Newspapers / The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, … / May 12, 1881, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE FARM. Belling Small Things. Many farmers scorn to deal in small things nrown on the farm, and often al low little things to go to waste whioh might be mado a souroe of revenue. Our large cities and towns are generally sup plied with vegetables by market garden ers, but the smaller villages do not fur nish a market sufficiently large to justify one in engaging in the business exclu sively ; hence the residents of sueh places go without vegetables and fruit, except such aa they raise themselves on small lots. As an illustration of how much eau be made from small things, we give the following experience of a Pennsyl vania farmer as relutod in the Now Yerk Times: Farmers neglect their homo markets too much. Every country village may be made to furnish a market for a large quantity of fresh vegetables, milk, cream, butter and similar farm produeo. 1 have even sold considerable early sweet corn and cabbages to neighboring farmers whose crops had not yot reached maturity for use. It is a well-known principle of businoas that supplies create demand You show a person something which he never thought of before, and never knew be wanted it, and on sight ho finds it is precisely what ha needed. It is, in fact the thing "ho long had sought, and mourned because he found it not," with out knowing exactly what it was llu. man beings are full of just such unde veloped wants, and when these needs aro supplied they come as a revelation to them. There are no markets so poorly supplied with luxuries as eountry mar kets. Let mo give a little chapter in my own experience : When farming cloie to a village in Pennsylvania. 1 set out a strawberry bed, and planted a qaan tity of sweet corn and melom for my own use. These crops produced more than I needed, and I did not know what to do with the surplus. I procured a hand-cart, and employed a colored man to take this surplus to the village. I began with the strawberries; I sont out a hundred quart boxes with a good deal of doubt as to the result, expecting to have the most of them brought back. To my sarprise, the cart was brought back empty in about an hour, and the man handed tne ten dollars as the result of the venture, and wanted more berries, as the stock was exhausted before he had been half way through tho village. All hinds went to picking, and another load was sent off and sold, and the maa re turned by noon. "Boss," said he, "the folksea wants some cream ; what's wo to do about dat ?" "Let them have some, Harry." So I sent a can of fresh cream out, and it sold off at once at forty cents a quart. This was a new wrinkle. Sweet corn was sent out when ready, and the farmers who were in towo even bought it to take home. No oae had •sough sweet cam that year. The next year a much larger quantity of corn was pat out early, and the villagers came out to the farm eager to get it, and the stock was soon exhausted. Strawberries Under Glass. Miss H. B. Trimble, of West Chester, Pa., who has been very successful in the production of hothouse grapes for a number of years, met with tbe loss of her vines last summer from the ravages of the phylloxera. With extensive green house and farming facilities at hand, she decided to engage in the rais ing of straw berries and tomatoes during the period necessary to grow new grape vinee, end has the past winter been re markably successful in her new vesture. The varieties of strawberries selected were the Shapeless, Charles Downing and Cumberland, tho plants being placed in boxes five or six inches in depth, which were arranged on the shelving of the housee The tomato vines were plaeed on the floor and carefully trained up the side of the bailding. New York famishes the best market, the strawber ries bringing an average of $G per quart, while the tomatoes averaged fifty cents yer pound. The prices were well main tained throughout the winter, the seve rity of the season preventing Southern fruit getting into the market as early as usual. A New Yorker writes : To rid land of stumps, I dig around and under them with a spade, leaving a basin to catch tbe water of winter and spring, which, as it freezes, slowly raises the stumps from their beds. Some of the largest wero so raised by spring that we oould tip them over by hand. The solid ones I went around again to give Jack Frost another opportunity to put His icy Sogers under them. I think a field can be oleared in one-half the tlmo that it could by the old method." Stillu-an B Allen, oi Boston, has just distributed S3OO in prizes to Maine boys under eighteen years of age who have raised the most Indian corn oa oae eighth of an aera ia the pait season. More than 600 boys in nl! parts ot the State competed, and the prize, S2OO wu awarded to Frank E- Small, oi Stoekton, who raised 2,240 pounds. Cold Snaps. "We're having some pretty wintrish weather," said old Daddy Wot&erspoon to Undo Sammy Honniwell, aa the two gentlemen met near tha City Ilali.— "Right for'ard weather for the season." "Jist go, jiat so conceded Unole Sammy. "Rominda me of tho fall of 1831. It commencod 'long the foro part of NoTomber, and froze stiff till March. Good, smart weather, too. I remember that it was so cold in Brooklyn that No vember that bilin' water froze over a hot fire." Daddy Wotharspoon looked at him and braced himself. "Yea, yes," laid he, "I mind it well. That's the fall the milk froze in the cows. Rat the cold season was in 1827. It commenced in the middle of Oetober and ran through to April. All the oil froze in the lamps and we didn't have a light until spriug set in." "Ay, ay," responded Uncle Sammy, growing rigid. "It's just like yestorday to me. I walked 140 miles due east from Sandy Hook, on the ice, and slid back, owing to convexity of tbe earth, you know. It was down hill comin' this way. Rut that wasn't as cold as the winter of 1821. That season commen ced in September and tha mercury didn't rise a dregree till May. Don't you re member how wo mod to breathe hard, let it freeze, cut a hole in it, and crawl in for shelter ? You haven't forgotten that ?" "Not I," *aid Daddy Wotherspoon, after a short pause. "That's the winter wo used to give the horses melted lead to drink, and kcop a Lot Gre under 'em so it wouldn't harden till they got it down. Rut that was noihin to tho spell of 1817- Wo begun to feel it in tbe latter part of August, and ike boomed stiddy till the 30th of June. I got through the whole spell by living in an ice house. You remember that seaion of lbl7. That's tbe winter we woro under shirts of land-paper to keep up a friction." "Well, I should say I did," retorted Unole Sammy. "What! remember 1817? 'Deed Ido That was the spell when it took a steam grindstone four days to light a match. Ay, ay 1 Bat do you know I was unoomfortably warn that winter t" "How so ?" demanded Daddy Woth erspoon, breathing hsrd. "Hunnin' around your ice-house to find where you got in. It was an awful spell, though. llow long did it last? — From August to the 30th June? I guoss you're right. But you mind the snap of 1813, don't you? It com mcnecd on tlio Ist of July, and went around and lapped over a week. That year the smoke froze in the chimneys and We had to blast it out with dyna mite. I think that was the worst we ever had. All the clooks froze up so we didn't know the time ot day for a year, and when men used to set fire to their buildin's so as to raise the rent.— Yes, indeed. I got $3,000 a month for four burnin' buildin's. There was a heap of sufferiu' that winter, because we lived on alcohol and phosphorus, till the alcohol froze, and then we eat the brimstone ends of matches aad jumped around till they caught fire. Say, you—" Rut Daddy Wotherspoon had fled.— The statistics were too much for him. Laziness is a premature death. To be in no action is not to live. One may live as a conqueror, a king or a magistrate, but he must die as a man. — DANIEL WEBSTER. An Arkansas girl refuted to marry her lover unless he performed some he roic deed. He eloped with bor mother. Teacher: "Did I not tell you to be prepared with your history lesson ?And here you are unable to repeat a word of it." Soholar: "I didn't think it was necessary, sir ; I,ve always heard that history repeats itself." Kissing by ladies in way of friendly salutation has gone est of fashion now in all the great cities among the better society. One reason why it hns fallen into disuse it because of the greater risk of catching diphtheria and ether throat and mouth diseases from indulging in it. Dr. R. J Galling, the inventor of the famous gun bearing his name, was rear ed, the Buffalo Courier says, in a rough little log oabin in tbe heart of the North Carolina backwoods. What in time became the Catling gun is said to have sprung from a boyish attempt to make a eorn planter. The scarlet fever in Charleston it pronounced an eoideaiio. Tlie death rate there daily is truly alarming. Out of oua military company eleven death* occurred in oue week. Adults aa well aa children being its victims Of ooarie tho papers say nothing about it. The theory that a submerged body can be raised by firing cannon over it was recently proved in Chicago. A plumber named Leonard had jumped off the wharf and drowned himself, and his friends, got out the artillery and raised him by firiag over the spot where he had gono do wo. One Hundred Feet in the Air. Tbe following tad account of tho death of J. T Moore, ion of Capt. W. T. Moore, of Thoinaiville, is related by * Noes and Observer correspondent: "Mr. Moore was employed by the Riohtaond and Alexandria Kuilroad Company as foreman of rock work, and was on last Thursday evening at work twelve miles from Lyncbbarg, on tbe banks of James River, trying to break a vast rook with powder. Having drill ed a hole fifteen feet in the roek, and failing the third time to break the rock with powder, he attempted to charge it with nitroglycerine, pouring it in tbe hole from a jug. It ignited some way, supposed to havo been caused by tbe heat from the former efforts to explode it, or from frictioa by the fall of fifteen feet to the bottom of the hole. He was blown one hundred or more feet high, the body falling in Jamss River, 350 or 400 tect from the explosion, where the water was fifteen feet deep. The body was thrown with 6uch speed that the men who were near by and saw it thought it was a rook or powder keg; Thore was but one man assisting him at the time, and he was mortally woundod. A search was made lor tho body, and, fail ing to find it, but finding a trace of blood from the place of accident to the river, they wers forced to believe— though it seemed unreasonable—that the object seen %iug through the air and falling in the river was his body. "After a scaroh of four hours the body was found, the foot aud hands gone and being otherwise mutilated. ''Mr. Moore had beta employed by the Western Ncrth Carolina Railroad Company for the last six or seven yeari, at Mud Cut and other points, until aboat six weeks ago, when he left to take the position he was filling at tha fatal mo ment. Ho was twenty-four years old, and a very excellent young man of high character and standing in this commu uity, where be was raised." Young Moore was a cousin ef Mr. Jno. D. Paylor of Wiastoo. A Printer's Dream. A printer sat in bis office chair; his boots were patched and bis coat thread bare ; while hie face looked weary and worn with care. While sadly thinking of business debt, old Morpheus slowly round him crept, and before he knew it he soundly slept, and, sleopinr, h* dreamed that be was dead, from trouble and toil bis spirit had fled, and that not even a cow-bell tolled for the peaceful rest of his cow hide sole. As ho wand ered among the shades, and sni>ke and soorch of lowsr Ilades, he shortly ob served an iron door that crcakingly swung on hinges ajar, but -the entrance was crossed by a red hot bar, and Satan himself stood peeping out and watching for travelers thereabouts, and thus to the passing printer spoke and with growling voice the echoes woke : "Come in, my dear, it shall cost you nothing, and never fear; this is the place where I cook the ones that never pay their subscription suns, for though in life tbey u.ay escape, they will find, when dead, it is too late; I will show you the placo where I melt them thin wi'h red-bot chains and scraps of tin, and also where I comb their beads with broken glass and melted lead; and it of refreshments they only think there's boiling water for them to drink ; there's the red-hot griad stone to grind down bis nose, and red-hot rings to wear on his toes; and if tbey mention thay don't like lire, I'll sew up their mouths with rod-hot wire; and then, dear sir, you should see tbem squirm while I roll them over and cook to a turn." At these last words the printer aweke aad thought it all a practical joke ; but still at times, so real did it seem, that he cannot believe it was all a dream ; aad often h£ thinks, with a chuckle and grin, ef the fate of those who save their tin —and never pay the printer. Busiaess before pleasure—always pop the question before you atteuint to hug your swsetheart. People who have the asthma should •at oaiona. They have a tondcucy to strengthen the breath. "Tbespriag will be backward,' predic ted Vendor, as he wan about to apply a red hot poker to the cat's nose. An Olead farmer has had painted and posted up in his poaltry boase a large sign bearing the inscription : Eggs fifty cents a dozes." Ha also keeps light burning all night to prevent the hens flora going to roost. Aagry debtor: "Here is your money boy. Now tall we why your vaster wrote eighteen letters abant that paltry sum." Shopboy: "I'm sura I can't tell, air; if yoa'll excuse me, sir, 1 think it was because seventeen letteis did not fetch it. " It ii itaUd tbat the coat of roDniag Northern mills DJ •team per borae power ia about g7O per annua, while the ooat of running bj water ia estimated at about §2O per annum per borae power. Tbe difference in favor of water ia thought to be about SSO per annum for eaoh horse power. Agreeable to the above statement the water-power on Dan River in this county is worth uilliooi of dollart per annum. WILSON, BFRNS & CO., WHOLESALE GROCERS AND COMMIS BION MERCHANTS. So S Howard street, corner of Lombard; BALTIMORE. We keep constantly on hand a large and well assorted stock of Groceries—suitable for Southern aud Western trade. We solicit con ligaments of Country Produce —such as Cot ton; Feathers; Ginseng; Beeswax; Wool; Ikied Fruit; Furs; Skins, etc. Our facilities lor do ing business are such as to warrant quick sales and prompt returns. All orders will have oar prompt attention. 43-lv. ~IN ITS 17TH VOLUME. THE RALEI (i II NEWS. P. U. IIALK, Editor, L L POLK, Cor responding Editor EDWARDS, BROUGUTO.V & Co., Business Managers. A Ho. 1. DEMOCHATIC JOURNAL DAILY AND WEEKLY. T E R MS : Daily, 1 year, §7.00 I Weekly, 1 year, $2.00 -*'• 6 months, 3.60 I " 6mos., 1.00 " 3 " 1.75 | Address, THE RALEIGH NEWS, Raleigh, N. C. "If yon waul a GOOD PIANO OR ORGAN, write or call o«*W. P. ORMSBT, Winston, who can SBf ply any make or style made i in tho United State: at priess which will defy competition. If you want tbe BEST SEWING MACHINE aver put before the public, call on W. P. ORMSBT for the "l.igtil-Huaaisg i Domestic" in the Music Store, Winston. Old pianos, organs, and machines ex ; changed." . W. P. ORMSBT. ; T ißTcatrs aal Mee'atuics. PATENTS nnd liow to obtaiu thciu. Pa*|)h!ets el eO p«jes free, epen receipt of Siaiups for Postage. Address GILMORB, SMITH & Co., Solicitors of Patents, Box 31, Washington, D. 0. SJEEDS THAT SURPRISE! THE PAHM3BHS* "BOITAIXZA.- Maxtxc, fc new vpg(it%M* S. A., di fl~n from un.vth'.ti f ever grown hrr?. delicious m>v or cooked. Snod epnt t*y m til cU. A paper. Hoy» llofcii of Japan, half UeMi hr.'f nen. rninl hy chem ists to be the rliliest human food known. Flna foUcr plvit, f'i-cd, I) cm. a paper. Cuban Ctnv. u Watermelon, lint Impu ted, largest variety ever tfTown in 1. ii., ftria. luscious, ri'.Bi* u»id sucurv ; best to keen or ship. 25 cts. a paper or 2.t secflH. 6 papers for |l. Very rcaree. Ur-vf-Wooa Muskmelou, known. 2 ts-J fr-"t lunir-Bne qnalttv, early an I proline, loots, a toper. I'llm.u Tomato, rieiien: flavor, early, proltC'-. solid—un cqn&led In everr wny.lj I'!- a paper. White K«yp tlun l orn (from the N!le\ »(elds Immensely in the Mouth where o'.horcorn fails. Unequalea for t dile or etnek, '.*> ct». a paper. 76 els. a Pound. Teoelnte,one plant fe s.t enr two days: lOto 1- n. blch. 15 "ts. It paper. (tireo ('orn-rrtl na 1 In. long, V in. bro«ul. Seed will bring Ihbiiion prices, Ijetj. a paper All th-above -n'. for "of each for Aitdß-m C. n.«t3.BV.irr .JtCO. Atlan.-a, «». Reform.*: Hon. W. L. Calltouu. Mayor ot Atlanta. W. ASK the recovered •* t dyspeptic, bilious foTWIX suffering, victims of t ~ fever autl ague, tho mercurial diaeajcd U patient, how recov ereil health, cheerful spirits and good ap i t,,e y will tell ttU 3 ? *slll y°" h u taking SlX —gj* MOSS'S LIyUR RBOULA TOR. Tho Cheapest, Purest, nnd Best Fumily Medicine in the World! For DYSPEPSIA. COySTIPATIOX, Jaundice, Bilious attacks, SH'K J/h'AP ACUE, Colin, Depression of Spirits, SOUR STOMACH, Heart Burn, .Vc., &c. This unrivalled Southern Remedy is warrant ed not to contain a single particle of MKRCD ftv, or any injurious mineral substance, but is Purely Vegetable, containing those Southern Roots and Herbs, which en all-wise Providence has placed in countries where Liver Diseases most prevail. It will cure all Diseaaea caused by Dorangoment of the Liver and Bowels. THE SYMPTOMS Of Liver Complaints are a bitter or bad taste in the mouth ; Pain in the Back, Sides or Joints, often mistaken for Rheumatism; Sour Stomach; Loss of Appetite; Bowels alternately costive and lax ; Hi'iiduche; Lots of Memory, with a painful sensation of having failed to do something which ought to have been done; Debility, Low Spirits, a thick yellow appearance of the Skin and Eyes, a dry Cough often mis taken for Consumption. Sometimes many of tht symptoms attend the disease, at others very few ; but the LIVER, the largest organ in the tody, is generally the seat of the ilisease, and if not Regulated in time, great suil'ering, wretchedness and DEATH will ensue. CAUTION. As there are a number of imitations offered ro"the pnhlic, we would caution the commun ity to buy no Powders or Prepared SIM MONIf LIVES ■REGULATOR unless in white wrappers, and has the red letter Z and Jiortiir in the front, and i 3 made by J. 11, ZSILIN $ CO. "Wi hare tesled its virtues, personally, and know that for Vysjfpsia, biliousness aud Throbbing Headache, it is the best medicine the world ever saw. We have tried forty other remedies before Simmons' Liver Regula tor, but none of them gave us more than tem porary relief ; but tho Regulator not only re lieved J)ut cured us."— Ed. Telegraph and Messenger, Macon, Ga. MANUFACTURED ONLY BR J. 11. ZEILIN & CO., Philadelphia, Pa. SOLD BV ALL DRUGGISTS. delSt Robert G. Galloway, Jr., with STERN & CO., WDOLBIALB Itools and Shoes, No. 9 GOVERNOR STREET, sth Door froa Maia, ap7m6 RICHMOND, V*. fDEMQlfittj'B ,-or BOI.IIIK.UR, I CIIVIUIIO Widow#, fathers, mother* or •hildren. TlmnwrndfPer«i.>nf given for lOMof t»r wins »r RMJDlftenno. Th "i«»ad« cf ptuiiorHT. *. 1 ,oldi"W entitled to |JS'CK£A»£ and BOfNTV. PATEM'S procop»d fwr InvrDCv/v. notdj r« land warrant* rror!irci.houßht»nd*old. Bolditr* tr.d bcirfapr'T f«>r yoar ri?ht« at one#. Sct.t! a . tamp? for 1 Too C'Ui««»n-Sw!dkr." and Pnt#i'-n and rnoifir Uw«. ititrki Mi l it:«trt>cMonf. Wo «.t/irofer K» Ui'nMndM»r Pc&aiMkorA tmi Cllmti. A hlrxrr* N. W, FlT*B;3ra!!* Cp.l'i v.-no; j; lAs ;-.it Atfyi, »,r.ck Wusmntha. D.v. GEORGE W. IIINSIIAW. W. M.^HINSHAW. FALL AND WINTER GOODS, 1880. IIINSIIAW BROTHERS, (BIG STAR SIGN, SHALLOW FORD STREET,) WINSTON, N. C., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN Dry Goods, General Merchandise, Grass Seeds, Fertilizers and Country Product. ONE OF OUR FIRM HAS JUST RETURNED FROM NEW YORK, BOSTON, AND other Northern cities, and we now offer the trade a much larger stock thai w» »T«r beforo had, consisting iu part of Jo Cases of Trints 5 Cases of Dress Goods 5 Cases of Pleached Domestic 2 Cases of Flannel 2 Cases of Linsey 6 Dales of lllankt-ts and Quilts 3 Bales of Ticking 2 Bales ot Drilling lo Bales of Plaids 2o Bales of Sheeting 16 Cases of Jenns, Cassiaieres and Cloth 2o doz Men's While Shiits nnd Drawers l&doz Men's and Ladits' Merino Shirts aud Drawers Soo Shawls and Ladies' Cloaks luimrnss Stock of Notions of all kinds 5o Pieces Oil Cloth Bo Bags Coffee 25 Barrels Sugar 25 Cheese 25 Buekels Candy 3o lioxes Soap 5o Barrels Syrups 2o.Grosses Snuff Tinware of every description Big Stock of I'ainls and Medicines 25 Catea lints School Books, Blank Books and Stationery, 1,000 Pairs Winchester (Virginia) SHOES BOOTS. All warranted. Nose hotter. Complete Assortment of FRIKS' JKANS, UKORQIA JKANK and Holston Woolen Hills, ALL WOOL CASSIMKIIE.3. All sold nt FACTORY i'UICES. Our stock of ALPACAS ani DRESS GOODS and TRIMMINGS is very large. We hare recently added a Clothing 15 cpa r t ell TO OCR STOCK, AND NOW OFFER AX ENTIRE NSW LINE OT OVERCOATS AND 200 SUITS FOR MEN AND BOYS, Rt bottom prices. Wo will sell our clothing ns low as wo can afford and hare only eae price for it. Oar goods are bought right and will be Sold at a Nmall X'l'oiit. Wo defy competition in both stock and prices. Country merchants will End ear B©„ WHOLESALE DEPARTMENT UNEQUALLED. "Wl Our trade has increased more rapidly than that of any other house in Winston aad wa intend to keep it growing. We are thankful for past patronage and ask everybody to corns and sea us. ALLISON & ADDISON'S I vv^'vvj! "ST A R fei l\ UK AND" tip COMPLETE MANURES are tho BEST for WHEAT, CORN and TOBACCO. N. 11. MEDEARIS, of Forsyth. TIIOS. H. PEG RAM, Jr., of Winston, | Are with us as Salesmen, and J. W. MARTIN, of Davii, I invite their friend* and ao- W. 11. BYNUM, of Stokes, quaintancea to eall and see J. M. MARTIN, of Stokes, them. W. T. POINDEXTEII, of Yadkin. Respectfully, October 28th, 1880. IIINSHA W BR 0 TJIIRS. STILL ALIVE AND KICKING* JOHN F. GRIFFITH, FRANK L. MOORE, ISAAC H. NEL6ON, Of Davie County. Of Stokes County. Of Stokes County. A BIG SHOW COMING ! Although we have been driven out of the Joyner block by fire, we beg to let tho public know that our business is going on as if nothing had happened. We are now located on the Ogburn Corner, where we have on view a Large, New aid Well Selected STOCK OF DRY GOODS, Groceries, Notions, Hats, Boots and Shoes, Tinwaro, Queensware, Willow-Ware Sole Leather, Bacon, Salt, &c., &c. In fact everything kept in a First Class Store. We are now open and earnestly solicit our many friends and iormer customers te BE SURE and not buy goods before giving us a look in, as we are satisfied we are fully pre pared to give entire satisfaction. All Goods Guaranteed as Represented. We are just starting and intend to build up an boneßt trade by fair deatfng. Griffith, Moore & Co. WinstoDj'lTanuary, Bth. H. A PERFECT STRENGTHENER.A SURE REVIVER. IRON BITTERS are highly recommended for *ll diseMes T+- quiring a certain and efficient tonic ; especially Indication, Jhjtpepna, Inttr mitteni Fever*, Ward of Appetite. JASS of Strength, Lack of Energy, etc. hnnchee the blood, strengthens tho muscles, and gives new life to tho nervee. 1 hey act liko a charm on the digestive organs, removing all dyspeptlo symptoms, such *s IhWmo the Food, Bekhinq, neat in the Stomach, Heartburn, tie. The only Iron Preparation that will not blacken the teeth or give headache. Sold by all druggist®. Write for tho ABC Look, 32 pp. of useful and amusing reading— tent free. BROWN CHEMICAL CO., Baltimore, Md. 2#o Cases Slioci nnd Boots Go Packages Crockery and GUsawar* 100 Kegs Cut Nails 2o Keg* Horse and Mul* Shoes 25 Boxes Horse Shoe Naila 15 doz Sliovols. Spades aid. Forks 2o dozen A xes 3,000 dozen Ceats' Spool Cotton Cross-Cut, Hand and Wood Saw* 2,000 lbs Sole Leather boo lbs Upper Leather Files, Locks, Hinges, Bitta, Screws, Hames, Traces and Callars, 2,000 lbs Pots, Skillets, Ovens and Lid« 20,000 lbs Meat and Lard 1,000 Bags Salt 500 bushels Clover, «the Grass Seeds 4o tfozen Buckets *nd Tuba 3o dozen Brooms 3o Coils Rope 200 Oak Kegs 5 bnrrols Coal Oil 2 barrels Linseed Oil 2.000 lbs Lewis' White Lead 250 Trunks, Valises and Saddles 65 Grindstones and Fixtures
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 12, 1881, edition 1
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