Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Ledger … / Feb. 8, 1879, edition 1 / Page 1
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I . 1 I ; . -'..).. i : ' . T .;;;,: . ' . v i i . . -r Ai l i i A -I ,- - . ; 1J u AJ . ... r : - .-. .. : SfFicn ox - - I W ' J I i MB " FV J r II " . Ii 1 . ( I V7 " E 1 ; f - U A M.. A A B 1 J 1 . M M ls 1 k . . FttANKM.Y 'STREET, II SfH W'SS, JRMU 1.1..' V B , X ? - 'J; v, ' MX,. ' ' 1 . . ' T crrOlTK THK STORK OF J. WL 'iquai-p.' one insertion, one Hollar 0,e each mf. sequent in.-ertion tittt? Il'lits. i-M;tr.otsliia(lo for htt-Krwh-cw riiursttay bctore each day of Uue. i i " THK GKKATEST BARGAINS OF THE SEASON. . j 1 " i . ; I orlfr to f'a our stock as iapiilly wi.ihH. w shall offer our entire t?sr.ir- 'ol: Meri'hau.lise for 30 lay. lor Cish. aH l-ricvs never reached beiore in tiii-' rJ trkef. AVc have a nice assortment ot v, KY STAPLE DHY GOODS, 1; HEADY MADE CLOTHING, BOOTS Jk SHOlv HAUD Av'aRE, CliOCKERY, ind GROCERIES. Ve ileem it r.nnccc ssary to ive quo- atHin-s, a siieh:n(ivertKiii- only leads to cutting on a tev leading -oods by ti mtrehants vit.hotit seeurinorany ad- Mta to.-iuirenasers in I heir general iills. We'can' safely saj- that our gotvjs have beeii i bought .at the lowest pfic.es ri-aehed this season and win oe sold at . wv suaall advance on . cost. We are now selling tome goods at 23 er cent, under quotations given by others. All are respectfully invited "toveall and ex-'--amine; f - , " Pay XTp Old Seoret. We tender our thanks, to our friends who Have ;stood hy us so faithfully and paid ih Sfi promptly. And -oufd i-e-mind those indebted to lis that we are greatly in need f the money. .We have waited long ahd patiently-with some of you. and we know that times are hard, that the4iriees for produce are low, and it may-he. that you oah't pay all at one time." tVnn-' J see us. We will al low yotri.beral prices and deal liberally witJi you. Our inability to call on you' "but increases your -obligation to ca! and see us an-,1 pa.v what you can. Very respectfull v, ii LONG A XOllWOOI) . Ch spel Hill. X. C, Dec. 7. 187S. . OJEX THE I3I:T, Webster's XJiiuritlocl U0 Eiigraviiigs; 1S4 I'ages luai to. Four Pa;es of Co!n'4 PUk FiiblUhed ly G. t 1. MKRKrAM, at Springfield, M;iw."( warmly ixi)oj:sj;d PY Ivi. run. ! I . Fret4.it . Mvtk'y, I ;eori; Mar-hJ i-".V;:-eeue H:dlock. J I;i ! i. WhitU i . r. Willie, f '.John G. S.-ixi:. Klltiu Huniit. - l:nul Weirter. it'iti i.'hviii c. " . 'II. .'ol-ridge. , ?,ir, j j' ' Hor;!'"1 Maui!. Mf'ieitii Jitt.v rr.ij- Frerident's. tiiti t4r Anit'vi .-an 'ai-d European 'ioI;trs. "T T. -tt-t r-c he Dicrioitarv us-d in ? t)j'j :mii (i :!mMit i!iiting Otliro.' , ..v.- .....i l'.,.;i,..i u ti i'--r -on-i.-.i:it ue aim reierenee. .'t.t f..ifi"Ty l.;;p in training eji'ddren o:;:' :i;tt-ligeiit men. 1 ij. v.fri! far- later. Imc t- more mat ! !. uiv other Dictioiiai V. ; rpiie authorized auth'wri.ty iu Courts ot -L .hitiee, for the meaning of words. E p-ypi dories ahd iletiuitioiis faf in ad v.:u -ejof any other Dictionary-. . e orainended bv f hief Justice Waite as'MjeVtauthoritj- for delinitions." THE BEST. F A' GTS: Kecommended b .the State Supt's of uinercnc rauites anu yj over .college i'reiidents. , AlM)ut"3?i,OOQ have been placed in Public Sehuols hy law or by 'School authorities!. It contains 3,000 illustrations J i l.V yiZi-il i&L 7 f-rxJr- 1 k ! M I I ! I I 1 I -a I . I I f ! I 111 tT I I . ' nearlvthree times :is manv as an v other iictioiiarv. Three pictures, of a ship, on page 1 751. illustrate the 'meaning tf more than IOO M oi-ds. The sil 4 of AWbster's Dictionary "s 9 times as great as that ot :imv otlier w ries ofDictiouarie.V' ' AI.S . , ' WEUSTER'S NATIONAL PIC TORIAL DICTIONARY. , h40 Pages Octavo. GW Engravings. It it'not ri'jhtly 'claimed that IS THE .si,o;o.o IN PHEMIU.5IS! - COMMISSIONS TO ALL. AGENTS ARE WANTED 1 - ! in every vost town in the United State l? eiBi Mibseptious to the 1,1111 ugtoii Iluwlceye. scd five cents for copy a'nd terms to IIAWKEYE PUR. CO., - I$uilington, Iow. VX3L,tJ3XK: II. FOR THE PUBLIC GOOD. ! IVUMBKR lj CHA:E SOME ONE'S SERVANT GUU. phe stood there, Ieaiwnir weaiily: Against, I lie winnow frame. . Her lace was patient, sad and sweet, . Her garments ooai-sc and plaui Wlio is -he, pray ? I asked a. friend Tlie redilipg ve a curl, f Je:tllv ! I do i.ot know tier n une ; She;S some ones servant girl. , i III1 I lltyl 111! tltU O. I I I I With I'lir.ien trudge alon jr. Her lace w;i sweet anil patient .-till, I Amid thtf jostling throng; i Slowly, but cheerfully she moved, j- Guarding with watchful i-Are I r A mai Kei o.isket, inuxii too luge Fur heislight hands lo bear. ! A man, Fd thought a gentleman I Went puAing rdetv b. j , Sweeping the basket irom her hands I nut llin. ug uu. ins cf, For th'ere. was no necessity ! I Ami ! that busy whitU i , For him to be a gtntleman j j: To "some one's servant ghi-'v Ah !well it is, that God above ' I Looks in upon the heurt, I" And never judges any one j I iiy just the outer part ; I For It the soul be pure and gootl, i lie will not mind the rest. 1 Nor question what the garments were In which the ioim was dressedL I - s And, manv a man, a woman fait ! Uv, fort tine reared and fed. '1 Who will hot mingle here below I With those who earn their bread, When they have passed away from life, I Beyond the gates of pearl, j Will meet before their lather's throne With many a servant girl. j Sut Liovenaroofirl 13ncltlv fIoid that are horse down.4 to the yearth." "He's spreading his tail to rty'.now." Keep him whar he is." ,Vo, wo, Shaytail " "He's ,c ancmg a utr J hese, And .like expressions were addressed to a tiueer-looking Idng legged,' short-hodied,- white haired, hfg-eyed, funny sorfof a genius, fresh from some bench legged Jew's cloth'iig store, mounted on j"Tear poke," a nick-tailed, bow-iieeked, long, poor ho:se, Iialf dantiy, hall ilevil, and enveloped in a jiertect net Work of bridle reins, cruppers, martingales, straps, .circingles and tl'i reting, vho had reined up in front of Pat " Nash's, grocery, jmong a crowd of mountaineers, lull of fig'nt arid mean whiskey. j ''I say, you, durned ash cat, just keep your siiirt on,- will ye i You iiave never seen a mle hoss till I rid up. Tearpoke is next la; the iTeft that ever shericd nubhins, an" he's dead lis a still worm poor ole Tjcketail." hr ' . . ; What killed hirri, Sut ?' said an ! . . . anxious inquirer. ; j j" Why, nothing, you tarnal fool, he jus died so, died a standin! up, at that. Warn't that go3 lueki .Fri2 stitf; no, not thai adzacly, but starv ed fust' and -'then friz afterwards, so i' "stiff, thai when me an' dad juishnd him over, lie stuck out jes so (spreading--out his arms and les)jlike a carpenter's . bench, and A we waited se'venteeo'days lor him u thaw, afore wucoulil skin 'iui. Well, there we was Dad, an' me, (counting on his fin gers) dad, aiC me, ah' Sab, an' Jake (Fool Jake we calls him fer; short) aii' Januass, an' Phineas, an' me, an Calline Jane, an' Sharlutte Ann, an Simeon Samul, an' Noar Danj H eb ster, an'r nicy an' the twin gals, an! Catharine Second, an7 Cleopatary tVntony,. an' Jane Lind; air Tom Bullion, an' the baby, an' thej pros pect, an nam herseft all lef j "thout ara hoss to crap with. I here was nice mess for a 'spectable white fam ily lb be slashed in, w-anft it ? I be darned ef I didn't sorter like stealing a hoss sometimes. Well, we waited an' rested till nig . h strawberry time,; hoping'tjiat eome stray boss mout come along, but dog my cat et enny sech lucli ever cums w'har dad. is, he's so dratted . mean, an' lazy, an' ugly, ah' savage. -, '("Well, one nite, dad he lielrvake ali nite..asnortin'an'rollin',an'blow- ! 1 iii', an a scratchin', an' a whisperin' to mam,' an'! nex' mornin', says he, S it T tell von what we'll do ; I'll be hoss rhyseff, -an' pull the plow, ile you driN tne, an. ion tlie L HILL, ,N. G4 ole quilt (that's mam) an' the bras f . . :0 kin jlant, or let it alone, just as llieyj please.' ip out we we went to the pawpaw , thicket, and leaded a rite pearj chance of hark; air' .mam an' mei inado gears for da3, an' they becum laim nitily, then he would have a bridal, so I luk a old umbreller what I'd tbun' an' a little forked piece of ironj!sorter like unto a pitchfork, ye know, an1 we bent an' twisted it I! ' . ' ' i sorter inter a bridal bit, snail shapej (dad: wanted, a curb, as he said he mite! sorter feel his oats hikI irbts cavortm'.) W ell, when we got; ter bridal fixed on dad, he chomped ah bit just jike a hoss, (he allers was a mostj" complicated dern fool : enny iiow,an' mam allers said so when he warnt about,) nv then I pat on the geers, an' out dad an' me goes to the field,1 I leadin' dad by the bridal, an a totin the gopher plow on my back When, we cum to the fence, I let down the gap, an' it made dad mad $ he wauteuT to jump the fenceon all fours, hoss ways. I hitched him to i . r -..". i the gopher, an' away went dad lean in' forward to his pulliif rite : peart, an' .we made sharp plowing dad go in rite over the sprOuts an' bushes same' as a rale hoss,Jthe Only differ was he went on two legs. Presently we cum to a sassafrac bush, an' to ill , ! S- ; - keep up his karacter as a' hoss, ddi bulged squar intu it, an' thru' it, an' tore -down a hornet's nest nigh as big as a bosses head, an' all the tribe kivered him rite strate. He reared an kicked onst or twiste an' fotched a squeal wuss nor ara lioss in tl destnc, an' sot intu " mnnin' awav , just as nateral as you ever seed. I let gj the lines an' hollered .'woa, dad, woalV but I mout as well said ' woa" to a locomotive. Gewhdlicans! howlie run 1 When" ho' emu W HUs t lnsiS lQ y n;y brethring, bushes, he cleared the top of 'em . j i -i .'-.!' gopher an' all. P-raps he' thot there mout' be another settlement of bald hornets in 'em, an" that it was safer to go over than j thru, j an quicker lone.;' ' ' N'Every now an then heM paw the side of his he d with fust oneiforelet?' an- tin ii tothi'?-, then. he'd gin hisseft a ovei haiided slap, that sounded' like a waggiii w Ii J i, a run n in' all tlie time, an'' a .'kerrin' that gopher jist about as fast an1 as liigli from the yarth as a gopher wis eve carried I swear. When he cum to the fence, he busted rite squar tliru it, tarrin' down-rite intu seven pannels scaiter: in' an' brekin the! rails mitily, ah' here jie left gopher, geers, singletree aii' ciivvis all mixed up an" not wuth a1 darn. Most ot his shirt stuck on the end of a rale, an' nigh ontuja pint of hornets staid with the shirt,a tinxm' it all over, an' the balance on 'em, about.a gallon an' a half, kept with j dad. j He seemed to run just adzacly as. fast as the hornets , could fly.' It. wur the litest race I seed. Down thru the sage-way they all went! the hornets makin' it look sor ter like smoke all roun' dad's bald headj an' he with nuthin "on but the bndal, an' nigh onto, a yard o' plow lines sailin' behind. - . VI seed that he war aimin' for the swimmin' hole in the crick,, wliar the cliff h oyer twenty-five feet perpqn d ic ul ar to t h e wart e r, an ' h i t's nigh onto ten feet deep. So to keep up his karacter as a hoss, running up to t.hebiuft; he jistjleapt rite off intu the water, an' jist I kept on runnin': I crept! ao' looked over. There was dad's' baid head, for the yai th like a peeled ingun, a boblyV up an' down, an1 the hornets sailin' an" circul in roun'jan' roun', turkey buzzard fash ion, an' every wonst in a while one, an' sometimes ten, 'ud make a dip, at dad's -head. He kept up a rite peart dojjiri under sometimes, afore they hit liim nii'i fiitmn.times after, an ; the 1 1 1 U IliiUf ... v - water was k.verea wun uu.u - ' ' ',.ItTI . . L n!n -r t ti. hornets, 'vvnm on yarm . j doin'ln thar, dad ?' s'ays. I... Von t ( ip) jer-see these cusseu Vu,P; u . nyl varmints (dip) after me?' 'Why,' pez I fthem are hoRS flies thar- 'you t ; faint ralelv afeard r.t em are you lioss ibes bell i' se2 dad, 'they're m i a in in rri it ti kt.i. i.i.v n ...... ... ? - T ... , . . i (dip) inf irnul cuss !' 'Well; dad.you'll ave tb stay there till nite, an' arter inoy go to roost you cum home an I'll feed ye. I porter think you won't need enny c;irriei' for a week or two.' 4I wish I riiay never see io morrer, (dip) if I doift 'ruinate you (iip) when I do git out P.sed dad. " 'Better, say. you wish you may never see another bald hornet, if you play boss agtn,' mz I and kno wiu' dad's unmotified na er, I broke from them yarts. an' sorter cum to the cop per mines. I'staid hid but till the next afternoon, when I seed a lellow traveling an' says jl, 'What was go- in' on at the cabin this side of the crick when you passsed it V Why, nuthiii' much, only a niani was sitten in. his door with nara a shirt on, an' was about as big as a ten gallon keg, n' he hadn't the fust sign ot an eye all smooth.' , 'That was my gad? sez I. 'Been fiten much in this neighborhood lately V sez the trav eller, ruther dryly. 'Nun wulh speak ing of pussonly or pan jcnlarly,' says I; Now, bojs, I hain't seen dad seuce, an wud be afeard to meet'him in the . next, ten years." And the last I saw of Sut, he was stooping to get -in at the doggery door with a mighty mixed crowd at his heels. The Ilcti-p ol Tlaon sand fetiiii52w. fTliis chaiiicteri.stie1 ellusion first ap peared in a New Orleans paper.; It is waif worthy ot preservation, i lie lo calit3' is supposed to be Jit ;a village on the bank of the Mississippi liiver. whither the volunteer parson hail jbrought his 'Hat boat for the purpose oi J . that I am not an edicated man, an' I am not one ot them as believes that education is necessary for a Gospel minister, for I believe the Lord edi: cates his preachers jest las he wants "em to be ed:cated ; an' although I say it that oughtn t to say it, yet ni the State of Indian v, whar I live. i. liar's no mail gets bigger congrega tions nor what 1 g ts. Thar may be some here to-day, my brethring, as don't j know what persuasion I am uv. Well, I must say to you, my brethring, that I'm a Hard Shell Baptist. . Thai's some folks as don t like the Hard Shell Baptists, but I'd rather have a hard shell as no shell at all. You see me here to-day, my breth ring, dressed up in fine clothes ; you mout think I was proud, bat I am not proud, my brethring, "and al though I've been a-preaeher of the - - i. gospel for twenty years, analthough I'm: chptihg of the flat, boot that lies at your landing, I'm no( prcud, my brethring. . - j - ! i I am not gwine to tell edzactly .wiid-re my text is to be found ; suf fice it to say, it's in the leds of the Bible, and you'll find it eomewhar between the book of Generations and the last chapter - of 'the book of Revolutions, and ef .'.you'll 'go and search the Scripture's, you'll not only find.my text thar, but ai great many other texes as will do you good to read, and my tex, ' when you shall find it, voti shillfind it to read thus: "And he played on a harrj uv d thousand strings sperits ny jest men made perfick.'V My text; 'my. breihrlng, leads me to speak of sperits. Now thar's a great many kinds of sperits in this world. In the fuss place, thar's the sperits as some folks 'call ghosts, and thar's the sperits uv turpentine, and thar's the sperits as some folks call liquor, an' I've got as good an artikel of them kind uv sperits on my flat boat as ever was fotcb down the Mississippi river; but thar's a great many other kinds of sperits, for the tex says, "He played on a harp uv a t-ho-us-and strings, sperits uv jest men made p 3rfick." But I'll tell you the kind uv 8, 1879,' : snerits . as la nit ;ri k is as fire. That' the kind uv sperit i . ... . j is meant in the Itex. mv brethrih iNOWtliar's 1 WAaK'mllnir-LJnjJ H ,.-.v a.Kiijr jxilJVld; uv tire If! tl.n nmvlvi ? there's the common sort of fire you liuht; you cigar or pipe wjtli, and then lhar's foxfire and, camp ire, fire before your ready, and fire md fall bhek, .and many other kinds1 uv fire, for, the tex says, "He playcxj dn the harp uv a! owsand striiigs, sper ts bf just men made jier'fiek!" But. I'll tell you the kind uv Jire as is meant in the tex, my brethring it's hell fire .V an' that's the lind uv jlire -&s a great mauy uv .yr)u II i jkuc ci you juon i ao uettee nor iwhat you have peen dom for "He played! on a harp uv a m-oaud - - t - . strings, sperits pertick. u v jest men made .1 Nmv, thedifferent sorts of fire'.in the world may be likened ijntp the different persuasions of Christi.lns iii the world. In the first pl;lce We have the Piscaj ahons, and th4y are a high-sailin' and high-falutiif set, and they may be likened unto-jt tur key buzzard, that 'flies up into the air, uiid he goesinp, aiid up, tli i;e looks no bigger than your ingei nail.aud the fust-you know he' cums down,: aridMowif and is a fillin hini-. self' an the carkiss of a dead hiss bv, the side of the road, and "He played .on the harp uv ja thousand strings, sperits uv jest men made perfipk." And then thar's the - Methodis, ' .. i . i 1 Ml. 1 -L . 1 anu iney. inay uu iiseiieu unio Hie -qui ril runniir up into af tree,' for i he Methodis : bel-se ves if'g w in e on trofn one degree uv grace to an- theV- ahd final y on to perfection, and the squirril goes! up, and upj and up, and he jumps from limb to iimb, and branch to branch, ahd the fust thing you know he falls, and lown he cums down kerflumix, and that's like the Methodis, for t hey Ts allers ! fall m' from grace, ah: I and He played on a harp uv n thousand strings, pents "uv just men; made perfiok." V . j And then, my brethring?. thar's the Baptist, ah ! and they haVebeen likened unto a possum on a 'sjmmon ,ree, and thunders may roll, .and the earth may quake, but that possum .lings thar still, ah ! and yon may, shake one foot'Joose, and the other's thar,1 and you shake all feet loost, iud ne laps his tail around the limb, md he clings ancl he clings forever, .or "He played thousand strings, made perfick." on the harp uv a - . ' sperits uv just men j The Largest Locomotive;- The laigest loeoinotive made in ? this country was sent out from! Phila delphia the othef day to take its! place oil a long and heavy grade in the Rocky Mountains n; on the Atchison, Topeka and Satjita Fe Railroad It has - eight driving J wheels, only 42 inches in diameter ; ( the cylinders meaMire "20 .by 20 inches, and the boilef is 42 inches in dian eter. It has 213 tubes, , each over .11 feet lohg. The weight of! the e'noihe is 118.000 oounds, and I the o;reat weiolit ' and sizei of the boiier and the small driving wheels form atrenieirdmis power.. The; riving Vhleels are merely to I eiizht di distribute the weight, for il the weight rested oh but four, iio track 1 ever laid could withstand the p res sure :The weight is so gieat.thatH the western railroads over which it mu4pas, will not permit it to go over bridges so j it 'will have to be taken to pieces and carried over in sections. . . - A captain of a volunteer co rjis, he-doubtful- whether he had dis- ing tributed muskets to all the men, cried) "AH you that are without arms, hold up your hands.' f It takes a . good ileal of grief to kill a woman just after she has got a Real -i akin sacque. The WEEKLY I.KpG Ell is furAished to subscribers at one . dollar and tilt v cents per copy pev annum, invariably in advance. Six months, one eVll-'ar. i Eleven ropj?-, oneyesir, lilteen dolhir. Twenty-two copies, orYo year, thlrt5". 'j dollars. ' - :.:' - 1 ' ' ' Addi cts all ortl?rsHo 'Te WEEK E C I EEDGEH.' ChapVl Hill, N f. " 1 JjM J - YV 1. 3XfOVTJll YS Stock of Goinl- i-j now rnuipleti ii' .ever Department, and will. hesoU I at noriOAi rnil i:s. iin: cvsti or to prompt paying euloineiN. I HisStock '-consists In" part of CASSIMEBES, CLOTHS, COi tonades. LINEX DBII ls lor Paiit-'and .Suit;, iiv1 . .: A Full Line of Domestic 10-4 bleach . and unbleat beiKSlIKKTlNti. PILLOW (JASK tioods.. 1,AK H (ilU)KCK! . A- tlhAY i MIl'JI IMiM. LONSpAI.H j A Full Line of i FIG UK Kb- AND PLAIN - . LAWNS, 4 . . : . ' . i :- . 7 .: . Style.. Li .LIXKX FOK LADIF.A.-srci i ... . I . flAMliL'tf; l-.i'-!.'.;r. '-n i ; from i.;'.t.,i;ii.- -ui). Li '1 sr.: ' - . if .-ir. ; ' I 'x -:- yiAlii5l'AlA.i-y i HA S, :i ..?- lot. "KKhTPS Sli iK'l'S :t;itAOf.;. A KS." full lin. X - ,: MILES and ZIEGLEL S nana made Mioes in eve v Nr ;,.!.! r tJei. tlemeii, Indies. 'Mi.es -. audi Chil dren. Also a la rife- lot of other ifo! and popular makes of Shoes, ,:i M cC AIJ L: Y'S is Headquarters for '1 -.- -' v'' .' ' " ' ' . BACON, LARD; and GKOCE-' :r- : --: ...... I : , 1IE3, CANVASSED & SlTGAlf CURED HAMS on hand all the .'' 'J i ' ' ' r " itime at Bottom Prices. v "i " - ..- . . , N1..C'. HAMS and SIDES at lOcU: GOOD BROWN SUGAR at 10rt Cash. GRAN (JLATED, CUT LOAF and best BROWN SU- GAR at lowest prices. OK ITS and HOMINY, alwavs on hand; ' .' ... X ' .; ,1- ' '- A FULL LINK OF; FfsifV C:'V IIKKKIXO. MCLLKTS-.' . IJLUK FfSIL Sir. ; IlKST OtllLV- MOLASSES and PtJiH-) IIOXEY DKIP SYliLP. PUKE CIDEK VIXEOAKau' '. i 'i ' ! 1 ' ,' J FKESII KICK. A lull Stock of Farmer's Friend J'lows, l'tints iiiid Uolts. a I war. hand. : , S WEEDS' Ji'eriued. Kod, Squat'' and Uouiiil Iron on hand, tff nil the'difler eut sies at the lowest cash price. - COMTOX IIOESin all the latest .am! improved styles HOKSK :md MULK SHOKS nu f NAILS. CUT and everv si7. Fixtsinxf XAILS r! :. ! i K ,ADE. le l!.i ' i "!!' GJtAIX and "frKASS? H In fact, every ihin in'i Line A beauriful line of LADIES', MISSJ'". a:V,:i .'jfflL'.'UlIXV TIM MM Ef.d rLMM luD,; , . Ii A i PiHJNrS. 11UFF-. ( Ul; I rt .lit' I ( f. LA KS in every Stjv 'U: . A full Line of ."fienth' nten an.l Ladi NECKTIES. V ' Geintlemen aii.l- Rv' h l '!-LT ;nVd STKANV II ATS. iu :di the, lal.k an t newest Sf vies. I I A full line 'of Men andliovs I;EADV MADE iLOTll-IXO at prices that can not be beat. i 4 - ''- UMBKELLAS aiid PAKASOLS that be:ds them all. from 13 cents to . If y hi want to save money, t oi-i. to McLAULEY'S. where" you will fnjei what you want fit prices to tih every--bodv. -- ; ' ll 'i . ". ! . . J Thanking the public, for the liberal patmhfte jfivtn nie heretofore. I pledft. rr3'setf in the future, as I have tried to do in the pst, to Writ Everybody Hjjht1 and ifivf thein the .Worth of theif raonev Very respectfully. I V. D. M ('ATLK V. . ( b:ipel Mill N' C.t M.IV H. 1S7. ..- "4'
The Chapel Hill Ledger (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 8, 1879, edition 1
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