Cljc Cnnricr:
1 O
& Democratic New
papci
nXlES OF ADVmiTlSING.
(10 USES ok Ltisc MnrrrE x tqiRX
One fqiEur one insertion 11 00
One Each uUrj-nt Inv rtion... 63
Ob On month . . t.00
tn Two month 3iJ
Cnc Three inontM 5X
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Ore Twelve uionth 15 J.
Contr-ct f. Ur5er pjnoe nutu? on liberm
ternw
Published every Friday in Loulburg
, hates of suiKtuir'noN,
Copy 1 year......---
6 Months.. t-
DEVOTED TO POLITICS, LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART.
8 Months,
TaiMSCASllMX!IDVA.-i VOL. 8.
LOTJT.SB tJRG-, N. C, OCTOBER, 31, 1873.
NO. 1.
SELECTED POET:
Our diiIJloa
a
-
ion
,
JJY OEORGB D. TRENTICE.
Tis sad. yet sweety to listen
To tbe eoft wind' gentln swell,
And tbink ic hear the niu'ic
Oar childhood knew bo well :
To gaza out on the even, .
and
the
And the boundless fields of air,
And feel again our boyhood's wish
To loam like angels there.
The e are many dreams of gladnrss
That cling around the past
And from the tomb ot leeling
Old thoughts come thronging fast
The forma we loved so dearly
In the happy days now gone,
The beautitul and lovely,
So fair to look uporjj j
Those bright and gerrtle maidens
Who setinod so formed for bliss,
Too glorious and too heavenly
For gjch a wotld as this';.-
Whose dark. so!t eves seemed s-
ming
To a sea ot liquid ligiit,
And whose locks ot gold were strt
ing
O'er brows so sunny bright.
Whose smiles were like the sunsliir.
In the spring time of the year-
Like the changeful gleams of April,
They follow every tar i
They have passed like hopos away.
And their loveliness bA3 fled,
ph mnny a heart is mourning ' j.
That they are with he dead, J
Jke the brightest buds of summer,
! . rru U f..11 tl tVio a'om
They bave fnllen with the s'em ;
Y-t, nb, H is a lovely death
' To fade from earih like them 1
An I yet the thought is saddening
To muso on such a3 tuey
And feel that all the beautiful ,
Are passing frst away ;
That tin- fair one3 whom we love
Up .w to each loving'breast
L'ke the tendril of the creeping
'Tben priih where they rt . f
And we can but think of thesr,
In the soft and gentle spring.
4
When the trees are waving o'i r us,
' And the fl wms are llshom;n;' ;
And we k 'ow' that w ritcr s ici-min
With bis cold and stomy fkv
kA ti-.a .l.triniK lif!vntv round u:
Aiu v . -. . w j
" Is budding bi t to d'e 1
ORIGIN At STdjttl
BY CHARLES SOUTH.
Chailcston and its iiands!
1 VrtCQ Kniffhtsnf tho ninoteentli ee
TJ IleaTt of Southern Lhivalry
onnfimnnt: fruit of the finest civi
tion, and principles of tlrfj Old W
wedded to. the match lcf p liberty
lavish nature of the Tjcw. findiiio
aspiration too lofty, nolifoioo iP,
jio conception of goveriment toofc
ind grand, or constru4elf princf s
too lofty for faith andj hearty Jp-
tance, whether tuo uieiapuysici vj'u
riAfnf a Locke or I the hollo dvu
of a Clhoun. A rejiubhc of r.
a pure "democracy of sentiment,
wotiltb and reilneuicnt, such
o - - I
world never before saw, save in f
Greece ; and such as mater al pro
and charging institutons - may
et nossiblo again, Never, a
the world move
.uckward.F11
tho curtain rise on alike stage
drarnaptoyeJ for lUb worVl a? f00'
by troupe whose actoi s verc
'and none sntoruin whose
the solution of life s greatest
and the rudd awakani?g of
" dream.' .Wo who sat at th(
. ' Al. 1. F. a-1 X rr f o VI y
cled with the players
glimpses at tinfes of scene
andflunsourchapi
and fetting applause, . .vruc AV0"-
men of the South woull1 rcca11
the actors.a moment bel
in the old attitudes, raf V10 cur-
tain for adast glance
. .,". lid tho. . dark
away, leaving the silef
Jv , . , .. .n forever. lor
ncss on which.it mJ
" tho life that moved I
v . . .1 a f reman
U mst as irrevJ -
U VZ. . ra..r.;. fcut necropo
H U DY aeswujw j , -
u ? ', t .f1 wucnee us
)t tuc eariy
it had been c
ter
beautiful harbor, formed by the un- and
c . - i l
or the rivers Cooper and Ashlev
. . ... . 1 5s,,lS)
CHAPTER I. f
Charleston lies out on the
nmyi ue proaa strong arms told about inS
embrace it. On the left . frnntinr I
, - .
Atlantic, in the mouth i of Cooper her
river, is fehute s Folly Island with its
towerlike fort Castle Pinckney. Alonf
the main shore and still jn the left,
extends the picturesque village Mount
Pleasant, crowning a bluff with a fine
beach at its base. A mile further on,
the shore of Haddrill's Point rounds
away abruptly, and across a! channel, a
quarter of a mile wide, thus made, is
Sullivan's island with its stanch old
fort Moultrie ; which now, in the year
of our. Lord 1860, gallantly mounts
the stars and stripes, and not unwo: th-
ilp bears itself the north eastern guar
dian of the harbor. Three nliles across
the entrance, turning toward the south
west, Cumm'ngs "point curves up, the
eastern extremity of Morris! island.
This is a. long low desert of sand, myr
tle thicket, marsh grass and cactus ,
and with Long island beyond it hedges
in fronuthc sea the largest island in
the harbor, James.
James island has an area of perhaps
thirty-six miles, and is nine! miles in
length. It is separated from! the. main
land, west by the Stono, and! north by
the Wappoo rivers, and from Charles
ton by the Ashley. Two points, Fort
Pemberton on the west and Secession-
iville on the south, constitute it the
fcnilitary key to Charleston by its ap-
, ,1. it. CJA 1-1 I e.
roach through fetono inlet
from the
cean , for at these points
only does
he river touch James island clearly,
ith no interval of marsh." ..Broad
reeks wind in every direction through
ts level area : through cotton .planta-
tons and 'orangeries, the stately villas
f planters gleaming from pomegranate
acia and. 'magnolia .groves: and the
tie myrtle shaded hamlets of their
jlored people. The principle road,
ng along its centre and length, ter-
iat t'na whaif which runs into the
ter nearly a hundred yards toward
l t Sumter. North of the
nlrest the city, are the old
bqdings and tlx; martelle '
road and
garrison
oiver, rel-
is4f old colonial Fore Johnson. South
of
stretching toward Morjris island
is Harrow nromontorv
.
a
half mile
long,f yellow sand, studded thick with
twoWs of verandoed and lauieed ent-
ith a bit-of 'Street between.
The ieet becomes impracticable as
tho lal nat rows, and q, few houses
sing'y ont Sumter, ou the Iwo hun
dred yils beyond its termination.
FormiiA'in acute angle with these,
and folliiug the curve of jhe little
estuary lich shapes the promontory,
are othcrVhite cottages lying clase to
the watcriedge in shrubbery and pal
metto. sq in verdure and those
in yellow A and together, form the
Fort JohnA of to-day ik a line
with the lai point and Fort Sumter,
and on the sVhern Isuore, is Recession
ville, Theslre the summor saaside
retreats of tlJjames I -landers, who
fieo hither fro .T,mfi to nvemrer "
Irom the mala 0f tLe rich veget-tion
of the interior
a "i
It is tho lastlScritemher.
.A broad
'rom the
sheet ot crimsoitght falls
glowing west ouWfcstle?s waters of
the harbor, and (V 0rs and breaks arid
a
plays on the waveU as thstidc creeps
in the crot of eve ripple a
lit
1 1 r f fifl
serpent The whiLpircs and domes
of distant CharlcstoW s iflised -with
rose, and the hugo V'ncated cone of
Sumter rises clear frW the j glancing
water like a gilded lf0 riding at an
chor. The frondage V the; myrtles
and palmettos beyonde little bay, in
which the waters are lajnr ihe shore,
1 o
, are steeped in amethysrV. jiaze an(i
tangle into a brckea ncl)r 0f iride.
scent light the level raysr the setting
sun. bailing and nshinhoats end
white winged yachts gl d er th3
water. TLe crie of curleUnd king
fid ers over the shrimpladenjncomiug
tide mingle with the subducWoiees of
geutlcmDii gathered at the wflrf, their
numbers constantly increasingly boats
from tho city, bringing pa?seukrs and
the mail. On the verandas. areWher-
ladies and children, and parties aiin-
slowly along the firm rwhite beach,
their garments flutterln'g in the breeze
their laughter rising softly
-r- . . - ., , - - , 1
But apart from the others as choos-
1
ue a young gin Etarras- -
motionless. , .Tbe waves creep up tod u-
, . . . .
feet and break with a' low ripple I -
na" slo" half laughter, and thefree.j j
sea birds skirl about her bead,
fearless of the still erect figure. A
ace oval, pure in tint and outline, the
blue veins of the temples and the del
icte moulding of the brow, especially
the organs of ideality, giving it a sing
ularly clear spirituelle air; a beautiful
mouth, expressive of exquisite sensi
tiveness and poetic feeling ; large grey
lasu shadowed eyes as varying in light
9? brooks in April ; dark hair with
Just enough of ripplo in its mass to
to make it rebel against the pearl comb,
whence a stray tress has uncoiled and
lies tendril like upon her shoulder ; a
pliant ylx proud figure and perfect
hands this is the picture - of Grace .
Ilazlehurst. She stands with an eager
look in her eyes, and with lips unsteady
in a mixed emotion of pleasure and
vague painr She might have listened
to music, a grand triumphal choral
with a sweet scarcely beared thread of
plaint winding through it, with ! just
that look upon her face. , In a low clear
voice she repeats Tennyson's poem
looking ove I the water :
;, Break, bre k break, j
1 Ou thy cold grey stoaes Oh, sea V
Now the crimson rim of tbe sun sinks
slowly behind the sand-hills of Long
island," a moment more slnd the can-
. ; - - - - . j
non booms from Moultrie, tbe Hag flut
ters down 'with the dead day, and her
dream is broken'. Broken post effect
ually by the sound of horses feet, not
to becgain renewed. Four young men
in hunting gear and with bag of game,
plover, snipe and summer duck are ap
proaching from the street.
. The' are riding niarish tackys, a
small horse peculiar to the coast, flour
ishing only on tho marshes, never sink
ing as cows and deers do, finding firm
IPH witliure instinctv and capable
of endurance fori
days consecutively,
if all wed a run on
them all night for -ecuperation. ' The
youngest of the party, who has a fine
deer fastened to his
to one of the dwelli
saddle, turns aside
ngs and calls, for
some one to take his spoil ; the others
ride forward, two pf them in earnest
conversation.
The third, who is slightly in advnee,
sits his horse with a careless grice.and
wears a gay insouciant expression on
his handsome facca face almost, femi
nine in its brunette beauty, lie- lifts,
his hat to bow to a lady, shaking back
the clustering black curls from his fpre-
head ere he rcp'aces .it, and you. see
that the fearless, ready fire in his black
eyes accords well with the easy but
proud and assured carriage of the sup;
pie figure, and rescues the straight noso
androu.idedcliiufrom femininenes?.' He
quickens his pace as he recognized Miss
Ilazlehurst and springs light lightly to
the ground as he reaches her removing
his hat arid remaining uncovered in
gallant obeisance.
' You were drinking in the spirit of
the gloaming, Miss Grace, i I see you
are full of it Can you parion me for
dashing the sparkling liquor from your
cup so rudely r . .1
If you fill it withsomcthingb3tte",''
she answered. There wa3 little sparkle
in my cup just nw.. , The voice of the
S3a nearly always wakes in me a vague
unrest and heartache. , I
She turned to receive the greeting of
the two who now approached. One of
them, a young gentleman of . twenty,
n:t so tall as bia companior, yet wear
ing a modest, quiet dignity, and bear-
iog some slight resemblance to bis sis-'
ter in icgolarity of feature, was John
uburs.: the o!lur seemed much
the oldtst of the three, Ic r a grave and
tbouihiful repose of fcj and-beariogj
enhanced by the charm ct" a gentle
chivalrous and who'ly unconscious
manner dcnUd in some measure Lis
otherwise apparent youth, A broad
high brow a,nd fine leature, ergraven
wi:h all delicate linc3 and mouldings cl
thought and culture, gave an intellec
tual character to his face, ar.d supp ied
magnetism lor trust and revereccc. lie
removed nis bat and greeted Grace
with a gesture that called some add U
tionai llgnt ana coior lato uer rjes ami
euetlv;. xiia civs ncic Kij oin, iui
, , . . . . ,
clear and steady, wanting in the shad-
aaJ d , that ryere ivin t0 h
nri ,iri-!nmnf la.hpo.
- - 0 - - -n
i3 it you, Mis3 Grace, who are eubs
et to unnst and heartache ? he asked,
smiling at her now brilliant face. Do
you carry the symptoms in your eyes ?'
You think with Mr. Ioor thtn, thet
I show marks 'ot intoxication rather V
she answered, glancing at the fl. st
comer.
'Say rather of "cspiration,' said Wil
lie Ioor quickly. 'Asoon as I looked
into your eyes I thought of
i
'The bard who, on theChian strand,
Beheld th ;la d and xha
itiae to the swilling oi tb
Ody s y
he voiceidl sea.'
Co:,fos t!at your thonghts were
flowing in musical numbers '
' 'I d , those lines of Ten uiy son wilh
their inevitableheart break,
jTireak, br ak, break 1
Oa thy cold grey stones Oh fcea 1' . ;
were ringing their knell in my heart
when the day died rnd you came.'
Snch sad thoughts in so brilliant a
scene, Miss.Grfice ? What cou'd have
awakened them?' asked Elliott Girar
deau. 'I he shouts of the 'Hibernian's boy' I
I suppose.' ahe said laiirhinr. but
with an" undertone of pathos in her
voice, or it maybe that inexplicable
inconsistency of human natuie, that in
Vtroduces a minor chord into our gayest
mugic and a skeleton to our fea3ts.'
But I think that Tenneyson' eaid
John Ilazlehurst in that fine p'aint
found real cause for hia pain, the old
union of love and. death, la not the
keycote struck in the lines; ,
'But the tender grace of a day that is
dead
Will never ccm- buck to me.' -
The nvan f the sea may awaken
bi'tcr reminiscence, can it create pain f
'Mny not the touch that awaken
re t r o.p ct ion's stir also iudt finite ap
prehension,? the misty unknown of ti e
future be as tt-prible as the eniomb vol
umea ol the past ?' a&ked hi3 sister
looking away to the dnrkening East
across the lading water. Dots rrt lnis
low uudtrthrobbing as of a great heart'
suffering reach U3 in all thkigs that
move us deeply,- in music, iu Alps and
oeffti and marching : constellation;
through every deep poem winds this
subtle thread.
'Can the heart escape it?' !
ll tl iuk cot ' said Elliott G:rardeau.'.
It is an element of development - and as
inevitaMe as it is cducatiuna'. s'orno,
htat and rain are the artists of nature,
of . her landscapes and harvest-, her
ip ig pre m"sj and autum fruitage.
loaia and sufT -ring, working out into
grtat thoughts and noble deed-", kindle
human life into sympathy and aspira
tion. All birth -jand education c ec;
througn suffering, dl , btigh's are at
tained by struggle anrt endurance.
Like riro; it expands ih? capacities ai d
clears the medium; ard Christ hiu;sel!
wics his creatures to tall sympathy by
parsing bt fore them throagh tbe firec,
himself made perfect through suffering.
'If that bi trut eaid John, 'one
would not avoid it even if it were ps
sible.'
I should 'certainly' said Willie Ioor
3ome things I can readily bear, but
others humiliation, the final blasting
ot life's best hopes aad purposes I
could not fnict them.
A moment of silence fell, which was
broken by Marion Ilhzlehurst, a Irank
bright lad of fourteen, who having
surrendered Irs deer and horse into
proj er luad n w jired the porty.
Vi:at is '.hi mitur ? cried he. Yoa
lo k ts if all weie at a funeral.
'Is the bird det 1?'
Willie I or who had been watching
Miss Ilazlehurst lurtively, smiled and
colcre ', looking much re ievc.
Ah, I had torgittoD, Misc Grtcu-
you bave been considering suffering in
the abstrac, le: me th jw it to you in
the concrete lam s rry and ashamed
with my view of it toconless that lam
the scent in this case. Lie took some
thing folded in a batdkerchief, tender
I j enough from the bosom of his huot
ing coat, and placed it in Ler banc, a
young mockingbird -wounded. 'I shot
at a duck, and the bttle thinr rose icr
to lice and Lrkd iu wio. Marion
I id you wou'd be good . a narltan t3 iu
4Yes, I told bim how yoa cried over
that dyicg nonpareil,- the cat brought
in the other day.
bLe colored and I&ngbei a liitla at
thii iraak disclosure, yet when, as she
bent over the little thing, it stirred and
uttered u try of pain, opening its eyes
bright with agony and liar, he bowed
her face quite low, till it touched the
brown feathers and when she lilted it
the kshes werebtaded with ttarr.
Mr- Girardeau woald have made bis
aditux as she was turning homeward
with it, but Maricn interfered.
YiU must, make Mr Girar.leau come
to supper, sister,' he said.' . Hi shot a
deer this eveaing. and gave it to Me".
Ilibbard who hs charge of the Club
dinner tomorrow. But be must bave
soma of our veuion to niijht. It will
be so lorg before we all butt together
egam.
S'ie fave the invitation rauttly. with
her eye, and he signified a pleaced
acq'iiecence. Willie Ioor accompanied
her home, and the others turned toward
the wharl where politics and the ap
proaching canvass were causing en ex
cited discussion.
(TO BE COXTINTED.)
F llkn Man and Woman. -Man
sunk below bis natural level, hates and
affects to despire the bight where ho
has walked. Women, fa'cn from her
fair estate, looks ever back to it, with
longing and regret ful eyes lie pro
claims Ida self not worse than bis fcl
lows; eudeivors to pu l those above
(jown to his flat. She admits her fault
deplores is glad there arc women
so much better and mo c fortu ate
than she? strives to bave hope for the
future, and 'istens witn bounding
blood to eve;y voice that brings back
to her the spotless past NcveJ docs
she quitclrr nowce moral'ty: humanity
.claims her to the last. Miserable,
down ' t'oden who'ly forsaken, she
looks up fro u the dross and the noire
nd bears the ?ark of her love still
singing at the ga'es of heaven.
Those acquirements which simply
furnish, the it ind, which are itvported
into it with out taking root, or adding
anythi g to its iover and compass, are
our property, in leedrbut they a e not
ourselves; and they 'cave us in rjoint
of moral value, exactly whe e the
r .... .1 ii.i i '..i .ii i i
iuuuu us. vjuiu iu loise-Micn, U"u lvoryj
may embellish a 'jre; but these vain
ornaments can never cause it to send
forth fidl and so-orous tones.
James J hkins.' faid a Echoo'mas
ter to l.ii pupi', 'what is an average?'
A thiog, sir, answered the scholar,
promptly, 'that bees lay eggs upon.'
'Why do you ?ay that, you silly boj?'
asked the pedagogue,
'Because, sir eaid the youth, 'I
heard a pcntleman say tbe. other dy
ss a hen would lav, on an Hvejngp, a
hundred and twenty rggs a year.'
'What's your business V asked a
judge of a piisoner at the I ar,
WelI s'poic yoa might calircea
locksmi:h,
VTKoti 1 i rl rriii loo- Ir C. w
Tvisiu uivi juu iao. rt & Mbjvwii
rad.-?'
'List night ; when I heard a ca1! for
t'ic perlice, I made a bolt for the front
door' '
If yon desire to
woman is cocsUnt,
know whether a
persevering; and
capable of pursuigg an bject to the
end, look into ,htr work-baske. Ii
you find there two, tl.re, or mere un
finished pieces of work, each one of
which baa become soiled from lying
arcund, you may safely conclude tLat
she is fick'c.
There is to g-eatrr crime than to
stand between a man a' d his devel
opment; to t ke any 'aw or i Ftitutioi
and put it around bim like a collar aud
fasten it there, to that as lie grow
and enlarges he. presses again t it till
he suffocates and dies.
A man, itajicg at a boarding-house.
Ul s the story tha, in a recent thunder
storm, the warning of the elements was
to awticspinng tLat the hair io a dish
ot batter in the pintry turned complete
ly white during the night.
A good hearted but partially deaf
old lady is much disturbed by the
talk about tbe Kickapoo Indians She
doesn't se why any body should kick
a poor Indian.
Don't tell an editor bow to run si
newspaper. L;t the poor fool find it
out himself.
A big nose may be jmtly called nob-
E. II, PLUMMEU & CO
121 Syaiviore Street,
rLTnsr,ui:Cf va
Dealers in Iron Sleeland i
1
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS.
Orders will recti. e prcmp nd cart
ful attention, anJ bre rope tlully so
licited. 1
General Afnts fur tie F rxtrs
Friend Plow, has met wi.b ULivus.il
sommendatiun.
Highest prices alluded fur tenp iro:i.
stp 2C .
II- He Uammorul & Qq,
Dealers la
HATS, CAPS, FURS, STRAW
GOODS, CANES & UMBRELLAS,
No. 20 Sycamore St., Petersburg, Va.
tSf P&ricular
tb rst.-iQa
attention
paid to Or
K '-C 3m.
T, A. ST. CLAIR. .
t'a. ufcciur.-r of .
CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, EXPRESS,
SPRING & FARM VAGGNS.
CRRTS AND DRAYS.
Corner cf Lombard & Second Street,
PETERSBURG, VA.
A good assortmeat a wyj on hand,
and will muke to order tvtry desciip
tiop ot work in hi line.
Repairing .f every desi riptioa bear j
and light such us painting, wood-ork
black-fcm. thing, done fmhtally and
promptly. All woik warranted I
specttUy ask a call, - as I am ui that
hUi iu prh-c i.nd Wwrkmans:iip I cau
tipc 8Uilcii p; " " 6 p 2G 3.ii.
A EW AND CHEAPEST
SIOCIC OF
FALL I WINTER GOODS
la Fra: k'.inlorj.
I would respec: fully inform my cus
tomera and the poli o generally, that I
am now receiving my
FALL AND WINTER STOCK OF
GOODS!
Selec'td with r-jat care and purchased
n the best tern.a in the E tstern markets.
I have now a veiy lull un I varitd ctock
consiatitig of Dry Good?, Notion?, Oro-
. ...
cents, y ieDsWire. iiardare, Ulass-
ware. lieaIv-ma.te clothing. Hats, Boots
snd S'joip, ritiWd.rc IIlILv.-ate, Lea
ther, and iu fact &l:i'&t everything suit
ed to the waatd of thj people. 1 invite
all to C'-me and examine br themselves,
as my txerience iu tuplying- their
wauis in lue pst aud continued fair
dealing in the future, together with be
iag coutcut with vnj kiuall profit will
enable me to give uniform batfction.
I will take hi! kiLdi of M.rchntaMe
produce iu txcuunge for G.hkU.
And will al.ow ihs Lighit Market
Price toi the Sime.
I cu Ker ixtrai rdin:y n-ducement
in Several ciit-Mcs ot go 1?. to tuoc
wishir g j ib l.t.
Sep 2'i
F, II. JARTAN,
hf, t: bTAKKS. O. J. 1 lloMArf.
STARKE Sl THOMAS,
Whulcfle aud Retail
103 Sjcam)re Sr., Petersburg, V,
we are now rrccmnz ur Fall t rek
tf good purebred Irom Importers anil
Mamfacturer. We are rr ortd to o -
ftr inducements in price aca quality to
Physician, merchants and j.rjitr.
wuose iraa we s tiicn. A lu uk.
K-Tosene un at reduced price. We
arc Ag ots t it VV ilaon rcm-dy f ,r Col
sumptioc. sep 2C 3a.
JOSEPH CARR.
(Saccessor to Jordan & Carr.)
Wholesale and Retail Dealer ia
Drugs & PalentHedicines
Taints, Oils, Gfuss, Dyes,
Varnishes; Brushes,
Perfumery, Fancy
Articles, &c.
Corner Sycamore aud WaaaingU n tt.,
sep2C 3m. Petersburg, Va,
Anew lot ot family and superfiae Floor
jut received- c. T. WILUISI
The Best in. Use.
Occnpic pice only 7 fwt SquVreT
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' THE
ALFOHI) MIESS
SiMsst ail .Host Pawerral
JCottOD Press
Tii3
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Two men can easily park a 50J lb,
bile of Cotton, and i( it a.) arranged 14
that the power and working force ctq
be Houbled. if reccsry. P ki as cna
pact a bale as the old fashioned acre
with half the Itbor, Can be run by the
gin power or by wter and steam by
putting wheel fn p'ace of th cranks.
Farmers can buy Family Itg:it, aad .- o
Lmdd thdirown Piesat nuill cxpensrfl,.
Irons Furnhlicd at Cost r
State, County and F-mily IUghtV for :!
sale by MALLORY A ALFORD .
Sole Proprietors fr the 8 mtbern states
i3l tl Frankhnton. N C
H. S. Furman & Co. m
DRUGGISTS APOTHECARIES.
Franklinlon, N. C. , ";
' Ket-ps cons.antly oa LLnJ a good ti
Sonuient ot ... c
I nntinrt iirnininrA
llriUba. MtU lb iHth.
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PAINTS, OLS, OYE STUFFS.
The attention of lh jiicians it called
to ur a'sortm-.at iix:r aud Fmid
Orders solicited an I ptompt'T filled.
Oil thebs: p js-iole ert:ii.
riiEcmprios cahcjuxxt c ur cxdsd
Limp goid, , -Paint
Dru.Vf.
GREEN & ALLEN,1
Grocers; And
coMMiisiox me:iciia::t
Solicit Cons xcsiclU of
Cotton, Toliacoo, AVIscat.
Produce Generally.
A?nts
for thi Ercellifnzi Cottoa,
Fertilizer and Ou'.leiu itiprorcl Steel
Urush Cottua u.ea.
Jo. 110 jcxayrt heet, PUrlur, V
Nu. 1-1
oJ,MUMMt; ki t Jt Mil Bm 0
GROCERIES I GROCERIES!!.
Extra , Demerara scd orto Rico 51
gar; Jars, Lagusgra and Itio Cot
..fee: Bacoo, sides and s'Uoul
der: Cioic Demerars
31 U;et: Family Ex
tra, and buper,
Floor: new
Itice,
Jar. rjn;r
King. White & Shaw
.
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