I i 1 The Carolina Watchman, Rlcf , IX ADVANCE. A MIDNIGHT-BBAHA. 75 ii- I r TTT J STOMACH Then they evening dress, i i,i J broken down m heaitn ana spir its l hrtnic dyspepsia, or Buffering from the i terrible exhaustion that follows the attiks Of acute disease, the testimony of tnoisanda who have been raised as by a miracle from a similar state of pros-: trsjoa W Hosteller's Stomach Bitters,! la a suie guarantee that by the same means tori, too, may be strengthened and tbretM . . . . r. tesi for sale by all Druggists and Dealer' generally. '.'OH J iliS 1 1 BOOTS, SHOeS & GAITERS, made to onlerf Alf M ork First Clasa Seventeen Years F.x pcrlepoe. All Material of the best grade, and work doneJathe(l;itest styles ; Rely mle ivor k always on hand- Repairing nftitiy and promptly oue. Ord rs by mall prompt ly ttik d. h Wm. L. Sagle. JlJy. i Wisat air. . C EB&TAYLOR HAVING PURCHASED pa f I ?. THE tyj !r 4: - or WM. ! if ; SMITHDEAL, l Ah WfcUL AS THE JNTEUEST OF It- Hi Crawford, of : the 'firm of rIr. CRAVFORD & CO., - -S Wo are lstonftrs with now prepared to supply all kinds of our GRIGULTURAL IMPLEMENTS, In Best ii A K "addition to the Selected Stock of D W A R E in the STATE. We also h indlo anfJ.Blasting P owder ami -a -' FUSE fall lino olMiuin We will Supplies. putaicate Any Price V the State. CALL AND SEE US. in Oct SA'u'L TAVLUt. (0:1' were -arrayed ir4 faultless and their manner althonch supercilious enough, wds calm and polished, fciow he saw them half dressed with dis heveled hair John carrying a student's lamp in his left hand, and iu his right an ugly-looking caue-sword, witH a blade painfully naked, while George held a revol ver at full cock. ;j Talking in a low tone; as they' called one another's attention to various spots where posBibly the burglar-might be-1 concealed, they -went slowly from corner; to corner, probing every recess with the sword, and in an altitude of strained attention to every sound. Their faces, grotesquely lit by the. mingled fire and lamplight, showed a fierce hunter's look that made -Bob faijrly sick. i lie did not dare look at them long lest the magnetism of his gaze should attract their iu voluntary attention. Nay he never made a frantic effort not to think of them, from the fear that some physical current might have the same effect for he believed strongly, though vaguely, in thfe mysteries of animal magnetism, and a notion that a I person sensitive to such influences might detect the presence of his victim by the very terror the latter had of him. M , 7 He could scarcely believe biis fortune, when a moment later, the two brothers passed again beneath him back into the j dining room, j I From there they went on through the f rooms beyond, and the sound of their foot steps died away entirely. 1 Perhaps five minutes after, they returned that is, as far as the dining; room and Bob gathered from their conversation that they had found one of the fastenings in the basement in a condition indicating that the burglar might have escaped there, Mrs. McLane and Angie, having satisfied themselves that the coast was clear, descended to the dining room, and a lively discussion of all aspects f the problem en sued, which was highly edifying to Bob. Then the conversation became still more interesting, as it turned on himself. He heard Mrs. McLane saying : "He must be a hard sleeper, fbrI knock ed several times on his door." i Then one of the brothers grunted some? thin contemptuously and he heard Angle's voice excusing him on the ground that he must be tired after, his long journey. . .-. !'Are you sure you looked everywhere in the library?" was Mrs. McLane's next question, at which a cold sweat; started out on Bob s face. He had just begun to feel quite comfortable. " ! Johnand George declared, however, that they had looked everywhere, j "Did you look under the sofa? "Behind the window curtains?" "In the dark cornet- by the book case ?" asked the ladies in succession. ! Ingenious cruelty of Fate I Even Angle was racking her brain to guess his hiding place. What if it should be she who hit upon it J .1 Bob drewa breath of relief as Jhn re plied, with some asperity, to all these questions, that he had told them once that they had looki-d everywhere. M t This silenced them, but Angic said, a moment later: j "Just let me ask one more question : Did you Jook on top of the bookcase?" It seemed to Bob that he died then, and came to life again to hear John reply, con temptuously: v j "Over the booEcase; 1 here's no room there : and. it tncro were, noooay dui a monkey could get up." - I There's room enough," pertisted Angie, "and I have often noticed, when sitting in the library, what a nice hiding place it would be. What if he should be up there now, and hear what I'm saying !" she added, in an agitated whisper. "Nonseuse 1" said John. "Well, there's no harm in lookiag, anyr I way, said Mrs. McLane. f "Come along, then," grumbled John. "You shall see for yourselvesi" i At this Bob shut his eyes and turned his face to the wall. The ostrich instinct is the human instinct of despair!. He tried to fly away from himself, and leave his body there as a direhct. I he effort was desper ate, and seemed almost successful. But he could not quite sever the connection, tho' his soul appeared to be hovering over his body, only attached by a single thread but a thread which, alas I would not break. r A moment after they all passed through the door directly .Beneath mm, and goiue clear to the other end of the library, stood On tiptoe, and peered at his hiding place, There seemed to be eyes in his back which felt their scrutiny. But the lamp they carried did not suffice to bring out his figure clearly. "I'm sure I see something' said Angie, getting up on a chair. "It's only the shadow of the firelight, replied John. "Light the jjas and let us make sure," said Mrs. McJane. j George stood up on a chair under the chandelier, and lighted one of the burners, An inarticulate- ejaculation fell from every mouth. A human figure was dis tinctly visible, reclining: along the top of the bookcase, with his face toward the wall lhe ladies. wouja nave lorthwith ran away but for the fact that one door of the room was directly beneath the bookcase, and the other close to it. Upon Bob's paralyzed senses tell the sharp words of John "Wev'e got you. Get down !" , lie did not move, but at the summons his soul, with inexpressible reluctance and dis gust, began to return from the end of its floating thread, and reiuhabit the quarters for which it could not quite .shake off re sponsibility. . "Get up, or I'll shoot I" said George "Oh, doa't shoot him T'said Mrs.McLane. while Bob, still motionless, dimly Tioped he would. "Get up 1" reiterated John; and he did s-etup. lIU own will was inactive, and John s was the force that moved his mus cles. He turned around and sat up. his legs dangling over the edge Of the bookcase, and his wet, white, wretched face blankly directed toward the group- -a most pitiable ngure. - . - , . "Jump down," said John r"and if you try to escape, you will get shot I i , Bob let himself drop without regard to how he was to alight, and In consequence was severely bruised against a chair and the edges ot the bookcase, j He st xxi lacing tue group. 1113 eyes mechanically sought Auie's. What was his surprise not to perceive in her cxpres -ion ot miugUd curiosity and fright the slightest sign of recognition I A glance showed hiai that it' was the! same with the others. John and George; evidently sup- ined that taev wort dealing with au ordi nary hiirT.n.r. and lhe other.- wiri n-tan'ii ly quite us devoid of suspicion as o his identity. His wig 1 " He had forgotten all about That explained this singular de i The bald man in stockinsrs. trousers, and shirt, caught hiding in the library after an attempt on the silver, quite naturally tailed . t ... . j .1. .t iu recau to tneir minas (no youin or ratner loppisu attire ana luxuriant ioces, wno twide them goodnight a few hours previous. As this fact and its explanation broke upon Bob's mind be frit au immense sense of re- lef, instantly followed bv a more poignant perception of the inextricable falsity and cruel absurdity of his position. He had little time to think it over and had little time to determine his best course. John stepped forward, with the point of his cane sword motioned him into a comer, thus leaving the way clear to the ladies, who at once hurried into the dining room. throwing glances of fear and aversion upon Bob as they passed. Angie paused at the doorway and asked : "What are you going to do with the dreadful man ?" - . Bob even then was able to notice that he had never seen her so ravishingly beautiful as now, with her golden hair falling over her charming dcthoJbille, while her eyes scintillated with " excitement. She would have blushed to have been seen by him in such-an undress toilet, but, with an odd feeling of being double, he perceived that she now regarded him as she would have an animal. ''George and I will attend to him. You had better go to bed' replied John to her questlou ; and then he sent George after some chord, meanwhile quietly standing in, rontf Bob with cocked revolver. Had he scanned his prisoner closely, he might have detected .something familiar in his linia- menta, but in careless contempt he took him in with a sweeping glance as an av erage burglar, whose identity was a ques tion for the police. Bob had not uttered a word. In the complex falsity of his position he could not indeed muster presence of. mind to resolve on any course out regarded with a kind of fatuity the extraordinary direction events were taking. ; But when George returned with the rope, and ordered him to put his hands behind him, he said, in a tone so quiet that it surprised himself: "Hold on, Mr. McLane: this joke has gone far enough. I am Robert Withers, at your service, and respectfully decliue to be considered in the light of a burglar any further." George's jaw dropped with astonishment, and John was scarcely-, less taken aback. "Blamed if he isn't ejaculated the for mer, after a moment, in a tone of incredu lous conviction, as he recognized at once the voice and now the features of Bob ; "but where 8 your hair? ' Bob blushed painfully. "I wear a wig," he replied, "and to-night. coming down stairs after you were all abed to get my ring which I had left on the table here, I did not fully dress. Going back, it was my luck to stumble over that cursed stand in the other room !" But what did you hide for ?" asked John sharply. Bob lust touched his bald head and replied: - I heard the ladies up." John pitched the revolver on the sofa and stood pensive. Finally he said, with a sardonic smile: "Mr. Withers, how do you propose to get out of this? Shall I call in the ladies and let you explain ? They will presently be wanting to know what we have done with the burglar." Bob made no reply. Already, bitterly humiliated, he saw no way of avoiding in definite and yet bitterer humiliations. John thought a few minutes longer, and then said : "Take a seat, Mr. Withers; I have proposition to make." 1 hey sat down. ; "You are aware," continued John, in the calmest, most linpertnrbable toue, "that don't Jiko.your match with my sister, and haye done my besr to break it off. But she is an obstinate girl, aud I had pretty much given up nope, lhese peculiar circum stances nave most unexpectedly put you in my power, aud I propose to make the most of my advantage.- If I were to call in Angie now and introduce you, I feel toler ably well assured that it would be the end of your matrimonial expectations in that quarter. Still you shall nave a chance for your life. I will call her'if you say so?' And John rose. "For God's sake don't let her como here !" groaned Bob in abject pain. John griuned, stepped toward the door, and then turned back irresolutely, mutter ing: "Wonder if it wouldn't be the shortest way out of it to call her down ?" Then, with a saving reflection on the uncertainty of a woman's course under any given set of circumstances, be came back and reseated himself opposite Bob, and said, with a tar- donic smile: fed you don t like my little suggestion of giving you one more chance with Angie? On the whole, I think you are wise. The other alternative is to'leave the house at once, relinquish your engage meut, and nevor see her again. Make your choice aud as quickly as convenient, tor am getting sleepy," and he yawned lazily. Bob sat in an attitude of utter dejection, . .1 1 f x 1 1 ' 1 staring at tne asnes 01 tne nre, wnicn an hour ago had blazed as brightly as his own love lit fancies. He was completely de moralized, aud almost incapable of thought a w 1 . a or resolution, mere was something so pitiable in Bob's odd-looking, dismantled figure, half-dressed, with that queer, white, bulbous head, dimmed, black eyes, and ex pression ot crushing shame and defeat, that L. u 1 1 1 . it wuuiu uavo uiuvcu aiiuusi hut uuo wj compassion. It did stir compunctions in George, but there was no mercy in John's still, blue eyes. Two or three minutes passed in a silence so complete that even the almost noiseless movement of the Ft ench clock en the mantel, was distinctly audible.. : lou are taking altogether too mu time to make up your mind, Mr. Withers. It will make shorter work to call Angie," finally said John, sharply, hi patience quite at an end. He rose a id stepped to the door as he spoke. "It won't be necessary, John here I am 1" said a clear'voice, with a sharp ring in it that the family had learned to know meant decisive work, and j Angie stepped into the room, her blue eyes , flashing with indignation and her lip trembling with scorn, beautiful as a goddess. 1 Bob started up from hts abject attitude and stood facinif her with the look of UidU I (A . . ..... WU .WM WMW ... ...k squad. As he stood there, drawn up to h a full height, with just a touch of appeal softening the defiance of his expression it was a manly face aud figure in spite of alL But her brothers received Anie first at tention, j :You mean, cowardly fellows 1" she said, in Poor Ireland. i ; New York Herald. w may criticise Irishmen i f-t. as much as i i. we please and in many respects their don', j i ' duct is fairly open to criticism but we can 1 n W.u t it. . ....... . .1 1 1 in tones of conpentrated contempt. "I would not have believed that men were so mean I and I am almost as much ashamed of youMr. Withers', she added, turning to Bob. with a softer but yet angry. voice. Did vou think, sir. that I took you for'irduf beauty ? 1 don't care if you wear" forty not help pitying the utter wretchedness of wigs, or none. You are absurdly vain; sir." i their present condition. In some parts off She was smiling nowj "You should know I Galway, and in many parts of Donegal: the ' a woman loves a man it is of f horrors of actual famine are being realized. ! grace and not of works anyhow, John " Ulur she added, turning to him, as if contrasting his slight figure with j Bob's fine physique, "Mr. Withers dosn't wear shoulder-pads." With that parting shot she disappeared into the dining room, in a moment reappearing, to say : Mr. Withers, you may forgive them if you want- to. -I I am by no means sure that I shall and now, go to bed, all of vou. and don't be keeuing us awake.' . - There was an outward silence, for a few moments. Then John said : - "I don't ask your , pardon, Mr. .Withers, because I mean to succeed, and I'm sorry I didn't. But I know when I'm beaten, and you need expect no further opposition from me - Let's go to bed," - . A Cheerful Home. A single bitter word may disquiet an en tire family for a whole , day. One surly glance casts a gloom over the household f while a smile, like a gleam of sunshine, may light up the darkest and wcarest hours. Like unexpected flowers which spring up along our path, full j of freshness fragrance and beauty, so the kind words, and gentle acts, and sweet dispositions make glad the home where Christ's peace and blessing dwell. No matter how humble the abode if it be thus garnished with grace, and sweetened with kindness and smiles, the heart will turn longingly toward it from all the tumults of the world; and home, if it be ever so homely, will be the dearest spot un der the circuit of the sun. And the influences of home perpetuate themselves. The gentle grace of the mother lives in her daughters long after her head is pillowed in the dust of death, and fath erly kindness finds its echo in the nobility and courtesy of sons who come to wear his mantle and to fill his place; while, on the other hand, from an unhappy, mis-governed and disordered home, go forth persons who shall make other homes miserable, and per petuate the sourness, and sadness, the con tentions, the strifes, the railing,which have made their own early lives so wretched and distorted. Toward the cheerful home the children gather "as clouds, and as dover to their windows;" while from the home which is the abode of discontent and strife and trouble, they fly forth as vultcrs to rend their prey. A correspondent of the Mining and Scien tific Press, speaking of the famous turquoise mine near Santa Fe, perhaps the most ex tensive and largest-worked mine of that mineral on the Globe, says it had evidently .... " -V been worked tor centuries oeiore the Spanards made their appearance in Mexico, "The irregular opening in the mountain, made by the ancient Aztecs in their search for this precious mineral, are called wonder cave3. When the ; Spaniards came they took possession of the mine and worked it for nearly a century with a large force of natives. It is said that an extensive cave in this mine, which killed a great number of natives, was the: immediate cause rif the uprising in 1GS0, which drove the Span iards from the country. The Washington Fot savs : Editors who make the greatest' efforts of their lives 'in abusing the 'daddy' dollars, are not unlike ly to see the time when they will rejoice that we have many millions of them on hand. Cheap money sticks to a country when better money goes away. Suppose we should have another panic and such a thing is sure to come, unless our laws are greatly improved what a comfort it would be to the head ot our finance department to have one or two hundred miliiona of the coin. that so piously trusts in Proyidence to make up its deficiency in weight ! He could put his gold behind the grand array of silver, and keep it there till the last of the 'daddies' had been counted ouN We have heard of a man who was happy in the consciousness that his wife was so hideously homely that there could be no cause for jealousy. We may be happy yet iu having a dollar so cheap that nobody will want it. cable dispatch from Dublin brings the! news; 01 death by starvation at Loughrea, a town in and about which there waa untold j suffering in 1880, - If it were a single case f ! A TV 1 rrV A.eil tv.M tt ' k wri .t f .Am I rnent : but. unfortunatelv. it is the indies.- i tion of a general and deplorable state of i affairs. The Poor Law Guardians declared : that the case was only one of many, land that the Bishop and Priests announced that I they had not a shilling with which to alle- viate the increasing misery of the popula- tionj Last year's crop of potatoes is well j nigh if not entirely consumed, and in the terrible interval between February and J uly, when the new crop will begin to come in, there seems to be nothing to do but to starve. v -' , r The British government might easily give employment by means of relief works, out it has always been strangely disinclined to lend a helping hand to Ireland, and at this present moment it is so busy in track ing certain criminals that it is forgetfal of tens of thousand of women and children who1 have scarcely ever had enough to eat, and who now have nothing. AVe do not apologize for agrarian or other crimes,', but it must be admitted that the paternal char acter of the government is such as to excite anything but a feeling of patriotism.. It is rather difficult to kiss the hand that smites you, and a chronic condition of semi-starvation! is not favorable to loyalty. to a man thnn in Wa fn;.t. :.. u: r'i I - .w..- ittiui 111 Ui9 JCI- Iowa. The man of Mlh and honor H not apt to be suspicious of others, and does not willingly believe evil. The lover of scandal and the believer iu it are alike deficient fu honor and morality, and are the bane of well organized socit v T r 1 1 . 1.1 a . J - - wit vu.ig WUIU be quietly killed somo morning, the liext feneration of men and u - . - - - waaavM tfould be happier. A case of hydro- i . 1. ? 1 . . . pnooia now ana men starts the cry of "Muzzle the dogs," "Death on the highways," etc. There is death and mystery in the highways and by-ways and in the home from the poisoned tongues of thelgossips. Let the voice go up; "Muzzle the gossips." Teach the children that gossiping is dishon orable, and that faith in the honor and virtue of mankind will build up society and add to the sum of human I v , nappincss. J Lesson No. 3. With the important help of Mr. Moore, through the AV10 York Time, we took a peep at the farmer's fences and kitcheiand Earior, ana ascertainea now ne was anectea y the Republican tariff that is more popu lar than ever before with that party. ; Let us now enter the bedchamber of the farmer and take a glance at the wardrobe of the family. Here is a short inventory with the tax appended that he must pay : Percent. Men's clothing, of wool r Woolen hosiery and undershirts Cotton hosiery and undershirts Woolen hata and caps The farmer's wife's black silk dress Gloves Blankets Alpaca dresses If we arecorrectly informed, the Stute treasurer pays tho legislators but $240, that is, $4 for each day of their session. The session beginning Wednesday, January 3, sixty days carries it to March 4. The mem bers, as vo; understand it, will not draw per diemfter the 4th of March. This thea gives oply 18 more working days. The more important measures are still tobecon sideredand the passage of time ought to be duly noted. It is true that the members may romain after the expiration of the sixty days without compensation, but after March 4th the chances of a quorum will diminish with each day. Neut and Obterter. flhina nofwesses the longest bridgo in the M-world. It is at Langang, over an arm of the C?ua Sea, and is five miles long, uunt entirely of stone, 70 feet high, with a road wayvro feet wide, and has 300 arches. The parapet is balustrade, and each of tho pil lars, whiek are 75 feet apart, supports a pedestal on which is placed a lion 21 feet long, made of one block of marble. Apropos to the value of our timicr, Dr. Council mentioned yestciday that he saw a man pay one of his neighbors, in Watauga county, forty miles from any railroad, one hundred dollars cash down for a single tree and it was not a very big" tree either. Without doubt we have the finest maple and walnut in America, not to speak of our other woods.--3etf and OUsrur. 43 75 45 75 50 50 60 3 from 64 to 70 Any other woolen dresses A pair of scissors Brass pins Hair pins Penknives Needles Steel pens Ink Paper ' Razors That will do for lesson number three. 45 SO 54 50 25 45 25 20 45 ne doubtless estimates the Republican tariff at its proper value. He pays more profit to the manufacturer than he pays to the mer chant. He pavs 13.20 on a blanket that would cost but 2 if there was no tax to pay under Jhe tariff. Wilmington Star. Sheep. Mr. R. W. Best, of Raleigh, connected with the Census Bureau in Wash ington, sends to the Raleigh Christian Advocate the following : I am more thoroughly convinced that some legislation is necessary on the subject. Now in the Old North State we Lave in round numbers 467,000 sheep, and with such a climate and wild pasturage we ought to have ten times as many. The loss by dogs, disease and stress of weather Is 104, 000, very nearly 25 per cent ; the loss by dogs alone is 47,000, almost as much; as tho others combined. The number of ; sheep owners in the State is 53,000.. Is there another industry in the State where 53,000 of its inhabitants are so much-interested that the grievance would not be abated by prompt legislation. - How do you account for this? The St. James Gazette savs that some thousands of people gathered in Liverpool recently to witness Mr. Irving Bishop's acceptance of a challenge to discover a pin which had been hidden within a radius of 500 yards from the Adelphi Hotel. Bishop is a "thought reader," aud this is what happened, ac cording to the Gazette: The piu was hidden while Mr. Bishop remained in the hotel in the custody of a local clergyman. At 1 o'clock Mr. Bishop emerged from the hotel blindlolded and drew his challenger with him, the connect ing link between them being a piece of piano wire. Having traversed three or four streets, Mr. Bishop entered the Nep tune Hotel and discovered the pin inserted in one of the window sashes on balcony. an .upper Home Conversation. ! Children hunger perpetual ly for now ideas. They will learn . with pleasure from the lips of parents what they deem drudgery to study in books; and if they have the misfortune, to be deprived of many educational advan tages, they will grow up intelligent if they enjoy in childhood the privi lege of listening daily to the conver sation of intelligent people. We some times see pareuts who are. the life of every company which they en'er, dull silent, aud uninteresting at jhome among their children. If they have not mental activity and mental stores sufficient for both let them firet use what they have for their own house bold. A silent home is a dull ; place for young people, a place from which they will escape if they cm.; How much useful information, ou tle oth er Wid, is often given in peasant family conversation, and what con-; scious, but excellent menial traiuing is lively, social argument CiiTti'ate to the utmost the graces of conversa tion. ! ! Gossip. There is absolutely no redeeming feature in gossip. Even if true we do not wUh to know dis agreeable facts about any of onrneigh lors. Nothing is more ueniorunz 11 NATIONAL HOTEL, SALISBURY, g. C. MRS. UK. BEEVES. ForroerlT nroorietrewt of tliU -in v House, has again leased it, and will be 1 a m. pieaseu to see ner many patrons when they visit Salisbury. Citizens wantincr the Omnibus mar Imtp orders for it at this House: Jan'y 15, 1883. 14:3m. For Drcpeptla." Costlvemosst Sick Headaebe Cbronle Dlasw rHnca Javmdlee, Imparity of Uo IMood, Paver b4 Artie, Malaria. and an Diseases' oanaed br T- The attention of Farmers "al public is called to the fact that T. J. MORGAN FT Ail nnrmAtl a TPircf Ploca WAMTT V nrA CERY STORE, next door to Blackmer & layiors uaraware, where he will keep a full line of fresh poods, such naPMnnr ifoai Bacon, Salt, 8ugar, Coffee, Tea, &c Also a fresh and complete stock of COIVFECTIOJVERIES, and Fancy Groceries. Will pay the highest cash prices for But ter, Eggs. Chickens, and all saleable coun try products. ; January 18, 1883. 14:3m. ran Cement of Llrer, liowcla and Kidheys. BTMPTOMS OF A DTSKASTO'trVXR. Bad Breath; Pmia In the Side, tonetiines the ; Tela is fete vader the ShonUer-bUde, atistaVea for H -Rmmwiwj general lou f appetite; Bowela teaeraUf cmqvc. aomctiiBea alternating with la; ' -the Jkead b troubled with pais, b dull and heavy. , , with cooBKlenblc loee of memory , acoompanied erjtfc a painful acaution of k-mi t tomcthi nw which ought to have beca doee; a alight, dry eougS , aad flushed face is omeiimes an attendant, efasi mtuakca for coaeamptioa; the paticat oootplaioa . of wearioesa and debility; ncnrousy easily startled; ' fce ca burning, somcrirpea a prickly sensation s . t cf the skin exists; spirits are low and despondent, aad, although satisncd that excrcia would be besc-.-. - 4 ncial. yet one can hardly suromoa up fortituoe la 7 te1-" foot, distrust, ererr remedy. Several of the above symptoms attend the-disease, but eases have occurred when but tew of them eaiated, yet ' " examination after death has shotfa the Unr to have beca extensively deranged. i It shoold be used by an persona, old and' yotrng", whenerer any mf Uio abov . ymptoma appear. ,t ,., Paraona TraraUne or TArlng Hn :17a L healthy LocaUtloa, by taking a dose occasion ally to keep the liver ia healthy actios, will void ' ' J aS Malaria, BUlnas aUackn, Dizziness, Nau sea, Drowsiness, Depression of Spirits.- etc; t'J" will invigorate like a glass of wine, bat la no la . . , y toxlcating beverage. . " It Ton have oaten anything hard 'ot ' dlgation. or feet heavy after meals, or sleep loea at aight. take a dose and yoa will be relieved. Time and Doetors' BlUa win ba aavad , ; 7 always kaeplns; the Regulator ' latheBoaMl- i " "c- For, whatever the ailment may be, a thoroughly safe purgative, alterative and tonto caa never be out of place. The remedy is haraolaaa. . . and does not luterlere with bualaeaa or : plea re. j t, t.. IT IS PURELY VEOETABLE, - I t And has all the power and efficacy of Calomel or Quinine, without any of the injurious after enacts. A Governor's Testimony.. ' - ,jj Simmons Liver Regulator has beea in use ia my fiunilv for sosae time, and I ass satisncd it is a valuaMe additioa to the medical science, j ' . . J. Giu. Shobtex, Governor of Ala, lion. Alexander IX. Stepbena, of .a.. Says : Have derived some benefit from the use of Simmons Liver Regulator, and wish to giro it a further trial. : ' .' , "The only Thins; that never falls to ReUeve.M--r have used many remedies for Dys pepsia. Liver Affection and Debility, but aever have found anything to benefit me to the went r i . ., f : 11 i . . v r . m mtwmm ura ivcguuiior aas. t sent rrosn Mia aesota to Georgia for it, and would send further for such a medicine, and would advise all a ho are sisa- ' Qarly affected to give it a trial as it seems the only thine that never tails to relieve. P. M. JJaT. Minneapolis, Mian. Dr. T. XT, Maeon aayat From actual eav aerience ia the use of Simmons Liver Regulator ia aiy practice I have been and aa satis ucd to use and prescribe it as a purgative medicine, j - t6rTake only the Geaolne, which ahrays " baa ea the Wrapper the red Z Trade-Mark; aad Sitnaattu-eof J. H. CIUN CO. FOR SALE BV ALL DRUGGISTS. The One-Price Store! i 1 . KLUTTZ & REM Ell LEADING DEALERS IN DRY GOODS, CLOTHING AND GROCERIES! FULL STOCK OF FURNISHING GOODS, i f BOOTS Al SHOES A SPECIALITY ! LARGE STOCK OP RUBBER COATS & SHOES, Agents for Coats1 $ Spool Cotton. Full Assortment of 150 Bushels EAELY NOETHEEN SEED-POTATOES, Just5 in. ; r-Bcat Floor, Meal, Oat Meal, Buck-Wheat Floor,. Meats, Sugar, CoffeesyTeaa, Rice, Hominy, Grits, Pure Lard, Corn, Oats, Bran, Syrups, and four kinds pf New ' ' "v Orleans Molasses, &c. Coffee Roasted or Green at 10 cents per pound. 3 lb. Cans Tomatoes at IB cts. Best 10 ct. Sugar, Try it. We mean to sell you Good Goods as cheap as anyone in town. We buyj and sell all kinds of Country Produce. Giic us a trial. W. W. Taylor, D. J. Bostian; Saletmen, FA IK NOTICE. . f r: All persons indebted to us before Jan. 1, J883, by nftto or acoount, are hereby notified that they must call at once and settle. We do not want to add cost on our customers, but wc must have our money. KLUTTZ & BENDLEMAN, Feb. 14, 1883. ' ' 1 Tiroili-Breil PLYMOUTH ROOK. I They are the most popular fowl in this country, beinj justly termed the "FARMER'S." BTEGGS fort sale, at $1.1)0 for thirteen. Address, .W. A. WILBOEN, Salisbury, N. C. 10:tf ( T mm " " . J. R. KEEN, Salisbury, H. C. Aarenl far PHtENIX IBOH WORKS. "Jk Piurinpr Mm Smi TJills - TURBINE WHEELS. -J .Also Contractor and Builder mr rr ' r.ita fmm - South Carolina Phosphates. Its Excellence for All Field Crops is Unsurpassed, FOR SALE BY THE ' VA3D0 PHOSPHATE COnPAHY. CHARLESTON, a C. FnASCijR. Hacker, President. Jcsiau J.IUi:o, Trrahurtrr. i S

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view