Newspapers / The Reidsville Review (Reidsville, … / Feb. 21, 1896, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE WEEKLY REVIEW, EEID3VILLE, N. C, FEBRTJAIVg 21. 1896. 3? L.,i,uV;ly TIitiTT-- ........... --.......w,...,...,... ...v for Infants and n n OT HER S, Do uuu a Drop, Godfrey oanuaa, many ao-oaued Bootnnur errvpa, ana most ramedfea for ohOdren P Yon Kiuw thai optiim and nxT)hln are atnpe. yo Ton Know that hi most countries' dniggiaU are not permitted f acll narootlca without labeling them poisons f Po Tom Know that yoa ahould not permit any medicine to be given yonr child unless you or your physician know of what It U composed 7 Po Ton Know that Castoria Is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list of its ingredients is published with every bottle 1 v ' Po Ton Know that Castorlajs the pieeulpUon of the f among Pr. Burnet Pitcher. That it has been in uae for nearly tbtrty years, and that more Castoria if new sold than A at all other remedies for children ot. ilnedf d Po Ton Know that the F jmt Offloe Department ot the United States, and of other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to m tha word Castorl and Its formula, and that to Imitate them is a state prison effense T Do Yon Know that one of the reasons for granting this gorernmeniproteHae was because Cartoria had been proven to be svbaoliitly fcavnnloasT Po Ton Know that 35 aTermX doses of Castoria are furnished for 35 eoata, or one cent a doss f Po Yon Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may be kept well, aild that yoa may hare unbroken rent 1 WeHj these, things are worth knowing. They are faow Tho fao-slmllo Children Cry for Pltchcr'o Castoria. What Interests Us May Interest You. i I J. D. COTTEN, Special Attention Paid to Repairing and Painting of Buggies and Carriage W, P. HORNER -MANUFACTURER OF Drays, Spring Trucks, DeliYey and Farm Wagons. 73 A i Warehouse and Factory Trucks Made at Short Notice. Patton Street, IX) YOU NEED Sash.Doors, Blinds, Mouldings, Brackets, SIDING, FLOORING, FRAMING, SHINGLES AND LATHS! GUILFORD LUMBER MFG. CO., GREENSBORO, N. C. 22 iT.sLr, I VENETIAN BLINDS, best ever P. I). WILLIAM & C WE AilEr NOW RECEIVING OUR FALL STOCK OF GENERAL MERCHANDISE Such as Shoes (nothing and Cloth of all kinds. We have always endeavored to please our customers. Will U. gladfor you to cail and examine our stock before buying elsewhere Would call the Farmers' attention to our CANE MILL, The Best on the Market. The best Wneat Fertilizer.-. Can give you certificates from some ot our best farmers, who h ve been usme it for years wit' best ot le- suits We also handle Cement, Lime, Plaster, etc. Agents tor Clark's Spool Cot on. Merchants can save freight by buying from us. Always glad to exenange Gfods for Dried Fruit, chickens, etc Wht a Corn or anything ot the kind. Call and see us. P .H. inilLLIAKlSOn a CO. GRAND AUCTION SALE. I have one of the finest herd of Registered Poland China Hog to be found ana will have an auction sale in Reidsville some time in the early spring. Wait for this sale and get real throughbrerf pigs, entitled to registration. Thn, besides, the cold weather will be past and you run no risk from olds with yuur p gs It wil pay you to wait for this sale. I have a very large surplus now. JNO. A. City Office28 K. Street ton, erll rorMllaMldJTllM,ai.&.by Children. You Know that Paregoric, composed of opium or morphine f I have one of the best vards in the State, and ke p constantly on hand a large selection of MONUMENTS, TOMBSTONES, etc. My prices are from ioptr cent, to 20 per cent lower than asked by other dealers. If not convenient to call, write fo- prices. Very resp'y, W. D. ROWE, DANVILLE. VA. AGENT, REIDSVILLE, N. C Danville, Va. Can supply you with anything in this line on short notice and on the most reasonable terms. See our EMBOSSED WOOD, some thing new, being highly orna mental and costing very little more than ordinary lumber. .Used in decorative work. Agents for Hill's INSIDE SLIDING and made, and csta very little more ot very fine, late apple Tre. Bus YOUNG. Greensboro, N. C I Thin Faaa Beinedy enrai quickly, permanently bM norroii liaaes. Weak Memory, L.OM of Uraio tower, tt.4Lri:ub. WakafntneM. J .oat VlUUIty, Nightly Emi dreams. Impotency and wtln dlMnaes eanaed by yom ful error or ezcetMrt. uvouuDiDovpiun. is- mm Md biwod bnllArr. Makesthe pa leaod puny troe and plump. Kartly carried Invest! jcketl wrbo; f or . By malljpre nnlrt. witkauTUtmviiranlrAorrtimrvrrfui"tcd. Write oa.nre iwull.l kMk, aaaled Dlaln wrmpoe-, wilte tefttlmonlala and H..Ml.t.Mltli. V..kMM fM MM.HlMt4Ml I MifMrfl rllUII rBTZCAAOVK&UAK.Oragglrtf. BOILED DOWN. News of the Week From Parts of the World. All An Epitome of the South. Two Louisiana delegates, elected toj Tote for Reed's nomination, are out tor McKinley. The southern railway Is about to be gin to more its general offices back from Washington" to Atlanta. . Seymour Keener was hanged at Clay ton, Ga., for the murder of his sweet heart and fier sister last summer. President Cleveland has pardoned J. J. Morris, sentenced in Georgia to ten. years' imprisonment for conspiracy. The Elm Grove cotton mills, in Lin coln county, N. O., have doubled their capacity, and are now working all spindles. At Dublin, Ga., the jury in the case of Edwin Walker, charged with the murder of Frank Moss, returned a ver dict of not guilty. A new postoffice has been established at Rocky Point, Alachua county, Fla., five miles southeast of Gainesville, with George A. Main as postmaster. Big island, in the Tennessee river, five miles from Dayton, containing over 700 acres, was sold at chancery sales to E. T. Noel of Nashville, for $26,500. Major H. H. Rogers of Richmond, representing the United Banking and Building company of that city, died on the train between Columbia and Green ville. S. C. The Farmers' Alliance in North Caro lina has fallen off until it has now only 15,000, and it is said that many of these are only nominal members. Once there were 105,000. D. L. Boyer, the patricide, who forged letters and recommf ndations to Gov ernor Turney and secured hlsfbwn par don from the Tennessee penitentiary, has been arrested at Memphis, Tenn. H. J. Hoyle and A. H. Critcher were in a boat fishing for 6had near Green ville, N. C, when a flurry of wind cap. ized the boat. Hoyle was drowned. Critch jr made his escape by catching a tree. The Gulf Coast Lumber company, a union of export lumber manufacturers of the states of Alabama, Mississippi and Florida, in a meeting at Mobile in creased prices of all grades from 60 cents to a per 1,000. Some of the thousand people who went from Pender and Sampson coun ties, N. C, to Pelzer, S. 0., to work in cotton mills, write home that they were deceived by the promises of agents and are greatly dissatisfied. There are 14 damage suits brought by relatives of the miners who were killed in the coal mines at Cumnock, Chatham county, N. C. The suits aggregate 1120,000 and are against the Langdon, Henzey Mining company. The schooner Maggie J. Lawrence of Philadelphia, carrying a cargo of coal and bound to Charleston, 8. O., with a' crew of seven men, stranded a half mile Bouth of the Pea Island, Va., lifesaving station. The crew was saved. Joe Lewis, a negro, was lynched two miles northeast of Pell City, Ala., Sunday about 11 o'clock. Lewis attempted to assault the young wife of a Mr. Prence, a respectable farmer who lives about a mile and a half east of this place. ' Sam Cummings, acquitted four years ago on the charge of killing James Perry, was fatally shot at Coal Creek, Tenn. , in a general fight. Before dying he said he had committed the murder with which he had been charged. Judge Huph I Whiteside died at Chattanooga, Tenn., from blood poison ing, which attacked the system through an amputated leg. He was the victim ot his own carelessness, having acci dentally shot his foot off with a shotgun. Zebe McOollen, Elijah Lemmons, Den nis Gunn and the latter' a son were drowned four miles from Stoneville, N. O. The men, while intoxicated, made an attempt to cross the river, which was greatly swollen. Their bodies were recovered. Tom Covington was hanged at New ton, N. 0., for the murder of James Brown, superintendent of the Long Island Cotton mills of Catawba county, in September, 1894. Covington died game, and knelt while a minister prayed for him. Three children of William Littlejohn, living some distance north of Anniston, Ala., while playing in the woods found and ate a lot of toadstools and were soon taken violently ilL Doctors were called, but in vain, all three being dead within ten hours. The boiler at the 6awmill of Henry Haywood, near Wakefield, N. 0., ex plodfd and instantly killed Haywood, his Son Ivan and Kufus Tucker. All were white. Three employes are seri ously injured. The boiler was blown a great distance and the buildings were wrecked. The dispensary at Waynesville, N. 0.. which was created by the fusion legis lature, has been in operation one year. Its net profits, after paying all expenses and salaries, are $2,000. W aynesville is a mountain town of $1,500 population. The dispensary is modeled on that at Athens, Ga. A sensation has been caused at Mo bile, Ala., by the arrest of Henry David Hear n, a leading light in the Baptist church, who is accused of causing the death of his wife by the administration of nitric acid, which he had obtained from a local physicial for alleged ana lytical purposes. Robert Laughlin, a prominent farmer living three miles from Augusta, Ky., was assaulted by unknown assassins who stabbed him several times. His wife was murdered and also her 14-year- old niece and their bodies cremated by burning the house. Laughlin escaped in the darkness. In the depot at Pocahontas, W. Va., George Gray and Len Hartsook en gaged in a quarrel over a woman. Gray shot and killed Hartsook after Hartsook had fired two shots at Gray without effect. During the affray Miss Clara Clemens was shot and seriously injured. Gray escaped. A charter has been secured from the probate judge in Walker county for the largest cotton mill in Alabama. It is to have 46,000 spindles and will be lo cated at Cordova. The mill will be built by the Nashua Manufacturing company of Nashua, N. H. , and will be called the Indian Head mill. The Southern States Passenger asso ciation adjourned its meeting at Tampa, Fla., after granting a special rate of 1 cent a mile to the United Confederate Veterans' encampment at Richmond, and a rate of one fare for civilians and a rate of 1 cent a mile for military or ganizations to the Savannah military fair. W. T. Surles, an employe of the Southern railway, was killed by a train at Durham, N. 0., his foot having been caught in a frog. His body was taken to Cumberland river. The Cape Fear river was so high that only the coffin containing the body could be gotten over and Surle's wife could not witness the burial. Mrs. Eliza J. Nicholson, proprietress of the New Orleans Picayune, is dead. She was suffering from the grippe when her husband died a week ago, and the sad event so shattered her system that tho disease develoved into congestion of the lungs, and without strength to fight off the attack she rank rapidly into the final sleep. . Preliminary work , on a new joint freight depot for the Seaboard Mr Line and the Western find At antic railroad will be begun in Atlanta in a few days. The contract for grading has been let. and plans have been drawn for the structure, which will cover a lot 900x200, The Kansas City, Memphis and Bhv mingham Railroad company has been made defendant in Lamar county in three suits of $10,000 each for disturb ing graves near Sulligent, Ala. The company will plead, it is stated, that the graves were so badly cared for and marked that its agents were not aware that any one was buried there. " T. J. Wood, a farmer at Antioch, Miss., murdered his 18-year-old daugh ter, Minnie, by striking her about the head and face with an ax. Minnie was about to become a mother, and ac cused her father of being her seducer. Words led to the result mentioned.' Wood then proceeded to a lot close by his residence and, with a pistol, ended his miserable existence. 1 There is great indignation in Pavie county, N. O , over cruelty to a white girl named Graves, who was about to become a mother. She was driven from home and neighbors refused her shelter. Her child was born in an abandoned to bacco barn. She dragged herself to a house near by and fell fainting at its door. The next day she died of ex posure and lack of rare. The Democratic members of the Ken tucky general assembly, who Have been supporting Senator Blackburn in the senatorial fight, have signed a petition requesting Secretary John G. Carlisle to use his influence with Messrs. Weis Binger, Carroll, Speight, Violett and Walker in- an endeavor to get them to vote for Mr. Blackburn, on the ground that he is the Democratic nominee. Judge Richard EL Clark, for many years presiding officer of the superior conrt of the Atlanta circuit, and one of the best known men in Georgia, has just died at the age of 72 years. Judge Clark came of a distinguished family, served at various times in the legisla ture and in the political conventions of the state and for 50 years past had been a leading figure in the judicial circles of Georgia. From Brights, Ala, comes a story of annihilation of an entire family by measles. The members of the family of P. A. Higgins, a postmaster, were taken down at almost the same time with the malady. First the son, aged 20, died; then the mother followed, and the father came next. A daughter aged 18, also died from the effects of the dis ease. The neighbors had to bury the family one by one. Governor Turney of Tennessee has pardoned Sam Mayfield, a negro of Dyer county, convicted of murder in 1882 and sentenced to life imprison ment; Taylor Webb of Hardin county, sentenced to 65 years for an unnatural crime, and Denton Duncan, another ne gro, of Marshal county, sentenced eight years ago for life for murder. The lat ter sentence had been commuted by Governor Buchanan to 15 years. Note From Xorth, Kut, Went and Abroad. The insurrection against Japanese rule in the island of Formosa ia spread ing. Dispatches received from Cuba say that 107 insurgents were killed during the recent fighting there. Negotiations are still in progress look ing to the conclusion of a commercial treaty between China and Japan. At a free-for-all fight lit Sugar Lake, Mo., one man was killed and several others more or less seriously injured. Peter L. Atkins and Maud Kelly, lovers, drove into the Wallkill river at Middletown, N. Y., and were drowned. There has been a heavy reduction in freight rates from China to New York, amounting to a cut from $13 to $3 per ton. William Waldorff Astor dismissed the editor of the London Pall Mall Ga zette because of his anti-American sen timents. The senate has passed a bill giving the city of Charleston, 8. C, the use of the old postotnee building for municipal purposes. ' Charles H. Lovess of Boston, a dis charged policeman, shot his wife twice because she refused to give him money with which to buy rum. One man was killed, one fatally in jured and five others were slightly hart by the explosion of a 110-horsepower boiler at Pawtucket, R. L Bartholomew Shea died in the elec trical chair at Dauuemora, N. Y., ing the penalty for the murderf ert Ross at Troy m March, 1W4. Secretary Herbert has sent to the house an estimate of the appropriation of $4,000 for the establishment of a coaling shed at Key West naval otation. Grant Atterbury was lynched at Sul livan. Ills. He died declaring that he was innocent of the crime of outraging his sister-in-law, Mrs. Roxy Atterbury. William H. Crain, representative from the Eleventh district of Texas and a member of that body since the Forty ninth congress, died at his home in Washington. Father Jakimowitz, a deposed Polish priest, narrowly escaped lynching at Mount Carmel, Pa., by a mob of his former parishoners who claimed he had defrauded them. Dreadful stories come from Yoko hama of the treatment of Japanese by Formosa rebels, some correspondents go ing so far as to state that the Chinese practice cannibalism. A protocol has been signed by the Italian minister and the Brazilian for eign minister wherebv the two countries agree to submit their dispute to the president of the United States. An organization of ex-slaves has been effected at Topeka, Kan. , by 50 negro men for the purpose of making a de mand on congress for pensions. It ia the purpose to make it of national scope. The Mexican government is deport ing American tramps under a clause of the constitution allowing the executive to send away pernicious foreigners. Tramps from the states have become a nuisance. Fourteen-year-old Maggie Callard and Mabel Winters, aged 15. ventured on the thin ice over a pond at Middletown, N. Y. The ice broke and both were drowned. The bodies have not yet been recovered. Owing to the rapidity with which the work of constructing naval vessels is being pushed, no less than eight ships will be added to naval lists, and be ready for commission before the first of next July. Cyrus E. Carter, a retired Bergeant of the United States army, was found dead in a room at the Palmer House, Chicago. Death was caused by asphyxi ation, but it is not thought that he com mitted suicide. Professor Fox of McGill univeriity, at Montreal, has succeeded by the new photographic process in finding a bullet embedded in the leg of a man who had been discharged from the hospital with the wound closed over the balL Henry H. Faxon, a Boston reformer, sent $500 to the Women's Christian Temperance union with advice not to waste time trying to convert heathens, but to be active in politics And untiring in their efforts to convert distillers. The third annual meeting of the Na tional Game Bird and Fish Protective association was held at Chicago and ' matters relating to the passage of better laws for the protection of game In va rious parts of the country were dis cussed. Mr. Winslow S. Pierce, acting for the reorganization committee of the Union Pacific Railroad company, has submitted to the senate committee on Pacific rail roads the reorganization committee's draft of a bill for the reorganization of mat roaa. - Edwin F. Uhl is now ambassador to Germany, having taken the oath of office at the department of state. He will go to his home at Grand Rapids, Mich., in order to close up some private busi ness, so that it may be about 80 days , before he reaches Berlin, The Philadelphia Method. It is the fashion of the Republican nAwsroinfira to refer to the South as the part of the country in which election frauds are most frequent and most flagrant. That there have been election frauds in this section ia admitted. but why should the Republican papers single out the South when they dis raifw thia evil I They can find in the very Gibraltar ! of their tartv crimes against the hAllot which for cunning and infamy fur Rurnass the worst malpractice of thfl kind that has occurred in the Rrtiith. PhiladelDhia is the strongest Re- miblicancitv in the country. It is the onlv laree city in the country which goes Republican at all elections and the Republican majority there is nlwavs iust what the ' bofses want to mace it. The plan ot voting dead men originated in Fious f mla delnhia. Names on thousands of tombstones in that city have been nlaned on the registration lists and devoted Republicans or hired scoun drels who are ready to represent the ! departed at the polls are never wantii.e' The Dractice of voting dead men has been so often exposed that the i Renublican leaders have resorted to new and more ingenious devices. One of their latest schemes is to enlist cats and dogs and transform them into good Republican voters. A committee which has been ex amining the voting lists of Philadel phia recently found among the names recorded as qualified voters those of Theodore Parker and El wood Parker. Tlnon investigation it was discovered that the former was a pug dog of ; excellent character and the latter a very useful yellow cat. How many other Republican voters of similar character are on the rmi adelphia lists will probably never be known, but it is probable that their name is legion. It is not reasonable to suppose that the horses, cows and goats have been slighted by the en terprising Republican hustlers. We knew that politics makes strange bed fellows but it was reserved tor the party of morality in the City of Brotnerlv Love to form an alliance with dogs and cats. Atlanta Journal. The South and History. The South has added every foot of territory to these United States, save Alaska, the JNortn fi ways in opposi tion, as the records oi the votes m Congress will show. The two mili tary heroe of the war of 1812 (which the North opposed, even to the point of holding a secession convention the Hartford convention) wereSouth- errers - Winfield Scott, of Virginia, and Andrew Jackson, of Tennessee. Southerners colonized Texas, whip oed a nation, and gave us an empire. The North did not want to admit the State, but the South out manceuvered it. Then followed the Mexican war (I admit it was a crime), which the North again opposed ; but Polk was a good juggler, and we got another em pire. As usual, the glory belonged to the South Scott and Taylor, both natives of Virginia. The North has no Daniel Boone, no David Crockett, no Sam Houston. The nation's idols, as witness their familiar nicknames, were all Southerners by birth "Light House Harrv," "Great Scott," "Old Hickory," "Rough and Ready," "Honest Abe." And even In the civil war what an arrav we have, for the North, short in military and governing genius, imDorted ii. Lincoln, greatest of all. was from Kentucky ; Andrew John son of Tennessee : George II. Thomas the "Rock of Chickamauga." the one Union soldier who never made a mis take or lost a battle, was a Virginian. The man who really saved the na tion in gaining Russian support was a Southerner Cassins M. Clay, min ister. And the Admiral there was but one, Farragut and he was from the South, too. I could go on much further. On my first visit to Boston I was astonished on just stepping out of the railroad station to face a sta.ute of a Southern man Lincoln. At his feet was crouching a negro another Southerner, by heavens! I wandered about the city some time, hoping to find a monument raised to some great man Massachusetts had presented to the nation, Down on some street, surveyed by a cow a couple of hun dred years ago, I encountered a bronze statute of a woman in bloom ers! long hair and all, though the name was masculine. A great man, no doubt in Boston. Another New State Enterprise. Messrs. J. H. Bobbitt and J. L. Ramsey, of Rftleigh, have organized the Bobbitt Drug Company, with headauarters in that citj. They will manufacture what they claim to be a superior remedy and a certain constitutional cure tor rheumatism, called "Rheumacide,,: an entirely new discoyery. The proprietors state that sales have already been made :n three states, and cures effected in every case. The Raleigh Press Visitor says : "Mr. Bobbitt is well known as one of the best and most progressive nharmacists in the tate and is ex- Dresident of the North Carolina Pharmaceutical Association, and the fact of his bringing the remedy for ward is alone a good guarantee for it. Mr. J. L. Ramsey will be ad vertising manager and has the ability to push the enterprise to success, etc. The News & Observer also gives an extended notice, ard after speaking of a number of remarkable cures. says. "Mr. Bobbitt and Mr. Ramsey are the very men to push it actively and TV . The remedy is said to be entirely vegetable and non-alcoholic. The method of manufacture and ingre dients are different from any proprie tary medicine on the market. Try a canof Hopkins' Steamed Hom iny (Hulled Corn). It is delicious. 4t When Baby was sick, we gave ber Castorta. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When ihe had Children, she gave them Castoria. EXPECTANT We Offer Yoa a ReneuY which INSURES Safety MOTHERS, 01 Lite to Alotn er and Child. "MOTHERS' FRIEND" Robs Confinement of Its Pain, Horror and Risk. Mv wife iiumI "MOTHERS' FRIEND" be 1 rnr hint, nf her first child, she did not suffer from t R1SP8 or PAINS was quickly , I relieved at the critical nour suuerniK dm little she had no pains afterward and her recovery was rapid. Sent by Mail or Exress, on receipt of rice, fl.OO per bottle. Book "To Moto rs " mailed f'ree. , BBADFIKLD REGULATOR. CO., Atlanta, Ga. SOLD 8T ALL DRUGGISTS. ' BABY'S COniNfJ. Nature intended that every woman should look forward to the com ing of her baby with joy and hope, unclouded by anxiety. Almost pain less parturition is quite the usual thing among uncivilised people. Even in our own country it occasionally happens with women in robust health and good condi tion. It ought to be the rule instead of the excep tion ; and it is a fact that a very large proportion of the usual pain and suf fering may be avoided br looking after the mother's general health, and specially strengthening the particular organs concerned in parturition. Many mothers have been brought through the trying time almost painlessly by the aid oi JJr. fierce s ravome ricsLi lt-in. n prepares the system for delivery by im parting the organic strength and elasticity which the mother specially needs ; shortens the time of labor and of confinement ; pro motes the secretion of abundant nourish ment for the child and fortifies the entire constitution against the after period of de pression and weakness. It's use should begin in the early months of gestation the earlier the better. " Mrs. Fred Hunt, of Gleninlle. Schenectady Co., N. K, savs : " I read about Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription being so Rood for a woman with child, so 1 got two bottles last September, and I)prfi!itT 1 3th. I had a twelve-oound baby eirl. When I was confined I was not sick in any way. I did not sufler any pain, and when the child was born 1 walked into another room and went to bed. I never had an after-pain or any other pain. This is the eighth child and the largest of them all. I suffered everything that flesh could suffer with the other babies. I always had a doctor and then he could not nelp roe very much, but this time ray mother and my husband were alone with me. My baby was only seven days old when I got up and dressed and left my room and stayed up all day." ihe simple troth You are obliged to buy Christmas Presents; no matter how hard the times are. iviaturaiiy men you wane 10 nna the place where you can get the most or your money. Dance Bro3. & Co Danville, Va , is tlie place Above all others. They have Presents to suit everybody, young or old, rich or poor. Send us your orders and be convinced. Large stock cf toys and borks for chil dren, DANCE BROS. & CO. DANVTLLE, Va. Opposite Johnston & Cheek TO MY PATRONS AND THE PUBLIC I have iust received from an Import insr House in New York a fine line of Foreign and Domestic Goods, consisting of French Calf, Russia Calf, in lighi and dark colors. Cardoran (which neither breaks or leaks, as it has no grain) Kan earo. Dongola. Patent Leather, Ooze Ca'.f. in bl?ck and daik green for Tops and Patent Leather Shoes; for drew shoes this has no equal. A so a lull hneof sboe finding-- ev erything that is needed bv a shoemaker that I offer to tne trade cn as good terms as the same quality of goods can be sold I refer to my patrons and solicit your order, it in need of nrst-class shoes. J. H.Saunders S, Elm Street, Greens- boro, N. C. A trial order solicited. WINE OF CAREU t V f. r for month' v seek, sho'jUi.- Th"..- i' rainrRi iH - McKl. -.- n omb. 1 Flooding. 1 r ops- " ' roit KAi.r. Ellington & Snipes Practical- Wheelwrights and Blacksmiths. Shops on West Market Sts. Frashure s Old brand. Horseshoeing done in a scientific manner and according to the natural formation of the foot. Repairing of all kinds of vehicles, Buggy painting. All work guaranteed. Prices reason able. Your patronage respect- ully solicited. NOTICE. n fttm tTnltm) States interested in tl Opinm and Whisky habita to have one of my books on these dis ease, address B. M. Woolley, AUai.ta. G THE NEW YORK WORLD, Thrice-a-Week Edition. 1 8 Paes a Week, 1 59 Papers a Yew. Is larger than any weekly or semi-weekly published and is the only Dema ratic"weekly" . . i i i i X1AM " Thr.. tim.a a large s xne leaning neuunuau wcc.ij v. V v..k rN... T. will K nf ncrffiu 1 U 1 17fln- iicn i vji . iij . ..... - . tage to you during: the Presidential Campaign, dar and has all the freshness and tin eliness of a daily, it coaj Dines an mo news wim m iung list r t interesting departments, unique lea mni nrf nnni and trranhic iUut trations. the , later be-ng a specialty. . All lOCW IwpiUTCluCLkS nave veeu n vj wUhnnt nv mrr.au in the cost which re mains at one dollar per vear. HEvICW and the Ladies' Health Journal to- gtther one year for .. ' n f at a and Ruttthattfv reilereO r I -n v .. lob acco. No crop varies more in qual ity accreting to grade of ferti lizers used than tobacco. Pot ash is its most important re quirement, 'producing a large yield of finest gradejeaf. Use only fertilizers containing at least io actual Potash in form of sulphate. To in sure a clean burning leaf, avoid fertilizers containing chlorine. Our pamphlets are not advertising circulars boom ing special fertilizers, but are practical works, Contain ing latest researches on the subject of fertilization, and are really helpful to farmers. They ar sent free fat ;ne asking. GERMAN KALI WORKS, N-'is?!'! S . Ww York W. B. BEACHAM Dealer in Lumber and Building Material. SCALES L.T., ITSVTT.t.e N " Last Call For Taxes ! Th time for oayinjr vour taxes, no March iith, every one ureed to meet me and Day bis taxes on or before thi date, or he will be vis ited at once after the 15th, bv Deputy with tre express purpose ot coiiecti rects No excuse will be of collecting, as the law di- acceDtea. as the Taxes must be collected. Ft tr warning Its ray purpose to give ev ry man a fair oppor unity to pay his taxes, and for this pnrpose I will have mv books open from now until the 1st davof March at mv offirt in Reilsville (except court week) when will be at Wentwrth where you can settle. I will visit the places named beH w on dates mentioned express' y for the purpose of col lecting taxes. Wentworth March 1. Stoneville March v Prices. March Madison March 5. Rockv Springs March 6. New Bethell March 7. Huffines' Store.. March q ThoTipsonville March o. Kuthn March i Oregon March Leaksville March 13. Reidsville March 14. Remember the dates and bear in mind its to your interest not to let you taxes go into the hands of Deputies. W. B. WRAY. Sheriff Rockingham Co. DR. J. N. HES'iEH -DENTAL SURGEON REIDSVILLE, N. C. Uostairs. corner Pea Rlook Guaranteed Absolutely Non-Infringing. The best Telephone and the most rap'd Simplest, Cheap est to build and to operate. Telephone Switch board and Central Of fice System is made MASON-MAXWELL TELEPHONE M'FG. CO. Factory, 3 Governor Street Richmond, Va. Send for Prices State Number of Subscricers. Our Telephones and Switch boards have been adopted, after thorough expert investigation, by the largest competing com panies, including Baltimore, over 5,000 subs. Newark, X. J., over 4 000 subs, Jerssy City, over 4,ooo subs. Washington, D C, over 3 40 subs. And many others. ATLASTIC AND DAHYILLE RAILWAY. Schedule m effect March i7. 1S95 EASTERN DIVISION, No. -i No. 4 Dailv No. 1 STATIONS. Daily Ex Sun Daily Ex Sun No. 2 Dail P M 5 10 4 '5 4 00 .3 20 3 02 2 48 a 3; a oS 1 4 J 17 A M P M 5 5 5 55 35 7 22 7 ? S 00 8 U S 9 03 9 10 Pit AM a M Lv Ar q ao Norfolk iFerryl. .. 10 10 q 45 ...West Norfolk. ... 945 10 25 SuttoIK go) 11 II . ix 79. 11 47. 11 59 7 30. 13 47 I IS. P M Franklin 8 12 Courtland 800 Capron 7 44 Drewrvville . 7 ?o Belfield 6 sS . . . Pleasant Shade 6 38 .. Lawrenceville ... 610 Ar lv A M WESTERN DIVISION. No. 1 Daily Ex Sun No. 2 Daily No. 6 Ex Sun Daiiv No. 5 Daily STATIONS P M A M Lv P M P M. 10 00 9 49 9 3 Q 22 9 15 9 0 8 52 7 49 7 32 6 45 6 15 5 30 P M Ar 1 '7 1 28 146 53 1 57 1 1 2 22 3 20 .3 2 408 4 4 5 2s P M 600 Lawrenceville ..1 '5 6 ix.. .Charlie Hope 105 6 20 Brodnax 11 6 6 q LaCross! 12 37 6 46 South Hill 12 31 7 o- Union Level 12 i 707 Baskerville 1207 8 05. .. Buffalo 'unction ...11 eq 8 31 Virgnina to 17 9 co. . . . Denison June 1047 041 ...Semora 9 41 10 30 Dan. ille 9 oo Ar Lv A M CONNECTION'S. ft Belfield with Atlantic Cast Line for Richmond, Petersburg, Goldsboro, Wilming ton. &c. , At Jeffress with Southern Railroad for Chase City, Oxford, Henderson, Raleigh, Durham &At Norfolk with N. Y , P. N. 4 N. R. R. (Cape Charles route) for Wilmington. Phila delphia and New York; with BavLine Palace Steamers for ul ' Point. Baltimore and north ern cities; with superb new iron steamers. W.H. TAYLOR, C. O. HINKS, Gen. Pas. Agent Supt. C D. OWEKNS, V. P. G. M. FOR YOU TO READ 13,000,000 IN USE. Think of it. Thirteen millions of the Gen uine "-inger Sewing Machines in actual service, each and every one giving entire satisfaction They are permanently and locallv represented the civilized world over. Received 54 First Awards at the WfJrlo's Columbian Exposition in Chicago for Jurability, simplicity and su periority of njechanicism. The few points of ot friction aie all read justab'.e and loosmrton which occurs from years of constant use can easily be taken up at any time. It has no cog wheels and ro Fpriogs apart from the tt-nsions A folding box lined with velvet contains all the iatest improve J attachments s given withrach macliiue. The best is the cheapest always Entire sat'sfaction positively guaranteed, anc they are here to do what they say. Any kind of old machine takf n in exchange. Write cr apply to Tne Singer Mfg. Co... Danville, Va., or to J. Huger Hill, Their Reidsville Representative. Live, Energetic Business Men Wanted. 1 A ft iR'S HAIR BALSAM ClentM and bnutifiet the halfc Pnimatafl a luxuriant crowtH. Never F&ila to Sector Gray Half o jonuuui yoio. Gun nalp difeue a hair tailioa. J0e,ndtl0Uat PrufirliW HINDERCORNS, nniSiratnrCnrna. fctoM all XMUlk r fMbftULM wajkiBgaaay.lfaAat lKHCKMh HUGH R. SCOTT Attorney - at - Law, REIDSVILLE, N. C. Prompt attention to all business. Special attention to settlements of Estate Negotiation ot Loans, and tne Rent ing and Selling of Real Estate in town and country. At Wentworth on Mondays. LUMBER! When in need of Lumber address Call on o MEI. LOU E, Manufacturer of and Dealer in all Kinds ot Rough and Dressed LUMBER, Shinztes, Laths, Siding, Ceiling, Floor ing and all kinds Building Material. Greensboro, and Red Springs, H. C. THE TRAVELING MAN'S . . HEADQUARTERS. Hotel Carolina C':ts'-3 Postoffice, o:reet, DANVILLE, VA. E. II . ELI YSON, .... PROPRIETOR. Modern Improvements Rates, $2.00 Per Day. POIcllMlrr'a Eb(1I.Ii IMaiaimH Rrma4. EflflYROYAL PILLS P-wfWV Original u4 Only fBlne. mmuj Brand in Ktrd ri fttri ruetallieS hoi. se&jed with blue nhhon. I ake no other Rfu' danarouM tmhttttu- turn and imitation. At Dragjristi. or end 4. In rtm for particular!. tiHtimonial aui "Kellef for I.odit," " Utter. tr rvtar fold bj ail Local Druggist. 1'biljuia., l'a GRATEFUL -COMFOPTING EPPS' G0C0A BREAKFAST SUPPLR. l,By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of the diges tion and nutrition, and ov a care'ul arp ica tion of the fine properties of well'-selected Cocoa, Mr E ps has provided for otir break fast acd supper a del'cate'y flavored bever-e which may save us manv heavy doctor' Mils. It is by the jud'c ous use of such arti -les of diet that a constitution mav be gradually b.nlt up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundre'.sof urile ma adie are floating around us rea?v to attack wherever there is a weak point. We ma escaue many a fatal haft bv keeping ourselves well forti fied wi h pure bloed and a ropeilv nourish d frame." Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or niiik Sol , only in ha'f pound tins, bv Grocers labelled 'hus: JAMES KPPS 4- CO.. Ltd . Ho .eopathic Chemists, London England. Since ici I have been a suffere' fr om catarr I .rie Ely's Cream tlalm and t all appearances am cured Terrible hea aches from which I had long suffered are gone W. J H'.tch cock. Late Major U S. Vol. & A. A. Gen., linffalo. New York. CATARRH FLY'S CRCAV BALM Or-ens and cleanses the Nasal Passages Allays Pain and Inrl 'm mation. Hea's the Sores. Protects the Mem brane from co'ds, Resrores the S-nses of Tate and sme'l. The Halm is applied directly into the nostrils, is quickly absorbed and gives ro l;ef at once. tLV'S PINEOlA BALSAM is a sure cure for Coughs. Colds. &c. Pric- of Crea-- Balm. ;o cents at Druggists or by mail. Ely Brothers, 56 Wan en treeu New York. !I0 MORE EYE-GLASSES ED. KOBE wax EYES. MITCHELL'S ;ye-salve Certain. Bafa, and Effective Bamady for SORE, WEAK, & INFLAMED EYES, Producing Long-Sightedness, & Restor ing th Sight of tht Old. Cures Tear Drops, Granulation Styf Tumors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye Lashes, lis noDccno qhck relief m fekjaieit era. Also, equally efficacious when csed In other maladies, such as Ulcers. Fever Sorea, T am or a, Halt Rneaan, Barn. PI Ira, or wherever Inflammation exists, JBfl TCMiELMJB MAJLi'FMI may b used to advantage. field br (01 D cgcUta at 25 Cents. Cape FMfidiiiD alley Kiilway Co. John din.. Receiver, Condensed Schedule in 9. l895- Effect Dec. Northbound. Lv Wilmington.. Ar Fayetteville. . Lv Fayetteville.. Lv Sandford Ar Sanford No . No, No. 16 7 2 a m 10 Si a m 11 19 p tn 7 2s pm 2 56 p m Lv Climax Ar Greensboro.. Lv Greensboro.. Ar Walnut Cove 3 5 PIn 4 ,i p m Ar Mt. Airy 6 45 p m Lv Bennettsville Ar Maxton 8 5 a to q 2 a m Ar Fayetteville 10 52 a m Lv Ramseur 45 a m Ar Greensboro 8 35 a m Lv Greensboro ) 15 a m Ar Madison 11 50 a m Southbound. No No. No. is v Mt. Airy 9,5am Ar Walnut Cove 11 a m Ar Greensboro., u 5S p m Lv Sanford 1 ig p m Ar Fayetteville. 4 30 p m Lv Fayetteville. 4 45 P m Ar Wilmington. 575pm I v FaveUeville 4 -,8 p m Lv Ma'xton 6 ij p m Ar Bennettsville 7 20 p m Lv Madison 12 25 p m Ar Greensboro.. 35 P m Ar Ramseur 5 5,T1 W. K. EYE h . General Ptsnger w W WHY. f-Jenral Miatpr RIPAN-S The modern stand ard Family Medi cine: Cures the common every-day ills of humanity. 0. tu 3 a u o tu z o WALL PAPER Bv Mail. vour AT WHOLES A.LE PRICES. tooSAVt "LK-4 FREE. New desi ms c- and up. Eleant gilts ind up Borders ame low rates. Ssai c. 'or postage; de luct when orlerinjf F. H. Cady. 805 Westrar. St.. rrovidence, K.. I. LIBERAL DISCOUNTS to clubs an! agents Mam
The Reidsville Review (Reidsville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 21, 1896, edition 1
4
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