-T ANDREW J. CONNER, PUBLISHER CAROLINA, CAROLINA, HEAVEN'S BLESSINGS ATTENL TIER.' SUBSCRIPTION $1.00 PER ANNUM VOLUME xin. RICH SQUARE NORTHAMPTON COUNTY,- N. C, MARCH 24. 1904. NUMBER 12 For hard colds bronchitis, asthma, and coughs of all kinds, you cannot take any thine better than Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Cherry Pectoral. Ask ybur own doctor if this Is not so. He uses it. He understands why it soothes and heals. " I had s terrible eoogh f or Mb. Then! took A7ri Cherry Pectoral awl only one bottle completely cured me." . Mbm. J. B. Daxfobth. St. Joseph. Mich. Ve.,Me..gl.M. . :. - J. o. a tie coy 1U1 AU (imtrTista. Coughs, Colds ClMlllMI'l. Friend, when your heart is heavy, And you know not where to turn, When the years lie dark behind you And their blistering memories burn, Arise, and fling them from you The thoughts that poison sleep; And pray the Lord's good angels Around your ward to keep- Nay, dwell not with the sorrow Or the fruitless might-have-been; I Nor waste in vain repinings, The strength to fight with sin. Arise, and march straightforward, And face the years to be, And pray the Lord of angels To send you victory. Margaret E. Sangster. Happy Yau wi.i hasten recovery bv tak ing one of Ayer'e Pills at bedtime. I: P. COPPEDGE. M. D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Office it residence of ? M. J. Panton. Near Dr. Stanceffs) MARGARETTSVILLE, N. C- - HOTEt BURGWYN. JA.CKSON, N.C. . JAMES SCULL, PROPS. ; ' Bates f2.00 per day. BOo. per mea CLE ELAND HOTEL Jackie, N. C J. S. CXANT, PROPRIETOR, : Terms We. per meal or $3-00 per day. Special rate by the week or month. MlDTKTB Tin Esfiit mis t a Married Ijife (By Rev. Thos. B. Gregory) . The following communication has all the ear-marks of perfect feet sincerity, and on, that ac count, if for no other, it would seem to call for such answer as we may be able to give: "' " I am a oung woman, twen ty two years old, in perfect health, fairly intelligent, and with a high school education. I have always lived a good life and am happy. But this is merely introductory to the main fact that I wish to to speak of my marriage. I am to be married in about two months, and naturally, I am doing a great deal of thinking about it, wondering whether it is going to prove ; to be a happy marriage or one full of trouble. It will be perfectly proper for me to ask you a question, - which I hope you will answer - as frankly and truly as you ' know how. The question is this. A hat are the essentials 'of a happy married life? Some married people,- you know, aave homes that are anything but lovely: while others get along beautifully. -What makes the unhappy; " homes? and what makes the happy ones? You will do me a great fa- . vor by answering -my ques- tion through the columns of the "American," the paper that so many look to for advice. Speaking broadly, it .may be said that the chief essentials of a hanntr Tna.Trwwl llfo Td t-.rriA 1rw promptly and fatthfuttj, attended to sense. The chances ara' thot, the hnahanrl anrl vetfo DIL G. G. POWdLL who reaUy love each other and have good judgment Will get along together fairly welL If they have good sense they will understand the folly of look ing for absolute perfection in each other, and if they have the love they will be very patient tie bit of quiet dreaming over his cigar. She will not forget that trou sers and coats, andjrests, and shirts are supposed to have but tons on them, and that, to the average husband, a missing but ton is a source, of great incon venience and unrest; She will not neglect her person al appearance, remembering that in the sight of every husband who is worth talking about, a slouehy wife is an eye-sore rather than an attraction. She will not insist upon having a hundred-dollar dress and a thirty dollar hat when she knows that generous as her husband may be at heart, those figures are beyond the reach of his purse She will not be insanely jealous If her husband happens to look at, or speak to, a woman on the street, she will not fly up into a passion or accuse hira of wanting to run away with her. These are some of the most dangerous foes of marital happi ness that are obviated by the two great essentials.-love and sense. f ; Of course, if these two things are lacking if the husband ant wife care nothing for eash other and are deucientdn good sense a happy married life is out of the question. New York American. Bu S. Gat. Gablaitd-E. , Gay s Ilidyetto ATTC2XEYS ANB COUNSELORS AT UW JACKSON, N.C Practice in all courts. Basines promptly and faithfully attened to " 1?3 z Harris .COUNSBUERS AT LAW - - i Jackson, N. O. V Practice in all courts. Busi ness promptly and faithfully at-'i : tended ta ' Janes A, Worrell ATTCINFIY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW Jaefcson, H. 0. Practice in ail courts. Business DENTIST, POTECASI, N. c. Can be found at his office at all times except whennotice . is given in this paper. Dr. W. J. Waid DEIITIGT, iVELDONtN.C with the little faults which they know are bound to xist, even in the best htfnian beings. But it might be well to be a trifle more specific, and, there-1 Bern Journal. fore, it may be said that there DIL J II. -JACOBS certain things which the hus band wno loves nis wile ana nas good sense will not do. He will not go home the worse for drink, disgusting his wife and heavily taxing her respect for him. He will not squander his means on games of chance, thus jeopard izing his family's comfort and possibly it very necessaries of life. - He will not spend his evenings at the "club." or the "lodge," or somewhere else away from home. thus rendering himself almost a stranger to the members of his family. . ; . He will not attempt to be a boss" that most despicable of all the offices to which a husband ever thought of applying himsel He will share with his wife in the wise and and loving administra tion of ' the affairs of the home 1 and stop right there. TCll 7 . . He will not be a bear when be V V I lxV enters his home, cross, surly cold and indifferent; on the other hand, he will be a human being, gentle, considerate, bland like a day in June, not chilling like old December. .' : And the wife? W ill the wife who loves her husband and is for tunate enough to have the good sense we are. talking of also re frain from certain things? She will not get into the w,retched habit of nagging her husband at every turn any worrying the very life out of him about nothing She will not call her husband a Taxwand Poll Tax. The urgency of the tax collec tors, and especially the publish ed request from the Sheriffs of different counties for tax delin quents to come forward and set tle promptly for what they owe in the way of taxes, is equally important to those who owe, as well as to those who are elected or appointed to. collect tnese taxes.. " More especially is the matter of the payment of the poll tax important,, for failure to pay this tax before May- 1st, this year, means that those who have failed will lose their right to vote in the elections of this year. It is the penalty, which those who do not pay theirpoll tax be fore May first, 1904, must suffer, the forfeiture of all right to vote in the important elections which are to take place this year. : The failure to pay this poll tax lief ore May first, with the conse quent loss of the voting privilege, does not mean that this exempts the delinquent from payroentfor the tax must be paid any way. The importance of a vote this year, ana every year, ougnt to bo sufficient to cause every poll tax payer to meet his obligation long before the day when the limit is set. And it is not too much to say that all taxes should be paid , so that no taxpayers name goes upon the delinquent list. New , Dentist , Can be found in hit office at all - timet except vden notice it given f in (hit paper. - WiUbew Roxobel loeeJs after 2nd Sunday in each month WOODIiANO, H. C House Moving Oyer 20 Years Experience E. S. ELLIOTT. - Rich Square. N. C. A. E. CoraiAKS. JO0U8 Cofblaitd HOUSE HOVERS A'e are now prepared to move far ties of any size. Prices 'low I ,vill be to your interest to see us - COPELAND BROTHERS, - - Geortre, NC How I Mt 0ner:l .IkIiii II. Uordoii. I first met General Gordon in Nashville, Tenn., in-1892 He came to hat city to deliver his great lecture, "The last days of the Confederacy." Of course he received an enthusiastic welcome. My son, at that time u lad twelve or thirteen years old, had beeii an omnivorous reader of Confederate history and was well up on General Gordon's record He was eager to see and hear the war-battered hero who led Lee's advance into Pennsylvania, and the last charge at Appomattox. He had imbibed, in some way, sentiments of intense bitterness toward the Aorth. I was troub led about it, for while 1 am my self a "dyed-in-th-wool" South erner, I have only the most fra ternal sentiment toward our friends "up North." One day, in conversation with Mr. Thomas Nelson Page, I told him of my son's jnveuile ultra bourbonism, and of my inability to understand where he got his impressions. Mr. Page suggest ed that there was probably "a woman in the case." And, sure enough, upon inquiry I found that a favorite aunt, who lived in Petersburg, Va., during the war, nad been entertaining tne little folks with stories' of the siege of Petersburg. It was easy to see, then, where the boy got his views. Grant's shells, a4 they went screaming and burst--ing in lurid splendor over "th cockade city," and driving thf women and children into the cel lars for safely, were not very fra ternal messengers. V: T. took my boy with' me to call on General Gordon at the hotel: The General put his arm around him, and spoke to fyim very kind ly, which of course pleased him greatly. h That evening we went early to the tabernacle to hear the Ueuer al's lecture. Just as we took our seats, General T- -, of the Fed era! Army, also took a seat just Feace-f. 1 -1 have jast received a large - ' Car Load of the American Field . - fence .which I am offering at . - ' loir prices. My sales of thw , . -Fence are: doubling every year, ; nri I have vet to hear of the 1-: :v " - . r; ; Cut complaint. . ' " I have it in several styles. - I also have a lot ot EUwood Fence for gardeas. 7 Write for prices or flail on MLR. CONNER, 2 ' ' . - - At depot, ' t. .ch Square, N. a A Successful ank. The Bank of VVeldon is and in stitution to be proud of. ft be gan business here August, 1892 with a paid up capital of $10,000 It has been steadily growing ever since; and today is one of the safest and most conservative banking institutions in Nortn Carolina. Its president, Hon. W E. Daniel; cashier, M r W. 11. Smith, and assistant cashier, Mr, R. S. Travis, have been with it as officers since its organization A few vears ago Mr. R.,T. Daniel entered the institution as book keeper and was later elected teller. , At the close of business Febru arv 23. 1904, it had assets of $211,411.04. Capital and sur plus of $29,500,00, and deposits of $181,803.52. . The man who said "a bank in Weldon will not pay," when this institution 1 egan business about 12 years ago, has since gone into winter quarters with the ground hog, and is still afraid of his own shadow. Roanoke News. Specialties in Agriculture The specialties in farming are relately as important as the great staples, and these are strongly emphasized each week in American Agriculturalist, which we are offering: in connec tion with our own paper at very low rates. It is the recognized authoritv on such crops as ap. nles. DOtatoes. onions, cranDer- ries. hops, tobacco, peppermint pt . and also devotes much at tention to live stock, and dairy "brute" or a "cruel, heartless wretch" should he, semi-occasion ally,": feel like wheeling his easy chair off inty a corner to do a lit interests, field crops, etc. earnestly recommend it as worth the consideration of everyone en caered in anv branch of agricult- C3 O ' ure. 1 u:... "NTx in fmnf. nf n A varv Imi-cto fTtiinii I .J 1 flag had been hung on the wall behind the platform, and we we're scarcely seated when my son ob served it, and said: "What have they put the flag up there for?" I suggested in au undertone that he would better be careful; that there was a Yankee general just in front of us, and he migfit overhear him. He "dian't care if he did. They had no business putting that flag up there!" The colloquy was interrupted by the manager, who discovered us, and invited us to occupy seats on the platform. This brought us in front of General T , who preferred to retain his seat in the audience. Immediately thereafter General Gordon came upon the platform, and while a storm of applause was shaking the very roof, he beckoned me to him, and asked if I would do him a favor. "Certainly," 1 replied. "1 have left the manuscript ol my speech in my trunk at the ho tel. I think I know it, but, un less I have it by me, am afraid 1 may forget some parts of it. Here in the key to my room, and this one is the key to my trunk. I wish you would go and bring my speech." "All right," I .said, "but will 1 have time?" "General Jackson is to intro duce me, and I will keep him speaking till you get here," he replied. 1 hurried to the hotel, opened his trunk, rummaged among a lot of. papers, and finally found 'The last days of the Confedera cy, ana rusnea oacR to tne tao eruacle. A jerk on General Jack son's coat tail arrested an elo quent oration, and brought Gen eral Gordon to the stand. He spoke two hours, with the manu script lying before him on the ta ble, and he never onoe referred to A t one point in his speech he paid a glowing tribute to Gener al Robert E. Lee.whieh, of course elicited loud applause from the audience. 3 son fairly went wild. He cheered with hands and feet and voice. So did General T -. v hereupon my soh lean ed over to me and exclaimed: " W hat is he cheerihs for? Lee was our man. "Oh, yes," I said, "but the war was over long- before you were born. General T is cheering because he admires Lee." A little further on, General Qor don- paid a high compliment t General Grant. Again there was deafening applause, such old Con federates as Jackson and Kelley and Morton, General Forest' chief of artillery, joining in lusti ly. I watched my son to see il he would take part. He did, but in a feeble way. He was proba bly thinking of Grant's shells, and of his mother hiding from them in the cellar Poor fellow! Several days passed and I was walking with my boy in the woods around our home in the neighborhood of Nashville, when he said : "Papa, I think I have a subscriber for the Youth's Com pnnion in that house yomler." . "What!"' I exclaimed, in assuui ed surprise. "Am vou iri ulnt ing that paper?" "Yes, sir,"- lie said, "isn't it good paper?" ; Oh, yes," I replied, "it is at. excellent p.iper. But it is print, ed in Boston; antM didn't think you would circulate a Yankee paper." "Oh, -pshaw, papal" lie said, "what in the world is the use of keeping up the fuss?" And then I saw that General Gordon had done his work well. The example of this old hero of a hundred battles, bearing the scars of the conflict on his body, pleading for fraternity and speak ing of the Northern soldiers as brothers, had exorcised the evil spirit of sectional prejudice, and left the boy free not the less a Southerner, but more an Ameri can. I have always been pro foundly grateful to General Gor don for the valuable service he rendered me on that occasion. I believe that was the effect o; his speech on all who heard it, and I know it was, the aim of hi.--work as a lectarer to promote love and good felhn? !.ytween the North and the South. By the way, I think my son hii the nail on the head when he said: "What in the world is the use of keeping upthe fuss?" The great conflict lias passed into one ever dreams of reopening tne issues it aeciaea. The fame of the great actors in the drama belongs to the whole country. General ijordon, one of the noblest characters on cith er side, was allowed to live for a whole generation after the close of the struggle, that he might ex emplify the patriotism that rises above all sectionalism and em braces the nation in its loyal de votion. In every great battle in Virginia from the first Manassas to Appomattox; in the very vor tex of the hottest of them; shot eight times; risingfrom the rank to be a lieutenant-general; the commander-in-chief of the Con federate veterans; a typical Southerner in every respect no man in America loved the Uuiou or the flag: with a smcerer or more ; rdent love than General John B. Gordon. His whole ca reer from the time he sheathed his stainless sword at Appomat tox, recalls General Grant's epi grammatic words: "Let us havt peace." The men foremost in tin tisht were the first to quit. Rev S. A. Steel, D. D.. in Epwortl Herald ever What 1 ;i H-.ibiv? (By J. Rex Jay.) Our hobbies! Did you stop to think 01 them? They exist i:i direct ratio to the population of civilized coun tries. Their names, therefore, are legion. The washerwoman, the woman of pink teas, the bootblack of the street and the millionaire all have their hobbies. They appear in a vastly diveritkd array ol forms for forms they have and their lineaments are u easy trai nable as tracks in a frtvh snow. Every man has his luhby. A certain- t it izeii, who; from v .standing in 1 iie cni.iiu:iity, adjihlged an iiit liiji-cnt man, is defined tiy aii;)t!iji- t ii -izen as be ing 011 a certuin- lv ;-:c. v pui-snit. at least of ui.- citizen maKin oni-id tiiiiid. Th t hi-" o! nervation is recognized also as being inlel A third citizen eor.te.s.-ilong and t lis you ihat' i he st corvl citizen. 0:1 a cei tain topi--'r i.ursuil, 8 o unsounu niiiui, u ni't; tne iirst ci . i.:e!i vtilui'teers the infoi uia tion that the third Citizen is per haps Avholly, or at least on a cer tain subject pursuit, mentally unbalanced. . ' All of these observatious are made candidly, and arc, seeming ly, the serious thoughts of those giving them exi ression. The query tliereiore arisen, Is one man competent to judge of the mental condition of another? Or, s long as a man lives in accord ance with the rules of public opin ion and the law, has any man a moral right to adjudge him in saue? ; -- ' ' One man isubv;-.' es the law as his vocation; secoiidai iiy, he be comes a socio lojiiht and makes that study his chief-' diversion in ife; another man lwo ue.s a car- enter, and ii!i-idutail'y a work er in wood, tji.j latter serving as lis favorite diversion, his point of interest an 1 conversation; an other man, wJ-o ha i been spared the pain (?) of ihysical labor through fina:;;ial endovmeut, bt cenjes first, astnaeniand clul man, incidentrdlv a glolie trotter the customs of every t ountry in terest him and form his favorite topic of conversation, as well as of study. Because of their tenacious ad hesion to their favorite pursuits, the onlooker of the friend will tell you that these men are men tally unbalam ed, not realizing that he hiinst If has a favorite di version, a i;d the query again irises. Is luan eounieteut to Ljudge? : ; - Their country's freedom was the hobby of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson Indian apolis Sentinel. DO YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK? Kidney Trouble Hakes Ton Miserable. Almost everybody who reads the news papers is sure to know of the wonderful cures made by Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy. It is the ereat medi- r cal triumph of the nine teenth century; dis covered after years of scientific research by Dr. Kilmer, the emi nent kidney and blaa der specialist, and is wonderfully successful in promptly curing laine back, kidney, bladder, uric acid trou-bics- an-! Bright's Disease, which is the wont (or -iv f f kidney trouble. D -. J'limcr'j Swamp-Root i.- not rc on.nir.n'ifc f --r everything b;-.t if you havekid Key,..l.iver;t.r Madder troubii it wiii Le four Hist ilje rcrr.eSyau need, h has been 'ecld in so maiiy ways, in hospital work, in private practice, among the helplecs too poor to pur cha; relief s.nd has proved so successful ta every case thr.t a special arrangement has j been made by which all readers of this paper i who have not already tried it, may have a sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book telling more about Swamp-Root and how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. ! "When writing mention readinghis generous l offer in this paper and ' fCJK". - .i send your address to g!" !"...,; wiliiliiSS ' r.Kilmer&CoBing-gSTfH" hamton, N. Y. The a!iajLJ ; regular fifty cent and Home at b amp-fox. 4 dojlar sizes are aoid by all good druggist. the rrrrc-. Pwsmp l?oo-. Dr. Ki'lr-'!! vmp-Boot, and the address, Binghamp on. N. Y.', 00 every bottle LIDDELL CC. Charlotte, N, 0 That's.. the- name and addresB of makers of the best class of ginning machinery. ' A cotton cleaning feeder : which is as simple as any other, Is Deluded in our complete p ianiat Outfits. :;V ENGINES, BOILERS, SAW MILLS PULLEYS AND SHAFTING, 40. Largest shops in tbe State be, tools. Write for catalogues, or ask or asalesman. !l'.ViM ii: V Hot Far Wrong. At a dinner party in V ashing ton the new Chinese embassadoi discoursed on American fashions satiriecally. "Now, in China," he said, "our iasnions never cnange. l wear the same sort of hat, the same sort of coat, the same sort of shoes, that a man in my position wore a thousand years ago. Ant it is the same with the Chinese women. Their fashions also have not changed in 1 know not how many dynasties. Long ago in China, we found the costumes that seemed to us the most grace. ful and the most comfortable, and we clins; to those costumes e love them. "But you here in Ameriea how often is it every week, every fortnight that vou change vou fashions? Only the other dav met on the street an American naval officer of whom I am fond He had a parcel under his arm. stopped my carriage. "Come,' I said, 'let us have little chat a comfortable litt chat ' "But the naval officer shoo hU head. He said, hurriedly 'No, I cannot. In this parcel there is a bonnet for my wife, Were I to stop and talk, the fas ion in bonnets migjitlfcrige be fore I'reached hoitae." Woman's Home Companion. - ' T If yo u is all your position requires. Original work commands atten tion, and will be of great service in , helping, yo i to advance in your position or in directing work of your own. The valuable employe i? the one who antici pates the needs of his position ' and attends to theni before he is told. -:r-:-- Keep your eyes wide open for the things which need to be dona, (I and then do them before you are asked to. You may think ne tions which.are not prompted by the presence of your employer will never be heard of by him. Put aside this delusion. There are innumerable waysin which an employe's habits of work are brought to the at) ention of your employer; and, in the near future the right person will be sure of reward. Sum ss. . . And every article is Come In take a look at beautiful display of - JEWELRY On the counter you will also find catalog illus trating thousands of useful n and practical Gems If you want the verybestvalues for your money BUY HERE THAT'S ALL Question Per the Lawyers. The State Bar Association composed of lawyers, not bar keeperswill meet in Charlotte in June, The Landmark makes bold to suggest a question which we trust the association will dis cuss and elucidate, and we be speak the aid oi The Charlotte Observer, which is on the ground, getting the matter beiVre the as sociation. The question is, "should a 'possum dog eat sum, and if r.it whv rot?" becoming moiv a;ipa tent every day that a "possum dog won't eat 'possum a lawyer won't prosecute a lawyer if he can help it, and only half heai tedly if at all. An apparently conspicuous example of it occimed in the State the otl or day. If this is a settled rule 'of the legal profes sion the lai? v, who lurnish the business, are inteiesttd in know ing tne whys and wheretores. Statesville Landmark.-:.' ' ; Wayside vVistlom. -Opportunity is the cream time. . - ' Self conquest is the greatest of victories. The more you say the less peo ple remember. A mother's teats are the same in all languages." Good breeding is a letter of credit all over the world. ' It is more profitable to read one man than ten books. ; A man cannot go where temp-, tation cannot find him. - : i People ruled by the mood of gloom attract to them gloomy 1 things. J A fault 'vhich humbles a man is of more use to him than a good action which- puffs him up with In the conduct of life habit counts for more than maxim be an se habit is a living maxim and becomes flesh and instinct. Detroit News Tribune. V. r.h COGGIHS & CO. BOYKINSTVA. Shingles! Cypress Shingles in all widths and grades.- We have them on hand . and are - offering them for sale at Bull ""Hill Mill, Northampton County. We will be pleased to quote prices to any one wishing Shingles or fence boards. . OocoNEECftEE Ltjmheh Co. . -. '-' -. ' Jackson, N. i pos it is CAR HAY I have this day (March 8) . received a car of choice No. 1 - Timothy Hay; also car lead of . Cotton Seed Hulls and ileal. " : . My prices light. y M. II. CON NEE, Eicb gqrjre, N. 0 W liJ ) ANOKli -I HO WAN TIMES rf AND .AMERICAN CULTURISTJ Americas AORicrtTunisT. 'r-. in-eat rami Journal of the East and So itb.ls the be. : m.1 uuat practical of Its kind. Cftp Cf VCB.CQ It lias beonthoono accepted author iwii uu ltr c;l a;CGlure. It 8,iu maintains its supremacy as 1...Q ol J reliable in all that pertatn3 to farm practice and thon:::it. I; it. jo n-'t ivclcoaio pobllcation to progressive farmers lu tlid Uudlo ii :-tes a.ml the South. THP PKFTIRI Of AMERICAX AGRICtrLTTTBIsf Ispart- special edittiri.il f-!Aturos and poller. Cf u& le-irr?!ht is the absolute reliability of its reading aud udvertisesients. If you would advance rapidly I m your position, or g r on faster) in the world, don't acquire a liab it of waiting to be tt '. I what to do. Antieipa - v the wauls of your employer. I'h your common sense aud ij.rvnni'.y'i.i trying to solve the pro-il.-Miis that come up from day to day'- Nobody ever advances who loixtHntly waits'; for direction Jt th- man who j decides promatly' and with pre-t cision, without being.. told what' is to be do.", and tiit-n does it, j who gets on in the world. I A habit of doing' no-thing with out orders or directions is para lyzing to one's faculties and death to individualitv and orijn-1 i nality. Don't labor under the delusion tin. L to :mn-tte the ac tion and methods of those above in FREE YEAH 803K AND ALMANAC. low, are yrcseatr, psslyaid, vith tUe AXSBIOAS - AO.I- cultubist Yka r Book and A lm an ac for ISO. This ereat work is a Cjc'.p of Pro -rm a id Urcnts in the Whole World. A Sarket ld Cj .iplcto Uum A Ti Miaif oi suthtiMi A Urtmm Work 011 Evorr Sabjees of Time!y Interest PmftlB.n5 to Afrrira!l.iv, lasnrjMUMne.PaMtoACcVi, Hoaehal4 KdarAlton. Keiiyto. and Pl.ftl'eM. It is alno an ALX4S.tr .rrelradw, rfmtkw, lilni..i.1..1 P&lA, iidu for aacit iw!h, etc. Vuiur Fmuti for each month. A SflMPlFGflPY irHkt will be mailed dHmrLCUUrl to y..a br addressinc obaigk nam cuarAAi, a Lmi.,au ru, in tirt tKj. ' EVEaYFAEKER st will help to make him firm more rBoninu, IteoTea The Field, ' Live Stock, "Dairy, Horticulture, Poultry, . Veterinary, Floriculture, -Apiary, entomology, How to Buy end . ' . Mow to Sell. EVERY HOE Tirr-n n jnnmal li i r 1 1 imi t irtil help to make it RKiGnrsa and urxxa. ItcoTcathe Kitchen, Dinlne- Room, Parlor, Fireside, " Sewing- . Rocm, The Study For Old, Toune, Married. Slnele. Our SPECIAL Offer: Roanoke-Chowan Times $1.00 American Agriculturalist, 1.00 Year Book and Almanac, .50 OUR PRICE FOR ALL, . $1.35. Address ROANOKE-CHOWAN TliVSES,c RICH SQUARE, - NOBTH CAROLINA. i v-

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