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FRAN EiJLIN VOL XXY. LOUISBURG, N. C, FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1805. M'MRKR 3. 'Hi IAC SCHOOL TEACHERS ASLEEP FOlt ELEVEN YEARS. Public i r,. Suoeriutendent of s oi i' l auKiiu county wui ; lucueer tase 01 a jp rencn tfiri in a ' ' i 0,nourg. ou tUe second Thurs-L-Voruary, April, July, Sep . 'u ).', Octooer and December, and ',''l uU,I(Jr L'lreo days, ii necessary, ......i.djii it pv;tniiQiii!r aDDli- oc i i-u,t" . . , .. .. ,T.....,r i.. , i 1 t.-i I ciillltV" i Vii-'ji'r? a turday oi each ...r;, a.i.i ali puolie days, to attend ,iaood connected vvicn my io r;acU in the Public Schools ,. will also be in to .i.'.' 1M1" J. N. Harris, Supt. 1!." MA.S.SENBUKU, ATTORNEY AT LAW. L OlJSBUKG, S. 0. ,,r i' ti :e in all tUe Courts of til e State. O.lK e iu Court House. c. M. CUOKK & SON, AT roRN BVS-A.T-LAW, LuCISBL'KG, X. c. Ml ittenl the courts of Nash, Franklin, , , . u.. o .art of North CMroliup, aud tlie U. ) ait .iu I uisirioL wu.i. j. IS. ilALONB. ,i..w i--ivr Avcocke & Co.'s ,;l ' 'u s'..r -. a Ijoiuing Dr. O. L. Sills. U. ML'UOLSUJ, v. VRACriJlNQ PHYSICIAN, LiJl ISBL llO, X. C. BirKISTT, , V HNF.V AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. L JCISBLKG X. O. .... ,.,,. mi l painstaking attention given to ... ... '-.n.it r intrjsted to hU q.iu.s. t , Cliiri ) uatioe on 'pn tu, nuu. oii tl.iu R Jbt. W. WmstOH, Hon. J. C. i'r-s Kirst N .tion.il Bunk, of VVlu- It- illl & Ulllll, u iiiawn, i w.vo "' 'YI , i li is. K. T .ylor, Fres Wake For- in ( lUI'l liouau, uiiuoiii. M l; i :i 1'. Sl'KL'lLL, ATTORNKY-AT-LAW, LOUI-SBURO, X. C. , ;.i .,tt..n i tin- courts of Franklin, Vance, r r in'--l ' " Wirrmi aui Wake counties, also t'h m'i ,r 'm' Court of North Carolina. Frompt all nti 'ii given to collections, &o. V. GL'LLEY. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, FiiAN'KLISi'OX, X. C. All Iplt iI tiusiness promptly attended to. ri vl. is. B. WILDER, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, LO: iSB JUO, X. C. o ' hi Main street, over Jones & Cooper's TEYINtr TO ATONE M. PERSON, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, . L ILlsB'.l.O, x. c. j-.- in aii i-ourts. Oifke in the Court Trail ce. London 'i'e'egrapb. There is a girl named Mauerite Buoyenval at TLenelles, in tbe north of France, near St. Quentin, who is reported to Lave been asleep for the past eleven years. A. good deal of doubt has been throwu ou this phenomenal slum bering1 case, not only in Paris, but also in Thenelles and its vicin ity, where there are two camps one of the believers, and the other of those who maintain that the so called sleeping beauty rises at niynt ana nas a good supper. The matter has been investigated by a Parisian, who has seen tbe girl, and found her as lean as a skeleton and stiff as a corpse, but still living. Her mother injects milk, peptone, and sometimes wine through a broken tooth iu the girl's mouth. Marguerite Bouyenval made away with a baby eleven years ago, aud tbe gendarmes were sent to her bouse. The girl was so frightened that she had an attack of hysteria, which lasted several hours, at the end of which she fell into a trance. The doubts thrown on the continuation of the trance have evidently been caused by the fact that the mother of the sleep ing girl has made a great deal of money by exhibiting her. A local doctor, who has observed the case during the eleven years, in formed the investigator from Paris that Marguerite Bouyenval bad really been asleep during the whole time. Occasionally she had hysterical cries, but did not awake after them. Other doctors have also agreed as to the genuineness of the phenomenon, and the sleep ing girl of Thenellfss remains a human uivsterv. A sea captain who lived in Washington' during his stays on land had a great fancy for fowls of all sorts, and especially prized an old gobbler which had been long in bis possession. From one cruise, says Harper's Young Peo ple, he brought home a mischiev ous young monkey, which made as much trouble as tbe proverbial " white elephant." "One day, hearing a terrible commotion in the hennery, the captain entered and found Jocko with the gobbler under his arm while he was de liberately pulling out the poor bird's last tail-feather. The cap tain rescued the. tnrkey and pun ished the monkey severely, who knew very well why be was chas tised. The next day, again bear ing a commotion among the feath ered tribe, the captain went to the scene of action, and there sat Jocko with the much persecuted gobbler between his knees, while he was trying to put the feathers back. His intentions were good, but the turkey seemed uuable to appreciate them. A Spae Filled With Silence. Uockim? at Sin. The Man Who Picks Locks. t r i: n ntiy op ii- 1 .1 ..Vntal Oili'-e r nv r .1 niesi Coolers store, I .isu'.ul 'ivi rs io tli'5 pu: !!-. i Charlotte Observer. How the Weather Came. , ; . .u ,t of tne o; ;-s' i "it i t..oii'-0' i ; ,11 l h .vi p W i-i f '-Kht -rs ;, :.-i!--, I j'i:n t o ;i:l'iier lions !n--'.:(,:. m t skilful m -nil r, s.ft r thf .ii-, iu t ;m ,s. ;.ii I with th nio-t ..- i i-rr iiu'Mts i'mwi -n I 1-ri ... i My. b -f re ommen :..;tious - , i r, : : !' .a !.:! .'. A p .rt of . r . , i ; i, r -sae tf iby 'ii :lle I. K.-sp tfiiiiy. J. E; .A;.3 D.ou3:., P. D. S. Dentistry. There is nothing lik ihe reason why. South k now i n j The ' sun n v II KDWA.RD3- N. C I A . IV.lli!-; FOREST No-.ii-i'iurjr on Monday, Tug'lav l i f .!(- wt the first Su'iiiay ? !i ju Mpari'd to do all kinds oi l.v an unprece.Jentedly severe cold 01 11 1 LUt?-v J M,,MB HiPtn as can picK u uiey cans our glars and gives 'm years of Lard labor, though they was .just as clever as the lucky un who set the thing a-going.'' New York Advertiser. M-adows Hotel. IB. ICIiTC3-7 DENTIST, LOriSBUIvG, N. C. (i.Ti;-.-- hvit ilaeket Store. int liptre iVi lti-.nore Dental College. T.v.'.ity-fi'ir years active experience. .MtriKii-i i. tkkth a specialty. Natural t'h r.-ni ivHil and new ones inserted in T'.VKNTY MINTTE.S. All wuik warranted. L ' a isb u rer is my home "for better or ''" and you will always find me M'ly t.i correct at my own expense any W'Tti that may prove unsatisfactory. Very truly, R. E, KING, , Dentist. YAHBOROUGH &, DAVIS, The Blacksmiths OF LOUISBURG. All work in our line done on short nnriee, and satisfaction guaranteed. have our new shop (the old ten pin alley) in u Md shape and are better pre-nar-1 thau ever to serve our custo- J. M. C. H1LU THE TINNER, ' pr-piirei to do all kind of tin work, re p.iiniir worj. guaranteed. Place "i liiiMiiesx on Miiin ft erect in house recently (,,vl'""l liv F. Farrish. 0S3ORN HOUSE, t D. OSBORN, Proprietor, Oxford, N. C. ood accommodations for the traveling public. WILL AT THE BRIDGE. BLACK- SMITHING. nuh,'r ' 1 ;un w,'n known and prepared to do y fu i,1",',1 y,jrk- I "ope you wid see me as 1. 1- K r (ir . i . 1 "'I H-!llir oilir J-l- 2Tr t,r .,, , 'e- l lurg ri mm i am aiso "i si 1 1 Ur Jr"ur &u"' 9Ucn aa Pitting . 1 ' KsSc;;. I have :l fi-w mina which I '"' t-u 'tl'ys ''' LU'lt WU1 be 81J 11 Uut called for Yours truly' A. T. NKAL lout; U-fore. Yun will nr) mo rn u8', si l,:T "f th,i iver bridge, Main -street' i'. 'i c- While I am doing all kinds has been taken by surprise wave, and now that the sun has aoain appeared, and we are be ginning to yet warm once more, we feel that we would like to have some understanding as to the cause of it. The striking feature of the yreat blizzard of '95 is that it sud denly rushed upon us from the South instead of coming from the icebergs of the North. Weather Expert Thomas McCabe, of Wash ington, D. C., has undertaken to explain this mysterious meteolog ical freak ; and tbe following is the explanation, as we find it con densed by a contemporary : " As is more or less well known, the coldest part of tbe North American continent s, in all probability, in tbe Saskatchewan Valley, east of Mounts Hooker and Head. The height of the Rocky Mountain range at this location prevents the eastern flow of vapor from the Pacific Ocean ; and so the cold wave lurks almost undis turbed in this nestling valley. But in order to dislodge this skulking arch-imp of Jack Frost from his Northwestern hermitage King Winter exercises a clever little ruse of strategy. He whips the warm currents and ocean sur face evaporates from the Lower Atlantic westward before tbe trade winds. Bi these currents, scurrying before the trade winds. run up suddenly against the east ern off-shore winds which blow from Florida or Texas. The cyclonic shock produces a wide storm area, aud cloud matter from without rushes into the windy fray. A vacuum is created near tbe northwestern hiding place, and presto ! the cold wave leaps forth, races like an icy charger through the twisted vortex to the Carolinas, and assaults the citadel of the North from its nnguarded Southern gates." In the lowest spheres of life the force of inventive faculty may be detected. Tbe burglar himself as a mechanical genius may be a rival of nature. An honest genius of an inventive kind invents a lock ; straightway another inventive genius of a dishonest kind picks that lock. A man, not a burglar, but a professed lockpicker picked a subtle lock of a bureau for me because I had lost the key. The science the man showed, the re source, the ingenuity, formed a study, and his efforts "were soon crowned with success. I was struck by the skill the man dis played, but still more by the phi losophy. " They call the iran who invented that there lock, sir, a gentleman, and they say he's made a tremendous fortune by it ; ; but they gives no credit to them as has learned in pick it, not a bit New York Ledrr. Areas of silence are among tbe unexplained phenomena of nature There are spaces in the vicinity of fog-signals where there is no sound of warning heard, although there is constantly sounded the note of danger. Aceidents have happened to vessels in this way that are accounted for only by the theory that there is an area over which sound passea without producing any effect. In one case a steamer ran aground about oue and a half miles from a fog signal that was iu full play. Notwithstanding tbe short dis tance, no sound was beard, while at point five or six miles away the signals were distinctly audi ble. Another 6teamer ran aground only an eighth of a mile from a signal that was sounding loudly. Experiments have been made for the purpose of locating these silent points, and their whereabouts has been accurately determined. One theory of the cause of this silent area is, that the sound, coming in contact w ith 5ime current of air of electric strata, is thrown upward out ol level course, and proceeds over the bead of the sailors. What is it "to make a tnyck at ein?" Clearly, to speak of it in a trifling way, and to make joke? about it. A Christian man will never speak about ein w ithout a certain awe. It is tbe thing which destroys the human race; it is the "abominable thing" which God hates. The Christian cannot bring himself to jest about it. It is far too solemn a matter. Other men may laugh about mor al evH; or may give nicknames to Satan; or may ridicule the 4,pre ciseness," as they call it, or those who endeaver to avoid the con tamintion and pollution of sin. Ho cau do nothing of the kind. WHAT ONE HEN CAN DO. SELL Y01R TOBACCO Take an old speckled hen, for instance, that has bad no raising at all, one that's been thrown out of tbe corn-crib, knocked off the porch with a broom and c based oat of the garden by a worthies? pup. Just take that sort of an old fashioned ben, and let's see : She lays at least two dozen egg ai d then goes to sitting on 13 of her eggs. The other doren pay her keen while -he turns eggs into I chickens and while sho is scratch- iug for tberu after they are hatched and before being weaned. ; That sort of a ben generally batches 10 out of tbe 13 eggs and raises eight of them, that sell for But we must knock off $1 for AT- Sin is to serious a matter in Lis ! Si eves to jest about. But there ire their raising and put only $1 other ways, I think, of making a i aside to the credit of old Speck, uiock of sin, and one is, by gloss ! who loafs abont "awhile, anil then ing over wrong-doing bv fair and !, -l,e lays another two dozen egc specious names. Call a young i a'"l sits again and raises aiiother fellow "a little wild," or "a lit- ; l()t of e i g b t chickens, that sell for Pleasants' New Warehouse. LOUISBURG, y. c. Our fan!iti. f r celling your t bncro for high pric nreeimvl to any houfu. in th Stnt- V haro junpU mean, and intend that every pile o( voir tolvirt-o put on our floor nhiUI bring firry rnt it i worth Turing your tnlian-u t u, and w will p;ir you Ne Wan-tniiw priv for it. W H Pi.f. a-avts A To Loui-burg. N ('..Aug Ot1:,''.1 LOUISBURG What There is iu Sleep. tie unsteady," w'.ien h is post ing to the devil as fast as he can go; call drunkenness and lut lony "good fellowship," call dis honesty "smartness," and cheat ing "dexterity" and, it strik- s me, you are indulging in ihe habit attributed to the persons in our U-xt. You are making n "mock at sin." Yet again, 1 2 more, aM no we pay off ara:;; and put another do;lar to the. cred i t of our old 1 en . Well, then it' long toward mid summer, and she loafs awhile,1 and th'-n sh- takes another laving spell, and lays another 25 egg. ai;d then sits again, and brii.jr on a full brood that sell as before, and we credit her with another Carriage Shops H. TAVI.oR. rr-pri-trr. Bupjry, Wa?- o pa::. V.r - . Wise Words. About, all there is in life is a good night's sleep. Instead of worrying and fretting for fame, a man should conduct himself in such a manner during the day that he will sleep well at nigh . If a man will behave himself and slepp well, be need not worry about his future; he will succeed in everything that is desirable very much better than those who do not, behave themselves, and consequently do not sleep well. The great secret of life is good conduct. It brings all the re wards that are worth having. think you must not acquit a man dollar, the half of th produce of How a Man Goes to Sleep. EDSE PALISTIN STAR SHCP- Louisburg, N. C. M..s. Ktyl... ri: W. M. Alston and L. W. Efjerton, mo,i,.i( and fitted up in elegant I'U'lr lll, 1.,..U LM. M 1 Ktvi ' "r! 1 -v arp Putting on right much first '."'' ''ordlill'y invite all who want Tin.u V K To con,e tr their shop. 1 M With: iwnr,l iu " D..1: .. l J Politeness and good Horace Chilton, of Tyler, Texas, who is to succeed Senator Coke, is not yet forty years of age. He is a well-built man with a bearing at once digifified and kindly. Though not an or.ator, he is a mas ter of a 8icinle and lucid -style. Nine out of ten people yon talk with have some sort of a tale of woe to tell. The best sweets, like the great est joys, should be sipped, not gulped down. Fame is cheap in a small town ; it is so easy to get your name in the newspaper. If you have a good thing stick to it until you are certain of some thing superior. The public will always suspect any institution that is a particle averse to investigation. There are few speeches and few books that would not be improved by judicious pruning. So many wicked spiders down town are regarded as innocent flies by their women folks at home. No woman should ever worry over the loss of a man who hadn't tbe courage to ask for her. A woman's idea of a perfectly awful thing is to have a visitor call while she is washing ber hair. A lie is often told without say ing a word, by putting the rotten apples in the bottom of the basket. If vou don't want to subsist upon bitter husks of retrospection, don't buck up against a put-up job. A great many people do not learn until they are forty-five or fifty that it is dangerous to become confidential with people. It must be very discourging to a man to be very gallant to his wife iu public, and have her look as if she wasn't used to it. . Never undertake to satisfy all of the whims of yonr neighborhood, rather satisfy yourself that you are doing right by- not meddling ; then you will have more friends. The Great West. "Order is Heaven's first law," and ihe old truth is manifested even in the procees of going to sleep. When a man drops off to sleep, his body does not do so at ohce, so to speak. Some senses become dormant before others, and always iu the same order. As he becomes drowsy, the eyes close, and the sense of seeing is at rest. It is quickly followed bythe disappearance of the sense of taste. He next loses the sense of smell, and then after a short interval the tympanum becomes insensible to sound, or rather the nerves which run to the brain fro.n it fail to arouse any sense of hearing. The last sense to leave is that of touch, and iu some by persenstive people it is hardly ever dormant. Even in their case, however, there is no discriminating power or sense of what touched them. This sense is also tbe first to return upon awakening. Then hearing fol lows suit; after that taste, and then the eye becomes able to flash impression back to tbe brain. .The sense of smell tdJIy enough, though it is bv no means the first to go, is the last to come back. Tbe same gradual loss of power is observed in tbe muscles and sinews, as well as in the senses. Slumber begins at the feet, and slowly spreads up tbe limbs and trunk until it reaches tbe brain, when unconsciousness is com plete, and the whole body is at rest. This is why sleep is impos sible when the feet are cold. New York World. of complicity in this offense is if you find him incapable of ex pressing indignation agr.inst moral evil. It is part of a godly charact-,-to hate sin. A righteous indig nation isalways found in a living soul. And if a man can Lear of unrighteous arid oppressive and selfish act, without heing moved thereby to anger, depend upon it that man has not a living soul within him; he has not been made a subject of the converting grace of God. To be indifferent about sin, to treat it with tolera tion, wuth leniency, with indif lerance is as bad a sign of our spiritual condition as cauwell be imagined; it is, virtually, to make a mock at sin." Gordon Calthrop. Cure lor Hea lache. Asa rem e,.ly for nil form of I'e.v' ach? Kleone Hitters has prove, 1 (,i he very lest. It ffterts a jx-nna ih:i r cure snd the m ist drea le 1 hv: al Mck headaches yield t its ii tlieece. We i -e all who are afflicted p'-n'inv boi.le, a rid k'ive this roie'v a fa 'rial. In cases of habit ti.l cnstipatii n Kh'ctric Differs cures by co'e ; the tle-'ded tone ti i the hi 1 vvels. n U'l fe w c:ves Ion? resist the use of ih s m-'dic ne. Try it once. Iar:ce bottles only tnty ceuts at Ayeocke & (Jo's. Drug Store. another batch of eight chickens, which makes .'! to h- r credit over and above all ex erises. Then she lays a little more and sheds ber feather? and knock? about and scratches f r a living until toward th" holidays, when she take? another spell of laying and lays a good lot of eggs bv ('hrirtmas and quit?, but doesn't set because it is too coll. But alont.' about February she aets it. again and lays ri'ht sharply for a month or more until she is around to the tiino where she started in last year, and iu footing up we rind she has paid aM expcses and $3 besides in 12 month?, a pretty good showing for a 25 cent hen. Texas Farru and Ranch. It your 'arriaz-. i r a : i v h : : : : n 1 . i rt-piiiri ii kr ntoi ,u want it d"t.e r i gh . brift: ;' 'o rnr-. at:d if vci want Y''ur irr ac or Buccv r i:. a f". :?- '.a 'S manner, i I- a ! - . I Lav ? ry--d my t ; ir." und-r a t) rt- 'ass pa: :. ' f r a : i d w i h .. 1 workman, can ' L p" -for l'h'j ran'--" satisfaction in a.! w i irk i , ' T' s ! .-ii to u:". I h s.vm a t: r-t -c 1 as- ! ti :h" black -ri.:' h ?h- iv utid'Tsta'ids ey. rvthmj alout f rorr t'K' pay 1 ' T i lack smith p who ful f il i:. ' i rw-1 n e t"i ri" 1 nggy . o have toj r -o hrir.ir :' WILL p.K pr::e art his rij::i'So, h'rs- to :r:o:;; 1' do-ti n. i work 1 . i' i r. d aionn to n," wl. 1 m )N K RIGHT p-asonnbi". I n.ak D u l'c: rd'-r. I f y u w a : . ' .. Mam: RLigjy ur S'a v Hi r orders, and v. u; what y.u w ati'. Thank ::, my fri-::ds f .r th-t p.V P it.a'o ;:. ! pa-' and solicit :ng ' b- sa:i.- in futur-, I am. Yours v'-rv r-spct "u '.I v . II. C. TAYLOR. d Whit.- r . z.H-d H. v v hali Law lie V as The jj an. S' KT H i !: f con ;o iTHI'r:ii. I ' i.:w ok.' i How true it i ? that a g ' i l : t y con science need? no accuser was wel1 shown by a lit'le occurrence re ported by an exchange. A gentleman we:it out of town for a day's fishing, taking a luncheon with him. Whet, be reached the creek, Le discovered that he had dropped the luncheon somewhere on the way, and hast ened back to look for it. By and by be met a hurl-y negro, who iVicTwr: ' ' i- v I M r 1 - - f II ' ::. ::r.t. Tt. J .; loo The Japanese Mikado is a man of great personal magnetism. He is in fine physical condition and is naturally extremely viva cious. His eyes are brilliant, his teethewhite and regular and his smile attractive. He has been a great reader and is espec ially well informed reKardinfe' , foun(j it French literature. j ked very well pleaded with y IX- I ' ' i 1 T.xt mi'ia.r '. : -- .; k; :. ' J r ; h-t 1 "Clr. 1'. H M 1-k ' S-r.- ,r i . urv himself and was picking his teeth. " Did you pick-up anything in the road as you came along? asked tbe gentleman. " No, sab," answered tbo col ored man ; " I didn't pick up any thing. Couldn't a dog have and eat it up ?" Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria They were dinning off fowl in a restauraut. "You see," he explained, as he showed her the wishbone, "you take hold here. Then we must both make a wish and pnll, and when it breaks tbe one who has the biggest part of it will have his or her wish gratified. " "But I don't know what to wish for," she protested. "Oh, you can think of some thing," he said. ''No, I can't," she replied ; "I can't think of anything I want very much. "Well, I'll wish for you," he exclaimed.' .'Will you really? she asked "Yes." "Well, then, there's no use fooling with the old wishbone," she interrupted, with a glad smile, "you can hate mel" Truth. The Discovery Saved His Life. Mr. G. Gaillouette, Druist. Bea- veville. 111., says: "To Dr. Kin-, s New Discovery I owe my li'e. Was taken with La Gripp; and tried all the physicians for miles about, but of no avail and was given up and told I could not live. Having Dr. Kin s ew 1ms- covorv in niv storv I sent for a ltHe and began its use. and from the first dose begr.n to get belter, and after nsin? three botiles was up aud about aa'o. It is worth its weight in fT"id. e i won't keep store or house without it," l Get a free trial at Aycocke & Co's. Drugstore. The late ex-Senator James G. Fair once told Col. N. II. A. Mason, tbe California cattle king: " When I went to Virginia City all I wanted was to get a little bit of a stake to keep my family from starving. I never expected to make a fortune." Buckleu's Arnica Salve. The bet snlve in the world for rnt bruise, iorve. nicer, salt rhenni. leve torm, tetter, rhappsl hnix. chilblain, corns, and nllskin eru ptioim.Aml positively cure pilw or no py. It is truarante) to give satisfaction or money refunded. Prir '2o cents per box. For sale by Thomas A Aycocke. Mrs. "Mozette, one hundred and six vears old, and an inmate of tbe Jackson county (Mich ) Alms house, fdories iu tbe assertion that she is " as mean a woman as God ever put breath into." SHOE MAKING. r.i.' ir i' .-T- i i r .iv ' r. r. " i ;;'. l a ; o v n : p-ar of Thomas' I rt: g tire, i h- all--y nh'T" ). d.s sho ro.akmg and r--pa : ri ng, and guar-ant-"S to do work as giod and cb-ap-r than a.:y Sho-'-Mak-r in t h" Sta'o. Come am' se ( .r yourself. R'-sp.-cf fully, MOSKS WKST. i iff rHiFa&0Hai?9! Feed, Sale ; Livery STABLE S. "Take tbe lowest beat and work your way up. -Let a man be called np always. Do your work wherever you are. and do it faithfully and bo contentedly that they will want you still higher. Tbe more you do your work well, the more thty will want you still higher and higher. Be drawn up. Do not force your self up. That leads to chicanery, to pretence, to mistakes, and even temptati ns and crimes." Henry Ward Beecher. HAYES & PINNELL, Proprietors, LOUISBURG. N, C. , GOOD TEAMS A NIT roLITK DRIVERS, SPECIAL ATTENTION TO TRAY KLING MEN. A Fl.HF. LINE OF BfGOIEi" Al O I ON HAM. TASTELESS TON i n Fine Tailor Made Clothing. At rtnlom ros.Je r,rf. I htr mrr l I he a iretx-r for t he R. i a I tilorn of O, ir g i lnr"t tilono(r eTriliknsect in t! t"nife! Stt. (inilrin tnmib jount h.n Dot t.e. ant t hioc yoo wct in tbe mmr J elothinir Fit gn n, n t eeJ r-'7 trir. CsJl axd tor iMKrit'U hlrtfnIt.T. Jo W Kin. of the firm klicg A n IS JUST A3 COO D FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE GOctr. GALATTA. I IX.. Kcr. 1A, ISB Pmrt ModVcto Co-, M Loot, Ma. Gotl-nca: W oM lui Tr. 00 boulm o JBOVBU TASTXLE ClllLL TOKRJ nd bto kowtU lhre KTomm slrmdr thta Tr- lamlUmrtt iwrMiac of 14 r"S "f fr" . tmrrr sokl an an Ida thai nra toch aainai Mtia frtw aA jour looki. loon trofr. Cam A 9a FLOWERS. BOIES. ETC. Hyacinths, Tulip, Chinee Sarr-W Lilies ond other bulb, for 'intr and early Spring blooming. Roe. Crnation and other handsome rut flow erw. bouquets nnd florM designs. Palms, Fern?. etc for room dtr mtiug. Janlinen, Fancy andcuni mon Flower Pot. Ro, Mnpnrr ia, Etergnvn". Pecan and Krglih Walnut trw, etr. H. STEi:3iETZ. flaleigh, N. (L PL one 11 X i'l
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 8, 1895, edition 1
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