I , i NEW YORK a r m ml IS A tl T T L st AND BEST Ttii inTrtTTCi mii siK .An. r rti 1- . r,nnrTT 1 T T" tCT Hr.lilltlUUQ AUJ uuuwk- V LY NEWSPAPER. KATION AL AND EVANGELICAL. AH tha News, Vigorous Editorials. : ,JL trustwortny paper nr uusi It bu special departments for Farmers, Sunday school Teachers ami Housekeepers. m Kf YORK 0BSE1YER FOR 1886, Sixty-Fourth Volume, will contain a new and never before pub lished serieaof Uekus Letters; regular correspondence from Great Britain, France, Germany and Italy : Letters from Mission Stations ia India, China, Japan, Africa and Micronesia ; original articles from men of influence and knowledge of affairs it) dif ferent parte of this country, and selected articles from the choicest literary and re ligious publications, in poetry and prose. A New Volume, containing a Second Series of Ihekbcb Letters, a sketch of the author, and a review of his life and work has been published. We shall offer this year special and at tractive inducements to subscribers and iriends. Sample nnpies free. N. 1EU 1UUK UttMiH., NEW YORK. K. BBUNER, Of Uie Watchman. J.SAM'LMCCUBBIXB County Treasurer. BBJJNEB & McCUBBLNS, REAL ESTATE AGENTS. The undersigned are prepared to do a GENERAL REAL ESTATE BUSINESS, and solicit business of that character. All reai property entrusted to us will be adver tised all over the United States, FREE OF CHARGE to the owner. Persons having farm lands forests, mines, or other real property should eonsult us at once. Special attention giv en mineral lands. Reports, assays and aaps tunrihed when desired. BRUNER & McCUBDINS. Salisbury, N. C. Land for Sale. BY J. M. HADEN, REAL ESTATE AGENT, MAIN STREET, SALISBURY, N. C. Farms, Town Lots & Mill Prcperty. "Calfand see his Descriptive Cata lo;jue and Price List, lei ins to suit. no3:6m THE WATCHMAN JOB OFFICE IS THOROUGHLY EQUIPPED mat vabbit m ob printing, PROM POSTERS as big as a barn door down to most delicate Letter and Note Heads, Bill Heads and Statements, BUSINESS CARDS, PAMPHLETS, ' PRICE LISTS, ,. Sefcool anXJarts frugtainmes, BLANKS OF ALL KINDS Court and Magisterial. Orders solicited and satisfaction guaranteed PROFESSIONAL CARDS. 4 - Kana CKAir.B. l. h. clement. CRAIGE & CLEMENT, Sai.isuluy, N. 0. N W AVC'' t!W Agency of Messrs. Things that we Ueed. nasturaee for cattle, sheep and hogs more land devoted ex clusively to grass and froit for consumption stock. We must keep our stock on our own premihes, and set apart large portions oi we mrm for them to range over. This can be done in most instances without inter fering with the tillage land. j Wn Wh rnol dairv houses and nice and swings of cool water, tm utilized in the making of first class butter. A thoroughly equipped dairy does not exist in the Soth, where general farming and planting is tjie rule. We need good butter and sweet rich milk in our daily repast. To iave butter that . is better than soap grease we need dairy houses and all the necessary appliances for suitable and cleanly handling of milk and of but ter. We need graperies on almost every farm. and. near towns, in every garden grapes for dessert, grapes for lunch, grapes for jams and jellies, grapes for tarte, dried grapes, pickled grapes, pre served grapes, brandied grapes and grapes for wine, for the cup that ejs hilerates and does not lieastialize. Con cords, Catawba, Isabellas, &c, and that incomparable gem of southland the Scuppernong. Yes we need graperies; we need vines in every nook and corn er of the farm- Not mere stumbs pruned to death after the style of oth er sections, but vines left to grow ajid spread of their own free will, with plenty of spreading room and a good support allowed them. , VVe need more rich bottom land fjor corn and timothy; marsh and alluvial land for grazing; orchards and pas turage grasses put on the hillsides ; a better division and a more general separation of stock one kind from an other more sowed crops and less till age, and we need cattle and stock sheds, comfortable, clean and dry, that shall be cool in summer, warm in win ter, and always healthful. We need, especially need, more orig inality aud less copying in our modes of farming. Our sectional features of climate soils and plants are distinct. and we need different methods of do ing things. In a word our agriculture is peculiar and our plans and opera tions should be peculiar too. 1 o copy ist, but discoverers we must be. A Preference on the Gallows. Washington Letter livCiikago Xcws. A funny anecdote connected with the Hon. Joe Blackburn's first race for Congress was told me the other day Joe happened i,o be pushing through Owenton, the county seat of Owen oimtv, oh the occasion of the hanging or a noteu criminal, as a nangmg is rather an exceptional episode in the State of Kentucky, the honorable Joe concluded he would stop over a few hours and witness the event. The gallows was erected in the public square so that no citizen, however humble, should lose the opportunity of witness ing the unusual spectacle. It was, in fact, a gala dav such as the history of Owenton has seldom recorded. The sheriff, with true Kentucky hospitality, invited Blackburn, as onjrof the dis tinguished guests present, to occupy a seat on the gallows. Blackborn did so. After the preliminaries had been ar ranged the sheriff consulted his watch and discovered that it was not quite 12 oclock, the hour fixed for the execution. Turning to the prisoner, he said: "You have ten minutes yet to live. Is there anything you desire to say in the meantime?" The prisoner sullenly replied there was not. At this instant Blackburn sprang from his seat, and, advancing to the edge of the scaffold, said: "If the gentleman will allow me his remaining ten minutes I will be glad to announce myself a candidate for your i suffrages. If elected to Contrress " At this point the prisoner interjected: "Say, you ! Is your name Joe Black burn r "Yes, sir," responded Blackburn po litely. Turning to the sheriff, the prisoner said: "We won't stand on a few min utes, more or less, when the alternative is presented of death on one hand or listening to one of Joe Blackburn's long-winded speeches on the other. Flip the trap and let me go!" The good natured sheriff obligingly "flipped the trap," and the next instant the desperado swung into eternity, while Blackburn clambered down the gallows, exclaiming, as he went, that he had lost the greatest opportunity of his life. The Northwestern Miller makes the suggestion that uev,ry Staie in the Union is r.ch enough to support di rectly and wholly its, convicts. Every State needs better roads, and should keep them in repair after they are made. Every convict in the land, who is made to labor, should put in his time on the public highway, and the sooner this policy is adopted, the better it will be, not only for individual States, but for the whole country. The prac tice of private employment of convict labor must go." Better roads are certainly badly needed, especially in the South. One of the most serious drawbacks to coun try life in the South is the terrible con dition of the roads during the winter. In some sections good roads are more needed than new railroads. The em ployment of convicts in making good oads,cwhile not yielding a direct rev enue for their support as when hired out, would in the end doubtless be of greater profit to the State, as good roads would be of almost incalculable benefit. They would benefit every in terest, increase the value of land, at tract immigration and largely add to the profits of the farmers. When you invite company to spend P, it- .I...... ' A - i . . I o tam J. - Lit rr-r v V r:A:r: 'luAAxaec WHa offended some trifle and leaves. About Railroads. Engine drivers and fireman; Engine drivers, to quote the words of a famous engineer, are not made; (they must be born. All the training in me worm will not make an incapable man a good driver. What is known as a "heavy" haod is an incurable failing, while lack nf indirment the most important of all qualities required is irremediable. Eaginedriving is a passion which many men who were destined never to handle fth regulator hav felt. To stand on the footplate with the Knowledge oi the vast power that is at one's com mand, and to know how to use that knowledge; to understand the strong and weak points in one's engine, and be able to work on them to the best ad vantage; to obtain a maximum of speed at the smallest lossible outlay of coal; "to nurse" the Vast machine so as to get the best results; in short all those qual ities, which are only to be got by ex perience, study, and constant observation are the attributes ot tne man wno nas reached the top of the tree, and is entrusted with the conduct of the ex press and mail trains on our principal railway systems. The future- engine driver begins as a lad, when he is taught cleaning. A number of these cleaning boys are attached to every engine depot, where they await the arrival of the spent leviathans after they have run their journey, ine dos empty tne nre dox, displace the bars, clean and scour every part of the machinery, polish the brass externals, and thoroughly destroy every trace of dirt and dust on tne engine. This work soon gives the cleaners a fair idea of engine construction : and' if thev show themselves intelligent and fit, they may after a time, be promoted to the post of firemen. iot on a last train, nor, indeed, a passenger train at all, but on a "slow goods one of those trains which gets shunted at ever siding to allow the faster trains to pass by. Here the novice learns firing and bow to keep a good head of steam, in both of which processes there is con siderable room for the display of intelli gence. The method employed in keeping up the fire has a deal to do with the effi cient working of the engine, and be . mm 1-1,1 a the driver ever so skiltul ana ever so thoroughly master of his locomotive, it will be imposible for him not only to earn his coal premium, but even to maintain speed and keep time, if his firing is done in a slovenly manner 1 he work or a hreman is pretty con stant while on duty. He has to keep the coals on his tender damped from the hose, to put on fresh coals at fre quent intervals, to keep an eye on the steam gauge, to follow the driver's in structions respecting the dampers and forcers, to attend to the taking up of water, to keep the footplate clean and tidy, and lastly, to keep an eye on his side of the tram on the rear. If he shows himself capable, promotion fol lows with rapidity. From a slow goods he is passed on to an express goods and . i ' i i i a thence possibly to a snuutmg engine playing about a by-station or junction Hence he goes to serve on a slow pass enger train, next on a fast, and lastly on a mail train. From this point his further promotion is less certain, and dependent rather on chance than ordin ary merit, vacancies among drivers be ing rarer than among hremen, and, as a matter of course, more carefully be it m e, ft stowed. Asa driver, the novice com mences on a slow goods train, and pas ses through the same stages as when a fireman, culminating, after many years service and numerous proofs of his qualify, in an appointment to an ex press engine. The engine driver prop el has a locomotive over which he rules with all but despotic sway. He alone is responsible, and lie alone dares to meddle whith the machine. The driver has nothing to do with the preparation of his locomotive. He reaches his depot about an hour before starting-time. He finds his engine clean and bright, the fire lit, the steam up, and immediately proceeds to see for himself thai all is right. Every lever, every valve, the smallest bearings, are in turn tested, and all being right he formally takes possession, hooks oil, and finally steams into the station, where he finds his train already made up. His day's work consists on the northern lines of two journeys of about 150 miles each, requiring, including stoppages, &c, about ten hours. On the Korth-Wes-tern system his pay is 7s. Od. the single trip. London Globe. What Killed Emory A. Storrs. Chicago Herald. "There goes a young man who won't live long," said a Madison street bar keeper, as a bright, stalwart Chap walked away from the counter. uWhat is the matter with him?" k0h, noth ing, but that he's drinking benedictine. A man is always a goner if he starts on that. It is a glorious drink, you know, and goes to the head and makes a man feel like a little angel on earth and all that, but it kills him all the same. It fascinates him and makes him its slave, ou see. He cant stop, and he keeps on drinking more and more, and pretty soon he goes all to pieces. Nobody but brain workers hanker after it, and it is sure death to them. Did you know that it was benedictinethat killed Em ory Storrs? Well, it was. A year ago last spring Emory- had braced up and quit drinking altogether, and stuck to it like a man, and was working like a good fellow, when he fell ill and his doctor prescribed benedictine as a cor dial and tonic. That settled it. The seductive stuff took hold of Storrs brain and made him its slave, just as the doctor might have known he would. He had quit drinking whisky and wine, but he wasn't strong enough, to throw away t i seductive liqueur. Why, Iv'e been told that a few weeks before his death he was in the habit of drinking four or five quart bottles a week and often one in a day. And his friends wii me iu tell me that he was never so wittv and brilliant as when he had had about half a bottle. A Back Hunter's Odd Craft. A man in South Bend, Ind., goes duck shooting in an old craft which he calls an "invisible boat' He has cut one-third of an entire boat's length down to the water line. The remainder is made water-tight, and in the stern a mirror (twenty-eight inches high and forty-eight long) is placed so that the lass reflects the water in front and the ecoys. Behind the mirror the h unter sits and paddles bis boat toward the ducks, making his observations through a small spot in the mirror, from which the amalgam has been removed. As the boat moves up td the ducks they, can see their own reflections in the mirror, and in ome instances swim toward the boat When the hunter is near enough to shoot he drops the mirror rorward ttgloosmg a string, and gets too effective shots one at the ducks in the water and one as thev rise. ' Landlord System in America. The North American Review has a paper by Thomas H. Gill that is worthy of thel consideration of members of Congress and of the people generally. Mr. Gill is an Englishman or Irishman, and is a member of the British Parliament. His services were secured to visit the Northwest Illi nois, Iowa, Kansas. Nebraska and Dakota and study the landlord system in ihat great section. The paper published is the result ot Mr. Gill s observations, and it will be a surprise to intelligent people generally. It is known to newspaper readers that the Republicans in the Congrt-ss have been extremely lavish during the last quarter of a century in donating the public lands to railroads. It is also known that the public lands have been ''gobbled up" by certain persons to a large extent, but it is not known how far this has been carried and the ela borate report of Mr. Gill's investigations will throw light where it is needed. It will be a great surprise when it is known that already in thw country with its vast terri tory the landlord system has been sodevel oped as to surpass anything yet atained in Grert Bntain. In other words, there are this day more men farming as tenants of landlords than there are in England, Scot land, Wales and Ireland. It is the Old World system engralted upon the New. Some ot these landlords own ten, twenty, forty thousand acres. Wilmington Star. No Right to Boast The Washington correspondent of the Augusta Chronicle tells a good story in illustration of the fact that some people who boast unduly of their ex- t l i v cepnonai vinue may conceal an imp somewhere worse than the devils they condemn. Here is the story: In North Carolina, not long ago, a dapper, mid- 111 1 T i 1 " aiea-ageci isortnern man rose in a crowd and exultingly said: "Gentle- men, i never smoKea a cigar, never chewed tobacco, never drank a drop of ,i mor and never wore a beard in my life. I married the first woman I courted and am an example of what temperance can do." A gigantic North Carolinian, a grand m i i specimen ot his race, rose, and, confronting- the stranger, said: "I smoke and chew tobacco, take a drink when I feel like it and courted sixteen women before I married one. If I am not a better bit of human flesh than that little man with dyspepsia, you can tie me to a wild horse and chase me with coon dogs.v The South's Progress. The New York Express says: "How- few Northern men realize for instance. that in the first six months of this year $70,000,000 were expended in the erection and extension of Southern factories? Yet this is the undoubted, verified, marvelous fact. How few in this region are prepared to learn that the accessible values of the South have increased 040,000,000 in the past four years. Yet these are trustworthy figures. How many of our people dreamed that the South had 307 cotton factories, with 800,000 new spindles? How many 4uew that in Alabama, Georgia, Arkansas, Kentucky, Tennes see and West Virginia, the output, of coal was increased from 900,000 tons in 1870 to 3,700,000 tons in 1880? How many knew that in the above same states the output of iron ore rose from 40,000 tons in 1870 to 5G5.000 tons in 1880. An Austin boy who came from school very much excited, and told his father that all human beings were de scended from the apes, which made the old man so mad that he replied angri ly: "That may be the case with you, but it ain't with me, I can tell you that now, my son." The boy didn't say anything, but when his mother came home he told her about it. Much care should be exercised in saving all wood ashes, as they are among the best fertilizers for the farm and garden. It has been truthfully said that they are to "the earthly parts of vegetables what milk is tothe animal system, or barn yard manure to the entire crop." They contain every ele ment, and generally in the right pro portions, for insuring a full and rapid growth. - Yon are usually impecunious on a holiday; but when you have to work all day long and nearly half the night, yon think of the riotous enjoyment you could purchase with your money if you only had the time. The man that owes yon money drops into oblivion until the debt is forgotten ; but the man you owe appears at every gathering you attend, and you are fi nally driven to paying him in order that you may see less of him. If your great grandfather helped sign the Declaration of Independence, no one is aware of it unless you tell them; but if your great grandfather was hung, you can t get into a war of words without having it thrown up to you. There was a crowded public meeting it Belfast on the loth to declare their opposi tion to a dissolution of the union and to home rule. NO BOON THAT SCIENCE HAS CONFERRED Has been fraught with greater blessings than that which has accrued to the inhabitants of malarial ridden portions of the United States and the Tropics from the nse of Uostctter's Sto mah Bitten. The experience of many years has but too clearly demonstrated the inefficiency of quinine and other drugs to effectually combat the progress of intermittent, congestive "and bilous remittent fevers, while on the other hand, it has been no less clearly shown that the nse of the Bitters, a medicine congenial to the frail est constitution, and derived from purely bo tanic sources, affords a reliable safctruard against malarial disease, and arrest it when developed. For disorder of the stomach, liver and bowels, for general debility and renal in activtiy, it is also a most efficient remedy. Ap petite and sleep are improved by it, it expels rheumatic humors from the blood, and enriches a circulation impoverished by mal-assimitation. Southern Bivouac. A short time before his death, Alexander H. Stephens dictated to his amanuensis a sketch of the late Gen. Lee. The first ar ticle was unsatisfactory, and he began a second. This article, oreoared with ffreat care, Mr. Stephens was not able personal ly to revise, but as it is, it will appear in the Southern Bivouac for February. A sketch of Lee by Stephens will have a very peculiar interest. You never remember that vou have left your watch under vour nillow on the top floor uutil you reach the side walk, and it is not until you reach the top floor at night that you recollect that you either left the front door open or unlocked. Puck. A gentleman srenerous in his contri- buttons for church purposes, 1ut not regular in his attendance unon Dublic worship, was wittily described bv a 1 ! lar of the church, but a kind of a flvmi? buttress, supporting it from the out- s.ae. Girls who wish to have small, pretty shaped mouths should repeat at frequent intervals aunng the day, "Fanny rinch fried floundering fist for Francis Forbes father." It is just after breaking vour back to put a patent leather shine on your snoes tnat you accidentally step into a puddle up to your ankles. The poor blind man lives in the country, where there is beautiful scen ery; and the man who can see a five dollar bill twenty yards off, behind a stump, works in a coal mine. If you perform an act of charity, it is never known. If you are guilty of a misdemeanor, it is known in the columns of every newspaper, and your name is not spelled wrong. The dove coos its dulcet notes away off in the woods; but the peacock lets off its rasping shriek, which always suggests a rat-tail file, right under your window awake. before you are half When it is pouring rain, your um brella is not to be found anywhere in the house; but during a drought it is in three or four rooms at a time, and you have to pick your steps to keep from falling over it. The man with one eye wears a pair of spectacles, and the man with two eyes wears a single barreled eye glass. Your dog flies down the path and tears your dearest friend to tatters; but when a burglar breaks in to the house, the dog is chained up in the barn. When a miner, has been eaten by a grizzly, the western people speak" of him as being admitted to the bar. "How do you tell a fool when you see one?1 asks a correspondent. How! By the kind of questions he asks. Wives and newspapers are just alike. The only man who knows how to manage them properly is the man who has neither. "1 11 join you presently, said the minister to the young couple waiting, as tie started tor the key to the church door. STATUE Of " LIBERTY ENLI&HTE5II6 THE WORLD." More Honey Needed. The Committee in charge of the construction of the pedestal and the erection of the Statue, In order to raise funds for its completion, have prepared, from model furnished by the artist, a prefect fac Hmiit Miniature Statuette, which thev are delivering to subscribers throughout the United States at the following prices : No. 1 Statuette, mix inch in HHfffU, the Statue bronzed; Pedestal, nickel-silvered. at One Dollar each, delivered. No. S Statuette, in same metal, twelve inches high, beautifully bronzed and nickeled, at Five Dollars each, delivered. No. 8 Statuette, twelve inches high, finely chased. Statue bronzed, Pedestal, Heavily fril 1 ver-lla ted, with flush stahd, at Ten Dollars each, delivered. Much time and money have been spent in perfecting the Statuettes, and they are much improved over the first sent out. The Com mittee have received from subscribers many letters of commendation. The Sew York World Fund of $100,000 com pletes the Pedestal, but it is estimated that $40,000 is yet. needed to pay for the iron fasten ings and the erection of the Statue. Liberal subscriptions for the Miniature Statu ettes will produce the desired amount. Address, with remittance, RICHARD BUTLER, Secretary, American Committee of the Statue of Liberty, 83 Mercer Street, New York. AMI! MATRIX'S MICE. Having qualified as Administratrix upon the cs'atu of V. A. McCorkul dee'd 1 nereoy noiny au persons having claims against said estate to present them to me for payment on or belore the 17th dav of j December, 1886, or this notice will be I plead in bar of" their rneoverv. Jennie A. McCohkle. A dm'. 1 Thco, F. Kluttz, Att'y. Dec. t18S5. j-H For Sale at this Office : Land Deeds. ...Seal Estate Mortgage Deeds.... Sheriff Deede'of several different forms ; Chattel Mortgages. ...Mortgage Sale Notices; Magistrates' summonses, Executions, Subpoenas Witness Tickets Transcripts, &c. Bastardy Warrants and Bonds.... State Warrants, Ball Bonds ...Peace Bonds.... Appearance Bonds, Appeal Bonds .... Prosecution Bonds... Ejectment Writs summary Attachments.. .Bonos mm mane Title. . . . Sale Notices for Administrator. Trespass Notices. . . . A foil line of Solicitors Indictment forms. Numerous blank forms lor Superior Court Clerks. . . Several forms foruse of Attorneys.. I. h-v And man v Miscellaneous. AU which will be sold low. . . .Blanks of any and all kinds printed to order In best style and ojn good paper at very low figures. It vols, of Scientific Amercan, 1 No. each of Jones' Law and Equity. 250 lbs. Brace's second hand Bourgeois tied np. S3 or so Fonts advertising display type, lo Jobbing Fonts.1!? loo lbs. Large Bordeiftype. ryone complete slock of Printing material for s five column paper and Job Office, presses included. rw-Many of the above Blanks and nearly all the printing stock, will be sold very cheap foe cash or on short lime. Kerosene Oil! BY THE BARREL AT I ENNISS Drug: Store. July 9, '85 tf. FRESH TURNIP SEED? The Earliest and Best Turnip Seed for salo at . ENNISS". TRUSSES 6f all kind,, at reduced prices, at EXjSlSS'. Fruit Jars! CHEPEU THAN EVER. A LSO (Rubber Kings for Fruit Jars, at J E.NiNlS.y. SCARE'S PRISEBm PftDES For sale at ;T ENDsISS THE BEST AND CHEPEST MACHINE OIL For Threshers, Reapers, aud Mqweis at ENNISS'. PRESCRIPTIONS!! If von want vour prescriptions put-up cheaper than anywhere else go to EN1TISS' Prug Store. v 9, '65. tl Enniss' Blackberry Cordial, FOR Disentery, Diarrhoea. Flux, &e, for sale At ENNJS' Druj; Stoie. NOTICE. Having qualified as Administrator of Paul Ilolshouser, dee'd, I herebj give no tice to all persons having Claiujs ugHihst the estate of said deeedent. t!0 present them to ine on or before the 12th day of Novem ber, t8o. CUHISEKBUIIT IHdl.8IOU8ER. de;17 Adut-V of Paul Kolshouser Craige & Clement, Att'ys. COM QUICK! DELAYS A HE DANGEROUS!! v J. S. McCUBBINS bus just returned froin the N nlfern cities with the LARGEST & 8187 SELECTED Stock of Goods that he lias ever offered to the public; consisting of DryjGojpds, Gro ceries, Hats, Boots and Shoes, Sole Leather, Crockery ami Queens-ware, Clothing, P10 vision. Wood and Willow ware, &c. Also a lull line of FERTILIZERS of the very best brands, viz: BAKEK'S Well Tried FOR IjVIIEAT. MEUItYMAN'S A. D. Bone " f " WALKER'S Ground Bone " t 44 NATURAL Guano just from prchilla, and supposed the only Natural Guano on the market. Go and get Testimonials and if jou -aut to save money, don't forget to call on him before buying either Goods or Fertilizers. Salisbury, Oct. 1, 1885. f 2o:tf PATENTS? Caveats, Trade Marks and Copyrights Obtained, and all other business In the l. S. Patent Office attended to for Moderate Fees. i our office Is opposite the V. 8. Patent Office, and we can ubt4iln Patents In less time than those re mote from Washington. Send Model or drawing. We advise as'to patent ability free ot charge; and make So charge Obtiin Patent. - We refer her to the Postmaster, the Supt. of Money order Hlv.. and to officials of thC. s. Pat ent office. For circular, advice, terms and refer ences actual clients in your own Stateor county. wriweio C. A. SNQW Jt CO.. Opposite Patent Oiuce, a&blngton l. C. Oct. Si, S3. U r out z3 s HORSE AND CATi Li. POWDERS So nam win tip of f our, rtm oriLrxa Fa vaa. il f-ontz-n Fowlen are mil In tisnm.sr ' owdwirillmrpund i.r 11 M-' holkra. ronu Inwiors will prevent Gapk- tjc Fawu. ro-Uz Pow pr wn Iqeren e tlie ormntftT of milk anl cream twenty rw-r cent., arxl mnkr tiie laitterana inn weet. Komz- Pwr1rm will nr or nrev,.nf lmot ktkst to which Hoiv.-s Hnl tt!e r n)eet. rorTxi Pow-mas wiu aiv s atifactiok. Sold tTerywnere. DAV I D r. FOTTTZ, Proprietor. BALTI CE, MD. J. H. Ennisg, Druggist, Agent. GOOD FARM FOR SAJLE. A good farm of 250 acres, welf watered, plenty of forest, meadow, and good dwel ling and out houses, for sale by Brvner & McCuBixs, Keal Estate Agent.--, Sa1i.-btf'. X. C. It out of sorts' with headache, stomas disorder , torpid liver, pain In backer lifaZ stlpation. etc .neglect may be fatal. (Wrf of Btrona's Sanative ill8 win plre,??? A few doses restore to new health and vigor ONLY f PFflM AN" ut rctrrmu n,... Omm1 by indiscretion, excess, etc BnMKla dar; Curm usual ly within Booth. o DwZ,7 pocQu-ckery. Positiy. Proofs, fall derir&S latter of MM In plain ktoIw! envelope frol juuA uibidAJ. 00. P.O. gig itOwKio, k.y MUlOim M3L,B fcKEtfsrLs PPSBILITI W F8ALEE Mr it A Life Experience. Rerrarkablo uui Quick cures. Trial Package? . SerU stamp for sealed particulars. Addreea Or. WASP A CO. Louisiana, Mo, A. C AES ' f o all who are safferinc; from" the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous wtak neas, early decay, loss' of manhood, &e T will send a recipe that will cure you, Pugg of CfiARQK. This reat remedy w'a9 dis covered by a missionary in South America Send a sell-addressed envelope tothe Rev Joseph T. In max, Station D. New Xari City- '- ! 4:ly DO YOU Draw or Paint ? - Then send to EUGENE L. TIAIWI8 & CO., Raleiyh. N. C. for Pricelist of Artists' materials. They kp ever thing, needed and will fill your order by mail or express promptly. Portraits in. Crayon 'and Oil. Oil Landscapes, Western N; C. Seeueryr 5 4:3m. pd. NOTICE TO DRUOttfSTS AND STORE KEEPERS. I guarantee Shriner's Indian T-crmifuge to destroy and expel worms from the mj. man body, where they exist, if used ac cording to directions'. You are author ized to sell it upon the above conditions. David E. Foutz, Proprietor, Baltimore Md. MILL STONES. m 1 fTTH UNDEKSIGNED has bought the well I- 8TONE QUAKRY of E. E. Phillips, deceased, Kuunu nun-A UUU.M I MILL I ana win continue to supply the public de mand for Mill Stones from- this rKi.vr.it it A okit so well known throughout this country tor Its superiority for Mill Kfones. Granltebloers torOrnamental purposes, Monuments, Ac, &c, can also be had at this quarry. Address, . J. T. WYATT, Salisbury, X. C fsT SEED HOUSE S&gg SEEDS PLANTS T. W. WOOD & SONS, Wboltile and Retail Seedsman. Richmond, Vfe To the neda ci ine 1 traveler ami ncwsi M.Vr!' ach Hitters is peculiarly ;'.. strengthens the diirvsMvc braces the-physical ei.ergii , -.:r..-rf.-ca. ; ttioni. : fcinr;; it to ii..WeaUU- lui innuenees. it remove tnn1.iri.il I'm i.r ftnttet ii ..if i i. .li preven I faithfully stimnlirres the littn-va ai;i lCi, 'iV.-ietsi , bladder, and enriches as.weii a-3 jitmiM the blood. When overcome bv tatiirtje, Whether mental or physical, the Wears and debilitated find it a' reliable sonree ot renewed strength and comfort. For sale by all DrugzisU and Dealers generally, TUTT'S PILLS 25 YEARS 1W USE. Tat Greatest Medjcal Trlnrcph of the Age! SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID L!VER. IiOaaof appetite, Dowela costive, Pain la the head, with a dull sensation in tho back part, Pain voder tho shoulder blade, Fu llncs.i after eatioe, with it dis inclination to exertion of boar or mind, Irritability of temper, l.oxr spirits, whit a fading ot" having neglected romc duti Weariness, Dizziness, Flattering at tho Heart, Dots before tho eyes, IZeadacho ver the right eye, Itectlerrsnrse, Tit! fltfnl dreams. Highly colored I'rino, and , CONSTIPATION. .TUTT'S PiUT.3 avo especially adapted to such cases, on 3 d sc effects sue!) a change offeelinprfsToaM msKUtlic nnfl'ercr. They Increase ilio A ipciitc.antl uure tte bedy 1 1 Take oil I'lesli. t:i::i lae.' 'tcm I noarih4,; ' t by ili. . . T osM? Artior. ca the WgsUveOrr.-in3.5:rTi::3rSlvol?ra tutt "1 Ojiat ITatti rsr WnisEF.US changed to a Ctossr it:cd-7 a. Ei:it;le np;l lent Ion of tMaDTE. Ii i-n;;ar3 rt urturel coirr,r.ct nstantarr:a:.:y. ." '! by I;-rj;ir. or sent, bv errrc 1 r:i rece'r-s cf PI. OfHco, r7u3T-y f-ow York. Dec. 20, '4. ly. JPH.OF. jKERVOUSOEBIUTY lOliGAMICWEAKNESa r IWdv mrtA namflrOOl WftH.RIS'l f line the killed phsr- Inlnrodiunua bfcf- A Radical Cure for HRVOUS ' over brain. work. Avoii f too free indulgence, f I t h t m1 f.i ill- SSM lifinna. Mmilt from DEBILITY, DmmU W nnlrnnao the unpoMtwa or prrtcn tioiN iimto for thrM tronblef. Oct oar Pice Circular and Trial Peck age, and leers tansenant Ulgdiiiii ncaaimiM,! SPHTSICAI facta beans takina m DECAY, mcrt elsewhere. Take SURE RF.MF.ltY that haS CUBED thowaanda. eoea not interfere with MNs tion to PBtineaa, or eaute TestSj for over8w any way. rossora lacfeatiac medical pr.nci- I pain or uwoBTesience m Thousand Oases. V . timjil PACKACCa TBEATSLEJrr. YCAR3 BV USE IN WANK lipeeine influence U fell I without delay. ThtMt. I the hu. I man oreaniatn It rtJtored. I The animating elenynta of In, wliNwff On Month, - Two Month. - If h mMm waited area Iful and raDidlrrainf bft! SbrsoMontha, 7.C Iftrengthandaeauein HARRIS REMEDY CO.. rrcCHti S06 N. Tenth Bt, ST. XOOTS. 3X- r6NCMTt ft nuim Sitters I - i

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