nr-rv.-^
AS BABY
Down Unable to Work,
Bar.
Va.?Mi*. Ann
P?Ug ,tm?X^^^Bplace, says: "I ?ul
lertd lor an awful pain in
?T right ^^^^Kjsed from womanly
' - ? ? , tor itf ^ wWl.
,. ? so very much,
11 mi|d, and as help
less as a bab^^Ki lnlthe wont kind
o< shape. jl do any work.
I began tald^^Kf J g* woman's
tonic, and the very first
dote.* By (be ^^Hfed taken 13 Jot
tles, my nenh^^^^Kpletely restored.
good as T didX^^^^K iQ^' ~,u',eel "
Cardui certairil^^^K me from losing
my mind, and 1 duty to speak
In Its favor. > w'^Hd some power
over poor, sufferi^^^Hien and could
make them knowy^^^Kd it would do
If you suffer Voti^^^RKthe ailments
liar to worien, Vrtainly be
If T< ?
peculiar to women, lertainly be
worth your wMIe to^^?car<\i a trial.
H has been Uelpin^^Hk wduien for
more than SO years, will h So you,
loo. fl
Try Cardui. Your^Mgist sells
Writ* u: Chattanooo^^HdsM Oo..
Advisory Dept.. Chattano^^Vrenn., (or S ft
huhmt?Unt onyour case M p&ti book. Ho*
Treatment for women." inwrapper. N.C. 12
Old 'King cotton making desper
ate effort to rejpliflBils time honored
(VAV&. v K.'
Velir Hm Been Dniflkernus In Loniiu
Do the right thing A the right time.
Act quickly In time y>' danger. \
In time of kidney (danger Doan's
Kidney Pills are most \eftctlve.
Plenty of evidence of their worth.
Mrs. W. C. Jones 221v N. Bloodworth
St, Raleigh, N. C.,-say?: "My back
ached constantly and ofucn I had pains
across my loins. SomeVtlmes I was In
such bad shape that 11 could hardly
get up after sitting awllile. 1 did not
get my proper rest at nlight and I suf
fered! n tensely-froto headaches. The
doctor's medicine brougmt me no re
lief. Doan's Kidney Pllis drove away
the aches and pains and\ restored me
to better health than I hao enjoyed for,
years." (Statement givenv January 30,
1908). \
Over two years, Mrs. (Jones said.
"My back or kidneys h&ven't trou
bled me much since I iuscmI Doan's
Kidney Pills."
Price 50c. all dealers. T%n't simply ;
ask for kidney remedy?cl Doan's |
Kidney Pills?the same lhat . Mrs.
Jones had. Foster-Mlll*r?" Co.. ]
Props., Buffalo, N_. y.
"Here is the Answehjii
? Webster V
New International
The Merrjam Webs tek
Every da7 in your talk and reading, at
home, on tbo street car. In the office, shop
and school you likely question the mean
UiEiPt?ol?c ncw wor?* A friend asks:
vv hat makes mortar harden?" You seek
tuelocaUonof LoeAJrafrfa^orthopronun
clation of JuJutsu. What is uhitm coal?
This New Creation answers all kindfl of
questions in Lunirn aire, Hf story, Diorraph y,
Fiction, Foreign Words, Trades, *rts and
Sciences, uith Anal authority.
400,000 Words.
6000 Illustration*.
Cost *400.000.
3700 PagBB.
The only ilirtinuiirywlth
uio new die i d r<; par?*.?chnr
actcrijtfd tu "A Stroko of
Genius."
India Paper EtfRTorr
On thin, opnoue, strong!,
India paper. What * utia
ftction to own tl;e Jfrrrioaa
wetwter in n form so lic h t
and ?o-convenient to use I
One half the tliicknc? and!
weight of Regular
s
On ?
14% lb?. SlMliHzB
fi inches.
&IC
- COL
SprfagfMd, Mim?
THE HOME CIRCLE COLUMN
/ / Pleasant Evening Reveries?A Column
Dedicated to Tired Mothers as They
Join the Home Circle at Evening Tide.
ORUJU. THOUGHTS FROM THE EDITORIAL PEN
Talki to Mothers on the Boj Problem.
MIbs Maty Harrington, a teacher
In an Iowa City School, recently Kave
an address at a Mother's and Teach
er'* Institute that every mother should
read.
Miss Harrington'* address, was one
of special merit In that It was prac
tical and logical and the Idea beauti
fully expressed.
Questions Mothers Caa Answer
"Some of the neighborhood ques
tions which might be controlled by
?the co-operation Jbf the mothors are:
"Why Is Jhere a different standard
of action and Ideas for the boys than
for the girls T
"Can the night street corner boys
be kept at home?
"Why was home good enough until
he was ten, eleven or twelve years
old when he answered the call of the
street?
"Why do the girls consider It their
place to be at home?
"Will' this double standard of ac
tion for the girls and boys ever con
flict? . - :
\ Chiefly Boy Problem.
"I BfeWeve the neighborhood prob
lem Is chit-fly a boy problem. The
boy'? life Is aMded Into three periods,
Infancy from birth to six years of age
childhood from six to twelve, and the
lescent period from twolve years
to manhood. The trying time In the
government of a boy Is In the kdplea
-thlrd of all the popular
tlon of this city Is In the adolescent
age and so you see we are dealing
with one-third of all the people.
"Why should parents^ relax the
reins of guidance for the boy. In his
teens, when he Is In' the mogt "critical
stage?the street gang' stage. This
relaxation Is not Intentional on the
part of the parents, It Is only that the
boy himself feels the call of the street
and the gang and the parent falls to
go with him. In a way the gang spir
it Is legimate, but the father should
in spite go with thtf boy and the
mother and the home should receive
the gang. Recall In memory the plea
sures of your young days when you
went with a crowd and have sympathy
with our child In that same enjoy
ment.
Boy's Club Meets nt Home.
"The best type of boy', club is th>?
| world meets in the home kitchen of
in the living room. The evening lamp
| is the home's light house and the
j hour after sunset Is the Sabbath of
the day. The evening hour and the
home ought to be made so that the
; children will love It. The parents
should provide books and papers and
mxfeazines and games for school day
j evenings. On Friday and Saturday
evenings extra social affairs may be
held, an occasional party and a meet
ing of the crowd or the gang in some
home under careful supervision. The
boys and girls ought to meet togeth
er in these evenings and there should
be an understanding and a nelghbor
Jiood standard for going home in time.
So every mother would know just
when the children would be . at home.
"Dp you know your boy's frlendsT
Do you ever take time to take an ex
tra loaf of raisin bread or an^ extra
pan of ginger bread so your boy can
share with his friends, who will by
that tojfen know that mother' 1b also
their friend?"
' Mothers, Will It Pny t
We are forcibly struck the other
day by the truth of a remark made by
a-man who at the time was under
serious difficulty over the crop that
had sprung up from the wild oats he
had sown when a boy. A little friend
of his was putting over some chastise
ment, when he gently remarked,
'''Take aH your corrections kindly and
be thankful to any one who cares
enough for you to tell you of your
mistakes or ?|rn you when you first
begin to go astray. For," he contin
ued sadly, "the more corrections you
receive and profit by when young, the
less you will reeelve from the world
when older." |
A truer statement was never ut
tered. What a responsibility, then,
upon parents. Will It pay. to cloae
our eyes to the fact? All our cor
rections should be made with an eye
to the future as well as the present.
There should be a principle Involved.
Let our children see that It Is our
duty to punish them sometimes, never
a pleasure. In our desire that their
young lives be full of joy and? glad
ness, will'it be wise to retrain from
Imparting to them a knowledge of,
the sterner realities "at life? Will
it pay to allow them to go untaught?
We must teach them so Judiciously
the difference between the trend up
ward and the trend downward, that
of their oton accoiM they will eschew
those pleasures of a doubtful nature.
We cannot guard our boys and girls
too closely. Many a fair flower lan
guishes and dies before It is time. It
will- not pay to close our eyes to the
signs around us, thinking our boys
and girls proof against these Influen
ces. Above all things, teach the. girls
to ^e natural. Do not allow them to
^et into these simpering, giggling,
foolish ways that so many misses ap
pear to think smart, and yet do not
cause them to feel tha^ you desire to
put "old heads on young shoulders."
Par from it Let young people be
young people Btlll, but the while not
forgetting thit there is fgr more real
happiness in bdTng pure and true than
can be found along any other line.
DISORDERS COME FROM
THE LITER
Are Yon Odds With Yourself! Do
You Relrulate Living?
<""\re>Sjr6u sometimes at odds with
yoursel\ and with the world.? Do
you wonller what ails you?True you
may "be eating regularly and sleeplnR
well. Yetsomethlng is the matter!
Constipation, Headache. Nervousness
and Bilious Spella^mdjcate a sluggish
Liver. The tried remedV is Dr. King's
New Life Pills. Only \sc. at your
Druggist.
Bucklon's Arnica Salve for Sores
Bucklen's Arnica Salve for SkHS^Er
uptlons
Pope's Items*
Everyone is invited to come out to
Pope's next Sunday as the choir from
Wake Union will sing on that clay,
February 14th.
Miss Maud Puller, of Raleigh, spent
Monday with her people here, Mr. and
Mrs. W. A. Fuller.
Miss Zelma Holmes spent last week
in Henderson with friends.
Mr. Vannie Williams was one of the
many visitors to Pope's Sifnday. He
is one of th<T*frequent visitors fromj
Louisburg.
Mrs. Vick Holden Is visiting her son.
Mr. J. T. Holden.
Mrs. Geo. Kearney spent Sunday,
with' her sister, Mrs. Ray Perry.
Misses Nannie and Bee Bee Frazler.
Qf Harris Township, spent Sunday |
with Miss Lizzie Pergerson.
We have some very forgetful peo
ple here, as one of our neighbors
went to town last Sunday in liia bug
gy and forgot his horse and buggy and
came home on foot.
Q. H. P.
Five Minutes Cure
if Stomach is Bad
"I'nVW'H Wupepsln" Is quickest, surest
Indigestion cure
known. -
You don't want a slow remedy when
your stomach Is bad?or an uncertain
one?or a harmful one?your stomach
is'too valuable; you musn't Injure It
with drastic drugs.
Pape's Olapepsin is noted for its
speed in giving relief; its harmless
ness is certain unfailing action in
regulating sick, sour, gassy stomach
IU mlllona of cure* la Indigestion,
dyspepsia, gastritis and other stomach
trouble has made it famous the world
Keep this perfect stomach doctor In
your home?keep It handy?cat a Urge
flfty-cent case from any drug store and
then If anyone should eat aomothlng
which doesnt agree with them, if
what they eat taya like load, ferments
and sours and forms gas; causes head
ache, ditzlness and nausea; eructa
tion* of acid and undigested food?
remember as Boon as Papo'a Dlapepsln
comes in contact with the stomach all
such distress vanishes. Its prompt
ness. certainty and ease Id over com
ing, the worst stomach disorders is a
.revelation to those who try It.
Whenever You Nwl a (lmr?! Toole
The Old StindiraGrami i'aatciess
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tonic Mcause it/contain? the
well known toniii propertfAof QUININE
and IRON. Itmtajurfne Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Builds up the Whole System. SO cents.
Odd-?lts of News,
Ixis. Angeles, Cal.?Mrs. Walter
Akers was brought back to life re
i cently by three physicians after she
had been actually dekd for more than
ten minutes. The "mlraole" was per
formed by manipulating the heart un
til It began to beat and by artificial
respiration.
New York.?A sailing vessel has ar
rived In port whose crew did not know
of the prevent war. The boat was the
Padang. She left Padang, SumariH.
an Aug. 12 and did not speak any ves
sel until Just outside of New York,
where she was hallud by a British.,
cruiser.
London.?Irvin 8. Cobb, writer. In
terviewed Lord Kitchener recently.
Kitchener gave the Interview under
the Impression that he waa to meet
Ty Cobb, the ball player.
; Loj.'Angeles, Cal.?E. R. Davis sup
ports a family of fourteen on a one
quarter acrc of ground In spite of the
fast that he 1ms bj>t one arm.
New York.?Moses Woo'er celebra
ted his 100th birthday with a party at
wbtcli he made encouraging efforts to
learn, the tango. Wooler Is posttve he
will live to be 140, and It's his great
est ambition. He smokes 6 to "10
clears every day, besides a pipe and
consume 5 a beaker of imported beer
with each meal. "Tobacco and ale
have kept me-healthy" he told a World
intervi^v.f v "an'' I'm better than lots
of men at 60. "He walks .daily with
out a cane, reads the papers wftliout
gla^se? and never has been seriously
Falmouth, Mass.?Miss Martha
Palmef^dtsappeared si* weeks ago and
when shelxjjppeared she said she had
been wandejfb&in the woods eating
acorns and bcrriiSSvShe made the ex
periment for her heSHh and says she
never felt better- than she does now.
Healburg. Cal.?A remarUaMe fall
from the heavens of meteoric floss
took place here recently. The
ranged In s'! ? from tiny t peeks to
sheets 20 feet square.
Try This For Neuralgia
Thousands dl people keep on suffer
ing with Neuralgia because thoy do
not know what to "do for It. Neural
Iq a naln in the nerves. What you
want to 3bvIs to soothe the nerves
Itself. ApplyL Sloan's Liniment to the
^urfacc over the painful' part?do not
rub it In. Srean's Liniment pene
trates very quifckjy to the sore, irrl*
tated nerve and atl^vs the. inflam
mation. Get a bottle oCSloanVj Lini
ment for'25 cents of ai}y aru&?fet and
have it in the house?against \)olds
and Swollen Joints, Lumbago. Sciatica
and like ailments. Your money back
if-not satisfied, but it does almost in
jtant relief.
A New l'ord Story.
Here is a new Ford story we saw
somewhere, but have for gotten Ju3t
where. A man in California writes
to the Ford Company and tells them
they should feel very much exalted
for the re&aon that the Ford is the
only car mentioned in the Bible and to
prove it cites them to passage in \
isaah which says "He went up into
Heaven on high" and ask what other
car but a Ford could do that?
RUB-nriY-TISM
Will cure youi
Burns, Old Sores
Etc. Antiseptic
Rheumatism
Neuralgia, Hei laches, Cramps^
Colic, Sprains,' ] raises, Cuts and
Stings of Insects
Vnodyne, used in
ternally and externally. Price 25c
Everybody Wants to Do It
What ?
^ X
Cuss When His Car Gets Balky
. / ' ? V ' '
Just keep in touch "with us and you won't want
to cuss?won't have any occasion to cuss-for we
will ^eep your automobile in prime working
condition at very slightest cost, much less than
your bill will be if you let it "run too long"
Louisburg Machine Works
Incorporated
Phone 43 . -= Louisburg, N. C.
February is a Month When
You Want
- ? r ?
Good Eats
This is a Store Where You Get
Good Eats. What More
Need We Say.
E. JONES MRGOH.
Main Street* Ltuisburg, N. C.
Wish You
Happy and Prosperous New Year
And extend to you our many thanks nnd apt>ffciatio rs
patronage you have extended us in the past. Bfcmnt,
m*-rit your future patronage by carrying ihe bentp^y
the most reasonable prices. ,1 am Your t:ulv^s?v>-.
FRED A. RIFF^
Jeweler and Optometrist Louisburg, Nortto Carolina
Prepare For Better Weather.
And have all your old Automobile Tubes and Casings
repaired before the spring arrives. Then you will be
ready for any ernergency. We use only the best of ma
terials and expert workmanship. Our prices are right
for the best of work. ? We also do sewing machine and
bicycle repair work. .Come to see us.
E. B. Griffin
I . a
-. ~ ?
Less Smoke And
More Heat.
t ? ?
it what our Coal offer* job. Oar
Coal la clean, dry, carefully screened,
fall weight. When you boy a ton of
It youqet a ton of lattefectloa. Order
yonr next ton from a* Tonil tet JnM
Um coal you're looking for, delivered
promptly t>y careful, polito driver*.
We' Must Ask Cash Upon Delivery
for 1
-
? r ' ? , ' _j_
Coal, Wood, Etc Bought From Us.
Send
Your Laundry
to th? L0UISBCJB6 8TEAM LACN
DRY. We rnaraatoe satisfaction or
refund your money. Our cleaning and
pressing department will saye you
money. Bay a Coupon Book or Salt
Card and mtc the discount. If oar
work pleases yoa toll your friends, If
aot toll at. >
Phone go. 7 LOUISBURG COAL & ICE CO. PhoneM 7