Newspapers / Roanoke News (Weldon, N.C.) / Sept. 29, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Roanoke News (Weldon, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
,0 If"" Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. A NEWSPAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. Terms of Subscription $1.50 Per Annum,; VOL. XI, V. WKI1)0N N. ('., TIHKSDAY, SKl'TKMUKK L'i). 1!H NO. 122 SLANDER ON GIRLS, us Bay J " M.i'OI(). J i(;K CtNT P'o'a . AH'i.'(iil)li'Prepara!ii)iiror,s M$ similaiiiig tlK-Fuodancllfc-gula Jt-i g lln SiOiii;uIis andUwclsol '?3 ' Mm fes CASTOhIA Chicago Tribune Says that the j j f air Sex Sows "Wild Oats" as j well as the Sterner Sex. ! Promok'sDi4('sliou.ChmfiJ'! ni-ssamllfcsi.CoiildliisnfiilKr 0Miiu.Mitfptoa' torMiral. Not N am c otic. fallout htd" jUx-Sftm HvmSrfd Cttiftftd Suyitr n&ttyrrati fciw. Anrrfert iWmtdv foiCoitslina- llou.SourSloniafh.Ularrtiw Worms.t oiTvulswiis.reverisli nessaiulLossOKSLtliP. Facsimile Signaiurr nT NEW YORK. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature In Use For Over Thirty Years ji I IU Exact Copy of Wrapper. THf O(NTAUP) COIHNV, NIW VON ITT. "T JzJMdJ ft in fSHOE Ii! If! I II: um- m r sryA'5 on sale -Now! If anything a little lit smart er and more exclusive than usual. The kind you see on Paris loulevards - Fifth Avenue too. Every leather that fiossilly ' want at any time. A. L. STAINBACK, Weldon, N. C. last and 1 1 a woman couia m Sew FALL and Winter Boots MILL AND COMPLIiTI: UNI- Ol: CLOTHING furnishings, and GENERAL MERCHANDISE fresh from the Northern markets. Call and see our new goods for Fall and winter. , Respectfully, I. J. KAPLIN. KOANOKE RAPIDS. N C. 31 THE BANK QF WELDON, VKUH)N N. (' Organized Under the Uws of the State ol North Carolina, At'lll'HT 2UTH, lStt-'. Suite of North Carolina Depository. Halifax County Depository. Town of Weldon Depository. ci5!Ll!!.ls!rpl!s.:.... $45,000. For more than 17 years thin institution has provided laiikiujr facili ties for this section. Its stockholders ami directors have Urn nlcnlilied with the business interests of Halifax ami Northampton counties Tor many years. Money i loaned upon approved security at the legal rate or interest-six per centum. Accounts of all are solicited. The surplus and undivided prolita having reached a sum equal to the I'apiUl Stock, the Hank has. commencing January I, hum. esulilishe.1 a Havings Ilepartinent allowing interest on tune deposits as follows: ror Deposits allowed to remain three months or loinrer, 2 per cent. Six months or longer, 8 per cent. Twelve months or longer. 4 percent. For further information apply to the President or Cashier. It is all nonsense to say that girls j J don't sow wild oats, and that they J don't reap them, too, with many I ; bitter and vain regrets, Of course j it is all delightful while it lasts, hut ; the sowing time is soon over and ! the later. For it must be remembered that j a girl's temptation don't lie in the! direction of poker or high halls, i i They are nevertheless real in their j own way. ; At lirst she sees no earthly rea- son why Tom should not hold her hand, or Dick kiss her, just for j fun. When Harry slips his arm j around her waist when the picnic snap shot is being taken she thinks it is the greatest joke in the world, i Her laugh is the gayest of any at the picnic, and when one of the boys suggests playing forfeits she thinks the idea great fun, and throws herself into the game heart and soul. A little later she takes a stroll with Jack and attempts a tiny whiff' from his cigarette. "I never take a dare," she explains to Will, who comes up at that moment. Will is about to reply when they see a couple of girls standing near, who would never have thought that they could have come up so quiet ly ? Then she says a great many things she doesn't mean and re marks "cats" quite loud enough for them to hear. "After all it's only the Jones girls, and who cares whin ihev think anvhow?" Later she goes out for a walk j with Fred, and doesn't take any I pains to think how ate it is. When ! they finally get back to the picnic; things are all packed and the oth ers are waiting for them. The other girls don't say much, but 1 they look a great deal. j The years slip past and some j how other girls gel engaged but i she is left out. 1 om says she is a I jolly little girl, he remembers how he used to hold her hand, but he is glad to think of his own special girl up state as being a hit more standoffish. Dick still kisses her occasionally. He-kisses every girl he can. Alec pays her a sigh or two until he sees the photograph in Tom's den, where Harry and Jennie figure in the picnic picture with Harry's arm about her. The photograph cools his ardor he knows the sort of chap Harry is. 1 He wouldn't have him hang ing around his sister. And Will? Will too, has sighed after her vivacity and camaraderie, but he has a horror of the 'modern girl and he remembers the picture of the cigarette that time with Jack in the woods. So Will falls in love with Polly, who hasn't one-tenth of Jessie's sense, but who has a trick of blushing. Of course she meets other men, but somehow she is popular with the girls "old cats," she calls them and this don't look right. She is reaping her wild oats she doesn't realize it she calls it hard luck and does not see that it is her own making. For there is just the difference between a boy's crop of wild oats and a girl's. When a boys has sown his crop he is pretty sure to find some wo man who will help him reap them help him with her sympathy and tears, if need he, but w hen a girl sow s her wild oats she reaps them alone. It Saved Ills Leg "Ml lliimalit I'll lose my leir," miles .1. A. Nwrll'i'll. tif WultM tin ll. Wis, J'Ten years uf eeieuia, that l i doctors could not cult-, had at lust Imd me up. Then Itiicklcn'a Arnica Salve cured it. sound and well." Inialhhle lor skin Ki upturns, Kivenia, Salt Kheuiu, hods, lever Sores, Iturns. Scalds, Cuts and I'iles. 'J.'ic. at all druggists. crksidknt: W. B. DANIKL, vkh-chhsidknt: W. H. SMITH. I' ASH IKK! K. . -TKAVIf, 1:1 I KCTINU A CURK. l'liynician Have you any aches or pains this niornine? Patient Yes, doctor; it hurts me to lueuthe; in fact, the only trouble now seems to be with my breath. PhyBieiun All right, I'll Rive you Hoiiiethiiitf that will soon stop that, (food Housekeep ing. CASTOR I A For Infant! and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of THE SETTINC OF THE SUN. Broad are the fields, and long the road Where the dust has sought its rest, And the day's last rays go creeping there With the shadows from the west; The old rail fence reclines at ease With its years of duty done, And a peaceful song Moats through the trees With the setting of the sun. Light were the hearts that tramped the road Or sang in the meadow brown, Warm was the hand that laid the dust Or scattered the thistle's down: Well were the tasks of men performed, And well was day begun, Thai's why there is come the joy of rest With the selling of the sun. Ye who are lost in the city's throngs, And the whirl of the city's life, Ye who are faint with the toil of years Thai has bowed you in the strife; Pause as the days slip o'er its edge, And let heart fancies run Through the olden, golden long ago With the setting of the sun. The bloom in the buds that were yours in youth, And there runs the world away To the sylvan glades where eve has crept And the twilight's haze is gray; There comes the songs Irom the zephyr land Where smiles of hope are won, ' And the youth that you knew comes back to you With the setting of the sun. HOME IN OZARK CAVE. Oueer Habitation Pitted Up With Piuno, Libruryand Furniture. 'IV 'IV V. 'IV 'iV '! 'IV (V 'IV '! m m ' 'IV m !'V (IV 'IV 'IV ; !V 'IV THE FIDDLER'S FAREWELL. With my fiddle to my shoulder, And my hair turning gray, And my heart growing older I must shuffle on my way ! Tho' there's not a hearth to greet me I must reap as I have sowed, And the sunset shall meet me At the turn of the road. 0, the whin's a dusky yellow And the road a rosy white, And the blackbird's call is mellow At the falling of the night; And there's honeySn the he;.iher Where we'll make our last abode, My tunes and me together At the turn of the road. I have fiddled for your city Through market-place and inn ! I have poured fourth my pity On your sorrow and your sin ! But your riches are your burden, And your pleasure is your goad! I've the whin-gold for guerdon At the turn of the road. Your village lights'll call me As the lights of home the dead; But a black night befall me F.re your pillows rest my head ! God be praised, tho' like a jewel F.very cottage casement showed, There's a star that's not so cruel At the turn of the road. Nay, beautiful and kindly Are the faces drawing nigh, But I gaze upon them blindly And hasten, hasten by; For O, no face of wonder On earth has ever glowed Like One that waits me yonder At the turn of the road. Her face is lit with splendor, She dwells beyond the skies; But deep, deep and tender Are tears in her eyes; The angels see them glistening lit pity for my load, And she's wailing there, she's listening, At the turn of the road. ii i it l ii 1 l W it; h d i7 v it it At t it it vl ll I ill ll ll doing directly south two miles from Prairie Grove, Ark., you en ter a narrow valley, and travelling westward a few miles you come to the few picturesque cliff of con glomerate and sandstone, with a wall of boards at its base, which j forms the only inhabitatcd cliff dwelling in America. You enter and find yourself in a j room 72x40 feet, with a ceiling of wave-marked white sandstone ris ing as it recedes, from 12 feet at the entrance to 45 feet at the rear wall. Here LTder H. S. Mobley, president of the Boy's Corn Club of Arkansas, and valued attache of the Department of Agriculture, has lived the last three years with his cultured family, his books and mu sic in contentment, happiness and health. Three years ago Flder Mobley was a cripple Irom rheumatism. He then owned the land on which the cliff dwelling now is, and knew that under the projecting rock where he lives it was always dry. There was a seep of chalybeat wa ter east of the cliff and a bubbling spring of clear water west, and so he boarded up the south of the cliff, and there was roof and floor and two sides of a kingly chamber of stone free from insects, ow smo-l is ' BdOUd "OO V NI1I3Z 'H f 7 , '!! -'1 J"l 1'' 1UH.1 '3ltJ, ' -"H mi -mir J.'l ,"V !ill!..J ami H -,l Hll,M(l.,.l)-l '.Hinu.i pun nip:atl jo ;.4'is.u .-mi p.iii ui'l asup V 'kuuHjo 3.lSSip pllli l.)VMUHS Jll hlKl.USri 'S.IAUl om sw.jito n ;lv!l(U lWl.o.l Mil ll z aaa SNOIAI IAI IS asn pjtions im 'p.iHwjniusut pun pajj mv ..num,, ta.ij no. pun S39Iq iON S30Q Q00J N1HM J (Hi 3 S' s- 6 PUTTING AWAY SMALL SUMS I lei e, you can put away small sums not needed for present use. And while waiting your call they will draw interest. s An account in our Savings Department does not always imply ? small transactions, far from it. Many large depositors are using ; our Savings pass-books. They are using them for the interest 3 they get; they are also using them because of the convenience afforded. I per cent, interest allowed, compounded quarterly, g BANK OF ENFIELD, ENFIELD, N. C .y,.'U,uv,',.v,('M','.0 'M'MM' .'.'i.A;yi,,'iiu'j.v,;iVi;iiiiii;,fliW'V. if, ROUND Till- CIKCU:. Chronic Old (Irowlcr (whose subject, as usual, is the coun try, and how quickly it. is goiiitf to the dogs) -"Anil after all, it's you fanner chaps us is at always the root of all the evil. You 30 dry, and ol nearly uniform temper-i raise the Jcorn, and the corn ature. Into it for health and nov- i raises the whiskey; whisker AN ARTFUL DODUP.R. Ir, Miner Leo Hates, presi I'tit of llirnin College, enliven I, in a recent address at Hi ram, Ohm, a knotty etymoioi cul problem with a story. "We must tint dodo our problem as the boy did," said lir, Hates. "A teacher, you see, was ba hih a great deal of ililtictilty in making clear to a boy the meiiiiiiiK of the word "recuper ate." "Now,' said the teacher, "your father is a hard worker, isn't he ?" "Yes, sir, be is," said the lad. "Anil when be tfets home nt night lie is dead tired, is he not ?" "Yes sir, be is," "Then," pursued the teacher, "since it's night and he's dead tired, and wdrks over, what does he do?" "Ah!" said the boy, "that's what mother wants to know." Washington Star. UKTWTI-N THE COURSLS. hotel the rk. !'" queried bov will ' replied the Children- Cry FOR FLETUER'S CASTORI A 1 he stranger in th pinniped down his bug. "I wanler room," he sail "No. a"!" rapped "Second Moor." "Is it a good line the hi nuiirer "Kxcellent! Tin show you the way,' clerk. The stranger took up his bag, "Kight-ho!" he said. :-Oh, 1 suv. what s the eutin hours in this hotel?" 'Breakfast," answered the lerk, "7 to 11; lunch 11 to ;(; dinner, :t to 8; supper. H to 1'.'." Tlu' stranger dropped his bug again. "tlreat Jerusalem!" he ex claimed. "When am 1 goin' to git lime to see the town?" Answers. elty he moved. His health is restored, and he is a vigorous traveler and worker for agricultural interests. Three years have dulled the edge of nov elty, but the comfort of this unique home holds him and family to it yet. The single stove seen furnishes sufficient heat on the coldest days of winter, and in fact it is not often ' that the smoke curls from the cliff, side where the pipe projects j through the stone. Atavism no-: j where shows in the house. Piano, ; ' library, and all the accessories of modern life are there, and the , i news of the busy, throbbing world : finds daily a pulsing response in ; this home. The smooth, dry sandstone ' stratum forming the floor of the dwelling extends out beyond the roof several feet, hard and white, : and then the ground slopes sharp-1 ! ly but evenly for 100 feet to the ; j fertile valley. I The dryness of these cliffs is 1 i wonderful, and accounts for the 1 fact that toads, lizards, snakes and ; ! insects do not infest them. Back of the table are natural shelves sufficient for all the food and for Mrs. Mobley's culinary utensils. There is water at the door. Storms, not even the cyclone that sometimes disports over that region, never disturb the dwellers of this twentieth century cliff house. Nature is lavish in sculp ture and painting in and around it, and hence Flder Mobley does not object to his neighbor's fence on his roof, for it does not disturb him nor detract him from the unique beauty of his picturesque home. Contrary to what might be ex pected, the cave home is nicely lighted by the windows in the front, because the ceiling-, and walls are white. And not only are ordinary insects not found in this home, but that universal pest, the house tly, does not annoy. St. Louis Post. raises politicians und poli ticians raise all the trouble we have in the count ry." Petroit Free Press. SHI: (iOT AWAY WIT HIM. Five young men went into a shop recently to buy a hat each. Soring they were in a joking mood the shopman said: "Are you married?" They each said "Yes." "Then I'll give a hat to the one who can truthfully say ho has not k issed any other wo man but his own wife since he was married." "I (and over the hat," said one of the party, "1 have won it." " W lien were you married ?" "Yesterday," was the reply, and the hat v.-us hand 'd over. One of the others was laugh ing heartily while telling his wife of the joke, but suddenly pulled up whe 1 she said : "I say, John, how wat it you didn't bring one home.'' SUBSCK'lBli o NOW ! FOK THE Atlanta Journal D Daily, Sunday and Semi Weekly. Largest Circular south of Baltimore. P4 D BY MAIL n Per Annum Daily and Sunday $7. Daily only, $5. Sunday only, $2. Semi-Weekly, $1. D Tin home. sweetest type of Heaven is Bl nil ANlUiKNKlal. l.'Kl'.UKlNii Hirtoeint k Specialty ! All work irimrinlci'd at t'ale'a old -land, lleui" Socolld. I'niiie to see Svt'uilloie sin' W. It. DAY, Weliliin, N. C A Man ol Iron Nerve. lndoinithlc will and tremendous ener gy are never found where Stomach, Liv er, Kidneys and Dowels are out of or der. If you want these qualities and the success they bring, use Pr. Kind's New Life Tills, the matchless regulators for keen brain and strong body. 2&c. at all diuf gists. LMI'TY IIIT.I'S. William Jennings Bryan oikc joked about our American fondness for titles. "You all know of the colonel," he said, "who got his title by in heritance, having married Colonel Brown's widow?" But I once met a general w ho got his title neither by inheritance, nor by ser vice, nor by anything you could mention. "General," I said to him, "how do you come by this title of yours, anyway?" "Why, sir," said he, "I passed my youth in the flour trade and for twenty-seven years was gen eral miller." "1 know another titled man, Judge Greene." "Are you, sir," I once asked him, "a United States judge or a circuit court judge?' "I ain't neither,'' he replied. "I'm a judge of hoss n cin'." CHIIdrort Cry FOR FLE1 CHER'S CASTO.RIA Laraest Slid in the Sootk. Wtli'tl 111 Vtlt'olk full oh us on ill ll tnl iull You wuill ami urt M ti tiH't.lv, lt:i irn; ini oiunussfis, no Ukit'ill I'O III III 1 SMI in s uif ul- 1 to our pnt'i'S This t n:i- uhli't us U use tipitt'la iiiu tt'iml anl tintsh it ptoprriy We lay Freight Guarantee Safe Arrival THE COUPER MAR3LE WORKS. (titt Witt hi hu.Mm-utt ) 9 : 1 I I All the news I All the time !fo Ladies! iWe Muney and Kcci, i i sd Style by leauitg McCaU's Magazine and Uiin;, McCall Patterns MeI'" V 'l MSCALLS MAGAZINE tun in At Met. II Pa'trmi ill M' k- -mil iii. t'1 umii. -.i.l i.r fr. Wt Voll iiive Yon Tim ;.hni!i!' infuriinui .1 t.Il nil lli'llli UIM . . .s.mul li.JtH i", " fv si jcir, iiu Uitii.. : A I'ti'H I'.Ul.'Ut. .-'i. ii M'JlUt l tl.il ur I lor live humi'lr .i' . a.! vmi ( link" (ft '-.-r 1 x.w 11 h;i ihK i'IhiIhim' Ii a H Wilt !' ! ! I' -t i i- linti hiirtHT tlnai j ritiHMii tiini-ttit. Prfifnti I.T P'Ulil'i' Mm- xi fir 'tro ; . -in- :nul 1 ic'i Prm , v, m H 249 Wl 37 Nt W YORK iiiH-jh.) imuk M Electric Bitters Succeed when everything elae lulls, tn nervous proiuuiion and lemalt weulmeuea they are th supreme reincily, at thousands have icaulicd. FOR KIDNEY, LIVER AND STOMACH TROUBLE it ia the beat medicine ever aold over a dmggUt'a counter. Wood's Trad Mark Farm Seeds are best qualities obtainable. Our NEW FALL CAT LOG gives the fullest in formation ahout all seeds for FALL SOWING. Grasses and Clovers, Vetches, Alfalfa, Crimson Clover, Seed Wheat, Oats, Rye, Barley, etc Catalogue mailed free, on re quest. V rite for it and prices of any seeds required. T. W. WOOD I SOUS, Selsaa. RUhmond, Va. Special Sale ! We have on hand several consign mints of llie latest in nool. AY ash aud Princess ladies Suits. Hat her than re turn these suils our headquarters, deci ded to put them on ssje at half price for cash only. ttoHuns $7.5(1. l'rin cess, white and all other colors $." to f,, now f2. -m to if.S. Wash Coat Suits 4 to $11, now ll.'is to $H. t to til Net V aist reduced $l.7f to Jil'.ral lllack and col ored silk l'etticoats ft to now L'.88 to fcl.7."i. Voile Skirts fit to $ now n'i.f) to jtid. lll.aiPlI yanls lace and embroid eries to close out at half price. 7,re, to tfl Messalme silks, all colore, now bit i V. S and (le. calicoes dj to 4c. ID and 12jc ginghams 7 to He. About S,(KK1 yanls dress goods to close out less than cost. Ladies hats at half price, Hugs, drutrtrcts, carpeting! and matting at and Ix'luw cost. SPIERS BROS. WELDON, Ni C. to :! ITT I
Roanoke News (Weldon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 29, 1910, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75