Iinr a"" ! - mm - r XV P. - ' I i-sK-Li : - - -- - . - ?!!? mmmmmmimmmm If '& . " " fl 0 B n ft s iar--- scst Circulation OF ANY junty Newspaper. Mi for and Proprietor, 'ill. iONWE JOj&u,jLf jiha. The Largest Circulation OF ANY Halifax County Newspaper. 'Excelsior" is Our Motto. Subscription Price $1.00 Per Year SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1912. j of Many : deles Beatlis. .-.ic prevnir'ug in this ,trou3l?ecause so decep- rr-: :. Many sudden deaths are caused l.-y it heart dis- rpcumonia, 1 t r . -i-'Ji laiiure or Jiroplcxvarecflen the rcsu'it cf kid ney disease. If ku.r.cy trouble ic - ' Z r.l lowed to advance - thekidney-poiscn-.-. cd blood will at- caieicg catarrh of or sediment in ...-he. back ache, lame : ..-.iMC-r.siiess, rervous- . themselves break v .-.y cell by cell. . .; t-!:nost always result t of the kidneys and :r..t organ is obtained . r treatment of Ihekid--c- corrects inability to : : ling pain in passing it, l unpleasant necessity I to go often through i up ruany times during .''. and immediate effect : e g reat kidney remedy ... !-;:..!!!us the highest be ' i! !c health restoring 1 will convince anyone. ; l-w.-ant to take and is :'.:t:". in fifty-cent and .:L-r. You imv have a .-i hock that tells all e hy mail. Address, . I'.inghamtoi!, N. Y. vu reading this gcii - y.-.-y-r. Don't make ember the name, : t lot a dealer sell ' uv of Swamp-Root j iiiv27ipointed. Statox, -ef-Law, ,ck, N. C. r his sei vices are KEHUKEE BAPTIST ASSOCIATION A Brief Sketch of Hs History by Elder Silvester HasselL S 3)UNN .'vcr ; 'never his services wire.:!. I ;UXX nse lor at Law , N. C. hi j services are roved security. - - v-i V). KilcWn. M.D. .- TV i 21. SDN, 0. i 'J "UXT, n. c. Neck, N. C, on of each month t !!;' diseases of Throat, and fit iv- Comniercia The 147th session of the Kehukee Primitive Baptist Association (the oldest in the world) is appointed to be held Saturday, Sunday and Mon day, October 5th, 6th and 7th, with the church in Norfolk, Va,, near the fair ground, on the trolly line to Ocean View. This Association was formed 1865 at Kehukee church (so called from Kehukee Creek, a tributary of the Roanoke river), in Halifax coun ty, N. C, and the present meeting house is a mile from Scotland Neck, N. C. It consists of 42 churches, of which 40 are in north-eastern North Carolina, and two in Virginia, oiie in Morfolk, and the other, South Quay, five miles from Franklin. There are about 20 ministers and 1,500 members. In 1827 the Kehukee Association declared non-fellowship for all mod ern, money-based, so-called benevo lant societies as contrary to thp teaching and practice of Christ and His apostles; and so do all the 269 Primitive Baptist Associations in the United States, with their 1,500 min isters, 3,000 churches, and 102,000 members, who are scattered from Alaine to Texas, and from Florida to Washington. As in the apostolic churches, their ministers are not salaried, but are voluntarily aided by their members. They have no Sunday schools, but rear their children ia the nurture and admonition of the Lord and en courage them to read the Scriptures. They have no Theological Seminaries, but those who feel divinely called to the miniatry delight in studying the Word of God, and many of them are e expounders of the Scriptures. iThey have no missionary societies. but their ministers travel on preach -hag tours over many counties and States, without any promise of their expenses being paid, gomg as they icet lurected oy the Spirit of God and us the way is opened in Ills providence. In their views of salvation they " " I 111. Si I - - - iii -mi i, i 1 1 NUMBER 40. Beth Are RigM. Theodore Roosevelt, candidate for ; a third term as president, said re- cently: "Taft now represents the bosses, and the Republican party is j composed of them and the vest ed in- ; terests of the country." j And President Taft said 1 "Roo:.- Makes a great difference ia mo&t ntmon. They are troubled with "nerves' Ihcy suffer from backache, hec'acbe, slsepIcvsriesE, u sensation of irritability or twjfchintf, hot ilashss, dizzy sps!Utor many other sm-toms of female weakness. The local disorder anil inflammation should bs treated with Dr. Pierce's Lotion TaLIets and the irregularity and weakness of tlz female system corrected sad ntrenj-thened with Dr. "ierce's Favorite Prescription. The strain upon the young vvcsjTian or the woman of middle r.sjc nnon the nerve and blood forming structures msy be too great for her strength. This is the time to take this restorative tonia or.d strength-giving nervine and regulator. For over forty years sold by druggists in ls THE FOLLOWERS. Winner in the Pittsburg Post. Professor Paschal, Coming Back at Maxwell, Repeats Charge Against Simmons. c 'TI I j X . -t.ilrs in Whitf. ! D'liidinjr. ' to 1 o'clock LT;! T3 MOTHER AM CHILD ."!.-'-, Svrt'p has been .. -.l.v MII.UONS ot r ' - ::i:.u!i:n wiiiLB ' .'.T srccEss. it -t;-:ns the gl'ms, :- t ". :..' I) COLIC, and :: . I'J A. It is al- - .-!! : fur "Mrs. :.-. I fclic U'J other 2 t i E9tor9 Gray ii- - "1nn-,Ttn- 6 j -ti - 0, A u T T . - I 'i t Mi !;- .. 1 ' 20 Automobile why ' sell the best. COMPANY, :;. c. - i j n si s?ir or-L, -.. . j (si t-LiJ v-J u;3 .'.'- w rri.wvy k) are strongly Calvinistic or predesti narian; but they believe that all hu man beings are accountable for their thoug ;t-i and words and deeds and that s&lvation is perfectly free to all who heartily "desire it. They hold uncompromisingly to the full verbal inspiration of the Old and New Testament Scriptures. No man or association or convention has any authority over any church. With them immersion is the only baptism and is a prerequisite to, the Lord's Supper. These ordinances are not .-racranients but are only symbols of the believer's union with Christ. They believe in truthfulness, hon esty, temperance, and morality, grid exclude members who do not prac tice these virtues; and they ins;st upon a spiritual and heart religion. Individuals among them publish fif teen religious periodicals. Kehukee church was formed in 1742, and Elder Andrew Johnson Moore, of Whitakers, N. C., ha3 been their beloved pastor since 1879. He was a captain-in the Confederate army and was wounded at Fort Wagner, in Charleston harbor, and has been a teacher and farmer tince the Civil War. Europe's Vast Armed Force, ft wculd take nice and a half days for the armies of Europe to pass a given point, marching five abreast, 15 inches apart, at an eight-mile gait. Multitudes of People take SCOTTS EMULSION regu larly to repair wasted vitality and enrich the blood to withstand winter colds and exposure. It contains the highest grade of cod liver oil, medically perfected; it is a cream-like food-medicine scrupulously pure and healthful without drug or stimulant, in dorsed and advocated by medical authorities everywhere. SCOTTS EMULSION drives out colds-nourishes the membranes of the throat and lungs and keeps them healthy. Ncthins equals SpPT:. EMULSION for lung d fro"Cn j - tnakn-ior. tSb.t chests anJ all palf.ic.iary trouhiz3. Enually rood for infants, chiWren or Suits, but you must have SS&TVSm In Mr. A. J. Maxwell's reply in The News and Observer of Sdptem- ber 3rd, he quotes the following from my letter: "Mr. Gorman in his votes on the tariff voted just as Mr. Al drich desired on a few impor tant schedules. So on the Pay-ne-Aldrich bill did Mr. Simmons. The significant thing is that Mr. Simmons' votes were in accord ance with the plan of Mr. Aid rich." And then says: "Professor Paschall knows, or ought to know that that is a slander. He know., or ought to khow that Senator Simmons op posed absolutely the Payne-A Id rich bill." Aa to Senator ommions 'oiiposintr absolutely the Payne-Aldrich bill," I will let Joe Daniels, in an editorial in The News and Observer, of June 16, 1909, answer, to-wit: "The Democrats will, of course, vote aga'nst the tariif bill. All Aldrich needed of pro tectionist Democratic senators was to help him fix a few sche dules. That done, he can whip enough Republicans in line to pass the bill without any Demo cratic votes." I repeat the charge that "Mr. Simmons' votes were in accordance with the plans of Mr. Aldrich," and that on a "few important schedules of the Payne-Aldrich bill Mr. Sim mons voted just as Mr. Aldrich de sired. Now for the proo: : He spoke and voted with Aldrich against the Democratic platform on lumber. Cong. Record, April 28, 1909. He vjted with protection on buildin ich to retain material, car penter's tools, lime, cement, etc Cong. Record, May 24, 1909. He voted with Aldrich for protect ion on iron or 13, 1909. He voted with Aldrich for protec tion on coal. Cong. Record, June 23, 1909. He voted with Aldrich for protec tion on quebracho. Cong. Record, May 20, 1909. To further sustain the charge. I desire to quote from the editorials of some of the leading Democratic journals of the country. The Indianapolis News, the great est Democratic paper in the North west, reproduced in The News and Observer, March 11, 1911, said: "Lorimer was elected by the help of Democratic votes. But for Dem ocratic votes he would, yesterday, have been excluded from the Senate, and the Democratic senators who supported him co-operated most cor dially with Senator Aldrich in the manufacture of the Payne-Aldrieh law." Simmons voted for Lorimer. This paper is supporting Woodrow Wilson for president. Did it slander Senator Simmons. Again in another editorial, the In dianapolis News, (reproduced in The News and Observer, juiy u, x,, in speaking of Senator Bailey and others who betrayed the party (mcntioningSimmonsby name) said: "However, the people are not de ceived They have noticed that when Aldrich wanted Democratic votes he had no difficulty in getting them. It would not be easy for such men as Bailey, Simmons. Daniel and others to square themselves, etc. And it is supporting Woodrow Wilson for president! Did it slander Senator Simmons? In an editorial of October 15 1910, xl . r: T lorn- ;r,arhing Senator onm - - the most influential Democratic pa per in the Southwest, said: "Senator Simmons has been one of Senator Aldrich's ready rescuers, one of the most dependable in help ing the leader of reactionary Repub licanism out of his troubles." In same issue, it referred to Sena tor Simmons as "one of the South erners who framed themselves out to Senator Aldrich." This paper is supporting Woodrow Wiison for President. Did it slander Senator Simmons? Harper's Weekly, in a column edi torial, condemning Senator Sim mons' Democracy, April 1, 1911, said: , "We have not forgotten his speeches and his vote- during the iastge of the Payne-Aldrich bill through the Senate. Simmons did not then shine as an opponent to pro tection. On the contrary, he stood distinctly for the idea that Demo cratic Senators ought to get what they could for their particular con- sutuenctes. tie belonged to the group of Democratic Senators who by acting c n that idea really played into Aldrich's hands and enabled the protectionist leader to get what he wanted." Wilson for President. Did it slander Senator Simmons? Further speaking of Senator Sim mons' insincerity of tariff reform: "For their guidance and warning they (the sincere tariff reformers) hoze the knowledge of how tariff re- evelt is not a Republican, but repre sents a one-man party whose chief : advisers are the harvest, and steel trust magnates." I Senator LaFollette, of Wisconsin, ! also a Republican, says both Taft ! and Roosevelt are telling the truth j about each other. And LaFollette ; has had enough experience with! both Messrs. Taft and Roosevelt to ! know what he is talking about. j The answer is: Win with Wilscn! j Tavenner. i lor woman's peculiar weaknesses nnd '!i'tressi".j eilmcnls. The one remaly so perfect Elss. Scott. in compoMtion nnd so sf,ou ia curative effects as to warrant its makers in priiU;n; i's evrry ingredient on its outsida wrapper. Thf cne rc.M'i'y which chsolutely contains neither alcohol ncr Injurious or hubit-fcrn-i i?; drugs. Following !?Ier selected it rcriedom from a large number 1 c ! similar ones and cited merely to illustrate these remarks t ":a t!;s -winter oC VXS, I bccirna rrrrritly rra ciow-n and lnfrular wr't'-s JA::z. Hknry Scovr. of S-.van Cro-k, Mich.. Iiuuto 1. Cox 49. I r'.v.vi- but Kurf'y grew won?, fir.'t, t last, solved to apply to t!w daa Vrs f-jr Ik! i. T'r.e doctor raid I had i.ifU'.rni.iulion, enlargement ami lacar t:cn. I ;n d lvon v.vor.s and cot tin better. Th'a doctor aald I voulJ liavo ic- an twrxtvm, ln't thnt I vouul not listen. My h ma te Prescription. TThon acrcxii the floor, but aftar mininar. o I drooied tka doctor ami took Dr. I'it rco's f 'vtvorile IVesciiption. Only lor it I think ouid have lxHn di i-J-I ree"y believe it saved icy lira. I zeal Letts - BOW than ia twenty j'.iu:." v- 'VAx'kVvVX"!? liml DurrfriisM t-.-.o loltics of "or. l-kro's FavoK V--aVVvvM 1 starter, to tr.Ke thU ru.itily 1 eouM not walk ac r5VA'AY.V had tak&n tiuw 1-ittVi I c'i:d I'eel rnynelf mi form was wrecked in the last Demo cratic administration. So has the country that knowledge, and neither the party nor the country can afford to waste any consideration or any patience on the kind of Democracy which now again threatens to defeat Cong. Record, May j the best and greatest of all under takings." And it is still supporting Wood row Wilson for President. Is it still slandering Senator Sim mons: Joe Daniels, in a two column edi torial impeaching Senator Simmons' Democracy, in News and Observer, July IS, 1911, said: "No Democrat could consistently make the Republican protectionist speech (referring to his lumber tariff speech) which Mr. Simmons made at that time. During the consideration of the Payne-Aldrich tariff bill, Mr. Simmons voted so often with Mr. Aldrich for the pro tection schedules that northern Dem ocratic and independent papers re ferred to him as a protectionist." Joe Daniels is supporting Wood row Wilson for President. Did he slander Senator Simmons? Strange that neither these nor any other Democratic paper of the coun try eyer thus of Vance, Ransom, Jarvis or Overman. G. W. Paschal. Wake Forest, N. C. tas) News, Saved by His Wife. She's a wise woman who knows what to do when her husband's life is in danger, but Mr. R. J. Flint, Braintree, Vt., is of that kind. "She insisted on my using Dr. King's New Discovery," writes Mr. F. "'for a dreadful cough, when I was so weak my friends all thought I had only a short time to" live, and it completely cured me." A quick cure for coughs and colds, it's the most safe and re liable medicine for many throats and lung troubles grip, bronchitis, croup, whooping cough, quinsy, tonsilitis. hemorrhages. A trial will convince yoa. 50c. and $1.00. Guar- j anteed by E. T. Whitehead Co. I Mars in razes TO BE DISTRIBUTED BY i HE IN ITS Great P e Voting WEALTH Contest. o w e Ci3 0 F. ' .---Ti.-,.- 4 -a- .,,f-.r-.' . .. . --7' .-,l.r.i? i i JI Lt'. H CD ssaa aaaa e Eules and Regulations Governing The ontest. Rewewa's, 500 votes, $1.00. Renewals, more than one year, 600 voles, $1.00. Pack subscription?, 400 votes, 1. AN?rour;cE:-TENTT. This Pi ano and Popular Ladies' Voting Contest will be rondvnied fairly and honestly on business princi ples strictly, with jnsiiee antl;1.00. fairnps? to a'l concerned. itn ylVa ve the above principles this will be;-. 2. PRIZES. -The capital prize ' 10 r.m .iW inon' will be an Obermever & Sons ' . , . Piano. Alio other valuable prizes f. Twea y years new subsenp In thP nmnnnt. oP mnv doHniM. i tions, oO.OOO Votes, 20.00. which are announced herewith rs new subscriptions, new subscriptions, $3.00. G. Instructions. Results as : will run a 2."-vote coupon which cm be vcted free for any lady i contestant. ; Contest to run not less than 00 ; days. Closing of contest will be j announced 2o lays in advance of closing. The right to postpone date of closing is reserved if suf ficient cause should occur. The contest shall close on a day which will he announced later. Ten days prior to closing contest, the judges will carefully lock or 3. Candidates. Young ladies ' to standing ot votes will he issued seat uaiiot oox ana iaxe 10 one oi in this and adiolninjr tovno are ! after 30 days. No votes accepted ! the banks, where the same will el tht beautiful $400 Obermevev & Sons be allowed to become a candidate close of contest, when the judges igible to enter this contest, and at ies man regular price oi paper in a pi':c w.ie vutmK wu uc ; party receiving the largest ' concerned m this contest, jno ame aunng uus.ness nours anu i i """N i - " . i ,.,. ...:t, iU: . .,,;)! ,xr rA o v-ml r- of ninrVif until Piano, and other premiums vi!i be distributed in accordance with the contestants' standing at the final count. 4. Tie in Votes. Should nny of the contestants tie in vote?, The Publishers Music Company will award a similar prize according to standings at tne final count. in tins contest or worn lor con- wi:i.iaKe rnarjte nu ctuih 8mn tcs-tnnts. and announce the young laiies Votes after being voted cannot ' v.inning in their turn, be trar.sivrred to another. Re ; The last ten days all voting: sure you know vvhi'.m you are go- must be done in a sealed box at in.g to vote for before coming to the bank. If you do not wish the ballot box. as the editor or anyone to know whom you are anyone will positively not fcive voting for, place your cash sub- you you any mtorn.ation on tne scnption, togetner wnn your 5. Votes Classed. Votes will : subject. The keys to the ballot coupons, in a sealed envelope, be issued in the following dc-nom- box snail be in the possession of which will be furnished you, and inations: the awarding committee during put same in ballot box. This will New subscriptions, 600 votes, the contest. ' give every one a fair and square $1.00. For the first 30 days the paper deal. Scotland Neck Merchants who will Contribute Valuable Prizes. Prize -Two Washstand Sets (White, with Gilt Band). Value, $10.00 Donated by HARDY HARDWARE COMPANY. "The Hardware Hustlers." We give a 2o-Vote Coupon with e?ch $1.00 Cash Purchase. Ask for Coupon. Prize-Chifforobe. Value, $20.00 Donated by SCOTLAND NECK FURNITURE COMPANY, Furniture an 1 House Furnishings. We give a 23-Vote Coupon wi!h ea-h $1.00 Cash Purchase. Ask for Coupon Prize Set Keen Kutter Silver Plated Knives and Forks. Value, $5.00 Donated by JOSEY HARDWARE COMPANY. Pioneer Hardware Dealers. We give a 25-Vote Coupon with each $1.00 Cash Purchase. Ask for Coupon. Prize Gold Ring. Value, $10.00 Donated by E. T. WHITEHEAD COMPANY. Drug;jriot3 and Jewelers. We give a 25-Vote Coupon with each $1.00 Cash Purchase. Ask for Coupon. Prize Announced Later. V Donated by . BURROUG HS-PITTM AN-PIT I'M A N COM PA NY, Everybody's Store, We give a 25-Vote Coupon with each $1.00 Cash Purchase. Ask for Coupon. Value, $2.50 e 515.00 j Prize Announced Later. j Donated by L. WAX MAN. Clothing and Dry Good. We give a 25-Vote Coupon with each $1.00 Cash Purchase. Ask for Coupon. Prize Announced Later. Value, $2 50 Donated by J. W. ALLSBROOK, - The House for Good Groceries. We give a 25-Vote Coupon with each $1.00 Cash Purchase. Ask for Coupon. Prize Announced Later. Value, $ . Donated by EDWARDS & COMPANY, General Merchandise. Wo give a 25-Vote Coupon with each $1.00 Cash Purchase. Ask for Coupon. j , "l ' i , i w 1 1 ' i s ocracy, the Dallas

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