tlN
VOL. XXVHI
LOUISBURG, N. C; FRIDAY,. APRIL 22, 1898
NUMBER 10.
FRANK
Methodist Church Directory
Sunday School at 9:30 A. M.
Geo. S. Bakee. Sapt.
Preaching at 11 A, M., and 7 P. M.
every Sunday.
Prayer meeting Wednesday night.
G. F. Smith. Pastor.
lJrot'essional cardM,
D
U. S. P. BUIIT,
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN,
Louisburg, N. C.
offi.-e in the Ford Building, cornerj Main
a Nash streets. Up stairs front.
B. MASSENBURa,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
LOUlSBUBe, H. C.
Will practice in all the Courts of the State
Office in Court House.
c.
M. COOKE & SON,
ATTORNEYS-A.T-LAW,
LOU1SBDRS, 5. 0.
Wni attend the courts of Nash, Franklin,
nraiiville, Warren and Wake counties, also tbe
?T, U,n Court of North Carolinp, and the D.
jj circuit and District Courts.
k h Foster. Db. J. E. Malone'
j. -
RH. FOSTER & MALONK
PRACTICING! PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS,
Louisburcr, N. C.
Ortlce in Building opposite Emory Hotel
Main Street
-yy- H. LIPP1TT, M. D ,
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON,
FRANKLINTON, N. V.
D
R. W. U. NICHOLSON,
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN,
I.OUISBUB8, H. 0.
PliUILL & RUFFIN.
ATTORNEY S-AT-LAW,
LOUisBuae, n. c.
Will attend the courts of Franklin, Vance,
w.rrn .n,i Wake counties, also
the supreme-Court of North Carolina. Prompt
attention given to couecuuuo.
T'
HG8. B. WILDER,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
touiaBuae, n. o.
ntflne on Main street, over Jones & Cooper's
store.
T.
W. BICKETT,
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW.
LOUISBUB8 N. C.
Prompt and painstaking attention given to
every matter intrusted to his hands.
Rulers to Chief J ustice Shepherd, Hon. John
. Kr.t.t W Winston. Hon. J. c.
Krot National Bank of Win-
of Monroe. Chas. E. Taylor, Pres Wake For
est College, Hon. K. v . iiiuuen.
Of f ice in Court House, opposite Sheriff's.
BILL'S WILD ROSE."
The sun was eetting in a sea of
rainbow hues behind the tall, gray
peaked mountain tops, whose som
ber jaggedness here and there glint
ed brightly where the golden shafts
of diaphanous sunbeam kissed them.
The lurid glow -of the light of the
setting sun filled the atmosphere
with a weird, nery haze, the gray
ish yellow sand of the earth gleam
ed more golden, and the dark olive
of the umbrageous trees shone of
brighter green. A group of men
are clustered loungingly about the
door of Gruff Rock tavern.
"It ain't nuthin to none of us,"
one of the miners is savins', "ex-
9 Of '
ceptin that what hurts Bill hurts
us."
"If Master David means wrong by
the girl," another says, and his fists
clinch incidentally.
'Hoi' on, Buok," some one inter
rupts him. "If in all the white
faced aristocracy there's one gen'le
man, it's Master David."
"Gosh, I wonder if Bill knows?"
"Shut up, comrades! Hereheis."
A form, uncommonly tall, stal
wart as an oak, straight as a pine,
advances toward the group. He
strides to a vacant chair in silence.
There's nothing prepossessingly
handsome about this gruff western
er excepting the gentleness that
lurks about his mouth. Bill had
perceived the seemingly mutual par
tiality of his little Rose and the pale
faced stranger, yet why had every
one perceived it?
When young Lodding, a stalwart
stripling, had come to Pawnee Bill
to tell, in his honest, faltering elo
quence, the story of his love for lit
tle Rose, Bill shook the boy's hand
with kind heartedness.
"Lod," Bill said, "Hove my little
gal better nor anything else on
earth, but you're worthy of her, lad
Go ask the chit, and my heart and
godspeed go with you."
Lodding never broached the sub
ject to Bill afterward, but his eyes
lowered and his lips twitched pain
fully whenever the great blue eyes
of Bill met his. Rose never men
tioned Lod's name now, while there
was a time when she would run to
Bill with a merry laugh to exhibit
the rare mountain stone or a brace
of game that Lod had given her.
That was before there had been a
question of love; but now well,
now it was different.
friends, but but but that is all j
it must be all."
"Well, we can still be dear friends,
but I want you for my little wife
besides.
"Your wife, David? In your
home, among your friends, I would
be"
"You would be there or elsewhere
what you are here the one woman
I love. If you would but marrv
me, Rose"
"No, no, not that David. What
could I ever be to you ? An ignorant
girl, who knows nothing but what
you learned I mean taught her.
Your wifel -We have been euch
good friends, how can you mock me
so?"
"Rose, darling! I mock you! You
are unkind !"
"Unkind toyoul As if I would
not gladly give my life to save you !
one moments pain! Unkind to!
you, dear David ! You do not know j
me. I well, I can't help loving!
you, you know, but that is all I ask 1
-let me love you with all my hearti-
let me watch your coming and i
going. Let us be the dear, dear j
friends we have been, and when j
you go away from here why why
you must go away some day, dear
David."
She turns from him as she speaks ;
her little brown hands are pressed
tightly to her heaving breast, her
lips are blanched and set, She trios
to conceal the tears that well into
her eyes.
"Rose," he whispers gently. Still
silence. He listens painfully to the
stifled sobs that wring her bosom,
and his hert aches as, with a wild
cry of "David 1" she falls sobbing
upon the rocky ledge of the cliff.
In a moment his arms are about her.
"Rose, dear Rose, have I pained
you? Rose, dear, do you love me ?"
"Yes."
"I shall ask your hand of Bill. If
he gives you to me, will you come i
Rose, I love you sol Will you
come?"
"Yes, David."
stifled sobs of Rose against her fa
ther's knee.
"Master David, Bill's cabin will
always be .happier for your comin
near it, and Rose will always be glad
to see you. Now, goodby, lad, and
God bless you. Leave my little un
to me, for her sorrow is deep, Mas
ter David."
"Goodby, Bill."
David respected Bill's word too
highly to thwart it even so much
as in thought. After that evening
Rose and he epoke of their love as
something that made their lives
more sweet, yet as something that
was going from them hourly, mo
mentarily, and in their hearts they
'How will it
SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION
NORFOLK. VA., MAY 6th-Uth.
Take away iU Claotand Ctriit
mn would loee its charm for children.
The Southern Baptist Convention, The
American RaptUt Educational So
ciety and The Womeu's Itaptiat Mis
sionary iniou .Meet in Norfork,
May Gth-litn.
OASTOIVIA.
ti M
NOTICE.
-ll tiekrt
w.
M. PERSON,
ATTORNEY AT-LAW,
LOUiSBUBe, ir. o.
u.o-.t in all courts. Office li Neal
Building.
YARBOROUGH, JB,
ATTORNEY AT LA W,
LOUISBURG, N. C.
Ulfice on second floor of Neal building
"Main Street.
trusted to him
will receive prompt and careful attention.
D
R. D. T. 8MITHWICK,
DENTIST,
LOUISBURG, N. C.
Hotel. Room 9.
'js administered and teeth extracted
without pain.
D
R. R. E. KING,
DENTIST,
LOUISBURG, N.
Office in Opera House
Bi ilding Second Floob.
With an experience of twtnty-five years
in a sufficient guarantee of my work m all
the up-to-date lines of the profession.
HOTELS.
HOTEL WOODARD,
W. C. WOODABD, Frop.,
Rocky Mount, N. C.
Free Bus meets all trains.
Rs $2 per day.
F HAN KLIN TON HOTEL
FRANKLINTON, N. C.
SAWL MERRILL, Prp'r.
Good accomodation for the traveling
public.
Good Livery Attached.
OSBORN HOUSE,
C. D. OSBORN, Proprietor,
Oxford, N. C.
ftnnd accommodations for the
traveling public.
MASSENBURG HOTEL.
.T T Massenburg Propr-
HENDERSON, N. C.
Good fare: Po
lite and Attentive nervant
NORWOOD HOUSE
Warrenton. North Carolina
W. J. NORWOOD, Proprietor.
s..Mm rtt Commercial ToarlstB and
X aivi-n- -
raveling Public Solicited.
Good Sample Boom.
JJ1A.B18T HOTW. TO STOBXS i.XD CQVBT HOJ781
Among the miners all conversa
tional desire seems to have fled,
and each, engaged with his own
thoughts, seems not to be conscious
of the long silence. Some distance
eastward, silhouetted against the
transparent blue of the evening sky,
two forms are visible meandering
slowly along the rocky bowlders
and low lying cliffs the figure of
a girl, from the wide rim of whose
hat floats a tangle of sunny curls, a
smile lighting the comeliness of her
youthful countenance as she places
one slender hand in that of her com
panion, who offers his assistance
from where he stands on a jutting
rock a little beneath her.
His lips part in a genial smile, as
though he had said something amus
ing or pleasant, and the girl's smil
ing face breaks into ripples of
laughing smiles. Pawnee Bill has
turned and gazes at the tableau in
silence. He utters no word. Rising
silently, he moves slosvly from the
still companionship of his comrades.
As he movers from his comrades
they look at him in silence. What
harm could come to Pawnee Bill s
Rose? What would that aristocrat
be in Pawnee Bill's hands? A help
less atom, a reed why, nothing at
all.
"Do let us stop here. I'm tired,
Master David."
"Rose, why do you persist in call
ing me Master David? Do you not
like David just as well?"
'Yes, but you see everybody
here calls you Master David, and
why should I be different from any
body else?"
"You cannot help being that,
Rose; at least not to me. Now,
to please me, let me hear you say
David."
She looked at him, half timidly at
first; then, fixing her glance firmly
on his, she says clearly and sweet
ly, "David."
"Bravely done 1 But I have not
yet finished. Could you not say
'dear David?' "
The long lashes are lowered now,
and her face is crimson flushed.
"Couldn't you, Rose?" he pleaded.
She strives to meet his gaze as be
fore, but her eyelids seem to droop
involnntarilv. and her lips falter
perceptibly as she says "De-ar Da
vid." She is too confused to notice
that both her hands are held in his,
and when she lifts her eyes he is
crazing ardentlv into their blue
depths.
"Rose, my little Rose," he whis
pers, "you do not know how much
I love you.
"Oh, Master I mean dear David
you must not love me!
"And why not!"
"Well, you are different from me,
you knw. We are good, very ..good,
On the hard earth plot before
Pawnee Bill's cabin Bill and the lad
Lodding are conversing in low whispers.
"You know, Bill," Lod is saying,
"I never told you afore, but Rose
eays as how she don't love mo, save
as a friend, and, Bill, don't say noth
in to the little girl. She can't heir
it, you know, no more nor I can help
lovin her till I die. Then she's bet
ter nor me anyway. Master David
has made her take to book larnin,
and I I"
Bill seizes one of the brown, hard j
hands of Lod in his, while with the '
other the lad brushes the tears from i
his eyes. j
"There, they're coming down the
way now, Bill, and I I must be
goin. You won't eay nothin as how I
I was a fool and blubbered, will you, j
Bill, and you won't be cross at the
little un, will you, Bill? Good-I
by!"
The eyes of love are keen, and as
Pawnee Bill kisses his little Rose's '
upturned lips he perceives that the
great blue eyes are humid with
the remembrance of recent tears.
"Have you come back, little '11111''
is all he says, and he leads the way
into the little sitting room, which is
Rose's especial charge.
"I say, Bill," David commences,
"I've a great favor to ask of you."
"Now, Master David, what can
you be askin of me? You have all
you want and a little over, I'm
thinkin."
"Not quite alll want, Bill. There
is something I havo not which I
want very badly, and it is that for
which I've come to ask."
Rose's face is red with blushes
and a strange look is in her eyes.
Bill looks kindly at David, but the
gentle curves of his mouth have
grown to austere lines.
"Well, Master David," he says.
"I want your little Rose for my
wife, Bill."
Bill does not start. Rose scans his
face eagerly.
asked themselves,
end?'"
It was noon. The air was tilled
with mellow autumn sunshine. At
the mines the hour of rest and re
freshment had come gladly as it
does ever to the eons of toil. The
hum of ceasing labor waa ttill audi
ble. Rose, as she kisses her father
tenderly, places beside him the dain
ty collation which it had ever bef n
her loved task to prepare for and to
carry to him. She smiles t-weetlv to
the gruff and grizzled miners about ! t,onH
her, who doff their hats HLd respond
cheerfully.
The story of the love of Rose and
David had been whisjvered but
merely whispered among them. To
thorn it was something strangely
hoi-, this wonderful love -it awetl
them. They could not toll why
Lod was wont to look intently at
the coming and going of David and
wonder perplexedly why nature had
not made him euch as ho that he
might have won Rose's Iovp. Still,
he kved the pale aristocrat, tuo,
and he venerated his noble conduct
toward Rose and worshiped Rose all
the more for her sacrificing love for
David.
Rose waves her hand blithely as,
at some distance from her, David -doffs
his cap in greeting. Then those
who were watching her saw her f net
suddenly whiten, a wild light dart
into her blue eyes, her hands to
clinch tightly, to staud hesitatingly ,
for a second, and then to dart fur
ward with lightning rapidity. There
is a sound as of something falling
heavily to the ground, u man's voice
shouts "Master David:" a woman's
shriek, and the voice of David cries
"My God : Rose!" :
Those who witnesse-d the hurried
scone flocked to the place of disaster. ;
the ret of the miners following 1
wonderingly. Athwart the ground
a heavy wooden beam lies aslant,
close by the body of Rose, her head J
horribly gashed, her slender hand j
clutching tightly the loose blouse of j
David, who lies prono beside her I
(consciousless.but uninjured), where
Rose had dragged, him from the j
reach of the hand of death, offering 1
herself as satisfaction to tbe grim
ogre in David's stead.
Pawnee Bill views the scene in si
lence. The still unconscious frni of
David is conveyed from the scene.
Hands, rough from laborious toiling,
gentle with love, stoop to lift the
prostrate form of Rose.
"Don't touch her, comrades," Bill
gays his voice does nut juav r, but
it is a tone deeper than usual -"that
task is mine. "
Uo lifts the form tenderly, and
with his face pressed tightly to hers
white with the death tinge h
moves onward.
The nest day the body of Rose,
still in the last, calm sleep, lies m
humble state in the little sitting
room. Loving hands of kindly wo
men have arrayed her daintily and
fastened a cluster of wild bloom in
her folded hands. Large sheaves of
! blooms are about her, breathing
their sorrow in whiffs of perfumes
upon the still air.
Beside the silent sleeper Pawnee
j Bill sits; his hand covers caressing
! ly the pale, folded hands of his lit
tle Rose. He looks neither around
! Dor about him; his glance is trans
j fixed with sorrowful intentness upon
the marble palo face before him. A
hand is laid lightly upon his shoul-
All praon oib ft wf t vill b rtrd
to pT lb uim at om. 1 l kuiltf
Kill
ill b in bar of '.Iwir rrrTfj Tk
Aj.ni 1 l
V. . Qaci Ha r
('4111 4 Sov Alt t
Tb Sab-arl Air Ltn
to Norfolk on ncroaot of th-
at tbe rat of dor Far f or b- lUund ' rl" r
T.in TV - ...i , W ..W ' "r " t"i! 1 1 r9. or tat
is mtf niCosnt. ba two aarmDii br
running, on May Mb, f tb "IUpit
8pUl." Tbn train will m Aila&La
at 12:00 noon, baini? attach-d our Cbr-1
Car. in wbicb vrtic will t brld dur
inff tb trip. Tb -0 rtir- will t
coDdoct-d oy Mr. Vnlfbo, tab
oeiat-d with I)r. Broughtou. of Atlanta.
For baods. tnr thirt y pa-, ill Jt r'f 1
Hsn'i liH.k and (il- to tb- Umwti'.ino
call nu or writ t anr rfj rvutatj . - . f
tb? S-aborl Air Lin . . r 'o
T J . Apr.K.oN.
trDra! PawriK"'T Auti'.
Por'-m I'h, V.
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7-1
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111
POWDER
A4irttx rVr
ill s
it'l in bar of th. s-i
a rv 1 H 1 (
JEWELRY,
JEWELRY. JEWELRY
If a woman i prottv oh
safely insist on Ler own imer
ra
1'1S )LI"TI .V
- 1
No t are Nu ,-.
Tbst i th w.iv all Jr-iH-n!. '. i
J rove's Tmtelens Chill r-nir f r Chill
and Malaria. It it sunr-ly Ir -n an1
ijuinine in a t.vv-1. i f.-rra. I'hiMrfD
love it. Adult yt'-f'-r it to ti'.'.t.-r na-!-teatink:
toiiicH. fri r-a!i
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".r:-. nrv r'-;i:-ti
iii. i ' iiint.1
Watches, Clocks
Jewelry
and
r i .ir.d fw tti.
llr.viM
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CHEAP FOR CASH
Beware of every
honest only because it
policy.
m t n who i s
l.i- l-fft
Murk li-n'
A rnii'H h
wi.n.1 f r
The best alye in 1 1
brui, i,r,M, 1 1 ! r .
ores, tetter. -h a (
corni, and all k i a
tuelv iMir--" I'll'--. r n pa
i ruarante'l t. . w rf---or
money r-ftind'-d I'ru-ei
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and - i -ri-,r-l
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MORTGAGE IhLl OF EE1L E5TATL K
ra 'r"-r 'fiw U' .jc. ; ir. ;v v7
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REPAIRING.
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S m K rr: A.'.j
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ELECTION NOTICE.
SAI.K F I M
D. P. LYNCH
NoUTH I'AKol.lNA
l it V N K 1.1 S Co! Sl 'i
Wo tii- r...ir.i 1
Franklin - unt I,.
and .1 ppi i n t i
Kogi-t nir aii' 1 K . A
K Haw kins. .1 r.d;-f
the Mum. lp.il i:i- t!.
and for t h- T w n
Count y and S t i t . .
day in May , 1 . (
of Mayor an ! r'ir
for said Town.
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The re-
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and Apr,l 1'
third and
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ChaT
d.i-" .
Sat hi '
on t he
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t r
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I !i'i!i, .i!i. mi pr:!
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tir-t ."at !ir ia;.
r.i-eiimg T l.e . .
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the sail;
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pr- e.:,:i
Jad fn '
V'TIc-p
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s 1 1 hae not h'Tet'i'iir
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ELECTiON NOTICE.
n n'K
NORTH ('AH "LIS A.
KkaNKI.IN ('- I NTV
We tin- P.. ianl . .1 I'.h
lin ' -unty have m-r i
tiointeil li. W. Morn-
Rose," Bill said tenderly, "come , d m wbigpers hi8 uamo ln
here, little un. Do you love Master
David?"
Yes." The monosyllable, is half
a soh.
"So do I, little un. If you was my
son, boy, 1 couian t love you more
nor what I do. The love for my near
kin couldn't ho dearer. You see,
Master David, my Rose is a wild
prairie flower; she has nothin but
her love to give you. Tell me in
your great home out east 'mong ser
ciety and fin'rieswhat will my little
Rose be? You see, I love you my
self, lad, and! could not let you do
this foolishness."
"But, Bill"
"Let me talk some, Master David.
I'd be the last one who'd mar my
little girl's happiness or yours, but
this I can't do see her become your
wife. It wouldn't be fair to you;
'twould 'pear as if we was takin a
advantage of you, and bimeby, may
be, both on you would be sorry if
you married, and now, as it is, you
will bless me some day. You'll for
get each other"
"Bill, you don't know what you're
eaying," David cries. Then there
was a profound silence in the room,
broken by no sound save the loWj
broken accents, and David knetde be
side the sorrowing father, his face
buried in hia hands upon the old j
man's knee, sobbing bitterly. Paw- j
nee. Bill's arm steals lovingly around
the stooping form and gently strokes
the bowed head.
"She's goin from us Master
David," he says in a low voice.
David answers only with tom. "My
little girl died for you. Master Da
vid, but I'd 've done the same. May
be, anyhow, she's better off, for Una
was a rough old world for my little
un."
They watched together in silence,
David's head leaning sadly upon the
coffin edge, the hand of Bill lovingly
twined around him.
In the quiet churchyard that sleep
in the shadows of the chapel room is
a little grave, and at its head stands
a heavy cross of gleaming marble
on which is carved the one word
"Rose." It is David's last gift to
Rose. San Francisco Pot.
f,
a nd l i N 1 .nnle y a n 1
.Juiitro of Fleet H n for tl
F.leetioti to h held in
Town of Franklmton, so.
and State, i in t he 1 -t 1 i
Mnv, 1 s'.is, f, ,r th-- ...,-! i, ,n
and rive ( otnini-.-ion, r
Tovvn .
11. K. IIakrh,
J. T. ClIrTON,
Hoard of Kl
. .-I !.,:. k
: ! . i nd ap
r 1 1 v i ' r a r
H H.-t.-r.
e niunii ipal
Mtld for t he
1 ' oiir.'
l--'!av in
.. M.onr
for -ani
i - -. i i
in H.
.: I r
r -r.
' ' a -.
ti 1
r. i
- JO'l'J
f-r-.
ect ion .
!.
i . : -
i U
Feed Sale : Livery
STABLE
LOUISBURG N. C.
ioI Th MS AM
r"i.in. d;;ivk
T
V K' IAI
.7 7 1 ST ii
Ki IN, Ml:
A
Their DUTerant Wri.
A woman always judges a man
ly his voice, and a man judges him
by hia necktiesPearson's Weekly.
, NOTICE t'F KFJilSTF. A1T N.
i
J The Ileift rut ion Fei-'k tor tr,.
I rvpisterin;' of votem for the M'ini
I cipal Khi tion t l- held m the Town
! of Frankliuton. on Tu lav, May
lad, ls'.is, will I.. ..p.-n.-d at th
! votinir ph'i'-e in l'rankhnton. N.C.
! from o' look A. M , to oYIim k
' V. M.. on April '-th. and April Kith.
;the same Ih-uio; th third and
fourth Siiturduy net imrmdiau-ly
pn'wJinir sau! el.i tion, and on April
3d from 0 oVloek. A.M.. until 12
M , it leinjr the second Siturd it
next ini med lately pr. ce line the elec
tion. C'Tillentros must mnd.' nfver the
c1oh of the book on said wimuh! Sit
urdar, and tbe wime will l hetird ;n
the fint Saturday next prvoeding
the pW-tion beginning at o'clock,
A. M. Only thos wlm have not
herotnfnrp nrowrlv mristprv! an
N H'JM ( l! d.INA I
I'ROKi.h I'i't n I
In M
l'l Ki
ll KT
A Fp
; r
r
Ft K- H.
11.
r. k n
voterx in (uud Town tin now roftmirel
W. MoRaia, liriatrar,
to reyiuter.
E.
M. H AMI - KK.
To W iiou It (
Notiev ih hrby trivn t'-ial I !.-ito
t n nppoint-i by Hi I'on.-r F W
TimU-rluke. Judw'" I'r-.d-.nt:. 1'..-e.-i-r
of Jill rt,'n--5i in nrtion f--lon-int;
to M. H Aunfkf, lh df'Ti.lrtnt
nlxive nani.1 . and of nil d-bt du
' t Mid M H Ayrt- ke. ith or !T
to rolU-rt .-ll "Aid dtt nnd .-hix.- m
! nrtion forthwith nnd hold th- pro
I 1 of uini ubjt to f- n-ijr of
! the court And I do nr-ntim nil pr
j fionn inilebt"'! to rvrwd l li Ayct- k.
J to rndr an nrroant to m nt onor
at my offirv nt Iuubunr. I. C. of
1 all ilid)t and um of morn iwiur
bv them rp-tiTt4T to M. H
A vctwke and ti pny th nni to ra.
"This 20th Marrh, 1 "CW
JO. Cscdvp, R0Ttr.
ilwaji tp hr
, at TjfT rior.it,t
E. F. YARBOROUGH.
Insurance.
Neal Building, Louisburg. H. C
fif Compinli :
MPIRULof London.
PALATINI, of Mancrtitf,
WlllUmtrgh Cty. of M. T.
Brltt.n Amorica. Toronto.
Atlanta Horn. Atlanta.
r-vr-rty ir.-j! on lAorat4
trrni. Iwrl!:n mplj o1mtiUJ
It , 1 rr trd f t rt xXrt
I b-kiiA p-jfci'wk U UiC m -, 1 1 1 fjf