Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / Aug. 16, 1911, edition 1 / Page 3
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i 1 'i Children Cry The Kind You Have Always in use for over 30 years, All Counterfeits, Citations and i, Just-a," infants and Children-Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and SooOJng Syrups. It Is Pleasant It contain, neitter Opium, Morphine yior other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys V7on s roll if, .cverlntf.- " m -a Ld V.-id ri !tr ?eth Constipation and 1 h tulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tne GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS 'Bears the '0 Lenini ave You n Use For Over 111) Yoanr ,I!i?5.f5!'IL-C)MPANY' 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. Roxboro Real Estate Trust Company. You can make no mistake when you invest in Roxjboro dirt, it is sure to increase in value. If you have any idle money and want to invest it we can show you where you can do to advantage-Town Lots and farms is our specialty -let us show you. INSURANCE. When you place your insurance with us you know that you are protected. Only Best Com pany represented, prompt settlements, batisfac- rory adjustments. We are here to serve you, give us a call. Yburs truly, Roxboro Real Estate & Trust Co. N LUNSFORD, Manager Near Many people have an idea that they can buy their supplies for home use cheaper in the larger towns, but such is not the case for we buy our stock in as large quantities as any store and are prepared to furnish you with DRY GOODS, SHOES, HAT S, Groceries and Farming Implements. at prices as low as anybody, and you have the advantage of getting what you want near home. Visit our store and get oar prices an i you will see the advantaes we offer. Reade Bros. Company HELENA, N C f IsF1 fit i W for Fletcher iiiiriiiiiii iMlifclii IWih, JTTT has loTtnZ cna nas been made under his per sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow Tin rma r . . Signature Always Bo 6- ?! Home NECESSITY OF ORGANIC MATTER IN THE SOIL We do not advise the use of any leguminous crop inthe treat ment of these poor lands the first season." You will do well to do this you may have to use one or two hundred pounds of some good grade of commercial fertili zer. be?in in the fall. If the land is rather heavy, break it as deeply as your teams can pull it but do not sub-soil. Sow a bushel and a half of rye per acre and use home grown seed if you can possibly get it, at any rate, get seed grown in North Carolina. In the spring, if the season is good and the rye is growing, off nicely, it might be well to clip it when it first comes into head, in order to let it make a second growth.' Your main object now is to secure a large amount of vegetable matter to be plowed under. Therefore, leave the clippings on the ground while the rye makes its second growth When the second growth begin to bloom, run a heavy roller over the ground; follow this rol ler with a good sharp disc har row, and disc the land until the rye is cut into bits. Then turn it under as deeply as your teams can pull it, provided, the land is not two wet. The plowing should be about eight inches deep. After plowing, set the disc harrow at a slight angle and run over it a nother time in order to break the clods dnd pulverize the surface, Let the land lie about. a month and seed it to cowpeas, using, if neccesary, about 100 lbs. of Acid Phosphate to the acre. When the peas have made their growth, roll and run the disc harrow over them about twice; cut them to pieces and plow them under deeply and let the.land lie until it is time to sow rye again. Sow rye and crimson clover after the peas Thelfollowing spring treat the rye as you did before, clipping, rolling, discing, plowing. You should clip just before the crim son clover comes into head, or, befsure not to clip the clover, when you clip he rye. The second growth of ryo is likely to come off about When the clover is ready to turn under. Then roll, disc, and plow as above directed. Now. wait for a good rain and disc the surface twice and pre pare to plant corn. You have now worked the land one year without getting a crop that is, you began last fall a year ago, planted it to crops this sum mer and fall, plowed them all un der and this spring you are growing corn on a piece of land which perhaps has not een farmed in ten years, aud you are going to get more corn off of it this year, in all probability, than you have been getting off of your best acres on other parts of the farm, and you w7ill have done it all by deep plowing and . green manuring, with the addition of a little cheap commercial fertilizer. Your land is now brought up. The value has changed from say $5.00 an acre to $40 an acre for actual farming purposes. Next week we shall continue this discussion of rye as a green manure, and hope to bring before you some interesting facts which we have not been able to bring out in the above discussion. J, L. BURGESS, N. C. Department of Agrilctlture Loss Time means Loss of Pay. Kidney trouble and the ifls it breeds means lost time and lost pay to many a working mat.. M. Balent, 1214 Little Penna St., Steator, III . was so bad from kid ney and bladder trouble that the coud not work bui he sas; "1 took Foley Kidney Pills for only a short time and got entirely well and was soonable to go back to work and am feeling well and healthier than before." Foley kid ney Puis are tonic-in action, ulcTc in results a friend to the working man or woman who suffers from kidney ills f J : " J : DrugXo. Cotton Crop WOb be Largest .Ever Known this Year. Washington; Aug" 4 -With continued official assurances that the 1910 11 cotton crop of the United States will' be the greatest yiald in the bistory of the country, there is speculation as to its total value. Should the staple this year sell at the same price it did. in 1910, the value of the crop would be approximately $1,000,603,000 exceeding the record breaking cotton crop value made last year by more than $180,000,000. Further estimates from the government's official figures of 89.1 per cent, of a normal for the condition of the growing crop on July 25th, indicate that the crop Will be, 7,046,500,000 pounds, or 14,741j631 bales of 478 pounds net weight, This would surpass the record cotton production year of 1904 by more than 1,000,000 bales. If the crop this year sells at 11.5 cents a pound the average price for the last five years, its value would be about $20,000,- 000 below last year's great value record. Hay Fever, Asthma and Summer Colds. Must be relieved quickly and Folqy's Honey and Tar CompQund will do h. E. M. Stewart, 1034 Wolfram St, Chicago, writes- "II have been' greatly troubled during the hdt summer months with flay Fever and find that bv using Fo ley's Honey and Tar Compound I get great relief." Many others who suffer similarly will be glad toben efit by Mr. Stewart's expeidnce. Morris Webb Drug Co. News from Brookland. Editors of The Courier: We are at home to day, Aug. 4th, after an absence of eight days. We were at the dedication services of the church at old Banks last Saturday and Sunday. Rev. N. H. D. Wilson preached Saturday morning, Brother Perry Satur day evbning, Dr. ' W. H. Moore Sunday morning and Brother Shore Sunday even ing. The sermons were pronounc ed very fine. The congregation was very large both on Saturday and Sunday. It was thought that never before were so many peo ple assembled there. There was a large cengregation at Berea on the second of August. A very large assembly of orderly people well dressed. The pastor of the Missionary Baptist Church at Oxford preached in the afternoon of that day. There were some con versions. It is said the Greensboro Rail way will run by Berea, Oxfordand Henderson and be in operation in 18 months. Crops in the neighborhood of Banks, in Granville, were never better, it is said. The live stock Association, of which the Commisioner, Mr. I Henry C. Floyd is President has made sales of some unbroken colts at satisfactory prices, on fall time. The interest in the business has increased of late considerably. Senex. Think On These Things. The Raleigh News and Observer makes the following statements which deserve the consideration of every one. Pure water and pure milk, de struction of flies and mosquitos, and a clean town will . prevent most' of the sickness that troubles people in the South. The preva lence of preventable diseases is a reflection upn anv community. If the man who caused two blades of grass to row where one formerly gew is a public benefactor, the boy who causes only one fly io carry disease where formerly two spread con tagion is all the more a benefactor. One ounce of clean-up before sickness is worth a ton of disin fecting after sickness. , ( The fly looks' very . harmless but thinly wherj? , he comes from when he lights ; on your table. Swat the fly; ' " GENERAL NEWS. The governor of Oklahoma say's he will enforce the liquor laws of his state if it takes an hundred thousand men to do it. JohnW. Gates, the - American . financer, died at 5:10 in Paris Tuesday corning in the ams of his wife aid his son, Charles G. Gates. Leaders of both houses of Con gress figured the adjournment of Congress between August 15th and 19th. The: Democratic House leaders hold this view. In the Georgia general assemb y there are republicans. Of this number 1 36 Monday v declared for Woodrow Wilson for 1912. Jud- son Harmon got 20, Hoke Smith 14, Champ 2 and Folk 1. The Lenoir News learns that up to July 25 receipts of the hack line from Lenoir to Blowing Rock were about $1,000 in excess of the same period last pear, the rates being the same: which gives an idea of the increase in travel. Tamm iny's corn eating contes Tuesday was won by James Dugan, a cab driver, who ate fifty-seven separate ears, earring off the 1911 championship and a purse of gold coin. Duncan's nearest competitors' was 11 ears behid. Robert Mattheson, the 13-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. D, S. Mattheson, of Chicago, 111., who with his mother and two, small sisters they had been spending the summer at Lake Toxaway, was drowned in the lake there Satur day afternoon at 5:30 and was not recovered until 1 o'clock this morning. An effort was made Saturday in the Texas Senate to give Senator J. W. Bailey a vote of in dorsement on his vote on the Canadian-United States reciprocity agreement. It met with at leatt a temporary defeat by a vote of 14 nays and 11 yeas. Police Judge Walter L. Watson, of Raleigh, has announced that he has no set price for "drunks." He warned the audience that while he may be fining the offen ders $50 and cost, he does not want them to think that is all he can do is necessary: that some road sentences may follow if offen ders continue to offend. General George W. Gordon, commander-in-chief of the United Confederate veterans and a mem ber of Congress, died at his home in Memphis at 4 o'clock p. m. Wednesday. His illness dated from his last political campaign, when he was re-elected to the national house of representatives, the last general of the Confederacy to serve in that body. Senator La Follette and Chair man Underwood, of the house Ways and Means Committee, who have undertaken to reconcile the dipevences between the Senate and the House on the Wool and Far mers' Free List bills for the full conference committee, are in an unQuestionable deadlock with the possibility of remaining so and thus forcing and adjournment of the session without final action on either of these measures. An Accomplished Girl. A girls education is most in complete unless she has learned; To sew, 7 To cook, To mend, To be gentle, To value time, To dress neatly. To keep a secret. "I o be slf-.reliant. To avoid idleness. To darn stockings. To respect old age. To make good bread. , To keep, a house tidy. To make home happy. To be above gossiping. To control her temper.. To tkecare sick. , r To tekecare of the baby. t To sw4webs. cise. Philadelphia Record. , r he mmmm Here is the record of ,'ime;fcf the. jmost -wonderful cures f Eczemai that basJ ever come to our notice. We comnieud it to all . , who are suffering f rota, this distressing ' flUhv ease, or have little children afflicted With' it. ' r ri-' Mrs. Rose Stoo2f3i of Greensboro, a. C., , , writes: "About -four years ago-jtuy little , boy broke out with Eczema and suffered fc terriblv for two ongvears. He was sore . from head to foot, the only parts of his; M bodv free from the trouble being the, k palnis of his hands and bottoms rol - bv ; feet. He Could not walk, but crept on bis ; hands and feet. . He was in such agony he would pray to die. He liad been doe- tored by the best doctors, and I never exacted anything to cure him. The only way he could get out was for me to put a pillow slip over his head, with holes - for his eyes, nose and month. His clothes had ' J to be changed two and three times ft iday. v The itrhlng was almost nroidurablef,ana s -at night he would itch anJ scratch until I didn't know what to do Jx him.- A, frieud insisted on.: us. trying ' v i- ; MRS. JOE PERSON'S REMEDY. ."We bought a bottle, aad used itrwith. snch good results that we kept en, and tc- r day our child is entirely well." r - You have only to imagine the an.rQlshf,';' In that mother's heart, as she helplessly . v watched her child suffering the tormerts . . , of Eczema, to realize the gratitude .she feels toward Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy -and Wash. This ca&e demonstrates beyond all douot that this gtet. Remedy will cure Eczema . and air tronbles resultlp from impure, im ' poverv?nea or foisoqed isiooa. Even wnen y , these afflictions have progressed to the stage known as "chronic," Mrs, Joe Per-' A son s Remedy will effect a complete cure j if used according to recommendation. ... . , . ' It is a purely vTOtr.b'" compound. enAA tirely free from L. : . .Ai .1 --'.og 10 dients. It Is the . T mo. Aits -Mire. , Blood Purifier anu ..-:Vn" avr y' t on . the market, and Wt ' i:::.-d... , . or,f- , tione in both, men and women it Ktand -without a rival. Write for testimonials of people anxious to tell how Mrs. Joe Per-v-son s remedy cured them when everything else, doctors included, failed. In cases of external trouble, infiarami . 1 tlOL .lcerntion or itching humor, our Wasli i should be used in connection with thJ ( " , Remedy. s M For sale by dm.splsts, or supplied on ie -7 ceip- of price, per bottle; 0 bottles for vo.00; " dozen by express prepaiC foj &10.00, bv & THE NORTH CAROLINA ' COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE -AND MECHANIC ARTS. , The state's industrial colleg Four-year courses in Agricul ture, in Civil, Electrical, and Me chanical Engineering, in Indus trial Chemistry in Cotton Manu facturing and Dyeing. Two-year courses in Mechanic Arts and in Textile Art. One-year course in Agriculture. These courses are both practical and scientific. Ex aminations for admission are held at all county seats on July 13. For catalog address THE REGISTRAR, West Raleigh, N. C. Is Your Land Rich? Use Blackstone bone Tankage Fertilizers And get it in treated bags. This Kind Good agents sell it at your station, fcrot, come to see, or write BLACKS! Hi Clff.GCCMPflE INC. FROM THE TROPIOSr" ITO HEAL US. In Central America many natives are gathering the seeds of thiaplant, Cedron Seed, a rare medicine that has valuable curative powers. But few drug stores carry this seed, owing to the high cost of the article. This country is a large consumer of this costly seed because it enters into the famous catarrh remedy, Peruna, sold the world over. - . First Class Farm Imp) You s&ve Lftbor, Time and Money when you buy Imple- - ments that wear well and work r well. The kind that we ell. We issue one of tne test and most complete of Farm Imple ment Catalogs. It gives' prices, descriptions and much interest information. Mailed free upon request . - .; We are headquarters for -V. Crhnp and other Roofing .Wire Fencing. Barb Wire, Poultry - l T' Netting. etc .:Ai - Write fqr Descriptive Catalog and prices on any supplies or Farm Im plepent8 you require. .. ,M w ' . 1502 Cast Main Ct, ' O Cedron Seed ffiKL V v i t .7 ' 9 h v 1 t
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 16, 1911, edition 1
3
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