VOL. XXlX$t A J$$ CHARLOTTE, N. 0., SUNDAY FEBRUARY 25, 1883. NO. 4,328 WE HAVE iUreatlv PJaced i ht' r -j h Ol7i2 SPRING ORDERS With Oar Manufadnrers fOK (.UB SPRING STOlKOF s, HATS, Trunks and Yalises, WHICH WILL BE More Complete and Varied Than ,VKR BEFORK. r We fc-nder thanks to our Friends and Pa trons ror their Liberal Pniroi.age dur n the past ye tr. and hope to merit a con lnuarce of their fdvor. Respectfully, Pepu l Co. fet4 ONE FOOL&NiONG M&NK. Wri cked by liUUiilcmpertd Ambition A UgUtliou.e on ib Shoals. "I ought to have stopped five years before I d'd; but I (bought It wouldn't amount to anything, so I kept on. I was a fool, or coure-btit ho lsu't, when ambition and the" chancS st making money spurs him ou ? I only hope I shall get well enough to digest another square, u eal some time without a rebellion in my stomach." The speaker was one ol the best known clrtl engineers and mtn'n' experts in this countryj hardy nature as a1 buffalo, Wit broken down by hard study and the merciless lashing administer ed to his mli d and body by his own band during the earlier part of his career. At fifty he U p re ma urely gray, bent to' form and dispirited, Dys-; pepsladld It Dyspepsia,, the self-inflicted curse ol the American In every department of tolL -I am thlrti-fite year bid," write Mr. Charles, H. Watts, of West Somew. Putnam county. N. T , and had suffered from dyspepsia for flft-en years. Tried evfrythlng. At last gate PARKER'S GIN GER TONIC a chance to show what it could do for me. It proved its ability by curing me. I recom mend It to all who are suffering ' from this dread ful disease." Mr G. R. Cole, druggist, of Cannel, N. Y., certifies to the truth of Mr. Watts' state ment. Gloom, despondency, hopelessness, d If gust with all labor, sleeplessness horrid dreams t render bed-time It the hour of execution lo a criminal these are some of Dyspet sla's foot-prints The Dyspeptic knows what Coleridge meant when be said: "Night is my hell " Parker's Ginger Tonic cures Dyspepsia, purlles the Blood, flif perse; Rheumatism and all chronic ailments. Prices 50 cents and Si a bottle.' .HISOOX & CO.. . fobl Mew York. NO USE FOR THEM. CettcrnlBf Certain Blicnaf thel?a Dega ibat Hare bad 1 belr Day George Stephenson's Rocket," and the magnifi cent JocomotlTes, ot to-day, jm built upon the : same general prfrielpleiet1 the machine with I ' ." ...-. .:t a which the great' engineer astonished his age, 1s Interesting now only as an Illustration of the be-; ginning of the invention. There were plasters wlthWealnthm:l tty' cad itotovi 'nSstikiaA iaoii&A lie and the physicians; and the triomph of the' Ca peine is founded upon the partial successes, or .?! i the utter failures or iU"precegsprv Kmjthlng J- f i i - -' i i ' i of vajoe in the old porous plaster is retained to t if ' ;- i jK ! the Capctne; but &t this point all comparison ends and contrast begins, lor, example: t The old piasters were s'ow in their action; the Capclne U aulek and sure. (I ;1 The old plasters lacked the power to do more than to Impart s ight, temporary relief In eases easy of treatment; the Capcine penetrates the sys tem and permanentlyujes the troubles Tor which t Is recommended. 1 The old plasters depended for any good results they might attain upon an aeojdent of their mak era and the naked faith of thjr wearers; the Ben son's reaches its ends by megns of the scientific combination of the rare: medlelnal ipgredlents which it contana. ..2 i In brlet the old pl8s llff Stephenson's dli-;V Benson's goes on its way winntogloWeepujf omaJlsojrtsotpe.lifiJiiil m wu very iact lies the leading danger w wepeopu, who box and tise this tellable and "went.De remedy1 ypc?rtsf ii the tottrntevWe 'to vlrtua. ' ImnsilA. fa'theorteesaroi faB- mates to success.. .BeBsotfPlarssean- in name and style, mt 1-; .'. "i . 00 Ck- -'J I (now mired, I.m- ib..,-.i..f .Vmi ri.t apciNX cut In lhfleenter,Ptlce iBMjxhunuciMiJBetmuf, 7ttmrCtoemistsvKeYeii.t I tovMvinpvjSj' iin r.r sf-vv-;-f m ' MtilM&Ji&i m wan - qaiciji ku4. rsdlrallr tured. i, , Ll. tlk,,t iTTt"' I-.. i WI HATK JTOt BBClltKD k BEAUTIFUL LOT OF- Hamburg EdgiBgC and Insertings, Barred Nainsooks. LINEN 0' INDES'y &C. SPRINCri calicoes, n&w Style ruchings, &c. MSf, For the next 80 days we will offer special Inducements in HEAVY GOODS, several lines to be closed ont Regardless of Cost. Come and , see Oar BwapeetfnllyrJfavag,.w. sw-. --- T. L. Seiglei& Co, Ieb4-dw WORTH OF- WOBTH OF SILVER and IM A I i J; W R E, TO BS SOLD WITHOUT REGARD TO COST, AT J. T. Butler's Jewelry Store. dec 16 GRATITUDE. Denver, Col., Aug. 29, 1882. Gbhts I cannot find words with which to ex press my gratitude to you for the cure your Swift's Specific has effected in my case. I was afflicted 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 one dozen email bottles of S. S. 8., and there is not a sign of the disease remaining. My sores are all healed, my throat la entirely well; I am rid of that tenible ing a drug disease. Be- clerk, I have many hun seen s or Is sTa d- dreds of men dosed with Calomel, Iodide of Mer cury and Iodide of Potash, until they were made complete wrecks, that I rhudder td think of he misery! which has. been brought on jibe human family by the use of Mercurials focBlopdTOseases. it Is a erring shame 'that, physicians wll tiot 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., SL Louis. J. H BAIF, Broadway Pharmacy. Denver, Col. If you doubt, come to see na, and we will CURE YOD. or charge nothng. Write for particulars; and a copy of the little book, "Message to the Un- i fortunate Suffering." Ask any Druggist as to our standing. ' tarjl,000 BKWARD wiUfbe paid tosjpyf Chemist whdrwfll find on sial 01 (30 bottles t; 1 81 Sv, obeparticle of MerearyAldi JpP slum, or any Mineral substance. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ? Proprietors, Atlanta, Ga. Pr ce of small s'za, SI. 00 large slza, 1.75. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. ! dec28od j THE GREAT GERMAN! REMEDY ! FOR PAIN. Believe androures Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, E1ADACHS, TOOTHACHE SORE THROAT, QTJTN8Y, BWKIXENaS SPBAIKS, ! Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, j FBOSTBITES, ! BVSITSJ, SCALDS, And all other bodily aches ; and ptdna. . J , FIFTY CEKTM BOTJLtl llollbvant)roCTrlseioi t i Dealers. JDlrfctlonalo 11 ; lsgiiges. f . . I I . TheCharlei-liVogelftrCoL . jSwimiii tJu tOLK OO.K 11 most nota ana mi v-csbiui spiTin the U.S. Addrws DrUWAftD-4 CO .iouian. Mo. mooRECDurrrfGnn?! siAnu a act t a. a an t TAWf4 v ABU MU-U ! VACS, 1 . SAKTLlS O? SEHTi ft - -. licttni,n - I r k:zti CAnouA k;ustszi ca,: $1510 Clocks,Jewelry, Jss -. . .i Mwssssaid free! r 1PISELF-CUR4 Wn "li a! fcioLta ,v. r i rSt line of the L"I III I f It.' XV79J RitEIGH LETTER, WHAT IS ' GOING ON 4T THE CENTRE. Washington's BirthdaySpeedr Jus tice to a Swarthy Fieud Black Kn KloxG. W. Swepson Paralyzed An Elongated CalendarThe Geog raphy ol North Carolina The Scheme for Redisricting the State The New Code. : -v ' Correspondence of The Observer. Kaleigh, Feb. 23. George Washington theFatber of Vila nhnntrv: 5 ' '-c - "Pa." said Johnnie Blacknali to Dr B yesterday morning, "there's no school to-day on account of, its being Wash ington's birthday--when was Washington-born, Pa?" . " Wnw. if t.hia nuestion didn't hack the doctor it does your correspondent, and I doubt if there's a man in the legisla ture that can answer it nrst nre. x ec the newspapers were dumb on the day and the legislature spent the day in ses sion as usual. : j . JSPEEDY jUSTIOE."? A negro naqjed Jerome Holt attemp ted axape: in Alamance county last Friday nightand waa arrested $atur day, indicted Tuesday, tried Wednes day and sentenced on Friday, by Judge Gilmer, who is holding court at Gra ham. Mr J A Long, Esq r of Caswell, was assigned as counsel for the de fense. Holt is a young negro man and has had two brothers hung for the same offense. The fellow acted like a madman. He went to the cabin of an old, inoffensive white man, James Ter rell's, near Gibsonville, where the old man, aged 67 and his wife aged 56, with their little boy were all asleep in bed, and actually lifted the woman out ot bed, the old man driving him away from her by beating him over the head with a gun. Mr Long says that Holt, in his statement to him, said that he had been to a frolic near Gibsonville and got drunk and knew of nothing that he did until the Bext morning, when he found his head bloody and a partf his clothes were brought him that he had left at the old white man's cabin. So tally one more for the gallows from drunkenness. negro ku kltjx. A colored woman and her daughter were taken from their cabiD in Cas well county the other night by five ne groes, in masks, and whipped. They were only struck a few licks and the negroes said the whipped them for be ing lewd women. The women recog nized one of the party, a fellow named Bethel Curry, and be was arrested and bound over in five hundred dollars lo the next Superior court. So Caswell will have a negro ku klux case on hand. : GEORGE W. SWEPSON. Mr George W Swepson lies paraljzed at his residence in this city. He has been in bed about four weeks. He can not use his legs and lies mostly on his back. Mr Azariah Graves, an old friend of his from Caswell was up to see him this week. He says Mr Swepson's mind seemed clear enough and he even joked with him, but he noticed during a pause in the conversation, that he would fall asleep, his mouth half open and breathe hard and heavy. Mr Swepson went home from down town one morning last November about half past ten o'clock aod his wife noticed that he looked pale and wearied, but he said nothing was the matter, only he felt so sleepy that he could hardly hold his eyes open, and so he laid on the so fa and immediately fell into a deep sleep, and slept till she aroused him to late dinner. He said to her, "you'll have to help me up," and extended his hand and she raised him up, and he went to dinner as if nothing more was the mat ter, but after dinner went to sleep again and slept eighteen out of the twenty-four hours. The doctor said then that it was premonitory symptoms of paralysis. Mr Swepson is about 55 years of age. Rev Dr Skinner of the First Baptist church, his pastor, who thinks a great deal of him, is aimost daily with him. There is many a man that George W Swepson with his mon ey, has helped, who in his heart to-day says, "May God be with him." THE LEGISLATURE. The House has offered near one thousand bills. There is a bill before the House rela ting to a geography of North Carolina, to Be' published by Mr Peter M. Hale. The bill provides that if tne geography when published is acceptable to the State Board of Education, and the price agreed on between them and Mr. Hale, that then the Board shall direct it.to be uspd in the common schools of; North Carolina. The Legislature will make eight Democratic Congressional districts, and the county of Mecklenburg will be placed in the Sixth district, with the county of New Hanover. I give you the districts as arranged : First .District Beaufort, Camden, Chowan, . Carteret, Currituck, , Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, Marti OiPamlico, Pasquotank; Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell and Washington. Second Bertie, Craven, Edgecombe, Green, Halifax, Lenoir, Northampton, Vance, Warren and Wilson. Third Onslow 'Pender, Duplin, Sampson, Bladen, rWayne, Cumberland, i Harnett and Moore. . - ! "Fourth Nash. Franklin. Wake. Dur- i ham, Orange, Chatham, Alamance and 1 m - i i. - .- , JOIinSbUIl. ' . Fifth Granville," Person, Caswell, Rockingham; Stokes,? Guilford, Surry I andForsyth; , . ? Sixth New Hanover, Brunswick,! Columbus, Richmond, Anson, Union,! "Stanly, Cabarrus, Robeson and Meck-j lenburg. Seventh Montgomery, Bandolph,Da-? vidson, Rowan, Davie, Iredell, Catawba! and Yadkin. Eighth Wilkes, Alexander, Ashe,5 Watauga, Alleghany, Caldwell, BurkeJ jCleaveland, Gaston and Lincoln. j v- Ninth Cherokee. Clay, Graham, Ma- con, Swain, Jackson, Hay wood, Tian-j sylvania, Henderson, Polk, Rutherford Buncombe McDowell.Madison.Yancey and Mitchell. I This is the bill as reported favorably i)y., the sub committee, and ; wjlU " be! adopted by the Legislature, and,! anoj told , was the plan aa-8ttgeested? b$ Messrs Seager; Womack and Caho, Tpe committee . operated, on the. smallest Democratic majority for..the last eight years. TaKirjg ine roiiowmg majonwes 1st District Dem. . . . 2nd District Rep. A 42$ e '-e'V fc i .10,000 . . . m . 80 . i,H8 .1,318 1,400 3rd DistriQtTrDein::... 4th . Distriet-rDem . 5th District Dem 6th D istrict-rDe m . 7th. District Dem. . . . ftth 'Difitrict Dem . . 1,500 9th District Dem. . : .. .... . 1,082 :! The committee on the code wilt re port to-morrow: t; ; , t f:'".!f: ! A bill, providing, for the publishing and distribution of the code was intro duced and passed - its - third reading in the Senate to-day. Mr Dortch intrd 4nced it.. . The code will be in two jvo nmas. and as "many: as ten thousanil copies each may be published. It ;taa(y i be stereotyped, Mdthe prihtlngi.iloqe either in or ont fctbeistate, as tne com mittee sees besty-iMii jnomad. -: , -uin.,.1..m ".JlBJSaS ' The Will of a Benevolent " MaB t j , .The will of the late rilliam E, Dodge of New York has been filed tn cburt. After, leaving Wsidow rich, and prp riding liberally for bis sons andUother xelatives. he bequeathed 350,000 to hurch Vadd educaon entetprise, (mintltr.P.rtuihvtftriark. " -j-,-. .e , I T1 T : S 'r "IAHiT-T - irTtnla.- RftMnrRTTV. savs I have old a great many Dottles of Brown's Iron, Blttera and riave ii nigniyreconuHtjuutJu." - - - s I EXPERIMENT STATION. , i What the State Chemist is Doing One of the Finest Labratories in lae Conn A correspondent of the Richmond Dispatch, from Raleigh writes thus of inei experimental soauuu tmaer tne management of Dr DaDney ; t One of the most valuable acquisitions of the State within the last few years is our State chemist. It would have paid Virginia to - have established an agricultural experiment station'iu order to have profited by the seryicesofDr Charles W Dabney, Jr. You Will re cognize the name and family at once. The young doctor has much of the sturdy strength of mind and character that characterized StonewaHrJackson's chaplain, and he will have all of it be fore he counts his threescore years. I spent an hour in his offices yester day, and I found entertainment enough to have kept me a whole day. The ex peri m en t station occupies large and neatlyrfurni8hed apartments in the ag ricultural department building. There are public and private offices, and gen eral and- private laboratories, sample and store rooms, balance and furnace rodms. and a verv odorous room called- in plain Anglo-Saxon, theistiktTjaav wuere me samples oi lertuizers are opened,. mixed and ground. Dr Dabney has a corps of assistants composed of Dr Baldwin You Herp, a graduate of . Go ttingen, and recently operative chemist in one of the works for potash salts at Stafford ; Herbert Battle, and Frank Dancy, both gradu ates of the scientific schools at the State University. The labratory is equipped with all necessary apparatus, machinery and conveniences, to put which in place a liberal sum was allowed Dr Dabney. The water used is pumped into the tapks by a steam boiler, which is then used to supply steam for the distilled water apparatus, for the steam baths, drying chambers, &c. There are plate glass hoods for drawing off from the laboratories the noxious gases and f urns from acids, a crucible furnace, a muffle furnace, imported from England, and gas combustion furnaces. Water, gas, and suction for rapid filtration are supplied at each working-desk. When I was in New Haven last spring I called to see Dr Johnson, of the Con necticut Experiment Station, and he remarked on the liberality of North Carolina in fitting up its laboratories properly.and ventured the opinion that its Experiment Station had the best equipped official laboratory in the Uni ted States. Dr Dabney says that when he has put in place a few working desks, shelves &c, that he will have one of the best appointed laboratories for industrial work in this country. The first agricultural experiment and con trol station established in the country was that of Connecticut, and North Carolina has the honor of being a good second in this advanced work in agri culture. I asked Dr Dabney what work his analyses included.and was surprised at the scope and variety of subjects which his answer embraced in it. "Last year," said he, "we worked 174 official and 74 private samples of commercial fertilizers, 23 chemicals for composting, 10 floats (finely ground phosphate rock), 6 home-made com post fertilizers.besides 25 feeding stuffs cotton seed, meal, stalks; ashes of cotton seed hulls and kernels; tobacco stems and dust.miner als. seeds, waters, horn, leather, shoddy, and other adulterants of fertilizers." In all he informed me that he made in 1882 459 complete analyses, and that the work was of a higher order, and the number of different determinations made greater thau in any previous year. All these analyses are made bv the chemist in his official capacity. He re ceives no compensation for work done for the citizens of the State. NEWS NOTES. Miss Susie B. Anthony sailed fsr Liver- Eool from Philadelphia on the steamer Iritish Prince Thursday. C B Richard & Co, of New York.have transmitted to Europe in aid of the suf ferers by the Rhine inundations the total amount of $112,17456. Gen Mac Adaras telegraph from Paris to London to deny that he is the "Num ber One" spoken of in the Dublin in quiry. Capt Pierre Lanier, of East Baton Rouge Parish, La, was shot and killed on nis way home last Friday. His clothes were saturated with coal oil and set on fire. At Milford, Mass. Thursday", thirteen school children were thrown from a double-runner sled, which struck a tree, and nearly ail or them were picked up unconscious. Suit was entered Thursday in the Su perior court at Montreal to annul the marriage of Miss Chaffey, of Perth, to Henry Allan.the bogus "Lord Cantyre." Miss Chaffey, who is under age,is worth about a million dollars, and married without her guardian's consent. Mother Baptista superioress of the Catholic orphan assylum for boys in I Brooklyn N. Y., died Thursday. She was Well known to the religious of this ! country and in Europe, and was one of the Sisters of St. Joseph who introduc ed the order mto the Diocese of Brook lyn. The deposition of Secretary Chandler in the Massey-Wise contested election case was taken in Washington Thurs day.' The Secretary's evidence was to the 1 effect that so far as he knew the subject of the disposition of the Feder al patronage in Virginia was never al luded to at a cabinet meeting. He said that he was the author of the famous dispatch to Haves: "You have 185 votes and are elected," but that he sign ed it With Zach Chandler's name, be-1 cause that old gentleman was a little under the weather that night, and was not caring much who was elected. A Fire Fifty Years Old. Statesvllle Landmark. One of the grand jurors for the Su-i perior Court at this term J was Mr Eph raim Scroggs, of Fallstown township, concerning whom a singular and inter esting little incident may be told ; Mr ScEQggs.has now burning on bis hearth the same fire which was started when he went to housekeeping, 50 years aa From the day that fire was started, to this, it has never been permitted to go out. Summer and winter for thtse50 years it has been replenished as occa sion required. From a roaring heap, it has drooped, many a time, to a bed of smouldering coals, but it has never been permitted to turn into ashes. We sus pect that by this time Mr Scroggs has grown almost superstitious about it. Doubtless if he should wake np some morning and find the fire quite out, he he would be the subject of unpleasant sensations. But such is the man that we can hope that his fire may last 50 years to come, and that he may last to kee itburning. .: ; A Virginia Moose Story. J . Mr. Robert Beverly, a well-known resident and land owner of Fauquier county, Va., says he has in his posession a natural curiosity in the shape of a mouse, that sings, chirps and has the other , peculiarities of the bird kind, minus the feathers and conformation, It. warbles similar , to a mocking bird, -and Its notes are of equal sweetness to either that or the canary; ;, , .. What Did it. - -" HemphIa,Tenn.Aprll 20th, 1881. 'Hi H. Warner ft Cofttrs-I have been a; suffer er from Infancy with a disease of the kidneys, which yielded neither to doctors, medicines nor 'mineral springs, t A few bottles of your Safe Kid ney and tlver Cure, however, restored me to per fect health.- -K GaBU 8. BOOKBB. 1STATE PIEWS. m Gas tonia Gazette; Crossties in large quantities are being gotten up for the Narrow Gauge. According to the terms of the lease the road is to be completed to Newton within twelve months from the date of the lease. We do not hesitate to say that it will be completed to Lenoir by that time. Salem Press; Samuel Knauss caught at odd times during the past winter, 111 rabits, 57 squirrels, among them a fine fox squirrel, now rare in our woods, and 43 'possoms. From what we learn brick making will be carried on extensively the com ing spring and summer. A large num ber of buildings are to put up in Wins ton. Golds boro Messenger ; The books of the Goldoro library have been removed to the Graded School in order that the pupils may enjoy the benefit of them in common with the members of the li brary association. Prof. Moses is hap py in the posession of the library, and is exerting himself to swell the number of useful volumes.1 And now Goldsboro comes to the front with the largest cotton bale on Tecord;its weight is 1167W pounds. jluib is no "snaxe story, duc a postive fact. The mamoth concern was put on the market last Tuesday by Mr. Jas. Edmundson, of this county, and pur chased by Messrs. H. Weil & Bros ; it had to be weighed on the railrod scales, and five men were required to handle it. Laurnbnrg Exchange; Mr. J. D. Mc Laurin and family, of Bennettsville have gone to Florida. Some of our citizens are getting up Eititions to be presented before the egislature for the formation of a new county out of ithe lower portions of Richmond and upper portion of Robe son. Habeas Corpus Case. Statesvllle Landmark. Recently, in the town of Henderson ville, a difficulty occurred between J W Brittain and his father, on one Bide, and Jas M Fanning on the other. Young Brittain fired at Fanning but missed him and his shot struck S L Cunning ham, who was not a party to the affray, in the hand. Blood poisoning resulted and Cunningham died. Brittain was jailed, and last Monday was brought before Judge Gudger here on a writ of habeas corpus. The case was argued Monday night by Mr W A Smith, of Hendersonville, and ex-Judge Furches, of this place, for the prisoner, and by Messrs Thos J Rickman, of Henderson ville, and J S Adams, of Statesville, for the State. The Judge took the papers and the next day admitted Brittain to bail in $2,500. From Dr. 8. W. Hunter, Baltimore, Maryland: " Having become familiar vlth Colden's Liquid Beef Tontc. I lake pleasure in recommend ing It as an excellent preparation, combining as It does both food and tonic in a remarkable way, and producing good blood, health and strength." (Remember the name, Colden's take no other.) Of druggists. Mothers I Mothers I! Mothers!!! Are you disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and crying with the excruciating pain of catting teeth ? If so. go at once and get a bottle of MBS. WINSLOWS SOOTHING SYEUP. It will relieve the poor little sufferer Immediately depend upon It : there Is no mistake about It There Is not a mother on earth who has ever used it, who will not tell you at once that It will regulate the bowels, and give rest to the mother, and relief and health to the child, operat ing like magic It Is perfectly safe to use in all cases, and pleasant to the taste, and Is the pre scription of one of the oldest and best female physicians and nurses In the United States. Sold everywhere. 25 cents a bottle. for Dyspepsia, C o stive n es s, ralal BM1 an k fc h i Sick Headache, Chronic Diar rhoea, Jaundice, Impurity of the Blood, Fever aad Ague, Malaria, and all Diseases caused by De rangement of Liver, Bowels and Kidneyi . SYMPTOMS OF A DISEASED LIVER. Bad Breath; Pain in the Side, sometimes the pain is felt under the Shoulder-blade, mistaken for Kheumatism; general -loss of appetite; Bowels generally costive, sometimes alternating with lax; the head is troubled with pain, is dull and heavy, with considerable loss of memory, accompanied with a painful sensation ofleaving undone something which ought to have been done; a slight, dry cough and flushed face is sometimes an attendant, often mistaken for consumption; the patient complains of weariness and debility; nervous, easHy startled; feet cold or burning, sometimes a prickly sensation of the skin exists; spirits are low and despondent, and, although satisfied that exercise would be bene ficial, yet one can hardly summon up fortitude to try it in fact, distrusts every remedy,. Several of the above symptoms attend the disease, but cases have occurred when but few of them existed, yet examination after death has shown the Liver to have been extensively deranged. It should he used by all persons, old and young, whenever any of the above symptoms appear. Persons Traveling or Li ring In Un healthy Localities, by taking a dose occasion ally to keep the Liver in healthy action, will avoid all Malaria, Bilious attacks, Dizzmess, Nau sea, Drowsiness, Depression of Spirits, etc. It will invigorate like a glass of wine, but is.no In toxicating beverage. If Tou have eaten anything bard ot digestion, or fed heavy after meals, or sleep less at night, take a dose and you will be relieved. Time and Doctors Bills win be saved by always keeping the Regulator in the House! For, whatever the ailment may be, a thoroughly safe purgative, alterative and tonic caa never be out of place. The remedy is harmless and does not interfere with business or pleasure. - - ' IT IS PURELY VEGETABLE, And has all the power and efficacy of Calomel or Quinine, without any of the injurious after effects. A Governor's Testimony. Simmons Liver Regulator has been in use in my family for some time, and. I am satisfied it is a valuable addition to the medical scienoe. J. Gtu. Shokter, Governor of Ala. Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, of Ga., ' says : Have derived some benefit from the use of . Simmons Liver Regulator, and wish te give it a further trial. "The only Thing that never fans to Relieve." f have used many-remedies for Dys pepsia, Liver Affection -and Debility, but never , have found anything to benefit me to the extent ' Simmons liver Regulator has. I sent from Min- , nesota to Georgia for it,, and would send further for . such a medicine, and would advise all who arc sim- ilariy affected to give it a trial as h seems the only ; thing that never fails to relieve. P. M. Jannet, Minneapolis, Minn. Lr. T. W. Mason says: From actual ex- ; perience in the use of Simmons Liver Regulator in my practice I have been and am satisfied to use and prescribe it as a purgative medicine. . . : 4" Take only the Genuine, which always ' has on the. Wrapper the red Z Trade-Mark ' aao Signature of J. H. ZETXIN CO. j U SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. i DIPHTHERIA HAS NO CHANCE WHEN TREATED WfT(f;e This wonderful remedy has saved he ' lives of many, many -j&udreit ' " who were almost dead with : ' '" '-l kit -ill iii'l DIPHTHERIA. R HVmrv WHson. Lawrnnce. Mass-, bbts: "The surgeons pronounced my case- Diph theria, and decided that no remedies could reach it Perry Davis's Pain Killer saved my lifo n . : . . i . Libeous Leach, Nashua, K. H, ssys: " I had painterg' oollo and diphtheretio sore throat very severely. nut auier axove dowl w. DRU6GS T3 ALL KEEP IT. M OUR NEW GOODS ARE DAILY ARRIVING NOW, - WE WISH TO CALL YOUR ATTEVHOS TO OUR -NEW EMBROIDERIES. ' AMONG TEtEM THB YKBY POPULAR In fa and Swiss Embroideries that we have been Selling, and the Irish Embroidery, The only thing new In that line out this season. A nice line of White Goods. amma n $ f! C9?SXT- Alce line of CHITON S and LACK CTJBTAIN3. Just In some rettrSPBINGCALICOBa If you want to buy UNDEBWER, BLANKETS, or any Winter Goods -ebeap, give us a call, as we have a few on bands that we will sell at a sacrifice rather than carry over till another season. We have a large stock ot LA.DISS and iHILDRVN'd 8 HO 88 from the Celebrated House Of SVITT & BROTHER. LOOK AT THEM. Truly Your tr MISS ALICE HAET Is again over our customers. 15 IS ONLY EQUAL er Con THAT CAN BE SAVED BY ALL THOSE WHO MAKE THEIR PURCHASES AT THE (Kreat Clothing Emporioiu -OF L BERWANGER k 10 Leading Clothiers and Tailors. AT this vast Repository, so complete In all its Departments, the most Fashionable and Ktogant CLOTHING can be bought at 1 5 PER CENT LOWER THAN ANY OTHER ESTABLISHMENT IN THE CITY The most or our Garments are Manufactured in our own House, and are equal to the finest Custom-made work for TABLET Y, STYLE, FINISH, FIT and DURABILITY. This Great f areroem Has No Rival in the State. Facts which are attested to bv thrones of customers, who. after the first Durchase. return bring ing with them their friends. NO TBODBLB TO SHOW GOODh. Remember, we glvs 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, Xj. Berwanger efts Bro., IV Agents for PEARL SHIRTS. Leading Clothiers and Tailors. -3 pa t3 GO 1 CO S" cni O w Ox o o 2 pa ca 05 AND bits 1 gas ggggg " Cdcjd 0B 0000 09 00 OS 00 CD 09 Q0QD 09 HHHHH qQQQq Q Q OQ QQ 8 S ,1 a 14- OO AN e b a i i g S H ? h- Hi i 3 '5 C .. 3 , I d S g I ' BS3B3 S ' 1 w I I i O . W f h 3. S2 -1 m 5 2l . 2ft? -B- SWS Q. J- - O r ..a-t. ooo HH rz s - h S2 ? H m Gf2 - THE FURNITURE DE ALEE, Is Frequently Asked SO GSSBi Answer: He Bays in Lwgc Quantities E. SI. ADBEWSy Wholesale andiKctaU1, Dealer, AND STOCK OF- store, where she will be glad to see her friends and HARGBAVK8 & WILHELM. 15 u TO THE AMOUNT a CD 7. CO ZX3 CO P3 C3 CO How it is He Sells and Content taSell at Small Preto TO THER Ia OC2 CD CX2 EWS, li t t t r I if - u M 7.1 r ! -A ! I 1 Z r v1 irjrvsaizioM vxn paper,

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