The
Carolina
AVifpliTrmn
f w mywj my mm m m m mi m i m a
H H H M H H 0V H M
-
r
i
r0L X7. THIRD SERIES
SALISBURY. S. C, JULY 5. 1883.
w
it
NO 38
!he Gaf olina Watchman,
; ESTAW llllKD IN THE YEAR 1832.
I'liti r. $1.5 IN AI) ANCK.
DAEBYS
FLUID.
A Household Article for Universal
if Family Lae.
For Scarlet And
Typhoid Fevers,
Diphtheria, Sali
vation, Ulcerated
Sore Th rra t , Small
Pox, Measles, aad
all Contagious Diseases. Persons waiting on
the Sick shoild use it freely. Scarlet Fever has
never been lihown to spread where the Fluid was
used Velio Fever has been cured with it after
black vor.fi t had taken place. The won
casts of Diplitheria yield to it.
Fevered ana Sick Per- SMALL-POX
iioni refreshed and and
lied Sores prevent- PITTING of Small
ed by bithing wkh pox PREVENTED
i D:.rbys Fld j A mcmber ofm fam
impure Air made . waj keywith
hornriess asa piirioeu. cli ,,. I ,h-
lor Sore Troai it is a
sure cure not delirious, was not
Contagion destroyed. . . , ' .
Hun!, the patient was
for Froated reet,
' Oliilhlains, Piles,
ChattiigH. etc.
pitted, and was about
the house again in three
weeks, and no others
Wliile&omplex
Jous secured by its use.
Ship lvVf prevented.
To purity Jreth,
CIcaaM Uh Teeth,
it can't be $if passed.
Catarrh relieved and
cured.
EryiipeleSi cured.
HuriiH relieved iiutantly.
Hears prevented.
Dysentery cured.
Wound heiled rapidly.
Scurvy curio. .
An'Aotldotfc for Animal
or Vegetate Poisons,
Stings, etc.
1 used the Fluid during
our present afll i criort w i th
Scarlet Fevdr with de
cided advantage. It is
indispensable to the sick
room. Wm- F. Sxwd
poro, Eyrie, Ala.
kliioiiii.ilisiil cuf-d.
had it. - J. W, Pakk
inson, Philadelphia.
The -physicians here
use Darby Fluid very
successfully in the treat
ment of Diphtheria.
A. Sl'OI.LKNWEKCK,
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
letaa, J. MARION
SLMS, M. !., New
York, savs: "I am
convinced Prof. Darbys
1'rophylactic Fluid is a
valuable disinfectant."
. 1
VaaderbUl University, Nashville, Tenn.
I testify to She iiKt excellent Qualities of Prof
Ti,,W.. Pr,r,S-U, Pt..i.l A .. ,i:..:r-. -j
I detergent it is both theoretically and practically
1 :i;.cr:';ru ay preparation with -vhich I am ac-
M' quaiuted. NT. LurroN, Prof Chemistry.
Darbys Fluid is Recommended by
Hon ALCjAmtEK H. SrnniF.NS, of Georgia
Rev. Ciia F. Deems, D.D., Church of the
Strangers, NY.;
Jos. LsCoiirB, Colombia, Prof .University, S.C.
.ley- A. . ?A i tlk, Pruf., Mercer University;
Rev. Geo. F. Piekce, Btsliop M. E. Church.
IMHSrENfARLK TO EVERY HOME.
Perfectly iharmlcss. Used internally or
externally lor Man or licast.
The Fluid as been tliorouzhly tested, and we
i have -bundaafevidence that it has done everything
V hi-H claimed. Far fuller information get of your
j Liruist a pamphlet or send to the proprietors,
. dH. ZEILIN & CO..
MinufccturmlChcniists, PHILADELPHIA.
MER & TAYLOR
Avirla PURCHASED
THE
STOCK
o v
Wm. Smithdeal,
AiWEi.rj.'sTIIfi INTEREST OF
E C.-.tw;'jrd, of the arm of
br. Crawford &co.
;n! iitiw iiroparetl to supply our
4toiulM-8 yhh all kinds of
mmkm IMPLEMENTS,
Ii addition to the
Hvsfj Hilectcd Stock or
H A lh) W A li E in the
S T A T E:
me also hnndlo
le and Blasting Powder
1 I
RUSE
,m fullllineot Mining Snpolit.-,
l - i -r . -
' We will J3?$
plicate Anv Prices in
- 'i
the State.
Jf AKD SEE US. q
1 "UiKR,
PROPHYLACTIC
5
mr A t. AT?T A
I Diphtheria I
Prevented. I
i
? s
i i
SiS'L TAYLOR.
60:ly
Thoughts.
J
BY M. K 1.1. BUOWN, NEW MARKET, ALA.
When the gorgeous tints of sunset
Have passed from the sky away,
Aud the day is changing slowly
Into the twilight soft and gray ; S
When the gentle breezes of evening,
With kisses soft and light, j
WooYrom the dewy roses,
Incense for the wings of uight,
My heart repeats, with a sad refrain,
"Days that are gone, pleasure and pain.
Loved days of happy childhood !
O, fair and cloudless morning !
When days of joy and pleasure,
With rosey tints were dawning,
No tli might of clouded evening
When flowers would cease to bloom,
W lien clouds af deepest sorrow
Would .shroud mo iu their glopm.
No thought of the dark to-morrow, when
night would follow day
When Scylla and Charybdis, their pres
ence would betray.
Mut alas ! the clouds too quickly -Obscured
my future way.
Days, bright as the clouds at sunset,
Like them soon turned to gray.
And castles, grand aud lofty,
Of fortune, tame and treasure
Disappeared ; while anguish and woe
Usurped the throne of pleasure
And 1 t'ou ml, when no joy with sorrow
blends,
You may bid farewell to holiday friends.
I drifted across the wild waters,
Alone on the ocean of time ;
Aud life was dark aud dreary
It had lost its rhythm and rhyme.
But I looked to God iu the darkness,
To the author antTprcserverjof life.
He still the fierce heart struggle,
And lulled the restless strife.
So, in the deepening twilight, rest to my
heart is given ;
For I look not for joy on earth, hue be
yond to the gate of heaven.
The Children we Keep.
The children kept coniingWie by one,
Till the boys were five and the girls
were three,
And the big brown house was alive with
fun
From the basement floor to the old roof
tree.
Like garden flowers the little ones grew,
Nurtured and trained with the tender
est care,
Wanned by hive's sunshine, bathed in its
dew,
They bloomed into .beauty, like roses
rare.
But tine of the boys graw weary one day,
And leaning his head on his mother's
breast,
He said "1 am tired and cannot play:
Lei me sit a while on your knee aud
rest."
She cradled him close in her fond em
brace ;
She hushed him to sleep with her
sweetest song,
And rapturous love still lighted his face
When his spirit had joined the heaven
ly throng.
Then the eldest girl with her thoughtful
eyes,
Who stood where "the brook and the
river meet,"
Stole softly away into paradise
Ere "the river" had reached her slender
feet,
While the father's eyes on the grave are
bent,
The mother bwked upward beyond tho
skies ;
"Our treasures," she whispered weie only
lent,
Our darlings were angels in earth's dis
guise." The years flew by and the children be
gan With longing to think of the world
outside ;
And as each iu his turn became a man;
The boys proudly went from the fathers
side,
The girls were women so gentle and fair,
That lovers were speedy to win j
Aud with orange blossoms iu braided
hair,
The old home was left new homes to
begin.
So, one by one the children have gone
They boys were five and the giils were
three ;
And the big brown house is gloomy and
lone, s
With but two old folks for its compa
ny. They talk to each other about the past,
As they sit together at eventide,
Aud say, "All the children we keep at
.. last
Are the boy and girl who in childhood
died."
Sensible Advice.
t
There is nothing like their own home
for married people, even if the wife shall
have to cook aud sweep the floor and
clean the wiudows. If she is a healthy
girl the exercise will do her good and
no young man who has to labor for his
living should marry a girl that is. not
healthy, strong and willing to do her
own work while they are ttjo poor to hire
a servant.
This thing of marrying a gill that you
have to hire another to take care of is
not a wise thiug for a poor young man to
do. He should look out for a girl that is
broad shouldered, strong iu muscle, bav-ing-of
course other virtues. The ideal
girl, the consumptive, tight-laced, party
going, piano-playing, French-talking,
fashionable girl, can be no proper wife
for him. This languuge tho girls may
think unkind, but it is not. It is better
for girls that are not fitted to be a poor
man's wife to remain with their parents
than lieeoine such. It will be liettcr far
thoir lovers too, aud better for society.
L JU.
Mr. Bright on America
Good Reading for Intelligent Tax
Payers. From the London Times' Report of his Ad
dress at Birmingham.
In our time the very gentlemen
who were opposed to us told the peo
ple that if we allowed the untaxed corn
of foreign countries to come here our
people would be thrown out of em
ployment, land would go to waste,
the laborer would be worse paid than
he was before. Now, in the United
States the very same argument is used.
The protection party in the United
States says to the people, "What will
become of you if you allow the man
ufactures produced by the pauper la
bor of England to come into the
United States? What will become of
your labor and what will become of
your wages?" And so they say exactly
what our countrymen said forty years
logo, only talking of pauper labor, I
think, has tor the most part vanished,
and if wages have doubled during the
last forty years, and everything upon
which wages are expended is reduced,
what can be more monstrous than to
speak of the pauper labor of England?
Perhaps, though I am speaking here
in this vast assembly of my own
countrymen, I may be permitted to
address a word to the working classes
of the United States of America.
Well, I will say this to the working
men ami artisans of the United States,
that centuries of legislation in this
country have not done so much, lrave
not conferred so great benefits upon
the labor qf England as have been
conferred by that great Minister of
foity years ago Sir Robert Peel
cheers and by Mr. Gladstone, the
great Minister of to-day. Loud
cheers. Will you permit me to
dwell for a sentence or two upon a
question, as it affects the United States,
in which we, and they, and all the
world are greatly interested?1 I be
lieve that the question in the United
States as between a high protective
tariff and a merely revenue tariff is
nearing its solution. Hear. Opin
ion is growing; facts economic facts
which are I r resist aWe, are coming
to the front and are offering them
selves to the consideration of stales
men there, and of every intelligent
man in that great Republic.
There is an extraordinary condition
of lhing8whicli no other country iu
any age of the world has ever experi
enced, or even dreamed of. There is
an actual surplus of revenue of 30,
000,000. Why our Chancellor of the
Exchequor potters about with l,
000,000 or 2,000,000. He puts a
penny on the income tax one day, aud
another day takes it off again ; one
day he gives a quarter of a million to
the country gentlemen to help then?
repair their roads, and then discovers
that he cauijot find the money,
and does not do it. rLatiLrhter.l
Chancellor of the exchequer of the
United Sfajes, monarch apparently of
all he surveys, deals with a sum, the
magnitude of which we cannot meas
ure and cannot conceive, but a lump
sum of 30,000,000. Now, this
30,000,000 is fatal to the high pro
tection parly. The Government does
not know what to do with it; it must
either throw it away or spend it in
something foolish. and unnecessary, or
else it must refuse to receive it by re
ducing the duties. Now,
when that question comes to be dis
cussed in the great forum of a nation
of 50,000,000 people what must be
the result? A very intelligent mem
ber of Parliament told me two or
three years ago I am not sure I ever
quoted his opinion before, but it is
worth hearing I think, as he said
thai his Liberal opinions had been
greatly strengthened by what he had
observed in the United States. Hear,
hear. He said, "If you note what
they do, a great many of them talk
wildly and foolishly, but," he said,
"they always act very wisely."
Laughter and cheers. Well, two
ears hence, I believe, there will be
a good deal of talk, and perhaps a
good deal of it wild and foolish, but
when that people are brought to the
issue whether, having struck off the
negro, they are to leave the fetters of
protection upon the industry of all
their countrymen, I believe they will
do before long what we have done,
(cheers,) and will declare it to be the
inalienable right of every American
as it is the inalienable right of every
Englishman to spend bis money iu
the cheapest market in the world.
(Loud cheer-.) ; Now,
what I w ant to suggest to you is this,
that if it should come, as 1 believe it
will come, that the United States will
go down to a sensible revenue tariff,
whatever that may be I do not
point the sum or the amount; I mean
a tariff which will permit large free
dom of trade with all the nations of
the world and then, if England and
America, growing rapidly to 100,
000,000, take this course, what will
be the effect upon the other nations
of the globe ? ' May I ask
you what at this moment are the two
great curst s of Europe. The one- is
the system of high tariffs, the war of
tariffs, and the other is the war of
arms and armies. (Cheers.) The
one is burdensome in fact both are
burdensome at all times, and armies
are at times more than burdensome
when they are employed in destruc
tion and slaughter. If yon were to
destroy the tariffs of Europe you
would destroy the pretense for the
maintenance of the great armies of
Europe. (Hear, hear.)
Fruits as Food and Medicine.
BY JXO. STAIN BACK WIL805, M. D.
Now that the fruit season will soon
be here, it will doubttess be interest
ing aud highly useful to our readers
to learn something of the nutriveness,
digestibility, wholesomeness, medicin
al action, and proper use of the fruits
and vegetables with which God has
so abundantly blessed our earth. Bat
while they are blessings, they, like
many other blessings, have been con
verted into curses through the igno
rance and perversity of mankind. Yet
the fruit kingdom affords an almost
endless variety of delicious and whole
some food, and, iu many cases, the
best of medicines, when properly
used.
Dr. Paris truly says: "Were we
to form an opiuiou of their value from
their abuse, we should certainly be
rather disposed to class them under
the head of poisons than of aliments."
Now let us inquire .why this is so.
Is it hecause most fruits are unwhole
some in themselves? or is it because
they are improperly used ? Evident
ly the latter is the true reason. A be
neficent Providence never intended to
afflict, but to bless, the human fami
ly by giving them a bountiful supply
of fruit pleasant to the eye and sweet
to the taste. What, then, is the trou-
4Ie? How comes it that such bless
ings are perverted till they may be
compared with the
" Fi uit of that forbidden tree,
Whose mortal taste brought
Death into our world,
And all our woe" f
The great error in the use of fruits
consists in crowding the stomach with
them when it is already full ; in eat
ing them al all times between meals
when there is no natural demand nor
desire for them. When taken along
with food, as food1 in moderation, or
as a desert, when the stomach is not
over full, they are highly conducive
to health ; and, as the writer quoted
above very truly says, "they appear
to be providentially sent at a season
when the body requires that coolii g
aud antiseptic aliment which they are
so well calculated to afford." The
correct rule for the use of fruits is to
use them moderately between meals,
and at meals, as a part of the meal, or
as a dessert, when the stomach is not
overloaded with other food. Though
desserts are, as a general thing, ob
jectionable, because taken when the
stomach is already full, fruits are
much more wholesome, r hen taken in
this way, than the pastries, cakes, etc.,
generally used as desserts.
Let us now briefly pass in review
the different kinds of fruit, consider
ing them in relation to nutriveness,
digestibility, etc.
Of all the fruits with which we are
blessed, the peach is the most deli
cious and digestible. There is noth
ing more palatable, wholesome and
medicinal than good, ripe peaches.
They should be ripe, but not over
ripe and half rotten ; and of this kind
they may make a part of either meal,
or be eaten between meals ; but it is
better to make them a part of the reg
ular meals. It is a mistaken idea
that no fruits should be eaten at
breakfast, or before breakfast. It
would be far better if oar people
would eat less bacon and grease at
breakfast, and more fruit. In the
morning, there is an acrid state of the
secretions, aud nothing is so well cal
culated to correct this as cooling sub
acid fruits, such as apples, peaches,
etc. Still, most of us have been taught
that eating fruit before breakfast is
highly' dangerous. How the idea
originated I know not; but it is cer
tainly a great error, contrary both to
reason and facts.
Plums are less digestible than peach
es, on account of their pulp; and all
pulpy stone fruits are more or less in
digestible, in proportion to the quan
tity of this pulp, which is likely to
cause fermentation, resulting in diar
rhoea. This is a frequent trouble in
children, who often eat them half ripe,
and who frequently swallow them
pulp, seeds and all. The juice alone
should be taken into the stomach, and
this is wholesome.
The apple is one of the best of fruits.
Baked or stewed apples will general
ly agree with the most delicate stom
ach, and are an excellent medicine in
many cases of sickness. Green or
half-ripe apples, stewed and sweeten
ed, are pleasant to the taste, nourish
ing, cooling and laxative, being far
preferable, in nsany cases, to the
abominable doses of salts and oil usu
ally given in fevers and other diseas
es. Raw apples, and dried apples
stewed are better for constipation than
most liver pills.
Oranges are very acceptable to most
stomachs, having all the advantages
of the acid alluded to; bnt the juice
alone should be taken, rejecting the
pulp.
The same may be said of lemons,
pomegranates, and all that class.
Lemonade is the best drink in fevers;
and when thickened with sugar, is
better than syrup of squills and other
nauseous drags, in many cases of
ccnghs.
Tomatoes act on the liver and bow
els, and are much more pleasant and
safe than blue mass and "liver regu
lators." The juiee should be used
alone, rejecting the skins.
The small -seeded fruits, such as
black trries, figs, raspberries, straw
berries, grapes, etc., may be classed
among the best foods and medicines.
The sugar in them is notricious, the
acid is cooling and purifying, and the
seeds are laxative. We would be
much the gainer if we wonld look
more to our gardens and orchards for
our medicines, and less to our drug
stores. To core a fever or act on the
kidneys, no febrifuge or diuretic is
superior to watermelons, which may,
with very few exceptions, be takeu iu
sickness and in health, in almost un
limited qualities, not onlv without in
jury, but with positive benefit. But
a . i fi a -
in using them, the water or juice
should be taken, excluding the pulp ;
the melons should be fresh aud ripe,
bnt net over-ripe and stale.
Id another article I may have some
thing to say of peas, beans, nuts; cab
bages, col lards, etc.
A Brave Young Man. At Cor
ney Island, Wednesday, a little
daughter of Henry Benedict, of Phil
adelphia, whilst playing on the beach,
was struck by a high wave and car
ried off her feet. The father and an
other daughter, who were iu a car
riage, plunged into the water to save
the child, but in an instant all their
lives were in peril. At this juncture
Charles H. Bi liars, aged 19 years, a
Newark bookkeeper, plunged, into
the water and reached the girls, who
had floated some distance. He swam
with them until he reached a footing
on the sand, and dragged them be
yond the breakers. Bi liars dashed
in again and succeeded in dragging
the father to land, and then he fell
unconscious. Several persons arrived
in time to lift the form of the gallant
lad and rub him to consciousness.
Bi liars modestly refused to accept a
money compensation, when Mr. Ben
edict pressed upon him a superb gold
repeater, which he took from his
Docket, with a omhl chain and seals
I 1 o J: -I
attached, and also a diamond ring of
considerable value.
Helena, Mont., June 27. At 3
o'clock Saturday morning while the
coach from Deer Lodge for Helena
was crossing the main ridge of the
Rocky Mountains, 18 miles west of
this city, two men with haukerchiefs
tied across the lower part of their
faces, stepped from the bushes and or
ed the driver to halt. John McGr
mick, a post-trader at Fort Missoula,
was on the box with the driver and
drawing a six-shooter quicky opened
fire on the highwaymen. One was
badly hurt and crawled back into the
bush. The other returned McCor
raick's fire aud seriously wounded one
of the horses. The other team took
fright and ran and was soon out of
the range of the robbers. Three oth
er passengers were on board but were
unharmed. The treasure box was on
the coach following the one attacked.
Cubing Cloveb. Iu curing clo
ver the sun is only necessary to wilt
it after cutting. Wheu this is well
done, the clover should be put in
cocks, sn.all at the base, but as high
as they can well be made. The cocks
may be tramped some in making. In
a day or two they become hot within
and must be opened out, but not un
til all dew and raiu has dried off.
Take the cock down in flakes without
shaking to pieces, aud expose to the
sun. After being thus exposed for
an hour or two, the clover can be re
moved to the stack or mow. Each
layer in the stack should have a light
sprinkling of salt.
The Philadelphia medical ghoul,
Hathaway, M. D., was in the habit of
feeding dogs on dead Ladies. His
wife says : "Large and ferocious
hounds were in the cellar, andyou
could hear them gnawing and tearing
the tender flesh from the little bones.
The brutes were allowed to feast on
more than one human body, and they
seemed to relish the awful meal."
This beats the Tewksbury tanning.
WU. Star.
New Orleans, June 28. A Times-Democrat
special from Greenville, Texas,
gives a different account of tho lynching
of the negroes who committed the rap
upon a young lady near Jefferaon, than
has been published elsewhere. It stab s
A- nt them was hanged and the
111 (ft l ""- "
other burned to death yesterday.
1,000,000 POINDS OF
DRIED
FRUIT
KLUTTZ & RENDLEMAN'S!
They hare just received a new soppTy of SUMMER GOODS, which they offer very
cheap, with a full assortment of
Dry Goods, Notions, ClothinS, Funushhig (hods.
Their Stock of Family Groceries is large and complete. They still have the best
Floor. Oat Meal. Meats, Sugars. Teas. Coffees. Rice. Meal. Brae. Shorts,
New Orleans Molasses, Syrups, Pore Lard. &c.
A foil assortment of Family Medicines. FRUIT JARS cheap and all kiockv
Table and Glassware, A Good Stock. Agents for Coats' Spool Cotton.
Still have a plenty of Five Cents Tinware. JTCome and see us before you buy or
sell, for we will do you good. w. W. Tatlo, ) 0 ,
July 4th, 188S. I, j. Bostian, Sl".
iV
s
ffOSIiFERv
STOMACH f
ITTEBS
No time slionl 1 1 lost if the otonvw'i, lift
anil bow. I ur? Iftii- I-1, In a. In; t tin' Mirv
remedy, lloaii-ili-r'a u.il:h Ii llitti rs. Dis-f:is-
t' tin- organs naiiRtl iii p-t tlHra far
more scrioti, aul :i ilt-l.iy is, tinTrl'nrv, haz
ardous. l)yisM ji-ia, liver complaint, chills
and lexer, i-arly rheumatic twinges, kidney
weakness, briii" wrioiw lodi!y trouble It
trifled with. I .one no timu ia Uaiu thid
effective uud sate medicine.
1'ur sale by ull IrugisU aud Dealers
jjeuerally.
1 lie back ward stale of agriculture at
the South is shown iu the ahseuce of im
proved agricultural implements. Our
farming tooU are of the simplest and fro
qiieiitly of the oldest patterns. 1 hey are
not la I mm Having. They are not cotUly to
buy but they are cost I v to work. They
are a load for our farmers to carry be-
e;uise they are ineffective and do not fill
lv iii-et tli. renuircinents of our situation
We have made some figures that illus
trate the difference between the South
and the other sections of the Uuion in
this matter.
In speaking of hands we mean hands
over sixteen years of age. To the hand
the average value of agricultural imple
ments in North Carolina is $20, Georgia
$15, Mississippi $15, South Carolina $12
and Alabama $12. That gives an idea of
how the matter stands at the South. The
tools to the hand are worth between $12
aud $20.
At the North and West a different pic
ture is presented. In Pennsylvania the
average value of agricultural tools to the
hand is $125; in New Jersey $125; Min
nesota, Iowa ttud California $100; Illin
ois ami Kansas $80; Connecticut aud
Ohio $75. '1 he difference is evident. Those
who have the best tools can do the best
work. How can workmen who have
tools costing but $12 compete with others
whose tools cost $125 f lo not the lat
ter have every advantage ? As a conee
quencc we find the latter being better
equipped at the North is more protitable
than at the South. The hands produce
more and they are worth more. Let our
progressive farmers think over these facts
aud put the ball iu motion.
- While a Cincinnati wite whipper was
plying his vocation the other evening his
long suffering victim retaliated with a
brick, and her legal supporter is now the
object of much concent in the City Hos
pital. We chronicle with pleasure this
indication that the women are about to
assert their rights. Tnnn-itar.
In truth there is to day a morn cordial
feeling in the North toward the Southern
people, and a heartier sympathy with the
efforts of the latter to develop their pros
perity aud well-being, than there has
beeu at any time during the hist 40 or 50
years.
A party ot six gentlemen and five la
dies are to leave Washington city this
week for a tour in the Virginia moun
tains. They will foot it, carrying two
tents for the ladies anil one for the gel -tio.orn
in their bairgage wagon. There
will be no servants, tho ladies doing the
rooking aad the gentlemen Ihe heavy
woik. They will lay in a g d supply
of health. AVir 0'&.
'-9f$ejK-BBB5s-sV JLKalAm
ipitoriMMBjMjWH
Al BERRIES
AT
.Tsl.
J. R. KEEN",
Salisbury, N. C.
Apt for PHCENIX IRON WORKS,
Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills,
TURBINE" WHEELS
Also, Contractor and Builder
Ja 85, 'S3. I y
EALTHCORSET
Increases in popularity
erery day, as ladies And it
the moat
tpSFOKTaBLS
ASP
PERFECT MTTIMJ
eiwMt tvrr worn. Mcr
chauta - ay it pivcathebct t
f.tisuittion f any corset
therrvcr tohl- Warrant d
Mtiffactnry or money rc
itrulcd. Vt.r sale lir
J. D. GASKILL only,
17:tf Salisbury, N. 0.
A COOB ( OW anil CAM?
FOR SALE I
A good Cow, of medium age, and a Tung
calf, will be sold at a fair price. Cow ts
giving milk. AppJy at this Office.
30:3t pd.
XOTICG TO CREDITORS
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 the 28th day of May
1884, or this notice will be plead in br of
t heir recovery. J. W. TURNER.
This, 28th day of May, 1883. 6-!
Administrator's Notice !
Having qualified as administrator ofthe
estate of Lawson J. Peeler. decM, sol ice is
hereby given to all creditors to exhibit
their claims to me on or before the 30lh
day ef J,uuc, 1884, and all persons indebted
to the estate arc rcuncstcd losmlto
j diate payment. ALFRED L. PEELER,
L, . . , Adm'r of Lawson J. Peeler,
Craige & Clement, f '
Attorneys.
Dated May 23, 1883.
till gj-gnEr
mi HPS m
r H aJ5 m. 8?
ii sli si!
is!; HI ?sS
mi Hh6 - a
m c. $ if; if
i M " 3lo i'l
i n :,' w $
U m
I
t
(. 184-
H i- '