[ADVERTISING z T«ar SMMT tack.—ladfekMM >d vaitfe- I ing b tha kind tbat paya back to roa V the inancy joa unit Spac* in thia J paper aaaurea 70a prompt ictnraa . . VOL. VI. - NO 20. DIRECTORY * jg Tawa Officers Hayor—Jo*hu» L. Bwll. Caaunwoaai —Dr. J, S. B- Knight, n. &. W, Dr. |. a Biggs, A. Haswll, f. K. Modj{e». Street CtttaMwt -r.K.. Hod##*. M.S. tmL V Clark-A. Uunll. " Treasurer —N. & FW. Attorney—Wbeelei Martta. l*obcv—J ;tt. Lodges ■•Q akewarke* Lodg*. No. yw. A- *. "d A. ML Kagular wealing •*«rj.««J Mid th TliiiJ uifhu. p.—Camp. Mo. l®7, Wood mam of Use World. Regular aieetiag arary sad last Friday Bights. Church af tie Adveat Services oa tka aacoud aad Mth Sua- Aaya U tba muoUi.motoiug aad eveaiag. ■adoa tha Saturdays (S p. m ) Mora, aad Ml Maadavs (» a. ». j altar Aaya ol tSa laeatb. All *«# owdlaUj la ntad S. 8. LuwAi. Ractar. . Aethedlst CiarcM BOT. S. ft. iLoaa, (ha MetSodist Fa»- ur, has Ua toUowiag aypeintmsats ■nrj tuda; morning at It o'clock, aad a%M at y c'clock raapacti»aly, sxcapt tka aacoad Sunday. Bandar Sckoal arary Sander awraiag at »J« o'clock. Prajer-iaaeung every Wedaasdaj evaa i«l at ) o'clock. Hoily Spring* »rd Saaday eveaiag at | o'clock; Varaon tat Saaday anaiag at | o'clock; UamUtaa tad Saaday, morning aad night; Haaaalla awl Saaday at $ o'clock. A cordial ia ntatioa to all to attaad^Uaaa.aarrioaa* Baptist Church reaching on tka tat, tad aad 4tk Saa day* at ll a. at., aad ;:jo p. m. Prayar aaootiai m>f Thataday night at 7J° Saaday School trery Sundayjwormug at f:y>. J. D. Biggs, Superintendent. Xha part err preaches at Hamilton on the jrd Sunday la aaoh month, at il a, m. aad 740 p. m.. aad at IDddick'a Grose eaSaturday bafor*avary iat.Sunday at 11 a. m., aad on tka tat Saaday at j p. m. Slada School Uouaa on tha and Sunday at tp. m.. and tha Biggs' School Uouaa aa tha 4th Sunday at } p. aa. Sfarybody aacdlally iavitad. A. D. Ceaaou.. Paator. SKEWARKEE JL dkr lis. PO, A. F. fc A. JL Asf\ Diaacroav Pom iv»s S. & Brown, W. M.; W.C.Manalag.S. W.; Mc. U. Taylor, I. W.; T. W. Thoai aa, S. A. P. Taylor, J.D; 8. A. Bigg., Secretary; C. D. Carstarphca, Treasurer; A. ft. Whitmora and T.C.Cook, Stewards, ft. W. Clary, TUar. STANDING CuMMITTftBS: Cnaarrv —S. S. Sroara, W. C. Maa aiag, Mc. G.Taylor. Fimamcu—Joa. D. Bigga, W. H. ftai *ll, ft.J. Paal. InuiKa-W H. Bd wards, W. M. Grata. P. ft. Uodgaa. AsvU-'M—H. W. Stabbs, W. ft. l»V ertaoa, H. D. Cook. Sauaau, —I. M. Hat ton. Professional Cards. DR JOHN D. BIGGS M DBHTMT\ Omct-lUii Pmi « w. a. itum w*. a *»**!« DM. HAERBLL * WARIBN PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS •PPICS tM Biocs D*XJO ATOKA 'Phona No. X) D&. J. PBSBLB PEOCTOFT PHYSICIAN# AND 'SUEGEONJ Oflka la MohUy Salldlag oa**: froo ta skgo *. a.; gto|p. m. "PtfONB IS Prud«D.>ls«tM WINSTON ft EVBBETT 1 ' " " ATTOASIMTS AT LAW BUK Building, Williamatoa, N. C, S. AT WOOD NBWKLL LAWYER f- ' BRINGING UP THE KID. How to RaiseThUdren by the Stockyards Philosophy. Pin so blame glad it's a boy that l*in (felting ov« feeling sorry it ain't a girl, and 1 m almost reconciled to its not being Unas. Twelve pound*? Bully! Maybe that doesn't keep up the reputation tor giving good weight! but I'm coming home on tha run to help him mysrlt, be cause 1 never knew a fcUow who wouldcn I he a little abcut the weight of No. 1, and then, when yoa led turn up to the hay scales, claim that it's a well-known acien tifil piinciple tint children shrin during the first week like a ham in smoke. Allowing for tare, thougt.il be still nets ten, I'll feel that he's a creuit to the brand. It's a great thing to be sixty min utes old, with nothing in the world except a blanket anil an appetite and the whole tight ahead of you but it's pretty good, too, to be six ty years old and a grauilpop, with twenty years offigat left 11. your stiil 1 want to raiae oui kids to be a DMu't son, aud tiicn, it it's necessary, we can always teach mm how to be a nth one's, ChilU nature is human nature, aud a man who understands it can make his children like the plain, sensible things aud ways as easily as ths rich aud foolish ones. 1 remember a uice old lady who was raising a lot ol orphan £raudctiildren on a mighty slim income. They couldn't have chicken often in that house, aud when they did it was a pretty close fit and done to throw a«ay. ao, instead of beginnmg with the white meat and stirriug up the kid l like a cage full of hyenas when the ' heeding the Carnivore'' sign is out, she would play up the pieces that don't even get a mention on the bill of fare of e two dollar coun try hoter. She would begin by say in a please don't-all speak at-once tone, "Now, children, who wants this dear little ueck?" and naturally they all wanted it, because it was pretty plain to them that it was something extra sweet and juicy, do she Vould allot it as a reward ol goodness to the child who had been behaving best and throw in the gizzard for nourishment. The nice old lady always helped herself last, aud there was nothing left for her but white meat. It isn't the final result which tne nice old lady achieved, but the first one, that I want to commend. A child natu ally likes the simp'e things till you teach him to like the rich one*, and it's jost as easy to start him with books and amuse ments that hold sense and health aa those that are filled with slop a»d stomachache. A lot of mo ti ers think a child start out with a braip that can't learu Anything buj nonsense, so when Maudie asks a sensible question they answer in g&ogoo gush. And they believe tSat a child can digest everything from carpet tacks to fri d steak, so whenever Wil ie hollers they think he's hungry and try to plug his throat with a banana. You want to have it in mind sll the time while you're raising this boy that you can't turn over youi children to subordinates any more ban you, can your bus ness and £et good tesults Nurses and go>- ernesses are no doubt dl right iu their plac , but there's nothing 'just as good" sa a father and mother. A boy doesu't pick up cuss words when his mother's around or learn cussedness from his father. Yet a iot of mothers turn over the chil lren along widt the horses snd dogs, to be led snd broken by the servants, and then wonder from which siie of the family lsobel in herited her weak stomach, and where she picked up her naughty ways, and why the drop* the h's irom tome *ord* sod pronounce* others with a brogue. But ahe needn't look to Isobel tor any in formation, because she is the only pers«n about the place with whom the child ain't on free and easy terms. —From "Oid Gorgon Gra ham; Mere Letters From a Self vlade Merchaitt to His bon,'' by George Horace Lorimbr. By per misMon of Ootibleday, Page & Co., Publishers. WILLIAMSTON, N. C., FRIDAY. MARCH 3,1905. UYDtC A in. Tksse Whs firtM «-Ltre Berwa Tacta-Bests. Dressing or taring beyond one's means is nothing less than ahaolnte dishonesty. II yoa are trying to do what yon cannot afford to do, you are living a lie; if you are wearing* clothes that yon cannot afford, they are perpetual witnesses against you. They are labeled all over with falsehood; your jewelry your carriages, your furs and your coatly gowns tell me that you are rich when you live in a poverty stricken home and when your mother is obliged to make all sorts of sacrifices to enable you to make this lake display, you lie just as surely as you would if you should try to deceive me by your words. The couciousneas of being well dressed, and yet owing for it, of riding in carnages which one can not afford, or of patronizing expen sive hotels and restaurants which one cannot by any stretch of imag ination or sophisty afford, is de structive to all respect, to truth and honesty and to manhood and to woomanhowd. You cannot afford to wear lies or to cat lies any more than you can afford to tell lies. There is only one possible re> s-ult upon character of falsehood! whether acted or told, and that is perpetual deterioration and demor alization. No one can live a" lie, or act a lie, without being dishon est. When a man sacrifices his honesty he loses the mainspring of his character, and be cannot be perfectedly honest when he is lying by frequently coatly hotels or res taurants, by wearing expensive clothing or by extravagant living whan he cannot afford it. —Success. Keeps Pigs Qeaa Sigma, who has been giving some sensible and practicable articles to the breeders' Gazette on the man agement of swine, says: "Another thing that I have thoroughly learned by dear exper ience is the vital importance of keeping the youngsters out of the inud. One week of cold, rainy weather in muddy pen, even if they do have a dry, warm sleeping place will put piggy back at least two weeks in growth. Keep them out of the mud, especially cod weather even if to dothis you are obliged to confine them to a board floor. But the ideal way is to have yonr lots so arranged that the piges csn have the run to a grass lot when the weather is good, and csn be readily confined to the board floor when it is bad. The mud bath may have its advantages Tor ma tured hogs, especially those that are infested with vermin, but I don't want any-of it for my pigs neither do I want it mixed with the slop so that the pigs w ; II be com pelled to eat it. In fact, I consider mud bad —very bad —for a pig, whether taken intern Jly or applied extcrndly." The whole story of "The Sim ple Life," as written by Wagner, is told in the threO words which make ihe motto of the State, "Esse quam > i eri," which mean-, don't pre end to be anytbing but what you are. Once a frog irnrat trying to seem as big as sn ox, and most of os burst in the same way. Lead "The Sim ple Life " It's .all right, and in it lfei contentment and happiness— scarce articles nowadays.—Char lotte Chronicle. "Gimmie a pound uv tea." *'Green or black?" . * it dm't mek no difference— ifs fer s blind woman." —Leslie's weekly. Customer —"But thst umbrella looks so awfully cheap and com mon; the price yon ask for it is pre posterous." Dealer—"My dear sir, that's the beanty ot tl.at umbrella.. It's really the be-t quality, hot it's made to appear cheap and common so no one will think it worth stealing." —Puiladdphia Press. ' Subscribe for Ta* gmraaraiaa « f - To do psor, slipshod, lolched work. To give n bad exsmple to young people. • .%V' ■ To have a orals, brutish, repul sive manners. To hide a talent because you have only one. Not to ho scrupulously doan in person and surroundings. To acknowledge a fault and mako no effort to svsreoms it. To 'bo uagvsiefhl to Mends to those who how helped ns. To kkk ovor the,(odder upon which Wo hove otimbed to our po sition- To he grossly ignorant of tho customs 'H wages of good socie ty. To ignore tho forces whkh are improving civihastiou In your own country. To shirk responsibility in poli tics, or to ho indiCerant to tho public welfare. To know nothing of the things wo see, handlOk and enjoy every day of our lives. Not to know enough sbout tho lsws of health, about physiology end hygiene, to live heslthfnlly and ssasly. " To vote blindly for perty, right or wAng, Jastood of far principle, because you hSfo,boen doing oo for yeers. ,* To be groaly ignorant in these daya| of free schools, chssp news papers, periodicals, sad drcnlntinf libraries. j To be so-oontTOlled by any appe tite or pMSlsa that one's useful ness end standing in the communi ty are Unpaired. FOR 19Q5 The Atlanta Constitution 7 Tut Sunny South Tkm Jaatfbt Mmafm 4 IHsrarp W—kiy, BOTH FOR ONLY >1.25 SUIT f ACT ISF AMERICA. THE saatMasriaa of 4mbs two weakly papers—the one for mmm% Ai eshor pardy Mwwy-aalsi so Idesl offer tar saury Asaftara hpaaufcoM. the wmtur Mufmrnmr, u ta is pages, contsiaa *»aap»rf 4a Ml aarsfelly prepared sod ia ttHlgaadf prmHa fe» urtoaiaraf fhmimrms doas sra war* SMOF hi sa%sar%4ea prise In market SS|S is tfwspa mmfm. I» VMSSS'I Kingdom and Chil4rwm'» are *a bast rsad sad most sp prsaftasi papa at Mis ks spas iai articles sad JgfMT l» !T?U»»a*asrf lltmrary fswdar mf ttsMA, papsiar its wide terri tory, sad lasM If hp fl*sai yrl ia the latroducdon of new Santhsra vrtM ta ifca (horary world. Msay of its short stary saataw hara hiaa# m llgki authors wbose fsme sad fonoaa have heaa arede paadbla by Tho Sunny South. It (• rdwatl la avar SM* hones today and Is destined * be *o leadiap Awsrlaaa saory aad household paper- This nafiX saaabiaattea btaads ad *at la desirabte la a hoaia nadlag offer, fsao eowipleta papers •very wook, aad IMS WIH deraenarrate ia you ka vdue and iiieurs ywor ■■■iai aa a HfSrtmu aabaeribar. Tho Groat Agents' Offer tfns ifsslraOaffait m Month to Actio* Agonts. ▼s hara a mat m#r* ageaHS' offer— ths moot liberal of aay Aiaarisaa palll—ls a bywhlsh ageats may eara from Fifty to Omo BmmMrwd Botlarw por Month , Agents wsnted ia svory comaraalty. Write for agency particulars aad pat yoarsaff la a way to adt monoy oa a good propodrioa- Send yoar sobeeriptloa to wither paper st its brice, or take both at the oombinatloa rate. Remit by ssfe methods, addressing sll orders to The Atlanta Constitution, A 1 !. ANT A, GA. Nat to have an intelligent idea of the country in which we live, not to know its history, its industries, and the conditions of its people. T» live in the midst of schools, libraries, museums, lectures, pic ture galleries, and improvement dubs, sad not to svail one's self of their advantages. —Exchange I The New Orleans Daily Stste says: "The fsrtner has his shsre Of the work to do, and that work is to hold, reduce and diversify. With that done the farmer will be OS ssHd os the rock of Gibraltar, sad prospsrity will be restored to tho South. It must be remember ed* thst success csn only be secur ed by the csrrying out of th* en tiro programme. The South is to day face to face with a situation which must be met one way or the the other. The farmer must either take hold of tho eituation and mas ter it, or be mastered by the situ ation. For tho first time in the history of the cotton industry, the farmer has the weapons in hand with which to protect himself and to command prosperity. The eyes of the world are upon him, afid it would bo both disgraceful and dis astrous should he fail to rise to tho opportunity and command sue- It the Other PeUOWi Place. Pow cootrovorsies of soy kind— espsdslly those of a personal na 'tore—have dl the advantage on one side. However postive one feds that he is right, if he will put kimsdf in the other man's place and study thesitustion calmly, he will find that he has crossed the shore lino of perfection himself and has waded et least s little way into the groat oceen of error.—Scotland Nock Commonwealth. The F*y of School Teachers. World's Work furnishes some striking figures on the pay of pub lic school teachers. They are more than striking. They strike on the injustice of a system that gets all it. can and pays as little as possible for it. It is not denied that teaching is hard work—hard and wearing. The teacher, a mau or woman,who has served a long period in the schools is not wotth much, for any other vocation, at the end of that service. And the job, or profes sion, calls for not ouly years of preparation, but tact, patience, the highest order of intelligence, and that aomething that has not been named, but is the ability to get along in the face uf couutle.ss wor ries and obstacles. Now how about the pay? A coachman—an average, corn" petent coachtnau, who can drive and who knows something about horses —is better paid than the. av erage school teacher, for in the whole United States the average pay of women teuchers is under S4O a mouth It is pointed out that in a cer tain locality of North Carolina a man who trains puppies tor quail hunting draws a better salary than any school teacher in the commun ity. In the state of Indiana 12,000 teachers receive less than per year each, and there are other States iu which the showing would be worse. Are the people of the United States in earnest about their de sire for thorough education? And, if they are, cannot they re alize that while some—perhaps many thousaud of good teachers — will work for a pittance because they must, b the highest talent will get out of the business when op portunity otiers, and that there is and will continue to be a scarcity of the best teachers because ol the scant salaries paid and ottered? t Moderu education will not pro gress as it should, or produce the results desiied, until tlifrre is more justice displayed in dealing with those who Jo the work and bear the burdens. —Atlanta Journal, Save The Moisture The rapidity with which a fresh brisk wind will dry clothes 011 the line is familiar to every housewife. Almost intuitively one swings iu the air anything from which one wishes to have a trace of moisture removed, like a-piece of writing when one has mislaid the blotting-paper. From the same principle it follows that where land tends to dry too rapidly, un der the influence of constant breezes, rows of trees planted as a windreal may prove useful. It often happens on the great plains, where the natural precipi tation is hardly up to the needs ol agriculture, that eitra fresh evap oration, due to prevalent high winds, still further accentuates the difficulty. In such conditions the "sbeltrrbelt," or windbreak, illus trates anew the maxim that "a penny saved is a penny earned.' The effect of the wind in increas ing the evaporation of water sur faces has long been known. Re cent experiments show that it is the stfme with the moisture of the laud, and that soil several hundred feet away from a windbreak dries up* half as again as that near by—a difference not wholly ac counted for by the greater shade. A lake in the woods will evapo rate only half as fast as one jn the open. This is by no means the only ad vantage of the lines of trees which form so conspicuous a feature o many European landscapes. Orch ard* need protection against the gales that often accompany the summer storm. Gardens are more successful when thus surrounded. Domestic animals, more dependent than man on natnre's moods, de rive great benefit from any temp ering of the extreme of heat and cold. The economic importance of for ests in rrgnlating the flow of streams is beyond computation.— Your money back.—Jndiciou* advertis ing ia the kind that pay* back to you the money you jnveat. Space ia this paper assure* you prompt returns . . WHOLE NO. jBO [ A MATTER OFHUOH p§n POWDER Absolutely Para HAsmsußsmm Williamston Telephone Ci. Office over Bank of llartia Ciuty, WILLIAMSTON, N. C.J (Phone Ctiarres Mtmin limited tojj; ariaataa; ulm ahaaw will positively be mads far laaaar tlaia To Washington sj Cwh. " Greenville Ja} ** " Plymouth •) " " Tarboro !] " " Kocky|Mount |] ;• " Scotland Neck ■] R " Jamesville if a " Kader Lilley'a i| m " J.[G.;Staton ig 4 J. L. Woolard 13 " L' O. K. Cowing 9L CO. IJ '• i,' Purmelc IJ " " Kobersoriville IJ •' '* Kveretta IJ " Gold Point , l| " Geo. P. McNaughtoa l| " Hamilton so '* For other pointa in Kaatern Carollaa .see ''Central " where a 'pkona will ha found for use of noa-iubacrlbara. In Gase of Tire youfAvaut to be protected. In case of death you waat to leave your family some thing to live on. In case ef accident you want some thing to livejfon t b«aid«a borrowing. Let Us Come to Yoar l?irtm We can insure you agaiaat loss from Fire, Death and Accident. We can insure your Boilar, Flute Glass, Burg larv. We also can boa 4 you for any office requir ing bond NoneaßuQ Best JCcnpaiitsL Riini«itii K. B. GRAWrORD INSURANCE AGENT, Godard Building 1 ' CO VEAJf# M iijii' Wir*- - : , Anroni*f*nl!Hn ft Hfcet*»> ■>« • • * t-t v %-*i Milch If I -illi c»mt orlit* .'.«*• * - *«» (i vent Yon i» f»r«»biil>jy j . '•miHtrtctlvoiitiftdullnl. ]J**ilhrv:fc . | * «»nt fri'6, tArt»*iit apfUcy *l-1 m - wruiif j* I .11 r-istn liiUen tnnioirh >iunu ,* i*. ■ - J , pi. till nut If 8, WH hoilf fthnr* o, tu# Sdeaiiffc Jftwrftw \ «-k!y ! *^ . ilittltm of AH? f*ric#»t.. .« '4- 1 *»'* r ; four mufitlie. «. L. t» • a.4*» * "iM'V Bstfm? H.\al" 1' rmo , V. r * AGJEJNTS! «Mtt|ACE)NTS TUB UHUATSHT BOOK Of TBI BAT "CHRIST IN THE CAMP" BY DR. J. WILLIAM JONSB AOBN-ra KWOKTai N. C.—"Worked onoday, naalvad M ulna." Ala.—"Rpceivi-d Proa. 1 o'clock, aold T bar triafct," Va.—"Sold 14 in U hourm." L P. Baaina. Taxaa—"Worked ona day. sot It oataaa." APPLY AT ouee T» THK MAKTIH » HOTT CO, AtUale, to write for oar ooalMeatial Mtw >i»»l ay plying tor patent; it mar be warfh aaaaay. wo promptly obtain U. S. aad Faraiga PATENTS WaVaswftf i a«a , Jas the beal legal aarrlea aad adrWa, ia4 aar o bargee ara moderate. Try aa. SWIFT & CO, Patent Lmwymrm, Opp. U.S. Patsat Ofles.WasMsitsl, l.i SUBSCRIBE TO TBS BNTS&mS [|i.ee a 7ear.2