Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / Feb. 15, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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Advertising Rates I On Application. ! -- ! ! ! I r "I . n r.t'. '' i Established 1870. VOL. XXXIX NO. 103. Country, God and Truth. LUMBERTON, NORTH CAROLINA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1909. Single Copies Five Cents. WHOLE NO. 2434 Watches And Chains ! The Largest Stock in the County. If Interested see us Before Buying. Boylin's Jewelry Store The K. P. Guano Distributor. Scatters the Guano and Covers 1 t. No waste around stumps and ends. No cogs and chnius to clog and break. Nothing about it to break or get out of fix. Large hopper, balanced load, light running. Sows any quantity. Simple, strong, dur able. Awarded diplomas by North and south Carolina Fairs 1904. Unquestionably the only Entirely Satisfactory Distrib utor before the people. All Dis tributors furnished with Gal vanized Iron Wind Shields to prevent guano from blowing away in windy weather. Eor Sale by Leading Dealers in Robeson and Adjoining Cpunties. N. JACOBI HARDWARE COMPANY, 1-21 Wilmington, N. C. J. H. ANDERSON, Faycttcvillc, N. C HOW LINCOLN BOY. HELPED A RICHLY MERITED TRIBUTE. Complete Stock of Dry Goods, Notions, 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. J. H. ANDERSON. Fayetteville, N. C. ll-80-8t PROSPEROUS TIMES Are fast Returning and All Business Should now Begin to Expand. To Meet These Conditions we are Taking Care of the Demands of our Present Customers and we Are Ready to Supply our New Customers with Funds in Amounts Limited only by the Business they will give us in Return for these Accommodations. IF YOU NEED MONEY CALL ON US for Particulars as to our Methods. ::::::::: The Bank of Liimberton, LUMBERTON, N. C. A. W. McLEAN, President. R. D. CALDWELL, V-President. C. B. TOWNSEND, Active Vice-President. A. E. WHITE, V-President. H. MORROW, Cashier. THE GREAT CLEARANCE SALE IS NOW ON And will Continue throughout January. REMEMBER, all Winter Goods ARE GOING AT 45 CENTS ON THE DOLLAR. Die Chance of your life to get Winter Clothes Below Cost. Come Quick Before the Stock is Picked Over. Yours for More Business. A. WEINSTEIN, THE KING CLOTHIER LUMBERTON, NORTH CAROLINA. Through the Great Man's Rec ognition the Boy is Now One of the Most Prominent Citizens of Little Rock Story of the Friendship of the Two Reads Like Romance. Little Rock. Ark.. Special 11th. Because Abraham Lincoln condescended to notice a little boy who was selling campaign buttons with the future emanci pator's picture on them, tired out from his work, was sleeping on a chair in a hotel office, and did not feel it below him to lift him and carry the lad to hi3 own room to sleep out his weariness, that boy is to-day one of the'most respect ed citizens of Little Rock, and is secretary of the board of trade. George Russ Brown when a boy in the late '50's and early Ws lived in Galesburg, 111. At that time Abraham Lincoln was mak ing his first campaign, and the little Brown followed him from town to town selling campaign buttons with Lincoln's picture in a tinfoil 'frame. Brown knew the candidate well and whenever he passed he always got a nod and a kindly word. At that time Illinois was a hot bed of politics and Galesburg was seething with the excitement of the presidential cam pa i g n farmers Hocked into the city and marched in parades through the streets. At these times Brown reaped a small harvest from the sale of the campaign buttons, many of which he wore pinned over the front of his coat. He allowed the purchaser to select his own button and pay whatsoever he desired therefor. At one time a stranger was buying a button when Lincoln passed near. He approached the pair just as the man handed the Brown lad 50 cents in pay ment. "Give it back, " said Lincoln. "The button is not worth that." The boy started to do as he was bidden, but the purchaser would not have it, and with a complimentary remark for the candidate, he bought another, paying 50 cents for it also. "You could have heard Mr. Lincoln laughing at least a block," says Mr. Brown, in speaking of the incident, now. "But that was his custom. He was always in a good humor. I remember him best as a long legged, boisterous story-telling young man, without beard or mustache." In those days the coming Pres ident called the Brown lad Ottawtromie" and when he failed to pronounce it correctly Mr. Lincoln never failed to dem onstrate his mirth in loud shouts of laughter. During the heat of his second campaign, when the boy was following him to Knoxville, Bloomington, Monmouth, Free port, Springfield and other Illinois towns, selling thebuttons, Lincoln was always saying cheer ful things to him. At one time young Brown, tired out, threw himself into a chair in a hotel office, and while the night speaking was going on, fell asleep. Some time later Lincoln passed through on his way to bed, and seeing the little fellow curled up in the chair, picked him up and taking him to his own room, laid the little tired form on his own bed, where the future citizen of Little Rock was allowed to finish his nap in peace and quietude. While a page in the Wisconsin Legislature young Brown sold Lincoln The Madison Journal, and also had a paper route which included Camp Randall, where the Federal troops of Wisconsin were mobilized just before going to the front. These days Brown saw the President many times day. 'I never realized, however, the greatness ot the man in those days," said Secretary Brown, while discussing the plans for celebrating the martyr ed Presidents' birthday Friday The Movement to Honor the Women of the Confederacy as Seen by a Northern News paper. New York Tribune. However the people of the country may differ as to the issues involved in the civil war, there can be only one -opinion re garding the bill introduced in the Legislature of South Caro lina providing for a monument to the women of the Confederacy. Full recognition of the heroism of these women has been unani mously accorded by Northern as well as Southern writers, and it is fitting that future generations should have a visible reminder of the self-sacrifice of that part of the" population which did its heroic work during lour dark years, not to the inspiring music of the military band or in that excitement of the battlefield which leads to self -forgetf illness, but on the deserted plantation, in the midst of almost inconceiv able hardships. in any war the women are called upon to carry fully as large a share of the burden as the men. It is not they who bear the arms and who hear the whistling of the bullets over the field of bat tle, gray with smoke, but it is the women's ears that are strain ed for n?ws from the front, and the women's hearts that ache for those never to return. For them there is none of the inspir ation which a united host creates: they must carry not only their own burdens, but in many in stances are compelled to pick up those laid down by the men who have gone to the front. All that the North suffered during the war the South suffer ed two-iold. The bouth was drained of its strong men to an extent hardly conceivable in the North. Not only were the wo men left to carry on almost all the work of their country, year after year, with such assistance as they could secure from the negroes who had remained faith tui to them, hut they were to a large extent deprived of the means with which to perform the simplest and most necessary tasks. Over andjover again the crops they had planted and hop ed to harvest were destroyed and their fields laid waste. Their homes were in many instances pre-emptied by their enemies, and many of them spent their days in nursing not only their own soldiers, but also the suffer ing men in blue. No one will begrudge the women of the South the monument which the men of the South are proposing to erect in their honor. It is one more merited tribute to an example of heroism which has tew equals m the his tory of civilization. DYNAMITED NEGRO LIVES. T " II l ! r. i rnysicians marvel inai such a Battered Person Can Survive. Asheville Special, 11th. The negro convict, Dave Mc Cain, who was blown up by a dynamite explosion at the con vict camps Saturday morning, is at the Mission Hospital alive and, the attending physicians say, with a good chance for recovery. That McCain is alive and may possibly recover is a marvel to the physicians. He is literally torn to pieces. Both eyeballs were blown out at the time of the explosion, his face and body mutilated and pieces of stone the size of marbles driven into and through the flesh. The phy sicians picked small stones out of the eye-sockets and from the flesh. One arm has been ampu tated. Strange to say, the negro has never suffered any pain. This is explained by the physicians who say that the shock was so great as to make the man immune from pain. McCain is said to be the worst battered up man to be alive that ha3 come to the notice of physicians here for manv years. WHERE PEOPLE LIVE LONG. Fayetteville to Have a New Pa 10-26 Buggies, Carriages AND BUSINESS MAN GONE. Disappeared From Home in Pine View, Harnett County Robbery. Wilmington Star. 12th. A gentleman in the city yes terday told of the strange dis appearance of Mr. C. B. Kelly, a merchant, large land owner and cotton buyer, from his home at Pine View, Harnett county, on the A. & Y. railroad, on Dec. 20th since which time he has not been seen or heard of. He bought thousand mile book at Sanford from the Seaboard when last seen and is believed to have gone away. He is supposed to have had quite a large sum of money on his person when he left. The same gentleman here yes terday told of the ingenious rob bery of Mr. H. L. Cameron at Pine View about three weeks ago. A man claiming to be a deaf mute asked to be taken in for a night's lodging. Mr. Cameron took him in but the stranger was gone next morning and he had taken with him Mr. Cameron's watch and about$30in money. Nothing has been heard of the fellow since. per. Announcement was made Thursday of the establishment of a new weekly paper at Fay etteville, The Index, to be pub lished by Mr. J. A. Oates, the former publisher of The North Carolina Baptist, and Mr. J. A, Parham, formerly news and tele graph editor of the Raleigh News and Observer, Mr. Parham being managing editor and Mr. Oates associated as an editor. Messrs. Oates and Parham, in the estab lishment of the Index have taken over three other papers The Cape Fear Shuttle, weekly, of Hope Mills; The Clarkton Ex press, weekly, of Clarkton and The Chronicle, monthly of Fay etteville. Mr. G. G. Myrover, the former editor of The Shuttle will edit a department of The In dex containing the news of Hope Mills and its vicinity. A. C. Johnson, who formerly edited Ihe Clarkton Express, will be associated editorially. Dr. J. J. Hall, the publisher and editor of The Chronicle, will do special writingfor the paper. The first issue of The Index, which will be an eight-page week ly, will appear Wednesday. Prompt Payment of Life In surance Policy. Wilmington Evening Dispatch. 11th. The Wilmington office today paid to the beneficiary of the late J. W. Wishart $3,000, that being the face of the policy carried by the deceased with this company. It will be recalled that Mr. Wish art was accidentally killed Janu ary 10th, near White Hall, Bladen county, and for that reason proofs of death could not be obtained as soon as usual.The Wilmington office of the Life Insurance Com pany of Virginia forwarded the proofs of death to the home office last Friday and today handed over the check for $3,000. Men of 70 Not Regarded as Old Simnle Life and Longevity. I.ondon Daily News. In Norfolk them are in every vil- age individuals of more than 80 years of age and not infrequent- one or two over 90, and those of 70 and upward are regarded as not even old. Many farm la borers of 70 are quite hale and hearty, working from early morning up to 5 and 6 o'clock in the evening, and some are so vig orous as to earn a full man's wages. And the women in the country (writes a correspondent) are more tenacious ot lite perhaps than are the men. In one vil- age personally known to me, containing about 300 people, within the past six months have died three women of more than 90 years of age. the oldest of these being no less than 96. -In another Norfolk village with in habitants to the number of 400 there lives a man of 95, a woman of 90, a woman of 89, a woman or til and several ot both sexes over 80. In yet another village there is a blacksmith aged 96 and the widow of a country medical practitioner whose years mount up to 92. This longevity of the Norfolk peasant, comments The Lancet, has a very interesting pathologi cal sute to it. The chief enemy of the farm laborer of the East ern countries from the stand point of health is rheumatism. Not many reach even middle ag without having been the victims of rheumatism, and a large num ber crippled in their old age by this disease. But in spite of this the average of longevity seems to be very high, although as well as rheumatism he has to contend with the lack of adequate hous- TEN MILE An ca v entertainment f- Library Fund Movements of the People. ComSHiuli n- of Th.' KnU-imwii We are having vorv i weather in this section. Mr. H. B. Ilumiihrov. nf 1 m.. berton, filled Row U. K. S.M1. telle s appointment hoi-o Sun day. Mr. W. P. Barker, of I .nm- berton, spent Sunday with Mr. N. A. Townsend. Among the many that attoml- ed church here Sunday from a distance were Mr. Honry Jones and Miss Katye Marlov, of Lum ber Bridge. Mr. J. N. and Miss Doyle Britt spent Saturday and Sun day with home folks. Little Richard liozior. of Ro zier's, spent Sunday and yester day at the homo of Air. A. A. Bethune. Miss Lena Russ, of Barker's, who has been teaching near Barnesville, returned home last week, to the delight of her many friends. Mr, C. W. Barker spent Sun day evening in Bladen. The sad news reached here Sunday night of the death Mrs. ii j. i?m . ii ..i nan, oi iampa, r la. mk was 1 1 . I T 1 a uaugnier oi air. . n. row ers. Mr. Wiley Honeycutt and daughter, Miss Addie, of 1 iladen Union, were guests at Mr. Wil liam Malone's Sunday. Miss Nan Willis was the guest of Misses Cora and Fonnie Britt Saturday. Quite a number of our young people enjoyed a hayride Satur day night. A telegram reached here PROFESSIONAL CARDS Aluu r llarker. Th..nm I.. Johnson BARKER & JOHNSON, Attornkys at Law. U'MRKKTON. N. C. All t.usin.-ss given prompt ami rar lul attention. Office upstairs over Rob eson iV.unty l-omi&TrUHt l'i. 10-8 'Phone o. i(7. l. P. Shaw. I,. T. lxk. SHAW & COOK, Attoknkys at Law. ih Ainr.KTON, N. C. All business entrusted to them will rei eiye careful ami prompt attention. , . j ' U,,"K siore. Wade Wishart. K. M. Britt WISHART & BRITT, Attorneys at Law, LUMRKKTON. N. C. All business given prompt and care ful attention. Ullice upKlaira in Argua Building. y.jy Stephen Mclntyre, James 1). R. C. Lawrence Proctor. Mclntyre, Lawrence & Proctor, Attorneys and Counselor at Law, LUMBERTON, - - - N. C. Practice in State and Federal Courts. Prompt attention given to all business. T. A. McNeill, T. McNeill & ing accommodation and want of proper sanitary arrangements. That to eat sparingly of plain wholesome food, to be much in the open air and to work suffi ciently to occupy the mind and to exercise the body will enable a man to defy more or less the evils of environment would seem to be shown by the toughness of of the Norfolk laborer. Vaccination as a preventive of typhoid fever has been adopted by the medical corps in the army and the new system will be in troduced as rapidly as an ade quate supply of serum can be prepared and distributed for use by the officers of the corps. We Now Have a Large Stock of Up-to-Date Buggies and Harness. Quality, Prices and Terms Good. When in Town Come to See Us. William Jennings Bryan in speech at Pensacola, Fla., Feb. 9th, said "The country need not hope for a revision of the tariff at the hands of the present Con gress. The Republicans cannot ! afford to lower the tariff. Every man who has a schedule has con tributed to their campaign fund and must be protected. It is true that the contributions to the national fund were publish ed, but moneys received by the congressional fund were so taint ed that the Republicans dared not publish them even after the election." A torch operated by oxygen and acetylene radiating a heat of 6,300 degrees, said to be the most terrific known to science, has been invented. By means of this torch it is possible, it is de clared, to weld aluminum, here tofore regarded as an impossibil ity. The torch makes a flame that will cut through two inches of solid steel in less than a min ute and pierce a 12-inch piece of the hardest steel in less than ten minutes. It would take a saw almost twenty hours to do this work. Center Dots Movements of the People. CorrcKpondenoe of The Robesonian. Rev. R. A. Hedgepeth filled his regular appointment here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Don Inman, of Fairmont, spent Sunday after noon in this section. Mr. H. H. Pitman, of Fair mont, was in this community Tuesday on business. Mrs. Sandy Pitman, of Lum berton, spent a part of last week in this vicinity. Mrs. Emily J. Martin, of Raft Swamp, is visiting relatives and friends in this section. Messrs. Claude Bullock and Benton Stubbs spent a part of last week in McColl, S.C.,on busi ness. Mr. Wright Prevatte, of Lum berton, spent Wednesday here. Mrs. W. R. Atkinson and Misses Maude Bullock and Katye Bvrd spent Monday in Fairmont, guests at the home of Mrs. Anne Pitman. Messrs. Hunter Bethune and Joe Allen, of Kmgsdale, spent Sunday here. Messrs. Brant Atkinson and Claude Bullock attended a box supper at Mt. Eliam Saturday night and report a delightful time. Mr. Arthur Bullock, of Balti more, spent Sunday afternoon here. Mr. Edward Bissell, of Mt Eliam, spent Sunday afternoon here visiting his many friends. Quite a number of our people will take in the flag raising at Bethesday Friday. Lumberton, N. C, R. F. D. No. 3, Feb. 11, 1909. Sunday announcing the death of Mr. Carey Fisher, his death being the result of a runaway. One of the most enjoyable events of the day was an enter tainment given by the Chaffee Literary Society at the home of Mrs. Florence Britt Friday night for the purpose of raising money tor a library, uysters were served in an informal manner. 1 be most enjoyable event was a shooting match. A piece of card board with a red heart pierced through the center by a black arrow placed on the dining-room wall, and the contestants were given a bow and arrow. The prize was a roasted chicken for the shot nearest the confer of the heart. Mr. Neil A. R.;ss proved to be the most successful contestant. After enjoying everything in store for them and when time was telling of a new born day, the guests took their departure. The amount realized was between sixteen and seven teen dollars. Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Townsend, of St. Pauls, spent Sunday here. barah Jane. Ten Mile, N. C, Feb. 9, '09. 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. C. Offices on 2nd floor of Bank of Lum berton Building, Rooms 1, 2, 3, and 4. lrompt attention given to all businese. CHAS. B. SKIPPER, ATTORNEY-AT-I.AW, LUMBERTON, N. C. All business entrusted to him wi. receive prompt and careful attention. Oflice in First National Bank Build ing over Post Olfice. E. J. BRITT, ATTORN KY-AT-I Ji W, LUMBERTON, N. C, Office over Pope's Drug Store. DTT. HHON n etT Eye, Ear. Nose and Throat Specialist, No. 12 North Front Street, Wilmington, M. C. ornierly Eye and Ear Hospital New- York City. Late Assistant Surgeon, Cornell Hospital. 8-tt-tf hurman D. Kitchin, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, LUMBERTON, N. C. Office next door to Robeson County Loan and Trust Company. Office phone 126 Residence phone 124 7-9 HEN "CHEWS TOBACCO. Respectfully, How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- -io-tf PI Fuller Son, LUMBERTON, N. C. Advertise In THE ROBESONIAN. ward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall s Catarrh Cure. if . J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, U. We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be lieve him perfectly honorable in all bus iness transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Waldinc, K inn an & Marvin, ' Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken intern ally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testi monials Bent free. Price 75c. per bot tle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti I pation. In his address at the sixth councilor district of the Union Medical Society at McKinley Hall, Massillon State Hospital, of Ohio, Dr. J. D. O'Brien exhibited four patients who are suffering from paresis and who have been treat ed with a recently discovered serum. All are inmates of the Massillon State Hospital. In the clinic, Dr. O'Brien told of the results of experiments made on patients by the use of the seriim, which he had found beneficial, he says. He told of cases at the Massillon State Hospital, which, he said, had been sent away cur ed, but gave no names of pa tients. The four inmates exhib ited were in different stages of paresis. It is proposed to test Dr. O'Brien's methods of treat ment on these four subjects. Fred Perry, a young man of 18 years, was instantly killed by becoming entangled in a belt at the Lorene Oil Mill at Moorsville Thursday afternoon. He was in the act of placing a belt on a fast pulley when his clothing caught in the belt and in the twinkling ot an eye he was snatched up by the belt and hurl ed round and round the shaft ing, it being estimated that his body made over one hundred rev olutions before the machinery could be stopped. Cool-Headed Florida Officers Rescue Negro After He is Covered With Oil and Tied to Stake. Special to Charlotte Observer 12th. Charley Crumley, the negro arrested on suspicion of being She Refuses to Lay Without Daily Stimulant of Nicotine. Younestown, O.. Di: patch to New Vurk WorM The saltiest old salt that sails the sea does not love a chew of tobacco better than does a hen owned by Burt Miller, a lawyer, of this city, ror more than a year the hen, which was always industrious and remunerative, has refused to lay her customary egg each day unless her system is toned bv tobacco. So each dav Mr. Miller sets before her can of chewing tobacco and she takes a chew. The word "chew" is figurative, for. of course, nothing is rarer than hens' teeth. This hen Decks at the tobacco in the can Dlainlv with great enjoyment and. after holding it in her mouth a while, eiects it. The love ot tobacco must De an acquired taste for a hen, just as are caviar and olives lor a man. Mr. Miller thinks his hen flfnnired the taste bv eating to- haocne-- ' 's vhich she iounci on his e-rounds after his man of al workhad no further use for them The hen will chew only the best fine cut of one particular brand She has refused to taste sam tiIps of other brands sent to her the man wno auemptea to cnmi- r r,v,an.,fnMiirpr. whomav jNewen , - -j u ,rQio f n U If! T nany assault miss irma mevven , - h, ; m.-nf, the value vesterdav. was taken irom tne , i: . v .. .... i an H-iiverLisemeiiL icaum. lJ 1 jail at lakeland this morning Dy , t h until they l-v i UU Ia-viit r Tr 1 - a inuu ui. x,uw uici., . stake, tagots heaped aoout nis M mjiw tried to cure his body and oil poured over tne , - . , , -t . her Tbe Secret of Long Life. A French scientist has discovered one secret of lonff life. His method deals with the blood. But long ago millions of Americans had proved Electric Bit ters prolongs hie and makes it worth living. It purifies, enriches and vital izes the blood, rebuilds wasted nerve cells, imparts life aid tone to the en tire system. It's a godsend to weak, sick and debilitated people. "Kidney trouble had blighted my life for months," writes W. M. Sherman, of Cushing, Me. , cured me entirely, drug stores. but Electric Bitters Only 50c at all The board of commissioners of Craven county, after considering the matter for some time, have decided to place the county offi cers on a salary basis. The sala ry of each office will include the pay ot deputies and assistants. The following basis was agreed upon: Sheriff, 3,700; clerk ot court, $3,000; register of deeds, $2,500; treasurer, $1000; chair main, board of county commis sioners, $600;county commission ers, $4 per day while in actual session. The Legislature will be asked to give the authority to make the change and the plan will go into effect January 1st, 1910. mass with the intention of burn- iner him. However. Sheriff John Logan, his brother Alonzo Logan and Special Deputy E. McMullen pleaded for calm action and the negro declaring he could prove an alibi, was spared. Crumley was marched back to jail and a number of prominent men have sworn to prevent any further attempts upon his life. Many armed men are in the town. Miss Newell declares that Crumley looks like the man who attempted the crime but is not certain. J. M. LILLY, M. D. Practice limited to diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. 15 Green St. Fayetteville, N. C. 4-16-tf Dr Thomas C. Johnson, Physician and Surgeon, Liimberton, N. C. Office over McMillan's Drug Store. Calls answered 1'romptly day or nigh t Residence at Mrs. Sue McLeod's. 4-27-tf. DR. N. A. THOMPSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, LUMBERTON, - - X. C. Office at Hospital. Phone No. 41. Down town office over McMillan's Drug Store. Calls promptly arswered night or day, in town or in the country. DR. R. T. ALLEN, DENTIST, LUMBERTON, - - N. C. Office over Dr. McMillan's Drug Store. DR. JOHN KNOX, JR., Physician and Surgeon. Lumberton, N. C. Office at McLean-Rozier Drug btore J. G. MURPHY, M. D., Practice Limited to Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Wilmington, Pi. C. 6-1-tf CHARLES McMILLEN, ARCHITECT, 313-314 Southern Building, The merchant who vertise stands in his doesn't ad own light. tobacco cure." It had no effect on her, however efficacious it may be on numan. This hen's eggs have not the slightest taste or odor of nico tine, but are '"strictly fresh." Revolts al Cold Steel. "Your only hope," said three doctors to TVJrs. M E. Fisher, Detroit, Mich., suffering from severe rectal trouble, "lies in an operation." "Then I used Dr. King's New Life Pills," she writes, "till wholly cured." They prevent ap pendicitis, cure constipation, headache. 25c at all drug stores. Soldier Balks Heath P!ot. It seemed to J. A. Stone, a civil war veteran, of Kemp, Tex., that a plot ex isted between a desperate lung trouble and the grave to cause his death. "I contracted a stubborn cold," he writes, that developed a cough that stuck to me, in spite of all remedies, for years. My weight ran down to 130 pounds. Thpn 1 hocran to use Dr. King's New nisfoverv. which restored my health now weip-h 178 pounds." For severe colds, obstinate coughs, hemorrhages, asthma, and to prevent pneumonia it's unrivaled. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by all druggists. 8-6tf Wilmington, N- C. E. G. SIPHER, ELECTRICIAN, Lumberton, N. C. Office in Shaw Building, Phone No. 11 1-6 Subscribe for The Robesonian or 1909 and keep up with the vents of interest. DR. R. F. GRAHAM, DENTIST, LUMBERTON, N. a Office over Bank of lumberton. Rooms M- 7 andSL l-20-f8 Write to the Wilmington Marble and Granite Worlu for their ILLUSTRATED CATA LOGUE of MONUMENTS and HEADSTONES. R. D. TUCKER, Proprietor. WILMINGTON, :. C 1 tf V-iu 1 1 ; , - . .'-rr' V . . (v I
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
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Feb. 15, 1909, edition 1
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