dvsp.tisiiw 1.- TO BUSINESS .WHAT STEAM IS '!- Machinery, A TA j IF YOU ARE HUSTLER .WKi. ,,,, :, uro .idvertitr.cnt about , ..-w ;,!!'! in-eii it in THE DEMOCRAT, -.(( a change in bu.-ines all rP?,0?2SSI0NAL. w. o. M I'OWKLL, P1 u er Xew Hotel, Mail oM,AN! XlU'K, X. C. ;w;ivs at hi office when no e!..r;inre'l cbewherc. 6 U 20 lv r, r w;K WHITEHEAD, 0 corner Xew Hotel, Main .' Ti.. N I XKfK'N. C. fgT w: found at hi ollice when .--ioti.-dlv engaged elsewhere. 0 lv 0' A. c. LIVEKMOX, vi r-ri c i 1 1 v- n. T!, rover J. IX Hay's store. ,ii!- from 1) to 1 o'clock; 2 to YVk. 2 12 1y roTLAXI XECIC, X. C. D VI! I'.HI.L, Attorney at Law, EXFIELT), X. C. I'nict'n-es in all the Courts of llali ftx nii'l :i'ii'ininr comities and in the v.iprenii' and Federal Courts. Claims c ,!!r.-tcd in ;dl parts of the State. : s i v W, a. nrxx, r r J! x k y-a T-L A Sct.Tl.ANK Xi:r K, X". C. ir IVm-iiee- wiicever p uiri'il. lib service are 2 VA lv JJU. W. .1. WARD, Surgeon Dentist, Eni iki.o, X. C. (Mice over Harrison's Drug Store. 2 7 Ualy E VAKI L. TRAVIS Attorney ;iil Counselor ai Law, HALIFAX, X. C. tM"n i L uxl on Farm Land. 2-21-1 v JvYAC EVANS, r.V.y E R A L CA RI'EXTER. A -;.p-ia!ty of Bracket and Scroll work f nil km ls. Work done cheap uti.i ov jiy piece guaranteed. 2 7 ly Scotland Xeck, X. C. STILL HERE JOHNSON eweler. Vnh.t thorough knowledge of the l.!Nin- and a complete outfit of tools ""'I material, I am better prepared than ever n, d. anvthing that is expected ot u fir-t e!a-:s watch-maker and jeweler. A full line of Watches, Clocks, J ewelry AND MESICAE INSTRUMENTS. , !"--!ae!e- and eye glasses properly -"ed to the eye, free of charge. All w,,i'v guaranteed and as low as good AVi,ik can lie done. s u iui Mn)i,irs &d justed and re- J'"M'o7. Sr"Lo.,k for my big watch sign at the New bnig Store. W. H. JOHNSTON. sei!ail Neck, N. C. 10 G tf NOW ON HAND. U'Ibb SELL THEM CHEAP. "Also will take contract to 'furnish lots irom 50.000 r more an v where within LMSToV miles of Scotland Neck ' "iinhvaya furnish whatrV want. Correspond- er'-eand orders solicited. gyTf D.A.MADDRY, l-l'i-O.j-iy Scotland Xeck, N. C. MENTION THIS TAPER. LD XEWSPAPARS FOR SALE, ! I'KO.'.I.U The BRICK ! O.cts. per hundred. E. E. MILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor VOL. XI. A DISREPUTABLE PEACTICE which the people of the South are resenting, is the efforts of some to sell them imitations for the real Simmons Liver Regu lator, because they make more money by the imitation ; and they care little that they swindle the people in selling them an inferior article. It's the money they are after, and the people can look out for themselves. Now this is just what the people are doing, and merchants are having a hard time trying to get people to take the stuff they offer them in place of Simmons Liver Reg ulator which is the "King of Liver Medicines," because it never fails to give relief in all liver troubles. Be sure that you get Simmons Liver Regulator. You know it by rjjgs old stamp nSismm the same of the Red package. r mi . 1 Lt on me It has ed you, who have ft never lail- m and people been per- suaded to take something else have always come back again to The Old Friend. Better not take any thing else but that made by J. H. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia. IN CHURCH. Inst in front of my pew sits a maiden, A little brown wing on her hat, With its touches of tropical azure, And sheen of the sun upon that. Through the broom -colored pane shines a glory Iy which the vast shadows are stirred, But I pine for the spirit and splendor I hat painted the wing of the bird. The organ rolls down its great anthem , With the soul of a song it is blent : But, for liTD, I am sick for the sighing Of one little song that is spent. The voice of the'eurate is gentle : "Xo sparrow shall fall to the ground," But the poor, broken wing on the bonnet Is mocking the merciful sound. Ch ristia )i Rcij inter. Newspaper Headlines. llvffalo Time. The newspaper head-line, as we now It, is peculiarly an American in vention. Overseas the ''scarehead is in unknown quantity. mere tne most important article, it matters not iow sensational it may be, is not .riven anv larger or more conspicuous leading than other iess important news stories. Startling information is given preference of position, but in no other way. The general idea is that the hcad- ines writer sits down and dashes off the first bright phrase or catch-line that enters his head. Xot so. A nice, mechanical calculation must enter into it. He must be an artist and an arti san. He knows to a nicety how many letters will go in the style of type em ployed for the first line. If there are several word, the space m between must be calculated in the number of letters. He knows also that a letter "M" or "W" will, by reason of its greater width, shorten the number of others that can be employed. There is probably not a man living who has ever written a heading for a newspaper and not experinced the annoyance of discovering that some peculiarly felici tous line that had occurred to him as a little too long to "go in." In this way thousands of happy thoughts are en tombed in the graveyard of good ideas that exists in every newspaper office. "Wording in Government Positions. Edward W. Bok, in Ladies Home Journal, gives the followig advice to young men seeking public employment: I would not advise any young man to enter the employ of the government, that is, if he has any amouion. government position holds out attrac tions to the average young man because he feels it is safe, that is, so far as the payment of his salary is concerned Then, too, he is apt to believe that the government salaries are somewhat higher than the salaries attached to civil pursuits. But, to my mind, he buys these "sure" elements at a very dear cost to himself. The average gov ernment clerkship is a very poor affair. Xot only is it poor in itself, but in ninety cases out of a hundred it means pure clerical routine. It has about it a peculiar stifling monotonv and restraint which are apt to quench the fire of ambition. Pro motion is impossible upon the same lines as in a business house. The chances for development are meagre. While there are exceptions to the gen eral rule, government service is not the best thing for any young fellow. He will be wiser if he enters into the more fearless freedom of civil pursuits, and leaves the average government position alone. In the first, he can be what he likes ; in the latter, it is doubtful. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 6. 1895. THE EDUCATIONAL WANTS OF THE NINETEENTH CEN TURY. Mcral Edncatis: V.Y D. V.. SIMPSON. ha hi b' rton Hobexon in a. Although education is u.-uallv divi ded into moral, intellectual, social, .-esthetic, technical and physical, it must not be supposed that there is a rating the one from the other. There is no such line. They are dovetailed, the one into the other like colors in the spectrum, and that teacher will be a poor moral instructor, indeed, who only finds opportunity for moral instruction during the Scripture lesson. He will be unworthy the name of a teacher of sociology, who only finds time for its great lessons at some particular hour of the day. JS'o, there is no sharp line ol demarkation between them. Still equal b foolish will be the teacher who will try to teach everything in one les son. Every lesson has a particular ob ject in view and this must always be kept in mind. We have no patience with those teachers who do strive to burden an exercise with far fetched morals when such do not in the least apply to the exercise in hand. Having said so much we shall now proceed to consider Moral Education. Xo school fulfills its purpose which falls to attend to the morals of the pupils. No teach- ls qualfied for the responsible office he holds who neglects his duty in this res pect. W e are an enthusiast with re- ard to good scholarship, but we are far more of an enthusiast with regard to sending out from our educational in stitutions good men and good women, good boys, and good girls. Good schol- arship is a grand and a desirable thing, but actual goodness still grander and more sublime. It is divine. Hence the reason we place Moral Education at the top. It is first, because it is of most importance. Whether a man is to be a blessing or a curse to himself md humanity depends not so much upon his physical capacity, more upon his intellectual, and most of all upon, the bias of his mo-al nature. Let us remember this. To neglectit is suicid- l d. At the outset we may say that it is not to be inferred that teachers are to give religious instruction of a sectarian nature in the schools. We mean no such thing and are bitterly opposed to such proceeding. But what we do mean to insist upon is that the true educator is bound to use every means in his power, and to utilize every op portunity he can, "to quicken the con- cience and influence the will" of the pupils under his care. It goes without saying that virtue is not aiwavs mw cwiwimiisui knowledge, and that the lessons which children receive may become pernicious to them if addressed only to their un derstandings. Let not the teacher, therefore, fear that he invades the rights of parents by giving his first care to the moral culture of his pupils. It is his bounden duty. In the same degree as he ought to guard against ad mitting into his school the spirit of sect and party, or of instilling into the minds ot children religious dogmas or political principles which their parents disapprove m the same degree, he ought to elevate himself above the pass ing storms which agitate society, in or der that he mav be able to apply him self without ceasing, to extend and es tablish those imperishable principles of reason and morality, without which the general order of civilized society is in peril, and to implant deeply in the young minds those seeds of virtue and honor which it will be out of the power ot the passions oi a more mature age to eradicate. He must never, by his con versation or example, run the risk of weakening among children the venera tion due to virtue. Faith in "Provi dence, the sanctity of duty, submission to paiental authority, respect for the laws, for the rights of all men, together with the thousand and one virtues that spring from these, are the sentiments which he must unceasingly inculcate by example and by precept. If he fail to do this he has come far hort of his J duty. He may have been an instruct EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. or but he has been no educator. We feel constrained to quote Lord Broug ham in this connection. He says : "I trust everything under Gal to habit, uion which, in all ages, the legi.-lator. as well as the schooI-m.L-ter, has mainly placed hi? reliance ; habit which makes everything easy, and casts all difficul ties upon deviation from a wonted course. Make sol riety a habit, and intemperance will le hateful, make prudence a habit, and reckless prolliga cy will be as contrary to the child, grown or adult, as the mo.-t atrocious crimes are to any of your lordships. Give a child the habit of sacredly re garding the truth, of carefully respect ing the property of others, of scrupu lously abstaining from acts of improvi dence which involve him in distress, and he will just as likely think of rush ing into an element in which he can not breathe, as of lying, or cheating, or stealing." And how is this habit to be secured? By quickening the conscience ; influ encing the will. In many cases pa rents do not value the schooling the children get, simply because it is not valuable. The poor are not bad judges of the value of what they purchase poverty makes them so ; although it is not in the nature of things that igno rance should rightly appreciate knowl edge, it is not difficult so to adapt the knowledge we give poor children to their wants, as to make its value felt by the dullest parent. It is because we do not so adapt it, that the parents do not feel the benefits of Education. It is the fault of the teacher, not theirs. Their children come home coated with crude learning, which they cannot un derstand, and perhaps do not much un dervalue in thinking it worthless. But this they do understand that their children are none the better fitted for work, and all the less inclined to it ; that their learning has not improved their love for them, or school discipline their odedince ; that Scripture lessons have not made them religious nor mor al. They can see and understand these things. They do understand them, hence, in many cases, as we said, the parents do not value the schooling their children get, because it is not valuable. We have been on the wrong track. We must get back to the be ginning. We must quicken the con science and influence the will. Two of a Kind Almost. Selected. He passed down the aisle of the car to the seat occupied only by a man wearing a weed on his hat, and there halted and sat down, and every passen ger thought it a funny thing that two men each a widower should thus be brought together. At least one of the widowers also thought it funny, for af ter a bit he turned and queried : "Your wife dead?" "Yes." "So's mine. Yours die of fever?" "Yes." "So did mine. Loving, faithful and economical ?" "Yes." "So was mine. Broke you up, didn't it?" "Yes." "So it did me. ing for half a day Couldn't eat noth Have a big funer- al procession?" "Yes." "So did I. Counted thirty-one bug gies and wagons. Got a grave-stone vet?" ' "Xo." "Xeither have I. Death is an awful sad thing, ain't it?" "Y'es." "But we must make the best of it. We cannot help the dead by mourning. Got your eye on a second wife?" "Xo, sir !" Avas the indignant reply. "How long's your wife bin dead?" "A year." The other picked up his valise from the floor, vacated his seat, and as he started lor the car ahead he said : "Stranger, I thought we was two of a kind, but I diskiyer that I am wrong in my riggers. One of us tells the truth and the other is a lie, if ldie for it ! Good day !" 7T:sn And Sisinecc )o!ii' Cotnjtuion. A New York banker aid rc-crntly. "Among our dpjio-iior we hae a few young giri. the daughter of wealthy men, wtjo plee their allow-mce- with u, and draw ujkh us in small heck. Their ignorance of the in-t nlmary busine method is s:naing. (:,e -voUn- u liuZ notified that she had overdrawn her drjKtsit to li e amount of thirty dollars, promptly :nt us an order for that sum, payable hv ourselves, to ourselves. "The father of another girl placed a sum of money to her credit with and gave her a check-book. In a short time she had overdrawn her de posit. She assured her father that it was impossible. He placed her next quarterly allowance with w, warning her not to allow herself to overdraw again. "At the end of a month she sent a check, which we did not cash because her deposits had already leen drawn out. We notified her, and she went to her father, sobbing with indigna tion. " 'They say I have no money in the bank, and look at all these checks which I have not used !' she cried, showing him the book half-full f blank checks. "These are facts, though they seem almost incredible. And yet these are cultured, bright girls, who are at home on matters oi literature and art, and who probably chatter fluently in two or three languages." A real estate lawyer declared that he made it a rule not to transact business for women, as their ignorance of finan cial laws and methods made them un reasonable clients. One of the prominent brokers in Xew Y'ork also made the statement that ho "found less difficulty in man aging a transaction involving tens of thousands of dollars for ordinary men of business, than in one where hun dreds are concerned for a woman. The average woman is not satisfied with an investment which will not bring in an exorbitant profit. She is inclined to insist upon large gains regardless of safety, and if loss follows, in nine eases out ol ten suspects that her broker has pocketed the money. " There are of course many women as well able to manage their incomes as men, but they usually are those who have earned them. Young girls who in all probability will some day inherit property, are too often left ignorant of the ordinary principles and form." of business. If money is to be your slave, girls, and not your master, learn how to con trol it. Joy in our Abilities. Y. P. Leader. On one occasion did Jenny Lind ex press her joy in her talent and self con sciousness, it was during her last res idence in Copenhagen. Almost every evening she appeared either in the opera or at concerts ; every hour was in requisition. She heard of a society, the object of which was to assist unfortu nate children, and to take them out of the hands of their parents, by whom they were misused and compelled either to leg or steal. "Let me," said she, "give a night's performance for the benefit of these poor children ; but we will have double prices." Such per formance was given, and returned Iwrge proceeds. When she was informed ot this, and by this means a number of poor children would be benefited for several years, her countenance learned and tears filled her eyes. "Is it not beautiful," said she, "that I can sing so?" Through her I firs, became sensible of the holiness there is in art ; through her I learned that one must forget one's self in the service of the Supreme. Wha Bly wm nek, w h" CarU. When ih wm a Child, she cried for Cutwta. When aha beoam KIm, the cmnj to CaMori. -fTbea a bai Ctildrac, at Uuca Cor1ft. SUBSCRIPTION PKICK ft N0.2G I " ! I werv lu.ky en ',!, t, . VI thi c!.ite rjint-. J jouM j ' fei!otv," sa!' .i you:-;,: msn. "And tbea ! a friend. J j "Why, then, I'd pud d t n the..;.'.! . .... i ou ana l ull s pie uu ' prime fellow- roin.d n, ke-p the I wjnes and Ibr l.nc-t le r in the country." "And then'"" Tl... I"t i i i i ii-ii t u iiij.ii. :uij leie, an l Mi and drink, and dance, and keep .j:; 'id kert i .1 houo, and enjoy fifo jrlori-u!, ." "And thenv "Why, then. I Hip, like otbiv eop!e. I should grow !d.and not cue so much i"r theo thing."' "And then ?" "Why, then. I supjo, in thee. -m-of nature, I should leae all thee plea ant things and well, e die "' "And then "O bother your 'then-" I mu-t le ofT." Many years after the blend w jie costed with : "God bless you ! I owe mv happi ness to you !' "How?" "By two words spoken in season Join ago : 'And then !' " A Ho rait in a Hud Hut. Kxchangr. A bona fide hermit hn leen diseov ered in Cabarrus county. His name l J. 1'. Langley, and he Iivos by CoMle Creek-. Hi liuhif iitimi U u enrii-if v - j It is a hut, maue of poiei ami cnvcrol ... . . - . . with turf and leaves. A small nper turo in one side of it lets m light, ami serves as a door. Lungley came from Yadkin county, and for years pa-t ha livtnl alone in thb mud lint. He h what is commonly known m a "roof and verb" doctor, ami the ignorant and superstitious oi that eetion d the cniinlrv 1 r .n i him Ho tini'cr onvw meat, ins K"n an-i k' ' 1"" him supplied in that line. He is 7." vears old. i.: i ... i l ; .... U liablo to prent runetiowu aisiun- anr through sym- pathy. lysj-iia, or IiidiKtioti, ofU-n caustt it to jfiljl- tate in a distrhUiR way. Nervous Vrm- tration, lfbility Htid Imjoverish-l bl-i, raold nulsatioim. Many ttrnf, Spinal Affeetlons, caustt it to labor nnduly. Sufferers from ttwh rv- ous Affections often imagine themwlves the victims of organic heart dbease. ALIj NEUVOl'H DI8EANEH, as Pa- ! ralysia, Locomotor Ataxia, Epilepsy ; or FiU, St. Vitus'a Dance, SleeplenKiietM, erv- j Otis Prostration, Nervoiia lability, Neural- , Melancholia anl Kindred Allmenu, arts reated as a srxx-ialty, with grat uc, by the Staff of the InTaltd' Hotel, tar Pamphlet, References, and Particulars, en close 10 cents, In Btam for postage. Address, World's Disi-insabt Medical, Association, Buffalo, N. Y. I w v. 00 P - ui a CD 'Si "2 -" c O P i GO - CD O o ti 7- CF3 Southern Hotel, HALIFAX, N. C. FlU-T CL.i A""OM MObATIo.N .- I o'. thk Prnuc. Th Far". The Jimt Th Market Afford. ME.S. C. P. TlLLKKY, Mrs. John H. J'exsee. 2 21 3m Managers. I II 1 I v - - ;i m : t - VUh jour Adtrrtimrtit j , i . ''.'. ' HI li w. . 2 3' ! llCuWe5'!. :. ! L m '" i i - , .....- . J DR. H. 0. HYATT'S SANATORIUM, K!-l. V :i lv Norfolk Commission Co., 1't lil! Ye.--!,d .it i . !, i i; ! 1 1 i i . i - -H .- n, l . f r. .. N. ff. Sk. V., ; I V v 'a.-h'e', I'aMix! b ui'' I'. .' , 'ew U r:,e. N. : I: I; I . B.nk of W.ni.1-. . ' Ub. o., N r i l 'J 1 1'rti on Ihmm.iIi ;.i l Is - ,o. 1 i:l iti! miN en n-d in .'. n . i . , '. 1 . - ' f..rd'- S.iiiit..t !..; I J.:- t . . t f ill-. S..!d b'i: T WIht!.. . t ,. C. OniLvi-!, S.-..i!,,M i N.-. 1. N. C. 11 t '. lv. ?N'..'ll-h Sp; l!l 1.1 iili) i. all H.u L S..t! .,i t .,!!.,.,-.! 1 and t ; f i ; 3 - h - h' 'u l; .. t -1 A . ,". t "M-ax in Sin 1.-. M.Jii!!-. S ,m-" . , , it e.,u -, .i i , . . . ' 'MIII 111--, ... lit. Ti, ,,, i i- il -e i if i?i l..i!t'.v V iM .."ted t! e m-t wot, it fnl I tut -i-i 'e o .! known. SoM b., I. I i,;' 1 .-,1 ,V c.i., hnu.-gi'.-, s oii.u.d Nr. ;,, r. i 1 I v. Hot; Cholera. The f.(T!io!i M.Sj ir Tt ' f.-... . , 'ttre, w 1 1 i f i .Miri-- .n 1 j.o-. '. i i in Inc.'- and iM.ultrv 1- (Mi i..'" .'! N !!. ! I1H.V' ,in,j at , j !,:" , , i i, , 1 Stoje. I be ! I n -d . ' ". r i i - !.l -'dv i- -n r 1 1 ! o 1 I ov ;n Mi v.i- u l i r :i. .,llt. ,mu(.. Tr, i( p ,. .b- '- .uid I n u:: .-ton ! N B roi: ovj;i: i'ikty vi: a i:- j An Oi ii ami V i!i T i. i i i I .' i 'i 1 1 V I Ml Wlll-lo',' '.- ,k .-II i I, i , ,.,. UH fl ,r , e,i ' - ioii- d itiotbei- foi t!i-!r i ! i' lo o i while K-thim.'. w ith i f - f - - It ' (M .. t. .-Inld, ...!...,. t. .'-i-, i- ii , ,,, , , ,i . , i , ' 1 ' ' ' " " ' tbe ts-t M-n.d ( ! l :.(!,. . i ,,!c:l-nit to tin- t.i-i- - .' ! ' I o:.-. P) v ,,,,, . f ,, I -ot fne.en!-., b,M .-. r- ,.e i h inejileulable. !.-'! w ;, ,i, ...., ,i I ,,, . ( , ) . ; nooij.ei kiikl j . e Tin: Uew Drug Store. ScolWpkIriir,o. "e irr.lte the ;lMe f tl d 1 p; of . it l.iud Ne I ot ir v to i. nr i i-i". -tocl of Dims. Patent Wm. CliCI; K-al-. I '"f :iUl ! , We ::.' e a . - Physicians' Prescription YV'.'x-h !..'-! h' liny, a d ' 1 1' -? of . M p ; iei.i jj. '!. b .-ii 1 Jl tf i 1 I N 1 ' i I i ' ll'ii -r'i ' I p- . rn. 4 ft o f.'JaL lWSTG.'-tSL?v YE-S&LVE SORE, WEAK, & INFLAMED EYES, Producing Lor j-Sijh'edr.tu. & Rtiior ing tfie Sight cf tht CIS. CorttTearDroM.Cranutatlor Styt Turners, Red Eyes, Msttel tjre Lathe, ua rtocrnis unci uiirrm rmmiTuix Alo, oanr ff'-e!'J n i1 la othr tntlvi.-u. trh I ler. Frftr Mre. Tamar. Hall Uhrmm, lliri., Pllra. or lrMlnllmlinl'nn!'. St ftCUHl.li ... 0UkyaUlOracUta'J3Ceats. 7 12 ly r.