Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / Sept. 3, 1897, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOL MVll. wetumiist (jnureu lnectui y. . , anndav School at 9:30 A.' M. V &and v Geo. S. Baker. Snpl prea,hinp at 11 A. M.t and 7 P- M; Pri yern&ng Wednesday iiWt YnJ G. F. Smith, pastor. . V A TRYING SHAVE ' ' -' ENGLISH GOOD ENOUGH. CvU AN ODD KIND OF, A TALE. I , . - ' . D r. hurt, - - KACTICING PHYSICIAN," Louisburg, N. C. DREAM DISCOVERIES. i Iecjiteein. at Tiniea to HaWthe J?oW. , , - w iwnTtng iot Memory. r " ,The Rev. Mr, Wodrow, the- his tonan of the Covenanters; is an en-thusiaeticrCalvinist.- Tt t hink,who told a poor oman with a arge iamiiy , that itjwould be an uncouth mercy if all -her. children were saved."- : This was from his point of view they, that -be saved are-f aw V. OVA . If d? 1 i TRYING SHAVE an affi.pin Hip Ford Building, corner Main '"" .... n n Ml iMIlt .-. 1. 1. KUFFIM, -w-r- i v -a- a -werT ,TT01v-SjI-AT-JUAVY, -Louisburg, N. C. " ii r n i ii-i- in all -ourt . Office in Ford ni I"" mi.:. l M....V. r ji mam auu iiaou oiitxto. (Ill IK li. ATTORNEY AT LAW. . LOUISBURG, K. a a ui ,r'i, tice in all the Courts ol the State oiiu-e in Court Boose. " rJS'-- C. VI, C'UKB & SON, . TTURNEYS-AT-LAW, L0UISBUR6, N. 0. ... attend the courts of Nash,' Franklin, Qriuvil g Circuit aua District Courts. rt-nand Wake counties, also the & 4.V. nAU. tw.a . TT i 11 r I I IT IHOrLIl U2VTUU11U. KUU LUB U- J) R. J. E. MALONK . . . . . ,,m. two doors Deiow aycociuj s vu. a w""- r r 1 VIII. drag Btort- ka. w. u. nicuousojs, D" PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, LouisBUse, . a Sl'HLlLL, ATTORNEY-AT-IiAW, L0UISBDB8, If. 0. . . .. Win attend the courts of Franklin, Vance, ai.i:iiii. Warren and Wake counties, also uie isuurf we uourt of North CaroUna. Frompt .tteiitiou K'veI1 10 collections. rpHOS. B. WILDER, A ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. " L0UISBUR6, K. 0. Offlce ou Main street, over.Jones & Cooper'B Itore. V m W. EICKETT, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. louisbubo h. a :.; Promiit and painstaking attention given to every ui;ill' r intrusted to his hands. - i; Refers in chief Justice shepherd, Hon." John -Uninmr Hon. Robt. W. Winston. HOB. J. C. BuiUjii, frea. First National Bank of Win ou, Glenn & Manly, Winston, Peoplea iBank of Monroe, clias. E. Taylor, Pres. Wake For? est College, Hon. E. W. Timberlake. 1 . -office in court House, opposite (Sheriffs. w. il. PERSON, ATTORNEY AT-LAW, ; louisbubb, ma - Practices in all courts. Office li Jonr s & (oiir Uuilding. w. II Y ARBORODQH, JB. ATTORNEY AT LAW, ILOUISBURO, N. C. -Ulfice on secon d floor of Neal boilding Mailt Ml t el. All 1. business intrusted to him trill receive prompt and careful attention JJK. 1). T. bMITHWICK, DENTIST, I.oriSBURG, N. c. -z- s . ' - - OfEcc in Fofd Building, 2nd. floor, (ias administered and teeth extracted without pain. '. . JjR. E. P. EARLY, dentist, LOUISBURG, N. C. Office in New Hotel building, 2nd noor. (7aa administered and teeth ex tracted without pain. ? . . ... R. K KINQ, DENTIST, LOUISBURG, N. C. V" : Offk k in Opera House 'V bniLDiNQ Second Fijooh. . nil .in experience of twtnt-fiye years biimc n ut guarantee of my work' inaiJ ue ui-io-,iiVte lines of the profession. . HOTELS. HOTEL WOODARD, W. C. WOODAitD", Vtoii Rocky Mount, N. C. ne Him meets all trains, Rh,u'j 12 per day. ' "M of a dozen, and their mother actually pxyevw u meet mem aU in the New Jerusalem. Such a merov wnnm u : uuwmu. ,aflen vvoarow believes in every kind of portent and miracle and warning, and .-bogie, , down to w". -uAaiijei.- tost Bermon, mar- yelonsly .; pursuing him and rejoin iug mm as ne naes. ,: xne ioiiowmg anecdote, would nave delighted Wodrow, though now ne would have classed it I can not guess. :A gentleman, very well Known in many ways, was at his house, in the country, where a vounc lady : was . visiting himself and his wife. She lost a pearl from a ring. It could not befound, and she went home. Four or five weeks later she again visited - her friend's, arriving in the evening, and, as it happened. not going into the library that day. jn ext morning, while dressing, her host said to his wife: "Did you remember to take away the pearl that Mary lost from the place where I put it? "You never said . anything about it," answered the lady. "Oh, excuse mel I told both you and her that I found it in a chink of the bureau in the library, and put it on top of my papers, and I asked you to take it lest the servants should dnst it away in the morn ing' - .. - - The lady then went to her guest's room and asked her if she remem bered being told about the discovery of thepearL, She agreed with her hostess that the subject had not even been mentioned. "Then the maids will have swept it away," said my friend, and he ran down to his study in his dres ing gown. The pearl wasnot where he remembered having laid it, but .he looked in the crevice whee he said that he bad found it, and there lay the peark : - One explanation would be that he had dreamed the whole affair, the dream being suggested by an uncon scious: or. subconscious perception of the pearl in the crevice. But he cannot recall any dream on the sub ject. -He was certain that he had found, the thing when wide awake, taken it out of the chink, placed it on the top of his papers, and told both ladies. It is just conceivable that he actu ally did find it and place it .on the papers; that, meaning to inform the ladies,he believed that he had actu ally done so and that the pearl was accidentally swept r back by the housemaid into the chink of the bu reau whence he had rescued" it. This would not have been Wodrow's ex planation, but it would have recom mended itself to Dr. Carlyle. I know personally ol four cases in which lost articles were discovered by a dreaBbf the loser'a ; The last case was the key of the cellar an awkward thing to lose. After it had been missing for days the owner dreamed that it was lying in a cer tain drawer, where it - was found, though -why, how or when it was placed there memory could not re call, ! Sleep seems occasionally iq have this power of reviving lost memories of things done or perceiv ed with, imperfect waking con sdousness. Andrew Lang m Long man s. , : -' - ..- Tb Mobammedans a Military Cruild. " - The Mohammedan population of the Turkish empire has been very patly compared to an immense re licious confraternity. It is, in fact, h vast military guild, or brother hood; bound to obey the commands of - its supreme cnieia, mo oucxa.-ui- Islam and the sultan: Kvery 'i-uric ought, in a certain sense, to , oe a priest and a warrior-: Kemem Dering reaaii v -a unueri BaTulas;'Exprlenoo f a Drummer CTno -,Had Uelpod lynch s Mecra 'Here is the rstorv ..tha'; traveling man told Cohductor Quiggie. cm tho ears while traveling- between Har risburg and Williamsporti Said the traveling man ; 4I was down south on a business trip " some months ago and I did a pretty jair business for that section, t One evening - I ; got into a town - where I expected to do som trading, and after having sup per J sat on the hotel veranda smok ing when I noticed a crowd coming down the street and" there was con siderable excitement apparent As the crowd drew near I saw it was a lynching party. About 100 men had a rope ind they weTe hurrying along a colored man who had been caught red handed in some crime for which lynching is the penalty in that sec-; tion. It was a wild, crazy mob that had the man.nd I'll never tell you what impelled me, but I jumped up and went along, catching hold of the rope as I ran. A mile beld w the town the end of the rope was thrown over the limb of a tree and the col ored man was strung up and the end of the rope fastened. Then those who had revolvers took turns at fir ing shots into the dangling corpse, "The .next morning after I had breakfast I went out for a walk and passed a barber shop. I needed a shave and I went in and took a seat in the chair. The barber was a col ored man, and I recall now that he looked at me in a peculiar way as I entered the shop, but it did not im press me at the time. He lathered me in a slow, deliberate way, and then he got out his razors, stropped one of them carefully and prepared to shave me. As he drew the razor down over my right cheek he re marked, 'You is a etranger in dish yere ton, isn't you, sunt' 'Yes,' I said, 'I came last night.' I saw yju last- night,' he remarked. 'Where was If I asked. You had hold of the rope when you passed dish place. "My heart sank down to my shoes and I gave myself up to silent prayer. This man had me at bis mercy. He could have cut my throat with one swish of bis razor, and he knew it and I knew it kl saw you again,' be said. ' W-w where !' I asked- 'Down .at da hangin. You had hold of de rope down dere too.' 'Y-yes,' I gasped. I thought sure my time had- come, and that he was just playing with me as a cat plays with a mouse, and that he was secretly enjoying my terror previous to giv ing me a final stroke. But he calmly went on shaving me, and as he rounded up the stubble on the chin he remarked: 'You is from deiio th, suh, where de colo'ed man has bis rights, sub. Yon ought to know bettah dan to hang a pore colo'ed man down in dish yere part of the country where he don' git no trial. "And that ended the conversation I never wanted to run so badly in my life, but I was powerless, and was weak as a baby until he go through. When he had used his whisk on me, I gave him a quarter and told him to keep the change and left the shop. Say, if .you ever hear of me mixing into a lynching bee again you want to have me placed in an asylum. That taught me a les son. How did I know that the man shaving me was not a relative of the man that was lynched?. It might have been bis brother and he would not have dared to open his mouth. That time I hunted trouble and found barrels of it " Harrisbufg Telegram. There la Beldam Any .Be on Tow ' ; ploying" Ve! Word.' . - 13 there any reason' for using a foreign language when the idea can "be expressecTwith' equalvclearnet-s,' brevity and force in our own Anglo Saxon f ; la there any sense in ty ing that a 'man has $1,000 per an num when we-mean $lv000 a year! Why should we say that the people of -the United States .drink on an average every year so many gallona of distilled spirits per capita when we mean so many gallons each, or, we may say a head I We may ikUI that the word&per capita are a sole cism, meaning by headi- If ar'c ciie to use any Latin in the premirca, we should consult correctness and say per caput : ' What earthly reason for calling a popular hymn and tune ' bik "Laudes Dominil" It sometime happens that there are ideas con veyed -by a foreign word which hardly have an equivalent in Eng lish. In these cases it perhaps permissible toi borrow the foreign word or phrase. .For examplo, we possibly have no single word which is the equivalent of the French persiflage. That however, has been adopted into our dictionaries and may.be considered an English word of French . parentage. But doca mauvais honte express any thing not conveyed by falso shame! And is sang froid anything more than cool blood i The use of foreign words and sen tences is peculiarly Inappropriate ij inscriptions which are to be read by the plain peoe. When the friends of the departed Dr. Gold smith appended their signatures to a round robin, begging that the epi taph upon the poet might be in Eng lish, and when the czar of uteia ture, with wonted absolutism, said "An English inscription would bo a disgTace to Westminster abbey," he was wrong, as positive people are very apt to be. Of the millions who have read with delight "The Trav eler" and the "Deserted Village" and "The Vicar of Wakefield!' how small a fraction of 1 per cent are those who know aught of any lan guage but English 1 When the fathers and mqthers, the sisters and sons, of the mep who died in the war for liberty and union read, with dimmed eyeo, upon th monument erected by gTateful coun trymen the story of the virtues and sufferings of their heroes, it is hard that they should be confronted by a Latin sentence which remind3 them of theii ignorance of classic toDgues. It is possibly well enough to have a Latin or Greek inscription in Me morial ball of Harvard university, for those who read it can look as if they understood it, but what reason tor putting over the memorial to Colonel Shaw and his black soldiers the Latin motto of the Cincinnati, which mocks his surviving comrade and the eons of those who fell at Fort Vagner with their enforced ii literacy? As if to add to the infe licitv of the situation, scholars tell us that the inscription is not even good Latin. "Reliquerunt omnia conservare rempublicam" should bo " Ut conservarent rempublicam." The neighboring monument on tho common, erected by the state of Mas sachusetts to the heroes of the war, bears, fittingly, an inscription that is English throughout Philadel phia Press. Told by a Tmrater Telegraph Oparata at ' ; , ; Bed IMtU . - I There is hi Washington telo graph operator'whoforthe past five or six years has been able, to live without work, becauae,- after : 23 years of faithful service at the tick er, an old aunt , of "nl died in New Jersey, leaving him money enough to pay off all his debta and net him an income about twice as big aa he ever made per year at bis dek. . c "I had an odd bit of exiericnce fence," he naid the other flay to a Star "man which 1 have told a good many limea, tut never to a newspa per man, and very rarely to any body in the last ten or a doxen years. You haven't forgotten, of course, the most lost person of our modern history, one Charlie Road. Well, when he was etolen, I "was an operator at a raining - town of l.OCOj or 1,200 ; people," called Red Dirti something oTer 100 miles from Den- rex. 1 may say that there isn't any town there at all now and ha? n't been for 15 years. "There wasn't a great deal of businer dune ovi-r the Ued Dirt wire, and my duties after dark wens mostly nt the leading gambling place in town, which was the only rcupcctable resort we had. 1 "slept in tho office to be handy in case of sudden calls, and ono night about n year or 16 months after the Charli" IWs disappearance I had just re turned from the Seven Up saloon usually known as the Seven Uppers Houao and was getting into bd when i was startled by tbo tlckei beginning to have spasms. "1 rushed to it to find out wbal was tbe matter, and, as I did o whoever was making the ditirl ance had got himself in shapo, and as fat as he could get tho word Ut uie be was telling me th.it bo was one of the men who had stolen tbe Ross boy, and was then inthoh.indh of the others, who refusod to restore the child to bis father end, hail threatened to kill him (tbe wndtr) if he made any attempt to tmtray the party. They bad tbe boy with ! them then, and they were at' aixl ? here there was a worse spa?m thnn ever, and uot another tick came To say I was shaken up but ill ex presses it. but it was a stormy nigbt. and to go (searching was impuNcible until daylight, and, nctifyintt our town marshal of what 1 bad beard. 1 Tbe KasbtilU Banner ajtthr is a child thret months old in to si citr tthocaaUlk dUtlbcllj. Girl, of course. - : . BHEUMATISM CURED. - A flr r mlnat rHjlclaaa and alt thtr kDOQ remedies fait. DoUrOe Blood liaIfB.(0L B. B will quietly cur. ThouaarH of tratamoolals alUal U fact No ca.t of ItUaotnatUci cast Valid lefore tu marfc hJiar power. SrMl atamp for boos of rtlc?ar It contain aviJeoc thai will cowlae rou thai B. B. IV. H tbe brt nr for all lilood and Skirl DU ae ever diC9vr Beware of sub oilu tea said to b -jut aacoodL fl 00 pr Urg lotU. For Ml by drugjtwt. In tbapubllc schools of Japan EojjliBh IsoQsge it rfqatrcd by law to be taught.' Mr. Jaroe K. Frr!l. of Burnt V. Vs., has!Ucartid all other dUrv rhoea medicine od Row baod oely Chamberlain's Colic. C'boltna a ad Char rhoea Kerotdy. lie baa uel tt la bhi family aad acid it to his customers for year, and baa no bcttatkn ta aafief that 11 U the bat remedy for colic aad durrbvea. he ha ever idoo. It Dot only ivea relief, but affects a (rau neot cure. It U alv r4ea.aot and aafe to take, tnaktn tt an klU rwmedv for bowel comflalrtt. For aal by W. G Ttiomaa Drupist, Loubur. N. C - : e e i - -Absolutely pure ! ! C-W,i e la yveat Uaevt eff1a a I MliUh.., lmn IV t jo4 af ae e eadelrmao4 a:twlea ra to lU(i aoTAt BASisanjwtixacu.xsw Teas. IBUU .LIMITED D0UDLE DAILY SERVICE r-n-TMROt.XU. t HOTEL EMORY louisburg; nc,'1 W. K. MARTIN, PROPRIETCR. Y t ualVaa kali wi aaa On m I k.ifcU - 1 If II Oi aaa P-iroi SIS i SO I i I'ortiatMit " lttaierxa XO US leraa 1 r 9 13pm SOdaet a IS fa 1 1 - o pvm 1 1 Lt, as Ii Wai ! ayaea 3J ll loaaa NKWLV KlSISHKn.AMriTRSISltRD Thf'Hit Fare.I CtiMKOBTAnLI Jl!fH)M, I'OUTESCBVAXT. r4fct.-l Ham Uut rjr Oiia. tirwaeood. Jbrtoa, -Alburn. - AlUsta I di T .V i k r iV lun's u' ; iiUftu tu r a L f ' WtS'i- - l3trtoe. Atrvf : (jreucki. ."ttci.. tltur a - - 10 up a. e. "i I a A 14 vea S IS ft CJ 4 It S Vi & lu as i -4 all 43 1J a ' 9 foal lu 2i invito canmy only neigDDor u.o:t!ir, CQa,HfM- ftt t Ujm mt Ujrcraiur ou iuu umiu muv, uriv the Red Dirt branch tapped him. Cu miles away. "1 could not get him, and after repented failures I went to bed, to start off with tho marvhal at day break to find out wliat tbe matter was We did not strike it till next day in the afternoon, when, in out of the wildest parts of the moun tains, about ten miles from (he rnuin liDe, we found the wire cut ami evi deuces of a Ktruggle at tbe foot of a telegraph pole, with irpots cf blood on tho stones about the place. What it meant, who bad done it, wby the parties were there, whether tbey were as the one bad represented, or anythingin the way of explanation, we did not know. All we knew waa what -had come to me over tbo wire at midnight We went on to the main wire, but tbe operator .there was on a drunk and had been for 36 hours, and heilid not know much as we did." Washington Star. Gannaway Hardware Company. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL HARDWARE, Clir, S a" iiHoM. Verte. I HeWt. WtUtl t'.im A r 1 1 4fo u. Iu47 pm .. s oo Hitall 10 aaa 10 34 I vT 1 1 CO 1 4 ISO? pee 3 41 1)S a 45 ua, 4 so a sj & to 4 Oj t 12 oo rm 7 &J pm a 4u pm lO 42 I 1 1 4 15 IlUta - 15 1 40 5 41 1 OS S4 t5 0 U- 7 thia fact, we can stand the ease with which the spirit nf fanaticism is roused m those por; tions of the empire where the Turks tten before the flood. The Oldest Book. The oldest book in the world to which a positive date can bo assign ed is an assortment " of proverbs i somewhat after the 6tyle of the nroverbs collected by Solomon, The work; is accredited to Ptab-hotep, an Egyptian king, and Egyptologists I assign to it an anitquity of. at least 3000 B.:X!. Abraham was called to leave his home in Ur ofv the Chal- dees,"-1921 B. C, so that this volume was written l,i00 years before the beginning of Jewish, history. The deluge is placed; by" most cbronolo gnsts at a a 2318, so the book, if its dating is: "correct imusV have been Methuse-. FIIA1 .ITrri-W n ATKf.t are in the maldrity, and the feroci V " - " . .. . . . . .. .x j .iwu.nw, "- t?v ; ahd eomewhat . lnainereni; . naiureu i pr0Yerbs, were collected when the FRANKLINTON m '020 Z:itt'L MERRILL Ft f r l; lab was born B. CL 3317, so that this naovrus : was - preparea ana tnese Rood accomodation for the traveling oa Livery Attached. people will behave runder the influ : ence of what 1 may can religious m- rt-riaHrTi -."The Sultan ana liis Subjects. oldest man onirecora was a young fellow of "300 years.;!: lively 0SBORN HOUSE; C D. 0SB0RN, . Proprietor, '3 Oxford, N.C. ood accommodations for: the deling public. , f V: 1- J 11 Mnwiaciibiirfir; rxopr HENDEBsbir. 11, d. 3'&acoaai aid ClTiUalou' 'j ; ; It is an "odd theory, ;yet no doubt tha correct onel that the coasf area of Europe has probably had more to do with the commercial and social Bupremaoy of ' that" continent ; than any fotber causeInVestigaiion will show that Europe has a mile of coast for every .164 square miles of its land - area;: while "the j A-merieas, which rightly come-nextj have 359 square miles of : land" to every mile ..M wa mrt shod.' v L rtf mnst. . Asia has - 376 miles - ana : 2 in the ninth centuryrthey begai Africa 530 square miles to each mile tc? shoe horseslbiit" strange to say of coast.- ; The-low order of culture only in time of frost- King William still prevailing on the dark - conti l. Introduced horseshoeing into Eng. nent, though history is as old as lonVf" oTd :ix horseshoes artt on "the that of any; other portion ": of the aoaf of arrna of the man w wwww world, is aimoss. jnmBputauia v Perpetual Sunahlne. ' Perpetnarsunshine occurs on the oast of Peru. where: although it mav be misty occasionally, the blue Trv ia aiwavs visiuio iuuSt WT.UiarV ?veilI&Perpetual; eunshine i,o-n rin snUis above thefhorizon atart flxists in the Sahara, the great Heeert of Africa, and in tne . otuer -rainless regions of the earth... Napoleon aad Mm. dIaoard. One day, during the visit of Fescb, tbe little congregation was appalled by the noise of a saber clanking and dragging on the flagstones of the hall and of a voice calling imperi ously for Gonsaive, one of the young Isoards. All of the assembly, frozen with terror, remained rooted to the spot, After a moment's .hesitation Mme. d'Isoard-courageously. opened the door. The disturber was Na poleon. ..The lady recovered her calmness and rose to the situation. "Take off your helmet at once, mon sieur," she said sternly, "and re; member where you are 1 "My son will not go with you until mass is finished. Kneel down." Napoleon submitted with the docility of a child, and, with every appearance ojf recollection, remained to the end. One of the;. things Cardinal Fesch was most vehement in asserting up to the very close of his life was that his mighty nephew, throughout all his erratic career, "never for a moment lost the faith. Donahoe's Magazine; ,: : .; r ' " - -: ?;V;r--- Sae WaaXncky, -.. V.The'IiOndon Mail says that a well known woman" of title had several times, had a manfrom the cycle maker's to execute various repairs to her i machine repairs which wera necessary ; on:account ", of the firm's careless workmanship. fler ladyship's little girl happened to be watching the execution of the re pairs with great interesC and. re marked to the mechanic, "Don't you think mamma's very . unlucky with her bikei V ;"Unlucky, did yer lay I", waa tha man'a reply, vwny, her rUayinip' alire etill ain't ahel i 4o 1 1 SI J "., i l 3 2 20 fl 05 ajft lf 'Tm II S5 1 HO At l. 1 jcy03 r . f vv-ery. T i3 Cr Wrn lo aaa ffo p m. t 1 4. k a. 4 5S aw co ta RrnaraJ A V L. a 15 iO Weaieto v Vtmrt. KR If .; 1 I JO fUJlieo. I 41 If 4 set v.. vt. Von ta. K. A.i. 7 a ui & lo pm 7 W 05 LOUISBURQ.N. C. We bars just opened and mmplels Stock of Largo .ifwr evi Utormelloe. aftJ to II. trd. AUtg P A1, wJjr. r r. Jo, tw rr Jet 4m . FL WrfW le-ral J fna!dt. rfJ Twm I oraBoUt. Ta. Ugr. Until ruiit. fra. r ki . A Gllapee at lUoikok. Maxwell Sommerville. in his book, "Siam on the Meinam, From tbe Golf to Ayutola. says tbat in the main business quarters of Bang. kok pawnbroking is a leading rail ing. Adjoining tbe pawnshops were rickety fbops, booths and stamu. where indolent dealers are prepared to supply all the wants of the pas ersbj. providing it docs not caue them too much i exertion". The bonzes, or priests, were always nu merous. "They pass from house to bous? begging, though by tho church it it considered that they are giving tbe people the privilege of thus oontrib uting something for the susteoanc of the cult- They are in the habi; of extending this privilege to tlx people every morning. This is on of the institutions, not only . of tl church." but a custom universal! recognized and approved by th people. These bonzes, wrapped it. their yellow cotton garments, stand in coteries of two, three and four in front of each house, saying not word, but - holding out their bronze bowls for rice and their netted bag for contributions of fruit" . Hardware, and prop of a at all Mo to a Full Line of all Kinds of carry William gave Taat estates for caring dence of the correctness of this tbel tS' f our .; V'Ca'ate'aartaa Olrxla. --It is well known that the eagle. raven, swan and parrot are each centenarians. An eagle kept in Vi enna died after a confinement of 114 years, and at Shel bourne is an oak known .as the raven tree, in whicL the same pair of ravens are belf cvex'i to have nested for more than W veara. V 8wans upon, the Thame sbout whose age i there, can be but little chance of mistake, since they ire annually "nicked," hava-been known to turviva HQ yean ynd raoxe, Loaaoa Echo, . Agricultural Implements sod other supplies nsied on lbs Farm. 2" Please call and eismioo our Stock before making your par- THE UNIVERSITY. 47 Teacber,-4 13 Students, (Sum mer School 15S) Total, 549. Board SS a rooath.3 Brief Coursea.3 Full onwes. Law and Medical School and School of Pharmacy. GRADUATE COURSES OPEITO WCUU- Summer School lor leacners. rVholarshirs and Loans for tb Needy." . AddreEf,'. Chapel U ill, N.C. a . r " .. ,U: :N0nW00D HOUSE wimsiai. VI:rtaCinH:i. onOoiKPrrUar. . ntrooi of CoaaaawUl TosrtaU nveHai rsUU BoUdtad. ' - CWL taaaf I Ila-aaa. . . SOUTHERN RAILWAY. rmonou aim ukili CON DEN 5 KD SCHEDULE. IN EFFECT JA.NCABT I. TH.AI.V4 LEA V S AAUUH. M, C I J A. M. Ceart el In iilm fj n kuk Mm aa4 f iaie a Ue ofUio tm Soria ' -r-Ttn iuu mao. At hlmrj. to aa aotav ta We(ra 5orth OaroAaa, kan. tU. Tna., rlaMs e4 e ttata. k Caacwaa, r lw. Uala aU pnt SLA. Ir. a OoatMvta at iarace to Otfoea.- Itailf. (tkraartlW ae4 brnlx, rmwe4 Mf At Omiiw i ou. em tao WaAbtectoei aa4 ataieii VeMiuaMrf ilJulWi. a4 tae Sew T aa rio aaon tAae tnmU ta u-Ua tjf aU pct $orta.ak& wU atftia mam tMia JTo. U . (or iMarlua. Kkaaca4 aad tt I lien UAr Kacal etjueae. aae kea eae ikwa foe "iin nmiie. --i, ta rnsala flee trata a m itaet caU) (or CWWm, rnfluUeif, Urwavtiiw, auaata aad aU awaia aoaia; atao lataUa At um, aaa aa aoate ta ear foe AUaa. Ji vuie aaa at lluVKU iu wm car far actuate aad iatAi lue. CMawrteatfMeaefoe rBfeCLeeeie aal letenaMiUta eaeltoae aa Laa k Uaoa a4 rafvltreiHe aan Cat eaufi tMMora foe evera a4 WrWJUt7. dfeaerra 9a uj; for beUatoea4 UHe Mutate ,l,Opoa e tao W. at w. k a. Cueutaerta at -raaa tm WlteM, luxar atoaav. Taruoe aad iooj ataOuttaaa orf a aad Carouaa luuiroad. am tea at a emcee lie r. M. looMta it Paraaaa foe Oafoed, Mjitw, iiiidii; at tKre, toe aaaiacxeei SUaad roeu-afcvoro. Pallf. Titaix ARxrr at aaixioa. x. c fjt Y. ai. rroea Attaata, Ckarwca. Qrm iiaur. , iro a an oata auaia A. X. Froea tiarMtarc Vmilj. aorta aad eoatx AS r. X. rom o.toeo. tauaataffaa, rirfUrtaetatia pKata ta Saa, tfreunxia. U A. kC rrvm Xra Tor. Waaaiartaa. Lraairr. Iiauie umenit. roe r. h. , rioa woaje&oea aad ad tt k r. M. lair. Sa aaaJaf ttm'jL. kL aa Baadae at a. X. Dar La. aaa. voim 4jwf-at tral& nrrr railaa rata oa mtrmatm Irti yatotre aat era, aad oa aaoraias1 train I ureaooro. Poa-aeeai'r traiaa taveea kaietrk. Cka. aua aal AUaala. bafek y. imea"kd aa eyg raoiatloa. u. t aaraxra, x r, atr-arweaa, jr. d O, O. Oax. W. A. Tnrt traaaret ewM. - ri
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 3, 1897, edition 1
1
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