Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / Nov. 2, 1908, edition 1 / Page 1
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E KOBE Advertising Rates On Application. Established I879. One Dollar and Fifty cents the Year. Country God and Truth. S;- Copies Five Cents. VOL. XXXIX NO. 73. LUMBERTON, NORTH CAROLINA, MONDAY NOVEMBER 2, 1908. WHOLE NO. 2404 nn SOMAN November Term of Court ! Save all watches that need repairing and have them repaired while attending court. Our large stock of materials enable us to do it promptly. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Our Stock of Watches is Complete, and we will have some Special Bargains for Court Week. Be sure and see our stock while in town. It is a pleasure to us to show our goods. Boylin's Jewelry Store. r We are Agents for "Parker Fountain Pens" and Supplies, vvaunam and fclgin Watches, 1847 Rogers Brothers' Celebrated Silverware, one of the Largest Diamond Houses in America. WITH AUNT BECKY. BUSINESS IMPROVING. "The Best-Laid Plans"-How! the 'Squire Lost a Sock Per simmons and Nuts and Mind ing the Bars Mr. Bryan and the Presidency Death of Mrs. - Alonzo Williams Other Mat- kJM Peters Shells to the Front ! They Have Forged Their Way To The TOP BY MERIT. They Have an Unequaled Record for Accuracy. Try Them and you will be SATISFIED. For Sale by Your Live Merchants. 11 1 II 1 O takes it only in smal H. Jacobi Hardware Lompany, JrLg ser Wholesale Distributors, Wilmington, N. C. 0-29 The forcmos t Consid eration In Banking Protection Should be the of Depositors. Our Long anil Successful Career of Nearly Twelve Years without the loss of Dollar of any Mor-.ey Loaned; Our Modern Rules which require the same Security of Every One who Borrows from us, and which provides that our President and Cashier Borrow no Money of the Bank; our Large Capital, Stockholders' Guu-antee Fund and Undivided Profits. Amounting in the Ag- gregate to over $108,000.00, Tojfether with the Reputation of our Directors and Officers as Experienced Business Men of Unquestioned Character, is the Protection t fc. offer. The Small Depositor Receives the Same Courteous Treatment as the Large One. What More Can You Ask? If YOU are not Already a Depositor, OPEN a New Account WITH US. The Bank of Lumberton, Luttibertoti, N. C. A. W. MrT,EN, President, A. E. WHITE, Vice-Pres. TIIOS. J OFFICERS! R. R. CALDWELL, Vice-Pres C. B. TOWNSEND, Cashier, InOORE, Ass't Cashier. Tine Price! Coflom Is Again the Chief Topic of Conversation Among Farmers and Other Business Men. We are not Prophets, and therefore cannot say with Certainty whether the Price of Cotton will be Higher or Lower, but we do say that if you have Determined to Hold Your Cotton for Higher Prices, that it shouid not be Exposed to weather and FIRE, but should be Deposited in a Storage Warehouse where it will be INSURED for its Full Value, and will be safe from the weather. Our Warehouse will not only Insure and Store your Cotton, but Our Bank Will Lend You Money on it to meet your press ing obligations. 00 0 0 0 0000000 MONEY DEPOSITED WITH ITS draws Interest at 4 per cent. Com pounded Quarterly. Give us your business and join the Large Number of Satisfied Customers. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Robeson County Loan and Trust Company, (Bank of Lumberton Building,) . LUMBERTON N. C. A. W. McLean. President. Stephen Mclntyre, Vice-President. C. n. Morrow Cashier. Buggies, Carriages and Harness If you want the BEST, buy Tyson & Jones 'Buggies and Carriages, made by Tyson & Jones Buggy Co., Carthage, N. C, The Celebrated "CHASE" Buggies, Carriages, Etc., Manuf acturecTby Oxford Buggy Co., Oxford, N.JC. Genuine Studebaker, Lerch and Finch-Whitlock HARNESS. ... .... . , , cide the great Presidential issue Every Buggy Must be as Represented or Money Keiunded. and the feeling of anxiety and ters. Correspondence of The Robesonian. I intended getting this off in today's mail, that it might be in time for Friday's edition, also I expected to have paid my re- spects to j.ne uniei Deiore now; Robbie Burns has said, and truly, "The best-laid plans of mice and men gang aft agley . Now the poet failed to make personal mention of the women folk in the above lines, but of course we are understood as be ing stock-holders in the same company, and really it seems to me sometimes that our purposes and plans are the very ones most liable to fail. Well, I guess it would not do for us always to succeed in each and every in stance, because as a general thing we are creatures of im pulse and some of us are apt to form hasty decisions, jump at conclusions, and say and do things that we regret upon calm reflection. I have been indebted many times in my life to the cool, deliberate judgment of the Squire, and his advice and coun sel; then sometimes I think he ought to take my advice but he takes it only m small, and very is one thing brought to his attention re cently that I think he will re member, viz: to put his shoes and socks in a good place every night, or else prepare to search the premises next day for these necessary articles. He arose one morning recently, and lo! the little dog had arisen before him, and came in to make his morn ing call and warm his nose by the fire. I had gone to the din ing room, the 'Squire was snoozing peacefully, and there being no one to disturb the little dog's peaceable possession, he selected finally one of the 'Squire's socks whichhe captured and carried off without our knowledge or consent. -Then I heard presently a great rum maging going on, also a mutter ing accompainent,so I decided to step in and see what was the matter. "Do you know any thing about my other sock?" was asked by the 'Squire, as he circuited around looking under beds, chairs, etc., for the missing article. "No", said I, "but the puppy was in here, and I guess he knows something about it." I got a fresh pair for the 'Squire and a few days after ward found the missing one in the yard where he (Dash) has a depository for stolen goods of various kinds. Persimmons are getting ripe and I hear of some beer being made, but in olden times they were not considered in suitable state until after Jack Frost had bitten them slightly. In the f allof the year when corn and peas were harvested there were "gaps to mind" that is, a panel of the rail fence was let down carefully and so arranged as to admit the entrance and exit of carts and wagons to haul the grain home. There was no stock law in those good days of plenty, and hogs and cattle ranged at their own sweet will. So the "gaps" were guarded to keep the wandering stock from getting intothe fields. Many days I helped to mind them, when I was a little girl, and what good times we had, eating persimmons and hunting for "hog apples", black haws and hickorynuts and walnuts. You see, our guard numbered some four or five little fellows of both colors, and while one or two watched alternately at the gap the others were en joying themselves in various ways. I am yet very fond of "haws", but where they once grew in great quanities the trees and bushes have disappeared, and I rarely see any at all. We have had moderate rains in the Fork, making everything more pleasant, as it was awfully dusty and dry. One week from today will de cide the great Presidential NEW RAILROAD SURVEY. M Gradual Return to Higher Level of Prosperity. Washington Special,Oct.29,to Charlotte Observer. President Finley, of the South ern Railway Company, who has just returned to Washington from an inspection trip of two weeks over the lines of the sys tem, found evidences of improve ment in business conditions and of a general disposition on the part of business men throughout the South to take a hopeful view of the future: Speaking of the information he had gathered on his trip, Mr. Finley said: "Prices for pig iron are firmer. Southern furnaces, as a rule, have sold their product up to the end of the year, and the in creasing number of inquiries for iron warrants the expectation that orders will soon be placed for business during the coming year. "Lumber is more active than for some months past. Especial ly is this true of the grades shipped in box cars. The pres ent demand will be augmented by increased requirements from railways, principally for car re pairs, as iflome of the railways are contracting with car compa nies for some of their heavier re pair work. "One of the most encouraging signs of reviving industrial ac tivity is the increasing movement ot steam coal to industrial cen tres. The unusually warm weather ot the present tall is retarding the movement of do mestic coal. "The cotton crop is early, and the fibre is moving to market in larger volume than at this time last year, although, as a result of the. stagnation which has pre vailed in the cotton goods mar ket, prices are lower than a year ago. lhe demand for cotton seed products is good and they are moving freely. "The domestic market for cotton goods shows indica tions of gradual improvement. Owing to the accumulations of large stocks and to other causes anecting that market, there is at present little demand for cotton goods in northern China. Aside from this, the export demand is fairly good, and those mills in terested in the north of China trade are looking forward hope fully to a renewal of sales for that market. "Grain traffic into the South especially corn - - is light. This is due, in part, to the relatively high price of corn and the low price of cotton, and in part to the fact that at this season ot the year the bouth is consuming its own grain. "Merchandise stocks which had been permitted to run low during the business depression are be ing replenished conservatively. Retail trade in the cities is good, but as a result ot the low price of cotton and of a disposition on the part of retailers to buy cau tiously for the present, jobbing trade is still somewhat restrict ed. "While some lines of business have not yet shown as much im provement as might be wished, I believe that conditions generally are decidedly better than at any time since the beginning of the business depression a year ago, and that we have reason to look forward to a gradual return to a higher level of prosperity." Preliminary Survey of New Road From Gibson to Dillon via Mc Coll and Clio. Dillon Herald, Oct. 29. Dillon's dreams of a new rail road may be realized. The sur veyors have made the prelimina ry survey from Clio to Dillon and while they are reticent as to the route of the proposed new railroad it seems to be a foregone conclusion that the route will be by way of Little Rock with Dillon as the objective point. There seems to be little likelihood of the road stopping at Dillon. It seems to be making for some point on the Atlantic Coast and its eastern terminus may be Southport, Conway, Georgetown or Charleston. Mr. Bonsall, the moving spirit in the enterprise, made a short stop in Dillon a f ew days while en route to Gibson and informally discussed the matter with a representative of the Her ald. When asked what route they proposed to take when they left Dillon his reply was "an easterly direction." Mr. Bonsall is very anxious for the road to touch at Dillon and will come here the latter part of this week and take up the matter officially with the Chamber of Commerce. The preliminary survey has been made from Clio to Dillon, the surveyors having arrived here Monday afternoon. The route comes by way of Little Rock and enters Dillon from the north west, at a point near the Afro American Methodist church. The land owners along the route cov ered Dy the preliminary survey are very much interested in the enterprise and many of them have already expressed a willing ness to grant a right of way through their lands. The road will open up one of the richest agricultural sections in the state a section that has long felt the necessity of an outlet for its pro duce. Work has already been started on the road from Gibson to M& Coll and a prominent citizen of Clio who was here the other day said that an agreement had al ready been reached between the citizens of Clio and the railroad people for the extension of the road on to Clio. The Dillon peo- are very much exercised over the coming of the new road and the result of the meeting between the promoters and the Chamber of Commerce this week will be awaited with interest. General OatesWho Has Charge of the $200,000 Congressional Appropriation, Reports Prog- to ARKS CONFEDERATE GRAVES. ress. Washington Dispatch. Oct. 28. General W. C. Oates, of Ala bama, who is superintending the marking of graves of Confeder ate soldiers who died in Federal prisons, called on the President today and told him of the prog ress ot the work. Me said that of the $200,000 appropriated by Congress, $47,000 had been ex pended. One matter brought to the President's attention was that the law provided for simple white marble headstones like those in Arlington National Cemetery, and in this. respect in some cases it was impossible to carry out the aw. One instance was at Indi anapolis, where 1,620 Confeder ate prisoners were buried and af terward taken up by a railroad company, which wanted to use the ground. This company had been given permission to remove the bodies and in re-interring them all had been placed in an acre of ground in Greenlawn Cemetery, in many cases more than one in a grave. There was nothing to indicate who the sol diers in the graves were, Gener al uates tola the President, so they cannot be marked in dividually. It is General Oates idea to mark these graves with a shaft of white marble, bearing the name of all the sol diers buried there, but this can not be done withoutjzhanging the aw. Mr. Oates said there were many similar instance through out the country, but the work was progressing very favorably. At Columbus, O., where 2,260 Confederates died at Camp Chase, the graves have all been careful- y marked. In all 25,000 Confed erate soldiers died in Federal pri sons and were buried at different points from Boston to Sante Fe, N. M. nrr WW To fully enjoy your evenings at home you must have a ST1EFF or SHAW PIANO. 1842 1908 66 years of continuous piano building under the care of two gener ations of one family he.s enabled us to pro duce the best piano of its time. Sold by its maker directly to the home. CHAS. M. ST1EFF, Manufacturer of The Stieff and Shaw, Pianos with the Sweet Tone. the FRIVOLOUS MADRID. Can Compete in Prices and Terms with any Dealer Robeson County. in 8-20- tf Fuller & Son. N. C. LUMBERTON, Let Ds Do Your Job Printing ! WE MAKE A SPECIALTY IOF CommcFcial Work. SEND US YOUR ORDERS. unrest will be over and the county can settle down again go ing on the even tenor of its way. I would oe proua to Know we had once more a Democratic President, and I am much of Mr. Bryan's opinion if he meets defeat this time, it shall be the outcome of fraud and bribery, or, in plainer terms, the election will be bought by the corpora tions and trusts. I never ex pected to live to see American independence and freedom dom inated by the power of wealth and oh! the end is not yet. The foundation of our glorious gov- Seven Years ol Prool. ernment is being fearfully shak en aud I fear unless great re forms take place, that we are drifting near the rocks that will wreck our grand and gallant barque. My admiration for Bryan increases as I read his courageous speeches and note his unfailing fund of informa tion and readiness and force of arguments. He is in truth a remarkable man. and I trust the vote of the American people will, on Tuesdays next, declare him to be our President. A few days ago we received the sad news of the death of a much-loved young kinswoman in far-away Florida Mrs. Alonzo Williams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Neill McCallum, of the Alfordsville section, who mar ried and settled with her young husband, who was engaged in the naval stores business in that State. We are having rain in the Fork these days, which has put a quietus upon the long siege of cotton nicking. A good many of our neighbors heard Senator Overman s speech in Maxton last Saturday, and express great admiration for both speech and speaker. What has become of my friend "Sarah Jane"? I miss her newsy items from your columns; also our friend Mr. Davis, whose let ters are so readable and enter taining. "Aunt Becky" Old Fork, N. G, Oct. 28, 1908. A Note From Bethesda in Re ply to "Pha." To the Editor of The Robesonian: Some noble person has said Better shun that fellow who al ways meddles into others people' business, but seldom attends his own," and it seems that these words apply directly to Phil We are sorry he thinks that the majority of our Bethesda friends are young men. We are glad that we have some young lady friends in this community and wish to sav to him that one them is prized more highly than all the young men would be Phil" be a good type of the young men around here. Phil is an astonishing character to us. He is really bold enough to claim a friendship with us when we have never met him or if we have met him we shall not own it, since he is ashamed to tell his name. As for the rules Phil" mentioned, he knows nothing whatever about them, but they might prove to be more strict than he now thinks if he had them to contend with. "Phil", we don't mean to dis courage you, but we think it will pay you to wait next time for "Big Foot" to write the news, or if "Phil" and "Big Foof'arethe same person, wait till you get something to write. Perhaps you have the wrong name the reason you can't do better. We have a name in mind that would suit you much better than "Phil the Fiddler." It is this "Phil the Meddler." Now "Phil", a gentleman will stop meddling: a meddler will meddle on. Katye Oliver, "The Teacher, Barnes ville, N. C, Oct., 29, 1908. Freeman Printlnn 60 Lumberton, N. C. "1 have had seven years of proof that Dr. King's New Discovery is the best medicine to take for coughs and colds and for every diseased condition ot throat, chest or lungs," says W. V. Henry, of Panama, Mo. The world has had thirty-eight years of proof that Dr. King's New Discovery is the best rem edy for coughs and colds, la grippe, asthma, hay fever, bronchitis, hemor rhage of the lungs, and the early stages of consumption. Its timely use always prevents the development of pneumonia. Sold under guarantee at all drug stores. 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Bow Is Your Digestion? Mrs. Marv Dowling. of No. 228, 8th Ave., San Francisco, recommends remedv for stomach trouble. She says "Gratitude for the wonderful effect of Electric Bitters in a case of acute indi gestion. prompts this testimonial. am fully convinced that for stomach and liver troubles Electric Bitters is the best remedy on the market to-da; This great tonic and alterative me cine invigorates the system, purines the blood and is especially helpful in forms of female weakness. 50c. at all drug stores. lay. edi- Spanish Capital a Spendthrift Town and Devoted to Gossip. London Times. The note of Madrid is frivolity. It is a spendthrift town. No where do so many people of modest means keep carriages, or at least hire them. The automobile has supplied a new outlet to an old passion. Nowhere do so many people who cannot afford to have a motor driver, or to buy regular supplies of petrol (which, to be sure, is both dear and bad in Spain), keep an automobile Therefore they turn out now and again for a short run at high speed to their own glorification and the danger of the public. As for that public, it lives in the streets and in a perpetual state of brisk talk. What London or Paris news comes through to Madrid, except telegrams, is mostly gossip, Important matters appear to in terest the Madrileno little. What did interest him was when young person appeared on horse back m Hyde Park in a direc toire costume. Feather-headed' and light-heeled, the Madrileno is, on the other hand, good na tured and easy to live with. Madrid women dress well, even very well, and the charm of the Spanish woman is never denied. Modern Madrid is sometimes supposed to be modeled on mod ern Paris, but the writer's view is that there is nothing Parisian about Madrid, except the skin. Pans works desperately hard, is intensely interested in serious things and producers, thinkers and men of intellectual and scientific eminence. Madrid certainly does not work hard, does not appear to be much interested in anything but frivolity, and few of her great est men, even statesmen, are much more than names. Southern Warerooms, 5 W. Trade Street, CHARLOTTE, N. C. C H. WILMOTH, Mgr PROFESSIONAL CARDS Abner Barker, Thomas L. Johnson. BARKER & JOHNSON, Attorneys at Law, LUMBERTON, N. C. All business given nromnt and care ful attention. Office upstairs over Rob eson County Loan & Trust Co. 10-8 l"hone No. 97. D. Cook. P. Shaw, L. T. SHAW & COOK, Attorneys at Law, LUMBERTON, N. C. AH business entrusted to them will receive careful and prompt attention. Office over White & Gough's store. 9 24 WadeWishart, E. M. Britt WISHART & BRITT, Attorneys at Law, LUMBERTON. N. C. All business given prompt and care ful attention. Office upstairs in Argus Building. 9-10 W. H. KIN LAW, Attorney-at-Law LUMBERTON, - - - N. C. All business promptly transacted. 4-16tf Stephen Mclntyre, James D. R. C. Lawrence Proctor. Mclntyre, Lawrence & Proctor, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, LUMBERTON, - - - N. C. Practice in State and Federal Courts. Prompt attention given to all business. LOOK TO YOUR EYES. SHUR-OH Sight is the most inestimable of all blessings; blindness the most woeful of all afflictions. This being so you will readily concede the great importance of your eyes as a part of your animal or ganism. We have satisfied thousands, we can satisfy you. Spectacles and Eye Glasses correctly Fitted to your Eyes for $1 and up. EYES EXAMINED FREE. Dr. VINEBERG, At Kingsbury's Drug Store, Masonic lemple.J Wilmington, N. C. Artificial Eyes Inserted Without Pain. 8-24-tf W. H. SHOOTER. Contractor and Builder. Lumberton, N. C. 15'years' experience. Give me a chance. 9-7-tf T. A. McNeill. McNeill T. A. McNeill, Jr. & McNeill, Attorneys at Law LUMBRTON, N. C. Will practice in all the Courts. Busi ness attended to promptly. N. A. McLean, A. W. McLean. McLEAN & McLEAN, Attorneys at Law, LUMBERTON. N. a Offices on 2nd floor of Bank of Lum berton Building, Rooms 1, 2, 3, and 4. Prompt attention given to all business. CHAS. B. SKIPPER, attorney-at-law, LUMBERTON, N. C. All business entrusted to him wil receive prompt and careful attention. Office in First National Bank Build ing over Post Office. Dr. d. m. Mcdonald, Red Springs, N. C. Special Attention Given to Fitting Glasses. Office in Citizen Building next to Post office. 10-8-8 E. J. BRITT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, 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 prurifier. DR. W. O. EDMUND, 3-21 Lumberton, N. C. POPE DRUG CO. xi Wishs to call attention to y the fact that it keeps ev- t ... ... . . j erytmng usually lound in a FIRST-CLASS DRUG STORE. From this date the Drug Store will be OPEN ON SUNDAYS from 9 to 11 a. m. and from 3 to 5 p. m. for Prescription Work ONLY. Dr. J. H. HONNET, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Specialist, No. 12 North Front Street, Wilmington, N. C Formerly Eye and Ear Hospital New York City. Late Assistant Surgeon, Cornell Hospital. 8-6-tf 9-14 Built in a Good-Sized Fall of Snow at Asheville. Asheville Dispatch, Oct. 29. The first snow-fall of the sea son came between midnight and dawn to-day and early risers this morning were given a genuine surprise when they stepped forth to find the ground cover ed with snow and the surround ing mountains and house tops whitecapped. At daybreak snow and sleet were falling but later changed to rain and all day there has been a cold drizzle. There was evidence this morning that the snowfall last night was heavy and but for the fact that the ground was rainsoaked several inches of the beautiful ' would have been visible. A House That Was Day. Harper's Weekly. W. C. Carl, a contractor of East St. Louis, contended that a house could be built in a day, and set to work to prove it in the presence of a crowd of builders and carpenters, bettors, and, not least, the prospective tenant and his bride. At 8 a. m. the foundation trench was finished. By noon the thirty-one workmen were finishing the roof. By 4 o'clock the sashes and clap-boarding were completed. By 7 p. m. the neighbors were moving furni ture into a four -room house, with a reception hall, bath, closets, plumbing, gas and elec tricity, and hot and cold water supply. The Oldest Baptist in the World Biblical Recorder. Y-LO Talcum Powder, Natural Violet. By-Lo is so fine that it floats in the air, and so delicately perfumed with the odor of fresh flowers, that we know you will like it. It does not have that Talcum Powder odor, just The Smell o! Fresh Violets. We handle all the different kinds of High-Grade Talcum Powders, but re gard By-Lo as the best there is You will think so too when you try it. Yours to Please, Or, J, D. McMillan DRUGGISTS, Lumberton, N. C. June 18th Thurman D. Kitchin, M. D.f Pbyslclan and Surgeon. LUMBERTON, N. C Office next door to Robeson County Loan and Trust Company. Office phone 126 Residence phone 124 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, Pbyslclan and Surgeon. Lumberton, N. C. Office over McMillan's Drug Store. Calls answered Promptly day or night Residence at Waverly Hotel. . 4-27-tf. DR. N. A. THOMPSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, LUMBERTON, - N. C. Office at Hospital. Phone No. 4L Down town office over McMillan's Drug Store. Calls promptly answered night or day, in town or in the country. DR. R.T. ALLEN, DENTIST, LUMBERTON, - - N. C. Office over Dr. McMillan's Drug Store. Son, Zion's Advocate, our Bap tist paper in Maine, credits that State with having the oldest living Baptist in the world Mrs. Salome Sellers, of Sunset, Deer Isle, who was born October 15, 1800. She was converted at the early age of eight years and has, therefore, the great distinction When you stop advertising you of having lived a full century of stop a portion of your trade. i the Christian life. Watched Fifteen Years. ' 'For fifteen years I have watched the working of Bucklen's Arnica Salve; and it has never failed to cure any sore, boil, ulcer or burn to which it was ap plied. It has saved us many a doctor bill," says A. F. Hardy, of East Wil ton, Maine. 25c. at all drug stores. V ' ' ' "GEE WHIZ, Children, you ought to see the can dy that I have got. lc. prize boxes, Chu-Chu and all kinds of penny goods. 10 and 15c. lb. mixture something fine. Come and see. Fine Oysters. Lumberton Bakery & Cafe. J. R. MORRIS, Prop. DR. JOHN KNOX, JR., Pbyslclan and Surgeon. Lumberton, 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 it-14-.Jai J. A. MacKETHAN, M. D., MacKa than Build inf FAYETTEVILLE, N. C. Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat a Specialty. 1-13 E. G. SIPHER, ELECTRICIAN. Lumberton, N. C. Office in Shaw Building, Phone No. 11 1-6 DR. R. F. GRAHAM, DENTIST, LUMBERTON, N. C. Office over Bank of Lumberton. Rooms No. 7 and 8. 1-flO-OI El I 1:1 li i 1 1 1 1
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
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Nov. 2, 1908, edition 1
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