Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / Aug. 27, 1897, edition 1 / Page 1
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j,etll0llist rhurch Directory." - - ; ' anndav liotl at 9:30 A. M. -. " SUD Geo. S. Bakb. Sapt. Preacbini: at 11 A. M., and7 P. M.,v ,t,rv .uii'lay. . . -r Praver mating Wednesday night. , , rra' (. F. Smith. Pastor.. !sional cards lU'HT, I K ING PHYSICIAN, l.ouisburg, N. C. ' .; r,ffi,,Mn tl- Ford Building, corner Main an M. H. HUFFIN, ATTOllNEY-AT-LAW, ' Luuisburg, N. C. -tj.-.' vn all courts Office in Ford BuiMui-r , oi in -r ui Miuii aiiu nasa Bireeis. B. MASSKNBURO, 13. ATTORNEY AT LAW. LUISBUB, H. a ; - . -: ; a-iii i.rai-tn e in all the Courts oi the State uili. -e iu Court Honse. c. M. O'UKK & SON, . TTURNEYS-AT-LAW, L0UISBCR8, N. 0. vtl,lftllIMl 111'" vwi La CIH1BJ1U, Jubreuie Court uf North Carolinp, and the U. I urtuit ana District Coorts. vvai-i-euana w age coanuea. &ibo tne I) a. J. E. MALONK Olllce two aoors ueiow aycucse . s uo.'B drug siorf, aajominff JJr. u. i. .tua. D g. w. U. NICHOLSON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, L0U1SBUK6, N. a S. Sr-HUILL, ATTORN EY-AT-LAW, ; LOUISBUK8, . o. Will at ten J the courts of Franklin, Vance, Onuiviiie, Wurren ana wane counties, also the suiirtiine Court of North Carolina, lrompt ittentiuii given to collections. Stc rpH08. B. WILDER, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, LOUISBURe, N. o. oillce on Main street, over Jones & Cooper's itore. W. BICKETT, iTTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. LOCISBUKG H. C. Prompt an-1 painstaking attention given to every mutt, r intrusted to his bands. Refers to chief J ustice Shepherd, Hon. Joan Maiming, Hon. Rol.t. W. Winston, Hon. J. C. Buxton, 1'rej. First National Bank of Win- itou, Uieiin & Manly, Winston, Peoples Bank of Monroe, chas. E. Taylor, lres. Wake Por- wit'oiiire. ttoii. k. w. Timberiake. Office in Cou i t House, opposite Sheriff's. M. PERSON, ATTORNEY AT-LAW, L0UISBUB6, 5. a Fractic k in all courts. Olllce ix Jonf s tt (ooper UiuMing. U YAKBORODQH, Jr. A HOliNEY AT LA A', .LOL ISBDRQ.N. C. Ullice on second floor of Neal bnildinsr Ham street. All Kal business intrusted to him Bill receive Di oiuot aiid r-arefnl attention. J), T. !-SdlTHMCK, DENTIST, I.OI ISI5URG, N. C. i Office in Ford Building. 2nd floor. as a4minitered and teeth extracted without pain. JjR. E. v. EARLY, DENTIST, : LOUISBURG, N. C. Office in New Hotel bnildintr. 2nd tfacted without pain. JjR. R. E KiNa, DENTIST, I M isHURG, n. c. Offi, K Oi-kha House , . . : bl lLDING SEiCOKD FloOR. 'Ill t 1 1. r i i . n , t .? iwlnn..A tiicn,.., i. uuiee ot my work in ail "Ml "us oi the profession." HOTELS. HOTEL WOODARD. W- C WOODAED, rOf ' ky Mount, N. C. Free s meets all trains. s ler day." A.NKLIJSTO HOTEL FRANKLINTON, N. C"- U Pnblic muuauon i or ine iraveung God Livery Attached. - " "t"1" BORN HOUSED L- D. 0SB0RN, ietor. Oxford, N. C. jtrafl,. aummoaations tor the MASSENBORGi(lii Henderson, nc 8ood commodaUoMGoWfiT?o T0 ternst mMmi nil. S. 1 V . j . J : : . ' - . ' . - i ii I; l r v HER LESSON. T"" '; rm haneW " the HeTena, iue. Email, nnxious ; woman who waa: tho boardino- suspected that lie wai a crlnkrthe fmy Wfe What first excUecIcherjsuapicion was the fact habjtually .wpi a frock coat. There Prmce Albeit feoat that ' invariably ' mie; di8tniSt-' o his llow men. .Bhe wasjnot surprised when' thiaarde&teeito;b:er"with the niouncenienpfiat-hB wag going to - ''I'm very eorry," she answered. I have done my best to make it comfortable." "You have indeed. I have been ofoundly impressed by your solic 1 itude for my well being, and I as sure you that as I journey onward through life, perhaps never to en counter this boarding house again J it will be sweetly refreshing to re call that sometime and somewhere I have known a landlady who gave thogbt to her boarders other than, to keep tab on jvheh the rent came due." The landlady heaved a little sigh and blushed. "If you feel that way about it," she said, Ml don't see why you are going to leave us.?' "I can't stand suspense," was the answer. "Present discomfort is better than complete ease combined with a future that bristles with the terrors of uncertainty. I am be coming attached to this place. I would rather move now and break tlie ties while they are still slender .than linger till the frost comes again and be obliged to have my traps' carted around town while I seek other lodgings in cold weather." "But I don't see why you will have to move at all. " 'You are not experienced in run ning a boarding house." "It's true that I have been en gaged in this business only a short time; but I don't see how yon found it out." I thought I was pro viding exceedingly good accommo. dations." " Yes. The excellence of the es tablishment in all its branches was woiai ursi excited my . suspicion. Then I resolved to put you to the test. I knew that. I could determine with absolute accuracy whether you were a novice andall this care and attention to detail merely the re sults of early enthusiasm. You will remember that this morning I said something at breakfast about the coffee being rather slow to settle." "Yes. It seemed a little heartless of you to call attention to it before folks, and I gave the cook a good talking to about it. I am sure it will not occur again." - The thin boarder looked down up on her and smiled indulgently. "It is too bad," he commented, "thatthissolicitude, which does you so much credit, should have been the means of my detecting your secret. Had you been old in the business when you heard me say that it took the coffee a long .time to settle you would have cast an icy look around the fable and said that it reminded yOu of some people. That is a form of repartee that was invented short ly after Adam and Eve left the gar den of Eden to look for other accom modations, and no one but a begin ner would have let the opening pass. I am sorry, but I prefer the peace of r mind thatomes from a settled pol icy to basking in the sunshine of luxury, only to see it day by day ob scured by the shadow of a mercenary economy. This evening I. will pay you the $7.60 that" I owe you, and then. we will part" -. A long, hard line that had never been there before came into the face of the little landlady. ; She had taken her first lesson in the eternal truth that the- mbre one tries to please people the less one is likely to succeed. Detroit Free Presa A'Seotch Joke. . A . traveler ; had" left his wrap in his carriage. The guard; opening the doojr of a 'jcompartment,' in quires, "Is there a black mackintosh here!" . 'NoJ'. answers one of the big bearded - highlanders inside, "there's no . black; Mackintosh but there are six red Macgregprs. " This anecdote would almost seem toiave been copied t in I another y. railway itoryl "Hasye ybu, inquires a cler ical passenger, looking up ; from his book "have v "you read Iiamb s tales i" "No,V replies his Vis-a-Vis, who. happens to be . a commercial trayeler,v"but: I have black sheep-. ekin rugs Gentleman's; Maga Zlne. ' l : - - . y r -. . : a "rri To Take Off Tient King, J Wjieii fingerrgrow$ a ring cannotjbe taken off, an easy way to reduce the swelling is as loi lows A narrow.rubber band is takt en and placed several -times around the finger ..near : the ? nail, and while the hand is held : up the band lis' slowly rubbed down until it reachest the ring. i This is repeated several timesy and- after a few ;. minutes it will be foud tha't the finger is thin enough to slip off the ring without Wi eUfitatest difficulty if Si FOOLISH FEAR OF LIGHTNING Pewe iWltles hom It Than From Other Causes of Accidental nti,. 'A news item: civfis fhn rmmitp' an investigation carried out by Dr. m. wtamey nail, president of Clark university, on the things that most exene rear in people. Of the 298 & - . . V kWU t classes of objects of fear to which 1 707 persons COnfp.Rfl1 4hn"n'iin lightning lead all the rest, although TJ f or inf tan3 ftfcrvrf ti i ; one8.eic-. ; be l T-hoi - iuA V ' " "uo posiomce combined. . He was look inat thunderstorms oonstitnt fhA i , . , j ouuruoui xearwim to the always impressive and not mirequently ovepowering nature of the phenomenon. But any justification in fact for this rear, so far as fatal results are con cerned? We believe but, on the contrarv. that rtfe-J other causes, which barelv i place in Dr. Hall's list, are infinitely A A " . . - .... mwe tjiiHuea to tne aistmction as fear producers than is lightning. As proof of this we may cite sta tistics of the United States weather bureau. These show that for th four years 1890-3 the deaths from ugntning numbered 784, or an aver age of 196 a year. Again, Mr. H. F. Kretzer of St. Louis found from the record of nearly 200 newsnnT. that for the. five years 1883-8 there were i,0d0 deaths caused by light ning, or an average of 205 a vwir We doubt whether of the number of aeatns classed as "accidental" in the whole United States anv one group can show so small a number. m Jew York city alone over 200 people are drowned every year while nearly 150 are burned or scalded to death, and close to 500 persons meet their end by falls of one kind or another. Comparing the record of 200tis:htnine fatalities for the whole country with the acove records for New York city, with its total of nearly 1.500 acci dental deaths every year, it will be seen now groundless is the popular fear of lightning. It is a survival, an inherited superstition. But there is another rx)int in con. nection with this matter 1 which ought to be particularly comforting to city dwellers, albeit countrv dwellers may not be affected in a like manner, and that is that statis tics show that the risk of liehtnine is five times greater in the country than in the city. The cause of this immunity for city dwellers is not iar to seek. It is doubtless due to the predominance of metal roofs, tne weu grounded water pipes in houses, and probably as much as anything to the protective network of overhead electric wires of all kinds. The popular belief that a stroke of lightning is invariably fatal is also not borne out by facts. Indeed, one record specially devoted to this feature snows tfiat of 212 persons struck only 74 were killed. Takine it all in all, there seems to be no more groundless popular fear than that of lightning. Indeed, if one can go by statistics, the risk of meetine death by a horse kick in New York is over 50 per cent greater than that of death by lightning. Yet with all the weight of. statistics against its deadliness Lightning will probably continue to scare people as hereto fore. Perhaps, after alL.there may be a more dfrect cause than the mere psychological one usually as cribed to it, and that is the fact that many people of nervous tempera ment are affected hours before the approach of a thunderstorm and thus rendered particularly power less to stand the strain wbich more or less affects even the most phleg matic natures during a disturbance in the heavens. New York Times. Took a Dollar For a Chicken. . An old darky was arrested for stealing a silver dollar. The dollar was found on his person and pro duced in court. "You stole thismoney ?'.' asked the judge. - ' "Dat's whut dey says, suh." "Well, what have you to say for yourselfi . "Well, suh, nuttin much; 'ceptin dat I wuz driv ter it.:" " "Driven to it?" " "Yes, suh. You see, jedge, dat dollar had a bird on it, en it look so much r like a game chicken dat thought I wuz in a henroos' en des nacnuuy oaggea it. "Atlanta Con stituticn. " - ; Bet's Innocence. Bet Flint, a humble friend;of Dr. of stealings counterpane. She was Justice Willes, who had a; kindness for her sex, summed up favorably, and she was acquitted.. After which Bet 6aidf with a - gay and satisfied air, 'Npw. that .the -counterpane is my own, t shall make a petticoat of Classed --'' ---- - : .-- - :l 1 -v A KOfTinirTi,Wiifftr noa trio AnAw 1 rng announcement standing , in his columns,.'. A . first; class ,paper, en terea as secona class matter in : I third class " TOStoffice." Memuhi j wommeral-Appe ; - POSTMASTER WAS IGNORANT Ought to Hm Knows HuU Blackbird jua4 OlseM Kolr Wer tb Sua. In the mining camcs in urmer Michigan people of every national ity underihe run areeinployed.and the" mail that arrive nt tht nrvc 7 " . ' w Voint of delivery ia as incongruous Bfl fl 'Tn7irnoi.hu-o.1,' rrUi t v i an amateur- postmaster thought as he look it over in the candle box in tie rear of the board rtianty . a grocer, ore S .v icticr iur a call dtp wno eat on a soap box and waited "There never was 6uch a name in the world," said the postmaster in grumpy voice. "Who ever hnl of Blackbird for a name?" Dat eez so dat mv name-mo." said the man who"wantod the lptfpr He spoke with a strong French ac cent, "i-eter Blackbird, my fader he make it too." And I tell you Blackbird ain't no kind of a name heathen or oth erwise. Say. French v. what von done to pick up a name like that? uowsomever, if the letter was here, it would be plain readin. Mebtui it'll come next week. Whod'youex. pect it from, ennyhow?" Me fader, an it zee money got dat I ltn' bim-me." "Well, get out now with your jargon. If it comes, I'll e?ave it for you. Come agen when you can't stay so long." And the letters packed away for the next comer. in a week the half breed was back as before, looking for a letter for "Peter Blackbird," and, as before, no letter awaited him. "Can you read writin?" asked the postmaster ancril v. as he fliml the letters on the rough counter. Whaffor I hev letter come eef I no read?" asked the half bred in return. "Then you look here and see that there isn't anything for 'Peter Blackbird.' " The woodsman took each letter in his grimy hands and with infinite pains and difficulty spelled out the nara names to which the one he had given seemed an easy one. At last he seized one with a yelr-of delight and began tearing it open, when the postmaster insisted on seeing it "Hello!" he paid. "This ain't your letter!" "Yum, yum, yum, dat mv letter I tell you dat name in Eenglish, for you not speak a de French- -dat my fader hanwrite dat my name" He held it up, and the puzzled postmaster looked at the inscrip tion and read this legend: "Pierre L'Oiseau Npir, Camp Alger, Micb." "Well, what the has that got to do with you?" asked the post master. "Dat Peter Blackbird in French all right. What for you zat ig. n'rant," was the half breed's an swer as, seizing his precious letter, he faded away. Chicago Times Herald. Hobble SapplUd to Order. A certain gentleman whoso offices are near the Strand has built up a huge business connection by profes sionally advising people as to what hobby to adopt. His advice is always based as far as possible on a pretty accurate knowledge of his customer's tem perament and occupation. And a queer fact is that several doctors have discovered his worth and are sending their brain fagged patients to him for bobby treatment just as they might dispatch them to a den tist for toothache.- As almost every one knows, there ia a marked fashion just now for hobbies of all sorte, and to the wealthy person who is too busy or too lazy to start one for himself this hobby merchant has become a per fect boon. Suppose you wi6h to take up orchid collecting. You simply call at his modest looking little office one morning and leave your order. The whole thing is conducted with the strictest confi dence, and within the same month your conservatories are stocked with an orchid collection which is the envy of the countryside. London Answers. - - Thoughtful. "Didn't she seem at all affected when you told her how her refusal had wrecked your hopee?" :- "No." .; ; ? v '-'Not even when "you told her that jou had become desperate and were going on an expedition to the north pole" "Not a bit v : xsiuj4 , ciio - yjixcr you any mue parting token any : little., memento 'Yes, she did thatil She said that if I wanted her to shoVl work my 'mohogfam on a pair of ear muffs. v Washington Star. - . "Koy-U Weddiojr CjLke. . . In England rdyal wedding cakes are never Bent out until they have ... a 1 "a. - ? . 11 ri luaiLureu hi least bix moxiiDS. ine ' m . -- , 1 to seven hours, ' So great is the de- mana for cake on the occasion -of a royal wedding that the makers havo always a' stock of more than 1,200 I pounds jt asgnlng j rppra, -. . Senator Baler. It is t he tame old fo,fooliingthe people in : every. Vimpaigu with sometbiDg new, playing artful!) upon their passions, n4 .seeking to, inspire in tbetu distrust of everybody buthimielL But GotHs just and one day the fox will b run to earth. Charlotte Ooseivr r. CATAHKU CURED. Ho rrmrdj.U rffrclnal in eisdlcal in and caritig Catarrh U-:aaic Hlund Balm' It. B H It punflrsn-i rotieh- Ibr blood, elimloatm microbes, baetrrta. -le. .and boilds op ib sjHtftn from tho flr aw. iDouftaou-s of cava iT catarrh havr Ut-o caivd by ii uisg'.c power. For 4!! blod and Kkin diara-M-a.it, bw dj ejol Raj tbf old rrliablc and Iook traWd ma td, and don't throw joor moo-y aj on RabstiloUa, ralnvrd off as jrjt gtod." Boy ibe old Miab'.e lloUnk Blood Calm. Price ? I. CO frr large bot tie. For aal br drDj-itn. Ihu U Hatter's (iarne 1 Butler's ambition 8eUa to t to! advocate some measure that is o j very extreme that cooservfctive meti will not follow him. He does i :ot appear to want a majority party. He wauls a party Ian enough to hold the balance er and keep him iu the Se; party mat tie can trade aud soil at his will and always U able to de li ver the goods. DID YOU KVKR ' Try K! trie I lttr an n rrmdr for vour troudlH? If not gfl u tx. tile "now "and 1 get relief. This ineikin ha Iq fouud 1 to bo peculiarly adapted to th relief 1 and cure or all femalW comptal nl.s cirri. ing a wonderful dr t Intlunce in giv- , iuir Strength and lone to theOrana. If ! you have Km of appetite. ronHtiputlon. j heaJache, fain tin pell. or r nrvou. lee.-, excitable, irtvum bolv or i troubled Tilh dizzy pel!. Kleclric Hit i ten i tbe medicine you ommI. ht-alth unJ strenpth iiaranteeO by iU uv. Kiflv -t and 11.00 n tAyccke & Ca's DruK St. rs One or the Other. Tbe man who siUbimdownto read Tbe modern Sunday paper through Kas either got a job ou band. Or else be hasn't mneb to do. THERE IS NOTHING SO (i(oo. j There U nothing jut go.nl a Dr. ' Kin'i NS;w Discovery for tTnu:ii tion. ' colds and conjrha, o 'dvntand U uud do , not permit Uie dealer to h.1 you tn? i substitue He will oot ctaioi therr U anv I in letter, but ,a ord.-r to tnake more ' profit he may claim om-tlun le to tie ju-l a otkI. You vka.nt Dr. King' i w Discovery bcau vou know it to h safe and reliable and truarAnte to do oo.i or money refunded. ror coueh. cold. conHUinplioa and for all nfTec- tionn of throat, chest an i liinc. there I no'hiue ho trotnl aji i Dr Klnir" N"w Di.overv. Trial botlle free at Aycvke & Co.' s dm: store. " - iVCbattle Blanks, Mortgage ! Deeds, Lien Bonds Ac, for rale at I TIMES OfTic'. ! NOTICE OF DIS5?0LI'TI0S. I i The ct-partoerhip ettinr hrtofore l- 1 I ween W. T. Hughe and . ( Uaghm nn.ler ; the flrm nuai of A. C. lluvhr h. IV ' doic a fcalr. warrbouiw and "nrr.l tolc co l.ijmnem br. eipd by limitation. W r. Mughew rvtirea I rum ii.t Arm. A. C Hi our, w. T. Ihuiiu A wrtl 1 i,n from the alwtTe I bar re tired from the arvbona kauim on nr rotint ol tb large iwr ntc In mi or.ler bnl n which no require toy entire t:oie "T huninee. it le ttintinued by Mr. A. t. tiagbe Qn1e( the mm Srtn name and be penk fur tbem the MOlf Ithrral (xttronage oioki jpoDinfow nrin. 1 Dnnktucr air I iruooa ior poi iitvor i am Very truly. W. t. llt onra. I tleeire to utate that I 'ill ro&ttoo the wnrehonec baneM amier the More flrto name Di neprt full t eolU it the pnlrtMtage of the pnldic. A to the pnut ererjr pile of to bacco eold on tnj Boor ahafl 1-riBg tbe high est roarkrt prn-e. He pert Kill r, A. i'. Ilraaca. Aojr. 13th. 1-m NOTU'K. By virtoe of the power irieen in a rerlaJo mortiraire deed ea-atetl n the J t ' 1 j oi Man-b, 1HH4. by Wanhinrlaa Itaakina and Kotena Haakiaa hi ifr. to S. C. Vaaa aad dtily recorded io3ook SIS. ia tbe ofDr of the Kefheter ot Deerl cf Fraakha coouty, and deltinlt hitrinj b-en nnde in tbe payment of Aid mortirfitte deot I will on Toenday tbe 7th Jy ot Sept era Iwr, 1837. aHl lorcu.h at puNic oortioB. at Krankliatoo. tbe folio injc tract rf land Irinjr aod ta in Franklin coanty, Htat aforeaaid. and tn Fraaklintntt Vovnuhip and dearnbej and den tin ed aa fuUoara, Vo-i: Befrinoiair at a rock in M. O Vana lirterrjobing Uieix-e n. is" w. 11 pole 214iaka to n It Washington Hawkina comer, then re aJjug- anid llaaliu' line v 7U e. J4 pole 1 9 kaka, thence Unac D.T. Ward'aUneS. 12 e. IT poiea II loA. thence 8. r.5 w O polee 5 Hnka. tbeoca K. 1 w. 13 pole 1 1 link to a rock on Lnoiaborr road, tbetice alona; aaid roaJ a. 80 w 46 feet, theucen H w. 13 poire IS lioka to a rock. W. H afayaetd'a comer, taeoc w. JO polea 24 linkalo tue bejrinniaat eoataiaina: t wo and three fUlba acres morw or lea and known aa the Milea UayfUid lot. Thia the 4tb day of Aufrt, 1HH7. ' " -; - " . H.C. V Jim Mort grage - R. O. Wurrr, Attorney. v JOB-WORK I -i .Yon ran get all kinds of ItUr beads", .Bill 'beads Note heids. Envelops, Business csrds, Visiting cards, Posters, or any thing in that line, done at short notice andoo tbe best material at tho Ttxxs Job ofico;"---. -. ;- - 1 - . """"'aaaaaBaaBaaBaBaBaamaaa 1 not her revlmlt. "Gliddsn says tb country it iroing toeTerltrtiog tmajb." y "What oEce ; was it Glldden waoUd?" Chicago TriLanr. Dr. J. I Trry. vf Trimbla. Tii in Pskl c of CUajabrlalaa fVIL r-K..i. r arxi U'.rrfoa Rocoady, im-r : -Ii vicinity." ll.U Uth. Kt rvtrtady !a nlary and dlarrbo. a4 U-r-Kvtj,-l I ncuy wrtrvtrcr tt frr. orth . and merit lwxnn krtowo. No ihr i rwinedy la ao prmpt or (f-taal. or o i rleaaot to lak S-4d ". O Lhotnav DrutiHt, Loubjri. X."c. - E. F. YARBOROUCH, Insurance. NeL5H."dlnR. Leultburg. N. C Flrta Compinlti 1 MPCRIAL,of London, PALATINE, of Mtnchtltir, WllliamaburghCity.of . Y. British Amarioa, Toronto, Atlanta Horn, Atlanta. property inurl on Uromhl tornut. IH!in- -.-xria!ly i!Kit.i. Itooda arraogKi for oCSr. and rUn boldio pckltion. of trat al anall HOTEL EMORTiiP LOUISBURC, N.C.,1 W. TIN, PROPRIETOR. NKWLY FINISHED AMlFl'RMSilED Tin: IUt Fakk., CoMKoHTjini.KniMiii, Poi.iTi: Seuvat. inn C33ie:ei:i cf i U:.tn H:tr. Gannaway Hardware Company. WHOLESALE ISD RETAIL HARDWARE. LOL'ISUL'UO.- N. C. We ba jntt opened ind complete Stock of Lr? Hardware, and prop'v at all tima to carry a Pull Line of all Kinds of Agricultural Implements and other supplies oce led on Farm. tbe CT Please call and eiamioa oar Stock before tDakiof your par eKajM. THE UNIVERSITY. :nz 17 Teachers. 4 13 Students, (Sum mer School 15$)Tu'al, 549. Hoard $S a month. 3 Brief Courses, 3 Full Courses, Law and Medical Schools end School of Pbart&axr. GRADUATE COURSES CPEITO W0UE1. Summer School for Teachers. Scholarships and Loans for tbe Needy. Address, pRUI0r.5T Albermas, Cbape U ii!, N. C. - NORWOOD HOUSE VI J.ftcn0D,rrrie44. , r t - . - P4troajre ot Coaoarttal Toarlau im raeaUa rmbOa loadt4. - ' ' . Cooel aaaU Ttrr jfviixn Horn to sroxai ax poyrt Been . . -. ,, mi H (a mm Absolutely Pure. .LIMITED D0UBLEDAJLY SERVICE MtTM aoct. l 3 11 JVii I ii a 5 trti it "3 14 !U1 M ...5 10 IT n ' I a 4 ''i r.;,, IS O-ii.j-t-T-t lTa l. I . . .. ' 7 A ( I. 1 J 4 an 3 J It ,M la , Oil l--i ".'..w r r f r M : a . T i t f T. MUTHKU.N RAILWAY. riKUIOIT AIM LIHil, 0NHK.6EI SCHEDULE. I.V KFPECT JAM'ART I. IA4, Taata liuri aVALaaT v. e 1 !X A IL Cti kX q, Ice aa l"trai a. j iTl T ! -jta ae Jlorva ' 1 riMi i r-t at fTisrj. t aat la Hier oelA t. aaaa. 4kt. , w ur rt. ai (Vm, euT. taMirf wra.uie. f Aj. Uala aakt aJ Bwate uta. CcMrta ax lraa j rtf je-t ClraTtB aa4 &7iua nint Vkaeate aa aU.ieu Vitl iL4aata; taa m tor .fc4 rVoa Mdft toa i?far te, mxm fvaa 34rta,a-4 wtia at a ua traia u Ism lx.kM.abaaK4 aa f-it.ra. 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The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 27, 1897, edition 1
1
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