Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / Feb. 25, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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E ROBI j Advertising Kates j One Dollar and un Application. i Fifty cents the Year. r A1TT A nT i i 11 5 Established 1870. Country, God and Truth. 4f VOL XL NO. 2. 1 'rtiefln&r , opies Five Cents. LUMBERTON, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1909. 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 it No waste around Htumps and ends. No cogs and chains to clojf and break. Nothing about it to break or get out of tin. Large hopper, balanced load, light running. Sows any quantity. Simple, strong, dur able. Awarded diplomas by North and South Carolina Fairs l'J04. 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. " 1 f Eor Sale by Leading Dealers in Robeson and Adjoining Counties. N. JACOBI HARDWARE COMPANY Wilmington, N. C. 1 1-21 J, , ANDERSON, Fayetteville, N. C. 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-30-8t WILLING? OF COURSE. 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 Col. Bryan Reiterates Statement That He is Willing to Run Again An Incumbrance Which the Democratic Party Cannot Unload. Charlotte Observer, 22d. Col. Bryan said again at Den ver, Lol., baturday, what he has said many times since the last election, in reference to making a feurtk-race for the presidency: 1 am not AW out-and-out candi date, but if the people of this country and my own party should demand that I make the race again, standing for my well- known principles and ideas, why, do not very well see how I could refuse." He said in the same connection that he had made himself ' 'clear on this sub ject time and again, and if the people have sense enough to un derstand it, why, what's the use of explaining it over again : We scarcely see. And here we have it once more, except a little more definitely, perhaps. We do not know but what it will be just as well .o have it over again not, as some would argue, in order to "get rid" of him, for another experience would be ineffective for that pur pose ;it has been seen that defeat is not a cure: but because he would defeat any other candidate and better he than a better man. Why do we say that? Witness: In a speech at Urbana, 0., in 1904 he said: "The Democrats in 1892 played a confidence game on the people and put a bunco steerer Mr. Cleveland at the head of the party." In the cam paign of 1904, while "support ing" Judge Parker for President, he said: "A Democratic victory will mean very little, if any, progress on economic questions so long as the party is under the control of the Wall Street element. Mr. Parker is as thoroughly committ ed to the side of the fianciers as Mr. Roosevelt. After the party had rejoiced over the harmony secured by the omission of the money question from the plat form and after he had secured the nomination he injected his views upon the subject at a time when he could not be taken from the ticket without demoralization. The nomination was therefore secured by crooked and indefen sible methods. " This is the sort of "support'' he gives Democratic candidates. With a great many people, enough to turn the scale in an election, Bryanism is a religion. There fore any Democratic candidate whom he wants beaten will be beaten and he wants any one beaten excepting himself. The Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, hereto fore one of his most loyal sup tensions are pernicious, his coun sels are misleading; he is a pro voker of schism and a ban upon success. If the Democratic party has not the wisdom and strenjrth to emancipate itself from his lead ership, and to tell him that the flag is not his to bestow on a man of his choice and sort, then the pretence of maintaining it in the semblance of a political force in the land had better be abandon ed. Our contemporary is here discussing a recent dispatch which said that he will be asked to name the candidate 1912 if he does not want in the nomination himself. He He is given to meeting opposition with an ultimatum. Let him now be the recipient of one, stern and final: Go to the rear!" But he will not go, and there you are. The situation is that the Democratic party has on its hands an incumbrance which it cannot unload, cannot be elected, and will not allow anybody else to be. The condition is humiliat ing but who will deny that this is the state of the case? Some day, somehow, he may cease to be a fetich, the object of the blind idolatry of enough people to turn the scale in an election, but that day is not now nor is it in sight Then what is our plan? We have none. Then why write about the matter at all? We do not know. porters, has suffered an exhaus- Methods. ::::::::: tion of patience and we copy a few sentences from an interest- The Bank of Lumberton, LUMBERTON, N.C. A. W. McLEAN, President. R. D. CALDWELL, V-President. C. B. TOWNSEND, Active Vice-President. A. E. WHITE, V-President. C. H. MORROW, Cashier. Announcement : The New Management of The Pope Drug Company wish to Announce that they will Continue the Business at the SAME PLACE, with some Improvements. Mr. I. L. Pope will be found in the store as before, and Mr. R. T. Fulghum, a Registered Pharmacist, ready to fill your Prescriptions. We Expect to Carry Everything found in a First-Class Drug Store, and we are making Improvements to meet the Demands of the Business. Thanking the people of Robeson and adjoining counties for their liberal patronage in the past and asking a con tinuation of the same, we are, Yours Truly, The Pope Drug Company, Lumberton, N. C. Inc w. Co., J. Reaves Machine Wilmington, N. C. UGeneral Machine Shops and foundries r You can get your work done promptly and at reasona- ble prices if you send to us. We Guarantee Satisfaction. t-14-thurs i f Advertise In THE ROBESONIAN. ing editorial in its issue of Satur day: 4 'The mistake was made last time of allowing him to assume the part of 'It' without interrup- j tion or contradiction until he had all the strings of the situa tion in hand and no choice was left to Democrats but to support him or desert their party. He is now playing again the double role of oracle and organizer, and if the waiting policy should be re peated by other leaders and by the press he will turn up in 1912 with another organized army oi noisy shouters, formidable enough to scare all possible com petitors into their holes and eag er to do his bidding to the letter, He must be discounted and dis credited now, at the inception of his campaign, or it will be too late. If it is not too soon for Mr. Brvan to be laying his pipes ant' stretching his wires for a fresh exemplification of his Kingship of Democracy, it is not too soon for those who think he has al ready too long and too often led the party to deieat to take up arms against him and inaugurate active measures to circumven his ambitious and impudent scheme for ruling the future as he has ruined the past of the nartv. "Selfish, self-centred, self- magnified, the human pack mus be unloaded or the patient don key will die outright, bo tar as that fraction of the Democracy for which this paper speaks is concerned, there is to be from now on flat repudiation of Bryan and Bryanism. His personal pre- Tbe Secret ol Long Life. A French scientist has discovered one secret of long life. His method deals with the blood. But long ago millions of Americans had proved Electric Bit ters prolongs life and makes it worm living. It purifies, enriches and vital izes the blood, rebuilds wasted nerve cells, imparts lite and tone to tne en tire system. It's a godsend to weak, sick and debilitated people. "Kidney .,iKd hart h hen tea mv me xor months," writes W. M Sherman of rvo- Mo., "but Electric Bitters cured me entirely. drug stores. Three New Cabinet Members All But One of Official Family Known. Charlotte Observe. Great interest naturally attach es to tne evidently autnentic re port that Mr. Jacob M. Dickin son, of Tennessee, is to become Secretary of War in .President Taft's cabinet He is a native of Mississippi, is fifty-eight years old, aud is general counsel of the Illinois Central Railroad with headquarters in Chicago, though Nashville is his home. He is o: hnished education, a part ot which was acquired in - Leipzig and Pans: has served by special commission on the bench of the Supreme Court of Tennessee and was Assistant Attorney Genera of the United States in Cleve land's second administration. Mr, Dickinson is a Democrat but no of the Bryan variety. Though not a national figure he is un quest, nably a great lawyer and will :n the cabinet. R. Ballinger, of Seattle, Wash., who is supposed to be slated for Secretary of the Inte rior, is a native of Iowa and is in his fifty-first year. He is a graduate of Williams College, Mass., a lawyer and author. Charles Nagle, of St Louis, who is to be Secretary of Com merce and Labor, is a lawyer, is in his sixtieth year and a native of Texas. He has served in the Missouri Legislature and has been a member of the faculty of the St. Louis Law School since 1886. Though alter the announce ment of Mr. Taf t of the selection of -Mr. Hitchcock for Postmaster General and Senator Knox for Secretary of State he said that he would give out no further cabinet appointments until the 4th of March, the public, thanks the smart newspaper men, practically knows now who will constitute his othcial iamily ex cepting the Secretary of the reasury, whom he has not yet chosen. REV. D. C. BRITT. THE TARIFF AND POLITICS. Died Lying in a Wagon, From a Hemorrhage. The following account of the death of Rev. D. C. Britt, men tioned in Monday's Robesonian, is given in a special of the 21st from Kutherf ordton to The Char- otte Observer: The town was shocked yester day afternoon by the sudden and untimely death of one of its best eitizens, Rev. D. C. Britt, which occurred while on his way from bis home in the western part or town to his store. Mr. Britt had been at his place of busines dur ing the forenocn and seemed as well as usual. At 1 o'clock he went home for dinner and ate a hearty meal. About 2 o'clock. while returning to his store in a one-horse wagon, driven bv a small colored boy, Mr. Britt be came ill and told the driver to stop the wagon and hurry and summons a doctor. He then lay down in the wagon and the boy hastily returned to his home, a short distance back up the street, to inform his wife and telephone for a doctor; but before his wife and medical aid could reach him, Mr. Britt was in the throes of death and soon expired as the result of a violent hemorrhage. Mr. Britt was a young man. just 36 years of age, a native of Robeson county, and came to Rutherfordton about three or four years ago f row Lumberton for the benefit of his health. He was a Baptist minister, a gradu ate of Wake Forest College, and prior to his removal to Ruther fordton was engaged in active ministerial work, which he was forced to give up on account of his failing health. After com ing here his health began to im prove and he decided to perma nently locate here, building a heme and entering into business. He was a refined Christian gentle man and his death is deeply de plored by the people here. He is survived by a wife and two small children, besides his fath er and mother and several broth ers who reside at Lumberton. "The funeral service will take place at the Baptist church to morrow afternoon, conducted by Rev. J. Q. Adams, of Charlotte, after which the remains will be laid to rest in the village ceme tery beside that of his little daughter, whose death occurred shortly after the family came to Rutherfordton. The Wood Schedule Savoyard, in Charlotte Observer. Boxwood, ebony, granadilla, lancewood, lignum-vitea, mahog any, rosewood, satinwood all on the free list, all untaxed, all used by the rich. They ought to yield a big revenue and they all ought to be taxed 100 per cent, for revenue only, which would put into the Treasury $4,000,000 paid by men and wo men with money in both pock ets. Now let us see about wood of lower degree, the baser sort. Board, planks and deals are ta. -ed $1 a thousand feet, and if the imported article has had a n'k ot work done on it the tax is graduated up to $4 a thousand feet. Thus the heiress who would buy a $5,000 piano pays no tax on the rosewood in which it is encased; but the day laborer who would build a cabin worth $500 must pay a tax of $11.88 on the lumber that goes into the habitation. The brier-root, of which a very desirable pipe is made, and of which we import ed from the isles or shores of the Mediterranean to the value of $346,270 in 1907, is on the free list. It ought to be taxed 100 per cent. The clapboard that PRESIDENT CALLED TO AC-I COUNT. WHOEL NO. 2437 PROFESSIONAL CARDS A Blistering Rebuke of Chief Executive. Charlotte Observer, ISM. rpi me report oi ine maioritv th. of Duo-vuiLllllllllT Ul lilt. OOUttie committee on the judiciary on the action of the President in the case of the Tennessee and Iron Company, as told in yesterday's dispatches, is sen sational, and the reader was pre pared for the statement that the news that such report was to he made to the full committee "created consternation in the Senate." The sub-committee re port as agreed upon by Senators Culberson and Overman, Demt A.nf rtl r .' I 1 Tk l l - i-i aio, rtuu lYitneuge, uepuuiican three out of five -was in sub- r.fn.A 4U4- 4l Tl 1 atautt: max me i resident was without authority to nermil tlm absorption of the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company by the United States Steel Corporation, the i3C a I l enect oi wnicn was to permit tne latter to monopolize the iron ore supply ot the country, and was equally unauthorized in restraining the Attorney General C . j P . i trom inverierence wnn the mer ger. "Leaders in the Senate made no secret of the fact that they Aluu r Murker. TIioiiihh I.. BARKER & JOHNSON, Attornkys at Law, LUMBERTON. N. (.. All business irivon nri.mt . ful attention. Ofliee upstair over R.h. eson County Ian & TniHt Co. 10-8 'I'll one No. '.)";. 1. P. sl,aw. I. T. Cook. SHAW & COOK, Attoknkys at Law. LUMBERTON. N. C. All lm.sinesH enlrustwl to them will receive careful ami prompt attention. wmce over t irsl iNationul Bank. 'J J Wade Wishart. E. M. Britt WISHART & BRITT, Attorneys at Law. LUMBERTON, N. C. All business fivi'11 iiroimit uii.l nr.. ful attention. Oflice upstairs in Areus Building. yl0 Stehc Mclntyre, James 1). R. C. Lawrenc Proctor. arP Iinwil inrr tr rt iUnt covers the beggar hovel is taxed far," which of course means that the lull committee will to-dav PLEASANT HOPE HAPPEN. INGS. The members of the Cabinet selected are as follows: Secretary of State Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania. Attorney General George W. Wickersham. of New York. Secretary of War J. M. Dick inson. oi lennessee. Secretary of the Navy George von Lu Meyer, oi Massacnu setts. Secretary of Commerce and Labor Charles Nagel, of Mis souri. Secretary of the Interior R. A. Ballinger. of Washington. Postmaster General. Frank H. Hitchcock, of Massachusetts. Secretary of Agriculture James Wilson, of Iowa. - In this list are five lawyers, than whom Mr. Taft believes there are none better in the country. It is believed that this is not a mere coincidence, but an accomplishment carefully plann ed. as constitutional legal restric tions on corporate abuses are the accomplishments Mr. laft will strive for. Tobacco Prospects School Clos ingPersonal. CorroepoBdeBce of The Robesonian. As I have not seen anything from Pleasant Hope for a good while I will send in a few items. Farmers are busy preparing their farms for planting. Judg ing from the amount of fertilizers that are being hauled and the number of tobacco beds we see, somebody is going to plant tobac co this year. Our school closed the 9th and we were sorry to lose our teach er, Miss Dome Smgletary, from our midst. We shall miss her very much and hope to have her back next term. There was an ouster supper at the school house on the 9th and everybody had a nice time. There was a cake given for the prettiest girl present and Miss Mamie Andrews received the cake. Mr. E. D. Ivey, of Baltimore, visited at Mr. Will Andrews' Sunday afternoon. Miss Nettie Inman visited her sister last week. Mr. Sandy Andrews and Johnnie Davis visited in this com munity Sunday afternoon. Some of the boys from Pleasant Hope attended preaching at Center Sunday. Mr. Will Lewis was one of the number. We have preaching every first Sunday afternoon and Saturday before. Everybody seems to like our new pastor, Rev. Mr. Bridgers. Best wishes to The Kobeson- $1.50 a thousand feet. Barrels, boxes, casks and hogs heads are taxed from 15 to 35 per cent; furniture is taxed 37 per cent; hubs for wheels are taxed 20 per cent; staves, 10 per cent. ; shingles, 30 cents a thousand feet; but rattans and reeds and bamboo are free. The entire wood schedule is set down at an average taxation of 14.21 per cent., on the beau tiful articles, and the revenue collected on aggregate importa tions of $30,368,111 dutiable 11 m wooas and manuiactures ot was $4,385,038. That was in 1907. That year we imported of other woods to the value of $11,374,925 that paid not a cent of revenue. "O, well," the fellow says, "the tax on woods is but 14.21 per cent. That's nothing." But it is a great deal, and as big, relatively, as a tax of 80 per cent, on wool. The bulk and weight of a cargo of lumber make the freight on it ample "protection" to the American sawmill. If wood were as light as wool we might be sure the "protection" on it would be ex pressed in as high figures as that on wool. Here is Canada at our door with 8,000,000 of woods, against our 1,000,000 acres. If woods were on the free list we would stop cutting down so many trees and we would not hear the clam or in uongress tor the govern ment to buy lands on which to plant trees to conserve water courses. When Daniel Boone first set foot on Kentucky soil I doubt if there was a river in what is now that Commonwealth that had ever been muddy. To day half the rivers of that State are muddy half the time. An nually floods in the Umo cost in damage to property, to say noth ing of loss of life, tens of mil lions of dollars. Our scientific men say that it is all because of this cutting down of trees, and there is no doubt that the floods get worse, year by year, as the cutting down of timber increases. re turn down the sub-committee's report. It will nevertheless stand ot record and as a blistering buke ot the Chief Executive. lo nave laid himself liable to such a challenge was quite like Mr. Roosevelt. Headlong, head strong, impatient of restraint. he is restive under the limita tions put by the constitution upon his powers, and this is not the first time he has broken bounds, invaded the domain of both the legislative and judicial departments and arrogated to himself powers with which the constitution does not invest him, There is little reason to doubt that if the full judiciary com mittee should determine the issue judicially, in the light of the facts and the law and not in a spirit of partisanship and with the purpose of saving the face of an arrogant and impulsive Presi dent, it would find with the sub-committee; but this it vi not ao, because tne leaders in tne benate are unwilling to go that far, Mclntyre, Lawrence & Proctor. Attorneys ami Counselors at Law, LUMBKRTON, - - - N. G. Practice in State and Federal Court. Prompt attention given to all business. T. A. McNeill. T. A. McNeill. Jr. McNeill & McNeill, Attorneys at Law, LUMBRTON, N. a Will practice in all the Courts. Busi ness attended to promptly. N. A. McLean. A. W. Mclean. McLEAN & McLEAN, Attoknkys at Law, LUMI1ERTON. N. C. Offices on 2nd floor of Rank of Luai- berton Building, Rooms 1, 2, 3, and 4. Prompt attention given to all business. CHAS. B. SKIPPER, ATTORN KY-AT-I.AW, LUMBERTON, N. C. All businesH entrusted to him wi. receive prompt and careful attention. Office in First National Bank Build ing over Pout Oflice. E. J. BRITT, A1TOKNEY-AT-LAW, LUMBERTON, N. C. Office over Pope'a Drug Store. H. HONNET, tan. Cracker Jack. Pleasant Hope, N. C, Feb. 19, 1909. 50c at all Soldier Balks Death Plot. It seemed to J. A. Stone, a civil war veteran, of Kemo. Tex., that a plot ex isted between a desperate lung trouble and the erave to cause his death. 1 contracted a stubborn cold," he writes, 'that develoDed a cough that stuck to me, in spite of all remedies, for yaars. Mv wicht ran down to 180 pounds. Then I began to use Dr. King's New Discovery, which restored my health enmr : " elv. I now weieh 178 pounds. For svere colds, obstinate coughs. hemcrrhages, asthma, and to prevent nneumonia it's unrivaled. bUc and si.uu. Trial bottle fre. Guaranteed br all druggists. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. -F. J. Cheney & CO., xoieao, u. We. the undersierned. have known F. J. Cheney for the lastf 15 years, and be lieve him pertectly nonoraDie in an dus iness transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WALDlNf, KINNAN & 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 sent free. Price 75c. per bot tle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Mesopotamia was the garden and the granary of the world when Cyrus was King of Persia. It was watered by mighty riv ers, bedecked with boundless forests and bejeweled with onulent cities. To-day the owl and the bat dwell in tiabylon, and Mesopotamia is a desert in habited by Bedouins, for the simple reason that those forests were denuded of their timber. The valley of the Guadalquiver, three centuries ago, was unsur passed m Europe for salubrity of clime, fertility of soil, beauty of landscape and prosperity of inhabitants. Now it has become comparatively a desert Why? They cut down the forests and the soil went off in freshets, as it has on so many farms in Ken tucky, and in 1909 there is but one family in the valley of the Guadalquiver where there were four families in 1709. France and England profited by what befell Spain, and in France I am told no Kian ever felled a tree until he had plant ed another, not even on his own land. Perhaps that is why France is the garden of conti- Revolts at Cold Steel "Your only hope," said three doctors to Mrs. 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 curea. iney prevent ap pendicitis, cure constipation, headache. 25c at all drug stores. Closing Exercises at Public School at HoDewell on March 6th. To the Editor of The Robesonian: The public school at Hopewell, near Elrod, will close on Satur aay.Marcn o. a nice programme is being arranged by the school and a big dinner will be given by the patrons. The school has been continuous for four months and has been a successful one. we are expecting nice exercises and plenty of dinner, therefore we cordially invite the Croatan Indians in this and adioinin counties, especially the teachers. The county superintendent of schools. Prof. J.R.Poole, is here by invited. We are expecting to hear some addresses from some of the Indian teachers of the county, to whom we are person ally addressing invitations to come and hear the speeches, dia logues, concert pieces, etc. We are arranging to have instrumen tal music. D. F. Lowrey. Principal. Elrod, N. C, R. F. D. No.l. Dr. Eye. The oat Ear, Nose aud Specialist, No. 12 North Front Street, Wilmington, N. C. Formerly Eye and Ear Hospital New York City. Late Assistant Surgeon, Cornell Hospital. 8-b-tf Thurman D. Kitchin, M. D., Physician and Surgeon. LUMBERTON, N. C Oflice next door to Robeson County Ixan and Trust Company. Oflice 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, Physician and Surgeon. Lumberton, N. C. Office over McMillan's Drug Stor. Calls answered Tromptly day or night Residence at Mrs. Sue McLeod's. 4-27-tf. nental Europe. But here is a protective tariff, the wood schedule of which made 'Old-Saw-Log-Sam" Stephenson a millionaire, that encourages men to cut down trees, and here is Congress with its arms full of bills calling for millions with which to buy land on which to nlant trees. Once there was a fellow by the name of Sisyphus. He was a very bad man to tackle in a horse swap or games of old sledge. Thcsupus killed him for some of his devilment, and Pluto set him to work in the in fernal regions rolling a stone up hill that fell back every time he crot it to the top. Conerress is the great Ameri can Sisyphus. If you would keep posted sub scribe for The Robesonian.. Save Money by Buying Cham berlatn's Congh Remedy. You will pay just as much for a boU f rhamlwrlain's Couch Remedy as frr flnv of the other couch medicines. but you save money in buying it. The saving is in what you get, not what you pay. The sure-to-coure-you quality is in every bottle of this remedy, and you get good results when you take it. Neglected colas oiten develop serious conditions, and when you buy a cough moHirMnp von want to be sure vou are cettHp one that will cure vour cold. Chamberlain's Coueh Remedy alwayi cures. Price 25 and 50 cents a bottle For sale by all druggists. DR. N. A. THOMPSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, LUMBERTON, - - N. C. Oflice at Hospital. Phone No. 41. 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'a Drug Stor. DR. JOHN KNOX, JR., Physician 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, Noie and Throat, Wilmington, N.C. 6-1-tf CHARLES McMILLEN, ARCHITECT, 313-314 Southern Building, 8-6tf Wilmington, N- C E. G. SIPHER, ELECTRICIAN, Lumberton, K. C. Office in Shaw Euildiag, Phone No. H
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 25, 1909, edition 1
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