jK ''.nf( sans!
A NEWSPAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
Terms of Subscription--$1.50 .er Annum
JOHN W, SLEDQE. Proprietor.
WKLDON, N. ('., TIU'KSDAV, NOVI'MUI'li 115, lUV.i.
NO. 21)
VOL. XLV1II.
afkM&
if
VPRQDKLYN -v
BERACLE
The Klud You Have Always Bought, and which lias been
lu use for over 30 years, 1ms borno th slgnuturo of
and liu been made under his per.
fir , atonal supervision slnco Its Infancy.
JUAMtl Allow no one totlecoleo you in this.
All CounterfeltH, Imitation find " Just-iis-sTood" lire but
Experiments that trlilo with ur.tl cniliinirer tho lieullli of
Infants wid CiiUdren-Eiperic-n.ie injalnst Lxpcritneut.
What Is CASTORIA
Caatorla Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drop" and Soothlutf Syrups. It Is I-leiisnnt. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor olhcr Narcotic
substance. Its aire Is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Fevrrisbuesi. It cures DlarrliniR and Wluil
Colic. It relieves Teetht'iff Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
8toimwh and lltuvels, giving; healthy and iiiiturul sleep.
The Children's rauacoa-Tlio Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
Uatei ftmote It the
H ecu nil Tlttie.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
4(v ,T THC OINTAUn MHMNf, TT MURMf TBItTt tW OftY.
OE
30
THE BANK OF VELDON
WKLDOX, X. ('
Organized Under the Laws of the State of North Carolina,
State of North Carolina Depository.
Halifax County Depository.
Town of Weldon Depository.
Capital and Sarplus, $55,000.
For over L'l yeais this iustitutiiin bus (ii vt U-1 banking facilities for
this section. Its stookliol.li r an, I ullieers an- identillcd with the busi
ness interests of Halifax ami Northampton counties.
A Savings Department is maintained tin Ihe bent tit ol all who desire
to deposit in a Savings Hank. Ill this liepaitnient interest is allowed us
follows: ,.
For Deposits allowed tureinain three monlhs or longer. '-' per cent Ms
ri U . '! I.... r..,l 1 iu i.r I. HIT, II' 1 lt.-npllt
monius r longer, ,i per ci-ui. ...... ,- . ..
Any information will he furnished on application to the I'lesulcntort ashiei
rRlSIDINT :
W. E. DANIEL.
viea-i'KKsiDENT:
W. K. SMITH.
I.. I'. DKA I'F.lt, Tellt-i
CASHIER:
.1. It. DRAKE.
DIRECTORS W. K. Smith, W. F. Daniel, .1 U. Drake. U I heu,
A,C. House, J.L. Shepherd, W A. 1'ierco, I). B. Zulhcolfei. .1 . . sledge
MASl'FACTTKKltS (IK
Building Material for Modern Homes, Sash, Doors,
Blinds, Mantels, Door and Window Screens
MADE TO OltDEK AN D ItLtilLAK STOCK SIZES.
Good Materials. High Qrade Workmanship Our Slogan.
Weldon, N. C.
Choice Cut j
Flowers
For all Occasions
Roses, Carnations and Chrysanthe
mums are the aeaaonable Bowers now.
Our art in wedding outfits is eiiual to
tbe best. Nothing liner in llorul oiler
ioga than our styles.
Hyacinths, narcissus, tulips and
lilies in great varieties. Plant early
for best results. Rose bushes, ev
ergreans, shrubs, hedge plants,
shade trees and herbaceous plants.
a"--
Mail, telegraph or telephone, orders
promptly executed by
j. L O'QUINN & COMPANY'
FLORISTS,
RALEIGH. North Carolina.
Phone 149 Ask for pi ice list
IUI4MM. I MU 1 I . HKlil. real"
IlirilMITBH""1"!"'. r.iipF
ID. SWIFT & CO,
303 Seveatk St., Wathin-
Wood'a Hish-Crade Seedi.
Crimson Clover
The King ol Soli Improver,
elao makes aplendld fall,
winter and aprliiR grailng,
the earliest green feed, or
good bey crop.
rsiulUN nLOVER will increase
ihe produchveneas of ihe land more
than Iwenly limes as much as the same
amount spent in commercial fertiliiers.
Can be sown By useir of "
working ol corn, cotlon or other culliva.
ted crops.
Vl'e are headquarters lor
Crimson Clover, Alfalfa,
Winter Vetch, and all
farm Seeds,
Write (or prices and DecrlpHv
Fall Cataloo. giving iaiormatioa
about all seeds for fall sowing.
r WBIBLE'STUDY'ON
COD BURIED MOSES, HIS SERV
ANT. Dsut.ronomy 34:1-12 Nov. 16.
Pffclwn 1 1 ' !'il f ' toil i Ihr deal
of Hi hjiiiIi.' - r.cllwl I0.-3.
m TsroSES is one of the grnnd
hunuters of liNtory. His
I T uulillll) Iniinis up ns a great
patriot, general, Judge find
ruler of his people; und still grander
does he appear in his relationship to
ward liod. He wus the personlllea
tlmi of oliedleuee iiinl loyalty ns a serv
nt of Jehovah. In this he typifies
Messlnh. As we rend. "A Prophet
shall the Lord your Ood raise up unto
yon from amongst
your iM-ethreii like
unto iiie" 1 urn a
diminutive picture
of that great
Teacher. Leader
and King whom
Jehovah has an-
oluted to he the
real Deliverer of
Israel and the
world from the
bondage of Snliin.
slu und death.
Anv one can see
that great faith ill God was necessary
for the position occupied by Moses.
But comparatively few can see tile real
depths of .Moses' churueter; for only a
few realize the Divine call to Israel
and Moses' work lis their mediator.
Moses, the Servant of Qod.
w. eiinnol hell) feeling sympathetic'
toward this grand servant of tiod-
"the meekest man In nil the cartn.
After so many years of patience, long-
suffering and loyalty to find, in nn un
guarded moment, Israel's great medl
inr fulled lu meekness und loyally
Directed hv the Lord to speak to the
rock, which on a previous ocension he
bad smitten. Moses petulantly smote u
thu Hprond time
The rock whence came the llfe-glviug
ol renin renreseuted the lluck or Ages
Messiah, who was to he smitten once
more Coiniinre Hebrews h:4-fl.
The fnct that Moses was used us n
rvne nf the Seeiind Death class lu no
sense Implies that he experienced the
Second Death or cut himself oir rroni
nivinu fnvnr The nunlshment be re
celved merely helped to complete the
typical picture--lie might not enter t a
nson.
Canaan Viewed From Mt. Pisgah
Plrnruh Is one of the peaks of Ml
Neho. From It Moses got n view of
the Promised I.nnd, toward which his
eye of fulth hud looked for eighty
years nud toward which he had laborl
nualv iiulded Israel for forty yeurs.
This iirand ohl servant of God, fully
resigned to the Dlviue urrungemeiit,
was put to sleep hy the Lord whom be
served
Moses' seuuh'hre was hidden duubt
less to prevent anything of the spirit
of Idolutrv. St. .lude declares that Sa
tan strove for possession of Moses1
body, doubtless with a view to using
It In sonic ldolutrous way.
Mosss Disd and Waa Buritd.
We are not to overlook the fact that
Mosea died, und will not live agalu
until the Divinely appointed time
wben. uuder Messiah's Kingdom, be
will he resurrected. Meantime he has
stent with his fathers, as the Bible
evnerallv records of all who died
The account of the tniustlguratlon of
our Lord and the appearance of Moses
and Kilns Willi Him In that vision
must not be made to eoutl'udlet the
statement that Moses died and that the
oulv hone for Buy one Is by u resurrec
tion from the dead. (1 Corinthians
1.V1.1.14.) We have Jesus" owu word
for It that neither Moses nor Elijah
went to Heaven. He declared, "No
man bath ascended up to Heaven.
John 3 l'l.
Jeaus fxi'luliicd that whut the dls
tides saw was a vision. 'Tell the
vision to no man." (Matthew 17:0.)
Just so the trumpets, beasts, etc., of
Revelation lire uot reulltles, hut vi
sions. St. Peter, who witnessed the vl
alnn declares Ihst It was a representa
tion of Messiah s Kingdom. IS I'eter
1 -lil-IS 1 Moses renreoeiitisl one class
and Elijah another, as participators
with Jesus lu Ills Meeslnuic glory.
God's Promiss to Abraham.
At the foundation of all God's deal
In its with both Natural and Spiritual
Israel Ilea II 1 a
aSMtfEViivW Kreut, oath-bound
tJum ,t promise to Abin
&M,5'''',y hm-''la thy Seed
fflU snail an mo rain-
ltr.7y tiles or me euriu
1 JT- T . . . ....
. ie uiesseu. ims
yicif ". 1 was the flrat clear
statement of God's
IflsLI-TMKfCCtUiM
AMPCURBTHtLU;,-
ofjn.iiit:G'
T. W. WOOD O SONS,
Seedsmen, RiuuuuuJ, Yi.
DRUMIM IN THE TWILIGHT. IHIiMMi TDD QtJICK.
OTiWJfL
V
Wliat more can we do to con vince you that you positively
can find perfect health and relief from your suffering by
using Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound? All the
world knows of the wonderful cures which have been made
by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, yet some wo
men do not yet realize that all that is claimed for it is true.
If suffering women could be made to believe that
this grand old medicine will do all that is claimed for it,
how quickly their suffering umild end!
We have published in the newspapers of the United States
more genuine testimonial letters than have ever been pub
lished in the interest of any other medicine for women in
the world and every year we publish many new testimo
nials, all genuine and true.
Read What These Women Say!
BlufTton, Ohio. " I wish to
thank you for the good I derived
from Lydia E. I'uikhiiiu's VcRetii
ble Compound sometime ni. I
suffered eaeh month such agony
that I could scarcely endure, und
after taking three nouiesoi i.yuin
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Coin
pound I was entirely cured.
"then l nauan auacKoi oikuhu;
inflammation and took Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable C'omixiuiul
and I am cured. I thank you for
what your remedies have done iur
me and should anything bother
me again, 1 shall use it again, for
1 have great faith in your reme
dies. You may use my testimo
nial and welcome. I tell every
For 30 years Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetnhlo
Compound litis heen the stiiniliird reniedylor 1-
' hi. ..1,1. .,,, mi's inlltilMltS
does justice to herself it she does not try this t.j-
mous lllllll-ino inntii-i n"ii. -- -
has restored so many siifleriiiKWOinenlohenltli.
si. Write to I.VIUA E.l'INKIIAM MEIMCl.yJCtl.
U (CONFIUENTIAL) I.VNN. .MASS., lor nilvice.
Your letter will he opened, rend and answered
by a wonmu ana iieiu in airit-i. inuuuiwo.
mm
go mm.
No more of aching he-iris, Je.ir love, no silis.
Nn wistful, huckwjrd elances in the pasi,
No different ways to tread, no sad gond-hyes,
To part us, love, when we go Home ai last.
The tears we weep shall all be wiped aw.iv,
The cross 'neaih which nur souls so nil How down,
The Father, love, hath promised tw some Jay
Shall blossom at His touch mio a crown.
The anguish now we cannot understand.
The hitterness. the onuine and unrest,
Hut we through faith, dear love, can clasp his hand,
Who bids us trust because I lc knmvcili best.
Then let us cease to thus repine and sigh,
What mailer if lo-day we walk apart,
To morrow, I le who watches from on high,
Will bring our footsteps salely home, dear heart.
And weary earth shall fade and die below,
While in our hearts and on the oilier snore,
Shall we behold the bright eternal glow
Of life, dear love, and life forever more.
So we shall meet again and hand in hand,
Shall walk toccther by the crystal sea,
And we shall know and we shall understand
Just why He chose these paths for thee and me.
JUST BEVOND THE BEND.
A BIRTHDAY POLM.
Are You a Woman?
Mi Cardui
purMise to remove
the curse of death.
From the very be
ginning He bad
premeditated send-
God to tisleeni the
world and to bring lu a blessing In-
stead of Ihe curse. Yet the first clear
aiatmint of this Divine purpose waa
made to Abraham, that himself and
bis posterity should be associated with
nod lu the work of human upiiu.
In due tluie the Loaoa became Jesus,
and sacrlflclally laid down Ills life. To
ill,,, w.ni uatheied the "Israelites In
" i,. wliara In His sulTerlnns and
death aud to lie iniide partakers of Ills
glory. These with Jesus are to con
stitute tbe autltyplcal Moses, raised up
from aiuoinrat their brethren. Not
enough of aucb "Israelite Indeed" Is?
ln found. Divine Wisdom has beeu ee
i,.tiiir others from aiuonnet the Gen
tiles. Thus gradually Qod has been'
nnMrim the e-reat Prophet, PrVst
gad King, to be tbe great Mediator.
FOR SAIE AT ALL DWSTS
Is
Whv Use L. ft M. Seml-Mlxed
Real Paint
lt..,,.e ii'a economical, because it
is nure White 1-ead. Zinc nd Linseed
oil. Because it's the highest grade
quality paint that can be made. Be
cause when the user adds 3 quarts of oil
i ..lu. nfihe 1. & M. Semi-
Mixed Paint, it makea'l S-4 gallons of
pure paint si t cost oi aooui i.s i"-i
gallon, i ins saves ,uv uf. awu. -.onl.
a oallnn on all the Damt Used.
Tk. t. M is and has always been the
Another mile of life's long journey made
Jusi one more mile-stone nearer to the end;
Look up my soul ! Have faith ! Be not afraid !
Our biding place is just beyond the bend.
Sweet resting spot the weary iraveler's last relay
The halt on life's highway we all must make,
Where we can lay aside our garb of clay;
Lie down 10 sleep, and in new garments wake.
Not far ahead one darksome ford between
Its stepping stones are rough, but helpful hands
Will hold our own, and angel forms unseen,
Will lead us upward to the promised lands.
Almost in view. Have faiih; a few more days,
And we shall s""ul upon the farther shore;
F.'n now 1 seem to hear sweet strains of praise
Refrains soli chained, which I've heard before.
Remembered voices Moating 'cross the tide,
Songs sung wiih dear ones when they came to die,
Paint music waited Irom ihe other side,
Pamihar songs from lips I've kissed good-by.
Hear them my soul; hear mingling with them all
Kind words of comfort to ihe sore distressed.
Those tones of mercy in ihe Master's call--"Come
unto me and! will give you rest."
Another mile of life's long journey made,
Jusi one more mile stone nearer to the end;
Look up my soul ! Have faith ! Be not afraid!
Our Master waiis us just beyond ihe bend.
All Things Karthly Are Sub
ject To Decay And Sooner Or
Later Must Fade, Wither,
Droop, Perish, And Pass for
ever Away.
The Trugedy of the Day i s
The Loss ol Novelty and Sur- j
prise, Once Regarded as Tile i
Joy of Childhood.
I'
one what your remedies have
tli inn for me." .Mrs Uiioda Win-
GATE, li0X atl.1, lllufftOU, Ohio.
Teritwater, Mich. "A year ago
I was very weak and the doctor
said I had a serious displacement.
1 had backache and bearing down
mins so bad that I could not sit
in a chair or walk across the floor
and 1 was in severe pain all the
time. 1 felt discouraged as I had
taken everything I could think of
mid was no Letter. I began tak
ing Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta
ble t'oiiiKTuiid and now I am
stroiiganil healthy." -Mrs. Alien
Daiimxu, R. K. 1. No. '-, Box 77,
Pent water, .Mich.
highest
trade and moat' perfect
paint I
Chlldren Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
; I'.y Henry I'.lmint i
Sitting here in the deepening
gloom of iht: mellowing twilight
and wiih feelings softened and
j sweetened hy the hallowing influ
I enecs thai always sweep over one's
"' heart as we sit and yield to that
sweet melancholy that is always
fell when the shadows those silent
and voiceless pallbearers in the
funeral procession of day puss on
to the cemetery in darkness, we
begin to muse and commune with
(iod and dream of Heaven and iis
rest, and blessedness, and long
and crave and hunger for its beat
itudes and iis felicities, ic, sym
phonies ami iis raptures, and
for those ioys that are imperish
able, and for those flowers of hap
piness that live in perpetual bloom
and fragrance. Here in this
earth life all joys and all pleasures
are ephemeral, and are as evan
escent as the Quivering flashings ol
the dazzling lightnings that write
out in glittering letterings upon the
black parchment of the clouds the
awe inspiring sentence, "Behold
and know that 1 am God" and
which electrify for a moment and
then fade away into the rayless
deeps of space, and leave not one
single brilliant letter there to
tell of its thrilling corruscations.
Yes, all things earthly are subject
to decay and sooner or later must
fade, wither, droop, perish and
pass forever away. The glittering
dew drop, which sparkle with such
diamond-like brilliance in their
fragrant coronal at morning; die
under the kisses of sunbeams, and
pass away like a snow flake upon
the bosom of a river. The beautiful
rainbow, ehild of die light and the
shadow, born in the w edlock of
ihe sunbeams and the tain drops
and nursed on the echoes of ihe
reiterating storm, yields to the in
explorable law of decay, and in a
moment, in ihe twinkling of an
eye, all ol its variegated colorings
its beauty, its splendor and
its loveliness are drowned in the
Hood light of the etVulgeut sun aud
not one trace is left- to tell where I
iis iridescent alone-, had glisiened. !
The beauties of the woodland,
the fragrance of its blooming
(lowers, ihe murmur of its rippling
cascades, and the tunefulness of its
Hod taught minstrelsy, whose
gladful notes thread the air with a
melody as sweet as echoes from
Heaven yes, all these are sub
ject to the same inexplorable law,
and like the dew drops and the
rainbow, they, too, yield to the
touch of the decay and pass away.
Yes, even the stars, which blos
som out into such rich bloom ol
brilliance upon midnight skies, and
enrich a world with iheir spark
ling wealth, yield to the same stern,
immutable, irrevocable decree,
and in the quivering Hashing of
some daz.lins meteor we behold
the brilliant funeral train of some
dead star on its lire paved pathway
to everlasting burial. But there is
one thing which cannot die. There
is a life Jesus-given which lives
in the eternity of its own undecay
ing, undying vigor and Ireshness
and nlorified beauty, and it has a
iov and a peace and a rapture
about ii that eternity its elf cannot
fathom or measure or bound.
Yes. there is too on earth the
Christian's hope of that glorious
immorality, and protected as it is
in the arms of religion, and nursed
on the faith of the promises of
Jesus, it, too, has an eternity of
existance, and grows stronger,
purer and brighter as life run s
down its ch annel to the ocean ol
death. And even its glory beams
will Hash across the darkened
chasm, and illume and brighten
up the inky deep which rolls be
tween time and eternity, and dis
close to enraptured vision beauutul
glimpses of ihe blessed haven of
peace and rest which lies glisten
ing all bright aud resplendent with
that clorv light which flashes in
everlasting sparkles from the
throne of ( iod.
CASTORIA
For lufanti and Children.
Nig Kind You to Always Bought
The following from Ihe Phil
adelphia Public Ledger is good
reading and contains hint :
"A few days uko a ovinia
boy walked thirty miles to see
a circus, lie left his home ut
sunrise, crossed the Allctfha
nies, reached town h"fore
dark, got a youd night's rest,
and spent all the next day
taking in the sight:-. Il was
his lirst glimpse into ihe larger
world, and he enjoyed every
minute of it. Satiated and de
lighted he struck his trail again
and with him were memories
that will hist for mouths to
come.
'It is a simple incident, but
the point is that his happiness
was so large that it became an
item in the lucal news of the
State. The tragedy of the day
is the hs of novelty and sur
prise, once regarded as tbe joy
of childhood. By the tune the
bovs and girls of the pres nt
age reach twelve or fifteen
they have seen about all that
is to bo seen, and many know
entirely too much of the world
for their own benefit.
"Civilization is wonderful
and benevolent, hut it has noth
ing that could excell the charm
that eimm to the twelve-year-old
hoy of the mountains when
he saw the sights of his first
circus and beheld the old, old
antics of the old, old downs.
Often happiness is in imt know
ing too much and always it is
haviie: something new to
know "
IMM-FCRKEDA POOR TRADE.
PEPSI-Cola
never fails to cool
i n vi gorate refresh I
It has aflavor all its own
rare and delicious.
This and its healthy
effect gain and hold
friends everywhere.
Try it, and Pepsi-Cola
will be your favorite
your daily preference.
In Bottlea or At Fount
5c
;. M. DICKENS,
Local Agent, l
Weldon, N. C.
SAI OONKRF.KIH CONVhKTS DRAM
SIIOI' INTO l)in GOODS STORE
HKOAI 'SK Hli WAS AFRAID OF
1 -llll ItlU'N.
A saloonkeeper recemlv elosed
out his business and opened
a small dry goods store instead.
One of his acquaintances, know
ing thai he was exchanging a good
income for a very limited one, re
nionsiratcd wiih him. "I can't
help il, Jim," said the saloon
keeper, "my children are growing
up and they began to ask questions
about the liquor business that I
could answer without being
ashamed before them. They
didn't like to see their father sell
ing whiskey, they said. I'd rather
be in a poor trade that there's no
nuesiions about, and be able to
looki my children in the face."
GREAT BARGAINS
IN TYPEWRITERS.
Wc carry u large stock of standatd
Typewriters. Can furnish at once Mon
arch, Fox. OliuM, Remington, Royal,
Smith Premier. L. C. Smith & Bro.'s
aud i'nderwood. Any other make from
"ito l.lduvs' notice. We have both the
visible an.l the invisible. We bought a
large atock of these Typewriters from
one-fourth to one-half the regular whole
sale price, and 011 sale no alone-fourth
to oue lmll Ihe remilar retail prices. A
good Tvpewntcr Irum 7.oO to $15. A
belter one 11 'si to ifiS.iO. The best
Irom tan up lo any price, -vt ill De giaa
to answer any inquiry in connection
villi these machines, aud send samples
of the work di.nc hv any of the Type
writers e have F.very boy and gir
should haw -el our cheap Typewri
ters to leain ho 'to use. Any persoa
who can wole well on a typewriter can
.U.. .,,,.) n Intire UtitniV AnVOna WhO
buys a cheap typewriter from us and
wauls a neuci one later, we wm
buck the one hoiurht and allow the same
f,.r , n i.l!.nir. fnr a heller one.
if returned in irood condition and within
six mouths. Ii not 111 good condition we
allow the market value. We carry Type
wi iler ribbons and other supplies.
bPIERS BROS.
WELDON, N. C
I!
MIS USUAL LUCK.
Mark Twain in his lecturing
days reached a small eastern town
one afternoon and went before
dinner to a barber's to be shaved.
"You are a stranger in town
sir?"
"Yes, I am a stranger here,"
was the reply.
"We're having a good lecture
here tonight, sir," said the barber,
"a Mark Twain lecture. Are you
going to it?"
"Yes, 1 think I will," said Mr.
Clemens.
"Have you got your ticket yet?"
I the barber asked.
"No. not yet," said the other.
"Then, sir, you'll have to stand."
"Dear me," Mr. Clemens ex
claimed. "It seems as if 1 always
have to stand when 1 hear that
man Twain lecture."
NOT WHAT HE CAME FOR.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
The self-made man never quite
gets ihe job finished.
In illustrating that appearances
are often deceiving, Senator War
ren of Wyoming recently told of
an incident that happened in one
of the Western states.
Sunn- time ago. the senator said,
a certain party was traveling past
a pond when he noticed a man
struggling in the water. Evident-
j ly the man couldn t swim, and,
seeinp the peril he was in, ihe
traveler quickly jumped in from
his horse and went to ihe rescue.
In a few minutes the man was
safely ashore and wringing him
self out, and then came ihe usual
questions.
"Haw in the world did VOU
come 10 fall in?" asked ihe travel
er. "I didn't come to fall in, pard
ner," answered the rescued party.
"1 came to fish."
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA
Whole Family Benefited
By Wonderful Remedy
There are many little things to
annoy us, under present conditions
of Iiie. The hurry, hard work,
noise and strain all tell on us and
tend to provoke nervousness and
irritability.. We are frequently so
worn out we can neither cat, sleep
nor work with any comfort. We
are out of line with ourstlTtl aai
others as well.
A good thing to do under such
circumstance! it to take soiuot'iing
like
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills
to relieve the strain on the nerve.
Mrs. J. B. Hartfild, ii Plum St,
Atlanta Ga., writes:
"I hsve on sartral eeeaalona bra
vastly relieved by us our ia4
Irinoa, rSeoclaUy tk AStt-rmln Pills,
which I kaaa oonstantir on hand for
th. us. of myaaU, hesbaad and twe
Buna. Nothln In th. wvrld muIi Utwsi
as a haadache reaaedy. Often I aas
enabled by Ilia uaa of on or two at
the Pills to contmu. my housework:
when oth.rwla I would be 1 bed. My
husband Joins ma In my prate of th
Antl-Pam Pllla and Narvfcva."
Dr. Mile.' Anti-Pain Pills
are relied upon to relieve pain,
nervousness and irritability in thou
sands of households. Of prova
merit after twenty years' use, yoa
can have no reason for being longer
without them.
At all Druegiata, a omU.
MILES MIOICAL CO., glkhart. In
sept 4 ly
Administrator's Notice
Tl, ,,.luriitnA.t having nnalified aa
administrator of the estate of Diamond
Hawkins, deceased, tin is lo notny an
persons having claims against said es
tate lo present mem 10 uieuoiicniKuni
.1 liia .olUa it, Wahlnn K! IV aithia
one year from the date hereof, or this
notice will he plead in tne oar ei tueir
recovery.
All persons Indebted to aaid estate
will please make immediate paymesit
This the Stlth dav of October, 191 S.
C. P. ANTHONY,
Admr. of estate of Diamond Hawkins,
deceased lu-K
TJvar croaat 1 :' I
Tablet. Nethii
Mse A.I 4ruat.ii1
. flics' laamMTe
. for eenatasa.
Anllls,ssa
prodm
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