t
1
Advertising Rates Made Known on Application.
A NEWSPAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
Terms of Subscription$lc-G ' tr Ai rtnr
VOL. XLII.
WIXDON, N. ( '.. TIiriisDAY. FKI.l.rAl.Y UMKs.
NO. 1 1
tsstss
THE WATERMELON. - THR MESSAGE 'MUSIC,
lll: , j E 9lJ
1
so
1!
5d5
WO
-act
;o.
Ait
Africa is the Original Home
This Luscious Fruit.
of ,
HY FRANK I.. STANTON.
THE HUMAN HEART.
This Is a Subject which (let Vry
Sear To Us All.
GIRL FROM ALABAMA.
A Dapper Youtij; Man (lets !r
Trouble Trying to Flirt.
Weak Women
For Infants and Children.
JIM'OIIUL 1 PKH rifUl'n
AVcgelaWf PrcparartonforAs
similaiiiiOiiicFood.iniiRfdi!
ling II Stomachs andBoweW
Promoli'sDiftMHonOwifiit
ness ana i(wu on ami stem
Opiitm.Morphirie norMinftiL
wot Narcotic.
fn,i,i W-
Jtxitam
Jkistftti
lmmnat-
Mm Sttim
Anttfrcl Iforaedv forronsllpa-
Hon . Sour StonMch.Dlarrtoea
Worms jConvulswiis.revensli
nessandLOSS OF Sleep.
facsimile Signature of
NEW YOHK.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
Oji) Guaranteed uno""
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
M - I III"
Aw
J For Over
Thirty Years
mm
ernr.
TMtHKTtURUHNNT, NEW
IOE
30E
0X
Day I'iiosk '.'..
N'Kim I 'm in v:-" LM and 'A,
P. N. ST AINBAUK,
Weldon,
:lTNl)KHTAK KH.
North Carolina.
' Full Line of CASKETS, COFFINS and ROBES.
Day, Night and Out-of-Town Calls Promptly Attended to.
II. G. ROWJi
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER.
Seventeen years' Experience. Hearse Service Anywhere.
30i lot- tutor IOC
The humorists always associaie
the African-with the watermelon, j
assuming that the taste of the col- j
ored man for his favorite dainty '
arises from his life in the southern
states, where the melon vine grows ;
like a weed.
As a fact, however, the African j
taste for the watermelon is heredi- j
tary. The vine is a native of Af- j
rica, where it is found wild in the
great central plains of the conti
nent, and has also been cultivated
for many ages.
- In Egypt the melons grown
along the Nile rival those of south-!
eastern Missouri. I
The melons mentioned by the
Israelites as being among the good
things they had in Egypt were un- j
doubtedly watermelons, for in the !
wall paintings about the time
of the exodus the melon vine !
is represented, and in one case a (
long procession of slaves is depic- j
ted, each bearing on his shoulder
a huge dark green watermelon.'
Botanists say that varieties of
the melon are found in southern
Asia, and some even claim that the
plant grows wild in central and
South Africa, 4iut Africa is no
doubt the original home of the
melon, and in his preference over
every other kind of vegetable or
fruit the African merely displays a
taste that has become fixed in his
race by thousands of years of in
dulgence, for in central Africa ripe
watermelons are to be had every
month in the year. Detroit News
Tribune. THE SLAVES OF GOLD.
What's that the fiddle's sayin' which the others never hear?
Somethin' that's a-hoverin' betwixt a smile an' tear !
Somettlin' of the past time the shadow an' the beam,
An' I hear it for the lust time in a dream- in a dream !
"The old lads are weary
Youth must have a chance;
Too old to dance now- -
Too old to dance !"
On merry nights I hear it from my chimney-corner place;
Rosy cheeks aroun' nie, with the dimples in a a race !
An' I seem to feel their freshness a breath of golden curls,
As movin' to the music they swing the sweetheart-girls !
"The old lads are lonesome
Youth must have a chance;
Too old to dance now
Too old to dance !"
That's how the fiddle's singin' in a tune to them unknown
A sort of farewell message to the heart of me alone !
"You've reaped the youth-time roses you've had your day and time:
The twilight round you closes, where bells of Meni'ry chime : -
"The old lads are lonesome
Youth must have a chance;
Too old to dance now
Too old to dance !"
WLOfJQMO.
BY BENJAMIN TAYLOR.
"The Love of Money Is The Root
of All Evil.
OE
THE BANK OF WELDON
Will. DON, N. (
Organized Under the Laws of the State of North Carolina,
AI'ilt'STi'MTU. tS't:'.
State of North Carolina Depository.
Halifax County Depository.
Town of Weldon Depository.
a!.M.Sfl. $40,000.
For more than liflecn wars this institution has provided hunking facili
ties for this section. It's stockholders unit directors have liei-n itlt-ii 1 1 lie I
with the business interests of Halifax and Northampton counties for
many yean. Money is loaned upon approved security at the leirul rate of
interest six per centum. Aeeonnts of all ale solicited.
The surplus and undivided profits Imvinir reached a sum eiiual to the
Capital Stock, the Hank has. cotuniencimr January 1, I tuts, established a
Saving Department allowing interest on time deposits as follows: for
Deposits allowed to remain three months or lonuer, "J per eent. Si
months or longer. ,H per eent. Twelve months or lonirer. 4 pel eent.
For further information apply to the President or Cashier.
Who are the leaders of our best
society, generally speaking? Why
a man may carry a whole library
in his head, and if his coat be see
dy and his pocket empty he is no
where while a brainless fop, whose j
attire is faultless, and who carries
a full purse, is a first-rate smart fel-1
low. What chance has a young
lady a little out of style, who has !
to earn her own living, to shine in
society by the side of one of our j
fashionable ladies whose papa is a j
millionaire? Socially we are the
slaves of gold. Old-fashioned peo-
pie look at it in the old-fishioned I
way, and say it is all wrong. And ;
so it is; but it is a fact that stares us j
in the face that those who
There's a magical isle up the river of time,
Where the softest airs at e playing;
There's a cloudless sky and a tropical clime,
And a song as sweet as a vesper chime,
And the Junes with the roses are staying.
And the name of this isle is the Long Ago,
And we bury our treasures there;
There are brows of beauty and bosoms of snow
There are heaps of dust, but we loved them so !
There are trinkets and tresses of hair.
There are fragments of songs that nobody sings,
And a part of an infant's prayer;
There's a lute unswept, and a harp without strings,
There are broken vows, and pieces of rings,
And the garments that she used to wear.
There are hands that are waved when the fair shore
By the mirage is lifted in air;
And we sometimes hear, through the turbulent roar,
Sweet voices we heard in the days gone before,
When the wind down the river is fair.
MINISTER TO THE SICK.
Anything Which We May Do for
Them, In Love, Will Be Seed
Sown in Oood Ground
e kksidknt:
W. K. DAN1F.L,
vu'K-i'iiKsiiuivr:
inc. n. w. i.i:wis,
(Jaehsou. Northampton county)
tasiiikk:
W. It. SMITH.
o:
3E
3E
3
worm tne most are considered as
of the most worth. After all,
perhaps, the wisest man was right
when he said "The love of money
is the root of all evil." We know
from sad experience that it is very
inconvenient to be poor, but no
i man is poor who has a happy
home and it does not require lace
curtains or velvet carpets to make
a home happy.
If you have Catarrh, rid yourself of
this repulsive disease. Ask Dr. Shoop,
of Itaeine, Wis., to mail you free, a trial
liux of his Dr. Shoop's Catanh Remedy.
A simple, single test, will surely tell you
a Catanh truth well worth your know
ing. Write todav. Don't sutler longer.
Sold hv W. M. Cohen. Weldon. N. ('.
It is a grand, good and beautiful
thing to minister to the sick
to the wants of those laid
are low by affliction, and doubtless
SEABOARO
AIR LINE RAILWAY
Don't turn a man down just be
cause for him nothing ever turns
up.
The Badge of Honesty
there is not a human being but will
acknowledge this fact, but it never
so forcibly strikes us as when we,
ourselves, are lying prostrated by
disease. How many times have
we, when suffering almost unbear
able pain, or tossing with a burn
ing fever, resolved that if ever we
did get well again, we would do
all we could for the sick. It is a
sad pity that with returning health
our good resolutions oftentimes
flee away. It is not expected that
busy mothers be Florence Nightin
gales, to go out and nurse wounded
soldiers, and indeed this is not at
all necessary, for they can find sick
ones nearer. In almost every
neighborhood there is one, per
haps more, whose well days are
over. They are usually spoken of
as invalids, and so accustomed are
UUUL
ts
i
UlUU
b on every wrapper o( Doctor Piercf'i we t0 lejr being sick that We may
i!,,i,i.. Miilli-nl Discovery because a full . .
ii.. ..( imminent comiHisiu it is ! ohen times seem mdiHerent to
printed there In plain KmrIIsIi, Jorty tner su(fering and Confinement.
Tenrsofexperlencoh.ispmvenitssuiierlor j
worth as a blood purifier and InviRorat- But tO lliettl It never grows old,
ing tonic for the cure ( stomaciHihoMers ! and much is the good, right here,
down svstem as nn other tonic can ta ; that we can do. Many and varied
which alcohol Is lined. The active medic- re ,,e ways we Crt ,ep ,1cm
Inal principles el natlVH Nut such a ' it
lioid.'n s.i ami o.u'tr r.Ht, stone ami these unfortunate ones. In fact,
Mandrake r.n, llhlrt and Hl''k anvl,i,g which We mav do for
by the use of chemically pure, triple- them 111 love, Will be Seed SOWI1 111
rellned glycerine. Sond to Dr. H. V. I lerce I B00u Bround. A bunch of flow
ers, a new book
ai Ilutfalo, N. Y., tor .f ree booklet which
quotes extrnctt from well-roconlted med
ical authorities luch at Dn. Barlhntow,
To and Through the South Atlantic
States and from New York
to Florida. Also via
Atlanta' to the Southwest.
Unexcelled PassengerJService Via
S. A. L. Railway
Watch for announcement of Improved Schedules.
Cleveland Carter, C. H. QATTIS,
Tiekrt Afent, VYaldoo, N. C. Tray, l'asa. Agent, IUIaijIl, N. C
King, Scudde, Coe, Elllngwood and a
host of othej showing that thfM root
can be dapended upon for their curative
action It all weak itatea of the stomach,
accomiJiiled y Indigestion or dyspepsia
as well 6 i4ll bilious or liver coraplalnu
and In irtlitastlng diseases "where there
Is loniZflcsh and gradual running down
of Ufrstrength and system.
The "Ooldep Medical Discovery "makes
rich, pure Wood and so Invigorates and
rcmilales tlie-tnm:ci liver sial Ismi-Ji.
iiitli ll'r""tf1l 'l"'m- Lh" "mt
Thus all skin affections, blotches, plmplea
and eruptions as well as scrofulous swel
lings and old open running sores or ulcers
are cured and healed. In treating old
running sores, or ulcers. It is well to In
sure their healing to apply to them Dr.
Vlerce's All-Healing Salve. If your drug
gist don't happen to have this Salve In
jtock, send llfty-four cents In postage
stamps to Dr. K. v. nerce, invatuis' iioiw
or magazine,
dainty morsel from one table, all
these are trifles, but may brighten
up their dreary lives; and then we
should visit them, or if they live at
a distance we should write them a
tender, sympathetic, though cheer
ful letter.
THE REASON.
Do you mean to tell me you
have lived in this out-of-the-way
place for twenty years?"
. That s right, stranger, twenty
years."
"But I don't see what you find
ind Surgical Institute. lluff:.l. N. Y., and : to keep you busy?
a largo box of the "All-Healing Salvo- , "Nonin stranirer. That's the
reason I like it." Louisville Her
Kill reach you hv return Dost.
You can t afford to accept a secret nos
trum asasulistltnte for thlsnon-alconollc,
medicine or known composition, not
even though the urgent dealer may
thereby make a little bigger pnilit.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulat
Snd Invigorate stomach, I'ver and bowels,
iigar-coatad, tin? granulai, ear to Uk.
Mcaadjr.
aid.
Diamonds are going up also
the chins of their feminine wear
ers.
At times when you don't feel jusl
right, when you have a had stomach,
take something right awav that will as
sist digestion; not something that will
stimulate for a time hut something that
will positively do the verv work that the
stomach performs under ordinary and
normal conditions, something thi'it will
make the food digest. To do this vou
must take a natural digestant like Ko
dol for Dyspepsia. Kodol is a scientific
prenaratum of vegetahle acids with nat
ural digestants and contains the same
juices found in a healthy stomach. F.ach
- . ' v w iimu ,,oou grains i
ol good lood.D is sure to all'ord prompt 'rn"
in i, ii togesis wuni vou cat uuil is
pleasant to take.
"in i iy vi . M. Ciln-n, Weldon. V ('.
Never do any worrying today
that can be put oft' until tomorrow.
He I suppose you wouldn't
love me any longer if my money
was gone.
She Well, I certainly couldn't
love a man who was shorter.
Stop that tickling couch! Dr.Shooi
ough Cure will surelv stop it. and with
icrteet sale! v. It is so thoroughly
larmlesH that Dr. Mump ti lls thers
use nothing else with very young lia
's. The wholesome irreeii leaves uml
tender steins of a lung healing moiin-
tainous shrill, furnish the curinir imiii-
rties to Dr. Shoon's Couirh Cum II
calms the cough, and heals the sensitive
iroueliial menilmines. No opium, no
hloroform, nothing harsh used to in
jure or suppress. Demand Dr. Slump's.
lake no other.
ohlhyW. .M. Cohen, Weldon. Y C.
Good intentions never seem to
get beyond the crawling stage.
tinppe is sweeping the country. toii
it with I'reventics, U fore it gets' deeply
seated. To cheek earlv colds w ith these
little Caudv Cold Cure tablets is sure.
sensible and safe. I'reventics
contain no (fuinine, no laxative, noth
ing harsh or sickening. Pneumonia
would never appi ar if eailv eol.U were
poonpuy luoken, Alsogooiltor fever
ish children. Large box. is Tablets. 2,'.
'ids. Vest pockets. ,'i cents.
Sold hy W. M. Cohen, Weldon, N. ('.
Tomorrow never comes unless
you have a note to meet.
Tin' stilijt'rt (if lit'at'l.s is one
that ;its very nour to us all.
The heart is tin- center to all
our feelings. It is t ho scale in
which wo weiu'li the ads of our
friends, and ouht to weigh our
own It is the liar at which
we jinlne our enemies. It is
the fountain head of all our
thoughts and deeds. It is the
safe deposit where we treasure
up all the sweet memories of .
the past . and the tablet on
which is marked the scars of
ill-treatment. It is the captain
of the little, craft in which we
journey down the stream of
life. It is the dwelling place
of the soul that indestructible
spiritual life that dwells within
us.
There are glad hearts and
sad hearts, and hearts that are
broken. Did vou ever think
that no human being was over
born whose destiny was not
linked with the heart f sotno
one else. There's mother's so
licitude for her child; tin.' heart
is its abiding place. The two
hearts are bound together by
the tender cords of affection,
and distance that separates
them can not break this binding
force.
The head is receptacle in
which to store knowledge; the
heart is a monitor that directs
the knowledge. T h e glad
hearts! How welcome they
: are in this old world! The hearts
i that wear a smiling face and
I extend the glad hand! They
; scatter sunshine wherever they
i go. They inspire us with gootl
thoughts and the desire to do
! noble things. They smooth
' down the rough places in life. 1
1 They remove the obstacles from
j our paths, and sweeten the
pleasures of this old world.
Then there are the hearts that.
are sad. ami appeal to our sym
pathies. They water our own
hearts with their tears and
keep alive the spirt of love and
compassion. Thev. too, have
S their (iod-giveti purposes,
i And what shall we say of the
! aching hearts ? The mother's
! heart that aches for her way
ward boy, the wife's heart that
yearns for a caress from an
erring husband. What can
equal a mother's love for the
boy? You boys have grown up
tender babies under a
mother's watchful en re, Ah,
boys, how many heartaches do
you cause that dear old moth
err Do you realize the world
of affection in a mother's heart?
What joy can you have in Iter
Borrow? What pleasure in her
pain? Stop, my lad. and think
of your mother's heart. You
have it in your power to make
it sad. Let your heart warm
s to hers as it did whijn it was a
babe in herarins. K indly stroke
the gray hairs on her head and
assure her that in your heart
there is seated a deep and last
ing love and reverence for her.
lo you know that this sub
ject of hearts is the grandest
one on earth? The more you
study it the longer it grows.
It is as broad as the ear'h, as
high as heaven and as deep as
the unfat homable a by ss. 1 1 en i ts
are the trump cards of life, ami
the ticket we must present at
the door of heaven.
The heart is the bookkeeper
of our actions. How do you
V(iip if it clean and pure
A dapper young man on upper
Broadway last evening was follow
ing a girl, whose hands were in a
huge mil IF. Suddenly, at lorty
lil'ih street one of her haiuK, clad
in a two-ounce boxing glove, dash
ed out and sent the masher rolling
into the gutter. He lay there a
few seconds, while some humorist
in the little crowd that witnessed
the feat slowly tolled off the "one,
two, three, four, etc." of the regu
lation referee.
The masher picked himself up
with difficulty and scurried away
just as Detective Leigh, head of
the uptown detective bureau, came
along. Leigh said authoritatively:
"Young lady, you mustn't come
around here knocking people
down."
In an instant the girl had swung
around again and Leigh saw the
two-ounce glove coming his way,
and, being a boxer himself, just
managed to dodge enough to re
ceive a glancing blow. Leigh threw
his coat open and displayed his
shield and the mysterious woman
dropped her guard.
"1 beg your pardon," she said
sweetly. "I am a stranger here.
I came from Alabama, and am a
stenographer, alone in town. But
I'll tell you, officer, there's no man
in this city can insult me with im-;
punity. I taught women boxing
in the South and I'll teach New !
York mashers homing in the j
north."
Leigh stood petrified for an in
stant and then made a movement :
, as if to shake hands with the girl. ,
"1 admire you," he saiJ, alter
j spectators had declared the girl
had acted in self-defense. "Won't j
you tell tne your name?"
1 "No, sir," she said. "But I'll
tell you other things. I put this ;
boxing glove on and hid it in my
muff, because every time I walk '
down Broadway to get the fresh air
some hoodlum accosts me, and as
the police can't be everywhere at
once, 1 decided to take care of my
self. I've knocked about four of
them this evening and there'll be
more."
Whereupon the dainty athlete
thrust her padded hand into the
mufl and strolled away, while the
masher hurried to some place of
safety. New York American.
ALWAYS TAKE TIME.
"Take time to breathe a morn
ing prayer, asking dud to keep
you from evil, and use you for His .
glory during the day.
Take lime to be pleasant. A
bright smile or a pleasant word
falls like a sunbeam upon the hearts
of those around us.
I ake tune to re polite. A gen
tle "I thank you," "Excuse me," '
etc., even to an inferior, is no
compromise of dignity, and you
know- ;
"True politeness is to say the
kindliest things in the kindest :
way."
Take time to be patient with
children. Patience and kindness
will open a way for good influence
over almost any child.
Take time to be thoughtful about
the aged. Respect gray hairs even
if they crown the head of a beggar,"
To w iili mill wnm'H. tin r Is n least fn.
fray to li lp. i:ul w it It i!n.f way. I vu treat inviti,
IN.iM, be lotiiNiiii'tl. Oin l luntl, etie U colMUtlt.
It. inul, ImiI lioili nrt imi.uriu.'it, l"if)i Ufinimtinl.
)r. s)i,.i.ii' Nith( I'mv is din Liii'iil,
l'r Stump s. l;.-iuniti. tin- ( iiii-tinilifrinl.
'I'i).'f"rm. r- Jr, r-lm.tjr Niirln nn mi topienl
ITiii'M':- ii'.'in i .iii"si'"t y r nn l V, w In!" l'r.
M. iMp f. tnNiii" i- wholly an int.-nml trvtit
111' r 1 1 'I In- K' slor.i i i v- nielli',, liiwuijf limit tlin
einirn Kyt.-in. fti'i'tithK tin- rim ir ol ult norvt),
hi! ii-sii". mi'l i.!! Mum) mlmi'iilrv
'i'li'i N Klil ' HI'"". Hit II- lutltli' iini'Iieft, doe !U
Wt.rli whil yti'i . li -until.- -i.p'iini Ititlam-i-i
mui'uM -.urlae -, h.'iils Infill vi'k:ivn-, hihI
iti-.eiit.rifr-, wliiii- id- It.-torutivi', i ii.TVoiitt
es-'!t nn tit, fit I- p ti'-w.'t! iK'ir uti'l iiTtil.itiuti
lnitMs tip v,i-l' il tisMD'H, lirinuHiK ahout ri-newii
li'i'iiirth, viK-'i. anil lift, 'i'uke l'r. MnrfiiB
Ito-tiii'utivi"- i alili-t-. fir Mniii'! hii ifi-neral ionic
tO 111..' p-'"lll I'tir liM;tiV liJ' Ul Jiulp, UrfUUB well
Dr. vShopp's
Nig'ht Cure
W. M. COHEN.
our
Stomach
No appetite, loss ot strength, nervotts
peas, headache, constipation, bad breath,
tfenetal debiliiy. sour risings, and catarrh
of tne stomach are all due to indigestion.
Kodol relieves i;.d gestion. This new discov
d) represents the natural juices of diges
tion as they exist hi a healthy stomach,
combined with the greatest known tonio
odd reconstructive properlies. Kodol for
dyspepsia does not only relieva indigestion
and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy
helps all stomach troubles by cleansing,
purifying, sweetening and strengthening
the mucous membranes lining the stomach.
Mr. S. S. Ball, ol Ravonswood. W, Va.. says:
' I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years.
flodo cured ma tnd wa are now using It In milk
rr baby."
Kodol Digests What You Eat
Botties oniy. Relieves Indigestion, aour stomach,
biiiokfne of i? as, etc.
Prepared by E. O. DeWITT & CO., CHICAGO.
Sold hy W. M. Toiii'ii, UVI.km, N. ('.
GEORGE C. GREEN,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
fVutiimul Hunk lUiililinir)
Weldon, N. C.
1
1 Tliis Morning?
A Gentle La:ciive
And Appetizer
1
SsS3jEiaajUKsF
W. W. KAY.
Family
as-
Grocer,
SULPHUR BATHS AT HOME.
Kvt'iytliinir taken into tin- l,nna,.i
hIiiiuIiI Ip ilircltsl fully within a rrrtain
tim. linn you fi'cl that vmir ntom
acli is not. in kuoi! order, thut llin food
yon liavc I'nti'ii is not liciiiL' ilim'Hti'il
take a (food, natural diireHtant that will
do tin-work the iliitestivi' jiiiooR arc not
doinit. The bent rmnedv known toilnv
forall Stomach troulilps ih Kodol, whicli
iaKuarantepil to (five prompt relief. It
is a natural diirestanti it diitPMts what
you eat, it is pleasant to take.
old hy W. M. Cohen, Weldon. X. O.
They Heal The Skin and
Away Its Impurities.
Take
enough for public inspection, or i
is it scarred over with hn d l(',s"" ," t'111"'1"
thoughts and worse deeds? Ah,
keep thy heart diligently, for
out of it are the issues of life.
sulphur IliUh-. hi-ul Skin ii-.i.:i-.i". und
11, tin Iiihi. , Iiii,.,,,' tiinM. Sow
you don't have to un nll'lo it hih-pi ieed
I'ut a few spoonfuls
wki.iox, k. c.
I keep the best of everythin? in my
line. I'olite attention to nil at KAY'S,
my J ly
WALTER B. DANIEL.
ATTOKNKK-AT-LAW,
WKI.IiON, N. c.
I'rui'tii'es in the courts of Halifax anil
Northampton mid in the Supreme ami
I'ederul com ts. t 'ollections made in all
purls of Ninth ( 'ionium. Itrancli olhec
. ul iiuinu open every Monilay.
Some politicians have long fin
gers and short memories.
CASTOR I A
Tor Infants and Children.
Hit Kind Yov Han Always Bought
HE AIMED HIOHER.
He kissed her hand.
She withdrew it hastily and gaed
reproachfully at him.
"1 didn't think it of you," she
said, almost tearfully. "I had al
ways considered you a young man
with ideals and"
"I I am sorry if I have offend
ed," he stammered. "I"
"Well," she said bitterly, "I
certainly expected you to aim
higher."
So he took heart and made new
resolutions and things.
of 11 Weill K's .ii id sri.l'iil u
the hot Water, mid ou uet il perfect ul
pliurliiith riaht in your own home.
Apply IIANCOI K'sMil III Sl'l.l'lll
to the iillccted parts, and Kczema und (
other stulilioru skin troulilesnte ipiiekly :
cured. lr. K. It. Thomtis. of Valdnstu, :
Oa.. wan cured of a painful skin trouble, j
mid he praises it in the liiulicst K ilns.
Your druiririst sells it.
nwnxK's l.Hjfm sii.t'iuiii
OINTMIINT is the best cure for Sores,
Pimples, lllaekheads and all intlumma- j
tion. Oives a soft, velvety skin
KILL the COUGH
UNO CURE the LUNGS
WITH
Dr. King's
jaw Discovery
PR ICR
OLDS Trial Bottle Free
AND IL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES.
FflR OOUCHS
GUAHANTEEO SATISFACTORY
OR MONEY REFUNDED.
' Bears th.
Slgnatur of
OASTOniA.
Bus tks 8 w m lw'ls "fi'1'
A woman thinks her husband is
smart to be able to tell what makes
the furnace smoke, though he
can't stop it.
11111
Postmen can tell there's nothing
in women's letters by their being
so thick.
Boars tl
fUgnatars
Kind You Haw Ahttjn Boulit
fromtitiy utttaimtl, or rtC PCTUHNED.
tO YCARS IXPEfMENCI. ( Kir OMABOS Alii
THI LOWItT. SciKt inotlvl, ph.Hu or hkrtti 'h fr
eniwrt ititIi und frw irport on pntnifttliiU'v.
HWINOaMCNT em i-oikIikU-! Mora nil
Court n, I'ntt'nt (liitxinml Ihronul) nn, AIJVFW.
Tift BO and SOLD, trot". TRADI-MRKS, PtH'
MONS and OOPVAIOHTS qnkLiy ulUiiut.1.
Opposite U. . Patnnt OfT1of
WASHINGTON, D. C,
MMmm
m aaatt.'ittfllliitaW i iiTir-srf.il