. "as'' . h whs est circulation OF ANY , 3.jfav cstnty Newspaper. 4 At:-:Y, Editor and Proprtetc r. 'Excelsior" is Our Motto. Subscription Price $1.00 Per Year y'OL SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1913. NUMBER 48. USE Commonwealth. Bia ' ?3 ' . . - . StstJjecf to VAJrjy Troubles tivii. I have been a vi:h severe pains v:.h on the verge of i-'d resulting i'rorr. :v! other Ci.miplie.a .: mine rccom- TV ;):' ii.se troubles. T 5. - . A.. I. i i i i ' - i;;e l i)fa:i ua- o l- hpirrm In im- i had t'.hed the nrst j '-iiiiuoc'' i' ? use until I . h-' and con-j r jvo ur.lu I was com i. I mi h ippy to say wll ?-nv wo nan on v 1 bv?n fr flu p.st :ir. :"o Dr. Kilmer's in i I cheer faViy re a'.t whj suffer ii on t i r. u 1 1 v '.'.,v- i ri'lv vours. " nks. alVa baxter, Vl.wS' Orange, Texas .viYd and ?wern to before u this Joiix J. Ball, Notary Public. 7ws.. 5vip-!Xoct Will Do For Yon. m Hi- Kilmer & Company, 'anitoru N. Y., for a sample -V- ir will convince any one. , a's.) receive a booklet of c" n-mation, telling a.u t)v k'-ineys ana Diaauer. vr 'iriT, !e sure and mention ,"'': -- fth. Regular fifty- ?ize bottles for A. N. DUBOIS -V.c io a Textile and Office and (.Hijoriuory 3'.!S N. 9th St., V:i.v.igtox. N C. ,n!ilv$i anything, particular P-n iib.err-. Cotton Seed i'rtv.n Soe.l 0.1 Products, Well .":V?-.'.-i":x and Mineral Water, .n'.v'l F I Products, Dairy Fro a Urir.e aivl Earth, etc. Vmr.s h:-al'i have their Weli ;.v-r.iine.l at least once, a year, ; -i ": !:::;t p-irt of their land that n;..-r cr-'ps, analyzed to find :ni?:in?, so it can be added their i.itid to make it good and :-v'ivj. .1- niv p-ice of analysis, which 1 " 1 " ? - ? "3 !!.'.5r? BALSAM i"i lviV.:i.J Ice bcSa r .v; . !;--.Tir:r-,t eiot'i. ;:y-nsT. jij, . :.; r.ji stairs in "White hi- P.nildirg. HO-t-; frop 0 tO 1 O'clock an i . to 5 o'clock. u. A. I. Morgan Physician nnd Surgeon- Scotland Neck, N. C. 1:3 in the imi 'diner formerly t i Ky Dr. J. P. Wirn'oerley. 'has. I Staton, itforRey-at-Law, Seo'Jasid Xtck, N. C. iees '.vh-rever his services are required. '""ill a. A orn.cy an1 Counselor ai Law Scotland Neck, N. C. etices '.vherever his service.? are required. i 8. L. SAVAtiE OF ROCKY MOUNT, N. C. j lkia Scotland Neck, N. C, on , .-a Wednesday of each month :?uwi to irsat the diseases of - s.Ear, Nose, Throat, and fit 1 O. f. smith "tys: m asid Surgeon : y' ;n 1 n" Crescent Pharmacy, Inc bcotl?ma Neck. N. C. . ft S ,1 ii- ?ra K v . . tr " . UMnv-v S I -: ' ' 1 later to ,-,;:i,'T-i'.'!i, N. Y. 9'ti t -;'u,iJ iafi . , ,CI1i-cnEs-TER s A I , tested with B!ueCt? f kit ''V-LR. for twenty-five III h, . L .Safest. Atnl RrHahle. gf ' By STACV E. BAKER NCUi is i jc i::tr cjij a:iu fct a So sti ong thai they heed not the call Of the little brown house and the plea Of the saya that summons them all To the board festal board! They may roam To the en23 of the world, but the nay, Ee It ever so far, must lead home On this day! Thoush tha fingers that beckon are old, Yet the one who Is Jousting afield Must come hurrying back to the fold And lay by his lance and his shield fcor think of thr tnsirnfy and frav, - - ForgH ti.?a isii- sni-harit to rcdcn, And offer up thanks for a day In his home. Shun the incu'3itive person, for i Hp is ever a leaky vessel," is a say j in ? of Horace. The exquisitive per- son probably wants to know your j private affairs or something which you wir.h kept, secret, only for the purpose of relatinp; it to romeone eh c and posing as a person of im portance because of knowing- some thing not generally known, Inquisitive persons eeldcm have scruples about divulging -secrets they are able to get hold of. The Sranish have a saying: "Tell your friend a lie and if he keep it a se cret, tell him the truth." It is bet ter to keep your own secre ts or dis close them only to long known and tried friends cn whom you are sure ycu may rely. Sidney has said, "What is mine, even to my life, is hers I love, but the secret of my friend is not mine." When anyone confides his secrets to vou keen them sacredly. Reserve, although it may be carried to ex-j quired to give the trees a rest period cess is a good quality to cultivate. ', in topping them for gum. The size. O.eWldom prospers in business who ; number, and location of the incisions al'ows everyone to know all about : are regulated by law. In the Uni , ted Seates similar regulations are in nisattaiio. , . a Trouble is often made by telling , force in the tapping of pines for what you know or think you know j turpentine on the Florida national about a neighbor's affairs. It is ; forest. wiser to keep a firm control of your j sr-pech The fact that someone Hands It Back to Oliver, wlnts earnestly to know should set Waghington "o.-The long AppointnieDis Agreed On. . Mr. Simmons announced that he had Ssnators Simmons and Overman (jgcided to refuse to allow John T. have recommended the men who are Oliver to be named for the job. Sen to be district attorneys and mar- ator gjmmons said he had read all sbals in North Carolina as soon as the editorials in the Reidsville Rri vacancies are declared. Francis D. view whjch is edited by Oliver, and Winston, of Windsor, and W. C. ha(1 concluded that he could not al Hammer, of Asheboro, will be dis- ow a man to be confirmed by the trict attorneys, and W. T. Dortcb, Senate who had published articles of Goldsboro, and Charles A. Webb, reflecting upon his democracy, if not of Ashevil'e will be mamials.-Hen- his integrity, such as those written ism demands the It is doubly important and nothing in the world is so needful as Scott's Emuls.on, good cheer and ! WmZr-X rz? sunshine. aj YOUR SiliUui in feast. e bards to the bird at tb o they tell of the pilgrim come eastT Do they tell of the pilgrim come weatt With the wanderlust in him to roam. But who hears and who hears to obey The call of his heart cryins, "Horn On this day!" Though for gormands and gluttons thy sing, Ail the troubadours best In our land. 1 shall strive in my verses to bring A rouse to the wandering band Who ease in their dash for the bay And rime from the lands they would roam '. . - To thrill to the lure ot the day And hornet Forest Notes. There is a flourishing forest school in the Philippines, and 28 men were graduated with the class of 1913. The so-called Scotch pine is the principal tree in the Prussian for ests. Its wood is much like that of the United States. In general it may be stated that the most dangerous forest fire pe riods in the west are in middle and late summer; in the east they are in the spring and fall. Because of the importance of for estry at the annual congress in Washington November 18 to 20, an extra day is added to the sessions, Monday the 17th. It has been suggested that guaya can, a very hard wood of Central America, may furnish shuttle blocks to supplement dogwood and persim mon, now most used, and in danger of becoming exhausted. Under forest regulations in Co lombia, rubber gatherers are re I drawn out fight over the Reidsville ; postmastership was ended, so far as Senator Simmons is concerned, when utmost precaution in maintain- Scott's Emulsion mates wc umuu rich and pure." It contains the vital flesh building and bone-building properties insures abundant nounsn- ment. It strengthens the nerves and creates energy and vitality during this period. Expectant and nursing mother always need Scott Emulsion. pRUffGIST HAS IT i-ei OLD HICKORY CHIPS Siicrt and Pilhy Saylegsfln Subjects Past and Preseo. Su'zer"seen his dutyand done" Kind of weather that put3 a tune in the heart. Come on old Senate and get this currency question settled before we all run out of currency. It must be observed that Colonel Roosevelt has been in South America a remarkably long time without shooting anything. The assassination of Bill Sulzer has been indefinitely postponed. At last account the big moose was running strong in Brazil. Porto Rico wants a legislature. Several states would be willing to donate theirs. Blessed is the man who doesn't expect too much from his friends. There are fears that Mrs. Parkhurst has been misled by stories of the ease with which large profits may be derived from American lecture engagements. It may be suggested that Europe should attend to its Turkey before worrying about America dove of peace. It seems like wasting the time of a busy man to ask Charles Murphy to keep track of a bit of small change like a $25,000 campaign do nation. A safe and sane halloween cele bration may be regarded as another mark of advance in cultivation. The closely calculating citizen is likely to feel that the labor involved in solving income tax problem is entitled to some consideration. Like the comet whose approach invites forebodings, Mrs. Parkhurst prove picturesque and harmless. The way Murphy is going down it would seem that when Sulzer fell so fell all of them. One way to settle the Mexican question," probably would be to let those greasers get a glimpse of the new dreadnaught Texas. Filipinos who left home to travel with a show are stranded in Bel-, gium. The Filipino is not nearly so successful a showman as the Ameri can Indian. There is not much use of trying to horrify a Tammany leader with pic tures of a tiger in the theoes of dis grace and dissolution. Efforts to keep alive the discus sion as to who discovered the North Pole are now largely in the hands of the advertising experts. Col. Roosevelt approves of results in New York without definitely men tioning them as indorsements of his policies. China is no doubt already begin- ning to reel tnat it Knows more about running a republic than Mex ico. The problem is to get an income large enough to be taxed and then find a way of exempting it. It is impossible for Gen. Felix Diaz to feel sure whether a days de velopments will call on him to as sume a tone of ringing defiance or an air of patient resignation. Let us hope that the next time New York is staged that there will be no reason what it should be sup pressed. At the present rate of progress Yuab Shi Kai will be forced to raise wages of the Chinese Lord high ex ecutioner. ' Imagine the strain required of the New York assembly to enable it to say, "Why hello Bill," in a tone of glad surprise. The Nobel prize of the year has been awarded to a Frenchmon for his work in Anaphylaxis who's the man that will say olf-hand he doesn't deserve it. "Cork or Bottle," says the Chi cago Record Herald, "is the consti tutional convention issue in Illinois." Just what that means is not clear but naturally the both go together. No doubt of Col Goethals accept ed the police commissionship of New YorJf, he would favor the lock sys tem at the City Hall. ' Speaking of benevolent earth quukes as a California pper does it would require one of that sort to make Huerta take a hint. An investigative highbrow aiises to state that America is none o '.her than King Solomon's lost land of ophir; we only wish he had kept Ijiis women's suffrage and left the rW. The worst thing you can $o foi sdme man is to praise (hSta. THE HOUSE BY THE SIDE OF THE ROAD There are hermit souls that live withdrawn In the peace of their self-content; There are souls like stars, that shine ' apart In a fellowless firmament. There' are pioneer souls that blaze their paths Where the highway never ran, But let me live by the side of the road, And be a friend to man! Let me live in a house by the side of the road Where the race of men go by, The men that are good, and the men that are bad As good and as bad as I. Why should I sit in a scorner's seat. Or hurl a cynic's ban? Let me live in a house by the side of the road, And be a friend to man! I see my house by the side of the road. By the side of the highway of life, The men that press on with the ardor of hope And the men that are faint with strife, But I turn not away from their smiles nor their tears Both parts of an infinite plan. Let me live in the house by the side of the road. And be a friend to man! I know there are brook-gladdened meadows ahead, And mountains of wearisome height, And the road passes on through the long afternoon, And stretches away to the night; But still I rejoice when the travellers rejoice, And weep with the strangers that moan Nor live in my house by the side of the road Like a man that dwells alone. Let me live in a house by the side of the road, Where the race of men go by; They are good, they are bad, they are weak, they are strong, Wise, foolish, and so am I. Then why should I sit in a scorner's seat, Or hurl a cynic's ban? Let me live in a house by the side of the road, And be a friend to man! Sam W. Foss. Loses In Cotton Marketing. We may summarize our conclu sions by saying: (1). No cotton should be allowed to lie out in the weather. You will be sacrificing $10 in grade to every $1 you imagine you will gain in weight. (2). The present system of indi vidual selling of cotton must go "everybody for himself and the devil take the hindmost." There are too many of the hindmost." who catch the gentleman aforemen tioned; and there are too many un necessary middlemen to support Cotton farmers must organize to sell co-operatively on special days and in large quantities. (3). They should have their cot ton graded by an expert and impar tial grader. (4). They should see to it that they get the benefit of higher prices for erades above middling as well as the losses for grades below middling. (5) . Especially in long-staple cot ton is careful grading of the high est importance. (6). Farmers should get reports of what all available market towns are paying and find out whether in any of them prices are being held down by a buyers' '-trust," acting without competition. In such cases they should appeal to the business men and commercial bodies of the town for help. They will real ize that such methods will cause farmers to boycott the town ana hurt trade. (7). Farmers and tenants should be encouraged to have their bills fall due in two or three payments instead of having to settle every thing around November first. (&l . These and other plans should be discussed in your Farmers' Union or other farmers' organizations; and !i the farmers are not organized in your community, this will be a good subject to organize them on. r arm ors firhtine sinelehanded can never bring about the reforms needed for their relief The Progressive far mer. T Care a Cold In One Day . i t a ATTVE BROMO Quinine. It rtopjthe TJT Headache n& works off the Cold. ?TaOT'S signftture on each box. Sc. AbsoIutelyPMr ROYAL the most celebrated of all the baking? powders Sn Hie world celebrated for Its great leavening sSreng&h -and purity. It snalces got cakes, biscuit, iire&d, etc, Iiealtlifiil, it insures yon against alssM and all forms of adulteration aliatt go with the low priced brands. FOOD SUPERSTITIONS. Dyak Warriors Won't Eat Deer Far Fear of Becoming Timid. In rural Germany one still meets with a superstition that lie who eata during a thunderstorm will bo struck by lightning. Abstaining from food during nn eclipse is common among savages; also a belief that in eating the flesh of any animal one absorbs that animal's characteristics. Thus an In dian tribe highly prizes tigers' flesh as food for men, but forbids women to eut it lest it make them too aggressive. In the Kongo women are forbidden to eat birds of prey on the same princi ple, but are encouraged to eat frogs, which the men on lio account ever touch. In the Caroline Islands black birds are a favorite dish with women, but men must not eat them, because If one did and afterwaid climbed a co coa tree he would surely fall to the ground and be killed. Among the Dyaks warriors must not ent venison because It would make them as timid as the deer. Fowls and eggs are forbidden to women of a Ban tu tribe because on eating either a woman would certainly fly into the brush and never again be seen. Again, the flesh of many animals is forbidden because the animals themselves for example, swine are disagreeable to the eye or have untidy habits. Ex change. BAD FOR PRONUNCIATION. 8ilent Reading and Neglect of Con versation Are Harmful. Perhaps the most potent of Influ ences toward diverse pronunciation, especially difference in accent, Is the fact that we seldom or never hear in conversation a vast number of words which nevertheless constitute an im portant and Indispensable part of our vocabulary. "By silent reading and neglect of conversation language itself," declares Richard Grant White, "Is coming into disuse." The result of this practice Is not only that we are always men tally registering pronunciations pecul iar to ourselves, which we have no means of ascertaining to be uncommon or ridiculous, but also that the natural tendencies of our language, unrestrain ed by the conservative force which oc casional use in conversation might ex ert, rapidly foster new pronunciations and produce a diversity of pronuncia tion even among the most careful speakers. All these influences obviously sup plement each other in resisting any trend toward uniform pronunciation and facilitate the progress of the tend encies of speech peculiar to our Eng lish tongue. Robert J. Mcnner in At lantic Monthly. A Fleet Street Story. Henry Arthur Broome, in "The Log of a Rolling Stone," says that In 1S71 he was engaged in wood engraving for Punch when one day, at the end of the week, short of money, he stood gazing longingly at the cherries on a coster monger's barrow which stood abreast of the offices of the London Telegraph. His gaze arrested the attention of a gentleman whom he had often seeu there before, though not at midday. Then a kindly deed was done. The gentleman, averting his gaze from me a moment, purchased two paper bags of this fruit Then, placing one of them in the pocket of his capacious rtnst coat, he turned to me with the sweetest smile imaginable and without a word offered the other one to me, which I gratefully accepted. He then passed on and went upstairs to the of fices of the newspaper. That was my first introduction to the prince of jour nalists, George Augustus Sala. The Other Vexan. "I don't see how that woman can gad about the way she does and neg lect her little children." "How do you know that she gads about?" We get the same girl to tase care of our babies wbtn we're away from home, and she's kept busy over there fully half of the time. It provokes me so to have to be pr.t off so often when I" want t get nway.-Chl.-ago Uecord II era Id. KEN'S WANTS. "Man wants but little here below," That was an ancient song; We do not hear it now, you know. The sentiment is wrong, Man wants just now all he can get. In way of sordid tin; The way that some go after it Seems like a very sin. Man wants a fancy touring car, He wants a private yacht; He wants to get a lot of junk His neighbors haven't got. He wants a lot of suits of clothes And rare gems for hi3 wife? II wants a chate-iu by the sea. To make complete his life. He want3 a lot of stocks and bonds. And Standard Oil preferred; He also wants a lot of thing3 Of which he never heard. He doesn't really want them, In true sense of the term; But thinks he does and that's the same. And he'll work and squirm To garner everything in sight And keep it stored away. He saves a lot of useless junk To meet the rainy day; And when he dies and passes on He leaves it all behind, Because he cannot take along A thing of any kind. 'Twould suit a lot of men first rate If they were but endowed With brains sufficient to invent A pocket for the shrowd. Chicago Post. Nasb County Creates Healtb Degart icent. A joint meeting of the County Board of Commissioners, Board of Health and Board of Education was recently held in Nashville to d'scusa the advisability of employing a com petent physician to devote his en tire time to the prevention of sick- . i ness. It was overwneimmgiy de cided by the boards that this bo done, so provision was made for the employment of such an officer. At the mxt meeting of the Nash County Board of Health, it is ex pected that a competent man will be decided upon from among a num ber of applicants from both within and without the county. With Rowan, which at a recent meeting decided to take this pro gressive step and is now upon the lookout for a competent man, and Nash, there are now twelve coun ties in the State having whole time health officers. The other ten are Cojumbus, Sampson, Johnston, Robe son, New Hanover, Durham. Guil f rd, Forsyth, Rockingham, and Buncombe. TDe Finest Mao. The attacks on Dr. Hardy of the School for the Feeble-Minded were wholly unfair and unworthy. Dr. Hardy has given the State fine ser vice in arousing public sentiment on the matter of ptoviding the children of i he twil;ght a chance to grow, and he is the fittest man in the State to have charge of the institution at Kinston. Charity and Children. This Will luterctt Mothers. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children relieve Feverishness, Head ache, Bad Stomach, Teething Disor ders, move and regulate the Bowels and destroy worm.. They break up Colds in 24 hours. Used by moth ers for 24 years. All Druggists. 25c. Sample Free. Address, A. S. Olms ted, LeRoy, N. Y. 31 I V Si ill i X 1 1 hi A. A I 3: r. 51 3 A it I !" '.'V & EVERYWHERE xffiS,