Newspapers / The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, … / May 31, 1901, edition 1 / Page 7
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r THOROUGHBREDS. || Who?. Btt*. you youjr vixen! Jiuw, Ne lie, . our foot. 1 60, hoop la! You've got her! The Leautiful hiute! llolu hi r i:t 1 1 a ir anei.t; One bitch to r:y ^.rth, Ai:U I'm wiiii y 1. my !c?s, for the cade o. ;he earth. Vow. Curoc, a . hero, Ce careful, dear heart! She is fresh a* the fountain And rank for a atari. ?'You fisr iiofr" Oh, no, But you like yo r sweet wilUfc And we'll give you a breathing! Away! To il?e hi.La! Oh, bathe me, ye winds Of the withir.:;g downs! Brush the acunt of the '?functions," The taint of the towns! What is art to Shis nature Or wine to this air? What's a picture to Nell And her blooded bay mare? ?Sc-ribner's. i WHERE COFFEE CAME FROM. Legend Gives the Lethean Berry a Ro mantic Origin and History. There is extant a tale of the dis covery of coffee, a story which might have suggested to Charles Lamb the idea for his dissertation on roast pig. This is the legend: Toward the middle of the fif teenth century a poor Arab was traveling in Abyssinia, and, finding himself weak and weary from fa tigue, he stopped near a grove. Then, being in want of fuel to cook his rice, he cut down a tree which happened to be full of dead bcrrie.-. His meal being cooked and eaten, the traveler discovered that the half burned berries were very fragrant, i Collecting a number of these and j crushing them with a stone, he found that their aroma had in- i creased to a great extent. While wondering at this he accidentally let fall the substance into a can which contained his scant supply of water. Lo, what a miracle! The almost putrid liquid was instant !y I purified. He brought it to his lips. It was fresh, agreeable, and in n moment after the traveler had so far J recovered his strength and energy . as to be able to resume his journey, j The lucky Arab gathered as many berries as he could, and, having ar rived at Aden, in Arabia, he in formed the mufti of his discovery. This worthy divine was an inveter ate opium smoker who had been suffering for years from the effects of that poisonous drug. lie tried an infusion of the roasted berries and was so delighted at the recov ery of his own vigor that in grati- j tude to the tree he called it cabuali, j which in Arabic signifies force.? j Denver Times. When He Raved. An Irishman over the age of four score and ten who by strict economy had accumulated a moderate for tune and was about to die called in the parish priest and the family law yer to make his last will and testa ment. The wife, a grasping, covet- I ous old party, was also in the room. The preliminaries of the will hav- J ing been concluded, it became neces sary to inquire about the debts ow- j ing to the estate. Among these were several of im portance of which the old lady ha*i been in ignorance, but was neverthe less pleased to find that so much ready money would be forthcoming after the funeral. "Now, then." said the lawyer, "state explicitly the amount owed you by your friends." "Timothy Brown," replied the old man, "owes me $250; John Casey owes me $185, and"? "Good, good!" ejaculated the pro spective widow. "Rational to the last!" "Luke Bowen owes me $200," re sumed the old man. "Rational to the last!" put in the eager old lady again. "To Michael Liffey I owe $1,000." "Ah." exclaimed the old woman, "hear him rave!" Thieves In Tangier. "They don't minec matter? ir. Tangier," said a man who spenl some years in that quaint old sea port of Morocco, "with a man who loses sight of the distinction be tween his own property and some one else's. When a thief is caught in the most trivial offense, he is told to hold up both hands. Then they ask him which hand he would like to keep. When he has made his ehoice, they cut off the other. This naturally creates a prejudice again?: kleptomania in its various forms. 1 don't quite know what they would do with a hank officer who got hi? eluteh on a million, but 1 guess the would save the hand with its con tents and throw the rest of him to the sharks." The Speakers. At a hotel in a busy quarter cf Paris the following notice appear : "Ici on pr.rlc Ar:v!;i?. Espa.it ? Jtalien. Allemr.nd." etc. An Englishmen recently enter 1 the house and a ked in liri'' b French for the interpreter. Tot waiter replied that there was none. "Who, then," the Ffeitisher ask ed, "speaks all these languages?" The waiter, with an innocent ?mile, replied, "The customers!" o'HAFFEE'S HEROISM. Out' Day'si Work that Drought ( lliiu Promotion. ^ Ore of the chapters of General Chaffee's diary deals with the fight 1 of the Hig Dry Wash in the summer j of 1882, cherished by cavalrymen t as one of the gallant ones of their ) arm of the service. About 150 i White mountain Apaches who had ] taken to the warpath were on one i side of a canyon in the Mogollon i plateau. Chaffee, a major, with a pursuing troop of the Sixth cavalry,,' held the summit of a rocky hill I commanding the entrance to the ' canyon. The battle went on for hours. One of the scouts fell some ( twoscore yards from where Chaffee 1 was standing. A second scout, at i Chaffee's elbow, remarked that the fallen man was done for, but the ] major saw that he was only wound ed. "Come along," said he, "and we'll fetch him in." Then he threw himself fiat on the ground and crawled toward the ? wounded soldier. The scout fol lowed. Slowly and painfully Chaf fee and his. companion, in the face j of a concentrated fire from aW the ; Indians, worked their way to the j wounded man and half carried and j half dragged him back within the 1 lines. The handful of troopers on the rock, thrilled with the deed that had been performed, forgot the task I in hand, stopped fighting and began j to cheer. This made Chaffee furi- j ous, and he shouted at the top of his voice: "Shut up that noise and go shoot ing!" Thus recalled to the work of fighting Indians, the men again turned their attention to their car bines and, relieved in the nick of time by two troops of the Third cavalry, slowly they fought the foe to a standstiil. The Apaches, al most to a man, were killed or cap tured. Chaffee was brevetted a lieu tenant colonel for his day's work, and in 1897 the brevet became a commission.?Kansas City Star. rsi\g eog3 as Tt nxsrrTs. The turnspit dogs, writes Alice Morse Earle in "Stagecoach and Tavern Days," were little, patient creatures whose livos were spent in the exquisite tantalization of help ing to cook meat, thje appetizing odors of which they sniffed for hours without so much ag a taste to reward them at the end of their la bors. The summary and inhuman mode of teaching these turnspits their humble duties is described in a book of anecdotes published at Newcas tle-on-Tyne in 1809. The dog was put into the wheel. A burning coal was nlaced with him. If he stopped,1 his legs were burned. That was all. He soon learned his lesson. It was hard work, for often the great piece of beef \?as twice the weight of the dog and took at least three hours' roasting. I am glad to know that these hardworking turn broaches usually grew shrewd with age and learned to vanish at the approach of the cook or the ap pearance of the wheel. At one old time tavern in New York little brown Jesse listened daily at the kitehen doorstep while the orders were detailed to the kitchenniuids, and he could never be found till nightfall on roast meat days. PEItPETrAt, MOTIOH A DELrSlOV Arkwright, the celebrated Eng lish inventor, in his younger days, and even Sir Isaac Newton believed perpetual motion might be discover ed. All so called peapetual motion machines that have run have been impositions, with secret clockwork or some other hidden source of pro pulsion. i If 1 J V? a1_ _ * 1 i Men nave presumeu, uy ine aiu of levers, balls rolling on an inclin ed plane, tlie wheel and axle, the Archimedean screw, the pump, the siphon, the hydrostatic bellows, the hydraulic ram, etc., to have discov ered perpetual motion. An authori ty in the study declares: ""From the infant machine projerted in the thirteenth century to the last hy draulic, pneumatic, weighted and lever worked pretensions patented as motions, no motion whatever has resulted from the one or the other to the present day. Not a solitary discovery is on record, not one ab solutely ingenious scheme project ed or one simple self motive model accomplished." SLOWS Ol T BY OYK PTFF. A party of American tourists were doing Italy, and in the course of their peregrinations they found themselves in a very old and very quaint cathedral. One of the prin cipal objects of interest there was ? lamp which, as the guide declared, had been burning incessantly for 600 yean. For a minute or two the sightseers gazed at it in silence, and then one of the number drew a deep breath, blew out his cheeks and gave a mighty puff. "Well, I guess it's out now," he said as he turned for the applause of his friends.?San Francisco News Let ter. FUNNY "FREAKS." Jueer Slip* Mudc "With the Pcu and the Tongue. The tone of Erin have long la bored under the imputation of mak ng more "breaks" with their ;ongucs than any of their fellow nortala, but front the following it vould poem that the "bull" is not necessarily indigenous to Irish soil: It was a Frenchman who in writ ng to an acquaintance said: 1 left my knife at your office yesterday. If you knd it, pleast* send it to me. Yours, Lb Roqi e. P. 8.?Since writing this I have found my inife, ao you need not trouble to aend it. The 6ame individual sent a pres ?nt of some fruit to a friend, and in the bottom of the basket he placed i note the postscript to which read: You will find this note in the bottom of the basket, but if you do not let me know imtnedi ttcly. It was a Scotchman who said, 'The butcher in our town does such i small business that he only has to kill half a beef at a time." A German in advertising for a lost pig said, "It has no earmarks except its tail, which is missing." A British magistrate on being in formed by a vagabond that he had no wife responded, "Well, that's a lucky thing for her." At a prayer meeting in Vermont a pious old deacon invoked a bless ing on a "poor young man whose father is a drunkard and whose mother is a widow." At a negro ball the doorkeeper on being asked what"Not transferable" on the tickets meant, replied, "It means dat no gentleman am admit ted 'less he ccmie kisself." VICTORIA AND HER ENGLISH. The shy and retiring disposition of Hawthorne has often been com mented on. Yet on occasion he could be quite as clever with his tongue as with his pen, as is evi denced by this story from Forward: It happened in England. Mr. Hawthorne was a guest at a formal dinrfcr gjven to one of the foreign embassadors. The conversation had turned upon an autograph letter of the queen which happened to be elumsily expressed. "What do you think of the queen's letter, Mr. Hawthorne?" he was asked. The man of letters was perplexed, but he replied that it showed very kind feeling. "No," persisted the wicked inter rogator, "but what do you think of the style,?" Mr. Hawthorne was equal to him. "The queen lifts a perfect right to do as she pleases with her own Eng lish," he replied. HIGHEST AND LOWEST STATES. Every one knows which is the smallest and which is the largest state in the Union, but how many know which is the lowest and which is the highest? According to tine results of meas urements and calculations made by the United States geological survey, Delaware is the lowest state, its ele vation above sea level averaging only 60 feet. Colorado is the high est, averaging 6,800 feet above the sea, while Wyoming is a close sec ond, only 100 feet lower than Colo rado. In minimum elevation Florida and Louisiana dispute for second place after Delaware, the average elevation being for each 100 feet. Taking the United States as a whole, our country lies slightly above the average elevation of the land of the globe. Tl'RN ABOl'T. A young man and woman got on a Philadelphia street car the other day, and as there were no vacant 6eats the young man said in a loud tone of voice to a negro, "Will you have the civility to give this lady a seat?" The negro did so, saluting the young woman. The seat next to her becoming vacant the young man hurriedly appropriated it with out offering it to the negro. Just then the car stopped, and a stout negro washerwoman entered the car. As no one offered her a seat the negro, with a smile, said to the young man, "Will you have the ci vility to give this lady a seat?" For a moment he hesitated, but at last concluded to comply with the re quest, very much to the indignation of the young woman.?Exchange. TOO SANGUIXB. At the moment when war was declared between France and Ger many in 1870 the French were so sanguine of success that the Pa risian streets abounded in such no tices as: "Maps of Germany sold within for the entry into Berlin" and "Ger man-French dictionaries, for the use of the French when at Berlin." ? But the climax of arrogant as sumption was reached when a Pa risian cabman, on driving to the, railway station a young Prussian of-' ficer about to rejoin his regiment positively declined to accept nis le gal fare, saying coolly: ? "No, sir; a man should not pay, for his own funeral!" ? Pearson's Weekly. THE HOLIDAY. Be ptve hi3 ey? ? to the skic? of blu* His tan to the bird* aud beet. And he gave his heart to the winde that lev Away over empty aeaa, ^ And he .aw the depths that he could not sound. And he heard the unworldly soups. And his heart, unfettered, tUd past the bound Of a tired life's rights and wrongs, Ar i he n it' r wrought r r p ayed nor slept Nor tr^ub'ed with good tuiJ ill. Ai d his dr.aii.s were \a?i.e as the sceute thai swept And sweetened the lonely hi 1, And there fr. m morning ti'l eve he lay, And never a jm !c sous, lit. But he came hona- glad ut the close of the day, Because he had li.ed for nsupht. ? ?J. J. Bell in Chambers' Journal. A GHOST STORY. The Mystery of the Vanishing Railway Traveler. An English ghost stoty of the only authentic sort is related by Wilbcrt Beale in his "Light of Oth er Pays." A young man, Mr. A., one night left London to take a trip into the north of England ind had for a companion in the railway car riage but one man, a stranger. Mr. A. addre-- 1 some remark to i his fellow traveler in starting, hut the man took no notice of it and began to read a newspaper with great diligence. Presently Mr. A. went to sleep, ard on awaking after an hour's nap found the carriage empty. No station had been passed, and vet his fellow passenger had vanished. He was puzzled and believed him self to have been the victim of an apparition or n dream. Twelve months passed, and again the two travelers met, under pre cisely the same circumstances. Mr. A. resolved that this time the mys tery should he solved, bat he had had a hard day's work and in spite ot Inn)?eif toil last asleep. \vnen he awoke it was to lind that his companion had mysteriously van ished. lie now began to suspect that this second illusion might forebode soma disaster and joined his friends with u fieavy hear'.. His sister, no ticing his d pr.v i ?1, urjed him to accompany V.rr to some neighbor hood merrymaking. He consented, but on entering the ball started vio lently. "There; there it is again!" he ex claimed, with a terrified look. "What do you mean?" whispered his sister in alarm. "The phantom!" he gasped,point ing to an advancing figure. "I have seen it twice in my journeys up here, and each time it vanished into air." "How absurd!" said she, relieved. "That is the owner of Harold park. The railway runs through his es tate, and he has a private station, at which the train stops whenever it is signaled. lie is deaf and dumb." The Lion Officiated. An extraordinary ceremony was performed in Cape Town. A lion tamer had been giving an exhibition for several days, and one evening he informed the audience that he had just become a father and be intend ed to baptize the infant on the fol lowing day in the lions' cage. Those who heard him thought he was jok ing, hut when they reached the exhi bition hall the next evening they found that he was in dead earnest. In the cage he stood, surrounded by his assistants, and near him were seated three women?his wife, one of her friends and the godmother of the infant. To the left of them stood the clergyman, holding the ba by in his arms, and behind him was a gigantic African named Leo, who was to act as godfather on tiie occa sion. Facing this fesrless group were two huge lions, whose every ac tion showed that they were immeas urably surprised at the intrusion of so many strangers into their domi cile. Moreover, their surprise was the greater since, in honor of the event, their cage was wreathed with llowers and splendidly illuminated with electric lights. The ceremony was duly perform ed, and while it lasted the lions be haved with "perfect propriety," much to the satisfaction and sur prise of the immense crowd which thronged the hall. A Lake Mysteriously Drained. In the year 1881, without a mo ment's warning and with scarcely a tremble of the earth, the high and rocky strip of land which separated the large lake in the rear of the city of Manzanillo. Mexico, from the sea suddenly parted, and the waters poured into the harbor. The im mense amount of water which pour ed through the narrow chasm may be better calculated by consulting the figures of U. Zapyaro, the civil engineer who declared that the vol ume represented l,00u.000 gallons a minute during the three days it was rushing through the hreak. The lake was full of alligators and the harbor swnrni. g ri'li sharks. When the motifters met, a ?.wafer battle immediately ensued ar.d was closely watched during Ilia three days it lasted by almost the entire popula tion of Mamtanillo. It may be men tioned that the sharks finally tri umphed. Iigr 71 ' Ican bc K<4?&A ^^v?*n |tt^\x ,; ilhoMt Siipply IWW^'Ir/ Pot ffl ash and your profits will be |^large; without ?> Potash your ^wSl crop will be Our books, telling about composition of fertilisers best adapted for all crops, are free to all farmers. GfckMAN KALI WORKS, ftj Nassau St.. New York. Bill Files Letter Files, You file your bills? Then you need a bill File. We have them in two sizes?for lonj; bills and for letters. You wish to Keep Letters You receive? Then buy one of our Letter File Books. With one of these books you can keep every important letter where you can Find it in a Moment, Without any Trouble All the above goods on hand at reasonable prices. We also have a few Single Entry Ledg ers on hand at low prices. BEATY, HOLT A EASSITEB, Smith field. N. C. NOTICE! The* undersigned having qualified as Ad ministrator of the estate of Aquilla Narron. deceased, ail persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the j same to me duly verified on or before the 26th day of April, 1902 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery and all persons in debted to said estate will make immediate payment. This 20th day of April, 1901. CLAUDE L. NAKRON, Administrator. Jno. A. Narron, Attorney. Apr26?Ow-pd. NOTICE OF INCORPORATION. North Carolina?Johnston County. Notice is hereby given that the Secretary of State has issued to E. J.Holt, T. R.Crocker, H. D. Ellington and S. S. Holt a certificate of incorporation as follows. 1st. Name, Holt Hardware and Buggy Co. 2nd. Purpose, General Hani ware and Mer chandise, Vehicles Manufacture and Repair Shops, Ac. 3rd. Place of Business, Smithtleld, N. C. 4th. Duration, 3U years. 5th. Capital. $10,000. Shares $100 each. 6th. Stockholders not individually liable. W. S. STEVENS, Clerk Superior Court. NOTICE! The undersigned having qualified as admin istrator on the estate of C. K. Pearee, de ceased, all persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same to me duly verified on or before the 10th day of May 1902 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery and all persons indebted to said estate will make immediate payment. This 7th day of May 1901. D. H. Wallace, Administrator. May 10-6 wp. NOTICE OF INCORPORATION. North Carolina. I Johnston County, I Notice is hereby given that the Secretary of State on the 30th day of April 1901 issued a cert ittcate of incorporation to W. M. Sanders, W. L. Woodall and others under the name and for the purpose, etc.. as follows: 1. Name: Smithfleld Improvement Co. 2. Place of business: Smithfleld, N. C. 3. Purpose: To erect hotel and buy and self real estate. 4. Existence: Sixty years. 6. Capital stock: $*90,090 to commence when $5,000 Is subscribed. 6. Value per share: $100. W. 8. Stev?nb, C. 8. C. NOTICE! The undersigned having qualified as execu toron the estate of OtoiM B>BrldffMide ceased, all persons havinir claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same to me duly verified on or before the 17th day of May* 1902 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery and all persons indebted to said estate will make immediate payment. This 16th day of May 1901. Anderson Oowfr. Ex. P. O. Lemay, N. C. M 17-flw. THIS IS The New Number 8 Domestic Sewing Machine, ? FOR SALE BY J. M. BEATY, 8MITHTUELD, N. C. A car of lime on the road ? Hair, piaster and cement in atocl all the time. W. M. Sanders. Southern \ Railtoak THE \ STANDARD RAILWAY OP \ THE SOUTH. \ The direct line to all points. Texas, California, Florida, Cuba and Porto Rico. Strictly FIRST-CLASS Equipment on all Through and Local Trains; Pull man Palace Sleeping Cars on all Night Trains; Fast and Safe Sched ules. Travel by the Southern and you are assured a fcafe, Com tort able a no Expeditious Journev. Apply to ticket agents for Time Tables. Kates and General Information, o? address, R. L. YERNON, F.R.BARDY, T. P. A. C. P. & T. A, Charlotte, N. C. Asheville. N. C. NO TROUBLE TO ANEWf R QUESTIONS S. H. HARDWIGK, G. P. A. WASHINGTON. D. C. WILMINGTON k WELDON RAILROAD And Branches AND FLORENCE RA1LKOD. (Condensed Schedule.) TRAINS GOING SOUTH. 25 -wj K zz ? 2 ^ I>ated January ? ?' '!??' ~~ - ??? ?? &S ?* z ?'? ? aS | ;^='S J.; A M ! P M A Mfr~M Lv Weldon 11 5ui 8 58 ! Ar Kocky Mt... 100 9 52 j-, Lv Tarboro 1221 d 00 ... Lv Kocky Mt ... 10T,| 1002 637 6 16 126* Lv Wilson 160 10 40 7 10 6 57 2 40 LvSelma 2 661 11 18^?. Lv Fayetteville 4 30! 12 35__^. .. Ar Florence 7 26 2 40 ?... P M IA M Ar Goldsboro 7 55 Lv Goklsboro .*. 0 46 3 30 Lv Magnolia 7 51 4 36 Ar Wilmington \ j 9 20 0 01) TRAINS' GOING NORTH. Dated July sJ-S ' & J Si. 3 u S!,1B?0. ?l.t? 7-=l *5 7= 5?lzi3- 5* 5* p5 ?c | * T3 Q& 4ri ?? Z?c A M i |P M I Lv Florence 9 50 ! 7 35 Lv Fayettevllle 12 15 941 Lv Selma 1 50 1135 Ar Wiiaon?? 2 35 12 13 :Ti.rri Lv Wilmington 7 00 9 36 Lv Magnolia 8 30' 1110 Lv Goldsboro.. 4 60 ?37 12 20 P M A M P M Tp M Lv Wilson 2 85 5 33 12 13 10 46 1 18 Ar Kocky Mt 8 30 6 10 12 45 11 23 1 63 Ar Tarlsiro 7 46 , Lv Tarboro 2 31 ! Lv Rocky Mt....I 8 30 12 07! Ar Weldon 4 32 1 00i | IPM I I A M | j Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, VadkiD [ Division Main Line?Train leaves Wilmington 9 00 a m, arri\es Fayettevllle 12 05 p ni, lc-cvet I Fay etteville 12 26 p m, arrives San ford 1 43 p m. Returning leave Sanford 3 06 p m, arrive Fay I etteville 4 2(f p m, leave Fayetteville 4 30 p m. j arrives Wilmington 9 25 p m. Wilmington and Weldon Railroad, Bennette | ville Branch?Train leaves Bennettsvillt 8 06 ; a m, Maxton 9 06 a m. Red Springs 9 51 a m. | Parkton 10 41 a in. Hope Mills 10 55 a m. arrives ' Fayetteville 11 10. Keturnitiing leaves Fay etteville 4 45 p in. Hope Mills 5 00 p nlk Ked | Springs 6 43 p m, MaxtoD6 16 p m, arrive?Ilea ; nettevilie 7 16 p m. 1 Connections at Fayetteville with train No. 1 78, at Maxton with the Carolina Cent ral Jtaik road, at Red Springs w ith the Red Spring and I Row more railroad, at S&nford with tne Sea i board Air Line and Southern Railway, af Guir with the Durham and Charlotte Railroad. Train on the Scotland Neck Branch Road leaves Weldor. 3 66 p in. Halifax 4 17 pn.ai I rives Scotland Neck at 5 08 p m, Greenville ? I 6 57 p m, Kinston 7 66 pm. Returning louvet I Kinston 7 50 a in, Greenville 8 62 a m, arriving ! Halifax at 11 18 a m, Weldon 11 33 a m, daily 1 except Sunduy. ! Trains on Wasbinfton branch leaves Wash ; ington blOam and 2 80 p m, arrives Panneie V 111 a m and 4 00 p m. Returning leave Parmele 9 3ft a m and ti *1 p m, arri\ e W ash ing ton llUOam and liKlpm daily except Sunday. Train leaves Tarboro daily except 8uiuluy at 5;#iprn, Sunday 4 15 p m. arrives Plymouth j 7 40 p in, H 10 p in. Returning leaves Plymouth daily except Sunday, 7 50 a m and Sunday ? 00 a m, arrives Tarhoro 10 10 a m, 11 00 a m. Train on Midland. N. C., branch heaves Goldsboro daily except Sunday 5 00a m, arrive Smitbtleld 0 10 a m. Returning leave Smith Held 7 00 a m, arrive Goldsboro 8 26 a m. Trains on Nashville branch leave Kocfcy Mount at 9 30 a m,3 40 p m. arrive Nnsfiv die 10 20 a m, 4 03 p m. Spring Hope 11 00 a m. 4 26 fm. Returning leave Spring Hope 11 20 a m. 56 i? m, Naahvflle 11 46 a m, 6 26 p m. arrive at Kooky Mount 12 26am,6 pm, daily ex. Sunday. Train on Clinton branch leaves Warsaw foi Clinton daily except Sunday 11 40 a m and 4 i p m. Keturning leaves Clinton at 6 45 a m and i 2 60 p m. Train No. 78 makes close connection at Wel don for ail points North daily. All mil via Richmond. H. M. EMMEKSON, Gen'l Passenger Aft J K KENLY, Gen'l Manager. T. M. EMMEKSON Traffic Man'r. Ko do I Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. It artificially digests the food and aids Nature in strengthening and recon structing the exhausted digestive or gans. It Is the latestdiscoTcreddigtst 1 ant and tonic. No other preparation can approach It In efficiency. It In stantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea, - Sick Headacne, Gastraigla,Cramps and . i all other results of Imperfect digestion. L- Pries90c.and|1. l*rfr?i?ccont?tM?Ht)pss Until lis, Book*Unbuutdj?pepa.?mnltedtrss PrtpsrtS by C. C DsWITT * CO-. CO'taao
The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 31, 1901, edition 1
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