The Carolina Watchman. VOL XVn.-THIED SEEIES SALISBURY, H. C, DECEMBER 24, 1885. VA 1A , L - n ft Q 1 1 3 M -a -3 o J b w Go m m g a S3 Q H O a 53 S Q CD M g IT o 3 O o 3 CD E be H s o r. s a CD 0" - i P3 o -d Si 7T (L 3 I 3 go O - "i C 3 if O e 3" 3 CO 3 O s n n 2 H 2. n' 3 s ft . rtm to O it m 8 s THE GREAT EXTERNAL REMEDY! KLUTTZ'S TOBACCO L1NIENT FOB RHEUMATISM, G0lT,l NEU RALGIA, SPRAINS, BRUISES, PAINS, ACHES, AC. -Combining the wonderful curative virtue of To bacco, with other -approved rubefacients, uiukibg murvelous compouud for the. relief of huuiau sul fertng .tw- RELIEF GUARANTEE. ITS ACTION IS WONDERFUL.. Suffer no longer. Be humbugged with quack ur-alls no longer. Tobacco hi Nature's Ureal Rciaedy. H has been ted In a crude way trom ihrt daraof Sir Walter Kalelgh down, and has work ad Dkioy t marvelous cure, and saved many a valu able Ufe. lathe "iobaceo Liniment" Its trtues ar aclenCltlcally extr.icted, cotublaed with other abl medical agenta, aud conlldeutly offered 10 ht ytlfellc, not as a cure-all, but as a safe, powerful ffeetlT External Kemedy, applicable wher ever (here U pain to be relieved. It largo bottles at only 25 cents. For ale by all Druggists. Akfur it, and in sist upon having it. Don't be put off with Worthless substitutes. Try it and yoa will be thankful for haying had it brought to Jour 'attention. THEO. P. KLUTTZ ft CO., Wholesale Druggists, Proprietors, (30:3m Sxusbuky, N. C. COME QUICK! DELAYS ARE DANGEROUS ! ! J, SL McCUBBINS has just returned from the Northern cities . with the LARGEST ft BEST SELECTED Stock (f Goods that he has ever offered to the public; consisting of Dry Goods, Gro ceries, Hats, Boots and Shoes, Sole Leather, Crockery and Guecns-ware, Clothinu, Pro vision Wood and Willow ware, ice. Also a full line of FERTILIZE R8 of the very best .brands, viz : BAKER'S Well Tried FOR WHEAT MEURYMAJTS A. D. Bone " WALKER'S Ground Bone 4k NATURAL Guano Just from .Grchillo, Guano on and supposed the only Natural the market. - (Jo and get Testimonials and if you want to save money, don't forget to call on him before bu viii either Goods or Fertilizers. Salisbury. Get. 1, I880, 23:tf DEBILITY IX ADULTS 13 often eaused by worms. The chunge from cliild to 11 1 a 11 hood ia not sufficient to rid the system of this awful pliigue. Shriiiers Indian Vermifuge will expel thvm aiid restoi v hrjlJi aud a bright jeoiuplexivUb Enochyille, N. C, Dec. 15th,. 1885. Dear Watchman: By request of friends, I furnish you the following bit of news. At a call session of the . L. Synod of North Carolina, held in Mt. Pleas ant, N. C, for the purpose of considering- the interests of North Carolina College, it was decided to try to raise an endowment fund of $30,000 during the next five years. ftOOO, to be raised withfn the bounds of Synod. Rev. W. Kimball, the great church builder of Synod, was unanimously chosen as the agent to raise said fund. $15,000 to be raised in the church at large. Rev. P. W. E. Peschau of Wilmington, N. C. was chosen as agent io raise this amount. A good choice. These agents are to have a salary, and their work is to begin with 1886. They are under the supervision of a committee of five, viz: Revs. J. A. Linn, C. A. Rose, B. S. Brown, Hon. H. H. Mc Alister, and Jesse W. Miller, Esq. If any men can raise an endowment ior North Carolina College, those cho sen will certainly do it. If lu,000 is not subscribed in nve yeare then all subscriptions will be null and void. This is-a grand and noble effort on the part of the North Carolina Synod, which numbers about 5,000 communi cant members. It will require lauda ble sacrifices and liberal giving to the move a success. W. A. L. Handling the Lariat AX ART IN WHICH THE MONTANA COW PUNCHERS TAKE GREAT PRIDE. I noticed a variety of lariats with a round-up party, nearly all of yvhick were "made of the very best quality of hemp, twisted sovery tight that it was almost impossible untwist the strands. Others were made of sinew cords, and were braded very neatly, the ends or lassoing parts being greased so as to slip easily. Their lassos are about sixty or sixty-five feet long, one-third of which forms the noose, and wheu swinging it, it is grasped a little above the loop, so as to prevent it from slip ping until launched through the air. The lasso is swung over the head and left shoulder, and back over the right shoulder, a peculiar turn of the wrist as it begins to return keeping the loop wide open. Whennying through the air the noose takes a slightly oval form, but remains open, and settles quietly around the object aimed at. Mciiaigan exhibited to me the modus operandi of handling the rope, and some of his feats performed in my presence were not only executed with marvelous pre cision, but were also beautiful to look at. The model cowboy is certainly an expert in his profession, perhaps the best rider and lassoist in the whole northwest. WJiat Slosson is to billiards McGaiaan is to his profession. One afternoon, wnile loafing around the camp fire on the Musselshell, McGaigan and I got to talking about the skill he had acquired in throwing cattle, and I had little difficulty per M. suading him to let me into the secrets of his wonderful dexterity and actually showing me some of the fine points of he business. Mounting our bronchos we rode off through the sage brush and out uponthe open ptairie, where num berless cattle were peacetully munch ing the luxuriant buffalo grass. My friend had his best lariat tastened t the pommel of the saddle, and first showed me many fancy shots, throwing th lasso from or to any point, over either shoulder, behimLor in front He caught a tremendous bull by the horns, which looked up m surprise and started off like a steam engine, but the pony bestrode by the cow boy, planted his fore feet firmly in the ground and checked Mr. Bull in his mad career be fore the latter got well started. The enraged steer went round and round in a circle at a 2:40 gait, the pony acting as a perfect pivot and turning slowly around with him; but it was.no use; the bull was a prisoner, and would have remained so had not McOaigan taken pity on him and passed the wonderful ring down the line, upon which the rope leaped from around the horns and fell to the ground. McGaigan remarked that it was no credit to catch a bull by the horns, for he cannot be thrown by them, and is simply held a prisoner, but the skill of throwing a lasso is to pitcn tne noose just in front of an animal when he is going at full gallop, so that at the next step he treads into it. He tried it on 111111.1 r another Dull wnue notn 01 our pomes were jumping along on a dead run The old fellow was going about as fast as we were, but the fatal loop shot through the air at a tangent, and fell, wide open, just in front of him on the ground. The left forefoot plunged square into the circle, tne rope was tightened with a sudden jerk, and the steer rolled over in the dust, as cleverly caught as anything I ever saw. The broncho, too, understood his part of the business thoroughly, for he bore at the right moment in the opposite direction, else he might have been thrown instead of the bull, to which he was much in ferior in weight McOaigan also caught great big steers F tlloping past at an angle by any leg named. Not once was his judgment at fault. The noose, whizzing through the air in every direction, went As true . a 1 Hi 1 ( m to the mark as a outlet snot trom a riue. - a I was much taken with the free and easy sort of life experienced by this round-up party, and enjoyed the trip and camping out experience so hugely that I was almost tempted to give up the profession of a scribe and become a cowbov mvself. but thomrht better of it next day, and, although 1 had tots ot y r - C7 un and enjoyment, I concluded that cowboy life must have its dark as well as its briidit, sunnv side.-r-.iloMfroMi Letter. dosing Up. December finds the planter with comparatively little to do on the farm, except to close up the little odd jobs that come ot the season, such as getting av n L. 1 1 v .1 t 1 inn fur -fiwil lioillltirf Hi itter to be used as needed, completing shelters for stock and such like thmgs. The corn and cotton are all secured, or should be at once; the tobacco is all in barn and nicely cured, and only awaits damp weather for stripping; potatoes and apples have been cellared Or are ready to resort preparatory to cellaring, and the hogs to be fatted are already in pen, and receiving liberal rations of corn and collards, preparatory to the slaughter. All is snug and secure all over the farm, with little work and plenty of good things to enjoy, and liigh anticipations of the near holidays. The stock farmer, however, I and poulterer has more to do. There is the daily feeding and oversight of the stock. Rat ions must be liberal and regular to he trough and rack. Milch cows need special attention. Hay alone, at this season, will not yield much milk. They must have bran or meal. Even one quart a day to each cow will be found to make a quart difference in the yield of milk, but three or four quarts ,-,i. ,U fKom ThoJuum It llUltl 1IUU I llv 11IOU 111 LHL111 I 11V OI11.1.L I should be fed daily in a sheltered sunnv place, and protected from the rams and snows when tney come, uut give them free range in dry fields in open weather. The poulterer must be on the alert for eesrs all this month and next. He must feed well, and. keep the hens warm and contented, and they will lay. In general, give them the run of the farm now. Ihey will pick insects, vii i i ii i i grass, pebbles, seeas, ana all these go far to keep them m health and laying. Feed corn at night and bone meal at noon; green leaves, fruit, &c., often. Do not erowd the stock, and keep the species as much apart as possible. At any rate, restrain quarreling and con tention, and have nests enough for the laying stock. Do not omit the bone jf you want eggs. Break and beat fine the bones from the kitchen, and if possible have the pure fresh ground for them. retersburu Messewier. A Host of Tyrants. A unique document was submitted to the henate Wednesday. It was a me morial from a Brooklyn man, urging that the government shall establish a newspaper at every first-class postoffice in the United States, to be published at public expense and for public use; such papers to be for the publication, free, of all advertisements of the people, and of the utterances and opinions of people who may choose to avail themselves of the columns of the government news papers. The memorialist sets forth that the only tyranny existing in this country is the tyranny of the press that the press is a powerful dynasty. and unless this despotism is checked and overthrown it will subvert the gov ernment, lhe only power', says the memorialist, competent to grapple with the tyrannical press is the government and he urges that government papers 1 e established. The memorial covers thirty-six pages of legal cap paper, and the opinions and grievances of the me morialists are set forth in the minutest detail. The scheme is a brilliant one. and of course will be adopted by the government with alacrity. The idea of the tvranny of the press is excellent What American newspaper man would have known he was a tyrant but for this Brooklyn discoverer? Xeics-Ob- server. Names of Multitude. little girl was near the picture of UW1' T1 Pfple may, and do, almost rfiWnf ahi'tia wUn ahA 0ni;mwi Jfany day abandon their idolized 'hero, a nu "See what a flock of ships!" We cor J . 1 . - rected her by saying that a flock of ships was called a fleet, and a fleet of sheep was called a flock. And here we may add, for the benefit of the foreign er who is mastering the intricacies of our language in respect of names of multitude, that a flock of girls is called a becy, and a bevy of wolves is called a iMick. and a pack of thieves is called a qatKi. and a gang of angels is called a host, and a host of porpoises is called a shoal, and a shoal of buffaloes is called a troop, and a troop of partridges is called a covey, and a covey of beauties is called a galaxy, and a galaxy of ruf- nans is called a horde, and a horde of 1 llJ"f. , 1 rubbish is called a heap, and a heap of oxen is called a drove, and a drove of blackguards is called a mob, and a mob of whales is called a school, and a school of worshippers is called a congregation, and a cougregation'of engineers is call- ed a corps, ana a corps ot robbers called a band, and a mind of locusts called a swarm, and a swarm of people is called a crowd, and a crowd of gen- tlefolks is called elite, and the elite the city's thieves and rascals are called roujhs, and a miscellaneous crowd city folks is called the community jmblic, accordingly as they are spoken of bv the religious community or the secular public Some of the Heroes. Joaquin millkr on butler, shkrmax, AC. Literary Life A lady from Boston, who is connec ted with a mission in one of the low districts of New Orleans told me this anecdote. With three rows of little hall nude black people before her at the mission. and in hand, she began: iv iiu who me 111 at umnr 1 Twentv or thirtv little black hands shot un in the air. and twentr or thir- ... X . -T ' .... v""c TTrT t . uWho was the strongest man?1 'Sampson." "Who wa the wisest man?" "Solomon." "Who was the wickedest man?" "Ben Butler!" This feeling has become anl will re main a tradition; a name that the old black "Mamas will use to frighten their little ones with. And thus it may be that this man will be remembered when the rest of us are forgotten. Two little acts, out of my many 1 , set down here The elegant home of the present clerk of the Su preme Court has been forcibly entered and searched from garret to garden three times. The fourth, time the sol diers came the indignant Creole took his little son with him and went to General Butler, and handing him a re ceipt said: "Sir, it is useless to send your soldiers or any one else to search my house for treasure. Ihis you will 18 a receipt for my silver and treas- UHT5. At 13 BlliUCU UV liJC V l ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 tl J 1 1 i" I .. - i" of the Spanish man-of-war which left this city the day you entered it. General Buttler assured the Creole, 1 m 1 1 in the presence ot his son, above re ferred to, that his house would not again be disturbed. One more, the oldest United States Senator now living, and a celebrated historian, took his treasures, and, by the help of a black servant, buried them in his garden. They were soon on their way North along with a ship load of pianos, silverware and libraries. In fact the most famous and best loved preacher of the South, a man whose word like that of the venerable henator or the clerk of the Supreme Court re ferred to, is beyond all possible ques tion, told me that nearly taronf v v!irsi after the pillage of New Orleans bv Butler, he found many of his books on the second hand stalls in Boston, and some of them were voluntarily return ed to him. Stick a pin here, and think of this man, Shermsin, Sheridan, beggars at the beginning ot the war; princes atter. it they are true soldiers Where did their colossal fortunes come from? But they are not i . i At 1 1 soldiers, as Laesar. Alexander and so on, who led to battle sword in hand The modern 'hero has no tiste for the front. There is not a single scar among all the "heroes" I have named. Butler is no doubt brave enough in speech, the bravest as well as well as best of the famous lot, no doubt, i et none of them every really smelled powder, and each has made his fame by invading and burning Christian homes and made his fortune by plun dering them. lou reproach me for opening up these old wounds ! I want to get the iron out; I want to let the light m And then, not till then will these wounds heal. Let the truth be told of such men. and let them keep their places. The South is, has been and shall be, because God made it. God made the South, and man cannot unmake it The man who says he knows no South, no North, no hast, no W est, is simply a demagogue or fool. Ml -hp ate Ot The people have cone after talse gods before. The worship of gold is new religion, put it is none 4he less lalse The hand that struck down the golden calf in the desert lifted up the greatest race that h&i been, and never was a Moses so needed among men as now. As for this other form of idolatry it 1 1 ! 1 1 is none tne less perilous oecause less I 1 i. .-.Jl-i..... H I I . , II',.... 111. ..II. IAW . . .1 .'I UUI UlttJll JIJ I J tu IIWJOIUJI uuutuci uuu less worthy. State Horticultural Society. The Raleigh correspondent of the Charleston News & Courier writes that paper under recent date: The btate rlorticuitural society met here several evenings ago and heard some remarks on fruit growing in N, C. Jhis has been successful the past 1 Ti t J 1 i season ana attention nas oeen given the general subject of fruit culture in its variovs branches by persons who I evidently mean to devote money and .1 1" 1 X. " i. . . , ., X - . S51 1 time to waai is cerium speeaiiy De come a great source of wealth. Strange to say, North Carolina produces, in the 3-E- I' a ar extreme eastern and western part of her domain the choices apples grown anywhere. In the counties west of the Blue Ridge and in Hyde county, l!' is near the sea, tnis rruu is found in re is markable profusion and perfection. The reports as to apples, peaches and pears were all of a gratifying charac- of ter. Urape culture nas increased 25 per cent, in four years. Never before of . was so much clear profit realized on or. grapes as in J24 ana its&o. This society has been of milch bene- fit to our State, and can be of much greater benefit, specially in the way of educating the fruit growers in proper methods of handling and shipping fruit The growers of Western Carolina spe cially need to be stirred up on this mat ter. West of the Blue Ridge the finest apples in the world are raised and the quantity of production is increasing very rapidly every year. It ought to be a source of large wealth to our sec tion; but, our people must learn to 1 A 1 e p"? more P?ins. gthnn& Handling, P8 ana snipping, Deiore they can nT to successfully and upon , , , . weM P?1. and shipped from more re- m.0.ie. Vm' rresent rreignt rates, mote which are full high, but will decrease with increase of tramc, our people can reach Southern markets off the sea board upon an eoualitv with Northern shippers; but the condition of their fruit when it reaches the market, mix ed and bruised, and in many cases dir ty, at once places our shippers at a disadvantage. The same will apply to vegetables. Let the Horticultural so ciety give special industry to this branch of fruit business, and give the people full instructions and advice upon the matter, and they will render their fellow citizens and the fruit industry a lasting and profitable benefit. Ashe- rtlte C itizen. A Picture of Gen. Toombs. It is pleasant to turn from the con sideration of the late Mr. Toombs' tem pestuous public career to the picture of his private life. This, says the Augus ta Chronicle, was like that of Chatham. Intemiierate and inconsistent he may have been at times in his career, but faithful and affectionate and pure and gentle to his lovely wife he always was. 'rot all the allurements of power, or responsibilities of office or the stress of political misfortune or post-bellum ex ile could separate him from her. He was courtly and noble in his family circle; his words were soft in his wife s queenly presence, and when the light of her loving eves were shut out from him, his feet were guided to the altar where she had knelt, and he prepared himself to meet her in a higher life. Gen. Toombs made no high-flown or hypocritical pretensions about religion. He did not profess immediate change of heart, nor could he promise entire reform in his being but he entered upon his religious career with the sim Ple fa,tn of a child and the eternal hope a nnsiian. eics-uoerver. m m i . r m ij Dangerous and Useless Practice. The doctors are now inveighing sharply against the black crape veil so generally worn by ladies in mourning They pronounce it unhealthy, expen sive and unbecoming. Dr. Hunter Mc- Guire says: The black crape veU is un doubtedly hurtful, and the custom should be abandoned; apart from its poisonous dye and offensive smell, me chanically it interferes with healthful resperation. Dr. Brock says: I have long considered black crape veils detri mental to health and mentally depress ing in their effect; and Dr. MaCaw says: tne custom or wearing a crape veil as an article of mourning apparel would be honored in the breach rather than inthe observance. These heavy dou ble black veils prevent the free access of air and light two essential elements in health. They are unbecoming, ex pensive, and from the dye are always more or less disagreeable of odor. It has long been known that black crape over the face is exceedingly injurious to health, but the custom of wearing it has so long been in vogue that it will probably be found impossible to J break it up. Still the Richmond phy- sycians say that some ladies are taking 111 - 1 -11 1 their advice, and are either doing away with heavy crape or consenting to J wear their veils up. This is at least a beginning of the reform so much to be desired. Goed Music in France. French will not dance to bad i ii i ii ill The music, lr tney eat potatoes ana sail all the week, and drink water without wine from Easter Monday of one year to Good Friday of the next, they will have good music, lhose who have traveled in the French provinces must have often been astonished with the excellence of mere village bands, and at the perfect acquaintance with the best and newest pieces of the musi cians at village fetes. Nothing of a popular character in music escapes them; and the villagers hum a new air in the provinces a very few days after it is known in Paris. An ingenious burglar's ladder was r- centlv taken from a negro thief in Washington. It was constructed of light but strong rope, and at one end had two sharp hooks fitted to fasten on a window sill Thps was attached to An iron rod eAoable of beins? extended fhirfv nr fnrfv fppf. The whole eould i . j : . j z" - . l T be wrapped in a bundle about the size of an ordinary umbrella. As the ap M paratus had a hooked handle, and was inclosed in a case, the owner could car ry it along the streets without attract ing attention, while in two minutes it could be turned into a rope ladder and securely fastened to an unbolted win dow, giving a burglar easy means of 'entranoe to a house. Boston Journal, WARD'S WOES. ' . . . . His Desperate Straggle and how It Ended. Just twenty-seven miles from the classic city of Athens, GaM is located the thriving little town of Maxey's, the residence of Mr. Robert Ward, who has just been released from a most perilous predicament, the par ticulars of which he has consented to give to the public. He writes as follows : Maxxy's, OoucraoBPB Co., Oa. July h, 1885. For twelve or fourteen years I have been a great sufferer from a terrible form of blood poison which ran into the secondary, and finally it was pronounced a tertiary form. My head, face ami shoulders became almost a mass of corruption, and finally the disease commenced eating away my skull bones. I became so horribly repulsive that for three years I absolutely refused to let people see me. I used large quantities of most noted blood remedies and applied to nearly all physicians near me, but my con dition continued to grow worse, and all said that I must surely die. My bones be came the seat of excruciating aches and pains ; my nights were passed in misery ; I was reduced in flesh and strength ; my kidnejs were terribly deranged, and life became a burden to me. I chanced to see an advertisement of B. B. B., and sent one dollar to W. C. Birchmore & Co., merchants of our place, and they procured ouc bottle for me. It was used with decided benefit, and when eight or ten bottles had been used, I was pronounced sound and well. Hundreds of scars can now be seen on me, looking like a man who had been burned and then restored. My case was well known in this county, and for the benefit of those who may be similarly af flicted, I think it my duty to give the facts to the public, and to extend my heartfelt titunks for so valuable a remedy. I have been well for over twelve months, aud no return of the disease has occurred. ltOBEUT WARD. Maxey's, Ga., July 1, 1885. We, the un dersigned, know Mr. Robert Ward, and take pleasure in saying that the facts above stated by him are true, and that his was one of the worst cases of Blood Poison we ever knew in our county, and that he has lcen cured by B. B. B. Botanic Blood Balm. A. T. Buiohtwkm,, Merchant. W. C. Bikcumork& Co., Mer'h'ts J. II. Bkiohtwkll, M. D, John T. Hart. i, W. P. Campbkli.. Atlanta, Ga, July 10, 1885. Wc are ac quainted with A. T. Brightwell and W. C. Birchmore & Co., whose names appear above, and take pleasure in saying that wey are gentlemen , oi un doubted veracity ii i un i iv in I'nnnniuif'ii any assertion thej uiakc. hey HOWARD & CANDLER, Wholesale Druggists, Atlanta, Ga. Sold everywhere. REMARKS. If B. B. B. will cure such terrible cases as the above, is it not reasonable to sup pose that any and all cases of Blood Dis ease can lc cured i We do not announce the cure of a man while he is at home groaning and suffering with the disease, but all of our certificates are words of truth from those who have been cured and can look you squarely in the face and say so. We cure in a shorter time, with less money and less medicine than ever before known. IV. ,1111 111.111 UUI Ul II UIIMUV, free to any one, filled with more astound ing home evidence than ever before pub lished. Call ou your druggist, or address BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga. Dccl7J17 Kerosene Oil! BY THF BARREL AT ENNISS' Drug Store. July 9, '85 tf. FRESH TURNIP SEED? The Earliest and Best Turnip Heed for tale at EN KISS'. TRUSSES reduced prices, at Of all kinds, at ENN1SS' Fruit J ars ! CHEPER THAN EVER. ALSO Rubber Rings for Fruit Jars, at ENNISS'. SCARE'S PRESERVING POWDES For sale at ENNISS'. THE BEST AND CHEPEST MACHINE OIL For Threshers, Reapen, ami Moweis at ENNlSS'r PRESCRIPTIONS 1 1 If vou want your prescriptions put up cheaper than any wlierc else go to ENNISS' Drug Store. J-Vy 9, '85. tl. , Enniss' Blackberry Cordial, roK niiAnterr. Oiarrhcaa. Flux, &c, for sale At ENNISS' Drug Store. NOTICE. Having qualified as Administrator of Paul Holshouser, dec a, I nereoy give no tice to all persons having claims against the estate of said decedent, to present them to me on or before the 12th day of Novem ber 1886 ChkisknMcrt UOLSKOCSXm, '17 Adm r of Paul Holshouser C'raige & Clement, Att'ys. C. A. KRA.TJS, OR2TA232TTAL PJOTa?. i -:-o-:- m Particular attention paid to freaootac and ofcorauve painting. In oil. wax or wtLer-cnkm Will make tti.ls uu ctiurclkP. uutltc bulUlloin an pmaterralaeBoea. Work guaranteed. HattreaoM. r desired Putt office adtlrefiti. c- ft-SSlWfc. 47t3m WHEN YOU WANT J HARDWARE AT LOW FIGURES Call on the undersigned at NO. 2. Granite Row. D. A. AT WE LI 4VM for the Salisbury, N. C, June 8th tf. Mineral Springs Acafleny, PALMERSVILLC.(Hiauveo)N.o. I C. M. MARTIN, I'MNCirAL, iQriuuate of Wake Forest Collew, a toe rm v.'rsity or Virginia. rriTios, ss to $15 per session of & The only school la tAls section that teaches tto University of Va. methods. Vlimroue. ex-l tensive, thorough. The cheapest school la the! U. 8. where these world-re noWed methods are taught. Good Board only as per month. I 17 ly Address. V II. M aktih, PliB. L SEND YOUR WOOL TO THE THIS NEW FACTORY u is no"- in operation, and facilities for man ufacturing Woolen Goods such as have nev er before been offered to our people, are within the reach of the entire Wool grow ing community. We manufacture JEANS, CASSIMKR9, FLANNELS, MNSEYS. BLANKETS, YARNS, ROLLS, Ac, , Soliciting a liberal. patronage of our peo ple, we are respectful fy, ? , Samsblkt Woolbx mills. gT Office at old Express Office. X ay 28th, 1885. 82tf R.T.HOPKINS IS NOW AT TUB T Corner of Kerr A with a full line of DRY GOODS GROCERIES. AUo keia a Kirst BOARDING HOUSE. Call and see 28:ply. . .7 IP YOU WANT TO FILL YOUR GAME BAG. AND MAKE BIG SCORES, USE remington ifles-ais: SHOT GUNS. AH the Latest FOR DESCRIPTIVE CIRCULAR ADDRESS Lamberson, Furmanlftb' SOLE ACENTS FOR E.REMlNGTON&SOIli aMr0ag Arm mi A tf 281 & 283 Broadwyfr WESTERN OFFICE, , D. H. LAMBERSON ARMORY, - - - IOON, REMINGTON SHOVEL8, SCOOPS, 8PADII. liKiTiKtT saiici. it nuua IE ME HE I THAT IN MMS AKAlVftTS One Piece of Solid NO NOUS OR RIVETS TO WEAKEK THf send won ciacoLaas. REMINGTON AGRICULTURAL Cl.i Hew V.rk OSlc. 118 LAMP CHIKNETS that will Bot break by beat, lor swe ai ExiISs DIAMOND wish at All colors TUM ENNISS for Seeds of EN N 1 88', DON'T FORGET to call all kinds at TO THE LADIES t Call and see the Flower Pot at - RNNISS. A MILLION of worms gnawing day .4kt is ouite enooeh. we thik, tkrew a child into spasms. mlfugc will destroy restore the cb ild. Shriner'a Tar- uxl expel t MAKUWAKL Salisbury Woolen Mills i i i 11 J L ft I - I i 1