Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / July 16, 1891, edition 1 / Page 4
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r - sr 1 Home and Farm. Doubling the Crop by Culti . vation. .- . . - If no weeds ever appear in a corn hra would stilt ' be need for frequent cultivation, "-said IIenrj Stewart. A. few years ago J left ten rows through a com field , unworked while the rest of the field ' was" culti vated very week until the . tassel ; appeared. The weeds in those ten rows were pulled by hand, and there were very few, for the ground was a sod deeply plowed, and narrowed thoroughly up to time the corn was slanted. The stalks in the. ten ros were more than three . feet - shorter than those in the rest f the field, and there was scarcely a single ear that was filled to the end. The rest of the field, which was a few square yards over two acres, yielded: a 19 bushels of shelled corn; estimating two bushells of cars to one of grain The ten rows made up exactly one fifth of an acre (32 rods,) and gave only 111 bushels of corn. Every thing else being equal, the difference heincr over "1 bushels to the acre, wa9 clearly due to the absence o ' cultivation, the ground. being baked and dry the greater part of the time ;w tvon I left one strip on the .7JUVs - a. , other side of a field, measuring ex actly an acre, without either cultiva tion or weeding, and it yielded 14 bushels of poor corn, the rest of the field yielding 42 bushels of grain to the acre. In 188D, I Mid an eigli acre field that yielded enougl to pomnletelv fill a 500-bushel erik v ft t, equal to over 30 bushels of shellc corn per acre, on a very poor old hole that was newly broken up, without inn nil re. but was cultivated eight t.impft. w hile mv half of a rented four acre field, worked only twice, amounted to one wagon load of car9 equal to 20 bushels of grain, and this small field was much better soil than the old field. . Mv nmntiee for manv vears has j i . been to work the corn once a week beginning on Monday when the wenlher was suitable, and continue the working as lonsr as a horse can - r c get through the rows without break inthe stalks -and this is usually nntil the ears berin to hans out in rows aud the cultivation has always been on the surface. New York Voice. Experience and Scienee It is interesting to learn how the common experience of farmers is frequently corroborated and justified, by science. It has been a constant habit among farmers to give hard wood ashes with the charcoal in it to the pigs as a useful tonic and aid in feeding. Breeders of swine" have averred that this condiment was a preventative against hog choleraH And now the Wisconsin Experiment Station in a recent bulletin shows, a- the result of careful experiments, that wood ashes are so useful an aid to digestion in pigs as to have re sulted in a saving of 138 pounds of corn out of 626, or about one-fifth. Three lots of pigs were fed at three trials; the average result is given as follows: With corn , alone, 629 pounds of meal made l60 pounds of pork; with ashes given ad libitum, 491 pounds of meal made the , same weight of meat; with bone meal, 487 pounds of corn' meal gave the same result. With the corn-meal alone, the bones were weak, sustaining only 351 pounds without fracture; with ashes the bones bore 581 pounds without breaking; with bone meal, 680 pounds were supported ine Duiietin claims a saving of 28 per cent., but the figures given show a small fraction over 20 per cent umj. me reauns 01 tnc asues are to neutralize acidity in the stomach and to afford necessary potash' and lime, both indispensable for good digestion, and this of course is an antidote against intestinal disorders wnicn encourage cholera. New York Times. Pale But Honest Bulter. Did gilt-edge butter lovers know the true nature of the annotto of commerce, they would change their tastes and be contented with a pale bnt healthy, honest butter. It is a rare exception to find pale bntter from a, Jersey cow. The next hon est, healthy colorer is a liberal sup ply of carrots; one of the; most healthy roots for cow, horse or man, especially our young children,': and one of the most prolific crops in this country. Any cow's butter, will in cline to the desired color if fed liberally on vmrotiiJeneij JJkIletiur. Happy Hooslers Wm.' Timmons, ' Pastmastcr o IdavilleKIndM writes : ' ":Electric Bit ters has done more" for me than all ;anedicine8 combined, , for that 'bad feeling -arising .from Kidney and Jjwet trouble." , John Leslie, farmer and; stockman, of same place, savs Find Electric Bitters to be the best Sidney, and Liver : medicine, made jiib xeei iiKe A new ; man.'. J.. w; Oardnef hardware Jnerchant: same town, says : Electric Bitters is' just thc;thing for a man who is ; all run downnd don't care whether he live? or dieshe fonnd new Btrength, rood appetite and felt just like he had -fa -new lease on me. Only 50c. a bot ict at i. u. juorns jurug Store: The- SoutrTs Shipping Pro- I 1 '--v- . gress. - , t In notfeig the progress of the South attention is chiefly centered on her iron and other manufacturing indus tries. But there is progress : in an other direction whichspeaks quite as much for. the future a the marvel ous progress made in the' develop ment of the South' s material re sources, and in the establishing of j manufacturing enterprises. -A glance' at "the record of our I Southern' ports, which shows.: the progress of. our . ocean - trade, will gentleman showed signs -of iimnis prove a revelation to even the well- takable excitement, pulled the wrong informed reader whose thought has bell-cord and rung up & fare as a sig not been - turned in that ' direction, nal. that he wanted to get off. ." After This is the more encouraging and significant because; in ; the' calcula-in tion&on the South's future progress on industrial lines this was rarely taken into account, the figuring gen- erally.stopping at the seashore, and yet Southern - enterprise is moving quite asrapidly and is making quite as' much of a mark on sea as it is on land, which is saying a good deal. To the Baltimore JfanufnUarerx' Record, which keeps an Argus eye on Southern development and pro-1 gress on lan and seawe are indebted for some interesting facts and figures showing the increase In ' the foreign trade of our Southern ports. It sums up to the value ! of the exports, m twenty Southern' ports in .the past eleven months ending , May 31st, at I $321,179,905, as compared with 53Ui,40i,z ior me corresponaing Ann nnF ' t l 1 . .1 I period of last year. The total ex- ports'of the' whole country amounted to $82(J,823,354 compared with $804- 717,334 for the corresponding eleven months of last year, a gain of$22,- 103,310, $19,728,625 of which was in the South, while the increase, of all the other ports in the United States was only $2,376,685, the increase in the Southern ports being nearly ten times as much as in the others. This phenomenal increase is an index ,of future possibilities when a concerted effort is, made in the direction of de veloping our marine business, which has recently attracted compara tively but little atte1 tion. -The figures above quoted apply only to foreign shipments and not to the coastwise trade which is also as suming uery large proportions. The ports showing the largest gains were Galveston $9,300,000: Charleston' $8,000,000; Newv Port News $3,800,000. Norfolk and Ports mouth $2,200,000, Savannah $2,2Q0,: 000, Wilmington $2,1000. This rapid increase in our shipping trade fa to be attributed to two causes, one the improvement of our harbors, wnich is strikingly illustrat ed in the marvelous increase at Galveston; the other is the rail road combinations between Western, Southwestern and Southern roads, making Southern ports their termini, which is strikingly shown in the in crease at Norfolk and . Portsmouth. Most of these combinations have been effected within the past vear. arid are but the beginning of a traffic system which is going to show as tonishing results in the near: future, when the grain, , cattle, pork, etc. of the great West seek foreign markets through Southern ports instead of through Northern ports as they for merly did. What has been ; here said' refers only to the export business, no note being made of the imports' which must also have made noteworthy in crease. The imports are doubtless small in comparison with ' the ex ports, but tLe time Unot far distant when they will be a "mighty factor too, In these days of thrift, enter prise, business competition, arid nec essarily close calculation, commerce moves on the cheapest, speediest and most practible lines. Every dollar saved on the coast of carriage and of handling of goods enables the competing shipper or merchant to put his goods upon the market that much less and ; gives him jn st 'that much advantage ground in the battle of trade. The Bagacious trader will seek the shortest, quickestjand cheap est route to export or import his goods. The ships' 1 which "carry Southern -and .Western' rro-luetaUo foreign countries back empty but will hiiu Something back in exuh.uaij far wluit laoy 'wuk and thus t!i i :"r.. 4c twk ir w and keep - i-i- ;,!.!.,;, ,.Cc irh the export trado ' From Liverpool to Cincinnati, for instance. bvwav of Wilmirtrtn in about four hundred miles shorter tnan by way of New York, and ? of course, shorter : to ' other Western commercial centers. This- means that when, the 'system ot Western and Southern roads is perfected, as it will be in the near . future for railroad operators -and canitalists are now, and have been "some time, working on that line, and the South has a merchant marine of her own which will", necessarily grow out of these combinations and her increas ing, she is-not only going to become a great commercial section, but that she will wrest the supremacy on the seas from the Northern porta, which in the past have had . almost an ex clusive monopoly of ocean traflic, as far as the ships of 'this country fig ured. That is ; written among the inevitable. . The South 'is moving not only upon. rra firmx but i on the watery plain, and she is going to get there on both.' " " . Satisfied With, His ment." Invest- On the grip of a summer car sat an old gentleman who - looked like Penman - Thompson ' in - "Josh Whit comb.". '. The car ran through a sqalid district where women and, children sprawled " ovef the blistering pave- iment, while puny babies wailed, and helpless mothers tried in .a listless, half - hopeless -way to quiet their cries. ' " , - , Tha train ran' by two 'squares of sweltering miserjv-and then the old the usual exchange' of compliments 9uch cases between the( conductor land the 'passenger, he succeeded in (alighting, and muttered :' "By gosh ! i I'll do it: it won't cost mucfl, and.it ! will do lots of good." , .' v . When he reached the women, they appeared to- be . pleased at what he. suggested ; arid when the next car came along going west, he halted it and loaded evervtmna in eigrut on board for a fresh air trip. ; , 'Arriving at the end pf the road, Mr. Cheeryble, or Uncle Josh, who- ever he was was soon in treaty with a saloon keeper for a bucket of Jem onade. . ! ' ; - v,5 'I Not too . sweet, von know, but wtn ot3 0f jCe x -rne womeQ and children drank it easerlv. and .after enjoying: not cooi breeze, but a less torrid one ' . . than that which rose from the town pavements, Old Beaevolence put ftem on a "car and sent them home. ; How much did all that fun cost?!! Three dollars for car fare and one dollar for lemonade. Oh, a fel low can do. lots with four dollars if he tries."- St. Louis ie'nldu Irish Wit. Some time ago while I was trading in a village store, one of the clerks came to the junior partner, who was waiting on me, and said': ' ' 'Please " step to the desk. . Fat Flynn wants , to settle his bill, and wants a receipt." - , "The merchant was evidently an noyed. '. "Why, what does he want of a re ceipt?" he asked; "we never gi one. . Simply cross his account off the that is receipt enough So I told r. nim,' answered the clerk, "but he is riot satisfied. Yon had better see him." So the proprietor stepped to the desk, and, after greeting Pat with a 'good morning," said : "You want to settle your bill, do you?" Pat replied in the affirmative "Well," said the merchant, "there is no need of my giving you a re ceipt. bee 1 x will cross your ac count off the book;" and suiting. the action to the wdrd, lie drew his pencil diagonally across the account. "That is as good as a receipt." "Uo ye mane tnat settles it?" ex claimed Pat. "lnat settles it. Raid the mer chant. " And ye are shure ye'll never be afther askin' me fur it again?" "We'll never ask you for it agam,5 said the merchant decidedly "Faith, thin," said Pat, "I'll be afther kapin me money in me pocket, for I haven't paid it." ' ; The merchant's face flushed angrily as he retorted : , "Oh, well, I can rub that out !" "Faith, now, and I thought that," said Pat. 5 . S ; , v It is needless to add that Pat got his receipts Exvhamjr. - , Banana Peel on theSiJe- Walk. The street car had passed, but to - catch it he reckoned, . So he ran ltke a . deer, and shouted and beckoned, . " ',v Till he planted his heel. On a 8 moot h bit of peel :" Then he saw half a million of stars - v in a second. Jw He was in too oreAt. a hnrrvr bnt. , 0 j i ter have waited , for ' another car. There'; are cases, however, -where haste is necessary. " If you have night-sweats, feverishness, -weak, sore lungs and a hacking cough, do not lose an. hour in obtaining. a supply of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery. Delay In such cases is dan gerous; it may be latal. . Before the disease has made'too great progress, tue.-vxoiaen meaicai mscovery" is I a certain cure. In fact, it is guaran ieea-10 oeneat or ? care,, or . money Paid for it; promptly refunded. ; ; Two moonshiners were recently killed by "lightning .in Cherokee county. s ' A Hniisp.hnlrl - Rpmprlv. w f FOR ALL T i BLOOD and SlUUZ DISEASES J 5 To) To) . 1 JU I JU CAa"4 raaJ nU U Tfl roe SCROFULA, ULCERS,' SALT UIS3 RHEUM ' Fe7FHA form of malignant SKIN ERUPTION, be- tides being efficacious in toning up the system and restoring the constitution, - when Impaired from any cause. Its almost supernatural healing properties Justify us In guaranteeing a cure, H erections are followed. '. " . OCN I " rltCC "Boek of Vondera." . BL000 BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga. CAUGH1MG AND CRYING. How" These Outwsnl Slffna : T i Sorrow AfTeet Hamnn Katoro. , ; "1 Buppose the most " prominent cause of laughter, " says Dp. William A. Hammond, "is a sudden revo- ution : of ' the eniotions-that is, a change from one emotion to another. esieciairy when the changes re of a pleasant character;: .1 h us; lor insuiiicov when we have- been . reuilinjr some thing rather calculated to'exciti grief . and we come to something of a ritlieu ous character ur teiulency is u taugh, while if wtv had the nclioulous all throngti we pi-obaDiy - won ia oi laugh at all. meiiiwe luugn ai ai temnted wit rather . than at true wit. True wit excites pleasure., but does not produce laughter, as does Durfoonery -W6 laugh at the'antics of aclowu, but not at the sayings of Mohere. , r What is, the inimeuaie cafise oi laughter"- 'It 13 the i-ctjex action excited by the causes I have mentioned acting thrOHglrthe brain r and nervous ays tem 'upon the ,. respiratory- muscles throwing them into, spasmodic action. Ijaughter is a spasm of. the respiratory muscles, accompanied by a relaxtion of Uie muscles of the' face and some . times by the shedding of tears." ' . '.At what ago do people laugh the most? , - I think it is not often the case that adult men " laugh. They smile, but laughing is in greater part confined to women and children. A- mere child laughs readily, anduir elderly person who has long pussed the middle of life 'is very apt to laugh at slight causes. Tins, however: is uangeroua for thei to do, us they may bring on, apoplexy , or drop uoud from some heart disease H -tney muuige ux im moderately. : I have known several instances of deatli being brought On in. this' wiiv by hl tieonle Tliea person of enfet'-blt'd faculties will laugh at ctt Utin tilings ' which',, would not d ciu rihibiljtv with aiuiduH of well or; deitd niimi. . ? A vi-ry curious circum-stancwcojun-eletl with laughter is that, espwjallyv with diiidren, and some- timt's - with , woiutMi and . frequently "With old pHiple. t!ie Risible expression with their- real feolinjr... "They laugh when .Ktu-prised. 1 bad a tient once who ". lauirhra whenever ; he - saw a funeral. I Io mcai.t t cry rather than to laugh. Thr-it was' another i who laughed ininioderateiy whenever-he rejid the obituary columns ok a neWa- iwper. .He said he did so because he felt so sorry. He would laugh from Sve to ten minutes at A time before he could c-optrol himself." - ' ; 'Do not.ijrnorant people laugh more than the educated ?" "Yes; that is because they have not been 'so accustomed " to control their emotions as are people of refined life. alt (he reasons for laughter are most mlricate. I have a patient who laughs over a solemn French book be is read iiig. lie .laughs over it in a most ex citable manner, and what he laughs at I cannot imagine.". -. "What are the facts in regard to weeping?" . ' ' ' , 'yVeepiu" the sbeddingof tears, is rarely indulged in by adult men of good minds for causes of real sorrow. Old ; persons, women and .. children," weep; men of well ordered "minds do not. -Man : does not. weep as a rule under pain; he may groan, but he does not shed" tears, though children and. women will do so often ou slight occasions.' ' - , ;. " : ; ; "What produces weeping?" "Generally 'physical pain. . Adulta do not usually express sympathy for real suffering with tears. ; It is a very curious thing that men. will witness the real suftering' of a poor woman having her leg amputated in a per fectly stoical manner. They go to the theatre, and seeing a girl taking the part of one in distress, shed tears dur ing half jof .the play.' , I have looked upon . many distressing -scenes un moved so far as weeping is concerned, but upon watching acted suffering I have had tears come into my eyes.' A remarkable example of this principle is that of Nana ISahib, the Indian mutineer.- He could never read a pitiful story without crying over it, yet he inflicted the inost horrible tortures on the men and women who fell into hia hands, aiid seemed to enjoy their mis ery." ' V -' :.v-':A ::': 1 - : "At what age do people" weep most readilyf . , ''h The proclivity to shed tears is very well marked in. old people, especially wlien they are suffering from some Drain disease, such as apoplexy, or have suffered from iu NThey weep over trifles,! bad under' my care atone time one of- the most eminent gentle men of bis time, who occupied a post next to the highest under the govern ment, who would cry because his cof- tee was cold, and yet thai man s mind n its best condition., was one of the best this country ever produced. I mve seen ; hmi cry for ten minutes on such occasions. ,: He -; was suffering: from brain disease. . . Some persons can't weep even when they Want to, though the grief of those persons " is very- uistressing, anu, is very apiio produce " serious disturbance 6i , .the nervous system,rVanc when' tears do come it is a great 'relii-f foi' them.'"- "W hat etrect do thess emotions have on people?" .-. . . - " , '1 thiirk that laughter is better for mankind . than weepjhg.fr Jl think those amusements which tend to pro duce laughter tend, other things being' equal, to prolong life, while those cir cumstances that tend to produce weep nig ana emotional distress tend to shorten life." ".What harm might excessive laugh ter cause? - "It might cause death. T "What would be the effect of ex cessive weeping?" ' reople are more apt to die from that than from laughter. Iiaughter kills only as it interferes with the ac tion of the heart, or as. it n'ould re strict the muscles of rcsulation so greatlv that they press upon the large muscles of the neck and cause ano- lexy, whereas weeping produce eart disease ouite often. It is better to laugh tliau to weep, that is certaiB." - v, ft .iungion r-osL , ' " Iilan'y Persons Are broken down from overwork or ltousuhold tares Brown's Iron Bitters IstmiW the syitem, aids digestion, remoyea x y&s of bile, aud cures malaria. Get the genuine North Carolina's Slugger. . Roanoke," July ,6.-Wm,l Lay ton, weller weight, champion of j North Carolina, knocked out Frank Griffiin, welier weight, champion of Southern California, here this morn ing in two rounds for, a - purse of $500, ;: The wen tried ' eacli " others j tc ct.es in the first round ' an i in the 1 second Layton knocked Griffin down three times. The last tiine he lay bleeding like a beef till he was picked up by hia seconds. ' Layton has never oeen knocked out and 1 his backers talk of installing him 'iuraui3t Jack McAuliffe. . . .'..,; a. tcaic, or cluldroiMhat -.vawt L't".ln . ' up, rlinn.d talec - -a. B.(OWS'S IHOJi KITTKKS. - . !-niiiit ui irfkc, I'Uitw Jualinii-. !ivr:se; ua .iiou:ness. M. ouuieruki:'.-! PLAGIARISM. Ihe-Habit f Claiming Other People's literary Work. ' . t. ' The setting up of a claim to the au thorship of "Little Lord Fauntleroy bv a lady whose literary work has never attracted puduc anenuon to ner- sell must awaken mtersi m me puo nomenon of a malady not yet classi fied by the doctors, but familiar to all editors, critics and publishers. ' ; Tk: itfuuiEA ia oViniv tViA nnium curiosities y? SSSgStsWH O LES ALE nacy' with 1 which " it resists, treatment and, in its effects upon the moral char acter of its victims. ',- The characteristic symptom- of the ailment is an irresisti ble disposition to claim to have written other peoplfe'a. literary works. - -. It has never been definitely deter mined whether the disease is infectious or not, but there is a strong suggestion that it is so in - the fact that' even the most robust . moral - health seems to afford no secure : immunity from jits attacks, j s - t --. Let us consider a few tvDical cases. The late Dr. Holland was the instigator of the "Saxe Holm" stories. - They were written by a person qrr persons perfectly well fenown to him. -. rie was coTisulted from time to time concern-,, ing them. : He received them m man uscript, suggested occasional changes, many of which were made, and, as the editor of the magazine in which they f were ; puoiisneu... ne urow cnecss in payment for them. He confidently belie vedT'theref ore,1 that'he knew ho wrote ' the : stories as certainly as he knew who wrote his own poems.' And yet there were three entirely reputable persons, all accounted truthful, each of whom solemnly assured Dr Holland laqU VI (UIOj UA ftAVftd tt a vw wj v ClfV each having a different tale to tell of tne ,wayin whicn .the ; maousenpts were stolen. -. - - ' " ' ' "- Mr. William Cullen Bryant 'once told the present writer that: a -person who was not born until years after th first publication of '4Tbanatopsisu ve hemently claimed the authorship of that poem, and went away indignant wnen Mr. isrvant aeciinea to surren der his own pretensiona in that par ticular.- - The number of ' persons wfio wrote "Beautiful Snow", was estimated by the late Richard Grant White at twenty-four, .-and everybody, remembers howmany different persons produced "AH Quiet Along j the Potomac", and "KockMetoBleepi" . me curiosities or plagiarism are endless, and sometimes startling coin cidences arise in connection with them. The present r writer,:. when editing. a weekly ' periodical many years ago. had offered to him an article which he had himself written and published anonymously in a daily newspaper two years earlier.) The "article was written for a temporary use, and tnere was nothing in it to cause any reader to remember it after the immediate oc casion had passed . away. If v the pla giarist had offered his literary swag to any other editor, his theft would not hare been suspected. His ill luck led him ' to submit his manuscript to the only person in the country who could I r i !,- j i uave Known ii origin, ana reai auiuor ship.- ' :yJ-:.?;- v ; . '. " .-:' A-rural cleirerrman'in New York had the courage upon one occasion to offer a literal transcript of Dickens' "C!hristmas Caror to a New York ed itor for sale, arid .when the: editor objected that the work was : already widely known as Pickens, the clergy man solemnly protested that he could not imagine how the author of "Pick wick" could have got at his maio script, which.had been locked up for years in his parsonage desk. The editor was unable to aid him with any plausible conjecture. -'..",-'-'--... . : Some years ago a student in the Uni versity of California" made a col lec tion of the - best - colle&re - magazine poems he could find, and among the pieces was one of unusual quality, whose author had fcen much admired throughout the college world for his remarkable production. A newspaper critic presently discovered that Alfred Tennyson had shamelessly stolen the poem and published it as his own many years - before its actual author had ceased to wear bibs at dinner. . . -In the" year -1873 or 1874 a woman. committed suicide in Milwaukee who had attracted a good deal of attention tnere as ueorge miow ene. bad ex plained to those who interested them selves in her literary career that her latest s story. "John Andross." then running as a serial: was written under the pseudonym of- Rebecca- Harding Davii Yet the'editdr of the periodical ! 1 ' 1 : , r , i , i in wnicn me story was puDiisnea naa been all the while cavina- a Philadel phia lady for the installments, under the impression that she was Mrs. Re becca Hardiinr Davis, and that the story was really her work and not Georee , Eliot's at alL .New York World. - - - Death-la m Letter.1 -. Just a little while ago an occurrence took place' .oh the other side of the ocean which, - while by no means without a" parallel, is still ' a matter that will interest all fond of studying, in an' ahiateur way, the transmission of disease. A poor fellow died in Lou- uon- oi lypuoiu : iever, -anu nis wue sent to . a - friend, jn- Glasgow a lettei conveyinff the news of his decease. While the fever at the time was very prevalent in the neighborhood ; where the London victim died, : there was no. sign of it in Glasgow then, but three days after the receipt of the letter the Glasgow friend grew sick with all the typhoid symptoms. The doctors who attended him sodiasrnosed the case. and expressed the opinion that, not withstanding the - Ion? journey be tween London and Glasgow, the letter bad carried tne germs of tne disease. New York Press. Miss De Gold Ma, that man in the upper left hand box is a brute. He has been ogling tne all the evening. Mother That is young Mr. McCash, whose. uUcladied and left him one hundred thousand last month. He is looking for a wife, they say, and Miss JDe Gold Me is a nice looking gentleman, anyhow. ; Can't we put him os our list, maJ Drake's Maga tine. - ' - . Secretary Rusk is above medium height, with long hair, and longer Deara. , - co:::u:.:?tic:j cou::icrcold DRONCHITIS Threat Affectlcn SCROFULA - yasting cf Flesh Or any ZHmtm teher th Throat and Zunga r Xnflatne&f Zacfe of Strength or ervt Tower, you cam bo relieved and Cured bp :pure cod liver oil ? - ; With Hypophosphltes. PALATACLC AS MILK, Athfor Scott't Emulrion, mnd 1st m esc-. ' ptanation ' or oolieilatlon . induce ' you to meetpt a oubttitute, , . ' v fc) AC DEALERS I ti Heavy Groceries, pi fill D fid TTC A I '; f LU U II MllU 'lilbllLl Remember we buv all of our. heavy CAR LO AD LOTS and will not be undersold.;- ; - '' We are the mannfactureru' agents BUILDING ' -i - - " we-are also agents for the following standard brands of Uuano : "Owl Brand." "National." "ChesaDeake." Bull," "Empire," "Dissolved Bone and "Piedmont," all of which will be Remember, our place of business Warehouse. Give us a' call hear our prices v - r- ' ' " - Beat the world on goxid MEAL, MEAT, FLOUR, MOLASSES, SALT, KEROS ENE OIL. CORN, &c, in CAE-load lots," direct from the Factory, thus knocking the Qoffee : ; Siigar, r .Etc, " -"r:;'"7 " Wxer between- Atlanta and, New York sumers. . -"?v- and We don't intend to be downed in anvthing in the Grocery line. Asheville. to Morrist.wn. Tenn. "Are tept in large quantities, and will be sold as low as the lowest. Thejarger quantities' of gpods handled, the cheaper we can buy ; th'eraget freights cheaper, and we can afford to sell them cheaper. So -don't be deceived, but come and see for yourselves.. We mean business.-- TTaiTToar.Friend8wa?:?'.i';' TH E SOUTH BO STON Sash,: -Blinds, Doors, Brackets, Mquld- mgsf -V; indow! - Our Lujiiber is thoroughly , iried in a i STURTEYANTiViTENT DRY KlLiN..- Remember that .ire our agents t FACTORY Write them. i"ri Rox'ioro, and will furnish you anything in the above list i'ltlCES, I Priie List and Estimates furnished by 'them AND R ETA I L w FEED STUFFS. Sc goods in - .- for MATERIAL; i " i. r" ' ' : "Anchor Brand " -B. B. B " "Durham phosphate", for corn "line Island. sold at the lowest prices. , ' -' V is next door to Farmers' -Alliance and be convinced. -J: 'X; ' L''', Very trulr Your 1 FriendsVrf V i .passBros . ' ' i Goods and Low Prices. e?; ; - TCbabpO; EtO; .: ; : M .and Door Frames 1: 1 -- . ; -f:: V -'AND jy i ) L w vJ p ..; ; ; ; - -' ',- i , gj,T-ri "" '-' l0rtween yvasnington and rew Orleans via ""'K-'fiSJ" "" v ' .' ' T5? 1 Monte- merv. Richmond and Greensboro Lynchburg & Durham ft. IN EFFECT JULY I , l Hnf" MAIL AND EXPRESS DAILT. . Tfl BOOM ,,f"'S:iLl,'nch,n.r'f.' j2th l. . . B: 40 o clock a. m lurmid ! '. South Uosl.)n.4:8U; DenauJ Koxboro. W-.ki Helen",' Uh'li h itTH BuUItB. Leave hnrbam. 8S0 1 m i,ymioer.i:48; Helena? A-! Uoboro. 1 55; Woodsilalo. & 1 1,' Brookneal,7:l(l; DurmA, ' local freight, evkbt- say except BUHDAT.-. south BOCt. Leave I-ynchlmrir. vjak . . k 79 O'clock A. M." f,,rm" 7 ' ' llMi. 8o7uh Boston V'SV , - . aatassrr" worth BoUno. Leave f)nrhnm. (fcio a u ' - ' - "-ynioTer, 7:29 Helena. 7 ir r - Itnxoar. ftM; WomtadaleJt-il: DenniBlon Jnnc. l(h(K); Boiith - 11:45; lro.,kneal. 1:68; arrive M Ljnebbnrg, 12ilisl., 4:S0. i mixed, dailt.: ' " - SOUTH BOUMD.T.T. Ly nrlilmrir, 80 s . . Diirmid, 838; South Hoton (H)2; lennston,6 27; Woh. '-r' rta.e. tl U; Roslmro, 7 (tt; - " ' Helen, J 20; arrive Dur- - 1 , hum. 8 80. - r.. worth nonxD. Ly. Dnrham, 8 00 a m., II.--:.'. "' ' 'en. 67; Koxlioro, 7 17; , WofxlH. ale,788;Tenijlfiii, . 7 Sonth Ilosbin, 8 12; ljurmlrt, 10 5U;arrWLy -h- - , ' bnrg, 11 UU . . No, 1 connecrs at Dnrmlil i-iih Vn n v.. .IIUIAIIU tMTIBltlU.' W C HOTJ3TOJ'Jr K. C. 8TANAUD, ;i- Acting Superintendent 1'reaiileut. RICHMND & DANVILLE R. R. - CONDENSED sen cnm n IGorrected to May 3Vt 1891. ! DAILY. Southbound, J mu 9. J o. 11. Lv Richmond . 3 Ow p m 8 12 p m 10 20 p m 2 57 p m 4 43 pro 6 10 p m 7 30 pm 1000 p m 9 2 55 a m 8 00 a in ' 10 19 a m t8 80 p m U 50 p in 1 30 a in 3 32 a in 8 00 a in 7 25 a m '10 28 a in 12 02 p in 12 10 a m 1 85 p m 4 43 p m 6 05 p in 12 30 p in 1 55 p in 5 40 p in 910pm u Daoville Xi trreensboro Lv Gold8boro ' Ar Raleigli Lv Raleigh -rtv Dnrham r Ureenslioro Lv Vt'iiistbn-Salem f8 30 p m .V Greensboro 10 30 p m Ar Salisbury i 12 20 a m Lv Salisbury' 1 at Charlotte 12 30 am 2 10 am 5 32 a m t6 47 a m .1 15 p m' v .O2 20am' - ao a m 10 20 am, " Spartanburg Greenville . " AtlanU Lv Charlotte i " Ar Colombia Ar Angu8ta 4 DAILY. . I rvm i Tmi mm r i ' o. 10 no. 12 .87 00pm 0 10 45 am 1100 am , ' 2 00pm 4 00 a m . 6 30 p m . 7 00pm 8 10 a m 5 10am 6 40 pin 6 52am 8 35pm v?7 00 am ,. 8 45pnr ' 8 44 am:.:; 0 80 p m Lv aurusu Lv Columbia ":; at Charlotte , Lv Atlanta -Ar Charlotte ' At Salisbury - ll.v Salbbnrv Ar Greensboro Ar Winston-Salem -11 83 am LV Greensboro - 10 30 a iri fig 10 a m 12 10 a m Ar Durham , ' ar Raligb 'M 12 33 p m ' 4 35 a in 129pm . 715am 184 pm 8 45 a m Lv Raleigh Ar Goldsbora 8 10 p m 12 20 p in Lv Greensboro 8 52 a m 10 40 p m 12 20 am 7 00 a in Ar Danville , 10 40 a m Ar Klchmond - 410pm Daily exoi pt Sunday.. Daily. W ashineton and Southwestern VpKtihnlwl Llmi ed operated between WashiDtrton nn i Atlan daily, leaves Washington 8 40 p m, Danville 8 45 a m., Greensboro 10 a m., balisbury 6 34 a Charlotte 7 65 a m., arrives Atlnnta 225 p m. , Retnrniiig, leave Atlanta 13 25 pm.i Charlotte 9 20 Dm.. Salisbury 10 32 p m., Greensboro 12 03 a m a rives DanvUli-Jl 30 a m., Lynchburg 335 a m arriveWashingtori 8 38 A m. No. 9, leaviniT' Goldsboio 2 67 n m and Raleigh 6 10 p m daily, makes connections at Durham with no. 40: leavins at 7 30 n m daily except Sunday, for Oxford, Hender son and a'l points on O. & H- O & ).. nd B. & M. roads. . - : : U 08. 9 and 10 connect "at Richmond from and to West Point and .Baltimore daily except Suoday. c V ; SLEEPING-CAR SERVICE. On Trams 9 artd lO, . Pullman Bnflet Monte Raleigh aud Greensboro, and bet ween Wash ington And ; Augusta, and "Pullman Buffet Sleepers between Washington and Asheville and Hot Springs. v ' j '. --: SOL HAAS, ; .TAS. C T YI O.R Traffic Manager. . Gen. Pass. 4gent. W. A- TORKj Division Pass. Agent, -.-v :-- Ealeigh. N. C. . ATLV TIC & VILLfi ft. R -Oo- ' SCHEDULE IN KFTECT MAY 11, 1891. BOONUEAST. ' STATIONS. i.vi Danville " Blanche Miltori Seniors Na2.. No: 4. 2 45pm S 10 829 3 49 4 02 4 26 441 5 41 '7 45 y, : 810AM ; 8 68:V . . Cuningham y ; Harmenj - , Dentiiston r Mayo ' Clarksville h " Lawrencevi'ild 9 10 : . 9 40 ' ' 9 50 - 10 52 1 16 pm -5 807 f j An Portsmouth ' BOUND WEST. STATIONS. f N. 1.; N- 8 Lv Portsmouth- " 10 00 am, 8 00 pm Lawrenceville : , 8 14pm 1 80 am ' " Clarksville . 4 22 ' , ' ' ' Unjo ' 6 21 r ' Denniutop , 6 82 X " Harmony , - 5;7 Cuninghams . 6 01 . - ' Seroora 616 Milton - - 684 K -" Blanche ' ; 6 46' Ar. Danville ' '7 10 ; ' -' 1iwe opnm-ctiou will be mad at Ports mouth with the New York, Philadelphia & Nfollt: Bail way, (Oarje Charl Route), and Baltimore steamers, for, a11 points North anj at Danville," with the Jlichmond A Danville RaiWayj tor all point North r South. , ' . . Alfred P Thobn, ' - . . Char. II. Cromwell, ' '. ; Receiv.ere. ' . .;' - . 0.' M. ITijoiiks,-' . . ' General Superintendent.
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 16, 1891, edition 1
4
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