L llG Carolina Watchman. T. -THIRD SERIES SALISBUHY. N. C, JULY 12, 1883. SO - roit xiv - ! ! lt The Carolina Watchman, iSlABUSHED IN TflE YEAR irJ. i$ICBfl.M I.N AD ASfB. - For Dynpepaia, Coat ivc Beta, Sick Headache, Chronic Diav rlKca, Jaundice, Impurity of the i ,i..ol, Fever and Ague, Malaria, ami all Diseaaeft hiir-1 by I )- ntngeinent ofliver, liowcls and Kidneys. SYMPTOMS l)F A THSFASKD T.lVKR. liad Breath: ft'-ain in the Side, sometimes the .iin is filt ii'idef the Shoulder-blade, mistaken for Choumausm ; general ls ftf nppetite Bowels eixraUy eostiVe? sometimes nhemating with laa; Ihe head is irottjMcd with pain, dull and heavy, !. eoteicJerafeffc loss of memory, accompanied - a painful seffeitit.n oj lcarvt: undone something $ict; uuht to hfe licen doBfc, a slight, dry cough Hushed facets imctiics an attendant, often iulst.-k':n fr cisumpio the patient complains Sweanncss amlfWiility ; nervous, easily startled; fcil cold r burnc, sometimes a prickly sensation Sine skin exi: spirits arc low and despondent, add allhoUfrh sasficd that exercise would be bene ficial, yet one can h;irdly summon up fortitude to try it in fact, distrusts every remedy. Several lite aliove symptoms attend the disease, but cases Srv'ciu-red wiicn but.few of them existed, yet (Attinatiaa aftc death has sliowu lite Liver to kive beeaextenyely deranged. It Hhoiild lu; m 1 by all persona, old and young:, v.Hjbm-ver any of tin abt.vo s - in nt oiii npnear. llVrsnn Traveling or T.ivintr in TTn- lli-altliy l.m:uSiti-, by takinua done occaaiocv Ev to I ccti thr Liver in heakhv -cn.iu. will avoid .aii Malaria, IttlioiiH at lack's Oiziiness, N'aa- sfa, Oniwsine 'Depression w spirits, etc. It it'll invigorate like a glass of wine, but is uo in toxicating beVeraijo. If You have eaten anythfnjr hard of digestion, or fed heavy after meals, or aleep h at night, take a dose and you will be relieved. Tim'' and Doctors' Hill will be saved i by alway keeping the Regulator hi the House! or, whatever the ailment may be, a thoroughly fife purgntiv, alterative and tonic can qever b- out of place. The remedy is harmless and does not interfere Willi business or pleasure. IT IS PlTItEI.Y VKr.KTABT.K, hixl has .ill thetpower and cflfic.tcy of Calomel or hiiiUDe, without any of the injurious after e fleets. A Governor i Testimony. Simmons I.iver Regulator has ln.cn in use in my jtaiily fur Mime; time, and I am satislicd it is a raluaMe addition to the medic. .1 science. ). Gill Siiortkk, Governor of Ala. Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, of (... xys : nave ucnveu some oeiient irom tne use 01 iimtAuns I.iver :kei;ultor, and wish to give it a utk-:r lliu! I "The only" Thin that never fails to Relieve." 1 have used many remedies for Dys pepsia, I.iver AiTection ami Debility, 1 ut never have (ound anylHiing to benefit me ti the extent .tiin;n.ins I ,iver-:kegulator has. I sent from Min nesota to Georgia for it, and would send further for I such a medicine and would advise all who are-sim- 1-"il.irly affected tfi give it a tri. l as it seems the only tiling that lies cr fails to relieve. ' ft M. 'Jannet, Minneapolis, Minn. fl)r. T. W. Mason aaya 2 From actual ex perience in the fcc'of Simmons Liver Regulator in -' iy practice 1 have been and am satisfied-to use and prescribe itjas a purgative medtciue. J6Take fyiy the Genuine, which always has 011 the Wrapper the red ' Trade-Mark and Signature of J. II. ZEIL1N & CO. FOR SaIe BY ADRUGGISTS. , ABKMER &T AYLOR bAVIlsia PURCHASED STOCK O F WM. SMITHDEAL, AS WKfj; AS -THE INTEREST OF 1" 1 - S R Crawford, of the firm of R. R. CRAWFORD & CO. ' s i I V-' art; iiinv nri'inimil (o sniuiK- nur I X 'ml customers v-itl. all kimls of AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS, In iuMitiou to tliej Ihst Selected Suck or 11 A H;i W A K E iii the ! S T A T E. ft I We also handle ; 1 Rifle aim Blasting Powder ' i kF U S E ami a ful line ot Mining Supplies. 3t We will jgj puplicite Any Prices in I the State. CALLED SEE US. f I SATL TAYLOR. 50: ly RUE'S HEATHEN. The long line of blue check aprons followed the other long line of small bluejackets through the wide hall, up the bare, polished stairs, an4 Jnto the clean, airy chapel. Then, at a signal, every apron and jacket slipped into its appointed place and the large room was still. Little Rue's apron had been about midway in the procession, and so she found a seat near the mid dle of the chapel, where swinging the small feet that could not touch the floor, she looked listlessly out through the window opposite, over a beautiful view of grove and meadow, and then np at the white ceiling, whejre a great Ayr buzzed tA his pleasure, without having to walk in Hue. On the platform a man in fine broadcloth and gold spectacles was be ginning to talk ; but Rue only listen ed dreamily. "My dear children, I am delighted to visit this grand institution to see so many of you iu this beautiful Home I so wel I cared for, so well instructed i 1 1 n aim so nappy. Rue wondered why all the men who talked there said that. jShe wonder ed if he really would like to eat and sleep and walk in a row and always wear a blue checked apron. Then she forgot all about him, in watching the sunlight play on the small head im mediately in front of her. What a brilliant red head it was I And then a bright thought occurred to Rue. A few of those hairs, twisted together, would make a beautiful chain for the neck of her china doll, her one treas ure; and, of course, Ma: 7 Jane Sulli van would never miss them, if she only pulled out one here and there. Forward crept Rue's, eagar little fingers; but they were too nervous in their haste to be sure that they held but a single coarse hair before they twitched"; and the result was a sudden explosive "Ow !" from Mary Jane, the turning of a battery of eyes in that direction, and an immediate investiga tion by the authorities into the cause of the disturbance. Poor little Rue was marc!. oil off in disgrace ;. but, aSJ she leached the door, she heard the speaker say : "I am sorry this has happened ; sor ry that any one should miss what 1 am going to say ; for I hope to inter est all these dear children in the work of sending the gospel to the heathen." it was kind of him to call them all dear children, after that dreadful event, Rue reflected, as, with burning cheeks and tearful eyes, she tood, with a number of other little culprits in one ojhe wide halls, for even pun ishment was in rows at the Home. Shifting her weight from oiie restless fot to the other, yet trying to stand sufficiently upright to answer the re quirements of the penance, Rue diJ sincerely wish that . she had been a good girl aud remained quietly iu the chapel, partly because of the humilia tion that had befallen her, but also because she wanted to hear what he had to say on the particular subject he had named. "Why didn't he begin with that? and then I'd have listened !" she thought, rather resentfully. For back .among Rue's few shadowy memories of the past, of love, and mother, and aphonic that was not the Home, was a dim recollection of some curious arti cles which her baby hands had only been allowed to touch carefully, be cause they were mementos of an uncle who had died far away on a mission field. "So it would have been most like hearing about my relations; only I havn't got any," mused Rue. "Oh, dear ! I wish I'd staid good and hadn't pulled Mary Jane's hair. I didu't meati to anyway." She tried to find out about it aft er ward, by inquiring of one of lite oth er girls. 'Oh! he wanted the children to try and save up something, so they could help send Bibles to the heathen. Guess,Hf he lived here long, he'd find we hadn't anything to save,' was the reply. Bibles ! That was where Rue was rich. She actually had two that had been brought from that faintly re membered home. --I don't s'pose I'll read One of 'cm to pieces ; not if 1 used it till I'm a big woman,' she said to herself. 'I might give the' other one. I ought to help, 'count of being a relation, somehow, and I want to be good. 1 just do.' Liter iu the day she ventured an other inquiry. How will he get those Bibles to the heathen ?' 'I don't know. Why, yes, he'll send 'cm through the post-office, of course. What do you care so much about it for? That was what Rue did not mean to tell. She chose her prettiest Bible, spent the play-hours of two days iu writing an epistle on the i fly-leaves, aud tied it up in a piece of brown pa per. Her knowledge of the post-office and its requirements Was exceed inly limited ; but she supposed it would be necessary to put something on the cutside of the package, to tell ful whom it was intended. She want- ed it to go where it was needed the most, and, of course, the post-office people would know where that was,! she reflected ; so she carefully printed, ! in very uneven letters; "For the greatest heathen," and then laid the w prccious package away, to await a lu- ture opportunity. She would trust j her secret to noone, lest some unforseen interference might result, and she cau- tiously sought information. now do yon do when you put any- thing into the post-office ?' she de- manded of Mary Jane Sullivan Why, you just put 'em in. You go in the door, and there's an open place where you drop 'em right down exclaimed Mary Jane, lucidly. How good Rue was for days after : that. How she washed dishes in the kitchen, under the care of Miss Djr- J forthy, and made beds iu the dormito- nes, untier me supervision 01 airs. Mehitable, and so, at last, earned the privilege of being the one sent to town on some trilling errand for the mat ron. Thus it happened that one bright morning the clerks in the post-office were surprised by a little package tossed in upon the floor, and a glimpse of a blue cheeked apron vanishing hurriedly through the door. Un stamped and with its odd address, it created a ripple of amusement. " 'For the greatest heathen.' That must be you, Captain," declared one ; and the post-master laughingly, took charge of it, and theu forgot it until, at home that evening, he found it in his pocket. 'What is it?' asked his wife, pres ently, as she saw him silent and ab sorbed ; and, looking over his shoul der. she read the little letter with him. Original in spelling ami uecirliar in Writing it certainly was, but they i slowly deciphered it : "I haven t any money to mvc 'cause I'm one of the little girls at the Home. Some of them have rela- tions to send them things sometimes; but I haven t. I have two Bibles; tain "red meat and black seed they pay but I wouldn't give this to any one their money and take them along when, but the heathen, 'cause my own ' all probability they were, when pulled mama a gave it to me. It's nice "as green as gourds." Thumping cannot to have a mamma to cuddle be relied on for selecting a good melon, you up and love you just by your own self, and tuck you into bed at night, and not have to be put in a row all the time. It makes a lump alt swell up in my throat when I think about it, aud ir;y eyes get so hot and wet 1 can hardly see. 1 wish God did have homes enough, so he could give every. little boy ami girl a real one, and we needn't be all crowded up iu one big place, that's ju-t called so. Sometimcs, when 1 .see all the houses, it most seems as if there must be enough to go 'round ; but I s'pose there isn't. I guess it'll be the real kind we'll have up in heaven, and I Want to go there; and that's why I send you this Bible, so you can laara about it. You must read it and be good. Oh ! dear ! It's dreadful hard to be good when you haven't any mamma. I hope you've got one, if she is a heathen, for I'm mast sure that's belter than no kind. Good-bye. liUE LlXDSKY." 'Poor little thing!' exclaimed the lady, half laughing, but with a sud den moisture in her brown eves. a Captain Grey looked around the beautiful room. 'I'm inclined to believe that letter was properly directed and has reach ed its rightful destination,' he said, thoughtfully. 'Think of it, Mary all those cosy, pretty rooms, and no one to occupy them but you and me, while there arc so many homesick souls iu the world ! You have spoken of it before ; but I was too selfishly contented to care about it. If I am not 'the greatest heathen,' I have cer tainly been far enough from the sort of Christianity this book requires.' 'Well ?' questioned Mrs. Grey, with shilling eyes, waiting for the conclu sion of the matter. 'Shall I go to-morrow and bring this little midget home with mc for a visit, say aud see what will come of it?' It did not occur to little Hue that the stranger she met iu the hall the next day, and Who had a long inter view with the matron, could be of! any possible interest to her small self, until she was summoned down stairs to see him. 'Would you like to go home with this gentleman, for a visit of u week or two, Rue ? He has come to see you,' said the matron. 'Me?' questioned Reu, oblivious of grammar lessons and with a dozen exclamation points in her voice. There was no danger of her declining. The prospect of a visit anywhere was delightful, aud the possibility of such a thing almost as wonderful as a fairy tale. iSo it jwas a, very bright little face that Capt. Grey found beside 1 rim in the carriage, and Rue looked up at him shyly, through her rings of sunny hair, to ask, a-s the only imag inable solution of the happy problem: 'Are you one of" my relations ? 'Yes; but I didu't remember it un til last night,' he answered gravely. The weeks. that followed were brim ful of joy to Rue, and she won her way straight into the home and hearts that had opened to received her. 'And so you think 1 may tell the matron that yon do not care to go ! back, but are willing to stav here? w w questioned the Captain, when the al- lotted time had expired 'I guess,' replied Rue, looking down at her dainty, ruffled attire and sud- I denly flinging her arms around Mrs. ' Grey's neck, that you didn't ever live , there, aud eat soup, and wear check 1 aprons, and have nobotty Hkje this to love, or else you'd know I But she has not learn yet that it ' was her own missionary effort that brought so great reward. Kate W. Hamilton in N. Y. Independent. m m Watermelons, . If PuUcd Tihejf hare properj9 Xa- tared.UnhmlthtfUon kiVUooseiiGoQti Melon A Prcvcnure 0 Ckille and Fever --A New Remedy for Chills aud Fevert. . Cor. Washington Evening Star. As the melon season is close at hand I will for the benefit of the inexperienced otter some suggestions relative to select ing and using this most excelleut fruit, and thus enable them to discard green ones, as well as those that have been pulled before ripe, both of which are un fit for use. High prices are m great in ducement for getting them to market ear ly, consequently they are generally pull ed several days too soon. It is true they afterwards ripen, but they are never so good. The pulp become tough, and if eaten in any considerable quantity is lia- ble to produce cholera morbus. I once knew a person who had to send for a pbysician double quick in consequence of . having eaten a melon that had doubtless ' L'eeu Pu "eu before ripe, it sucn melons be eaten at. all the pulp should not lie swallow, but merely chewed up for the water it contains. Many people have no certain way of telling when melous are pe, have them plugged. If they con- r luey nre frequently puiteu ami leu several days in the sun to wilt and ripen before being carried to market. They thus acquire the necessary dead sound when thumped, such as will deceive the best of Judges. As the growers of melons appear to resort to every artihee for palming off their Unripe fruit, I will now give some simple rules for selecting a good melon, and general observation of which would dotitflless result in compell- j,tg them to permit their melons to remain on the vines matured. until they have properly HOW TO SKf.KCt A (lOOD MKI.OK. The rinds of melons, w hen left on the vines to mature, generally become hard, and the pulp bi itlle. If the melon be gently borne on aud you hear the inside crack or give way it may be regarded as a sure sigu that the melon matured on the vine aud is consequently a good one. Another good plan for selecting a mel on is to examine the side that lay on the ground. If the melon lemuiued on the vine until properly matured this portion will be fouud to have changed from a white to a pale yellow, aud, upon a close examination, numerous small pimples, somewhat like the measles, as it were, will be noticed on said surface, parti cularly near the outer edge. These pimples may be regarded as a sure indi cation that the melon remained ou the vine until mature, as they uever appear ou those that have been prematurely pulled. Sometimes this desirable pale yellow is produced prematurely by turn ing this portion of the melon to the sun for a day or two. Iu this case the yellow is apt to be too deep. This fact iu con ncctiou with the absence of pimples, will readily tell the experienced eye how said color was produced. MELONS A PKKVEKfrlVK. OY CHI 1.1.8 ASD PETKUS. Melons are a mild aperient, and if ea ten properly will keep the bowels free and regular, tlms preventing chills and fevers generally. But, to insure these results, the melons should be of good quality and eaten regularly, say twice a day at such hours as will least interfere with meals. For a few days at the first of season they should be partaken, of sparingly, gradually increasing the quan tity. If partaken of too freely at the start they are apt to derange the bowels but if you will siiok to them, eating for a while sparingly, you will soon become acclimated, as it were, and will thrence foi th be all right for the remainder of the season, provided they are eaten regularly. Rut if eat irregularly, say freely for sev ral days and then none for several days, the bowels w ill bo apt to undergo corres ponding changes from an aperient to a costive state, aud disease may be the re sult. Of course, it would be laid to the melons, when it was merely attributable to the irregular manner iu which they had been eaten. To prove that melons when regularly eaten, will not produce sickness, especially chills and fever, which are so ofteu laid to their charge, I will cite a case where they were actually instrumental iu effecting a cure: d - new remedy for chills ajco feter. Some years ago I was in a mining towu in California during the melon season, As melons and fruits generally had to be hauled in wagons a distance of some twenty miles, I could not procure them with the usual regularity. Upon one occasion my supply of melons gave out aud I remarked to an acquaintance that as a result I expected 1 would hav&a chill. Sure enough, one day while eu- gaged in a mine I was taken with a very severe chill. I spread ont in the un with all the extra coats that could be gathered around piled our imt ef course eonld not keep warm. Just about' this time a supply of melous arrived and I commenced eating them heartily. I had a craving appetite tor oysters aud vine gar, hot little or uo appetite for auything else except melons. I procured from an vdjaceut store some llaltimore canned oysters and consumed about three cans daily, served with strong viucgar, aud between, meals ate heartily of melous. Strange as it may seem, these two mcdi- cities combined, without any medicines whatever, cured the chills as thoroughly as could have been done by means of quinine or any other remedy. I had oivly oue chill. The philosophy of the matter is this: The melons reopened the bowels which had probably become costive, and the oysters, being a strong diet, strength ened nature, thus enabling her to throw off the disease and restore the system to hr normal condition. The fact that the chills were completely eradicated while using melous must be conclusive proof that they will not produce chills, if eaten regularly. I afterwards spent much of my time during several melon seasons in Marys- ville, a city much addicted to chills, by reason of adjacent swamps aud low lauds. I ate melons regularly and had no chills, whilst many who were afraid of them had chills. I have never been in any place where chills appeared to be so prevalent as iu Mary s ville, and I will give it as my opinion that melons, regularly eaten would do more to eradicate them than any other means that could be devised. They would doubtless be cheaper 'thayi doctors' bills, to say nothing of the coin forts incident to avoiding sickness. After a person becomes used to earing melons they may be used to the fullest extent, even becoming a substitute for water for weeks at a time without pro ducing the least injurious effect. In fact 1 if used regularly to this extent, fevers generally would lie consigned tot he back- ... a a a . J" grouuir. At the close ot the melon Rea son fruits, euch as apples, should be ea ten freely to keep the bowels regular un til the time for chills pass. The princi pal danger of sickness occurs after the melons have given out, and in order to successfully pass this point it will bcuec essory to exercise considerable care es ecially in regard to diet. Htgikxe. Something's broken loose at Wash ington. One Clifton Sylvester, who signs himself secretary pro tern., tells us a harrowing tale about Great Bri tain, aud bids us prepare for the next war. To that end he insists that a new generation demands new parties, new issues, new leaders. What, this nation wants, what this nation de mands and what this nation will have, scr eec 1 1 es CI i lion Sy I v es t e r , is a i e Issue. And, sayeth this uukifwu oracle, the greatest, highest, imjhlest issue today is what shall be our for eign policy? For the purpose of de termining that issue the Democrats and Republican parties are both to be sent, to Coventry and a new party -is to arise composed of "all citizens loy al to their country," whose prime ob ject is to beard the British lion in his den and electing a Northern ad a Southern President and Vice-President to present a united country against a foreign foe. Mr. Sylvester is going to call his little party the Na tional, and "it will win," says he, "at every presidential election until its mission is accomplished." What a glorious destiny ! We fear Mr. Clifton Sylvester is a little premature; and soinewh it wreck less. The South with her 5,000,000 bales of cotton which England consumes, would hardly wish to cut 01T this demand and reduce the price of cotton to three cents a pound. The West that sends to England three hundred millions of dollars worth of provisions would hardly quarrel with heir customer. The mercantile North that lives by its foreign traffic would ndt care to see "gras growing" in the streets of its commercial emporiums. And so we apprehend that a war with England would please no one save oulv Mr. Clifton Sylvester and few protected iron workers. The truth is Mr. Sylvester seems to be a political dude. News- Observer. Pigs, in Summer. The practice of some of the best farmers now is to keep pigs, through the suinnwr on green food, cut and carried to the pens, with a little grain, and what! milk can be spared after butter making. Spring pigs are thus made to weigh 200 uo u uds at seven months old, and except in the last mouth, they get lit tle grain. The best time to sell such pigs is at the beginning of cold weath er" usually in October. i 1,000,000 POI NDS OF DRIED FRUIT AID BERRIES KLUTTZ & RENDLEMAN'S! They have just received anew supply of SUMMER GOOD3, which they offer vcr cheap, with a fun assortment of Dry Goods, Notions, CotliinG, FurnisMxfe Goods, Their Stock of Family Groceries is large and complete. They still have the b Flour, Oat Meal. Meats, Sugars, Teas, Coffees, Rice. Heal, Bran, Short New Orleans Molasses, Syrups, Pure Lard, &c. A full assortment of Family Medicines. FRUIT JARS cheap and all kind?. Table and Glassware, A Good Stock. Agents for Coats' Spool Cottor Still have a plenty of Five Cents Tinware. rCssne and see us before you buy o sell, for we will do you good. Joly 4th, 1883. No time Blior.ll be lost if tlie tm.arfi, MW aim bow, U arc afiuctiHl, to ali t the sure remedy, IloaU-tu-r's Stouiuch Mtu-m. Dis eases of the orpins named bcgi t others far more serious, and a dvljy id, tm-refore, haz ardous. Dyspepsia, liver complaint, chills and fi-vcr, e'acly rheumatic twinges, kidney weakness, brinr serious bodily trouble if trilled with. Lose no time ia using this effeciiv and sale medicine. For sole by &11 DrnpftUU and Dealers generally. Paper houses arc coming into" use in Eogiand, where for some purposes they arc fouud greatly supr'mr to tents. Shooting boxes twelve feet square were found convenient both to use and transport, and, the material being impervious to moisture, the little cot tages arc satisfactory from a sanitary point of view, it is said that they will be used at the seaside during the coining season, not only for bathing houses, but as resiliences for quiet bachelors of contemplative habits. An exchange discussing the value of irood roads says, that modern ex periment gives the following restilt.of the resistance to traction on common and paved roads. Say that one horse will draw 1,000 on a common dirt road ; he will draw on the same incli nation : Paved with gravel - - 2,100 lbs Paved with broken stone - 4,200 lbs On well made pavement - (J, 000 lbs This illustrates the practical advan tages of well made roads ; but there is another advantage. No matter how fine the larger portion of the road may be if there is a bad part deep mud or a high hill the load must be no greater than the team can haul through the mud up hill. The wrost part of the road limits the amount of the load; and therefore not merely should the road-bed be kept in gd condition, but the hills should be graded, etc. We at the South are backward in this road business, and the sooner we mend our ways the better. Neics-Oba. CtrUBYlNG Cows. It is claimed bv the advocates of cow currying that it cleanses the hide of superfluous hairs, keeps it active and healthful, aud void of that peculiar odor so com monly found in milk ami sometimes in butter; that it promotes the secre tion and disposition of the putrid par ticles of the animal system which would otherwise be absorbed by the secretory glands and be carried off in the milk, and leaves the latter not only purer but better, and gives pro nijse to the butter-maker of a higher -olor and a purer flavor to the drum, hence a hitter price in the market. W. W. Taylor, ) a J. E. KEEN, Salisbury, N. C. Aunt for PHffiNII IRON WORK Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, AND TURBINE WHEELS Also, Contractor and Builder Ja 25. 'S3. ly EALTHCORSET Increases In nopnlaril every day, as ladies find U the most OltFOltTAIM.E A!D PT.ltWKCT FITTING cort4 ev.-r worn. Ifffr ch;iuts vay it elves Uie bet Batlsfaction oLnnj corsi t thctycrcr fold. Warrant i ntf?factory or money -fBiidtd. For sate by J. D. GAS2ILL only, 17:tf Salisbury, N. C. 5 5 r .03! jr$ H K 9R A ;30I COW and CALF FOR SALE! A ooo( Cow, of imMium age, and a yuoj calf, wll be sold at a fair prices. Cow is giving milk. Apply ftt this Office. iJ0:3t pJ. NOTICE TO CREDITORS ALL Persons having claims against the estate of Wilson Tnrjncr, rtecM, are herein notrripfl to exhibit tlfe samc'tti the under signed on or before (lie 28th day of May. or thi notice will be plead in bar i' their recovery. .L V. TURNKR. A din 'r. This, 28th day of May, 18S3. Gt pi. Administrator's Notice " Having qualified is administrator of the estate of Lawson J. reefer, dee'd, coliee !ix hereby given to al) creditors' to vxiiW. their claims to me qn or bvlme the day of June, 1884, rind :dl persons inth ho to the estate are rcqjutsti d to make imtut diate payment. ALr'HKD L. PKELLK, AdnVr of Lawsuit J Pceiwi Craigc & Clement, ( Attorneys. ( Dated May 23. 18 . ii si wife its If. 23A I P.5?! s. t3 y. - y In h 1 I m u - i I

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