&titt.Km warn SIMMQMSX regulator7 Are yon taking Simmons Liver Eeo- DLAT0B, the "KlNQ OF LIVES MEDI- cmEa?" That la what our readers want, and nothing but that. It is the same old friend to which the old folks pinned their iaith and were never dis appointed. Bat another eood recom mendation for it is, that it is bepteb than Pills, never gripes, never weak ens, but works In such an easy and - natural way, just like nature itself that relief comes quick and sure, and one feels new all over. It - never fails. Everybody needs take a liver remedy, and everyone should take only Sim mons Ldver Regulator. , . . Be sore you get it. The Bed Z is on the wrapper. J. H. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia. FIIO SESSIONAL CAROP. , JACDli A. rOXVli, ATTORNEY AT"LAW, GRAHAM,',, - . . N. G . May 17, '88. ' ' " .,' .1 . 1; liT EllNODLE. ATTORNEY AT LAW GRAHAM, - - - - N. C. John Quay Bvnum. W. f. Bvscm, Jb, JJ Y N UM ' ATBYNUM.' Attorneys and CoudspIots at Law, -.' GREENSBOEO, N. O. Practice regularly inn nue Qiinnly. v Id the conrtg of Ala , Aug. i, 94 ly. . Dr. JohnR, Stockard, Jr., TiXTRLINCrTON, X. C. flood sets of tenth f 10 rer Set. . ' omco on Main St. o tr I. N, Walker & Co.'s t'ir. Xiyery, Sale 'ZZH Feed STABLES. "W. C. Moore, Pkop'b, GRAHAM, N. C. Hacks meet nil train. Good aiug le or dou it le U-ams. t'burgea moderate. ; . Z-M-dm I am the North Carolina Agent for Dr. Whits' Naw Hair Grower Treat ment the Greatest Discovery -of the Agei. . It will permanently cure falling of the hair, dandruir, scaly eruptions. posiuies, or any scaip niseasc, ; , It prevents hair turning gray and restores hair to original color, and brings A NEW GROWTH OF Hair On Any Bald Head On Earth It 18 the only - treatment . that . will produce these results. - Testimonials and treatise furnish cd on application. Mr. John M. Coble is my agent at liranam, jx. u ; " - Rcspcctfullv, B. f. LASIILEY, Dec. 14-t Haw River, N. C. SESDFOR SAMPLE COPY. " Since its enlargement, The North Carolinian is the largest weekly newspaper puousncu in- the Mate. It prints all the news, and preaches trie aoctnne oi pure aemocracv. It contains eight jmges of interesting matter every weeic Bend ono- dol . lar and get it for a whole year. A pample copy will be mailed" free on application to - OrfEPHUS DANIEL, Editor. Ralehfh. N. C. Tho-North Carolinian and Tiik AL.AMAXCE ; LEANER -Will Ik) BCT.t for one year for Two J)ollar, - Cah in advaiko. Apply at The Gleaxlb onice, Graham, N. C Pradbury Pianos. Unezerllwl for iur InKfaoola nd ral- Vfnr ty permiMtun to Mm. i W. Urrl. I'W Vermont A, Wuhlr.tlin, U. fV WMIim iej oo of oor uLuum U m iBoruerlaccncluae llii MTcrllaeutkat ADDUE.st) If. O hMIIH, . 123 P- J. W fUr U4 . i-lniUiO, o, c DENTIST, A Head of flair ,'TftE CONFitsSlON '0F AN AUTHOR.' Writing Book, He Saye, I Llba Firing . ,... Shot la the Dark. . All 6f ua who write books fire" tnoro or less into the dark into ' that strange, hazy ontsido world where 1 they road books and do not write them. " The imago of tho marksman will last a little longer. Wo peer into the uncertainty, seo people of this kind and poor people of that, portly; serious men, ansomio earnest men, massive, responsible men, jo vial souls, blades, a multitudinous varioty of fools, grave, tender wom en with pure minds, wild, ndventur- " ons women i, with pure minds, re spectable women decently iinpuro, J earnest women indecently pure, cu rious youths and maidens, a vast multitude, reading, reading, reading. i There are worked out folks needing distraction, miserable souls asking for comfort, real orsbam, curious minds requiring plausible new solu- f ons 01 tne greap paraaox 01 tilings, babes awakenina; to strong meat. We authors " and authoresses and authorlings regard thenftendf astly. "I will have yonder good woman, " says one of us, and bang goes his ' book, full of purity and pathos. There is a yelp, and a Philistine gen floman rolls Over, touched profound ly. "I will appeal to my wronged, unhappy sisters, " says an authoress, ''frankly and openly," and so plows a long lane through the crowd, achieving quite a heap of curious, ribald young men. " A silver bullet, " says another of us, "the costliest material and the best of workman ship," and he hits no human being bags only a brace of unsubstantial reviewers. .'., - ... . i: The great majority of us, authors, authoresses and authorlings, do not know our readers. All of us havo an idea, but we feel the chances aro against its being correct Ono would like to try something of this kind, a sort-of agony advertisement opposite tho title page: "If you find this book altogether satisfactory and can con veniently spare tho time, will you, dear reader, come to" Kensington Gardens, say "at 3 o'clock on tho 1st of May, with a white flower in your dress or buttonhole, as the caso may be?" It might bo a most de lightful gathering for some of us. One would liko to soo Professor Drummond's assembly a curious crowd, of serious people without sol idity or Huysmans'." It is a dream of course, for very few readers oaro enough for any au thor to take as much trouble as the walk demands. The unhappy genius would simply meet a large crowd of curious people reporters and all the rival geniuses and net ono of them would havo a flower. It is a pleas ant fancy, though incredible, to sup pose the author finding Just ono sol itary white blossom dropped shyly near the gates. It would servo for a sonnet perhaps. But the real read er would remain unconf easing and unseen. ; Nc wo shall nover meet that reader of ours upon earth, that guardian reader, loyal and affection ate, who watches over eaoli one of us. ' It may be we shall meet him in another world him or '. her. In heaven, it may be. ' Literary criticism is. overmuch given to ignoring tho reader, a fault that noods correction. Books are not written "in the absolute" they aim. 'And the reador is, or should be, the aim of them all. It is absurd to review a book entirely, as pcoplo put it, "on its own merits." That has ever been the vice of academic criticism. But yon might as well judge shooting without looking at the. target 'Hero, " ' your critio might say, "is an admirable marks man. Notice the pretty turn of his wrist the sympathetic twinkle in his aiming eye, the porfoct correct ness of his protruded foot the clas sical finish of his sighting." "He has missed?" "What matter? The target ia a fool" This .loads to a pessimistic view of targets. And as suredly the reader is the aim of the' book, or why ia it written? London Saturday Review. Tba Cbaanploa Weat Weaaaa. There is a woman in eastern Maine who couldn't go to a picnio when in, vitod because she couldn't get time. "I have so much work at home;" she said, "I can't go anywhere." Yet this same woman afterward sent a o( of old rags to a junk dealer, where she realized a cent a pound, perhaps, and every pieco of them hod boon newly washed and ironed smooth and was neatly folded up. The thing . was so funny that tho junkman put tho rags on exhibition as the work of a woman who was short of time. Sbo jjm now safely lay claim to the title of "champion neat woman of America, "Lewis- I ton Journal. , ' , - t satfullr. . , Longfellow was slow to talk sbout bis own poetry, butfrotu hi u fat given by his brograiihers it evident that be considered " Evangolino" as bis best and his translation of Dante us second in point of merit llany of hi admirers will sgroe with him as totbedrst, few as to the second, He once said, "If I wore to iwwrite Hmwatha, 1 would uao a different aetur." - ODD CONCEITS IN CANES. Daman Bonn and 'Tmth For Handle. , Mlcka Mada or Skitu of Animal. , "Some qnoer articles are made up into canes" said a loading maker of walking sticks to a reporter. "The curious looking knob on that stick is the top of a man's thigh bona It .was loft hero to' be repaired by a customer whose businoss partner had Jost his leg through an accident The log was amputated, and ho. had , tbeknnokle of the femur made" into ahead for a walking stick.' When he died not long ago, ho willed it to his partner,' who left it hero. " ''Do yon often have people wont ing stick handles made out of human bono?" asked tho reporter. Well, not often, but I know of ot least four ensos sinoo.I"have boonn businoss. It is very diffioult to mako a satisfactory handle ont of human bono on account of its spongy tex ture. You cannot give it a high pol ish, and it sotm wears out or decays. This stick here, you see, has n head studded with little pieoes of bone. What do you suppose they are? Why, tooth. A customer of ours had Riggsl disease, which- causes the teoth to gradually drop out one by t ono. : As each tooth fell out ho would come in and havo it inserted in the head of his cane. I am just putting the last ono in today. This ia not a solitary instance either. , "One of the best and most oxpen sivo materials from whiob a stiok can bo' mado is rhinoceros horn. A first olass rhinooero3 horn will meas ure 30 to40 inches in length. One horn will make seven or eight sticks. The horn is prepared and pressed into any shapo or length. A good Itick is worth from f 75 to $100. "Another material which makes a very heavy and tough stick ia the skin of tho manatee. Tho skin comes in lengths of about two foot and is dry and shriveled. Thoy say, and I believe it to be true, that if a blow is struck with a manatee stiok hard enough to draw blood the death of tho victim will follow. It is claim ed that it is poisonous if any of it gets into the blood. Thero are very strict rules against carrying them in Cuba" and West Indies gonorally." Bnakowood is tho most expensive wood used in canes. It is also tho J A. .1 j a. i f strongest and lasts longest A plain piece of snakowood big enough for a cano is worth (5 whoh mounted. Tho dealer showod a stiok made from one of the oak slats used as a tn porary footpath over tho Brooklyn bridge boforo it was oponod. Tho backbone of a shark makes an odd stick, light and very strong. Whale bone, sboep's horn and many kinds of skins are also made into canes. For handles boar's tooth and the tusks of hippopotami are gonorally nsod that is, for tho high priood sticks. Cheaper handles aro mado from different grados of buckhorn. Walrus tusks are also largely used for good handles. Tho hardest thing in tho world in tho way of bone in can strike firo from it with stool. No tool will touch it and tho enamel has to be eaten awny with acids bo fore the tusk can be worked at all. New York World. Street Democracy. "' Thoy were two- ragged children standing on the curbstone watcbin r the carriagos as thoy drovb up and stopped to lot out their occupants. " The street waiftf wore dirty and ragged and no doubt hungry, for the basket they carried between- them was empty, and tho faoo 'of tho younger of tho two was tear stained. "Thoy must bo awful rich," he said to the girl at bis sido. "Jimmy," sho , answered, "d'ye know wpt I'd do if I was rich as as mud, like them? I'd Jes' set up straight in roe carriage, an if tho folks didn't got out. o tne way i a run over cm "I wouldn't" said Jimmy slowly and solemnly. "If I wua rich, I wouldn't want . no , carridge, nor bosses, nor not bin. ' I'd go Jos' as fast as over 1 cud to heven an bring mo madder back agon." He finished with a sob, and tho girl looked at biin with an air of su perior disdain. . , "You're a silly," she said, but her voice was soft, and sho took his band in hers as they moved a way. Detroit Free Press. ... Becnrly Vattalra. "Voltaire was tho ugliest man of his ago. Emaciated to a skeleton, all the features of his countenance woro exaggerated. His , nose and chin nearly met from tha lack of teeth; his eheuks woro sunken and wrinkled; his eyes set so far hack in his bead and so obscured by shaggy, overhanging brows as to bo almost invisible. Ho usually wore a L-rgo wig, from the midst of which his at tenuated features peeped ont with comical effect For years before ho died bis woigbt did not exceed W pounds. Cfcniea af Timlin. Aunt Rosa Well, Juaniro, what would rotf like to be when, yon are Crown up? - " - Juanite (whoso ptrents aro very stnet) IdJiko to be aa orphan. Pa. - ' MOW CABLES ARE SENT. Th. Tiro Srnteaui of Snhmarlno and Over land Telrgraplir Arc Very Oidcrens. Tho manner in which messages are sent and received over tho trans atlantic cables between this country and Europe is very different from that in-whioh mittod. telegrams are trans- Tho two systems of submarine and overland telegraphy, although but two departments of tho ono soienco and in many waya closely connect ed, are yet entiroly different one from tho other. r. Thoapparatus, theruotbods of sig naling and evon tho telcgraphio characters that form the alphabet are olrocether dissimilar, and the most export land lino operator would bo a3 much nt a loss in an attompt to send a message orcr the cable as would a locomotivo engineer. V " Instead of tho loud clatter, and din and the incessant clicking of brass sounders so familiar to evory ono as the distinctive charuoteriatio of a telegraph ofllco, thoro is in tho cable office absolute silence so far aajhe manipulation of the Instruments is concerned. lnstoad of thonrcsnagoboingrattled ' off by tho tongue of a brass sonnd- er into tho ear of theoporator they aro silently written uy a sienaer, mvstorious finger on a ribbon of white paper, which passos quickly before hi3 oyes. Tho paper ribbon, ; which is about half-an inch wido, is unwound from a roll and drawn by noiseless clockwork over a sholfiike ydesk in front of tho operator. j A delicate glasa tube no thicker than an ordinary noedlo and crooked like a bent forefinger, which is su3- ponded between tho poles of a large upright niagnot, moves nervously to the right and left on tho ribbon bo-; particularly noticeable with , tho ing drawn beneath it and traoea in a rooks,' who nro most conservative, tbin lino of blue ink characters that An authentic story is told of a fami look something liko tho markings on ly of rooks who had for centuries a barometer chart cr tho quotation built thoir nests in a cathedral close board of a stockbroker. in England when a pair had the rad- - If tho comparatively clumsy in- ical temerity to soloct a tree in tho strumonts used for land tolegrophy were used on tho Atlantio cablea, scarcely ono word a minute could bo transmitted, whilo with the recorder a speed of from 15 to 25 words a minute is regularly maintained. Tho mirror, which Ja still used on ; gomo cables, is tho most dolicato and I . . . perfect tolographio instrument over invented. It issimplya small noodle suspended in a magnetic coil dolioato 'and frogilo as a feather caught in a spidor's web. Tho noodlo iaa piece of watch spring threo oigbthsof an inch long suspended by a short thread of co coon silk and having asma'l picco of silvered glass affiscJ to it with shcl lao. Tho wholo thing weighs but W-2 grains. The instrument ia placed in a dark room, and a ray of light from a lamp is focused through a lens on the .mirror and reflected back onto a graduated scalo. Tho ourrenti of j elootrioity sent through the cable ' enter the magnotio coil and causa tho noedlo to bo deflected from side to sido, tho motions being mado to form telcgraphio characters. Those minute vibrations aro rend off by an operator, who calls oui each word as horocoivos it to a copy ist, usually in an adjoining room. Now York Dispatch. Catching the Chairman. Very frequently it occurs fbat on ovorofOcious director of a railway ( company will make a point whon traveling on his lino of railway of .laying nico littlo traps for tho lowly employees and afterward soundly rating thoso who fall into them. - Tho other day ono, of theso indi viduals arrived at a wayside station in ' a trap. Tho portor carried his ' portmanteau and ms onto Iho plat-' form, and when tho train arrived put toiQ R0ttlng Jn tno gentleman band-' man touched bis cap and said: "Thank'oo, sir." . Then the great director frowned, "Do you know that byooocpting that foo you are rendering yourself liablo to Instant dismissal? Weren't yon told ea entering thin company'H sorvico that under no circumstances were yon iorniutea to rooeive grat- ( uities from the gcnoral public?" Tho poor man quailed and shudod oerrously, for bo saw that ho had boon caught. IIo had never met this ' , . - . . . . . . pompons person ociore, out ho guosfted that he bad some oonnoct ion witn the company. Bo, brightening opposite side and ataros at bcr win up, bo said: "That'a right enough, j dow by the hour. If bis appcoranco ir. But yon ain't one of tho general U agreenbto, sho appears at tho win j,ull!o. You're tho chairman of the 1 dow after few days of this per compony." IIo kept tbo 2 shillings, fornianco. Vben the acquaintance London Tit-Bit. Jovolops, bo is introduced to her japa, and after tho necessary mar- A it act by vrwaeia joaeyfc. riage arrangements bare boon made A German authoress who is col- bo is introduced to her. The pre lecting autographs for on album for limlnary tramping and staring ore girls and harvaloaWo contributions " called "doina- the bear. ' oy ine usjxror v uuara 1 ana t mi eriek bos obtained tbo following motto from the mxwcr Francis Jo- scjih, is not known to have pren aqcn autogrspus dcioto. it is written in a clear, bold band and ; ntns tans: -xoio your Uutica so- ,ny other bnman being and moro i kmaly and require tho same oi of b-1 concerned about tho matter his vis srs, but be ltaiieot toward the fail-! jtor brought to bis attention than in tnpaof ywr, neighbor. Frsns Jo-'nyotber buninobs oq the face co! let" Loadou. tfew .. . . tbot-arth. ' ' ' ' I - ' ' 'the story' of the Hksf7"" Wonlaf, Hating, Hatching and Teaching tba Yonna; lilrd to Kly. . , :i . - From tho, humming bird to tho eagle tho daily existence of every bird is ' a remote and bewitching mystery. The bird is our little broth- er7 and it is only during tho nesting I period that we can study ma domes tic life and keep the married couple undor closo investigation. Tho nest, differs from our homo in the fact that it ia sololy a nursery, for' the moment tho nestling can fly tho I world is his homo, any comfortable twig is a bedroom and a spray of loaves a Bholton , Ho "lunches wher- evor ho meets his prey and when ever ho feels hungry and thus needs no dining room with its accompany ing kitchen and storeroom. In bird life at nesting time, which is the courting tiino of our bird friends, they are in great contradistinction to oursolves. It is the male that plumes himself out in his most gor geous plumago, whilo tho bride, as a rulo, wears a dingy dross. But there are fights among the birds for their brides, often alienation of af foction and sometimes innrdcr. Thero aro, too, in birds tho spinsters and bacholors, who look on with and bacholors, who look on with j cold contempt at tho quarrels of the i , youngsters, manyoi wuom tocnarm or win a bride sing thoir sweetest songs and dance or dram with thoir no others had boon by that form of wings. As n rule, tho female bird ! patriotism which rests not merely solects tho site for the nest fliid in ! on animal instinct but on a princi mnny cases sbo is alone the architect I pie. They had fought with joyous while the male bird simply aids her with his song and brings her food. That many birds return to tho same nesting place year after year is undoubted. This is true of the swallow, building its small earthen home under' our eaves, and most neighboring barrack yard. Tho wholo parliament of rooks of that colony were oalled togothor, and , with many caws discussed tho sub ject on tho cathodral green. An al I most gray headed rook took tho floor, and it was evidently docided that the barrack troo should bo look . ...... ed upon as a colony, for tho birds were allowed to build thoro in peace. In hatching tho brood there is a great difference among birds. Tho ruby throated humming bird never comes near , the nest just caroling awoy in the near vioinity, Tho sonar sparrows, however, lako turn and turn about oh tho noat and this U truo about many dth6v birds; It i3 generally said that birds give tip all care-of thoir young as soon as tbey aro Hedged. This is absolutely in correct. Tho paront bird gives tho first lessons in flying as carefully as do we in seeing our children toddle across tho floor. ,: When the young bird has rniscnl. eulated tho distanco from bough to bough and fluttered. to tho ground, tho parents aro as solicitous over tho fall as any mother over the tumble of her babe, and with cnc:uraging bird talk mako tho youngster jump to some porch and not infrequently '. actually carry him thoro. Young I birds, liko young children, aro often I indiscreet, and the young mocking bird is ono of tho mct obstreperous of fledgelings, causing his parents an infinity of trouble They climb out of their nests days beforo they can Cy and aro an easy prey to thoir many enemies, especially man, but aro guarded and fed to the utmost by thoir parents. In tho neating time, especially when tho young aro hatched, birds use the strangest ways to keep an enemy away from tho home of tho brood, y' V ' sado against almost every bird by their ncsta are ruthlessly destroyed or robbed. If theso leso people would i it is the bird that really learn that raves their crops and their orchards by killing hundred? of thousands of insect that would eat cp everything, our little brothers would be far moro pjentiful and crops of all aorta far more -abundant. Lccrnre by Mrs. Olivo Thorno Miller. . Maziraa Cearrtabrpi, A Mexican girl ia courted by a uniquo proceaa. Iler would bo lover valka up and down the street on tho CkwraMal, ' . Chembinl bad tbo ezeentional tal. cntof being able to oonTinoe orery t eo0 witn wbotn ba talked that be intt,i i,i i. t - A(rTErl A YEAR. Tho alrader Ultra nod their headM Oo cither aide tne gardtia way, , '' - 1 Awl all olonK the flower beds v Tall foxglove atond tn fair array. ; The thruetle In the pear tree near Htlll carols it when flrat we earn ; , The dame old song he sand last ywuy . And ra, we are no more tha sasaa. ..... , . ........ -.',. J How stronff the Ulies sitikUI How neat The ordurcd rose beds, row on row I ' i It's still the BO'Oo that seemed sweet A year agu a ynar airo. .. .Si' noticed how thut apple bontfh . Ktood out bu gram agsinin) the sky. It's loil a lair at rvut now. ; But we are altered you sad . ; The days have come bctweon n twe And nnived an erer more apart. We cannot, ax wn niwd to do, Ti'll to each othrr all mir heart. Only a year mnoe Inst we met, ' Eat tn that ymr what things have beool ; tfe wulk. we talk together, ytt We oanoot brtdu the gulf between. , All looks nnrhsnged. save we akma. We've drtrted tulo other ways. il . Time turns the page, the part is gone. And naught restores the vanlHhxd days. . The flying honrs new scenra reveal. We never fancied you and 1 : They eould come when we should feel -Mo longer sad to say guodby. i . H. C. Watktn tn Now York ledger. . The National Army of Fran The great armies ol th Fjonch republio bad been created "by Qirnot with the aid of his ablo lieutenant, Dubois de Crance: They were or- ganizod and directed by the unassist- ( ed gonius of the former. , Being tho ; nrst national armies wnicu iiurojio i bad known, thoy woro animated as alacrity for tho assertion, confirma tion and extension of the rights of ! man. In the march of events their . patriotism, grounded in Rousseau's ; doctrinos, bad brought into promi- nenoo his conception of natural boundaries. Thore was but one opin ion in tho entire nation concerning its frontiers to wit that Nice, Sa voy and western Rhine border were all by nature a part of Franco. As to what was boyond opinion was di vided, some fooling that they should . continue fighting in order to impose thoir own system ; wherever possi ble, while others, and they by far the largest number, woro either iq difforent or clso mnintainod that the nation should fight only for its nat ural frontier. To tho support of tha latter sontiroont came tho gonoral longing for peace which was grad ually overpowering the whole conn.' try. Professor W. M. Sloano'a"Lifa of Napoleon" in Contury. . , - - i Stumped tba Savage, A distinguished African explorer, M. Mizon, on his return to France brought with him a young negrosa Yi years old called anabon. Ono day she was taken to see the pictures in tho Goupil gallery, and her enter, tninors were naturally desirous of knowing bow a perfected art would affoct an utter savage.. She was ask ed to toil what sho saw and answer ed readily enough as she came to ono canvas after another that she saw trees, men or animals. Finally sho was led up to tho canvas of an impressionist on an easel by itsolf and interrogated in tho same fash ion. Sho hesitated for a long timo. Then she walked up to tho picturo, looked behind it and retreated again. . "What do you soo?" urged bcr companions. "It is a horso,"sbo returned hesitatingly. Tho intention of tho artist bod been to represent tho margin of a pool wbcro a wom an, with a child standing beside her, was washing clotbos. &m Fronct. co Argonaut j All Orris Are Beautiful. - "I don't know what yon ever saw in mo to admire," tho fair ono re marked demurely. , i ; And be answered: "Oh, well, yon know, sweet one, a fellow who is anything doesn't look for more beau ty in a girL It's" And now thoso two hearts that beat as one ' aro doing separate thumps. He has returned her soiled glovo,ond a lace handkerchief and a . 1 t. . , . Mi . , Jr VJV '7U UOT " " '.ho ba" nerved everything except ino ammona . oroocn, wnica sue keeps as a souvenir of their shatter ed love.-London Tit-Bits. t . Saoka4 Rum Lady I hoard yon had a fire here and aro selling goods at a bargain. I ' (h-ocer That right, nia'am. Look ! at these fine bams fur seven ponoo a pound, only slightly daniAgod by smoka Pick Me Up. Queen Elizabeth hod a red bom and was ranch ashamed of it, always taking pains to have it carefully j powdered before making apoblio ap- i pearanoe on a state occasion. ' " j Switzerland has its namo from : 6ch weirs, the dojdo of the three for-1 est eaotons that led the successful insurrection against tho Austriana. Prince Bismarck has a very loud, harsh voice and generally sjieaks in a dogmatic, dictatorial way that ad mits of no contradiction. - . Bnlwer Lytton was always oonsid. roJ o had a largo. coarse not, thick lips and heavy, dull features. -r Feathers as an article of dress .waa at fi rat xefiTtt ftnlv riw tnAn In their hclmatsi. . ' j Doctbrsay; ' Bilious and InterraitlentFevera which prevail in miasmatic dis--tricts are invariably accompan- ted Jby:. derangements 1 of the Stomach 4 LiVer''and' Cowejs The Secret "of Health. The liver is the great, .rdriving wheel "; in "the mechanism of man, and when it is out of order, the whole system becomes de- ranged and disease is the result, Tutt's Liver Pills Cure all Liver Troubles. MACHINIST ANU , ENGINEER, BURLIXGTOX, ' . ' MACHINE, BLACKSMITH h H( )P, FOUNDRY, 8-Pi pings, fittinps, vlve, eto. Vahable Farm and Mill ! Br anoMerof Oultford Svpnlait court, nuule In a aiwulal proceeding hnU) Mr. M .1. Murray atlvUir arepJatnriS mn O. I. Vincent M Ounrdkin and oibera ant defendnnu, tbe awlriflKnel wtll lell at ibt onurt houso luur In Urabaia, 4lamauo COUIlty, UU . ' - - iir SATURDAY JULY fl, 1895, the fOIIowhiir real pmpetr. In wlf A trae of land In Fdiicatt'a tiwhln. Ahwmuae noumy, on I he watera ot atony crwk. adia- ln the lands of tha bite J. A. ftmbaja 14 A. Vtnceui, an nt tier, eoutainlna V - : "2C0 ACHES, more or ter, known a tba Cheotev TlaneeM I'lece. anrt up to a few irrara tg o tba bone ai1 the late W. j. Mitht Zm tkla. tract la a. lnrire brick dwelling and out hotuv and mill. The hnd 1 a-layted tn tba irrowtli of fine tobauco and other fnna product. Tba) bi'ldlmr will jtart at CillJ.SO. i TKHMS i One third cano. tba other twiv, llilrii In One and two yeam, m-tired by bmid tfctrrytiis inicrnti rrnm JUuy k. o. ana tni rcaurved until nurchaan uinncy la f uUjr vatl. urchaan lanncy la luUjr yal-L K.H. PAHKtU, I row J.A.XOMO, Co"T. ' t d . 7T 77? Wtii Do You Ses Spots 4 A before you in the air? That fe yotu liver" fauli. Rhenrontism, t 4 rin..wt;!n Miifrftf-4- Mat E actio ead BlUiousacae v ail Pyurlivert fault , ,i f -K SvaiDiama of a tXmrdered Lrrart Pia In bade, aide and ahoUcre,a ft bad taut ia I! noaU, tualad J-t toieuc. KPcrcl drewainct. dicaaa i VX tloabad,IitUiMnatlMat9a)acB.lqaa l5 ot aMxtita, tour and Mi atoawca, t J.7X habitual cot.nau.aotaBetarauia t. . eye, a v jiiow, mym tdww, K' veuanoa, niK.-Jaa oa tha fee, dry K'aL eough, nfue J iniaa. .'-, At th fifst eppeanmcft ? V.T mr.-Viant tat A bet tit of ' 0 .V y it grots txaigM to wcrk ea tXo fSJ ' BalaProprirter, Kaoxviiie, Tcso. y Stldl.yIJ.B.H0LT&CO; International ; Ii5tIonary ( i l taalaable In 0(Boc,Srbnol,nnd Hmtne i hivr trout Carc (a Corer Sn rrfllf ' I'sabriJed." gtacdard. f the , V. S. Cur't rrbit- 1 nicOfllra.theU-S. . 111 rtmeCeartaiMl i af nearly all tba 1 Genual bueka. - iv arwiljr mo- ' (Waded by State 1 fnprrinretHieate ol Srhaobi. aad ' pother Mnmtwn at- 1 matlUMMBiu- ' fce. , . Tho Oao Grrnf ff.JwrfrJ A uthtrrtty. ia. J. Pr'T. Jnorina of tba It. S. i i Snfwna rnart. wrt-e : Tbe lnternaftwaal i lirttuoaiar U tnararfrrttna of litnOunarits. I miaaml Ittoalaaatbaaae rraat aiamt- ' b mvA tnthivbt " ft . A Colletra Freaideat irriteet "eaaa. wttk whlrb tha aye Catta tba " ward aMglit, tmr aeearacy af aVSaJ ttoa. fna- tftctti aaatboda tm tixil "aattaaT praaaartaalna. far teraa yet 'Minim tn nulla ataltaneata ot tatta. "anal far praetleal a a warkhnt "tUetloMry. Webater'a IateraatioBaJ' "awala aasr eOar alalia Taaane.' C.JtC. JfTXXTA Jt CO, PabltsieTM, met rH Iur caaua rraniuf -w-itt ui W , 1 j an I W niun uacqv nrai.-i punne a, UU youMtkaiik&iti'te cured, p.tckrtwDrajjtrfCf Bwctsl Far K. J

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