Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / Sept. 16, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE MOBESONfAN Advertising Rates LOn Application. I -J ! One Dollar and t a Fifty cents the Year. J Established 1870. Country, God and Truth. Single Copies Five Cents. VOL XL NO. 60. LUMBERTON, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1909 fWaltham And Elgin 7 Jewel Watches I f' (?lfC ur Watch I F fei $ f I wl most complete 1 -wjy CUnty' k Boylin's Jewelry Store, i Sav; 111 machinery i-ataaxBssst&i Ginning Machinery, Shingle Mills, Boilers,Engines,Hoe Circular Saws, Disston Circular Saws, Etc., Can be had for Cash or on Time. For Anything in The HARDWARE LINE Call Jon or Write us for Prices. i 0 0 0 0 2 0 dS 0 f McAllister Hardware Company. LUMBERTON, 8-2: N. C J JACOBI Now if anyone wishes to find An axe or a hoe, a rake or a spade, Tools for the farm of every kind, Here he can buy them cheap as they are made; Andirons and shovels, pokers and tongs, Nobby cooking stoves and all that belongs n first-class stores in the hardware line; Elegant machines to chop sausage fine; Long rolls of rope, large balls of twine. Jute lines for your plows, and cotton ones, too, A halter for your horse, a pistol for you; Qurry combs, brushes, paints in every hue Qf the rainbow's arch that spans the ether blue, ge sure to remember to give me a call; I have a warm welcome and bargains for all. N. JACOBI, No. 9 Market St., Wilmington. The above is an exact reproduction of a Jacobi axe ad in The Morning Star, Nov. 11), 1878. This axe has always been a pride with us. The quality is unex celled. Sold and guaranteed by N. JACOBI HARDWARE COMPANY 10 and 12 S. Front St. COMMENT. E. H. HARRIMAN. Unquestionably Edward H. Harrirnan, who died Thursday, was a big man. He was the kind of man who decides where he is going, what he wants, and makes for the accomplishment of his object with a determina tion that will brook no opposition, brushing aside as straws what would appear insurmountable ob stacles to a weak or vacillating man. When one is bent on doing colossal things one cannot stop to round corners or smoothe an gles, so one could not expect, a man who accomplished even a small part of the large undertak ings that engaged the attention of Mr. Harrirnan to have always us ed blameless methods. His life reads like a romance. His fath er was a poor Episcopal preach er on Long Island, with a salary which never exceeded $200 a year. The son walked three miles to school in New York and it is said that "he had the reputation, which still survives, of having been the worst boy and the smartest in his class." When 14 years old he quit school and went to work in a broker's office at $5 a week, and that he there learn ed the game from the ground up is shown by his wonderful suc cess in the business world. At the time of his death he controll ed 18,000 miles of railroads enough to cross the continent six times employing in their ope ration 80,000 men, and directed 54,000 miles of steamship lines, making 72,000 miles of transpor tation. He had been a member in the matter of keeping appoint ments is passing strange. Pro crastination is the thief of time, as a wise saw hath it; so also is approximation; and approxima tion is also the curse of a vast number of people. Approxima tion, not only in the matter of time, but as to facts. Being sat isfied with having things"about" so and so has caused many a man's life to be bound in shal lows and miseries. How many men do you know who will keep a business engagement to the minute? Ten to one you can count them on the fingers of one hand. .Vany people need to learn that an appointment for a certain hour does not mean five minutes after the hour or any number of minutes after the hour, but the hour to the minute. If one's own time is not regarded as val uable, one should have regard for the value of the time of others. At this time of year school work begins again. No more im portant thing can be taught than the importance of being punctu al. Many a boy has been taught to strike an attitude and chestily declaim, "In the bright lexicon of youth there is no such word as fail." Which is all right, but the eternal fitness of things is missed altogether when that same boy is not taught that if he would wipe the word "fail" out of his lexicon he must know the value of time. If one learns the value of time, the supreme importance of being there on the minute, all other things will be added. THE OLD SOUTH. Snyder" gave an interesting skptrh in Mnnrta v's lecno nf tho .,! T -1 T' 1 " w.v. oi me iNew ion. oiock rxenange seAempnt nf tht nnnpr n-rr ftf since 1870. ihe lollowing listot pv., thuu i companies with which he wasac- Q cnvAor am anA . I'll I J A IllUUO U1IU tiveiy connecieu win serve xo give some idea of the marvelous that others have made in The Rohesnnian rpfpntlv nhnnt th activities of the man: He was I ;mn,.lor, ,x president of the Oregon Railroad hititnrv r.f th mntv win foil presi- on g.oocj grounc an(j jgaj. fruit. It is safe to say that there is not and Navigation Company, dent of the Oregon Short Line, president of the Southern Pacific, president of the Texas and New Orleans Railroad Company, pres ident of the Southern Pacific Coast Railroad, president of the Oregon and California Railroad Company, president of the Cen tral Pacific Railroad Company, president of the Louisiana and Western Railroad Company, pres- a county in the State or, for that matter, in the South, with a more interesting history, and the one who gathers that interesting his tory and puts it in readable form will not lose his reward. News Notes and Personals from Back Swamp. Correnoondtmce of The Robesonian. Fine weather the past week ident of Morgan's Louisiana and Texas Railroad and Steamship for eotton riiokintr company, president or tne racn- Rev. Oakley Biggs preached to ic Mail Steamship Company, a large congregation Sunday at president of the Railroad Securi- Back Swamp ties Company, president of the Miss Bertha Barker spent last Snnthprn ParMfnV Tprminal f!m- Week visiting MiSS Sallie Thomp- v ri r ir haoi I . yi 4r 4-1 1 - T3. uf 1 rt v- 1 a - T Z v"u Mis3 rjeiia Bryant, of South and Asiatic Steamship Company, Carolina, is vititing relatives and presiaeni oi me union racmc, tnends in this community, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Alexander, of East Lumberton, spent Sunday here, and Mrs. Alexander will spend the week at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.J P.Prevatt. Mr.and Mrs.John Gaddy spent Hold Yourself Erect ! chairman of the executive com mittee of the Wells Fargo Com pany, director of the IllinoisCen- tral Railroad Company, director of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail- roadCompany, director of the Erie Railroad Company.director of the Sunday here at the home of Colorado Fuel and IronComuar.v. their parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. D. director of the Western Union Pitman. TpWrnnh rvmnnmv rWftnr nf Mrs. Lawrence Smith andMiss i the National City Bank of llt 1 York, director of the Chicago and This cut represents the Ideal Shoulder Brace for Ladies and Gentlemen. SOLD ONLY BY The Pope Drug Company, Inc., "THE HOUSE OF QUALITY," ,, , Lumberton, N.C. week visiting at Fairmont Mrs J A Thnmnsnn snpnt Inst Alton Railroad Company.director week visiting relatives and of the Pere Marquette Railroad friends at Fairmont. Company, director of the San Mr. and Mrs. Tank Inman, of Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake Pembroke, were visiting hereSun Railroad Company, director of day. . Mrs. Inman's sister, Miss the New York Central Railroad t-,em Company. M w w T w:0 cnmt TiVlrlnv And even that does not con- hn this' community. elude the list. He controlled.it is Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Prevatt. of said, whatever he touched.A man Chocowinity, are spending this must needs have been of iron week visiting their parents, Mr. frame to stand the strain which and Mrs- J- Prevatt. he evidently put upon himself, . Miss Lula Barker, of Ten Mile Habits, Customs and Manners of Her People Before the War and Since The Institution of Slavery and How the North Misunderstood Conditions. To the Editor of Tlie Koliesonian: It is now going on to fifty years since the freedom of the negro, and for the information of those who knew not the negro as a slave and to give the rising gen eration some idea of the habits, customs and manners of our peo ple prior to our internecine war, the following pages have been prepared. The customs of our people were so regulated and fixed that I don't suppose a century would have changed them as much as did those four years of war, and subsequent defeat. For a year or two after Appomattox, outside of Sherman's line of march, the affairs of the plantations were changed very little, the negro remaining on the farms pretty much in the same conditions as they had been. They were given part of the crops, in most instan ces, for their labor, and remained under the same discipline as be forethe habits of obedience in culcated by a century of slavery were not easily broken. The great majority of , slave owners were kind and consider ate to their slaves. Their money value, if for no other reason, would induce their owners to feed and clothe them and protect them from punishment, other than what was incident to proper dis cipline on a well-managed farm. On a great majority of farms the relations between the negroes and their owners partook more of the patriarchal form of govern ment than that of master and slave. The negroes generally had two weeks vacation during the year. One was about the first of August, when the crops were "laid by," and the other was Christmas week. The Au gust event was called the "green corn dance," at which time the master gave them a dinner com posed of all the good things gen enerally raised on a farm, and supplemented with a generous portion of good horse-apple cider, a beverage that was always to be had on a Southern farm. To ev ery head of a family an acre or two was given, which was usu ally planted in cotton, and at Christmas this cotton was carried to market and the proceeds given to each negro to use as he thought best; and such a time as they would have beggars my descrip tive powers. The question of ex pansion or contraction of the cur rency, which has agitated our country no little in the past years, was exemplified to me on my re turn home on a furlough in 18G2. By this time the Confederate currency had become considera bly inflated, and I found our ne groes with finer clothes than they had ever had before, and each negro man had in his possession a nice silver watch, besides other extras. All this from the pro ceeds of the same amount of cot ton and corn that before only af forded him "'a bare living," in cluding the inevitable jug of whiskey. Now this is what ex pansion of the currency did for the Southern negro. There were very little police ar rangements in the South until the Wat Turner outbreak took place in Virginia about the year 1834, when the people became alarmed, and instituted the pa trol law, by which every neigh borhood had its captain of patrol and a number of assistants, whose duty it was to see that the ne groes were at home at night, and if they found any off the planta tion without a pass irom his mas plowed shallow for the want of proper agricultural implements, and used no efforts to improve their worn-out fields. Why, 'tis only since the war that the great manural value of the cow-pen has been developed." In those days there was no such thing known as mortgages or agricultural lien?. Everything was based on the ne gro as a money asset. Men grew rich by raising negroes. A young man starting out in life with a negro or two, and marrying a wile with one or two more, had nothing to do but to loll away in true old Southern fashion; and by the time he became fifty years of age he'd find himself a compara tively rich man simply, by the natural increase of his slaves. When emancipation came he was rudely awakened from his dream. What hurt tne South more than anything else was the sudden ness of the change. Like the Irishman who fell from a scaffold, and on being asked if his fall hurt him, replied that the fall was very pleasant, but it was stop ping so sudden that hurt. Look ing back now, I don't know whether gradual emancipation would have helped matters any. The change from slave labor to free had to te met, and probably it was best as it was. . Very few people in the North understood the negro or the in stitution. When Lincoln issued his emancipation proclamation he supposed that every negro in the South would know of it. whereas not one in a hundred had evtr heard of it; and he also expected them to rise in rebellion, so as to draw the Confederate forces from the front in order to protect our women and children from mass acre, and thus end the war. You see, he didn't understand the negro's character. It is wonderful what a change has come over the spirit of the ne groes' dreams since freedom. Under the slave system our wo men were as safe under negro protection as under the white, but now a white woman is afraid ot leaving her home unprotected for any distance. If a Ciger was known to be loose in a neighbor hood.every man would go around and would be constantly in fear of his life. In the South today, a tiger is always loose in a wo man's mind. The feeling of com radeship that once existed be tween the races is lessening ev ery day as the older members of both races are dying out. and when the last of the Mohicans shall have departed the race ha tred will become a serious ques tion. Tb.e doctrine preached to the negroes during the days of reconstruction by the army of carpetbaggers and scalawags that swarmed down here during that period will then have reach ed its full fruition. I am simply writing ot the things I know to be so, and am rot theorizing I have wandered somewhat from the subject matter of this paper, which has to do with r.iat ters and things prior to the war I don't suppose there was ever a more homogeneous people than were the average Southern farm ers. Whole neighborhoods work ed in unison as if -directed by one head. They had the same kind of farming implements, and began the different operations of the farm about the same time of the year. You would find them commencing to break up their PROFESSIONAL CARDS DK. V. L. ANDREWS. ( I'ln; i. i in ii Surn-.ii. Hope Mills, N. C. l l'l at II. .1.1 ,;y :iu, ijr,t How The Colors S r Each Otl on some of th at .in i s 'J: " '' T I.. J..,i,.-.i,. SHAW & JOHNSON. I t owu-IU rs ill l.uw, N. C. ! At lorn i.i'Mi:i-:i: her ""ii ,,u ,. wear socks of tine slia.l,., .),,,., other and tie of aii..tlt l. even aild a Waisl.,,. ,,, u of the t-oiiittiiiut on. I an Some Haberdashers Do Not Care ion. I l i a Ii.-,. in Mai. a. I'.-.l. ral Court ! I i.ni.l all. :, i j.u,.,, ( t,usm,.si, ! (tlh , s , I-,,.,, National Hank. j Wa.!.- W.:,art, .:. M lirl WISH ART & liUITT, Ari'"i!Nns at Law, I l.ll.MKKU'luN. N. C. ! All I.iimii. ss civ. ii .r..in.t an.l rare I I nl ;.II. i,(i..i,. oili. .. u,.NtaH ,,, Argus ; ItuiMinjr. y it as lonff as they x.-ll th.- ,., their customers Iim.Ii hu.. '"K li.-tl-i Hi'- r.in.lu... or not. Now at Join. T i:,,,t . , . "' will lie I" lin.l wnai wm nurinoiiizv an.l a anil wear wt II. Gent's Furnishing St..r- assisted ly polite rlerk l'.va. JOHN T. BIGGS & CO. - N. C. Lumberton, 3 29 Prescriptions This is the principal depart ment of our store. So impor tant that the reputation of our store depends on it. Your health also depends on it -so does the reputation of your doctor. You can now sw how important a department it is and why we pay so very par ticular attention to every de tail of it. But with ail the extra attention we give it our prices are moderate and fair and often far Ix-low prices charged for the same prescriptions in other cities. St, i.l -.ii.-ii M. I. J an ; re, i.-s 1 1 Mdnlyre, Attorneys Lav K. ( l.awr'iu 1 'r H'tur. wienie & frottur. an.l ( '.nn.--. li. i s at ljw I.U.MIIKkTON, - - - N. C. 1'rac-ti.-,- in Hat.- ami federal Courts, i'roii.j.t attention ri, -n u. all l.iisin.-as. I. A. M. N.-ill, T. A. M.-Ni ill, Jr. McNKII.L & McNElLL, Afloincv, ji law. I.I-.Mi:.M(iN, N. t Will '!n ... . in all II,. Curls. I'.usi nebS at I. s.u. : t., i..initiy. N. A. iM.-l.eai.. A. W. Mt-Iun. V. ii. Snow. McLean, McLean & Snow, Attouxkv;: at Law, UiiV.HKUTON. N. C. Dlii.-. s on 2nd Hour of Hank of I.um U rlon Jluildiii, lliM.iiis 1, 2, and 4. I'roiiit attention jjiven to all business. E. J. BR ITT, AITIIKNKV-AT LAW, UliMl'.KUTON, n. Olliee over lope's 1 riijj Store. THOMAS N. M 1)1 ARM ID Allorucy al l.:iv, i.i mi:i:i:ioa, : : : n.o. O'li.-e over I IrllJ Store. JJ-U5 McMillan's Pharmacy. 5-27 STOCK REMEDIES. Kvery bolt!.: of I)r. Ivlmond's Colic and I.uiijjf Fever Cure ij Guaranteed for eolic, fravi-!, int uinoniu, stomach and lung disorders. Also a lilood prurilier. Uil. W. O. KUMUNJ). : t Lunib.-rton, N. C. Dr. J. H. IIONNET, I hjsiclan and Surgeon. Practice limiie.i to diseaseHof F.ye, Kar, Nose anil Tin oat and luting of glasses. No. 12 Nortli Front Street. Wilmington, N. C. x c if Thurman D. Kilchin, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, LUMKIKTON, N.C. Odice next door to Uol-son (bounty IjOuii and Trust Company. Olliff pli'.in- '.'y Ke.id. nee phone 124 7 9 Beautifully Heavy Is the basket from our Grocery. " u are delighted every tune you see our land at the same time, except the brinfrine ifood things for vnur enjov clearing oi new grounds and re- ment. pairing of fences, which business was out of the regular pro gramme; but with this excep tion there was very little varia tion. The time for the planting of the different crops was as unchangeable as the laws of the Medes and Persians. It is one of the great mistakes Fre&h and Attractive Stock Always ready for our customers at bar gain pricea. Dry and Fancy Groceries, dried fruits, fancy canned goods all are here in abundance. J. H. Wishart Free Delivery. Phone No. I . of the North to suppose that UUll fl 1 LllVU l (A. tyUOO XI Will 111J lilUO -I "lli terhewas to be punished with general ignorance prevailed to WHl-l Il-l Nffd flffflon ioekao nn tk Wo any extent in the average VV IlCll 111 liccu - - - p 1 1 z i mi r nti, o c,;u Ko ooumern community. ineir Willi c. ovriLvii, j. 1 1 v i i t-i Of a talking machine and I . 1 1 j 1 111 Ifl H I I H I 1 11 II Ml-IIIIlf ill 111 acted as cantain of Datrol. and it Ma,:"ei? w.?xe i4ureu lu ueauie to date watches. eas lamps and to teacn tne .La. tin and ureek n1ifa. norkt knives, razors, fokim W ao din uoi lit: vviicncvci uiid Huli L 11 l r, 7 i : " ' , , . and it is small wonder that he did not live to be more than 62 years old. since tne above was put in Mrs. Warren Prevatt. Mr. Eugene Purvis, of Center, spent Sunday in this community. Mesdames Julia and Jettie cuiumumior. -A sup- ....,1 :i itnj .vfli'itnri rrr languages generally, ana some shears, seit-oiung racycies, unyc ie a..u isimiciii, nau w uc iiiiuticu. nun I . .T-. j j arri;. -oil M, Store, or patient he'd endure the punish- " .uui ai -muuu. uCvutu f----, T the Rambler and Pierce, ment, Dnt it ne got a hck over tne '" f f t,-.. and wny not have a victor taiKing ,,,V. v,,, .,.v, vtl V lew ui uiic xaiiuci tiaaa I chine in vnur home ana in vour stoic fvf traveled to any extent and olten It will draw trade one would imagine he was being a man wou d ?R,sh I118 university - t m pnWADnS ! Fifteen stripes was course ana setueuuown wiintmi w. " Reliabe Drugs and Medicines type we have read a statement Britt, of Kingsdale, spent Satui to the effect that MrHarriman's day night and Sunday here parents were wealthy. If that Mr. A. D. Prevatt, of Pembroke, is true.or if it is true that they attended church here Sunday were poor, matters little. His career was remarkable in either j. Ti ; i ii j. i . eyem.. ina auu umt ue u.u nut dispatch of the 10th from give evidence ot any special tai- Mexico Citv states that another ent until he was forty years terrible flood has visited the Jam Snowball. BackS wamp, N.C, Sept. 13, '09. rv nrrlnrn.' ! the law and he was willing to gobably ever leaving his native take what the law said, but any- '5ttle' , -u; v,nf ,,f,nl The negro was the sun around wiin o,i u; J which the old Southern planet re- ter's also, who would resent this volyed and had its being and unlawful Duniahment of his slave: cotton the them? of general busi- QnrM h oan snmp W iwiits ness conversation. A young A a matter nf r-nrinclrv T will were conaiuoneu upon tne nuni mUhor0 rhenhrPoWv of those er oi ner prospective wave., OM :,.;mnlJitisnowntheNorth upon WdOOvO) 11 1 Vr 11 V-1V v.J j-jj'j worded: to pass Jones' 4-8 Lumberton, N. C. l)r Thomas C. Johnson, tliyiclii and Surueou, I.imih.rton, N. C. (Jll'ii-e over McMillan's Drug Store, nils answered Promptly day or night ICesid. iice iit Mr.-!. Sue Mcleod's. 4 27-tf. DR. N. A THOMPSON, HIYKIdAN ANI SI IWIKON, .UMUKIiTON, - N. C. Office at HoHpital. I'hnne No. 41. Down town oflice over McMillan's Dru Store. ,u'iA promptly answered iijrht or day, in town or in the country. DR. R. T. ALLEN, DKNTIST, LUMBKKTON, - N. C. Office ov r Jr. McMillan's Drug Store. DR. R. F. GRAHAM, DKNTIST, UJMI.KUTON', N. V. Onice over l'.ank of i.jTiiherton. Rwonw S'o. 7 an IK. 1-20-08 E. G. SIPHER, ELECTRICIAN, Lutuberton, N. "C. Office in Shaw Building, Phone No. 11 1-6 are the only kind safe to use. The uncer tain kind are apt to do more harm than good. What you get from This Pharmacy you can rely upon absolutely. If the health of your household is dear to you prove your sincerity by coming here for your drugs and medicines. old. BEING PUNCTUAL. ilow any man witn sense enoueh to pour sand in a hole can stumble along through life without ever once getting even so much as a faint conception of the importance of being punctual iltepec district in the State of Oaxaca." Sugar plantations and mill? were destroyed, hundreds of head of cattle killed, and scores of farm laborers lost their liveF. McLEAN-SLEDGE COMPANY . . N. C. Lumberton, 9-2 Go With a Rush. The demand for that wonderful Stom ach, Liver and Kidney cure, Dr. King's New Life Pills -ia astounding, nriicp-ists sav they never saw the like. Its because they never fail to cure Sour Stomach, Constipation, Indi-o-esrion. Biliousness, Jaundice, Sick Headache, Chills and Malaria. Only 25c, at all druggists. Night on Bald Mountain. On a lonely night Alex. Benton of Fort Edward, N.Y., climbed Bald Moun tain to the home of a neighbor, tortured bv Asthma, bent on curing him with Dr. King's New Discovery, that had cured himself of asthma. This wonder ful medicine soon relieved and quickly cured his neighbor. Later it cured his son's wife of a severe lung trouble. Millions believe it's the greatestThroat and Lung cure on Earth. Coughs.Colds. Croup, Hemorrhages and Sore Lungs are surely cured by it. Best for HavFever, Grip and Whooping Cough. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed : by all druggists. as the $50,000 To Lend At 6 Per Cent. Interest. Caldwell & Norraent, Insurance Agents, LUMBERTON, 6-3 N. C. VXV.. amount of her cupons. The free- iviy uuy xuiiiiicto icctvc . , - . raA repass jiuiu oumi. . u;, v.M i -ii n it i . , Lilt; wuiiian uvui vj u"i Ull monuav iiiuinHiK. , w ;a 00t;m,tiH h h.r Tom fimti-h " John .Tonps' wa ""w D1.lc j ., v,,o r;f,D real worth. KememDer, 1 am 2&th Plae f h S writing of the average Southern- . I hn ..t ;U Aiie ucuyic ut lijc uiu uuuhi - , . j . . . - orio cv, f wv,Qt w99 ers wiio aireu uieir aristocracy .v, i-v.n in th oiuuuu noraii's uicices 111 UlC tile Miuai l lauui in ljiv- i . t , , , - i world, that they deserved to have rtU" assumptions lost them. Thev took up no pievaiunj. op - t- f f flic tur ion of the .North in reerard to the - .haMpownf . Vi C..4-U 1 D..O.1, c i..., ... 11 n u LUtix II people I -iin ij every ounua t j o : -t Nunaav achnni at !") a. m. anu .j p. in. nmg ai :3U. Directory of the Lumberton Methodist Church. REV. E. M. HOYLF, PaMor. The Road to Success has manv obstructions. but none so des- pjrate as poor health. Success to-day remands health, but Electric Bitters is the createst health builder the world has ever known. It compels perfect ac tion of stomach, liver, kidneys, bowels, quarter For the love of Moses, hurry', purifies and enriches the blood, and Baby's burned himself, terribly John . Everybody is cordially invited to at- yuiCKi mr.jiuKgisi Uuick! A hnv ttnd these Hrvi.H Warning. tones and invigorates the whole system, nie cut his foot with the axe Mamie's Do not be persuaded into taking any Vigorous body and keen brain follow scalded Pa can't walk from piles Bii- ting but Foley's Honey and Tar for their use. You can t artora to siigni ne uui-.m ...j ...m -cne.sae-go; chrome coups, urmi.n.ua, uaj E.ectrit Bitters ifjweak, run-down or it and soon cured all the xamilr. u'B the asthma, and lung trouble, as it stops sickly. . Onlv 50c. Guaranteed Dy an gre-iesine-raw iui. octet by a!! I the couch ana neam uie lungs. ojiu limggists. I druggists.. by all druggists. Lumberton Pressing Club On Fourth Str:t-t, back of Boylin's Jc-wc-ry Store, LUMBERTON, N. C. Cleaning and Pressing Neatly Done. Spt-eial Atti-r.tion Given to Ladies' Dresswcar. Work done for ivblf epeopleonly. Telephone No. 10. 5-G Typevriters Gf All Makes Sold, Exchanged and Rented. Easy Payments. S. H. HAMILTON, Iocal Agent. Write to the Wilmington Marble and Granite Works for their ILLUSTRATED CATA LOGUE of MONUMENTS and HEADSTONES. R. D. TUCKER, Proprietor. WILMINGTON, N. C Itf ' Plnesalve'11 1 ; .5 M0?" Carbtili2c1 -Vr- 4- 7 )
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
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Sept. 16, 1909, edition 1
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