Newspapers / The Northampton County Times-News … / Dec. 20, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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PATEON VOL. 3 LASKER, NORTHAMPTON COUNTY, X. (;., THURSDAY, DECEMBER, 20, , 1891. NO. 51. THE 6LEANEB . .f i - ANNUAL" ADDRESS. Of Hon. W. R. Williams, Ma"- In a short time alter taking oounaiess innuence ana lmper ter ofState Grange. -possession of the Treasury Do- ious dictation. : : before the STA'i u t li'T iVKliKi) ( ; I lASu: i: AT LASKEK, AT ITS 22ND AN N I A I- SESSION HELD ON tju: 11th and X2tii DAYS OF DECEM BER, 1804. State Grange 1q 99 years old. the National Grange 28. It ;s HJ;ill in North Carolina, butyet .,iro!iir ainl powerful in the U. S. The National Master and Secre : : 1 1 v r i i t the present year as j.j.jijiv encouraging, With new ''jt-iO.w organized, dormant i;ir'S revived, with many thou , ;.i(of additions' in" members. , j i i s sad to see so few members, - ;id s '"few granges in our State : t .pleasing to note the tenacity faithfulness manifested by i, .. j,.v. Year after year, we in brotherly kindness, hop i U aiid praying that. the farmers s . Vi" error of their ways : ; ;-t ii ii aaih to the best of all j :i ;ipi 's organizations. 'i i; A XIZATIDN OF ALL' CLASSES. one denies the organizations , a!.f-j:irsu"its, professions, class- j ,( m ri ty, previous condition, : f color. Some of these class ,.vi;nv organized to enable them 'jo t niggle for a living; others promote their greed, to s,i ivtigtlien their terrible grip, wha-h they already have on their coMhiry,. society and mankind, juifl lo-make that gripa ierietual ;mi Junyioldmg ower as time ad-vaii-t's and their wealth increases. 1 1 is strange those who need or-tj-i:;h:, t ion worse, ire the most rni ' i-'ss arid indifferent. STRAXCE EVENTS. vVithii the last year andfwith iii.! r vents that have recently oc--4-u ijivd.we have problems strange i jsolve among the farmers and liihoi 'mg classes: and also among who are high in authority, !;,. ;;. chosen to guitrd and to tnd tiiem executed. Many of them a'i d as to bring contempt up- Wii 'iliemselves by the betrayal of . very trust and the violation of vry obligation. MONEY INFLUENCE. , 1 a- its see if it is not, theinflu (.;'n' of the moneyed forces by t Ihm r organization that has caused na.st of, tliese s't range events... betravals and The moneyed powers by their national banking, mercantile, 'Manufacturer's associations, the It i ii . llt inonojxflisi. me ruuuui uuav, ino!,cy devil, gold bugand "treas a rv looter," with their head quar ters in -Wall Street N. Y. and Street, Tendon, evident ly tiK)k possession of the last con g u s s. We see it i n the Hou se of Kcpn'seiitatives by their refus- ' ing to repeal the5 fen jxircent tax on S ta te ba nks. the opiiosi tion to ; lowe r the tariff unless by the con sent-of the sugar trust the opix)- sition to the pure food bill, thede- . tennined light against the "option hilt" ''the reiKal of the Sherman hill without any increase ot cur renew or the free coinage of sil- ... A ..I ver. and establishing m Ameiica in imitation of plutocratic Eng land, a single gold standard of value. Tins money power was not less potent' in the senate the senate t r i i. -t Aaiir.mi ni:iv. once nouoieu u vui"". Webster, Badger, Uenton, Macon a nd Tim rm an now, alas, an ag gregation of millionaires, many of tlumi openly charged with buy ing their places, and at its recent meeting some of them (enough to prevent honest legislation) were oienlv charged with voting and advocating in behalf or the tariff i bill that has a clause and a strong one donating thirty to forty mil lions of dollars to the sugar trust '. robbers; and many other instan ) Cos might be alleged and noticed ! of the money power in the senate, ! but this organized money power i cfnTW here. We find the same influence dominating f the cabinet of the President - UBU tuo i - took ix)ssession of the nnanciai Adepartment of the union,, me A ororvwhprft tongratulat- yiso. His opinions of the, demon- itiza ion of silverwere wellknown. W'lartment ne was in vi tea to fvj tri w Yo rk' to attend a banque t of tVr tnusionaires. lie went, aau tIe-;- a a banquet surpassing the 'feast Alexander (rendered iriirM by Drydeh) midst luxu ry, pomp, display, scenic allure ment, glaring lights and Hashing bewilderment; he, this honored man from Kentucky, rose and in formed the banqueters that there could be no standard of value but golilj and the millionaires, and the gold bugs, and the trust rob-! bers, and the money devils, and I tlie bankers, the monopolist, the j railroad kings, the bond holders, and "treasury looters" applaud- ed, shrieked and shouted, and lilled their glasses, and shouted again. Over the wires . they across the ocean flashed the news to their brethren the jews and the money "dev ils of Lombard Street, London; and the refrain was taken up and they shouted (no doubt) "there is no gxl but gold." The secretary surrounded by this fascination (and we know not what other influence) forgot the eloquence by whichhe instructed his countrymen that the demoni tization . of silver was a crime, more terrible than all the pesti lences and wars that ever befell tlie American people. "Since then the policy of the administration is to j)lease the Wall Street gold bugs; they sell bonds in. time of peace, and by redeeming the treasury notes in gold, they fur nish much of the gold to the bond purchasers to "loot the treasury" thus losing at the spigot what they iolur in at the bung. They follow the example of Davy Crock- ett when coon skins were curren hen co Ten nes ev-ini ennesseeanu a, cuun &.vm w ua the price of a drink. Davy bought one drink; the grog shop keeper threw the skin under the coun ter, which was open on the out side. Davy got the skin again and continued to buy with the sanre'siTTnTrri - shOD. This, is me F'M . . . J 1 ftllAW of Cleveland administration. : wo things it does certain: it is piling up a debt on the tax payers of America, and assisting the bankers to lend their money to the government for five per cent when they could not get 1 per cent any where else. Such is happiness for the money lend er and their children; but its hard on the ixxr, the laborers and J- m the farmer for their children yet unborn will have to pay the debt TRUSTS AND MONEY. Thus we see that the money lowers are ruling and governing. These trusts ana: Kiiiureu cum bines are a class above the. laws. Before them the courts are pliant and supplaint: judges cease to denounce, grand jurors to indict. attorneys to prosecute, and petty jurors to rentier verdicts of guilt Every farmer who. makes cot ton has his cotton seed priced by the cotton seed oil trust The courts have indicted them in Tex as and Memphis, but then like the sumr trust in Washington, D. C, which theattorney general (Olney) .v ndlrmd attorney, refuses fto cv . all will amount to nothing. L."WS AGAINST THUSTS AND OPTIONS. ""i 1' t c!itrt we nave laws Xll uui j n.minst the Trust-robbers, speeu latino in futures, -&C, but what judge ever calls the attention to the grand jury concerning me violations of "tliese laws? Or what solicitor ever makes out a case for the grand jury? This was one of the charges brought against our judges and. solicitors by the spread-eagle screamers at the last election. And the people applauded. The people are not such fools as" they are often con sidered. The Grange has had much to do in educating the farmers, and as ixx)ple become educated theyeas ier comprehend the laws of right and justice; and are more exact ing and less subservient to the oppressor to make use of a com mon expression 4theykick. These trust and money powers are felt everywhere at the, re through, solve and account for many strange events, but by their uouauesumaie meirsirengia; The government-stump-orators demagogical statesmen tell us that this is the grandest and most Ijowerful nation on earth yet be fore the national banks, whiskey trust, sugar trust, tobacco trust, oil trust the various manufactur er's trust, the railroad combina tions and the gold bugs, this gov ernment is but weak and help less. For it was plain at thislast political cyclone they bursted in- to the ranks of nearly every labor organization, invaded the rural districts, captured the farmer, the miner, the mechanic, any and all alike. How else can we ad count for the Greenbacker for getting his creed, the Populist for saking his cherished ideality of fifty dollars per capita' (that W'ould cure all the ills by which we suf fer, awl drive hard times away forever) by fusing with and vot ing for the very party that de monitized silver, contracted the currency - and established the na tional banks. How can we account for the hundreds of thousands so soon forgetting their life long free trade principles, a tariff for rev enue only, and placing in power again the party that gave the McKinley tariff bill. ' How can we account for that class of voters found mostly among the farming population wjio for generations have cdnJ tended that we can have neither prosperity nor purity in the gov ernment until we return to the Jeffersonian doctrine, that the laws should be only made so as to give equal rights and equal jus tice to all and special privileges to none, and yet voted for the par ty that never fails to enact laws that are class legislation, and grant special privileges to a few and boasts of the consummation. These things- are strange contra dictories when judged from a philosophical standpoint-yet they timate from the money influence, j The people being more and more in need, inexorable more and more demanding, cause them to be sub missive to the three thousand money devils and that class who own near half of the property m the Union. Lord Bacon wrote in "the days of Queen Elizabeth, 'That above all calamities that could befall a nation, was the money getting in to the hand s of a few' people. Tnat calamity is here, and is fast sapping the very foundations of the government, which was so strongly laid, by the wisdom and patriotism of our forefathers. The few who control the money ,T-;n r.rmtrnl the neople. It is the history of mankind. HUMAN LIBERTY. Our forefathers believed that the first consideration of the gov irnment should' be to protect hu man liberty. Tlie plutocranc -i T. i : ,v'-i tlmf l-io UlUivvj v first and last consideration ot gov eminent should be to protect property and establish, a class with titles, privileges anci rmmu nities suiwrior to' other people. A SKONGEK GOVERN MENT WANTED Tilings are fast going that way. A stronger government more soldiers, more navy, more appli ances for war in time of peace, owning of railroads by the gov ernment a continuous clamor for paternalism, all are havihgthe same tendencies, though irom very different sources. What the end" will be no man knoweth but tlie patriot trembles for the fu ture of his country, for he knows that 4ieternal vigilence is the price of liberty. ,? The low prices of farm products makes the heart of the poor old farmer sick. These ieriods. it is said, are the vi sua- tions. the result ot me meyiiuuiu, that follow the laws of trade every nation. HISTORY REPEATS ITSELF, We recollect when things were as low as they are now it was iwr, 140 to '43. and not much k-.t- irritil '45-46. Good mules nd horses sold ior 0. to and cows $a to pork $3. nxrt: Cotton was so low that per ev erybody quit making it and there but "when sold, brought 40 cents Ier bushel wheat CO cents. There was not such a thing as a piece of pork or a barrel of flour in a coun- 4- - - .4-A. -v. SmlnsA ititt enro ti siAJie j. iuuccu jiiv. iajes were iuw; jjwjjic huiu mostty homespun and the music of the sjiinning wTheel was heard in every farmers honie. "We liad plenty of State bank money. There were no homestead laws, and "no trouble to get credit or give security. The crop lien and the mortgage deed of the mer chant was unknown. - But we live in a different age, surrounded by different environ ments, more necessities, more de mands, more .pride, more fashion and more worldiness, which makes these hard times much harder than then. MAN A CRELTUKE OF HABIT. - Immediately after the war the high price of cotton caused the farmers to inako it a specialty. Man is but a creature of habit any way; and that habit has held him ever- since. The country merchant and the town merchant made bargains with the commis sion .merchants, to handle the farmer's cotton, and the farmer got into another habit of getting the country merchant ? to "run" him,' whilst the commisoion mer chant generally "run"Hhe coun try merchant; and so tlse farmer went on, nerer pricing:any thing he made ; until nowr the -condition of the farmer is deplorable, and the . poor f elknv who happens to be in debt is like the inriner circle of hades, as described by Dante, , -. . - - A t He that enters here le ves hope f behind." WHAT CAUSES THE LOVi PlilCE OF COTTON is a question wThich hould be Alliance deeply considered. Til and the Populist say th t the idea that too much is made i the most preposterous nonsensf? imagina ble, and is only the aigument of the plutocrat and the gold bug, that -there cannot be too much cotton: when not half of the people have a whole shirt to their backs, nor shifting sheets on their beds, &c. They declare the true cause, is for the want of moiiey to buy it, that the demonitization of sil ver and a contraction of the currency is the only cause that the gov ernment v ought to issue green backs directly to the people, and let them buy the cotton, and the price wTould go up, &c, and soon. On tlie other hand, we are pre- sed.vitii.ibfailtgr that she dies three-fourths of it, that In dia and Egypt and the Argentine Republic, are making cotton ana can do so cheaper than Ave can, because labor is .cheaper, ..their climate as good and lands as fer- ile. That we are making too niuch, more than the world is needing, that 10, 000, 00V bales win be. and is iust one-hallper pound in price that o,000,UUUj would oe, ' -v , lit ffiat such has been thtj history oiL the cotton crop. This is wnat we might call the economic view with much ood common sonser Another class say tint the sup nlv and the demand liis nothing to do with price of cott4n, that the heartless speculation uiid 'option gamblers" that buy up or pretena to more cotton in a single day, or week, than is" made ik the world is what keeps down the price; that New ork gam o?rs Duy w 000,000 bales, whilst there -does not come 200,000 to tlir port an. nually. Our ieople hive various opinions, but one thinj-we do cer tainly know,' that it was the .rpitv: thnt rm up the price during and OVUl A A, y - I X after the that the -u.-rt.-r' and we knoi short crops of corn and this year, have tor the last made corn hio-her at Chicago thai it has been for twenty years, ad the same may be urged to a griit extent of rk The irreat crfos of wheat in the same years Ijive caused wheat to be the lowesjon record. LIVE AT 'HOME. Oil ("HE HOME STEAD I S G O IE. Now, brother farmfrs, we must our own smokuiouses, ana onr own corn eribsior we will iill ff our homesteads, for the price of land is so lef that it will i Y z Usa iii A i-nniti riT tllO - oniy uring uic iAAA a . a. morhige, and me ifP"i wman become slaves to metew w no o hn lands, ust as Uif are in ire- and, Scotland and rgiana. jonn '- t . T. , , -ri - ivlf. the trreat pnosopner who wrote -the hrst Costitution for old North Carohna.vhen it was owned by the Lortl proprietors -ibat who er-owneu me land owned the penile. Adam Smith. Hume, JohiJtewartrMill, Herbert Spencer. J say, that money r is when -land is chc ig languish. of scarce, andeverji es. iir. uiruic ii r ri : .. 3titly stated that land was sehi within fifty miles of London f less than in the same distanced New York. Land is cheaper to- y than it lias been for almost a c rury among the English sreaki Tlie scarcity of monevbeingin the races .onev,or the do. nds of a few. has no doubt sol thing to do with it the price hi deningdown to the gold standaiof value. education. . F1 nratioTt is said in bo the orr- ing need of the; farmer and labor- er; Ignorance places them al- tn ariisaflvatitnwinpvpnr to a uisaa anuige in every. ways mirsnit-V Tho tv,-.nt tho intrwIV craf the money devil do not de sire general and universal educa tion of the masses. They know that the ignorant are ever the victims of prejudice, and the de votees of fanaticism, and are con trolled by the demigogue and av aricious. The Grange is a strong friend of the public school It fa vors giving the children of all classes a chance to get a'common school education. The common school system is much better than it was a few years since, but lacks much, very much, being what it should be; butthe people niake it what it is and they can and should give us a four months schools as the constitution directs. There ought to be a good Grange hall in every township underneath an academy, and in everychool dis trict the committee should- be composed of the best citizens, ir respective of politics or'religion; but the teachers should be chos en, not less for morality. than com-' potency. Education without mo rality is a ciir.se. The teacher who does no inculcate and en force truth, honesty, cleanliness, sobriety and good manners, both by precept and example, should be - relegated; from the school house. v. THE GRANGE A SCHOOL. The subordinate Grange is a school in which, if properly con ducted, knowledge of inestimable value may be obtained. Here is where lessons can be taught of a prac ticable value of the'fa rm, of Via Vvmo Srfl inwtr'rirtinn in busi ness methods generally of which the farmerislamentably deficient B re then let me urge you to standby the Grange. Its the farm er's oldest and best organization. During the year we appointed de puties in every county, wThere there was a probability of benefit; ting the Grange. I offered my poor services whenever desired but with sorrow I state the order has' not prospered. The farmer's COnsequences, the fruits, roots, wiU not awake to their own inter- r n vegetables of the gar est Organization was never so llt3iU& badly needed, for all farming in- den of Eden were all the food dustries were never so badly de- necessary for their simple wants; pressed. " and Adam had no need of tilling . newspapers and books. and fdrcing the earth into bring On the farm nothing adds more ingforth bread cereals, nor dig- bii,!!;, j Xxipers. . We have good orange papers like the Grange Bulletin,, the Farmer's Friend and Grange Ad- t)cate, Grange Visitor, Farm and second time that bread is men Fireside and Itim sure I need not tioned in the ancient history of mention the Patron and Glean- er, here at its home. But I will say if there is a .paper in all the State its superior in cleanliness and abhity I do not know it MY TERM OF MASTER expires at this : meeting, and I hope the mantle will tall upon tne snout- ders of one more capable of .ex- tending and benefitting the order. -. t -i ,1 For kindness by the brethren and sisters during these long tiPRiiTirtftrwmc lwemiveiauoim years to me ever shown, I never can oe sumcienuy graieiui. The Water Power of Niagra. Emrineers have estimated, says Harper's Weekly, that the total water power of Viagra tails is r 000,000 horse' power. This esti- mate, tobe sure, is in the main "bnly a guess, but when the area drained into the akes above Lake Ontario, and passing through the Niagra River, be considered, the - - guess or estimate does not seem to be too large. The water sur- face of the great lakes above On- tario is 84,000 square miles, and the watershed of these lakes is 240,000 square miles more than twice the area of Great Britian and Ireland. The total length of shore line is 5,000 miles, while the volume of water is 0,000 cubic miles, of which Lake Superior mntnins almost one-half. The rat of outflow at Buffalo is from 217,000 to 275,000 cubic feet per second. 'while the fall of the cata- ract is 165 feet - The volume of water in tlie lakes is such that it U.r. i;- i ml "i(l VlO f n-fT1 if lias VWU cauuia. aa.aaa. . DO ?ie"r:..r r' rj I ever thought I was me wrong triumph and rejoicing, hl chizedekJ king of Salem, CU Ui WOU1Q Oe COUUUUW Vx,r j Aecfiol u,ti is, if the lakes could be gradually drained. There are very large figures, but in the main they are the results of exact measure ments. The small water powers in the world are uneven, and are afflict- ed by floods and droughts, but this ereat power at Niagra is as constant as anything in this world can be, not even the ice in the severest and longest winter ever - know appreciably changing it Tlie nresent rlant is intended on- , 4 ,,:i; io: nnn firi-c w m. . only for a small part of this. Oth er turbine wheels will be put in place as the demand for power grows. The general plan of the company contemplates the ulti mate use of 450,000 horse power on the American side and like amount in Canada."" Such a" pow er would turn all the wheels with in a radius of 500 miles of the falls. At the present time a con siderable part of the power de veloxTed is to be taken to Buffalo by electric transmission, and it is the confident expectation of the electricans now at work on the problem that the , power can be taken as far east as Albany, 300 miles. away,-, and delivered there cheaper than power can be gener ated by burning coal. If this be so, then all the country between Albany and tlie falls will be ad mirably adapted for manufactur ing, while the Erie Canal "will af ford cheap and tolerably quick transportation, for there seems fo be little difficulty in the way of hauling these boats by electrical power. Scientific American. Bread. Where ? How? "In - the Beginning." j For the Patron and Gleaner. J From the time when Adam and Eve constituted the first house hold, and Adam was condemned to "eat bread in the sweat of thy face, until thou slialt return unto the ground,1' bread lias been con sidered hot only a desirable luxu ry out a continual necessity. Probably, before Adam partook of the forbidden fruit then man- fashion, charged Eve with the cnr in tjie trarden-to raise cab- them, nor rearing- a swarm ot , . f, summer'spork -f' W tor ms -uueu v. tjie Qld Testament may be found . AWm femnd- Zu, uZ" ei pauiciiv" 0 days, pursued after those who had despoiled his brother 'Lai t j i Viim nrQw nnenn- lc nni, i 6 - of Lot from the hands of the ene- my and return to his native land Mel: and U-.Tncf of tVio Most Him (jrod. i"-" " brought , forth bread and wine, ona he blessed him, and said, Blesse(i be Abram of the Most av nf heaven 1 AXliiH Uni Tth. And blessed be the Most Hih God, which hath deliv- pd thine enemies into thine hand. . Again, we find in Gen. 18, that me arred Abram now named A- hraham, was sitting in his tent door durim? the heat of the day, Qn the piains Gf Mamre, when lo! f urof ano-pis stood bv him." With i w-- r that unbounded hospitality which, as-R-ith the Arabs, immediately on greeting a guest, first provides water to. wash the feet and then prepares food, Abraham, offering water said: "Wash your feet, ana I will fetch a morsel of bread, and comfort ye your hearts.' M. H. Kick. Lahaska, Pa. to be continued. The mind is but a barren soil a soil which is soon exhausted. and will produce no crop, or only one, unless it be continually ler tilized and enriched with foreign matter. Sir Joshua Reynolds. ,.tu olirara orn- ..loved -m a -w steen tnrougn me, a wuua.-,.- UJ mt m rtr TfnPnGSS js the hot-bed of temp- L the cradle of disease, the - waster of time? the canker-worm nf f elicit v. 1 Men who have nothing but memory, are but living lexicons, andas it were, ' the pack-horses of j Parnassus Kant KOTICE the estau? of Jesse B. Johnson, deceased. 1 "erel,y noiuy n person holding clslm against said estate, to present them to t , . ,r yr pajiucui, un ur udure.auuaryiJ.fc ISOC, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. Debtors will please pay promptly. This Not. 24, 1834. Joseph O. Flythe, Adm'r. SUMMONS. North Carolina, Superior Court. Northampton County, Special rTDaefeg, T. B. Edwards, Sarah Grtzzard and hus : band, Henry Grizzard, W. Ks Edwards, Magnolia Kicks and husband, J. R. Ricks, riaintiff, vs. Adrian a Wheeler, A. D. Edwards, J. A. Delpatch aud husband, W. R. De loatch, I. M. Edwards and husband. M..T. Edwards, II. B. Edward?, Julia Hall Edward?, Mattie Pop, Nettle Pope, and Boddie Poe, Defendants. The defendants, Julia Hall Edwards, Mattie Pope, Nettie Pope, and Buddie Pope defendants above named, will take notice that a summons In the above en titled action was issued aahM said de fendant on the 24 day of November, 1894, by J. TV Flythe, Clerk of the Su perior Court of said county, for the par tition of the real estate of which. W. P. Edwards died seized and possessed in said county, which summons is returna ble before said J. T, FlyUie, Clerk as aforesaid on tho 5. day of January, 1S93, when and where the defendants ar re quired to appear and answer or demur to the complaint which Is deposited In -said office, or the relief demanded Kill be granted. This November 27, 1894. J. T. Flythe, . Clerk Superior Court. Peebles & Harris, atty. for pin". NOTICE. By virtue of a decree of the Superior Court of Northampton county in the case, of Bettlc S. Barnes vs. Geor gie B. : Barnes et al., I shall, on Tuesday, January 8th, 1895, at the residehice ou the below described prem ise, sell by public auction that tract of land situated in said county, on both sides of the "Princeton" road, and bounded by the lands of Alex. Home,, Sam'l Britt and others, and known as the "Colin Barnes" tract, recently occu pied by Jos. B. Barnes, dee'd., and con taining 170 acres, mere or les. J'rmsof Sale: One-fifth cash, the balance payable in four equal annual in stalments with interest from sale, title retained until all is paid. Henry C. Edwards, By B. S. Gay, atty. Commissioner. NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the under signed has qualified before the Clerk of the Superior Court of Northampton County, N. O., executor of Ann E. 5iag et, deceased. All parties Indebted to said estate must pay at once, and all parties holding claims against said es tate must present the same to the un dersigned executor within twelve months from the date of this notice or it will be .,i .1 .1 i.k,r rf ihMr rwwuuui Tlila SALE OP LAND. By virtue of a judgment of the .Supe rior court of Northampton county, ren dered at Spring Term, 1891, in the cane of Barnes and others vs. Kawles, Ed wards and others, I 6hall sell for cabh at tlie Court-house door In Jackson, on Monday, Jany. 7, 1895, all that tract of land called the Edwards tract, on which the defendant, Geo. Rawles now resides, and which is fully described In the judg ment and complaint In said action. Dec. 1, 1894. It. O. Bubtox, Comr. Trespassers-Take Notice. All persons are hereby forbidden to" AX t cut, remove or damage, or in any way Injure, any timber or property of any digcriptioft which we own In Northamp ton or li any other county In wortn Car olina, without our special permission, under pains and penalties prescribed by law. The Cummer Company. This Novenber 20, 1894. FOR RENT. One desirable House and Lot In Rich Square. Terms reasonable. Ad dress, Mbs. SallieJ. Baugiiam. Hicb Square, N.C, New Store and New Goods. I desire to announce to ray f rleudi and the public generally that I hav opened a Plain and Fancy Grocery at Lasker, and would be glad to have a liberal ibare of your patronage, promising that I will deal fairly with you. Very Bespectfully, ZL CK. 3Draper. A CAKD. We Lave just received a shipment of Johnson's Chill and Fever Tonic. It was bought with a distinct under standing between the Manufacturer and ourselves that each and every txttle is guaranteed to core any of the following diseases: 1st. f bills and Fcrcr. 2nd. Cilllecs Firer. 3rd. Hemorrhagic FeTer. lib. KeuralgU. . 5ib. aieisles. : , 6(b. LaGrippe. Now, we are willing to sell yoa on tbe same conditions we noy u on. We guarantee ONb single 50-cent bottle to cure any of the dis eases above enumerated. Failing to do so we will cheerfully return your money. Yours truly, John Baug n am. Rich Square, N. C. Coxxee & Vauoiian, La.sker. N. C. The very best Kerosine oil on the market, red and white kept for gale by ' Conner & Vaughan, Laster, N. C. ed Mr. Cleveland for an appoint- rl rftd safe and cent election we can only see i was hardly any aemanu iui w Jilt; lit -"ojr
The Northampton County Times-News (Rich Square and Jackson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 20, 1894, edition 1
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