HIE DEMOCRAT.
The Advertise!' s
Tin: dfmoceat
a r.u i
o
RATES LOW.
E. E HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor.
VoiTvi.
WE MUST WORK FOR THE PEoPLFS WELFARE.
ulnrrlplinn 1 . Jii jrr rnr.
SCOTLAND NECK. N.C. TIU KSDAV. .liVYL'I. ls'Mi.
DEMOCRAT
JEL Jl JL A2A
FAVORITE
1
1
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: 1
1
I II O F K S SI O N A L .
Aycock & Daniels, C. C. Daniels,
CoMsboro, N. C. Wilson, N. C.
Avcock & Daniels & Daniels,
ATTORNEYS AT LAY,
Wilson. N. C.
Any Business Entrusted to us will be
Promptly Attended to. -1 4 ly.
y7 A. DUNN,
A T T O R N E Y AT LA W,
Scotland Neck, N, C,
p,.,Pticf: wherever his services are
reiu:red.
1 r
feb!3 ly.
J II. KlTCIilN,
Attorney and Counselor at Law,
Scotland Neck, N. C.
ftV Office; Corner Main and Tenth
Streets.
1 5 ly.
J)
AVID HELL,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Enfield, X. C.
Practices m nil the Courts of Halifax
nnl adjoining counties and in the Su
j i . me and Federal Courts. Claims col
lated in all parts of tho State. 3 S ly.
AY .H . 1 A Y, A.C.Z' 'I.I.K'l 1'I"EK, 14. It ANS .M
Weldon. Henderson. "weldon.
DAY, ZOLT.iriiFFKR & RANSOM.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Weldon, N. C.
:? s l v.
T
MIOMAS N. HILL,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Halifax, N. C,
Practices in Halifax and adjoining
counties, and the Federal and Supreme
Courts. ' ly.
I)
R. M. J O II N s o
m to f ?n v7 7 0
(iKKit'E- Cor. Main and Tenth Streets,
U) 11 ly. Scotland Neck, N. C.
I)
K. W. O. MeDOWELL.
OFFICE Corner Main & lOtli Sts.,
Next door to Wilson A llsbrook,
St. OTLAND NKCK, N. C.
E'er Alway3 at his office when not
professionally engaged elsewhere.
t 2C tf.
JUy;, U. C. CHRISTIAN,
Scotland Nkck, N. C.
i"r; Can be found at his ofiice
over Jose Brothers' store when not
professionally engaged elsewhere.
2 13 tf.
HOMINY!!
HOMINY! HOMINY!
3
V-'
1 keep on hand
best of
at all times the
HOMINY
AN I)
M E A
L
Lowest
which I will sell at the
Prices Feasible.
Call at the BRICK MILL and be
surprised now cheap you can buy.
W. H. KITCHIN.
: 1 tf.
SOOTH
GQNSUrVlPTIQN
SCROFULA .
BRONCHITIS
COUCKS
COLDS
Wasting EiseaEcs
MULS1QI
3 El
Wonderful Fiesh Producer.
Many Lave gained one pound
per d;iy by it3 rise.
Sen It's Emulsion is not, a secret
remedy. It contains tho stimulat
ing properties cf the Hvpophos-
r.liite: and puro Norwegian Cod !
Liver Oil, tho potency of "both
being largely in ;. -used. It is used
by Physicians all over tho world.
PAL AT ACLE AS MILK.
Sold by all Druggists.
6COTT &B9WNE, Chomists, N.Y.
c.-ifj-00-ly.
Y iKKYJoWAN.
On improved farm lands in suras
of 300 and upwards. Loans repay
able in email annual instalments
through a period of o ears, tuns en
abling the borrower to pay off his
indebtedness without exhausting his
crop in an- year.
Apply to R. O. BURTON, .In.,
Attorney,
4 10 Cm. Halifax, N. C
FITS. All Fits stopped free by Dr.
Mine s Creat Nerve Restorer. No Fits
alter In st day s use. Marvellous cures
lreatise and 2.00 trial bottle free to Fit
caes. bend to Ur. Kline, Ml Arch St.,
Two Soldiers sit tj slmr;
The armies they had ceased to light,
The night was s-till and dark,
And many thousands on the held,
Were lying stiff and stark.
The stretcher men had come along
And gathered all they could;
A hundred surgeons Torked that night
Behind the clump of wood.
They hashed the lanterns in my face,
As they were hurrying by,
The sergeant looked and said, 'he's dead
And I made no reply.
The bulkt had gone through my breast,
No wonder I was still ;
Hut once will I be nearer death
Than when upon that hill.
A gray-clad picket came aloDg
Upon his midnight heat;
He came so near me that I tried
To move and touch his feet.
At once he bent and felt my breast
While life still fought at bay;
No one who loved me could have done
More than this man in gray.
O'er me all chilled with blood and dew,
His blanket soft he spread;
A crimson sheaf of wheat he brought,
A pillow for my head.
Then knelt beside me for an hour
And bathed rn' lips and brow
But for the man who was my foe
J 'd not be Jiving now.
Then as the coming daylight shone,
lie bent his lips to say:
"(iod spare you, brother, though you wear
The blue and 1 the gray."
The sounds of war are silent now,
We call no man our foe.
But soldier hearts cannot forget
TIxq scenes of long ago.
Dear as the one who stood with us,
To struggle, or to die;
No one can oftencr breathe their names,
Or love them more than I.
Hut from my life I'd give a jear
Thai gray clad man to see;
To clasp in lo.e the foeman's baud
Who saved my life to me.
l-tauc J'. J-.u'oti, in 'Jesus Si f 'tin
Vluit is to lircoiuc tle Collide
KlUtl!Illtt'?
(N. Y. Ledger.)
When one marks the long hst.sof
recent graduates from our principal
colleges lists in most cases twice
as long as they were thirty years
ago one wonders at first sight '
where such a. multitude of highly
educated young men will go. Where
aie thej- to tind places suited to
their training and attainments?
One can imagine some of them
asking despondently with Tenny
son: "What is that which I should turn to,
l gbtning upon days like these?
Eycry door is barred with gold, and opens
but to golden keys:-'
Yet. if wc look closely at the matter,
we shall see icasons for believing
that the supply of educated men is
not in excess of the demaud. In
the first place, we must remember
that the population of this country
is twice as large as it was in 1SC0,
which means that the field of op
portunity has expanded in propor
tion to the number of graduates.
In the second place, a marked
change has come over tho post
graduate intentions of college
students, and consequently over the
nature ot the studies comprehended
in a university course.
At the beginning of this century,
a majority of the men graduated
from our Eastern colleges entered
the ministry. Thirty years ago, bj
tar the greater number contempla
ted the practice of law or of medi
cine. Now a largo and steadily
increasing fraction of graduates
apply themselves to the innumerable
forms of business or industrial
activity which have sprung iuto
existanee under the joint stimilus of
capital and science.
This signal alteration in ' the
objects which graduates have in
view has had the ellVet of broaden
ing and reorganizing the university
curriculum. Not only is it no longer
rhe so'e fuoehoii of colleges to turn
out clergynv.'-i, but ir has even
ceased to be (heir exclusive purpose
to qualify young men for the learn
ed professions generally. 'I hev
now seek to impart such a training
and equipment as will fit the faithful
student for any walk of life, in
which a disciplined and well-stored
intellect and the invaluable habit
of concentration are the factors of
success. Such being the aims and
the methods of contemporary
colleges, we do not think the num
ber of their graduates is out cf
proportion to the needs and oppor
tunities ol our fast-growmg country.
Radam's Micnor.E Killer is no
longer an experiment. It has been
thoroughly tested for two years and
has never failed in any case. For
sale try E. T. Whitehead & Co.,
j agents for Halifax county.
NATIONAL SHAME.
For The Democrat.
Doubtless all are familiar with the
exclamation of the Roman Pontiff
with regard to some high-handed
measure which he had undertaken :
'T am not able to do this by law, but
by the greatness of my power I will
do it.''These word3 might well be ap
plied to the Republican majority in
Congres?, who recently passed the
Lodge Election Law , in defiance of
right and justice and in the teeth of
every principle of the Constitution.
Tbe purpose of the bill, as alleged
by .ts supporters, is laudable enough,
to be sure. They say that the elec
tions at the South are mere farces,
and they introduce this measure to
remedy a long stanaing evil. Such
a claim, coming from such a source,
is redieulou3 in the extreme. In the
first place the elections in the South
arc a? fair as they are in the North
or in any other part of the country,
for tbat matter. In the second place,
though they were not, the Republic
an party is about as well qualified to
institute a reform in any department
of tbe government, as Robert G. In
gersoll is to become a missionary to
China. In the third place, if their
own record was a little less spotted
in every particular, they can find
enough to do for the next twenty
five years in fumigating their own
ranks. Eor instance they might
turn their attention to Mr. Dudley of
'blocks of five fame,'' who shortly
after the recent election found it
convenient to absent himself consid
erably more than five blocks from
his native State, in order to avoid
the clutches of the law. Or they
might give a share of their notice to
that devout black-leg, John Wanna
maker. The truth is they discern objects
better at a distance. The fraud ex
isting in the far South is plainly
within the range of their vision but
the crimes committed at their own
doors pass unnoticed. They prefer
a telescope to a microscope. With
the former instrument they sweep
the horizon and discover a spot upon
the sun of Southern righteousness
and lo ! a howl goes up from all
quarters. In the mean-time they are
blind to the microbes of moral dis
ease that are preying upon their own
political system.
The time has gone by when the
public placed any confidence their
pledges of reform. By some means
or other the opinion ha3 become cur
rent that a Republican returning
boird is not the mightiest engine of
purity known m this free govern
ment. Possibly the iniquitous pro
ceedings of 1S7G have something to
do with the prevalence of such an
opinion. Moreover there is some
thing strikingly anomalous in the
eight of a party which has stolen one
presidency and successfully negotiat
ed the purchase of two more, crying
aloud for a free ballot and a fair
count.
There is no one to be deceived by
this hue snd cry of political crime in
the South. There is no one who be
lieves that the administration would
care a straw whether the elections
were fair or not, if the Southern
States returned a Republican major
ity. The pretense of a moral issue
involved is merely an attempt to
conceal tteir own nefarious purposes
neneatn the veil of hypocrisy an
effort to make gain of godli e9S.
Beneath it all, plain and patent, is
the determination to keep themselves
in power, though the rights and lib
erties of twenty millions of people
are violated thereby. Their action
sdiows that they inte id to turn over
the South, body and soul, to the
most corrupt and abandoned party
ttint ever cursed a free country with
its vile legislation. They have but
-iv?n a new version of the old story
-.bout the miser who said to his son :
"My son, get money. Honestly if
you car; but, my son, get money."
The people are given to understand
that henceforth thi-3 government i3 to
he of the Republican party, for the
Republican party and by the Re
publican party.
As to the result of the election
bill that can not be doubtful. Riot
and blood-shed mav abound : the
two races now dwelling together in
peace and harmony may be rendered
1iscorrant and belligerent; but no
sane man dreams that the South will
ever again be subjected to the horrors
of negro domination. She is Demo
cratic and will remain so. Not be
cause she is dislyoysl, or rebellious
against ju3t rule, but because she
sees in the Democratic party her
only hope and her only salvation.
The United States flag may be un-
furled in every towuship and United
States cruisers may cast anchor in
every river throughout her borders,
but the result will be the same. For
the last five years the Democrats
have been losing groucd in North
Carolina. They had no pressing
need to unite. Their only danger
was their security. Let this measure
pass the Senate, receive 'he Presi
dent's signature and become a law,
and tbe people will be banded to
gether as they have never beeD be
fore. At the close of the war, the
Republican leaders placed the ballot
in the hands of three million ignorant
freedmen, hoping thereby to per
petuate their power. By means of
these yotes the Democrats secured
control of the House of Representa
tives, for fiftee.i years, and in '8-1
6ent Cleveland to the White House.
History repeats itself. This bill
which they esteem their strength
will prove to be their wetness. It
may became a knotted cord in the
hands of justice to scourge the
money-changers from the Temple
of Government , and tbe Republican
party may find too late that,
''Upon their heads they placed a fruitless
crown,
A nd put a barren sceittre in their gripe,
Thence to be wrenched by an uniincal
hand,
No son of their succeeding."
T. M. IIUFIIAM.
Tlie Seamless Kobe.
This is a cold world and yon want
something to wrap around your
spirit. Cbrist offers you a robe to
day. He wove it Himself, and He
will now with His own hand prepare
it just to tit yoar soul. The right
eousness He offers is like the coat
He used to wear abcut Judcs, with
out seam from top to bottom
Tlie .cjjro up orlli.
(Charlotte Chronicle.)
Thomas W, Swann, colored, writes
an instructive communication to the
Philadelphia Record, in which he
says :
''Being a native of Danville, Ya. ,
add the son of a former slave , I have
been living in the North but a short
period , nt what I have seen of the
two sections, I claim the Southern
nc2ro has more privileges and ad
vantages than his Northern brother
of the same race. Though I have
used my utmost endeavor to avail
myself of the 'equal rights' so boast
ingly mentioned by the 'friends of
the negro' in the North, I am de
barred from the workshops, from the
counting-rooms, from official posi
tions, or from any occupation I may
seek, except that wbich requires me
to wear the white apron, badge rf
cook, or waiter, or as a hod carrier.
I must seek only the positions least
remunerative if not the most menial.
VThen I pass dong Lombard street,
Philadelphia, I find that prejudice
against them has crowded the negroes
together like pigs in a pen, and 1
venture to aesert that there i9 not a
spot South of Mason and Dixon's
line where the negro is In so much
misery.or facc3 such squalid poverty,
as the poor denizens of Lombard
street and the other miserable quart
ers in which he has been compelled
oa account of his color to reside in
the 'Good City of Brotherly Love.'
It would be wise to let a little of the
love of the brother in black to begin
here at home."
The ambitions negro in this coun
try has certain obstacles to overcome,
wherever he locates. Not constitu
tional amendments, nor any legisla
tion, can remove those obstacles. In
the North or the South, they will be
alike encountered. This may be a
sad condition of thing?, and it may
be unpleasant to mention it; bnt it is
a fact, and a fact, that should cause
the ncro to re2ard as a humbug
anj" party that pretends to give him
I milk and honey at nothir.g a glass,
i The way for the negro to ovcrtom-
these obstacles is not by abuse of the
white race , or constant expression
of discontent with his surroundings.
Tbe thing for the intelligent negro is
to aid in promoting the prosperity of
his section, realizing that he has a j
somewhat "hard road to travel," but
. .
resolving to travel it.
Working
i will not smooth his pathway
The best evidence of the progress
of the nero race, would be its refu-
3al to surrenler its vote for "LaflV.'
Taukingtox Prairie P. O.,
Liberty County, Tex.
Mr.Radam I have used Wtr.
Radam's Microbe Killer, and many
of my neighbors have used it with
the most wonderfal result in many
cases. Geo. F. Allen.
For sale by E. T. Whitehead &
Co. , agents for Halifax county.
i
1
WHAT DR. TAI.M.U.F. S.W F
SA Ml ATI I REST.
Men have found out that tie fifty
two days of rest in every jesr :re
not a subtraction, bat an addition.
It has been demonstrated in all de
partments. Lord Castlcreagh thought
he could work bis brain three hun
dred and sixty-five days in the year,
and he broke down and committed
snicidt: and Wilberforce said in re
gard to him: '-Poor Cestlereagh 1
This come9 from non-observance of
the Sabbath." A prominent mer
chant of Yew York said : ''I s-hoabi
long ao have been a maniac but for
the observance of tbe Sabbath.'' The
aeryes, the brain, mentai aod mora!
consti'ution cry oat for Sabbath rest.
What is true of man is true ot
beast. Travellers have found that
they come sooner to their destination
if they stop one ay in seven. What
is the matter with some of these
horses attached to the street ears as
the poor creatures go stumbling ami
staggering on? They are robbed of
the Sabbatic rest.
In the days of old, when the sheep
ami the cattle were driven from the
far west to the seacoa9t, it was found
out by positive test that those drov
ers got sooner to tho seaboard who
stopped one day in seven on the
way. They came pooner to the sea
board than those who drove right, on.
Tbe fishermen off the bank3 of New
foundland have experimented in this
vuatter, and they find that they catch
more fish in the year when they ob
serve the Sabbath than in the year
when they do not obserye the Sab
bath. This is also true of machines.
When I asked a Rocky Mountain
locomotive engineer, as I was ri ling
with him, "Why do you switch off
your locomotive on a side track and
take another?" as I saw he was
about to do "Oh, we have to let the
locomotive stop and cool off, or the
machinery would very soon break
down.' The manufacturers of salt
were told that if they allowed their
kettles to cool one day in seven they
would have immense repairs to
make; but the experiment was made
and the contrast came, and it was
found that those manufacturers of
salt who allow :d the kettles to cool
once a week had less repairs to make
than those who kept the furnaces in
full blast and the kettles always hot.
What does ail this mean? It
means that intellectual man and
dumb beast and dead machinery cry
oat for the Lord's day.
Don't ''Sino It lTnler.'
(Ledger.)
"I'm ruined utterly ruined !" fea'd
a cleaned out speculator in our hear
ing the other day. The gentleman
had invested his cash in several
tempting bubble?, and they had all
burst, leaving him without anything
in the world that he could call his
own, save his watch, his wardrobe, a
j iot Gf unsettled bills , and the ill-will
of his creditors. And so (and he
might have sat for a picture of Des
pair when he said it), although he
was a stout, hale man of thirty live,
he said he was " ruined, and might as
well knock under.''
Knock under! No never! Al
ways rally your forces for another
and more desperate assault upon ad
versit. If poverty come upon you
like a thief in the night what then?
Let it rouse you, ps the presence of a
real thief would do, to energetic ac
tion. No matter how deeply you
may have got into hot water al
ways provided that you did not help
the Father of Lies to heat it your
case, if you are made of the right j
sort of stuff, is rut desperate ; for it
is in accord wRh the divine order j
anel sweep of t'.ins that 1 i f
:e -Moum
II
have r:o anli:ui.iea which an i.o
I .,r,00
determined n-an, with a fair sVre of j
brains and Heaven's help, cannot j
surmount. j
The most potent remedies for the
cure of disease have been discovered
i . i j. -i f . . i - , , r t -
j by acci-iem. xiie ursi nose o. ui
buallv?noerger73 Autniuie lor .Malaria
Ioiven. as an eioeriment. to an
i old Ian v almost uyinsi irom tue cuecis
! of Malaria, on whom Oainine acted
! as a poi?on.
One dose ccrea htr;
and a simrle doe has cured thous-
and a since. It is the only known
Antidute for the poison of Malaria,
Sold by Druggists.
That sour-tempered, cross, dys-
nnntii i n i i r 1 1 1 n al . should thka Dr.
jj.;hv , ; t-J
J. IL McLean's Sarsaparilla ! It will j "
make him feel as well and heartv as i Eon weak back, chest pain?, ue a
tha healthiest of us. He nceJs brae--Dr. J. H.McLea.s Wonderful Heal
ing up, vitalizing, that is all. ing Plaster (porous.)
For sale by E, T. Whitehead &, Co. 1 For sale by E. T. Whitehcal & t'e.
. .1 ixltl !Cot!trl.
-1 ;
i : v - r : . i k
i.o-r- t1,2' 1 av
1 1 u i : :
i
On last Mo-Jay io:a;:;R Cap:. H
. d t;d J, of t Le Parkfr M iuo . iici
A
Ii;est,.i. Manly cuuotr, w
1 about!
beJ af 'i-K'JDO in monev -d
v2.tOJ worth of valae wclrv
Mr. dud 1 ha 1 nut the mouev tc-'
fore starting oat for HilesviHo, in n
valise, and this valise wai placed i:s
the rear of the bujgy or under tht
seat. It cor.laine 1 $SOO ia green
back an I UO in silycr, and tuc
jewelrv.nmong wbich was Mr?..! add t.
gold waic'a and :-o:ue costly dia
monds. C.tpt du 1 1 travels in a top
t uggv, ai d i he c -rtains were don
when he left town I a-t Saturday.
uen lie reacweu n.s iK"'.in.v.
he found his valnj go:;c ! IB
:,
i-x
bun
mediately ro le back to S ii
and notified the police. One
HlfM' i
re be !
ga e on
at (i
bJt th
procured another.
C.ipt. Judd re::i:nibers pas.-irg
two negro bojs on the roxl the day
tie lost tlie inone). His wagon driver,
who was some distance behind Lin
passed the same negroes. One car
ried touic'tuing in his hand, covered
witli a co it. The supposition is that
t bey lifted the valuable valise from
ttie buggy from behind , unnoticed '
by Capt. dndd, and made away with !
it. That Saturday afternoon twoj
negro boys bought pisttds in Sails-j
bury atid spent mne) very freely.!
They took the evening train for j
Greensboro, !
When these facts wore .a ncert un-
ed , Ollicer Pool left for Greensboro!
and Winston, but the next he ml of i
the stolen property was the new- that
a gold water on which was engr.ived
Capt. dudd's initials had been left
with fleweler Powlkc, at Charlotte,
by a negro boy, who was supieione 1
by the jeweler, an 1 who escaped be
fore he could be taken by the Char
lotte police, who arc now on the trail.
III Oil- I'lK'IM.
Cray's 'Elegy' occupied him foi
seven years.
Bryant wrote Thanattpi.V in
the shad '3 of an old forest.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox composed
her little poem. 'Fhe Land of Nod.' j
while rocking her baby brother to
sleep in a eta lie.
C owner wrote 'John Gilpiii .s,
Ride' when lie was under one of j
these terrible fits of depression so I
common to him.
The poem, Tho Kails of Niagara,'
was written by its author .1. C.
Bratnani, rue euitor i a sman ,
paper in Connecticut. He wrote it
under pressure, in response to a call
for 'more copy.'
General Evth; wrote T Am Dying.
Egypt Dying.' on the night belong
his death. He had a premonition
that tie was going to die the next
day. ;
After the Ball,' the little poem
which has made the name of Nora ;
Berry known in the world of letter-,
was jotted down on the back of an :
old letter, with no idea of the pop-,
ulaiity il was to achieve in flu-;
pages of a noted magazine. s
Poe first thought of l'ho B V j
when walking the streets of Balti j
more on a wiuB i night. He ian:
the bell of a 1 iwyci's Louse a
11 1 (lilpl t . .......... .' ' j
gentleman's library, hut bim-elfi
up. ami (he ne.( nioinlng pr-en! d
the lawyer with a copy of hi- cele
brated po'-m.
Thomas Mooie, while waiting;
'I. alia Rookb.' spent so many '
months in reading up Greek and;
ctntufi r tn mm u -ilUi'ii iriin I f: e
IYrsain works tha
acnmpli-hed oM'-rt'a! srd.olar.
people bund it diifcuV to b.
that its se.-ne- were in t p'.-uv
th.- .-pot ins't !'l of in ;t
it .veiling in I;e -'i-hiie.
l'A.'.n: C.1TV,
- , i o i i
. . ... -. i .
j 1
j ?1
i-v-i o:.e
-.t-.-r:.
IfiTS h'.U"
ir-1. X
. j - -
I fi.vinv
; - ,,J,,-,-iC "i'to,,,-
j
, c!. but t-5 no , n,,. x 'ti
-1"-""M " - ' - 1
' meo:ci ir, tin- .
' my testimony and wtk-ome, if It wi
j ,() 5ny ,- d. Y'-urs truly.
II. K. Emi-:::oi:v
sa-o oy
E. T. Whitehead
Co . strer.t io:
II alt (ax count v.
he be- aru" nn ' ' '
NOTHING SUCCEEDS
L i k e Sue o e s .
MA
it
t :v i u-n t
CAUSED BY MICE' T-l,
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