<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<mets:mets OBJID="17594" ID="wordcount17515" 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="2011-07-11T03:04:29" 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, 19 April 1893</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">17594</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="job">834</mods:identifier>
          <mods:originInfo>
            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18930419</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/ncgre000/00000018/00017594/00017594.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, 19 April 1893</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>18930419</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>17594</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="00017594_tn_0001" n="1" />
                <p>
C t. <lb />
V v <lb />
THE BEST <lb />
That is the kind of work <lb />
the patron of the <lb />
Job Office say they get- <lb />
This Office for Job Printing- <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA. <lb />
Things Mentioned in our State Ex. <lb />
changes that are of General Interest <lb />
The Cream of the Hews. <lb />
The North Carolina Medical So- <lb />
will hold its annual meeting <lb />
in Raleigh on May 9th. <lb />
As Willie a lad in <lb />
Jones county, was cutting a bush <lb />
with a knife, the latter slipped, an <lb />
artery was severed and ho bled to <lb />
death. <lb />
Dr. B. F. Dixon, of the Greens- <lb />
Female College, has an- <lb />
his resignation as <lb />
dent of the College, to take effect <lb />
in June. He will be succeeded by <lb />
Dr. of Raleigh. <lb />
Scotland Neck There <lb />
is something like an <lb />
amongst the horses at penitentiary <lb />
firm near Tillery. Several have <lb />
recently died there. Mr. J. P. <lb />
Futrell has lost several at his river <lb />
farm also. Mess. Biggs John- <lb />
son have lost one also <lb />
E. City On <lb />
Friday afternoon the mill of W. G. <lb />
Ferebee, at Bell Cross in Camden <lb />
county, took fire was entirely <lb />
consumed. The loss is estimated <lb />
at without insurance. The <lb />
tire was probably accidental. <lb />
Free Three or <lb />
four hundred dollars have already <lb />
been subscribed towards the <lb />
of a Presbyterian church in <lb />
Kinston. The church will prob- <lb />
ably be erected nest fall. We <lb />
wish the movement success. <lb />
Charlotte Observer The first <lb />
shad ever caught in <lb />
river was found in Thomas Porter's <lb />
trap this morning near <lb />
Several hundred thousand <lb />
shad were put in this river in <lb />
and this is the first one <lb />
caught. <lb />
New On Sun- <lb />
day night about o'clock the <lb />
house of Tom Jones, colored, <lb />
on Messrs. Watson <lb />
land, near caught fire <lb />
and was completely burned, to- <lb />
with its contents and three <lb />
little children, whom the parents <lb />
had locked up in the house when <lb />
they went off to church. <lb />
Charlotte A fourteen- <lb />
year-old son of Mr- W. J- <lb />
Laughlin, a former resident of <lb />
Mecklenburg, was killed on the <lb />
big red hill, near the depot, in <lb />
Concord Saturday evening. The <lb />
boy and his father were thrown <lb />
from a wagon, and the wheels <lb />
passed over the boy cutting open <lb />
his breast, and tearing his lungs <lb />
apart- <lb />
Tarboro There <lb />
was a dastardly attempt to wreck <lb />
the train on the Plymouth and <lb />
Tarboro road one day last week <lb />
near a place called Johnson's not <lb />
far from Williamston- Cross ties <lb />
were piled up high on the track <lb />
and the train ran into the pile scat- <lb />
them in every direction and <lb />
was thrown from the track. <lb />
-------An Edgecombe farmer in com- <lb />
to town several days ago fell <lb />
through a bridge and broke one <lb />
hundred <lb />
Weldon News Frank Richard- <lb />
son caught an unknown animal in <lb />
a trap near last week. The <lb />
animal was larger than the largest <lb />
house cat and its skis was thicker <lb />
than that of a ten year old cow. <lb />
Its tail was about like the tail of <lb />
an ordinary cat, with the exception <lb />
that it was covered with very stiff <lb />
bristles instead of fur. No in <lb />
that neighborhood had ever seen <lb />
an animal like it before. This <lb />
section of county seems to be get- <lb />
ting full of strange looking <lb />
II. B. Randolph, Brunswick, Ga. <lb />
was under the care of nine <lb />
different but not one did me <lb />
good that Botanic Blood Balm has <lb />
CHILD BIRTH <lb />
MADE EASY S <lb />
Friend is a scientific- <lb />
ally prepared every <lb />
of value and in <lb />
constant use by the medical pro- <lb />
ingredients are com- <lb />
in a manner hitherto unknown<lb />
WILL DO all that is claimed for <lb />
it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor, <lb />
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb />
Life of Mother and Child. Book <lb />
to mailed FREE, COO- <lb />
taming valuable and <lb />
voluntary testimonials. <lb />
receipt of price per <lb />
REGULATOR <lb />
SOLD BY iLL <lb />
I had a breaking out on my kg <lb />
below the knee, and tad well <lb />
with two and a half <lb />
blood medicines had railed <lb />
to dome any good. C. <lb />
S. C <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner <lb />
IN TO FICTION. <lb />
per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XII. <lb />
GREENVILLE. PITT N C, WEDNESDAY APRIL 1893. <lb />
NO. <lb />
IT PAYS <lb />
That's what the <lb />
Merchants say who <lb />
Advertise in the <lb />
AT THE THREE PIGEONS. <lb />
I was troubled from childhood with on <lb />
of and three bottles <lb />
cared <lb />
-1 id <lb />
When I was about thirty years <lb />
old, I went fishing one Sunday on <lb />
the banks of the Cher, near Saint- <lb />
It was at Easter time, <lb />
a little warm but pleasant <lb />
near the water. I had installed <lb />
myself in an excellent place. At <lb />
my feet the brownish-green <lb />
wound tranquilly in and out be- <lb />
tween grassy banks. Daisies and <lb />
field-flowers grew on either side <lb />
to the water's edge. I heard <lb />
from time to time the bells of <lb />
and ringing <lb />
tor service, and I took great pleas- <lb />
ore in the thought that it was Sun- <lb />
day, that I had a long day before <lb />
me, that I had no unpleasant <lb />
neighbors to disturb me in my en- <lb />
occupation. <lb />
unhappily reckoned without <lb />
my host About o'clock I saw <lb />
appear, behind the poplars, a <lb />
couple who placed themselves on <lb />
the other side of my rod, about ten <lb />
feet distant. <lb />
They were a middle-aged man <lb />
and a lady, young and very <lb />
pretty. The gentleman, clean- <lb />
clothed entirely in black, <lb />
had a very correct air and a very <lb />
severe countenance; the lady in a <lb />
gray dress and straw <lb />
trimmed with blue ribbons, was <lb />
plump, and very lively. <lb />
They carried a fishing-rod, and <lb />
the husband made his wife sit <lb />
down while he adjusted the rod <lb />
and arranged the bait. <lb />
Without appearing to watch <lb />
them, soon that they <lb />
were novices in the art. <lb />
thought I. are <lb />
amateurs and will not me <lb />
unless they frighten away the fish <lb />
with their <lb />
They caught nothing. On the <lb />
other hand, in less than an hour <lb />
had by basket half full. My <lb />
neighbors were still unsuccessful. <lb />
Finally, the young woman, dis- <lb />
gusted, threw down her rod and <lb />
strolled slowly toward me. At <lb />
the moment she reached me. <lb />
I landed a large perch, and I <lb />
took a mean pleasure in leaving <lb />
him flopping on the grass. <lb />
before putting him into my basket. <lb />
cried the young woman, <lb />
a in <lb />
an insinuating voice she <lb />
how do you so <lb />
many fish while we have not been <lb />
able to take even a <lb />
I was young then, and though I <lb />
was always timid m the presence of <lb />
women, I was not insensible to a <lb />
pretty face. I replied, therefore, <lb />
at gallantly as I <lb />
madam, it is only that you <lb />
do not understand. To fish with <lb />
a m is a more difficult art than one <lb />
thinks. But if you will follow my <lb />
advice I will show you how to fish <lb />
Here, seat yourself, I will prepare <lb />
your <lb />
I showed my pupil the tricks of <lb />
the rod. of which she seemed to <lb />
entirely ignorant. After a few <lb />
instructions she did fairly well. <lb />
The spot was a good one, and the <lb />
fish allowed themselves to be <lb />
taken. <lb />
At each lucky pull at the line, <lb />
the little lad- laughed like a child, <lb />
clapped her hands, turned toward <lb />
her husband, gravely <lb />
seemed very happy in his <lb />
wife's joy, and thanked mo with a <lb />
ceremonious politeness. <lb />
At last the afternoon waned. <lb />
About o'clock we stopped fish- <lb />
and was about to leave <lb />
of my companions, when the <lb />
young woman ran to her husband <lb />
and whispered to him. He listened <lb />
with a thoughtful air, evidently a <lb />
startled. After a moment I <lb />
saw them coming toward me, but <lb />
it was the lady who said to <lb />
you have been <lb />
kind to us, that we can- <lb />
not leave you in this way. It is <lb />
owing to your goodness that we <lb />
have caught these fish, and it is <lb />
but right that we should eat them <lb />
in you give us <lb />
the pleasure of dining with <lb />
The added his <lb />
to that of his wife. They <lb />
urged mo in such a cordial way <lb />
that I we went to <lb />
Saint <lb />
At the Three the <lb />
husband asked for a private parlor <lb />
ordered dinner. We were <lb />
pleasantly served in a room where <lb />
windows opened wide upon a gar- <lb />
don filled with flowers. <lb />
The fresh air had sharpened our <lb />
appetites. Besides our fish we had <lb />
a roast asparagus, a tart, and <lb />
vine. was seated at <lb />
the right of the pretty lady, who <lb />
laughed constantly, and who did <lb />
not leave my plate or glass empty <lb />
for a moment. <lb />
The husband was less jovial; he <lb />
wore a constrained smile, and oven <lb />
the wine did not have the effect of <lb />
loosening Ids tongue. At certain <lb />
moments h seemed almost em- <lb />
had taken upon my- <lb />
self the duty of carving the fowl, <lb />
and, sharpening my knife, I cried <lb />
the fowl to me, I knew <lb />
how to carve, and I can cut off <lb />
heads in great <lb />
was astonished at the small <lb />
of my pleasantry. The <lb />
husband reddened to his eves, <lb />
wife turned pale, and a dead <lb />
i in the r m. <lb />
were very reserved about <lb />
affairs. I had put adroit <lb />
questions, because I was anxious <lb />
to know with whom I had dined, <lb />
but they answered in a very <lb />
way. All that I could learn <lb />
was that they were staying at <lb />
Tours, and that they lived at Or- <lb />
W hen we bad taken our coffee, <lb />
night had fallen and it was time to <lb />
depart I had done justice to the <lb />
repast, and was very gay; before <lb />
leaving. I thanked them warmly <lb />
for their hospitality, and declared <lb />
that I had never enjoyed myself <lb />
better than in their society. That <lb />
made the smile, and <lb />
I cordially extended my hand to <lb />
her husband, who, after a mo- <lb />
hesitation, gave me his. I <lb />
shall never forget the strange sen- <lb />
I experienced when I <lb />
grasped that icy hand. <lb />
hope we may meet I <lb />
said, I may have the pleas- <lb />
of returning your <lb />
do not that, he said, <lb />
with a singular accent. leave <lb />
Tours to-morrow. Adieu Mon- <lb />
In fact, I never did moot them <lb />
again at Saint although <lb />
went every Sunday. I often <lb />
thought with pleasure of the good <lb />
dinner which I had eaten at the <lb />
Three months passed. One day <lb />
I was exceedingly busy at my desk <lb />
in the office when some one entered <lb />
and presented at the wicket a <lb />
check. In those days we frequently <lb />
had checks presented for payment <lb />
for public services. I took the <lb />
paper, without looking at the per- <lb />
son who handed it in, to my chief <lb />
to sign. Returning, I was curious <lb />
enough to read it. <lb />
It was an order for francs <lb />
to be to the bearer, M. <lb />
What was my horror when I <lb />
reached the wicket to in <lb />
the my host at I <lb />
the and the <lb />
band of the pretty lady. <lb />
then remembered that an <lb />
had taken place at Tours <lb />
the day before my fishing <lb />
had dined with the headsman <lb />
By Andre translated <lb />
from the French. <lb />
AND <lb />
Carefully Selected Matter for <lb />
the Domestic Circle. <lb />
Tricks of Tourists. <lb />
think that a big hotel can <lb />
take care of a good many people, <lb />
don't said Assistant Post- <lb />
master Richardson, pointing to a <lb />
tall Market street caravansary, <lb />
it would seven stories <lb />
more on top of it to accommodate <lb />
all the people who have their mail <lb />
sent there. <lb />
is asked a <lb />
you see, everybody that <lb />
has ever heard of San Francisco <lb />
also knows of some big hotel, and <lb />
people coining out from the East <lb />
tell their friends to send mail to <lb />
some such place, because it sounds <lb />
well, and always want to <lb />
appear to be traveling first-class. <lb />
But it is really a fact that more <lb />
than half the mail which comes <lb />
addressed in care of the fine hotels <lb />
is ordered in tho city, <lb />
and those tourists who are sup- <lb />
posed by their friends to revel- <lb />
ling in the of a high hotel <lb />
with a grill room are really stop- <lb />
at some a week <lb />
Well, I guess it does <lb />
make trouble for us to have to <lb />
separate all those letters and send <lb />
them to other but the <lb />
friends at home are pleased and <lb />
the vanity of the tourists is <lb />
at our Fran <lb />
Examiner. <lb />
A Colossal Pia. <lb />
Perhaps the largest pie ever <lb />
made was that baked at <lb />
Dale, Yorkshire, in 1887, on the <lb />
occasion of the Queen's jubilee. <lb />
The dough was made up into two- <lb />
stone lots and then welded to- <lb />
so to speak, while the <lb />
were sliced by four stones <lb />
at a time. Of meat the pie con- <lb />
a boast weighing stone <lb />
a calf and a sheep. The dough <lb />
weighed stone, while the <lb />
toes which found a temporary rest- <lb />
place within it represented the <lb />
goodly weight of stone. <lb />
It was baked in a specially <lb />
oven for four and a half <lb />
ours, under the superintendence <lb />
of a of matrons. It was then <lb />
placed on a trolley and drawn by- <lb />
two horses through the streets to a <lb />
field, where it was cut into <lb />
segments and formed the meal of <lb />
many a hungry man and woman. <lb />
Although 2.000 people dined from <lb />
it, they left enough to have pro- <lb />
a hearty meal for over <lb />
more. <lb />
Very Close. <lb />
there much between <lb />
George and Hilda <lb />
saw them sitting on the <lb />
sofa last evening and you couldn't <lb />
have put an between <lb />
Hard of Hearing. <lb />
never seems to <lb />
hear his door nowadays. <lb />
ring and then go away. <lb />
course he can't <lb />
hear. He is over his ears in debt <lb />
A GOOD <lb />
be was a jolly good follow <lb />
-And Ins the long <lb />
when the crew was mellow <lb />
And the vine Juice passed along, <lb />
stay till the night winging <lb />
And usher the morning tat <lb />
With the of turbulent ringing <lb />
And the of the <lb />
Do tarried mirth Sowing, <lb />
At the suit of his fellow-men. <lb />
Bis wit and hi hours bestowing <lb />
On of common ken; <lb />
An-i he kept the burning <lb />
That we might in Its light. <lb />
Again to the least we're- turning <lb />
He sleeps In his to-night. <lb />
We alt at the t <lb />
He is biding <lb />
and I cannot help me thinking <lb />
How be his bed i <lb />
While a barroom bellows. <lb />
That thought Is a St <lb />
For the of us Jolly good <lb />
To ponder a bat I <lb />
The Care of Colds and the Time <lb />
to Treat Samoan Tea, <lb />
Where Met of the <lb />
Prod u end. <lb />
When one becomes chilled, or <lb />
takes cold, the mouths of myriads <lb />
of little sweat glands are suddenly <lb />
closed, and the impurities which <lb />
should pass off through the skin <lb />
forced back at the interior of <lb />
the body, vitiating tho blood and <lb />
putting extra work on the lungs <lb />
and other internal organs. Just <lb />
beneath the surface of the skin, all <lb />
over the body, there is a network <lb />
of minute blood vessels, finer than <lb />
the finest lace. When one is <lb />
chilled, the blood is forced from <lb />
these capillary vessels into one or <lb />
more of the internal organs, pro- <lb />
inflammation or <lb />
and thus often causing <lb />
dangerous to life. <lb />
The time to treat a cold is at the <lb />
earliest possible moment after you <lb />
have taken it And your prime <lb />
object should be to restore the <lb />
perspiration and the capillary <lb />
circulation. As soon, then, as you <lb />
feel that you have taken cold have <lb />
a good fire in your bedroom. Put <lb />
your feet into hot water, as hot as <lb />
can be borne, and containing a <lb />
tablespoonful of mustard. Have <lb />
it in a vessel so deep that the water <lb />
will come up well toward the knees. <lb />
Throw a blanket ever the whole <lb />
to prevent rapid evaporation and <lb />
cooling. In from five to min- <lb />
take the feet out, wipe them <lb />
dry, and get into a bed on which <lb />
there are two extra blankets. Just <lb />
before or after getting into bed <lb />
drink a large glass of lemonade. <lb />
as hot as possible, or a glass of hot <lb />
water containing a teaspoonful of <lb />
cream tartar, with a little sugar, <lb />
if desired. <lb />
Should there be a pain in the <lb />
chest, side or back, indicating <lb />
pleurisy or pneumonia, dip a small <lb />
towel in cold water and wring it <lb />
as dry as possible. Fold fowl <lb />
so that it will cover a more <lb />
surface than is affected by the pain. <lb />
Cover this with a piece of flannel, <lb />
and both with oiled silk, or better, <lb />
with oiled linen; now wind a strip <lb />
of flannel a foot wide several times <lb />
around the chest The heat of tho <lb />
body will warm the almost <lb />
immediately, the oiled linen and <lb />
flannel will retain tho heat and <lb />
moisture, and steaming the part <lb />
will generally cause the pain to <lb />
disappear. <lb />
Should there be pain or soreness <lb />
in the throat, you should treat in a <lb />
similar manner with wet compress <lb />
and flannel bandage Eat spar- <lb />
of plain, simple food. Baked <lb />
apples and other fruit, bread and <lb />
butter, bread and milk, mild toast, <lb />
baked potatoes or raw oysters may <lb />
be eaten. By following the <lb />
directions intelligently and faith- <lb />
fully you will ordinarily check the <lb />
progress of tho cold, and prevent <lb />
serious, possibly fatal, <lb />
change. <lb />
Hints for <lb />
Clean your mirrors with soft <lb />
paper instead of cloth. We have <lb />
seen this advice repeated <lb />
times, and yet we see cloth <lb />
constantly used, with its usual <lb />
accompaniment of lint and trouble. <lb />
If ink is spattered on woodwork <lb />
it may be taken out by scouring <lb />
with sand and water and a little <lb />
ammonia; then rinse with soda <lb />
water. <lb />
MORNING LIGHT. <lb />
Sunday preach word. <lb />
And waking <lb />
Prom r sing with sweet <lb />
morning light Is <lb />
Ho and split tho nose. <lb />
Then swung, with dire momentum <lb />
His left, and with two rapid blow <lb />
To sent <lb />
The victor as arose <lb />
From those who on him <lb />
For forty thousand cash those blows <lb />
Of his that day had netted. <lb />
from the vanquished wiped tho blood, <lb />
H is broken nose they mewled; <lb />
But well they knew his name was mud, <lb />
day of fighting ended. <lb />
. victor upon the Bight, <lb />
Which pleased him more than pained him; <lb />
For his opponents woeful plight <lb />
Had fame and fortune gained him. <lb />
And wild applause around him broke. <lb />
No critic's assailed him; <lb />
The papers In great headlines <lb />
And as a hem hailed him. <lb />
Out for his home the victor set <lb />
pat It mildly <lb />
And at the depot he met <lb />
by crowd who cheered him wildly. <lb />
to to struck up the band; <lb />
Thus they has lauded. <lb />
And ladies, in hand, <lb />
scrapper deeds applauded. <lb />
Cheer after cheer and shout on <lb />
Arose around toe station. <lb />
For half had turned out <lb />
To him an ovation. <lb />
Meanwhile the battered vanquished slept. <lb />
With grin f need Mends around him. <lb />
Near where he fell, or waking wept <lb />
And cursed the fate that downed hiss. <lb />
Tins did net happen far away. <lb />
Among a savage nation. <lb />
But here at and In our day <lb />
Of <lb />
love has a fillet on his ryes. <lb />
He sees not with the common <lb />
Whom his fine Issue touch despise <lb />
The censures of indifferent men. <lb />
There la In love an <lb />
That not In wit or lie; <lb />
He walks In everlasting <lb />
Despite the fillet on his eye. <lb />
-K. II. <lb />
BRANCHVILLE jottings. <lb />
Ed. Reflector The catch of <lb />
shad and other fish at the fishery <lb />
at Branch's bridge is the largest <lb />
known for some years. The gov- <lb />
placed them while young <lb />
in the river near Ford and <lb />
this may account for the large <lb />
number of shad. We saw a few <lb />
days ago a German carp weighing <lb />
nine pounds from this fishery. A <lb />
one last summer I <lb />
with a hook weighing ten pounds j <lb />
J- V. Beale has closed out his i <lb />
grocery store and entered on his j <lb />
new duties of special policeman at <lb />
this place. <lb />
More guano has been brought j <lb />
hero this spring so far than for <lb />
two years past. We are <lb />
that advance in peanuts has <lb />
turned the heads of some of the <lb />
farmers as they are going to in- <lb />
crease the acreage. <lb />
The colored teachers of the pub- <lb />
schools of the county met at <lb />
Galilee church a few days ago for <lb />
examination but owing to ab- <lb />
of county superintendent <lb />
nothing was done. <lb />
This writer has for time <lb />
been wrestling with the mysteries <lb />
of short hand and typo-writing <lb />
and while not an expert <lb />
yet is making fair progress. <lb />
This accounts for absence of our <lb />
for some time past. <lb />
Quill Pen. <lb />
The Baby's Airing. <lb />
It is well to send the babies out <lb />
for an firing every day, if they <lb />
are to competent hands. <lb />
But often baby's tender little body <lb />
is jarred and wearied being rat- <lb />
over a rough road, bounded <lb />
Into and over gutters, and <lb />
thumped over crossings at head- <lb />
long speed, until it <lb />
harm than good from its outing. <lb />
Almost every one knows what a <lb />
difference there is in drivers; how <lb />
one man will, however easy the <lb />
carriage, take you to your <lb />
end feeling that you <lb />
black and blue from jolting about, <lb />
while another will avoid every <lb />
loose stone and moderate his <lb />
speed at the rough places. Be <lb />
sure that babies suffer quite as <lb />
much as their elders from <lb />
charioteers. It is perfectly <lb />
easy to guide a child's cab over a <lb />
gutter without a jar, but it is <lb />
done by a servant, and often <lb />
not by mothers themselves. Not <lb />
only are tho little ones jerked and <lb />
bumped along in this tiresome <lb />
fashion, but they are kept hours <lb />
in their carriages without change <lb />
of position, getting benumbed and <lb />
cola in consequence. This is quite <lb />
wrong. Young infants should <lb />
take the air in the arms of an at- <lb />
Very serious evils result <lb />
The <lb />
Information Came Toe <lb />
I get a little information <lb />
from asked a <lb />
looking man at the Northwestern <lb />
station this morning. <lb />
replied the officer. <lb />
want to know how <lb />
these confidence men <lb />
various Sometimes <lb />
they borrow money and a <lb />
worthless check on a <lb />
do, eh f gasped the man, <lb />
with a sudden start. <lb />
or perhaps borrow <lb />
money and turn over a check for s <lb />
trunk. When you go to look for <lb />
the trunk it is not to i <lb />
the <lb />
man. <lb />
they sell you a <lb />
bogus or borrow on <lb />
its <lb />
they sometimes hire their <lb />
victims to boss a mill or factory <lb />
somewhere, and then borrow <lb />
money to pay a freight <lb />
different shouted <lb />
the man, as ho jumped clear of the <lb />
floor. <lb />
hanged if I haven't <lb />
been taken in on every one of <lb />
in a ride of a hundred miles Say, <lb />
come down and show me the <lb />
from subjecting their tender bodies the deepest spot in the <lb />
An Editor's Duties. <lb />
A newspaper man has no <lb />
to seek office. It is his <lb />
to try and get an office for the <lb />
other fellow; to sound the praise <lb />
of the candidate and keep quiet <lb />
his own feeling ; to whoop her up ; <lb />
for his man, and let his man for-1 <lb />
get all about him when he is <lb />
ed ; to defend his candidate <lb />
against the attacks of the <lb />
Opposition, see that whatever i <lb />
favors his candidate has to bestow <lb />
goes to the other fellow. <lb />
It is his business to boom the <lb />
city for all it is worth, mouth <lb />
month, and then see worth of i <lb />
printing go out of tho city <lb />
ten cents can be saved in doing so. <lb />
It is the business of the news- <lb />
paper to every enterprise a <lb />
frequent then catch <lb />
because he had failed to re- <lb />
cord the fact that some prominent <lb />
citizen had his delivery wagon I <lb />
To subscribe liberally <lb />
to every public charitable i <lb />
church entertainment, advertise <lb />
them for nothing, pay his own <lb />
way to everything then be <lb />
called prejudiced mean spirit- <lb />
ed because a column is not de- <lb />
voted to that particular affair. Do <lb />
you wonder that there are so <lb />
many cranks in tho newspaper <lb />
business <lb />
to jars. <lb />
How Rapidly We Think. <lb />
showed that a wave <lb />
of thought would require about a <lb />
minute to travel about a mile of <lb />
nerve, and Hersch found that a <lb />
touch on the face was recognized <lb />
by brain and responded to by <lb />
a manual signal in the seventh of of <lb />
the place where can drop in and <lb />
never come to the surface <lb />
again with my dough-filled <lb />
No Wheels In Tangier, <lb />
Among tho strangest <lb />
ties of Tangier, and one that <lb />
forces itself upon the attention of <lb />
tho newcomer, is the total absence <lb />
a second. <lb />
He also found that the speed of <lb />
sense differed for different organs, <lb />
the sense of hearing being re- <lb />
to in the sixth of a sec- j <lb />
while that of sight requires <lb />
one-fifth of a second to be felt and <lb />
In all these cases the <lb />
distance traversed was about <lb />
same, so that the inference is that; <lb />
images travel more slowly than <lb />
sound or touch. It still remained. <lb />
however, to show the portion <lb />
this interval taken up by the ac- <lb />
of the brain. <lb />
Prof. by very delicate <lb />
any kind of wheeled vehicle. <lb />
In the entire city is an ex- <lb />
ample of all the others in the em- <lb />
there is not even a donkey <lb />
cart, for the streets arc much too <lb />
narrow to admit of their use, and <lb />
transportation of passengers and <lb />
merchandise is effected upon the <lb />
books of donkeys, horses, mules <lb />
and camels, according to <lb />
weight and the distance. <lb />
There are but few streets <lb />
which a loaded camel could enter, <lb />
and not than throe in which <lb />
ho could pass another loaded camel <lb />
or horse. Some of the smaller <lb />
Progressively <lb />
North Carolinian. <lb />
Tho Caucasian asks us to say if <lb />
we tho Legislature was pro- <lb />
conservative when <lb />
tried to repeal the Alliance char- <lb />
in such indecent In <lb />
the first place the Legislature did <lb />
nothing of the sort. The Alliance <lb />
charter was not repealed, nor did <lb />
the Democrats in that body try to <lb />
repeal it. In tho House a bill was <lb />
passed putting the business <lb />
fund in the hands of a receiver <lb />
to enable farmers who desired to <lb />
do so to withdraw their money ; <lb />
and a new charter, free from <lb />
tics was given the Alliance. In <lb />
the Senate full hearing was given <lb />
and when the Alliance leaders ex- <lb />
pressed a willingness to allow <lb />
those who desired to draw out <lb />
their money to do so, the charter <lb />
was so amended. We call that <lb />
legislation, and the <lb />
honest men in the State will call <lb />
it <lb />
An amusing incident occurred at <lb />
Tryon Street Baptist chin eh Sun- <lb />
day night, Dr. Prichard <lb />
was preaching on and <lb />
as he was coming in on the home- <lb />
stretch of a very able <lb />
rounding up several heads, he <lb />
spoke of Samson's faith- <lb />
said the speaker, finishing <lb />
up this head, us <lb />
he paused a moment before going <lb />
on to say, such when, <lb />
to his surprise, the congregation <lb />
dropped on their knees in the <lb />
and fell to praying. The <lb />
taking in the <lb />
his natural astuteness took the <lb />
cue, and led the -prayer, bringing <lb />
his sermon to a close before he in- <lb />
tended or expected to. The <lb />
occurrence was so ludicrous a one <lb />
that preacher as well as people <lb />
could hardly repress their laugh- <lb />
until the final benediction. <lb />
The doctor will be careful here- <lb />
after, not to make too long a <lb />
pause when inviting his <lb />
to pray for any of cardinal <lb />
Observer. <lb />
Th-s remedy is becoming so well <lb />
sod so popular as to need no <lb />
special mention. All who have <lb />
Electric Bitters slug tho same song of <lb />
purer medicine does not exist <lb />
and it is guaranteed to do all that, ts <lb />
claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all <lb />
the Liver and Kidneys, will <lb />
remove Boll,. Salt Rheum and <lb />
affections caused by impure blood <lb />
Will drive Malaria from the system <lb />
and prevent as well as cure all Malarial <lb />
cure of Headache, <lb />
and try <lb />
Bitters Entire guarantee <lb />
and <lb />
Dreg More. <lb />
apparatus, has demonstrated this <lb />
to be about seventy-five-thou-1 <lb />
of a second. Of tho whole <lb />
interval forty-thousandths I <lb />
in the simple act of <lb />
thirty-five-thousandths <lb />
for the act of willing response. <lb />
Daisy Apron. <lb />
unique apron is of <lb />
Swiss, with white medallions, <lb />
inch and a quarter in diameter, <lb />
at regular intervals over <lb />
it, will require for its <lb />
a and a quarter of <lb />
Swiss, spools of orange <lb />
Florence silk, two <lb />
yards of orange colored moire <lb />
ribbons for ties. A hem six <lb />
inches in depth finishes the bot- <lb />
tom, top is folded over deep <lb />
enough to form a ruffle and a <lb />
shirr; now tho apron is ready to <lb />
begin with the embroidery silk. <lb />
After It is finished there are <lb />
rows, medallions in each <lb />
row. Knot the silk, draw the <lb />
needle through from tho wrong <lb />
side, at tho edge of a medallion; <lb />
then bring the silk across on the <lb />
opposite side, dividing it in halves, <lb />
then in quarters. then <lb />
quarter once. Now the <lb />
is divided in eighths, and is called <lb />
a daisy. Proceed with tho others <lb />
until the daisies all made. The <lb />
material is nearly a yard wide. <lb />
A Woman on the <lb />
Miss Ida Hewitt, of Cairo, W. <lb />
Va., who is known as the only <lb />
female locomotive engineer in the <lb />
world, has boon engaged by the <lb />
lady Commissioners of the World's <lb />
Fair to run the first train over the <lb />
grounds on the opening day of <lb />
the Exposition. <lb />
Pretty Table Covers. <lb />
The Indian cottons of heavy <lb />
quality, which are embroidered in <lb />
rough, coarse, effective stitches, <lb />
make picturesque table covers. <lb />
These are found in dull <lb />
red, so common in Indian needle- <lb />
work, in indigo blues and in dull <lb />
orange yellows, embroidered with <lb />
figures and sometimes set <lb />
are so narrow, that even <lb />
tho panniers of a donkey would <lb />
scrape upon either side, so that in <lb />
the city itself the transportation <lb />
upon donkeys for tho <lb />
side streets, and upon horses and <lb />
for tho main <lb />
Canary Birds. <lb />
These pretty are often <lb />
covered with annoying vermin. <lb />
may he relieved <lb />
of them by a clean white <lb />
cloth over then- at night, tn <lb />
the the will be <lb />
with red spots, <lb />
M they aw y be seen <lb />
the eye; these the <lb />
parasites, a source great annoy- <lb />
a ace to birds. <lb />
in Near Future. <lb />
Customer Have yon Scribbler's <lb />
tor this month <lb />
And <lb />
won't you have a copy of nest <lb />
month, They're both out <lb />
A Guatemala Betrothal. <lb />
They have a queer betrothal <lb />
custom down among the common <lb />
natives or peons of Guatemala, <lb />
is scarcely romantic for the <lb />
girl I was passing the hut of a <lb />
native on a or coffee <lb />
when I saw an old <lb />
woman belaboring her daughter <lb />
with a stick, which she <lb />
applied vigorously across tho <lb />
and body of her beloved <lb />
offspring, who set up wails of woe <lb />
and pain, though I fancy tears <lb />
quickly dried, for it was a <lb />
significant event for her. This is <lb />
the way the old lady gave her con- <lb />
neut to the marriage of <lb />
The natives receive but little <lb />
cash during the year. Tho priests <lb />
charge what is considered a <lb />
good sum for performing a mar- <lb />
and the natives <lb />
of the lower classes dispense with <lb />
it. The mother beats tho daughter, <lb />
there is a feast of and tor- <lb />
cakes and tho dispensation of <lb />
unlimited quantities of native <lb />
everybody is happy and <lb />
drunk, and that constitutes the <lb />
marriage, which, singular as it <lb />
with little mirrors, glittering like, appear, is regarded and ob- <lb />
miniature coins. These table J, ft awfully. <lb />
covers are sometimes finished with <lb />
a band of Liberty velveteen in <lb />
dark or the dull <lb />
burnt orange shades which <lb />
so beautifully with Indian <lb />
yellows. <lb />
A LOVER'S RIDE. <lb />
Job room for two, not too much <lb />
I tack bar in all and warm; <lb />
I'm <lb />
And of the of her <lb />
I shake the lines out tree and gar. <lb />
The balls chimp and away. <lb />
the and ; snow, <lb />
behind t h a t y street, <lb />
Its garish glare and noise, we go <lb />
Into the and <lb />
And and there a household <lb />
rifts n to s flying dream I <lb />
How speed the horses <lb />
sweet bells clatter mirth. <lb />
And ere star to white tn <lb />
AM every field Is white cm earth. <lb />
Row dark the brightness how bright <lb />
The the winter night I <lb />
We the open road wind, <lb />
the dim shadowy lanes <lb />
Our wild pare slackens, and I Sod <lb />
One hand enough to held she reins; <lb />
And, somehow, when I i to speak. <lb />
My are on bur <lb />
Ah, life s fair In many way. <lb />
Mil of dear, enchant tug <lb />
And lore Is sweet In summer days, <lb />
path and sylvan bowers, <lb />
fit Wt me choose all bUm above <lb />
ride the gM I <lb />
S This Office for Job printing. <lb />
Save <lb />
Paying j <lb />
Bills <lb />
BOTANIC i <lb />
BLOOD BALM J <lb />
THE GREAT REMEDY . , <lb />
th. , , <lb />
W , I <lb />
SCROFULA. ULCERS. ECZEMA, <lb />
at <lb />
a i I <lb />
BLOOD BALM CO. Atlanta. C , <lb />
J SEN <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb />
TAR RIVER SERVICE <lb />
leave Washington for Green- <lb />
and touching t and- <lb />
on Tar River Monday, day, <lb />
Friday M A. M. <lb />
Returning leave at A H. <lb />
Thursdays and Saturdays, <lb />
wine <lb />
These departures are subject to stage of <lb />
water on Tar River, <lb />
Trade at Home. <lb />
As an exchange says the only safe <lb />
course for a to pursue <lb />
is to deal with local merchants. <lb />
Whether it is crockery, groceries, <lb />
millinery or dry goo citizens <lb />
goto established dealers for <lb />
their supplies. It is the safe and <lb />
honorable way The citizens ex- <lb />
the merchants to sign every <lb />
subscription paper public and <lb />
charitable objects well as pay <lb />
their taxes, insurance and the <lb />
expenses of maintaining re- <lb />
and attractive marts of <lb />
trade- It is no leas incumbent on <lb />
the people generally to do their <lb />
trading right here at home with <lb />
houses that are permanent and <lb />
reliable- <lb />
Meats. <lb />
A friend In need la a friend Indeed, <lb />
and not than one million people <lb />
fount list such a friend In Dr. <lb />
King's New Discovery for Consumption, <lb />
Coughs, and have never <lb />
Great Cough one <lb />
trial will convince you It has won- <lb />
curative powers In all diseases of <lb />
Throat, Chest and Lungs. Each bottle <lb />
guaranteed to do all that Is claimed or <lb />
money will be refunded. Trial bottles <lb />
free at Store. Large <lb />
Connecting at Washington steam- <lb />
of The Norfolk, Wash- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore. <lb />
Philadelphia, New York and Boston. <lb />
Shippers should order their goods <lb />
marked via Dominion from <lb />
Hew York. from <lb />
Norfolk A <lb />
more Steamboat from <lb />
more. chants Miners from <lb />
Burton <lb />
JNO. SON. <lb />
Agent, <lb />
Washington N. C <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, <lb />
Agent, <lb />
N C. <lb />
1875. <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
AT TUB <lb />
OLD h STORE <lb />
AND MERCHANTS BUT <lb />
their year's supplies will find <lb />
their interest to get our prices before <lb />
chasing elsewhere. Incomplete <lb />
n all its branches. <lb />
PORK SIDES <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb />
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb />
at Lowest Market <lb />
A. <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one A com <lb />
stock of <lb />
always on hand and sold at prices to suit <lb />
the times. Our are all bought And <lb />
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb />
sell at a close <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
S. M. <lb />
Card <lb />
A Card. <lb />
lo <lb />
to Greenville, l offer my pro- <lb />
services to tho people of the <lb />
town and surrounding section. Thank- <lb />
my friends and public generally <lb />
in and around for their kind <lb />
new my stay and service <lb />
whenever needed, lam <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
DR. W. II. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
I desire to announce to my friends and <lb />
he public generally that I have opens-1 <lb />
office for myself just across the <lb />
my residence and on the old Dr. <lb />
Blow lot where can be found at any <lb />
time. <lb />
FRANK W. BROWN, M. D. <lb />
D. la J AM <lb />
DENTIST. r <lb />
L. <lb />
KY-AT-LA W, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Prompt attention to business. Office <lb />
at Tucker Murphy's old stand. <lb />
J JARVIS. L. <lb />
TAR VIS BLOW, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
In all the Court. <lb />
t. A. B. r. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
M. O. <lb />
Prompt attention given to collect <lb />
L. C. LATHAM. HARRY <lb />
T A <lb />
A K AT- A W, <lb />
N. G. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, ff C <lb />
Practice In all the Collect tow g,<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017594_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
WEDNESDAY. APRIL W-h, <lb />
1803. <lb />
th- <lb />
K. C. m second-class mil matter. <lb />
column one year, g. <lb />
one week. l ; two weeks. <lb />
mouth Two one week, <lb />
two weeks, one Month, <lb />
Advertisements Inserted In Local <lb />
Column as reading items, i cents per <lb />
line each insertion. <lb />
Ml Advertisements, such as Ad, <lb />
and<lb />
to etc., will <lb />
be charged at legal rates and <lb />
HE PAID OB IN <lb />
Contracts for any apace not <lb />
length of time. <lb />
made by application to the either <lb />
in person or by letter. <lb />
Copy tor <lb />
all changes of should he <lb />
Handed hi by o'clock on Tuesday <lb />
order, to receive prompt in- <lb />
the following. <lb />
The extraordinary session of I WHAT EDITORS CAN DO. <lb />
the Senate which has been in <lb />
since the 4th of March ad- <lb />
last Saturday. Most of Ba Sin and i <lb />
. . , some the u i. <lb />
the work done was confirming them with interest. o <lb />
of appointments made by Mr. things in the last number <lb />
Cleveland. It is generally desire to emphasize by cull- <lb />
ed if not positively certain that the attention to them First y our <lb />
President will call a session of j very excellent on the <lb />
I , . evils of the Sunday paper. M i <lb />
Congress to convene either the of power <lb />
September or October. The ob the secular press to mate <lb />
will be to prepare and pass a <lb />
Tariff bill so much demanded by <lb />
the verdict of the people. <lb />
Portions of the west had de- <lb />
cyclones last week- Id <lb />
several States numerous lives were <lb />
lost. <lb />
North Carolina gets ore Minis- <lb />
Mr. Alexander of <lb />
of North Caroling goes to <lb />
Turkey, and <lb />
The Richmond gave a <lb />
double sized daily, eight pages, <lb />
every day last week during the <lb />
meeting of the Southern Govern- <lb />
ors in that city. There is a <lb />
men of journalistic enterprise. <lb />
The Naval Rendezvous is in <lb />
progress at Hampton Roads and <lb />
is very largely attended- Nearly <lb />
all the navies of the are rep- <lb />
resented and the occasion furnish- <lb />
es an opportunity for seeing <lb />
which seldom happens in a life <lb />
time. <lb />
Mr. Cleveland is reported as <lb />
saying North Carolina will only <lb />
get one Minister. She may <lb />
get two Consulships but this <lb />
is all she will get. Mr. Pendleton <lb />
King will probably get one of these- <lb />
The question who will be the lucky <lb />
man in capturing the other <lb />
Among the aspirants let the most <lb />
worthy be appointed. <lb />
The Governors of the Southern <lb />
States held a meeting in Richmond <lb />
last week. Governor of <lb />
Arkansas was elected chairman of <lb />
the meeting. The discussion of <lb />
various questions was timely and <lb />
cannot fail to result in much good <lb />
to the South- The suggestion for <lb />
this meeting was a wise one and <lb />
the meeting was a success in the <lb />
broadest of the word. Our <lb />
own Governor Carr was a <lb />
figure in the body and <lb />
North Carolina with credit <lb />
to himself and honor to the whole <lb />
State. Should the suggestions <lb />
made by the body be successfully <lb />
put in operation incalculable good <lb />
will result to every State that was <lb />
represented in the body- <lb />
who was tried in North- <lb />
last week for murder, was <lb />
acquitted. The accused was <lb />
by as able counsel as North <lb />
Carolina can produce, among <lb />
whom was Senator Ransom. <lb />
There was much surprise at the <lb />
verdict. How much better it <lb />
would be the State if those <lb />
who are guilty of crime were pun- <lb />
There are plenty of people who <lb />
would like to prevent ministers of <lb />
the gospel from preaching <lb />
and morality. There are also <lb />
plenty of people who would like to <lb />
choke the press Sun. <lb />
Just give those people their way, <lb />
silence the from the pulpit <lb />
and press, remove from our nation <lb />
the influence they exert, and in a <lb />
few short years enlightened Amer- <lb />
would present a worse scene of <lb />
heathenism than can found in <lb />
the wilds of Africa. <lb />
Senator put a different <lb />
phase upon the resolution of the <lb />
Republicans in the United States <lb />
Senate by coming forward and de- <lb />
an investigation cf the <lb />
charges made against him. They <lb />
had not expected this and were <lb />
trying to make political capital by <lb />
pretending to want to investigate. <lb />
There are too many fellows on <lb />
their side of the chamber whose <lb />
characters need a little light turn- <lb />
ed on for them to favor <lb />
The Democrats might do <lb />
well to agree to a general commit- <lb />
tee of this kind as the result would <lb />
be that there would several seats <lb />
on the Republican side vacant. <lb />
The reader who gets hold of a <lb />
copy of the Raleigh North <lb />
does not want to lay it down <lb />
until he gets entirely through it. <lb />
No more interesting news from <lb />
Washington can be found any- <lb />
where than the letters cf Mr. <lb />
Josephus Daniels to the <lb />
In the last issue his <lb />
summed seven <lb />
columns, and it was all about just <lb />
such things as our people want to <lb />
be reading. He does not hesitate <lb />
to speak out for North Carolina <lb />
and wants her to be fully <lb />
by the administration. One <lb />
of his last letters contained the <lb />
names of persons from this State <lb />
holding positions in the Interior <lb />
and departments, to- <lb />
with the date of appoint- <lb />
and salary attached to such <lb />
position. This will be followed <lb />
with similar lists from other <lb />
departments- The Reflector is <lb />
glad to note also that Mr. Daniels <lb />
has been given a still higher <lb />
than that to which he was first <lb />
appointed, he now being Appoint- <lb />
Clerk in the Interior Depart- <lb />
Last Thursday was the day for <lb />
Alliance meetings all over tho <lb />
State wherever have county <lb />
organizations. Judging from ac- <lb />
counts in our exchanges re <lb />
ports from many of these meetings <lb />
show that instead of in the <lb />
interest of the Alliance -and the <lb />
farmer, they were simply for de- <lb />
the last Legislature <lb />
passing resolutions calculated to <lb />
stir up further political strife. It <lb />
seems that this is not the case so <lb />
far as Pitt county is concerned. <lb />
After the meeting here was over <lb />
we asked one of the most <lb />
members of the Alliance, a <lb />
man who is a through Democrat <lb />
and whose integrity can always be <lb />
relied upon, if anything of general <lb />
interest that he could make public- <lb />
bad transpired, or if the Third <lb />
element tried to take charge <lb />
and run the meeting in the inter- <lb />
est of that party. He said no, <lb />
only matters pertaining to the in- <lb />
the Alliance were discuss- <lb />
ed and nothing presented in the <lb />
meeting had any political <lb />
that the Third party <lb />
were sufficiently amused at <lb />
the they cut last year in try- <lb />
to take the Alliance into <lb />
tics, and he thought they had con- <lb />
it best to hereafter let well <lb />
enough alone. If the Alliance will <lb />
follow out this line it can yet <lb />
prove a blessing to the farmer. <lb />
The tendency of the times seems <lb />
to drift more and more toward <lb />
mixing the and the world <lb />
up together, and no wonder <lb />
that there are those who think and <lb />
say the world is as good as the <lb />
church. The church festivals are <lb />
losing much of their sacredness <lb />
and significance because of the <lb />
with which they are held. <lb />
A few Sundays ago the churches <lb />
of our land were holding Easter <lb />
services commemorative of a risen <lb />
and ascended Savior of the world, <lb />
and since then there have been <lb />
numerous accounts in the papers <lb />
of <lb />
Easter Card <lb />
and goodness <lb />
knowns what else that the world <lb />
tries to make popular and <lb />
table by prefixing the name of this <lb />
sacred church festival. Strange it <lb />
is. too, that there are so many <lb />
church members who lend their <lb />
influence to the prostitution of <lb />
these sacred names. They go into <lb />
the sanctuary one day to worship <lb />
the Christ in an Easter service, <lb />
and next day participate with <lb />
the world in an <lb />
Let the world have its balls, its <lb />
card parties, and all such if it will, <lb />
but for religion's sake keep the <lb />
name of Savior and the <lb />
set apart to His memory out <lb />
of them, if the churches gave less <lb />
countenance to these <lb />
things they would lose much of <lb />
their popularity. <lb />
public sentiment on this on <lb />
other subjects. Tho secular <lb />
do it for it alone reaches the <lb />
class of among whom tie <lb />
sentiment it to be made. The re <lb />
press can make and <lb />
serve the sentiment among the <lb />
religious classes reached by it and <lb />
no more. God speed tho day <lb />
when every Christian man that <lb />
the editorial chair of a <lb />
newspaper will as you have <lb />
done, aloud and spare <lb />
against tho wide spread <lb />
of by the <lb />
Sunday newspaper. Fearful is <lb />
the responsibility of that man who <lb />
yields the of tho <lb />
which he controls to aid in build <lb />
up public sentiment contrary <lb />
to God's just and holy <lb />
the observance of which are <lb />
profitable to. all men, physically, <lb />
mentally and materially, as well as <lb />
spiritually. <lb />
Timothy, Great will be <lb />
the reward of that man who re- <lb />
fusing to yield to a wicked public <lb />
sentiment, brings the of <lb />
the which he controls, and <lb />
consecrating at the altars of truth <lb />
divine makes it a creator And pro- <lb />
totter of public sentiment for God <lb />
and the right. I not how <lb />
I did and who they <lb />
Christian men are editors of <lb />
secular papers in North Carolina. <lb />
but I feel that the number is <lb />
to work a <lb />
throughout our on <lb />
this vital subject within <lb />
they will act in unity. <lb />
May Holy Spirit come upon <lb />
every Christian editor of a <lb />
paper in ti North State, <lb />
and may they do this work the <lb />
Master while they have so great <lb />
opportunity. <lb />
Yours Very <lb />
If. Ti <lb />
P. S. I will write about the <lb />
matter later. D- H. T- <lb />
Joseph O. Lopes <lb />
Of lid. <lb />
Younger and Better <lb />
A War Veteran's <lb />
Gives Strength <lb />
and Overcomes <lb />
Is nothing I have ever taken hi my <lb />
life did so much good Flood's <lb />
I In tho Union army from to <lb />
M confined la prison eight <lb />
months, and diseases contracted there <lb />
linger. chills and fevers for years, and <lb />
my doctor toM me that I mast take grains of <lb />
z day for a long time I did so, hat <lb />
after a It did me no good, and then he <lb />
ordered hop which was as bitter as gall <lb />
and Bade raj sick. Rheumatism then caught <lb />
me In my left leg and I could not move It. The <lb />
doctor said <lb />
I Had Malaria. <lb />
Hood's did mo so much good that I <lb />
have i. ever and it always does me <lb />
good. Ky tell mo I look younger and <lb />
I did <lb />
feel cannot Hood's <lb />
i en My case was a bad one, but Hood's <lb />
Put Ma on My Feet <lb />
I .-. very to It. I <lb />
all Um people whom I hear com <lb />
Una weak tired and for other <lb />
I. I many who been <lb />
,. ; by t I am a witness to the <lb />
. O. Lo- <lb />
l . . . ; . . <lb />
owe ills, biliousness, <lb />
., sick headache. <lb />
TAX SALE.<lb />
Mont <lb />
A. <lb />
provisions of chapter of <lb />
of I shall, beginning <lb />
Jay l-t 1898, at It o'clock <lb />
rout of tin- <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our regular <lb />
Washington-. D. C-, April <lb />
Senator Hoar's deep-laid scheme <lb />
to secure some political capital by <lb />
having a Senate committee <lb />
gate charge p <lb />
to have been <lb />
Senator Roach, of North Dakota.- <lb />
fourteen or fifteen years ago, has i <lb />
to In fact, it is dead- <lb />
It was killed by a Democratic <lb />
in Greenville, sell the below de- <lb />
. town tots for taxes <lb />
due in- the year 1898 and unpaid there- <lb />
of, and i -t advertising tin <lb />
J. A. K. TUCKER, <lb />
Tax Collector. <lb />
DAM <lb />
i , res 1891<lb />
B u A Lumber OH <lb />
u j ,, <lb />
. u go<lb />
son, Cherry, acres <lb />
of Senators, which adopted a <lb />
ton a low <lb />
Jackson acres <lb />
resolution against making an in- Knight, <lb />
into the career of <lb />
they became such. I Little, J II, town <lb />
In the discussion in the executive  H <lb />
session held before the <lb />
as well as in the caucus, Demo . Ire acres <lb />
Senators made strong A., acres<lb />
Brian, i town <lb />
Bullock. <lb />
town lot <lb />
acres <lb />
against tho right of tho Sen- T e <lb />
ate to make such investigation. Warren, <lb />
They held that as the authority to <lb />
create a Senator rested alone with ,; <lb />
the State, and that tho of j iT <lb />
a man to the V- S- by a I wards, Si <lb />
State legislature was a <lb />
certificate of his good character <lb />
for the Senate, Had it not been <lb />
for the <lb />
at the election of a Democrat to <lb />
the Senate by the Republican leg- <lb />
of North Dakota this in- <lb />
never would have been <lb />
proposed. <lb />
The position of Assistant Treas- <lb />
of the U- S-, at New York, is <lb />
one of tho most important, from a <lb />
strictly commercial point of view, <lb />
under the government. lie hand- <lb />
more money than any man in <lb />
the country and his to give a bond <lb />
of something that com- <lb />
few men can do. The <lb />
nomination of Mr Conrad X. <lb />
of New York, who was V. <lb />
S. Treasurer during President <lb />
Cleveland's first administration, to <lb />
this position gave general <lb />
faction, both in political v, <lb />
circles. <lb />
um it a <lb />
J J, lama <lb />
Gainer, Dicer A. acres <lb />
Dicey A. <lb />
Hi, Perry, <lb />
,, <lb />
Wm, acres <lb />
Jenkins, It. -o a res <lb />
Win, II acres <lb />
; j, acres <lb />
Perkins, J,<lb />
Vines, acres <lb />
acres <lb />
Jot <lb />
Ionian, <lb />
u acres <lb />
C W agent <lb />
i; w agent <lb />
act <lb />
Wright, ; W agent <lb />
acres <lb />
, G R W <lb />
town lots <lb />
s; <lb />
Hi<lb />
COLUMBUS <lb />
AMERICA <lb />
A Tree Planting Day. <lb />
Wilmington Messenger. <lb />
North Carolina has an Arbor <lb />
Day at last. It is called <lb />
Planting which is a better <lb />
name tor it. This editor has been <lb />
hammering at that for lo these <lb />
many years. The last legislature <lb />
passed a bill making 12th of Feb- <lb />
a public school holiday for <lb />
tree planting. That is, we sup- <lb />
pose as far as the act contemplates <lb />
going. The State at large needs <lb />
such a day for planting <lb />
trees in all the towns and villages, <lb />
in all the homes, and upon all tho <lb />
waste places of farms. <lb />
Among the deaths in New York <lb />
lost week were from <lb />
attributed in many cases to <lb />
the haste shown in changing under- <lb />
wear at the appearance of a <lb />
little warm sunshine. If more <lb />
common sense were shown in such <lb />
matters there would be fewer <lb />
graves Star. <lb />
Am the have discovered that <lb />
they can get bargains by trading with <lb />
W. H. WHITE <lb />
GOODS have <lb />
rived and ready <lb />
I want every lady to fee the nice Dress <lb />
Goods, and every gentleman to see <lb />
nice CLOTHING <lb />
GOODS contained in my Bring <lb />
along the girls, too. as I have <lb />
what Is needed for every one <lb />
GROCERIES. <lb />
Speaking of Groceries, I have fresh <lb />
rivals of such things as every house- <lb />
keeper needs. Examine what have <lb />
you will be sure to <lb />
Yours to serve, <lb />
W. II. WHITS. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
On Monday the first of May, A. D. <lb />
1893. I will sell at the Court House door <lb />
in the town of Greenville to the highest <lb />
bidder for one land in Pitt <lb />
county containing about one <lb />
and fifty acres and bounded as <lb />
Situated in township on the <lb />
north title of Tar and sooth of <lb />
Creek, adjoining the lauds of <lb />
Moore, J. J. Rollins and others, <lb />
and known as the William Langley tract <lb />
mid in the division the lands Daniel <lb />
Langley or lot No Said land is sold <lb />
for purchase money to satisfy an ex- <lb />
in ray for collection <lb />
against James A. and W. Harris and <lb />
which have Seen on said land as <lb />
property of said J mes A. and W. <lb />
Harris. It. W. KING, Sheriff. <lb />
April 1st 1893. , <lb />
Sill<lb />
II <lb />
ca- <lb />
in <lb />
On the isthmus of either <lb />
sex can do the courting, with the <lb />
natural result that almost every- <lb />
one gets married. <lb />
TO MERCHANTS AND DEALERS <lb />
I will be at my the Court <lb />
the <lb />
fur <lb />
and <lb />
. J E, for wife, <lb />
W II, acres <lb />
K. I, Sarah A, <lb />
Mei ks, M m acres <lb />
II, acres <lb />
Bawls, J II, guard A Fleming <lb />
acres <lb />
Teal. <lb />
I field, W ;. acres <lb />
M lair-, II, Jr, acres <lb />
. Jg <lb />
res <lb />
Adams. T. acres <lb />
a. acres <lb />
Cory, W L acres <lb />
Chapman, William, acres <lb />
Cox, Quinn, acre. <lb />
Ewell, acres <lb />
y.-lames, assignee of E S <lb />
acres, 1891, <lb />
Galloway, James, E S Dix- <lb />
acres <lb />
Haddock, Abram. acres <lb />
B, acres <lb />
acres <lb />
Barber Henry B acres <lb />
d acres J <lb />
Brooks ; W fence town lot <lb />
Lula fence town lot Co <lb />
Branch BO acres <lb />
Ca-r Moses acres i <lb />
Cannon E acres i <lb />
James <lb />
Dudley Green acres <lb />
Bills. <lb />
J 1-5 acres<lb />
Hart, K E. acres <lb />
W B, town <lb />
Harris, C <lb />
Jones, Wm, <lb />
Johnson, Ida G, acre, <lb />
Calvin, acres <lb />
W K,<lb />
Mills, A acres <lb />
acres <lb />
Nelson,. B. <lb />
Spier, J E. lo-ii lot <lb />
Savage. T, town lots <lb />
Smith, G W, town lot <lb />
J P, acres <lb />
Tripp, Hardy, acres <lb />
Nellie . M, acres <lb />
Wilson, acres <lb />
Williams, A Inert, <lb />
A wife, acres <lb />
Mills. Marv J, acres <lb />
Mill.-. Church, acres <lb />
Roger.-. acres <lb />
Smith, acres <lb />
D V. acres, 1881. <lb />
Joyner, Mrs Lou A,<lb />
acre, <lb />
II, p s. <lb />
Bake;, ; ;. town <lb />
Hi it at . <lb />
Kitchen, I. I town lot, <lb />
ville. 1841, <lb />
Kitchen,. I,. town lot, Farm- <lb />
ville. <lb />
May. tn, acres, <lb />
J acres, <lb />
acres, <lb />
Heal lie. I II. <lb />
Crisp. M M, acres, <lb />
K. <lb />
Anderson, C T, acre , <lb />
children, <lb />
pap <lb />
i- <lb />
is <lb />
3-t <lb />
BO <lb />
lot<lb />
Henry, <lb />
Adams, I kin y. <lb />
, F, acres, <lb />
Caesar, i lot, <lb />
J i. s, <lb />
Burbank, town <lb />
Cox. A and wife. acres, <lb />
Cory, u h, acres, <lb />
Cherry, K guard, town lot, <lb />
town lot, <lb />
U, I town lot, <lb />
Clark, Wiley, J town lot. <lb />
Cherry, Wilson, town lot. <lb />
Sarah Cox, <lb />
Elks, <lb />
L, <lb />
i n <lb />
. at <lb />
.- <lb />
j .;. <lb />
S T, issuer, s, <lb />
J J. h acres, <lb />
Faithful, It acres, <lb />
Fleming, K lot acres, <lb />
Sidney A, <lb />
A A. .-ens, <lb />
lot, <lb />
r. I town <lb />
Greenville fob M Co. town lot, <lb />
ah, town it, <lb />
Charles, lo acres, <lb />
Alex, acres, <lb />
B II, i <lb />
RM, town lots, <lb />
. town it, <lb />
Aaron, acres, <lb />
Ni l.-en. town lot, <lb />
Hardy, Stanley. town lot. <lb />
Mary, ton <lb />
. town lot, <lb />
James, Berry, acres, <lb />
John-oil, F J, 1801, lots, <lb />
1803, town lots, <lb />
J Ben, vol. town <lb />
Keel, II r , and wife,<lb />
Kennedy, C- town lot, <lb />
Lawrence, L 1891.1 town lo;, <lb />
1888.1 town lot, <lb />
for ME -theirs <lb />
1681, town lot, <lb />
for heirs <lb />
1-2, town lot, <lb />
ant S is Lawrence, <lb />
i town lot, <lb />
N B Lawrence, <lb />
1883, i town lot, <lb />
Langley, T . acres, <lb />
A. acres, <lb />
Moore. T II t acres. <lb />
ill, <lb />
E acres, <lb />
Mayo, <lb />
May, J B, town lot, <lb />
1891, acres, <lb />
1882, <lb />
Parker, W acres, <lb />
Pollard, I <lb />
Peyton, Lula, town lot, <lb />
Ida, 1-5 low lot, <lb />
Victoria, <lb />
Mary, town <lb />
ferry, Jennie, town <lb />
1891, <lb />
Sermons, acres. <lb />
Skinner. Charles, town lots, <lb />
acres, <lb />
Stephen, i town Iota, <lb />
I, E a, town lot, <lb />
spell. Ned, town lot, <lb />
Stancil. Wilson, <lb />
Stephen. town lots, <lb />
Teel, Mrs N S, acres,<lb />
U F, <lb />
I, <lb />
1.11. <lb />
I. <lb />
SEA All red, <lb />
Williams, Matthew, town lot <lb />
George. town lot <lb />
Amos, town lot <lb />
acres <lb />
Wilson, Henry and wile, acres, <lb />
W II, acres. <lb />
Wm, <lb />
Archibald, Win, acres, lot <lb />
land, <lb />
Blakely, J C, 1,600 acres. <lb />
Clark, Jas E. acres, <lb />
Daniel. A Q, acres, <lb />
Joseph, acres, <lb />
W , <lb />
Jones, Wm, no acres, <lb />
Win A, 1861 acres. <lb />
Woolen, Abram, acres, <lb />
y; <lb />
N oil <lb />
10-J-2 <lb />
RIG <lb />
SI <lb />
JO <lb />
-8 <lb />
.,<lb />
ii<lb />
i d <lb />
IS <lb />
SWOT <lb />
Atkinson, Harry, acres <lb />
Buck, John ii. 7-; acres <lb />
Bland, W Hack, act for Carrie L, <lb />
acres, <lb />
Cox, Fred, acres <lb />
Gannon, <lb />
Cannon, <lb />
Cox. W ii, Cox, acres <lb />
Cory, N B, <lb />
Cannon, W, acres <lb />
Bland, W B, town lots <lb />
Brooks, Samuel town lot-, <lb />
Freeman, fence acre <lb />
Fizzle, J T, acres <lb />
Gardner, W. acres <lb />
Hardy Joseph J Jr scree <lb />
-I V ex Joan Smith acres a ii <lb />
J F B Cherry <lb />
CO <lb />
Lo <lb />
Kills r I <lb />
H d <lb />
V. <lb />
.-. <lb />
Noll . I,. . a I <lb />
; r-v <lb />
V. <lb />
Mi Suits <lb />
Men's <lb />
Chi Ml <lb />
Shirts low a <lb />
I. ill Slices <lb />
. . d . <lb />
and II lite p<lb />
Tho Now <lb />
Outwears the old shape. <lb />
Doesn't deform I he loot. <lb />
Saves discomfort. <lb />
Saves darning. <lb />
Co., Mass, <lb />
For Sal<lb />
Prices <lb />
The I. <lb />
i township, <lb />
of O. T. <lb />
. . Hid- <lb />
I I U I <lb />
a lino <lb />
A oar <lb />
in; II Hi j on I In <lb />
slob <lb />
are an r <lb />
hood, church <lb />
mil PI . . . in. <lb />
farms <lb />
A i farm . <lb />
from i <lb />
ville. Urn <lb />
and out <lb />
. .; <lb />
la <lb />
known as tho . <lb />
I I <lb />
H. <lb />
.- . . . <lb />
ship, C mil <lb />
q. Part of the ; re <lb />
acres, adj mi, <lb />
I n <lb />
and can made <lb />
A . . <lb />
it lo miles fas <lb />
We ., for- <lb />
owned by <lb />
. I . . <lb />
A tract of <lb />
station, v. I e; <lb />
. kiln . <lb />
tr . <lb />
township, n tin . i <lb />
road, pine timber. <lb />
Mills, <lb />
i- <lb />
11- <lb />
h . <lb />
ha, Mi Si ; <lb />
Oysters, <lb />
Sos. <lb />
I Son <lb />
res <lb />
no <lb />
ii<lb />
Hardy Jesse acres <lb />
Kilpatrick for Bessie fence <lb />
acres <lb />
Kilpatrick K fence acres <lb />
b V fence acres <lb />
S S fence acres <lb />
Stilley F fence J acre <lb />
L II act for Alice fence town <lb />
lots <lb />
J B for Charles E fence J <lb />
town lot <lb />
Stocks Charles acres 1-i <lb />
Smith Sam M acres <lb />
Smith Frank acres <lb />
Smith Charles S acres <lb />
Smith acres <lb />
Tyson K A acres <lb />
E fence acres <lb />
Wilson acres <lb />
Wilton -S mother <lb />
W E children acres <lb />
Witherington I. II acres <lb />
Bo art<lb />
I ii j <lb />
You <lb />
i . <lb />
The<lb />
Announce to tho public that they want their <lb />
The Patronage of- <lb />
A nice line of well selected <lb />
on hand, and coming now every steamer <lb />
that will well repay you to inspect before making <lb />
your spring purchases. <lb />
Yours trade and <lb />
N. C.<lb />
Roots,<lb />
HASKETT.<lb />
I.<lb />
HINGES. NAILS, AND AXES, <lb />
and Packing, <lb />
TOOLS, <lb />
DUMPS and <lb />
Store Pipe, and Chimney Pipe, <lb />
Paints, Oils, Glass and Putty, and <lb />
many other articles kept in a first- <lb />
Store Call to sen <lb />
if yen cheap for <lb />
tho cash. <lb />
i a b <lb />
of int, . <lb />
South id<lb />
a single copy. We <lb />
every Southern <lb />
for sample I lie <lb />
Baltimore, Md.<lb />
LONG, <lb />
Dealer 111----- <lb />
General Merchandise, <lb />
Has sale of <lb />
In N. the <lb />
factory of Moore, the <lb />
optical plant in the Smith, <lb />
Atlanta, arc not sup. <lb />
plied with those famous<lb />
s.-. . . <lb />
v . <lb />
All dealers keep it, SI <lb />
red<lb />
Can <lb />
at the OH <lb />
stand. <lb />
pared lo <lb />
on <lb />
Fine- <lb />
Repairing done <lb />
in i <lb />
D. D. HASKETT, <lb />
X. <lb />
LI, <lb />
N. <lb />
. . .-.-- <lb />
II is with pleasure that I to <lb />
the citizens and <lb />
that i hays just returned from <lb />
Northern Markets when I visited <lb />
all openings am now <lb />
receiving; the most and <lb />
selected stock of -Millinery . v r <lb />
opened In this market, town <lb />
and you will gel nothing but the <lb />
good. Low prices <lb />
and satisfaction <lb />
Mrs. Georgia Pearce, <lb />
N, c, <lb />
door to Old ore. <lb />
i and la a <lb />
chester. <lb />
U v. lamp with<lb />
WE CAN SELL YOU THE <lb />
BEST MO WEB IN <lb />
THE WORLD FOR<lb />
CALL ON lS WHEN IN <lb />
NEED OF TIN WARE, <lb />
STOVES, <lb />
PAINTS, OIL. <lb />
PLACE YOUR ORDERS for TOBACCO <lb />
S. E. CO., <lb />
d, <lb />
Ma<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017594_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Reflections. <lb />
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING LOTS. <lb />
Desirable Location for Home Seekers. <lb />
On the south- western border of Green- <lb />
ville and lying just the College <lb />
grounds is a beautiful tract of land that <lb />
is about to be placed the market <lb />
for residence lots. This tract of land, <lb />
containing acres. Is what was known <lb />
as the Marcellus Moore farm until it came <lb />
in possession of the Brothers in <lb />
January, 1802. These enterprising young <lb />
men have decided to lay this property <lb />
off in lots offer them for sale. Be- <lb />
cause of its nearness to the College they <lb />
haw given their property the name of <lb />
College City. <lb />
Just opposite and running on a line <lb />
with the last street through the property <lb />
laid off by the Greenville Land <lb />
Company, a feet <lb />
wide and yards long has been opened <lb />
through this new property. Other streets <lb />
arc to be opened and the lots formed in <lb />
regular blocks. <lb />
It is well-known that to the extension <lb />
and building up of towns the tendency is <lb />
more or less toward or around the depot, <lb />
and when it is considered that this College <lb />
City property lies only about a quarter of <lb />
a mile from the depot it becomes all the <lb />
more desirable and valuable. <lb />
A a suitable place for residence it is <lb />
not to be It is the highest <lb />
elevation anywhere around Greenville <lb />
and is far above the main of the <lb />
town. Excellent water can be obtained <lb />
on any pat of the property, a <lb />
vein running all through it. <lb />
The property is only a few minutes <lb />
walk from the Court House and business <lb />
portion of the town and being just out- <lb />
side of the corporate limits is free from <lb />
town taxes. All these things are worthy <lb />
the consideration of home seekers. <lb />
Persons wishing to purchase any of <lb />
these lots for immediate improvement <lb />
can get at a very low figure. The <lb />
if the lot- will be of at <lb />
less than their value, and thus an <lb />
i- to get a home at very <lb />
About fifty lots will be soon at <lb />
public auction, notice of which will be <lb />
given later. Those desiring to secure a <lb />
lot at private sale can do so. <lb />
The future of Greenville and the pro- <lb />
ahead of it. makes an invest- <lb />
here absolutely safe, to say nothing <lb />
of the desirability as a place in which to <lb />
live. A lot in College City will give con- <lb />
location, high elevation, pure air <lb />
and water, things that cannot be <lb />
in selecting a site for a <lb />
home. <lb />
Any further information about this <lb />
desirable property can be had from <lb />
Bros Greenville, <lb />
Personal. Big Sturgeon. <lb />
Mr. C. W. returned from the I On Friday Mr. E. B. Moore had in <lb />
North last week and his new goods are j market the largest sturgeon we ever saw. <lb />
coming in. It was a huge fellow weighing pounds <lb />
Father Price will deliver a discourse at I was caught In net below <lb />
Croquet Sets at D. D. <lb />
Honey in pint bottles at <lb />
Seed at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
ties from <lb />
There was a light frost yesterday <lb />
morning. <lb />
White Mountain Ice Cream Freezers at <lb />
D. D. <lb />
Furniture repaired, upholstered and <lb />
cleaned by D. P. <lb />
For good gentle family drive <lb />
horse. Apply to B. S. Sheppard. <lb />
Lime and Land Plaster for Peanuts for <lb />
sale by D. P. <lb />
Ice 1-For sale by S. E. <lb />
burn. <lb />
Samples of goods at my <lb />
place of D. P. <lb />
the Catholic church Sunday evening <lb />
at o'clock. <lb />
Mrs. S. A. Ch went to Washing- <lb />
ton yesterday to visit friends and attend <lb />
the Conference. <lb />
Mr. L. I. Moore, a young man from <lb />
Wilmington, is reading law under Mess. <lb />
Latham Skinner. <lb />
Miss Jennie Williams last week closed <lb />
the school she was teaching at Falkland <lb />
and has returned home. <lb />
Ex-Gov. Jarvis will deliver the annual <lb />
address the Wilson Collegiate In- <lb />
on the 30th of May. <lb />
Miss Margie Langley returned home <lb />
last week from a visit of a month to the <lb />
family of her brother, Mr. J. E. <lb />
at Richmond. <lb />
Miss King closed the school <lb />
she was teaching at Shady Grove on <lb />
day, and has taken a position at Mrs. <lb />
millinery store. <lb />
Mrs. J. Goodwin and children, of <lb />
Philadelphia, and Mrs. L. E. of <lb />
are here visiting their mother <lb />
sister, Mrs. P. E. Dancy and Mrs. M. <lb />
M. <lb />
Cadet Charlie Forbes, who came h me <lb />
on account of sickness, and Cadet James <lb />
B. Cherry, Jr., who was here to spend a <lb />
few days with his parents, both returned <lb />
to Homer school at Oxford last week. <lb />
Mr. C. T. left for the north- <lb />
markets Monday to add <lb />
large stock. He has gone on to make <lb />
some special selections and will be able <lb />
to show the very latest styles on his re- <lb />
turn. <lb />
Rev. J. II. Messrs. J. <lb />
II. C. Hooker, J. A. G. <lb />
M. Tucker, II. C. Edwards and Master <lb />
Milton White arc attending the naval <lb />
rendezvous near Norfolk. Others from <lb />
here will go down during the week. <lb />
Little Hal Sugg, son of Col. I. A. Sugg, <lb />
was painfully hurt one day last week <lb />
playing the Academy grove. <lb />
He fell down, and striking his knee <lb />
against an old tin can nearly cut the <lb />
knee-pan off. He is getting along very <lb />
well with his injury. <lb />
The District Conference meets in <lb />
Washington to-morrow. Bishop Duncan <lb />
presiding. The delegates from Green- <lb />
ville are Messrs. T. J. Jarvis, A. L. <lb />
Blow, A. B. Ellington and D. D. Has- <lb />
Revs. G. F. Smith and War- <lb />
lick, and perhaps others from here will <lb />
attend. <lb />
Washington. <lb />
Takes the Edge Off. <lb />
The first wag who came in to see what <lb />
that big paper cutter would do wanted to <lb />
know if we could trim our side whiskers <lb />
with it. Billie was able to work the next <lb />
day after the shock. <lb />
Early Closing. <lb />
It has been the custom in the past for <lb />
our merchants to begin the first of May <lb />
to close their stores at o'clock in the <lb />
evening. We suppose they will follow <lb />
the same custom this season. <lb />
Odd Fellows Address. <lb />
At the meeting of the Odd Fellows <lb />
st week Prof. W. II. delivered <lb />
an address on the first degree. We hear <lb />
it highly complimented by some of the <lb />
order they say those members who <lb />
failed to attend missed a feast. <lb />
Some warm days now will start cotton <lb />
planting. <lb />
Look after your legislation for the <lb />
town election. <lb />
Sec advertisement of sold <lb />
Brown <lb />
A lot of new novels just in Monday <lb />
Reflector Book Store. <lb />
at <lb />
Try some <lb />
of those nice preserves at <lb />
Louisburg Commencement. <lb />
The sermon before the graduating <lb />
class of Louisburg Female College will <lb />
be preached by Rev. F. A. Bishop of <lb />
Durham on Sunday May The ad- <lb />
dress before the two literary societies <lb />
will be delivered on May 31st, <lb />
at M. by Rev. R. B. John, of Wash- <lb />
Before Night. <lb />
A change of schedule that our people <lb />
will be thankful for went into effect yes- <lb />
The train now comes in at <lb />
in the evening, about an hour and a half <lb />
sooner than formerly. Going north <lb />
mornings it passes here the same hour as <lb />
before, This schedule is all right <lb />
now, if the trains will be made to run by <lb />
it. <lb />
Third Ward Democratic Primary. <lb />
The Democratic voters of the Third <lb />
Ward of the town of Greenville are re- <lb />
quested to meet on Friday April 28th <lb />
1893 at o'clock P. M. for the purpose of <lb />
nominating candidates for <lb />
to be voted for at an election to be held <lb />
on the first Monday in May next. <lb />
Alex L. Blow, <lb />
Com. for Ward. <lb />
A Fire at Hamilton. <lb />
A friend at Hamilton writes us that <lb />
Harrell's carriage shop and other build- <lb />
were burned o'clock <lb />
day night. Loss about Some <lb />
children that were passing saw a <lb />
man enter the turning room, strike a <lb />
match and apply it to some shavings and <lb />
then run It was no doubt the work <lb />
of an incendiary. It was with great <lb />
difficulty that Hooker's stables and other <lb />
buildings were saved. <lb />
of our young people are <lb />
many wild flowers. The woods <lb />
are beautiful with them. <lb />
Customers wanted for envelopes <lb />
now on hand at Reflector Boot Store <lb />
from to cents a pack. <lb />
A new drink at <lb />
try it. <lb />
There was much drunkenness on the <lb />
streets last Thursday, the day of the Dal- <lb />
loon ascension. <lb />
Talk of the pretty <lb />
dress goods at Bros. <lb />
Now you may listen out for the <lb />
typed item that all the fruit has been <lb />
killed. The Reflector promised to <lb />
make no prediction until July. <lb />
A large stock of nice Furniture <lb />
at the Old Brick Sore. <lb />
over <lb />
alls from 3.1 cents up. at Bros. <lb />
Remember I pay you cash for Chickens, <lb />
Egg and Country Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
C. P. Co's. Ladies hand <lb />
made shoes. Try a pair and you will <lb />
wear no others. Higgs Bros. <lb />
Black ink, red ink, violet ink and <lb />
mucilage, cents a bottle at Reflector <lb />
Book Store. <lb />
Be sure you make a big crop of bright <lb />
tobacco. Buy Cotton Seed Meal at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
If you want health, drink pore water. <lb />
You can get this by using a Drive Pump, <lb />
for sale by D. D. Haskett. <lb />
Something That <lb />
Wants.-A low price, but reliable <lb />
for Peanuts. Carolina Soluble <lb />
Bone and Potash fills the bill precise- <lb />
Manufactured by F. S. Royster, <lb />
Tarboro, N. C. For sale by Geo. M. <lb />
Tucker, Greenville, N. C, and A. G. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
We hear that the truck crops around <lb />
Kin-ton arc tine. <lb />
vacant store <lb />
c to fill up. <lb />
The rendezvous near Norfolk takes off <lb />
a few of our people this week. <lb />
The Rifles were out for drill Friday <lb />
afternoon with thirty members. <lb />
It is just a week to the meeting of the <lb />
Press Association at <lb />
William-ton had a fire one night last <lb />
week which destroyed four buildings- <lb />
The young people of Farmville will <lb />
give a ball Thursday night, May 4th. <lb />
A cold wave struck us Saturday night <lb />
and put the mercury down In the ti-s. <lb />
Ward meeting, for <lb />
dates for will be held next <lb />
week. <lb />
was rise in the river to <lb />
enable boats to go to Tarboro <lb />
Monday. <lb />
Already commencements are being <lb />
talked and preparation for them getting <lb />
under way. <lb />
The colored Odd Fellows here are <lb />
paring for a celebration of their <lb />
May 5th. <lb />
key tied to piece of wood <lb />
with shoe string. Owner call at Ref- <lb />
office- <lb />
is preparing to open his ice <lb />
cream parlor this week. His fountain is <lb />
already to full Hast. <lb />
R. L. calls attention to bis <lb />
machine shops and also to the <lb />
Reaper which he sells. <lb />
Heavy snows last week in New York <lb />
and Ohio. That's doing the thing up <lb />
cold for the middle of April. <lb />
Potato bugs arc complained of every- <lb />
where and people say they never saw <lb />
so many of them this early in the season. <lb />
The Reflector Book Store has just re- <lb />
another lot of good cent fool's <lb />
cap paper, pens and other <lb />
stationery. <lb />
The last Legislature exempted the real <lb />
estate of the town of Greenville from <lb />
taxation to keep up the fence in this stock <lb />
law territory. <lb />
In the last week or two the foliage of <lb />
the trees has developed rapidly, and in <lb />
some instances the have attained <lb />
their full growth. <lb />
Mrs. Griffin Is showing her customers <lb />
some pretty styles in millinery this season. <lb />
Her work is always done well and at <lb />
satisfactory prices. <lb />
Remember, the selection of <lb />
this year is an important <lb />
matter. Think well over it before you <lb />
go into the primaries. <lb />
If there were not so many people who <lb />
think more of their dogs than they do of <lb />
their families the number of mad dog <lb />
would be far less. <lb />
Pender was showing an oil cook stove <lb />
the other day, that looks like it ought to <lb />
prove a great blessing to the cook and <lb />
housekeeper in the summer lime. <lb />
The facilities of the Reflector job <lb />
office were increased last week by the <lb />
addition of a Paragon paper cotter. <lb />
Our work must keep up with the best. <lb />
The war against Is on. On Mon- <lb />
day volunteers were enlisting in com- <lb />
to be known as independent <lb />
Order of Dog and they promise <lb />
to charge on any dog found running at <lb />
Urge in the streets. No doubt some <lb />
howling will be heard tat the toad. <lb />
Registrars and Poll Holders. <lb />
1st D. R. Dawson. <lb />
Poll Holders, S P. Humphrey, B. F. <lb />
Anderson. <lb />
2nd C. F. White. <lb />
Poll Holders, W. H. Smith, T. A. <lb />
A. It. Ellington. <lb />
Poll Holders, J. White, M. King. <lb />
Ward-Registrar, J. T. <lb />
Poll Holders, W. W. Humphrey, J. L. <lb />
Sugg. <lb />
May <lb />
The gentleman requesting us to make <lb />
a note last week of the date upon which <lb />
J. II. is to preach in <lb />
Greenville, inadvertently gave us the <lb />
wrong date and it was so published. <lb />
will preach in Greenville on <lb />
Wednesday night, May at Great <lb />
Swamp, Thursday, May 11th ; at Flat <lb />
Swamp, Friday, May 12th ; and at Skew- <lb />
the next two days, second Saturday <lb />
and Sunday in May. <lb />
Sawed to Death. <lb />
A colored man working at a lumber <lb />
mill out in Beaver Dam township, was <lb />
literally cut to death by the saw some <lb />
days ago. In attempting to step over a <lb />
log while it was in motion his foot be- <lb />
came entangled and he was thrown on <lb />
the saw In such a position that his leg <lb />
was cut in two at the ankle and thigh, <lb />
his arm cut and cuts also received <lb />
about the body and head. The man was <lb />
placed in a cart and started to his home <lb />
in Greene county, but bled to death in a <lb />
very short while. <lb />
Look at this Reasonably. <lb />
If Greenville had a good hotel building <lb />
other needed improvements could be <lb />
more easily secured. Persons who come <lb />
here to prospect would not get a good <lb />
impression of the town from the hotels <lb />
we have. They are the places in which <lb />
a stranger first takes an observation when <lb />
going into a town, and the first <lb />
ions received arc hard to shake off or <lb />
counteract. There is no complaint at <lb />
the way the hotels we have are kept, but <lb />
Greenville ought to have one in keeping <lb />
with the business of the town and that <lb />
a stranger could look at and feel like the <lb />
town had something in it. <lb />
Chicago Hotels. <lb />
Mrs. W. B. Phipps, of Chicago, who <lb />
once lived in Greenville and is <lb />
by some of our people, will have <lb />
the management of two hotels in <lb />
go during the World's Fair. Both hotels <lb />
arc brick, contain only rooms and ax, <lb />
located conveniently to the fair and parks <lb />
and within ten minutes of the heart of the <lb />
city. These buildings offer a decided ad- <lb />
vantage over the dangerous frame build- <lb />
of to rooms that have been <lb />
constructed hurriedly just for use during <lb />
the fair, and from which escape during a <lb />
fire or storm would be almost impossible. <lb />
information desired concerning the <lb />
hotels over which Mrs. Phipps will have <lb />
management can be obtained by writing <lb />
to Capt. W. B. Phipps, Archer <lb />
Chicago. <lb />
Cotton Seed and Fertilizers. <lb />
Some argue, and the commission mer- <lb />
chants especially are taking this view of <lb />
it, that the heavy sales of fertilizer this <lb />
season indicates a corresponding increase <lb />
in the cotton acreage. While we fear <lb />
that the farmers will increase their cot- <lb />
ton acreage this season, the increased <lb />
quantity of fertilizers they have <lb />
ed cannot be taken an Indication that <lb />
they will do so. The heavy <lb />
sales Is accounted for by the fact that the <lb />
farmers during the past season sold all <lb />
their cotton seed, which In former years <lb />
they hare been using as a fertilizer, and <lb />
now they have had to boy something else <lb />
to put on the land In of the seed. <lb />
We believe It would have resulted more <lb />
profitably to the farmers to have saved <lb />
their seed and pot them upon their land <lb />
than to tell them and attempt to supply <lb />
e place with a <lb />
Married. <lb />
residence of the bride's mother <lb />
Mrs. Elizabeth Hooker, in Greenville, <lb />
on Wednesday afternoon 12th at <lb />
o'clock, Miss Louisa Hooker and Mr. W. <lb />
were married, the ceremony <lb />
being performed by Rev. G. F. Smith. <lb />
The <lb />
A Startling Peat. <lb />
The largest crowd seen In Greenville <lb />
for sometime was here last Thursday to <lb />
witness the ascension and para- <lb />
chute leap by Miss Nellie By one <lb />
o'clock the crowd began gathering about <lb />
the vacant lot in front of the foundry, <lb />
from which point the ascension was to be <lb />
made at four o'clock. Before that hour <lb />
it commenced raining, but this did not <lb />
interfere with the A few <lb />
minutes to four all was in readiness and <lb />
the great air ship leaped up from the earth <lb />
the lady behind it. The ascent <lb />
was very rapid, and before the throng <lb />
could hardly realize it a signal was given <lb />
and the parachute cut loose from the <lb />
balloon. The next moment the lady <lb />
dropped for some distance almost like a <lb />
cannon ball when the parachute unfolded <lb />
and made the descent more gradual. <lb />
Still the heavy atmosphere made it very <lb />
rapid and the spectators had fears for the <lb />
reaching the earth in safety. <lb />
The whole performance consumed but <lb />
little more than a minute's time. It was <lb />
a daring feat, but too perilous to afford <lb />
enjoyment. <lb />
Alumni Association. <lb />
The of Wake Forest College <lb />
residing in this county met here on last <lb />
Saturday and organized a Alum- <lb />
composed of the follow- <lb />
members Rev. J. II. J. <lb />
L. Fleming, W. H. Dr. W. II. <lb />
Bagwell, Dr. D. L. James, C. M. Ber- <lb />
W. T. Fleming, C. L. Barrett. J. <lb />
B. Fleming and J. J. <lb />
Others, who were not present will be <lb />
added to this list. <lb />
The following officers of the association <lb />
were <lb />
L. Fleming. <lb />
J. H. <lb />
D. L. James. <lb />
After some discussion as to the objects <lb />
and the results to be attained by the <lb />
body the meeting adjourned to meet on <lb />
Saturday, May 13th. The College may <lb />
expect good results from this Association. <lb />
It is composed of progressive, energetic <lb />
men who arc an honor to any institution. <lb />
Long may the College live to do <lb />
work. <lb />
Drowned Herself, <lb />
We learned last Wednesday of the <lb />
Mrs. Jane Falkland <lb />
township, which occurred a few days be- <lb />
fore. She told her husband the morning <lb />
of the sad tragedy that she was going to <lb />
the home of a friend to spend the day. <lb />
He advised her against going left her <lb />
at homo when he went off to his work. <lb />
He went back home later and finding that <lb />
she was not there began search for her. <lb />
From inquiries he ascertained the <lb />
in which she went, and following on <lb />
found she had gone towards Mayo's <lb />
pond. He hurried hoping to overtake <lb />
her but arriving at the mill found h r <lb />
body lying In the water. On the bridge <lb />
were some articles that she had placed <lb />
there before throwing herself into the <lb />
water. The distance from her home to <lb />
the mill was about three miles, but the <lb />
way she went to get there covered about <lb />
six miles. Mrs. Edwards was mo.-c than <lb />
years old and left a husband and <lb />
grown children. It Is supposed that <lb />
her mind being impaired led to her <lb />
her life. For some days she had at <lb />
times talked and acted strangely, and had <lb />
more than once spoken of an intention to <lb />
drown herself. <lb />
Piano Recital. <lb />
Last Friday evening in the parlor of the <lb />
Ricks House Miss Carrie and her <lb />
class in music gave i very entertaining <lb />
piano rendering the following <lb />
PART I. <lb />
Trio Die in <lb />
C. Sheppard, Cog- <lb />
hill and Cobb. <lb />
Solo Minuet de Mozart, Jules <lb />
Harding. <lb />
a la <lb />
Op. Cobb. <lb />
on the Hudson, <lb />
G. D. Wilson, Op. White and <lb />
Rountree. . <lb />
part II. <lb />
in A <lb />
solo L. <lb />
Smith. <lb />
Solo Schubert's Serenade. Fr. <lb />
Rountree.<lb />
Smith and Harding. <lb />
Op. <lb />
Miss Sheppard. <lb />
The performance of each one of these <lb />
selections was exceptionally good and <lb />
elicited much praise. When the pro- <lb />
gramme was completed, at the request <lb />
of the audience Miss played two <lb />
charming pieces, displaying great skill <lb />
and perfect mastery of the piano. In re- <lb />
to the earnest solicitation of <lb />
those present Mrs. J. B. Cherry sang <lb />
two delightful solos. <lb />
Miss has only taught In Green- <lb />
ville a short while, and the progress her <lb />
class has made is truly marvelous. Those <lb />
so fortunate as to be present on <lb />
are Indebted to her for a en- <lb />
evening. <lb />
a m <lb />
MACHINE WORKS <lb />
-When I return I will open up a- <lb />
LOVELY LINK <lb />
-OF <lb />
YOURS RESPECTFULLY, <lb />
C. T. <lb />
GREENVILLE, C. <lb />
RACKET STORE <lb />
BULLETIN NO. I. <lb />
OUR DRESS GOODS DE <lb />
PENTS FURNISHING GOODS <lb />
DEPARTMENT. Standard <lb />
Brands of Collars and Cuffs, White <lb />
Shirts, Shirts, in all the <lb />
spring colors and shapes. <lb />
we will show all <lb />
of the Colors in Silk <lb />
Bedford Cords in Heliotrope, <lb />
Pea Green, Cream and all colors. <lb />
U Worth of SUSPENDERS <lb />
and and Gauze Shuts <lb />
OUR HAT is that must be sold, <lb />
complete. Alpine and Fedora UR w LACE <lb />
in all spring shapes. M DEPARTMENT is complete. <lb />
CLIPPERS FOR LADIES received a full lino Point Do <lb />
Red, White, Dock, and i Gene Laces which are <lb />
Black. <lb />
, I and UNDERWEAR <lb />
CULL LINE OF CALICOES, j DEPARTMENT We carry <lb />
only largest end best assortment to <lb />
be in the city. <lb />
Come to the Racket Stoic look at our Great Bargains in nil of <lb />
our different departments. No trouble to show goods. <lb />
Store; <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
O. <lb />
Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Gins, Ac. <lb />
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO REPAIRING.<lb />
THE BEST IN THE WORLD. <lb />
Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Write for <lb />
and prices before buying elsewhere. <lb />
A few Second-Hand Engines for sale. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb />
I. <lb />
GREENVILLE. <lb />
Bolls Bagging, <lb />
Bundles New Arrow Ties. <lb />
Small Full Cream Cheese. <lb />
Tubs Choice Butter. <lb />
Tubs Boston Laid. <lb />
Boxes Tobacco, all grades. <lb />
Boxes Cakes Crackers. <lb />
Barrels Stick Candy. <lb />
Kegs New Corn Mullet. <lb />
Gail A Ax Snuff. <lb />
Barrels P. Snuff. <lb />
Railroad Mills <lb />
Barrels Three Thistle Snuff <lb />
Car load Rib Side Meat <lb />
Car load Seed Oats. <lb />
Car load Flour, all <lb />
Kegs Powder. <lb />
ons Shot. <lb />
old Virginia Cheroots. <lb />
Full line Case and <lb />
else kept in a class grocery <lb />
I aliment. <lb />
Ton bring us balmy air and blue skies. <lb />
Under your magic Influence nature <lb />
wakes to a fresh beauty and productive- <lb />
People yield to your and <lb />
their pulses quicken. Everybody and <lb />
everything is awake and the watchword <lb />
of the season is I have just <lb />
returned from the Northern markets and <lb />
am now opening a beautiful line of<lb />
Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes and <lb />
Furnishing Goods, <lb />
which I shall offer to the public at a close margin, <lb />
talk for themselves. <lb />
We do no blowing, our goods <lb />
I will be to see my old customers and friends. <lb />
CLOTHING CLOTHING <lb />
SPRING SUITS are doing duty to-day. Grand, good ones they are, <lb />
Th got In quality. I desire to gel head, for I am <lb />
trying to do better. All the colors, all the cuts, proper lengths, and nothing but a lit. <lb />
I am located In the store formerly occupied by H. Cox. Not one oM <lb />
piece of goods ill the store. Give trial I am sure I can please you. <lb />
FRANK WILSON, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
a p. a i- E <lb />
to t <lb />
.-g <lb />
5.2 <lb />
S o .,<lb />
Wishing to thank my many <lb />
friends for their liberal patronage <lb />
both Merchandise and differ- <lb />
articles which I manufacture, <lb />
I take this method of <lb />
that while I thank yon all I <lb />
am also striving hard to secure <lb />
advantages that I can give you <lb />
in order to further merit you <lb />
a cc <lb />
at <lb />
Q. s <lb />
o J<lb />
For other articles in our <lb />
Pews, <lb />
Wheels, Brackets <lb />
Tobacco Hogshead and General <lb />
Repair Work, you will do well <lb />
to correspond with mo before <lb />
ranging with any else. I <lb />
give you some advantage- <lb />
A. O. COX, <lb />
N. <lb />
In I <lb />
hi <lb />
CO <lb />
If <lb />
New. . <lb />
Straight <lb />
Clean <lb />
Large <lb />
COBB BROS. CO., <lb />
to <lb />
COTTON FACTORS, <lb />
and <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
FAYETTE STREET, NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
and Correspondence Solicited. <lb />
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb />
to the of Tilt and a line of the following goo <lb />
that are not to excelled in this market. And to be an <lb />
good. DRY GOODS of all kind. NOTIONS. CLOTHING, GEN <lb />
GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and SHOE., <lb />
DIES <lb />
WARE, <lb />
kinds, G. <lb />
Hair. Harness, Bridles and addles <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at <lb />
Jobbers prices, dozen, less per cent for Cash. Bread Prep- <lb />
ration and Hall's Star at Jobbers Prices, White Lead and pure Lin- <lb />
seed Varnishes and Paint Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb />
WASHINGTON ITEMS. <lb />
Rev. D. W. Davis baptized <lb />
parties in the river hero Sunday. <lb />
Hiss Rodman, daughter of the <lb />
late Judge died here last <lb />
day night and was Sunday even- <lb />
Funeral services were conducted <lb />
by Rev. Nat Harding In the Episcopal <lb />
church. <lb />
The road machine has arrived and been <lb />
tested, but we believe the authorities <lb />
have decided not to purchase It. <lb />
Electric lights are to be placed In the <lb />
ice factory and around It. <lb />
Mr. W. K. Jacobson has gone home. <lb />
The last we heard of him he doing <lb />
fairly well. <lb />
The painters commenced on the market <lb />
last week. <lb />
Rev. J. N. H. of Tarboro, <lb />
preached in the Presbyterian church here <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
COTTON MARKET- <lb />
NORFOLK SPOT <lb />
wired by Cobb Bros. A Co. <lb />
Norfolk, Va., April 1893. <lb />
Good Middling, <lb />
Middling, 711-10 <lb />
Middling, <lb />
Good Ordinary, 9-16 <lb />
Tone, easy. <lb />
We are still making a specialty of <lb />
LACES, HAT <lb />
We have a first-class assortment and sell close. <lb />
get prices- <lb />
Do not re <lb />
JACK WHITE <lb />
IS AGAIN <lb />
BEFORE YOU. <lb />
Bring me your <lb />
CHICKENS, EGGS, <lb />
TURKEYS. DUCKS, <lb />
GEESE, GUINEAS, <lb />
PEANUT QUOTATIONS. <lb />
Prime <lb />
Extra Prime <lb />
Fancy<lb />
and a for all kinds of machines are sold by <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
BROWN BROS., <lb />
And everything that is raised the country and I will pay just <lb />
as much in cash can be hod anywhere in Greenville. I will also <lb />
handle on a small commission anything that my customers may want <lb />
me to. Remember my headquarters is at the old Marcellus Moore <lb />
store, right at the live points crossing, the most convenient place in <lb />
Come to see me. <lb />
Tours to please, <lb />
JACK WHITE, Greenville, N. C <lb />
J. L, SUGG. <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT. <lb />
N. G <lb />
All kind, Kink, placed in <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
Depositors for American Bible Society I AGENT FOB A FIRST-CLASS FIRE A <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017594_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT. <lb />
TOBACCO JOTTINGS AND LOCAL <lb />
NOTES. <lb />
Farmers who have tobacco now <lb />
had better keep a close watch on <lb />
it for it will soon go into the May <lb />
sweat <lb />
Mr. W. T. Brogden who has been <lb />
on the Greenville market since it <lb />
first opened as book-keeper for <lb />
and proprietor of the Greenville <lb />
Warehouse, says he intends <lb />
his family here next fall- <lb />
the farmer. The Greene county <lb />
farmers may not sell-as much cot- <lb />
ton here now as in former days <lb />
bat one thing is certain they spend <lb />
more money in Greenville now <lb />
than at any time past. Only a <lb />
few days ago Mr. A- E. who <lb />
doubtless never sold a bale of cot- <lb />
ton in Greenville in his life sold <lb />
two loads of good tobacco and <lb />
went back home heavily loaded <lb />
with dry goods, groceries for <lb />
which he paid the cash right here <lb />
in Greenville among some of the <lb />
Mr. B, W. Royster is having his I merchants, which is a great deal <lb />
prize house, on Dickerson avenue better than if he had grown cotton <lb />
newly painted. It will present a and traded on time and in the fall <lb />
very good show from plank road <lb />
view and very much improve the <lb />
looks of the tobacco quarters. <lb />
Mr. is a hustler and the <lb />
Greenville market is feeling his <lb />
influence. We need only a few- <lb />
more such men and Greenville will <lb />
assert her independence as a to- <lb />
market- <lb />
Mr. G. E- Moore from near <lb />
in Greene county, was <lb />
at the Eastern last Thursday with <lb />
a two thousand pound load which <lb />
was pulled by two horses twenty <lb />
miles. Mr. Moore lives about <lb />
twenty miles from Greenville and <lb />
about from Wilson and <lb />
he has sold most of his crop in <lb />
Greenville. Still there are others <lb />
who live nearer Greenville that <lb />
sell their tobacco in Wilson. <lb />
They soon learn however that this <lb />
is the best place to sell after all. <lb />
We heard it rumored on the <lb />
streets a few days ago that two <lb />
more prize houses would soon be <lb />
started up in Greenville. If such <lb />
is the case we hope it <lb />
why on earth don't you let <lb />
know who it is that is going to do <lb />
the building. We would never <lb />
know when to stop the <lb />
magnanimity of your great big <lb />
soul and commending you to the <lb />
world for the extent of your public <lb />
Do let us know it. <lb />
Give us that encouragement so <lb />
that we can the frown of dis <lb />
pair that always tries to smother <lb />
new undertakings. <lb />
brought his cotton down here and <lb />
delivered to the merchant to whom <lb />
it belonged for goods for which <lb />
he probably paid two prices and <lb />
gone back home with a light poet <lb />
et and a heavy heart, the result of <lb />
the ODe crop cotton culture- <lb />
right here it would be in <lb />
season to quote the work of <lb />
another one of Greenville's <lb />
men who looks at the tobacco <lb />
situation just a little different from <lb />
the other. Ho says that if the <lb />
of is extended <lb />
over Eastern Carolina and <lb />
ed it is only a question of time be- <lb />
fore the time trade business will <lb />
be at an end. If we understand <lb />
the meaning of this remark it con <lb />
more encouragement for the <lb />
farmers than anything else this <lb />
man could have said. Kill the time <lb />
trade business break the neck of <lb />
the mortgage system, the vilest <lb />
curse to both farmer and mer. <lb />
chant and the most unsatisfactory <lb />
way of transacting business to all <lb />
parties concerned that there has <lb />
ever been allowed by the laws of <lb />
the State. <lb />
About three hundred years ago <lb />
when the wandering savage with <lb />
his battle and scalping knife <lb />
roamed over what is to-day our <lb />
vast agricultural fields and thriving <lb />
busy cities, Sir Walter Raleigh <lb />
landed at Roanoke Island and in <lb />
the name of the English Queen <lb />
took possession of all the vast <lb />
j lying to the west as far as <lb />
The cotton mills declared a Mississippi river which was <lb />
of thirty per cent, last year. Carolina in honor of <lb />
A smoking tobacco factory in Hen-, Charles IX of France but <lb />
a similar profit, and still the death of Queen <lb />
the people of Greenville are con- <lb />
tent to stand behind their <lb />
t rs allow the abundance of <lb />
raw material of every class and <lb />
kind by which it is so copiously <lb />
surrounded to be shipped to our <lb />
neighboring towns whore it is <lb />
transferred into usefulness and <lb />
then sent back to be sold to the <lb />
merchants of this place at a profit <lb />
of per cent. Now all of this <lb />
might be kept right here and with <lb />
an investment of fifty dollars apiece <lb />
by the business men of Greenville <lb />
a factory could be started that <lb />
would help to keep our raw mate- <lb />
rial at home would throw life and <lb />
animation in our town and last of <lb />
all would give work to numbers of <lb />
idle hands that to-day are without <lb />
occupation and visible means of <lb />
support. <lb />
properly and justly belong to <lb />
North Carolina, but with the <lb />
of men like Harman of Win- <lb />
Burgwyn of Henderson and <lb />
J. Carrot Durham it is only a <lb />
question of time when she will <lb />
reclaim all her lost honors and <lb />
rank first as a tobacco State, a <lb />
place to which she is justly en- <lb />
titled. <lb />
seed beds I do in the field, say <lb />
pounds on a bed rods long by <lb />
We are just in receipt of the fol- Partially fertilize <lb />
lowing letter from a gentleman <lb />
who was raised in Granville conn <lb />
and who is now engaged in the <lb />
manufacture of plug tobacco at <lb />
Winton N. C. The letter was <lb />
handed us by Mr. Chas. Skinner <lb />
who says that this gentleman has <lb />
all the for <lb />
tobacco. The letter speaks for <lb />
itself and we want you to read it <lb />
think about, ponder over it, and <lb />
give this man the encouragement <lb />
needed and we will soon have a <lb />
factory here- <lb />
Winton, N. C, April 10th <lb />
Mb. Chas. Skinner, <lb />
Greenville, N. G <lb />
My Dear am informed <lb />
that your people had commenced <lb />
the culture of tobacco around <lb />
your town and that Mr. O. L <lb />
Joyner and Col. Sugg were enter- <lb />
prising business gentlemen and <lb />
that they might be to <lb />
enter the tobacco business that is <lb />
the manufacture of plug tobacco. <lb />
Now if any of the citizens of your <lb />
town would me some help I <lb />
might commence such business in <lb />
Greenville. You know who I am. I <lb />
know all of the business, both of <lb />
the manufacturing and culture. <lb />
Please find out the sentiment of <lb />
some of your friends and let me <lb />
hear from you. <lb />
Your Friend <lb />
D. A. Owen. <lb />
One of the merchants of the <lb />
town was heard to remark a few <lb />
days ago that the spread of <lb />
co culture over Eastern Carolina <lb />
was killing Greenville as a cotton <lb />
market that the farmers of Greene <lb />
county, who used to bring a great <lb />
deal of cotton to Greenville had <lb />
stopped and were either growing <lb />
tobacco in its stead or were mar- <lb />
their cotton somewhere <lb />
else. <lb />
The fact the case is this ; the <lb />
culture of tobacco in Eastern <lb />
North Carolina will never kill <lb />
Greenville as a market for any- <lb />
thing. Of course the more <lb />
co there is planted the less cotton <lb />
there will be to market and the <lb />
better off will be the merchant and <lb />
Elizabeth Charles I of England <lb />
took to his own home. Sir Walter <lb />
found on the coast of our State <lb />
many curiosities which were <lb />
to the English people <lb />
among these was the tobacco <lb />
plant some of this unknown weed <lb />
was procured by his men in their <lb />
first voyage and taken back to Sir <lb />
Walter who remained in England <lb />
while the first trip to the fairy land <lb />
was made. Ho soon learned its <lb />
uses and one day while whiffing <lb />
away pleasantly in his drawing <lb />
room a servant who had been <lb />
ordered to bring ale returned and <lb />
seeing the smoke gushing pro- <lb />
from his master's lips and <lb />
thinking that ho was on fire dash- <lb />
ed the contents in his face. This <lb />
fact though a joke clearly shows <lb />
that the use of tobacco was <lb />
known in England and the old <lb />
authorities before the discovery of <lb />
America, before the discovery even <lb />
of North Carolina a century after <lb />
the discovery of America. <lb />
It was in North Carolina soil <lb />
that the civilized world first found <lb />
tobacco growing. It even <lb />
more for history bears out that <lb />
it was in Eastern North Carolina <lb />
tobacco was first discovered <lb />
and in all probability it was at <lb />
least an hundred miles east of Pitt <lb />
county. Notwithstanding these <lb />
historical facts and <lb />
the fact that North Carolina <lb />
produces more bright tobacco than <lb />
all the world besides yet she has <lb />
never yet had this credit given her <lb />
by the tobacco world. Virginia in <lb />
this respect wears the laurels that <lb />
THE SECRET OP GROWING FINE <lb />
WRAPPERS. <lb />
For a number of years I have <lb />
grown my tobacco with the use of a <lb />
fertilizer formula commonly known <lb />
hereabouts as the <lb />
While the materials used have <lb />
not been exactly in accordance <lb />
with said formula, nor the <lb />
per acre quite in accordance <lb />
with the original formula yet the <lb />
mixture is substantially the <lb />
as no other <lb />
was used, except on a part of <lb />
the land, a light coat of stable <lb />
manure was spread. I transcribe <lb />
from my book the formula as I <lb />
it last year and about as I <lb />
have used it other <lb />
Cotton meal <lb />
Cotton hull ashes <lb />
Oyster shell lime <lb />
1,600 lbs. <lb />
1,200 lbs. <lb />
lbs. <lb />
Total lbs. <lb />
The whole cost was o <lb />
per ton mixed. <lb />
THE SEED <lb />
I used the same mixture on my <lb />
plow and ridge up in the fall, the <lb />
beds where plants are to be <lb />
the next year. The ridging up will <lb />
materially accelerate the drying up <lb />
the land in the spring, and thus <lb />
make possible the early sowing of <lb />
seed. <lb />
FITTING THE LAND. <lb />
I plow my land three times, once <lb />
in the fall and twice in the spring. <lb />
The fall plowing, I think, by the <lb />
action of the elements in freezing <lb />
thawing, and the disintegration of <lb />
the lumpy foil, tends to lessen the <lb />
trouble the next season from cut <lb />
worms. It certainly does destroy <lb />
weeds and retards their new <lb />
growth the next spring until the <lb />
land is sufficiently dried off for <lb />
another plowing. After each <lb />
plowing in the spring, give a good <lb />
thorough harrowing with an Os- <lb />
born spring tooth harrow, and a <lb />
smoothing off with two heavy <lb />
planks one firmly bolted to the <lb />
edge of the other, leaves the <lb />
ground in the desired condition <lb />
for the <lb />
APPLYING THE FERTILIZER. <lb />
There are two principal methods <lb />
of applying fertilizer to tobacco <lb />
land. One is to apply it previous <lb />
to the last plowing, the other to <lb />
apply it the last plowing and <lb />
just before setting the plants. No <lb />
mistake will be made in adopting <lb />
either methods. The argument or <lb />
theory of the plowing in is <lb />
that, by so doing, the fertilizer be- <lb />
comes thoroughly <lb />
rated and mixed with the soil. <lb />
That is undoubtedly true and <lb />
where one has a large acreage to <lb />
put out it is advisable to got as <lb />
much land ready for the as <lb />
possible early in the season. An- <lb />
other argument that all soluble, <lb />
parts of the fertilizer by being <lb />
some time in the soil previous to <lb />
setting the plants are in process of <lb />
being assimilated with the soil and <lb />
therefore all ready to receive the <lb />
roots of the young plant which <lb />
immediately begin their forward <lb />
growth- This also is probably <lb />
theory reduced to practical opera- <lb />
But having had a number <lb />
of with the above <lb />
and always by sowing <lb />
the fertilizer on broadcast after <lb />
the last plowing, and having <lb />
most invariably had good results <lb />
therefrom, even grown side <lb />
by side with a large field treated <lb />
in the other manner, I am obliged <lb />
to infer that it is just as well to <lb />
spread on fertilizer after the last <lb />
plowing. But the harrowing must <lb />
be thorough. <lb />
My theory is, that the nearer the <lb />
fertilizer is to the surface, and still <lb />
have it thoroughly mixed with the <lb />
soil, the better. Tho tobacco <lb />
plant is a gross feeder, and its <lb />
roots do not, many of them, strike <lb />
deep down into the soil. Pull up <lb />
a full grown plant and you dis- <lb />
cover that a large percentage of <lb />
its roots strike out horizontally <lb />
from just under tho surface of the <lb />
soil. If you have ever had full <lb />
grown tobacco badly washed by <lb />
water running through the rows, <lb />
you been astonished to see <lb />
how literally full of small fibrous <lb />
roots the soil was near its surface <lb />
and clean across the furrow. This <lb />
leads me to believe that it is <lb />
to send the fertilizer deep <lb />
Practical Farmer. <lb />
P. <lb />
Reported <lb />
f Green, to <lb />
Common, to <lb />
Good. to <lb />
Fine. to <lb />
Fillers <lb />
Common. <lb />
Fair, <lb />
Good, <lb />
Fine, <lb />
Common, <lb />
Fair, <lb />
Good, <lb />
Fancy, <lb />
Common, <lb />
Fair. <lb />
Good, <lb />
Fancy, <lb />
Smokers. <lb />
Cutlers <lb />
W nippers <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
IS to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to SO <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to<lb />
Reported by Owen Davis, Manager Davis <lb />
Warehouse. <lb />
MARKET QUOTATIONS. <lb />
Lugs or <lb />
Common to medium, to T <lb />
Medium to good, to <lb />
Good to fine, to <lb />
Fillers or <lb />
Common to medium. <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
Medium to good, <lb />
Good to fine. <lb />
Cutters or <lb />
Common to Medium, to II <lb />
Medium to good, 12,15 to <lb />
Good to tine, IS. -i to <lb />
Wrappers or Best Leaf; <lb />
THE TOBACCO WAREHOUSE, <lb />
O. L. JOYNER, Owner Prop. <lb />
ATTENTION FARMERS <lb />
Do you want a strictly Do you want a Fertilizer that has been <lb />
high grade Fertilizer I tested by your neighbor and found to be <lb />
superior to all others. <lb />
IF SO <lb />
Call on the undersigned and buy any of the following which <lb />
are guaranteed strictly reliable. <lb />
ORINOCO , <lb />
COMPOUND, <lb />
PREMIUM, <lb />
PURE GERMAN <lb />
sell these goods on terms to suit all purchasers. <lb />
G. M. TUCKER, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
R. W. ROYSTER CO. <lb />
N. <lb />
References and type samples finished on application. <lb />
To my friends and customers who have so liberally <lb />
bestowed their patronage on me during the past <lb />
year, I wish to say that I have purchased the entire <lb />
Warehouse interest of Mr. Alex. and I <lb />
earnestly solicit a continuation of your visits with <lb />
heavy loads of the yellow weed and I will <lb />
tee to get you just as much money as can be had <lb />
anywhere on any market. <lb />
With this I am before you. Now give me your <lb />
co operation and in less than five years Greenville <lb />
will take her stand among Um <lb />
Carolina Tobacco markets. <lb />
stand the foremost of North <lb />
serve, <lb />
O. L. JOYNER, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. O. <lb />
Common to medium, <lb />
Medium f good, <lb />
Good to lino, <lb />
Fine to fancy, <lb />
Common to medium. <lb />
Medium to good, <lb />
Good to fine, <lb />
Fine to <lb />
Ripens are com- <lb />
pounded from a prescription <lb />
widely used by the best <lb />
cal authorities and are <lb />
in a form that is be- <lb />
coming the fashion every- <lb />
where. <lb />
act gently <lb />
but promptly upon the liver, <lb />
stomach and intestines; cure <lb />
dyspepsia, habitual <lb />
offensive breath and head- <lb />
ache. One taken at the <lb />
first symptom of indigestion, <lb />
biliousness, dizziness, distress <lb />
after eating, or depression of <lb />
spirits, will surely and quickly <lb />
remove the whole difficulty. <lb />
may be ob- <lb />
of nearest druggist.<lb />
are easy to take, <lb />
quick to act, and <lb />
save many a doc- <lb />
tor's bill. <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
obtained, and all business in the U. <lb />
Patent or in the Courts attended to <lb />
for Moderate Fees. <lb />
We are opposite the IT. S. Patent Of- <lb />
engaged in Patents Exclusively, and <lb />
can obtain patents in less time than those <lb />
more remote from Washington. <lb />
the model or drawing Is sent we <lb />
advise as to free of charge, <lb />
and we make no change unless we ob- <lb />
Patent. <lb />
We refer, here, to the Post Master, the <lb />
Stint, of the Money Order Did., and to <lb />
officials of the V. S. Patent <lb />
advise terms and reference to <lb />
actual clients in your own State, or <lb />
address, C. A. Snow Co., <lb />
Washington., P. C. <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
RUSSIAN GUT <lb />
Violin Strings. <lb />
Imitators and Followers <lb />
JOHN F SON'S <lb />
GENUINE and toe GENUINE <lb />
Violin Strings <lb />
No Dealer or Musician need lo by poor String If ho <lb />
to buy t um <lb />
JOHN F. SON, <lb />
Ask your for them and if you cannot git them report ti vi. <lb />
No Good Band Sold at Retail. <lb />
j. . <lb />
-Manufacturer of- <lb />
DRAYS <lb />
HARK <lb />
to <lb />
SO to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to M <lb />
to <lb />
with a plenty of energy WASTED <lb />
THE MICHIGAN <lb />
MUTUAL LIKE INSURANCE CO., <lb />
and AMERICAN ACCIDENT CO. To <lb />
whom a good contract will be given. <lb />
terms, etc., <lb />
District Agent M. C-, <lb />
SNOW HILL, <lb />
t . <lb />
co o co <lb />
-3 <lb />
Can <lb />
You Read <lb />
The Future <lb />
Do yon know what your con- <lb />
will be years hence <lb />
Will your earning capacity <lb />
be equal to the support of <lb />
yourself and family This is <lb />
a serious question, yet, you <lb />
could confidently answer <lb />
if you a twenty- <lb />
years Policy in the <lb />
Equitable Life <lb />
A method which guarantees <lb />
all the protection furnished <lb />
by any kind of life insurance, <lb />
and in addition the largest <lb />
cash returns to those policy- <lb />
holders whose lives are pro- <lb />
longed, and who then need <lb />
money rather than assurance. <lb />
. For facts and figures, address <lb />
W. J. Manager, <lb />
For the Carolina, <lb />
ROCK HILL, S. C. <lb />
a tonic, or children who want band- <lb />
up, <lb />
It cam Malaria, Indication, <lb />
Urn <lb />
Tor the Cure i all Skis <lb />
This has wen in use r <lb />
and wherever know has <lb />
been in steady demand. It been en- <lb />
by the leading physicians all over <lb />
be country, and effected cured when- <lb />
all other remedies, the attention of <lb />
the most physicians, have <lb />
for year failed. This Ointment Is of <lb />
long and the high reputation <lb />
which it has Obtained is Owing entirely <lb />
its own as but little has <lb />
ever been bring it before the <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. Sample box free. The <lb />
discount to <lb />
promptly attended to. Address all or- <lb />
and communications to <lb />
T. F. <lb />
Sole Mar. Proprietor. <lb />
lie, N. C <lb />
U well with the bent Mechanic.-, eon put op nothing <lb />
hilt keep tip with tin- and the Improved <lb />
Beet material used in all work. All styles of springs are you can select from <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Ram Horn, King <lb />
We also keep on hand a full Hue of Beady Made which we <lb />
ell at the rates. Special attention given to <lb />
Greenville, N C. <lb />
Do Write <lb />
THEN <lb />
YOU MUST <lb />
HAVE PAPER. PENS, <lb />
ENVELOPES, PENCILS, INK- <lb />
WEI-DON K. It. <lb />
and branches Condensed Schedule <lb />
TRAINS GOING <lb />
No No No <lb />
Jan. 1st, daily Fast Mail, dally <lb />
ex Sun <lb />
12,30 pin pm <lb />
Ar pm pm <lb />
I-v Rocky am <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar<lb />
TRAINS GOING <lb />
ex <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar <lb />
am <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilson m <lb />
Mont <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro am <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Weldon 5.15 Halifax 5.35 p. <lb />
m., arrives Scotland Neck at 6.23 p. m., <lb />
Greenville 7.68 p. Kinston 9.00 p. m. <lb />
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. m., <lb />
Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving Halifax <lb />
at a. m., Weldon 11.20 a. in. daily <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Washington Branch leave <lb />
Washington 7.20 a. in., arrives <lb />
8.60 a. in., Tarboro 9.50; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 6.36 p. m 7.86 <lb />
p. m,, arrives Washington 9.00 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Scotia Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, P M, Sunday P M, arrive <lb />
Plymouth 9.50 p. m., 5.20 p. in. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except <lb />
6.30 a. m., Sunday 10.00 a. m- <lb />
arrive Tarboro, N C, 10.26 AM 12,20. <lb />
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson <lb />
Branch leave Fayette- <lb />
am, arrive Rowland p m. <lb />
Returning leave Rowland p m, <lb />
arrive Fayetteville p m. Dally ex- <lb />
sept Sunday. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch, leave <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M <lb />
rive N C, A M. Re <lb />
lining laves Smithfield, N C AM <lb />
arrive Goldsboro, NO A M. <lb />
Train <lb />
Mount P M, arrive Nashville JO <lb />
P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb />
8.86 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch R. R. leave <lb />
Latta 7.80 p. m., arrive Dunbar 8.40 p. <lb />
m. Returning leave Dunbar a. <lb />
arrive Latta 7.16 a. m. y <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, at <lb />
and Returning leave <lb />
ton at A M, P. M. <lb />
at Warsaw with Nob. and <lb />
Train No. makes close connection at <lb />
Weldon for all points North daily. All <lb />
rail via Richmond, and daily except Sun- <lb />
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb />
dally except Sunday with Norfolk A <lb />
railroad for Norfolk and all <lb />
points via Norfolk. <lb />
General <lb />
J, R. <lb />
T. <lb />
SEE WHAT THE--------- <lb />
Reflector V Book <lb />
CAN OFFER YOU IN THESE. <lb />
Store <lb />
Legal Cap to cents a quire. <lb />
Fool's Cap Per to cents a quire. <lb />
Letter Paper cents a quire. <lb />
Note Paper to cents a <lb />
Envelopes to a pack. <lb />
Box Paper from cents up. <lb />
Gilt to cents a <lb />
Pure Linen Note Paper, ruled plain. to a quit. <lb />
Nice Square Envelopes to match the Paper. <lb />
Fine Tablets at all prices. <lb />
THESE ARE NO THIN. CHEAP <lb />
PAPERS THAT WILL NOT HOLD <lb />
INK hut Strictly FIRST-CLASS. <lb />
Tablets, Slates, <lb />
lilt <lb />
o-- <lb />
JUST <lb />
SEE WHAT <lb />
WE HAVE FOR <lb />
THE SCHOOL CHILDREN. <lb />
Pencil Tablets, and <lb />
Fools Cap sizes only cents. <lb />
You pay cents for these <lb />
same tablets elsewhere. <lb />
Slates cents to cents. <lb />
Slate Pencils per doz. <lb />
Fancy Colored Crayons <lb />
per box. <lb />
Spencerian Pens cents per. <lb />
dozen. <lb />
Fine Assorted Pens <lb />
per dozen. <lb />
Plain Load Pencils cents <lb />
per <lb />
Rubber Tipped Lead Pencils <lb />
cents per dozen. <lb />
Pen Holders cents per doz. <lb />
And lots of other things just <lb />
as cheap. <lb />
Do You Read <lb />
Then yon want the best We handle the leading <lb />
Harper, Frank Leslie, Review of Reviews, <lb />
New Peterson, etc., at usual retail prices. Besides we carry a line of <lb />
paper covered Novels at cents each, and nicely <lb />
at cents. These embrace books by the best writers, <lb />
a list too large to mention- Any book wanted that is not on hand <lb />
be ordered. <lb />
SUBSCRIPTIONS TAKEN TO ALL THE LEADING <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>17594.0001</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>9914eb41c65ae7f45d30eac462c3dd00</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>17594.0002</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>a6512576bd451e9af52940e8dac97b13</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>17594.0003</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>7cd32b8133e3af88898a4022b34b67e3</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>17594.0004</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>834985b758ebe080c8e71d7abfaee1b9</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: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/ncgre000/00000018/00017594/00017594_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/ncgre000/00000018/00017594/00017594_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/ncgre000/00000018/00017594/00017594_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/ncgre000/00000018/00017594/00017594_ac_0004.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/ncgre000/00000018/00017594/00017594_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/ncgre000/00000018/00017594/00017594_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/ncgre000/00000018/00017594/00017594_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/ncgre000/00000018/00017594/00017594_tn_0004.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></mets:structMap>
  <mets:structMap LABEL="AUDIO">
    <mets:div ORDER="1">
      <mets:div ORDER="" LABEL=""></mets:div></mets:div></mets:structMap></mets:mets>