The Carolina Watchman. T f 0L Xlf. T3IRD SERIES SALISBURY. N. C, JUNE 21, 1883. - NO bo Tile Cardlina Watchman, TAlif.lSjiEI) IN THE YEAR 18S2. 'Kfc4 $1.50 IN ADVANCE. K DARBYS ROPHYLACTIC FLUID. 1a Household Article for Universal s FsinUjr L'e. For Scarlet and Typhoid Fevers, Diphtheria, Sali vation, Ulcerated I Sor Throat, Small I Vox, Measles, and tl Conta;iiB Disease. Persons waiting on 32 Sick shouluse it freely. Scarlet Fever has ndcr been ltnon to spread where the Fluid was 7. ' VJk Vvr kac hen rureii with it after l v . ItllU" I:.'" . . la of Diiituneria yiou io u. F vereil an.) ck Per , rcfrcsBed and SMALL-FOX and bed Sores fire vent- PITTING of Small Pox PREVENTED A number of my fam ily w.is taken with Small-pox. I used the Fluid ; the patient was not delirious, was not pitted, and was about the house again in three weeks, and no others had it. - J. W. Paek inson, Philadelphia. Id by bathing witn ii rim Fluid! 1 Lip u re Ar made larralcss anuipiiriiicvi. f I: Sore I ureal h a a . jure cure. f i ,.nt:iL-iin destroyed. tr r'rote4 Feet, ihtlbUiusJPiles, fhaHiiK. fc. jaif.iliu.it isnf cured. Sdf! WiliU ti'.ipleX- lun, ,tcti:oily iu use. SBip Frv l' Scented. T purify tiieiti f ath, Cleanse tl Ti-etli, f I can't be sumsscd. Catarrh relieved and cured-. .. I KivMpelas cSred. liuriirtlievcdiu.Unlly. Sisir preveuted. imenlery cved. Wund healed rapidly. St&irvy cured.S Arj Antidote for Animal Vegetable? Poisons, Sings, etc. limed- the Fljid during oul presen t a til tption with bclrlet ' Fever Iwith dc ti.fJ advaiita(:. It is "in'stens.di!e t the sick- Diphtheria Prevented. The physicians here use Darby Fluid very successfully in the treat ment of Diphtheria. A. Stollknwkkck. Greensboro, Ala. Tetter dried up. Cholera prevented. Ulcers purified and healed. In cases of Death it should be used about the- corpse it will prevent any unpleas ant smell. The eminent Phy sician, J. MARION SI MS, M. D., New Yorli, says : " I am convinced Prof. Darbys rotlu. W.M. f. bAND' ruin, Ey I'ropiivhictic rluid is a valuable disinfectant." Vabderbilt University. Nashville, Tonn. - IHestHV to tie niot excellent qualities of Prof. Dailies Prophfcctic Fluid. As a disinfectant and ilelfrcnt it isjBbolb. theoretically aad practically iiirior to an preparation with vhich 1 am ac quainted. N.. t. DurTON, Prof. Chemistry. tarbys I&uiil is Kreominendrd hy 1 n AmixAoeh H. Stkhirns, of Georgia ; l4v L'iiasJF, DhfcMS, D.D., Church of the Sir, ngcrs, N. Y.; I . I kCi'NTK, Columbia. Prof .University, S.C. Vfcv. A. J. BftTTLK, I'r.if., Mrrtfer University; friv. (luo. h. Pikkcb, ltishop M E. Church. IN lsri:N.4 Itl.i: TO EVERY HOME. Perfectly harmless. Used internally or extcinally for Man or Dcast. . T ic Fluid Itelx-en thoroughly toted, and we liav alMiiidarftycvideiice that it has done everything hen (iaimed. Fr fuILr information get of your ln ut a pamphlet or send to the proprietors. I II. ZEILXN CO.. ' llaikifactuTinChemists, PHILADELPHIA: HAVING PURCHASED 1 STOCK o p Wf. BMITHDEAL, AS V R. R KLll AS T11K INTEREST OF Crawford, of the firm of I'M. ' R. CaA'i.F3RD & CO. low prepared to supply oht etistoin jfi(i, Hi UimU of 11 .1 AGRlpTURAL IMPLEMENTS, I '3u addition to the l'8t Selected Stock ot A IU 1) W A K E iu the j STAT E. 1 1 I We also handle i Rifle Uriel Blasting Powder F E and nil line ot Mining Supplies. -J - We will Duplicate Any Prices in the State. And see us. VMoflEl, 9Hr99Bfi j!ffaaicau fii itjlt! BL&CEHEB & TATLQR THE Sl'rL TAYLOR. 50: ly Oct. i The Story of Life. "' . .- j f . Saj, wliat is life t 'Tis fo be lorn, A helpless tmbe to greet tfie light With a sharp whI!, as if the morn Fort tuld si cloudy moon and night: To weep, to sleep, and weep again. With sunny smiles between and then t And then apace the infant grow To be a laughing sprightly boy, Happy despite his little woes. Were he but conscious of bis joy ! To be iu short, from two to ten, A merry moody child ami then T And then in coat and trousers clad, To learn to say tire Decalogue, And break it, an unthinking lad, With mirth and mischief all agog; A truant oft by Held and feu, And capture butterflies and then T And then increased in strength and size, To be, anon, a youth full grown ; A hero in his mother's eyes, A young Apollo iu his own ; To imitate the ways of men In fashionable sin and then"? And then, at last, to be a man To fall in love, to woo ami wed ! s With seething brain to scheme and plan To gather gold or toil for bread ; To Kite tor fame, with tongue and pen. And gain or lose the prize and then f And (hen in gray and wrinkles eld 1 o inouru the speed ot life! decline : To praise the scenes of youth beheld, And dwell in memory lung syne: fo dream awhile with darkened ken, Then drop into his grave and then ? John (. Saxc. Where lo Wrinkles Conic From. "Where do wrinkles come from ?" And the joyous little Grace,, stoked gravely in the mirror At her rose-tinted lace. "Where do the wi inkles come from ? Why first, dear, I suppose, The heart let's ill a sorrow, And then the wrinkle grows. "Then anger comes a tapping, Ami the heart s door opens wide: Fheii hasten naughty euvy Ami discontent and pride. "And flic wrinkles follow slowly, r or the lace has for its part fo tell just what is doing Down in the secret heart. And the red lips Ipse their sweetness, And draw down so." said Grace ; "And thejovely, youthful angel Goes slowly from the face." i Watch the gate of the heart, my dar ling For the heart is the dwelling place Of the magical angel of beauty, hose smile is seen in thy face." Whiskey is Illixois. The statistics of liquor drinking iu Illinois are appal ling. It is stated that the annual cost of liquor consumed in that State is tJo.tMKl, - (MM). Iu Chicago there are 3,7o0 drinking saloons, and estimating that the receipts of these saloons from the sale of liquor and beer will average from $10 to $175 daily, the total amount annually expend ed in Chicago for drinks is $32,002,750 or more than $50 per capita for every man woman and child in the city. The pro portion of drinking saloons in Chicago is one to every lb0 population, and in the State of Illinois there is one retail liquor dealer to every 270 inhabitants. There are in the United States 170,000 retail li quor dealers whose annual sales proba bly amount to $030,700,000, or $18 00 per capita for the wnole population of the country. It is estimated that at least 90 per cent, of the liquor consumed is dr. ink by. the male population, who an anually expend upon the gratification of of their appetites for drink the enormous sum of $G90,000,000. These figures are startling. Tliey show what a great evil the temperance reformers have to grapple with. How to Trkat a Drundkx Max. A man who is thoroughly drunk needs as much good treatment as any other who from different causes is unable to take care of himself. His temperature is low ered and he is liable when in such condi tion to contract disease especially pneu monia. He should be put to bed and kept warm instead of being locked up iu a cold cell. Of course it does not seem just, according to the common way of looking at the matter, to treat a man well who luis voluntarily placed himself in such a state ; but when you think that life might be at stake, it does, not seem so unreasonable. A drunken man is al most iu variably in a condition to con tract pneumonia, the worst form of this disease being alchoholic pneumonia, and very few of these cases recover. The police should at least sec that such a per son is kept warm and not suffered to lie in the wet aud cold. Dr. A. JE. Nichols. It seems pretty clear that $105,221 55 was wasted at the Norfolk navy yard in i ( pairing the steam tog Pinta. Mr. Dez- -endorf charges that the money was ex- I peuded iu order to give employment at ' good wages to mcu who would vote the coalition ticket. The board of inyestiga lion reported that the repairs made, the j tug uo more uusea worthy than she was , before. That is to say, though the bosses expended over $105,000 of the people's mouey in their owu interest, they geuer- lv refrained from c ing the Wvxt any ous harm. Xetrs-Ob A Significant Story. i A wealthy banker in one of our large cities, who is noted for his large subscriptions to charities, and for his kindly habits of private benevolence, was called on by his pastor, one evening, and asked to go with him to the help of a mun who had attemp ted suicide. They found the man in a wretched house in an alley, not far from the banker's dwelling. The front room was a coblcr's shop, behind it, on a miserable bed, in the kitchen, lay the poor shoemaker with a gaping gash in his throat, while his wife and children were gathered about him. "We have been without food for days," said the woman, "when he re turned." "It is not my husband's fault. He is a hard working, sober man. But he could neither get work nor pay for that which he had done. To-day he went for the last time to collect a debt due him by a rich fami ly, but the gentleman was not at home. My husband was weak from fasting, and seeing us starving drove him mad. So it ended that way," turning to the fainting, motionless figure on the bed. The banker having fed and warm ed the family, hurried home, opened his desk, and took out a Hie of little bills. All his large debts were prompt ly met, but he was apt to be careless about the accounts of milk, bread. etc., because they were so petty. lie found there a bill ot Michael Good low's for repairing children's shoes, fit.). xUicliael Lux allow was the suicide. It was the banker's un paid debt, which had brought Hi use people to the verge of the grave, and driven this man. to desperation, while at the very time, the banker had given away thousands iu charity. I he cobler recovered, and will never want a friend while the banker lives, nor will a small unpaid bill ever again be found on the banker's table. No man has a right to be generous until his debts are paids ; and the most efficient use of money is not alone in alms-giving, but to pay lib erally and promptly the people we e m p I oy . Compa n io n . Oposstun Hunting in Australia. Prof. H. N. Moseley, in his "Challenger Notes," speaks of a visit he made to the domain of Sir Wil liam McArthur, at Camden Park, forty miles from Sidney, New Suth Wales, ami gives his experience iu hunting the opossum. He says: The park is 10,000 acres in extent. Here I went out on several occasions to shoot opossums by moonlight. The opossums are out feeding on the trees at night, or are out on the ground, and rush up the trees on the approach ot danger. 1 hey are very difficult to see by one not accustomed to the work, but by those who habit u all shoot them with ease. In order to find the astonishing animals, one . t places himself so as to get successive portions of the tree between his eye and the moonlight, and thus searching the tree over, ut last he catches sight of a dark mass crouch lur on a branch and usually sees the ears pricked up as the animal watches the danger. This is called "mooning" tl.e opos suin. Then, with a gnu in one's hand, one fully realizes lor the first time the meaning of the saying, " 'Possum up a gum tree." The unfortunate beast has the toughness of his skin aloue to trust to. "Bang !" and down it conies with a heavy thud on the ground, falling head first, tail outstretched ; or it clings with claws or tail, or both, to the branches, swaying about wounded aud requires a second shot. It must come down at least, unless, indeed, the tree be so high that it is out of shot, or it mana ges. to nip a small branch with its prehensible tail, in which case it sometimes contrives to hang up even when dead and remains out of rv.ach. Nearly all the female opossums which 1 shot hand a single young one in the pouch. The young seem ed to be attached witli equal fre quency to the right or left teat. I shot the animals in the hopes of obtaining young in the earlier stage, but found none such. Among stockmen, and even some well educated people, in Australia there is a conviction that the young kangaroo grows out of a sort of bud on the teat of the mother within the pouch. We killed about twenty opossums iu a couple of hours on each occasion on which I went out. Scientific American Queen Mary, the gysy, now 76 ' r years old, has jnSt come over from England, and is ruling over her sub jects, who have gathered in Pennsyl vania and will have a big jubilee in : central New York in July. Mary is I said to be the queen of all the gypsies , v t t i ' m wm)m j m in Hie worm. A Year Without a Summer. During the cold spring, like that which, we hope, is just now drawing to an end, people generally console themselves with the reflection that the sun will eventually get the vic tory and that summer will certainly come at last, though its coining may be delaved. Uncertain as the weath er is, the general features of the seas ons recur with a regularity which warrants the confidence thus reposed in the annual return of seed time ami harvest ; but there are instances on record in which even the seasons seem to have lost their characteristic features, as if the ordinary laws of in otero logy had been temorarily sus pended. A remarkable case of this kind, and one which-the long con tinued cold weather of this springs makes particularly interesting just now, is that of flic year 1816, which has been called "the year without a summer." A communication printed in the CongrcautionaUst gives the fol lowing summary of the weather of this remarkable year: January and February were mild ; March was cold ; April began warm, but ended in snow' aud ice. Ice form ed an inch thick in May and fields were planted over and over again till it was two late to replant. June was the coldest ever known in this lati tude; frost and ice were common. Almost every green thing was killed; fruit nearly all destroyed. Snow fell to the depth of ten inches in Ver mont, seven iu Maine, three in the interior of New xork, aud also in Massachusetts. There were few warm days. It was called the dry season. But little ruin fell. The wind blew steadily from the north, cold and fierce. Mothers knit extra s.cks and mittens for their children in the spring, and woodpiles that usually disappeared during the warm spell in trout of the houses were speedily built up agaiu. Planting and shiv- i I . i erwg were done together ami the farmers who worked out their taxes on the country roads wore overcoats and mittens. In a town in Vermont a flock of.Va. The forgeries have been going on sheep belonging to a farmer had been ; for three years. Wright was speculating sent as usual to their pasture. On 'in cotton futures and sometimes made the 17th of June a heavy snow fell . money and took up the notes, in this way in New England. The cold was in- ' preventing exposure. He is married and tense. : has an excellent family. At one time he A farmer who had a large field of was comity attorney, lie ran away about corn in Tewkesbury built fires around three weeks ago ami has not been caught it at nigh to ward oft (he frost ; many an evening he and his neighbors took turns watching them. He was rewarded with the only crop of corn in the neighborhood. Considerable damage was done in New Orleans in consequence of the rapid rise of the Mississippi river. Fears were enter- tained that the sun was cooling off, and throughout New England ail picnics were strictly prohibited. July was accompanied with frost and ice. Indian corn was nearly all destroyed; some favorably situated fields escaped. August was more cheerless, it possible, than the sura- nier mouths which preceded it Ice was formed half an inch in thickness. Indian corn was so frozen that the -S A - .1 .1 .1 .? 1 greater nan was eiit uown ami wnew for fodder. Almost every green thing was destroyed in this country ami in Europe. On the 30th snow fell at Barnet, forty miles from London, Very little corn ripened in New Eng- land and the Middle States. Farmers .supplied themselves from corn pro- uuceu in ioio lor seeu in tne spring of 1817. "It sold from 84 to 85 per i i. i UUS",CI ' September furnished about two weeks of the pleasantest weather of the season, but in the latter part of the month ice formed an inch thick. i l.l , . ,Ai li.i.l s-vts-kMA t L o ii i0 oIinia tt Y"1 , r T x- t t,ie 5traw ura,a WUS a,,nost l,roo,0,l- of seven tramps supposed to have perish- the cold weather. November was ry, whereas the duty on mauufactur- cd in a falling building. Thcv evidently cold and snowy. December was com- hate wag relatively small. So they . A M hvr vallie on a ,icad triUup fortable and the winter following brought in the hat alread made, and hau W1 a ,ive tme.CVM. 7VW7r. was mild. Very little vegetation was ripped it up to get the braid. Did matured in the Eastern and Middle ,ou ever jiear 0ra more ridiculous ii-1 If this life he unhappy, it is a bur States. The sun's rays seemed to be iustration of the insanity of the pres- den tons which it is difficult to destitute of heat during the summer; all nature was clad in a sable hue, and man exhibited no little anxiety concerning Uie future of his life. . . 1 he average price of flour during the year was $13 per barrel. average price ot wheat in rmgiami was 97 shillings per quarter. Bread riots cccurred throughout Great Brit ain in 1817 in conseouence of the i.:.i. . ..e.i! A .tt ..if lift. 11L I high price of the staff of life. Char leston News and Courier. s Lynchkd.--Waverly , Iowa, June 9. The Barler brothers were taken from the i:iil In- ii mull mt 1 I ill , 1 u-lj :ia.t lliidlt J J " - c and hung to a tree half a mile east of the mg tracts ot blacK waiuui umucr . jail. The nnb was composed of men this country. from Fayette coauty, led by a brother of According to the report of the di Deputy Sheriff Shcppard, who was killed rector8 of the mint, the mines of by the Barber brothers last fall at West j j,ort j, Carolina produced last year Union. The Sheriff refused to give up jqq QGO in gold aud125J0Q& u sil t he keys of the jail, whereupon the mob, j battered down the dors with sledge hammers and aftei a short delay inside Several reforms, rooking toward the lyuchers brought the criminals out with voi us tied around their .iL- ...... 4 iiviuivi va no. iij as uiyiii;i K w m,wm .Neither ot them niucheU a particle auu they did not even plead for mercy at any stage of tlie proceedings. Queer Family Complication. A iR-enciman'a Plan for Righting a I Woman Wronged 6 H is Son. In the suburbs of Paris there lived a short'tiuie ago a wealthy widower, who was blessed with an only son. This young gentleman took a some what, low view of morality in general, and was living with a lady whose finger was adorned with no wedding ring, but who was nevertheless the mother of his two children. The father was a kindly hearted unworld ly old man, ami constantly impressed upon his Eon the advisability of marrying-the lady and thus (according to French law) legitimizing his children. The son, however, did not take the idea and at least the anxious parent, deeming that he was at the point of death, summoned him to his bedside and declared that unless he at once married his mistress he would do something that his son would after ward regret. The son remained ob durate and the next day his father sent for the cure and himself went through the form of marriage with the lady i u question. Having thus done what he considered to be his dutv. died and was buried. His son then found that his own children had been converted into his stepbrothers and inherited with him and their equal shares of the paternal estate. If he is a wise man therefore, he will at once marry his father s widow. But he can hardly marry his stepbrothers. So at least half of the property which would otherwise have been his has been sacrificed to his obstinacy. News from Northampton county in this State, has been received here to the ef- tect that samuel J. w riglit, a young lawyer of respectable counection,' has com in it ted forgeries to the amount of $30,000; Wright has been doing busi ness for a number of the wealthiest men in the county. He forged their names to notes and then forced the name of James Boone, clerk of the Supreme court as endorser. The notes were discounted either in the bank at Suffolk or Norfolk, although diligent search has been made for him. The Evil of Impure Litera ture. One of the most insiilimus evils of the dav. and conseoueutlv of tie vvorst aiHj mmt difficult tu ileal 1 wjtlf s tle rami increase of impure literature. Our book stores, news stands and, to our shame he it said, j even olir private libraries and parlor tables are piled high with this sort f stuff, from the tiashv storv-naners aiu njt,y chronicles of crime to the j works of popular novelists, who gild tiejr poisonous pellets with the graces of rhetoric and the flowers of fancy, ! Xhe upas tree overshadows all society ad from its venomous branches there mm 4- I ,8 a constant ilrin. um. Unp ot aeru poison, vitiating all life. The hoys auc gjrs 0f the land are feeding on t iiis literature to their everlasting de- trimeut. Boston Post. The vor.iemns Qath remarks : "Mr i io a buiiniaui iiiii', v.iif, vi i i iu.iia,d iWht said : 'YVIiv. sir. some tjme ag0 j waS ;n a bat factory, where ttov ..,ora ,,;, ltr un kin huts made i - . . . . . outside ol the United states in order to get the starw to manufacture into oUier haU gi j. Vmt in the worj doeg tjig ,uean ?' Then they tQjd me that the (iuty Gn straw and m i elt tariff than that?'" file aisle of a church is not the proper idace for a sexton with squeaky boots. 1"W - M Ua tP MUnH mhtiI. kilMi ot ile." Xew York Advertiser. Fate ii the friend of the good, the iruide of the wise, the tyrant ot the foolish, the enemy ot the bad. Envv is a passion so full of cow ardice and shame that nobody ever had the confidence to own it. Eiiglhih capitalists are reported to have "cornered the largest remain- - - . . . a .. I . . I giving the l.ative some ?art in man- . . . ,. I k". I rino' their arrairs, nave ja ueeu . " A i. vinprrw the - gj - j prupweu .-, liberal and progressive Marquis saipuw. i NEW SPRING GOODS! 9' fill IIM jlMPffi& 4 i KLUTTZ ft RENDLEMAN Have now received their entire stock of SDrim; and Summer n.in.U vl;. l. l,r K. selected with great care to suit the varied wants and tastes of their numerous customers, all of which they offer as cheap as the cheapest. They have now in Store the LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF DRY GOODS NOTIONS, CLOTHING, FURNISHING GOODS, SHOES, Ladies' and Men's HATS, AND FAMILY GROCERIES they have bought for many seasons. fST'A new stock of TAMLE and GLASSWARE FULL ASSORTMENT OF FIVE CENT TINWARE. SP .We still hnvc the best FLOUR, UVT MEAL, MEATS. SUGARS, TEAS BT COFFEES, RICE, CANNED FRUITS, JFLLIESj, PURE LARD, BRAN "XST MEAL, New Orleans MOLASSES and SYRUPS, e. A full assortment of FAMILY MEDICINES. Agents for Coats' GUACIO, which is fcW First class, and which Come and See us before you buy or sell, for wc will do you good. April 12, 1883 BEV. A. I. HOBBS Writes:- n,,n,P 7 KEY. J. L. TOWNER, After a thorouph trial of they run r bgTn T1i XBON TONIC, I take pleasure f TM j Indwstrjr, 111 . .Bays: In statins? that I have been "Y flflYft X I consider it gTeatly benefited by its U I J II I a most excellent remedy tor use. Ministers and Pub-X: OmAM Ui the debilitated vital forces. uc opeasers will una It of the greatest value Where a Tonic is neces sary. I recommend it as a reliable remedial agent, possessing un doubted nutritive and restorative properties. Zoimlle, A., Oct. 2, 1882. mpius B7 TBI DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., 213 IT. KMJX ST., ST. 10713. James Gordon Ieiiuett estimates the value of the New York Jlcrahl at $10,000, 000 and says it is paying six per cunt, per annum interest on that amount. Outward actions can never give a just estimate of u-, since there are many perfection of a man which are not capable ot lions. appearing in ac- Adam is the only man who never tan- tnlised his wife; cook." ibout the "way mother 1 es, hut when lie yot into trouble lie threw 1 lie bhime on her. Priest : "P.it, I understand you are going to be manned again."' Disconsolate widower: "Yis, yonr rivivnce." Priest: "But your win, Pat, has only been ccad two weeks." D. W. : "Vis, your, riv'reucc ; but share ain't she as tlead as she ever will be !" A boy wrote a composition on the sul- ject of the Quakers, which he described s et that never quarrelled, never got into a nrhr, never clawed each other, aud never jawed back. The production con tained a postscript in these words Pa is a Quaker, hut ma isn't. Up iu .Milwaukee they labored diligent ly all day yesterday to recover the bodies bear; if it be hi every respect happy, it is dreadful to be deprived of it ; so that in either case the result is the same, tor we must exist in anxiety! aud apprehension. "Jake" Ilallybui ton, formerly editor of the Morgantou Blade, met with a serious n11(i Verv naiuful accident the other day J near his home on Lower Creek, iu Lower (.'reek, iu this this county. He was working the road with a number of other men, and one of them was cutting a tree, when the axe slipped from his hands ami struck Mr. Halliburton in the mouth, cutting thio' hu check aud dislodging . sevt ial ol ins teeth . Morya u ton Mou n ta ineer. New York has finally abolished the obnoxious law authorizing the detention of iunoceiit witnesses of crimes, and now persons who have knowledge of the com mission of a crime can furnish the infor mation to the proper officers without running, the risk of being locked up. The statute just repealed was not only a dis- ......... .. tlm ! t . tint IhiiiIi.iiiI iiiv.'il & . , , rf helped forward the detention ot el ime - . 01 am. w J . Times Spool Cotton. Agents for the EMPIRE we offer for 400 lbs. of Lint Cotton. w. w. tayi.ou & n. j. BO!TIAX, Salesmen, J. R. KEEN, Salisbury, N. C. Apt for PHUNIX IRON WORKS, Eita, Bote, Sav Mills, AND TURBINE WHEELS Also, Contractor and Builder Jil 23, 'S3. ly - or-aPro-- UxxUU ol Iron, J'rruvian SSSSW(Ei tw it toimiijwn A GOOD COW and CALF vFOR SALE! A pood Cow, of medium age, and s Tung calf, will be sold at a lair price. Co U giving milk. Apply at this Office. 30:3t-pl. NOTICE TO C R E D ITORS ALL Persons having claims against the estate of Wilson Turner, dee'd, are hereby notified to exhibit the same to the under signed on or before ihe 28th day of May, 1884, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. J. W. TURNER, Adm'r. This, 38th day of May, 1883. 4t pd. Administrator's Notice ! Having qualified as administrator of the estate ot Lawson j. reeler, dee d, notice is hereby given to all creditors to exhibit their ilaims to me on or befoie the 3Qta day of June, 1884, and all persons indebted to the estate are requested to make imme diate uavment. ALrRKU L. PKKLKlt. AduiV of Lawson J. Peeler. Craige & Clement, f Attorney. s . ' Datcl M iv '2:j I 83. as lkJm Hsf r Si33l QS. s m o l 7- - fxl 0 2 Hz 5 && witfrn I K c! 0 HZ M tn' w 2 m vim Ho 3 lusfm ill 1. 1 - - - - - - li - j j 'v I v I -j t

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