at o'clock, Mr. W. H Parker, of <lb />
Farmville Miss Pattie <lb />
of Greenville were married. Rev. J. <lb />
L. Winfield officiating, <lb />
On Wednesday evening, January <lb />
at Farmville, Mr. H. B, Harriss <lb />
and Miss King were married. <lb />
Rev. J. L. Winfield performing <lb />
ceremony. <lb />
All of the happy couple have the <lb />
best wishes of <lb />
New Officers. <lb />
At the annual meeting of <lb />
Stockholders of the Greenville Land <lb />
and Improvement Company held last <lb />
Wednesday the following officers <lb />
were elected for the ensuing <lb />
R. Moore. <lb />
J. Langston. <lb />
Asst, G. M. Mooring. <lb />
L. Blow. <lb />
O. <lb />
Board of Directors. R. Moore, <lb />
G- M John Flanagan, E. <lb />
A. Maya and D B. House. <lb />
The following officers of Covenant <lb />
Lodge No. f. O. O- F. were in- <lb />
stalled at last meeting by J. A. <lb />
K. Tucker D. D. G. M. <lb />
Noble Grand, C, D. <lb />
Vice Grand, Dr. Zeno Brown. <lb />
Recording <lb />
W. L. Brown. <lb />
Treasurer, D. W <lb />
Sitting Fast A, , <lb />
School. <lb />
The Spring term of Greenville <lb />
Male Academy will begin on Wed- <lb />
January 1892. I de- <lb />
sire to say to tho citizens of Green <lb />
ville and Pitt county that the school <lb />
is now well equipped for doing first <lb />
class work. If you will send me <lb />
your boys I will guarantee <lb />
both as to their advancement in <lb />
studies and general de- <lb />
Special effort ii made to <lb />
arouse a desire in each boy to do his <lb />
full duty because it is right for him <lb />
to do so. He is made to feel the re <lb />
that rests upon him <lb />
Any misconduct or indifference to <lb />
work is not countenanced. Board <lb />
can be had in private houses or with <lb />
the family of the principal. Pupils <lb />
boarding are not allowed to loaf <lb />
upon the streets. We refer to the <lb />
present patrons as to the general <lb />
merit of the school. From reference <lb />
to in this paper you will see <lb />
that tuition is now There- <lb />
lore don't wait but send your boys in <lb />
early. Any information cheerfully <lb />
given. W. H. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
The Tournament. <lb />
On last Friday morning the sun <lb />
rose on a cold, clear day and <lb />
wended our way to where <lb />
there was to be a Tournament. We <lb />
arrived there about o'clock and <lb />
proceeded to the tourney grounds, <lb />
where had gathered a large crowd of <lb />
ladies and gentlemen to witness a <lb />
contest of skill. met by <lb />
clever gentleman and Chief <lb />
Marshal, Mr. J. B. Little, who snug- <lb />
domiciled in a comfortable <lb />
seal. We were soon met by his able <lb />
assistants Messrs. O. W. Harrington, <lb />
J. E. Fleming and B. B. <lb />
who made us perfectly at <lb />
home. The hour having arrived for <lb />
the ceremonies to begin Chief Little <lb />
ascended the rostrum and announced <lb />
the rules for governing the <lb />
Afterwards in a few well <lb />
chosen words be introduced the <lb />
tor of the occasion, G. B. King, Esq., <lb />
who arose and held his audience p-i I <lb />
bound for about three-quarters of an <lb />
hour. His eulogy on our beautiful <lb />
Southland was perfectly grand and <lb />
many an old veteran bowed bis head. <lb />
His tribute to woman was <lb />
and elicited great applause. It was <lb />
as grand an as we ever had the <lb />
pleasure of listening At the <lb />
close of the address the lilting began <lb />
and some pretty riding was done, <lb />
but the track being so from <lb />
the recent rains it was just <lb />
to make good runs. The score is <lb />
as follows, each Knight having ti ye <lb />
R W. Ward, Knight of Southern <lb />
Pride, rings. <lb />
D. G- Moore, Knight of Hope, <lb />
rings. <lb />
J. J. Knight of <lb />
Liberty, <lb />
J. J. Mason, Knight of Faith, <lb />
rings. <lb />
S. I Dudley, Knight of Forest, <lb />
ring. <lb />
W. S. Briley, of Great <lb />
Swamp, rings. <lb />
J. B. Fleming, Knight of Luck, <lb />
rings. <lb />
see by above that Messrs. <lb />
Ward and Satterthwaite had tied, <lb />
they had a deciding tilt, Mr. <lb />
taking the most rings <lb />
was declared the winner. <lb />
Mr. J. J. Mason catching the most <lb />
rings crowned Miss Lucy Tyson, of <lb />
Farmville, Queen of Love and Beauty. <lb />
Mr. next, crowned <lb />
Miss Ward, of near Greenville, <lb />
First Maid of Honor. <lb />
Mr. J. J. crowned <lb />
Miss Jennie James, of Greenville, <lb />
Second Maid of Honor. <lb />
Mr. R . W. Ward crowned Miss <lb />
Lilian Nobles, of near Greenville, <lb />
Third Maid of <lb />
The Judges were Messrs. W. M. <lb />
O. W. Harrington and <lb />
who gave perfect <lb />
faction in all their decisions. <lb />
At. night the Coronation Bali took <lb />
place and was a grand affair, many <lb />
going from Greenville to attend. <lb />
We noticed on ground Misses <lb />
Jennie James, Carrie Cobb, Annie <lb />
Foley and Delia Marshal, and <lb />
Messrs. Richard Hester, J. L Sugg, <lb />
W. H Long, B. F. Sugg, <lb />
M. B. Lang and W. E. Warren <lb />
and J. Marquis, of Greenville. <lb />
Great credit is due managers <lb />
in untiring efforts and every- <lb />
thing passed off very pleasantly. <lb />
The Reflector Book Store has <lb />
bought out a receiver's stock of <lb />
and is prepared to offer <lb />
heard of bargains on cap. fool's <lb />
cap, and note papers. Schools <lb />
will be supplied at even less than <lb />
auction prices. We will sell job <lb />
it to dealers at prices that will as- <lb />
them. We bought this paper <lb />
to Fell and save money if <lb />
will call before the stock is sold. <lb />
Appointments of Rev. A. D. Hunter. <lb />
First Sunday, morning and night, <lb />
Second Sunday morning at <lb />
and Saturday night before. <lb />
Third and fourth at Green- <lb />
Tills, morning night, also second <lb />
Regular Wednesday <lb />
flight services each week. <lb />
Settles t t school house on, <lb />
A BEAUTIFUL HOME MARRIAGE. <lb />
The Wedding at <lb />
Pitt County. . <lb />
Notwithstanding the inclement <lb />
and disagreeable weather with which <lb />
last Wednesday dawned upon us, <lb />
a number of our people <lb />
drove out to <lb />
home of Mr. R. R Gotten, to <lb />
witness the marriage of Ins chain- <lb />
daughter, Miss Agnes LeRoy <lb />
Cotten, to Mr. Julian Timberlake, <lb />
Raleigh. <lb />
The groom, accompanied by a <lb />
number of bis friends from <lb />
and from Tarboro, arrive, at <lb />
Mr Cottons the evening before, and <lb />
that night bad a delightful <lb />
led by Messrs. and Can- <lb />
in a large tobacco on the plan- <lb />
It was in ended that <lb />
marriage should take place in this <lb />
building, which had been beautifully <lb />
decorated for the occasion, the <lb />
bad of Wednesday morning <lb />
ma it necessary to change the <lb />
original plan and have the marriage <lb />
in the residence. <lb />
The ceremony was performed at <lb />
high noon by Rev. N. C. D. <lb />
D., of and was exceed- <lb />
impressive. The wedding <lb />
march was rendered by Miss Lizzie <lb />
Giddens, of o, as toe party <lb />
entered the parlor. <lb />
The ushers were C. C. Vines, Ly- <lb />
roan Gotten of Falkland and William <lb />
Moore of Greenville. attendants <lb />
were Miss Myra Vaughan of Nor- <lb />
folk, Va., and Mr. Cecil Lee of <lb />
; Miss Emily Gilliam of Halifax <lb />
and Mr. L. A. Mahler Raleigh ; Hiss <lb />
Lina Battle of Raleigh and Mr. J. <lb />
Floyd Brown of Raleigh ; Miss Kate <lb />
Hale of Raleigh and Mr S. D. How- <lb />
ell of Tarboro ; Miss Mary Bunn of <lb />
Rocky Mount and Mr. Allred WiN <lb />
Hams of Raleigh ; Miss Mary Phil- <lb />
lips of Tarboro and Mr. G. A. Hold- <lb />
of Tarboro ; Miss Annie Hume <lb />
Portsmouth, Va. and Mr. <lb />
Carr, Jr., of Old Sparta ; Miss Lucy <lb />
Raleigh and Mr. Bruce <lb />
Cotten of Falkland. <lb />
The bride was by the <lb />
maids of honor Misses Bessie and <lb />
Sadie Tucker, Miss Bessie Tucker <lb />
coming out with the best man Mr. <lb />
William Grimes of Raleigh and Miss <lb />
Sadie Tucker with Mr. Henry John <lb />
of Tarboro. <lb />
The bride entered leaning on the <lb />
arm of her father and was met by the <lb />
groom who had entered from -op- <lb />
with his best man. Her <lb />
dress trimmed <lb />
with real lace and pearl girdle, tulle <lb />
diamond ornaments, and she <lb />
carried a white prayer book. <lb />
The bride's maids were all dressed <lb />
in pink china silk, train, <lb />
effects, and wore pink mull hats <lb />
ribbon strings. The maids of <lb />
honor wore pink and white silk, em- <lb />
chiffon, white silk mull hats <lb />
The decorations were in pink and <lb />
white with intermingled twigs <lb />
holly and clusters of palms, lighted <lb />
candles being dispersed among the <lb />
latter. The dining room was ex- <lb />
the being the <lb />
same color as in the other rooms and <lb />
the tables arranged in the form of <lb />
double heart. <lb />
After the ceremony a reception <lb />
was held until o'clock during which <lb />
an lunch was served. <lb />
Among the many guests present at <lb />
the wedding we noticed Gov. and <lb />
Mrs. Jarvis, Misses King <lb />
and Forbes. Col. Harry Skinner, <lb />
Mayor F, G. Dr. Zeno Brown <lb />
and Deputy Sheriff R W. King, of <lb />
Col. K R. Jones, New <lb />
Col <lb />
Rev. J. N. H. Tarboro; <lb />
County Commissioner C. V. Newton <lb />
and J. S. Harris, Esq., of Falkland; <lb />
Ms. Timberlake, of Raleigh, Mrs. J. <lb />
H. of Hertford. <lb />
Among the large display hand- <lb />
some bridal presents were; <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Skinner, <lb />
steel engravings. <lb />
Miss Hume, royal Worcester jar <lb />
for palms. <lb />
Elias Carr, Jr., pair cut glass <lb />
water <lb />
Misses Tucker, bisque candelabra. <lb />
W. Grimes and L. Mahler, silver <lb />
fruit bowl aid cream <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. T, G- <lb />
set in case, <lb />
Miss Mary Phillips, cut glass <lb />
bod. <lb />
J. T. Bruce, case silver tea and <lb />
table spoons. <lb />
Dr. Zeno Brown, silver covered <lb />
dish. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. H. silver <lb />
fruit bowl, <lb />
S, S. gold crumb spoon. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Henley, silver <lb />
ladle. <lb />
Miss Mary Bunn, silver cheese <lb />
dish. <lb />
A. W. Taney, silver cake knife. <lb />
-Miss Green, gold berry spoon. <lb />
G. Lee. carving set in case. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. F. G. James, silver <lb />
cake basket. <lb />
Williams, silver ice far. <lb />
Thomas Badger, jar in India <lb />
J. B. Ferrell, royal Worcester <lb />
Mis Ella silver waiter. <lb />
It. K. Williams, carving set in case. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Blount, silver <lb />
fish fork and knife. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. K. R. Jones, silver <lb />
basket. <lb />
silver sugar spoon. <lb />
and Mrs, Alex. gold <lb />
and silver ladle. <lb />
Miss Kate Hale, <lb />
Miss Vaughan, gold and silver <lb />
fruit spoon. <lb />
J. F. Brown, silver cheese knife. <lb />
Miss Justice, royal Worcester card <lb />
receiver. <lb />
W. A,. silver knife- <lb />
Misses Giddens, silver berry <lb />
spoon. <lb />
Miss Lina Battle, souvenir orange <lb />
spoon. <lb />
F. W. tongs. <lb />
and Held, silver berry <lb />
Mr- and Mrs. Ward, silver waiter <lb />
Miss Gilliam, bisque dancing fig- <lb />
Henry Johnson, lamp. <lb />
Miss silver and bisque <lb />
salts. <lb />
Logan Howell. filigree basket. <lb />
Mis Knight, in <lb />
Miss Drake, pair panels. <lb />
C. C. j pitcher and waiter. <lb />
Gov. and at s. Jarvis, diamond <lb />
pin in silver. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. Dobbin, <lb />
Mr. and <lb />
Harry Skinner, set lunch <lb />
Immediately after two <lb />
wk where a com <lb />
, given <lb />
Wednesday night. Thursday morn- <lb />
left on an extended South- <lb />
tow. <lb />
Mr. Timberlake, the groom, is one <lb />
of the most deserving, successful <lb />
popular young business men of <lb />
Raleigh holding the position of book- <lb />
keeper of Raleigh National Bank, <lb />
and Miss Gotten, who is well known <lb />
and has a large circle of friends <lb />
and admirers, is one of the fairest <lb />
and most accomplished daughters of <lb />
the many which North Carolina <lb />
boasts. <lb />
GREETING <lb />
Marriage Licenses. <lb />
During the month of December the <lb />
Register of Deeds of Pi it county <lb />
issued marriage licenses to forty-two <lb />
couples, twenty and twenty <lb />
two <lb />
B. Roebuck and Mag- <lb />
L. Congleton, John W. Tripp and <lb />
A, Patrick, W. B. Nobly and <lb />
Tripp, Isaac Worthington and <lb />
Nannie Worthington, S. T. Carson <lb />
and Lucy J. Knight, Andrew ditch- <lb />
and Evans, A. P. <lb />
and E. Nobles, Edward L. <lb />
Worthington and Lula Cory, S. A <lb />
Gainer and Delia Andrews, Samuel <lb />
Tucker and Emma <lb />
Edward Buck and Mary Lillian <lb />
White, Robert and <lb />
Ann Langley, White and <lb />
Delilah Phillips. Duncan Willis and <lb />
Effie Tingle, Abe Ward and <lb />
Ward, W. L. and Nannie <lb />
Joyner, Samuel Gray and Carrie <lb />
Congleton, F. and Mag- <lb />
D. Moore, C. Alfred and Lucy <lb />
Barrow, J. R. Smith and Mary <lb />
Ed wards and Nervy <lb />
Barrett. Henry Edwards and Sarah <lb />
Jane Boyd. James and Sarah <lb />
Pei kins. Henry Wooten and Jen net <lb />
Vines, William Bond and Delia Al- <lb />
Warren Bell and Frances <lb />
Adams, James Best and Mary Haw- <lb />
kins, Louis Chapman Louisa <lb />
Gardner, West Edwards and Lucy <lb />
Mac and Ella How- <lb />
ard, Taylor and Puss <lb />
George Barrett and Easter ViMS, <lb />
John Gay and Emma Vines, <lb />
Moore Bynum, <lb />
say Bond Mary Moses <lb />
and Mary Edwards, Frank <lb />
Hines and Harriett Williams, Guss <lb />
and Maggie Page, William <lb />
and Battle Fleming, John <lb />
and Adams, Oliver <lb />
sad Ida Bell, Nettle <lb />
and <lb />
The man who prefers a city Weekly <lb />
to a home paper because got <lb />
more in reminds us the <lb />
who picked largest <lb />
pair of boots in box because they <lb />
cost no more than the smaller pair <lb />
that fitted <lb />
Incorporation Notice. <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA <lb />
Martin County. J <lb />
Before W. T. Crawford, Clerk Superior <lb />
Court. <lb />
Incorporation of The Dennis Simmons <lb />
Notice is hereby given that Dennis <lb />
D. Simmons of William- <lb />
and T. W. of <lb />
N. C. have this day filed articles of <lb />
agreement under their bands and seals <lb />
the undersigned for the e of <lb />
becoming Incorporated under the name <lb />
ard style of Dennis Simmons <lb />
Lumber and letters have <lb />
bean issued to them and their successors <lb />
under that name. The business to be eon- <lb />
ducted by said company Is the buying <lb />
and selling of and timber lands, <lb />
to got, cut. buy, sell, mill, transport and <lb />
manufacture timber and lumber into any <lb />
and all of its various products and gen- <lb />
to conduct carry on a lumber <lb />
business in all Us details, branches and <lb />
departments and for that purpose may <lb />
own and operate saw and other mills, <lb />
dry kilns an all machinery <lb />
proper for carrying on said <lb />
The office of said <lb />
shall at X. C. <lb />
and the period of incorporation thirty <lb />
years. The subscribers of the capital <lb />
stock of said company are Dennis Sim- <lb />
mons, D. D. Simmons and T. W. <lb />
man. The capital stock of said com- <lb />
is forty-live thousand dollars <lb />
ed into four hundred and fifty shares of <lb />
the par value of one hundred dollar each, <lb />
but said company may from time to <lb />
time increase said capital stock to any <lb />
not to exceed one hundred <lb />
thousand dollars. No personal or <lb />
liability tor the debts, tics <lb />
said company is imposed upon <lb />
said stockholders, successors or any <lb />
subsequent subscribers to the capital <lb />
stock of said company. ray hand <lb />
and <lb />
This mil day of <lb />
W. T, CRAWFORD. <lb />
Clerk Superior Court. <lb />
and School <lb />
The Spring Term of this School will be- <lb />
gin on Wednesday, Jan. 20th, 1882. <lb />
Tuition per term of <lb />
Primary, per session, s <lb />
Intermediate, per session, 10.00 <lb />
12.50 <lb />
Languages, each, 3.00 <lb />
School will be thorough in all of <lb />
its instruction, mild but firm In its <lb />
; having in view at all times <lb />
full of young men and boys <lb />
for active business life, or successful col- <lb />
courses. Board can be obtained <lb />
with the principal, or at other places in <lb />
to-vii at reasonable rates. One half of <lb />
tuition payable at the middle of <lb />
term, the remainder at Its close. For <lb />
further particulars see or address, <lb />
W. H. A. b., <lb />
e, N. C. Principal <lb />
TO THE PUBLIC <lb />
-----If you want to <lb />
Witty <lb />
in the purchase of a PIANO from <lb />
Ten to Fifteen Dollars <lb />
in the purchase of an Organ address <lb />
General Agent for North <lb />
who Is now handling goods direct from <lb />
the manufacturers, as <lb />
PIANOS, <lb />
for tone, workmanship and <lb />
and endorsed by nearly all the <lb />
musical journal In the States. <lb />
Made by Paul who is at this <lb />
time one of the best mechanics and In- <lb />
of the day. Thirteen new <lb />
patents on this high grade Plano- <lb />
Also the A EVANS UP. <lb />
RIGHT PIANO which has been sold by <lb />
him for the past six years In the eastern <lb />
part this State and up to this <lb />
given entire satisfaction The Upright <lb />
Piano just mentioned will be sold at from <lb />
Rosewood, Oak, <lb />
Walnut or Mahogany eases. <lb />
Also the CROWN PARLOR ORGAN <lb />
from toO to In solid r stout or Oak <lb />
cases. <lb />
Ton year experience In the music <lb />
business has enabled to handle <lb />
nothing stands good, he does <lb />
not j that he can sell any <lb />
Musical Instrument about par cent, <lb />
cheaper than agents are now <lb />
to an banks in Eastern Carolina. <lb />
TN ENTERING UPON THE <lb />
New Year we wish to thank <lb />
our many friends for their pat- <lb />
during the past year, <lb />
and trust for a liberal <lb />
in the future. We will <lb />
still sell at cost our entire stock <lb />
of winter goods. Messrs. Jas. <lb />
L. Little Co. having closed out <lb />
their business I have secured <lb />
the services of Mr. C. M. Jones <lb />
who will be glad to have all of <lb />
his friends call and see him. <lb />
Wishing you many happy <lb />
returns of the season, we are <lb />
Yours very truly, <lb />
C. T. M FORD, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
WE WILL <lb />
At Cost for the next <lb />
DAYS <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
BROWN BROS. <lb />
Agents for New Home Sewing <lb />
Machines. <lb />
Depository for American Bible <lb />
Society. <lb />
w. M. <lb />
W. <lb />
MOORE PARKER, <lb />
FOR. <lb />
Smith's Improved Hand Pump, <lb />
Burglar Window and Door <lb />
Union Central Life Insurance Company, Cornish Celebrated <lb />
Pianos and Organs. <lb />
We will pleasure in public in of lines, <lb />
MOORE PARKER. <lb />
Office in corner under Opera House N. <lb />
TOW <lb />
----by <lb />
Sept. 27th. 1800. <lb />
Mess. Boykin. Carmer Co., Mil <lb />
Dear Replying to yours of a few <lb />
would that have used <lb />
for yearn, and <lb />
more clear money during those years <lb />
than any other since I have been fanning, <lb />
and have done nothing else. <lb />
Yours truly, <lb />
A. <lb />
Oct. 7th, 1889. <lb />
Mess. Md. <lb />
Having bought and used <lb />
one car load of your <lb />
I can cheerfully recommend it as one of <lb />
he finest fertilizers on the market, at <lb />
a me time It is the cheapest and appears <lb />
especially adapted to the soil cf Middle <lb />
Florida. It forces tho crops to early <lb />
maturity and largely increases the yield, <lb />
I am confident that it permanently <lb />
improves the land. I expect to use <lb />
three ear-loads the coming season. <lb />
Very truly yours, <lb />
ROBERTS. <lb />
Moor's Mill. Ga. Jan. <lb />
Boykin, Carmer A Co., <lb />
Dear Sirs I used two formulas of <lb />
last season <lb />
Cotton and Corn. I gathered near <lb />
a bale of Cotton to the acre. I measured <lb />
one acre of Corn land and gathered <lb />
bushels of Corn by weight off the acre. <lb />
I am well pleased with your <lb />
J. J. <lb />
N. C, 31st, <lb />
Mr. S. O. Middleton, <lb />
Dear Sir The <lb />
bought of you In tho Spring was Hit best <lb />
I ever used. I used 11-2 formulas on <lb />
acres and the Cotton was the best I <lb />
have ever mode. I have used <lb />
brands of guano hut none equal this. <lb />
Yours truly, <lb />
D. D. <lb />
BOYKIN, Md <lb />
1883. <lb />
J. A. ANDREWS, <lb />
-At the same old stand where he will continue to keep a full line of- <lb />
MEAT AND <lb />
for <lb />
G. E. <lb />
-DEALER IN-<lb />
w. o.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017529_tn_0006" n="6" />
                <p>
N. Sept M. <lb />
H. <lb />
have been one of <lb />
for years upon a <lb />
has been s put- <lb />
REFLECTOR. <lb />
N. C <lb />
THE COUNTY. <lb />
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS IN <lb />
SESSION. <lb />
Elect <lb />
valid woo u .- <lb />
trouble a <lb />
have In <lb />
the doctors <lb />
to Eire him relief, and I <lb />
satisfied tint but for <lb />
lost I have never ran It to <lb />
his o- to sweat I <lb />
would not be V for times Its <lb />
cost. <lb />
Mr. h cf Ra- <lb />
hank. Winston, and of <lb />
men of t h or th. <lb />
Tor all Information <lb />
ATLANTIC CO., <lb />
No. Hew d. c, <lb />
on C. <lb />
D. D. HASKETT <lb />
Another baa passed and I Bin here <lb />
with the same The New Lee <lb />
New Patron, Piedmont, <lb />
and Seminole, and all of <lb />
these are pronounced nil <lb />
right. Also a full <lb />
line of Heating <lb />
Stoves, <lb />
Stove Pipe, Tinware. <lb />
Ate., Ac. <lb />
Doors, Sash. Blinds. Locks, Butts, <lb />
Nails, Axes. Glass and <lb />
Putty, Paints and Oils, <lb />
for Brown's Cotton <lb />
Agent for Hall's <lb />
Safe A Lock <lb />
Safes. Agent <lb />
for The <lb />
American Sewing Machine. <lb />
It will be to your interest to examine <lb />
my before purchasing. <lb />
D. D. HASKETT. <lb />
GREENVILLE.<lb />
Please Read it. <lb />
E T <lb />
CD <lb />
et- <lb />
1-s <lb />
HE TROUBLE is <lb />
question is, WHAT <lb />
SHALL WE DO The <lb />
country is full of La- <lb />
Grippe in an <lb />
form. Now what <lb />
will cure It We <lb />
with authority <lb />
and have positive <lb />
proof furnished us of <lb />
hundreds of cases <lb />
cured right here at our <lb />
doors, among our best <lb />
known people, <lb />
have been quickly and <lb />
permanently cured by <lb />
the use of <lb />
Royal <lb />
If taken in doses of <lb />
Two Teaspoonful in <lb />
Half Glass Water, as <lb />
hot as can be taken <lb />
every hour we <lb />
tee a cure. It is as <lb />
pleasant to take as <lb />
lemonade. Our <lb />
as to the above <lb />
which we will <lb />
are unquestionable. <lb />
For sale by all <lb />
druggists. Try it. <lb />
King's Royal Co., <lb />
ATLANTA, GEORGIA. <lb />
Tie Tar Transportation Company<lb />
ALFRED Forbes, Greenville, <lb />
J. B. Cherry, <lb />
J. S. Congleton, Greenville, <lb />
N. M. Tarboro, Gen <lb />
Capt. B. P. Jokes, Washington, Gen Ag <lb />
The People's Line for travel on <lb />
River. <lb />
The Steamer Greenville is the finest <lb />
am quickest boat on -the river. <lb />
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb />
and painted. <lb />
Fitted up specially for the comfort, c <lb />
and convenience of Ladies. <lb />
POLITE ATTENTIVE OFFICERS <lb />
A first-class Table furnished with th <lb />
beat the market affords. <lb />
A trip on the Steamer Greenville is <lb />
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb />
Leaves Washington Monday, <lb />
Friday at o'clock, a. m. <lb />
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday <lb />
and Saturday at o'clock, a. M. <lb />
Freights received daily and through <lb />
Lading given to all points. <lb />
F. Ural, J. t. CHERRY, <lb />
Washington N. C. Greenville. N. O <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
TRADE <lb />
This Preparation has been in use over <lb />
fifty years, and wherever known has <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb />
by the leading physicians all over <lb />
the coos try, and has effected cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with attention of <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment is of <lb />
. standing and high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained is owing entirely <lb />
to Its own efficacy, as bat little effort has <lb />
ever been made to bring It before the <lb />
One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
s sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
box Ire. usual <lb />
discount to Druggists. All Cash Orders <lb />
promptly attended to. Address all or- <lb />
and to <lb />
T. F. <lb />
Sole Mar. and Proprietor, <lb />
Greenville. N. C. <lb />
Anita <lb />
bast salvo in the world for cuts, <lb />
raises, tores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever. <lb />
chapped hands, <lb />
J, all and <lb />
at M rewired. It <lb />
J to priest <lb />
or money refunded. Price per <lb />
for isle y U <lb />
They Dispatch a Large Amount of <lb />
in a Single Day. <lb />
Greenville, N. C, January <lb />
The Board of Commissioners of <lb />
Pitt County met this day, present <lb />
C- Dawson, chairman, S- A. Gainer, <lb />
T. E. Keel, Leonidas Fleming and <lb />
C-V. Newton. Minutes of last <lb />
meeting read and approved- <lb />
Orders for paupers were issued <lb />
as <lb />
John Stocks Winifred <lb />
Margaret Bryan <lb />
James Masters H. D- Smith <lb />
Alex Harris Daniel <lb />
Webster Martha Nelson <lb />
Lydia Bryan Jacob <lb />
horn Asa Knox Susan <lb />
Briley William <lb />
Susan Norris Nancy Moore <lb />
Lucinda Smith Pattie <lb />
Lance Winnie Fleming <lb />
Patsy Harriet <lb />
Henry Harris <lb />
Adams <lb />
General were issued as <lb />
H. C Hemby J. D. Gas <lb />
kins J. S. Boss C Kin- <lb />
James Bright Irvin <lb />
Harris Frank Darden <lb />
G T. Tyson T B. Taylor <lb />
John Flanagan H G. <lb />
Connor R. J. Chapman <lb />
Peter Forbes S. T. Car- <lb />
son H- F- Keel H. F. <lb />
Heel Macon Moore W. <lb />
John Avery <lb />
Dr. B. T. Cox W. B- <lb />
Burnett Wm. Staten B. <lb />
S. Sheppard and D. C- Moore <lb />
J. J. Forbes B- H. <lb />
D. H. James C <lb />
son C V. New- <lb />
ton S- A. Gainer Leonidas <lb />
Fleming D. J. Whichard <lb />
n t J. A. K. Tucker J- <lb />
ill J A. K. Tucker J. A- K. Tuck- <lb />
Stock Law territory of <lb />
and Swift Creek <lb />
Theo Bland A. P. Pittman <lb />
C D. J. Which- <lb />
ard <lb />
Greenville Stock Law territory, <lb />
C. H. Johnson <lb />
The following persons were <lb />
granted license to retail liquor for <lb />
six months from the first day of <lb />
January <lb />
Staton, J. S. <lb />
Powell. <lb />
F- Savage, AB- <lb />
Bro. <lb />
Hooker, H. <lb />
C. Edwards, W. H. Smith, J. J. <lb />
Stokes, J. A. Brady, Jesse Baker <lb />
Co. <lb />
Parkers X. Fleming- <lb />
R. Davenport, J. T. <lb />
A. Bland, S- W. <lb />
Brooks, C. C Bland, E. Lang, W. <lb />
B. Hellen. <lb />
S- Harris, W. S. <lb />
Cobb Store-C. D. Smith. <lb />
O. Proctor <lb />
Bro. <lb />
N. Dudley. <lb />
N. Shelton, J. W. <lb />
Moore. <lb />
TeeL <lb />
Oscar Hooker was granted U- <lb />
to run billiard tables in <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
The following were exempted <lb />
from paying poll tax for S- <lb />
C Whichard, A Martin, W. H. <lb />
Harriss, R L. Moore, S- F- <lb />
John Elks, Bryan Buck, Guilford <lb />
Stokes, Wm. Manning, W. W. Col- <lb />
ville. <lb />
The following listed their taxes <lb />
for <lb />
Greenville <lb />
son, Mary Lucas. W- R- Evans and <lb />
L. N. C. Nichols. <lb />
Sallie <lb />
Perkins for 1890 and 1891. <lb />
son, Titus Jolly, Aaron Hines. <lb />
Bethel <lb />
J. <lb />
Slaughter. <lb />
Swift Creek <lb />
River Transportation Company <lb />
for 1889, 1890 and 1891- <lb />
J. 8- L- Ward, County Surveyor, <lb />
presented his official bond which <lb />
was approved and ordered re- <lb />
corded. <lb />
W. Harrington, Constable of <lb />
Greenville township, presented his <lb />
official bond which was approved <lb />
and ordered recorded. <lb />
L. A. Mayo, agent for H. C <lb />
Edwards and wife petitioned the <lb />
Board to reduce the number of <lb />
acres of land listed to them on the <lb />
tax list of township fox <lb />
year 1891 from acre-, to <lb />
acres and the valuation o <lb />
which was granted. <lb />
W. H. petitioned the <lb />
Board to release him from paying <lb />
tax on acres of land <lb />
which is charged to him on <lb />
list which, the same owned <lb />
by W. K. and charged <lb />
to W. K- who pay <lb />
on the same. The was <lb />
MARK. <lb />
T. M. Whichard complained that <lb />
he was changed on tax <lb />
list of township with <lb />
12,00 income tax and to be <lb />
released from the payment of the <lb />
same, which was grant-id. <lb />
P. H. Kittrell complained that <lb />
he is incorrectly charged on the <lb />
tax list of township for <lb />
for 1891 with as net income <lb />
tax and having paid tax on the <lb />
same petition that it be refunded, <lb />
which was granted. <lb />
petitioned <lb />
the Board to be released from an <lb />
income tax of four hundred <lb />
listed against him on the tax <lb />
township for <lb />
1891 as he did not understand <lb />
what an income tax was, which <lb />
was granted. <lb />
Joel A Manning petitioned the <lb />
Board to be released from paying <lb />
tax on wrongfully charged <lb />
against him on the tax list of Con- <lb />
township for 1891, granted. <lb />
W. R Nobles petitioned the <lb />
Board to release him from the <lb />
payment of an income tax of <lb />
charged against him by mistake on <lb />
the tax list of township <lb />
for 1891, granted. <lb />
R. E Turnage made complaint <lb />
that he is charged on the tax list <lb />
of township for 1891 <lb />
with net income from pay- <lb />
on which he petitioned to be <lb />
released, granted. <lb />
G. W. petitioned to be re- <lb />
leased from payment of tax on <lb />
net income which he improperly <lb />
listed in for <lb />
1891, granted. <lb />
J. Tripp petitioned to be re- <lb />
leased from the payment of <lb />
income tax charged against him <lb />
on the tax list of Greenville town- <lb />
ship for 1891, <lb />
W- L. Stocks petitioned to be <lb />
released payment of in- <lb />
come tax charged against him <lb />
township for 1891, <lb />
granted. <lb />
J. B. Tyson petitioned to be re- <lb />
leased from payment of tax on <lb />
income wrongfully charged <lb />
against him on the tax list of <lb />
township for 1891, <lb />
granted. <lb />
Seth Tyson petitioned to be re- <lb />
leased from payment of tax on <lb />
income charged <lb />
against him on the tax list of <lb />
township for 1891, <lb />
granted. <lb />
Freeman Vines petitioned to be <lb />
released from payment of tax on <lb />
income incorrectly charged <lb />
against him in Farmville township <lb />
for 1891, granted. <lb />
A petition for a new public road <lb />
leading from the Greenville and <lb />
Black Jack road near W. F. <lb />
and run to Kinston road near Fred <lb />
Cox's mill over the lands of John <lb />
W. F. Guilford <lb />
Page, and <lb />
Alfred Forbes, signed by John <lb />
and others, was read, <lb />
and it appearing to the Board that <lb />
the same had been legally <lb />
order the Sheriff to summon <lb />
a jury and lay out the road in ac- <lb />
with said petition. <lb />
J. A. K. Tucker, Sheriff, made <lb />
report laid out <lb />
and established a public road be- <lb />
at a Bethel <lb />
road at the John S. Smith place <lb />
and to the and <lb />
Greenville road near Germain <lb />
Moore farm on the <lb />
south side of Creek, in <lb />
accordance with an order passed <lb />
by the Board at the December <lb />
meeting. <lb />
The Sheriff also made report <lb />
showing that he had laid out and <lb />
established a public road from the <lb />
Evans on the mill road in a <lb />
direction via Ballard's <lb />
bridge through the lands of Bryan <lb />
Grimes, L. A. Arnold, P. W. Ar- <lb />
W. H. Arnold, Ed. Campbell, <lb />
John Campbell, Henry Campbell <lb />
and J. O. Proctor Bro to a point <lb />
on Black Jack and Boyd's Ferry <lb />
road near Grimesland. in accord- <lb />
with an order passed by the <lb />
Board at September meeting. <lb />
The Sheriff also made report <lb />
showing that he had laid out and <lb />
established n public road over the <lb />
lands of S- C Whichard, J. L. <lb />
B. D. Beach, Elizabeth <lb />
Moore, Asa Bullock, Moore, <lb />
W. B. Roebuck, John H. <lb />
J. E- Davenport, W. T. Keel and <lb />
B. A. Davenport from the Green- <lb />
ville and Hamilton road at 8- C <lb />
to the Greenville and <lb />
Washington road, in accordance <lb />
with an order issued by the Board <lb />
at December meeting. <lb />
The Sheriff also made report <lb />
showing that he had laid out and <lb />
established a public road from the <lb />
Grimes mill road to what is known <lb />
as the Evans place, running in a <lb />
southerly direction to the <lb />
Beaufort county line near Boyd <lb />
bridge, through the lands of Mrs- <lb />
Bryan Grimes, John Elks, E- M. <lb />
Dixon, J. J. Dixon and Matthew <lb />
Hodges, in accordance with order <lb />
issued by the Board. <lb />
The Sheriff also made report <lb />
shoving that he had laid and <lb />
established a public road <lb />
at the New road near <lb />
W. W. in town- <lb />
ship and going through the lands <lb />
O. Moore, G. W. <lb />
Foreman and <lb />
and Mrs <lb />
Grimes to Washington near <lb />
. i <lb />
in accordance <lb />
with order issued by the Board <lb />
Ordered by the Board that the <lb />
portion of the public road in Caro- <lb />
township prayed to be <lb />
in the petition for the new <lb />
road which was granted Dec, 7th, <lb />
be discontinued and the Board of <lb />
Supervisors be notified of the same- <lb />
Ordered that B H. <lb />
keeper of Greenville be <lb />
discharged and he be notified of <lb />
the same. <lb />
Ordered that C be <lb />
pointed keeper of Greenville <lb />
bridge at a salary of m nth <lb />
and that he be notified to take <lb />
charge at once- <lb />
Ordered that J. J. of <lb />
township, be changed <lb />
with double poll tax for 1891. <lb />
The committee appointed at the <lb />
last meeting of the Board to take <lb />
consideration the building of <lb />
the dam at the foot of the bridge <lb />
on the north side of Tar river and <lb />
to secure a permanent right of way <lb />
through the land as prayed for in <lb />
the petition made the following <lb />
The undesigned comprising the <lb />
committee appointed by your body <lb />
to obtain from B. J. a <lb />
right of way for the erection of a <lb />
dam or driveway across his land <lb />
from the foot of the bridge across <lb />
Tar river to the main public road <lb />
at a point north of his tenant <lb />
houses near a walnut tree, beg <lb />
leave to report that upon con- <lb />
with Mr. Wilson he <lb />
agrees to convey to the county a <lb />
sufficient strip of land between <lb />
said points with the privilege of <lb />
the county use for the <lb />
and repair of said way, all <lb />
necessary dirt that they may de <lb />
sire said dirt to be taken from the <lb />
land lying between said road and <lb />
the Wilmington Weldon R. R, <lb />
for the sum of one hundred <lb />
provided that the county <lb />
shall remove his fence on the west <lb />
side of said dam or and <lb />
erect the same the east side <lb />
there of. <lb />
Leonid as <lb />
The Mew Yorkers. <lb />
CLEVELAND. <lb />
The Evening World. <lb />
calls attention to the fact that on <lb />
the first of the year the New York <lb />
rid struck a balance sheet on <lb />
Mr. Cleveland's record for 1891. <lb />
It was a truthful balance, and re- <lb />
in bold relief the superior <lb />
wisdom and wonderful acumen of <lb />
Mr- Cleveland as a statesman, <lb />
unique in his refusal to be guided <lb />
by the politician's rules, and his <lb />
incapacity to elevate or strengthen <lb />
his position at the expense of the <lb />
public good j firm in his <lb />
and fearless in expressing <lb />
them, without a thought of the <lb />
consequences to himself. <lb />
DAVID B. HILL. <lb />
The Washington Post <lb />
Governor Hill; may <lb />
a born leader of men, nor a mag- <lb />
net to sway the multitude, nor a <lb />
statesman able to more than <lb />
great public questions, but as <lb />
a setter of pins in his own inter- <lb />
est and general disturber of the <lb />
peace of the Republican family, he <lb />
beats <lb />
a- v. . <lb />
fl -i <lb />
F AIM <lb />
Whichard, <lb />
O. <lb />
A I <lb />
and <lb />
. R. <lb />
branches Condensed <lb />
S SOUTH. <lb />
No No H, No <lb />
Jan. 4th. dally TaM Mail, dally <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
Weldon 12,20 pin pm C <lb />
Ar <lb />
I ULCERS. SALT <lb />
IX RHEUM, ECZEMA, <lb />
el malignant SKIN ERUPTION, be- <lb />
being efficacious In toning spike <lb />
and the constitution, <lb />
when Impaired from any cause. Ha <lb />
almost supernatural healing properties <lb />
lustily us Is guaranteeing a cure, if <lb />
directions are <lb />
SENT Bi, <lb />
BALM CO., Atlanta. Ga. <lb />
says of j <lb />
not be j <lb />
1323 <lb />
S. A. Gainer, V-Com. <lb />
J. R. Move. <lb />
It appearing to the Board from <lb />
the report of the committee that <lb />
B. J. Wilson has agreed to sell to <lb />
the county a right-of-way for the <lb />
construction of a dam for a road- <lb />
way from the foot of the bridge <lb />
across Tar river to the main pub- <lb />
road at a point north of his <lb />
tenant house near a walnut tree, <lb />
upon the following The <lb />
count to pay to said B. J. Wilson <lb />
mortgagor, the sum of fifty <lb />
and to P- Elliott, <lb />
mortgagee, a like sum of fifty <lb />
and to remove his fence from <lb />
the west side and erect the same <lb />
in good condition on the east side <lb />
of the proposed new road, and for <lb />
in consideration of the said one <lb />
hundred dollars and erection of <lb />
said fence, the said Wilson and <lb />
Elliott agree to execute to the <lb />
county a deed for said right-of-way <lb />
of sufficient width, with the <lb />
of digging and using <lb />
dirt on the west side of said <lb />
to make and keep in <lb />
repair said dam or embankment <lb />
as the county-from time to time <lb />
may close to erect and main- <lb />
on said right-of-way provided, <lb />
that this license to take and use <lb />
dirt shall not extend to any land <lb />
of the It further <lb />
appearing that the preparation is <lb />
reasonable and just, it is ordered <lb />
that the Attorney of the Board <lb />
prepare and have executed the <lb />
necessary papers securing to the <lb />
count the privileges aforesaid. <lb />
And that upon the execution of the <lb />
papers and their acceptance by <lb />
the Attorney of the Board the <lb />
treasurer of the county shall pay <lb />
to the persons herein before named <lb />
the amounts herein before <lb />
A petition was presented by <lb />
sixty-two citizens asking for a free <lb />
ferry across Boyd's Ferry, and a <lb />
counter petition to the above sign- <lb />
ed by citizens was also <lb />
and both were laid over <lb />
until some future meeting. <lb />
We have a speedy and positive cure <lb />
for catarrh, canker mouth <lb />
and headache, in CATARRH <lb />
REMEDY. A nasal free with <lb />
each bottle. Use it If you desire health <lb />
sweet breath. Price Sold at <lb />
Store. <lb />
Two New Sizes of Postal Cards. <lb />
The Department has <lb />
commenced to issue the larger <lb />
two new sizes of postal <lb />
cards. The small card is same <lb />
width as the one now in use, but <lb />
about one-third of an inch shorter. <lb />
Tho largo card is fully an inch <lb />
longer and three-fourths of <lb />
an inch wider than the present <lb />
card. It is said by the depart- <lb />
that the small card is of much <lb />
finer quality than the old card. It <lb />
is of a light gray color, very strong <lb />
and hard to tear. The largo card <lb />
is of commercial yellow color and <lb />
said to be of excellent quality. <lb />
The stamp bears the likeness of <lb />
General Grant, and the engraving <lb />
is the work of the bureau of en- <lb />
graving and printing. All three <lb />
sizes of cards will be issued, and <lb />
the people will take whichever <lb />
they prefer. The quality of the <lb />
new card is said to be much better <lb />
than the old one, and be- <lb />
enlarge the facilities for <lb />
correspondence and for <lb />
It is expected that they will <lb />
prove a great accommodation to <lb />
the public. <lb />
Oil, Win a Cough- <lb />
Will yon heed the warning. The <lb />
perhaps of the sure of that <lb />
more terrible disease Consumption. Ask <lb />
yourselves if you can afford for the sake <lb />
of saving to run the risk and do <lb />
nothing for it. We know from <lb />
that Cure will cure your <lb />
cough. It never fails. This explains <lb />
why more than a Million Bottles were <lb />
sold the past year. It relieves croup and <lb />
whooping cough at once. Mothers, do <lb />
not be without it. For lame back, side <lb />
or chest use Porous Plaster. <lb />
Sold at Drug Store. <lb />
The hat and cap makers of <lb />
ton add their voice to the cry for <lb />
restricted immigration. They are <lb />
themselves immigrants, and most <lb />
of them have been but a short <lb />
time in this country, but they have <lb />
been here long enough to see <lb />
how an unchecked of <lb />
graded foreign labor hurts our <lb />
Sun. <lb />
Tor Wane and <lb />
Use only Abbott's East Indian Corn <lb />
Paint. <lb />
delicious Is the winning <lb />
Of kiss, at lore's <lb />
slogs poet, and his sentiment l true <lb />
with one possible exception. If either <lb />
has the catarrh, even love's kiss <lb />
Ms its sweetness. Dr. Sage's Catarrh <lb />
Remedy Is a sure cure for th is repulsive <lb />
By mild, <lb />
and healing <lb />
it cares worst cases. <lb />
reward offered, for b able aim. <lb />
A Investment. <lb />
Ia one winch Is guaranteed to <lb />
you satisfactory results, or in case of fail- <lb />
a return of purchase price. On this <lb />
plan you can buy from cur <lb />
Druggist a bottle Dr. King's <lb />
New Discovery for Consumption. It is <lb />
guaranteed to bring you relief in every <lb />
case, when used for any affection of <lb />
Throat, Lungs or Chest, such as Con- <lb />
of Longs, Bron- <lb />
Asthma. Croup, <lb />
etc., etc It is pleasant and agreeable to <lb />
taste, perfectly safe, and can always be <lb />
depended upon. <lb />
Trial bottles free at John L. <lb />
Drugstore. <lb />
A baker in Philadelphia sends a <lb />
stout healthy man about the streets <lb />
with a large placard announcing <lb />
that he eats the bread from that <lb />
baker's shop. It has proved a <lb />
advertisement. How would <lb />
it do to label drunkards with <lb />
telling where they got their <lb />
We arc sure who <lb />
make drunkards would not relish <lb />
having the samples of their work <lb />
labeled. The architect puts his <lb />
name on the house, the artist upon <lb />
the picture or statue, the factory <lb />
upon the piano, and why not have <lb />
the drunkard maker's name put <lb />
on his job Ex. <lb />
and Liver <lb />
Is it not worth the small price of <lb />
to free yourself of every symptom of <lb />
these distressing complaints, If you think <lb />
so call at our and get a bottle of <lb />
Shiloh's every bottle has a <lb />
printed guarantee on It, use <lb />
and it dots yon no good it will cost <lb />
yon nothing. Bold at Wooten's Ding <lb />
Store. <lb />
The Southern figured <lb />
more unfavorably in the of <lb />
mercantile failures during <lb />
just ended, than any other geog- <lb />
section of the country. <lb />
The reason of this is due no <lb />
in large part, to the low price ob- <lb />
for the cotton crop in 1890 <lb />
and 1891, although <lb />
may have also contributed to <lb />
the result- Cotton has about <lb />
reached the point when it is not <lb />
profitable to raise it, <lb />
of which probabilities <lb />
are that its production will be cur <lb />
tailed somewhat during the pres- <lb />
Sun. <lb />
positive cures of <lb />
Rheumatism, Blood <lb />
P. P P. wakes <lb />
stages of Rheums <lb />
Poison. Scrofula, Old Sores, <lb />
Malaria, and Female Complaints, P. P <lb />
P Is s powerful an excellent <lb />
building up system rapidly. <lb />
For Old Sores, Skin <lb />
Ulcers and Syphilis, use only P. P. <lb />
P., and get well and enjoy the blessing <lb />
only to be derived from the use of P. P, <lb />
P. Prickly Ash, Poke Hoot and <lb />
Potassium. <lb />
To Young <lb />
Mothers <lb />
CURES SYPHILIS <lb />
Mil prescribe It <lb />
all laws H <lb />
tor the cure f <lb />
Cures scrofula. <lb />
HAVE several d parcels of real <lb />
estate for sale. Look over the list <lb />
I below and cull on or write them. <lb />
IA lot on Third street below Co- <lb />
In the town of Greenville, <lb />
good two-story house with four rooms <lb />
kitchen and smoke house convenient <lb />
large stables on the premises, <lb />
Two good building lots in Skinner- <lb />
desirable <lb />
location. <lb />
A lot on between <lb />
. Front and Second, has nice house of I <lb />
rooms, good well of water, large gar-1 <lb />
den plot and stable. I <lb />
A half acre lot In <lb />
large single story house <lb />
of G rooms, cook and dining rooms at- <lb />
all necessary nut buildings and <lb />
stables, water <lb />
A fine farm containing acres. <lb />
-i. miles from Greenville on Mt. <lb />
P Basset road, has gin house, stables, <lb />
barns, two room tenant houses; ah <lb />
acres cleared, balance well wooded, <lb />
good water. This laud Is excellent for <lb />
the cultivation of line tobacco. <lb />
farm lying on branch of the <lb />
v. railroad about half way be- <lb />
tween Grifton and Kinston and within i <lb />
mile of a new depot, contains acres. <lb />
cleared and balance heavily timbered <lb />
pine, oak, hickory. and cypress; <lb />
v Ta <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Ar Sc ma <lb />
Ar <lb />
Warsaw <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilmington <lb />
1258 am <lb />
pm am <lb />
o am <lb />
GOING NORTH <lb />
Wilmington <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Warsaw <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
No No No <lb />
dally dally daily <lb />
ex San. <lb />
pm <lb />
s. <lb />
Sow, <lb />
h. <lb />
One <lb />
W.<lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ai Rocky Mount l <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro -58 am <lb />
Ar Weldon pm pm <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Train No. will not Jan. 7th. <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Halifax 4.22 M. arrives Scot <lb />
land Neck at 6.16 P. M., Greenville 6.53 <lb />
P. M. Kinston p. m. Returning, <lb />
leaves Kinston a. m., Greenville <lb />
8.2 a. Arriving Halifax a. <lb />
Weldon a. m. daily Sun- <lb />
Local freight train leaves <lb />
10.15 a. as., Trivia Scotland Neck 1.05 <lb />
has tenant houses; railroad Greenville 6.0 p. <lb />
nearly through of this farm. The T-40 p. m. Returning leave Kinston at <lb />
land has clay subsoil with sandy loam. arriving Greenville 9.55 <lb />
is in good state of cultivation and highly a., Scotland Neck 8.90 p. Weldon <lb />
improved; is line trucking land. P- m- <lb />
A farm miles from Greenville on via <lb />
I. Kinston road known as the Jackson <lb />
contains acres, cleared; has p M, <lb />
. . <lb />
serial Scald -d, etc., <lb />
P. h <lb />
PP. P. <lb />
SB the <lb />
en <lb />
sire I<lb />
CURES <lb />
MARIA <lb />
sad blood <lb />
of P. P. f. A-fa, puke Root <lb />
P. P. P. <lb />
Proprietors, <lb />
Druggists, Block, VANS AH, <lb />
For sale at I Wooten's Drug Store <lb />
PAIN. <lb />
MAN c-a <lb />
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb />
or Shaving, Cutting Dressing Hail <lb />
AT THE GLASS FRONT <lb />
the Opera House, at which place <lb />
have recently located, and where I have <lb />
everything in my Hue <lb />
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb />
TO MAKE A <lb />
MODEL BARBER SHOP <lb />
all the improved appliances; <lb />
comfortable chairs. <lb />
Razors sharpened at reasonable <lb />
for work outside of my shoo <lb />
promptly executed. Very respectfully, <lb />
OR MILK <lb />
GRATEFUL COMFORTING. <lb />
COCOA <lb />
all necessary <lb />
10- <lb />
8- <lb />
Williamston, N C, P M, P M. <lb />
Plymouth 8.80 p. m., p. m- <lb />
leaves Plymouth daily <lb />
Sunday 0.00 a. in., 0.00 a. rot <lb />
Williamston, C, 7.30 a m, 9.58 am. <lb />
arrive Tarboro, N C, A <lb />
Train on Midland S C Branch leave <lb />
Goldsboro except Sunday, A M <lb />
N C, a M. Re <lb />
good dwelling house and <lb />
out buildings. This is a <lb />
limn, <lb />
A house and lot in Greenville on <lb />
corner near J, B. Cherry and W. S. <lb />
Pawls, now occupied by the family of <lb />
the late W. A. Stocks, house contains <lb />
rooms, kitchen convenient, is convenient <lb />
half a from turning leaves X C <lb />
street of the town. Possession arriVe H SO AM <lb />
can be 1st. Tran on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky <lb />
A good building lot on at U P M, arrive Nashville o <lb />
and Fourth p Hope P M. Returning <lb />
leaves Spring Hope. A M, Nashville <lb />
8.35 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
for daily, Sunday, i. <lb />
and A M leave <lb />
ton at A M, and P. M. con <lb />
at Warsaw with Nos. and <lb />
Southbound on Wilson A <lb />
Branch is No. Northbound is <lb />
No. except Sunday. <lb />
Trains No. South and North will <lb />
stop only at Rocky Mount, Wilson, <lb />
Goldsboro and Magnolia <lb />
Train No. makes close connection a <lb />
Weldon for all North daily. Al <lb />
--ail via and daily except Sun <lb />
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb />
daily except Sunday with Norfolk A <lb />
Carolina railroad for Norfolk and all <lb />
points via Norfolk. <lb />
DIVINE, <lb />
General Slip's. <lb />
J R. Transportation <lb />
street, between Third <lb />
streets, splendid location. <lb />
The house and lot on Pitt <lb />
street near Dickerson Avenue, <lb />
good house of rooms, large lot with <lb />
stables and out buildings. <lb />
house and . on <lb />
Pitt attest, adjoining the lot of B. <lb />
S. Sheppard and the lot described in No. <lb />
comfortable one-story dwelling <lb />
of four rooms, dining and cook <lb />
plenty room for garden. <lb />
Terms on any of the above property <lb />
can be had on application to <lb />
WHICHARD. <lb />
TOWARDS A <lb />
Printers and Binders <lb />
R. -A-L . N. O <lb />
1-2 La TINS ONLY. <lb />
DEAF <lb />
A HEAD NOISES <lb />
Whimpers heard. Con <lb />
fell, b, r. III SHU, <lb />
V-. t -r. <lb />
How Lost I How Regained I <lb />
A new and only <lb />
ESSAY on and <lb />
KNOW THYSELF. <lb />
Or <lb />
Medal PRIZE ESSAY on<lb />
EXHAUSTED VITALITY, <lb />
MATURE and all DISEASE <lb />
WEAKNESSES of MAN. pages, doth, <lb />
rat; prescriptions. Only <lb />
sealed. <lb />
with SEND <lb />
of the Press and H <lb />
testimonials of cured. BUS. <lb />
No. <lb />
Medical baa <lb />
but no equal. <lb />
of or la a <lb />
more than gold. H now, <lb />
every WEAK and NERVOUS man, learn <lb />
be STRONG. <lb />
PARKER'S <lb />
HAIR BALSAM <lb />
the<lb />
. <lb />
to its Color. <lb />
Cu-3 scalp hair <lb />
CONSUMPTIVE <lb />
II cur the c <lb />
The <lb />
MOT or CO., . Y. <lb />
her <lb />
. <lb />
We have the largest and most complete <lb />
of kind to be found in <lb />
the State, and solicit orders for all classes <lb />
Of Commercial, Rail- <lb />
road or School Print- <lb />
or Binding. <lb />
WEDDING STATIONERY READY <lb />
FOR PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb />
BLANKS FOR MAGISTRATES AND <lb />
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb />
us your orders. <lb />
EDWARDS <lb />
PRINTER AND BINDERS. <lb />
RALEIGH. N. C. <lb />
Greenville Iron Works, <lb />
A. B. Prop. <lb />
Saw Mills, Ac. repaired. <lb />
Iron and Brass made to <lb />
Pipe and Pipe Fittings In <lb />
town. Be sure your worK to <lb />
A. B. <lb />
depot Greenville, N O, <lb />
OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb />
Has Moved to next Door Court House <lb />
CONTINUE MANUFACTURE OP <lb />
My Factory Is well equipped with the Mechanic, put up nothing <lb />
hut FIRST-CLASS WORK. We keep up with the time improved styles <lb />
Best material used in all work. All styles of Spring arc you can <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Raw, Horn, King <lb />
Also keep on hand a lull of ready suite <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb />
he year round, which we will sell as as the lowest. <lb />
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb />
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past favors we hope <lb />
merit a continuance of the <lb />
J. I, SUGG. <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE AUNT. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
SUGG JAMES OLD STAND <lb />
All kinds of placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At current rates. <lb />
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE <lb />
WHY <lb />
Potatoes. Pus, <lb />
and for <lb />
on A B C <lb />
plant. . <lb />
am <lb />
THE OF C <lb />
to the buyer of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following goo <lb />
not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be no <lb />
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING, GEN <lb />
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and GAPS, BOOTS SHOES, LA <lb />
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS. FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING <lb />
DOOR., WINDOW'S, SASH and QUEENS <lb />
WARE. HARDWARE, I LOWS and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of <lb />
kinds, On and Rock Live, of and <lb />
Hair. Harness, Bridles and addles <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholes <lb />
prices, dozen, less per cent for t ash. Bread Pr j <lb />
ration and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers White Lead and pure <lb />
seed Oil, Varnishes and Faint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and OM <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb />
I CLOTHES COULD what a sad tale they would <lb />
twisting, burping <lb />
In way common soap. <lb />
; necessary when <lb />
ion soap. They would we dread <lb />
who still hold <lb />
and NOT SO THE WOMEN, or their <lb />
who wash in the modern with th modern mean. <lb />
WASHING COMPOUND. <lb />
the too women ; their <lb />
Harmless to all but Is to -hat CUB <lb />
-bin terns-it <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
  <mets:amdSec>
    <mets:techMD ID="TMD0001">
      <mets:mdWrap MDTYPE="NISOIMG">
        <mets:xmlData>
          <mix:mix>
            <mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
              <mix:ObjectIdentifier>
                <mix:objectIdentifierType>local, filename</mix:objectIdentifierType>
                <mix:objectIdentifierValue>17529.0001</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>70176976</mix:fileSize>
              <mix:FormatDesignation>
                <mix:formatName>image/tiff</mix:formatName>
                <mix:formatVersion>6.0</mix:formatVersion></mix:FormatDesignation>
              <mix:FormatRegistry>
                <mix:formatRegistryName>PRONOM</mix:formatRegistryName>
                <mix:formatRegistryKey>PUID: fmt/10</mix:formatRegistryKey></mix:FormatRegistry>
              <mix:byteOrder use="system">little endian</mix:byteOrder>
              <mix:Compression>
                <mix:compressionScheme>uncompressed</mix:compressionScheme></mix:Compression>
              <mix:Fixity>
                <mix:messageDigestAlgorithm>MD5</mix:messageDigestAlgorithm>
                <mix:messageDigest>004e70e839541cb727778099270782a0</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7355</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9531</mix:imageHeight>
                <mix:PhotometricInterpretation>
                  <mix:colorSpace>Grayscale BlackIsZero</mix:colorSpace>
                  <mix:ColorProfile>
                    <mix:IccProfile>
                      <mix:iccProfileName></mix:iccProfileName>
                      <mix:iccProfileVersion use="system"></mix:iccProfileVersion></mix:IccProfile></mix:ColorProfile></mix:PhotometricInterpretation></mix:BasicImageCharacteristics></mix:BasicImageInformation>
            <mix:ImageCaptureMetadata>
              <mix:SourceInformation>
                <mix:SourceSize>
                  <mix:SourceXDimension>
                    <mix:sourceXDimensionValue></mix:sourceXDimensionValue>
                    <mix:sourceXDimensionUnit>mm</mix:sourceXDimensionUnit></mix:SourceXDimension>
                  <mix:SourceYDimension>
                    <mix:sourceYDimensionValue></mix:sourceYDimensionValue>
                    <mix:sourceYDimensionUnit>mm</mix:sourceYDimensionUnit></mix:SourceYDimension></mix:SourceSize></mix:SourceInformation>
              <mix:GeneralCaptureInformation>
                <mix:dateTimeCreated>20100614</mix:dateTimeCreated>
                <mix:imageProducer></mix:imageProducer></mix:GeneralCaptureInformation>
              <mix:ScannerCapture>
                <mix:scannerManufacturer></mix:scannerManufacturer>
                <mix:ScannerModel>
                  <mix:scannerModelName></mix:scannerModelName>
                  <mix:scannerModelNumber></mix:scannerModelNumber>
                  <mix:scannerModelSerialNo></mix:scannerModelSerialNo></mix:ScannerModel>
                <mix:ScanningSystemSoftware>
                  <mix:scanningSoftwareName></mix:scanningSoftwareName>
                  <mix:scanningSoftwareVersionNo></mix:scanningSoftwareVersionNo></mix:ScanningSystemSoftware></mix:ScannerCapture></mix:ImageCaptureMetadata>
            <mix:ImageAssessmentMetadata>
              <mix:SpatialMetrics>
                <mix:samplingFrequencyPlane>object plane</mix:samplingFrequencyPlane>
                <mix:samplingFrequencyUnit>in.</mix:samplingFrequencyUnit>
                <mix:xSamplingFrequency>
                  <mix:numerator>400</mix:numerator>
                  <mix:denominator>1</mix:denominator></mix:xSamplingFrequency>
                <mix:ySamplingFrequency>
                  <mix:numerator>400</mix:numerator>
                  <mix:denominator>1</mix:denominator></mix:ySamplingFrequency></mix:SpatialMetrics>
              <mix:ImageColorEncoding>
                <mix:BitsPerSample>
                  <mix:bitsPerSampleValue>8</mix:bitsPerSampleValue>
                  <mix:bitsPerSampleUnit>integer</mix:bitsPerSampleUnit></mix:BitsPerSample>
                <mix:samplesPerPixel>1</mix:samplesPerPixel></mix:ImageColorEncoding>
              <mix:TargetData>
                <mix:targetType>internal</mix:targetType>
                <mix:TargetID>
                  <mix:targetManufacturer></mix:targetManufacturer>
                  <mix:targetName></mix:targetName>
                  <mix:targetNo></mix:targetNo>
                  <mix:targetMedia></mix:targetMedia></mix:TargetID></mix:TargetData></mix:ImageAssessmentMetadata></mix:mix></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:techMD>
    <mets:techMD ID="TMD0002">
      <mets:mdWrap MDTYPE="NISOIMG">
        <mets:xmlData>
          <mix:mix>
            <mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
              <mix:ObjectIdentifier>
                <mix:objectIdentifierType>local, filename</mix:objectIdentifierType>
                <mix:objectIdentifierValue>17529.0002</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>70176976</mix:fileSize>
              <mix:FormatDesignation>
                <mix:formatName>image/tiff</mix:formatName>
                <mix:formatVersion>6.0</mix:formatVersion></mix:FormatDesignation>
              <mix:FormatRegistry>
                <mix:formatRegistryName>PRONOM</mix:formatRegistryName>
                <mix:formatRegistryKey>PUID: fmt/10</mix:formatRegistryKey></mix:FormatRegistry>
              <mix:byteOrder use="system">little endian</mix:byteOrder>
              <mix:Compression>
                <mix:compressionScheme>uncompressed</mix:compressionScheme></mix:Compression>
              <mix:Fixity>
                <mix:messageDigestAlgorithm>MD5</mix:messageDigestAlgorithm>
                <mix:messageDigest>0a76cca5b4a1a0b6ba8df45dba7d8c3b</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7355</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9531</mix:imageHeight>
                <mix:PhotometricInterpretation>
                  <mix:colorSpace>Grayscale BlackIsZero</mix:colorSpace>
                  <mix:ColorProfile>
                    <mix:IccProfile>
                      <mix:iccProfileName></mix:iccProfileName>
                      <mix:iccProfileVersion use="system"></mix:iccProfileVersion></mix:IccProfile></mix:ColorProfile></mix:PhotometricInterpretation></mix:BasicImageCharacteristics></mix:BasicImageInformation>
            <mix:ImageCaptureMetadata>
              <mix:SourceInformation>
                <mix:SourceSize>
                  <mix:SourceXDimension>
                    <mix:sourceXDimensionValue></mix:sourceXDimensionValue>
                    <mix:sourceXDimensionUnit>mm</mix:sourceXDimensionUnit></mix:SourceXDimension>
                  <mix:SourceYDimension>
                    <mix:sourceYDimensionValue></mix:sourceYDimensionValue>
                    <mix:sourceYDimensionUnit>mm</mix:sourceYDimensionUnit></mix:SourceYDimension></mix:SourceSize></mix:SourceInformation>
              <mix:GeneralCaptureInformation>
                <mix:dateTimeCreated>20100614</mix:dateTimeCreated>
                <mix:imageProducer></mix:imageProducer></mix:GeneralCaptureInformation>
              <mix:ScannerCapture>
                <mix:scannerManufacturer></mix:scannerManufacturer>
                <mix:ScannerModel>
                  <mix:scannerModelName></mix:scannerModelName>
                  <mix:scannerModelNumber></mix:scannerModelNumber>
                  <mix:scannerModelSerialNo></mix:scannerModelSerialNo></mix:ScannerModel>
                <mix:ScanningSystemSoftware>
                  <mix:scanningSoftwareName></mix:scanningSoftwareName>
                  <mix:scanningSoftwareVersionNo></mix:scanningSoftwareVersionNo></mix:ScanningSystemSoftware></mix:ScannerCapture></mix:ImageCaptureMetadata>
            <mix:ImageAssessmentMetadata>
              <mix:SpatialMetrics>
                <mix:samplingFrequencyPlane>object plane</mix:samplingFrequencyPlane>
                <mix:samplingFrequencyUnit>in.</mix:samplingFrequencyUnit>
                <mix:xSamplingFrequency>
                  <mix:numerator>400</mix:numerator>
                  <mix:denominator>1</mix:denominator></mix:xSamplingFrequency>
                <mix:ySamplingFrequency>
                  <mix:numerator>400</mix:numerator>
                  <mix:denominator>1</mix:denominator></mix:ySamplingFrequency></mix:SpatialMetrics>
              <mix:ImageColorEncoding>
                <mix:BitsPerSample>
                  <mix:bitsPerSampleValue>8</mix:bitsPerSampleValue>
                  <mix:bitsPerSampleUnit>integer</mix:bitsPerSampleUnit></mix:BitsPerSample>
                <mix:samplesPerPixel>1</mix:samplesPerPixel></mix:ImageColorEncoding>
              <mix:TargetData>
                <mix:targetType>internal</mix:targetType>
                <mix:TargetID>
                  <mix:targetManufacturer></mix:targetManufacturer>
                  <mix:targetName></mix:targetName>
                  <mix:targetNo></mix:targetNo>
                  <mix:targetMedia></mix:targetMedia></mix:TargetID></mix:TargetData></mix:ImageAssessmentMetadata></mix:mix></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:techMD>
    <mets:techMD ID="TMD0003">
      <mets:mdWrap MDTYPE="NISOIMG">
        <mets:xmlData>
          <mix:mix>
            <mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
              <mix:ObjectIdentifier>
                <mix:objectIdentifierType>local, filename</mix:objectIdentifierType>
                <mix:objectIdentifierValue>17529.0003</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>70176976</mix:fileSize>
              <mix:FormatDesignation>
                <mix:formatName>image/tiff</mix:formatName>
                <mix:formatVersion>6.0</mix:formatVersion></mix:FormatDesignation>
              <mix:FormatRegistry>
                <mix:formatRegistryName>PRONOM</mix:formatRegistryName>
                <mix:formatRegistryKey>PUID: fmt/10</mix:formatRegistryKey></mix:FormatRegistry>
              <mix:byteOrder use="system">little endian</mix:byteOrder>
              <mix:Compression>
                <mix:compressionScheme>uncompressed</mix:compressionScheme></mix:Compression>
              <mix:Fixity>
                <mix:messageDigestAlgorithm>MD5</mix:messageDigestAlgorithm>
                <mix:messageDigest>8bfc1ba444fcdce53abc46b99d20e3d7</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7355</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9531</mix:imageHeight>
                <mix:PhotometricInterpretation>
                  <mix:colorSpace>Grayscale BlackIsZero</mix:colorSpace>
                  <mix:ColorProfile>
                    <mix:IccProfile>
                      <mix:iccProfileName></mix:iccProfileName>
                      <mix:iccProfileVersion use="system"></mix:iccProfileVersion></mix:IccProfile></mix:ColorProfile></mix:PhotometricInterpretation></mix:BasicImageCharacteristics></mix:BasicImageInformation>
            <mix:ImageCaptureMetadata>
              <mix:SourceInformation>
                <mix:SourceSize>
                  <mix:SourceXDimension>
                    <mix:sourceXDimensionValue></mix:sourceXDimensionValue>
                    <mix:sourceXDimensionUnit>mm</mix:sourceXDimensionUnit></mix:SourceXDimension>
                  <mix:SourceYDimension>
                    <mix:sourceYDimensionValue></mix:sourceYDimensionValue>
                    <mix:sourceYDimensionUnit>mm</mix:sourceYDimensionUnit></mix:SourceYDimension></mix:SourceSize></mix:SourceInformation>
              <mix:GeneralCaptureInformation>
                <mix:dateTimeCreated>20100614</mix:dateTimeCreated>
                <mix:imageProducer></mix:imageProducer></mix:GeneralCaptureInformation>
              <mix:ScannerCapture>
                <mix:scannerManufacturer></mix:scannerManufacturer>
                <mix:ScannerModel>
                  <mix:scannerModelName></mix:scannerModelName>
                  <mix:scannerModelNumber></mix:scannerModelNumber>
                  <mix:scannerModelSerialNo></mix:scannerModelSerialNo></mix:ScannerModel>
                <mix:ScanningSystemSoftware>
                  <mix:scanningSoftwareName></mix:scanningSoftwareName>
                  <mix:scanningSoftwareVersionNo></mix:scanningSoftwareVersionNo></mix:ScanningSystemSoftware></mix:ScannerCapture></mix:ImageCaptureMetadata>
            <mix:ImageAssessmentMetadata>
              <mix:SpatialMetrics>
                <mix:samplingFrequencyPlane>object plane</mix:samplingFrequencyPlane>
                <mix:samplingFrequencyUnit>in.</mix:samplingFrequencyUnit>
                <mix:xSamplingFrequency>
                  <mix:numerator>400</mix:numerator>
                  <mix:denominator>1</mix:denominator></mix:xSamplingFrequency>
                <mix:ySamplingFrequency>
                  <mix:numerator>400</mix:numerator>
                  <mix:denominator>1</mix:denominator></mix:ySamplingFrequency></mix:SpatialMetrics>
              <mix:ImageColorEncoding>
                <mix:BitsPerSample>
                  <mix:bitsPerSampleValue>8</mix:bitsPerSampleValue>
                  <mix:bitsPerSampleUnit>integer</mix:bitsPerSampleUnit></mix:BitsPerSample>
                <mix:samplesPerPixel>1</mix:samplesPerPixel></mix:ImageColorEncoding>
              <mix:TargetData>
                <mix:targetType>internal</mix:targetType>
                <mix:TargetID>
                  <mix:targetManufacturer></mix:targetManufacturer>
                  <mix:targetName></mix:targetName>
                  <mix:targetNo></mix:targetNo>
                  <mix:targetMedia></mix:targetMedia></mix:TargetID></mix:TargetData></mix:ImageAssessmentMetadata></mix:mix></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:techMD>
    <mets:techMD ID="TMD0004">
      <mets:mdWrap MDTYPE="NISOIMG">
        <mets:xmlData>
          <mix:mix>
            <mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
              <mix:ObjectIdentifier>
                <mix:objectIdentifierType>local, filename</mix:objectIdentifierType>
                <mix:objectIdentifierValue>17529.0004</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>70176976</mix:fileSize>
              <mix:FormatDesignation>
                <mix:formatName>image/tiff</mix:formatName>
                <mix:formatVersion>6.0</mix:formatVersion></mix:FormatDesignation>
              <mix:FormatRegistry>
                <mix:formatRegistryName>PRONOM</mix:formatRegistryName>
                <mix:formatRegistryKey>PUID: fmt/10</mix:formatRegistryKey></mix:FormatRegistry>
              <mix:byteOrder use="system">little endian</mix:byteOrder>
              <mix:Compression>
                <mix:compressionScheme>uncompressed</mix:compressionScheme></mix:Compression>
              <mix:Fixity>
                <mix:messageDigestAlgorithm>MD5</mix:messageDigestAlgorithm>
                <mix:messageDigest>7b89983ee5c8742a12616281405e4c55</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7355</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9531</mix:imageHeight>
                <mix:PhotometricInterpretation>
                  <mix:colorSpace>Grayscale BlackIsZero</mix:colorSpace>
                  <mix:ColorProfile>
                    <mix:IccProfile>
                      <mix:iccProfileName></mix:iccProfileName>
                      <mix:iccProfileVersion use="system"></mix:iccProfileVersion></mix:IccProfile></mix:ColorProfile></mix:PhotometricInterpretation></mix:BasicImageCharacteristics></mix:BasicImageInformation>
            <mix:ImageCaptureMetadata>
              <mix:SourceInformation>
                <mix:SourceSize>
                  <mix:SourceXDimension>
                    <mix:sourceXDimensionValue></mix:sourceXDimensionValue>
                    <mix:sourceXDimensionUnit>mm</mix:sourceXDimensionUnit></mix:SourceXDimension>
                  <mix:SourceYDimension>
                    <mix:sourceYDimensionValue></mix:sourceYDimensionValue>
                    <mix:sourceYDimensionUnit>mm</mix:sourceYDimensionUnit></mix:SourceYDimension></mix:SourceSize></mix:SourceInformation>
              <mix:GeneralCaptureInformation>
                <mix:dateTimeCreated>20100614</mix:dateTimeCreated>
                <mix:imageProducer></mix:imageProducer></mix:GeneralCaptureInformation>
              <mix:ScannerCapture>
                <mix:scannerManufacturer></mix:scannerManufacturer>
                <mix:ScannerModel>
                  <mix:scannerModelName></mix:scannerModelName>
                  <mix:scannerModelNumber></mix:scannerModelNumber>
                  <mix:scannerModelSerialNo></mix:scannerModelSerialNo></mix:ScannerModel>
                <mix:ScanningSystemSoftware>
                  <mix:scanningSoftwareName></mix:scanningSoftwareName>
                  <mix:scanningSoftwareVersionNo></mix:scanningSoftwareVersionNo></mix:ScanningSystemSoftware></mix:ScannerCapture></mix:ImageCaptureMetadata>
            <mix:ImageAssessmentMetadata>
              <mix:SpatialMetrics>
                <mix:samplingFrequencyPlane>object plane</mix:samplingFrequencyPlane>
                <mix:samplingFrequencyUnit>in.</mix:samplingFrequencyUnit>
                <mix:xSamplingFrequency>
                  <mix:numerator>400</mix:numerator>
                  <mix:denominator>1</mix:denominator></mix:xSamplingFrequency>
                <mix:ySamplingFrequency>
                  <mix:numerator>400</mix:numerator>
                  <mix:denominator>1</mix:denominator></mix:ySamplingFrequency></mix:SpatialMetrics>
              <mix:ImageColorEncoding>
                <mix:BitsPerSample>
                  <mix:bitsPerSampleValue>8</mix:bitsPerSampleValue>
                  <mix:bitsPerSampleUnit>integer</mix:bitsPerSampleUnit></mix:BitsPerSample>
                <mix:samplesPerPixel>1</mix:samplesPerPixel></mix:ImageColorEncoding>
              <mix:TargetData>
                <mix:targetType>internal</mix:targetType>
                <mix:TargetID>
                  <mix:targetManufacturer></mix:targetManufacturer>
                  <mix:targetName></mix:targetName>
                  <mix:targetNo></mix:targetNo>
                  <mix:targetMedia></mix:targetMedia></mix:TargetID></mix:TargetData></mix:ImageAssessmentMetadata></mix:mix></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:techMD>
    <mets:techMD ID="TMD0005">
      <mets:mdWrap MDTYPE="NISOIMG">
        <mets:xmlData>
          <mix:mix>
            <mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
              <mix:ObjectIdentifier>
                <mix:objectIdentifierType>local, filename</mix:objectIdentifierType>
                <mix:objectIdentifierValue>17529.0005</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>70176976</mix:fileSize>
              <mix:FormatDesignation>
                <mix:formatName>image/tiff</mix:formatName>
                <mix:formatVersion>6.0</mix:formatVersion></mix:FormatDesignation>
              <mix:FormatRegistry>
                <mix:formatRegistryName>PRONOM</mix:formatRegistryName>
                <mix:formatRegistryKey>PUID: fmt/10</mix:formatRegistryKey></mix:FormatRegistry>
              <mix:byteOrder use="system">little endian</mix:byteOrder>
              <mix:Compression>
                <mix:compressionScheme>uncompressed</mix:compressionScheme></mix:Compression>
              <mix:Fixity>
                <mix:messageDigestAlgorithm>MD5</mix:messageDigestAlgorithm>
                <mix:messageDigest>376f36ba2f35d4288fda7cea424c5396</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7355</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9531</mix:imageHeight>
                <mix:PhotometricInterpretation>
                  <mix:colorSpace>Grayscale BlackIsZero</mix:colorSpace>
                  <mix:ColorProfile>
                    <mix:IccProfile>
                      <mix:iccProfileName></mix:iccProfileName>
                      <mix:iccProfileVersion use="system"></mix:iccProfileVersion></mix:IccProfile></mix:ColorProfile></mix:PhotometricInterpretation></mix:BasicImageCharacteristics></mix:BasicImageInformation>
            <mix:ImageCaptureMetadata>
              <mix:SourceInformation>
                <mix:SourceSize>
                  <mix:SourceXDimension>
                    <mix:sourceXDimensionValue></mix:sourceXDimensionValue>
                    <mix:sourceXDimensionUnit>mm</mix:sourceXDimensionUnit></mix:SourceXDimension>
                  <mix:SourceYDimension>
                    <mix:sourceYDimensionValue></mix:sourceYDimensionValue>
                    <mix:sourceYDimensionUnit>mm</mix:sourceYDimensionUnit></mix:SourceYDimension></mix:SourceSize></mix:SourceInformation>
              <mix:GeneralCaptureInformation>
                <mix:dateTimeCreated>20100614</mix:dateTimeCreated>
                <mix:imageProducer></mix:imageProducer></mix:GeneralCaptureInformation>
              <mix:ScannerCapture>
                <mix:scannerManufacturer></mix:scannerManufacturer>
                <mix:ScannerModel>
                  <mix:scannerModelName></mix:scannerModelName>
                  <mix:scannerModelNumber></mix:scannerModelNumber>
                  <mix:scannerModelSerialNo></mix:scannerModelSerialNo></mix:ScannerModel>
                <mix:ScanningSystemSoftware>
                  <mix:scanningSoftwareName></mix:scanningSoftwareName>
                  <mix:scanningSoftwareVersionNo></mix:scanningSoftwareVersionNo></mix:ScanningSystemSoftware></mix:ScannerCapture></mix:ImageCaptureMetadata>
            <mix:ImageAssessmentMetadata>
              <mix:SpatialMetrics>
                <mix:samplingFrequencyPlane>object plane</mix:samplingFrequencyPlane>
                <mix:samplingFrequencyUnit>in.</mix:samplingFrequencyUnit>
                <mix:xSamplingFrequency>
                  <mix:numerator>400</mix:numerator>
                  <mix:denominator>1</mix:denominator></mix:xSamplingFrequency>
                <mix:ySamplingFrequency>
                  <mix:numerator>400</mix:numerator>
                  <mix:denominator>1</mix:denominator></mix:ySamplingFrequency></mix:SpatialMetrics>
              <mix:ImageColorEncoding>
                <mix:BitsPerSample>
                  <mix:bitsPerSampleValue>8</mix:bitsPerSampleValue>
                  <mix:bitsPerSampleUnit>integer</mix:bitsPerSampleUnit></mix:BitsPerSample>
                <mix:samplesPerPixel>1</mix:samplesPerPixel></mix:ImageColorEncoding>
              <mix:TargetData>
                <mix:targetType>internal</mix:targetType>
                <mix:TargetID>
                  <mix:targetManufacturer></mix:targetManufacturer>
                  <mix:targetName></mix:targetName>
                  <mix:targetNo></mix:targetNo>
                  <mix:targetMedia></mix:targetMedia></mix:TargetID></mix:TargetData></mix:ImageAssessmentMetadata></mix:mix></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:techMD>
    <mets:techMD ID="TMD0006">
      <mets:mdWrap MDTYPE="NISOIMG">
        <mets:xmlData>
          <mix:mix>
            <mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
              <mix:ObjectIdentifier>
                <mix:objectIdentifierType>local, filename</mix:objectIdentifierType>
                <mix:objectIdentifierValue>17529.0006</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>70176976</mix:fileSize>
              <mix:FormatDesignation>
                <mix:formatName>image/tiff</mix:formatName>
                <mix:formatVersion>6.0</mix:formatVersion></mix:FormatDesignation>
              <mix:FormatRegistry>
                <mix:formatRegistryName>PRONOM</mix:formatRegistryName>
                <mix:formatRegistryKey>PUID: fmt/10</mix:formatRegistryKey></mix:FormatRegistry>
              <mix:byteOrder use="system">little endian</mix:byteOrder>
              <mix:Compression>
                <mix:compressionScheme>uncompressed</mix:compressionScheme></mix:Compression>
              <mix:Fixity>
                <mix:messageDigestAlgorithm>MD5</mix:messageDigestAlgorithm>
                <mix:messageDigest>202afcae835d3c82714061f2917f0f94</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7355</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9531</mix:imageHeight>
                <mix:PhotometricInterpretation>
                  <mix:colorSpace>Grayscale BlackIsZero</mix:colorSpace>
                  <mix:ColorProfile>
                    <mix:IccProfile>
                      <mix:iccProfileName></mix:iccProfileName>
                      <mix:iccProfileVersion use="system"></mix:iccProfileVersion></mix:IccProfile></mix:ColorProfile></mix:PhotometricInterpretation></mix:BasicImageCharacteristics></mix:BasicImageInformation>
            <mix:ImageCaptureMetadata>
              <mix:SourceInformation>
                <mix:SourceSize>
                  <mix:SourceXDimension>
                    <mix:sourceXDimensionValue></mix:sourceXDimensionValue>
                    <mix:sourceXDimensionUnit>mm</mix:sourceXDimensionUnit></mix:SourceXDimension>
                  <mix:SourceYDimension>
                    <mix:sourceYDimensionValue></mix:sourceYDimensionValue>
                    <mix:sourceYDimensionUnit>mm</mix:sourceYDimensionUnit></mix:SourceYDimension></mix:SourceSize></mix:SourceInformation>
              <mix:GeneralCaptureInformation>
                <mix:dateTimeCreated>20100614</mix:dateTimeCreated>
                <mix:imageProducer></mix:imageProducer></mix:GeneralCaptureInformation>
              <mix:ScannerCapture>
                <mix:scannerManufacturer></mix:scannerManufacturer>
                <mix:ScannerModel>
                  <mix:scannerModelName></mix:scannerModelName>
                  <mix:scannerModelNumber></mix:scannerModelNumber>
                  <mix:scannerModelSerialNo></mix:scannerModelSerialNo></mix:ScannerModel>
                <mix:ScanningSystemSoftware>
                  <mix:scanningSoftwareName></mix:scanningSoftwareName>
                  <mix:scanningSoftwareVersionNo></mix:scanningSoftwareVersionNo></mix:ScanningSystemSoftware></mix:ScannerCapture></mix:ImageCaptureMetadata>
            <mix:ImageAssessmentMetadata>
              <mix:SpatialMetrics>
                <mix:samplingFrequencyPlane>object plane</mix:samplingFrequencyPlane>
                <mix:samplingFrequencyUnit>in.</mix:samplingFrequencyUnit>
                <mix:xSamplingFrequency>
                  <mix:numerator>400</mix:numerator>
                  <mix:denominator>1</mix:denominator></mix:xSamplingFrequency>
                <mix:ySamplingFrequency>
                  <mix:numerator>400</mix:numerator>
                  <mix:denominator>1</mix:denominator></mix:ySamplingFrequency></mix:SpatialMetrics>
              <mix:ImageColorEncoding>
                <mix:BitsPerSample>
                  <mix:bitsPerSampleValue>8</mix:bitsPerSampleValue>
                  <mix:bitsPerSampleUnit>integer</mix:bitsPerSampleUnit></mix:BitsPerSample>
                <mix:samplesPerPixel>1</mix:samplesPerPixel></mix:ImageColorEncoding>
              <mix:TargetData>
                <mix:targetType>internal</mix:targetType>
                <mix:TargetID>
                  <mix:targetManufacturer></mix:targetManufacturer>
                  <mix:targetName></mix:targetName>
                  <mix:targetNo></mix:targetNo>
                  <mix:targetMedia></mix:targetMedia></mix:TargetID></mix:TargetData></mix:ImageAssessmentMetadata></mix:mix></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:techMD></mets:amdSec>
  <mets:fileSec>
    <mets:fileGrp USE="MASTER">
      <mets:file ID="FID0001" MIMETYPE="image/tiff" SEQ="1">
        <mets:FLocat xlink:href="" LOCTYPE="URL" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0004" MIMETYPE="image/tiff" SEQ="2">
        <mets:FLocat xlink:href="" LOCTYPE="URL" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0007" MIMETYPE="image/tiff" SEQ="3">
        <mets:FLocat xlink:href="" LOCTYPE="URL" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0010" MIMETYPE="image/tiff" SEQ="4">
        <mets:FLocat xlink:href="" LOCTYPE="URL" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0013" MIMETYPE="image/tiff" SEQ="5">
        <mets:FLocat xlink:href="" LOCTYPE="URL" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0016" MIMETYPE="image/tiff" SEQ="6">
        <mets:FLocat xlink:href="" LOCTYPE="URL" /></mets:file></mets:fileGrp>
    <mets:fileGrp USE="ACCESS">
      <mets:file ID="FID0002" MIMETYPE="image/jp2" SEQ="1">
        <mets:FLocat LOCTYPE="URL" xlink:href="http://150.216.68.252/ncgre000/00000018/00017529/00017529_ac_0001.jp2" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0005" MIMETYPE="image/jp2" SEQ="2">
        <mets:FLocat LOCTYPE="URL" xlink:href="http://150.216.68.252/ncgre000/00000018/00017529/00017529_ac_0002.jp2" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0008" MIMETYPE="image/jp2" SEQ="3">
        <mets:FLocat LOCTYPE="URL" xlink:href="http://150.216.68.252/ncgre000/00000018/00017529/00017529_ac_0003.jp2" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0011" MIMETYPE="image/jp2" SEQ="4">
        <mets:FLocat LOCTYPE="URL" xlink:href="http://150.216.68.252/ncgre000/00000018/00017529/00017529_ac_0004.jp2" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0014" MIMETYPE="image/jp2" SEQ="5">
        <mets:FLocat LOCTYPE="URL" xlink:href="http://150.216.68.252/ncgre000/00000018/00017529/00017529_ac_0005.jp2" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0017" MIMETYPE="image/jp2" SEQ="6">
        <mets:FLocat LOCTYPE="URL" xlink:href="http://150.216.68.252/ncgre000/00000018/00017529/00017529_ac_0006.jp2" /></mets:file></mets:fileGrp>
    <mets:fileGrp USE="THUMB">
      <mets:file ID="FID0003" MIMETYPE="image/gif" SEQ="1">
        <mets:FLocat LOCTYPE="URL" xlink:href="http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/encore/ncgre000/00000018/00017529/00017529_tn_0001.gif" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0006" MIMETYPE="image/gif" SEQ="2">
        <mets:FLocat LOCTYPE="URL" xlink:href="http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/encore/ncgre000/00000018/00017529/00017529_tn_0002.gif" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0009" MIMETYPE="image/gif" SEQ="3">
        <mets:FLocat LOCTYPE="URL" xlink:href="http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/encore/ncgre000/00000018/00017529/00017529_tn_0003.gif" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0012" MIMETYPE="image/gif" SEQ="4">
        <mets:FLocat LOCTYPE="URL" xlink:href="http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/encore/ncgre000/00000018/00017529/00017529_tn_0004.gif" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0015" MIMETYPE="image/gif" SEQ="5">
        <mets:FLocat LOCTYPE="URL" xlink:href="http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/encore/ncgre000/00000018/00017529/00017529_tn_0005.gif" /></mets:file>
      <mets:file ID="FID0018" MIMETYPE="image/gif" SEQ="6">
        <mets:FLocat LOCTYPE="URL" xlink:href="http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/encore/ncgre000/00000018/00017529/00017529_tn_0006.gif" /></mets:file></mets:fileGrp></mets:fileSec>
  <mets:structMap LABEL="IMAGE">
    <mets:div ORDER="1">
      <mets:div ORDER="" LABEL=""></mets:div>
      <mets:div ORDER="1" LABEL="">
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0001" />
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0002" />
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0003" /></mets:div>
      <mets:div ORDER="2" LABEL="">
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0004" />
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0005" />
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0006" /></mets:div>
      <mets:div ORDER="3" LABEL="">
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0007" />
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0008" />
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0009" /></mets:div>
      <mets:div ORDER="4" LABEL="">
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0010" />
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0011" />
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0012" /></mets:div>
      <mets:div ORDER="5" LABEL="">
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0013" />
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0014" />
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0015" /></mets:div>
      <mets:div ORDER="6" LABEL="">
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0016" />
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0017" />
        <mets:fptr FILEID="FID0018" /></mets:div></mets:div></mets:structMap>
  <mets:structMap LABEL="AUDIO">
    <mets:div ORDER="1">
      <mets:div ORDER="" LABEL=""></mets:div></mets:div></mets:structMap></mets:mets>