THE GLEANER
GRAHAM N. C., JANUARY 28 1880
E. 8. PJUtSm Editor.
LATEST FRO* MAWS— From y ester*
days telegrams it seems the Fusion Leg
islature ot Maine lias about petered ont.
Only seven of tbe Senate met. Tho Re
publican governor Is wailing the action
of the Snpreme Court, upon questions
submitted by the Fnsionists, before issu
ing iiis commanding all
not Republicans to disperse. It is thought
to-day will be tbe end of the Fusionists.
We see it stated that of the 150 cen
sus Supervisors only thirty-eight am
Democrats. The Wilmirgton Star s*ys
North Carolina is the oidy State where
all the Supervisors aie Democrats. We
had ssen it stated in some of our ex
changes that Patterson is a Hepnblican.
Ths Republicans wanted all the Super,
visors, and the Democrat* wanted Half
and so neither party is satisfied.
The debate on Bayards financial reso
lution has began in the Benate, Beck of
Kentucky having spoken in opposition to
it last Friday, after which the Beoato ad
journed to Monday, when the dissuasion
was to have been renewed. There is
scarcely a probability tbat k will pass.
The prevailing sentiment seerih to be not
to disturb tbe ftuaneial condition as it
now exists. Tbe Honse has already in
dicated Ms determination to let the law
ae it now stands remain. There will be
mnch talk over it. and that will bo all.
Nothing of importance has boon done,
and tbe present session bids fair to be a
very doll one. Each party appears a lit
tle timid in view of tbe near approach of
tbe Presidential election.
Hie Exodas continues to go on, and
to spread, not very rapidly, but yet pretty
steadily. In sections it will likely be
felt in n scarcity of labor. That those
who go will be the grant sufferers there
is ssaroely a doubt, bat then, they are
free, and if tbey wish to go, the only
doty for Ihoee who would prevent it to
perform, is to give them, truly, such in
formation and advice as they believe
woald serve their interest. In the ex
amination before Voorbees' oommittee, it
has oome ont thnt the railroads pay the
agents a dollar a head for all who bay
tickets over their lines. 8o far as the
investigation has gone, it shows that gross
misrepresentations have been awl* in
specting the opportunities offered for
bettering their condition in Indiana, and
Kansas, and peihape other Northweetern
Statea. Of some of thoee who have
reached Indiana pitifel itories of ■offer
ing and diatreea oome. back. A number
liare already died, and others are in grrat
destitution. The more intelligent ne«
gross are opposing this exodus more, bat
they are ens pec tod by.the negroes,'it ap>
pears, or at least not heeded.
A bill haft been inUttdooed in the Leg-
Mature of Mew York to change the
mode of electing Presidential Electors in
that State. It ia propoeed that each
congressional district iu the State shall
elect one, and that two ahall be elected
from the State at large. If this bill be
comes n law it will rendor that grrat
State lees important in the ooming elec
tion. The Legislators is largely Republis
can, and the proposition of eo radical a
change indioatee the grave doubt Repub
licans themselves have of being able to
oleot the nest President. Should the node
be shanged, aa the bill providee, the vote
ol the State will be divided in the elec
toral ooUege, giving the majority of the
thirty-Ave votee to the Republican can
didate. Newspaper opinion is divided
ee to the probability of the bill's passing.
Anything to gain or regain political
power in too much the policy now, and
trouble of great seriousness will yet yarn
on! of it, we tsar.
Dow» in Florida, Uraat Is aeid In have
mnirktd, respecting i crowd of negroes
thai wen thronging UM pswagae anden-
INUMM to tbe bolt) where bo VII Hop
ping, ai»d war* about to be pat oat by
tbe landlord, that "Whore I an lbare
tbcj cat) come." At this apaacb The
* North State appoars (really maved, aad
coupling It with bla ralaaal to aao Dcjtaia
Kearney, dbaonn tberaia great nob Jo
naaa of aoal aad ladepeudence of cbarac-
Mr. Oraat aald "Let ua hare peace" and
for eight years be kept ball tbe oountry
In turmoil aad strife; be said "Let no
guilty man aaoapa" wblla be kept near
bin and in bla ooufldeuoe iboaa notori
ously guilty, nd. when they wero forced
to vacate thrir high plaeee, parted with
tbana regretfully; be aaid no man eon Id
afford to be Prealdput about wboae title
to tbe ofioe there waa doubt, or worde
to that effect, and etraighiway went about
•aaembiiug soldiers at Washington to
acat Ilaves. That is about all we remem
ber his saying until tlds last grand utter>
anoe. to the effect that the negroes can
cohie whererer he may be. Maybe he
has grown more aincere, aa be lias grown
older, and aeeu more of the world.
'■ V -
JSorth State: It Is reported that ex»
Gov. Garcelou, of Maine, is about to vis
it Washing'.on. If lie lias a lit regard
lor decency, ex-Gov. Gsycelon will keep
accltulocf for some time to come.
If it is that the Governor earnest
ly tried at giving place to defeat
ed candidates to the exclusion of their
elected opponents, and it be desires con
genial company, and, above all, to be with
thoso who cannot twit him with a lack
of sonnd morals, there is no fitter place
forliitn than Washington, ami no better
society than Sherman and Hayes. They
may get the laugh on him for his want
ot success, and crow a little over their
own superiority in that regard, but then
the presence ot such company could not
jfail, oven with thcuo little drawbacks, in
i being soothing loouo who had )>een en
gaged iu tho counting out business. II
all that is charged against Gareelon is
truo, ho will, by comparison, bo quite
respectable with the President anil tbe
Secretary of the Treasury of tho couu*
try.
ITAINK.
The unhappy condition of affairs iu
Maine continues to attract public atten
tion. Tbat an armed conflict is imminent
is thought by many. We shall really be
surprised if anything like a fight occurs,
bat then there does appear to be a flue
opening for a very deplorable State ol
affairs; and, indeed, sncb a condition aU
ready exists, only a little less to be re
grettod than a collision ol armed men.
It It a sad commentary upon the politi
cal morals of tbo Stale. Soldiers aro
dangerous. They may defend liberty,
and drive back an iuvader, but tbey are
equally as effctive in destroying liberty
andheeomiug the invaders of civil rights
themselves. No well ordered govern*
ment should ever stand in need of tbe
service ol a soldier in civil matters, and
especially in a contest for power between
bodies of men, eacb claiming to exercise
the functions of government. We can
not perhaps give oar readers a better
idea of the condition of the two contend
ing parties than by publishing tbo tele*
graph in Sunday mornings papers:
AUGUSTA, MB., Jan. 23.—The general
impression is that matters are iu a more
cruical condition than they have been for
some Ume. Crowds aro collecting at
various points in secret clans, armed men
are drilling, and other circumstances
tend to create alarm. The Chronicle
Greenback Labor organ, or Aabarn, says
that the State House must be takeu
though it costs a thousand lives. Tbe
government is not alarmed, and will
make tbe State Uonse periectly impreg
nable. Tbe first military company that
ever entered tbe State House, marched
lu at midnight. Pilisbury, Blood, Chan
ging and others are known taibe enroll
ing! n everv enmity in the State, and
meu are collected in the couuty towus
for J. L. Smith's call. Capt. Black, of
Augasta is drilling men nightly.
Mayor Nash addressed the following
to Uov. Davia to-night: "In view ot the
threatening attitude,of persons hostile to
the present government of tho State, I
feel oonstrained to say to your excellen
cy that I tear my olvll police forco wilt
be suable to sufficiently protect the pub
lic property at the capitol, or even hold
possession of the building itself, against
such a force as the public euciniet seem
to be willing and able to bring against
It.
From eomnltation with the military
authorities, Diris became iho roughly
convinced of the serionsuoM ol iho situa
lion, and that the position of Mayor Nash
is perfectly sound, 110 therefore order
•ed to the btaie House the Capitol Guards
and Richmond Light lutantry, who at 1
o'clock a. m. wore there. The Auburn
Light Jufhntry will leave this place for
the oapitol at S o'clock this morning, and
oihec military forces will be brought if
necessary. Information ol Iho opera
tious of Ibe Fusionisis comes from rolia->
bio men iu each oounty. Tho design is
to tske tho Hoose—Pillsbury's last hope
It Is hoped that the prompt action of
Gorernor Davis will avert trouble. Men
are known to be ready at the call of
Smith, iu Lioooln and Somerset couutios,
who are to take sleighs across the conn*
try. The prompt action of Colonel Peak*
prevented movements in Piscataquis
oounty. All the armories in the State
are uudcr guard. The ltepubllcaus moan
to hold possenlon, and if the Stale
troops are inadequate, the President will
be called upon lor aid.
UOSTOH, Jan. 84.—'The JlcraUi An
gusta special says: Three oompanies of
troope and a Gallium gun garrisOu the
State llouse. When the ltepubllcaus
meet this forenoon tbere will be as little
show of arms as possible, and (be soldiery
t will be la the background. The Repub
licans leel well braced up this morning
and are generally urging the dispersion
of the Uuiou ILall legislature. The sort
of ■lterances which set the authorities to
thinking, are such as the following:
Pillsbory saysiu hie Daily Standard this
morning: "Men of Maine. Ibe next artN
do on tbc programme is to disperso by
force the Legislature eonvened in Union
llall. Are yon, as 1 roe men, wiling to
submit to Ibis outrage? See to it that
your representatives are protected. This
is the culmiuation of the outrage inflicted
upon the Democrats and Greenbackers
by the stalwart pimps of the ltepublieau
pany. Who is the man wlio will uow
step out of our ranks aud side with the
cowardly meu intrenched in the .State
llouse, wlio will tremble at tbeaoond of
their owu voices aud do uot Awl safe un
ices beaked up by the bayonets ol the
State militia? Let it bo what it may,
hUtory will read that Corporal Davia
was the first man lo tho State of Maine
to authorise au array of bayonets at the
Stale llouse to keep from iu portals citi
zens of the commonwealth."
Every military company in Maine is
uuder arms. Capl. Ulaclc of lira Fusion
stall, says all he a«ka Is to be arrested.
A. r. Gou'.d, Icgnl adviser to the Fusiou
government, cluiracteriaes the moviug of
troops as a despcrato act and sure to re
douud to the political advantage of the
Fusiouista. lie eaya it is the biggist bin
der yot maile l»y the Republicans.
The Fusionist Legislature met with
diminished numbers. Speaker Talbo.'t
told the reporters bis llouso needed pro*,
tcetion more than the Republicans. The
Fusioni&t show signs of nervousness
over the state of aflaiis. Should the Fu
sion Legislature go to Biddeford it will
likely find the doors ol any ball it mav
engage guarded by soldiers. "No fool
ing any longer" is the Republican talk
toMlav. The Stato house is converted
into a sort ot barracks; stoves have boon
set up in the cellar to cook rations of
boet',&c., lor thQ soldiers. L"be Governor
is strongly urged to nt once disperso
the Union Flail Legislature and Fusion
government, but whether l>o will act un
til tlio first ot next is doubtful Sunday
night the Slate troops will be under urins.
Republican authorities assert lhatiflhei'c
is civil war thy responsibility rests upon
the Futiouists.
CKIVSCSIN NORTH CABOI.Ii*A.
The following information we clip from
tiie Raleigh Observer. Those who wish
to be enumerators, will be glad to know
the man who is to name them. There
will be we suppose about four enumera
tors iu this county—that is this county
will make about four districts of the pre"
scribed sizo as to population, with an
enumerator for each. Wonder if any
one wauts a place?
The President has, nominated the foli
lowing as census supervisors:
For the first district, composed of the
coautles of Beanlort, Bertie, Camden,
Carteret, Chowan, Craven, Currituck',
Dare, Gates, Greene, Hertford, Hyde,
Jones, Lenoir, Martin, .Pamlico,*Pasquo.
tank, i'erquitiiuns, Pitt, Tyrrell and
Washington. H. D. Robertson, of Mar
tiu couuty. He is a Democrat, was a
member of the last House of ltepreseuta
lives, aud is admirably qualified.
For the second district, composed of
the counties of Alamance, Caswell, Chat
ham, Davidson, Davie, Edgecombe,For*
•ythe. Franklin, Granville, Guiltord, Hals
itax, Iredell, Johnston, Nash, Northamp
ton, Orange. Persou, Randolph Rock*
ingham, Rowan, Stokea, Wake, Warren
Wayne and Wilaou, Joseph H. Card wall
ot Rockingham couuty. He is a Demo
crat, aud the appointment is an excellent
one.
For the third district, composed of the
counties of Anson, Bladen, Brunswick
Cabarrus, Catawba, Columbus, Cumber
land, Duplin, (juston, Harnett, Lincou,
Mocklenbnrg, Montgomery, Moore, New
Hsnover, Onslow, Ponder, Rlohmond,
Robeson, Sampson, Stanly and Union,
Walker Mears, of Wilmington. He is a
Democrat also, and is in every way qual
ified to perform the duties of the office.
For the fourth district, composed ol all
tho counties in the State not named
above, Samuel L. Patterson, of Caldwell.
He is a Republican, in a son of the late
General Patterson, ana is entirely com-,
peteut.
POLITICAL, NOTBS.
The President sent (be following nom
inations to the Senate: Jamn Russell
Lowel, of Massachusetts, to be minister
to England; Johu W. Foster, of Indiana,
to be minister to Russia; Luciao Fair*
child of Wisconsin, to be minister to
Spain; Phillip 11. Morgan, of Louisiana,
to Le minister to Mexioo.
General Yanee, Representative of the
mountain district, in this State, has iu«
troduced a bill in Congress to repeal the
law imposing a duty on salt.
Nomination*by the President:. Lewis
Ricbtnoud, ot Rhode Island, United
States Consul at Belfast: Henry W, Len
aid, of New Jersey, at Cam|>eacby; Eli
11. Murray, ot Kentucky, to be Governs
or of Utah territory; Stephen N. Sims
inons,'Assistant Appiaiser ofNow York,
aud Robert M. Kelly, Pension Agent at
Louisville Ky.
Harper 1 * Weekly has at last come to
the poiut ui attacking Grant'* nomina
tion as unwise, because many iudepeu*
dent Republicans will against him,
but Editor Curt is emphatically declines to
say whether ho will support Graut or
not if the uoutinatiou is made. "We
shall not" says Harpert Weekly cross
the river till we come to it
Senator Bruce (colored) is 'the young
gest member of the United States Seu>
Garfield began life as •
wood-chopper and cauai driver.
The Republicans of Congressman VGor
illa* district got together and asked him
to resign, lu oonsequonce of his alleged
crooked work in the Bergen county Batik
and in forging water Bonds. Not with
out some diaeronoe ol opinion, however
was this conclusion reached. It was
freely acknowledged that in the event of
his resigning a Democrat would be es*
leoted iu his place, and that would make
the New Jersey delegation Democratic
instead of Republican, and, in the event
of carrying (lie presidential election this
year into the llouse, might deckle the
result.
Tbe plot thickens (o steal the electoral
▼ote of New York for tbe BepubUcau
candidate. That tbe Stalwart manager*
intend to do it. is a queatiou which no
longer admit# ot a reasonable doubt. Tbe
only question is, Uow are the Democrats
to deleat the conspiracy ?— BaUinort
Gazette, Dan.
llosooe Coukhng would walk to tbe
polls with an open ticket tar Jell Davis
fo» President, and vote It sooner than be
would vote lor Blaiuc.— Albany Argus.
Senator elect Mahone, of Viiginiajptve
a bauquet in Richmond, the other night,
to tbe oolored Assemblymen. Tbe table
iasaid to have beeu crowded wilt ail of
tbe delicacies and rare dishes of tbe
season.
Judge George baa been nominated by
tbe Democrats in the Mississippi Legist
iature to fill the seat uow occupied by
ltruce in the United States Senate. His
term ot office begins 4th of March 1881.
A POLItfCAI. CVBIOMTT,
[Philadelphia Times] '
The South Carolina idea uf running
iJrant and Bayard as "solid uniou" can
didates lor President and Vice-presi
dent bas got as tar a long as the organi
sation of a olub. It is composed of plant
ers of Newberry couuty, mostly okl sol>
tilers, who send greetings ol peace and
good will to all the people throughout
the laud, and-invoke them to rally or
organize them-clvis" into similar
clubs, with a view to establishing the
peace and prosperity that will naturally
follow troiu reciprocally kind feeling.
The Times and half a dozen other North
ern journals are requested to priut the
lesolutions in full, but it is enough to
give their purport as above. A» a token
of the revived Unionism of the South,
and a political curiosity!, yie movement
is worth this much of a notice. But it
requires neither fhe prophet to say that
belore Grant and Rayanl ruu on the
same ticket the millennium will have
arrived. Not until then will the Hon
and lamb lie down togetlier.
The Democrats of the Louisiana Leg*
lelature have nominated Gcnl. R. L. Gib
son, now a Representative )n Congress
Jo succeed Senator Kellog, ' whoje term
in the United States Seuutor expires the
4th oi March 1883.
For Colic, Dysentery. Teething and other dis
eases of Babyhood, always use L>i\ Bull's Baby
Syrup. •
Hate* Weekly: Wake Forest, it Is thought will
have «ver two hundred students this year, or
which uumber, sixty will be from Wake couuty.
Hale's Weekly: The Dismal Bwamp Canal was
ou Thursday last sold at public auction iu Nor
folk lor the sum ot of 4&?5,U0U cash, and was
purchased by Jfesscrs. John B. Whitehead, Clcs
ero Burrus*, John L. Roper, H' G. Ouaerdonk
aud Jobu A. Tompkins, tor themselves aud oth
er bondholders. The caoal Is thlrtv aides loug.
The government owned stock, to the amount of
lftlf a million dollars. The new company pro
poses to widen aud deepen; aud generally Im
prove the property. . f J,
Hale's Vfeckly: War In Virginia once more.
There Is a tleet of over forty vessels, organised
under an admiral aud fully equipped for war,
in the waters of the Kappahauock engaged in
the Illicit taking of oysters. Two citizens of
Lancaster county have been already shot by the
pirates, and tiagrant war between the contend
ing parties Is imminent. The depredating fleet
Is said to be from Delaware and Maylaud. Gov.
Holladav has put troops In the held aud order
ed their Instant capture.
Greensboro' Beacon:
Burglary.—An attempt was made on Sun>
day night ta rob the Shertfls office in the court
house. A piece of the panel'lu the door uear
the locks was taken out by ineau* of an auger,
and a bote some eight Inches lu diameter made.
Tue object, no doubt, wasto take oil the locks,
but la this they failed. They wesc probably
frightened off.
Raleigh Observer; We learn with regret that
Prof. A. K. Lcdoux, the accomplished Static
chemist will to-day tender bis resignation of the
position to the board ol Agriculture.
The widow of ex President Tyler has asked
Congress for a pension, on ground of the im
mense depression in the value of her real estate,
tue mortgage on her Northern property having
been foreclosed, and those on her Southern
property constantly troubling her. She says:
"I dud 1 have scarcely anything whatever to live
upon." /
Hickory Caroliniant The Lackey Brothers, of
Excelsior, caught a penitent! iry couvirt last
week. The poor fellow (a negro) had come all
the way from Rileigh in a naked condition, lie
has been returned to Raleigh.
The Harnett Railway Company has been or
ganized with W. F. Kornegoy of Goldsboroas
President. A survey from Goldsboro to Smileys
Falls, on the Cape Fear, in Harnett county,
was ordered. The distanoe is forty seven miles.
Col. Wharton J. Green, the present owner,
U enlarging and improving Tokay Vineyard,
near Fayetteville.
A married negro man, named Arthur Jordan,
induced a weak minded daughter of a respect
able white man, named Nathan Carter, to uiope
with him, and for the crime was arrested and
put in jail, in Warrenton Va. He was taken
from prison by a baud of masked men and
hanged.
A bale of cotton was shipped from Wilson,
in this State to Norfolk, Va,, and wuen put into
the compress it would not squeeke up, as ex
pected but resisted so stoutly as to break the ma
chine. An examinstion revealed a twoTiundred
and fifty pound rock in the centra. If the Demo
cratic party had plenty of such men in it, as
the one who fixed np that bale of cotton, it
would fight Radicals more nearly on equal
terms.
Jacies M. Young, for (he killing of Geo. Hin
ton, ID Petersburg last Novembei, has been
convicted of murder in the second degree, the
punishment for wbicb is ten years in iho peni
tentiary.
Nancy Gibson, colored, of Charlotte went
out to wash for the day, leaving her three
small children in the house. One of tbem waa
burned np before night.
Against town law for boys to even csrry
rubber slings in Charlotte. .
Mecklenburg, a rate horse of Charlotte, died
at Augusta Ga. where he had been carried
attend the races.
The merchants of Monroe havo organised a
Board of Trade.
Mrs. Mary G May and her daughter, Miss
Kate May, of Danville were bnroed to desth
by the explosion of s kerosene lamp. Mrs.
Nsnnie Hern don, another daughter of Mrs.
May's, was badly burned.
Winston Sentinel: Some of the citizens of
Mount Airy have sued out a writ of mandamus
against tho president of the Cape Fear & Yad
kin Valley Railroad to compel bim to commence
work on the Western div talon of the load ax
cording to the terms of the consolidation.
Raleigh Observer: There are at present 207
convicts in the penitentiary Of the*c 80 are
white. Onlv S white women ate held, and 9B
colored. Of the con vlcU 90 are in fur life, ft)'
various offence*—arson, bnnrlary and murdc
The *hoe *hop* are bu*y on order*, and are no*
turning out 130 pain |>cr day. There are »ev
eral loom* at woric, which make nearly all Uu
cloth worn by the prisoner*.
WBBILIMO, W. VA., Jan. 80.—Tbere is a
great deal of excitement be-e to-night over the
operation* of the Are bugs, who are trying to
Are the city. Two more Are* were disc >vared
this evening. ThU make* fifteen flro* in the
lact twenty-four boor*. Several suspicious
characters are now in onrtody, and the mayor
ha* sworn in one hundred extra policemen. All
property owner* hare private watchmen em
ployed. The street* are tbrouged with men
women and children expecting to hear the
alarm of In any moment.
KorA Stair: Wo have living in Grcen*bo
roan old lady. said to be about 93 year* of ace,
who haa Mvcd hare nearly all ber life, bat who
has never yet Men a railway car or locomotive
engine, ittt ough she lives within a quarter of
a nalte ot the depot, her curiosity U not great
enough to indaee bur to visit It not* ith* landing
she to quite sprightly oa bar feet, and folly able
to do so.
Aorth Male.- A man reca&Uy went Into one
of the Photograph Galleries In this city to have
bis picture taken, and In the cxcitemcn produ
ced by the occasion he swallowed a silver half
dollar.
The fiat Hebrew marriage aver soJemsiwd
la RaWigh took t>lace last week. Rabbi Mm
deishon of Wilmington offlcisted and Mr. Mas
riee Rosenthal aad Mba Hannah Graasntau
ware the coatracting parties.
Prof. Ladou has tendered his rmignatlon
of hia position in charge of the experiment sta
tion at Chapel UiU, to the Board* of Agricni
tare. ' t
P. Wilson, city editor of TU* Obsrreer has
been elected Secretary of the Board of AgricaK
ture. to BU ttie vacancy caused by the death of
T. J. Robinson.
Ex-Senator Jas. V. Skinner, of Perquimans
county is dead.
NEW" ADVERTISEMENTS
THE RALEIGH
/ EDITED AND PUBLISHED BY
BLACK & REID.
RALEIGH, N. C.,
fs the organ of abont 69,000 Methodists in
North Carolina,.and has the largest circulation
of any paper in the Stato. It gives the mar
kets, secular and religions news. Id a weekly
eight-page, religious, family newspaper. Only
$2 00 per annum. Subscribe at once. Adver
tising rates liberal.
1880
Wko Ikatl be Prnidrnlf
Who Wbnll be Govern >rf
Take your County Paper, aud then subscribe
for
- _ THE
Raleigh Observer
A Democratic Newspaper,
"THE OLD RELIABLE,"
SAMUEL A. ASUE,
Editor and Owner.
Daily, per annum ... $6.00
Semi-W keklv, per annrnr, - - 3.00
Wkekli, per annum, - - 2.00
Postmasters allowed a liberal commission on
all new subscribers they may obtain for Thk
Observer.
Valuable Water Power
For Sale
The undersigned hove a valuable water pow
er on Big Alamance, three miles above Jla
mance Factory.
There is about ten acres of Und connected
with it, and more to be had on reasonable terms,
adjoining.
This power is improved to the extentof a saw
mill and a first rate grist mill, both wheat and
corn.
The powar is ample for a cotton factory,
there being sixteen feet head, and is the beat
power on Big Alamance.
It is jnst four miles South of Gibsonville, on
the N. 0, B. R. and there is a good public
road all the way.
Terms made easy. Address, for particulars,
R. W, INGLE,
Company Bhope. N. C.
or A. G. CLXPP
Gibsonvllle. N. C.
1.38. mam.
NOTICE.
Letters Testamentary having been issued to
the undersigned, upon the estate of Seymour
Pui year dee'd,, he hereby notifies all persons
indebted to said estate to present them, on or
before the first day of February 1881 or this
notice will plead lu bar of their recovery.
This 36th day of January 1880.
8. M. WHITE. Ex'a
1.38 80.6w.
- DISSOLVED
The firm of Corbett & Lea, McCray's Blore.
N. C., was this day dissolved. J. F. Corbett,
having purchased the entire interest of W r A.
Lea, will continue the business. "All persona
indebted to the said firm must make
Immediate payment
to J. F. Corbett, be being rested with the right
and privilege of collecting and receipting for
4ll claims dne the late firm.
J. F. CORBETT
Jan. 14th 1890. ■ W. A. LEA.
GRANT'S iOUR
ABOUND THE WORI.Dt
The only low priced authentic edition con
teiniuK a complete record of the trave>. f Gen
U. 8. Grant. Agents are cautioned b)>r
rious books issued by unscruDulous publishers.
Elegantly illustrated. Over 800 pages. Price
t5.25. Outselllug all books. A pent# wanted to
send for illustrated circulars and terms.
FORBHEE & McMAKIN, Cincinnati.
BINGHAM SCHOOL
HBBAHBVILI.t, If. ©,
IS*.now PRE-EMINENT among Southern
Boarding Schools for boys.
been the most prospcrousln the 86 years of the
School's history.
Tbc 11'Jud Henmimm will kt|is #a»ar|f
14th ISSO.
Board 913 per month. Tuition SSO per Ses
sion. For Catalogue giving full particulars,
Address, Mxi. R. BINGHAM,
Supt.
Scott & Donnell
Graham N C •
Dealers in
DBV 6MBI. GB9CRBII
HARBWARB, n ATM, BOOT
AMBOCS. MOTION*, IKOH.
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LYNCH'S SELECT BCUOOL.
Qion POIWT, H, C.
An English, Mathematical, Classical, Com
mercial anl SclectiSc Aodemj
Mai. W. B, Lynch A. M., Principal.
B. P. ReM A. 8.. Assistant.
Spring session of 1880 begins JwioanrSl*.
Board and tuition per session 880. For cirru
IST address the Principal
jpnifahtestign
isMßunninaiieriMa
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ntPAIKD BT
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