Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / April 23, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
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Tne Courier is published in the centre of a fine tobacco growing section, making it one of the best advertising mediums for merchants and warehousemen in the adjoining counties. Circulates largely in Person, Granville, Durham and Caswell counties, in .North Car olina, and Halifax county, Virginia, Advertising rates reasonable ; terms made known on application. jF PESSIO . . A L jAFxDS N. Attorney at Law, . Mi l.tlTT, Attorney at Law, and Notary Public, K"i-r, X. C. i . ! mi I ear. uiur cnlni-ltt.l I si it (five n tu all liuu V. KIT" II I.N, Attorney at Law, liox b- u i, N. C. f r-H-.- uliiH'tfvur lua vich me reiillrel. nli-o .ii WniHK 'til Hotel. IWI'KAIl A litmus. Attorneys at Law, tfuxboro. N. C. I'ra.-i"'' vli.-rvi-i- i li.-ir i-ervirrs :m- reitiirel. 1 -1 i i : lit' il'"ii ): i vwi. l tin- (Iki-iiou of ''1;imh A. w ; it 1 1 A.M. Attorney at Law, . N. C. i.-.-ni ill 'lie iirl-"I llio Mule. IImu--u.- ,i I iini'Ki I lie .mit- ill IwMt Isl Murt : K-I.il- -.Miril-. settle e.late awl I V lli- UtU-i-. J, T. -iraylnirii . I I . N t; TK YilOli . M. Warllck. Milton, . C .V Alt I.I Attorneys at Law, itm-ih'i! in nil tin- nun nl I Ih- stair ami iu I ..- .- l-ii I viir; -. l anitireiiieiil of iMtate In liii illfnuleil -.it. Ni-i.il .tt- niioii uiveii o-.um!h iu 1'eraon and li- -ll tmitilieii. IK. K J. Tuckkr, SURGEON DENTIST. Oj'KICK oiriier riMill) tlir amir in the Vl.-rritt liiliiiK, EOXIiO.a). N. C. K. It. A. momTON. l-ru.-t ii-lng; lli lctn, Roxboro. N. C. '.jaw ui if:--femna aervi-.-a li ike. ieople it it- .iri mi'l iirriiii4ni( country. I'rac ICC Ik all I lie liriiui'Ui' f uti-ilii-llit). IU 4-1 V i; v . It. Klsl", rritetir.iuc I'hjrau-ian,. Roxboro, N. C. Kir.ir- lu iri(RHiona! -rvii-t-a to tlie ieiple I .;,'I t. .i .1 "Urrminlnig -miuiinity. D it. I. A. WISE, rmet iclnit riiy.l.'ia, Roxboro, N. C. offer Inn iple.oiial Heryiren to !lir MHile of lrilni nihI "iirroiin lintr r.iiiuiiunify. Itesi-il-ii-e mi coriii-r of Munran street mtml tnta A enue. C. Wiimteait, I'reitiilent. 4. 8. HraiUlier, 'anliier. Farmers' Bank of Roxboro, roxboro. r.c. lrt it- re-vive-l d I-H-lions and re mittance iriitiiiily mad6. MiMinery and Jewelry. TTIE LATEST 'Ol-Spring and Summer 01 --STYLES IN HATS AND BONNETS, --AT-- MRS, J. A. NOELL'S MILLINERY, In Burnett & Barrett's i Drug Store. When in need of any thing in the Millinery line, be sure and call in snd ex mine my stock before buy ing elsewhere, as I am con fident I can save you mon ey, all! I ask is n Smael' Profit and Quick i f Sales. I will also keep my . Dress-Making Department. and give it every atten tion necessary to insure satisfaction in tit, style and work. I will have a num ber of competent assistants and prepared to turn out work promptly. .Misses Susie Barhett and Jtoxie Burch are with me and will be pleased to have their friends call and see them. ' Respectfully . - -Mrs. J. A. Noell. , Southern Jewelry Housed e-i. at4 rrfit-r'tririH'- ; " v 'O Watches.-Diamonds ami" 0v.rrtlilMt jwirtitfulnjf :,.b ' tin" - Jewelrr lui.M " ' "' ' " ' ' 'j ' : , : UluatratMiCataliwu. (entfree toanr aridi-M tmiill jroti vlil l.y iM lilmrjr, be tare anil la imI nnr Mock. . .' T" n ' i . . F. D. JOHNSON &' SONS. : . . ' 1028 Main Street; ; Lynchburg. Va NOELL BROS, Proprietors. Vol. vii. Selected for the Courier. Sir Cupid. Sir Cupid once, as I have heard, - Determined to discover What kind of a man a maid preferred, Selecting for a lover. So putting on a soldier's coat, He talked of martial glory; And from the way he talked, they say, She seemed to like the story. Then, with a smile sedate and grim, He changed his style and station, In shovel hat and gaiters trim, He made his visitation. He talked of this, discoursed on that, Of Palestine and Ilermon; And from the way he preached, they say, She seemed to like the sermon. Then changed again, he came to her A roaring, rattling sailor, He cried, "Ho, ho! Ilove you so!" And vowed he'd never fail her.-' ... ile talked of star and compass true, The glorio3 of tlie ocean, And from the way he sang, they say, She seemed to like the notion.11 Then Cupid, puzzled in his mind, Discarded his disguises; "That you no preference secin to find, My fancy much surprises." "Why so?" she cried with roguish smile, . "Why, prithee, why so stupid ! I do not care what garb you wear, So long as you are cupid ;" Philander. April 20th, 18.H. Where to Put the Stamp on Letter. It has become a custom which all thoughtful persons always observe, to place the stamp on the right hand corner of the envelope, but few peo ple have ever stopped to think what was the reason for this choice of po sition. The cancelling stamp and the postmarking stamp are fastened side by side upon the same handle, and if the stamp is correctly placed, one blow makes both impressions. If, however, the stamp is on the lower right-hand corner the postmark falls on the address, and both are illegible, while if the stamp is on the left-hand side, the postmark, which is always at the left of the canceler, does not strike the envelope at all, and a second blow is necessary to secure it. So, if the stamp is anywhere ex cept in the upper right-hand corner, it makes just twice as much work for the clerk, and this, where he is stamp- ng many thousand pieces every day. is no small matter. There has been in use for some time, in the post- office in Boston, a number of cancel ing machines, into which the letters, all faced upward, are fed. These machines, if the stamps are correctly placed, do the work quite well, leav ing on the envelope the row of long black lines which we all have noticed on Boston letters. I am not able to learn, however, that there is any other office in the country, as yet, which uses these. The Boston office has also, quite re cently, put in operation a most - in- postmarking postal cards, which dif fers from the other in the greater rapidity of its work. Two hundred cards can be placed in it at once, a crank is turned, and click, click ! they fall into a basket all stamped. ' X Hki'II' ', ill X-Cflljll?. The Condition of Italy. The condition of Italy is indeed deplorable. iNotnins is anoraea a clearer insight into rotteneess of its foundation than the recent foolish blufl' of Baron de Fava. The facts show that she is in no way able to wage war. Her whole social and financial system seems to be about to collapse. The outlook is indeed a wretched one. . Banks are - suspend ing and factories are closing with a rapidity that is startling. But re cently the great firm of Corradini ut. terry failed, with liabilities estima ted at over 15,000,000 francs, and the head of the house. Giovinni Cor radini, over sixty years of age, and up to the failure universally re spected, is shown np to be a7 forger and swindler and a fugitive from jus tice. The big sugar refinery at An- cona has closed: Marvrogordato's bank has failed and the streets of Leghorn swarm; with unemployed, semi-starved workingmen. At Ge noa there have been numerous fail ures. : The mnncipal coffers of Na ples are empty, and the . revolution ary party all through Italy is bolder, more . persistent .and violent than ever.' Only recently delegates rep resenting a 'thousand, unemployed workingmen waited on the minister qt the Interior and told him to his face that if, the' government did not grant their demands,' ; they would pillage the city. Z- This is not, on jhe whole, a Very pleasing outlook for a coun try, that so foolishly .- blustered, throush its" representatives ' 'in . its effort to bulldoze the United States, Italy has much to look alter, witnin its own limits, that ; will - keep it pretty fnljr engaged,: without seek ing new fields of trouble with - the repnblie o( the United States.-Nor folk Virginian.. - ' Roxboro, ; - : . . - - - . Melange Qf Dots. It is said that honesty in little things is not a little thing. It is said that good sense is a gold dollar, current at all times, and con venient in all places. It is said that the charms of kind ness are irrestutible; they conquer and captivate, and return with spoils and triumph. , - It is said that men succeed in their professions quite as much by com plaisance and kindliness of manner as by talent. It is said that manliness cannot afford to do without tenderness; nor can the feelings be outraged with impunity. . It is said that no evil dooms us topele8sly . except the . evil , we Jove and desire to continue in, and make no effort 10 escape from. , It is said that we might enjoy much peace if we. would not busy ourselves with tjie words and deeds of other men, which do not apper tain to our charge. It is said that pleasures should be such as unbend and refresh tiu mind, such as leave you complete master of yourself; not such as sub due to their power, It is sail tiiat deep learning will aiake you aoccptauie to tne learued; uut it is only an easy and obliging Dehavior and entertaining convcrsa cion that will make you agreeable, in all companies. it is said that iron does not sparkle iike a diamond, yet it is useful. Uoid has nut the fragrange of a llower, yet it is valuable. So diflcr ent persons have different graces oi excellence, and to be just have an eye to all. It is said that some of the finest qualities of human nature arc inti mately related to the right use ol money, such as generosity, honesty, justice, and self-denial, as well as the practical virtues of economy and providence. It is said that every, quality of the human mind, however valuable in itself, loses much of that value by being developed out of proportion to some other contracting quality, Even virtues may in this way run into vices. . Self-respect unbalanced by respect for others, degenerate into egotism and pride; affection and amaability unattended by firm prin ciple lapse into weak concession; benevolence without judgment be gets pauperism. It is said think of ease, but work on. It is said that he that would con quer must fight. It is said that tlie only way to have a friend is to be one. It is said that charity is a virtue of the heart and not of the hands. . It is said that poverty is not a shame, but the being ashamed of it is. It is said that we should use gentle words : for who can tell the bless sings they impart? It is said that character is the raiment of the soul, which every man weaves in his life-time. It is said that each year one vicious habit rooted out, in time might make the worst man goocL It is said that the best protection against the people's ill manners are our own good manners. It is said that to lament the past continuously is rather a hindrance than a help to bettering the future, It is said that there is a trans cendent power in example. We re form others unconsciously when we walk uprightly. Tt is said that when tossed on the angry 'waves of a sea of trouble, a good motto is, "Never give up the ship." But, when the ship manifests a 'tendency to sink, it is a wise move td swim out and not go down with the wreck. It is said that it is all very well fori man to believe that the earth revolves on its axis; but when he becomes thoroughly convinced that he is the axis, the , less yon have to do with him the better. - It is said that thrift is the basis of self-help, and the foundation of much that is excellent in character. , It is said that . busy lives, . like busy waters, are generally pure Stagnant lives, like stagnant pbols, breed corruption; . : - It is said tiiat sympathy, the feel ins with another heart in its mingled experience, -whether glad or sorrow ful, is a blc39e I power on the earth. . It is said that the world has lived with -human beings in it a good many hundred years now, and the faithfu wife and - mother still ranks first among women.; - 7 i ' t It is said that true contentment is like ' a peacefully-flowing streamlet nnder a summer's sun. - It goes stead ily on in its course assigned to it by natural laws, and is ever being fed from its never-dying source. , ' r , 5r - - , PniX-ANDKR TirTn HOME FIRST: North Carolina, Thursday, April 23, 1891. - WASHINGTON LETTER. ) Fio u cur regular cortvsmi-nt - - Washington, April 10, 1891. Senator Peffer is in demand at public meetings I ere, and he doesn't forget to impress the principles of the Farmers': Alliance upon his hear ers at every opportunity. He made a speech at a largely attended meet- r of the" Federation of Labor this week, that has attracted wide atten tion. He took up ' the immigration question a very live one jost now from the passage of the notorious contract-labor 4aw in 1864, of Which de said : "Many a time have I won dered how the hand of honest old Abe Lincoln must have shaken, when he signed it." t This law he argued was a -natural sequel of the ' granting of, 84.000,000 acres of public -lands, to railroads in 1862 and 8, and was passed to enable their agents to bring over, under contract, cheap uropean laborers to do their work. As a direct result of agitation in 1882 the first anti-alien Contract law was passed, another in 1885, and still another at the last session of Con gress. He then gave his hearerp some pointers bout pushing the educational work in and out of sea son, and supporting men from their own ranks. Speaking of an interview in which Senator'Edmunds characterized the armers' Alliance movement as a fever. Peffer said : "Some peo ple fossils, I was going to say are inclined to belittle these things. noticed that Dr. George K. Ed munds said that it was nothing but a fever, and that the public were afflict ed periodically in this way. But the people will not listen to these ancient physicians; and will not heed antediluvian remedies." Con cluding he said : "I want to identify myself with you. I want bn, the a boring men and women of the coun try, to understand that you have, at east, one friend in the Senate of the United States, one who will not be shamed or afraid to present whatever you wish to tha dignihed body. Another distinguished Alliance man, Col. L. L,. folk, president oi the National Farmers' Alliance and ndnstrial Union, made his first bow before a Washington audience Iastl night, at the public meeting held by Local branch No. 4, National Citi zens Alliance. He made a good im pression, and it is said some con erts by his able presentation of the principles of his organization. The centennial of the Amencan Patent system is being celebrated here this week, and the town is full of the men who have made fortunes out of their own or somebody else's inventions, to say nothing of the newspaper inventors whom we have with ns always. The Patent Office is beautifully decorated inside in :ionor of the occasion, and in the lecture hall of the National Museum is an exhibition of many interesting things, including the identical printi ng press at which Benjamin Frank- in worked in London. This roorn- ing the visiting inventors were taken to Mount Vernon and allowed to pay their devotion to the tomb of Washington, and their spare cash for souvenirs sold on the gronnds, and this afternoon the celebration is to close wilh a military review. t has been a very pleasant affair to those on the inside, so to speak, but as tickets were reqnired for every thing the people were really not "in it." Baron Fava, the Italian minister has gone home) and the public lost interest in the cause of his going as soon as it was certain that a- peace ful settlement would eventually be reached. Mr. Blaine's answer to the ast dispatch from the Italian jrov ernnient was read to tfie-Cabinet, approved and sent off by ' 1 mail It will not be made public at that time." - ; . Gen. Benj. F. Butler, was made happy this week by the receipt of $270,000 of .Government money in payment for the white . elephant he has had on his hands ever since ' he built the big stone house just oppo site the Capitol building, which the last Congress very kindly passed a bill to purchase 'for its own use at the price namn.. . It is believed here that Canadian reciprocity is completely done.; for as far as the present administration is concerned, and that no notice wil ever be sent to the Canadian gov efnmentthat Mr. Harrison is ready to receive them and - hear their - propo sitions. Mr. Harrison is criticized for having so brusquely - sent., the "eml nentCanadians - back home, ' when they came hear to keep an engage ment made with Mr. Blaine. "It would only hae- been, courtesy to have allowed them to say what they came to say," remarked a - Republi can Senator last night, and he is by no means alone in thinking so. ,. Senator Edmund's resignation ere ated more regret than surprise among his party associates. v m ADROAD NEXT. A Trying Calamity. Among- the minor calamities oi life, that of being compelled to break up nonse-keeping and selling off the conveniences and embellishments of a pleasant, well-ordered home, is one of the most trying. When a family submits its 'portable- property"- to the tender mercies of a,publicat an auction fight, the sacrifice, however, expedient, involves . a - thousand re grets.-. It is impossible to discard and turn out of doors chairs, tables and sofas with -which one ''has been on terms of the closest intimacy for years," and that Care associated with delightful recollections of do mestic comfort and hospitable re unions, without something like e- nierleHoHsehold chattels that one has known, perhaps, for half a life time, and which are hallowed by the daily touch of -those one loves, seem to have an almost human claim to jonpideration and affection When the auctioneer steps in to shatter with his hammer these agree able asc-jciations, it is impossible not 'Articles We Sell For 2 to regard him us an enemy. He is a Cents. conspirator against our peace, audi I Finger Ring, .1 China Doll, his audience are his accomplices, ile lays irreverent hands upon things very dear to us. They are mere "leather and prunella" to him. He would sell a throue from under a king without the slightest compunc tion. The thuds of his mallet, as he scatters our most cherished "no tions" hither aud thither among the heartless crowd, sound like the blows -f an undertaker's hammer giving the finishing touches to the last piece of furniture that humanity requires. Women, as a rule, are tender hearted, but they never take their tenderness with them to public ven dues They pass the most valued amily heir-looms from hand to hand with horrible indifference, and when the excitement of competition is upon them, they bid for-our treas ures with a ferocity that is truly ap palling. Some of the quack medicine ven ders advertise to cure an "all-gone" sensation at the pit of the stomach; but, alas ! art can devise no remedy or the ''all-goneness" a man feels at his heart when the auctioneer's gavel knocks down the last of his household goods, leaving him a chat telless outcast at the mercy of -the boarding-house interest. New York Ledger. Talk's cheap, but when it's backed up by the pledge of the hard aish of financially responsible firm, or com pany, of world-wide reputation tor fair and honorable dealing, it menus Now, there are scores of sarsapa- rillas and other blood purifiers, all acked up to be the best, purest. most peculiar and wonderful, but bear in mind (for your own Bake), there's only ? tiunrmiieed blood- purifier and remedy for torpid lives and all diseases that come from bad blood. That standing solitary and alone sAl uu trial, is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. If it doesn't do any good in skin, scalp and scrofulous diseases and pulmonary consumption is only lung scrofula just let its makers know, and you get your money back. Taik's cheap, but to back a poor medicine, or a common one, byselling it on trial, as "Golden Medical Dis covery" is-sold, would bankrupt the argest fortune. Talk's cheap, ,but only "Discov ery is guaranteed. . Great Confederate Gathering United States Senator ' Walthall and Ex-Governor Lowry will deliver orations .at the unveiling of the Con federate monument in J ackson, Miss., on June 3rd. Gov. Lowry will, it is understood, offer a tribute to the late Jefferson Davis, while Gen. Wal thall will speak of the Confederate cause. It will be the greatest demon stration in "Mississippi since the war. The Germ Destroyer. -. In. the field of discovery and' in vention, medicine has not kept pace with surgery. TJiat, perhaps, is nat ural; seryice 'surgery ia the mechan ical branch of medicine. 'The. gen eral acceptance of the germ theory of .disease, however, opens a new field for medicine, and will, take it completely away from the mediaeval superstitions that still eling to its skirts! And yet medicine v is not without its discoveries. r It-Has long been known, and the -fact is now rec ognized wherever the test-, has been made, that Swift's Specific (S S. SO will destroy the gerins of ' malarlial disease, the microbes of skin disease, and the bacilli of contagions . - and other fofms of blood poisoning, ejects them from the blood, and purifies and builds up the system No medical discovery of our day has achieved such remarkable -success.-- GOU.RIKH . : ; ' -. " ' - ; - V SI.OO The Blue Flaq n - . . . r: r DANVILLE, VA., and Ml LTO N, N. C.f is the place to buy your Goods. Our motto, "Gcod Quality H6nest yuancin.oeu uneap euji Meap, and Keep (Jontin 'tally at zi,'is what the people hke We quote below onlya few of the I I mftnv low nnp. t whto.h w ram nnr OnrJia . ,1 - :- i - ; v :r' ; . I Articles We Sell For r- :,'.-:. Cent. 1 Thimble, n r--.-. ' . . ' 1 Key King, ... ';':, : 1 Penholder, - -' : 1 I 'ox. Matches, (200 in a box), ' I Paper Pins, . ; : 1 Paper Needles, ;. 1 Paper Carpet Tacksr , , , -; 1 Box Bluing, ' v 1 Box good Blacking, , i 1 Crochet Needle, - -:. .. .; -' 4 PenPoints ; " ' 3 Bone Cottaruttonsr?" T 1 Metal Collar Button, " 2 doz. Hair Pinsy . 2 Lead Pencils,' 1 pr. Shoe Strings, I Memorandum Book, I Pipe Stem, , ;: -I yd. Torchon Lace, 10 Marbles. I Tin Cup, 1 Toy Pistol, 1 doz. Wood Screws, 1 Spool good Cotton, 200" yds., I Pepper Box, 1 eke Laundry Soap, I cake Toilet Soap, . - .- 1 qr. Writing Paper, 12 good Envelopes, 1 Lead Pencil, rubber tipped, 1 Cake Cutter, 1 spool good Silk Twist, 1 set Knitting Needles. Articles We Sell For 3 Cents. 1 Nutmeg Grater,' 1 large Tin Cup, or 2 for 5c, 1 cake good Toilet Soap. v large cake Laundrj' Soap, vial Best Ink. or 2 for 5c, 1 qr. good Writing Paper, 1 pack good Envelopes, Tin Pie Plate, or 2 for 5c, 1 Tin Dipper, J ell v Pan, or 2 for 5c, 12 Horn Collar Buttons, Writing Tablet, 1 Tack Drawer, School Slate. 1 good Fine Comb, pr. wrougnt i5utts ana ocrews, - The alove represents only a few of Other goods not quoted, are proportionately low, and we respectfully ask an inspection OI OUr gOOUU auu pnuco.- nucu iu juuwu ui JJttUiiic, see what we keep. "Quick sales and small profits," for the cash down, is a rncd j-iile of business. . It pays vou, deluvian credit system, and come down high road to prosperity. J. W. UAlLlil oc tu, rrop a muv xiag rargaiu owre, , - Corner Main and Craghead Streets, Danville, Va And Main Street. Milton. N. C. Mr. Wm. Pavlor. an old merchant givin" us the benefit of his counsel Dusines8. lie win ue pieascu w occ THE PEOPLE'S BANK, CAPITAL STOCK - OFPIC13BS: J. A. LONG. Pres. J. LEE H. BATTLE, Cashier. ; DIEECTOKS: A. R. FOUSHEE, W.I.NEWTON, - A. LONG, S. MERRITT, R. TAYLOR GLEAVES, of Lynchburg,; Va. Conducts a General Banking Business, consistent with business principles, to its CUSTOMERS. ' .- - - ..-- i . ' . Alvavfi haa mnnPT to leild at 8 D6f C6Xlt. - - We call special attention to oar Time Lock, Burglar and Fire Proof Safe. We want your business, ana souciii DURHAM AUD OXFORD J.IARDLE YORKS DURHAM;;-NVCr Per Year Fn Advance. '.' . No. 36. Barqain Articles Ve Sell For 4 "'Cents-- 1 Nice Satteen Scarf,1 ' 1 good Money Purse,; . i 1 good Glass Goblet,-, 1 bottle good Mucilage, ." i qr. good Note Paper, 1 pack good Envelopes, lTin Dipper. 5-1 Tin Wash Pari,; 1 good Hand Saw File,y ; ' : 1 pair good Scissors, " j. .' 1 Pocket Knife, V r ! ; I good Tack Hammer,' ; ? s 1 U'nivlan fini'irrvf " " ; . C 5- spooi uiarK's u. m. r, juireaa, 1 8ool best Searing Silk, ; V 1'goodFine Comb: , j 1 good Dressing Comb, f 1 Lamp Chimney, .. 1 Towel 1 Curry Comb, 1 doz. Dress Buttons, 1 bottlt best Machine Oil, I Articles We Sell For 5 - Cents. 1 good Looking Gl&ss,: 1 cake Fine Toilet Soap, ' . '. I bottle Cologne, ' I Money Purse, 1 good Wood Pipe,- 1 Cake Mould, 1 graded Quart Measure, 1 II C ' i niQe Breast Pin, ' i Wash Pan, 1 yd.'gootl Calico, 1 yd. good Bleaching, 1 yd. nice Silk Ribbon, 1 pr; good Ladies Hose, 1 glass Cream Pitcher, 1 glass Mug, 1 glass Goblet, 1 Pocket Rule, ' 1 Brass Padlock, 1 iron Padlock, 1 good Screw Driver, 1 Machine Oil Can, . ; 6 Tea Spoons, 3 Table Spoons, 1 good Fine Comb, 1 pr. Strap Hinges and Screws, 1 good Coarse Comb, -i , 1 good Tooth Brush. 1 Glass-cutter and Can-opener, 1 Lamp Burner, 1 Pocket -Knife, 1 good Curry Comb, 1 Mouse Trap, 1 cake Castile Soap, " , 4 1 igars, 1 Shaving Brush, 1 Potato Grater, 1 Nutmeg Grater, 1 Potato Masher, 1 Atple Parer and Slicer,- ; I large size School Slate, . 1 Flesh Fork, 2 papers Snuff, 1 wire Steak Broiler, 1 Wood Spigot, 1 1 8et A B i : Blocks many cheap goods we keep in stock. and it pays us. to quit tue old anti to hard . pan, And you are on the rvespecuuny, . i x formerly ot Leasburg, iN. C., is with ns, and experience iu the conduct of the auu ocn mo invuuo - - - $30,000 S. Kl ERR ITT, Vice Pres. C B. BROOKS. J.L: BROOKS' Extends every accommodation correpoiiucuvc. - : - j 1 Stone Person Cddnty Courier,; - Publish every Thursday, by - " roxboro. N. c. - v , TEEMS OTi SUBSCRIPTION !. ' One Copy OntfYear, . v.m i 1.00 One Copy Six Month's) -v 50 Cash invariably in advance r " ADVERTISEMENTS.. A Wonder Discovered! For "the prevention and cure of diseases among Horses, Cattle, Sheep ', . .. V ' - V ' and Hogs,- ' v v. - - v -, JOHNSON'S . SUNNY SOUTH-- Horse and Cattle Powders have no equal. - iThey . increase the flow of milk in cows."' They - " " Prevent and Cure Cablera in hogs. They enable your, horse to do .one-. third more work; by "aiding diges tion, improing appetite, t and other wise bringing the animal to a more Vigorous &nd Healthy -Condition. -oo- Fowls require an entirely different medicine to keep them healthy and make them produce eggs profitably. We make a powder, and calHt A POULTRY POWDER. -1 o- N. M. JOHNSON & CO., WHOLESALE ASU fc.fc.TAlL DUVGGISTS. DURHAM N; C. -0'- These Powders are for sale inRox ., . - vti','i; " "v"-" -i'"".1 : boro by j. D. Morris, Pass Bros., and A. R. ; Fou- l-hee WATCH THIS SPACE EV- ' ERY WEEK. -R. E. COUCH , BOZBORO,N.a I Watches, Clocks, Jewelry. VATGIIES, GOLD WATCHES of all kinds i SILVER WATCHES, and NICKEL WATCHES at popular prices. . Al-' so genuine' RAILROAD WATCHES -at rock bottom prices.- . v CLOCKS. ; I offer special bargains in CLOCKS from 10 to 115.00.. All warranted. SILVER-WARE. Beautifal wedding and ; holliday - presents in SILVER SPOONS, FORLKS. KNIVES and TABLE- v WARE of all kinds at lowest prices.. OPECtACLEO. IJiave the finest lot of SPECTA CLES ever brought .to - the ceunty and will guarantee to fit any eye, " JEWELRY -BREAST-PINS, EAR-RINGS, BADGES, CHARMS, CHAINS, ENGAGEMENT and WEDDING RINGS; in fact, anything you . want In the Jewelry line. ' . . . , Bring me your watch, clock and . jewelry repairs. Satisfaction , guar anteed. ' ; , . ' - -" . "
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 23, 1891, edition 1
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