Newspapers / The Durham Recorder (Durham, … / June 3, 1885, edition 1 / Page 1
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professional &c. J. W, Gbaham. j Taos. Rmrra. ' GRAHAM ft STTTFIN, ATTOUGIIATUW, , B1LLSB0R0, N. C, ' Practice la the eountle of "Alamance, CnaweU, Durham, Guilford, Rockingham, fenon, and Onintv A. W.GRAHAM, . ATTORNEY AT LAW. . UILLSBORO, N. 0. PRACTICE In the Oonrti ol Ortnr-.Caat. ham, Perami, Wake and Ml anvUle. Claim reflected tn all parte of tht State, rj.oa.3 1y. Dr. P. R. HARDEE Having located in Durham, oflr hi pro Rational service to the people of Durham M BVVeatr.I: ... Aid.. . Xt m ,7 vm..miuj wuuirv. vnilOV ftl Ala Jl Jnhnann AP. . T Oa CWf Doarciaj nje. :o:- W oAr to the puMto Ar-i-clata accou . aw nicety nirnianea room, MEALS AT ALL HOURS. All t-Vl- .im.lU KM .V - . . "t Zr , "i'ljuoa wiui hw mn me uoruB rnoea libera. , ,CAPP A ALLEN, Proprietor. Railroad street Durham. N. C. asar2My- W. W. FULLER. ATTOttBET ATULAW, DURHAM, N. C. XT PRACTICE in State and Fede ral Court. 3. G. RYAN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, RALEIGH, N.C. fNov.28-ly DR. G V COPP, (Graduated at the Univenity of Maryland) Dentist, RI0O8BEE BUILDING, OVER DIKFS BOOKSTORE, Durham, N. C. aeptz. Joh5 Mahnihu J. S. Massing, Chapel Hill, N. C. DurhMP, N. C MANNING MANNING. AtNUITI AT LAW. DURHAM, N. C rracuce in state ana xeuer. Court. Office riant building. John Manning will be in his office on the 2nd and 4th Saturday! of each unto, jan. 8 Ja00BA.Lo-)O, Robeb? C. vtbcdwick- LOItQ At STBtTDWICK, Attorneys and Counsellon at Law. DVRUAV.N. a - Practice iu the Co'ta of Durham. Ibv nance Chatham, Orange, Penon and Cae well and in the Federal Court at Greene bom. aprUSO. mis. n. in umsa, FEATHER. DYEISO AXD CLEARING ESTABLISHMENT. Feather trat by mail can be furn'ubeii in ae week time. not NORTH FIFTH STREET, nlt-ly RICHMOND, VA. RICHMOND STEAM DYEING, CLEANING AND CAR . PET CLEANING WORKS. MRS. A J PYLE, No, 308 N. Fifth St, Richmond, Va Oentl-meo' and youth." dotting cleaned A. -A .-A MmainH. Mia itrauM. ahawls ckatka, glove t cleaned and dyed. Da taa-k and tact curtains made to look like nr. Satisfaction narantfed. Mention this paper. janH-7 Jf0W SoB't- PnMfia-a vnr ihHll until -TH1 have examined the large and varied ae . ., anrtment oi an porn sauaage, nan tA kf th faijut mutton and nicest Krk the market afford. Mr. Younger i had 15 year experience in the butcher business and knows what will best suit hi patron. He w!U not ell anything bat the vcy lest meat to hi customers. Trice reasonable. Call and leave your order which will be promptly filled. Mar. 251. jyOBMONP JCE COMPANY (Sneostwt to A 0. Babcoek.) WHOLESALE AH BET AIL Brlm in and Shipper of Kennebeo Ice - ernes Am E2PQT: Foot or 17th Street, 8opth Side of Dock 'ESA1TCH ISFOT; Na East idarahall Street. RICHMOSD, VA. Telephone 223. A. D. LANDERKIN. janU Bupt. C.BELLEN0T, Engraver and Manotactorer NOTARIAL and SOCIETY SEALS TOBACCO BRANDS. STEEL a 1 AH 13, ASD ALPHABET BURNING BRANDS, PRINTING Plain and Fancy Cages and all Unde ol oirai. Mau-IT BUY THE LIGHT RUNNING NEW HOME Sewing' Machine,1 SWIFT, STRONG AND MOST DESIRABLE OF ALL Machine W. T. WARD, Aotirr, Raleigh, N. C V. E. Simons & Bro. BLOKB00K MiUTlCTtR'S. FULL LINE OF BLANK BOOKS and hooks of ererr kind amle to IS 1 A 1203, Main St, Richmond. Ve. oct221y BUY YOUR GOODS FROM BERRY & O'BRIANT MAIN STREET, DURHAM, N. C (ForSrIoocupied bjr W. J. Oatea,) Vekeepconstantlron hand erenrthinf &and in a flravdaai retail (Irocery, and will at all linuari 'erna a fair equivalent Cur toot outlar of Caih. We keep the verv bat four anH in etir banineai will make it a specialtr. We sell onlr the beet brand of this pre-teen ialte 10 all hoosehold hppi- aeav iomaoa ae na, mi vxio TUB ItiTIOltili Deteli DamriUo, Va. ThW Kew Hotel I Centrally located near laeDcpote. a saw rcasrrrs id m iiatbo by STUM. EECTRIC BELLS A5D OAS IN EACH ROOM. HatepWid Bath Rooms lor Ladies and f -.. M.I ImmIIm tWm PmiUm tiav. k&it Immt anert ence le the boeiaeat, aad by earsful attee). Una to Ilia wane m we inTwmj psuiw, hope to taera and recei share of weir PrMrATlM ARICHARDHOJC. Eatabliahedlal845 SOUTHERN STEAM CANDY MANUFACTORY. Loits J. OassleaXe WboUale Dealer In CONFECTIONERS, FRUrTS, CIGARS, CANNED OOODH, Ac Manufacturer of STEAMED REFINED ASD FRENCH CANDIES, RICHMOND, - - - - VA. A esperience nf years and a sneeasful bneinM, esaMf him loorfrr ererrtbing la kis tine, at Baltimore prior, and in aoat iaraaoei tme. 111 and f him. iaa.14 NEW CITY BAKERY ;o: Hafiag jiMt opened a New Bakery in the 7? M 7i TtilHtlivtm AfUllcry jittiutffe XXain St., Durham, It C f am prepared to (11 order tr all kinds of Breada, Cakes, Pics tc, at low prices The serrma of a man or Thirteen yean as periene la the largest Bakery in the State at irginia, ha been awn red. I can guar- antei to my Irtnxli gnooe as nn at the neat bum, ja atMiuon.to tne tieaeiT I will keep ft LARGE STOCK of all kind c4 Canned Gooda, Pickle t rail and verythiog mm kept to ranry Grocery Store, laiij Durham friend hr a ahar of their patron Mlneing tnal they will be well pleaeed witr verrthing nought iron m. very truly, J C Wilkerson, dec!7. Main t, Durham, N. C. Notice Ther will b aa election of tea (10) teacher i the Durham Oradfd School oa jan Z, All applicant mnet be ex. mined by Prof. Kennedy, who can be loood at tit Knnol daily, mayff EroKua Moagnr.n, cVr. , Tobacco Oalture.. I oonmenoed writTog for tke Re corder a eerie of article on the cultivation and management of to bacco from plant-bed to the ware- nouse floor; but a it i too late for my first, about plant-beds, I will com mence with the second, preparation and planting. Thorough prepara tion of the land before planting ir essential for a good crop. . lne land should be thoroughly broken: at least three time before it is bedded and hilled. Any land that I sandy and baa a mulatto inb-aoil ia adapted to the growth of fine, yellow tobacco. If after plowing your land three, or four time, and it is cloddy, harrow ' Aa Orango County Tradition. It was several rear ano. when na ture was just breaking the icy link of winter chain, that a friend and I took a walk in the western part of Orange county. A we ascended a bill we caught signt of a grave, nestled upon its very summit, , Approaching with reverent deference we found the grave built up of brick, : now Cut crumbling Into dust, surmounted by a marble slab bearing the Inscription, "Sacred to the memory of some old Revolutionary hero ' who died in 1793, and who was remea- bered only in the traditions of the neighborhood : on of which my coji- pauion , now related. Upon toe ur- ! Strange Freaks of a Bird it well with a heavy two-hone bar rounding farm this old time worthy row, and then immediately bed and hill, as tomes land bake after the first rain after being harrowed, i Of course no one who owns such land will barrow before they are ready for planting. Lap off your row three feet a part and drill in about one hundred pound per thousand hills, some good commercial fertilizer, if yoor land is poor ; if in good condi tion, 3(10 hundred pound per acre will be sufficient If you have it, and can possibly do so, put enough table manure ia the drill, so that each plant will have about a single nand-rul In the hill. Any more than that is injurious to the tobacco, al ter manuring as above, as , it keep the plant growing too long, and epa it green after il is grown. I prefer tobacco checked for several reasons. First, It can be -plowed each way. and requires less hoe work, second. By putting your fertilizer in the hill and then running across your beds, every three feet, you can drop your stable manure ia the check, save a good deal of stable manure, and have your tobacco hill nearer equidistant which I very Important, it you wish to have tobacco of uniform size. Cow pen manure ia equally at good as (table manure if kept under shelter. I prefer composting the stable ma nure and cow manure together, throw ing enough rich dirt and litter to keep it from firing. Ashe are also good, though some object to it, laying, it keep the tobacco green too long: as far as my experience goes they are one among the best fertilisers for to bacco we have, and it is a great mis take with guano companies that they have so little potash in their guana A exeat manv farmers think it re quires a good deal of -ammonia to make a good tobacco crop aa the ol 1 genuine Peruvian contained 10 per cent, and as they then madeiucL good crop they could do so now if they could get it pure ; never thought that at least one half the ammonia waned in the air before their tobac co commenced to grow, and that their good crop was owning to me large per cent, of potash It contained. The best crop or tobacco I ever raisea the guano contained no ammonia, nut from 4 to 6 per cent or potash. f evei y other ingredient . except am monia i present in the toil that is es sential to the development of the plant, the atmosphere will supply that Your plants should be at least three feet apart each way, and as I tated before, as near equidistant as possible, bbouldyou put your manure in the hill be sure to mix it thorough Iv with the dirt as it baa a tendencv to fire the tobtcco in dry weather If not thoroughly mixed. Hare your rowt ruu so that all surplus water will readily pass off. If possible have horizontal ditches every twenty or thirty step to carry it off, running Farther than that in tobacco lots it injurlou both to the lend and tobac co. Have broad Bat bill tor rolling land and high sloping hills for flat land. In drawing your plant eare (hould be taken not to bruise the roots. The large! always to be drawn first, going over the entire bed getting the plants a near the same size as possible, as that will enable yon to have your whole lot come la nearly at the same time, which will save yon time and trouble both in topping and cutting time. Water your bed after each drawing, so the dirt may settle back to the roots and keep your plant growing, in plant ing have a large peg ; insert it deep enough in the nil aa you wish to put your plant, withdraw the peg, insert the plant and then insert the peg in the ground at deep at the one your plant Is in, and about one inch from the plant ; then pre the peg to the plaut, car being taaen that the press ur be harder at the root than at the top of the plant: for no plant will live if hole I left at the bottom of the plant I should have mentioned that the roots of th plant should is every instance bs washed clean of dirt To bt enntmued. David Da-is Adma to a Young Lawyer. A young lawyer friend of mine from Chicago, about to be admitted to the Supreme Conrt asked ex-Justic Daid Davis for bit advice in regard to his conduct on the occasion of his first case. The Judge replied: "You need not be afrlad to speak before th Supreme Court, and if one those duffers in a toga interrupt yon in th midst or an argument by some irrelevant question, don't get fright ened and spoil your argument by stopping to amwer bin. Jut say quietly: ".xcae me, your Honor, but I will reach that by and by," nd if you don't reach it It won't matter. Yon need not be afraid that yon will be called op to antwer it after yon bare taken your teat The young man took hi advice, and gained hi ease last week-Cfewfand Lender. lived in hi princely , mansion ad counted his slaves by score. II wat a hard master and wrung labor rrom hit servant bands with unpity ing severity.. His broad acre were well tilled, his barn well filled, but in the heart of tha slave love' fur (he master found no nlaoe. Gray slowly whitened the lock of .i . ... . ine punier ana tne anaaow were lengthy, until one dar when the sen- light came shimmering down in gild- en waves across his threshold, and the glad bird warbled his spring-time song, the Angel of Death touched him with bit sable wand. A he lav dying, he beard a conversation just outside hi door, between two of hi slave, i; WelL John, they say old marsier' gwinter die ; he been a bard marster, and worked ns bard, and now we'll enjoy ourselves and won't have to work much.' i "Well, that's so "said John. -and as soon as old manter dies I'll be a happy man." s biowiy the recedidg lire current paused aud for one moment the mas ter teemed to regain hi vigor. Call ing in his slave he rose In his bed snd said : "I heard your conversation. Yes. you'll be glad when I am dead. Look, do yon see yonder hill over looking this whole Tarm Well, when I die I am going to be.buried tending up, so' that I can see every field, an1 if you once chirk work my spirit will haunt you forever." lie ceased speaking ana the next moment was a corpse. The funeral proceijlon bore him to hit eold and narrow dwelling, and placed the coffin in a vertical posi tion accordina? to hi last wtah. Tkt ilave toikid from Ve,r; -tiM n'uht believing that the master IJoirit hovered above ready to avenge any delinquencies in labor, and to- v, when th shadow of night have fat en the negro of the neighbor, hooa' ri go a long distance out of their wavto .-void "Old Marster's Grave." - Mioma. For Editors and Oralflf a bit or MSE-KU.V CLcn run) PHT. 'Am Steooif Johnslnir in da hall die eavenln' V asked the President as he rot np and winked at Samuel Shin to stir up the fire and roust El der Toots out from behind the stove. " 1 e. tir." replied n hieb-pitched voice from one of the back corner. "Yon will please ttep to de front" Brother Johnting has nlway brag ged about the length of his heels, and he now appeared to think that the hour bad come when be w.s t re ceive a prize chromo. His face wore a broad grin, and just at that mo ment be would have lent Brother Backslide Davi fifty cent without the least security. "Steuoff Johnsing" said Brother Gardner in bi deep-toned voice, "I wat in de feed-etoab de odder night to see about gittio' two bit wutb of meal fur my bens, when yon walked in an' wanted to git trusted fur a bale of hay fur your mule." "An ne trusted me, sen. , M'ZHlr. an' Pleased n to see it In a few mlnits de old man Cummins limned in. De two of you talked about de glneral wickedness of man kiod fur a lew minus, an uen a dis pute arose as to d alge of de world." "Yes, tar. Deold man Cummins doan know noffln' tab," "You called bim a liar. "But he called me a fool." Yon called bimabiggot" "An he called me a humbug." "'Zactlr 'sactJr I faeerd it all. Rrndder Johmini. an' now I want to ax you what vou know about de aige of de world r bI I know at much at de old man Cummin." "How old am de airtbr -I dunno. ah." "Oh. vm don'tl You an' Cumnint call name an' almost fight ober what neither or yon kin cum widin a roil. Iron miles of knowiu'l Dst's man kind, 'sactly. Kin be bluffed on what we do know, but we won't back wa ter fur any libin' man en what w doan know. When wa Kit a theory we fiitht fur it sooner dsn fur solemn fack. If w can't convince de odder partv bv blab w are ready to do it by tlnggin'. llruJJer Johiwing, it will be well fur yon to disreckolect a few rack. A Kill or argyroem am worth a bushel of abuse. It takes a man of strong common tense to ad mit hit fault and errors. Ton may believe wid all ver miirht and still be in de wrong. Find a man who pride hiratell on stlckin' to hi epinyuot and von ba found a dsmrerout man in it community." Detroit Free Fret. The makloc of oranza wine proving a successful buiinest on the Pacific coast. A few day ago, w'bil Mr. Robert a. Veitcb, of Alexandria county, wat at work in bl field, just back of bis barn, he noticed a full grown par tridge on the ground that came ni te him Instead" of -taking flight, and seemed to have no leaf whatever. It nxpressea it eniorment bv eooinsr aod fluttering around hi neck and konWers. He took it to the boose and the children, more to save it from the attack of the cat, put It in the cage.; They fed it and it ate heartly chattering all the time. . The next morning Mr. Veitcb told the children to tale It to the woods and let it go. Tbcy did to. Dirt it followed them im mediately . back to the house, " snd keep with the children wherever they ge, being much more docile than any of the fowl. It can't be made to leave the houae, nor wbuld the family wish to have it go away if it were not for the cat. Th children, have un dertaken to protect and familiarize the cats with the bird by imprisoning cats. I be children have undertaken to protect and familiarize the cats with the bird by imprltonlng the cats during the day and letting the bird play near them ; they then at night put the birds in a cage, bung it np high and release the cat for the night This partridge brings to mind the nutempsyeboua oi the Indian prince, who soul first entered a deer and and then n bird, and may probably argment the number believera.in trans migration, a fewol whom, it occas ionally appears, live in this county. Axendrta Gazette. Dying; Echoes. . J ' t BWnBJtB i ) t, ft Ever and anon they come to us in in the fragment of a song, the dead fragrance of some long culled flower, or the last footfall of a loved one. Years may have intervened since we draped the snowy folds around the rigid form, but those toft, deep echoes still linger about us, giving a mourn ful pathos to our lives and filling the atmosphere around us with the taint of dust and grave-mould. The old borne, though dismantled now and reft of all who once filled its halls with music and gladness, is fraught with memories pungent and bitter, and we love to linger amid it gloom and desolation fur we feel the pretence we have so lost, and those dying echoes break the deep silence of the moae-grown ruin. Every IbUg there ma aa have loet it sun light, and every memory eeem to come from nfor-away realm who penetralia we are forbidden to pierce, and every echo like mnslc borne over dark, still wsters. The new year is upon ns with Its gift and gratulation, it psen aud pageants, its grsna ah uaii ana huzzas, but there are hearts it can not lift from the dust and heads that refuse to (hake off their ashes, for, like Rachel, they are mourning re fa to be comforted, ine oia vear hi l lusnicu ui" snd sefersihuu over made and feasting will nevermore stir their hearts to the joye of life. , But lighter spirits are awaiting the joyou peal of wedding bells, and mirth and revelry must rule the hour. The orange wreath and filmy lace mutt be donned to cheat n into tne belief that the time f the aioging of birds and perfume of voilets and bursting of bud ha come, Young heart are throbbing with love and hop and joy, and to them the New Year I the glad awakening of the purple and golden dawn that whisper or a glorious neiu oi oeauiy Just to revealed. Bid tbera enter, and quaff lu nectar draught,- tor the time will rarely -come to them, too, when dying echoes will be the only reminders of -present bile. Let us revel la the n ilight while we may, "heart within and God o'erhead." birds came to7 tlie spring, and the fishia', worms crawled out of the ground, and the boys tetonthe green banks of the Hltle creek waitin' for a bite, and the johnny-jump-op nestled in the sonny places, there was a wed din' In the old house, and when tbe winter come again' they set by their own fire and the shovel nod tbe ashes wss out of a job. Merchant Trave ler. . , Tha Good old Times WflCM OAS aid KBBOtsaa Mbb hot. Uncle Davie wat giving tbe boy tome a Ivies in their love-making af fairs, and one of them asked bim how the young people did when he wat parking. Them wa great times, boys," he said in reply. "We didn't here no gas nor kerosene. We done our sparking by a plain tallow dip; but jnost frequently jut by the fire light Firelight it wtrmin', boy, and flickers just enough to make a girls eyes shine. It's mighty soft and purty, too, and kinler in awsy none of yoor gas-llghU know anything about Sometimes the fire tblned up a little too powerful ia places, and the young mta would get np without sayln' anything and put a hovelfu of ashes on it Then he would cod dle np to the girl in tha shadows, and h would codult some, too, and it really didnt tee like there wat anything else In the whole big round earth to be wished for. Party toon the Ira would get obstreperous again, aod tha little flames would twinkle ia and out, at If they wanted to see what was goin' oo, or had seen 'and wat laughln' and winkin'aboot it aod bavin' tome fun, loo, and tha young fellow would reach fur the shovel aod the ashes and cover the bright blast all up. Aod somctimet re member, now, only tomotimee the girl woold get p and pot ashes on, and then well, boys, when the blue -' Tha Hew Evangeliit i . sown or. bev. six jokes' tivixas. "Somt preacher," he 'aid recent ly, "are so elegant that they always refer to hell as the 'burnt district' This sort of dignity is tbe starch of a shrood." Another time he said: "Pull on your doubts by the roots and you'll find a seed at the bottom, aod that seed Is sin." Ooce he rouseq tbe sluggish by saying ; Many good Christians sleep to sound that the devil can come op aod saw off their beads with a dull case knife before they wake." "I can get along better," be said in Nashville the other day, "with moet everything in thie world than the people that talk too much. A lie is always on the down grade, but the truth you have to hitch an engine to." Speaking of, trouble be said t "Tne best woman in thit town is the woman who has wa ded through trouble that an angel's heart could not have endured. When God wants to strike ns with afflic tions let ns not run butttsnd and take 'em." A few days sgo he star tled a large congregation by thie ut terance : "A woman that marries a man with whisky on his breath is tbe biggest fool in the world, except the one who (tin bi toddy for bim after the marries bim. If yon don't like that sort of talk yon can rack oot of here." Again he said: "Opinions ruins tbe world. That old Colonel, tbe old cuss, will ssy, 'it's my opinion so and so.' A dozen young men who hear him will go off and say 'it's my opinion so and so." They get their opinion from the old Colonel, and be gets bis from neiu l say to tnem, shut np you old blab-mouthed fool." "Wbat'a culture worth," be asked again, "if It's nothing but whitewash on a rascal V "I'd rather be in heav en learning my A B C than in hell studying Greek. My God, keep my boy pore and boo eat and let nun die a Awl." "Talk about aa koneet na tarring to dee, broke ia the other day ; "they won't starve, (jod will feed an honest man if be has to put tbe angels on halt rations." Tbe Revision OriticiseA. Under thla head we clip tbe fol lowing from the Wilmington Morn ing Bur. The secular papers teem with dis ciwion of the new revision. Some am verv favorable and tome are wise, ine mow competent mat admit that tbe correo- . I. ... I t on or manifteiv""" , "" IjtllMW uwui; mui vu-i of the EocIUh of tbe James revisn complain of tbe liberties taken with the new revision of tbe Old Testa ment as they did ot the revision of tbe New. There Is no doubt that tome of the changes made are very in harmonious ae to language although giving a literal translation of the ori- Sinai Scriptures. Ia mauy passages ames translation conveys doctrine and sentiment that were not in the Hebrew. But it is to be regretted, that in making the needed emendations the reviser were not able to give to their Eogluh some of the rythmical Bow or the earlier ivngnto. Tbe Philadelphia American, edited by Prut Thompson, of the University of Pennsylvania, aays of the defec tive English (not nngrammatical but rugged aod nnmelodioos) of tbe re visers: "There is not a single masur or the English style ampng the theolo gian on either of the revision com mittees of either side of the Atlantic. Tha only man of this kind who ob tained a place oa tha Old Testament Committee wat Bishop Thirl-, all, in England, aod he died at long ago at 177.. Dean Stanley was the only one on the New Testament Committee, and be died long before tbe work wa finished. Dr. Krautb, oa tbe Old Testament Committee ia America, came the nearest to meeting this want, bot be, too, died before the work wa finally revised. The other gentlemen on both committee are men of sound Greek and Hebrew scholarship: but they are not men in to whose bandt a venerable Engllah classic could be given with confidence, . - . T J . .1. . I A npurgeon bbiu vi tu rcvieete vi the New Testament They may knew Greek, but they don't known Engllah.' In many place tha revised version give a clearer taught into tha mean Ing of the original, nod its connection or ihougnt, FbiMpbia RocorJ: One Virginia postmaster hat been re-appointed Mrs. A. L. Long, of Charlottesville, wife of Let's Chief or Artillery. She it a model official, a lovely andcul tared woman, tha sole tuppot of her husbaod. now blind, and their tbiee children. Her father was one of the stoutest of Union soldiers General E.V.' Bummer and a Republican rresident, urant, gave her first com mutton ' ' RALEIGH, N. C. , .1 , PIANOS. ORGANS rjfcw HOME Serving Machines. The largest stock ii N. CaroUna,- WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD AND THE BEST PLACE TO BUY. 19 Write for Svtmt Ct janl4 i . . -w ' ' f Ojeigpe Spnn ifnTls mf ZerwA-Ot " r av . : v. 1 1 1 Jsrrrr AVVr f - i OUtt SUCCESS IN THE PAST ENABLES US TO GFFEK GREATER INDUCEMENTS to oil rATRO.vin hik ftjitbe 1 Ta... Our great aim is to give our custom ers the best class of goods at the lowest market value. : Our Superior Facilities enable ot at all times to offer to the trade KEWNOVttlTES IB SPECIAI B1RG1KS in every department Our stock is now complete and very, attracti ing spared no pains to present to the public this spring and summer larger assortment and variety of style than eveiWbre, to which v7 luiiy invite an inepeciion, leenng tatunea that our low pries1 good merit the liberal patronage extended to os ib he past, aad wumuud an hi, uurc. M' Adams & B ap 15-3m Send for samples and rale fo ALABASTINE, A Natural Material for Finishing walls, ceilings, rough plaster, new smooth sand finish, a soiled hard fin ish, painted walls, wood ceilings, wall paper, brick, rough boards, canvas, etc., etc. si?ft to umm ADDING SB HOT WATER, Can be mixed by any one. A; housekeeper can out the aid of ski, apply it with tilled labor. ALABASTIN it a valuable discovery, it eoi tutes n permanent finish forwa assimilating with the plaster, ai will not rub off. It does not detei orate by age; In this respect it is un like all other preparations of a simi lar character. Alabastine it a disin fectant and renders apartments hwlthful. Cracks la tbe walls can be filled by mixing the Alabastine thick, which cannot be done with Katsomine. Five pound of Alabac tine will cover 60 square yards, or 450 square feet two coats. Sample cards showing n variety of beautiful tint. For sale by T.H. BRIGGS ft SONS, Raleigh. N. C Mention thit paper. aplo-tf Keep good company or none. Nev cr be idle. 71 ssli- r 1 nnvu.J "1 I w AT chin war Hated. FiltriJ for-n;ue JT av 1 flP-vj IJUM V hhw l m - . Maia aad Tenth Street, Kiel uxm Stock tolthm DOORS, 8ASII, BLIND8.t1 SUMS, HOT BED SAJCLT - Price List on reqneo WINDOW m. A ca tt" vi, aiajea M Jk- j aw COLORS, COACH AND yX tndreUil . IX8WAK6l,J IS2JU f. jzlOBroM al-8m Riciwi Knowing the wants of people with very tender feet, I ask yoor atten tion to my lint of OLD GENTS AND LADIES WIDE BOTTOM, FLAT HEEL, FLEXIBLE, SOFT SOLE 8HOES. TIES, SLIPPERS AND BU8TIXIS, NO CREAKING, NO RIPPING THE FINEST Line and best assorted stock of Va licet, Trunks, Bacbels, Railroad Bag Clerk 8aca Ac Sooth of the Potomac r LEASE rati ae Vie-ala theea at the J. A Cries Pact Block. Richmond, Va. lanTJ . Real Estate Agency Wa have formed a copartncrahlo for the nle, leasing, aod renting real ettattor EYERY DESCRIPTION. Those wishing to buy or sell Town Lots, Dwellings and Farms should consult ns. Special attention given to tale Tobacco Farms. Terms made kno on application. doing in THE i CarringtonaV,! offer now as I hare been ue past tot l BEST. SAFEST TOfl all description. 1 will gnarai04 aiu faction in every parucniar give a vainabit enuf pro quo oouayt mndt with meT of Foreimi an Wines, Cigars, or wholesale. Durham betort FIXED In my line of badness. m aa w farmers are ipeciaiiy lovA and take op tome of the banraina. Ketneclfuiiv. feb2j 8. R. CARRT r WL and Agents Wi A gnoJ agent an Bounty throughout the R' aem far Th. Kejvtls ctaMloa) We I WI .1. LJ I " PL
The Durham Recorder (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 3, 1885, edition 1
1
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