tin j-j
It':' .-
JtllT W. SLEIDO-E, PROPUIETOB.
A. NEWSPAPER IT O 13 THE PEOPLE
TEBMSHl-50 PER ANNUM IN ADVANCE
)L. XXXVII.
WELDON, N. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. 1902.
NO. 20
r. 5 : J
era
1
JltoI
o Kind You Have Always Bought, and which 1ms been
n use for over 30 years, hna borno the uttrnatnro of
I ri - and has been niarto under his pcr-
JJ&7'fjL, "onal supervision lnco it Infancy.
Saf7Y. UCAtK Allow no one to deceive yon In this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and" JuNt-as-good" are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
lufituts and Children Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castorla Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
porlc, Drops and Soothing1 Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other NarcotiO
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverlhucss. It cures Dinrrluea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend.
Genuine CASTOR A always
Bears the Signature of
- A LITTLE SHOP TALK.
si
'he Kind You Haie Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THI ffTMIft OMIMNV. Tt HUUf tmctT, NtW VM OW
Cures Cbolera - Infanltim,
Diirrhota.DyitnUry, ana
th Bowel Troubles oi
Children of Any igt.
Aids Dlgutien, Regulates
iht Bowel, Strengthens
the Child ami Makes
TEETHING EASY.-
M. D. ST. LOUIS, MO.
Olfinni O. ft. Hun-. fWMtir nl Htatt. ATiim. Tut.. Km. SI IMIfl.
ItuTSfoatid Dr. Moffftt'iTKKTlIINAa intend i4 rsasdf sind id for bt tithing cuildrtn. Whsa my oldtfft
n st Hwtuinf caiia, wwj sxwaiar aj wtrtMa as mm ws wouia uuvitaoir iom mm. i DkppsnM upon
Hi IN A, tail Dtftn ftteno 4VlmlBiJUnnt it U him, sad his lmproatBnt wm tntv ksd is 14 hours, and from
dr o ho rtcuMraWd. 1 btro ooniuaU kept Hand ik4 It sIbc with mj children, ft&d bv taken grotl
urtilBMaadlBg 1m nniMt to sll BMiwn f joobi obUdrasV lloudU snraiMblssTtn after the tthuii
1 tu pswad. 1LU8. 1. U. HAHDY.
pMT. Costs Osly 25 cents at Drug gists
Or m&U 15 mm to C. J, MOFFITT,
ft
The.Weldon Grocery Co.
n
WHOLESALE JOBBERH IN
STAPLE & FANCY
GROCERIES
HB-Wt Sell Only To Merchant.
Orders Solicited. THE WELDON GKOCEItY CO ,
2 8 It wgi.ooN.N. c.
The Newspaper a Good Index
To the Town As is the Pa
per So Are the People As a
Rule A Community Judged
By the Paper it Supports.
Aslievillo Citizen.
Tho Cilij'D in doing pretty well jut
now, 1 1 1 u r k you, no what it in nliout tn
miy i" no tticcinl tipplinjiiuo In ihclf.
We liove boon ItiMli'il pmty well fur li e
mutt ptl ii ml would not therefore be
UDderriood an registering Lick. Tliere
are Boiiiw enern' observatioon, however,
that c would like to tuuke, applicable to
ill new.'papei8, especially those in small
towns.
A newKj aper is a good iodex to a
town. At u the paper an are the people,
M a petty rale rule.
As a atreHm cannot rifte above its source,
so newspaper m l be no better than its
coniitilueucy.
mat la to say, 11 a towu haa a pin
paper, it ij, as a rule, because it will not or
cannot tupp rt a pood ooe. And the
chances are that it will not support much
of anything else On the oilier hand, if
a town has a iood paper it is becausn it
gives it food supputt, auil us a rule its a
good town to move to or invest in. There's
business ami public spirit there.
Business men ofien complain that tin ir
looal paper is not doing all they think it
ought in its columns toward building up
tbe town or that it is doing too much for
some rival place. Yet it not infrequently
happens that these very men aie the first
on some whim or pretext, to withdraw
support from their local paper. Tbey
hive even been known to transfer it to
soma out-of-town publication. Be it said
in their dt fenac, however, they do not
always realiiu that in doing so they are
hutting a home enterprise.
The work of building up a town
reciprocal and co-operative. Its vauous
interests must, as uear as possible, stand
together.
Would you have in ycur newspapers
something to be proud id ? Then give
them i suiipoit that will enable them to
be such. Would you have them a stand
ing advertisement cf the excellence, tl e
enterprise, the posperity and tbe growth
of your town? Stand bebind them aid
thrv be all that von could ask.
It wnu'd bo difficult to point out an
in'tanee where u town has grown into
importance that its growth cannot be at
tributed largely tn the work of its news
papers. The newspapers, above all el e
Lin a town, should receive the hearty sup
port of their own people.
HO W TO KEEP YOUNG.
I-VISIT OB WRITE-si
The Petersburg Furniture Co.,
20.1 AND 207 N. SYCAMORE ST.
PETERSBURG, VA.
mm
41 111 i I
iTirr i ?i fi
ill 1 1, f wrr -siMMj
' r;i if . m u f
a W, .ill I I
'
THE HUSTLING AND Ul'-TO-DATE LEADERS IN
FURNITURE, CARPETS, STOVES
AND GENERAL HOUSE FURNISHINGS.
A. J. "WIN F I KLI)t PRESIDENT Si MANAGER
.Special Attention to Mail Orders. oct 3 lv.
THE STRANGER.
Isn't A Wife's Place With Her
Husband, Especially In The
Days Of Trouble ?
,-JalliSr-Js:.4t
n:JiiJtal.l J'-:l
H
EKcelsior Printing Co.
WBLIDOIT, 1ST. O.
m
m TiAtfftr. "Rill and Pankfit Heads m-
m Weddiner Invitations. m
Circulars, Hand Bills, Etc.
fiortd n n rnnt" nrdprs All KS
wi i' SVUV MW J V V W WA IWw -l l
M oraers receive prompt ana
A.1 -1A A.1
Tk Bank i W,
-::r,.:WELDON, IN. C.I-
Orpiiizei Unier Tie Lai. of tie Stale of Hortk Carolina,
AUGUST 20TII, 1892.
8TATK OP NORTH CAUOUSA DEPOSITORY.
HALIFAX COUNTY DKl'OSITORY.
TOWN OF WELDON DKPOSITORY.
CAPITAL UNO SURPLUS $26,000.
i . . t .(i.l ,i.r.. r. .rir.l, f-. nAAr.
Wl My .! .MM IIMillUIIWU IIW UIWIIUUU WMIMM WWHMW 4U. iUM avw.k
stockholders and dlrootoH have been identified with the buaioess interests of
I Initial and Northampton oountiet for man; years. Monej in loaned upon ap
roved seouritt at I ha h'cril rata of interest six oer ocutum. Acoounts of ill ire,
iolieited.
President: . " Vioe-Presidenl: Csshier
fH. K. DANIEL. Dn. J. N. RAMSAY. W. B. 8MITB,
Seaboard, Northampton oounly, N. 0.
D
K
P
LIU
OPINION
SYDNOR k HUNDLEY, for values ttue, ire uosurp.faed tbe. city through
XieWioglonoDe, for stjles, the choicest FURNITURE waits for JoTJ"
Durable and elegant, ornate or plain, suoh Suite elsewhere we aoflk in vaiJ
IToted for UPH0L8TERY, here we fiod a grand collection of every kinJJ
Ofoemeotal DRAPERlES.it iekr own well, in perfect taste, they excJ,
Rightttfll K. Broad St, of MIRRORS& PICTURES, the stook'seomplctB
(Sc lor beauty Si quality we ean ro'y on all SYDNOR A HUNDLEY do suppllf
This erreat store is 709-711-n3
E Broad street, Richmond, Va
The prolh m of how to keep joun,', i r
to keep (rum lootiiiL' old, ha enatitii
the tbiufihts of buth men and women
ever io?e the orld bean. Women es
pecially havo shown a deep interest in
the vexatious matter, fur their influence
with men haa always depended much on
physical frenhneas and beauty Numer
ous writers have ciintritiuted their views
l) to defying the riddle uf the ravages of
time. The latest ntll-knnwn writer to
dUeourfe on the liuiiii.r theme ia Max
O'ReX Without giving a recipe lor
the prewrVAiion of bi'HUty, M. Blouet
drops n any uvful Iiimh as tu the cauats
which lead to tho unuatutally eurly dis
appear ce of youth in aume people. Bad
tem; tr an 1 a lack of l.uuior are, in his
op nton, the two greatest memirs of
youth aod beamy. Max Oltell tliiriki
with the aid of a sense of humor and
good tempera woman van be young and
beautiful until 511. After 50 be can
off r no a liiee on the pubjeot.
(Ml
lust within her erajp
ia safety but alie
dote not see it ; she
ia looking the wrong
way. There'a many
'g a wuninil auiiKXKHK
In sea of illarMe
who ia doing tho
same thing
I LI h- M.
fif anatclntlK at
'TyfJ medicinal
i ST atrewa when the
life buoy, I)r.
iPierce's Favorite Preacrip
tion ia within her reach.
Many a woman baa testi
fied : "I know I should
not be alive to-day but for Dr. Tierce'a
Favorite l"reacription." Thia famous
medicine eatabliahea reg-.ilartty, driea
weakening drains, bcala inflainmation
and ulceration, and cures female weak
ness. Week and aick women, eanecially those
suffering from diseases of long standing,
are invited to consult Dr. Pierce, by letter,
fret All correspondence ia held a
strictly private and sacredly confidential.
Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
I Uke nknaurt la writlna toW m know
the rtmI Rood I received fnwn jrour ' Favorite
Prescrinliou ' and your ' Pleaiant Pellets. ' aavs
Mr.. Nora O.ditic. of Rio. Han Co., Kr. I
took seven or eiaht tiollles of ' Favorite Fretrrlp
tion 1 and one ur two vials of the ' i'ellett.'
Think 1 would have tieen in my grave had ft
not been for vour medicines. It naa ten about
four month, aince I took the laedkine. I was
all run down, had loss of appetite, could not
aleen at uivht. waa nervom. bad backache.
black apota on my llmlia, and aick headache all
the time. 1 have not had aick headache stiwe I
took your tueuiciue. l
"Favorite Prescription" makes weak
women ttroiig, sick women well. Accttit
no aubatitiue fur the medicine which
works won.lers for weak women.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cur dit
iluess and aick head&che. '
"LOOK OVER THE HARNESS FIRST,"
ini.wrr-'rnTrB tra.l usn w .sn ur. :rwin tia "
'a,knja,.dnrsi.aiiuauratK:aaKi,4iin,tfua:.ii;.aw;la
When old Uncle John starts off to town
He looks at the straps with care;
"For you never can tell," says Uncle John,
"What trouble there may be there.
I've saved a runaway many a time
Where worst might 'a' come to worst
By simply not forgettin' to just
Look over the harness first."
Is there not a lesson that he who starts
To scattor wild oats away
May learn from the plan of Uncle John
Which will stand him in stead some day ?
In setting forth on the long trip where
There's many a break and burst,
Make sure, as nearly as mortal may
"Look over the harness first."
And for him and for her who take the step
That must lead unto joy or woe
The plan that is followed by Uncle John
Is a good one on which to go.
There are many weary women and men
Who are counting themselves accursed
Because they didn't, before the start,
"Look over the harness first."
For him and for her who have come to the place
Where the ways appear to part,
The lesson we learn from Uncle John
May well be taken to heart.
The joys they have lost may lie ahead;
Perhaps when the bond is burst
The eyes that are sad may brighten hut
"Look over the harness first." "
Hi
In war and love there are many defeats "H
Which lead to shame and despair,
That never had conte if the buckles and reins
Had only been kept in repair,
Whoever you are, if its glory or gold,
Or power for which you thirst,
Try Uncle John's plan, when its time to set out
look over the harness first."
!
a
atur'
GOD WILL SPRINKLE THE SUNSHINE.
If you should meet a fellow-man with trouble's flag unfurled,
An' lookin' like he didn't have "a friend in all the world,
Go up and slap him on the back, d holler "How'd you do?"
. i 1 , I 1 . 1. ..'11 U 1. 1 f . - .1 .
AUU grasp ulS lianu so wurm ne 11 k. t v ub una a lneuu in you.
And ask him what's a hurtin' him, anaugh his cares away,
And tell him that the darkest night is just before the day.
Don't talk in graveyard palaver, but say it right out loud,
That God will sprinkle sunshine'in the trial of every cloud.
This world at best is hut a hash of pleasure and of pain.
Some days are bright and sunny, and some all slashed with rain
And that 8 just how it ought .-mc, ror wnen tne clouds roll by
We'll know just how to 'predate the bright and smiling sky.
So learn to take it as it conies, and don't sweat at the pores
Because the Lord s opinion doesn t coincide with yours;
Rut. nlwnvskeen rememberin' when cares vour oath enshroud.
That Got! has a lot of sunshine to spill behind the cloud.
James Whitcom Riley.
THE REASON.
A iei.)sii'r t Umd a priie recently
for the beat answer to the question
"What are the reasons that keep wo
man fruui marrying?" A horrid, cynical
male orcituro curried off tine of I ho prii'i
with a list of sixteen "reasons," Among
thca were : ' .
Her Inability to make up her mind.
The horror of being "given away."
Tho unhappy result of nioil tnuriiagcs.
The fascination uf continuous flirtation.
The uncertain quality of a husband's
temper.
The glory of never having accepted a
proposal.
The scarcity of desirable, or even tol
erable men.
Her satisfaction in aajinjiJ'oii," when
she means "yen."
The saving in huumn life through the
absence of bad cookery
The ebjectiooabls clause in the mar
riage service relating to obajience.
Her nstural nnselfishness places the
hsppiness of the man sbe loves before
her own, and eho remains tieglo.
Do you belong to the Law aod Order
Society ? Yes, sir; anybody yon want
lynched?
It takes two people to make a quarrel)
but a dui;n or more generally take t
hand ia it before it is patched up.
LINGERING SUMMER COLDS
Don't let a eold run at this season Sum
tuer colds arc the hardest kind to cure
and if negleoled may linger on for
months A lung scige like thia will pul
down the strongest constitution. One
Minute Cough Cure will break up the at
lack at once. Bale, Bute, acts tt once,
I'ures coughs, colds, croup, bronchitis.
ail throat and lung troubles. The crjit-
dten like it.
W. M. Cohen.
It takes a otrjao td wear a ball drct;
and then kick about the immodesty
the bathing suit,
A REMARKABLE RKCORD.
Chaimbcrlain's Cough Raedy has
remarkable record, it nas been id use
for over thirty years, during which lime
many million bottles have been sold end
used. It has long been the standard an
mam reliance in tne treatment oi croup
in thousand of homes, yd during all this
time no case has ever been reported
the manufacturers in which it failed
effect a cure, W hen given as soon
the ohild becomes hoarse or even as soon
u the croupy oough sppears,.it will pre.
venl tbe sttaok. It is pleasant to tak
many ohildren like it. It contains
opium or other harmful tubstanco im
may be given as conSdently to baby as
to an adult.
For sale at W. M. Cohen's drug store
The young mother stepped into the
city church with the baby in her arms,
and took her scat in the pew by the door.
Tho grand organ was pealing out its
notes, ami the little one had a frightened
look in its wco face; but lilting it up to
ward the mother's, its little heart was
soon assured by her smile that it was all
right, nnd trustingly it nestled in her
arms and listened to the singing of tho
hymn. When the preacher began the
sermon it had fallen asleep. It was the
first Sunday in thn month, and the day
that the Lord's Sunner whs nilnilmttprpr!.
Through the nassins of the hrxail ar il P'1
wine the little one slept on, aod as the
mother partook of the sacred emblems s
new light came into her face. It wss
such a comfort to meet once more around
the Lord's table with His followers, ni t
withstanding ihey were strangers; and
when the time came for the closing hymn
the preacher gave out that one which
Busgests so much of Christian love aod
Christian companionship :
"Blest be tbe tie that binds
Our hearts in Christian love."
The baby woke in the last singing, aod
the mother slipped out as quietly as sbe
came in.
"I went to oommunion to-day, John,"
she said, as she went into tbe room of
tenement house. "I felt as if it would
bring strength and comfort to me. The
aby was just as good as he could te
too. I don t know wbat folks thought
of my taking the baby to church; nobody
takes babies to church. But somehow I
felt such a nearness to the Lord and it
seemed as if His real presence was with
trie, that I did not feel out of place with
baby in the strange church. 'Commit
thy way unto the Lord,' John. That
verse came to me so many times to-day.
Let us trust Him, and things, I believe.
will change to the better."
The father was playing with the baby
while the mother talked to bim. He
was one of those men who are out of
work, and times were hard and money
almost gone no bright outlook was be
fore him.
"Ah, what a pity, Wary, that i ever
brought you here to this great, heartless
city, where no ooe cares for us I"
You know, John, I could not let you
come without mc. Isn't wife's place
with her husband, especially in the days
of trouble? If you had only gone with
me to tho communipn today you would
have got help and cheer, I know."
John shook his bead.
"I've pretty nearly lost all my faiih
Mary," he said, sadly, "Things have
gone so wrong with me, and it is so
strange, when I am willing to work and
want work, that I cannot get anything to
do." '
"Maybe to-morrow, John, will bring
us better things. We only live by the
V, and let us trust in the Lord this
beautiful day of His, and perhaps you
will go to-nii-ht with me to the church.
The minister seems to be so kind-bcartcd
and said such comforting words this
morning. Tho baby will bo sure to sleep
through the sotvioe."
Wneu the organ pealed lortb the an.
them of praise John and Mary, wil
the baby cuddled up close to her breast
slipped into the last pew by the door,
There was a look of relief in the mother
ly face of a lady who sat in one of th
tide seats, and she whispered to the elder
ly man next to her. It was somethio
bout tho father and mother who bad
come with the baby to church, for they
turned their eyes in the direction of
John and his wife and the baby sleeping
so quietly. When the services were over
the lady hurried out of the church and
touched the young mother on the shoul
der.
"I am glad to see you," she said,
i gentle voice. "I hope you will come
again. Are you a stranger here ?"
Tbe tuara came to the youug woman
eyes as she said :
"Yes, wo are atraogora this ia
liuaiiaud,"
And then came t pleasant bit of talk
which the good minister saw from
place down by the pulpit, and he name
up to tbe little circle and took, the names
and address of the strsngers in the po
and said he would call on them. i
The father and mother passed on cut
of sight, and as the cojd child of God
walked by the minister's side she said :
"I raw that woman at church this
morning with her baby; I watched her
partake of the communion, and there
was something so sad about the face that
my heart went right out to her. She
went out of church before the service
was quite ended. When I got borne I
elt so sorry that I could not have spoken
a word to her. I felt that there must be
a stress of some kind to bring her to
church with her baby. Oh, I am so
glad that she came again, for I am ture
she needs us in some way I"
The next day the minister aod the
mothcrly-fnocd woman went to see John
ind Mary. John was oat, tai to these
Christian friends the young wife opened
her heart. She told how John was los
ing faith because of his repeated disap
pointments, and how anxioui she (elt for
bim.
"We must find your husband work,'
said llie minister. "The members of the
household of faith should always be
ready lo help each other."
The niiuisUr sent for John tho next
afternoon, for a situation had been found
for him in a lurgo wholesale sloro, the
proprietor of which was uu ifficir in the
church.
The Lord's command had been ful
filled, the stranger had been taken in and
Christian love and help had been given,
The next comtnuoion season Joho and
Mary handed in llitir letter from tbe
couutry church and united with tbe peo-
THE WOMAN WHO WEEPS,
When Real Trouble Comes,
She Is No Good.
e of the Lord and found a church home.
nd could sing f:om their hearts :
Blest bo the tie that binds
Our hearts in Christian love."
I am not goiog to speak now of the
woman whose hear! is bowed down with
grief, the woman who weeps because her
heart is full. The paiticular woman I
have in mind is the human watering pot
whose tears will splash down her cheeks
at the slightest notice and sometimes at
no notice at all.
She is usually a woman of great feel
ing or fancies Bhe is. "I feel so much.
am so sympathetic," Bhe quavers, and
even as she Bays this the moisture eomes
to her eyes.
II a girl announces her engagement,
she cries. If tbe same eirl breaks it off,
cries again. If she hears of the
death of a caterpillar, she will weep buck
ets, and when she is enjoying a novel she
does so from first chapter to last with
damp wad of a handkerchief packed
tightly in her hand. Everything may
be goiog dead wrong in her house from
attic lo cellar. The children may be
screaming and the servants quarreling,
but Bliil she weeps on, bowed with grief
at the death of the heroioe.
And when real trouble oomos do you
suppose this most sympathetic woman is
any good? Not a bit of it. She sits
on s stool and enjoys the utmost luxury
of weeping while the victim of it all goes
about dry eyed with her heart almost
breakiog trying to do the work of two.
OWES HIS LIFE TO A NEIGH
BOR'S KINDNESS.
Mr. D. P. Daugherty, well known
throughout Mercer and Sumner counties,
W. Va., most likely owes his life to the
kindness of a neighbor. He was hope
lessly sfflicted with diarrhoea; was at
tended by two physicians, who gave him
little, if any, relief, when t neighbor
learning of bis serious condition, brought
him a bottle of Chamberlain's Colio,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, which
cured him in less thau twenty-four hours.
lor sale at W. M. Cohen a drugstore,
Weldon, N. C.
A vr'Wtnble liquid for rrovertiinir oi
equali.iii the fl-ov of women's mense?
winch iK-eiir once in every lunnr month.
BRADFXELD'S
1 emale Regulator
is the essential quality of powerful herbs.
It is a concentrated essence best adapted
for worneu's delicate organism, and put in
such form that it is always properly
assimilated and taken into the system.
:toipa;:es, sttrmressioii, paiuful or other
irrti-.mr.iy or the menses auu sickly hows
corrected and cured by the retrulai
use of this supenor eninienagogue.
Menstruation, or periodic flows, neces
sitate n breaking down of cells lining the
mucous membrane and a reconstruction
after every sickness, which is accompa
nied with marked congestion and loss of
blood. Such changes are very apt to pro-
juce Ciiromc catarru. leucorruea or
Whites is the result of these irritatinff dis
charges. Regulator cures these troubles
and restores to perfect health the patient
who suffered tbe debilitating losses.
Jiuy ot druggists. Jji.co per bottle.
Onr- illustrated book mailed free.
"Perfect Heath for Women."
TH: BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, 9M.
Some people only tell tho truth when
it is disagreeable.
Ilea-i il.)
. V. 'x'1 O S3. X A a
olltkiMl You lbs Always t
We alwsys manage to get slong with
out the things we can't get.
FOR OVER SIXTY YEARS
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been
used for over sixty yean by millions oi
mothers for children, while teething, with
perfect sucoess. It soothes the child.
softens the gums, allays all pain, cures
wind colio, and is the best remedy for
Diarrhoea. It will relieve the poor little
sufferer immediately. Sold by druggists
in eiery part of the world. 25 cents
bottle. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Wins-
low's Soothing 8yrup," and take do oth
er kind
A NAN'S IDEA.
"Marriage often changes a man's ideas
of life."
"Yes, few men see things the same
after exohanging views with their wives.'
Brooklyn Life.
Thought So Herself Aod the dido t
cet mad when her husband oalled her
a fool? No. She married him, you
know.
. ,r..'-itfr-aaiiai
tSJELLQW.POISQS
in your blood ? Physicians call
it flalarial derm. It can be seen
changing red blood yellow under
microscope. It work day and
night. First, It turns your com
plexion yellow. Chilly, aching
sensations creep down your
backbone. You feel weak and
worthless. e
ROBERTS' CHILL TONIC
will atop the trouble now. It
enters the blojd at once and
drives out the yellow poison.
II neglected and when Chills,
Fevers, Night-Sweats andageri
eral break-down come later on,
Roberts' Tonic will cure you
th?n but why wait? Prevent
future sickness. The manufac
turers know all about this yel
low poison and have perfected
Roberts' Tonic to drive it out,
nourish your system, restore
appetite, purify the blood, pre
vent and cure Chills, Fevers and
Malaria. It has cured thous
andsIt will cure you, or your
money back. This Is fair. Try
It. Price, 25 cents.
Sold bv ALL DRUGGISTS.
" aU
"W Early Risers
The famous) little) pill.
DYSPEPSIA
For lx yer I wu a Ttcilm of dy
Mwla In its worst furm. 1 could cat nolbitiff
hut milk toast, and at time t my sunnui h would
Dot retain and digest even iliut Last March 1
began taking CASCAKKTS and since then 1
have steadily improved, unlit 1 am as well a I
ever wu Id my life."
IMViu il- mukpht, ncwara, i.
ff CATHARTIC jl
riWWini rsuBifcaiuie, niwim, J mow uwu. "v
Qoud, Merer Hioken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, iito, 600.
. CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
fttwliaf UmaUf CMtuf, Chit. MbmIimI, m. SI I
HA Tfl DIP Bold and piaranteed br aU drug-
Constipation
Does your head ache ? Pain
back, of your eyes? Bad
taste in your mouth? It's
your liver ! Ayer's Pills are
liver pills. They cure consti
pation, headache, dyspepsia.
25C. All dnij;iU.
Want jroar mouxarba or board, a baaatlfal J
hnvi or rich black? i l i, iia I
for the
laker
niiniitimiaaiiA rwrt
DUbMHUriHIllO UILwr.li
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what yon eat.
Th's preparation contains all of tbe
dinestanw and digest!) all kinds of
food. It Rives Instant relief and never
fails to cure. It allows vou to eat all
the food you want. Tho most setmlUve
stomachs can take It. uy Its use many
thousands of dysneptlcs have beeo
cured after everything else foiled. H
unequalled for the gumiach. Child
ren with weak stomach", thrive on it.
First dose relieves. AdletunnoccRsary.
Cures all stomach troubles
Propnm) nnl vhj 1. 0. DrWiTT Co., dhliwiro
Ttie It buVlie'cuuialua t)i tlmua the 50c. aiaa,
W.M, Cohen, Driiggut,
IvinsrtYSil
SCIENTIFICALLY Distilled
NATURALLY AGED,
ABSOLUTELY PURE,
Best ttad Safest fur all uses.
Fur Sale By
V
W. D. SMITH, x Weldoa,N
Cate KUnute Cou"!i Csro
For Coughs, Colds and Croop,
DE.STAINBACK,
NOTSRY PUBLIC.
WlI.DOK, N. 0
gaJUBoanoke News Offle.
ttif..' Js-it