Newspapers / The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, … / Aug. 15, 1907, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
The Randolph Bulletin. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. flUCE ONE DOLLAR A YEAR U. S. HAYES, Editor and Publisher. Entered as second-class matter J une vnd, 1905, at the post office at Ashe li no, N. C, under the act of Congress of March 3rd 1879. The Standard Oil Octopus will stand several $29,000,000 squeez es and still have oil to "burn." A Geoi-gia "prophet" has pre dicted that the world will wind up its business December next. Prohibition goes into effect in that State Jan. 1st 1908. Do not think for a moment that because the government has tapped the Standard Oil Octopus for $29,000,000 worth of grease that that is all the fat the ani--mal contains. Stock quotations show Stand ard Oil stocks to be on the de cline. In fact the market price is less than $700 per share. All country editors should sell their holdings in Standard Oil before shares in that company strike Rock (feller) bottom prices. (We have disposed of ours.) Agitation against the railroads has about spent its energy and reaction is setting in. Already sensible people are realizing the enormous harm which will result to the state from such a wave cf public sentiment against the great transportation lines. Un less bitter opposition against the railroads cease, we may expect all railroad construction to be dis continued. Capitalists are not anxious to invest money in rail roads which maybe "legislated" out of business at the instigation of a few demagogues. In another column will be found a clipping from Charity and Children which should be of interest to every citizen of Ashe boro. If the enterprising ladies of Asheboro would organize a Civic League for the promotion and beautifying the town, they would perform a public service of incalculable vaiue. Asheboro is naturally a town of beautiful homes and a systematic effort by the good ladies of aesthetic taste would convert our little town in to one of the most beautii'ui in the State. The experiment is .well worth -trying. Republicai'throughout"-the country are well pleased with the action ot the Omo central com mittee in endorsing Secretary of War, Taft for the presidential nomination. Since Roosevelt has eliminated himself from the pres idential possibilities, W. H. Taft is the next choice of Republicans who believe in the square deal policy of the present occupant of the White House. No scarcity of presidential timber exists in the Republican party, but among the many aspirants, Taft seems the most likely to continue the policies of the present adminis tration. State senator Klutz has been seeing things. In his Masonic picnic speech at Mocksville last week he "viewed with alarm" the centralization of the general government at Washington and a corresponding impairment of states' rights. The same buga boo and hallucination has blind- - A . 1 - 1 L. 1 - 1 .1 1 J-1 eu me signc arm ciouueu judgment ot statesmen tor more than a century. It was anions the first great principles which divided the founders of the gov ernment into two political par ties. However these "states men" who go about preaching states' rights should possess their souls in peace and take comfort from the facts of history. Dur ing the entire existence of the government, the fullest measure of states' rights, guaranteed by the constitution, has been safe guarded by the Washington gov ernment and at the same time the general government has been able to protect itself against encroachment and nullifying acts of individual states. In his report on educational conditions in Randolph, publish ed in last Sunday's News and Observer, the supt. says that educational sentiment in the ru ral communities is improving and that "rural committeemen are a great deal more careful in the selection of teachers." We were under the impression that as there are fewer teachers than schools in the county, the com mitteemen have no choice in teachers, but are compelled to j & to be the most valuable pre employ any tefher who may ! "5 apply. He further says that the to never disappoint the taker, by salary of teachers has increased j Asheboro Drug Co., Standard a little more than 26 per cent i Drug Co. Price 50c and $1.00. since 1899, but he failed to say I Trial bott,e frPe- what per cent the superintend- j the indications in the south. ant's salary has been increased The Senatorial contest in Mis during the same period. , sissippi derives its chief impor- Again quoting the report he states that Randolph county is a "beggar county" as regards the school fund to carry on a four ; months school. Rather than 1 "beg" from the State, why don't represents the more enlightened ; to a concerted harmony, scatter the county Board of Education I and liberal thought while Cover- j ing the impulses of evil which "tap" that surplus in the county nor Vardaman stands for the old (ever strive, no matter how often treasury we were told about dur-; sectional and . prescriptive im- j defeated, for mastery in the ing the last campaign? ! CIVIC LEAGUE, Every town in the State should j organize a civic league, the ob- ject of which is to promote the j moiai, euucaiumai aim pnysicai condition of the community. It gives a voice to the citizenship to advance the general good, and opens an opportunity for mutual helpfulness that is hardly afford ed through any other, certainly not thiough any better, means. Take the phisical condition of the average town: weeds growing on sidewalks, tin cans, newspapers, rags, broken crockery, and all manner of trash and filth lying in the streets. Back lots the recep tacle of all species debris. Flow eiiess, grassless and dreary yard, innocent of sprig of green, wells exposed to germs from neighbor ing lots. How are these con ditions to be remedied except by a wholsome sentiment among the neighbors against these slovenly and dangerous conditions? The civic league has for its object the beautifying and making attrac tive the homes of the people. A dozen families banded together can transform a whole town. Thei-e is nothing like the power of example, and a Civic League in all our North Carolina towns would make them shine like the villages of New England. But more important still is the moral filth which the League aims to remove. Is the moral tone of the average North Carolina town higher than it was a dozen years ago? We doubt it. Our social life needs tuning up. Purity of speech and of life need to be re-emphasized. Our young peo ple are rather too free with each other. Moral lapses, especially among people of influence, are too lightly regarded and too soon forgottoen. Men who are moral lepers are received with open arms into good homes were they spread their moral malaria like mosquitos do the germs of fever. As we understand it, the Civic League proposes to uproot the rank weeds of impurity ar.I nur- honor. Charity and Children Make the Children Happy. We have all seen children who have had no childhood. The fun loving element has been crushed out of them. They have been re pressed and forbidden to do this and that so long that they have lost the faculty of having a good time. We see these little old men and women everywhere. Children should be kept child ren just as long as possible. What has responsibility, serious ness t do with childhood? We always feel indignant, as well ss sad, when we see evidences of maturity, over seriousness, care or anxiety, in a child.s face, for we know some one has sinned somewhere. The little ones should be kept strangers to anxious care, reflec tive thoughts and subjective moods. Their lives should be kept light, bright, buoyant, cheerful, full of sunshine, joy and badness. They should be . tn lnno.v, nmi fn niav vv, I J and to romp to their heart's con tent. The serious side of life will come only too quickly, do what we may to prolong child hood. One of the most unfortunate things I know of is the home that is not illuminated by at least one cheerful, bright, sunny young face, that does not ring with the persistent laughter and merry voice of a child. No man of woman is perfectly normal who is distressed or vexed by the playing of children. There was something wrong in your bringing up if it annoys you to see children romping, playing and having a good time. Orison Swett Marden, in Success Maga zine. ' Endorsed By The County. "The most popular remedy in Otsego County, and the best friend of my family, writes Wm. M. Dietz, editor and published of the Ostego Journal, Gilberts ville, N. Y., "is Dr. King's New Discovery. It has proved to be an infallible cuse for coughs and colds, making short work of the - j worst of them. We always keep ! a bottle in the house. I believe tance from the light it throws on the general temper and spirit of the South. It was essentially a struggle between progress and reaction. Mr. Sharp Williams pulse. If Mr, Williams has suc ceeded even bv a narrow margin it is so far rrratifvinar. but he i 0UKllt to have won by a decisive ! amq unmistakable maioHtv. i The thoughtful and observing j paople of the North have Iooked i with hope and sympathy and genuine interest to an advancing South, In no patronizing spirit but with cordial good will and j fellowship we have seen the evi- dences of a new awakening in j that section, We have been i it has darkened our under deeply gratified at her splendid j standing, weakened our will and industrial development and at her rapidly increasing share in the general prosperity jof the country. We have desired that with greater business interests in common and closer commercial union the old bitterness would al- together disappear on both sides, ! and that each section would bet ter understand and approach the other. We have not been unmindful of the difficult and perplexing problems, peculiar to herself, which the South confronts, and we have been more and more dis posed to recognize that she must work out those problems in her uvvii nay. dui we nave teit iUiu:UA f a,7ar.,T u,.,lc.f nf v 1 .1 k nave not hesitated to say so, that my and in the end must guc. she should work them out in the cumb to the deadly javelins hurl way of Mr. Sharp Williams and ed with fiendish malevolence b not in that of Governor Vanla-1 the worW the flesh &nd the man. On the line of Mr. VM-i devil liams and his kind we have seen j Selfcontrol must saye us frQm have watched with deep interest to note which side would carry the more support. The indications are diverse. Mr. Williams has apparenty suc ceeded in Mississippi, but by a margin so small as to show that the State is evenly divided be tween the progressives and the reactionists. The fact that Gov ernor v ardaman, on his kind of campaign, could run the liberal leader so closely is not encourag ing. In Alabama the election of ex-Governor Johnson as the suc cessor of Senator Pettus is a dis tinct triumph for the right. The new Senator is an able, enligh tened .and hiah-mkl statesr-a- dlitt Win vvi tini.y . La new South. His colleague, Mr. Bankhead, who succeeds Senator Morgan, is also a fair man. In Arkansas the election of Jeff Davis some months ago as the successor of Senator Berry was the triumph of another Varda man. Nothing could have been worse. These contests are watched with great interest for what they signify. They are followed with uiccu ti.c "'i true advancement of the South. More are to come. South Caro lina will soon be engaged in a Senatorial battle. If she should have the good sense to choose such a man as Colonel John C. Hemphill, the able and broad minded editor of the Charleston "News and Courier," she would at once take a higher position i with the whole country. He is a I true leader of thought, and his j election would give the State such a Senator as she has not had for many years. With the best wishes for the South's true progress we hope that more of its contests will have such re sults. Phila. Press. There is Money in Bees. Mrs. Emma Shugart who lives one mile east of Jonesville has demonstrated the fact again this year that there is money in bee culture. For the past 15 years or more Mrs. bhugart has been giving much of her attention to the bee businsss. She now has an extensive apiary at her home besides two additional apiaries on Lthis side of the river in Surry county. by much study and attention to the subject she learned to handle them as easily, and more intelligently than the ordinary housewife handles her chickens. The honey season for this year is now practically over, and as a result of this year's operation she took, in all, about 8000 pounds; most of which is very fine quality of sourwood honey. She has al ready sold about $1000 worth be sides keeping enough for family use. She had this season about 140 colonies of honey gatherers. mere is money m Keeping Dees, but they must have attention ; they will not succeed well with- out attention. Elkin Times. TRUE SELF CONTROL. Self-Control is an exercise of the will which puts a brake on passion, curbs temper and sub dues inclination. It is the check which holds in restriction the elements in hu man nature and brings them in- heart and brain of man. We are all creatures of a dual Dersonalitv: the soul nnrl mind of a Dr. Jekvll lie hidden in the hodv nf a Mr Wvrfo in Ooh every one of us. ' There ig much of j Jn a1 of us, but unless we are ever on guard the goad will be more than counter-balanced by the bad. We are heirs of a fallen race and sin has been the patrimonv bequeathed us: it is a bad Wacv lef t in us a strong inclination to evil. If we let that inclination mas ter us, if we become its slave, it will hold us in an abject servi tude and lead us step by step down the dark incline which leads to moral ' death and final destruction. We must combat it, wage a ! constant warfare, fight the good fight, never laying down our arms until "Victory" is em blazoned on our standard. If we desire this consumma tion of the battle we must gird around us the armor of self-con trol, otherwise we will be vulner- passions which burn within our breasts, from the wayward desires of the erring heart, from the tempests of hatred, envy and jealousy which sweeps around us like ocean billows - on a Wintry day, in a word, from the foe within and the enemy without. When temptation with capti vating smile beckons us to fol low her lead along the flower bespangled paths of wrong, let us remember that an asp lies coiled in each waxen petal and call self-control to our aid to guide us into the straight, if narrow, road of right, where every obstacle is but a stepping and " Higher to those heights where virtue sits en throned. The first duty of a government is paternal, to look out for the interests of its subjects as a fath er would his family, but the first duty of the individual is to him self, to govern himself. The man without this virtue is I of no use to the community, but I on the contrary is a drawdack anil p?pn hpcomps n rlnno-prnns element to society. He h; s not the will power in his nature which calls to his aid self-control to enable him to counteract the evil that is in him and which is ever prompting him to do wha t is wrong. The result is that evil triumphs and thus, instead of an agent for good, he becomes a power for bad among his fellow -men. What fills the jail and criminal asylums: what feeds the gallows jand the electric chairs of our j land, what leads men and women from a life of uprightness into the debasing slavery of sin and crime? It is alack of self-control con trol over their evil passions. Let a man lose control of him self and the way to destruction becomes not only easy but he travels thereon with what mathe- maticians would call an accelerat ed velocity. Simple diseases if not controled in time grow into serious cases; a slight cough if left unchecked may develop tuberculosis. Many a man has lost his life by neglect ing a little cold; so many a bright boy and loved daughter, the pride and hope of fond par ents, have emerged from the f chrysalis of innocence into the larvae and finally full life of crime, by failing to control their first impulses to do wrong. The old Adam is strong in us ! all, and he is ever wriggling and twisting to come forth. It is for us to conquer him; not let him conquer us. Carlyie says: "The king is the man who can." When we are tempted to do wrong, let us call the power of will to our assistance to enable us to do what is right. Clear away the darkness of sin and come out into the sun- ; light of a higher nobler plane, j and first of alI cear the atmo. j sphere of your own mind and j gjve yoiir brother-man or sister- woman the benefit of reasonable consideration. We are in bondage to any man or woman to the extent that we permit ourselves to be roused to anger or resentment by his or her words ar actions. The brain befogged by the fumes of anger can work neither clearly nor quietly and when that is th'3 case one cannot serve self or neighbor to his or her full ability. Madison C. Peters in Phila. Press. Letter to Wood & Moving Asheboro, N. C. Dear Sirs: How did you get your business? we'll tell you how we got ours. You sell shoes, we make paint; perhaps we can do a good turn to ourselves, you and we, by swapping experiences. We began 152 years ago in a little shop a few-minutes walk frQm where we are now; a great many things have happened, we don't remember them all. We made as good paint as we could and learned to Make better. We are the oldest now; we don't know whether we had any teach er or not; it's so long ago; if we had, he's gone and forgotten. We should have been forgotten if we hadn't made good paint and friends. You buy your shoes; you have an advantage in that; if you make a mistake, you can stop it quick; if you make a hit, you can push it quick. We've had to go slow; it's hard to pick out one's own mistakes, and it's nothing but fun to correct the mistakes of others. You know where to go for leather that keeps its shape, feels good, looks new, and wears a long time. What a comfort it is to be comfortable from making one's customers comfortable! We also have a unique advan tageunique, you know, means that nobody-else has anything like it. We make a strong paint that takes less gallons, saves half the cost of painting your house, and it's like that leather of yours for wear. It is all paint and the strongest o paint. Paint is usually adulterated and weak. We're very old, but we make young paint! one gallon is better than two, if it has the stuff in it. - Yours truly, F. W. DEVOE & CO., New York, P. S. McCrai'V & Redding Hd aint.-"" AO Next day the fatal precedent will plea? Thus on, till wisdom is pushed out of life, Procrastination is the thief of time; Year after year it steals, till all are fled, And to the mercies of a moment leaves The vast concerns of an eternal scene. If not so frequent, would not this be strange? That 'tis so frequent, this is stranger still. Of man's miraculous mistakes this bears Tha palm, "That all men are about to live," Forever on the brink of being born. All pay themselves the compliment to think That one day shall not drivel, and their pride On this reversion takes up ready praise; At least, their own; their future selves applaud : How excellent that life they ne'er will lead! Time lodged in their own hands is folly's veils; That lodged in Fate's to wisdom they consign; The thing they can't but purpose, they postpone; 'Tis not in folly not to scorn a fool, And scarce in human wisdom to do more. All promise is poor dilatory man, And that through every stage. When young, indeed, In full content we sometimes nobly rest, Unanxious for ourselves, and only wish, As duteous sons, our fathers were more wise; At thirty, man suspects himself a fool; Knows it at forty, and reforms his plan; At fifty, chides his infamous delay, Pushes his prudent purpose to resolve; In all the magnanimity of thought, Resolves, and re-resolves; then dies the same. And why? Bacause he thinks himself immortal. All men think all men mortal but them selves; Themselves, when some alarmiug shock of fate Strikes through their wounded hearts with sudden dread; Cut their hearts wounded, like the wounded air, Soon close; where passed the shaft, no ! trace is found, As from the wing no scar the sky retains, The uarted wave no furrow from the - keel, So dies in human hearts the thought of death: Even with the tender tears which Na- ture sheds O'er those we love, we drop it in their grave . Edward Young. "Regular as the Sun." is an expression as old as the race. No doubt the rising and setting of the sun is the mcst regular perfoumance in the uni verse, unless it is the action of the liver and bowels when regu lated with Dr. King's New Life Pills. Guaranteed by Asheboro Drug Co., Standard Drug Co. 25c. H9- No. n & Tie wise ufSsfus NOTICE. I offer for sale my J interest in the Cox & Allen saw mill. Located on the Cox & Allen land two miles south of Ramseur. A bargain for some one. Reasons for selling are personal. Call and see me. J. C. Allen, Ramseur, N. C. j TEACHER WANTED. ! Notice is hereby given that ! the school committee in Union ! Grove District No. 2, Grant town 'ship. (white race,) wish to'em- ploy a teacher to teach said ; school. All applications can be undersigned. J. II. Smith, S. S. Cox, E. L. Brown, Committee. To rs. W. H Allen Manufactures Doors Brackets Molding- Sash Mantels Turning Dressed Lumber and all kinds of building material. Write him for prices. W. H. ALLEN. Brown, N. C. Wool Carding. We will receive Wool and re turn balls at the following places: W. J. Millers store, Ashboro, E. N. Howard's store, Mechanic, Morgan's & Delk's Mills, Jack son Creek, S. A. Cox's store Pisgah, E. C. Brown's, Brown, Yeargin & Brown, Mechanic N. C. Arrival and Departure of Trains. Southern Railroad. TRAINS GOING NORTH: No. 136 " 142 " 134 11:15 a. 4:25 a. 4:00 p. m. m. m. " 144 6,50 a. m TRAINS ARRIVE FROM NORTH: No. 107 3:35 p. m. " 141 10:30 a. m. " 143 9:40 p. m. " 135 840 p. m. Trains Nos. 135 and 144 Sun days only. All other trains week days only. N. B. Above schedule figures published only as information and are not guaranteed. Aberdeen & Ashboro Railroad. TRAINS GOING SOUTH: 107 3:40 p. m. 136 S 11:15 " " 74 3:10 p. m. All trains in above schedule week days only, except Nos. 107 and 130, which run daily betw een High Point and Asheboro. JNO. V. HUNTER, M. ASHEBORO, N. C. calls Day answered from A-i. EBJRO DRUG COMPANV. Night calls from CENT KAL KOT.-i A Beautiful Flag. Every American with real red blood m his veins loves our nag. But do you possess a good one? You can get a beautiful flag al most free if you will send a check for $3.50 to The Phil adelphia Press. This will en title you to The Press daily, ex cept Sunday, for one year by mail, postage paid, and also a fine hand-sewed nag, size oxd feet, fast colors, fully guaran teed. This flag also is really worth the amount asked and then you get the great horn 2 newspaper of Philadelphi. Be a patriot! When' you have a good flag you can demonstrate your natriotism at time when "Old Glory,, should be displayed. If vour children are set a good ex ample they will learn to love Old Glory" like they should De caught. To-day is the time to order. Send all orders to Cir culation Department of The Press, or hand your order to the newsdealer or postmaster. r CHIP TOBACCO is one of the best and largest plugs of flue-cured goods ever offered' the consumer at lOe. It is manufactured by a strictly INDEPENDENT firm, a con cern depending solely upon the good, will and patronage of the people at large; a patronage only desired upon the strength of the superior quality of their tobaccos. That it has earned this appreciation is amply proved by the tremendous and rapidly increasing demand for CHIP. In fact, wherever their tobaccos come into competion with other makes, whether with the neople or before judges of the world's great expositions, tfiey are invariably winners Call for CHIP and save the tags as they are valuable. A copy of our 1907 premium catalogue, which is one of the largest and most attractive ever gottea out by a tobacco manufacturer, will be mailed to any address in the United States on receipt of only 4c in postage stamps or S of the tags we arc redeeming. HancocK Bros. & Co., Lynchburg, Va. TRINITY COLLEGE. Four Departments Collegiate, I Graduate, Engineering and Law. ' Large library facilities. Well equippel laboratories in all do- partments of science. Gymnasium j furnished with best apparatus. 1 Expenses very moderate. Aid for worthy students. Young Men wishing to Study Law should investi gate the superior advan tages offered by the De partment of Law in Trin ity Col'ege. .. .. .'. For Catalogue and fruther information, address ? I D. W. NEWSOM, Registrar, Dai-ham, North Carolina. Trio V School art A First-Class Preparatoi-y School. Certificates of Gradu ation Accepted for Entrance to Le'idlm Southern Colleges. Best Fiti lapped Preparatory School in the South. Fecu ty of Ten Officers i ami Teachers. Campus of Seventy M Five Acres. S Library containing Thinty Thousand Volumes. Well equip- J pid Gymnasium. High Stand- ards and Modern Methods of In- struction. Frequent Lectisres by Promi nent Lecturers. Expenses Exceedingly Mrlerate Seven Years ot P&8ii::nr3l Success. For Catalogue and o;hji- in formation, address. H. M. North, HEADMASTER DURHAM, N. C. I VERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. 178I907. nead of the State's Educational System DEPARTMENTS College, Engineering, Graduate, L:iv, Medicine, Pharmacy. Library contains 45,000 volumes. New waterworks, electric lirhts, cen tral heating system. Kew dor mitories, gymnasium, Y. M. C. A. buildm;:, library. 732 STUDENTS. 74 iN I ACULTY The Fall term begins Sept. 9, 1907. Address Francis P. Venable, President, CKAPEL HILL, N. C. HERBS BY EOPLE IN Oi CALITY ISf THE STROXCE ST PROOF TfHAT THIS FAMOUS HOUSEHOLD REMEDY DOES ALL THAT IS CLAIMED FOR IT. :: :: ONE need suffer with Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Liver Trouble, Kidney Dis orders, Catarrh, Diabetes, Consti pation, Eczema or any ailment arising from impure blood. One tablet of LISS NATIVE HERBS taken each day will quickly put the most weakened system per fect order. Each root, herb and bark in its composition has a spe cial mission to perform. Each box of the remedy contains 200 Tablets for $1.00 and a Registered Guaran tee to CURE or Money Refunded. A 32 Page Almanac tells the story completely. The medicine is NOT sold in drug-stores, only by agents. THE ALONZO O. BLISS COMPANY. WASHINGTON. D. C. ARE SOLE MAKERS OF BLISS NATIVE HERBS -SOLD BY- F. A. HOOVER, Thomasville N. C. R F D N.o5 Sent prepaid to any address upon receipt of $1.00. A vigorous initiative ar.d strong self-faith make up the man of power. Be sure that the h.spors you are striving: for are r t really dishonors , Education turns the wild sweet J brier into a queenly rose. j Summe Our spring trade has been such, that, it enables us to sell a lot of Hats and some of the Trim- mings we now have in stock at reduced prices. We also have a new line of Gloves and Fancy col lars, and are daily expecting a very desirable lot of the American Beauty Cor sets, All can be suited. A new and more complete line of the Cucum ber Prepara tions, just receiv ed. Mrs. E. T. Blair. CilAS. I Hoirox ATTOllNKY - AT - LAW Asimouo, X. C Will practice in the Slate and Fed eral courts. Special attention given to collections and the settlement of es tates. Office: North side court house. Thau. S. Fhkukh, ATTORNEY-AT-l AW. ASHEBORO, - - N. C. All matters attended to wilh arc and promptness. Special attention given to collections and settlement of estates. (1:21:7) James T. Moreliead. Oscar U. Sapp. M0REHEAD ik SAPP .ATTORNEYS AT LAW N. C. in communica- Kandolph county. DR. D. K. LOCKHART, ii:istist, Asheboro, - N. C. Offce: OVER TK 12 BANK HOIKS: 9 a ni to 1 p m 2 p m to 5 p m N. I3. COX AKIIKISOUO, N. C. W. I ). STHIM AN As. C ' DEALER IN HIGH GRADE Depot St. West side railroad 'Phone 66. Little money BUT BIG MONEY. You ill save money by pay ing cash for what you buy, and will avoid paying for goods you havent bought to call on J. L. NORMAN and buy cheap, where you will not be bothered with book ac ' counts. A nice line of Grocer ies, Notions, Overalls, Suspen ders, Pants, Shirts, etc. JONES OLD STAND north side Depot st. Asheboro. For BARGAINS in Shoes, Groceries, AND Genera! Merchandise (iO TO W. W. JONES, On Depot Street. The undersigned begs to announce that he has opened a first-class Undertaking Establishment and is now ready to serve those in i need of anything in his line. His stock is new and complete and his prices are reasonable. , N EY HEARSE, GENTLE STOCK AND CAREFUL DRIVERS. A s hare of your patronage is solicited. JOHN W. JOLLY, Opposite Lewis-Winslow Hdw. Co. Asheboro, N. C. TTt TZfit ld T on w pallV r tl.
The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 15, 1907, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75