- .- . , : : r a The Chatham Record. EC. A. LONDON, Editor. UEB3ESDAY. OCTOBER 22, 1913. Governor Sulzer. of New York, was convicted last Friday by the impeachment court of that State and was removed from his office. There were eight ar ticles of impeachment, on which he was tried, and he was con victed on three and acquitted on the other five. He was convict e d of making a false statement of the contributions made for his cam paign last year. The law in New York requires every candi date to file a correct statement of all contributions made for con ducting his campaign and a state ment of his campaign expenses; Although a Democrat Gov. Sul zer was convicted by the votes of Democrats, and nearly all those who voted for his acquittal were Republicans. It seems that his impeachment was brought about by "Boss" Murphey, the ruler of Tammany Hall, because he would not obey the orders of Murphey. Although removed from his late high office of Governor we predict that Sulzer will yet arise from his present fall and again become a potent factor in New York politics. While he may be guilty, as charged, yet he is no worse than a majority of the New York politicians, both Dem ocratic and Republican. If Hon. Richmond Pearson Hobson had died in his attempt to obstruct the harbor of Santi ago, or had died soon thereafter, we think his fame now and here after would be greater than it is or likely to be. His entrance into politics was unfortunate for him, and his recent attack on Hon. Oscar Underwood was especially unfortunate for him and has de tracted no little from his renown acquired during our war with Spain. His feat at Santiago was justly praised and entitled him to high rank among the naval keroes of the world, but his am bition for Congressional honors has proved most unfortunate for him. The notorious English suffrag ette, Mrs. Pankhurst, is" quite indignant because she is not al lowed to land at New York and is detained as an undesirable im migrant. She ought not to be al lowed to land and carry on her disorderly and riotous proceed ings here as she has done in Eng land, and, if she attempts to starve herself here as she did there, we hope that she will be allowed to do so and thus rid both this country and England of so pestiferous an agitator. Congress may continue in ex tra session until the regular ses ion begins on the first Monday in December. Since the final passage of the tariff bill very lit tie has been done. The currency Din is still being considered by the Senate committee and may not be passed by the Senate be iore tne last of next month. In 4.1 i . me meantime tne House is not attempting to do any business. out most of the members are at home. The sudden death of Polk Mil ler, the Southern humorist, at his home at Richmond last Monday nignt will be learned with deep regret by hundreds of admirers of this Southern gentleman t i ... xnrougnout the South. He was known far and wide for his plan- uauun stones or war time and his performances on the banio 1 : , J ueuig m evidence at many Con federate reunions. Senator La Follette of Wis consm, will deliver a lecture at itaieigh next Tuesday night un der the auspices of Meredith Col 1 lege, and he will no doubt be greeted by a very large and ap oreciative audience.' He is om k wuspicuous men in public life in the United States. " -r m 3 . A vim is reuuction made by the Democratic tariff bill, recently passed, is the abolition of the duty of 25 per cent on Bibles im- poneo into mis country. Not many persons knew that the Re publican tariff jaw actually levied a high tax on Bibles, but this is now abolished by our new Underwood-Simmons tariff law. A War Relic Returned. ; i From the Raleigh Times. " A member of the Times staff received a letter in September from former Adjutant-General Jones of this State, for many years a resident of Los Angeles, California, statins: that a Union Mr. Worcester, nodvo'fCol. Peter G. Evans of the 5th North Carolina Cavalry in 1862, on the battlefield, me atory was published in the limes. Mrs.-Koot. jonnston, oi. xuvauo daughter, now of Birmingham. was found by the Times to De the owner. Now Gen. Jones writes: "The silver cup has been de livered to Mrs. Johnston by ex press at Birmingham, Ala., bv Mr. Worcester. We send our most sincere thanks to you ior finding the owner. . We have had a letter from Mrs. Johnston and she is greatly gratified at the re ceipt of the cup, which was hers. We thank you for publishing tne article which led to the discovery of the owner. If you make any further publication please send a copy to K. P. Worcester, Soldiers' Home, Lios Angeles, uai.t and . one to me. noping to see yuu some day in California whither the tforld seems to be drifting. PThe above news item will be read with much interest by some of our countymen who were mem bers of the regiment commanded by Col. Evans, who is well re membered by our older citizens. Many years before the war his father owned the Egypt farm(now known as Cumnock), and two companies from Chatham were in the cavalry regiment com manded by Col. Evans, who was not killed in 1862, as above stat ed, but was mortally wounded and captured in a gallant charge near Upperville, Virginia, on the 21st of June, 1863. -Ed. .Record J Wanted His Funeral Advertised. Kinston, N. C. October 19. Clifton Ward, a well-to-do-Sampson county man who died recently, left a, will, made two weeks before his death, which is believed to be one of the most unique instruments ever probat ed at Clinton, as. well as one of the longest. Very minute were the instructions to L. L. Damer on, Jr., and E. S. Williams, the executors. Mr. Ward divided his estate, estimated by him at $13, 500 but believed to be worth a larger sum, among a large num ber of relatives, and made a num ber of bequests for "retributive justice. He directed that a steel casket and metahc vault be used and that his body be laid in the cemetery with those of rela tives. Rev. J. L. Everton or an other minister of the Universal ist faith was authorized to con duct the funeral at the court house in Clinton after it had been "advertised in the county papers three weeks," for which procedure no explanation is had. To pay the expenses of the fu neral, advertising, etc., 2150 is set aside. The Youth's Companion in 1914. Seven college presidents and a number of college instructors, in cluding ex-President 'iaft, will contribute to The Youth's Com panion during 1914. Then there is Gene Stratton Porter, whose stories of Indiana woods and swamps have made her famous, and Kate Douglas Wiggin, who never wrote a dull line in her life, and Mrs. Burton Harrison, who remembers when conversation was really an art as practiced in Washington and in the manor houses of Virginia. And this is just a beginning of the list. If you know The Companion, you have a pretty clear idea of what is in store for next year's readers. If you do not know, ask us to send you sample copies for instance, those containing the opening chapters of Arthur Stan- wood Pier's fine serial "His Father's Son' Full announce ment for 1914 will be sent with the sample copies. For the year's subscription of $2-00 there is included The Com panion Practical Home Calendar for 1914, and all issues of the pa per for the remaining weeks of 1913, dating from the time the subscription is received. ' The Youth's Companion, 144 Berkeley st., Boston, Mass. New subscriptions received at this office. Natural-gas production has be come one of the leading: indus tries of the United States, and to this country belongs the cred it ot making natural gas a com mercial product. It is the best of fuels --cleaner, more conven ient and more efficient for almost any purpose than any other fuel. Anchored in Hampton Roads early in 1915 will be the greatest international fleet ever gathered in American waters, assembled in answer to the invitation of the United States government to cel ebrate the completion of the Pan ama canal by making a voyage to the Pacific through the new wa ter way. Canning Club Girls. Washington, Oct. 17 Fifteen girls, one from each of 15 south ern States, will visit Washing ton, probably on December 11, as a reward for their success in being awarded first place in the girls' canning club state con tests, the department of agricul ture announced today. Women assemble here at the same time and will act as chaperones for the girls. The department estimates that 25.000 girls have been enrolled in the canning clubs of the south ern States this yean Each girl is supposed to have carried out a definite project in gardening on a ten acre plot. The girls have raised tomatoes principally, but frequently they also cultivate string beans, cucumbers, pep- pers, okra and otner vegetaDies. Canning club work among the girls of the south began four years ago under the direction ot the bureau of plant industry in co-operation with various private agencies. Prizes have been giv en heretofore, but never have the winners of the state contests been sent in a body to Washing ton, although the state winners in the boys' corn clubs have been rewarded in this manner. Soldiers Killed in Accident. Meridian, Miss, Oct. 19. Twenty-two soldiers were killed and more than 100 others injur ed when a special troop train on the Mobile and Ohio railroad plunged through a trestle near State Line, Miss. The entire train fell a distance of 20 feet. The wreck was caused by the engine tender jumping the track about 200 feet from a trestle. The engine was not derailed and passed over the trestle safely. The tender broke loose from the engine, however, and plunged Iwith the baggage car and three coaches to the ground. One hundred and seventy-nine soldiers were on board the spe cial train. They were from Fort Morgan and Fort Barancas. They were going to Meridian tor partic ipate in the Mississippi-Alabama joint state fair. baniord Express: ihere is a movement on foot by. the busi ness men oi Jonesboro to open a tobacco warehouse there. It would be hard to find a busier man than Mr. Paul Barringer. As he has the manaeement of both the Lee county cotton oil mill and the oil mill recently re built at Raeford he is constantly on the go. He knows the cotton oil business and the stockholders are pleased with his manage ment of the mill at this place. Quicksilver is used mainly ac cording to the United States Ge ological Survey in the manufac ture of fulminate for explosive aps, of drugs, of electric light ing and scientific apparatus, and in the recovery of the precious 'metals, especially of gold, by amalgamation. An increasing demand has been reported in manufactures of electric appli ances. The Family Couth Medicine. in every norae there mould be a bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery ready for immediate use when any member of the family contracts a cold or a cough: Prompt use will stop the spread of sickness. 8. A. Stld, of Ma son, Mich., writes: "My whole fam ily depends upon Dr. King's New Dis covery as tne beat cough and cold med icine in the world. Two 50c bolties cured me of pneumonia." Thousands of other families have been equally benefited and depend entirely upon Dr. King's New Discovery to cure their cough, colds, throat and lung troubles. Every dose helps. Price 60c and 11. All druggists. H. E. Bucklen A Co., Philadelphia or St. Louis, adv Governor Locke Craig wear ing overalls, will contribute his sum to the good roads , move ment November 5th and 6th. He will work the roads, even as he has asked other citizens to do. A Gentle and Effective' Laxative. A mild, gentle and effective laxative is what people demand when suffering from constipation. Thousands swear by Dr. King's New Life Pills. Hugh Taliman, of San Antonio, Tex. .writes: "They are, beyond question, the best puis my wife and I have ever taken They never cause pain. Price 25c at drupgists or by mail. H. E. Bucklen & Co., Philadelphia or St. IjOuIs. advt Wadesbor.o Messenger: Mr. A. P. Hawley and a Companion, about 11 o'clock Monday night. treed a 'possum in a big oak tree in the woods near the depot. The tree was too large to cut down, and Mr. Hawley camped under it until daybreak Tuesday when "he climbed it and found two 'pos sums, one weighing 13 and the other 11 pounds. It is -seldom that a 13-pound 'possum is seen. John W Thompson, of Ral eigh, has been appointed deputy collector at Panama. The salary is $2,500 a year. .-low's' This? Ve nr Onit Hundred Dalian Reward an w . iurrli Uukt cADLot ta cured ay Bail's r. J. CHENEY CO., Toledo. O. W. th uoderaleaed. bre known F. 1. Cbeney -r It it 15 yri. &4 bcilavc bia. perfectly turn- iral;lr ft. all Dullness irauaaeuaua u huucuu; aUd to ajry o.'t any obllcaUoaa uadt tils trm. JUTIOKAL IiAXK or COMi'XKCX, ' . Toledo. Oitlo. H!!' iXltrria Cure Is taken Interna i!y. 5Clinr d'reUy upot the blood aod mucoua urfa cf .M ovtUJiu. reetia lata aeoi ir-r. j-nrc a a im toute. Bold by a-l Irurr- 'i'ake Hall'a fan Ux Fllia for coBBtinatioB. Yonnf Lady Kills a Fox, From the Fayetteville Index. " Miss Thetis Lamb, 18 years old, daughter of Mr. Wade Lamb, who lives on route 4, killed a grown fox one day last week. Miss Lamb was out in the field when the dog jumped a fox and chafed it into the woods for a short dis tance to where the fox had some little foxes hid. Miss Lamb went to the place, found the foxes, both young and old, jumped onto the old fox and killed, her with j her feet. Brave girl she is, for ' a fox will fight most any old time, and especially when her children ' are near. The young foxes on seeing their mother trampled to death beneath the feet of the girl ran into the woods and saved their lives. ' German Airship Explodes. Berlin. Oct. 17. The newest and largest of the Zeppelin war : airships, L-Il, was destroyed in midair by an explosion this morn ing. All but one of twenty-sev-: en military men aboard, includ-; ing the entire admiralty trial board, were killed. The disas ter occurred just above the main street of the city of Johannis thal, while the dirible, 500 feet ong. was on a trial trip prelimi nary to her acceptance as the flag ship of the new German aerial navy. - The shatteed bulk of the air ship, a mass of blazing canvas and crumpled aluminum, dropped 900 feet into the public highway. There was nothing to be done except take the dead bodies of the victims from the twisted wrockage. Lieutenat Baron von BIul of the .Queen Augusta grenadier guards, a guest of the trip, was the only survivor, but he was badly injured and his condition is critical. Lad? Fatally Earned. v Yadkin ville, Oct. 17. -As the result of burns received a few days ago Mrs. J. M. Cheek, of Chestnut Ridge, near here, died yesterday morning at 4 o'clock. Mrs. Cheek was cooking in the kitchin. early one morning last week when some of the children placing around the stove knock ed the wooden blocks out from under one of the stove legs and turning the stove over on Mrs. Cheek. She was burned with the hot stove, besides some boil ing water that poured from a ket tle on top. Since then she has suffered untold agony until death relieved her of her suftering. . Want Long Staple Cotton. Washington. Oct. 17. Three members of the Arkwright Club. of Boston, representing a num ber of large cotton spinners in New England, had a conference today with Secretary Houston. Assistant Secretary Galloway and members of the cotton commit tee of the Department of Agri culture, in regard to the growing of long staple cotton in the South. The New Englanders said they were anxious to secure as much of this variety of cotton as pos sible. Oil of the Porpaiaa. The porpoises killed In winter are the fattest and produce most oil. The largest size measure about seven feet in length.' five feet in girth and weigh about SOO pounds. Such a porpoise yields from six to seven gallons of oil. The blubber of a big porpoise weighs about 100 pounds . and is one and a half inches thick in summer and twv in winter. The jaws of the porpotat yield a superior quality of oil. Wbra bung up in the sun it readily drips away into cans provided for the pur pose, the" quantity of oil thus procur ed, however, being not more than half a pint to the jaw. The oil from the blubber gives an excellent Ugbt and is in demand along the coast fer light house use. It has no offensive odor. Busy All the Time. Little Howard came in the other day, crying and rubbing several ; bumps caused by a series of "butts" adminis tered by a pet sheep. "Well, Howard." said his sympathet ic auntie, "what did you do when the gheep knocked you down?" . "I didn't do anything. I was getting up all thtime." Delineator, The Troubl. "Do ypu find any, trouble writing stories, Dawdly?" ' "None whatever. But I'd pay a men well that could sell them for me." Philadelphia Inquirer, A Winning Play. Old Friend Your plan Is a moss ex cellent one. But do you think your wife will agree to It? Married Man Ob, yes. I'll tell her some one l sug gested it. and I'li call it an idiot's idea. You can't order remembrance out of a nan's mind. Thackeray. Women Who Get Dizzy. r Every woman who is troubled with fainting and dizzy spells, backache, headache, weakness, debility, consti pation or kidney troubles should use Electric bitters. They give relief when nothing else will, improve the health, adding strength and visor from the first dose. Mrs. Laura Galues, of Avoca, La., says: "Four doctor hnd given me up and my children and all inv friends were looking for me to die when my son insisted that I use Elec tric Bitters. I did so, and they have done me. a world of good. Just try them. 50c and $1 at ail druggists or by mail. H. E. Bucklen & Co., Phil adelphia or St. Louis, advt ' : ; Q I? - :r , . - " l Howneiyirtnisrate ICopyright. 1308. by American Press Aao- ciatton. Three friends dining at a cafe were chatting on the subject why certain people fail to fulfill a law of nature In tnatiu?. One of them, a married man, after listening to all tae others had to ay, spoke up: "Marriage Is a matter which strikes people .the, same as lightning does Some are thrown together, , some ar kept apart, some go into it thoughtful ly, some toboggan into it." "How did you happen toembark lu matrimony?" asked one of the party. "You speak as if you had had one' of these experiences yourself." "My own case is peculiar. Like other young men, If they will admit it. I er- j perienced a longing for some woman .who would be all in all to me. But. in the first plaee,' I didn't think I could afford a wife, and, in the second, noth-; Ing occurred to attach me to any wo man. The day when I would get my affairs in shape and make marriage a prime object was always a few years ahead of me. ! "I had reached the age of thlrty-ffre without getting any nearer to settling down in a home when one night, while on a journey. I found myself in bed in a hotel. One cau't conceive of any j probability of a more unfitting place j for' that inexorable fate we have been speaking of to start one of its matri monial ventures. I ' was alone, lying awake, did not know a person in the city where I was, and it was mid night. "I. had been counting the strokes of a city clock when I heard the door open and the rustle of a dress approaching my bed. There were several matters which would naturally have occurred to me if there had been time. In the first place, I had forgotten to lock my door; In the second, wboerer had en tercd was not likely to be . a robber, or eren a thief, for there was noth ing stealthy In the entrance nor the approach. It was, pitch dark, and I could see nothing. I could only hear A woman's volte it was sweet and scwnded sweeter . In the loneliness of midnight said: 'Sorry! I've beea so long. I could not help It I bad to wake them up te set Into the kitchen.' "I naturally waited for develop ments. A hand was slipped under the bedclothes and something warm placed on my stomach. Then the band was withdrawn, and the voice said: - Til light the gas "Now. there was something pleasant In all this that I knew must cease un der the light. It was plain that I had been mistaken for a sick man. and I wss in no hurry to disabuse the owner of the voice who had made the mis take. " 'Don't, I said In a sort tof invalid moan. Come and bold my hand!' "I " heard her feeling for a chair, which she drew to my bedside and. sitting down, took my. hand with one of hers while she passed the other over my forehead. Not only were the hands soft, but I was quite aware that so long as It was dark I had a soft thing.' I wanted to say some thing, but feared my voice would give me away. So I contentea myseii witu iruicu uijarii niiu u lust to let her tninnw an occasional moa know that I was not In a mood. She encouraged me to believe that I would soon be better, anu by several things she said I inferred that she was nursing some one MI was thus luxuriating blissfully when the thing she bad put on my stomach began to burn. I presume if iny face could at that moment have been seen it would have been vividly expressive.. Once the thing began to burn it grew apace, and it was not long before It felt as if a rcdhot iron was being pushed about atnoug my entrails. "Did you ever hear of the boy who with one band shoveled Ice cream into his mouth and with the other held the space between hla eyes that the cold made painful, crying all the while? Weil. I was like that boy. 1 had never before held a woman's soft hand at night anywhere, certainly not in a lonely hotel, and I couldn't niakt up uy mind to let go. 1 knew I bad some sort ef a plaster on and might take it off with my loose band, but she would hear me and the situation would be closed, the thing kept burning and burning until I could stand it no longer. " 'Great Scott!' I cried at last, start ing up. This la the fire of purgatory.' "I heard the scratch of a match, and in an instant a gas jet tUamined the room. . "There stood a girl in disbabille a wrapper and a pigtail. She looked at me with a holy horror, then exclaimed: 'Good gracious r " 'You must have got into the wrong toora,' I remarked. " 1 should think so.' ; " who is the patient you are earing for?' " 'My brother. I went down to get a mustard piaster and coming back got into the wrong room.' ' 'Well, you've burned a hoi pretty aear through me.' "I took the thing off and fiung it out sn the floor. "You may call it fate or chance oi providence or what you like.' but th .way I came to marry my wife wa through a mustard plaster. It would take a five hundred page novel to tell the rest of the atory, and I'm not is that line. You can make up a theory from my case or let tt alone. -' When ever I tell the story , I can feel that redhot plaster On my vitals. "Waiter, bring a Claret cup, with vlenty of Ice." F. JL. MITCHEI Eczema and Itching Cured. The soothing, healing medication in Dr. Hobson's Eczema Ointment .pen etrates every Hoy pore of the skin, clears it of all impurities stops itch ing instantly. Dr. Hobson 's Eczema Ointment iu gunranteed to speedily heal eczema, rashes, ringworm. tette and other unsightly eruptions. Ec-I zrna Ointment is a doctor's prescrip tion not an experiment. All druggists or by mail, 50c. PfefTei Chemical Co., Philadelphia and St. Louis, advt 55SS FOR THE NEXT THIRTY ' - s '. - " . ',- I "' ' . . , , 1 ', ' . 1 We offer a substantial reduction in price on heavy and shelf Hardr ware, Paints, Harness Cook Stoves and Ranges, .v We do this for the purpose of reducing our stock pre paratory to moving into our large new store room, which will soon be completed. . If it's anything in Hardware, Builders? Material, Roof ing, Harness, Stoves and Ranges, we've got it. See us; b q convinced. Everything in Hardware LEE HARDWARE CO. Sanford, N. C. sasssssamsssBscsam. SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION. North Carolina, Chatham countyIn the Superior Court. Berta Peebles et als Against ' Joe !. Peebles, Mrs. Howard Lumidtn alias Lumsdale et als. The defendant, Mrs. Howard Lums dale alias Lumsdale, and all other heirs-at-law of the late Martha Pee bles, who was a daughter of thelate Wm. (L. Harris, will take notice that a special proceeding as above entitled has been instituted before. the clerk of the Superior Court of Chatham coun ty, N. C.,' for the purpose of having the timber now standing upon the lands devised to the said Martha Pee bles by the will of the said Wm. O. Harris, which lands are in Chatham county, on or near Deep river, sold for artilion, and that, she and they ar lereby notified to appear before the clerk of the said court at his ofrice in Pittsboro, N. C, on the first day of t .November, 1913, and answer or demur to the complaint now on lile therein or the relief therein demanded wilt be granted. This the lslday of October, 1913. JAS. L. CilllFPIN, Clerk Superior Court of Chatham County. Hayes A lly num. Attorneys. SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION. Dettie S. Mclntyre Against John C. Futrall and wife, T. E. Fut rall and wife, Robert Montgomery and wife, Paul Bustian and wife, E. 13. Futrall, Emma Futrall, Alma Futrall and others. The above named defendants are hereby notified that a special proceed ing as above entitled has been insti- tuted before the clerk of the superior court of Chatham county, North Car- olina, for the purpose of selling for ; partition the merchantable timber now standing upon . the laud in said coun- ty devised by the late 13. F. Headen to the plaintifl for life, remainder to me ueieru unifs. Jirwi me saui iipfpnd. . r. C ants are hereby notified to appear be- i fore the said clerk athisoflice inPitts- nf TAiAmKa. 1Q19 ,1 ,. n . A . 1 f j mur to the complaint therein filed or i I the relief therein, prayed for will be granted. This the 21st dav of October, 1913. . JAS. LURIFFIN. Clerk Superior Court. II. A. Indon & Son, Attorneys. The Thrice-a-Week Edition OF THE New York 'World Practically a Daily at Price of Weekly v - - No Otier Newspaper in tie World Gives so Much at so Low a Price. This is a time of great events and you will want the news accurately and promptly. All the countries of the world steadily drw cl Rer together, and the telegraph wires bring the ha penings of every one. No other news paper has a - service equnl to that of The World and it relates everything fully and promptly. Tim World long since established a record for im parti ility.and anybody can afford its Thrice-a- Week edition, which comes every other day in the week, except Sunday.; It will be of particular value to you now. The Thrice-a-Week World also abound in other strong features, serial stories, hnmor, mar kets, cartoons; in fact, everythingthat is to he found in a first-eiass dailv. The f hrice-a-Weer World's regular subscription price in only $1 per year, and this pays for 15( paperi. e offer this unequalled newspaper r and THE CHATHAM &EC- Jk S ORD together for 1 year for The regular subscription price of the two papers is $3.50 . TUB IS THE PAN Mlrf KNUlCf't ML AI lb aUl al ikal yea m npoitMi, al Stat k auludcda a apcaai (armuU lar tiUaJing that ha twaa a teaat lor more itiaa 1 00 yean, it given you la ii caa. (earfy nd caaveweal ior use. M E m kepi hmh. corny, free (tub dyat, aanynaa aad iaigimllt aoVm by Am aatight caa, wkow UmI guarantee ike parity of ft i ii 3 i i Mm Ya w am I iad "f- I "' TUB IS THE pAN . f OfcPFE CUT FLOWERS. WEDDING BOUQUETS, FUNERAL DESIGNS.' PALMS. FERNS. BLOOM ' ING PLANTS. CABBAGE AND TOMATO PLANTS All order giyen prompt atten tion. If. J. MCPHAIL, pbon No 94. Florist, SanforJ. N. C. COFFINS and CASKETS A full stock of Coffins and Caskets always on hand and onlri at all nnri Ail lr?nr? 5010 ai Pnces- BU , anrl 7M ; B.NOOE, PITTSBORO. N. C SEABOARD Air Line Railway SCHEDULE. Effective April ii7th 1913. Direct line between New York. Flor- KlShWf. ject to cnange without notice. Figures given below are for the Ih ) formation of the public and are net "nleed- V cure, with No. 18 for Portsmouth- Norfolk, which conriects at Wel don with th A. C. L- for Eastern Carolina noints. at Norfolk with all steamship lines for points north. No 234 2:43 p m. connects at Mon curewithNo. 11 for Charlotte. Wfl mington, Atlanta, Birmingham, Memphis and points west, No 11 connecting at Hamlet with No. 43 tor Jacksonville & Florida point No. 231 Will arrive at Pittsboro 1PJW a m connecting with No. 11 with No. 18 from the south. No. 211 Arrives at Pittsboro 6:10 p ra. connecting with No. Tlfrom points north. The Pittsboro train connects at Mon cure with the 8hoo-fly going to and from Halelgh. Trains between Moncure arrJ Pitts boro operated daily except Sunda . For further information apply to B. M . Toe, agent, Pittsboro, or write to J. T. WEST, Division Passenger Agent, Ho 4 West Martin St Raleirh. Wood's High-Grade Farm Seeds Best Qualities Obtainable 1 We are headquarters for Seed Wheat, Oats, Rye, Barley, Vetches, Alfalfa and all Grasses & Clovers. Write for Wood's Crop Special giving prices efnd seasonable in formation about Seeds, for Fall sowing. ' ' ' ' T. W. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen - Richmond, Va. Woed's Descriptive Fall Catalogue gives prices and information about all Gardes Seeds for Fall Planting. - MaHl frae on request.