Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / Jan. 28, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE ROBESONIAN One Dollar and Fifty cents the Year. Advertising Rates On Application. ..ngle Copies Five Cents. Established 1870. Country, God and Truth. LUMBERTON, NOtfTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1909. WHOLE NO. 2429 VOL. XXXIX NO. 98. i . i I III HI II I - Watches And Chains ! The Largest Stock in the County. If Interested see us Before Buying. Boylins Jewelry Store The K. P. Guano Distributor. Scatters the Guano ami Covers it. No want- around stumjis and ends. No cogs btuI chains to cloff and break. .Nothing about it to braak Vet out of fix. Large hopp-JV balanced load, light runninV Sows any quantity. Simple itrong, dur able. Awarded Mliplomas by North and Sout):arolina Fairs 1904. Unquestiably the only Entirely Satisfactory Distrib utor before theople. All Dis tributors furnftied with Gal vanized Iron Kind Shields to prevent guafl) from blowing way in win weather. Eor f'ic'Tiyi Leading Dealers in Robeson and Adjoining Counties. N. JtfCOBl HARDWArE COMPANY, 1-21 f x Wilmington, N. C. A- J. Faycttcyillc, pi. C THE LEGISLATURE Complete Stock of Dry Goods, Nations, Shoes and Ready-to-Wear garments. As Soon as the Spring Styles are Ready, we will have a Full Line of MILLINERY and the BEST MILLINER who has ever been IN THIS SECTION OF THE STATE. w J. H. ANDERSON. Fayettevllle, N. C. . ll-30-8t STATEMENT OF CONDITION OF The Bank of Lumberton, As Condensed from Report of the North Carolina Corporation Commission. November 27th, 1908. RESOURCES: Loans and Discounts, : : : : $142,420.36 Overdrafts, :::::: 3,513.60 Real Estate, : : : : : : 510.00 Furniture and i Fixtures, : : : : 3,383.27 CASH AND DUE. FROM BANKS : 69,958.91 Capital, : : Undivided Profits, Bills Payable, DEPOSITS, : LIABILITIES!: $219,786.14 $ 50,000.00 9,775.93 NONE 160,010.21 $219,786.14 Consideration. Safety and the Welfare of our Depositors our First Total Deposits in our Commercial and Savings Bank OVER $250,000.00. REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE Robeson County Loan and Trust Company, (Bank of Lumberton BttUdlnK,) LUMBERTON N. C. AT CLOSE OF BUSINESS NOVEMBER 27TH, 1908. RESOURCES : Loans and Discounts, Furniture and Fixtures, Buildings, : : : CASH AND DUE FROM BANKS 88,107.63 398.85 4,382.89 12,095.18 LIABILITIES: Capital Stock, Undivided Profits, DEPOSITS, Four per cent. Interest Paid on Deposits, E veryiThree' Months. $103,985.56 $ 10,000.00 3,699.23 90,286.23 $103,985.56 Compounded A. W. McLean, President. Stephen Mclntyre, Vice-President. C. n. Morrow Cashier. WHEN YOU BUY FROM US REMEMBER WE HAVE THE Newest Colors and Styles In Schloss Brothers Clothing. Come and Give Us a Call. RESULT 15 ABSOLUTE -CL0Tr1ES.x Jenrette - Singletary Company, Large Number of New Bills Monday Local Option Bill for New Hanover The Mat ter of Draining and Reclaim ing Swamp Lands. The Senate was in session only 45 minutes Monday. A compan ion bill to the one introduced in the House the other day was in troduced f orequipment and main tenance of the Eastern Training School at Greenville, providing for $50,000 immediately and for 125,000 annually until further notice. The session of the House Mon day was marked by a large num ber of new bills. The resolution of sympathy with the King and Queen of Italy was passed as amended by the committee on appropriations by striking out the $5,000 appropriation. The time for the address of Dr. S. A. Knapp, of the United States De partment of Agriculture, to the General Assembly was set for to morrow evening, the 29th. A petition was presented by Repre sentative Koonce.of Onslow, from citizens of that county, asking that the State prohibition law be so amended as to allow farmers to sell wine of their own make in quantities of one quart or less. Forty-seven more counties were tacked on to Mr. Morton's bill for the control of automobiles on the roads of New Hanover coun ty. When Mr. Grant moved to adjourn for the day, before the calendar was exhausted, at 1:20 o'clock, Mr. Doughton, of Alle ghany, reminded the gentleman from Davie that if the minority were really anxious to get through and go home the way to do it was to stay at work each day and keep up with the calendar. Some of the new bills introduc ed are: Providing for an amend ment to article 6 of the constitu tion.eliminating the poll-tax pre requisite to voting and extending the time for applying the educa tional qualification to November, 1916; prohibiting the sale ot co caine, opium and morphine of more than 5 per cent, solution strength, the present limit being 30 per cent., and putting viola tion under jurisdiction of the Su perior courts instead of justices ot the peace; levying a tax upon automobiles and other motor ve hicles in New Hanover for the benefit of the public roads of that county; amending the pilotage law so that if a vessel decides to take a pilot on the Cape Fear river, it must take the one that spoke her first at sea and took her over the bar. Under the law of 1907, as it is, pilotage over the bar at Southport is compulsory, but optional up and down the river, and the vessel has the right to take "any pilot" on the river. Another bill by Mr. Mor ton would exempt New Hanover county from the provisions of the btate prohibition law and re store local self-government". This last bill was referred to the committee on regulation of the liquor traffic. In the bill it is set forth that the majority of the qualified voters of New Han over county are against the pres ent prohibition law, and have so recorded their votes, both at the special election of May 26 and at all other elections held for this purpose; and it is desired that al laws relating to the manufac ture and sale of liquors which were in force on January 30, iyu, be re-enacted in so far t they relate to NewHanover coun ty. A bill was introduced to estab list a teachers' training and sum i I a i "ii mer scnooi at Asnevme, upon property owned by the city in the heart of the town; to permit absolute divorce alter 5 years abandonment instead of ten, pro vided there is continued resi dence in the State during the abandonment. The resolution to pay the $1, 055 expenses of the inauguration committee was passed by the committee on appropriations. I he committee on education turn ed down the bill to tax manufac turers, bottlers and dealers in coca-cola and all drinks containing caffeine, except coffee, the pro ceeds to go to the public schools. The Senate judiciary committee ordered a favorable report for Senator Elliott's bill to require the clerks of the Superior Courts to report to the Attorney Gener al all regular and special terms J 1.1 1 M oi court, the number ol cases tried, the number continued, the time court was in session and the cause for adjournment, the Dur- pose being to gather data for the guidance of the next Legisla ture m redistricting the State r:n . . oujs snwmz attorneys liens on judgments for fees as counsel and to facilitate settlement of executors both received unfavor able report. The joint committee on agri culture heard Monday from ex perts and citizens interested on the subject of draining and re claiming the wet, swamp and overflowed lands of the State. The bill is that recommended by the drainage convention held at Newbern last September. It provides that when a majority of the la adowners resident in a proposed draining district, or the owners of three-fifths of such land, petition the clerk of the Supei 'or Court to have cer tain territory organized into a drainage district, the clerk ap points drainage engineers and two viewers to make a prelimin ary examination. The drainage commissisisioners appointed are to be one a disinterested civil and drainage engineer and the other two resident freeholders, the engineer to be appointed on recommendation of the State geologist and paid by the State preliminarily; the pay to be re funded when the drainage fund is provided by the sale of bonds or otherwise. The superinten dent of construction shall fur nish bond in the sum of $10,000. The commissioners are to assess the lands for 'taxation for the cost of tne work. If the cost is ess than an average of 25 cents an acre on all the land in the district, the assessment is to be collected in one installment like State taxes; if more than that, the commissioners may issue bonds after three weeks' notice, and any land owner not wanting to pay the interest on bonds may pay the county treasurer the full amount of the assessment and have his land released. Congressman Suall and J. O. Wright, supervising drainage engineer of the United States Department of Agriculture, headed a delegation of citizens rom Hyde county that appear ed before Governor Kitchin, the Oi.. l i , j,La: i egislative committees relative to a movement for the enact ment of a law by tlie'present General Assembly that; will pro vide for the drainage of large sections of Hyde county, in cluding Mattamuskeet lake and adjacent swamp landa owned by the State board of education. A bill has been prepared and will be introduced as soon as the State authorities, especially the State board of education, de cides just what attitude it will take regarding the undertaking. The bill is to apportion the cost of draining private lands among the landowners in proportion to the benfits. It is claimed that these lands cannot be drained without draining the State ands and the lake also, and this is the reason it is sought to include the State in the undertaking, which is declared by experts to be entirely practicable. There are two propositions, one being for the State to share the cost of the drainage and the other for the State to donate the lake bed to persons or a corporation that will drain it. ORRUM OCCURENCES. A Coming Debate and Oyster Supper A Delightful "At Home' ' Personal. Correspondence of The Robesonian. Miss Emma H. Kelley spent Saturday night and Sunday with Miss Katie Stone at Mt. Eliam. Mr.- W.C Powell has construct ed a nice fence around his yard, which adds much to the appear ance of his residence. There will be a public debate and an oyster supper here on Friday night, the 5th of Feb ruary. The query will be, "Resolved, that North Carolina should have a four-months' com pulsory education law." The speakers are: affirmative, R. C. Pickler, H. G. Jackson and N. S. Barnes; negative, Grover Britt, Thad. Stone and Alexander Gra ham. Everybody is cordially in vited. Miss Howard's "At Home" to her music class, the hour from 4 to 5 Saturday afternoon, the 23rd., was one filled with joy and mirth for those who have been enrolled in the music class of Stinceon Institute. Miss Bonnie Howard, the efficient teacher of the class, received each pupil in a very pleasing manner and soon all were at ease in her room, which had been tastefully ar ranged for the occasion. After some preliminary conversation a musical contest was entered into with gay spirits. Several tied for the prize, a piece of sheet music, but the Fates would have Miss Athesia Powell the success ful contestant. Refreshments were served in an attractive way and when the time came for leav ing all the fortunate members of the class united in voting Miss Howard not only a splendid music teacher but also a charm ing hotess. ice v. b. J. Mcbonel made an interesting talk at our school here after -the recitation last Sunday morning. Since Mr. McOonel has moved here he has decided to build and remain with us. He has purchased a lot from Mr. J. R. Lawson and will soon begin the construction of a resi dence on Lawson street. Messrs. Heck Stevens and Dave Floyd were here Sunday. Simon. .Orrum, N. C, Jan. 25, 1909, Abbottsburg News Affairs- Movements of the People. Correspondence of The Robesonian. Miss Ida Gooden returned home last week from Pollard; Ala., where she had been visit ing her sister for some time. ROBERT froml Sun- LUMBERTON, N. C Subscribe For Roumanian. Rank Foollshnes. "When attacked by a cough or a cold or when your throat is sore, it is rank toolishnese to take any other medicine than Dr. King's New Discovery," says C. O. Eldridge.of Empire, Ga. "I have Used New Discoverv seven vnara onH T know it is the best remedv on PsrtVi fnr coughs ahd colds, croup, and all throat ana mng troubles. My children are subiect to croup, but New Discovery quickly cures every attack". Known me worm over as the King of throat anu lung remedies. Sold under guaran W8 at ail flrno- fltnroa Rfin T1 nn inoi uviuc jxee. Miss Lizzie Campbell, North Brown Marsh, spent day in these parts. Mrs. W. J. McEwen and chil dren are spending this week visiting Mrs. R. E. Lee, of Lum berton, Mr. D. M. Buie called in Sun day night from North Brown Marsh. Rev. A. McFadyen, of Clark ton, was calling on the sick folks yesterday. Mrs. A. F. Harinton, of Clark ton, was in this vicinity for a short while this week. Miss Carrie McEwen spent ast week in Columbus county visiting her aunts, Mrs George and JVLisa Kate McEwen, the lat ter being quite sick but much im proved. Mrs. Wilton McCallum and children are visiting home folks this week. Mrs. McCallum is quite sick, but is improving slowly. Misses Lang and Harvel. of Brunswick county, are visiting MissJennettMcK.ee this week. Mr. Woodie McFatter got his foot right badlV mashed at the ; :i i irM i.i mi yiauujg iiini u yiarmon inurh. day. V We sympathize With the fami ly of Mr. A. S. MCallum, who is undergoing a serious operation in a v lrginia hospital. Men folks are hustline around 1 i maiung tneir perries now and irom the way the weather feels they can soon go to planting corn, cotton, etc. Mr. J. D. George spent a short while in these parts last week Misses Lula and Pearl Gocden spent Saturday and Sunday with their sister, . Mrs. R. D. Mo Ewen. Abbottsburg, C. Jan. 23 1909. V' Long Branch Locals. Correspondence of The Robesonian. Mr. A. L. Stone, who has been sick for a great while and has been to a hospitial in Charlotte, has returned after having been gone three weeks. He is greatly improved and we all think that by taking good care of himself he will be able to go to church in a month or so. MissAnna Belle Humphrey, accompanied by Miss Lee Pope, visited her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Humphrey, of Saddle Tree, Sunday. Mrs. Martha Stone, who has been spending a while with her husband at the sanatorium in Charlotte, has returned home. Farmers are getting ready to plant, cutting stalks, and mak ing tobacco beds is the latest now-adays. A Higher Health Level. "I have reached a higher health level since I began using Dr. King's New Life Pills", writes Jacob Springer. West Franklin, Maine. "They keep mv stomach, liver and bowels working just rigni . it tnese puis disappoint you on inai, money win be refunded at drug stores. 25c. Mr. J. O. Carter, of Lumber- iirx-i, niw vioiuug 111 willO pal t Ul the world last week. Wonder if Mt. Eliam folks want to have another debate? :f they do, why let me know. Lumberton, N. C, R. F. D.No. Jan. 23, 1909. Aii Odd Inscription and What it r leans. Olds in Charlotte Observer. If you will delve among the court house records in a lot of the counties in this State you will find a very strange endorse ment upon some of the papers, subpoenas, etc., in other words the three letters, "G. T. T, Now what do these mean? We .Ln? t .1 1 1 were taiKing aDcuc tnis odd in scription a day or so ago, a num- j ber 01 lawyers being present.and only one of the number was able to give the meaning. Back yon der, a good many years, when a gentleman much sought after faded out of signt he did not go up into the air at all but lit out for Texas, and so it grew to be a tashion when a deputy sheriff or constable could not find such a person to make the simple en dorsement above referred on the . 1 1 . papers in tne case, thus saying in the briefest sort of way that he had gone to Texas. " $100 Reward all The readers of this Darier will be Dleas- eo 10 learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that sience has been able to cure irr all its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the on ly positive cure now known to the med ical traternity. Catarrh beine a con stitution disease, requires a constitu tional treatment Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken interally, acting directly upon the blood and rAucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the founda tion of disease, .and giving the patient trngth by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its-curative yowers that they offer Ona Huna-ed Dollar for any case that it tails to. cure, bend for list of testimo nials. 1 Address: F J. CHENEY & Co. Toledo.O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. ladcis-Hail's Faitilv Pills for conHti- What Manner of Man He Was "A Consummate Illustration of the Real MaVi of Power." The following eloquent tribute to General Robt. E. Lee is taken from an address delivered at Chaoel Hill on last Tuesday, the anniversary of Ge;i. Lee's birth. by Dr. Woodrow Wilson, presi dent of Princeton University: "The war between the States was quick with forces which it is difficult for us to handle even now without excitement. That war represented such convictions as are of the color - and ardor of blood. The stage of that great drama is flooded with a lurid light. It is hard to hold calm judgments regarding it. And yet perhaps the most dramatic cir cumstance of the whole tragedy is that at the centre of that crimson field stood the quiet fig ure of this man whom we re gard as above all gentle, remov ed from passion and of the very flavor of quiet sincerity. There was no touch of the histrionic about General Lee. His modest demeanor upon every field of action seems almost an attempt to withdraw himself from sight and to move the forces of the day without thought of the gen eral and with thought only for the business in hand. And yet he is all the more noticeable on that account. He was, in fact, like every man of supreme force, compact of fire, as Washington was, though the fire that burned in Washington was less concealed upon the surface of the man than that which moved Lee to his daily achievements. Every one who approached General Washington was aware that he was in the presence of a man of powerful passions, though only one or two men could ever say that they had seen him yield to a,,v.oTtbe impulsive forces that slum aunaay u , . - H he Vn'mcoif perfectly in hand. In General Lee, on the other hand, the fire came to the surface and declared itself to the observation of those who stood about him only at some crisis of the action on the battlefield, when with a sort of imperious energy he roused him self to stir those whom he com manded to the thing that was to be done and to check any at tempt to question or alter his directions. And so he stands for us as a consummate illustra tion of the real man of power, Fire under control is the very emblem of force; uncontrolled it is the emblem of destruction, and this man's perfectly school ed and disciplined power is the model ot wnat men who com- mand should be. "But fire under control is a perfect emblem of, force only when it is not only, controlled, but directed to the accomplish ment of definite ends.4 Lee was expressive, not of self-will, not of mere aggressive, Cvmmand ing power, however disciplined and restrained, but of something which can be described only as a principle alive and in action. He used his force as a man, does who is serving, not himself, but some idea which rules and in spires him. His quietness and modesty when out of action were as true an indication of the real character of the man as the fire and energy that flamed in him when battles were afoot. For it j was not himself he was gratify- 1 ing; it was a duty he was serv- j ing and a definite conception and j purpose he was pursuing. Ho 1 was self-subordinated to princi- j pie alike in choice and in action, ! looking not to his interest or his own glory, but to his duty. It is this which makes him a supreme example for men who seek to serve. With force enough, initiative enough, organizing and commanding power enough to gain any object he chose for himself, he thought never of himself but only of the thing he was set to do, and this self-subordination to principle and to duty, shining so conspicuously in him, as it did in Washington, is what puts him alongside oi Washington among the great characters of our country, for it is a singular and sienificant thing that men's characters grow in proportion as they be come indifferent to themselves and to their own interests. They are lifted, not by schemes of self-aggrandizement, but by wishing only to guide the tide of purpose arising in a nation, and they are themselvesnohigherthan the tide by which they are lifted and which they know how to govern. There is a sense in which it may be said that it is not character merely that does this, for the quality of this kind of accomplishment does not seem wholly personal. It is rather the . 1 . expression, tne embodiment in a person s choice of a force great er than the individual, the force of purity and progress that is in a free people and without which no people can be either free or great" The Selection Of a Piano is very much the choice of friends. like The more care exercised in the selection, the more certain we are of lasting friendship; and the greater one's refine ment and education, the more judgment is displayed in the choice of friends. The selection and exclusive use of Stieff Pianos in many of the greatest educational insti tutions in the United States is a source of gratification to us, and we feel justly proud of the fact that in about two hundred colleges we have more than one thousand Stieff Pianos. There must be a reason. INVESTIGATE ! PROFESSIONAL CARDS Abner Barker, Tljomas L. Johnson. BARKER & JOHNSON, Attorneys at Law, LUMBERTON, N. C. All business given prompt and care ful attention. Office upstairs over Rob eson County Loan & 1 rust Co. 1U-H 'Phone No. 97. -wt-iAjaa CHAS. M. STIEFF, Manufacturer of The Artistic Stieff, Shaw and Stieff Self-Player Piano. Southern Warerooms, 5 W. Trade Street, CHARLOTTE, N. C. C. H. WILMOTH, Mgr. OH'JR-ON "BLUR" lhis word is ijsetl by people coming to us perhaps morethan under any oth er conditions. The meaning of this word is plain to us all, and when you hear it you know what it means. Something is not clear, a mist, cloudy, smoKy, shady, and as some say inky, a little obscured. All these words are familiar to us, they come to us in com plaints or expressions of trouble. - Broueht about bv poor eyesight, or as it is usually expressed, everything has become BLUR'D. We often make things clear to our patrons and that we understand this difficulty. Come and see us. EYES EXAMINED FREE. Dr. VINEBERG, At Kinirbury's Drug Store, Masonic Temp! Wilmington, N. C. ' Artificial Eyes Inserted Without Pain, 8-24-tf D. P. Shaw, L. T. Cook. SHAW & COOK, Attorneys at Law, LUMBERTON, N. C. All business entrusted to them will receive careful and prompt attention. Office over White & Oough s store. 9 24 WadeWishart, E. M. Britt WISHART, & BRITT, Attorneys at Law, LUMBERTON. N. a All business given prompt and care ful attention. Offioe upstairs in Argus Building. ; 9-10 R. C. Lawrence T Stephen Mclntyre, James U. Mclntyre, Lawrence & Proctor, 1 Attorneys and Counselors at Law, LUMBERTON, - - - N. C. Practice in State knd Federal Courts, I) ..4- n:i j-A .it 1 z T. A. McNeill, ' T. A. McNeill, Jr. McNeill & McNeill, Attorney al Law gt LUMBRTON, N. C. Will practice in nil the Courts. Busi ness attended to promptly. N. A. McLean, A. W. McLean. McLEAN & McLEAN, Attorn e vis at Law, LUMBERlbN. N. C. Offices on 2nd floor of Bank of Lum berton Building, Rooms 1, 2, 3, and 4. Prompt attention given to all businesa. CHAS. B. SKIPPER, ATTORN El -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 Officii E. J. BRITT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, LUMBERTON, N. C . Office over Pope's Drug Store. Dr. J. H. HONNET, Eye. Ear, Nose and Throat Specialist, No. 12 North Front Street, Wilmington, N. C. Formerly Eye and Ear Hospital N T i Af All Ml Iork u,tv- Late Assistant Surges lVUeWnterS UI All lIiaKeS Wrneu Hospital. 8-C- 1 - Sold, Exchanged and Rented. Easy Payments. S. H. HAMILTON, Local Agent. Thurman D. Kitchin, M. Physician and Surgeon, LUMBERTON, N. C County W. H. SHOOTER. Contractor and Builder, Lumberton, N. C. 15 years' experience. Give me a chance. 9-7-tf Office next door to Robeson Loan and Trust Company. Office phone 126 Residence phone 124 7-9 Dr. d. m. Mcdonald, Red Springs, N. C. Special Attention Given to Fitting iii asses. Office in Citizen Building next to Post- otnee. 10-8-8 ? 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. J. M. LILi, 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, Lumberton, N. C. Office over McMillan's Drug Store. Calls answered Promptly day or nigh t Residence at Mrs. Sue McLeod's. 4-27-tf. DR. N. A. THOMPSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, LUMBERTON, - N. C. Office at Hospital. Phone No. 41. Down town office over McMillan's Drug Store. Calls promptly answered night or day, in town or in the countVy. DR. R.T. ALLEN, $100 POPE DRUG CO. Wishs to call attention to the fact that it keeps ev erything usually found in a FiRST-CLASS DRUG STORE. From thi3 . date the Drug Store will be OPEN ON It Does the Business- Mr. E. E. Chamberlain, of Clinton Maine, says of Buclen's Arnica Salve "It does the business; I have use it for piles and it cured them. Used it for chapped hands and it cured them. Ap. plied it to an old sore and it healed it without leaving a scar behind." 25c at all drug stores. The merchant who doesn't ad vertise stands inhis own light, SUNDAYS m. and irom 3 to 5 p. m. fdr PrescriDtion Work ONLY. 1 from 9 to 11 , 9-14 GEO. S. BACKER & SON DENTIST, LUMBERTON, - -. N. C.' Office over Dr. McMillan's Drug Store. DR. JOHN KNOX, JR., Physician and Surgeon, Ltttnberton, 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 CHARLES McMILLEN, ARCHITECT, 313-314 Southern Bui'Jing, g WUmington, N. C E. G. SIPHER, ELECTRICIAN. Lumberton, N. C. Office in Shaw Building, Phone No. 11 1-6 MANUFACTURES OF oors. Sash, Blinds. Moulding. Building MaterU Sash Weights and Co J. Charleston, S. C Purchase our makes, which we guai antee superior to any sold South, and thereby save money. Window and Fan cy Glass a Specialty 4-20 P i n e s a 1 v e ACTS USE poultici a.V.nl 31 RELIEVES DR. R. F. GRAHAM, "" DENTIST, LUMBERTON, N. a Office over Bank of L-imberton. Rooms no. 7 and 8. 1-20-C8 Write to the Wilmington Marble and Granite for their ILLUSTRATI LOGUE of MONl HEADSTO: R. D. TUCKEI TIT t 1 i r L
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 28, 1909, edition 1
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