fejfsi injjp) k1 I fini P-k HB lift (u! Lz32ssah A NEWSPAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. Terms of SubscriDtioii--$1.5l) Per Annum I, LIV. WKLDON, N. C, TIIUKSDAY, .JANUAliY 1, 1!)20 no.:h f : f St-i Contents iSFluid Praohnj fttWillHiTW . . .....it -1 duu r.ekT. AVcd ol.iuk' IVoparationtbrAs siniiiniinijuKinwi -v - - ling iheSiorcadK and Bowel if Thereby I'roraoiin Dhfctai l.ncrnuuiMu""" neither Mam.Morphine nor; Constipation and DiarrtBf i ana kvttoi"" nIFCP ac-SWl Swjsrj NEW -Yuwiv Exact Copy of Wrapper, ISWTIIRIA Bargains for You IF YOU BUY GROCERIES W. T PARKER & CO, Wholesale WELOON, lixon Lumhsr Weldon, N. C. M.t.NUr'AtTllKKrM OF ttuirdiivi' Material for Modern Momes. sash. Door linds, Mantels, Door MAIK TO OUDK.K AND 'luod Materials. Ht(jh Grade m , IS IT" The very newe ;t styles in Orpine 1 : Wtt,m Georgettes and Crepe-de.CJii i-'. ttu . ... we nave a complete unc ui L,om aim : Gentlemen's Furnishings. S i. . &TAIMBA CK. m jjg The Busy Store, GOOD GROCERIES build up the system, stimulate the brain, mid increase your capacity to think. And righi thinking brings besi le . fults. Our prices make you think. Call in to see us. L. E. HULL, GASTORIA For Infantg and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature. of Use For Over Thirty Years ALL YOUR FROM Gash Store N. C. Ss Millwork Oo. and Window Screen iiF.lit'LAR KTOt'K Sl.KS Workmanship Our Slogan. IVIH ew u tNf CNTAW 0OMNV. MM, VOK CITY. SAVE MONEYlf By traJiin fit home and still be a booster ior nur town. Mnnt. ftnrnralna In VV . ter Goods. w WW WELDON. N C gg Choice Hams There is nothing more appetizing than a slice of our choice ham. We have anything you may want in the line of meats. All Kinds of Canned Goods. What , sP In ttirnino over a W I (A new lean, be sure to lay a 1,000- $ pound weight on $ $ it, so it wont fly $ () back. & $ YEARS MERELY LIFE'S CHAPTERS Offer Opportunity for Each of 1)8 to Write Therein a Record Better Than the Preceding. THE coming yenr lies spreai' like tin' white pluln that sweeps from the roadside to the Ulstunt forest where the gray squirrels are milking tracks In the light snow. On this white Bheet a lit tle record may !e written ; not a full life story, but merely a brief chapter or two. like the i hnplers of sgulrrel Ufa that muy be read by one who to day ventures Into the white forest. It Is a great mystery thut lies aheud. a treasure house of endless possibili ties. The span of a iiimu'x life Is short; shorter In absolute measure ment than the span of i year, for each year, when Octobe.- fades Into November, has wrought completeness. No human life can bring compleieness. It cannot bring' completeness of knowl edge or completeness of happiness or completeness of good works. The best man can do. lu his poor, limited way, la to gleau as much wisdom and win as much happiness and do as much good as the number of his (lays per mits. When the human October fades It may thus be rich and peaceful and without the scars of stormy days or the blight of wasted days aud without Undue regret that what should have been seen and known and done has not been seen and known aud done. A YEAR'S completeness Is but a twelvemonth. Our human Incom pleteness covers many twelvemonths. How fortunate that each dawning year means a new opportunity to live and learn. Again aud again we may take ui IU thrtad and advance V-""l goal of apprehension. We may study Ood'i works and yenr by year come nearer to an appreciation of them. Wc can never fully appreciate them, for our winds are Butte, and tlioy are In- ) The new resolu' ( tion will be simply () j the same aid re j solve broken with j such frequency. w $ Never judge a man's wonh by ihe statement of his tax collecior. CASTORIA For Infants and Children In U For Over 30 Years Always bears the i Will He Write? finite. But each succeeding year Is a new opportunity. It offers the perfec tion of completeness, and by even a partial comprehension of Its fu!liies we may move toward fulfillment of the measure of our lives. "I urn not afraid," said Thoreau. "that I shall exaggerate the value aud significance of life, but that I shall not be up to the occasion which It Is. I ahull be sorry to remember thut I was there, but noticed nothing remarkable not so much as n prince lu disguise; lived In the golden age a hired man ; visited Olympus even, and fell asleep after dinner, and did not hear the con versation of the gods." ONE who loves only artificiality, who does uot note the excellence of the world he has been set to rule, proves himself unworthy of his herit age, and Is punished by bitter unrest. His life lacks the boon of contentment which Includes all boons. There are, or course, the few whose mental scope Is too narrow for self-tneasureinetit. They do not even know that they are discontented and may enjoy life as the ox enjoys life. The)1 are fortunate. The unfortunate man Is the one who has, even dimly, an understanding that the world Is good ami beautiful and that he Is falling to reap the richness that Is rightly his. I The coming year Is Indeed a great mystery, full of possibilities. Who- i ever has not watched and studied tlm : BOW many of us era watt ing for the opportunities ofthecomlngyearlWith , how many of us ts It the i unuttered hope that tomorrow, j next weeK.next month, thenext yearmay be as tcday In Its priv ileges andopportunltles.onlyfar more abundant. We are told that the first day of the New Year ts anappropriate time to form good resolutions. But the New Year ts tomorrow, and there ts a better time for such a tasK, and that time is to day. Tor "now ta the accepted time." Bjo H. C. Poller. I pussing years may begin today; It is never too late. Whoever has long watched and loved the years will know that to his knowledge, however ripe, ' ttch will be added, lie will ad vanci step nearer to the goal of con tentment, and In so advancing will In crease his human D'cfuln!'"", hi" h'-'p-fulness. THE year dawns nn on earth red with blood, an earth t.iru with strife. It will be for most of the peo ple of the eurlli a year of sorrow and of sacrifice. Hut for all this II will not be a bad year. Not half of civil ised niaiiklnd but all mankind Hint has not fuigotteu the meaning of civiliza tion has been unselfishly, heroically engaged In the needful work of rid ding Hie world of a noxious parasitic growth, the poisonous fungus of mili tarism. For those who gave tliein Belves to this essential work it will he a good year. For all who are suffer ing that the years to come may be happier and healthier the year will be u good year. February will bring Its crystal A gii I Ihsh'i mi itch use lor a man w lio is loo cowardly lo pro pose. Children dry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA A woman will have her own . t w ay even if it is a roundabout way. v5 $ Little old last year's ; if- 4a resolution is as ) good as any, and . $ probably will wear $t fully as long as a $ new one. & f$ $ brightness. April will spread hei t'enst of (lowers. June will display her green perfection of beauty. August will offer the ripening grains; October the luden orchards. The year will take no beed of the crime that has been done by man or of the veugeuuee that marched Inexorably. POETS tiled In the trenches of Oal Upoll and France, watching Hod's sunrise or the wispy clouds In the blue. Hrltlsh gentlemen caked with the mud of Flanders wrote detailed re ports of their observations of mlgm tory birds and of the effect of drum fire on bird life. French students and scholars, bearded and dirty, made careful notes of the llora of the Meuse and the Soinme, These men visited Olympus and did not fall asleep while the gods con versed. Neither did they permit the roar of man's fury to drown out th" divine voices. So It must be a good year that Is ahead. There cun be no bad years. The years are measured by Ood and not by the evil that nieu do. Joy That All Can Have. The Joy of living Is best found In the real success of life. Take away success and there's no Joy In life to one nlive to opportunities and respon sibilities. No live man is satisfied with mere existence, for he wants to con tribute something; to the world's prog ress, the world's good. Aud It Is In such contribution that real Joy Is found, the satisfaction that comes from full reali zation that one has done what he could in the year given him. So this Is the Joy this Journal wishes every read er may have the coming year; and will have If they fully appreciate that the new year Is theirs, to make It truly a happy new year. Day Means Much to All. New Years suggest 1m limit' personal views of self. The annual crop of good resolutions shows how near most peiyile are to becoming radically bet ter. Th day also bring a sense of the InoUunllMe l.MMliV.S of life. It 13 the door into a wonderful future, new Inventions, new discoveries, new achievements, of social Justice ami priv ilege and Joy for the masses of men. " ' ' f ) If you leave it to the schoolboy' ) New Year's day $. f$ is what comes be- fore he has to go A) back to school. $ Many n irl catches ;i luisruii d tij 'tailing hif r hook with indiff i ence. Peiiy larceny is grand larceny when applied lo a siolen kiss. An opiimift is a man who de clines to judge ihe future by ihe past. lommV hot levv leaia A lWbamKcrr O.M.MY Tlti )T," christened Thomas Trotwood Hiruey, sprawled on the table at his father's elbow. He was engaged In printing some thing which he carried about with him, "It's an uwful hard Job, uln't it, daddy? Hut 1 guess gentle- mans has to do It anyway, don't we?" "What's that, Sir Thomas?" asked Ills father, glancing up from his book. "Why, the New Year resolution thing," answered Tommy as he labo riously put on some finishing touches. "Pretty big word, that. Whs', aboul It?" "Yep, but then I don't say It much. It's sort of like a bet. You bi.-t you do or you bet you don't. An' I'm going to bet I do." And Tommy closed his book on a little fat linger and climbed on his father's knee. "And what is It you're betting you'll do, liiisterklns?" smiled his fnther. rumpling up the boy's brown curls. The child was unusually serious; he looked Intently at his fnther. "I'm going to see about getting a lady for our home, daddy. I'm so tired being wlvout one. I I want a muvver, dad tly a muvver is so handy." And try as he might to mnke his declaration very matter of fact, Tommy-Trot's chin quivered and he hid his face on his father's shoulder. Mr. Hiruey laid aside his pipe and for a full long minute said nothing. "So that's your New Yenr's resolution. Engaged In Printing Something. is It, old man, to get us a lady for our homo?" He somehow could not say the word mother lightly, though It had been five long years since Tommy's mother died. "It would be nice. Uuve you found any one, spoken to any one yet?" "I'd like to have the lady wlv the diiny eyes that takes me to school mornings," admitted Tommy. "I asked her once was she a muvver, and she said no, Just only a little boy's aunt. 1 sped she's so busy being a aunt that she wouldn't have any time to be a muvver," and the child sighed deject edly. "I wlsht you'd ask her daddy. Won't you?" "Why, I don't know Hiss Woodburn, old num." The father smiled a little ruefully us he remembered that he had thought to strike up an acquaintance through Hie child, but Miss Woodburn hud coldly repulsed him, though she had long been a fast friend of Tom my's, stopping for him to slip his hand into hers as she hurried to her school room, which was In the same building 'us the kindergarten. "I think we have pretty good times together, after all. .Shall daddy be the bear tonight?" "I'm most afraid I'm sick, daddy," murmured the boy ; "I spect I'd better" go to bed." Mr. Hlrney gathered Tommy-Trot up solicitously a ml prepared him for bed. "I wlsht your lap fitted me better, duddy. I'm going to get the New Year lady's lap to tit like Kenny Jones' niuvver's does," complained the child, drowsily. The next morning Miss Grace Woed burn slackened her pace, expecting Tommy to come miming as usual, then she reduced her si.-., walking slowly past the house. The door sw ung open mid Mr. l'.irney, costless, nn apron tied about his neck, frantically ex plained Hint Tommy-Trot was very sick with Ihe croup, that the doctor was trying to get a nurse', but he feared the child would die before they could get help, as the wuinun who kept their cottage was away. Fortunutely Miss Woodburn had taken a first-aid course; also, In her strenuuus business of being un aunt, she had helped to take little Nephew Peter through a very severe uttack of croup. She knew that every minute was precious. She began drawing off her gloves and unfastening her wraps as she hastened after Mr. Hiruey. Hlie telephoned her assistant to take her place til1 further orders, then reached out her hand for the apron. Lovingly fibs bent over Tomuiy-Trot, wha held Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOR A ln!u try is mother of good luck. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA I', i 1 1 III ilZr Hail and FAREWELL TO THE OLD Old Year, thy life is well-nigh spent, Thy feet are tottering and slow, Thy hoary head with age is bent, The time is here for thee to go; Already in the frozen snow A lonely grave is made for thee; The winds are chanting dirges low. Upon the land and on the sea. Old Year, thou wert a friend to some To some thou wert of worth untold, Thy days were blessings, every one, More precious far than shining gold; But unto others, thou a foe Did prove thyself an enemy, Relentless as the chains of woe As ruthless as the maddened sea. Some will rejoice to know thee dead, Othcrr will mourn thee as a friend; Some will look back on thee with dread. Others their praises to thee lend: I neither oiTer praise nor blame, Old Year, for what you brought to me, For unto me both joy and pain Your active hands gave lavishly. Thy solemn death-hour draws a-nigh Andhatkl I hear thy funeral knell Slow p.'.iiing through the darkened sky Farewell, Old Year farewell, farewelll H.ML TO THE NEW HaiM hdil! to thee, O virgin yearl Not yet a day's length Thou with the merry eyes and clear And joyous voice of dulcet tone: Hail! ruil! to tliee, thou Our nraise is thine. O Pnr thnn art- nnre rf wnn Thy young hands yet but blessings bring. The monarch who is laid away , iS Within the catacomb of years Was hart h and ruthless in his day . Seemed lepj to love our joys than tears j M We look for blessings manifold, S New Year, from thy pure sinless hand. We trust thy heart will ne'er grow cold Toward us and our Native Land. Bring hcuiing to the hearts now sore From wounds the cruel Old Year made; The veil of peacefulness draw o'er The woes at each heart-threshold laid: We cannot love a tyrant king I Our hearts refuse to loyal be To one who takes delight to fling Upon our hearts keen misery I Be kind to us that we may say, When comes the time for thee to go; "O darling year, we grieve to-day, rwfS Because we all have loved thee so!" Good Housekeeping.' ;: out his hand to her; deftly she smoothed his pillow, asking quick questions us to doctor's orders and showing the bewildered father how to follow them, all the time talking lu soothing, comforting little sentences to the child. "We're good pals, aren't we, Tommy? And we're going to have some awfully good times together, aren't we? And will you make a bar gain with me? When my little Peter kins was sh k he did Just what I want ed him to do. Will you do thnt, dar ling? If you will you may call me Aunt Grace, Just as he doei. Will you, dearest?" "ltavver call you muvvtr," whis pered the child hoarsely. The color flooded Miss Woodburn's face, but with a little life hanging In the balance there was no time to hesi tate. "All right, little man, It's a bar- "Rawer Call You Muvver," gain and you'll take the bad medicine Just as If It were good." Patiently sbe worked, sendlug the grateful father flying on errands, or telephoning the doctor to ask for fuller directions. No man has any concep tion of a woman's resourcefulness till he sees her trying to save the life of some one dangerously HI. Mr. Thomas Blrney watched, fascinated the move ments of this highly competent young woman who seemed never to give him a thought except to order him about Noon came the afternoon was almost spent before the child was sleeping calmly in her arms, the crisis passed. "We're won I" she announced to the Polk Miller's Liver Pills Farewell 11 full on thy throne strong ot nmo; Tfl vouthful kin?. and Bin ' father, "and If you will get me a glass of hot milk I will be very grateful." "I'm ashamed not to have thought of that myself." he told her remorse fully as he hurried to obey. When he returned she tried to dispatch him to get himself something to eat. "I'd ruther not," he assured her; "I do not think I could eat. I only want to make you understand how much appreciate what you have done for me aud Tommy-Trot. We'll be your de voted slaves from now on and Tom my's father will run him a close race, Miss Woodburn." "It was mighty fortunate that I re membered thnt I had promised to stop for him," she said quietly. "But I think now that you had better get your din ner at once and then I will run home for mine when you return." Her tone brooked no argument, although Mr. Blrney much preferred to look at the picture of her holding his sleeping child thnn to eat. Shortly after Miss Woodburn had her dinner Mr. Blrney, In distress, tele phoned that Tommy had awakened and was crying hysterically for her. Would she come and stay a little wblle and get li! in to take one more dose ol medicine? Hastily putting on hei wraps. Miss Woodburn started for the Blrueys', taking with her an old nurse who she knew would stay with Tommy for the night. "You pwomlsed me!" he walled. "You shan't go back to Peter; I'll (wash him I" Abashed, but smiling, Miss Wood burn soothed the child, who clung to her ml she assured him over and over again that she would return In the morning, and Mrs. Brown would stay till she came back. Wben Tommy-Trot was finally quieted for the night, Mr. Hlrney Insisted on taking Miss Wood burn home, und It seema that most of ihe (hue was spent In telling her about his family and his prospects, as though he felt It necessary that she should be thoroughly acquainted with his biog raphy. Next day he made the ac quaintance of her father and repeated the story and much more about him self aud Tommy-Trot. And as Tommy soon learned the way to the Wood-' burns' nlso the neighbors are wonder ing whose courtship Is the most ardent, Mr. Blrney's or Tommy-Trot's. Hut certain It Is that Miss Grace Woodburn Is to be the New Year lady In the Hlrney home. (Copyright, 1M9, by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) 1f The Good Old Kind iW I lr alweys do the work. S.me formuU for JO yean. Unequalled foi Bilioueriete, Sick Headache, Conilipation end Malatia. At all druggiete. Manufac tured by Polk Miller Drug Co, inc, Richmond. Va. 4 i i J 4 WELDON, N.C Jinx Batchclor't Opera Hum.