.Jllli J LXU- :' ' ' ' - ' LODlSBPltG; N. C; F1U1LVY, SKtTKilliKH 27, 1395.;, , : ; ; '; ;, - ; ... . xuJtBKlitt As 15. ATTORNEY AT LAW. .- win uritie ia ail the Courts o tie State o.Jce ia Court iioaae. COOJiB & SON, ' " Af fOilNJfiXS-AT-L AW, . C. i,jLldHJKU, H'. C. win aten i taj court oi A'ash, Franklin, ....... . Mb .iti 1 illJllM. .M.-i. J 4.11.41 jau, UJ jjuuiol ouaru. r ... .... ot-ui'o. iijuiu'"e .. . PRACTICING PHY81CIAIT, LOUi&iiOKtf, d. C. V. 1 1 i j i T 1 I I .a.: ." : AXrOKNBY-AT-LAW, ' ? - Mil attend tue orU( of 'tfrankHni Vanpc, W al'ruu alia w tuko wuuua, aiw Ole iJOiirt Oi norltliJUroUUik. JftOiUyt .riVdU tO l5uUecfclOUS,-6H , v 6 lad JJ1V A rrORNEY-AT-LAW, KJtiAiSKLlJHroN, j. U. ill ieif.il LiUJiueba promptly attended to. . i.rTl lliU i ATTOHNEY-AT-tAW, LoUisBCKQ, N. C 0 n,;e ou Main str-jet. over Jones & Cooper'B Ht'if' ' A TTOKNKY-AT-LAW, L U1)BUUU, K. 0. s in an courts. Cilice in tne court AY. II. YAUBO ROUGH, Ja. ATIOUNEY AT LAW, LOUISBUKGt, N. C. iniii;!' onsccuud lluor oi -ixeal building M ,i. :i Siref.t. All l.f.il business intrusted to him vui u-i-cive prompt auU vareiut ativutioa. T. V. BICXEXT. 1, HJI.-OJlTRe . c. l'r )iiiit an i piiualikiag alt.;ntion given to ev.-ry uj ill r iutriiBtea to IliU-S. Krl :ri tu Ciiiel' JaaU0(!5-h'.'.phi;ri. Hon. John m ,,, ,n... riou. .to.it. vv. Viasi.oii, lion. J. c li.iU in. rTei. Fi.st N aiou.d liauk of Wiu .,. v 1 -.in & -M-tuiy, vViuutou, r"oplea BjoiS. of M-in cm, w. E. r iyior, ires, wane jf'or-t-si , uil . iiou. Ji. Ciinierliik!. , u.a.;,- iii Cuuic lioaae, opposite Shortif's. Dentistry, W. H. EDVYARDS Or" WAKE F0BE3T, N. C. it i l I,. . II visit 1 :miHi)arjf on ilouilay, luesaay i:t.-.ila.v iolio.vin the ttrnt Sauday :-: m iiitu (ji-epareJ to do tJl kinds of i iii ii ivoric. i.ii. - ov-r 4ouw & Cooper Store r.i-Kt dour to T. li. iVilJei- Law otiire i)1 ,.i-:.-iT, J. EDWARD DUGGER D-1). S. LJUldliaiivT, N. 0. (rri'lure uf the oldest Dental College in t i- w,i; ;l. K irac yearn experiencrt. .sr. improve-l iuscrutueuw Teeth ex t:-jrt-1 vvitiniut paiu. Artificial teeth wit. i mi plate. Satisfaction or money ti-tunwd. 1 Oiiioe (iver Jones & Cooper's stora. J. M. C. HILL, THE TINNER, i pn'p xrvl to ilo all kind of tin Work, re p,i,n -, ii;. All work jfuaranteed. Place of ihiMiit'Mrt on .VI vin gureet in hoase reeently 'ii:.'iii,'-l liv F. Parririh. RUFFIN& LEWIS, BLACKSMITHS We are prepared to do all kinds of w rk in our liae. Call to see as at our siiup ur-ir the Louisbarg milla. DR. IR,. IE. DENTIST, LOUISBURG, N. C: OTi'- ovr Jacket Store, 'ret I it Biltitnore Dental College. ii'y-tour years active experie-oce Ai'.riFi'juL tsbth a spgcialtt. .Natural -r ii ivm ved and new ones inserted in twenty .minutes. AH work warranted. L uiisburt,' is my home "for better or w-irv" and you will always find me r-'i'ly to correct at my own expense any 'jrs that may prove unsatisfactory. Very truly. It. E. KING, Dentist. YAiiBOROUGH & DAVIS, 18 ISiaCKS OF LOUISBURG All work in our line done on short ntio". and satisfaction guaranteed We have our new shoo (the old ten pin lUy) in g -od shape and are better pre pird tkan ever to serve our custo mers - : - STILL AT THE BRIDGE. BLACK-SMITHING. Where I am well known and prepared to do iiii! wora. i hope jrou will see me as ou hav0 done before. You will find me on ln - B.vjt sue of the River bridge, Main strept LoumiMir n. c. While I am aoinjr ail kinds - t'liicksmith inff. don't foruvt fhat I am also jr'PiM lio r. piir your gmitsuch as putting "a new io :ks (fce. I have a few sins which I in . rePtllru tnat will be sold if not canea i Yours truly f ' A.T. NA1 YOU WANT A HOUSE ? If so yoii will do well to" write see J. Levister,' at - Henderson iN- C., before contractinjer. 5 Plans "Pacifications arid est I mates mad h,'rnt buildings, &cV .' -12-2 ia. , B - . MY, CALLERS. I swung- in mjr hammock one midsummer roleasly drmiur the long hour away, . . STfiT" a Vg bnmWebee, noisy and bold. Eichly dressed in a suit of blck velvet and tf Bailing - Wxth wings edged with polka dots, bine as the ky. . - . He tarried a moment to bid me "Good day." Tben lightly and gracefully fluttered away! l??! my caUer. an impudent chap. Persisted in spoiling my afternoon nap. ' in vain ail my efforts to drive him away. iw uecermined to stay. Be lit on my cheek and he mummed in my ear, , ; . "You don't like the song of mosquitoes, that's -'.clear,'- ::r,,r ,::; But invite me to dine and then youTT peroeiTe How quickly your troublesome caller will leave." This seemed a strange way to get rid of a guest! . ,. - - , . Do you think i$ would prove the wisest and bett? , t t , . What effect Would "it have on some callers you .-..know? tW(-.. I, ycuieked them to tHne, do you think they . would go?, , ' - - Now England Kitchen lagazine. This Goat Could CounC. In the days past before the begin ning of the land speculation in the building of this city Charles B. Se vier was the fortunate possessor of as fine a specimen of the Angora -goat as-oonld be asked. In fact, its pedigree was longer than that of a awe grass raoer. When Mr. Sevier was a younger man, he obtained this valuable goat, which he trained in many ways. Tlen each year the fine wool the goat produced yielded a revenue that was the foundation of his fortune. Mr. Sevier made the goat a regular mathematical table, and so trained was thergoat that he would send him into the orchard to procure a dozen sweet limber twigs, and tne goat would butt the tree until just 12 nice ripe apples would falL Then the goat would pick up the apples and put them into a bas ket and bring them to the house. He could sand the goat for one or a hundred apples. So it was in everything. The goat would be sent to feed the horses and told to let them eat just ten stalks of green com in the field. The goat would perform the service and butt the horse away from the eleventh hill. If the goat was m a muddy field and started to go to another, he would climb to' the top of the fence and wipe the mud off his feet. In this way ho did not abstract the soil from either Ben Margrave's or from Parker's farm on to Charles Se vier's farm. In time the goat became so valua ble that Mr. Sevier used to sit 'on his porch and" direct tho goat to keep the wheels tuminsr. At last the goat "could not digest an empty whis- y bottle, and it died. So after this sad occurrence Mr. Sevier sold hi3 farm to the East Tennessee Land company' and moved to Harriman, where he now resides. He still in sists that croats are intelligent. Harriman Press. . ' Reverend Jokers. Dr. Henson of Chicago is an old Chautauquan, and several years ago Bishop (then Dr.) Vincent intro duced him as he was about to de liver a- lecture on "Fools." The chancellor said, "You are to listen to a lecture on 'Fools' by one" a pause in which the audience gasped for breath "of the wisest men on the platform today." Laughter and thunders of applause. Dr. Henson : "I am not so great a fool as Dr. Vin cent" the audienoe gasped again would have 4Vou suppose." The amphitheater goes into paroxysms. Chautaurina Assembly Herald. Christina Rossetti. In the prime of life Christina Ros setti was a tall, somewhat gaunt fig- tire,, with olive complexion inclined to sallowness and dark, .striking eyes. - She was better looking in old age than in middle age. fane once mad e the singular oonfession to a friend that she had never in her life seen the sun rise. r Revised Version. In the next revised version of the Bible we shall probably read of Ad am saying,. "The woman thou gavest me did hypnotize me, and I did eat, and of course Eve will lay the mes meric influence on the other pai'ty mentioned in the Scriptures. Bos ton Transcript. An important invention has been patented in Sweden and other coun tries by which red and white fires can "be made for matchmaking. The invention consists m . removing the sap from the fir, thus enabling it be ing impregnated by the substance which makes it inflammable. .. , -The gestures and speeching efforts of a young lawyer in court may be like tho hands of a Watch.. They have nothing to-do with thevcase. How Orleans Picayune. , ' , " . Red castle, Eossshire, is said to be the "oldest inhabited residence in the Highlands of Scotland. ..It was built by. William the Lion in 1173. M ' r : 'A French physician reports a case of hicoough successfully treated by taking snuff until sneezing was pro-,. voked, " JjLi v ' v "' V There are two Orders of 'the Swan one in Flanders, the other; a pri- Tate prder in Prussia, . -' , , BETTER THAN A NOVEL. Because It Is Shorter, and It May B , , Just as True. In the' year 1802 the land that now 'comprises Delaware county, O., was the hunting grounds of the Del. awara" Indians. - The Sachem Ko chestreo, Moon That's Full, had two wives. Laughing : Brook, who had a daughter named Wild Flower, whose lover was a 'young chief of the Wyandot tribe,' The second wife was named Old Woman That Scolds. She also bad a daughter, Fleet as tho .Windt who ;was also in Iotjo with the Wyandotf chief, who preferred Wild Flower. . The old ' eachem possessed a great treasure, tho Becret of which he con fided to Laughing Brook. Old Wom-i an That Scolds and her daughter at tempted to. murder Laugh ingtBrcok unarWild Flower to get the secret. Laughing Broolf died, but before her, ileath told her daughter that the treasure was buried in a cave on the east bank of the Scioto river, about one mile south of where the village of Bellepoint now stands. Wild Flower fled after her mother's death, married the Wyandot chief and went west with him. In the fall -of 1872 she adopted a white girl baby that the tribe had stolen from a wealthy family in Il linois. The baby never knew her parents and believed herself to be a true Indian until the fall of 1893, when Wild Flower told her tho story of he birth and also tho story of the treasure cave, which she had never before told to a living souL The girl's name among the Indians was Deermeedia, meaning Liko the Dove, but the name her parents had given her was Nellie King. After hearing the remarkable sto ry of Wild Flower, Miss Nellie made up her mind she would in the spring seek out the cave on the banks of the Scioto and with the monoy try and find her parents among her own people. Nellie had a good education, hav ing attended trie Indian scnool for many years, and was besides very prettv. She had a friend, an Indian about 05 years old, who had been her companion from childhood. He would not listen to her going alone, so she told him of the treasure cave, and they came to Delaware on April 7, 1894. After resting in Delaware for a day or two Miss Nellie find her old friend, the Indian, went to tho coun try in the vicinity of Bellepoint and procured board and lodging at a farmhouse close to where the sup posed hidden treasure was to.be found. They spent most of their time on the river in a canoe, exam ining the banks and looking for tho cavo until they were regarded with suspicion by the good countryfolks, for they kept their secret. One morning alter a Heavy ram tnev went in their boat on the river as usual, hunting for some traco of the cave. The river had risen to a great height and was bank full. - A floating log demolished tho frail craft. Tho Indian was thrown out of the boat, and striking on his head against a floating log met his death Nellie would have been drowned had she not been seen by one oi a party of campers, who had strayed from his camp at Millville, to float downthe.stream in a boat watching out for wiW. ducks. Before she sank the second time the hunter pulled her into his boat. Her companion introduced himself as Dave Norton of Delaware. He took her to his boarding house and promised to find the body of the Indian1, but was un successful. Dave's acquaintance with Nellie ripened into love. Nellie recipro cated. They took up the hunt for the cave together, but the high wa ters had washed away all traces to the cave, and to this day tho treas ure is unknown. Shortly after this Dave and Nellie were married, and with the assistanco of Ben S. Lee she has been able to find her rela tives, who are prominent and Wealthy people of Chicago. Cincin nati Commercial-Gazette. No Respect For the Lawmakers Anyway. "There seems to be very little ro- Bpect for the law in this place," the tourist ventured to remark. "Stranger, " said the native sadly, "this here used to be the law abidin- est place in 17 states till Bill Jones he went to the statehouso an seen what sort of fellers runs the govern mint. , Wh-vY friend, they wasn't a one of 'em that didn't hev blacken- en'd shoes an a collar on." Indian apolis Journal. - ' - ' ' The Uoneas Friend. At one time a lioness in the Dub lin zoo was troubled by rats nibbling her toes while she slept. A terrier was placed in the cage, and' on 'see ing his efforts to drive rats a Way the queen of beasts literally took , the terrier to her breast, in which posi tion he reposed every nightCleve land Leader. ' ; . .-"'' ' ' Great Showing.; vf'i1.1--',1 "When L first tookvhbld of this place," said the new proprietor of the grocery, store on-the corner, it was doing absolutely nothing, '-'and:, now the business has -doubled." Chicago Tribune. - THE OLD MINER'S STORY. - ' . - - 7 v.-' -"' ; 4rtons Crickets Stem to Travel Klcht . -KA Milaa'sui Hour. . ... - : ,' The truth of tho following tale cannot ba vouched for. . It oughfc-to bo true prbbably is, as. it was told tho other day to a small party in nn tip town club by an old mining en gineer from Arizona who has here tofore always borne a reputation for .veracity. -v .:V. -'.-'"- ' - ' V You know," he '.said; "that one of the most troublesome qualities about giant powder which we use Lrr our work is the fact that the con cussion caused by ono explosion ex plodes any other powder which hap pens .to be'jnear at hand. ; Fatal ac cidents are. often! the-' result. yAnd yet this same quality allowed rod to ascertain -.what (desiredta know just how faYt cricket3 mi grated. They travel eight miles an hour, gentlemen. I found it this way. Last summer an old miner and myself wore making our way across one of tho plains near Pres cott to a claim some miles distant. Night came on before we reached our destination, and wo were com pelled to build a firo on tho trail and fix ourselves until daylight came. We had with us three sticks of giant powder, which, for safety's sake, we carefully laid on the trail about 100 yards from our firo. "Toward 10 o'clock we began to be disturbed by a groat number of those big Arizona crickets, which were following the trail across the plains. They came by thousands, solemnly walking in single filo. We know that it was no use to disturb them, and so let them go by undis turbed. An hour passed and still they came. "At length I reached out to throw a stick of wood into the tire, and as I did so I brushed a cricket into the flames. Instantly there was a loud explosion that scattered the ashci all over me. Then came another and another bang! bang! bang! My companion and I jumped to our feet and gazed down the trail. It was simply a line of fire as explosion fol lowed explosion. It kept up until we could no longer hear the reports, but we could traco the devastation by the flshes of light. The last died away in about "0 minutes. Wo hur ried back to whore wo had loft our powder and found but a small stick, all gnawed, left. Then we know the crickets had dined on it as they passed. The fire and concussion had done the rest.., "On the next day Vie tfrpt along J mo trail ana iouna it srrown wuu the legs and heads of dead crickets. Tho last corpse was found ust eight miles from where wo had camped. An hour had intervened between tho arrival of the head of the line and the disaster. Hence my conclusion that crickets travel eight miles an hour." New Ycrk Evening Sun. A Technique of Fen and Ink. It i3 easy of course to understand how pen drawing should have come to bo so largely employed nnd elab orated. It is a matter of reproduc tion for illustration. An otching will not print with type nor with a steel engraving. This led in tho early part of the century to tho imi tation of steel engravings by wood engravers, who did tbe business most skillfully with immense labor. The drawings for them were mostly made in pencil. But photographic process rendered the intervention of the wood engraver needless if tho artist made a pen drawing that would photograph and process well. A purely technical difficulty can be overcome by large numbers of crafts men. Large numbors accordingly have learned to make pen drawings to supplant wood engravings. But it should be noted that to do this is itself a kind of reproductive process. Few elaborate pen drawings are made without a studious foundation m some other material, 'ine pen line must frequently be traced or drawn over the pencil line, very much like tho engraver's tool. The point-about the moderns and ancients, then, resolves itself into the imitation by the moderns in a new medium of the technique of nn old. It is certain that the ancients could have performed this feat if they had chosen. -London Spectator. An F.CS Indian Corn. "Poultry" i3 authority for the statement that a pigeon in the pos session of a correspondent recently laid an egg which on being broken was found to contain nothing but Indian corn. The same correspond ent also stated that he had a hen which was crop bound. On opening the crop he was surprised to find, in addition to a ball of long grass, a full grown mouse. Detroit Tribune. - Cautions. 'v ; Mr. Sharpley Mr. Ca'ndee said that you had a sweet tooth., 'v ; j N - Miss Oldham 'Tis falsej : - - . . Mr. Sharpley That's what ; I thought, but I was afraid to say it -Yonkers Statesman. :-. .We consume our lives in providing the very instruments of ' life .and ' govern' ourselves still with a regard '.;.to the future,- so that we do not properly live, "but are about to live. Seneca. When Baby was sick, we gsv her Cmstorts ' When the was a Child, she crksd for Omtori. When she became Kim, she dung to Cutoria. Wha aha bad Children, she gave then Castorta. .. .-SCHOOL' FOR GIBLS. - . r - -"- " - Misses Edith ayd Fannie : Yarfcor . cagb, Principals. . ' ThniiMt tmion will bsin oo Thnmlay the 5th of September andr the same mn- aprraent. . . , ' ' Chargra for totiou very niodprftfcv ' i For further particulars apply to -the laSy piindplH. - NOTICE. By virtue of power vested in me ander an order of sale uf the ttupenor Court u Franklin connty, t will on Tuesday toe 22d dav of October attti oart Uoae door iu Looibarr at public unctiuu, to the hiithpet bidder, soil for cujth. one half undi vided interest in a certain trtw-t or parcel of laud. sitaatd in r'rabklin cuuuty, 3tot of North Carolina, adjoiuin the Uuds of li. H. Strickland, illis Joyoer and others, containing t wo huudrmi and tea errrsloorv or Ihwi, it being the piece of laud knuwn a thelaud t Said tract of lao.l yi be sur veyed and diviHiou niude before the day of this sale. W. N. Fuller, Administrator of Mabtha K. 11. Mcspht. t The above tnvct of land jescribeU is knowu as the Murphy tract. IGE. IG. ICE. THE LOUISBURG ICE COM PANY, Composed of R. T. Yarboro, J. Hi Uoperman and W. J. Neal, are prepared to furnish tbe public with the very best manufactured ice, -AT- Reasonable prices, delivered any where in town. Orders left with W. J. Neal or R. Y. Yarboro, will be promptly filled. Those desiring ice on Sunday should send to the houpe erjy iu tJe-;Oanrjiiix -M leave eiroraers oamraay evening. Ccttcn Stales ani International Emo- sition, ATLANTA, OA.. VIA THE SEABOARD AIR LINE. VESTIBULED LIMITED TRAINS Upon f McSm Extra Fare is Cliansi Leave AVaehitiKtoo. D C, daily, at S.40 P. M., Up)U urnval of tbe "('oDKVMiunnl Limitfd' trom New Yor., and reach Atlan ti at 4:0U P. M.. the next day. A Btconil train, with through Wnina: cars from New York, leavm NVnshinKton at 4: 10 A. M., Hrnv.ng at Atlaota C:2u . M.. the Dost day. Hotb traius leave from tbe Pennsylvania railroad station and land paiiacngers to the Union Depot at Atlaota as near tbe Expo sition groands as through paaaeoirs via ant line are landed. At Portsmouth and Norfolk. Va.. tbe Stu board Air Lioe has other connection equally as important as those at Waahinjr ton. ueimly: From Sew York and Philadel phia, the; Cape I harl.-s Koute; fruut Balti more, the Bay Line steamers; from Wash ington to Norfolk, and w ashiortoo steam ers; from ' New York, the Old Dominion steamsbie anq Irom Bontoti and Provi dence, the Merchants' and Miners' Steam ships. Cloen ronnertion is made at the steamer sides with through trains and Poll man Drawing-Room, Buflet rileepiux Cars operated through from Portsmnutb to At lanta witboutchange. Each of ttnne routnt takes the paseuKer via Old Point Comfort and through Hampton Roads. EQrlPM KMT. These trains are composed of the hand someHt Pullman Drawiny-Hoom, BnSet Sleeping Cars and Day Coaches The 8:40 P. la. train ("The Atlanta Special") is ves tibuled from eud to end and is ofkhated SOLID ROM WaSHISQTOH TO ATUAXTA WlTHOtTT CHAH6K. FoncTS or irreaicsT alokq tie use. The route from Washington ia through Fredericksburg. lUcbmond and Petersburg. Virginia, Weldoo, Kalelgh and Soutbero Pines, North Carolina. Chtter, Clinton and Abbeville, tioatb Carolina and Elberton and Athens to Atlanta, Ueorgia. KATES J Excursion tickets will be sold to Atlanta And return, via the Seaboard Air Liae, as follows. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, Septembi r 17tb to December Hth, inclusive at $14.00 from Washington, and f 12.6U from Ports mouth and Norfolk, limited to ten dajs from date of sale. Daily, September 16th to December 15th, inclusive, at 19 25 from Washington, and $17.33 from Portsmouth and Norfolk, lim ited to twenty days Irom date i4 sale; and at $2(1.25 Irom Washington and $23 63 from Portsmouth and Norfolk, good until January 7, 1800. . - the sxpoamov imrpasaea, iu some respects, anv Exposition yst held in America - Here yon And.-aide bv side, exhibits irom F lorida and Alank California and Maine, the United States of America, and tbe Coifed States oi Bnutt. Mexico and Canada, and ao oo until narJv every civilised nation on the globe ia repre sented. On the- terrace are fcraad, among many other attractions. Arab. Chinese and Mexican villngea, showing jnst how those peoples have their "daily walk and conver sation." - - . Ask (or tickets via 'Tax Seaboaed Ant Pullman Sleeping Car reservations mill be made ond farther information furnished upoo application to any Agent of the Sea board Air Hue. or to tbe undersigned. H W. B. Gloveb. t T.J.AKnKascw . Trafflc Uanaer. " General 1'aaa. Agt, r. rT. johx; . ' k ' X Tka-IVesiJent. ; ; LADIES AND GENTLEMEN Who may !b nice shampoo ing or bair dre?mg doue. will do well to call on W. M. ALSTON & L. W. E0EKT0N. Ladies U. yourbanir cut right. . We bare Dr; Wbite new balr arrower; Van's Mexicau Hair Restorative, Ayer'a IlalrViRor, Tricopheroas for tbe bair and akin, tidbit))? to beat it to keep tbe hair from f alt Injf out) V HOTEL WO0DARD. W. VT00DAM, I'rk. 4 ; Koeky llaaot, K. C. Ftp TIu Mreu all traiaa. Jl $i yr day. University of Nwth CaroliTia. Comprisei the -UnirrrsitT, tbe College, the Law and iledical Schools, and the Summer School for Teacher. Tution G0. 35 Teachers, 471 Students. Addreas Prvaident Winston. Chapel Hill, N C, for Catalogue and handbook on "University Education. " m t a I nomas warenouse js the place for hijrh prices Larjre onlers. rifnty of Mcney, L'olitf, honest treat ment. LOUISBURG Carriage Shops, II. C. TAYLOH, Proprietor. If your Carriage, Bugjry, Waft on or anything in that line need repairing and you want it done right, bring it to tne, and if you want your Carriage or Buggy re painted in a first-cla?8 manner, bring it to me also. I have served ray time under a firet-cla?3 paiu ter and wood workman, can tlrere fore gaurantee patisfactiou iu all work entrusied to me. I have a first-class black smith in the black smith "hop who ful ly understands everything aboat his hueinepp, from ehoeiug a horso to iriouing a fine tugpy. It dcK'8 uot pay to hav your work botcbed up, eo briujj it along to mi wbre it WILL BE DONE RIGHT, my prices aru reasonable. Lmaktt Buggies and Wagons to order. If you wnnt a ood Home made Buggy or Wagon, give me your order, and you shall have what you want. Thanking my frirnds for their patronage in the pat and solicit ing the t-nnie in future, I am, l ours very respectfully, II. C. TAYLOR. Build up Horns. BY PATRONIZING HOME ENTERPRISE MALLORY DURHAM CHER ROOTE CO., OF DURHAM. - - N C. ARE MANUFACTURING AS FINE CIGARS CHEROOTS AND CIGARROS As can be found on the market. Their leading brands are "BOLL OF DURHAM" A dime Cigar for a nickle. Hand Havana filled. "JULE CARR" Named n honor of Col. J. 8. Carr, Pren. Blackwell Durham Tobacco Co., 5 cr.t Sumatra Wrrapper 'BLVCKWELLS DURILVM1 Named in honor of Col. W. T. Blackwell, father of Durham 6 cent SumatraWrapper. LITTLE SADIE, CUBAN CIG ARROS, 10 FOR 10 CENTS. "OLD CHUNK" CHEROOTS, 5 for 10 cnt8. Toe finest smoke for tbe money. "OLD NORTH STATE" Cheroot, 3 for 5 cent, a nre winner tbaffelw-ajs please. Stick to home and send us your orders, MaHory : Dnrbaa Charcot Co. DURHAM, N. Ci Kenifember,-when yon spII vour Tobacco at HUGHES Ware House, you have . a crowd of hustling buyers to work for you,, who. hare larpro orders for. all prades ot Tobacco and will piye you tho highest market price -for it. IIugucs Bros., Prop'rs.- NEW- S A LOON :o: DAVIS & EIGHT PrcpIiSrs, '. louisbuiu;, XI. c. We hare fitted rip in tip top vitylaSA!X)0NiutbebuiM. . inR on Nafb Sr just low D.H. Taylor &f Co'a., and are ' ' ' now, fall . Equipped and prff ami to tap plj lb ppW of IxioUburg - and Franllm county tbe North Carolina Biandy, both apple and peacb, wirref.freia Beer, and everything usu ally kept in a Crst-clajs Sa loon. We desire to bare you call and try our OLD-- TONONGAHELA xxxx Which we are-confident will please the most fastidious. Give it a trial and you will baYe no other. We are sole agents at this nlace for this renowned brand of wbitkey, which alwavs remember and come to us whea jou want it. ALL CTHER BRANDS 0? STANDARD WHISKIES KEPT ON HAND, Our place shall at all times t kept quiet and orderly, and gn tleiuen need have no hesitancy in calling in at any time. No Rowdyness will be permitted. Trusting that you will favor us with a portion of your patronage, we asure you we will make our best effort to please you, Youra reipectifully, DAVIS & U1GHT. RESTAURANT. On September 1st, we will opo a tirel-cla Restaurant in tbe basement tinder D. H. Taylor' & Co., where you can get a foo " meal at all bouraf on tbe 'Edo peao plan DAVIS & niGITT. OSBORN HOUSE. C. D. OSBORN, Proprietor, Oiford, N. C. Good accommodations for tbw traveling public EDWARD F. YAROBRQUGH. FIRE INSURANCE, lyOUIRnUIbG. M. C CliNTltAL HOTEL X I Mnasicnhurrr Propr HENDEHSON. N. C. Gvrd aceommedstlens. Good fart. Pa liU sodaiuotlve sensats. SHOE MAKING. MOSES WEST holds forth in rear of Thomas' Drug Store, (on the alley' where be doe shoe making and repairing, and guar antees to do work a good and cheaper than any Shoe-Maker in the State. Come and see for yourself. Respectfully, MOSES WEST. CHICKEN CHOLERA 'On, be cured bv using- THOMAS POULTRY POWDER. ItalMcurea Rorp nnd gape. Now b tbe time to uae It. 25 ceuU a package. For aale by W. Q. THOMAS. Droggkt, LooUburp, N. C. , NOTICC I I have decided to reduce bit BEES to 10 Hi7pb. Will all remainder for I3D0 per hive, this includes lop case. These bees are worth 5.00, for bees alone. Apply at once to A. D GREEN. Fit ANKL1NT0N HOTEL nuyKUSTojf, n. a c. ir. hoses', PipT. - . . - . - - Good aectBodUoB for tbe irsrslicg psblie. Good Lfrevy AtUcbed. . R. R. CROSEN. FIRST CLASS Pd INTER, LOUtSBCRO, . a - I wish to offer xaf srW to the pcl tie. and iU frty tbat J am p reared la do all kinds of kotrW painting, (rrtin inc My work ia Lcbarjr apeaka for ftclf. and I ref-r to aft rartie for wbota I fcara worked. - Old farnUore' mtde n-w. Give n- rear r- ?-- ii. and you shall te pUed. , Cfioicest Liquors