THE FRANKLIN
TIM
.oTt W17-T
Metlimlist Church Directory.
Sunday School at 9:30 A. M.
Geo. S. Baker. Snpt.
Pivai-hing at 11 A. M., and 7 P. M.
j'nvvr ueeting Wednesday night.
G. F. Smith, Pastor.
I'roiisional cards
1)'
S. P. W'llT.
PKAl TKTNG PHYSICIAN,
Louisburg, N. C.
,1 N.i-!
tin- Ford Building, corner Main
wvets. Up stairs front.
W
I'.u.
n.
M. ii. UUFF1N,
AY fORNEY-AT-LAW, '
L tuisburg, N. C.
,i :i' t ii f in all courts. Office in Ford
1 uj. .-!.nir oi Main and Nash streets.
U MA.SSKNBURO,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
LOUISBUEG, N. C.
Will nr.utice in all the Courts of the Ptate
O.iiee in Court House.
c.
M. C'VKE & SON,
.T TORNKYS-AT-LAW,
LOIISBUK8, N. C.
Will uttfnJ the courts of Nash, Franklin,
n - uivill'' V:u ri'ii and Wake counties, also tbe
on-iat
an I District Courts.
j)
R.
J. E. MALONK
o ti,-e two doors oeiow Aycocae s
J;-urf tor a iJoiuiiiK Dr. O. L. Ellis.
Co.'s
1)'
W. II. NICHOLSON,
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN,
louisbukg, N. C.
.SPitUILL,
THE LITERARY HACK.
pis Trials and Tribulations-He I. Cml
I lous to Rejection - Dividing
j With a Millionaire.
I
I Special Correspondence.
I. Z and then a magazine published
in Philadelphia fills a few pages with
expenments." taleof absurd things
jdone and written by volunteer contrib
utors. Their ingenious letters, which
jthe editor quotes from time to time in a
discreet way, are very amusing. But
there are two sides to this question, and
the experience of a writer for newspa
pers and periodicals, related to me a
few days ago. shows that even the well
trained editor may have many weak
,spots. Perhaps the amateur writer will
find it amusing to see the other side.
"I often hear young writers lament
ing the return of a manuscript,' eaid
in? pruxeBsionai mend. HJf course a
man who makes his living with the pen
iusbs an sensitiveness on that point.
When I say 'makes a livinsr I dnn't
speak of the man to whom writing is an
incident or the man to -whom it i n
exaltation. I mean the bread and butter
writer, the man who writes steadily on
a variety or topics and for many pub
lications, one you would call a 'literary
hack,' a man who selects his own top
ics usually and markets his wares where
he can. He works when he is 'in the
mood, and he lives where he pleases.
Commonplace Rejections.
borne men grind out a regular
amount of copy every day. Others write
a great deal one day and nothing at all
perhaps for two days afterward. "What
ever his habit, though, a man of mod
erate industry will turn out seldom less
than 10,000 words in a week. This may
be divided into twor three or even five
or six sketches. With a product of 200
or 250 manuscripts in a year, some seek-
CURRENT MISCELLANY."
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
L'JUISBURG, N. C.
Will attend tho courts of Franklin, Vance,
,ir invi!l-. Warren and Wake counties, also
i a ursine Court of North Carolina. Prompt
T
nti 'ii given lo collections. sc.
THUS. B. W 1LDKK,
OiMi:
ATTORN EY-AT-L AW,
L0UISB0R8, N. C.
m Main street, over Jones & Cooper's
.'ji W. CI '.'RETT,
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW7.
LOI ISBUE8 N. C.
'r imiit an 1 nainstaking attention given to
tv -rv iu.-in.-r mtruste.l to tns nanus.
K'-f'-i'M t Chief Justice shepherd, Hon. John
M.mniii-. Hon. Robt. W. Winston, Hon. J. L
ISuUon. Pres. First National Bank of Win
Kt.jii. ui.-nn & Manly, Winston, Peoples Bank
uf Monroe. Chas. E. Taylor, Pres. Wake For
est Coil -fc-, Hon. E. W. Timberlake.
offi.-. iu Court House, opposite Sheriff's.
W.
M
Prart'i,'
Hous'1.
PERSON,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
LOflsBUEe, N. C.
Mtn all courts. Office in the Court
V A RBOROUGH, Jk.
ATKHlNLY AT LA.
LOUISBURG, N. C.
fifHi'e on second floor of Neal building
Maui Mreet.
All i: business intrusted to him
'."ill receive i. ion; t and careful attention.
I). T. Smith wick,
DENTISTS.
LOUISBURG, N. 0.
'fiorU in cwy department of Denistry
oi-.-nted with skill and accuracy.
DR, IE. IF1. ZEIR.XY"
DENTIST,
LOUISBURG, N. C.
office in New Hotel building, 2nd
it .or. Gas administered and teeth ex
'racted without pain.
HOTEL'S.
HOTEL WOODARD,
W. C. Wood ard, Pro.,
Rocky Mount, N. C
Free Iius meets all trains.
:;.tuU 2 per day.
NORWOOD HOUSE
Warrenton, North Carolina
v. j. NORWOOD, Proprietor.
Patronage of Commercial Tourists anu
Traveling Public Solicited.
Good Sample Boom.
Nearest Hotel to Stobes and Cocet House.
ITiAN KLIN TON llOTEL
FRaNKLINTON, n. c.
C. M. flOBBS, Frp'r.
ftood accomodation for the traveling
public.
Good Livery Attached.
OSBORN HOUSE,
C. D. OSBORN, Proprietor,
Oxford, N. C.
Good accommodations for the
traveling public.
MASSENBURG HOTEL.
1 r Masscnburg Propr
HENDEESON. N- C
Uood fteenmmnrifltinns. Good fare. Fo
Lite aBdaHentifeflfftwO O
iug iur many momns Deiore tney nna a
publisher, this writer will have often
as many as 40 or 50 manusoripts in cir
culation at once. The return of one of
these from an editor is a commonplace,
almost a daily, occurrence. The act of
mailing it to another editor is per
functory. A man of system will have a
'route' for a particular manuscript
mapped oat in advance, and sometimes
his clerk will rehandle it and he will
not even know that it came back.
"It is not, then, the return of a manu
script in the ordinary course which ex
cites emotion, but the failure to return
it or the return after acceptance. You
know what a pay on publication office
is? Its system is the foundation of the
story about the man whose old age was
solaced with a check for something he
wrote when he was a youth. Not all
publishing houses are of this class. I
won't mention those that are. The
Youth's Companion buys every year 80
per cent more matter than it publishes
and pays on acceptance.
"Provisional Acceptance."
"And then there are publications like
a society journal in New York which
prints rare pictures of the lingerie of
the Four Hundred and an occasional
story. The editor of this publication
conceived recently the brilliant idea of
accepting manuscript 'provisionally.'
He notified contributors that if they
would retain copies of their manu
scripts he would grant them the priv
ilege of offering these duplicates else
where with the understanding that if
the duplicates were accepted the orig
inals would be recalled. Now, if you
know anything about the ways of mag
azines, you know that the editor who
received the dnplicate might publish it
without warning the author and it
might happen that it was published the
day before or the day after by this jour
nal of society. In this event the editor
of the other publication no doubt would
put the writer on his black list Of
course the scheme was absurd. One of
the circulars which suggested it was
sent to me. I had a manuscript with the
editor, accepted more than a year be
fore for publication 'within a few
weeks. ' I replied that my manuscript
had been accepted without any provi
sion and the new plan was not accept
able. Result the return of the manu
script, now 15 months old.
"Here is another sample from my
stock of experiences. I write a letter for
simultaneous publication in a number
of newsDaners. A New York editor tele
graphs an offer for it. I say I think I
nan tret a better price. I find I cannot
eet more and I return to the first paper.
Vnn still want the storv?' I say. 'At
the price I named,' says the editor' un
derstudv. The editor himself is away,
as I learn from fervid daily personals
in his own paper. I deliver the manu
script. The date of publication comes.
The story appears elsewhere, but not in
New York. Inquiring of tbe under
study, who exhibits embarrassment,
learn the editor has returned and re
jected the matter eolely on the ground
that it had been 'withdrawn.' But of
this he has not even notified me," Con
versation pins him down to so naked a
state of facts that he says airily that the
matter is trifling and he will pay the
bill. Thirteen months have gone Dy.
The bill is still unpaid.
Dividing With, a Millionaire.
"A periodical had a number of my
manuscripts on band accepted and de
termined to cut its space rate down 50
per cent. I protested that my matter had
been accepted at the old rate. The editor
would not have it so. He even wanted
to pay the cheap rate for matter already
published. Result I call back my man
uscripts, and long montns aiter buiuo m
these missing children of my brain come
back without explanation or apoiogy.
Some never reach me and never wilL
J But I feel their loss lees than that
of another story one ordered from me
by a magazine editor and accepted. I
made several attempts to call this back,
but cannot hear from it Finally a new
editor comes in, and from him I learn
that many manusoripts were destroyed
by a fire, and the publisher , (who, by
the way, is a millionaire). baa concluded
to ask his contributors to share his lose
with him." Jamb3 R. SAinreasos,
Philadelphia, . . ; -". r
Game killed in full flight has a mo
mentum that carries it a lo$g way
sometimes. The London PiM
several instances where the birds have
hit the sportsmen. In one case George
Alonners was shooting in the woods of
Long Island when a erouse driven bv
beaters came flying along fast and high
np. He shot at it, and then, with the
other barrel, fired at another bird. Just
as he was about lowering his gun after
the second shot he received a blow on
the head that knocked him senseless.
The grouse first hit had tumbled against
his head.
That same afternoon a wheelman,
riding along near the line of hunters,
admiring the scenery, jlid not observe a
big black cock till its feathers brushed
his head. The black cock had been killed
and had nearly hit him in falling.
The Badminton volume on shooting
tells how the late Charles Leslie was
knocked out of the battery by a grouse
he had shot A strong hat probably saved
him from serious injury.
American hunters have had similar
experiences. A man was riding along
in a wagon some time ago, according to
Forest and Stream, when something hit
him on the head with enough force to
make him dizzy. An unwounded par
tridge flying through the woods had hit
him fair. Why the bird did not turn
aside is as much a mystery as the fact
that partridges sometimes fly against
house sides and are killed in so doing.
Madagascar.
Madagascar was never seen by Eu
ropeans until within the last 400 years,
though it was well known to Arab
traders at least 1,000 years ago. Pre
sumably they saw there some of the
eggs of the sepyornis, a gigantic fowl
which at that time doubtless still sur
vived, and brought back the accounts
which have been embalmed in the fables
of the roc. The Venetian traveler Marco
.Polo speaks of Madagascar, though he
never visited the island, and refers to
the roo incidentally. It is now known
that there was quite an extensive fam
ily of rocs, some of which were tall as
an ostrioh, while others were only the
size of a turkey. In the northern part of
Madagascar is the most remarkable nat
ural f ortress in the world. It is occupied
by a wild tribe who call themselves the
People of the Rocks. The fortress is a
lofty and precipitous rock of enormous
size, 1,000 feet high and 8 square
miles in area. Its sides are so steep that
it cannot be climbed without artificial
means. Within it is hollow, and the only
entrance is by a subterranean passage.
LOUISBURG, N. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1896.
Albion Academy,
NUMBER :
i ,
I
THE HOUSEHOLD.
Verw Items In Furniture and Deooratlom.
How Qulnoe Jallr I Kritr-lfflr
Pexloa'e Apple Oinver.
Southern Moss.
"The southern moss is rapidly diRap-
pearing," said Z. P. Tri beaux of Don
aldsonville, La. "A few years ago all
of the trees in the south had hanging to
their branches great wisps of gray moss.
It grew independently of the tree to
which it was attached and without
harming it It was not used for any
thing and was not supposed to possess
any value. Within the last ten years it
has been used extensively for packing
and by upholstering establishments.
The demand has lately so increased that
thousands of poor people in Louisiana,
Mississippi and Alabama make their
iving picking it off the trees, and it
forms a very important branch of busi
ness in New Orleans. It is most plenti
ful along the bayous and in the swamps,
and the moss pickers, with their flat
bottomed boats, are among the most
picturesque sights of the south."
Washington Star.
How Royalty' Beds Are Made.
Next to her majesty the queen among
members of the royal family the Duchess
of Saxe-Coburg is the most particular
as to the way in which her bed is made,
ber fastidiousness almost amounting to
eccentricity. She has the sheets pulled
with scrupulous tightness over the spe
cially made mattresses, and the slightest
shade of a crease is the signal for a
reprimand in her household.
Our own queen will only have her
bed made by one woman and shows ex
treme restlessness when any trivial
hitch occurs. The Empress Eugenie is
equally particular and sleeps now, as
she has always done, on a low bed not
above a foot from the floor. This is a
practice shared by many other great
folk. The empress' late husband slept
upon just such a couch, and the great
Duke of Wellington preferred a common
soldier's pallet to any other bed.
Pearson's Weekly.
New Tork In Prehistoric Days.
There was a time when what is now
the Hudson river, instead of flowing
into New York bay, flowed into the At
lantic ocean, some 80 miles farther
away, and when the rocks of the lower
part of what afterward became Manhat
tan Island stood many hundred feet
higher. The reader can picture to him
self the great glaciers which followed,
and which, after grinding away the
hills, left the rock surface plowed with
the deep furrows that we find now, and
then the slow deposition, by other gla
ciers and ioe caps, of the Band strata,
results of their destructive action else
where, and so the building of that
structure, layer by layer, on which some
day was to be built the very heart of
the metropolis of the western continent
Engineering Magazine.
Education In France.
It is auite clear that, whether it be
for better or for worse,, we are gradually
approaching an order of things more
American than French, In the old sense
of the word. As regards children, the
prisonlike school has opened its doors,
boardixuz lyoees seem to be losing favor.
and scholars can en joy -all the bodily
exercise that tempts schoolboys on the
other side of the Atlantic. At the same
time the number of those who finish
their course in the "humanities, " that
splendid' name that nothing else can re
place, la growing smaller. Some are
content to follow merely the so called
modern course. The hurried and cur
tailed education which permits an early
entrance into practical life has numer
obb pftrtistma, Ttu BeotKmin Qenturyv
Is there a woman whose eye does not
twinkle at the sight of a well made
piece of furniture, an artistic teapot or
even a small piece of embroidery! This
autumn there ji a new serving table, on
which three or four courses can be
placed ready to be served at a dinner
or luncheon. This novelty is made of
highly polished mahogany in three
broad, round tiers. By the aid oi a sim
ple mechanism they unfold, and when
open act as shelves. The leg of the ta
ble is in good straight lines, will fit in
a email corner .and is quite deoorative
in its way.
A wicker chair has now made its ap
pearance in the market with a splendid
sealing wax finish, Tni im done in all
colors, sometimes in combined tints,
which add gretfpy to tte decoration.
As a chair covering . tbe- new Algerian
stripe is now popular, and for this spe
cial furniture it is very ornamental, be
sides durable for wear.
For wall dressing, friezes are no lon
ger in vogue. Even tbe wood panel acts
now as a dado. Wall papers this seaaon
are 6plendid in effect and have become
one of the most artistio ornamentations
of the age. A new sanitary design is of
a glazed surface in tones of cream white.
As a pattern there is one of carnations
which is so well given as to insure al
most a water color effect Another has
a bunch of American Beauty roses most
artistically drawn ; another, a running
vine of corn flowers; still another, a
splendid scheme of chrysanthemums
All these papers can be washed with a
wet cloth to eradicate a spot or rut of
any particles of duet that might injure
their brilliant surface.
Bedrooms this season are iu light col
ors, tbe delicate blue and pink prevail
ing. With the new delicate dimities, of
which neatly all the patterns are in
flower designs, they can be made to do
excellent duty for walls, windows and
doors.
The tea corner has made quite a hit
in un afternoon room that is, an apart
ment where the light comes in charm
ingly at that time of the day. This
wooden settee, run around one corner,
is of good size, sufficient to bold at least
six peopla It is painted in sage green
and is cushioned with a highly glazed
muslin. This material has a white back
ground on which is a gorgeous pattern
of highly colored flower effects, is re
markably showy as a covering, is well
buttoned and ie quite durable. For cozy
corners, window seats, chair or sofa
cushions it is very pretty very charm
ing, says The Decorator and Furnisher,
the source of the foregoing items.
STATE NORMAL
A ND
INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL
NEXT SKSSION WILL II VM I N
(M'loHKU
Willie Grandpa, me a ("to
ry. (trsndpa Once upon a lime,
before people thought of marrying
for money Willie Oh, I don't
mpn a fairy story. Norristomn
Herald.
.iTll 1VK.
Thi? School ofTer tb l.ei.efilof
a liberal e 1 neat io:: to vouinf men
and ladiepof color. It UxjUed
ii Frank Ii n ton , N. C, on the Eist
side oT the S. A L railroad, about
oue hundred anl?. three minute?
walk from ihe tatiou, ami in a
nark of three arres. It roan.and
NOTICE
llariuK qaalfflr.) .i adminitirat.ir no iSr
lloJ km H i n i U PitrtiatD t!v i t.,
firf nolif to nil prmoi omwg ! -!jt
iti !.ltmc . I.iims AJfitt ;l h1 f.'.iU to
.n-"iu I lm !. ir pi t mnt unnr I fc.t.
i -t 1 t . 1 "'.? i .r I h nohiT ill ! j .1 ;.!.!
i ' i lii r
1 h
S Ml V. ! . J .
NN 1 1 i. . 1 1 T
ItH W Mm
w- r 'j i,
IISS()H TIi N.
Absolutely Pure.
t L ro
Lw t -ti
U K. Kiqx n l I) V 8niturk. under
f - firm nam . tt L i ti Sm it K .
a piciun eqne view o f tLe mi r r -u i.u - bn dt.U-d br initoal e D-nt"
A " " .1 TO O! .1
". .1 .4 I I 1 1
I'.m I It 1 1
itinllHT t
t l
! v - I WT
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liiK country, hm! i- fr- e from t:il:
rial and ju 1 luou a r y diens c.
The I'liildin? are sai -ion?,
ventilated, niul ?uitally adapted mnt.
to the comfort of the students.
Scholarship, s45 for a terruef
I'lrtie ilidrbtrvi to .i flrm wiil -ulr
with I T. inithniick t . l(v, D'i rurtii-t
h "Id i OjC i 1 i m c : c t i firm i II jrr -t
thjmi to I1 T (idi: hwk f r far-
1 . 1" . MllTHVk li t.
ptmbfr lot. lvv
I n a". . ; I hi'
' o he in air. ei.ai.ee
!at.d, ai.d t:..i. at"
ar-- a n ti u 3 ; i v k i . . d .
bri rfin.i'.fi tLat
arre r devoted
ler : n cot-
8 monlh?, including l.'mrd
washing. Tuitiun. Free.
hi
'1 l.rri.K TnU N 1'1'J H'Kl'.TY
F i: SALE.
For fnrth'-r pa i ! i cu i a r? addres-
SnrillKKN UAll.W AY.
PIKIIIllM VIM LI M.
( N1EEI H EI''. I.E.
in r.i-r r . : . v a;.i :.
REV. JNO. A. SAYA6E. A.
ER A Nh I.I NT i N.
M.. President.
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v.i nt !"t r r.d t .-
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Cedar Rock
tV-i fr nt
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"n Main
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C I M
ACAD KM Y
Foil HOS AND
Tho So ho d w : , i open
day, September 1-t, '.'i'.
NEW STAND.
ti&Ls : s
' - r .U-1 Hill
. - ; f r Ui i- '
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I- X m. " f .- ;. r
III
T
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Tuition and Iiard vrv rnnder
ate. TLoroii' her n- a i : d i-m' re-?
shall be ur aim. i'h- vrv hot
advantnes in ov ry 1 ;:; r t m - u t
The ruu?ic !-partment wi:', e .,
r.-!;. to i
p.t 1 1 III-. th.lt
:. k ' r- o;i
i n tl ..- 1...U--
iM U' r i . 1 . 1 t .
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tt
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L'liarkfe oi a
teaeber.
th.
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IeliciOM Vestll Sop.
Take three carrots, two turnips, a
parsnip, a head of celery, half a small
cabbage, tthree or four odious, with a
bunch of savory herbs (.f all kinds. Cut
the vegetables quite small, tying the
herbs together. Let them all stew in a
couple of ounces of good butter uirfil
they begin to be tender, then turn into
a larger stewpan and cover with two
quarts of water, adding a knuckle bone
of ham or bacon if possible, and cook
gently for about two hours.
Place a colander in a large basin and
rub all the contents carefully through
this with the liquor. Wheu ail has Deen
passed, dissolve another ounce of butter
in the 6tcwpan, stir into it atableepoou
ful of flour, add the vegetable puree
next, stirring well all the time, titir
over the fire until it boils up again.
then add salt and pepper to the taste
and a small cupful of cream or new
milk. Serve very hot.
'or full partiru Iur? add
SPKNCKK CHAPLIN.
r-r
Hav iatv
tr.v-r f '
- 1 !..
Or J
Principal,
A. U HTK Di K
Gannaway
Hardware Company,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
HARDWARE.
i.onsm i;;. n. c
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f Jmi;- A K in.''..
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f. ma V- . -n :n-.i:av
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T K A :
TAYLOR'S PARLOR
SALOON.
i
Hjiru'ains! Harirain
We have jubt openrd
and coirplete Stuck of
L?
Hardware,
W here a' I . H .
f r chMp Wh:kev
N 1 1.e; iV Beer.
vl- r A (
Braid..
Ki ? ,r
1 -a. 'r
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s; m - . '
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W H wan
it- ; r M
ffnd propre at a!
a FuTl Li ne uf ul
tim.? to
Kn.d? . f
c a r r v
"Banana Blftd.
Put 4 tablefpoccfulB of water over
the fire, add 6 tablespoonfuls of sugar.
the grated yellow riud of a lemon and
half a stick of cinnamon broken in small
pieces. After boiliDg ten. ruinates
strain, return to the fire, thicken slightly I
with half a teaspoouful of cornstarch J
dissolved in cold water, and when it is
smooth remove from the fire and set in
a cool place. When the dressing Is cold,
add a teaspoonful of vanilla, beat thor
oughly and set on ice. Peel 6 firm, ripe
bananas, cut in slices, pour the dressing
over ana place on ice until roaoy to
serva
Quince Jelly.
A good quince jelly can be made from
the cores and parings of the quinces And
a few tart apples cut into quarters.
Cook for an hour or more in water
enough to fully cover them ; then run
through a colander and allow to set till
the pulp has weir settled probably till
the following day. The juice is then
drawn off through a thin muslin bag,
measured and placed over the fire.
When it boils thoroughly, add a pound
cf sugar for each pint of juice and boil
till the jelly rolls from the spoon.
Agricultural
Implements,
hre ran
made crn
Ta v ii.r .V '
three year? o ", .
be fore.
W h o k e r ?
k e v at
d Lr me
I. II.
From one wek
1 , c h. a per than ever
old K. A.
) M K f'
f s
and other
Farm.
u ppl i. s n
led
on
th
STUART'S ROCK
BRIDGE RY
yESTlBULED
.LIMITED
1 TRAINS'
D0L BLE DAILY
SERVICE
h..
j - v- - i : , ii--llauu
Vw iirl'im V.
Biond W li I u - t . ii .
I'hllaU' Iplila. :'"...,. i, .
rl Ik Ii Ir fa.
tlalllru.rr,
N v 1 oiL.
T Please call ;
Stock before uiii
chase.
km
e x ui r. 1 1 e our
pu:
W. ILK A NT ED 4 VEAES 'I.I'
T T T T 1 . 1 1 " 1
li.il. i av lor ,v o. i.j k e
' k : v
l A
New Saloon.
I have opened a FIKST-t'LA:
SALOON
In the New B r i r k I ! u i I d i : k'
KIYHIl STKEE V,
(id V i rk' i na ( 'i i i h. I. H. 'lay
"" . ai.d he a',?o kee. the hi
;.d (.-uap'-t horue-mr.d e Bra
k
-t
d v
,d-
Km.
K A .
i
tr
1 ; i 'ili, o t h e r 1 i n 1 1 O -. f a
.1 . J J L . L
u,si arkoou. anu cds f i man
ever t.efcire. Special prirea to all
rny cutorner, toti,e o:,e. corse all.
I 'olit- and rotu p t at te 1. 1 i on and
kiilfui bar-tender.
OLD KOCK r,KlD(;K
RY K
H -: :
h i-i-
rl i .
K rr. "
ft.. :
f fia a'
u . t. a.
T n
rt k
! H. -a.
-
1 r.
i
r r
I'M
. k r
Kiss Parloa's Apple Qlns-er.
Four pounds each of apple and sugar.
Make a sirup of the sugar, adding a
pint of water. Chop the apple very fine,
with one ounce of green ginger, or if
vou cannot set the green Ringer use
white ginger root. Put in the sirup
with the grated rind of four lemons and
boil slowly four hours, or until it looks
clear.
Odd Mention.
Very dainty are the glass finger bowls
in varying shades of color and appar
ently overlaid with lace.
Silver candlesticks continue to please,
especially when accompanied by one of
the new shades of pierced silver, with
colored Bilk lining.
Vases, fern dishes and table center
pieces of ruby glass, wth giU .orna
mentation, are attractive features In
Bohemian glass ware.
Silver grape scissors and grape fingers
are in order. The first snips the fruit
from the cluster; the second picks it up
anil conveys it to tbe month of Lb lux
uriant person who eat it
Children Cry for pitch,! Cwtorii,
( 'on rt
tin
M ree'
of
) a
1
w I
(in rear of
carry a ful
FINE WHISKIES,
BRANDIES, WINE-,
ee esi i bf;:ii i-
Vjt i vr me a call a : i 1 1 i ' I u m v
best effort' pi esse y u.
5" Especially do I invite you to
try a
MIXED DRINK
at rny Bar, a I am atified I
can give yon genuine deiiht.
Yours respectfully,
R. C. BATVHHI.OR.
Ans 7 ii.
Til
T VM
win::.
n
i
F TMr
or ihe,l ,y th
i t h r. ii jhou
I'
a
l
a:,d th--L.
ui i - l.-i r.
t- ' . ui"ii :.i
We pr
bridL- Wl
t i in u Ian t
id-i.t
II. a
l " a d : ; i e p K y i -'h-
country,
ph;. ,r; a:o i.f
i th- fo ! I. n . :. '
to tn- a
from a!
ho ut
1 adul:
il-k.-V
i llf d-d. k
y pure
'a! ;in.
.ow i i,p
an
a
: ; a at
H t- V r t.
B- a '. t N r' k. j.n :
' , : taa'f r' . ra
J' , r. 1 in! It
lt.". r
w V 1 1 a S K-
r. 1 . t. f T . a.
i i ; L- j- '. t '
rr. r I tl ;.:
-' r- ' ' - -" -i
'C a v? T1 .
A'.Ur ! ;-v . i . - i
1 1 r t ' A ' A '.
. .2. all- r : i
Ufa.; r a. . .-.
If.r- ajr - rrr .
. r. " .
'. r-r-:.j a'. . i
'. cf . !r. ; : '
c: V - r f -is .
i; a :
Y -r 1. rr r.- r . i:t
w Al-'-'-ra A'. t. :
K.i I :. :
rl a a;
! r
4"
: i
''I
lit
SikMH'd K
J.
E.
S.
B.
M ALONE,
FOSTER.
CLIFTON
Lall r. i r .-. ' a'
1' na '.-j A'-lxx-'w.
TRAI.1 RKATH RI '.
u r u I a ; ; 1
rv. r-.t l B-ay 1 lr- j ; 5 1 )
Y rra rt RMa .'.
tlm.-r. miky.ibM.
f r. -to t,Tv a s . y j to.
f )
' e f -r. T.
t A .it "j.
A A fL...r .J
?- t, fUi.
' ailtr'. .
Clearirm: (mt Sale.
We will for IS nxt .10 dT il-r on onr
Coonim. bl(C lot oi Sb anj I'.iMita, rUro
nanta of Culiro. I'nnt (ruth. ! a food
mtD) othr r ta rr ioa txi nororrooa to m-c
tiou, whirh will eall for tb rub rrgirtj. v
lew 0( coat. Call earij end arsrr brt-a..o.
Kl5Q 4 l'UUU'TI-
The alnv- Ii pj .r :s ',d onlv
hv D. H. Taylor k Co , xchii
agents, at their aloairrs on Nash
St., who alo carry s
full line of everything usually
kept in a first-class "aloon.
Fresh boor a "TctaitT. Your
patronage solicited.
Your friends,
D. Ha TAYJ-QR & CO.
rAiLt
U . I'AlLY
l'V.i A t.- a-.;
4 31AM
Altacta j
A I iax. La ia: j. r!i -.
U fa w ool ary ' r-
II a A
I JK A U r KI L T
' ill t-a - fr i rt -ji .f - r-.aa. j
H w Vwn-a lio Ri-aj,' a: ait-a. ,
-".lof. 1L..AU. 1 U'
aavaC
Mlt-BtSornt ri-'rave Tf.i ;r.x,
So rtlra fr. aj i-t - U:k' rt l.
M a La. u,
a. . . c.
K. Jc. K w. B (iUTU.
Tyrrm. arr-a uxjk. TreJAc sUa
T. JL afxSss tit. jrssaai.
ait, asa.