0 HE ST&IIDliiD. Satubdat, January 14, 1883. Arrival of Train t C5ord: Arrives from Washington at 1:24 a.m. Arrives from Charlotte at 6.00 a. m. Arrives from yashngtoll at 11.59 a.m. Arrives from Charlotte at 7:25 p. m. THE MAILS. Mails for the north close at 6:30 p. Mails for the south close at 11 a. m. and 9 p.m. Money order and registered letter department open from 9 a. m. to 4 General delivery open from 7:30 a. a. to 6:30 p. m. Also half hour at d.30p. m. Sunday hours for general deliv er r, 8 a. m. for one hour; also half nour after opening of noon mail. Lock boxes accessible from 7 a. m. to 9 p. m. Mails for Bost's Mills, Flows', Lo cast Level, Furrs and Smith's Ford leave every Friday at 7:30 a. m. Mails for Mill Hill, Springville, Coddle Creek and Tulin leave on Saturdays and Tuesdays at 8 a. m. Mail from Mt. Pleasant arrives ev ery day except Sunday at 10 a. m., and leaves at 1 p. m. m ami V 11. 111. Subscribe for The Standard. The days are beginning to lengthen. Rev. C. A. Rose, of Rowan, paid our town a visit on Tuesday. Our market has been poorly sup plied with pork and fish this winter. The firm oi Swiuk Bros, has been dissolved by mutual consent. See their ad, Mr. Jessie Smith f ormerly- of Mt. Pleasant returned from Arkansas last week. A horse drove on the stampede was the street excitement of Toes- day moraiasl The largest wind mill in town is the one put up at tne Dig spring on Spring street. We regret to learn that Miss Lot tie Boyd, daughter of Mr. William Boyd.is very sick. Rev. Mr. Campbell paid Raleigh a visit this week as a member of the Grand Lodge of Masons. We are pleased to note that Mrs Quantz, who has. been- quite ill for some timex is improving. Master Gus Correll will be initiat -ed into the mysteries of a drug dis peuser by Dr. Johnston during '88. F. V. Snell has bought the cottage formerly belonging to Mr. J. S. Fisher, near the Female Academy. Mr. Chas. Moose has put up a nice new dwelling on Spring Street near Mr.. Troutmans and has moved into it. To many of the editorial fraternity we send this, issue with our best bow, respectfully asking for admis sion as an exchange. Last week was the week of prayer Union services were held each eve ning at ono or the other churches. The attendance was good. Ed. F. Correll has the job of paint ing the new factory. His reputation of doing things up nice, keeps him busy even in these winter days. The office of The Standard will be found up stairs over Mr. R. A. Brown's store, next door to the Times. Come up and see us. Rev. J. G, Anderson, 'of Virginia, has taken charge of the Rocky Rivei congregation. He preached his in troductory sermon to a large con gregation lasf Sabbath. Mr. Jno. K. Patterson has moved the old house, next to his residence, back from the street snd converted it into a neat comfortable cottage. Mr. John Sawj-er, a highly es teemed young man of Bilesville.died Thursday, the 15th instant. He wa3 a nephew of our townsman, Mr. Geo. Hegler.. Our Register of Deeds issued, du ring the fiscal year ending Nov. 15, '87, one hundred and fifty four mar riage license, 104 white and 50 col ored. Air. rrea otarnes gin nouse in No. 1 Township was totally destroy ed by fire on last Saturday abou 2 o clock. Twenty five bales of cot ton were burned. The hog killing season is about over.. At any rate the hog commit tee have ceased their Sunday visits and discussions as to the relative weight of porkers are heard no more. Four of the family of Mr. Moses Stirewalt,.in South Rowan, are se riously ill with something-like pneu naonia. Mr. John Phillips' eldest daughter is also yery low with the same disease. Mr. Fred Fiirr, of No. 9 Township lort his dwelling, house and its con tents by fire on Saturday night last This is quite a serious loss to- Mr. Furr. The origin, of the fire is sup posed to be accidental. Mr. P. B. Fetzer has placed a large tank on a good stone and brick foundation in rear of the Fet zer drug store. It is quite an im provement on the old wooden struc ture he had removed. Mr.JPleas Mjtley has the mumps. The trees are decked with ice crys tals. Our county roads are said to be vwy bad. Mr. C. G. Montgo mery has his of fice on the Caton corner. uThe primal object of the newspa per is to give the.news'" The market has been overstocked with bad colds this winter. The price of cotton seed has come down to about 13 cents per bushel. Mr. C. A. Pitts has been quite unwell this week and is confined to his home. Notwithstanding the bad fruit year of '87 there are plenty of apple schnitz on the market. The shad frogs made music Sun day night. Perhaps they will yet peer through icy windows. Mr. Ed Cline, son of Mr. A. Cline of No. 8 township, is now behind the counter at R. A Brown's. Mr. H. A. Blackw elder and others of our progressive f ai mers, attended the farmer's meeting in Greensboro this week. It is a f general remark that our butchers have supplied the market with better beef this winter than ever before. The familiar face of Mr. Geo. Keistler, of Greensboro, one of our old time citizens, was seen on our streets this week. The new street opened from De pot Street and running by Mr. Fet ter's dwelling, is one of our pret tiest. Saturday, Sunday and Monday last were bright,, balmy spring like days, but now it is really winterish, and "North winds plaj Eolian sympho nieS; And rigid Frost his sternest vigil keeps." The Correil Bros, have added greatly to the appearance of their jewelry of late by a general remod eling and the addition of an ebon wall case for their silver ware. Their stock of brilliant jewelry and silver ware adds to all the surround ings a happy effect. For the benefit'of our country sub scribers, we will pay special atten tion each week to the fluctuations of the cotton and produce markets. Mr. J. W. Cannon and ;Messrs. Dove Best & Co., have kindly agreed to correct these reports weekly for us. We really believe Concord has the best livery stables of any town of its size. - They are not old, tumble down, rickety outhouses, but spa cious, roomy buildings, warm ana comfortable. Brown Bro. at the one and M. J. Corl at the other have the stock and turnouts to please even the most fastidious dude. Many citizens of Cabarrus and surrounding counties will receive a copy of our first issue as a specimen, and also as a gentle reminder that The Standard is ready to brighten the firesides of every household each week for a little pecuniary ad vance. The new factory is rapidly nearing completion. The building is under cover, the boil?rs are placed, and the electric lights are being put in position. It presents a handsome appearance, and the buildings erect ed for the Superintendent and the hands not only look well but are com f ortable. Now, friends, this is our first visit to you. If you like us, as a newspa per, and would like a weekly visit of this sort of miscellaneous gossip, come up and subscribe. Our earn est endeavor will be to improve each week. See our terms and act ac cordingly. Rev. Mr. Bostic has received a call to the Baptist church at Durham. We understand he has accepted and will enter upon the duties of his new field at an early date. The little charge here will miss him greatly, and the Durham people are to be congratulated on securing so ener getic and earnest a minister. Doc Walter says he was a prisoner at Elmira, N. T., eleven months of the war. He got there with a Con federate V. which he traded to a paroled man for a 25 cents shinplas ter, and when he left there he had $11 in U. S. bills. The sameness of Elmira prison fare made him crave pickles, but he could get none till he arrived at Chambersburgi Pa There he bought a bottle for 35 cents, ate all the pickles,, drank the vinegar, and now has the bottle at home. A colored citizen, the owner of 10 acres of land, three miles from Con cord, wears a bland smile as he tells this : "Last Spring I had a old horse give me and started to sow some oats and break up my corn land, but the old horse died, so I made me light plow stock, which I pulled myself, acting as horse, "while my old woman held the handles and my daughter done the hoeing. I raised 75 bushels of corn,. 75 bushels of sweet taters, 40 bushels of Irish ta- ters, and 300 pounds seed, cotton, and made $15 cutting wheat for the hite folks. Mr. M. H. H. Caldwell has the mumps. Mrs. Dr. Moose and daughter, of Mt. Pleasant, are quite ill with pneumonia. Our young men have formed a Roller Skating Club, and have en gaged Caton's Hall for their rink. Charlotte capitalists, alive to the interest of their growing oity, sub scribed $85,000 in ten minutes for a new cotton factory. Later sub scriptions run the amount up to $105,000. As something that will ' interest our Lutheran friends here, let us state ' that Rev. Hallman, former pastor of St. James church, this place, married one dozen couples from Nov. 7 to Dec. 28. Our County School Board should not only be praised, but a vote of thanks should be given them for their action in arranging that the public schools shall be continued the full term of four months as di rected by the constitution. In the butchering season Mrs. J. S. Fisher had a porker slaughtered, the flesh of which looked unhealthy. Dr. Archey examined it, and then sent it to the State Chemist. Ex amination there and at Washingtbn dispelled the first idea that it was affected with trichioa, but proved that what seemed to be small parasites among the muscles were portions of undeveloped tape worm. Business Changes. The firm of Brown & Schaeffer is dissolved, and R. A. Brown now holds forth in the store room lately occupied by Bingham & Harris. H. M. Goodman displays his gro ceries at Litaker's corner. The Messrs, Whitley occupy Mr. Boyd's store room next door to Mrs. Cross' millinery. Dr- Archey is nicely fitted up in Litaker's new building. Reliable information comes from No. 5 that five persons have been ar rested and are now in Salisbury jail charged with burgalarizing the store house of, Mr. Jas. Cline in No. 5, and that of Mr. Henry Graber, of South RowaD. The names of the parties arrested are William and Henry Roseman, two Newsom broth ers and Alf Hess. The sister of the Newsom boys is also arrested as an accomplice. It is said that there is an organized band of sixteen impli cated in the lawless acts of that vicinity. Another informant tells us that for months past many citizens of South Rowan and north Cabarrus have been loosing by petty thefts, and were greatly exercised as to who were the trespassers. Gradually the oeroetrators became bolder. A few waeks ago Mr. Charley Powles and his neighbor Thornton had 60 chick ens stolen. Jas. Clme and Henry Graber's stores were broken into, and the night after Mr. Monroe Ketner butchered, the theives en tered his Mill, poured the wheat out of the sacks, then proceeded to pry open his meat house, put his meat in the sacks and carried it off on his own horses. At another time Bill Roseman and his pals visited a very aged la dy, (Mrs. Adam Roseman) who lived alone with a hired girl, broke open her smoke house aDd finding noth ing proceeded to ransack her kitch en, notwithstanding her expostula tions. The "girl slipped up stairs and blew a horn, a signal in that country of distress, but before the neighbors arrived the theives had left, first threatening the old lady with death if she exposed them. The whole country was aroused by these depredations and the result is a part of them are bagged. Meeting or Count Commissioned. Our County Commissioners held tneir nrst meeting oi tnis year on Monday the 2d, at which D. B. Cross was appointed to change the Harrisburg road from Harrisburg to his house, and J. F. Erwin was appointed overseer to change the same from D. B. Cross' house to Dr. Pharr's land. Sheriff Propst made his return of taxes for 1887, which was audited. D. L. Hethcock, keeper of stand ard weights and measures,, and Jas. N. Brown, Coroner renewed their bonds as requested by law. Tbe following demands were or dered to be paid : A. A. Cruse, wood for road, $2.75. C. A. Sherwood, services at poor house, $143.25. J. P. Gibson, medicine lor poor house, 5.45. R. S. Young, County Physician, 533.90. J. F. Goodman, wood for road, $1.00. J. B. Sherrill, publishing state ment of county expenses. $53,92. C. A. Caldwell, plan and statement of Cox's mill bridge, $7.50. J. F. Willeford, merchandise for poor house, $23.49. Yorke & Wadsworth, goods for poor bowse, $15.65. Jno. R. Patterson, jail fees, $29.50. Wm.. Propst, Sheriff, clothing, &o .. for Mary Tucker and W. H. I Chambers $40. 00;. Forgery. ' Last Tuesday evening a tony younff man dressadin a wine colored suit and wearing a light colored hat, registered at McNamar's Hotel as F. J. Edwards. Richmond, Va. He purported to be advertising a book. Nothing was very marked about him except his familiarity on short acquaintance. ' Thursday afternoon about 4 o'clock he stepped up to Mr. John Leslie, cashier at Cannons & Fet zers, and presented a check on the City Bank of Richmond. Mr. Les lie promptly told him he could not cash it unless some one could ident ify him, or the check was endorsed by some known rel.al le person. He immediately stepped out, and in a few moments returned with A. M. Brown's name as the endorser, and received the cash. The transaction created no surprise until at a later hour Mr. Brown was shown the check and denied all knowledge of it. Mr. Brown being interviewed, says when the check was shown him he at once recognized the signature as a good forgery of his name on the back of Brown & Scbaefler's account that he had sticking in his upper coat pqeket, with the name fully ex posed. He thinks that the cheeky young forger studied the handwri ting whilst making himself very fa miliar around the office stove at his stable, where he regaled the crowd with a highly pictured description cf a party he had attended, stating that he had got a little too full of the sparkling fluicl that- buoys up .the feelings, anil this being a dry town he had telegraphed for a gal lon to revive Hs flagging spirits. Altogether it' was a bold faced and cheeky job. The forger isyoung, smooth faced, near six feet tall and weighing some where about 165 or 175 pounds. He deserves to be jailed. J. Dovcj's Farmer's Store and the firm of Dpve Bost & Co., have been consolidated and now occupy the spacious store room formerly occu pied by: Mr. Dove. Mr. Joseph Cook was the reci pent of a bo x of nice and appropriate presenis from his nephews in Ar kansas,; as a memorial of their es teem. We Jearn from the Charlotte Chronickj that Rev. W. B. Arro wood, pas tor of Beth page congrega tion, this cjounty.has been invited to serve as sujnply for the churches of Philadelphia and Matthews, in Mecklenburg;, with a view to an ear ly call a pas1, tor. We ha e labored under some diffi culties in getting out our first issue, the chief, of whnch is a want cf ex changes, the difficulty of getting everything in ordei, and the natural backwardness of cur local news gatherer in interviewing,. We hope to be all right in a week. A disastrous accioV.ntJoccurrecl to tlhe passengei train on the Chester and & Lenoir Narrow Gauge road, near Hick ory, early yesteiday morning. The entire train, with the exception of the engine and tender, went down with a trestle, fi re broke out in the wreck and both trestle and curs were burned to ashes. The accident occured at the trestle two miles west of Hickory, and the train that went down was the west bound train, composed of a baggage and express car and two passenger coaches. It was in charge of Capt. Waddell, and was qnite well filled with passengers, several ladies being among the numbe r. The trestle was thirty feet high and the fall of the train was terrific. As the cars struck upon the ground below the v were shivp.rpfl to nieces and the M , i uOT passengers were unaoie io expunu uuw they escaped with their lives. Not a single person on the train escaped nn injured, but the wonder is that some of them wore not killed outright. So far as can be learned the list of the injured is as follows : Bev. Dr. Beall, of Lenoir, skull crushed, and injured fatal. Conductor Waddell, slightly hurt. J. E. Coffey, colored, jaw bone broken. The engineer and fireman were pain fully injured, and all the passengers more or less hurt. Eev. Dr. Beall, who was fatally in jured in the wreck, was a Presbyterian minister of Lenoir, and was well known in .Mecklenburg count. Charlotte Chronicle. Secretary Lamar has replied to the resolution of the Helena (Mont) Board of Trade oonoerning the min eral lands taken up by the Northern Pacific, that no patents of lands re ferred to are being issued, and the question as to the necessity of non mineral affidavits by the railroad company is pending before the de partment, and action will be taken until that question is "decided, - and no patent will be issued within sixty days. BUSINESS LOCALS. DISSOLUTION. The firm of Brown & Schaeffer having been dissolved by mutual con sent, the undersigned, purchasing Mr. Shaeffer's stock, will continue the gro cery business at the old stand lately oc cupied by Bingham & Harris. I thank the public for the liberal patronage heretofore bestowed and respectfully solicit their custom in ; the fiitnro. I All perrons owing Brown & Schaef fer are requested to come forward and settle at once as the business of the old firm must be closed up at an early day. R. A. BBOWN. Stillthey come, in packages, bun dles and boxes, those nice and pret ty goods. The last invoice of ladies hats are splendid, and those neck ties for the gents superb, at the Racket Store. i i Business Change. The two firms of Dove, Bost & Fink and J. I 'ove's Farmer's Store have consolidat ed and are now doing business together at Dove's corner. Don't fail to call and examine their varied stock. The weather is cold, but Cook & Sappenfield are prepared to keep up the circulation of groceries of every kind. Flour, bacon, lard, canned goods, sugar, coffee, candies and fruits at the lowest prices for cash or barter. Gents, the cold weather is not over yet, so hurry to the Racket Store and be fitted out with good warm underwear at Racket prices. TERRIFIC SNOW STORM MINNESOTA. IN St. Paul, Minn, January 12. The mDst severe snow storm and blizjard commenced here at 10 o'clock this forenoon and still oontinues. Trains between St. Paul and Minn eapolis are delayed in some cases an hour, and all the roads centering in this city are becoming blockaded. Reports from all points throughout tne state snow tnat tne storm is general and no through trains will probably be started on any of the lines to-day. Hukon, Dak., January 12. A Iter rific snow storm Ibegan here at 11 o'clock this morning and still rages. The wind is blowing 50 miles an hour, The air is so full of snow tnat one is unable to see 50 feet at any time, Wixiona, Minn., Jan. 12. The temperature here has been from 10 to 35 degrees below zero for a week. Winnipeg. Minn., Jan, 12. The coldest snap for years has been pre vailing for some days past. Yester day the thermometer touched 50de grees below zero. Minneapois, January 11. The ther mometer registered 32 degrees be low zero this morning. There was a strong - wind last night and the weather was the severest of the Isea- 'eon. Trains are delayed. At uai Ick&c yesterday the thermometer registerwl fifty-four degrees, below zero, the' bottom of the register be ing reached. OtfiertNorthwestern towns report 25 to 40 degreeV .below. At Dalton, Ga., they pointed out an old darkey who was to be married that evening, and I took my seat beside him on the depot platform and said : "Uncle Reuben, is it true !that !you are to be married to-night?" "Yes, sah, yes sah, yon's hit it ,zact ly right, sah." "Were you ever married before ?" 'Why, bress your soul, boy, dis will be my fo'th wife!' "How long since your last 'one died V "Jist free weeks next Saturday." 'Isn't it pretty sudden, when yOu have been a widower only two I weeks?" "I reckon not, sah. I don't 6ee how I can help de ole woman any by tra! blin round alone." "And they tell me thatj you are over 70 years old?" Yes, sah -1'ze risin' of 73." 'And you don't even own a chick en!" ''No, Sah.' "And the bride is as badly off as yourself?" . "Jist 'zactly, sah.n "Don't the future look a little dark to you V "See heah, white man," replied the old chap, as he slid to the ground and brushed the dust off his coat-tails, I doan1 like dat sort o argyment ! Ize ole an' poo an doan' know much, but I ain't de sort of a mule to take a foth wife without making, all arrangements to board wid her fadder an gin him tow fnote wheneber anvthine is due I Spose Ize gwine to be sleeping in fence coners an libin on green apples kaze my las ole woman took a noshun to die ? No, sah ! I isent dat sort of a numraer ! Ize got to dat age whar Ize got to be tooken car of if I has to mary free wives 'to do it." Detroit Free, Press ADIEU TO LIGHTNING KODS. Greensboro Workman. The Chicago News of a recent date has an article under the above head, in which the declaration is made that the belief in the protection to houses through lightning rods is a delusion. For many years we have been of the same opinion. As to the lightning rod man, the News says he was the most intolerable nuisance that ever imposed upon the public.' We are reminded of having passed along a certain road some time ago and having our attention called to some very dilapidated build ings, against one of which was erected a lightning rod. It was est imated that the cost of the lightning rod must have exceeded the market value of all the houses on the lot, and it was not a pleasant thought to. remember that the rod itself which cost the proprietor so much moDey represented not one scintilla of protection. We remember hnvitic nnoA hppn visited hv ft lifllt- I ning rod tgent. We went out bare- ! headed and 6tood for five or ten min utes while he delivered his Stt speech on the peril of being without a light ning rod. His utterance was very rapid bnt when he reached the end of his speech, looked for a moment to see the effect produced and finding his auditor incorrigible, he made the addition to his speech : "Well, sir, I have giren you faithful warning, and I leave you here in the open wide world with no protection on earth against the thunder and lightning cf heaven " And the lightning rod man went h is way. NoCuHEFOB"DrvEBS.,--GoT. Tay lof, of Tennessee, recently told of a colored clergyman, who preached a sermon on the text : "And the multitudes come to him and he heal' ed them of divers diseases." Said he: "My dying congregation this is a terrible text. Disease is in the- world.1 The small pox slays its hun dreds, the cholera its thousands and the yellow fever, its tens of thous ands, but. in the language of the text, if you take the divers, you are gone. . Tnese eartnly d octors can cure small pox, cholera and yellow fever if they get there in time, but nobody but the good Lord c an cure the divers." CNC0RD MARKETS COTTON MARKET. Corrected weekly by J. W. CA3INON. Stained, Low middling, Middling, Good middling, 71 to 8f 9 to 9J 91 9f PRODUCE MAEKBT. Corrected weekly by DOVE, BOST k FINK. Bacon, 10 16 10 18 15 to 20 16 to 20 SO $1.25 . 115 10 125to 2.40 Sugar cured hams, Bulk meats, sides,, Beeswax. Butter. Jhickens, . Corn, The Standard, Eggs, Lard, Floiirro: 'mih luwiltna Meal, . , Onions, Peas, 55 to 60 6Vtt:.!. 55 to GO 40 to 50 4 to 5 75 to. 85 Oats, Tallow. Salt. afTHE LIQHT ftUIUJMQ al SEVIUG 'MACHINE HAS NO EQUAL. PERFECT SATISFACTION New Heme Sewine LlacMne Co. ORANGE, MASS. 30 Union Sjuare,H.Y. CMcage,U. St loult, Mo. Atlanta, Ga. Dallas, Tex. San Francisco, Cai. r-OW SALE ijV SIOOO REWARD urkfiwrniKk Claw 8n i. mi iVICTOI 3.nh1. vnallWl ran. TT I rKTWiTfTi Newark machine co NSwAHK. O. WRITE FOR ACIPLES OF CEO. H. C. MEAL & SON, Baltimore it Holllday Strait, BALTIMORE,. MD. Double AIM iiraus STRONG FACTS! A great maxf people are asking what puticwlar troubles Bkown's Ikon Brrrxxs U good Cor. It will cure Heart. Disease, Paral ysis, Dropsy, Kidney Disease, Con sumption, Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, and all similar diseases. Its wonderful curative power is simply because it purifies aw) en riches the blood, thus beginning at the foundation, and by building up the system, drives out all disease. A Lady Cured of Rheumatism. Baltimore, Md May 7, 1880. My health was much shattered by Rheumatism when I commenced taking Brown's Iron Bitters, and I scarcely had strength enough to t tend to my daily household duties, lam now using the third bottle and I am regaining strength daily, and I cheerfully recommend it to alL I cannot say too much in praise cf it. Jttn. Mabv E. Bkashba. 173 fwstmanit. Kidney Disease Cured. Christiansburg. Va., 1881. Suffering from kidney disease, from which 1 could get no relief, I . tried Brown's Iron Bitters, which cured me completely. A child of mine, recovering from scarlet fever, had no appetite and did not seem to be able to eat at alL I gave him Iron Bitters with the happiest results. J. Kyu Montagub. Heart Disease. Vine St.,HarrUVunr, Pa. Dec a, 1881. ' After trying difonnt physicians and many remedies for palpitation f the aenit without receiving any benefit, I was advised to try Brown's. Iron Bitters. I have used two bot tles and never found anything that gave me so much relief. Mrs. Jamns Hass. For the peculiar troubles to which ladies are subject, Brown's Ikon Birr ms is invaluable. Try it. Be sure and get the Genuine. TO TOBACCO GROWERS OF NORTH CAROLINA! TOD CATi SATK MONEY BY TJSrNO BADGH'S SPECIAL SUBSTITUTES FOR PERUVIAN CUANO. 8 AUGH'S Ke v Process 1 0 per ct. 6U AKO A perfect mbotUat for PKKU V1AN-G uar. an teed to contain 10 per cent, of Ammonia. Wholesale Price SS5 per 2,000 lbs. in Baltimore. BAUfiHS SPPUl SUBSTITUTE FOR SIX PER CENT. PERUVIAN 6UAN0. Wholesale Price S35 per 2,000 bs. In Baltimore. UT" In order that all may be able to us BAUGH'SSPEMIFERTILIZER FOR TOBACCO! We u now aeUiaaT it direct to Farmer at Serin Varollaa. at SJ33 per angle ton. on board Baltimore In aood bace of 20O lba. each Ctuih with order tans siring the Farmer who bura wholesale ra nut a taarle ten, advantaga of the b price. We would. However, ad Vina clubbing1 toiretber and buying la Farmer zmr-lomA Iota to aecoro lowest freight rates. nera foraaalaa. Addrcaa U order and Inquiries to BAUCH Cc SONS 103 SOUTH ST.BALTIM0RE.MO "ISMS" the wonarr-iSM-To-dAY is RHEUMATISM III THE BACK JPERRY DAmS PAIM KILLER. RHEUMATISM IM THE KK EES , Cured by PERRY DAVIS'S PAIM KILLER: RHEUMATISM IK THE MUSCLES Cured hy PERRY DAVIS'S PAIR KILLER, RHEUMATISM OF LONG STAKDIMQ Cured by PERRY DAVIS'S PAIM KILLER. RHEUBATIC SUFFERERS, buy of any Druggist Perry Davis's Pain Killer j THE TESTS OF 40 YEARS PROVE BEYOND DOUBT THAT PerrjMsPainKiller IS THE GEAT HEALTH KEEPER THE RELIEVER OF DISTRESS THE COMFORTER FOR PAIN THE ENEMY OF DISEASE AND A FRIEND OF THE FAMILY, WyiCH SHOULD ALWAYS EJE AT HAND. EVERY DRUGGIST keeps PerryDavissPainKiller WIMTirrUorD R.SCOTT'S beau. ful ciectrlo Coraeta. Sample free to tboae becoming Kti orUk, quick sales. Territory riven. it. OrSaUatactlonnsranteed. Adsreis DR. SCOTT. 842 Broad. NEW YORK IPCMTP

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