Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / May 1, 1907, edition 1 / Page 6
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- V Detel 3urcen ORO, it. a DR. O. P. SCHAUB CSsrj hb prcfetsionfti service in ; pr&oth 3 mJieine In tl its IS tuspatmdjte country. OMce ova Wm. D. Merritt, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Peoples Bank Building. ItOXBORO, N. a W. H. B, NEWELL, Wathmaker, Jeweler, ROXBORO, - - - N. C In Hugh Wood's store. First-class-stock of goods on hand at all times Marcus' Winsiead, Attorney at Law, MILTON, N. C. Practice' reguularly in Person and Caswell courts. Prompt attention giv en to all business. DR. R. J. TEAGUE I will be in my office at Mor ris' Drug Store every Saturday and Sunday. Special attention iveneye, ear, nose and throat diseases and fitting of glasses. KitchiiY H Carlton Attorneys and Counsel lors at Law ROXBORO, N. C. Practice wherever services re quired. Phone 10. ft. "Rr- "ROOTIH. F. 0. Carver Boone & Carver, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law. Pass & Carver Building, Main Street, ROXBORO, N. C. 'Phone No. 59 ft. L VftSFO'R'D, Attorney at Law, Office over E. A. Bradshaw 'g Store, , ROXBORO, N. C. W. T. BRADSHER, Attorney at Law, ROXBORO, - - - N. a Practice in Person and adjoining counties. Special attention given to aofiections. I 1.1 Tonsorial Artist, Special attention given tp the treat ment of the scalp. To the traveling public. When in Roxboro you are cordially invited to give me a call. Our towels are clean j razors sharp. Shop up-to-date. Corner Main street and Reams Avenue. . tiaBiftsH NOVEMBER 25, 1906. Ex. Except Sun. Daily Sun. Daily. p.m. a.m. V a.m. p.m. 6.15 7.00 Lv. Durham, Ar.x 9,15 9.30 7.07 8.29 Lv Roxboro Ar. 7.32 8.00 8.00901 Lv. Dfinnistnn At. ?:7 57 8.28 9.24 Lv, So. Boston Ar.2.25 7,051 S.45r9.39 Lv. Houston Ar 6.09 6.49 11.50 12115 Lv. Lynchb. Ar 3;00 4.15 j WESTBOUND Leave Lynchburg. 2.30 p. m. The St. .Louis exprest iui tummyuB - o,iiu yiJiut;neiu,- lO; Vlm cinnatti1 .Pullman sleeper and Caft v 7.10 a. m. for" Roanoke,; Rardford. Bristol,, ' BluefifeldorlohViPocahon tas;"Welch:'i--- v"T-v' '.',1 ' 5.30;,p. :m. daily ; for Roanoke and intermediate sta t ions.' tr-" : -EASTBOIINILay "Lyjachburg.-!. 3.35';jp; : mAgffii: Fanville; Richmond, . PeteriouTg.iand'. Norfolk. 8.50"; at m.oy armville: ;- Peters- to . any VSgent or.to rt; -: ; t WOODING. - v. . Yte-Br BEVILLEr Q: P.-A., ; IN Fit CONDITION' - . 1- ; : r - M-'-fci: Di Manufacturers Highly Pleased With Outlook BANQUET AT HOTEL BRUNSWICK Many Important Papers on the. 0 :uge to yQUf wer; they? mat you ton Industry President . Maccoll, play maxblos for?" Harper's Weekly. of the Association, presides, Del ; ; livering ; Address on Productior RECIPES. Manufacture and Export of thi A Good Saadwieh A nice sandwich Boston, Special. The 82d annual meeting of the National Association of; Cotton Manufacturers opened in j Huntington HalL Mass., Institute oi Technology. Many important pa pers on the cotton industry have been prepared and for the chief social event of the gathering a banquet was arranged for the evening at the Hotel Brunswick. The first session Was called to or der by President James R. Maccoll, of Providence, R. I. President Maccoll V address fol lowed, and among the other speakers were Everett' W. Burdett of "this city, who spoke on "Corporation and the Public Welfare Harvey Stuart Chase, Boston, on "The Cost cf Maintenance and Depreciation in Cot ton Mills," and Henry K. lioweJl, also of this city, whose topic was "Taxation and Valuation With Ref erence to Industrial riants." Condition Seems World-Wide: In his address, President Maccoll said : "I am glad to congratulate you up on the continued activity and pros perity of our industry. This condi tion seems to be world-wide. There is adequate consumption or at least demand to employ every spinaie ana loom. A year ago we recorded Eng land's increase of 6,250,000 spindles. The latest reports shew 10,000,000 spindles added or projected within five years, which equals the 'growth of the previous 30 years. In our own country there has been a normal ad dition of spindles; imports of cotton manufacturers have increased during 1906 as compared in 1905, $14,-500,-000, or 26 per cent.; exports have diminished $13,500,000, or 24 per cent.; yet there is no evidence of over-supply or glutted markets. Ex tension of foreign trade is for the moment ignored, on account of the home demand absorbing all the out put. "Everything that enters into the cost of production is getting on to an excessively high level. It is hardly to be expected that the present tariff can prevent large importations of foreign goods unless we can maintain our lead in the use of labor-saving methods and. devices. But the fact is that our foreign competitors are keenly alive to the situation and are rapidly adopting American improve ments, and there are already many mills aboad that are fuly aquipped with every American , device.' As sdon, therefore, as there is a reaction abroad, we fmay expect a reaction here." Grieved Over Dowie's Death. New York, Special. Grieving, it. is thought, because of the death of "Prophet Elijah III,r Dowie, Mrs. Lydia Staley, threw herself from the front window of her. home on the fifth floor of an apartment house "in East one seventy-fourth street and died later in a hospital from a frac ture of the skull. ' The Staley s were leaAinc: member of the Dowie Cult in this city. Staley told how his wife had grieved after the " Prophet V 1 death andl said she had worn herself almost to a shac!tow through enforced fasting. : Big Packing Plant Burned. Pittsburg, Pa., Special. Zoeller Packing Company, occupying two acres of ground on Spring Garden avenue, Allegheny,, was destroyed ) by fire, causing ah estimated loss of $300,000. The origin of the fire has not been, ascertained. It burned rap idly and for a. .while adjacent prop erty was threatened. . Stack Crashes Through -Roof. Millville, N. J., Special.Three young women employed at T. C. Wheaton & Co. V glass factory in his city were killed Wednesday by the collapse of "a smoke , sack - -.which crashed through a room m which they were working. The dei : '" Lena- Doughty. . ' ' ; ; Lydia Thurston. Sylvia Galligher. The accident s occurred 'ft during a wind stonn. ' In the Game. Once there was a man who thought Uncle Riissell Sase ought . to. stop work.'" He : spoke, to , him . about .. it. "Why get together any more money, Mr gage? You clm.t feat n; y0u can't" drink ' it." What good will it dp youT'V . - - "Ever play marbles?" Uncle Russell asked. ; "Yes, when I was a boy' "Couldn't eat ,em, could you? "made", mustard; . over this, on one slice, put a layer of cottage or sour milk cheese ; on the other side, spread thickly finely-chopped olives mixed with mayonnaise, and place "the slices together. For another slices of rye bread are buttered spread with mustard, then with 'cottage cheese, and put the slices together. Ham Muffins. - Cream one-fourth cupful -of butter, add gradually nearly three-fourths of a cupful of cold boil ed ham, chopped fine, also a well beat en egg; then alternately one cupful wf Graham flour and one cupful of white flour, sifted, with three tea spoonfuls of baking powder and a cup ful of milk. Bake in a hot, well but tered muffin pan about twenty-five min utes. ' Cheese Fritters Cheese fritters can be concocted with a chafing dish and they are very toothsome to any cheese lover. Mix four tablespoon of grated Parmesan cheese with two ta blespoons .of stale bread crumbs. Beat four eggs well and add to first mix ture... Season with salt and paprica Drop from tip of spoon in small cakes on a hot, buttered blazer. Brown on one side, then turn and brown on the other side. . To Be Fat: Drink Chocolate. In an obscure but picturesque little Village of far off Germany there ii a place" called the "Chocolate Cure," where thin people go to become stout. The patients eat -and drink cocoa and chocolate all the time while they rest, admire the scenery, gossip and gxo ratter every day. The true secret of the great success of the treatment is the happy way chocolate has of fattening . just the right places., set tling in the hands, the arms, the neck and the shoulders, making the fair patient prettier and plumper all the time. The really effective part of this cure may be tried at home by any persevering woman, and the medi. cine is so palatable and the method so simple that there is actually, it seems, no reason why all should not be of Just the desired weight - 4 SELF-CONFESSED LIAR. Slangey Yes, I tramped through Switzerland once. .Newitt Come off! You never did. Slangey Sure I did; on the level. Newitt That proves you're lying. It!s simply impossible to tramp through Switzerland on the level. Catholic Standard and Times. A Kentucky Congressman says the Wall street man is a bull today, a bear tomorrow, but always a hog. That man will not be cabled to fill the chair of hih finance zoology in a tainted-money college, prophesies the New York American. APPENDICITIS Not at all Necessary to Operate In Many Cases. Autdmobiles and Appendicitis scare Borne people before they are hit. Appendicitis is often caused by too much starch in the bowels. Starch is hard to digest and clogs up the di gestive machinery -also tends to torm cakes in the cecum. .(That's the blind pouch at entrance to the appendix).- A N. H. girl had appendicitis, but lived on milk for awhile then Grape Nuts and got well without an opera tion She says: "Five years ago while at school, ' I suffered terrib Jy with constipation and indigestion." X Too much starchT white bread, potatoes, etc., which she did not digest.) - "Soon after I left school I had an attack of appendicitis and for thirteen weeks liVed on milk and water. When I recovered enough to eat solid food there was, nothing that would agree with me, until a friend recom mended Grape-Nuts. V "When I began to eat Grape-Nuts I weighed 9 8 lbs. , but I soon grew- to 115 lbs. The distress after eating left, me entirely .and now I am. like a new person.": - j ' S (A little Grape-Nuts dissolved in I water or milkNvould have been much better for this case than .milk alone, 'for th3 starchy: Dart of the I wheat and barley . Is changed into a Grape-Nuts. ) Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich., Read; the little : book, "The Road to Wellville Jn pkgs. "There's a reason." ; 5 C . YOUR GRANDMOTHER USED IT. But She Never. Had Sulphipr in Snch Convenient Form as This. s Youi randmotherviised Sulphur';" as her favorite; household remedy, and so did her grandmother, gulphur has been curing skin and blood diseases for a , hundred years. But in the old dava thev had in fnV powdered sulphur. , !; Now. Hancock's Liquid " C..1.L... J.' iJL . ? 1 J.T-'- 1.' i: J.- ' 1 l ' louijjuui garcrs it ui juu ui iae uesi possioie form and you get the full benefit;- - -Hancock's Liquid Sulphur and Ointment quickly cure Eczema, Tetter Salt Rhum and. all Skin Diseases. It cured an ugly ulcer for Mrs. Ann WWillett; of Wash ington D. C, in three days. - ' , Taken internally, ' it purifies the J blood and clears the compjexion. : Your: druggist sella it. , ' Sulphur Booklet free, if you write Han cock, Liquid Sulphur Company. Baltimore. It is vain to learn wisdom and yet to live f oolishly.-Spanish. - The walls are the books of the So. 17-'07. poor. Punch Include six cans of Argo Red Sal mon in your next grocery list. It will keep for twenty years. - We lessen our wants jy lessening our desire. Lahernus. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Wootterd's Sanitary Lotios. Noverfails Atdruggista. Use can most change the stamp of nature. Shakespeare. i " . s Take Garfield Tea in the Spring it will save you many days of headache, lassitude and general ill health! This natural laxa tive purifies the blood, cleanses the system and establishes a normal action of liver, kidneys and bowels. v ORIGIN OF THE PEARL. Cecretlon Formed for Defense, Thinks M. Seurat. The origin of the pearl in the shell of the ; oyster, or other bivalve 01 mollusk, has been the object of a conoiderable amount of investigation and speculation. Among the more recent studies of the subject may be noted those of M. Sedrat recorded in the "Comptes Rendus." This natural ist finds that In pearl oysters from the Gambia lagoons, in the South Pacific, the pearls are due to a small worm- a sort of tapeworm. In cysts on the body and mantle of the oyster he has found true pearls surrounding a nucleus which he has shown to be one of these worms. Like other tape worms, this one, concerned in the pro duction of pearls, requires a second host in which to complete its develop ment. And M. Seurat considers that the ray is the second host ; In this case, for he has found in the spiral intestine of this fish small tapeworms which he regards as the adult form of, the larval worm of the pearl, oys ter. The author has named this pew species of tapeworm Tylocephalum margaritiferae. The view has been held that the pearl is a secretion formed, as it were, in self-defense for the surrounding an4 isolation of ar injurious foreign body. : THIS PEEKABOO GIRL 'NOT " .FOOLISH. Inconsistent and baffling as ever, the peekaboo shirtwaist igirl is tempt ing bronchitis and kindred ills, for she still cMhgs to that muchdiscussed article of dress, unmindful that the frosty air calls for union suits and fur. : The combination ef tie. peek aboo and loosely hung coat, cut off just below the shoulder bla&es with a bit of fur darapejd across was seen in a street yesterday, and an elderly woman, evidently . a friend of the3 girl's mother, was overheard to remonstrate with thegirl for her exposure of neck and ofceat. "PshalP ! " . replied the girl. "There Isn't: any danger. !' I have a peekaboo chest protector especially proved "for peteaboo waists.?--New. York Presa. . :v:s -f t&ALLAA i A i A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A AND j JUI0Y -JMFLl--- WG0 ' "-'r Do You Open4 Your MonxSi Llkea young bird and gulp down whaw ever food or medicine may be offered youJ Or, do you want to know something of til composijbion.aiid character of that whiX you take into your stomach whether food or medicine ?... . ? : . - ..'Most intelligent ana: sensible 'people now-a-days insist en laimrfT. Jl.f employ whether asfood or. as mSicTn J 2fSl a- perfect 'b"" upuu ucn Knowledge. So he pub!ishes,MMQadcast and on each bottle wrapper, whati?tedicines are made ol and veesJfjQWtb This he t he can weUord jadp befeauM th r2 the ingredients of whfch his medicfnpft are made ate studied and understood ibeT more wilitnfeir superior curative virtue? b apnrfcTaj, '-" " . " - For the cure of woman's peculiar weak nesses, Irrefularitles andJderangementa; giving rise to frequent headaches; back ache, dragging-down pain or distress i lower abdominal i or pelvic region, accomr panfed,! ofttimes, -with a debilitating pelyic, catarrhal drain and kindred sympv toms of weakness, Pr. Pierces Favorite Prescription ii a most efficient remedy. It is equally effective in curing painful periods, in giving -strength to nursmgr mothers and in preparing the system the expectant mother for baby's coming thus rendering childbirth safe and com paratively paiiUess. ; Thekw Favorite Pre scription" is a most potent, strengthenin tonic to the genera! system and to the organs distinctly JeTninhle in pa?tiaular.i It is also a soothing and invigorating nervine and cures barrens exhaustion nervous prostration; neuralgia, hysterlaj spasms, chorea or St. . Vitus's dance, ancl other distressing nervous symptoms aV4 tendant upon funettenal and organic dis-i eases.of the distinctly feminine organs. . i A host of medical authorities of all the? several schools of practice, recommend each of the several ingredients of whicS ,n Favorite Prescription" is made for thej cure of the diseases for which it isclaimecE to be a cure. You may read what theyj say for yourself by sending a postal care request for a free booklet of extract from the leading'authorities, to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel and Surgical In stitute, Buff alo, N. YM and It will come to you by return post. - 7 A blow threatened was nevr well given. -Italian. V , Argo Red Salmon is just the jjiing for unexpected company. There i$ nothing better to serve from the can. At all grocers. ;: v c -; Don't buy everything that's cheap and you '11 escape being taken in. Protective Paint Pure White Lead Paint protects property against repairs, ' replacement and deterioration. It makes buildings look better, wear better and sell bet ter Use only Pure Linseed Oil and Pure White Lead made by the Old Dutch Process, which is sold in kegs with this Dutch Boy trade mark on the side. v This trade nfark protects you against fraudu lent White Lead adulterations and substitutes. SEND FOR BOOK 'A Talk on Paint," gives tahiable infor mation on the paint subject. Sent free upon, xeauest. -- ' All lead packtd in 2907 bears this mark. NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY In whichever of the follew- ing cities is nearest-" you: : 5 New York. Boston,- Buffalo. Olerelan, Cincinnati, Chicago. St. Louis, Philadel phia John T. Lewis & Bros. Co. Pittsburgh ' National Lead&OU Oo.J i So 17-'07. A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A tt
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 1, 1907, edition 1
6
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