Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Feb. 26, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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Tj TT 1 j' ..L 14 i Ul, xiv. WARRENTON, N. C, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26 1 909. NO. 31. STATEMENT ' CITIZENS BANK IIKNDKIiSON N. C. ' - NOVEMBER 27th, 1608. RESOURCES $t.YVUl.H in' House imd Fixtures, l(),:i"J.7;i I,i -..ins and DiM-oir.it 1 1 ( nlrafN. Sb'cV I us -v.i tv i.cparnmm, c :i nn 1 'i1 :! andCajih Items, pi -v- f: iM i J;iv::ks, Tctal, is.2c.08 ii2,n;.4i tiol,737.U. LIABILITIES Capital Stock paid in, Srrplus and Profits, Di e to Banks, Deposit;;, Ca.-hier'sCh'ks Outstanding, L'c -lifit'd Checks, Total, Trustee's Sale of Lands. 3y virtue of the power and authority conferred upon me by a certain DeecNf Trust executed to me by Matilda Hicks and R. Lee Hicks on the 4th day of March 1904, and duly registered in tl e ollwe of the Register of Deeds for $100,000.00 vv arren county, jn. u., in cook oa, 51917 pag-e iz, i win, at tne request or. tne 28 40W.53 owner or the bond secured by saia 4(0,0lG.i)0 JJtea OI Aru3l aeiauu navmg ueen 1,4S0.C6 rcade in the payment of said bond, sen 42.09 1 a tne court nouse aooroi saia vv arren county, at 12 o'clock M. on Tuesday, J.' rch 9th 1909, at public auction, to thj highest bidder for cash, those three certain pieces, parcels or tracts ot land, lying and being in Hawtree B51 ,737.95 acthmg doing. Then a farmer who 2 . ' . ; v trd sold a let cf cattle and bad thl 2-TMvivtTrV'1ijAt 4 money in bis houso was neatly robbed I lie I -3 1 llllla ot every dollar of it He and his witt X "w y, w 4 were Elceplag fa a bedroom off tka X : - I. . sitting room, and the robber had ef y r ?i M ftiiifl t , f eeted entrance by using a ladder and 3. ' ;, "3, a second story window. The sum tak-j ' V. en was ?3oO, and now the sheriff and! Copyright, 1908, by T. C. McClure. J hi3 deputies began to move lively. By ' X . . jt . . 1 , Til! - 1- , mC SIUVICC W LOlCUtl XiilSS, V 11J UUll- It was a brutal way of putting it, ey to bis schools, certain highways but everybody in the town of Graham j were watched at niht. Nothing came had come to speak of Jimmy T,andon ' of. that, but the postomcc in a villaga as the town fool. It' was said that the ! in a contrary direction as robbed of boy had been born bright enough, but ) $100 w orth cf cash and stamps. at the age of five a stroke of lightning REMEMBER this WavM has One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars of its own to.vnship, in said Warren county and Upland Surplua to Ruaranlco ytnr deposits, and in addition to c v' t . . , . . v., -j.i-.iz i c-iiwn-i rn nncu as louows. viz. h, tin siocur.oiuers are inouj ior in uuuiuuiiui .Ml r.iu oiflcers are bonded. V a;-o fully insured against burglary and daylight hold up. 1) posit ycur money with the Ci ui'.ens Bank. It will be safe, J.H.OWEN. W. A. HUNT, Cashier. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. Dr P. J. Macon, Physician & Surgeon, 7arx53tsa, ITcrth Caiclina. Olfioe CaU pri.a. i tl.V iitteu U-d to. oppuMt' tt.iui t house. u un.. u. a. roTi. GREEN & BOYD, Attorneys at Law, '7arrsat:3, Kcrth Carclina. l iUUT JNO. I. LJeing L.ot iNO. which was allotted to Lucy F. White in the partition of the lands of her fuher, the David Hicks and which was conveyed by said Lucy F. White and W. H. S. White, her husband, to said R. Lee Hicks by deed, dated March 21.it 1903, and which is bounded as fol- I vish to announce to the public lo vs. Beginning at a stake, Mrs A v tlvit I have put in a nice line of Fleming's corner, near the north of the Edison Phonographs and Broadwater Branch, thence along said Records, and the advantage you Fleming's line N 3-4 W 56 P 18 L to hrvo by buying from me, is, "that a stake, corner for Lot No 6, thence N vi ii ilnn't lmvp to nav anv ox- 21 P lo L to a to stone on the bouth nvrsa or ireicut cnarges. in E lison Machines are conceeded to be the best Talking Machines m ule, and the name "Edison" st lis it. D2 CHARLES U. PEETL Con-sultAt'onby Aj pointmci.t. Tuispiionc Connection. rile Lkms side of Hawtree Creek, N E corner for L t No 6, thence down said creek its various courses N 55 W 14 P W 17 P 5 Lto the north of Wortham's Branch, th ince N S3 E 49 P 5 L to a stake, cor ner for Lot No 4, thence S 41 P 5 L to H;ivtree Creek, thence up said creek iti various courses S 29 1-2 E 22 P S 21- 1- W 12 P S 3 W 18 P S 31 1-2 E 16 P i 23 M.E 12 P S 5 F 20 P to a cedar acd ash, J H Thompson's corner. thence S L0 W 12 P S 31 E 12 P S 11-2 V had worked the change in him. He lost the power of speech, and his mind was weakened, and' after the death of his widowed mother he was an inmate of the poorhouse for . two or three years. Then he became a hanger-on of the town, having no particular home, but being cared for as an ob ject of charity. Kot qtifte that either. He was always willing to do any work he could to. pay his way. He could hear if he could not talk, and, though he seemed to have no more inind than a child cf three, he got along very well. Two things the boys of the town came to learn in timeJiramy had a . streak of cunning In him, and he was revengeful. Jimmy Landon waa thirteen years old and had been looked upon as the town fool for seAeral years when a sort of event "happened in the quiet Community. A stranger, who called himself Colonel Bliss and who was so crippled up with wounds that he had to use a pair of crutches, arrived In town and delivered a series of lectures on war. It came to be understood that he had been the colonel of a gal lant Illinois regiment and that owing to his wounds and other misfortunes he was in bad financial shape. He did fairly well with his lectures, and he made many friends, and when he pro posed to open a singing and writing PiTiemier that )on don't have lo osder your Chrul c.-i iresont frra catilojaes bow, s I cary nice Une r. '- n..i j!e!rvifcnk:sd' i t'tank the oob'.ic foe I oil the west side of Howtree Creek, t:i ;t l.bcrM patroaaiie. asJ solicit S continuance of same thence up said creek b 1J kj lo f VV 16 P S ID 1-2 E P to a hornbeam on th j Kast side of the creek J II Thomp- son's corner, thence S 86 3-4 E 40 P D L to a sassafras, J H Thompson's cor ner, thence L 11 1-4 W 55 P 12 L to a si -)ne, Thompson and King's corner, thence N 86 3-4 W 22 P 13 L ro a stake school he received much encourage ment. He could sing, and he wrote a beautiful hand. The colonel took up his. quarters at one of the two inns in the town, where he had the u?e of the hall used for I a:n yours for ccurttoui trea;mc:it. B. 3. WILLIAMS, Attorney - at - Law, Ttirctta, IT. C. Ui'l.V :y. N. t. - 'f. W. Pit-nrT, IiO.tUihUi-g, N. C IThos. A. Shearin, JEWELER, Waukenton, - - - - In. Kj. Seaboard Air Line. & 151CKETT. Attorneys at L a w. CHAS. FOSTER, hcl.odr.lf Effective Jun. 3fd. l&Q. L to the beginning, containing (52) fjity-two acres more or less. TRACT No. 2. Be;r,g lot No v lich was allotted to James II Hicks m tne partition or uie laaasoiun sam David Hicks and which was conveyed bv said James H Hicks to said R Lee Hicks by deed dated 1904 and which is bounded as follows: Beginning at u take Nicholson's corner, in the line of Let No 2, thenc? along Nicholson's t. to ti 1 .1-1 W 52 P 23 L to an old ? vanish oak stump, Nicholson's cor- cf r, thence along Nicholson's line N 61 3-4 W 56 1-2 P to a large white oak, thence N 87 1-3 W 50 P to a stake, N idiol son's corner, thence S 2 1-2 W LITTLETON, N. C. 'I'liono 43. Civil Cns'.r.ccr onrl Surveyor t'i tnee up said creek, its various cour 24 P S 13 W 32 P S 2 l-Z It. K. I'.oad, I'atk, TimU-r, Town, ,it-. uiul 1'iirm WorUouickly done and jciMiriit..-'.v planned, mapped platted and Kurin work solicitc-d. Dr. II. Wn.ltcrs. Surneon Dentist, Warreuton, North Carolina. cuurt house in rieminc OtTiCP o;i;.sU8 nrrt.i r.uilJin?. I'Uoiicm: O.Iice. N.. 58; Rit'ilonce. No. fit? X)r. Bob. S. Bob tli, Vnrr?nto, North Carolina j'ht-Ko urriir.ilM ami ib-pntturtfi are I't ly s iiifi rniitiii for the public hud m l-.ot KUHi'aiitet d. Tr&ina v.'ill puss 'A illl'll i'lalllS tH fol!lWH, 8UtjPlll to cl. u.tro w ithout nottre: v No. 32, 3:SG A. M., for Foitsmonth- 19 p 15 L to old runoi Hawtree Creek 1 .r.r. P T fnr Piii(anmi;ll'. v . .r..Kr nM.m q .i.irm a-nn r i scs S 6 -z vv . a ii. .., i?c w i p r 1?, K 20 P S 48 1-1 E 13 P lo C'..;-oIiim points, anivingnt Poitsmotith to a stake near the mouth of Wor- f:V)P. M , coi.neciiitg with Steamstiip tv .im's r ranch, thence N 83 E 77 P to .. for Washington n;tltimo,-.-, l.Vp . u of Lot No 2. (...ark, New lurk, liobtcu and Pi-mi -iaKe ,v,pp.T (lei-WH ' tbence along Lot No, 2 N 3 E 43 P o. L tc a state and stone near a cnoppea 15 ae, tUenee S 3 1-2 E 36 P 5 L to the beginning, containing seventy (70N acres, more or less. TRACT No. 3. Being Lot No 2 which was allotted to Mrs Ann W Hicks and said II Lee Hicks in the partition of the lands of the said David Hicks, the said Ann vv ihdm n.iai.J - rrr ! 1 A Ili'nlcl ll O T'lnfT PflVflV- P(l VinnilI tU 1. " t5 " ' v Mo. 20. -3:00 A.. M lt HACR Noilina f.u- Oxford uud x.aleish, nrnvm 10:0u A. 11. No. 411:23 P, M , for local points liutigli, Clmi !otte, Atlanta Uiiiutug Li m. Mtni)lis and points South west, consectmgat Henderson for Ouihin tunl connecting at Hamlet with No. 4o for Florida points. No. 33. 12:54 A. M., tor I Uai.'o.tF, Wilmington. Atlaula, Birmin jlmm, The town fool could hear, and he heard &V about the robberies. ' He couldn't grasp the particulars the way ether folks did, but he absorbed enough of them to make him act queerly. He went aboutwith a grin on his face, and when spoken to about the robberies he put on the most know ing look his face had ever worn. The sheriff bought the lad 10 cents'-worth of candy and tried for an hour to get scmcthing out of him, but Jimmy sim ply munched the sweets and grinned. If he had anything up his sleeve he wasn't going to bring it to light just then. The robbery of the farmer wag still being talked of when a hardware store in the town was entered and robbed. In addition to 25 In cash, the robber bundled up $200 worth of the choicest cutlery. There was no clew until Colonel Blisa furnished one. He directed suspicion toward the town fcol. Jimmy Landon was brought to the hotel by the sheriff, and the colo nel and others set all sorts of traps for him, but were no wiser at the end of three "hours. The boy would grin ar.d giggle and lie down on the floor and laujb, but no one else could see where the joke came in if there was a joke. For two weeks after the robbery of the hardware store there was nothing doing,. The colonel held to it that the boy, fool though he was, had become frightened. Then the grand climax came, and it was a hair raiser. There was a private bank in town, and the owner had quietly put on a watchman. One night this watchman heard sus picious sounds at the back door and raised an alarm and heard some one running away. Fifteen minutes later there was the awfulest kind of a row in the rear of the hotel. , None of those who rushed out were prepared for the sights that greeted them. Colonel Bliss, "without his crutches, had beer caught by a leg In a bear trap, the tewn fool was rolling on the ground in laughter, a man's trail over the rcofs could be traced in the thin snow, and there were tracks leading from the trap back to the bank. Jimmy Landon had suspected the man that whacked him with a crutch and set a trap for and caught him. There was no getting out of it for the colonel.. First, It was shown that he was no more a cripple than any one else, and, sec ond, the plunder of his various rob beries was right there In his trunk Re simply stood on his dignity an went to prison for ten years, and the town fool is still today welcome to make his home with any family in the community. The doctors say that his mind will never be any brighter, and other folks say there is' no need for it to be. Some Brief Proper Names In the Zuyder Zee there is a bay called Y, and Amsterdam ha3 the river Y, while, strange to say, in quite another part of the earth, in China the same brief name is given, to town. Elsewhere in the Flowery Kingdom in the province of Honan, there is a SOAP. Who invented soap ? That this is not a modern convenience is well known. But just when it! came into general use is a mys tery. In Biblical times cleansing a geuts were used. - The books of Job and Jeremiah contain the word' "soap. " But this is merely a convenient use of the word in translation. . The Hebrew word "borrith," for which it was sub mitted, is a general term for cleansing- substances. What these substances were is un known, but were probably little like the modern soap. Pliney speaks of the invention of soap by the Gauls, who. how ever used it as a sort of pomade or hair dressing. He also refers to the use of both hard soap and soft soap by the Germans. The use of fuller's earth which has saponaceous.qualities, for cleans ing purposes, was known to the Romans. Philadelphia Evening Telegraph. i50. Es7olts At Cold Steel. "Yonr oulv bona." ssid throe doo tors to Mrs. M. Fisher, Detroit, Mich suliering from a severe rectal tioahle lies in an operation, "-"then I used Dr King s New Life Pihs, she wines, "till wholly cured." They prevout Ap pendicits, cure Coustitutton. Headache 253. at C. A, Thomas. Discovery of Mammoth Cave. OtVu-e I'hone M. 33-12 m Memphis and points West, connecting . tQ saiJ R Lee Hicks alof her in w tli so. w am ifiiei ior niunifeiou. . - T N . Deed dated K . HI for Columbia, bavnunah, oacH- ltafc -- - . - . Z, . ..ii,.. n.,,1 .11 nmL in Florida. Mach 2tst 1303, and which is bound- HAD BEEN CAUGHT BY A LE3 IN A BEAR TKA P. dancing. He could have had the best room in the house, but he did not want 0lty called U, and in France there is a it. lie. wanted one with a back in- river and In Sweden a town rejoicing stead of a front view. Just beneath in the name of A. his windows was the roof of the kitch- j rroper names of this brief nature en, and below that was the root or a are notf however, monopolized 1; shed. From thence it was a drop of Pjaces. Instances are on record where only six feet to the alley In the rear of individuals have been similarly named the hotel. These things were not taken ome years aso there was a shop kept Dr. V7. V. Taylcr, Surcoon IDentist, I'vciidciH any nervices iccluded in the practice of Deutistry. Crown and bridgi work, porcelain iulay, and casl filliiiRS according to the methods o! to-day. Office Thone . 2. fm lleidcuce " S. G. DANIEL, .Attorney at Law, LITTLETON, N. C. Practh'rs In all the courts of the Stat-. Money to loan on real estate. Ki-i'i ivtT'f' Hunk of Littleton. Will be in Warrcnton every first Monday. Trains will pass Norlina as follows: North bound. No. 84.-2:28 A. M.. for Richmond. Wnfchiuztoii and New York. No. C5, 1:45 P. M.. for Richmond, Washington and New York. No. 36,-2:10 P. M., local for Rich mond. SOUTH BOUND. No. 81,-2:00 A. M., Wilmington, C.-.arlotte, Atlanta. M., Columbia, oa ed as follows: Beginning at a st ike and stone in Nicholson's line, N. E. corner for Lot No. 1. Thence along Nicholson's line N. 86 1-2 W. 49. P 11 L. to a stake in Nicholson's corner Thence N 86 1-2 W 36 P. 5 L to a slake and stone near a chopped pine, thence S. 30 W 87 P 22 L to a stake t nd stone. 'Uheuee fi 80 1-2 Ebl P. U Iload S W corner for Lot No. 1. Thence No iSo. oo, l:iu A, ai., vAnuinnia, ok- a-7 p 22 L to the beginning contain vf,mmh. Jacksonville and Florida point? ' 87 r i u lo 1 No. 43.-3:25 P. M.. for Hamlet, Col- in? Forty-five (4o) acres more o- u. utr.bia. Savannah. Jacksonville and This 5th day of February lwy Plant Wood's Seeds For The Garden 6 Farm, Thirty years in business, witn p. fteably increasing trade every vca- until wn have to-day one of the iartrcst businesses in seeds in this country is the best of evidence ft3 to 'Ihe Superior Quality of Wood's Seeds. We are headquarters for Grass and Clover Seeds, Gced Potatoes, Seed Oats, Cow Peas. Soja Beans and Ml Farm Seeds. Wood s Descriptive Catalog tho moBt useful and valuable of Garden and Farm seed Catalogs mailed free on request. T. V. VOOD 6 SOSS, Settiamen, Richmond, Va. Florida points. No. 29, 8:00 A. M., Uxtora aua ha- r . - a. I 1 I No. 41, l:au ST. Al., ior iocai pouis Charlotte, Atlanta and points West. Meal station." for 38 and il are Ham let and Norlina, all other trains cwrj Cafe dining cars. All through trains tie equipped with "Wstibule high hack Fiat coaches, J'unmau drawing room sleeping cars. For further information apply to W. S. TERRELL, Agt., Waireu Plains, or write to C. H. G A.TTIS, Tra. PafrP. Agt. Raleigh, N. C. TASKER POLK, Trustee. Everyone has heard of the Mammoth Cave of Kentucky, but few probably are aware that its dissovery was due to the search for suitable earth for the manu acture of saltpetre. The ,anxie: y to find saltpetre earth was due to the embargo bill passed by congress in 1807, which for bade American vessels to sail for urope and foreign vessels to and cargoes in America. The Americans needed gun powder, and to make it they re quired saltpetre. They had been getting it from Spain and taly, but the embargo bill stop ped that, and there was no Ame- vionn snnnlv of the substance. A - IT 17 roving Chemist, named Samuel Brown, had shown h-vw saltpetre or potassium nitrate, could be obtained from cavo earth. And so the quest for caves was begun and assiduously continued. When the Mammoth Cave was found, every part of the great cavern was searched for cave earth. From pit, by-ways and avenues slaves carried out the heavy loads of petre earth. Many thousands of tons were treated, and the rude chewistry of the axt nrnrluced something: like J c 100.000 pounds of saltpetre with in two years. Kansas City Jour nal. Administrators Notice. Havin qualified as Administrator cf Rev. L. C. Perkinson deceased, late of Warren County, Woi-tn tjarou ra, this is to notify all persons hay 5nc claims against the estate of said deceased to exibit them to the under- tinned on or before the vm. ud i .Ta rmnrv. 15)10. Or this EC-lice- Will ladinbar of their recover?. .persons indebted to said estate please maite inuueuiic j.aj.. This 29th of Jan. 1909. WALTER P. RODWELL. Admr notice of by outsiders until later on. The town fool took a liking to Colonel Bliss at once. He was drawn. toward him by his crippled condition. The lad had never seen anything like it in his life. The colonel could manage to get up and down stairs, but no more. If he left the hotel it had be be in a carriage. Jimmy Landon started out to attach himself to the stranger as a body servant, but his unusual curiosity brought about his downfall. He had served for two weeks when the colo nel found him rummaging his trunk and sent him to the right about. Not only that, but he whacked, him over the back with one of his' crutches. Those whack3 destroyed the boy's il lusions. The colonel was no longer a cod to him. Jimmy had reasoned it out In his sillv mind that the trunk was a partnership concern and that he had a Would You like to Hvs to be (Baltimore Suu.) ' Proff essor Metchnikoff, the fa mous tlusaian who won the No bel prize, says the average man ought to live to the age of 150 years. For years he has been at work on the problem of length ening life, and he beleives that , if he can find a way to run cer tain impolite gQrms . out of the system almost anybody cju en joy a century, or so of life. The processor is going to spend the $19,000 from the, NobeK fund in trying to stretch out the pan of human life. The professor considers Dr. . Osier anamatuer in the art of lieing. He regards 60 years as the mere boyhood of man, about the age at which he should stop frisking around and settle down to home life and steady work, I shall spend the $19,000 of Nobel fund money," says ths professor, "in continuing my ef forts to discover how the body can be given its chance, so to speak, and how it can be preven ted from being needless sacrifi ced in early youth comparative ly, that is, at 70 or 80 years "of age when it ought to hold out until it is 150." Dr. Osier ought to be ashamed of himseli! calling 60 years old; why, it's positively kiddish; and we can account for it only on the ground that when Dr. Osier said . it, he was a mere boy himself and didn't know. But, if men lived to be 150 years old, how would the young sters ever get a chance ? Think of Mr. "Roosevelt turned loose in politics for 125 years! How much monej would the rest of the country have left if John D. Rockfeller were given 75 or 80 years more to geather in the sheaves ? Living 150 years might be fine for the rich but there are mil lions of us who really couldn 't afford i. If, as reported, the cost of liv ing has increased 50 per cent, in ten years, a dead man ought to be in a position to save a lot of money. on the Rue de Louvan, Brussels, h. ThM-esa O. and there is a Mine. O in Paris, who is well known as the pro prietor of a popular cafe. An amusing incident is recounted in conection with the Impressment into the military service of the son of this Mme. O. The young man could not write and so signed his name on the military . papers with a cross, it not occurring to him nor to any of the offi cials how easily he could have written bis name Boston Post. All will Cxccutor's Notice. Having qualified as executor of Su si;.n Hansom, deceased, late of Warren Ci-untv, North Carolina, this is to no tify all persons having claims a g linst theestate of said deceased to c.vibit them to the undersigned on or l.:forc the luih day of January 1310, op ibis nr,t;ce will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to Eaid estate will please make imme diate paymert. This the 11th day of Jan. 1909. M. F. THORNTON, Executor of Susan Hansom Dec'd. H. A. Hawkins, Atty. Cockerels! To grow strong healthy chicks it is very important that you in troduce new blood. One of my Barred Plymouth Rock, White or dftTt.fi cockerels wil JJ UU M J w v-- surely improve your chickens. fine lot on hand at bargain prices if taken at once. John. H. Fleming Warren Plains, N. C. R F.D. No. 1. Golf Stories Outshina "Fish Tales." nollng in one is so common that the feat is ant to pass without comment. To arouse our enthusiasm a golfer must kill something. A big fish was killed on the South Ilerts course at Totteridge, but not with, a goir pan, armerbtin. Newark, however, perfect right to examine its About a ye r contents, and to be whacked for doing it and then to bo driven away in dis crace aroused a thirst for revenge. The schools naa just .goi xainy buui- cA when more events came aionsi. One night the postofflce was robbed of cash and stamps to the value of ?2UU. It was a widow who held the office, Ths Secret of Long Life. . A Trench scieufist has discovered nnfl soeret of Ions life. His method deals with blood. But long vgo mil lions of Amaricans had proved Llectnc Rittersnrolonas lifft and makes it worth kvlng. It pnnhes, eunches and vitalizes the blood, rebuiida wasted nerve cells, imparts life and tone to the entire system. Its a godsend to weak, sick and debilitated people. 'Kiddev trouble had blighted my hfe for mouths,', writes W. M. Sherman, of Cushiugj Me., "but Electric Bit ters enred me entirely." Only 50c. at C. A. Thomas. The Hoop Snake, The universe is eager to hear what President Roosevelt has to say on any and all subjects. But is he ready upon snakes? By nature he is down on-, them.' What does he know of the hoop snake of the South ? Thousans of men could be presented to him who would swear to the ex- istanceof such a creature. It forms itself into a hoop, when offended, by laking its tail into its mouth, and chases'its enemy by rolling the highway at a ter rific speed. If the enemy hides behind a tree this wonderful ser pent, going to fast to turn aside, strikss the trunk with such force as to bury its spiked tail in the bark. This anchorage renders it helpless and the ene my either escapes or kills " Mr. Hoople. New York Press. If yoa need a pill taUs DeWift's lit tle Early Risers. Insif-t on them; gen tie, easy, plaaaut, little liver piils. Sold by Hun ler Ding c . a coif ball, driven into the river, killed a trout of two pounds in weight, mis fs not a fishing story, but a goir story and 1 should be the last to throw sus nlMnn on its truth. Durinc a tourna ment at Hawick a gull and a weasel were killed. It only required a brace or two of crouse and some ground 'I 1 i. Ai4-f -n - 1-1 r T ATI t i I mA Tr 1 1 1 1 1 ( - si mi ii I ill:' ii t.. and everybody felt sorry lor ner. " a t was decided that the trick naa ueen - done by two men who were seen loaf- Ins about the streets at a latc nour '" , that nMit and the sheriff failed to get Last winter a gentleman was adver- anv clew. The colonel heard or tne useawMus inuamj v.. robberv of course, and seemed to tase ungusn provim-uu luu, ih.u. a deep interest in it. In fact, his ad- by a local city councilor, a self mac e vice was taken bv the sheriff in seek- man. The first song was "The Owl toe to solve the affair. Only ten days (Stephen Adams). On rising to an- later the leading drv gooas store was uuuuce n luau. entered at niht and $70 in cash tak- that the singer had not arrived, a fact en As no Wis were taken, the sheriff that he duly notified to the audience. ''a timt name one in the town A little later the missing baritone vraa the robber but the colonel dif- made his appearance and was observ- ered with him.' In his opinion an or- td by the worthy chairman, who rose canized gang was at work and the with evident pleasure and innocently frlsrhtened awav be- ennounced with marked confidence: .v "Mr. 'Ampton win now inwi us iw fore they could begin loading up their wagon. During the next week there was the longed for 'nowl!' "London An swers, ' tsakes Kidneys Blaoder KigUt i J Uwo more monins o iuiiiu. and rain. Jave you taken advantage of our 25 per cent, off on Suits and Overcoats. fetter make jour purchase now and get a bargain before they are all picked over. Hilliard-White Co. SB . t n lit i i
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 26, 1909, edition 1
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