Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / Nov. 10, 1892, edition 1 / Page 1
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TJtie Courier is published in the oentre: of a flne tobacco growing section, making, it one of the beat advertising mediums for merchants and warehousemen in tin adjoining counties. Circulates largely in Person, Granville, Durham ami Caswell counties, in North j.Car rIina, and Halifax county, Virginia. Advertising rates reasonable ; terms made known on application. KOFESSIONAL pArDS II. LUNSFORD, 1 . Attorney at Law, t- . Boxboro, N, C. . . . . . t . ERR ITT & BRYANT, Attorneys at Law, ROXBORO, N. C. Practice in the several Courts ot the State Special alter tion Riven to case in Tertton, iirham and cnawell counties. All Legal Business entrusted to our care will ecelve prompt attention. . v KITCH1N, Attorney at Law; Roxboro, N. U. fru'.ttces wherever his set rices arc requlrod. office at Winsteart 'llotei. " w INSTEAD PROOKSr Attorneys at Law, Roxboro, N. C. fraoi, -o wherever their services urc roq'ilrr-d. I'rompt attention given lo the eullcciion ol aims. W. GRAHAM, Attorney at Law, Oxford. N. C. raiuces in all tho courts of the Stale, llnn-lt- money and invest the same in host lut Mort-,-age uenl Kstatc Security. Settlo estates and vesugate titles. Strnyliorn . ixford, N. M. Warllck. Milton, N. C :TKAJ0RN & WARLICK Attorneys at Law, dice in all the courts of the State and in 'cdcral courts. Management of ('.states jtliy attended to. oecial attention given to cases in Person and ive'l counties. Dr. E. J. Tucker, SURGEON DENTIST. Office up stairs in W. J. Johnson & o' new building, BOXBORO. N. C. QR. LOUIS F. HIGH, Physician and Seigeon, Woodburn. N. C. Special attention given to tbe treatment of Chronic Diseases. Teiieprapn omce, Caningtiara, N. C. It. A. nOUTON, Practicing Physician, Roxboro, N. C. tilers his professional services to the people I uoxuoro ana siirroirnaing country, t-racuc d all the branches of medicine. ItM-ly W. B. CRISP, Practicing Phjiclan, Roxboro, N. C. odei nis professional services to tbe people of itntiMro a ai surrounding community. IV4 A. WISE, Practicing Physician, Roxboro, N. C. ortcis his professional services to the people ol lloxboro and surrounding: community. Kesi lenco on corner of Morgan street and Reams venue. ZLTOTIOIE! oo Having returned to Roxboro, again offer my professional services to the citizens of the the town and surrounding country. W. M. Terrell, M. D. THE DRUMMER8' HOME, Hotel French. Main Street, South Boston, Va. lias been put in first class order and thor oughly renovated. Convenient to all depots and business portions 01 tne town, barge ana well-lighted sample rooms. Also a good Poo room attached. J. B. FRENCH, Prop. Roberto. Terry. Hatager. EF"Lock Box 8U 9 1 12 TWO BIG STORES. Oxford Durham. A. M A X, OXFORD, and DURHAM, N. ( MY MOTTO Is to sell down my immense stock can buy them at your own pricelat wholesale or retail. Do not miss the opportunity. While the Cake is Hot. Two large stores of general mer chandisecomplete in every depart ment which I will sell 50 per cent less than you can buy them where else. aiv JIU OL'V-ICVXLi. Hemdon Block. No. 2. College Street Durham Store, Cooper's Building, Main Street op posite Post Office. Wyatt's old stand. Adolph Max. Notice. Havinrthls Kevt. 3rd. 189 analifled aa ad- ministratorof tbe estate ol tbe late M-. Allen, I hereby rnotify all persona haying- ai as again., wiupiu.ie, w present raemw me wiui.n twelve moniD8 irom mis date, xoosa owinc "?W"'-'2S" mkeearlreettlement. xois oepb ra, ima. v , 11. aliiIH, w. .Kiichta7Vtif! 'i!LAJlf NOTICE I ! , ;v,.v r i iu ..il . i i 1 1 1.. . ... 1 - -.'" ' ' - Z&??J lunnon tools etc. . . . .. "neat, oata. tobacco, horses, wnarons. Ella fSGW'tf Oct. 4th, 1892.' - Kipans Tabules cure h'ver troubles. ipans xabules purify the blood. NOELL BROS, Proprietors. Vol; ix. r ISRAEL RETURNING. More Jaws Now In Palestine Than Returned From Babylonian Captivity. There are now over 100,000 Jews in the Holy Land. The Jewish popu lation there at present is larger than it has been at any other time since the end of the first century of the Christian era. Nearly four-fifths of them all have gone hither from other countries within the past few years, and they have been going thither this year more steadily than ever before. In former times only a small number of Jews were permitted to live in the country; but the re strictions upon their settlement in it and upon their ownership of land have been removed, and thev are now at liberty to repeople it and take possession of it. The number of Jews who have returned to Pales tine during the dozen years they have been free to enter has been greater than the number who returned after the Babylonian captivity twenty four centuries ago. In the city of Jerusalem itself, ac- cording to a report of the British Consul there, the Jewish population is now fully 40,000, and a larger part of the real estate in and around the city is in Jewish hands. The num ber of synagogues, schools of learn ing, hospitals and other public insti tutions is constantly increasing; the water suoply has been improved; new streets have been opened beyond the walls; telegraphs and electric lights have been introduced; several lactones have been set up, and the new. railway to Jaffa has already stimulated the activity of the population in various ways. "Pales tine will soon be ready for the Jewish race," says the Rev. Dr. Kelt, of the Episcopal Church oi Jerusalem, in a letter to the :London Times. The reports from the northern parts ot Palestine are favorable. There is activity at Acre and along the route to Damascus. The wheat raisers there are rejoicing in the pros pects of finding markets for their crops; so are the raisers of olives and other fruits. The soil in that region is well adapted to the growth of cot ton. A number of important public works have been undertaken in various parts of the country between the river Jordan and the Mediter ranean; and we hear of yet other projects in which the Hebrew caDi talists of England and France are prepared to invest money that may be needed. It will undoubtedly take a long time to regenerate Palestine; but we infer from the news received from Jerusalem that the work of regener ation has been begun. It must take a good many years to give the pre domiance to the Jewish element in Palestine, but if the number of Jews there should increase for the next ten years at the rate at which it has increased during the past ten years, the Jewish population in the Holy Land will run over a million very soon after the opening of the Twen tieth century. The shutting out from this coun try of the Jewish as well as the other European immigrants has already had an influence upon the Palestinian movement A SKfcLETON STORY. Dr. W. S. Howell, brother of the editor of the Vienna Progress, had a skeleton in a box. One day he pull ed out the ugly, ghastly, grinning skull and began to handle it. Fin J he decided that he wanted that skuu opened so inai ne coma stuay the inside structure. There being several seams in the skull he decided to fill the skull with peas and soak them in water, thinking that they would force the seams apart. - He asked the editor to help him. and the latter poured peas and water into the hollow bone and corked ud rrom i running out. Sometime after the editor was startled to see that the'-peas had sprouted in the skull and the vines were of most wonder ful growth. Out of the whole where the backbone is joined to the. neck an army of little veins had grown, and by some unknown instinctive power they had twined in and through all the bones of that body. The young tendrils hjd wrapped around the stovepipe and table legs and the Whole SKeietOU had been t r - . reared Upward ltt thO middle of the tt. it, Ba i ryuui. i'iuuhw uudwuo ouh cvoo . annY! ,, i viucd ns omDuiiujjiu, jiu ww- tered around and -upon the presses1, iBianuo auu -niuico, nun uuui souu . J J9W , wpg; , Ppd , of a 1 m m II .1 i j i amaii ntrn . r.n. ercracL conntemara - Aot th lafgene,ri lt is rumbred that I WilCU Idle nutvi ucucm tucoo uuiuga I i iv. nA;im UnhA i h?left otM ;pflc,e ibr. aeX window route, ana ine s&eieroa is nun la fall ! editorial control.--Chicago News. . . ON' Roxboko, North Cakolina, MELANGE OF DOTS. It is: said that knowledge is for for the sake of man, and not man the sake of knowledge. It is said that the greatest work has always gone hand in hand with the most fervent moral purpose. It is said that the past is associ ated with the present. To learn from the past is the wisdom of the present. It is said that a man can take one or two interests in life, and so give himself up to them that all the greater truths of life are entirely un heeded by him. It is said that any man who sacri fices the best part of his - nature to the worst is a loser ever)' day, even if he gets twenty per cent, interest on hi 8 money. It is said that the sweetest music is not in the oratoris, but in the hu man voice when it speaks in tones of tenderness, truth or courage. It is said that every day is a little life, and our whole is but a day re- Peatea' 1 aose' ereiore, mm aare i 1 m it e - t i i lose a aay are aangerousiy proaigai It it said that it is more often nec essary to conceal contempt than re sentment, the former being never for given, but the latter being somtiraes forgot. It is said that suffering becomes beautiful when any one bears great calamities with cheerfulness, not through insensibility, but through greatness of mind. - It is said that nothing is so great an enemy to tranquility and a con tended spirit as the amazement and confusion of unreadiness and incon- sideration. It is said that life is so complica ted a game that the devices of skill are liable to be defeated at every turn by air-blown chances incalcula ble as the descent of thistledown. It is said that no man is born into this world whose work is not born with him; there is always work, and tools to work withal, for those who will; and blessed are the heavy hands of toil. It is said that tne good is one thing, the pleasant another, these two. having different objects, chain a man. It is well with him who clings to the good; he who chooses the pleasant misses his end. It is said that, it is not a thing di vine to nave a smile wlncn, none know how, has the power to lighten the weight of that enormous chain which all the living in common drag behind them. It is said that there are lour reas ons for being a total abstainer, the head is clear, the health is better, the heart is lighter and the purse is heaver. It is said that wind and wave are always in favor of the best sailor. It is said that nature can only be controlled by being obeyed. It is said that the nearer we ap proach great men, the clearer we see they are men. It is said that he that refuseth to buy good counsel cheap, will gener ally buy repentance dear. It is said that the gem cannot be polished without friction, or man perfected without adversity. It is said that he who does not ap preciate is he who generally consid ers himself unappreciated. It is said that the biting sarcasm and the cutting ridicule that give amusement to the unthinking and ill-disposed by their keen edge cut at the root of many an innocent per son's happiness. It is said that man worships suc cess, but tmnKS too uttie oi tne means by which it is obtained; what days and nights of watching and weariness ; how, after years, he has dragged on and seen the end afar off, all that counts for litttle if the long struggle does not close in victory, Philander. THE AUTHOR WAITED IN VAIN. Colonel John Hay tells an inter eating story tnat ne voucne lor as true. It is' well known that great publishing houses accumulate manu scripts for future use and file tbem away in vaults until needed. A friend of the Colonel's wrote a story called "The Brazen Android," locating the scene of the story in England in the tinfe of Roger Bacon The author's name was William D Lruonnor, wno ror- years uvea , in Washington. r The story was a long one and ran through three numbers of the magazine when published in 1891. The singular part of the inci dent is thatTthe; story t was " written and acepted by the Atlantic Monthly in 1861 and ; paid , for . month after month , and year after year. Mr. O'Connor watched the magazine: for the publication of , his , story, and it finally ' did- appear within ; a short time after his death,' more than thirty rears after it was accepted. Wash Ington IPost.' V 1 1 ft . i - rvv HOME FIRST: ACnOAD NEXT. TALKED 1,000 MILES. The Mayors of flew York ana Chicago , Con verse Over a Telephone, v New York, : Oct. 18. Mayor Grant, of New York,- sat in: an office in this city today and talked to May or Washburne in his office in Chicago: The conversation wascarried on over the longest telephone line in the world. - - Th8 American Telephone Compa ny has just finished this long dis tance telephone, and this was the opening. The line is 1,000 miles long. The conversation was carried on in an ordinary tone of voice, and the gentlemen could -hear each other plainly Mayor Grant congratula ted Mayor Washburne on the pros pects of the World's Fair, and said he regretted he could not be on hand himself. The Mayor of Chicago ans wered pleasantly. The conception of a long distance wire between Chicago and New York was that of E. J. Hall, Vice- President and General Manager of the American Telephone and Tele graph Company. Mr. Hall has had that idea in view for fourteen years, ana nas worked at it nearly six years. 1 he hrst long distance com munication was effected between New York and Philadelphia in 1885. It was shortly after extended to New England States, and then to Albany and Buffalo. The next step was the construction of the line between Chicago and Milwaukee. The work of extension was then carried east through Eastern Pennsylvania, and a line was built from Buffalo by way of Erie to Pittsburg. The extension to Chicago followed. The difficulty of securing good telephone service, it was found, increased greatly when the distance exceeds 200 miles, but Mr. Hall obviated the difficulties by using the best materials, and also by using the metallic instead of the earth circuit. . The wires are strung just balancing each other, and at in tervals of 1,300 feet they cross so as to prevent noise: The line between Chicago and New York has such im portant places on the route as New ark, Harrisburg, Reading, Pittsburg, Cleveland, Toledo and Detroit, through some misunderstanding, is not yet connected. DINNERS MUST BE MORE PLAIN. Phisiological facts, no more than ilbred people ought to be admitted into good society. There is one, however, that is of concern, seems to demand an important change in a long established precedent. The stomach of civilized man has shrunk to such an extent it appears some thing will haveto be dropped from the menu. When meals were occa sional, as now among savages, the elasticity of the stomach was capa ble of great deeds. In the days of ghtmg and knight errantry food was as precarious as now on tne plains, and this created the stomach of the valiant trencher man on whose capacity the present orderly, se quence of dinner was founded. The passing away of the three and four bottled men has been remarked with the growth of the temperance movement and popularly ascribed to it. It is only recently that a side ight has been thrown-upon the real cause of their effacement. This is the insufficiency of what has come to be known as the tank. For a long time dinners of state. have facetious- y been held to be periods of gloom. t was the true word spoken in jest t is now frankly admitted that the modern stomach is unable to wrestle with the procession ot dishes at din' ner. New York Evening Suh WHY SHE WAS THANKFUL. A story appropriated to the occa sion is told of the family whose cus torn was to expect' from each indi vidual member tl an, expression of some definite blessings each : had to be thankful for. As the turkey was carved into sections each, beginning with the oldest, expressed his or her dearest blessings. Finally it was the turn of the youngest member to tell her reason for being thankfal. She was five years old. . She had not considered the subject, and she was interested in the carving. ,- She .was pressed for an , idea, and when it was to the main , point.. All :in a breath she '' exclaimed, "Oh,' Pin thankful weVe got. a turkey. an4. give me lots of 8taffin papat'! ; - That's the;way with all of us we are thankful for a turkey and we wants "lots of stuffin.' -i " -v IT WAS ALWAYS ONE WAT. "I want you to understand" said the red-nose man, f that I am one of those persons who can ' drink when they want to and 'let it, alone when they want to." . . U 4 - '"But you are always drunk." 1 v u : "That's because I have never yet wanted to let it alone' - T"tr No. 13 " iff T rul ,nt a f liuvroit ail v ac biittiur rur iiitr T--&vt ; :. . I Shereas the-early days . of V ' J -' .y rJ - ' 1 - 4 y-frij-- ...4. - I Lincoln 8 time in Illinois a curious character who presided at the bar. His name I have forgotten, but I re- member my father's characterizing in a certain case in which this per- son acted as . counsel for the plaintiff, a five dollar note 'had been stolen. : "-at , TWfact was, proved beyond ques- tion. f lhe point at issue finally was . - one of grand or petit larceny. The counsel for the defendant made the , . ingenious plea that the bi was an Indiana bill and worth f4.ya, ana therefore was below the limit of petitWeny, Aye - dollars being that n,u ' -r:1. llUllb. The jury seemed quite impressed by the argument, when, the counsel 1 for the Dlaintiff arose and in the pe- culiar drawl and nasal intonation . , ... , , - , . , characteristic of his speech said: Gentlemen of the jury, if any one I of you was to take that Indiany five dollar bill to market, there's not a butcher there M would nV be gld to take it at pa-a-ar. If you were to go to any of the stores on the square here, they'd be willing and more'n willing to take it at pa-a-ar, but this mean, confounded anpk couldn't afford to steal it at pa-a-ar." The jury rendered a verdict of "guilty of grand larceny." Sophie B. Herrick in Century. I A TOAST TO GEORGIA. Alexander H. Stephens used to I recite a speech made at a dinner in Washington whereat were gentle- men from several states amono- them men irom several states, among tnem a Georgian not accustomed to such occasions. He had already become embarrassed by listening to the toasts humorously, is more than a valuable , mi,mf f ,u accomplishment it is a positive boon m compliment of other states, and md parente ought to the graceful responses made by a regard humor developing more than citizen of each, and when Georgia they do in the training Tor their chil was announced, vexed that nobody dren. When Charles Dickens created was there more competent to do Mark Tupley he conferred a dlsnct justice to theme, he rose with a feel- ing niucn like anger and shouted : I "G entlemen, dod fetch it all 1 1 can't make a speech; but that ain't goin to hender me from drinkn' to the state o Georgia. I'll do it and J '11 do it free. Here's to her ! She I comes from nobody, she ain't be-1 . . , , , , . no aenon noooay. ana you oetter believe she don't care a continental cent for nobody 1" Col. R. M. John in Century. ; A SAFE INVESTMENT. Is one which Is guaranteed to i I bring you satisfactory results, or case of failure a return of purchase I helost aja opportunity for a success price. On this safe plan you can 1 fuj speculation, he says: "They were buy from our advertised Druggist a bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery , x. ti . , for Consumption. It is guaranteed to bring relief in every case, when used for an affection of Throat, Lungs or Chest, such as Consump- tion. Inflammation of Lungs, Bron- venTgol rid ofte a nun chitis, Asthma, Whooping Cough, her of the bills and made about Croup, etc., etc. It is pleasant and thirty-two dollars out of the transac- agreeable to taste, perfectly safe, , , , . i j andean always be depended upon. Trial bottles free at J. De Morris Drugstore. TWO HEADS, BUT ONLY ONE FARE. The famous two headed boy has nnnnna exoeriences outside the UUA.VMU V .MW museum as well as in it. When he was traveling from Phil- ad elphia to Chicago with his father! and manager, the conductor, seeing two heads and receiving but. one . , , , A, 6 , . ticket, asked for another. The fa- ther, who does not speak English well,' said: ' ' 2jone ji The conductor insisted, and finally threatened to put one of the boys off unless he received another fare. N iiiereupuu tue uiauager, nuu no rm iu U ?n the Wftxt seat eniovinor . the ioke.l little fellows coat remarking : "All right, pnt him off. Which one shall it he?" The conductor passed onBos. ton Herald. .. JHERIT WINS. We desire to say to .our . citizens, that for years we have been, selling Tlr; Kinir'a New Discovers for Con- Bitters, and have never handled rem euies that' sell as well, or that have given 0 such t bnlyers satisfaction, We do not, hesitate to cmaranteel . j lu -t-i.-- factory results do, not follow ' their use.'r These remedies have won their rreat DODnlaritVureiv o f. t ri iditwlif.fe l"- "'.ir?"""lu?mm '--.. ' : . U - - xne worsi ensmy-or : tnenuman race is the person who? tells you joa oojut to snow IV . - - COUR $ 1 .00 Soma Common KxumuIam. Jen use iew aaiecuves as a nuo iT5 m , ' "" while women of all ages employ a great many with which to weaken their speech. Ladies are also lavish yeroe, wxuen is tne latest and so, which I 'promptly' forgot" (that style) is much in vogue, and I'1 lawfully." "Very pleased" is also the new thine: now. and the cid faned "very much pteased" has Quite crone our. "Dirfirt.lv vnn W f came," which has no excuse in grammatical construction, is also in style, and it is considered bad form cdU it The last two aro of course direct importations from the British isles, and therefore desirable. " "Quite'.' in, its perverted meaning of. ."rafter" .is no "longer 'camcL-f i j a ' mil. x il dodded Improvement. "Quiteapleas- ant evening," that mawkish form of expressing enjoyment, nobody with Pretensions would dare to be nearu uraermg nowadays, wnue 441f arrQin tZZ . plete recovery, is in common use. Dreadful and splendid, preceded by perrecuy, are out or iavor, ana tnat KT leA, tfilSodS? to very young girls and idiots. "Rare (for rarely) good sport" is heard commonly now, ana "rum go" but the last is pure slang and I am not venturing within that sacred sty. Chicago Post The Cultivation of Honor. "After considerable effort," says a man and fathftr. "I t.hiriTr T bavfl nml- tivated a sense of humor in mv young son. He did not possess it naturally, but I have taken home and had him read the humorous papers and peri odicals, have told him fnirnv Rfcnrtas that I would hear and made Hm see the funny side of things whenever possible. And now I notice that he fmjoy8 a joke "J? 8668 1316 Vhlt wiih . vjarhift a short time ago." To take life not flippantly, but whioh to be "cheerful under depressing circximstances" Is the one ftat is akin to the habit of finding a JJ to a2alr8 of ere is a wMe difference between humor and frivolity; when we have found the difference we cannot have x, lar qo women neea tne leavenoi a yous spirit many are prone to seriousness, which often becomes absolute and pervading gloom. New I York Times. A Loat Opportunity. Deputy Marshal Chase, of the Portland police, has a collection of confederate bills, which he has had sjnee his company left the front at tne close ox tne war. m xeinng now being handed out to us all in tmUm- nnumoers. aiewoi mem just to send home as mementos, we to Petersburg the bankers there were offering 20 or 25 per cent for these Mils. They thought that later onjhey would taon. i migm nave maae consiaera- bly more if I only had taken more of 3 t. that the bankers anything out of their bargain. " liangor UommerdaL How Cheap Fans Are Fainted. The cheaper fans are painted by wholesale. A long strip of silk, or other material, is tacked to a board. many fans are outlined upon it, and I . . v,"T" r T IdtHtio. . T.w,nia ir. nn the whole set. Such fans cost only a few francs each. They serve to aid the flirtetio of pretty French shopgirls or to tickle the peasant in the rjrovinces. Flower fans of the more expensive kind have found little or no sale nere, ana are not lmporcea mncn. Many of the cheaper fans, ranging as five or six dollars each, are ornamented with painted flowers, the work of unknown artists. New VnV Onn I muu. Ingenious. An ingenious individual has hit &Ba whereby he expects jniake a large fortune. He will Bdvertise largely: , 1 "For half a crown I will divulge a .!1 whereby halfpenny postage Btamps can be made to do the work of penny ones.1 A would be jnillionaire wrote, him on the subject. He got for an answer, Be two of them." London Lettef. was Why He Set a Time. Little Georee (to account collector) Father isn't in, but he told me to - 1 Gteorce No. 6ir. He'll be : out th-that's why he told me to tell you to cau tnen.-cnanga. . , ; ; The Woman's Journal corrects a statement to the effect that this fall will witness women voting for Presi- time. , Women not only voted for the first three Presidents '.of this they voted in l-New Jer- is - 1 aeT.-C-A majoritrof the"; Jerseywo- min wereFederali8ts.howeverndit - is said their votes camea tn otaie for John Adams against Thomas a I Jefferson. So when the Jeffersonians r ..mi eot possession Of the Jersey legisla- 'Soitjt 19 TV. J. . - " 2R. Per Year in Advance. MERCURIAL 1 Mr. J. C Jones, of Fulton, Ark, says of i I "About ten years ago I oon- traded a severe case of blood poison. Leading physicians prescribed medicine after medicine, which X took without any relief, v I also tried mercu rial and potash remedies, with unsuo- RIIEUHATISW Oessful results, but which brought on an attack of mercurial rheumatism that made my life one of agony. After suf ering four years I gave up all remedies and commenced using 8. 8. 8. After taking several bottles, I was entirely cured and able to resume work. .- I, . t I Is the greatest medicine for 1 blood poisoning to-day on the market." ItaeatlM on Blood and Skin XMmmm nailed ' BWOTBPScinoCtt., Atlanta, G. MILLINERY. Fall and Winter. Mrs. J. A. Noell Is displaying a line MILLINEKY that for of QUALITY AND PRICE, Cannot be excelled any where in this section. When in Roxboro you are cordially invited to in spect ray goods. Will take pleasure in showing you the different styles that are to be worn this season. Very Respectfully, Mrs. J. A. Noell. THE J L THOMPSON FURNITURE CO., 210 and 212 Ninth Street, LYNCHBURG, VA. JUST RECEIVED. An elegant line of fine and medium PARLOR SUITES ; a complete stock of CHAMBER SUITES, : SIDE BOARDS, WARDROBES, MAT TRESSESES, LOUNGES, BOOK CASES, DESKS. We are agents for the West Lynch burg Furniture Co. They Make the Best Goods for the Money. We Sve a fine line of BABY CARRIAGES. (Just the thing needed in Roxboro.) Also CARPETS and RUGS, WIN- DOW SHADES and CURTAINS, REFRIGERATORS, FEATHER PILLOWS, BOLSTERS, &c. We are agents for the Davis Sewing Machine, ..Hoof oorth Ynn nfiftd onfl. Best on earth." You need one, Write us. V'T T T rTT.TD I V JL W X V -L V. BTCYC LESHRi nTimonrl ' 'M-nri ui Sayes time, Money, Horses, Buggies, and gives greatest pleasure to riders, and is most -,-durable on all roads. They will soon be in universal use. They are sold on .... ; -, easy payment : plan or for Cash by J. De Mor ris, who will furnish Catalogue and any INFORMATION Care&ta, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat ent business conducted for MooEaTC Firs. ; and we can secure patent in lees tuna tbaa those remote from Washington, . ' . ' ... Send model, draw Ing or pboto witn fleaerrp tton. We adriae, if patentable or not. free of charM. Our ieo not doe till patent is secured. . m.,. nv ta Oht1n Patanta.n wKh names of actaaf clients In 7001 State, county, of town, sent free. Address, . . . ? taw- ParcaT Omct. HfMioT. O. C,; r-:', ' aianv Persons! ' '. iu'X 4 re broken down from overwork or household 1 an Brown's Iron Bitters " ' " labuildB the system, aids digestion, wmojes ex tss of bile, and fares malaria. Pet the genuine. Kipans Tahules assist digestion. Eipans Tabules cure nausea. - : 1 12 Ulonth s Person County Courier - Published every: Thursday, by E0XB0E0, N.C. : ,. TEBMS CT SUBSCRIPTION I One Copy One Year, One Copy gjx Months, - 't Cash invariably in advance.' 1.00 .50 E.V.FAUCETTE, DURHAM, N. Cs its for ' the' Light Binning: Agents for 'theTLlffht Bin'kfeM 1 TJ J3Q2SCE3STIO ' ; Sewing MacHtne.? . They aretoeBEST, LIGHTEST - . RUNNING?, V NEAREST NOISE LESS and MPST DURABLE II chines made in the world. - , 1 ; s We keep on hand' a ifullfliiioot P n 1 Need les, O lis, Uefvl nflf; r Machine Parts aWdi Attachmento - o N of all makes. We also handle the ;BRAUMIJLLER? 1NG. ' s'x'hii rrwa-TT , PIANOS, buying directly froni the factories, and can offer Sa,3aixfia8.f)xIT in instruments, not surpassed by 'v any dealers.' '. We have large stock of the famous CROWN ORGANS, If you want a, SEWING , MA- f lfl(. CHINE, BICYCLE, IANO,' OR. I , GAN, or anything rtaWni-'toV1 either, let us know -of It and we will 1 take pleasure in sqpplyinir . toot. " . . . r a wants. Very ResPectfally,u f 1 J n 1 l J r f 1 . ' . ! "! iiG AlOHhl r11 . .h 0 iiilllOlilBv) .-. , jiso v.i 4 te'jYT Off) ni r . a ... 1 tm 1 t . C. ft HUIISS ROXBORO, N. 0., FOR Groceries A1 HP' Shoe ; ' ni '': , up;tn n T,bi S. H. HaWfiS fe f!n. l it DEALERS IN LIME, PLASTER11 hJ.t CEMENT. S. H. Hawesmr ' ohii t.r..-um 4s9iino diW Jea "'' 'DEALERO IN J f;d ouio? voa Kichmoind; in - jilhi 04 kiihiiavwn--h?'j'i;i')--.' ''-':' wtsd y'jiiJ . irnin -'.t -iM iwa..tt 'ill ii imwl 1 mi lollete ' r.,.!. SMM. tJTr .v .ifl an ,1 ....Mf liinllBdUMHlMuM cnoeioot to ro bo wniT, wj, j- -r iiUfciat I'M in Ml It !i r,)iv - 3KI a aaaiuji bm 4 wha. ' , . : ' ItTiiiiiloi;'.). 1 I.
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 10, 1892, edition 1
1
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