I 64! Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. A NEWSPAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. Terms of Sulscription$1.50 Per Annum VOL. XUI, WKLDOX, X. ('., TIU'HSDAY, FKIUU'Al.Y 27. MM,. NO. .:?. llligi WW Wi SgraeaBal IBB AVcgelalilcPrrnaralionrnrls similaiin(!ilieFoflil.iniiniiii,ia lingilieSiomactaamlMsof Pa Promotes DisHonfltff ful ness awl Itsllonuins npiifrr Opiiim.MarphiiK norMiacraL shot Narcotic. JtrttptirMBrSWWmm JkMtrMt AiiitSitd hwmml -JftoSanflHsW Conflrtt SiAjar WatapHR ftmr. Anerfecl Retwdv for Coreta- tlon,SuurStfmiach.Dlarrtoea Wormsfurvulsions.rewnsli nessandLossOFSmP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper, 01 11 Day TiioxK ; P. N. STAIN BACK, Weldon, . . North Carolina. Full Line of CASKETS. Day, Night and Out-of-Town II. G. ROW E, FUNHRAL DIRECTOR AND E-MBALMRR. Seventeen years' Experience. Hearse Service Anywhere. mm fl 101 30E3DOE THE BANK OF WELDON WKLDOX, X. C Organized Under the Laws of the State of North Carolina, Anil STiMTIl, ls'fj. State of North Carolina Depository. Halifax County Depository. Town of Weldon Depository. Capital an d Sorpl us. $40,000. For more than fifteen years this institution Iiuh proviilril liankinur facili ties for this hit turn, I(h HttH'kholderM uml direetoiH have hern iilentitieil with the ImfineHH interestH of Halifax ami Northampton enmities tor many years. Money is loaned upon approved sceurity at thHiira. rate of interest six per centum. Accounts of all ait solicited. The surplus and undivided profits having readied a sum eiial to Capital Stock, the Hank has, comin?ncintr January I. Phis, eNtahliht Savings I Apartment allowing interest on lime deposits as follows: Deposits allowed toicmain three months or loticei, 'J per et-nt. months or longer, 8 per cent. Twelve months or lonjjer, 4 per cent. For further information apply to the President or cashier. PRRHIDRNT: Vlt'K-l'KKHlDKST: W. K. DAN1KL, l. II. . 1.KW1S. f.Tachson, Northampton county) SE ABO A HI ) AIR LINE SCHEDULE EFFECTIVE These arrivals and departures are only as infor mation for the public and are not guaranteed, and are subject to change without notice. Trains will leave WELDON as follows: No. 32 for Portsmouth and Norfolk at 6.50 a. m. No. 38 for " " " t 2.4S p. m. No. 29 for Raleigh and Oxford at 6.45 a. m. No. 41 for Raleigh and points South at 1.10 p. m No. 33 through train South at 11.03 p. m No. 30 Shoo Fly arrive at Weldon at 8.00 p. m. For further Information relative to rates, sched tiles, etc., apply to CLEVELAND CARTER, Ticket Agent, Weldon, N. C. Or write to C. 11- (i ATT IS, Traveling Passenger Agent, Raleigh. N-& For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years OMi (W TORS ITT. 10E OE U N n. ii r rinKH "M :u .VI. COFFINS and KOBF.S. O Calls Promptly Attended to. n 30E 30 the 1 a For ak it 1 Kit: 1; smith. W o RAILWAY JANUARY 5, 1908. ay y TMI tHTau HflM HER FIRST SPEECH. , The Words Had Left Her But She Knew What It Meant. It was the first appearance in public of Ada C. Sweet, of Chica go, United States Commissioner of Pensions under President (Irani and one of the first women in the movement for equal political rights for the sexes. When the Civil war broke out, she was living with her parents, in the village of Lom bard, now a suburb of Chicago, and was chosen to present to the boys of the Lombard company a silk flag which the women of the place had made with their own fair hands. The literary woman of the vil lage had written for the occasion a beautiful presentation speech, in which the soldiers were adjured to "take the fair Hag into which your wiv es, daughters and sweethearts have sewed fond hopes and tearful prayers for your safe return, carry it through the smoke and shell of battle, free from the stain of dis honor and the rents of defeat, and bear it home victorious at the end of the war." "I thought," says Miss Sweet, "that I had learned that piece up and down, backward and forward inside and out; but on the great day itself, when the band ceased playing and an awful hush fell up on the crowd, and every face was turned up to mine, it was different. I opened my mouth and paused. The literary lady creaked forward in her chair, and whispered loudly, "Soldiers of Lombard' "That whisper went through me like a knife, but left me still speech less. I set my teeth, stepped de cisively forward, and pushed the flag into the hands of the nearest soldier. Then I spoke. Every ; word of that speech had left me; j but I knew what it meant. " 'Soldiers of Lombard," I said ' ! in a desperate voice that must have I j been heard to the utmost confines j ! of the crowd, 'here's your flag! I Don't get it dirty! Don't tear it! And be sure to bring it back !' 1 A shout rose from that crowd ; suchasnooratorbefore orsincehas ; : ever evoked from a club in those ! parts. The first thing I knew I j was riding on the shoulders of two ! soldiers, while the whole company pressed about me, with waving hats, and my father was leaning over toward me from the back of i his big horse and calling me his i 'own original girl' while the tears rolled down his cheek with laugh ter. "As long as I lived in the village of Lombard I never dared to meet squarely the vengeful eye of the literary lady who had written that , presentation speech." Neighborhood Favorite. Mrs. K. IV I Inn os. of Harbor. Maine, speukiim of Kltrtrii- Ihltcis. saya: "It is a neiirhhorhood lavtuile here with us. " It deserves to he a favorite everywhere, lttfivcs nuiek relief in dyspepsia, liver complaint, kidneyderaturemont. malnu trition, nervousness, weakness ami tren 1 eral debility. Itsiiction on the hlon.1. as a thorough puriliei makes it especially useful as a spring meilieme. Tins ;rand alterative tonie is soltl under iruarantce at anv drim store. -'e. Some of the best people are seen at their worst when you get the best ot them. A Most Valuable Agent The iilycerinMniployHi in Ir. Tierce's medicines greatly enhances tlu medicinal proHTties which it extracts from native medicinal roots and holds in solution much licitcr than alcohol would. It also possesses medicinal properties of Its own, beliiK a valualile demulcent, nutrltivo, antiseptic nn.l antlferiueut. It adds greatly to theefllcacy of the Itlaek Cherry bark, lllooilroot, (ioiden Seal root, stun risH and Queen's root, contained in "lioldi'ii Meilical Discovery " In anUliiing chronic, or linirerlnir coughs, hrouchiiil. threat and allc. IUi., f..r a!! of lUl Ihe-n agents are rceoiu mended by staud ard medical authorities. In all cases whern there, la a wasting away of flesh, loss of appcilto, with weak tomalp, as In the early ttagea ot con tummipn. there can be no doubt that gly cerineacts as a valuable nutritive and aids !ie Golden ti l root. Stone root, Ques ropt "d lilaclc Cherrybark la RromTli'ig digestion and building up the esh aimifrengih, controlling the cough and brlnlfig about a healthy condition ot the whale ivstem. 01 course, it must not be ejecled to work miracles. It will not curt'Umsumptlon except In Its earlier atagea. Tt w ill .-lre very severe, obill nate. hir-mi , l;r,n,l.- coulis. tuondi.al and IlirWiU'-iil lruil'!ri ill") iir.mic .ore tin i aJ-JLJay-X Vftj c ifis nol so et'iviUa. Iris In the lingering hant-on coujhs.or those of long standing, Avfii when aeeoinnanied hv tihssiinii from lumrs, that it has performed its most i marvelous eures. . Prof. Kiniey Kiiintrwood, M. i., of iten- nett .iieu. v ouetre, nie.iKo, sa,a ui hij-rerlne: HrfTOTS'lSOTTrS men, and consequently no drunk i'.'!"f:?. 1 ards. Remember (hat drunkards lis aetton uisin eliV'emeil. dlsoMk reO slom-a,-tis.eslM'elally If lliele Is ule'ration or ca- i tarrbal tfastrilta ii-atarrhal hillaimuatlon ol . .,..n.B...T ti U a most, efficient itrvitaratlon. Olreertne will relievo ruany eases of pyrosis (heart hum) and excessive gastric. (atoniaeU) '"(!ohien Medlrsl DiseoTerji " enrlehes and purities tins hlowl curlnK lilotehes, iilmnlea. cruniioiiH, acrutulous swollinifs and old soraa denVl'to Pr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo. N T. ftr fn booklet trlllnf all about 11m ntl3 BK'Irloal risrta ciniwosln this woaMlrtMl naacaaa, Taa fi as) aiouhgl la U. THE WAY 0' FRKDI-iRICK Jim's goin' to leave to-morrow Jimmy, our baby son I kin skersely realize, mother, that he's past twenty-one ! We've alus made a baby o' him, an' iest can't help but grieve, 'Cause it's awful hard, old woman, to see our last child leave. Johnny, our oldest boy, went away many years ago, To seek his fortune 'way out West the ole farm wuz too slow. He's bin married sev'ral years, an' they say he's doin' well, I s'pose he's awful busy, or he'd wriie once in a spell. Then Mary married a Kansas man, and she went away, 'Peared 's ef our hearts 'ud break, fer many a weary day; She's got a lot o' children now, an' s'pose she don't hev time To think much o' her ma and pa, and sometimes write a line. So all our children, one by one, hev left the old home nest, Tho' it caused us bitter tears, we thought that God knew best, But Jimmy seemed to love the farm we set seen store by him We hoped he'd never go away our baby, Little Jim. But Jimmy's growed into a man, and he is leavin' too, To live in town he thinks is grand, and do what others do, 'Tis the way o' the world, I reckon, we've no right to grieve, Tho it's awful hard, old woman, to see our last child leave. "NOT UNDERSTOOD," "Not understood," we move along asunder; Our paths grow wider as the seasons creep, Why life is life we marvel and we wonder, And then we fall asleep. "Not understood." "Not understood," we gather false impressions And hug them closer as the years go by Till virtues often seem to us transgressions, And thus men rise and fall and live and die, "Not understood." "Not understood," poor souls with stunted vision Oft measure giants by their narrow gauge, The poisoned shots at falsehood and derision Are oft impelled 'gainst those who mould the age "Not understood." "Not understood," the secret springs of action Which lie beneath the surface of the snow Are disregarded; with self-satisfaction We judge our neighbors and they often go "Not understood." "Not understood," how trifles often change us. The thoughtless sentence or the fancied slight Destroy long years of friendship and estrange us, And on our souls there falls a freezing blight, "Not understood." "Not understood," how many breasts are aching For lack of sympathy ? Ah day by day, How many cheerless, lonely hearts are breaking, How many noble spirits pass away, "Not understood '" Oh, God ! that men would see a little clearer Or judge less harshly where they cannot see, Oh, God ! that men would draw a little nearer To one another. They'd be nearer Thee, "And understood." UNHAPPY MARRIAOHS. The universal expectation of married people is that their mar ried lives will always be happy ones. Deluded dreamers ! They imagine that they are different from other people, and that when they enier the portals of matrimo ny, love, peace and prosperity will ever be their attendants. Such ones had better by far consider themselves the same as others, but form iron resolutions that will keep them from the dangerous coasts upon which so many have been wrecked and ruined. Un happy marriages depend upon many causes. Previous to mar riage, many try to appear more in tellectual, more amiable, or more accommodating than they really are. Depend upon it, that love brought into existence by a moon light stroll strengthened by deceit and fashionable displays, and final ly consummated through the in- l lluence of intriguing friends, will I fade in after life almost as fast as the llowers which compose the bridal wreath. WHO ARE DRUNKARDS? Young men did you ever think who drunkards are? Drunkards men grown are drinking young up. If then, there were no drink ing young men there would be no drunkards. But where do the drinking young men come from? j Why, of course they come from ; the children. If all the children j were pledged agaillSt ... the use of intoxicate, everything that can there would be no drinking young are drinking young men grown I up, and these drinking young men ; are unpledged children grown into young men Let us iook well al ter the children. A man generally gets his back up when he has to back down. THE WORLD. H. WILSON. At times when you don't feel just riclit. when you have u had stomach, take somethunr riirlit away that will as sist digestion; not soinetliMui: that will stimulate for a time hut soniethiui; that will positively ilothe very work that the stomach perforins undet ordinary and normal conditions, Homc'liin that will make the food digest. Ti do this you must take a natural diirestant like Ko dol for I'yspepsia. Kodol is a scientific preparation of veiretalde acids w ith nat ural ditrestants and contains Ihe same juices found in a healthy stomach. I'.aeli dose will diirost more than K.lioil iriams ofirooil food.lt is sure to allord prompt relief; it durests what you eal and is pleasant to take. Sd.l hy W. M. Cohen. Weldon. N. I'. A thin bush is shelter. better than no Stop that ti'kliii eoULrh! ltr.Shoo,"s t'ouuh ''me will Kiirely Mop it, and with Ii ShsX i,r. s ,.l VZZl to uxe nothini.' elxc with very younit tin- lues. 'I he wholesome irreen leaves and tender stems of a hint; lieahm: moun tainous shruli furnish the eiirintr prop erties to hr. Hump's t'oui:li t'nre. It ealins the eouidi, and heulsthr sensitive hronelnal ineinliritnes. No opium, no ehlorolorin, uolhiiiit liaish used to in jure or suppress, pemund hr. shoop's. Take no other. All Peulers. On curtain lectures a husband alw ays prefers to draw the curtain. i:civtliiutr taken into the stomach should he iliuested fully within a certain tune. W hen you feel that your stom ach is not in itoimI order, Unit the food you have eaten is not lieinir digested, take a food, natural dii:estant that will do the work the digestive juices are no' doinir. 'I lie best remedy known tislav loi all stomach troubles 'is Kodol. which is truaranleed to line prompt relief. It is a natural diirestart; it dnrcsts what von eat. it is pleasant to take. Sold l.v W. .M. Cohen, Weldon. N. ('. liven in the Middle Ages old wo men tried to look young. (Irippe in 8weepini; the country. s,,p it with I'leventics, U'fore it eels deeply seatetl. To cheek early colds with these little Candy Cold l ure Tablets is sure ly sensible and safe. l'revenlics contain no Quinine, no laxative, notli- tit? harsh or sickening, l'ncuniouia w ould never appear, if early colds were promptly broken. Also iriiod for fever ish children. I.arife Imix, Is Tablets, l'.'i cents. Vest pockets, o cents. All Dealers. Wonder if the candy merchant isn't afraid of getting licked. Baarstis Bifaatu. iltt Kind Vw Ham lwas Boiight EhsumsSaysj NO ALUM in Food nd ntriijty proluLiutlie nle of alum baking powder So does France So does Germany . , Th uW of alum loodt b.B j,ia VI j,!,,,,,,, nd Uw DtttiHt ot Columbia, and alum taking powdm art everywhere itcoguued u injurious. To protect yourself again! alum, vhen ordering baking powder, Say plainly- nd be lure you grt Royal. Royal i trie only Baking Powder made from Royal Crdpe Cream of Tartar. It add to ihe digeuibilit; and wholesome- neu oi ine rood. THINGS WE CAN'T AFFORD. "Where There Is a W ill, There Is a Way." Our mothers taught us very im perfectly the distinction between spending and investing; and if we read the signs of the times aright, the sins ot the mothers will be vis ited upon the daughters until the third and fourth generation. Of course we have a vague idea that "he that giveth to the poor lend eth to the Lord, and He will repay him again;" but have we any ade quate idea of the safety and the blessedness of the investment of giving. We do not refer to gold and sil ver alone. Can the gentle sex af ford to spend so much time in fash ionable calls and fashionable parties and fashionable dress and invest ' so little time among the sick, the J sad, and the suffering ones in our midst? Can they afford to spend so much time and money on ex I travagance of dress and in luxuries and invest so little in papers, books and lectures? We count families by the score, now in the Twenti eth Century, whose reading matter is confined to a cheap religious publication and a weekly local pa-p.-r. Your children positively wasie i much of the time in long even j ings, which, if invested in good i papers, magazines and books, I would prove to them an exhaust : less mine of wealth and happiness, j Now as the long winter evenings pass, ask yourselves if you can af j ford to do without these things. Many of our well to do farmers as well as others are too niggardly ' in regard to the money they invest in the education of their children. If a child will take an education, he or she has a right to it: and there are few maxims we believe in more implicity than "Where there i is a will there is a way." HAD TRIED ELECTRICITY. A benevolent gentleman at tempted to converse with the motherly old lady who sat next to him in the railway carriage. He discovered that she was very deaf, and the conversation was esiab i lished by shouting. "You are very deaf, aren't you, madam?" ultimately bellowed he of the benevolence. I am so. was the reply, "and : haven', been able to do a thing for it. "Have you ever tried electrici ty?'' shouted the kind hearted man. "Yes," she said, nodding vigor ously, "I was struck by lightning last summer." Honied words she used to speak, When their love was young; Now she still is like a bee. But his cry is, "Siuiig !" The tri.til.lt- with most coul'Ii remedies is that they constipate. Kennedy's I ax alive Couirh Syrup acts gently l,ut promptly on the howels and at the same time it stops the coul'Ii l.v st.othinir the I throat and lunir initation ( liil.lren like it. Nddhv W. M. Cohen. Weldon. NC. Held for baby. the future the new If you have Catarrh, rid yniirseli" of this repulsive tlisease. Ask lr. shoop. of Itacme. Wis., to mail you free, a trial box of his Hr. shoop's Catarrh Iteinedy. A simple, simrle test, will surely tell y.iu a Catarrh truth well worth your knnn inif. Write todnv. Don't sutler lonirer. All HealeiH. In stealing kisses, one may re member that an even exchange is no robbery. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. . The Kind You Have Always Bought B.ari the Signatur of mm Let Us Place Our Ambitions High. To Make Men l.oynl and True. There is but one rule of strict inoraliiy that a man can adopt, That would he in live as pure and pet led a hie as he would have his wile live, lo avoid a.sMiciations, habits and language thai he would have her avoid. The old idea of one scale of morals for the man and another for the woman is very w rong, and until a young man ostracised from society by the same act that would turn the young wo man out in the cold world's social standing is a farce. The life blood of the future is the bounding pulse of our little j ones. No son or daughter should I be allowed to leave the shelter ol home ignorant of these principles thai underlie good government. Will the boy who taught the sweet law of obedience for loves sake, in the tender years of childhood, be likely to rebel when he is called upon to obey those laws that are made for the preservation of our country and good for the people? Will not the boy brought up to hold in respect all that goes to make up a noble man and woman hood abide by these teachings when he steps into the broader fields that lie before him? Will the girl brought up with such a brother give her future into the keeping of a young man who scoffs at religion, defies the law that makes all social life desirable, and lets his reason and judgment be led off' by every wtll-o'-the wisp that lurks at every morass and slough to lead weak men to de struction ? Should wc need to fear the future if we do our whole duty? Let us place our ambitions high, to make men loyal and true. NUBBLES. Signs of the times- I to XII. Many feasts are opened with corkscrews. liven down trimming may be up-to-date. Most women are fond of a tell ing situation. III a doesn't printing of fie ihvays get his the devil due Some people never get along "winimingly in the social sw m. If you are a pig, you must ex pect some one to squeal on you. The playwright doesn't like it when the actors play wrong Adam was the first press agent. . He boomed the original snake charmer. To enhance her beauty a wo man's veil is seldom unavailing. ! A man isn't as anxious to be right as he is to have others think that he is right. In the workaday world some people don't work even half a day. You cannot send a letter by mail without Uncle Sam's stamp of ap proval. L:ena wireless message, you know, may have something to do wiih wire pulling. SULPHUR BATHS AT HOME. They Heal The Skin and Away Us Impurities. Take Siilpliiu baths heal sl,in Disrates ait'l i:ie the body a wlinlesniiu' nl.. N.m you don't have It. iron It toil hiL'h-ptieed resort to iret them I'ul a lew s) ufuls ol MANctH K s I I.,. I ID 1 l.l-lll Ii m the hot water, all.) Voll uel II net I. -fl Mill. phin bath ritrhl in youi own In. me. Apply HAM in K'sl i,i llit 1 rill ; to the atl'eeted parts, and re.euiu and oilier stubborn skin lioublesare iinekly Clllcil. Hi. K II. Thomas, of Valdosta, (ia . was cured of a painful skni trouble, and he praises it in the hiubest terms. Your drtnririst sells it. HANCOCK'S 1.11,11111 si l.l-lll li (UN IMl'.N I' is tlie best cure for sores, I'iniples. lllaeklu-ads and all iullanuna tiou. Civos a soft, velvety skin. SPOILED A GOOD THING. It was so cold on Chestnut street that the two Arctic explorers felt at home. "By the way," said Pearman, "don'i you think Columbus rath er overestimated?" "Why overestimated?" Welly asked. "He discovered America the first time he went to look for it." Philadelphia Bulletin. OABTOniA. Bsantit yylln Kind Vou hit kimn Bought Btfaatu 1 FAIN Pftfn In flip If -ii-I-Pant i -f jTit:. ;-t i, elw ii-' ,i!,v ai i. provi- ;i ti- liny rr , Ulji'-t cm l'P. i In iiuvuli. p'. Ihi-s it- fft'ifli4. N I- fiooil j.-. -,:;!- not!- PJf . v. lr M n. iv ill. H ) t ii In (. l.i:.t :l.l ( 'I Ii: t U-:-iii.'li. Till.)"! ClUI Ji'S fiidii.t I.C'l-lll'.' II V Itsrfl.'i'i i-i linnsii;,r, t-l. i-.f 11 thntitrli siti ly, it stii' ivin; luH'm. If uti liavi- H li'-R-hH.... if. If it i J.ii. Mill Jn ivn -n;ti If you Htu L"-. r.-i ! fOi.p'Hi--l....'.il in. --ii;- oruiTiit v. 'op It M i' - II" It in Jo minnt'-, nii-l i.,'i tiif unuiu'imi i't'H.'l ;nv-v,--Uruiv y.mr iitv-T mi-i ilti IW. ;i. Hint Mini V-"' 1J li.tii Er'ot.i.ltl. Li.H.ll (,V -nr.'. 1"1 i u 1 wn v - I:'- .-in-i'ly f'ui n WtJ Cli lit iM t-fDlf, itll'l flu '.no jnim (HiI'Th.. klXhtfll.irl.ll, t!i. 1-ltHtil i-iii a- h.i'iy tl.iunbuj it (T' t p'l, ami r .... If i - 1 It U 111 TL- tM.Il iliy ivcuiuniuud Dr. Shoop's Headache Tablets All Dealers. Sour Stomach No appetite, loss o! strength, nervous ness, headache, constipation, had breath, dcb;lily, sour risings, and catarrh of the r.tomach are all due to Indigestion Kodol relieves indigestion. Tins new discov ery represents ttie natural Juices of diges tion as they exist in a healthy stomach, combined with the greatest known tonic a:;Q rscor-Mruelive properties. Kodol for dyspepsia does not only relieve indigestion and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy helps alt sto.t.ach troubles bv cleansing, purifying, sweetening and strengthening the mucous membranes lining the stomach. Mr. S, S. Ball, of Ravenswood, V, Vt . sayi: " I was troubled with sour flifmaeh for twenty years. KMoi cured m and wa are now using it In milk (cr baiy." Kodol Digests What You Eat. Bottia only. Reltpvps Indigi-ktlnn, sour itomacl beiCh;.-? :t pas. etc. Prepar.d by E. O- OeWlTT & CO., CHICAGO. S.hl l.y V. M . (ilicti, VMinj, M. V. GEO RUE C. UREEN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAWf i National Ihmk l.uildinir) Weldon, N. C. till xx LIVER-ISH This Morning? IAKE W. W. KAY. Grocer. WEI.IiOX, N. C. I k ep the host of eveiytililltf in my I'ohte attention to all at KAY'S, niv Iv WALTI-R I: DANIIU., ATTORNI:R-T-I.A', W Id.l'tlN. N C. I'laetu-es iu the cults of llalil'ax antl Noitbampiou m n, I in the Supreme ami I e.leial ci-iiits. ( '..lli-ctit.ns made iu all !'-' - "f N.utli ( 'aii.hna. lliancli olhco at lianiav o,eu every Momlay. KILL the COUCH nd CURE the LUNC5 w,th Dr. King's New Discovery FDR Pouchs soTKoo u WOLDS Trial Bottle F rce ND ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES. GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY OR. MONEY REFUNDED. I'niitiiitlT I'l-'Hliicd, tO VtARS'f KPtftltNCt, Oui CHARCtSANI THK COWttT. B. iul iuxli-l. (fCMMo or nkeicli lor pl-n fMn-n ntii iuh n'oit on pHttMiubUKy. INmiNCCMiNT niuiK mitditrUd Urfor all Cniirlt. lti-t.tt nlil.iinM Ihtxmarli ADVFN. TlftEOnmi SOLB, ti.v. TRADK-MARKft, PI.N tlONft and COPYRIGHT quick lr oMkUhkI. Opposite U. 8. Putent 0T1o, WASHINGTON. D. C. 1 A Gentle Laxative I And Appetizer 1 Family FEE StTUSNFO

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