nir mi sr Hps wli 4 Sjksjv nan will b I'STAISUSIHil) IN .Sod. A NEWSPAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. Terms of SunscriptionSl.SG Per Annum VOL. WAX. WKLDOX. X. C., TIU'USDAY, NKITKM IJK1. 17, 11)1 I. NO. 21 SIMPLY TRUE TO INSTINCT. KEEP ON. i gFn: G ASTORIA 'Zt.n iv r-J ESS 1 1 . ' i is - s V3 If!" 6 K tl- 1 25 hulls Ut-iilied To Mud To Do and Accordingly. Whom They Took Action .U.M'llol, J ;u t-K N I'." ! AM''!i'liilii-Pirp:!riiii)iii;Ts i Mnil:ilNi';,!rr1ni,iiii;r(.(!i1 j linilllh'SiiiiiHrlcdiiJiJmvis.i The Kind You Have Always Bought sOTj332SIG3 Signature of Pr(i!i-,clsnisi!im.nim!,u!l ncss ai-.il I'l'sifnmaiusiH'iilij" t'piiim i l'ii-;ihmr iiiir.liiHT.il. Not N ahc otic, V,-.; ."JMWJJmWIt .V .l,7W i vMV.fcm- .! . ( .iw i t'mWMI - A .'titiirtwii'l Mir I ftuHZiqcr. 1 iliyw r7oiw. f AprrfrT1 Rfiik-iIv I'liiTnusllpa lion.S'.iui'SliireHli.Dlaiita'i Worms fiimalsioiivfrorisli nww awl Loss or Sluk Far. Simile Sigiiniiirr of NEW YOHK. 11 Ira to tlr7ftr U-r---. ;..-i;.-.f-.1- i.v...l nri Exact Copy of Wrapper. Bears the At i S In id se i . for Over Thirty Years CINUUR COMMNV. N(W VOItH OITV, i 1 Vi i is K WKLDOX, X. (' Organized Under the l.uws of the State of North Carolimi, State of North Carolina Depository, I lahlax C "null i y Llcpository Town ol Wc'kion Depilatory. Capital Fur over -1 yurs llns in-liiiiih-u )m i.U-d hnnkniir l';u'ilit itk fui tliit Hivhoii. 1 1- sim'k hnKli ;inO HtiniMUo i.l. niiiu'.l v.iUt Uic Imi i- lli-s iiilnr-.l- ol' HulilliA Niullianiplt'lt mi!Iiln A Suvinirs hrpai'lmrnt is iu:lii1;4 i t'M tl.f hi im (i t of uli who 1( sire tn ill ;1 n huh Han . hi lli I 'fjMil m fii! i nt i D l is allow i" I For lii'pitvits iillinvc! tnirttuuit lln-f niout! inonllj" oi him:'' . - iTiii w i- in out In lurniiit'it on ui'jiliiMtH ot lniiL't i, "J I'-'f fi ill. Sis oi Iniinoi . 1 pi-i iM'Ill hi to llif PrvMilriit ot ( ':iliici 11 I'ltKtlHKNI V 1 1 K I'lll -111:M I 'im-.l! I II w. i;. ).mi:I,, w li. smmii ,i. o. ukakk, II ( 1 1 I. c hi; iriln. l II t l l.'i.'i h.j r . !. u i- I i it i.. i.. t . ..t. ... II 1 II U. T. I'am. l. ,1. I. Mirj.li, r.l'. W . A hi. u-.-. h. It. .olhrril, i. .1 W. -I, .!- 1 1 . u u ; I DO YOU mWE TO TOv.i . i 1 7'i,:.. fitrimr irml tn mitrltt. And find the markot unfavorublo for your produce? The farmer who has a telephone in his home can telephone first. The useless trips thus saved arc worth the cost of service. Under our plan the service costs but a trifle; 'armor owns the instrument and the equipment. 'or information write to our nearest Manager for pamphlet, or address: tarntt'rs' l ine Department HOME TELLPIIOM & TELEGRAPH CO. Henderson, N. C the. W 1 rm r. a rafrrrc.-jswi iiwuain'i iii A W'lu'M ihc cunvLTalioii loil tip to the wonderful' iiistiiict ul' siitrn; j iiiiiin.ils lilias M. Amnions, cover- j nor ol Colui'.ulu, came across with ' a story ahtinl two meirupolilan j brokers. The hrokers were liaving an al-1 tcr lnticln'on smoke one alicrnoon iin,l one of them became reminis cent. "I low well do I remember when j I was a hareloot lad, unserved the broker. "In those days the most ol my time was spent in look ing alter the stock on father's farm I'll never forget the day tbat fath er roped a couple of bulls and told me to bold them while he went into the barn for a moment. " "What did they do to you?" asked the second broker. " They didn't do a thing to me," answered the Hist. "They scorch ed my hands with the rope, they upset nie, they mauled me and they walked all over me." "I don't doubt it in the least," returned the second. ''Unruly dispositions, I suppose ?" "No, it wasn't that," replied the first. "It was a ease of wonderful instinct. They sized me up at a i;lance as a small stockholder and knew what is Renerally done to small stockholders." LAST WORD IN PWiCAl TION. Two friends boarded a great trans-Atlantic liner and set sail for Cherbourg. One was a good fel low. The other was a niggardly man. The first night out they went to their stateroom. "Say Bob," said the niggardly man, "I wish you'd step out on deck while I undress." "Thai's a remarkable request," objected the good fellow. "Why have you developed this streak of bashlulness ai this late day I i.ever saw any signs of it before." "Never mind about that," said the niggardly man. "You get out !" After a long and acrimonious ar gument the good fellow went out on deck and stayed half an hour. When he returned to the stateroom the niggardly man was stretched out in the upper berth. Moreover, he w as dressed up like a Christ mas tree in a benbboned night gown and a woman s ooudoir cap. "Say!" exclaimed the good fel low. "What in thunder is the mutter? Why have you got that make-up on?" "Look at me and be wise," said the niggardly man. "Kemeniber the Titanic. In ease of a wreck, w omen and children lirst." Pop ular Magazine. SHI: I ILLLDTHI: BILL. John Sloan, the painter, was lec turing on "Models" before an art class in New York. "Then there is the frivolous model," said Mr. Sloan. "She, unless very beauoful, is to be avoided." A mvoious model besought a friend of mine to employ her. "'No, no,' he said. 'I only do still lite flowers and fruit.' " 'Well,' said the model, looking up at linn, reproachfully out of limpid blue eyes, "well, ain't I a peach ?" Chicago Hecord-Her- ald. jami-.s oaxxox. jr.. m. a., n. d ritixniv.u Aire 1tii la.irkmono Srhonl nanto,l 1lio fM!nwln MOTTO: thomiiuh InMiiioihm umliT posliivfly llirlMlun liilliM-iM-ra t tlw lowest powllilo km. DA...1. IT Is l.id ;v. with a fa.-nltv of S3, a hoar-lln twtmniur of IXCoUlU SB.s. n Biml.MU h"ily of 4M, and a plant worth $l.",000, The Leading Training School for Girls in Virginia, I'AYS alt eharcra for thf year, tn.-liirtlnu T.il.Io Hoard, nnm, l.lclits. K:.:tm H' :it. l.n" !:y, X'-d Ato-n- Mition, Vhvsli-al Onltiivo jml Tuition in alt sulijocts ept music ann el 1 20 Years :$150:i: $150 t an pnii nls Brut i -Vim! i !v ttor r. 'n l, ullli t:iow rwrl- ertis d n::ii'tfiii,'til al Midi inoiliT: lo r.i- .' I. a c.'ilai'n:1 anil applu-ft- tkm blank aiMivwi til O. r. AOVM i, NiinW), lllaiksKMio, Va. When You Yawn a Good Deal In the day time, and feel dull, lazy and discouraged, you have every symptom of a torpid liver. Mmmnns Ked Z Liver Regulator ( The Powder Form) is a fine tonic for a disordered liver. It acts promptly. The bilious im purities which have inter fered wilh I he free action of the liver ait- driven out, the stomach is cleansed and strengthened so that it can more thoroughly digest food. The bowels are purified and a regular habit re-established. It is a splendid medicine for the Whole system. Promotes a feeling of cnercry, mental activity and cheerful spirits. Sold by Dealers Price, Large Package, Si00 A.k lol Ibr graulM ,ih ihr tin Z .11 the Ithrl. II you cannot tH II. remit lo m. we will wnd II by m,il. p. lr!n. Mmntoiu lim Rfful.ni II .In, put up in l-qn-.l tons lor IhoK wh pirlrr II. Tit. II 00 pc? boale. Look tot tbe Rot Z lltcL J. H. rr.UIN a CO., ProDrtetora Si. LobU, Mluoari If the day looks kinder gloomy, An' your chances kinder slim, If the situation's puzzlin' An' the prospect's awful grim, An' perplexities keep pressin' 'Til all hope is neatly gone, Just bristle up and grit your teeth, An' keep on kecpin' on. l-'umin' never wins a light, An' frettin' never pays; There ain't no good of broodin' in These pessimistic ways Smile just kinder cheerfully When hope is nearly gone, And bristle up and grit your teeth, An' keep on kecpin' on. There ain't no use in growlin' An' grumblin' all the time When music's ringm' everywhere An' everything's a rhyme Just keep on smilin' cheerfully If hope is nearly gone, An' bristle up and grit your teeth, An' keep on keepin' on. James Wliiieonib Riley. INGERSOLL'S VISION OF WAR. A Beautiful, Clearcut Word Picture of War Preparation. The following is an extract from "The Vision of War," forming a part of a speech delivered in 1 S7ti by the late Col. Robert G. Ingersoll at Indianapolis, lud., to the veteran soldiers of the civil war ; " The past rises before me like a dream. Again we are in the great struggle for national life. We hear the sounds of preparation; the music of boisterous drums, the silver voices of heroic bugles. We see thousands of assemblages and hear the appeals of orators. We see pale cheeks of women and flushed faces of men, and in those assem blages we see all the dead whose dust we have covered with Mowers. We lose sight of them no more. We are with them when they enlist in the great army of freedom. We see them part with those they love. Some are walking for the last time in quiet, woody places wilh the maidens they adore. We hear the whisperings and the sweet vows of eternal love as they lingeriugly part forever. Others are bending over cradles, kissing babies that ate asleep. Some are receiving the bless ings cf old men. Some are parting with mothers who hold them and press them to their hearts again and again and say nothing. Kisses and tears, tears and kisses -divine mingling of agony and love! And some are talking w ith wives and endeavoring with brave words.spoken in the old tones, to drive from their hearts the awful tear. We see them part. We see the wile standing in the door with the babe in her arms standing in the sunlight sobbing. At the turn in the road a hand waves she answers by holding high, in her arms the child. He is gone, and torever. We see iheni as they march proudly away under the Haunting Hags keeping lime to the grand, wild music of war marching down the streets of the great cities, through the towns and across the prairies, down to the fields of glory, to do and to die for the eternal rii?ht. "We go with them, one and all. We are by their side on all the gory Holds, in all the hospitals of pain, on all the weary marches. We stand guard with them in the wild storms and under the quiet stars. We are with them in the ravines running with blood, in the furrows of old Helds. We are with them between contending hosts, unable to move, wild with thirst, the life ebbing slowly away among the withered leaves. We see them pierced by balls and torn with shells in the trenches by the forts, and in the whirlwind of the charge, where men become iron, with nerves of steel. 'We are with them in prisons of hatred and famine, but human speech can never tell what they endured. 'We are at home when the news comes that they are dead. We see the maiden in the shadow of her first sorrow. We see the silver ed head of the old man bowed w ith his last grief. "They sleep under the solemn pines, the sad hemlock, the tearful willows and the embracing vines. They sleep beneath the shadows of the clouds, careless alike of sunshine or of storm, each in the window less Palace of Rest, liarth may run red with other wars; they are at peace. In the midst of battle, in the roar of conflict, they found the serenity of death. "A vision of the future arises : "I see our country filled with happy homes, with firesides of con tent. "I see a world w here thrones have crumbled and kings are dust. The aristocracy of idleness has perished from the earth. "1 see a w orld without a slave. Man at last is free. Nature's forces have by science been enslaved. Lightning and light, wind and wave, frost and flame, and all the secret subtle powers of earth and air are the tireless toilers for the human race. "I see a world at peace, adorned w ith every form of art, with music's myriad voices thrilled, while lips are rich with words of love and truth; a world in which no exile sighs, no prisoner mourns; a world on which the biggot's shadow does not (all; a world where labor reaps its full reward, where work and worth go hand in hand, where the poor girl trying 10 w in biend with the needle the needle that has been called the 'asp for the breast of the poor' is not driven to the desper ate choice of crime or death, of suicide or shame. "1 see a world without the world's outstretched palm, the miser's heartless, stony stare, the piteous wail of want, the livid lips of lies, the cruel eyes of scorn. "1 see a race without disease of flesh or of brain shapely and fair the marred harmony of form and function and as I look, life lengthens, joy deepens, love canopies the earth; and over all, in the great dome, shines the eternal star ol human hope." THE AGE OF DRESS. T he iVlan Sees the Real Woman and Not Her Clothes. Under the above heading the Iowa State Journal very truthfully remarks thai the world is all run ning to clothes. We are made to believe that the great thing about a woman is her clothes. I'.ut this is for the women. Men don't care a snap about what the women wear, so it is decent. The masculine eye has not been gifted with those powers that can discern the grace and delicate intricacy in the lines and folds of a gown. The man sees the woman and not the clothes and don't you forget it the bright ness of mind, the gentility of tem per, the unselfishness of life, and the cordial good will he see thru the dress and under the millinery. The dress may be costly and beautiful but it does not impress him if the wearer is full of conceit and vanity. Sorry, indeed, will be the day when a man makes his estimate of a woman from the clothes she has on, and fails to see those immortal qualities of mind and heart which constitute the true woman. The mere expression of vanity in a woman is not hopeful, is not prophetic of happy homes or a noble citizenship. ANI-NT AN ACTOR MAN. Dan Daly once essayed the legit imate. It was in his early days. All he had to do was to come to the centre of stage at a critical mo ment and shout : "The king is dead, long live the king !" When the time came Mr. Daly promptly assumed the correct dra matic pose, but for a moment was so agitated (hat words failed him. Then he bellowed at the top of his voice: "I.onglive the king- he's dead!" Chicago News. years we have been statnv' m the newspapers of the country that a great many women have escaped serious op erations by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, and it is true. We are permitted to publish in this announcement extracts from the letters of five women. All have been recently received unsolicited. Could any evidence be more convincing? IIimkiikin, Mil. "I hail mins in ,r.'"i siilos mill finch n. snronpss I niulil scarcely sliuiirlilt. il 111. at times. .Mv hack nclicil mid I was so nervous I could not, sleep, and I thon-lii' I never would bo, iinylMiiM-until I submitted loan oicr,ili"ii, Inn I en. nmeiiceil taking l.yilin K. I'inkliaiii's Vi'sotulile (.impound ami sunn felt like a new woman." Mrs. Uavvai:i Nwki;, Iloil;;ilon, .Mo. ( ii.Mti.oTTE, N. ('.' I was in bad health fur two years, with r.lllis 111 liotll sides and va Vel V llelvnlls. T lent n. iTiiwili which the doctor suit! was a tuiio ,-, ami r never would j;el well unle.su I had an operation. A Mend advised me to tulie l.yiliu, K. 1'ink liunf.s Vee;eliible Coiiipi Hinil, and I jrhnllv sav that 1 am now enjoying line health." Mis. Uosa Sims, pi Winona, St., Cliailutte. K. C. 1 l lNliI I'.li. "The tloel or advised ll severe tinto-ation. hiit.mv husband l'o' me i.vdi.t K. I'iiikliaiu's Yetretiihle ( iiiiiiiiiiinil anil'l exirrifiKvil ureal relict' in a short lime. Now I feel like a new ci'sim mill can do a hard day's work ami not mind it." Mrs. Ada Wilt, lliti Stock St., Hanover, 'a. i:o.uri:, 1 1 -1 - f was sick in bed anil llnvonf llin lient. nlivai- eilllis said 1 Would have lo be taken to the liosnital for nil nlKr- ittion as I had soinetliiii p-uwii.i; in mv left m,1,.. I refused to sub mit to the oK'fatioii ami look Lydia K. I'iukliam's Y enviable Com pound anil it worked a miracle in my ease, ami I tell other women what it has done I'm- me." .Mrs. ..i-ii,v A. (onswoi.ti, SHX) Dlk. East Yilliaiil Street, III eatur, 111. Ci. i:ki. ami. Onto. '! my side pained me so thai 1 i xneel.-d to I,. eralion. Iioetois said they knew of in a hitie; U.nt. would help me. I took Lydia K. Pinkham's Yesre. table roiiipoiiml and t 1., cam,' regular and five fiom pain. I am lliaid.liil fur sin It a 1 medi cine and will always n'lvo it the hi'liesi praise.'' Mis.C. II.(;iui.i'itii,',':!Uo .Madison Av., lowland, O. WritetoIA WA K.PINKimi Mf.UICINKOn. (0HIIK.MTAI,I I.YXN. MASS.. I or ml vice. Your IctUir w ill lie opciicil, renil ami answered by a woman and held iu strict eoulideueu. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Very iiTctrnlar ami for several years 1 I X peeled to li.l',,' io UlldtTlIO till OB- T- 'l ' , For Iiu.eii.: ad Children. fhe Kind You KnVQ Always Bought Bears thti W yCaJT Signature of CVT JSOCl PROLLSSIONAL CAk'DS. W Al.TLk' H. DAMIil.. Attorney-at-Law, W Kl.l'i iN. N. r Bl-YONI) HOPL l'CU'IHTs III liie t'ouil 1 Vililiariil'hili uil'l la 111 I'Y.leral coillls. I olleel part- ol Not t li I a l .ill oil i at lf:;hiu o,-i ii l:ahia at. .11- lllllile III 11 "Don't keep pestering me." "Then you won't marry me?" "I wouldn't even be engaged lo you ai a summer resort." Courier-Journal. Po-Do-Lax Banishes Pimples had Wood, I'm tiles. Ilea.iai-I.es, Itil itniMies.s, Torpid Liver, I onstiiiatitm, eti'.. fonif from lti,ln;('stiuli. 'fake I'o-l'o-I.ax, tin- pleasant an.l absolutely sine l.axalive, and you luai't s.iilei I'uiln a deiaiu.re.l Stoniaeli or oilier trou bles. It uil! toueup the In it and purify tbe blood, t se it retrularly and you w ill stay well, have elt ar complexion and steady nerves, t ict a .",ne bottle In. lay. Money baek if not satislied. All diui:-kpstn. iv Moiei i " j Wm. L. KNIGHT, Attorney and Counsellor al Lav. j l-.l.lNiN, N. I '. t'Moti bank , Tmst ss oroiuptlv an.l la't'iiwllv at j Ul'.i.-e bus -ill.-. im 1 to. LLLIOTT H. Cl.AKK. ATT( ) R.N ll Y-AT- LA W , UNLUCKY STONE. Cynicus I once knew a fellow who gave a girl an engagement ring of opals. Sillicus Gracious! Wasn't it unlucky? Cynicus You bet it was! She married him." Judge. INVIiSTIOATI-O BLI-ORE THE RESCUE. "Is she going to marry the young man who saved her from drowning?" "I think so." "But is she sure that he is able to support her in the style to which she has been accustomed ?" "Yes, she looked him up in Brad street's before she fell in." Hous ton Post. When the wind propels a straw hat it is chased, but the remarks of the owner are nothing that even sounds like that. Stop Thnt First Fall Cough Check your fall couch or eol.l at once don't nail it may lend to m-nous luiii; trouble, weaken your vitality and develop a chronic hunt ailment net a bottle of lr. Hell's I'ine Tar Honey to day; it is pure and harmless use it freely for that fall coujih or cold. If baby or children are Hick cive it to tliein, it will relieve quickly ami per niiini'titly. It soothes the irritated thioat. lunirs and air passat-es. Uios.-ns I'ldcitm, in antiseptic and fortifies the system at ai list col. Is. It certainly pre vents cold germs from getting a hold. Utiarantoed, (Inly 2.'ic, at your druggist. Dizzy? bilious? Constipated? ir. Kintr's New Life 1'ilts will can yon, cause a healthy tb.w of I'.ilc and rids your Stomach and lloivels of waste an.l fermenting body poisons. I'liey an- a tonic to your stomach and Liver and tone the gelieial system. Tnst dt.se w ill cine you of thai tlt'iires.si-.l, di.y, bilious and constipated condition. all druggists. No woman talks all the tune When she is doing up her hair her inouih is full of hairpins. I1AI.II AN. N. I '. I. i.- iii tbe courts ul llalil iv an. idjoiiiiiiL-counties and n tile piellie collll ol the slate, special u.lcli tiou eivcu 1. collections au.l pn.i'ipl i turns lo-ti-ly I) KM' I ST, 111 1 ll i. IN hANlM. bt .l.blNi.' WKLIHiN. N.l, ,-.PJ ly A I. SCMISLLR. CIVIL ENGINl-ER, SurveyiiiR a Specialty ' Phone :.'ol I'.Ml'oIil V, VA A Delightful Profession for Young Women IILKU is no occupation ;;T ; lor a young women that ., ,'; is more pleasant or con genial, more suited to her ability and nature, none tha; can give her more personal satisfaction, and if she be a thoroughly trained professional none that offers biooer rew.-rds than that of music teaching. The supply of competent teachers of piano music is far short of the de mand. I las your daughter ever given this mailer a thought; have you ever spoken to her about (some day becom ing i teacher of music?) if so- buy her a STIlfFF PIANO al once, get her started on the road to success and fame, the sooner she starts the better. CI' has 5U. ticff, I.Ki'M'. STLLLK. Mgr. No. J.'il l.roaby St., Nortolk, 'a. I). E. STAIN HACK. NOTARY PUBLIC And h'irc Insurance. l-.iai.ilc Vnslttfk'c -:- WxU N i Rheumatism Pains Stopped Tin lirst application of "-loan's l.uii mo nt trues nirlu to tin1 painful putt it lu'iH'tiiiU'S without tuMiinLT it utop the Kheumutic Tains around the joints a ml jfivt's rrlief and comfoit IiuiTt utter! (ict a bottle today! It in a family medicine for all pains, hints, hruines, eutN, sore throat, neutalia and chest pains. Prevents infection. Mr. Chat let II. Wentwurlli, ('alifoinia.w rites "ll did wonders for my rheumatism, pain is pour as soon as 1 apply it. I recommended it to my friends as the best remedy 1 ever used.' Guaranteed 2oc. at your drutotiat. watch My ! I mMmG0pl ! Are You a Woman? m Cardui Hope is the dream you when awake. have A woman may have faith in her husband, but she seldom believes more than half he says. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CANTOR I A WE KNOW THE BUSINESS No tinkering with your valuable timepiece. WE OUARANTEE OUR WORK Let our expert repair man ex amine your watch or clock He will tell you what is needed and what the cost will be. When your watch has been re paired by us, you can depend upon it every time to catch a train or meet an engagement. J. H. WALLER, WKLUOX, S. ( S. A. L. Walcll lrtspcctor. Next door to olhcottei's DruK Store, mar 19 ly. Tha uiiiuii 0 T nnirt UlliU FOR SALE AT ALL DRUGGISTS n-aaTESKi SPECIAL TO WOMEN The. most economical, cleansing and germicidal of all antiseptics la K soluble Antiseptic Powder to be dissolved in water as needed. As a medicinal antiseptic for douches In treating catarrh, inflammation or ulceration of nose, throat, and that caused by feminine Ills It has no equal. For ten years the l.y.lla K. Plnkham Medicine Co. has recommended Paxtine In, their private correspondence with women, which proves Its superiority. Women who have been cured say it Is "worth Its weight In gold." At druggists. 60c. large box. or by mall. The Puton Toilet Con Boston, Mass

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view