Newspapers / The Dispatch (Lexington, N.C.) / March 11, 1896, edition 1 / Page 2
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.ILK Mu.lt. laW. . r r ows r.em e ivaiu ; result have been ob- S T'-iOtuas A. Edison in his t with X raysthe ne . i .. . I t I'e not only produced rays icnt penetrative power to i anUneous pictures through ,rv card board, but rays that i make good, clear picture oach twelve inches of wood wit . a eiposure of ten mantes. . In ad- Uliion, a beautiful picture was ob tained through card board at a dis tance of three feet from the tube, These are by far the best results obtained with the new light in this country.; No rays of equal power has been produced by a scientist or excevimcutcr bCre, and nothing ap pears in Oio record pf the cspjn ments of Prof. Roentgen to indicate that the rays usedJby iim had such rem&rkabfe "strength. Only a year auo such a'. . wonderful thing would hare been thought of only as a miracle: What science wiU bring to pass in the next decade would be hard even to faintly surmise. f Speaking of the political situa tion the Washington correspondent of the Charlotte Observer says: "Rprirenentative Bhuford. as here tofore, stands np to Senator Butler. Ho says the Populists will not snp . port either Democratic or Republi can party free silver nominees, but that they would meet both Demo cratic and Republican free silver individuals half way. His curious roason is that co-operation with either party would be ineffective; there are tnot enough votes. He appears to think there will be no formal fusion in North Carolina with either party this year for any purpose." Spain has got her back up, as will be seen by reference to another column, because the Senate passed resolutions recognizing the Cubans as belligerents and calling ui.on President Cleveland to secure the independence of Cuba. Spain puts on a big show, but we think she is not likely to want to enter into war with this country. We hope the whole matter may be amicably set tled. Mr. H. B. C. Bryant, formerly on the staff of the Charlotte Observer, and a very bright young man, has bought the Charlotte Democrat and will hereafter edit it. we wisn Mr. Brvant an abundant measure of success. ' . Endowment for Trinity. News and Observer: Mr. W. Duke, of Durham, who baa alt ready given more to Trinity Col lege than any other North Caro linian has given to an education al institution, has changed his proposition to give f 50,000 for an endowment fond when $75, 000 from other sources has been He now offers to give f 2 emj time other , parties give 3, whether it is much or little. This very generous proposition ought to stimulate the Metho dists of the State to earnest ac tivity to raise at least 75,009 during the preseut conference year, with nearly a hundred and fifty thousand members, it ought not to be difficult to se cure an average of fifty cents from the membership. In a re cent editorial, the Christian Ad vocate said: - "It ought to be no easy mat ter for ns to raise 175,000 this year and that would give us a respectable endowment fund, ?125,000. Wake Forest, the Laptist wllege of the State, has b n endowment of f 190,000. The Presbyterians have given David son $108,000 endowment. : We pre far behind these churches in tliie respect. -; Shall we remain thus behind? We must move Ljrwardl" . . In reference to the statement in the Washington correspond nee of the Charlotte Observer : hat the Atlantic Hotel at More nd City had been exchanged - property at Laurel, Md., and subsequent denial of it in r p npe re, Col. J. S. Carr, who in Mew born Thursday, said e Journal: "Yes, I have v Morehead City property, j.ected to have mude the 1 before this, but withiu the sale will have been 'ted. While 1 cannot litely as to the plans owners, 1 believe that c Hotel will be opened 1 (i nd ran in first-class .'"arch 4. The p' iire day fix- United btatet . i 1 "ti(1 nt , . I jlM CN Mlb6iOS- j ( ...:, lio OUrvr: Sou. tinial li'sr full ex l'rtbidi'nt Uormi'.,i pi. k!J at a fcrvut uieetiir. of lrcnl)vteriuus in New Ycu 'city in advocacy of niiaaiOn work. The f Act that an evPresident should have lent hi mflueuce to ath cause was commented opon as significant. Tuesday nifjht at Carnegie Mask Ball, in New York. President Cleveland presided at a similar meeting held to further the work of home mission work, making a speech in which he endorsed both home and foreign mission , work, as Chief Executive of the nation. He said: . "But it ifl not only m your feU low-cltisen but as the Chief Exec utive officer of your government that I desire to speak, for I am entirely certain that I serve well our entire people, whose servant I am, when I here testify to the benefit our country has received through borne missionary effort, and when 1 join you - in an at tempt to extend and strengthen that enort. And farther on: '11 .we turn from tb object of home missionary labor to the situation of those actually toil ing in distant fields for Qod and humanity ana a purer, netter cltiznesbip, our sympathy with their work must be further quick ened and our sense of duty lo them and their cause actively stimulated." Coming from the Chief Execu tive of a great country, these ut ¬ terances are siguihcmit. The President spoke immediately as a Presbyterian, but his words have a wider scope, mid las en dorsement of uud testimony to the beneficence of mission work apply to the efforts of nil denom inations to the work of the Christian Church iu tho widest meaning of the term. Civiliza tion follows in the wake of Chris tianity. When, therefore, the pioneers of Christianity receive auch encourntreuKiit as the pub licly expressed Uod-speed of the chief ruler of a nation, their la bors are lightened. It is a sign of the world's getting better. It is unusual, and if it has ever been done before we do not recall when. POLITICAL. Ex-Senaror Mandcrson. lie- publican, of Nebraska, has shied his castor into the Presidential ring and gives notice that he ex pects to be in it himself. Senator Peffer says the Poon- lists in their national platform will drop all the peculiar '-isms" except free-silvensm, in order to catch the free-silver vote. H. Clay Evans does not want to be a candidate for Vice-President. He will run for Governor of Tennessee, and then accept the position of Po8tmaster-Ueneral if McKinley is elected Presi dent. Senator Calvin S. Brice has de cided that be will not attend the next Democratic national con vention. He has not made this announcement tohis political friends in Ohio, but before anv movement is made in the Buck eye State to select delegates to the convention, he will state hid reasons for retiring from the natioual organization of the party. Orisinal Observations. Orange (Va.1 Observer : Fnro. handed men often overreach their neighbors. A man without enemies is like a gun without powder. ine mouth is too often the sew er of obscenity and vulgarity. The dead dream in ondless sleep 'tis living eyes alone that weep. The only time a dead man leads is at his own funeral A small soul has plenty of elbow room in a narrow-minded man. Those who seek to climb only by the errors of others never rise tar or remain Jong up. The best thing a man do when he feels like swearing is to pay no attention to his feelings. To bring np a child in the way he should go, take care he don't see where yon go, dear parent - A new political to be started. It is an owe noth ing party, but we are afraid its unmoers will be too small to ever win an election. ' M rs. Hngg. of Chinum ha im plied for a divorce. ; She says she knows when she has got enough of a good thing. - , . , ' " :- Honoris Above All. -Windsor Ledirer! '.Th flr-t tiling to save the State from is an example ni moral and polit icul duplicity and intrigue which has lowered us in the eyes of the nation and set dishonor and chicanery above the good old North Carolina ways of truth and decency. toe Loger cannot support lu the trial of a case in Powell county not long ago the attor ocv8 objected to all the jurors wuobad been enmmoned save as no others were at hand, twasacreed that the action ' oiild be tried , by the one re t jury man. After the ev 5 v Leard, the jml-e told ' 1' ' t juror to retire and 1 ' verd.t-t. Le retir" ' . 1 r t. " f tor c CE.Nfc.HAL KtWS Th Alleghany Stir denies thtit there is any truth iu the recent r port of the killing of three men on i tfc wounding of fifteen in a b i tie in that county. . , .. The people of Cuba mho arc po iu the fight are more afraid of the Spanish soldiery than tbey uro ! tne insurgents, ana . trior doubtless have reason to be. A 20-story office building is to go up m Atlanta, at the Junction ot rettdiirce and Broad streets. The Journal says it will be the hlghest buiidiag in America outtide of New York and Chicago.. - Lowell, Mass., March a. At 9:55 to-night the condition of Qov. Greenhalge was unchanged. Death may contest any moment. Later: Oov. Oreeubalge died at 12:30 .m. The correspondent of . the United Press in Constantinople telegraphs that the Washington 1'oBt. ant Evening Star, and the 'ew Yo. V Trior n'or!d and Life, have been permanently pro diluted bv the Porte frrm enter i.'g Turkey. As the Durham Sun aptly puts it a in an with good health, a to work t.i -'" ' ' r . aloug in thin world, iu-r "i k.-i. keep such a man down. , It is a pitiable sight, however, to see a bundle of so many possibilities sitting on a goods box railiug because every thing is not done just as be would do it, and wuit- r i . t - . . , , - i ti,ir.-t r,,t.,Hni hi. nont nir lor tne iora 10 case niui uy nnrl onRt rnllfl.r unA thpnw him ' into thB land of Canaan. That man would muddle the houey and sour milk. A curious application of the Roentgen rays has been made iu Frauce by Professor buuuet, of Kouen, and the chemist, M. dis card. They took true und false diamonds for the experiment, and obtained entirely different results. When the rays were ap plied to the false diamonds only indistinct images appeared on the photographic plates. The real diamonds, however, allowed the rays to pass, and as a result much darker pictures were pro duced on the plates: Thus a cer tain method of discovering the quality of diamonds is assured Samuel Edison, the father of the inventor who just died, wus very proud of his son, but he used to tell visitors that in bis boyhood Tom was not at all bright. "Some folks thought he was a little addled, he said ''Teachers used to tell us to keep him in the streets for ho would never make a scholar. All he ate went to support bis brain, and not els body, and be was puny. He was forever asking me questions, ana when I would tell him did'nt know be would ask: ''Why don't you know?" His mother was splendidly edu cated and had great natural abil ity, and he was very much like her." It appears from statistics that more books were issued in 18'J5 than in any previous vein enough tew notable ones were 111 be number. The new books in cluding new additions, issued the United States numbered 5,5000, iu England 6.500. and in France 12,027; a slight falling on in the last country. A healthy sign in this country was un increased demand for such stand' urd works as Scott, Hawthorne, etc., showing a reaction against the mass of miserable staff which crowds the book stalls. lathe different departments fiction led in this country with 1,050 books; then came law, then religious, tueii educational works. President Homer T. Fuller, of Drury Uollege, Springfield, Ohio, has received a letter from a Mas-. such use tta man who offers large sum of money for the veri fication of a war episode. ' The story is that in the early days of the war a detachment of Confed erate troops in Missouri took about lour Hundred Union pris oners. Twelve of these were lined up and shot without pro vocation by the Confederate of ficers. Upon hearing of this act the commander of the Federal regiment drafted twelve Confed erate prisoners to be shot in re taliation. As the line was being lormed, a young man named William Lear stepped forward and asked to take the place cf one 01 tne condemned men, who was bis friend. The request was granted ana juear was shot In place of his friend. . . ; ; The Louisville Courier-Journal quotes from ah interview with Judge Z. T. Fnlmore in tbe American Wool and Cotton Re porter on the progress of South em cotton mill enterprise. Of North Carolina be says: "My careful investigations proved that none of the better condi tioned mills paid less than 20 per cent, per annum on the cap ital invested. No mill visitf d by me in the Stat? of North Caro lina is now paying less than that and several I found to be paying as high as SO per cent." "Such figures as these," says the Cour ier journal, "speak with more convincing eloquence of the South's future than the booming reports sent out miring the town lot era. a Duumors wuich jmys so well and in which, according to Jodre Fulmore, there has never beu n failure, so far as ' ' "1 ('1 rnl.im is enwerned i tie 1 1' f t,i evwy r. . , t 1 1 1 9 i.,..i 1 ALL SPAIN AROL; Barcelona, Spain, March.. The fever of u.J:nanon a;t4 hate against the United States,vhich seems to have taken possession of the hearts ot all Spain over the action of the United States Senate in recognizing - the provisional government of Cuba . as bel ligerents, and in calling upon President Cleveland to use his good offices with Spain and sec are the independence oil Cuba, culminated in violent scenes here yesterday, and an attack upon the United States consulate. ; , . i The trouble did not arise out ot the spontaneous forma tion of the mob which did the violence, but was the result of a public meeting, which had been influenced by .fervid speeches. . V f- The public ; demonstration to protest against the United States Senate's action was or ganized by the political lead' .s. irfcluding Republicans '! aien of all 'shades oCpo- litical sentiment. It was 3 o'clock in.s the. ai- ternoon when the meeting as sembled, and they were tully 15,006 people present, all in a state of hisrh patriotic en- thusiasm, and npe lor anj nianifesta ifestation of the emotions which possessed them. - Saved by a Shot. Sir George Yule of the Indian ivil service was a mud, swt-et natnred man, but a "mighty hunter." who bad killed hun dreds of boars and shot tigers on foot and from horse and ele pliant. Sir Edward Braddon, n Ins "Thirty x ears 01 enixar. tells of Sir fcleorge s narrow es cape from death in an encounter with a tiger. - tin was standing ouisiao 01 a jungle from which a tiger was being driven DV oeaters. ine tiger came from the jungle with in a few feet of the spot where Vnle stood and rushed at him. lie had only time to bring his rifle up to bis hip and fire as tbe beast sprang upon mm, kuoub.- ng lura to tne ground, Bmasuuig in his sun helmet and tearing bis shoulder and chest. The Hirer was dead when it reached the ground, killed by the chance shot so coolly fired. - - Truth is often stranger than fiction. Here is a well-vouched- for story which seems a case In poiut : "twelve years ago Frank Thornleigh left hislibme in Hamilton because inMutner had. unvr the death of.-hw f rst wife, married a widow. Frank; who was only a voung bovat the time, did not like the idea of a stepmother, so one night he tan away and smppea as cabin boy on a boat to tsunaio. un his arrival there he fell in with a Canadian horse dealer, who took a fancy to him and with whom he remained until the old gentleman died a short time ago; leavin? Frank his $50,000 estate. The latter visited his old home recently and was just in tbe nick of time to save his father's home from being seized on mortgage. His stepsister, whom be left as a little gin, uad grown . ,j ... .-. . ,- up into a beautiful young wo man, luey will be mam next week." '-. .' ' New York, Mar. 2.-A heavy snow storm began shortly before midnight last night, accompan panied by heavy wind which continued nntil 10 o'clock this morning, when it stopped, and later in tne morning the sun broke through th clonds There was a delay on every street car and eleated railroad line in the. city and several slight accidents are reported 011 the street cur lines as a result of the storm. : Resolution. The following are tho resolutions passed by the Senate- and House entK 1 t , ' Resolved, By the Senate, (ih House concurring, that in the opiuiou of Congress, a condition of public- war exists between the gov ernment proclaimed and Tor some tune maintained by force or arms by the people of Cuba, and that the united Stales or America should maintain a strict neutrality between the contending powers, ' according to each all the rights of belliger ents in the ports and territory the United States. ; i 4 Resolved. That tho friendly of fices of the United States shall bo offered by the President to the Spanish government for the recog. nition of the independence ol Cuba. Vasslln as a Preservative;. ftew lork Times: Vasclin the salvation of new shoes which have become wet and muddy 1 1 rat ruo tne shoes well with soft cloth and then remove all the mud. Now for the voselin Saturate a cloth with it end ru it well into the shoes, fc.tu.f the shoes into f'mpe. and let them rest for a vliiie; then rive them sin r oi.iug and rr ,i; x an f y v, ,;l fpp r e r ;,d t 1 1 1 i. st ..i, ( irvv .--sir v ,. ( Golnits KtwYork. Prvt.idnt Cleveland ha ac cepted th invitation of the home mission Jwird of tht- Pres hytrlan chuivh to prvsid at the mating to be held at Carne gie Hall, Nw York city, when surra roe effort is to he made to clear off au ind-btedrees of $J38,000. The Piwid. ni will make a short addn. R--. Dr. Talmage and Mr. BroDkt T. Washington, the colored orator, are also -xp-cted to speaK. Mrs. Cleveland will probably accompany the President. - A private oox Has brn reservea for her use at the meeting. The President and Mrs. 'Jlveland will start early Tuesday moa-n-ing, and will probably return to wasuingtun the next day. Four Bla SuooMaoa. ; . Havingneeded merit to more than maxe good all the advertis ing claimed for them, tbe follow ing fonr remedies have reached a phenomenal sale: Or. - King's New Discovery, for Consump tion, Coughs and Colds, each bottle guaranteed.- Electric Bit ters, the great remedy for Liver, Stomach and Kid n y s. ; Buck ten's Arnica Salve, the best in the world, and Dr. King's New Lifo rills, iwhich . ore a perfect pill,' "A II these remedies are guar anteed to do just what is claimed I for them and the dealer whose name is attached herewith : will, be glad lo tell you inoreof them. Sold at Lexington - Drug Co.'s store. , V -V A Pennsylvania man recently presented his wife with a piano tump, which she said she would call after him. On asking her the reason she replied. "Well. dear, it has a good deal of brass about it, it is nandsome to look at, it is not remarkably bril liant, requires a- good deal of attention, is -liable to explode,- flares up occasionally, is always out at bed-time, and is bound to smoke." : Mrrl4m R'Valla. Fromalelirr .rmen bv Rev. J. Gunderman, of Dimondale, Mich., we are permitted to make this extract : "I have no hwita tntion in recommending Dr. King's New Discovery, as the reJ suits were almost marvelous jo tbe case of my wife. W hile I was pastor of the Baptist church at Hives Junction she was brought down With pneumonia succeeding La Grippe. Terrible paroxysms of coughing would last hours with little mteruption aud it seemed as if she could not survive them. . A friend recommended Dr. King's New Discovery: it was quick in its work and highly sat isfactory in results." Trial bot tles free at tbe-Lexington Drng Co's. store. Regular size 50c "Accidents?" said the old sea captain, "No, we never have any 10 speak -of on this line. VVhv one. trip about a vear atro 'the ship caught fire down in the hold, and we never disooved it till we got into port , and began to discharge." . .. - "that's strange.- What, put the fire out!" Why it burned down to . the sea aud the water put it out. Couldn't burn the water, you k'lOW." , "iv ;: ,:':c:.. And (he captain walked away smiling, whii the interlocutor was Bo astonished that he never thought of asking whv the shin did not sink. Take Simmons Liver Regula tor now. It's just the remedy for the Spring of the year to wake uo the liver and cleansu the whole system of the accu mulated waste '.ot the , winter. "My wife com baited more ma laria in Alabama in 1861 with Simmons Liver Regulator than all the doctors in the neigh bor- ncod. i i We ve nad a seige of malaria in our own family, and It helped us."-V. Bryaut, uauas, xexas. - .'.;:;.;;.-. A- Louisiana, the first of the States to hold an election in 1896, is also first t)f the States to elect delegates to the St.- Louis Republican convention. The Louisiana election I of State officers will take nlare on April 21. in August, Ala. Dama . will elect a uoyernor, while Arkansas will vote on Sept 7. and Maine on SepL 14. ' The Vermont election will be on Sept. 1, . The very latest classification ot the Ke publican delegates .chosen in Lotiisana gives eight to Gov, Morton, four to Senator Alli son, and two each to Gov. McKinley and Speaker Reed. The next of the States to choose delegates to the Re publican National Convention will be Arkansas. LmbraoMAII. ti LookingSoothwar J: vXh the snme amo?" ! 1 "J capital that 1 I u; on the V.V t, 1 a a r .rdan t j 1 si the worij . prv " ii - lions anj f -) it ei' t ia f r ( f t" e '. 'i- not f 1 I f rt:,ev-i f Cine' Give f of em1 been 1 we wi.i i citws 1 knew, vantr other 1 South could 1 ing of try. I qunli: and 1 ' ;r 1 TV.2 tZT SFni;;Q l:ed:q;;e b Simmons Liver Regulator. Doot forget to take It Now is the time you need It most to wake up your Liver. A sluggish Liver brings on Malaria, Fever rx Ague, Rheumatism, and many other Ills which shatter the constitution and wreck health. Dont forget the word REGULATOR. It Is SIMMONS LrVER . fGULATOR you want The word REG ULATOR distinguishes It fron all other remedies. And, besides this, SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR Is a Regulator of the Liver, keeps It properly at work, that your -system may be kept In good condition. FOR Trie CLOOU take SIMMONS LrVE KEGULATOR. It Is the best blood purifier and corrector. . Try K and note the difference. Look for the RED Z on every package. You wont find R on any other medicine, and there Is no other Liver remedy like SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR the Kingof Uver Remedies. Be sure you get It . , - -J. H. geUlm Otv. Philadelphia, Pa. The Washington con expand ent 01 tne Koston Ulobe m re sponsible for the follttwing: "Gro. vet vieveland not a candidate for re-Uomination for the Presi dency at the bands of the Demo cratic National convention. He has made this known to bis per sonal friends .and an authori tative announcement - will in all probability be made early. Information from a source that cannot be doubted is to the effect that Mr. Cleveland will make his intentions known in a commun ication addressed to a prominent member of the Massachusetts Demucracy. "... State of Ohio, City of Toledo,! . JLincas Uounty. - : f Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner ot ' the firm of P. J. Che- nVt Mr Pa . ArAntm knainAM 4Vk A city of Toledo, county and 8tate atoresald. and that said nrra will pay the sum of ' ONE HUN DRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that can not be cured by the use ot Hall's uatarrn Cure. . FRANK J. CHENEY Sworn .to before tne and sub- subscribed in my presence, this otn day - ot uecember, a. u. 1886. - seal - A.W.GLEASON, Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken In ternally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of tho system. Send tor testimo nials free. F. .1. CHENEY & C0.i Toledo, O "Sold by druggists, 75c A literary ', correspondent asks : ' ,- , "How can I get 'Trouble on Lost Mountain ?" Report any moonshine dis tillery that you may find in that neighborhood, and it will come easy. - Ihe t'almetto " State of South Carolina sold last year, through , its dispensaries. $920,662 worth of liquor, ot which the net- profit was $159,039. .The sales of the sub-dispensaries amounted to $i,o76,o6, at a - profit ofl $201,383. , V . It is the best' liniment in the world for' all cuts, bruises, sprains and iheumatism. . For sale by the Lexington Drug Co. uvery Dottle guaranteed to do what ia claimed for it. - Riverside Medicine Co. tf - - . Ore Hill, N. C. -, The Oldaat Man. Raleigh News and Observ er: . In regard to Hiram Les ter, the ' man. who ; died the other' day at the age of 128 years, a dispatch from. Gear gia says: T . - t"There' is no question as to his great age, as he leaves son 02 years 01a, wno is an jnmate of the same institution and a daughter, who - lives in Heard county, and is 95 years 01a. i "Uncle Hiram, as he was familiarly known, came from long-lived ancestry. His fath er lived to be 100 and his grandfather to be 1 15. The 01a man claimed to nave en joyed the hospitality of George ,Washington for three days, and spoke fluently oh the sub ject of the oScialacts of J . f- icrson, r iau.son and Jay. lie d.u.ae J to have tot'ht in t!.e war cf i3i2, but he nevci drew a peni.ion. lie 1. 1 1 . ;-'"s i.i t'.e civil war." j I. r wrs born in I'; .' . ' an.! v t.t t!.e tine c f ! ' ' :-."y t! ' 1 A' . ilea. ta J at ill t f Jw: ivvtived A larga stock of v . How 8taelsv Porks, Hoes, Trsee . Chains, Ac, for our Spring trade. ' ' s - : . We are now bett . . . ; . ; wpply the Fanners with the neeea. nirrarniingTooln thsiisTwbelbre.. ; . - ' Oiir, Chattanooga and 8yracuss . ' ; . ' .v ChlDedFlowi stand witaont a rival' -. '. : They are the best plows on the - - market, and fully gaaranteed in ev- : ery respect Try them and be eon- -. vinoed. Every farmer should have 4 them oa bis place. : Shelf and Heavy Hardware ' - - rail assortment 00 hand all the time. r Common Hows and Castings rack '--: ; - f : " u Dixie and Farmer's Friend, wa ' v ' - ' have constantly on hand. """ " ' . ' When wanting anything in the " , " Hardware line always call ia and see , .'-r ''.'(.." - Yonr obedient and appreoittive " friends, v REDWINE ; CO. THE DISPATCH FOR 1883. ...You. will waut the paper fuU of interest as to politics, with it all. , Only $1 a year; cents. . And. besides this. Vfill will wan i . . . j - - d"'en- . Let us send you the paper for 1896. " C IF YOU WANT A THING DONE Take it to a1 Busy Man. . x January was one of the busiest months n the history of our business, notwithstanding it is usually considered thedullest month in the year. That sptaka tor itself. Honest work and a guarantee that guarantees fa the secret of it. Be as wise as your neighbor and taks your watch and dork wnrb ;.b . ' Next Door to Post-office Lcoli for EeatlquartGFs. S. L. Owen's Grocery Storo is tub place, and be sure and get there before you stop. The largest and most complete stock in town, , Too much to name," so come and call for what you want and pay for what you get owe no man, and we will all be happy. -. L ' A 3 TA A. . T-l . " . mwwm a wKibwwa c .uugesi siuck to select ixom ever brought to Lexington. Very Early Rose, Beauty 'of Hebron, Pride of the South, Peerles and Duibank. .Call and see me and yu and I will Le happy. . Yours to please, ' " ' v J oh Priyth) If you arc alive to your ii'.crests you will do two darinj First: U..j i.lcc, printed stationery. C C-.-nJ orJers'for sa'J rn;, ; j to'me." I do job '" j. is t'y 1-usSness. If j i i t r : n anytliir- : . . V : .& an. order, f '" '.'.a .-.aranteed. I':' s r-. Now, r .-: If i.i need ofl" T ", l,: ' I.'lIIc"'-, ' ( .'.itemen!'-, ,('" ' -; " ' cf . :r i : - , - i is at W a-uSI "for 1896. The year will be and. you- will want to' keepup 6 months 50 cents; 3 months aS -. 1 uu li iur your cnu- Hanes, T!t 1 ' r r si f -' ' 1 t' . i y.: ! 1
The Dispatch (Lexington, N.C.)
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March 11, 1896, edition 1
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