Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / July 9, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
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nn EOBESONIAN Advertising Rates u 1 hi One Dollar and f I! On Application. Fifty cents the Year. Established 1807. 1 1 ;r i !! ! ;lif ! ... 1 Country, God and Truth. Single Copies Five Cents. VOL. XXXIX NO. 40 LUMBERTON, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY JULY 9, 1908. WHOLE NO. 2371 Ladies Gold Watches, Chains and Silk Guards. - erf When you think of Buying Any. thing in Fine Gold Jewelry, such as Watches, Gent's or Ladies', Silver, ware, Clocks, Cut Glass, China, Fan cy Toiletware, Eye Glasses, Cases Etc., think of Buying from the house with the Stock. Boylin's Jewelry Store. THE Fay NATIONAL BANK. etteville, N. C. III ' ' h in far safer than if you kept it yourself. Fire cannot destroy our vaults offer very littlf U'liiitUition ti burglars. The latter gentry know it is EVERYBODY REGARDS A DOLLAR A well worth making. Has it occurred to you that after you have made it, it i KMinsn not to take care ol it in the best possible manner? Deposited in the National Bankol Fayettevllle. your rush anil they much easier and sater to rob a store, office or home where money is known to be kept. Make your cash safe by dcositing it with this bank. W. A. VANSTORY, Presidfnt. '. vi Pr,.-wl..nt S- W- CXM5PER, Active V. Pres. T. M. SHAW, Assistant Cashier A. i;. McMlLLAN, Cashier. DIRECTORS: .J. VANCE MeC.OUGAN, W. A. VANSTORY, E. 11. WILLIAMSON, A. L. SHAW, 11. L. ( (iOK. W. .). JOHNSON, K. II. WILLIAMSON, JOHN KLLloTT, J NO. II. CULBRETH, HUNTER G. SMITH, II. Mil). ROBINSON, W. K. KINDLEY. A. . McEACIlERN, W. II. SIKKS. C. J. COOPER, T.-21-lm J. J NO. R. TOLAR JOHN ELLIOT JOHN A. OATES S. W. COOPER W. L. HOLT. W. McLAUCHLIN T. B. UPCHUCRH SOIL SURVEY. vL oil Peters hells to the Front! They Have Forged Their Way To The TOP BY MERIT. They Have an Unequaled Record for Accuracy. Try Them and you For Sale by wi 1 be SATISFIED. Your Live Merchants N. Jacobi Hardware Company, Wholesale Distributors, Wilmington, N. C. The Most Skilful Player Cannot produce really fine music from a poor Piano. The purchase of such an instrument is a mistake, the soiling of one is worse. When You Select a Piano Here we are always glad to have you bring an expert player with you. Then the tone and volume of our pianos aie brought out in all their beauty. Then the (jnality of our instruments is proven better tlrin any attempt at description we might make. Eagle Furniture and Carpet Co. Luttiberton, N. C. A ReMaMe Bank Is one which nuts the Interests of its Depositors above the Interest.-, of its Officers and Stockholders. Conservative than Bii' Oivhl and Safe Management is more Important ends. It lias been the Policy of this Bank to follow these Ideals. Our President and Cashier borrow no money of the bank. We renu ire the same security ot every one wno ?xr- rows from us. Not a Dollar Kleven Years. Lost by Bad Loans in our Existence of Is it to Your Interest to Deal With Such a Bank? Open an Account with us and be Convinced. The Bank of Lumberton, Luttiberton, N. C. Object of the Work Ten Dis tinct Types of Soil in Robeson County-Questions in regard to the Work Answered Rob eson's Soil Conld Easily Sup port Many Times the Connty's Present Population How the Soil Maps Will be of Great Value and How They May be Obtained Without Cost. At the request of the editor of this paper Mr. W. E. Hearne, who is m charge ot soil surveys in this State and who, with his assistants, is just completing a survey, which has extended over several months, of the soils of this county, has written for The Robesonian the following inter esting account of the work and what it means, the maps will be ready for distribution in about twelve months, Editor. The work of studying the soils of the United States and making soil mans has been carried on by Prof. Milton Whitney, chief of the Bureau of Soils, U. S. De partment of Agriculture, for about ten vears. During that time surveys have been made in every State except Main and Ne ada. These surveys have been so dis tributed as to include the most important geological formations, areas varying widelv in physi ographic positions, and sections of the country where allhe dif ferent crops of the country are grown. In these various areas and counties neatly 500 distinct grades or types of soil have been mapped. Those of you who are acquainted with the surface geology and soils of this country know that the soils of the At lantic Coastal Plain differ from those of the Piedmont Plateau, or mountain section, of this State. The glacial soils of many of the Northern States likewise diiier from those of the limestone val- i leys in Pennf ylvania and Ten- j nessee; and so the soils of the Central West differ from the soils j in the semi-arid and arid regions j of the United States, where the rainfall varies from 5 to 15 inches j per annum, or from one-tenth to ! one-fourth of what it is in North Carolina. In each of thesebroad divisions of the country are found a number of different soils, each type having definite physical properties and each type varying from the other in chemical an alysis. Robeson county lies in the Coastal Plain region of North Carolina. This region extends from southern New York to Florida along the Atlantc coast, varying in width from a miles to 150 miles or more. The soils of Robeson county are sim ilar to those occuring throughout this region. Most of you are familiar with Eastern North Carolina and know that there are several grades or types of soil in it, and that these types are suit ed to different crops and require different fertilizers in order to yield the most profitable re turns. In Robeson county ten distinct types of soil have been mapped and the area of each outlined. Considerable care has been taken to locate all the swamp lands and bays so that it will be an easy matter to cal culate just how much land could be brought under cultivation when such places are drained. The soil survey work in North Carolina is being carried on by the United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Soils, in cooperation with the North Car olina Department of Agriculture. Since the work of making soil maps is comparatively new, the majority of the people are not familiar with it and wTonder what those fellows are doing by sight ing up and down the roads and boring holes in the ground. All kinds of questions are asked us, but the most common ones are: What are you doing? What good will it be when you finish? How much does it cost? As this work is done to benefit each landowner and the community in general, it is nothing but proper that every person in Rob eson county should know all about it. We have made an accurate map of the county, showing the roads, railroads, towns, houses, churches, school houses, streams, ponds and township lines. On this base map will be shown the location and extent of the ten types of soil found in the county. Samples of each type have been collected and will be ana lyzed. Each type will be de scribed in the report. Some of the types of soil here are identical with the soils on the North Carolina test farms in Pen der and Edgecombe counties. On these farms Dr. B. W. Kilgore, State Chemist and Director of the stations, is carrying on num erous fertilizer experiments and also variety tests of cotton, corn and other crops in order to ascer tain what is the best fertilizer for each soil and what variety is best suited to each soil. He knows what soil type he is exper imenting with, and by having the soils of Robeson mapped he will be able to give out valuable information to the farmers of this county concerning each type of soil. The amount of money annually invested in fertilizers by the farmers of -this country is iip wardof $100,000,000. Perhaps a third of this money is annually wasted and brings no adequate returns, owing to the fact that the majority of the farmers do not understand the soil require ments for just the proper kind of fertilizer and go ahead buying most any brand and applying it to the land without due regard for the needs of that particular soil. The soil survey is the basis for the study of the adaptation of soils to crops. Anyone who has any practical experience knows that not all soils are equally suited to all crops, and that more or less of a selection of soil is made for certain crops. The crops grown here and the suggestions in re gard to the introduction of a few other crops which have been grown successfully on similar soils in other localities will be mentioned in the report. Robe son county otters great oppor tunities, as its soils could easily support many times the present population. These reports wil furnish prospective purchasers and settlers unbiased mforma tion concerning the soils, agri cultural conditions and possi bilities of the county. To illus strate: If a nothern farmer should receive a copy of the map and report of Robeson connty he could see at a glance just what kind of soil there is in any partof the county and learn all about it from the description and analysis without leaving his home. In this way it will enable prospec tive settlers to take up lands suited to certain crops and also enable present owners of lands to learn from the experience of other localities what crops and fertili zers are best suited to their soil and climatic conditions. j Underlying all attemps to im- prove the agricultural welfare of any community lies the necessity for a correct knowledge of the character and variety of its soils. The soil is the farmer'scapitaland eVy he should study how to use it to tne pest au vantage, just as a banker studies how to place his funds. The object of the report which accompanies the soil map is to set forth clearly all the infor mation possible about the soil, the analyses of them, the agri cultural conditions, crops grown, prices of land, methods of cul tivation, etc. These maps and report cost the people of Robeson county noth ing. Copies of them can be secur ed by writing to Congressman H. L. Godwin, Dunn, N. C. W. E Hearne. Lumberton, K. C, July 6, 1908. WOMEN IN OFFICIAL LIFE. THE NEGRO AND HOMICIDE. Result of Elections in Bohemia and Norway Swedish Policewomen. New York Sun. The progress of women in official life in Europe is slow, but it cannot be doubted that progress is being made. Within the last few weeks women appeared tor the first time as candidates for election to the Bohemian Diet. It had been demonstrated as a legal prop osition that if they fulfilled the other requirements their sex was no bar to their election. So far their candidacy stands merely as a demonstration. Two women received votes of some importance. One Maria Jumore, who ran in the district of Hohenmauth. had 144 votes. while the man who won had 592. In Prague the Social Dem ocrats made a woman. Miss Macheva, their candidate. She polled about 20 per cent, of the total vote. The women suffragists of Nor way were disappointed at the outcome of the local election in Christiania. In all the other parts of the country they elected important delegations to the commercial councils. In the capital only rive women were chosen in a total of 84 city coun cilors. There is an active agita tion going on all over the coun try to bring the women and men voters ot Lhristiania to a different frame of mind. Of advances made where the suffrage was not involved the appointment of three women policemen in Stockholm is an in stance. The authorities have determined to experiment with them. They are to have salaries ot 1,500 kronen, or about S390 a year, to begin with. England also has just named her first woman school physician. She is Misss Sophy B. Jackson, M. D. , and she has been appoint ed in the borough of Croydon. Colleges DIET FOR SLEEPLESSNESS. A. W. Mr I.KAN, President, A. K. WIIITK, Vire-l'res. TIIOS. J. OFFICERS! R. D. CALDWELL, Viee-Pres C. B. TOWNSKND, Cashier, MOORE, Ass't Cashier. SUPERB CHOCOLATES AH other chocolates s just Huyl try Huyler's. They are 0 ... ;.... ufter von once ft) MI.SL iiii'. y j u - - ii nt. In packages from 5 cents up. "Ait normal. " HHvs Roosevelt, "and there means, send IIEK a box of lluyler's. Common Causes of Insomnia Indigestion and Hunger. London Globe, Dr. William Stevens says JJthat insomnia is not a disease itseli, but the effect of an unhealthy condition of body or mind. When the cause is removed the insomnia may be expected to disappear. Every physician has had stub born cases of it which would not yield to any treatment and for which a change of air or of scene became necessary. But such as these should not occur, and do occur only when the sufferer has neglected precautions that should have been taken when the trouble first made itself manifest. Insomnia results from causes which can be removed if attended to in season. The most common cause is found in the digestive organs. Either unsuitable food, causing insomnia as a feature or indigestion, or insufficient food, causing the patient to oe Kept awake by hunger. There are few things which can be universally recommended as diet for sleeplessness, since what will agree with one man will disagree with another. But two things that may almost al ways be recommended are lettuce and celery. A Prize Which all Should Offer. Baltimore Sun. At Bryn Mawr College, Penn sylvania, the other day a prize was awarded to the member of the senior class who showed throughout her tour years in college to the highest degree the qualities of joyousness, high courage, fortitude and faithful ness." There are no traits of womanhood more attractive and more necessary to the happiness of the home than those traits for which this prize was given at Bryn Mawr. The prize is to be awarded annually, in honor of the memory of Mary Helene Ritchie, for five years secretary of the college, and who was distinguish ed for the qualities to which the prize is dedicated. The merry heart goes all the day, while the sad one tires in a mile: and noth ing can more effectually lighten the burdens of this life than joy ousness and cheerfulness; noth ing can support those who suffer from adversity like high courage and fortitude, nothing can inspire trust and confidence so much as faithfulness. The woman who is cheerful as she performs the homely duties of the home: who receives her husband or brother or son with a smile when he en ters the house; who has a word of comfort when he is in trouble or a word of courage and hope when he is despondent is a gem of purest ray serene. The home where sucha womenpresides is the dwelling; place of happiness, and fortunate indeed is the man who has such a home. While these qualities are largely temperamen tal and the gift of nature, it is certain that they can be cultivat ed and encouraged. The habit of despondency is a habit which can grow by indulgence. The habit of cheerfulness and hopefulness, the quality of joyousness and courage can be cultivated, and the method adopted by Bryn Mawr College of emphasizing its importance by offering a special prize for it is excellent. High Rate of Killing in This Country Due to Blacks. Mobile Register. "The high rate of homicide to the population in this country, which is just now one of our na tional reproaches, mav lead some observers to believe that there is something in our civilization or our political or social institu tions which breeds an inclination to murder. That supposition seems to do our country injus tice. Our white citizens, who have lived in this country loner enough to have fairly imbibed its influences and characteristicp, seem to be no more homicidal than other civilized white folks. The percentage of murder in Massachusetts, Vermont, Rhode Island and Connecticut is less than it is in England. Where the figures are hierh it seems to be due either to unsettled condi tions in the newer States, to large negro populations or to im migration. There are about 57, 000,000 native-born white peo ple in the country say, three- fourths of the population to whom are credited 43 per cent, of the murders. If all the popu lation was of this grade the num ber ot homicides would be cut down more than 40 per cent. out nine or ten million negroes (one-eighth of our population) do nearly 40 per cent, of the mur ders, and about 10,000,000 for eign-born persons are credited with 16 per cent, of it. That is to say (roughly) a quarter of our population does considerably more than half of the killing, and neither the negroes nor the foreign-born persons can be rat ed as products of our civilization. mi t j i ine Italians are unduly, even extravagantly, prone to homicide both at home and here; and both Italy and all other countries that our immigrants come from doubt less send us a larger proportion unruly or criminal persons among their emigrants than is found in their stay-at-home populations. Many of the best and some of the worst of the Europeans come here. The Benders come from Germany; Mrs. Gunness from Sweden. In the morning paper the persons arrested for the bomb explosion were Italians; the farm hand wno has confessed the mur der of three in New Jersey was born in Bohemia. New York State yields unsatisfactory sta stistics of homicide, for the rea son apparently that a large pro portion of its population is newly come from abroad. This is from Harper's Weekly. The striking statement that a class of citizens, numbering one eighth of our population, commit 40 per cent, of our murders, is astonishing; and this class is the American negro. Our older peo ple can remember the negro as most docile and reliable, seldom given to crime of any sort, and very rarely a murder committed by him. What has brought about this great change? This is a question worth studying, for the remedy cannot be found until the cause is ascertained. It is our duty to correct this evil, to find the cause and remove it;and for the sake of the safety of our white people this should be dene. Our writers and statesmen should take this matter up in a broad and brave way, and continue at it until a change is brought about. Punishment does not cure it. Crimes increase, de spite coal mines, hangings, etc. It is a matter worthy of the attention of a convention of Southern Governors and states men. NORTHERN CALIFORNIA TREES. PROFESSIONAL CARDS The Sequoia There Grows 400 Feet High and 26 in Diame ter. Humboldt Standard. The sequoia here in Humboldt is the tallest tree in the whole United States. But the tourist from the East or West knows it not. What would he say to the information that in the north west of California grows a migh ty continuous forest of these great trees and that it takes days to travel merely from end to end of that forest, which is lonirer than the distance from Boston to New York or from Chicago to St. Louis. Yet such is the case. On the ridgres and flats of Humboldt is the forest, and of that forest the trees grow to 2G teet m diameter and tower 400 feet in the sky. Do you know what those figures mean? Measure the room in which you are now sitting, it it is a very large room, the longest dimen sions would just about contain one of these great trunks. Look out of your window and see the people more than a city block That is the distance from one sees the topmost of these stupendous gi W. H. KINLAW, Attorney. ai Law LUMBERTON, N. (' All business .riiti.tly transacted. 4-lCtf Stephen Melntyre, K. ('. I .awreme, James 1). l'riHtor. Mclntyre, Lawrence & Proctor, Attorneys ami Counselors at Law, LUMHEUTON, N. t". Practice in State and Federal Court. Prompt attention given to all business. LEON. T. COOK, Attoknky at Law, LUMBERTON, N. C. Olfice in First National Bank Builditur. away. which bough ants. The T. A. McNeill. T. A. McNeill. Jr. McNEILL & McNEILL, Attorneys at Law, LUMBRTON, N. C. Will practice in all the Courts. Busi ness attended to promptly. will be no hard times. That McLEAN-ROZIER CO $100 Reward. $100 The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity, Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the founda tion of the disease, and giving the pa tient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they olfer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold bv all Drusifists. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for com tion. Over Thirty-Five Years. In 1872 there was a great deal of diarrhoea, dysentery and Chol era infantum. It was at this time that Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was first brought into use. It proved more successful than any other remedy or treatment, and has for thirty-five years main tained that record. From a small beginning its sale and use has extended to every part ot the United States and to many for eign countries. Nine druggists out of ten will recommend it when their opinion is ask, although they have other medicines that pay them a greater profit. It can always be depended upon, even cttina- in the most severe and dangerous leases, ror saie oy an uruggisia. Horrace Phillips, 15 years old, was drowned in Latta Park lake at Charlotte Sunday after noon while m bathing with sev- veral of his companions. Will Richardson was convicted in New Hanover Superior Court Monday of the double killing ot Josephine Pigford and Slocum Williams m Wilmington last Christmas and was sentenced to 30 years in the State penitentiary. The term of court, which had lasted over into this week on ac count of holiday on the Fourh, closed Monday. The Remedy That Does. ' Dr King'B sew Discovery is the remedy that does the healing others promise but fail to per form " says v'rs. E. K. Pierson, of Auburn Centre. Pa. ''It is cur ing me of throat and lurjg trouble ot lontr standing, that other treat ments relieved only temporarily, New Discovery is doing me bo much good that I feel confident its rontinr.ed use for a reasonable length of time will restore me to perfect health.'' This renowned cough and cold remedy and throat and lung healer is sold at all drug stores. 50c and $1.00. Trial bot tle free. Confesses to Express Robbery After Five Years. Fayetteville Observer. 6th. Tom Covington, who was ar rested in Wilmington Friday and brought here Saturday by Con stable Savage, on a warrant charging him with stealing a package containing $365.64 from the Southern Express office in this city, on December 19th, 1903, was tried this morning be fore Mayor Bullard, along with Will Gainey, charged with par ticipation in the same crime. Covington made a confession. He said that Gainey took the package of money from the of fice, and that he and Gainey went behind the Laf ayette Hotel, and divided the contents. He said Gainey gave him one $50 bill, two $10 bills, a handful of silver and two checks, the letter for amounts totaling $150, and kept the balance, all specie, for himself. The package was from the Southern Ex press office at Bennettsville, en route to the head office at Wilmington. The mayor bound both men over to court, in the sum of $200 each.. Covington failed to give the bond and was remanded to jail. Gainey gave bail and was set at liberty. For five years the express officials and local officers have been hot on Covington's trail, and it was only last week that Chief Monaghan located him in Wilmington. redwood of California is the great tree of the Pacific coast Two thousand acres of it exist in Oregon along the Chetco river South ot the Chetco a continuous redwood belt begins ond increas es in width from ten miles at Del Norte county to eighteen or twen ty miles and keeps on unbroken to southern Humboldt county. Here is a gap, but in Mendocino the belt becomes dense again and widens out the thirty-live miles. South of that county the tree grows in isolated patches. The climate and topography of northern California have brought about this limited distribution. North and south along the coast in nearly parallel ridges lie the mountains of the Coast Range, steep and rising to altitudes of 1,000 to 2,000 feet. A few large rivers, the Smith, Klamath, Mad, Eel, Russian and many smaller streams cut through them to enter the sea, and along their courses in places are broad bot tom lands and gentle slopes. West of the Coast Range the climate is even and moderate, with a temperature running from just below freezing to eighty degrees. Snow lies on the top of only the highest ridges. Thirty to sixty inches of rain falls in the autumn and winter, and during the summer sea fog bathes the coast. But east of the mountains, less than fifty miles from the sea, lie hot interior valleys, never visited by fog, parched and rainless in summer, and wet only occasion ally by the winter rains condi tions too unfavorable to permit the growth of redwood. It re quires very little from the soil except that it be moist, it is so dependent on moisture of the air that this factor mainly or wholly determines its distribu tion and the eastern limits of the forests are determined by the distance inland to which sea fogs may drift. There are two types of the tree that which grows on the hillsides, and the second, which grows on the flats along the riv ers and streams. The usual type is that of the slope; that is the growth found on the steep sides of the coast ranges, and side by side with the redwood grow other trees, such as red fir, tan bark oak, white fir and mad rone. As the slopes become moderate, the altitude lower, the soil deeper the forest becomes denser, until on the rich flats and in the gulches the second type is developed. On the best redwood flats no other tree grows. On the slopes 225 feet is about the maximum length and ten feet its greatest diameter, while on the flats, under better condi tions, the tree grows to be 350 feet high with aldiameter of thirty feet, and occasionally giants ex ceed this. Most of the redwoods are from 400 to 800 years old The oldest tree scientifically measured was 1,400 years. Af ter the tree has passed 500 years it usually begins to die down from the top. It has a straight, slightly tapered trunk without limbs for more than one hundred feet and a crown of horizontal branches that may occupy a third to a half of its length. The roots strike downward at a sharp angle and are so large and so numerous that they form a compact mass. The bark is of a reddish color, fibrous in texture, gives to the full grown a fluted appearance and offers such a re markable resistance to fire that except under great heat it is not combustible. Insects do it little harm, the wind can scarcely up root it and fungi seldom affect it. WADE WISHART, Attorney at Law, LUMBERTON, N. C. Prompt attention given to all business. OHice over Bank of Lumberton. tf-1 D. P. SHAW, Attorney at Law, LUMBERTON, N. C. 'All business entrusted to hiin prompt ly attended to. OHice in Shaw building. N. A. McLean, A. W. McLean. McLEAN & McLEAN, Attorneys at Law, LUMBERTON. N. C. Offices on 2nd floor of Bank of Lum berton Building, Rooms 1, 2, '.I, and 4. Prompt attention given to all business. CHAS. B. SKIPPER, attokney-at-i.aw, LUMBERTON, N. C. All business entrusted to him wil receive prompt and careful attention. Office in First National Bank Build ing over Post Olfice. E. M. BRITT, ATTORN EY-AT-LA W, LUMBERTON, N. C. Office upstairs in Argus Building. All business promptly transacted. E. J. BRITT, ATTOKNUY AT-I.AW, LUMBERTON, N. C. Office over Pope's Drug Store. STOCK REMEDIES. Every bottle of Dr. Edmond's Colic and Lung Fever Cure is Guaranteed for colic, gravel, pneumonia, stomach and lung disorders. Also a blood prurilier. DR. W. O. EDMUND, 3-21 Lumberton, N. C. Thurman D. Kitchin, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, LUMBERTON, N. C. G.unty Office next door to Robeson Loan and Trust Company. Office phone 12i 7 9 J. M. LILLY, M. D. Practice limited to diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. 115 Green St. Fayetteville, N. C. 4-16-tf Dr. Thomas C. Johnson, Physician and Surgeon, Lumber ton, N. C. Office over McMillan's Drug Store. Calls answered Promptly day or night. Home at residence of Prof. J. R. Poole 4-27-tf. DR. N. A. THOMPSON, PHYSICIAN ANI SURGEON, LUMBERTON, - N. C. Office at Hospital. Phone No. 41. Down town office over McMillan'8 Drug Store. Calls promptly answered night or day, in town or in the country. 5 or 6 doses "666" will cure any case of Clills and FEVER. Twenty five Cents Is the Price of Peace. The terrible itching and smart ing, incident to certain skin dis eases, is almost instantly allayed bv applying Chamberlain s Salve Price. 25 cents. For sale by all druggists. DR. R. T. ALLEN, DENTIST, LUMBERTON, - - N. C. Office over Dr. McMillan's Drug Store. DR. JOHN KNOX, JR., Physician and Surgeon, Lumber ton, N. C. Office at McLean-Rozier Drug Store. 1-2-08 J. G. MURPHY, M. D., Practice Limited to Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Wilmington, N. C. 6-1-tf Jut Exactly Right. "I have used Dr. King's New Life Pills tor several years, and find them ju't exact ly right. ' svy: Mr A A. Filton, of HariioviLe, N. Y. New Life Pills rplieve with out the least discomfort. Hestrem edy for constipation, biliousness and malaria. 25c. at all drugstores. J. A. MacKETHAN, M. D., MacKathan BriLDING. FAYETTEVILLE, N. C. , Ear, Nose and Throat a Specialty. 1-13 5 or 6 doses "666" will cure ! any case of Chills and Fever. o.n E. G. SIPHER, ELECTRICIAN. I.umburton, N. C. in Shaw Luil ing, Phone No. 11S. 1-6 DR. R. F. GRAHAM, dentist, LUMBERTON, N. C. Office over Bank of Lumberton. Rooms No 7 and 8. 1-20-08 7-'J-tf
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 9, 1908, edition 1
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