(
ADVEETTSIKG
IS TO
BUSINESS
-WHAT STEAM IS TO-
Machinery,
IF YOU ARE A HUSTLER
advi:kti-k
Busiuess.
DEMOCRAT.
Win
That Great Propelling Power.
o : " -:-- o " -K c" c " -c :" "!" -C" mt
Write a nice advert isement aljout
y r.ir business and insert it in
THE DEMOCRAT,
a id you'll "see a change in business all
aound."
PKOFESSIONAL.
D
II. W. O. McDOWKLL,
Office North comer N'cw Hotel, Main
Street,
S otlaki Nkok, X. C.
'Ahvavs at bis office when not
professionally engaged elsewhere.
1 Jo, fj 2(J
D
It. FliANK WHITEHEAD,
Oflice North corner New Hotel, Main
Street,
Scotland Neck, N. C.
25" A 1 way found at his office when
not professionally engaged elsewhere.
7 0 1 v
D
11. A. C. LIYEKMON,
Office Over J. I). Bay's, store.
Office hours from 0 to I o'clock ; 2 to
5 o'clock, p. in. 2 12 ly
SCOTLAND NECK, N. C.
D
K. J. II. DANIEL,
-Pi-NX, X. C.
Makes the disease of cancer a Specialty.
9 10 ly
JjAVID BELL,
Attorney at Law,
ENFIELD, X. C.
r Practices in all the Courts of Hali
fax and adjoining counties and in the
Supreme and Federal Courts. Claims
collected in all parts of the State.
3 8 lv
W,
A. DUNN,
A T TO R X E Y-A T-L A W.
Scotland Xeck, X. C.
Practices wherever his services are
required. - 10 I y
w.
H. KITCHIX,
Attorney and Counselor at Law,
Scotland Xeck, X. C.
fgyOflk-e : Corner Main and Elev
enth Streets. 1 5 ly
I. J. Mercer & son.,
G2 East Main Street.,
RICHMOND VA.
LUMBER COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
-o-
(iives personal and prompt attention
to all consignments of Lumber, Shin
gles, Laths, Ac 4 17 'JO ly
NEW
After six years experience, I feel thor
oughly competent to do all work
that is expected of a
WATCHMAKER and JEWELER.
WATCH MAKE P. and JEWELER.
.Repairing k Timing Fine Watches
A SPECIALTY.
1 also carry a full line of
WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY,
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS AND
FANCY GOODS.
Spectacles and z.
Eye Glasses Properly l
Fitted to the Eye. Zt
Tr,'. hiki Setting Mm
THE BEST OX EARTH,
SEWING MACHINES CLEANED
AND REPAIRED.
SATISFACTION OUAltANTEED.
II'. . JOHXSTOX,
Xext door to X. li. Joseii. 10 0 Gin
I U I AWRFNM:
Dealer in-
GRAIN, MILL FEED, HAY, CLO
VER AND GRASS SEEDS.
Improved Farm Im
plements A .SPECIALTY.
Agent for Clark's Cutaway Harrow
and the Deering Mower,
A Model of Perfection.
SCOTLAND LECK. N. C. 1 6 ly
Jewelry Store
E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor.
VOL. X.
THE HEAVENWARD CALL.
LUCY I.AKCOM.
What shall I do, my Lord, my God,
To make my life worth more to thee?
Within my heart, through earth abroad,
Deep voices stir and summon me.
Through strange conhwvwi of the times
I hear thy heck oniric call resound ;
There is a pathway more sublime
Than yet my laggard feet have found.
My coward heart, my flagging feet,
They hold me in bewildering gloom ;
Come thou my stumbling steps to meet,
And lift me into larger room.
The dearest voice may lead astrav ;
Speak thou ! .Thy word my guide
shall be,
0, not from life and men away,
But through them, with them, up to
thee.
It is not much these hands can do ;
Keep thou my spirit close to thine,
Till every thought thy love throbs
through,
And all my words breathe truth
divine.
With souls that seek thy pure abode,
Let. my unfaltering soul aspire ;
Make me a radiance on the road,
A bearer of thy sacred fire !
A Financial Transaction.
Washington Post.
"Say, mister." said a hoy who had
just overtaken a market-wagon after
pursuing it for four or five hlocks, "do
you wanter know who hit you in the
neck with that hard snow-hall?"
"You het I do," replied the man,
slackening speed:
"Will ye gimme a quarter ef I ketch
him and bring him here?"
"Yes."
"Gimme fifty cents?"
"Yes," said the driver, lifting his
whip from the socket : "but I won't
give you any more'n that."
"Well, git the money ready."
'JYou haven't got the hoy that threw
the snow-ball yet."
"Yes, I have. That boy is me
Dad's sick, and me and mother can't git
work. The twins is too little ter earn
anything, an' if I don't hustle there
won't be any Christmas-tree at our
house. I'll take a lickin' any day fur
fifty cents."
"Sonny," said the market-man, in a
voice that was remarkably husky,
"here's yer lifty cents. I'm in a hurry
now you needn't bother about deliv-
erin' the goods. We'll call it square
-
77isdom cf Sslf-restriction.
S. S. Times.
Perhaps there is nothing under
which men wince and fret more than
the restraints and restrictions which
the circumstances of life force upon
them. And yet, humanely speaking,
there is no greater helper, no truer
guide, than external restriction. Every
one knows that it is comparatively
easy to act the gentleman in a society
vhere the forms of etiquette are rigidly
observed, but it is not easy to come up
to the same requirement in a society
where freedom is the rule and where
rules are free. A newly employed
street-car driver has no difiicultv in
finding the route over which he is to
direct his horses. He cannot drive off
the track without being jolted into the
consciousness of his own error. But a
ride across a trackless prairie, while it
leaves the rider free from the restraints
of the rail correspondingly opens to him
the danger of going astray. Many a
young man desires to leave his present
employment that he may be "his own
master." But no one is competent to
master himself until lie knows how to
impose restrictions upon himself as the
servant of that master ; nor will lie be
competent to serve and accept the res
trictions which it would profit him to
receive from himself as the master of
that servant.
LIGHT AND HAPPINESS COME TO YOU
u you're a sunering XV o-
maa. lbs messenger in
this case is Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription.
Maidenhood,
Womanhood,
Wifehood,
Motherhood,
all need the best of
care, proper regard
for hygiene and the
" Prescription."
It's a tonic and
nervine, a remedy pre
scribed bj an eminent
chrsician and specialist
tar all the Deculiar ills and
ailments ox women.
Some dispositions are sunny even in pain.
But, it was not meant that women should
suffer so. She need not, while there's a
remedy that regulates and promotes all the
proper functions, dispels aches and pains,
brings refreshing sleep and restores health
and vigor. In the " complainte," weaknesses,
and irregularities of womanhood, it's the
only guaranteed remedy.
If it fails to benefit or our, you get
your money back. --...;-.
SIS
SCOTLAND NECK N. C, THURSDAY,
A GREAT PHYSICIAN Oil DEATH.
Sir Andrew Clark's Secret cf Health
Tennyson's Deathbed.
From nn Interview
Review.
in Westminster
' Keep my name out and then tell
the world what 1 tell you, as far as
words can tell such thing-, of that
glorious deathbed down on the Surrey
hills," and then, with glowing emotion,
n ' voice mai rose aim anu
nr rrrour i iilL-t oriel n -r A. 1 1 C
ty'rne of the last watch by the bed
side of the poet.
"I have stood by the bedsides of
thousands of fellow creatures," he said
"and have seen very grand and solemn
death bed scenes, but never, nover one
like that from which I have just come
from."
Sir Andrew, when lie grew animated,
had a strange magnetic power over his
hearers I have heard others, students,
medical men and private friends of his
often observe this and I sat in spell
bound silence as lie told of the glorious
day which, in the midst of the autumn
storms and ra in r dawned over the world
as the poet lay on his deathbed.
One sentence I remember of the de
scription which he then gave me.
"The distant hills, shrouded in mists
of perfect white, could be seen through
the oriel window of the room where
Tennyson lay like a piece of breathing
marble."
He went on to describe the night
Hooded with moonlight, the perfect
stillness, the dj-ing man's request for
his Shakespeare, and, "after that the
dark," and then he rose again and
walked up and down the room. I also
rose to go.
"Sit still !" he thundered suddenly.
"Shall I tell you w hy Tennyson's death
was so peaceful? This not to be put
into the papers to-day. Probably - it
would not interest them to-day. But
the secret is this : He lived a quiet,
laborious, simple life. It is a secret
which few men learn in time to profit
by it. I was his friend before I was his
physician. Metaphysics drew us to
gether. Gladstone, too, is deeply inter
ested in that subject, and we all three
agreed in our taste for a simple life,
and a life of work.
"Half the disease of the generation
is due to people's idleness. Idleness,
the beginning of all evil. The motner
of a pampered darling of a daughter
yends to me. The girl ails, no one
knows why. I am to come and pre
scribe. I know before I go what is the
matter with the girl. 'Go to your
local medicine man,' I say ; 'he can
manage the case very well.' But no,
It must be Sir Andrew7, the grumpy
Scot, and Sir Andrew prescribes long
walks and less rich food, and regular
meals and early hours. And presently,
when the young lady has regained her
red cheeks and high spirits, they think
I have performed a wonderful cure !
'Now let me tell you how I myself
have managed to live at all. I am (G.
Oxer thirty years ago, when I was a
young and obscure Scotch practitioner
in London, I applied for a place on the
medical stoT of the London Hospital.
The authorities there said : 'Oh, let us
give the poor chap a chance. He is
consumptive ; he won't last long. Let
us, in pity, give him the post.' Well,
I have outlived nearly every one of
them. All my life I have been deli
cate : I have several times been at
death's door, but by reason of a simple
life and a life of work, I have managed
to get verv close to three score and ten.
The Per Capita Circulation
Philadelphia Ledger.
The official Treasury circulation
statement places the present percapita
circulation at $25.4:9. This is an in
crease of about $1 per cacita since July
1, 1892. On the breaking out of the
war of the rebellion the per capita cir
culation was between $13 and $14. On
July 1, 1862, it had declined to $10.23
the lowest point reached to the present
dav.
?a PsffaGpium Habit
f 52 2 "'V f -a V cured at home with
' 1 ? S ' ;i"3k V B fc'Jtpai n.Book of par-
3Iexa.j E tif-ulp.rseeritFliEE.
S3H3ES35SSBBHBEt3B.M.W(X)LLEY,M.D.
Atlanta, C-. o 'hiicbf US1
"EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO.
What E:es czi Child Head?
Dr. T. 11. I'ritchoni in ChahUe
Observer.
This is a question of moment, f r
read he ought, and read he will. Tl e
mind requires food as we'll a.s the 1-xly,
and the parent should i-ee to it that the
right kind of mental and mor;:1 pabu
lum provided for his children. Ob
fervatiwn. reflection and communication
are the three great sources of Knowl
edge. Conversation and books are the
means by which we learn mo.-t.
Doubtless wc learn more from conver
sation than all other sources, but
hook.- ;i,e the material for reflection.
They awaken and stimulate thought
and they exert a powerful and perma
nent influence- on rl.arafter. I'.r.d
books T!::iVe bad !::';). Am impu-e
book, or ne ; : ; 1 1 ,!;!) .-;-pr:tici in.
read by a child, j.-nm- ail'et-t hi-5 thinking
and his character for life. The statis
tics of criminals in this country show
that those under twenty, and I am
sorry to ray sometimes even under that
age, have been largely given to the
reading of pernicious literature, espe
cially "tUtne novels " By all means
encourage your children to read and
know what they read. Take the pains
to get good books and papers for them
and they are to be had in great abun
dance. Some of the best minds in the
world have written for the young, and
you can get books of adventure, of
travel, of science, of religion, which
are adapted to their age, and will in
tensely interest their minds and do
their hearts good. If possible, control
and direct the reading of your children,
if you would have them to grow up
virtuous and useful men and women.
To Find Anyone's Age.
Xew York Press.
You can find the age of any person
and the month in which he was born
by a queer tr ick that was well known
by our fathers and mothers in the
days w hen they went to the old log cabin
school-house and spent their mornings
in teliing riddles and playing all sorts
of practical jokes.
Ask the person whose age you are to
tell to take the number of the month
in which he was born and multiply it
by two.
January is counted as number one,
February as number two, and so through
the year.
To this product he must add five,
and then multiply the amount by fifty.
To this last number he must add his
present ;;go, and from the sum subtract
the number of days there are in a year,
or 365.
All the work up :o this point must
be done by the lsetvori without letiir.g
anyene see hi.-; figures ; hm now you
ask him to tell you what number he
has found, and to that number you add
115.
The result obtained by this last op
eration contains the information want
ed. Point off two figures on the right,
and the number will be the age sought ;
while the number on the left of the
point will give the month in which the
person was born.
This trick never fails.
About Negro Schools.
Exchange.
There are 25,530 negi-o schools now
in the South, 2,250.000 negros have
learned to read, and most of them to
write. In the colored schools are 23S,
000 pupils and 20,000 negro teachers.
There -are 150 schools for advanced ed
ucation, and 7 colleges administered by
negro presidents and faculties, and of
these presidents three were formerly
slaves. There are 154 negro editors,
250 lawers, 740 physicians, and there
are now educating themselves in Euro
pean universities. 247 negros from the
South. In 18S9 Bishop Atticus G.
Ilaygood published a paper in Harper's
Magazine, in which it was demonstra
ted that up to that time the entire
North had given $15,767,747 to this ob
ject, while the outh, by State Govern
ments had given $37,377,678.24. While
the taxes paid by the black men have
not been more that two-tenths of the
whole amount of the school fund, he
has received about a third and in some
States nearly one-half of the entire
school tax.
JANUARY 25. 1894.
p
Sen: 2a:k t: China.
I.:ie- of Chinamen :.e valued in
J China, says the '!:';" Tim. N (
rn.-Uter how worthiv.-- tLccv.i;"r ' f ti c
bo:.fvii.. ' hae b c: I: :. a i
sxj!i a- he is i! 1 I is ic-;i::i:i. an- - i-
crtd and must take up ; l.v.i lsnal t t -
ing iib'cc in no f-i-t ou '-'! th Yh - w -
' 1
ery Kingdom. When a Chi:; ..in :;rj uu s
in a foreign laii. 1 '.4-s s 'vith
full tin it-i-'tanii; , thai s,,ir. f -the
future hi- brc. hren wiil -.T"
n
back to the haul whence !,- v u: c. In
Chicago work was I'.-ccsuly c'-i- men
on the sacred :..tv f e:Jiian::i th
bones (f a nunil r of Chin - w h- c
.(I:,: f 'I I v ! V P:l ,, Vr .... I
tfia--
.:'U-i Us i,t death of the '
Ail- I' I -
iTi.ii;:- :.ie to Ik;
e refuliv im p., rid ' r
1
shipment toChimi are : Lay bum. TIu. , ., ,., :,..-,M,t;M.,ttil,Cl.Vv.,s,
Mon Ye, 1SS0: Ling Bmg. K.-e Jloiig.j,,v ...j,,;,,, :,u, r!il,.(!1H,
MoiTongLeng, Ouong Moy H-ung. I (if ,.XJ ,.J:.,. p , , aM!i, t!.,
82;Kee3!oylIam.Two Bark. Ibe n:(kr(;ik(.r ul, n,.,.Uvi U u
Lee, Le Hing, 1S.:; Hing Wah. T..ng j for ,lifJ M.vi(.,.
Ching, Foo Lam, 1NS1 ; May Yon Sin-,
Ah Shuk, Maynam Hing, LSS5 ; Ling
Sing, Le Ching, Moi Foo Ching, Toi!
Chow, ()v Fok, 1Sn! ; Yon Sam, H n
' ' ..
t; -w 1, kt
ii, 11 00 inn it-t'i. 1
Owing to the rough weather this work
was put off, but nothing of much im
portance was accomplished beyond se
curing the necessary Board of Health
permit. An inspector from this depart
ment was sent with Sam Moy to Hose
hill and Craceland cemeteries, where
the dead men now rest, to see that the
exhuming process was done according
to law. As soon as the weather permits
the work will be carried on in earnest
and the Chinese bones will be pre tared
for their final grave.
The Chinese custom is to take up the
dead after they have been burled six
years or more and send them to their
friends in China, w here once eve ry year
a celebration in memory of them takes
place. On that occasion the graves are
decorated with flowers, and the dead re
ceive offerings of roasted - hk-t-en, w hich
however, is afterward.- eaten by the liv
ing with many wishes that the departed
could be there to enjoy it with them.
Bodies have been exhumed a San
Francisco, Portland, and other place-sin
America and sent across the oct an, but
the ceremony has never been performed
in Chicago. The mortal remains of
nearly 100 subjects of the Emperor and
Son of the Sun rest in Rosehill
Graceland cemeterie Some of :!;,-. 0
have been under the ground longer than J
the requisite period of six ear- and
their bones are to de disinterred, care-
fully sealed in tin boxes, and shipped
to the land of their nativity, where Vol- j
a:ive.s will receive and care for them
ever atterv.ards.
The work will be carried on under di
rection of an official from San Francis
co, known as the Chinese Coroner.
His name is Crin Joy Poo.
The Chine.-e quarter is greatly inter
ested in the undertaking, chiefly lo
calise the custom has never been put
into effect here, and the strange rites
celebrated in connected therew ith nr.'jui'.V
isp some diversion in flip Chinese
f
whosp monotonous routine of dailv e. V.
ence on south Clark stieet makes a little
variety welcome. The money for exen
ses is all collected, the tin boxes and
heavy wooden-cases have leen made,
the undertaker is here, and everything
is in readiness.
To an American the ceremonies will
be novel and interesting. Before a
grave is oened four lighted candies
will be placed, two at the head and two
at the foot, and kept burning until the
bones of the dead have !een taken out.
The undertaker, standing at the head, !
will recite a few incantations and er-!
form a short religious service. He
will be dressed in the robes of his office
which are desc-riled as leing gorgeous
in gold trimmings and embroidery.
After the bones have leen lifted from
the grave they will be dipped into a
kettle or jar of loilLig oil, made of aro
matic herbs and roots and then care
fully wijed off with soft cotton clothes
and dried. It is claimed that the hot
oil soaks into the skeletons and pre
serves them so that they will last thous
ands of years. Dr. Gee Wo Chan, who
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE Si oo.
NO. 8. '
i a raci.n man, -:! ;n-!rrd.y tlnl
th no f !! 'f ? Li ,i:;iTl- 'r hr
Un kept in & c2i !:!: :i . 1 ir. :
Further prrp.tr:Ui :: c rtMt f tl.v
.wrapping f cih 1:1 .1 I.i-uo !
. . , ,
in .1:1 1 i .,!:;':. '.l
1 ! c
! t-
!-
vi
tin -x '. 5s...
Mt !
1
,
inta-'t. T!;o u.t.l.
ol l!!-ii"." ...!;!,. I ; r- If
' , , . ,
1 ... . , , . ., , , ,
' inu.-t o ;cc ur;t-I ftr la .1 writt!i -r
(itk. i?c , . t, ;; ;,..t.a(..
: of tfie-j' titv Ixixe- will I
p!.u 1 u; ,'i
w.KjPM c-v f r !: - '! put.
1-
'will ltar a (ini L.!iiig t! ! t,:e
: the ti..!i , !: 1 ) it: v. !e-h .a ' !. !
I a.- v.li the r--tt.e -f !,p p-.-Mj t
; wi'iiin it i coii.jj.,i. Wl ! it ; r--(
pi; .l t. the:;1, t):- i - ' v. '.V. 1 - ?.,!. :
., ..... 1 .
.01, : !:-l J., m p !!,:(! t ,t v 1,
ri'h'. :-!;H-ed in a r-ioiip jar in
! .1 , .
pre-i. f"r the l'lsn-o p, m- 1 bun-:
;
... . ,,
i M it m nt ,. ,-tirif.
It strike- u as bpiiu: b:ii judgment
for a man to tent land year afu-r pnr
when land is aseheapas it in the South.
In a few years his rents would pay for
a home, that is if he makes any kind
of crops and is a farmer. One tronl.Ip
we apprehend is, that many of our
tenant farmers do not think they can
get along with less than two or three
bundled acres, when really they would
be better off with forty. Any man
with forty acres of land can make a
good supnort for his family, that is to
say, if lie woidd make it oh a larp-r
farm. A man had better have ten
acres which lie can call his own than
to rent. When the land is his, he will
take an interest in improving it, !
cause he will feel that what he put on
it is his. If he plant a tree, itnproe
his house or add any convenience, he
feels it is f r tho use and benefit of
himself and faniilv
llmself and family. He h:is the jK'cu- j ,.;ivin Mitb-, Mimt-. we'iiey, binur
iar feeling of j.roj.rietorship bringing l'"" :r .'iU.'u
li
a sense of gratification which the man
who never owned a home has neer
realized. We do not ine in to adise
any one to buy on a credit a large farm
which he lias not the capital to
properly work at:d which he can
never pay for, but start with a fmall
1 I tract, if only ten acres and add to it a-
ids mean-may enable him.
Tho Sincf Fretting
'' '"''-
'I iiere is one sin w hlch it k-m..- to
pie is ovorvutifri' .-iiifi pwrvbuh- i li n-
' . (
derestiinatfl and quite too ttiti-!i over-
lool.-! -I--. . iln-ifiotiu of l.o-iftrr T f
is tne sin oi iretung.
It is as common as air, as seech
so common that unless it ri-e alcove if
usual monotone we do not even ob-ene
it. Watch any ordinary coming to
gether of jieople and we how many
minutes it w ill le le?ore somelcly fret-
that is makes metre or less com pin in-
mg statement of something cr other.
which most probably everycne in the
room or t lie ear or on the street corner
knew lefore, and which mo.-t probably
nobody can help. Why say any thing
about it?
It is cold, it is hot, it is. wet, it i- dry,
somebody has broken an apjK.intrnent,
ill-cooked a meal : stupidity or bad faith
somewhere has re-ulte.1 in discomfort.
There are plenty of things to fret
about It is simply a-toni-hing how
much annoyance and di -com fort may
be found in the course of everv dav's
! ,
! living, even at tne sirnpie, n one omv
keeps a sharp eye out on that side of
I l il 1 I 1 s.
!
Even Holy Writ say- we are prone
to troutiie as sj.arKs u u mani. iui
1
even to :he sjiarks living uj-ward, in the
blackest of smoke, there i- a blue ,ky
, i
above, and the less time they waste on
road the sooner thev will reach it.
Fretting is all time waited on the road.
FITS. All fits f-topj-ed free; by Dr.
Kline's (ireit Nerve L'-r t rer. No tit
after fir.-t d-iy's iih. M.irveloii- cures.
Treatise 'l'Si trial boctle f'Xe to Fit
eases. Send to IK. Kine, 931 Arch St,
Philadelphia, I.
! m n i V' k Vi u i t:o vnt ! Voir,
in i i mi li un:
T i t V
WUh your tUrMnu-ti
t !! c'aL - r.-4 list tu 1.4T.
The Old Friend
An-.l the U-t frien-!, that vrr
f i:b vo i,
Lh-.rl:
lit r, vlho lb 1 Z si. it
yo.i l..-r at th" r. i .f tl..
exre!!. t;t . r It. J. -.i a?.l
t!. t ar.yth:::.: o i -.
It H tho Kit.; !" l..v. r M.vL-
ine.; is l-iter th n y.V., nM 1
tike the? J hu-o of QiiU t,. a?.. I
C.il.inel. It a.-b- .1 r. t ! v m t!..
Liwr, KM:iys itU 1 1.N atal
ives new lib t ' th-- vh ! h'
tern. 'J'lii i- the ta i;. y u
want. So.l by all 1 'ru ..'.;-!.- in
Ijiojtiiil, or in Tow-ler to taken
tlry or rna-h? itito .1 te a.
irr.vr.11v iA( k ii:-t
liaa ll '. M ! In ! tapper,
J. II. ZKIL.IM 1 10.,rUUa. i iu, 1
"liHV lul'l i, All M. i S I - 1 - I - "
Siniplv apply i in-'- o:i,!!t.c:,l 1
No internal 11 sli-i!ip ip)uuiI 'um
tPt ler, pppiii.t . !!-li. .1!! ei !(p :, n
t Iip f.l'-P, h Hid-. !p-'. ' . !pi!I'k' tl '
-kin p'p.ir. whi!" - ? i - i ! tilth . h- t-ieat
healllC and !H.t'- -i;, p.
.-1 f, i.ii 1 1 c; o-'r elv k via;r
druiti-t for . .. i - t . t ::-!! I .
i (n ovi:i: 111 !A' vi: i
As Oil' W111 I 1 . 1 1 1 1 III mi LV
Mrs Viii-lo' oothmi tup In
u-e. for oei idly e.u- b-, million-
of tnotla-.' - for tl a L1M11 n
W bile t- tblll'..'. w I'll pel fee! -!. .e-- It
-oothes the ebtld. soften the
al!as all ain enie-i wind -o!i- :ind 11
the Ix'-t ien.e.y foj Jhoihoi I
pleasant to the t.i-le Sol. I l, Imik--U'i-ts
in ee;y p.ilt of the WoiliJ,
Twenty five eent- a bo't!e ll- a!fie
i- iiM-ah lllable I i--imp ii 'l a-k f Ml
Win-low M.tbin;: iuj.. .o.d
no othpr kind.
Lnu'li-h spa m J. mm. en? M-n.-r.p
all Hard. Soft o: '.d lo't-'i I ;u .tu
atld 'leuii'be- fioMi I" ' - I ! ' -1
i ThfoiiL'h. ' .u-b-. Li'
.." IV
u-'
of oe i..-M'e
i tie
lno-t woi.d; it.' in! pi e ever
known. o'd bo I, J !,!' ! .d .V
Co., Irufi:i-t-. - 'tl.ii d Ne-k, N
10 1 lv.
' I - ' I I ! I - ' II' 1 1 1 m : i : I
S Y M I , o - M o ; - ; s i e 1 1 1 1 ' I
'.ng and -' M.L'iti' : tii -b
v 'i .i ; ' ' i , I f ' h
t lltli' i f 1 1 'IN w h h
t ,'.-!,!
". . .t
i no
',i e!.
; cera" tx-i-onn.'iu c-
I l I M' I r'o,- the lt'-h III
! ;l' be, i H U ! r: i ! . 1 1 , ill In
c.i e le-
in
the ei
At di '!"-? "f t v
I mail fo. 5o cent-. I'r .- ';a-,'. .-oti
I'biladeiphia.
It'-i.
on. j .' -e- .1.1 ;. I
ij -. i in ,i hv Wo- .
a ' i i M i i ! - ei i
l(,,ri',. Sil'llf.'OS I of .Oil. I fo- I
, aij,j (t' y, y 1 ; t ... 1 A t ...
i i )l IIL"-i-t . ."cot i.iu't N !. N ' '
1 1 1 W I v
Ni: -
Central : M
I li;iu- jn-t opened at my old -tnnd
and a.-k the pat rona'e of the pnhl-r.
I shall keep
Beef, Pork, Fresh Fish
And y-o-r- in ea-on,
I will payhii-'he-t ea-h prie- for
NICE FAT STOCK.
Be---etf'l!!y,
K. ALLSBROOK
S 31 3m
-cot la fid Nl-ek, N. C.
LAND SALE.
Bv virtue of ;m evfiitson in my
J hand- from the Siij r;or court of Hali
fax county !.1 the ca'W o Jt.iM'S l ll,
a imini-tra'or of I. lb I'-e!! a-.iii.-' L.
II. Whitaker and John L W h:t o.. r. I
v ill on Monday the 5th 'i "f J'ebt'.a
. .ii: .: . .1..
rv i v. 1. ex I to out-lie a'.,-i ;oU ;o i
, .-. - , ' , , r . t ,i .
I hjghe-t bidder f"t e.-i-h. m front of tne
j ,.,,url bou-.-door in the town of n.r.i.
! fax. in said county of itabh,-.. all ' f the
-aid L. H. W hitat.er and b.
Whitaker - in'ere-t in and : ' ,.t fact
or nareel o! iatid -:tua?e.l in t .' uu-
ty .f Halifax anu .-tale . , .oi ..n ,
Una. king oM bi-fiin-' 'o-.l.. nd
l-.undl bv th.- land- of .1 n. I'.o ! a-r,
V. If. Whi'take:, l:. A. J')"!:. i. t e
late Mr-. K. W h ::o.er and o- i - . d
containing one thou-and a i. - n r
ie-s. Thi- 1-t i- f .Luitiar v i V.'L
B. I. All -liliooK, .heritr,
I i it per S. J. Cl.uk, l. S.
0K)CSK5).CQ