Newspapers / The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, … / July 12, 1901, edition 1 / Page 7
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t he Religion of the Boers. From the Nineteenth Century. When I was serving as anting Chaplain to the forces in 1899on tien. French's lines of communi cation at Rosmead Junction I was told on excellent authority that a colonial Boer farmer in the neighborhood had said that if the Boers did not win he would burn his Bible and have no more to do with God. I have since heard the same sort of state- i inents made in other quarters, and although 1 have no means of verifying them, 1 believe them to be substantially true. A broken Calvinist is a desjierateaud illog ical man. When the logic of events caused the Scottish Came ronians to despair of their posi tion, they actually intrigued with the Chevalier, a bigoted Roman Catholic Prince, in 1708 against the Government of liueen Anne. The end of the war will find the mass of the ignorant Boers in a condition of religious despair. All that they have been taught to believe about themselves as the elect jieople, all the promises of God-given victory which Paul Kruger and their ministers of religion have perpetually set be fore them, will be to them as the baseless fabric of a vision. They will merit the compassion and pity of every God-fearing man in j our empire. Theirown ministers j have, most of them, ministered so fatally to their political delu sions that they will be as sheep without a shepherd. There area 1 few among them who will give them wise counsel, such as Mr. Du l'lessis. There are some min- j isters like the Hev. Andrew Mur ray, of saintly life and wide spirit ual power whose devotional j works are read and valued in England. But the political taint is the predominant characteristic of most of them. White Man Turned Yellow. Great consternation was felt by the friends of M. A. Hogarty of Lexington, Ky., when they saw he was turning yellow. His skin slowly changed color, also his eves, and he suffered terribly. His malady was yellow jaundice. He was treated by the best doc tors, but without benefit. Then he was advised to try Electric Bitters, the wonderful Stomach and Liver remedy, and he writes: "After taking two bottles I was wholly cured." A trial proves its matchless merit for all Stom ach, Liver and Kidney troubles. Only 25c. Sold by Hood Bros., Druggists. Everett the Orator. Edward Everett seems to me, on the whole, our best example of the orator, pure and simple, j Webster was a great statesman, a great lawyer, a great advocate, a great public teacher. To all I these his matchless oratory was j bot an instrument and incident But Everett is always the ora-1 tor. He was aclergyman a little | while. He was a Greek professor a little while. He was a college j President a little while. He was j Minister to England alittle wlrile. He was Representative in Con gress and Senator. He was Gov ernor of the Commonwealth. In i these places he did good service 1 enough to make a high reputa-1 tion for any other man. Little of these things is remembered | now. He was above all things? I am tempted to say, above all i men?the foremost American ora tor in one class.?Senator Hoar in Scribner's. It is easier to keep well than get cured. DeWitt's Little Early Risers taken now and then, will always keep vour bowels in per fect order. Tney never gripe but promote an easy gentle action. Hood Bros., Hare & Son. J. It. Led better. Two executions occurred at Birmingham, Ala., Friday, a white man and a negro being hanged. Frank Miller, a safe robber and murderer of Police man W. T. Adams, and Alonzo Williams, colored, the murderer of Bob Callahan, also colored. Stops the Cough and Works off the Cold. Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tab lets cure a cold in one day. No Cure, no Pay. Price 25 cents . VALUABLE LAND FOR SALE! I offer for sale one hundred and sixty-eighr acres of land in Meadow township, Johnston county, adjoining the land of J. T. Hudson and others. Of this, one hundred acres is finely tim bered, the rest is fine farming land for tobacco and other crops. It has a large dwelling and is in a fine community. If interested, come to see or write to Eldkr Josiah Eldridge, Glen wood, N. C. _ "A man's real lifedoes not con sist in what he cats and what he wears, the jolly good time he has and the number of times he's called 'a good fellow.' Life?the life that counts?can f?e measured only by the development of char acter and soul, and only the man who is in touch with the Infinite? who reaches up and takes hold and heeds the divine voice, who follows the divine light, can live the life that is worth living." To Cure a told In one Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature on each box. 2">e. Don't. Don't cast peopleoff even when they go wrong. Don't talk them down. Quit your gossiping about people's mistakes. The man who never made a mistake is a myth. Mingle gentleness in your rebukes Make allowances for constitutional frailties. Never savharsh things where kind words will do as well. There are many 1 in our churches and out of them who are in need of sympathy, and that will speak to their hearts a great deal louder than eloi i uent sermons or long prayers. What the man who is down wants is a lift. Let us make men feel that we love them, and that we want to help them, and they will be helped. "The bread cannot rise when the yeast is kept' apart from the dough." Happy is the man and blessed the woman who has in his or her soul that which gives to life the warmth of the sunshine, the redo lence of the rose, and the fresh ness of the dew.?M. ('. Peters. ihe Didn't Wear a Mask. But her beauty was completely hidden by sores, blotches and oi nil ties till she used Bucklens \rnica Salve. Then they vanish ed as will all eruptions, fever sores, boils, ulcers, carbune es and felons from its use. Infalli ble for cuts corns, burns, scalds and piles. Cure guaranteed. Joe. at Hood Bros. Side Lights on History. The question in its original shape was addressed to Socrates h""\Vhy do you swear?" asked one of his intimate friends. "Sh!" he said, lowering ins voice. "Xantippe doesn't know I do!"?Chicago Tribune. A bad complexion generally re sults from inactive liver bow els. In all such cases, DeWltts Little Early Risers producegrati fving results J. K. Ledbetter, Hood Bros., Hare .k Son. A Georgia Youngster's Journal. Monday-Had to dig hah for dad to go a-tishin . Hetished all dav. and two men brought lain houif 'bout supper tune. Tuesday?ClunMi a tree to get a bird's nest, an' fedl out o the tree on to the back of a mule that wuz grazin' under it. The mule didn c like that, an' tlirowed me up into the tree again. Wednesday?Proposed to Jim mie Johnson's sister. Asked her to Ply with Me. Her mother heard me, an' .g've me such a lickin' with ashiuglettaatl flewed bv nivself, au' (lfcn't feel tired enough to sit dpwn to-day. Thursday?P^l into a molasses barrel, which wuz only half lull. Though we all have our Troubles and Sorrows. 1 must say that life is Sweet to me. Friday?A barbecue was gi ven to the Sunday school Children vesterdav. We all had more than We could eat and carry away. It is good to belong to a Sunday I school. Saturday-The new preacher come to spend Sunday with us. \t breakfast he ate seven biscuits, one beefsteak, mi' a fried chicken, an' druiked 4 cups of coffee. He asked me if 1 didn't want to be a anS 1 told Him that,fHestaid long, an his Appetite held out, I'd have to he One.?Atlanta I Constitution. Those famous little pills, De Witt's Little Early Biserscompel vour liver and bowels to do their 'duty, thus giving you pure.,n h blood to recuperate your body. ' Vrc easy to take. Never gripe. hIv'Tiou,J. B. I-dtatW. i Hood Bros. Out west . J ohn Silence lvgs mar ried Mary Peace. H that inn t a happv union we'll throw up the sponge. And yet?what s I name??Ex. __ TO MAC.ISTHATES:-THE Herald office is the place to buy ' your blanks erf all kinds: JAPANESE CURIOSITY. A Potent Factor In the Modernizing of the Nation. A characteristic which ha3 been potent in the modernising of Japan is that of insatiable curiosity, an in tense desire to see and understand anything new, says Anna N. Benja min in Ainslee's. While the Chinese attitude is that of contempt for any beings or institutions not evolved in China, the Japanese are eager to know of everything connected with our form of civilization and to adopt it if it is good. Sometimes their great rfc eeptiveness and power of imitation and adoption lead them to adopt innovations which they afterward And it wiser to discard; hence the accusation of fickleness. A perusal of Japanese history shows that the people have ever progressed by im pulses, by action and reaction, and that in the end g?od judgment seems to become supreme. The for eigner traveling in Japan is soon made aware of the quality of curios ity. On every railroad platform he is surrounded1 by a crowd pf people who, with ihf'ir lflouths as wide open as them eyes in their effort to- lose no detail of interest, regard''him slowly from head to foot and com ment upon him among themselves the while. These people may have seen hundreds of foreigners?they may see them every day?but they continue to act as if they had never seen one before I visited some Americans in Tokyo who had lived in the same house with the same Japanese neighbors for about a year, yet each time that we went out to drive the people in the little Japanese house near by would rush to their windows and stand there watching as eagerly as a small Yan kee at,the circus. This happened every da v. It is always possible to tell wlietner a foreigner happens to be in his garden, for a good si^cd crow of Japanese gathered about the gate announces the important fact. Sin Eaters In Wales. A curious custom prevails at fu nerals In some parts of Wales. A poor person is hired?"a long, lean, Ug ly, lamentable rascal"'?to perform tRe duty of sin eater. Bread and beer are passed to the man over the corpse or laid on it. These he con sumes, and by the process he is sup posed to take on him all the sins of the deceased and free the person from walking after death. W]ien a sin eater is not employed, glasses of wine and funeral bischits I are given to each bearer across the j coffin? The people believe that ev ery drop of wine drunk at a funeral is a sin committed by the deceased, but that by drinking the wine the soul of the dead is released from the burden of the sin. In some places it is the custom to send to the friends of a family after a death a bag of biscuits with the card of the deceased. Tlrese fu neral biscuits, often small, round sponge cakes, Were known as arvel bread, arvel bread meaning ale. When arvel bread is passed around at a funeral, each guest is expected to put a shilling on the plate. ? How Sheridan Used^an Idea. Perhaps the wittiest of Richard Brinsley Sheridan's retorts was de livered, as it seemed, offhand hi the house of commons. He said that Dundas resorted to his memory for his jokes and to his imagination for his facts. Fnfortunately foi the extempore reputation of this jeSfc, it is found set 4Hown in Sheridan's notebook yeajs before. He' jots down the happy thought, "He em ploys his fanty for his narrative and keep3 his recollection for his | wit." Later on he expands thi^into 1 "When he makes his jokes, ydu ap plaud the ateufacy of hjp memory, and 'tis only when he states his fact! that you admire the flights of j his imagination.*" After this he u^es the idea #> the j confnsioji of Michael KeHy, a com | poser of musicj who had been a wine merchant. "You will now import your music and compose Vour wine." Finally he lets it off with a bang in the house of"commons. Habit and Eatlfig Houses. When a man has created a ftabit ; of eating at a sertain place, he thinks of? that particular place whenever he geds hungry. He may I have begun by accident, have 6e cured'a good seat, a good wai&r or got acquainted witl^thes proprietor ?r g^t some fatfbme dish to his laste or met agreeable peopfe. .Some insignificant thing struck him fa vorably. In a few days he gr>e3 ?there from habit, ne gpts angry and dissatisfie^every now and then and tries another place, but he finds I drawbacks everywhere and goes back again. Habit is stronger than the attractions of superior food and oqokery, stronger than money con siderations. If it were not for hab it, th? good will of a hotel or a news paper would be worthless, and j scores of restaurants around town | would be closed in a month.?New , York Ilerald. S3 RES JIKL ULOERS. Sorvs ami Ulcer* never become chronic or.los the blood is in pooi'condi'ion ? it sluggish, weak and unable to throw oil the i*>isous that accumulate in it. The system must be relieved of the unhealthy matter through the sore, and great danger to life would follow should it heal before the blood has been made pure and healthy and all impurities eliminated from the sys tem. S S.S. begins the cure by first clean v ing and invigorating the Mood, building nt> the general health and removing from in? ?y T? A CONSTANT DflAl'i all morbid, effete matter. UPON THE SYSTEM* When this has been accomplished the dis charge gradually ceases, and the sore oi ulcer heals. It is the tendency of these old indolent sores to grow worse and worse, and eventually to destroy the bones. Local applications, while soothing and to some extent alleviate pain, cannot reach the seat o&the trouble. S. StS. does, and notnattei how apparently hopeless your condition, even though your constitution has broken down, it will bring relief when nothing else can. It supplies?the rich, pure blood necessary to heal the sore ahd nourish the debilitated, di-eased body. Mr. J. It. Talbert, Lock Box Winona, Miss., savs: "Six years ago my leg itom the kn en the foot rv.?s one solid rorr Several phvKiciat;J treated me and I made two trips to Hoi Spring*., but found r.o t -iief I was ipd -cea to tn t- w S . and ii made a complete cute. 1 have been a per fectly well man ever sftice jJ At m -ty > , only purely veg etable blood purifier \CV known?contains no k ||' >u poisonous minerals to V?sP ruin the digestion and add to, rather than relieve your suffer ings. If your flesh does not heal readily when scratched, bruised or cut, your blood is in bail condition, and any ordinary sore is apt to become chronic. Send for our free book and write our physicians about your case. We make no charge for this sen-ice. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA. GA. Normal Summer Symptoms. "Christian Scientists believe in ignoring physical distress.'' "Pshaw, Christian Science girls race np to the ice cream soda counters just like all other girls.'" ?Chicago Record-Herald. '?1 wish to truthfully state to you and the readers of these few lines that your Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is without question, the best and only cure for dyspepsia that 1 have ever come in contact with and I have used many other preparations.?John Beam, West Middlesex, Da. No preparation equals Kodol Dyspepsia Cure as it contains all the natural digest ants. It will digest all kinds of food and can't help but do you good. Hare & Son, Hood Bros.. J. R. Led better. A Natural Lure. "What is the remedy for pov erty?" demanded the lecturer in thunder tones. He paused for a reply, and dur ing the pause a man in the rear of the hall called out: "You might try thegold cure." j ?Detroit Free Dress. Treatment Horses? Dneumonia and Colds. Give White's Fever Medicine every half hour and apply White's Black Liniment. Colic and Kidney troubles, give White's Colic and Kidney Cure. Staggers: Give W hite's Durga tive and White's Fever Medicine. Worms: Give White's Durga tive and White's Worm and Con dition Dowders. Allen Lee, Druggist. This signature is on every box of the?renuinc Laxative Bromo=(Ji!inme Tit let* I the Remedy that Hirer n cold ftu one <la> i NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION. The partnership heretofore ex | isting between .1 osiah Stancill i and S. Klawansky, under the firm name of Stancill & Klawan sky is disolved by mutual con sent. All obligations of the firm will be assumed by S. Klawan sky and all accounts due the firm must be paid to him. June 21, 1901. J osiah Stancill, S. Klawansky. June 28-3wh. Tobacco Flues i Come and see nie if you want the best flues for the least money. 1 have them. I have the Cotton King and Elmo COOK STOVES, i (the world's best) ' Fine Breech Loading Shot Guns, All at factory prices. Come and see them if vou want to get the best goods for the least money. Respectfully, S. B. JOHNSON, Smithfield, N. C. Apr8-ia? Schedule of the RALEIGH i CAPE FEAR RAILROAD. IN ?FF?CI JUNES. 1901. SOUTH HOUND TEA IN8. No. 5 No. 3 No. 1 STATIONS. Monday. Monday. W Mm- 1 uesdfty Tuesday, day and Tb'sday Th'sday j Friday. ami ami Satu'day Satu'dav A. M. P. M. A. M. Lv. Raleigh 7 00 4 (10 7 00 laralelgh June 7 06 4 06 7 06 Caralelgh Mills 7 16 4 10 7 10 ? Sylvaula 7 30 4 16 7 16 j Barnes 7 37 4 33 7 S3 Hobby's 7 117 4 3d 7 38 MeOullers. s (?i 440 7 47 Banks 8 03 4 46 7 60 Austin HOB 4 48 7 53 Willow Springs 8 35 5 la) 8 06 Sextons 8 40 5 10 8 30 Ar. Slppakaw 8 50 5 15 8 35 NOKTH BOUND THAIINS. No. 3 No. 4 No. B STATIONS. Monday. Monday, Tuesday Tuesday, 1 Wednos Th'aday Th'sday 1 day and and and Friday. Saturd'y Saturd'y A. M. r M P. M. Lv. Slppabaw ...I 8 40 5 30 3 30 Sextons ! 8 45 | 5 35 3 35 Willow Springs! 8 55 I 5 45 8 50 Austin 9 05 I 5 50 4 10 Banks ! 9 10 5 .'3 4 05 McCullers 9 35 B0. 4 30 Hobby's 9 30 6 35 4 35 Barnes 9 35 6 80 4 40 Sylvaola 8 45 0 40 4 50 t'araloigb Mills) 9 55 6 55 5 00 Caraleigh June' 10 05 7 ' 0 5 10 Ar. Raleigh 10 10 7'5 5 15 All sc hedule trains carry passengers. Ap proved: JOHN A. MILLS. Pres. and Gen. Mun. notice! m/niu?J'ydt*i>iifnt.,'| haxinp qualified an Ad ?J" ! ,f r,?n tht' estate of Akevi rtircnler , dete.iHtd. all per?on& having claims atminst ! l}ot,fk,d to present the .t i ^ti!y \eriUed on or before the 14th I fnT.Hr ,',tUt"h'' "ntkt' " 1'lcKded ' , n ,"x' l v "1"! "ii ihtsodh in pal'ment^ e?tate will make immediate This loth day of June, 1901. A. C. CRFMPLBR, June 14?Bw-pd. Administrator. NV"h?CA/.iOI'INA- I In the Superior Johnston County f Court. Autrustu9 Wriirht, l Plaintiff ' II a 'Vfam8t a .. ' Notice. 1). A. * ields and wife, i Jerusha Fields, - Defendants. ) D A Fields above named. aaihA'veh?. > Ch-thl" a" aetion entitled rlSi? . ? 'L''cn commenced in the Superior of Johnston County to foreclose a mortiraae deed executed to plaintiff by the Fn wl whi h' A' I'ield8 and wife Jerusha ( .J in ?or'"'>?>? is registered in the Keiristcry of Johnston County, Book "G" No ! . patte 144. Said mortiraye is past due. the Jnhn22S.V?y i" mortiraire is situated in Johnston County, North Carolina. ..The defendant. Ii A. Fields, (personal ser rnsh.ci "fi"1 '.'"Tm bavins ,let'n made on Je i u V wl" ,urtherl 'ake notice that he !n.^qV apjiear at the next term of the Johnston County, to lie hr. (',',?,rl'ri Monday in SepU'mlier, Ittil at I'otLni A c Johnston County, North nlslnf !n*u'nt| answer or demur to the com plaint in said aetion, or the plaintiff will ap ,i?Vrt f"r tbe re"e' demanded ill I me complaint. I This 36th day of June 1901. W. tS. Stevens, Clerk of the 8u lv. . VT Pt'foir^Cuort of Johnston County. jno. a. isiahron, Attorney for Plaintiff. June 2tt-6wk-pd. I seem a improvement co. '? h,'r,:hy ff|v"n that the Secretary of to h n" wso a ul'rtitieate ot incorporation Parklw u^- W?y\ Kl?bardson, J. H. iff li ? W"!,,'"1 and others, as follows: i ? tv?mv helma Improvement Co. 5 . 'r!n<T?! Place of business, Sclma. N. C n ' IIjo object is to iiuild Tobacco Ware house, I rl/.o Hou ses and to deal In tobacco. etc shares 1 al 8tock is *5,u)u divided into a*j anyl'labie1* corPonitors 6haU not be individu 6th. Durational) vears. W. 8. STEVENS, Clerk. E31-/ V T i-! ? HP II L: , fc uTtf IL SEWIEO MACHISE Do not be deceiver! hv thi so w .to ad a J,*1 ? V1-' Ma-Woe for c-f).00. Iins:l-.H'.'l i.t , rim lijnscm be bought from iisrirm.it of our dealers from *' IS.CO to 913.00. WC MARE A VARIETY. the new home is the best. The Feed determines :!te strength or weukniMs <if (Sr".vi:ij{ Machines. The lloulilo l-Vtst colli:.ined with otlier strong point* i ,k , the \o-.? Homi: the best (Sewing Machine to buy. Iiil!(fCIRCUIiRS5;,St-',i5 wemiiDiiftiotnreaiidyr A bvioiepXhSllfn" the i:ev ko:?e sc^im machine 60. ORANGC. MASS 28 Union 8q. N. V.. Chicago, 111., Atlanta, Ua^ St. IiOuis,Mo., Di!'MS,Tox.,Snn Francisco, CaJ. FOR SALE BY J. M. BE AT Y, 6MITHFIELD, ?. C. i have used i)r. f. e. White's Worm and Condition i'owders as a blood purifier for horses. It improves the apjietite, fattens the horse, expels worms and gives a glossy coat. Polie Gardner. Guaranteed and sold by Allen Lee, Druggist, Smithfield.'N. C. Our clubbing offer of The Her ald and the Atlanta semi-weekly Journal for f 1.50 is withdrawn. No more subscriptions will be taken at this price. The Herald and Home a Farm one year for fl.25. ??*?: Southern Railtoay. .? ? ? m THE < STANDARD RAILWAY OF THE SOUTH. The direct line to all points. Texac, California, Florida, Cuba and Porto Rico. Strictly FIRST-CLASS Equipment od all Through and Local Trains; full man Palace Sleeping Cars 04 all Night Trains; Fast and SafelSched ules. Travel by the Southern and r?w are attured a Safe, Comfortulnl and Expeditious Journev. Apply to ticket agents for Time Tablet, fratc* and General Information, or addicts, R. L.YERH0H, F. R. BAKDY, T. P. A. C. P. & T. a, Charlotte, N. C. Ashevillt. N. G. NO TROUBLE TO ANfcWf R QUE61 'CPS S. H. HARDVVIGK. G. P. A. WASHINGTON, D. C. WILMINGTON & WELDON RAILEOAh And Branches A.\'I> FLORENCE KAILHOl). (CondensoU Schedule.) TRAINS GOING SOl'TH. ! 3. S. u.' ' - ^ i Dated January '". ' -2 "r la. Mil. S~' ??*' - e* | *?ldfc|l is JI Lv Weidon u .'?'?? - v. ' ** Ar Rocky Mt . 1 ?i lifisL.. Lv Tarboro 12 el I dOj | I.v Rocky Mt |. . an 6jris? L\ Wilson 1611 10 40 7 JJ ;y? . o. Lvtwlma ; 2 sr. 11 w *_ Lv Fayettevllle! Old isar>! A Ar Florence I 7 25 ? tpl \p * |a m i ;.T ArGoldsboro , 7 55 ~~ 7jRJ Lv Goldsboro ' LV Magnolia i - 5* *;i Ar Wilmington 0 jjO- 6 ? - ^ TRAINS GOING NORTH. DSf?aiuly S-^2C| ?J 5T. Siji'fl ! a M I J F M ^ Lv Florence 9 50..... 7 Lv Favetteviile 12 15 I 9.1 Lv gelma I V. n At 1 aiiij igjgj Lv Wilmington1 tcV 'V ? L\ Magnolia i f, :jl, j, j, Lv Goldsboro.... | 4 50 ; K27 :it ? nr.. ?' X; A M I' 5^", M I.v Wilson 2.-C, .via IS !?; 11) 4). lit Ar Rocky Mt... a;k)l ? 10 1246 li s, Ar Tarboro 7 41; Lv Tar bo 10 j am1 1 Lv Kooky Mt ... 330 1-07 Ar Weidon ! 4 .32 . 1 00 I P M 'AM I Wilmington and Weidon Kailroad. Va k.? Di\ision Main Line?1 rain leaves Wilmington 9 id. rt m. arrives Fayette \ llle 12 ?* p m, 1 m ?? Fayetteviile 26 p m,arrivesSantord 1 40 p n. Ret urning leave Saulord 3 06 p m. arrive Fay ettevllle 4 2t|u in, leave Fayetteville 4 311 v vr, arrives W ilnurigton 9 26 p ni. W ilraingtou and Weidon Kailroad. Bennctt* ville Brunch?Train leaves Kennel taviiles ? ?*. am. Max ton 9 05 u in, Red Springs 1*1 m Par:;ton 10 41 a m. Hope Mills 10 fin a ED.Arrives Fayetteville 11 10. Ketuniining lean* ra\ ettevilie 4 45 p m. llope Mills 5 00 p S, Ited Bpnngs 5 4e t? rn, Maxtor t? lfl 0 m. arrives Hoe Dcttsvillc 7 15 p m. Connect ions at Favetteviile with t*,n No. .8, at Max ton with the ' 'arnlina Cent 5> Ran road, at Red Springs w ith the Red Springs pad Row-more railroad, at Sanfcrd with th( sea board Air Line and Southern Railway, at Gulf with the Durham and Charlotte Kuilr&ad Tram on the Scotland >eek Bran? Foad leaves W eldon b 55 0 n:. Halifax 4 17 p in. ar rives bcotriand Neck at 5iw p m. Greenville 0 W p m. Kins ton 7 66 pm. Kcturni^k haves Kinston 7 fid a m. Greenville 8 52 a m/arrivine Halifax at 11 18 a m, Weidon 1133 a 4, daily except Sunday. Trains on W ashington Branch leavas M asu lngton 8 10 a m and 2 30 p m. arri\? wele 910 a id and 4 00 p m. Beturnfifi l?rv* 1 armele 9 35a m and ? 30 p m. arrive Washing ton 11 ID) u in and 7 30 p m daily except ftiiiday Train leaves Tarboro daily except Kifftay at 6*tpm, Sunday 4 15 p m. arrives Plymouth 1 4*i p tu, 8 10 p m. Returning leai ??* Litn.< .ith daily except Sunday, 7 fid a m and sKlavOUO a m. arrives Tarboro 10 10 a m, 11 on ufi ' Train on Midland. N. C.. iWandT loeVex Goldsboro daily except Sunday 6 W a n. arrive Smithtield 0 10 a m. Returning leave SnutK field 7 ID) a m, arrive Goldslioro 8 25 a m Trains on Nashville Branch loa>4 Borax Mount at 9 30 a m, 3 40 p in, arrive NashvitU 10 20 a m. 4 03 p m. Spring Hope 11 Hi a m 1 s& pm. Returning leave Spring Hcpe fT20 \ m u l' "L,N^hviTle 11 46a m, 5 26p m, Vii\eat Roi ky Mount 12 26am.6 p ra, daily #>x.T?uiichi\. Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw 101 Clinton daily except Sunday 11 4o a it and 4 a P m. Returning leaves Clinton at li it a m and 2 60 p m. Train No. 78 makes close connection at WYi don for all points North dail^. Ah ra. m* Richmond. H. M. KMMFKSON. g T. M. KM M Kill-UN TrmHlc My. Kodol Dyspepsia Care Digests what you sat. I.t artificially dipe".*fhe food Nature in su-ensthcbiug andn?i[i< structiug the exb- u?t#d diK?#\ve or* gan?. It Isthe latp?tdl*cor?red<i>Rtit aut and tonic. No other.preparation can approach lPlu efficlrncy. It In stantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Ind'g, ..tlou, Heartburn. Flatulencef* Sour SvOmach, .Mansea, Sick Headache, ( astralgla.c amps and all other results uJ lmperfect J itesUon. Price50c and 11. I> watt^iftalr ilvum us all alM. Bouk all a uu. uXirrea P^pertd by E. C. 0?W>TT * CO. CQlcas*
The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 12, 1901, edition 1
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