Newspapers / Roanoke News (Weldon, N.C.) / April 19, 1900, edition 1 / Page 1
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t ilicsssffla JOHN W. SLEDGE, propiuktor. VOL. XXXIV. A. NEWSPAPER FOB THE PEOPLE TEP!M!S: 150 PKR annum in advance WELDON. N. C THURSDAY, APRIL 19. 1900. NO 51. RUNNING SORE ON HIS ANKLE. After Six Years of Intense Suffering, Promptly Cured Si Si Si Olwtiintu hdi-ch and ulcers which refuse 1.) Iieal under ordinary treat iiifiit mum Ix'ci nne chi'iiiiic ntiil ileep. KlUltlill- lllwl liv. !i unrn 41.... n . a n m ........ . .. . r..w.. twit un. Of 0. 0 A euiire cimiumon is m a depraved cm unlit ion. They ; v. wi wi are H Kevm, (lniill UWi t!( svstlfn)i am, are J RtHtitly wippinij awuy tho vitality. In overv c'im tlm .iinis,,,, ,niwt be elimirmtwl from tlm blood, aud noumoiintof external treatment can have Riiy effect. There is no uncertainty about the merits of 8. S.-S. ; every tkim ninfla fnr if iu l.-w.U..rl .1.. I - ' J . . ...ivuvi ur multiply uy UOUVHlCm testimony of those who have bim cured by it and know of its virtues by experience Mr. L. J. Clark, of Orange Courthouse, Va., writes: "Tor six yrars I lml n olwtinHte. running ulcer on my ankle, which at timi's caused me intense surTtriaz. I w is bo disabled for n long while that I was wholly unfit for business. One of the Iwst doctors treated me constantly but did me no Rood. I then tried various blood renu.li without the least benefit. S. 8 8 was so highly recom mended that I concluded to try it, and the tfot was wonderful. It seemed to get right at the s.'at of the disease and force the poison out, and I was soon com pletely cured." Swift's Specific 8. S. S. FOR THE BLOOD drives out every trnee of impurity in the blood, and in this way cures permanently the most obstinate, deep-seated sore or ulcer. It is the only blood remedy guaranteed purelv vegetable, and con tains not a particle of potash, mercurv or other mineral. S. S S cures Contagious Blood Poison. Scrofula, Cancer, Catarrh, Eczema, Rheumatism, Sores, Ulcers Boils, or any other blood trouble. Insist upon 8. 8. 8 ; nothing can take its place. Valuable 'woks mailed free by Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Ga. TOMBS OF THE EGYPTIANS. THEY WERE BUILT TO LAST. P. N. Stainback, WELDON, N. C. Dealer in QeeML - - - .hlfCMiDISE ZEICLER eV BAY STATE A SPECIALTY. JF1 ' Kim's. SHOES lar.Sole AgMit In Weldon forHTROUSE BROTHERS HIGH ART CLOTHING. (Formerly sold here by M. F. Hurt.) A lit guaranteed. UNDERTAKING In all its branches Metallic, Walnut, Cloth Covered Caskets and Collins. Telephone or telegraph messages at tended to day or night. IXENUY Of THE EGYPTIANS WAS DE VOTED TO DEATH. To the Egyptian death was but ibe beginning of a career of adventures and experiences compared with which the most vivid emotions of this life were tame lie lived with the fear of death bofore hit eyes. Everything arouud hi in re minded him of that dreadful initiation into the mysteries of the Ireui.udoua af'ier life for which his present oxiateooe was but a preparation. His cemeteries were Dot hidden away in remote suburb-; his dead wert not covered with mere grassy mounds, or a slab or stone. The whole land was a graveyard; its whole art was of the mortuary, "Are there do graves iu Egypt that ibou hast brought us into the wilderness to du? ' asked the Israelites in derision, and we may believe that Moses winced at thesaroasm. Egypt is the land of graves, and the whole en ergy of the people that could be spared trout keeplug lile together was devoted to death. The mightiest tombs in the world the pyramids were raised upon the deaths of multitudes of toiling slaves. The hills were honeycombed passages and galleries, chambers, pits, all painfully ex cavated in hooi r of the illustrious dead, aud sculptured and painted with elabo rate skill to make them fit habitations for his ghost. Wherever be looked the Kjiyptian beheld preparations for the great turning point ol existence. The mason was squaring blocks for the tomb chamber; the potter molded images of the gods or bowls or jars, to be placed in the grave for the protection or refresh ment of the ka, exhausted with the or deals of'lhe under world; the sculptor and paiutcr were at work upon the walls of the funeral chamber, illustrating the scene through which the ghost was to pass, or depicting the industrious life of the departed. The very temples which cluster aloDg.the levels beside the Nile were in the bills behind. The sacred lake, dow the weedy, picturesque bum of waterfowl, was then the scene of solemn I'erryings of the dead The tem ple walls were covered with the terrors of the judgment to oorue. The houses ol the living, indeed, were built of per ishing mud, but the hotuea ol the dead made to the gods who ruled their fate were made to last forever. On these all the strength, the science and the arliitir skill of ihe aoeieot Egyptians were cheer fullv lavished. Best Prescription for Malaria, Chills and Fever, Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic It is simply Iron and Quinine in a tasteless form. . . . Sold by every druggist in the malarial sections of the United . States No cure, no pay. . . . Price, 50c wum ecu 1 pb J WW a a jmmmunmm Dt. Loon, Mo. , Fab, I, tat. Puis VsDicina Co., City. Osntlomant V7s wlah to conffratulaU you 03 tho incroajod nalc n aro havinitoa your Uovou IftutcksMi Chill Tdnac. On tsm-l-dnff our rccorl ol invoqtory under date or J .n lot. wo find that wo Sold rturim th 1 C'.:ill Ljawa ot 2m0 doxen CSroTOa Tonic. V tlso fljd that our Biles on your Izatlvo Uronjo-Qulnl.TO 7nblets havo boon som? Ihiar ooomojj: having cold during too lato CoMunlClripocajoo V-COdoicn. Ploaso roou dowu ontor oncloawl herewith, and ebllgo. Yours truly , MEYER BROS. DRUG CO. ?sfe ...mimikmuut S I til J-l rWssMssyf f..u,. RETAILER. Palm If BD101HB Co. Ebomoh, Iu. First Tasteless Tonic ever manufactured.. All other so-called "Taste less" Tonics are imita tions.. Ask any druggist about this who is not PUSHING an imitation. CONSUMER. WvmiWBO, Tex., Sep. 18. II Pam Msoicnra Co., Bt. Loais, Mo. Oentleroen I writ voa few linci of urat- 11 (in. I think wnnr ftFAVaVll TAftlaPlCMM 4 till I 'onloij one of the bett medicinn in theworid UjrCbiHuaD'l FoTor. I bavo three cliiUlr.n that hava been d wn with malarial foror for 10 nnllnnoni I hnndU imm or eltrhi diffi'F- i nnf 1,1 kttr. K.trtht. Phill mHirfn of nil eatbind.iof Chill Tonics but I soil ton bottloa i tr Doctors bills oomintr in ail tho'.irar of CaTOVcj to where I si ll ono of tho others. ,;i t ,r:it to town and eot throo bottlei i I sold S3 bottlei of Qrof os Chill Tonic in , C3rovoi Tonic Mv children oro all well now ono day and could h:ivo col I moro if I hd hl aQj n waa your iSstolea 1 Chill Tonic thai did 11 on nuou. nr. tnvo wwjs wuivu vww j caiUlOh too mucu in lia DOuau. ofcbiilawiUlOQODoUk' YountrnW. JAMES D. ROBERTS iU.pcctf ull Y . jUim T. VI N YARD. HENDERSON TELEPHONE COMPANY. ornci or GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT, HiNUUHHON, N. 0. I bt to it.nnuDoe that the follow ing towns are now connected by long dislaooe phones, and the rate herewith published will be in effeot on and after March 15th: News & Opinions Of National Importance ntoM WELDON to Aitell, 30. Airlie, 20. Brnokston, HI) Brinklejville, 20 Centreville, 40 Churchill, Crowelli Dabaev KnBeld, Franklinton, Oast 00, flillburg, Henderson, Halifal, Kittrell, Laurel, Liltletoo, Louisburg, Maoon, Manson, Medno, Middleburg, O.kville, Oiford, Kidgewar. ltiugwood 40 25 25 20 30 25 40 25 15 25. 15. 35. 15. 40. Koanoka Rapids, 10 10. 35. 35. 10. 40. 40. 20. F C. ToBPLMAK, Uen. Supt. Tilleiy, Vaughso, Warren Plains, Warrenlon Wise, Voungsville, rlrlntatr.Ploth Pmri Kipo.tli, irUarwA aalarr and nKtm Mid. liiti rtw , u . ALONE J. L. JUDKINS, Wholesale and Retail Dealer Iu Fine ' Staple p Fancy- Contains Both. Daily, by mail, Daily and Sunday, by mail, $G a year 13 a year. THE 5 Sunday Sun g Is the Ureatest liar Sunday News paper in. the world. Prioe 60. 1 copy By mail 12 t year. Address THE SUN, New York. mtFRUITS. CONFECTIONERIES. Crockery, Ohua Tin, and wooden and oil lowware. Also I'mtt'a Horse, Cow Hog and Poultry Food, and Orove' JOC Taxteleas Chill Tome. Aleiamlei Liver and Kidnev Tonic for purilving the blood. This tonic is warranted or moner refuuded. J. L. JUOKINS,' No. 21 Washington Ave., Weldnn, N. dee 11 It. A PPOMATTOX IRON WORKS -Manufacture reof CASTLES IU THE AIR. HEY SERVE A USEFUL PURPOSE. HEY TEND TO LItlllTEN THE BURDENS OP A WORM) FILLED WITH HARD REALITIES. MAKE NO HASTE IN BURYING THE DEAD Jl'ST THINK OF TUB HORROR OF A SITUATION OF BURYING ALIVE. SUCH ONE Ad uubridled imagination which is owed to set up unattainable ideals nviy a source of unhappiness, because it pictures conditions naver realiz:d; where- , a well ordered imagination only serves gild realities. Tbi ideal when attain- , becomes a reality aud thua loses its charm as a fancy of the mind, but it may serve a useful purpose while still an ideal ecausc it is aD incitement to ttf irt. In the practical sense men deal only with realities, and they are of prime impor tance, but it would be a mistake to reject Itogether the benefits that may be ob tained from a proper use of the imagina tion in dealing with realities or in fore casting a future which, when it becomes a present, may be made of realities that have been ideals. Much of the happi ness of youth is derived from j iyous an ticipation of the future, from the build ing of castles iu the air. Duly in rare casea do the castles be- irae well founded realities, but they have served a useful purpose when they have given pleasure to those who pictured em and have incited in the builders a esire for advancement. No oue should grudge young men the j iy they find building them or seek to reduce the easure to be obtained from a proper ue of the imagination. Theie are Grad griuds who will insist upon the importance of facts and seek to curb the aspirations of the young, but they accomplish no useful purpose and simply reduce the m of happiness by perm .nently de priving the young of the solaces of imag- ation. The realities of life need do erald. They impress upon men from the momeot the latter enter upon their dividual work, but the ideals are eva nescent; they last only as long as the cart remains young, buoyant and hope ful, and should not be disturbed unhipa they have become the subjects of possib'e abuse. "It is, of course, tolly for a mao lo set up an ideal that can never be attained and lo abandon effort because of tha ev- deut impossibility of uttaioing the plaoe jou which he has set his aspirations But it is wisdom for the young man to t up befor himself an ideal that he may by his own tffotts make a reality. He is, then, something to work for a def inite purpose to which he may devote bia mind and bis energies. And when his arly ideal has vanished because it hi become real he can establish another still it'lur. and thus have before him at all mes something superior in its inspire tional power, at least, to the dull realities with which he has to deal day after day. The great writers and artists have been inspired by ideals, sometimes by ideals not altogether attainable, but al ways by ideals of a character to incite study and tffort, Imagination has pic tured for them possible works of art, and in fittiug themselves to do the ideal work they have produced essays or stories, poems or pictures of great merit and of value to mankind. Imagination thus employed not only sweetens the lives of those who make in telligenl use of it, but is of service to hu manity, bt cause it leads to the production of the great works that make for progress and tend lo lighten the burdens ol w.nld filled with bard realities. The only people who make an effort to live up to their oonviotioos nowadays are inmates of penitentiaries. FOR LIVING 100 YEARS. KOST MEN DIG THEIR OWN GRAVES A CIIIOAOO MAN HAH SOME UNIQUE IDEAS AS TO HIS MODE OF LIVING, Agricultural Implemonts, Shaftings, Mill (Searing, l'ulleys, All kinds ol Machinery, and Repairs. No. 83 A 34 Old St, Petersburg, V. "Ihave long thought it my duty to write you a few lines to let you know what Dr. ptercf 't F.vorite I'rrncTlptton h.. done for inf. wntn Mr.. Huphrmia P.lconrr, of Trent. Mo.krron Co. Mich "1 .m Iwrnljr-trm yrat. old h.vv lirrn marrtro Irn year.. 1 am thr m.hr ol Hwr chiUlreii. My Orel lw iMitilr. writ un born, .ml 1 uf IffRl evrrvlhma nul 1th My fhrnl all (houghl I onild nrvrr itnwr, I w. rutneed lo liiy ponn.t. W ti t u 1 w . . hiee month along fur my third chilli I takrn with h.nwrhiR or flooding and came near hav ing a miv.rri.ge from tewale 1 . vr two month. T w.a under the care of our doctor, hut was netting weak . r all the time until one day I wilt and got three bottle, of ' Favorite PrrKTititinn ' an.f one bottle o relict..' 1 im proved ki fa.t, I continued to lake your medi cine u- III bntiy wa. born, and he 1. healthy and 11 rik I. He ia four year. old. My baby girl ia two year. old. Mv health ha. been good ever aince. I now weigh 105 pound, and when I be gin to feel badly I take Favorite PreiK-ription whkh alwav. help. me. 1 alwaya tell my neigh bor, what help, me and a good many have taken van ' Favorite Preacriptlon ' with good rraultB." The "Favorite Prescription " has cured more women than all other medicines for women combined. It t me only pre para in nf it. .nrt deviaed bv a regularly grad uated phyaician skilled and experienced specialist in the dtwaaea of women. Other medicines are sometimes acid on the plea that they are ' lual as good as the ' Favorite Prescription.1" Don't believe it. Don't be imposed upon. Counterfcite art never aa good as the genuine. Over wo, ono women have endorsed " Fa vorite Pre.cription." They ay there ia nothing "Jtiat aa (rood" and they know. Would you rather have the say o of one dealer who makes an Mtra profit on the ubatittite, than the protnbU worda of ,ooo women whoa, only object in recom mending the "Favorite Prescription " ia their deaire to help their suffering aiatersf In the quiet hours of last Sabbath evening my eyea chanced to fall upon an aocount of a disinterment of dead bodies in a town in New Jersey, which made me sick at heart. A young mio, perhaps only a boy, bad been buried some time ago, and his oof fin was taken up and removed with the cuffius of other members of his family. The onlookers found the glass crushed and the remains were in such shape as to prove beyond tho shadow of a doubt that the supposed dead body recovered anima tion and fought agaiust its prison with all the strength it oould muster and died io unutterable agony. Just think of the honor of such a sit uation 1 Shut in a prison, and so deep under ground that no cry or entreaty could reach the ears of those who loved him nd who would have gone to the rescue to a moment, Who can measure the bitter aizuuy ol that boy a soul, when he found himsell walled in to perish to doatb 1 What tur menls of thirst and hunger he eudured before the vital spark left his poor frum ! It is horrible to reflect upon and still more horrible to su-pect that there may be hundreds who have also been buried alive. There is too much haste, as a rule, in buryiog the dead ! I live in the country and I speak of country methods, as they impress my mind. The embalming pro cess, I presume, would make death a cer- aioty, because embalming fluid would be fatal to human life after it entered the circulation, but there are tens of thous ands who are buried, as they died, and perhaps there are many whose condition has simulated death, and the trance re mains unbroken until they are fastened in the coffin and walled up io the grave. I can imagine nothing more absolute ly terrifying than to awake to life in such unhappy situation. May the Merciful Father help these poor victims of haste to a quick demise I I have always thought there should be time all iwed to banish all doubt. Uuluas the persun dies with an iufectious disease, surely they can remain i ut of the ground for this putpose until everybody is con vinced. Perhaps as our civilisation advances, there will be a place prepared, where the corpse can rest in favorable situations for recovery, if by chance the opportunity offers, with restoratives near by, and help within call. I have seen people in death, who look ed as if alive, but asleep, I have heard of others who retained in the complexion fleshy tiuts. I should never be willing to wall up those persons io the cold grave uolil the usual signs of dissolution set in. People who die suddenly snatched from health, should have thorough ex amination before the verdict of death is pronounced. The thought of that poor young man fighting for air and life and obliged to lie in the ooffio until nature's deadly strug gle expired, makes me sick to think about, as before said. There is nothing more oomfortiog to bereaved ones than the feeling that their dear ones are resting io their graves put away io good order buried in the midst of loving friends and attended by (host who love them best to their last resting plaoe. Doubtless the poor New Jersey boy had all these attentions, waa laid away with the lean of a mother and father. But what must be their feelings dow, to recollect that fearful struggle three feet uoder ground, where tht wretched crea ture foaght lor life and still perished ! 1 shall beg my people to let me stay outside, God williog, until the death signs are beyond eontradictioo, and surely tliare should be no indeoent haate in re moving one from its owo home until these signs prevail. Tie Savage Bachelor. Dr. D. K Pearsons, of Chicago, the octogenariao philanthropist, who has given away bis entire fortune of t.'l,500, DUO and who declined the other day lo serve on the Dewey committee because it would involve the loss of hit alter dinner nap and possibly iuterfure with his plan to live to be 100, gives these rules for longevity : "Most men dig their graves with their teeth. "No pies or cakes; no pains or aches. ''If you overwork your liver it will tell on you to your brain by and by. "Live like a farmer and you'll live like a prince. "Men can live without eating 10 days; they can't do without pure air five min utes "Don't get angiy and don't get exci ted; every time you fret you lose a min ute of life. "Let a man abuse his stomach and he'll get fidgety, cross to his family and go to the devil. Doctors say, "don't sleep on a full stomach.' I take my after dinner nap just the same and I'm 80 years old. You can't believe all the doctors say. I cured a man eoce by telling him he was a 'damphool' because he imagined he had a dozin ailments. If you catch a cold, lose your quioine and eat an onion. "Give away your money; it's exhilara ting and lends to loogevity. The idea of giving while one'a alive will become epidemic as soon as men discover what fuD it is. I'm happier thao any other mao in the world. "There are a lot of fellows down towo who tell me they want to live a abort life and a merry one, I want to live a long life and a jolly one in my own way. Some men like their clubs and society. That's all right. I doo't belong t a club, and they couldn't hire me to wear a swallowtail coat, "A lot of men have a fine time with midnight banqueting and speech making Let them go. I've a room up bere on SEVEN RUNNING SORES CURED BY Johnston's Sarsaparilla QUART BOTTLES. THE GREAT SPRING MEDICINE. JOHNSTON'S SARSAPARILLA as a Blood Food and Nerve Enerrlzer, la th Creates! SPRINd MEDICINE ever discovered. It Comes as a rich blessing from heaven to the " worn out," the run down, the overworked and debilitated. That " tired feeling," those "sinking spells," the languor and despondency which arise from badly nour ished nerves, from thin, vitiated blood and an underfed body, vanish as If by a magld spell. The weariness, lassitude and nervous prostration which accompany tha spring, time and the heat of summer, are conquered and banished at once. For every form ot neurasthenia, and all ailments of the brain and nerva, Insomnia, hysteria and nervousness generally, II la almost a specific. It furnishes the very elements to rebuild worn-out nerva tissues. It feeds brain, nerve centers and nerves, calming ar.d caualizlne their action: It makea rich, red, honest blood. Newness ot lite, new hope, new strength follow Its faith (ul use. It makes tha weak strong, and the old young aealn. Il waa Ihe antiquated (but now happily exploded) method In the good old times, t treat Salt Rheum, Scrofula, Cancer and other troublesome disorders arialng from BLOOD TAINT with powerful alteratives, such as mercury, arsenic and other miners' agents. It was expected by tnis treatment that the poison could be killed while tha blood was left to course through channels holding In its circulation the specific germs of tha disease. But in this way, every part of tha body became more or less diseased. Noth Ing can be more terrible than a horribly destructive blood taint. It not only attacks viru lently the different structurea of the body, but many times the bones are honey-combed and destroyed. It often seeks out the nerves and spinal cord, and again it will bring de cay and death to some vital organ, as the kidneys, liver or stomach. There Is only ona scientific method for the cure of blood taint, That Is, PURIFICATION! Every particla of the blood must be removed through the execretory channels, the lungs, kidneys, bowels, liver and skin. " First pure, then peaceable." The great restorative, reconstructive and vltalizerof the blood, JOHNSTON'S SARSAPARILLA, not only radically and ex- baustlvely removes the taint, but also removes all mercury, oalomel and other minerals, and fills the veins and arteries with the ruby, glowing current of vitality. "Tha blood ia the life." Good health means pure blood. The old and reliable remedy, JOHNSTON'S SARSAPARILLA, Is universally regarded as tho greatest Blood Purifier ever discov ered. This fact is now established beyond question or cavil. BLOOD POISON CUBED BT dCHNHTON'a S AKS 4FASMI.I.A. Wllllama, D.vla. Brooka k Co.. Detroit; ' Gentlemen! In Aorll latt t k-van .ln .inMNCTrtM'C e.BCl.iBll I a I. Dt j nj- . ty an amputation of one of my arms. I had SEVEN RUNNING SORES on my nigi. I ujed tvo bottla ia wa. entirely cured. I know It ia what cured me. Your truly. G. W. LUTHFH. uuauaAII DHVa UOM W. M. COHEN, xmoxT, aanoaat, WELDON, N. C. How Sal. A countryman saw for the first time a school girl go through her gyiaDastio ex ercises for the amusement of the little ones at home. After gazing at her with looks of interest aod compassion for some time, he asked a boy near if she bad fits. "No," replied the boy, "them's gym nastics' "Ah, how sad," said tha man; "how Irng's she had 'em." "Atom Tk Size Of It." It's do trouble at all to get married," remarked the girl with the new engage meat ring. "No," replied her married sister with a sigh. "The trouble doesn't begio uotil the bill, 200 feet above the city, with shortly after the oeremooy." the wiudows open at the bottom, and it's as good as a picnic to me to go to bed FOR OVER KIPTY YEARS Mea Winalnwr'a Sonthino- Svnin has heen there at eight o'clock every night. used for over fifty vears by millions ot "I doo't drink either tea or coffee; mothers for children, while teethiog, with they enter the heart. A vegetable and perfect suoeess. It soothes the child, a fruit diet will help a man to remain 8often8 the Bums aIlay9 a" Pain cure8 ... ... ,lp . f wind oolio, and is the best remedy for young. It s better than the fountain . , ' . ,. 1 " , Diarrhoea. It wi relieve the poor little lile or Ihe medicinal baths. .tf,n, immodi.tolv S.,ld hv rlrnmnaia in ArAvif naor nf tha TawiolH 9 fa flunt. (a A SUBSTANTIAL FACT. and ask for "Mrs. Wiot, W. R. Clark, Pickaway, Virginia low's Soothing Syrup," and take no oth savs: I have for several vears been usine e' kind. W . . . . . . . . . - . WOOD S HIGH GRADE Farm Seeds. Our business in Farm Seeds is to-day one of the largest in this Country. A result due to the tact i that quality has alwaya been our nm ponwriernrion. vv supply all Seeds required lor the Farm. GRASS & CLOVER SEEDS, Cow Peas, Cotton Seed, Seed Oats, Seed Corn, Soja, Navy & Velvet Beans, Sorghums, Broom Corn, Kaffir Corn, Peanuts, Millet Seed, Rape, etc. Wood's Descriptive Catalogue ftvea the fullest Information about lieae and all other Seeds; beatmethoda ofoulture, soil best adapted for difTer- rent crops and practical hints aa to what are likely to prove most profitable to grow. Catalogue mailed Irea upon request. T. W. WOOD & SONS, SEEDSMEN, - Richmond, Va. A Practical Fellow. Ramon's Pills in my family with most satisfactoiy results, and do not hesitate lo j.i . . . recommenu inem to my customers as 0. ,- . .; ; . . I ne ion spsre no time or pains in supcio. to .u, . . a.uur. aepv 0Te.eUe J0U write me. wsrocK. not oniy are your puis rename ... ,,m. lU... .n .: .u,. it - lie ..il. mil ail I iitui. i. iu. .v "There u one thing I would like to know," said the Savage Bachelor. "Is that possible? ' asked the Sweet Young Thing, with some acerbity; this occurring at the breakfast hour, when lovely woman is at her unaweetest. "Yes. I want to know why nearly all these women who have distinguished but Ramon's Relief and Nerve and Bone Oil are the most satisfactory remedies I lore gen- back od me I cio use them in a novel I'm getting up." ever bandied, aod if they were t erally used, they would ofleo make the CURB A COLO IH osb ll.iY doctor's bill 25o. instead of 12 00 These Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. goods need no dusting io my stock be cause they are constantly coming io and a going out aro Trade Winners and Trade Keepers." These good qualities are not a theory but a substantial fact, For sale by Kdward T. Clark, Weldon SC. All druggists refund money if its fails to cure. ZDc. Ihe genuine has h. It. J on each tablet. For sale by W. M. Cohen Druggist, Weldon, N. C. No Hope For Him, DANIEL WEBSTER'S EPITAPH. (Written by himself and copied from his tomb io Marshfield, Mass.) Lord, I believe, Help Thou, mine unbelief, Philosophical argu ment, especially that drawo from the vastoesa of the universe io compari son with the appireot insig nificance of this globe, has some times shaken my reason for the faith that ii in m ; but my heart has assured me that the Uospel of Jesus Christ must be a divine rea'ity. The sermon on the Mount can not be a merely human prodnction. This belief enters into the very depth of my con science. The whole his tory of man proves il. Then you cannot be tbe sunshioe of my life? asked the young mao, with the insistence of one under a fixed idea. No, replied the lady detective softly you know I am a professional shadow. Some people seem to think that all tbe exercise they need is working their jaws The crowa have great caws for com plaint this spring, as corn planting is so late. Qod picks his men when and where he chooses, and seems to delight in 00- easionally defying the accepted human standards in his choice. It lakes great moral courago to ray 'No,' remarked the cicricai-iooking indi vidual. Yes, indeed, aasertod the part maid. People notice it so nowadays you don't say 'Nit.' Just about the time a man concludes that all the wisdom of the world concentrated in his cranium, the world di-KMven that his head it as barrtn as the desert of Sahara. W, T. PARKER, t DIALM IN- Heavy AND Fancy Corn,Hay & Oats All goods cheap for cash. 3-lbs green coffee for 23c I have recently added to my bnsiness a bakery. Best Bread and Cakes furnished at abort notice. at&jgaa W. T. FARKEB, Weldon. N. C. aug 1 It NEW GOODS. O 0 0 0 0 0 0 Thkri is a man in Alabama who can bit the mark without looking at it. He I shot through the door a few nights ago 34 yards Elastic, Be ; Si needles It, St stiei wriltuj, paper, c, vu in-raw BoMoofi 5c, Yard wide percale 6c, Plaid drew goods, :i)c, Floor matting 10, 13, 15c. Carpeting, 13, to 47jc, Farmers heavy shoes, asc. Ladies' ahoee, 70c to $1.00, i'.uits ito to tl.75, 3 yard lac curtains 37 cents, Curtain poles and fixtures, 18c, ear tain scrim, 4c, calicoes, 4c Mea'a coats and vesta 85c, men's panta, 60c, boy's pants 15 to 30c, Boy's suite 45 to 95c, Mattress ticking, 6 to 7c Men's winter underwear, AKy plush capes, at totl.50. 1 am re ceiving some good bargains in winter goods Weldon, N. C Dr. Cadt'8 Condition Powders at an imaginary burglar and killed his themselves by a display of brains look so ... ;., -k., . um ,,l. . i K.d sister. much like men?" I .... ,j VUUUIIIUU, ...UIV, U I'.-lIU UUItUU. Out. vermifuge. They are not food but med icine and the best in use to put a horse io prime oooditioo. Price 25c per pack age. For tale by W. M. Cohen Weldon J. N. Brown Halifax, Dr. A. 8. Harrlaoa, Knrleld. Druaxiitt. A Pretly Strong Hint. They had been engaged to be married fiflteu yeurs, and still he had not mul tared up courage enuugh to a-k her to name the happy day, One evening he called in a peculiar frame of mind and asked her to sing somelhiug tender and touching, some thing that would "move him." She sat down at the piano aud sang "Darling, I Am Growing Old." The average man somewhat resem'iltl a lobster. He's not so green after he's been in hot water. OABTOIIIA, Bean tha J) ltie m m 'il's NSM "T1 (ZEISS' Soro Throat Bore throat and constant ooughine in. dioate an affection of the bronchial tubes which may develop into pleurisy orlnflammation of tbe lungs. Do not waltt but use Dr. John W. Bull's Cough Bymp at once and be en red. COUCH SYRUP Curw Hoireeneu and Sort Throat. Dom are nnall and pleasant o take. Doctors rtctnmcadtt. JTica 15 cu. MaUdrusiiiU. v'v 50 YEARS' , Vr EXPERIENCE III 4k 1 TfMM MftMtS DfttONS AnTone awndlnK n ukrtcb and drtpf Inn mmf qnlrkl MOArtfitn our opinion fr whether n In t mi t ton prohl)lT pmentAhlsx Corn !-.-tton Pt Hotly ufldnt lui. Handbook tm t'-iait tout frM. OI1Hrt Wfiftoy for nrntitu ptMH-f. I'atsnU tttken throuicb Hunn Ct. notslr iffruu tVHtcaL, wunoui cnmri m mm at..! jhpv 1-rrsBsj, aw ouleViuii of amy tiUlaO kiuraaiL 'mr 1 ; roar monuj, ft. worn bjshi SllsfeMaflMaf, ( ""If rua,&g. - -aj
Roanoke News (Weldon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 19, 1900, edition 1
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