Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / Feb. 23, 1916, edition 1 / Page 6
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Attest RUB OUT PAIN , with good oil liniment. 'That's the surest way to stop - them. he best rubbing liniment s Goo or the Ailments of Horses, Mules, Cattle, Etc Good for your own Aches, Pains, Rheumatism, Sprains, ; Cuts, Burns, Etc 25c. 50c $1. At all Dealers. The Fariper is a Business Man HE needs a typewriter for the same reasons that every busi-' liess man needs one. Because it saves time, it saves labor, it enables you to keep carbon copies of all your correspondence, it is the up-to-date business like method of writing. And that isn't all. Every farm is a home and the farmer's typewriter is a home machine to be used by every member of the family. - The school, the home, the farm all have their own writing to be done, and the typewriter provides the modern time saving way to do it. Our new REMINGTON Junior Typewriter is the ideal farm typewriter. Just the model, just the size, just the price. It is half the size of the standard Remingtons and half the price, but it writes -with standard type on paper of standard size. It is so simple th:it any one c:.n operate it, and as for its quality, the r-.ipc ington" is the answer. The price of the Kemington Junior is $50.00. Tear out this advertisement and rerd to us with your nanie and ; "d.v s unci we wiJl send you an illustrated booklet. Remington Typewriter Company. (incorporated) 6 Shepherd Big. Raleigh, N.C.. " BUY p MECHANICS MAGAZINE For Father and Son AND ALL THE FAMILY faro and a half million readers find it of absorbing interest Everything in it is Written So You Can Understand It We sell 400,000 copies every month without giving premiums and have no solicitors. Any newsdealer will show you a copy; or write the publisher for free sample a postal will do. $1.50 A YEAR 15c A COPY Popular Mechanics Magazine 6 No. Michigan Ave., CHICAGO - JHi.m.m.m.m.m. For Serivce and the best of Fire and 'Life ! Insurance Protection !-' SEE ' I" " ' ' ' . Cunningham & Long Jas. H. Whitt, Represenatiye ; All Kinds of Insurance. Roxboro, - - North Carolina s $0.' J This is a prescription prepared especiallj cr MALARIA or CHILIS & FEVER, five or six doses will break any case, an? ii taicen men as a tome the rever will r' return,- It acts on the liver better th' s Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 2 J HIOHi iTEP. SPILL DIAMOND BRAND LADIES ! Gold, metallic boxes, sealed with Blue( Kit rsBSand Ribbon. TAKB NO OTHEH. Birr nF Tn. DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for .wenty-fiv .years regarded ss Best, Safest, Always Reliable. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS Sg EVERYWHERE '.SmS muggist and ask Top CIII.CHES.TEK 8 ' The Rayo Lights ;e a Gas Jet npO light the Rayo'1 lamp you don't have to remove the shade or the chim ney. Just lift the gal lery and touch a match. It is just as easy to light as a gas burner and it requires little effort to keep it clean. amps are the modern lamps for the farm. Simple in design yet an ornament to any room in the , house. . Use Aladdin Security Oil or Diamond White Oil to obtain best results in Oil Stoves , Lamps and . Heaters, The Rayo is only one of our many products that are known in the household and on the farm for their quality and economy. Ask for them by name and you are sure of satisfaction. Standard Household Lubricant ' Matchless Liquid Glosf i Standard Hand Sepa ( rator Oil ' ' Parowax Eureka Harness Oil Misa Axle Grease ' If your dealer does not ' have them, write to our nearest station. ' STANDARD OH. COMPANY - - (New Jersey) BALTIMORE ' Washington, D. C. Norfolk, W.Va. Richmond. Va. Charlotte, N. C. Charleston, W.Va. Charleston, S. C. i T ' i VOMAH 81 YEARS OLD y JIade Strong By Vinol Greenville, S. C., "I want others to Know of the great benefit I have de rived from Vinol. I am 81 years old and Vinol has i given me strength, a healthy appetite and overcame nervous ness.. It is the best tonic recon structor I ever used." Mrs. M. A'. -Hutchison. ... v. Vinol is a delicious cod liver and iron tonic without oil, guaranteed to overcome run down, weak, devitalized conditions and for chronic coughs and colds. , , " For Sale by Hambrick & Austin. THE PRESENT ATTITUDE OF THE FARMERS IN BOGKiNG- T TO BE During a recent trip from Reids- ville to Stoneville by automobile there 'was not in evidence along the whole i;oute one single field of rrra oo The absence of grazing neces sarily means absence of stock. It Mlows that the absence of.stock means a steadily decreasing farm value, and the purchase from oth er sectious of necessaries for, the lyime, as well as for the support of our meagre farm stock. TMis means sendingur dollars to en rich the wide-awake farmer in other States. There is no condi tion under which such a course is justifiable. Were we even in the position rf accumulating arreat wealth from our tobacco crops we would not be justified in treating our lands as though they were mines, to be abandonees soon as we have extracted the gold. But we are not getting wealthy raising tobacco. : . Rockingham county will rajse tobacco probably as long as there is a demand for tobacco, and in all probability that will be for a long er time than our limited vision can ecompass. Every farm in;: our county has on it a certain area suited to' the growjngof the bright leaf. It is a crop, the cultivation! of which insures our" farnilfs a bunch of money at.the end of the year sometimes too i less, and tins' area growth of a high class leaf should alone be devoted rto the purpose, leaving the remainder of the farm foriversified cropping and graz ing, etc. Put the present attitude of the farmers of Rockingham County in this matter ought to be reversed, and tpbacco made a side issue and grass and grain the principalcrop on every farm in the county The State of North Carolina buys annually about seventy - mil lion dollars worth of hog products. The State of Iowa sells annually ajsolid billion dollars worth of hog products. We can raise hogs more cheaply in North Carolina, and iwith less handicap from disease, than they can in Iowa, yet we do 4- -l a i mi iai&e eiioun io supply our own nesds. We,are frequently met with the statement that there is no market for hogs raised at home. Well, theTe was a time vvjhen there was no market for home raised hogs in Iowa, but the' Chicago packers soon found that the lard hog rais ed in Iowa was just what they needed, and the market was creat ed. The Richmond packers have expressed the hope that Rocking ham county will raise all the hogs they can buy this year. Are we going to do it? Most any farmer in our county can raise his meat on one acre of alfalfa. Ten acres of alfalfa means wealth to the average farmer; Sow alfalfa; if y(0u -don't get a good standee first season, turn your hogs into it, and sow it again next season. The first season's crop will, inoculate the ground, and you. will be assured of a oo'd stand. Let us all sell the air ah not the land. We have, been - sell ing the land for - years, and there is only just , so much land ypii cannot makS a. handsbreath; your self. But we have an unlimited amount of airr: and utilizing it in the growing of soiUmakYng crops we can sell the produce of HIM COUNTY DUGH REVISED V these" cropsand make , our land better at the same time: our Homes' uappier, uuu ourselves conienteai- becauswe are enriching Qflraelves and otir loved ones, and making no bnej;o suffer thereby; '.Vf xvucKiuguain couniy iarmers are selling their, poultryand !Atruc;1f now in Rei'sville for cash. We havebut one buyer here now. Raise more poultry and truck and yrour wilb have more buyers in Reidsville. ; No farm in RockLigham County should be without at least 5JJhrif ty hens. They will furnish foryour table everything that you., cannot raise yourself on-our own landf- That is, if you give them proper care and attention. Why not interest your children in the scientific rais ing of poultry on a profit-sharing basis? . Every farm in Rockingham county should haveisjne gard en patch, carefully wired Tto' pre vent enroachment by hog or IdouI try. On this patch, richly manur ed from your compost pile, you should raise all, and every! variety of vegetable necessary tomaihtaiir your family in the bes of health wereyoy never to purchase a pound of meat. Don't be afraid of raising too much you can sell all you cannot' use at home,! or can for future use, in Reidsville. An acre of garden patchjvell manur ed, and carefully tended,! can be made to produce $1,()00 worth of truck in the season, and the gard en will be left in better shape for future cultivation .than it was be fore you began. Do you want to try? We will be glad v to secure literature for you on the subject. Put the young folks to it; they will gro to love it, and through Mt will acquire a' greater j lbvefor the farm, and the lure of the city will vanish. te Colds Need AHeit! Internal throat and chest trou bles produce inflammation, irrita tion, swelling or soreness and un less checked at once, are likely to lead to serious trouble. Caught in the throat or nose. It is soothing and healing. Pine is antiseptic; honey is soothirg both together possess excellent medicinal quali ties for righting cold germs. Insist on Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey. 25c. all Druggists. It doesii't necessarily follow that a ma ought to have a keeper just because he is guarded in his re marks. Now Feels Entirely Well. Those who have backache, rheu matism, stiff and swollen: joints or other symptoms'of kidney trouble wfll be interested in a statement from A. H. Francis, Zenith, Kas., who writes: 4 'I had a severe pain in my back and could hardly move. I tried several remedies with no results. I took about two-thirds of a 50c box of Foley Kidney Pills and now feel entirely well' Mid dle-aged and older men and women whose kidneys are weakened find these safe pills give relief from sleep-disturbing bladder "ailments. Sold Everywhere.. There isn't a whole lot! of differ ence between the men who are oh top and those who are on the ground floor. j V..- . i . The Btifst Recom mend a J ipri The Strongest recommendation any article may receive is a favor able worcLfrom the user: It is the recDinmendations of those who .have used it that makes Chamber lain's Cough Remedy so popular. Mrs. Amanda Gierhart,! Wayries fiefd, Ohio, writes, 'Chamberlarn's Cough Remedy has s beeii used in my family off and on fori twenty years and it has never! failed to cure- a cough or. cold.' Obtainable everywhere.' '.' Wlieii a girl tells a 4M0w :"heis thelst man' inr the world she' would marry, he hopes-f the first shall be-last" , ! v.-.- r -wiuo Ai.xjeii s .jrine-iar-no-iey e, sommes4i.ifei , h. ..wr I f mn l)in. Ti mj. IT suited to'Jthe .W ,mW uie serins wincn nave setuoa in GIOETODI, SICK TOMORROW DOSE OF. NOT CALOlilELilMES YOU SICK : AND YOU USE A DArS WORK. : A Calomel salivates! It's mercury. Calomel actsjike dynamite: ou a siuggisn. -liver. When calomel cpmes into contact with sour -bile it crashes into it, ' causing cramp ing and nausea. ' - Ifyouyfeel bilious, headachy; constipated "and all 'knocked out, just go to -your. druggist and ge: a oU cent bottle of Dodson's : Liver Tone, which is a harmless vegeta ble substitute for dangerous, calo mel; ;Take a' spoonful and if it deesn't start - your liver aud straighten you up better and quick- 'er than nasty calomel and without making you sick, you just go back and get your money. If you take calomel today you'll be sick and nauseated ..tomorrow; besides it may salivate you, while if you take Dodson's ' Liver Tone you .will wake up feeling great, fullOf ambition and ready for work or play. It's harmless,-pleas ant and safe to give to 'children; they like it. ' A good listener is a man to whom you can tell a funny story that doesn't remind him of one of his own. Severe Cold Qufekly Cured. "On December farst I had a very severe cold or attack of. the grip as it may be, and was nearly down sick in, bed, " writes O. J. Metcalf, Weatherby, Mo. "I bjught tvvo bottles of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and it was only a fe day untiM was completely restor" ed to health. I firmly believe that Chamberlain' Cough . Remedy, is one of the. very best medicines atid will know what to do when 1 have another cblol." Obtainable every -where. Life is a cocktail in $hich the pleasures of anticipation are blend ed with regrets for the past, v j ' - , ' ' v J What Children Ne?ci Now. In spi te of the best care mothers can give them this weather brings sickness to many children. Safe, reliable family medicines are in demand. 1 Mrs. T. Neureuer, fiu Claire, Wis., writes: "Foley's Honey and Tar. cured my boy of a severe attack of croup after oth er remedies had failed. I recom mend it to everyone as we know f rem our experience that it is $ wonderful remedy for coughs, colds, croup and whooping cough.'' It stops the coughs that hang oh and weaken after the laprippe. Sold Everywhere. Perhaps" the' good die youpg on the principal tbat we should come early arid avoid the rush. : 3 and other Skin Trouble f We Guarantee to stop the itching and begin healinff. wiui uie urst appncaxion or return your money There are lots of skin, reme dies but Saxo Is the only one we guar antee like this. Why don't you try It? HAMBRICK & AUSTIN, DRUGGISTS. v . Roxboro. 'P .: v . i i IS YOUR COMPLEXION CLEAR? A clear complexion and a torpid liver cannot go hand in . hand. "Clear the bile ducts gently, - hut. firmly,' with l utrs Pills At your druggist ' sugar coated or plain' r No, Six-Sixty-Sfe rhia i-a prescripUon prepared especially for MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER. t ive or six doses will break any case, and if taken then as a ton?c the Fever will not return. It acts on the liver better than Calomel and does not rioe or sicken! 23c - - .LAND SALE. By virtue of.tte powers contained u a certain deed of trust executed - to r? by C. H. .Brooks and wife IdaG bSS on the :18th day of March, 190 to cure the payment of a note of ev?; date and ot recod ih ; the Reris Jr S Deeds office for Person Wntv f Carolina; in book 13, page 500 . teJf Tsan?,f not having been comT ed vnth, I will on ' s piK MONDAY, MARCH 6, 1916 offef for sale to the highest bidder at the Court House door in Roxboro, n U, the following lands: . Lying and be mg in the town of Roxboro an the cor Durate.hmit.Jjne , bounded on the north by the lands of Mrs. Mamie Merritt on the eat by the lands of W. H Lon' on the west by. the lands of J. H Car ver asd on the south by the road from Roxboro to'Barnetts tfiir, - contairiiS orle acre more or less and known as 'tha Day place.. - salermS f made known on day of . This Jan."27th, 1916. . : Reade. SALE 0 VALUABLE TOWN LQT. By virtue o the- power 4estd i under a deed of trust executed hv T,n nie Satterfield and others, registered in Person County in boak, i, page 258 I will on the v 6TH DAY OF MARCH; 1916 sell at public auction for cash in front of the cc-urt house door in RnYhnrn lot of land as described therein, situat ed in the town of Roxboro and bounded on . the 'East by W. T. Grecmrv South and west by Harriett Ann Gar- rett,,ana on the Morth by the heirs of A. J. Hester, and perhaps others, con tairiing (2) two . acres more nr ioc tt.nuwu as tne oin oatierneia lot. This Jan 26th, 1916. R. P. Brooks, Trustee. Notice Sale of Valuable Land Under and ;by virtue of the authority conferred upon me bv a certain deed of trust executed by Chpstain Tate on the 20th day of September 1909, and duly record ed in book 17 at- page 337, de fault having 'been made in the payment of the note secured by said deed of trust, I will, on Monday March 6th 1916 at 12 o'clock M. in front of the Court House door, sell to the highest bidder for cash, the land described in said deed of trust to Wit: A certain tract of land near Brooksdale church, bounded as V iL- O.'L r. J4 .,,. iv-00 follows, on the north s by Lewis Raglaid e al. on the'east by John Brooks, south by Paul Coley and on the west by Louis Peace. On this lot is situated a good three room cottage, lot containing 3.48 acres more or- less. This Feb. 1st, 1916. N. Lunsfprd, Trustee v Saving this 'clay qualifi'ed as: the Ad ministrator of the estate of James M. Lucas,- deceased, late of Per son County, North ; Carolina, this is. to notify all persons indebted or holding claims against said deceased, to present them to the undersigned at Woodsdale, N. C. on or before the I9th day of Jaa 1917, oK this notice will be plead i-n bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This Jan. 19, 1916. G. M. BEAM, Administrator. Administrators Notice! Having this day qualified as the ad ministrator of Cora T. Diinn, deceased, this ii to notify all persons indebted or holding claims against said deceased to present them to the undersigned Ad ministrators, on or before the 8th day of Jan. 1917, orthrs notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted 7 to said estate will please make immediate payment. This. Jan. 8, 1916. J. O. Fuller and W. A. Dunn, . 7';7, Administrators. Inactive Kidneys Disease 'I shall not soon forget the benefits I derived from the use of Foley Kidney Pills." AL A Godfrey, Forest GroTe, Oregon. Too. much work and too little work fceem to have about the same effect on persons past-middle age. Proo. action of the kidneys is necessan t good health. They act as a fil.1 and remove from the blood poisonous waste matter which' if permitted to remain in the system leads JLo many complications. Many nervous, tired, run-down men and ; women- suffer from pains, in the back and sides,; dizzy spells, bladder weakness, sore muscles and stiff joints and fail to realize that rheuma tism; diabetes or even Brighfs dis ease may result. - 1 If you have ' cause to believe that your kidneys are weak, disordered or inactive you shouht act immediately. Foley Kidney Pills have , been used by young, middle aged and old with complete satisfaction. They act quick IT and sure ly and have given relief , cases of ten years' standing. - i - k ", Li- re a Wife ills Woman's ionic FC3 SALE AT M. DR06GISTS F4 mm: Wnm mm t
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 23, 1916, edition 1
6
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