Newspapers / Roanoke News (Weldon, N.C.) / Jan. 24, 1901, edition 1 / Page 1
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if IN jOHIN" "W. SLEDGE, pkopkiktor. VOL. XXXV. A. NEWSPAPER IF O IR, THE PEOPLE. TEPIMIS: 150 PKR ANNUM IN AUVANCf WELDON, N. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1901. NO 39 ESTABLISHED 1870. FRANK T. CLARK CO.,,-., (Successors (o Cuokc, Clark k Co.) Sash, Doors anl Blinds. MoulJings, Stair Work, Porch Trimmings, Hardwood and Slate Mantels, Tiling and Grates. paFiuc Builder's Hardware.- P ALN TS OIL & GLASS. And Building Material uf Every IWriptioti i Ci'Uimeruial Place and 49 Koanuke Avenue, NOHFOLK, VA. Jy iy P. N. Stainback, WEIDON, N. C. Dealer in qefeL .UnCMflDISE OF AIL KINJ'. ZEICLER BAY 8TATE A SPECIALTY. B-leA((-iitinVel(louforSTKOi:sKKIOTllEUS IIHI1I AHT CLOTHING (Formerly sold here by M. F. Hart.) A (it g'ni'iuiteed. MfTrflf fg&fti In nil in Imimhw. M.-lallic. Walnut, 4W-VifKJi i Cloth f.,v.-ri-l CakeU and Coffiim. .SSfpP- Teh-phou or telturuph niewmges at- 1 U 11 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 & GO, o,t4 4 u. PoA.IjEIC3-IL.ISr. C. f The Celebrated 3Mf Golden M Pure Eye and :5E T?Avacf ;-v WTTTRTTTES. illii Disiilltl Eijmsli For 17. w. w, niDOti,n. c. by J.&E.Mahonoy PORTSMOUTH. VA, iV" I , jjii tWUl'iit.un: Pure Rye Only - $2.00 Gallon: U 'jr Arlingloo and Lake lrumiuond. TOW- lillerv at Alexandria, Va. A W- W. K A.Y The Peerless Wine, ujjjjui iiuii . Id Thousands nf American UuiiM-hidd. SHOULD BE IOST ALL mAnrrntpDPV n,",c by garrett i co. J A.VJXOjQjLilV "of'1'11!? ri,u,e(J ,D(J lhe" M are guaranteed lo give satisfaction. Home Offioe, CHOCKOYOTTE, N. C. The Best Liver Medicine. Largeit Package on the Market. a.. Dui.M PriM gta. Fir for II 00. J1m m Ih. body and fiilof .Iclrw work. A rrttDdnsoBMBdrd tttmon'i n. u.TuM u SHOES UNDERTAKING rndt ti day or liitjlit. Pi BOOKS! itftv-fr i it & it Crown MJIW .... Branoh Warehouse, MEMPHIS. TENN. "cortd Tonhj kaantalor-Two rfl l. (X. VroDrtrtora.ai0"'"'"1"1- IT PAY? A TWO YEftR OLD BABY. HE WILL COST YOU PAIN AND SORROW BUT UK WILL PAY FOR IT AGAIN AND AUAIN IN WIIIHFKKINU TIIOSK THREE LITTLE WORDS: "I LUB MY PAPA." Does a two year-old baby pay for it self up In the lime it reaches that intei esting are ? Sumoliuxs I lliiuk not. I thought so yesterday when uiy own baby slipped into my study and "scrubbed" the carpet and his best whiio dress with my bottle of ink. lie was playing in the coal hud ten minutes after a clean dress was put on him, and later in the day he paMtd fifty cent worth of postage stamps on I lie parlor wall and pouied a dollar's worth uf the choicest "White Rose" perfumery oul of the window "lo see it wain." Then he duf: out the center of a nice ly baked loaf of cake, and was fuund in the middle uf lhe dining room table with lhe supr-bowl between his ligs and mutt uf the contents in his stomach. He has alteady cust over 100 in doc turn' bills, and I feel lhal I am riht in alliibuiiu uiy few gray hairs lo lhe misery I endured walking lhe floor wilh him at night during the first year of his Hie. What lus he ever done to pay me for thai ? Ah I I hear his tittle -feet pattering alung out in lhe hall. I hear his lilile ripple of laughter because he has es caped I'r.'iu his mother aod has found his way up lo my study at a forbidden hour But lhe duor is closed. The worthless little vagabond can't get in, and I won't opeo it for him. No, I won't. I can't be disluibed when I'm writing. He can just cry if he wants to. I won't he bothered for "rat, tat, tat," go his dim pled knuckles oil the door. I sit in si lence. "Rat, lat, tat." I sit perfectly still, " Papa." No reply. "PeeZ", papa." Grim silence. "Baby tutu in pei, papa." He shall not come iu. "My ppa." I write oo. "Papa," i-ays the lillle voice; "I lub my papa. I'eize let biby iu I" I atu not iiiite a brute, and I throw open the dour: Iu he comes wilh out stretched little arm", wilh shining ees. iib laujjliitig f'.iee 1 catch him up into inv arms, and his warm, soft little anus go around my neck, the out very clean little cheek is laid close to mine, tbe baby voice says sweetly: "l lub my papa." l)oi 8 he pay ? Well, I guess he does ! He has cnsi me many anxious dajs and nights He has cost me lime and money and care and self-sacrifice He may cost me pain and sorrow He has cost much. But he has paid for it all again and aijain in whispering those three little words into my ears: "1 lub papa." Our children pay when their very firt feeble lilile cries fill our hearts with the mother love and ihc father love thai ought never lo tail among all eartly pas sions Do our children pay? J. H D., in I'elroit h rie Press it's TMe washed And strength waited, to try to push back me rising uuc wuu uiwm. It's jiut aa great a waste of time oud . f.. mnr u.riima want of atiencth to try to push back the rising tide of disease -vith the " nervines," "com pounds" and "nerve fooda" which simply drug the nerves into a drunk en stupor. Thev make you feel good? So does whisky, while the feeling lasts, but the reaction is dan gerous and deadly. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is a tem perance medicine. 11 containa no al cohol, opium, cocaine or other nar colic. It strenBtlirna the body by purifying the blood and increasing the supply of tliat vital fluid. It heals diseases of the stomach and or gans of digestion and nutrition and thua reinovra the obstacles to a per fect nourishment of the whole body. m(Ui yr" M u,y t"n,wri and heart Irotil'led mr much 1 h.l Iu do omrthlng . the dm-tu. et'iiU not hflp nir ."nlM Mrs A ttiiil'P o o J', C.llloi.l. Bui ; " 1 '" Ku F'aa'ueo aa M trratmrnt f'" crr ul ln .iuiMXS cilfl wa. lttcr for lonit lime lhn It canir bc-k 1 then iiki: Dr Hctie's Cldtd McJIcal DiKowry and 'Plcamit PI1U.' TUrtc nifdKiDCS cured me ;nieh. I do uot b, h pln and lodigwlloo aa I did. It if very hard lor me 10 tell von what 1 .ullered before- I comnieuced taking your nluible medicine. I rrcomwend It to all lhe tufferetl whom I Dr. Pierce's Pleasant PelleU strengthen and atiniulate the liver. 1.' ' J'-.a.W .tTxTVJffi ?y,ti A PPOMATTOX IRON WORKS, Manufiicturereof Agricultural Implements. Shafting! , Mill Gearing, Pulleya, All kinda of Machinery, and Repairs gtj. Peanut Machinery Specialty. 1 tX Mm. M M Old St, Petersburg, Vt HAD A BIG HEART. "GOING TO SEE MY MAMMY." OUB WHOLE FRELINUS TOWARD UNDERWENT A CIIANOE. Ou last Thanksgiving Day, we left Dallas early in the morning for Pittsburg, the seat of the East Texas Conference. The night before there was a freight wreck oo the T. k P, Railroad near For ney. This made it necessary to go by way of Knois and back by K lufman in order to get round tbe break aod again reach the main line at Terrell, This consumed more time than we had con templated, aud we knew that this delay w mid re quiro a long stop over at Big Sandy. As the train swept along on hi" aled time, we had no opportunity for dinuer. The prospect was not pleasing, and we were not in the most pleasant mood. As we stopped at a small station, an overgrown awkward fellow about twenty years of age came in and flapped down on the seat with us. His dottier were clcao, but course, and his hand and face were brown and mummy-like. We were not at all pleased with his cumpan iooship. And to add to our displeasure, he heuan to squirt great meuthfuls of amhier i n the floor near our feet. To express it mildly, we were disgusted, but the other seals were all taken and we had to bear it. Weht ped, however, thai he was simply off on a lillle Thanksgiv ing frolic, and that perhaps he would g I off at the next station. So, inspired by thi hope, we said to him, ' How far down are you going ?" He replied, "Neigh bor, I'm a goin' seventeen hundred and fifty mile." This was a stunner. But we asked, "Where on earth are you ;oing in order lo compass such a great liitance?" "I'm a goin' to the south rn part of North Car 1 y " "Were you brought up in thai State?" wo asked Wdl, yes; but I've been away from tliar twenty-two months and three days' was his reply. Then we said, "Are you going back on a visit I tits lips quiv ered, lhe tears came into his big eyes, and with a genuiue sob he blubbered oul, No, My mammy's sck, and I'm s gun to sec her. 1 to atearea, nomine telegram, she's a goin' to die." Our whole feelings toward him under went a change ! We forgot all aboui his auihhr. his uucouth looks, and his roogli maimer-. lo had a great hie heart in him, and he was going seventeen hundred and fifty miles loses his dying mother, aud that got close to U". Froui thence on we found all about him, He ,i a good, awkward country boy, from the Old North Stale. For months hi had been busy in the cotlon field, and when the news of bis old mother's illness reached him, he dropped everything and started fur hi me. He was possessed ol noble impulses and filial feelings. These more than made up fit his lack of pro priety and the absenoe of cultivated man ners. In his bosom there was a heart that throbbed wilh an unmixed love fel lhe dear old woman that nurtured him in his infancy, aud who had watched over his early chi.dhot.tl Aod iu th hour jf her affliction he did not forget her How easy it is to misunderstand a frllow-manl Had we nut spoken to this boy we would have left bim under wrong impression as to his roal merit, but as it is we will remember him for all time to cine. Thus it is that Providence ol'i en brings us together "as ships that pisbiu tbe oight"; and just a little iff rt will cement a friendship, sweet and abid ing. The boy who goes to see bis dear o d stiff ring mother has something akin to Christ in his bosom! Texas Chtis. tian Advocate. TOLD THE TRUTH ONCE. "After having supplied a moonshine) in South Carolina with a month'a sup ply uf smoking tobacoo," said I govern uient surveyer tbe other day, "I presumed upon the deed to ask : "Didn't you know it was against tin law to mauulaoture uiooushiue whiskey? "I heard (bat it was a law ouce," h replied. "What do you mem by once? ' "Why. Julia treuch tuld metliair was sieh a law, but when I asked Jim Tru mm about it he says that Juba is sieh liar thafcDobudy kin believe him under oath, aud so I reckoned I was safe to ahrtsd. Shoo, but I wonder how Juh oome lo tell the truth lur that one timet" Wheo a woman has a curu Irimmcd these days, it is referred to as a surjoa operation. There pi obably never was a wifeloyi and loving enouch to respect her hus band's wishes in regard to his funeral If a man says something affectionate to his wife in public, she forgives bim for all the mean things he has said iu private in ten years. We all know what it meant to damu wilh faint praise, but there is praise to extravagant as to be damning, and some praiae barely veils t sneer. A WORD TO THE WISE, DON'T WORRY. r IS THE CRAPE ON THE DOOK AN NOUNCING A FUNERAL WHICH If YET IN THE FUTURE, Among t lie good resolutions that might be made for ibis year aud one that ihould be carefully kept is a dotermina- on Dot to wuiry. Sume one has said f the habit of worrying ; "This would he a comparatively hap py world if we did uot suff r so much 'mm things that never happen. How our shoulders ache under tbe weight of burdens we are never called upon lo bear! How our hearts aro wrung by gt ill's that never take shape I'' If no more serious charges could be brought against , worrying would head the list of follies. It costs us an untold amount of unneces sary misery. It takes away the streDgib we need for work. In all its record of accomplishment, it is impossible to point lo a single good result it has brought about. Worry is the nail in the c ffio of the man not yet dead; it is the crape on the door, announcing the funeral, that should not take place for years to come. Worry is the dyspepsia aud indiges tion, brought on, sot from ovet-eatiogor eating too much rich food, but from thinking too niuoh before about what we are going to have to eat, or whether we are going to have anything at all to cat. It is the ovcronat put on as a protection gainst the expected cold wave that turns out to be a warm one; it is the umbrella raised to keep off the rain that turns out to be sunshine; it is lhe oeleslial telescope, which throws inverted images. Worry has never yet brought sunshine to any one, but has times without num- er, caused the sun to pasB behind a cloud, when there was not a cloud to be seen in sky. It has exhaused the strength iu the yesterday, that is needed to push orward the work of to-day. "Sufficient tilo the day is the evil thereof." Let us borrow no trouble, for each day aDd hour will come ladtn with its proper amount f sunshine aud cloud. We have pointed to lhe absurdity of worryiui; and it is now in unlit tor us lo iut the way out uf it. To get rid of the darkness in the room we should not think uf dippiug it out, as we would to much water: we would displace it with lit. If we put worrying under the ad of nonsense, it is easy to under gland that il must be dtiven out by in. ix of Sense. e can uot get rid of worry by an llort ol the will uot to worry, we must drive it oul by seeing that il is absolutely foolish and injurious as well, to worry Anything that would naturally happen will come j ist the same, do matter how much we worry, and if we do worry, the thing will happen in our weakened state of mind. THOUSANDS SUNT INTO EXILK, hvery year a large number or poor si Hirers whose lungs are sore and racked with coughs are urged lo goto another o iuiale. Hut this is oostly auu not al- wivssure. Don't be an exile when 1'r, King's No Discovery for Consumption will cuie you at home It's the most in fallible medicine for coughs, colds, and ill throat and lung diseases on earth. Tbe first dose brings relief. Astound iog cures result from persistent use, Trial bottles free at W. M. Cohen's drug store. Price 50o and f 1, Kvery bottl ganranteed AT THE OTHER END. A certain naval i nicer was Very pom pous and conceited when on duty. Que day when he was eflicer of the watch, and he oould not, as usual, find anything of consiquence to grumh about, he attempted to vent his spite ui one uf the stokers uf the Vessel, who wa to the engine room on duty. 'Going lo lhe speaking lube, the offi oer yelled: "Is there abliiluring idiot at the end nf this tube?" The reply came quick aud startling "Nut at this end, sir I" The leeiincs of the i flieer, aotc turnc awav with a black frown, oan be tetli imagined than described. A PROMINKNT CHICAGO WO MAN SPEAKS. Prof. Roxa Tyler1 of Chicago, Vice President of Illinois Woman's Alliance, in speaking uf Chambei Iain's Cough Remedy, Bays: "I suffered wilh a se vere eold this winter which threatened in run into pneumonia. I tried difTrruit remedies but I seemed to grow worse and thj medicine upset my stomach, A friend advised me to try Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and I found it was pleasant to take and it relieved me at unoe. 1 am now entirely recovered, saved a doctor's bill, lime and suffering, aod I will never be without this splendid mediuiue again." For sale in Weldun by W. M. Cohen, druggist. Sarah Bernhardt, who is 66 yean old aoJsiill youog looking, says that noil, ing agea a person so muoh is being lone tone. Her religion is to avoid beiog lonesome, OLD RED EYE. FOR AND AGAINST. INUERSOLL 8 ECLOOY OP WHIoKEY AND DR. UUCKLEY'S REPLY. "I send you some of the most wonder ful whiskey that ever drove the skeleton from the feast or painted landscapes in the brain of man. It is tbe mingled souIb uf wheat and corn. Id it you will nd the sunshine and shadow that cliaseJ each other over billowy fields, the brealh f the lark, lhe dew of the night, the wealth of summer and autumn's rich con tent, all golden with imprisoned light. Drink H, and you will hear the voice of men and maidens singing tbe 'Harvest Home,' mingled with the laughter of children. Drink it and you will feel within your blood the starred dawns, lhe dreamy tawny dusks of perfect days. For rty years this liquid joy has been with in staves of oak, longing to touch the lips of man." DR J M. BUCKLEY'S REPLY. I send you some of the most won derful whiskey that ever brought a skel eton ioto the closet, or painted scenes of lust and bloodshed in the brain of man. It is the ghost of wheat and corn, crazed by the loss of their natural bodies. In it you will find a transient sunshine, chased by a shadow cold as Arctio mid night, in which the breath of June grows icy, and the carol of tbe lark gives place to the foreboding ory of the raven. Drink it, aDd you shall have woe, sorrow, babbling, and wounds without cause, your eyes shall behold strange women, your heart shall utter perverse things. Drink it deep and you shall hear the voioe of demotiS shrieking, women wail ing and worse than orphaned children mourning the loss of a father who yet lives. Drink it deep and serpents will hiss in your ears, ooil themselves about your neck and seizo you vith their fangs; for 'at last it bitetb like a serpent and stiogeth like an adder,' For forty years this liquid death has been within staves of oak, harmless there as purest water. I send it to you that you may put an ece. my in your mouth to steal away your brains. And yet I call myself your friend." AS IT WILL BE IN 1902. Under the new apportionment, there will be a number of changes in the num ber of Congressmen from the States in 1902. Tbe next House will have 38G members. This table will show the dif ference : 58th 57th Con- Con gress, gress. Alabama 9 9 Arkansas, 7 6 California, 8 7 Colarado, 3 2 Connecticut, 5 4 Delaware, 1 1 Florida, 3 2 Georgia, 11 11 Idaho, 1 1 Illinois, 25 22 Indiana, 13 13 Iowa, 11 11 Kansas, 8 8 Kentucky, 11 11 Louisiana, 7 6 Maine, 4 4 Maryland, 6 6 Massachusetts, 14 13 Michigan 12 12 Minnesota, 9 7 Mississippi, 8 7 Missouri, 16 15 Montana, 1 1 Nebraska, G C Nevada, 1 1 New Hampshire, 2 2 New Jersey, 10 8 New York, 37 34 A'.rth Carolina, 10 9 North Dakota, 2 1 Ohio, 21 21 Oregon, 2 2 Pennsylvania, 32 30 Rhode la'and, 2 2 South Carolina, 7 7 South Dakota, 2 2 lennessee, 10 10 I'elas, 16 13 Utah, 1 1 Vermont, 2 2 Virginia, 10 10 Washington, 3 2 West Virginia, 5 4 Wisconsin, 11 10 Wyoming, 1 1 Total, 386 357 KOKOVKH KIKTY VKAKH Mrs. Winsluw's Soothing Syrup hasbocn used for over fifty years by millions nf mothers for ohildren, while teething, with perlect success. It Boothee the child softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colio, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. It will relieve the poor ltttl sufferer immediately. Sold by druguists in every part of the world. 25 oents bottle. Be sure and ask fur "Mrs. Wins- low's Soothing Syrup," and take do oth er kind. If man haVt a wife, there are a lot of things iie oever Gods out until they happen. EVERLASTINGLY AT IT. IF YOU WOULD SUCCEED. EVERYONE SHOULD HAVE A DEFINITE PURPOSE IN LIFE AND STICK TO THAT PURPOSE. This is the motto of a very successful business firm and it is a good eniub motto in itself, though subject to excep tions aud modifications, as arc all short phrases, If one wuuld succeed in any undertaking he must keep everlastingly at it, or he must at h ast keep his one ob ject always in view, f lie author of lhe phrase lakes no recreation whatever; night and day he pursues his ulject with a considerable degree of success. It is not improbable, that he would have achieved an equal degree ol success, atd been the better fur it, if he had limited his exertions to ordinary business bouts nd had refreshed himself at other times by obange of occupation. But the main thought in his favorite phrase may be heartily commended to young men. They ought to have a defioite purpose in ife and stick to that purpose They should not go to the extreme of carrying busi ness cares home with them and maintain ing only one line of thought and interest. Indeed, for most men an opposite policy is desirable. They ought to find rest and relief from busiuess carts in some form of literature or artistio amusement disassociated from business. They will thus be refreshed aod fitted to pursue their main object with renewed vigor. But they ought to have a definite pur pose in life and they ought to slick to that purpose during working hours. The aimless man is always weak. A lillle discouragement or some more attrac tive prospect sways him from his purpose and he wastes energy in lhe pursuit of many objects instead of concentrating it upon one. But consistency in following one lioo of aclion with one purpose in view presupposes a proper selection at the outset, and this is really the must diffi cult part of lhe problem that besets young men. They may make up their minds to be energetic, persistent, faith ful to an ideal, and yet be led by circum stances beyond their control into the wrong calling or profession. If that should be the case ihey should not stick ev, i lastingly at it, but should correct the error as soon as possible and get the right start. Thereafter they can safely follow the rule laid duwu fur achieving success though even then they may find that the word everlastingly means a little tou much The trouble with all mottoes and prover is Ibat tbey cannot lie tnaue tuiciuie u . , i 'i i -c ey admit ol exceptions or qualifications of any kiod. The wise man accepts the general truth they contain, but does not regard it as nicesarily the whole truth. Keep everlastingly at it" is a good motto to set before tbe ambitious young man, and he would not go very wrong, perhaps, if he should aecept and follow in its literal signification, but he should first make sure that his object ia t good bject and that be ia qualified for bis calling and then ht should oonsider bether he can best attain his purpose by devotiog bis hours of relaxation as well as his hours of business to one ob ject or wether he can make better pro gress by refreshing bis mind at times and devoting only business hours to the attainment of hit ambiiion. Once con- inced that he has selected the right aim d life, be should pursue it unceasingly making even his hours of recreation con- ibute to the attainment of his purpose. With that qualification and in that sense tbe rule "Keep everlastingly at it" may be accepted aa a good business guide. Cut this out and take it to W. M. Co hen's drug store and get a free sample of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver' lab ela. the best ohvsio. Ihey also cure disorders of the stomach, bilious and headache. Hoax That was fierce cigar Jonrs ... . . , it i q gave. Wonder what nranu ue smoseri J on Mother Hubbard. Mother Hubbard? Yes; loose wrapper. indigestion dyspepsia biliousness and the hundred and one simi lar ills caused bv impure blood or inactive liver, quickly yield to the purifying and cleansing properties coiuamcu m Johnstons QUART ottlb. It cures permanently by acting naturally on all organs oi me body. Asa blood-cleanser, nesn builder, and health-restorer, it has no equal Put us in Quart Bottles, and sold at $ each. "TUB MICHIOAN Oft DO COMPANY, Itotnlt. Mick. , . TWwUTanrtMlDflJvarlUa. aje. fj POB SALS BT W. M. COHEN, .WBUHJN.H.O. Contagious Blood Poison There is no noison so hinhlv contagious, so deceptive ami so destructive. Don't be too sure you are cured because all external signs of the disease have disappeared, and the doctor says you are well. Many per sons have been dosed with Mercury and Potash for months or years, and pro nounced cured to realize when too late that the disease was only covered up , ,. . i:i, driven from the like Bogota LikO. glirfaoeto break out again, and to their sorrow and mortifi cation find those nearest and dearest to them have Iwen infected by thia loath aome disease, for no other poison is so surely transmitted from parent to child as this. Often a bad case of Rheumatism, Catarrh, Scrofula or severe skill disease, an old sore or ulcer developing in middle life, can be traced to blood poison con- in eCirty Tho Sin of tho Parent. life, for it remains smoldering in the ys tem forever, unless properly treated ami driven out iu the beL'itining. S. S. S. is the only antidote lor tins peculiar virus, the only reniedv known that can over come it and drive it out of the blood, anil it doe9 this so thoroughly and effectually that there is never a return of the disease to embarrass or humiliate you afterwards. cures Contagious Bioou Poison in any and all 8 1 a g e a ; contains ni mineral to break down vour constitution ; it if purely vegetable and the only blood puri Eer known that cleanses the blood and at the same time builds up the general health. Our little book on contagious blood poison is the most complete and instruc tive ever issued; it not only tells all about this disease, but also how to cure yourself at home. It is free and should be in the hands of everyone seeking a cure. Send for it THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA. GA. Swift's Silver Leaf Lard Lard is used, in one way or another, in the prepara tion of nearly every meal. Its effect on your food is noticeable, and it should always be of the best quality procurable. Swift's Silver Leaf Lard has attained its great popu larity because the quality never varies. It is the stand ard lard of America. Ask your grocer for Swift's Silver Leaf. You will find it thoroughly satisfactory. Swift and Company Chicago St Louis Kansas City St. Joseph Omaha St. Paul Over 150 Branch House in the U. 8. Monuments AND Gravestones. WE PAY the FREICHT andCU AR ANTE E SAFE DELIVERY . . . LARGEST STOCK in the South Illustrated Catalogue FREE. THE COUPER MARBLE WORKS. (Established'1848.) 159 to 163 Bank et., Norfolk Va ov 3 ly. I1ERVITA PILLS Restore Vitality, Loit Vigor and Maihood , Car Im potency, Night Kmlsiloni, Loot of Hen ory, nil waiima aiteuut.p all effects of BoH-abutte orl i I J'fAnerva- tonic nd! ai aJ hinnd nuilciar. ttr intra I tn pink sluw to palel cheat t ana restores timl flrfi of youth. Ity mtill IfSOo Mrboi. 6 boiM forL $8.60, with our bsvnhabls gmumnts to ort) or refund tho money paid. Beud for ciroulat and copy oi our baukaoie guarantee Dood. S--;TI.Ul EXTRA STBENQTtl Positively ffnaraitteed euro for Loss of Power, Varicocele. Undeveloped or Shrunken Organs, Paresis, Locomotor Alalia, Nervous Prtwtra tion, Hysteria, Fits, Insanity, Paralysis and tho Kasmt-s or KicMitT ungi looacco, vnuini oc liquor. By mall In plain pack na. $1.00 0 box, 0 for tft.OO with our bankable iruar fcntee bond to cure la 30 days or rfun4 money paid. Address NERVITA MEDICAL CO. Clinton Jackson 8ts CHICAGO, ILL! For sale by If. M. Cohen, tfehlon N. C. vfcM4L 60 YEARS' , EXPERIENCE i Trup Mr$ tfill CCFVI.IOHTtAC AnvmeiM'Tnllnf s skpirh and diw.ii'iki mnf ijiitcklT asicrtniii our ohHihhi frto wln iliot an liiveiittnti u I'ritim'tty ruiteriLaMn. rnnntiuilcit. Iloiirintrlrtly runmimitlnl. llaiidi ik mi t'ult :tte ont rim. Dlili'Rt niionhy for wnirmj! pni:. l' tents tiiiu'ii ttirmiL'ti Maim L Jy. fooctre m4 eullcs, without charge, iu Uta Scientific Jlmtlm. A hsndsnmely ilrostrated weekly. rsrtMft rtr rotation of any erionude journal. Turtnv W refu-; four nuntks, l Sold by all newdoJwra. MRU Co New Jo.il Jtmuk umm. m t St, Waaaunwa. . t 601 PILLS GO CTS. 1 VI ri
Roanoke News (Weldon, N.C.)
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Jan. 24, 1901, edition 1
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