It" ADVERTISING IS TO BUSINESS -WHAT STEAM IS TO- Machinery, Greu Tkoi klmm Power. THAT ertisement about ,o,;r buMiie. and insert it in f THE DEMOCRAT, it-.ito ui ;i "-v .,i .1 a rOinnoro in business all a" von 11 - 1.' PROFESSIONAL. w. o. Mcdowell, D R. Vorth corner New Hotel, Main OrTice Street, SCOTLAND XfXK, N. C. -Vhviivs at his office when not v- ensrasred elsewnere. y 20 Jv I- HANK WHITEHEAD, D' Xorth corner New Hotel, Main O.Tiee Street, Scotland Neck, N. C. faAlwav found at his office when not professionally engaged elsewhere. 7 G ly OFFirE Over J. D. Ray's store. O'iVc hours from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to 1 o'clock, p. m. 2 Illy SCO TLAND NECK, N. C. D AVID BELL, Attorney at Law, ENFIELD, N. C. M ii,' i e,,ternd in the Minreme and Federal Courts. Claims collected in all parts of the State 3 8 ly W, A. DUNN, ATT OR X E Y-A T-L A W. Scotland Neck, N. C. Tract ices wherever his services 2 13 lv are required. D R. V. J. WARD, Surgeon Dentist, E'FIELD, N. C. Office over Harrison's Druf Store. 2 7 95 ly E DWARD L. TRAVIS, Attorney and Connselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C. Money Loaned on Farm Lands. 2-21-ly MENTION THIS PAPER. STILL HERE The Jeweler. With a thorough knowledge of the l'tiines and a complete outfit of tools an l material, I am better prepared than ever to do anything that is expected oi a first class watch-maker and jeweler. A full line of Watches, Clocks, Jewelry AND MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. I'octaoles and eye glasses properly fitte-1 to the eye. free of charge. All work puaranfeo'l and as low as good work e;'.n l-e done. in- Midlines H !:!. ad hinted and. re- .CSTrxf,k for my big watch sign tl e .New Drug Store. at W. H. JOHNSTON. .- k, N. C. JO i tf 11 111 191 1 NOW ON HANI). WILL SELL THEM CHEAP. ?J&.U will take contract to P"-furm.h Lts irom 50,000 jf5"oi- more anywhere within miles f Scotland Neck "iiwavs v.ant. furnish wIiatOT Cone.-pond- you JJR. A. C. LIVERMON, mmmmm D. A. MADDRY, l-10-'J5-ly Scotland Neck, N. C. MENTION THIS PAPER. JLHE DE E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor VOL. XI. L Vregulator 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 AiONS LIVER REGULATOR, the RED Z, Mr. C. Himrod, of Lancaster, Ohio says: bIMMONS 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'i 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 TME REMEDY. Take it also foi Biliousness and Sick Headache ; both ar caused by a sluggish Liver. J. II. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia. GIVE HIM A LIFT. Give him a lift ! Don't kneel in praver. .Nor moralize with hia despair, The man is down and his great need la ready help, not prayer and creed. 'Tis time, when wounds are washed and healed That the inward moUve be revealed ; ' " "" Mere words are but a mockery. One grain of aid just now is more To him than tomes of saintly lore, Fray, if 3 011 must, within your heart, But give him a lift, give him a start. The world is fnll of good advice, Of prayer and praise, and preaching nice ; But the generous souls who aid man kind Are scarce as gold and hard to find. Give like a Christian speak In deeds, A noble life's the best of creeds ; And he shall wear a royal crown Who gives them a lift when they are down. Heaven May toe a Lonely Place. Chicago Times-Herald. A little boy, when questioned by his mother regarding some escapade, had not told the strict truth regarding the affair. She had taken him on her knee and was expla;ning to him that people who told lies could not go to Heaven. "Mamma," said he, "did you ever tell a lie?" "Well, my son, I don't know, but i possibly at some time in my life I may have told some things that were not quite a3 they should have been." 'Dkl papa ever tell a lie?" again questioned the bo'. ll am afraid he has," replied his mother. 'Did Aunt Fanny ever tell a lie?" persisted the boy. His mother concluded it was now about time to choke her son off before he had involved all the relations on both sides of the lamily, so she said : "My boy, I am afraid there is hardly any person in the world but who has at some period of his life made some statements that would not be called the truth." The boy pondered over this for a few moments. "Mamma," he said, "it must be dreadful lonesome in Heaven nobody there but God and George Washing ton. Only Once. Judge (gravely) "The prosecutor swears that you hit him twice upon the nose. Have you any denial to make?" Defendant (stoutly) "Yis, yer boner ; oi hit but wunst upon the nose. The sicond toime oi hit him where his nose hocl bin." Tid Bits. The Mount Lebanon Shakers recent ly performed a great deed of charity, 1 rrrme lint tTlP ever resulted in &w "-j -Pame. Thev gave away 1,000 bottles or their Digestive Cordial to those suf fering from stomach derangements. It was so effective in curing those who used the remedy that they were loud in their praises ot it and in conse quence a large demand for the cordial was at once created. The druggists of this town have little books that tell all about it. Digestive ootpj nn annetite, aids diges- VyUlUlill v.i-""- i . tion and Drin auy-. . t Laxol is the name of a palatable j Castor Oil. Just the thing for chil- 1 dren. j i r nTnrcp 4 pppst TTERE ! OLD NE vVSrAPERS HtM. , 40 cents a hundred. although it was not uesign .-.0 . ity, although it was not designed as a charitv, being nothing more nor less tun on fldvnrtisine scheme. Jt how- SCOTLAND NECK, DAY BY DAY CONSTANT SELF-L2NIAL. Perseverance to the Enl Rev. Spoford W. Brooke. "If any man will come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily." I think every one of my readers will feel that the emphatic word here is the word "daily." It is easy enough for a man who has absorbed the best in our religion to love Christ ; it is not hard for him, in some moment of thrilling affection for that great life, to resolve on some sudden momentary act of self- sacrifice. But to do such deeds day af ter day that is where the tremendous difficulty of the Christian life begins No woman, for instance, doubts se riously the beauty of self-surrender in days of courtship or the first days of married life. It is the persistence of the old faults in him she loves, the hopes that are not granted, the new weaknesses her husband develops, the daily pressure of small cares and anxie ties which threaten to wear away the love that once seemed capable of any sacrifice. I find again that the dull, lonely per severance sacrifice involves is the reas on why men, who feel themselves call ed to some new enterprise, are at first so anxious not to accent it. Their frantic struggles to escape their duty, the complaints of their own unworthi- ness, their many excellent reasons for not undertaking the task ; how ludi crous and yet how human it is ! No one, indeed, but the man himself knows how hard it it is to say, "Thy will be done," when God s will is new to him Moses' urgent cry to God to release him rom his duty of freeing his fellow- country-men from their bondage to Egypt "Behold ! they will not believe me ! O, my Lord ! I am not el oquent" is the typical cry of men in all ages called to a work involving con stant sacrifice of self. It cost the great est spiritual influence of the middle aes, Francis Assissi, months, nay ! ears of doubt and suffering before he could decide on quitting his reckless ife and taking poverty for his lifelong bride. We remember as we meet such lives in books or experience, that prayer of Augustine, which was so true to our nature : "O God make me holy, but not yet." How difficult is the mean commonplace reality of small inglo- ious details ! "It is hard," the poet cries, "to be a Christian." And who should know it hardness so well as he, he dreamer of visions, the lover of beauty, the builder ol romantic ideals. These idealists of lite some of you will emember how James Russell Lowell speaks of them : Hear them but speak, and you will feel The shadows of the portico Over your tranquil spirit steal lear them unfold their plots, their plans, And larger destinies seem man's. So great in speech, but ah ! in act, So overrun with vermin troubles ; The coarse, sharp-cornered, ugly fact Of life collapses all their bubbles. ' No ! It is not sacrifice to dream the dreams of purity, goodness and love. The aspiration, the prayer, the fervid eeling are but the brilliant messengers we send before us into the presence of the king of our lives. That which is going to carry us, maimed, defeated of ten on the way, but triumphant at last, into his presence, has scarcely yet be gun. This is daily "perseverance to the end" in the road we recognize as God's way, when the glow is past and all the fervor is cold ash in our hearts I dare not, therefore, write to you in oud, swelling words, about the duty of self-sacrifice ; I cannot embroider so difficult a fact with any rhetoric. Some times, Indeed, a man's heart is full of confidence and joy as he looks up into the face of God. Then no phrases are too splendid to paint his delight in life. But the daily pelf-denial, the constant gilt of ourselves to God, the purifica tion of the heart, no man can talk easily and lightly of that. It is harder than physical energy, harder than in tellectual work, harder to face than eath itself. Let us consider, then, soberly and quietly, what pel Menial really means in the life we have all of us to live. What is it to take up our cross daily and follow God? It is to know what our weak points are, to fasten our at tention upon them, to do what we can to overcome them. There is, for in stance, the haunting habit of indolence. Few of us are so unfortunate as not to be compelled to work for our livelihood ; the world asks, indeed, labor from most condition of being allowed to live. But there Is all the difference be-1 tween taskg done with an eye on the clock, and tasks done with all our being 1 in them. It is only the last, however, that please ourselves wholly, and to v rhap8) of partly pIea8 j I : L -..-.!- .".-'"',.. a I iPYryi QTrt re rtuo unxTn N. C. THURSDAY, ing other." I know how dark it is for some of us thus to prew our nature in to the labors of the da v. Sometimes ' our place does not suit us, sometimes the zest has gone out of us, sometime the material itself seems hopelessly ob stinate. How often does his desk, his machine, his counter, loom up before a man's eye like a dark and heavy cross ! Now, there is where the chance for in dolence comes in, there is where the great tempter stands by our side. But there, also, is where God's lonely call for perseverance strikes upon the soul, and the chance for self-denial hails us like a friend from some passing ship on the ocean of lite. I say God calls us then. Do you think He only calls us? Nay I He helps us ; He himself, incar nate in our being, helps us. I remember the story of the Dutch mathematician, who for many months had tried long and wearily to. solve hi problem. Then, one night, in a dream the solution flashed like an inspiration into his mind. So it is often with our selves. The steadfast, inexorable re solve to overcome indolence does tri umph at length. God hears our dumb prayer ; ne helps us almost uncon sciously toward himself. Unseen of us the body accommodates itself more easily to the weary task ; invisibly the brain responds more clearly and firmly like a furrow to the ploughing thought, step by step, the man's being enters more fully and powerfully into what he does. What is that but the prayer for self-sacrifice made into our flesh and blood? What is that but the word of God coming to dwell in our hearts? What is that but God himself incarnate within us? Or there is, once more, the habit of playing with the greater less yenial sins of life, lust, dishonesty, drink, pride, avarice. Ihe men are few very few, in at least my experience who ' really intend to become the slave of these des troyers. Wo are not wicked deliberate ly. It is rather conceit, confidence, the desire for joy that leads men on too far. They cannot bear the separa tion from old friends involved in the 1 struggle, the slow, dull, weary endeavor, , the monotonies, the reiusals which the strife involves So they cast off their I crosses and run down hill like children. But at the foot ot the hill they find a ar heavier cross laid on their shoulders. Is it not better to bow our heads now to the yoke before the inevitable self- oathing comes? Is it not better to hear now the lonely voice of God than to hear at last only the cry of insincer- ty and weakness within? No riches can fill up that void in the heart where God has been but now is not ; no smiles, no shouts, no amusements. Surely the ighter cross is more profitable than the heavier, the stronger self-denial now than the weaker self-denial here- afier." "I am come," says Jesus Christ as he laj's that cross of daily self-denial on your unwilling shoulders, "I am come that ye may have abundance of ife." It is the truth. That is, indeed, the reward we receive in sacrificing oiy 01 these sins. J? or purity means vigor of body, mind and heart ; and sincerity means rn erect head and fear- essness before men, and each defeat of temptation means step by step growth into inward power and peace. Take, my friend, then, the way once more ot daily self-denial ; send your prayer Deiore you as a messenger rom your soul toward the king of all souls ; and then stumble and fall your self onward and upward and forward, till you rise at least a new and better man m the invincible presence of Him who loves you forever. Let us carry thus these life-giving words of Christ into the coming week with its many temptations. "If any man will come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily." We all need them. Every man here has his weaknesses, one or two that he dreads more than many enemies, one or two that he knows can destroy his power and banish peace. God visits us, indeed, in his mercy, from time to time, with bright and happy visions of what we might become if only we were once for all free from these. He grants us, moreover, through the voice of the orator, moments of fervid feeling, when we are in spirit what our souls at their best would fain be in tact. Then aspi ration bears us upward, then prayer unites us quickly with Him. then en deavor seems so easy. I would not seem to say one word asrainst this heavenly hypnotism. Tersonally I am always more grateful to the man who can arouse my religious emotions than I am to the man who tells me ethetical truths I have known only too well and too long. But still the old hateful habits are strong and firm ; they have roots which emotions can never cut away. After the emotion cornes the test of life. Then the real struggle of daily self-denial begins. My brothers and sisters, let us see to it that when the divine impulse goes, "perseverance to the end ' yet remains. 'Faith's meanest deed more favor bears, Where hearts aud wills are weighed, Thau brightest transport's choicest prayers, Which bloom their hour and fade." MOQRA NOVEMBER 28, 1895. OUR CLIMATE. WHAT AN IOWA HAN THXNES 0? IT. Says it is Superb. M. R. Intne, writing from Mt. llo' ly to the Sovthrrn Statf$' Magtiiinr. publihi by the Mtnuficturtr$' -ord L; Baltimore, ms thu of North Carolina : "I Co net think in all the world y.u w;mld find .1 Mcli.ii cf country with finer climate than that of North Caro lina. It lx m in ply Mijerb. Indeed I believe It will add ten caM to any icr s:ih life. The Kil is good if a man has common sense enough to employ a projcr me.ins. The ieop!e, rich and poor, are social, generous and neighlor ly, and I can not ee by word or look that I am not thought as much of as if I was a native, "to the manner born." I came here Irom Iowa nearly eight years ago, and I must say that I great jy preier this country to mv native State. Indeed, I cannot underhand how a man can stay contentedly in Kansas, Nebraska, Dakota or Minneso ta when he can live in such a country as this. Land is cheap here, and there is no better to le found anywhere in the Lnited States. Wc are hundreds ol miles nearer the large Northern cit ies, and we have first-class railroad fa cilities. We have all kinds of timber for manufacturing and other puriose4, and lumber for buildiug is cheap. We can cultivate many things that can le grown in the North, and a number of things that the soli there will not pro duce. As to fruit raising this State will soon lead them all. I have three-year-old peach trees in bearing, also grape vines two and three years old that were too full of fruit this year for such young vines. My apple and pear trees, four and fie years old, are load ed with fruit. "In conclusion I will say I want no more blrzzards and cyclones, no more twenty-five degrees lelow zero, and no more $1.50 to $G per cord for wood. So let ethers do as they will, I shall stay right here in old North Carolina, and nothing would please me more than to have 10,000 or ten times 10,000 of my fellow Northerners come down here to live and keep me company. The war is over and no bitterness against the Northern man exists, but rather a gen uine brotherly feeling for him. I may, accoiding to the judgment of thoe who have not tested these matters, le "putting it on pretty thick," but I am "stuck" on this country and am bound to blow my horn." Do Away With Horses. Manufacturers' Record. The horse, having been supplanted in street-car service, is soon to have a still more active rival in motor vehi cles. It looks now as though lovers of good horses will soon find their favor ite rapidly supplanted by petroleum, gasoline or electricity, even for all country-road purposes. The hold upon public attention which the motor vc hicle has already secured will surprise those who have not watched the move ment. All indications point to as great a furore over horseless vehicles as wo have of late years had over bicycles. The success of such vehicles in France has demonstrated their utiht', and now many of the leading manufactur ing concerns of the country have taken up this new line ol Industry with a de termination to vigorously push it. The Chicago Times-Herald desiring to pro mote, encourage and stimulate the in vention, development, jerfection and general adoption of motor vehicles or motocycles, lately offered prizes a mounting to ?",r-X) tor the best vehi cles. In this contest the question of speed is not the only requisite to be considered. It would le pos-ib'e for an ingenious mechanic to construct a machine with which he could easily outstrip all others in the contest, and j-et that device would be of no utility and the outcome of no value to the world from a practical point of view. It is the desire of the paper that this contest shall add to the sum ol our me chanical knowledge in this, the new branch of the science of transportation. Nearly 100 entries have already been made, many by well-known firms now engaged in machinery manufacture, carriage making and kindred interests. So great is the attention now being given to the horseless vehicle that a new paper known as The Hortelens Age has been established in New York, and a study of its pages shows an astonish ingly large number of vehicles already constructed and ready to seek public favor. The revolution which this in dustry threatens to work in transporta :i,.n of people and freight is an inter-e-ting study. 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, Omal a BIdg., Chicago, 111. U U tf SUBSCRIPTION PKICE li oo. NO. 51. A OUilGEOa'O ttniFC flr you ft for tin fcorrot to4 nrl. TVrT I too tM- txvattr fur Its W la t&&)r iltrar f i4crly r TU Tris;i tf tostrritin Scrpry U Kturt-4 hf Ihm fori tkt RIIPTIIRP " HrffKM tv nui I Unt. rv rur4 wttlaoMt ihm kolftn4 without nun. tluaT, ckf taf tru t-a Im thrown ! Tfcr 7 orrrr rum but often Id 2u. tsfiAar trmt'on. Mrtn u Uttkoo od OrLh. TilMORQ Urtrv. r;br-oJ t"tvrto I MWUnO .aJ rt any ctm, r aw rrnsoTpJ without Ihm l-T.M it cut tin oprrmtlor. PILE TUMORS. $",:r7. "Si other dtwmar t-f tb lower lwL ir p-rmrvrrit ly rurrj without pia or rrrt tn tb knif. CTflUr- la th" tUaMrr. t matter wivivt. DOw law. W cruntved. put- rrritfl. u)k4 out au4 rfcvtir rw mornl without cuttln. STRICTURE X'JL rruTJTulTJt cutting la Pwntlrvd of mr. tor Kirnphle-t, rrferrot-r tn4 all parttru ra. kt4 10 crnta tn tatns to World IiaptiaarT MfMltcaJ A tion, SrtJ Mala Huffakt, .V V. HO MORE EYE-GLASSES no ma J' ETC tYIITCHELL'C A Cartala. Bafa, and Effective Baoaad for SORE, WEAK, & INFLAMED EYES, PndJcir.j Long-Sightednttt. 4 Rtitot ing the Sight of th Old. Cures Tear Dropa, Granulation Sty? Turn art, Red Eyes, Matted Eyt Lathi. 150 rtoDinic trie RiuLrm n miuTcru. erual'r rS.c!f! whtn til In ohr nala-lien. mi'-h r rra. Ffr ra. T:nor., -lt Hhram. llama, 11 lee, or t.i.tr. iiv.: r.jm..Tif llr.ta, JI M li.lliZtJL'0 - liny ; rse.l f ! van' .". Celt- br all lrug'-: m 43 Cent a. 11 11 ly (C) COPYRIGHTS, CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT f for a Kotnpt answer and an boneot opinion, write to I'NX A: CO.. who bare bad nearly fifty years' experience In th patent btmineaa. Cotiitunnica tlona strictly confidential. A llanaboah of In. formation concerninc I'atenta and bn to ob. tain tbem acnt tree. Also catalogue Ot meviiao teal and acienttno books sent free. Patents taken tbrourh Munn at Co. rroelre special notice In the freotinr Amrrlrnn. and thus arc broogbt widely before the puMicwith. oat cost to the inventor. This rpleudid roper. Inxued weekly, eleesntly illnstrafyt. Laa ty fax the larsest etrculatlou of Any scientific work in the world. S3 a year, tain pie copies sent !re. Bnildlne Kditlon.tDonthly. $i.SUm year. Minrle copies, 'i cents. Brery muuber coptina beau tiful plates, la colors, and phouwraphs of new houses, with plana enabling builders to b.w the latest dealrns aad vocur oontracts. Addrtwe MUNN i CO- MEW Youk. Util BkvibwiT. TA5TELESS C DLL IS JUST AS COOD FOR AD U LTS. WARRANTED. PRICE SOcts. Galatia, Ills.. 'or. K, Par Medicine Co., K. Louis. Mo. Gcntlerren: We M lJt year. flW U--Ulee of "ItOVE H TASTELK.-8 CIIILI. TOMC ail hare ui?bt tbree cruat already U4a year. In a. I iirti penence of It year. In tbe drua buloewt. bae Derersold an article that gave such uiurtrtaJ aaua- -For sale and guaranteed ty E. T. WHITEHEAD & CO., 6 6 6m Scotland Neck, C. v -v -wfc. mwrfwfV. ifjar as 1111 miiiv AT w . . II J 2 1 sW " So K w O H O a H ' ' rr -r- rr t ) 1 r a 2 2 S w I I 2 r 1 r- CD 1 H P CZZ3 ' ( - y r )- , 5 P w i 1 HI ME 1 IF YOU ARE HUSTLER toe wxit AUVKUTIiT vera Business. rr Yi t & rtiT:rvrvT : Now. th at ci. or ur m:i;s TIUT Tot W'UU jour A dicrt lament U the cU to rr;i Tmk DrxociuT. DR. H. 0. HYATTS SANATORIUM, KIXSTOV. N. i '! rill l-Artlrl at a d V.t a U fjGJ Ih'riift $ o f the Jr iw- ijrnrrtit Sntgrry. ! ly J. pT AN DER SON & CO t Virrtl (OMMISSKIN MKItril AM .o. ;.; .' .i.i,h .n I. .v..r..:4. r.i. ('untry f Krry lhiip- ti"ii St !ir:tM. I.jNr;il !i l .t 1 c .Mm1o ii Ctnipi ynnirnl.. I! . Hiivt I . : iMtlfii" Ittnl ind llii"iiieu l irini ifiuT.tll v f N'tf"lW. rp'tnpt Sd1 n nd Iinii.fliii J- turii-. Sietiitl AttiMitl.'ti Tail (., tiie Krturit of I'n.ptv rip mid i !. '. 12 lv. Itch mi tnmiftn a.nl Ixtne ni all anim.'iN ciin-! in a" iiiiinit' l v W...1- fonl'rt Sitnitjtry I--i-.t Thi i;ri'r faiN. Sold l.v V.. T. U hit. ht a I .V Co. Irtijj'trie.t, Stlitiid Nf-k N. li I 12 ly. rilKllpli Sp:i1Il I.JI1I11 flit M Itiom all Hard. Sft ir '.tllou--.! Lump- mid and CU'tiij.hfx (torn lmi It1,. n 1 Sti.itii: SiiiIm. SiiIiiiIk. Suwiii'v. Kniif 1 ' 1 " worm tli.ff, rpr.iMi", nfi' .-'iiMt Through, 'oiiprhp. l'A Sum- . ly IIK? if on hoftl'. Win t .1 'U- thw inoft woii.iifnl Itlfini-m 'ino - tr known. Sold Im, !,. 1 . Wtiitf hf.t I A Co., I ru.Ki'-tei, Srt.tl.ind .N'o k, . C, 10 1 lv. Hog Cholera. The f;imon, Msjor Hoi Cholera Cure, tvhirh ciiri find prevrnt h..le.f 1 n Iiom 11 1 id j 1 1 1 1 r y i i mh' at N, It. ftiK-y'K .Hid t I . 1. t hltfl.-(td MfUK Sfor'. I JtO iiifl iM ti 1 lilK'iilv rt'oni- nendod lv in;tiiv wftrn f.iiiii r a a sure fiire. I rv a pack ,i J IohvV find I'riiK store. foil ovi:k i i ity yi:.ks An Ou am Wii i-Tiuip l!inY Mrn. Wiiifhiw m Soothing Svrnp t it e M'i'ix xwl for t'T fifty yur y fi'll ion d iiiotlifix for thfir t-hildifii whilo tethiiH. with jx-fff-! purt-i-o. it .1 .1 .... KOOUlf III" fllll'l, eoI!MK III' Ktlllie, IIh vh fill imin -mi. wind folic, iiii ! m he I'-! M'iiuly fir I Mi i r ho In ilfll.-fOlt to tll t;L-t. So). I ,y Irnv jl-tM in f ry p ut oi 1 1 . u "i '1. I'wfiil v livf ffiitx fi l.tt!f. If- ,i im n iiH'.ilculalilo lU'piiif ;iiid ;i-k f 'f lrx. Window V SiH.f 'fjn ti'ip, i id inVt) (Uj -i lv 10 ot lii'i kind. a VAi.r.Msi.r. 11M1. Afffr f;irp ill ffudy mid Jalr, tl.-i in at 1 i-.t Ufii dl-foMMfl a nii- :?! iof r-faiiiiili rftiifly. It la ln-n --t. I on piitiMit. who li.m- dt-piiifl of ;ver Ix in c-uri-l, th if ! haw t-!! n pfry f.i-f, m oiili ful. iro!f'n tfir-iitn.it ) Ci:m if U , i :t !-! a a -tlf M-nifdy in id! '.- of ( i i -f 1 i uid Aftitf Jot! iiuiiiatoi Kh lim it tm. out, I-iimlaKo. Sfifitlta, .Ni-ur alia ; -Mx'ially OtMtiaii Ni ui I'.i i. I. -fi ' ii- oriho a and all kilidlfd a!li--ii"!,-. It n" a vn 1 1 f.il .! I'loo! ptiril.i r. I i;J '"jior'ially iwlol tn Kivi tii.t, IV ri.t'io, Scrofula, fill il.itidil if l,mar;' ff lit"i and di--a- - f t!.- l.r.rr and Ktlf.. It i Hlipolufr-! v frrf frotn nil i: o .iu Sff" jtttarK" a Ifll'-.id if. ! in onn . lor , S'-ol- ' thrt-f da - an 1 a o-ilivf n: l iri from tix' to i ihn-fti tay I,v I. T. Whrti-I.oid A ' l.u.d Ni-W, N. C. r.rhY's rii.K -i rro-i r. i:y i piiaranf'il to fir- and .'. ...M- pation.or tuufy if'ii"!d, .Vi ci-nM jar l"iv. Sim id I'Ao -t imp- fir irrul.tr and f;i -amp'' to M u. : ; . Ki ) , K i-!-rt-l I'h.iii.i .ft, Lai, '!! r. I n .N pta! anvfil. J'r a;!' Iy l.:l-fjfti-i df'i'Jt- en r;. v. t f ff, :.'l at ?'' land Nf-k. N. C , ( I'.. I . Vhitfl.i-l A. Co. ) STIiKF.T liESTAl'RANT. Mil K'-i: Kt AM' I I vfi.NAl . I eat at HoblnnV. I Ioii't. XouriKhlng nieal.t at all hour. Shrie-fthop for making and rejairinn JOHN HOHKKSON, Main Sstrcet, Scotland Neck, N'. C. .Cwaaaw r -err J 7