rr- ,o Advertising , Good Advertiser ,, what Steam is to rh u :cat propelling ,;.- ..ij-crgivrs results. MM Use theso column tor reault. An advertisement in this pa will reach a good class of people. : , , -Jifr aud Manager. Subscription Price il.00 Per Year. NUMBER 5i. 'Excelsior" is Our Motto. Hew Serif Vol. 11.--6-13 SCOTLAND HECK, N. C, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1908. y -sol .JJBpE Co ."V T AT T T If A W A II A If 1 UW W JK, A 1 JtL r L VvWwv as Well as Ulen r - Made Miserable by Mdr.ev Trouble. r-eys upon iho mind, dis ambition; beauty, !goi and cheerfulness soon disappear when the kid neys are out of order or diseased. 2 Kidney trouble ha; become so prevalent thai i: 1.3 not uncommon for a child to b. born If r-iTllctcd with weak kid - '' r.cys. if the child urin z.ez too often, if thj i'!tsh or if, when the chili hen it should be able to it is yet afflicted with --d upon it. the cause c; .ir.y trouble, and the first :-"--irds the treatment of cry.ns. T;.h unpler.sant ?. c;seed crniition of the .:cr and not to a habit ai ;e. '1 as men pre made mis oy and bladder trouble, he same great remedy, the immediate effect oi .5:-cn realized. It is sold ' tii-- TT.-nje Oi" Snvj.ip-TSon. in.luuinj many of the '.i:r,:al l"r.;er.s receiver :i In writing Dr. Kilme ;r.. N. Y., be sure an; iir.y r.ii-take. but re ' v;,.l!-.i Root. Dr !: -'t, t lie iV.i-.Iro- . Y - !! ev.TV 1.- . r!o. ; 1 ; i:KY AT LAW. thind Xer-k. X. C. .: '.ivr-s Ahvwherc. i.m DUNN ;; i V A s i) Of) UNSELOR AT Law, - -tlaivl Neck, X. 0. .- - wherever services ar required. J. P. WiMBERLEY, ;v-iri.vN and Surgeon, Scotland Neck, X. C. i'.v .,!J I"1 .-,- Frt. '. C. LSVERKON, DEXTIST. ( t;!i-.-o up st't'rs in White- li'-vl Buil-lintr. ( !: from o to i o'clock . 2 to "y oVlock. ; '"; ;.vi; Optician, '!:ik.T. Jcwelpr, En-j Lrrav-.;?4, i :vA X. rk. X. C. I V! CiirN'sKl AT J j A W . mi io Trust BuiMinj: , n CorxSEIiOR AT Law, ! f--l!f:ix, X. C. 1 on Farm Lands 'x-L'l'ANTK AflEXT. i , .I- v r1 7 1;, linderfakers' Supplies'. FP. and Complete Line. Coffins and Caskets Burial Robes, Etc. tezTz Service any Time .,'usey Company, v" 'T':nd X,nkt Xorth Caroli na ae KmnyS and Bladder Right It.-,.-! UA'.3 i -. i : .) t:.a ' Co V -s, i i YLi ni?ii2pJoiX I . ..L . j t r : rVf A'fi tTTniQJn wm$mm . y m mi ; VrUtO fhMm can happen be- fP fkm W&iS Christmas!". Kate rM4M Jfji-r m& WWffil Hd n. to herself WMA WW A:s.y m nd said it aloud, tzCy y SJy II ll l4 V V ,3 llft4fia lo iotcil that it 7 Tick tack, tick lac' . - - - v. v.- Three minutes to eight by the P.ursery clocK.' TicK tacK. ticK iocK. ""D'yuufinK. it's nearly tUfd-VC o'ctocK?' TicK tacK.. ticK tacK. "Supposing he's forgot us. JgcU" if: ijlLf. N5aX 'HZRE'S a lt!e old man vkh silvery hair T V.'itii twinklin" black eye aa a rosy red face, Au'onct a year he comes to our place, An' our little maid An' our little man Ez anxious to sec 'im soon's they can. But you better take keer, fer some folks say "At if y-f naughty he'll fly away, An' qicker'n you kin whale phew fec5 Open the door to the gracious Guet, IMM' - P Wi! I The tiabc of the manger bare, W .iiSgN ! i' tfljt 1 With burden of sorrow unconfessed, S !kJf fM 1 1 ifa ! p?W 1 And a nassiona.e love In His p.erced breast- 6 itjXM (! I Ah He humbly P!eads for a place of re.t- M$ "i, ,, S ll ' i i PC I With the night dew on His ha,r. Ik ! S Open the doo, to the , racers I gW.fgf t f l fef The pilgrim whose sun, sinking low m the west.! gmhmf(M ! 1 To the feces Saunt gainst your w.ndow pressed, ,,;f. fa yrf feO J'S ijlfMr Whose lives voo may bless to-day. I i; j?-ljjt,( b'Vi'Ah i myV i WMItmmmB Mm mm ( I i ft -fe TicK. tack., tick. tack.. ""Won't nwje be crcs? she comes bacX.f" TicK. tacK,. ticX. lock,. " "Did anyone hear Father Christmas KjxocKj" TicK tacK. ticK tacK. (It tjuas nurse tuho ccmc laith u loaded sacK?) E. M. B. - - zJ Away he's gone i'.p the chimney flue ! An' our little man Es tryin to be jest ez good's they can. But cf yer good an' "bey yer pa An' don't never cry an' vex yer ma 1 le'li fill yer stockin's with games an toy An" nuts an sweets an" all sorts o Joy. So cur little maid An' our little man Wants Sar.ty to come jes' as quick 's he can. - J S3 i ism ill fffi spi HAT a lot of things can happen be tween July and Christmas!" Kate fttrid H to herself nnd said it aloud, 16 irn:rtly that it startled her. Ior she was alone. Mother was off on an eleventh-hour and unsatisfactory wresile with the Christmas fchoppmg pt'oijJepi. Sis had chosen this g'ray afternoon to call On fi chyin. hom frrm college. So Kate had opportunity to uuala herself as miserable as she desired. It was now six weeks since Jack had called and six weeks is a long inifl when a man is 25 an-i a girl is 20, and each is very mucli JiitFvsteA in the other. Just how much Kate was interested was something unsus pected. Once Jack thought he knew, but now all he knew was that he did noc know. Wikii Jack suddenly disap peared from Kate's perspective no one" noticed his absence from the picture. To most people Jack Lad seemed a part of Kate's social background. Some ho had sen thfni together at firand Traverse had ac "arced him 16 the middle distance, lint of the fore ground no one thought. What happened in July was this: The 'Wilsons r'ee n more than firmly established in their cottage, which looks over Grand Traverse bay, than Jack appeared at the hotel, which looks over them both. That tra? net remir'Kab!e for nil had been members of that particular summer colony for years. Then, the day of the picnic on the Point, Jack and Kate found themselves sitting at the green fringe of the forest looking out over the blue expanse of the bay. A hundred yards in front of them VJrs "Wilson was gathering up the table cloth and things. There was a little sense of chill in the air a harbinger of autumn. And there was a change in the atmosphere between the two. The girl'ft lips were tremulous. The man wa3 agitated. and strangely tender and brutal in his speech. It will net interest you, he said, "but I am going down to-morrow. "But why so tragic? We will be back in town in a week ourselves and yet I do not feel so horribly blue about it." "Well, things down there are -dif ferent." "Yes. thev are different, but not un pleasant when you first get back to thorn. I shall miss the canna in tront of your hotel ; but I have no doubt the fall millinery on State street will be quite as gorgeous.' "Ycu are clever, and, like most clever people, a little heartless. You know how things are different down there. The people are different why, we are different ourselves. And it is just the difference of which you sn'ik the diuerence between these Mowers and flowers of silk and satin, between those lilies out there and lily ! stems of wire nnd paper." "You are a little unkind, Jack," she said, geutly. The soft reproof, more suggestive cf tears than anger, brought the story to his very lips. He wondered how he should tell it. Then an old schoolboy trick came back to him. He brought out his penknife. Beside them was a little spruce and, in the soft, flaky bark he carved a heart. Within its lines he dug deeply the initials of two people. The girl caught her breath and blushed a little, which are the proper and cus tomary things for a girl to do at such a time. Then he told her what was in his mind. It left her a little panic-stricken and she took the refuge her sisters al ways have taken she asked him to wait for his answer. In suctti a case there is but one thing for the man to do, and that is to wait until tomorrow. Hut when a man is terribly in earnest he takes people serious'y. "When I see this carviog of yours again, then we will talk about this, Jack if you still think this way." She thought she was putting him on a most proper probation. It was only a woman's reluctance to give up her freedom. But he took her at her word. Next day he vnt away. Hack in town aain.'at first he saw her often. His restraint she imagined was resentme.it. In November, a month of storias and droary skies, thejy quarreled, That was six weeks asP . . - - - , - - . tAm atii unsatisfactory wresile with the mt Jlh WW I1 All that six weeks he pondered the ' v,v4 vuv,y . V x I Mn4. 14- T-V.a. t M. it to idle auu uau. x iic 11 uc icsuivcu to end the suspense and still keep his word. 1 One day a young man, whom the na tives were satisfied wa3 most cer tainly insane, stepped off the train into a snowdrift. He wanted a team, a guide, a shovel and an ax. As he had money and determination he got them. This crazy young man drove four miles and waded through two mora. Rang the Door Bell Violently. On the Point, now bleak with winter, he stepped by a tiny spruce protruding from the snow and began digging as furiously as if he were hunting for buried treasure. A half dozen little trm he uncov ered. At last, with a boyish laugh, he laid the ax at the foot of one until the chips flew. That nijsht the crazy man who had come 300 miles tor i Christmas tree started homeward again. Christmas eve the man and the Christmas tree mounted the steps of the Wilson resi dence and rang the door bell violently. ' Well, what else Could ?he do? That night they went out into the Christm;! crowds together and bought the tin sel for the first Christmas tree Kate bf hod in years and the very best. (Copyright, 19U3, W riob A. Patterson.) IN THE REALM OF THE CZAR Ru3s!ahs Look Upon Chrictmas the Mo3t Sacrecf knit Mest Celebrated Holiday. as HRISTMAS is the most sa cred and most celebrated holittey in Russia. Contrary to the custom in nearly all other countries, Christinas there always comes on Sunday, and a continuous celebration is held until midnight on January 2. The Russian believes in devout re ligious services in honor of tho birth of Christ, and each day during lh3 Season each family, including all its members, attends church at least once. On Christmas morning th most important services take place. Each congregation marches solemnly to the nearest river, which is always frozen over, tho ice being sometimes as much as three feet thick. After a large hole has been chopped in the ice the priest dips his cross in the water and prayers are pronounced, after which the priest holds baptismal exercises. Having been blessed by the priest the water is considered to be holy and as fast as the people can file by the hole in the ice bottles of all sizes and descriptions are filled with the water. -This water is prized the most high ly of anything in the home, and bottles of it are sometimes found a century or more old. some lanaiirs secure large quantities of it and bathe in it at regular intervals during the year. There is one custom which many Americans would cherish in their own Christmas celebration, and especially the young people. It is that of kissing, for on Christmas day every one steals a kiss from whomsoever he meets. In some cases, and among the older peo ple, the hearty handshake is much used, but the younger element clings closely to the old style. Santa Claus is unknown to Russian children, but the "Babushka," an old woman witch, carrying a long stick and attired In the usual witch cos tume, visits the homes in every vil lage and city and -distributes greetings and then comes at night and leaves the gifts for both old and young. DAIRY DOTS AND DASHES. AmonVan f.irilK it ls not KJU UlUOt j.iiiv . necessary iu kccjj w.. ... ed quarters,- yet we often see small UAlij uuiuo v. - c- k-, c rm me- Tsrms. ana mc rows crowded close together. Tho nreiudice In favor of beefy cows is still a great obstacle in the wav of the progress of dairying. tt 1 easier to keep a big barnyard xiPiin than It is a small one. The best buttermakers say never to pour water on butter when washing It, but around it, then move the but ter in the water. hand separator is the motive which keeps the right hand fro?n knowing what the left hand is up to. J Tak The Commonwealth. IB THE V.'OMAX WTIQ MAKES GOOD, rnO Post-esses Many Things, But Mort of All, Common Sense. The woman who makes good must be blessed with strength and health and an ambition to learn and take advantage of every opportunity that comes her way. She must work with all her heart; play with all her heart; above all things avoiding indifference and the enemy to all progress apathy. She ir.ust elect the pleasure that will briii&Jier the greatest joy, choose the"wwk she is best fitted for. Ordinary hard luck never ruins people. It pnt3 them in a mood to learn a thing or two. Everybody makes mist's V With some it 13 a regular occupation; but to make a mistake an3 wail about it is to make two. Women often speak of their tal ents not being appreciated. A tal ent is next to worthless unless one has the ability to get down to hard, plain, every-day grind. Then, too, the woman who wins must learn to talk, but not to tell. There is an art the most consum mate art in appearing absolutely frank to the butcher, the baXsr and the family cat and yet not reveal any of one's business affairs. The woman who wins must he able to hold all and hear all, yet betray it by neither word nor look; by inju dicious defense no more than by overt treachery; by anger at a ma licious accusation no more than by a smile at an egregious mistake. To be able to do this requires a rare combination of tact and self-respect. One cannot just slide along in busi ness and win promotion and more salary, A knowledge of the Business is necessary to show results. QUEEN HAS UNIQUE KUXGAIjOW. Gothic Door of Alexandra's Resi dence Is Half of a Kowboat. London. Queen Alexandra has a unique bungalow. It is in Norfolk down by the beach of Snettisham, a quaint watering place of 15,000 peo ple. The beach, a favorite with the queen, is crov.de.i in the summer sea son with holidaymakers, tourists and others. The Gothic door or main en trance to the bungalow is nothing else than a row boat cut in half. The outer walls are cf bright yellow cast stones bi-ought from the Snettisuam QUEEN'S BUNGALOW. pitg ana the blocks are laid "In the rough with liuir.orous projections. There are two main rooms, one for the queen and another for the attendants, and between them is a small lobby, which also gives access to the offif-e. Around the queen's apartment, runs a five-foot high dado of dark stained vertical boaros ana above the cemented walls are en crusted with stones of various hues and mussel, cockle and other shells from the beach. Concerning Manners. One of the worst faults to which young children are liable consists in Interrupting the converratlon or elder people. Another tendency which' brings the blush of shame to a mother's brow Is that wnirn children have of contradicting the statements of their elders. This is bo strong a habit with many ccnaren hat tt is onlv necessary for a raoiner to make a statement involving statis tics to elicit the ever ready on, no. it was only three times," or "only two miles." Nor is it confined to young children, but is quite as com mon, and much more shameful among grown boys and girls. If taken in time, this should not be difficult to correct, but the first step must be on the part of the parent, who must take the greatest care to be truthful. She Taught a King. Miss Mary Woodman of Woburn, Mass., was Instructor to the late King Carlos of Portugal, In English, his tory and painting. 8ne has in ber of a number of mementos eiven her bv the family and when she ; left Portugal she was promiseu a. n- tie of nobdity Bhould she ever re turn. - A Common Nutnlck. A common nutpick is a handy ar ticle to have in ready reach In tho kitchen, with which to .take caps of! milk and cream bottles, to silt open the paper around tea and othei packaged goods, and to open crackej boxes. TVip Australian crum trees erews to a height of 415 feet. '35&i 0000000000000M0000000000 Xmas Goods! A fresh and fine assort ment of all kinds Apples, Oranges, Malaga Grapes, Figs, Raisins, Nuts, etc. Fresh Oysters Daily Fine Pork Sausage, Gro ceries of all kinds, Choice Candies, Coca-Cola, Pepsi Cola, Ginger Ale, etc., in bottles. MRS. THOS. F. GRAY Old Main S. Hotel Guiiding. 0KKWKKXO0OOK0K Largest and Best Equipped Plant in the State. Chas. Miller Walsh Quarrier and Manufacturer MONUMENTS, Tomhs anrl firavpsrnnp of Every Description. .ei;-lit prepaid on all ship i: ents. fSafe delivery jnar on teed. Vt'riu' for design and prices. Iron Fencings to. . . Cemetery and otu,r-ti-i:?..r purposes a. Spkciauty. Petersburg, Va J. Y. SAVAGE, Agent, Scotland Neck North Carolina WHEN IN TARB0R0 iZfZi Whether on hu.-t-SA-tSS ness or pleasure, t64l vou should mal.r- vou should mar.? it a uoint to call i at our Studio and it ' SP! OLil' I itK'SL V-Tl- w - - I in tr-o ot ; Arl S. R. Alley, M-iiii St.. U-xu: Puil-Iina, Tat Ixno, N. t . Everything in PhotPifrapliy We Keep on Hand All Kinds all ihz Time. Also Complete Undertakers' Outfit. Hearse Service any Time Day or night wo aro ready to accommodate our friends and the Public Generally. M. Hoffman & Bro. Scotland Neck North Carolina Kodol For indigestion Uur uuarantee coupon If, after using a ft.oo noula of KeUol, jroa can honestly tr it bat not benafitad yoo. we will refund your money. Try Kodol today on tbU guarantee. Fill out and aiga the follow ing, pretest It to tho dealer at the time of purchase. If it lalla to satisfy you return tho bottle to tbe dealer from whom you bought it, oad wo wlil refuail your money. T " Stat Sign here - lint Thle Oat- Digests WhatYouEat And Makes the Stomach Sweet B. C DeWITT Ac CO., Chlcaso, lib Sld by E. T. Whitehead Co. . ff t;. ::y' jf while yiU .-!: LZ. Buna i 2' I-