Newspapers / Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, … / Oct. 10, 1901, edition 1 / Page 2
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j ''l 1 IJq "dj : f ii i I i , m. rrr vicitto nnRnpH iiTi t.Vift store room adioioins: and now have one of the best store rooms in the State xtto ata nlfiaaed to onnounce ta our Irienas ana cubwiuwb nonafavio- hiine- in tiiei northern markets, our buyers have returned home and we are now of xxroii litAd nd nerfectlv ventilated. After weeKS o icarjiux 3TQ;rrh n Onr increase facilities place us in the front rank of buyers and in " 7 . - . 1.1- 1a-mx-m nnrt nQTTBr O LUOIA W u.wu. www - . fering to VMtraawo :: --r" offer them in same proportion. large quantities we gci txxw j,www now of, buying1 DRESS GOODS. The most important item is the Woolen dress Je plain wPaveor most artistic Bnished importe d fabn e an all are dis mayed at attractive price. The favored materials in dress fabrics are Yiennas, Prunel as, Venetians and Broadcloth.we have them all m a large variety of shades and at prices to suit all Narrow striped neat lined camels hair efiects are much believed m for walking skirts, our prices range from 50 cents per yard to $1.75 per yard. The ad vent of the new styles in the separate woolen waist has caused the creation of an endless yariety of flannel waist cloths and to meet the popular demand we have bought largely and are showing them trom 25 cents per yard up to 90 cents. BLACK DRESS GOODS. This department deserves special mention as an cx'ra effort has baen make to secure the best and most popular fabrics, and with pardonable pride we claim to have an assortment of black goods un f qualed in this section of tLe State. Another new feature introduc ed his season is the use of many stamped, plain and corded weaves of Velveteens, whole costumes are made of them, but the popular demand for waist patterns, the most sought after stvles are black grounds with colored effects, we are showing a nice assortment. SILK FABRICS. Tsffita silk lead the van in plain and fancvs. BUck Taffetas are applied to every possible use, whole outside wraps, petticoats, bias bands for skirt trimmings, all are good. Our as?cr ment is complete from 19 to 36 inchps wide. CLOAKS AND WRAPS. The most important item in a ladies outfit after her dress is a wrap The Jacket has most to do with her general style and conse quently shares with her hat a rather jealous determination to have the best she can afford European and American manufactures have decided upon the 27 inches and 42 inches as being adabted to popular demand. We have an extenfiye assortment and at prices ranging $5 to $15. CLOTHING, CLOTHING. Ready made Clothing for Men, Boys and Children. This' depart ment is a new one for uf, but it has in no sense been neglected, time and energy have been spent in selecting and buyiDg and we feel confident in saying that our assortment is all that one could de sire and better still our prices are as low as the lowest. We have been fortunate in securing a first class clothing man, one of experi ence and will always be glad to show the line whether one boys or not full and complete line of Hats, Shirts, Collars, Cravats. Under wear and Hosiery, in fact an up-to-date Gents Clothing and Furnish ing store. HOUSE FURNISHINGS. We are better equipped in our Upholstery Department to inter est vou than ever before. The stock is larere end varied, the pat terns attractive and prices the lowest. Nottingham lace curtaing, Irish point lace curtains, Point de Esprit curtains, Tapestry curtains fancy draperies. Millinery I Millinery This Department is always a leading feature of our bueioess and is replete with the Latest creations from New York's biggfst and best houses. Our buyer spent several weeks in the Northern mar kets perfecting herself in the art of trimming and fepls justified in saying we show one of the most attractives lines ever displayed by us. We still carry the Zeigler Bros' Ladies Fine Shos, Bay State Shoe & Leather Co's medium and coarse Shoes for every day wear, and the Humanic and Banister Fine Shoes for men. "Black Cat" Hosierv for children, Lord & Taylor's "Onyx Black" Hosiery for Ladies. Carpets, Rugs, and Matting at all prices and in a large variety of styles. REMEMBER It is no trouble for us to show goods, and c rdially invite the people of Granville and adjoining counties to call and examine our ep'endid stock, promising to sell you all goods at lowest possible prices. Come and and se us and we will do our best to please you in everv partic ular. Polite and attentive clerks to supply your wants. A recep tion room is provided for the ladies, with couch and a cradle for the baby, chairs and other comforts. We have bargains to offer you so come and get them as we save you money. OH HHg .rfMta ,Li LI r I v yt v. w j i J L CI J MlIsOirtBiw We have three children. Before the birth of the last one my wife used four bot tles of MOTHER'S FRIEND. If you had the pictures of our children, you could sec at a g- ance that the last one is healthiest, prettiest and finest-looking- of them all. My wife thinks Mother's Friend Is the greatest and grandest remedy in the world for expect ant mothers." Written by a Ken tucky Attorney-at -Law. HER '8 iHpT FRIEJID OXFORD PUBLIG LEDGER. JOHN T. BRITT. OWNER AND EDITOR. THURSDAY. - - - OCT. 10,1901 Ain't You Sorry You Spoke? "Justice" in the Union Republican says "we can't say that all Democrats are anarchists,but we do saythat all anarchists are Democrats." Norcan we say that all Republicans are liars some of them are our best people but we can say as true as life and death, that all such monumental an archist liars and anarchist breeding writers as "J ustice" are Republicans. Besides "Justice" knows that it was an anarchist Republican sham Gov ernor and a hired board of Republi can mountain anarchists that assas sinated (iov. (ioebel, of Kentucky. Wilkesboro Chronicle. prevents nine-tenths of the suffering incident to child birth. The coming1 mother's disposition and temper remain unruffled throughout the ordeal, because this relax ing, penetrating1 liniment relieves the usual distress. A good-natured mother is pretty sure to have a good-natured child. The patient is kept in a strong, health j condition, which the child also inherits. Mother's Friend takes a wife through the crisis quickly and almost painlessly. It assists in her rapid recovery, and wards off the dangers that so often follow de livery. Sold by druggists for $1 a bottle. THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO, ATLANTA, GA. Send for our free illustrated book written expressly for expectant mothers. BL!Q Would Have to Go out of Business. Take away from the average evan gelist his sensational methods, his funny stories and his vulgar witti cisms, and he would have to go out of business. Some of the most dis cordant asses who ever whacked a pulpit or brayed over an open Bible are called evangelists. All they care for is to drag people into the church by the scruff of the neck. They do not ca're whether there is any change of heart and sincere purpose to try to live a Christian life, but they only want to enroll so many more names on church books.The glory and honor of (Jod are forgotten, and all is done for the glory and fame of the evange list. Salisbury Truth. Hazing at Wake Forest Wake Forest college has j ust passed through a crisis it seems. Hazing, was being practiced. A student in-1 formed the faculy and for this crime( ? ) f he was waited on by a committee and ordered to leave college which he did. Two of the hazers were expelled whereupon 5()or more of the students pledged themselves to leave college if the expulsion were executed. Presi dent Taylor and his faculty however placed all these in the roll of offend ers and gave them till Saturday noon to appear with a reversal of pledges or leave the institution. It is under stood that the boys took the wiser course and all is quiet along the line. Hazing it is understood must stop at Wake Forest too. "OA8CAKF.TS do nil cluimed for tliem and are a trmy wuuderf ui medicine. 1 have ol ten wished for a medicine pleasant to t:i ke a nd at last nave tound it in Cascaieis. Since lakiiiK tliem. my Diood.nas oeen nui itled and mv eonmlexiim h:is im proved wonderfully and 1 feel 'much better in every way. Mies. Sa i.i.ik ii. Ski. i. ahs. Juttreli. Teuu. i f Q2j CATHARTIC TRADE MARK REOISTERCD r? Pleasant. Palatable. Potnt. Taste Good. Do Good. Never sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 26c. aOc. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Bl.rline Itenit'riv ( ..pnj.iiny, 'lili-neu. Jlm.ln-al. New York. 319 Nfl.Tfl.RAR Sold and Kua ra meed by all drug nU'lU'DMU iststo : V K K Tobacco Habit. Adminstrators Notice. HavlD? qna'ified as Adnrniptrator of the estate of J. C. Terry, notice 1s hereby given to ail pereone indebted to ei M estate to 'ome for ward and settle same at once Parties holding aeainst said estate will present them to me for payment on or before tbe 13th day of September 1901 or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. A A Ulck8) Administrator JbU Sept I3tb 1901 New Cause for Lynching. A fresh ground for lynching 1 been discovered in the rural parts oi Texas. In Harrison county a race war has been in progress for several days, and as many as Ave negroes have been hanged and whipped to death for not harvesting the cotton crop. The negro tenants had taken the laud on shares, and the planters being unable to get their part . of the yield through the laziness of the ren ters have begun a lynching campaign. This is a somewhat novel excuse for the killing of men, and is not upheld by public opinion existing in any civi lized community. The disgrace of this foul evil rests heavily upon the nation It offends against all moral sentiment, and increases in intensity in proportion as the provoking cause of the outrage tends to become uncertain or trival. Philadelphia Times. Stricken With Paralysis. Henderson Grimniett, tf this place, was stnckeu with partial paralysis and compU te ly lost the use of one arm and side. After being treated by an eminent physician for quite a whi'e without relief, my wife rocom mended Chanber ains I'ain Balm, and after using two bottles of it he is al-nost entirely cured. Cto. K. Mc- ona!d Man, Logon c unty, W Va Severa1 olher very remark ab'e cures of part paralysis have been effest ed by the use of this liniment. It is most widely known,. however, as a cure for rheu matism, sprains and bruises. Soli by J. G. Hail. . At Shelby ville, Ky., two negroes are taken from the jail and hanged for the murder of the printer, W. C. Hart last Saturday night. Lewis Ockerman, Ciosheh, In: DeVVitt's Little Early Risers never bend me double I ke other pills, but do their wcrk thoroughly and make me feci 1 ke a boy. Certain horough genile. J. d. Hall. The American Negro. Heports of an alarmist character were rife some years ago regarding the fecundity of the negro race. It was freely stated, and generallybe lieved, that the African was proving himself so prolific that he would within some ealcuable period ofj'ears outnumber the white man in the United States. These statistical re sults were reached because of some faulty census work in the Southern States, and also because of the high er birth rate among the blacks. The fact was overlooked that the death rate is also much higher, for which reason the net gain at w hite expense is very slight. Iudeed, it seems now as though the negroes Were actually on the decline. The census of 1SMM) shows that they make up only 11.58 per cent, of the whole population, as against 11.93 per cent, in 1890 and 13.13 per cent, in 1880. Be fore the war the percentage was much higher. In1830 it was 18 per cent, and in 150 above 15 per cent. It must be remembered, of course, that the negroes make no gains by immigration, as they formerly did. None are brought here from Africa and very few come of their own voli tion, while Europe sends us shiploads of white immigrants every week. It appears that in only four States Arkansas, Alabama, Florida and Mississippi, is the population of ne groes now greater than in 1890. The negro population in Virginia and the border States has decreased; in the Northern cities it has slightly increas ed. Philadelphia Times. The Baltimore Sun tells us. of a young woman in that city who gave $100,000 for a husband. Us men come high.butthe girlshave got to have us. Ex. The University of North Carolina asserts its right to be the head of the educational system in -North Caro lina. It has 537 students already reg istered for the fall term. The agricultural commissioner o Texas estimates the cotton crop of the state at 800,000 bales less than last year. Miss Caroline Hall, daughter of an army oflicer living in Boston, passing herself off as a man, dies on a tranp At lan tic steamer and thus the strange s tory is revealed. Cooks have about the softest snap in the Klondike. They get $150 a month and can stay by the fire all time. Mothers everywhere praise One Minute Cough Cure for the sufferings it has lelieved and the lives of thair little ones it has saved, fctrikes at the root of the tioub e and draws out the inflammation. The ohi--dren's favorite Cough Cure. Our government makes explana tory answer to Japan's complaint is to rigid enforcement of quaran tine laws at San Francisco and Hon olulu. W. T, Wesson, Gholsonville, Va. drug gist writes: "Your One Minute Cough Cure gives perfect satisfac'.ion. My custOni eis say it is the best remedy for coughs, colds, throat and lung troubles." J C Hall. The trial of sheriff North on charge of murder for killing a number of a mob while trying to lynch a prisiner has begun at Asheville,. Ala. A Typical South African Store. O. R. Larson, of Bay Vi;la, Sundays Rivtr, Cape Colony, conducts a store typ cal of South Africa, at which can be purchased anything from the prov rbial 'needle to an anchor." This store is situated in a valley nine miles from the nearest railway station aud about twenty five miles from the nearest town. Mr. Larson says: "I am favored with the custom of farmers within a radius of thirty miles to many of whom I have sup plied Chamberlain's remedies. All testify to theii value in a household where a doctor's advice is almost cut of tne question With in one mile of my store the popu'ation is perhaps iixty. Of those within the past twtlve months, no less than fourreen have been absolutely cured by Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. This must surely be a lecord." For sale byJ.G. Hall. Mr. I... A. Carr received a telegram today stating that his father-in-law, Mr. (). J. Carroll, died this morning at Morehead City. It is supposed that his death was due to heart trouble. Deceased was 56 years of age and leaves eight children, three sons and rive daughters. The three married daughters are Mrs. L. A. Carr, of Durham, Mrs. W. P. Whita ker, of Raleigh, and Mrs. Weatherly, of Cleveland, Ohio. His three sons and two unmarried daughters reside in Kaieigh. Durham Sun Oct. 4. FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION " I am so thankful for what Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription has done for me," writes Mrs. John T. Smith, of Slocan, B. C, Box 50. "It cured me of a disease which was taking away all my strength, helped me through the long mcnths before baby came and I have a big strong baby girl, the most healthy Hnd happy of all my three." HAKES THE DIFFERENCE. Durham Sun: This morning be tween 12 and 1 o'clock a disastrous fire broke out in East Durham, and destroyed two six-room house, two three-room houses and a store, all the property of W. R. Barbee. Mr. Barbee's loss will amount to some $3,000, with about .f 1,800 insurance. The loss to the occupants will amount to some $1,500 or more. The Blood Serum. The Blood Serum, THE Registered by U. S. Patent Office. in Uric Acid Conditions, Gout, Rheu m a t i s m, etc-, etc., far superior to the Lithia Tablets and other ex temporaneous solutions of the Lithia Salts. THE REASON WHY. By John V. Shoemaker, M. D., LL. D., Professor of mtr .Medico, and Therapeutics in the Afedico-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia, etc., m The Neia York Medical Journal, June 22, 1899, says: l( ence has shown that the Buffalo Lithia Water, lithia and the as sociated salts, is much more effective in some very important particulars than ex temporaneous solutions. It exerts, for instance, A SOLVENT ACTION upon RENAL, HEPATIC, and VESICAL CALCULI more powerful than could be expectea from a mere inspection of its chemical analysis. 15y SWEEP INQ URIC ACID RAPIDLY outof the system it alleviates the HiSERlES of GOUT. It is efficacious in RHEUMATISH, BRIOHT'S DISEASE, DIABETES flELLITUS, and a number of nervous affections." "An additional advantage and extremely important reason for the PECULIAR EFFICACY of the BUFFALO LITHIAVATER cmppsUaS mates that of the SERUfl OF THE BLOOD ; therefore, it is admirably fitted for ; absorption into the blood current and immediate incorporation with the watery por tion of the NUTRIENT FLUID. It becomes at once identical with the BLOOD SERUfl. These are qualities which far surpass those possessed by any extemporaneous solution of a single chemical preparation, as when a LITHIA TABLET, e. g., is dissolved in water for immediate administration. When we speak of a dose, it is of a quantity altogether relative, and what the physician emphatically desires in a dose is THERAPEUTIC EFFICIENCY- this we have in Buffalo Lithia Water. " Spring No. t, is both a nerve and a blood tonic, and in pale, feeble, and ariinnc subjects is to be preferred. In the absence of these symptoms, No. 2 is to be preferred. Buffalo Lithia Water j''?ya.'e by Grocers and Testimonials which defy all imputation or questions sent to any address. PROPRIETOR BUFFALO LITHIA SPRINGS, VIRGINIA This signature is on every box of the genuine Laxative BromoQuinine Tablets to remedy that core a cold fa est dm Valuable Farm tor Sale Containing 99 acres adjoining the farms of EaU h Currin. R. P. Aiken and V7. G- Wallcrv one mile north of Eennehan station and adapt ed especially to growing of fine tobacco, coin, wheat, etc. Has fine rapture land LIZZIE AIKEN. -Apply to J. It. Lyon, Agt, Northside, JJ. Executors Notice. Tl e underpinned having qualified ai execu tors and executrix of the last will and testament of Fielding Knott, deceased, hereby giv notft e to all parties indebted to the estate of their testitor to come forward atid make settle ment ofthesamo Ail parties holding claims again st said estate are notified to present th some within one year from this date or thi? Tiotic i will be pleaded in bar of their reo very Thi8J2nd day of October 1901 SALLIBA KKOTT, J B KNOTT. CM KNOTT, , n . Executors, W Alfcivln, Atty, Application for Pardon NORTH CAKB1NA, GKANN1LLB CO T N'T' Notice Is hereby given to the public that P lication will be made to the Govern or o arolina for the pvru of Tom Parke', cl i ..tw n,hn 10a iMinvir.ted at April v.,i'.e c.?.uniy wn" wa I count' lHui 01 ine ouperior ,, n. for the crime of Aeeaolt with deadly e"V npon Edward Short, and sentenced tf theva roads of Orange connty for a term of 12 mom Thu October U 1901. roYSTBR. o(. County Attora; n
Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 10, 1901, edition 1
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