Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / Oct. 23, 1896, edition 1 / Page 1
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r - v - VVVl -1 . - - 3I,.tiinli9t Church Directory. Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Geo. S. Baker. Sapt. IVai-Mnp? at 11 A. M., and 7 P. M., ry Sunday Prn-er meeting Wednesday night. G. F. Smith, Pastor I)' lrt)itxiI1il cards : s. I'. uruT, iMlAfTinXG PHYSICIAN, Louisburg, N. C. m ill.- Ford Building, corner Main i i;ii M. II. KUFF1X, A T ' r 0 1 1 N E Y-AT-L A W , Louisburg, N. C. Will lliiiMi" , ;i, t'n-' in all courts. Office in Ford . roi iHT ot Main and Nash. streets. 1 1 H. ). M.S8ENBURQ, ATTORNEY AT LAW. LOUISBUR8, N. C. Will j.r.n'tioe i all the Courts of the State Oilice in Court House. c. M. t;i iuiCE & SON, ATTORN KYS-AT-LAW, LOLISBCRQ, N. C. Will :itten l tli.- courts of Nash, Franklin, 8 mvill--. Warren and Wake counties, also the sii.r -iiii' Conn of North Caroliup, and the U. c.iv uil ,tu i Listri-;t Courts. - If J. K. MALONK. i ivo doors below Aycocke & Co.'s ird atoi-.-. it IjoininK Dr. O. L. Kllis. 1) V. U. NICHOLSON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, LOLISBUR8, . C. V. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, LOUISBURG, C. Wi;l atte:i 1 the courts of Franklin, Vance, GruiwIK Warren and Wake counties, also the .'jit . uie Court of North Carolina, Prompt itt .'"nil hi K veil to collections, Sec. V K.si. K. WILDER, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, LOriSBURG, N. C. on M.iin street, over Jones & Cooper's W. LIC RETT, T. ATLJRNLl AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. LOL'ISBURO N. C. iM-.vmpt mi l painstaking attention given to rt-rrr uI.iit-T intrusted to his hands. R. "f -r- to chief J uatice Shepherd, Hon. John M muni;.'. Hmi. Rjiit. W. Winston, Hon. J. C. B'it"ii. Pres. First National Bank of Wlu t,t,,n uieiui x Manly, Winston, Peoples Bank .,i M n roe. Chas. E. Taylor, Pres. Wake For est Oil. v.-, Hon. E. W. Tiinberlake. ot't'i in Court House, opposite Sheriff's. W. M. PERSON, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, LC'UISBL'RG, K. C. Practices in all courts. Office in the Court House. II. YAREOROUGH, JR. avioiiinKY at law, LOUISBURG, N. C. c.ttiee on second floor of Neal building M;i;n Street. Ml l.ual business intrusted to him ..ill receive y.rompt and caretul attention 1). T. Smithwick, DENTISTS. LOLTSBUUU, N. C. Wi.rk in Hwry department of Denistry :-;e. uted wltU-rfkill aud accuracy. DENTIST, LOUISBURG, N. C. Office ia New Hotel building, 2nd floor. Gas administered and teeth ex traded without pain. HOTEL'S. HOTEL WOODARD, W. C. WGODAKD, Pro?., Rocky Mount, N. C. free Bus meets all trains. I:'"s $2 per day. NORWOOD HOUSE Warrenton, North Carolina W. J. NORWOOD, Proprietor. ti,. f f r.Tnmrrial Tourists ana 'HI vuav Vi a T raveling Public Solicited. Good Sample Room. Nearest Hotel To Storks and Court House. FUANKL1NTON HOTEL FRANKLINTON, N. C. G. M. EOBBS, Prfr. Good accomodation for the traveling public. Good Livery Attached. OSBORN HOUSE, C. D. OSBORN, Proprietor, Oxford, N. C. Good accommodations for traveling" public. MASSENBUBG HOTEL. I? Masenburg Fropr HENDERSON, N- C WASHINGTON LETTER. The Secretary of the Nary'. Govern ment Yacht-Life on the Dolphin. Small Cost to Uncle Sam. Special Correspondence. How much pleasanter is the lot of the secretary of the navy than that of any other member of the cabinet When the hot weather comes, he gets aboard the yacht which the government furnishes him and cruises along the Atlantic coast, stopping at Bar Harbor and New port and calling this duty. It really does involve a duty, and Mr. Herbert is fortunate in being able to make duty so pleasant in the heated term. This Bum mer he varied his cruise along the coast with a trip to Europe. Mr. Carlisle, too, has a government yacht whenever he wants it, but Mr. Carlisle makes no pretense of duty. He simply gets aboard a lighthouse tender or some other takes his entire family, direct and col lateral, on an excursion. For this he has eminent example. The president uses the boats belonging to the treasury department whenever he wants to go on a shooting trip Only the Expense of the Coal. These junketing trips of the president and his cabinet officers usually cost the government only the coal used in mak ing steam. Of course the working force uii cwu kjl iiiw vessejs is me same so long as she is in commission. The pro visions for the use of the nresident or the cabinet officer and whatever guests are taken on the cruise are not furnished by the government. Even Secretary Herbert has to stock his own table aboard the Dolphin, which is the secre tary's official yacht. If the secretary should go on a short cruise on any other vessel, he would go as the guest cf the commanding officer, or, if the vessel was a flagship, of the admiral. These officers would be proud of the privilege of entertaining the sec retary of the navy, though, as a rule, officers aboard ship are jealous of their mess and not at all pleased to have a stranger share it. The navy department receives frequent requests from people of all kinds for permission to go and cruise on a government vessel. Tbey are seldom granted, chiefly for the reason that any ODe who went on a cruise on a government ship would have to go as the guest of the admiral, the command ing officer or the officers of the ward room, and the president himself would have no right to force a guest on the of ficers' mess. A Fractious Guest. Army officers are quite as jealous cf their independence in all unofficial mat ters. When the body of General W. T. Sherman was taken from New York to St. Louis for burial, I was on the train. The trip had been planned by army of ficers at Governors island, and General O. O. Howard, now retired, was in charge of the arrangements. 'General Louis A. Grant, assistant secretary of war, was one of the party, and he in terfered seriously with the arrange ments, declining to share a stateroom with General Howard and making him self as unpleasant as he could. All the officers were serious. "Secretary Grant was not invited," they said, "and as this is not a department affair he is simply our guest. " I think they were strongly tempted to throw him off the iram. , Navy officers have not a great degree of respect for the secretary of the navy. because he is a civilian. But they show him every deference, and a request from the secretary to be allowed to share the officers' mess would be considered a command. However, on the Dolphin the Rp,cret,arv has his own mess, which is fortunate, as he usually has one or both of his daughters with him Supplies at Cost. The secretary has a cook, a steward and one or two table boys assigned to him from the enlisted men, and his steward buys supplies with money which the secretary furnishes. Sugar and flour and other substantial can be had from the government stores at cost The secretary also keeps a supply of wine aboard, because he must entertain the commanding officers or vessels which the Dolphin meets, and if any foreign ships should be in harbor with the Dolphin there would be much ex changing of visits. As all the entertain ing done by the secretary is supposed to be paid for out of his own pocket a cruise on the Dolphin may be a very expensive affair. The Dolphin was one of the first ves sels of the new navy. It is a dispatch boat built by John Roach nearly 15 vears aeo. It was completed by the gov ernment and on trial was condemned as beine below the required speed. Later it was pronounced nnseawortby, but this was a false verdict, as 12 years' active service has shown. The Dolphin la a small shin. The New York's com- i K2ri officers and men. The Tv.ir.Viin carries onlv 8 officers and 107 " ------- . men. The battery oi tne snip cuubibw i-.n R nonnrler ranid fire CUnS, tWO 4 unw v f x inch breech loading rifles, two 47 milli meter gnus and two gatling guns. On Board the Dolphin. On other vessels of the navy sleeping and cabin room- are maae to ac- mrwinr,ft themselves to the demands VVUli""-" for snace for the machinery, the maga zines, -the guns and all the otner oper ating and fighting features of a warship. On the Dolphin tne arm amen s is unim portant, and a great deal of space is given to the cabin, well equipped with cool wicker lounging chairs andlong leather divans. Near the middle of the room is a companionway forming a horseshoe, and around this th tables re -arranged wlien the secretary gives a large dinner party.. The cabin is well supplied hy the department with fine linen and glass and silver ware. The Dolphin, carries very little am-, munition and ia not intended for fight ing, but to prevent a possiDje expiosjyu in case of fire there are arrangements CURRENT MisCELLANY. After ordering your bulbs, set about getting a compost ready in which to pot them. As good a soil as anv is one composed of ordinary garden loam, sand and well rotted equal parts. One-third sand may seem like "too much of a eood thine." bnt it is not Nowhere in the world are bet ter bulbs grown than in Holland, whose sou is nearly all Band. Better bulbs can be grown in clear sand properly ferti lized than in the richest of soils with out sasd. Mix your compost well and have it fine and ye"llow. It is very im portant that the manure should be old. Fresh manure is harmful to all bulbous plants, out or in doors. I shpuld advise the growing of several bulbs in the same pot The effect is more pleasing because of the greater mass of color in a limited space. Three or four hya cinths, tulips or daffodils may be grown successfully in a 7 inch pot Half a dozen crocuses or snowdrops will be re quired to fill a 6 inch pot. Three or four average size bulbs of the Bermuda lily can be grown in a 10 inch pot. Eben E. Rexford in Ladies' Home Journal. LOUISBURG. N. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBBKR'23, 1896. i MAIbion Academy, NUMBER .'m SHORT NEWS STORIES. Dassled Her Triends at Small S Peppered by the Prtnee gwr Style of "Wall Street LamK The Food of School Children. It is a lamentable fact that too little attention is given to the hygienio sur roundings of the pupils in the schools and by far too little to the nature of the food and the manner of eating. The aim often seems to be to so prepare the food that it will require little or no mastication before it is swallowed, and when solid food is ta'.. it is no suffi ciently masticated to properly prepare it for the digestive orgajj. Soma years ago a doctor requested m- of his pa tients to report as to the number of bites it required to masticate different foods. He especially'desired to learn how much less children chewed the food before Bwallowing it than their parents. He got reports from 150 intelligent peo ple and learned that practice this re gard varies very much ; that children generally are entirely too apt to bolt their food. To encourage the habit of chewinglt more thoroughly he had ad vised parents to give the children chew ing gum, much to the disgust of many of the parents. He thought the habit of swallowing food before it was properly masticated the cause of insufficient nourishment in many cases. New York Ledger. Diffusion of Powerful Odors. It is said that a grain of musk ia ca pable of perfuming for several years a chamber 12 feet square, and that too, without sustaining any sensible dimi nution of its volume or weight Such a chamber would contain 2,985,984 cubic inches of space, each cubic inch con taining 1,000 oubio tenths of inches, making in all nearly 8,000,000,000 of cubic tenths of inches. Now, it is prob able, indeed almost certain, that each cubic tenth of an inch of the air of such a room contains one or more particles of the musk, and that this air has been changed during the series of years an Inconceivable number of times. This be ing the case, it is only natural that the imagination should recoil before at tempting to compute the number of par ticles which must have composed th single grain of perfume. Numerous they must have been, taken all toget er, they have no appreciable weight i magnitude. True it is that the human mind cannot conceive of such "infini tesimal littleness." Verily, Horatio, there are more wonders in this world than were ever dreamed of in ycur phi losophy. St Louis Republic. One of the large department stores In State street Chicago, is famous among shoppers for iU willingness to take back or exchange goods. If a customer, after purchasing any goods, change her mind and thinks sho would rather have something else of equal value, the exchange- will be made. There is more or less money loss involved in these ex changes, for sometime the goods are slightly worn or soiled when tbey are returned, but the establishment has al so gained many customers by reason of this liberal policy. Occasionally a cus tomer will abuse a good privilege. A woman came into the store one day last June and bought a belt with the agree ment that if she did not like it after she bad taken it home she could bring it back and exchange it for another. The woman came back at the end of a week and exchanged the belt for one with a different style of buckle. The second belt diipleaned some of her friends, so she brought It back and ex changed it for a third, which she kept two weeks before discovering that it failed to harmonize with her ehirt waists. The salesman In the belt de partment smiled and looked rjleasant every time she came back to make an other trade. He believed that she would finally pick up the right one. He wm mistaken, however. After she had worn seven of the belts and had dazzled her neighbors all during the summer months and led them to believe that nho had a trunkful of belts somewhere, ahe brought No. 7 back to the store and said she had about given up trying to find one that pleased her and 6be be lieved she would like to have her mon ey back. So the salesman refunded the money. Chicago Record. STATE NORMAL a NO INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL. NEXT SF.SSION WILL HKUIN fXTOBKU r.Tit iv Thi? School ofTer! th- l enefilof a liberal -l neat ion to vmn' uen acid ladies of cl'r. It i; lora'e 1 st Franklinfon, N. C . on tl.e Kii side of the S. A L railroad, abo it one hundred ard, thre minn, walk from the otalieti, and in a park of three acren. It command St. Louis Refiublican : Tbeper oonal campaign cf the Democratic nominee for the Presidency it de veloping into the most remarkable the country has ever knowu. NOTICE : v HaTiDg qaatiflr.1 - .l m i nl r tir n I k -tjil of X m lljliw U I'arhaoa thta t,. fiToitirr to all j-rn m 11 lai.j tt' To mslr immnlmlr vllkraMl mn i all pr dn hoMinjf rUimi AHtnt A.it r t.3 t to I i n ii t t Kn irtr Trnt on or Mi.r, in., -r 1 t 1 "7 or i bi not -r m ill (W.W1 :u 'mr ot tfva.r rrn,rT Tn CVrt r tat ' .-, S VMl'Kt. J P KV.H U 1m r 1 1 t . a It i !'.". I1SS UTI N. w festal partnership h'-rWofr -xiMbir bto II K Kiecr and l. "i Smtthpfk. arir ta firm now .( kinv L Smith ck. a pictureaqtio vi of lh MirruniiJ- t Lm b--n di..hr-J tr mtjtotl rrnt. POWBER Absolutely Pure. L i T I iti country, ami i fr e from mala rial atid pulmonary diea--. The ln i Id i n jj are fpariu, will ventilated, and "uital'iv adapted to the comfort of the tu louts. Scholarshi p, 45 ( Hi fn- a term of 8 month?, including t.-ard and w a-h i ti Tuition, Kre,-. rrlit indted .. a id rm will "-UN ith I). T Stnittwvk at mo", ml prttr- For furt h.'i.lm ' iim iwr.ot Mid fir-n .tit t txni t. 1 T rmi'h'wK-k f : turrit. R K K:.i .. I F Sw:tv. S- p'r m b-r 1 ' . 1 - i.i a r.i.i: t ivs ri: ri: r u sa i.r.. i i r-. ' p T Bro k ' j n I'i'.ii' (CUitf f Br j a: , need is i. . w tit c n e v v . ; u ; c t. 1-. a- 4.e p-. V t it ::. i j a 1 I AD pi : r SiH'TIlKKN KAll.W.n. M,K.Ki' - I ! r I Ml. r pa r t i v u i a r dd REY. JNO. A. SAVAGE. A. M., Presideut. Fit n i i v r. t . N ' Cedar Rock ! ha j'l.t varan' i . 1 : b if i-r fr ft i - - !w f r ai.- . n- tal'sat.'- - r -t h '. ; K i'. - 4 i'.. !.. r. It l U .'Jlj'! llj' 'Hrr A '.a. Ihr.' IN WW i. TRAIN" i K A i fcj . r at- r y rn . 3f ' n M;r. r-aidr. r "r ." ) r i tl" h V, T ' K, . .n ii i o t,-r-v - , . ti lt r-' t -. b u ; . avLa '. " i r- it i Ki V. H.. ii.t. At i 7 CADKM V B)S AND NEW STAND. tbe Cood aceomntoditions Good Jrfc French Children Sent Out to Norte. Formerly children of the best fam ilies were sent out to nurse, as shop keepers' children are now. The sons of countrv landowners, nursed on their own estates by farmers wives, oiten staid on a year or two after they were weaned, sharing the rough life around them, which, if they could bear it, made them very vigorous. I form my opinion of this by the samples I saw in my youth of men before the revolution. Once the child returned from tbe coun try to its family it was placed, accord ing to sex, in the hands of either a gov erness or an abbe, such as are still found in the Old families of the Faubourg St Germain. More frequently then than nowadays little girls began to study Latin with their brothers. Now we have the foreign nursemaid, who takes the Child when it is just beginning to lisp and before it knows how to speak its own language welL At present an English or German nursemaid is to be found in every well to do family. Th. Bentzon in Century. Grateful For Belnff Peppered by Wai. Detaila of an accident while the Prince of "Wales was the guest of the I Earl of Crewe at Frystone hall, near j Pontefract, during tbe Daucaster we k, are just to band. The prince, the Hon. j Sir H. Keppel, Lord Londonderry and other members of the house party were j rabbiting in the park, when one of his royal highness' shots struck some iron i railings and rebounded with great forco into the faces of five of the beaters who j were ranging bushes near by. Fortu- J nately nothing very serious resulted. The prince was evidently cognizant of i the mishap, but one of the boaters, j quite a typical Yorkshireman. who had i received a portion of the shot in his lace, snouted, tiey, don t send any more like that this way. " The five beat ers, glad that they escaped further in jury, speak of being shot by the heir apparent to the English throne with a considerable degree of pleasure and re tain tho small pellets taken from vari ous parts of their persons as interesting relics of the incident. Loudon Stand- , ard. A Story of Barney Barnato. ' A Cape Town paper tells a pretty lit tle story of Mr. B. L Barnato. As a boy Mr. Barnato went to the London free school. When he left, hii teacher, who was much attached to him, gave him a penny and his blessing. The years rolled by, the friendless yoath had made his wonderful career iu South Africa, and the little Barney had be come a personage. About the time when half London and Paris were going crazy over the flotation of the Barnato bank Barney was seized with a fancy to visit his old schoolmaster. With great diffi culty ho managed to hunt up the old man. "Do you recollect" he said, when they met, "do you recollect giving your little Barney a penny when he left school 80 years ago? Hero it ia back again and with compound interest" and therewith he handed the school master a check for 105. T ! Th-' School will ope dav, September 1 -t , 1 ; ne- Up ' I'lM' - ' 1.1 r,t - ?s Tuition and Hn.ird -tv moder ate. Thoro'i'lien.e-a : dprore- ?hall lo o:ir aim. l io- v ry l.-t advantage in ev-ry 1 :i i t rn" 1. 1 . The muMc d .-part m'T.t w i i charge of a thoroughly c m teacher. I e ;-ete i ti nt For full Or J full p.'irticu SPF.Nt'K l: iHl'I Principal, ' li r if- n . P 1 r - N . A !i t to i " -' i rr -t o lltiln, rv r ' !. ' -1 ! -.V. h W 1 II VI 1 ' F. k : v - r. 1 'a'.- :.- a,! p I 1 .-.'. i - v fs- , ! j I'"! I. ' I 1 1 'V n k- ' r - r. h . . ; -- r.' t r " in bar f I l r Ki - - J Gannaway Hardware Compaivy, WHOLESALE M RETAIL HARDWARE, 'i p--int--r i-r! 1 PARLOR SALOON. r. '. U tu. ; f. hi IU' la Trains! Iarirain: We have jiift open-d rtxi cotrplete Stoclv of Hardware and pirop;"se at all t i tn a Full Line of all Kind L rre a v . r A' v . Ii ra t. d :e? , to f c a r r v id L I'. v e . K i TO Ii Agricultural Implements, for flooding the magazine quiekly, ; - v Coal Hade From Human Breath. It is interesting to know that an au dience of 3,000 people listening for two hours to a concert are not only culti vating and indulging their musical taste, but are engaged in the somewhat prosaio occupation of producing no less than a hundredweight or. coat ana l i gallons of water from the impurities and moisture of ' their own breath, and that if they were, all performing them selves, instead of listening, this quan tity would be nearly doubled. It is far more1 wholesome to drink the undiluted water of the Thames at Black- wall than to breathe the air of a crowd ed and unventilated room, and how cleanly people can be content to do so is only explicable on the principle that what the eye does-not Bee the heart does not grieve over. We are all resigned to our agreement to consume- a pock of dirt during our lives, 'though never content to eat cfT a ditty plate. Pearson's Weekly. Zteady For the Grave. The San Francisco Call says that "there are at least 800 people walking the streets..cf San Ffancisco in good health and" likely to live many years who have already arranged the details of their 'funerals. They have selected the oofflns in which they will be-buried, and paid oaah for the same, as well as lor the buxita plot, hearse,- eta." New Style of Wall Street Lamb. Things were lively on the Stock Ex change about 2 p. m. , and tbe bo tie of business was at its higheat Suddenly a ' cry of alarm went up from the Bugar j post Wall street is timid nowadays, ! and the apparition of a brawny woman j flourishing a stout clubover their heads j struck terror to the hearts of the augar plungers. "Help! Anarchists! Help!" they cried. "Go on. ye spalpeens. Ye are the an archists, " cried tbe woman. "I'll 'an archy' ye," and she swung her club. Doorkeepers Deacon and Budus rush ed for the woman, and a lively Bcrim mage followed, in whiob the club play ed an active part She was finally put out into New street, but the brokers were nervous forthe rest of tbe day. New York World. SisEBATCat Kissed HLT. Prince Bismarck is supposed by some people te be blind to a woman's charms, but a story is told which indicates tbat the ex-iron chancellor is quite as suscep tible to "feminine loveliness as other meiu A Colorado belle, who was tak ing the waters at Kissingen when Bis marck was there, one day walked straight up to him, as American girls will when thy have made up their mind to do a thing, and said: "I am going home today. May I shake hands with you?" She took hiB offered hand and at tempted to kiss it but he promptly withdrew it, saying, "In Kissingen we do not kiss hands," and the scarcely displeased damsel received a chaste sa lute upon her lips. Cincinnati Com mercial Gazette. Trouble of the Preacher. To the perplexities ever incident to the study of the human heart a Meth odist clergyman of Toronto, the Hev. J. Odery, found an addition in his mail box recently when be received a letter in which the writer said, "I inclose to you a plant leaf from my dead wife's grave and for Mrs. Odery a aample of the bridal dress of the lady I am about to marry. " New York Son. Jhildren Crj for Pitcher Qwtoria, i and other u p pi i j Farm. tST Pleae call ; Stock he fore m : i cba?e. led on and i k i : . , Vh.r.- I'. H. T for che.-ip YL;kev V i 1 1 A: H e r . Whre can v..'i e'. mad" riirn whi-key a Tm v lor oV ' From oi. t i . r e y a r . d , c h e r be fore. Who k.i - . '.d R A. STUART'S ROCK BRIDGE RYE- WAKKANThlM V KAILS I.I' V. H I H Km I I I - L 1 : 1 I s yESTlBULED .LIMITED DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE t la r t Or Ira tnona l atlilu, Pbllavdrl pbla. . r I Ik III'.. Killtmcrr, i 1 oik. ' X H 1 1 , v ... i r n pur- h . - l t. a New Saloon. I have opened a FIKSI-t'LASS SALOON In the New Urick IIuildiiivT on UIVHIi STREK T, 1). II . Tay lor o ', d V i r k.-1 " a t I ' o , h n d lie a a:id cheap. t home A i. lub. I ao keeL l : i l.iwn, other that arf ;ood , ever before, f H 1 a y . or i the f i : , e t made I-lrai.dT l 'lor (fa., k i : . d f and cLper tLau pecial i rices to al! r ; my f utorD''r, come cti.. corse all. I'idit n : d 5 rMtnpt attention at.d "kiliful tar-tenders. OLD KOC'K lUilDCiK (in rear of (urt carry a fall lin. FINE W1IISKIKS. .Mret) of d is Tin: W 1 I I V K T A M A 1 v I WnlU.li. i-f Tin: a: i - Ht. r r . r. K . : . .". t - i rta 3. -' . . r i i a . ll:. c r- 1 1 m r 1 .'.it M . rf. k. ,: t : . ' J R. .--: a' Riv: r to a t! a it : --i. -. ' t : r'nrz. - I uir m ! a.. r li f r. .-. . rr i: N r k Ka. i.i! j - , - , . i u-. i : i- : : . -:. av -.a 5 i : f i in' Atli.t t. J' ax. : ; t - Pr i BRANDIES, WINK-, FRESH BKF.R ETC. Give tne a call and I will n?e my best e fforts plea?o you. aJJT Especially do I invite yci to try a MIXED DRINK a'.d ii i 1 1 g p 1 1 y i -country, of 112 at my Bar, as I am satisfird can give yon genuine delight. Yours respectfully , It. C. BATCHELOIt. Aon 7-i I. 1 I- j'i!tr.iii,''' ! pure pr?cribed by th" l-ad c i h 1 1 throughout 'he a.:id tlv rid"nt phy.-icianc I.nuist'ure. Rad th follow t-t imon l a I : We pr.-scrih" Sluaris Rnk Widc Whiskey wh"!u-v-r a ptiinulant is n-ded, knowiiik: it to t' absolutely pur- and fre froinall adulteration. ( J. E. MALtlNrl Signal E.S. FOSTER, ( J. B. CLIFTON "At. r. 'w S.c'5 rr. !" r.- 1 O.irw.tt. U;. . r o ar . . : if Tata, i 'o.ue' i t w r m MnsrhLa i rr. '- 1 a k r. a: : krr . . .: , r V :. T - . ja- i -b j .-'. r ; ' . - . - ' A ; '.uu At ' r r vr. a v VI : . u t , I . n i .. J r.'.jl 'jr g : , -j t K ri a i. ' r r ' J "l ' ' r " ' ' ' r . v - ". a w . '. i, . i t t g t : r ( TU thr'uh i'a -r. kr . rx w ha a h r f " " ' 5 i t .J a i .'. ag n- a a.a. I'a. ; .A IS' urh : ki r r 1 . -z.x: . I- M I'M! 1 F r . T.Tfc-..-t. i r ti. . AtiT.a At..-.lj itil i -xli.M-;a I ' t.M-a 1 I : .: t I r T I , rwTi :r:..r . lit r AtUr.U. 1 d only , exc!tii vo Clearintr nt Sale. We will for th next rto day j! on oar conntm. a big lot ol Shiwn mul Hoota. Krw- ( naats of Calico. Paot t'ltb. noJ a irnoi man j othr harirnina tx nomrooa to cun- ' tloil, whirh we will f tor tli rivali rcard . less ot cost Call eariy and -mrt a bariraia. The ahove 1 ipuor i" hv D. II . Taylor A Co agents, at their saloons on Nash ', St., who also carry a full line of everything unally kept in a fir?t-c!a8 saloon. Fresh ln-r a jpcialty. Your patronage solicited. j Your friends, j D. IL TAYLOR & CO. ' r3 u'.b to A'.ir'l TRAl.Sa HKAC1I RAL Kt .H )S4K M iHill rr ta '-rfok. J". rf rr. -.. an! j. .rf north T'.a B17 1 .d ll. : Y P k Kai.rid IVUrtt or KVfcnv t 1 arJ 1 ah .r.t. t Rj . tltLror. I"fc!la.. ipktA. ' tout: U:av:.; aiao trra calf. ITyroa' aAt,ltr1 . c . an '. -avt m 1 arc'ua j. '.t a at rkko n A U . IiAILT Atlaxta rf-fTi. I'ailxu V -a:! ia . f rvtal All ant in) r-Mrl am;ii. a;.V. A i-taKTfW. Uivtv4 kl v bwtr r. A M . DA 1LT Trrta tht:f. AUVi At:r a a-r3 Inta-f. talat aUtl a I . A M T- a it-T H TvirraK-c. .ic-n . Rl'tr&--n ua-i.lt-f. !1 tl taVOT-. rti'-Wlpfca. a? I rk a. UW f. HtaUml r-a!mB Tiai,! 3 f-i Tra It a. Ho aairmfkr. ij-i"ii-k'tnt.!.cirto h Lint. a avM a n it RaiT. . C. B- fT. Jo. H W B Oucrtca. vtrrm aiTr.o aiAa. Tra Kaa
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 23, 1896, edition 1
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