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Noell Bros., Proprietors.
Home First : Abroad Next.
$1.00 Per Year in Advance
VOL. XXVIII
ROXBORO, NORTH CAROLINA. Wednesday Evening, Feb. .22 1911.
No 8 "
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Join The Boosters In The
ourier's Popularity Contest
This is Boosters Week and the Time to
Boost Your Favorite Candidate.
n
, 500 Extra Votes for Every
i
fore Tuesday, Feb. 28th
Manager will be Found in
Saturday from 1 p. m. to
Acquainted.
It is time to get busy if you
expect to have some-real fun out
of The Courier contest. It's fun
to picK one, au.u oucu tuxu. iu. j.ivj.
try to make her a winner, kave
your coupons and see that your
subscriptions are paid and the,
votes Riven to your lavorite. I
Don't lose any :time m seeing
your friends and getting them
to subscribe for The Courier
and cast their votes
for your
candidate.
Bo a booster. Yeu will enjoy
the contest as much as some of
the candidates, if you can be of
assistance to some worthy can
didate Remember you can give your
favorite extra votes by paying
your subscription during
"Booster Week."
Thove is still" plenty of room
for new candidates, as daily
some drop out and others take
their places. It will appeal to
anyone with a little ambition to (
seo that they can enter in an
almost open field and have the
b. si kind of a chance at a fine!
9
prize.
Just Getting Started.
At present the candidates are j
lust string started, feeling the j
puls of their friends to learn;
their strength they know that'
y-bscriptions are what count,!
.I teat to secure them is the;
suivst way to pile up votes,'
though the coupons are oy no
g,i u.c
!.-nnstO Oe ties J1W, a0
ning of a prize sometimes de
nends on a few votes. Get. your
Wl
we can cave you money and can furnish
og and Field fencing,
in any height and
on us for Steel and Galvanized Roofing.
Have just gotten in a. CAR and can
give you good quality.
Long, Bradslier & Co.
Yearly Subscription turned in be
1911 at 8 p. m. The Contest
The Courier Office, Tuesday and
8 p. m. Come in and Get
friends into the habit of cutting '.
coupons out for you, and it will !
keep up their interest in you,
it,c;i nicj win nuu uju uueir
favorite candidate fall behind for
lack of the utmost help they can
give.
very Subscriber Should Vete.
Every subscriber of The
Courier should give their votes to
some candidate. Send in your
favorite's name and then vote
for her. Vote just as you would
for a congressman to represent
i you, only yote oftener, as it is
i perfectly safe, and the oftener
you vote the more sure your can
didate is to be a winner.
Your help may be what is
needed to encourage your
favorite candidate to do the
work which will place
her at the top of the list.
Every yearly subscription toThe
Courier this week means an extra
7,500 votes for your favorite can-
didate
How Votes Are Secured.
A coupon will be printed in The
Courier which will be good for the
number of votes indicated on the
face of the ballot. These ballots
must be cliped out and sent to the
ballot box in the Courier office.
The best way to secure votes
however is by securing subscrip
tions. Votes are allowed on sub
scriptions as outlined in the vot
ing schedule print on another
page. With each casn suosenp-
-. i i
P. An mnro wo will io.
sue a certain number of votes ac-
at right prices,
Call
cording to the length of the sub-j
scription. The certificate votes is
sued on each subscription can be
voted at any time during the;
contest.
The Contest Manager desires
to call the attention of those inte
rested to the fac1' that this is a
contest for individuals. Each can
didate muit stand or fall by her
own individual efforts. The can
didates who do themost success -ful
Tvork will naturally be the
winners.
There are no obligations attach
to entered the contest. Nomina
tions cost nothing and the prizes
will cost the winners nothing. A
candidate cannot possiblv lose
ary thing more than a little time
and if the proper energy is put
behind the time expended there!
is little chance to lose this. It is
a friendly struggle that The
Courier has inaugurated with
handsome reward for the winner
anu nu oujaiiouis wiiai ever.
Have Paper Started At Any Time
A number of inquiries have
come to this office in regard to
taking out the subscription and
having it started at another time.
This can be done and the votes
will be issued on all orders of this
kind. Many who are now taking
another paper wish to discontin
ue it at some date and do not
wish to have another paper start
until their time expires on the
one that they are taking at the i
present time. In such cases just
let us know the date the subscri
ber wants the paper started and
he will be credited accordingly
and the votes be issued as soon
as the money for the subscrip
tion is recieved.
NAMES OF CONTESTANTS.
Roxboro
Miss Conelia Cozart 9,450
" Gladys Wrenn, 1,000
" Frances, R. Long, 1,200
Mrs, S. H. Jones 1,500 j
Miss Mary Lee Gregory 1,000 i
" Odell Thomas 2.200
Eva Oakley 1,100
' " Maggie Lee 1,1 00 1
44 Janie Newton 1,000-
'l Bertha Clayton 1 ,000 i
" Isla Newell 1,000'
44 Bessie Janie Andrews 1,000
11 Gle-a Woods 1,400
Mabel Harris 1,000!
" Elma Featherston 1,000 '
44 Frankie Woody 3,700
" Margaret Johnson 1.000
" Myrtle Barnett 1,000
44 Lizzie Yancey 1,000
44 Kate Long 1,000'
" Hallie Jones 1,200
4 'Mary Hunter 1,000 '
"May Willson 1,000;
" Hattie Cheek 1,000
Roxboro, R, F. D. No. 1
Miss Ruth Harris 1,000
41 Grace Winstead 1,000
44 Ruth Foushee 1,000
44 Nannie Foushee 1,000
44 Lorena Tapp 1.000
44 Luclle Newton 1,000 j
44 Georgia Rogers 1,000
44 Ora Blackwell 1,000
44 Susie Blalock 1,300
" Laura Long 1,000
44 Bessie Frederick 1,000
44 Ira Allen 1,000
44 Gertrude Wilkerson 1,000
44 Bessie Jeffrevs 1,000
44 Lela Russell 1,000
Roxboro, No. 2
Miss Ruth Gentry 1,000
44 Pauline Neal - 1000
Roxboro No. 3.
Miss Lillian Farley 1 ,000
44 Mary Wagstaff 1,000
Loraine, Winstead 1.000
44 Ida Bryant 1,000
" Jane Murray 1,000
44 Lucile Winstead 10,200
Roxboro Ne. 4
44 Ruth Brooks 1,200
Roxbtro No. 5
Miss Allie Garrett 1,600
u Hettie Rogers 1,000
" Laura Tingen 1,000
.' v- Sadie Wilkerson 1,000
V V Maggie; Lawson 1,000
41 ; Lillian 'Crampton 1,000,
Roxboro No. 6
Hiss Hassie Whitfield 1,000
4 Minnie Whitfield 1,000
Bethel Hill.
Miss Maud Woody 1,600
14 Bessie Humphries 1,500
" Irene Woody 1,000
Hurdle Mills.
Mtss Annie Coleman 1,000
4 Gertrude O'Briant 1,000
kenia Rimmer 1,000
Wocdsdale
Miss Marian Bailey 1,000
. Nannie Bet Hall 1,000
Woodsdale.No. 1
Miss Ethel Crowder' 1 000
" Zell Warren 1,000
41 Iva Wilhams 1 000
".Maude Williams 1,000
" Eva Long 1,000
" Annie Long 1,000
" Onie Carver 1.000
Leasburg
Miss Bessie Thompson 1 ,000
Semora
Miss Mabel Yarborough 1 ,000
Miss Lansdell 1,000
Miss Pointer 1,000
Milton
Miss Maude Dixon 1,000
" Susie Hires 1,000
" Eihcl Burch 1,000
i Annie Connally 1,000 j
" Pattie Bell Morton 1,000
Prospect Hill
Miss Odell Cheek 1,000
" Maggie Warren 1,100
44 Haliie Cempton 1.100
4 Mary Warren 1,000
44 Hessie Satterfield 1,000
" Verna Nelson 1,000
44 Maude Stewart 1,000
Rougemout
Miss Corrine Bowling 1,000
, " Myrtle Parker 1,000
"OHie Cothran 1,000
44 Willie Hall 1.009
" Lpuisa Nichols 1,000
44 Julia Carver 1,000
" Timberlake
Miss Lizzie Timberlake
" Bertie Laws
1,100
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,009
1,000
1,000
Minnie Andrews
Sallie Reade
Lizzie Reade
Ethel Rogers
Judith Bowen
Timberlake Nor 2
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Ina S. Pearce
VirgilIina,1Va.
James Battershill
Baskcrville, Va.
1,500
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
Ridgeville
Miss Myrtle Wilkinson
Kate Map Compton
Lula Barnhill
Cedar Grove
4 4
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
it
Maude Pittard
Lizzie Stewart
( (
" Lizzie Wall
I Evr Pittard
Mill Creek
Mrs. N. H, Street
Mill Creek No. 1
Miss Mildred Slaughter
1,100
1,000
Ur$. Thomas E. Allen ofjl Dirkan
Died of Brain Fever.
Durham, Feb. 15. Mn.
Thomas E. Allen aied yesterday
afternoon after an illness of but
ten days, brain fever being the
cause. She was a native of Per
son county, the daughter of Mr.
G. D. Moore and a member of a
splendid family. Besides her
husband and the six children of
her immediate family, she is
survived by two siiters and two
brothers. One of her family con
nections is Mr, and Mrs. J. W.
Zachary of Cooleemee. Mrs.
Allen was 40 years of age and
ont of the , city's good women.
She wai a faithful member of
the Memorial Methodist con
gregation, ;'"
Please notify us if your Phone is
out of order and we will : have it
QUICKLY CURES COUGHS, COLDS
AND CATARRAH.
If you, dear reader, could spend
an hour looking over a few of the
suffering from catarrh' that dis
gusting disease that ill surdy
sap your vitality and weaken your!
tinue.
You would have just as much
faitri in MYOMEI as we have, and
we have so much confidence in its
wonderful curatiye yirtue that it is
sold the country over under a
positive guarantee to cure cutarrh
croup, sore ihroat, .coughs . and
colds or money back.
No stomach dosing when you;
breathe HYOMEI. Just pour aj
few drops of the liquid into the
inhaler, and breathe it in, I
t. . , , , ' . i
1 is mighty pleasant to use; it
opens up those stuf fed-up nostrils
! in two minutes, and u.akes your
head feel as clear as a bell in a
short time. :
Breathe HYOMEI and kill the!
DOWN GO THE PRICES ON
1
Copyright 1910 '
The House of Kuppenteimf-?
Chicago
ol the seasons smartest styles at
Come to-day.
BERMAN & LIPSHITZ.
Jones Hotel Building.
301
EW LOW SHOES
For Both Men and Women
Now Ready and on Display.
Better select yours while you can get your
size in just the style you want and have
them ready for the nice spring ' weather
which is getting mighty close by. We are
selling them every day.
In Zeigler's for ladies we are showing theJ
most popular shapes in onertwo and three
strap sandals, pumps and Oxfords in suede,
velvet, vici and patent leather.
In Walk-Overs for men we have the snap
py smart styles which the young men want
as well as the comfortable styles for more
mature yeate.
j We will be glad to show you these shoes.
uu. V tQJD rnr-7 iQIT- lI5H5
catarrah germs. It's the only way
to cure catarrah. It's the only
way to get rid of that constant,
hawking, snuffling and spitting.
A complete HYOMEI outfit,
which includes a bottle of HYO
MEI and a hard rubber poeket in
haler, costs $1.00 at Hambrick'
and Austin druggists everywhere.
If? yu already own a Hyomei in
haler you can get an extra botde
of HYOMEI for 50 cents':
"We have used HYOMEI in
our family for the cure, and break
ing up of coughs, colds, sore
throat and cattarrah affections,
and can say that it is a grand
remedy worth its weight in gold,"
Mrs. John Cooper, South Wayne,
Mich.
Notice.
Jake Brooks, colored, having
hired to me for the year 1911 and
left me wjthou a. cause' I ,for.bid
any one from hiring 'or harboring
said Brooks. Any one doing so
be dealt with to the fullest ex-
tent of the law.
G. Stephens,
Jan- 23 rd- 9J
Better get in theVace NOW.
Ready Made
Garments for
LADIES
and
Right now is the best
time ot the vyjiole season
to get a new
Suit, Cloak or Ov
ercoat. Assortments are now
good, you know what
styles are, test, and prices
have reached the lowest
limit. Don't delay, com I
at once and qet your pick I
prices lar below ordinary.
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