Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / March 14, 1900, edition 1 / Page 6
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-t ROXBORO, N 0,, March 14, 1900 THE AUTOMOBILE. I am the Automobile And I run My. never tiring course Along the roadways Of the world. And leaye no hoof prints In he sands of time I am the horse's Juggernant, Likewise tVe mule's And over their Eecumhent necks "My whirling wheels Pass to an era TNot for them. They mark a step In progress Through six Thousand years; I leap the bounds Of all the past ! nro the Eutiip :th . A wisV rRt marks w v.er, C 1 n ' , And the next A thousand years ahead. T stand, a pioneer, Upon the lofty ridge Between the new and old. And backward down the Kismet path I hear the slow Surceasing tread Of hoofbeatsfmoving To the field Of desuetude. I look before and see A million multiples of me Subserving man In all his Moving needs A ministrant of Motion that Is measureless as are Its master's wants. By night and day 1 itanct and wait, And at the master 8 beck ' I go. I have ho tired eyelids for The hand of Sleep To lay Its re- v ; v-No hunger gnaws , My vitals out; No muscles, Overstrained and sore, Plead silently to' me For rest. In my new lexcon There's no such word as rest, And tireless as may be The energies of man My service meets Tham everywhere, , And tireless as they. And make cessation cowardice. ' I am the movement Of the time to come: And in me motion finds Its rhythm and its poesy ' Its "get there" ; And its best activity. , lam the Thing; '' The It of passage and ' 'The master servant of the Master man, 'Through the splendors Of the f nture. In every land and dlime. I will lead the jrand drocession - TJpJthe corridors of time In the nicne Of transportation r In the Pantheon of Fame, " God among the gods ' v Of motion, " I shall set my seal f iAnd name. : . ' William-j. Lampion. J. Shreer. Sedalia, Mo., saved his child's life by One Minute Cough Cure. Doctors had given her up to ie with croup." It is infallible cure ifor oouerhs.; colds, tfrib.'v nneumonia. ; - X -a , ' O i ' - .. - - - . bronchitis and throat and lang trou bles ' Believes at once. Hambrick v . . - v ... .... f.. -v -t ' . 1 v Co --7: , ,' ;' "1 -fJ " r.iinfcu wuVuS All FIRF tAILS. m BestCoughSpr Ttii Good. TJW ft In time, sold oy arnggista. 11 BIDE Your TIME. When fortune treats you slight ingly j And everything goes wrong, Remember that you still are free To labor and be strong. To him who bray ely does his part Misfortune ie no crime, Juot hold your grip and. keep up heart ' "And learn to bide your time. The surest road' to greatness f ies, Trhough hard and patient work, The glorious name that never dies Comes not unto the shirk. Fame sits upon an eminence, . v A pinnacle sublime, He who would win must seek her theuce, Strive on and bide his time: The man hope and euergy, Who kaeps one goal in sight, Who goes his wty with constancy. Will soaie time, win the fight, The man whose life a glory lends, To every age and clime Is he whose purpose never bends, Who works and bides his time. Go onward. O'er the future's hills The hawn falls cool and sweet. Go onward, though your path may lie Through calumny and smile, The way will brighten by and by, Go cn and bides your time. And When the fight at last i o'er, . The toil at last is dene; When standing on life's farther shore, Beneath her setting sun; Beyond the future's unbarred gate, The bells of heaven chime; Ahd justice, love and glory wait or him who bides his time. Benver News. "I had bronchitis every winter for years and no medicibe gave me per manent relief until I began taking One Minute Cough Cuie. I know it is the best cough medicine made," .says J. Koontz, Corry, Pa. It qnickly cures coughs, colds, croup, atiiina, grippe and lung troubles. It is the children's favorite remedy. Cnres quickly. Hambrick & Co. Bro. Dickeys Philosophy. De longer I live de mo' impress I is wid de freedom er dis guv'ment outside de jail. De office er de president is so high dat sometimes w'en he pits dar he can't see de people below 'im. I don't believe in dis country spreadm' out so iur dat its arms can't reach its co-ittails. Fum de way dey talks, de Lawd is on both sides er de wars, buc dar's doubt dat de old deveVs all over r" 'em. In politics dey mos' inginrally kicks de ladder down when dey gits ter de top; but sometimes dey over looks de fac' dat dey ain't no fire es capes in de buildin'. . Many er de congressmens wev sens ter Washin'ton ter save de country ain't heard fum 'twell seed time. Politics ineks strange bedfellers, en ley never is enough kiver ter tek in de crowd. F L. Stanton, in the Constitution. , "I had dyspepsia for years. "No medicine "wag so effective as Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. It gave immediate relief. Two bottles produced mar velous results,1' writes L. H. Watren, Albany, Wis. It digests what you eat and cannot fail to cure. W. R. Hambrick. Long staple cotton sold for 12 1 cents iu Norfolk Saturday. - - ,m .- . . ... -. W. S. Philpot, Albany Ga., 1 says' DeWitt's Little Early Risers did me more good than any pills I ever took. Ths famous little pills for constipa tion, biliousness and liver and bowel trublesHambriek, & Co v The One Day Cold Cure. ' Cold in head and sore throat cured br Ker- mott's Chocolates Laxative Quinine. As easyV ;to;take as candy. "Children cry lor them." ; . -r p3rn rur. Secret of Beauty f is health; The secret of health" is the power to digest and assim ilate a; proper ;quanity of food. This carr never be done wKei the liver does hot act it's part Doyou know this ? Tutt's ; Liver Pills are an abso lute cure for sick headache, dys pepsia; sour stornacH, malaria, constipation, torpid liver, piles, iaundice, bilious fever, bilious ness and- kindred diseases. :. Tutt's Liver Rills A Liverpool Tailor. An enterprising Liverpool tailor never has been known" to acknow ledge that he didn't have anything a possible customer might ask for. One day a customer entered the shop and asked if he had any brou sers made especially for one-legged men. "Certainly," replied the merchant. 'What kind dp yc-u want?" 'dress trousers," said the man "The best yoa've got." Hurrying into the jere of the store the 'enterprising merchant snatched up a pair and cut eff the right leg with a pair of scissors. Hastily turning the edges, he pre sented them to the customer, "That's the kind I want. What's the price?" "One guinea." "Well, give me a pair with the left leg off." London Tid-Bits. SToni Bears the Signature of .The Kind You Have Always Bought $10b Dr. B. Detchona Antii Durec May be worth to yoti more than $100 if you have a child who soils bedding from inconten ence of water, daring sleep. Cures old and. young alike. It arrests the trouble at once $1. Sold by W. B. Hambrick & Co. Druggists Kox -boio.jf C. A. R. DeFJuent. editor of the Journal, Doylestown, Ohio, suffered for a number of years from rheuma tism in his right shoulder and" side. He says : My right arm at times was entirely useless. I tried Cham berlain's Pain Balm, and was sur prised to -receive relief almost im; mediately. The Pain Balm has been a constant companion of mine ever since and it never fails." For sale by Hambrick & Co. SOUTHERN RAILWAY An Ideal Tourist to the North and ast, via trie "Onesapeake Line Steamer. The pleasure-seeking tourist can accomplish no more delightful rail and water journey to the North or East than via the Southern Railway, to Norfolk, the nce the Chesapeake Line Steamers to Baltimore. The Chesapeke Line is the fast mail route. The fleet consist othe most magUficent steam ships afloat, City of Atlanta, Charlotte, Danville and Baltimore, leaving Norfolk every week day at 5 :45 p. m, for f Baltimore touching at Old Point Comfort. These ships were especially com structed for the. Bay service, and their appointments are as perfect as the most fastidous taste can suggest. The cohsine is unexcelled and every attentkn possible is shown to tle traveler. r The connection with the Southern Railway, arriving at Norfolk-at 7:50 a. m, permits a day's stop over at thatjpoint, giving an opportunity to visit Old Point Comfort; (Fort Mon roe), Virginia Beach, and Newport News, For rates, through tickets and any other information call on any agent Southern Railway or write R. L, Vernon, Trav. Pass, Agt, Cbar. pltt: N. C. -y-j Ad m i n i st ra t o r 's Notice. Having Qualified as Administrator of J. Hi Blackwelldec'd, late of Per son Co., North Carolina, this istoi notify all persons having c'aims against the estate, to present the same to i me - for payment, on or before the 14th day of,Febif 190L or this notice w41 be - plead in bar of their recovery. " All persons indeb ted to aid estate will please make immediate payment. N" ThisPeb. 34th, 1900. . -. W L THOMAS,: : v: T Administrator!. f oai-s tne T 1,10 hm m naY8 AlWaiS tJODffilt l-Z' ."cattiro of""' SGROFULfl AND ITS . 7 CURED BY ,: J,Qhnstori?s Sarsa , i r ' QUART BOTTLES. JL' MOST WONDERFUL CTJIMBC. I A'Grand Old Xady Gives HeKxperteiie!!;,;.,:., : - - Mrs Thankful Orilla Hurd lives in the : beautiful : village . of Brighton, Livingston, Co., Mich. ; This venerable and' highly .respected ladyvas born in the year 1812, the year of the great' war, in Hebron, .Washington Co., New York. She came to Michigan in 1840, , the, year of "Tippecanoe and Tyler too." All her faculties are excellently preserved, and possessing a Tery re- ' tentive memory, her mind is t ull of interesting ; reminiscences of her early life', of the early days of the State of Michigan and, the interesting and re- I markable people she has met,Nand the stirring events of which she was a wit- I ness. But nothing in her varied and manifold recollection., are more mar velous and worthy of attention than are her : experiences v in the use of JOHNSTON'S SARSAPARILLA. Mrs; Hurd inherited a tendency and pre- i disposition to scrofula, that terribly destructive blood taint which has cursed ahd is cursing the lives or tnousands and marking thousands more as vic tims of the death angel. Transmitted from" generation to generation, It is found in neary every family in one form or another. , It may make its ap- ?pearance in dreadful running sores, in unsightly swellings in; the neckor goitre, Or in eruprions.of varied forms. Attacking the mucous, membrane, it may be known as catarrh in the head, or developing in .the lungs it may be, r and often is, the prime cause of consumption. ' r ' ; SpeakUigof her case; Mrs." Hurd says: "I was troubled for many years with a bad skin disease. My arms and ' limbs would break out in a mass of sores, discharging yellow matter. . My neck began to swell and became very unsightly In appearance. My ' body was covered with - scrofulous eruptions.. ; My eyes were also greatly inflamed and -weakened, and they pained me very much. My blood was in a very bad condition and my head ached severely at frequent intervals,' and I had no appetite. I had sores also in my. ears. I was in a "miserable -condition, I had tried every remedy that had been recom mended, and doctor after doctor hafd failed. One of the best physicians in the state told me I must die of scrofulous consumption, as internal accesses - were beginning to form. I at length was told of Dr. Johnston, of Detroit, and his famous Sarsaparjlla. I tried a bottle, more as an experiment than any thing else, as I bad no faith in it, and greatly to my agreeable surprise, I began to grow better. You can be sure I" kept on 'taking it. .1 took a great many bottles. But I steadily improved until I became entirely, well. . All the sores healed up, all the bad symptoms disappeared. I gained perfect health, and I have never been trounled with scrofula since. Of course an old lady of 83 years is not a young wdman, but I have had remarkably good healtii since then, and I firmly believe that JOHNSTON'S SARSAPARIIXA is the greatest blood purifier and the best medicine in the wide - world, A both for , scrofula and as a spring medicine." This remarkably interesting old lady did not lok to be more than sixty, and she repeated several times, "I believe my life was saved by JOHNSTON'S S ARSAPARILL A." , J. D. MORRIS, Roxboro. In Olden Times When a boy had the croup, his mother used to reach up to the shelf over the fireplace and get the familiar black bottle, filled with the nauseous compound that th j cross road druggist sold as a pauacea for all ills of the flesh; when his twejve year old sister had the measles, the same old black bottle was brought into use; and when the old lady herself was touched with the ''rheumatiz, the aid of the same familiar cure all was invoked Sometimes the cure, all cured sometimes it didn't; but it was haridy and i was cheap, and so people kept on using it, and the man who made it got rich and went abroad every summer In pretty much the same( ignorant ' way . j FARMERS USED MANURE on all crops, because, like; old, plausible compounds, it was handy and cheap But, nowadays, farmers know that the growing plant requires the right sort of plant food, just as the growing child requires the proper kind of food, and so, when they plant tobacco. NOW THEY BUY - a specially prepaaed tobacco fertilizer, when he plants cotton, he buys a special cotton fertilizer, so with corn so with wheat so with no ws that certaen crops require much ammonia, some but lttle ammonia some Crops require heavily potashed fertilizers, others only phosphoric acid And the farmers of the old State have learned something else that is equally as important, lo witthpt the DURHAM FERTI LIZERS axe uartuuuy prepprea Dy expert cnemists witn regarato tne crops on which they are to be used, and are honestly made oy capable mannfanfntiora .-' ' As to Durham Brands, a booklet for the asking. Address Durham Fertilizer Gompany, Durham, North Carolina. J- A. LONG, t-res. J S- M E R R 1 rr ITU ROXBORO; N.'C. Capital Stock,, III Surplus and profits, Transacts a general bankmev business; xa prompt and careful a ttentfon ness solicited. . ' x X ' - ' " ; 1 x Job Work at this bflai6e. Nothing but the best; prices coinpard with any; nicer print Sanipl es; for the s asking:. J JwS. BRADBHER, r Cashier. TTi IV ice-P res $40,000.! ; 5,500. in all matters. Your busi- Piny, 'AWFUL flORRORS parilla H SI j ' -'to X I than - ' s S -i-r.-?' ' "
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 14, 1900, edition 1
6
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