The Granite monthly : a magazine of literature, history and state progress . ons, Riverdale. Wheelbarrows are manufacturedby Leighton Bros., and the PaigeBros, are doing quite a business aswood-workers at North Weare. There are many other small indus-tries, and W. H. Kilburn, of EastWeare, is a prosperous dealer in A SKETCH OF WEAR/:, 349 grain and feed, with grist-mill at-tached. John Herrick has estab-lished himself as a florist, and in-tends to increase his business largelyanother year. Hooper & Breed are dealers ingroceries and provisions at NorthWeare, and a reliable and prosper-ous firm.


The Granite monthly : a magazine of literature, history and state progress . ons, Riverdale. Wheelbarrows are manufacturedby Leighton Bros., and the PaigeBros, are doing quite a business aswood-workers at North Weare. There are many other small indus-tries, and W. H. Kilburn, of EastWeare, is a prosperous dealer in A SKETCH OF WEAR/:, 349 grain and feed, with grist-mill at-tached. John Herrick has estab-lished himself as a florist, and in-tends to increase his business largelyanother year. Hooper & Breed are dealers ingroceries and provisions at NorthWeare, and a reliable and prosper-ous firm. Frank Tucker docs alarge grocery business in the same are attracted yearly numerous vis-itors from all sections of New Eng-land. As a summer town,1 Weareis not to be despised ; in fact, it maybe said to have no superior in thispart of New Hampshire. Its charmsof quiet rural beauty are such that adrive in any direction will never failto find a host of ever-varying andpicturesque bits of natural scenery. • . ^^Tsimtc^izzM Sg&^fe&ts V etessaga, i «^V- >-*-. gm. m \ ,,>- — part of the town. is an enterprisingand hustling young busi-ness man, and at the presenttime holds the office of postmaster. B. T. Jameson, the grocerat Weare Centre, is one of Wearesnumerous postmasters. At SouthWeare Charles A. Thorp has re-cently become proprietor of the vil-lage store; while at East WeareA. H. Marshall combines the sale ofgroceries with his duties as the serv-antof Uncle Sam in his section. As an agricultural town, Wearecompares favorably with any in thestate, and the fertility of the landand the almost universal neatness ofthe farm buildings are everywherenoticeable. To many of these farms Mt. Walling-ford and the River. From Mt. Wallingford, the highestelevation in the town, can be dis-cerned the hills and mountains offorty different towns, while from , its neighbor, the view isnearly as extensive. From Tiffanyhill, Mts. Washington, Lafayette,Moosilauke, and


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookpublisherconco, bookyear1877