V.I 0) iSTABLISIli:!) IN I860. A NEWSPAPER fOR THE PEOPLE. Terms of Sub.scrii)tion$1.5(, Kr VOL. LI. WELDON, N. C, Till I USD AY, MAY 11)17. NO. .":! La si ova m a inn lisa NVt tnii!"nls HiFluiil Prantimj GASTQRIA I AL(.oni)I.-31MiHl.EST. AVViH'l.ibli-PrcparationforM similiiliniiUutiHHlbyKi'tuli' lirisiltu-Moniachsnncl iwrniso neither Opium. Morphine nor Mineral. Not Narcotic 1 JteipetfMDzSAHtMififlR Pumpkin Sent . u. arum fabUf UJtt h ',mn W 1 ,5'- 7 ConslillnUonand Diarrhoea arm iL'viTisi""- LossofSleki' St Inr ()i:vrACTCoMPAN. NEW YOUR I'AaU C Wrapper. THE MM OF WELDON WKLDON. . c Organized Under the Laws ot the Slate ol Nurth Carolina. State uf North Carolina Depository. Halifax C.OUIIIV Town of Welclnn Capital and Surplus, tor over '.'I yi'am tln insiitutioii has pnivuli'il laiikniK larilitira lor thin spol ion. It sIih'Mi.iIiIith and iillii't-e u i ut ilic.l vtilli till' .ui- IH'SK llltiTCSts Of ll.llllux Iltl'l ol tliatll )toll IMUIIlll-S A Suvimrs lli'iarlini'iil in iii;iiiiIuiiii I I'm the li.Mi.'lit ul nil win, ,i.iri' to deposit m u suvines liunk lu this l"iartrni'ni ml.-r.-i is iillonr.l us follows: For lli'posits allowctl lorfinain llirrf iiinntli.H or luimrr. ' k'- cent six months ol lonirrr. 3 per ct'lll. Tw.'hr iiioultisnr loin,'.-r. t percent. Any inl'ormalioii will he luriiii.lie.lon atnilieulioa to tin. I'roaiileiiiori'nsliici PRBSIORNT : W. K. DANIKL. .'it K-riiKsinKVT: W ft SMITH. 1.. ( lllfAl'Kli.Telld. DIUKCTDUS V. li. Smitli, W. H. Hanii'l. ,1 1 1. I naU, H . II Cohen U. T. Dani.'l. .1. I.. S.,.r.l. W. A. Pi. roc. ! I', olliroll. r. .1 . W. s,,lie Mr. Automobile Owner Attention ! Send Us Your Old Tires! 3,500 to 5,000 Extra Mile Service Rea dily from Bell 2 in 1 Tire Co., (Incorporated) 202 W. Broad St. RICHMOND, VA. Phone Randolph 6281 ' We buy Old Tires. I. Z A o 4RTISTIC WL0HIHQ, g ' NEW SPRING DISPLAY FOR SUITS & OVERCOATS g a I take your mean-un1 ami make wnit to iu.'i' on my twitch, full aiil jf V inspect line liue of piw iroiuls ami s-Aniple. Sutisfaetiou truaiautftily it iftr-ttti 11 iy Announcement! We have bought out the Dray Business and Good Will of Mrs. J. W. Vuughn and this is to an nounce that we will continue tile business in Wciuuii, Kiiuraiileeiiig prompt service and careful handling of baggage and freight by experienced drivers. r:or dray service call Ben Rodwell Phone No. 323. SMITH & ROD WELL, WELDON, N.C. nnm HOOF PAINT S()LDBY WELDON, N C, For Infitnts ai r ".'Mldrcn. Mothers K f That Genuine 1 :na Always Bears the oignature i In Use For Over Thirty Years Tr.. blNU JNCOMKtltf NIW vorh cirv IVlMKilori' Depository. I'AslllKi:: I. I. I'liAKK, ISA. w m h h m B , TO BE WEATHER WISE. II You Want Fine Weather Look For Fine Weather Signs. llofo urn Koitii' of the most rr liiiifknlilc, for H117 arc liiiKod tiinii si'ii'iititir fticts: Wlicii llio sun si'ls ill it Hca of Klory, that in, v lir-tt (lit Hiin M'l iv it ri'd, Mm limy expert cIimi- wejit In' I- on the fol low in;; liny. Al niuhl. when Hie moon iH elear ami shows clean relies, with no halo or riiiy of mist s 1 1 j i m 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 4 it, there is little danger of ruin. When the wind blows sti'iul ily fioin the west, the weather will continue fair; it very rare ly rains in our Kastern States with the wind in the west. Watch the smoke from a chimney or from your camp fire it is a good barometer, If the smrtlco rises high, it means clear weather. The smoke will also show from which direction the wind is blowing; so will a Hag on an upright flagstaff. A gray early morning, not a heavy, cloudy one, promises a fair day. A heavy dew at night is sel dom followed by rain the next day. Think of it this way and you will remember: Wet feet, dry head. Animals are said often to show by their actions what the weather will be, and there is reason for this. Some of them certainly have a knowledge of coming storms. We are told that sjiidcrs are especially sen sitive to weather changes, and when they make new webs the weather will be fair; if they continue spinning during a shower, it will soon clear off. Adeliu !'.. Heard in St. Nich'o las. A UKAin IFUL YEAR. A girl was wcking up a new wall cilfinljr, hearing the unfamiliar figures of iln- new year jusi about to open. "li is going io be a beautiful year,'' she said, with a prophetic tone of assurance. Some one who heard the girl's prediction, curious to know what was in her mind, asked: "How do you know it is going io be a beauiitul year. A year is a long time." "Veil," she answered, "a day isn't a long time, and I know be cause I'm going to take a day at a lime and make it o. Years are only days when you come right down to ii, and 1 am going to see lhat every single one of these 365 days gels some one beautiful thing into it." "Then it will be a beautiful year," the friend answered. "You have hold of a wonderful se cret. "So leach us to number our days that we may apply our hearts unio wisdom. And let the beauty of the Lord our God be upon us." I he bvangelical. If u man has an extravagant wife and a large family to support it isn't a hard maner io convince him thai home is die dearest spot on earth. You cannoi measure a man's brains by the spread of his whis kers. IN HEALTH Woman Tell How $3 Worth of Pinkham's Compound Made Her Well. Lima. Ohio." I wu all liroksn down tn health from a dipnl.tcrmeni.Oiieof my luuy friendt) cum; to au and uliu ad vibed me to com mence taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound and to use Lydia E. Pinkham'sSanative Wash. 1 begau tak ing your reuiadiea ami took $6. UU worth and in two montlia wua a well woman after three doctors said 1 never would stand up straight again. I was a mid wife for seven years and I recommended the Vegetable Compound to every wo man to take before birth and after wards, and they all got along so nicely that it surely is a godsend to suffering women. If women wish to write to me 1 will be delighted to answer them. " -Mrs. Jennie Moykk, 342 E.NorthSt., Lima, Ohio. Women who suffer from displace ments, weakness, irregularities, ner vousness, backache, or bearing-down pains, need the tonic properties of the roots sod herbs contained in Lydia E. PwklnuB 'I V f getable Compound L!;!!!l!!!lSiiiLiiiiii HIS WAY 1 lis way is best. How long I spent in learning 'Twasonly for my highest good He planned, And all ihe while His loving heari was yearning Thai He might lead me gently by ihe hand, And end unrest. His way is best. I cease from needless scheming, And leave the ruling of my life io Him, All will be well, though all wrong 'tis seeming, And will be clear what now to me is dim. So I am blest. His way is best. I may not know ihe reason Of the darkness I am passing through; Bui this I know, that every testing season He makes a blessing, if io Him I'm true, And so I rest. His way is best. When I shall cross ihe river, And see my King, my Saviour, face io face, I'll praise His name forever and forever, For all the way He led, for all ihe grace With which He blessed. GET UP AND GO ON. Your wee foot slipped on the floor, my son; Get up and go on! Your game of tag is far from done Get up and go on. That dimpled knee got an awful hurt See the rough-up skin and the ground-in din ! But you're good for a stronger, swifter spurt .Get up and go on. Sometimes there are terrible bruises, lad, But get up and go on. ' And your father's arms if it's quite loo bad Gei up and go on Will gather you close and gently say : "There, there ! Has ii spoiled ihe baby's play?" Bui you'll find in the end thai the better way Is "gel upand go on." All through your life it will be the same Get up and go on. Grin over your pain and play the game Get up and go on. For folk will watch when your falls take place Will waich ihe expression on your face And accurately will adjudge your case So get up and go on. And whenever the fall too cruel seems To get up and go on; When hope has hidden its faintest gleams, Get up and go on! And the arms of the Father who knows what's best Will hold you close io a loving breast ; Till your baffled soul finds strength in rest - Get up and go on ! SAY "I WILL." The Wishbone and the Backbone. "Don't carry your wishbone where your backbone ought to be." I saw this ihe oilier day on a card in a shop window; a piece of ex cellent advice which we all need, is it not? How much time we waste in wishing lhat things were other ihan they are: that our en vironment was different from what il is; that we were physically, or morally, or spiritually stronger than we know ourselves to be! Is it too much to say that the two lit tle words, "I wish," express the normal attitude of mind of a large number of people? I do not sug gest thai ihe exercise of will power can altogether change our environ ment, or give us bodily health; but it might help to do both. It is of no use io ourselves or to others to spend our time and energy of soul in wishing lhat we and the world were better. It would be of a very great deal of use were we io exer cise our will power in ihe matter; if, instead of saying, "I wish I were better," "I wish ihe world were bcitcr," we were to say, "I will be better, and I will do my part in making ihe world better, God help ing me." If we, you and I, are to do any good work in our own souls, or in ihe world, we must leave otf saying "I wish," and be gin io say "1 will." UNLUCKY ANSWER. Her husband had just come homi and had his first meeting with ihe new nurse, who was remarkably pretty. "She is sensible and scientific, too," urged the fond mother, "and says she will allow no one to kiss baby while she is near." "No one would want to," re plied the husband, "while she is near." And the nurse was discharged. Any silly nonsense sounds rea sonable to a girl if put in the Form of a love letter. Anyway, we ought to be thankful that the pray ers of our enemies are not always answered. . , IS BEST, TAKING. NO CHANCES. Bismarck one evening attended a gathering of prominent men at the house of a Russian nobleman. During all the conversation he was particularly sarcastic, cutiine friends and opponents unsparing ly. hen he rose to take his leave and walked downstairs the hosi called a pel dog that was frisking about and led him to one side. "Are you afraid the dog will bite me ? asked Bismarck. "Oh, no," replied ihe host; "I'm afraid you'll bite the dog." A MISTAKEN CONNOISSEUR. "How wonderful your painting is ! It fairly makes my mouth water." "A sunset makes your mouth water ?" "Oh i it a GiincAl I ihAi.nh. it was a fried egg." SUPERSTITIOUS. Neighbor I heard your dog howling last night. If he howls three nights in succession it's a sure sign of death. Nexidoor Indeed ! And who do you think will die? Neighbor The dog. UNCLE EBEN. "De man who makes hay while dc sun shines," said Uncle Hben, "gcuciaily has io take care of a lot o' folks dui put in de time sitiin' in de shade, overseein' de job." WAR HUSBANDS. "How about the man who got married so that He wouldn't be among the first called to enlist?" "Let him alone. The kind of woman who would marry that kind of man will make him willing to go to war or anywhere else io es cape from home." Occasionally a young man would rather w'ork all his days than mar ry a rich girl. We don't know the answer. It costs more to avenge a wrong than it does to let it goby default. GAVE IN LOVINfi MEMORY. He Made His Love for the Dead ! a Power totiladden the Living. j A little old tiiiiu en into the ollice of the Chicago Char- ! j it it- and hiiil down ' I ."' "to ! help out s e n ly families." j Then he told I hem a story : "Years ago, when all my I olke were living. I couldn't af ford tn give presents. Things arc different now, hut most of my folks have gone. I went shopping just ns if my folks were alive. I picked out a shawl for an aunt of mine. She's dead, anil 1 didn't buy it, but I put down the amount of money I would have spent. Then I went, and got some things for my dead brother and for my father mid mother, and for a few old friends of mine.. I didn't really get I hem, you know, but 1 picked the tilings I thought they would like. When 1 added up all the money 1 would have spent it, cnnie to almost $l."il, so I added u little to it, and so here it is." Has any one heard of a finer, more beautiful way of showing a man's love for his dead? The things he wanted to do, it was too late to do now. lie might, it is true, have spent money on stone to make more artificial and melancholy, the quiet hillside where "his folks" rest. He found a better way to spend his affection, to re member in fancy those he no longer could reach and to see that his loving memory of them went to make others happier. He laid tribute on grief and made it a blessing. It is not a sad story; we need not pity him but we cannot help loving him. Milwaukee Sentinel. WHAT BOY READS IMPORTANT. Youth Should Be Protected From Depraved Associations in Print as Well As In Flesh and Blood. What n boy reads is us im portant as any thing else about him. You try to protect him against depraved associations of flesh and liln.nl. but pretty often you make little enough effort to protect him from de praved associations in print. You send him to school in a belief that the stuff he absorbs from printed pages forms his mind; but out of school you may let him absorb stuff from printed pages that is not tit to be in a dog's mind. Time was when you could tell a wrong book for a boy be cause it was bound in yellow paper and sold for q dime. Nowadays many wrong books for boys are perfectly bound in cloth, and they are perfectly moral, in the narrowest sense of that absurd word. They de scribe how u fourten-year-old boy, with a discarded set of harness and an old hoopskirt, made a flying machine ami sail ed around the earth; or with a leaky wash boiler and $2 in cash built a submarine that de stroyed the enemy's Heet; how a lad in knee breeches circum vented u gang of desperate criminals and so became presi dent of a railroad at sixteen. These tales of preposterous juvenile achievement are do praved because they nro mon strous lies. They do not stim ulate a boy's imagination: they drug it. They do not set his mind usefully ut work, but send it off in a weird opium d ream. They do not brace or engage a boy's mind: they lead it into a vicious, enervating habit of dope-taking. They are a sort of psychological whisky drinking that makes the victim unresponsive to wholesome, nalurul tonics and begets a llabby craving for the artificial kick. --Saturday Even ing Post BASEBALL PLAYER FIRST. The'"Sunday school class had just finished singing '.'I want to be an angel and with the angels stand," when the teacher, observ ing that one of the boys had not taken part, said : "You want to be an angel, too, don'i you, Charles?" "Yes," answered Charles, but not right away. I want to be a baseball player first." Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORI A jFl$Wr4r t mW lirvfl h1! MAKE YOUR with L A. M SEMI - Hadelaafewmlaafta For Sl by YOU 8AVC Klt l 'i.U'h. tt.-1-l..u. II.U'O', II Illt'X I!K i 1 1 v nil I"ii;-i;y a: United States few Goodrich M have on sale in our salesroom now the largest stock of Automobile Tires ever shown in Weldon. Three of the best makes on the American market. Tires that will give you more miles for your money than any other make. Our tires are guaranteed by the manufacturers on mileage basis of 3500 to 5000 miles. K have in stock almost any size or style--- W Plain Tread, USCO Tread. Chain, Nobby and Silvertown Cord Tread. The market is un settled now, and I ires may advance1 at any time, buy now, save money, get the right tires at the right prices. Also carry in stock a full line of all Automobile supplies and accessories, Batchelor Bros, Chalmers a id Chevrolet Automobiles 1 INVITATION. 8 You are invited to open an account withheg BW OF EHFIMD, S EfrlELD, fi. C. S i Per Cent, allowed in the Savings Depart 8 -- ment Compounded Quarterly. KmMSIUtWHWiOXMnMUMI 1 You (ill h Entirely Satisfied With your SPRING Suit if you let us take your order for it, and dress the "STkOUSE WAY." We know how to incorporate your ideas. Strouse & Bros., custom tailors, whose line we show are past masters at the High Art of Styling and Tai loring. If you want the best, if Style, Price and Fit appeal to. you, come to us by all means. FARBEH & JOSEPHSOii MEN'S MID BOYS' OUTFITTERS. . WELDON, N. C, OWK PAINT PASTE PAINT and your own Linseed Oil. You obtain greatest durability and cover ing power. The L & M PAINT is so positively good that it is known as the "Master Paint." Whereas the best of other high grade paints cost you $2.75 & gallon, our LAM Paint- mude ready-for-use will cost you only $2.00 a gallon. 73o. A GALLON ON EVERY CALLOW I. . oilan l S. el.. ii. n.hj.,,1,. 1M ill Kelly Springfield Oldest (iurage In Weldon Republic Trucks i 1