Newspapers / The Eastern Reflector (Greenville, … / July 14, 1886, edition 1 / Page 1
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Eastern D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. TRUTH IX PREFERENCE TO FICTION. $1.50 Feb year, in Advance. VOL. V GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C.. WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 1886. NO 25 ^p Eastern Reflector, | PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY AT ^WILLE PITT COUUTY. N. C. ' TiirtvY THE OLD MAIL'S MATES. D. J. WHICHARD. I An ohl maid knelt beneath a maple tree I With feelings wonderful queer; I She prayed both long and fervently: Subscription: Per annum. $1 50'“King, Lord, consent my voice to hear; Vlver&ung Rates furnished on application Thou knowest my wish before my tongue Can name it; but it doth belong General Directory STATE GOVERNMENT. So thou has taught, and I believe. Thou knowest it ; s not wealth or power Governor- 'd M Scales, of Guilford snowy linen, lying in readiness up- be shocked. She might grow an on her table. ; gry and scold, particularly if Mab “ Chil’un whar aint got no man- should contradict her, or venture ners aint got no bizness in folks an opinion ot her own, but the kitchen,” she observed suggestive- child did not mind that. ly, as she resumed her occupation. I As is customary in the South, “ Aggervatin’ konterdickshnschil- the kitchen was an out building, ’un is de sort I aint got no use fur standing some little distance from in de work. Big an’ little, black the honse, with which it was con- an’ white, I ’spise ’em in mysight. needed by a plank walk. It was a I bin lookin fur Miss Frances to large, unplastered room, ceile.d holler out’n de bouse, sumthin ' with pine plank, and heavily beam- tion, during which the last little child's dress was folded and laid in the basket, Clammy stood ail her irons in a row on one side of the hearth to cool, and seated her- selfin a splint-bottomed rocking chair, with an infant’s robe in her lap, and a silver knife in her hand for the plaiting of the tiny frills. “ Did I ever tell you ’bout Mars kotch hold of my han’ once wid boP o’ hern an’ said “ take care of my boy ! take care of my boy !” an 1 wouldn’t res’ unt’well I prom- Newspapers, Sam P. Tvins, editor of the /Ath ens Post, one of the oldest editors ised. I done it soon ez I got my in Tennesee, gets off' the following senses together good, to soothe her j about politicians : of co’se, but I didn’t know what | The newspapers by this time I were promisin’, nor which de-|know that the average politician boys sho meant, nor nothin’. Ned, honey ? Mu’s oldest man, of Ney Hanover. Secretary, of State—William L. Saun ders. of Wake. Treasurer'—Donald Wr Bain, of 3V ake. Auditor—William V. Roberts, of Gates. Superintendent of Public Instruction— Sidney M. Finger of Catawba. Attorney General—Theodore F. David- son, of Buncombe. SUPREME COURT. Chief Justice-William N. H. Smith, of Wake, Associate Justices—Thomas S. Ashy, of Anson; Augustus S, Merrinion, of Wake. JUDGES SUPERIOR COURT. Wilt Thou the gift in kindness grant? A hoot owl sat in the maple tree, A jovial, happy owl was he. Dozing and sleeping his time away; But at the sound of the old maid’s prayer The bird awoke with a sullen stare. Silent he sat till the prayer was through, Then suddenly cried; ‘Whoof whool whoo’ n’other ’bout dem lessons, now, mun.” Rebuke and suggestion,, fell on heedless ears: the made neither defense nor i der, indeed, it is doubtful heard what was being said rather a^—ber. Iler mind First District— HL Shepherd, of Beaufort. Second District—Frederick Philips, or E dgecombe. Third Distrfet-ILG. Connor, of V il- son. Fourth District—Walter Clark, Wake. Fifth District-John A, Gilmer, Gut ford Sixth District—E. T. Boykins, As to grant Thy servant Thy voice to hear, Which has not before greeted mortal ear Since Sinai shook to its very base And its terrible tones? .O. wondrous grace!' Thus to herself did the old maid speak— of of of Sampson. Seventh District—James C. McRae, of Cumberland. Eighth District—W. J. Montgomery, of Cabarrus. Ninth District-Jesse F. Graves, of Yadkin, Tenth District— Alphonso C. Avery, of Biuke. Eleventh District—W. M, Shipp, of Mecklenburg. Twelfth District—James C. L. Gudger, of Haywood. Representatives in Congress. Sena e—Zebulon B. Vance, of Meck lenburg; Matt. W. Ransom, of North hampton. i’ .use of Representatives—First District Thomas G. Skinner, of Perquimans. Second District—James E. O’Hara, of Halifax. , Third District—Wharton J. Green, of Cumberland. Fourth District—William R. Cox, of W ake. Fifth District—James W. Reid, of Rock, gbam. , Sc renth District—John 8. Henderson, oi Rowan. Eighth District-William IL IE Cowles, cf Wilkes. T , Ninth District—Thomas D, Johnston, Buncombe. BOUNTY GOVERNMENT. And lay half senseless upon the ground Till roused again by a terrible sound, heard The loud “Whoo! whoop' of the ominous Then she answered: “Dear me! I hardly know who. Most anybody, Lord, will do !” DISTANCE LENDS ENCHANTMENT. Are as white as white can be, But never one in the harbor Are as white as the sails at sea. And the clouds that crown the mountain With purple and gold delight, Turn to cold, gray mist and vapor That comes not near our beach ; Stately and grand the mountain Oh, Distance I thou dear enchantrcs. The gleam of the far-off sail. JWHd Mob , befo’ ed above.’ The winter sunlight streamed in through the uncur- alike, taiued windows and made patches child of light on the dusky floor. On a rejoin- wooden bench, near the ironing if sho table, stood a big split basket half was HI led with other matter ; was wrest ling with its first psychological ciif- Acuity, thing Could there be such a tilled with freshly ironed clothing. In the deep throated chimney the flames, from the burning logs, leaped up and roared and cracked ; a big Maltese cat, on the hearth, as demoniac possession ? sat upright, and reflectively stro- Was it possible for devils to enter ked his whiskers with his mouse- human beings and arrogate to their ' colored paws. Outside the snow own purposes the natural powers lay deep on the ground. and intellectual force of the per- Mammy pulled out laceand frills sou so possessed? The Bible ci- and smoothed ruffles and tucks ted many instances of bodily pos- with clever, capable fingers, Her session and bodily casting forth : comely brown face was a pleasant there was the woman who accom thing to look upon, and her ban modated seven at once, and the dana turban made a bright patch man among the tombs. But then, 1 of color against the ducky back- Mr. Burton, the clever scientist, ground of the wall beyond her. who gave lectures on chemistry at 1 “ You lessons. the school she attended, maintain- mun,” she observed, tentatively ed that reve'ation was apocryphal. She had listened to his conversa tions with her uncle, at whose house she stayed during the school • session, when neither of the men knew of her presence in the room, ■ and had endeavored to follow the' course of their reasoning, to her j great bewilderment. She was an imaginative child, “ Dis here snow aiat too deep fur de cutter nother. I hearn yo’ Pa fellin’ Jerry he mils’ git it oat ter- morrer an’ haul you back ter de ’Cademy in de arternoon. C’ris- mus run out day befo* yisstiddy given to thought, to quietly hearkening to the convey sation of older people. She had collected a queer jumble of facts and fallacies, odds and ends of theories, scraps ot information, A'peJ ).' Court Clerk-E. A. Moye. Sheriff—William M. King. Register of Tleeds—Lewis II. W ilson. 'Treasurer—James B. Cherry. Surveyor—Abram S. Congleton, Coroner—J. B. Johnson. _ . Commissioners—John S. Harris, ( hair- man ; S. 11. Spain, E. 8, Dixon, James R. Congleton, Samuel Quiuerly. Public School Superintendent-Josephus Latham. Sup’t of Health—Dr. J. T. Sledge. TOWN. Written for the Reflector “Mar’s Ned's Wife,” 31. G. McClelland. Ilysh, honey !” But mammy— 1 Ilysh, chile! ’Taint no Bekase you gwine ter school for three or bin fo’ Mayor—Fernando G. James. Clerk-L. W. Lawrence. Treasurer—C. A. White. nion’ts you aint got all de ’light- ennient of de Turtles an’ de ’pos- Councilmen—1st Ward, J. R. Russell and J. P. Norcott. 2d Ward, C, A, White and J, S. Smith. 3d Ward, J. D, Williamson and J. L. Smith. CHURCHES. Episcopal—Services First and Ihird Sundays, morning and night. Rev. N. ( . Hughes, D. D., Rector, Methodist-Services every Sunday, morn ing and night. Prayer Meeting eyerj Wednesday night. Rev. 1- A. Bishop. brother way back dar in old Vir- ginny whar we all come from ?” “ No,” replied the child drawing nearer. “I shou'd like to hear about him.” “ Jus’ like I was fellin’ yon, chile,” commenced Mammy, sway ing softly back and forth, “ we didn’t none of us—dat is de white family (Iceptin’ ’twas yo’ Pa) an’ us house people—belongs! down here in Mississippi at fust. ’Twant none of-us raised down here. We come from up in ole Virginny ; in de James river valley dey called it, an’ our plantation up dar was another sort o’ one to disone. De lan’ wa’n’t no better, but de hous es, an’ de yard, an’ de neighbors was heap mo’ to my saterfaction den what dese is. ’Twas jus’ a beautiful place, dat one was, an’ dar I reckon we would all of lived an’ died same as we bad been born and raised, ef it hadn't bin fur Pear’d like to me arterwards when I was studyin’ ’bout it dat, dat ar dyin’ mother seed things whar was beyant de knowledge an, ezern- ment of mortal folks, an’ dat it laid pow’ful hebby on her mind. Po’lady ! She never lived mor^- ’n a day or two arter dat night, an’ arter her def’, pear’d like de string is the friend of the newspaper du ring the campaign and the enemy of the press at all other times. The offiice-hokler in general des pises an outspoken newspaper. When in office he wants only an organ to defend him, right or wrong. As a candidate he appre ciates the moulder of public opin ion and readily allows the necessi- had bust loose frum roun’ de fam-|ty o f a f^e press in a government fly, an’ it sorter drapped to pieces. | o fthc people. As an official lie Miss Frances, she war so broke j considers a free outspoken news- down wid ’stress an’ nussin’, dat I paper a public nuisance. After the ole Mars’r sent her down here to । e ] ec | 1 , oi4 b e b as n0 use for the press Mississippi, to stay flong ov her o . r people. aunt t’well she got rested an’ pae-; -••• itied. Dat was yo’ Ba’s mother,| The condition of the country kase Miss Frances took’en married has improved within a year. It her own cousin, like Virginny peo- ; bag been so slow and comparative- ple mos’ly does do. She war a 1 ly so little that it is not easily dis- widow den, an’ arterwards she'cerned. But there has been im- went up to de Norf somewhar an’ provement. Railroads have done got her another husban’, an’ Miss I better, trade has been better this Kate wa’r born up dar. ' year than last, and failures among My Sallie, de onliest gal I bad/merchants are fewer. During the (me an* ole Mistis jus’ followed one six months of 1886, ending with anudder, heaps o’ boys an’ jus’ one 30th June, there were nearly 1,000 gal apiece) come down here wid less failures than for the first six “I know all my lessons well enough,” rcplied'Alab. indifferent ly, “and I’m not going back to school until Monday. Mamma wants me to have my heavy dress es to take, and they aint done yet. I wisti you’d tell me a story Mam my. I’m so tired of thinking, and My ole Mars’r had six boys, an’ only one little gal, Miss Frances —your Ma. Dar was Ned, he was de ohles’ one, an’ proud we all was, bof’ black an’ white, upon de plan tation when he was born, po : fel low, kase didn’t nary one of us guess, not from ole Mars’r—de proudes’ one of all—down to de chil’un in de quarter, de trouble dat blue-eyed baby was gwine ter see. Den dar was Conway, Charles, an’ Robert—him dat Miss Frances kase she wa’r her'months of 188; . The liabilities are $50,434,000, against maid. An’ mighty pleased she a l so less, being wa’r, an’ sot up ’bout de change,' $74,722,000 for 1885.— Wihuing- like gals all is, white an’ black. I ton Star. De young men sorter scattered ; too, an’ de fus’ winter de Mars’r i PROFESSIONAL CARDS. was mos’ly by hisse’f ’cept when : >—— --r^TrT-^---T-r^^ Die boys would come down an’ go. D.e. moore. j. H. tucker. j d.murphy. Toward de spring dar came a ^JOORE, TICKER & MI RPHY, mighty change, for Mars Ned he: whirled in, be did, an’ got married,! an’ fetched his wife home to de ole ! __ A TTORNEYS-A T-LA W, Greenville, N. C. scraps of erudition,all second-hand i « Why’nt yon go in de house an’ for she was still too young to think ' play wid t’other chil’un,” suggest- connectedly, most of it mere junk which the influx of knowledge and experience would sweep away. It was all real to her, at present, and her old plunder was not rec ognized as such, but considered a fine possession, a vast treasure. This idea of demoniac possession was her last acquisition and she kept it in her pocket, as it were, and kept taking it out and turn- ties too. Folks whar war grey-'ingit in her bands and puzzling haired befo’ yer ma, eben, ’gun I her little brains over it, interested ed Mammy. “ Mandy and Jake’s in de nus’ry, an’ dey was havin’ a I mighty good time when I come 'out.” I Mandy and Jake were Mammy’s , own two grandchildren, merry lit tle coffee-colored monkeys,always in great demand with the white I children as playmates, on account ■ of their fertility of resource. Man- 'dy and Jake in the nursery was generally synonymous with fun of growed up to be a doctor—an’ Wiikins— Knfus dey used to call kim, kase bis head was as red as de colt ole Mars’r gin him when he got big enough to ride—a rale sorrel-top be were. Arter she had five boys Mistis look likeshe’d go clean distracted arter a gal, and ole Mars’r wa’n’t no better. When Miss Francos was born you’d er ’lowed dar never had been er baby Yon de plantation befo,’ an’ when place to keep house an’ make ’er home fur ’em all. An’ she did. De fust month she was on her Sunday manners an’ didn’t nary soul ’cept us colored te study ’bout beaux, some sense. I reckon. in order which even twelve-year- got jin the thing, but densely ignorant | o|d Mab did not despise . pT to . git inside of folks. Debbils big as er house, an’ strong as er horse. I done seed ’em. What you know I’bout it? You aint nothin’ but chil’uns! Chil’un done got so per ¬ Debbils kin ■ of its nature and properties, j One day she summoned up conr-1 age to question Mr. Burton about Baptist-Services First and third Sun- puketv an’ forred ole folks ’blee- days, morning and night, and on Second and Fourth Sundays at night. Prayer Meeting every Wednesday night. Morn ing Services at Pactolus every Second Sun- and nt Cross Roads, 111 Falkland township, every Fourth Sunday. Rev. Thomas Carrick, Pastor. Sabbath Schools in all the Churches every Sunday morning at nine o’clock. LODGES. ged to scramble ’pon de bum bank an’ gib ’em all de track, keepfrum giftin’ run clear over. Dey know dis, air dey ’pwionates d^, an’ you kyarnt never teach ’em nothin’— not eben dar own foolishness. it, but he simply laughed and bid her not to bother her little head with speculations on matters be yond her present scope ; to wait until she should be old enough to understand science, and then the dark places would be light to her, and the rough places made smooth But Mab could not wait. She wanted aid to understanding at Dey knows all whai’s printed ’pon 'once ; the darkness was dense but toy Arbi afteFthe 1st and Srd Sunday at! de ® M " sheet—ebery side—befo’ . s)ie cold not help groping, the Masonic Lodge. W. M. King. W. M. 1 de type gits sot up, an’ dey kin • pongh places obstructive, but that Greenville R. A. Chapter. No. 50 meets every 2nd and 4th Monday nights at Ma- tell Juout It, an sonic Hall, F. W. Brown, IL P. , piement befo’ dar Covenant Lodge, No. W, I. 0 0. K thro , de g k i n . ; moots ovorv 1 He.SuaT Illght. L. ! M ;’ sen’out er sup-! on |y made more intense her desire r eye tool bu'st to press forward. What could be Lordy, lordy ! dey- die meaning of “demoniac posses- L.C. LATHAM. HARRY SKINNER. A. L. BLOW j ATHAM, SKINNER & BLOW, Attorneys-at- Law, GREENVILLE. N. C. , ' u 4 L T AWRENCE V. MORRIL, people know nothin tail ’bout do | i temper she had, but arter dat I— Attorney and Counsellor at Law Good Lord hab mussy I don’t say | GREENVILLE. N c. nothin’! De tantrums UGH F . MURRA Y, could git into would er made tie M ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. ve.y ole Satan hisse’f open bis eye an’ uncurl his tail listenin’, while he larnt how she done ’em. po’ little Rolfe, de youngest of till,] Will attend all terms of Pitt Superior Court, from the tirst to the last day of the Ef you was to take dem seben session, and devote his best efforts to all " _ . ■ business entrusted to him. why he wa’n’t j devils Mal T 1,ad > an ’ add to ’ em 1 Mar 27 son, N. G. Insurance Lodge, No. 1169, K. of IL, meets every Friday night. Allen War- ren, D, . „ , Pitt Council, No, 236, A, L. of IL. meets every Thursday night. J. B. Cherry, C. POST OFFICE. Office hours 8 A. M. to 5 P. M. Money No or- ’s so forced !” The old woman paused in her sion.” As usual, when in difficulties work, flat iron in hand, and con- she betook herself to the kitchen day she was out or tune ; she did not want to play ; romping with the children could not solve the problem of demoniac possession for her. “I don’t want to play. I want to sit here with you, Mammy, and see yon crimp the rufiies on the baby’s dress, and listen to a story. Please do, Mammy ! Nobody ever tells such delightful stories as you —nobody .can. Aunt Kate says that you have the gift of narrative like the ancient improventors.” “ What’s dat, honey ?” ques tioned Mammy, a grateful look coming over her comely face. Dearly she loved big words and high-sounding compliments, as j cunning little Mab well knew. ! This, that Miss Kate Allison—a i young lady from way up in Bos- come de nex’ year, no’count at all. ” | de ones dat chased de hogs down' 1 ’ , 1 • . 1 de hill, an’de ones whar sot in de Everything went on mighty 1 ’ , , r i tombs wid de tormented man, an ; peaceful t’well de fo’ oldes’ bovs . . , ,1 ,, , ," pis’ as many mo- as you choses, an got grow’d an Miss I rances . , , , . . tii’n ’em loose in de big barn to jaw, an’ fuss, an’ quarfl, dey could n't do no wuss’en she done when her temper was up. She was mighty pretty in de face too, an’ could sing sweeter’n anything you ever hearn,an’ dance an’ be sweet as sugar long as she pretty slip of a gal ’bout eighteen. Den ole Afistie took sick, an’ noth in’ didn’t seem to do her no good. I mind one n ; ght when she was at de wust, she called me to de bed side to her. T*want nobody in de room ’cept me and her, kase dat was my spell of watchin’, an’ I’d , - not her own way, but let anybody made Miss Trances lay downin' 5 , , , , . . , . , , , cross ber, an’dey better take to de de nex’ room. Ole Mistis had ns’ 1 , . . , , , , woods an’live in er hollow tree up in de bed and was pintin befo’ ,, , , . , . , , , • p . t’well she come roun’ agin, ber wid ber white thin tinners, an’ 1 - , ,. 1 She come of a good ole family shakin’an’ tremblin’ like a person in an ague. I went up close when she call me, an’ pulled de kivers round her, an’ took hold of her han’s, an’ tried to make her lay down. Iler eyes were wide open but she didn’t look like she seed me, an’ she kept sayin’ over an’ over, “Ned’s wife! Ned’s wife! j too, but dey was bad people, bard- ; living, hard-swearin’, bard-drinkin’ I folks forginerations. Dey used to ! tell awful tales ’bout dar barb’rous I doings, and dar temper. One de ' family, dey say, killed b his wife— —don’t—don’t let—” an’ den she 1 least-ways be hit her, an’ she died an’ another one shot his own broth er in a row dey had one day. Arter I seed what sort ot ’ooman , ’85, tf. W. B. Kodman. 1. A. Sugg- F. G. James- pODMAN, SUGG & JAMES, A TTORNEYS-AT»Ij A W, [Successors to Jarvis & Suos.] GREENVILLE, N. C. Collections a Specialty. Practice in the Superior, Federal and Supreme Courts. ^^NDAEW JOYNER, Attorney and Counsellor at Law GREENVILLE, N. C. Will practice in the Courts of Pitt, Greene, Edgecombe and Beaufort coun ties. and the Supreme Court. _ Faithful attention given to all business entrusted to him. templated the child, who had usur-' to confide in her old nurse. Mam-1 ton—had said of her gift sounded sorter mumbled off like sol could-1 Miss Mildred was. I didn’t blame n’t onderstan’ her. 1’eared to me 1 ole Mistis fur bein’ oneasy on her D R. H. SNELL, WASHINGTON. N. C. Surgeon Dentist. Tenders his professional services to the P Teeth extracted without pain by the use o£ Nitrous Oxide Gas. S^-CONSULTATION FBEE-W I^ERBERT EDMOND, GREENVILLE, N. C. Fashionable Barter anil Hairtresser. Call around -and see him at the Glub House. Satisfaction Guaranteed. ped the kitchen chimney-cornel with unqualified disfavor, rolling I my was ignorant, but, as yet, Mab | very tine indeed. was only vaguely conscious of that | Order hours 10 A. M. to 41 I’. M. hers will be issued from 12j to 1 p.m. and, per eyes and clicking her tongue fact. She knew that Mammy did. ^B^the/maiVanives daily (except Sun- against her teeth as though lan- j not know as much as, for instance, ' day) at 9130 A. M., and departs at 3 F M. 1 gua£ y e proved inadequate for the her father or mother, but she was Tarboro mail arrives daily (except bun- © \ r • day) at 12 M. find departs at 1 P. M. - expression ot disdain. W ashington mail arrives daily (except Sunday) at 12 M. and departs at 1 P. M. Mail leaves for Ridge Spring and inter mediate offices Mondays, W ednesdays a nd Fridays at 6 A. M. Returns at 10 P. M. Vanceboro mail arrives Fridays at 6 P. M, departs Saturdays at 6 A. M. II. A. Blow, P. M. I don’t know exactly,” admit ¬ ’twas so curus dat I couldn’t git i my min’ votin’ it, fur to ketch hold | death bed. [CONCLUDED NEXT WEEK.] * ■ Vmqre money than at anything . ‘ - - else by taking an agency for the best riling book out. Beginners succeed gran I y. None fail. Terms free. Maja LUTT BOOK Co., Portland, Maine, C HAS. HERMANN SUEZ, Technical and Analytical j ted Mab, “but I reckon it’s a per- of it good, an’ ’skiver what she j son that tells the very best stories was aimin’ at no way I could fix in all the world, so that everybody it. Mars Ned didn’t hab no mo’ ted Mab, “ but I reckon it’s a per After a still willing to concede that Mam-I wants to listen to them—andthat- moments contemplation, pregnant i my might know more than she did i’s you. I’ll ask Aunt Kato if that Then too, she did not j isn’t it.” with rebuke for vain presumption,' herself. she turned to the open fire place,! wish to consult her parents, she i “Dat’s it, honey, dat’s it, you deposited ber cold iron before the ' feared that her speculations might 5 may be sho,” asserted Mammv, de glowing coals, and caught up shot be considered wicked, and she 1 cidedly. “ Miss Kate, she’s a la- one. She tested the temperature ’ wished to stand well with theldv oftbis by turning it face upwards' higher powers. Mammy was dif-' compliments, and scientifically spitting upon it, ferenf. clammy plight not be scrimp the cloth none, before she trusted it upon the able tp explain, but slip wpuld not* wife, en nothin’. I never even ! beam tell of his lookin’ ’cross de 1 road arter no gal pertick’ler. Look ' to me so sin’lar fur de Mistis to I couldn’t git her pacified n’oth- iii’ she don’t pay no grudgin’ e r, all I could do. She don’t never moanin’ t “ trouble” She kep’ er er moanin’ ’bout ’ “Ned” t’well I After a moment spent in refiec- got right sheered en foolish, She It is told in Waterbury, Conn., that a well-known business man of that town prepared to build a handsome dwelling, and awarded the contracts. During a recent kirmess there his fortune was told , by one ot the alleged gypsies, who 1 warned him to give up the project, I else death would claim hint. If ' the house should not be built, long life and happiness awaited him. Next day the merchant withdrew the contract, and nothing futher has been done about building the new bouse. Counsel and Expert in all matters rela ting to Chemistry. Investigations, re ports, analyses and opinions. a To o at oary* WASHINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA, THIS IS IMPORTANT. 4 LL PERSONS INDEBTED TO THE Auntorsigned either by note or account are earnestly requested to come forward and make immediate settlement, as wo are compelled to have the money. Flanagan & Williamson, JanOtf GREENVILLE, N. C.
The Eastern Reflector (Greenville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 14, 1886, edition 1
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