Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / March 13, 1882, edition 1 / Page 1
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'..: - ... I"-'. ' MmiH - .aa a a m mm . a m -a a mm a mm x a. a a a b a mm .. mmi ma a aa m m ..... ma mm aat a bb mi b bbbbbbb m. . . m mm'B a . . . a . -Bi a mm. --- - : v 1 . . , i . 1 . . 1 , ,v, , ; -r .-: : .- ;. VOL.S. ClifJUtrasiiff Itontr, J GRAHAM, N. C, MONDAY, MARCH 13, 1882. fl.- i i' v NO. 3 tJoctrji. , rUJMJSHBU WlIKKLf AT c. Eldridae Kcrnodle, t a" Tuuus: 4. - ;, ' v.7 (me Tear .11.50 lit Mouths .. 75 rprofl Months ... . . . . . . ......... . : do Every pcr.-on sandinf w a club of ten si,b icribers with tilt ciiolt, entitles himself to one jpy free, for ihe lungh of time for avUIcIi the chili is made tap. Paperi seiit.o dilTcreut olHccs No Depqrtttrt from the Cash Sputem Postage pKEi'AirrAT this Offick 1 week 1 mo., t " " 3 MM 1 in. 3 In. 8 lu. 100 ( I SO 2 00 I 35 3 IK) U ) I 75 3 50 S 50 3 00 3 00 4 50 SOt 4 50 6 00 4 00 t ) '750 650 10 00 13 50 10 00 15 001 1800. 4 4 00 700 8 00 0 50 10 50 12 50 15 00 20 00 M col 1 col. B7 50 $12 00 11 00 . V. 00 13 50 15 00 1750 20 00 35 00 48 00 Oscar, WIItThoa Answer, f From Piick.l " " ' Cl ftwir am - -1 ......a. i puL-trri moil art -Crv sreat, Aim very teudor uud moot ttoslily fair And consummate; : ' - lint, oh to the knee-breeches thou (Tost-wenr Our hearts out with yoarulnsr of desire Our souls are lit W illi tire, Wiih tire at lire of d;une. Oh tnink not, Cear, we are inakliir L'ame Of tlicc, wliom kme ulreud calls 1 he priest, the prophet a.id the seer of small! Oh. Oxvir, nre they eo!d? Or docs an u'.Hterette tl l'eifn enfold' j-., iicii uie enrui irom day to darkness spins. 18 00 33 00 30 Oo 37 00 45 00 80 00 Yearly advertisements changed quarterly if desired.- ' ... . - ,A Local notices ten cents line, first insertion Mo local .inserted tor less than Dftv cents.- . PROFESSIONAL CARDS. . seed right into the tiling . Now 1 say ef lie's a dance, the sooner most "people in these parts lose ibeir senses ' jjets lo bo dunces, the better 'twilljje for all con cenied Ami with tbal old liiley sulk ed Indignantly out of the postoflioe. XolwWisliiiidiits! all that old Riley co tlilwiv, however, publi opinion was j against JJnnip See. li was Cfital.i thnt lie was dall in liis lcssui.s, jJc conid not keep up nitli Mr. Pciiru.ldock's classes, ii mi instead of sludydiiiK his Latin verba, hu was perpetually iater-i-upiiiig the school by uskin .Mr. Pens rtuldock to txplHin things tike thunder ami li-fi. tning and (.ho presence of Kiiell in the rocks on the iimuiiuiiii, uiidilie ciirinu ways ptaiug have i of iukiriir caio i of themselves thinas which had no re j laiion ;a the woik ot ilie hchool. Jt was agreed that Riley Van-ihii could urn know anything about ediicaiinii, ijceuusc not iiinibell educated... It was Uost thou o.i ,vrap thy sweet snpreniest shins ... nrwitwN, iib.ii armoreu. trrcaves Bound aa a gleauer biuieth up his sheaves? How dost thou keep them hp? Il ..I" the stiiekiugs we reler to, Osoar - Uo they gn back on thec upon the slaijc. Or uiake ihee iuomiiiious in the ho-car? Oh, It would brim Affliction's bitter cup, And fill thy soul with limcstheihic ri To lii-ve them slip, O martyr of all martyr!- Dost thou wear ijartei s? . Do the three buttons oe tin; himl-W i....i- Tell us, sweet stranger; we fhould like to wear ho was even said and litis came 16 liile'8 ears , thai he was prejudiced .against eduea- lion. Even 4 VViil it hire teams to haul stone I 'asked Riley. .. - 'No;' but it will enable ycu ta haul stone without Jjesms. If it will. Wei, let mc h"nr wlinl it is,' Hidd Ivilpy, chu.igiiig Ids pMrpu.-c while epeukiitg. ,. ...... Raft t!ie slonos down,' mid llmnp: Now kwik' a!tere jlanip See,4 said old Riley,, MMe-Mood up f-r )ni, tin aid. yon wa'iiM'no dnuco wlioir overv body else said ryotr was; but thin here looks as ef t hey was tialit an I wm wrong. INw in ii itiir, kin t rail stone down a creek thai ain't g.t niore'ne" six inches o' wafer in i!, a-biilbliiy aroutid anion" the ihcs of the bottom?' 'Well, you 8ie,' Kiiid Hump, VO. W.BAHAM. f llillsoyro, N. C. .. . i. , JA3. A. GRAHAM. Graham, N. C. GKAUAH & GRAHAM ATTOHNE18 AT LA W, Practice in the 8tatc fnd Federal Courts," WSjieei tl atteutiou paid to collecting. J. D: KEEN0DLE, A ttorney tit Law, IVIM faithfully and promptly attend to all Dusi jess intrusted to hiui , v k , - , i ; O ginger of the honeysuckles, ' . Ha. t thou a real confidence in buckles? O Sairt as sweet as centred e'er a triptveli, Are thy surcii gles knit? Or do they Hi Willi wiry neatness, duplex and elliptic? , Dost thou a sorter Affect the patent stockin-r strap surportur? And whercunto, O prophet, dost' thou hiteli it Tell us the garment Fame ucrse'f shall ultehc ; l? - ;, .,:., , Do the Philistines jeer? And dost thou keer"? Oh, carest thou one eontinental lilly, Though all the world asserts the Hylc is hilly? t - It is not, Oecar, poet of pain and passion, Just wait and see Those breeches to the knro Have taken the fancy of our gilded youtli And, willow, willow wally, eke, good sooth, Here is a tact that we will bet our cash on. They will soou bo the too consummate fashiqn.. .!- ir ".' H2. OVAIIAiTI, N.C. Practices in the State and Federal Courts THE MISTAKE ABOUT 1IAWP SKJf 1M fakhfnllv and oromntlv ttlti-iKt m ll ..!. Aaa flJUt 1 lib HI CUiC. 'Uatnp See, dunce I Wei), maybe so ; but arier what I've seed, it 'ud ti.ko a stnai'ter schooluiasler than jou to make me think so,' 1 . It was old Riley Vauglin who 8 oke, and although old Riley hud vo eduea lion,. his hard sense and sound, judgment were respected by all the men who sat there in the village postoffice wailing for the mail. He had grown prosperous by dint ol hard work and good judgmonl, and his neighbors we're .accustomed to ask fir and lo reepect his opinions. '1 did not say prcsiscly that, Mr. Vaughn,' replied Mr, Pcnrnddock, the schoohnaster. ; 'J onlv fcaid tny be-t ef' forts to educate the boy were rendered futile and nugatory by reason of his iu exiilicable inability to grasp and retain so simple a thi::g as the accidence of tbe Latin verb.' . - ; .That means, in plain English, that lie ain't got no.grip on what you teach him, don't it?' asked Riley. - , , - Yes. that is vtul I ir;ean,' replied the schoolmaster, with something, like a shudder t old Riley's Euslixh. 'But I svill make an honorable exception in the matter ot m&i hematic. He seems in siinciively to grasp aril hmeiical princi ples.' i Tea,' drawled old Riley; one 'o your hoys fole me Ilamp conM figure out how long it 'ud take toi a cistern to get lull ef Ihere was ihree pipes .' diflerent sizes a &. PARKER, ATTORNEY, , UK A II AM, (V. C , . Will attend regularly the Superior turts of Alamance, " atwill, Prrsou, Chatham and Ran ilpli, and the Federal courts at Greensboro, business entrusted . to him shall have faithful mention. , ' 6-4 80. lr. ... ...i ., . .. . - i t . -1 n , r. 1 ' -L. ' H ,i- --m.il. " i... , - - BR. J W GRIFFITH, I DENTIST; r u fully preparet' to do any and all : kinds of ork pertaining to the profession 8peeial attention given to the treatment of lueasesof Uie MOtlfll. ' ? , ! - . Calm AxrkHozo . 'jts Tows a Oountr 1 1 1; GENERAL PRACTITIONER u Medicine and Surgery, s fiBAIIA.1l, y. V. 9.1.80. ly. T. B. Eldridge, at Law. GRAHAM, N.C. ?na1Uf in the State and Federal Courts. ah business intrusted to him shall receive roropt and careful attention. ' ADVEtmSEMENTS. 'Afl. W. UBRIOHT. DAVID SCOTT. STAR -' GREENSBORO, N. 0, Patriot BailHing, on 0ontl) im Bt- WINTER SALS DATS ' - Wednesday and Friday: Believing'itwni'bet Growers of this Believing it wj,1''be to the"introst of tiie To- h "'""era or mis section of the Mate to arenon8C In centre of trade, wo fatrUt BalUiag, Bta Klat lreeuT on each . dally the "minor wjL,l,,hae sales during the winter wy n4Wday.tnddaUy the toon th. pfdiiies for handling good, aodT satisfactory wJnwieed. ; t - . - . jj""' Mr. Seott was the popular Anctlontei at "!Knterprlge Warehouse, and would be pleas. rZfZ Wends. GrJ present Houston A Bro,r Wholesale ,wr, will manage the finances. ample can,PlnSyard and bouse for Fel ,48Vlm.; .. . ALBRIGHT & SCOTT. ; PATENT S. runuin' into it, an' two others 'o slill different 6izes a-runnin' out.' Yes, he is expert in the practical ap plications ol arithmetic; and yet in arithmetic his sianding is not good, be cause he seems incapable of mastering the exact terms of the lormtilse and rules.' Well, now, look hflre,' said old Rilev, rising and striking the counter with bis big flat ; 'ii Jei omo' to this here, the boy ain't got nugrio on your words an' things; but he's got a good grip on iJees and principles, an" it's my belief that's the inside o' sense. I dou't want tone un Hump's mctlier was. dis couraged. Hauip wu8nlnu8 'pottering,' bhe said, instead of attending to bis books. 'Why,', she said, 'lie is been fooll .g witu' a spring on the Hill back of the hoii-e the whole season through. He's laid pip3 lo bring the water down here, j and now he's tinned the whole house j iiitu a mill.' 'llie'i she would show her Visitor what Harnp had done, lie had coiittructed uu ingenious waier-wheel with whi'ih to make the most of the power atlonleil by the spring, and had set it a variety ot tasks. A siieich ol line shaltiiig passed under the floor 61 the house, and bands were passed though (lie floor to the churn and (he SQwiug-niachiiie, and even iho sausage chopper could be attached at will. '1 don't deny that it's handy; and saves work' said his mother. 'And now he's made a soi l of fan in the dining-room, and has set thai going, loo, so that it keeps the flies efl the table. If we had a baby in the house, I believe he'd make the water rock the cradle. But it's dis couraging about his studies. Mr. Pen roddock is in despair, and stys he dcu't know what Is lo be made ot the boy.' The summer proved to bo & very dry one, and the gardens especially suffered for water. When the people began to complain, Ilamp had an idea. He al ways had an idea when an emergency aroso. He went into his mother'; gar-, den and worked all day. digging a trench down the middle, and making Utile trenches at right angles to the maju one, so that each bed was surrounded by them, and! the larger beds crossed as well. He was very careful lo keep ail these trenches ou one level. When he bad finished , he laid a drain from his water-wheel lo the main trench, so that the waste water, alter turnir.g the wheel, was carried into the garden and emptied into the trench. Little by little I he main trench filled; then ihe water trickled in to (be smaller ivemhes, and as the spring from which it came was a neyer-lailing one, the garden was supplied with water throughout the dry, hot sum mer, and such a garden nobody iu that regiou bad seen that season. . People said that Ilamp See certainly was a handy sort of boy; but they were sure to add, 'It's a pit be is so dull.' ' One day old Riley Vaughn was offer ing extravagant prices for- horse, mule, or rx teams lo haul stone. Ho had taken a contract to supply from his quarry the stone for the railroad bridge over Bush Run,' aud now the time for delivery was near at baud, and no teams could be had. ; All ihe hcrscs were at work on the crops and it began to appear that old Riley must either lose money on the contract by hiring horses and mules and teamsters at ruinous prices, or forfeit the contract itself. He tried in every necessarily offensive, but you an' all . iSI.a -4M I ii nr lit ffi flOflfth scqooimasieis uo J"" , , nt. idees.'tney "irecuuii cu net. mut. your no- JU . -n T-EHMANJJ. Solicitor ot American and 1 1... 'oreifrn Raimit. vi;.,..t . r 411 : tierore r lat- at U ' si'JlS11 Pateuts, Washington, D. C. I1, pnnoeted with Patents; whether bel t T Office or the Courts, promptly 1 . "P charge mad unless a paten ESBd far flri,la c 10 oa t parrots. " They dou"t waut no I iust want the words, an' that's tiono'learn!u. That's the trouble o' this here country down here; men learn word an' kin m ike speeches, but they can't do noihin'. Now ' Pre seed that boy HawpSee do what nary a man in this couuty couldido. I bought the fust reaputachine as was ever seed in these parts, au' when it came it was all to pieces; aii packed in boxes. I sent one arier an-dier ter all the blacksmiihs an' wheelwrighls au' carpenters here about lo aet the Thing np, and I'm blest el one on 'em oould make out which end o' tbe ihing was loreinost. Not one on 'era could put auy two pieces together. That 'ere boy hung- an-nnd all the time, with his forred creased up like, an' finally he 'says lo me, says he, 'Air. Vuhn. let me try.' 'Well try,' says ' I 'an' el vou git ber together j I've got a five-dollar bill fer yon aayoe you won't believe It, but alore noou that very day, that there reaper was asreapiu ! fered twice the usual wages, but still he leveled op Irtnii the qtt trry and there's only two feet fall, or a lililo less aiid Iho hanks are now hero '.ess than live feel high; ami so as there's a good deal more water running down in a day ihati an body wouhl thliik, it's my notion to build a temporary daiu Just be low the bridge jouv e enough timber and pluuk heic lo do it with two hours' work of Jvour men building it, say six icel high, there where the bunks are closest together. Be lore noon to morrow the water will rise lo the lop; id the dam, and run. When it does, you'll have six leet of water here and lour Icet ol water at. the quarry and jour men caji pnsh mils down as fast as they can toad them. . Huwdoyou know (hero's only two foot lull?' asked old Riley, eugerly. : I've leveled it,' said Ilamp. 'That is, jou figured it out with I hem sticks?' -' ' Yes:1 - ; Are you sure you've got the ribt aus vcr?' asked the old man, wild with eagerness. ,'Peictly sure. Yoit'seej-Il'i simple. I plant my sticks , 'Never mini about how yon do it; I can't understand that ef you explain it but look me iu the eyes, boy. This thing means - thousands o' dollars to Riley Vaughn el you'te got your answer right. I kin understand that much; an ef you've worked out this big sum right for me, I'll choke the next man that says you're a dunce jiut 'kase. yon don I lake kindly to old Pend ruddock's chats leriu' sort o Isarhin. I'll do it, or my name ain't Riley Vaughn, an that's what pve bcQit called for nigh unto 65 year now. Old Riley was vividly excited. He called all his men to the place selected, and set them at work building the dam, while Hamp looked on,- and simply made suggestions lor eimplyfyinglbe work. The dam was finished at three o'clock in (be afternoon, and at six o'clock the water had risen two feet six inches, while -the back water had passed the qnarry. ' There!' said Hamp 'that proves my work. The water h level, of course, as far as the 'jack water shows itself and we have six inches of back water at Ihe quarry and two feet six inches at the dam; so the fa'l is two feet.' It looks so,' said Riley, who was also eagerly watching the rise ot the water. The workmen had gone home, all ot them convinced that this attempt to back the water a mile tip the creek was the wildest foolishness; but old Rllcy and Hamp waited and watched. - 'It doesn't rise so fast now,' said Riley. 'That's because it lias a largor surfaco; but it still triset, and the surface won't increase much more now, as ther's a steep place iust above the quarry, and h can't back any futher op.' . The two waited aad watched. Mid night came, and the measurement show ed three feet six Inches depth at the dam. Siil! they waited and watched. At six o'clock in the momWig the depth was four feet two Inches. Then Riley rent a boy to his house with -orders to bring a big breakfast for two. At seven 'clock the break fast arrived, aud the measurement showed lour feet' three inches aud a half, j It's a-risiii fasier again,' said Riley-. Yes; the level is climbing straight op j (be bluff banks now, aud i.ot spreading out as It rises said Hamp. At niii.J o'clock the depth was foar feet eight and a bail inches, and the men at the quarry had a raft ready, and were beginning to load it. Ten o'clock Drought four feet eleven inches ot wae, and at noon there were five feet and four niches, ' I've missed it a little, said Hamp. 'I said the water would rnn over the dam by noon, and it has still eight inches to rise belore doing that.4 Well, that sort ot a miss don't count, a dunce or anything like it. An' that ain't all,' said the old man rising and striking Ida fist iu (he palm of his band; They'yo bceijL rt-saj iii'lthatolo Riley Vaughn dii(i,'i vnlly edncaUou; now I'll liow, cur pin , a-goin1' to make I hi", tlaiii n pmiiiiHfiii, iiisiiuiiion, I'm a gi iii to I mid Viiughii & jSce'd I6i:iidry an' tigiiiviitooritl i:iiplitneut factory i ight dowu 'lie creci" Ihere, uii put a big' lot ol irnprovetiinuchiiicry in ii; an' I'm a"g'dn lo "sond my pardiu-r, John ihmi'deti 8oe, off next week to get the rest o' ids education: where thoy sull the sort o' education us is good lor him not a lot o words bill principles aud goiu' lo New Yoik right away, boy, an' at old Wiley Vuughii's a-goin, to fool all the bills outeii your interest in the comiir-factory .' You'll study all sons o tii;eriii( -works au machine pi iuiples, in the big school in New York! what's called the school o' mines, an' then you'll go to all the big factories au, things. . ; : -. . .-!---'.':-The scheme ivas carried out; Hamp spent Hiiee years in study, aud returned au accompli died mechanical engineer. Ho wnni into the factory as old. Uilcj'a partner, and his work has been to ini-i provo machinery 1 ' processes The firm own many. patents now on things of his invention, and the Inctory is the center of a prosperou." region, iii which Hampden See is au especially respected chizcu. ; A Both Handed Banker. 'The Equal Us of. Both Hnds, was the xuiject of a recent lecture in Ooo j.er -U ai n. The led ure was . by Geo. E. Woudtrd of the Second Nation al bank, and it was 'illustrated, by the lecturer with the aid of ' a blackboard and red and while chalks. ' Mr. Wood urd said thnt every man could become and ought tt become both bunded. The best teat of ambidexterity, he said, is writing a signature, and he proceeded to write his own signatory in a doZ n different ways, from right to' left ' and left to right, with both hands siniultane. ously, either on toe same line or oa par allel tin, back war J or forward, uide do wo or reversing the sigoatui-a - so i could be read only iu a mirror. Then he u.ixed up lhoe methods, writing the name forward with the ; npsii down with one hand and right) side . up with the other. - : '.'' ', ' ,,' '"j'l. . 'This Said Mr. Woodard, "is . val nable accomplishment fdffat bank Pres ident or a railroad ofliciaV for he who can writ) bis name twice while another man is writing it ' once deseryea , threj holidays in a week, or double pay.i My paying teller .cashes checks to any of those signatures, aud not even he can tell whether it is , a forgery or not." fnghter. Then the artist wrote a love lettr in French in one hand and a business let ter in English with the other, simulta neously. A fterwards he wrote such words as "FonUinbleau" at,d "Con KUutm.ple." "As an Athletic exer cist club swinging and dumb bell shak ing sink into stupidity beside this." "The mott difficult thing to do," be said, '.'it to draw a sqnara with ' one hand anJ a circle with the other." Then he attempted thi task. The ends of the circle did not meet, and it was not round besides the tqaare looked like a parral lelograiq, hut the audieoce applauded Fiuwllj Mr. Woodard drew j with both, hand.- symmetrical geometrical figurrs, which be called decorative deigns, em ployirg the right hand on the ri-ht side of he figure, and the loft' hand on th left side, lie sketched seven, of these figures " Jand said: "I. will cbal lengH any draughtsman in New York city to ertoriu the task in an hour and a qnarter with one band,' and be may select his own deigos," ' ?;"::t iYat Uke Mob bauds. TUo boy jest tljat will help yoa could get but very few. He was In real trouble, with a loss of several thousand dollars threatening him. One day Hamp. who knew what trouble Riley was in, went dowu lo the creek, aud, cutting several twigs,, began setting them np'at a distance, from each other, aud sighting from one to the others The lew teamslers who were at work watched him curiuusly, but could not make out what he was doiiij.. He went op ihe creek with his slicks, roov lug one oi them at a lime, and always csrefolly sighting from one to another, or rather from one ovsr another to a third. In that way he worked np to the quarry, which was immedialdiy on the p.rk. nearlv a half mile above the point where the bridge was to be built. When j said Riley. 'You've worked the sum' be had done, he walked back, examining out right, anyhow , an' the water's deep the banks as he went ; then be presented j enough lor raftlii', an' Mill a-risin. It'll himself before Riley Vaughn. -' go over, the dam 10 two or ihree hours 'Mr. Vaughn,' he said, 'I've au idea J more, an' I'll do wnat i saw: rii,- cnoae at will help yoa out ol your difficulty.' any man 'at says John Hamdpon Seo's An Iowa school master knocked down a hornet's nest, to use In illustrating a led n re, bat If the reinaks be mado immediately after, wlHe kiting across the country,, were merely those ho iu tended to useWu the lecture relative to ihe hornet's ! nest and ' they certainly referred to the nest the discourse was one totally nufit for people to hear. , A lover of birds: ; '! know said the little girl 16 her. elder sister's young man at the supper table, 'that vou will j.iiu our society for the protection of Inile Dims, beeanse mamma' savs you are very fond ot larks. Then there was a silence and the Llmburger cheese might have been beard scrambling arouud in its bOx on the cupboard shelf. Sweet simplicity You must have been leaning up against , ihe banisters, A1 SMM", dear,' affectionately - lemarkeil the fair girl's grandmother as she brought her spectacle 10 a correct locus and took another look at the stains on the waist of Angey's dress. .Them ain't no banis ter stains,' returned the truthful maiden, who ran a little boys' bible class in the parish church; 'Charley was feeding ma- caramels last night aud 1 guess tbein's the prints of bis fingers.' If 1 -'.l -4;"'" '';:- IB ' Keuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache; Soreness of the Chest, Gout, ' I ' Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swellings and " Sprains, Burns and Scalds, , General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet -, and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. -'." No Preparation on earth equalx Pt.' Jacob On. as '' -i a , mure, timple and chrap External Ilcmedy. r . A trial entail but the comparatively trlQIntr outlay of BO Cents, and every one f uffcring wiih pull . . , can have cheap and positive proof of its claim. Direction in. Eleren Language. , SOLS BT ALL DBDGGIBTS ABO DEALESS IS , HESICDfE, A.VOGELER S& CO., ' .' BaMmor,MdjTT.g.J. t ; " . i j ' . Are-Dally Recchin!; " ' ' ' N'sVASASONtdJiLE: O00DS.Tr Extra sixc Crochet Quilts ; 10-4. 114 Bed Blankets; - - ' White aud Ked. Twilled aad Plain Flannels; Extra, heavy, bleached, brown and ,fancy col ored Canton Flannels 1 --f Silk Warp Flannels;- : - - - Embroidered F.annels; -60-inch Bed Ticking will hold feathers, : Every variety of shades and price in; Silk Handkerchiefs. . - ( CHILDREN'S FANCY HOSIERY, Including full regular French made aud -: shaped double kneed Hose for Boy, v Ladies' extra and over sixes and lengths ; . . : Ladies' Fleeced Hose; ". Ladles Solid Black;' Vj , r i; Ladies' Sod Misses' Black and White Hose ; , : .... ..4 ; -Cashmere Hose, GENT3 AXD LADIES' MERINO HOSE. We sell a large trade in Fancy and.Fiae Hosiery, and keep the stcck up all the year round, Heavy Woolen aad AU Wool . . OAS S I M E R E S For Men's and Boys' wear. Carpets Body Brussels, Tapestry Brussels, HM Til T 1.1 Tl III On inree riy. perwi & ij, ,- . .. pers. Extra Supers, Fines, , Carpet Borderhig. Persian Damask, 4 4 to match, smUble. for Hallways, Dining. Booms Veastiaa 8Ulrways and Trackings. Also, iu aU gradei. O O Cs. YEAROAN, PETTY&CO., . ! Balelgb, 3. C, :; ' Sx ;v;;-'TiiE";l',:vt . mi wmi Is prepared to Execute Job "Printing ' and wrrn - -y. ' Neatness And Despatch, ' G i v e U s A Trial . Patents f Inrcnioxxs B. W. ANDKBSOS. , . , C" s5tITfl Andorspn $ Cnitl:, attobWky8.at-e.aw, No. TOO Sevkmth. Stkebt, WAsuiNaToy, D J ' No fee for preliminary examination. No t OQless pAtcut is allowed. Fees less than f tl responsible auency. Books oi tuiomiation free of oharge. : iteiorences. jurnished non truest. . i t. Sex'U 13, tt , I i 2 I cured in 10 to a d.ivs.ltn .vriii I'jt f tablishe, 1 rnr,-.. T rii. . !..- & li- ...ingcascio. .
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 13, 1882, edition 1
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