I -:. 4. V - .1 tue ciiAtillir cixizj1, A Weeely T-rolnmn paper In full sympathy with the masses. Weekly, four pages. 2col. y INDEPENDENCE, TRUTH, JUSTICE. 1 PRIV& 0N ftOLLAR PER YEAR, IPlant your advwheihent ill tke CHATHAM CITIZEN i vttl want it to bear fruit in Chatham Conntv. . ' 1 PITTSBORO, CHATHAM COUNTY, N. C.t APRIL 8, 1897. NO. 324 VOL II, ft -It J 1L 1L JLZUAH. o VERONICA THE j . BI2AUTXKIE1R. N 44 VERONICA"! 3 TOILET POWDER, 15 A HOST UNITARY AND DELIOHT FUt. PREPARATION. IT PURIFIES - AJ WELL. AS " I BEAUTIFIES THE SKIN. Guaranteed perfectly harmless Used by people of refinement and recommended by all who .have tested its merits. ritlCE, - SO Ce'nte. ty nan or ai uruggisis. j (Send toe for sample and circular.) Lalcerv-llle, K. Y. -h i "Nothing cist life l::ri; The most rdrczhlr.y r.h:!; pleasant Soap for tlieil:.:. j; i 3 S fnunrAKTisiync rca tiis X Twit. lhtcrovCTu 31 X" It lasts twice as Ionrr as others. j Atrial w;Il convince yon ef Its ereat merit. WU p:cas ue most lastiCious. CHARLES F. MILLER, Mfr. of FRENCH MILLED TOILET; SOAI; AND PHBFIIMFDV.! Lancaster, Pcnn, ESTABLISHED, XS59. tL2JD-FOU i A SAMPLE COPY. 1 Do you like to read a good health ful story every week ? - 2. Do you like to see the .follies of life illustrated every week? 3. Do you like to lead all the news fr!!i -all ,iarts of the . world . every vet k 'i I ; . ' - " If "so send one DOLLAR and sub- acriba fi tlu Lavst and Best week ly mi the State. Sample copy furnish ed free on application,. ' T -Address, , Josphus Daniels, Editor, iTlie Noith Carolinian. Ptaleigh, X. C AV. Ei Mnrchison, T. Henry Calvert, " ' Joue.sboro. S.C. IMltsboro, X. C. rI lie uudrs3priied have this day asso ciated I wniieives together for tl.eprac- iice or 1,-uv, uiuier the Iirm naite of Iurcl.is')n& Calvert, in the Superior courts i.i unatuam county. Mr; I'aivrrt can be found s.t his of- 1 ce in Pittsb-u-o ;t all tim-s. and 2Jr 3iir c!iison can 1-e ad(iriss.ed or consult - tlat lii-jo'reo inJuiu-sboro. ' 1 Pron;pt attention to business is guar- anTfct u l y usv. -TfcisOctouef 7, 189G. . ; W. E. Murcbison, ; - -T.IIeary Calvert Sub-scribe For : Chatliam Citizen : Send for Sample Copies to' show - venr neighbors. There's a CUSHION FRAME BICYCLE prevents jolts, jar ana strains. Why ricU 'a Rifcii Frame, t with its injurious effects, when von can buy a wheel giving EASE AND COMFORT? Lines of "Wheel Unchanged J Durability IncreaserL Send for catalogue of our Rigid and Cushion Frame Bicydes. ; R1GHH8NB BIGYGLE EQ., RICHflOND, LND. Eastern, Branch, i N Yort 97 Chambers SL, j Nw Yorlu 8 fiiiiTMi mmm mil !i mii r if I ED1CATtO P'r, II.'IITA MCH n E t B W P .to 5 672213:1 ' ; j aicrjmbno $L4i (Sliatham (SUtlzgn. . PITTSBORO, N. C. R. B LINEBEItRY, Editob audi PcIsliSheb ., . SUBSCRIPTION' TRICE S1.00 Per Year. Advertising Hates on Application. Entered at t be Post -Office at I'ittsWo, N". C, as second class; matter, Scpl. 5, 1693. I ' I Indcpendonco, Truth, Justice. I Communications to be printed should be written' on one side of the paper ouly. Your real name must "accomp any each communication or it can not be printed. I j i The editor is not re,sionsibk for-the views, of correspondent, but; win al low nothing enter the columns of the Citizen that he knows to be jfalse or slanderous. j ' "We want intelligent correspondents ?n every township in the county. " Who is the republican party of Xorth Carolina, the Raleigh Tribune or his excellency Governor Daniel L. Russell? " . ! " ' . Will some goldbng dernocjat who joined the "reform" forces last fall to vote for Brvan and is now so thoroughly convinced of the necessi ty of "relief to the people" that he daily complains because the whole populist platform was not enacted in tj Jaw by the last legislature please tell us some "relief" for which the democrats were more united than the populists? : j The Raleigh Tribune savs its onlv object in taking the paragraph form the Citizen was to show that our party is the Fame as the one formed t the national democratic bouveu ... . . . . f. tiou. We tail to see how what we hr.d to say had anything to do with that ; " ' I We were arguing there is as great need for the Alliance now ;as ever and we objected to being put. down as spying that the Alliance has per formed its mission. We. asked the question if it had and answered it in the negative. j Some democratic pajwrs just go off into a spasmodic fit of jov over the fact that certain ; designing political schemers, no longer able to deceive the democratic party because there were so many of their kindi in that party more ade t . than they, joined the populist and have becn-found to be corrupt in the part they flayed in that party and have been denounced as such br popnlists. . j No wonder this is straiige to a democrat who has been allowed to stay in his party when he opposed the principles adrocated by his party. It is scarcely to be wondered at that sucii a democrat snonlu ter anxious for political tricksters to remain in the populist party aud corrupt it un til people have no more faith in It than they have in the democratic party all festering with the poisonous cankering sores which it has managed to keep coucealed from view. Knowing the chagrin that party defeat brings to the above described democrat aud how party sueec.?? with him is paramount to public welfare or anything else it is not difficult to see why such a one should cast insin uations at populists who "stand for the purity of their party, eveu sug gesting that they have no right, to condemn such as have been untrue. Editor Daniels has worked against the lease in his paper with a venge ance aud, no doubt, many of his read ers think that the democratic partv is in line with him. It has never oc curred to Mr. Daniels to state that in the legislature his party iu the house all voted against the lease except 27 three having voted against it aud in the senate all voted against the lease except 7 which was their entire membership in the senate. . ! i Chandler, Oklahoma, a town of 1500 inhabitants was completely-" de molished by a cyclone on .March "30. After being blown down the' wreck caught afire and some of the crippled were burned up. Loss of lives-19; in-i jured over 100, . POPULISTS AND TARIFF A A MANIFESTO ISSUED 13Y THE ' ing questions of financial and mon PAHTY CAUCUS. opoly reforms and also to avoid giving They Have No Faith in the DingUy Bill as a Step Towards Prosperity, Free Coinatre of Silver the Onlv Hope. , "The tariff has been the bettledoor and shuttlecock of politics for more than one hundred years, and its fiual settlement is more distant than when the controversy l?egan. ; .. j ' "During this period the country has experienced at different times both prosperity and hard times, not only uuder a high tariff, but also nn dera low tariff; but it has always ex perienced hard times when there was a contraction of the money volume, no matter whether the tariff was high or low. . ! "When the Cleveland-Republican combination repealed the purchasing clause of the Sherman act, aud htop- ped the issue of new money, the crash uume, uoiniiusuiuuuig, me mcxviu- ley tariff remaiued in force a year and a half thereafter, and when the Democratic Wilson bill became a law the evils of the contraction were not mitigated by it, but j tims have continued to grow worse. We have no faith in either a Republican or a Democratic tariff as a remedy for the evils of the gold standard and mo nopoly rule. "e recoguizc the fact that all former tariff legislation, as well as the proposed Ineasu re, has many nn- just discriminations, and works hard- shirs to many industries and un reasonably fosters others. - ' "lhe chief Republican complaint against the Wilson bill, however, is that it does not produce sufficient revenue for the support of the govern ment This lack of revenue is not the result of defects in the bill as it was passed by Congress, but resulted from decision, of the Supreme Court which 'declared the income tax un constitutional. There are many ways to supply the deficiency without re newing the tariff agitation.- The most direct and effective-method would be to restore silver and increase the cir culating medium so as to restore the level of prices which existed prior to the demonetization pf the 'metal. If that could be done, the present tariff law, with the money derived from the , other source, would create a surplns and not a deficiency. If the money powers are strong enoug to postpone relief in that way ample revenue could be derived from a tax on a few articles which would produce reve nue, or what might be still better, a reduction of needless expenditures, such as extravagant appropriations of money for rivers and harbors, not required by the needs of commerce, and the like. j "We do not regard the Diugley bill as a revenue measure. It is extremely doubtful if it will produce as much revenue as the Wilson bill. Nor is it a tariff for protection in aiiy just sense. It is emphatically a tariff for agit- atiou. me uiscrinuuauon and in equality of the bill will create great dissati faction. It seems to us design ed by the Republican party to create such a tiriff agitation s will divert the attention of the people from the misery they suffer from a contraction of money and the rule of monopolies. Tariff agitators,who who are usually either ignorantly or knowingly the tools of monopolists and the money trust, have succeeded j for the last tweuty years in deluding many voter into the belief that the misery they endure results wholly from the wick edness of the tariff proposed, or pas sed by the opposite party. The sole object ot the gold Republicans seems to be to engage the Democratic party in., the old chronic tariff "war, and thereby sidetrack all questions or is sues which they fear to meet, and which aioue can bring general , pros perity,. These and other like consid erations have induced the Popnlists in the two houses of Congress to de cline to recognize the tariff issue as a proper subject to divide parties un till the main issue of the mouey ques tion and the rule of monopolies is settled. They refuse to countenance any scheme which will keep up the chronic fight over the tiriff to enable the money trust to avoid a decision on the real and vital issues between the people and concentrated wealth. "VVhile the Popnlists will do all in their power in both houses of Con gress to remedy the manifest de fects in the Wilson bill and to secure to farmers and laborers such protec tion as shall correspond with the protection in both the McKinley and the Wilson bill ot finished roducts, to equalize the burden of taxation necessary to raise sufficient revenue. and to also equitably distribute the benefits resulting from such a tariff, ,et it uie refrain from voting f jr lor jifminst th DincrW billon iu iiual passage, it will be to avoid even the appearance of promoting the con- - Uinnaye of the tariff agitation to 'sidetrack the "vital and overshadow- rountenace to the contention that any tariff legislation, however wise and just, could remove existing evils i D1g general prwpeniy. Thealdressis signed by all the Populist Senators and Representa tives. . AN ACT TO ENCOURAGE LO CAL TAXATION FOR PUB- LIC SCHOOLS Whereas, This Genera Assembly has, by raising the rate of school tax from 18 to 20 cents, already nrovid ed an increase of fifty thonsan d($50, 000) to the common school fund of the State The General Assembly of .North Carolina do enacc Section 1. That the sum of fifty thousand dollars ((aou,uuin, or so much tnercot as mav ce nrcfssanvis j hereby annually appropriated out of j auv money in the treasury, not cthcr- wise appropriated, the same to! be paid as called for by the State Board of Education and by 6aid Board to be paid to the public schools of the Stite as hereinafter provided. Section 2. On Tuesday after the second Mouday iu August within the year 1897 theBoard of County Com missioners of every county shall cause an election to be held in every school district in their respective counties upon the question of levying a special district tax for the public schools of said district, and notice of tbU election shall be given by the County Commissioners at their regu lar Junsrmeeti ng, and notice shall be published In the county papers and posted on the school houses of said district Section 3. The Board of County Commissioners shall determine the amount of tax to be voted upon' by each district, but said tax shall beat least 10 cents upon every $100 worth of property and 80 cents upon every poll, and shall not .be repealed within three years from the date of first levying it After three years from the date of first levying a special tax for schools said tax may be repealed only by a majority vote of the qualified voters of the ilistrict, and no flection for the repeal of any special'tax shall be held except upon written petition to ht lkard.of County Commission ers, signed by at least one-third of the qualified voters of the district Section 4." Iu every district that fails to levy a special f chuol tax iu 1897 the County Commissioners ihall order an election to be held every two years on the T utsday after the first Monday in August, under the provis ions of this act, until such special tax is levied. Section 5. At said election every voter in favor of the special tax shall vote a written or printed ballot with the words "J or fechools, ana every voter opposed to the special school tax shall vote a written or printed ballot with the words "Against Schools." Said election shall be held under the rules and -regulations prescribed for the election of mem bers of the General Assembly of North Carolina, The County Com missioners shall prepare said ballots and distribute them. They shall also prepare boxes for the election and appoint poll-holders and necessary officers. If a majority of the quali fied voter shall declare in favor of the special tax the same shall be immed iately levied by the Board of County Commissioners and collected at the same time and in the same manner as the general school tax of the coun ty, and shall be placed within thirty davs in the county treasury to the credit of the district in which it was collected. Section 6. To every district that ihav levy a special school tax under the.provisions of this act the State Board of Education shall give annu ally for three years a sum of mouey equal to the special school tax collec ted every year until tha appropria tion of $50,000 for each is exhausted: Provided, That no district shall re ceive from the State Board of Edu cation more than $500 a year, and if the aggregate of the taxes levied by districts utdjr the provisions of this act shall be greater than the amount herein appropriated, then this special State appropriation shall be divided among the several districts in pro portion to the amount raised by spe cial taxation. ) Section". On the 31st day of Jan uary in each eir the Treasurer of every county where any special sebex 1 tax naa been leyiea unaer xne pro visions of (his act shall send to the Superintendent of Public Instruc tion a sworn statement of the a mount of special school tax collected in each district for that year. Imme diately upon the receipt of this stite ment the Superintendent of Public Instruction shall send to the Treas urer of the county a warrant for a sum of money to be placed to the - r ; . rr1if. nf ih rliatrint Minul tn tho enni 1 aYi4w1 far Ayvrrwt in do district respectfrely that yean Pro Tided, That if the ipecial school tax collected in any district in one year is more than five hudred dollars j the Superintendent of Public Instruc tion shall send to the County Treas urer a warrant for such district for $500 and no more. Or auy district where an amount not exceeding live hundred dollars shall have been rais ed by voluntary subscription au equal amount shall be paid by the Treasurer. Section 8. None of the provisions of this act shall' annlv to anv town- . . - . i ship, city, or school district that now levies a special school tax of as much j as ten cents on every $100 worth of property ana thirty cents on every poll. Section 9. All laws and clauses of laws in conflict with this act are here by repealed. . Section 10. This act shall be in force from and after its ratification. In the General Assembly n-nd' three times and ratified, this 'jth davi of March, J897. " j NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. 23. 3ST003S, J"., HAS Coffins and Caskets READY FOR DELIVERY ; At any hour, day or night Coffin from $2 ftf 25. Caskets from $40 to $7i. a tli . ... WHY sena oat ot the uountv ucu jun uiu get LH:tivr goous ,ior the money right here in Pittsboro? ...... l. - l l 1 . r I Administrates' ; Notice. Havlnjr qualified as Administrators! oi the estate of W . JS. btraughan, ue ceased, notice is hereby give i to all persons holding claims njrainst sid'de- cnlent to prreei.t tlicm to us for settle ment on or ueiore the 4th - HA 1 of MARCH. 11-. r this notice will be pit ad in bar of their leeovery. I hose indebted to 8 ltd estate wiH please coma forward and settJcf. K. V.STRAUGIIAN, 1I.T.CJIAP1N, Administrators of W. N. stratighan, decaset . Administiator's Notice. Having' qualified as Administrator' on ti.e estate of S tmueJ T. Cojrgius otr this tiic ibt auy ot, .Aiarcn, ivji, notice Is hereby given to ;ill I'Cisons indebted to the estate ot t'ie saia.atuuel r. Coir gins tojrrake rnintliate payment; ancf all persons haviui; claims aain?t saM estate wiM present them to rue for pa,,; mentou or ueiore uie nan u:i on March, IrM, or this notice will beple;:d in bar of their- feerf e?y. This 1st day I of March, 18U7. C1..C. CO(3lXaf, Attax'x. Summons By Publica tion. NORTH CAROLINA . In the Su CitATUAM Count v. vverior Court. V. M.Ellis, A-ielaide Ell ami HoJohnar Ellis ' vs. E. II . I'.otdfn. Madison Uowden andW It. Mitchell. The defendants above i anie-l Vill take notice that an action as bove en titled has been commenced in the Mi perior C ourt of Chatham County to recover a certain sum of money due the plaintiffs 3th6 wants of the defrnduur, E. II. Uowden. as their (junrdiau, and the def-udantfr Madiscm ikrwdeu and W. 11. ilitciiell, as sureties ou Guardian bond for said E lit Dowder (Junrdrai for the above jiamed plaintiffs. A ud tlie defendants will farther tkc notkC that they re required to appear at the next term of the .Superior Co irt of said Couuty of Chatham to .be held in the town Pifsbro. N. C in said county on th lhitteeuth Monday after i;e Fi:st Monday in i'cbruaiy, IM7. and tnsvrer or tieivmr to the oinjIaint in s..id action, or the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in said complaint. R. U. DIXON Clerk of theSupeiior C.urt. This Mhiw.y of March, 1? bicycles f RrJlabk Agents "Wanted J buffalo WHEEL CO., i RHEUMATISf.1 iiiORHLGIS. CATARRH. ASTHMA. HEADACHE Hialreij ! tfcouuis Thoaeb so nnlTersallr nsed and tested rpek Uiof thla rret irnktrf Ma tou u taken aa directed aod la the proper quantity a Urvpa" raanoi fail to cure any of the diseases lot whirb it is rteommended. What It has already doe to rallers lbs suffer! ua is told la tboosaods of letters of gratef ol pc ale. ,i Jir' "?Brrrx width fr aaia aL ttly Clre my personal endorsement of too rheUmT;-eVd- wtoV leftanT paralysed and I was only abut to dreos with iuwance. I secured a bow of AUKUrJ and look a dose that nljbt. rnbbrn aJrt. uu eateraallfa; directed Thi foLotrins woE! V IJLVa ,"l??d L?.d ,n1, hnnienaely wilered. end eontlnnin, tre. -cm j:; rz . J "" -",. -mmm noimcij rree irora pain, snd all swr-'iuc Vf-!". I' J-PtJ...Tbe Ainew and completeneM of .bit cm wn, Vi MiJl!7-kDJ?B JotLVtT ' le" of I"4 tarnlf property ofyonr medifLft and hare several friends who have been eured by It nf r0mtkiriYiUht h lad Ath mL give thU remedy o trial. Slnreretr yonrs j. p Llsf EBl'RNKR. Bmrcon of Pcfulut and Hejtrm tfr$. OUSUck &xkamn BmldJ, &, A CURES THE INCURADLC. J . Detn KirA: I trbPld Use to'tnaifl yon for yooia-reat remedr JROIv ami tit ron whst it has done for me. 1 hid KHtumaxUm in ery jaS and In tho hearl mud I ba. Catarrh of the head for no yeara, 1 was so poorly that I toe the 52? of my leS, ll f!:i lr,i ji j not move without pain, I w a so crippled, that 1 had done bot little wors Tuf mr years and our family physiclsn. a good doctor, told ia that my BheumatAm a i l tHtarrh were incurable, and I believed him. But now. after usinr "a DRor?' !f to inontHs. I an tn.ir say 1 have not felt so well for seven years, fuu medicine mare (h la claisaed for it At this time my Catarrh is mwh beuerT and I haTO acaw any KbeumnUaor at ail and the heart weakneaa and patn are gone. Hy hearinc Is now eood "J,.,n!.ye?3i,r wmofh better I bare trained more thai? to pound. of fle.Vand c-art tu Pf i2nn !,J!ihe ? I eeer saw to ffire a mJtZr who hM a yonSe chlict for it the wm effect on tbe child as on the notsw. It ward, off Croup and cores tho hires of the chila and causes sweet and refrenhtna sleon to botb rwincndoM Jan. . laflft. soars respectfully, b?r f.-f my year, an iyiOid. mmd rtadimrtke KelUms. oskimr.t his tn Jartrment was fenuuu, MR. J.J WILSON. Isb sin: l onr letter of recent date at band, the testimonial yon apeak of is rennlne The company who manufacture "Pi ns Drops- published my iwtlnioniaJ i Ju-t -' IriTeit the4 ana ecr wurdof It is trae, and I could iwoar to it ad i.rov it by Janffar for publication in order that poor sufferer-, lnenrable as I once wa. and aa vou are miaht I cured lirt 5 Oropa" and o-e it and tt wUl cure yoa as li b cmWh! . 1 ha- i "Vi , "Qf ny lrlit'r "te yonrs. ana it U a pleasure toiMhi answer all whu wriie. Tell all LvlfiliiT" V b.nl h"v? y'L'11 bun - hrops.- I know how to rymwuhi, nlth ihmt r rsH (,,,r 5M?n I snffered so long. U Is now 8 months since 1 have tell any i-ain. . W L1 ?". J"!. brother, naes Drore" tn his practlr. ami Jius ma lnef docin2 (iT: fcto!t. lit uri for s cut Ilk rnnn Mb. mint. Sept. 21. IS91 If ryou have not juflt lent confidence after reading tf?-e tetttrs for a Urge bottle. send rr a sample bottle. mbU-bcontalna aufficieiitmedic1n to cot.vVb-ri.u f Us mtrlt Tbla woiiderrnl c.uratlTe ftirc. aim. instant relief and la a permanertt i-e for VHmmttltni. Jclatloo. NeoralCia. Dyspepjia. Backae., hyfevsr, tnb. Slorpieji.wess NarYttosnsss. Nervous snd NeoralgM rt-sSaVJl, HM WfrA. tMtlirSc. earache! Ooup. "La Orlrpe." MUrU. Craeptos Nmmi&h. BrtnreW. ti atodrrO Oiaa. - FIVE nnOPS " la the name and dose. Lair rrti)ei (t dni. i on. k; oti!e for 5 1 SapiMe httle nrciid by mail e. Rot sold by drugxUta, L:t uulr by us and our agents. Affcnt appointed Iu new territory. . . SWAM SON RHEUMATIC CURE CO., 167 Dcartora SU Cjicato.RL 8 Spring We have open for your inspection the most sup-'ib Y.na oe Spring IT-ftlig ever shown in Ualeigh. No pains ha-e I ecu partti ttfmake our line not onlyilE linkj of the city, but- of tbe State, and we feel justly proud of- our acfii'-veinent. Our Spring stock embraces every eoncei v.ible .ty le, pattern and weave, and we will take tI-.M5nre in showing you the different styles, etc- i a Examine Our Stock and Prices before You Buy. ; ' CROSS To Country Kcrcbants I dm now . prepared to syi at wholesale priei Quinine, 1-8 02L lOt size bottle. raregorie, 10c Laudanum, . 10c (iistor oil, 10c (ilyccrme, 10c Kiwi.. Ienon, . lUc Vanilla, He ii U tt tt ti t ii . tt Kp.om JalU, Sulphur, &c. tc. A"hv order thx-iu from othtr places when you can get them as cheap and just as good from your local Druggist ? Just received a fresh suppy of Garden Seecs Call and see me when wanting any thing in that Sine- February t . G. R. Pilkingtoa's Drug Store, Pittsboro, Ii. C. Wanted-An Idea I Wboeaathtek tiling to patent? aoana atnipke Protect rxfnt W-t thr rear fcrtaa-yo we-Jt Writ JOH? muDTSLhUUX CO, Fateat A MjL WMHcrtoa, D- tar U $.IJK prtm a411t ol wo aeswired larsnWaaa wimA, and their marvelous cure, ft-ietj-eor UieiXh.Tutnrr !tt.ks chi tt ltii stfimuei4 t Uj ;cot r"!Tk ( ri of ;!- wr known in tt Sifferers cared withoct a t!;!e Uili f -FIYE DROPS." ! did ToamiU...! no. jou i.ever dki and never will, i. mumy years at t tffcUl retresmtative of the saffariof aod out of gratitude to y-a o On the wh of Janoary. is, 7. ud with an axcravaied caso of inflammatory WM. M. kELLKV ., alberta, terry i o InJ. UUcr 'trnktcki Ji? and rttetvtd this rrflj,wkik he fmveardtd uS. " ' 8 1 W. KKU.EVS Opening. LIIMEKAPJ The Clolhiem. IVlortgage Sale. By virtue of the power of a ceitaiu mortgage deed executed to the unde -signed by Jag. i. Lonif and m if, Kii LoDg, aud registered in book s.. pages 556 and ii7. iu the office of Itei -ter of Deeds f r t hatliatu c.hitity. I wi!t on the 30th dav of April. l7, ou tht premises. at 12 o'clock M.. aeli for rn-?i at public auction, the land situate-1 in XT-. IT I.:-. A, :u. . .1 lows: On the waters f tijr r n-Ic. adjolnlngthe lands of ty.Ml. Heckw'i aud Antlira Ueckwith, containing tit teen xeres. NANCY LOXCi l'er M. E. Mann, agent" " April I, 1897. THEMATCHTSS 7 BURDETT '-i'SB.f I They fxcrl xa power toof Tirkty, elegance sad durxbillti Catal3gPriegtoaFf?kann lianafactared by BURDETT ORGAN COl, ( Freeport, H XstmHUJfd IXC. . J W aT m T - dUT, m, Si a J i .1 f - .S-J t t

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