Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report IX. : TO PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS .The Superintendent of Public Schools of fra nklin county will be in Louisburg on the second Thurs day of February, April, July, Sep tember, October and December, and remain for three days, if necessary, for the purpose of examining appli cants to teach in the Public Schools of this county." 1 will also be in Louisburg on Saturday of each weak, and all public day3, to attend to any business connected with my office. J. N. Harris, Supt. I?i-o cession sil ciiti-tis. C. 1 M. COOKE & SON, ATT03NEYS-AT-LAW, AVill ntten.1 the courts ol Nai. FraaWin, I QrariviUo, Warren ac.i Wake eotuities, also the j louisbi aa. k.'C h'.ilreme Court of 5orf. C;u-ol!ui, inU the U. ; b. circuit aua Uistnct Coaus. , JR. J. E. JIALO B. Oilio- two doors 'x-.low Thomas & Aijrcocke'E dru bto.-e. a.ijoiLiug Dr. O. L. Lllis. i W. II. ItffCUOLSON, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, lc"isb;;r.i, x. c. JP W. TIMBERLAXS, A TTO K.N Y- AT-1. AW, LiUIS3.".:RG, o. OSoe on Nash street. S. SPRUILL, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Louisuuno, x. c. V'ill tten "1 the courts of Franklin, Vane, Grmv;il Warren ;ml Wake counties, also the HuDruie Court of North Caroilaa. Prompt tt mi u given to collections, Sec. N. Y. QULLEY. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, FRAXKXIXTOX, X. C. AU lPgal r usiness promiitly attended to. rjiUOa B. WILDISR, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, LOUIffBCRe, X. c. OTVe oa Main street, one door below Eagle Hot-L W. M. PERSON, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, L'tnsu'jBs, x. c. rrictiiws In all courts. 0!Hce in the Court Hona. WHAT gi IT DONE CAN IT DO I The orijrinal and only Rnnine Compoand OxyjiPii Treatment, that of Drs. Starkey & Palfn is a scientific adjustment of the ele ments of Oxygen and Nitrogen maprnetiisd; suil I he compound is so condensnd and made portable that it is seat over the world. It has been in nse for over twenty years; thousands of patients have been treated, and over one thousand pliysieiants hiu-e used it ami recommended it a very signifi cant fact. "Compound Oxygen Its Mode of Action ami Results;" is the title of a book of 200 pn.es, published by Drs Starkey & Palen, which irives to all inquirers full information ns to this remarkable curative agent and a good record of surprising cures in a wide ra nge of chronic cases -many of them after being abandoned to die by other physi cians. Will be mailed free to any address ou application. Drs. STARK EY & PALE.Y, l.'.L'O Arch Street. Philadelphia. Pa. 1 'JO Sutter Street. San Francisco, Cal. Please mention this paper. Coffins and Caskets. We have added to our already complete line of wood and cloth covered Coffins and Caskets SOLID WALNUT COFfiHS AND CASKETS. Also a line of METALICS as nice and fine goods as "is car ried in any of our cities. Our ptock is complete in .every line ' -t ... Respectfully, . - - . - B. R. Habbis & Co. Louisburg," N. C. " " 1 Bank of Louisburg " Does a General "Banking fBosta&s Collections made and wturned promptly , Uortneni Exchange bought and sold. COUNTY ORDERS CASHED . ' i v.. ' - , Interest paid on deposits after three r - tt. P. WEBB, President a n s Magazine FOR 1893. PARTIAL PROSPECTUS. FRANCES HODOSOK BCBIOSTT will eontribnte the first serial to appear In a raugazme from her pro for many years, enti tle. "The One I Knew the Best of ill." h. a BOlfKBR will furnish a series of six sketches entitled 'Jersey Street and Jersey Lane." niustrated. BOBEHT 8 RANT - wil relate the further experiences of Prsd and Jo3j)hln9 In "A sequel to The Reflections of a Married Man Ilinatr ated. HAS OLD PHEDRICK r-illlrib5le ?PlltlJ novel of great pow. er' cntlt,OJi Tn Copperheao. bytes author op "jbbry." Miss S. ii. RUSott, the atithor of "Jrry,' will ri:e :. re;iUttU; scory of life among- the Tennetaee mounjuin rs, "The Durlict cjucr-ret-:' Somn unnubiisfl., - iters of Ctriyle to C ward iTviug si. ; o'Lors. -IcUu- with a p -rt of cartyi'i s i:f-.- f .-.r -ri.THUt from Ui-.t r r uirht opt iu trre-ni ai r;iiur-. oi Curiyl,, te:ni-ni3ceni-vs. Rv . ti-.ns o Liiitnm ud .arnn. r By tii iu.u uJ.i(iu:s i Chai...)run tist in J.-it):.u. .o--rt vtlma, who h -s lust rjfiraea srom a uU-n?f. ,i nriy two yesrs .n taa couiitiy. ua ia.:tly iPustr.teu t.v ta uihor. - ui:-orio moments, wlii. h have '.V' f-:ifur'J ot a -" m'' zmo uung :s2 w: a t. conliaa -u : y .-.ouie v rtcuWiv strik ing pap-rs. cmoDg th.Gi aeraa uy th3 gri ut war correspondents, Wiliain ii. ixuaa-A, ArcL taii Fories, and others. MEiJ'S vJUC'Ji-ATIOl'S. A series of artijl s on ihe lif-i work of men m many callings the hief w iys (exclusive of professions) in which uun earu their liveli hood. THE VOBLG'S FAIR IX CHICAGO. A seri wil te published later in th year giving the impressions made y the exhibition upon dilJetent ol servers of not.-, l oth Amer ican an J foreign; and many of these olerv- rs will be Mav artists who will illustrate their own articles. MISCELLANEOUS ARTICLES. Furth er contributions to the Poor In irreat Cities. Mrs. Barnctfs illustrated pep r ou the London plan for Home aid to Invalid chil-,c- of sPecial iuter st Jdso wili Prof Ucilprm's authoritative account oi the Ponrv Belief Expefiltion (iliustrat d,) a very inter esting arti: le l.y Octave Uzanne on the exhit.i tlon of woman's art now going on in Paris, and articles upon artistic subjects, accounts of travels, ets etc. TUB ILLUSTRATIONS of the year will represent the work not only of the well-known ilustrators, but many drawings will also appear by artists who are Lest known us paint- rs. TERMS : $3.03 a Year; 2-c. a Number. SPECIAL OFFER. The numbers for 1S92 and a subs ription for ISStt, 4 60. The s:;me, with back numbers bound in cloth, $6.00. Kow is the time to sub scribe. Charles Scribner's Sox. 743 Bro.uiway Kt w York. .r-iuio. -ff ;rsttpr An A.. 1893. HARPER'S MAGAZINE. ILLUSTRATED. Harpcr-s Magazine for 1303 will continue to mniitntlw unrivaled staii.lard of exc. llonc.' which has ch-iructerzed it from the begimng Among the noteablc fcatur. s of the vei.r there will ; new novels by A. Conan Dayle, Con stance Fcidmore v'oolson. and William Black hhort stories will be contributed l.y the most popular writ-.-rs of th - day, iucluding Mary K A i!kirs, Richard Hpriing Davis. Margaret nelan.i, Braitdcr Mstthews, and nruiy o'hers The iliust r.iti-d -h scriptive papers will crabne artJclcs by Julian Ralph ou new S?onthrn and Western subjects: by Th o lor. Chibt on In fa..; by Ponltn -y nig-lov ou Russi an1 Ger manp; hy Ri 'hard Har.iing Davis on a Lon don S-son; l.y Col. T. A lo.Jtr. on Eastern Rjders; (-t. t.-iwin A Abtey s i.lastrations of IMiakespearo's Commedies will ix t-iitrarjr uriicies win re conirlbutad Djr Chas. Eliot Norton. BIrs. SamesT Hilrla WiiiaTn aean Ilowella, Brander Matthews, and others. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. PER YEAR. harper's magazine.. 4. oo nAnr&n e weKLI ., ....... 00 BABPEB 8 BAZAR. ..... 4 QC HARPER S YOUNG PEOPLE... 2 00 Postage free to all subscribers in the Unued tstatesy Canada and Mexico. The volumes of the- Weekly .tginr with the numbers for June and Iteeembe of each year. When no time is specified! subscriptions will begin with the nnraer" turTect at.tae time or receipt or order. Bound volumes r of Harper's V.'eebJy tor three years back, in nat cloth bin'dln-e wUE.be sent by taail, post-paid for 3 Oft per Ti.uuue. '- iota eases, .tor binding, 5o eento) esph by mail, post-paid. Keniittanses should be wade by Dost office money onlti or diaXt. to avoid chance of. loss. i .. New-yrapcrg are not to copy fkisadver- tisemtivt ntiiona me .express oider " oi Harper Brothers . - - ' . Address -. ' - .. ..-. - : ' .- " ". . . ., ; Habpeb& EcoTaEBi?; New York OnEQILUOH LADIES . IM DAILY BECOMESDIKS " lliU ADJUSTABLE UflUll It expands across the Ball and Joints. - , -. Tfii makes ft K TifiBEST PnTDtUHIffiST SLCOUKff, mil HOST J CO MFORTABLE SHOE m . -THE TT0EIL fRICEl, $21.50, $3, $30.; C0NSOUDATEDSH0ECO. - ' MffnnfacUuctSy Lynu,-" L Masai -'Shoes naia tomeasurc- TOB STALE BY V- V'" Scritoer 1 iv4(p WHICH WILL THEtf CHOOSE. A 7,000,000 Bale, Crop : or, 9,000,000 Bale Crop. - - Which. -will the farmers choose, a decrease ot labor and plenty of home-supplies at a handsome prof it, or an increase of labor with sraofc houses and corn cribs in the West, and rainoas loss on the pro duction of their cotton crop ? Can any sane man hesitate ? A 7,000,000 bale crop will bring 10 cents, or in round numbers $350,000,000; while a 9,000,000 bale crop will not bring over 7 cents, or say $315,000,000, a loss of $35,000,000 and how about the cost of production? To raise a 7,000,000 bale crop at 8 cents per ponnd will cost $280,000,000, which if sold at 10 cents will net the far mers a profit, over and above the cost of production, of $70,000,000. On the other hand, to raise a 9,000,000 bale crop at 8 cents per pound will cost $360,000,000, which if sold at as much as 7 cents per pound, would only bring $315,000, 000, or a net loss to th3 producers ot 45,01)0,000, showing- a differ encc in favor of the lesser crop of $115,000,000, and that with plen ty of home supplies for the next crop. It is generally admitted that with meat a 8 cents per pound end corn at 75 cents per bushel, the average cost of producing a pound of cotton is 8 cents. With these admitted facts before the cotton growers, their policy should still i further reduce the acieage and place the American crop on a 7,000,000 basis, thus insuring 10 j cents a pound for cotton, or a prof it to the larmers of at least 2 cents on the pound, but on the contrary if they return to an increased acre - age," an increased use of fertilizers, and produce a 9,000,000 or a 10,. 000,C00bale crop, values will be i..ia reaucea below 7 cents and every pound of cotton will be sold at net loss of 1 cent or more per pound. rT"wl n Tr w 1 n n 4V,rt- 1... ..wn iucj? miuw me av erage cost of production is in the I rai iv. t a fo . neighborhood of S cents a pound or,j i i- . , and by limiting their acreage they ; can make a profit on it, they are j everywhere making preparations o increase the acreage, and volun- arily assuming an unquestionable , ico kjl liianv luiiiiuiis. ine price A. w. ng incai tuuay ranges irom 12 cents cash to 20 cents on time; the price of corn from 65 cents cash to .fl on time. To buy sup plies at these prices to raise 6 or 7 cent cotton is simply suicidal. It is not yet too late to recede from the determination already formed to increase the acreage; why not cut down the cotton crop and in crease the acreage, of food crops? It can be done and done profita bly. . He Was Done. Chauncy Depew told a good sto ry about the old 'spiritualist who ded and his neighbors thought he ought to have a decent' Christian burial, and sa they got an old vil lage preacher to officiate, and he prayed at the open grave andung a hyjriuj'and then was making' a few Bympathetic-remarks abont the uncertainty of life and the- duty of preparing for death, - and so forth when suddenly the bereaved widow, who was a spiritualist, too, rose forward and aid: "Stop-- s.top right now Mr,- Johnson. I've jest had a communication from my aeceased'' husband m " thei. coffin there, and he says you are, an old fpoU and everything yoo have said is a lie.' - ; ' - - i The good old -preacher- was set oacK anu emoarrassea ior a. mo ment, and his voice trembled and his eyes gotatery .as he .said; My friends, I have been preach ing "the a gospel for ..forty ?.y ears,' week in and week out, and, I have helped bnry.' most every .man; woman and child who has died iii this settlement, but this is the first time in all my life that I was ever sassed by a corpse and now ;you may; throw, in the dirt, : for I'm oae.'V-VBill p.M . r tOUISBDRG, S. CraiDAY; Al'RIT. " T1 1 S??S??M,WWBIMBBMM ' - . !VAJArf4 ft TWO OF THE KILLED: - . . -. ;;:p-;;';.- It may be said," perhapj ; that every incident of a uan'Uife has power to make him either better or worse; but this must be. "especially true of tragical experiences, of in frequent occurrence with most of us, but distressingly common to soldiers engaged in actual war fare. Scenes like the jTollowing," described by Major Small in his history of the Sixteenth Maine Regiment, could hardly hare been witnessed without leaving BQme permanent impression upon the be holder. After the battle of Gettysburg a number of men, in gray suits, were lying in a grove at the left of Cemetery Hill, and sadly I made my way among the dead and dy ing, proffering 6uch assistance as sympathy dictated. Oue poor fel low, about twenty-five years old, was shot through the body. His wants were few. u i j .. SU CUiUJ W 011 I VO'l COY- 1 er me up r Then Lis mind wan red. and he m-jrip.urd "Dear mother soinothii:g alua! So glad 'ti- a1 ovr. Son came clear sens,- of L:. condition, vould 1 w-it f , ids fatuer and toll him h"vv he died, how he loveu them at home: "Tell ihem all about, it, w(n"t you? Father's nam-' is Ro,( rt Jenkins. I belong to the Seventh North Carolina came frorn ("hat- ham county. My name is Will . " and tearfully I covered his face. A A little farther on my attention was attracted toward a ylluK i " ' : "Cl ; i i aV.I,8.8,df Snd W&S lookil, aV "g 7 handsome face iWhe, 6 l;n)closed hls e7es g&Zed S.tea,hly into mine Nvitb 5ucb 1 & ,ie8tloninK. bungry look, an ap- i 1 1 1 m ii i 1 1 rx oni nil a o . - i . , . fe' 4- A T"l 11 I .1 r. 1 "v uunci tu answer r couia only ily ask where he was wounded . "Don't talk to me, please,' he said fl , A , , , A moment after he touched his vMO t i T .1 breast, and I saw there was not a chance for jim When askeJ if he was not afrR. to die he answered, "No; I a, glad T am l 1k )h , , , tbis wiU eU(1 the I asked him whether he was a Christian, and he began to make some answer, hut a sudden spasm of pain closed his eyes. I could not bear to leave him, and had just put mv fare dov: close to his when h- Midd-vi'v opened his , yes. I shall v: forget their unearthly b'-au'v, a-oi the sweet, trusting twpi.-s.don which overspread bis face, as he said to me, with a motion as if he "would throw his arms around my neck, 'I am going home good bye!" . . I did weep; I could not help it. do not recollect his name; he may not have told me. I only remem ber that boys from the Sixteenth Maine carried him to the field hos pital because they wanted to do so, although they, too, saw it was nearly over. Youth's Companion; Turkeys for BreeSingr. It has always been a mystery .to us why so little care is taken by ordinary farmers to, get the', best grown, mature, turkeys for breed mg purposes. : The usual way i on many farms isJcr select all the fin est specimens for market possibly because - the .extra ' money they bring is so Jeorely. needed. 1 ; "It"' is no wonder lhat turkeys run' out and;; become unprofitable r 'under such management. ' Get the best for breeding, and next fall clinch the' improvement by; keepltng the best" for" another season -Boston A r tickl ng ' sensation " - of the throa, a piping'Voice and a dispo sition. -to- expectorate frequently are, the forerunn ers of v a danger bus throat affection. - The bronchi, al trouble of ten develops into con- sumption, unless (cheeked by? the timely use of . Dr, Ball! 'Coo gh Sjruj). :Beware4 T . 7. im YOUR COUXTY PAPER. if any Reasons Why It Should be . - . Patronised. Cor of th Oxk rd Ldgr. So far as I know every county seat in North Carolina has a news paper, doing what it can for the education of the county's resour ces, trying to elevate the cilszens and'help them on to greater prosperity.- Our home paper baa be come a fixed necessity, and every citizen ought to feel bound to be a subscriber. County pride, if nothing else should induce us to stand by oar home paper, and the man who from 6heer iudifference fails to support his home paper, is wanting in county pride. I am ambitions enough to want my county to be the equal of her his- I ter iu point of intelligence, an.l i enterprise, if not in point of! wealth; aivi without a tfi-.d, 1 sound, healthy and enterpri.-inc honw j.ftj er, t':- ii'-Ilio:, ar..l ; onterjit ic mu.-t be w.imi m atrl'iti ' K- n i t -t, want my i-m-h: v j a.r to i,- ''ii.: of any i-tl or and w it;, ;n; ; from all ir ( i ' - be. 1 'h- h:i"- , ap ' 1 . ! . ? V Hti ' tii i , !.. t '' ' i h- x'. 'i :n ike -to every family e can not af he repiionsirdiitv 1 l-S Wv.-rK.lV Vi-lt iti it.- ierritory . ford to fi?.-'irne "f '. i'ari;i, a family without pro- I ! 1 1 i ;:n t means for ed i;Litiu:. . A 'uod newf-iaper is a splendid educator, and our chil- ! (j ren will eavrerlv read it .-)..., they are slow to r ad anything else, and in the course .f twelve VRS, nmmiIlt , , t LuiMiiiis mr) win imv'M d.irie . - .... v vuunii; lli.lt DHj ; erwise would have b-en ne.'hHt- ed. 1 knew a man oner with a large family of children w,li ed- ! ucated and the man ua, , ... r : and being asked ho w he man n-A to educate his children i,re , ,ieJ . , k . piied with trood newMiaoer and . ,J t i i i . , , i Oilier literature, atitl ti t t hm to scj loul hat 1 could, and ? ..".- ucated themselves" Tlie newspap-'rs hel, r , . r--i-- thi rst fo r Kl.i'Wln 'l:.-r-w-'..!1i:1 know are children today to not grown that world is much Iarc'r father's farm or th.-ir borhood. The new- n ,t n w n n th-ir pat'er larger the ideas id eir own. I know of no piai-e wd;.r" w r;tn in ve.-t $1 .j that w ;: vi-.il u s:ndi large return- as in .:jr 1. i:i paper. Then it is a reat mis take that pe.iplf make m s ih s -ribing for a paper abroad ' ' .: . . . c . i t i . i ' i o in-1 n i ' in t ..i : r - - -1 n r ' n r i ' li i n Tl.-o o ; ib. or r no home pude. i havt uo word to utter against subscribing to papers abroad if we just take our home paper. The first two papers for us to read is our home and church papers, then- as many more as our inclinations dicUte. But one says, I can get a larger paper with much more reading matter for the same price abroad. That may be true, but you cannot afford to be without your home news. Your county pride is at stake nd you cannot afford to sacrifice that. Then even if we would all patronize our home pa per with ar paid up subscription, our hard, worked editor 'could en large his paper and give us much more reading matter. Another says, my neighbor takes the home paper, and I read it.'-Well, that is j net stinginess to the core, if we are ai all able to subscribe for a paper. Some people excuse them selves by saying- the editor is i of different politics and therefore we will not take His paper. ' I in ist that this : U not a valid ex cuse, and that we ought. to read the borne paper for the sake of our home . news. ; If my county paper was of." aifferent -"politic from mine,-'I?vwould still, eub scribe to and read it as a - home enterprise and agree to disagree with, the editor aa tb politics. ' ' r In" conclusion I suggest that we all feel it our duty to aid the edi tor in making a good home paper by tending him items of-news from our neighborhoodand ihoae competent or accustomed to wri ting, contribte now and then to the columns ef the papr. Wo ihoald feel that it la our paper aud that in some measure wo are responsible for IU sneceea. A Xew Argument Ajraiast Corset. This is the shape of a woman's waist, on which a corset tight is laced. The ribs deformed by being squeezed, prss on the lungs till they're diseased. The heart is jammed and cannot pump the lirer is a tor. pid lump; the atomacb, crushed, cannot die.t, and in a me a.A .11 - 1 rr. fore, thiasillv wn.n., n .9, n n.... . t . ' 3 l" but thinks eh haj lovely bhape. though hidsrm as a crippled ape. Thi is a woman natural waist, w h u h cornet nvr yet disgraced. Inside it a uiiiie of health. Outside of charms it ha a wilth. It is a thing i-f beauty true, and a sweet joy forever new. It needs no artf ul padding vile or butle biK' to iv it "style."' It 'rony and solid, loom w and sound, and hard to 'et one arm nro ind. A Us ' if womn on.y ki..-w tJ,.- mischief that th-- r .r-.-'.s do, they'd let Ii.tin-- Ntt'ir- w e h-r w ay, and iiv.-r trv h r A a 1 -1 t o - - - a v . A.- a h'.'i.-.-huld t-".i. 1 v tiot b e i e. i 1 . Mr Hr.--k ., 4''1.' i. .r '.. " f o k , a , writ'--: a rreat deal fr. :n n 1 - -'.T-r- 1 a - V. - -.1 ar he iio r :1. sore thro.it. et--Iff u ii ' ; i I t r . I ti w r--. P.! II).- I. f r i r; d- a- a I.-- i-d. - i r : L it can :i . -. i 1 ! i Wanted ! Names 200,000 TU TUB Weekly Constitution PU1WJ u XUinU. Q. THS TA.BMXR1 TKlZXto. A. BOaUK COHPAJTICCT, - wonu. THE GREAT SOUTHERN WEEKLY. ItirAjTkaltortl DvpM-UMat to Om bmt la JU Wocuai lad CkairfaMcolMa urn X HptUi7UTTu8tNikiiHMn vombkamX to vcfMrsI rmdinc tajuirr. BOJ Ar vrlks lortt Dr. Tiimtn prvrlrm fo It -- JoJ CIiKiW H&rrts (Car bm, viSm P. awd ao4 rrtMk. U BfMloa u raiM nporl ty It . . v A. M. wir cutf ruaktt) Vm ivwi kt. T& Klpttnr. TrtJi stock.u. KitfcwJ Ma tolm Joknmuao. mni tfc Mrt txuwy xiM of Ua WM kooUbatt to tu miaou. . ITISA MAGAZINE ' .' lsj max rssux a ls jedccatox. $1.00 a Tut ifrota wmat4taiiJ77 Waflfy. Homj far - IX7D FOX IXMfXE OOrXflL ycmrwrlT rv1 hr tMriov who ul trim CJt of tlx fc Tin DoUrt Ok. TbAi Otmt. yrilljoaWrdtUwarm!, Tt aal prrtap tf tbo appfxe& 4 that cjonr trrfM dUr CosaipV. Ak ronrltrtf yiflMfforl totih aak of 50 nt to nre tL tUk aa4 do nohlQ for iU W Im trvr trprioi HaI tiloh Con wQJ ear joarconxfc. It Tr UIK Tl rt ptaiAs vbranorstbaa a wullkm hriU f icld past rar. tt raltm-a erxap aod hoc4ajr coc al oax. Uotbrrt do aot b m ilhovt lc PrulU and flower Lave been rightly amed children of tha light woven from aaony air." Vpettmea Oaea. 8. II. aiffird. Ntt CjwL Wit, trobli tta Brirl4rU ad Eixrsv tin. hU lBXch mxM dlvrlml, bt liter affectrd to aa alarmlax d rr. aprU tU mr, 4 W a trrruJr rvd txj i tU$i ad acrvcjrtk Thrboal of KWtrie liixen rord hia. Kdrd ?lpbnl, IIrr)tirK. Ill . hid a raania aor oa hk tJ -tt Klfri Bitten td -n hntM rJ .afvi and John r-krr. C'- ri. ii.. r3 titp Urfr ftrr rw -n ht i 1 (J.n d b. u IxqrtbW Ov I f RWfm nil.M I . ' " V 1- 1 hira ; '.jp-ij. wuTTuai s Arrack ' Vo i canr.ot afford to bay ad yo-ir l:om supplier, do matter , hi l ip.- crop you glow toeii. ! ' j Kirl'i CTvr L.a. ih tl".id j pjrift-r. rum frhMM l! i-nH- I ) th- tofl'iuj ai c-sr- c-i ; -1 tion. 2V.. 5.V. ad Jl.Cf. j Hens that are crowded will i.cA, lay. WV ht piT itl rjLiT rir :f r caurrh. diptif. rAr.kr w zt tai h- ixrh" .a Sh:i h urrh Yr ir A TJi.Ai ;nw. r frw aifk b- : IV- Frnkhat. n r o . - ; z-r - i , -f ' I o.j at. V;'ini. ? r ( T r. . i,.rn'th.: T i s. . . i..t-..r :hL aur.!, . - il eU.f 'i- ' i i -" T - ' ' :j . ' -. :- r r K I J Wi - i- r : - r I r Tii i r i -.. . Hill L. I I I A I r.B 1 - k HILOH'S CATARRT, REMEDY. i" ' . .-.tt- .-- - J A --- ! l.-ri.rf .. 1 . V 1 T '. rm 1 . I H ' I I i I i 1 1 is (.nni IMA I )I i a -t..iII I ' r i liJrij tmpUte stotV. ot for yl.00 will d tntT- bvk auatwrv, tM cocaplrt. vhkb will nk orrr 400 - fthort Item of t&lrrt, betUrt otW WATBRLKT MAQAI15R. Bos ITS. BootoB. Uml JACOO EVAN 3, THE SHOEMAKER. I &o mom la low aad oeropjiAiC tb thep fomcrly oerepld . rtyt Grwa. GI ta roar pdro&iff vLi 1 will irir rvo'aUitfietiw. NOTICE OF 8.1 LE.. UdT aad by rtrtM p a decnv r ? mk nkU la a eana pa4iivK la tb &. prior Cocrt ot FrtaUla touMtj, evi tUd J. & Wyao, Gaardiaa. actiat J. IL Bergrroa ao4 otbm, I will, oa To, djy.th lfe&of AprUlS33,ataCcf Hoom door la Zxmtebtxrr. expo to aV at pblie aoctkm to trarta of bH mentioned ta aaii deerf. Flrrt trar, War aad brl&f la aaLS eoactv if FrWklia. dlclalrur lb UndAY IWt 8jVe, A. a HarrU aad otbrra, co. Uiolar 1M!wi Breoad. traH. " tng aad twin la lb coqjlXv of XaA. ad adMata tbo Uaia of IWajaiaU Boon, J. M. HrtDtVT aad oOcr, cw -Ulalar arrr, bcla tLaUadact.. - rrrn1 bf b- Nww to ait' WalUrbrty of taortra, rvmrdl . la Book 54. T4Ur SI9. CAriatrr of DmW CJ for FraaMla etjaty, aad fa 45, rtfa RSI. Bgir of Dmda off for ah foualy. Trttat of aal. -fh, balaaoa csa a rrI'.w 1J rvrwil- 1 viU8rvr rut. iatrr( froo dat aaie. Tab ilrch IS, 13. E.T. OaTt OcusiLjarr.- Prrbof aom if 1S fiJw Covrt 4 Fraaaaa oty in t W ( c4 C- inwaMnior, c lib 4r- rrj , o8r lor ami In UW kiWt K.fir lor ri Ioomw4 Uariof Uol larmH tax to Vnhiafttm Harria. roatAi&r 3 rrwa. oarrU4 oa &t Kovta a4 r tA U4a of ti. U Arrlaruro. ta4 tW horva by tk U-1 ot W. t'. .wjl It txr IoJdo a rood . . - ar. m. PnQt, . T. B Viimi. Barta-i, issa. -Coaii ? - t. r-