THE FRANKILJN TIMESL VOL. XXVI. LOUISBURG, N. C.y FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1896. NUMBER 20 "v ;' jjetnodist Church Directory. Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Geo. S. Baker Supt. preaching at 11 A. M., and 7 P. M., ee?v&tfrn2ting Wednesday night. 11 y G. F. Smith, Pastor. lrot'essional crds, , !. MAS8ENBURG, 1 ' , ATTORNEY AT LAW. LOUI3BUR8, N. C. j,, :u tice in all the Courts of the State Ottice in Court House. , N j c 'OKB & SON, , ViTORNEYS-AT-LAW, LoCiSBURO, N. C. ,, i in - courts of Nash, Franklin, w , 1 1 " Jar,.ea ami w afce counties, also the W'li c. rcLUt: CO ,uii urt of North Caroltup, and the U. I Hstri'Jl Courts, B uircu.. . . . t r. W T two doors below Aycocfee & Co.'s rtrU'an' adjonuuK Dr. O. A.. ELUB. ii. NICHOLSON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, LOUISBUEH, N. C. Will FHCILL, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, LOUI3BURG, N. C. .,.,i th courts of Franklin, Vance, ILlli,'" . uucv.... - , .ru''n! r,'ine Court of North Carolina. Prompt ,u givtiu to collections, &c muS. U. WILDER, Oilier 0 slur A.TTORNEY-AT-LAW, LOUISBURG, N. C. Main street, over Jones s uouper T. AT 10 V. B1CKETT, RNEV AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. L0U1SBURS Jf . C. iT.mn.t and painstaking attention given to ' , ,. ,u, r intrusted to his hands. B 1 to Chi" f Justice Shepherd, Hon. John T t . . T f Kre" Fir National Bank of Win UuvlOii. trw. ri ,,.;. f nrles Bank i.' Tairinp vrt. wa&e f il' roe For- Timberlake. "!;;!'' ft cwri Hooii, oppo.lte SMUTs. AY. M. PERSON, Praetiei-s ATTORNEY-AT-L AW, LOUISBURG, N. C. in all courts. Office in the Court AY. II. YARBOROUGH, JR. ATTORNEY AT LAW, LOUISBURG, N. C. oi on second floor of Neal building Mull Mieft. ll Ii'mI business w ill ifceive intrusted to him prompt and caretul attention. WASHINGTON LETTER -How the Government Is Bunkoed on Itt Very High triced Ait "Work-The Correspondents' Train. Special Correspondence. The fuss.that is being made over the acceptance of the de&gja of tCarl Rohl Smith for the Sherman statue may call public attention to the many scandals which have marked the purchase of art works for the government. In this case Sculptor Smith was ruled out of the final competition for the prize by the committee of artists asked to make se lections from the first designs submitted, and the committee having the expend iture of the money in charge quietly overruled the decision of the artists and substituted the name of Smith, for that of Mr. Partridge. It was a" foregone conclusion then that the design presented by Smith in the final competition would be accepted. The committee did not de liberate very long over tine question, but designated Smith as the sculptor of the Sherman statue. The design presented by Smith, artists say, can be produced for about one-fourth the amount to be expended, and there are evidences of a Senegambian in the pile of wood. Whether he will be brought to light bv the protesting artists who are holding indignation meetings in New York and elsewhere is very doubtful. There is no one with authority to review the deci sion of the committee, for, while it has representatives from the war depart ment, it is a committee of the Society of the Army of the Tennessee. The same favoritism has always been shown in the purchase of so called works of art for the government, and as a re sult the public places of Washington are defaced with as curious an aggregation of misfit pictures and statues as can be found anywhere in the world. One of the curiosities of this collection is a six toed Indian maiden pictured in a group in the rotunda of the capitol. The artists who have got commissions from congress are the men who have been successful lobbyists. One of them got a commission to paint an historical group for the capitol for which he re ceived a sum far in excess of its value as a work of art. When it had been completed and in place for a year, he concluded that he could get a little more money out of congress ; so he returned to the capitol and presented a petition for several -thousand dollars additional. He was as successful in lobbying this ap propriation through as he had been with the first. This happened a good many years ago. A more modern instance of CURRENT MISCELLANY. SHORT NEWS STORIES. Dr. J. E. Palmer, IMIACTIC1NG PHYSICIAN. FllANKLINTON, - - N. C (ifffi's liin iirofpssional service to the people of till . pt'ctiol KING, D. T. SMITH WICK. Kinc; & Smithwick. DENTISTS. LOUISBURG, N. C. Wnrl in pvcrv department of Denistry e. ,-nt.Ml with tkill and accuracy, oilier Opera House building. DR. IE. 3T. ZELIRXSr DENTIST, LOUISBURG, N. C. Office in New Hotel building, 2nd floor. Gas administered and teetn ex. traded without pain. " Speaking of experiences, ' ' remarked in old engineer to a reporter, "have I four permission to narrate a little one that happened to me during my first year a an engine? 3ot only my permission, " responded ibe-generous reporter, "but my impera tive command and an invitation to take lomething while you are about it. " The preliminaries being satisfactorily arranged, the engineer proceeded with. his story. It was 25 years ago," he said, "and I was a fireman on a road in New York State. The engineer I fired for was. or rather had been, one of the best on the road, but he had been turned over and steamed under a locomotive boiler in a wreck and after that he was given a less important train. Not so much because he was any the less good as an engineer, but because officials have an jdea that it takes a man's nerve away when a serious accident happens to him. We had a run of about 75 miles each way and on Sundays in summer we carried excursions. We had never had any trouble, but for a month before the experience I am telling my engineer had been in a bad temper and acted as ugly as the mis chief. I reported the matter to the di vision superintendent and he told me to stick it out for a month or so longer, as they proposed to relieve the old man and put him at work in the shops. Two Sundays after that we were returning in the evening about 9 o'clock, behind time, owing to delays occasioned by washouts causing us to run slow and cautious. We had 20 miles to go and it was over the WQrst part of the road and I was watching out of the cab, when all at once the engineer gave a shout and made a grab at me. His eyes were blaz ing, and I could see in a second that he was either drunk or crazy. "How I got away from him I don't know, for he did his best to throw me off the cab, but I got away and climbed up on the wood piled up on the tender. He didn't follow, but turned at once to the throttle and threw it wide open. I knew what that meant with six coaches full of people behind us and a bad track, and the first thing I did was to try to knock him out with a stick of wood. I missed my throw and he came after me with a heavy iron bar and I went over the rear of the tender on to the platform of the car next to us. By this time we were fairly jumping over the track, and I was so rattled that I didn't know what to do. "In a second, though, I gathered my self up and uncoupled the train from the How the Policemen Fooled Pearson- Re fused to Treat and Wu Elect ed Muaio at Meals. One of Roosevelt's many funny ex periences with New York policemen re calls a story often told on Inspector Pearson, whose noiseless galoshes were for so long the terror of Washington "cops." It was about 12 years ago, while walking in one of the streets of Georgetown, that Inspector Pearson came upon two police officers sitting on the doorstep of a private residence ob livious to the goings on in their respect ive beats. Pearson quietly took the number of the house and had the delin quents hauled, before the trial board' for neglect of duty. Odinarily there would have been little hope for men in their position, but they were resourceful With the consent of the occupants they employed a carpenter to remove the steps from the house and place them in front of the next residence. Then as a defense they merely stated that there were no steps in front of the house where the inspector declared he had seen them sitting. The trial board, very mnch interested in such a line of de fense, visited the place in a body, found that the officers' statement was true, and dismissed the case, to the great sur prise of Inspector Pearson. Some years afterward the latter heard of the trick and declared it the best that had ever been played on him. Washington Post this favoritism is the awarding of commission very recently for a bust of locomotive, which was not so hard to TT T- I -i j; i 1 i . i J J 3 3 i.W John O. Breckinridge for the senate chamber which has been given to James P. Voorhees, the sen of the senator from Indiana, by the committee on library, of which his father is a member. Young Voorhees is a weird protean genius who has been at various times a claimant of public nqtice as a sculptor, an actor and an author, and who draws a government salary now as clerk to his father's com mittee." He is hot recognized as an artist and the struggling artists of Washing ton and this city is becoming a "home of art" year by year are naturally dis couragd by this favoritism which has so little consideration for merit. It has been suggested more than once that con gress appoint an art commission to pass on all works of painting or sculpture. Members of congress in great number are going to the St. Louis convention and as many more will go to the con vention at Chicago. Four years ago con gress was in session when the conven tions met and the news from Minneapo lis and Chicago was received on the floor of house and senate. The business of congress was virtually suspended be cause the interest in the aff airS of the conventions was so great that no one had heart for anything else. And be sides there were so few Washington cor respondents present that there was little use doing anything. If it were not for the Will viKit LouiHUurgonMoraay, lueeuaj TOnrV pts in t.V.A irallft- thfirfl wnnld hfl i e-n : V, tio Nin rwl 'i V i ' w-.--.- (- j fewer speeches made and more business would be transacted in a shorter space of time. The correspondents are going to St. Louis in style. They always do, because, for reasons known to themselves, the railroads find nothing too good for the correspondents in this city. The Penn sylvania road always makes up a special convention train for the corps of corre spondents. It is a train of sleeping cars with a dining car attached, and each correspondent has a section to himself. Dentistry, W. H. EDWARDS OF WAKE FORBST, N. C. Riul Wi-drnwlav following the hrst wunaay in f.ich month and at Frankhnton on r n lay and Saturday of the same week, pre pari'd to do all kinds of Dental work. Crown and bridge work a specialty. Pos itively I an put, in artificial teeth in one hour afr extracting the teeth" nrfiro in Meadow's hotel, rooia No. 9, at Louinlmrg, and at E. W. Morris' residence, r'nuiklinton. HOTEL'S. HOTEL WOOdARDj W. C. WOODABD, Prop., Rocky Mount; N. C. do, as we were on a down grade and the engine was bouncing so that the coup ling pin swung loose at intervals. Then I slapped on the brake there and went through the train as fast as I could, telling brakemen and conductor to slow up, and do it quick. Jur part or trie train being stopped, we got out to see where the engine had gone, but we could see nothing. Putting a man with a light on the track a mile behind us to stop the next train, the conductor and I went ahead to find what had become of the runaway. "Two miles away, or two minutes at the rate he was going, we found the engine in the ditch and the engineer buried under it The engine had struck a soft place and spread the rails any body knows what that means and think what the result would have been to a trainload of passengers going after that engine at 60 miles an hour! It al most made my hair gray to think about it, and when the people on the train heard the story they made up a purse for me that almost made it curl, and I concluded that it was an ill wind indeed which blew no good." Washington Star. Refused to Treat and Wu Elected. "I was elected to my present office, " said R. C. Arnold of Winston, Ala., at the National, who is now serving his second term as alderman, "because I would not buy a jug of liquor. The con test was a very close one, but I thought my election was assured, when twe nights before the voting was to be done a delegation came to me and wanted money with which to buy a couple of gallons of whisky. I refused to give it and the next day my friends told me that my opponent had furnished four gallons and 80 men who had been relied upon to support me had gone on a picnic and had agreed to vote for the other man. This I knew would defeat me, and after carefully polling my strength, a comparatively easy matter in a com munity where every voter is known, I concluded that the liquor had settled it against me. Election day came and not a man who went on the picnic returned. The polls closed and I was elected by ten votes. We subsequently learned that the crowd had got drunk and been ar rested, keeping them away from town. Had I given the liquor my friends would have gone and those of my opponent re mained at home." Washington Star. JOKES OF THE JESTERS. The new minister was talking with one of the influential citizens of the vil lage in order to get some idea of the personnel of his congregation. "I hope tfe will pet along very nicely together," he remarked politely. "I hope so too. I don't doubt that you'll be all right with the older mem bers. But I'm afraid you won't be as Pop lar weth the young men ea the other was. "Did he address his remarks espe cially to them on any regular occasions V ' "No. Their likin for im amed ter start all of a sudden. Ho had took Charge of the Bible class in the Sunday school durin tho absence of the ree'lai teacher. Some of the young men wa. 1 Inclined not tor pay 'tentiou, an one er two said things ter make tho rest laugh about his being purty young an won deriu how soon the infant class 'ud ecttin up tor do teachin. " "Of cours he kept his temper?" "Yes, indeed. An when the Ir-sson was over, he says: '(Gentlemen, I'd like ter make your further acquaintance. I've fixfxl up a kind of gyinnaniuin where I live, an I'd like ter have you come up tr morrow evenin ter look over the appa ratuses an things. " "Did they go?" "Couldn't keep Ym away. They thought it was goin ter be a chano- ter have some more fun wet 'ini. The day after, two of 'em had hlaek eves, one of 'em had a skinned jaw an another had pieces of stickin plaster all over his left ear. They never went into rartieulars about what happened, but one of 'em told me that you never conld tell 'bout these people who hd jes' come fnni college. An from that day ter this there never was anything too much fur 'em u-r do ter 'blige the minister." Detroit Free Press. TAKE NOTICE. All persons indebted to Kin Jfc Macon ore hereby requested to make settlement of name at once, or their account will be pat in the hands ol an officer for collection. KINd 4 MACON. Notice! ! ! IR,. TYLER, ORNAMENTAL HOUSE AND SKiN TAINTEII. CslMming, Grinio? sod Parlor psiofin:, i"p-illin.. Ordure l-ft at TbiimaV Irug Nr? will b- attends to promptly. TAKE NOTICE ! Oar hack is run to the depot for the benefit of passengers who pay, and while we do not wish to be discourteous to anyone we respectfully ak that all "dead head" will either walk or "pay." HAVE & FULLER. 00 YOU WANT A HOUSE ? On th ltt day of JuDe 1H00, we the undTsiej will enter into a co partnership for the practice of Medi cine and Surgery, DR. E. S. FOSTER, DR. J. E. MA LONE. Iounlun;. N. ( NUTICE. . IFy-a want roar Walcbe. docks, Pit.l. S-winjf HaehiD and Jwlry rriir-d a; tbort aottap. tak tbm to J. A. FAI LK.NBK, JrUr. I X'i; to Uirhle Warrh-, Looi. ' bar. N C WtT.TMf. SO Bl If so y on wijl .jo or eee J . Lev iter , e 1 1 to write, at Loui bu r N. C , before tontrai.ti'- ( . Piat.. speei.ication." and estimate made ou burnt building, TAYLOR'S PARLOR SALOON. A Natural Infer el ce. Little George A. paid his first visit j to the country a short time a?o, and a was natural was much int-rt.-d m the . farm and all its belongings. )ue day I his unele took him to the bam to ! some chickens that were just hatched. The process of incubation was soim-thing which had never 1 fore come under his j observation, and he looked with op-n i eyHl wouder at the fluffy chicks wjjile j his uncle tried to explain the hatching process All at once he turned anil rush- 1 ed iui'o the house to his mother, ex- ' claiming: ; "Oh, mamma! come out to the bam, I quick! Uncle John has set a hen and hatched out ten little Henrys!" New ! York World. i Harirain: Where a' ? ) . II. T f'r cheap Wli;skv, B VV Hies iV B"rs. hre can road corn whikey?&t Fa v hr A' 'i. Ftt.i one 1 1 r A ,1 b,, D. m three y -virs old , before. c h-&tir than ever Uncle George Pullman does not con- Frce Bug meets all trains, lif'-s $2 per day. NORWOOD HOUSE Warrenton. North Carolina. W. J. NORWOOD, proprietor; Tourists and tribute to the gayety of the party, be cause he receives pay for the use of his cars pud his dinners are not served free. So far as the correspondents are con cerned, however, they are free, for no one on the train can spend a cent. George W. Boyd always has the train in charge, and if there is anything lacking in the supply of good things it is because some one has neglected to name a want and because Mr. Boyd's bountiful imag ination has not supplied the deficiency. On tbs trip to the St. Louis convention plMvifi ivmaN ROT E I A ight yea?a some one sgge8 88 there should be a piano aboard. The suggestion was made in fun, but Mr. Boyd took it very seriously, "tfeorge, he said to his special attendant, i'when we getf to Baltimore, telegraph the agenj at Harrisburg to put a piano aboard trie train. " And it was done. Onlv Washington correspondents are permitted on this special train, and 'this rule has caused a great deal of heart- rrfirniner. Four vears ago a man who aotpA a Vairent" I won't say lobbyist Oxford, N. C. . of the Pennsylvania road at Washing- , m n I orviVHorl -Pot nwnm m od atl OnS On the accommodations lor ine r , - - vr:r"r,, , Pitronapre of Commercial mvt-iing Public Solicited. Good Sample Boom. Nrakest Hotel to-Stores asd COubt House. FRANKLINTON, N.;C. ' C. M. EOBBS, Prp'T. " Oood accomodation for the traveling public. i'jod Livery Attached. . ? OSBORN HOUSE, C D. OSBORN, Proprietor, Good traveling public. MASSENBUBG HOTEL. Matssenburg HENDERSON, N. C Cood accommodations. , God fare; lite and attentive amhtn, ' -.. train. ThenressccanmitteerepUedcoolly that as ho was not a correspondent lie sonfd not have them. He was very in- "You know who TI am," he said to the chairman of the press com mittee. "I certainly do, " said the chair- Propr man,' "and yon. can t go on this train. And what the chairman saia was gos Dfel, for the correspondents' owB. tb vial tram w me wuvcuuuu -. , v " Carl sczowmp, A Joke on the 2Iiaistr. "A good many stories have been told of the ease with which petitions are cir culated," remarked A. B. Carlton of Indianapolis at The Cochran, "but the best instance I ever heard of was in an Ohio town. A popular minister there was induced to head what he thought was a petition for a charitable purpose, and on the strength of his signature the name of almost every reputable citizen of the place was signed to the document. It was then presented to the county court, and, being in regular form, pass ed, as a matter of course, without any attention being paid to it, and the first intimation the minister had that a joke had been perpetrated was when he re ceived notice that his application fur li cense to keep a saloon had been granted and would be issuedas soon as payment therefore had been made. At first the minister and his friends were indignant. but soon appreciated the joke, and it furnished the preacher with a text on the carelessness in signing such peti tions. " Washington Star. There at the Start. The Office Boy Mr. ILuma Rays he never heard of you. The Aged Caller Did you telfhim that I was the first man to suggest Wil liam McKinley for president? The Office Boy Y.-s, and he said i then1 were several hundreds f vnn. ! The Ag.-d Caller But I'm the only i 01,J nue urMi one. ( ine umce uoy uan you prove it.' The Aged Caller Of course' I can. I was his father's family dttor! Cleve land Plain Dealer. Who keep old K A STUART'S ROCK BRIDG E RYE- Po Gibbet Always Beady In Indian Territory '"There is an increasing amount of pardon business coming to the president's desk, and he often has many cases wait ing his action, ' ' writes General Harrison in Ladies' Home Journal. "Offenses against the postal laws, revenue laws and national banking laws make up the bulk of this business ; but cases of murder from the territories and the District of Columbia are quite frequent. The In dian Territory has been the abode of lawlessness, and 'crimes against human life have been very common. Until re cently crimes committed by or against white men in that territory were triable mainly in the United States court for the western district of Arkansas, at Fort Smith, and Judge Parker of that dis trict has probably sentenced as many men to death as all ithe other United States iudses combined. I am told that the gibbet is never taken down. " On the Mississippi. This country, to people who have not looked into the matter, does not figure as a large owner of floating property outside of war vessels and those attached to the revenue and lighthouse service, but a recent careful estimate shows that on one part of the Mississippi river the nation owns over 1, 000 craft of different kinds. That is the stretch between New Orleans and Cairo, and the value of the vessels ajid their outfit for riprap, revet ment and levee work does not fall much below $6,000,000. When the work is rushing, there are at least 10,000 men employed pn the vessels and in connec tion with the tasks assigned them. Ex change. " Suburban Life. Whether you know it or not that sec ond year in the suburban house is a crisis and turning point in your life, for it will make of you either a city man or a suburbanand it will surely save you from being, for all the rest of your "days, that hideous betwixt and between j thing,; that uncanny creation of modern days of rapid transit, who fluctuates helplessly between one town and an other; between town and city and Be tween town and city again, seeking an impossible and, unattainable perfection and.: scattering remonstrant servant maids "(and disputed bills for repairs j along Ma cheerless track. -Exchange, t, Squaring Thinsr. Bixby (very nearsighted) Who's that dumpy fright coming up the mad on the wheel? Stinch.com b That's my wife. Bixby N-no, I don't mean that one. I mean the grand guy with the bologiik bloomers, Stiuehcomh That's your wife. Cleveland Plain Dealer. W. FTR ANTED 4 VEAKS )I.I) I). II. Tavlor A 'o. W iO keroj Virv'ina Club, I). II. Tav;.r o.. and he also keeps the hnet ! and cheapest home-ma.de Brandy I in town, other liquors of a!i ki:,i that are good, and cbaper than ; ever before. Special prices to my customer?, come one, cnraeall. ! Boli'e and prompt attention and skillful bar-tenders. OLD KOCK RRIDGK Y K is Tin-: TANDABD W iKLP. T TI1K mealtime Music. A New York man writes that his di gestion has been impaired, his nerves ruined and his appetite entirely destroy ed by the necessity of being compelled to eat in seven restaurants out of ten in that city to the accompaniment of mu sic. This recalls a remark made by Judge Charles Levi Woodbury, when an orchestra was introduced by a former management'in the Parker house dining room where Judge Woodbury has dined since the time when the memory of man runneth not to the contrary. Tho or chestra was sending forth its sweet strains when the waiter at Judge Wood bury's table asked him what he would have for dinner. The judge looked up in the direction of the orchestra and said: "Bring me a broiled fiddler. " It wasn't long after this episode that the orchestra was permanently dispensed with. Boston Herald. Clothes and the Men Van Arndt I bought a golf cap yes terday. Femlworth What links are you gt ing to play on? "None. I'm going bicycling. What are you doing with that cycling sweat er?" "Going out fishing. " Truth- Is guaran"-"r! prescribed by th cians throughout and the resident Louis't'urp. K-ad test linon nil : TV - - . e pp sc r i : a-.d is n. g jd.y-:- oo' ; n t r v . phvsicians of the toll'.w ;:ic pur-lea hf Something Will Be Done. Wiggins Those railway tracks at the crossing will surely have to be eunk below the street level right away. Briggs What makes you think so? Wiggins Three wheelmen have pro tested against being deluyed by tho safety gates. Cleveland PLiin Dealer. pp bridge Stuart Kock- I'.SKey Whenever A stimulant is needed, knowir. it ro be absolutely pur- and t'p t from all adulteration. Hi F- t J. J. E. M ALONE, S. FOSTER. B. CLIFTON. A Husband-in-law. A rough individual walked the other morning into the office of Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Johnson. ' 4 1 come to you for advice, ' ' he said. "I am a husband-in-law and" "A what?" asked the astonished at torney. "A husband-in-law ; don't you understand?" "But, my dear sir, there is no sush relation as that " "No such a relation as that, you block- headed ignoramus 1 My wife has run off, sir! Now do you catch on?" And before Mr. Johnson had time to say a word the man left the office in disgust St Louis Republic The Simple Truth. Hoax Egley's pretty well fixed, isn't he? Joax Well, he's making more money than he can spend. "You don't say?" "Yes. He's a coiner in the mint " Philadelphia Record. Th" above liquor is so l ny u. ii. l ay lor iV t o.. j ace nt 8, at th:r saloon? ! St., who also c a full line of everything kept m a hrst-clas Id I U S 1 V e Nash O ! i . V XC on r r j a U8ua 1 y saloon. The Very Firat. He (earnestly) Am I tho first man you ever kis.d? She Of course you are. How stupid men are! I never knew one who didn't ask that New York Herald. Y ou; A Punfent Remark. "There goes Kerchew, the snuff man ufacturer. Ls he wealthy?" "Well, he's got a fortune that inn't to be sneezed at. " New York Prcsa. the A Hill Button Wanted. An ardent admirer of one of the Re publican statesmen whom Senator Hill delights to refer to as " recent candidates for the presidency, " wrote to the senator a few days ago begging "one of your buttons." The senator's private secretary, who is something of a humorist, deliberately cut a button from an old pair of the senator's trousers and forwarded it to the correspondent. The acknowledg ment of the Beeker after souvenirs ha not . yet been received. Washington lake All the Bet. " Young Lochinvar camo out of West, didn't he?" "Yea; I suppose ho was an Ohio muan. " Truth. Bike! Bike! Bike! Old t' rambler to new girL Bike! Bike! Bike! O'er the hard street atonea, O ahel And 1 would that my tonpae could utter The thought tht arlne in me I O well for the newspaper boy That he acoolji on his rvclo away! O well fcr the butcher lad That he jedal perchanc it may pay! But wbrc tat-.y fclrl get on All n-cn.ac'j. and with prospect of apiil. It is O for tbe touch of a w e hc It band Anl the sound of a Toice that conld tbrillj Bike! Bike! Biko! With thy foot on the pedal, O ehol Bat the girlish grace that the whelitrack dead Will never oome bock to tbeel PuKfc, Fresh beer a specialty. patronage ol icited. Your friends, D. H. TAYLOR & CO. R. R. CROSSEN. FIRST CLASS PAINTER. I-OUISHURO, N . C. I wish to offr my nerno- to the nal lic, and will sav that I am prepared t. do all kind of h us pointing, grain ing &c. my work ia Louisbarg p-k for it-lf. snd I refer to nil partis fc whom I hT worked. Old farnitar made ne". Gite me yonr patuar and you shall be pleaded. J. W. HOBEKTSON PKACTICAL CONTRACTOR and BUILDER. LOUISBURG. N. C. RAILWAY. IM.nnoT 1H LIK C N DENSEI) SCHEDULE. IN K V FK T JANUARY 1. la5. TKAI.N-I.KA.VK RALEiUJt, X. C. A ' rr,'.i t (i nros'cw tor ail ;- ;r : ' r r'.A t4 fol.b fcXkJ r-;. r. -in ul polats c thm N r-,i-trr. .North t-irvjctc Kall r vl A! Ni: cry . f -r U ponla A rrr. NorU otAiftk. at- . . Tr.n . a tixttUi aJ m ' ni i- iz.: h ct fci' Ia:.i itg if-r.TJ . .. At .r.V :. 1 l. . v.s'.A ' " M : I .art.ua f t "tfrrd. iA j .i-m...- kz. : K'f:.t irl - jr. .i) A ' i f- L rv. W.tfc Ub a n'.:r.,'i. n .- 1 -j'k mil L;m if 1 IV ri i:. i r. t.L nuir :ioi ni:t .:r." tr:t. IJ t-ur !-kf. ti... Ri-brr... t; 1 Mil ltU . tU'.'.vLi Ka ' .'.a tr!r. JJc JC ffc. iir-.:.v.r Al-ki.. m; .i Jr. t .'i .. - ia. . Actlt. :..."... c. vii--r.Lt Ja-ajt.-i xt. i j- r.; ir. FVcrlJa. - ; r -it '. : A'. -r. .-kfci I f I! ( r A3.I'J ks, acA. 7 . zi. ft .'. ft". . ' r ! . j. : . . t rir'ft'..! "..ft-.- T. V?" '. t WTX l. i '-i.y -. ;- a w K M k J" f 1 V .1 r. N r .! ri f SI k' Sc ' f r V ,:r r. r-.h 1 f ' ' - r r rf : . a Kz.i ( r :it. t : (t- 'r pi. a:: M I A H M M ARK Kr A K A K A L V '.if . ' r: tr. ! Yr it.er' an '. r-5r. '. n '. s ."t it i X T- . . - T rk Wuhlt'-t. " -. rg I ft.". t'. 'jrr.i:. po (j . -'.r- xi.'. ftw . j-c: r.' KM in: j l-.-x. tr-iit.' i ' u i . m x r. '.gh r-r. ' ' ( rT. ' r I k : Uft. y 1-V r. :.xr.: - :nmlix: r. I. H . W H dint i. -.- ft-- -xrrj i r. ; : r r n ' rx : r. PO. XT. '. CT. V. 'TT.'.l.g e-rx. fr t Kfti : pr. f p ci p.r .n Ra,-! r.ir Jk . -A I ;r.i-Lx2 xs :w. T V A r'. . W A Tt . i ,r f fti h i Wui'.tjl'r- r- .LIMITED DOUBLE DAIIY SERVICE tllaula r Orleans Norfolk Itlrh mond. UiahlDflan, ti lllnerr, rhlUJrlptiii. Boft'.OD, ru lark. mm mm w m av w T R A I N - l. KA '.' K II A L K i Li H I 3T A V.. HA-.LY W'.xr.'x -1L. PaLliaAii Vtl?jl. f r H; ir n. pfn' urf. Ki. hn: -ih'.!.-".. n. KlV-a.-T r,t.:i.:r'tl. fw Y r l i- ir.T t..-nh. BuSrt In:rc K. . m r i r r. 1 rajlm-n t. AUu u ir.-'en l'r.. r i ft r xxt'.ri'.cTi to N.tr V'Tk. t'uiitccn it.g r Mctr In f. rm .u!h ArrLft '. kh.B4-toi 4 M . B t.ra r 11 n -i . Vt la.1: pfe li!r M . York !J r u i . . for f rrxizn. alk. . rf k M V :-t n Vorai .!.. !v.drl n i R. 4T. kf RftLip.!- II Ji A H-. DAILY. F'T H - n Vt n. ',.Vt. paff Sk. prf n..uth. N.irf.T.k n1 ltlr-lil tutw ct. V.I...TU : I'-Ttans- ti'.b Hh Hy Lin f r d J-..lrt n t R.tlm. r. !th .Norfolk r1 aak- i'.h N Y f. k lULLrk-l for PrlU.Wi-hl. aii.l i--'.r.t r.orlfc. t'.xo a! H n w!tk Alac'.a c : Lia f t Ri'tmoD i. Ah;tlijtRii r.i. -r. 1'ki'a.l'lrbla vrl Yrk. an. wlU K-etlaoJ N-rk Bnrifb for Grwrtllk 1 aU l:.ion an 1 fVynsoulh 1'aUmjfta Irj- a Atlanta to Pcr"nouia. IJB A. M . PA1LT AtUr.U rainnVal f.r S..uthm HaisW. lllm jrt-o. M r.ro-. CTir-t:r.LJD--latn. Mielrylr,-tr.Oiiitoi. ijrcw!. At t-rlil. AU..t"h Aliar.ia, Ao jrntVa, Cc-lomfl. Mvoe . tarj. Ma t.O. Nw lrln. CT. kiocLa. -NaahrtlW-. ilnni hi. an 1 4il poiolat lanocJ aotk vtwt tbrona-h l"a .'.mn Boa aoctk atr aa4 day. ru-k- htr.ftco 5t Mp foe DctrUD dlrwtly at I'nlon Iw. to Atiknta.wHij diTtrf lo !ID'. al- Talipot. Atlanta. Car V orU n. .uth to Monro. ralcnan (ple liir M . DAILY For 1lm leg-ton. ChartotUt. Cb-tr. 3iwo tr. --1. Alh'Tva. AlUrrla axi all lLlrm0!; tatiora C'ooivH al Tctpe vtaUoc. Atlanta, wi?h dlTrfirtnir lln I'dUbaxi tr4&f aar Portronlh to Atlanta TRAIN. REACH RALEIGH J-W P aL DAILT. Trrrax Jtorfolk. Portanoalh. anJ tnnte north Tla Bay I o anikf. T. P. a X. Rjulrol Ptrl.or. Rickm. o 1 and uhleV. Bi; Uraor. Kbila. Wjila. Jt-w Tork. a4 Boartoe; iko (ron Urwaniif, Plymontlv, vaaadnjriott . ?f c. and rat( m Carolina po nta vta icilo. iT A kL. DALLT. IMaiis, Specifications and estimates Furnished on Short Jioti- Fine Work a Specialty a vatlrle. from Alheca. AKrUifc. "Atlanta fumrzl." PnT. Atlanta and point aoata. O rem wood ad r-ater. A. kf.. DAILT. Prom chirVotfe, AMvna, AUaata and InLrr ttvedlat ataUoea. 4 JO AM. DAILT. AtlanU fprtaL from KorfoIk.Portamoirt RenWraoo. vrUoa. Ri-hrtod. waahlnclea. Ml mo re. rhUaUrlphla, .Vw York aavd tks Ma-iVAt rallinta Veatlbnled Trait a. 3o extra fare. iTP"',tVkpt j-rot. or to B. A La an. ' 80L raaavaxvou Raiclf a. JC. c S. fr Jomw. H. W. B. ourraa. YWvrT. kod&en. Man. Traaaaa. V. . aaciiaa- x. a-awamaov OvnalN, OCarMlft,AtC I