. Turner's North Carolina almanac : for the year of our Lord ... . lmatter prepared by the typewriter, twocents for each ounce or fraction thereof, ex-cept postal cards. Drop letters; two centsper ounce or fraction thereof, at placeswhere there is a carrier delivery. Second Class—All newspapers and otherperiodical publications issued at stated in-tervals, and as frequently as four times ayear, from a known office of publication,one cent per pound or fraction thereof,after being admitted as second-class matterby the Post-Office Department. Third Class—Books and circulars, proof-theets, correcte


. Turner's North Carolina almanac : for the year of our Lord ... . lmatter prepared by the typewriter, twocents for each ounce or fraction thereof, ex-cept postal cards. Drop letters; two centsper ounce or fraction thereof, at placeswhere there is a carrier delivery. Second Class—All newspapers and otherperiodical publications issued at stated in-tervals, and as frequently as four times ayear, from a known office of publication,one cent per pound or fraction thereof,after being admitted as second-class matterby the Post-Office Department. Third Class—Books and circulars, proof-theets, corrected proof-sheets and manu-script copy accompanying the same, blankor printed cards and envelopes with printedaddress, photographs with only name andaddress of sender in writing, seeds, cuttings,bulbs, roots, scions and plants, one cent foreach two ounces or fraction thereof. Transient newspapers, periodicals, etc.,that are published at regular intervals, andsent by persons other than the publisheror newsdealer, one cent for each four ouncesor fraction Rearly 8 soon -jtxn we haT«b«en training men nnd womenfor business, first Bnsiness Gol-lege in Ya., and second in Soathto own its building. No free. Bookkeeping,Shorthand, Penmanship by maU. President. Leading bos. ool. south Potomao river. —PhiU. Stenographer. Fourth Class—Embraces all matter notin the first, second and third classes, whichis not in its orm or nature liable to de-stroy, deface or otherwise damage the mail-bag, and is not above four pounds for eachpackage, except in case of single bookiweighing in excess of that amount (limitedto four pounds six oimces in the foreignmails) one cent for each ounce or fractionthereof. ^ Note.—Labels, patterns, playing-cards,visiting cards, addresses, tags, paper sacks,wrapping paper with printed advertise-ments thereon, bill-heads, letter-heads, en-velopes and other matter of the same gen-eral character is charged as fourth-classmatter—that i


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, booksubjectalmanac, bookyear1847