Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / Sept. 28, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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tfoell Bros., Proprietors. , Home First: Abroad Next. $1. 00 Per Year in Advance- Vol. XXVII ROXBORO, , NORTH CAROLINA, Wednesday Even v - : No. H9 J nttMOCRATIC DAY."!sykes. wf" was introduced by Mr. and in a: few words announced The Democratic host had been ooking forward to the opening of : Wic rmintu -with the camp111 - oreat deal of interest, and the Chairman, after consultation - with the canbidaies, decided "to 'have his opening at Helena, hoping -to have a goodly number of the, :old Wed and true Democrats or tne County to come out and give the hall a good send on. fcaoiraay, tne 94th day of September, was named . tir,': the day, and (iov.o.w.. yv. Kitchin, Hon. C B. Watson and Mr. Victor S- Bryant were - invit ed to address the people. V ; , Posters were distributed and the announcement duly made through the columns of The Courier, in viting the people to come out and hear theese distinguished speak ers. Dinner of barbecued pig and and sheep was promised,.:, and every preparation was made for the comfort of those pressnt, But, S.'G. -Winstead in a .strong and Fifteen nanorea i cupc , u;aoin iy opccgxi ui auuui xu tinn- ;n? and tcjoy Damecue umner. . , ulcs. . j uage naa not made a po- micai speecn, tie said, in explain ing twhy he could not speak, : this campaign. But really--and' truly, the Judge was not called upon to make any excuse' for he delivered the doctrine in a T manner entirely satisfactory to -his' friends . and equally as uncomfortable to the eremies of Democracy. ;" . ; : ; ";Mrvt Caleb: Green, the popular Clerk of , the .Court for Durham county, by special request, of friends, yielded to persuasion and spoke for about twenty minutes, and Craade almost -happy , hit. His-speech was full of humor at the.same time replete with' truths that sank deep into the ' hearts of his hearers. ? '' v' f. , At this hour, 1 o'clock, dinner was announced and with about fifty of Helena's fairest daughters, ,harT becue was;handed but to about fifteen' hundred men, women and children, with lemonade arid cake . , , i . .M UIV.IIIJ. . 1 A Fv n nrr itrrl Kti rtirt k ...-.... .r,.-.-, t. , j ......: ut-'-. my,ueii"pyu:ui u promptiy at 2 o'clock the crowd not dream of such an ocean of i flOCAmW Qf f u nrhnr - whon M? folks." Every preeiret in the L ,M. Cari,on introduced in a very Coumy wasreprteentea, ana men i. hafipy and aDpropriate- manneri some. A conservative estimate of r q, v; Kitchin. For about 2 ,be crowd was 1 00 people. - The hot;rs the Gov. held the audience only rem was ihat all of our' m nrflno. nwHc fl-prp nrt. snnnhed with har-'; . - - un. .-r -t ; mey naa nstenea lor more tnan an himself Mr. Hicks is well known in this County and 'assured the people jhat he would be , elected, for, - while he- expected ta, carry Person his County would give the ticket a majority of moret than one thousand. The people of Person will have "the pleasure of hearing' from him before the campaign is ended. ; , ' " ; We must say to the credit of the thriving little town of Helena that we, have, never seen a more, order ly and tvell behaved crowd, - or a crowd of more intelligence ' than the one presented to the speakers on last Saturday."- . - , , 7';;' It was indeed -af. good day for Democracy ind osf November the 8th the, returns from . that . section will show. a wonderfully, 'different tale than on previous years. VITAL WASHINGTON NEWS. becue. ihnnr nnd a "hnlF in the mnrnino" ;; to Bm v.e can safely, say without : ; ch wm nQ in ear or conirauituuu, mai tn th? npalcpr affprnnt tn fame may not have received aU; . - - svnnns:, ftF thfi snrK hey wanted for the stomach's sake for jt would be unfair, but we can !one went away empiy ;tr uuu, say trutniuny tnai ne was at nis onest and trua Democratic prin- j besti and we doubt if he ever made iple preached oy nonest upngnt a bener,,,speecnT.ltwas vote4 men. ' r . . winnms: speecn, ana no man wno The speakers, Hon. H. A; Fou-. heard it could say aught againsVift! hee, and Mr. Caleb Green, of or say there was an unfair wbrdf urham, and Gov. ;W. W, Kitchin i uttered. No man is more uniyer- araeout from uurnam in Auto- sany iuvcu in uus uuuiy, wneits obiles and arrved at 11:15. arid he is best known; than .Governor about fifteen niinutes the Re- Wilham w. tCitchiiV and it wasin- kblican wool began to fly. Hon. ! deed a treat to his friends .;. to have . A. Foushee introduced by the the pleasure of Ji&teningr,to him. hairman, led off, ami made- a Another speech :of - this kind ; and nost excellent speechl It i was t we believe the majority : for Jlour he first time that many of our ticket would run above 500, for eople had heard him make a po-; . truly the people will do right .when tical speech and was a revelation they are so clearly showa what is them, for they did; not know right. ,We do not believe, there hat our County had produced an- was a Republican present who lis- her such a campaigner! one who tened to his speech but what :went nks with the very best in Ithe. away Feeling, ashamed of the fact. tate. . . , ... Hon. A A. . Hicks, our canal- He was followed ; by i Judge date, for the Senate, was called for f 1 M REMEMBER THE.DA.TES V October 3d to :8ih. - t 'l , if',' jy- raF 4 ? ; . . I. I iwt'""52. 14". ' -r - r r " " v ' )rnh?r wc are aoino - to deihon- the in mir- Storei VOll a rpnt rnmp nnd w want CVefV man and 'ont cest B in the county to call and take lunch with us whether you opiate buvina or nol- If will be worth: while Jo see this ,PV) !fi - 1 rx7' 01 Go By, Clyde H. Tavenner, Special Wash ington Correspondent of: this Paper. President Taf t i has made it plain that he hopes and expects to secure a renomination for the Presidency. 4 This ' means . thaj ' he does not even yet see the point conveyed in the returns of the recent : elec tions: It is evident to many that the President sees no significance in the fact that from Maine to California the candidates brand" ed.'witli his . indorsement have been retired Ito private life by overwhelming." majorities, . while thosejiaving his opposition ; have everywhere been elevated by the In yew ; of tle decisive re pudiation of the Taf t administra tion in tlie recent elections, it.be?. comes interesting to know the identity, of the mon, whose advice Ibe -President, f as followed to his poh1 tical downf alL Here are some of thelmen in the Taf t cab inet whose " pedigrees ' make lit plain why .Mr. Taf t's administra tion has failed to please the com mon people: ' ' Attorney General George C. Wickersham Former attorney for the sugar trust: rit was he w'ao1 induced President f Taftto recomend in his annual, message against' a' Congressional ; inves tigation the $2,000,fJOO ;suar trust .underweigHt irauds;) ;, im meoliately - upon t- staking x office "Wickersham dropped suits which had, been started against the beef trusty taMng the' position $hat he olid not believe members of the trust meant! to violate the law and that ; nothing could be i gained through prbsecutions fbr Vpast' offenses:. "Wickersham wrote . legal r opinion vindicating Ballinger and J indicting Bm chot: and Glayis":T j Secretary of lAgricultureili son- Does whatever; his superl ior officers" (Taf t;-Aldrich. Can- non aeiiai;i uemancM in z oruer xo hold i his position; - Iias shown himselt to bejan enmylof f pure food, laws by permitting manu facturers of food products tq use benzoate ,of soda ; in any ; tquan tity.. desired: takes ; position re tail merchantsrand ; not trust nor larm are respousi uie ior increas ed prices. ("This is official, yfew Of the Taf t administration.) r , Charles Nagel,- - secretary- of Commerce an d Labor -.Former attorney for the "Walters Pierce Standard Oil company; he, is at the. head of the department f in whichis located the ; bureau' jof corporations.'- - $t: -:.' - ; . Secretary, of -JVar .pickinson Harrimart and Illinois Central lawyer: showed his hand as a stool pigeon f or vthe railroads by ,blo3kini an independent .line oi steam ships to Panama.,-" " . Secretary of the Treasury MacV,eagh His records is im- materiil, as Aldrich is reaV " head of currency , and finance - of the counter Ballinger Exposed . and dis credited, -but still in office',, ; TUTll ' ABOUT MAINE. Sufficient time has now, pas sed toet the truthfromrMaine. Authentic reports show, that ' the Democratic victories there were not won principally upon : state andlccalissues as the -Republican leaders have' tried x to : rep resent. '"The most ' . prominent - is sues w re: f L ' " I - ' - i 1 . 'i - Failut!elof the Republicanparty to fulfill its campaign' pledge '-.to revise the tariff downward; higti coat ot living, Cahnonism, Hale ism,vquestions pertaming to pro hibitioni : ; , - ; -The Democratic congressional candidates promised to inves tigate and expose the ; followingt 1 ,The cost of living as affected by the tariff And the trusts. : Extravagance in' government expenditures. -" . ; -. The pfir't played by Mr. "Wick ersham tn the sale of friar lands in f3t FliiliDDines. - : : The arcbunt of money Cor telyou and other- cabinet members squeeze out ' of plutocrats for campaign purposes ; when Rosa velt ran in 1904, aild , how ' mnch Hitchcock raised for Taft foisr years later, v ,Thaefirtfiof- th trusts and syndicates to; grab timber and mineral lands i and: water , power sites and ; Ballinger 's . relation thereto. ? ' v ' - . . t - The reasons " why President Taft joins the" Guggenh'einis in denying to Alaska territorial The inf 1 aences behind the rub ber schedule,' cotton schedule and wool rschedule-; of ": the ' Payne Aldrich tariff bfflr : : V: . The part .played by . national officers in promoting the -plundering of the civilized Indians of Pldahoma by lawyers claim agents and politicians, : V- . - , ' GENEROSITY. OF -AU)RICH; ' - Republican candidates ... for j Congress boast of the generosity o f S enatOB Aldrich i?i permitting ajlarge number of articles to go on the; free list in the new tariff law, And-Jemocratic ::,.candidates;are telling , what the f ree list" really consists of .SomS of ;the, things that the generous . Rhode , Island statesman permitted pn the free list . were t . joss-sticks, bladders, dried, blood and a horse hafr Then there are birds eggs, lemon juice turtles and Junk. .Also , acorns, bones, asnes zaffer, r cdtgut, fos sils, Brazilins peoples and oairum J EXPENSIVE horseshoeing! : iVQne hundred arid :forty: dollars for-street car ticketsi $237.66 for horseshoeing,' $429,55 "for ' soap anct; brushes! These are a few of the small 1 expenditures !.f (of the state department of the govern ment in 1909The : horseshoeing item is a gem as a ' sample of the mucbr'boasted ' 4 Taf t policy , of "cut-to-the-quick'.' , economy. The item of $237,66 refers to the shoeing of four, . liorses for brie year!, . . , : . . A GROWING ARMY r ; In the last eight years" ;99,225 federal roftlceholders have been added to the pay rolls of ; the national government, fsX .an an nual increased expense to ? the people of Jmore than' seventy million dollars, Ta My Friends of Person d Cas- utu KonU t . ":n u.4 - . t. -i ,.; f UUUI 111M1I UUU: ukaoi, OIJU X. Will vUC : Well:, , ' t triad tr corrp thdm r ih c f rP my ability. - . -r When you are readv to sell I wisn to inform all of my. old friends of Person -Caswell and adjoining; Counties, that I will be 2ve me a trial and I will guaran-. with , the i - Banner Warehouse, I tee you satisfaction. r x Danville, Va.. ' for the-season off " V , Your friend ,1 910,: 1911 , where they will find ; . Joe Featherston. . modations unsurpassed for accom 'Au2.' 9. 3. ms. . .... . Dixie ClotMng ?Store, ROXBORO, . .e : . . We are the leaders In Low1 Prices and good Merchandise:. ;We are here to' save you money and intend that farmers of. Person,' CaswelI:andi)range -counties shall have the opportunity to buy goods as cheap as anywhere Our.stoclTof 'C ,.:.,: - .. ; . ' GiothmgL Diy-Goods, Shoes,;Hats, ;and everything carried in a first class General btore, is new. and up-to-date and our - i PRICES LOWER than same qoods can'be bought in this town, Give us call and will prove this assertion to he true. : v All' ' - . V Always ask to see our D:,L and Piedmont $3.50 .and $400 Shoe the best shoe in town. ;uj DIXIE CLOTHINa STORE, : . - '-:-JXroldberg3agev:--x M Phoned- J;;:;: EVERYTHING TO BUILD ! - EOXBOROi N. C. HOE 31 JOE fffl F)k TO a dii'iiilllb Si For Ladies, Misses and Children. ; ; Cprrect in style, high inequality and reasbnaibly priced; By far the biggest and best assortment of this iyi class of goods that we have ever shown;Tr-X-:;- Ladies Tailored Suits r " S6 to S30 LadiesTailored' Waists SI to S2.50 -: . ' Ladies Tailored Skirts; $2.50 to 510 v. Indies Coats r: , t.v - t $3.50to$15 - Misses and Children's Coats $2 toS8 'J Mercerized Petticoats! 75c to $3.50 :-ir SOlc Petticbate :. V ; $3;50 to 55."-' ; . , Misses, childrens dresses 35 c to SI. 25 ;;Ar full Ime of sweaters, I(nit and lauslin undenvear for larJiss. misses and children. , Our store is full from hzzz- mentbHtcl i ' v. D o Ul Everything ta wear and furnish the home. ' toms b see and you vail shy b buy. 0' Lin 30 3
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 28, 1910, edition 1
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