; mfe-Mh . , . - 411-1 ill - r 111 1 I ill Ji I If t 111 ill IK II V U Mittfttf X, W ffF-'! YOLicKXIX., CjlARLOTTE, N. C., WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 7, 1883. NQ3;312; ;'7'WB;-iiaVe ; .54, .; a--'"''ri - Already Placed OZ7i2 SPRING ORDERS With Our Miuuiadiirers KO UH Bl'HINO STO( K OF H ATS, tuts ani Valises, WHICH WILL B More Complete and Varied Than KVKR BEFORK. , a i - IS" We tender thanks to our Friends and Pa trons for their Liberal Patronage dur.ng the past year, und hope to merit a comlnuacce of their favor. Respectfully, Pecram d Co. feb4 A 00MM05-BEH8E EEMEDY. SALICYLIC!. No More. llbKunialiam, Gout er Neuralgiat IMMEDIATK BELIEF WARRANTED. PERSIAN KNT CURE GUARANTEID. Five years established and sever known to fall In a single case, acute or chronic. Refer to all piomlnent phrslclans and drugLits for the stand ing of Sailcjdica. SECRET: The only dlssolver of the Poisonous Uric Acid which exists In tne Blood or Rbtumat.c and Qouty Patients. SiLICYLICA Is known a common sense remedy, brciuse It sttfes directly at the cause of Rheumatism, G-ut and Neuralg'a whl'e so many so-called specifics and supposed panaceas enly treat locally the effects. It has been conceded by eminent scientists that outward applications such as nibbing with oils, ointments, liniments, and soothing lotions will not eradicate these diseases which are the resu t of the polsontr g of the blood with Uric Add SaLICYLICA wo'ks with marvelous effect on this acid and so removes the disorder. It is now exclusively used by all celebr-ued physicians of An er'ca snd Knrope. Highest Medical Acadfsmy of P; rts reports 95 per cent cures In three days. It ETO EiTIB Tilt that SALI YLICA Is a certain cure for Rheuma tism (jout and Neuralgia The most Intense pains are subdued alnit Instantly. Give It a trial. Relief gunrantet d or money re funded. Thousands of testimonials sent on application. 811 BOX. 6BOX88for$5. Eent free by mail on receipt of money. ASK YOUR DR GGIST FOR IT. But do net be deluded into taking Imitations or substitutes, or some hiLg recommended as "Just as good!" Insist on the genuine with the name of WaSHBURNE & CO.. on each box, which Is guar anteed chemically pure under our signature, an lndlspenf-lble requisite to Insure succuss la the treatment Take no other, or send to us. WASHBURUE Sc. CO., Proprietors, 287 Broadway, cor Reade St., New York. novl8 dw ly KO USE FOR THEM. Concerning- Certain Klicof the Past bogm ibat Har had Their Day George Stephenson's ' Rocket." and the magnifi cent locomotives of to-day. are built upon'ilifl same general" principle, yet the macUme with which the great engineer astonished his age, is investing now only as an Illustration of the be ginning of the Invention. There were plasters with holes la them long befoj BENSOS'S ClP- CINE POBOU3 PLA9TEB surprised Wh the pub lic and the phy Iclans; and the triumph of Jibe Capclne Is founded upon ths'-paUai . successes, p the utter failures of Its predecessors.' Everything of value In the old fjoroiis . piaster, Is. retained In the Capcfne; but at this point all comparison ends and contrast begins. For example: ; ' ' 1 The old plasters were sow in their action; the Capclne Is quick and sure; . The old piasters lacked the power to do more than to Impart s lght,; temporary relier in cases easy of tr,eatment the Capc:ni penetrates the sys fcm and permanently cures the troubles for which t Is racommended. - , The old plasters depended Cor any good rtsulte toy might atuift upon an'todd'ent of thelr'mai fn th naked faith of thlr wearers; ihe Ben; n'8 reaches its ends by means1 of 'the.sclenilfld ""nation of th a,eUcontans. .. . . M ;r e did testen;ilite;4tteiBois fe lh Be D8lne' a. switched, ot the track, Wle w from1!!,, 80e' 011 " W JFlsnUolden;opla y w ofpeopsej'nr- ! , , t& " 'nu ry f act He tni leAdlng danger Daystoiredr f,Per Wbufe Ttoe1 uremak"-" "aUon Is the concession fail: ra CipcTv,, ine genuine-oare we John.!6111 108 Mntef. Trtce 25eJ Bea- 4 v-nemuits, New Tork, New Spring Goods WE HAVS JUST HECZ1TED X BEAUTIFUL LOT OF Hamburg Edgings and Insertiogs, Barred Nainsooks s, LINER D' INDES', 4C. SPRING CALICOES, NEW STYLE IIUCHING8, &C. 49- For the next 30 d 15 s we will offer special Inducements In HBaVY GOODS, several lines to be closed out Regardless of Cost Come and see Cs. Respectfully, T. L. Seigle & Co feb4 d&w -WOBTH OF WOBTH OF WATCHES, SILVER and PLATED: W A- R E, -TO BS 80I.D WITHOUT REGARD TO COST, IT J. T. Butlers Jewelry Store. dec 1 6 GRATITUDE. Denver, Tol., Aug. 29, 1882. Gents I cannot find words with which to ex press my gratitude to yc for ihe cure your Swift's Specific haseflected In my case. I was aftlcted with the horrible blood disease for three years, and after spending some time at the Hot Springs, considered my case a hopeless one. I used-only onedoz-n small bottles of S. S. 8., and there is not a cign of the disease remaining. My sores are all healed, my throat is entirely well; I am rid ot that tenlbleiaP'ian mm disease. Be ing a d.uglN jclerkilhave seen iiniriw jTVr " ---m -T hun dreds of men dosed with Calomel, Iodide of Mer cury and Iodide of Potash, until they were made complete wrecn.t, that I fhudder to think of the misery which has been brought on the human family by the use of Mercurials for Blood Diseases. It Is a crying shame that physicians will not acknowledge the merit of your GRAND Blood Medicine. Use my name as you wish, I refer you to my present employers, or to Messrs. Collins Bros., St. Louis. J. H BAIF, Broadway Pharmacy, Denver, CoL If you doubt, come to see us, and we will CURB YOU. or chaige noth ng. Write for particulars and a copy of the little book, "Message to the Un fortunate Suffering." Ask any Druggist as to our standing. 81,000 REWARD will be paid to any Chemist who will find on analysis of 100 bottles of 8. 8. S., one partlele of Mereury, Iodide of Potas sium, or any Mineral substance. ' SWIFT; SPECIFIC CO., Proprietors, Atlanta, Ga, 'Pr ce of small size .J... ....81.00 large size, 1.75 SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. dec23 eod THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY 1 Relieve and cures RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, ' BACttACHE, EEIPACKB, TOOTHACHE, SOBE THROAT, . otneusy , SWELLINGS, . SPBAINS, , Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, ,;IOSTBfTES, And all other bodily aches - - - and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. 2' Sold bynllDrOMlsts and .Dealer. Directions in 11 laaguages. . .. ,; The Charles A. Vogeler Co. t. A. VOGBLDt 00.) BalUaora, C. S. 1. r is, 'Kutu trap' M i '.r',.i fASlKic ntKEOi ir tumr Ekjomr eonseou quil;ly and radically UMt . , u.'Nie 1 (lutinx aMuonthl. SJL curv, uiileMiiiaveras,)afr!f.a fttm r mnu in.Diau mrmmrn. ntajMaehHtfit Pimphlt daw, ilcurt mm KtiM'ett ipplimriiMi "il bvt peitUvawmM for thbor UmOrhj it o tM thooranda of caasa of ttaa warat klndi n M kmc , (CaodlDK liar bean eorad.- Indd,atrasr it myfaltS, in itt affleaer, that I wlU aend TWO BUTTLKS JSRKB. to Ether with TALUABLB TBBATISB OTLthla dlMaae, t ranlliarar. Glva Kxnraaa and P. O. addrasal I '.it -... torn m fanyTk. Pipes, India Mil $1511 ockJewm It Pirelli 'm"''""i"" "Ti I in lllik,l'P rtwirammmtmn. I lit f I '(SS) I p 0 R PA 1 N ttMspkVMUsM4itfUli m i Mnetim tor tXt " bc thUliMM U motto 1 THE MERITS.-0F ENSILAGE, FARMERS TEL.UNG OF ITS EF FECT OH CATTlTE. Discussion om the Proper Mode- of Growing the Crops, FilluiaT the Silos and Using the Ensilage. The Ensflage Conpfress which metj in New York last week, was attendedj by at least one hundred farmers from va rious parts of the United States, iridi eating a widespread interest in the sys tem of ensilage, or the preservation of green crops, with their juices, byde positing them in pits or silos under . weight. There was a Yery large collec tion of samples of ensilage of corn, rye and other green crops, and of but ter and cheese, the product of ensilage food. Mr. J, E. Brown, in calling .he meeting to order, said : "This is the advanced class in the great study, and numerous letters come to us from Maine to - California, frbm those who cannot attend in person. , It was evident after our last meeting that a secona congress would De necessary in orderto correct certain misconcep tions that had grown up concerning the BBLom, aua many questions not touch ed at that time remained to be dis cussed, ana, it possible, answered. We are much more competent to do this now than we jWere then. We met last year in a sore ot amazement that sn many had succeeded; we come now to gether curious to know if they have laiicu. Aiie teat 01 the value of this system or any other is the comparative cost of labor required to produce the same, results. If we have learned to diminish the labor required, either in producing the crop or in preparing the silo, or in filling it with less haste, we have increased the value of the svstm. Nearly all the first silos were builtuby men who could not afford to fail, Mnd they cost so much that they discour aged their poorer neighbor's, who spp posed they must all be of masonry. More than one-half of the 4,000,000 farms of the United States are 100 acres or less in size. This ensilage congress will send word to these small farmers that they can share in the profits-of a system that wbs supposed to be re served for capitalists or for farmers with income from other sources than the farm. Here is a sample of ensilage from a silo that cost only $10,and holds ten tons, and it is very good ensilage, too.. We can say to England and Scot land: 'Don't; wait for the weather; harvest your fodder while it is wet,' We can say to Ireland well ! I dem't know what we can say to Ireland. Par liament has told Mr. Gladstone that he must keep his eyes and ears ODen ab6ut ensilage, and he has promised to do so. We can say to New England: 'Don't abandon your farms, but keep all your sunshine by saving the juices of your crops.'" Francis .Morris, of 'Maryland, was called to the chair, and he called for expressions of experience. 1 Alfred A. lleid, of Warwick, R. I., was the first to respond. He said that during the last year his calves had de veloped, well, his cows had yielded. an even flow of milk with none of the usual shrinkage in winter, his steers were in fine : condition, his oxen had grown in weight, and he had had'no sickness. He had fed to all all the en silage they would eat three times a day, giving the milch cows in addition, inree quarts or Dran, his oxen 2 quarts, but the young cattle nothine but ensi lage. When feeding rye ensilage' he had. noticed twice in two weeks a slight taste in the milk. He thought probably that the ensilage had boen too long ex posed to the air and fermentation had started. From 1m daily farm journal he read a resume of the cost and yield of four acres of ensilage erops. The total cost of G6 tons, 427 pounds of corn in the held, was $159.51, and the total expense from the field to the silo was $6037. Mr. Brown called on the Rev. Dr. Or- miston, who told of his experience last year on his farm at Whitby, 30 miles from Toronto, on the shore of Lake Ontario. His twelve acres of land had produced an average of 124 tons each of ensilage, at a cost of $1.20 per ton from the field to the silo. He had raised a second crop, clover, and put in the sno on the com, and piled in some apples on that. The silo was opened the first week in January, and all found in good condition, though his man wrote it smelled "rummy." Houses, cattle, calves and pigs eat it readily, turning away from turnips to take it. Dr. Or miston was satisfied that silos could be built cheaply, but thought good ones must cost and pay. A letter irom Hi W btewart ur,?ed the putting of good pasture grass into ensilage for the sake of good beef. He said he had found that ensilage of sweet corn and clover produeed' as. much and as good milk and butter as fresh grass. Mr Moore, ot UocKland county, hunt one silo in the ground and one in his barn with matched boards. In the first the ensilage was found to have been decayed to the depth of six inches all around. In the second it wa-3 as sound next the boards as in the centre. When it froze he fed it to the cattle just the same, and they seemed to relish it. Chas T Cromwell, of live, N Y, said he had built his silo much more expen sively than was necessary. Last year he had sown his corn broadcast. It came up, and with it ragweed so thick that it could not be cultivated. He "en silaged" all as it grew. Horsetooth, southern corn, in his opinion, makes the best ensilage ; oats were better than rye. Mr Strong, of Golden Springs, Baid that he had grown 65 tons of corn on 6 acres at a cost of $1.20 per ton, allow ing $2.50 a day for team hire. He sav ed one half the cost of tiis previous crop by not cutting the corn, but put ting the stalks into the silo whole. ' Si los could be made cheaper than they were. He was convinced that it was not necessary to make them air tight. At that was essential was the pres sure. He began to feed fourteen cows ensilage on December 31. At that time they were giving three cans of forty quarts each daily ; now they give four cans. Each cow's fodder costs 2 cents a day. He reported that ' two farmers in his neighborho9d had failed with en silage last year. .... J x Smith, of Doyleston, thought if it had not been for ensilage he would have been in the sheriff's hands before this. Now, however, he was making butter for 6 cents a pound that , his housekeeper had the impudence to ask fifty-seven cents a pound for in the market. J W Walcottr who runs a large farm as an adjunct of his , hotel, the Ven dome, in Boston, answered a great many yestions as to his methods and results. The cost of harvesting to him was less than 44 cents a ton, and the to tal cost about $2. He had used rye en silage for four years, and had never had bad results ; but the rye must be ' cut early. To his milch cows he gave since November 20, corn ensilage mixed with three pints of corn meal and three pints of cotton seed meal a day; to his, younger stock ensilage only. The most convenient silo was one that could be filled in a day. In one that had been a fortnightlling he Iiad .noticed the strata iB4icating the quantity pit in each day;, j Qneostrn g $25 was as good as one costing $25,000; the whole secret; was in havingsufficient continjaous pressure to f orce out the oxygen. I He ased 150 pounds, to the' square foot, but this was a great deal 'more, than was necessary. - - - -..-- . J MBrugler. of New Brunswick, read a statement showing that he had raised 353 tons ana l,30 pounds of ensilage on 28 acres, at a cossoi $0.25 per ton. W N Gilbert of RichlandJ vT.v, 1 iTari, raised 44 acres at a cost of $695 40i but. ne naa noc cnargeu 1 cut 01 lanaor an.- terest. Mr Hemingway, or Connecticut told a mournful storyrpf the death df a horse and a muie, wmcn had been tributed by two veterinary snrgeon the rye ensilage with which he- had thRm. DrWJi Fagerformerlv nf X York, but now of ; West Point, Neb; ka, said he was sun using ensilage liked it better than ever: he van f ing 330 cows with it; he preferred cdrfl as being more proauenve of milk than rye. In 1881 it cost him 92 cents alon to raise it and put it in the silo. Legrand B Cannon, of N Y city, said mat nis experience wiui ensilage f as verv limited and confined almost . clusively to its effect in fattening qa tie. He purchased 90 flhort horned cat tle and experimented with them on his farm in Vermont lasc winter, treating some as the New Eagland farrier treats his stock ana ieeaing others jon ensilage. . It cost him 10$ cents per day for each animal fed on hay, and cents per day for each animal ted on eijsi lage. xne economy ut.-. ensuage over hay was thus $4 80 during a period; of six months. The gain in the weight of the cattle fed on nay was 5 per cent., and the gain of those fed on ensilage was 11 per ceuL., uio gain in the con dition of the ensilage-fed- cattle being iuny vjo per ceuu x ue normal temper ature of the bovine family is 102 dil -and the speaker found,tat the temper: ature of the cattle led. on ensilage was uniform throughout the winter, whilo that 01 the other was continually fluc tuating, mi uanuon said that he was highly pleased with the result of his ex periments with ensilage, and proposed to continue them this winter. i Congressman Orlando - B Potter, said that his experience of last year had been repeated this year on his farm at Sing Sing, and he had made no change in his experiments except to increase the quantity of ensilage and decrease the amount of grain fed to his cattle. He had also added hay to the conte it,s of his silos, mixing it with ensilage, and he fonnd that if he mixed! more than 10 per cent, of hay it injure the ensilage. He considered that silos ijnder ground were superior to those, built above ground, and the best covering for them was 8 or 10 inches of eart&, His ensi lege was slightly acid, but there was nothing offensive about if and he-' fre quently placed it in hi mouth a'nd chewed it. The fermentation whfen takes place is about equal to the fijrst process of digestion. Mr Potter asked if any person present hadjfed ensilage to hogs with success. President Mor ns answered that he had given ensilasre to hogs and that they grew fat on it. hie wanted no better food for them. George T Powell, of Ghent, N. Y., said that he ha two years experience' of feeding ensilage to sheep and hogs. Three years ago he fed sheep on the best clover hay, and the grain in weight was 23 pounds per head when he ship ped them to New York. He fed a num ber of merino3 on ensilegeta year ago. Their average weight in the fall was 75 pounds, and their agerage weight in March was 82 pounds. Mr Benedict, of Holyoke, Mass., testified to the adapta bility of ensilage as a food Cor hogs'. He is feeding 65 hog3 on this preserved f od der, and they relish it and ' are rapidly growing fat on it. Mr. Powell, in. an swer to a question as to the. effect 1 of ensilage of horses, said thft&he-had fed his five horses on corn ensilege with grain and hay. with one exception they all like it, and the horse that donT; seem to like it particularly manages to eat his ration all up during the day. My horses never looked better," said the speaker, "than they have sinoe 1 have fed them from the silo." W W Merriam, of Summerville, New Jt rsey, said that Prof Cooke, of the JNew Jersey Agriculture College, claim ed that dry stalks properly treated prove as good fodder as ensilege. The speaker did not agree with the Profes sor. He weights his suo with stone and turns out as fine ensilege as can be pro duced. He owns the largest 18 months old New Jersey heifer that he has ever seen, and she been raised entirely on ensilege. Mr Morrison found that the cost or 150 tons ot the rodder was, on an average. $2 72M per ton. Mr Linsley, of Morris County, New Jersey, exhibit ed a specimen of butter made from cream taken from the milk of cows which were fed entirely on ensilage. The milk increased from 15 to 20 per cent, and very materially in quality within one week. VV H Truslow be lieved that corn was the best material for making ensilage. He had tried sorg hum on the farm of the late Saroual Beinington at Cazenovia, but he found that the rir.d was tough and sharp, and Ciittlejdo not like it. He thought clover contained too much nitrogen to make good ensilage. He brings his ensilage out af the siio about forty-eight hours before feeding it, and mixes the grain with it. He then drenches it in warm water before giving it to the cattle. Hungarian grass, Mr. Truslow said, makes excellent ensilage. He thought that the proper time for corn to be ensi lage was just after the ear had formed, the silk had appeared, and a few roast- ng ears could be gathered. (Jol Wright, of Atlantic City, agreed with Mr Trus low, and said that he had never cut a field of corn for enislage that had not some ears fully developed. Mr Brown offered the following resolutions which was unanimously adopted: "The Ensilage Congress assembled in New York January 2o, 1883, desire .to express to M Auguste Goff art, of France, their appreciation of the great value of the system of ensilage discovered and introduced by him. They recommended to the farmers of the United State its universal adoption as the cheapest and best method of preserving fodder crops. A vote of thanks was then passed to Mr Brown for his labor in presenting the advantages of ensilage to the pub lic, and the congress adjourned sine die afier nnthnriziner the president and sec retary to take steps to effect a perma nent organization for the future. The Northern Pacific Railroad. A few years ago the Northern Pacific Railroad project was considered h total failure. Now its friends are exulting over the prospect that it will soon be completed. The length of the line from St. Paul, Minnesota, to Portland, Ore; gon, is 1,950 miles, of which it is claim ed not truthfully, we fear that 1,650 are already finished. There are, it is said, ten or twelve thousand men at work upon the road, which is expected to be completed next fall. Then we shall have three through routes to the Pacific Ocean. It does not follow be cause the Northern Pacific is farther north than the Central Pacific that it will be more frequently snowed up. The Southern or Texas Pacific is to be the best of the threp. It will be open all the year, and every day in the year, we suppose. "She Wore a Wreath of itoes." She had the lumping; tooth-ache The night when first we met; Her lace was marked with anguish, Her eyes with tears eie wet I told her Perry Davis's ., Pain Killer was the thing To cure the jamming tooth-ache, ' 4, And take away lta song. . ;( Next evening, when I saw her, j . I asked her, "Did yon get , : 'That bottle of Pain Killer?" - ? ! Said she: "All rig bt -you bet!" A CARD. i To all who are Buttering from the errors and In discretions of youth, nervous weakness, early de cay, loss of mas hood, Ac..' 'I will send a recipe that will, cure you, FUSE 0F CHABGK. ; This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in eoutn America. Beod a self-addressed envelope to the Bst, Joseph I. Isvah, Station D,,New York City. - . ; HOON DISPATCHES-. 5 The Proposed Treaty 'withdrawn proposed treaty witb MxIco,vprbxid tog ivi. um re-sruu or iVYeii ana .LA'ADm .Qaima, was .yesterday withdrawn from tne ien.ate by tne( president. : -':' Another Ship. ; - London, Teb. 6; It ia the shin $ix Hemy: Lawrence, 'from London fdr New Orleans, which is m -distress, and not the steamer which, haa been docked at Liverpool: She was dismissed rand towed into Queenstown . on The lth tnst." t The Czar Gives Notice of Jus Corona tion. . ; St. Peteksbtjrg, Feb. L The Ciar has issued liis manifesto, .giving notice of his coronation at Moscow on the 2,7th of May. The manifesto is address ed "to all Russian subjects."?' An ukase orders the attendance at Moscow.on the occasion of the coronation, of all jrar ahals of nobility, arid prefects of nm. incial capitals, except those of Siberia tvuubo atttsnuance is excused on lac count od&taAeeand presidents! of rural, and ; urban and ministration. The ministef of the households is charged with the duty of making the necessary preparations. He will be las- sis wju uy a .&p9f)xu co m mission. Investigating tie Labor Question j ' Washington." Feb. 4. The Senkte committee on education and labor will to-morrow begin an investigation into the labor question, taking' up the sub ject of wages and hoars of labor ; the relations of labor and capital; the con dition of the laboring classes; labor strikes, and kindred matters mentioned in the Morgan, resolution of last ses sion. The witnesses thus far summbri ed are F K Foster.of Cambridge, Mass ; president of the Massachusetts Federa tion of Trades: P J McGnire Phila delphia, secretary of the ? National .brotherhood of Carpenters and Join ers; RD Lay ton, Pittsburg, Pa, secre tary of the Knights of Labor; Samarel GompetsNew Yority, first vic president 6V the National Federation of Trade and Labor Unions, And W B Baird. Eckhart mines, Maryland. ! A Practical Refutation. Though the government has with held some $12,000 of the amount due Col Eads becausethe depth of the water at thejliead of the South JPasa ia less by onertenth of a foot than, the.full Ire-' quirement of the law." The. jetties at the mouth of the Mississippi river con tinue to give practical refutation to the declaration of certaiA fault-finders that' they are failures, and that the excellent channel ascribed to their operation does not exist On Thursday -week the British steamship -Rochester; loaded with 5.890 bales of - cnttcm and 54jRflO bushels of wheat inTbulk. and drawlne 25 feet 11 inches of water, left New Or leans arid'assed 'through the,, jetties out to sea without, touching bottprn. New Orleans is certainly deriving vast benefits from the jetties, despite alii re ports to the contrary. ' i " : , ! . BXDFOBD ALUM ASD I BON BPHIH&S WaTXB A NT) Mas8. The great tonic and alterative contains twice as much iron and fifty per cent, more alum inum than any "alum and iron mass" inOTn. Just the thing for the "Spring weakness"" note bo general. Sold - br aU druggists of any BtandinfV prices reduced one half. mam tr . DABBYS PROPHYLACTIC FLUID. A Household Article fox Universal Family Use For Scarlet and Typhoid Fevers, Diphtheria, Sail-' -ration, Ulcerated Sore Throat, Small Pox, Measles, and Eradicates MALARIA. all Contagious Diseases. Persons waiting the ShcIc should use it fraelv. Scarlet Fever never been known te spread where the Fluid ml used. Yellow" Fever has been cured with it after black vomit had taken place. The worst cases of Diphtheria yield to it. Fevered and Sick Per sons refreshed and Bed Sores prevent ed by bathing with. Darbys Fluid. Impure Air made harmless and jfarified. For Sore Throat it is a sure cure. Contagion destroyed. For Frosted Feet, Chilblains, Piles, Chafings, etc Rheumatism cured. Soft White Complex ions secured by its use. Ship Fever prevented. To purify die Breath, Cleanse the Teeth, it can't be surpassed. Catarrh relieved and cured, Erysipelas cured. Burns relieved instantly. Scars prevented. Dysentery cured. Wounds healed rapidly. Scurvy cured. An Antidote for Animal or Vegetable Poisons, Stings, etc. I used the Fluid during cur present affliction with Scarlet Fever; with de cided advantage. It is indispensable to the sick room. 'Wm. F. Sand ford, Eyrie, Ala. SMAIX-POX and PITTDf Q of Small Pox PREVENTED A member of my fam ily was taken with Small-pox. I used the Fluid;; the" patient was not delirious, was not pitted, and was about the house again in three weeks, and no others had it. J. W. Park inson. Philadelphia, - The physicians hero use Darbys Fluid very successfully in the treat" meat of Diphtheria. A. Stollenwerck, Greensboro, Ala, Tetter dried up. Cholera prevented. Ulcers purified and healed. In cases of Death it should be used about the corpse it wQI . prevent any unpleas ant smell. The eminent Phy- sleian, J, MARION SIMS, M. D., New' Xork, sai vs 1 am CC :onvinced Prof. Darbys Prophylactic Fluid is valuablt le disinfectant. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. I testify to the most excellent qualities of ProC Darbys Prophylactic Fluid ' As a disihfcctant and detergent it -is both theoretically and practically superior to any preparation with' which I am .ac quainted. N. T.' Lui-roNi Prof. Chemistry, j Darbys Fluid is Recommended by ' Hon. Albxamdbr H. StbphknS, of Georgia; Rev. Chas F, Dbbms, D.D., Church of the Strangers, N. V.; Jos. LkConts, Columbia. Pror.,TJniveTsiry,aC. Rev. A. J. Battlk, Prof:, Mercer University; : Rev. Gbo. F. Pierce, Bishop M. E. Church. tNDISPENSABXE TO EVERT HOME, Perfectly .harmless. Used, internally or. ' externally for Matt -or Beas't. . The Fluid has been Aotoughly tested, and we nave abundant evidence that it has done everything .here claimed. , Forullei icibrmatioa. get ef your Drnggist a pamphlet "or send to the proprietors y J. H. ZETXXN & CO., ' ' Manufacturing Chemists, PHUJVPELPHIA. ACHING NERVES CAUSE PERRY DAVIS'S PAIN KILLER BRINGS. ' NEURALGIA SCIATICA TOOTHACHE; ,EARACHfi';'';':':i...'; . And the whole nboo ' irjailr oif . -., perve diseases are coxedJay . SXJRB1 AlllECTALEDllUGqiSTS KEEP "PAiN KILLER."1"" EipHtiieria : Prevented.- : i Scarlet Fever AGO NY RE-LI EE Penflaiflfiler NOW IS YOUR TIME! JUST EXCWTHD, j 1. IMcsV tfi&nfe' and ' QuHrd s Rollers, Ladies' Gossamers and Gents' Rubber Coats. , m . 'i ' . We are no closing oat oar stock ot Winter Goods, at ' .GREATLY REDUCED; PRICES ASD If lEi NOW 13 YOta --DRESS la very low la quantity and prices, embrtclr ATnrirddnff Just received a new lot of Langtrj Ties, and For, oc, is DeingcioBeo our very cneap. 11 you want a BARGAIN In anything that uBorjMtaarjdwevrmnvmoeyouthatwehavltfofiou. Smith Janll 15 IS ONLY EQUAL THAT CAN BE SATED BT ALL THOSE (blreat t nnmvTiATnTm o nnnm L.MMAllMffl'MUl Leading Clothiers and Tailors. AT this vast Repository, so complete in all its Departments, the most Fashionable and Ktogant CLOTHING can be bought at 16 PEB CENT LOWEB THAN ANY OTHEB ESTABLISHMENT IN THE CITY The most or our Garments are Manufactured In our own House, and are eaual to the finest Custom-made work for VARIETY, STYLE, FINISH, FIT and DURABILITY. : ' ' ' This Great Wareroom Has No Rival - in tfie State. Facts which are attested to rttirotaes ef enstomera. who. after the first rjorobase. return brine. Ing with them their Iriends. NQ TBOUBL S TO SHOW GOODB. Remember, we glys a discount on all Winter Geods of 1 5 per cent. Thanking the Public for their Liberal Patronage in the past and soliciting a part of the same in the future, we are Very Respectfully, , . X-i. 33erwangor . c5 TFlyo-, t2F i gents for PEARL SHIRTS. ; Leading Clothle and Tailors. -1 P0 Or r l o O Or o w 3 tux' S" cr5 e 1 AND GD DD QQ en si CD 09 CO tv C3 qOQQq Q Q OQ 00 OO W r I s: c d O d w o o CO CD CD O CO 3 o CO I S I s SI f w H g .CD: -P I .mm ! 5 SB 0 : a 1 I o 1 C - a CO m II THE FURNITURE DEALER, Is Frequeritly Asjcgd How iiCHClB'l's : .3 .'!! tot er f HeBivs'iir Umiii6fc mi Am Content ta Sell itSmIl Profits ' , r j 11,1 -ie-' v'-" ' JU " ' ' ,:iX 5in l B.:H;fANDIlE.mWhoIesaleand Retail Dealer. Ai LAftQB STOCK -OF YOU WANT A ifrassr it I., IK La- TIME TO GIT IT. GOODS-- Odr stock. tof Taney and 1!? aattema at halt their ralue t Jacket. DlBtAM. Clonka ttnmM vftrt far, m fo oV, v,ai Trimming. Our atoct ot , 1 anything that is kept In the Dry Goods Haif avrtf lelm, : Building, East; Trade:: Street 1 TO THE AMOUNT . WHO MAKE THEIR PURCHASES AT THE re Clothing lEmporiui OF 11L11 -a CD CO 7 CO CD SO co. n -n p2 CD SO CO GO H H o .WttSK" 9 CBQD bo BHHSW" QQOq a :qS -OF- 'a 5- H O 4 o . s 11 Q B to Ctf w g000g 5oo65 ANT v:'l- &2 - i --1 - .it if I'i 1 ; J 1 Hi iff I! . 1 1 tit t '! f !!! 1 I .'i '"I 1 11 i i I