<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<mets:mets OBJID="17738" ID="wordcount18763" 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="2011-07-12T11:05:15" LASTMODDATE="2011-07-12T11:05:15" 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, 27 March 1895</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">17738</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="job">834</mods:identifier>
          <mods:originInfo>
            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18950327</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/ncgre000/00000018/00017738/00017738.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, 27 March 1895</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>18950327</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>17738</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="00017738_tn_0001" n="1" />
                <p>
JOB PRINTING <lb />
The Reflector is <lb />
pared to do all <lb />
in this line <lb />
NEATLY, <lb />
QUICKLY, and <lb />
IN BEST STYLE. <lb />
Plenty of new mate- <lb />
rial and the best <lb />
of Stationery. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
You Need <lb />
The Reflector this year. <lb />
It will give the news <lb />
every week for <lb />
a year. <lb />
D. J. Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XIV. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1895. <lb />
NO. <lb />
Reflector and Atlanta <lb />
Constitution a yr. <lb />
Reflector, <lb />
and twice-a-week <lb />
N. Y. World all for <lb />
a year. <lb />
NEWS IN <lb />
To hundred <lb />
from Savannah for Liberia yes- <lb />
A woman a . n.-- of <lb />
DOOM was <lb />
Several were burned <lb />
at Burlington, canning a lot- <lb />
T i reported that the govern <lb />
tut Ml ulster <lb />
ton from Hawaii. <lb />
Conductor Goodman, nor- <lb />
Virginia, <lb />
has acquitted. <lb />
It is that another <lb />
American <lb />
y war <lb />
Mr. l T. Swindell, <lb />
merchants-, will move to <lb />
Norfolk, and on business <lb />
there- <lb />
The Lodge, I <lb />
Older of meet <lb />
May <lb />
of at <lb />
Tue city council of Atlanta de- <lb />
that base-ball are a <lb />
refused to grant a <lb />
pi-runt to a to play inside <lb />
the city <lb />
Otho Wilson says that he has <lb />
gone to H <lb />
will need some coaching this <lb />
line, it has been so long be <lb />
was engaged this pursuit. <lb />
Raleigh. <lb />
lake of Baltimore, <lb />
Steve of Australia, <lb />
Letter as spar- <lb />
ring partner, fought eight rounds <lb />
t the contest was <lb />
declared a <lb />
WHAT THE LEGISLATURE DID. <lb />
1- It increased appropriations <lb />
It created new offices <lb />
which nave d with <lb />
It per day to <lb />
employ pages laborers to wait <lb />
on the at a total cost of <lb />
for <lb />
Had to Pay Bad Tax. <lb />
Pitt County Magistrates. <lb />
From King's Weekly we take <lb />
Hotel de at <lb />
N- C, is kept by Jno. <lb />
G Gurley- Everybody calls him ; the following list of Justices of <lb />
He is an the Peace for this con There <lb />
character. The portrayal of such j are many errors in the names but <lb />
a character would have delighted ; are said to be just as in the <lb />
Dickens. Last week Senator j original. No people live in the <lb />
Fowler, of bis way ; county by some of these names, <lb />
home after the adjournment oil Mr. E A- Superior Court <lb />
4- It added two totally need- j the Legislature stopped at the i Clerk, says official list has <lb />
less Criminal com is- j House. When be to ; received by <lb />
S. It elected two small I his bill and found it was lie <lb />
ability to able tiled j objected amount. Baying j J. <lb />
he willing to a moil <lb />
but fr as <lb />
too slid <lb />
lie e; yo on of <lb />
bid- is that tax A Hodges, W. A <lb />
Tue Senator admit E D. U <lb />
he was. Bald <lb />
want to <lb />
old you've pay <lb />
enough the tax n one of <lb />
my Tim Senator <lb />
joke and g- <lb />
paid bill nil ado. <lb />
New Observer. <lb />
ii <lb />
Two young white men, brother-, <lb />
were teasing a the <lb />
latter find them with a pistol, <lb />
instantly killing one fatally <lb />
wounding the other. This <lb />
n ii ii New Orleans. <lb />
A few nights ago a named <lb />
Gus was kill- d on the <lb />
Norfolk and Carolina railroad <lb />
near He had <lb />
been to Kelford, and left there <lb />
a stale of intoxication. He was <lb />
y ears old. <lb />
A 14-year-old Virginia boy, <lb />
whose parents were Oral, tried to <lb />
procure a to marry a <lb />
woman of some years of age. <lb />
Being the c clerk <lb />
he a lawyer to see what <lb />
could be done in the matter. <lb />
Eon- A. M. Wad or <lb />
Las invited by the <lb />
Monument Association to <lb />
deliver the address the unveil- <lb />
of iii monument <lb />
at Raleigh -W ii, and be ac <lb />
the invitation. <lb />
box of taken <lb />
by the steamer from <lb />
Island her regular trip <lb />
Friday and she went back and got <lb />
more Sunday. The ship <lb />
men Friday, average of <lb />
to the box made for the one <lb />
shipment. <lb />
The report of the State <lb />
Department shows that <lb />
while for the season Mar. <lb />
18th last year the receipts from <lb />
sales of tags were <lb />
this season to the same <lb />
date they are only 13.0. <lb />
a remarkable falling off <lb />
in fertilizer sales this season. <lb />
A regular blizzard has swept <lb />
over e country the last few <lb />
days. There was snow all over <lb />
the north west and cyclones <lb />
in the south. many places <lb />
the snow reached a depth of six <lb />
At Augusta, a <lb />
clone badly damaged forty <lb />
houses, causing a loss of <lb />
The Pop law to tax doctors <lb />
year is a hardship on the <lb />
country doctor. One of the <lb />
does not live <lb />
far from Charlotte was in <lb />
to-day, and he told a report- <lb />
that it was outrage. The <lb />
beauty about it is that this doctor <lb />
who is on a kick was last fall, the <lb />
biggest mouthed Pop in the <lb />
A triple killing occurred at <lb />
Miss., a small station <lb />
the Alabama Southern <lb />
railroad. Ben and Allen <lb />
brothers, aged respectively <lb />
and years, and James Britton, <lb />
aged years, renewing an old <lb />
quarrel at a meeting, of <lb />
the boys shooting Britton, <lb />
mortally wounding him, while <lb />
Britton shot both of the <lb />
boys, killing them instantly. <lb />
The Governor has sent out <lb />
commissions to Judges <lb />
and Jones of the newly created <lb />
Eastern and Western Criminal Cir- <lb />
Courts. They bear date of <lb />
March 13th, the day they were <lb />
sent to Senate. Charles A- Cook, <lb />
of Warren, who was voted for for <lb />
the judge of the Eastern circuit, <lb />
has tendered his resignation as <lb />
Senator and it is accepted. This <lb />
makes it clear that he proposes to <lb />
contest for the place- <lb />
Salve. <lb />
The best Salve the world for Cuts <lb />
Bruises, Clean, Salt Rheum <lb />
Fever Son;, <lb />
Chilblains, Corns, and all --kin <lb />
and positively Piles, or <lb />
pay required, it is guaranteed to give <lb />
perfect satisfaction or money refunded <lb />
cents per box. For sale by <lb />
John L. <lb />
in the United <lb />
Ii lei the printing to <lb />
a political favorite at a Cost of <lb />
lowest <lb />
it adjourned of my <lb />
Fled Douglass, and the <lb />
voted down resolution to adjourn <lb />
in honor Washington and Lee. <lb />
8- it refused to a <lb />
cent to finish the <lb />
monument until <lb />
ordered it done to make <lb />
for <lb />
It maimed soldiers <lb />
out of office to make for <lb />
robust <lb />
lO. It matte the A. M. Col <lb />
the fool-ball of politics. <lb />
11- it trampled under foot <lb />
every parliamentary law <lb />
u get spoils for <lb />
12- it permitted and directed <lb />
an upon white members <lb />
by door-keepers without <lb />
or of law. <lb />
It set back the public <lb />
school interest twenty years by <lb />
partisan, hostile legislation. <lb />
i-l- it replaced <lb />
learned men with untaught <lb />
incompetent officials, as <lb />
sized particularly by the retire <lb />
of Capt Mason <lb />
of S. Wilson. <lb />
It permitted more stealing <lb />
of bills and more records <lb />
than was ever before known in the <lb />
history -f the State. <lb />
It increased from <lb />
to cents on -he <lb />
it passed the most unfair <lb />
one sided election law ever <lb />
enacted the State. <lb />
WHAT THE DID <lb />
NOT DO- <lb />
It did not decrease the <lb />
of any officer in the State. <lb />
it did decrease the <lb />
of any officers. <lb />
S It did piss a law against <lb />
trusts, bat was the pliant tool of <lb />
corporate power. <lb />
i- It did not decrease <lb />
5- It did not stop any abuse or <lb />
expenditure anywhere. <lb />
G. It did stop paying <lb />
successful contestants or <lb />
it did not afford any relief <lb />
in any way, shape or form to the <lb />
toiling masses. <lb />
It did declare for <lb />
coinage, but post- <lb />
the resolution Instructing <lb />
Senators to vote for it. <lb />
It did redeem its pledges <lb />
made to the <lb />
New and <lb />
Little, Alfred Nichols, <lb />
Township-- <lb />
H- <lb />
S. <lb />
E. <lb />
Giving the Devil His Dues. <lb />
Keep the devil away from the <lb />
children he will soon have to <lb />
give up the <lb />
The man who knows that God <lb />
is with him will always be very <lb />
careful where he steps. <lb />
Our neighbor sees our faults, <lb />
but he hasn't seen the bitter tears <lb />
they made us weep. <lb />
The devil is proud of a <lb />
no matter whether be be- <lb />
longs to the church or not. <lb />
A Loose Alligator. <lb />
There was a pretty lively time <lb />
at the dept Tuesday <lb />
A Now Haven, Conn-, <lb />
gentleman had a present a large <lb />
him by a <lb />
friend. The alligator was boxed <lb />
up, but the car was Opened <lb />
J. F. <lb />
Godfrey <lb />
J. A <lb />
Bullock. <lb />
A. Car <lb />
so-, J. L. J. J. <lb />
J. Ii. Jenkins. <lb />
Carolina H <lb />
Woodard, D N. P. J. H- <lb />
P. K. Woodland, H- <lb />
H. T. T. K. II. <lb />
Chapman. John M <lb />
i Williams, J. M. <lb />
Fleming.<lb />
B. Moore, S. V. Laughing <lb />
house, Braxton. A. T. Rod <lb />
dill, E. E. Croft- <lb />
Falkland Township Henry S <lb />
C Moore, R H <lb />
SCRAP BOOKS. <lb />
THE ENGLISH <lb />
A Library of One Hundred and <lb />
Twenty-Five of Them. <lb />
PARISH. <lb />
of th <lb />
had mashed the Tyson, William C Mo-.,. ,, , <lb />
and was roaming around read, to j E Brown, W M Smith. <lb />
the possession of the car <lb />
with every comer. <lb />
To add to the <lb />
Joyner, J A K Flanagan, <lb />
of freight agent, the gentle- Joseph Tug-ell, A. Hill M- <lb />
to whom he was <lb />
didn't such a as that <lb />
would not take him. <lb />
Edwards. <lb />
Greenville <lb />
Township Ola <lb />
Goodman, J. A. <lb />
, i Forbes, W. T. , . i <lb />
awhile the alligator J ;, Mt . Boyd, <lb />
was Mr. It- g j Fleming. <lb />
Bond, a butcher of the town, ac <lb />
relieved the <lb />
of his <lb />
freight Journal. <lb />
A of Persecution. <lb />
matter how things <lb />
go, he poor always suffer. Jack <lb />
the nabobs who rail- <lb />
roads of running <lb />
over a poor man's <lb />
and the man w o ca i afford to <lb />
own a horse runs down a poor <lb />
fellow a so. <lb />
And poor fellow <lb />
runs down the poor fellow who <lb />
has to it- And <lb />
the man who walks s <lb />
against the cripple who goes <lb />
the way. <lb />
the cripple crutches <lb />
spends most of his time jamming <lb />
hi i sticks down on other people's <lb />
corns. It's really a selfish <lb />
B- <lb />
Carson, E P. Daniel, <lb />
Samuel Harris- <lb />
Swift Creek <lb />
Thompson, Starke E- <lb />
G Cos. A. F. Pittman, J. U. <lb />
Dixon. <lb />
Home Pride. <lb />
you hear a man <lb />
his home says the <lb />
may be sure <lb />
the sentiment is reciprocal, and <lb />
and his for some other <lb />
field would be hailed with de- <lb />
light. up for your <lb />
says our contemporary, do <lb />
what can to help along every <lb />
man who is engaged a <lb />
mate business. His success will <lb />
be your success. If felt dis- <lb />
posed to do it, break <lb />
down mm in town, his <lb />
would react on and make <lb />
you poor No man yet has <lb />
accomplished anything by <lb />
The North Experiment his home, it is a sorry <lb />
Station has a of man j,. Neither <lb />
cow-pea seed, lied Ripper, does it do a man any good to <lb />
known other varieties, which abuse his neighbor. This is a <lb />
have been found to do well on world, and if a man <lb />
Cow-peas for Distribution. <lb />
the Station farm. These will b <lb />
distributed free one half pound <lb />
packages to farmers of the State <lb />
who agree to test them <lb />
report the result to the Station, <lb />
the fall. Four cents stamps <lb />
must with each <lb />
to pay postage on the <lb />
seeds. Address, Dr. H. b-Battle, <lb />
Director, Raleigh, N. C. <lb />
In 1887 Fred A. Olds was <lb />
the clerk to the joint committee <lb />
don't like his let him <lb />
more Virginian- <lb />
ill was allowed <lb />
the two receiving <lb />
only for the work, this being <lb />
allowed on a as will be <lb />
Cured- <lb />
local a they cannot <lb />
reach diseased portion of ear. <lb />
There is only one Deafness, <lb />
and that is by constitutional remedies. <lb />
is mused by mi con- <lb />
of the mucous lining the <lb />
Tube. When this tube <lb />
yon have a rumbling or <lb />
bearing, and when it i en- <lb />
closed s the result, <lb />
and unless Inflammation can lie <lb />
Look into the drunkard's homo ; on reference to the of <lb />
if would see tracks that have , that year. This year there were <lb />
been made by the cloven hoof. to the committee, and <lb />
else. <lb />
All lies have the smell of brim- <lb />
stone their garment, no mat- <lb />
whether they are <lb />
black. <lb />
Every time e devil makes a <lb />
he has to admit that <lb />
love is the greatest in the <lb />
world- <lb />
If the devil eyer rubs <lb />
with it is when <lb />
he gets a good man to oppose a <lb />
good cause. <lb />
God shows he sinner <lb />
that he is wrong <lb />
him in contact <lb />
who is right, <lb />
Senator's <lb />
How is this for fusion <lb />
extravagance yet the <lb />
Progressive says the Leg <lb />
is the best one we have <lb />
hail since the <lb />
The states <lb />
that one township an East- <lb />
Populist who <lb />
had joined the ex <lb />
the five who were <lb />
. magistrates by the Legislature <lb />
bringing j bus quit the disgust. It <lb />
with somebody I u, a that there were not <lb />
j enough offices to go around, then <lb />
There are people who seem to j there would have been no <lb />
think that God only expects j and they would have lost no <lb />
them to keep the Tea votes That such was not the <lb />
on Sunday. case, however, was the fault <lb />
As long as the devil can hare the Douglass Legislature for <lb />
his way about the saloon he will did their best to make places, <lb />
have one claw run through the for themselves, and then lot <lb />
church. their but the job <lb />
Going out on a wet night to the officers <lb />
hear election returns is one thing Pave before the <lb />
going to prayer meeting in of the Legislature were sup- <lb />
the same kind of weather is <lb />
another- , <lb />
Since the finishing of the W. <lb />
Bitters. N. C. R. R. to Asheville in 1881, <lb />
This Is becoming so the property in the sis counties <lb />
Kl. sin the same song Swam, Ma <lb />
purer medicine does Hay wood. Jack- <lb />
and it is guaranteed to do ail that is i son, Cherokee has <lb />
claimed. Bitters will cure all from 1880 to <lb />
diseases of the Liver will <lb />
remove Pimples. <lb />
other affections caused by Impure <lb />
blood Will d from the <lb />
system and prevent as well as cure all <lb />
Malarial cure of Head- <lb />
ache, Constipation and Indigestion try <lb />
Electric satisfaction <lb />
or money <lb />
and 11.00 per bottle at John L. <lb />
Drugstore. <lb />
out this e restored to its <lb />
normal condition, hearing will lie de- <lb />
forever ; nine case, out of ten <lb />
are caused by catarrh, Is <lb />
but mil c a condition the <lb />
-mis surfaces. <lb />
will give One Hundred Dalian <lb />
any earn Deafness <lb />
that cannot lie cured by Hall's <lb />
Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, tree <lb />
K. . CO. Toledo, <lb />
by Druggists, <lb />
Some High-Priced Autographs. <lb />
At an autograph sale in Paris in <lb />
December, 1890, the signature of <lb />
Christopher Columbus is, <lb />
probably, one of the most fantastic <lb />
manuals ever used, and which <lb />
has been fully described in Notes <lb />
for the brought <lb />
francs. The only existing piece of <lb />
manuscript in Titian's handwriting <lb />
was knocked down at francs, <lb />
and one with Cromwell's signature <lb />
attached brought in exactly half <lb />
that sum Alfred Morrison, a great <lb />
English collector of autographs, was <lb />
present at the sale and paid a sum <lb />
equal to francs for the only let- <lb />
written by Corneille that has <lb />
ever been on the market. The lust <lb />
written by to Em- <lb />
press Marie Louise was disposed of <lb />
at the same sale, bringing 4.000 <lb />
and several signatures of <lb />
Louis XIV. and Henry IV. fetched <lb />
1.000 francs each. <lb />
The State of North <lb />
Carolina issued of, <lb />
bonds on account of the Wes- <lb />
ten North Carolina Railroad. <lb />
The increase of revenue from the <lb />
six counties mentioned <lb />
have, it is said, more than paid <lb />
the interest on the I <lb />
sigh and Observer. <lb />
Almost an Accident. <lb />
of narrow <lb />
observed Mr. reaching <lb />
for his second cup of coffee, I <lb />
tell you that I was on a train the <lb />
other day that came three <lb />
feet of being run by another <lb />
train going at full <lb />
mercy sakes, exclaimed <lb />
Mrs. did it <lb />
train that came so near run- <lb />
into he rejoined, butter- <lb />
a biscuit, on the other <lb />
track and going the other <lb />
It was several before Mrs. <lb />
broke loose, but when <lb />
she did she made up for lest time. <lb />
Tribune. <lb />
Trout off Many Important Subjects <lb />
and Am Sourer off <lb />
to Mao <lb />
Mad Thorn. <lb />
Mr. S. Thornton K. Prime, of <lb />
Dwight, in writing to the Chi- <lb />
Record on the subject of scrap <lb />
books <lb />
might be called a scrap-book <lb />
fiend. I commenced malting scrap <lb />
books when I was a young man <lb />
and have continued for the last <lb />
years making them. There <lb />
are I think to-day few pleasures <lb />
of my life so dear to me as look- <lb />
over the books have made <lb />
or commencing new ones. will tell <lb />
you a few facts about my <lb />
To-day they number over <lb />
one hundred and twenty-five vol- <lb />
I was years of <lb />
age when I made my first scrap <lb />
book, and recently I had it bound in <lb />
rod calf with marble covers. This <lb />
book I made in New York city. In <lb />
1858 I came west and located in this <lb />
village. always had a great weak- <lb />
for cutting out of newspapers <lb />
every article bearing upon subject s <lb />
in which I was interested. I still <lb />
keep up the practice. <lb />
the the tariff question <lb />
was very largely discussed In our <lb />
newspapers. I accumulated a vast <lb />
amount of stuff on the subject, <lb />
classified it so I had enough matter <lb />
to make forty volumes fourteen <lb />
inches long and sixteen inches wide <lb />
on every subject connected with th <lb />
tariff question. Then came <lb />
what was known as granger <lb />
I took an active part in that <lb />
upheaval, and preserved as far as I <lb />
was able all the material, historical <lb />
and These records <lb />
when made up filled over ten vol- <lb />
of one hundred pages each. <lb />
Tile drainage then occupied my at- <lb />
I have four volumes of <lb />
what was then one of the <lb />
most prominent practically dis- <lb />
cussed topics interesting the farm- <lb />
of Every newspaper in <lb />
Chicago had something to say as to <lb />
the good results which were sure to <lb />
follow from the use of tile drainage, <lb />
and as time progressed the sequel <lb />
proved that we were correct. These <lb />
books are particularly interesting to <lb />
Die. This era in the history of our <lb />
state was quite an epoch and went <lb />
to show what the press could do in <lb />
the way of Improving the country <lb />
by means of publishing, discussing <lb />
and agitating questions of a <lb />
character. I was always inter- <lb />
in the crops. How else could <lb />
I be if I lived on a farm and tried to <lb />
grow crops, but generally made my <lb />
living off of it You would hardly <lb />
believe it when I tell you that I have <lb />
now on my shelves thirty-four vol- <lb />
of three hundred pages each <lb />
fillet with crop records of every day <lb />
of the year from 1832 until the pres- <lb />
time. <lb />
my daily recreations, and I <lb />
might say with equal propriety my <lb />
recreation by night, are illustrated <lb />
scrap books of art at home and <lb />
abroad. My theatrical scrap books, <lb />
which I never tire of going over and <lb />
compiling and arranging are my <lb />
heart's delight. These number <lb />
volumes. I also keep large <lb />
portfolios in which from time to <lb />
time I put all my pictures, which <lb />
ultimately I expect to make into <lb />
I look back at my first <lb />
scrap book and sec how small <lb />
were its beginnings to what <lb />
proportions they have now reached, <lb />
and think how true is the <lb />
despise the day of small <lb />
My present fad is the <lb />
My collections, first, cover <lb />
this country, then come Paris, Lon- <lb />
don and Berlin. I have always kept <lb />
my theatrical paste <lb />
them into my books, with criticisms <lb />
and pictures of the actors and the <lb />
plays as far as I am able to get hold <lb />
of them. <lb />
have now a cheap cover made <lb />
to hold the books while I make them, <lb />
and then after they are finished have <lb />
them bound up substantially and in <lb />
uniform binding. I found that <lb />
wore out the books more in <lb />
them than I did in using <lb />
them. A good paste is a very <lb />
important essential to making a <lb />
successful scrap book so far as its <lb />
general appearance is concerned. <lb />
There is a great tendency for the <lb />
pages to curl up, spoiling entirely <lb />
the looks of the volume. I have <lb />
found that starch, say two table- <lb />
spoonfuls boiled with the white of an <lb />
egg, makes the best paste I have <lb />
ever used, and since using it the <lb />
leaves of all my books made after <lb />
this recipe retain a smooth and <lb />
sightly appearance. <lb />
a great believer in a scrap <lb />
book. Prom many points of view it <lb />
is better than an encyclopedia. I <lb />
have during my life induced many of <lb />
my friends to commence making <lb />
scrap books. They all tell me that <lb />
they find these books a spring of <lb />
never-ending joy and a lasting pleas- <lb />
They certainly fill a long-felt <lb />
want, particularly in the lives of <lb />
those whose tastes run in the <lb />
of <lb />
How Did It Happen <lb />
has been ex- <lb />
from the <lb />
was his <lb />
the point of a joke in three <lb />
minutes; their time limit Is five or <lb />
Francisco Chic <lb />
History Tells U But Little <lb />
Early <lb />
It is to be remembered that, n in <lb />
the apostolic age the work of con- <lb />
the world started from the <lb />
great towns, so was this emphatic- <lb />
ally the case in Gaul. How early or <lb />
how late the practice became general <lb />
of calling the country cure the <lb />
parish and the Episcopal sec the <lb />
I have never been able to <lb />
discover. As early as the fourth <lb />
century we find mention of country <lb />
churches with lands belonging to <lb />
them, and in tho next century the <lb />
numbers of these foundations so <lb />
much increased that <lb />
D. mentions a visitation he <lb />
made of the rural churches in his <lb />
diocese and notice <lb />
that by this time these settlements <lb />
are sometimes called and <lb />
sometimes dioceses. <lb />
Later on, Gregory of Tours <lb />
D. more often calls the <lb />
cures dioceses and the <lb />
Episcopal see the But. <lb />
Bail them what you will, we are <lb />
fairly well instructed as to tho man- <lb />
in which the country parishes <lb />
we call them rose up in <lb />
Gaul; and I have a suspicion that <lb />
what was true of Gaul was true, <lb />
of Britain. I <lb />
have a suspicion that if we had for <lb />
British history anything approach- <lb />
to that wealth original sources <lb />
which have for early French <lb />
history during the first five or six <lb />
centuries of our era, we should have <lb />
evidence that many <lb />
of our English parishes existed as <lb />
ecclesiastical Vs. with pretty <lb />
much the same boundaries as they <lb />
have to-day, and are survivals of a <lb />
condition of affairs anterior to <lb />
the Saxon <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report <lb />
Royals <lb />
ABSOLUTELY PURE <lb />
A JET-PROPELLED <lb />
Driven by Water Jet, <lb />
LIFEBOAT. <lb />
He Was Not Accommodated. <lb />
An English journal tells a good <lb />
story at the expense of the earl of j <lb />
Derby. While walking on land be-1 <lb />
longing to the earl a collier chanced <lb />
to meet the owner. His lordship in-, <lb />
quired if the collier knew he was <lb />
walking on his land. <lb />
land Well, I've got no <lb />
land was the reply, <lb />
I'm like to walk on somebody's <lb />
Where did get it <lb />
explained his lordship, <lb />
got it from my <lb />
did they get it <lb />
asked the collier. <lb />
got it from their <lb />
was the reply. <lb />
where did their ancestors <lb />
get <lb />
fought for <lb />
said the collier, <lb />
squaring up to the earl, fight <lb />
thee for <lb />
Handsomer Than a Hat. <lb />
The fashion of taking off hats in <lb />
theaters and other public halls is be- <lb />
coming more popular in Baltimore. <lb />
The men think the top of a lady's <lb />
head looks far better than the sum-1 <lb />
of a high bonnet. Baltimore <lb />
Mischief Done by Wind. <lb />
When the prince president, on his <lb />
journey through France, came to <lb />
B a triumphal arch had <lb />
been erected for him by the prefect <lb />
at the entrance of the town. A <lb />
wreath suspended from a rope was <lb />
to be let down upon his head, <lb />
and the arch bore this <lb />
has well deserved But a <lb />
gust of wind carried off the wreath, <lb />
so there was nothing left but the <lb />
with the has well <lb />
Peter the One Disciple Who Fought. <lb />
Peter was the one disciple of <lb />
Jesus who so far forgot the teach- <lb />
of his Master as to resort to vi- <lb />
It occurred in the Garden of <lb />
Gethsemane, during the arrest of <lb />
the when Peter cut off the <lb />
right ear of one of the servants of a <lb />
high priest. All of the other dis- <lb />
took flight. <lb />
A Musical Building. <lb />
In one of the large apartment <lb />
houses in New York there are <lb />
pianos, to every four persons. <lb />
Why Men Should Marry. <lb />
It was clearly meant that all men, <lb />
as well as all women, should marry; <lb />
and those who for any reason miss <lb />
this obvious destiny are, from <lb />
point of view, failures. It is <lb />
not a question of felicity <lb />
eight cases out of ten may be more <lb />
than but of race re- <lb />
The unmarried man is <lb />
a skulker, who, in order to secure <lb />
his own ease, dooms some woman, <lb />
who has a rightful claim upon him, <lb />
to celibacy. And in so doing he de- <lb />
frauds himself of the opportunities <lb />
for mental and moral development <lb />
which only the normal experience <lb />
can provide. He deliberately stunts <lb />
the stature of his manhood, <lb />
his heart and brain, and <lb />
chokes up all the sweetest potential- <lb />
of his soul. To himself he is <lb />
apt to appear like a wise fox that de- <lb />
the trap, though it be over so <lb />
cunningly baited; that refuses to <lb />
forsake his liberty for the sake of an <lb />
appetizing chicken or rabbit, which <lb />
may, after all, be a decoy stuffed <lb />
with sawdust; while an a matter of <lb />
fact his case Is that of the cowardly <lb />
servant in the parable, who, for <lb />
fear of losing his talent, hid it in a <lb />
napkin, and in the end was deemed <lb />
unworthy of his stewardship. <lb />
North American Review. <lb />
Produced <lb />
Rotary Steam <lb />
The Royal Lifeboat institution, a <lb />
benevolent organization supported <lb />
by subscriptions from the charitable <lb />
people of Great Britain, maintains <lb />
many lifeboat stations on the roasts. <lb />
which are the means of saving <lb />
of lives every year. In gen- <lb />
lifeboats are worked by oars <lb />
and sails. In 1891 the institution <lb />
caused to be built a steam propelled <lb />
lifeboat, worked on the let principle. <lb />
That is to say, instead of the <lb />
nary screw propeller jets of water <lb />
are used to drive the vessel. <lb />
The water jets are produced by <lb />
means of rotary pumps, and when <lb />
the jets are discharged from the <lb />
stern the boat is driven forward, <lb />
says the Scientific American. The <lb />
discharge nozzles are capable of be- <lb />
shifted so as to direct the jets <lb />
laterally, In which case the vessel <lb />
may be turned around or made to <lb />
move The first jet-pro <lb />
pelted lifeboat proved very useful <lb />
and and now the <lb />
has added boat worked <lb />
on the same principle. The vessel is <lb />
named the City of Glasgow. She is <lb />
fifty-three feet long, sixteen feet <lb />
beam, five and one-half feet deep <lb />
Displacement, thirty tons. Besides <lb />
coal, provisions, water and crew, <lb />
the boat will carry forty passengers. <lb />
On each side there are two <lb />
gal pumps for working the vessel. <lb />
Engines, two-hundred horse power. <lb />
Speed, eight miles per hour and <lb />
capable of towing another boat at <lb />
speed. The vessel is pro <lb />
and turned with the utmost <lb />
facility without the use of the <lb />
although, of course, a rudder is <lb />
provided. Going at full speed the <lb />
boat may be stopped dead and <lb />
started astern in twenty seconds. <lb />
A somewhat similar jet boat <lb />
named the President Van Heel, has <lb />
been built for the Lifeboat <lb />
of South Holland is operated <lb />
with much success. <lb />
We have on several occasions <lb />
called the attention of the navy de <lb />
to the importance of <lb />
our war vessels lifted with jet <lb />
pipes and proper connections with <lb />
the steam pumps, so that in ease of <lb />
need, such as loss of rudder or an <lb />
action, this auxiliary means might <lb />
be employed to steer, swing or turn <lb />
the vessel, as circumstances might <lb />
require. We have also suggested. <lb />
the inquiry whether additional <lb />
pumps and pipes might not be <lb />
ranged for connection with the main <lb />
engines of the ship, so that in case <lb />
of loss of propeller or breakage of <lb />
shaft the propulsion of the vessel <lb />
might be still maintained. <lb />
These suggestions apply not only <lb />
to warships, but also to merchant <lb />
steamships. The jet system is not <lb />
capable of yielding so high a rate of <lb />
speed for a ship as the propeller, but <lb />
it is a safe and effective method, <lb />
especially useful for emergencies. <lb />
It would be a simple and <lb />
inexpensive matter on all <lb />
steamships to arrange jet pipes for <lb />
steering purposes in case of rudder <lb />
loss. <lb />
THE COLLECTING MANIA. <lb />
Roanoke Union. <lb />
The next will be held <lb />
with Mar. <lb />
and 81st, <lb />
A. M-. Introductory <lb />
Sermon, -I A <lb />
P. If-, Reports <lb />
of concerning tin Work. <lb />
P. M., Literature Our <lb />
Homes., Revs. J. it Pace, <lb />
K Howell. P.- <lb />
M , Sermon by Hey. D. <lb />
A- -M-, Devotion- <lb />
Exercises., Rev. J. R. Puce. <lb />
A. M , Our Orphanage, Revs. <lb />
J Edwards, J. A- <lb />
and J K Howell. II A. M , The <lb />
Scriptural Idea of s Church, <lb />
J. W. Powell and J. A <lb />
P. M, Row Shall a Believer <lb />
Decide to Join I <lb />
Revs J. A. K. <lb />
Howell And R. T Vann. 8.80 <lb />
I M., Mis-ion Work the Bounds <lb />
Our Union, R-vs. J. R. Pace, <lb />
J. W. Howell <lb />
Sunday, A. M., Sunday <lb />
School Muss Sleeting, ll A. <lb />
Sermon by Rev. A <lb />
Sermon by O. <lb />
M- <lb />
When Easter Comes. <lb />
A friend of the Boston Trans- <lb />
M. H <lb />
was attracted by the suggestion <lb />
your paper this evening to <lb />
compose a which would <lb />
give the reason of the <lb />
nature f the Easier <lb />
The following clever rhymes are <lb />
lidded- i hey should be taught <lb />
in the primary schools. <lb />
days hath <lb />
Every poison remember; <lb />
But Io know Easter's <lb />
come <lb />
Puzzles even some. <lb />
ii March the twenty first is <lb />
Jut I the moon, <lb />
And when sow see it full <lb />
round, <lb />
Know here soon. <lb />
After the moon reached its <lb />
full, <lb />
Tin ii Easter will be hero <lb />
The very Sunday after. <lb />
each every year <lb />
And if hap on Sunday <lb />
moon shall reach its height, <lb />
The following this event <lb />
Will bathe r bright. <lb />
Z. <lb />
V n A Jeweler. <lb />
C. <lb />
X. w lot Spectacle <lb />
DR. <lb />
Just Now the Contemporary Poster is <lb />
the Chief Attraction <lb />
Anyone who has ever suffered at <lb />
any time from the mania for collect- <lb />
in any of its forms, must feel it <lb />
in these lays a constant tax upon his <lb />
powers of self-restraint to keep his <lb />
hands off of the contemporary poster. <lb />
The posters In particular with which <lb />
some of the publishers announce the <lb />
new numbers of magazines, and <lb />
sometimes new books, are a constant <lb />
temptation. Anyone who has ever <lb />
collected anything must feel that <lb />
they are too fascinating to be neg- <lb />
and that not to gather them <lb />
as they appear is a neglect of <lb />
that is almost criminal. <lb />
For the solace of persons who have <lb />
this impulse and refuse to yield to <lb />
it, it is a pleasure to out that, <lb />
after all, tho collector is a slave to <lb />
bis hobby, and the more things he <lb />
collects the more masters he puts <lb />
over himself. To able to see <lb />
pretty things, and not to be bitten <lb />
with the desire to take them home <lb />
and salt them down, even when they <lb />
can be had for the asking, is an at- <lb />
which promises to be quite <lb />
as for its rarity as most of <lb />
the things that ordinary collectors <lb />
acquire. When we sec the <lb />
length to which the postage-stamp <lb />
mania has gone, the prodigious <lb />
of photographs which <lb />
overwhelm most contemporary <lb />
lies, we may surely justify ourselves <lb />
In some stiffening of our resolution <lb />
not to drift into tho habit of board- <lb />
even pretty things that we do <lb />
not really want. It is so easy to be- <lb />
gin collecting, and so unsatisfactory <lb />
Io stop after one has once started <lb />
Let us be of us, <lb />
at maintain that not to be <lb />
a collector Is a distinction, just as It <lb />
is not to have had ones picture In <lb />
the <lb />
your blood pure and healthy <lb />
and yon will not have rheumatism. <lb />
Hood's the blood <lb />
richness. <lb />
II. A. JOYNER, <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
X. O. <lb />
stairs over <lb />
Hardware store. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
Prompt attention to <lb />
K. I. I. Moons,<lb />
N . C <lb />
Ml under Opera House. Third St. <lb />
V i. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, SO. <lb />
all Collections a <lb />
specialty. <lb />
DR. D. L. JAMES, <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
M. C. <lb />
J. H. J. L. <lb />
FLEMING <lb />
a w, <lb />
n. c. <lb />
Practice in all the Courts. <lb />
. C. LATHAM HARRY <lb />
I i SKIN <lb />
at Li, <lb />
R, N i <lb />
J tun, L. <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
I- <lb />
ii. nil the Courts. <lb />
John E. Woodard. P. C. Harding, <lb />
Wilson, N. C. N. <lb />
WOOD Alt D A <lb />
LAW, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Special attention given to <lb />
settlement of claim.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017738_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Entered at the at Greenville <lb />
N. C, as second-class mail matter. <lb />
WEDNESDAY MARCH 27th, 1893. <lb />
The monument at Bentonville <lb />
the unknown was <lb />
veiled Wednesday. <lb />
Wade Hampton delivered ad- <lb />
dress. The was done <lb />
by thirty ladies dreaded in <lb />
military uniforms. The <lb />
i said to one cf the <lb />
prettiest the South <lb />
Tho Auditor refused to allow <lb />
some of the charts of Phillips <lb />
and Bryan who are on the Mrs. <lb />
Ho <lb />
gives as his reasons that <lb />
were unnecessary expenses, <lb />
is the second time it seems <lb />
Phillips didn't gel what be <lb />
plied for at the State Treasury. <lb />
Mr. writes i letter for <lb />
the Atlanta Constitution which is <lb />
full of praise for the last <lb />
We suppose Mr. Butler <lb />
thinks it the best Legislature the <lb />
State ever had because they <lb />
elected him and then <lb />
allowed him to control all <lb />
We are sure of one thing <lb />
and that is that North Carolina <lb />
never has had any Legislature <lb />
that would have disgraced tin- <lb />
Stale by Butler <lb />
before this one- <lb />
Josiah Tamer his claim <lb />
allowed which lie claims has been <lb />
due him ever since the public <lb />
printing was done by Tb <lb />
Secretary of State and Audi- <lb />
tor were appointed to examine <lb />
and see if the State owed him <lb />
anything- They reported that <lb />
he was entitled to 30.62. It <lb />
came from the difference meas- <lb />
of the em and en quad. <lb />
This amount will come in wed <lb />
in tho old age of battle horse <lb />
of Democracy and will be <lb />
sorry to see him get it- <lb />
If two members the A <lb />
legislative <lb />
committee who have been ;. <lb />
spree, one a <lb />
fist and other n <lb />
hare any respect for themselves <lb />
or one iota of pride left, they <lb />
will sober up, reform and gee to <lb />
work. If they do not, we <lb />
their friends to send after the re <lb />
Progressive <lb />
The men who compose tho <lb />
above com mil toe are. <lb />
of Cherokee, of Chatham, <lb />
and Rev. J. T. Phillips, of Put <lb />
When the Progressive <lb />
writes this about its <lb />
disgusted with action- <lb />
is a disgrace to S <lb />
Carolina As for that, about <lb />
Legislature did <lb />
same line- <lb />
Some days a <lb />
from the ti's <lb />
visited so mm of the S <lb />
States. Among other places they <lb />
stopped over at Richmond and <lb />
was received the Executive <lb />
Mansion. There was a <lb />
with the party and when the par <lb />
lunched with Gov <lb />
it turned out that be was also <lb />
present- There have been several <lb />
interviews published which <lb />
Governor he did <lb />
not know there was a with <lb />
the end this accounts <lb />
fr the social <lb />
the affair- <lb />
Gov. received a letter <lb />
Senator Hailing in reference <lb />
to the episode staling that <lb />
he was certain that the interviews <lb />
purporting to have been bad with <lb />
him in reference to the who <lb />
was with his committee was not <lb />
true. The Governor replied at <lb />
he was disgusted with while <lb />
affair and that the interviews <lb />
all true. Besides he desired to <lb />
inform him that had he Known a <lb />
WU with em the commit- <lb />
tee would never have been re- <lb />
at Executive Mansion- <lb />
Tim Governor writes plainly and <lb />
leaves no doubt as to w here he <lb />
stands upon the race question- <lb />
ADDRESS TO COTTON-GROWERS. <lb />
Necessity of Decreasing the Acre- <lb />
age Strongly Urged. <lb />
Athens, Ala., March <lb />
tor D- Lane, president of the <lb />
American Cotton Pro <lb />
Association, ha-, issued lite <lb />
following <lb />
the Cotton Growers of the <lb />
I wish to call the <lb />
of the cotton-growers to the <lb />
strategic movement made <lb />
by cotton manipulators to <lb />
them into the suicidal act of <lb />
planting again a large acreage in <lb />
cotton- That has been <lb />
felt Liverpool f W some time <lb />
reference to a acreage <lb />
goes without saving, and bad this <lb />
menace not existed values <lb />
would have been lower than they <lb />
have been, and now, as the end of <lb />
the season is at band and the <lb />
staple is substantially out of <lb />
hands of the farmer, these gentle <lb />
men who have represented the <lb />
bear element for many <lb />
while cotton was moving in large <lb />
volumes now resort to this case <lb />
of values up simply as a <lb />
to induce the farmers to <lb />
more cotton than possibly <lb />
intended- <lb />
warn the of the <lb />
South that the price of the last <lb />
few days is fictitious. It is the <lb />
product of a conspiracy of men <lb />
to systematically rob the <lb />
of his legitimate gains. It is <lb />
a delusion and a snare to catch <lb />
the unsuspecting farmer, to in- <lb />
him into the toils of <lb />
three-million surplus, so that <lb />
I hey can bear down values lower <lb />
than last season with an <lb />
ed surplus hand <lb />
people beware, it is a <lb />
bait to catch those who will bite- <lb />
There can be no legitimate <lb />
sous shown for tins resort to <lb />
values. The production hay ex <lb />
needed the <lb />
Russia has placed a <lb />
virtually prohibitive duty on <lb />
American so we can no <lb />
longer expect to sell her <lb />
bales. <lb />
can be no made <lb />
by next season in the finical laws <lb />
of the nation. Therefore, where <lb />
is legitimate cause for this <lb />
rise ii cotton has been selling at <lb />
tho legitimate figures It is <lb />
simply the old spider <lb />
game, a recurrence of the <lb />
and tho and am <lb />
constrained to <lb />
long, oh, Lord, how long Is it <lb />
to be ever thus that our people <lb />
are to be way laid and robbed of <lb />
their subsistence <lb />
deny proposition, <lb />
defy the man who made it, <lb />
any can produce <lb />
legitimately for live cents with <lb />
reasonable profit, and I state <lb />
advisedly and emphatically that <lb />
tho cotton mean <lb />
ally a man who digs grout d, <lb />
the unfortunate who the <lb />
over the mortgaged <lb />
not ii cents a <lb />
day for his labor the year round. <lb />
What is to be the fate this man <lb />
if cotton goes down l or J cent <lb />
this tall, is not at ail <lb />
probable we recognize the <lb />
conditions confront <lb />
take into the fact <lb />
that we hid a mot <lb />
season for picking oar crop this <lb />
last season, and its classification <lb />
was higher than ever known, <lb />
hardly any grading less than <lb />
middling. <lb />
it averaged <lb />
and though may a <lb />
smaller crop the, e season <lb />
of 1895 if we ha e a rainy or <lb />
gathering season, <lb />
cotton, in all probability, will <lb />
grade lower, and may we will <lb />
have a recurrence of the season <lb />
of when we had a super <lb />
of the qualities. <lb />
could then expect same <lb />
relative difference in the grades, <lb />
which must, of course, result in <lb />
considerably reduced returns <lb />
from whole crop. <lb />
invoke the most earnest at- <lb />
of growers to <lb />
nefarious scheme address <lb />
this letter as a caveat, that <lb />
may not deluded by this <lb />
iii sheep's or, in <lb />
this boar bull <lb />
Cloth <lb />
J. W. city treasurer <lb />
of Vs., shot and <lb />
killed himself yesterday. He was <lb />
short in his accounts. <lb />
Rev. Dr. William Brown <lb />
professor of ancient languages at <lb />
Roanoke College, Va, dropped <lb />
dead from apoplexy. <lb />
Tho Brooklyn trolley-cars have <lb />
killed men, women, and <lb />
since electricity was intro- <lb />
as a motive power in the <lb />
summer of 1892. <lb />
A druggist's clerk in Boston <lb />
has succeed in makings medicine <lb />
which will deprive a cat of its <lb />
voice without injuring it in the <lb />
least. Seven large Tom cats were <lb />
experimented upon last week- <lb />
They sat the peak of a roof <lb />
and made frightful faces at each <lb />
other for hours without <lb />
taring a sound- The clerk ought <lb />
to be sure of a princely fortune. <lb />
A bill to tax bachelors and es- <lb />
an <lb />
when the tax shall have <lb />
reached Was introduced <lb />
in the House of <lb />
by <lb />
The bill defines bachelors as tin- <lb />
men of years or over who <lb />
have never been married, and ex- <lb />
men who have reached <lb />
or who can prove to a board of <lb />
unmarried women over years <lb />
of age that they have proposed <lb />
at three times to <lb />
marriageable females <lb />
refused each time. <lb />
A HAPPY PLAN. <lb />
Bow Style and Utility Can <lb />
Adapted to Each Other. <lb />
Be <lb />
Two Young Ladles with Big an <lb />
Many Pamela Which I jitter to <lb />
Seriously th <lb />
Young <lb />
DIED OF A BROKEN <lb />
HEART. <lb />
His His- <lb />
Si. <lb />
lire. <lb />
NEWS IN <lb />
ax City, la, had <lb />
snow Registers <lb />
Up in the cold north a weather ob- <lb />
server wants to find a man who will <lb />
invent an instrument to measure the <lb />
depth of snow correctly. All sorts <lb />
of mechanical devices have been de- <lb />
vised to measure rain and fog and <lb />
sunshine, but nothing smaller than <lb />
a level lot has been pro- <lb />
to show the correct depth of <lb />
snow, and even that device, if the <lb />
wind happens to be out for a <lb />
isn't of much use scientific <lb />
poses. If anyone has an idea for a <lb />
machine of this kind he will receive <lb />
grateful thanks of the observer <lb />
Dy communicating with him. He <lb />
wants to issue a snowdrift bulletin <lb />
that average up tho depth of <lb />
snow in fence corners and open <lb />
fields <lb />
The Arc <lb />
An English naval officer writing <lb />
home says, alluding to the <lb />
prowess shown by tho Japanese <lb />
in capture of Port <lb />
would make very bad <lb />
mies. could smash them at sea, <lb />
probably, but we could do nothing <lb />
against Japan on land. We can <lb />
teach them nothing in military sci- <lb />
They are roasters of modern <lb />
scientific warfare. The capture of <lb />
Port Arthur was a perfect <lb />
shall I mark these la- <lb />
dies shoes <lb />
the prices in plain <lb />
figures and the in <lb />
Y. World. <lb />
Stays Pliable. <lb />
The skin is the only part of the <lb />
body that is not hardened by <lb />
age. <lb />
Reprehensible Extravagance. <lb />
Clerk has had sickness In the <lb />
; family, to his would re- <lb />
ask you for an advance; <lb />
, yesterday I had to pay my doctor's <lb />
amounting to a hundred and <lb />
thirty marks. <lb />
my dear fellow, <lb />
tho old story, I'm <lb />
means. <lb />
GREAT GIFT. <lb />
A terrific storm s <lb />
s u- Mediterranean <lb />
Work has com mi need on <lb />
public building at Newborn. <lb />
farmer near Salisbury a <lb />
hen which has just laid two black <lb />
eggs. <lb />
Fir, at New Orleans destroyed <lb />
half a million dollars worth of <lb />
DOt <lb />
Davis r, dry goods <lb />
dealers of have as- <lb />
sign-, d. <lb />
The burning of a furniture <lb />
factory at G., caused a <lb />
loss of <lb />
Mr. W. C- Solicitor of <lb />
Halifax county Court, <lb />
died Saturday night. <lb />
Hardy T. Gregory, of nth <lb />
Carolina, has beau appointed a <lb />
post office inspector. <lb />
A New ore was <lb />
robbed of worth of <lb />
in broad daylight. <lb />
is good American make as if as- <lb />
ladies of Alexandria, Va. j sinning that this fact would counter- <lb />
a man named J. act the effect of the cheapness of the <lb />
Why President Hayes Wore a Com- <lb />
Silver-Plated Watch. <lb />
Pr Hayes was always noted <lb />
for I is thrifty habits, but some <lb />
things which impressed the multi- <lb />
is signs of meanness were real- <lb />
nothing but ordinary prudence. <lb />
For example, everyone wondered <lb />
why he would while drawing <lb />
a salary of fifty thousand dollar a <lb />
year, in wearing r. silver-plated <lb />
Waterbury watch, worth possibly <lb />
three dollars, observes Kate Field. <lb />
He was aware that his practice was <lb />
and any astonishment <lb />
amused him instead of <lb />
him angry. In answer to a look <lb />
of surprise he would think <lb />
that is a plain watch for a president <lb />
the United States to carry, but It <lb />
as <lb />
Weiss for them. <lb />
An explosion secured in a coal <lb />
near <lb />
fifty nine killed. <lb />
Fire the St. James Hotel at <lb />
Denver yesterday damaged the <lb />
hotel to the amount of <lb />
A Mr. living near <lb />
article. <lb />
The truth was that almost weekly <lb />
deputations of western Indians <lb />
called upon him, always bringing <lb />
presents of some kind to the great <lb />
father. Of course, ho was expected <lb />
to give something in return, and the <lb />
object was to find something cheap <lb />
and at the same lime acceptable. <lb />
had a difficult yesterday I batches were a novelty to the In- <lb />
with a Tho struck and to present a chief with a <lb />
him with a stick, killing him. I watch which the father <lb />
j self had been carrying always <lb />
Mrs. Mary of Chow- <lb />
county, years old, has just this, and not caring to distribute <lb />
cut a tooth. Her eyesight is <lb />
good and she can read without <lb />
spectacles. <lb />
gold watches, or even silver ones, <lb />
Mr. Hayes hit upon the expedient of <lb />
buying nickel watches at thirty-six <lb />
A woman of Greensboro I dollars a dozen, and always made it <lb />
went off from home leaving convenient one with him <lb />
two in the house. Same I any emergency. Chicago <lb />
old house destroyed and <lb />
both children were burned to <lb />
death. <lb />
Drought locusts have <lb />
Post. <lb />
Left Out the Not. <lb />
The Worcester Gazette <lb />
tells a story of Rev. Dr. Bancroft, <lb />
caused a severe famine in the father of George Bancroft, the his- <lb />
f Africa, and I and once pastor of the First <lb />
many natives are selling them <lb />
selves their into am <lb />
very to obtain food. <lb />
Dr. R. L Payne, of <lb />
a son of tho Dr. who was <lb />
recently murdered, lost <lb />
horses by drowning while <lb />
to drive them across a swollen I <lb />
creek, and narrowly escaped I <lb />
life. <lb />
A marvelous find of gold re- <lb />
at the Ingrain Mine, <lb />
county. the pat few <lb />
days numerous its. the <lb />
est weighing two pounds, others <lb />
smaller, have been dug out, <lb />
he supply seems still plentiful. <lb />
Unitarian church of Worcester. A <lb />
tr was commissioned to <lb />
make two tablets, on which the Ten <lb />
Commandments were to be painted. <lb />
The carpenter made the tablets of <lb />
knotty boards, perhaps not <lb />
their use. When Dr. Bancroft <lb />
directed the painter not to let the <lb />
knots show, the man, who was a <lb />
waggish character of the day, paint- <lb />
ed the Ten Commandments and care- <lb />
folly left spaces where note <lb />
ought to stand. Dr. Bancroft had <lb />
a sense of humor, and it is believed <lb />
he laughed, or perhaps smiled, and <lb />
then told the painter he had mis- <lb />
understood him, and had better re- <lb />
store the riots. <lb />
Both the girls were rosy from <lb />
walking in the keen air when they <lb />
Sot Into the elevated railroad at <lb />
street, and both were <lb />
heavily laden with packages. It was <lb />
a case of parcel, little parcel, <lb />
hat box and and every time <lb />
either one of them stirred some one <lb />
of the impediments fell to the car <lb />
floor. Sometimes one of tho girls <lb />
was stooping down to pick p the <lb />
big parcel or the little pare and <lb />
sometimes they were both stooping <lb />
down to gather up these and the hat <lb />
box and bundle as well. Two <lb />
brokers, who were sitting opposite, <lb />
began quietly making bets as to <lb />
which package would slip off next, <lb />
and what with their exercise in the <lb />
open air, that In the car, and their <lb />
knowledge that they were affording <lb />
a good deal of deadhead amusement <lb />
to the passengers, the girls got red- <lb />
in the face every minute. <lb />
just think it a said one <lb />
of them at last, women don't <lb />
have pockets to put things and <lb />
she gave a little white box a vicious <lb />
tap that jostled It up against an ob- <lb />
long brown arrangement and sent <lb />
both of them tumbling to the floor. <lb />
When she came up gasping from <lb />
the rescue of these, she jerked at her <lb />
big sleeves like an angry little bird <lb />
plucking at Its feathers, stopped <lb />
short in the process, treated her <lb />
companion to a magnificent example <lb />
of the baby stare, and <lb />
I've got <lb />
asked Katie. <lb />
an said her companion. <lb />
watch <lb />
And with that she took up the lit- <lb />
white box, thrust it under her <lb />
jacket near the shoulder, gave a <lb />
quick wriggle, and presto it dropped <lb />
Into the big puff of her sleeve. Then <lb />
the oblong brown arrangement was <lb />
similarly disposed of; and then a <lb />
round, flat package; and then an- <lb />
other something and another some- <lb />
thing else, now tucking It into the <lb />
right-hand sleeve now Into the <lb />
left, everything was disposed <lb />
of. Then Miss Katie her <lb />
friend's example until all of her par- <lb />
were tucked away, and when <lb />
they got off the cars at Park place <lb />
there wasn't a sign of parcel, <lb />
little parcel, hat box or but <lb />
their sleeves stuck out like four cap- <lb />
balloons, and all the Brooklyn <lb />
girls they met turned green with <lb />
envy. <lb />
THE <lb />
It Is a New Instrument for Testing <lb />
the Air We Breathe. <lb />
A new and novel instrument is <lb />
the or dust-testing <lb />
It is not a complicated <lb />
scientific machine, being solely In- <lb />
tended for estimating in an easy and <lb />
simple manner the amount of <lb />
and number of dust particles in <lb />
the atmosphere. The action of the <lb />
instrument is based certain color <lb />
phenomena associated with what is <lb />
called condensation of <lb />
and which can be produced by steam- <lb />
jets, high or low temperature of the <lb />
air, the increased number of dust- <lb />
etc. In working tho <lb />
scope the air is drawn into the <lb />
by means of a common air <lb />
pump and quickly passes to the test <lb />
tubes, which are fitted with glass at <lb />
both ends. When the tube thus <lb />
charged is hold toward the light <lb />
colors from pure to near- <lb />
black-blue to the <lb />
or impurity of the sample under <lb />
are indicated. The dust par- <lb />
also form an important factor <lb />
in these tests, variation In their <lb />
number causing the mirror to throw <lb />
all the colors of the rainbow. <lb />
So Rev. Dr. in <lb />
of <lb />
Jesus died literally of a broken <lb />
heart. This is the opinion of Rev. <lb />
Dr. the most entertaining <lb />
historian of the life of the Saviour. <lb />
His death on the cross occurred <lb />
sooner than was usual in crucifix- <lb />
Ions. He was in tho prime of <lb />
and by previous <lb />
health. There is no record of <lb />
physical ailment in His life. The <lb />
flow of blood and water <lb />
from tho wound caused by the spear <lb />
of the Roman soldier points <lb />
to another explanation than <lb />
crucifixion la the opinion of medical <lb />
men. The immediate cause of His <lb />
death appears, in the same opinion, <lb />
to have been the rupture of the <lb />
heart brought about by mental ago- <lb />
of joy or of grief Is <lb />
known to induce tho bursting of <lb />
some division of the heart and the <lb />
consequent flow of blood In to tho <lb />
or bag, filled with colorless <lb />
serum, like water, in which the <lb />
heart Is Eminent med- <lb />
authorities a death <lb />
from heart rupture hand is sud- <lb />
carried to the front of tho <lb />
chest and a piercing shriek <lb />
Tho hands of Jesus were nailed to <lb />
the cross, but the appalling shriek <lb />
was uttered. <lb />
A of Lock-Jaw. <lb />
Charlotte Observer. <lb />
Seeing in the Observer, a few <lb />
days ago, a child died in <lb />
Charlotte with lock j caused <lb />
by running a rusty nail in its foot, <lb />
and as similar deaths are so <lb />
I give a potent <lb />
and for the of the dear <lb />
little children who are so liable to <lb />
such accidents, I hope all papers <lb />
seeing this will copy. Take one <lb />
teaspoonful of laudanum <lb />
enough cotton to absorb it, and <lb />
bind it to the wound, it will <lb />
give almost instantaneous relief. <lb />
I have tried it know whereof <lb />
speak. W. P- Williams. <lb />
College, N. C- <lb />
Personal Abuse In Old Politics. <lb />
Population of British India. <lb />
According to the census of 1801, <lb />
the population of British India and <lb />
the native states was 287.223,431, an <lb />
increase of in ten years. <lb />
Of these, according to religion, <lb />
there were <lb />
Mohammedans, 9.820,467 <lb />
aboriginals, Buddhists, <lb />
284.380 Christians, Sikhs, <lb />
1,416.638 <lb />
Hebrews and of all other re- <lb />
Of the Christian <lb />
certified to be <lb />
Roman Catholics, and the remain- <lb />
with the exception of a <lb />
few hundred Syrians, etc., <lb />
Mr. <lb />
Baltimore, ML <lb />
Run Down <lb />
That Tired <lb />
Headache, No Appetite <lb />
Bottle of Hood's <lb />
Bring Back New Life. <lb />
C. L Lowell, <lb />
using- Hood's <lb />
I frequently and did not know <lb />
what tho matter with me. One day I would <lb />
feel tired I could hardly the next I <lb />
would hare a headache and on, not <lb />
Snowing what the next day would bring forth, <lb />
did not hare any appetite and <lb />
Was Run Down. <lb />
I tried a good but they did me <lb />
no good. Baring heard a great deal about <lb />
Hood's I decided to try a bottle. I <lb />
Cures <lb />
am glad to I felt I hare now <lb />
used bottles and feel as well ever. It <lb />
been of great benefit to me as I regained <lb />
and <lb />
Health. <lb />
can <lb />
Kan excellent blood M. <lb />
Street, Maryland. <lb />
Nothing in modern times can <lb />
equal the virulence tho apparent <lb />
exacerbation of the presidential <lb />
campaign of 1828, when Andrew <lb />
Jackson was formally entered in the <lb />
presidential race against John <lb />
Quincy Adams. Personal abuse was <lb />
rife. Adams, the impeccable, the <lb />
frigidly just, was accused of a <lb />
of crimes, one of the least of <lb />
which was that he acted as procurer <lb />
for the czar of Russia. Clay was <lb />
branded as an unprincipled <lb />
a professional gambler, a lib- <lb />
and an accomplice of Aaron <lb />
Burr. Jackson was stigmatized as <lb />
a murderer, a dueling man-slayer, a <lb />
a turf sportsman. <lb />
Don't forget the pretty cf <lb />
tablets and box papers at <lb />
tor Book Store- when you want <lb />
something nice to on. <lb />
The Radical Aftermath. <lb />
Do not forget that the Radical <lb />
Legislature the taxes <lb />
in every f of property. <lb />
That means an increase in the <lb />
aggregate of many of thous- <lb />
ands of dollars taken from the <lb />
people, and that too in a time of <lb />
monetary stringency and tho low- <lb />
est price for farm products known <lb />
to this generation. And that is <lb />
what the great blowing, humbug <lb />
Radical did 1895, <lb />
the way of carrying out their <lb />
pledges to the people- Just put <lb />
us in and will undo evil of <lb />
the rascally Democrats. That <lb />
was the stupid, demagogic cry <lb />
and boast. Never was there so <lb />
much of brag and so little of <lb />
actual performance Four <lb />
cents increase every of <lb />
property in the taxes. Renumber <lb />
that. w Messenger- <lb />
-----o- <lb />
has just opened a grand display of <lb />
In Clay Serges, Diagonals, Cheviots, Worsted, <lb />
Mixed and they are <lb />
of while the styles shown in <lb />
Pants Patterns will be to you joy <lb />
Look at the following and take your <lb />
BUSINESS <lb />
IMPORTED SCOTCH SUITS, <lb />
SILK MIXED SUITS.<lb />
In Dove Tail, <lb />
Cut Sacks, Prince <lb />
Cutaways. <lb />
Four Friends of the Editor. <lb />
The subscriber a <lb />
pays his promptly in <lb />
advance. <lb />
Tho man, woman, <lb />
boy or girl who introduces him to <lb />
a news item- <lb />
Third The who is <lb />
not afraid to tell the editor when <lb />
be sees something in the <lb />
particularly pleases him. <lb />
subscriber who <lb />
doesn't hesitate to tell tho editor <lb />
frankly when he sets something <lb />
in the paper that please <lb />
him. <lb />
Every one of these four classes <lb />
the editor of a live newspaper <lb />
in his <lb />
The editor of a live newspaper <lb />
must have close collections, must <lb />
publish all the news and must be <lb />
in touch with the minds and <lb />
hearts of his readers. <lb />
Twenty Years Proof. <lb />
Liver Pills keep the bow- <lb />
els in natural motion and cleanse <lb />
the system of all impurities An <lb />
absolute cure for sick headache, <lb />
dyspepsia, sour stomach, con- <lb />
and kindred diseases. <lb />
do without <lb />
R. P. Smith, Va. <lb />
writes I don't know how I could <lb />
do without them. I have had <lb />
Liver disease for over twenty <lb />
years. Am now entirely cured. <lb />
Liver Pills <lb />
Harris Suits, <lb />
Sawyer Suits, <lb />
Cheviot Suits, <lb />
Imported Suits. <lb />
Clothing is lower this season ever known <lb />
before and I have been to the northern markets <lb />
and had my pick and can certainly suit you in <lb />
style, cut and B. <lb />
Don't forget I carry and have just received a <lb />
handsome line of <lb />
your produce to <lb />
J, Meekins, Jr., t Co. <lb />
Factors <lb />
AND <lb />
Commission Merchants <lb />
NORFOLK VA. <lb />
Personal Attention given to <lb />
Weights and Counts. <lb />
They quote Monday's <lb />
Norfolk priors on produce <lb />
Middling cotton, to <lb />
Irish Potatoes, Old Chickens. <lb />
Sweet Young to <lb />
Eggs, to Peas, to <lb />
Corn. to <lb />
KNOTS <lb />
and can suit you every time in style and price. <lb />
in fact everything is fresh and new and will sat- <lb />
any who will come and let me show them. <lb />
FRANK <lb />
THE LEADER IN CLOTHING. <lb />
GROVES <lb />
Save lime, money <lb />
bills. Go where you please, I <lb />
when you please, as last as you <lb />
please. Find pleasure, health and <lb />
economy all in one. <lb />
Rambler Bicycles are the acme of <lb />
mechanical perfection. Strong, <lb />
and reliable, with not an ounce <lb />
of useless material. The Rambler <lb />
is the wheel for record breakers and <lb />
for pleasure seekers. <lb />
Various models, all the same price <lb />
tells all about them <lb />
free, of course. <lb />
JEFFERY MFG. CO,, <lb />
o. e. <lb />
HOOd'S act yet promptly <lb />
on <lb />
Greenville <lb />
Corrected by at the <lb />
Old Brick <lb />
Butter, per to <lb />
Sugar cured to <lb />
to <lb />
Corn to SO <lb />
to <lb />
Flour. to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
Potatoes ;. to <lb />
Potatoes <lb />
Sugar to B <lb />
to <lb />
Salt per to <lb />
to <lb />
Beeswax per <lb />
to <lb />
per to <lb />
Hulls, per <lb />
Cotton Seed <lb />
to a <lb />
to <lb />
Cotton a a Peanuts. <lb />
Below are prices of <lb />
and peanuts for yesterday, as ed <lb />
by Cobb Bros. Co., Com mission Mer. <lb />
chants of Norfolk <lb />
Good Middling <lb />
Middling <lb />
Low Middling <lb />
Good Ordinary <lb />
PEANUT. <lb />
Common <lb />
Prime <lb />
Extra Prime <lb />
Fancy <lb />
Spanish <lb />
at <lb />
B. E. 2.5 to 2.75 pr bag. <lb />
1.50 to 1.75. <lb />
Black ind Clay. W to 1.00 per bushel. <lb />
TASTELESS <lb />
CHILL <lb />
M Your Fines can Hi Best <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
have a large lot of the cleaned and best <lb />
T IRON <lb />
yon ever and are headquarters for Tobacco Pities We m make them a <lb />
cheap the and guarantee our work In every particular. <lb />
S. EX Fender Co., <lb />
Dialers In Stores, l Mowing <lb />
IS JUST AS FOR ADULTS. <lb />
WARRANTED. PRICE SOotS. <lb />
ILLS., NOT. <lb />
,., , <lb />
soil last year. COO of <lb />
CHILL TONIO <lb />
already this In all our <lb />
years. In tho hare <lb />
an universal <lb />
faction as your Tonic. yours mil t,<lb />
f and by John L <lb />
Woolen Druggist. <lb />
3-10 <lb />
7-10 <lb />
to U <lb />
If<lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned duly <lb />
fled before the Superior Clerk of <lb />
county as of E. C. <lb />
is given to <lb />
all per-ons Indebted to th e estate of the <lb />
decedent to make Is pay- <lb />
to the undersigned, and all per- <lb />
sons having again t Hie es- <lb />
must present i he before the <lb />
14th day or MM,, or ibis notice <lb />
w be plead in of very. <lb />
day of <lb />
B. C. <lb />
K. <lb />
The Place to bell your <lb />
TOBACCO <lb />
the <lb />
EASTERN <lb />
TOBACCO <lb />
WAREHOUSE, <lb />
O. L. JOYNER, Prop., <lb />
ESTABLISHED . <lb />
INT. C. <lb />
Just Received Cars Rock Lime. <lb />
KEGS NAILS. ALL SIZES. <lb />
Floor, <lb />
Meat. <lb />
Hay. <lb />
BO Tuba Lard, <lb />
Case Sardines. <lb />
Bread Preparation. <lb />
Soap. <lb />
Star Lye <lb />
MM Boxes cakes and Crackers. <lb />
Cases Matches, <lb />
C Dust. <lb />
GOOd LUCk linking <lb />
Sacks Coffee. <lb />
Bills Molasses, <lb />
Tons Shot, <lb />
Kegs Powder. <lb />
Granulated Sugar, <lb />
Snuff. <lb />
Gall Ax Snuff, <lb />
R. It. Mills Snug. <lb />
Three Thistle <lb />
Boxes Tobacco, <lb />
Dukes V. M. P. <lb />
Va. <lb />
Cases Oysters, <lb />
H. SUGG, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At current rates. <lb />
AGENT FOB FIRST-GLASS FIRE PROOF <lb />
Sale- <lb />
N-. C. <lb />
county of Pitt and bounded as follows mat Of <lb />
to Adjoining the lands of Amos It. adjoining <lb />
Cox. W, M. Stocks, Bedding and <lb />
Others containing thirty-eight acres <lb />
more or less. The lands are fold rive acres <lb />
for the purpose of making assets for sold for the purpose of making a <lb />
the of the estate of J. for the of debts of the <lb />
i W Terms of sale D. W. Terms of <lb />
n. flan . . i u . n u iv. i. <lb />
rash. W. <lb />
of the estate of J. L. W. Nobles. <lb />
Brag A Tyson, <lb />
March 1895. <lb />
county of Pitt. township. <lb />
g tho lands of I,. Tucker. F. <lb />
Alfred am others <lb />
on Swift Creek, contain <lb />
five acres more or less. Said lands are <lb />
assets <lb />
estate of <lb />
sale <lb />
cash. W. B. <lb />
of the estate of W. <lb />
Sugg A Tyson. <lb />
March 20th<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017738_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THESE LENT. <lb />
At Least Then Names Are, to Mike <lb />
News Cur Readers. <lb />
Rev. A- Ore left for Kins- <lb />
ton night. <lb />
Mr. A IV Dupree went to <lb />
Richmond Tuesday. <lb />
Col. J. W. Johnson, of <lb />
ma City, O- T-, is in town. <lb />
Miss of Kinston, <lb />
Mrs. K <lb />
Mr. H- G. Jones arrived from <lb />
Neck Monday night. <lb />
Mr. H. C Edwards went to <lb />
Norfolk Tuesday morning to buy <lb />
horses. <lb />
Mrs- Susan Proctor has re <lb />
turned to her home in Washing- <lb />
ton. <lb />
Dispute a women <lb />
when she says in y Goods <lb />
are the to buy <lb />
Because she knows what <lb />
she's talking about. <lb />
Argue with lier when <lb />
says my prices are <lb />
I money-savers. She talks <lb />
a sensible woman <lb />
who knows what's what. <lb />
Try to excuse yourself <lb />
other <lb />
mine <lb />
can <lb />
offer no reason that can be <lb />
for passing the store where <lb />
the best and cheapest go to- <lb />
Expect your wife to <lb />
j meet you pleasantly if; <lb />
you've gone to <lb />
store than mine, <lb />
when she expressly told you to <lb />
go nowhere else do; <lb />
these things it you expect to j <lb />
live long and keep your hair on. j <lb />
Try to excuse <lb />
I for going to some <lb />
store instead of <lb />
know that <lb />
We want all people to drop in <lb />
and see stock of <lb />
Mr. J. II. returned <lb />
Monday night from Elizabeth <lb />
Ci. <lb />
Mr Charlie return- <lb />
ed Monday from Scotland <lb />
Neck. <lb />
M's. L White left <lb />
for Lome at Rose- <lb />
Miss Lemmie James, of <lb />
is visiting L <lb />
Rev C- M Billings will preach <lb />
in the Methodist Church <lb />
day night. <lb />
Mis. B. R. King, of <lb />
is spending this week at <lb />
R- W. Kings. <lb />
Mrs M. M returned <lb />
Friday morning from a month's <lb />
visit to <lb />
Mr. L H. Rountree has moved <lb />
o his mother's two <lb />
miles from town. <lb />
sou returned home their vis- <lb />
it to Greene county. <lb />
Mr. W, Q. who was <lb />
visiting his brother here <lb />
to Friday <lb />
Hats add Furnishings. <lb />
My Spring and Summer<lb />
Just received and open for in- <lb />
Come an them <lb />
IT W IS <lb />
Come and see <lb />
save you money <lb />
me and I will <lb />
H. C. Hooker, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Car ad <lb />
D. <lb />
W. <lb />
Cash<lb />
Cotton Seed wanted for <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Handsome and cheap Oak Sets, <lb />
up stair-. Old Brick Store- <lb />
M. Ferry Garden Seed <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
New Millinery -rood, received <lb />
this week at Mrs. L <lb />
Remember T can take your <lb />
measure nave you a suit of <lb />
clothes made to order. Fit <lb />
Frank <lb />
has <lb />
W. <lb />
Mis. Georgia has gone <lb />
to Baltimore to <lb />
ea of spring millinery. <lb />
Mr. W. T Crawford, Clerk of <lb />
the Superior Court of Martin <lb />
I county was here Friday. <lb />
Messrs. D. W. Harden, D. <lb />
Smith and S- left Tues <lb />
morning for Norfolk. <lb />
Mrs. W. B. Brown and <lb />
hive returned from a visit <lb />
to her parents in Virginia. <lb />
Mr. W. Brown has <lb />
from the north where he went to <lb />
purchase goods for Brown <lb />
; Hooker. <lb />
Mr J- C has <lb />
family back to Greenville from <lb />
will again make his <lb />
home here- <lb />
Rosa Holly Hill, <lb />
county, is visiting her bis <lb />
Mis. W. B- Burgess, in <lb />
Mr. M. R- Lang Fri- <lb />
T H E R t F L TO H night from his northern <lb />
j chasing tour his new goods <lb />
r are arriving. <lb />
Miss Jennie who <lb />
I been visiting her Mr <lb />
returned to her home <lb />
Washington Tuesday- <lb />
Mis. W. T- Miss <lb />
Sallie and Master <lb />
Willie have gone to <lb />
to visit relatives- <lb />
Conductor had charge <lb />
of passenger <lb />
evening in place of Capt Hawks <lb />
who is for a brief spell. <lb />
has been spending a few days <lb />
with his daughter Mrs B- F. <lb />
and returned home Tues- <lb />
day. <lb />
Miss Harris has gone to <lb />
Baltimore to take special course <lb />
of instruction in hat trimming <lb />
one of the large millinery <lb />
of that city- <lb />
We regret to learn that Mr. <lb />
B. F. Sugg, who has been off <lb />
a business tour, is quite sick at <lb />
Mt Olive. Mrs. Sugg left Tues- <lb />
day morning to attend him. <lb />
Mr. J- W. Higgs returned Sat- <lb />
night from his northern <lb />
purchasing tour- He says he <lb />
selected a beautiful line of goods <lb />
both for the Higgs Bros- <lb />
Ricks Taft ft Co. stores. <lb />
Mr. P. G. Howe, representing <lb />
the Howe Engine Pump Co., <lb />
is here trying to sell a engine <lb />
to the Town Council for protection <lb />
against tire. We hope I he city <lb />
fathers will a trade with <lb />
him. <lb />
OTHER LOCALS. <lb />
Last week of March. <lb />
The fruit trees have commenced <lb />
blooming. <lb />
The churches were well attend- <lb />
ed <lb />
A was killed in Lang's <lb />
store last week- <lb />
The days and nights are now <lb />
very near of equal length- <lb />
Mr. H- W- Whedbee has been <lb />
appointed a notary public. <lb />
Get your spring ads ready. <lb />
Good weather will soon be here- <lb />
Mr. Godwin is enlarging <lb />
his workshop Dickerson ave- <lb />
A large sign has been painted <lb />
across the front of the King <lb />
House. <lb />
A bed of beautiful crocuses are <lb />
in bloom in Mrs. Alfred <lb />
flower yard- <lb />
Mr W. L. F- Cory is making <lb />
improvements to bib buildings on <lb />
The prospector casts his eye <lb />
the right when he puts <lb />
it on Greenville. <lb />
Rifles had a very good <lb />
drill Friday afternoon. Twenty- <lb />
men were out <lb />
Smith's string band went to <lb />
Grifton Friday night to furnish <lb />
music for a <lb />
Martins have put in their <lb />
are good <lb />
indication of spring- <lb />
Mr. Charles fell the <lb />
river while was lid <lb />
up with a Cold <lb />
from tin; <lb />
the school children the <lb />
Reflector Book Store now has a <lb />
supply of large penny t <lb />
are beauties, too. <lb />
Last week's weather and <lb />
. doubtless give prophet <lb />
Hicks more over the <lb />
correctness of his predictions. <lb />
Mr. O L. Joyner found a herd <lb />
of hogs in his newly <lb />
patch Tuesday. Ho says <lb />
that patch of potatoes is all up- <lb />
Mr Allen Warren he feel <lb />
safe saying that the cold <lb />
weather of the hut few days did <lb />
not damage the prospects at <lb />
all. <lb />
A few nights ago some one <lb />
went in the of <lb />
E B. Higgs, i mile from town. <lb />
and stole about pounds of <lb />
meat- <lb />
A tire company was organized <lb />
in Kinston Friday night That <lb />
has purchased a Bra <lb />
which will arrive in a <lb />
few days. <lb />
One consolation to be derived <lb />
from this backward spring is <lb />
good prospect of an abundant <lb />
fruit crop. <lb />
rec <lb />
and <lb />
Iron Drive <lb />
f-et Galvanized <lb />
U. D. Haskett- <lb />
new <lb />
best <lb />
Just <lb />
Pump- <lb />
pipe- <lb />
Seed Meal <lb />
Bliss Triumph Potatoes at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
I par you each for Chicken <lb />
Produce at the Old <lb />
Stare. <lb />
Spring Hats in all the <lb />
shapes at Mrs L. <lb />
received car load of <lb />
Flour, lowest s. <lb />
D- <lb />
your cotton seed to <lb />
Henry Sheppard, and buy your <lb />
Meal Hulls- Car load of each <lb />
just arrived tor sale cheap. <lb />
A large of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick S ore. <lb />
Tobacco and <lb />
Instruction for patting and <lb />
prices furnished application to <lb />
The Hymen Hardware <lb />
Co., Tar N. C <lb />
First, of the season New <lb />
Spring Oats, Cheap at the <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
are the best in <lb />
the for cents. <lb />
J. L- Stark v. Co. <lb />
Laces, Ribbons, Baby Caps, all <lb />
BOW and cheaper then ever at <lb />
Mrs L <lb />
arrived at <lb />
Washington. See and get <lb />
prices. Forbes. <lb />
Wait for Mrs. M D. new <lb />
goods now being selected if you <lb />
want the very latest and prettiest <lb />
styles in millinery. <lb />
Mrs. M. D. Higgs is in <lb />
more for ten days selecting <lb />
spring millinery. Do not make <lb />
your purchases until you see her <lb />
stock. <lb />
The coming season the ladies <lb />
will find at my store the best <lb />
stock of millinery and fancy <lb />
goods ever offered here. <lb />
Mrs. M. D Higgs. <lb />
Work has commenced again on <lb />
the store building near the Plant- <lb />
Warehouse and it will soon <lb />
be completed. <lb />
Oh, shirt-waist silks at <lb />
Lang's. <lb />
Tobacco rowers Attention. <lb />
W have just received a large <lb />
of tobacco flue iron of <lb />
good quality and clean. Parties <lb />
who have ordered flues from us <lb />
get them now at any time <lb />
S. E. Pender Co. <lb />
Mr. B. D. Evans received a <lb />
postal card informing him of the <lb />
death of a brother, Mr. Evan <lb />
Evans, which occurred at Brook- <lb />
N. Y-, on the Hie <lb />
brother was in his 78th year. <lb />
whisper to Li dies <lb />
Go to see the beautiful silk and <lb />
wool and other novelties <lb />
in dress goods at Lang's. <lb />
Rocky Mount, N. C- <lb />
Mr. F. S. Royster. <lb />
hundred lbs. of to- <lb />
raised by Orinoco Guano <lb />
brought me net. lbs. <lb />
at per lbs- lbs. at <lb />
per lbs. Truly, <lb />
W. F. <lb />
Notice. We have <lb />
our machinery are expecting <lb />
several car loads of first class flue <lb />
iron in a few days. We are <lb />
pared to make any and all kinds <lb />
of flues and will guarantee first <lb />
class at reasonable prices. <lb />
Yours very truly, <lb />
O- L- <lb />
Oscar <lb />
The demand for tobacco cloth <lb />
has been so heavy this <lb />
that, dealers had to bustle to got <lb />
enough to till orders. <lb />
Some fears are expressed <lb />
planters Unit the <lb />
wet weather caused seed <lb />
to rot in the ground. <lb />
from the country say <lb />
they never saw tin- roads in <lb />
worse condition. Hauling over <lb />
them is almost an impossibility. <lb />
Daughters have r- <lb />
several new members in <lb />
their order the last few days- <lb />
They do a noble work in the <lb />
If men advertised their good <lb />
as extensively a j they ad <lb />
their good deeds there <lb />
would be no stagnation <lb />
Globe- <lb />
Mr- G. R. Moore writing from <lb />
Georgia to renew subscription <lb />
to know it <lb />
is lonely with a Pitt <lb />
without your <lb />
You need not tell him we <lb />
it, but we hoard a lady say <lb />
that if had fifty men <lb />
as as Joyner <lb />
you would soon a city <lb />
Nursery is now the <lb />
most popular place around town, <lb />
people going there to look <lb />
at the beautiful flowers. It is a <lb />
treat to go through the green <lb />
house. <lb />
The Reflector Book Store <lb />
just received a largo lot of tine <lb />
papers, tablets, <lb />
ledgers, memorandums, time <lb />
books, cards, etc. Come <lb />
see them. <lb />
All finding a blue cross mark <lb />
their paper are notified that <lb />
i heir subscription has expired, <lb />
and everyone is invited to renew. <lb />
You ought to keep the <lb />
family. <lb />
The A. N. C R. R offers to <lb />
give per cent, on the freight on <lb />
ll building material, shipped <lb />
from any points on its line, to re- <lb />
place any of the burned buildings <lb />
tn Kinston. <lb />
Like the coming of a ray of <lb />
sunshine is the announcement <lb />
to-day of the rival of new goods <lb />
at Higgs Bros. They have a <lb />
beautiful line and say they will <lb />
be sold cheaper even. <lb />
A representative of the Re- <lb />
has been to Prof. Ed- <lb />
studio to examine his <lb />
wax figures which he will exhibit <lb />
here next week they show <lb />
wonderful workmanship. The <lb />
figures look as natural as life, <lb />
and his exhibition will be exceed- <lb />
interesting. <lb />
Harried. <lb />
At the residence of the bride's <lb />
father, W. H- Oakley, <lb />
on March 20th. by <lb />
Rev. R. W. Hines. Mr. J. E. <lb />
Miss Mattie L <lb />
both of Oakley. <lb />
I oases to Lumbermen. <lb />
The water the river has <lb />
caused several rafts of logs to <lb />
break loose their moorings <lb />
and come down the stream. Sat- <lb />
night a largo raft lodged <lb />
against the county and <lb />
had to be cut away Sunday to <lb />
prevent damage to the bridge. <lb />
Greene Is Coming, <lb />
We heard a Greene county <lb />
farmer Friday that his county <lb />
was to give Pitt a close <lb />
race in tobacco culture this year- <lb />
The farmers over there are <lb />
extensive preparation for <lb />
planting the weed. We will drop <lb />
the hint to them now, that if they <lb />
want the best prices for their <lb />
crop when cured Greenville is the <lb />
market should Bell on. <lb />
More cf Tb <lb />
Few if any people <lb />
expected <lb />
everything white wow when <lb />
they got up next morning. But <lb />
that was just the condition of <lb />
things. From the quantity en <lb />
roofs of houses at least an inch in <lb />
depth fell. Houses, fences and <lb />
for the <lb />
snow to to make every <lb />
beautiful. <lb />
Three of a Kind. <lb />
An exchange speaks of three <lb />
of the most stingy men <lb />
The first will not drink as much <lb />
water as he wants unless it comes <lb />
from neighbor's well. The <lb />
second forbids his family to write <lb />
anything but hand as it <lb />
j is a waste of ink to make large <lb />
letters. The third slop.- tin, clock <lb />
save the and tear of ma <lb />
all to take <lb />
a newspaper the ground <lb />
it is a strain on their <lb />
spectacles to read- <lb />
Marriage <lb />
The lent two weeks Register i <lb />
Deeds King issued licenses to <lb />
eleven seven white <lb />
four colored. <lb />
WhiteR L- Brown and Mag <lb />
Daniel, J. E. Mat- <lb />
tie L. Williams. Jesse <lb />
Lilla Murphy, William Morgan <lb />
and Dora Jacob Barrow <lb />
and Isabella Stokes, J. J. <lb />
and Annie Bland <lb />
and Lucy Knox- <lb />
Hardy and Annie <lb />
Fleming, Daniel and <lb />
Delia Stephen Dixon and <lb />
Martha Johnson. <lb />
An Immense Case <lb />
The bond case of <lb />
against the Commission- <lb />
is now in its fourth week of <lb />
trial. The recent law passed <lb />
by the Legislature gave this case <lb />
precedence over all others and <lb />
made it necessary to go into it <lb />
any other business could <lb />
be disposed of. There are about <lb />
a hundred witnesses on each side <lb />
and as much time will probably <lb />
be in the examinations <lb />
for the as has already <lb />
been taken by the plaintiff. The <lb />
mass of testimony is <lb />
Judge has shown impartial- <lb />
his ruling and has dis- <lb />
played much the <lb />
bench during the and mo- <lb />
proceedings. We be <lb />
everybody would be glad to <lb />
see the case reach its termination- <lb />
The <lb />
It looks -bk h small <lb />
army to see the hands after work <lb />
hours these coining <lb />
from the direction of the ware- <lb />
houses, the and the mill. <lb />
These give just a small forecast <lb />
of how things would be if Green <lb />
ville had a few factories. <lb />
New Building and <lb />
Greenville continues to gain <lb />
new buildings. Mr. G- E- Harris <lb />
is preparing to erect a residence <lb />
on lot on h street, and <lb />
Mr. C T. has just con <lb />
new dwellings on <lb />
his property. The <lb />
building record for this year bids <lb />
fair to be as good as last year. <lb />
Try <lb />
Buying goods is one thing, <lb />
selling them is another. Simply <lb />
because a man lays in a stock of <lb />
goods is no reason that he is go- <lb />
to sell them unless he lets <lb />
purchasers know something about <lb />
what he has Tell them through <lb />
the Reflector and it will help <lb />
you make sales. <lb />
Building a Race Track. <lb />
A club has been organized here <lb />
to build a face track and the <lb />
work of laying it off com- <lb />
The track will be a half <lb />
mile circle is located on the <lb />
land of Mr. J. L Moore on the <lb />
road, nearly one and a <lb />
half from <lb />
Meters. N. EL Henry <lb />
Edwards and R. L. Smith are <lb />
directing the construct ion of the I <lb />
track. <lb />
A New Paltry Cook Book. <lb />
Miss L. A- Willis, Principal <lb />
Baltimore Cooking School, ha <lb />
com oiled a now Cook <lb />
Boob, which i being distributed <lb />
to the patrons of the well know <lb />
Bread <lb />
of the author <lb />
the took of value <lb />
Mail one wrapper fr m a <lb />
MUSICAL AT THE SEMINARY. <lb />
An Appreciative Audience Wit- <lb />
a Delightful Enter- <lb />
Another of those delightful en <lb />
for which Pitt Fe- <lb />
male Seminary has become so <lb />
well noted and popular given <lb />
in the hall of the build- <lb />
Friday evening, and this <lb />
one even all former <lb />
forts in that direction. The <lb />
was slow in <lb />
the real merit of the enter- <lb />
and expressing <lb />
a. the exorcises. The en- <lb />
tire was rendered <lb />
without the interruption <lb />
in perfect order. It is a real <lb />
pleasure to notice how <lb />
everything the <lb />
moves, and these occasional <lb />
attest fully the <lb />
of manage <lb />
and the excellent <lb />
of his assistants- The pro- <lb />
gramme is given in full below <lb />
without comment on the <lb />
performers, as every selection <lb />
was given without the least <lb />
I. <lb />
Class. <lb />
Piano <lb />
Misses N. James E Proctor. <lb />
Motion Class- <lb />
Piano Valley <lb />
Miss Sheppard. <lb />
-Miss Bruce Forbes. <lb />
Piano Donna <lb />
Misses B. Patrick, D <lb />
Tucker and M- Tucker <lb />
Broom <lb />
Class. <lb />
Duet Hoop <lb />
Forbes. <lb />
V- Rawls G. <lb />
It- <lb />
Blow <lb />
age of is Bread <lb />
to the <lb />
Works, Providence, R. I- A copy <lb />
will be free- <lb />
That Bed Tax. <lb />
Referring to the fact that the <lb />
De Gurley made Senator <lb />
Fowler pay extra bed tax, the <lb />
I Sampson Democrat <lb />
a matter of justice to Mr. <lb />
i Fowler Democrat <lb />
will say that he opposed tho bed <lb />
i tax the Senate But his patty <lb />
favored it and levied it. Mr. <lb />
Fowler ha i been accustomed to <lb />
pay a day at this hotel, and <lb />
not undo the sudden <lb />
rise in rates to <lb />
Brothers <lb />
lass <lb />
Some <lb />
Elocution Class. <lb />
Piano Duet. <lb />
Misses Patrick- <lb />
Spelling <lb />
of <lb />
Miss Sheppard. <lb />
Dumb Bell <lb />
Culture Class <lb />
Piano i <lb />
Misses Sheppard <lb />
in the <lb />
Class <lb />
OUR IMMENSE STOCK OF <lb />
SPRING GOODS <lb />
arriving by <lb />
every boat and <lb />
this <lb />
train. Received <lb />
lot Suiting, suitable for early spring <lb />
wear. lot All-Wool Serges, per cent, less <lb />
than last season. lot Silk and Wool <lb />
cents. lot Hamburgs, Insertions, <lb />
lot Serpentine Crepes, all shades. <lb />
Our Spring line of <lb />
Fine Shoes are <lb />
the prettiest ever shown. <lb />
All size, width and toes <lb />
known shown to the trade. <lb />
F. Shoes <lb />
for Men. Every pair is. <lb />
warranted. <lb />
ii <lb />
THE CLOTHIER. <lb />
Next to Tyson Bankers. <lb />
Mrs <lb />
Offer the best selected line of <lb />
Odd Fellows Visit <lb />
The S. T. Hooker degree team <lb />
of Covenant O- O F- <lb />
report a trip to Kinston <lb />
Monday Tho Odd <lb />
lows who wont down were <lb />
S. T. Booker, w- II. D- <lb />
L White, . J. <lb />
E. A , C. D. R. <lb />
L. Bomber. T R. Moore, F. M- <lb />
Hodges, . Frank <lb />
son, D- W. S B- j <lb />
J. V- Morris Meyer, W. <lb />
L- Brown, Zeno Brown and W. <lb />
H. Bagwell. conferring <lb />
degrees, which occupied until <lb />
o'clock, the Kinston sir <lb />
red a turkey <lb />
The selections by wore <lb />
especially to the <lb />
the most <lb />
thorough discipline. The patrons <lb />
of the who <lb />
could not help feeling a just pride . b in Greenville. Comprising <lb />
j goods at reasonable prices. <lb />
The will Notions. Shoes, Hats and Caps, <lb />
that it the people of th j <lb />
community who do Furnishing Goods, Crockery, <lb />
the Seminary are making <lb />
full <lb />
are miking <lb />
in depriving their Implements. A <lb />
Molasses, Meat, <lb />
Mr.-1 <lb />
i i i i ; . ; i v . i i . ; t , . <lb />
iris of the splendid advantages <lb />
tins school offers. Groceries, <lb />
bad a better institution a specialty. The largest and most com- <lb />
the girls need just of <lb />
as ca,. i. Hero i he Semi r in county. Ladies, men, children, <lb />
be the pride of the o , i j <lb />
co annuity, it is farmers, mechanics and laboring <lb />
the duty of one to give it I <lb />
the support it merits. <lb />
While family of Mr. <lb />
Matthews were at church Sunday <lb />
night some one into his <lb />
house Washington street. The <lb />
thief broke a slat tho blind <lb />
front window, unlocked the <lb />
blind, raised tho sash and went in. <lb />
the window after <lb />
The was after money only <lb />
and seemed to know where it was <lb />
kept the house, as nothing but <lb />
the trunk in which Mr. Matthews <lb />
kept his purse was disturbed and <lb />
only the money was taken out the. <lb />
empty purse being left in the <lb />
tray of the trunk and the trunk <lb />
left open. The robber went out <lb />
at one of the rear Mr. <lb />
Matthews says be does not know <lb />
the exact of money that <lb />
was in the purse, but it did <lb />
exceed <lb />
goods <lb />
mg <lb />
Second <lb />
MUSES DE ART. <lb />
Ayden Items. <lb />
Ayden, N. <lb />
house of Mrs- Rawls is rapidly <lb />
going up- <lb />
The business managers of Car- <lb />
Christian were in <lb />
session here <lb />
Mr. J. C- Cox, of Winterville, <lb />
was on our streets yesterday- <lb />
Mr. Mrs. Wm. Coward, of, <lb />
Greene are their <lb />
daughter, Mrs. Tr. Dixon. <lb />
A petition with signatures- <lb />
Si of the in town and <lb />
people of the com- <lb />
was sent this to <lb />
the Postmaster General request- <lb />
the department not to change <lb />
the name of Ayden office. Four- <lb />
fifths of the white patrons of the <lb />
office signed the petition. How <lb />
is this for sentiment <lb />
Ayden N. C 21st, <lb />
Mr. Richard Anderson's wife is <lb />
very sick. <lb />
Mr. Geo Parker is moving his <lb />
family to Winterville to-day. <lb />
Messrs. J. W. and W. B- <lb />
of yesterday <lb />
Mr. Swindell, of Las rent <lb />
ed Bros, mill and is <lb />
it- <lb />
Mr. James Campbell is very <lb />
sick with yellow chill. Our ex-el <lb />
lent Dr Dixon has of the <lb />
ease he is likely to got well- <lb />
N C, Mar. 23rd, <lb />
The Carolina Christian <lb />
give an entertainment last night <lb />
and is reported as being a very <lb />
enjoyable occasion. eat many <lb />
in <lb />
The has been full of cot- <lb />
ton buyers this week., the <lb />
stuff has been rolling to. <lb />
Misses Annie <lb />
The stores present a <lb />
scene now, so many now <lb />
are opened. <lb />
Mrs Bettie Taft is <lb />
residence on corner of <lb />
street painted <lb />
Try one of splendid Par <lb />
fountain pens at Reflector <lb />
Book Store and yon will be <lb />
pleased With purchase. <lb />
The y Ming ladies of the <lb />
eh ii re i will have a <lb />
Friday evening and <lb />
from what they tell us it will be <lb />
very interesting- <lb />
Eggs took a fall Monday after- <lb />
noon -in the vicinity where the i <lb />
colored were <lb />
The audience scattered <lb />
under the shower. Throwing <lb />
eggs was not tho step to <lb />
take to express disapproval of the <lb />
of such a crew. <lb />
We frequently meet up with a <lb />
queer combination of names in <lb />
our exchanges. It is now stated <lb />
that a man Spunk Iris mar- <lb />
a western girl named <lb />
By this union we have tho past <lb />
tense, ; present tense, <lb />
spunk; future tense, <lb />
ham Sun. <lb />
will snow AT <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
and every profession come to see us and get <lb />
prices fixed in your minds before you <lb />
try to buy elsewhere. Black and Spring Oats <lb />
and Seed Potatoes on hand and to arrive. <lb />
Yours for lair dealings, good quality and low <lb />
prices, J- B. CHERRY CO. <lb />
Office at Warehouse, <lb />
HIGH GRADE FERTILIZERS. <lb />
buying and get oar prices. for sh or Mine, will <lb />
ell the following n <lb />
Capitol Tobacco Beef, Blood Bone, <lb />
-----1 . Durham Bull. <lb />
Monday, Wednesday, <lb />
1st, 2nd, 3rd, <lb />
National <lb />
Peruvian Mixture, <lb />
Alliance Official, <lb />
Very Truly, <lb />
I Acid Phosphate, <lb />
FORBES <lb />
of <lb />
General Ac cents. <lb />
The collection of Wax <lb />
Figures ever shown under a tent. <lb />
Gentle spring conies with all sweet songs of <lb />
the birds and lovely and so <lb />
does our our pretty <lb />
WALL PAPER. <lb />
If you wish, to beautify your <lb />
at samples, they can. be seen, <lb />
at the store of S. E. Co., or <lb />
will to your home if you <lb />
will y am. for one of <lb />
the largest Healers in. the <lb />
States can. give you low prices. <lb />
A. B. ELLINGTON. <lb />
Salesmen Wanted <lb />
to crown <lb />
Stock which is the Best In the World. <lb />
All new tin well tan- <lb />
I of <lb />
nil traveling expenses paid, <lb />
for terms, age. <lb />
A THOMAS. <lb />
Maple <lb />
, Cheater , a- <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The having I be- <lb />
the Superior Clerk of rut <lb />
M lo the i slate of <lb />
w. Is <lb />
hereby given to to <lb />
i of to make <lb />
payment lo the <lb />
. mill all pi r-mi having <lb />
Mild i -lute present the <lb />
WISH TO NOTIFY 1808, or thin <lb />
notice in bar of recovery. <lb />
This of Mar. <lb />
their friends of d. w. <lb />
trade that they have <lb />
bought out the <lb />
Racket Store and <lb />
will engage in the gen- <lb />
-and fine line of- <lb />
Ia Frank now <lb />
to day you hear the <lb />
good news about clothing. He <lb />
has suits to fit everybody at <lb />
most any price. And bis furnish- <lb />
mg goods, dry and notions ,. <lb />
all right both quality and Harvey Mrs. ,<lb />
Our goods are prettier and cheaper than ever <lb />
and they going fast. Come quids. <lb />
HIGGS BROS., <lb />
Leaders of Low Prices,<lb />
and Clothing business. <lb />
We are receiving <lb />
Everybody invited to <lb />
all and see us. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
RICKS. TAFT CO., <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
BUILD UP HOME <lb />
By <lb />
M Co., <lb />
of DURHAM, N. <lb />
Ate line Che- <lb />
roots and n can lie found on <lb />
the market. Their brand are <lb />
OF <lb />
a cigar for a Nickel, <lb />
filled. <lb />
a very flue Sumatra <lb />
Havana tilled, <lb />
Named in honor of Col. <lb />
well. <lb />
S Cigar, Sumatra Wrapper <lb />
made, a win- <lb />
Named in honor of J, <lb />
of Tr <lb />
o, <lb />
Ten<lb />
Five for in The t for <lb />
the money. <lb />
NORTH STATE <lb />
Three for S cents, a that <lb />
Stick to home and mt your or- <lb />
Insets put up when de- <lb />
Ired. Address <lb />
n. a.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017738_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
flit You <lb />
The management of the <lb />
Equitable Life Assurance <lb />
; Society in the Department of <lb />
Carolinas, wishes to <lb />
cure few Special Resident <lb />
Agents. Those who are fitted <lb />
; for this work will find this <lb />
; A Rare Opportunity <lb />
; It however, and those <lb />
who succeed best in it possess j <lb />
; character, nature judgment, <lb />
j tact, perseverance, and the <lb />
respect of their community. <lb />
I Think this matter over care- <lb />
fully. There's an unusual <lb />
opening fir somebody. If it <lb />
fits you, it will pay you. Fur- J <lb />
information on request, j <lb />
W. J. Manager, I <lb />
Rock C <lb />
The Charlotte <lb />
OBSERVE <lb />
Carolina's <lb />
FOREMOST ER <lb />
DAILY <lb />
WEEKLY. <lb />
Independent fearless ; bigger <lb />
more attractive than ever, it will be a- <lb />
invaluable visitor to home, the <lb />
the club or the work room. <lb />
THE DAILY OBSERVER. <lb />
All of the news of world. Com- <lb />
Daily reports the <lb />
Capitols. i'S a year <lb />
THE WEEKLY OBSERVER. <lb />
A perfect family journal. All the <lb />
news of the week. The reports <lb />
from tile Legislature a special. <lb />
flu Weekly b- <lb />
server. <lb />
ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. <lb />
Send for -s. Address <lb />
THE OBSERVES. <lb />
Charlotte, N. C <lb />
WILMINGTON A B. B <lb />
AND BRANCHES. <lb />
RAIL <lb />
Condensed Schedule. <lb />
booth. <lb />
Hated <lb />
Mar. <lb />
A. If. <lb />
Leave <lb />
Ar. Mt <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
Rocky Mt <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Selma <lb />
Ar. Florence <lb />
SOU <lb />
r- I <lb />
A. <lb />
Oil <lb />
Wilson <lb />
I t <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilmington <lb />
P. II. <lb />
OS<lb />
M.<lb />
Dated Mar. Florri Selma Ar . i i- n . C A. M S <lb />
Wilmington M M HP M n <lb />
. . <lb />
W Ar Rocky M. M. <lb />
Ar<lb />
Tarboro <lb />
Lr M t <lb />
Ar m <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Brand Road <lb />
leaves 3.40 p. in. 4.00 <lb />
p. m., arrives Neck at p <lb />
0.37 p. ., 7.85 <lb />
n m. Returning, leaves Muslim <lb />
a. m. Greenville 8.22 a. Pi. <lb />
Halifax at ., 11.90 <lb />
daily except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on V Branch leave <lb />
Washington 7.00 m arrive- <lb />
8.40 p. m. Tarboro returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. m. 8.10 <lb />
p. m arrives Washington 7.35 p. m <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leave Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
A Raleigh It. R. daily except S,,,. <lb />
day, at p. in. -100 p. M ; <lb />
arrive Plymouth P. M-, 5.20 p. m <lb />
Returning leaves Ply mouth-lady <lb />
Sunday, 6.30 a. m., Sunday 9.30 a in. <lb />
10.25 a. m. and <lb />
a in. <lb />
on Midland N C Branch leave <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sou lay. a- <lb />
riving a m. K- <lb />
leaves a. <lb />
arrive Goldsboro. <lb />
Trains on Nashville Branch leaves <lb />
Mount at 4.30 p. m., arrive <lb />
p. m. Spring Hope 5.3.1. <lb />
n m Returning leaves Spring Hope <lb />
a. m. Nashville a. re., arrives <lb />
at Rocky Mount in., <lb />
on Latta Branch, Florence B <lb />
R Latta 6.50 p. m., arrive Dun <lb />
bar Returning leave Dun <lb />
bar a. m. arrive Latta 8.00 a. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War. <lb />
for Clinton daily, Sunday <lb />
it a. in. leave Clinton <lb />
Warsaw with <lb />
main line trains. <lb />
Train No. makes close connection <lb />
for ill point, North all <lb />
nil via and daily except <lb />
Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Lu e <lb />
at Rocky Mount with Norfolk <lb />
Norfolk dally and <lb />
appoint North via Norfolk, daily ex <lb />
p. DIVINE, <lb />
General <lb />
J R. KENLY, Manager. <lb />
Mi Mi are. <lb />
In <lb />
Poor <lb />
Health <lb />
means so much more than <lb />
you and <lb />
fatal diseases result from <lb />
trifling ailments neglected. <lb />
Don't play with Nature's <lb />
greatest <lb />
If are <lb />
onto weal <lb />
i general ex- <lb />
have no appetite <lb />
and cant work, <lb />
begin at once <lb />
the moat <lb />
Is <lb />
Brown's Iron Bit- <lb />
A few bot- <lb />
ties cure--benefit <lb />
comes from the <lb />
very first <lb />
your <lb />
and It's <lb />
u to take. <lb />
It Cures <lb />
Dyspepsia. Kidney and Liver <lb />
Neuralgia, Troubles, <lb />
Bad Blood <lb />
Malaria, Nervous ailment <lb />
Women's complaints. <lb />
Get only the has crossed red <lb />
lines the wrapper. All others are sub- <lb />
On receipt of two ac. stamps we <lb />
will send set of Ten Beautiful World's <lb />
Pair Views and <lb />
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MD. <lb />
ESTABLISHED <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD B STORE <lb />
MERCHANTS <lb />
their year's supplies will <lb />
i heir Interest our prices before <lb />
D all branches. <lb />
c. <lb />
at <lb />
A, CIGARS <lb />
rte direct <lb />
buy at one profit. A com <lb />
pl.-i. stock of <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
prices t <lb />
an all <lb />
Bold i therefore, having <lb />
t. ; t a close margin. <lb />
S. M. , <lb />
N. <lb />
This Reminds <lb />
You every <lb />
in the month <lb />
March that if <lb />
you have <lb />
your Printing done <lb />
at the <lb />
REFLECTOR <lb />
JOB OFFICE. <lb />
It will be done right, <lb />
It will be done in style <lb />
and it always suits. <lb />
These points are <lb />
well worth weighing <lb />
in any sort <lb />
of work, but <lb />
ail things in <lb />
Your Job Printing. <lb />
LOCAL NOTES AND TOBACCO <lb />
JOTTING <lb />
L. <lb />
There will be a shortage o <lb />
plants on of <lb />
the extreme cold weather which <lb />
a many <lb />
from sowing plant laud- <lb />
Mr. G. T- in the March <lb />
number of the Southern <lb />
tobacco as first <lb />
introduced here in <lb />
and this now lead.-, in <lb />
wrappers and fancy cutters. <lb />
Wilson and <lb />
each have three tobacco <lb />
warehouses and a sufficient <lb />
f storage other <lb />
lie says further there is more <lb />
hog and i v in the eastern <lb />
section to-day there has been <lb />
much the sixties- <lb />
During the present year we <lb />
propose to make the <lb />
Department one of the most <lb />
features of the already <lb />
popular We have <lb />
just completed an <lb />
by which the will go <lb />
to tho nearly ti <lb />
in North d <lb />
at is <lb />
leaf dealers, it is through <lb />
this medium that we expect to <lb />
the of the <lb />
trade to the superior s <lb />
of tho section in the pro <lb />
of bright yellow tobacco- <lb />
Asa matter of fat try the <lb />
largest <lb />
in America an- represented <lb />
the eastern markets. They <lb />
i not to be, <lb />
as a matter of business the <lb />
dealer could not do <lb />
better to place his business <lb />
card in columns of this paper <lb />
which hails direct from the center <lb />
of this now far famed golden <lb />
belt. <lb />
During the two mouths <lb />
we have had quite a number of <lb />
prominent business men here <lb />
to tell us that they would will- <lb />
build more prize houses for <lb />
the season if they <lb />
could a tenant for at <lb />
least year. <lb />
said he would build half a dozen <lb />
if he could rent them out. <lb />
we need it <lb />
is to say, however, if <lb />
the market as much as it <lb />
did last year there is no <lb />
reason why we should not sell at <lb />
least a third there will be <lb />
a need for at least three more. <lb />
We have doubt but that <lb />
of houses will be built to take <lb />
care of the next crop. The mar- <lb />
is now beyond the doubtful <lb />
line. It is expert <lb />
Those who at first were <lb />
its worst enemies to day are Us <lb />
well wishers, who two <lb />
years ago could not be <lb />
enter the tobacco business <lb />
or to think of prize <lb />
houses are willing to a help- <lb />
do all they can to <lb />
encourage the tobacco market. <lb />
As an evidence of the value of <lb />
a tobacco market to the public <lb />
who are in no way interested <lb />
the tobacco business just <lb />
the value of real estate adjacent <lb />
to the warehouses three years <lb />
ago with what it is now. Four <lb />
years ago this year the first to <lb />
warehouse was built <lb />
Greenville- At that time we know <lb />
of u piece of that was <lb />
bought for twenty seven hundred <lb />
dollars a few days ago a party <lb />
wanted to purchase one-tenth of <lb />
it and the owner said he would <lb />
take twenty two hundred fifty <lb />
dollars for it, but did not cite to <lb />
sell at that price. Now we don't <lb />
want to say that the increased <lb />
validation of the property is solely <lb />
attributable to the tobacco mar- <lb />
for there are two other en <lb />
prises that have added largely to <lb />
the of the property namely; <lb />
the with the depot near <lb />
this property and Ham <lb />
lumber mill. Aside from <lb />
these what else has added to the <lb />
value of this property That <lb />
nearly all of real estate <lb />
depreciated value no will <lb />
dispute, while this property has <lb />
increased in a most wonderful <lb />
ratio. We another small <lb />
piece of land owned by a man <lb />
who three years ago did more to <lb />
discourage the support of <lb />
market than other that <lb />
we know even urged his <lb />
friends to ship their tobacco to <lb />
some other At that time <lb />
his laud valued by himself <lb />
at three dollars and <lb />
have been bought for less <lb />
money. A few days ago he was <lb />
asked what he would take for <lb />
and he said four and <lb />
fifty live dollars, an of <lb />
over per cent. These are two <lb />
instances where the tobacco <lb />
has helped others besides <lb />
those directly connected with it. <lb />
Besides there are numerous <lb />
cases and ail real estate <lb />
Greenville has advanced won <lb />
in price- There is a <lb />
piece of laud just front of the <lb />
warehouses owned by J. J. <lb />
J. R- Cory. If the public <lb />
believe that the tobacco <lb />
has added materially to their <lb />
property just ask these young <lb />
men what their land was worth <lb />
in 1890, and what it is worth <lb />
day, or what they can sell it <lb />
to-day. <lb />
TEN CENTS A MINUTE. <lb />
Men Command a <lb />
Salary of a Tear. <lb />
A Eleven <lb />
Don't pound or beat me- <lb />
Cover me when I am too <lb />
warm or cold. <lb />
Don't stand me in a draft. <lb />
4- Don't overload me. <lb />
Don't compel me to work <lb />
when I'm sick- <lb />
Don't cut my feet too much <lb />
when I'm shod. <lb />
7- Don't over drive and under- <lb />
feed me. <lb />
Remember that I have feel- <lb />
Don't water me. when I <lb />
have been a long distance, <lb />
until I have am cool- <lb />
Talk to me kindly. <lb />
Treat me as yo <lb />
like to be treated if yon were a <lb />
I Dumb Animals. <lb />
That la About for <lb />
Any Individual's Work la This <lb />
tor the <lb />
and Hoar. <lb />
Fifty thousand dollars a <lb />
Think of <lb />
Four thousand one hundred and <lb />
sixty dollars and sixty-seven a <lb />
month, a week, a <lb />
day, an hour, and a little more <lb />
than ten cents a minute. <lb />
That is the salary received by each <lb />
of a number of well-known men <lb />
this country. <lb />
A recent dispatch from Raleigh, <lb />
N. C, is to the effect Will W. <lb />
Fuller, of Durham, N. C, who <lb />
ready has tho largest income re- <lb />
by lawyer in the state, <lb />
has been engaged as counsel by the <lb />
I tobacco trust at a salary <lb />
per annum <lb />
That amounts to more than the av- <lb />
man earns in a lifetime, it <lb />
would be a fortune to many. <lb />
The president of the United States, <lb />
j the chief magistrate of the nation, <lb />
does not greater <lb />
for his services, with all the re- <lb />
which that implies. <lb />
In fact per annum is <lb />
; as the high-water mark at <lb />
; which man's service can be valued <lb />
individually in this country. <lb />
I And yet it is surprising to note <lb />
the number of officials in <lb />
this city alone who draw this amount <lb />
annually, over above their in- <lb />
comes resultant from other <lb />
transactions. Very truly it is <lb />
him that hath shall be<lb />
Almost without exception the re- <lb />
of enormous salaries are <lb />
men already wealthy, or at least, en- <lb />
independent in their <lb />
stances. <lb />
The services of Chauncey <lb />
as railroad president, are valued at <lb />
a year. Rather than risk <lb />
losing this snug annual income Mr. <lb />
politely declined an <lb />
to become a member of <lb />
dent Harrison's cabinet. <lb />
Henry B. Hyde, president of a <lb />
life insurance company, receives a <lb />
like amount. <lb />
President John A. and <lb />
Richard A. both life in- <lb />
presidents, draw a <lb />
year between them in salaries <lb />
from their respective corporations. <lb />
Among those whose time is worth <lb />
an hour yearly, are President <lb />
Thomas T. of tho Western <lb />
Union, Henry O. <lb />
dent of the sugar trust, and rail- <lb />
road President Roberts. <lb />
Among the ministers of the gospel <lb />
Rev. John Hall, of the Fifth Avenue <lb />
Presbyterian church, commands the <lb />
highest salary. He gets a <lb />
year, all of which is devoted to <lb />
charity. <lb />
Rev. William S. comes <lb />
next, with a salary of His <lb />
time and money are equally <lb />
among his parishioners, with <lb />
the exception of an occasional in- <lb />
In his proclivities as a <lb />
huntsman. <lb />
The presidents of several of the <lb />
big trust companies receive <lb />
a year each, and J. Edward Sim- <lb />
mons, president of the Fourth <lb />
bank, who is a conspicuous <lb />
figure in the financial world as the <lb />
leader among the new school of <lb />
bankers, receives the same amount. <lb />
Jay Gould's physician, Dr. Munn, <lb />
has been for several years in receipt <lb />
of an annual salary of from <lb />
the Gould family. <lb />
On the turf, where money isn't <lb />
money until the day is over, <lb />
sums are paid the leading <lb />
jockeys. Fred for instance, <lb />
receives a retainer of from <lb />
the for one year's services. <lb />
This amount is probably doubled by <lb />
the emoluments and perquisites <lb />
which accompany his position. <lb />
Jockey Harry Griffin, who is but <lb />
years old, gets, as a retaining fee, <lb />
for each year he has lived <lb />
from Gideon Daly, besides fees <lb />
paid him by others for the privilege <lb />
of having second or third call upon <lb />
his Y. Morning <lb />
Extraordinary Smuggling. <lb />
The genius of the smuggler is a <lb />
very remarkable thing. <lb />
One of the most amusing stories <lb />
of smugglers is that told by an Eng- <lb />
who imported into his own <lb />
country a of fine fat geese <lb />
at the Christmas season, many <lb />
years ago. One of them <lb />
excited the suspicions of the In- <lb />
by its wonderful weight <lb />
was killed and opened, upon which <lb />
it was discovered, says the <lb />
that there was concealed within <lb />
it a number of small dutiable <lb />
The rest of the flock having <lb />
been similarly inspected, it was <lb />
found that their owner had com- <lb />
the unhappy birds to swallow <lb />
a large quantity of stuff upon which <lb />
there was a heavy duty, and which <lb />
would have all come in free had not <lb />
the first goose excited the suspicion <lb />
of those in Young <lb />
People. <lb />
Where the S -i Gains a Day. <lb />
Chatham island, lying off the <lb />
coast of New Zealand, in the South <lb />
Pacific ocean, is one of the few <lb />
points of the globe where the <lb />
day changes, it being situated ex- <lb />
on the line of demarcation, be- <lb />
tween dates. At that place <lb />
Sunday, or Sunday noon, ceases <lb />
at the striking of the clock, and in- <lb />
thereafter it is Monday <lb />
noon, or, more exactly, a few sec- <lb />
after noon. On that peculiar- <lb />
situated island it is possible for a <lb />
person to begin his midday meal at <lb />
a. m. Sunday, and eat <lb />
until Monday without <lb />
consuming more than a half hour's <lb />
time or making a glutton of himself. <lb />
Japanese Soldier Gymnasts. <lb />
Every Japanese barrack has a <lb />
gymnasium, and the Japanese sol- <lb />
rank among the best gymnasts <lb />
in world. In half a minute they <lb />
can scale a fourteen-foot wall by <lb />
simply bounding on each other's <lb />
shoulders, one man supporting two <lb />
or three others. <lb />
A WORLD OF WORDS. <lb />
The English o Contains <lb />
Over of Them. <lb />
ad Vet the Most <lb />
Have a of <lb />
Than Wonderful <lb />
Fig-area on the Subject. <lb />
The philologist, an American, <lb />
admit that you speak English <lb />
well, with a slightly accent, <lb />
of course, though years in this <lb />
country; but your entire vocabulary <lb />
is less than words. And do you <lb />
know how many words there are in <lb />
the English <lb />
so many as in Italian, am <lb />
returned the distinguished <lb />
singer, a foreigner. my <lb />
try we have the low Italian and the <lb />
pure Italian, made up of the Latin <lb />
and the Greek, and the <lb />
are thousands of them. Why. it re- <lb />
quires a whole lifetime of earnest, <lb />
hard work to master our language. <lb />
In America you have but English <lb />
words, and there are not many of <lb />
them. think your language vary <lb />
you are not familiar with <lb />
English words, and there are nearly <lb />
times of them. We have <lb />
about words in our <lb />
There is living no <lb />
man who can remember so many its <lb />
words of any language. Can <lb />
you name one who knows so many <lb />
living nor dead. Even <lb />
Shakespeare, the greatest of English <lb />
writers, knew but words. <lb />
Milton struggled along on <lb />
Many other great writers used less <lb />
than Tho average educated <lb />
men of the day, the graduates of <lb />
the great universities, get along <lb />
through life with a vocabulary of <lb />
or words, and use only n <lb />
fourth of them except on state <lb />
Men use more words in <lb />
writing than In speaking. In <lb />
nary conversation few use more than <lb />
or <lb />
have built tho English <lb />
upon a foundation of all the <lb />
tongues of the earth. By and by <lb />
English will be the universal <lb />
In years you will hear <lb />
nothing else spoken. <lb />
being no new lands to set- <lb />
we will no longer require differ- <lb />
tongues. We want to get to- <lb />
once more and speak a com- <lb />
tongue. The English <lb />
race is the strongest on the earth <lb />
to-day, and will eventually rule the <lb />
world. <lb />
the beginning of the present <lb />
century English was spoken by only <lb />
people. It is the language <lb />
to-day of more than per- <lb />
sous. It hi not only rapidly <lb />
the common language of the <lb />
world, but the polite tongue as well. <lb />
traveler finds to-day English <lb />
well spoken in all the capitals of Eu- <lb />
rope, while years ago it was <lb />
possible to get along without a <lb />
knowledge of French. English is be- <lb />
taught in all the great <lb />
ties of the world, modern educators <lb />
conceding it to be the coming <lb />
yet, with per- <lb />
sons speaking it, you use ordinarily <lb />
less than of per cent, of the <lb />
words. what use can the other <lb />
words, so many of them, be Why <lb />
do you continue to increase the <lb />
of words so <lb />
Before the philologist could reply <lb />
a man approached the table and <lb />
bowed to the foreigner, who <lb />
and asked him to <lb />
sit down, after presenting him to <lb />
the philologist. <lb />
he began, <lb />
conversation on the subject of words <lb />
their uses Interested me, and I <lb />
couldn't help coming over to say <lb />
something of a practical nature. <lb />
For seven years I was a <lb />
and reported in that time many <lb />
of the best speakers in this country. <lb />
our system we have <lb />
characters, or signs, which we <lb />
are required to learn by heart and <lb />
remember. Each sign has its par- <lb />
meaning. Words or <lb />
not covered by them we are <lb />
expected to invent ourselves. <lb />
with such a system we are <lb />
enabled to tell accurately the <lb />
of words used by an orator in <lb />
the course of a public speech. Henry <lb />
George uses about words. <lb />
Chauncey uses less, should <lb />
say not more than Mr. Blaine <lb />
was a fluent speaker, always clear <lb />
and to the point, with a vocabulary <lb />
of less than words. <lb />
his great speech before the <lb />
New England society, Henry W. <lb />
Grady used only words. Col. In- <lb />
is one of the purest speakers <lb />
in this country; I do not think ho <lb />
uses more than Y. <lb />
Recorder. <lb />
HE COULD GUIDE THEM. <lb />
A Seven-Year-Old Boy Who Felt a <lb />
Distinct Mission for Leadership. <lb />
There need be no fear as to the <lb />
safety of the republic, the longevity <lb />
of the government at Washington, <lb />
or any of those other similar <lb />
about which eminent states- <lb />
men have from time to time permit- <lb />
themselves to be troubled, so <lb />
long as the country contains young- <lb />
of the sort described by a <lb />
teacher in a West side primary <lb />
grade. <lb />
Along in the afternoon, when the <lb />
children were growing tired of the <lb />
regular routine, and began to be <lb />
restless, the teacher decided to let <lb />
them march around the room awhile. <lb />
She told them all to stand up and <lb />
then asked who would like to lead in <lb />
the march. The children looked at <lb />
each other doubtfully, nobody <lb />
being willing to take such <lb />
a grave responsibility on his small <lb />
shoulders, until finally a sturdy lit- <lb />
chap of seven stepped out and <lb />
remarked confidently, although with <lb />
perfect modesty, as if he had arrived <lb />
at his conclusion after mature con- <lb />
great-grandfather was a sol- <lb />
in the revolution, my grand- <lb />
father fought in the war of 1812, and <lb />
my papa in the rebellion, and I think <lb />
I do <lb />
The teacher thought he could, too, <lb />
and he took his place at the head of <lb />
the greatly to his own <lb />
faction and with the undisguised ad- <lb />
all other J <lb />
STOPS THE POWER. <lb />
Many Reasons for tho <lb />
Shopping of Corn. <lb />
A Way In Which Lives May Bo <lb />
That Hat Few <lb />
Instance In <lb />
New York City.<lb />
A new possibility in the manner <lb />
in which persons may be endangered <lb />
trolley cars was developed in New i <lb />
York, recently, says the New York <lb />
Sun, when a trolley car got half way ; <lb />
across tho tracks of the <lb />
railroad at the Market street <lb />
Crossing and the power suddenly ; <lb />
gave out. An express train was <lb />
approaching and came within thirty <lb />
feet of smashing the car and killing <lb />
anybody who may have been in it. <lb />
An inquiry as to how such a situ- <lb />
could be brought about de- <lb />
the fact that the trolley cars <lb />
are liable to lose their power at any <lb />
instant and from a great number of i <lb />
causes. The most likely cause is <lb />
from the grounding of the current <lb />
caused by a careless <lb />
to get ahead too quickly. <lb />
If a motor happens not to be <lb />
first-class order and it is started too <lb />
quickly a ground connection may be <lb />
established instantly and all the <lb />
that section of the circuit <lb />
goes to that one car. Of course, all <lb />
the other cars on that section lose <lb />
their power are stalled. If one <lb />
car is crossing a railroad track just <lb />
in of an express train there is <lb />
no help for it. This sort of accident <lb />
may happen with experienced motor- <lb />
men who are very careful. Such Is <lb />
the perversity of the trolley car. <lb />
Another possibility is that a <lb />
graph or telephone wire or any <lb />
other kind of wire may swing against ; <lb />
a trolley wire. The instant the ; <lb />
wires strike the electricity runs ; <lb />
away and the power on the section <lb />
is gone. Delay from this cause may J <lb />
be for a second only or it may be for <lb />
a day. It all depends. <lb />
Still another danger is in the key <lb />
or plug jumping from the switch- j <lb />
board in the powerhouse. Plugs <lb />
will jump out, sometimes with <lb />
BOO and sometimes without. One ; <lb />
thing that will make them jump is <lb />
the starting of five or six cars on <lb />
tho same section at the same mo- <lb />
When there is a block on the <lb />
road and five or six cars stand in a <lb />
line with passengers fuming against <lb />
trolley cars in general and the very <lb />
one they are in in particular, of <lb />
course the crew of the car are <lb />
to go ahead at the earliest op- <lb />
Sometimes all tho mo- <lb />
start at the same time, and <lb />
when they do the power leaves them <lb />
altogether. If another car on the <lb />
section happens to be in front of an <lb />
express train there is no help for it. <lb />
Sometimes the belt in the power- <lb />
house that runs the great dynamo <lb />
slips and then tho power is gone. <lb />
These are just a very few of the <lb />
causes that result in tho trolley be- <lb />
coming powerless, and they are <lb />
things that cannot be guarded <lb />
against by any system of signals. <lb />
The Market street crossing of the <lb />
Pennsylvania railroad In Newark is <lb />
the worst crossing that the <lb />
dated Traction company has to deal <lb />
with. To avoid accidents there the <lb />
railroad company has gates, which <lb />
are turned on the approach of <lb />
trains. In addition to this <lb />
every trolley car must stop be- <lb />
fore it reaches the crossing, and the <lb />
conductor must run ahead to the <lb />
center of the crossing and look in <lb />
either direction to make sure that <lb />
no train is in sight. The motorman <lb />
must not start his car until the con- <lb />
signals him to go ahead. All <lb />
these precautions go for naught if <lb />
the power gives out when the trolley <lb />
car is on the crossing. It is <lb />
now that tho possibility of <lb />
accident may be avoided if the <lb />
car stops far enough back from <lb />
the crossing to gather speed, after <lb />
the safety signal is given, sufficient <lb />
to float the car across the tracks. <lb />
A YOUNG WOMAN. <lb />
. i i I <lb />
GRADE <lb />
MADE <lb />
For beauty, strength, lightness, durability and easy <lb />
running; qualities, no other bicycle can equal the Victor. <lb />
Buy a Victor and know you have the best. <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb />
Makers of Victor and Athletic Gratis. <lb />
HEW <lb />
SAN FRANCISCO. <lb />
coast. <lb />
LOS ANGELES. <lb />
Shoes <lb />
W. L. <lb />
Over One wear <lb />
W. L. Douglas and Shoes. <lb />
All oar are <lb />
They value fur money. <lb />
pt and I <lb />
ho prices are stamped on <lb />
From to saved <lb />
A KINS. <lb />
our dealer supply yon<lb />
and <lb />
SO Police Shoes. tales. <lb />
end <lb />
Stats <lb />
If your cannot <lb />
you, write for <lb />
W. L. Douglas, <lb />
R. L. Davis CT <lb />
II. i <lb />
. C <lb />
c. <lb />
Co. N. C. <lb />
i i. <lb />
minis, i . <lb />
COBB BROS CO. <lb />
FACTORS. <lb />
AND- <lb />
Commission Merchants <lb />
STREET NORFOLK, VA <lb />
and Solicited. <lb />
Has <lb />
Anthony Tells How She <lb />
Kept Youth and <lb />
dear Miss Anthony <lb />
replied, when asked the secret of her <lb />
wonderful vitality, attribute the <lb />
secret of my good health to the fact <lb />
that I have never abused it. have <lb />
always made it a rule of my life to <lb />
be regular In my habits. I have a <lb />
time for everything. I live on <lb />
muscle and brain-giving food. I <lb />
have not broken down in my cam- <lb />
life simply because I never <lb />
would indulge in dissipation or late <lb />
suppers after a lecture. I not <lb />
eat a hearty dinner before <lb />
in public; on I eat very <lb />
lightly. After my lecture I do not <lb />
accept invitations to swell suppers. <lb />
I go straight to my rooms, take a <lb />
bath and take a cup of hot milk and <lb />
eat a cracker. I think if I lived <lb />
down in New Orleans I would merely <lb />
eat orange and a cracker before <lb />
retiring after a heavy evening's <lb />
work. <lb />
thing, human nature <lb />
demands a certain amount of sleep. <lb />
Women need at least nine <lb />
sleep out of the twenty-four. If you <lb />
go to bed and wake up in the morn- <lb />
without feeling refreshed then <lb />
tho human machinery is out of gear, <lb />
and the equilibrium must be restored <lb />
or nervous prostration or a general <lb />
breakdown is the result. This is <lb />
inevitable. Nature won't be cheated. <lb />
Women try to do too much. The <lb />
overdrawn drafts on nature must be <lb />
paid. there is tearing down <lb />
there must be at the <lb />
time or the structure falls. <lb />
This of the human wear <lb />
and tear is accomplished by food <lb />
and sufficient amount of rest, <lb />
and sleep. This has been my <lb />
rule of life. Any woman may build <lb />
up a strong, healthy constitution by <lb />
A Household <lb />
D. W. Fuller, of N. Y., <lb />
that he always keeps Dr. K <lb />
New Discovery in the house and his <lb />
has always found the very <lb />
results follow its use that he would <lb />
not be without It, procurable. O. A. <lb />
N. T. <lb />
says that Dr. King's New Discovery is <lb />
the Cough remedy ; <lb />
that he used In his family for <lb />
eight years, and It has never failed to <lb />
Trial that is claimed for it. Why not <lb />
try a remedy so long tried tested. <lb />
trial bottles tree at J. L. <lb />
Drag Store. Regular and 1.00. <lb />
OLD <lb />
-------IS STILL AT FRONT with a ti; I ink<lb />
YEARS has Die that the M the <lb />
Hemp Building Pumps, Panning m. in-, every <lb />
ting necessary for Millers, Mechanics and general nous a- well as <lb />
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Dress Goods I have on hand. Am head <lb />
quarters for heavy Groceries, and lobbing agent for Clark's o. X. T. <lb />
Cotton, and keep and clerk j. <lb />
ES, <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. . <lb />
The next Session School will <lb />
begin on Tuesday the day <lb />
and Continue 4-i weeks. <lb />
MONTH. <lb />
HERBERT <lb />
PARLORS <lb />
Under Opera House,<lb />
Call In when you want good work <lb />
Primary <lb />
Intermediate <lb />
Higher <lb />
Languages <lb />
NORTH <lb />
It. R. TIMETABLE. <lb />
Effect 1808. <lb />
The instruction will continue through. <lb />
Discipline mild If necessary <lb />
an teacher will he employed. <lb />
guaranteed pupils <lb />
enter early and attend regularly. For <lb />
further apply to <lb />
W. II. <lb />
Aug. G, 1891 <lb />
I AM. <lb />
Pas. <lb />
Sun. <lb />
Ar. <lb />
P. M. <lb />
DOMINION <lb />
tS i so <lb />
Pass Unite <lb />
Ex Sun. <lb />
Ar. <lb />
A. M A. M. <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
New Del ii <lb />
ii i <lb />
P. M <lb />
A. M A. M <lb />
freemen leave Washington <lb />
ville and touching at all land <lb />
on Tar River Monday. Wednesday <lb />
Friday at A. M. <lb />
Returning leave Tarboro at. A. M. <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb />
Greenville days. <lb />
Thee departures are subject to stags <lb />
of water on Tar River. <lb />
at with Mean <lb />
of The Wash- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk, <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and <lb />
Slippers should -roods <lb />
marked via Dominion I fr m <lb />
York. I. from<lb />
more Steamboat from <lb />
Merchants <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. SON. Agent, <lb />
X- <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, A vent, <lb />
X C. <lb />
Train I connects with A <lb />
I train bound North, <lb />
Goldsboro m., and with K <lb />
train West, <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
Caveats, and and all Pat- <lb />
for MODERATE <lb />
IS Opposite U. S. Patent <lb />
m less time those <lb />
remote, from <lb />
m Send model, drawing or with <lb />
advise, if or not, of <lb />
charge. Our fee due till patent Is secured. <lb />
A PAMPHLET. to Obtain <lb />
coat of same in the U. S. and foreign countries <lb />
sent free. Address, <lb />
0-. PATENT OFFICE. WASHINGTON. D. C. <lb />
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK. <lb />
Tor Cure of all Hi <lb />
This Preparation has In use over <lb />
years, and wherever know has <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb />
by the leading physicians all over <lb />
and cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention of <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment is <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained is owing entirely <lb />
xi its own as but little ha <lb />
ever been made to bring it before the <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. All Cash promptly at- <lb />
tended to. Address all orders and <lb />
communications to <lb />
T. V. <lb />
Greenville, N, <lb />
We will fill them QUICK <lb />
We will till them CHEAP <lb />
We will till them WELL <lb />
Heart Framing, . <lb />
Rough Sap Framing, ; . <lb />
Rough Inches <lb />
Bough Sap Boards, inches <lb />
Wait days for Mi Planing Mill and <lb />
we will furnish you Lumber <lb />
as <lb />
Wood to your door for <lb />
cents a load. <lb />
Terms cash. <lb />
Thanking yon tor past patronage, <lb />
GREENVILLE N. C. <lb />
mm <lb />
Real Estate <lb />
and <lb />
Rental Agent. <lb />
Houses and lots for Rent or for <lb />
terms easy. Rents, Taxes. Insurance, <lb />
and any other <lb />
of debt placed in my hands for <lb />
have prompt attention, <lb />
Sat faction guaranteed. I solicit <lb />
patronage. <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>17738.0001</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>70504756</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>2dcdfc58f485f1d35a788df5383e84c5</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7397</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9528</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>20101103</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>17738.0002</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>71309022</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>5dbe4c3f1f5a828e9bf9b3d6a8d83fd0</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7420</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9600</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>20110614</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>17738.0003</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>71309022</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>dc506590584b03a8301560a17edde632</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7420</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9600</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>20110614</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>17738.0004</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>71309022</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>e9e83094d24c6f9de419768dbdccedb5</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7420</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9600</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>20110614</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/ncgre000/00000018/00017738/00017738_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/ncgre000/00000018/00017738/00017738_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/ncgre000/00000018/00017738/00017738_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/ncgre000/00000018/00017738/00017738_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/ncgre000/00000018/00017738/00017738_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/ncgre000/00000018/00017738/00017738_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/ncgre000/00000018/00017738/00017738_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/ncgre000/00000018/00017738/00017738_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>