Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / June 29, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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J VOL. XXIY. LOUISBURG, K G., FMDAY,NE29, 1804. NUMBER 18. - - . r "ah TO PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS The Superintendent of Public Schools of Franklin county will , be in Louisbiirg on the second Thurs day of February, April, July, Sep tember, Oetober and December, airid remain 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 week, and all public days, to attend to any business connected with my ottioe. J. N. HAiiftis, Supt. Profeswional iiii-tis. Q M. COOKE & SON, AT T U KM E YS- AT-L AAV, LOUI.-iBKO, N. O. Will attenJ tho courts of Xesh, Frabklin, Granville, Warren hikI Wake counties, aiso the Suirr-.t; C-urt of $iii.'a Caroiiup, iaiu thu U. Hairts.it5 C-urt of jf.'a Caroiiup, ioiu J. Circuit a.Uii Ji.3lrliiV"?uui't3. J. R. J. E. MALONE. Office two doors below Co.'s ii-ag store, aJjoiuiug Dr. O. L. iillls. jK. W. H. NICHOLSON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, JiOL'ISBUEG, N. 0. E. W. TIMBERLASE, ATTORN EY-AT-L AW, LOUISBl'HG, X. C. 0:iu;e onHain street. S. SPRUILL, ATTORNEY-AT-L AW, L:UI33UKG, X. C. Will attend the courts of Franklin, "Vance, Gr.iQvill, Warren ninl Wake counties, also tiie Supreme Court of North Carolina. Prompt attention given to collections, &c. N. Y. QULLEY. ATTORNEY-AT-L AW, FRANK LfXTOX, X. C. All legal business jiromptly attended to. I. WILDER, ATTORNEY-AT-L AW, Lort-BLKO, X. c. i on Main street, over Jones & Cooper's M. i'ERSON. ATTORNEY-AT-L AW, ' L ' ."l--B,"hU, X. c. Sic!s in alt courts. Oilice in the Court ioivr. S. BOOTH, i Imve fitted up an office for tue i- ; !.:' of Dentistry in nil its : i ii'- Louiburir, N. C, and v. ili lie in my oliice the two week? Mlowiniir the second Sunday in each month. (iuarautee all my work i'nd my pricrs to suit the hard 1 1 itn's. Oltice in the Jones &, Cooper li uildinii. UENT1ST, LOUISBURG, N. C. OtHfo ov?r llacket Store. (Iradaate Baltimore Dental College. T wiity-f'o'ir years active exprieuce. A.M'ii-'R'IAL TEi'.TIt A SPECIALTY. Natural lent: removed and new ones inseitt: 1 in T .Vi::-'7V .MI.XUTE. All work warranted. L-iuisburg- is ray home "for better or worst'" and you will always find me rra'ly to correct at my own expense any work that may prove unsatisfactory. Very truly. R'E. king, Dentist. SOcts., and ,$1.00 per Bottle. Onrea Conelisi Hoarseness, Sore lntoat, Croup promptly; relieves Whooping Congh and Asthma. For Consumption it fans no rival; has cured thousands where all others failed; will cure you if taken in time. Sold by Druggists on a guarantee. For Lame Back or Cheat, use SKlLOll'S PLASTEE. 23cts. lave YpuJCtorireaiedv is fruaran teed to oure too. Price 60 cts. Injector free- Peed, Sale Livery STABLE S. HAYES & PINfiELL, Proprietors, LOUISBURG, N, C 0001) TEAMS AND POLITE DRIVERS. I'E' IAL ATTENTION TO TRAY ELING MEN. tP Eft- CAIV I OBTAIN A PATENT ? Fot a I ;i,'.l,P answer and an iionest opinion, writ to - N iSc CO., who have had nearly fifty years' i-ritnca in the patent business. Coimiinica '' -trictly confidential. A Handbook of In j i''i-i:.ioa concnrninn Patents and hew to ob uiniee:itfreo. Also a catalogue of meehan i.nl scientilto bootas sent free.-., i iuunts taken throngh Munn & Co. receive ' neticolnthe Scientific American, end 16 hrnT7frltl HiUl hitfnni ilia YmllTta wlt.iW -ut coiit to the inventor. This splendid naper, JhKuo'.. weeklv. elezantlv IlliiRtrAl-ed- has bv far the iest circulation of any scientiSe work in the j, J.'j5" a yew. Sample copies sent free. ... L'iUdipg Edition, monthly, $2.50 a year. Single iTJ"",0.-- cents. Every number contains l eau- l'I:tl piaffes, ill nnlrtrM nhniwrnnhs. Af new J ouses. with plans, enabling builders to show the a'.'it.2?'!r'B eeonre contracts. Address aphs of new "tiJi (6 CO, KSW YOUK, SCI BUOAVWAT. im n 2 ""'ess fs m bs n m ? mj -jk x i sua? rar3T-rro PLAYING A TRICK WITH A BANK BILL. A Kan Who Planned a Good Joke on El In BoHton Friends. v A man walked into a hotel near the Grand Central station early one morning, having just left a train. He ordered and ate a hearty, break fast, and then instead of giving his waiter the money to, pay iJie check and waiting tor the change afc most men do he "tipped" tie waiter and carried ;the bill, to the cashier. In his hand along with tne bill for his breakfast he held a $10 note. '.'I wish," he said to the cashier, 1 'that you would pin a slip of paper to this bank bill so that you can identify it and then put it away, please, untij I call for it. Til be back tomorrow." The cashier looked rather aston ished. "Yes," said the other, "I only want to leave it here as security for my breakfast. IH come back to get it." "Bu t it's a good bill, " said the cash -ier. "I'll accept it and give you change." "No," replied the stranger, "I don't want you to do that. I want merely to leave this bank bill in pawn. I want to pledge it. Give me the price of my breakfast on it, and tomorrow I"ll redeem it." ( "Oh, I see," said the cashier, with a smile, ' 'you want to keep this bill be cause it has some peculiar value through association. It's a sort of a souvenir, eh?" ' "Well, not exactly," was the an swer. ' 'You see, I have been over in Boston. I went nearly broke there. When I was coming away, some of my friends insisted on lending me some money. I told them that I should not need it, but they declared I Could not pull through. One of them forced $10 on me." " Til tell you what Til do,' I said. 'You take down the number and date of this bill. I'm coming to Boston again next week. Now to prove to you that I don't need this $10 111 bet you that I bring the same bill back with me. I'll bet a dinner for us all.' "They took the bet, and that is why I want to put this bill in pawn. Pretty good joke on them, eh?" he said, with a wink. "I spend it, and yet I keep it. Take good care of it for me," aud he went out, looking like a conqueror. About five minutes later the cashier took out the bill, pinned a slip of paper to another one of about the same color and appearance and slipped them back into his cash drawer. "I wonder who'll have the joke on him now?" he said to, himself, and then he whistled softly. New York Tribune. Don't Laugh at Yonr Dog. An extremely human characteris tic of our canine f riends is shown in susceptibility to ridicule. Faint traces of this quality are to be found in monkdys, and perhaps even in the more intelligent horses, but nowhere elso save in man, and hardly there., except in the more sensitive natures, do we find contempt, expressed in laughter of the kind which conveys that emotion, so keenly and painfully appreciated. With those dogs which are endowed with a large human quality, such as our various breeds of hounds, it is possible by laughing in their faces not only to quell their rage, but to drive them to a distance. They seem in a way to be put to shame, and at the same time hope lessly puzzled as to the nature of their predicament. In this connec tion we may note the very human feature that after you have cowed a dog by insistent laughter you can never hope to make friends with him. Professor N. S. Shaler in Scribner's. "Or the Leopard His Spots?" Dr. Sanermann, one of the leading German ornithologists, publishes sonie interesting particulars concern ing his remarkable experiments in artificially .coloring the feathers of canaries. According to the doctor, canaries, when fed upon cayenne pepper, gradually change the color of their plumage, passing from the characteristic yellow to a beautiful red. Cayenne pepper contains a tinc torial substance, an irritative princi ple and an oil. "When the last two substances are extracted by steeping in alcohol, the pepper loses its color ing powers and properties. From this fact the doctor draws the con clusion that the oily principle of the pepper i3 the necessary vehicle of color. St. Louis Republic, A Pnn on Frank Tlatton. : When the late Frank Hatton was sworn in as postmaster general, one of his newspaper friends in Washington sent out the following dispatch, which was considered by the subject of it the cleverest pun that had ever been- made on his name: "The administration decided today to keep its Hatton in cabinet meetings for the remainder of the presidential term. If. asked if it means anything, simply say the weather i3 getting colder, and the president is only showing proper can for the head of the postofnee depart ment." San Francisco Argonaut. Impertinent Query. Ikithusiastic Author Yes, sir, I don't expect to be able, to write the1 half that's in me in this world. When I get to the next world, I expect to keep on writing just the same. Cynical Friend Words that burn! Chicago Tribune, . Editor Kecne Was a Dandy. There was one man at Shasta basin in those old days who could . and would both work and play cards. That was James R. Keene. I think he has always .been called "Jim Keene," though the long, kindly and brilliant letters I have had from this man have always been signed James R. Keene. He was editing a paper at that time, poor,, persecuted man, and I at last forced him to tell me, as many an honest man has since, that I could not write poetry. " But he had and still has a great big heart in him for any one who is willing to work an? try to get on, whether in Wall street or elsewhere. No, I never played cards with Jim Keene. I never saw him turn a card in my life, though the. boys up there' used to say that when the young ed itor sat down at a game he generally got up with all the dust in sight. But bear this distinctly in mind, he was an Englishman, with an Englishman's ideas of play. Besides that he had both hands full of other employment. And bear in mind furthermore that I don't say, except as I have heard, that he ever tossed a card at all in that stout hearted, style while in Califor nia. But I am certain if he did play with the Oakhursts and loungers of dear old Shasta he "played them out of their boots." Joaquin Miller. in San Franeisco Call. 1 Amenities of Flat Life. The lady in the flat overhead was making her first call on the lady who had moved in a few weeks before. They chatted about the weather and the merits of the apartment, and the conversation was gradually brought around to hardwood floors. "They're lovely to look at," ven tured the visitor, "but unless they're well covered with nigs they're a nuisance. The folk who live on the floor above me have a carpet sweeper and a piano. When they're both per forming at once, it's rather hard on my nerves." The. newcomer saw her opportuni ty. She thought it might never come her way again, so sho said sweetly, "By the way, I wish you'd tell the gentleman who has the front bed room that when he throws his shoes on the floor just before retiring it sounds to us as jf he were playing ninepins." The visiting lady straightened up, and the newcomer noticed that her fingers twitched nervously. "The boys' rooms," she said coldly, "are all on theeast side of the house. The front room is my dressing room." The hostess suddenly decided that it was time to serve a little tea. Chi cago Record. The Eye After Death. j Many years ago the rumor gained circulation in s:me circles that cer- j tain doctors had found pictures in i the eyes of deceased men, which proved to be the images of persons and. things that they had last looked at before dying. And further that these doctors had utilized their knowledge so as to help to discover a murderer by a postmortem exam ination of the eves of the murdered person. Nothing seems to have come out of these rumors except a vague idea in the minds of reading people that the eye of a dead man retains the image of the last thing looked at. The idea has been settled as an er roneous one. The retina becomes of a pale white color soon after death, and the pellucid fluid in the cornea, which does not exude in the living state, but is constantly absorbed and renewed, cozes out gradually after or a short time before death and forms that obscure film before the cornea which destroys its transpar ency. Brooklyn Eagle. A Complicated Case. "What can I do for you V asked the lawyer. "It is dis way," said the tough young man, putting his cigar stub in his pocket and hanging his leg over the corner of tlie table. "I live on Mississippi street. See? An Kitty dat's me steady she usty live on Tennessee street. See? An, say, since dey changed de name of it, she don't live on Tennessee street no more. She resides on Capitol avenue. Catch on? An since she is begun residin on Capitol avenue 6he says a bloke from Mississippi street ain't good enough to trot in her class an gimme the shake. Kin I soo the city f er damages, er kin I?" The lawyer has the case under con sideration. Indianapolis Journal. Quietly Settled. - The correspondent of the Boulder Sentinel, writing from Basin, tells of a row in that city in which one man lost his nose . and another his ear. "But," naively states the correspond ent, "the matter was quietly settled." This will undoubtedly be consoling news to the gentlemen who lost por- tions of their anatomy in the row and who otherwise might have been of the opinion, that it had been set tled with a blare of trumpets and an ax. Butte Bystander. ; Shrewd Figurins;. "Sharp man, that." "How?" 4i:Widder sued.him and got judg ment for HC0," "Yesr . ; . ; - ' ' . "Married the widder, got a divorce fdi $60 an had-$40 left out of the llOOAtianto Constitutioa, - j TTHE GIRLS OF ARGENTINA. Type of Voluptuous Hatrty, trot Fas svnd Cro t Thirty. ". The Very beat word picture of an Argentine girl that I have of er, seen, true to life, though rathe? flowery, says a Buenos Ayres correspondent, is as follows: 'V- "Imagine a brunette oi.15 or 1G, developed to a precocious - maturity. An erect figure of medium L'cight, but splendidly proportioned, with a bust that would make Lord Lytton's flat chested heroines green with envy; proud and graceful carriage ; a face of perfect oval; spotless complexion, with a slight tinge of Creole blood that imparts to the cheefc the hue of the damask rose. The eyes are dark, large and lustrous, fringed by long, silken lashes, and. . overarch"-.! by eyebrows which, with tleVight of her hair,' makes the white forehead look like alabaster; small and deli cately chiseled nostrils that dilate nervously at every inspiration ; teeth so white and regular that to catch a glimpse of them through the arch of a smile is a wonder at nature's per fection the only fault of the beauti , ful face the sensuous lines that sur round the full red lips, symbols of a passionate nature. "Imagine the face in its frame of soft black hair, surmounted by a white hat of the most coquettish fashion, on which real flowers repose and living fireflies gleam, and that lithesome figure attired in a crush of some soft texture and delicate tint and of a fashion known only to the Worths of Paris and Mr.drid, with I the sparkle of a diamond here and . there or climmer of dull trold. And imagine the whole being instinct with the grace and vivacity of early youth, and you have the complete portrait of an Argentine girl." But with all these charms that dazzle the eye and captivuto admira tion there seems to bo something lacking on closer acquaintance per haps because the voluptuous style does not appeal to the soul like the more spiritual beauty of the Saxon maiden, that where the senses only are fed they become satiated after a time, like one on a steady diet of sweets. Unfortunately, these charm ing creatures are universally r.ddict ed to the rouge pot and powder puff to such an extent that the real wom an appears to bo in total eclijise un der drifts of white and daubs of red. And, as with the gentler sex in all southern countries, their beauty wanes at an early age. While wom en of colder climates and colder tesiv peraments are at their prime at 35 oi 40, the Portena's golden ago is be tween the years of 15 and 17 At 25, I or sooner if married, she is quite passe and metaphorically laid on the j shelf. A tendency to corpulence is encouraged by indolent habits and excessive indulgence in the flesh pots, and at middle age many of them de velop hirsute appendages that are the envy of the beardless youths. Philadelphia Record. Tests For Pure Knttr. It is said that it is an almost cer tain test of pure butter to melt it and note the color and odor. A German chemist gives the following direc tions: "Pure fresh batter, when melted, is perfectly clear, or only very slightly cloudy, usually dark yellow, and has the familiar odor of pure butter fat. Pure stale butter may be very cloudy and even opr.que when melted, is usually of a dark yellow color and has the odor of rancid butter. Melted marjrarin, on the other hand, is very opaqae, of a light yellow color, and has a charac teristic, indescribable odor." In ad dition to this, one may try the teat resorted to by experienced cooks: Drop a bit of it upon a very hot saucepan. Pure butter will rise in white bubbles; margarin melts and runs across the dish m oily looking streaks. .New lork Leuger. Cntrne, of Course. A good story, which is of course untrue, is told on Judge Durham. The incident is said to have happened while he was controSer of the cur rency. One Sunday, so the story goes, the judge, who isa devout man, went to church in Washington. The audience was an inspiring one and the sermon a good one. When the minister had quit speaking, he said: "Now let us return thank3 to the great Controller of the universe." No sooner had the words been ut tered than the judge, who is a gentle man of the old school, arose and pub licly thanked the preacher for the distinguished honor ho had paid him. Lexington Press. wis. What I wonder at, is that wigs are not universal They do such good service in sparing the natural hair. One can dye a wig to taste without unpleasantness to the scalp. I 'am getting really to like the wispy wig of a hue that nature never could havt invented. A beauty born with red hair looks so much better in a dark wig, or a flaxen or any amber colored one, than in what nature gave her The red wig makes a dark complex ioned person going onto 50 almosi seem young. London Truth. " ' ConclnaiT. Little ltrJ'Qlks- say there is peo v pie on the planet Mars. little Dick There isn't. .: Little Dot Why isnt there? Little -. Dick (triumphantly) How , vthere?-LoM(j A CIXDKIl' IN THE EYE. Lamherton Itobrcootan. Nine persops oat of every ten with a cinder or any foreign sub- j stance in the eye rill iustantly begin to rut the eye with one hand, while hunting for their handkerchief with the other. They may and sometimes do re move the offending cinder, but more frequently thev rub till the eye becomes inflamed, bind a handkerchief around 'the head and go to bed. This is all wrong. The better way is not to rnb the eye with the cinder in it all, but rub the other eye as vigorously as you like, according to a writer in the Medical Summary, who relates the following experience : "A few years since I was riding on me engine oi a last express The enirineer tlinw v oi en the i i w I 1 caught a front window, and cinder that gave mo ino?t excru- eye with both hand! Let your j eye alone and rub the other eye.' I (this from the conduct Jr.) I thought he was chating me and I worked tbe Larder. '1 know you doctors think you know it all, but if you will lpt that eye alone and rub the other one, the cinder will be out in two minute?, ' per sisted the engineer. I began to rub the other eye, and soon I felt the cinder down near tbe inner cantbus and made readv to take it out. 'Let it alone and keep at ' the well eye,' shouted the doctor pro tem. I did io for a iniuut longer, and looking in a small glass he gave me I found the of fender on my cbeek. Since then I have tried it many timee, and I Lave never known itto fail in on instance, tinier it was as fdiarp 1 as a piece of steel or something that cut into the ball and re- 1 quired au operation to remove ! it. ! The Stiuiriest Man. v?tingey men have been stumb ling blocks in all ages. They have always lived. But the man who would tell a lie on sixty daya time rather than tell it for ca.-h, and the man who had plenty and would go hungry have been re tired by a gentleman Hvingabout thirty miles from this city. lie goes to church regularly, sits on : the front seat always, but pays! nothing on the pastor's salary or j in tbe church collections. His' pastor tells all that is known" of this man's closefistednes, and he I ays that when be gives out 'Old j Hundred' to be sung in any of the services, this stingy man will ! sing "Ninety and Nine," in der to save one cent. or- W hat Is a Gentleman. Dr. Charles A. Dana, of the New York Sun asks the question. "What is a Gentleman?" The great Sun philosopher answers tbe question himself after asking it: "He must be a gentleman bred in the boue; he can not be made a gentleman simply by educa tion. His quality as a gentle man must be the outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace; and all that the polish of education can do ia to assist him in giving expression to this essential quality in accord ance with the usages of polite so ciety. -You can no more make a gentleman of a man who is not 'born a gentleman than you. can make a thoroughbred horse out of an animal of common stock. He mast be a gentleman to begin with, a gentleman by the grace of God. Opportunity and educa tion can only bring to practical frnitf illness theseeds sown in him by inheritance." This ia sound philosophy, but only one of tbe many definitions given to the word gentleman. Perhaps the most concise, brief aud accurate description of a gen tleman is by Cardinal Newman. He saya "a gentleman is one who never offends.". "Whenever yoo find a man of that kind yon find one embodying all the traits that are demanded by Dr. Dana. -Ye- Highest of all in Leavening Power. r i cy W ABSOOiTEUrf PURE A genius is never taken to be one by bi3 looks. All Free. Tbom lio bre nd Dr. Klnr "iw Diueovery tow tja no3 tbnw vbo rryitfr. Dall on Hi dt?rtid droe- 1 f-O'io"-Ta J H-'r ra-nt Kcr -cist and pvt a trisl bottle fr. Srni j Urui nd llTr tf- 'n-j tat your naim acd addivsn to II. K. Hock. I T"1 inalubU TL-r ar atrao lm& ., Cbicag... and c-t a rarvjih i l" u' f- f rom ry drj. b--x tlf Ir. Kiaff'a N-v Life PilU, frw. J -"ru a-jSita and to b- ptn-x t .i w-U a a copy f Guid- to Health ' t. v .. n. .-& br t'tr mHnrii,,l 1 in.trnrtar fr. !l nf 1 actKT. bot by 7lftC t' U rxah hich in g-uaratul to d....nc--l and i enstjrta nuthiac at Arco-ke x ( '. ' i)ru.u,r. - - : Still ID tll6 Rlllf v, i: WILL SLLL VOL rou k- S THAN ANY OTHKR nor SK IN TOWN. ... . e have ft coniplt hn of dm- 3 ifne trl) from th .Northern mar- j hei unn i' pnmiiM' to -u mm heap for the rah. We btiv for ennh nnd ran save you tl;o di- fount. On r LUl K we off r you Special Iniuccmsnts Fruit and ConiWtionrriw frwh c ery day. Call and He us. and we will trvat you with courtly. ( ur Tin Wftnl ;nil illi V.'nr.. u . 1 if . , f,.r chap 1 ou rs To cinint on . K II. Thomas A: Co.. ( liiton'rt orTi'T. Louisburg. Countrv Produce wnnt!. TAR RSVER RTODTT PAP.M K3ise Your bacon, Kunon, Best, - a m a a Mat Milk and Butter. Pure I'red Dunn- JVrsev Piirs. 1 Purv P.rcd (ifrd down I'.urk. Pure Bred Jt-r. v HeiiVr and I Hl'LL CALVES. 1 My cows have butter reord of O pound.- it wp'k. l'--t Hull. I P'nnr and IImmi in Atn.-ri .1 nt th j head of my herds. My k is r--r i isterd. Write for wlmt n w : i 1 1 1 and I will Mipply you at p-aoi..-il,le pr;eM. W L. M ( ill LK. I ranklinton, N. V. Coffins and Caskets. 1 We have added to our already complete line 01 wood and cloh covered Coffins and Caskets SOLID WALNUT COFFINS AND CASKETS. Also a line of VETALICS as nice and fine goods as is car ried in any of our cities. Our stock is complete in every line. Respectfully, R. R. II A RBI 8 & Co. Louisbnrg, N. C. FKANKLl.NTO HOTEL E. M. WARD, PropV. Good accotnmciauofia. puUt servants, and the best tare the market ' affords. Good LI very In connection with hotel Latest U. S. Gov't Report. r?w no 11 True religion always pat shine in tire heart. Krre Ml. S-ol joor addrM t II. B. Hock Wo. Chirac a, (t- Muup S-t Ir. Ki jit IM I'tU. . A trial UI a'J "'f J-V ,n""' f"v lb "TT trm - RUrar 2;. r U-i. rv14 br ycx & lJrcr- : In the arithmetic of nothing 'Hunts but love. II earn P.iu lln't AmU.-A tiaHe. v-t Mil' ia th world (or mts ir-'-, t.-ttf-r. i-hHT.j-t baJ v t h ilbUta. ri.rn, and Ml nkin -rTrjit. r.w, ard tuly c.in' j il . r no fr. It Ugur-ant-d cn- j-rf-t ."tifa.'tJ-a rr !?."2r rt ur.d-i. rrr H o-at pr t 'i. F"r sal- bv Th-ma ii Avrke F r nv'tiarrv-r.f an 1 i t !-!-. d-fc. aad ;ch xj--t pn : . r .ini rail n or ad it. I. ii .. I?;rhara. . C. j-?Th- chi th- Sta:-. tf. Shiloh" CVke. tLf (irat ( '"cch ao4 Cfup car f r - by Tboman h Avc"k. I'k-t ii rsD'ain t r. : j -Qrf d-. onlr Jfx. CbildrrD lo it. FAIiMEHS TAKE NOTICE. We havf opnel a market and stock extbaii at Clifton's old corner, and want to buy beeves and hog? of any sire. Milch cow.. mutton or iambs, and fowls vf all kitid. All that want meat of any kind ?end us your order. Everything as rpr?nted. We meaii buiiifp, call and ee us. K J. Rac-dale & Co. FINE NEBLG ICE! Qui- Customers will irrcatlv oblijre j us if they will pro cure their ice xin the morning and eve ninir. Wp sell only tlie verv ural ire tmest nat--the Ken- nel rr. li. V. Yakboko & Co. CKN THAI, HO'l ML oienderSon. n. c. (1 -o.) cr'naia1iin. 0xkJ 'are. Ta lie at.J elective fTtti. 5 nmMHO i k ORGANS! t 1 To Oar Nona caraiioa matrons t T vMt th BMT lor tfc L-KAiT . A HuXCT. Xm mU W ttiM ttval oar UaUiatiU ar j RELIABLE. 6u5VA&AtLY PERFECT, a t . U.a.i . wa - w4aA 4 ,;. i X nt'T rtoH ot t I RALEIGH BRANCH, 4 0 )t? IHda'l jo kaow a y L NX mm ,(mk. omr owa Mo. lara-r( M'lUr knw ta KAW-thv IM T O aMn va Mit-us W J mtt- ' romtmy A tloa. Ail MprM mtd bT aum A lOTCrajnMil. mmn prkr. mY T lrr-n.. .axx- kaatnea nli4i ka J 0 k.n6. AiroiV iat mi mm W 1 mialUia'i prti rd f itrbii A m. mr lr.tj ImiM A J ta fomr rry 4aur. Iwim fc X U wltri troaj. a U mo Trmtn T t ma tmorn. rit wdnamlw W T . t .1.1. A ii4Mror4m tor Hiftl t Mafce.A ItaMnbT loa. ltmm laxr T Mnop, mmm all moiU 9 wwata. Amy priaaa J MUM dap4Urc4. UUm tail V BraBilrr oor 4 ? rODDEFl & BATES 4 L SeclHeni - ftlcsls Kcs:e.l t Kala Bovaa. SaTaaaah, Oa- t 4 nfMVt.ll.l C --! ta. KaMxIk 4 ti. C.: HiUI. Taoakt w iir kiu. La.1 all uJrr wmr rflract araa- i (CM!. . 5 Eiiu&u as) ' 1
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 29, 1894, edition 1
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