Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / Oct. 1, 1897, edition 1 / Page 1
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';..& v,"-'-. '. . : .. - .... ... v ...... jjetnodist Church Directory - cnndav School at 9:30 A. M. -San Gbo. S. Baker. SLapt. Preaching at 11 A. M., and 7 P. M., " pivr meeting Wednesday night. rr y G. F. Smith. Pastor. tt 4 w t w i w r - h. LUU1M5UKU, li. UFWDAY,; OCTOBER I,; 1897 XUMBEH33 SHUT IN A VAULT. l-roie ssional cards, D K. ;. r. Bl'KT, KACriCING PHYSICIAN, Louisburg, N. C. V ()ffir(. i t ho Ford Buildinjr, corner i v.,.1, streets. Dp stairs front. i till a Main M. II. KUFF1N, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Luuisburg, N. C. Will I1 Buil'li"; u t ice va all court Office in Ford corner of Main and Nash streets. B. MA.SSENBURQ, ATTORNEY AT LAW. LOUISBUBS, . c.i vi iii i.ractice in all the Courts of the State otiice in Court Hoase. c. M. oK)KE & SON, t ATTORNEYS-A.T-LAW, LOUISBUB6, H. C. : Wni attend the courts of Nash, Franklin, n.onriii.'. Warren and Wake counties, also t Jnmvuie courtof North Caroline, and the D. jj iircuit auJ District Courts. I) r. J. E. M.AL0NK otllce two aoors oeiow njt .iriiir store, adloininir Dr. O. L. cocke Ac Bills. Co.'s D r. W. U. NICHOLSON, F. PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, L0UISBUR6, H. O. 8. SPRUILL, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, LOUISB0K8, H. C. Will Attend the courts of Franklin, Vance, Otunviiie, Warren and Wake .counties, also the Miprcuie Court of North Carolina. Prompt itirutMii given 10 couecuons, sc. rpEOS. B. WILDER, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, L0UISBUB9, K. 0. Office on Main street, over Jones s Cooper's tore. W. BICKETT, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, LOUISBUKS K. C Prompt and painstaking attention given to every matter intrusted to nis nanas. Kefers to Chief J ustice Shepherd, Hon. John Minniiik'. Hon. Robt. W. Winston, Hon. J. C. Buxton, fres. Kirst National Bank of Win ston, 01 'im & Manly, Winston, Peoples Bank of Monroe. Chas. K. Taylor. tree, www roi- est College, Hon. E. W. Timberlake. off ice in Court House, opposite Sheriffs, AY. M. PERSON, ATTORNEY AT-LAW, LO01SBTJB8, 5. C Office ti- Joms & Practices In all courts, louper Building. U YARBOROCOH, JB. ATI ORNEY AT LA W , LOUISBURO, N. C. oifice on second floor of Neal building Main Street. All legal business intrusted to him 7 ill receive prompt and careful attention I). T. SMITHWICK, DENTIST, LOUISBURG, N. c. I , - , J Office in Fnrd Rnildinfi-. 2nd" floor, .cepteu aiiu agrccu . . . ; " . . . ; , - i- - a a; Was administered and teetn extractea Dusiness euucaiiuu, without pain. JR. E. F. EARLY, DENTIST, LOUISBURG, N. C. Colonel Harry Ford was the presi dent of a j big, bank in a western etate, and the colonel arid I were, at the chronicling of this tale, in New Yort, .. . whither we had. gone as chance" traveling companions on a train from the west It was on Snn day morning, and as we took it easy m the handsome apartments he was occupying a messenger boy brought him a telegram. ; The message was from his wife,, and, the boy being a bright eyed youngster, the cheerful colonel chatted with him pleasantly a moment ana gave him a quarter us he departed. Doesn't that make telegraphing, I -w-v, .ynj J. lUUlUiCU. wim the true Yankee spirit "of thrift VI used to be one myself, 'Ahe said in explanation "and now whenever. I see a bright eyed kid like that I warm up to hinvand give him some thing, though not always a quarter. Being bunday and the telegram be ing from my wife, I do a bit better than usual and part with all of 25 cents." "Do you really mean that you were once a messenger.boyt" I ask ed in great surprise as I looked over the elegant manof the world, every inch a gentleman born, who satin the big chair by the window grace fully poising a cigar in his thumb and finger. - "Really and truly," he laughed, "and if yo'u can stand a reminis cence this morning I'll tell you the story of my life.' Journalists" and he bowed over the arm of the chair "I believe, are always on the look out for interesting facts in history and fiction, aren't theyf" I hastened to assure him that they were, and after making me swear that I would keep awake at what ever sacrifice he began. "When I was a youngster of 10," he said, "I "was a messenger boy earning the luxurious salary of 3 a week, all of which I gallantly turned over to my mother, who was a banker's daughter though she had been turned out of her father's house because she had not married to suit him and her stepmother. In deed she had gone further and married the man who had suited her, and after that, while her heart was never empty, "she and her hus band and only son were often so, and life was not quite as rosy as it might have been. We were brave people, though, and with my $3 a week we managed somehow to get along, I improved after a year or two and incidentally picked up teleg raphy, so that when I was 15 I got a place at a small country station in Missouri and took my mother there to live with me on my salary of $40 a month, my father having died a year before. 'When I was 16 my mother died, leaving me alone in the world. At the funeral my grandfather re lented sufficiently to propose that he educate me, which proposal I ao- to take a good By the time 1 was 21 I had been graduated, and my grandfather gave me a position in a bank he owned in a very pleas ant interior town, where I showed of the big vault open, so the last man. out of the bank could put the books away and ' .lock them up against fire. The man. who did this nearlyalways .was .an' old fellow. partly deaf, and a janitor rather than a clerk. One day. when I had -shot up the inside safe and gone out 10 30m Kate in her trap at the door, she sent me back to wait until she went up town to see a friend about a church supper they were interest ed in. Old Jockr as we called him, was not at :his desk when I came back, though I had said goodby to hjm as I went out, nor was there any one in the bank, and as I e&t a moment at my own jlesk I noticed a paper that had been left thereby mistake, I got up at once to put it where it belonged in the safe, and as I went into the vault I did not observe that all the books had been put away,-though I could hear old Jock in the little room back telling his boy about sweeping out The paper belonged in a pigeon- as respond, even at long Intervals, to the knocking on the outside, and I sank to the floor with my head against the cold steel wall between thelight of the wot Id and the dark ness of death. As I lay there pant, ing I hoard the dull thud of the beat ing on the outside, and it eoon came as a beating of time, or rather eter nity, a measure of music to soothe me to sleep, and I sank away into semiconsciousness and seemed to be dreaming. . "You know they say that when a man is dying under unnatural or violent circumstances all his past life comes back to him, even in mi. nute detail. It did not' quite appear to me that all my life was passing in review, before, me in my. dun geon, but it did seem au if the yoath of my life had comeback to me, and I thought -I was once again in that little telegraph station on the Mis souri river catching the clickety click click of the instrument on my table, and which always Beemed to hole far back in the vault and high- me as important as a ship's deck is Office in New Hotel building, 2nd Qoor. Gas administered and teeth ex tracted without pain. D" R. E. KING, DENTIST, LOUISBURG, N. C. "men in Opeha House Building Secosd Floob. Willi ;m experience of twtnty-five years 'i mi mciPDt guarantee of my work in all uie up. i o-date lines of the profession. HOTELS. HOTEL WOODARD, W. C. WOODABD, Prop., Rocky Mount, N. C. Free Bus meets all trains, Ra"S$2 per day. ' ' FRANKLINTON, N. C. Good accomodation for the traveling Good Livery Attached. ; ; . V 0SBORN HOUSE, ''. D. 0SB0EN, Proprietor, SOxford, N. C. t Good travel mg public. . massenburgjoteikI up, so that I was oompelled to go up a stepladder we kent there, and about the time I had got myself hid away in the shadow the big door swung to, and I could hear old Jock turn the combination out of "joint. I yelled out, but it was too late, even if the old man's ears had been sharp, and I found myself in the disagree able predicament of being shut up in my own safe and no visible means of escape. At first it struck me as ludicrous. Then it became serious, and in a few moments I had gone to tfiinking as those people think who are confronted with tremendous momenta in their lives. I soon de cided that my only hope of getting out was through Miss Vernon, who, when she returned, would naturally inquire for me, and in this way old Jock would in time discover that he had shut me up in the vault. How long it would be until Miss Vernon returned or what chance of the old man still being there when she came now began to demand discus sion in my brain, and for a minute or two I stood still in the thick darkness and listened to my heart beating. Then I remembered that we always kept a hammer in a pi geonhole near the door, and, groping around, I found it and at once began to pound on the door. Immediate ly a response came,but of. course I did not know who was giving it, though evidently the boy, as the old man could scarcely have heard. This gave me hope at once, and I set up a regular tattoo on the door with my hammer, to all of which came the responses from the out side, but it was not getting me out of my prison, and confinment was becoming irksome. "For the first time now I heard faintly the sound of human voices calling to me, but it was as if they were miles away, and I could not distinguish whose they were, though I thought I knew Kate's. I answered back, but the place was so thick and heavy that my voice frightened me, and I used the ham mer instead of calling. Up to this time I had not thoroughly realized what my entombment meant, but now it came upon me that the only man in town except myself who knew the combination had gone such aptitude that the old gentle-1 away for a vacation to the seashore man entirely forgave me for having' and that with the door airtight, or practically so. I could not live a -ft- w very great while in the vault, cer tainly not long enough to hear from either the clerk on vacation or from the people 'from whom we had bought the safe in St. Louis. In deed, if I stood it for two hours I felt I would be doing well, for my pounding had filled the little air I had with dust, and it was nearly suffocating ma The pounding from the outside increased the dust, too, and, while I could prevent myself from doing it and did stop, the very fact of my stopping made those on the outside pound harder, as if to encourage me when, as they thought, I was losing hope. "This thought came to me with a shock so great that I almost collaps ed. I caught at the eides of the vault in the inky darkness, and for a minute I became deathly sick. Following this came almost a frenzy to veil and howl and claw at the door and scratch my face and teal at my hair. I had heard of people acting so and going mad when lost in caves and such places,- and I felt it coming on me in" that dread ful hole. To ad d to the horrors of my situation, the air was growing rapidly worse, and I could not stand up in the vault without a feeling of the most profound nausea.- It was the nausea of despair, . if any body ever has analyzed just what that la At -intervals, notwithstanding the harm, of it, I would grope around for the hammer and . pound on the floor.- only to choke- more and "to the re sponses from the outside. trap'she owned, leaving tne Dan i l-iwo xeei iroin ugataumur auu t nftoT nlnsina time. 4 o'clock, love and-life and : Utterly shut, off arid driving for a couple of : hours, fxomftheni alL": It was horrible to her house. -wnere x iw been the son of his disobedient daughter and told me to go ahead, and I should be a partner some day. "The next most natural thing in the world to do was to fall in love, and I did it for all there was tn my throbbing heart, and on the evening of the day I was promoted to the cashiership of the bank I asked Kate Vernon to be my wife. I did it adyisedly, too, for my grandfa ther had told me when I married he would give ine an eighth interest in the bank. Miss Vernon wasn't tne most beautiful girl the eye of man ever rested on, and even I was forced to confess that there was too much pug in her nose for classic beauty, but she was the. Drigntest young woman in tbfc county and the cheer iest, and I was heels over - head m love with her, which made up for all discrepancies. ; - 'During all the time of my expe rience in -the bank I had kept up my nUNKLlSTOK ilOTELl"1161681: in telegraphy, and after Hate ana x naq setxxeu upuu su ture relationship I had connected her . house : with my room at the bank, .; and, whenever -1 - had tne chance I called her up and and talk ed love to her between, meals . by electricity. I don't know how much of th'at kind of talk we indulged in, but I do know that Kate became al most an jtjxpert telegraph operator and could easily.haye no ade her liy-. ing at it had there: been such a ne cessity.- -: V- ".- ;; : : ' 1; ."One of the other customs of that nhflrminsr time of love in the fore-. .j i hear the inuffied I'thudsJof accommodations- lot the " ;v? I Wotca.. to end at J 1 MaN8eDbarFr6pr supper with her. On the days, when she would teiegrapn.aowii iii t Henderson; n. a accommodations. Good fare. Po lite udtnttTrrTifi; was" coming I would , lock up the "money and valuable ; papers in fbe inside safe and leave the outet doors ihmk:Lofaid I anv sure a. thousand times worse than if I had been bin ie4 in the 8ands of , a deselt a hun-' dred iniles from water - and green trees.'- Slowly I felt my strength go ing, and at last I oould not so much to an admiral. I seemed to be bear ing the 'calls' of operators all along the line, but I gave no recponse, and then the scene changed, as it does so suddenly and unaccountably in dreams, and I was at my instru ment in the bank listening with all of a lover's eagerness for the first call ot Kate Vernon over the wire had put up for her. "It was very faint and far off, and I think I must have smiled as I bent my ear closer to the instrument to catch the sound, having in mind my sweetheait at the other end of the wire essaying ner nrat attempt in handling the- Qhtning. For a mo ment it was vague enough, with its modest little clickety click click. put all at once it seemed to say something to me. I could not dis tinguish at first, but presently it took form, and 1 could catch the 'call' I had taught her. It was the letter K, repeated over and over again, just as all" operators do when they want some other operator who is not at his desk to respond prompt ly. Then it was the clickety click click of the letters that formed my name, and 1 smiled to think that aa a child learning to talk says 'mam ma' fiiet, so Kate was saying fiist in this new language of the wires that she was learning the name ot her teacher. "But there was something more than a dream in the sensation I was experiencing. I oould feel that it was something more than a dream. I knew that pome sound mutt be shaping my dream for me, and, without knowing what 1 was doing and within odd Reeling of the very peculiar key we had put on our in struments, I took up the hammer and sounded my 'call' to Kate Id response to what I was hearing. In. stantly the 'call' was repeated and my name followed. Now I seemed to throw off the niLhtmare, and 1 roused myself. Striking with the hammer on the door, I called to Kate by name, and then, distinct enough, though muffled, I heard the clickety click click on the outer door, and Kate was telling me in the mysteri ous manual oi morse a message oi courage and hope. "And what a wonderful strength is hopel Now that 1 had established communication with the outside world I took gTeat courage imme diately, though I did not understand just what or how 1 was going to do to be saved, for I confess that I was not very clear headed at this time I thought only of telegraphing to St Louis for the combination and had, actually signaled to Kate to do so at once, and I would try to keep up until word was received, whon, to my indignation, she laughed at me over the wires that is, the door plate and told me to telegraph right then and there to her what the combination was and she would do the rest "How plain and simple, that wasl And I had never thought of it Nei ther had I thought of telegraphing to her from my prison, and it was only because she was a woman that she ever thought of sending word through that dull door to me with a hammer. She has since told me that some men never will learn anything unless it is hammered into them, and I never Bay a word. Anyway, when, three minutes after I had told her what the. combination was, the door opened and I fell forward into the fresh air of the world of sun Bhine Kate caught me in her arms, and it was her voice I heard faintly and far off as I had heard the click ety click click of her tapping that led me back to life and light and love once mora ". ''"And you uvea happily ever after I" I inquired after so long tf si lence that I was surprised at myT Belf.-V':;v :-f - TV.. My boy," said the banker ear nestly, she has eaved ray ure a hundred times since, that and I wouldn't trade her for all the other Women in the world. And when she sees this story in print,'' he added, laughing, ''I'U need to have my life saved again, but she won't do it, 111 bet a hcrse and harness. y..-.. She. must? draw the line some where,' said L"W. J. Lampton in Washington Star, -IF. YOU VALUE MONEY 7 TI1KN GO TO- THE CASH BARGAIN . --HOUSE,: (Rodgerrou's building, front of Hart's Warlou.) - At lees tban Coet of Manufacture. ITS CASH WE WANT AND CASH WE MUST HAVE Then We raurt Slaughter i-rlces l ebotrn below-. Meo'a all wool pnot a low ah Mio'a good vool oit low urn nn oit, doth woaM col tnu re or. Importer! Clar ArtHl suit worth SlO.ltOO. lor llfn't gool Over coat. haaffnl prW. only Urti'n Cap, wll werTwhrr at 25c lor Urn' Carter thiHn, regular reroH . brnkll. Men' Hock. iroo weight. Uadim stockier Vr.. eoch or a pnir for .Note above price, weijtb in your mind all tbat is Mated here, Ion t spend a until you ba tried The Cash Rarain House. Your good old friend, JOHN DEITZ, Prop 92 a. 75 5.7f 3 ix 15c. 4c. 3. HaAre To sort that ya lata tnevdaaraatf She Ylbj, Bar InaJd, Td carry r T TWVI i jour 81BI i.Joaraal. . rtra Jaka. i. SOMETnUiQ TO OOW. K may hm worth soaMthUr la-mom thai th-a Trr bai odkJ for roalor Ur-Uw Urd out rroi ajttoet to hmllby rigor H Dectrio BUUrv TbU medkJaa U fxurlj vtrUtlU, acta hy glrXog too to XKm rrm CMlmli t be at omacK. CoUy atiaula!a Vh Urt M4 tMaey.M4 aMa Uim orxmaa la throwtaf off IcnpuriliM fa th Uood. Uecufo IfiUera Improve u appvUU. atda dtrfttiu. aa4 V roHiacai by Ihoae who have triad tt aa the rr Wm bloo4 MrtrWraaJ aanra toalc.Trv It SoW for A0c.ortl.00 par botUa al Aycocke A Cba Orax Stora Willie Papa, bal it a belt Una railway f Papa ue wbtre everybody baa to bold oa by a strap, I jroeea. N. Y. Tribune. Many Kara laid Lbalr chlUrwn ooU hara died of croup. If CfcajnbrrlaiaHi Cousti Heoocdy had Dot b rlro. write Kellaxa A Oarrea. drucxl- Sa- vtw, Va. -PeofJ ootna Croat far aad near to frt It vd apeak ot It la tha hlCbal Urmi." Tbla Is aqualty tna of thui ramady la aeery cooaaaaitr whara lltokaowa. Biy a bottU al 1loav' Drue Store and Ut It for Tcaraalf. 4 FOYBin Strickland Talks. to thank eTrrjbody a bo I want bought CLOTHING HATV. NOTIONS. Ac. of tne thronb tL pnt Kpriojf ad Hnmiwr. I filo briar Urfare yoa and the poUli- triraUj, a wrfl Hected and boucht stock of CLOTHING, HATS, TBUUs of ILaila. Borne eara ko, before railroad building hod reachel its present scientific basis, a train on the Chi cago, Burlington and Quincy road, which was running at what was at that timo a very high rate of ipwl, met with a moft unusual accident It was an Intensely hot day in Au gust. Those who are acquainted witu that country are willing to ad mit that the degreo of heat some times experienced in that region is little short of the boiliDg pitch. The raila were heated, and as the heavy train paaecd over them they seemed to almost give way under tbo weight Suddenly the engineer taw the track abuad of him rise from the roadbed, swing out of line, then slowly settle down on the levol prairie in an almost perfect curve. The ties and raila were not discon nected, but seenied merely to have lifted themselves up to fall in a more comfortable position. The train wu stopped, and after a thor ough examination it was deemed safe enough for the train to pass over, which it did, moving very slowly and cautiously. Experts vis ited the place as Boon as possible and declared that the incident was due to the expansion of the raila. Theii ends touched, and, there be- ing no room for lengthwise exten sion, they bad no choice but to lift themselves and form a curve. It is probablo that the jarring of the train assisted in thia matter, the vi brations possibly starting the side wise movement. At all events it was a most peculiar and interesting incident. New York Ledger. LOOK OUT! All persons that are liable, who bare failed to procure a license, as required by law, will b pro ceoded .gainst as provide iu the Revenue Laws of North Carolina. U. C. Kfaky, BberitT. August Gth. 1SS7. I NOTIONS. Ac WIDE AWARE AND UP TO DATE. VALISE. I hava n aoit of do I be tor errry man. youth atij Ujy. alo a nl lor Terr roan, jcxjth a&d boy ot tb aboWale prw. I bar the IstrC atylea of ih abov nanmj UtU i.rtb $,100 lor I3.0O. and tboa worth $225 for 1.50 aoj ao on down to 25 onla. All tbe bat Wooleo CJothicg handW m bcroxht or orUcr pL-uTfl tor ix b!ora tbetArifif bill paMtaed. Yoa kvo what it roiut for dothin. IU aara to rail and aemr oatlay bort bar ing Yoora trait. I. C. STfUCKLAND. louUborx, N. ', NOTICE OF REMOVAL. sor- If you are wide awake and want to economise by gettiog the full worth of your money, you will coma at once to castor I A HEADQLTJARTERS, For : Infant and Children. Bah. Halla at km Druggist What leads you to thick yon will make a good pre scription clerk? Applicant I used to bo a bar tender. N. Y. Jouoal. TOE U RAND EST REMEDY. Mr. R B. Oreeve. merchnot. of Cbllho- wle, Va.. certlflea that he had coosump Hon, was giren tip to die. nought all medical treatment' that money could procure, tried all cough r;cneot be could hear of, but frot no relief; spent manv ourhts sUtln? up la a chair; was induced to try Dr. Klnr New Diacor ery, and wa cured by us of two bottle. For past three veara hoa been attending . . j PI. T to DUSioesw, anu paja ur, xviok Dhcovery Is the grandest remedy ever 'made, as il has done so much for hhn and also for others in his community. Dr. Kioe'a New DUcorery is guaranteed for coughs, colds and coosumpUoo. It don't fail. Trial bottles, free at Aycocke & Co. 'a Druic Store,. Harry WaiU'f old stand, where you can fltid the Cheapest good for tbe money In Louisburg. We mean business. You will Sod nlee fresh Groceries of all kinds. Dry Goods, Notions. &c , &c. Give us a tall and yoa will be sure to call again. I bare motej m t Hurt? 8hop from tbe ataad on kLiin Street, tnxt to Knrtnmi and Mefthacla Itank. to the Avrrtck Building oa Court Street next door to tb storr rrntlr or copwd br H. Waitt. Iam now Ut ter eqoippe-d than ever to srre niy pttrona and the public pre era 11 r Sharp m in, rlo toaela. and ererythtnjr nit and tidr. I till bare aa aAitnt. NLel Thomas. the popular barber, who will be fried at all timea to bare h friroda call. Call to e me. Ilrvpectfullr. Kpwasd roKTta. Gannaway Hardware Company. WHOLESALE UD EETA1L HARDWARE, LOUISBURG, ,N. C. We bare jnst opened and cosplele Stock of Large Hardware, and propose at all times to a Pull Line of all Kinds of carry Respectfully, COOKE & CA8II. Hewitt I never could tell a good story. Jew e it Wait till yon are mar. ried, and 'yoo Ul learn. N. Y. Tribune. . - THOMAS CUILLi CILLA Are "oUaaan" the Callta vbererer tried. Farorable report areeomina-la froai erery direction. Head abatJodjre Tloibniak has to aay: ;. '" - Looleborir. N C . Mr. W (J.Tbonaa.T Jstte Stb, IS97. LoolabarKv N. C " - . - , Pui Sis-I cbeerfony bar teatlwoar to tbe Merfta ot your MII Willa." Oae ot ay rhlldrea bad cbiUa and Wree loe aerermi weeks, ableb tbe aaa! reeefa Utlexl t rare. 1 trtei taeaa pia .wiia sroua wki. Tbey not only effected a cure, bat ia proved bar geoeral bealth. Acrricultural Implements and other supplies nee Jed on the Farm. faT Please) call aad examine out Stock before aakinjr joof w NOTICK. By vtrtaee4Uewet1vw ta a certaSa inorfrajre aW4 esacateel aa the 3lk aay 4 Ivmlwr, 1hm3 by Jibm mOAm( a-a Utiabetk MeCaavag. ate wUaw t . C Vaaa. a4 4ay weoedea la Book ST. fae B23. la teoflVree4 tae Reerbtae erf Daaia c4 rraaaiia roeety. wa t4e tm tW par BM-at of eiS aaortaaf-e . I wlHea Katarday, taeSta Saf ml rioaer. 1KBT. mmU k rk at aaboe aarttoa a KraakHatoa. . CU ae Kxwviif iraem oa :laad. Irlaa aa4 Wa ta Fraahiia caty. Htata alorraalil. aaS ta l'rmaiaUe ?. leaea mm a.Trib.a m4 avaaea a- HVm Um. raaatac IWar eart ao aelea U a ataae aa4 ootatar. taeai a etaae, Uwan eat aa ao 60 poW ta tw aealaatas. eaatalaU- iNOTICE. By trfe e4 a adaanat e4 tbe ttoe ComrX of rraafcua eoaaty ta tae cj mU.L. rtlkaj, 4ataWralr m Mary A Vrff4, wm, rVkr Carve aa4 olWn. ri.aa Mff4ar tae 4tS aa 4 OrtWf. lavT. la Sroat oHWfwrt tioaaa W. la ta Taw a e4 Ltaaart. rraaklla maaty. X. f. laratwuu bUrWM ttiair laeaaOat Jiirtt ta4a la trwau Traata. fraakUa leaait. aa44 Ba. t: a ta Beeta. aa4 mim e iw 4 lliarp WaS aa4 oa tae w Wy ta toi ml ra. era aa le, Hal II arrte. taw Oae Ilaa4re4 mm lrery.rre areea.a4 ktra mm tae Werf S. Vw4w4 teaS- Try mm Im ml eoart tate la-4 mm mm earry4 4 StatSaal lata tare lote. Sax. 1 rmmtmimtmt H mrrmm. 3MH mrmm mm .S4e arts SO aot ta I areea. aH teaattaut aa tae S4Uc wii,etfc a to a miml la J. I lot wis ae etmJ loe mm rpniif. ta e aia, ea I Tae tn mm m4 mim are aaJt ru mm. Ue balaare aa taete aoaiW !. te Taie tae Tt day d Bteaaee taT. H, C tux, Martaaree. ' w.COctxrr,Atwreyt . - aaytaaata te bjaar latereaa O. t ITtXxe, Cwa . T. f traCUx, Sttaraey. taaaay e4
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 1, 1897, edition 1
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