ft SsiS Msi SV
in IL
fir MfiWL VAX HI ffJTX uKtdr HE
ft Jii II J isu
jDVERTISIISTGh ZRJLTES-moderate.
A. KBSPAPBB FOR TUB PEOPLE
TERMS:-81.60 PKR ANNUM IN ADVANCE
VOL. XL.
WELDON, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1905.
NO. 25
BEAUTIFUL THOUGHTS,
'Vif ;:;iiiiiP'iiitiiiit.M
." M 1(i- nil j'j.ircmrww '''
AYcectablePreparfltionror As
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"Sot Narcotic.
OTnnm
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Mi 3m
iimm .mi?
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facsimile Sifjrmturc of
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The Kind You Have
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Signature
of
OP
i
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Use
For Over
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CAST
IB
mm
Make our Store your headquar
ters during the Weldon Fair.
Visit our store and see the bar
gains we are offering.
H. D. ALLEN & COMPANY,
WELDON, N. C.
NEW FALL AND WINTER STOCK ARRIVING.
ir YOU BEEANYTBINOTHAT IB WORTHY
Ot PKAIBI BI'EAK Or IT. IVKN Ik' TBI'
CANNOT DO A WORTHY DEED YOU8
HELP COMMEND ONE WIIO 1KIIH.
Try to be something In tliii world and
jou will be loLiething. Aim at eiccl-
loooo ant eioellcnoo will bo altaiocd
Tbiaiatlie greatest secret of suoooss and
eminence. "I cannot do ii," novir ac
complished anything. "I will Irj" has
wrought wonders.
We can only give what wo have. Hup-
pineea, grief, gaiety, sadness aro by na
ture contagious. Bring your hoilth and
your strength to the weak and sickly and
so jou will be of use to them. Give
them not jour weakness, but jour energy
so you will receive and lift them up.
No man or woman of the humblest
aort oan really be Btrong, pure and good
without the world being the better foi
it, without somebody being helped and
comforted by the very existence of thie
goodness.
never revenge an itjury. II yon
have an enemy, act kindly to him, and
make him your friend. By little
little, great things are accomplished;
repeated kiodneBaes will soften a heart
of stone.
It is sometimes better to bo im
upon lliao never to trust, Safety is pur
chased at too Jour a rate, when in order
to secure it we are obliged to be always
olad in armor, and to live in perpetual
hostility with our fellows.
lIf ull who hate would love us,
And ull our loves were true,
The stars that swing ahove ue
Would brighten iu the blue;
If cruel words were kisses,
And every scowl a smile,
A better world than this is
Would hardly be worth while;
If purses would untighten
To meet a brother's need,
The load we lictir would lighten
Aliove the grave of greed.
"If those who whine would whistle,
Aud those who languish laugh,
The we would rout the thistle,
The groin outrun the chaff;
If hearts were only jolly,
If grieving were only forgot,
If tears aud melancholy
Were thing that now are nut
Then Love would kueel to Duty,
And all the world seem
A bridal bower of beauty,
A dreAm withiu a dream."
DID YOU CALL inTEAlING, DEN?
AN OLD TALE ItliSKT.
"Htind up, Billy Mason,'' sternly
Said the judgo, "and answer now
To tli o charge the ttato la bringing,
That you stole your neighbor's cow.
Are you innocent or guilty 7
Answer Dow, and mike your plea "
"Maasa Samroio, di la Billio ;
Is you duo forgotten mo?
"Don't yu member 'bout dc cabin
'Bout dc fever in yo bruin,
When yu (bout yu seen yo mammy
Ravin' dar wid all de paiu,
How he sut an' watched an' tended ?
Ef be axed de Lord ter len'
MuBsa yuddcr (olios' chickens
Didyu call hit stcalin' den ?
Hain't us played as boys togedder
Wboo I yust Icr blong ter you?
Mastic Sammie, I remembers
M assie ole an' missus, too,
Don't you 'member 'bout de pantry
Us a sncakin' in as still
Aa a mouse, an' stealin' custard ?
How us Tided, you and Bill ?
In the autumn lime of His lilo when He is neuting the goal of his earthly pi'-
griuiucc bo docs not, as did Lord Byron, take op a despairing wail, and ray:
"My days aro io the sear and yellow leaf,
The fragriiooo and the fruit bavo flown;
The Worm, the canker, and the grief
Are mine alone I"
Hut to tho ountrury He with Addison, exultantly sings to His own soul:
' The stars shall fudo away
The sun himself
flruw dim with ago and sink in yeurs,
But thou shall flourish in immortal youth
Unhurt amid tho war of elements,
The wreck of matter and the ciush of w.irlds."
Suoli will bo the glorious culmination of a life of devotion and solf-eacrifice from
youth to old ago to Christ and Ilia oaUMj. When the autumn of such a life on
oarth is over and the Christum as he faces the winter of death can exclaim exultant
ly with tho Apostle Paul, "I have fought a good fight. I have kept tho faith. I
have finished ui; course; henceforth there ia luid up for me a erown of righteousness
which tho Lord my righteous judge shall givo mc in that day."
It doth not yet appear what wo shall be, but we know that when He shall appear
we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is."
"Don't you 'member massa'a apples
How I olumb de bigges' tree ?
Massa, jedge, you did de watohio',
Den you 'vided up wid me I
WaB hit wrong fer us ter pilfer
All demaiga fum Uncle Ben?
Massa Sammio, yu an' Billie
Didn't call hit stealin' den I
"Massa Sam mie, does yu 'member
When you went to go to war
With a sword, an' file de yankecs,
Dat yu carried Billie dar ?
We wus figbtin' dar togedder,
Massa Sammie, yu an' me,
In a ditch in frunt er Hichmund,
Helpin, Maasa Robert Lee.
"Does yu 'member bow de yaokces
Cut de ration waggins short ?
How yu moB'ly had er plenty
Wid de piga dat Billie oaught ?
low he foraged fer livin'
Ef he brung yu in hen,
What he foun' a roostin' keerless :
Did yu call it stealin' den ?
"Massa Sammie, when a bullet
Split yo face below de eye
When dey lef yu atunned an' bleedin'
On de battle fial' to die,
Do' his arm wus broke an' shattered
Wid a minnie bullet, still
Want he Massa Sammie's nigger
Am yu done forgotten Bill 7
"Massa Sam I got de 'yellin' ";
Billie's ole an' orippled now
Bent an' broke wid ills an' ailins,
Hain't de strangth to hoe an' plow,
Bleeged ter live an' keep a-gwine I
Ef he tuk a 'yellin' ' when
Soul an' body nearly parted,
Wud yu call hit stealin' den 7
Bout tho judgo's head, and softly
Rolled the tears a-dowo his cheek ;
Love has thrown the gage to duty ;
(Is it blood the law wou'd seek 7)
And the charge upon the docket
Blotted is with fulling tears,
And the judge's heart, in roaming
Through the meadows of the years,
Plucks again the boyhood roses
From amid the thorns of life,
Dreams again the peaceful visions,
Hears again the fearful strife,
Till at last his tongue is loosened,
But the tear drops frcoly flow
As he speaks it in a tremor,
"Billie Mason You can go I
"That tho law may not condemn mo,
Massa Sam will pay your fine :
Curce and live with massa'a people ;
(Let the clerk the judgment sign)
Though it wasn't wrong to forage,
Yet it's wrong to steal a cow
(What's tho next oaso, Mr. Sheriff),
And we call it stealing now I"
SHE ALWAYS MADE HOME HAPPY.
THIS EPITAPH WAS PENNED BT A DE
HEAVED UUsDAND, AFTER SIXTY
YEARS Of WEDDED LIFE.
IO? A If W pgHk VEGETAULE SICILIAN
Iti&iLiLv Hair Renewer
why not stop this falling of your hair? At this rate you will soon
be without any hair' Just remember that Hall's Hair Renewer
stops falling hair, and makes hair grow.
Tie Bank of W,
-:::WELI)ON N. C.
OpiM Mer The Lais of the State of North Carolina,
"LO, IT IS NIGH THHI2."
The surprise in life always comes in
finding how we missed the things that
have lain nearest to u; how we have gone
faraway to seek that which was close
our tide all the time. Men who live
best and longest are apt to come, aa the
result of all their living, to the conviction
that life is not only richer but simpler
than it seemed to them at first. Men go
to vast labor seeking after peace and
happiness. It seems to them as if it was
far away from them, as if they must go
through vast and etrange regions to get
it, They must pile op wealth,lhey must
see every possible danger of mishap
gusrded agaiust before they can have
peace. Upon how many old men has
it come with strange surprise that
peace oould come to poor or rich only
rith oontcotmenl, and that they anight
aa well have been oontent at tba very
beginniog as at the very end of lifel They
have made a long jnuroey for their treas
ure, and when at last they sloop to pick
.... 1 .1 . . L ? J - .1.
it np, Id it is mining ciose oeeioe lue
foo'priot which they left when they aet
out to travel in a circle I'hilhpe Brooks.
W
HIS LOVE FOR MO i HER.
GOOD BUSINESS.
The fear of injustice to ihemselvcs is
stronger in moat men than their lo"e of
justice lor einera.
AUGUST 20TH, 1892.
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA DEPOSITORY.
HALIFAX COUNTY DEPOSITORY.
TOWN OF WELDON DEPOSITORY.
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS
$33,000.1
For ten ur this institution his provided banking facilities for thia aeciion
atoekholdan.nil k. k. i,l,.nrifi..,l with the business intereats ol
Illtf-a .n.l W l ... . -. Mn.na in l-tanAf! Iinnn aD
iuu uumiainpioa aoanuen lor roauv ye.. "". -i r
Braved securitv . il l....i p.i. nr ini ner oentum. Aouounts oi all arc
Solicited.
4 President:
f-E. DANIEL.
Vice-President:
Db. H. W. LEWIS,
Jackson, Northampton oonoty, N. C.
Cashier:
W. R. SMITH.
1 1 The largest and best plant in
4 the State.
CI1ATILES MILLER WALSH,
yu.rner and Manufacturer of MON
Tom r q npivil
TOM I? J 1
x, . f ee'y deeoriptioD.
Freight prepaid on til shipments.
ial delivery guaranteed. Write for
mgu and prioos
lajEvAlso Iron Fencing, Vaw
etc., for cemetery and other
Durnoaea t lowest prices.
MJV8A.TIHFACTI0N GUARANTEED.
Work Delivered At Any Depot.
otU lj.
BLOOD WELL TELL.
It tk. lottof viulllv, nervoua fore, and
trtto-th to win a race. Blooa muii ue
Without (rood red blood a man has a
wok htart and Door nerves. Thiimis. of
the blood,, or anemia, is common in m
.H.l ,iih. wi.ttit.ii .nd all those who work
Indoor., wno uo noi g rnitKn -t7P
in ihpir Irnlis. consequently have too
.... ivltit hlnnrl rorOUSCleS.
Keep In. nerve. nouriBircu, me .t
.v tit hritd cool, the stomach vigorous,
the liver active with a tonic which haa
tood the test of time and haa a witle repu
tntion. such as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Tonic, con.istini of lara portion, of
alcohol, Iron or cod liver oil, do not brlng;
the desired changes in the blood, because
they do not enter the .ystem and are not
hwrbed into the blood, with the eicep
i.,M rtf the alrohol. which shrivels up the
red blood corpuscles when it don come in
contact with them. Therefore do not allow
the dealer to insuii your imminent uj
telling you he h. something better than
Dr Pierce'. Ooldrn Medical Discovery.
Tht roil ol mailing only. "The People's
Common Sense Medical Adviser," la large
inure., is sent frtt on receipt of twenty-one
one-cent .tamps, for the paper - covered
book, or thirty one stamps for the clolh.
bound volume. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce,
BulTalo, N. Y. , ,.
For con.tipation, 'he true, Klentific cure
ia l)r Pierce'. Pleasant Pellets. Mild,
kartules., yet aure. No other pill can com
pare with them.
ADTUMN--MPD11DITATIDN.
A LAY SERMON.
"The melancholy days are come,
The saddest of tho year,
Of wailing winds, and nakeJ woods,
And meadows browo and scar."
ILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT sang thus in one of his plaintiff miods
Uoe while perusing those liocs can almost hear the sighing of the
tumn wtnd; the dripping of the steady dowopour of the cold rain from
the roof, and the rattle and the whirl of tho driflinir. fallioe leaves
though the day may be origin, the rays of the sun warm, and the breeto
sou and balmy,
Autumn! How muoh there ia in it tor m to learn and how muob it brings to
usl The thought, how inspiring I It is a reminder of joys onoo realised, but now
forever gone I
Susan Coolidge, in bcr farewell to summer, sang:
"Go rose, since you must
FlowerleBS and chill the winter draweth nigh;
Closed are the blithe and fragrant lips whieh made
All summer long perpetu'l melody.
Cheerless we take our way, but not afraid;
Will not there be more roses by and by?"
The fruit-gathering time is Autumn, spring sows and plants; summer waterr,
cultivates, grows, and matures; autumn harvests, gathers, and stores away. A con
siderate, frugal preparation against cold wioter's time of barrenness and want: and
the poet, Longfellow, sings at its close:
"Gone are the birds that were our summer guests,
With the last sheaves, return the laboring swains."
Autumn ia also a reminder of death and decay. The com, once so luxuriant, has
ripened, withered up and dtodl The lovely fliwera, rich in their sweet fragrance,
but emblems of youth and beauty, have faded and fallerl The forests but so re
cently ao profusely clothed with an abundant wealth of leafy verdure, io a few days
are robed in "hectio flush," and soon thereafter a dull brown indicates that death,
the destroyer, has accomplished bis workl Then soon follows the time
"When falling leaves falling through the motionless a'r,
Or numbly oling and shiver to be gooel"
The "Indian summer is one of tho glories of autumn time. Then is chestnut
timet The shellbarks and the walnut", shooked and hastened on to their falling by
a vigorous chill administered by "Jack Frost" are rapidly drooping. Oh, then, how
delightful it is to spend a day among the forest treesl What r. time for atudeots,
Young men and maidens to bie themselves away on an afternoon and enjoy a romp
among the trees that are busy casting d wn to the rieh products of their summer
growth,
Well did J nomas liucnanao Held, with tne autumn lime in his mind, sing;
"It ia the season when the light of dreams
Around the year in golden glory lies;
The heavens are full of floating mysteries,
Like hidden poems lie the baiy streams,
Mantled with mysteiica of their own romance,
While scarce a breath disturbs their drowsy trance."
But in many respects the autumn time la a representative and remiudur of the
approaching close of man't earthly oareer. As the raya of the Sun become less di
reel, and the days become more cool; as the evening twilight net. in at sn earlier
hour, and the temperature and the shadows invite to the shelter of the home, aud
urge to a closing up around tba open fire, or tho well-wa-.med stove, in like manner
does the orecping on of age ohill and dampen the ardor of youth, atrip outdoor
spoils and athletics of their power of oaltivation, suppress the spirit of frivolity, io
duoe to more serious meditation, and render the quiot of the home and the restful
nos of the evening spent in the sacred precincts of the family circle mire and more
captivating.
It is then that deep down in man's soul there is a realiaition of the truth and th
beauty of the sentiment Paul II. Haync had in mind when he wrote
"Happy the heart that keeps its twilight hour,
And in the depths of heavenly peace reclined.
Love to commune with thoughts of tender power,
Thoughts that ascend like angels beautiful
A shining Jacob's ladder ol the mind."
Then, too, it is that, as the doting days of autumn time divert our attention from
the toila of the field to the garnered barvcat, and the fruita stored np for the winter
a realiaalion of the gradual approach of the close of this earth life, turn the Chris
tian's thoughts away from the busy events, industries and interests of the past and
present, snd fasten! them upon his "tressuros laid np in heaven," upon the "house
not made with hands," upon the "innumerable multitude" seen by St. John in the
Isle of Pattnos, and above all to a high r and nobler appreciation of the Balvatioo
which our Elder Brother Christ Jesus has purohascd for us in our redemption from
Bin and eternal death by His own precious blood.
A plain marble stone, In a New Eng
land church-yard, bears this brief inscrip
tion, "She always made home happy."
This epitaph was penned by u be
reaved husband, after sixty years of wed.
ded life. He might have said of bis de
parted wife, she was beautiful and ao
oompliahcd and an ornament to society
and yet not said she made home happy.
Ho might bavo addod, she was a Chris
tian, and not have been able to say, "She
always made homo happy."
What a rare combination of virtues
and graces this wife and mother must
have possessed How wisely she must have
ordered her house. In what patience she
must bavo possessed her soull How self-
denying she must have beenl How ten
der and loviocl How thoughtful for
the comfort of all about her I
Her husband did not seek bappinosi in
public placeB, because be found purer and
sweeter enjoyment at homo,
Her children, when away, did not
dread to return, for there was no place
to them bo dear as home. There was
their mother thinking for them, and
praying for them, longing for their com
ing. When tempted they thought of her.
When in trouble they remembered her
kind voioo and hor ready sympathy.
When sick, they must go home; they
oould not die away from their dear moth
er. This wife and mother was not exempt
from the oaros common to her place. She
toiled; she suffered disappointments; she
was afflicted in her own person, but yet
she was submissive and cheerful. The
Lord's will concerning her was ber will,
and so she passed away, leaving this
sweet remembrance behind her "She
ways made home happy." Maxwell's
Talisman.
A wiiter who spends his summers at
the seashore tells the following story:
Ao ignorant countryman who saw the
sea for the first time was much impressed
with the effect of the blue water, and
asked a fisherman if he oould tell him
the owner, as he would like to buy a gal
lon to tako home to his wife. Tho fish
erman replied proudly :
"Ub, wo man we own it I"
"Land's aakcB I" exclaimed tho rustic.
"Could you sell mo a gallon for fifty
ocnts?"
"Sure," said the fisherman; and he
disappeared, returning in a few moments
with a jar of water, fur which he received
the countrymun's fifty cents.
Tho latter departed with bis purchase.
Returning later in tho day, after tho lido
had gone out, he gaud iu Bilont wonder
at the water, which had receded far from
the beaoh.
"Lummc I'' he exclaimed, "don't they
do a trade I"
FOR OVKH SIX I V YEARS.
MltS. WlNSLOW s Soothing1 Syhup
has been used for over 60 years by mill
ions of mothers for their children while
teething, with perfect success. It soothes
tho child, softens the gums, allays all
pain; cures wind colic, and is the best
remedy lor Diarrhoea. It will relieve
the poor little sufferer immediately. Sold
Druggists in every part ot the world
Twenty-five cents a bottle. Be sure and
ask for" Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup,"
d take no other kind.
Be swift to hear and think, but slow
to speak, all ye who wisdom s inspiration I
seek I
An An ful Cough Cured.
Two years ago our little girl had
a touch of pneumonia, which left her
with an awful oough. She had spells of
coughing, just like one with the whoop
ing cough and some thought she would
not get well at all. We got a bottle of
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, which
acted like a charm. She stopped cough
ing and got stout and fat," writcB Mrs.
Ora BuBsard, Brubaker, III. Thia remedy
Sold by W. M. Cohen, Weldon, N,
C, W. E. Beavcns, Euficld, N. C , J. A
Hawks, Garyeburg, N. C.
Always say a kind word if you can
if only that it may come in; perhaps, with
singular opportuneness, entering somo
mournful man's darkeocd room liki
beautiful firefly, whose happy convolu
tions ho cannot hut watcb, forgetting h
many troubles.
Nothing to Fear.
Mothers need have no hesitancy i
continuing to give Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy to their little ones, as it contains
absolutely nothing injurious. This rem
edy is not only perlectly safe to gtte
small children, but is a medicine of great
worth and merit. It hu a world wide
reputation for its cures of ooughs, colds
and croup and can always be relied upm.
For sale by W.M.Cohen, Woldon,
N. C , W. E. Boavens, Enfiold, N. C,
J. A. Hawks, Garysburg, N. C.
During fly-time tho dining-room and I
kitchen aro both drawing rooms.
PLANS TO GET Kll'll.
are often frustrated by tudden break
own, duo to dyspcpaia or constipation.
Brace up and take Dr. King's New Life
Pills. They take out tho materials
which aro clogging your energies, and
give vou a new start. Lure headache
nd dizziness too. At any drug i
25c. guaranteed.
The greatest hour in a mau's life is n
that in which the world reeogoiics what
he has done, but the hour in which
his tremendous struggle with obstacles
and ciroumstano a, bis power prevails
against all that stands in his way
Anonymous.
ULLWTRAGIC MEANING
are these lines from J. II. Simmon?,
Casey, III. Think what might have re
sulted from his torrible cough if be h
not taken the medicine about which be
writes: "I had i fearful oough, the1 dis
turbed my night's rtBt. I tried every
thing, but nothing would relieve uotil
I took Dr. Kiog's New Discoviry I
Consumption, Coughs and Colds, which
completely cured me." Instantly relieves
and pormancntly euros all throat and
lung diseases, prevents grip and pneu
monia, At any druggist; guaranteed
DUo, and ll.UU. Trial bottle free.
The following story of Admiral Dewoj
is told by one of the sailors who returned
on the Raleigh : Just before the battle
of Manila, when the order was given to
strip fur action, tho smallest powder-boy
on the flagship dropped his ooat over
board, Ho asked permission to jump
Tier it. but was refused. He went to
the side of the ship, dropped overboard,
recovered his coat, and was promptly
arrested for disobedience. Admiral
Dewey spoko kindly to tho youngster,
who broke down uud said that tho ooat
contained his mother's picture, which he
hadjust kiwed, and he oould not boar to
see it lost. Dewey's eyes filled with tears;
be fairly embraocd the boy and oderord
In in released, Baung, "Hoys who love
their mothers cneugh to risk their Uvea
for ber picture cannot be kept in ironi
on this fleet." Philadelphia Reeord.
DO YOU GET UP
WITH A LAME BACK?
Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable.
Almost everybody who reads the news
papers is sure to know of the wonderful
cures made by Dr.
Kilmer's Swamp-Root,
the great kidney, liver
and bladder remedy. !
it is tne great medi
cal triumph of the nine
teenth century; dis
covered after years of
scientific research by
Dr. Kilmer, the emi
nent kidney and blad
der specialist, and ts
wonderfully successful in promptly curing
lame back, kidney, bladder, uric acid trou
bles and Bright's Disease, which is the worst
form of kidney trouble.
Dr. Kilmer s bwamp-KOOl is not rec
ommended for everything but if you have kid
ney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found
Just the remedy you need. It has been tested
in so many ways, in hospital work, inprivata
practice, among the helpless too poor to pur
chase relief and has proved so successful in
every case that a special arrangement has
been made by which all readers of this paper
who have not already tried it, may have a
sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book
telling more about Swamp-Root and how to
find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble.
Vhen writing mention reading this generoui
offer in this paper and
sena your aaaress ia mvh-rr?
Dr. Kilmer L Co.tBing- P&i t.W,
hamton, N. Y. The5
regular fifty cent and Hon of Bwnmp-Roo,
dollar sizes are sold by all good druggists.
Don make any mistaKo, but remember
the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton,
N. Y., on every bottle.
Il
J. A. ALSTON
FINE
CASTOR I A
For Infanta and Children.
he Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the .f5rr
Signature of twWZTlSt
Family Groceries,
PROVISIONS
Cigars and Tohncco.
Fine Whiskies
AND WINES'
Merrimac Club and Pride of Virginia, nice
And mellow. Bar stocked with Choice)
Drinks of every kind.
Cor. Washington Ave., and First Street,
Weldon N. 0. 10-21-lf
Tho fover of lust t. ':es away the appe
tite for the food of love.
He need never despair who faces
ficulty under Divine dircctiou.
dif-
OA8TOHIA.
n I, a The Kind Vou Ham Mwarc Booctlt
The introduction of a half-cent
would be a diro misfortune to the
day school.
piece
Sun-
Neuralgia
And Other
Pain
All pain
nerve pain
disease is
DID YOU
SAY DRINKS ?
Well you will find
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RYE, PURE OLD
APPLE BRANDY
and Sparkling wines,
Where, YouAsk?
WHY AT
W. D. SMITH'S,
Washington Ave.,
WELDON, - - N. C.
Fnll line groceries always on hand.
in any
the result of a tur
bulcnt condition of the nerves.
The stabbing", lacerating-,
darting-, burning-, agonizing
pain that comes front the prom
inent nerve branches, or sen
sory nerves. i9 neuralgia, and
is tho "big trothcr" ot U lit
other nains.
Dr. Miles' Anti-rain Tills
rarely ever fail to relieve these
pains by soothing; these larger
nerves, and restoring their
tranquility.
Dr. Miles' Anti-rain Pills
leave no bad after-effects, and
are a reliable remedy for every
kind of pain, such as headache,
backache, stomachache, sciat
ica, rheumatism and neuralgia.
They also relieve Dizziness,
Sleeplessness, Nervousness,
Car-Sickness, and Distress af
ter catinc.
'Fnr mnnv vearfl 1 h&Vft boon a. eon-
atant sufferer from neuralKla and
headache, and have never been able
in nhtaln nnv rollcf from varloua
headache powdeis and capsules, until
I tried fir. Wtlna' Antl-Paln PUIS.
They always euro my headache In rlv.
mlmitea time." FRED R. 6WINOLEY.
Cashier 1st Nat Bank, Atklnaon, Neb.
Dr. Miles' Antl-Paln Pills an aold by
your druggist, who will guarantee that
the first pacKage will Benefit.
Valla he will return vour money.
25 doeet. 25 cents. Never told In bulk.
Miles Medic?l Co., Elkhart InJ
Of Course
You Can Live
WITHOUT TELEPHONE
SERVICE
BUT YOU DON'T UVEAS
. M i..i in. i I,,.,..
MUCH AS YOU MIGHT
BECAUSE
Telephone Service
SAVES TIME
And Time is the Stuff of Life.
For Rates
APPLY TO
LOCAL. MANAGER op
Home Telephone) and
Telegraph Company,
I HENDERSON, . . f,. C.