TIIK DEMOCRAT. .The Advertiser's Till DrM H( AT. Inn J J o RATES LOW. E. E BILLIARD, Editor and Prosrietor. ViY. .VTT Woj:k F"Jt TIIK I'K' li'I.K- WH.f'A F. SC )T LAND X K( K . N (..'.. Till H i A V. K IMM'A I V I'11. 1 s'H u ! r i l i n I Oprrt-:tr. VOL. VI. T W OOR HJ1 - uy Me . Jl , N. h 5lVfc'y - j -A n i TTrmrn n H A v K ill I Ullllii P t O F KS Si O N A L . Ayco k a- Daxiki.s, C. C. Daniels, (Joldsboro, X. J. Wilson, N. C. Aycock & Daniels & Daniels, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Wilson. N. C. Any Business Entrusted to us will be Promptly Attended to. 4 4 ly. A. DUNN, A T T O R N E Y AT LAW, Scotland Nkck, N, C, Practices wherever Lis services are required. febBi ly. J 11. KITClllN, Attounky and Counselor at Law, Scotland Neck, N. C. t&g Orhce: Corner Main and Tenth Streets. 1 5 ly- D AVID PELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Enfield, X. C. Practices in all the Courts of Halifax and ai joining counties and in the Su preme 'and Federal (Joints. Claims col lected in all parts of the State. .'5 8 ly. W.H.HAV, AX'.ZOI.EICoIFKK, R.KANSOM YVeldon. Henderson. "veldon. DAY, ZOLLICUFFEU KANiiOM. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Wki.don, N. C. 3 S 1 v. T riMlOMAS N. HILL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Halifax, N. C, Practices in Halifax and adjoining counties, and the Federal and Supreme ('units. ; iy- n. it. m. J h n s o n , mm m, Oiiiei;- Cor 10 11 Iv. 3Jam anl Tenth Streets, SI; SCOTLAND .K( K, x - V D VY. . MfDOWr.Ll.. OFFICE Comer Main & 10th Sts , Next door to Futrcll & Speed, Scotland Neck, N. C. 1T Always at his office when not professionally engaged etee where. 9 2G tf. "pjlt. C. C. CHRISTIAN. SCOTLAND Nl-LCK, N. C. V Can be found at his office over Josey Brothers' store when not professionally engaged elsewhere. 2 13 tf. I" Hi CriTlx HAXALL MILLS, RICHMOND ,VA. "BVliD-lSLAND" Paten tRollerFamily Flour, And all other grades of ALSO- CORN-MEAL AND MILL FEED. 17 ly. I VERY AND JS AL II .0 R S: E S JUt h ALWAYS READY For II 1 u 1; ; O U 1 T l R X - () u T s at ClieaD Rates. Passengers carrieel quiekly to an point on or off the railroad. Horses well fed and properly groomed by tbe; day or by the month at reasonable charges. Jjp3 JFill always sell or trade. BRYAN & MORRISSETT, Main St.. Scotland Neck. N. C. FLOUR Si ABLES. !! ft?"-A ir3g?s- P 1 ai om. .ol Without Care. KI.LA HIOOINSON. You may build you an elegant mansion And fence it around with gol1. Set it all with diamonds and rubies; You may keep out the wind and cold. You may banish from it all intruders, Have music and levity there; You may shut out Discord and Envy Put you cannot shut out Care. You may build you a lowlv cottage, You may paint at all in white. Crow vines and shade-trees about it Let in only sunshine and light; You may keep om the envy and malice Tnat wriakle the faces we wear, You may keep Love inside, and Content ment Put you cannot keep out Care. You may sirg with the voice of an angel. You may dance with a lairy's feet, You may laugh till your laughter makes music For every one that you meet; You may dance till your feet seem twink ling, Till the roses fade m your hair, You ma' dance till the world does of envy Put you cannot dance away Caie. Ycu may smile in the face of womon W ho envy your very life, As you hide from their eyes all the bur dens, The weariness, heart-aches and strife; You may live so the poor will adore you, Live life that the world calls fair; You may let love be conquered bj-Duty Put you cannot live without Care. Imputation. Beauty of reputation is a mantle f spotless ermine in which ifyou t;re hut cnwrapp.d you shall receive tUe homage of those about you , as ready, and aa spontaneous as any ever paid to personal beauty in i la I'Osti entrancing Lour. Some kind of reputation you must have, whether you will or no. In school, in church, at home, and in society you carry ever with 30U tbe winjs of a good, or the ball and chain of a bad rep utattion. Resolve to make it beau tiful, clear, shining, gracious. This is within your power, though the color of your eyes and Lair is not. But reputation, after all, is but the shadow east by character, and beau ty, m this befet and highest sense, commands all forces wortb the hav ing in all worlds. Every form of at tractiveness confesses the primacy of this. IJeauly of character includes evtry good of which a buman heart can know, and makes the woman who possesses it & princess in Israel, whose home is everybody's heart . Frances E. Willarrf. Iiiiiir in ilie World. (Ledger.) Y'ou should bear constantly in mind that nine-tenths of us are, from the very nature and necessities of the world, born to gain our livelihood by the sweat of the brow. Whet reason have we, then, to presume that our children are not to do the earn-:? If they be, as now and then one will be, endowed with extra ordinary powers of mind, those ex traordinary powers of mind may have an opportunity of developing themselves; and, if they never have that opportunity, the harm is not very great to us or to them. Nor does it hence follow that the de scendants of laborers are always to be laborers. The path upward is steep and Ion;;, to be sore. In dustry, care, skill, excellence in the present parent, lay tbe foundation of a rise, under more favorable circum stances, for the children. The chiK dren of these take another rise ; and, by-aud-by, the descendants of tbe present laborer become wealthy and cultured. Tins is tae natural progress. It is by attempting to reach the lep at a single leap that so much misery is proaucta ... ljo worn. ouo,ei ma aid in making the labo-ers virtuous nnd happy, bv "ringing children up 1 1 11 i.t .. ! lo labor with steavlines, witn care, and with skill ; to .-how them how to j do a m en', cs i'ul Hongs a.s possi I b ; to it. I hem all in the l-.est maii- I tier ; to set them an example in in- j elustry, sobriety, cleanliness, and ! neatness; to make till these hanituulj to Iheui, so tact thev never shall be! iiahle to lall into the contrary ; to let them always see a good livu g proceeding from iaLor, aud thus to remove from them the temptation to et at the goods of others by violent and fraudulent mean?, and to keen far iroin their minds all the Induce ments to hypocrisy and deceit. Ifyou are all run down have r,o strength, no energy, and feed very tired all the time take Dr. J. II. McLean's Sarsaparilla. It will im part strength and vitality to yo-r system. For sale by E. T. Whitehead & Co. son FK. BY HON. HENRY W. GRADY. (New York Ledger. The beauty of Southern scenery, and the tenderness c f Southern skies iiave caught the attention of many of the very rich men of the North. Mr. H. M. Flagler of the Standard Oil Company, has spent over $7,C00, 000 in hotels and improvements, and his Ponce de Leon and Alcazar are not equalled in the old world or the new. Mr. George Vdnder'.d;t pur chased a mouutaia near Asheviile. in the famous Hand of the sky," and has outlined improvements thai will cost over $3,000,900 . In Florida a number of millionaires including h! foreign prince and duke or so have made superb winter homes. By the way, Florida ha3 recovered what she lost to California two years ago. The tide of travel is turning agiin , and Florid 1 is not confirmed as the win ter garden of the republic, but its sanitarium. The air and the sun shine of the South make life delight ful, which recalls a little story. A Northern lady and a Southern ont were thrown together for a day or two. The Northern lady had criti cised the railroads, the hotels, the homes , the towns, the farms of the South. A t last she said : "I tell you, though, 1 do enjoy your oalmy air, and your genial sunshine." 'T am so glad,'' said her Southern neighbor, "for that's about all the Yankees left us.'' In 18C0, Georgia, Alabama, and South Carlina were, with the excep tion of Rhode Island , the three rich est States in the Union. In 1880 rnev were, with the exception of Idaho, the three poorest. In the abov e comparison wealth is measured by the holdings per capita of the citizens of each Suite. After twenty five years of peace and of unusual prosperity, Georgia has jU3t reach ed again the total of her tax books in 18C0, minus her property in slaves. What a pull it has been ! Through the ashes and desolation of war up the hill, a step at a time, nothing certain not even the way! Hind ered, misled, aod yet always moving up a little , until shall we say it? the top has been reached, and the rest is easy ! The desperate days of starvation the doubtful days of ex perimentthese are over. And now the world will witness a change in the South, little less than msgical The ground has been prepared the seed put in the tiny shoots tended past the danger-point and the day of the miguty harvest is here ! The Comstock lode 13, perhaps, the richest spot of the earth. And yet , all about it is bleakness and misery. Its teeming riche3 haye gone to build up distant cities and carry great current , of which the miners, gasping in its depths, hear but dim report. The cotton tield is a new Comstock lode. And for years the farmers fought in destitution, as the miners fight, while the bales of cotton, as of silver, went to enrich the cities beyond their horizon . At last they learned how to catch the ebbing sea at the edge of the patch, and throw its enriching Hood back on their own fields. The long-leafed pine noiv standing in Southern forests, would yield, at $10 a thousand feet tic crudest form in which it can be rendered 500,010,000 m excess of the total taxable value of the Snith , includ ing cities, railroads, farms, personal property, everything. That is an euormous possession ! Rut that does not satisfy tbe New South. Male I into furniture, that pine would bring ; $-( nstea(1 Gf s10 a thoasand feet j Aml go m ?omething over four bun ; Jred an(1 fifty ruc.0ries , s e is turn ing it into furniture. Nov' by nn-igi v'cs that the sonics what comical revolution in Iiraz;! in he. Use :n-o;de a i . 1 to the em peror : kTf you pie i.-e , sir,v and the j emperor, eood soul , said to tb reo pie itb i asurv 1 no otI hanel atl'air it looks to 1 e. Fi.der teie surface tor yeara :.nd ears the re publican forces nave been at work, advancing, retree.tiag, trying, l' 1 1 i 11 g . patiently learning, testing, strengti.- ening, until at last everything was readv. and it was lust "Presto J - ' " changt! For twent) -five year? the indastri - al forces of the S ri H IV " '-. e South bave been at Davis ; or. The World's Tribute t j 1olk.V) eXpctl.encv and availibillty j ,r 't irrdate your lun-s with a ' :i v wif-.-N ca-e, U pro-.ui-! a bot the surface. Making eTJ' VZ,13 wilb 1 bave controlled already too long, s stubborn couh when a pleasant an J . :, ; :iU an 1 was m ,.d; ! rector, I perimentiog, working ! pe oj Zr. TUe mut be a ne. deal. The effective remedy m iy t o lj,ri;l in , t j h,all,. Me, ! - h.r thi , is , blocking up old ways, J Tbat i9 au tue capital that is needed, people have j!aycd seven up long Dr. J. 11. 3ici.e-au lar me -iue , with tho lamp of ex- Splendid opening for ladien and gen- enongh without eyei holdm: high Balm 1 , . 4. I -rv truly, Ri" 1 . L I . l'-'. 'o. v lit ditrointr ..Ulvin.'. tlompn. or making gaMC ForeU h. I. Whitdl vu, work under little show, experinn out new ways peering about with tho lamp of ex perieucc barely lit, digging, delving, strusilir, until at last the day hu come, and in dependence is proclaim ed. Now watch tbe change take j place with alipost comical swiftru s ! l cannot, ot coarre, attempt to answer, here ef ehewlcre, the in quiries these articles have brought ar.d will brin?. However, there isto thy 1 P- Tluy claim lint t 'n-y fr.., . !qK. , fu:nn .. -,. 1 -ou! 1 not be aiTt'otrd bv a tmt ad very well be answered. She asks:! "Do you people of the Suth ac-J knowledge that the cause your j fathers fought for was wicked and wroni: ?' We do not. We would not be wort by of those L.thers if we did. Nor of national fellowship. We ac cept as final the arbitrament of the sword, to which our fathers appealed. In p-jriVcL ! alty and sicoeiicy we iiuvt tjken up the new work that comes to onr hands, hoping for noth ing better than to do that work well. This is as far as generous men should ask us to go. It is as far as brave and self-respecting men can Lately a number of Georgians went to Ohio. At a public reception one of the Georgians stated he had fought a'. Gettysburg. Shortly after wards an elderly lady in black asked for the Georgian who had foii'ht at Gettysburg. He wa3 pointed out. She said to him : "Did you fight with the rebels at Gettysburg?" "I had lhat honor, madam 1" 'My husband was kille 1 in that battle," "It brought sorrows to many no b!e and Innocent hearts, madam!" 4iI wanted to tell you. sir, that, at last, I " The voice faltered ; the eyes filled ; the head was bowed and , in silence, the widow caught the hand of tiie Georgian, and held it in loving and forgiving grap ! Why cannot the lady from Maine rest her ca-e why cannot we all rest ours where t!i2 lady from Ohio rested hers? Head SI care ISainI. (Country Homes.) Every boy should haye his head , heart i.ud hand educated. Let th;s truth never be forgotLen. By the proper education of the head, he will be taught what is good and what is evil, what is wise and what is foolish, what is right and what is wrong. y Lie propjr education of the heart he will be taught to love what is good, wise and right, and to hate whatever is foolish and wrong. Ry the proper education of the hand, he will be enabled to supply his wants, and to add to his com forts, and to assist. The highest objects of a good education are, to reverence and obey God, and to love and serY'e mankind. Everything that helps us in attain ing these objects is of great value; and everything that hinders us is comparatively worthless. When wis dom reigns :n the head, and Ioye in the heart, the man is ever ready to do good ; and if his executive abiiiiy be equal to h i 3 enlightened senti. ments , order and peace reign, and failure and sutfenng are almost un known. The Julil and elie Mias. Rev. F. M. Slirout, Pastor United Brethren Church, Blue Mound, Kan., says : 4 T feel it my doty to tell what wonders Dr. King's New Dis covcry has done for me. My lungs were badly diseased , and my paish ioners thought I could live only a fewweek3. I took five bottles of Dr. King's New Discovery and am sound and well , gaining 2G lbs. in weight."' Arthur Love, Manager' Love's Funny Folks Combination , writes : ,;After thorough trial and convinc ing evidence , I am confident Dr. j Ki "'' New Discover,- for Cmseirnp-j 1 tion. beats cm ad, ana c ares w J; e u pvervl bin" else tails. f iie greatest kindness I can do my many t!ir!Uv and friends is t urge tnom to try it. -r ..t-i . 1 , Free trial bottles at E. I. S hitehead , t i & Co.'s drugstore. Regular sizes in i(1 flf) 8tP' v jlouey .Unking. If you are not fully and profitably emolo-ed 3 ou will find it grea.Iy to V1..ir interest to at once write to B. j y j0hn?on & Co. Richmond, Vs., i mnva -rn?pmt-nta with 1 lipm :uiu uuut ,...i-"n- ' to sell their great new book the i "Memorial To'.uxe of Jefferson - Splendid opening for ladien and gen- tlernen. AND RAILII- A1 fV MMIIONS n... S'in' f tlu-e corporations tp another th'rg tnat e-uis j-tran,:'- comrnii".n, ain! the W ..v W and It 1 i l oads ;iro .umoii ! hf n timber. I bey c'.aiin 1 1. . 1 : in their charter they ate allowed to charge mi much i per mile per hur.drul weight for! . Ireight, and o much per mile for t each passengor, and that they are! now c'. a 1 gin a good deal les than j the matimum chnr a'.luwed. j They claim that this right to charge I 1 1 r 1 iii tiii nijiYiinnm ti 1 1 1 111 1 lit- charter? , is a eontrr.et with the -tate, an I is a v-f-d right and cannot be violated by the state without coming in conflict with that clause of th-1 constitution of the United State? which fuibids any state to pass any laws violating contracts. Therebiio, they sty they can charge what tley please for freight till J passengers up to the maximum tixed in the cb titer, without let or hindrance from the stata or any other power except then own will and pleasure. If this be so, why should they fear or opoo-e a railroad commis sion? If they are out of reach ol the law . above the juris lietioii d the state , beyond the interference J of a oinnsission, why should they j oppose the appointment of a com mission, and call together their elaus by building torch-lights on the mountains and in the valleys at the assembling of each legislature.' Why aie they all present during the sitting of the legislature' I admit that there is some doubt as to whether or not tbe legislature can compel these roads to woik for tbe public for reasonable pay, but that doubt is as thiu as vapor and as transparent as glass. It is so shadowy that these roads have long since determined to never allow it tested in the courts, if they can possibly avoid it ; and so they have always made a common light against a railroad commission, All the other roads use the argu ment that it would be unjust to them to iix their charges while these favored corporations could charge what they please for their services. But strangest of all, these non-favored corporations employ tho ablest lawyers in the state to go before the committees of the legislature to plead the exemp tion and convince the members that these other corporations are beyond their reach and can charge what they please ; and, therefore, they too though not granted that right in their charters, ought to be allowed; to elo the same. These corporations not only pursue this course, but they employ the best legal talent in the state to write legal arguments for publica tion in the papers to educate tbe people their way and bring them over. I own muiviu aai cc-nviei .ons (i vuru I have no quarrel wtth the roads.! i3 right and good. They are simply attending to their I Carlyle well a s : "At all tur: own business. I have no quarrel J a man who will do fnithfolly io1 with the !awers they are attend- to believe firmlv. If lie have to ".-!. ing txi their own business aLo, j a, ctery turn 'he world's sutl'rag'-, ;i Now, let the p?ople be as jealous j u0 cannot di-pen-e with the worl i's ' of their rights, as earnest iu looking! vulfrr-ire and make his own s:d!'r.v; after them and as desperate in : serve, he is a poor e e -servant, and 1 maintaining them as the attorneys ( the work committed to him v. ill 1 e are. j misdone." Take care of your wives and childien as they do. see to it that you arc not deceived and misled i against vour own inteie.st in favor! of these corporations. Ifyou were in the place of these railroad kings 'and their attorneys, I am very sine i you would do as they do. ! Human nature is the same the world over. There is such a thing as educate I human natuie; bur with the :e surroundir.gs and : the same training none of would iw--..tv tooidi unlike eitbir men. j " - ' r Our wrongs mav not be as great a KJUl - - we imagine them to be. Hi'; rail- " , . . ; road authorities may not be so ' much wrong, after all. If the p r pie wttiit a railroad commission, 1 and I thiak they ought to have it. ! and I think the 10a Is ught to ! desi-c if , let th.m ceuimand the To-vr h -'i-hitun- to give it. to th rn Don't nominate any man who is ned in fm-nr of a commission. Let Us 4 .x .1. - - - ' not nominate any man for Judge upj0 is uot jr, favor of a commission. ll I ll r l.finr r. ' I if.. ". ral' v r.s! ! i s. nr. 0 1 : . ' , v I- a:i o rr a-. v r.r v :r g rr cn sr .,.11 V 1 i. ..' 1 : t :.e : 1 .ur; 1 .".... . t! e truth ! ? 1 '.: It i ! ' . . j j .III - t ) by t'..e.r r.c can tVaoao v u - z m n Tor !i'av .r: :.tiYc Mate to IvV.v: !. j tonditn.n, htn fi.e d-t r...t fart::'! ; .i--'ov m.-nt fy wh:rh ho cs-i rxskt t . - j A ....d, co nff-t 1'' ! hv.r:. j Y.ug men rc! -'ctanliy K .nv t ! f r hme. tut when !.;:..? rut i-.v.'-i ,,.g srii there is no idmr.ee for ll.ea ,, advance to r.o. lo an 1 bd;y ."'.a f r., ..-. t . n b.r leaving. It is i. Lict th.it many of our . 1 young Mien leave tl.e S.ste because they iio in. I rcc (i ve si; i muneration lor i:;e:r iM-ors. 1 1 many po-otio-,- t!;::t our )oung men iHYi,nr. their w is so small Ih'tt t 7 k ( tl.ev can barc'y make n l. : g. North C'.iro!ii:a c.;n not pare many of her voting men. S';:j ;.ced- ' them to t -ike pi .' e of the ddi r -n- ' eration thut will soo.i pss a.av. It is a sad re'b'C son that our y Ur.g ' men are constrained to go r'sewh re j to seek their fortune. They s'.o'til 1 p be employed at lctne. S-Idom .-irej the eiforts of many of our 3 oting me: justly rewarded. !. " I always make ii a point," : marked a man u f.acture-r, the et hi r .lav, "to reply to every ooumii I lion of a business nature :i ld: led 1 to me. It doesn't matter what :t is 1 .l out, pruvid :d only that it i couched in civil language. I do thi.- ! because e:ourte,y rtijiires tt.t I j sliould; but nsi ie from that, ! find ; also that it is goo I policy. Time ; and again in my life I have been n minded by newly secured customer h J that I was iemerubered through cor- I resiondence opene 1 with me y.ars! before, and many orders 1 ave come' iroit-h t i:s passing and friendly acquaintance with people, (hi the other hand, I have known plenty of businc-s nun tf lro dis respectful treatment of corn spot d ents has been latterly remembereil and repaid with compound intn-t. Silence is the rav attest and mos' con ternutuous way of treating auypo ly who wishes to !); h'.-urd an J to h. . ar. and resentment ii its antwer every time MiieirilT, (X. V. Le.l-r.) In life sincerity is the sire touch stone of character. The good and valuable man is he who strives to realize day by day his own sincere Conceptions of true manhoo 1. Thousands are stfugling to exhibit what some one else admires to reach the popular standard, to be or appear to be respectable an 1 honorable ; but few make it their j aj1; to live thoroughly up to their 1 , i 1 . . r ... 1 . i;o h. The transition from long, ase ing and paiutu! sickness to robu-.t health marks an epoch in the life of tl.e individual. S v:h a remark J'.e event is treasured in the memory ar.d the agency whereby t!.. "id health has b.-er. attainci is gra'efvl ly blessed. Hence it b: that :n i -iu ,- heard in praise at E!?ctr:c Ib'ter-. o many feel they owe their restora- f.on to healtii, to the u-J (ireat A'teratie and Tonic a'e troubled with any d ne I Kid'.evs. 1ver or tomac: -o . , . I,..rt 1 1 .-4 r. -. t-f .:: wv sn f;nd robef by us -of Lie. trie Bitter Sol i at and r ' h' r,er hnttle 11. T. Whittdiea 1 Cv L'o.'.s ilrui-to: For rheumatic aad r.turalg'c pair, ruh in Dr. d. II. McLean's 'o n 1 el ira:nc!'f. ar, I lalv-i 1 )? . . t . sicLian 3 Sarsaparilla. i on w:,, -O I nt sufier long. long, u t will lie 'Z r 1 1 u e 1 1 . , r , . KIl-'I il Spfce iy :i:4 a e :c.i; v. .j . . For -al" by K. T. Wnit-lo -e 41 c 1 " 1';. t v t e ' 1 b ' ; -I.'.e .1.1 ig- f -r a:: 1 .vJ; t i . t 1 . . . ; .. . ' v c n y it,'! t:.:; t 1. . II.. o. v rr '. Ctll'iC .4 ma a r. , 1 1; iv .' . :i , 1.... ;.. '. : W . ! r. i ! 1 . "W, CO' ' .4 1 ! s . . . ' 1 V .18 1 v "u:-; 1 ! . ,' C I ! 1 :l 10 j fi 1 ! 4 ! t 1 ! . bo . 1 ,', b 1 x. 1 :, ; hi -mp A? Mil' t ,. r , . .1 o . I f'irros e-ime 1 a gr ) ' !,e f 1 1 1 ', . W 1 1 In f t' !M'r : (" 't i ( 'i r 1 ill an t y " 1 . . . e 1 ' , e 1 1 ' r ' t !,'", e -1 r f .;',;! u ';!'; r' 'i oh'T'l'.'r w 1 o' h Jo , III -i ' V o l y ir p 1 -t o , r Into 1 tie a 'i' ire Jo ; 1 t 1 th- d, A !: , : r. rr 1 1 r c - o 'i , i .ri I!! ; 'l' -i 1 I lh 11 0 (. o. t v r,i .e no ; 1 r v v. 1 Ill I.' 1 , w ! ! ) ' ! ! e ! .) H I ' V !l M ? V II. d to a Mi- "ll'iM- ! , ! ' 1 ' d l'! ' 1 tr ; , . , ,. , ,. , v, , .,0 v, .j;. V I pry .( t)i. , p., r 1 .Mr. T. most o". e't; vi , bo: ! mo I I', llMho! v.; ,i"i' a '1 1 1 W .1 I ;,! pr'par ! !'or-'. :is Ts J !, ! ci'ii.v t r 11 o -.;; 1-0:1. b 1 're:e.- w 1 . 1 !l. tob -co crop, ! c be:1 ill Jo J 1 s in.' in t' 1 -i - t!o(). III ilH :! .ii 1- e 1 -;i h. : 1 .1 ll ti.ere i tt net- a-i :i s co-it h ; n i n z t 1 :! ! r V : 11 ' u : I ' ' ' r 1 t i 1 1 i v h :i ing of ( !. ! - i man v.oui i d wi . o . t ii- soli'.o ! of ! The re rr,.! r n of . i ; i r i the No h Pol; ana ma,.' s ' n- b- i :!''!' If i.'im'1 b 1 r wit', ' to! ' a-, : I i-ari I ' ' W : - 1 I v. 1 1 '1 fit- vt a' o:" i d a'no; ". co a ' .O 1 '. ! . 1 . : i : i . Lave ' r( 1 iro ont : c 1 1 M j ;. o 1 O . : y C-u. t u ' i i e i i' :o :, wor i. .fir; :'.! 'i.i-'j.or y 1" j (. s I' i , e , ' ' 1 ! ' ' ' J i1. r ?o '! 1 . ... 1 . . 1 r i : r ' . l 1 1 Me 1 a 4 '.no '1 Oi I - 1 1 ' t r m tS h , 1 ' : - ' I' , , ; . I., it rov' f i-;-e t.r;.: Co A I . i. a . 'A r ( 1 1 . a:-!: o a " . r i yiiif' ;i .1 ii el frier; !, ! e ;W at a i aCr.ac w ho , of !;r.i-v P. at my v. if..; 1 i for r.-.onthi, see. your ; ii's. I C'w : the cc ! !a r at o Mr. Perry, h-d .-f for v.'.r t h . n a ' ) i-ji.ie until hi-- h i i: 'ore I. Se iv: n t ; ier A :. 1 'I 1 ' - t re a a