. - . .
. , ' -
THE DEMOCRAT.
The Advertiser s
Tin: nr.MnrnAT.
Tl
RATES LOW
E. E HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor.
vmTvi".
WE MUST WORK FOR THE TEMPLE S WKLP A EE.
iil rijition 1 111 prr I -tr.
SCOTLAND Nl'X'K. NC Til" L'l'SI )A V. ! A M A K V -iit. IS'.m.
i !
1 i
nn k . 7 i "T rr r rN4 rj a xy m
r i TTnTlTii
P It O F E S S I ON A L
AYCorKTlUiT" c- Daniels.
Coldsboro, N. U. Wilson, N. C.
Avcoek & Daniels & Daniels,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Wilson, N. C.
. . . i :i l
Anv business lantrusieu iu us m u
Promptly Attended to.
4 4 ly.
7 A.DUNN,
A T T () R N K Y AT LAW,
Scotland Ni:ck,'N, C,
"nracticcs wherever his services are
required. fcb!3 ly.
;T:H. KITCHEN,
Attorney and Counselor at Law,
Scotland Neck, N. C.
jtcg Office: Corner Main and Tenth
Streets. 1
AVID HEEL,
D
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Enfield, N. C.
Practices m all the Courts of Halifax
and adjoining counties and in the Su
preme '"and Federal Courts. Claims col
lected in all parts of the State. 3 3 ly.
W.H.DAY, A.C.ZOLLKWFKK, R.KANSOM
i.Vcldon. Henderson. weldon.
J) AY, OU1C0FFER k RANSOM.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Weldon, N. C.
:i s tv.
JTMIOMA?? N. HI EE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Halifax , N . C,
Practices in Halifax and adj fining
counties. u:.d the Federal and Supreme
Courts. :5 s L'
The 1VliIperinjj Lute.
JAMES KACHMAN.
O'er DaiiPs couch, as old tradition says,
There hung a lute turned ever to Ood'
praise.
And when, upon the passing of the night,
The soft wind whispered towaid the gates
of light,
The lute filled all the chamber' of the
King
With its melodious murmuring.
Then woke the'royal singer, aRd with
head
Half raised, as if he heard a- Angel's
tread,
Listened, until, his poet soul on fire,
lie caught with eager,yearning hands the
lye,
And sang the songs the world's heart
sings again
Inspired outpourings of the souls of men.
;5h), o'er our heads, new dawning truth
abroad,
The whispering lutes sing sweeter
thoughts of Clod!
O poet, whom the world has waited long,
Come, smite the murmuring harp strings
clear and strong!
Corne, thou new seer, who shalt rise and
sing
This day's evangel of thy God and King!
luii-t uulily.
JR. R. M. J O II N S O N ,
0KEICE- Cor. Main and Tenth .Streets.
10 11 ly. Scotland Neck, N. C.
.11. W. O. McDOU I. LL.
OFFICII Corner Main & 10th Sts.,
Next door to Futrcll & Speed,
Scotland Neck, N. C.
lW Alway9 at his office when not
professionally engaged elsewhere.
9 26 tf.
His Haiall Crista Co.,
HAXALL, MILLS,
RICHMOND ,VA.
'"BYRD-ISLAND"
PatentRollerFamily Flour,
And all other grales of
FLOUR.
ALSO
CORN-MEAL
AND
MILL FEED.
5 17 ly.
I VERY AND SAL'
S1ABLES.
(N. Y. Ledger.)
Ii is astonishing how many people
there sire who neglect punctuality.
Thousands have failed in life from
this cause alone. It is not only a
serious .ice in itself, hat it i3 the
fruitful parent of numerous other
vice ;, so that he who necomcs the
victim (Li! gets involved in toils
from which it is almost impossible to
escape. It makes the merchant
wasteful of time; it saps the bosi
ness reputation of the lawyer, and it
injures the prospects of the me
chanic, who might otherwise rise to
fortune ; in a word, there is not a
profession, nor a station in life,
which is not liable to the canker of
the destructive habit.
It is a fact not always remember-,
ed , that Napoleon's great victories
were won by infusing into hia sub
ordinates the necessity of punctual
ity to the minute. It was his plan
to mana'iivreover large spaces of
country so as to render the enemy
uncertain where ho was about to
strike a blow, and then suddenly to
concentrate his forces and fall with
irresistible power on some weak
point of the extended lines of the
foe.
In mercantile affairs, punctuality
is as important as in military. Many
are the instances in which the neglect
to renew an insurance punctually
has led to serious loss. With pound
policy do the banks insist, under the
penalty of a protest, on the punctual
payment of notes, for were they to
do otherwise, commercial transac
tions would fall into inextricable
confusion. Many and many a time
has the failure of oue man to meet
his obligations brought on the ruin
of a score of others, just as the top
pling down in a line of bricks, of the
master brick, causes the fall of all
the rest. Thousands remain poor all
their lives, who, if they were more
faithful to their word, would secure
a large run of custom, and so make
their fortunes. Re punctual, if you
would sweep 1.
'TIP
i V V
It
I lie tev IMxJorerr.
Mi
ALWAYS REALY
F OR II I 11 K
(I 0 O D T i; II X -OUTS
at
Cheap Rates.
l'assengers carried quickly to an
point on or off the railroad.
Horses well fed and properly
groomed by the day or by the month
at reasonable charges.
IT IFill always sell or trade.
RRYAN & MORRISSETP,
Main St., Scotland Neck. N. C.
1 ;u m.
'ou have heard your friends and
neighbors talkin; about it. You
may yourself be one of the many
who know from personal experience
just how go id a thing it is. If you
nave ever tried it, ou are one of
its staunch friends, because the
wonderful thing about it is, that
when once given a trial. Dr. King
New Discovery ever after holds a
place in the house. If you have
never used it and should be afflicted
TK
BY HON. HENRY W. GRADY.
(New York Ledger.;
I was once riding through Lsa
caster county, Pa. shown by the
census of 18S0 to be the richest
agricultural county in America. I
was anxious to know by whaC means
Lancaster had wrested fromDanchess ;
county. N. Y, this distinction.
'What's the secret of your suprem
acy?'' I asked a farmer. '"Tobacco,"
he replied.
Shortly after , I was ridicg through
a scorched and stricken strip of
Nrth Carolina now happily re
claimed. I wondered what was the
cause of the unthriftines, and in
quired. "Tobacco," was the reply.
The difference was that ia Caro
lina tobacco was made the sole crop.
In Lancaster it is made the crown
and money crop of a diversified
asriculturc. The one-crop system
never made any people prosperous
It vtry nearly ruined the farmers of
the South. I have shown in a former
letter how the high price of cotton
in 1SGC-0, pot every available acre
in the South in cotton how the
merchant advanced money and sup
plies , taking lien on the crop not
yet planted. See how this worked.
The farmer started with nothing, the
war having robbed him. He bought
on credit the bread and meat his
labor consumed while it made his
cotton, and borrowed money with
which to pay the laborers' wages. He
w: s thus in bondage to the money
lenders of the Past and to the corn
raisers and hay growers of the West.
In this mad race between a money
crop and a mortgage, the smaller in
dustries of the farm were utterly
neglected the farmer bought his
hams, his lard, his bacon , and often
his butter and his fruit from the
merchant. Cotton was king and
then a despot.
"WHAT COTTON DOES FOR THE SOUTH.
Cotton is a plant worthy of hom
age. The soil has not 3ret given to
the hand of man its equal. Let us
see. This year's crop, 7,500,C00
bales, will furnish 3,000,000,000
pounds of lint, which would clothe
in a cotton sdt ever7 human being
on earth, and yield to Southern
farmers 350,000,000 in cash. The
lint sold, there will be left 3,750,000
tons of seed. This will supply 150,
000,000 gallons of oil, which, sold at
forty cents a gallon, will bring 60,
000.000. Or it, may be reduced to
lard , when it will produce 1,125,000,
000 pounds of edible .fat. This
grease, healthful and nutritious is
equal in pounds to 5,025,000 hogs of
200 pounds each. Allow 200 ponads
of edible fat to one person per
annum, and this would keep in meat
5,025,000 citizens. Rat tha wonder
ful plant i3 not exhausted. After
the seeds are stripped of lint, and
the oil pressed from the seeds, there
remain the hulls and the meal. Of
each ton, the oil takes only 250
pounds, leaving 1,000 pounds of
hull, and 750 pounds ot cake or
meal. This is unequalled a3 a fer
tilizer, of which we should have left
3,000,000 tons. Rut it is also the
very best food for cattle or sbeep.
Fed to either, it will first make meat
or wool , snd then, a3 animal man
ure , go Itpck to enrich the soil. Of
stock food, it will furnish G, 568,500,
000 pounds, enough to stall-feed
1,175,000 beeves for one year. The?e
in turn would furnish meat for G.000,
000 more of people. Such are some
of the possibilities of this royal
plant.
Those who read these stunning
figures will hear with astonishment
that the farmers who grow this plant
are not the richest farmers in the
slilpp-ng. For six years the fara:er-
Lipped culls and imptrfect rrXo-is
before they found that it pill test
prairies might hear in their pauses! Kvt ry s:c-p m the
the hoof Lea's A antipodean herds' ! made through !uw and
marching to meet them. Uc ler
Holland's dykes, t e cheese and
butter makers fight American dairies.
The hen cackles around the world.
California cha'ler.ges vine-cladFrance.
The Dark Continent is diacl-jsed
through meshes of light. There i
competition ever where. Th hus
bandman driven from his market
balances price against starvation ,
and undercuts his rival. This con
flict often runs to paaic, aud profit
vnnihes. The Iowa farmer burning
his Corn for fel is not an unusual
type. Of all the American farmers
the cotton 2ro""r ia the one who i
not driven almost to dcpair by com
petition. The mortgage-dBden farms
ofth? Wet. tha deserted farms of
New England these tell the htory
vjth !
e s . . V t-1 -
of foreign competition. Even in
our own land the occupation of new
area3 increases constantly the wheat
and corn and grass acreage. It is
estimated that tie Powell survey of
irrigable land makes an area eight
times as large as Indiana. Add this
to the wheat an! corn-prodncirjg
lands, and at the same time with
draw the Southern States, now rais
ing their own grain, from the list of
purchasers, and what is the prospect
ahead of the American rain grower?
Rut it may be urged U. at the cot
ton grower in the South has com
petition in Egypt, India, Brazil and
Russia. Let the record answer. In
1872 the American supply of cotton
was 3,211,000 bales. The foreign
supply, 3.036,000 bales. At that
perirmLt The ralae of cotton sec 1 ; AND RAI.'.R 'AD ft MMlM.N
wis discovered after uii:i'r.s f d U j
!ars had been wasted. Ir:?L potatoes i N
j
were grown for ten vears before a T'.er. : r. L.;b. tl.. j.:r: s .w
variety wis fi.und thfct would stand bs:i E-d ra:!ro-.d i .-:gl!r h- :. .:
- V
1 ' v
newt
d,et
r
c ':. s:. re. T; tr.r
tlrrs ! nrd t
:s a: i
,1 : t een
of ra.lr"u
7 u W 1 . . .4
to ship See melons. The cur-
the farm before the war was lv.-rm- !--g JU to h.k u; !
u la grass. There was mi way to ' c:.emic. ; usi i li ::i
kill it, aDd when it got hold of a -it in judge me-.". !., ;
piece of land it was abaadoi.e 1 "as portior.s an I th it
hopeless. It Is now found that
Rermuda grass gives the best past
urage fur cattle and the be?t result
in hay, and a farm set ia Rermuda , po.nt to tr.ike
will bring $20 an acre, while the ! the citizen.
the
t :.ey naturui-v
tent tit of the
and ti.cy w;l
i.T.'.ie
pto; !e
, there
c t::,d
f. r c
;ive t!.. -r tru
'j, t i: t r
M:r.e'iu:M f'
I. "W
.1 f
p :.
1 tht
a ; : i
A
.. v
same land withoct it will sell for $-5. :
I rum six to eight t ins of
Now.
Why
sweet, ' 3"U!1':
:t!iv of tL
j e'p.e in ltv
nutritious hay. commanding $20 per j the cit':;'. and :.gaint tie torp
ton, can be taken from an acre ofjtio!i.y It i j because t .e
Rermuda. It h estimated that m nine v s-ea out .f t 'n
50,OC0 acres will be in Rermuda ; right t t!.e individual.
lb
r of
ra-
r..- -: ! f
th. t
e e t he i i
s t : t : o a
r - c r j " r '. : .
nd j :.!' g
Corporatioii
i T:T"S t!.e
, and
grass in Georgia this jear.
Graeo means more cattle, and
more cattle means better cattle.
Mr, Edward Atkinson, of Roston,
says :
"The farmers of no section on
earth have ever had such opportune
ly as the Southern farmers who
adopt this plan. I'Lnt alternate
lots of grass rwd cotton ; run cattle
and ehecp on the gra-s lot-; bed
tliem in the winter with cotton seed
hulls and meal. Put back to the
soil in animal manure the fertilizing
qualtities of cotton seed cake and
hulls. Every year or two alternate
The corporation ki!N a one di
. 1 . !
'. r , i -
.5
... ,
the h,g!.:
once.
1 l.c vreut -ire ,
' i . : . n l iiidt per.
I i. s I . k . i ; t . : 1 - fc.iv 1
111 :
i i i r
1 o a i :
: : of t!
r: th"
, . . i . r e : i
time the world had been for twelve ! cotton lot a with grass. Ry the
3ear8 seeking a substitute forAmeric
an cotton. For five years the South
ern ports had been shut hy war. and
all that ingenuity could do had bc-cn
done to promote cotton culture in
foreign countries. The result was
that America made hardly 200,000
bales in excess of her foreign rivals.
That was in 1872. In the year 1SS3
the American supply was 8.000,000
bales; the foreign supply, 2,1000,000
bales ; both expressed in English
bales. So that, in spite of newaras
opened elsewhere, of fuller experi
ence, of spreading civilization , of
better transportation, of unlimited
money spent in experiment, the
foreign supply of cotton has decreas
ed since 1872 nearly 1,000,000 bales,
while the Southern supply has in
creased nearly 5,000 000 bales. That
shows that the monopoly of the
South is not only fixed, but deepen
ing. . Cotton is yearly becoming
more popular. Since 1872 the popu
lation in Earope has increased 13
per cent, cotton consumption in Eu
rope has increased 50 per cent. Cot-
lots have orchards, corn, wheat, and
truck patches. The cotton lint, the
oil, the wool, mutton and beef, and
the surplus fruit, furnish ironey
crop3 not equalled on earth. The
grass, cotton :-eed hulls, and cake,
keep the sto:-k, while the wheat, and
corn, and truck patches, support the
family,"
1 know that this combination is
not surpassed elsewhere on earth.
'Vtei n t!
t.o i, and :
' hi :i r.i v.n
t o a o l t ' i
sr...i thi- i
t . U (.!' t !.t
pij, or a tive dollar calf, or hum
down a poor maa'. f n' or t'.o .d-
his two ucrM of land. 1 1 ea.N
upon son'.e i- ient of the corporation
and comphtirM of the wrong. The
agent never thinks i.f the intior
again, and if h? shoj'.d thin!; of it
aiain, i'. is none of hi In-i.ie-s.
The ttati broj.ls over l.is h-i. nv.-
doys an attorney, enters suit and rharUis to bin
i ne ngJii oegin . li.e exjo ration tMntraeH e
of two years he gets judgment for
three time the value of tiis pig , s:y
three di liars, or fifteen dollars fi r
his calf. lie has paid his attorney
iiftet-n or twenty five dollar.-, !o?:
ten days attending the courts, a:.d .. gin.latu:e and th
two witnesses ten days each. 'Lie 1 y Mich a cout.-ac
corporation has paid its attorney ho true,
fifty dollars, fifty dollars cot i-i l!:;' p, it no .--ieh tr
case, atol rcvea tim-:.s on'- j T t( :i the . 1 Int ) hhe t .1
corporation appeals to the Supreme ' co.r-i leratio-i for
Court at a cost of twenty dollars tiiought of by e.'.h
h 4
i. i l!.
1 1 : :
i i i ,
i
e v
t i
it .
t
ten 1 i ij '.
I'nii d r ion , .i d i 1 y
ion -i and ,'t'. i v . d l
t
I: I!
i .i w i
ahiv
i'o r J o ;
1
-ueh eont r:ct f
-' i'o , and to I
t)
tt.- , a
J -o w i r to
l o- o I . ; e o : th?
. h i ' . . I .j
P- "j I O t ' i i
n : n i i
l V
1
! -
P irty
more to the fin ally defeated party the ii-giilaturo have p . i ,
a
' i
Add to it perfect climate, cheap and
abundant lands and labor, ecod it sm ori.-mg that the citizen ft
.,rvio oni oi.ir,!, ti immtfli 1 disusted. ou'rauo-d, abuses
" I 4
and twenty-live dollars attorney'.
fees on each side.
a leal fiht over a pt r r a calf.
Co- M
u)om v
t
i -
-o : : :
i ai'-r.i , ,o ii i
a corpora i u gra:
right to 1 1 in - j 1 ' I
l S OVt. 1 !ll;S
! 1 1 ration
.e a i r
i .i tf c ! r i
ne
people, and you hare conditions of
advantage that ought to fill the
South with thrifty farmers from the
North. The one dillieulty, the in
adequacy of the home market, is
rapidly disappearing. As I showed
you, in eight years the South increas
ed the number of Us aitisans 24 2,
000. Cities are growing as if by
magic, and good markets are being
built up in every eounty. The other
dillieulty of poor and high trans
portation ha been surmounted. The
railroad systems of the South are
ton is steadily driving out wool and I equal to those of any other section
lav,-vers and secret!-
w
met even with the whole
determines t
th in' tht
f rst rpp jrtu riit
A railroad conimi-sion c-ml i hav
s( t'.led tins matter at a saingof in
!h.
o-n :,;;y l
haf-.o.'Vfr.
1 ne i oo rs
er li : n o-f I h
o ! y : e i -; i
I
lines
i ' ! e
and i
. r.
I
eh rt
cost and hard feeling b A.v.i m the
citizen and the corporatie ri.
A man is on the road bed where
has no bosincj". Aeonling to
schedule, however, no train is c'ue : t
this time ; but an extra ngine sliO-'- vested ;n the people a-jd
along and the man is killed. A salt, he exercis.-d by u con-h
for ten thousand, dollars damage is people, ea! h-d for that
entered. Perhaps the man s family b-it-gatc 1 to t-
.;. rn.i:i.
'or; ij," i
-' a
hi . r
-i r r c n dc r it- po ! i ee po .
W gidutare tha r m!.- i
' ers h -id rn po -ver t in .
tor runh Hi r re i. ier. i i
i a
; ! t ;
t !.
ort( :
e i n of,,
, .. . . e i
or
t i
tlax. Since 1S80 cotton consump
tion in Europe has increased 28 per
cent., the consumption of wool only
-I per cent-, while tha consumption
of flax has decreased 11 per cenL As
for new areas, the uttermost mission
ary woos the heathen with a cotton
shirt in one hand and the Rible in
the other, and no savage, I believe, ! (i)urham Sun.)
and are under control of State com
mission law.
Such, in a hurried sense, is an
outline ol the growth of agriculture
at the South in the past ten years,
and its possibilities for the faturo.
A .TItiul View.
are as well off without irm as with
t t.e s' a'e. cor.', j p u'
him. He might have diec any way.
The jury g i v t s a verdict of 77, 50') ; tut ion, mi far as I fi
the administrator takes one h ilf and ' No lei-hi'iv-
d
the lawyers the 'dher
tion curses the
swears if wi!
The corpora-
jury 5V" to in and
even with the
with a cou-h, cold or any Throat. worlJ- And yet even more Is ta
Lung or Chest trouble, ecu r a be 9aid of its advantage. It gives
bottleatop.ee and give it a fair j to those who grow it a monopoly
trial. It is guaranteed every time that is beyond the reach of competi
or money refunded. Trial Potties
Free at E. T. Whitehead & Co.
Drugstore.
has eyer been converted to one with
out having first put on the other.
Not only is the Southern monopoty
in cotton fixed, but it is broadening,
lu the past three years the crop has
increased 1,400,000 bales, and yet
tne fix-fi! supply of cotton has grown
less each year. The present year's
crop of 7,500,000 bales will be taken
and consumed, and 8,000,000 bales
will be reeded next year. Within
five years the South will sell 10,000,-
000 bales of cotton in a single crop, j
and will receive from lint and seed
not 1053 than $000,000,000. This
stupendous incoras is not doled out
to each farmer at starvation prices
to meet driving competition eLc-
! - , li.-. If- n n T.I r- i ra a n? i r
wuere, out , pa.... .llltJC.a nu j peopl(J in f)lher p3rtg of lhc C0.Jntry j .
Control a moiiooo;. n.oi , no, r.uc- , . , ; n , . ( mr!p?, ninnpv i
It has been sugesied bv the Wash
ington Poxt that "maybe if the mov e
ment to increase the price of cigar
ettes is carried out the dealers can
afford to put some more clothing on
the pictures that accompany them."
There is a very pointed moral in
that sentence. Parties who arc
sanding out the pictures of rude
j women are doing more to corrupt the
Imorsb of the vouth of cur land than
any other class of people. The
jet
people. And so it will.
A commission would have seitled
the matter upon investigation, and
would have saved all the eo-t.
A bridge breaks in. An en-iie
and nine cars plung-i down th
precipice. Seven lives are lost and
nineteen other per-ons are v.-oan;1,; !.
The eciiine and cars cost the com
pany one hundred thousand dollai-.
Suits for as great amount of dan.rg
cs are entered again-.! the road, and
judgement is given for forty thou
sand dollar. Five of tin; tto-;-,.b-d
die, ma
hoi v. u fi 1" 1
nl ';. -1 by the le o'!e ol t !
tution , can h: n ! ir .- !. '
it c ) j! 1, a d .. 11 co;...-.-fi' 1
1 itnrt h would rob p!;
their riglits and plop r'
An ! th i
. ;',-!)
t : . i I, f .
) " I .1 I
jc ci.:,-! 1-,r-..
if
V . 1-g H -.
I . . . . M
1 r 'I.
I U now ai w e' 1 v. s ! !
atto'neyj, tii-.'. t
the United S'.-i'f- n,or.;
years ago d;cid--! ex :!'.;
for w!ia! I a-n now
Hat I also know th - 1 th
! ! ! o r ! h a "i
( o
or :
th v.-. r
. the r-
eo'i' - . 1
1
'ia ' p
- - v f
( weld
b- ' n .
:d for ! i !
" r ( ' ' e i I
ll ho.ir.i!
. ' !h
1
o,i
1 r
; O "
t
' r 'm
fi i! . 1 e- 1 ;
q ). 1 h ' d
ir.g 1.1 !ii
doa-n
and as many families stricken it '.
cigarette manufacturers are not the
gri!-!-on!v
ones. Some of the smoking to
" A coi
bocco manufacturers arc doirg the j br.,j .,. and
same thing.
The Sun would just make this in
jnuiry: In order to christianize the
1 t
TH-.!0.1 WO'
.hi
t. f 1
a e 1 r spi-e i-
,1
idg
t!i.: f o-;;d r
d ' ('I ;o ; . , '1
h- en oven
th
topj'eo ravf-i r. o'i' .'r-t v,'.oo;i
until it was repaired. Now, op
steps Mr. Know-all and -ays, "What
!ri;jhth"s the state to in-p-i'-'
interfere wit h t'ne bti
, 1
ii
I o
'."(I
f".,r t
1
t
T
:r;css o
ticallv, fix their own prices. This;
1 .r
raiL
FOR YOUNG LADIES,
Norfolk, Va.
Largest, Cheapest and fiest
School iu Tidewater Va. 250 students.
20 Teachers. Health record unsurpassed.
ONLY $42.50 A QUARTER for Board
and Tuition.
7 25 tf.
Great mistakes are often made in
trying to economize. It is a safe
rule to follow that the best is always
the cheapest. A cheap physician
may cost you your life. If you have
Malaria in your system, you will
not only be miserable, but unfit to
work.. Lost time is money lost.
One dollar spent for Sballenberger's
Antidote will cure you in twenty
four hours. Solti ty Druggists,
enormous stream of mone
flowing
Sick headache is the bane of many
lives. This annoying complaint may
be cured and prevented by the oc
casional use of Dr. J. II. McLean's
Liver and KidneyPillets (little pills).
For sal by E. T. Whitehead A Co.
tion. IJow Important this i? in these
days when fteam and electricity
have annihilated distance , can be
seen from a stu ly of the situation.
What other product does theAmeric
an farmer grow , iu growing which
he is not thrown in direct competi
tion with the cheap labor or bountl-
le3s area of other countries?
THE GREAT COMMERCIAL
CIIESSLOAItD
Steam has made of the earth a
chessboard, on which men play for
markets. Our western wheat grower
competes in London with the Rus-
sian and the East India. The Ohio
wool grower watches the Australian
shepherd , and the bleat of the now
historic sheep of Vermont ia answer
ed from the 8teppe3 of Asia. The
herds that emerge from the dust of
into the South every year the re
sult of a monopoly that can neither
be destroyed nor diminished must
in the near future make the South
exceedingly rich.
sou t: 1 1: 1: x a r; u 1 e u lt u i: e
BROADENING.
An excursion of Georgia farmers
went to Ohio this fall on a special
train, to study the dairies and the
cheese factories of that State. They
came back with this declaration :
must we contribute, or how many j
issionarics most we send, to count- !
roads? What right has the 'o
say what kind of a bridge a rrclrosd
eract the bad influences th
con
should hnve r-.vy
more U. an
1 - 1
"That. c;n-i o: s, tr:o'e a
4 . ... h -1 - .1 ' 1- r. I r f i O 3 cflnf Atit
irum Uiw: u.S l"UJ"-J e,u"u"Vnii;,nn l.o!! l.-r-r. n-oaa H
Jl s
far a?
o
a . e
a m r-
r-.t .te
re'-.-:.! 11 '
''o ;r! of !
' h du-:-i-
C . .
har of
t - , i.'t . th
in t '. e c ; v ;
1
: n o
, t i
1 1 v
w ','
1
v
across
If L
can e'jntrol the railroads why ct
control the farms, the cattle, rn r.-ho-
and the merchants? If the state
hr m in .i fio.t n re-rs who are fee-tiir:'r !
J - s.rcam on
the dollars and cents?
I? it right, just or or con?htent to
seek to correct the morals in Dur-
nam, wL.:ecoiiupang 3"',can jix thrill" to ho charjr- 1 by ' V)K
the young auroadf j the railroad cornp-anhs on a b
ev.i 1" it
p'incip'.
t 1 n
a a i :
..;!!
T n
R.t
if
h.!
t h
to th
th- i
1
ri t'd
CO
'O
,'
o i ,
t '
. "1
Pimples , bods and other humors.
are liable to appear abun
acts heated . The best remedy is
TfOhio farmers find butter and jjr. j, . McLean's Surap irilla.
cheese-making profitable on land 1 For sale by E. T. Whitehead 1- Co,
worth 200 an acre, with a grazing
season of six months, we can cer-
of com, a bak- of cotton or a
the blood !of Dpphs,wn7Cri it n..l hx tn
for which the farmer muit
corn, his cotlo-n or his a:q
se ; ,
'..
rre!
1 ::
Lis
A
i'i.:-
n a :
lMscae lies in ambush for the
weak ; a feeble constitution is ill
taioly find it profitable with equally pted to encounter a milarious
t.jii-i;
simple an-wcr to an these qu.
w;ull be th- : All the:e
existed tefoie the slate had its
b nv.'i. l'rod acts arc not der, endent
he Go-
, it a t: ' r i ' h s of
r.orat 1 on -.
Id..-v are tt e
hit. I freight and
p.e:r ro.i h :.i
if th-v ;'..:! '.
i 5 t. .
eo
. . e
'. to-
-e
1 1
aood lands at ?5 to 10 an a:re and; atmosphere aud su.uien changes o. up
least
on th-2 .ntato for th
a grazing season of ten months." In
addition to this, the cattle need very
little shelter in winter. The result
will oe an immeaiate impetus m me; the entire botiy
South to grass and cattle. Tor sale by E. T. Whit-d.ead .v Co
"-.emoeratur-, and th
are usuiily the easiest victims. D.J
.f IU McLeans Sarsaparilla wil
value, or u-o.
It is cheerfully admitted
lit to
or
the
tur
eh:
i 1 re
,1 t .rirt .rir
ha'je .i'.r--a4or-.u r-r.
arn pa-;.- ner it
ti; - legi-hi-nre n. ak
rea'-io-.-ible , an 1 if
And
.
-ii-t
. v
L'h!
tV of
f
u! " - ' , .pate has f,o n -lit to inter 're with , ..-1 f.,r -(SonHbi. r-.t-. t re.eai
I rrive tone, vitality and strength to ; . . i"1'1"- ..
'The entire body. ( t:.e piiv ,te n;f.ir, ol any c;ti.ea so tSlC. charur-: aud -r.nt t-,.- ru t
.' Ion? as they d, r.ot i:'i"ring- upon to t her-o