" ADVERTISING IS TO BUSINESS .V HAT STEAM IS TO- Maclimery, PKOI'I-IXIS-fJ I'OWFK. That nice advertisement about Write yT- i insert it in i .;!nP-s : -- tHE DEMOCRAT, .,; -,ce a change in businc iness all PROFESSIONAL. u- 0. MCDOWELL, New Hotel, Main ;h corner 0:1 K't. ,ti.ni Nf.cfc, N. C. it his ofhee when not ( ,'!v c-n"M ffd elsewhere 9 20 ly ""TTTvi.' WHITEHEAD, KJl'1" New Hotel, Main Street, Scoti.asi Neck, N. C. --vhvav- found at hi office when r()t I.rofe-.-ionaliy engageu eibewucie. 7 G lv t.sr l i 1. T TV lri-'a otrvro n.-hours from 0 to 1 o'clock; 2 to "" ' , 9 19 lv j0V!(,-k. i. m. - A- J SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. VT! HELL, Attorney at Law, ENFIELD, X. C. Fr.icficr- in all tlie Courts of Hali i.lX .uv adj. lining counties and in the iiij.ieine and Federal Courts. Claims eiUiv'el in all parts of the State. 3 Sly V. A. DUNN, .1 T T 0 II X t: Y-A T-L A W. S.'oTI.AXD XKCK, N. C. Practice quired. wherever his services 2 13 lv are R. V. J.WARD, Surgeon Dentist, Enfield, X. C. Office over Harrison's Drue Store. 2 7 9o ly pWARI) L. TRAVIS, Attorney ami Counselor at Law, HALIFAX, X. C. S'Moiu ti Loaned on Farm Lands. 2-2 My MENTION THIS rAFER. STILL HERE JOHNSON The Jeweler. ith :i ; thorough knowledge of the kiMne and a complete outfit of tools and material, I am better prepared than ever to il anything.that is expected of a"-r: class watch-maker and jeweler. A full line of Watches, Clocks, Jewelry AXn MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. si'e'-taHes and eye glasses properly iittel to tiio r-vo r.'oo Ar oi.pup All f-ve. lYeo of f li.'irsre 'irk guaranteed and as low as ,v"lk he done. good '"''''y Mid. ,).' .s- ndhtstrd and re ts- for mv l.ig watch sign at in ng r?iore. W. H. JOHNSTON. r I:i I i-1 Xfy-k X. ( lOCtf SU 1 nsim i sum m m i NO- ()X HAND. WIhL SELL THEM CHEAP. E&Aho will take contract to l"fninish lots trom 50,000 &or more anywhere within 2LW:i) miies 0 Scotland Neck C: a!1 ahvavs rm-mj, ,i...f l-.'MI imk iillill DO " want. Correspond-Jr ' 'e Kv orders solicited. D. A. MADDRY, l-Vm.ly Scotland Neck, N. C. MEXTIOS THIS PAPER. E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and PrirT VOL. XI. SIMMONSV regulatqr7 GOOD FOR EVERYBODY and everyone needs it at all times of the year. Malaria is always about, and the only preventive and relief is to keep the Liver active. You must help the Liver a bit, and the best helper is the Old Friend, SIM MONS Liver Regulator, the Red z. Mr. C. Himrod, of Lancaster, Ohio, says: "SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR broke a case of Malarial Fever of three, years' standing for me, and less than one bottle did the business. I shall use it when in need, and recommend it." Be sure that you get it. Always look for the RED Z on the package. And don't forget the word REGULATOR. It is SIM MONS LIVER REGULATOR, and there is only one, and every one who takes it is sure to be benefited. THE BENEFIT IS ALL IN THE REMEDY. Take it also for Biliousness and Sick Headache ; both are caused by a sluggish Liver. J. H. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia. WRITE HER EVERY DAY, Comrade have you got a wife? v ute her every dav, Hall the joy is out her life v hen vou are away : Write her from a speeding car ; .ever mind the thump and iar Which your loving letters max Write her every day. You are in the .stirrins world, She at home must stay, Conscious you are being whirled Farther vet away. There she's watching, waiting, 1; With heart beating, with eyes gli. i.mg, i,uick to catch the postman s whistling YV rite her every day. Would you some kind service render, Sweet attention pay? Then a loving letter send her, V hen you are awav. Would you her home life brighten ! Would you all her sorrows lighten ! Bonds of sweet affection tighten? rite her every day. And, however far j'ou wander, I am sure 'twould pay, Could you see her read and ponder Over what vou say ; Have your tablet in your grip, Fountain pen charged to the tip, Then don't let the chances slip, rite her every day. If you chance to gu.-h a little, And perhaps you ma-, She will grant you full acquittal, It is safe to say : Write her genuine love letters, Riveting anew love's fetters, These are Cupid's best abetters, Write her every day. Selected. She Had Nothing to Do. Greenville Reflector. A busy wife, tired of hearing her husband declare that women had noth ing to do, made up a little statement of the way she spent her time of one year. She had two children and two servants. Here are a few only of the items which silenced the husband once for all : Number of lunches put up, 1,157 ; meals ordered, 5)03 ; desserts prepared 172 ; lamps filled and trimmed, 328 ; rooms dusted (a nine room house;, 2,2ofJ ; dressed children, 780 times ; visits received, 870; visits paid, 108; books read, 8S ; papers read, 553 ; stories read aloud, 234 ; games played, 329 ; church services attended, 125 ; articles mended, 1,23G; articles of clothing made, 120; fancy articles made, 50; letters written, 129 ; hours at the piano, 201 : hours in Sunday school work, 208 ; sick days, 44 ; amusements attended, 10. The Mount Lebanon Shakers have recently perfected an ingenious cure for dyspepsia. Their Digestive Cordial contsists ot a food already digested and a digester of foods happily combined. The importance of this invention will be appreciated when we realize what a proportion of the community stomach are victims u k"" - trouble. Thousands of pale, thin peo ple have little inclination to eat, and what they do eat causes them pain and distress. The digestive cordial of the Shakers corrects anv stomach derangement at once. It makes thin people plump. Every one will be greatly interested to read the little book which has been placed in the hands of druggists for fsee distribution. What is Laxol ? Xothing but Castor Oil made as paletable as honey. Child ren like it. WANTED : Several trustworthy gen tlemen or ladies to travel in North CaroS for established I, reliable ,ho. o, 7QO rind expenses, teteacn pu- r y Fnc o e reference and self ad Do- dressed siauu " - y V -p mi : j rinnr Omaha. minion Company, Bldg., Chicago, HI minion Company, xmru x , l " -- - 1 - h . . . . - . A .,. . . . HE JJEMOCRAT. ;zi SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, ABOUT CUBA. ITS GEEAT INSURSECTION. Our Encwlsdgs Jleacre. Youth's Companion. Our knowledge of the facts of the insurrection now in progress in Cuba is far from satisfactory. While one can hardly pick up a daily newppajer with out finding some despatch concernin the struggle, it is impossible to deter mine how far the published statement have been colored by the authorities, Spanish or Cuban, by whom they have been prepared. The salient facta of which we maybe sure are that the insurrection has been in progress for a number of months, and has extended over a large part of the interior of the island ; that Spain has sent over her ablest general, with tens of thousands of soldiers, to crush it ; that the insurgents, far from yield ing, have adopted the constitution of a republic, and chosen a President and other officers. When we remember that a previous effort to achieve the independence of the island resulted in a war of twelve years length, fdled with atrocities hardly-paralleled even in similar con flicts, the immediate outlook is not inviting to the lover of peace. The history of Cuba in this centu-y is little more than a dreary record of unsuccessful attempts at liberty. At first the attempts were peaceful. The constitution set up in Spain in 1812, as a result of the Xapoleonic wars, guar anteed a certain representation to the Cubans. Through the successive de- eats of the Liberal party m Spain, this provision was neyer enforced ; and j when, In 1830, Queen Isabella finally accepted the constitution, the Cortes voted by an overwhelming majority that Cuba should enjoy none of the ivileges which it extended to the Spaniards themselves. Since then, to most Cubans, liberty and independence have meant the same thing. The rule of the governor- general has been absolute to a degree which it is hard for an American to realize. It is true that a small narty las continued to hope that some meas ure of self-goyernment might be gained without separation from the mother countrv. But the concessions by which the long insurrection ot 18G8-1880 was brought to a close proved of no practi cal value. The grasp of Spain on the colony planted nearly a hundred years before the settlement of our own James town has remained firm while both the Northern and Southern continents of America have been freed from Euro pean control. Whatever one's yiews as to the right or wrong of the present uprising, its general similarity to the struggle that resulted in our own independence can not be denied. In the matter of griev ances, in fact, most of us will be inclin- el to think that the Cubans have even greater right to complain than did the British colonists in 1770. The charac ter of their warfare, with its numerous small engagements and its slow prog ress, is also not unlike the earlier cam paigns of the Revolution. Xow, as then, the sea-power is almost entirely in the hands of the mother country, and consequently the insur gents are mainly confined to the inte rior. The advantage of a disciplined soldiery is on the same side. The cli mate of the island is, however, a help to the insurgents such as our fathers id not possess ; for we see it constantly sserled that the yellow fever is proving ar more tatal to the troops from Spam than all the bullets of the rebels. This similarity of the Cuban struggle to the Revolution, the nearness of the land to our shores, and the intimacy of its commercial relations with this country have made the Cuban question i matter of practical political impor tance with us. That the sympathies ot most Americans are with the party of ndependence is evident t3 every one. t is lurther asked, however, whether this sympathy may not properiy w expressed by some act of our govern ment. The contention that the L nited States should at least recognize the ,elligerent rights of the insurgents draws a certain strength from the fact that Spain accorded such recognition to the Southern Confederacy within ortvdavs alter the firing on Sumter. Efut we should not repeat, in retaliation, what we then regarded as a most unjust and unfriendly act. Some competent judges are of the opinion that the according of belliger ent rights to the Cubans by a first-class power would turn the scale in their favor. It seems certain that the Cubans themselves are looking to us from their mountains with some expectation of encouragement, if not of active help. WANTED ; Several trustworthy gen tlemen or ladies to travel in North Carolina, for established, reliable house. Salary $7S0 and expenses. Steady po sition. Enclose reference and self ad dressed stamped envelope The Do minion Company, Third Floor, Omaha Bldg., Chicago, III. 11 14 tf "EXCELSIOR- IS OUR MOTTO. Saved by His SIcg reuse. A etc York Sun. James Johnson, a middle-aged Nero, j wa arraigned yesterday m Jefferson ! Market Court for being drunk in j Bleecker street on Monday night. He uiai-K irmce aucti coat am patent leather hhoe. His trou-ers were yellow and tight fitting. Kith leg was adorned by a big ml His black derby hat had a white U): band around it. His ve-t vrmld !riVf put a prize cake-walker to f-hame. It contained all the colors of the rainbow. When Magistrate Crane gave him an opportunity for explanation he grabbed the iron railing to steady himself, and said in a loud voice : "Your Honor, the ability to write poetry and the power to aUtain from intoxicating beverages are gilt, neither of which I possess. I admit that I sought oblivion in the flowing howl last night, but I did it to f-oothe the stings caused by the outrageous shafts of fortune. I'm in hard hick. I be longed to that unparalled aggregation ot histrionic talent known to an unfeel ing public as Comstock's Mastodon Genuine Colored Minstrels. We had a two week's career which I might call meteoric. Then our lights went out, figuratively speaking, and we, the only gv.uuniv tuiwcM 111 1 Il.T Li Ulr-, U1C It I I stranded high and dry. I got tired cf being drv and got drunk." "Your Honor," continued Johnson, getting his breath, "this happened at Fort Jervis, X. Y. After many vicissi- tudinous experiences, too numerous to mention, 1 reached this city last night. I met several of my friends, and they were so overwhelmed with joy at my safe return tnat thov treated me not wisely, but too well. This is the result. "These garments in which I stand before your honor, covered with confus ion and shame, were worn by me in our unparalled street parades, which electrified all beholders and several times compelled street cars to take an other route. If your honor will let me go I'll promise you that you won't sec me again unless you honor me by com ing to witness my unparalled perform ance as the unapproachable interlocu tor in the mammoth aggregation of Etheopian wonders a company I nm now forming." Johnson was discharged. Extravagance Our Dangorons Fault. In editorially discussing American generosity, Edward W. Rok, in Novem ber Ladies' Home Journal, declares that the American is never so unnatu ral as when he is saving money, and never is he quite so much himself as when he is spending it. Hence, he has been the most unnatural mortal on earth for the past two or three years. But now, with the lifting of the gloom, and the sun of prosperity shining di rectly in his face, he is taking courage and heart. Once more he is going to spend. Thanksgiving means more to him this year, and thousands of thank offerings will have a ring of earnestness in them this month that they have not had for several years. Our hearts are most thankful when our pockets are fullest and our bodies best fed and clothed. Generosity is a synonym with the word American. The American dearly loves to spend, and be it said to his credit, he spends with equal pleas ure upon those he loves as upon him self and sometimes even with more. It is the American trait not only to be generous, but to wish to see others hap py amid personal happiness. The American is willing to work hard, but he must spend. All this is good : gen erosity broadens men, just as penurious ness contracts men. If we stopped at generosity all would be well. Rut Heaven knows we do not. Years ago we passed the line ot generosity, and if there were another line beyond extrav agance we would have passed that long since. But there is where we halt at present : at extravagance. We are known to-day as an extravagant nation, and our most dangerous weakness as a people lies in extravagance. No les son seems severe enough for us to re member : within a year the most of us will have forgotten what we passed through in the two or three years which now lie before us. We have rallied from the shock, and this is commenda ble ; but to forget its lessons would be a mis-fortune. Let us be known as a generous people but not as a genera tion of spendthrifts. When Bacy was euc. re gare her Castortv When she was a Child., she cried or Castoria Vhen sh became 3Iiss, ihe ccng to Castoria. TLcn iJ ha i Clildreti, sbe gave theia Caetoria, When in need of first class iob print ing remember that The Democrat Job Office does work of that kind. NOVEMBER 14, 1895. cotton rrruKKs. Is It a Sana cf Cha-:e? Tlieoi!:ce -f r-ired. Ti:. f.,wit-:i c ine gue-t. To a n.o.i? p!ca.:!.g ' i ' prove to p. ,:nt ..t V th.;n ur:! hi-, r fi ;! nd T C;Ml : t-o -.e::!. w;,'-ii the social ma;-hi tie i- laving up- n tf.;! n'-ihhor bun'.fiis th.it a re :?--;-ry, inire.i" -i..-. !le i.n;! uniu-t. Let ti j consider th-e contracts t.r the sale .f cotton, nut inttn.Usi tube delivered by the-el!cr t tiif purcliaHv, which i.ave passed into our ('minerchd language as "cotton future-." Let us consider them in thf light .f the ovo;i air exhibition whivli has l-een given ts in New Orleans and New York. It is conceded that the cotton crop of the present year will v ield much !e. . in quantity, than the crop of last v car. The producers wore advbed, when th" season rf plautmg began, to reduce the area of this crop, that the diminished yield might bring them Potter price. This was done with unexpected una nimity. The seasons have been so far unfavorable that they have added greatly to the decrease in quantity. The producers enjoyed a reasonable ex pectation that this diminished yield might be compensated by a correspond ing increase of price. This ep?etation was realized. The price advancrvl stead ily and with equal stop as the dimin ished yield became more and more an ascertained fact. Tlie producer might rest content, .whatever his disappoint ment, when ho saw tlie produce of toil pass into the market" under the equal and impartial law of supply and demand. Rut he is not allowed to re main content. Suddenly, as if stricken by a blow in the lace, he is told that Jk is the unwilling victim of a game of chance, whose furious excess and heart- less consequence make the wildest or gies ot Monte Carlo appear but triiles. But this is not all. This loss of the innocent victim, lwnl arift Ferions as it is, may be measured by the standard of money, and is the least significant con sequence of the game (if chance. Who can measure the full outflow of its influence and results? The press has given us scenic views of the game and the players. The Bull and the Bear have been brought, all too vividly, before our astonished eye-. We have not been advised, it is true, to adopt the colors of either one of these noble beasts ; but the tory of their combat has been told to us with such charm of language as to thrill, and, may wo not add, fascinate us? What ambitious youth, with the fog of battle in hi heart, under these seductive influences, can fail to bo either a Hull or a Bear'. And vet we have been educated to believe and to hold that games ol chance are wrong ; nay more, that games of chance, in public places, a;e crimes, because they do violence to t he peace tnd dignity of the State. We have gone so far, in our education, a to declare that the presence of a lotterv ticket will pollute our mail pouches We have driven from our mibt those quondam caterers to our rudor taste, the cock-fighter and the prize-fighter. We are improving in our education, and growing better n the years go by. We arc becoming more sen-nhe to the deformities of crime. Wo no longer tolerate vice when if comes into our presence as a monster of ' frightful mien." We require it to comb its hair and put on a decent dro-s. But are we not inconsistent in our education when we drive from our midst the cock fighter and prize fighter, and denounce as a criminal the man of cards who plays his game of chance before the public eve, while we iepeat. with glowing phra.--e, the exploits of the man of "futures," who herald- his victories from the hou.-e top-? Is not "futures" a game of chance? Is it not played in a public place? Was tnoie any privacy in the recent maddening game at New Orleans and at New Yoik which has inflicted such mischief upon j the toil of the tiro-luce? Is there anv moral defence of this game of chance?! Is there one single element of virtue in jit. Js it not more lascinatmg, more maddening, more wide-spreading in its ruinous influences and results than all other games of chance combined?; Apart from good moral.-, H it not con- ceded that it dominates the market and ! t sets at defiance the equal laws that govern pru e ? And vet when our keener sense of virtue recoils from it- presence, we put on our softest gloves I that we may not touch too rudely the I rich drapery of its person. We shall remain inconsistent in our education ; until we learn to rate thi- -gigantic g.Trr.e of chance with all othe; offences a-a:n.-t the peace andMiguity of il e Sute. SUBSCRIPTION I'RICi; Ji co. NO 49. ALL TIJK i r.7 trs tin n- -,Jwf, W !') ! Mr-ll 1 t I . l Yes S 'ti tvl It at Hut wt.fH OT or t l -r Orwi ! t 5-Jf r j p ion thal" a jrn ot insjurr t 1. thti u I lis 1 t'u tnnli-IM, 21 r- tl rim- j 'unti?-r -n't "mjrj w?h it , Tlx " Ih-wsiTf-rjr " r ik irm frrr lti!r fum-tjvri, jrtsl n t:tvi. twnilthy t-rii. iukI (i.ariMt, rj nl tcT!,- r! yiir h'4 ' cyst-in, In ttt m.t tut!rn Mnu Iir, j in rvrt-y fonn -f S.-r- tu m in Mmf'tjon ( r I.ur.j: rrcf t:l t In t'. rurltrr . T.n"fi -rj1 la rrrry t.t.l ti.t PIERCE Guar antees a ok yioxr.r rcti'mniid. m tfOF; EYF.-GHiSSES : i rft WEAK LIU. Eye-Salve SORE, WEAK, & INFLAMED EYES, iryti.sS'o'.tift'-iO:.'. Im-r.-!, Lf 1 '..h f f ye I e.hft. tV: f. -!-.lw :;? : i ,' t 11 CtR. ,"'. -1 Id ttir r . i I .. 4 . f Hoi r. Vr-. r. T fi M, ;r',. I'M, -r 11 11 lv (C COPYRIGHTS. CAV I Olt l AIN A PATT.NT ? For m rri.nmt. ner nti.t an l.oiu-.-t opinion. nn t' PI I.' N X V fit., who liavo had ui-nriy Ufl? ?:' exi(-ri-nei in j -c r t. ln oj Vtirdnnt.i.-.-i-t k.tih rOiotly ion:S h-iiu-il. A lliiTidbuuU nl In. forinntiou roTirirnaiB I'alrrl u.ii l.r t ik. t.i.!i ttii'Ui i-nt !rre. a -u'ulo-uu Ol ILciU.-uv lci nnd fcit.itiCc tK.k neut li.-o. l'att-nrs taken t brunch Murm & Co. rrrolTW Jpecial notice ir. the !rirnlilir .tmrrimn. iiJ thiia arc, brouvtt wul;l Lli. ro tin t-u! m- miii. out cont to tbo invenur. 1 h'.n n.!i inli.l i-:i..t. jMu-d weekly, eh-sant ly UluMrnt-l. t.y jai I i.o larct ciruulatiou of uuy acicntitic ik 1:1 Ui9 world. S3 n .'f. f.-itnt-io r'.i.li- tnt Irw. Uuildir.j; l-;aition. mmilily. t 'Ju a year, mnpla r"i)ifs, v. cenia. r.Tcry iiuuir-r c tirul platoit, in colore, ant t-liotocritr''. rf i-w fol-ts.Ili t.iu i- nnup, wua pians, enabling l.uil.1. r to hw tha MU.N.W i CO .NtW Yduk. 3U1 JSuuaIjWAT. W S 7. t . tZZ3 o J. V. 00 " p -i CD V. V- ii O ,2 & CT3 B rr - t3 X I s o o P i X .' HI !1LL mm is JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE 50 CtS. oatati . it i s.. Not. k, it. Paris Mediolne Co., trt. Ixtum, M crlu . fciwut tnre gn ir?arty ttiui " "r ' pert'-Tv-v l l year. ni -rm uu-uur", ! tievtr j14 an arti.l that gae u li mi. lacUua a juur Tome -For sale :;nd guarante.-d bv K. T. WfHTKHKAI) a ro., (j 0 Can Scotland Neck, N. C. Olj NKWsI'APAKS FOK cALL, j 10 eta. i-cr hundred. TASTELESS ! II T IF YOU ARE HUSTLER ' mm Y. t A :vr r tit vt t s No, in t cl nr v.y wr.v.n s 1 Tit 7 1 i-V WMi jour Jirrlirnirnt i i J DR. H. 0. HYATT'S SANATORIUM, KlTo V C. l'na. l.Mf'lM i! a !!;.; . g tT"'. V ? i r f t U 'y .t . ."'lf J, P, ANDERSON & CO., COMMISSION MKKCH AN IS, .Y ;.; l:...in:lr .. I, ,V , J'i r. untfy rilu.f ,f 'w l.-crq. t..!l ..!5Clt.l. l.lU'f ti "all .ide i 'M I ' .n-U'iinie- :t Il I I Ul VI - "tl! f- H itll rit Bu-U-e--' 1'inro liC.'.cr.Uv of N - f. .Ik. Pjoiiql S, ' no 1 Iititi.li.-t'. turn", ."j-tlnl At: oti ci P.o.i tin Kctuni ol llu.ptv ' - at id i-t '. P.' l v . . . . - Itch on human m.i-1 t.or' nuA a!l anim i!- ci:ifs in .'. mlnuti-' l-v cf f. in I'm ."-.mlt.irv Ix'ti'-ti I hi- I'-'T fail-. i.y'i:. v wiot.-h.-i-i a r... I ru'gi-t, .-oti.iud N k N.t". I I I '.-' ly. rnglt-h -iv m I liii.ifuf nio.vi :t!l M.ird. !- dt or '.ill. iu I.'.o. o- and and 'N iio-he- fr in h- i Hl.-.l Sj..iv ir. .-ui .-plttii-. v. t.ev , loio', worm tit.f. t.iii;-, in:' .v;!.ti ThroiiiJi. 'oii.h-. !'.; S.tvi- by n-' of oof ...i!ii ,o i..t :-i tliii tuust woiiiifui I5'unim hm mt known, o'd b 1- I"- W'fi!! !-'-;t.l ,t Co.. DrugVbt, .c.tl.ui-1 N- U, S.i'. 10 1 ly. Hog Cholera. The fainou Major H"g li .lor ''ore, vsbiob mui and pievioit hoicrit in hog- and ponttrv j m u .hi-..) 'i and at II. T. Whllel,-.i 1 lUug Store. ' In- jnedK ii.e i- higldv n nni mendixl l v m.iuy vvi-?tii f. inner a a sine cine. Try a p.ck:ig'. At N. B ,(W- '-. and luu More. roii ovr.i: i iity yi:ai:s A x f M.i s i Wii-Ti;iti IJi fi 'V Ml. Win-lov, V Soothing '"p loM u-il for over fifiv veir l-v million- .f mother- f-'j lln-ir eloMieri vv hl!e 1--t hllig. With fe.- .nr.!-- It .M.ihes the child, -.iu-u- the you,, al'avs all pain rii!",J wil.d c,Mc, nod l the U-t iem-ly for I i.o i 1M . fi j.Ii-.l-.H.t Jo the I i-te .' .Id I-;. !.",-;. gj-t- ill eveiv put f the -eld. Twenty fiv" ci-nt- a l- Mle It- viilun i- iiiCaliMil.tl.'e Hi-urn- iin-1 ii-l. f -r Mi. Win-low V So-, tiling f-wup. i l t ilt no other J.ind. - '' 1 v A VAU Ar.l.K I I M Alter vear- of tl1dy.llid l.ii-oi. tdeio hit- at l i-t U-en dl-'oveir ' ;i nie nn I never-f.iilinft remely, It hi- 'n !-!-tJ on patient-, who h.r-e i! -pi;i-l t ever l-eing rurel, the re-ult- have -m In eveiv r:i-', otidM fit!. tiroj!' Illicumat i-- ( uie i- iii.i-'.m.i!'-! it- a itive remedy in ;di e.i--- of ' l.c-ni-' and Acute I uthitfim-ito? s Ilhe on .tj-m, (iont, l.urrd :.g. . lat -.i. e o,i!;iii ; i-j-. i.oly r..iii..n Neu. .il, i. I'.u. u onfio .. I all J it.dil :o'V !.-. It i- valuable !;!-.! p'irif.er. l--m,; 4-.-;,!!v i.s-l'i! in lf rn.i. I'o .rt Scrofuhi! a!! ' .l.n.dniai I.nl.o i-:i nt4 at;d d:-ea-e- of t,,. Jver .m i Kldi.ev-. It i- aUo!itel free fo-m a'! t. '- to--, ' f-o . ' - ;i 1 r '! ;e l 111 I . U of t'o'-e d iv - .iO-I ;l " .Uc ':" e-1 in fo-.m five to eighteen d r .!e .v II. T. U'hro J,e ,d .. ' . -I. ind Ne k , N. '. Ill I-V- I'M.!; -I l l (-l lul'.Y i- go ir.Uite-! ro cure !'!' nr. 1 'i-i pir:oi,r n.or.ey jefmded. J' cen'n jrf-r !t. Ser.d two -r.tmj .or ;r- .! r oid free .imp'e to M u it If; :v, I leg. i-'ert-! rh.irm i' if , I ..i n ,,-'er. l'.i No ptal :m-we;i-I. f or .i !e b a I f.rt- !.i-- drugi-t- e . r , w f.ere, ar, t M ,' o i.m 1 Ne-k. N. ".. i.y K. T. U'h;tehe.l V t o. Mil K-lf Ul- AM' It '!' VIO . I eat at Bobin-n -. I l n't. Nouri-hing n-e.i!- at all b ";r. .S!i"C-?h''p for making and repaying JOHN KUl!i:K."ON. Main Street, .Scotland Neck, N. C. H l 0 If ." :