. : ' i- . '" - g . 1 jaip, VOL XVILTHIRB SERIES. SALISBURY, N. C, FEBRUARY 25, 1886. 0 r i i ! ' Lg .a,,,,,,.,,.,, :zz . 1 " : -. . m A Touch of Nature. MUSIC IS CAMP. TU;a ),r.niiti!"iil ixicni was written durintr the war by the late John li. Thomson, a southern poet, wjio died on the first day of May 18 Two artnies covered bill and plain "Wheije Ilainmhaimock's waters ; Ran deply crimsoned with the stain 5f battle's recettt slaughter. ThcSuibuicr clouds lay pitched like teats h uiads of heavenly aznfe, And eajsb dread gurf of elements Slept: iu its hid embrasure. Tc brejeze so poftly blew, it made No forest leaf to quiver,. An9 thjb smoke of the random cannonade Rolleja slowly from the river. And nofw where circling hills looked down WithUannon grimly .planted, 0'er lisless camp-and silent town The olden sunset slanted ; When n the fervid air there came I A atrnin, now rich, now tender The mijiiiic seemed i tself aflame With day's departing splendor. . I A Federal band, which eve and morn Playibd measure brave and nimble, Bad juit struck up! with flute and horn And lively clash! of cymbals. Down flocked the soldiers to the bank Till margined by its pebbles, One wooded shore jwar blue with "Yanks," T And;onewas gray with "Rebels." .Then all was still ; an then the band, With movement light and tricksy, Made -stream and forest, hill and strand Reverberate with ' lUxie." Th conscious stream, withburnished trlow Went proudly o'er the pebbles, But thrilled throughout its deepest now ffl With yelling of the Rebels. Again a pause, and, then again The trumpet pealed Sonorous, And "Yankee Doodle was tlse strain ; To which the shore. Rave chorus." The laughing ripples shoreward flew To kiss the shining pebbles- 1 Loud shrieked the warmirtg Boy3 in blue Defiance to. the RebeJs. And yet once more the bugle sang Above the stormy jript : No Khout upon the evening rang There reigned a holy quiet. THo cod slntv- streum it. a imisle'ss flood e Pouring oer the glistening pebbles ; - And silent now the Yankee stood And iileut stood the Rebels. , "Ho unresponsive soul had heard . That plaintive rtjptefc appealng, ,So deeply "Home StS-'t Home' had stirred The hidden founts of feeling. As bytlie wand of jlairy, inc cottage neatn tnt- live oaa trees, The .cabin by the prairie; Or cold or warm his native skies Bend in their beauty o'er himf Been thjfougb the tear-mist in Mr eyes His IdVed ones staiid before him. P "F f r i. '!'.' iAs fades the iris after ram jj In April's tearful weather, t The vision vanished as the strain And daylight died together; I But memory, waked by Music's art, Kxpresse.il iu simplest numbers, -Subdued the sternest Yankee's heart, j Made light the Rebel's slumbers. Aiid fair the form (f Music shrines That bright, celestial creature-- f Who still, "mind war's embattled lines, Gare this one touch of nature. The States Bights Killer. In view of otir constant eopposition to unnecessary extravagant measures and appropriations by National, State, County and City Governments, and the assaults we have made on that dangerv ons States-Uights-Killer known as the "Blair Kducatiamt! Bill,'' we have been called narrow-minded, little-hearted, &c. Ve care nothing about such epi thets, but we coujld reply (without be- ing consmered boasttul by those who mow us) that we have spent as much . money for educational purposes as any ! other man in North Carolina, and have probably given mray as much money for charitable ojbjects as any other man in the State during the last thirty years. The fellows wlm vote away other people's money are not always much in the way of paying donations or taxes. From such patriots and news paper Editors as E. J. Hale, Sr., of the old Favetteville Observer, H. L. Holmes and W. H. Bayne of the Fayetteville Carolinian, and Gales of Raleigh, and Lorihg aiul Fulton of Wilmington, We learnejHn our younger days to oppose extravagance and stand up for the right, without regard to payor praise, umr we can nor reiuse to ao so now, when the "new1 ish" is disposed to make raids on tax payers and the pub- uc treasury. Home-Democrat. ' lrue enough. The "new ish" don't know enough. It requires a very broad basis of ignorance to support such a parade of conceit, -They cry loudly for the Blair bill. Let it distribute its I millions to educate . the poorv they say. 1 here are no millions to be dis tributed except as they are wrnngfrom the tax pay era of the land. E very man with sense endligh to go indoors when u tains, knows that this is true. The Government must collect the money before it can give it iiway. North Carolina they say will get seven mil lions in ten years! But let the people remember that, during those ten years tne otate must nav thirtv im inns nf revenue tax! The. Government can af ford to swap 7 millions fpr 30 millions, and have an excuse to continue the in ternal revenue oppression, but t.he peo ple cannot afford it: The democratic party must wipe out the revenue and cut down the expenses riff th (mvom. ment, and favoring th Bliar measure I lie Uarolma Watchman. s not the way to do it. The money question is the smallest part of the in famous scheme. The invasion and possi- ble disruption of States rights and the tendency to centralization of power in the general government is where the greatest danger lies. The Marshall Texas Herald says: But there is a constitutional question involved in the bill, which will cause it to meet with strong opposition in the House. Itri not the simple question whether the State would not be large ly benefited by receiving that amount of money; but is it consistent with true Democratic principle of Republican government to thus recognize the pa ternity of the Federal Government over the sovereign people of the States. This is the opposition! to the Blair hi in its nresent shape, and it will defeat the measure. The Wilmington Star points out some opposition to the measure in the Senate, as follows . In the course of the debate in the Senate on Tuesday oh the great Feder al School Teaching in the States bill two interesting facts were stated. The able .Senator Coke mentioned the fact that the great State of Texas had in convention assembled "denounced" the Blair bill. Senator iHawley, of Con necticut, mentioned; that the State Board of Education; of his State be lieved that the bill was "unwise." T-here was never a more unwise and danger ous bill before the Congress one that promises to lead to more disastrous and far reaching results. : Senator Maxey, of Texas, pointed out the only Consti tutional way by which the Federal Government could aid school teaching in the States, and that was by distribu ting the proceeds of the public lands tmong the fetates. I his Constitution al mode will not suit the demands of hose who prefer more devious and dangerous ways. Level headed views of the Monroe Enquirer and Express : We are now told that the surplus which the official reports have been in forming us was lying idle in the vaults of the government treasurv will be non est when the outlav has been made which Congress has ordered to be made in several directions. If this is! ihe case, then we are no longer to be classi fied among the champions , of the Blair bill. Our position in advocacy of the measure involved as a part of its founda tion that there was a superfluous fund in the hands of the government treas urer. We areopposed to increasing our taxes in order to raise a fund for dis tribution by the general government among the states for the purpose. Since so many of our statesmen and valued contemporaries, notably among them the Wilmington btar, think the measure would be not onlv unconsti- tional and undemocratic but also tend to destroy the characteristics of self- reliance and selr-respect or our peo ple, we feel comtortable in view of the inevitable defeat of the bill. The old North State has been equal to greatly trying tasks in-the past, and we shall be very greatly surprised it she shall not be equal to the task of . creditable educational progress in the future. In the matter ot education, as welt as oth er things in the light of the past, we shall expect, in other words, to see the old State shine. The Blair bill, we think is doomed to defeat and to it now wre say farewell. The Louisville Courier Journal, Ken tucky's leading Democratic paper says: The point we make on the JJlair bill as extended is that, if Mr. Blair one year can indicate the course ot studv as it relates to temperance, he may next vear insist that these bouthern schools shall adopt certain text books on taxa tion, on history, on evolution, and fi nally that no school shall receive any rederal aid until it has abolished the color' line. The one course comes just as clearly within the domain of Federal legislation .as the other, and no one who insists that there exists a constitution al provision for such an appropriation can point to any line in the Constitu tion which would prevent Congress from marking out the course of study and determining what shall be the con ditions precedent to such asaistance. Now in conclusion, let these few paragraphs from the speech of Senator Ingalls, of Kansas, be read. If the blush of shame does not crimson the reader's face if is because his State pride is made of the wrong stuff. Thank heaven there are some in North Caro lina who spurn this infamy also: Mr. President, the amendment pro- posed by the senator trom Alabama it i it i ,. i-,,- ana me ouse rvauons matte oy tne sena tor from Indiana are based upon an entire misapprehensionof the objects and the purposes of this bill. It is not intended for the free Territories of the Northwest. It is not intended for the States of the North and the West. J LV. iL: i. : 1 1 11 fl lhey spurn it. I know, sir. I voice the Republicans, the people of ihe State of Kansas, when I say that they spurn in- dignantly and with contempt any as- sumption that they desire a donation from the national Treasury for the purpose of conducting the system of common schools within their borders. us drop disguises, let us come down to puet us ue jinn, ujjuub uus matter; let the basis of common sense and common robbery respectable. And these e In justice, and do not insult the people of meats were all for Blaine and Renubli- , uiuiciii oiiims. uu not insui. Massachusetts and IS ew Hampshire and New York and Illinois and Wisconsin and Kansas and Nebraska and Iowa uuv iiuuoiw uuu. ncviujait nuu town I j m i i i - , and Dakota and Montana by declaring nd J Cleveland, the corrupt ele that they want any portion of this dS f the hasten to make nation of $77,000,000 for the purpose of taking care of the common school system within their borders. We do not want it. When the States of the South, for whom this money is intended, come here and ask that they shall obtain it, and that the basis of distribution shall be the number of illiterates above the age of ten years without any maximum they know perfectly well, and the country knows, that they are obtaining that money under false pretenses. CLEVELAND S -REFORM . One Tear in Office THE GIANT FORCES WITH WHICn HE HAS HAD TO CONTEND HOW HE HAS STOOD THE FIRE. Washington, D. C, Feb. 14. The end of the first year of President Cleveland's term of office is near at hand. It has been a busy year and one fraught with great consequences. The manifold difficulties in the way of the first Democratic administration upon a return of the party to political power after a lapse ot a quarter of a century. It only comprehends results. Mr. Cleveland himself was a year ago an unknown quantity. The country knew what Governor Cleveland was; of what President Cleveland would be it knew nothing. That it believed in him and trusted him was evidenced by his elec tion and installation as President. At the very threshold he was, confronted by two facts: that a large portion of the Democratic party, composed of ante-bellum material, expected him to re sume administrative power where Buchanan left off; that a larger portion composed of the new Dem c ay, ex pected him to establish his administra tion on the basis Of reform. The first named element contained the old line politicians, the second a new generation of voters. Long accustomed to facts of political legerdemain and inured to falsehood, the politicians met the new administration with the assumption that ante-election promises were void and that now that professions of re form had served their turn they would be cast aside as useless. TAKING THE HONEST COURSE. The President had one of two cour ses open to him: to violate his promises to the country and stultify his whole record by accepting this presumption as a fact, or risk the displeasure of this formidable wing of his party by driv ing straight ahead and trusting to the results of a pure administration of public affairs for his vindication. He chose the latter and honorable course. As was anticipated at the first indica tions of this determination, he was threatened with the dismemberment of his party on the one hand and a united opposition or every corrupt element in the country on the other. Every mangy political cur snapped at his heels. Every spoilsman within and without hissed them on, and, too cowardly for open warfare, spat upon his shadow in the darkness. But the President, dominating a strong Cabinet in hearty sympathy with his honest efforts to give the people good government first and take care of his party afterwards, paid no heed to this partisan clamor nor turned aside from his great purpose. Gradually, day by day, he felt the ap proval of the people was his, and it strengthened his hand to execute. The curs became tired of barking and re fired into the obscurity of their ken nels. The venom of the disappointed spoilsman dried up. DISPLAY OF CORRUPTIONISTS. The elements that viewed the grad ual change and foresaw the triumph of honest government with the greatest dismay were the -elements that profit most by dishonest government. The corporations which had their founda tion in subsides and fraud held their charters by corruption, which had sprung from nothing to wealth and powe.i, which had the public by the throat and wrung from its purse enor mous dividends on millions of watered stock these did not want honest gov ernment. Such elements of unbridled corporate pover had put forth every energy to secure in perpetunity the politicals authority of the party under whose administration they had been born, reared and made fat. They had formed a syndicate of wealth to put a man in the presidential chair who was tainted and tattooed with fraud and whose prospective administration guar anteed them immunity and additional I 0 II I i i spoil. They were joined by every cor runt ring and rmgster. Democrat and Republican, v in the country, who be lieved tHat Mr. Cleveland's election meant honest government. Their can didate was heralded 3 ''The Thieves Own" and was supported because of it. His personal magnetism drew them as the loadstone draws needles Thev j swarmed at Chicago by thousands and j nominated him, against the protests of honest men, and they poured out ! money like water to elect him. Not ! because Sit was James G. Blaine, but because he was the representative of a I corrupt party, under which they had grown great. Republican rule had made successful fraud possible; it had made can rule. WAB ON THE PRESIDENT. Having vainly striven against fate their peace with the new regime. Jav Gould, the worst of the lot, was the first to congratulate the new President. Before the ink of the operator who an nounced the recount in New York was dry Jay Gould, controlling the major ity of the newspapers of bw York, the Western Union and the Associated Press, gave in his allegiance to the new government. Those combihations that could not see their way sat down and waited. They were led by their corrupt venal press to expect an early disrup tion of the Democratic party under President Cleveland. They saw his difficulties at once and waited an op portunity to take advantage of the first split. Their hired organs, Re publican and Democratic fostered the Bpirit of bitterness between the two factions; encouraged dissent ions, be cause in the weakness of the adminis tration or its total failure their inter ests might survive unscathed. Their common energies were devoted to an effort to force the President from his reform platform into the gutter of his predecessors. It was to this end the discontent was magnified and urged on to open rebellion. Wrhen it became apparent that the attempt to create a diversion must fail, the disappointment of the jobbers was intense. As day by day the President grew stronger with his party as well as with the country and the success of the reform govern ment was inevitable, the horde of ras cal became alarmed and desperate. The administration had begun to reach out' for them. The Interior Depart ment had begun to press the Pacific railroads for their dues; the Post Office Department had refused to divide 8400. 000 as a subsidy to steamship lines for carrying the mails: the Navy Depart ment had destroyed the Roach at a single blow and, finally the Depart-' ment of Justice stepped in and ordered the telaphone monopoly into court, At each successive step of an honest administration the jobbers howled with rage. They have joined forces in their hostility to the administration and the war has at last openly begun. FACING THE JOBBER S BRIGADE. If there were no other evidences of the entire success of the first year of Graver Cleveland's administration, the fact that it has arrayed against it all the political vagabonds, jobbers, corrupt c, u- wu" rini v i r iwi ii win i h nn i nv fraudulent stock holdei thieve .nnd tbo si, hsidi! nrSs would be a sufficient triumph. Just as an honest newspaper draws upon the dislike and hatred or tne criminal classes ot a community, so honest government at W ashington draws the fire and f urv of the jobbers and corruptionists. In this result President Cleveland is to be con gratulated. The combination of ras cals, great and small, against the Dem ocratic administration before the close ili : ii a Lof the fiscal year of its power is a tri bute to honesty rarely paid by a Chief Executive of this nation. Here in the national capital the sentiment is easily marked. Where most the creatures of the lobby congregate there will be heard the angry mutterings against Mr. Cleveland's administration. Where agents of rotten corporations sit down together are heard curses both deep and loud. In Washington these can le seen and heard on every hand, because every fifth man you meet is in some illegitimate enterprise. During the war it used to.be said with truth, that while everv Democrat was not arebel. every rebel was a Democrat. . Now every man opposed to the adminis tration is not a jobber, but every jobber is opposed to the administration. CALLING A HALT. Then came in a new administration an administration that believed in business principles and honest execu tion of the laws. It found Roach at work, on certain vessels for the govern ment. As soon as one of these vessels was completed a test was ordered by the Secretary of the Navy to ascertain whether she had been constructed ac cording to contract. The Naval Board accepted her in the usual perfunctory way, but the honest Secretary of the Navy saw from their own report that the test was not satisfactory and ordered a second trial. Roach soon saw the character of the new administration and. knowing that his work would-m t stand the scrutiny of honest govern ment, threw up the sponge and to em barrass the government as much as possible went into voluntary bar k ruptcy. His act was the most pomtod confession of the fraud of his whole corrupt career. His cause was seized upon by every orgau hostile to Mr Cleve land's adminittration and an impudent robber was male to pose as a martyr before the country. .-. THE GREAT TELEPHONE MONOPOLY. There never was a p irallel to the out rageons exhibition of brazen jobbery by Join Roach. If anything ever ap proached it, that thing is the Bell Tele phone Company's complaint against the administration. The company was primarily founded in fraud. It has been a fraud all the way through, or is reasonably believed so to have been, its own-actions giving color to the suspicion. The application for the Bell patent was hied on the same day with the application for a patent on the same invention by an inventor named Gray. A Patent Office clerk assumed the responsibility of giving the right of priority to Mr. Bell, when it was clearly a case of interference and should have gone before the examiners bf interferences. The facts would then have been brought out that have subse quently been developed, namely that the sending of language by word of mouth over a wire was not original with either Gray or Bell, and that even had it been it was not patentable. As the issuance of the Bell patent was thus a double violation of the rules of the Patent Office the natural conclusion is that it was obtained by collusion and fraud. Every movement of the Bell Company since that time has justified the worst conclusion. The peculair phase of the Bell telephone fraud is its general bearing on the public. EXACTING ENORMOUS TRIBUTE. Having obtained a patent on a law of nature by questionable means the Bell corporation began to exact trib ute from the whole country. No other telephone could be invented but had to pay a royalty to the Bell mo nopoly, because no telephone could be invented that did not utilize the law of nature that had thus been seized upon and appropriated to the sole use of the Bell people. In a brief two or three years the Bell company became the most gigantic and perfect mo nopoly of the age. There could be no competition. Secure in this posses sion it exacted the most outrageous tax upon users, charging from fifty to one hundred dollars per annum for the use of an apparatus which cost them from three to five dollars and com paratively nothing beyond the plant Nobody could have a telephone with out this extortionate demand was paid, and non-users werelaxed indirectly by users, the whole country beling levied upon one way or another to fill the pockets of the stockholders. Stock which cost next to; nothing jumped to the highest pitch and dividends were paid every month. The monopoly grew enormously rich and its influence ex- tended to every State in the LTnion where rights had been sold and sub- companies organized, and the tax was brought home to the people. As it grew wealthy, like other monopolies, it grew more insolent. It crushed out every attempt at competition ; successfully re sisted every attempt to test its right to franchise. Appeais were made in vain to the Government which had, under a lax Republican administration, fasten ened this monopoly on the necks of the people of the United States; in vain until the Cleveland administration came mt POWer' . 1 hen ? CrV P pressed found ears to hear their gncv- ances. THE GOVERNMENT TAKES A HAND. The government having been the means of committing the wrong, if ! wrong there was committed, was the ! proper party to investigate the subject, and in the name of the United States j the Bell Company was ordered into court to show why their patent should not be canceled. A COMBINATION OF MILLIONS. The Land Office thieves the reform administration. are against The Mormon gang of polygamists are against the reform administration and are willing to move heaven and earth for its overthrow. The lottery swindlers are against the reform administration because it is pre paring to move immediately upon their works. Filially, name any wicked and cor rupt combination, a corporation for an ' "" purpose, f jooueis ui nat- t :n r ' i . i i i! u i j eer cnaraciei , tne uiueisaiiu nutuurui i the same, or those who sympathize 1 with them, and you will find them op 1 posed to the reform administration of President Cleveland. It will not do to treat lightly the combined influence of all these inter ests. For it is now evident that they have in a certain sense pooled their is sues against honfst government. They represent millions, tens of millions and hundreds of millions of dollars of capi tal, real and watered stock. They are in possession of franchises which are principalities in resources and which extend their corporate influences to the remotest corners of the country where ever a wire is stretched or a rail laid. They own newspapers and control to a great extent the metropolitan pres . Their salaried agents swarm about Wash ington and. occupy seats in both houses of Congress. If the combination of jobbers embraced no political interests they would be powerless to produce re sults. Their hue and cry would fali upon the public ear like the sighing of mighty pines of the forest, weird and unearthly, but harmless. For tbo Watcbman Locke Letter. Mr. Editor: Please permit me a little space in iour pajer. The Caro lina W atchman stands at the head of our political papers. We had some very cold weather during the past month, especially on preaching days at Salem, but not so cold as to prevent Bro. Shieny from preaching a good sermon. He preached an excellent sermon based on Christ's first miracle, recently. Person's wishing to Aiear good preaching should come to dear old Salem, where they have a nice, com fortable house, warm and pleasant in all kinds of weather. The school at ! Salem is in the full bloom of useful- ncss, Miss Molley Julian has her hand: full, but she is a good teacher, and can't be beat when it comes to teach ing. Come one and all and let us build up Salem's plainJ While the farmers arte not busy wfth their crops let them work the roads leading to Salem. It is one of be worse patched up pieces of work I efer saw. The road force rah the county in debt some $25 or $30 in two days but they filled the road with pine poles, aiid so it goes. Mr. Ed. Seaford is hard at work picking cotton. He will have the honor of having the first bale of new cotton on the market this year. Bully for Ed ! Mr. S. is a wounded soldier, but does more work than most youfig men. He has a gin and is a just aid fair man He had the honor of put ting up the heaviest bale of cotton in Rowan last year. He has the best molases mill in the State, having tha capacity of producing as much as 1SQ gallons of syrup a day. The Salem people need a new post office and I hope they will get one. ft would be a great convenience to the people of the neighborhood. John Bost has not gone to parts un known. He ha gone west a few miles, and will be back in time for the planting of the next crops. 1' will-correct the marriage of Mr. Bean. He did not marry a Miller, but a Powlas, and she has beans three times a day. Mr. Al. Bost has them every day, but that is nothing, Locke has them always ready. Bost & Davis stand at the head of the hog line- yet. If they have any more lujgs that they can'tcarry let them Call on Locke township, where they w;ll find Samson. He lives yearf Plummerton, Graham street, CriderV Holly, with '"nothing to eat." V ery respectfully, A Farmer. HAPPY Iff YEAR Do you hear a big Boise way off, good people ? 'Hint's us, shouting Happy New Year! to our ten thousand Patrons in Tex as, Ark., La., Miss., Alu., Tenn., Va., X. C, S. C, and Fla., from our Grand New TEMPLE OF MUSH; which we are just settled in after three months of ihoTinj; and" regoiating. Hallelujah! Anchored at last in a Mam moth Building, exactly situated to our needs and immense business. Just what we have wanted for ten long years, but couldu't get. A Magnificent Diubla Stcrs. Four Sto ries ar.d Basement. 50 Pest Front 100 Feet Deep. Iron and Plata Glass Front. Steam Hsatcd. Electric Lighted. The Larpst, Finest and Most Com Blete Mnsic Honse in America. A Visit Fact. if up do say it ourselves Sac V orh noston, ( . incinnati. i n , , i ... Chicago, St. Louis. Xetc Orleans, or any Citij on tin's continent, and you will not find its equal in Si?e, Imposing A)- pearance, lastefttl arrangement, rAc gant Fillings, or JStoblc Carrietl. BUSINESS. and now, with this Grar.il New Mi:su Temple, affording every facility for the ex tension of our liuijincs?; with our $1200,000 Cash Capital, oWjjfctOO.OOO Stock ol Musi cal arcs, our tit isrant-n Houses, our 200 Agencies, our armv of employes, and our twenty veafs of successful experience, we are prepared to serve our patrons far better than ever before, anu givetiiein greater ad vantages than can be had elsewhere, North or South, 1 his is witat wc arc, 4vmg lor, and we shall drive our businyVs from now on with tenfold ehergv.. With hearty and fincerp thanks to all patrons for their ;ood will and liberal sup port, we wisli them all a Ilnppy New Year. Miu & Bates So. Music Reuse, aii.Vxi.Hi Ail, KxA. p. 9 II any one should hanpen to want a Piano, Organ, Violin, Bafijo, co:dcon liana instrument, nnim. M rings, or anv small Musical Instrun ci t. or She-t Muftic Music Book, Pic! ure. Frame, Statuary. Art God. or Artist' JlnteraK WE KEEP SUCH THINGS, and will tell von m!1 tbout the in if von write us. 8b Mi Hi last SEED HOUSE ff HHHiALL KINDS OF BJBJBBJBJBJBJBJ SEEDS PLANTS Send for New 111 n rated Catalogue for 1 886. Md prices of Field Seeds. Mailed FKEJE. T. W. WOOD & SONS, Wholesale and Retail Seedsman, Richmond, V ANSY PILLS Used to-day regularly by 10,000 American Women. Onaranleed mperlor (o nil other, or CMk reAwdeJI. Don't waste money on wortlileaa BMtraiu. Try Brnrdr first. Sold by all Drumusta, or A r t, or tor 11 v K.h and alwBTS mailed to an y addrew- sena 9 aems ror parucuian. X KPIiiHi iu., rnuaaa. L&B. I thia MT WIFE! My wife hss been a great sufferer Catarrh. Several physicians and patent medicines were resorted to, yet the disease continued unabated, nothing af. peanng to make any impression upon it. Her constitution finally became i the poison being in her blood. I secured a bottle of B. B. B. and 4-: her upon its use, and to our improvement began at once, and her ery was rapid and complete. No preparation ever produced such a ful change, and for all forms of ease I cheerfully recommend B. B. B. aa a sunerior Blood Purifier. R. P. DO DOR, 1 ft rd in aster Georgia From the Athens (Ga.) Banner-1 Uncle Dick Saulter says: Fifty ago I had a running ulcer on my leg refused to heal under any treatment. 1-853 I went to California and eighteen months, and in 1873 I visited Hot Springs, Ark., remaining three months, bat was not cured. Amputation was disci but I concluded to make one more I commenced taking the B. B. B. about si weeks ago. 'fhe Fifty-year old sore my leg is healjjig rapidly, and yesterday walked about fifteen miles fishing and hunting without any pain, and befro using the B. B. B. I could not walk exceed ing half a mile. I sleep soundly at night for the first time in many years. TO think hat six bottles have done me more good han Hot Springs, eighteen months in Cal fornia, besides an immense amount of med icines and eight or ten first class physician, will convince any man on earth that it is a wonderful blood medicine. It bat also cured me of catarrh. There is a lady living here, Mrs. 1 tas had catarrh for many, many rears. I iave known she had it for fifteen-or twefc. t y years, and my father once doctored hex, fjhs she was then a tenant on our place. For the last two and a half years she has bean bedridden, the catarrh or cancer (the nu merous nhvsicians have never decided which) during her two years and a half is the bed. had eaten all the roof of h mouth out. She was so offensive no oM could stay in the room; she could not eat anything, but could swallow soup if it WM trained. She gave up to die, and cam so hear perishing all thought she would die Her son bought the B. B. B. and alu several bottles, which effected an euro. She is iow well and hearty. I hot exaggeratjed one particle. LUCY STRONG. 18 NOW AT THE Corner of Kerr & Lee with k Cull line of DRY GOOD a4 fBOCEKIES. Also keeps a First Cla BOARDING HOUSE. Call and ate 28qly. !Ft YOU WANT TO FILL YOUR GAI AND MAKE BIG SCORES, DEMINGTIN ItlFLES SHOT GUNS. All the Latest FOR DESCRIPTIVE CI ADDRESS Lamberson, Furman L Co., SOLE AGENTS FOR E. Remington &Sons Sporting Arm mmi Ammaaitiea, 281 & 283 Broadway. NEW YORK. WESTERN OFFICE, D. H. LAMBERSON CO., 73 Suae Street, Chicago, B. ARMORY, - - - IUON, K. V. REMINGTON SHOVELS, SCOOPS, SPADES. ABE II THE IEST IAIKI, IT SULUI REMEMBER THAT HI 6900S All AL W ATI I One Piece of Solid Ste NO HOLES OR RIVETS TO WEAKEN TNE SEND FOR CIRCULARS. REMINGTON AGRICULTURAL G$.t I LION. X. V. Mw York (Mace. 118 plicftiM, otnond ! k UIUVU (HBP i i ii. a Kailroad, GREAT IMF. MOUTH RT HOPKINS at. 4 1 i 1 ,f i H I I p si f I ? V. : t A -1 mm ... ! . stria