VOL XXIY.
LOUISBURG, N. C, FRIDAY,1 Jl ARCH 23, 1804.
NUMBER 4.
IC SCirO OL TEA CHERS
1 1 1
. S iivM'intendant of Public
,ls of'lMMiiklin county will be
.hsIi'u-j: on the second Thurs
,,; i'.'!)iuary, April, July, Sep
, o, !o')cr and December, and
for three days, if necessary,
. n-.iruose of examining appli-
; to teach in the Public Schools
lis county. I will also be in
Mim-g on Saturday of each
; i n T j i 11 public days, to attend
!iv 1 u. sine 43 connected with my
J. N. Hahkis, Supt.
I'roiowisioual cards.
M. COOKE & SON,
ATTORNEYS-AT-L AW,
L (I ISB-KG, N. C.
w .:i
tt 'ii ! the courts 01 isasn, cranium.
,V ;i r re n an i V ake coauties, lso the
; .ii rt of North CixoHup, anJ tbJ U.
in i Distrl-it-OoartA
I. E. MALONE.
iv.-o doors bolew Ayooeke &
adjoining- Dr. O. L. Ellis.
Co. 'a
i)
K V, IX. NICHOLSON,
PilACTICINQ PHYSICIAN,
L0UI3BCI10, Is C.
i;.
SV. TIM.l51iH.LAKE,
ATTORNEY- AT-LAW,
LOUISB'RG,'N. C.
on Maiti street.
v
S. SPUUILL,
ATTORNEY-AT-L AW,
LOCISBURG, N. C.
Will ntteni the courts of 'Franklin, Vance,
f.r niviil'. Warren and Wake counties, also
:l Supr -ine Court of North Carolina. Prompt
v t -uti ui given to collections, &c.
N.
Y. QCLLEY.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
FRANK LINTON, N. C.
Ml legal business promptly i.ttonded to.
T
MI OS. B. WILDER,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
LO' ISBCIiG, N. C.
e on Main street, over Jones & Cooper's
M. fLRSON,
ATTORNEY-AT-L AW,
LOUISB'JRG, N. C.
H i s in all courts. OlSce in the Court
r!-s Conitlis, Hoars ones:, Sore 'fiiicat,
iiM'romptlv; re ieves Whooping Cougu
Ijii -u Y r Co;isnci;)tioa it haano
; !,.i ; cnirect thousands where nil others
I; uillcrr.B you if taken in time. Sold
:rii'rirista on n 'iiarantce. For Lome Baclc
ro ;
I V I
i 1 C'iit. st, L.SO SIIILOU'S l LAaf i.lu i3 CL3.
fHILO 'tl'SMS A7AH R H
REMEDY.
Unvo vnu Uitarrh? Tnisrernedv is Tuaran
t .ii to ci.re vou- Price 50cia. Injector free
' ' r r r . y y
dalc
fers YT.
;.u.4 : hoes at a raducod price, or 2875
;i them without name plainpeti S3
t to m, jmt iiim down as a fraud.
S3 SH
BEST IN
THE WOfiLD.
W. T,. DOITGIiAS Shoes are styliLh,.easy ft
1!:T, and ;ive better satisfaction Ktlhe prices ad
crtised than any other make. Try one pair and
t- - convinced. The stamping of W-.L. Dougbs'
i ur.e and price on the bottom, which puarantees
i -ir value, saves thousands of dollars annually
-) ihose who wear them.. Dealers who push ll.'c
.!e of W. L. Douglas Shoes grain customers
'ii'h heloi to increase the onlhcir fuli li:
f oods.'fhay can alford to sell at a lessproi'.:
r. nl u-e helieve you can Fave rtioncv tv buying 2
y i ir f-iotwear o"f the dealer advertised bciov.
Catalntrno free unon 2rpiication. .Add'-e
XV. Li. DOMJGXAS, Brocktca, Bint. Sold bv
JONES &-COOPER,
LOLlSBUaG, N. C.
'L' j n
FOR SALE ONLY
BY
DRUGGISTS,
Price 10 cents.
COPYRIGHTS.
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we
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tW- W Vn
n b ' rx '
3 Wfli
B 7 'I VTM
to
A STUDY IN SCARLET
By A. COlTAlt BOYLE.
CHAPTER IL
THE FLOWER Of UTAH.
This is ntt the place to commemorate
the trials aid privations "cncturecl by
the immigrant Mormons before they
came to their final haven. From the
shores of the Mississippi to the western
slopes of the Rocky mountains they
had straggled on withVa constancy
almost unparalleled in history. The
savage man, and the savage beast,
hunger, thirst, fatigue and disease
every impadiment which nature could,
place in the "way, had all boan over
come with Anglo-Saxon tenacity. Yet
the long- journey and the accumulated
terrors had . shaken the hearts of the
stoutest among them. There was not
one who did not sink upon his knees in
heartfelt prayer when they saw the
broad valley of Utah bathed dn the
sunlight beneath them, and learned
from the lips of their leader that this
was the promised land, and that these
virgin acres were to be theirs forever
more. Young speedily proved himself to ba
a siuiliui administrator a3 well as a
resolute chief. Maps were drawn and
charts prepared, in which th3 future
city was sketched out. All around
farms were apportioned and allotted in
proportion to the standing of each in
dividual. The tradesman was put to
his trade and the artisan to his calling.
In the town streets and squares sprang
up as if by magic. In the country there
was draining and hedging, planting
and clearing,, until the next summer
saw the whole country golden with
the wheat crop. Everything pros
pered in the strange settlement.
Above all, the great temple which they
had erected in the center of the city
grew ever taller and taller. From the
first blush of dawn until the closing
of the twilight, the clatter of the
hammer and the rasp of the saw were
never, absent from the monument
which the immigrants erected to Iiim
who had led them safe through many
dangers.
The two castaways, John Ferrier and
the little girl who had shared his for
tunes and had been adopted as his
daughter, accompanied the Mormons
to the end of their pilgrimanre. Little
Lucy Ferrier was borne along pleas
antly enough in Elder Stangerson's
wagon, a retreat which she shared
with the Mormon's three wives and
with his son, a headstrong, forward
boy of twelve. Having rallied, with
the elasticity of childhood, from the
shock caused by her mother's death,
she soon became a po-t with the women,
and reconciled herself to this new life
in her moving canvas-covered home.
In the meantime, Ferrier, having re
covered from his privations,, distin
guished himself a:b a useful guide and
an indefatigable hunter. 8o rapidly
did he gain the esteem of his new
companions tha.t when they reached
the end of their wanderings it was
unanimously agreed that he should be
provided with as large and as fertile a
tract of land any of the settlers,
with the exception of Young himself,
and of Stangerson, Kimball, Johnston
and Drebbor, who were the four princi
pal elders,
On the farm thus acquired John Fer
rier built himself a substantial log
house, which received so many addi
tions in succeeding vears that it grew
into a roomy villa. He was a man of a
practical turn of mind, keen in his
dealings and skillful with his hands.
His iron constitution enabled him to
work morning and evening at improv
ing and tilling his la,nds. Hence it
came about that his farm and all that
belonged to him prospered exceeding
ly. In three years he was better off
than his neighbors, in six he was well
to do, in nine he was rich, and m
twelve there were not half adozen men
in the whole of Salt Lake City who
could compare with him. From the
great inland sea to the distant Wah-
Batch mountains there was no name
better known than that of John Fer
rier. There was one way, and only one, in
which he offended the susceptibilities
of hiu coreligionists. No argument or
persuasion could ever induce him to
set up a female establishment after
the manner of his companions. He
never gave reasons for this persistent
refusal, but contented himself by reso
lutely adhering to his determination.
There were some who aecused him of
lukewarmncss in his adopted religion,
and others who put it down to greed of
wealth .nd reluctance to -incur ex-?
pense. Others, again, spoke of Borne
early love affair, and of a fakr-haired
girl who had pined away on the shores
of the Atlantic' .Whatever tha reason,
Ferrier remained strictly celibate. In
every other respect he- conformed to
the religion of the young settlement,
and gained the name of being an or
thodox and straight-walking man. .
Lucy Ferrier grew up within the log
boose, and assisted her adopted father
in all his undertakings. The keen air J
of the mountains and the balsamic
odor of the pine.trees took the place of
nurse and mother to the young girl.
As year sueeee.ded to:year. she grew
taller and stronger, her check more
ruddy and her step more elastic Many
a wayfarer upon the high-road which
ran by Fcrrier's farm, felt Ion g-f or jot
ten thoughts revive in his mind as he
Watched her lithe, girlish figure trip
ping through the wheat .fields, or met
her mounted upon her father's mus
tang, and managing it with all the
ease and grace of a true chilrof the
west. So the bud blossomed into a
flower, and the years which saw her
father the richest of farmers left her
as fair a specimen of American girl
hood as could be found on the whole
Pacific slope. . ,
't It was not the'father, however, who
first discovered that the child, had de
veloped into the woman. It ssldom is
In such cases. That mysterious change
Is too subtle and too gradual to be
measured by datesu : Least of aU does
the maiden herself kribw it until the
iomjol 4 VoiAa of th? &uelj of a'bani
sets her heart thrilling within her, and '
- i
and of fear "fiat a new aird larger na
ture has awakened within her. There
are few who cannot recall that day and
remember the one little incident whici
heralded the dawn of a new life. In
the case of Lucy Ferrier the occasion
was serious enough in itself, apart from
its future influence on her destiny and
that of many besides.
It was a warm June morning, and
the Latterday Saints, were as busy aa
the beea whose hive they have chosen
for their emblem. In the fields and in
the streets rose the same hum of human
industry. Down the dusty highroads
defiled long streams of heavily laden
mules, all heading to the west, for the
gold fever had broken out in Cali
fornia, and the overland route
lay through the city of the elect.
There, too, were droves of sheep
and bullocks coming in from the out-
IN AN INSTANT IT REARED UPON
KIND LEGS.
IT8
lying pasture lands, and trains of tired
immigrants, men and horses equally
weary of their interminable journey.
Through all this motley assemblage,
threading her way with the skill of an
accomplished rider, there galloped
Lucy Ferrier, her fair face flushed with
the exercise and her loner chestnut
hair floating out behind her. She had
a commission from her father ip the
city and was dashing in, as she had
done many a time before, with all the
fearlessness of youth, thinking only of
her task and how it was to be per
formed. The travel-stained adven
turers gazed after her in astonish
ment, and even the unemotional In
dians, journeying in with their peltry,
relaxed their accustomed stoicism as
they marveled at the beauty of tha
pale-faced maiden.
She had reached the outskirts of the
city, when she found the road blocked
by a great drove of cattle, driven by a
half-dozen wild-looking herdsmen from
the plaiu-5. In her impatience she en
deavored to pass this obstacle by push
ing her hor se into what appeared to be
a gap. Scarcely had she got fairly in
to it. however, before the beasts closed
In beMn l her. and she found hersU
completely embed led in the moving
stream of fierce-eyed, long-horned
bullocks. Accustomed as she was ti
deal wk.h cattle, she was not alarmed
at
ler situation.
but
took
at
vantage of every opportunity to urge
her horse on in the hope of pushing
her way through the cavalcade. Un
fortunately, the horns of one of the
beasts, either by accident or de-ig-i.
cam? in violent contact with the I'.anlt
of the mustang, and excited it to mad
ness. In an instant it reared up on iti
hia.l legs with a snort of rage, and
pranced and tossed io a wy that
would have unseated any but a most
skillful rider. The situation was full
of peril. Every plunge of the ex
cited horae brought it against the
horns again, and goaded it to
fresh madness. It was all that
the girl could do to keep herself in the
saddle, yet a slip would m:au a
terrible death under the "hoofs of the
unwieldy and terrified animals. Un
accustomed to sudden emergencies,
-her head began to swim, and her grip
upon the bridle to relax. Choked by
the rising cloud of dust "and by the
steam from the struggling creatures,
she might have abandoned her efforts
in despair, but for a kindly voice at
AM OFF, LUCY," HE SAID.
her elbow which assured her of assist?
ance. At the same moment a sinewy
brown hand caught the frightened
horse by the curb, and, forcing a way
through the drove, soon brought her to
the outskirts.
"You're not hurt, I hope, miss," said
her preserver respectfully.
She looked up at his dark, fierce
face, and laughed saucily. "I'm awful
frightened," she said naively; "whoever
would have thought that Poncho would
have been so scared by a lot of cows?"
"Thank God you kept your seat," the
other said earnestly. He was a tall,
savage-looking y ung fellow, mounted
on a powerful roan horse, and clad in
the rough dress of a hunter," -with a
long rifle slung over his shoulders. "I
guess you are the -daughter of John
Femer, he remarked. "I saw you
ride down from his house. When you
see him, ask.him if he remembers the
. Jefferson Hopes, of St. Louis. If he's
the same Ferrier, my father and he
were pretty thick."
"HadD't you better come and ask
- yourself?" she asked, demurely. -
The young (ellow seemed pleased at
the suggestion, and hia dark eyes
sparkled , with pleasure, - ' 111 do so,1
he said; "we've been in the mountains
for two months, and are ! hot over and
above in visiting condition, " lie must
J ns as h -find nk." : , s?'
1 A
"i
"He has a good deal to thank yon
for, and so have I, she answered; 'hc'8
awful fond of me. If those. cows had
Jumped on me he'd have nerer gvt
over it." v-
"Neither would I," said her com
panion. "You? Well, I don't see tliat it would
mako much matter to yoa, anyhow
You ay't even a lriend of ours."
The young hunter's dark face grew
so gloomy over this remark that Lucy
Ferrier laughed aloud.
"There, I didnt mean that," she said,
"of course, you are a friend now. You
must come and see us. Now I must
push along, or father won't trust me
with his business any more. Oood-byl"
"Good-by," he answered, raising his
broad sombrero, and bending oter hei
little hand.- She wheeled her mustang
round, gave it a ;ut with hex riding
whip, and darted away down the broad
road in a rolling cloud of dust.
Young Jefferson Ilope rode on with
his corapanions, gloomy and taciturn.
LTe and they had been amoij the Ne
vada mountains prospecting for silver,
and were returning to Salt Lake City
in the hope of raising capital enough
to work some lodes which they
had discovered. He had been as keen
as any of them upon the business until
this 6udden incident had drawn hia
thoughts into another channel. The
tight ol the fair young girl, as frank
and wholesome as the Sierra breezes,
had stirred his volcanic, untamed heart
to its very depths. When she had van
ished from his sight, he realized that a
crisis had come in his life, and that
neither silver speculations nor any
other questions could ever be of such
importance to him as this new and all-
absorbing one. The love which had
sprung up in his heart was not the sud
den, changeable fancy of a boy. but
rather the wild, fierce passion of a man
of strong will and imperious temper.
He had been accustomed to succeed in
all that he undertook. He swore in
his heart he would not fail in this if
human effort and human perseverance
could render him successful.
He called on John Ferrier that night,
and many times again until his face
was a familiar one at .the farmhouse
John, cooped up in the valley, and ab
sorbed in his work, had little cKance of
learning thjnevs of the outside world !
during the last twelve years. All this!
Jefferson Hope was aide to tell him,
and in a style which interested Lucy
as well as her father lie had been a j
pioneer in California, and could nar- j
. rate many a strange tale of fortunes j
made and fortunes lost in those wild, j
halcyon days. He had been a &cout.
to;, aa.l trjpper, a . . .r (.-xpl-jrr
and a ranchman. Wh-.-rjvor 'tirrirg
adventures were to ij lir. i. Jeffjr - n
IIopj had bL?n there in search cf them.
He soon became a fa-vo.dte with the
farmer, who spoke eloquently of his
virtues. Oa such occasions Lucy was
silent, but her blushing cheek and her .
bright, happy eyes thowod only too
clearly that her young heart was no j
longer her own. llcr honest father
may not have observed those sy-mptoms,
but they were as.suredly not thrown j
away- upon the man who had won her
affections.
It was a summer evening when ho'
came galloping down the road and
pulled up at the gate. She was at the
doorway, and cam? down to nvt him.
He threw the bridle over the fence an 1
strode up the pathway. 1
"I am off, Lucy," he said, taking her
two hands in his and gazing tenderly
down into her face; "I won't ask vou I
to come with me now, but will -on be
reatly to come when I am here again?" j
"And when will that bo?" site asked, j
blushing and laughing.
"A couple of months at the outside.
1
I will come and claim you then, my
HE WAS STTLL SITTIXO WITn UIB
BOW3 ox ma kjiees.
EL-
darling. There's no cue who can
stand between us."
"And how about father?" " r
"tie has given his consent, provided
we'get these mines working all right.
I haVe no fear on that head."
"Oh, weU, of course, if you and fa
ther have arranged It, there's no more
to be said," she whispered, with her
cheek against his broad breast.
"Thank - God!' he said, hoarsely,
stooping and kissing her. "It is set
tled then. The longer I stay, the
harder it will be to go. They arc wait
ing for me at the canyon. Good-by,
my own darling good-by. In two
months you shall see me."
II 0 tore himself from her as he spoke
and, flinging himself upon his horse,
galloped furiously away, never even
looking round, as tliough afraid that
his resolution might fail him if ho took
one glance at what he was leaving.
She stood at the gate, gazing cftcr
him until he vanished front her sight.
Then she walked back into the house.
the happiest girl in all Utah.
CHAPTER IIL
Torn TsaarcB talks with ns paopnrt
Three weeks had passed since Jeffer
son Hope and his comrades had depart
ed from Salt Lake City. J ohn Ferrier's
heart ws sore with'ha him when he
thought of the young -man's return,
and of the impending boss of his adopt -
ed child. Yet 'her bright and happy
lace reconciled him to the arrangement
more than any argument could . have
done. He had always determined,
deep down In his resolute heart, that
nothiaxr would ever induce him to
allow his daughter to wed a Mormon.
Such a marriage he regarded as no
marriage at all, bat as a shame and a
disgrace. Whatever be might think of
tho Mormon doctrines, upon that one
point he was Inflexible. lie had to
seal his mouth on the subject, however,
for to express an orthodox opinion was
a dangcroo3 matter in those days in
Land of the Saints.
Yes, a dangerous matter no danger
ous that even the most saintly tlarod
only whisper their religious opinions
with bated breath, lest something
which fill from their lipa might be
misconstrued, and bring down a swift
retribution upon them. The "victims
of persecution had now turned perse
cutors on their own account, and per
secutors of the most terrible descrip
tion. Not the Inquisition of Seville,
nor the German Vehmgericht, nor the
secret societies of Italy, wcro ever able
to put a more formidable machinery in
motion than that which cast a cloud
over the territory of Utah.
Its invisibility, and the mystery
which was attached to it. made this
organization doubly terrible. It ap
peared to be omniscient and omnipo
tent, and yet was neither sin nor
heard. The man who lveld out against
the church vanished away, an 1 none
knew whither he had gone or what had
befallen him. Ilis wi.'e arid children
awaited him at home, but uo father
ever relurned to tell them h iw he had
fared at the hands of his secret judge.
A rash word or a hasty art was fol
lowed by annihilation, and yet none
knew what the nature might be of thii
terrible pnwor which was suspended
over them. No wonder that m?n went
about in fear and trembling, and that
even in the heart of the wilderness
they dared not whisper
the doubts I
1
which oppressed them.
At firt tins vague and terrible prvvror
was exercised only upon the recalci
trants, who, having embraced the
Mormon faith, wished afterward to
pervert or to abandon it. Soon, how-
ever, it took a wider range. The sup
ply of adult women was running short,
and polygamy, without a female popu
lation on which to draw, was a barren
doctrine indeed. Strange rumor be
gan to be" bandied about minors of
murdered immigrants and rifle 1 camps
In regions where Indiana had never
been seen. Fresh women app?are 1 in
the harems of the ciders women who
pineil and wept, and bore upon their !
faces the traces of une-ttingulshabls
ho-ror. belated wanderer, upon the 1
mountains spoke of gangs of armsd
men. masked, stealthy, and nois.des.", ',
'ho flitted by them iu the darkness.
These tale j and rumors took nnb.starce I
anil shape, and were corroborated and
re-corroborate. 1 until they resolved
themselves into a delaite nam?. Tc
this day, ii to? l-me'.y ranch vs of the i
west, the name of the Danite Kan 1, or I
the Avenging Angels, is a sinister and ;
ill-omened one. '
Fuller knowledge of the organiza
tion which pro luce d such terrible re
sults served to inc-ea te rather than to
lessen the horror vi hi -h it i'ispire.1 in
the minds of men. None knew who
bvlonged to this ruthless s.K'iety. The
names of the parti- i oaf -r , in t he deeds
of blood and violence, d-mc under the
name of religion. -.vcP kept profound
ly recret. The very fri-r. l to whom
you communicated your mi-s-ri v:.n' as
to the prophe t anil his mission might
be one of those who would come forth
at night with fire and ro-.ord to e.a.'t a
terrible reparation. 1 lerice, every man
feared his neighbor, and none 'iikc
of the things which were ne.arvst his
fine morniiisT, John Terrier was
about to set out to hi wke at-iirHs,
when he heard the click of the lat:
a.
and, looking through the window, saw
a stout, sandy-haire 1, raid l!e-a -e 1
r?:p.n coming up the pathway. 11U
heart leaned to his mouth, for this was
none other than the great P.righam
Young himself. Full of tn-pidation ,
for he knew that sueh a visit bo led
him little good Ferrier ,ran to' the
door to greet the Mormon c'aief. The
latter, however, received his, salutation
coldly, and followed him with a stern ,
face into the sitting-room. ;
"Brother Ferrier,' he said, taking a
seat, and eyeing the farmer k? -:dy
from under his lighi-colore 1 eyelashes. 1
"the true believera have been goo 1 ;
friends to you. Wc picked you up
when you were starving in the desert, '
wc shared our food with you, led you ,
safe to the chosen valley, gave you a ,
goodly share of land, and allowod yon I
to wax rich under our protection. I
not this so?"
"It is so," answered John Ferrier. I
"In return for all this we asked "but i
one condition; mat was mat you
should embrace the trua faith, and
conform in every way to Its usages,
This you promised to do; and this. If
common report says truiy. you nave
neadected."
T BB COTVTIXCFril
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria
Mac, rt) mi U Wf as nwy -V . -Godl,"l
ri.X V lv -rk fcr - liif
nm mtaj - aa a - '
MHi ToaqaiVklx W W Innnrfhdttlt
! T,j al Ihr uan, 4 . a Jmm
wa. R ih inn. all - U aa; I
Aaacnca. j.hi smimi wf at im.1. p1--
mm all !sl HmvI yr mmU ool;
tin arark. All la s-w. i-wat ymj bl
1 1 la wnr. l.reat m7 o a irw
rr. eart a raialll'
It ASH T.elkl 1-U.T kr.J.
Aka mil. Aaipf.aa at ears.
arary aranirT.
a v vi , i ua - b
i r.ikt kiiki
kitkksis to- vriLAki, ai'.
.
SPEEDY and LASTIWO . RESTJLT1
7FAT PEOPLE.
. XnrfW M from anv iniurioua subnaBca.
leaaitayl
jy i
Priea S.OOpnbottla. Sva 4.lor trtafiaa.
XW21Q2LT 11EPXCAX. CQV XJotoa, alaaa.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.
ABSOLUTELY PURE
President Winston's rnaMei
band is building up the Unver
sity of Norlb Carolina wonder
fully. In 1891 tl institution
bad 199 student?, iu 1S92 it had
24S, in 1F93 there were 310 and ,
in 1894 tbere -were 395. How
lonp will it te before the 590
mark fs reacbel ? !
Specimen Cases.
S. II. Clifford. Vv C.is-wd.
troubled vith neural: and
rheums-
tinm, his Momsch
was di r Ji-r-d, his'
liver wm afft-t-d to an
liTee. appetite fell away,
and h wa
terribly reduced in neU
Three bottk-s of Electric
lhtt?r curvd
him.
Edward Shepherd, IlarrLLar, 111 ,
had a rutmiop oie on his leg nf eight
yean Klaudior. Fued three bttle -f
ilectric IV Iters and sefen b'X! of '
Ihicklen'H Arnica SaWe, and hi I-g i
sound and wll John Speaker. Ca-'
. i l r . .. .
lawl'ai v'-. uu ue larire ieer tore 03
his letr. dirton s.iid be via incurable.
(ue bottle 1-. it-ctric Hitlers an 1 ne t .1 ,
Hueklen'n Arnica SaUe enred him en- 1
tiivly. Sdd by Aye.f We L Cj., dm
cists. There are 192 students at t!.e
Agricultural and Mechanical Co -log?
iu Rarigh.
rjucklen's Arnica Kale.
The b-Mt salve in the world for ruts,
bruises, h 'r-s. ulc", salt rheuia. feTer
son-;-., iwTer. ehapi ed hand . c h il bla ms,
cornn, a n 1 ail !k in ru pt i na, and posi
tively cures piie.s t no pay. It i guar
anteed t tri.e prf"T cit !fa-t iou or
money rlund-'i. l'riee c-ii,,
Loi. For sah bv TL
fU.l
& Alt" -eke.
Now I rv Thi-.
It will c :
snrelv do y
C'l'lgh, c- ild' i
chst or Ion:
y l n. hinz a r.d w iil
i ..-). ;f y..-j hy s i
r any tr'i'ib rh tur-a'. ,
S. I'r. Ku:'h N Ii I
eovt-ry f r C'T.snnnt v., c ;t;h and j
e ds is trua r.i n;-ed i kruirant'-cl t" iv
relief or uif n-r will l-e jail i ak . Suf
ferers fn in la grippe fo md it j i the
thing and undT iis l.vl a jersi
and petfeet reroverr. Trv a KaropU-
botth
nt ei;r exreijse anl l--arn for
vours lf inst
h
iow tc--l a (kins' tt is.
1 rial ! 'tr ies f r--- at
drutr store. Lare s.:
ve
:d i
l'.'i.
HAlLl'i'U'S HAZAI1.
ii.i.rsTi: Aii.p.
II, rP
o 01 e -
r' ItarTr i a i"
1 1 i v t-1 t e 1 t
f.
l it. fo-nv i i. :
with rccifd the Kliiion, -.i i; i :i I
mi-riU5 r.'.'.MrtS'-it. I'-rt d--- .in-'
pHtt'TJ.-Oieet opp'. ments !r-e i m! ; -
ulil-' u l i k e to th h".:c ilrrs-.nur r:..l j
lb o r"fisionii I mndi'fe. No e pon- i
sl:ir-d to makf its art.'tie a luii'liviiufi j
id the hljKt order. I:i briv'lit t !!-, ,
ii rmisi i . i omeiin .. u -i t s i '. 1 1 ! (a i
sliry ;o) t .o -I i' ui V' i '
i:iou ns :i b.i'l,'rl if i ! i,n,i huu. r. I
:t-. i- klv iff-u.-s r verv t !i in g is i r. t ! i d
which is of interest t ' w on. t ti . Thi- -
for 1 will l'C n:'r t.y Wait r IW.i
nil! itii'l Nrn.ini KUfS. Jl r - '
. v.
1 1 ! h c iu- .s con r
,btiti
M .r :,
kind. Timely Tnik, ' Jy In
ton." re nil ndfii fur m.itrfin
. n N-Tth will ieci.J'v ii.i'ir.
n i
I
Ii.l
T.
ii.
W. 1 1 iv'i n 'i in "Worn n
i M,
pb. use u Citivateil Biidu in'-.
l'F.R YKAi:.
riAnrEH s nuiR
MAKPKH'M VAliAIlSE
HlllI'l R " Kkl.V.
OM
on
on
oo
The vnl ii m-s of 1 1 e b:.r a oeins i'li
the tirt N uinlte r or J hmu .ry o f each yen r
When rui tiuieimntioneiJ,ubsrripti'n
willre(iu with the mimber enrrvt-t p!
time nl receipt of order.
Pound Volumes of !Irpir' Birir fir
thre yeais bek. in ne-t elulh 'o . u d i n
will be sent by mall, pontage paid, or l
express free of expense (pnoidl tn
freight does not eicted one dollar per
volatile), for $7 CO per year.
( lutli aes for rAeh volume, saila'df
for binding, id be sent bv n.ail, p-s(
pnid, on rtrceipt of $1 00 e:irri.
PemiU.incc should be m.i-ie by Tei'.-Of
fire Moncv OrdT or 1'r.ift, to TiVi
;
j
J
char re of loss.
Newspaper ire not to copy tlii adver
tisement without the ipces order of
! H A BTER Jk Br.OTilECS.
d.tre
II AKPKH A BitOT ITERS,
New York.
NOTICE.
Py virtn of power conferral rpon me by
hd order iwni"i from the Soe-ru-r t'ourt oi
Frutiklin count v. in a i-n'ii ther-in t-in!-intr.
I ahull on Slnnl.iT, Aj nl 1. 1 MM
iwll it fkuhlie anrtinn to the htbrat lii-b'er
at the (Vnrt llonx door ia l.-nibari:.
Franklin ronnry. N (" . one certain tmet or
land Mtnatid in Frnnklm rorrity nd;oin
inz the lamia of Jaraca Jonn.ien. r Klii
aluth Ayenrne. John Av-saeoe an-l oher.
Contaucin-20t-i nrtvri. The ksiid lat.'a l-
inii portions of the trat upon which tlx
late WiHium Ayencoe rfrteil. Term) one
jinlfc.ieh iMil.iucajou cre.!ii of twelvenu-ntha
The di fi-rrsxl payment to lur f x ceul.
interrat. Thia "Jtth Febmiirr Lb4.
Eliuhitr Atkm-tc. .Mbi'i
of William Ayev-G. lecM.
A. V. Zii:ico3eT. Attj.
NOTICE.
Haviag this day qualtfle.1 aa alminia
trator on the estate cf J. J. B.bbitt.
all persona owin? said estate are re
el neat ed to eUlr and all who lue
claims against aaid vtate to prwen'
them on or before February1 Cth.
or this nothre will be pleaded iabarpf
their rwcorerr.
It 2. 1XERT0N Ada r.
Feby 0,1894.
1
Latest U. S. Gov't Report
rwd
An English syndicate Las pur
cbaed a 3,000,000 acre pasture iu
Teia.
Tbe burplar at midi-ibt txar
le feared by tLe timid; bat Le is
not so murh to be dreaded'as an
insidious cough, wbitii stealthily
enters the system and unNr
mines tLe constitution. When
the couyb fr6t rppsrs us Dr.
Bulls Con-h Hyrnp the effectual
remedy for all such troubles.
To Build Up
Yoor System nn l ptore
Your Strength
hivigonito Yoirr Liver und
Ptirifv Your Blood
Jive An Appetite
Tnketlmt '-X's ;i.-;it Melicice
P. P. P.
Frirklv
tniuai
Ah
l'-.he i:,K)t and Fav-
ill y u h-t ' h
nal .--rV.ap- '. rL
that in re 'rr:: -1
rn-.r.-.
e P
r
f :;r a; y ro. h
a- noir! j ( io- .
ran a ff - r! f- r t! e
rr.n the rtk
e k Low f (. y
AW roi.rseK if y-
sake ..f iuz .:;
and do n htr.c f--r r
eiprier.ce
vour coch. !t
ii
. y life vi il! r j:e
' r i:.n. Tliis ei-
r. k in. ui r. U ttl- a
y-ar. It rrl a
I : C'-ntrL at .
'..h-'Ut it.
p ia ns
A.-r- s Id
cr ' in An-1
M
tl.ers. V
1 4 .
HAlirKT. .S WKl'KLY
n i.i t:: vtep.
te -lr.g j ; ri: ' ; in At't'i . In pt-n . M "
! ur r!J. 'I . . r, i ri -t f !.: uh ' , r.
!rl Qlitior.1 :' riry -f r--'T 1
H - Oil :.ti It r ri t!4 b'-ch-nt -T-T if
u. t.m:i u i '-t rii j -n r i
t r.-
V
in- vnu;
iiti' l.I'' r- : f
f . :".r'r !' It .1
'.- n: : T-ry r ''. I -i-r:
' or.UIrt i' M t . '
I i h
i.t r
xr. : m .-.aru h.- r- tntfc-.
f -h. ' in--. wM r ! Itl
An; nl it y. A ai-1. .
Mail '-'th- I f .mi ij -Ir .
irw rr I - rl H ri ' M
I
. n
. Mi- -:i
HAiU
1. . r -.. r r
Ilil'S THJ-lt I 1.
AL:
IIAHI" K H t WV.l KLV
HAUt'hH Y'.T.W rij'I'l K
r--itJr" Fr to in u s
tc ! fi-it. r. ('.ii. -i.i, M
Th-V-!ilTtls'f !V We-k-y !. fc-'.n wtfi -ftrr
N i in-. . r f - ' r. u tj - i . h J -r V t.
r.o t irtv t n' '. : '. J rv, r I! '
cn 'lh 'h" N ain':r -urr!.: t Sisn- '.
r ' r' ' f r Vr.
p. . in 1 Vv!a-ii of H.rr- - Wfc1y i -t-'ir
I- y sirs 1 i k . In n-.-t ;.-th 1 .n '. p. r
: - s.nt I j m -.11 i--(r- t-a! '.. r 'j ej.ri.
f r - of i-ipi-r it o )' 'h fr '!.! ' n'
ex -"".1 or.e Jt.IUr p r v :i'ixf r l of j r
volnm.
T'orh e"e f .r oAh i.-'irsi'. i 'xtW f r
Mn-Mt.ff. wti: : ! i iua.I. t j-iii. . -,i
re-!i t , f 1 n ,-.rh
R.-:r.iMjnr, o-il ' m- W T r.-rT.rvr
j OrVr or Ir .ft. to m I ! ''.-.rs f U
t I - t I T Iht
.'-rt'
rin nt th jut ih
Bt ii r R
ex rfti i r jtt 'A
Hum
Allr m Ilirrma k BliTHIf", New
Yi rk
lh04.
HAP.PKKS MAGAZINE.
ILLtaTRATED.
Harber MajrJo tr tl wt: m.-trtiln
rhar-j. tt th-.t h mWltihr fjtortle tlios-lr-t.sJ
perioiliral fir tbe rvn- Ai"if ! t
reaatta f ent- ryrsrm atiirt kii I jr r u
Itahers. th t- will ,-2r 1btU t rr
p.-r. lr 1t!a:rite-l p-ir ou 1d.ia ty siilin
fre-1 Pr'o . en iifrmnr. y FeuMiH-y Yf
low. on kT It Rl. Uir1 Har.ttr. Dt! xr i
on Mesl-o I y FreVrl- R-XBlre'..-n. Atr. i.x
t li et h-r cota! I i are o iry jtrr m i
norcli I t Ciesirw'- Jn Mmrr ( harv .
ru "ler lrre r. the jt oaI reirdm--d .
d u HbU. ino if'-' . rt atorv . f
W -st- rn tron- Uf- i j cwn W!f er M.ct i
Tories w f.l slo l eonf ri" u' n1 I r Erir.. -
M.t'h. Rl h r I H-r itraj rnU. Miry
Wilkina. Ba b Jl Ea ry M j,r;. Mla U'Jfi -Almi
Ta-ixna. O-orpe A. Hirr. o-i
le Beaurereslr-. Thomaa 5 Iw-ti Y' rr r!
era. Artl l -Ron fci a of rrect 'n?r
wl'il tr eootribotevl t.y d!f Ir-gutetved l -s
IIAHPEK'S PERK iPICALS.
ITR Y r A R .
RAtrra a vmjnr.
Ntirm wetki t
Niiri itiiiii.. .
I'n.'t'trj f, e fo fill ' tfj
UtiiltJ $tati, Cj.'O'i Df J
4 Cv
4
4 (si
lrrt tn
Xcrito.
TV e vn'om-a t! e VTeeklr Vr:"w
irb llie nuuil-rs fr Jane trA IVceu l t
nt cccS rr-r. When no fltr.e l pec:t1.
su'. -ript:fta will br:a :tSU mfmv-r
.-nrr, nt ai l tiuie of r r, ij.-t 1 pi drr.
I'-cr-l Tilimd f Iltrwi'a etT
:or :!re year bark, io t.e-1 cK'th t ir,f i g
llf be lent lv raail, paJ,j ajJ r f
n-c r lolncje. loth eafa. ("t bibdicir, V
rt cck by ma'.I. i-ot-pa'd
lniilUBC- hoa!J le auaJe l 'Ti t
fie mfirjr tr i or drift, Io iit
hnr tf I.
Xtrrpnptn rr not fo cfy fi OuVfr-
HrrrSr EnAcr$
AlJre.a
IlAtrBl.Ii-s.jTiraa.Xw X0ft4
er