VOL. XXIV. LOUISBURG, N. C, FRIDAY, MAY 11; 1894. NUMBER 11. TO-PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS Tiip Superintendent ol Public Schools of Franklin county will be In Loublmrg on the second Thurs ,1m v of February, April, July, Sep tember, October and December, and jvm;iiu for three days, if necessary, for the purpose of examining appli cants to teach in the Public Schools of this county. I will also be in Louisburg on Saturday of each rtiM'k, and all public days, to attend to any business connected with my office. J. N. Harris, Supt. ProfcKsional csii-tls. 1 M. COOKE & SON, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, louisbcihj, n. c. Will atten l the courts of Nash, Franklin, Granville, Warren ant Wake counties, also the Supreme Court of North Caroliiip, and the U. 3. Circuit ani District Courts. I) R. J. E. MA LONE. oiflce two doors below Ayxcke & Co. 's dru? store, adjoining Dr. O. L. Ellis. 1) R. W. H. YflCHOLSON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, LOUISBURG, N. C. W. TlilBERLAKE, E. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, IJCfSBUBG, N. C. Office on Main street. S. SPRUILL, ATTUKJi W , LOUISBURG, N. C. Will ntten'l the courts of Franklin, Vance, Granville, Warren and Wake counties, also the Supreme Court, of North Carolina, prompt attention given to collections, s.c N. GULLEY. ATTORNEY-AT-L AW, All legal business promptly attended to. 1-UI0& B. WILDER, ATTORNEY-AT-L AW, LOUISBUKG, K. C. Office on Main street, over Jones & Cooper's store. -yy M. PERSON, ATTORNEY-AT-L AW, LOUISBURG, N. C. Practices ia all courts. Office in the Court House. Cures Coughs, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Croup promptly? relieves Whooping Cough and Asthma. 'For Consumption it has no rival: has cared thousands -where all otlvers failed; will CTTRB YOU if taken in time. Sold by Druggists on a guarantee. For Lame Back or Chest, use SHILOHB PLASTER. 25 Ct3. SHILOH'SCATARRH Have vou Catarrh? This remedy is aruaran teed to cure you. Price 50 eta. Injector free- CAUTIOT. ir a dealer offers TV. X. Douglas Shoes at a reduc-d priw, or says hehuathein -without name stamped on bottom, put him down as a fraud. v nn FOR GEN S3 SHOE BEST IN THE WORLD. Wi I.. TOITGIAS Shoes are stylish, easy fit ting, and give better satisfaction at the prices ad vertised than any other make. Try one pair and be convinced. The stamping of V. L. Douglas' name and price on the bottom, -which guarantees their value, saves thousands of dollars annually to those who wear them. Dealers who push the sale of W. L. Douglas Shoes gain customers, which helps to increase the sales on their full lir. of goods. They can afford to sell at a less prof. I and we believe you can save money by buyinr; a your footwear of the dealer advertised below." Cataloirue free upon application. Address, XT. In DOUGLAS, Brockton. Muss, bold bv JONES & COOPER, LOU1SBURG, N. C. FOB SALE OJJLY BY Aycocke & Go. DETJGOISTS; LOUISBtJRa, N. C. m Price 10 cents. COPYRIGHTS. CAW I OBTAIN A PATENT t For s tmpt answer and an honest opinion, write to t; i n ac i;u., wno Have naa nearly nrty yeora f -penence In the patent business. Commnnlca t ons Btrtetly confWentiaO. A Handbook of In iormation concerning Patents and bow to ob- im them sent free. Alo a catalogue of menhan. leal and sclenafio books sent free. - latents taken throogb. Munn & Co. receive peciai notice tn the Scientific American, and i? aE? brought widely before the public with out oyst to the inventor. This splendid paper, fc-ed weekly, elegantly illustrated, hae by fax tlie Sest ciroulation of any scientific work In the Sample -copies sent free. . Building Edition, monthly, l60 a year. Single fVP'es, cents. Every number contains bean iiiui pistes, to colors, and photographs of new P,uif. with plana, enabling builders to show the uve8lcnB and secure contracts. Address Wets., andJ Jf a 0 ,L0O per BotttftTy JJrS 1 mm W. L. Douglas ALMANAC, 1 ruiiiE vkui or ra um a-- .w vniblii I I j v mm w FzfZ V SKIRT DANCERS' (LLS. tfce Girls Who Fluctuate on the Stage Are High Strang When Off. " The skirt dancer hasrnost of the lis to which flesh is heir to combat with. Perhaps the most common of ;he fitful aches and ailments is a gen- ! ipparatus. Any comfortably situat- 0iT ltU 7 , poueen ?d person who views her spasmodic i8 JelP her though they know iction from the audience can realize Efeds no hi1P and sbe knows ' tvhy the writhing, gasynng, convul sive celebrity should be the most short winded creature on earth. It seems a marvel that seme of her jords do not snap and the whole ten sion suddenly give way and let her iown in a realistic heap in the mid 51e of the stage. To get a comprehensive view of aer in collapse and she does collapse it is necessary to take a peep be aind the curtain. At the ecstatic moment when the audience sees the last bow, the farewell wave of the aand, the retiring convulsion of the liip joint, at the same moment the Dverexerted, breathless and panting artist falls exhausted into the arms Df a faithful attendant, who bears tier gently away to a bottle of brandy md one of horse liniment flavored with turpentine. It is when the skirt dancer reaches the seclusion of her own apartments, however, that the really interesting part of her performance begins. Electricity is one of her modes 04 treatment, but she naturally eats something before she starts up her battery. Eating and drinking are prohibited by her code of digestive sthics, both before and between iances, for obvious reasons. When the embargo is raised and the cur tain goes down, the hungry celebrity repairs -to the nearest hotel and there follows the proclivities that nature has endowed hef with. If all this occurs after a matinee performance, the dancer next takes a nap, the dur ation of which is in inverse ratio to the amount she has eaten. When she wakes up again, with her head deared and her wasting tissues re paired, there are interesing baths, massages and applications of electri city. There is a noticeable something about the overstimulation to which the skirt dancer is subjected that makes this grade of terpsichorean temperament an interesting psycho logical study. The zealous and en terprising high kicker invariably has a nervous constitution that is strung many degrees higher than that of the well behaved and orderly young woman. She is irritable, hysterical, Spasmodic, fretful and has an over wrought sensibility and tempestu ousness of emotional capability that make her vicinity a dangerous one to all butthe initiated. Philadelphia tress. Druggists' Qneer Castomcrs. "Did you see that man who just went out?" asked a druggist yester day. "Well, he is a morphine fiend There is not a day passes that he does not come in here and plead for mor phine. He knows he will not get it, yet clinging to the fond hope that we might give it to him he never tires in his persistency. I suppose that man goes about from drug store to drug store pleading for the drug to set him free for the time of the trou bles of this life. Are there many like him? "Well, we have a number who come in, off and on as many as five a day but none are as persistent as this man. A well dressed fellow, too. If you heard him begging me to give him some of the drug, you would im agine a mendicant was asking for aims. . "Oh, yes, we have strange people come here. I often wonder when I consider the number of wild eyed, sxcited, 'nervous people trying to buy poisons of one sort or another why there are so few suicides. Of sourse we cannot and do not sell such drugs to any person without a doc tor's prescription, and perhaps this is the saving point. " Pittburg Dis patch. The Kropp Family. The Krupp family, whose fame for weapons of warfare is universal, is considered to have attained the dig nity of a dynasty. When Prince Napoleon visited the works at Essen, he exclaimed, "Why, this is a state within a state !" As a matter of fact, the present head of the house has under his orders more subjects than the Prince of Schaumburg-Lippe, who married Princess Victoria, the aster of the Emperor William. Sev enty-four thousand human beings recognize the sway of one man, their master and the descendant of the founder of the works. Berlin Let ter. " : A tTaelesa Terdict. "Yessaid the old traveler, "I was jn a jury in California once. It was 1 murder trial. I didn't, want the fellow hanged and so stuck out igainst the other 11 for nine days, locked up in the jnry room, when they gave in, and we brought in a verdict of 'Not guilty,' and then I was ready to stab myself with spite." 'tWhat about?" ' 'Cause the mob had hanged the prisoner on the very first day we were locked up.'V-Exchange. ; ;i Different. ' Collingwood I say, Tillinghast, Jidn't you tell me that Miss ElderMn was aa artist? Tillinghast- No. Isaid6hewas a work of r$. -X6ndoii Tit-Bits. Woraen on the Crossings. Did you ever watch women cross the street? There is the sweet young thing who picks her way even though the stones be swept bright and clean. She always possesses small feet and wears pretty shoes and smart gowns. and has an appealing look in her "eye wris - m . i ni- 4 rri 1 - they know it. But that makes no difference at all. The men always stop on the curbing to see if she reaches her, destination all right. Then there is the business young woman who plunges into the fray in awful absentmindedness. Sometimes she picks up her dress skirt, but she usually forgets all about it, and her shoes are not new anyhow. The po licemen know they ought to help her, and she gives- them fearful shocks because they know sho. isdoomed to be run down one day, and they only hope it will be on the next fellow s crossing. It all comes of her having her mind occupied. A woman with an occupied mind is bound to upset things. And finally there is the poor, little timid woman who is deathly afraid of truck horses and is shabbily dress ed and liable to heart disease. She gets across anyhow no one knows just how, because the first two vari eties take up all the attention. Phil adelphia Times. His Limit. The cavalry soldier of the Confed erate army furnished his own horse. If it was killed or disabled, it became necessary for him. to leave the front and go after another mount. When a man wanted a furlough, he had only to swap his horse for one that was broken down and then apply for leave of absence. Gradually there grew up a kind of brokerage system of "horse fur loughs," as they were called. So writes an old cavalry officer, who tells this amusing story of a man who wished to buy sueh a furlough and to that end put himself in com munication with a friend in the bri gade camp, "The price is $80, I know," he writes, "but 1 am willing to pay a i little more if necessary. I want it as low as possioie, ana any now you ; must not pay more than $100. That ; is my limit." J At that point he seems to have been taken by a new access of hume- I sickness, for he added : "If it cannot possibly be bought for ' $100, I shall be compelled to give as ' much as $125, though you must dis- j tinctly bear in mind that my limit is ! $100. Lovers of Cold. Climate affects the inhabitants of the sea just as it does those of the land. As arctic land plants canuot flourish at the equator, so in the Arctic and Antarctic oceans marine plants are found which are unable to surviye in warm water. Among the most remarkable of these cold water plants are the lamiuariacea?, a kind of seaweeds which sometimes attain a gigantic size, exceeding in length the longest climbing plants of the tropical forests and developing huge stems like the trunks of trees. Re cent investigations have shown that these plants flourish in the coldest waters of the polar seas, and that they never advance farther from their frigid homes than to the limits of "summer temperature" in the ocean. The genial warmth destroys them, just as a polar blast shrivels the flowers of a tropical garden. Youth's Companion. An Unexpected Wedding Present. A curious thing has just happened in south London. About 12 years since a young irl, daughter of well to do tradespeople, lost nearly 20, which she ha'1 saved out of a very liberal allowance. The money was taken from a drawer in her bedroom, and the thief was never detected. A short time ago the girl was married. On her wedding morning she re ceived an anonymous letter, stating that the writer was the person who stole her money when she was yet in her teens and inclosing bank notes representing asnearly as possible the amount stolen, with compound inter est added. Of course the bride was delighted, and no effort has been made to trace the anonymous writer. London Answers. No Birds In the White House. It is now a rule of the White House that no bird shall be allowed to war ble or even live within the walls of the executive mansion. Mrs. Hayes made this rule years ago, and it has been obeyed as a sacred precedent. When Mrs. Cleveland first came to the White House to live after her marriage, she had a pet canary which she brought with her, but the rule against birds was explained . to her, and she gave the bird away and kept the rule. Mrs. Harrison also started to bring a couple of canaries from her Indianapolis home before she learned that birds were strictly ta booed inside the White House. Bos ton Advertiser. - Sugar Trust. "Mister " said the'small boy to the grocer, "mother told me to ask you if they s any s"uch tning as a bugar trust." "Why. of course there is." W-welV mother- wants to get trusted for , two pounds," Washing ton gtar. BRIEF CAREER. OF T A HERO. Bravery oj a Hm4r JoornaUrt Denied hy TrtgiititX Rail road 3tan. He was a newspaper man, lived a long distance from the business ceu- -wer of the city, went home late at night and f onuled a big gun in his overcoat pocket as he wended his way through the streets homeward bound. He whistled at times, again warbled a little dirty or talked to himself for company's sake and had a nervous, constitutional fear of meeting foot pads. He passed the mouth of an alley, and a man stepped out of the shadows. That was enough. The newspaper man jerked out his gun and covered tho stranger, with the remark: "Up with your hands. Don't say a word, or I'll blow the top of your head off." The stranger's arms shot up into space, and he was speechless. The newspaper man then, t keepings 1 gun "at aim, began backing down toward the street corner as rapidly as possible. As soon as he had reached the corner he suddenly jammed the revolver down into his pocket, wheeled and started away at a gait that would have made Direc tum ashamed of himself. His home was only a half block away, and when he bolted into the house and j had the door bolted behind him he ! told his wife the story of his having been assaulted by a footpad and ex patiated upon his remarkable prow oc in nnttin cr th liicrhwurmin tn o As he came from his house the nex t morning to go to his daily toil he w as joined by his next door neighbor, a well known railroad conductor. The u the railroad man gave the newspa per man a piece of news. He said that while he was on his way home the night before, and just around the corner, he stepped into an alley. As he was coming out ou the sidewalk I his heart stopped beating and hi 1 be put back into the stables. ! blood was chilled as he looked into, Another plan that is often fob i the cold, shining muzzle of a re vol v- ' ', . . I er and was invited to throw up his ; Jowed 19 to Lave r?e or Cl0ver row j hands. j ing conveniently near, cut a ood j "Did you accept tho invitation?" i asked the newspaper man. I '-DnT look-liko:id rl fnl ?" nsko1 the railroad man and added- ' I ked mv ,UTns u th m,. houldt-rs cracked. Tl e air until; The f U11D ltt thing about it was, though, that the j , . T, . , 4l c 1 1 -1 r fects. Uut when the teams are footpad kicked away from me until he reached the corner and then ran ! ot at work they ran nearly a'. like a whitehead." 1 wavs be turned into the Daature "Wheie did he go?" was asked. "I don't know," answered the rail roader, "1 don't know. I ran the other way." Indianapolis Journal. The Gopher riant. j When travelers crossed the plains at the time when the Pacific- rail roads were first built, a beautilu! plant called the Euphorbia albo-mar ginata used to come up frequently along the tracks, which the laborer:- believed to grow from seed that had been waiting there to sprout sinct is .,ossible for teams to do consid the flood. Thev called it "snow (-11 , , , . . . the mountain," because the bractJ etabie work on Brass aloue' bul under the flowers, such as we see in ; they cannot be pushed as is often the poinsetta and other euphorbia i necessary without a liberal supply ceous plants, were striped with white 1 of d feed. Tne Republic, among the green. It is now stated 111 j Ualitornia circles tnat wtiere this I plant grows gophers will receive no j tice to quit. It is remarkable that it is said of another euphorbiaceous plant, the caster oil plant, that where it is grown moles will never appear. roone nas put great taitn m this statement, but that two plants of the same family should be watched by two classes of observers wholly inde pendent of each other and bo report ed to have exactly the same effect 011 destructive rodents indicates that there must be something certain to bring about the like conclusions. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. A Qaeer Idiom. The other day I heard a queer idiom, which I herewith present to collect ors of linguistic curiosities. The speaker was one of the ladies in the family of a government official who had been serving his country abroad for a short time. "No," said she. "We did not care for Europe. We thought it very dull. We were not bunched once during our whole stay abroad." The expression was so unusual that an enterprising listener, bolder than the others, asked what it might mean. "What do I mean by 'bunched repeated the first speaker in surprise. "Why, no one sent us any flowers. What else could I mean?" Kate Field's Washington. Close RescmbUoce. An exchange prints a pleasing but improbable story of an English schoolmaster who promised a crown to any boy who should propound a riddle that he could not answer. One and another tried, and at last a boy asked, "Why am I like the Prince of Wales?" The master puzzled his wits in vain and finally was compelled to admit that he did not know. "Why," said the boy, "it's because I am waiting for the crown." Youth's Companion. , MStonewir, Comment. At a council of generals early in the war one of them remarked that Major was wounded and would be "unable to perform a certain duty for which he had been suggested. "Woundedl" said old "Stonewall" Jackson. 'If that is really bo, I think it must have been by an accidental discharge of his duty." San Francis- co Argonaut PASTURING THE TEAMS. It requires some management at tbis season to keep the teams io good condition. Farm work of all kinds is pressing, the teams must do their part and this is often the hardest part. All animals, at this season, crave something fresh and green, and a supply is very bene ficial after long feeding on dry grain and roughness. But the teams need all the rest they can get and for this reason it is not always best to turn them in to the pasture at night. There are two serious objections to this. One is that it deprives them of needed rest, and the other is that it is an run pleasant ta&k tramping, throngh the wet grass early in the morning after them, to eay nothing of the time lost. Yet this plan is f ol lowed by mauy farmers. As 60011 as the horses are done eating their grain at night, they areturued in- to tbe pastures and are put back t . 1 into tlie stables lLe next "r..ii.g. In their desire to satisfv the atne- tite for something green the horse will tramp the greater part of the while the 1 , k.'as due- them good, the loss of rest doe? , not. One of the best plans is to have a good but small pasture convenient to the stable and then afler they have eaten their grain at night they can be turned into this pas ture for an hour or two and then feed at night for them aud feed it in the stables. V hile some grass is a good tning, too much 01 it is narmlui !nn nrrmnit nf ita wO'il-oniinr of. with benefit. lt pays to use all reasonable care to keep the teams iu good, thrifty condition. They must have strength if they are to stand up well under tbe work that is to be done at this time, and, while grass is a good feed, plenty of grain with some hay is needed to supply i material for bone and muscle It A Stoty With a Moral. j j , The Philadelphia Call hits the ' merchant who never advertises by ; re!atiutr the following ttorv : O "Once upon a time a donkey fell into a deep hole, and after nearly starving, caught sight of a passing fox, and implored the stranger to help him out." "I am too small to aid you," eaiu trie iox, "out 1 11 give you some good advice. Only a few rods away is a big strong elephant. Call to him and he will get yen out iu a jiffy." After the fox had gone the don key thus reasoned to himeelf : "1 am very weak for want of nourish ment. Every move I make it is just so much additional loss of strength. If I raise my voice to call the elephaut I shall be weaker yet. No, I will not waste my sub stance that way. it is the duty of the elephaut to come without call ing." So the donkey settled himself back and eventually starved to death. Long afterwards tbe fox on pass ing the hole saw within it a whi tened skeleton and remarked, "If it be true that the souls of animals are transmigrated iuto men, that donkey will become one of those merchauts who can never afford to advertise." One of RuesiVs marriage cus toms is for tbe bride and bride groom to race rapidly down the aisle as soon as the bridal proces sion enters the chnrcb, because of tbe belief that whichever places the foot' first on the cloth in front of the -altr will be master in the household. J Children Cry forPitcher,s Castoria. Highest of all in Leavening Power. 11 cy ABsSOUUTEttf PURE Senator Quay cays he would like to see the tariff question Uk- j en out of politics. Mr. Q:ay 1 isn't in the habit of playing the role of Senatorial joker. If how. ever he is really anxious to ee it taken out of politics, be could be accommodated in a jiffy if be and Lhvs republican coUeagns would . !on bill go through with as little fooling as possible. , Gl'AItAMEKI) I KK. We authority our ad-rfi--vl drayeit to Dr. Kintf' Nrw I ) i.c. ,-ry fi-r thU endi- i..n. IfV-a i- affliri ith c.muL r. or any lur.r. ihr as -r ' ?iUl, ,, wif, T.,.Y h dirwtl. cuinr it a fair trial -nd " lt- funded Wh c-hiM n t mak il.is . :Tr did we ti"t kri"W 1 1. a lr. Kmc - ,. , , , , disidj.tnts. Trialtt!l- frv at v r'- and t t. , T)F?, R,. KING, HKNTIST. Ltd lSlU lHi. N t-. t ilAok"-? S:. r--. (iraduat- lialtmi' r- l.-n'al Twi-ntv-fn'or yari arti.- i j-r -1. "- AI'.TIKI''! M. TF..TH K .-I K' I M 7V N.I' .11. t-th r'ir)nr an I nf uC' ir.'K'rt'-J in TWLMY XIMTF.". .Ml w rk wirni',''-!. '.ui!)iirr ii my h' in- "f. r Nttr ' r !-.' ar.d v.. i vm.1 dlway Jind rii-r-ad v t. - .rr-i't a? ::iy . :i nT.t- ar.y wrk ttiat uiay unvatiof act. tv . V.-rv t r . 1 -. II.'K. KINu. I '-:.t To (i AKIKNKkS : Karly cal-bage now, strong tenia' eties, paly Aj j '. a 1 1 1 s ready '', t' t v a r : -1 1 1st, e . e r -and lrihberv. yreen, magnoiia? i Verbenas, pani , aiil ail kind' uf bidding piants, jaitus aiil rubber j lai.ts ami others fur pot culture; flower . eds, bouquets. cut dowers, tlnral for catalogu-". H. Stkinmktz dtfsi i n s . !)d RaUik'b. N. ( Coffin and Caskets. We have add-d to our already complete lin ot wood and ckrfh covered Coffins and Ca.-k '? SOLID WALNUT COFFINS AMD CASKETS. Alfo a line of U ETA 1.1CS ap nic and fino pood? n i? rar- rb'd in anv of our c;ti-?. Our 3tock 18 complete m evry line ' Respectfully, R. R. Harris it Co Louisburg, N. C. FARMERS TAKE NOTICE. We have opened a market and stock exchange at Clifton's old corner, and want to buy beeves and hogs of- any size. Milch cows, mutton or lamb?, and fowls of all kinds. All that want meat of any kind send ns your ordefs. Everything as represented. We mean business, rail and see us. E J. Rausdalb fc Co. ICE! The Raleigh Crystal In Factory having ln pat in first da order is now prepared to torn out more Ice and of letter quality than ever before. The ice is put up in block of 200 pound t. For al m follows: S Block, 1O0 pounds, well jwicked, per expren3, 75 cents. Whole block, 200 pounds, well packed, per exprew, $1 .30. Low price by tbe carload or frac tion of carload of two ton or over. Not leRS than two tons will betaken bv freight unpacked. JOXEii & rOWELU. Raleigh, N. C. Shaved or Sawed Hard Pme Shin gle, Laths, Corn. Meal, Oat. Kran by carload, more or less, at lowest prices for cash by Jo.xej & Towell, Jlaleigh. X. C. Latest U. S Gov't Repcft Baking Pwsbr When a man has no ricbta l-fl h lgins to aftert hia wrong, n.ckleo'. Amk RaTre. ",T ,n V?1,1 u-tr-r. chprl LawKeallhUIn. c.m nd 11 km roptK-&t, a4 p.i- pl- nr no py. ItUffnir- u F .r bv Tbonv. & Arrvcke. Som pH)jJ tiik adi fi'l r.ougli !ut thv ;ivr un vof it. A LKADKK. Sir.c i'.n flrt intmil wrti-n K1--rw-r..-.!-r rind nriily in p ':r tw r, 'in'il n -w it irirrlv tri t) 1 atv ii j.i: r- ::i-l;riiial toftH- and a!t-r- atn- ataiain.' t:.i" ; s a t-vr, t sr.!' 1 n ;;. f r a:, a l:-r ar I k id h.-a'i-:.-. 1 ii I w It riv 'k n. r :iijti.n ai,J n' ir.alar:a fr mi T t. far'! n C'jirnv-l r r f .i n i .'ri-- r.iv i n-y .M r-- J-T l '.ti-. To Build V) Your Strength Purifv Your Ilood St r- r j it b- n Yi':r Nt ;'.nd (iivc An Appetite T h i V. r. r. I'ri.klv As.h IVk Hoot arl IV-t.-if siutr. Do You Know? Wi.a. fa!.o:i-K'.-tjTi run tl.-ir Pistiirv ? 'l H. TAYLOR & C Who cai 1 "'. I von Lo:;.-.-- ir.-i'i-- or;i u 1. ;k"f ,'fyr.i k'.- W"-k to ' h T ' V AT o'.d ? I). H. TAYLOR & CO. W ; m -a '. i p'JT'-, hrr.'v 1 1 . u i brandy pur- nwA f raitfhC D..H. TAYLOR & CO. W!..i innk'-s a -t-riaity of R. A. Smart's C'-l-br.'.vd Rock Ilridp R Vf 0 IX H. TAYLoR A- CO. . -r-' u a n c Old V i rg 1 :, W Club tor ur gallon ? D.U. TAYLOR & CO. Who kf-ers ail k ;:i is of Kx--rt B- r ar.d F::. W:: ? D. IL TAYLOR A- CO. Who k"- p a s'-irct !it;o of har.d :nad" tigr.r '.' D. II. TAYLOR 4 CO. Du. ItOHT. ROOTH. I I, -v.- rit'd up f 1 n otP.r for tiw I priicti- of In-untr in nil it 1 brnn h- m ixjuisburg, N. ('., find I will lw in my ohV the two wek I fi ilh ing th Knmd Sundoy in irh montn. viumnu-' nil my worn and ray price to suit tli hard times. Offio? in the Jones Afcr.of building. HARPER'S WEEKLY. ILLUSTRATED. Hnr- WHity H 7- mV qtWw tka tovttoc )orml tn AmrV, tj K rW-txii4 tt lutr(VrMw. In 111 oorr rl !UJfkhd rxra tiitQlnr. aAd It TMt array (4 r4r. In PrUJ llnoa lt irw t lhlrtt orVr c f ttirr.X. th men twt BttAl ty prlU-o n-. Irmloir to trt tfc taMoff tcj-W cf th ta Action, tb- neat popular UtY wrlterf ron t rl No t to tta ro a m ffaprT i?nlnfi 1 r lb f ar rowt rrt! r r Its V-"r il r UrU-m. M gfrrrSn. ary1 -ry w -til I' rrrtit c t puUU- Intrrrst; tt r--Tlxl BxortjIt at th tbe butory orrhtlmo. biwt p-il t-r tlon to siren to fh Army twi 5tj. AtB'! fport. Villi n.J t Dnmi. Iff ditlt raUhnl wprfu. Inaworl Har;r Wwk't rh tew1ctvr f rHntl'y pfr mm4 ! rttaive. rvt ltlrry -1iti 1 th mr'rw vUb Um km14 crttVAl rWctcr uf tb r-i Wm HARPER S PERlODlCALti. Pft Tbab. Bmrwm oa2te ' i H ARPER-S WKKCT ,f HARPKR-S B7.AR HARPERS TOCTfO TOVtK S'C Twfre Frr to TI m-rlhrr la tb TbI tej niur, CsKa.te. ctul Xtrrlrtv. ftnrt Ttrmtwr tr linlirr r.f tth T WH--n i trrvt wtnioneA, mlrrlpJii wlB tw gin tth t b 'amtr mrrrnt a tb tljnx- tt i i nf or-W. BrMiixt ToMjmw T Rrp-r Wr-kty f -f f rr of TrTl W1 Th frHtht Am tr nml oradoQn pr JTuiw foe 7 prr TOltTn. rwh rwM Tr Ark TOenw lt ltr vrf. r"Tn nl ty tamSX. yomtXX Hsmirttnt- voH r irsV t j TaS3 MrVy CmW OT Trfrt. o mvtlM tkute ct trm . rant ifhot th fiptiCTkrof Htiruk 4 Xdlttm : BAtru k 5h, SewTor.

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