jOtlN" "W. SLEDO-E, I'Rohuktor.
VOL XXXV.
A. 2T E "W SP APEE IP O THE PEOPLE
TERMS:-1'50 per annum in advance
WELDON, N. C, THURSDAY. JANUARY 17. 1901.
NO 38
ESTABLISHED 1870.
FRANK T. CLARK CO.,,.:-.
(Successors to Cooke, Clark k Co.)
Sash, Doors and Blinds.
r
Mouldings,
Porch Trimmings, Hardwood and
Slate &antels, Tiling and Grates.
K.Fioe Builder's
PAINTS OIL & GLASS.
Aod Building Material of Kvcry Dt-si-riptiun
'Jtf Cmum-'rcial Place and 49 Roanoke Avenue, NOKFOLK, VA.
P. N. Stainback,
WELDON. N. C.
Bi.'iiIit in
QeIeiuL - - -
flEUCMltDISE
OF AI L
ZEICLER& BAY STATE
A SPECIALTY.
Kp-Solt tm'Ut in Welrtod for 8TKOUSK
(Fwiuurly wd here by M. P. Hart.) A lit
n
Ul
The Public Schools are now open
ing over the State, and will need
supplies. These school books and
supplies can be had at a discount
to teachers and dealers. We sell
all kinds of books.
ALFRED WILLIAMS & CO.,
The Celebrated
& Golden Crown
IK Dnvo T?ttq onrl W
Vtfc w
Forest
WHISKIES.
DistilM Expressly For
mm&ty J.&E.Mahoney
5? PORTSMOUTH. VA,
M
KPitt-buri! Pure Kye Duly l
P 3S2.00 Gallon
Jvj w T
sS"V Arlington nd Lake
liilerv at Aleiandna,
I' -r-r-T-
w. "W.
Is Sol Agent
The Peerless
Wine,
raong!
Id Thousands of
Atnerioin Households.
Sciippc
SHOULD BE I IT .A-LIj
J3LiA.CXBERRYnnfailinp rMuadyIod all their
floods tre guaranteed to give Mtiefaelion.
Home Office,
CHOCKOYOTTE, N. C.
'ally
The Beit liver Medicine.
Largest Package on the Market.
Om Parks Prie ft ll0. ..
Pl ua Ui. bod. ul a tallai of .lrknt.d JL. mnd
Stair Work,
Hardware."
SHOES
BROTHERS HItill ART CLOTHING
g'lii'iuitefd.
UNDERTAKING
In nil it branches Metallic. Walnut,
Cloth Covered Cuxkt'l iiikI Culfiiifl.
Trlrphnue or trlraruph nirtwaKes at
tmleil to day or night.
A
IB!
Vivi i-ii-iii) Uiiilj
"V
Miller -w
. Vtj
Drutnuioud. i
If-
a.
T.
KAY
it Weldon, N C jlifr qcdim
Braooh Warehouse,
MEMPHIS. TENN.
- ."sr.:. t - - - i ir u.i if.,-- u
GROW IN OPEN AIR.
EAT AND SLEEP WITH THE EARTH.
THg TRAMP IH A I.UVER OP NATMRK
AND THE 111,18 SRV, AND WE ARE
ALL TARUKD.WlTti THE SAME STICK
A writer in tho Geotlcuian's Maga
zine invites us to see in the tramp not
the reeidum of civilization but a peri
patetic philosopher and lover of nature
aod the blue sky. We are all tarn d
with the same stick, the wiiter thinks,
aod if boDest will confess that we often
wish to ffee away from the ciiy and con
ventional life and idle in the woods, like
a ravage, all the rest of our days. Thoreau
deliberately planted bis lu-t in the furest
and spent two yei.s there. "I went to
the wood"," he says, " In cause I wished
to live deliberately, to Iront only tbe es
sential dels of hfe and see f I cou d no:
learn what it had to teach, and not when
I came to die discover that I had not
lived. I wanted to live deep and suck
out the marrow of life; to live so sturdily
as to put U rout all that was not life, to
drive life into a corner ai d reduce it to
its lowest terms." Every n fleeting per
son tires at times of the njonotonou
ripetilioo, diy afier diy and year aftir
year, of heartless tri.ulues which tu
ideas aod habits of one's associates make
oompulsury. "The mass of men," a
Thoreau puts it, "lead lives of quiet des
peration, envying the simp'icity and
nakedness of man's life in the primitive
age." Walt Whitman is mentioned as
another exponent of tbe vagabond idea
"The secret," he says "of the making ol
the best persuns is to grow in the open
air and eat and sleep with tbe earth. I
think heroic deeds were all conceived in
the open air." It is in search of this
inspiration lor "heroic deeds," we may
charitably suppose, that "Weary Willie"
cultivates the open air and is indifferent
as to where he eats aod sleeps. Hubert
Louis Stevenson, more than Thoreau or
Whitman, was a confirmed t.amp, get
ting close to the earth in rambles through
Scotland, Kokand and France, and final
ly settling delib irate ly among the savages
of Samoa. Speakioguf his sleeping in
the woods iu France, he says: "What
seems a kind of temporal death to people
chocked between walls is only a light and
living slumber to the io iu wh) sleeps
afield. Toe outer w irld, from which we
oower in our houses, seemed, after all, a
habitable place; and night a.'ter night a
man's bed. it seemed, was laid a-id wa l
ing for him in the fields, where God keeps
an open Imui-e. I thought I had redis
covered one ol those truihs which are
revealed to the savages aud bid to the
pilitical eeouotnisis." The tramp, it
seems, has his innings in communion
with nature, indulging an inclination
deenlv routed in human nature. The
r
philosophic vagabond inherits an instinct
too strong to be viU'Uished by the un-
appreciative remarks of the farmer's wife,
by the discouragement of cold meals or
hv the Dolieeiuao's baton. Baltimore
Sun.
A sentiment is a con vielioo which has
been worked over in the heat of emotion
aod then laid away in the mind to shape
action when occasioo calls aud there is no
time to think.
douse word
Stna any to a man, hut there is
great deal of lifting and reaching to do ;
a great manv trip up and down aUira to
make in the course of day's house work.
It'a hard where a woman is well. For
a woman sertering with some form of
"female trouble" it
is daily torment.
There art thousands
of such women
straggling along.day
by day, in increasing
misery. There are
other thousands who
have found a com-
Slete cure of their
iaeaae in the use of
Dr. Pierce's Favorite
Preacrlption. It
stops debilitating
drains, cures irregu
larity, heals Inflam
mation and ulcera
tion, nourishes the
serves, and giv
vitality and vigor.
It makes weak
women strong and
lick women well. It
contains no opium,
cocaine nor other
narcotic.
"For flbr of
mMtlM I mftVwl with
female trouble." wrttw
Mlsa Agnes MeOowm,
Jf ,. lank H . Wh-
I'm mmti to do m. ay oerm.nent
iiTdSorW H wth. wonaj of I"'".
1 trouble he w 1 decided w
ST JIiX kelp t received wry ncoin
L'ui Mtd rir ' Favorite- rieewiow
I 4.. i better, and. a
ksprurlDi ever, day
n. Di.'i Common Sense Medical
Adviser is sent fn, on reipt f ""P"
to pay cost or maniug
one-cent stamp, for a book in paper
ve,or sump, in cloth, to U.
R. V. Pierce, Buualo, N. Y.
PPOMATTOX
IRON WORKS,
Manufacture ra of
Agricultural Implement. Shafting,
Mill Gearing. Polleye, All kindaof
Machinery, and Kepaini
Uli, Peanut Machinery a Specialty.
Ne. as $4 Old St., Petersburg, Tt ,
2$ GCLSonahle feller.
FRANK L. STANTON, IN
I'm mighty fond o' winter, when
On the gardens where we frolicked with the flowers o' the May;
When they have the canuy-pullin
sweet,
An' the music o' the fiddle makes
J hen you 11 hnd ine shore
On the creakin' cabin floor,
A-danein' ev'ry quadrille an' a-coaxin' 'em fer more!
I've got a friendly feelin' fer the spring, so rosy dressed,
With the wind in all her ringlets an' the blossoms on her breast;
When the tnockin' '.nrtls air singin", an' you hear the honey bees
An' the robins nn' the rabbits air
i hen you 11 hnd me shore
Jest u-th'owin' wide tiio door
To the sunshine an' the singin",
An' then I like t te season when
An ihe drowsy, tlreamrul weather s like a sigh that s in a song;
When the cattle bells air clank'n' on the dusty hill an' plain
An' the lilies air a-holdin' of their
Iheii I takes my ease
In the shadows o' the trees,
While the partridge in the medder whistles lively fer a breeze !
An' I like the fall time, bretherin' when the leaves air gold an'
gray;
When all's so still 'pea-s like the
F'om the scented shadders o' ihe
When, if you" (i only listen, you
Then you u nnti me sno'e
Jest a-th'owin' wide the door
An' lettin' hetwen come down to
OF DAYS OF OLD.
ONLY A DREAM.
QOINU BACK TO THE SCENES titfCIIII.
HOOD.
How often prsnns who are eogn ssed
wiih the cares of business life find them
selves iu tho quiet moments geiog back
t i the scenes of childhood, and how tbey
long to go back over those days again.
S meiimes ihes si:ene come in review
unbidden; again they ate called to mind
by hearing s me one tell (heir expe
rience but come as they may, they long
to again go over the play s;rou id, the
fields, the forest and once more be a
free, untrammeled child again, to wade
the branches, calch minnows, go swim
ming or chase tho hare and squirrel.
The impressions of these things come
into ihe niii d when young and pliant,
and nothing short of insanity can office
them from memory. Such things biing
minghd jy andsalues-;j y, as one itn-
ioes they are going over the scenes
ajain, saiiuis", on maiunr nueeuun,
bringing the knowledge that those seems
have changed. The open field may now
be a forest, the grove a thicket, and on
noing to the old hone they find few ob
jects that remind them of other years,
aod the return does not give the pleas
ure expected. But it is all a dream, and
only a short rest for a weary mind, ami
cares crowd iu and engross tbe mind
ain Orange Va. Observer.
AARON BIRR S MAGNETISM
"NO FEMALE CAPABLE OF THE GENTLE
EMOTIONS EVEK LOOKED UPON HIM
WITHOUT LOVING HIM.
"Krotn the time the beautiful and
brilliant Madame Jumnl had been a
young girl, snd when Aa'on Burr vas
only a Captain in the American arm)
she had been more than once under (he
spell ol his strange fascination," writes
William Purine, in the January Ladiesi
Home Journal. "Burr had introduced
ber to ihe celebrated Margaret Mon
crieff, had desperately flirted with her
and had implanted within ber an admir
ation which was still alive when he was
an aged social exile. She had written of
him in earlier days that he appeared to
h i to be 'the perfection of manhood,
thai bis figure snd form had been fash
ioned iu the mou nd ef the graces, and
(hat he was as familiar with the drawing
room as with the camp. 'In a word,'
she said he was a couibiued model ol
Mars aud Apollo. His eyes were uf the
deepest black and sparkled with an ic
ooiupn hciisible brilliancy when he smiled
but if enraged it power was absolutely
iMrriliu. IutO whatever female soci't)
he ehanoed by the fortunes of war or
the vicissiiudos of private (ife to be oast
ke conquered all hearts with ml an effort
snd until he became deeply involved in
the affairs ol Slate, aud the vexations
incident to tbe political arena, I do not
believe a female capable of the gentle
emotions of love ever looked upon hitn
without loving him. W'bciever he went
he was petted and caressed by her sex,
and hundreds vied with each other in a
continuous struggle to oner una some
testimonial of their adulatioo. Subse-
quently Madame Jumel was married to
Burr, who was nearly eighty aud she
Dearly sixty. The marriage was not a
happy one, and the two soon separated."
'Your hair is very thin, sir,'
said tbe fat barber. ' Olad to hear it,"
snapped the viotitn "Corpulency is
so awfully vulgar."
It matters not bow i man dies,
bow he lives.
but
Wealth is Dot his that bas it, but his
that enjoys it.
I'OLMEK S WEEKLY.
the frost is ly in gray
s, an the culer s nharp and
a fidget in yer feet!
as heppy as you please;
an' a-whistlin' out fer more !
the summer comes along,
silver cups fer rain.
wind has sighed itself away
night, an' from the sleepy dav
d hear all the angels Say!
me, an' askin' em fer more.
AN ITEM OF NEWS.
THE SHOE ON THE OTHER FOOT.
8UMBTIIINI1 TO FILL UP THE PAPER,
BUT DID NOT WANT TO ADVERTISE.
A man walked into a country printing
offioe the other day, and said to the
editor :
"Say, if you want something to fill op
your paper with, you might say in your
next issue that I have just started a shop
to make and repair wagons and carriages,
and would like to have everybody to call
and see me."
"All right," replied the editor, "do you
want an advertisement in the paper, too?
'No," said the man; "just au item of
news in the local columu."
"Do you want to subscribe for the
paper ?" aiked the editor.
"Well,' uo," said the man. "I aiu
taking two or throe city papers, ami some
story papers from Chicago; I haven't got
time, to road auy more. Maybe I'll take
your paper when some of the others run
out."
"All right," said the editor; and he
smiled to himself.
Next day the editor sent his carriage
around to the shop. He wanted two
spokes put in the wheel, and told him
he had a little j ib for him, j ist to till up
his time and keep hi n buy.
The man looked it over, aod said :
"Well, the spikes will bo 50 cents
each, and th dashboaid that will be
is- l
"Oh," said the editor, "I didn't mean
to pay tor it. I just brought it around,
nue as you brought that item yr ester Jay,
ist to fid up your time. It's only an
em, you know."
"Then the wagon rep irer saw tb
point, and tbe editor went back to lis
office, and d. f ly pitched the item iuto
wastebasket.
KIIHOVHH WITTY YKAHst
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been
used for over fitly years by millions ol
mothers for children, while teething, with
perfect success. It soothes the child,
softens the gums, allays all pain, cures
wind colic, and is tho bent remedy li r
Diarrhoea. It will relieve the poor little
sutforcr immediately. Sold by druggists
to every part of the world. 25 cents
bottle. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Wins-
low's Soothing Syrup," and take no oth
er kind.
It takes only one to eu J a quatn I.
A PROMINENT CHICAGO WO
MAN SPKAKS.
Prof. Roxa Tyler of Chicago, V
President uf Illinois Woman's Alli.u,,
in speaking uf Chamheilain'a Cough
Remedy ays: "I suffered with a se
vera cold this wiultr which threateneJ to
run into pneumonia. I tried dilf. n Lt
remedies but I srmd tn grow worse aud
thv medicine upset my stomach, A
friend advised me to try Chamberlain
uougu itemeuy and 1 round it was
pleaaaot to take and it relieved me at
oooe. 1 am dow entirely recover d
saved a doctor's bill, time and tufferiog,
and I will never be without this splendid
mediciue again." For sale in Weldon by
w. ,vi, Uoheo, druggist.
Every noble work is at first impossi
ble.
THOUSANDS SENT INTO EXILE,
Every yesr a Isrge number of poor
sufferers whose lungs are sore and racked
with coughs are urged to go to another
climate. But this is costly and not al
ways sure. Don't be an exile when Dr.
King's New Discovery for Consumption
will cute you at home It's the most in
fallible medicine for ooughs, oolds, and
all throat and lung dis 'asea on earth.
Tbe first dose brings relief. Astound
ing cures result from pixTitcnt uv,
Trial bottles free at W. M. Coheu's drug
store, Prioe 50c and II, Every bottle
gsnranteed,
HER SUMMONS CAME.
HER DEATH WARRANT.
SHE PROPPED THE DISHCLOTH AND
AFTER THAT FATAL WARNING SPENT
THE BALANCE OF THE ENENINQ IN
TELLINQ HOW THE FUNERAL SHOULD
BE RUN.
As Mr. Gallup lighted his tin lantern
after supper and slatted out to buy
half a pound of Rio coffee for break,
fast and call at the postoffiue Mrs. Uul-
up was in excellent spirits and bad
taost of the dishes ready for washing.
He was absent 32 minutes, and when
he arrived home be found ber huddled
up in the big rocking chair, with a pil
low behind her head and the camphor
bottle in her band. She took three
long drawn sighs as be entered, but it
was labor, labor thrown away. Mr.
Gallup blew out his lantern and hung it
up behind the cellar door, and, having
deposited the coffee on a shell iD the
pantry, he removed and hung up his
coat and hat, sat down and took off his
shoes and theu, taking a circular from
his pocket aud puttiDg on bis glasses
with great deliberation, began to read.
It was a circular regarding a new dis
covery in the cure of consumption, aod
he bad not yet finished with the first
testimonial when Mrs. Gallup sobbed
four times in succession and faintly
asked:
"Samuel Gal'up, do you know that
your dying wife is present in the room?"
He made no reply. That testimon
ial from one who had been cured after
his coffin had been purchased made bim
hold his breath as be read.
"Yes; she is present," dolefully con
tinued Mrs Gallup after scvcial sniffs
at the bottle, "and she wants to hev a
few last words with you. When you
started over town, I was singin' Barbara
Allen and thinking my days might be
ong in tbe land. I bad just started to
nash the dishes when the summons
oame. I had that cracked blue platter in
my hand, but I hadn't gin it over two
wipes when the dishcloth fell to tbe floor
with a great spat. You arc hearin
what I say ain't you, Samuel?"
Mr. Gallup wasn't, fie was devour
ing the second testimonial wnicti gave
the case of a woman who bad been
given up by over 50 doctors, and yd
two bott'es furnished her with a new
p, ir of lungs.
"When that dishcloth fell, I knew
that my time had come. That's the
way M;'s. Grover and Mrs. Taylor went
Their disholotb fell and in 24 hours
they was in heaven. I shall be up there
by tomo rer night, Samuel, while you
will be Irec to stay out all night to bear
the political news. I'd hev died before
you come back home only I wanted to
talk with you a leetle about he funeral.
Let's see. If I die tonight, you'll hold
tbe funeral day after tomorier, won't
you, at 2 o'clock in tbe afternoon
.nr. (Jallup was listening to a noise
outside. He beard something to re
mind him of a hen trying to crow, and
he wondered if it eould be that so long
sfter dark.
" If you want it a day sooner, you
oan bev it," continued Mrs. Gallup after
sehs and gasps and sniffs st the bottle,
"but you must look out or the nayburs
will talk. Better hev it day after lo
morrcr, aud I hope, fur your sake, it
won't be a rainy day. I've sometimes
thought I'd like a big funeral when I
went with over 40 wagons in tho pur
ccssion aod the church bell a tollin and
tbe dogs a-howlin, but I've given tbat
up. No, Samuel, you needn't make any
spread over me. I'm one of tbe kind
tbat kio go to heaven without any hur
rah and fireworks. If there is ten
wagons in the puroessioo, I shall be
ni-fi'il. Don't you think ten ought to
be 'rtiff for a person like me?"
I- wa-ti'i a direct questi m, but had
lib, -ii Mr Gallup would not have
answered, ll j w -s di routing tho third
testimonial lJ making up his mind to
try a bottle on the sly
"Ten wagons in the puroession, Sam
uel, and the bells oeeiio't toll uor butuiu
e'se happen. If anybody is diggio
talers or makin soft soap or dyeing oar-
pet rags, they neeou t stop on my ac
oount. If 2 J people come to the house
that will be 'nuff. We've got 'leveo
e'isirs s'together, oountio them with
broken backs, and M rs. Walters
will lend you the rest. You will have
our own preacher of course, but he
needn't go on for an hour or two aod
tell how good I was snd how much you
will miss me If he says that my toil is
o'er and that you won't never find a
more vio wife, that'll be about nuff
Shall you do any cry in at the funeral
Samuel?"
No answer.
"I'd do leetle bit if I was you jost
leetle. If you doo't, folks will talk
about it same as tbey did about Jim.
DeWitt. He never eried at all, aod to
this day folks say he dido't use right
I doo't atk yu to break down aod sob
' aud git up au exei ement, but you
kit
i gasp a few times and wipe your eyes aod
' blow youroose I'm soiry you'll bev lotako
that long ride to the graveyard, as you
could be playing checkers or sutbin,
but I dont see how you are to get out of
However, you won't never hev to
go up there ag'io. When you git ready
to buy me a gravestun, you kin send
it up by a man. I s'pose you'll buy a
stun of some sort, won't you?''
Mr. Gallup dido't hear. In the
fourth testimonial a mao declared that
be had been saved afict one whole lung
and three quarters of tho other were
gone, and it was a sketch to thrill the
reader clear down to bis toes.
'Of course I don't keer about no
gravestun for myself," said Mrs. Gallup
as she tried lo wipe away her tears with
tho glass stopper of the buttle, "but if
yuu don't put one up the nnyburs will
call you stingy. Get a cheap one, how
ever. If you kin git one fur S10 and
trade a lot of carpet rags in, I'd do it, I
used to think I wanted a whole lot of
reading on my gravestun, but I've
changed my mind. Jest put on tbat
Susan Gallup expired in the forty-ninth
year of her age of gineral disability and
that she has found rest where asthma,
boils, backaches and rheumatiz cease from
Iroublin. You needn't say a word about
makin 40 yards of rag carpet and a bar!
of soft soap last year while enjoyin sore
eyes and a boil on my arm or that I alius
kept catnip, smattweed aod peppermint
bcrbs in the house and was a nurse to all
tbe nayburs. No, Samuel, you needn't
say a word about them things. Make
it a cheap gravestun, and you needn't
never go up there and an"
And when Mr. Gallup bad finished
the testimonials and fully determined to
buy at least three bottles aud bide them
in the wood shed he arose up, yawned
and stretched and looked around to find
Mrs Gallup asleep and the camphor
wasted on the fl ior. M. Quad.
Cut this out and take it to W. M. Co
hen's drugstore aud get a free sample of
Chamberlain's Stomach aod Liver Tab
lets, the best physic. They also cure
ilisorders of the stomach, bilious and
headache.
Deceit and falsehood, whatever con
veniences they may for a time promise
or produC'1, are in the sum of life, obsta
cles to happiness.
BuOWN TO ATOMS.
The old idea that the body sometimes
need a powerful, drastic, purgative pill
has been exploded; for Dr. King's New
Life Pills, which are perfectly harmless,
uently stimulate liver aud bowels to ex
pel poisonous matter, e'eanso the system
and absolutely cure Constipation and
Siek Headache. Only 25c. at W. M
Cohen's drugstore.
The best hearts are always the brav-
indigestion
dyspepsia
biliousness
and the hundred and one simi
lar ills caused by impure blood
or inactive liver, quickly yield
to the purifying and cleansing
properties contained in
Johnston's
$arsaparHla
QUART BOTTLfl.
It cures permanently by acting
naturally on all organs of the
body. Asa blood-cleanser, nesn
builder, and health-restorer, it
has no equal. Put us in Quart
Bottles, and sold at $i each.
"THB MICHIOAN DP.ua COMPANY,"
Detroit, Mick.
U Tii UrtrrttM tor Llm Ills, sjc vj
FOR SALE BY
W. M. COHEN,
Vt KI.DON, N. C.
PI fin mr. (ft ?nna
UUIlljl Vl&VMto,
Gordon
Baltimore
Rye and
0. P.R
Maryland
RYE.
"A Gentleman's
Drink.
Sold Only In
Weldon by
All Night House,
West Side R.R, SM
I oot 4 3j.
Sio External
Symptoms
The blood may be in bad condition,
yet with no external signs, no skin
eruption or sores to indicate it. The
symptoms in such cases being a variable
Ippetite, poor digestion, an indescribable
weakness and nervousness, loss of flesh
and a general run-down condition of the
System clearly showing the blood bat
lost its nutritive qualities, bas become thin
and watery. It ia in just such cases that
8. S. S. has done some of its quickest and
most effective work by building up the
blood and supplying the elements lacking
to make it strong and vigorous,
' My wife used sev
eral bottles of S. S. S.
as a blood purifier and
to tone up a weak and
emaciated system, with
very marked effect by
way of impiovement.
"We regard it a
great tonic and blood
purifier." J. F. Duff,
Priuceton, Mo.
is the greatest of all
tonics, and you will
find the appetite im
proves at once, strength
returns, and nervousness vanishes as new
rich pure blood once more circulates
through all parts of the system.
S. S. S. is the only purely vegetable
blood purifier known. It contains no min
erals whatever. Send for our free book
on blood and skin diseases and write our
physicians for any information or advice
wanted. No charge for medical advice.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO, ATLANTA, 6A.
Swift's
Silver Leaf Lard
has received the verdict
of popular approval a
larger sale than any other
lard in this country.
It is wholesome and
absolutely pure.
Swift's Premium Hams and
Bacon are unexcelled in quality,
choice flavor and attractive ap
pearance. Swift's Products are made under
U. S. Government Inspection.
Swift and Company
Chicago
Si. Louit
Kansas Cily
Si. Joseph
Omaha
St. V aul
Over aso Branch Kousea tn the U. 8.
Monuments
AND
Gravestones.
WE PAY the FREICHT
andCUARANTEESAFE
DELIVERY . . .
LARGEST STOCK In the South
Illustrated Catalogue FREE.
THE COUPER MARBLE WORKS,
(Established'1848-)
159 to 163 Bank st, Norfolk Yl
ov a It-
1ERVITA PILLS
Reitort Vlltllly, Lott VlfonndMiihool
Cur Tmpotftncy, Nltrht Emltstons, Lout of Met
orf. Mil wanting aiMawt,!
sue Recti of ttltobuMor
60
M riAurrns aim luuiKigiiuiir
PILLS,
jtUlblood builder. Bringf,
the pink glow to ptl
ctiMKi tna nwtnrM tho
60
CTS.
nr or youth, ur bmii
60c por boi. 0 boiM for
99-60, with our bftnktbl ftm-antM to our)
or refund tho money paid. Bend for elrouiM
eud copy of our bankable ruarmntee bond.
MaTabtets
EXTRA STHtwuTij
ImoedlaU Rtiittf
fTBLLOW LAMM
fositirelr irnarenttwd en re for Low of rower,
Varicocele, Undemloped or Hhrunkeo Orit-aua.
Pure.., Locotrtor A in., Nnrvwa Pruetra
tioo, Hysteria, Fits, I nwnity. Partly tin and tho
Liquor. By mail In plaiu parknm. $1.00
box, 0 fur $6.00 with our bankable ra-vr-ftnuo
bond to cure tn 00 days or refund
money paid. Addrese
NCR VITA MEDICAL CO.
Clinton A Jackson Sts CHICAGO, ILU
For sale by IK. M. Cohen, H'eldon N. 0.
,v4.,. 60 YEARS'
JlL EXPERIENCE
Tradc Mark$
. . DctlONB
rrH COPYR.OHTa0.
Anronewifidliif a MrHrh and drmirfN mmf
quickly wMrtmn (ir ninn frtio Mmtlier an
I n? tint ton if pri-MMy pntelMe. ('imiiitnif
tlimtrlr1ly ronllilfutlnl. lUiitibook cm IXonLf
lent friw. ul'ltMt tMTWM'y for wmrUnT ltti.
I'MlfihU Ufcmi tiirmitfti Mtuiti A (U lwelr
tficUU noil, H houi charm, ltt tb
Scientific Jfrjerican.
A tianrliomelr lllMtratwl vlr. Irtr 4r
euUlttjn of any rlntt(lfl VMinnU. Tomn, IS a
Kiar ; four nontl
rour noma, at. pom ay an newMaiTw.
o New jcit
m w w waaaicw wa, . v-
4we'"TatSSf
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