Newspapers / The Northampton County Times-News … / Feb. 25, 1904, edition 1 / Page 1
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OA) wan " . v ; n mm, mm ANDREW J. CONNER, PUBLISHER "CAROLINA, CAROLINA, HEAVEN'S BLESSINGS ATTENE ITER SUBSCRIPTION $1.00 PER ANNUM VOLUME Xin. RICH SQUARE, NORTHAMPTON COUNTY, N. C, FEBRUARY 25, 1004. " .NUMBER 8 AMrs Give nature three helps, and cearly every case of con camption will recover. Fresh lir, most important of alL (Cherry Pectoral I'curishinj Food comes next. Then, a medicine to control tie cough and heal the lungs. Asi any good doctor. I ant am Ayert Cherry Peetorl it y am m. I hara Men terrible cue of hint! dte nir eared by It, I m nerer without it." AABibx a Hamilton Marietta, Ohio. e..ste-p.oe. - - - f a ybk oo.. Consumption health demands daily action of the bowels. Aid nature witrrAyer's Pills. HOTbL BURGWYN. JACKSON, N. C. ; 'JAMES SCULL, PROPR. Kates $2.00 per day. 50c. per.mea CLS ELAND II0TEL lackses, K. C J. S. C2ANT, tR0PKET0B. Term 60c per meal or O-OO per day. , - Special nte by the week or month. Bis S. Gat. ; GaLSDE. Alloxans 7C "7 ci Ilidyotto ATT: ITfS AXrCoWiSELOEfc AT LAW: . JACXCOH JJ. C - Pnctioe ia all court. - Business jrorcjUy and fiithfully attended t C C Missus. F. B. Hahhii Pc 2 jlca'cw Harris . att.:;:y$ axs counselled at law , Jackson, N. C . , -:" Practice' in' all courts. Kusi ; mess pramptiy and faithfully at tended to . - .V - Jcirr-cs A. rcrroll . 11, 0. . PrcZlce in all courts. ' Business frc:;y and faithfully attended-ta D2iG. G. POWELL V DENTIST. ; POTECASI, N. . Cca be found at his office at, : eZL tines except when notice : ; b given in this paper. ; Dr.W. Ji.Ward - DZIT2IDT, ' iVELDON.N.a ' "DH." J. IL JACOBS Dentist . -T Can Is found in hi office at all - time except wdm 'notice is given r ' tn'tis paper. ' -: iJTZl le tn Boxobel week after 2nd Cnnday ifi-each month - i i-" WOODLAND, N. C . M.T.CHAVIS, y ; EA6LE10WN, 2T. C. . v HOUSE CAEFE17TER. - Xm prepared to do first class work. See or eorrespend with me before contracting House Moving" Over 20 Years Experience .E. 8. ELLIOTT. 1 . ' Klch Square, N. C. A. K. CorsLASD. -:j .. . Joeun CorLAHD HOUSE HOVERS "-.J rVa ar now piepared to move ; hen jes of any size. Prices low 7 -r iU be to yojir interest to see us, COPELAND BROTHERS, -Georee, N. C Wod'sSeeds. . Twenty-five years practical ex perience, and the fact that we do the largest busineeftin Seeds in the Southern States, enables us to supply every requirement in - tkim AND FARM SEEDS to the very best advantage, both as regards quality and price. Truckers and Fanners requiring large quantities of Seeds are requested to write for special 11 yc of W If vou have not received a copy 01 WOOD'S &t;&u tsuua. for 1904. write for it. There Is not anciher publication anywhere ta&t approache it in the useful iud practical Information that it gives to Southern farmers and gardeners. Weed's Sa4 Beak wffl be aultad oaraawest. Wri f dy: - eaatdclajr. hill .-4 t Woiivf witwaAtuuil) r.:::::::n3,. - virbiria. Remember The Living. Oh,-''' my friend, if you think aght - worth saying ,;. That may cheer me along on life's .: vy Do not lessen thegood by debyinr If I merit, commend me today. Hey far better is one kind word - v . spoken. To fall foil on the sentient ear Than profusion of tribute and token To the dead who no longer can heart Have you praise, then defer not the . giving; Hare you wreaths, place them now on my head; , For one rosebud is more to me living - Than a flower-strewn grave to me dead. Dedicated to the Sunshine Socittv by William w ng Love. Party Dehts to Newspapers After the last election the Char lotte Observer had a well consid ered article on the subject of the unpaid and f unpayable debts which parties and politicians owe to the newspapers, especially the country newspapers, which print the full country ticket at their mast-head, and do besides all manner of gratutious booming or candidates for office directly or through the medium of corre spondence contributed by their friends.'. It wai pointed out that hardly one of these organs print ed less than a thousand dollars -worth ; of such party literature gratuitous and the Charlotte paper thought it was ' a foolish practice, but, yet a kind of folly which would : long be continued though probably in lessening de gree. , Of course, the successful candi dates do theifiebest to make some return for this gratuitous by giv rag to the .county paper that kept the successful county ticket standing all through -the cam. paign,' as much public jprinting as the law authorizes, but that necessariiy falls far short of val ue received. - The unspeakable in gratitude and meanness orgiv ing any portion of the public printing to papers that do not support the ticket w as not avert ed to by the Charlotte paper, no doubt because it could not imag Ine that such a base thing eould occur. J,. The subject is one to which thS4 newspaper fraternity is giving more and more attention, as the money '..value of advertising is more and more realized. 'The Baltimore Sun - makes the con tending politicians in it baliwick pay for their communications, and it .is Drobable that it receiv es a hundred, Thousand dollars per - annum from that source alone, and hence is able to make a. better paper for the genera public Fayetteville Observer, x - j sjaj 1 ar i Sf What a Farmer Can do In Vitr. He can take care of his stock see tnat it is well-stabled and welL'fed., - and that it gets suffici ent exercise . He can repair tools of all kinds and get them ready for work in the spring. He can "fix up things in the barn so . that they will be more convenient. He can do this in the house, too. He can, during pk asant days look over ,the wood lot, cut old trees for wood or lumber, clear out : brush where necessary, pre pare wood for next winter, etc. He can grub out bushes, fill ditches, haul away agones, and repair fences, , if any of these things need to be done. He can get his hotbeds going. He can do many of the little odd jobs that he has neglected because he did not have time to do them. He can stu dy seed catalogues, implement catalogues, and al. other catalogues vhich are likely to be useful to him. He can lay out his plans for the coming year. He can read and study agricui tural papers and books, and oth er erood books and DaDers. It would be a good idea for him to select - some branch of his work for special study, and to take this up systematically and thor oughly. He can visit the schools. , Best of all, he can rest, and can : cultivate the virtues of pa tience and cheerfulness. E. E, Miller in Farm Journal W. B. Hearst. A Democratic Presidential Possibility ' (New' Bern Journal) ' Very many men, with political aspirations, have at times'been received with the smile of toler ance, but their pretences for pb-'i itical recognition were at the same time discredited and ignor ed by those who appeared to be political wiseacres. A few months ago when the claim was made that Mr. William R. Hearst, of New York City, but best known as the proprietor of great leading newspaper dailies in New York. Chicasro. and San b rancisco, was an aspirant for r residential honors at the hands of the National Democratic par ty, it was received with the umile of incredulity . and treated as a oke, The few newspapers which treat ed Mr. Hearst's candidacy as se nous, were the subject of jest by their contemporaries, in fact lr. Hearst and his possible Presiden tial pretences were put down as another attack, or a new form of this gentleman's so-called jour nalism. But-two recent events place a different aspect upon Mr Hearst as a Democratic Presidential pos 8lbihty. ' The first was the change in the proposed place of: holding the National Democratic nominating convention, from Chicago, to St Louis. Why? Because Chicasro was the home of one of Mr; Hearst's newspapers, and this in fluence might tend to promote Mr. Hearst's Democratic theories and personal political aspira tions ' to the confusion of those Democrats whose theories or po- itical desires and hopes differed from those ef Mr. Hearst, And recently, at a meeting of the Democratic State Committee of Illinois, in Chicago, there was an open , outburst between two 'actions, one headed by James H Eckels and Congressman James R. Williams, these gentlemen and their friends, making the state ment tnat democratic success was not to be gained by appeal. ing to those elements of discon tent, and disburbers of peace, meaning the populists and so cialists. The other faction is said to uave disagreed -wren tms pro gram, or perhaps with the lead ers who sought to control the meeting. ; And this other faction were followers of W. R. Hearst, and they claim to have won at this meeting, which means Demo cratic recognition in Illinois for Mr. Hearst's Presidential aspira tions. It is nearly five months before; the Democrats meet in conven tion to name their Presidential candidate. There are many names mentioned;- but is there any name at this time which snows tne potentiality as a pos-; sible Presidential candidate, even nominee, as does that name, WiU Hum RflTiilolnh Hf.rst, rt - t t : . 4. j 1 tant factor in the n xt Democrat ic, convention at St. Louis, in o uij, puuidi Mgus 4--. Vhf. AAni!i1aM1 a a nniW-unrtinir T..i.. u 1:: 1 ,.: - for the above two incidents are certain ly straws, which the wise politi-1 cian will not be slow, in noting, and guiding himself thereby, in the coming campaign, if he disa grees with Mr. Hearst and his po litical aspirations' for the Presi dency. Receive every inward and out ward trouble every disappoint ment, pain, uneasiness, tempta tion, darkness and dissolation, with both thy hands, as a true opportunity and blessed occasion of dying to self, and entering in to a fuller fellowship with tho self denying, sufferiug Saviour Look at no inward or outward trouble in any other view, reject every other thought about it, and then every kind "of trial and distress will become the blessed day of thy prosperity. That state is best which exerciseth the highest faith in and fullest resignation to God. William Law. Chamberlain's S tonne U aul Liv er Tablets. Unequalled For Constipation Mr. A. fi. Kane, a promi ent druggist of Baxter Springs, Kan., says: "Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets are, in my judgment the most superior preparation of anything in use today for constipa tion. They are sure in action and with no tendency to nauseate or grip. For sale by Rich Square Drug Co., J. L. Outlan J Woodland. What War has Done foe Y hy Girls so Generally Dis Civllrztioiu like Housework. (By Rev. T. B. Gregory.) There is nothing the matter, with the cry of horror that arises these days when two nations go to war. . That cry is all right. It shows i; thn.t, the wmld hsia Advanced. EC - ' r and that its head is clearer and its heart ; kinder than they used to be. . ' But it is well, nevertheless, not to be blind to the truths of his tory, among which truths is this one that war, instead of being art unmixed evil, has been one of the most potent factors in the great work of civilizing the world , Tremendous evil as war is of it self considered, it is yet an evil out of which an incalculable amount of good has grown. Cruel, bloodthirsty, devilish, this great evil has been the school in which humanity has learned many of its noblest les sons. . - ; . It was in the school- of war that men first learned to be obe dient, to curb their temper, to regulate their terrible self-will, and to acknowledge the order which is the basis of all human society War means discipline, discipline means self-control, and self-control is the first step away from barbarism. V . v; It was in war, too, that men learned courage not only physi cal courage, but moral courage; for it takes both to be a soldier. In the grim school of the bat tlefield man was taught to be brave, to. give and take the battle-shock' without whining in a word, to be a man. . It must not be forgotten that courage is the real foundation of true manhood. It is hard to think man; of a cc ward as being a or as having within him tliRTnakiiio- of a, ttiji.ti The man with a heart, even' though" " it be" 'a'somewhat ferc" cious one, may. become gentle as well as .courageous; but an out-and-out coward is nobody. . In war, again, men learned the divine virtue of self-sacrifice The soldier must feel, first of all, that he belongs not to him self, but to the cause in which he is engaged. Not abvays is it a worthy cause: -very often it is just the re versef but it is at least a cause, and for this cause the soldier must, if it is necessary, sacrifice himself. In the early times men were to a much greater ., extent than is the case today lawless, selfish, and, strange as itmighfl seem, at heart cowardly, and there is no estimating the value that war has been to mankind in teaching, as- necessarily it could not help but teach," the lessons of courage, order and self-forgetfulness. for ! it was out Gf these same virtues ; that civilization was to grow i . . . . ... .. hrfftkinr 01 mvuzatinn. we tr- o - 1 . ! : f,. .- listed ! pitv-Bt.jita hr aiiH t.horo' Kiir ' ; rouuded b hf)rde8 of wUd sav. ! . 11UU1CL111LJ. These little city states -(centres of light in an ocean of darkness) were obliged to do one of two things tight or perish. In them were the germs of civi lization, the seed of all future progress, the hopes of all the ages to .come, .and if they had not declared war on the surround ihg barbarism they Would have been incontinently -wiped from the face of the earth. v Battles have been fought that were among the holiest events of history. Marathon, that saved the civ ilization of Greece; Tours, that stopped the great tidal wave of Mohammedanism that threaten edto rollover Europe;and Lepan to,' that broke the naval power of ' the followers of Mahomet; Yorktowu, that gave us liberty what are these but holy names, sacred as any in holy writ. Yes, war has had its high and noble uses, but it must' be con fessed that t lie time has come when it should be no longer nec essary for civilized nations to light. There was a time when they had to fight or perish, but now, when practically all of the na tions are civilized, they should settle their differences by reason rather than by the sword. New York American. s The ever.pressing problem of how to get good domestics seems to be pressing with unusual weight upon the housewives of uWw York just now. At bottom the problem is a so . iai one. Most girls who have to be self- supporting prefer the store and the - factory to housework, not because the money rewards and material comforts offered by the latter are" less,. but for the reason that domestic service entails a surrender of personal liberty and a social descent. It is absurd, of course, that in a republic all honest- work should hot be deemed equally honorable but the spirit of caste has been brought over from the Old World, and American girls have an invincible repugnance against confessing themselves inferior to anybody. So they avoid occu pations which would cause them to be "looked down on," howev er unjustly and foolishly The girl who works in a store or shop has fixed hours. Her day's toil done, she is her own mistress: precisely as a worKlnan is his own master. It is not so with the domestic In the great majority of cases the employer insists on regard ing her relation to her servant as feudal. She feels, somehow, tlfaT; she is the girl's guardian and has the right to supervise her 'incomings and outgoings, to question ' her about what she dfoes in her leisure, and to be her "mistress" as well as employer. All f this meddling is usually kindly meant, but none the less it. reduces tiie girl from the stat us Of a free employe to that of a vassal. - . Jje time will come dien house J yrorp will be done on tha same terms as , other. work. '.That is, the employer Twill pay-ep much t AiEJU j-r.-Kfrrfi :BBrifa4ii';r.h l.nnsphnlfl . in sr. n,s the emnlnver now pavs for the services of the - .jj-.-j pwrrwJTiror nr TliimW and w I ho more think of having any-! thing to say about the private concerns of the houseworker than she now does of inquiring into the personal affairs of the carpenter or plumber. And when that time comes-,, when the housework ceases to i llon Ior ner ana 1Tjy earnest de be th.j protegee of the mistress, ! sire that . she should grow up subiect to patronage, cross-ques-1 tioning .":nd reproof as to mat- ters beyond the work paid for, the "servant girl problem" will solve itself. Then caste preju-' uon anu caresses 1 siiowereanp dice will no longer have food to I oil -"her; her peevishness passed feed on, for the houseworker will be as independent as any other worker. The custom of girls living at home and, going to the employ- era' house tdo .'their tasks, as iiirls go to the store and factory is a "rowing one. and should be encouraged. It has its inconven- iences. bnt it makes for personal frwlr.m frf oniniiniriBtinn from the condition of the "servant," Tin.hio oii at n hr,H,a miri to'it not character, or morality, or a superintendence of action which, while in many instance' doubtless salutary, nevertheless causes tnat dislike for housework which is felt so deeply among girls, who have a natural Ameri can desire to belong to themselv es. New York American. Some Very Silly Nicknames of "Women. - "I just cannot be reconciled to nicknames, especially for girls," said an old lady who ressides on Rhode Island avenue, to a party of friends. "It may be all very well for boys," she continued, 'because there's some robust coloring to 'Dick' and 'Jack' and even 'Jim,' and others, and when it conies to girls, a has the nick name, say I. I'm glad my par ents gave me the old fasliioTrted name of Mary and never allowed me to be called Mamie,'or'Mazie' or 'Mollie,' or anything else but plain Mary. "Now you know .'nicknames grow up with their owners, and it's rediculous to hear grand mothers as old as I am called by the tender, little pet names that graced thenl "before they had reached their teens. I can in stance three or four cases that I think will make you agree with me. One of them is that of a la dy whose parents had the excel lent taste of having her christen ed with the noble name of Lu cretia. In her infancy, this little one alwa3'8 pronounced the word cat with the letter 'T' as the ini- tial letter. Her elder brothers, and sisters thought it funny, and burdened her. with the applica tion 'Tat.' That name has gone with her through life, and if you should speak of her as Lucretia to any of her latter day friends they would know whom you were talking about. Even her grand children allude tocher as "Grand ma Tat.' "I have another friend who is a native of NQrth Carolina When she was in pinafores he was call, ed by her old colored nurse and all the darkies on the plantation which her father owned, "Little Missy.' This soon became cor rupted into 'Lilmiss Her brothers and sisters and little friends always called her by this nickname. Her parents did the same thing, ajid to this day she in known to a host of friends by that heathenish nickname. She has almost forgotten that her proper" Christian name is that beautiful Scriptural one of Esther "Still another case that 'gars me greet.' as old Bobbv Burns would say, is that of a spleididM woman, silver-haired, honored, and the mother of great-grand children. . Her proper name, chosen for her before- she entered this vale of tears was Katharine, after her grandmother. This beautiful baby, blessed, with this stately name, fell victim to her parents' idolatry, ai;d was called 'Pet.' Just think of it! An old lady, close upon seventy, known by all her intimate friends, men and women alike, as 'Pet.' 0: course, I don't like nicknames, that is for girls. Boys can go through life with auy name.' Washington t. - How to Make Cuiidrtm Lovely. ' There is just one way that is to surround them by day and night with an atmosphere of love Restraint and reproof may be i nungieq . witn t&e love. DuiloweJ "lUSt pe a constant clement. ." ., - Iouna my S1" was growing uuamiauie . UUU pilUU, SaiU a mother to us the other day,"and reuecuug on it sauiy, i couio on n . . ...... j 1 1 t 1 ly accuse myseli as the cause So I changed my management. and improved every opportunity to Praise dnd encourage her; to assure ner 01 my unoounuea anec 1 a f a 1 to lovely and harmonious worn anhood. As a rose opens to sun hine, so the child's heart opened 7 a WUIU1UI 01 coustanc anec- aay oer race grew ueautnui, 1 and now one look from me will t bring her to my side, obedient to lu.V will and happiest when she is "earest me." Is there not in tlris a leiiSon for al1 parents? Not i a11 the plowing or weeding or cull ! tivation of every., sort we can j Se our grpwing crops will do ! for them what thesteady stfining ! Ot the SUn Can effect. Loveis the suushine of the family; without virtue, can be brought to perfec tion. Exchange. Boys are Watched. When we see the boys on the streets and public places we of ten wonder if they know that busi ness men are watching them. In every bank, store and office there will soon be a place for a boy to fill. Those who have the man agement of the affairs of busi ness will select one of the boys; they will not select him for his a bility to s ear, smoke cigar ettes or tap a beer keg. And th "society swell" who isdaft about little social functions and is hap py in the conceit that he is "just the article" that young ladies hud indispensable on all occa- sions,isin as little demand as the beer guzzler or cigarette smoker, Business men may ha ve a few loose habits thciiiselves, but they are looking for boys who are as near gentlemen in every sense of the word as they can find, and they are able to give character of everybody in the city. They are not looking for rowdies. When a boy applies for one of these places and is re fused they may not tell him the reason why they do .not want him, but the hoy can depend up on it that he's been rated accord ing to his behavior. Boys can not afford to adopt the habits and conversation of the loafers and rowdies if they over want to be called to responsible positions Advance. Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. Unhealthy Kidneys Hake Impure Blood. All th blood in your body passes throusb your kidneys once very three minutes. 1 ne moneys are your blood purifiers, they fil ter out the waste or impurities in the blood. If they ire sick or out of oFder, they fall to do their work. Pains, aches sod rheu matism come from ex cess of uric acid in the blood, dua to neetocted kidney trouble. Kidney trouble causes oulck or unsteady heart beats, and makes one feel as though they had heart trouble, because the heart is over-working in pumping thick, kidney- poisoned blood through veins and arteries. It used to be considered that only urinary troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, but now modern science! proves that nearly all constitutional diseases have their begi ung in fuaaej trouDie. If you arc sick you can nuke no mistake by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy Is soon realized. It stands the highest for Its wwHwnuvuca wi lub iiiosi distressing and is sold on Its merits by all druggists in fifty- cent and ene-dellar siz es. Teu may 6ave a' sample some By man - Ban at fret, aba pamphlet telling you how to find out If yen have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer s M, tungtiamtoa. n. i. ' Don't make any mistake, but rem em be the name, Swamp Boos Dr. KOIipa Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamp pn.N. y., on every bottle Peace on Earth In Europe today millions o men, -the physical flower of the Continent, " are marching ;- and counter-marching?" practicing at targets, learning the use of bayo net and sabre, and performing as nearly as. possible in sham fights the evolutions xf aJual war.' It was so yesterday and last year,1 and through all the yesterdays of twenty years f robably "there are now some 20,000,000 Europeans not Jj beyond middle life who h'ave been trained to- the fighter's profession,- and who could at briefest notice take their place in the ac tive armyor in the reserve. Every city has its barracks Bowers replied: ""I will Mr. resident, that they are takeji in, charge by the cook of our mess and are well cared for " ' . - Several times during , his stay Mr. Lincoln was found fondling these Jkittens. It was a curiou s sight at an armt headquarters, upon the eve of a great military crisis in the nation's history, to see the hand that had signed the commission of all the heroic men who served the cause of the Un ion, from the general-in-hief to the, lowest lieutenant, tenderly caressing three tiny stray : kit- tens. - v-S- --'-fr rlt well illustrates his kindness which was mingled with the grandeur of his nature. Our Dumb Animals A Useful List of Books JFor Children. - - A strong ' bond for holding a family together is - the habit of reading aloud for an hour or two several evenings duringthe week Information should not be the objeot of suh reading, Jbut cult ure in one of its finest forms will be gained if - the best books are chosen. Boys and girls who have been studying the greater part of the day should either read or have read to them books inter esting, amusing or pathetic Books of travel, well written, biographies, of interesting per sons historical and literary es says by men of letters all afford delightful reading. Among the best books, for children are the the following: 'Gulliver's Trav els," 5 ' Alicej in - Wondt . land, Hawthorn's " "Wonder Book,: "The Arabian Nights," "The Water Babies," Tanglewobd Tales," Tom Brown at Rugby, "The Jungle Book," "J3sop's Fables," "Uncle Remus," "Pil- grim's Progress," "Robinson Crusoe," ''The Swiss Family Rob iusou" and the Waverly Novels. From an article on Reading for- Children, by Mrs. Theodore W. Birney, in the March Delineator. . NO VIC& OF SALE OF LAND By virtue of power contained in a mort gage to the undersigned recorded, in Book 106 and on page 411 of the Registrar's of flee of Northampton county, default hav ing been made in the payment of the debt secured by said mortgage, I will sell to the highest biddar for cash at the courthouse door in the town of Jackson or Monday the 7th day of March 1904, it being the first Monday in March, all that tract of land situated in said Northampton county, North Carolina, known as the old Harding land, bounded on the West by the lands of Mrs. Squire, on the South by Jack Swamp; on the Ea3t by Mrs. Squire and on the North by the lands of Jim and Sam Hardy, containing one hundred acres moi-e or less, a reference to the said mortgage is hereby made for a fuller description. l'his January 14, 1904. J. W. Ckkw, Mortgagee. L1DDELL CO. Charlotte N,- C That's the name and address of " makers of the best class of jjinning . machinery. A cotton cleaning feadar - which is ai simple as "any other, ia r' ocludpd in our complete einmimt ' ' outfits. -'. ' -:'', ';.. . ENGINES, BOILERS, SAW lULLt PULLEYS AND SHAFTING, 40. m Largest sbjps in the State baarV tools. Write for catalogues, or ask - or asalesman. ' . "'. : NOTICE! ' X wish to announce to the public that since 1903 has : y been the beat year in the record of my business to ' still held the fort longer and try. to make 1904 far; better by selling goods at a much less x profit. 1 1 repeat ; that- I expect to sell for about half my usual profit on many goods! Bat pleas ' don't forget that goods are considerably . higher than last year. - - I invite tha public from - .everv direction and thank -my customers for past fa vors. DATTE C. FUSTIS, FCIZI ' NEW VOKK KACKET STCKS, ' WOODLAND, N. C. - NOTICE! , Cypress Shingles in all widt!: -: Vajid grades. We have theci on hand and are offering them Jor sale at Bull FT HI , MilL Northampton County. We will be pleased to quote. ; -prices to any : one wishinflf -Shingles or fence boards, -j ' '- OOCONEECHEE LUMBER Co.: ' f '. Jackson, N. C LAND FOa SALE! - ' Tract No. L 120 acres of the ; Sheriff Grant land adjoining the B llenry Thomas Boone tract. No. 2. 6fr acres of the Peel land adjoining the lands of Chas.' 1 Cotton (Bullock.) v. xmo. a io acres witn three good v frame houses and a stable, ad- - joining the landsof C. J. FutrelL John W. Griffin and Thos: Dukes ; Good titles guaranteed to all ; the lands. - ..- - ' Fori further particulars writ , ; T. W. Mason, Heceiver, Gnmberry N. JC., or see T. G. Trenchant at 5 Jackson or Bryantown. : ; i We8toott & Trencharo ltjm Co. ; -;Gumberry, N. CL NOTICE. By virtue of the power in me vetted by Judgment or the Superior Court for Northampton County in a special proceed 'nd entitled W. A. Piland and wio Lilian Piland, Monroe Goodson Piland and ethers vs M. Li. Piland defendant, I will as com missioner therein appointed- sell lor cash by public auction at the court house door in Jackson, N. C to the highest bidder on Monday March 7, 1904, the following prop erty to wit: . '-. A tract of land situated h Wkcacane' township ia the aforesaid county adjoining i the lands of Judith P. Deloatch, the late Jesse Piland and "the heirs of Jethro Tay lor, deceased, and being known as the 'noma place, of the late William C. Piland where he lived and died and said to cob tain 90 acres more or less, j This the 4th day of February, 1904. r W. A. Piuxd, Com. " Gay & Midyette, Attys - BUY THE SEWING MACHINE Do not be deceived by those who ad vertise a 160.00 Sewing Machine for f 20.00. This kind of a machine can , be bought from us or any of our ' '-' dealers from (15.00 to $18.00. WE MAKE A VARimf.' THE NEW HOME IS THE BEST. The Feed determines the strength or weakness xt Sewing Machines. The Double Feed combined with trong pointa makes the New Home lue oeay eewing Macniiie to buy. WrittforCIRCOURSlSl re wannfttctnreand prices before purehaslns TEE REV HOME IEWIRS H1SHISE CO. ' eaaHat, mass. 23 Union 8q. IT. Chioago, I1L, Atlanta, Oa, : 4a I ionls,MO, Pallas,Tex,Ban yranclsoo, Oml . torn MLS
The Northampton County Times-News (Rich Square and Jackson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 25, 1904, edition 1
1
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