Newspapers / Washington Progress (Washington, N.C.) / July 26, 1887, edition 1 / Page 8
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FOIt FARM AND GARDEN. Ravage of tut Worm?. The simplest and most effective remedy for these destructive pests, which eat the plants off just beneath the surface of the soil, is to apply a solution of saltpetre irouud each hill close to the plants. The proportion of saltpetre necessary is a tablespoonful to a gallon of water. The quantity usually recommended is ouly a tablespoonful to a pail of water, but there is not the slighest danger of injur ing the plants by making the solution as strong as recommended. On the con ;rary, it seems to promote their growth. Tli ere is no doubt that cornfields might oe protected from the ravages of this greedy pest by applying the above rem ?dy. With a barrel of the solution at ?ach end of the cornfield, and a couple if good-sized watering pots, the labor of Ipplying is not nearly as great as it would ippear at first thought. larger branches of the tree with strong soap suds containing a little carbolic acid. In fact, our best authorities differ verj much in their modes of treatment. Th theory that comes nearest our own ideas VIOLENT WIND AND RAIN. A. Terrible Storm at New York Dam age Done at Other Places. New York. Towards noon Sunday, a terrible wind and rain storm set in, lasting on the suTVJeet, is that the disease is nearly half an hour, and accompanied with caused bv a lack of some mineral con stituent in the soil, which, from the continual drafts made upon it by the tree, has become exhausted, and which can be best supplied by top-dressings oi lime, ashes and a little salt, togethei with some good rich compost; or, ic fact, anything that will furnish food foi vivid flashes of lightning and heavy thun der. Trees were uprooted, window shutters and signs were wrenched 'om their fastenings and several pedestrians were injured. The vooden fence around Castle Garden and telegraph and telephone wires were blown down. Along the river fronts and the bay the storm raged with ereat f urv. The police patrol boats steamed out into the bay and r. seued many persons (live the Chickens lloom. The National Stockman says: The crowding together of young chicks is productive of more evil than almost any Dther of the many forms of mismanage ment. One lion, if a good brooder and care-taker, can look after as many chicks is two hens generally hatch, provided die has room to do so; but if four or five hens, each with a full complement Df chicks, arc assigned to a space that should be allowed to one, death and destruction are pretty sure to be the result. The little chicks will wander into the wrong coops, and the hens, kept in a state of feverish excitement through the the constant clucking of other hens, and the mixing of their own chicks with Others, become vicious and kill the strangers as soon as they are within reach. The chicks that live to grow larger quarrel about the feed. The strong ones grow stronger, and the weak ones become diseased and die. The ground becomes polluted, disease follows as a natural consequence. When the chicks are weaned, the close prox imity of other broods, similarly housed, leads them to congregate in large num bers. Some are smothered outright, and others die as a result of being over heated in the middle of the pile. Lice Sourish under such circumstances, and oring down numbers of the best chicks as their victims. thn fj-nn nnt fhrtrnttimr tliP free WHO 0 wno were flinging w 4iju " the t-ree not iDrgettmg the iree use oj . Edso q the heath board was the cultivator in incorporating the same among the rescuad. The ships Annie Wright ... r i.- nmi f.m-mwn Hrflfnwl their anchors and well with the surtace son.-aiumore Uinn the b y, offering a slight damage. During the squal a schooner was driven against the steamer Erin, for Liverpool, and stove a large hole in her side al.ove the water line. At Rockaway much bun Mulching and Cultivation. Experience has abundantly shown that mulching the ground not onlv adds to its fertility by the decay of the mulch itself, but it also retains a larsre amount 7 - - - v. J t of ammonia from the air. All have ob- j causing a great dea fr diau Training School, at the edge or town, served that soil covered with muien trees were broken dawn, builaiugs unro(eo, damage was done, many small houses being wrecked or destroyed. Patji.tkmc. Pa. A terrible wind and rain storm, accompanied bv hail, struck this lo cality about 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon, keeps more porous and friable than when some of the rooting being carried irom iouiu oOU hundred yards. The damage done at the i left exposed to the sun and drving B,.hnol will loot ui two thousand dollars winds. Earthworms contribute toward ! At the county almshouse bum ing a . i five hundred panes ot glass were biuken. fertility bv their holes, through which jjere in town a number of buddings were the air easily penetrates, imparting fer-' partly unroofed, one -as " - 1 1 . ! trees were blown down, and thousands of tility, which the soil absorbs. A piece window panes were shattered by the hail, of ground, a part of which had been in ' Some of the streets are littered with bra. tires . I and other debris, but so far as heard no h e straw berries and mulched with salt hay j have been lost. The hail was heavy, but the for three vears, showed a great ad van- ' rainfall was .only moueraie. me su.im , . . , , came rrom tne noi in. rage from the mulch. When plowed,; Ea8T0Nj Paa terrible storm visited this mulched part broke up very finely, this section between six and seven o'clock while the other ,r, was very lumpy. It ! MfJlKh'dJ was all planted the same day with corn, lightning struck a brick smokestack on the 1 t", .. .in. ;n n,,,l in fulliinr it struck which came un in five days on the "eiaweJ: 1 - I nirfl IK I . I' I1I'U oun u, - - DEATH OF MR. KRUPP. DR. A. B. CHAPIN mulched portion, and was about two ed in the roof over the hot furnaces. A i i i heavy shaft in the mill was also cut m two weeks coming up on the rest, and much h"VL nhti,r The Judd carraige of it failed to come un at all. The after 1 factors' near by was completely demol .. . . ! AViiii.im Hnniliii's barn was blown . 1:1. . i . i. is tii. '" J culture was aiiKe, yet there was a mucn wl - . ..,., mriM i the ruins. ' ami i'mii jiviv... . . . t- .i over Time to Seetl Urma. It is possible for grass to do well from iced sown any month or dav in the vear, yet all seasons are not equally favorable. Nature plants the grasses chiefly in the ate summer or early autumn, soon after ;he seeds are matured, and under favor able conditions the seeds germinate and nake considerable growth the same fall. Dlover seed left to nature's care is pro moted by its covering of husk from ger ninating until the foljowing soring. Some of our grasses are so hardy that ;hey will live through the winter under avorable conditions, even if the seeds iave scarcely more than germinated. Told alone will rarely kill young timothy -ed top, yet if sown where the ground is ! jxposed to alternate freezing and thaw- ! ng, so that the plants arc pulled up and eft with their roots exposed upon the iurface to freezing and dryiy.g, they must urely perish. Were it not for the depredations of grasshoppers and crickets, early autumn 6 perhaps the best time in the year for owing most varieties of grass seed, the orecise time to be determined each year y the condition of the soil and the char terer of the weather. On rich land too iarly seeding may give too much growth ,he first season. Grass roots need the ! protection of their own leaves, but it j rtdll not do to snintluT tbp nlontc mwU. I - - . - - - . . . ' v jn.iaL? Uliuet -oo heavy a mulch of rank leaf growth. The favorable period is from the last of fuly to the middle of September. more vigorous growth on the part which A ear loaded with ice on the Leingn auej i , i" j , , , Railroad was blown down an embankment, had been mulched. Soils not only have ml Stvtl,.al houses in differenr parts of the power of absorbing ammonia from ' Philipsburg were unroofed and many trees xi , , , , inl were uprooted. Heckman street being the air, but also from water that holds j blockej with fallen trees. The damage as it in solution. Bv retaining the water so ! far as known, will not be less than :JO,UUO. enriched, mulch adds to the fertility of the soil. Besides the advantages already ( mentioned, it is an easy wav to keep - i clear of weeds. The hay from salt T.. . f. . , , . . , t In Argentina, Ark., laborers work fourtD marshes is excellent for this purpose; hours a day for 75 cents. LABOR NOTES. but where it is expensive or inconvenient to secure, other material will be found serviceable. American Agriculturist. Farm and (warden Notes. No invariable rule can be laid down for the raising of calves on skim milk, ' and each feeder must make a rule for j each calf. Slow milkers are a detriment. The best cow will soon deteriorate under the manipulation of a slow or lazy milker. Reject a horse with a big, coarse head; do not look a second time at a horse with either a long, slack back or with a hollow back. A California vinevar list rbiims that be , " i e i i i T s by a prominent labor leader of keeps his premises clear of rabbits and New York citj that lo.ooo persons have been permitted to land during the last year in : violation of the law against contract labor. The average yearly consumption of nickel; in the world is between mo and 10.) tons. The builders in all sections of the country will be kept busy until the winter holidays. DcRlXfi June lo.noo men struck, against rt'.fds in May. and Pi,ooO the same month j last year. The Rrotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners issued nineteen new charters to li-ai iinions during May. Oxe of the mast successful co-operative en terprises on record is the Knights of Iabor Co-operative Soap Company of Chicago. It is stated that there are from iV 1.000 to 500.000 persons engaged in the manufacture ! 3f shoes in the United States and Canada. Seven or eight New England manufactur ing corporations have passed resolutions to invest money in building houses to sell or rent j to employes. The German Ministry of War offers to na tive saddlers and manufacturers a prize of ! 5,000 marks for the Ust model of an improved cartridge box. Sketch of His Great German Cannon and Steel Works. A cable dispatch from Berlin, says: Alfred Krupp, the well-known German metal foun der and gigantic steel gun manufacturer, died in his villa near Essen, Rhenish Prussia. Herr Krupp was b.orn at Essen in 1812. ; Alfred Krupp, whose death is announced, was proprietor of the enormous foundry and iron works at Essen, in Rhenish Prussia, which were originally established by his father in 1827. The elder Krupp had at first only two workmen, and the works were con ducted on the most limited scale; but under the son, who was born early in the present century, they have attained proportions so colossal that they are undoubtedly, the lar gest works of the kind that the world can boast of. As early as 1851 he sent the Lon don Exhibition a crucible steel clock, weigh ing two and a half tons, and to the Paris Exhibition of 188? one of forty tons. Sev eral of the monster guns turned out by him had a place in the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition in lK7o The works in 1873 cov ered an area of nine hundred and five acres, hich have since been constantly adde i to, so that at the present time they cover more than two thousand acres, An immense amount of cast steel, besidis finished articles are daily turned out. The works are con nected with the Rhenish railway line, and contains more than fifty miles of track to facilitate the traric, and every department is connected by telegraph lines with the central offices. Not less than twenty thou sand men are employed in the works, besides ten thousand in the mines anl smelting works, and others in other departmen s, making a total of about forty thousand. He built for his officers and men good dwelling houses, and hospitals for the sick and aged. There is also a sick, buria and pension fund, which in 1873 produced an income of 80,000, which has b e i doubled since then. Anoth er fund secures free medical attendance; up on an annual payment of seventy-five cents. The works at Essen include 2,000 smelting and other furnaces, with coke ovens, smiths, forges, steam boilers and engines, one hun dred steam hammers, several of which are of immense size and power. There is a fire brigade, whioh acts also as a police force, and many hundred watchmen. The articles manufactured include guns, gun carriages, shot, boiler plates, rolls, spring steel, machin ery, axles, wheels, rails and springs for rail ways and mines, and shafts for the largest steamers. Krupp was the first to introduce u n welded cast steel tires for use on railways. Ke owned extensive coal and iron min s in various parts of Germany, besides having concessions of iron mines in Spain. His smelting works, chiefly on the Rhine, con tain five hundred coke ovens, and annually produce five hundred thous nds tons of pig iron. The gigantic steel siege guns which the Germans used with such terrific effect against the city of Paris, were from his works, He accepted the title of privy com mercial councillor, but declined a patent of nobility offered by the King of Prussia in 1V4, Ten years later he received so many orders from various governor, its that he negotiated a loan of twelve milbon thalers, which were expended in increasing the are of his works. A BIG WAREHOUSE FIRE. gophers with the assistance of cats. Small chickens should never be kept or fed with old ones; they are apt to be injured. Have two or three yards and The National Works, at Bristol, L. I., I owing to the large amount of manufacture.! goods on ha 'd, have suspended operations for J an indefinite time, throwiiur 1.200 hands out separate them according to their size and j of employment. strength I RepoRTS from different points in the Con- 3 ' I nellsville (Penn.) coke regions show that the ! strikers were returning to work in larire mini- e . . ..-,,. bers. audit is believed all will beat work' the salest way ot keeping it for fowls is within a few days. to cut off the flower head w hen the seed The New England manufacturers of cotton is ripe, and pile it loosely till thrown to the fowls. Dampness is bad for young chicks. Arrange their drinking vessels so that be out in a storm. Blight in Pear Tree. While there seems to be no remedy as let discovered which can be implicitly died on as a cure for the blight in pear -rees, there are many theories advanced y horticulturists in regard to it. Down ng attributes the disease to a minute ungus which first attacks the bark, and, )enetrating inwardly, destroys the cell structures, thereby causing the dtath of he tree. II C SaVS that these fnntrmd n 'pores must be destroyed before any lopes can be entertained of saving the Je of the tree, and which can best be lone by washing the affected parts with inything that will accomplish the object -not merely applying the same super icially, but thoroughly working it into he pores by means of a paint brush, )ure linseed oil being about the best for he purpose. Another authority attributes the dis ease to atmospheric causes, combined, rrobably, with the state of the soil, and describes as a remedy, the application 2 salt to the roots. Another, that it is smsed by a superabundance of nitrogen i the soil, the only way of preventing ie activity of which is to increase the aineral elements in proportion ; the ap plication of wood ashes being probably j5 good as anything else. Others, again, attribute the disease to , Bmall insect, which, penetrating to the .ambium, causes the tree to wither and lie, and advises washing the body and goods count up their six months profit at ten per cent, more than last year, ana-think they see busin-ss enough ahead to keep every loom busy until the holidays. TflE General Executive Board of the Knights of Labor has given official notice of they cannot get into them, and do not with regulations governing the formation of allow them to run in the wet grass or to uational trades assemblies. Of the 3f,051 prisoners in Prussia 17,686, or leventy-flve per cent., are farmed out. Thev It is never good policy to divide a 4re m,tly engaged in the manufacturing in- - r. , , , V . iustries. The government gets- from six to farm in small fields, for it is waste of j twelve cents a day per head lands, waste of time and oppressive in-! Numerous cooperative manufacturing con crease of fencing that becomes a burden-' !.! "Cfl'V? U Vv7i : states backed by the Knights of Labor. The some tax in construction and maiuten- ! General Co-operative Board of St. Paul has ance j appropriated $40,000 to co-operatiye indus- I ;ries. Ben Perley Poore used to say that if A Pittsburo dispatch says that discontent farmers would thrive thev must change ' ssPreding among the Knights of Labor iron . r ind steel workers throughout the country, tneir policy. 1 hey must concentrate i They areindignant at the general officers of their labor, thev must give to a few acres 1 er t)ec'ause they have n)t been granted i charter fnv o Matinnol IVarloo' AcamKltr Kxcitinif IJIazo in New York. Seven Firemen Hurt by an Explosion. A. dispetch from New York says: The five story brick Metropolitan Storage warehouse pi Thirty-eighth street, between Broadway and Sixth avenue, caught fire. Before the' firein- n arrived the whole place was a rag ing furnace. Three alarms were sent out. The warehouse formed an "L" with the Ga sino building and for a while it was feared that the beautiful temple of light opera would be in ashes, but it was saved by the firemen. Sparks fell on the roof of the Hotel rnian die setting it on tire and the guests were hurriedly summoned to leave. The p rters rushed through the hells and knocked at every door. The guests were told that there was no immediate danger. Thev asked if they would have time to pack their valuables, being answered in tlie affirmative, soon P'.eked their trunk and carried tii m down tairs. The tire n the roof of the Hole! Normandie was soon extinguished, however, and the guests being reassured, went back to i heir roi :ns. Soon after the firemen had go; to work at the storage ware ous building a terrific ex plosion oceur-ed and seven tirenen, who were at work on the tirst Uor. were blown through the u indows to The street. All of them were very s we rely hurned about the hands and feet. Most of the injur.Ml tire i en were unconscious and five of them were con veyed in a patrol wagon to the hospital The damage is estimated at a half a mill ion, though it may be much more. The warehouse was used by New Yorkers who are out f town, and contained furniture, paintings, and valuable brick-a-brac. General Insurance and Real Estate Ad Office tor. Market & Second Sts., Opposite the Court House WASHINGTON, "N". C. Represents First-Class Fire, Life, Health, Accident Live Stock Insurance Companies. Real Estate BonaJit, Sola, Rented anl Taxes Failfinrlnh Houses and Lots in Washington and Aurora for Sale or Rent F, Wild 1 and for gale in all parts of the fctate. m fMHavinjr laror calls for Farms TimbprTonla of,-,, v O O - - ' j vvv , uai LltS IlfU'ln,. ior saie, win una n to ineir advantage to place a description with me n Yi ii o oaic is jjuu cueuteu. L-uarges uioaerate wnen saies are made. CHOICE FAMILY GROCERIES Housekeepers and Caterers are respectfully invited to call aad examine carefully selected stock of Family Groceries, Confectioneries &c )AT( JNO. B. SPARROW, MAIN ST, WASHINGTON, K, IAll Goods guaranteed Fresh and of First Quality. THE WATERBURY SERIES E. The Latest and Best FOR SALE BY The Jeweler. EASTERN CAROLINA DISPATCH FAST FREIGHT LINE MARKETS. the care now usually bestowed on many, and if necessary to do this they must di minish their farms. In haying, he ready to cut a field a soon as the grass is in proper condition; a delay of a few days will greatly injure the quality of the hay. Do not start the mower until the dew is off, and cut only so much as can be well cured and cared for. Hay caps often pay for their cost in a single season. Young ducks should be marketed md already several assemblies threaten to withdraw from the order unless a charter is jranted."' ITEMS OF INTEREST. The total debt of Mexico is Sir0,t)0i,00;. Tjie world's railroads carried 7,400,000 people last year. Two millions United States postal cards anj printed dally at. present. Chicago, on the basis of its new directory, claims a population of S0O,000. There are $HMi,0nu.0ii0 invested in the ! watch industry of this country, Baltemore Flour City Mills, extra, f:T. :r a?3.7.; Wheat Southern Fultz. s;,isi.-l: Corn Southern White,. 55a")Cets, Yellow. 4( a 47 cts. ; Oats Southern and Pennsylvania, o7a-ets. : Rye Maryland ajid Pennsylvania, 5fia57cts. : Hay Maryland and Pennsylvania 14a$1450; Straw Wheat, 7.50a$H.00;Butti'r, Eastern. CreaiueryISa'JOets. , near-by receipts le'Y Sets. ; Cheese Eastern Fancy Cream. 0 aiObicts., Western, 'JaU2cts.; Ej;gs lak: Cattle 3.00a$4.50; Swine li'.i'.aW4ets. ; Sheep, and Lamb :a4 ots;' "Tobacco laf Inferior, la1.50, Good Common. Va$4, Middling, 5a0.Uuod to line red, 7aU, Fancy, yali. New York Flour Southern Common to fair extra, 3.:0a$:UH); Wheat No. t Whit 4 aSocts. ; Rye State, 54a)ti; Corn Southern Yellow, 47a4VU ; Oats Wiute State,. IJKaoi) ets, : Butter State, PJall) ets. ; Cheese State, llaHcts. ; Eggs 14a 14' cts. Philadelphia Flour Pennsylvania, fa-ney, 3.50a$4; Wheat Pennsylvania and Southern Red, 85a86 cts ; Rye Pennsylvania 57a58cts. ; Corn Southern Yellow, 45a47 cts : Oats 30a37 cts. : Butter State. 18al0 cts.; Cheese N. Y. Factory, llal'i cts.; Eggs iitate, 12al3 cts. STAGE SPARKS. J 1 The whole lenarth of mad routes in miera- each, and may be sold either alive or j tion in the United States amounts to o75,OUO dressed, the best prices being obtained for the dressed carcasses. The best time for selling young ducks is in June and July ; they should be plump and fat. A clover pasture is of most value for growing hogs, though very cheap food for a part of the ration after the fatten ing process is begun. During the spring, when most rapid growth is taking place, an acre of green clover would furnish green food for a dozen or more hogs being fed corn to fatten. Every farmer has noticed the deteriora tion of oats. The best varieties fall back after a few years and are little better than the common oat. More attention might be profitably given to the seed. Two suggestions have been made : Thresh the bundles lightly with a flail and thus get the best seed; the other, winnow out all the light oats. Sunday bull fights have been added to the list of entertainments for visitors at Los Angeles. Cal. There are more than sixty thousand per sons confined in the penal institutions oi the United States. The lessees of 1 ,GO0 convicts in Georgia net at least $75,000 per year on their labor, after paying the state S2o, ');)(). There will be a joint Convention of the North American an4 Northwestern Bee keepers1 Societies in Chiaago, November U, 10 and 11, 1887. Fifteen ostriches have just been hatched from a nest of seventeen fertile eggs, at Mount Fairview ostrich farm, near San Diego, Cal. This is the best record ever made in America. There are "eighty birds at the farm now. Rich gold mines have been foun d in East ern Siberia, a few hundred mile.i from Yakutsk, extending over a district hitherto unexplored. Report de "lares that the region is a perfect new California in its greatest days of the gold diggings. How much better is the love thnr is ready to die thap the zeal that is ready to ki U. Mrs. Jennie Palmer-Heames, of Detroit, has written a comic opera. Madame Christine Nilssox is expected to sing in this country next season in concert. Her price is supposed to be $,500 a concert. "The Little Sinner'' is the title of a new five-act eomedy-drama which Mr. Ho war 1 P. Taylor has just finished writing for Ma 'ie Mitchell Miss Carren Campbell, an American violinist, has been astonishing the Germans with her magnificent playing. She promises to excel Camill aUrso. Mr. Augustin Daly, of New York, pro poses to present the "Taming of the Shrew"' in London next summer in a way that will equal the representation given in this coun try by Mr. Henry Irving. James P. Voorhees, a son of the Indiana Senator, is writing a play, winch he expects to have finished and ready for production this fall. The piece will deal with some of the ex isting conditions of the labor question. Carl Rosa's English Opera Company wdl include Mine. Marie Roze,Mrs. Burns, Messrs. Runeio, Crotty and Sauvage. Among the works in this year's repertoire will be "Lohengrin," "Nordisa," "Masauiello,'' and Masse's "Galathee." Master Joseph Hoffman, the wonderful young pianist, made such a success in Lon don that he will return to fill further engage ments there this fall and again next spring making a tour of the English provinces be tween his metropolitan engagements. -BETWEEN- New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Norfolk and WasJungtoa N. C, and Tar River, via Elizabeth. City, DrRECT GOODS TO EE SHIPPED DAILY AS FOLLOWS: From Xew York, via Pennsylvania R. R,, Pier 27, North Fiver. From Philadelphia, via Pennsylvania R. HM Dock Street Station. From Baltimore, via Philadelphia, Wilmington and: Baltimore R. President Street Station. From .Norfolk, via. Norfolk Southern Railroad. Through Car Servica Without Breaking 'Bulk, between E. City and Norfolk, Balto. Phila., and fl. Y Beginning' Tuesday, March '2'2nd. 1SS7. until further notice, the Steamer! Annie will leave Washington, from Company's wharf, Lnioa Alley and Water! Street, oa l:esdavs and hndays at 4 p. m., and. return !ng, leave Elizabeth utj, W ediiesdays a a baturdays at u p m. Steamer will stop, when, required, at accessible intermediate point. 3:15:ly J. C. BRACAW, Agent, Washington,. N. C. Insure Your Horses and Fine Cattle IN THE MUTUAL LIVE STOCK ( warn mm of ran it Incorporated January 2884. A. B. CHAPIN", President. JNO. U. .SMALL, Treasrr and Counsel W. K. JACO'BSON, Secretary. JNO. A. BLR(iESS Ge-n'l Agent. msFEES ONLY STRICTLY PREFERED RISKS. Offers its Policy Holders Indemnity atrainst loss either bythe Mutual or Guaranteed Rates Plan. Not a Claim Against this- Company Due and Unpaid. This Company, incorporated over three years, having manv of onr bestcifrl zens aa its members and patrons, paying all its losses promptly, without litii'81 of any kind. It is especially a HOME COMPANY, which is more satisfactory nil concerned than if scatrerod hr i.nrl tVioro. oil vn i-f that:! v mviu, an vivl iuo v. ill kcu OLalca. n - is more saieiy nandlea ana gives le s likelihood of attempts at fraud wH managers The high character of its management both for ability and integrity: tlx large and competent agency corps now being organi ed in its interest" and tbj Company's experience of over three years, is sufficient guarantee of the abilitJ . viiiijauj iu luiuiau secure aiui reuaDie insurance at the LOWEST JillA-U cost to its patrons. Reliable Agents Wanted Everywhere. With the following capital: EDemv. Pfirsfivftrano an ncJnr,ao Tof A'asti possessed of Moral c haraclrer Scrupulously Conscientious No others need' apply. J"Fox rates and additional information nnluu fV,0 rnran.niv. or" its Agents. tf T. W. PHILLIPS, MANUFACTURER OP First-Class BuggiesandCarriages, REPAIRING DONE AT SEORT NOTICE. SHOP ON MARKET 3Tf?EE' March 15, 1857-ly
Washington Progress (Washington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 26, 1887, edition 1
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