KHOT. ME LIGHTED FOR THE ILLUMINATION OF TAR HEELS, BOTH NATIVE AND ADOPTED, SOUTHERN PINES, N. C., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1 887. VOL. 2. NO. 7 Rubber StamrlT)R E- B- kankin, 25 Visitinsr Cards fcnd INDIA-INK to mark Lin- cn,' only 2o cts. t stamps.) Book of aOOO styles , free with each order. Agents wanted. Big;Pay! THALMAN M F C CO., BALTIMORK, MP, At Oxford, Md., a company ships oysters in the shell abroad. To keep them fresh, the shells are securely .A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF best Ever-blooming Hoses, Evergreen, Magnolia?, Greenhouse and out door bedding- ; plants. - ' BOUQUETS and FLOUAL DESIGNS, ... SEEDS and EVERYTHING FOR THE GARDEN. Send for Catalogue. H. STEIN METZ, . Raleigh, N. C. Homoeopathic Physician, ; Halifax St. (op. Cotton Platform.) ; locked with , wire for the American i. Raeeigh, N. C. I oyster, like the American tourist, is ! apt to keep his mouth open too wide, ! special attention paid to all tormst . . , .;, of chronic disease, diseases of women j when he Soes abroad. and children. Patients; treated by ! i.mail, and visits made to neighboring i towns when desired. 31'tOl The "melancholy, days" of Novcm ber am almost unknown in this region. The skies are soft and blue the air Q.RIFFIN & TEMPLE, ; mild and balmy and the sunshine Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, bright and warm. Although the grass 2Tt ELIZABETH CITY, N. C. is brown, the evergreen of the pines "T" . " - iractiee in the superior and Federal Courts of i QT,,i 'iltt'-:Av,ivoi ' rte i,J-"ll0i-e Q -a- -I r 1 tlft- Fii-st Judicial District and" mtLe Supreme I and the rich led ot the oaks gle a J-l & O " .w A vl o ( giytn to conveyanciUg alld collections. . beaut3r, to the landscape never seen t" j at this time of the year iu a less favored clime. W. J. Griffxk. 26tr2 that California has for This industry, and one overwhelming advantage which she has not, vis: nearness to Northern and Eastern markets. Whv do not some of our canny5 Scots here in Moore County seize , this opportunity? G. M. Allen. Wm. Cram. C N. Walters, j : FfSi-flONtfSLE !,'EF;CttrfNT TfiLUH, RALEIGH. N. C. kllGn 2c CrQITl; fHas tlie larst stock of Foreign Clothijf, Cassimeres, Cheviots, plain .and fancy Silk mixed Suitings, Shark skin Suitings in all shades. The latest New York styles '" " for full dress Suits. Machinists and Foundrymen, h Raleigh, N; C. ' Orders for SPECIAL MACHINERY ot every j description solicit!. Engines, Boilers, shaft ings, Pulleys and Hangers constantly on hand or made to.ordtfr. , i Repairs of all kinds promptly at tenoed to a4t short notice. MANUFACTURERS OF The North Carolina Teacher for No-r vember has several interesting arti- j cles,. Elementary Studies in Insects. by Prof. G. F. Atkinson of the Uni versity of North Carolina should meet with special attention of teachers and parents also. We heajrtily commend all efforts to teach children (and grown people) that the study of common things about us is interesting and profitable. . ' The Lone Star Pump,! he best made, double-actiusr,' auti-freeiryr, I DlGSS SUltS f TOm $40 tO $85. luti-pju'klnjr, with no rubber, gum or leather, j Business suits $30 to $60. auti Csed for wells, cisterns, irriffation or supply ing towns witli water. ' rvtw . 's Pomona .Mill Nurseries, 1 2Gto2 Samples furnished on application. J i v.-ii. Wetmore ft vo., Manulacturers othin made shoes; Raleigh, N. C. are selling Indies I hand sewed Morocco; button boots icr $2.75: lace. 1 $2.0: 2nd oualitv S2.00: .rd qualitv $i75. Anv POMONA, N. C. rn, -.i ' ,;ic . --ct hf ' fize from i to 7 made to order. A perfct fat 1 WO and one-lialf miles est,.., Ot jfuaranteeJ for ' additional. Gents' hand Greensboro, at Junction : of Salem ewetl bf calf congress gaiters and bais for , I $5.00; made to order, 3-5o; Boj-s hand sewed bals "Railroad. The main ; line, ()f the ! uor J2.50. Standard Screw, $2.00; Also a full line , ? of Men's, Boys', Women's. Misses and Children's Richmond 5c Danville Railroad Pegged Shots. Special prices to merchants. , . ; x, 5 ,, ; Sample pair sent on receipt of price. Anv of ' passes through t lie ; Nursery and V their pckkIs will be repaired at the Factory for within 100 tVt'of the office arid j "lf the usual price ' residence Salem trains ; make reg?: ular stops twice daily each way. SEE 3 THE Those interested in fruit and fruit-growing j re eordially invittd to inspect this, the largest 1 Nursery in the South. y The proprietor has for many years visited the leading Nurseries of the Nonli and West and t-orresKnded with those of foreign countries, ' gathering every fruit that was calculated to j fciut the South, and being located in the center of the Piedmont Section of North Carolina and with .u years xiericue)e, also the erperience of 111 v father let'ore inei 1 can chum without hesjtaucv that trees, cu grown iu these Nur-j aeries will do better in any of the Southern or border states than if grown further-North. or I sioutti. Try and be convinced. My stock eon-j sits of over One Million Fruit Trccs Vines, Cfc, of all the leading varieties,: lKth old and new. Apple, Peach, Pear, Plum, Apricot, Cherry, Figs, Japanese Persimmon, Pecan, English j, Walnut, (iraie ami all small fruits. Exergrcens, Koses, ie- ' ." I Corix'siHtndence solicited. Senl foreatalojue- '. Satisfaction guaranteed. Order dli-eet or gire j your orders to my autnonzeti agenr. AUdress J. Van Lindley, Proprietor, 1DMOXA, X. C. BEFORE BUYING. Easily Understood. SKXD rOB FBICS LIST. American B. H. 0, 4 Sewing Machine Co. 304 N. Charles Street and e W. Saratosra Street. BALTIMORE, MO. A LAND OF PLENTY. The attention of the people of the North and West has lately been attracted to the South, but the specu lative booms set atloat at Birmingham, Annistoii, Chattanooga and Atlanta have for the moment overshadowed the more permanent interests as repre sented in the agricultural districts, and of which so little is known. Take North Carolina, in a zone that has a just claim to be called temperate, we tind every variety of timber, from the hemlock and spruce of the far North, to the magnolia and palmetto of the tropics. A 11 the grains from buck wheat to rice. All saccharine v pro ducts from maple sugar to the sugar of the cane. All the minerals from the diamond to iron and coal. All the altitudes from a mile and a quarter p among the clouds, to the savan nahs of the Atlantic coast, and a record on the census rejMuts, of products that fills more of the blanks than any other State in the Union American 'Ayricnlturkt. v . i WE G!VE IT UP. The wages of laborers in California are much higher than in either Georgia : or Massachusetts', and yet the same tariff is in operation there. But if Northern physicians are often per plexed because they do not know of good places in the South which they can recommend to their patients, who need a change of climate. There is a growing prejudice against sending:, wages are due to the tariff, why are the wages lower in the Mate of ! people to Flo rida, particularly those with lung and throat diseases. To as many doctors as are known to us per sonally, as eminent and reliable in their profession we are sending the Pine Knot. We receive no pay for doing so, nor do we ask any. But it 1 is oUr earnest desire that' the merits of Southern 1 Pines as a health resort should be known to the right persons WHERE ARE OUR CANNERIES? California fruit canners find it ira possible to supply the Eastern demand for their goods, though they run both night arid day .Exchange. It a is Christian duty for the South, and especially North Carolina, to re lieve these California biethren ofj a portion of their burden. California canuers ought not to work so, hard. If they are not careful they will break down. Where are our ban- Massachnsetts, which is more given' j to manufacturing, than in California t , which is not given to nianufacturing at' rail? Does not this constitute a demon -stratiou that high wages are not due j to high tariff? Augusta (G:i.) Gazette. ! FALLOWING. ; . ;.; n The very best work vou can do : fioni now till Christmas, after build ing vour cattle sheds is to fallow, s Plow up all the land you expect to ! cultivate next year. By so doing you. ; give all the vegetable matter time to rot, ready for plant food next. summer. You turn the top soil under and pro i tect it from the winter, and turn your ' subsoil up to the snows and freezes of ! winter, which will thoroughly pulver ; ize it and take all the sourness vut of it. Besides these advantages, you put ; your next spring work at least one ' month ahead. You do your heavy ! work in the fall with vour team and : next spring they are in better condi- ! tion to make the crop; and vour land neries? Fruits grow here in profusion j; broken in the fa1 is in so muCu tter .i and of wonderful flavor and quality. Our people pay no attention to their culture, and do not even, take the trouble to save, those nature provides. There ought to be a hundred enter- i condition in the spring to receive seed. I Just put, one, two, three plows, accord ing .to the size of your farm and keep them at it. Keep one -cart or wagon all the while hauling trtraw in the lot and stable?, and our word for it, jou prises of this sort in North Carolina; wju Dever regret it. Scotland Neck alone. We have every advantage ? Democrat. 1

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