FY1 The Courier is published in the "Center of a fine tobacco growing section, making it one of the best advertising mediums for merchants and warehousemen in the adjoining counties. Circuhitv-s largely in 1'er.son,' Granville, Dur ham and Caswell counties, in North Carolina, and Halifax county, Vir ginia. Advertising r.ites misonabld; terms made known on application. P FESSIONAL PAFDS in It M I'l. lMTT. At'-m r. y at Law Roxboro, N. C. I'rti 'In' In tin' m'V. -I' ll courts of the State. I'roni ill )il ' en I jiv :. it'll bnsiucss n trusted ti him Miiiri! iii court House. JOIl.V MANNING. JA8. S. MANNING. II. A. FOUSIIEE. MANNING &FOUSHKK, ATTOKNEY8 AT LAW, " Viijtlu Itiiililiiij.-, uwrr liluluy Hunk. Durham, N. C. lr:iotiie iii Durham. Person and Orange counties. LlINSFORl), Attorney at Law, lfoxbnro, N. C. KI11MTT & BRYANT, Attorneys at Law, Roxboro. N. C. I'r.mtioc in tin1 several court.-, i.l llio st.ilu Speuiili ;itte' tio iven 10 I'iine-' in I'ersoii urliuni ami : aswell counties. All l.eal ISiiaiii.iss1 pntrusU-il to nur cure wil ecelve iirmnpt attention. vv. W K ITCH IN. Attorney at Law, RoxBon., N. C. Prt "li-e wlmi-i'ver li'u "hi v iw 'in' i'.inre.l . iflii'-i- -it tVinstr:,-! Ili.t'-!. A. ,V. fitt.UlAM, Attorney at Law, (jxI-.m. NT. C. i la.turirvin all rhc onrtH of the Mate. Ilan- i iimiuy a n I invc.-it thn huuic in lifist IbI Mori air . Kslale wurii "Jcttlf e.ilntea and nvi'l:'. ;itt- tiliC. j' s W I NSTRA l A. IlKO'-K- W1NSTEAD & BROOKS. Attorneys at Law, Roxboi'o, N. C. Vr:pt attentioifto all profession 1 lMnes9. Practice in tne Slate and Federal Courts. Ti l KKH SURGEON DENTIST. OKKK.'K ll SJnir.t i:l W. J. .loliIISDll & ki' new lni.liliiig, EOX-BOiJO. X. (.'. j : it. A. .uiiiTON. I'rat-.licina; I'liyHiciau, Roxboro. N. C. i!i!r. his"mfu-lTr:il si'rvti'en to the (ile of itoximroiti.il - ti" milling r.u'.ipt rv. I'rao lot m nil me Wiir'i. .- i f ii-.li'.'ine. nM-lv XnTOTXO-KJ! ;!air.'4 returned to Uoxboro, 1 i.;ai:i oHer :uy professional services t Hi.' citizens of the the town and sui rciiii.tii)'t country. W. M. Terkell, M. D.' THE DUUMMERS1 HOME, Hotel French. JWain Street. South Boston, Va. Tlasbeun put in liret rlass order and thor- .......... ,..) 1 "... i.'un ijinl tt Hit ili'llilt linii Imsitit'ss purlinim of tne town. I.ai ee jtnrf VCI-1I!TII l (K1II1UIJ riHilll. .liw .1 . .1 . .... vitrvmi roiim ai-i.ti iit'i. ' ik ., .v.,-. II. . it;. Tprrv, MUkaeer. Lock Uux SSI. 9 i ra JOHN S. HUGHES, MILL WRIGHT MILLCREEK, N.C. 1 .tin prepared to do all kinds of work con nects! Willi t.lie nii liDtr liiisincsH. New milltr Kill in ; all kinds of repairing etc , d"in in thr est manner ; pi-ieef moderate; i:iliHf.'ti'lin piiai'.'inteed. me.; mzkii ma. VIRGINIA FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY. RICHMOND. Assets - - $650,000 INSURES AGAINST jFl HE AND LIGHTNING This old mm pany, n more thiiii ialtxen- iiry in siie.ecKsfiil operation, has paid HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS T i..Hsr to I'Hi.ens of North Carolina laraei m vui'v simple and '-.oncise policy, fre of pettj riv'ii-ietions. and Diieral in its terms tndcon ilil loud. W. II. PaLMKB, President. V, ll. MCCARTHY. Secretary. DM HINES, District Agent, Milton, N. C. JAS. W. BRANDON, bax"te:r? Slxo-p, ROXBORO, N.C. When you c6me to Roxboro, don't forg t mo I am always willing ana re&rfr to accommodate my custom ers, and always keep up with the latest styles. nrei Consumption, Cough, Croup, Sor throat. Pocket lize. 25 doses, t5CtL Sold brail Drugeit on a guarantee. For Lane Back, Side or Caest Shiloh'a Porous Plaster is the best -5CU. OHILOH'SIlCATARRH lliSP REMEDY. Have you Catarrh t Then rise this Kennedy, it will Cure you. PrioefiOcts. Tbls Injector for ita guceasf 11I treatment, free. Kememben uuh'a Hemedies are sold on a guaranut tWYOVn JfACK AC BUS, , uz you are all worn out, really good for noth ing, it is general debilitT. Try nuinrt's mo njTTicns. It will cure you. cleanse-onr liver, and give 1 coed appetite. FER NOELL BROS, Proprietors. Vol. xi. I MM MOST BEAUTIFUL OF BIRDS. The Qaezal, Whose PI am age Rival tha Rainbow'i Brilliancy. In the Smithsonian building at Washington is exhibited one partic ularly perfect specimen of the most beautiful bird in the world. While its coloration is as brilliant as that of any humming bird, its superior size renders it more attractive to the eye. This is the quezal of Guatemala. Its plumage vies in brilliancy with the rainbow "and shines with a metallic luster. Until within the last few years it was unknown to science, mainly owing to the fact that it is a hermit among feathered creatures, delighting in the silence of deserts. It dwells on mountain heights above 7,000 feet in elevation. The quezal was the royal bird of the Aztecs. Its breast is a brilliant scarlet, while its green tail attains a length of 3 feet. Its size is about equal to a pigeon. Ita plumes were utilized ancientlv for the adornment of .headdresses and for' the famous feather pictures of the Mexicans. It nestles in holes in worm eaten trees, which it en larges with its bill so as to form a comfortable and roomy residence. The young are hatched totally naked. It is the hardest of all birds to pre pare for stumng because the skin tears like so much tissue paper, and the feathers are implanted to so slight a depth that they readily fall out. A specimen is very apt to be spoiled by falling against a branch on being shot. Up to 1860 naturalists did not know where the quezal was to be found. The few specimens which had fallen into their hands were obtained from the Indians of Guatemala, who kept the secret. About that time, however, a collect or, visiting that country, got on the track, went up into the mountains and shot a number of the birds. It is said that in ancient times the skins of all birds of this species that were killed belonged by law to the king. and nobody outside of the royal family was permitted to wear the plumes. The quezal belongs to the family of trogons. This genus includes 46 species, 33 of which are American. All of them are very beautiful. Washington Star. Dagaerre's Process. The process devised by Daguerre was substantially as follows : A sheet of planish copper, plated with silver and well cleaned by treating with di luted nitric acid and washingwith wa ter, was exposed to the action of the vapors of iodine. By this exposure a thin film of iodide of silver was formed on the surface, certain me chanical precautions being taken to insure that it should be uniform in all parts. The sheet thus prepared was then placed in a camera substan tially the same in principle as the photographic camera in use today and was exposed to the object for from eight to ten minutes. The plate was then covered and removed from the camera to a dark room, where it was exposed to the action of the va por of mercury, aided by the applica tion of gentle heat, by which the im age was developed. It was then fixed by immersion in a solution of hypo sulphite of soda, which dissolved out all the unchanged silver iodide, Washing with water followed, and the finished picture was protected by a cover of glass and suitably inclosed in a frame, one that could be closed, to protect it from fading under the action of the sunlight. Manufactur: errand Builder. "Roger Williams and the Bay Colony. Mr. Edmund J. Carpenter has come bravely to the defense of the men of Massachusetts Bay in the matter of the expulsson of Roger Williams. In a remarkably scholarly paper, read before the Historic-Genealogical so ciety he showed pretty clearly that the colony had to repudiate Williams and his ideas as a matter of rea sonable public policy, and that this repudiation did not extend to his ideas of religious or civil liberty. This does not detract from the rev erence due to Roger Williams for his work for liberty of belief and of government, but it goes to relieve the Massachusetts of those days from some aspersions. It is not so long ago that a Fourth of July orator here in Boston spoke of the "burning" of witches in Massachusetts. A judi cious correction of popular ideas of history is greatly desirable. Boston Commonwealth. An Expensive Favor. Naval officers sometimes smuggle without knowing it. An officer re turning from a far voyage consented to bring home for a brother officer left behind a package destined for friends in the United States. That package was seized and opened by the customs authorities when the custodian reached port, and he had to pay $100 duty on the goods. As he was an officer of no great rank or pay, and he felt bound to hold his tongue as to the unexpected demand of the custom house, his little deed of kindness was ' somewhat embar rassing. Boston Post. Intellectual and Literary. "Htfs very intellectual and liter ary, isn't hef "Why do you think so?" "He told me he never felt himself until he was 6nugly ensconced in his library." "Well, you see his folding bed is a oookcase."3L-Milwaukee Catholic Cit- &en. A Quarter Century Test. For a ouarter of a century Dr. King's New Discovery has beeu test ed, and the millions who have re ceived benefit from its use testify to its wonderful curative powers in all diseases of Chest, Throat and Lungs. A remedy that has stood the test so long and that has .given eo universal satisfaction is no experiment. Each bottle is positively guaranteed to give relief, or the money will be refund ed. It is admitted to be the ; most reliable for Coughs and Colds. Free trial bottles at J. D. Morris'. : SON Roxboro, North fECK'S BAD DRUMMER. Be Knew the Humorist Finally, bat Not In the Way He Boasted. Tliey tell a characteristic story of ! George W. Peck. When his fame as the author of the bad boy experiences was at its height and while he was actually rolling in riches, Peckjmade a trip to California, partly for rest and partly to see the country of which he had heard so much. A no toriously poor dresser, he was at this" particular time very shabbily clad. and in his -coarse, ill fitting garments you would hardly have recognized the man everybody was talking about and the man, too, whose check was good for a cool hundred thousand. One day, crossing the plains, Peck was curled up in a seat in the smok ing car when his attention was at tracted to a group of drummers across the aisle. The train boy had just gone through the car vending his litera ture, and the drummers were dicuss- ing. the--book entitled "Feck's Bad Boy." One of the party, a particular ly noisy fellow, boasted of an ac quaintance with the author of the book yes, he knew Peck intimately and forthwith proceeded to regale his friends with elaborate stories of his experiences with the Wisconsin humorist. From his point of van tage across the way Peck listened in silent surprise to the preposterous in ventions of the fellow, and his amazement deepened into horror and chagrin when the garrulous drum mer, encouraged by the interested countenances of his hearers, pursued his discourse to the extent of narrat ing, with scrupulous attention to de tail, the incidents of an alleged spree which "me and Peck" once en joyed together. You can fancy how wroth, poor Peck became when he heard himself pictured as the veriest sot and liber tine, for if there are virtues upon which he prides himself they are his temperance and his morality. Hav ing heard himself dragged by this superb liar through the boozing dens and low resorts of Milwaukee, Broth er Peck finally arose, gathered him self together and broke in upon the mendacious drummer's narrative. He said he had known Peck a great many years and was able to declare that Peck never tasted liquor and never visited disreputable places. Warm ing up to his business in hand, Peck dilated with seventy upon the evil practice of falsely laying claim to ac quaintance with people, a practice too often indulged in by vulgar, noisy people. He concluded his castigauon of the ofiE ender by disclosing his identity, by denouncing the blatant drummer as an impostor and by saying: "Here after, sir, when you are tempted to lie about me, pray let your fancy concern itself with me alone. When you report that I am a libertine, you reflect upon my home relations, and that is an offense which I shall not tolerate. You may advertise me as a fool, as a drunkard, as a thief, but be precious careful not to libel or slander me in such wise as to wrong and pain those whose relations to me as wife and children are my para mount, sweetest, tenderest, most sa cred consideration.' The story goes on to relate that by the time Peck concluded his remarks the loquacious drummer had shriv eled up into such a little wad that you could almost have plugged a key hole with him. Chicago Kecord. The Power ot XJghtning. On Aug. 1, 1846, St. George's church. Leicester, England, which was a new building, was entirely de stroyed during a thunderstorm. The steel having burst asunder, parts of it were blown to a distance of 30 feet in every direction, while the vane rod and part of the spire fell- perpen dicularly down, carrying with them every floor in the tower, the bells and the works of the clock. The falling mass was not arrested until it arrived on the ground, under which was a strong brick arch, and this also was broken by the blow. The gutters and ridge covering were torn up, and the pipes used to convey the water from the roof were blown to pieces. Mr. Highton calculated the power developed in the discharge of the lightning which destroyed the church with some known mechanic al force. He discovered that a hun dred tons of stone were blown down a distance of 30 feet in three seconds, and consequently a 12,220 horsepow er engine would have been required to resist the efforts of this single flash. Ashton Reporter. Architecture of Public Buildings. Government buildings have be come more and more "thingy," more and more compilations of "features" that fail to make up a physiognomy, The architecture is hrst impure and then unpeaceable. The features themselves are derived from all sources, ancient and modern, from the classic portico down to the new est fashion. Montgomery Schuyler in Forum. . Chiromancy. "Szo! Miss Mary, dey tell me dat you shall tell my garachter by my handt!" . "Well, to begin with, you are German" "Ach, it is vonderful I" London Punch. According to the Koran, the angels who gave warning of the coming de struction of Sodom were Israfil, Ga briel and Michael. It may do a$ Much for You. Mr. Fred -Miller, of Irving, III, writes that he had a Severe Kidney trouble for many year, with severe pains in his back and also that his bladder was affected. J He tried many so culled 'Kidney cures- but without any good result. About a year ago he beran iise of .Electric Bitters and found relief at once. Electric Bitters is especially adapted to enre of all Kidney and 'liver troubles and often on ves almost instant renei. One trial will prove our statement rricc only ouc. tor large oome. . HOME FIRST: Carolina, Wednesday Evening FISHING WITH A 'SUNKEN FLV. The Only Way Black Bast Can Be Taken In . the Saginaw Blver. : - "You might not think it wprthy of your skill asa fly fisherman, '' said one who is an expert in the art him' self, "and ordinarily it wouldn't be, as it seems a trifle vulgar , in style. but if. you ever come to fisting for black bass in a certain kind of water you will find that you must sink your fly or go without any fish. "For instance, there isnt a better black bass fishing water on tie conti nent than Saginaw river," Michigan, or any where the bass are bigger or more gamy. But the water is deep and very much discolored by the bark on the logs of the endless processions of pine rafts that go up and down that stream. Whitefish in the Sagi naw river would be whiteflsh only in name, for they would take on the hue of the pine dyed water, just as trout m the hemloeklbordered creeks jof Pennsylvania are so-dark in . color that, compared with their brothers ofHhe open wood streams, they are like a mulatto compared with a white man. " 'There is only one way of fly fish ing that black bass can bo taken in Saginaw river, and that is the seem ingly unsportsmanlike way I am speaking of. You must have large and rather gaudy flies. Three iniches above the dropper put a No. 2 Isplit shot on your leader to sink your flies. They must be sunk almost as deep in the water as if you were fishing with bait. Trail them toward the surface smartly, and when one of those big 3S strikes a fly, which will be so often that you will be astonished, if you don't say that you jiever had sport before fly fishing for bass then you are a dilettante sort of a fisher man, and no mistake. "A person who thinks be isn't do ing right by himself if he fishes for black bass any other way than with the fly ought to know that there is fly fishing. I never knew of but two lands before I tried the Michigan method, and I have used this third one with great pleasure and profit in many eastern waters where the con ditions were similar to those in the Saginaw and where no one had ever succeeded in taking any bass to speak of by the regulation methods. I had rather make a nice catch by sinking my flies, even at the expense of being looked - upon as a coarse fisherman. than to dawdle them all day on the surface and never get a rise." New York Sun.' The Mechanism of Thought. A person shuts his eyes of his own free will. We take his hand, we cross the forefinger and the middle one over the other, and between them we slip a little ivory ball. A singular illusion immediately arises. The person believes he feels two balls. And why! No doubt because under ordinary conditions, when the fingers are not crossed, one ball would not simultaneously touch the right edge of the forefinger and the left edge of the middle finger- two balls being necessary to produce the double sensation. Such is the ex perimental fact we all possess in our memory without being conscious of it By an artificial arrangement of the fingers, one ball may produce these two impressions, and the mind, not taking into account this artificial dis position of the fingers and interpret ing theJmpressions by the ordinary rules, arrives at the illusion of touch which has just been described. Noth ing is simpler to bring about than this illusion, because the sensory im pression from which it is derived may be modified at will, without any necessity of speaking to the subject under experiment Is it the same with an idea? Evidently not For in order to communicate an idea one must speak to a person and make one's self understood, so that as he becomes informed about the object of one's inquiry illusion is ind ole. Fortnightly Review. -'A Strange' Fractore. One "of ,the 'strangest fractures known to the medical profession was recently treated at the Pennsylvania hospital, where a young man ap peared with his arm broken between the shoulder and elbow. He said that he had tried to throw a stone that was too heavy for him, and in bringing his arm around the bone snapped, It seems hardly possible that the elbow and shoulder joints should be firm enough to stand a strain that would break the bone, and the doctors decided that there mus$ have been some softening of the bone. Such cases have happened beforej but it has always been with growing boys, whose bones are buttle enough to break at any unusual strain. Phil adelphia Record. ' Hand Lines. The lines on no two human hands are exactly alike. This fact is util ized in China in an interesting way When a traveler desires a passport the palm of his hand is covered with fine oil paint, and an impression is taken oh thin, damp paper. This pa per, officially signed, is his passport Yankee Blade. Logical. ? Little Dot Oh,- mamma, there's sign, "Puppies for sale." Won't you buy me one? Mamma Wait till you are a little older, dear. ' -' Little Dot But theyH all be dogs ihen. London Answers,. v Swords and Scimltera. The scimiter of the Saracens was the most effective sword for i cut ting purposes ever devised. It will be ( remembered, how, according to the story of Sir Walter Scott's Tal isman," with such a weapon the pa gan Saladin chopped a soft cushion in two at one blow, to the amazement of Richard Cceur de Lion. With a straight sword one can make a hack or thrust, but to slice an adversary one must saw with it The scimiter. being curved and wide and heavy I toward the end, slices by the mere ,j iac oi struting. xroy xuutw. -t ABROAD NEXT. fv; Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report .. DUG HIS "FATHER'S GRAVE.1 One of the Sad Incidents That FeU to a ' Boy's Lot at Oettyshnrg. "An incident which perhaps affect ed me more'thah anything Isawdur-fag';fh;w,-ia1d''-Joagfe Neale of Kittannfn'g to a reporter, -fwas after the -Tata -of Gettysburg. I went! adwlQfheredseent"wa8 to be seen: aid fihcomg over the field after the bate ricatrie ac3?6 wo persons digging ajgnatye; evidently for a body that lay near by.', I watched the op erations of ! the two" with- .interest One Was a middle aged man, and the other was a mere boy. Both wore the blue uniform. The work of the two in the twi light had a most peculiar effect upon me. inere ibeside the pile of yeJlow clay lay the body of a Union soldier. An ugly . hole m his forehead, em phasized by the mark of . the blood that had flowed from it, told too well how he had met his fate. It was an unpleasant sight, yet try as hard as would I could not tear myself away from it. I j began to study the two workers and noticed that the boy's face had a most sorrowful look. He tried to work hard, but there seemed to be a heavy load oppressing him. Every now and then he would glance at the dead body beside him and then wipe away a tear. I then began to talk to the workingmen. I asked for whom the grave was intended, and the elderly man pointed to the boy, then to the corpse, and whisper ed to me, 'His father.' I could never tell you what an effect this had upon me. The idea of a son digging his father's grave! It seemed horrible to me, something that I could not bear. I went over to the young man, and after throwing off my coat took his pick from him and told him I would do his work. While we dug away the boy sat off at a distance and wept most bitterly. When we had placed his father in his last resting place and had finished our work, he took me by the hand, and as tears rolled down Ins cheeks expressed his thankfulness for the service I had done him. Never had I seen such gratitude. That incident made an impression upon me that I have never been able to efface." Pittsburg Dis patch. Paper Spindles. The introduction- of paper spindles for yarn spinning, thus avoiding the objection to the great weight of steel as heretofore used, is said to have proved a decided advantage, and the process of manufacture is described as follows : A quantity of common pulp stock is run into molds the shape of a spindle; no attention being given to the whirl at this stage, and the cast of the molds is such that a spin dle is produced about four times the required size in diameter. In the process of hardening the soft, flabby spindle is placed in a com press, as it is termed a sort of hy draulic device in which a force pump is employed to give an enormous pressure. The spindle is placed sin gly in a peculiar shell arrangement, so made that, by revolving certain screws in the side compress upon the spindle from all sides, the latter is squeezed into a compartment about one-quarter its original size. The hydraulic power is used in making the apparatus -turn, which gives mo tion to the numerous screws. When compression of the spindle is com pleted, a perfectly formed, hard, tough, substantial one is produced, and when dried and polished the sur face is said to be as hard as metal. The whirls are next made. Again the molds are used, and the same method of ! compressing is applied, the result i being whirls of great strength and firmness. New York Sun. . A Distinction. 'Look here, Simpkins," said the city editor t sternly as the new re porter stood quaking at his desk,j "arViot lrfnrl rf a Ytvaatr la fma nnv- way! In writing up this story about the fellow that cut his throat with the bottom ; of a broken bottle you say, The man was found lying on the sidewalk writhing in agony.' " ; "Yes, sir he Was." "Now, that's just like a fresh re porter. You haven't been in the business but a week, and you want to destroy all the traditions of the profession.! I want you to under stand that you cant kick over the old landmarks in this office." . "Why, I'm sure, sir," stammered the amazed reporter, "I didnx in tend to do anything of that kind. That Would be very presumptuous." "Is it possible that you don't know any better?!. Then let me give you a pointer or two. When a person takes 'rough on rats,? carbolic acid or ar senic, or if (this man had pounded up the glass and swallowed it in such cases (and I want you 'to Temember it) the person -always "writhes in agony.' ' But if a person shoots him self or cuts! his throat he invariably welters in tiis blood.' Now don't you forget' that" San Francisco Post ? The London Sandwich Army. Who are the "soldiers0 of the 'sandwichl army" in London, 7,000 strong? In the service of one ad vertising contractor, it Is said on good authority, tare doctors, ' solicitors clerks, actors,. clergymen, arehitects, even -a former ' Yorkshire -squire, wealthy in;better'days. . Sheer mis- fortune sometimes presses men ; into tha Armv of mfcfcrables. whoso" 'oidi- nary wages vary from 1 'to 2 shillings a day.-r-iaopaon j-etter. . . One danger of female suffrage, is that the women may want xne men to bet them $50 bonnets against $C hats on the rtdt. Tammany Times. COURIERo $ f .00 September 5th, mm? HOLD THOU MY HANDS. Bold thou my handsl la grief and Joy, in hope and fear, Lord, let me feel that thou art near. Hold thou my handsl If e'er by doubts Of thy good fatherhood depressed, I cannot find in thee my rest, Hold thoa my handsl Hold thou my hands These passionate hands too qaiek to These bands so eager for delight Hold thoa my hands! And whenr at length, - i With darkened eyes and fingers cold. v I seek some last loved hand to hold, r . Hold thoa tny handsl - ... , -. William Canton. Notes That Druggists Receive. "You'd laugh if you could see some of the homemade prescriptions we" re ceive here sometimes, " said a Pomona druggist the other day. "I mean the notes mothers give to little children 'when they send them here for medi cine. "Here is one written on a piece of newspaper margin, 'arnicy 4 a sor fot,' which, translated, means arnica for a sore foot. Another,, on a piece of cardboard, was easily intelligible, powdered magnishey for phisik.' 'Poison. Gross of Sulperment' for bedbugs' called for corrosive subli mate to rid a bed of the terror of the tenements. '1 Poishon insect pow der' meant Persian insect powder. " 'Bia carbert of sody' meant the simple baking soda, to be used in this instance probably for a disordered stomacn. lmcture ot lobena was asked for on a torn scrap of billhead under the disguiie of 'tinctur lob ster,' and capciiso porous piaster was supplied when 'eaT-taiie piaseter' was requested. "Sumo mother with a crying baby, in order to g.'t sleep herself, asked for '5 .-t ii'.r-.rii.li' to quiet the in fant. Tinklura of jridine for exter nal use' huido won;::".; carefully wrote when she waLiUyi i- nn explanatory mtsui: ijt.. adding in . "ly.ward, ro- saete pairs. " -P: .ouu Pi-ff'm-s. JViarlm'roug It was i li;i:-::; N l i'h Gift.. ;ic of Maribor- OUlt th::t from r v t. sali in- cucaucii:' po. :-... v.'- i-oivcr 1-oivcr of divining t! . i.--r.-'.s ilaijs and was thus cnabl. -1 to ! csts H tb'.i.i. From the xperi'ONv f ihe iecc:)t patt he toiv-j'aw v.-ii-i p.dmi:.iL.''.!'h?arnessth imiiif -lia l. fr.tnro and whs ajble, as it wcro. to mu; out comi ngWfiits from a sriviy or ti..;j iiTit.n at tne mo ment. He -.uM balance future prob abilities wiui strange uccaracy r.nd could fill in with liviu fiurs-a the sket .-hy outline furm-ihed by the spy. Without this peculiar Rift, one of the instincts that murk tbo liorn gen era'., no campaign can be directed witti success. lo roai:z: went is going on Ix'voml a range of hills or anv other natural barrier to human vision and out of the reach of reeon noitering parties is one of the prob lems which perpetually confront the military commander. On the cor rect solution of that problem de pends greatly the success of all mili tary operations. "Life of Marlbor ough," General Wolseley. Beauty Everywhere. The remotest corner of the globe is full of wonder and beauty. The la ziest bank in the world, away from towns, wnere no artists clo congre gate, upon which no farm laps1 where no vines hang their cooling clusters, nor flowers spring, nor- grass, invites the browsing herd, is yet spotted and patched with moss of such exquisite beauty that the painter, who in all his life should produce one such thing, would be a master in art, an immor tal in fame, and it has the hair of 10, 000 reeds combed over its brow, and its shining sand and insect tribes might win the student's lifetime. God's least thought is more prolific than man's greatest abundance. Henry Ward Beecher. A Carious London Official. London fire engines often have to stop on their way to fires to take up a turncock, a liveried functionary, who is alone allowed to have the key to a fire plug. By and by 6ome great English radical will attain to power and will provide the fire companies with keys. Boston Transcript. Mot After Minnows. They were discussing a man whose financial methods ' had been called into question. "Why." exclaimed one man, "he wouldn't steal as much as a dollar." The other reflected a moment and said. "I RUess you moan as little as a dollar.' "Washington Star. ' Parisians are intensely fond of ca naries and other pet birds. It is es timated, figuring on the amount spent for bird food at the regular stores, that there are fully 100,000 pet "birds In the city, or one to every twentieth individual, including ba bies. A confident expectation that no ar gument wiH .be adduced that wfll change our opinions is very different from "a ; resolution that . .none ever shall. , We may print but not stereo type our opinions. Whately. -Thelibrary of ' the .Vatican iS; the successor of the Roman Imperial li brary, founded by Augustus, 'and contains manv manuscrints that were written during the later empire. ' 7 U , , ' rrr- r -;r" V A gold weighing machine -in the Bank of England is so sensitive that a ;T)ostaffe tamp 'dropiied on' the scale Trill turn the index on the dial adis- ,tanceof six.incjies. Ripaas Thnf s rnr-livcr troubles Tfi;n Tnluiisi pro'o:zl"fe. - - klpan;T.b1'?t ? st liver tvsic : " 'ilpuns Tahuk-s 'iir nausea. .- .a 'i-' 1 1 Per Tear in Advance. 1894. No. 3. A Straight Ticket in Texas.' Dallass, Texas Aug. 28. The Republican State Convention ' met here at neon with -nearly every coun ty in the btate represented. Mr. N. B. Moore called the convention in der and the nsual committees were appointed. A straight-out ticket will he nominated. - . Some e AVait Until alter the Holidays Before Buying Needed articles We presume ou account of the geaeralT close prices that are expected at 'that time. It's hot mach fun to swap dollars, but that is! about what we are doing. Therefore, if you need Groceries, such as Flour, Meal, Meat Liard, Sugar, Coffee, Syrup or iv'olas aes, Salt; or is it something in the Fancy Grocery line, such as Confectioneries, Cheese, Cakes, Crackers, Canned Goods, of any kind. Cigars best in town, To bacco, Snuff, or any table deli cacies, come to us, and we will give you liberal prices on all these things and so liberal that yon cannotafford not to come. Very Respectfully, W. J. Johnson & Co. DRESS-MAKING! u n i i i i i i 1 1 Of Interest to the Ladies IF you want r ycur Dresses made up in the lat est style, best work, and best fit, call on me at my residence on Academy street. Very Respectfully, Mrs. J. A. Nokll, Heals q Running Sores. Cures the Serpent's Sting. CONTAGIOUS In all its stages com mm a. on mimii eradicated hv H. K. I ULUUU fUlSUn stinate sores and olcersV -BBBBsi yield to its healing powersl it removes we poison ana ouiias up tne system) AnlaabietieuiM on the diseue ssa its twitwrst. milled tree. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. 't feel well Why? Oil ! I don't know. Worry I expect, Worrying about what? Well, vou know the servants are a heap of trouble. The children worry me a heap, l am broken "down. In the morainar r generally have a , headache ; Along . towards evening ' my back feels as if it would break. Every time the baby cries I nearly himn out of my skin, I am so nervous. Your system heeds toning up. Why not take Brown's Iron Bitters the best strengthening medicine made, It will give you a good appetite; make your blood rich and pure, give you strength," make life a pleasure.' Not only take it yourself, but' give It to the children.' It is pleasant to take. Small dose. 'The only Iron medicine that don't blacken the teeth. K But get the genuine it has crossed red lines on wrapper. SOWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, HO. ovimw -1 J w . a I m SSS Solid idnlek te tb. world. rwtM iiiMnr. miiww im,, SOUS oou with works mat . ( Wk tomlitr mm m , On Pzuol im free, og wjta ni luii tie Thmm. mmpim, u mil :. m a watch, an Bree -u worn ym Md Sola to ilww what w ana " .wbo eau rw ftwaub and n oiirh bars and Umm aboo ro htlwmr malt, la raloabtaamd. faraa. which hold. (iwraanwhaaomiUitaS, sa4 tha. w. an noakl W pay all axyww, frriaht, ate Aftar ; tm know all, ir ran wMVdttka teg Mwnk 4sr aamftom to Ml wdakanS opwarSa.S jHH. wttasoa i C.,iwXba , rwrslstaiw. 9 Don W AT!!"' . f a, l 1 i j r t i W 1). Person County; Courier 6 Published every Wednesday, bj HSTOEIjIj BROS., . ROXBORO, N, C. TERMS OF SUBSCETPTION : . . One Copy One Year,": - 1.00 One Copy Six Months, ' - . .60 Cash invariably in advance. f ' s J. tt. HUNTER UOTDoro,X. C. ' nri-car-cn -i- i i i i UNION Sewing Machine Handsomest Cover Made. New Style Skeleton Case. The only Machine that will sew BACKWARD as well as FOR WARD without stopping. Quiet, Light Running, adjustable in all its parts. We Sell to Dealers Only. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED LTnion Manufacturing Co. Wm, Peter, Owner. TOLEDO, OHIO. Can f he Puture? Do you kjiorvhat !yotrf con dition be 20 years hence? Will your earning, capacity' be equal to the; support of yourself and femily?' This is a serious question, ryet, you could confidently , ans wer " yes M if you" had a twenty-,; years Tontine Policy. in the 1 A method which 'guarantees all the protection furnished by any kind of life insurance, and in addition the largest ' cash returns to those policy holders whose lives are f pro longed, and who then need money rather than assurance. For facts and figures, address W. J. RODDEV, Manager, For the Carolinas, .-V ROCK HILL, S. C. 8Si, will hjM to.laramr ui. tut . ' aaam - - a ' " cum. t.aiM . rrnlliut. : HMImiM- loo. tut Corn, CottiTfrlSnd rVurata.. ti St 1 111 Oata, Tjbaooo and FraiU - - l&fd - a Also Hanata orPaasb, Kama, Holoaate Potash, Boats ot-.ea. iihtu. 0003a in lags am auiau gtiao I Ottantiuan. Tliw. iwu 90. KJ(Ba ot mm- w.B. mwfil ia.oV.C4k, womuser Mansiscwics,- w,sws "" Equitable Life V.