.jjHlf fern- t&rtHm? ' CZI A NEWSPAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. Terms of Subscription--$1.50 ier Annum JOHN W, SLEDGE, Proprietor. WELDON, X. ('., TIIIWSDAV, OCTOIJKll 510, lUl'.l. vol. xmn. NO. 1:7 ( lJ h f ' The Kind You Have Always nought, anil which las been la uso for over 00 yenrs, lms borno tho siltftiuturo of -A and Ii.i: ticciiniitdo nmlcr bin per- jf yyJy Boiml Niinorvlsinti since ltn Infuuey. AfvY. t-WCAM, Allow inxmoi totlf n you in thl. AU ConnfiTfuIlM, Imitations find ",ust-as-(;iicul" nro but JExperliiicnlH thai tilllo with in il cniliiiicr tho lirnltli of Iul'unts ami Cliildreu Kxucriciii'K against ICvperlmonU What is CASTORIA Castorlti Is a lmrmltwH mibstiliito for Cantor Oil, Pare Boric, Irif nod Kootiiiiie; Hyritp. It In 1'ioinuint. It contains licit In e Opium, Morphine iww olln-r Narootlo substance. 1 1 s tit,'e 1; it s'larantcfl. It destroys Worms and allays JYvcnshntay. It cures Dlarrlunn and Wind Colli!. It relieves TeeMi'MRr Troubles, cures OiiKtipation mid Fliilnleiirv. It assimilate tlio Food, regulates the Ktmn.uli and lloivels, jriviiitf healthy and natural sleep. The Children's i'auacia .The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of ROMANCE OF WING LEE By MARTHA LOWELL. ! MA S7 The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THf CCNTAUN OOMf ANV, TT MUMIUV TMCCT, NIW VORH CITY. THE BANK OF VELDON WKLDON, N. C- Organized Under the Laws of the State of North Carolina, State of North Carolina Depository. Halifax County Depository. Town of Weldon Depository. Capital and Surplus, $55,000. For over -I yearn this institution lias provided hanking facilities for this section. Its stuekholilois and oll'ieeis are identified with the busi ness interests of Halifax and Northampton counties. A Savings Hcpartincut is uiaintauii'd I'm the henetit of all who desire to deposit in a Sa njirs Hank. In this iH-parttiieul luleiest in allowed as follows: For Deposits allowed loieniain three uniiitlm 01 longer, 1! per cent. Six months or louirer. A percent. Twelve nionthsor loniter. 4 percent. Any information will he furnished on application to the I'resideutort'asliier PKKHIMRNT V. K. D AN I FX, VH'B-I'KKSIDKM : W. It. SMITH. I.. C. hllU'KH. Teller. t ASIIIKK: .1. O. I'lUKK, DIRECTOliS V. U. Smith, W. K. Daniel, .1. (). Drake, W. M. t'ohen, A. I'. House, J.I,. Shepherd, W. A. Pierce, I). II. Zollieoll'er, .1 . W. Sledge 3E .MANlKACITIfKlW OF Building Material for Modern Homes, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Mantels, Door and Window Screens MADE TO ORDER AND IlKtH'LAR STOCK SIZES. Qood Materlls, High tirade Workmanship Our Slogan. Weldon, N. C. I fait lo SELL W On if tie FERGUSON S Pern i. , m 1913 Model-the best of all. This Is a safe and profitable Investment and you wont go wrong to buy one. It is built right, works right, the price Is right and the manufacturers will treat you all right, It stands at the head for capac ity, quality, simplicity and durability. "THE TRUTH OF THE PUODING 18 ChEWING THE BAGS.". Ask a few of the following good people who has been using the Ferguson Peanut Pickers for four or five years: H. T. Boyd, Seaboard, N. C; J. B. Mann, Murfreesboro, N. C, Chas. Shields, Scotland Neck, N. C; S. V. Camp, Sebrell, Va.; Asa T. Crawford, Williamsion, N. C; lilias Boone, Rich Square, N.C.; John King Peanut Co., Suffolk, Va.; W. D. Newsom, Ahoskie, N. C; J. H. Allen, Newsoms, Va.; J.B. Holland, Vivian N. C; J. R. Kella & Bro., Courtland, Va.; Alex Boyene, Wood land, N. C. Write to The Ferguson M'f g Company, SUFFOLK, VA., and place your order at once. 8 28 2m Wing crossed the border In a re frigerator car and happily had es caped with noth ing worse than frost bitten toes. The week previ ous the train's c o n a Ig nmetit of contraband "Chinks" had beeu converted Into cold storage, and of this Wing was aware. V f Hl "lom"" "uw J Vf our uninvited vis- V i Itor complaisant a 8 b i a t aut In a nourishing laun dry. Five years, carofully calculat ed, ullowed him to revisit the tomb of his ancestors. This mental ecstasy, however, was I ZA ' made before meet- In the "Mellcan gal." p i T That day of I memories Wing 1(1 drove a satisfac tory bargain, filching a Bhlrt without notice being taken thereof. Carrying his empty basket down the street ha figured the gain and was content, and that eame instant he caught the first glimpse of his destiny. She was standing behind the plate glass of a department store. A robe of azure gauze, price marked $8.96, swathed her slender form and a polo bat of violets sat well forward above her golden "Marcel." Her cheeks mantled with the blush of maidenhood were luscious as ripe pomegranates and her round eyes, which In color matched the $8.95, grew lashes as long as a painter's brush. Wing saw and wbb conquered. Trail ing his basket he approached the win dow, admiration expanding his fea tures Into a grin. Fixed as the pago das of Nankin he stood before this daughter of the gods and drank bla fill of her loveliness. Late that evening he returned to his 1 laundry. Next afternoon he feigned sickness and hurried off to State street, where his idol awaited him. A week of such devotion and Wing summed up his cash on hand eight, nine, ten dollars and 40 cents. He dressed himself In Sunday clothes, rolled bla pigtail Into a tight knot and ' set out for the department store, where she wbb enslaved. "How muchee you want your Mell can gal?" be asked the floorwalker, most politely. Strange to say It took some minutes to convince the ad dressed that au Insult was not im plied. Questions followed at length. Did Wing wish the figure alone, or In costume, as exhibited. To be sure he j wished her clothes and all. Alas, w hen the price was named, including dress, hat and girl, in toto, Wing's counte nance fell. He shook hla head aud de parted with the visage of a stulo. Hehtnd the Ironing board came more i calculations and Wing began to work overtime. Months passed. The adored one changed ber diaphanous voile tor a smart green tailor-made and the violet polo for a velvet toque. Later In the season she wore a fur cape around her shapely shoulders. The new year had been ushered In before Wing again appeared in the role of suitor. The savings of six months were w ith blm. A new inven tory was made, the price had Increased with the season. Wing deliberated. Jle was "velly Bolly," but the "Mellcan gal" would have to do without her lux urious cape. The money being paid, the new master undaunted by jeers of the pop ulace aud occasional apple cores, shouldered his blonde beauty and bore ber home. Once within the laundry preclnctB, Wing placed the beauty on a waBh tub and arranged her gown In correct folds. It took him a full half hour be fore he was satisfied with the result. Then ho lighted some Jobs sticks and placed them so that she Buould be en veloped In the perfumed smoke. He next offered her a plate of rice and sooy, but the tilted nose refused to sniff Its appetizing aroma. Alas, that the fates should be so cruel to lovers. A sharp ring at the telephone interrupted this amorous soliloquy. To Wing's reluctant re sponse an irate customer demanded hla washing and threatened the law. Wing shouldered a heavy basket and stole out Into the night. An hour passed. The Mellcan gal still crowns the wash tub with stat uesque grace. Then a visiting rat spreads the tale that the beauty is be coming animate. True It certainly is that the smiling rosy mouth has begun to pout. An ugly wrinkle, too, has appeared above the smooth brow and as the moments pass the tapering fin gers stretch and grow weirdly long "I'llng, toe rats scamper as one azure orb smashes on the floor. Tears of wax run down the once tilted nose and ruin the tailor-made. A aecoud ay follows. The handa melt away and disclose their props of wood. Hrow, cheeks and nose have become one shapeless mass then the laundry door opens and In slips Wing. Emotion is not accorjlng to the code of Confucius, bo our celestial lover neither wept nor tore Ills hair. Ho looked and closed the damper of the stove. Then again, this time without th lingering glance, he locked the laundry door behind him and stole out Into the night. tCopyrlaht, by Dully Story Pub Co.) A Gentle and Effective Laxative A mild, gentle and effective laxative is what people demand when suffering from constipation. Thousands swear !y Dr. King's New Life Pills. Ilui(li Tallman, of San Antonio, Texas, writes: "They are, beyond question, the heat pills my wife aud I have ever taken." Tlioy never cause pain. Price 2.1c. at druggists, or by mail. II. E. BLCKLKN 4 CO., Philadelphia, Pa. Hi. Louis, Mo , v-j -iiy i.f.rrs- iiffw . fori. . :t!::!:n:i:!:::::i:!:::t:it::::;n::::t:;:u:;:;! WORTH OF REAL MAN Buy a Mechanical Drudge iANY a wiiil. r day of bric k breaking litbnr bad the average tanner spent stonnini? over the old bin k saw. HlTt zr"r"l'' zr-r-pinu it-; way through lzlLm tottL'h wood for the ' : l Inn stove supply. But the wise ones don t do it now. They have a handy engine to run tiie saw, wliilo they rest and plan or next summer's work. That engine is about the busiest and most convenient machine the wise man has on his farm. It immps water for him, runs the sepa rator, washing machine, feed grinder, corn shcller, and grindstone. Often it runs a hay press, ensilage cutter, small thresher, or a repair shop. The year round it drudges for him, saving the man's strength for more prof itable things. And the wisest man has an I H C Oil and Gas Engine because it does most for him at least cost. Its simplicity renders it almost trouble-proof. Its construction makes it easy to start and to oper ate, and it is most economical in fuel consump tion. It is made of best material, and when rnxi-s?ary it will deliver 10 to 30 per cent above iis l i.'.i horse power. I II C responsibility fir. ii;e engine la ,ts all the years it is in service. I II ('. engines are made in all styles verti-c-1 ri!-i horizontal, portable, stationary and sks.M.-.l, .'.ir and water cooled. There are pu iiping, sawing and spraying outfits. Sizes fi. !. 1 to50-boise power, to operate on gas, liiuoiinc, naphtha, distillate, kerosene, and aii-ohol. Oil ..actors, f-12 to 30-60-hotse poui ffor plowing, threshing, etc. 1 he I : I I.', local dealer will show you the i f 'lui", ti ll you all about them. Getcata li;;ues i.om him, or write the International Harvester Company of America Jiik'ui poratcu) Richmond Va. By H. M. EGBERT. Charles Coggswell, president of half a dozen corporations and a man to he reckoned with in Wall street, ciiino out of Ids club at half past two. He had Indulged in u hearty lunch and was tasting again In remembrance the excellent uti-u k u la leino which (leorgcs, the chef, had provided. He had an appointment with his lawyer at three, to settle the details of the alimony width he was to ullow his wife, who was about to separate from lit in . Ho iiIho wauled to change his will, cutting off his scaii'grace sou who preferred the life of u composer to that of a hank president. These things wero annoying, he reflected, hut then that steak a la nine had been superb "Hclgho!" ho sighed. "When a man gets to be forty-five his troubles mul tiply." And ho fell to thinking how hardly fate used him. As ho stepped Into the street a news boy ran Into him. yelling at the top of his voice. He plrked himself up and thrust a paper under Mr. OoggBwell's nose. "Suicide of a millionaire!" he yell ed; and there, sure enough, was the announcement, In big, black lettering. Mr. Coggswell bought a copy, and the next minute was was staggering back upalnst the wall of the club. The suicide was that of himself. Wheu he had recovered a little he read as follows: "Mr. Charles Coggswell, president of the United Reality and I'nlou corpo ration, and a well known figure on the Street, Bhot himself In the temple at half-past one o'clock this afternoon, in a lodging house on the Bowery. Al though he had dressed himself In shab by clothes and destroyed all evidences of his Identity. Mr. Coggswell's fea tures wero too well known for his death to remain long unknown. The body, which waa Identified by mem bers of his family, and his partners and business associates, who were AS TO Kill man. Did you give him a lift ? I le's a brother oi And bearing about all the burden he cm. Did you give him a smile ? I le was ci; l down and blue, And the smile would have helped him to i anle it tlit'oiio.h. Did you give him your hand V I le was slippim; don n Ii:!!, And the world, so 1 fancied, w is usim; him ill. Did you give him a word? Did nii n!mv, him i!n- rot. I, Or did you just let him go mi wiih his lo.i.l Did you help him along? I le's a sinner like ynu. But the grasp of your hand inighi hive cinicd him ihnmgh Did you bid him good cheer? Ju-.i a word and a smile Were what he most needed i'ut last weary mile. Do you know what he bore in thai burden of cares Thai is every man's load an I thai sympathy shares? Did you try to find mil what he needed from you Or did you just leave him to h.iule ii ihroui'.h ? Do you know what ii me.ms to be losing the light, When a lift just in time mighi set everything right ? Do you know what it means -just ihe clasp of a baud, When a man's borne about all a man ought id stand ? Did you ask what it means why the iiiiverii:g lip. And the glistening tears down the pile cheek thai slip? Were you brother of his when the lime cime id be5 Did you offer to help him, or didn't you see? Don't you know ii's die pan of a brother of man To find what the grid is and help when you can? Did you stop when he asked you to give him a lift Or were you so busy von left him to shift ? Oh 1 know what you say may be true But the test of your manhood is : What did you do ? Did you reach oui a hand ? Did ynu find him the road Or, did you just lei him go by with his load? jj !! &tf :A HAVE FAITHJN GOD! Have your plans miscarred, your ships foun dered, your treasure taken wings? Has your best wisdom become foolishness, sagacity proven a de luslon, your will power a broken reed? Have faith in God! Have friends vanished or proven faithless? Have enemies multipled and do they now crowd in upon you to destroy ou? Have faith in (iod! Has poverty gripped you and disease weakened otir frame? Does pain torment all your waking hours and has life's rainbow vanished in thick night? Have faitli in (iod! Somewhere beyond the Eternal Love sits enthroned. The hand which holds that sceptre never trembles, The wisdom which plans the life of systems and of men never blunders. His ways are not our ways, but some how loneliness and failure, weakness and pain, sunshine and storm clouds are working His will. We cannot see; we trust. Have faith in (iod!- The Christian (iuardian, tttaggenng Back Against the Wall. hastily summoned, was removed at llrst to the morgue, but now lies at his home, where the Inquest will be held this afternoon " Coggswell knew tho uiau a double of bis, strikingly alike even to the gait and gesture, who had once or twice Impudently demanded money from him on the strength of the resemblance, until Mr. Coggswell had threatened to have him arrested. Then the fellow had disappeared to end his days by his own hand la tho haunts he had frequeuted. The, tlrst Impulse of the financier was to hurry to his otllco and summon the reporters in order to Inform them of their error. Then a new Idea came to him, so unexpectedly that he flung out his arms as though to ward off a blow. "Suppose 1 were dead," he thought "Would the world be better off or worse?" The Idea was so staggering that he felt the need of time to think it over. Time and a place! He had a little private office In an unfrequented street off llroadway. He employed nobody there and no one knew of this retreat, to which he sometimes went to pon der over business deals In solitude. lie made his way there, unlocked the door, and sat down at his desk. if he were dead, wiped out, no longer a factor In the affairs of men, what would it mean to the world that he had known? What did his life mean? IDs death meant release and money to his wife; to his musician Bon It meant tho Inheritance of which he was lo have been deprived Ills part in r, 1'renllce, and be had always been nl loeeerheads, and nine times out of ten Prentice had been right In bla views I'oKgswell tried to think of one l.ei-Hoii whom his life benefitted, but ..mid not do so. Then why should be not be dead? lie could lay hands upon ten thousand dollars With liln experience and knowledge he could take this, go to some distant slate, and renew his for tune, shako off the past. Ho had nut yet realized that our past binds us in Invisible chains of steel. Acting upon Hie Impulse, hs donned a rough old ' u.t which he kept In a closet, clipped his mustache close, and passed out I into the street. In the shabby figure that thus emerged nobody would have recognized the president of one of the j largest- corporations In the country. j His plan, as yet roughly formed, waa to go to the Grand Central station, J j take a ticket for some distant city, j and leave ou the next train, first pur- j chasing a few toilet necessities, change of linen, and, of course, a suit- case. The adventure pleased him. He felt a strange happiness such as had long been unfamiliar to blm. There would be no more steak a la nine; more likely he would eat In I'liulico and Harvard lunch rooniB, as the five cent counters are euphoniously desig nated. He bent his steps uptown, walking, because lie needed physical exercise to enable him to concentrate his actively working brain He had traveled Into tho Thirties before ho realized how near ho was to his des tination Then, since the habits of years are not lightly overcome, he discovered that his feet had led him toward his club. A little gruup of members was gathered round the hull porter. Coggswell lingered near. No body recognized him. "Yes, gentlemen, I saw him enter with my own eyeB, at the very moment he shot himself," the man was saying. "Don't tell mo there ain't no ghosta, for In the future I'll know different. And Mr Georges swears he cooked htm a steak a la relne with his own hands." "Ah! The old habits persist after death," sneered Barnwell, one of his business rivals. "I'll bet he's busy cornernlng harps and bulling halos," said another. "Coggswell won't let a chance slip by." Some were too good hearted to speak 111 of the dead, but none had a good word for him. The shabby man turned away. It was growing dark, when starling up from a roverle, he discovered that he was standing In front of his house on .Madison avenue. He had forgotten all about hie plans. An Intense desire to revisit his home had taken posses sion of hlra. Nobody was stirring In the street. Tho shades wore down at all the win dows. Coggswell let himself In noise lessly and slipped along the hall and up the stairs, creeping like a guilty man hounded by adversaries. At the head of the first flight the lone drone of voices reached his ears. The draw ing room door was slightly ajar, and Inside he Baw the cofltn, surrounded wUh lights, and persons Btandlng near it. He crept up to his den at the top of the house. As he reached the last Biory he Baw a figure coming toward him, followed by another, and shrank back Into a closet Just as they came round the bend In the passage. They were two serving maids, and, as they paused, he heard one of them Bay: Why are you taking on so, Mary? He wasn't no good, for all I've heard tell of lilin. Didn't he drive that good wife of his out of his bouse and spoil her life for her?" "I can't help It," sniffed the other "Ho mayn't have been a good man, but he saved my brother's life " They passed on. and something leaped up In Cogswell's heart. He remembered now a carelessly tossed hundred dollar hill to the housemaid, wheu he had learned that her brother was suffering from tuberculosis. When they had disappeared he went dowa the steps with a firmer tread. Never theless, outside the drawing room door he paused and listened Prentice, hla partner, waa speaking. "1 tell you, Mrs Coggswell," he waa Buying, "Charles was a good man. Never you worry about his superficial faults. I knew hi ui more Intimately than any man of his acquaintance, aud I know that a warm heart beat under the affectation of selfishness. I could tell you stories " "0, I know he wsb," his wife Bob bed. "It is I who have been at fault. When he was u young man, struggling to make his way In the world, I stood between him and success. I was no helpmate to htm. I thought of nothing but dinners and dresses. O, Charles If you could only know, If you could only come hack to me!" A graver voice wbb speaking. It was that of the clergyman. Coggs well had been a liberal subscriber to church funds, mainly for advertising reasouB. "You must not reproach yourself, Mrs. Coggswell," he was saying. "Your huBband was a good man, but he fail ed as you say you failed, simply be cause he did not always understand the people about him. Ho waa a rigid ly good and honorable man In many ways and a liberal one." A fourth voice took up the parable. Coggswell Btarted and clenched his flsta In bitter remorse. The voice was that of his Bon. "I know father meant to do well by me," he said. "You know, mother, he believed that a man shoild shift for himself, to develop Independence of character. That's why he left me to worry along as best 1 could. God bless him! lie was one of tho finest men that ever lived." The voices died away, and It seemed to Coggswell as though he had already come to tho new birth that he desired. Why should he go away and sink his Identity when bis life lay here? No, the real life was In his accustomed place, with life's struggle still before htm, enmllles In nvercom. faults to bo atoned for, all the battle to be fought out over again In the accustomed bat tlefield. Ho hesitated a moment; then sofetty opened the door (Copvrlflit. HIS. by W. O. Chapman.) In Jf Mm KM Those fatigued can find cheer in a glass of PEPSI-Cola You enjoy every sip. In Bottles At Founts 41 Se gln v .ii I ij i. M. DICKONS, Local Agent, Weldon, N. C. GRfcflT BAF.Cf!! IN TYPEW R t'l fcks. v rum u l;iiLrt: htm'k ol' Ktamtuiu 'I'yftfVMUt'i.-. t mi furnish tit uiH't .ion un'li.inx. t'tiMi, luininglui), Ku)ui, Mllilli PlL'lilli i. I., t. S III llll & blO. 8 uiht I ii-Uiuihmi, a ny other make from Titi) .i.u.rv notice We have both the visilile and tin-m imIiIc. We bought a lltltM' Mock ol tln se 'I ypeWj'ltel'S liom our-it mi tii In i 'i i e lml i t lie regular ft hole sale pun. :ii.-i nit stU nov. at one-lourth lu one li;.h lt.' Hinilai I eta il prices. A k'ooil l' pew i itt t Hum i't.ot) lo $1.". A In! tec one Z IV o to ;s.fv.-U. 'Hie Lent from up to ;n y jmhv. ill hc-glad toanswri any iimUiiv hi eonuntioii with IhiM' ih.it iiiiii . and m nd ainpleb ol the ttoik i.f v any ol the Jype wntt'is we liuu kveiv l.ov and Lit lioultl 1 .U ve i n e ol ou i cluap 'ivpiViii teis U .cam liuw lo use. Any prison who can wtitr v. !1 vu a tvpewtUet can deinaiul a laiue salaiv. AnvoJie who liujs a ci tap lypewnlev fiom us atu wan l.- a 1 elU-i one later, v.e will ttku hack the one huujkht and aliow Uu-han-i pant lor it in i-xchange Cora Lettei one, il leiuipe 1 in iood condition anu within si mom hs li not in good Cuiiuit:oti we allow tin' niaiket aine. Wtcairy ijpt- w ntet nlihons and other supplies. WKI.HOS. N (1 m CM Ii'. The man who is anxious to start an argument can always find an oilier misguided person willing to help hiim Many a true word is spoken wiih lying intent. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Many a husband is a sorry e-baclu'lor. l-'oriiinaiely for the style facto ries, women have no sense of humor. Children Cry FOR FI.E1 CHER'S CASTORIA . " - -W-TOlBBIttSMBBSBBBMBHBMi Many a man has strained his in tellect by tryitig 10 bin in. CASTOR. A i'or Iai.mts and Children. fho Kind You Have Always Bought 'Bears tho tiigtidtuie Massage for Appendicitis. Dr. Albert Abrams, of San Francis co, predicts the early disappearance of surgery as a remedy for appendi citis He saya a massage treatment wUI displace It h'czema and Itching Cured The soolhing, healing medical ion in Hr. Ilohson's Kczema Ointment pene trates every tiny pore of the skin, clears it of ail impurities nop itching in slantly. Dr. Holmon s hczema Oint ment is guaranteed to speedily heal eczema, rashes, ringworm, tetter and other unaigiitly eruptions. Eczema Ointment is a doctor's prescription, not an experiment. Hv mail, .Wc. ol'i'KUTKU CHEMICAL COMPANY, ' t. Louis, Mo, Philadelphia, Pa. Finds Cure for Epilepsy After Years of Suffering "My ilauiiliter was ainlcted with emi,i,ti,. ins fur IhifL yoars, the attacks cumii.g every few weeks. We employed Beveial docturs but they did her no good. About a year ago we heard of Dr. Miles' Nervine, and It certainly has proved a blessing to our llttlo girl. She la now apparently cured and Is en Joying the best of health. It la over a year Bines ah has had a 1 fit We cimnot speak too highly of Dr. Miles' Nervine" MRS. FRANK ANDERSON. Comfrey, Minn. Thousands of children in the United Stales who are suffering from attacks of epilepsy are a burden and sorrow to their parents, who would give anything to restore health to the MifTcrrrs. Dr. Miles' Nervine is one of tin- brit remedies known for this at. lute. n It has proven I.,-... ,1 ,m thousands of cases and those who have used it have li e i;rc:itest faith ill it. It is not a "cure-all," but a reliable remedy for n.rvous diseases. You need not Instate to give it a trial. S'lld by all Druggists. If the tint bottle falls to benefit your money Is rctucnd. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind sept 4 1 y NOTICE. ilavintr qualified as Executrix of the last will and testament of F. H. Treaey, deceased, late of Halifax county, N. c. this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said de ceased to exhibit them to the under signed at Weldon, N. (!., on or before the 2 day of October, 1014, or this no tice will be pleaded in bar of their re covery. All persons indebted to the es tate will please make immediate pay ment. This the 24th day ofMeptember 1913. MR3. P. II. TREACY, Executrix of F. H. Treacy, dec.