<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<mets:mets OBJID="18975" ID="wordcount20565" 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="2011-07-21T05:37:40" LASTMODDATE="2011-07-21T05:37:40" RECORDSTATUS="Complete">
    <mets:agent ROLE="OTHER" TYPE="INDIVIDUAL" OTHERROLE="CATALOGER">
      <mets:name>Vinogradov, Amanda</mets:name></mets:agent></mets:metsHdr>
  <mets:dmdSec ID="DMD0001">
    <mets:mdWrap MDTYPE="MODS">
      <mets:xmlData>
        <mods:mods>
          <mods:titleInfo>
            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 19 February 1890</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">18975</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="job">834</mods:identifier>
          <mods:originInfo>
            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18900219</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/ncgre000/00000019/00018975/00018975.pdf" type="PDF" displayLabel="View PDF">
            <mods:titleInfo>
              <mods:title></mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
            <mods:identifier type="doi"></mods:identifier></mods:relatedItem></mods:mods></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
  <mets:dmdSec ID="DMD0002">
    <mets:mdWrap MDTYPE="DC">
      <mets:xmlData>
        <oai_dc:dc>
          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 19 February 1890</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>18900219</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>18975</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="00018975_tn_0001" n="1" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
-----Solicits Tour patronage <lb />
Its every reader. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
---------HAS A--------- <lb />
I JOB PRINTING- <lb />
Department that ran be surpassed <lb />
where in this section. Our wort <lb />
gives satiated ion. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO <lb />
Per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL IX. <lb />
GREENVILLE. PITT COUNTY WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 1890. <lb />
NO. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
N. C. <lb />
d. J. <lb />
I HE <lb />
C of Wake. <lb />
Tho. M. Holt, <lb />
of <lb />
Secretary of . <lb />
of Wake. <lb />
with one hall the need in one <lb />
direction, then over again <lb />
the other half m the opposite <lb />
the sower retracing his steps. <lb />
The seed should be left the <lb />
home, no aid girl. .-. . nor raked <lb />
At the door of the Prince's hill, nor <lb />
As she mood mis marble into the soil, trodden in with <lb />
, , ,. , , toot or pressed in with the back <lb />
An leaned on the polished wall. . <lb />
or a weeding hoe. or still, by <lb />
Her were her feet were ; ft bed <lb />
And Use To prevent drifting or puddling of <lb />
O give me a she feebly said. ht where <lb />
borne and piece id bread. .-on,. , <lb />
the ground <lb />
My father, alas I I never <lb />
And the tears did M <lb />
ens the work of hilling, and is the planter be blessed a good <lb />
at the same lime a more season in May or June, else <lb />
cal of the balks j but planting is then to be thought <lb />
can be thrown out at j of. It is a maxim with hay makers <lb />
first weeding. With a broad weed- j that they should work while the sun <lb />
boa these list or beds should shines. reverse of this holds <lb />
now be worked into hills, good with the tobacco planter, and <lb />
them feet inches apart.; be promises to he but a poor one <lb />
know that many recommend more j who from-a shower of rain, <lb />
crowding planting, giving the rows yet for the conveniences of <lb />
and hills a distance of only three I housing, it is not desirable that the <lb />
in doing so nothing in I should ripen at the same <lb />
my opinion is in the weight, therefore it is not bast that <lb />
inclined and two inches deep and j while h in is lost in the length j all be planted in a single sea- <lb />
n-. of Wake. sleeps in a new made grave four feet apart should be made with and body of leaf which aim Instead then of hastening to <lb />
f n. an orphan that mattock across tho bed. When , will, the prime I it to look <lb />
Superintendent of Public The night was d irk. and the snow still, ground is flat, subject be requisites. The hills laid off j the in order to <lb />
T. David- I rich man his door ; it be thoroughly I with great by stepping or I a in <lb />
son, of Buncombe. And his proud curled as he drained, as nothing drowns more otherwise measuring one row, and j has been do so and as <lb />
bread, for the tobacco plant. <lb />
Justice X. H. <lb />
Wake. <lb />
Associate S. <lb />
Joseph J. Davis, of <lb />
James E. Shepherd, of Beaufort and <lb />
C. or Burke. <lb />
First Brown, of <lb />
Another hour, and the midnight storm <lb />
Boiled on like a funeral knell. <lb />
then the hills of the next possible, shading or <lb />
Wot the threefold purpose of those of the first, and the planted hills, when <lb />
warmth, moisture and fertility, or is dodging them. is recommended. <lb />
. . IT. t i i t. s t i . l I . I j <lb />
CULTIVATION. <lb />
g hall an inch thick . The cultivation of the tobacco <lb />
stable manure broken the, raw crop though thorough, should be <lb />
the better, but in any , . .; superficial that, it is to say, only <lb />
a bed should now be top dressed irregular , <lb />
And drops of snow still fell. a covering half an inch thick of i i <lb />
The rich man slept on his velvet bed. <lb />
And dreamed of his silver and gold, <lb />
Philip., of i Tl I e <lb />
manure is not convenient, that j the subsequent work <lb />
M from the hen house or hog pen will the tobacco crop, should I <lb />
answer, hog hair also making ex- <lb />
top If of <lb />
these is at hand, some strongly nm- <lb />
Third millet Connor, of <lb />
Clark, of <lb />
Wake. <lb />
A. of <lb />
freeze. I roust she <lb />
as she sank. <lb />
And strove to cover her feet <lb />
With her old tattered clothes, all covered <lb />
ill snow, <lb />
s. covered in snow and <lb />
never be departed from, for the <lb />
i that, that method <lb />
gives the had the best drain- <lb />
age of which it is capable. m <lb />
morning dawned, the little; should be applied I <lb />
Seventh c. of, girl at the rate of half a bushel to every drainage is one of the first <lb />
Cumberland. Still lay rich mans door. .,. , and to considered, the <lb />
a of But her soul had fled t a home above. J ,.,,, . . . <lb />
Where there is room and bread for the the soil before seeding. The bed destroy the cut-worm. <lb />
F. Graves, of poor. now be covered P IS as trench <lb />
District-John G. b fine brush to prevent both drying; spotting, shedding and <lb />
lies in the -now. and freezing the soil, by which I excessive rain <lb />
No more she wears her old tattered the are either checked in accompanied by excessive heat. <lb />
She el -old their growth or lifted out by the j <lb />
-ii. roots. as much, for in tune of <lb />
. , , . -1 leaves stand to gather the <lb />
Tobacco Culture. I, next lo to of <lb />
Eleventh M. Shipp, of <lb />
Mecklenburg. <lb />
Twelfth R. <lb />
of Buncombe. <lb />
M. Vance, of <lb />
Matt. W. Ransom, of <lb />
the subsoil being left intact. <lb />
As soon as the plant has taken I <lb />
root which is shown by its j <lb />
color it should be worked with <lb />
the line only by the crust <lb />
of the hill, and drawing loose din <lb />
around the plant. This destroys <lb />
the first crop of grass and helps to <lb />
the <lb />
land between the rows has become <lb />
it should be plowed with a bull- <lb />
or shovel at the first work- <lb />
mg. <lb />
When the plants have covered <lb />
the a breadth of twelve <lb />
should be worked <lb />
is almost worthless any purpose <lb />
For if the season is a generous one <lb />
the luxuriant growth of the plant <lb />
tempts many to multiply the <lb />
of leaves. To all such let me <lb />
say, that while is lost in <lb />
body, nothing is gained in weight <lb />
by high topping, it being a maxim <lb />
among the growers of shipping to- <lb />
with whom weight is the <lb />
prime object, that eight is the max- <lb />
number of leaves for that <lb />
pose that is to say, that the plant <lb />
topped at eight leaves, will weigh <lb />
as much as if topped at any greater <lb />
number. Nor is anything to <lb />
gained by high topping in either <lb />
or color, which if the top- <lb />
ping be such as I have directed will <lb />
be all that is desired. <lb />
There are three varieties of the <lb />
worm which prey upon tobacco <lb />
plants the cut-worm, the bud- <lb />
worm and the horn-worm. Of these <lb />
the first selects as the point of its <lb />
attack the of the young plant, j <lb />
and is but the ordinary earth worm j <lb />
of our gardens, is best gotten <lb />
rid by early working. Second is <lb />
OVER THE STATE. <lb />
Happenings of Interest Occur- <lb />
ring in North Carolina. <lb />
AS <lb />
J. II. Cook, of the Concord <lb />
Standard, received the prize offered <lb />
by the State Department of <lb />
for the best article <lb />
five of a North Carolina county. <lb />
Charlotte Negro Scott <lb />
paid Hattie Davis <lb />
out of the chain gang with the ex <lb />
of making her his bride. <lb />
On Wednesday all parties came to- <lb />
at the jail and Hattie i <lb />
ed to marry Mr Stinson There <lb />
nothing a loves so much as <lb />
the chain-gang. <lb />
Salisbury Herald Last Monday <lb />
morning a bale of Mow m ; <lb />
cotton was opened at the Salisbury I <lb />
Cotton Mills, the cotton was worked <lb />
yarn, the yarn was carried over <lb />
to the Knitting Mills and noon <lb />
men's stockings were ready for <lb />
wear. Cotton the bale at In <lb />
the morning and seamless hose at I <lb />
Goldsboro From pas- <lb />
who arrived here Monday. <lb />
we learned of a terrible riot which <lb />
as common a variety, making its took place at Morristown, <lb />
appearance about the time the plant I Thursday night, between several <lb />
is coming into top, and feeds upon <lb />
, . . and their white emigration agent <lb />
The <lb />
ranee <lb />
Pender ma mt ti m <lb />
Fourth II Bunn. of AND OF When it into <lb />
W Brower. of a be,, <lb />
District Rowland of To an early and Vet <lb />
Henderson poisons such as carbolic acid or <lb />
Eighth . II. A. Cowles if tobacco is . , <lb />
Ninth O. of , , L. effect <lb />
. the thing prune importance. To A preventive is to sow the <lb />
. rain, but so soon as it has enough <lb />
a of the . . x j., , <lb />
I then, let no water of <lb />
is to guard against ravages of the l thoroughly with both plow and hoe. <lb />
i they turn down and throw bu. <lb />
secure this the seed any lie sown j of the bed thickly with <lb />
at any time between the 15th of De It <lb />
and the 15th of the ; jag Iced- <lb />
the better and allotting j A ,, preventive is to shut <lb />
square yards or seed bed to every by a <lb />
plants that will be needed foot high, built inch <lb />
The ground selected for this purpose <lb />
Board of he vii soil v . . , . , <lb />
Chairman J P. and J. D. sou, sandy text-, a earth pressed against <lb />
Cox. rich and with lull of the plank so as to <lb />
School but to make proof <lb />
North and West by rising ground <lb />
j or timber, against the cold <lb />
Court A. Move. <lb />
A-K. Tucker. <lb />
Register of II. James. <lb />
B. Cherry. <lb />
S. I. Ward. <lb />
Coroner H. B- Harris. <lb />
Commissioners-Council Chair- <lb />
man. Mooring. C. V, <lb />
W. A. James. Jr., T. E. Keel. <lb />
ding. <lb />
of F. W. Brown. <lb />
O. <lb />
F. Evans. <lb />
It. Lang. <lb />
T. Smith. <lb />
R. Moore. <lb />
Con Ward. B. X. <lb />
For <lb />
R. 4th Ward. W. N. Tolbert. <lb />
wind in early spring. Such spots <lb />
be readily found in wooded j <lb />
lows, at the toot of hills, near <lb />
to or along side some water course. <lb />
Other things being equal, the fa-1 <lb />
fence or cold frame does the <lb />
good of keeping the bed <lb />
warmer and moister should <lb />
never be omitted. <lb />
Ordinarily and after early seed- <lb />
the will begin to show <lb />
First and Third <lb />
Sundays, morning and night. Rev. X. C. <lb />
Hughes. D. D., Rector. <lb />
Sunday, morn- <lb />
and night. Meeting every <lb />
themselves about the first of March, <lb />
Ward. It. Jr., and Alfred , into the woods the spot . . . . ,, <lb />
T J and M. . . . . , . time an additional hall <lb />
,, is the better in order to escape; ., , . . <lb />
the hear tablespoon of seed Tor every <lb />
square yards, should be sown as at <lb />
The ground having been chosen, j first m <lb />
the next thing i, to rake it cleanly <lb />
and then burn it thoroughly so as, as <lb />
kill all germs of vegetation. The top before <lb />
Wednesday night. Kev. R. B. John, can be done at a with some good <lb />
Sunday, morn-1 Wast, if done with dry brush, heap- ,, the rate one gallon <lb />
lug and night Meeting every ed the entire bed a height of f , <lb />
Wednesday night. Rev. A-D. Hunter. .-. . . . J . <lb />
Pastor. some lour A. cost- with an equal quantity of damp <lb />
lier method is to burn with wood The should never <lb />
. u t, greed poles, which serve be wet <lb />
Greenville Lodge. o. A. F. A. of ventilation, in which .,, ,,. . r <lb />
M. meets 1st Thursday and With either dew or rain. <lb />
day night 1st and 3rd Sunday at case the wood should be piled them. Dry leaves and <lb />
young grass should I hand picked <lb />
Greenville R. Chapter. meets; convenient width, say bed tho of <lb />
f the pile has been ; b be <lb />
t O. O. l should be allowed to burn the are <lb />
meets every Tuesday night. O. W. some two hours, or until tho poles large set. but should then <lb />
lion. K. of H., are up. The bun. , And <lb />
meets every first and third Friday night, mg and tire coals should now t and <lb />
for a season to transplant. <lb />
Thursday night. C. A. White, C. upon handles, and again ; fro,,, <lb />
spread a convenient width and bed should be well <lb />
should , ,, again <lb />
M. to P. M. All mail burn until <lb />
Washington, XI and finely with the mattock, care <lb />
not to invert the soil, <lb />
P. M. and A. M. and then chopped with weeding <lb />
clear of roots <lb />
and Pullet arrive Tuesday and well which <lb />
Saturday at and reason never be burnt <lb />
departs at P. M. <lb />
Vane Black Jack and Calico when wet. <lb />
mails arrives even Saturday at P. <lb />
the tun. <lb />
SELECTION AND PREPARATION <lb />
OF THE SOIL. <lb />
A soft, deep, sandy sod is prefer- <lb />
able, which before planting <lb />
be always in the finest tilth, it <lb />
being an adage with good farmers <lb />
and departs at II AM. The bed is v ready for a properly planted is <lb />
J. . PERKINS The v, <lb />
Rev. A. D. Hunter's <lb />
of seed recommended half <lb />
Yellow Orinoco. The quantity; if the land new ground, it <lb />
sown should be one and, a half grabbed <lb />
every M square ad chopped, be raked and <lb />
Great care should be taken I and litter <lb />
2nd and 4th Sundays, morning . to sow the seed as regularly as ready for the plow, and be <lb />
night, Greenville Baptist church, also e , ., ,.,. J. ., <lb />
to prevent some spots <lb />
3rd morning and night. Beth- from being too thin, and what is <lb />
el Baptist church. <lb />
worse, other spots from being too <lb />
closely broken twice and cross-wise <lb />
with the bull-tongue, and as. often <lb />
harrowed. It next be mark- <lb />
Rev. E. C. Glenn's To do so the seed should be the <lb />
rows three feet apart, into <lb />
For preaching oh Bethlehem Mission, j mixed a be pounds <lb />
i into two Tho naturally of a good active <lb />
, bed marked off into con- fertilizer. It is then ready to be <lb />
breadths by lines j listed or bedded with a turning <lb />
Sunday at o'clock, <lb />
Grove, 3rd Sunday at <lb />
4th Sunday at o'clock,<lb />
off. <lb />
stagnate; upon the ground. For <lb />
new ground the hilling be done <lb />
as early as April or May, should <lb />
be always whet the soil is in good <lb />
working order neither too wet <lb />
or too dry. the one case it will <lb />
bake and the ready growth <lb />
the plant, and in the other it will <lb />
require much rain to put it in con- <lb />
for planting. <lb />
II the land is not new ground, <lb />
either forest or field, it should <lb />
be fresh or at least long rested and <lb />
in good heart, and which com <lb />
nor sorghum has lately crop- <lb />
For such land the preparation <lb />
is in respects similar to that for <lb />
new except that a turning <lb />
plow may take the place the bull <lb />
tongue, and the hilling should not <lb />
be the first of May <lb />
for fear that the hills may <lb />
grassy while waiting for plants or <lb />
a season to plant them. To <lb />
servo such lands and to prevent <lb />
damages to the growing crops from <lb />
washing rains, or <lb />
guttering is <lb />
Tobacco laud, more than almost <lb />
other, should be manured with <lb />
a liberal hand. Stable or yard <lb />
manure is every way the best, but <lb />
when not to lie had in sufficient <lb />
quantity must be substituted by <lb />
some good commercial fertilizer, <lb />
which there are countless varieties <lb />
the market possessing more or <lb />
less merit. <lb />
PLANTING. <lb />
The tobacco plant- requires <lb />
trees, it close to <lb />
and throwing out the row <lb />
with four or five furrows. If the <lb />
land had become very foul, turn- <lb />
plow is preferable. With the <lb />
hoe all the surface soil should <lb />
drawn into hills around the plant <lb />
as at This working is a lay-by <lb />
with the plow, which should never <lb />
be used after the have come <lb />
into top. But later than should <lb />
the land again become should <lb />
be scraped with the hoe only. Any <lb />
vegetation which springs up <lb />
the pleat has attained its growth <lb />
does it no bat is beneficial <lb />
keeping the lower leaves <lb />
from being sanded. But to the eye <lb />
of the genuine farmer it is <lb />
and is advantageous if a wheat <lb />
crop is to better be <lb />
kept down the last. <lb />
TOPPING- <lb />
In topping tobacco the end aim- <lb />
ed at. is to secure the greatest <lb />
weight with the desired <lb />
color and body of the leaf, <lb />
which last means Us toughness, oil <lb />
and sweet, flavor. With the <lb />
experienced planter the is to <lb />
op according to the constitution <lb />
the plant, such a rule is too gen- <lb />
to be much use to the begin <lb />
tie., instead of which let him accept <lb />
the following <lb />
So and as fast as the buttons, <lb />
or seed heads of the plant show <lb />
themselves, beginning usually about <lb />
the 10th of July, they should be, <lb />
topped. It is better to wait until <lb />
the bud, cutting it into minute holes <lb />
which enlarge with the growing <lb />
leaf. Ir is found in greatest, <lb />
upon new ground tobacco show- <lb />
that the woods are the habitat <lb />
the parent fly. Ins easily found <lb />
taken, except that doing so <lb />
care must be had not to injure the <lb />
leader leaves. The third is the <lb />
as that, found upon tomato <lb />
and Irish potato <lb />
am unable to scientific <lb />
these three worthies, nor is it <lb />
necessary to do so than to <lb />
say, that by common consent <lb />
g rat ion ago <lb />
The were the adjoin- <lb />
counties and were billed for <lb />
Arkansas, but when reaching Mot <lb />
they were informed by the. <lb />
agents who had them in charge that <lb />
they would lie taken to Mississippi <lb />
instead. This created a riot, and <lb />
the was that the agents had <lb />
to flee for their lives. The <lb />
refused to go any further, and a <lb />
they had Bo money whatever, they <lb />
decided with their families to <lb />
for home on loot. <lb />
Long <lb />
During these long no <lb />
belongs to the , , , , . e <lb />
class feel more <lb />
which is emphatically the worm, <lb />
and is our For it n. <lb />
effectual has yet been <lb />
greatest pest of the <lb />
first shows itself as early as May or <lb />
happy limn the young who have <lb />
good com for a homes. The pleas- <lb />
ant fireside, the agreeable company, <lb />
the of enjoyment in book, <lb />
conversation, games, other <lb />
things equally <lb />
June, but cot in great number, and ; should All them with a sense of <lb />
does hem little or no harm, but I contentment that- risen into constant <lb />
should not be to escape, gratitude. So one be dreary. <lb />
for if so, and as soon as it attains <lb />
11- <lb />
growth, it descends into the are <lb />
-content, <lb />
in con- <lb />
days from the time it is transplant j the seed head appears, because the <lb />
the chrysalis, and comes ion so fortunate, unless there is, <lb />
out again full in L It <lb />
The fly thus generated is a large is <lb />
night-flying moth, which is exceed j SOt. attractions <lb />
prolific, deposits its eggs , keep them from the street, the <lb />
greatest quantity during the billiard rooms, the dancing hall, or <lb />
moonlight other no less <lb />
, ,, and that young women <lb />
Against, the ravages of the horn ; from each domestic brightness <lb />
worm there is no remedy short, of I to seek what I heir craves <lb />
extermination. A partial prevent- in. kinds questionable <lb />
is to destroy the fly by distilling Many of I hem, if com- <lb />
a solution of Fans green or of 00- polled either by authority that is <lb />
bait flowers the James- over them or by circumstances they <lb />
weed. cannot control, live in n state of <lb />
Another device is to place in the habitual dull, languid, <lb />
tobacco field, at night, lanterns set, and as miserable <lb />
in pans filled with some viscid mat- disposition can <lb />
such as or molasses. Make them. It to improve <lb />
have found that to throw the crop person to contrast their happy <lb />
as much as possible into a single with the unattractive <lb />
field is some a bet- s or others of <lb />
one still lo plant it as I tut-r re <lb />
rapidly as possible, for the or homes, where <lb />
that August when the fly is do- , is for a <lb />
. , ,. , stay and hasty departure. <lb />
most it selects only, . . <lb />
ed to glow ripen properly. To <lb />
secure the best <lb />
the planting should be earlier <lb />
than the 10th of May, if <lb />
not later than the of June, <lb />
the case the plant is likely <lb />
to be stunned in its growth, as well <lb />
as deprived of the dews of August <lb />
and in the other <lb />
there is danger that it may not <lb />
have time to fully before <lb />
The plants are set very much as <lb />
cabbage plants are, by Inserting <lb />
them to and pressing the <lb />
earth well their roots and stems <lb />
a peg, A plant is said to be <lb />
properly planted when the point <lb />
a leaf breaks off in the attempt to <lb />
it <lb />
The should never <lb />
to wilt they are set. <lb />
if this cannot be done as fast as <lb />
they drawn from the bed, as <lb />
as can be planted in a, single <lb />
day he drawn while the dew <lb />
is on them, and kept needed <lb />
a shaded with their roots <lb />
on damp ground, their tops being <lb />
occasionally sprinkled with water. <lb />
If the hills have been put up with, <lb />
a good season they can or- <lb />
at any time in May be <lb />
planted without a rain, if done late <lb />
in the afternoon. They <lb />
clapped of the hoe, <lb />
which preserves the moist- <lb />
and prevents crumbling of the <lb />
earth, after the planting peg, and <lb />
be lighter or harder accord- <lb />
to-the of the soil. <lb />
four feet a part a sowed entirely plow. I prefer the list since it light with an abundance of plants, <lb />
space between the leaves a stalk <lb />
will then have widened enough to <lb />
admit the sunlight them ; <lb />
it should, however, never be suffer-1 <lb />
ed to bloom. <lb />
At the first topping done <lb />
field Midi plants as arc ready should <lb />
be. first is to say, have <lb />
lower leaves high I <lb />
as I or inches from the <lb />
then topped at ten. and only ten, <lb />
leaves unless the form of the plant <lb />
is very gross, m which twelve I <lb />
are not objectionable. At <lb />
the second topping such other plants <lb />
as are should be topped at <lb />
and so on down to eight and <lb />
seven leaves at each succeeding <lb />
topping, which is usually at in- <lb />
of week. for <lb />
lessening the number of leaves at <lb />
each successive topping is to cause <lb />
all the were planted <lb />
at sane to ripen together, this <lb />
being a great cut- <lb />
ting. the cutting of <lb />
leaves, the ninth leaf is the <lb />
guide, formation of plant be- <lb />
such that after it is palmed, <lb />
leaf points, always over <lb />
It is important to take <lb />
notice of this. <lb />
And it is important to pear in <lb />
mind that q secure the desired <lb />
qualities, of the nothing <lb />
is more and be- <lb />
more generally <lb />
stood, than the proper topping of <lb />
the plant. To ignorance pi this <lb />
matter is attributable the greater <lb />
part stuff <lb />
yearly gluts the market, and which <lb />
young and tender plants, and will <lb />
even choose other vegetation rather <lb />
than ripe or ripening tobacco upon <lb />
which tho newly hatched worm will <lb />
not thrive and can exist. <lb />
At every age of the crop a <lb />
outlook he kept upon <lb />
horn worm, but after the first <lb />
of August the entire crop most be <lb />
wormed over once a week, using <lb />
whatever extra labor is needed for <lb />
The extract taken from <lb />
a K written by Mr. K A. Bell, <lb />
fully explains <lb />
While surveying land in I <lb />
handle poison oak vine, <lb />
and in less three hours <lb />
eruption usually resulting such <lb />
There Shall Night. There <lb />
Wilson Mirror. <lb />
I here shad be no night there. <lb />
And there will be no need of any, <lb />
because is no weariness In <lb />
Heaven, and DOM ever long dark- <lb />
to fall so that the heartache <lb />
may lie relieved by unseen tears. <lb />
But would become of in this <lb />
world were it not for Night <lb />
Is nil readers life endurable to <lb />
half the world. They are able to <lb />
bear the day, to drive through its <lb />
heavy laden hour., only by the sure <lb />
knowledge that night, blessed night, <lb />
draws on. The keen, hard day; the <lb />
blazing, Minding, day <lb />
would drive them distracted if it <lb />
lasted longer than it does; but just <lb />
as heart and flesh are failing, down <lb />
rolls the solemn, shielding <lb />
night, and all are The <lb />
stars come forth look down, <lb />
saying nothing to distress. Holy <lb />
stars, that shine upon your <lb />
and shine upon grave, and <lb />
that watch you the way between <lb />
patiently, like the eyes of <lb />
And the moon, sweet, pure moon, <lb />
that never scorches nor blinds yon, <lb />
calms cools you with soft <lb />
light that like on the <lb />
spirit. Chore is melody Is <lb />
night but well is it for <lb />
tired and hunted mortals that there <lb />
is night here. <lb />
More <lb />
Topic. <lb />
Mr. K. K. dine, of Granite tells us <lb />
on Sunday night. Jan, some <lb />
person or persons desecrated the <lb />
grave, in cemetery, of <lb />
little girl who was burned to <lb />
death Granite on the day before. <lb />
It was noticed, last week, that the <lb />
grave seemed to have been tamper- <lb />
ed with d the headstone had <lb />
toward the foot or the <lb />
grave. Mr. John hard, who lives <lb />
i ear the cemetery, reported on <lb />
the Sunday night referred to he saw <lb />
lights in graveyard. The <lb />
of Granite thereupon, on Sat- <lb />
in opened grave and found <lb />
incontestable evidence of the fact <lb />
grave had been previously <lb />
ed and the coffin broken open <lb />
but that the perpetrators of the <lb />
outrage bad become In <lb />
midst of their work and, hastily <lb />
and clumsily replacing the lid of <lb />
the had refilled the crave. <lb />
What their object was passes all <lb />
We cannot help <lb />
peeling that there is a connection <lb />
between this outrage and the open- <lb />
of a grave m cemetery <lb />
not long ago. Can it be that some <lb />
wretched crank, with the morbid <lb />
and depraved hallucination of a <lb />
the is haunting that <lb />
lie ought to be <lb />
down and brought to justice. <lb />
is much modified by habit. <lb />
Thus, an old artilleryman often on- <lb />
joys tranquil repose while cannon <lb />
are thundering around him; an en- <lb />
has been known to fall asleep <lb />
within boiler while his fellows <lb />
were it the outside with <lb />
tin ponderous hammers, and the <lb />
of a miller is nowise <lb />
by the noise of his mill. <lb />
Sound ceases to be a stimulus to <lb />
such and what would have <lb />
proved an Inexpressible annoyance <lb />
to others is by them altogether <lb />
heeded. II is common for soldiers <lb />
to on horseback, and for coach- <lb />
men on their coaches. During tho <lb />
battle of the Nile some boys were so <lb />
exhausted that they fell asleep on <lb />
tin deck amid the deafening <lb />
of that engagement. <lb />
Cavils <lb />
the or otherwise the begins in <lb />
DANIELS. <lb />
N. C <lb />
swollen and disfigured, and my <lb />
bands and arm- seriously ah. <lb />
is <lb />
It is rich easier to destroy the <lb />
worm while it is very young, for j I began taking <lb />
Specific S. and taking <lb />
three large bottle I found all signs <lb />
of the breaking out entirely moon- <lb />
ed. I was led to its return <lb />
at Die same time next year, but it <lb />
did nor bis there in <lb />
of it.-, return since. <lb />
My little boy, eight <lb />
with the same poison <lb />
1881. After taking sever., bottles <lb />
Swift's Specie the <lb />
entire disappeared. A <lb />
slight form the same <lb />
Hen returned during the next spring <lb />
we then resumed the S. S., <lb />
and having taken during <lb />
ea-on to the sore p r <lb />
he has not since, had y <lb />
return of the disease. Swift's <lb />
S. certainly effected <lb />
thorough cures both mines, I <lb />
regard it as a most effective remedy <lb />
for all such diseases. <lb />
E. A. <lb />
S. O. <lb />
Treatise Skin <lb />
free. <lb />
SWIFT'S SPECIFIC CO., <lb />
Ga. <lb />
then it is always to found near <lb />
the hole it has made in the <lb />
Bat If it is neglected its youth <lb />
allowed to until it begins <lb />
to change its position upon the <lb />
plants, it is harder to and it. <lb />
then Important to know <lb />
of its habits in order to <lb />
hunt it successfully. Tims it <lb />
be found that in hot weather, ex <lb />
when cloudy, it feeds during <lb />
the cooler part of the and can <lb />
he best caught In the morning, <lb />
while In cool weather it feeds <lb />
warmer part of the pay. and <lb />
can be best caught in the <lb />
As soon as the plant Is topped, it <lb />
to forth succors at every <lb />
leaf, out more rapidly at the top, <lb />
each plant bearing two and only <lb />
two crops of should be <lb />
taken out a-s fa-t as <lb />
enough to be broken by <lb />
the hand, for if suffered to grow <lb />
and toughen a pocket knife will be <lb />
necessary to remove them, at double <lb />
the cost in time and After a <lb />
field has been topped, the <lb />
succoring should accompany the <lb />
worming, and ought to be repeated <lb />
once a week. ground succors <lb />
should be taken away as carefully <lb />
as those above, for they equally <lb />
impoverish the plant. <lb />
A AT- -L A W, <lb />
WILSON, N. C <lb />
-J h. <lb />
g. <lb />
I. BLOW, <lb />
J. E. N. C <lb />
J. E. RE. <lb />
J. M. TUCKER <lb />
1.11 A MURPHY, <lb />
A W, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
MASS <lb />
n. c. <lb />
JAMES, <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. <lb />
hi all I ho court. Collection <lb />
a Specialty. <lb />
B. YELLOWLEY, <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LA W, <lb />
N.<lb />
i.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018975_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
pp <lb />
THE <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
B, J, <lb />
Publisher's Announcement. <lb />
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb />
The Reflector is 41.50 per year. <lb />
Advertising One column <lb />
one year, one-half <lb />
one-quarter column one year, <lb />
Transient inch <lb />
one week, two weeks. one <lb />
month Two inches one week, S 1.50, <lb />
two weeks, ; one month, <lb />
Advertisements inserted Local <lb />
Column as reading items, cents per <lb />
line for each insertion. <lb />
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad- <lb />
and Notices, <lb />
and Sales. <lb />
Summon- to will <lb />
be charged at legal rate, and MUST <lb />
BE PAID FOR IN The RE- <lb />
has suffered loss and <lb />
much because of having no <lb />
fixed rule as to the payment this class <lb />
advertisements, and in order to avoid <lb />
future trouble payment in advance <lb />
will be demanded. <lb />
Contracts for any space not mentioned <lb />
above, for any length of time, can be <lb />
made by application to the either <lb />
In person or by letter. <lb />
Copy for <lb />
all changes of advertisements should be <lb />
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday <lb />
mornings in order to prompt in- <lb />
the day following. <lb />
The having a large <lb />
will be found a profitable medium <lb />
through which to reach the public. <lb />
Entered at the Post Office at <lb />
C, as Second-Class <lb />
Mail <lb />
WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY <lb />
The Senate passed the <lb />
ma bill including No-Man's-Land <lb />
in the new Territory. <lb />
Warren G. Elliott, of Norfolk. <lb />
Va., a native North Carolinian, <lb />
has been appointed President of <lb />
the and rail- <lb />
road. <lb />
The State Treasurer says Sher- <lb />
are settling up promptly and <lb />
that the Sheriffs of the east are <lb />
doing better than those of the <lb />
western part of the State. <lb />
Henry M. Stanley, a letter to <lb />
Col. Thomas W. Knox. of Ne <lb />
York City, says have had no <lb />
letters from anyone while in <lb />
ca. Misfortune followed every <lb />
effort to send me my <lb />
Mrs. M. Newton, of <lb />
Pa., last Thursday gave birth to <lb />
four children. They are all per- <lb />
formed, and about forty <lb />
dime museums are after them. <lb />
There have been hundreds of <lb />
tors at the Newton mansion to see <lb />
the quartet. <lb />
Editor Haydn of the Charlotte <lb />
Chronicle in referring to a visit to <lb />
that city by editor Caldwell of <lb />
the Statesville Landmark, intimated <lb />
that he wanted to see the day <lb />
when the arrival of that gentle- <lb />
man in Charlotte could be an- <lb />
as Gov. Caldwell. Well, <lb />
why not If the chronicle wants <lb />
to set that up as a nomination it <lb />
can get ready seconds from all <lb />
over the State. It is quite early <lb />
to be bringing out gubernatorial <lb />
candidates, but in all seriousness <lb />
we don't see why Joe Caldwell <lb />
make as good a <lb />
nor as any man to be found in all <lb />
North Carolina. He has plenty <lb />
of admirers in the East, and we <lb />
once heard leading Pitt <lb />
who happened to know <lb />
of his popularity and <lb />
influence in the west, say, that the <lb />
people of that section of the State <lb />
would almost take oath said <lb />
Why not Help North Carolina <lb />
One great fault with North Car- <lb />
is that her people do not <lb />
stand by North Carolina and by <lb />
each other as they should. The <lb />
practice of sending away for what <lb />
can be obtained within our borders <lb />
is entirely common. The dis- <lb />
is to send our money <lb />
away and let it help to build up <lb />
other sections instead of helping <lb />
to build up our own State. <lb />
Among the people there is fl great <lb />
lack of appreciation for each other <lb />
and of each other's interest. There <lb />
is hardly a town in the State to- <lb />
day but where instead of being a <lb />
unity and co-operation of business <lb />
interests, there exists spirit <lb />
of sending elsewhere for what <lb />
might be had at home. Such a <lb />
spirit is injuring North Carolina <lb />
and helping to hold her behind in <lb />
the race of progress. There is <lb />
plenty of money within the State <lb />
to make matters far different from <lb />
what they are if the people would <lb />
only seek to use it to the interest <lb />
of our own State instead of send- <lb />
all possible away to enrich <lb />
some other commonwealth. An <lb />
item in a recent issue of the <lb />
ville <lb />
of oar young men will leave In a <lb />
few to attend a northern business <lb />
college, notwithstanding that we have u <lb />
similar institution with first-class <lb />
in own Stat . We have schools <lb />
and colleges capable of fitting boy and <lb />
girls for tilling the highest spheres in <lb />
business or professional <lb />
and vet we Dud them all suffering <lb />
lack of patronage, while our money goes <lb />
abroad to foreign institutions. <lb />
So long as this practice prevails <lb />
it need not be wondered at that <lb />
North Carolina is behind many <lb />
other States, and that it is some- <lb />
time referred to as a good State to <lb />
remove from. It is time a halt <lb />
as called in this particular <lb />
If you have any interest <lb />
in North Carolina show it by <lb />
with North Carolina people <lb />
and patronizing North Carolina <lb />
institutions when it is possible to <lb />
do so. Keep your money at home <lb />
and always help home along. <lb />
Newspaper Notes. <lb />
The Elizabeth City Economist re- <lb />
begun its nineteenth year, <lb />
and the Graham its six- <lb />
Both good papers. <lb />
The Clipper which lately <lb />
pended at Grifton. has been re- <lb />
at Hookerton, its old home <lb />
with D. V. Dixon as editor. <lb />
to it. <lb />
The Raleigh <lb />
which ranks right in front with the <lb />
leading weeklies of the State, has <lb />
just commenced its eighth year. <lb />
Mr. Daniels is making the <lb />
at a paper whose influence is felt <lb />
throughout the whole state. <lb />
It is a real pleasure to again re- <lb />
that excellent paper, the <lb />
Greensboro Patriot, after its <lb />
suspension of a few months. <lb />
The paper has been purchased <lb />
and revived by Messrs. <lb />
Scales, with Col. John C. Tipton <lb />
as associate editor. Much ability <lb />
is shown in its editorial depart- <lb />
and the Patriot will be a <lb />
useful paper to the State. <lb />
We learn with much pleasure <lb />
that the Durham Globe is to be re- <lb />
and published both daily <lb />
and weekly. Mr. T. P. Eldridge, <lb />
editor of the Lexington <lb />
has purchased the Globe outfit and <lb />
will bring out the paper at an ear- <lb />
by anything Joe Caldwell a man of his talent <lb />
or the Statesville Landmark said. <lb />
He could carry the State solid. <lb />
Baptist Female University. <lb />
The Baptist State Convention <lb />
held last November decided to es- <lb />
a State Female University. <lb />
and appointed a board of trustees <lb />
who were to select location, take <lb />
steps to secure an endowment and <lb />
make all necessary preparation to <lb />
start the work. The trustees had <lb />
a meeting in Raleigh last week <lb />
and decided to locate the <lb />
in that city. Raleigh had <lb />
some strong competitors for the <lb />
and Industry at the helm there is <lb />
no doubt of its being an excellent <lb />
paper in every respect. e wish <lb />
it success. <lb />
The Henderson <lb />
dated Thursdays, <lb />
Gold Leaf is <lb />
but it never <lb />
reaches the office <lb />
Monday. For sometime we have <lb />
been trying to conjecture how it <lb />
took four days for the paper to <lb />
travel from Henderson to Green- <lb />
ville. But of late we have been <lb />
noticing that the Oxford <lb />
dated Fridays, reaches us <lb />
day a day later <lb />
than the Gold Leaf and getting <lb />
com- <lb />
prize, Durham receiving an equal j two sooner. Look this <lb />
number of votes with her on the thing Thad, and remedy the <lb />
first With the lights we trouble. We get hungry for the <lb />
have before us it is somewhat when it is so Ion <lb />
strange that Raleigh gets the <lb />
University with Durham offering <lb />
to give twice as much for it. <lb />
offer was and a site <lb />
while Durham's offer was <lb />
a site, of that amount <lb />
being pledged by J. S. Carr, who <lb />
is a member of another <lb />
nation, his pledge alone coming to <lb />
within of Raleigh's cash <lb />
donation. Oxford's bid was even <lb />
Kind Words. <lb />
We. do not believe there is a, <lb />
more generous, kinder-hearted set <lb />
of men in the whole world than <lb />
those who are at the head of the <lb />
newspapers in North Carolina. <lb />
There is among them that <lb />
to extend the hand of greet- <lb />
with such frank cordiality, <lb />
and let such words of <lb />
as draws us all together <lb />
and seems to bind us with the <lb />
s st tics of kinship. The majority <lb />
of them knowing from experience <lb />
what it is to conduct a newspaper <lb />
in North Carolina, and fully real- <lb />
the arduous labors it requires, <lb />
the dangers that are encountered, <lb />
the shoals that must be avoided, <lb />
the quick-sands that are to be ti- <lb />
over, can truly rejoice with a <lb />
contemporary when it has sailed <lb />
in safety into another <lb />
harbor. The Reflector re- <lb />
entered its ninth volume <lb />
and some of our exchanges have <lb />
been very kind indeed in their <lb />
comments upon those append- <lb />
ed below will show. During our <lb />
indisposition a few weeks ago we <lb />
could not watch the papers close- <lb />
and may have overlooked some- <lb />
thing that was said, however we <lb />
feel grateful to all who have men- <lb />
the whether it <lb />
met our eves or not. <lb />
Kinston Free Press. <lb />
Tho Greenville has <lb />
its 0th volume. It is a <lb />
good paper. <lb />
Advance. <lb />
The Greenville Reflector has <lb />
entered upon its ninth volume. It <lb />
is a creditable weekly and the people <lb />
Greenville give it a liberal sup- <lb />
port. <lb />
Wilmington Messenger. <lb />
The Greenville Reflector <lb />
eight year's old, has certainly <lb />
been a faithful and efficient sentinel <lb />
on the Democratic It <lb />
deserves to succeed and it gratifies <lb />
u to know it <lb />
Tarboro Southerner. <lb />
Our admirable contemporary the <lb />
Greenville Reflector has entered <lb />
upon it- ninth volume. We hope it <lb />
may a ripe old age and con- <lb />
its work as energetically as <lb />
has in the past. It merits much <lb />
success. <lb />
Salisbury Herald. <lb />
The Reflector enter <lb />
ed its ninth year with the last issue. <lb />
The Reflector la one of the roost <lb />
independent, outspoken and fairies <lb />
our eastern exchanges, and is a <lb />
to its editor. We wish <lb />
continued <lb />
State Chronicle. <lb />
The Greenville Reflector has <lb />
its ninth volume. Ii <lb />
is a clean, honest, bright and newsy <lb />
paper, and reflects upon its <lb />
editor, Mr. D. J. He <lb />
has the right kind of stuff him <lb />
merits the success ho has won. <lb />
Plymouth Beacon. <lb />
The Greenville Reflector, D. J. <lb />
editor, entered its ninth <lb />
volume on the inst. We wish <lb />
that journal unbounded success, and <lb />
may the public generally as well as <lb />
the of Greenville give broth- <lb />
their support. <lb />
Tarboro Banner. <lb />
The Reflector has <lb />
its ninth volume. Brothel <lb />
the REFLECTOR ban <lb />
almost grown up together <lb />
have done good, efficient work, and <lb />
succeeded their efforts to give <lb />
the people a good paper. May sue <lb />
ever be their portion. <lb />
Weldon News. <lb />
The Greenville Reflector be- <lb />
its 9th volume last week. It is <lb />
an excellent paper and is doing a <lb />
good for its section- It is live, <lb />
progressive fearless. We con- <lb />
brother on the <lb />
attainment of another volume, and <lb />
hope he will continue to succeed as <lb />
he deserves. <lb />
Washington Letter. <lb />
From our regular Correspondent. <lb />
Washington, D. C., Feb. 14th <lb />
Mr. Reed's the <lb />
can hers of the I louse, have <lb />
humbly obeyed their mastered or- <lb />
lies and the new Rules have <lb />
adopted by the House. The demo <lb />
wade manly protests against <lb />
robbed of their rights but <lb />
their arguments did not ca use a sin- <lb />
republican to vote against the <lb />
edict of the supposed <lb />
they would. Now that the are <lb />
down and that Congress practically <lb />
consists of Speaker Reed and the <lb />
there is great rejoicing <lb />
among that thrifts class of people <lb />
who thrive on extravagant govern- <lb />
appropriations, and if one <lb />
may judge from tho number of <lb />
schemes now before Congress call- <lb />
for large amounts of money <lb />
winch seem to have the endorse- <lb />
mint of lending republicans, they <lb />
have reason for rejoicing. If only <lb />
one-fourth of the money asked for <lb />
should voted by Congress, the <lb />
Treasury would be empty. The <lb />
country may on the <lb />
House to keep it <lb />
posted on what is on if they <lb />
cannot check the proposed <lb />
Senator spoke four days on <lb />
his educational bill this week. The <lb />
opponents this measure in the <lb />
Senate have been working very <lb />
quietly to defeat it, and now they <lb />
are confidently claiming that a mas <lb />
of the Senators are pledged to <lb />
vote against it. In spite of this <lb />
claim the general impression is that <lb />
the bill will pass. <lb />
Col. Lamont, who was formerly <lb />
Mr. Cleveland's private secretary, <lb />
was Washington this week for <lb />
part a day. lie said his visit was <lb />
a business one, but lots of people <lb />
thought there might have just <lb />
a little polities mixed up with the <lb />
democratic congressional cam <lb />
committee is practically com- <lb />
and farther announcement as <lb />
to Us organization is not likely to be <lb />
made until it is definitely known <lb />
Whether Senator Gorman will ac- <lb />
cent the chairmanship com- <lb />
which is now being urged <lb />
upon him by tho party leaders. <lb />
The hearings in the Ohio ballot- <lb />
box forgeries investigation, which <lb />
w- re used by Ohio republicans to <lb />
get even with each other on old <lb />
scores, have been closed, all wit- <lb />
discharged and the commit- <lb />
tee adjourned subject to the call of <lb />
its chairman. The last hearing was <lb />
highly sensational. <lb />
a liar, and Wood stated <lb />
the forged document was prepared <lb />
and himself. <lb />
Wood has been detected in a good <lb />
many lies, but there are lots of folks <lb />
who believe he was pretty near the <lb />
truth this last statement. <lb />
How's this paternal govern- <lb />
J Bills have been in both <lb />
Houses to prohibit any be- <lb />
made in the boundaries of any <lb />
Congressional district until after <lb />
Congress shall have made the <lb />
appointment Representatives on <lb />
the of the census to be <lb />
ken this year. If Congress, or a <lb />
majority thereof, make such <lb />
Resolutions of Respect. <lb />
OF LODGE, <lb />
No. K. H. <lb />
Whereas it has pleased <lb />
God, the Supreme Dictator of the <lb />
Universe, to call from our <lb />
Lodge below to the Supreme <lb />
Lodge above beloved brother, <lb />
Samuel J. who depart- <lb />
ed this life on the day Jan., <lb />
1890, therefore be it <lb />
Resolved; that we the members of <lb />
Grifton Lodge, while deplore the <lb />
of worthy and <lb />
brother, bow in humble <lb />
to the will of the Supreme <lb />
above. <lb />
Be it further resolved, that we ten- <lb />
bis bereaved family our hearts <lb />
felt sympathy in his their sad loss <lb />
and we point them to Him who <lb />
tempers the wind to the lamb. <lb />
Be it further that we <lb />
drape our regalia charter in <lb />
mourning for the next thirty days <lb />
and that these resolutions be spread <lb />
upon our minutes and a copy be <lb />
sent to the family of our brother, <lb />
also to the Reflector <lb />
with a request to publish the same. <lb />
J. L. Tucker, <lb />
P. B. Loftin, Com. <lb />
C. L. Rountree, <lb />
Scotland Neck Democrat. <lb />
Our neighbor, <lb />
the <lb />
Endorsement. <lb />
N. C, Feb. 15th. <lb />
Reflector At a <lb />
regular meeting Alliance <lb />
No. 1340, held February the <lb />
communications of Bro. Move pub- <lb />
the Reflector of 5th <lb />
setting forth the <lb />
views of the Alliance, was read in <lb />
open Alliance and unanimously <lb />
W. M. Moore, Sec. <lb />
Items from Cox Cotton Plan- <lb />
Factory. <lb />
Editor Reflector <lb />
Miss Pattie Smith is teaching <lb />
school. <lb />
Mrs. Susan Jackson who has <lb />
been visiting her daughter, Mrs. A. <lb />
G. Cox, returned home Saturday. <lb />
Miss Dora Brown is visiting <lb />
lister, Mrs. Sophia <lb />
Misses Annie Harding and Ma- <lb />
Smith, from near <lb />
spent Saturday and Sunday with <lb />
Miss Nannie Cox. <lb />
Master Tommie Nobles met with <lb />
a very painful accident Friday by <lb />
his leg with an ax. Hope <lb />
he Will be out <lb />
Mr. K. A. addressed our <lb />
COME IN <lb />
We want to have a talk <lb />
with you and tell <lb />
you now cheap <lb />
we can sell <lb />
HARDWARE <lb />
Dixie and <lb />
Tobacco Plows, Plow <lb />
Castings. The Famous <lb />
Elmo Cook Stoves. <lb />
Give us your orders <lb />
for <lb />
TOBACCO FLUES <lb />
early and you will be <lb />
sure to get them in time <lb />
LATHAM PENDER, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Car Load of Fine <lb />
Horses <lb />
Mules, <lb />
--------Just received by <lb />
will be sold------ <lb />
CHEAP FOR CASH, <lb />
ALFRED FORBES, <lb />
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb />
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding a line of the following good <lb />
that arc not to be excelled in this market. And to be First-class and <lb />
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, GEN <lb />
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, and SHOES, LA <lb />
DIES and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING <lb />
GOODS, DOORS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS- <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb />
kinds. Gin and Mill Belting, Hay, Bock Lime, Plaster of Paris, and <lb />
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles. <lb />
HEAVY A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at <lb />
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less per cent for Cash. r rep <lb />
and Hall's Star Lye at jobbers Prices. White Lead and pure Lin- <lb />
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a cull and I guarantee <lb />
or at reasonable terms on time on <lb />
proved security. I bought my stock for <lb />
Cash and can afford to sell as cheap M <lb />
Anyone. Give me a call. <lb />
A Lively Affair. <lb />
Herald. <lb />
We learn of a marriage that <lb />
curred in Township, <lb />
county, last Sunday night the 26th, <lb />
of January. The particular, as far <lb />
as we could learn, were about as <lb />
Mr. Kelly William, a young <lb />
Greenville entered <lb />
upon a new volume. We <lb />
late Pitt county on its- <lb />
journal and our contemporary on <lb />
its liberal patronage. Such papers <lb />
as the are doing more <lb />
far North Carolina than any other <lb />
single agency. <lb />
Goldsboro Headlight. <lb />
The Reflector, <lb />
the very excellent management <lb />
of editor has entered <lb />
upon its ninth volume. It is a clean <lb />
and out-spoken paper, and the very <lb />
liberal it receives from the <lb />
citizens and Pitt conn <lb />
in general, is ample evidence of <lb />
the esteem in which it is held. <lb />
Charlotte Chronic. <lb />
The excellent weekly, the Green- <lb />
ville has entered on <lb />
its ninth volume, editor Which <lb />
ard very happily is useless <lb />
to make allusions to the political <lb />
principles of the It <lb />
has never been anything but <lb />
staunchly Democratic, and baling <lb />
fraud and corrupt ion as it does can <lb />
never be anything The Re- <lb />
is a safe journal, safe, and <lb />
withal enterprising. It ranks with <lb />
the best weeklies in the State. <lb />
Wilson Mirror. <lb />
Tho Greenville <lb />
crisp, new and brilliant, has reach <lb />
ahead of Raleigh, that place offer- man about or years of age was ed its ninth mile post of usefulness, <lb />
and a site. It does united in the holy bonds <lb />
that with the strength to Mrs. Joanna a <lb />
Raleigh Baptists, with the widow lady of about summers. <lb />
local interest that would naturally I They were married at the residence <lb />
follow the establishment of of Mr. Williams, the <lb />
. t <lb />
an institution, that city bride's father, and the crowd was so <lb />
have offered more than any other; large that the sleepers under the old <lb />
place in North Carolina and should j gentleman's dwelling gave way and <lb />
have been required to give more, the wedding party adjourned to the <lb />
to secure the location. From what; where the calamity knot was <lb />
we can learn the First tied. Several collusions occurred <lb />
church of Raleigh is fully able to during the evening between differ- <lb />
erect the buildings, and i et member of the wedding party <lb />
hare done itself credit by taking a majority of them went <lb />
a lead in this Ion ago. i and <lb />
the energetic and efficient. <lb />
management the apt and talent- <lb />
ed We rejoice at its <lb />
prosperity, it has been a bless- <lb />
to Greenville and to Pitt <lb />
and has done much towards the <lb />
material and prosper- <lb />
of that entire section. Bold, <lb />
and able, it has <lb />
convictions of its own, and never <lb />
bends the suppliant knee that thrift <lb />
may follow obsequious fawning. <lb />
Senator Moody baa introduced a <lb />
bill providing for the erection of a <lb />
post-office building ail towns of <lb />
law is no limit to what it may <lb />
lie-t do. <lb />
Representative Grimes, of <lb />
left a Washington hotel because <lb />
a was seated at the same <lb />
with him. Public opinion here <lb />
says Mr. Grimes did right. <lb />
Representative bill <lb />
the Postmaster General <lb />
to erect post-office buildings in ail <lb />
towns where the gross receipts ex <lb />
a year is warmly <lb />
proved by Mr. <lb />
Senator Pierce has introduced a <lb />
bill an agricultural commission <lb />
to Investigate the causes for the <lb />
the present unsatisfactory condition <lb />
agricultural interest. <lb />
The Post master wants a <lb />
pORtal telegraph system, embracing <lb />
those cities having the free delivery <lb />
system, to be established at once. <lb />
He made a long argument its fa- <lb />
Alliance at Prosperity, on the night <lb />
of the 14th inst. Our Alliance <lb />
baldly know how to thank <lb />
Mr. for the brave noble <lb />
way that he has contended the <lb />
Alliance cause of late. <lb />
Our people met last Monday <lb />
night and organized a debating so- <lb />
they will meet again to-night. <lb />
is, has the great- <lb />
est influence the mind of man <lb />
women or money <lb />
J. L. of Washing- <lb />
ton, tilled his at Red <lb />
Oak last Sunday. The brethren <lb />
will secure his services for this year <lb />
a-s pastor of their church. Rev. <lb />
R. W. Stancill, State Evangelist <lb />
the Disciple denomination, has an <lb />
appointment there for the 3rd Sun. <lb />
day Match. <lb />
Feb. b, 1890. <lb />
IN <lb />
Died, at the residence of her son-in- <lb />
law. A. O, Gaylord, In Plymouth, X. C. <lb />
Mrs. Charlotte 79th <lb />
year of her age. was the sister of <lb />
Gov. Silas of Missouri, the <lb />
mother of Mrs. Thomas J. Jams, Mrs. <lb />
of Greenville, of Dr. L. A. <lb />
and Rev. C. J. <lb />
grandmother of Mrs L. C. Latham. <lb />
Faithful in everything, as a friend, as <lb />
a a wife, as a mother, Christian, the <lb />
active of life all done. She <lb />
to Plymouth in 1830, and the peaceful <lb />
ebbed to its among the <lb />
comforts home of her youngest <lb />
till early on February <lb />
from the awakening world, she took the <lb />
Rings of the morning and passed beyond <lb />
the bounds of the sea. <lb />
The Lord of the Infinite had said to its <lb />
dark waters, Be and had <lb />
promised -My hand shall lead thee, <lb />
my right hand hold <lb />
On that promise her course has bean <lb />
fashioned, and day by day, here a little <lb />
and there a little, her Christian <lb />
character which even here <lb />
showed the life Hues of immortality. <lb />
This makes the of those <lb />
beautiful lives, to whom the world owes <lb />
so much and of whom It knows so little. <lb />
The blessed influences of gentleness <lb />
one true, loving, human <lb />
soul on an into so many <lb />
lives, saving them to sweetness and <lb />
light from the dark and bitter turmoil of <lb />
existence. <lb />
Our ideas, of what is noblest and <lb />
before the committee best, are often but poor ghosts, and it is <lb />
offices this week, lie believes <lb />
would be a great convenience <lb />
that it would be self <lb />
tailing. <lb />
Col- <lb />
is here Opposing Secretary <lb />
W silver bill. House <lb />
in charge of the bill has <lb />
incited Mr. to appear be- <lb />
fore it submit his views. <lb />
big republican editor has <lb />
been provided for by the <lb />
Charles Emory Smith, <lb />
tor of the Philadelphia Press goes to <lb />
Bosnia as minister. <lb />
Presidential proclamation on <lb />
opening Sioux reservations in <lb />
South Dakota, to settlement, was <lb />
sent out from the House <lb />
Monday afternoon. <lb />
The <lb />
can Senators did not make much of <lb />
a showing when it came to a vote <lb />
on the confirmation of Mr. Morgan, <lb />
Commissioner of Indian affairs. <lb />
Only two of them voted against the <lb />
confirmation. <lb />
The leaders in the,. <lb />
Route are now patiently waiting to dealers the Story will <lb />
. , , sent to any four months for <lb />
ascertain what the one Dollar, containing Nellie <lb />
republicans propose adopting now Great Story. <lb />
. l, k <lb />
that they have everything their, and <lb />
an beery. H. T. <lb />
LOW TARIFF <lb />
FACTORY. <lb />
mi TARIFF ON <lb />
For we have free now. Ah <lb />
you are free to buy where you please, foul <lb />
if want to save money yon come to <lb />
my Factory on 4th street, rear of J. B. <lb />
Cherry For convenience w <lb />
have an entrance through II. F. <lb />
Keel's Stables on 3rd street. lean give <lb />
That you ever had in your life tor <lb />
to less money than any one <lb />
else in the county can Rive you. Why <lb />
for my expenses are less and I pay th <lb />
spot cash for goods and save the dis- <lb />
counts, and if yon don't believe it you <lb />
come and see. Having hail IS years <lb />
experience In the business I guarantee <lb />
perfect satisfaction or no charge. Be- <lb />
pairing a specialty. Don't forget the <lb />
place 4th street rear J. B. Cherry <lb />
A. <lb />
Greenville, <lb />
The <lb />
Forbes, Greenville, <lb />
J. B. Cherry, <lb />
J. S. <lb />
N. at. <lb />
R. F. Jokes, Ag<lb />
The People's Line for travel on <lb />
River. , , , <lb />
The Steamer is the finest <lb />
and quickest on the river. She. bat <lb />
been thoroughly repaired, <lb />
and painted. <lb />
Fitted up specially for the com fort, ac- <lb />
and convenience of Ladies. <lb />
POUTS OFFICERS <lb />
A Table furnished With <lb />
best the market affords. <lb />
A trip on the Steamer is <lb />
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb />
Leaves Washington Monday. Wednesday <lb />
and Friday at o'clock, a. m. <lb />
Leaves Tuesday, Thursday <lb />
and Saturday at i o'clock. A. M. <lb />
Freights received daily and through <lb />
Bill; Lading given to all points. <lb />
. J. <lb />
Greenville. N. O. <lb />
1890. <lb />
J. L. SUGG, <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N- C <lb />
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
AM AGENT TOE A FIRST-CLASS PROOF SAFE. <lb />
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb />
THE <lb />
D. Williamson, <lb />
SUCCESSOR TO JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Has Moved to One Door North of Court House. <lb />
WILL CONTINUE THE MANUFACTURE OF <lb />
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb />
My Factory is well equipped with the boat put up nothing <lb />
but first -CLASS work. We keep up with the times improved <lb />
Best material used in all work. All styles of Springs are use. you can select from <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King. <lb />
Also keep on hand a full lie of <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb />
the year round, which we will sell as LOW as the lowest. <lb />
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb />
Thanking the people of this and surrounding for past favor hope <lb />
merit a continuance of the same. <lb />
E. A. TAFT, <lb />
Wishes to inform his friends and public generally that he has <lb />
bought out the establishment of T. It. Cherry, and with <lb />
new stock added is now prepared to furnish the very best <lb />
GROCERIES, PROVISIONS AND FAMILY SUPPLIES <lb />
At prices in keeping with the haul times. I keep Flour, <lb />
Meat, Lard, Molasses, Confections. Canned Goods, Crockery. <lb />
Glassware, Tobacco, Snuff, <lb />
Orange Syrup is the best Molasses in this market. <lb />
Yon are invited to call. Remember the place, at Cherry's stand. <lb />
11-. W-IT., <lb />
J. B. CHERRY. <lb />
J. R. <lb />
J. G. <lb />
CHERRY CO. <lb />
only when they are made flash, be- <lb />
come a power, and heart yields to lie art. <lb />
This is the central truth of Christianity. <lb />
Mrs. from the first, was en- <lb />
with the true wisdom to sec to <lb />
use the real value of the world, and to <lb />
choose that imperishably good <lb />
now cannot be taken away from her. It <lb />
is the unspeakable comfort of those, <lb />
whose love yearns lier in helpless <lb />
but unquestioning trust, that her new <lb />
life is as sure as the of Ages. <lb />
lief example Is precious to them, <lb />
because of the length of days- <lb />
That teaches, what else can <lb />
matter how <lb />
to the end, the crown of all <lb />
things. It Is the proof, all else is but <lb />
promise; the perfect fruit the <lb />
splendid flower; no failure, no short <lb />
coming ; the absolute end, nothing but <lb />
full and fair. Tho life is finished and <lb />
enters into rest without toil, without <lb />
care, without fear. <lb />
twilight at set of sun, <lb />
Beautiful goal with race well run, <lb />
rest with work we'd <lb />
X. <lb />
Ely- <lb />
wonderful story in the <lb />
Story i tho talk of the <lb />
day. In towns t here are no news <lb />
EAST CAROLINA <lb />
mi INDUSTRIAL <lb />
NEW N. C. <lb />
Monday. <lb />
Friday and Saturday, <lb />
AND THAN <lb />
The Most Attractive Fair of the <lb />
kind Ever Held. <lb />
LIFE <lb />
OF THE <lb />
DAVIS, <lb />
MRS. DAVIS. <lb />
TO BE SOLD BY ONLY <lb />
The prospectus complete outfit <lb />
for canvassing will be ready <lb />
Agents Territory <lb />
this great work will please <lb />
as soon as possible, the publishers. <lb />
COMPANY, <lb />
18-22 Bast 18th Street. NEW <lb />
Have again come to claim your attention and solicit your esteemed patronage <lb />
do not claim that we have the largest and best Stock east the <lb />
Mountains, but we no say that we are to the front <lb />
--------with a specially selected line of-------- <lb />
Suited to the want of a large of customers. We are In full with <lb />
the hard times and can and will make low cash prices to all who favor us with <lb />
their patronage. Look down this column and see if we cannot interest you. We <lb />
are better prepared than ever before to serve yon. We have in stock to-day <lb />
a line of <lb />
Embracing and Trimmings, Gingham and Calicoes. <lb />
and Suitings, Piece Goods and for Men's and Boy's Suits. Homespuns, <lb />
Sheetings, Bleached and Unbleached Domestics, Canton Flannels and Bed Ticking. <lb />
Boots and Shoes. <lb />
Men. Women. Boys. Misses and Children, at prices that will cause the poor to <lb />
rejoice, the hearts of all will be made glad who buy Boots and Shoes from us, <lb />
why because we sell low and give the worth. A full f <lb />
and Goods that will delight the hearts of the young and old. <lb />
HATS and CAPS for men. boys and children. II WAKE, in this line we <lb />
you a stock as complete as the farmer or mechanic can wish. We make a specialty <lb />
of Steel and guarantee them to be the best made. <lb />
Groceries. <lb />
Which we are selling at rock bottom prices, not because we are forced to do so <lb />
but we take pleasure in offering and selling low down. Can we interest you here <lb />
if so come in and examine our stock of Sugar. Molasses. Coffee, Tea. Soaps, both <lb />
Toilet and Laundry, Lye, Matches, Starch, Rice. Meats of different kinds, Flour <lb />
which we arc now buying from first lands and can save yon money if you call and <lb />
I examine before buying elsewhere, Tobacco and Snuff. <lb />
Headquarters for Furniture. <lb />
Of which we carry a line not to lie excelled in this market, such as Suits <lb />
Bureaus, Double and Single Bedsteads, Cots. Bed Springs and <lb />
Mattresses, Children's Cradles and Beds, Chairs of different kinds and varieties, <lb />
all to bard times and short crops. Anything that you want in this lino If <lb />
have not got It in stock we will make a special order for you, as we have <lb />
from several of the best furniture houses in the United States and guarantee <lb />
as to prices. Wood and Willow wave. Crockery, Glassware, Lamps, Has- <lb />
Bridles and Cellars. Cart Saddles. Whips Horse Millinery. Trunks, <lb />
Valises and Traveling <lb />
Life is too short to keep on telling what have and can do. But wishing <lb />
hind you all health and prosperity and giving man. woman and child who cornea <lb />
G A. Stancill others, coital to Greenville a cordial invitation to come and examine our <lb />
about six hundred and twenty-six . ti <lb />
acres more or less, and being all woods <lb />
land, to satisfy an execution In hands s-a- n 4-vs-v <lb />
for collection against T. J. Stancill and I Q <lb />
which has been levied on said land as J V I V a <lb />
N. O. <lb />
Dy W. J. W. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
On Wednesday the 10th day of March <lb />
A. D. 1800. will sell at the Court House <lb />
door in the town Greenville to the <lb />
highest bidder cash one tract of <lb />
land in Pitt county containing about <lb />
acres and bounded as follows Situated <lb />
in Township, on the East side of <lb />
the public road leading from Gum <lb />
Swamp Church to Bethel, and being tho <lb />
excess of the homestead of T. J. Stancill. <lb />
urn<lb />
j.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018975_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
.<lb />
Column <lb />
Attractive <lb />
GOOD NEWS <lb />
-FOR THE- <lb />
DIES <lb />
A mammoth display of <lb />
THE <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
L Sparks <lb />
Imported for us direct <lb />
from Switzerland. <lb />
This assortment is com- <lb />
posed of many new <lb />
and rare novel- <lb />
ties in <lb />
Hamburg's, Swiss, <lb />
Irish Point, <lb />
and Van Dyke Edging, <lb />
Allovers, <lb />
Edgings, <lb />
Etc. <lb />
Col ton <lb />
Dec, M. New <lb />
Seed at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Lent. <lb />
One dollar a Solid Leather <lb />
Ladies Shoe at j. B. Cherry Go's. <lb />
Exodus all quiet again. <lb />
Sow Oats early. bushels <lb />
cheap, at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
To-day the beginning of Lent. <lb />
Arrived on the Boss Famous <lb />
Milk Biscuit at Old Brick Store- <lb />
us from puns. <lb />
One dollar buys Whole. Stock <lb />
Mans Shoe at J. B. Go's <lb />
Good <lb />
Business at the bank moves light <lb />
on. <lb />
The finest loaf of bread ever ate <lb />
was made of Point Lace Flour, at <lb />
toe Store. <lb />
There are plenty of plum trees in <lb />
bloom. <lb />
Seed Potatoes, five <lb />
varieties, cheap, at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
Oysters have been BUM the last <lb />
few weeks. <lb />
These goods being <lb />
imported direct to us <lb />
are bought without <lb />
profit and <lb />
we prices to <lb />
be per cent, cheaper <lb />
than usual. <lb />
Deeds, Mortgages and <lb />
Liens sale at this office. <lb />
It is getting time the lei <lb />
odor to put in. <lb />
designs Job Printing <lb />
at the office. <lb />
The skimmers tn shad <lb />
with dip nets. <lb />
The masonry work at the <lb />
bridge well. <lb />
per lb Sweet Scotch <lb />
Snuff. lb hold Pitt Co., which <lb />
is a of its superiority, at <lb />
the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Saturday is the anniversary of <lb />
Washington's birthday. <lb />
Tobacco re <lb />
a quantity of Tobacco Cloth <lb />
for Covering Tobacco Beds at <lb />
M It. Lang. <lb />
The of the days <lb />
becomes perceptible. <lb />
Once more the rush has <lb />
commenced at Higgs <lb />
Leader of Low <lb />
Prices. <lb />
The moon changed at minutes <lb />
past o o'clock this morning. <lb />
The office can sell <lb />
you good envelopes at a pack. <lb />
There was another lain last Fri- <lb />
day morning but it cleared <lb />
noon. <lb />
A nice line visiting cards, plain, <lb />
bevel and gilt, just received at this <lb />
office. <lb />
A man came in the <lb />
office, last Friday, and paid 87.50 <lb />
for five <lb />
The rise in the river last week <lb />
brought a run of shad up, and the <lb />
made right good <lb />
Next Monday the <lb />
Fair begins. Don't forget that it <lb />
will be well worth going to see. <lb />
Several car-loads of stone with <lb />
which to cap the brick piers of the <lb />
railroad bridge, arrived at the depot <lb />
last week. <lb />
All the <lb />
new imported <lb />
and at Higgs Sp <lb />
Mini ford. <lb />
We hear that Mr. John Elks, of <lb />
Black Jack, has a pig months old <lb />
which weighs pounds. It is <lb />
potted stock. <lb />
The boys were on the rampage <lb />
Friday night, taking around comic <lb />
raising a racket and <lb />
tun generally. <lb />
. fourth page under heading <lb />
legal notices will be found an <lb />
of land sale by B. s. <lb />
Sheppard, Administrator. <lb />
You can get Plaids and <lb />
bleached and unbleached <lb />
Domestics at cents at <lb />
Higgs Sf <lb />
Head our market report to-day. <lb />
more will be <lb />
paid to these reports and they will <lb />
be corrected every week. <lb />
The County Sunday School Con- <lb />
will have an interesting <lb />
the Court House to-day. <lb />
There should be a large attendance. <lb />
We hear that a little girl of Mr. <lb />
Forbes, living about four miles <lb />
from town, had one of her thighs <lb />
broken recently by a wagon r mining <lb />
over her. <lb />
Mrs. J. returned from <lb />
Baltimore last week. <lb />
Col. Skinner went to Wash <lb />
City last week. <lb />
Mr. J. J. Cherry, Jr., was in Nor- <lb />
folk last week on <lb />
Dr. Harmon is in Tarboro now, we <lb />
see from the papers of that town. <lb />
Messrs. H. F. Keel and W. B. <lb />
James returned last night from <lb />
hear that the wile of Mr. <lb />
Stanley Brown, of Martin county, <lb />
died last week. <lb />
Mr. D. B. Evans, of this town, <lb />
attended the Presbytery <lb />
in Raleigh, last week. <lb />
Mrs. M. M. Nelson left Monday <lb />
Philadelphia to spend a month <lb />
with her sister, Mrs. J. W. Goodwin. <lb />
Rev. N. Harding, of Washington, <lb />
preached the Episcopal Church <lb />
here morning and night. <lb />
Master George Nelson left Friday <lb />
to visit his Mrs. Cleve, in New <lb />
He will tie absent several <lb />
weeks. <lb />
Rev J. L. Win Bald, of <lb />
was in to us Saturday and <lb />
Monday. He preached Sunday at <lb />
Red Oak. <lb />
Mr. J. C. has moved his <lb />
family to the farm of his brother, <lb />
about nine miles above <lb />
He will engage both f <lb />
and farming. <lb />
Judge Spier Whitaker spent Sat- <lb />
night and part of Sunday in j <lb />
Greenville, at Hotel <lb />
Harried. <lb />
In the Baptist Church Hamil- <lb />
ton, N. G, on Wednesday, Feb. <lb />
12th, Capt J. H. Williamson and <lb />
Mi.-s Lizzie were married, <lb />
Rev. Geo. J. officiating. <lb />
Capt. Williamson is conductor on <lb />
Hamilton and Tarboro railroad. <lb />
We see in the Kinston Free Press <lb />
that Miss Ellis, daughter of <lb />
Mr. J. B. Ellis, who was formerly a <lb />
citizen of Greenville, was married <lb />
the 5th inst., C. W. Crab- <lb />
tree. <lb />
Write Sooner. <lb />
In last Tuesday nights mail the <lb />
Reflector received three letters <lb />
containing articles that the writers <lb />
desired printed in Wednesday room- <lb />
from Washington, <lb />
one from Bethel and one from <lb />
As we go to press on <lb />
evenings, articles coming by <lb />
that mail are always too late. We <lb />
are glad to receive items any <lb />
section for publication, but of course <lb />
cannot publish them when they <lb />
come late. <lb />
Stray Needle- <lb />
Mr. Cornelius Stephen- a pig <lb />
that he was trying to fat <lb />
for slaughter, some reason <lb />
the pig eat but very little and <lb />
did not increase in size. <lb />
he decided to kill the pig. <lb />
The head the pig was cooked and <lb />
while the tongue Mr. V. L. <lb />
Stephens found nearly a whole <lb />
in it. The inference is that the <lb />
pig in someday got the needle in <lb />
his and in attempting to eat <lb />
the piercing cause <lb />
such as to make him abandon <lb />
the It is a thing <lb />
that Mr. Stephens did not swallow <lb />
the needle while eating the tongue. <lb />
Tie Boys in Cravat;. <lb />
Billie returns his sweetest thanks <lb />
to Guss the beautiful scarf and <lb />
handsome pin brought him from <lb />
New York. <lb />
Jimmie wishes to ex- <lb />
tend bis thanks to the clever clerk <lb />
of H. Morris Bros., Mr. Willie <lb />
for a beautiful neck <lb />
presented him on Saturday. <lb />
The returns thanks to <lb />
Mr. C. L. for a beautiful <lb />
cravat. Says Claude. <lb />
was on the way to Washington to ; Your <lb />
hold a special term or Court. . , , . <lb />
I sends us more interesting <lb />
Mr. W. B. Brown of the firm of i items from Cox Cotton Planter <lb />
Brown Hooker, spent last week I this weeR. Why cannot other <lb />
in Northern market selecting I ions of the county send in items <lb />
new goods their spring and sum- also They not make your <lb />
mer trade. He will return this <lb />
week. <lb />
Mr. G. L. returned <lb />
Saturday night from his visit to <lb />
New York. He reports a pleasant <lb />
trip and brings back the glad news <lb />
that his people are all ex- <lb />
health. <lb />
Mr. J. M. Latham, a member of <lb />
the firm of Pender. has <lb />
removed his family from Goldsboro <lb />
to Greenville. They occupy the <lb />
dwelling belonging to Mr. Charles <lb />
Skinner in <lb />
Mrs. J. T. Williams has been <lb />
sick the past week, her <lb />
condition causing anxiety <lb />
her many friends. It is the <lb />
earnest hope of all that her health <lb />
may restored. <lb />
Mr. of the <lb />
largest best farmers of Greene <lb />
was in to see us the other <lb />
day. He says the is not <lb />
felt his section and that the far- <lb />
have all the labor they need. <lb />
Mr. C, C left here about <lb />
a week ago for the West. He went <lb />
to Memphis secured a situation <lb />
county paper more interesting but <lb />
bring your section before the public <lb />
and attract the attention of <lb />
to it. There is nothing like <lb />
advertising a section, and <lb />
a good way to do it is to have <lb />
regular items in your paper. <lb />
It will help any community to do <lb />
this. <lb />
Horses. <lb />
Mr. H. F. Keel, accompanied by <lb />
Mr. W. B. James, went to Richmond <lb />
last week to buy a lot of horses and <lb />
mules for this market. Mr. Keel is <lb />
one of the stock there is <lb />
in the county and had long ex- <lb />
in the business. He <lb />
what of horses suit the people <lb />
here and he none but what ate <lb />
good and reliable. He expected to <lb />
return last night with a car load <lb />
and those who go to his stables now <lb />
can see some nice stock. It pays to <lb />
buy good horses and Henry Keel <lb />
keeps that <lb />
Is He in Greenville <lb />
The Henderson Gold Leaf <lb />
is the man who en- <lb />
in a railroad office at per a store, runs his fingers into <lb />
as night shipping clerk. We are <lb />
pleased to know that he is well <lb />
pleaded is doing <lb />
Langley in this comity, <lb />
has been discontinued. <lb />
The Reflector thanks Messrs. <lb />
F. C. Harding and E. A. Move, Jr., <lb />
for an invitation to the celebration <lb />
of Washington's birthday at the <lb />
University of North Carolina, to be <lb />
held next Saturday morning. <lb />
People here were somewhat <lb />
in the of <lb />
Williams, expecting to see a <lb />
man who could at least make a pass <lb />
able presentment. His bearing in <lb />
Greenville was very much that of a <lb />
besotted rough. <lb />
every sugar barrel, then goes to the <lb />
cheese and cuts off a slice then as <lb />
a matter of course must have a few <lb />
crackers, perhaps before he <lb />
makes his mind to a <lb />
quartet's worth, he has eaten up the <lb />
profits on more than twice that <lb />
These characters are very <lb />
annoying to business men. Have <lb />
you never observed one of them at <lb />
The last of the Salisbury <lb />
are out. an- <lb />
the betrothal of Miss Em- <lb />
ma Homer, of Iowa, to <lb />
Mr. Isidore of <lb />
bury. Mr. Lichtenstein is a <lb />
of the firm of <lb />
one of our largest <lb />
tile houses, and he is one among <lb />
Two large were tied the most popular for our <lb />
up just below the bridge. Sunday. Up to two years ago this firm did <lb />
They come from the vicinity of <lb />
Tarboro and were being carried to <lb />
the mills at Washington. Rafting <lb />
logs miles may seem a long dis- <lb />
but it is done here on Tar <lb />
River. <lb />
The complimentary mention of <lb />
the Reflector made by our ex- <lb />
changes, as published elsewhere, <lb />
ought to be to the <lb />
people of Pitt county. From this <lb />
they can judge what esteem their <lb />
county paper is held by its <lb />
Our young friend Harris, <lb />
has purchased the commission bus- <lb />
of Mr. E. and will <lb />
conduct the same. He is <lb />
an enterprising man of ex- <lb />
business qualifications and <lb />
deserves a liberal patronage. He <lb />
will handle hay. grain and fertilizer. <lb />
Call and see the <lb />
grandest display in this <lb />
line ever shown in <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
yards Tobacco <lb />
Cloth for covering to- <lb />
just re- <lb />
and will be sold <lb />
cheap. <lb />
M. R. LANG, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
They are just lovely. <lb />
Those cents Calicoes at <lb />
Higgs Sr <lb />
The New people are using <lb />
every effort to make their <lb />
a grand success. It opens Feb <lb />
the 24th and will continue the <lb />
entire week. <lb />
the legal notice bead on <lb />
fourth page will be found two land <lb />
sale advertisements by Sheriff Tuck- <lb />
one to satisfy executions against <lb />
R. J. Wilson, the other against G. <lb />
A. <lb />
Position man of <lb />
eight years experience in <lb />
per and job desires a position <lb />
as compositor. Strictly temperate. <lb />
Address Reflector, <lb />
Greenville, N C. <lb />
Prof. Memory is <lb />
creating greater interest than ever <lb />
all parts country, and per- <lb />
sons wishing to improve their <lb />
should send for his <lb />
free as in another column. <lb />
Mr. Allen of the <lb />
Riverside brought a <lb />
box of beautiful hyacinths to the <lb />
Reflector office, other day. <lb />
They were for our better this <lb />
time Jut we reaped a toll measure <lb />
of from them and retain <lb />
thanks, all <lb />
Seed. <lb />
For several years the writer has <lb />
been a regular of James Vick's <lb />
seeds, and after testing them <lb />
find that there are none bet- <lb />
Last week he sent another <lb />
supply for the coming season and <lb />
we feel satisfied that vegetable <lb />
patch will show for itself later <lb />
If some of our dealers handle <lb />
Vick's seeds would be to <lb />
give to purchasers. <lb />
business in Greenville and was <lb />
popular here. Mr. <lb />
stein has a large number of friends <lb />
in the community who will <lb />
him upon bis approaching <lb />
nuptials. <lb />
The o of Deacons which <lb />
was announced to take place at the <lb />
Baptist Church last Wednesday <lb />
t was postponed until to night <lb />
because of lateness of tram <lb />
which prevented the coming of Rev. <lb />
Mr. Hundley, who was to assist in <lb />
the service. The ordination will <lb />
take place to night and Revs. <lb />
Hundley and will both be <lb />
present to assist Rev. Mr. Hunter. <lb />
Attempted <lb />
A man who came in town <lb />
attempted to take his life <lb />
by drinking laudanum. He asked <lb />
for a glass of water in a bar-room, <lb />
held it down below the counter, <lb />
poured something in it drank <lb />
it This peculiar action caused the <lb />
bar-keeper to go around counter <lb />
where be found a bottle that had <lb />
contained bar keep- <lb />
gave the alarm when friends <lb />
took the man and carried him <lb />
to the office of <lb />
Brown set to work to <lb />
effects of drag. The only <lb />
He <lb />
There was a in Guard <lb />
on named j <lb />
who was lodged there on Sat-1 <lb />
for being drunk on the street, j <lb />
Sunday a large crowd having made <lb />
up the cost against him, which was j <lb />
hut little over to re j <lb />
lease the When be heard j <lb />
the large crowd coming up the steps I <lb />
it scared him and they told him <lb />
jokingly that had come to lynch <lb />
him but not keeping him <lb />
long, the crowd told him what they <lb />
had done that he most <lb />
of When struck the <lb />
ground be let as the boys <lb />
put it the <lb />
Nothing has been said in aria <lb />
about it sooner, as we wanted to <lb />
all plans first, but by next <lb />
week i he Reflector hopes to have <lb />
its office in new quarters. It is our <lb />
intention to begin moving today <lb />
just as soon as this issue be <lb />
mailed. We are across <lb />
the street to the store lately <lb />
pied by Mr. E. C. In these <lb />
new quarters we propose to have <lb />
our business office and the telegraph <lb />
office a portion of the front of the <lb />
building and carry on the printing <lb />
department in the rear of the same. <lb />
This change will make us still more <lb />
convenient to business and we hope <lb />
all friends will call. <lb />
Late Trains- <lb />
Trains were late again nearly <lb />
night last week. The trouble <lb />
now seems to be that the shifting <lb />
engine that was on the yard at Tar- <lb />
has-been taken away leaving <lb />
the regular engine all the work of <lb />
up to do. Of <lb />
course this, consumes more or less <lb />
time and puts that train behind, <lb />
necessitating the waiting of the <lb />
Scotland Neck Greenville train at <lb />
the junction for it. For. sometime <lb />
now the to Greenville <lb />
would not have behind had it <lb />
not been for waiting at the junction <lb />
for Tarboro tram. The shift- <lb />
should be put back. <lb />
and tho Exodus. <lb />
Williams, the leader <lb />
of the emigration movement, has <lb />
actually Greenville with <lb />
his presence, but his coming seemed <lb />
to somewhat of a necessity so <lb />
far as he was individually concerns <lb />
ed. We hear that he was making <lb />
himself somewhat obnoxious around <lb />
Scotland Neck and was waited on <lb />
by some, of the citizens who inform- <lb />
ed him that he must leave the town <lb />
or take the consequences. i <lb />
to the leaving part of the <lb />
program, and being no train <lb />
the march orders were given <lb />
him except the one coming to <lb />
Greenville, this way he came Fri- <lb />
day evening. But he managed to <lb />
turn his trip here into a <lb />
one and took away a few <lb />
Saturday morning. The last <lb />
told of the workings of <lb />
Williams and George Sim- <lb />
mons toward getting <lb />
oft and about a lot I hem being <lb />
camped at the depot waiting the <lb />
train. They stayed there from Mon- <lb />
day morning until Saturday <lb />
Thursday reached <lb />
Scotland Neck and sent another <lb />
down here to help Simmons <lb />
get off the crowd, two coaches com <lb />
them. But seem <lb />
ed to forget the fact that it took <lb />
money to move folks and sent none <lb />
down here to pay fan-. <lb />
morning there was a rush of <lb />
to the depot to see the crowd <lb />
off to promised For an <lb />
hour or two before train time <lb />
were bidding each other good bye <lb />
amid great lamentations as <lb />
eighty big and little who <lb />
thought l hey were going away, <lb />
boarded the cars knew <lb />
not where. But when the hour for <lb />
arrived, Agent Moore <lb />
informed Capt. Whitaker that no <lb />
had been paid he ad <lb />
better clear his train and leave. <lb />
Whitaker signaled Engineer <lb />
Smith to move his to the side <lb />
track, and when the cars moved as <lb />
many heads as could get out the <lb />
windows began yelling good bye. <lb />
and shouting. This scene changed <lb />
when the train stopped and Capt. <lb />
Whitaker through the cars <lb />
telling them they must get off as no <lb />
one had paid their fare. train <lb />
out leaving a lot of <lb />
some of them mad. <lb />
Their spirits revived however, when <lb />
they found out was here <lb />
Friday night, hut lie took only <lb />
all told, away with him Saturday <lb />
and had to pay lull fare <lb />
for them. So the exodus <lb />
not hurt this section, as that <lb />
could be easily spared. The <lb />
Scotland Neck people made it so hot <lb />
for Williams he not take <lb />
any from there. Most of <lb />
who left had hang- <lb />
around the depot on <lb />
nearly a week, and Capt. Whit- <lb />
tells Williams left them at <lb />
two or three days <lb />
moving them on. <lb />
CHEAP CASH <lb />
At Harry Skinner Co's Old Stand. <lb />
-DEALERS IN- <lb />
and <lb />
GROCERIES. <lb />
We shall always carry a complete stock of First Class Goods. <lb />
Nothing Shoddy. <lb />
I shall be glad to have my old friends and customers to <lb />
see us, and assure them that we can sell them goods <lb />
For <lb />
Give us a trial and be convinced that the way to buy goods is for <lb />
the spot cash. <lb />
JOHN S. CONGLETON. <lb />
N. C., January, 1890. <lb />
WILEY BROWN. <lb />
JAMES BROWN. <lb />
NEW FIRM <lb />
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in <lb />
STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES. <lb />
Meat and <lb />
GREENVILLE. <lb />
Has in flock mid to arrive <lb />
Car Load Seed Oats. <lb />
Car Load Rib Side Meat. <lb />
Car Load St. Louis Flour, in all <lb />
grades. <lb />
Heavy Mess Pork. <lb />
Granulated Sugar. <lb />
Sugar. <lb />
Gail Ax Snuff, all <lb />
kinds. <lb />
Rail Road Mills Snuff. <lb />
Rico Molasses. <lb />
II <lb />
Tubs Boston Lard. <lb />
Cases Star Lye. <lb />
Gross Matches. <lb />
Also full line <lb />
Starch, Tobacco, Cyan, Cake. Crack- <lb />
Candies, Canned Goods, Wrapping; <lb />
Paper Sacks, <lb />
Special prices given to the wholesale <lb />
trade on large quantities of the <lb />
goods. <lb />
J. A. ANDREWS. <lb />
Washington <lb />
Engines and Boilers. <lb />
All sizes and styles commonly used. <lb />
At R. Williams Son's Old Stand. <lb />
purchased the entire stock of---- <lb />
Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, <lb />
Of Little, House Bro., we are determined to dispose of them at <lb />
VERY LOW PRICES. <lb />
We do propose to sell at cost or below but by buying <lb />
at a discount we can afford to sell fit such prices that will astonish <lb />
you. <lb />
MILLS, <lb />
Circular and Shingle Saws, <lb />
Rubber and Leather Belting, <lb />
Shafting, Pulleys, <lb />
la tact anything In the machine line. <lb />
We represent the standard <lb />
era of the land and can sell u low as <lb />
the lowest and on better terms. <lb />
Write for terms and prices. <lb />
mil <lb />
O. K. STILLEY. Manager <lb />
Washington, N. C. <lb />
This is no Humbug. See before buying. <lb />
Pit; v-o. N C <lb />
C C<lb />
T. H. GILLIAM. <lb />
Co. <lb />
Gob Gilliam, <lb />
Cotton Factors,<lb />
i i <lb />
-AND-<lb />
Next door to F. C. Glenn. I have opened a Grocer <lb />
--------will keep on hand n line line of------- <lb />
Store and <lb />
Meat. Sugar. Oil. <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
musses, u <lb />
Candies, Crackers, Tobacco. Cigars, Apples, <lb />
Canned Goods and t kept <lb />
grocery store, as well as Tinware. Crockery, Wood and <lb />
Willow Ware, Cull and see us. Goods delivered any <lb />
where in town. <lb />
J. J. CHERRY. Greenville, X. C <lb />
INTERESTING INFORMATION <lb />
Thai Man Stephens <lb />
-WHO KEEPS SUCH A ASSORTMENT OF- <lb />
We have had many years ex- <lb />
at the business and are <lb />
prepared to handle Cotton to <lb />
the advantage of shippers.<lb />
r- <lb />
GREENVILLE MARKET. <lb />
by M. <lb />
Wholesale and Retail Grocer, <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
CONFECTIONS AND FRUITS, <lb />
Says there is never any doubt of his giving yon entire satisfaction <lb />
if yon will give him a call when needing goods in his line. <lb />
He keeps Nice Goods. Fresh Goods and Cheap Goods. He also <lb />
keeps the best, Cigars and Cigarettes. Remember the place. <lb />
Grocer. Confectioner and Fruiterer. <lb />
All business entrusted to our <lb />
hands will receive prompt and <lb />
care Till <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875.<lb />
Mess Pork, <lb />
Bulk Sides. <lb />
Hulk Shoulders, <lb />
Sides, <lb />
Bacon Shoulders, <lb />
Tin County Ham, <lb />
Sugar Cured Ham, <lb />
Flour, <lb />
Coffee. <lb />
Brown <lb />
Granulated Sugar. <lb />
Syrup and Molasses. <lb />
Tobacco, <lb />
Snuff, <lb />
Laid, <lb />
Butter, <lb />
Meal. <lb />
Corn. <lb />
Bags. <lb />
Hides. . <lb />
Star Lye, <lb />
Cotton, <lb />
Dr. <lb />
Wilson, If. O, Jan. <lb />
This is to certify that Dr. D. S. <lb />
Harmon several weeks <lb />
Wilson, N. C, during which time he <lb />
met with great success in his <lb />
of fitting eye glasses for a <lb />
large number of people who have <lb />
had great difficulty in securing <lb />
spectacles which thoroughly <lb />
died defective eyesight. Es <lb />
was this th case with my <lb />
wile who has spent considerable <lb />
money in securing the proper lens <lb />
to suit her case. Dr- Harmon found <lb />
it necessary to make glasses to <lb />
her eyes and alter five weeks <lb />
trial she declares that cannot <lb />
be for so great <lb />
relief to by reason thereof. <lb />
B. F- <lb />
he gave for the act Dr. Harmon is now at Far- <lb />
to 11.75 <lb />
to Hi <lb />
to <lb />
to 5.50 <lb />
to M <lb />
to <lb />
MS <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
CO to <lb />
to <lb />
3.75 <lb />
to <lb />
3.40 <lb />
H, <lb />
cm. TO<lb />
-AND DEALER IN----- <lb />
mi <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD BRICK STOKE. <lb />
MERCHANTS BUY- <lb />
L year's supplies will <lb />
their interest to get our prices before <lb />
here. is complete <lb />
in all its brandies. <lb />
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS, <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb />
TEAS, <lb />
always at Lowest Market Prices. <lb />
we direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A com- <lb />
of <lb />
Notice. <lb />
To White School <lb />
am school Committeemen of <lb />
Pitt County. <lb />
Alderman, by authority of the <lb />
Law of the State, will hold an <lb />
Institute White Teachers at the <lb />
Court House in the town of Greenville <lb />
Monday March 3rd, 1800. This <lb />
will continue one week. There <lb />
will de public delivered on <lb />
Friday of that week. <lb />
Public teachers of the white <lb />
race are required to attend. They will <lb />
be compelled to suspend their Schools <lb />
during the continuance of the Institute I <lb />
I hope they will all be on hand. <lb />
The School Committeemen of Pitt <lb />
County are respectfully invited to attend, <lb />
especially on Friday. <lb />
II AUDI NO. <lb />
Co. Supt. Pub. Ins, <lb />
-BRING CORN TO----- <lb />
to mi,, at a close margin. <lb />
S. If. <lb />
Greenville. N. C <lb />
On Monday. 20th, lb I pro- <lb />
pose to of my <lb />
at greatly seduced price, in ; <lb />
sell t hem far below c st, as am <lb />
-------mined to------- <lb />
UNDERTAKING, <lb />
; J <lb />
ill<lb />
HEM OUT Ml STOW <lb />
on h- tic before i <lb />
ladies mete;. n . i ibis as i <lb />
I is a rare and k such <lb />
fL associated B. S. <lb />
; . in the Undertaking business we <lb />
are x serve the people In that <lb />
y. All accounts <lb />
, me past services have been placed in <lb />
tin I Mr. for collect it n. <lb />
Respectfully. <lb />
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb />
l Veep on hand at all times I nice <lb />
of Banal Cases and Caskets of all <lb />
v hold good and can furnish anything desired <lb />
Case down to a <lb />
you are Call the stock Pitt Coffin. We arc <lb />
up v. i-h all conveniences and can <lb />
Greenville Milk <lb />
For Good Meal. Will grind <lb />
TUESDAY AND SATURDAY. <lb />
ft White, <lb />
N, c. <lb />
. .,, <lb />
the method and results when <lb />
of Figs is taken; it is pleasant <lb />
refreshing to the taste, and acts <lb />
yet promptly tho Kidneys, <lb />
and Bowels, cleanses the sys- <lb />
effectually, colds, <lb />
and fevers and curs habitual <lb />
Syrup of Figs is the <lb />
remedy of its kind ever pro- <lb />
pleasing to the taste and ac- <lb />
to the stomach, prompt in j <lb />
and beneficial in its <lb />
effects, prepared only from the most <lb />
and agreeable substances, its ; <lb />
many excellent qualities commend it <lb />
TYSON Drugstore, <lb />
of Figs is for sale in I <lb />
and bottles by all leading drag- j C. o. <lb />
Any reliable druggist who <lb />
picked <lb />
R spec M. <lb />
Mrs. R. H HORNE, <lb />
Sf. C <lb />
services to nil who <lb />
us FLANAGAN SHEPPARD <lb />
Feb. <lb />
V AT <lb />
Front Reflector Office. <lb />
may not have it on band will pro- <lb />
core it promptly any one who <lb />
wishes to try it. Do not accept any <lb />
substitute, <lb />
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.<lb />
We have opened the purpose or con- j <lb />
R general <lb />
Go. Medical Discovery, War- <lb />
I U , <lb />
Pie <lb />
K to on Approved Security <lb />
I Collections<lb />
solicited remittance <lb />
made promptly. <lb />
S. S. S., B. B B, <lb />
k Water.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018975_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
THE <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb />
N. O. <lb />
-VOTE <lb />
i ff-i of peddlers and <lb />
many unscrupulous grocers <lb />
are trying to force on the pub- r I <lb />
lie, dangerous imitations of <lb />
Considering the popularity of <lb />
this is not surprising. We want to warn the public <lb />
against the use of these articles. They are danger- <lb />
to fabric and hands. PEAR LINE is never <lb />
but sold by grocers everywhere. <lb />
Each package bears the name of JAMES PYLE, New York. <lb />
WEI-DON R. R <lb />
am -Condensed Schedule. , <lb />
BUM GOING SOUTH. <lb />
No No <lb />
Dee. daily Fast Mail, daily <lb />
daily ex Sun. <lb />
If. <lb />
Ar Rocky Mount am<lb />
am <lb />
Ar Wilson am pin am <lb />
I-T Wilson SO <lb />
Ar I <lb />
Ar <lb />
I-v Goldsboro a am <lb />
Warsaw SI I <lb />
Av Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilmington IN <lb />
TRAINS GOING NORTH <lb />
No No <lb />
daily daily <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
I-v Wilmington f tin pin <lb />
Lt Magnolia am <lb />
Lt Warsaw <lb />
Ar Goldsboro<lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
far Wilson M pm <lb />
Ar Rocky lo<lb />
Ar Weldon pin <lb />
ex Sunday, <lb />
Train on Branch Road <lb />
leaves Halifax 8.80 r. M. arrives <lb />
land at 4.00 P M. <lb />
P. If. leaves <lb />
A. M., Scotland 10.10 A. i <lb />
daily except Sunday. <lb />
Train leaves Tarawa, N . j <lb />
A Raleigh R. R. except Sun- <lb />
day. P M. Sunday P M. , <lb />
C. SO P M. V M. <lb />
Returning leaves X . daily <lb />
except A M. Sunday A ; <lb />
M. arrive Tarboro, N C, fl IS A M. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb />
Goldsboro except Sunday. A M, <lb />
arrive N C, A M. Re- <lb />
turning leaves X A M. <lb />
arrive Goldsboro. N C, A M. <lb />
Train on Nashville Branch leave Rocky <lb />
at P M. arrives Nashville <lb />
P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
leaves Spring Hope A V. Nashville <lb />
MA M. arrive- Rocky Mount A <lb />
except <lb />
Train on Clinton leaves Warsaw <lb />
for Clinton except Sunday, at <lb />
and A M Returning have <lb />
ten A XI, and M. connect- <lb />
at Warsaw with Nos. and <lb />
Southbound train on Wilson <lb />
Branch is No. Northbound is <lb />
Me. except Sunday. <lb />
Train No. South will stop only at <lb />
Wilson, Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb />
Train No. makes close connection <lb />
Weldon for all points North daily. All <lb />
ail via Richmond, and daily except Sun- <lb />
day via Bay <lb />
Trains make close connection for <lb />
points North via Richmond and Wash <lb />
All trains run solid between <lb />
fen and Washington, and have Pullman <lb />
Palace Sleepers attached. <lb />
JOHN F. DIVINE. <lb />
General <lb />
i. R. Transportation <lb />
f. M. EMERSON Passenger Al <lb />
Atlantic N. C. Railroad <lb />
TIME Ho. <lb />
la Effect A. M. Saturday, <lb />
1st. <lb />
Going <lb />
No. No. <lb />
Ar. Ar. <lb />
in Goldsboro am <lb />
Kinston <lb />
Mew <lb />
IS pm Morehead City am <lb />
West <lb />
NO. <lb />
Mixed Ft. <lb />
Pass-Train. Stations. Pass Train <lb />
am pin <lb />
Sett's <lb />
La Grange <lb />
Falling Creek <lb />
Kinston <lb />
M S <lb />
Dover <lb />
Core Creek I<lb />
I IS Newborn in<lb />
Croat i <lb />
Newport<lb />
Atlantic <lb />
Morehead <lb />
4-5 Atlantic Hotel <lb />
pm Morehead Depot a in <lb />
Thursday and Saturday. <lb />
Wednesday and Friday. <lb />
Train connect.-, with Wilmington <lb />
Train bound North, leaving <lb />
a. m. and with Rich- <lb />
Danville Train West, leaving <lb />
p. m. <lb />
Train connects with Richmond <lb />
Train, arriving at <lb />
p. and with Wilmington and <lb />
Train from North at p. m <lb />
Train with Wilmington and <lb />
Through Freight Train, leaving <lb />
p. in and with Rich- <lb />
ad Danville Through Freight Train <lb />
aves Goldsboro at p. m. <lb />
Money to Loan. <lb />
ON in sums cf <lb />
and upwards. Loans are re-j <lb />
payable in small annual <lb />
through a period of live year- thus es-l <lb />
the borrower to pay off his In <lb />
without exhausting his crops <lb />
ii any one year. Apply to <lb />
TUCKER <lb />
N. C <lb />
EMORY <lb />
war Marine Book. <lb />
in i. all <lb />
pars of <lb />
on application to <lb />
A. Fifth Now York. <lb />
A f MESS <lb />
INVISIBLE Al <lb />
-V- HIM <lb />
ml, ii i-.-. f RB <lb />
i, <lb />
hie large profits, <lb />
Sample A rare <lb />
A. Starr. <lb />
-X English <lb />
PILLS. <lb />
Cross I.<lb />
I mL for I <lb />
send It m m- M scale <lb />
r s-i-l fr <lb />
by <lb />
Co., ., Fa, <lb />
HAIR <lb />
hair. <lb />
. V. <lb />
wanted <lb />
to sell Pitiless <lb />
Clothes <lb />
no more clothes <lb />
pins in It <lb />
holds <lb />
est and <lb />
lie.; without pins <lb />
Clothes do not <lb />
freeze M it and <lb />
cannot blow <lb />
NO <lb />
It is a perfect <lb />
winter line. <lb />
Sample line <lb />
for <lb />
also ft. line <lb />
, by mail <lb />
h-M <lb />
r price <lb />
I ad- <lb />
dress the Pin-<lb />
St. Mass. <lb />
How Folly, Vice, Ignorance. or <lb />
and <lb />
for Married or Social Relation. <lb />
this treat <lb />
work. It royal Beautiful <lb />
full Price, only by <lb />
concealed In plain wrapper, <lb />
Free, if apply now. <lb />
author, H. M. D., re- <lb />
the COLD AND JEWELLED MEDAL <lb />
from the National Medical Association. <lb />
for the ESSAY on NERVOUS and <lb />
PHYSICAL DEBILITY. Dr. Parker and a corps <lb />
of may be t <lb />
by or In person, tho of <lb />
INSTITUTE, <lb />
St., <lb />
order for or letter for <lb />
w above. <lb />
JAMES A. SMITH, <lb />
Greenville N . <lb />
have the fie easiest <lb />
Chair ever used in the Clean towels, <lb />
sharp razors, and ion guaranteed <lb />
in every instance. Call and be con <lb />
Ladies waited on at <lb />
Cleaning clothes a <lb />
Ho What's <lb />
Why another new discovery by Alfred <lb />
in the way of helping the afflict- <lb />
ed. By calling on or addressing the <lb />
named barber, you can procure a <lb />
bottle Preparation Unit is invaluable <lb />
eradicating and causing the <lb />
kinkiest hair to be and, <lb />
flossy, only two or three application a <lb />
sack is necessary, and a common hair . <lb />
brash is all to lie used after rubbing the j <lb />
vigorously for a few minutes with , <lb />
the Preparation. Try a bottle aid <lb />
convinced, only cents. <lb />
CULLEY, <lb />
Barber, <lb />
Notice <lb />
for baldness. <lb />
falling cut of hair, end eradication of <lb />
before the public. <lb />
Among the many have It with <lb />
wonderful I refer you to Lie fol- <lb />
lowing named gentlemen who will <lb />
to the truth of my assertion <lb />
Latham, Greenville. <lb />
O.<lb />
Any one wishing to give it a trial for <lb />
the above named complaints can procure <lb />
it from ms, at my place of business, for <lb />
per bottle. fully, <lb />
ALFRED CULLEY. Barber. <lb />
Greenville, March 14th, C , <lb />
BOOKS BOOKS <lb />
-f-1 T. SM, cf <lb />
Washington it. C, <lb />
He keeps on hand a fine assortment <lb />
of the best books at publisher's prices. <lb />
Call him for Bibles, large or small, <lb />
pulpit, family or pocket For <lb />
Book. Commentaries, Diction- <lb />
and standard works generally. <lb />
Clan furnish you any book you want on <lb />
short notice. <lb />
Chop up the corn and put them <lb />
in the manure heap. If cut and snaked <lb />
they may be used as absorbents in the <lb />
pig-pens. <lb />
Keep the barnyard well supplied with <lb />
material for absorbing the liquids <lb />
thereby rendering the yards dry and <lb />
comfortable. <lb />
Early in the a top-dressing of <lb />
pounds of nitrate of soda per acre <lb />
wheat will it grow rapidly and <lb />
yield better grain. <lb />
The prize butter at the Bay State fair, <lb />
Boston, was made from cows fed on cut <lb />
clover at night, pasture by day. and a <lb />
grain ration composed of two parts corn- <lb />
meal and one part each of crushed oats, <lb />
linseed meal, and wheat middlings. <lb />
Much time can be saved by keeping up <lb />
what might be termed small repair. A <lb />
little item that a few minutes work would <lb />
have repaired, if done at once, if lot go <lb />
is often the cause of a half-day's delay <lb />
at some future time. <lb />
The mainspring of farming is the seed. <lb />
It is more important to secure good seed <lb />
than to prepare for its reception in the <lb />
soil. The failure of seed to germinate <lb />
may cost the farmer the loss of <lb />
crop. The seed is something that tho <lb />
farmer should always examine before <lb />
spring opens, by testing it in boxes of <lb />
earth under glass. <lb />
Lime has the of being <lb />
at all seasons, though its effects <lb />
in the soil may not be immediate. It <lb />
never injures land if properly applied, <lb />
and though its results may be <lb />
factory at first, yet the effects are <lb />
the lime applied this year proving <lb />
in the future. Lime is cheap and <lb />
should used freely. <lb />
The saving of the various substances <lb />
that are supposed to possess no value, by <lb />
adding them to the <lb />
to a large item in the course of a year. <lb />
There is nothing grown on the farm, <lb />
either by seeding for the crop or <lb />
growth of weeds, that will not con- <lb />
tribute something to the fertility of the <lb />
soil if the materials are appropriated to <lb />
the for which they are adapted. <lb />
weeds can made useful in en- <lb />
the soil. <lb />
An exchange speaks thus highly of the <lb />
Brazilian flour corn Each grain pro- <lb />
from three to six stalks, and enc-h <lb />
stalk from one lo three ears, often <lb />
fifteen good ears to a hill, besides an <lb />
immense quantity of excellent fodder. <lb />
The stalks are so soft and sweet <lb />
hogs and other stock eat them up clean. <lb />
The grain is very sweet and as while as <lb />
snow, makes the best of roasting ears <lb />
and as good flour as wheat when ground <lb />
and bolted. <lb />
Fanning is a business that requires <lb />
judgment in every department. Tho <lb />
farmers should not place his dependence <lb />
upon a single crop, for such a crop may <lb />
lessened in yield by an Unfavorable <lb />
season, or in value by prices in a <lb />
market Diversified farming re- <lb />
of failure, and permits <lb />
of better cultivation and longer seasons <lb />
for work. Prices may be low on some <lb />
crops and high on others, tho result de- <lb />
pending on the seasons and area <lb />
Professor David of the Colo- <lb />
agricultural experiment station, in <lb />
a recently issued bulletin gives an ex- <lb />
treatise on soils from a chem- <lb />
standpoint Discussing physical <lb />
properties, he color of its <lb />
soil depends exclusively on its <lb />
humus forming a nearly black <lb />
sand gives a light yellow, and iron <lb />
oxide produced a red color. The darker <lb />
soils, other things equal, have tho <lb />
highest absorptive power towards <lb />
heat; this is shown when muck is applied <lb />
to the of snow in t he <lb />
Use and of The Work Shop. <lb />
Absurd things are about tho <lb />
farm work shop. The farmer cannot by <lb />
proficient in half a dozen trades, nor can <lb />
his son do even fairly good carpenter or <lb />
blacksmith work without practice. <lb />
Some people seem to think that nothing <lb />
is necessary but to get the tools, and the <lb />
needful skill will come with them. <lb />
absurdities written the farm work <lb />
shop would not merit notice were they <lb />
not likely to lead us too far in the other <lb />
direction. It is not good policy to go to <lb />
the blacksmith every time a piece of iron <lb />
is to be mended, or to the carpenter to <lb />
make us a bench. The charges of the <lb />
carpenter or the blacksmith are of less <lb />
imp- than the loss of time. Every <lb />
farmer who owns a large farm <lb />
have at one farm blacksmith outfit. <lb />
The farmer may not find it profitable to <lb />
sharpen the plows, but he should <lb />
to weld or together pieces of iron <lb />
r steel; to mend chains, shanks of forks <lb />
clips, devices, etc. <lb />
He ought also to be able to make rings, <lb />
links, hooks and pins. The necessary <lb />
tools cost little and the skill necessary to <lb />
such simple work is soon gained. <lb />
In wood many simple jobs or repair- <lb />
are done. It is by no means <lb />
certain that farmer should not go <lb />
farther in wood working. Handles for <lb />
axes, forks, rakes, etc., and <lb />
articles can probably bought <lb />
more cheaply than tho farmer can make <lb />
them hut generally ho can <lb />
better than he can buy, and when ho <lb />
counts quality he will find his <lb />
own work than ho can buy. He <lb />
can select the choicest timber and season <lb />
it It is a good practice to save <lb />
the toughest, best pieces when <lb />
out rails or posts. <lb />
With an assortment of copper rivets, <lb />
Rome awls, thread and wax, any strap <lb />
about tho harness can joined. This <lb />
much leather working is always profit- <lb />
able. If the farmer will give the tools <lb />
to the boys, the sense of property will <lb />
stimulate them to u in ; them. <lb />
One boy may have the carpenter tools, <lb />
an r the blacksmith tools, etc. If <lb />
choose to use their tools on rainy <lb />
days, when otherwise they might rest, <lb />
all right; but don't compel them lo. <lb />
Making this work of MOM renders <lb />
it distasteful. The hint so frequently <lb />
with the can <lb />
or mend when they cannot do farm <lb />
work, is altogether If made use of, <lb />
it will your every time; <lb />
V. . <lb />
The doctors are very much displeased <lb />
over a competitor who is gradually steal- <lb />
their best practice ; we mean Dr. <lb />
Bull's Cough Syrup. <lb />
To are con- <lb />
occurring among men en- <lb />
tailing loss of time and suffering. Keep <lb />
Salvation Oil hand v. Price <lb />
A Scrap of <lb />
It was just an scrap of <lb />
ping paper, it saved her life. She <lb />
was in last stages of consumption, <lb />
told by physicians that she was <lb />
and live only a time she <lb />
weighed less than pounds. On <lb />
apiece of wrapping paper she read of Dr <lb />
King's Sew Discovery, got a sample <lb />
hot tie, it helped her, she bought a large <lb />
bottle, it helped her more, bought <lb />
and grew better fast, continued Its <lb />
and Is mm strong, rosy <lb />
plump, weighing For fuller <lb />
particulars send stamp to W. H. Coir, <lb />
druggist, Fort -Smith. Trial bottles of <lb />
this wonderful discovery at John <lb />
We were not very well off. Father's <lb />
situation in the bank, although a <lb />
one, yielded but a when <lb />
with the expensive family he <lb />
had to support; so, when the question <lb />
came up where we should spend the sum- <lb />
mer, one of tho to be taken <lb />
into consideration was the o. <lb />
It did not make much to <lb />
was sure of a certain of <lb />
admiration and attention wherever I <lb />
went. I had ways received it since my <lb />
first day at school, where my pretty <lb />
curie and shining eyes had captured tho <lb />
hearts of the up to the last <lb />
ride taken in the park. <lb />
With not only tho beauty but much of <lb />
the cleverness of the family, naturally <lb />
great things were expected of me. <lb />
I had but one poor, pale, lit- <lb />
thing. She was younger I and <lb />
had always been delicate, but some <lb />
time had been growing gradually <lb />
until now we wheeled her about the <lb />
house in an easy chair. It was finally <lb />
decided that should take tho <lb />
boys up into New Hampshire and sister <lb />
Millie and I should go down to Beach- <lb />
point, a little unknown resort on the <lb />
coast. <lb />
accompanied us, but only <lb />
topped long enough to see us comfort- <lb />
ably settled. I was lonesome enough the <lb />
first few days. There were no boarders <lb />
but us, and the house was the only one <lb />
on the beach, our neighbors being away <lb />
back in the uplands. <lb />
I dutifully took my bath each day as <lb />
one swallows a bitter tonic. I played on <lb />
the little old-fashioned piano in the par- <lb />
and to kill time slept away tho <lb />
greater part of the long summer after- <lb />
noons. It was dull and com- <lb />
Millie was cheerful add contented. <lb />
She read and worked on the pretty things <lb />
she was constantly knitting out of bright <lb />
wools, or sketched much of the <lb />
as she could see from her chair by <lb />
the window. <lb />
One evening I was out of sorts and <lb />
a little cross, and had just declared I <lb />
wouldn't make a toilet to go down stairs, <lb />
where there was no one but the laud- <lb />
lord's son. who usually expressed his ad- <lb />
with open-mouthed wonder. <lb />
Presently our landlady bustled in full <lb />
of importance. <lb />
just run up a minute to tell you that <lb />
the stage has come and Mr. Brent was <lb />
in it. lie is here every summer and <lb />
comes gunning in the winter. He gave <lb />
it-, the sail boat on the bay, and we had <lb />
his name painted on it, Hartley <lb />
He ain't so very young, but he's rich, <lb />
and I thought perhaps you'd like to know <lb />
he was here so a to change your dress <lb />
before you came <lb />
She hurried away, feeling she had done <lb />
a good deed. <lb />
After closing the door to shut out the <lb />
cold sea air, I wrapped a shawl around <lb />
poor, shivering Millie, <lb />
dear, have <lb />
and when I am arrayed in my new <lb />
I shall be <lb />
Time dragged no longer after <lb />
Brent came, and soon several other <lb />
pleasure seekers arrived, until we were <lb />
a merry party. Escorts were plenty, <lb />
and. as was the privilege of my <lb />
I chose such as pleased best. <lb />
When my choice fell n-i Mr. Brent, as it <lb />
often I could see how pleased he was <lb />
to be of service. He was never officious, <lb />
yet always ready to quietly render <lb />
little attention needed. His manner wag <lb />
different from the gay gallantry of other <lb />
cavaliers, with their jests and flattery, <lb />
though he was always deferential, and <lb />
praised my taste, my <lb />
voice with a discriminating earnestness <lb />
i knew to be sincere. <lb />
i- because he is older than the <lb />
I said to Millie, who loved to hear <lb />
me talk of him. <lb />
She was always interested in anything <lb />
I liked, and he had kind to her, <lb />
bringing her fruit and and books <lb />
and t her in strong arms down <lb />
to the parlor of an evening, back <lb />
again to her room when she was tired. <lb />
I said to myself, the warm <lb />
blood circling hit. my heart at the <lb />
thought, mean <lb />
and he is in <lb />
How quickly time when one is <lb />
happy. Bach perfect summer day has a <lb />
remembrance hi my we boated <lb />
and fished and gathered shells during the <lb />
day, and in the long evening sat on the <lb />
long piazza, I had tucked Millie in <lb />
lied and her good night. <lb />
Air. Brent engaged in quiet Con- <lb />
our voices subdued, that they- <lb />
might not reach or disturb those who <lb />
sat with us. while ho told me of his <lb />
borne; of his struggles with the world, <lb />
and the w Inch crowned <lb />
them; his past life, and plans and <lb />
tor the future. <lb />
Listening to his voice and looking out <lb />
over the moonlit expanse, love freighted <lb />
n fairy boat and launched it from the <lb />
id, and watched it sailing o'er the <lb />
summer sea, careless where drifted, I <lb />
was so happy. <lb />
Each day I looked in tho little square <lb />
that hung on the wall of oar room, <lb />
and saw myself growing more blooming <lb />
and radiant, Mr. called bin <lb />
in I reminded <lb />
him of a crimson carnation, with my <lb />
bright color and the spicy scent of my <lb />
fan. <lb />
he added, turning to <lb />
her with a kindly smile, as though she <lb />
might feel slighted, her golden <lb />
hair and white dress, is a water lily. <lb />
It was our hist day at The <lb />
season was nearly over and was <lb />
already home with the boys and had <lb />
written to me to come and bring Millie. <lb />
informed mo that she had de- <lb />
her case to a celebrated <lb />
and he thought could be cured <lb />
be;, a doubt. <lb />
In the morning we went with a merry <lb />
party over the bay to the surf. <lb />
waved her hand t us from her <lb />
seal the porch, where with <lb />
kindness, had brought her and <lb />
led her with moist pond lilies, <lb />
which he must have walked a long dis- <lb />
to gather. <lb />
After taking my bath, I donned my <lb />
walking dress again, and getting tired of <lb />
watching the others in their picturesque <lb />
sporting in the breakers, I <lb />
down the beach to a point <lb />
the hulls of two staunch vessels, <lb />
with crushed timbers half sunk in the <lb />
eloquently told the story of storm <lb />
and . <lb />
Sealing myself on beam, I <lb />
e myself up to pleasant <lb />
of the eventful week which had just <lb />
la-.-l. I pictured my fairy boat sailing <lb />
over friendly seas under <lb />
until life being done, it was an- <lb />
chored in heaven. had no fear for the <lb />
future if one dear hand was to guide me, <lb />
one thrilling voice I had come to know <lb />
so well was to cheer me. <lb />
How good and noble he is I thought <lb />
with a swelling heart; how altogether <lb />
superior to all other men I had known; <lb />
bow worthy the love and respect of any <lb />
woman I had never been in love be- <lb />
I had seen a great deal of society, <lb />
received several offers, but none <lb />
rare eligible, and when said <lb />
I had without a pang seen father <lb />
turn them away. <lb />
was a step behind me, and my <lb />
beat t told me who it was. <lb />
did you find I asked, as <lb />
Mr. Brent poshed aside my dress and sat <lb />
down on the same beam. <lb />
yon suppose I Have followed <lb />
those little footprints until I know the <lb />
land, of my high-heel walking boots. <lb />
grand One never tires <lb />
of looking at the ocean, for it is never <lb />
twice . <lb />
He was silent a moment, and seemed <lb />
more thoughtful than usual, gathering a <lb />
handful of the white sand and watching <lb />
it sift slowly ugh his fingers. At <lb />
length recovering himself, he <lb />
something, you know I <lb />
always like to hear you sing, season <lb />
and out of Tho sea will bass <lb />
and <lb />
I the old, old ballad, <lb />
Fishers Went Sailing Out Into tho <lb />
As voice rose loud full, swell- <lb />
over the water with the melody and <lb />
dying away to tho sounding mono- <lb />
tone of the waves, I looked at com- <lb />
His was turned seaward, <lb />
and over it was a softened expression, <lb />
and in his eyes a tender light I had never <lb />
seen there my heart ceased <lb />
beating, my voice was too well trained <lb />
to falter, and the music wailed on. <lb />
M For men must work women must weep, <lb />
Though th harbor bar be moaning. <lb />
The sad chord did not touch him; joy, <lb />
I and faith and hope held possession of his <lb />
j sold. How his thoughts irradiated his <lb />
I somewhat stern features. It was the face <lb />
I of the one man in the world for me, but <lb />
j I did not know it could look so hand- <lb />
I some. <lb />
When the last echo of the song was <lb />
lost in a retreating billow, lie turned, and <lb />
I taking my hand, said in the courtly man- <lb />
that never forsook <lb />
you. I did not know there <lb />
was so much music in that song. I have <lb />
heard it often before but never like that. <lb />
Your rendering of it adds a hundred <lb />
fold to its meaning. And now I want to <lb />
speak to you on a subject that I had not <lb />
intended to mention when I followed <lb />
you <lb />
His bronzed took on a ruddier hue, <lb />
and the firm fingers closed over my baud <lb />
in a nervous clasp, while unnoticed by <lb />
him I lowered sunshade between his <lb />
face and mine. <lb />
know I ought to have waited until <lb />
you were at home, and I had meant to, <lb />
but something impels me to throw my- <lb />
self on your mercy, and find out my fate <lb />
you leave. I love your sister Mil- <lb />
lie with all my heart, as I never loved <lb />
any one before, and I ask your <lb />
to tell her so. I do think she <lb />
regards me wholly with indifference. I <lb />
will take cherish her as a precious <lb />
flower. As my wife, time and wealth <lb />
shall not be spared, and I am confident <lb />
that somewhere may be found a <lb />
for her infirmity. Will you intercede in <lb />
my behalf, if to her- <lb />
self to my care for mo with the <lb />
assurance that it is love, not pity, feel. <lb />
Knowing your great influence her <lb />
want to beg you for the sake of our pleas- <lb />
ant friendship to use it in my <lb />
A cloud was gathering on the deep, <lb />
the waves looked dark and angry, and <lb />
fancy saw my love boat reel from side to <lb />
side then go down, swallowed up in <lb />
mid-ocean. <lb />
At the call of the company we joined <lb />
them, and I went home, as I shall go <lb />
through life in daily sight of their hap- <lb />
with never a line on my face to <lb />
tell of my Barnard. <lb />
The World's <lb />
There are statisticians in several <lb />
tries, the known of whom is tho <lb />
learned German, Herr who en- <lb />
to sent from time to time <lb />
of the population of the entire <lb />
world. Inasmuch as many populous <lb />
countries have no census, and often <lb />
like a these world <lb />
can only put together, as to these <lb />
countries, the best attainable guesses. <lb />
Nevertheless, they probably make a <lb />
near estimate of the population <lb />
of the entire world, which they put at <lb />
twelve hundred million. The number of <lb />
men is supposed to be somewhat smaller <lb />
than the number of women. <lb />
The number of deaths each year in the <lb />
entire world is placed at about <lb />
and a quarter millions, which <lb />
would make nearly one hundred thou- <lb />
sand a day, four thousand an hour, and <lb />
sixty-seven a minute. <lb />
On the other hand, there are. it is <lb />
mated, thirty-six and three-quarters mil- <lb />
lion persona born every year; which <lb />
j would nuke more than one hundred <lb />
I thousand per day, and seventy per mill- <lb />
The average duration of life, in <lb />
world as a whole, is thirty-eight years. <lb />
One-quarter of the people upon the earth <lb />
die reaching the seventeenth year. <lb />
About six of each one thousand persons <lb />
born leaches the age of seventy-live <lb />
years. <lb />
Married people live to a greater age <lb />
than the unmarried; temperate people <lb />
and workingmen live longer than <lb />
eaters and the indolent; and the <lb />
people of civilized nations the <lb />
savage races. <lb />
A jet of inky tide. <lb />
The pounds. <lb />
The picture of <lb />
Before the dips. <lb />
The stamp of cents. <lb />
A straight the <lb />
A base we're off it. <lb />
A continued elevator shaft. <lb />
A barrel Cooper's Journal. <lb />
False modesty lying in concealment <lb />
Inn in <lb />
A sign of cold beef <lb />
A time-serving hands of a <lb />
Quite it is used for <lb />
Salve- <lb />
The Best Salve in the world for Cuts <lb />
Bruises, Sores. Ulcers, Salt <lb />
Fever Sores. Chapped Hands <lb />
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin <lb />
and positively cures Piles, or do <lb />
pay required. It is guaranteed to give <lb />
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. <lb />
Price lo cents per box. For sale <lb />
Wooten. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector, <lb />
IN COMBINATION WITH <lb />
Tit brightest of the children's says the Springfield Republican. <lb />
DE AWAKE<lb />
D LOT HOOP CO- <lb />
FOR <lb />
13.00 <lb />
IF FOR AT THIS OFFICE <lb />
NOVEMBER CD C C NEW m <lb />
I III P WHO OF THIS SPECIAL <lb />
I I ILL, <lb />
FOR THE YOUNGER YOUNG FOLKS. <lb />
j Q offers combination rates with <lb />
U. <lb />
cents a For baby and in the nursery, year. <lb />
Our Men and Women For youngest readers. year. <lb />
The Pansy a For Sunday and reading. <lb />
end all to this of may be <lb />
SUBSCRIBE SAVE MONEY <lb />
SIX-CORD <lb />
Spool Cotton <lb />
IN <lb />
WHITE, BLACK AND COLORS, <lb />
FOR <lb />
is lately used as n <lb />
for liver and blood affections, as well as <lb />
for those of the bowels and <lb />
Druggists sells it for cents. <lb />
child was affected just like yours. <lb />
Mrs. and Dr. Baby gave <lb />
it almost Immediate relief ; would <lb />
surely give it a <lb />
The i <lb />
Two local put up a good <lb />
job o companion. When <lb />
went running the two took along an <lb />
old sniffed owl, keeping it hidden <lb />
under the wagon sent, and during tho <lb />
afternoon they managed to get <lb />
from victim. They wired <lb />
the on securely to the limb of a tree, <lb />
then regained their companion, and <lb />
all three started homeward. Near the <lb />
edge of the woods, close by tho bogus <lb />
owl, the two discharged their guns at <lb />
pretended so as not to he ex- <lb />
ported to lire at the owl. They re- <lb />
marked that they wouldn't load again, <lb />
they were so near out. The innocent <lb />
gunner espied the owl tho moment <lb />
they arrived in the vicinity, began <lb />
blazing away at once at a hundred <lb />
distance. <lb />
After the fourth shot, in fever- <lb />
haste, he called to the others to lire <lb />
also. you see the blamed <lb />
asleep, and he won't wake till <lb />
hit in a vital spot might get <lb />
away was loading I An owl as <lb />
big us that is worth a dozen part- <lb />
But the friends assured him <lb />
of their confidence that he would bring <lb />
him down at last, that it was his bird, <lb />
and they would get no in simply <lb />
assisting at the death. This seemed <lb />
to inspire him with new energy, and <lb />
the shots increased in frequency, and <lb />
a terrible bombardment was carried on <lb />
against tho body of that owl. Finally <lb />
the bird staggered a moment and then <lb />
dropped over, but still clung to tho <lb />
limb with his feet and hung head <lb />
down. <lb />
got the toughest hold life <lb />
of any bird I ever shot puffed the <lb />
most exhausted hunter. soon <lb />
put him out of his and ad- <lb />
to within fifty or sixty feet of <lb />
tho owl the final shot, which <lb />
had the effect to blow the stuffed <lb />
head off and to scatter several <lb />
quarts of sawdust in all directions. It <lb />
was then that there flashed upon the <lb />
senses of the deluded gunner that a <lb />
cruel hoax had been played upon him. <lb />
And this feeling was confirmed when <lb />
he saw his two companions rolling <lb />
tho grass and and yelling <lb />
with Homo- <lb />
stead. <lb />
LEGAL NOTICES <lb />
Confess. <lb />
All honest, conscientious <lb />
who give II. B. B. Blood <lb />
a trial, frankly admit Its superiority over <lb />
AM. other blood medicines, <lb />
Dr. W. <lb />
regard I. II. B. as one of the best <lb />
blood <lb />
Dr. A. II. Nashville, <lb />
reports of B. B. B. lire fa- <lb />
its speedy action is wonder- <lb />
Dr. J. <lb />
writes confess ii. B. II. is the best <lb />
mid quickest medicine for rheumatism I <lb />
have ever <lb />
Dr. S. J. a-armer, <lb />
cheerfully <lb />
as a fine tonic Its use cured <lb />
an excrescence of the neck after other <lb />
remedies effected no perceptible <lb />
Dr. C. II. Montgomery, Jacksonville, <lb />
Ala. writes mother on my <lb />
getting B. B. B. for her rheumatism, as <lb />
in-r case resisted the usual <lb />
remedies. She experienced immediate <lb />
and her improvement been <lb />
A prominent physician who wishes his <lb />
name not given, pat. of <lb />
mine whose case of was <lb />
surely killing him. and which no treat- <lb />
seemed to cheek, was entirely cured <lb />
with about twelve bottles of B. B. B. <lb />
He was fairly made up of skin sod bones J <lb />
and terrible <lb />
This is what you ought to have, in fact <lb />
you must have to fully enjoy life. <lb />
are searching for it daily and <lb />
mourning because they find it nit. <lb />
Thousands thousands of dollars are <lb />
spent annually by our people in the hope <lb />
that they may attain this boon. And yet <lb />
It may by all. W guarantee <lb />
Bitters if used according to <lb />
and the use persisted in will bring <lb />
good digestion and oust the demon <lb />
dyspepsia and Install instead <lb />
We recommend Electric Bitters for <lb />
and diseases of Liver, stomach <lb />
and Kidneys. and a at <lb />
John L. drugstore. <lb />
Many people habitually a feel- <lb />
of lassitude, because they think they <lb />
have to. If would take Dr. J. <lb />
this feeling of <lb />
weariness give place to vigor and <lb />
vitality. <lb />
No liniment is in better repute or more <lb />
widely known than Dr. H. <lb />
Volcanic Oil Liniment. It U n wonder- <lb />
remedy. <lb />
Persons advanced in years feel young- <lb />
and stronger, well as freer from the <lb />
infirmities of age. by taking Dr, Ii <lb />
ilia. <lb />
Sick headache is the bane of many <lb />
lives. This annoying complaint maybe <lb />
cured and prevented by the occasional <lb />
use of Dr. J. II. Liver and <lb />
Kidney <lb />
Disease In ambush for the a <lb />
feeble constitution Is ill adapted to en- <lb />
counter a malarious atmosphere and sud- <lb />
den changes of temperature, and tin- <lb />
least robust are usually the easiest <lb />
Dr. J. Sarsaparilla <lb />
will give tone, vitality and strength lo <lb />
the entire body. <lb />
Distress after eating, heartburn, sick <lb />
headache, and indigestion are cured by <lb />
Dr J. II. fillets <lb />
If feel unable lo do your <lb />
have that tired feeling, take Dr. II. <lb />
Sarsaparilla; it will make you <lb />
bright active and vigorous. <lb />
The popular liniment, is the old <lb />
reliable. Dr. J. II. <lb />
Oil Liniment. <lb />
One of Dr. J. Little Liv- <lb />
and Kidney taken at night b <lb />
fore going to bed. will move the bowels <lb />
the effect will astonish <lb />
Pimples, boils and Other humors, are <lb />
liable to appear when tho blood gets <lb />
heated. Dr. J. II. fa <lb />
is the best remedy. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Letters of Administration on the Es- <lb />
of Keel having <lb />
granted to the undersigned by the Hon. <lb />
K. A. Move Superior Court clerk of <lb />
j County on the mil day of <lb />
is hereby given to all creditor- of <lb />
; Keel to present <lb />
their claims duly authenticated to the <lb />
undersigned Administrator on or before <lb />
the first day of March A. Ml. <lb />
Person indebted to said Estate are like- <lb />
wise notified to make payment within <lb />
that time. <lb />
Adm. of Keel <lb />
N. Feb. 1890, <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
HAVING before the Clerk <lb />
Superior Court of Pitt county on the <lb />
i day Jan. as Administrator <lb />
upon the estate of Mary Spain, <lb />
this is to notify all persons bidding claims <lb />
against said estate to present their claims <lb />
j to twelve months from <lb />
ibis date or this notice will be plead in <lb />
bar of their recovery. All persons ow- <lb />
said estate will come forward and <lb />
make immediate settlement. This Jan- <lb />
25th, 1890. <lb />
of Mary Spain. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By virtue of the authority given me by <lb />
an order of the clerk of the Superior <lb />
Conn of county Id the case II- s. <lb />
vs. Naomi Boyd and <lb />
Stanly Boyd, The undersigned <lb />
will sell for cash before the Court House <lb />
door in Greenville at public auction on <lb />
Monday the 17th day of March 1890, a <lb />
one half undivided interest in the follow- <lb />
described town situated in the <lb />
town of Greenville and known in the <lb />
plot of said town as Lot No hounded <lb />
the North by Front Street, on the <lb />
East street. toe West by <lb />
lot No. and on the South by lot No. <lb />
B. s. <lb />
This February 12.1800. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
On the March A. <lb />
I will sell a the Court Q <lb />
door in the town of Greenville to the <lb />
highest bidder for cash one tract laud <lb />
Pitt containing about <lb />
acres and as follows Situated <lb />
In Greenville township North side of <lb />
Tar River, adjoining the lands of m. <lb />
I Mum o. Brown and others. <lb />
sixty acres of the above laud <lb />
will be sold for the purchase <lb />
said land and known us tin- Bridge <lb />
Field tract, to satisfy sundry executions <lb />
In my bands for collection against B. J. <lb />
and which have been levied on <lb />
slid land as the property of said B. J. <lb />
A. K <lb />
B. W. King. D. S. <lb />
February lo, 1890. <lb />
Hand and Machine Use. <lb />
FOR SALE BY <lb />
M. R. LANG, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
fall m maw 27th, <lb />
TEACHERS <lb />
John Principal, <lb />
Associate Principal <lb />
Una. w, De- <lb />
Assistant Prim try I <lb />
Department. <lb />
May <lb />
Music. <lb />
Nana Vocal Music. <lb />
Miss Painting and <lb />
Drawing. <lb />
j, c. Penmanship <lb />
and Commercial Department. <lb />
DEPARTMENTS. <lb />
Primary, Academic, in. <lb />
Classical mid Mathematical. <lb />
sic. Painting and Drawing. <lb />
Commercial. <lb />
ADVANTAGES <lb />
Large, Comfortable Buildings. <lb />
Healthy Location and <lb />
Plenty of Prepared Food <lb />
Boarders. A Corps of Teachers, <lb />
all being graduates of first class <lb />
Mush- Department equal <lb />
work to any in tho State <lb />
New and Organs, <lb />
A of nearly volumes, <lb />
purchased recently for the School. <lb />
Bates Moderate, from lo <lb />
Board and Tuition Tuition and Terms <lb />
for Day Pupils the same as advertised <lb />
in Pupils who do not hoard <lb />
with the should consult hill. <lb />
before engaging board elsewhere. For <lb />
further s. Address. <lb />
JOHN <lb />
Principal, <lb />
C. <lb />
N. II. I ion <lb />
Notice. <lb />
On Monday the day of March A. <lb />
I will sell at Hi.-Court House <lb />
door in tin- town of Greenville to the <lb />
highest bidder for Cash the <lb />
one sixth interest one tract of land <lb />
I r county Containing about -lo acres <lb />
end bounded as follows In Greenville <lb />
North of Tar Ad- <lb />
joining the lands of B, II. Carney, S. <lb />
Johnson and ethers. Also one other <lb />
iii Greenville Township on the <lb />
North Side Tar adjoining the <lb />
lands of A. J. A. Thigpen <lb />
and others, eon tabling twenty-live <lb />
Acres more or less, the said Interest be- <lb />
that of u a. m the lands <lb />
of father, w. and be- <lb />
the undivided in <lb />
lauds of the -aid <lb />
the time of death, to satisfy sundry <lb />
executions in my hands for collection <lb />
against A. and which have <lb />
been levied on land as the property <lb />
of said A. <lb />
A. K- <lb />
IS. W. King. <lb />
February <lb />
men mm <lb />
LOST or <lb />
and <lb />
of in <lb />
HeWe- H In <lb />
In a, <lb />
r-m Stale <lb />
.-. I fr. <lb />
CO., BUr f M. V. <lb />
Edwards <lb />
Printers and Binders, <lb />
We have the largest and most complete <lb />
establishment of tin- kind to be found <lb />
the State, and solicit tiers for all <lb />
Commercial, Rail- <lb />
road, or School Print- <lb />
or Binding. <lb />
STATION KB Y READY <lb />
FOB PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb />
BLANKS FOB MAGISTRATES AND <lb />
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb />
Send us your orders. <lb />
AND N <lb />
RALEIGH. N. C. <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
obtained, all in the S. <lb />
Patent office or the Courts attended to <lb />
lot Moderate Fees. <lb />
We an opposite tin; l. s. Patent Of- <lb />
Bee engaged in Patent <lb />
can obtain patent in tune than <lb />
more remote from <lb />
the mode I or drawing wot we <lb />
advise as i tree of charge, <lb />
and we make no change unless ere o- <lb />
Patents. <lb />
We refer, here, to the Master, <lb />
f the Money Order t <lb />
Is of Um I . s. Patent Office. For <lb />
advise terms reference to <lb />
actual clients your own State, or <lb />
address, C. A. Snow a Co., <lb />
Washington, D. C <lb />
.-. I <lb />
Wat- <lb />
h in Hi <lb />
raM. <lb />
and a <lb />
with works and M <lb />
ts. <lb />
V- n. ; ran lira OM <lb />
fourth With our<lb />
sub, r. All <lb />
J do U h v too to who <lb />
and always result <lb />
In h holds for swart, <lb />
ind pay all <lb />
all, if Ilka to p to work for yon <lb />
Co. Io Mala. <lb />
Nickeled Pencil <lb />
MARKS ANYTHING P <lb />
n me in J O <lb />
; .-0 I ft <lb />
i turn i. <lb />
em<lb />
MIllS <lb />
the <lb />
III VI I'll <lb />
I It <lb />
t I lit. <lb />
and <lb />
ii i <lb />
at- Own ho writ <lb />
Ion at one ran sir C <lb />
AH lo <lb />
who <lb />
d th. a. ha- <lb />
f Hill <lb />
II end of th <lb />
t I <lb />
SCOTT'S <lb />
EMULSION <lb />
CURES <lb />
CONSUMPTION <lb />
SCROFULA <lb />
BRONCHITIS <lb />
COLDS <lb />
Wasting <lb />
Flesh Producer. <lb />
Many have joined one pound <lb />
per day by use. <lb />
Scott's Emulsion sot a secret <lb />
remedy. It contains tho <lb />
properties of the <lb />
and pure Norwegian Cod <lb />
Oil, the potency of both <lb />
being largely increased. It used <lb />
by Physicians all over the world. <lb />
PALATABLE AS MILK. <lb />
Bold by an <lb />
To <lb />
Liver I.- <lb />
tho safe certain remedy, <lb />
BEANS <lb />
Cue the ALL Mr Deans to the <lb />
tub most <lb />
tar nil <lb />
Price mt per Bottle.<lb />
; Tombs, Vaults, k <lb />
I your <lb />
, to the following <lb />
to Unit you c-in buy a <lb />
or MONUMENT of <lb />
this cheaper any other in the <lb />
That it Is the most reliable <lb />
anti known having been <lb />
tor over forty years in this vicinity <lb />
That the workmanship la second to none <lb />
and unusual or- <lb />
promptly and satisfactory. <lb />
Very respectfully. <lb />
Refer to P. W. BATES <lb />
J. J. Norwalk <lb />
B. <lb />
II <lb />
as W will . . r-. b <lb />
GOOD BOOKS <lb />
Bent post-paid on receipt of price <lb />
In th Bear of Africa. <lb />
A most thrilling and work. <lb />
pages; paper cloth <lb />
Imitation of <lb />
By i Kempis. Paper, unabridged, <lb />
American Humorists. <lb />
Selections from Artemus Ward. Mark Twain, <lb />
etc. paper <lb />
Agency, <lb />
Warren St., Hew <lb />
WRITE TO US. <lb />
RESORT <lb />
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb />
Shaving, Cutting Hair. <lb />
AT THE GLASS FRONT <lb />
I the Opera Home, at which place <lb />
j I have recently located, and where I hare <lb />
; everything my <lb />
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE <lb />
Storm Weather <lb />
for by Ho. B. Hicks, mailed <lb />
. to any address on receipt pf a <lb />
I postage The Dr. J. H. <lb />
j Co. St. Louis. Mo. <lb />
TO A <lb />
nil the Improved appliances; new <lb />
and comfortable chairs. <lb />
Razors sharpened at reasonable <lb />
work outside my shop <lb />
promptly executed. Very respectfully, <lb />
CULLEY<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>18975.0001</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>70937622</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>d56f85c894e19283f90ed8f217fca43e</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7420</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9550</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>20120614</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>18975.0002</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>70937622</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>f98b858c7be823483859dea27620ee84</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7420</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9550</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>20120614</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>18975.0003</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>70937622</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>87c797efe6c31062006792ab1c6621b7</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7420</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9550</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>20120614</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>18975.0004</mix:objectIdentifierValue></mix:ObjectIdentifier>
              <mix:fileSize>70937622</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>8858080ab11093549396177dc1a024c5</mix:messageDigest>
                <mix:messageDigestOriginator>ecu:digital_collections</mix:messageDigestOriginator></mix:Fixity></mix:BasicDigitalObjectInformation>
            <mix:BasicImageInformation>
              <mix:BasicImageCharacteristics>
                <mix:imageWidth>7420</mix:imageWidth>
                <mix:imageHeight>9550</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>20120614</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/ncgre000/00000019/00018975/00018975_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/ncgre000/00000019/00018975/00018975_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/ncgre000/00000019/00018975/00018975_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/ncgre000/00000019/00018975/00018975_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/ncgre000/00000019/00018975/00018975_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/ncgre000/00000019/00018975/00018975_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/ncgre000/00000019/00018975/00018975_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/ncgre000/00000019/00018975/00018975_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>