M W
smrx
Wine of C&rdui
Cured Her.
OS Booth Prior «hM,
ATLANTA, GA., March 21,190&
jMprtJorfcur months with
uTtadß
- wr Bnnrtng reeling m my
fiAMMlieina - 1
nMmitino BOCOIOQ
isswtfarajsa
•ity. In three weeks I lost fourteen
pounds of flesh and felt that I must
find speedyvnlief 0 regain my
hsskh Baring heard Winn of
Cardui praised by several of my
friend*, I sent fora bottle and WM
certainly very pleased with the
results. With In three my
appetite xetmned and ray stomach
MM me no mora. I could
digest my food without difficulty
and the aemoosnes* gradually
disilaMsiiL 'Nature performed
her tenttiene without difliculty
and I am onoe mo* a happy and
well woman.
• OLIVE JOSEPH,
Baa. Atlanta MfeyXigM citft.
Secure a Dollar Bottle of
L Wine of Cardui Today. -
PHYSICIANS
4 t ' " '
•*■ - * .
wpuld not endorse
and "prescribe
EGHOLS'
PiedmOnt
Concentrated
Iron and Alum
Abater..
UNLESS IT HAD
, MERIT
I » ,Jf
If you budcr with indiges
tiou, or anv form of chronic
trouble vou have all to gain
ami nothing t > lose by u*.-
inrit .*%.•'
• f* ' '.i
Forfait, with a guarantee,*
HV —-
5. r. mans;
Boz Boftlis 50c IBoi Boftlis $!
J. M. CiJ. iTyiioliUwi^.Va.
I Royal Elastic Felt Mittopss. §
I Is tho concentrated lowny i fleet I
of t.i* layers of iollM cotton of P
K Selected quality. In tho cuncen- L,
■ trution tmru if no hardness, B
•.fcj- 'lhey are softntjiist, MiU remain jg
bo through yiiurt ol com.Utit &
4l use. Writs (or trer booklet. R
"The Koyal"Way to Comfort." a
I If your deiUer hasn't it. write us. f •
A PRICE Wepixm PRICE j.
H #i». 310.00 r
B ONB MONtH'a TRIAL FRM. I)
BEE'S JSL
. Laxative !
HONEY-"TAR
» ■
i An improvement pver all
Cough, Lung and Bronchial
Reddles. Cures Coughs,
Strtngttana the Lungs and
Gently Moves the Bowels.
Pleasant to the taste and
good alike for Young and Old.
PRKPARKD «Y
Planli UidielN Co., CI km, U. S. L
S. U. ELUSON & Co.
.. 1 Worlds Fair
Parties,. desiring to visit the
Worlds Fair have the choice of
tWK'(jiJ«r*«ach week, Tuesday,
Thundar«fad Saturday during
which to purchase
coach exteWrswti tickets to St.Louis
Vis Natiolk-and Western Railway.
**W. B. BHVILL.
QetffYad fs. Agent. Roanoke. Va,
JS I
Rich Man,
Poor Man!
By KEITH GORDON
r n JdS. 1904. W fmrnrnt WUm
Before they necked the first ledge
overlooking Sausallto a mist like float
ing globulM of crushed pearl rolled
neiseleoaly through the flnsnns of the
hflle and blotted out the village, the
bay and the towers and chimneys of
Ban Francisco—in other words, the
world. In the damp air the girl's hair
curled mora dlstractlngly than ever.
Never had be aeen It when It framed
the low forehead in so bewllderbi*
an arabesque of rings and curvss and
wsves.
"You look rather swell youraelf," she
laughed In response to his eloquent
glance of approval. "Knickers snd s
Norfolk cap and tbs Jacket ann't half
bad on you. Taken In connection with
your cleft chin," she went on, throw
ing her bead back and screwing up her
•yes critically, "they make you a rery
preeentable youth Indeed."
"We won't talk about that" WM the
terse reply. "This walk to Point Boni
ta has an object"
Bbe opened her eyM wide.
"Certainly," she assented pdlltely
"Point Bonlta, for Instance. If It hai
any other object" she went on sternly.
"If you're going bsck to that old sub
J set, I won't go s step farther." ,
By thla time they wen moving In the
midst of a cloud.
It was his turn to be Innocent
"You mesn—ob," with a fine lmita
Hon of Impatience, "doesn't a girl ever
forget It if a fellow baa once happened
to fancy himaelf In love with her and
aald so?"
The pink of the glrl'e cheeks-It hs!
the soft furred look tbst Is responsl
bis for the slang adjsctlve "pMcby"-
deepened suddenly, unaccountably. Oui
of the tall of bis eye the youth observed
this Interesting fact with cruel glee,
reflecting with a pang that be should
have chosen diplomacy aa a vocation
lnatead of engineering.
"You ahould forgive and forget the
Bins of my youth," be resumed. "You
know you Insisted that you would al
ways be the bost of friends, and thafa
what I need now!"
"You change quickly enough, 1 moat
suy I" she remarked with some bMt.
"It Isn't six months since"—
"Since what?" be challenged. But ahe
turned away and did not reply,'while
the walls of mist lastly closed In nMrer
and nearer.
"What do you want to tell me?" she
questioned at last In an oddly aubdued
inauuer. lie did not answer Imme
diately, but swung on ahead of ber In
the narrow path as If he were making
a wuy for ber through the mtat. So he
bad got over bla love for ber. She felt
a shuddering sense of desolation. Still,
she argued, she could Bcarcely have
supposed he would go on caring, M
peclully since she bad explained to him
with.Judicial carefulness that abs must
marry a man with money on account
of ber mother and the younger glrla.
Strangely enough, though ahe had
pictured herself as married to another,
there bad alwaya been a somber. In
teresting figure hovering In the back
ground of that picture, one to whom
she meant to be so klud, so geutle, so
nil sweet, that bis regret should becoms
like a beautiful, sud song—to Ije wept
over and enjoyed. And uow the brute
was asking ber to "forgive and forget"
that he had ever told ber that be loved
her I
They had reached the summit of a
hill, and be proposed thst they sit down
upon a convenient bowlder to rast be
fore attempting ths next one. Ap
parently ber silence was unnoticed.
"You aee, fate's been telling off my
buttone lately," he began In a buelneM
like tone, "and the decree Is that It BM
got to be money!"
"What do you mean?"
"Itlch woman, poor woman, beggar
woman, squaw," he elucidated, touch
ing the buttons on his Jacket "and the
lot falls to rich woman every time. It
asems a beastly thing to think of—
marrying for money. I would be a cad
enough to do It but the thing Is that
there'a a girl—a mighty fine girl—and
1 really—l—hang It I like her! But
bow am I to tell whether It's the real
thing or whether her money haa some
thing to do with it? You aee. there are
reasons why I should hsve money right
away, long before I can hope to gain
It by my own efforts. The governor la
bresklng down, and hla affairs an In
bad shape, and there an the two kids
and mother to provide for."
The glrl'a heart was sinking as the
mercury does In a falling temperature.
All the Joy of living seemed to be 00s-
Ing away through her fluger tips, leav
ing her cold and Inert. He turned to
ward her curiously.
"Of course you don't think I'd con
alder such n thlug If I were not forced
to It by duty!" he went ou fervently.
"And I came to you because I thought
you'd understand, because circum
stances an forcing you Into the same
thing. They aay you'n going to mar
ry Urndshaw. You'll be a rich wom
an and a happy one, 1 hope; but, wheth
-1 er you an or uot you will have done
your duty by the family. That will be
yofir consolation, and that's why I
come to you lu my difficulty. What do
you think—can I decently ask the girl
to marry me? Remember, I like her,
but I'm not sure I love her!"
The fog. which had seemed about to
crush them softly a few moments be
fore, was now failing back, but they
were stlli In a remote world. With the
very sight of babltatlona cut off from
their view It was hard to believe In the
reality of purple and fine linen, horsM
and carriages and gold. Suddeuly toe
Tl» SmklM if Sprlig
. The Salve that cures without a
scar is DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve.
Cuts, Burns. Boils, Bruises and Pile*
disappear before the use of this salve
as snow before the sunshine of
spring. Miss H. M. Middleton,
Thebes, 111. says: "1 was seriously
afflicted with a fern sore that was
very painful. DeWitt's Witch Hazel
Salve cured me in less than a we*k."
Get the genuine.Sold by Anderson,
Crawford & Co.
too lat*. She had pot the only thing
that mattered out of tm IM u
tbougbtleeely and carelessly aa aba
would tow a pebble from bar path.
She bad not area realized what ah*
was doing. Down below, where the
Bradabaw fortune caat lta glamour,
everything had looted different She
had thought that with money at] things
Mm mart (all Into place. But here,
cot off from the world, the Bradabaw
wealth —mad Mm than nothing and
lore the only thing.
Farther and farther the fog receded,
(bowing thin In *ota. hot atlll con
teallng the valley beneath them. Bat
the WM very ran nww. Bran wbaa
the world aasnmed Its old pnperttone
It won Id bo the same. She bad had
bar lesson. The peechblow tint WM
gone from bar cbeeka, and her eyM
were grave and nnglrllab as abe spoke.
"I'm not going to marry Grant Brad
ahaw," abe said steadily, "nor any
other man whom I don't love. 80 yon
aee I can't help yon after allt I don't
think I could ever really -hrve meant
to do each a thing"—
Her roice broke, and the eyes that
bad been looking Into bis with a plead
ing strotfger than any words suddenly
filled with tears.
"I'm such a silly," she explained
rather unevenly, "bot I bate to be ac
cuaed of aocb a thing. And I think
you ought to be ashamed, Jackt You're
a man and you can make money for
youraelf and"-
Bnt he seemed to be paying no at
tention to her words. With deep at>-
bo waa naming the button*
of her coat as If he were eoanlttag an
oracle.
"Bicb man, poor man, beggar man.
chief," be chanted. "Doctor, lawyer,
merchant, thief. Bleb man, poor man!'"
be stopped, looking sncloosly for an
other button, but there was none there.
"You oeet" she gibed triumphantly.
'Terbape you've made a iblstake In
your own caee too." And, with a de
murs face, she counted the button.
"Poor woman!" aha announced, and
then something In his glancs brought
the bloom back to her face and her
bead went down upon his shoulder.
The thin pieces In the fog gave way.
leaving two Jagged space* that framed
a beautiful picture. Down below the
Bun waa shining on the blue waters
of the bay. on the treee and hedges,
among which neetled the bousss of ths
town. The girl caught her breath. She
felt ae If It were a benediction, a revela
tion of the peace of the years to coma.
"But what about our famlllM?" aha
asked In a troubled voice when the
mist had blotted out the plcturee once
more. He laughed Joyously.
"Sea that?" be Mid, holding out a
brawny right arm.
Tmmt 111 rietlM.
When the celebrated John Tlmbe of
anecdote fame waa subeditor of a Lon
don newepaper be one day commlaelon
ed one of the staff to accompany the
bop pickers In Kent and to write for
the Journal an abeolutely veracious ac
count of hla experlencM.
The faithful scribe to whom the taek
was intrustsd performed his Job with
scrupulous care, and, attired aa a bop
picker, bo epent a whole week among
hla temporary comrsdse.
In due course be returned to the ed
itorial office and produced hla copy.
Tlmba read a portion of It and then
burst Into a grsst rags. -
"This won't do at all, Mr. Smith,"
be exclaimed furiously. "Surely you
must know this Is far too coaras for
Insertion In our paper."
"I waa afraid that might be the
case," calmly replied the reporter. "Do
you think thla la better?" Baying this,
he banded limbs another manuacrlpt
Tlmbe pferuaed It and WM dellghtad.
"Ths very thing; charming!" be eft
claimed.
"Ah, I thought you would like that!"
Mid Smith. "That Is what I wrote
before I set out"—London Standard.
"linlis the Water."
Borne readers will remember the spir
ited account flrsn by Scott in "Ouy
llannerlng" of the form of salmon fish
ing that uaed to be known aa "burning
the water." It was a favorite amuee
ment lu England, Scotland and Wales.
The practice la no longer legal and can
be indulged In only at the rtak of pen
altlee, with the dlsgrsos which at
tachss to thlnga denounced as un
eportsmanllke. Torches wsrs used, and
the Mlmon were epeared by the thrust
of a weapon having barbed prongs,
called a leister. Bcott again may be
quoted for hie description of the apear
ing of aalmon from horseback in ths
Bolwsy. The Tweed, which WM the
river of his lifelong affections, WM
one of the worst suffsrara from "burn
ing the water" la the days when it
was permitted, and It WM computed
that thoipands of Mlmon were annual
ly taken by this form of cspturs. Ths
watsr may be "burned" even now here
and there, and In WalM a few years
ago there waa a short lived revival of
the practice.
. Mile ef CNIu.
Of the wonderful athletM of all agw
Mllo of Creton la perhape the most
known. He once ran a mile with an
ox on hla. shoulders, then with a Wow
of bla fiat killed the beaat and ate it
in one day. The strongest man could
not take from Mllo a pomegranate
which he held between hla two fingers.
He could break by contracting hla vein*
and muscles a cord tied around hla
forearm. One day, being In a bouae
with aome pupils of Pythagoras, the
ceiling threatened to fall in. but Kilo
supported the column on which It not
ed. tbna giving hla friends tlmeo en
cape. Hla death Is well known. He
tried to tear asunder the trunk of a
tree, but hla handa got pinched In the
wood, and. being unable to disengage
them, be perished, devoured by wild
Otuntf hiilinti
To cure Constipation and Liver
troubles by gently.moving the bow
els and acting as a tonic to the liver,
take Little Early Risers. These Fa
mous Little Pills are mild, pleasant
and harmless, but effective and sore.
Their universal use for many yean
is a strong guarantee of their popu
larity and usefulness. Sold b>
Anderson, Crawford & Co.,
- OM BMmal Mtato. •
Til* director of the mint la callad on
to *anr*r socb ■ wlflt range of joe*
tton* concerning the raises of old an)
now coin* and modal* that b* h*-
fonnd It ■***•*!> to lam* circular
covering matter* of tbla *ort. The
toll *omo latere*tin* facta. It appaars
that tb* mist do** not boy old coin* or
pnpor money «*pt *om* rar* colonial
-oin» in Ane condition, which an do
aired for tb* mint cabinet Mntllatad
or unotrmt United State* sold and
atlror coin la purchaa*d aa bullion.
Th* mint baa no pattern piece* for ante.
Tb* foronußcnt pay* no premium for
tb* return of an y of its coin* or pn
por money. New oolna cannot be
■track until authorized by an act of
congress. Tbe mint auppllaa United
State* coin* only and not of any past
data. Tb* fifty dollar goldptoo* and
tbe half dollar and quarter dollar
piece* In gold were "tract by private
partlaa on the California coast during
the IMB period and by tbo United
Statea government.
Tbe coinage of tbo following coin*
ceaaed In the yean named: Half aad
1 cent, copper, In 1867; 1 cant nickel
IBM; half dime aad S cento, atlrar, aad
3 cents, bronze, m 1878; 20 emits, all
rer, UTS; trade dollara, 1888; |1 aad
98, gold, aad 3 centa, nickel, 1888.
Tbe Columbian half dollar wa» coined
In 1883 aad the laabetla quarter la
1888. Tbe Lafayette dollar was ■truck
la 1888, tbo da te on tbo coin (1800) bo
lac that of th« unratllag of tb* memo
rial- .
Tbera are certain marklnga on *v*ry
United Htatea coin that enable tbe
place of It* coinage to be located
Tboee atrnck at tbo Pblladalpblg mint
bar* bo mint mark, but tboee atrnck
at all other mints ate dlatingulabed by
a amall letter on tb* r*v*ra*. near tbe
bottom. Hie** letter* ar* C for Char
lotto, N. G., discontinued in 1881; C
for Caraou Cltj. N*v„ discontinued In
1888; I> for Dibloaaga, (la., dlsconUn
aad In UMI; O for New Orieana and 8
for San Kranclaco. Tb* colna of tb*
United State* now authorized by law
are: In gold, double eagle, eagle, half
eagle, quarter eagle; la alitor, half dol
lar, quarter dollar aad dime; minor, fi
cent, nlokel, and 1 cent, bronze A per
son may buy a proof set of gold cola*
from tbe mint for 888.60 and a proof
sot of allror and minor colna for 11.60
When the bualneea of tbe mint* la
slack medala may b* struck from dl**-
furnished by Individ uala, public lnitl
tuttoni and incorporated aocletle* at a
cbarg* sufficient to OOT*r tb* coat of
tb* operation and tb* vain* of Uk
m*tal.—Brooklyn Eagl*.
Bsrir Taboaae.
According :■:> John Aubery, who
wrot* a celebrated wont on "tbo ran
queere Indian weed*," there waa a
time when tobacco waa worth it*
weight in allver. Among other thlogt
Aubery aaya: "Sir Walter Raleigh wa*
tb* drat that brought tobacco Into Bng
land, and la our parts- North Wllte-
It cam* la faablon through Sir Waltei
Long Tbey naed *llv«r pip**. but tb*
sammonsrs u*ed a walnut ab*ll. 11
waa sold then for Ita weight In allver
I bare beard aome of your old yeomen
neighbors aay that when tbej went tt
Cbipp*nham to market tbey always
culled out their ahlllinga to lay In tb*
Scalea agalnat tbe tobacco. Now 1 tbe
customer* of It ar* tbe greatest
that bla majesty hath."
A TMt mt S»k»l»tf.
Oontleuien who b«ve put an enemy
Into tbelr nioutba are recommended to
try a v*ry almpl* teat for tb* purpose
of flndlng out wbetber their bralna
have been stolen Tbey moat ataud
erect with thslr *ye* clo**d. aad If
tbey can perform this faat for a brief
period tbey may come to tb* conclu
sion that tb*y ar* all right Two In
dl vidua la who wer* accused of drunk
eane** at Poatefract proved that tbey
bad honorably stood tb* teat, and tb*
casos agalnat tbem were dlamlased.
Tb* great merit of tbe plan ia that It
caa be put iato operation snywber*
sad at aay Um*.—London Tit-Bits.
ran* In tb* Vias* of the rksrssks.
Pans were used by tb* pbaraobs as
atandarda la battle Tb*y appear oa
tb* to m baton ea of Thebe*. tud Terener
tb* dramatist, who lived In the second
century B. 0.. makea on* of hi* char
actus aay, "Take this fan and give bar
thus a llttl* air." Fans bar* played
thslr part tn political history. In IST
tb* d*y of Algt*r* la an altercation
with the French consul struck him
with a fan which h* carried. Tb* ctr
eurostsnc* was reported to Chart** X.
bis soT*r*tga. aad tb* r«*nlt was aa
•xpodltion to Africa, the end of which
waa tb* deposition of tbe day and tb**
annexation at Algi*ra and its adjacsnt
territory aa a eolooy of Franc*
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS
of FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR
On account of the great merit and popularity of FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR
for Coughs, Colds, and -Lung Trouble, several manufacturers are advertising
imitations with similar sounding names with the view of profiting by the favorably
known reputation of FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR.
DO ROT OE IMPOSED UPON
We originated HONBY AND TAR as a Throat and Lung Remedy and unless you get
FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAI you do not get the original and genuine.
Remember the name and insist upon having FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR. Do not risk
your life or health by taking imitations, which cost you the same as the genuine*
FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR is put up in three sizes—25c, 50c and SI.OO.
PrtpartJ oaly by FOLEY t 00., 12-04-00 Olio Strut, Chicago, MMs.
«■■■■■»- «i mluiMHMirn ir
S. R. Biggs, Wllliamston, N. C
tain number of yeara. It may be bus
banded or wasted, mad* to burn slowly
ar rapidly. It is lik* tb* oQ la s lamp
aad may be burned oat to Bttl* affect
la a little time or carefully husbanded
aad prassrrad aad thus made to last
loogar aad tiara brighter.
it I* a moot question whathw every
individual to aat at birth gifted with
lb* earn* amount of vital energy aad
tltfa sastalahig powsc. Tb* proba
ta la that *ach Is. The clrcum
steboea of tb* aavtronmeat from tb'
crmdl* to tb* grav* determine ita far
tors dsattay.—Osntlsmaa'a Magazine.
■ad Cssifssr rw Mas.
-What have yoa to aay far
sslfr demanded tb* bailie of the drunk
and disorderly. "Am verm sorra. sir.'
rata naed tbe chargi, "but a cam* up
frae Olesca tn bad company." "What
sort of companyr "A tot o' teetotal
an." "Wba-str roared tbe bailie'
"Tea mean to aay, air, that teetotalers
era bad oompanyf "Welt' rejoined
tb* prisoner, "y* ken bow 'twaa. A
had a bale mntcbip o' wbnaky wl' me.
aa' a had to drink it all to myself.
London Judy.
Hnd« lie* Csrlsss.
Wretch of s Man (at the elubH-l aay.
yea fel lowa, my wife went off to see
her mother lately. Intending to atny
for all weeks, bat I brought ber home
tn a harry. fco>ou know what I did*
I seat her s paper every day with a
paragraph cut oat and sb* wsa so full
of curiosity to know what local near*
1 waa keeping from ber that she came
homo at tb* and of four day*.
Bsigbbo"-How 'omt"did you stay at
tbe club yesterday. Jones? J on**—Oh.
the beat part of tbe evening. Mrs
tones- Why, John, you came home in
half aa hour! Jones-Weilf—Ctovstaad
Leader.
Tk* Bean.
Crawford—Did bla lawyer tall Hen
peck that be couldn't get a dlvorc*?
Crab*haw—No. Hl* wlf* did.—Towa
Topic*.
Cession Apart.
Unfortunately for Jomea. Mrs. J. la
not the moat careful of wfcmen. Ia
fact, sb* la tb* kind or person who
would fill tbe sugar basin with starch
and wondsr bow ths tsa came to taste
so curious. Tbe other day she bad been
doing *om* fancy work, and, as nsusl.
not having her work baaket by ber, sb*
Just put the ball of allk ahe bad b**n
uslug Into a tumbler.
Jamss waa rather later than usual
that night and aa be bad been staying
overtime licking stamps for circulars It
will be easily understood tbst be waa
thirsty.
Of course be chose the tumbler with
tbe ball of ellk In It to fill with water.
It waa emptied with two gulp*, but
there was something tn tbe taste of
tbe last one which made him think all
waa not aa It abould have been. Then
be felt a tickling at tbe back of hia
throat
"Tbafa mysterious," he aa!d. plac
ing his finger and thumb Inside bla
noQtb.
Ht cfiuirht bold of tbo end of rtlb
and pulled It.
Tbe tickling aenaatlon waa worse
than ever, and James' expression ss
b* kept on pulling and accumulating
ysnls of allk waa quit* awfnl to s*a
"Wlf*. wlf*." be cried. "*end for
Dr. Bquall* thl* Instant! I'm unraval
ta-r
»*. m , a
ManZan is the File Remedy that
reaches the spot and stops all pile
pain instantly. If you suffer with
Blind, Bleeding,ltching or Protrud
ing Piles and want to be cured it it
only necessary to use MatiZun, the
Great pile Cure.
Sold by S. H. Ellison & Co.
The health and fragrance ' and
strength of the great pine forests'
are condensed in Pineules —a new
discovery put up in a new way. A
cure for all Kidney, Blood and Blad
der diseases, Backache, Lumbago
and every form of Rheumatism.
Pineules rid the system of impuri
ties.
Sold by S. H. Ellison & Co.
' £ul»cr.bct> fUH JVif.UiKUjji
>i sv» .
Beautiful eyes and handsome tace
arceloquci.t I».jr uuaikius bu K f»
eyes are windows to a wornu't
hcaii uo ii»U.r'ft Rocky Mouutat
Tea i«jk« brig lib eye*. 35 cents.
Tea or Tablets.
J.M. Whelehb &Co.,Rober*onvillf,
M. C.
» -
For cracked lnuds, chapped lipa,
aud rough akin, Pinesalve is the
nicest quickest, best core. One ap
plication in one night prove* it.
Sold by S H. Ellison, & Co
—
One of ; Ring's Dyspepsia Tahlet
after tating eveu if vou can eat
hot fittie «ill cij,. st the little vou
do eat, and cure Indigertion Dy
-pepsin, Son St' nacb, Belching.
itui Weak Heart.
Sold by 5 H. I" i m, & Co.
To Our Merchant rriende
! - .. > t||
WE Aftl OVERSTOCK ED ON CANNED GOODS
Peaches. 90c. doz. Tomatoes, 80c. doz. Cera, Bjc. das.
Sardines, a cnae M, fi.aj dot. Han, 35c. das.
5 CASE LOTS^^r-^
We want to wove these geoda at once. Sead tu your orders. Prompt aad eficient
•ervice.
. .
Southern Supply Gompany
Williamston, N. C.
ss-*
11 I I dtrful tone quality, and 11
11 #** PIAIIUIJ remarkable durability. «
I WE HAVE All ATTRACTIVE J
V || you intend to purchase a piano at any time in the near |
II future. It will cost you nothing to learn what we have to ofies. I
I/ THE HARVARD PIANO CO., Manufacturer*, I
Ml OtNOINNATI, OHIO. M
" ' - .■
Frisco System fjHjfflf I
CHICAQO * EASTERN ILLINOIS JM I
Double Daily Trains
—— BETWEEN
St. Louis ond Ghica^o
fIORNINO AND EVENINO
Prom t a Salle St sat Station, Chicago 9Jo a. m.—9.10 p. m. ■I
Pram UulonSta.( Merchaatsßrtdgs)st.Louis 9.J0 a m 9.46 P a II
Morning or evening connection at both termini with linea diverging I
Equipmeut entirely modern and new throughout
A i« lI'HI.K-TaACK lAIIWAV
Bqoi|)|«l with practical and approved aafety appliances
Subatantially lonatniced.
Uennia S. Bigg*. Pre#. T. W. Tilgbman Gen. Mgr. Jao. D. Bins, Sec. A Ttxes
DENNIS SIMMONS LUMBER CO
ZZZ- - » * MtmifactureraCo&t) 2
Kiln Dried North Carolina Pine Lumber, > > J >
• • • • IOKNNIO SIMMONS' BRAND jOYNKM IHINOU
ORDERS AND CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED
WII.f.IAMSTON. N. CI
'Wbm
SKSSSSBr 6
jmrj arm wun* w rj
1847 ROGERS BROS."
aaakera.