Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / Jan. 29, 1896, edition 1 / Page 1
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I The Courier nnhlished in the center of a i-ne ftobai-co growing section, making it tne of the best advertising mediums lor merchants and warehousemen in jthe adjoiuing counties. Circulates largely in Person)' Grauville, Dur iiam and Caswell counties, in North Carolina, and Halifax couuty, Vir ginia. f Advertising-rates reasonable; terms !made known on application. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. RJ. TEA.GUE, M. D, l;ivinsr located In Roxboro, offers' hi. professional ser ..:..., ... ft,.. .-.M.-.tin of medicine m ill its branches, to the people of Rox ioro and surrouudin country, tpe al attention given the treatment of .,,oa .-.f nnsfl and throat. Ofiiee IWCftoco Jver C. T. Wilson & Co's store IICIiRlTT, Attorney at Law Roxboro, N. C. I Pieces in t!i8 several courts ol tho State. I ,; irivii to all business nta-uated ko hi in Office in Court House. LUNSFOUD, Attorney at Law, Soxboro, N. C. B GONE. MERRITT & BRYANT, Attcneyjat Law, Vract-ce in tbe several Coarts ot the State, iiial attention given to cases in Person. B?,ffi and f - Mwefi counties, and m the Fed- Seral Court. ,n ,r rare will All Leal uiisinesf c.in ' Offices in Roxboro'and Durham. Attorney at Law, Roxboro, N. (J. i-rx.Mii-.os wlicrin er his ses viocs are required, office ; .-.-irmers' Bank Building. C.S WIXSTKaii A. L,. liKUUJts WIN STEAD & BROOKS. Attorneys at Law, Roxboro, N. C. Speeial attention given to Federal practice, ootu in me otate uu i Washington. Attend regularly the Courts of Person and Caswell. All business intrusted to our care will receive prompt attention. Dr. E. J. Tucker. SURGEON DENTIST, Office up stairs UV.- new building, in V. J. Johnson & EOXBORO. N. C. JAS. W, BRANDON, Barter SliLO-p, ROXBORO. N. C. When you come to Roxboro, don't forg t me I am always willing and ready to accommodate my "custom ers, and always keep up with the latest styles. W. H. B, NEWELL, Watchmaker and Jeweler, "Story of the Confederate States." WRITTEN BY JOSEPH T. DERRY, of Georgia. This is a true story of late war, by a Southern man, and endorsed by the Generals. John S. Coleman, ofMoriah, N. C. is General Agent for this county Drop him a card and have him call on you. Prices from $2.50 to $3.50. Sold only by by subscription. Sub scribe now. J. S. COLEMAN, Gen. Agent for Person Co. Ask Your Neighbors About the cures made by TfAOC. without medicine, or write for in formation free. For sale or rent. Local testimonials. JOHN N. WEBB. 728 11th Street. Washington, The biggest Fire Iusurance .Com pany in the world is the LIVERPOOL AND LONDON AND GLOBE. The next biggest 4s the ROYAL. (Both of these are foreign corpora tions. The biggest American Fire Insar, ance umpanies are the followmg- and in order named, beginning with the largest: ETNA, 1 HARTFORD, - INSURANCE CO. OF NORTH AMERICA, ? HOME OF HEW YORK. Hke two most popular Southern "ttpanies in North Carolina last f were tne Y NORTH mnnnwa uniinc XRGINX FIRE tun Htoiur eseynt hTs iTlS? 1 jl over a quartS "llv 0P- iha Fidelity and fae:,, "LUy ul ":. ."'"moTe, are nB Fidelity Denosit f.n nt q-u: " . j vujuuu v0 u largest cuuiiuiuies in tne world which issue surety bonds of all kinflo including bonds of contractors, offl' cers and employees of banks, execu tors, administrators, guardians, trus tees, receivers, assignees, distillers, collectors of customs and infernal Revenue, gangers, store-keepers, and pfficials of States, cities andeonnties. Also personal accident, plate glass. poller, elevator employees, landlord ami common carrier liability. I I represent all the above compan in addition represent-the COMMERCIAL UNION, of London, wv.- u f dozen other companies w rit? in8urance against torna- r-;r wluo storms. Also the best Pom mPames existence. ongs Hardware Store. LUp & long, Sfe old clothing to thl HARRIS STEAM DYE WORKS fe&te4 W them look INSURANCE! PERSON NOELL BROS, Proprietors. Vol. xii. A CLEAR HEAD; good digestion; sound sleep; a fine appetite and a ripe old age, are some of the results of the use of Tutt's Liver Pills. A single dose will convince you of their wonderful effects and virtue. A Known Fact. An absolute cure for sick head ache, dyspepsia, malaria, sour stomach, dizziness, constipation bilious fever, piles, torpid liver and all kindred diseases. Tutt's Liver Pills New! New! Just arrived : The latest and newest in General Merchandise at C.T.WILLSON&CO'S We bought largely and bought early, and feel sure that our line of Dry Goods, .Notions, Shoes, Hats, &c, cannol be downed in either, price or qualky. Special attention is paid to S jEE oes. Don't pot off buying them, for when our orders will have to be duplicated they will surely come higher. Handsomer and better Shoes than ours you will not see at any price. The ben selected line of FURNITURE shown in these parts. Full stock almost anything you want in suites, bedsteads, tables, chairs, &c. The prices are the lowest at which good good3 can be sold. We are under price on these things. CARPETS! CARPETS! We are agents for a large New York Carpet factory and have a full line of samples to select from at New York prices, freight added. Don't forget this. We especially ask you to remember that our line of Groceries is second to none. A complete as sortment at astonishingly low prices, in fact prices generally will so sur prise yon that you will conclude it is a "surprise store." All kinds of barter bought and sold at the Exchange Store, C. T. WILLSON & CO., Prop's Salesmen Wanted! Good wages o sell our Nurserv Stock. Apply for terms. We will have for Spring and Fall, 1895, an immense stock of Apple. Pear, Peach, Plum, Apricot, Cherry, Grape, etc. Also small fruits," shade and orna mental trees, roses, etc. We make a specialty of wholsaling to large planters direct. We will sell to re sponsible parties and take note pay able in six, twelve and eighteen months. Write us for wholesale prices. Ad dress : Southern Nursery Co., Winchester, Tenn. Feb. 20-ly THE Columbian University WASHINGTON, D. C. Rev. B. L. Whitman, D. D., Pres. THE PREPARATORY SCHOOL. Thorough preparation for the College, for the Scientific School, for tne Naval and Mil itary Academies, and for busi ness. THE COLLEGE. Full Classical and Scien tifio Courses. Open to stu dents of both sexes. THE CORCORAN SCEINT1FIC SCHOOL. Forty-seven professors instructors; twenty-tbree departments; twelve a fi full courses oi study, students admitted. Special THE LAW SCHOOL. Twelve professors, includ ing two Associate Justices of the United States Supreme Conrt. " 1 THE MEDICAL SCHOOL. Thirty professors and as sistants. The course is fonr years. THE GRADUTE SCHOOL. Courses of advanced instrnc "on, leading to M. A M S C E . E. E. and Ph D THE DENTAL SCHOOL. " Seventeen professors: un asual facility. The cou se is four years . For catalogue '.descriptive of the several schools, address : " Robt. H. Martin Sec' Plan Bed Ferilizer. We are now -prepared to fnrniaii an witn ria.ni tea n ertili zer. We f i t-ii . 1- t .... nave it put up in tne mosi conven lent manner, iuu pouna sacks, and the verybest brands, and best of all we will sell it right . - Your friends, v l-l-4t - Pass Baos. THE DOff. WAS SURE TO COME BACK. He Brought His Owner & Small But Certain Income. Henry B. Gross, the manufacturer had some time ago a ery peculiar experience with n log h red dog a red setter dog. His business took him lo Elkton. Md. There, in front of a drugstore, he saw what he thought was a ; very handsome and nna dogr although he does not profess toW a jadge of the canine race- The thought came to his mind that his wife J was .very anxious to possess an animal of that character, and so inquired of the man of drugs if he would part with his four-footed belonging. The country Galen said: i "I dnnno. Purty good dog, that. - Wonld'irt mind selling hini'lf Iotnough for him. Let ve havrhiHrfSF & tenner. Mr Gross closed thejbargin with avidity. The druggist generously threw in the chain, and, holding one end of it, the Philadelphian tugged his prize to the railroad station, jeal ously guarded him in the baggage- car during the journey to the Quaker City, -brought him to his home, and triumphantly presented him to his spouse. There was joy in the Gross household. In order to accustom him to his surrounding the dog was chained at night in the basement, and from midnight to sunrise the neighborhood was atonsed with bis howls. It was thonght this vocal condition would pass by in twenty four hours, but the next night was worse thau the last; and, in Older to subjugate the animal, the irate Gross arose from his conch and belabored him full sore, hoping thereby to bring him to a realization of proper conduct, just as recalcitrant chil dren are some times subdued. The dog remained qniet during the day, but when the dogstar . again flamed in high heaven, he lifted his voice and wailed in a wav that made the teeth of the neighborhood grit and women turn pale with fear that death was in the house. The manuiac tnrer, arising once more, went down and, after another flagellation, un chained him and let the canine pest loose in the yard, hoping that a com paratively free condition .might bring him to a realization of his iniquity. The little free space in the rear of the house was surrounded with a fence about six feet high, which was supposed to give ample obstruction to the escape of the Elkton animal, Next morning when the Gross house hold arose from slumber that once again had come to disturbed pillows, the dog was gone, aud. had left no sign of his going. Several months later business again took Mr. Gross to Elkton, and, as he passed by the apothecary's shop, there blinking and basking in the sun, was the selfsame dog that he had carried with him to Philadelphia. He said to the smiling son of Galen : "Why that's my dog you have there." Certainly it is," said the apothe cary smilingly. "I did'nt take Lim away from you. He belongs to you. take him home with you. He got back here somehow, but he is your property." The Philadelphian said that he had some business at the other end of the town, and would return for the dog later. A bystander who ha heard the conversation followed him, and accosting him, inquired : "Say mister, did you buy that dog?" He was assured that such was the case, and then he chuckled. "Why," he said, with a laugh, "that drug store mau makes a pretty good living selling that dog. He has sold him about twenty times during the last year, but he comes back every time. May I ask how much you paid?" When informed that $10 was the price paid lie laughed immoderately, and when he recovered himself . he said: "Well you are ia greeny. That is the highest figure rjaid vet. Two dollars used to be the regular price, and he finally got it np to $5, but $10 beats the record." 1 Full of ire, the Philadelphian went back to the liar of the soda fountain, and said to the proprietor: "You have robbed me. You make a bust ness of selling this dog' The man placidly t said : '(What comnlain t have ton to make? "There is vonr dog. Take" him homo with you." There was some farther argument, and fihallv. when it was suggested to the apothecary that $10 was be yond the usnal price, hs said pleas antly : "Well, perhaps it is. Bat, of course, you must remember ( that the dog had to walk ' back and we are entitled to some compensation, but I am willing to return you $5," and upon-that basis the canine deal was settled. Mr. Gross is now hunting for a nwyannMiAunuAyiim, S -00 Per Year:in Advance; Carolina, Wednesday Evening, January 29. 1896. No. 24 - Cultivate Conctntralivo Energy.. . More failures of effort, come from a lack of concentrative energy than from a want of ability to accomjiliab the : things undertaken. A firm, strong determination ot will : to the task Unit is to be performed is : the first step toward making the per formance a positive pleasure. , The next step, requiring greater eelf-cohtrol, is to withdraw all : vol untary thought from . things not strictly relatedyto the matter with which yon are seeking to deal. -This withdrawal of ? the conscious mind from, the distractions' of more allur ing thoughts is certainly not attaina ble without a training ; which we must assist iu making as thorough as possible. It is gradually acquired just as the pliability of the body is acquired and maintained, by.. regular and systematic exercises. T - - But banish the idea that the train ing is difficult and tiresome. It is refreshing and Invigorating. Prpre it You know how it is. When you come to aDy work you have to do in a perrurbed, desperate, "repellent attitude of mind, you run the risk of partial, if not of entire, defeat in its execution. A calm assurance that what you undertake to do can be adequately done puts yon in right conditions to work out a satisfactory accomplishment of your task. There ahould be no will struggle. No vio lent effort is needed to attain high mental result. . The trained habit of expelling all thought, like the drawing of a few deep breaths, leaves the mind a vacuum which may be filled the more completely by the subject it is about to investigate. Like a single shining star in the firmament the theme rises snddenly to view, and with your mental eye fixed steadfastly upon , it the sight grows more and more luminous and clear. Your problems are not difficult to solve. It is your own mind that has to be cleared of the obstructions that hinder its sight, aud, lo! the secret that vexes you begins to unfold to your understanding and you feel that you'knew Jt all the time. From "What Insures Success?" in Demo rest's Magazine for February. McClure's Magazine far February. McClure's Magazine for February takes its first grasp of .the reader's attention with eight portraits of Lin coln (several of them very rare), some twenty other Lincoln pictures, and an account, abounding in vivid personal details, of Lincoln's mis fortunes as a country merchant ; of his entrance into the legislature, aud the beginning of , his acquaintance with Douglass; cf his work as a vil lage postmaster and a deputy county surveyor ; of his stndy of Shakes peare and Burns and a copy of Black- stone found by chance in a barrel of refuse; and of his romantic court ship of Ann Bntledge, aud his afflic tion at her death shortly before the time appointed for their mamage. In the same number the well- known editor of The Railway Age, Mr. Harry Perry Robinson, describes in detail "the fastest railroad run ever made" the recent speed run between Chicago and Buffalo, when 510 miles were transversed- at an average speed of 65.07 miles an hour, and a speed as high as 92.3 miles an hour was attained. Mr. Robinson was one of the official time-keepers. Mr. Murat Halstead, long editor of the Cincinati Commercial Gazette and now the editor of the Brooklyn Standard Union, relates the history of Garfield's nomination and admin istration, giving important conversa tions with Garfield and Interesting; personal reminiscences. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, in a chapter of -auto biography, "gives an interesting pid tufe of a New England girls' . school at the beginning of the war: aud also records reminiscences of Emerson, a uest in her father's house. . The ar feature is Mr. Will H. Low's article oi the great english painters of : the early part of the, century, with many splendid engravings of their pictures. To any one interested -in art these discriminating articles are invaluable. The illustrations hate been chosen with rare taste; they are interesting as pictures, aud as examples of :the irtiafji. who are critically, and bio- graphically presented 'in . the . text. The fiction is especially notable, in cluding a charming romance by An thony Hope, a pathetic and powerful story by Ian Maclaren, and a - char acteristic tale from the unpublished manuscript of Eobert Louis Steven son, half fairy story and half fable. S. S."McCLXJRE, ... ' - 30 LafayetteTlaee, New: York, Avoid him who, for more curiosity, asks three questions- running abont a thing that cannot interest him. Lavater. Subscribe for Thk Courier. !- ' ' '- " ' ' ' ' ' ' I Highest of all in Leavening ACETYLENE IMPRACT1CASLE. The explosion in New Haven yes terday,., whiclu caused . the instant death of three men, ; was : the result of an attempt to construct and oper ate successfully; an - appliance for regulating the outflow of acetylene gas from a steel cylinder, in which a quantity'of this new - illuminant was confined. - The experiments in Pfleghar's machine , shop ..have, been goiii ba' for two months. Jt is said that' the pressue of "t he "gas in 'the. twoIcylinderB, which were sent from New York" to New Haven, was 900 pounds to the inch. Mr. Pfleghar, it appears, had put the regulator on one of the cylinders and opened the vent, at the same time applying a lighted match to the escaping gas. The explosion of the tank took place instautly, and shortly afterwards the second tank exploded. It is no se cret that this gas is exceedingly exr plosive when mixed with air. One of the New Haven papers publishes the following interesting informa tion. . The board of underwriters of New York city has formally declined to write insurance on buildings where acetylene is used. This board came to the conclusion the gas in the cyl inders is extremely dangerous when being transported. President Mor ton of the board of underwriters of New York on bing interviewed on the matter explained that pure acety lene was not explosive, but when mixed wilh air it was,' extremely so. "The Pintsch Light Co.," said pro fessor Morton, while experimenting with acetylene gas had an explosion which I believe will be repeated very frequently under similar circum stances. They charged a cylinder with gas with only 90 pounds pres sure according to the gauge. Sudden ly the head blew out and crashed through the roof, went up into the air, and then fell back, demolishing a chimney. You can see for your self how unsatisfactory any gauge must be in case of acetylene, for 90 pounds pressure, could hardly cause such an explosion. However, I do not believe the calcium carbide, from which acetylene gas is made, can be manufactured at a price which would make it available. It will cost at least $100 a ton. Even ifjt can be manufactured in such a way as not to be explosive, the cost must be reduced to $15 a ton to be used as an enricher. I will not say that there is absolutely no use for the new gas, for at present it is wholly in the experimental stage," Down Goes The Suit. The Greensboro Patriot was first to announce that Peter Cobb and wife, Margaret Cobb, as stockholders in the North Carolina Railway Com pany, had begun an action in the Superior Court of Guilford county to annul the lease of that road to the Southern Railwry Company. The Patriot is also the first to announce that that suit has been withdrawn. To-day's Patriot says: Mr. and Mrs. Cobb have evidently reconsidered the matter and come to the wise conclusion that their stock in the North Carolina Railroad is about as good an investment as they desire" and that any action they would take to depreciate that stock now that it is bringing 6F per cent interest would be detfrmental to - , their own interests. To-day they filed with the clerk of the court a retraxit, which effectual ly knocks the props from under the suit and it falls to the" ground. By their action they have put an end to endless litigation before it is fairly begun; It is not likely that the Southern Railway Company will be further embarrassed by similar- ac tion. Ealeigh Press-Visitor. U' : i 7 Maj Winder Retired. J ;, ' " Norfolk, Va., Jan. 22. General! Manager Winder has been retiied from the position of General Mana ger of the . Seaboard Air Line, and Mr. St John becomes General Man ager in connection with his duties as Vice-President This action is in accordance witb an order of the President and a com mittee of the directors of the line com prising the Seaboard Air Line sys tem.' Mr. "E. St John to-aay as sumes the duties of - General Mana ger of the entire system, in addition to his position of Y,ice-.f resident. It is understood that the directors also created the position of General Superintendent, which wiU undoubt Power. Latest U. S Gov't Report WW CONVICT'S FLYING ;MACHINE. President Cleveland aud Secretary Hoke Smith have received interesting communications trom Victor L. Ochoa, a . Federal convict in " the Kings County, New' York, peniten tiary. - '- - - x . V He has an aerial machine which he wishes to dispose of and to give this government the first chance to secure it His letter to the President neyr - reached,, that fficiaV feat - was referred to'., the-1 . ComaJssienef of Patents, who did not pass favorably upon it because its practicability had never been proven. Ochoa stated that as he was serving a three years' term an the penitentiary he has no! opportunity of testing his machine, but if given a chance he will show that it "will work. successfully, in! which event he thinks he ought to have his liberty. He makes known his idea at this time because of the belligerent attitude of the United States toward Great Britain. He wants the attention of Con gress called to his invention, and states that it will do away with battleships. He asserts that his machine will go. from one to three hundred miles an hour and carry moie than double its weight He wants $25,000,000 for it and thinks this an insufficient, sum, but s-ijs half a loaf is better than no loaf. Letter Writing. If women sometimes convey their feelings too strongly in their letters it must not be forgotten that - men are guilty of the same offence, writes Edward W. Bok in the Ladies Home Journal. There is no man living who would not gladly call back some letter which some time in his life, he has written and regretted afterward. Men are as often swayed by angry passions in their letters as women are by their emotions. 'The"art of letter writing has not been conquered any more by men Than women. In fact, a glance over the literature of the world shows that the truest and best masters of letter-writing have been women. And I am inclined to believe this is true to-day as it ever has been. A woman writes a far more natural letter than does a man. She may require space wherein to do it, where a man would employ terse- ness. uut wnat man ever oegruugeu a woman an extra sheet or m" evitable postscript which - so of ten says more than her whole letter. A woman always ignores all formulas and writes as she feels. True, womans way may not always be the saf test but it is the most delightful all the same. It's just the difference be tween spontaneity and study. Horse-whipped. Tampa, Fla., January 22. Con ductor Mcllieflesh, who has charge of a Pullman sleeper between , this place and New Yorkwas so badly horse-whipped by Dr. N. B. Rhodes Saturday night that his life is de spaired of. Some time ago Dr. Rhodes sent his thirteen-year old niece to Winston, N. C, placing her on Mcllieflesh's sleeper. The child reached her destination almost crazy. When questioned she said when the train left Jacksonville she was the only passenger on the sleeper, and the conductor became very familiar. Finally he unticed her into" the state room and locked the door. - I be child began screaming in fright and Mcllieflesh released her, begging her to say nothing." The child's story was wired to Dr. Rhodes, and ne met Mcllieflesh's tram and horse whipped him, it is thought, fatally. The man's face is cut to shreds, and physician's s ly Uw sight of one eye has been destroyed. When MdhV flesh's offense became known, mere was a movement to - lynch b.im, but Dr. Rhodes , prevented this, Baying the fellow had been sufficiently pun ished. - . . Cure for Headache: . ; As a, remedy for all forms of head ache Electric Bitters has . proved to be the very best It' effects a per manent cure and the "most dreaded habitual sick headaches yield to its influence. We urge all who are af flicted to procure a bottle, and give this" remedy 'a fair triaL In cases, of habitual constipation Electric Bit ters cures by giving the needed tone to the bowels, and few cases long re sist the use of this medicine. . Try it at once. Fifty cents and $1.00 t J. 1 De Morris' Drugstore. V Let Us Quarrel To-morrow." My wife is one of the sweetesi lit tle women in the whole world, and I am not considered peculiarly cranky, but sometimes differences would arie beginning with the most trival things which, however, being duly nursed, became of momentous proportions and often threatened the neaee of a I family. Of course, I was commonly me one to blame; in fact as I look back on it now, I am sure 1 was al ways to blame, for I should have had the wisdom to give way on the non-essentials, and by a little W straint and gentle talk win my little wire over to my way of thinking But instead of that I feared I should sacrifice my dignity, (?) as head of the family by : yielding. - So some times I went to my business without my good-bye kiss : and two people were miserable aH day." v But my little wife had' an inspira tion (most women-- have when -it conies to. the breaking -point), and tne. next time onr "argument was drifting near the; danger line she turned aside, the, " 'collision by this womanly suggestion, "Howard, dear, let's quarrel to-morrow!" This was a proposal for an armistice. What husband could refuse? "A1K right," I said, "we will put it off. for ? to morrow;" and we laughed and talk ed of other things. But to-morrow did not come. Indeed, to-morrow never comes; it's always ahead; and if we only keep our quarrels till then, there will be no more heart broken little wife at,home and fewer "blue" husbands at the store or of fice. "Let's quarrel to -morrow." Selected. - Sleep until You are not Sleepy. A person may need nine hours out of the twenty-four. Indeed, he is a wise man if, feeling that he re quires them, he is sensible enough to take them. Goetb, when performing his great literary feasts, took nine hours sleep. A full grown adult, in a healthy connition, will seldom require more than eight. If, however, he discov ers that he is not sufficiently re freshed by eight hours, . he should take more. It is a pretty, safe rule to sleep as long as you are sleepy. "There are people,", says a" writer, "who are wise enough to eat when they are hungry, but who have never attained that higher reach of wisdom to sleep when they are sleepy." The Discovery Saved His Life. Mr. G. Caillotrette, druggist, Beav- ersville, 111., says: "T o Dr. King's New Discovery I owe my life. Was taken with La Grippe and tried all the physicans for miLs about, but of no avail and was given np and told I could not live. Having Dr. King's New Discovery in my store I sent for a bottle and began its use and- from the first dose began to get better, and after using three bottles was up and abont again. It is worth its weight in gold. We won't keep house with out it" Get a free trial bottle at J. De Morris' drugstore. Carlton Corn well, foreman of the Gazette, Jliddletown, N. J., believes that Chamberlain's Cough Remedy should be in every home. He used it for a cold and it effected a speedy cure. He says : "It is indeed a grand remedy,. I can recommend to all. 1 nave also seen . it .. nsea , ior whooping cough, with the best re sults." 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by W, - R. Ham brick & Co., Last Saturday was the anniversary of the big snow of 1857, when the train on the" North Carobna road was snow-bound near Jamestown for several days.-; The only surviving members of this memorable trip are Col. Chas. W. 1 Bradsher and .Mr, Frank Snider, of Charlotte. " o ha ftjfl t w e W 11 ITI I W R E G U I ATO f k GOOD FOR EVERYBODY and everyone needs it at all times of the year. Malaria is always about, and the only preventive and relief is to keep the Liver active. You must help the Liver a bit, and the best helper Is the Old Friend, SIM MONS LIVER REGULATOR, the RED Z. Mr. C' HimrodV of Lancaster,-Ohip, w! " Simmons Liver regulator broke a case of Malarial Fever of three tears' standing; for me, and less than An a hnttle did the. business. ; I shall use it when in need, and recommend it" v v Be sure that you get it. Always look for rti RED 2 on the cackaze. And don't fort the word REGULATOR. It is SIM MONS Liver Regulator, and there is only one, and every one who takes it is rare to be benefited. THE BENEFIT IS ALL IN THE REMEDY. Take it also for Biliousness and Sick Headache; both -are caused by a sluggish Liver. -w J,. n.55eilin& Co., Philadelphia. Person County Courier. Published every Wednesday by . N"OBLL BEOS.: ROXBORO, N. C. . . , TEEMS OF SUBSCRIPTION : " One Copy One Year, , - , , i.oq One Cop Six Months, ' - - f Cash invariably in advance . - ; Ayer's . was , THE ONLY Sarsaparilla ADMITTED XT Met GET The Best. 1- r urei 1st That de.-ith will come to all. 4 2nd That Groceries! sold by W. J. JOHNSON & .. CO. are the best that can be had, and the price ! is just as low as first- ; r , class goods can be bought : . anywhere. GROCERIES, TABLE. LUXURIES, - Lots, of dainties not found in ordinary stores; prices . ' no higher than you pay . for inferior grades. V . . THE DAY OF THE CANDLE . ha gone and the lamp has taken its place and :- we-are offering the larg est assortment of lamps in this town. : Ask to see our line of Crockery. .- IF YOU'RE IN A HURRY ,. for Groceries always come to - . . W. J. JOHNSON & CO. Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat ent business conducted for Moderate Fees. Oun ornceis OptositeJU. 8. pTtiTOrriee and we can secure patent In less time tuoa tnoee remote irom wosnmgton. - Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of charge, Onr fcc v.ot due till patent is aecnittd. t A Pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patenta," with names of actual clients in your State, county, or , town, sent free. Address, .... C.A.SOW&CO. Patent Ornci. Wwiidst. O. C (0 YOU WANT A Situation? COMMERCIAL COLLEGE CF KY. UNIVERSITY Pmf Smith fnv IB Tft.M PiHnAiYVAl at thaf Awaraea Medal by Worut t taepontum For Sntem oT Boob-keesln aal Ctoacral ttmiliieaa Education, etc Cost to complete Easiness lknre abont fyo, inclnding tuition, doou and board. Phonography, Xypewritlnpr and 1(10 in banks and 100 officials. S Favstlem. taueut. 1O.0UO aaccemai craanatea ESTER NOW. K en tnctty university vipioma awarded onr graduates. KW" AuUmb given cnar orcuinatet in Mecwing ntnatitm, - !:- order that yotur letter awynu Ait College tave thu notice and addrest at below. w - WILBUR R. SMITH. LEXNCTON. KY of all Cough Medicines is Dr, Acker's English Rem edy. It will stop a cough In one night, check'a cold in one day, prevent croup, re-, lieve asthma, and cure con sumption; if taken in time. It .is made on honor, from the . purest ingredients and con tains neither opium nor mor phine. If the little ones have croup or wKooping cough, use. it promptly. Tbtec Siza-25c, 50c aad $1 V bottle. . . At Druggist. 'ACKER MEDICINE CO, ' 6 and x8 Chamber Street, Hew York. LAND SALE. On 1st Mondav in Februarr. 1896.' I will sell at public auction, to the -highest bidder for cash, at the Court firaa world '2;;': Things Honse door in lioxDoro, jn. u., a ioivx or parcel of land, situate in Person -county, Eoxboro Township, being lot Nx. 4, in a division of the : land of the late Mrs. English Beaver, same contain 15 acres, more or less. Sale by order of Person County Su perior Court. This 1st January, 1896. J. S. Meeeitt, , . " Commissioner. 1 sau ior a nttle money.- edly soon be filled.. good dog. Philadelphia Times.
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 29, 1896, edition 1
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