Newspapers / Roanoke News (Weldon, N.C.) / Aug. 3, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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Jl jl Imm A .Ivortisiiijj Rates Made Known on Application. A NEWSPAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. Terms of Subscription-$1.50 Per Annum !VOi. XLV1. wi:li)on, x. c, 'rnr i;si). v. Aid ivr :;. r.n i, NO. 1 1 TM mI - Tho Kind You Huvo Always Roiiylit, uml ulitcli lias bitcu in iino lor over 111) jour, lias borno fhu siunaluro of -A and lia lx'cn inmlo under his -r- L ' s,)"al M'Pi'rvisi.m since it-iiiitatiiy. uX- 'eft' Allow ti one t.)dci cl o you in thii. All ('ouiitrrlVIts Imitations) nml ",TiiNt.;i,.j;iim(' .,.( lint r.pi'riiii iits that 1 t itlo with U".1 rmliiiiiT iho hoallh of lul'iiul ami Children Kijioricuro against lAiirriiut-uL What is CASTORIA CuNtorlu Is a harmless nuhst ituto lor 0'itstor Oil, Pare goric, lli-opn find Soothing S -i?is. 1c is l'lcasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotifl Milistiim e. Its litre. Is its) n'lsiriuitoe. It, destroys Worms and allays 1'everishiiess. It fines Piarrlm-ii nml Wind Colic. H relieves Teothliii; Troubles, euros Constipation and I'liitiileney. It assimilates the l-'ood, regulates tlm Stomach and lioncls jiving healthy mid natural sleep, Tho Children's I'aiiaeea-'l'ho .Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Tlie Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THC CIMT1UR OOKMNr, Tf HUDNK TNCCT, NCWVORN CITT. 301ZIOt3EIOE AV I'lf'NK P. jN. STALjS'BAOK, I'NDIlliTA K Kl!, Weldon, . . North Carolina. O Full Line ol CASkLTS. COLLINS und ROULS. Day, Night and Out-ol-Town Culls Promptly Attended to. H. G. FUNERAL DIRECTOR 0 Seventeen years' Experience. Mearse Service Anywhere. aoiaomc30EaoE: F01 ) 1 i FIFTY-NINE (59) LOTS IN THE TOWN OF WELDON, N. C, LOCATED AND OF THE DIMEN SIONS AS SHOWN BY THE FOLLOWING PLOT: I ! ' " FOR TERMS, APPLY TO W.E. DANIEL, Weldon, N. C. -Hi-tf OE THE BANK OF WELDON WKLDON'. X. (' Organized Under the Laws of the State id North Carolina, Al'lit'ST'.'ilI'li. tsi'e. State of North Carolina Depository. Halifax County Depository. Town of Weldon Depository.1 Capital and Surplus, $47,000. l or more thai) I vciirs this institution has I'lin i'lc.1 banking facili ties fur this seotion. lis Mocklinl.lers and directors have hivii identified with the business interests of Halifax and Nitliamdn counties for many years. Money is Inroic.l upon api'foved security at the leiral rate of interest six per centum. Account of all are solicited. The surplus and undivided profits haviinr readied a sum iviial to the Capital Stock, the Hank has. eomuiciienii: January I. I'los. established a Savinifs Department allow inc interest on lime deposits as follows: For Deposits allowed to remain three months or lomrer. e per Cent. Six inontlisor lomrer, 3 per cent Twelve moiilhsoi hunter. I percent. Korfurtlier information apply to the President or Cashier. I'HKuniNT : W. K. DANIEL, Vli R I W. It. to BIN ft MAM A.hvlll, N. Co hR "IIHjiriMlYl, .. n.n.'.-.hin Inr '"II ROUND TRIP TICKET I mm urn nliflr "v-lion, i, nol coiiviiiifil Unit ii. iniit, of ONI HRE WAU, rf Hit DIST fur Hrllh. Suiiolam VertiUMo. mid salrly iijniieii r Ilia. Sead for uukwm arum aadm. i.M.S.HMUUM.Hi.l.r.B.IU- IM fil Signature of 01 Nl III l'lli'M. 'i UM'l .VI. RO WE, AND EMHALMER. J 1 J I. i I I 3E RKSIDESr: l ASIIlXB. SMI I'll. H. S. THAV1S, prrpnrr.l OY fer Coll.R. ind for Chr. lis veils mi l tLONI n lb U. S., elleri n illMil I5O0 mil. lo niiy linriit who, on in. TOB tullk tnuin. wpnlale.! I'V Jurapfl 0AM vrfTN DON'T BE fOOLED, GIRLS. i Flowers and Candy Not All That j i Counts, Says Dr. Wharton. 0 "Wives are unhappy because ' husbands show a remarkable apti tude fur forgetting their marriage ! vows," said )r. I Itrnry M. Whar t' mi, of Brantley Baptist chutL ii, , lasl infill i;i .uioilier one ut his ', "inainiiiiPiii.il sermons," ; The subject of the sermon was ; "Why Wives Are I'nhappy." ! Right at lie start Dr. Wharton placed the burden of marital sor- row s on the husbands. "I Ins ' bands," l)r. Wharton said, "are ! too prone to ball before the allure ! meiiis of other attractions. A proper husband is one who keeps I up his courtship after his uiar- riage." i Secret societies, lodges and clubs come under the ban, while saloons were scathingly designated as the worst destroyer of the happy rela tions. I le strongly advised the married men never to tease their wives. "Teasing," lie said, "scares away happiness, which is the dove of Heaven. " "In order not to be unhappy," continued Dr. Wharton, "it is proper to start right at the begin ning, (litis, when a young man comes to call on you and bring you flowers and candy, don't be fooled. Hat the candy, but find out about the young man. Wear the dow ers and be nice to him, but look into his associations and the kind of life that he leads, so that when he comes to ask papa for your hand you may know whether you will be safe in intrusting it to him. Then when you gel married, the burden of the responsibility rests upon the husband. I lusbands when j you come home in the evenings do you call your wife sweetheart, and mavbe have a bouquet of flow ers, or do you give her a lemon? A little tally will go a great way to j eliminate the vexing questions J which arise in household matters "Don't be afraid to say sweet things to your wife. Neglect has blighted more lives ihau over in diligence ol sweetness. II a thing pleases you, say so. A husband is not lowering his dignity by show ing his wife that lie can be tickled over potatoes I tie J a new way, or appreciating the manner in which the wife w ears her tie. Do the lover all the time; the marriage certilicate should not cud the court ship. "lie true to your w ite, as you expsct her to be true to you. You have no right to demand of her that she sacrifice all for you and then not be willing to do the same for her. If you want your home to be sweet, do not take all the worries to your hard working wife and leave all the pleasures at the club or in the business oilice. " l he clubs are one of the w orst snares for the dove of happiness I that exist. When 'hubby.' goes to j the club to spend the evening and ' comes home, say. about 1 or 4 I o'clock in the morning, so tired i and sleepy that he has to have scv ! era I companions to show him i which is his house, is it any won der that the wife does not greet i him w ith a smile and a kiss ? j "The secret order and society j which requires the presence of the husband every night will soon cause the home to seem plain and barren."- Baltimore Sun. HARD I t CK. "Your father might have been a rich man but for one thing. " "What wjs that mother'-" "I le w as obliged to attend an extra sc on of Congress instead of spending the summer on the lectute platform." -Detroit Tree Press. j Thirty Years Together. j Thiitv year-ol association think of I It. Hon the inelil of a Hood thillK i stands out in that tunc- or the worth- lessiii ss of a had one, so ll ' I no lIUi-sswoil, I II this c idelice !ol"llnis liss. lolii'oid, Mich, who ' Willi's "I loo i- lisid Dl, l lint's New ; DiKcoiciv I'm ao yiMi. an 1 lis the best I Ciiu;:h and eol I cuie I cwr used. " Once 1 it tin. Is i ntiaiiiT in a Inline you can't i . i v it out. M my families have used it forty yeais It's the most unlallible j lucihcinc oil i ailh. I m iniatled for la j imppe. asthma, hay lever, croup, ijiiin- sy or sore hours, I'oce, ,V'C , $1. Trial bottle flic, liuaianteed by all dui(T itisls. The more successful a farmer is the less credit he will give to the weather and the Lord. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA IN WAYS THAT 1 sometimes think God lets our sorrows gather Till joy is hidden by pain's heavy cloud, That in the darkness we may lind "( )ur bather," We need Hun so when heart and head are bowed I sometimes think He lets friends fail and Lillet , I o show us earthly props are insecure, The broken hearts we lay upon I lis altar, Of healing and ol solace may be sure. I sometimes think He strews our path with roses, And w hen w e lind that each one hides a thorn He takes us by the hand and gently shows us I hat not to live to self has man been born. I sometimes think, w hen I le seems all unheeding, I in mug deaf ears unto our w ild i equesi, hi silent pity I lis great heart is bleeding Because to grant us it w ere not the best. I always think, in His divine compassion, Not one will perish from His loving hands; Knowing our weakness and the strength of passion, He pities us because He understands. Underneath the orchard trees lies a gypsy, sleeping; Tattered cloak and swarthy face and shaggy moonlit hair; One brown hand his crazy liddle in his grasp is keeping; Through the Land of Dreams he strolls and sings his love songs there. I p above the apple blossoms where the stars are shining I:ree and careless wandering among the clouds he goes, Singing of his lady-love and for her pleasure twining Wreaths of Heaven-flowers, violet and golden rose. In his sleep he stirs and wakes to find his love beside him, Pours his load of Dreamland blooms before her silver feel; Takes her in his arms, and as her soft brown tresses hide him, Both together fare to Dreamland up the star-paved street. IIJATMIXATIOX. Last night I dreamed of you. I thought you came And caught my hands in yours and said my name Over and over till my soul was slit red With that fine ecstasy that some w ild bird May know when first it ftels the blossoming And the keen rapture of the glad new spring. Almost today 1 fear to meet your eyes Lest I should lind them suddenly grown wise With knowledge of my heart, Almost 1 fear To touch your hand lest you should come too near And stanled, daeJ bv some tierce inner light, We both should ery. "I dreamed a dream last ui;;!it HELL FORTIFIED. There is Never n Day So Sunny, hut a Little Cloud Appears. Ood gives promise of grace also to fortily us for such trials as we inevitably must meet. While it is not right to borrow trouble, yet i testing times w ill come. Just as night follows day, so sure is sulier ing to come to every one of us. 'There is never a day so sunny, P.ut a little cloud appears; There was never a life so happy Hut has had its time of tears." We may be surrounded by lov ing friends, but just as sure as we live, we will w itness some of them die. If we live we must part from our dearest friends; it we do not, they must part from us. Suffering and separation and sorrow are sure to come. I'm Cod's promises are lamps to lighten up dark places. tiod's promise of grace should serve to stimulate and encourage us all in Christian ellon. Some are only beginning the Christian j life. Is not this a blessed assur ance with which to start out on the journey: "I.o, 1 am with thee!" What more could you ask? When we look at the duties to be done and then at our poor, weak selves, it is no wonder that we are ready to cry out; "Who is sufficient for these things ?" Din if we w ill only listen, we shall hear the Sav iour's reassuring reply: "My grace is sufficient for thee."- 0. H. I:. I lalloek A king Who Left Monte set the woild to tallouc. but t'aul Mailo ulka. of llutfalo. N V , s.ivs he always keeps at home fhe Kiiiitol'all l.aalm,v hi bout's New I. ile I'. lis and that they'ie a blessing to all his family ( un constipation, headache. indic'sOot!. dyspepsia. Only e n', at all dniitL'isls. Some men are just plain, ordi nary deceivers of their w ives; tin n there is the one who makes ha believe he can't bear to have her go aw ay from him on a visit. I'.SI Nj liiAlTHlJKOTHlRAIiOCHIlD. 1 ... V isi i.-v S;, . , . . i s Si I' li.l, ! i . r ir MX I V i 1 - In MILLIONS - t !! !!::. s l,.t ti.r r l nil. OKI N Willi. H .:. i ini-.. viih li.ioici' m ei'Kt s. it ..i.o ;i - on-eini o soi ri-ss n f oeMs. ALUS s.. I'll I'AIN . CI K I s V. 1 N O COLIC. BliJ . . f l.r.l tM,i.l, f r 11 1 A k U II. 1 . It I, . , '.iMv l.ariiiic s. If nun- mi'l t-k t..f ' Mrv . tiv. .. So.iihitia srup." una take on uiker CiuU. i'wtnlv-ljie ceuu a Louie. A man would just as lief havi boils as go shopping with his wife Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA. WE KNOW NOT. WlliiN KISSINU W AS COSI LY. The case of the people against Muriine, heard by the governor ol New Haven colony in council on Mayday, Kiiil), indicates the atti tude toward unlicensed kissing in those times. It appeared that .a- L'(l!l Murliiie iitid Sarah Tuttle had been caught kissing each other. Jacob tried to throw the blame on Sarah, saying he thought she had j "with intent let fall her gloves." Sarah denied the intent. Jacob then admitted that lie "tooke her i by the hand and they both sat ' down upon a chest, but whether kyssed her or she kyssed him he know s not, tor he never thought of it since until Mr. Raymond told him that he had not layde it to licit t as he ought." The stern I governor, after duly lecturing the guilty parties on the enormity of their offense, decreed that "the sentence therelore concerning them is that they shall pay either of them a tine of 20 shillings to the colony." LISTLN VOl Nfi MAN. Hoys, when you speak of your father don't call him "the old man." Of course you are older now than w hen you were taught to call him lather, t on are much smarter than you were then, you ire much more manly looking, clothes tit you better, your hat has a modern shape and your hair is combed dillerently in smart "flyer" th, in it w as then. Your father has ,i year's coat, a tw o year old hat and a vest of still older pattern. He can't w rite such an elegant note as you can and all that but don't call him "the old man." Call him father. Lor years he has been hustling around to get things together, he has been held up to the thorny path of uphill industry, and the bi ightest half of life has gone from him forever. Hut he loves you though he goes a long time without saying much about it, therefore be nol so ungrateful. A man 'sn't necessarily a fool at 1)0, but lie might as well be for till the inlluence he can have with men under .VJ. CASTORIA For I u fuuts and Children. Tho Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of RICHMOND EDITOR'S VIEWS. Mas a Oreat Deal to Say in Re spect to the So-called Society Set. One of these days the young women of this country--we mean the society "set" is going to catch Major I leiuplnll, of the Richmond runes-Dispatch, away Iroiu home and give hint a lambasting. Just read tins effusion from his paper of yesterday: "Why don't the young things learn how to do something- What are they here for? To w ear rats in their hair, to try on hobble skirts and make themselves con spicuous 111 public places, to have a good time with their fellows ? Pity the fellows after they have j been caught and shall be compell ed to live all the time with the in anities of existence. Only yester day, a fashionable dressmaker was complaining about how hard it was to get any of the girls to work but- : tonholes, a very simple thing it would seem, and so she had to employ a lady 70 years of age to , do this w ork and she does it well, because none of the younger gen- eration appear to know how to do anything of a practical sort. ' Time was when all the clothes of the family were made at home ; and some of us have not forgotten "them happy days," even if we do resent the sort of things we had to wear the seams of the trousers that invariably came round in front of the leg when this necessary ar ticle of dress was put on, the bulging of the skirt about where the knees of the limbs ought to have been, and now we are told that the youngsters among the girls do not even know enough of domestic economy to work button holes. Probably they do not know how to thread a needle or sew on buttons. It is terrible. Whither are we drifting? And what would it profit any of the young men to try to live with things like this? Of course, it will be said that "they w ill learn," but they do not know enough at least to know w here and how to start. Think of w hat you must endure, young man the biscuits you must eat, the coffee you must drink, the under-done hominy and potatoes and other things you stow away if you hitch up w ith girl who does not know how to make a button hole." Isn't this a Jinihummer? No better evidence is needed that the old gentleman is a back number; he is not passing; he has passed, lie ought to know that these society dears are not going to tell every thing they know. Lvery last one of 'em knows how to sew on but tons, but it is not m good form to acknowledge it. (ireensboro Kec- III d. tioon n ir During Speaker Thuitus H. Need's later years he went one night with a companion to the Portland club, where they hung their coats m the cloakroom and spent the evening talking politics. When they went to get their over coats on leaving Reed's friend thrust his hand in the pocket for his gloves and pulled out a pocket book that was not his and which some one had put in there by mis take. "What shall 1 do?" he asked Reed. "If I go around the club with a pocketbook in my hand it will look strange l'hat's all right," said Reed. "Keep the pocketbook and set the coat again; we'll go back to the smoking room." IIAUl) I I CR. The City Farmer Doggone it! I planted three cans of baked beans here a month ago, an' dere ain't no signs of 'em grow in' yet. New York World. It makes most any man feel lion est not to be in politics. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA "KID" MCCOY'S "DECALOGUE." Former Pugilist Frames "Com mandments" lor Sanitarium. Norman Selby, otherwise known as Kid McCoy, having fought 125 ring battles without ever being bad- , ly battered and generallv with vie- j lory as the issue, has decided to become a "doctor ot physical science." Selby, as he prefers to be called, has been studying and practicing his system siue I'ebru ary and he says he has in that pe riod gained 2? pounds in weight, added four inches to his chest J measurement, reduced his waist eight inches and, most remarkable, j grow n an inch and one-quarter in ', height. A straightened spine and correct breathing tire, he says, the princi ples which spell health. He has settled here and he will put the principles into practice in a sanita rium. He has framed 10 "health commandments," nature's laws, he calls them. Here they are : I-'irst Thou shall keep thy back bone straight. Second Thou shall use all thy lungs all the time. Third Thou shah drink a half gallon of water daily. Fourth Thou shah take suffi cient nourishment. Fifth Thou shall masticate thy food properly. Sixth Thou shalt sleep eight hours daily. Seventh Thou shalt cleanse the body daily. Highth Thou shalt walk three miles daily. Ninth Thou shalt think pleas ant thoughts and banish unpleas ant ones. Tenth -Thou shall praise the Creator for the result these laws will bring and tell thy neighbor. Greensboro Telegram. LP.ARN TO I'OktiLT. If you would increase your hap piness and prolong your life, forget your neighbor's faults. Forget the slander you have ever heard. I'utgci the temptations. Fotget the tault-liiuling and give little thought to the cause which pro voked it Forget the peculiarities of your friends, and only reniein- , her the good points which make you fund of them Fot get all per sonal quarrels or histories you may have heard by accident, and which, if repeated, would seem a thousand tunes worse than they are. Cut out as far as possible all the disagreeables of life; they will come, but they will grow larger when you remember them, and the constant thoughts of the acts of meanness, or worse still, malice, will only tend to make you familiar with them. Obliterate everything disagreeable from yesterday; start out with a clean sheet for to-day, and write upon it for sweet mem ory's sake, only those things which are lovely and lovable. LOOk I5LFORL M)U LP: AP. Agitated Old Oent-Ouick ! My daughter is overboard ! Save her, and she shall be your wife ! Hlase Person Wait till a large 1 wave rolls her over and 1 can see her face ! A man leaves wealth behind him j in an automobile; to overtake it he ; must crawl after it on his hands; and knees. I Ony Famous Hosiery Men.tor Women and Children. Gauze Lisle and Silk Lisle from 25c. and 50c PURE SILKS from 50c. to $1.00. In stock at the R. E. DRAPER CO., Incorporated The Satisfaction Store, Weldun, N. C, iff "The Liver Pills act So Naturally and Easily." Such a statement, coming from the cashier of a bank, shows what confidence responsible people have in thebC pills. Mr. A. L. W'iUun . alter trying them wrote: "I L.v.- ii-i rl Or. Miles- Ni-rvo ;i no I r.T fills :iml ;i!mi y-j-.ir v:.'l J -:i I n fills, nn rny-.-lf. Willi k 1 li.viltS. '11.11 l.lV'T fi:u li l so I. .it ,irfi lly :mi sn I'lii-ily II. .-.t I si .o -. i know II. ul I l.av Lilon li l.;ll. f-'ri'qu' ntly (.Ini; tirjil i.il with be-a.la.-bv I I .ke un Ann fain fill iinj K'-t liiiiia ij.ate relief in every case.-' A I. Wit i.ll, Sl.allil, 111. .Mr. Wil-,,n Hj-i fur n number Uf e,.e r,i-!,iiT lif Oil! i'll'St iVullwjal faiik of Sparta, Dr. Miles' Nerve and Liver Pills arc different from others. Many kinds of liver pills are "impossible" after one trial on account of their harshness. Dr. Miles' Nerve and Liver Pills do not act by sheer force but in an easy, natural way, with out griping or undue irritation. They are not habit forming. If the first bottle fails to benefit, your druggist will return the price. Ask him. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind. "Tie Thrice-A-Week Efliti OF THE Hgw York World Practically a Daily at the Price of a Weekly. No other Newspaper in world gives so much at so low a price. Tin: great political campaigns are now at hand, and you want the news accurately and promptly. The World long since established a record of impartiality, and anybody can afford its Thriee-A-W eel; edition, which comes ev ery oilier day in the week, except Sunday. It will be of particular value n you now. The Thrice-A-Week Wot Id also abounds in other strong features, serial stories, hu mor, markets, cartoons; in fact, everything to be found in first-class d.nlv. The Thrice-A-Week V'orld's regular subsciption price is only $1 per year, and this pays for I5t papers. We otter this unequalled newspaper and the ROANOKIi NFW S together for one year tor - - - um The regular subscription price of the two papers is $2,50. Ladies! Save Monty and Keep in 3 Style by Reading McCalU Magazine and Using McCall Patterns MrCftll'i Mtiiiioa t li. !,. y. u m. -- s; -i-i.M ut n llnl i;. IMo-l'se . k re t.i I J ll IMtSltM, (.11 (I lali-H lu-hOMi-el.'ltn"; fl:iit In. , NcW Ftt-stji. II i't m.' in eai It i-s n A . v;ilu.it.!i' 1 1 L 1 1 1 1 v i ' i. nil till Iin-tn' atn! S'Hial iiidu-r. u t 'i' a yenr. influ-1-a fyft r.iiit'iii. c A l i liv i' s.Hi.i'le i-"i. . Mtf ill PttUrM u .!', v oi t. ii. ll,-1 i:m r t u li.i:;n-. Willi vniir . ft tni;i-. t lutliuii' f.-r y.MrM'il nml fliiMr. m n ln li n ill lo- jo-t ir. t III si.vlf til. I'lVi . it.. til' !nL,'tl.T dun i, M'ii-. I f-T IVp i'-Ulorn ( auli''Ut. Wt Will 'ive Yob Fine Prtirntt I r pi-li tu: .. . ..- VI v-Wl Ilnllls N lilt f . . r tl. I : ' i i ili 1 1 ;.l.- -It l'l I H!.-r. in '.i!l i i;i'NY. lo ZV Whi H7ih Si . W W YOUK KifuLTHE COUGH anoCUREthelUNGS DR.EiltlG'S tlEVDlSCOVERY tymfOUCHS ui8oaioo rU" VOLOS ItlTBltttOTTltfBtt N0 AUTHROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES dUARASTCtO SATtSFACTORr BARGAIN SALE 1 Splendid Post Office l-quipment. ! MSCALIS KWU2IHI ! h ut: for sale a splendid I - equipment for a post office :. in a town of from 1000 to I,,: 1500 inhabitants, including SO Lock Boxes, 6 Lock Drawers, 50 Call Boxes, General Delivery' Boxes, tables, distributing cases, etc., for the full and complete equip ment of a post office, the same be ing all the furniture and fixtures in the Weldon, N. C. Postoffice. Sold on account of the new post office now being equipped here with all furnishings. A great bar gain to a quick buyer. Possession given about July 1st. CALL OR ADDRESS JOHN O. BURTON, P. M VELDON, N. C.
Roanoke News (Weldon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 3, 1911, edition 1
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