Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / Aug. 10, 1894, edition 1 / Page 1
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TO PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS The-Superintendent . of "Public Schools of Franklinotmty will be in Louisburg on the second Thurs day of February,' April, July, Sep- tember, Uctooer ana Decern Der, ana 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 office. J. N. Harris, Supt. Pro i ewloiiul oti-l. ARP ON STRIKES. c. M COOKE & SON, ATTORNETS-AT-LAW, L0CISBSJR6, N. C- wni nnii t.h courts of Nash. Franklin, Grauvillt;, Warren aud Wahocounties.tSBothe apreme C iurtofr.ortnuaponup, auu iu u. it Circuit and District Courts. ...... Bill Says Let Everybody Quit Work for a While. D K. J. E. MALOME. Office two floors below Aycoefce & druii Htore. adjohiiBif Dr. O. L. KUis.' CO.'B D R. W. H. NICHOLSON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, LouisBune, n. c. E. W. TIMBERLAKE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, LOUISBURG, X. C. Offit on'Main street. Y. a. 8PKUILL, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, LOUISBOES, N. C. Will atteml the courts of Franklin, Vance, OranvllK Warren and Wake counties, also the Supreme Court of North Carolina. Prompt attention given to collections, &c. N. Y. QDLLEY. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, FRANKLI-N'TON, X. C. All legal business promptly attended to. pHOS. B. WILDER, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, L0CIKBUP.6, X. c. Office on Main street, over Jones-& Cooper's store. yy M- PERSON, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, LOUISBURG, K. C. Practices In ail courts. Olflce in the Court House. Dentistry, W. H. EDWARDS OF WAKE FOREST, N. C. Will visit Loniahurg on Mondaynesday ttiri VVednewiav following; the lirst Sv.e.ijay in each month prepared to do all kiuus of lu-titnl work. OtUee in the Meadows Hot-el. Dr. KOBT. S. BOOTH, I have fitted up an office for tue rtractice of Dentistry in all its br;ini'he.-s in Louisburg, N. C, and ; will he in my office the two weeks following the second Sunday in each month. Guarantee all my work and my prices to suit the hard tiinort. " Grace in the Jones & Cooper building. DENTIST, LOUISBURG, N. C. Office over ilacfret Store. Graduate Baltimore Dental College. Twenty-four years active experience. artificial teeth a specialty. Natural teeth removed and new ones inserted in TWENTY MINUTEo. All work warranted. Louisbur? is my liome "for better or worse" and you will always find me ready to correct at my own expense any work that may prove nnsaustaetory. Very truly. K. E. KING, Dentist. YARBORQUSH & QAVIS, no mi m a r. a OF LQUISBURG. All work in, our, line done on short notice, and satisfaction guaranteed. We have our new shop the old tea pin alley) in good shape and are better pre pared thau ever to serve our custo mers. J. M. C. HILU THE TINNER. Is oretiared to do all kin f tin work, re pairing, &c. All work guaranteed. Flaee of business on Main street in house recently occupied by F. Parma, OSBORN HOUSE, C. D. OSBORN, Proprietor, Oxford, N. C. Good accommodations for the traveling public. RUFFIN & LEWIS, BLACKSMITHS. We are prepared to do all kinds 6 work in our line. . Call to see; as at, our shop near the Lo uisburg nulls. R. R. CROSSE N, . FIRST CLASS PAINTER, LouisBtraa, n. c. I wish to offer, my services to the pub- We are crowded now. "What with all the rami6cations of the big Btrike, the wide-spread war be tween capital and labor, the miser able contention over the tariff bill and the red-hoi strike of candi dates for office, onr weak minds are kept on a 'continual strain. Every trade or occupaiion has got a union now, even to the barbers and the newsboys, and if these unious don't strike or boycott occa- siocallytheboys get lukewarm and emit paying1 their dues and that cuts off the salaries of the officers, and so they must get up a carouse meat to fire up the boys again. It" is like the great monarchies of Europe. When their people get restless and discontented and threaten the government the mon arch gets up a little war with some other nation and that unites the people and kills off the surplus Suppose we all strike for a little while and swear off from any kind of work unless we can get more for it. Let the newspapers strike against the newsboys and quit nublishinsr papers. Let the rail- roads stop running:. Let the mer chants quit buying and selling Let all the manufactories close up for awhile. Let us all wear our old clothes and live off our gardetis Capital is just as good as labor and brains are better than ioth. It takes all three to keep the world going and if they cannot get along in peace let us dissolve the partner ship avthile and everybody and everything get on a strike. Bnt that would'nt do. Just think of the poor ; not the farmers nor the laborers ou the railroads aud in the workshops, but the poor women and children who toil in the cotton mills or at the needle in some mis erable garret the sewing wocfan j ... n i in tue great cities woo paee our garments for a mere trifle and who still sing " The Song of the Shirt,." Who is striking for them ? No body. It is not the very poor who are raising all tms raeset. it is the able-botlied men who have em ployment at living wages. I heard a farmer-say yesterday that they could get along if labor was not so hi eh. and no doubt his laborers are growling because wages are not higher and so it goes. The farmer grumbles because wheat is down to 60 cents a hushel and the laborer would reduce it to 50 cents if he could. And yet all classes who are not rich enough to live without work sympathize with the strike, and in its last analysis the prime cause is envy: and selfishness. How rich will a man be allowed to get- and still have the good will of his poorer neighbors ? How poor must a man get before he will have the help and pity of the rich ? But every day the press venti lates the whole business and every body knows all about it. , It was a relief when Mrs. Arp tolfl. me this morning she wanted that big red oak that stood near the corner of the garien cut down. I've been hinting about that a long time, but she-is opposed to cutting down shade trees, and so I never argued the ease at all. I never do. Some years ago I proposed to thin out the trees in the front yard but she objected. While she. was off to Rome on a visit I got the boys and we cut down three of them level with the ground ancl didn't leave a sign of a stump, and we hauled away every chip and scrap and covered the places with grass and she never found it oat for two. months, and wouldn't have then', but ..one : of the . mischievous girls remarked one day that we didn't nse to see the hills as plain as we and was sure 'it wouldn't fall iip the hill where I wanted it. If it went down the hill it would fall across my own fenee and across the narrow lane and onto the widow's fence and smash up the fruit trees in her . lot. So to be sure i climbed tue ladder ana sawed off some big limbs on that ride, and I knew that the limbs on the other side would pull it that way. I sharpened the ax and then I andjlucle Sara went to work. : When it was most down the good widow, who is onr near est neighbor and lives alone in her cbttage;came along and looked anxiously at what we were doing. I assured her the tree was bound to fall up the hill on my side, and so she went on to spend the day at a friend's, and we chopped on a little more. The wind was blowing quite a breeze, and I got my plumb and sighted again. Then I, sighted the top in line With another tree, and told Uncle Sam to chop some more. By and by I saw it was moving a little up the hill and all right. " It's go ing all right, Uncle Sam," 6aid I. "Let her go give another lick or two on the lower corner." Just then the wind got. up almost a gale, and before we could say Jack Hobinson, it sent that tree crashing down onto fences and orchards and into my corn patch and just tore things all to pieces generally. "Dar now," " said Uncle Sam, and " there now," was echoed from the back door, where my wife and the girls were watciiing. ii was iue wind," said I. " I reakon it was gravity," said my wife. They guyed me almost as bad. as the small boys guy a baseball team from a neighboring town, and I had to walk into the garden to let my collar down. I didn't! care anything about icy fence j nor the corn patch, but there wa? the tree top in the poor widow's orchard. My wife aud the gltls came ont to comfort me, bnt I wouldn't be comforted. How long would the widow be gone I rurninafed, and how long would it take to clean up things and re pair the damage as far as possi ble ? But we never stopped a a minute. There were three of us uow, all goods hands, includ ing myself. I "never worked as hard in my life. I dragged off brush as fast as they could trim up the brushy top. I got the step ladder and sawed off the broken limbs of the apple trees and unloosed those that were fastened down. We cut up every part of the tree that was on the widow's side and elearred up the fragments and then put a new post in the ground and brought plank and built up the fence again and re placed the barbed wire. Every little while I looked down the lane to see if the widow was com iuer, but she didn't come. Then we cut up that part that was in the lane and we carried or rolled every piece to my woodpile, and by 5 o'clock you could hardly tell that a tree had fallen there at all. I was hot and tired and my gar ments stuck to my perspiring flesh.. 4I looked again for the widow, and sure enough .she was in sigbt. Putting on a smile, I satd : "Well, the wind did take the tree down in your lot." She looked & the fellce arid the orchard, and said : " Well. I don't see where it fell. The fence looks just like it did, only better." It broke a large limb from that beatiful apple tree," said I.. " Well, that doesn't mat ter," she said. It hardly ever bears any fruit, and when it does the apples are not much account." "There was a, young peach tree there,' said I, " bnt it is not there Lack of Money. - ' V : '- A Burglar's SotcI Expcricnce.. If men realized bow their wive dislike to ask them for money, they would be quite willing to allow the partners of their lives weekly allowance, and thus secure to thm' a certain feeling of" indeppndence- But the majority of husbands never thiuk of such a thing. Under the old common law a wife was entit- led to " food, clothing and medi cine," and it has become customary to give her so much, and to snppose she should be satisfied with these. I knew a woman, many years ago; who insisted - that her- husbaud should pay her one dollar week She had three children and no ser vant. But her small demand was the standiug joke among other husbands, who regarded that unfor tunate husband who paid a dollar a week to his wife as reallv hen- m pecked. If a husband who holds the purse-strings tight from Lis wife, would put himself for a sin gle month in her position so far as the limitation in money-matters is concerned, he would learn a lesson of humiliation and shame of whose bitterness he had before no concept tion. The dissatisfaction among wives on this one point is wide spread. Men who mean to be con sidered just should see to it that the cause of this dissatisfaction is "I think about the rao curi ous man I ever met," said the re tired burglar, I nnt in a hoase ia Eastern "Connecticut and I shouldn't know him either if 1 Bhould meet him again unless I should bear him speak ; it w&t.so dark where I met him tht I never saw him "at all. I had looked around the house down stairs and actually hadn't seen a thing worth carryiug off; it was the poorest bonse I ever was in, and it wasn't a bad locking house on the out side either. I got nn-stairs and groped around a little aud finally turned into & rooni thtt was darker than Egypt. I hadu't gone more than three steps in this room when I heard a man say : ' Hello, there." Hello, says I." " Who are you ? " says the mrn, ' burglar ?' " And I said yes, I did do some thing in that line occasionally. ' Miserable business to be in, aiu't it?" said the man. His voice came from a bed over in the corner and I knew he hadn't even sat up. "And I abl, - Well I doimo. I got to support my family some way.' "Well you've just wasted a CEDAR ROCK ACADEMY Business Institute. MALE AND FEMALE. Coffins and Casiets. We nave n4dcd to our already complete line of wood and elotk covered Coffins and Caste ta sdud wMjtn ccmss ua mini. not allowed to remain as a root of j night here,' says the man. bitterness, to poison and spoil all i the home life. Ex. Hogg's Childreu are CcmpaUrn Thunder. Charlotte News. Governor Hogg, of Texas, ia a dandy, according to the statement r - - .1. . . i . oi a ounr man iroiu uiai oiare you see anything down stairs worth stealing ? ' " And I said no I hadn't. " Well, there's less up stair's," said the man. Then I heard him turn over and settle to go to eleep again. I'd like to have gone over there and kicked hiru, but 1 didn't. It va- petting late and whom the News had a little chat with to-dav. Th vonnc man said ' j I thought ail things considered, that 1 might just, ax well, let him have hi sleep out.' A Farewell Sermon. N. Y. Nin. Hoag was a regular Democratic nominee for Governor and tbere- fora was elected. He will proba-j bly be in the race for something I Tbo follojS-ing spi.-y :in.l nnique this year again and is using every- j dis-our. snys The S.-vnu::z.r. was ' ro t'llli". CIV'I. UP I). H iYl;rIIIV fcriTlI Situated in Franklin county, N. C, eleven miles eit of Louwbur, in one of the bo.t sections of the State for bnalth, refinement and re ligious and moral influoc. Tho course of study ia thorough and practice , prrpnring to Umcb, for college, or toe practical pursuit of Jile. Our prii-r are roi-ionW, corresponding to the low prices of your produce. Hoard ia 3X) yard of Academy nt $7.00 pr month. Tuition range from $1.00 to $:J.."0 -r month. A commerrial h:vil w U-ing fit tod up and VnA. 'lVugr.e will l rrcnrirc-d to do a.s irod work for the yoi:n:r men in thi. deprt ment a.- cm be had in th- State, i Telegraphy will alto U taught. ' Special atten ion paid to eniii.in- j ship. Our lare and roomy build-j i:nr was recently niit-ly pnintf-d and ; I will probablv be fumisb-d with r.ev . I school furniture by middle of Kail j term. Arrangements are nirvnJy mad i&r u!l irirls who lourd to i Frincin ipn-h-n 1 m 1'iitrusting their dauhti-rs toour cart. Th music .lopartnx-nt will un- j dr Miss Marv ("hifk. who is now ' Did i taking a p-w'.l conr at thf N-t ' Musi'- ( "ousi-rve.tory in the South. Mis- (T.cek is vtv .Mfrg'tif a.d will take grvat intTvst in inu.-ic class. .Lothr new pi mo will N add to ourto-k of instrument j. f-o pupils wiil f. in ! no li:lu u 1 1 y in having jmmI inst rum. an I plen ty of tin: for ur.nio. f r after all, it is practio tiwit makr- prfvt in! iiuiM.-, .1-. v.-ll us in oil.T Things Fall t.Tia iil op-n Ai:-zt l?lst, an i i ' ir.t ini:- Is u.-vk-. Srir.ir t'-r:) m!1 op-n .lantiriry Mli. IS'."-, a:, i continue Is -. l'or further .an u inat ion appiy to W. A. MITil. Frin -.p.-d. I liar K K'k, N . I '. Or Jno. A . ( i :; i '. S-,-' , ( Vi:ir H'Vk, N. i:. Also a lino of VF.TAUCS . nicn and fine (tooda as is car ried in any of oar cities. Oar stock is complete in every line. Respectfully, R. R. Harris & Co. Louisburg, N. C. hourtl with the Principal, so that j t oaietAs ned a;iim-h n 1 no dane r I TAR RIVER STOCK FARM. false Yocr Bacon, liotton, Best, Mi!x an j Batter. Pure Prl Ii.r'v .IenT Fig. l'ur- l'.rl OxforrJ down Mucks. Iure Frl Jcrvy Heifer iind HI FL -.VLVES. thing he'cairto fartl.tr his inter ests. Iot long ago, lo tue story j goes, tbe Governor's wife presented J hi in with triplets two girls and o boy. They- are all very healthy looking, and the Governor wishing to show his wife that he was not mad and also get some notoriety, named the children as follows: Urah Hog, lama Hogg and Ilesa Hogg. Tho newspapers have never said anything about it, but accord- iincr to the names the Governor has e-iven his children thev are undoubtedly all Hoggs, or he would not have said so uniquely. CAROLINA ,ho ; fon,b,v --MQoiiciatc Institute x, s .sentiments of th rvt.ni.g JJUJ&LU:uJ IlIOc'iLUtLj a,. i will napi.Jv vou n NASIIYII.T.K, N. C. The Deadly Cigrarotte. be, and will say that I am prepared to do all kinds of house painting, graia- infr &o t ivrlr in f .n aVn r a npaka for itself, and I refer to all parties for do nowj and and my.wife caught whom T ha.vft worked. Old famitttre on to the business right away She always does, y But she suggested this morniug that that oak would have to come down and it would give rnoro .garden.' As a woman sometimes changes her mind, ,1 went , at it - lite killing snakes. The trunk of the tree was perpen- I '.know it - was, for n ade new. Giv'e me your patronage, na you nhall be pleased, STILL AT THE BRIDGE; BLACK- SMITHING. Where I am well known and pT"paredto do y same worn. I hope you will see me ifts yoa havo done before. You will find me on "i" Kast lde of the River brldee Main etrafit," ou'.si.Qrj?, N. 0. While I am doing all : kinds ot I'lacksTalthlno. flrtn't. f nrtrv. thut I am also P-vpiaa.l io repair your gn, such as patting J j ;nl-v on new loka fcc. f tmA f o-nna whlcb I UlCUiar nTnJrdthatwm90,d"notcanedor planted ''it. I, tied a pair of big YMtrniy. - " lecisfiors .to'A string and stood off ' This iea of taxing Cigarettes is a great one," said the than who is always in earnest. "They are pernicious aud health destroying. Why, I kuew a man who was killed by Cigarettes. " Ye?, such cases are said to be common." " Such a nice young man he was, too. Cut off right in the prime of manhood. It wa3 a cruel blow to his friends." ' It's terrible," said his auditor, with a sympathetic sniff. . " I will never forget when they brought him homematigled and" "Beg jsardou. Did you say mangled?" " Certainly." " But I didn't know Cigarettes mangled. "- " But you see, this young man was ruu over by a wagon load of them on their way to a Richmond firm. He-was" But his listener had vanished. American Industry. -r pastor .... with tne pnstor : "Dear Un thn-n the hour ha pome forth' sevevanr f th- ti j y which hinds v.s. Tins is my farewell : sermon. I innt bid von ndieti. tS. D. BAGLEY, M. A., Prl l Hiring my pastorate utli you l i don't think the Lord hs loved you ! mud), not ninny of you lmv diel. j Neither do I th.ink ytu !ovel -u h ' other mui h. not many of you have ' ' mnrried. Neither do I think von! love me much, not all my salary has been paid, and what you did j pay was in rotten potatoes ami wormeuten peaches, and you know the Scriptures say '"Hy their fruit. " " y ve shall know them." I shall now SELECT PRIVATE SCHOOL. leave you, I am initd to a U tter m field, I have been culled chaplain to the penitentiary, i.et not vour . hearts be troubled, I go to prepai a place for you." My mw harp butter r-ronl of JO jvnun-ln p. r wpk. lW-wt Hall. l'ia.-and I.ani ia Ainricn nt the f m u rg t you want ppy you nt muwiuitw W. L. MfGHCC, Franklintoa, N. G. i ii WITH c(M PKTK N T I N ST iifl'To K Hcnir ! riirV.t liilrtr ;r month in tl. lt v 1 !-. TnHi:i u r-iirti.l trtr.. SlONDAY, Al.'d. I-'Tkh. LOUISBURG Carriage Shops. V!n!r nn.i Art nx-:ii:ti VtiT part imi.-ir iiJJrtu the I'rilir:.! Nahhv.ll.. ( C i CAHF.yVL THAIS is ; TH(uoi ;n isst;:vc :s. i Due of Its Dreaded Result.'. now.". Just a volunteer," she said, " and they were too thick, anyhow." If I had known she would be so pleasant about jt I wouldn't have worked so hard, hut all's well that- ends well." Hereafter when, I go to felt a big tree I shall make more allowance for, wind or we wait till there is none. Now I am going - to make a new strawberry bed plant out runners when they have - taken a little more root j hut tbat tree busi ness will never be ' forgotten. - It will be a photogra'ph on my-raem-ory.Y It actually crowded out the strike -andJpqliticsV' and after it was ail o?er it left roe calm 6nd ierene. . " , BttL-Anp. ' Foor, "But Kinaly. Clerk I am to be married shortly. Couldn't you tnauage to increase my salary a little ? . . Employer Couldn't really. But I'll tell yon what I'll do for you, my boy. , I'll shorteu your hours' dnring the first three months, so that you can spend , your evenings at home,and after that I'll lengthen them again, bo'' yoa will have an excuse to sret away." New Tork Weekly -y y-- v - Cihildrerr Cry forPitcher,sCastoria. 1 Banks I don't mind the influ enza dtself so much. It's the after effects I'm afraid of. Rivers The after effects are what ails me. I'm still dodijink' the doctor. Loudon Million. MKc Kditb and I-'anuie Ynrlo nuh wiil opn a i-'lc'i selexd for ', firls on Thursday August .'Jotli. ' TKUMS: Primary Dept.. p-r innth, $2.00 Advannl pupils, .'1.0 N extra chniire for Ijtiu and rhvsicnl l ulturp. A llousehoM Treanre. D. W. Fuller, of Canajoharie, N. Y., siy9 that be alw.tr-1) keeps Dr. Kind's Ne Discovery ia tne boase and nis family has always found the very but rvstilt-s follow itsasw ; that he would not te without it, if procnrable. O. A. Djkenian. Drutrgit, Cntskill. N. Y., sayr that Dr. Kine's " Disroverv is nndoubtellr tht best Coaffh remedy ; that he h)t us-v1 it In bin familv for ei.cjbt year, and it has neter failed to do all tbat U chimed for it. Why riot try a ren)dy so long tried and tested. Trial bottle free nt Aycocke & (Vs. drug store. Enlsr i9 fOc. and $1.00. If thingB are eo wisely ordained in this world that everything fits nicely in its place, then in what part of a crowd is the place for a short woman with an umbrella f Specimen Cases. S. II. Clifford. New. Cajwl. W'U., was troubled with N'enraljria and Nl'.heuroa tism, his Stomach tm dik)rdred. hi- Liver was affected to an alhrtr.iDg' dts gree. nppptit fell away, and h was terribly redacted in flesh and strength. Three bottles of .Eloctric Bitter cured htm. ' T. , Edward- Shepherd. IlarrisbaiT, III . had a running sor on bU leg of eight Ear Htanding. ,Used thrw bottler of lectrlc Bitttrs and seven -boiy of Buckleys Arnica SHalTe. scd his leg is sound and well. John ypeker, Cataw ba, O., had fltrf large Fever soivs on his leg, doctors gaid be was t ncarable. One bottle Electric Bittern , nd one box Backlen's ' Arnica ;8aUe enmi him entirely. Sold by Ajcoci & Co., at their Drag store, .- IWIYEKSITY OF NORTH CAHOLINA. Include the IVdlejr'. the UuivtTsi tv, tbe Lnw Sdirnd, the Medical Siliool aud the Sunii.ter School for Tf ach-n. rolled tuitiou $"i0.iH) a ywir: bo.inl 7.00 to IH.00 u tnrnth. iwion !zin.- Sept. . Address President Viastoa, Chapel Hill, X. C. WAKE FOREST COLLEGE, WAKS FOREST. N. C A 0ritvn CoTl etnbmcinic tn .Wo domical Schools en-1 tS jrrJainftl.,'ijwl of Law. A meU LiWrarr vt )(t rol nT5-i. A 1ar- bii1 well (jixUhl Itnliric Uouro. Tboronsbljr eoipr'. ir nuuom cnU Laboratorie. Itermrj- Soriet no arpneJ in tte Sinth. No rt Krtr nit mw at!oH. Vre tnitioa to Btt5itr nml ons ( niinUter. Ior tortbf!j. Hoartl from nix lo ten dtlir Cer tonmt tl. A coajjJct i3ri.tai ol at-r murx wiib tn pU bnthiup It.'-ihtW. Tb eumnirr Lmw S hiJ opens JqIj "Jo ft. Nrxt tnti toxins fptTt:br 5th. For farther inlonnMioa .!ire ltHV. C II TAT1XI(. rrUent. Th un(ler;c:ied having leaded ; lb" Jyouibur:4 Carriage Shops ' to-'-fher with tii? Blacksmith . Shops attached thereto, desires 1 to -ay to th popl- of Franklin j arnl adjoining counties that he is prepared to do all kind? of work i in his line at short notice. If ; you wi-h your vehicles of every I kind repair-d and repainted in j tb v-ry l--t manner by firsU I el?.'" workmen you can have tbe work don at my sbopa promptly j and at reason nlde rates. I shall ! have a nrst-chi.ag workman in tb ; Hlackptnirli fhep, who wfll fully lndr.s'and his t'usinees , and wiM ! iruaraute eatisfactiou iu every particular, j If you will give me your work you Bball b fatisti-d. Very reapoctfully, II. C. TAYLOR. Furniture repaired at short no tice and in the rerv best maimer.' FARMERS TAKE NOTICE. We have opened a market and stock exchange 'at Clifion'a old corner, and want to buy beeves aud bo9 of any eiro. Milch cows, tnnttoo or lambs, and fowls of all kinds. All that want meat of any kind eend ns your order. Everything 'aa. represented. We mean busiuevcall and see us. ' V. K. J. Baosdalb & Co. FKANKLLNTON HOTEL E. M. WARD, Prop'r. Good p.crornmnrkicotis. j4U serrmntA, aud the beat re the suatkt arVmrvl. Gd Livery rneoenectioo with no! Feed, Sale I Livery. STABLES. HAYES tPIHBaU FfcprlelCTS, LOUISDURQ. N. C. GOOD TEAMS AND. ' . rOLITE DRIYERS. SPCCTA L ATTC.vnoX TO TTJlV
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 10, 1894, edition 1
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