Newspapers / The Northampton County Times-News … / May 21, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
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INCORRECT DATE Correct date: 13 aooke Ctowami Ti ANDREW J. CONNER, Publisher. CAROLINA, CAROLINA, HEAVEN'S BLESSINGS ATTEND HER." SUBSCRIPTION SI.CO Per Annum. VOLUME XII. RICH SQUARE, NORTHAMPTON COUNTY; N. C, MAY 21 , 7903. NUMBER 21. lOnieSo 3- - - Lost Hair "My hair came out by the hand ful, and the gray lisurs iiepan to creep in. I tried AVer's Hair Vicor, and it stopped the hair from com ing out and restored the color." Mi's. M. D.Gray, No. Salem, Mass. There's a pleasure in offering such a prepara tion as Ayer's Hair Vigor. It gives to all who use it such satisfaction. The hair becomes thicker, longer, softer, and more glossy. And you feel so secure in using such an old and reliable prepara tion. il.Hl irattls. All dresjista. If your drmnciss cannot ttinply yoa, lend'ns or? ii'.'Ii-r p.iut we will express yoa a bo'Lle. Be j-.nd five tbe name ot your nearest exT-rrss olbce. Address, ... J.C.AYfT? :(.. Loivell. Mas. HOTKL BURGWYN. . - . ' JACKSON, N. C. JAMES SCULL, PROPR. - R;it 8 $4.00 per dy. 50a. per mea CLEV ELAND HOTEL V fackso ', N. C. : L P. GRANT, PROPRIETOR. . -Terms Son per meal or$2-00 per day. : ' Special rsres-by the week or month. r JamjDS A. Worrell ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW J Jackson, N. 0. Practice in nil crvrts. Business " promptly and faithfully at tended to N BBS s. GlT lilSI.VMO 3. MlDYBTTK Gay & Mi yette - ATTORNEYS AiNO COUNSELORS AT LAW JACKSON, N. C ' ' ; Practice iu nil courts. Busmes pnmpUy and faithfully attended tr- -C. G. Fbb(;bs , P. R. Harms Peebles & Harris ATTORNEYS A'O COUNSELLERS AT LAW '-. Practice in all courts. tSusi " ness promptly and faithlulily at tended to' , - Dr. W. J. . Ward DENTIST, ' A7ELDONT:Nr.C- kDE. J. JACOBS Dentist - Can be found in his office at all . times except wden notice is given in this paper. Woodland, N. C. M.T.-Off AVIS EAOtE10WN,N.C. HOUSE CARPENTER. Am prepared to do flrst class work. See or correspond with me before contracting House Moving Over 20 Years Experience E. S. ELLIOT I Rich Square, N. (V A, E. COPBLA.M D. JOSIAH COPELAJiD Ne are now prepared to move hr :s 'of any size. Prices low I ill b to your interest to see-.us. COPf-L NT BROTHERS, . f:'eorf . N. C Car load of Corn . . Just received a car load ol good Southern hue r'orn that wil mane go id bread. ,i It o a car lond of e ch of the following: Shp Stuff and pure wheat Bran, good Timothy Hay, Cotton Seed Halls nd Meal I .-ell at both wholesale and retnl ' priced. If von n ed anything in my " line you miJiitg v nvjoey by g."t - ting my prices Respectfrllv, V. F. OTJI LAND, - ' ' - Woodland, N. 0. Are Tou ' TO -U VT THE CEL MB R 4 TE Creeltsvill-3 Mill FLOUR It is made from the Choiceet S heat. Notice that sweet nut ty flavor. . Guaranteed pure and Wholesome Manufactured by . P. T. HICKS. If other Floors than those we sell - For reasc-DS that we cannot tell, ' Usorp th-place they own should take In spite o? price that we make, . .-. . . And imn to tLink they've come to stay - We kad you means to l' end . your way The Kindfim of Home'. Dark is the night, and fitfully, die rily Rushes Ihe wind like the waves of the sea; Little care I, as here I sing cheerily. Wife, at my side and baby on my knee; -; Kimr, king, crown me the king; Home is the kingdom and love is the king. Flashes the fir lightNupon th dear faces, Dearer and dearer as onward we go; Forces the shadow behind as, and places : Brightness round u with warmth in the glow. King, king, crown me the kint; , Home is the k ngdoni and love is the king. Flashing the loveligbt, increasing the k lory, Beaming frrm yes I r'ght with warmth of the soul Telling of trust and content the fcweet story, Lifting the shadows that over ns roll. : King, king, crown me the king; Honre is the kingdom and love is the king. Richer than miser wiih perished treasure, Served with a service no conqnest con Id bring; Happy with fortune that words cannot measa e, Light-hearted I on the h arthstone can sing. King, king, crown me the king; Home is the kingdom and love is the king., Selected. BRYAN ON ROADS. General Miles Favors Govern-! mental Aid in Improving the Program of the Meet Iioatls Farmers Should v ;;.:' r - ine. Insist on them. ; At the recent meeting of the ! National and Intel-national Good loads Convention held in St. Louis Gen. Nelson A. Miles, who is president of the national high way commission, made an ad- ress on "Military Roads and a National Highway," and said in part: 'Our government has ex pended $500,000,000 for the im provement of our harbors and waterways, and now the atten tion of t he public is being called to our postal roads and avenues, ol communication that are most useful and important to all our people. If such expenditures of the national Treasury had been made in the past for the develop ment - of railroads and water ways, is it not now a most ap propriate time that the improve ment f our roads should receive national attention and govern ment aid?" Ex-Governor Hogg, of Texas, pointed out the necessity for good roads, which, he believed, could be secured only through tne aid oi tne national govern ment. Ho spoke of the insular policy of the government, and said if some of the money that is being squandered in the Philip pines could be used here m the improvement of the highways, our roads would be in a far bet ter condition. Win. J. Bryan spoke the af ternoon session, receiving an ova tien. He said, in past: ' "The ex penditure of money for the per manent improvement of the com mon roads can be defended, first as a matter of justice to the peo ple who live in the country; sec ond as a matter of advantage to the people who do not live in the country, and third, on the ground that the welfare of the nation de mands that the comfort of coun try life shall, as far as possible, keep pace with the comforts of citv life. It is a well known fact or a fact easily ascertained that the people in the country, while paying their full share of county, State and Federal taxes, receive as a rule only the general benefits of government, while the people m the cities have, in addition, good streets, sidewalks, etc. The improvement of the coun try roads cau be justified also on the ground that the farmer, the first and most important of the producers of wealth, ought to be in a position to hold his crop and market it at the most favorable opportunity, whereas at present he is virtuall under compulsion to sell it as soon as it is matured because the roads may become impassable at any time during the fall, winter or sprinp:. In stead of ljeing his own warehouse man, the farmer 'is compelled to emploj' middlemen and share with them the profit upon his labor. The farmer has a right, too, to insist upon roads that will enable him to go to town, to church, to the school house and to the home of his neighbors as occasion may ramire and with the extension of rural delivery as he has an additional need for good roads in order that he may be kept in communication with the outside world. : You Know Whit you are Takln Wheu you take Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic because the formula is plainly irinted on every bottla snuwing tiiat it is simply Iron and Quinine in a tasteless form. No Cure, No Pay. 50c. N-C. PRESS ASS0CI1TI0I Meets at WrightsviUe flrst of JuIt The next annual meeting of the North Carolina Press Association will he held at Wrightsville Beach on Wednesday and Thursday, July 1 and 2. Arrangements have been made for ihe members of the Association to be quarter ed at the Seashore Hotel, at the rate of $1.50 "per day. President Marshall has ap pointed Essayists for the meet ing, as follows: 1. Some Recollections of News paper Men and Events. A Young Man s Reminiscences Major H. A. London, of the Chatham Rec ord..:. .-- 2. Typographical Correctness and Mechanical Excellence. Are They Worth While? J. D. Biv- ins, Albemarle Enterprise. 3. The Local Advertiser. How May He Be Best Secured, Served and Retained? D. J. Whichard, of the Greenville Reflector. 4. The Young Man and North Carolina Journalism. What Have They in Store for Each Other? W. Bailey, of the Biblical Re corder. Efforts are being made to se cure a journalist of national rep utation to address the Associa tion at the meeting. Definite and detailed announcements regard ing this and -all other matters connected with the meeting will be made m a later circular. Mr. Archibald Johnson, of Char ity and Children will deliver the Annual Oration, and Mr. J. R. Swann will read the Annual Poem on Wednesday night, July 1 Both the President's Address, by Mr. Marshall, on Wednesday morning, r and the Historian's Paper, by Mr. C. II. Poe, of the Progressive Farmer, on Wednes day afternoon, will be of special interest. J. B. Sherrill., Sec. Tut) Uses of Tut pentiue Terpentine, eitner mresmous form or in spirits, .has a house hold value. A child suffering: with the croup or any throat or lung difficulty will be quickly re lieved by inhaling the vapor and having the chest rubbed until the skin is red, and then being wrap ped about with flannel moistened with fiery spirits, Afterward sweet oil will save the skin from irritation,; says the Woman's Home Companion. In the case of burns and scalds turpentine has no equal It is the best dress ing for patent leather; it will re move paint from artists' clothes and workmen's garments; it will drive away moths if a few drops are put m closets and chests; it will persuade mice to find other quarters if a little is poured into the mouse holes; one tablespoon- ful added to the water in which linens are boiled will make the goods wonderfully white; a few drops will prevent starch from sticking; mixed with beeswax it makel the best floor polish, and mixed with sweet oil it is unrival ed as a polish for furniture the latter mixture should be two parts of sweet oil to one part of turpentine. Some physicians recommend spirits of turpentine. applied externally, for lumbago and rheumatism. . It is also pre scribed for neuralgia of the face. Ex. When you want a pleasant physic try Chamberlain's Stomach aid Liver Tablets. They are easy to take and pleasant in effect. For sa.e by Rich Square Drug Co., Rich Square; J. L. Outland, Woodland EDUCATIOMAL PROGRESS Xorth Carolina People More In terested in Education Than Politics. ' At the recent session of the Con ference for Education in the South held in Richmond, Va., Dr. Charles D. Mclver, Secretary of the Board, made his report of the work of the past year from which we copy the following, of special interest to North Caroli na: : Dr. Mclve said: "My work as district director has been largely, though not en tirely, confined to North Carolina, and practically all of it has been done in connection withf and through the following agencies. "I. Educational conferences or various purposes. "H. A systematic popular campaign for local taxation. "III. THe organization and work of the Woman's Associa tion for the Betterment of Pub lic School Houses in North Caro lina. V Educational conferences were held ; in Raleigh, Greensboro, Charlotte, and Hickory. The distinctive feature of the Raleigh conference was general organiza tion. The object of the Greens boro and Charlotte conferences was the promotion of the idea of community philanthropy. The object of the Hickory conference was to saturate a community with such educational sentiment as would prepare it to vote a lo cal tax for schools. "At Charlotte we undertook to raise $6,000, which, in turn, the General Education Board agreed to duplicate, with the understad ing that two-thirds of the amount should go to the rural schools of Mecklengurg county and one-third to the schools of Henderson county, situated in the mountain section of the state, As a result of the Charlotte con ference several districts in Meck- enburg county have held local tax elections and in most of them the vote has been favorable. As a result of the Hickory confer ence that town has already voted a local tax for the establishment of a graded school. "In the month of June, 1902, an active campaign for local tax ation was begun in North Caro lina. Two hundred or more speeches were made. The most conspicuous campaigners were Governor Aycock, ex-Governor Thomas J. Jarvis, Congressman John H. Small, B. F. Dixon, R. White, J. W. Bailey, A. M. Scales, R. D. Douglas, State Supt Joyner, and ex-State Supt. C. H. Mebane. The presidents of col- eges, professors in the denomi national and state "colleges, city school superintendents and oth ers aiso tooK an active part m that campaign. The audiences at the educational meetings held in June, July and August were arger than the audiences which attended the political meetings held in September and October, indicating a revolution in public interest in the subject of educa tion. "Just before the close of the last college year I undertook to organize through the students of the State Normal and Industrial College a Woman's Association for the betterment of the Public School Houses of North Carolina This organization now includes students of the Normal College, representative women, teachei s. and others in various sections of the state. About twenty coun ties have good organizations. and literature has been sent to all other counties. The purpose of this association is to organize small clubs or branch associa tions around each public school where there are three or more women who will volunteer their servics to improve the school house and grounds. "As a result of the Greensboro conference a local tax has been voted in nine districts in Guil ford county. It is hoped to have a local tax voted in every dis trict in the county in the next two years. So far our local board has adhered to no hard and fast rule as to the disposi tion of the $8,000 raised at the lireensboro comerence to pro mote local taxation, but usually in the districts that have voted the local tax we have given one dollar for every two raised by private subscription to build and furnish school houses. "Hon. J. Y. Joyner says there are now seventy-nine North Car- ' olina towns and cities and rural districts that have a local tax; that elections are pending in forty-five other communities; and that nearly one hundred other communities are agitating the question with probable elections in the near future. 1 "Recent school legislation in North Carolina has been very fa vorable to education. Every ed ucational appropriation has been increased; every official recom mendation of the State Superin tendent to the recent legislature, except one, has been enacted into aw; the salary of the State Su perintendent has been increased tnirty tnree and one tmrd per cent. Legislation favorable to the promotion of rural libraries and the betterment " of school houses has been enacted. County superintendents salaries in many counties have been increased, and ocal taxation laws enacted with the most favorable provisions. "In cooperation with the school officials and other prominent cit izens, the Southern Education Board has recently begun to or ganize educational campaigns in South Carolina and Georgia. In Georgia there is a movement to amend the constitution so that local taxes can be voted under more favorable conditions. In South Carolina there is much en- husiasm and a vigorous cam paign for local taxation will soon be inaugurated. South Carolina already has two hundred local tax communities." . An Investment in Good Roads Mecklenburg county, in which Charlotte is the principal city. has long been held up as a model by advocates, of road improve ment. That county has for many years been laying excellent mac adam roads that the makers be lieve will last for generations ; A recent statement of Superin tendent of Roads, S. T. Howe, shows that 118 miles of these macadam roads have been con structed and are now in use. The saving to the farmer in transpor tation has been great, as he can send his produce to market in any kind of weather, his team draw several times the loads they could over the old dirt roads. and there are so few break downs that the cost of repairs has been greatly reduced. Farm property along these roads has largely in creased in value, and the farm ing sections are more prosperous The roads are made by con vict labor the county using the latest improved roadmaking ma chinerycrushers and rollers, Rock found near the road is util ized, and trained men superin tend the work. Bonds were issued to pay for this work, and the cost has been considerable, but that it is re garded as a paying investment is shown by the fact that prepar ations are being made to maca damize more than 100 miles more, ; so that all the principal roads in the county may be join ed in a complete system. i ' mm What is Wealth? Does wealth consist in money houses, lands, bank stocks, rail road bonds, etc., alone? We think not. The young man starting m life with no money. but with good digestion, good sleep, good health, and abilitv to work in some profitable em ployment, has what the aged ca italist would be glad to exchange all his millions for. What compensation . is money for sleepless nights and painfu days, or the misconduct of dissi pated children? Which brings the greater haj piness the glitter, show, jealous ies and falsity of fashionable life or the heartfelt friendships whicl prevail so largely in the homes of the industrious poor? In how many of the palaces 6 our millionaires will you find greater happiness in the parlor than in the kitchin? How many millionaires will tel you that they are happier now than when starting in life with out a dollar? On the tops of mountains we find rocks, and ice and snow. It is down in the valleys that we find the vineyards. Let no man envy those richer than himself until taking all things mto account age, health wife, children, friends he is sui he would be willing to exchange Geo. T. Angell, inDumbAni mals. MEMORIAL ADDRESS. Delivered to Franklin Pytliians by S. K. Buxton A Former Citizen of Northampton (Newport News iVa.) Daily Press.) Attorney S. R. Buxton, of this city, was selected to deliver the address last Thursday at the Py thian memorial exercises which were held at Poplar Springs cem etery, Franklin county. Mr. Bux ton delivered an able address. which was highly complimented by those who heard it. It follows .J . in part: MR. Buxton s address. "In the country of time," says modern novelist, "there is an old fashioned garden of years and therein each of us has a little space in- which we toil from the dawn of life to its close. V e plant ting for us at times in the voy hope and there springs up despair age of life, though in turbulent and many things we thought would please with their fragrance only sting and burn. Sometimes we fear that we will leave our task half finished, yet we work on as best we may, hoping, at the last the Wise Gardener will brgive mistakes and only take heed of the blossoms." Some times a workman makes a mis take and the Master Craftsman puts him aside. In the inscrutable wisdom of Him who makes no mistakes, some of those whom we have lov ed and with whom we have work ed in this garden of years have been called upon to cease from their labors. The Supreme Chan cellor of the living and dead has spoken; the decree of the great I Am of all the ages has gone forth and m obedience tnereto tne Har vester of Death ha garnered the npened gram mto bis boundless and eternal store-house. Life has I been swallowed up in deatn, tne corruptible has put on incorrup tion and the mortal has been crowned with immortality. From the throne of Love, and Truth, and Right, and Mercy has issued the summons of the Eternal bid ding some of the men of earth make the great transition from the visible to the invisible, from the finite to the infinite. There- ore it is that we are assembled here at this time to pay tribute to those of our brethren in the order of the Knights of Pythias "uu 111 ieiJ u" "" have passed over the river and become a part of the Choir Invis- The influence of these men like some dim radiance shines on and on unceasingly, giving hope to the heart of him who feels it, and ighting up the pathway of life or those who have known its beneficence. The echo of the mel ody of the lives of these departed brothers still lingers to bless mankind and teach them how to live, When we consider the gracious ness of this influence, andits ben eflcence to revert to TnnnViTil our minrlsl the lives of the men from which it flowed and we strive to ascertain the secret. The Hon. II. L. Carson, in a recent address before the University of Pennsylvania, in speaking of the characters of these men who lough they diyet live, saj's "In the action and interaction of the wild waves of life, which sweep in stormy surges through the lives of most men, all the per ishable parts are washed away, and there appears the rock-rib bed hills, which stands for firm ness, for integrity, for nobility of aims, on whose sides can be seen inscribed in characters to be read by all, she lessons of their lives; and as they recede in that haze of years which pass one by one like cloud rifts before us, finally the illumined summits appear on which the eyes love to linger be cause tney point to an atmos phere of holliness." Therein lies the secret of it all the rock-ribbed hills, standing for firmness, integrity and nobil- ify of aim. It is good for us to contemplate these men, their lives, their characteristics, that we may me ueiternve. i-ms would be abundantly true even if we consider it only in the light of our individual lives and of those with whom we come in contact, It is more than true when we re member that as individuals we are responsible for and constitute the character of our national life. It is as tine as the law of compensation that a nation is no better than the individuals who compose it, and that the na tional character is but the reflec tion of the character of the indi- vidnal. It is well, therefore, for us to consider these things and at this time. .In this day and age of coniiner cialisni, marked though it may lie by proirress and development. when for a brief season we have left our former moorings, and when, as to the children of Israel before Mount Sinai, the golden calf of accumulated", wealth has been chosen as the goddess at whose shrine "we'.-.worship, it is vilV frit" na . r r' 11 ut in li,ii , , , , . .. v t of march betore proceeding furth er toward the promised land. In this day when greed and gain have voluntarily been chosen as the watch words of our civiliza- tion, and the almighty dollar has been designated as the end and purpose of our existence, it is fit- waters, to cast anchor, cousult our log and chart-book, to deter. mine whether we can pursue our mapped-out course and reach the haven for which we sailed It is not my purpose at this time to strike any discordant note, or to give utterance to any pessimistic sentiment, that may mar the harmony of these ele ments already attuned to the melodious music that makes for the highest in culture and civili zation, or that may retard the efforts of him, who conscious of strength born of light purpose, is striving to overtnrow tins mammon of unrighteousness. My only desire is that, in some way, leeble tliough it may be, shall be enabled to point out to you that which I believe to be the foundation stone, though re- jected by the builders, of our civ- nation. Universal brotherhood i8 my theme. Thirty-eight years ago, while our country was au but rent m twain by sectional strife, and darkness, symbolical of death, en shrouded in impenetrable gloom the whole face of our land, there appeared on the eastern horizon, as a sign of surcease and a prom ise to mankind that never again should we be involved in interne cine strue, tne star oi I'vtnian ism. Higher and higher shall this star ascend in the heavens, Htmo-Iioi nnrl bTio"lTf-oT clml! if a low U11til as it reaches the zenith of its glory, faith in uua , avt , . . , . anA . LLlctll HUltHJlI. XlUUUiiU Llir i5Ut ceeding - - generations this star shall add new lustre to its brill iancy, with each recurring year, until man shall scarce be able to behold its effulgent brightness. The fundamental principle ol our order, the cornerstone, as it were, upon which we rest, is uni versal brotherhood. Friendship Charity and Benevolence wel styled the Pythian trinity are the elements which we believe go . , .n,:,. 1. i t iiuttve. up mis uiuiuuuuu. x.v luv l"" CA" 1W "4 lu.lw v" tues, which we seek to mstul mto the lives and hearts of our mem bers, division walls of strife and hatred are made to rejoice. It is these indestructible virtues that bind us together in an in dissoluble union or brotherhood By the dissemination of the simple great principles of moral ity we are instrumental in mold ing not only the individual, but the national life as well. The strength of a nation lies more in the virtue of its people than iiri its intellectual attainments. The history of the past bears nie out in the statement that the civiliza tion which is to last is that which is upheld by a virtuous, as wel as an enlightened body ol citi zens. 1 here are manv among us to day who think that a complet civilization, a civilization that will stand the test of time, may be built or founded on intellectu al attniuments, or in military and connncTciar prowess. But I declare unto you that there must be something '..higher '.ami broad er and deeer than either of these foundations. You mar give to man the strength of an Achilles, or the erudition and wisdom of a Plato, to the exclusion of heart culture, and vou will make linn instead Of a benedic tion to man kind a Tiositive menace and evil to human society. Look, if you will, at the civilizations of yester day. If intellectual attainment be the acme of all civilization then the world-wide power today would be that ot the Greeks in stead of the Anglo-Saxon. Among the nations that have lived in all the annals Of history, whether of & antiquity or of today, there is . none comparable to the ancient -Greek from an intellectual stand- ' v points. Her poets, her orators, L: fi ller philosophers, her historians," -; are unsurpassed in tne range of - iterature. Homer, Demosthenes,' lato and Herodotus in their re- pective fields of work, are un- equaled. In statesmanship me was par-excellence: science, archi-, ; tecture, in the fine arts, in short, : in all education, she was first. v -And yet. despite her advance- - ment, there had been sown in her soil the seed of corruption,-which' springing up in the weeds of death brought ruin and.desola- ';" tion to a once fair land. ; ' ' And so with ancient Rome the proud mistress of the earths : At the height of her glory, the . strength other cohorts' wereirre- sistible and with one mighty sweep, under the banner of the in vincible eagle, her soldiery caus-"', '- ed the then known world to bot?- the knee before the throne of the" ' Emperor of Rome. Her system of codified laws was the most per feet of all systems. And yet de- 1 spite her prowess, despite her aws, she became a fulfillment of .'; that law, as inexorable ias the aw of the Medes and Persians, that all things human must have : their end. - . ' ' . . It is our purpose by the dissem -. mation of these principles that - make for universal brotherhood, to see to it that the civilization r of which we are a part shall not : suffer a like fate, but snail be per manent and lasting. ; . ' LIDDELLCOi Charlotte, N, C , That's the name and address of the makers of the best class of ginning machinery. A cotton cleaning feeder which is as simple as any other, is " neluded in our comnlete rosipt outfits. - . ENGINES, BOILERS, SAW MILLS POLIiEYS AND SHAFTING, AC, Largest shops in the State best tools. ; Write for catalogues, or ask tor a salesman. New Spring Goods and Newest Styles Just from the Great Metropo-, lis with Goods TJp-To-Date to 1 please the most fastidions. My store is filling to overflowiw with the prettiest and finest Spring stock I've ever been able : :o display and in all the differ ent classes of goods Pve been ac'." :. customed to keep Millinery in- . eluded. The embroideries sur pass anything I've ever had be fore. All yoa want to convince '" yon is to take a look at them. If yoa want an Up-To-Date White Wsist and Skirt we will V be pleased to show them jn the Mercerized, also the Basket 1 Weave nothing newer for -Skirts than Basket Weave Shep- . herd Checks in wash goods 5 -which comes in black and white :? checks. A fine line of Ladies and Children '8 Slippers. .The latest colonial in fine patent leather np to 2.25 . - Some beantifnl colored dress -goods in all the latest novelties; and stripes. Call and examine 3.;: for yourselves -"'; ;.":.;'- -. Yours to Serve, . ; ... MATTIE C. PURVIS, P&0PEIET02, ; New York Racket Stare . '. VVOODLANB. N. C ' t J. T FUTBELL . RICH SQUARE, N. C. DKAXR IN Watches, Clocks, Gnns and Jew elry of all kinds. Repairing promptly done and : charges reasonable. I ask the privilege of naming you trices, and solicit yonr patronage. 5 f?
The Northampton County Times-News (Rich Square and Jackson, N.C.)
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May 21, 1903, edition 1
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