uiirJ lyj Mef3 tfa w Jr IM w Ink i& ijsft vtM i) Advertising Rates Made Known on Application VOL. XLVI. A NEWSPAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. Terms of Subscription$l.SO Per Annum WKLDON, N. C, TIIUKSDAV, MAHCII 21, 15)12. NO. 47 1 jap liSiffi AM'OlloL PKK l'KNr AVcgcliibli-Prrparslioitror slmil;iiiinilirRK)(lantlRrtii(a ting Utc Siontinhs muiUowvlstf PronwIesDilionfkfifut rtess and nVsiXontains neiilsT Dpiimi .Morphine nor Mineral Not Narcotic. jKyKtfouikmnmmt . Ut Srrtna j Aotifif Reincdv furCoillta lion , Sour SlouvKli.DlarrtiuJ Worms .toiivulsious .rrvvnsli nessaitdLossOFSLLti'. FocSuihW Signature of NEW YORK. TT Exact Copy of Wrapper. Spanish ku- n i r 14 GUSTO nm The present low prices has created a very large demand for Spanish Peanuts. They are today worth 92 cents per bushel at Suf folk and Petersburg, Virginia. Correspond with us when you have Spanish Peanuts for sale. THE COLUMBIAN PEANUT CO., NORFOLK, VA. THE BANK OF WELDON WKLDON, X. r- Organized Under the Laws of the State ol North Carolina, Aril'ST20TH. I WW. Siate of North Carolina Depository. Halifax County Depository. Town of Weldon Depository.' Capital and Surplns, $47,000. For more than 1 vcars this institution has piovided hanking facili ties for this section. Its stockholders and iliici-tius haw l i en idi-ntilied with the business interests of Halifax ami Northampton counties for many years. Money is loaned upon approve! security nl the iival rati of iiiterest six pcrceiitutn. Aeeounts of ail are solicited. The surplus and undivided protits having reached a miiii c,iial to the r.nilMt.wk. the Hank has. commencing .lanuary 1. PHis. i stal.lisheil a Kaviliga Department allowimr interest on time deposits a follows: Deposits allowcil toremam three month- or Imnrer. per cent, months or longer, a percent Twelve months or longer 4 percent. Forfurtheriu formation apply to the President or Cashier. I'RSHiniST: W. K, DAN1KL, (II K-l'RKMIIKVr: W I! SMITH. II ll ei A complete line the makers. The Quality Best line ol high grade shoes in the city. Edwin Clapp Shoes for men of good taste, $().00 AND $0.50 Holeproof Hosiery. Let us show you. . WELDON SHOE COMPANY, WELDON, N. C. Si () l7 HIGHEST l FOR RAW runs anu mute p,j , I I " I ll 1 fO 1 .. C...IMI0S. Writ, (or srtcf UU mS t wMIO.H.,lh,. l. -etfV$, . Ketbushe4 IBilT JOHN WHITE & CO. mmiu u For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years Peanuts. lor Six asiiiuk: K. S. Tli.W'lS, of new shoes fi om store where Count MARKET PRICE MIO AST THI CENTAL. COMHNT. NtW TOM ITV. ! mil tl I nnn I I I I . uLi a uuu. i FLOWERS TO THE LIVING. I WORK. That Heroic Terrier Is More Wor thy ol Immortality Than Some Human Beings. He was a "mere dog." Yet they gave him a "Christian" bu rial. W hereat tlieovner,a New York man, was subjected to unpleasant criticism. Head the story and draw your conclusions The owner with his pel, a hand some fox terrier, in leash, was out for a walk. Suddenly, with a strange cry, the dog gave a great spring, releasing himself from the leading string of his master.. This was the cause: A Utile boy who hfd been playing in the street had fallen in front of a rapidly ap proaching automobile. The driver was unable to stop the machine. The death of the boy seemed certain. The terrier was at the boy's side in an instant. In a twinkling he had pushed the boy away from where he lay. The onrushing auto missed the little fellow by the frac tion of an inch. The boy was saved. Quickly he was caught up by a bystander and placed in the arms of his despairing mother. And ihe dog? The heavy, crunch in" wheels of ihe big machine pass ed over the body of the poor terri er and crushed out his life. He was only a dog. And yet If it is true that "greater love haih no man shown than ilut he lay down his life for a friend," what shall be said of a dog ihat laid down his life for a stranger? Only a dog. Bui He won the supreme praise of Holy Writ and more. The boy was not his friend, not even an ac quaintance, and yet the dog loved him to the death. NX'as i luit dog not a hero and a niattyr? Certainly he was entitled to decent Init ial. And if a hymn was sung and a brief sermon made by ihe dog's sorrowing yet proud owner who is found to sneer? Could the dog's surviving friend do less over ihe remains of such a hero? "l.o, the poor Indian," fondly believes that in the happy hunting grounds his faithful dog shall bear him company. Well, that heroic terrier is more worthy of immortality than some humans 1 know. Is there a here after for such a dog? TOO MUCH l-OK RIIMUION. The finding of an old document ; suggests a famous anecdote of the late Admiral Hvans, which ran something in this fashion: The Admiral one Sunday went to church in a certain city and sat down in a pew which seemed to him to be in a good strategic posi-; tion. The owner of the pew, who did not recognie the Admiral, at once wrote on a slip of paper and j handed it to him: ''My name is , , and 1 pay $1000 a year for j this pew.' Admiral livans at once wrote on the slip and returned it: "My name is Bob livans, and I think you pay too much." New York World The world will never give any credit at all till you are a success; then it will give you a thousand time more than you are entitled to. Ornatmnial penmanship is also a nourishing industry. our or sours When you tret I...V, liel hy. h ill Clik. "I'lue" '.oil ilist.im.i.'J look to tiie liver, ll ii In put. SIMMONS ri d l LIVER REGULATOR (THE POWDRR FORM) IS THE RF.MF.nY YOU NF.Fl It is not only an invigorating tonic for a torpid liver, but it extends its cleansing and restorative influence to the stomach and bowels. Helps digestion and food assimilation, purities the bowels and brings back the habit ot regular I'-'ily bowel movements. When the stomach, liver and bowels ari? active, bilious impurities no loic r obstruct func tional processes, the le lilt of which is renewed energy, menial activity and cheerful spmis. Sold Oy Aii.-r Ptice. Large Pat-kiln. SIMO A l"f U r-oui'"- s,,h ''' 7- 0,1 llbrl. It ( o. iitin.i. It !-'" I" w will leni It by ui.l. U'-.'a stlnn,.rfi. Urn BrfuLlul ll aU l.ut up I'i llgui.l ton. tut 'km !.. pnl'i it H " ft bottle. 1A Km Itrt rfrj It1 4. H. tEUIN ft " Pru.nl.hKS SH. louU, Missouri Absolutely Pure MAKES HOME BAKING EASY Light Biscuit Delicious Cake Dainty Pastries Fine Puddinyr, Flaky Crusts The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream ol Tartar irue JamesWhitcombRiley To listen ' smile tinkle of the strings Of the sweet cfuitar my lovers jihgers fondle, as he sino's? And as the nude moon stov tlovi?l shoulders into view, Shall I vanish from his vision when nrp dreams come true? WHEN my dreams come true shall the simple cowr. I wear Be changed to softest satin , and my maiden'braided hair Be raveled into flossv mists of rarest, fairest gold. To be minted into kisses, more than , any heart can hold Or "the summer of nvp tresses shall mj? lover liken to M "The fervor o his passion when my areunn luiiic nuc ' et- m. t.i. U LtobW-Mr- il t-'' THE A fool there was and her heart she gave (Uven as you and 1) To one who was called a heartless knave, But the fool styled him good, noble and brave, Never trying herself to save, , (Even as you and I). Oh ! the pain she'd hide, which she denied, Had ever been caused by the man She endured from one who did not care (And now she knows he never did care) And did not understand. A fool there was and her eyes were blind, (liven as you and 1) To all his faults and ways unkind. She loved the man and did not mind And could not see the faiths others would tind, Ignoring their warning that meani in be kind, (Fven as you and 1 1 Oh ihe love she gave to this so called kiiuu And the sutt'ering she endured Was caused by the man who did uoi know And now she knows he never could know And did not understand. He loved the fool or pretended to And sought her company for years 'tis true. And each mail brought her a billetdoux From the one who now had proven untrue. But it isn't the ache of the heart nor the pain Thai causes this organ to break in twain, (It's the knowing lhai she was loving and true. Shielding him ever as few girls would do Always hiding his faults from view For the one who had proved untrue. Children Cry TOR FLETCHER'S C A STOR I A And every mother expects to pick a better husband for her daughter than she did for herself. The easier it is to reform a man the oftcner you'll have to do it. Wkca teams Come uln my dreams come true' when mydreamscome tru& Shall I leanjrom out my, casement, in the starngKr and the tle39. and listen to the FOOL. Biickache Almost llnhearahlc Is an ulmo.it Ovitam result ol kidney truuhli'. h. t'.Mimcy, so;i Iv ('live street nloomiiiuton. HI . says: "I sullerei! uilh lai'kaohe ninl painsin my kidneys which were almost unbearable. I gave Foley Kidney 1'ills a good trial, and they done woidem for me. Today I can do a hard day's andi. feel the effects." E.CLABK. A Florist's Window Bears This Legend : "It Is Better to Send One Lily to a Live Friend than Ten to a Corpse." This card is said to be a very ef fective salesman, too, if one does not pause to reflect upon the point where sentiment and commercial ism meet. We cannot, of course, know how much good the flowers that are sent to a corpse do. But, we have an idea that the sentience to him who but recently inhabited that tenement of clay is little con cerned about such things. But we all know what messages, that cannot be voiced, they bear to the living, the rose in its gran deur, the lily in its purity, the vio let in its incomparable sweetness. "There's rosemary, that's for remembrance, and there is pansies, that's for thoughts." "Flowers," says Emerson, "are a proud assertion that a ray of beauty out values all the utilities of the world." And whoso gives beauiy sudi beauty gives a real gift. An en emy may give honied greetings. The gift of flattery may poison j while it pleases. There may be a humiliating assertion of superiority in ine gilts ot the rich and power ful. There is a gradation, too, often unconscious, but nevertheless ac curate, in the many conventional greetings we give to men and wo men every day. But every greet ing may have the force and effici ency, somewhat, of a flower. This is a grudging world. Did you ever have a word of praise in season? Then you know its worth, when the heart is heavy and the way seems dark. There is in all pro bability someone you will meet w hen you set forth this morning to whom a word of cheer, of real solicitude, of genuine sympathy thought-flower from soul to soul will be a blessing. Every day last week your path crossed that of someone in need of something you could give. Some j are struggling with temptation. Some are confronted with discour tnent. Some are bereaved. Some are suffering from injustice. Some have made disastrous errors. Some have hearts sickened with hope deferred. To these the right word of com fort and of cheer would have been more precious than gold. Greens boro News. Glorious News comes from l'r. J. T. l urtis, Hwinht, Kan. lie writes: "I not only hove cured had eases of ectriua m my patients with Klectric Hilteis. but also cured myself l y them of the same disease I feel sine they will lienetil any ease of eeze ma." This slums what thousands have ptosed, that Klectric Hitters is a most crfffVve Moo.1 tmnlier. Its all excel lent remedy for eczema, tetter, salt rheum, uleeis, boils and running mires. It stimulates liver, kidneys and Isiwels, expels poisons, helps digestion, builds up the strength. I'nce ie. atlsfac tiou guaiauteed by all diuccists. A man without convictions is as uninteresting as a man with them is insufferable. To Mothers and Others. You can use Hncklen's Arnica Salve to eure children of eczema, rashes, tet ter, dialings, scaling and ciusted hu mors, as well as their accidental inju ries uts, hums, bruises, etc., with per fect safety. Nothing else heals so iiiu'kly. Koi Iwils. ulcers, old running oj fevet sores or piles it has no equal. '.' ic. at all druggists. A woman's mind is like a bed it must be made up occasionally. CHIIdrn Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C ASTO Rl A All Manly Men Work. Work, my son, never did kill any one. You need not be afraid that you may overwork yourself. People may die because they work all day and drink or dissipate or gamble most of the night, but they do not die of work, my son not of work. Work is good for you. Good, honest, healthful labor will make you sleep soundly, eai heartily and digest easily. It will make Sunday a welcome day and a holiday worth while. Work makes men. Did you ever think, my son, that the men who least need to work are the men who work the hard est ? Why? Because it is a pleas- ...... .....i, :.. u. ...i..... . . . , employed. To be compelled to loat is to a real man a heavy pun- ishment. If you would be a man work. You cannot show me anywhere a lazy boy or man whom anybody respects or who amounts to any thing. Work. Find out what you best like to do and then roll up your sleeves and work at it with all your might and main. It doesn't matter much what the work may be so it is hon est and suits you. Work at your work. Whether you use a pen to write or a shovel to throw yellow clay out ofa ditch, whether you preach and pray or paint a house or pad dle a boat or run a peanut stand, you must work. Work hard. The busier you are about your work the less mischief you will do, the happier you will be, the more dollars you will make and the more good you will do in the world. Do not shirk. ( When you play you should work jt your play, but you should never play at your work. Work while you work; play while you play. All manly men work. Look about you. Noic the men whom you respect. Note those ihe world is proud of. -What sort of men are they ? Tell me. Workers every one ! There is nothing finer in all the world ihan the joy a man may find in the w ork of his hands or of his brain, fie is doing what he was intended to do. Work! Nineteen Miles a Second w ithout a jar, shock or disturbance, is the awful speed of our earth through space. We wonder at such r ase of na ture's movement, and so do those who take 111. King's New Life Tills. No griping, no distress, just thorough work that brings good health and tine feelings L'.'ic. at all druggists. Heroes scent able to yell the loudest of all over a stomach ache. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C ASTO R I A "I was Crippled, could hardly walk and had to Crawl down stairs at times on :ny hands ami knees. My doctor told :r.c 1 hsd an acute attack of intunii.i.'.;ory rheumatism. 1 was in the hospital for weeks, but was scarcely nMe to walk when 1 left it. 1 rc.n! ;.i out Dr. Miles' Nerviae bought a bottle and begun to get better from the start, and for rhe past six months 1 have had sciively anv pain and am able to walk as well as ever." J.H. Sanih as, P. (). bo v Kockaway, N. J. Few niedn iocs ate ot any bt'iielit for thcunutiMii, but Mr. S.tn.U r tells plainly what Dr. Miles' Re storative Nervine did for it. One uutne uf Miicylste of so.h to one bottle of Nervine makes an ex cellent remedy for rheumatism, which is now known to be a nerv ous disease and therefore tuhjtvt to the influence of a medicine that acts through the nctves, as docs Dr. Miles' Nervine Sufferers from rheumatism seldom fail to find lelief in the use of Dr. Miles' Nervine, with salicylate of soda. So d undtr a o that assures th return of ths pr.os of th first bottle If it (alls to benefit. At all Druggn s. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, In. Win. L. KNIGHT, Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law, W EI.IXlN, X. V. Business promptly and faithfully at tended to. Associated with Peebles A Harris and Cav A Midyette in Halifax Superior Court practice. JKSKf MRE DOCTORS FAILED TO HELP Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound Restored Mrs. Green's Health Her Own Statement Covington, Mo.-"Your medicine has done me more good than all tire doc tor l medicines. At everymonthly period I had to stay In bed four days because of hemorrhages, and my back was so weak I could hardly walk. I have been taking Lydia E. I'inkham'i Vegetable Com pound and now I can stay up and do my work. I think it is the best medicine on earth for women, Mrs. Jennie Green, Covington, Mo. How Mrs. Cllno Avoided Operation. Iirownsville, Ind. "I can say that Lydia E. Pinkham ' Vegetable Compound has done me more good than anything else. One doctor said I must be opera ted upon for a serious female trouble and that nothing could help me but an operation. "I had hemorrhages and at timea could not get any medicine to stop them. I got in such a weak condition that I would have died if I had not got relief soon. "Several women who had taken your Compound, told me to try it and I did ' and found it to be the right medicine to build up the system and overcome female troubles. " I am now in great deal better health than I ever expected to be, ao I think I ought to thank you for It. "-Mrs. O. M, Clink, S. Muin St., Brownsville, Ind. The OF THE Practically a Daily at the Price of a Weekly. No oilier Newspaper In world gives so much at so low a price Tlir. great political campaigns are now ai hand, and you ' want the news accurately and j promptly. The World long since ! established a record of impartiality, and anybody can afford its Thrice-A-Week edition, which comes ev ery oilier day in the week, except Sunday. It will be of particular value to you now. The Thrice-A-Weck orld also abounds in other strong features, serial stories, hu mor, markets, cartoons; in fact, everything to be found in first-class daily. The Thrice-A-Week World's regular subsciption price is only $1 per year, and ibis pays for 156 papers. We offer this unequalled newspaper and the ROANOKE NEWS together for one vear for - - - VMil 1 The regular subscription price I of the tw o papers is $2.50. We nave on hand several consign; incuts ol thc latest m wool, Wash and Piuieess ladies Suits. Kathcr than re turn these suits our headquarters deci ded to put them on sale at half price for cash only. 1 Suits S7.HO. Prin cess, w hue and all other colors $." to f7, now J'J. i lo W. Wash Coat Suits ft to now l.'.s to tX i to ." Net Waist reduced 1 .T.'i to f-'.iio ltlack and col ored silk Petticoats H to !( now f'J.SK to :l.7 . Voile s-kirts Stt to J now Sj.SO to f 4 "o. UMHHI yards lace and embroid eries to close out at half price. t.' to tl Messaline silks, all colors, now 50 to T.ic. ."i ami tic. calicoes 8 to 4c. 10 and 12'e ginghams 7 to tie. About 3.UOU yards dress goods to close out less than cost. Ladies hats at half price. Hugs, druggets, carpeting and mattings at and below cost. SPIERS BROS. veuon,n.;. McCall's Magazine and McCall Patterns For Women Have More Friends than any other magniine or patterns. McCall's is the reliable r;e-hi. n tiunln monthly in one nnil n one hundred thousand hone :; i' .des showuig all the latest desini.i, .. LV1 Patterns, each issue is .r.i...i.l of rv'.M'U.ng shoit stories audi:; iufosnrntiou for women. S. Mo-t nd Kirp b Strle tr nihKritmi. iUl NlllMl l,--,.ll.e .1 VltM. ; roiti a v.sr, ri. ,....ng any omoI um clUtt j UcCil V.itfru lice. McC.H P.Hm. U.J I" lr nui.'.KUy, c.im.my m,d wintlsf .old. Mf' J . : - I u .ll hiMM .ha. ... MM f' ..Vr.romhli,.a. Nnmhihih.n. Buy ftuni your dflcf, or by M.U nam McCALL'S MAGAZINE 136-246 W. J7tk St,N" York City Sew York World kial Sale ! ... '.