t
r
'"Prove all things; holdfast that which is good."
Vol. 6.
DUIVIM, IM. C, JANUARY 12, 1898.
No. 52.
- ,' -A. -A itA!' J V. "
yH tei
TOWN DIRECTORY.
CHURCHES.
M'tholiKt Church Key. D, B. Parker Tastor.
STvic first Sunday night, and fouriSi Sun
day ni'Tiiinjj ami nitfht. Prayornioeting
v'ry ' V Ineslay nitfht. f-'uki:iy schcel
; wry f-uiulay morning- at 10 o'clock, G. K.
iirantham Superiutt-nilout.
Tavist f IiurHi. Kev. h. R. Carroll, paster.
S-ivi-.-s :vi-y sec nd Sunday morning and
ni-lit. I'raye rnicetiiig every Thursday night
Sun-lay Srionl eery Sunday morning, O
TayIurS;ii t-riitenleut.
I'r'slyti rian Church. ll-v. A." M. Has.sel
.nfr. s-f vices evory first and fifth Sunday
morning, .md night, Sundar school every
Sunday morning, M.L. W ade Superintendent!
lisiili Church Rev. S. B. Hood, pas
tor. ServiiM'.s every third Sunday morning
and nig'it. Christian Endeavor Society every
Tuesday night. Sunday School fcvery Sunday
e,ening at . o'clock, McD. Iloliiday Supt.
Free, Will Baptist Church. Elder J. F
Owens, pastor. Services every second Sun
day morning and night.
1'rirnit i w Baptist. --Church on Broad street
Elder "A. fJ. Turner, Pastor. Regu'ar servi-
on tin; third Sabbath morning, and Satur
day before, in each month at 11 o'clock.
TOWN OFFICERS.
II. L. Godwin, Mayor. j
Commissioner
K. F. Young. J. J. Dupree, J. II. Pope and
Vv F. Pearson.
G. F. Snead, Policeman.
County Officers.
Shoriir,J. II. Pope. . '
( leik. F. M. McKay.
Register of Deeds, J. McK. Byrd.
Treasurer, G. D. Spence.
Coroner,.!. J, Wilson.
Surveyor, J. A. O'Kelly.
"County Examiner, Rev. J. A. Campbell.
Cc n,nns.--ioners : J. A. Green, Chairman
II. N. Bizzell and Neill McLeod.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
James II. I'ou.
Edward W.'Pou.
W. II. Young.
POU & POU & YOUNG,
Attorneys at Law,
LILLIXGTOX, X- C.
(Associated in the trial of Civil Cases)
in the Superior Courts of Harnett Co.
J,
C CLIFFORD,,
Attorney at Law,
J DUXX, x. c.
W ill practice i.i all the court:; of the
State, where services desired.
iTj- BEST.
ATTORN EY-aT-LAW,
DUNN, N. C.
Practice- in County Courts of Harnett and
surrounding counties, and ' U. S. Courts.
. ecial attention given all collections.
il II. MCLEAN
Counsellor Attorney
at Law,
DUNN, N. c.
l'riictice in all Courts. Collections a Specialty
W- E- Murchison,
JOXESBOKO, N. C.
Practices Law in Harnett, Mooie Stud
other counties, but not for fun.
Feb. 20-lv.
Isaac A- Murchison,
FAYETTEVILLE, U. C.
li act ices Law in Cumberland, Harnett
and anywhere services are wanted.
ihis promises to bjan in
teresting year in politics. White
men and white metal is our
motto.
One Minute (Jouh Cure cures quick
ly. That s what you want ! Hood
Grantham.
&
the Senate uommittee on
Library lias reported favorably
a bill appropriating $00,000 for
a statue of President Lincoln to
be erected an the battlefield of
Gettysburg.
I rosiieritv ctncs quickest to the man
"whose liver is in irooil condition. Do-
Witt's Little Earlv Risers are faniou
little pills for constipation, biliousness.
Luliiresl ion and all stomach ind liver
troubles. Hood it Grantham.
John Neill was . hanged last
Friday at Greenfield, Mass.,
lor the murder ot a woman in
liuckland in .January 1896.
Mrs. Mary Byrd, Harrisburg, Pa.,
says. "Mv child is worth millions to me;
yet I would have lost her by croup had
1 not invested twenty-rive cents in a bot
tle of One Minute. Cough Cure." It
'cuies coughs, colds and all throat and
lung troubles. Hood & Grantham.
In Oklahoma Territory last
Friday a mob of white citizens
burned two Seminole half-breed
Indians to a stake for the mur
der of a white woman.
J. A-Perkins, of Antipuity, O., was
for thiity years needlessly tortured by
physici ins for the cure of eczema. He
was quickly cured by using DeWitt's
itch Hr.zel Salve the famous healing
salve for piles and skin diseases. Hood
te Grantham.
In the vicinity of Kearden,
Arkansas, four negroes have re
cently been lynched; two for
murder and two for rape. '
It is easy to catch a cold and just as
eaay to get rid of It if you commence
early to use One Minute Cough Cure.
It tires coughs, colds, bronchitis, pneu
monia and all throat and lung troubles.
It is pleasant to t ike, safe to use and
ire to cure. Hood & Grantham
STATE NEWS.
Items of news gathered ero
ALL PARTS OF THE STATE.
T
t. jl . ;iriisie. irenerai nier
cliant of
last week.
Louisburg,
assigned
d
J. L. King & Co. large tobacf
co manufacturers of Greensborf1
made an assignment last weel
with liabilities over $20,000. -
The rainfall
North Carolina for
throughout
1897 wa(
17 inches below the average
i
The county commissioners oi
Brunswick county have refused
to grant license to sell liquors
in that county this year. . j
The postoffice at Mooresviile'
was kroken into and the safe
blown open and robbed by
burglars who got $106 in money
belonging to the postmaster and
about $50 in cash and stamps.
At an amateur performance
in Asheville last Tuesday night
a 14-year-old" boy named Hamp
ton was shot in the breast and
killed by another boy named
Scott, with a pistol that was
supposed not to be loaded.
The measles are at the Bap
tist Orphanage at Thomasville.
Last week it was reported that
100 of the orphans were sick
with them. No deaths have
been reported.
A jury at Winston court last
week in the suit of T. J. Wil
son against the Street. Railway
Company awarded -Wilson $4,
000 damages for . the killing of
his child two vears ago. The
railway company took an ap
peal to the Supreme Court.
Dr. Henry Louis Smith, of
Davidson College located by the
use of the X-ray the position of
a liiinDie in tne oroncmai tunes
of a six-year-old child last
Wednesday. The child is a
daughter of Mr. W. E. Harris.
il 1 1 ii i i -i . i
of Harrisburg, and swallowed
the thimble some eight weeks
ago and has been unable to
swallow since.
Jno. C. Davis, who a few
years ago created such a sensa
tion in Wilmington where he bT
forgery and embezzlement ob
tained nearly $100,000 which he
gave to churches in that city,
and was sent to the insane asy
lum at Raleigh, is pronounced
sane and was dismissed from
that institution last Friday.
He will go to Washington, D.
C, to start life again.
Mr. J. W. Cannon has formed
a company to erect a big new
cotton mill at Albemarle. It
will be a $200,000 mill, and
will be erected earlv in the
spring. A tract of land of Gil
acres has been purchased, and
the site of the new mill will be
on the railroad near the present
one. The brick wilj be made
on the ground, more than 1,
000,000 being required. The
lumber needed also will be se
cured near, so that the cost of
erection will be reduced to the
lowest possible point. The ca
pacity of the present mill will
also be doubled, making it a
$110,000 mill. Albemarle is to
be congratulated on its good
luck in securing these large in
terests, and the erection of these
mills will mean jthe permanent
prosperity of the town. Mi
las Reid was killed in Rowan
county last Thursday by Thom
as Broadway. It seems to have
been a cold-blooded murder.
Reid was shot in the head twice.
The murdered man left a wife
and one child. The murderer
is a notoriously bad character.
Concord Times.
Don't Titgltct Your Liver.
Liver troubles quickly result in fori -.;,
complication, and the man who i:ctlei- i
liver has little recard for health. A
of Browns' Iron Bitters taken now feml t : i
will keep the liver in ierfeet -rlv. If I
disease has developed, Browi -' ir..:i I t:
will cure it ptnnnr., ntly. Sft. i-fh
vitality will always feT'o.v ij 1 :
Browns' Iron Bitters is sold Ly nil tkuivi-
At Hahnville court house,
Louisiana, last Friday three
negro desperadoes were hung
for the murder of a Jewish ped-
ler. One of the negroes con
fessed the crime and told of
nine men and one. Ayoman that
he had murdered and had al
ways managed to elude the
law.
here this week! !
Miss Laura Lee of Smithfield
is-visiting Misses Esther and
Venie Bell in Sampson. -
Air. Jamie Smith and sister J
Miss Ella,. iof Johnston county
are in the city visiting relatives
Mr. II. II. McKay left yes
terday for Ghapel Hill where Ik
will take a course in pharmacy.
Mr. A. C. Hales, who has a
large contract for piling, has
returned from his trip to Moore'
and is now ready for business.
ivir. r . ivi. lucivav, is on fi
trip to Oxford, to attend the
meeting of the Grand Lodge o!
Masons.
Mr. M. D. Higgs left Mon
day for Greenville where he ha?
accepted a position with Messrs;
Higgs Bros., bankers. ;
. Messrs. J. W. Senter, J. II,
Wilburn and J. T. Johnson, oi
Bradley's Store, were in town
Friday and called to see us. '
Mr. A. F.
Lillinffton's
Jol
inson, one of
chants, was in town to-day am
paid us a pleasant call.
. ---.-- -
Must be a Populist-
At the last election, in a state
which I shall not make it dan
gerous for me to visit by men
tioning in public print, says a
writer in Good Stories, I heard
a funny kind of explanation at
the polls. One of the very
greenest country jakes I think
I ever saw came up and wanted
to vote. It was his first vote,
and the judges held him up.
"Want to vote?" asked one,
in:a pleasing, off-hand manner.
"What's that?" said the ap
plicant, trying to showT courage.
"What ticket?"
"I dunno."
"Are you a Democrat?"
"I dunno."
"Are you a Republican?"
"I dunno."
"How about being a Prohibi
tionist?" "What's that 'un?"
"One of the cold-water peo
ple." "For washin'?"
"For drinking."
"Gosh to splinters, I ain't
that I reckon."
"Very well," said the judge,
giving it up as a bad( job, "as
there isn't anything else, you
are a Populist."
- A faint gleam of intelligence,
as if some familiar name had
broken into the young voter's
perception, shone on his face.
' I dunno," he replied, hesi
tatingly. "Mebbe I am. Pap
says I'm the biggest dern fool
in four precincts." Toledo
Blade.
A Clever Trick,
It certainly looks like it, but
there is really no trick about it.
Anybody can try it who has
lame back and weak kidneys,
malaria or nervous troubles. We
mean he can cure himself right
away by taking Electric Bitters.
This medicine tones up the
whole svstem, acts as a stimu
laut to the liver and kidneys, is
a blood purifier and a nerve
tonic. ; It cures constipation,
headache, fainting spells, sleep
lessness and' melancholy. It is
purely vegetable, a mild .lax
ative, and restores the system
to its natural vigor. Try Elec
tric Bitters and be convinced
that they are a miracle worker.
Every bottle guaranteed. Only
50c a bottle at' N. B. Hood's
drug store. '
A special from Tarboro to
the Wil, Messengr on Jan. 4th
says: "George T. Williams
died here last night. He was
buried to-day. He was present
at the Big Bethel fight when H.
L. Wyatt the first man killed
during the late war was shot
down. He was by the side of
Wyatt carrying the southern
flag.j Mr Williams was buried
with military honors. His re
mains were escorted to the cem
etery by the Edgecombe Guards
and a few veterans."
A fire at North Wilkesbbro
last Monday night destroyed
$14,000. worth of property.
The fae
liaile Bljnatnrt
4f
ll en
y'f t sr eTery
m&J&ZZ n j
Returning to th 3 Fold-
A gentlemen who- lias been a
Populist, was in this office the
other day and declared that he
would never vote that ticket
again. He is disgusted with
the crowd that is now running
the State government. There
are plenty of good men all over
Norsh Carolina who have left
the Populist party for the same
reason that this man did. They
have been deceived by their
leaders who were out for the
spoils. A hearty welcome
awaits them in the Democratic
party. Sanford Express.
. - It is this way in every county
we hear from. There is a gen
eral disposition on the part of
the white men to get together
again. The Chicago platform
affords a good meeting ground
in national politics and the ne
cessity for good home govern
ment in State politics. Though
"reformers" are in power, yet
there was never a time but
once in Itforth Carolina when
there was more need for reform.
The last Legislature was such a
farce that even the Populists in
certain counties are holding
meetings to denounce it in reso
lutions as stinging as can well
be put together. If the Popu
lists again fuse with the Repub
licans they can only suffer like
poor dog Try, for the compa
ny they keep.
Only the men who got office
are benefited by the late fusion
arrangement. The people have
suffered from iniquitous and
burdensome laws. The invita
tion given out by the Democrat
ic State executive committee in
viting all who will support
Democratic nominees to come
into the primaries is therefore
timely. Clinton Democrat.
A Business Parable-
Once a farmer had one thous
and eight hundred bushels of
wheat, which he sold, not to a
single grain merchant, but to
one "thousand eight hundred dif
ferent dealers, a bushel each.
A few of them paid him in
cash, but far the greater num
ber said it was not convenient
then, but wTould pay later. A
few months passed, and the
man's bank account ran low.
"How is this?" he said. "My
one thousand eight hundred
bushels of grain should have
kept me in affluence until
another crop is raised, but I
have'parted with the grain and
have instead only a vast num
ber of accounts, so small and
scattered that I cannot get
around and collect it fast
enough to pay expenses." So
he posted up a public notice
and asked all debtors to pay
quickly. But few came. The
rest said, "Mine is only a small
matter, and I will go and pay
one of these days," forgetting
that though each account, was
very small, when all were .put
together they meant a large
sum to the man. Things went
on thus : the man got to feeling
so badly that he fell out of bed
and' awoke, and running to his
granary found his one thousand
eight hundred bushels of wheat
still safe there. He had only
been dreaming, and hadn't sold
his wheat at all.
Moral The next day the man
went to the publisher of his pa
per and said : "Here, sir, is
the pay for, your paper ; wIiqii
next year1 sf subscription is due
you can depend on me to pay
it promptly. I stood in the po
sition of an editor last night,
and I know how it feels to have
one's honestly earned money
scattered all over the country
in small amounts."
Everybody Says So.
Cabarets Candy Cathartic, the most
woncleifal medical discovery of the age,
pleasant and ref,-ehing to the taste, act
genth and positively on the kidneys,
liver and towel, cleansing the entire
system, dispel colds, cure headache, fe
ver, habitual constipation and bilious
ness. Please buy and try a box of C,
C. C, to-day; 10, -25, 50 cents. Sold and
guaranteed to cure by all druggists.
A conference of silver men of
all parties was held in Wash
ington Saturday.
Grove's Tasteless Chill Tome is a per
feet Malarial Liver Tonic and blood pu
rifier. Removes Biliousness without
purging. As plesant as Lemon Syrup.
It is as Urge as any Dollar tonic and re-
tans ior oue lu get me u cx uir- aiv
for urove's x or sale aua guarantee Dy
llood&Granthaui, Duna, N.C.
lric s lOO Vears As.
People talk of the good old
days of long ago when times
were better and money wasn't
tight. How would you like to
have a dose of old times as they
are indicated in the prices cop
ied below from an old account
book kept 99 years ago in Bun
combe county?
Having an opportunity re
cently, Rev. R. P. Smith copied
some items from such a book in
kind remembrance of his home
paper. S The old book is now
owned by Mr. S. W. Davidson,
of Swannanoa . Valley, .Bun
combe county. It might have
been kept by a blacksmith' who
ran a store or by a merchant
who also ran a smithy. Here
are some items copied under
date of March, 1798 nearly
100 years ago :
(DEBITS.
To 16 pounds sugar $4.00
To 1 bushel salt. ......... 3.00
To 1 gallon whiskey. .... .75
To 1 iron wedge. ........ .50
To laying plow 50
To 1 pair shoe soles ...... .50
To one-half yard muslin . . .37
To 1 pound- powder. '". . . . . 1.00
To 10 pounds hails 2.00
To 1 quire paper .37
To 15 pounds sugar and 6
pounds coffee 6.00
CREDITS.
By. 3 days' work . .$1.37
By 1 bushel corn .50
By 79 pounds beef at 3 ct. 2.37
Bv 1 week's work...... ..... 3.00
See that 16 pounds of sugar
for $4.00? And a bushel of
salt for $3.00? How do you
like it? The price, of muslin
was out p' sight none, was then
manufactured in this country,
perhaps all imported. Pow
der at a dollar a pound was too
high to burn at Christmas. At
20 cents a pound people
couldn't afford to hit many
nails on the head. And people
must have had something im-1
portant to write and wTanted to
write it mighty bad when they
paid 37 cents a quire for paper.
Why, the Gazette would be glad
to sell you all you waiit in 20
quire lots at 5 cents a quire and
could nearly double its money
at that. In other items the
contrast with to-day is not so
marked, but in the old times
when it took a week's work to
buy a bushel of salt, the contrast
is strong enough to make a body
faint. He who in those days
could earn the salt that went in
his bread ought not to have
been counted, a lazy fellow.
Gastonia Gazette.
Xhe Greatest Oiscovery Yet.
W. M. Repine, editor Tiskil
wa, 111., "Chief," says : "We
won't keep house without Dr.
King's New Discovery for con
sumption, coughs, and colds.
Experimented with many oth
ers, but never got the true rem
edy until we used Dr. King's
New Discovery: No other rem
edy can take its place in our
home, as in it we have a certain
and sure cure for coughs, colds,
whooping cough etc." It is
idle to experiment with other
remedies, even if they are urg
ed on you as just iis good as
Dr. King's New Discovery.
They are not as good, because
this remedy has a record of
cures ahd'besides is guaranteed.
It never fails to satisfy. Trial
bottles free at N. B. Hood's
drug store.
Ilea my. Utility and Value
Are happily combined in Hood's
Sarsapai-illa Coupon Calendars
for 1898. The lovely child's
head in an embossed gold
frame, surrounded by sprays of
flowers in mosaic, the harmon
ious pad in blue with clear
figures, and the Coupons by
means of which many valuable
books and other articles may be
obtained, make up the most de
sirable Calendar we have ever
seen. The first coupon article
is Hood's Practical Cook's
Book, a handsome, useful vol
ume of 350 pages. Ask your
druggist for Hood's Coupon
Calendar, or send G cents in
stamps for one to C. I. Hood
& Co., Lowell, Mass.
!i ea
Tetter. Salt -Rheum and Eczema.
The intense itchinsr and smarting, inci
dent to these diseases, is instantly allayed
by applying Chamberlain's Eye and
Skin Ointment. Many very bad cases
have been permanently cured by it. It
is equally efficient for itching piles and
a favorite remedy for sore nipples.
chapped hands, chilblains, frost bites
and chronic sore eyes. 25 eta. per box.
Dr. Cady's Condition Powders, are
just what a horse needs when In bad
condition. Tonic, blood purifier and
venniftiEre. i They are not food but
medicine and the best in use to put a
horse in prime condition. Price 25
cents per package.
For sale by N. B. Hood, Drug
gist, Dunn, N. C. - j
Loaded stick of Wood Explodes-
One of the most unusual ac
cidents that has ever taken
place in Charlotte, occurred on
South College street, in the col
ored settlement, last night be
tween seven and eight o'clock.
The family of Ed. Rosebor
ough, colored, was seated around
the fire. A fresh stick of wood
was thrown on, and there was
an immediate explosion .tnat
shook the whole house like an
earthquake, while a broadside
of bullets poured from the fire
place. The mother and four
children were seated around the
fire and when the list of the
wounded was made up it was
found that five were wounded.
Roseborough's wife was shot in
the neck tand thigh; a seven
year -old child was shot in the
stomach ; another child was
shot in the - eye ; anothor was
shot simultaneously in both
shoulders ; and the fourth one
had his hand almost torn off
and was shot in the mouth,
they are all seriously wounded
and the bullets or slugs have
not been located.
Roseborough was out of the
house at the time. He thinks
there must have been as many
as thirty-two bullets in the stick
of wood. He says he bought
the wood at Taylor's wood yard
on Ninth street. He does not
know who loaded the stick. He
is a deserving, hard-working
colored man and is employed at
Page & Medlin's shop. Char
lotte News, 3rd.
Ilitcklen'a A nil on. Snlve.
The best Salve in the world
for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers,
saltrheuui, fever sores, tetter,
chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skin eruptions,
and positively cures jriles, or
no pay required. It is guaran
teed to give perfect satisfaction
or money refunded. Price 25
cents per box. For sale by N.
B. Hood, Druggist.
New Names for the Same Old
Thines.
"New names for old things,"
remarked a gentleman yester
day, "are the order of the day.
There are from time to time
heavy rainfalls in this country,
which in the old times were
characterized as 'downpours,'
or something of that kind. Now,
however, we learn of 'cloud
bursts' everywhere. Eve'ry
time a mill creek overflows or a
hay crop gets suddenly spoiled,
it is attributed to a 'cloudburst.'
People have been dying from
stoppage of the heart's action
since the beginning of mortali
ty, and yet it is . but recently
that we began to hear of 'heart
failure.' A heated term is now
produced by a 'hot wave;' all
sickness that the doctors can
not understand is attributed to
'Bri ght's disease,' and living
cheaply in summer is called 4go
ing into the country.' The nom
enclature is different, but the old
things are the same." New
Orleans Time-Democrat.
I SSTE
IND
-TRUE.
Ki:cAi,Lr.i.
BY UAROARKT J. PRESTOX.
I would not call thee buck unles
Thou couldst return In Just tlie guUc
Tin 11 ever wcaret to my eyes
The very form whose nipt cart'M
Diew, with the warmth of its embrace.
Heart close to heart, and face to face;
Thus would I only cull thee back.
I would not call thee back with all
That radiant luster on thy brow, J
That would tut make nic conscious how
Immeasurably far above
All human bliss all mortal thrall,
Thou art not needii g eaithly love
That love that aches to call thee buck.
Not with the halo round thy hair,
Sot with the splendor In thine eye ,
Tbat dazzle soul in Paradise
Not lu the vestment spirits wear,
Would I behold thee : uch a ight
Would blind my vision with a light
That would not let me call thee back
It would but only make ine know
That farther than the farthest star
The mysteries of thy being are
From mine, so dashed with mortal woe ;
And I might feel, with poignant pain,
That we were not one soul, hut twain;
And then I could not call thee back.
Oh, couldst thou only come, beloved,
As when we parted! heart a-thrlll
With nil the thousand memories still,
By which thy deathless love was proved,
How would I were one hour thus given,
Lent for my solace out of heaven
Dare all, brave all, and call thee back.
A Famous Iloe's Feat
Mrs. Thomas F. Bayard's
famous collio dog Roy Mac-
gregor stopped a runaway horso
near DeJamoro Place to-day and
probably savGd a woman and
child from serious injury.
The woman was driving a
light wagon, when tho horso
took fright and plunged rapidly
down the road tho occupants of
the carriage screaming. As tho
horse dashed by Delamoro Placo
Rob jumped from the yard and
barking loudly, leaped at tho
bridle of the horso. This ho
caught in his teeth and held on,
suspended in tho air. The
maddened horso veered to ono
aide, and after going a short
distance, came to a, standstill,
and Rob released his hold 011
the bridle.
The woman jumped from tho
carriage, patted itoo on tno
head as he stood wagging Ins
tail and with tongue out. Tho
child affectionately kissed tho
dog, and then tho woman con
tinued her journey, tho horse
jogging away peacefully. Tho
neighbors who saw the incident
did not learn tho woman h
name. Wilmington, Del., Dis
patch 4th.
IlcfleciioiiM of ft Itachelor.
Every man knows when a
girl is trying to look at him
with a dumb question in her
eyes.
The first thine the snake did
after lie had finished with Eden
was to lick uupicrs arrow-
points.
Give a man ropo enough and
ie'll hanir himself: nive a worn-
and rope enough and she'll lasso
man.
I have noticed that when di
vorced people go through reli
gious revivals they don t al
ways get married again.
When a man first falls inlovo
he tears around like a circus
tiger tho first time it' has ever
seen an umbrella. Ex.
The State Guard now num
bers 1,794 men, an increase
during the year of 153. Troops
were called out eight times last
year to aid the civil authorities.
WOOD'S SEEDS are tvccbMy crown and
tflrctrH to tatxi the Deeds and rcquirementi of
Southern Growers,
Vood's Descriptive Catalogue is mott valu
able and helpful in giving cultural directions
and valuable information about all seeds
specially adapted to the South.
VEGETABLE and FLOWER SEEDS,
Qnss and Clover Seeds, Seed
- Potatoes. Seed OaU
and all
Garden and Farm Seeds.
Vrite for Descriptive Catalogue. Mailed free.
' T. W. WOOD & SONS,
SEEDSMEN, . - - RICHMOND, VA.
TKE IARCF.ST SUD KC'JSE 11 TEt SC Ji