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five classes in the School. A large accession to this School is confidently expected by the Superintendent and teachers. The Library of this school is a good one, and numbers two hundred volumes of instructive and entertaining books. The teachers of the schools are Misses. M. B. Bowman  S. A. Dickson, and E. Swinburn, white ladies of from the North, assisted by Miss Mary Holley, a freed girl of Greensboro said to be bright and promising as a scholar.
The building, in which the schools are taught is a large frame one, in good repair, tolerably well ventillated and if it had been divided and partitioned off into three rooms rather than into one very large one, and one quite small it might be pronounced a good School House.
The building belongs to the Friends. 
The attendance upon the Schools is prompt, and there is very