niljr3 wM HP la (a ly Ilia mm vsr, v J 3 Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. A NEWSPAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. Term:; ol Su.Kicriptio.i 0 Per Annum WINDOW N. ('., TIIl'liSDAY, FF.lJl.lWl.Y is. MM,!). o. Tim Kind You Have Always n.mBl,t, nul vtU,M lm boon lu use for over 30 yours, m Imrtm ti... ii .... ' i and lui! All Counterfeits, Imitations ti ami huh All Counterfeit, I nil tut Ion n l'.erlnieiit that ti ltlo wi'li nwl f iul:iirrr tins hoallh of Infant mid ChUdren-Bsperleiico Main.t INp. rlin.-nt. What is CASTORIA Custorhi Is n harmless ni.!siitu(o for Casior Oil, Pan, -orie, Drops mid Soothing Sytrps. it Is lMeasant. It loilains neither Opium, jMorphinn nm' oilier Narcotic) Mhstaueo. Its ago Is its .mnuitoe, U destroys Worms i.-ul allays IVteiisliiioss. It euros DSarrlnen ami Wind C die. It relieves Teetliinjr Troubles, euros Constipation and riatKleuey. It assimilates thn l'o,d, regulate tlio Miuiiiuh und liowels, jjivin;r hea'Miy and ni'ural sleep. Tito Children' I'aimeea-Tho Mot iter's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the ' w v t w wr w a The Kind You Have Always Bought- In Use For Over 30 Years. TMt CCNTftua OtONNI, TT NUAMf TOttT. NCW VOftft CITY. rpiOL M l'V PI"SK CV P. N. STAIN BACK. I'NDKIJTAKKIJ. VVeldon, . . North Carolina. 0 0 Cull Line of CASk'LTS, COFFINS and UOM.S. Day. Night and Out-of-Towu Calls Promptly Attended to. E G FUNFRAL DIKIiCTOR it Seventeen years' Hxperience. 101 lOCTHIOE 01 THE BANK OF WELOON WHKDON, N. (' Organized Under the Laws nl the State of North Carolina, Al'l.l'Sl'.,'lTll. Is'.iJ State of North Carolina Depository. Halifax County Depository. Town of V'ektoii Depository. Capital ail Surplus, For morp titan llfU'on yi'ars tliis inslitutmri lias prnviilnl l.aiikiin: fat-ili-ties for tlti Heetiou. Its slofklnilili'is mi l ilireftms haw hern iih ntilii .1 with tln l.uHinoHD inlerosti. of lla!:la ami Niithmj-t..!i ootinties rr many yearn. Monr-y in loanecl itpoti tiiirowd sei-irily at llirleiral lateof intfivMt nix norcfuttun. Acentiiils of all aio wilinlnl. The MtirpluR anil uinliviileil rtii liavnii: irm-hi .l a sum t i ital ( anitiil stork, the Hank has. eiiniiiieueinii '.laiiuaiv I. r'i'S, estalilt Savings Department sllowinc intc ir-t on time de.tts iix fil': lieposits allowed toremain three mr itlxir Ioiil'it. -' er eent iniinllnor longer, 3 per cent. Twelve niontlis or lotf.'er. I -er cent. For further information apply to the 1'renilenl nr ( a-lner. I'KKSIIlliN'T: W. i;. DA.N1KL, Viei:-i'io.iiio:M': I Hi. II. . l.t :w IS. (.laekson, Noi'tliaiiipton euiinly i SEABOAHI) All?, SCHEDULE EFFECTIVE JAN. 4, 1909. These arrivals and departures are only as infor nutian for the public anJ ar n t jtuaranlccJ, a.iJ are subject to change without notice.. Trains will leave VVKLDON as follows: No. 32 lor Portsmouth and Norfolk at 4 55 a. m. No. 38 lor at 3.05 p. m No. 41 lor Raleigh and points South at 12 07 p. in. No. 33 through train South at 11.38 p. m. We operate Doulile Daily vestibule service wita ' nl,milllth.Xoi h.lk 'mville,St-AuRi.ata,P, Atlanta. Hii num: ham, S en 1 ' k' 11 lhclunon.1, WaJli.nirton, itallimore, I'hilaih lphm ami N For further information ules, etc., apply to CLEVELAND E, CARTER. Ticket Agent, Weldon, N. C. Or w rite to II. (JATTIS, Traveling Passenger Agent, Raleigh, N.C. CXV.vSXN DociunndouiitliT Iiis per- win! supervision M,.,.,, It4 ii:iu. y. Allow no otic loslfi , hi. v.,.i i.. ii. L am Miis(.,h-u'o(m1 " . i.nr' Signature of onaocmom N H.IIT l'l.. l.s 1M Ullil ."it. HOWE, AM) HMUALMHR. Hearse Service Any where N 10 hi tiie sh.-l a I'm" aiiikii: . Ii. sMITI LINE . . .1 1. Pnlllllllli CU11 t .lack relative to rates, sched- BE A MAN, BOY. Your lather Has Done Fairly Well Hut You Can Do Better. So you are 21 ? Anil you stand up clear-eyed, i m mindeil, to look all ilie world : ; inaivly in tlie eye. Von arc 1 ni.i'i I D: I you ever think, ' inueli ii has co.,t to ma Mill, llOW ' ;e a man of you ? Some one h is (inured up the , co;t in money in reaiiny a chil .lie s;is to hnn ;i young man to ; ; les.i! age, e.ire for him, costs $25,-; ,00;i. Which is a lot of money to j put into hush and Wood. ! But that isn't all. ; You have cost your father many , j hard knocks and shori dinners and j worry and gray streaks in his I - hair. And your mother ah, hoy, j i you will never know! You have ' cost her days and nights of anxiety ' nit 1 wrinkles in her dear face and heartaches and sacrifice. j I It has been expensive to grow you. But ; 1 If you are what we think you ! are, you are worth all you cost i and much, much more. ' Be sure of this: While father doesn't say much but "Hello, son," way down deep in his tough staunch heart he thinks you are the Finest ever. And as for the little mother, she simply cannot keep her love and pride for you out of her eyes. You are a man now. And sometime you must step in t ) your father's shoes. He would n it like for you to call him old, but just the same he isn't as young as he used to be. You see, young man, he has been working pretty hard for more than twenty years' to help you up. And already your m ither is beginning to lean on you. ! Your father has done fairly well, but you can do belief. You may j not think so, but he does. He has i given you a better chance than he j had. In many ways you can be ! gin where he left off. He expects a ! good deal from you and that is ! why he has tried to make a man of you. 1 Don't flinch, boy. i The world will try you out. It will put to the test every fiber in : you. But you are made of good stuff. Once the load is fairly ! strapped on your shoulders, you ! will carry it and scarcely feel it ! if only there be the willing and , cheerful mind. ' All hail, you, on the threshold! j It's time you were beginning to : pay the freight. And your back ! debts to father and mother. You 1 will pay them, won't you, boy? How shall you pay them? ; By being always and eveiy ! where a man! - Grand Rapids I Chronicle. MA 1)1; TMI:M WISI-. "Dc four buttons in de collec-1 tiou fer de heathen," said the old , colored deacon, "is took in de j spirit in which dey wu. give; but I I wiint ter tell you right now, dat de j heathen don't wear de things what ' i billions goes on; howsomever, ef j you will put in a pair er galluses next lime, I'll make use er de buttons myself. '1 ,,1 Tim Knock-out Wow. Tli Wow whieli kneekul "t CorlwM Wan a ri'Vellltlcill til til.) lie lighters, limit the earliest it.-M of the riim the Itllm'k'Ollt hl" win 11 1 rin i for lie' jaw, the lelliplit or the j 11 ixn t.i r vein. Sttilliaeh ininelies were throw 11 In to worry and enn the linhti-r, Imt If a cicniilic man hml ti.ia in f the "hi liu'tO' is that lh niu-t vulit'Tahln 1 .. 1 1. was the nuioii of the Mniiiaeh, he'd have hiinilnsl ut Islll lur an luiioramiM. It. l'uiie W trliis'iim ii;'i'.tii pui.lif a parallel fact; thai on? dthe pV. r.i.i! a ell as In it. V pn.lei iVnr hyV, throat, feet ornl linns but tlie'JkJrii?eioHifl are utterly Indlller tut lo, until iliseVAlinils tl.o solar plestn anil knock us out. Mak" your sinmacn cure "uk siomacn,- iiiumeMiuii, or dji'isla, torpid liver, bad, thtn and Im iiire IiIimkI and other diseases of the or Ban of diitestion and nutrition. 'J'l.e"(hililen Misliral Discovery "has a ipecillc curative eftect tisin nil mucous airfare! and henro cures c .tiirrh. no matter where located or ' at naa It may have reached. In Nas.. I flftarrh It Is well to cleanse the passings With Dr. Suite's Catarrh Itemed)' lluid while using the "Discovery " as a constitutional rcni i.,iv ll hi tho "liolden Mislical Dlscov- J-Mt .1. J. I.' -....I iscovery rrv" cures catarrhal diseases, as of the ftomach, bowels, bladder and other pelvlo (.riiiins will 1 plain to you If you will read a bookletof extracts from the wrlt liijis of eminent medical authorities, en dorsing its lnnredlent-s and explaining their curative properties. It is mailed Vrrr nn reqiieik Address Dr. It. V. Pierce, IIiiITkIii. X. Y. This booklet iilvos all the IllKredients enterlnif Into llr. 1'ierce'l medicines from liicli It will 1 een that they contain not a drop of alcohol, pure, trlple-rclined glycerine tx'liis usl instead. Dr. Pierce's great thousand-page lllus- trnted Common Sense Mistical Adviser will tie sent free. pKls'r-honnd,.for 21 olio centstampa, orclolh uouiid for 31 atatuufc Adttrat lir. Pierce a a bore. t.mpd ami Strangliy ililJlteji.jor w7T!TCreTtvi"r-i.Trii7 sri'io-t viiltuT- .'" K. vi... i "liolilen Medical Li Btj :.?-r; mVRMUL.W. E2X:M can-, c i. i mm'Tm Powder i Li and cnu .i 'tw. ucmf? u nas w il nas dcr.co that .4 - I sweet, and perfectly wholesome. Royal 13 a safe guard against the cheap alum powders which are the greatest menacers to heahhef the present day. EOYAL IS THE ONLY BAKKG POWBEa MADE TUCM BOYAL CPAPE CEEAM 0? TA'tTiiS m m !!! LITTLE BOY BLUE" HV i-UGliNi: I'll-I.l). The little toy dog is covered with dust, But sturdy and stanch he stands, And the little toy soldier is red with rust, And his musket moulds in his hands, Time was when the little toy dog was new, And the soldier was passing fair, And that was the time when our Little Boy Blue, Kissed them and put them there. "Now don't you go 'till I come," he said, "And don't you make any noise !" So toddling off to his trundle bed He dreamt of the pretty toys. And as he was dreaming, a song Awakened our Little Boy Blue Oh, the years are many, the years are long, But the little toy friends are true. Ah, faithful to Little Boy Blue they stand, Laeh in the same old place, Awaiting the touch of a little hand, The smile of a little face. And they wonder, as waiting these long years throug In the dust of that little chair, What has become of our Little Boy Blue, Since he kissed them and put them there. - - fmt 0-00-0 -0-0 . J!i.. ..i -'ii.e "i 1 'fS? "r. -VV !t ''r'O WV Tl r-mic Tfi iJic 1 UUilL IU (HO LI i : i v$ f Written upon reading of the death of Lugene Field. Hie Little Boy Blue, who wandered afar, At sound of the angel's song,1 Stands still by the beautiful gates ajar, While around him the children throng. There's a smile upon the little boy's face, As, wailing for papa, he stands And welcomes him there with a baby grace, And holds out his little hands. Like the little toy dog all covered with dust, Who kept his vigil so true, And little toy soldier, all red with rust, So has wailed the Little Boy Blue. He has wondered why papa has stayed away From where all is pure and bright, For he wanted him so to join in his play In the beautiful Land of Light. Ah, deep in the hearts of world-weary men Is the tale of the Little Boy Blue, And gentle tears come to their tired eyes when They think of the toys so true, As the little boy went at the angels' call. In his dreams at the end of day, So the Master, who loved the little ones all, Has gone to his own, far away. vU cvy. ca; r!r 'O -O i. . ..s i,.- -,,.i "mi! OVFKTAKI-N. - A wizened liitlc man charged his wife with cruel and abusive treatment. His better half, or in this case better two-thirds, was a big, square-jawed woman with a determined eye. The Judge listened to the plain tiffs recital of wrongs with inter est. "Where did you meet this wo man who, according to your story, has treated you so dreadfully?" his Honor asked. "Well, Judge," replied the little man, making a brave attempt to glare defiantly at his wife, "I never did meet her. She just kind of overtook me." His faith's not wrong whose life is in the right. The more a girl smiles the lest she means it. Hi I l-i 1 M 1 : vo been making bread, biscuit cake in tl' J7 i cvojy . i housekeeper t . r vesica n ittieu 1:1 1. ciiocl ccr.ti- her food would be light, - -"Bt- 1 0-0 j-0-0 m $ 'P 'P f (P 9) (P ii vl l . - j - " - t - - 5' t.-f 0-00-00f 0-00 0i, A.S- -v ffX? itti c nnv ni 11c I ILL DUI DLUU c..vV wjs. cv iv cav V -a"V -"V-" ..i- ..C- Ii..v5i..C- yi.. The Secret ol Long Life. i A I'rencli scientist has discovered one I Kccret of long life, lint long ago mil I lions of Americans had proved that I Klcelrio Hitters prolongs life and makes it north living. It purities, enriches I .,.,.1 ,.ll.,l,. 1 1,,. 1. 1,.,,. I ...Km.I.Iv. vl...l nerve cells, imparts life and tone to the entire system. Its a godsend to weak, sick ami debilitated people. "Kidney trouble had blighted my life for months" writes W. M. Sherman, ol'Ciishing, Me. "hut Klcetric Hitters cured me entirely " Duly .'sic. at any druggist. Say but little and say it well. This is just the time of the year when you are most likely to have kidney nr lilad. ler trouble, with rheumatism and 'rheumatic pains caused by weak kid neys. Delays are dangerous, (let De- j Witt's Kidney and ISlad.ler Pills, and lie sure you get what you ask for. They ate tlie best pills made for back ache, weak back, urinary disorders, etc. Tbey ' are antiseptic and act promptly. We scfl and recommend them. j Hold by W, M. Cohen, Wal-ion N.C, Dr. 1 lell still exists- a final, ever lasting hell -despite modern cul ture, according to the h'ev. Dr. U'illiant M. Vines, who preached a lew weeks ago from the pulpit in the Hanson I'laee Baptist church, Brooklyn, on the question, "Has Modern Culture Aholised Hell'" Incidental to his general discourse, ' the pastor said that Michael Ange ! lo had drawn a false picture of God when he depicted Hint as "a 1 ler cules pitching people into a blazing hell." That artist's work, and others which depicted devils toss- ing bodies into torment, were de ! scribed by the minister as "hid- eous, diabolical views." "Modern culture has abolished !a material hell," said Dr. Vines. ' "And it has abolished that medie ! val hell which was also preached. ' And it has abolished the belief that ! millions of heathens who never j had a chance to hear the Christian ! religion went to hell at their deaths, j "Hell, based upon creeds, has j been abolished by modern culture. ! There may be a few people still ! alive who believe you will not be saved unless you adopt their creed. But eternal destiny is founded upon character more than beliefs. Further, modern culture has changed the emphasis from the 'wrath of God' to 'love of God.' "Modern culture has changed the emphasis from the hell of the future to the hell of the present. We are trying to bring heaven on earth right now by destroying the evil influence of the saloons, and causing better observance of the Sabbath. "But modern culture has failed to abolish the fact of hell. There is, in reality, a place of punish ment hereafter. And it has not (ti'ctrnvpit thp nwfnt m'o.trrv nP j what hell is. What is he'll? "I do not know, and 1 hope none of you here tonight ever will know. It is a place of darkness,' and that is an outer i awful' thought, whatever it may mean. "I believe there will be degrees in hell, but no man can afford to pass that. Hell is the great pris on house of the future. In hell, those who have had a chance will remember. You cannot get rid of memory." CONFIDK IN YOUR HOYS. A boy is entitled to his father's confidence; it is his right to know ! his father's nature and experiences; j only thus can he be fully heir to , all that parenthood can and should , bestow. It is for the child's good that we be a rtrent to him, first and last, not a master, nor yet a hero. , As to reverence, 1 doubt whether ; a child reverences his parents after : he is ten years old. He sees their faults, and secretly judges them often unjustly. Our neighbor Grayson has always exacted a sort i of homage from his family, lie is , cut for re-election and yesterday ! he made a speech before the Sun-1 day school, which somebody was extolling, when his son Harry said with a sneering laugh: "Oh, the old man knows how to pull the wool over their eyes !" I'd rather have my children know me as 1 . am than think of me as a hypo-' crite. Children know you, too, ; pretty well. They have keen in sight these days; they are far : quicker at mind reading than the ' children were generations back, j They know more about you than J you dream they know; but not be-1 ing wise enough to give the pro-1 per weight to cause and motives, , they arc apt to misjudge you. So ; il is best to be open with them. i HIS l)i:ilCII:NCY. A certain Chicago merchant died, leaving to his only son the conduct of an extensive business and great doubt was expressed in some quarters whether the young man possessed the ability to carry out the father's policies. CAN'T BE CONE. t Aholish Hell, Says K'ev. S'. M. Vines. "Well," said one kindly dis-; posed friend, "for my part, I think ; Henry is very bright and capable. ; I'm sure he will succeed." i "Perhaps you're right," said! another friend; "Henry is un-! doubtedly a clever fellow, but take I it from me, old man, he hasn't got the head to fill his father's shoes." i Don't women get nervous prostration from social obligations and too much housework? This won't occur if they usclhft.Jloag & TuiIuii'h Yino Itepcns the Favorite Tonic for women, price H. Sold by W.M. Cohen, Weldon, N. C. MAT 3 ml xSMa'I To .Most Men Life is a Cease Grind. I am tired almost to ueaiii IS not an uncommon reniai lor a man who returns home in the late of the evening after a hard day's work and worry with lv. .incss. An exchange truly says that, be ing in this Ir.mr: of mind sueh a man naturally linds himself a king is it worth while ? What do I ei out of life? And groping about for light he seizes on many secret in quiries a ; to the purposes and out come of life. To most men life is : a ceaseless grind, a constant effort ' to make ends to meet, lo keep : food and shelter provided for those i dependent on him, and he reflects I and reasons only to give it up as ' beyond him. And the next day he ' goes back to grind, not will) any relief but with a firmer conviction i that sueh efforts are necessary if he is lo keep his head above water. ' What is the answer? It has been j remarked that the Indian is not I the only thing exterminated by ! civilization in its march of progress. And this offers a hint to the an ! swer. It suggests that our whole I code of social life, the very pur- pose of life, has been misused, mis- applied and misappropriated, i The demands of modern life, if ! a man is to follow after them, have ! perverted the rule of living, until i today the average man is hard put to make the means of living. Work is now the end ot lite the neces sity to life and not the means. We have no theories here. Many men, reformers if you please, have tried to find the answer to this complex condition, and we have seen the new culls and colonies for the sim ple life, where the whole social fabric has been ignored, but we have not yet seen the great prob lem of humanity answered. This is not the answer but the reason for our work-to-live system is due to the fact that we live too fast; we undertake too much, too much thai is not essential to life, but that is imposed by social custom. The : answer may be that in Hie days to come it may be after years of t..;l and suffering humanity will wake I up to the greater purpose of life j and come into its own; when men I will realize that there is something j else in lite besides money, and that j after ail ii does nut m.iuer s.i much ; as to die in;:tvri.i! t'tings, a:ul irxn will turn aside to grasp ;,nJ enter- tain some of the higher purposes. What is your answer? WOMAN. I.OVtil.Y WOMAN. Her waist begins just below her neck. Her hips have been plan ned off even with the rest of her body. She is usually buttoned up the back, and around her neck she wears a section of barbed wire covered with lace. She wears on her head a blonde haysiaek of hair and on top of this a central dome with rings about the same size as those of Saturn. She is swathed in her gown like an Indian papoose, and on the end of her feet are dabs of patent leather. She walks on stiltlike heels with the expermcss of a tight-rope dancer. The pores of her skin are full of H ie w hile powder. This is a woman. 1 AVO A ISOUR STOMACH W ANE SIGNS THAT YOUR LIVER S IS OUT OF ORDER. P TAKE fj Simmons fl Llvci i EMULATOR And Feel j I 1 j ; . v' .?.fjrc Yourself Again. ; CrNINNF has the RED t T-d. rs tin th4 Iron! ol eaoh package a.-"1 the elgneture end eal of j. fi. zmm & co. ad th aids, IN ft ELI. I D. E. STAINBACK, NOTARY PUBLIC An,' ! ire Insurance. taikc News Office-:-Weldon N C it ft , r . h-l- N i.;'n wlfl Jy Vi Si&MSf IlSiiili?. z iiii' ri liiiuil, STIlliitlfiTl, 1 ejlltV, x ami elieerlal- is:ui.!t m p.ioit (li.siipfiear vs:i ii ttid.Klacyti'irc ij.x oi older or .lis c.i. I. KiitiicytroulileliM j 1-u nine m prevalent ' Ihst it h; tv ft tiiicoiu- 6" won for a child to he - ! :i i lu.-tcd with v.i :.k k.ilnevg. If the . "lei'e. i. ' e urine Ki'ulihi i, v ,s v t'v 1 leaches nil ';. ! .: Is- e' l. t . control the i "'le! :! riH hclwet- ., :;1 ii, tllSCUU!.vl of thiMlini- i , troti!:1.!', imkI the iirrt ,. i (is. S 'U th" treatment of ; il . ,," Th! i uiileu;.ant . . nr.i-1 condition of .i i k.i.l.icr ami not to a l e. "; S1J J ose. x, .1 1- 'Sin in i .1 ma.le mirsr t;i. y r i'..l hlavl.ler truuhle, .1 i'-r lame frreat remedy. I the iinau diate effect of i ; :t realized. It is sold '111 : V.'I.Hp- i f l'i-. i.rr i:5-.. 'v : e a .e il f: ' , II . tl Mi;i.-!(".t. : ' 'hu .iiids of testi Livt'l Irnm iiil.fi(:is -r.oct tu lo jti:l t lis ;i v.-riiint )r. Kilmer i, , V,, he pure ami r. iJtci't m:kc miy liu Kini ii" u: i:ioiiul i-.-tt. V.lv) j'l-lUlil r nn-ly n,;.i k Co.; llnu! ..I. unit mt Mluni tins y:i .i:ikc, hr.t r- umuIkt t!ic nanis, Ir. l'wil:iiL'i's Swamp-Moot, and the address, Emiiamtcm, N. V,, on every bottle. T. CLARK, Pj. ATTORNEY AT LAW, WKI.DON, N.C. 1'iuclii'es in the courts of Halifax and a.lioininif counties an. I il. the Supreme i court of the State. Special attention I given to collections anil prompt return Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup Relieves Colds by working them out of the system through a copious and healthy action of tho bowels. Relieves cci';;hs by cleansing the mucous membranes of the throat, chest end trci-hial tub's. "As plcav-mt to the taste as Maple Sugar" Children Like It For BVMCHE'- WEAK KIDNEYS Try CeWitfs Unci and Bladdtr Fi'.Ii - Sure and Sate .-old l.y W. M. Cohen, Wei, ion, N. ('. hue ivy of K'oannke Rapids' New Store New Goods 1 ha e opeucl llji I n v)r il. m the p line oi' Men's up-to ( ielll s i "ll I lusliiliy I llui.ts, s-hui s hte. in " new place of, 'sli.lliee with a new late Cliithinif and otitis, Hats, Caps, Also a tiuo line of 1. n. lies' skins und Ladies' Jieady-SIadii Suits, lur the snim;', in the finest pat terns, at the lowest prices. Conic. Don't tail lo see soon my spiinir openiuK and compare prices. You w ill surely save money liv 1. living v. nil' tfoods from . ' ' i. j.'kaplin, Roanoke Kapids, X, C. Very Serious Fl It is a very serious matter to ask A for one medicine and have the wrong one given you. For this i reason we urge you in buying iJ to be careful to g' t the genuine BLACK-DRAUGHT i Liver Medicine H The reputation of this old, relia- 1 bte medicine, for constipation, in ' Ed digestion and liver trouble, is firm ' m ly established. It does not imitate other medicines. It is better than others, or it would not be the fa vorite liver powder, with a larger Eale than all others combined. SOLD IN TOWH Fa First riocc Widget? Bakery .ti -..I u.D ;. ... i;..ri.iiJij HAVING secured a first-class baker I am prepared to fur nish Fresh Bread, Pies, Cakes r.tc. in any quantity. The best of everything in the bakery line. M. S. MOUNTCASTLE, Weldon, N. C. lYomiilly iht..m1, in- ft E PETUffNKD. to vKAir rxitHicrtot. (hh-chaquhs Ant THE lOWtT. t 'lul iiKHtrl. tjlmijor nkct- ti Ivt eiort twrfh unit fri i-v'""! u" pritildW, ty. tHFRINGEMINf 'its r..i.rtt.vec4 mnore ll HHirt. FnJent- f ' -rtilf.'ii hr' "-rli AIjVCH- tiscd mi toLt ti e i : ot-rftKKi, rtit tIOt und COYR;!n'v "u.- kiv tttunetL Opposite U. fl, Ttitent Cfflottf iVASHINQTUM, O. C. 1 B (1 I SET eas ,sa mm. m