Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / May 14, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
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The 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 tiio adjoining counties. Circulates largely in Person, Granville, Durham in T Caswell counties, in North Car olina, and Halifax county, Virginia. A I vertising ratesreasonable ; terms m:i lo known on application. Person CountyXourier, ' Published every Thursday, by t '' , 1 . m t : r, ... ! -. i :.' r .. '. I nsroEiiii beos.; ROXBORO. N. C .... . , ... .-. 1 . . NOELL BROS, Proprietors. HOME FIRST; ABROAD NEXT. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION': $1.00 Per Year in Advance. - i One Copy One Yeta,.:-W " One' Qopj Six;MonthsC? C4sh invariably in . advance LOO 50 Vol. vii. Roxboro, Noeth Carolina Thursday, May 14, 189 1. .r - r. r r- , 1 1 - '". ' - , :. .1 - ..: . ' - . ' . 1 -' ". ' ' .. - ... " . . ... ,i . -a 1 " i j3 PROFESSIONAL pAFDS I I'NSFOUn, Attorney at Law, Knxlxiro. X. C. J MKIUITT, Attorney at Law, and Notary Public, Roxboro, N. C. . ,, ,,.( mi'l earnest attention given to all ..-me entrusteil to him. w W. KITCH1N, Attorney at Law, RqxBoho, S. U. lines wherever lii sei vices are required. OOicc at V instead Hotel. INSTEAD A BUOOKS, Attorneys at Law, Roxboro. N. C. .. . .,,,.(. lu'iever their services are require1. l-ronii't attention given to the eollcciion of la i in. A. V. GRAHAM, Attorney at Law, Oxf.-r.l. N. C. llan- Uort- Settle estates ami .1 j in ;il I the (;ourls of the Stale. .1.' im.iu'V ami invest the same in best 1st Mort: i Itoal Kstute Secant.'' ni jtiate titles. . x. Strayhorn . oxfov.l. N. C I,. M. Warlick. Milton. N. C Or-KAYIIOKN vt WAULICK, Attorneys at Law, nr.' in all the couilsof the State and in in.- V'edrrai courts. Management of estatec .n,-iliva:t'ii'leit to. sm.rial attention i;iven to cases in l'erson ana Cuswell counties. hR. E- J. TUCKKR. SURGEON DENTIST. room up stairs m ine E0XB0KO. N. C. Okfice corner Merritt building, It. A. aiOilTON, Practicing Physician, Roxboro. N. C. Offers his professional services to the pe..le ,1 ttovi.oi'oandsurroiindingcoimtry. Prac ice is all tlie hranclies oi meaieme It) 4-1 V w. n. cuisp. Practicing Physician. Roxboro, N. C. otfi'rs his professional services to the p -ople . Uoxhoro and snrroiinuiug cuuuuuuiij. 'yyi- ' s- wise. Practicing Physlclau, Roxboro, N. C. tfara li I 4 ilVI) fcssinnal service to the people ot invl)Ofo and surroiindinit community. Kesi l. i.ce ou corner of Morgan street an Beams A entie. Winsteail, President. J. S. Bradslier, Cas uer. Selected for the Courier. The Hearth-Stone. A holy place i9 the hearth-stone, Where loved ones are gathered 'round. Where mothers, sires and sisters dear, And brothers and friends are found ; A holy place is the hearth-stone, Home s innermost shrine is there, Laden with blessed benison, And hallowed by loving prayer. A holy place is the hearth-stone, What clustering joy s abide Where the cradle of our infancy W as rocked by a mother s side : A holy place is the hearth-stone ; here childhood's pattering feet Go prancing in shade and sunshine, To the music of pleasure's beat. A holy place is the hearth-stone, Whero youths have wooed and won, And wed and gone to the battle Of life, with mil armor on; A holy place is the hearth-stone, Where manhood has settled down With blessings blossoming around him, An.l love for a priceless crown. A holy place is the hearth-stone, nence tlie oia ana trie young have gone To rest from their wearv labor. When the battle of life wa3 done; And oli! from the holy hearth-stone, I tory of the world When parted from those we love, forward with the tide of movement May we go to meet by the hearth- a Republio? Let the millions unite against' Jhe Millionaires.; Let them proclaim their unconquerable deter mination to live or die free men.' "This language has the ring of earnestness and sullen determina tion, an accent of bitterness and of despair that bodes no good to the peace of the industrial world, . "This problem has already been transferred from the realm of the purely economic and secular to the moral. The Pope . at Rome cannot issue an encyclical and not give large space to the question: In Protestant churchesjio-day organized capital and organized labor cannot dwell beneath; the 'name roof.T The churches of the rich are becoming more and more exclusively social clnns. "The two great historic political parties of America are apparently on the eve of disintegration. The cause of this is not fa? to seek. It is the confusion incident to the marshal ling of the hosts for the battle with private corporate powers. The great ignorant masses of the people are thinking as never before in the his- fhey are moving Ten Dollar Bills For Curl Paper. . ' v ' Put a nice curl in my mustachB, will you? said a well-dressed man Wednesday morning- . as ..he ; leaned back in a chair in a Fourth street barber shop. ' - - . ; ,'Yesf sir", said the barber .as he tacked' a towel .under the mans chin. . "I'll put a curl in it that will stay a week," he added a minute later as he pulled a couple of bits out of his pocket ancl ; smoothed- them on the- customer's -shoulder. Then he twisted np one side of the mustache and deftly fastened with one of the bills. . The same was done with the other. - The man was surprised, evi ; "Lading on Hands." Mt friejid. the asent of a Buffalo wall-paper house, was "taking on" with headache in Philadelpha, . when a slick-looking stranger about 25 years of age sat down beside hs and asked : s "Is t ache mostly over the eyes or in the back of your head?" It'a all over my head," groaned the victim. "Exactly. Proceeds from a nervous state of the system. Ah ! your pulse is away up. Let me see your ton gae.l I thought so; a cold current of air las chilled the nerves along the spiie and. smashing headache is the reult.! dently, at seeing money used., fori' Are you a physician?" I asked curl papers, and more surprised as "Well, no, not in the ordinary i he saw a big X in front of each eye. eense.- I am called a professor. stone Of Oar Father's house above. Philander. MR DIXON'S WARNING. The Millions and the Million aires in Rat He Array. A strong sermon on the past, pres ent and which cannot be stajed. It may be impeded for a time. If so, it will halt only as the flood halts in the narrow gorge. At least a new polit ical party is to be organized at Cin cinnati in 1! ay, that is sure to throw the election of the next President into the House of Representatives. Old economic maxima, theories, traditions and superstitions seem to . r . 1 1)6 suddenlv croinor to meces. The organized capital and organized la- obstraction wjU hte&K and with the bor, was delivered by the Rev Thomas Dixon yesterday, before a large congregation in Association Hall. He Baid the last fifty years had been an era of corporate power. Competition had been overdone, and monopoly has been the inevitable result hiss and foam and pour of a Niagara, the flood . will bear everything be fore it, resistless in its furious sweep. The battle of the ages will be fought between the federated giants; private millions of dollars against Farmers' Bank of Roxboro, ROXSORO.f c. IVnmu ri-vivel :ml w .H'tunw ami re- i:nil:iiiro. iruui)il ly untie. Roxboro, N. C. NOV IS YOUR TIME! Come to Roxboro and invest and pt a loot hold, before everything irets too high for you, and when you tome don't forget. JA i. vV. BRANDON. The Barber. He is willing and rady to accom mo diite his friends, and always keeps up with the latest styles. T ;i':i.ic-ry an J de Aelry. DRESSMAKING. SPRING SEASON OF 13)1 Larger stock than ever before. -All the New Styles, :ni i .it prices which will please. Do.'i't fail to give me a call when in ncivl of iVI3LLINERY9 &C, Tiie l)re Making Departmeht is i'i c.nire of iVliss Martha Hudson, wit!i a good forje of asHidtants. C:ill o.irly. r-!' r A L L i E YANCEY, Ovit Mr. A. R. Foushee'o Store. i:.ooro, April '9, 1801. 3 ;it'u.'.i Jewelry Houe, 1029, 3atiaa St.. ' JLiyn-clxtru rgr, "Va I m Viinr ir lr tr Watciies. Cl-f-'a Diamonds '" 1 -vlhiiiir iertliiin t tli .lewetry Illiistraini Cnlal.i)rii enlfre Iintiiy twlilrwi simnlil yon vifil I.) mrhbiirfr, lie curf and In "I'wt our stork. P. D. JOHNSON & SONS. 1028 Main Street, Lynchburg, Va T..1 U I 1 lvulc,8ua,B uccu the co-ooerative millions of wealth directors, bankofneers, railroad pres- pn)ducer8. The rC8ult of that con ulCulsnu unmugMu. flict, I firmly believe, will be liberty, A neweraDius iairto oeaneraoi Qot elavery Eqnality in opportu, atimuS ccuto, iu Lm;u w. uc . ity inste of despair; fraternity 1UUUU ww ,luV"a auu U1 and humanity instead of war and generations yet unborn. The men brutality. May God hasten such a wno nave ount up giganuc loraines day rNew York Wo, hi nave not, as a ruie, commuted crimes in the process. They are men of His Particular Ground. daring enterprise, genius, skill and industry. They have done only what As I sat on the hotel veranda in a those who curse them would have Georgia town, I noticed a colored done had they been given the oppor- friend and brother working myay tunity and the power. When he finally stood before me, "We see this future of storm out- hat in hand, and bowing in much lining itself," said Mr. Dixon, "in earnestness, I asked : the assault through the Courts. The "Well, George, did a cyclone strike back-bone of the Sugar Trust has your meeting house?" been broken in the Courts, charters "No, not 'zactly, sah." have been revoked and havoc played "Want to raise money for the i - with the vast fortunes figured on preacher?' paper. ;Now the corporation that Hardly, sah, hardly. endangers life or limb is in danger "After a bell for the steeple?' of annihilation if a jury's verdict "No, sah, can't say we am.' is taken as final. The millionaire ''Then you want Sunday School directors of one of the richest rail- books?" roads in America are now under "No, sah. indictment for the loss of the lives "Mortgage on the land?" of its employees in the recent tunnel "No, sah. disaster. It is not difficult to read "But you came here to strike me . . . . ... the meaning of that sentiment ot tor a quarter. 1 see it in your deep and bitter hostility. Forty looks years ago such men were considered "Wail, yes, sah," the highest order of public benefac- "And don't you intend to ask for tors. Now thev are the object of it on church grounds?" hatred and suspicion to millions. "No, sah, I has other grounds, sah. The conflicts between organized I has a particular ground -of my own labor and organized capital are be- Uali coming more and more bitter and "Well, what is it?" brutal. Ritter on the part of the "Why, sah, I was gwine to ask fur laborer, and brutal on the part of it on de ground dat you didn't know the corporations. The New York I jess got outer jail fur stealin' a bag Central Railroad, with its prestige, o' cotton I" its millions and its influence with oth er corporations, succeeded in crush ing the Knights of Labor in a delib erately planned and brutally led as sjiiilt. When the lob was comolete. Mr. Webb, with a perfect fiendish that house with me." said a canvaser delisrht. proceeded to dance a ji on their quivering hide. The whole dav or two aS performance, while it was legitimate "What tor" war, was inhuman and brutal, and "The woman bought a clock from r.hfi cnlf that aenaraf.es me on the instalment plan. She v j m -9 - o x I organized capital from the toiling still owes $2, and will neither pay millions, wider, deeper and more ut- nor give up the clock. terly impassible. . , "Why don't you go to the court?" "In the recent conflict at Moor- have to, perhaps, but I wood between the miners and the thought I'd make one more attempt capitalists, dozens of men were shot I want you to stand in front of - the down in cold blood. It was a sad house for the moral effect it will day for the owners of mines in Amer- have upon her. ica when the command was given to The officer Ivent with him and as- lire at Jioorwood. The Central La- 3m: ed a sort of heroic pose at the i4"o.inr..irii nr. ita lnfiftti mr ; nt nte. while the 'Canvasser went to W ty v 0 I 7 ' No. iiowcrv on last Hunduyr in th side door. It was promptly issuing its call tor a maasmelg at opei;e ' t his knock, and still more Cooper Union, said: . rom tlypailfbf atcrdelnged " 'All j ublio meuns of proteition him from head ta foot and Tun him liave been turned into agencies of out of the yard oppression; constitution, law and " 'A ell, the moral eliectof my prcs hmnoiiirAr nrA trnmnlwd miflfir foot inlence didn't seem to count," -re- .---v - I the very uaiis or justice,, crimes marten iuc imwi, j against the law and liberty of work- vBp you .bet.it di(L" gasped the inw men lire reneatedlv committed, otner as ne shook mm?eu. -"o 1 i ' The barber-applied the lath r, but the man grew nervous, y "Is that money you have twisttjd in my mustache?" he asked. . ! "Yes, sir, I always prefer good American scrip to common paper or tin foil. And," he added, after a pause, "it gives tone' to the business." "Well, I've had money in all parts of my clothes, in my shoes and hat band, even in my undershirt, but well, I never had it in my mustache efore. And they look like two saw bucks; are they?" "Yes; each is a ten. I have used two fifties, but that's when money was a little more plentiful." The barber shaved away, and the customer evidently kept up thinking. The chair was near the door, and the faucet some feet back into the shop. When the barber walked back to wet the towel, after going over the man's face once, the latter suddenly raised up, sprang from the chair and bolted out the door. "Hold on there yov fool !" yelled the barber, as he ran to the door; but the man didn't hold. He ran up an alley in the same block. Then the barber .sat down and roared, while the others in the shop joined in with him. "I thought he was going to do that all the time. Wrell, I've got the best of the bargain anyway. He has got the shave and the Confederate ten dollar bills, and I've got his hat." St. Paul Pioneer Pre. Store The Blii e Fl Bargain D A N V I L L E, VA., J and MILTON i s the place to buy your Goods. . Our motto, "Gcod OiuUith - Honest OjuLntiiy, Sell Cheap Fell aXHeav and Keev Contin- uallll at it. " is what the people like, i We quote below onlya few of the many low prices at which we sell our Goods : ADVETISEM ENTSV A Wonder 01 s c oyer e d ! oo- Some call me a fakir, even. I effect cures by what is called laying on of hands. You are skepticaP, of conrse but I'll agree to cure your friend here in ten minutes or forfeit $50." i "For heaven's 3ake, go ahead!" groaned Tom. "If you can cure me in an hour I'll give yon $10." We went down in the baggage de- partinent wiiere tne periormance wouldn't attract so much attention, and the fellow began passing his hands over Tom's head and face and also rubbing his hands. He hadn't worked a minute before Tom said he felt better, and in ten the headache was entirely gone. "Now, don't offer to pay me or I shall be offended," he said, as he 8 topped work, "and you had better sit quiet right where you are for about ten minutes. Close your eyes, thus, and lean back a little more, so." He bowed himself out in a graceful way, and had been gone fifteen min utes when Tom carefully arose, opened his eyes, and suddenly called out : "Robbed, by thunder !" The fakir got $90 in cash, a rail road ticket to Washington, and a diamond pin worth $125, and the police haven't nabbed him to this day. New York Su. Articles We Sell For I Cent. 1 Thimble. . " 1 Key Kingi, 1 Penholder, - 1 Pox Matches, (200 in a .box) t Paper Pins, 1 Paper Needles, 1 Paper Carpet Tacks, 1 Box Bluing, 1 Box good Blacking, 1 Crochet Needle, 4 Pen Points, 3 Bone Collar Buttons, 1 Metal Collar Button, 2doz. Hair Pins, 2 Lead Pencils, 1 pr. Shoe Strings, 1 Memorandum Book, 1 Pipe Stem, -1 yd. Torchon Lace, 10 Marbles. . Articles We Sell For 2 Cents. 1 Finger Ring, 1 China Doll, Tin Cup, 1 Toy Pistol, doz. Wood Screws, Spool good Cotton, 200 yds., ' - 1 Pepper Box, 1 eke Laundry Soap, 1 cake Toilet Soap, 1 qr. Writing Paper, 12 good Envelopes, Lead Pencil, rubber tipped, 1 Cake Cutter, 1 spool good Silk Twist, set Knitting Needles. Where Does the Farmer Come in? A Philosophical Family. He got it.- Detroit b'rtv Pi z. It Counted. to Td like for you to come over it house with me," said a canvi to a policeman on Mogul street a In connection with the recent pur chases of smoking tobacco factories by the American Tobacco Company the following statement has been go ing the rounds of the press : "It would seem that having se cured control of the cigarette trade, the company have now secured the smoking tobacco trade also. No rise in prices of smoking tobacco or cigarettes as yet, and the company declare there will be none. The ad vantages to th company are that they will employ fewer agents than formerly in drumming up business 1 ' Ml m JL . ana win maintain tewer oincers m big cities at high rents and high salaries; but chiefly, the company saves money for its members by stop ping the distribution of colored pict ures to accompany each box sold, Millious of these pictures were scat tered broadcaat over the country. It is said that the individual firms now composing the American To bacco Company spent $250,000 a year in colored pictures. Now there is no longer any competition worthy of the name. Each individual firm continues to manufacture its own peculiar brand, and the purchaser selects what he likes." There is also an advantage to the jobbers and retailers, since they get a rebate, from the . purchase price. The rebate, however, is provis ional. That is all very pretty, but the Amelia has pimples, and sores in the head, From humors internal her nose has grown red; She has a boil on her neck that is as big as a bell, But in other respects she is doing quite well. And pa has dyspepsia, malaria and gout. His hands with salt-rheum are all broken out; He is prone to rheumatics that make his legs swell, But in other respects he is doing quite well. And ma has night-sweats and a trou blesome cough, That all of our doctors can't seem to drive off; She wakes every night and coughs quite a spell, But in other respests she is doing quite well. There is nothing like philosophy to help one bear the ills of life, but in the case of the family what is most needed is a good supply of Dr, Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery It would cleanse Amelia's bad blood, cure pa's ailments, and check ma's cough. The "Golden Medical Dis covery," by its action on the liver, cleanses the system of impurities, It cures humors, ulcers, boils,' scrof ula, salt-rheum, erysipelas, and all kinds of sores and swellings. The only guaranteed blood'purifier. A Patriarch With a Family and a History. Articles We Sell For 4 "Cents. 1 Nice Satteen Scarf, , r 1 good Money Purse, . 1 good Glass Goblet, -1 bottle good Mucilage, 1 qr. good Note Paper, " 1 pack good nvelopesr 1 Tin Dipper, A 1 Tin Wash Pan, 1 good Hand Saw File, 1 pair good Scissors, 1 Pocket Knife, - 1 good Tack Hammer, 1 u ooden Spigot, 1 spool Clark's O. N. T. Thread, 1 sool best Sewing Silk, 1 good b me Comb, 1 good Dressing Comb, 1 Lamp Chimney, . 1 Towel 1 Curry Comb, 1 doz. Dress Buttons, 1 bottlfc best Machine Oil, For the jproventionVftQjCore ; of diseases among Horses, Cattle, Sheep and Hogs, . 1 frv ' v.Va,. JOHNSON'S- . SUNNY SOUTH- Horse and Cattle Powders : jm - ......'"' have no equal. - They increase ' the flow of milk in cows. They Prevent and Cure C iolera in hogs. They enable your hojrse to do one- third more work, by aiding diges tion, improving appetite, and other Articles We Sell For 5 Cents. 1 good Looking Glass, 1 cake Fine Toilet Soap, 1 bottle Cologne, 1 Money Purse, wise bringing the animal to a more 1 good Wood Pipe, 1 Cake Mould, 1 graded Quart Measure, 1 good Hand Saw File, 1 nice Breast Pin, 1 Wash Pan, 1 yd. good. 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, Vigorous and Healthy Condition. -00- Fowls require an entirely different ; 1 Brass Padlock, medicine to keep them healthy and 1 Iron Padlock, 1 good Screw Driver, . , - 1 Machine Oil Can, 6 Tea Spoons, make them Pdnce eggs profitably. 3 Table Spoons, 1 good Fine Comb, we make a powder, and call it 1 good Coarse Comb, 1 good Tooth Brush, Artrcles We Sell For 3 Cents. Nutmeg Grater, large Tin Cup, or 2 for 5c, cake good Toilet Soap, large cake Laundry Soap, 1 vial Best Ink, or 2 for 5c.,- 1 qr. good Writing Paper, pack good Envelopes, Tin Pie Plate, or 2 for 5c, Tin Dipper, Jelly.Pan, or 2 for 5c, 12 Horn Collar Buttons, Writing Tablet, 1 Tack Drawer, School Slate. 1 good Fine Comb, pr. w rougnt uutts ana screws, set A B q Blocks The above represents only a few of many cheap goods we keep in stock. Other goods not quoted, are proportionately low, and we respectfully ask an inspection of our goods and prices. When- in Milton or Danville, see what we keep. "Quick sales and small pronts,' ior tne casn aown, is a eood rule of business. It pays vou, and it pays us. bo quit tne ola -anti deluvian credit system, and come down to hard pan, and you are on the high road to prosperity. Kespecttully, J. W. DAILEY & CO., Prop's .Blue T lag .Bargain store, Corner Main and Cfaghead Streets, Danville, Va. And Main Street, Milton. N. C. ' Mr. Wm. Paylor, an old merchant formerly of Leasburg, N. C, is with us, L.!,-. - - . I 1 n 1.1 .v...nll An4- A-vVhAM AvWtO J T" Vi Q AAnflnnf ll I B &1V1U& USS LliC UCUCUif Ul illo WU 3G1 aim OAWviiv. au ouv- wuviuiw vuu P . .... . "I J business. Me will De pieasea to Bee ana serve nis menus. AND SJ"X: 1 Glass-cutter-and Can-opener, T-fttnn Rnrner. 1 PnokAt K"nifi. 1 good Curry Comb, 1 Mouse Trap, r U U L 1 K I JT U W Jj t K , 1 cake Castile soap, . 4 1 igars, 1 Shaving Brush, 1 Potato Grater, i Nutmeer Grater. 1 Potato Masher. ' o- CT 1 Apple Parer and Slicer, 1 laro-A bi7A Snhfrl Slat.A 1 Flesh Fork, . 2 papers Snnff, N. M. JOHNSON & CO., 1 wire Steak Broiler, 1 Wood Spigot, ANU ttTAlL UUUliUlS'lS. DURHAM N. C. -Ch These Powders are for Bale in Box- boroby J. D. Morris. PaSS Bros., and A. R. Fou- THE PEOPLE'S BANK. WATCH THIS SPACE EV- . ERYWEEK. R. E. COUGH r ROXBORO, If . O. CAPITAL STOCK - - - - OFFICEES: $30,000 J. A.LONC, Pres. J. S. MERRITT, Vice Pres. LEE H. BATTLE, Cashier. J. A. LONG, J. S. MERRITT, DIRECTORS: A. R. FOUSHEE, W.I. NEWTON, C. B. BROOKS, J. L. BROOKS' R. TAYLOR GLEAVES, of Lynchburg, Va, Extends every accommodation Conducts a General Banking. Business, consistent with business principles, te its CUSTOMERS. Alwava has monev to lend at 8 per cent. - We call special attention to our Time Lock, Burglar and Fire Proof Safe. We want your business, and solicit corresponaence, Watch.es, Clocks, Jewelry, . DURHAM AND OXFORD MARBLE WORKS WATCHES. She had not only by ruffians in the - pay f a hoe-handle, two dogs, a razor and . hnt .'h. th ' T&a t.h her three bis boys in there, and if people, have elected. Labor is on youhadn t been here wnera l De the very verge of complete enBave- about this timer ixciumye. mAnt Ghnll aiii iMmifi a! nlnfinA Ai I -rr--r? Some men are fated to see no fur be stopped in its :mad, career, or thef than the ground of the tread. shall it be 'permitted ,to tear down' mill. - 'permittei It is said that a venerable Span iard, aged 93 years, recently left Boston, Mass,, on his own vessel, with his descendants to the number of 278, for his former home in Bar celona. Spain, where they will settle greatest advantage of all to the com- j dovn for permanent residence. It is pany is not stated. Before the organ- said this venerable patriarch lus ization of this gigantic Trust, there been marcd three timea and has were dealers on every bright tobacco thirty-nine children, six of whom 16 daughteis were twins. He has and twenty -three sens, and all of market who bought that grade of tobacco Known as cutters ana re-1 wliom it i8 said-are living, the oldest sold it to cigarette factories: ThU 1 son beir g 70 -yenns, and who has 17 create! competition i among buyers sons, t.Uc olJcfct of whom is 44 years ! brother. The patriErui of this re- tnarka'olo family is credited with Laving spet 7z years in America; anu inaue oetrer pnu&j ior me tar-1 mer. . More . Inan that, the cutler dealers handle this tobacco in their factories and gave employment to large number oi hands. , But now; the ; occupntiou of the cutter dealer is gone. The -Trust h:ia one a?encv on each market, buvs 3 J I ; - . - f - ' , . ...... . - ' and. handles its own tobaccov without competition, and the l-esult - is that' the price of cutters has declined about fifty per cent.. ; ' ; ''. . A splendid advantage to the man- iv and having amuosed a fortune in tl e Ihide-and- loutlior business. The I " . . . .. . . ' name given to ms prodigy is Lucas i Negrairas Tacz, and ho Las. been a steady user of tobacco. it 'extern 7' t'CC O ft t.li' K - At Columbus, O., the other night a lady caught a rat making off with her gold watch and chain, which she had left upon a dresser on retiring. k 7 GOLD WATCHES of all kinds; SILVER WATCHES and NICKEL WATCHES at popular, prices. Al so genuine RAILROAD WATCHES at rock bottom prices. CLOCKS. I offer special bargains in CLOCKS from f 1.50 to $15.00. All warranted. sil-vertware:, - Beautiful wedding and holliday presents in SILVER SPOONSr FORLKS. yCNIVESahd TABLE WARE. of all kinds ait lowest prices.- ufacturers of cigarettes and a saving The rodent had. dragged his prize far in excess of the saving in cigar- -nearly twenty feet, and in a minute ette pictures, but the poor farmer has pore ,would have disappeared in his to pay for it Danville Reyhter hole with it. Robert . Kogrsnop DURHAM, .N-. C. SPECTACLES. I have the finest lot 'of.- SPECTA CLES ever brought to the "ceiraty. and will guarantee to fit any eye,' .JEWEIRY. BREAST.PLNsf' JEARIrINGS, BADGES, .CHARMS, CHAINS, ENGAGEMENT and WEDDING RINGS ; in fact, anything you want ' lil the Jewelry line." -Bring me your watch, - clock and jewelry Tcpaire. Satisfaction guar anteed; : ' L
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 14, 1891, edition 1
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