IF YOU ARE A HUSTLER rouwiLL ADVERTISE TOOB Business, ISTO BUSINESS ; WIIAT3TEAMISTO Machinery, -rT GtElT PrO"ELLISQ PoWEtt On MMA WIT A TrvirTr 111 E. E .HILLIARD , Editor and Proprietor. EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $1.00. 0 E Ajjersl Do you like your thin, rough, short hair? Of course vou don't. Do you like thick, neavy, smootfi hair? Of course you do. Then why E "53 TS rwi ip m 1 1 6i 11 WiHUI not be pleased? Ayer's Hair Vigor makes beautiful heads or hair, that's the whole story. Sold for 60 years. I have used Ayer's Ilair Vinor for a lone .i:s:e. I. .s. nuieeii. a wonderful hair touio. rrs-.rn.s health to the hair and scalp, and, at the saiue t:n:e. j-rovinc a s;-!-mlid dressini;." Dn. J. V . TA-rcai, Madill. lnd. T. !.' a bottle. AM 'i--H!-"-wts. for J. C. ATEIt CO., IWeak Hair PARKER'S U&ID R A I BAM Clese. aad beautifies the ht .Never Fails to Beators ftmrJ Cuiea ca:p diseases & hair falling. J"?, and $1. VP at Druggists PROFESSIONAL. Hit. J. P. WIMBEBiiJS x , 11 OFFICE EKICK HOTEL, SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. A. A- ALBION DUNN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Scotland Neck, N. C. Practice wherever their services are reouired. W. 3IIX0X, Kefkacting Optician, Watch-Maker, Jewelek, Exgkaver, Scotland Neck, N. C. i. A. C. LIYEBMOK, Dentist. Otrics-Over JNew Whitbead Building f)iiieo hoars from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to 5 o'clock, p. m. SCOTLAND NJECK, N. C. DWABD L. TBAVIO, Attorney and Counselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. O. Money Loaned on Farm Lands. entail Strain Affected Gen eral Health. Doctor's Doses Weak ened Stomach. Dr. Miles' Nervine Cured Me. Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine brings rest and sweet sleep to the tired brain worn out with the cares and anxieties of the sick room. Read the following: '"I have always been healthy with the ex ception of a touch of rheumatism since my 2-e came on, up to the time of my husband's last illness some years ago. 1 assisted in cursing my husband for nearly three months when he departed this life and the mental strain I think caused my trouble. Aside from extreme nervousness my trouble com menced with sore throat and neuralgia. My physician gave me purgative doses which weakened me very much and my stomach f'r a time seemed inactive. Mental strain and the dormant condition of my stomach soo:i told upon my general health. I had h'-iJe appetite and was soon forced to stay in bed a greater part of the time. Within at week after the time I began taking Dr. -'I.ies' Restorative Nervine and Tonic I was aUut the house. I continued theiruse until completely cured. My faith in Dr. -Miles' Remedies has been strengthened by experience of other people, our daughter hav h ig used Restorative Nervine with splendid results in a case of paralysis and a friend to whom I sent a box of the Anti-Pain Pills re ports that she has been completely cured of i?uraii:ia bv their use. 1 know or a numDer Oi others whom yourmedicine has helped ina lare degree. I wish you continued success." -1 as. Frances Coffman, Dayton, Va. , All druggists sell and guarantee first bot i i Jr. Miles' Remedies. Send for free book rn Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address Lr. Maes Medical Co, Elkhart, lad. Livery B uggies H arness Whips E o b e s Mm. Ml It is a pleasure to take Dr. Dade's Little Liver Pills ana enjoy their tonic eirect upon the liver. Sold by E. T. Whitehead & Co., Scotland, Neck, and Lesgett'a drug store, Hobgood. VOL. XXI. New Series--Vol. Pmsiit's Sped Official Copy of the Speech of Mr. Roose velt Delivered in Raleigh on the 19th. I am glad here at the capital of Nort a Carolina to have a chance to geeet so many of the sons and daughters ot your great State. North Carolina's part in our history has ever been high and honorable. It was in North Carolina that toe Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence foreshadowed the course taken in a few short months by the representatives of the thir teen colonies assembled in Philadelphia. North Carolina can rightfully fay that she pointed us the wav which led to the formation o! the new Nation. In the Revolution she did many memorable deeds ; and the bat tle of King's Mountain marked the turning point of the Eevolutionary war in the South. But I congratulate you not only upon your past, but upon your present. I congratulate you upon the great industrial activity which, to mention but one thing, has placed this State second only to one other in the number of its textile factories. You are showing in practical fashion your realization of the truth that there must be a foundation of ma terial well-being in order that any community may make real and rapid progress. And I am happy to say that you are in addition showing in practical fashion your understanding of the great truth that this material well-being, though necessary as a foundation, can only be the foundation, and that upon it must be raised the superstructure of a higher life, if the Commonwealth is to stand as it should stand. More and more you are giving care and attention to education ; and education means the promo tion not only of industry, but of that good citizenship which rests upon in dividual rights and upon the recognition by each individual that he has duties as well as lights in other words, of that good citizenship which rests upon moral integrity and intellectual freedom. The man must be decent in hia homo life, his private life, of course ; but this is not by itself enough. The man who fails to be honest and brave both in his political franchise and in his private business coutrlbutes to political and social an archy. Self-government is not an easy thing. Only those communities are fit for it in which the average individual practices the virtue of self command, of self-restraint, of wise disinterestedness combined with wise 6elf-lriterest ; where the individual possesses common sense, honesty and courage. And now I want to say a word to you on a special subject in which all the country is concerned, but in which North Carolina has a special con cern. The preservation, of the forests is vital to the welfare of every coun try. China and the Mediterranean countries offer examples of the terrible effect of deforestation upon the physical geography, and therefore ultimate ly upon the national well-being, of the nations. One ot the most obvious duties which our generation owes to the generations that are to come after us is to preserve the existing forests. The prime difference between civi lized and uncivilized peoples is that in civilized peoples each generation works not only for its own well-being, but for the well-being of the genera tions yet unborn, and if we permit the natural resources of this land to be destroyed so that we band over our children a heritage diminished in value we thereby prove our unfitness to stand in the forefront of civi'ized peo ples. One of the greatest of these heritages is our forest wealth. It is the upper altitudes of the forested mountains that are most valuable to the Nation aa a whole, especially because of their effects upon the water sup ply. Neither State nor Nation can afford to turn these mountains over to the unrestrained greed of those who would exploit them at the expense of the future. We cannot afford to wait longer before assuming control, lu the interest of the public, ol these forests ; for if we do wait, the vested in terests of private parties in them may become so strongly intrenched that it may be a most serious as well as a most expensive task to oust them. If the Eastern States are wise, then from the Bay ot Fundy to the Gulf we will see, within the next few years a policy set on foot similar to that so fortunately carried out in the high Sierras of the West by the National Government. All the higher Appalachians should be reserved, either by the States or by the Nation. I much prefer that they should be put under National control, but it is a mare truism to say that they will not be re served either by the States or by the Nation unless you people oi the South show a strong interest therein. Such reserves would be a paying investment, not only in protection to many interests, but in dollars and cents to the Government. The Impor tance to the Southern people of protecting the Southern mountain forests is obvious. These forests are the best defense against the floods which, in the recent past, have, during a single twelvemonth, destroyed property officially valued at nearly twice what it would cost to buy the Southern Appalachian Reserve. The maintenance of your Southern water powers is not less Important than the prevention of floods, because if they are in jured your manufacturing interests will suffer with them. The perpetu ation of your forests, which have done so much for the South, should be one of the first objects of your public men. The two Senators from .North Carolina have taken an honorable part in this movement. . But I do not think that the people of North Carolina, or of any other Southern State, have quite grasped the importance of this movement to the commercial development and prosperity ot the South. The position ot honor in your parade to-day is held by the Confederate yeterans. They by their deeds reflect credit upon their descendants and upon all Americans, both because they did their duty in war and because they did their duty in peace. Now if the young men, their eons, will not only prove that they possess the same power ot fealty to an ideal, but will also show the efficiency in the ranks of industrial life that their fathers, the Confederate veterans, showel that they possessed in the ranks of war, the industrial future of this great and typically American Common wealth is assured. The extraordinary development of industrialism during the last half cen tury has been due to several causes, but above all to the revolution in the methods ol transportation and communication ; that is, to steam and to electricity, to the railroad and the telegraph. When this Government was founded commerce was carried on by essen tially the same instruments that had been in use not only among civilized, bat among barbarian nations, ever since history dawned ; that is, by Good advice to women. If you want a beautiful complexion, clear skin, bright eyes, red lips, good health, take Holhster's Rocky Mountain Tea. There is nothing like it. 35 cents, Tea or Tablete. K x. wnueneau . Co., Scotland Neck, Jno. N. Brown, Halitax. A library of books may be sayed from molding by sprinkling a few drop of oil of lavender about it. FULL OF TBAGIC MEANING are these lines from J. H. Simmons, of Casey, la. Think what might have re sulted from his terrible congh if he bad not taken the medicine about which he writes: "I had a fearful cough, that disturbed mv night s rest. I tried everything, but nothing wpukT relieve it, until I took Dr. King's New Dis covery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, which completely cured me Instantly relieves and permanently colt all throat and lung disease ; pre vents grip and pneumonia. At IS. x. k LU A Co. draite; oaia. 8. (7-1 8) at NEW CURE FOB CANCER. All surface cancers are now known to be curable, by Bucklen's Arnica Salve. Jas. Walters, of Duffield, Va., writes : "I had a cancer on my hp for years, that seemed incurable, till Buck len's Arnica Salve healed it, and now it is perfectly well." Guaranteed cure for cuts and burns. 25c at E. T. Whitehead & Co's drug store. Before her marriage a woman thinks all men are alike, but a few months after she is firmly convinced that at least one is worse. Chicago News. The original is always the best im itations are cheap. Bee's Laxative Honey and Tar is the original Laxative Cough Syrup. It is different from all btbers It is better than all others, oecause it cures all coughs and colds and leaves the system stronger than before. The letter B in red is on every package Sold by E. T. Whitehead A Co., Scotland Neck, Leggett'a drag lie Fair SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, wheeled vehicles drawn by animals, by pack trains, andj'bv sailing ships and rowboats. On land this meant that commerce went in slow, cumber ous, arid expensive fashion over highways open to all. Normally these highways could not compete with water transportation, if each was feasi ble between the connecting points. All this has been changed by the development of the railroads. Save on the ocean or on lakes so large as to be practically inland sea, transport by water has wholly lost its old position of superiority over transport by land, while instead of the old highways open to every one on the same terms, but of a very limited usefulness, we have new highways railroads which are owned by private corporations, and which are practically of unlimited, instead of limited, usefulness. The. old law? and old customs which were adequate and proper to meet the old conditions need radical re adjustment in v'Jer to meet these new conditions. The cardinal features in these changed conditions are, first, the fact that that the new highway, is, from the commercial standpoint, of infinitely greater importance in our industrial life than was the old highway, the wagon road ; and, second, that this new highway, the railway, is in the hands of private owners, whereas the old highway, the wagonroad, was in the hands of the State. The management of the new higway, the railroad, or rather of the intricate web of railroad lines which cover the country, is a task infinitely more difficult, more delicate and more important than the primitively easy task ol acquiring or keeping in order the old highway ; so that there is properly no analogy whatever between the two cases. I do not believe in govern ment ownership of anything which can with propriety be left in private hands, and in particular I should most strenuously object to government ownership of railroads. But I believe with equal firmness that it is out of the question for the Government not to exercise a supervisory and regula tory right over the railroads ; for it is vital to the well-being of the public that they should be managed in a spirit of fairness and justice toward all the public. Actual experience has shown that it is not possible to leave the railroads uncontrolled. Such a system, or rather such a lack of sys tem, is fertile in abuses of every kind, and puts a piemium upon un scrupulous and ruthless cunning In railroad management; for there are some big shippers and some railroad managers who are always willing to take unfair advantage ol their weaker competitors, and they thereby lorce other big shippers and railroad men who would like to do decently into sim ilar acts of wrong and injustice, under penalty of being left behind in the race for success. Government superyision is needed quite as much in the interest of the big shipper and of the railroad men who want to do right as in the interest of the small shipper and the consumer. Experience has shown that the present laws are defective and need amend ment. The effort to prohibit all restraint of competition, whether reason able or unreasonable, is unwise. What we need is to have some adminis trative body with ample power to forbid combination that is hurtful to the public, and to prevent favoritism to one individual at the expense of an other. In other words, we want an administrative body with the power to secure fair and just treatment as among all shippers who use the railroads ' and all shippers have a right to use them. We must not leave the en forcement of such a law merely to the Department of Justice ; it is out of the question for the law department of the Government to do what should be purely administrative work. .The Department ot Justice is to stand be hind and co-operate with the administrative body, but the administrative body itself must be given the power to do the work and then held to a strict accountability for the exercise of that power. The delays of the law are proverbial, and what we need in this matter is reasonable quickness cf action. The abuses of which we have a genuine right to complain take many shapes. Rebates are not now often given openly. But they can be given just as affectively in covert form ; and private cars, terminal tracks and the like must be brought under the control of the commission or administra tive body, which is to exercise superyision by the Government. But in my judgment the most important thing to do is to give to this administrative body power to make its findings effective, and this can be done only by giving it power, when complaint is made of a given rate as being unjust or unreasonable, if it finds the complaint proper, then itself to fix a maxi mum rate which it regards just and reasonable, this rate to go into effect practically at once, that is within a reasonable time, and to stay in effect, unless reversed by the courts. I earnestly hope that we shall see a law giving this power passed by Congress. Moreover, I hope that by law power will be conferred upon representatives of the Govornment capable of per forming the duty of public accountants carefully to examine into the books of the railroads, when so ordered by the Interstate Commerce Commission, which should itself have power to prescribe what books, and what books only, should be kept by railroads. If there is in the minds of the Com mission any suspicion that a certain railroad is in any shape or way giying rebates or behaving Improperly, I wish the Commission to have power as a matter of right, not as a matter of favor, to make a full and exhaustive in vestigation of the receipts and expenditures of the railroad, so that any violation or evasion of the law may be detected. This is not a revolutioi -ary proposal on my part, for I only wish the same power given in reference to railroads that is now exercised as a matter of course by the national bank examiners as regards national banks. My object in giving these additional powers to the administrative body representing the Government the In terstate Commission, or whatever it may be is primarily to secure a real and not a sham control to the Government representatives. The American people abhor a sham, and with this abhorrence 1 cordially sympathizs. Nothing is more injurious from every standpoint than a law which is mere ly sound and fury, merely pretense, and not capable of working out tan gible results.. I hope to see all the power that I think it ought to have granted to the Government ; but I would far rather see only some of it granted, but really granted, than see a pretense of granting all, in some shape that really amounts to nothing. It must be understood, as a matter of course, that if this power is grant ed it is to be exercised with wisdom and caution and self-restraint. The interstate Commerce Commissioner or other Government official who failed to protect a railroad that was in the right against any clamor, no matter bow violent, on the part oi the public, would be guilty of as gross a wrong as it be corruptly rendered an improper seryice to the railroad at the ex pense of the public. When I say a equare deal I mean a square deal ; ex actly as much a equare deal for the rich man as for the poor man ; but no more. Let each stand on his merits, receive what is due him, and be judged according to his deserts. To more he is not entitled, and less he shall not have. PLANS TO GET RICH are often frustrated by sudden break down, due to dyspepsia or constipation. Brace up and take Dr. King's New Life Pills. They take out the mater ials which are clogging your energies, and give you a r ew start. Cure head ache and dizziness too. At E. T. Whitehead & Co's drug store; 25c, guaranteed. Redd "What's this I hear about Tonneau?" Greene "He's been get ting manled." "Did he d) well?" "Sure 1 He married the repair man's daughter." Yonkera Statesman. ASK YOUB DEALER FOB ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE. A powder for the feet. It cures Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous. Aching, Sweating Feet, Corns and Bunions. At all draggiata and - shoe -stores, 25o THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1905. NO 44 One night is all the time necessary to prove that Pineules is the best rem edy in the world for backache and all kidney and bladder troubles. If you have rheumatism or any other blood disease a single .dose will give relief. Sold by E. T. Whitehead & Co., Scot land Neck, Leggett's drug store, Hob good. "Some men accidentally go to sleep in church," said Uncle Eben, "an a whole lot ain't got even dat excuse foh not payin' 'tent ion to de pastor's teaohin's." Washington Star. Backache is never known to thote persons who take an occasional dose cf Pineules. The value of the resin ob tained from the Pine tree has long been recognized in the treatment of diseases of the bladder and kidneys. One dose of Pineules wi'l give relief, and one bottle. will cure. ' Sold bv E. ana one dohw wju cure, doiu dv x. T-rWtehlpd Cot, Scotland Wee, WONDERS OF SINGLE ACRE What Kay Be Produced on a Bit of, Land Containing 160 Square Bods. You who think that it must be 50 acres or nothing, will be surprised to know that unless you are farming for the markets and need pasture and sta bles and grass land, you can almost live on the crop that an acre will yield you, writes Charles M. Skinner in Good Housekeeping, ft will require work and care and knowledge, for you can not spend your time at tennis and ex pect the weeds to stay out of your let tuce, or the smut to affect your neigh bor's corn and not yours, or the cater pillars to keep off from your pea vines, or things to stay green after a month of drouth. Now here, on this common acre for it is ordinary, being near the sea and hummocked with rock, the ledges cropping into sight just outside the fence the farmer raises no end of beans, peas, onions and like mat ters, and strawberries to eat, to give away and to sell. lie has patriarchal apple trees that yield bushels of fruit. His tomatoes supply his own family, various friends rejoice in them no less, while a few pecks of them go to town. His wife puts up so many fruits and vegetables in jars that she has to give them to relatives, and she seldom visits her son in the city without car rying a basket of fruit to him. There are bits of lawn and beds of posies and curtains of vine and what do you sup pose? After the acre has been worked to this degree, there is room for chick ens at least a hundred of them, with their runway extending the length of the place. GOOD ROADS. They Need Not Necessarily Be Con structed of Stone A Pres ent Danger. While good roads are of the utmost importance to the farmers themselves, good roads -do not necessarily spell hard roads, as many hard roads advo cates seem to imagine, says the Prai rie Farmer. A movement to better our highways does not necessarily mean that they are all to be surfaced with stone, but there are indications that a strict watch will be necessary to pre vent legislative bodies from putting such a construction on the movement when enacting laws in regard thereto. Many of our roads can be greatly improved over the'r ppect nditiorj by underdrainage and better grading. These are the first essentials where a hard surface is finally to be provided. Proper underdrainage is of the most vital importance during a rainy sea son. No road can remain good at such times without it. In many cases the work of grading up that is done during the summer is very largely, and some times entirely, annulled during the fol loing spring months because of a lack of underdrainage. Roads often be come impassable during the spring months that would remain in fairly good condition if proper drainage were provided. We can see no objection to federal aid for road improvement along these lines, or why it is not just as proper and important for the government to give assistance in rendering an impassable road passable and in rendering an al ready fairly good road superfine. A GOOD SACK HOLDER. How a Bit of "Lumber and a Few Nails May Be Made to Provide a Great Convenience. At threshing time and when cleaning the grain for seeding there is oftcu much trouble in not having a handy sack A noider convenient for use and an extra boy or man is re Quired to hold them Instead, says the Farm and Home. A good sack holder BACK HOLDER, mat nas me advan tage of portability can be made from a one-inch plank 15 inches wide and three feet six inches long and one piece 15 inches wide and two feet long. Nail these together at right angles and se curely brace as shown in the cut. Build a hopper with hooks around bottom to hold sack. Place wedge-shape- piece at top of long plank and firmly screw on the hopper. This will be found very convenient for use anywhere. Injury by Mice and Babbits. Valuable suggestions for treatment of trees which have been girdled by mice or rabbits are made by the Iowa experiment station. The growing layer which lies Just beneath the .bark will grow over if it fs kept moist by bank ing up with soil two or three inches above the girdled portion. The soil should be firmly tamped about the stem and not allowed to dry and crack open. Another, but more expensive method, is to wrap the wound with a broad strip of cloth coated with grafting wax. Such wounds should not be allowed to dry out, and where not too severe the tree may be saved. Farm and Home. Fertilizer for Plants. Ammonia is an excellent fertilizer. Add one tablespoonful to about three quarts of water and thoroughly water the plants with this once a week for a period of tbout six' weeks. You will no tice a marked change in growth and col or as well as In the bloom. The time for starting the hotbed will soon be nere. rne maraet gardener has his mind on it now. Every home garden should have a hotbed and a cold frame, or some other means fori starting early plants, unless they can be purchased near at hand. r . t L u j iin JTjrVMl T05TVT Skni our Advertisfment in row Correct Dress Iethod" high-graoe tailoring introduced by t- Kays it of Lntc-nat;, O., satisfies good drcrserc everywhere. All Garments Knao Strict!' to You.' M-.zuro at moderate prices, and domestic fabric 500 :;i cf forci-n .1 Wiil:!i Is choc:e. Ask your denier to show ycu c.:r line, n ;f not represented, write to us for ; articular . L. K. Ed AITS 3. C IH I) DICK & HOOKKi:, Manui- acti rkrs' A.i xts, SCOTLAND KI CK, - Jf. C. Meayou were engaged T!!I YEKS LACY RECE1VE3 A EOX OF CAtLY- iicv; often oats YDL'il Win- HCW RECEIVE A DCS CF THESE REPENT - AK3MAILYCJS ORDERS. AT 3H0fc7 IMTLSVALD, TJ E. T. Whitehead tV' Company Hale Agents Scotland Neck. X. ( The Lirgtift and I'.j-t rj nipped Plant in Ifcs FAuis CHARLES UILLSR W&L8H Quarrier and Manurar.-lurer TOMBS, GRAVESTONES of Every Description. Freight prcpnid on Jill ship ments. Safe delivery ii.u iinteod. Write for designs Mild H'i(0S. Iron )n Fencings for ftftSF11 etery and otheri:if'ls Come purposes n Si'ecialty. Petei:siu'k;, Va. J. Y, Savage, Agt at Scotland Nebk, 1ST. C. MANY CHILDREN AUR SICKLY. Mother Gray's: SA-cct Powders fir Children, used by Mother Gray, a nnr3 in Children's Home, New York, brojk colds in 21 houre, cure feyerishncs, headache, 6t.om.ich lrnullcj, tectMiv disorders, ani destroy worms. At r.U druggists. 2s. Sample mailed Ire;1. Address, Alien COhni-ited, Lc-I'oy, N.Y. All old-time couh syrups were do igned to treat throat, lung a:i:i Imm- (ehial affections v.!thr,;:t duo 1? .id Ur the stomach and bowels, hor.ee mot-t o! them produce coi s ipttion. Pee's, the original Lnx ;tnc JI nn-y r.vA Tut is the original Laxative C'nigli Syrup. Look for the letter iJ in ird tvfr package. Sn'd by K. T. Whitehead . Co., Scotland Neck, Lf'rgctt'rf drug store, Hol.ood. HOLLISTERo Rocky Mountain Tea Nu32'5 A Bny Medicine f;v Ea-7 Pscj'.o. T Brings Golden He&lta and lteiowtl Vi&r. A specific for Constirntion. IP'lis'Rtinn. T.ivi" nrul Kidney Troubles. l'iiiipl- :. Kc;-m t. iTiimr lilnoil. Bail Brnath, Slavish noiwl,. H. n i Ii ntil Hfiokaprtr;. It's Kool-y M-inntJiiri 1 .- i in t.'!. form, JI5 oonts ft bur. ;-Tniiii'i imuiu b Hou.isteh Drvo Company, M . lis-.:;, T.'is GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR GALL0W PEOPl P and CURE the gyJG3 WITH r. ftisig's Dlseerarv flow fgrC ONSIWPTION OUGHSand Price EOc&Sl.CO Frea Trial. o ureas ana uaicKest uare zor an ri THROAT and LUNG TltOUS- jr1 -A- 1 n . . i lajaa, or ja.ux4X hack. E23L!' TOniA. Btantks The Kind You Haw Always Bragg H I he Modern Method rytem or ti to You.' Msmura 3 g at modcrr.te prices. 500 r;i 5 cf tard-n 3 f .J J .:- r..i.- ii. " kf f AtMOET MOlMtS, 9

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