STATE LIBRARY. i 1 t ctroiinct y.'.i. hm&i VOI XVII.-THIED SEEIES SALISBURY, N. C, APRIL 8, 1886. J IP hp I , WW 1 I V Yl I HO. 2, FIRE j ' I INSURANCE AGENCY OF- J.Sai ,Jr. Representing some of thelarg est American and English Com panies. Combined Assets Over $35,- j 000,000. 4 Pont fail to call and see him , before placing your Insurance. Remember that years of labor, pelf-sacrifice, and denial maybe j swept away in hour's time. Don't run any further risks but call at once ana take out a .policy. Office, next sdoor to A. C. Harris' I , If " Fel25:ly. Land for Sale. by M. J. M. HA. DEN. REAL ESTATE AGENT, MAIX STREET, SALISBURY, N. C. Farms, Tom Lets & Mill Property. 3f"Call and see his Descriptive Cata lojtue and Price List.. Terms to suit. oo3: 6 m Mortgage Sale of Land. Pursuant to tin provisions of a Mort gage, Registered in Buk No. 2, are 727, made by Noah Dealtnun for the protection and benefit of the undersigned, on the 7th day of May, 1885. in which he has for feited, the undersigned will sell at public ale fur cash, at the Court House door in the town of Salisbury, on the 0th day of April next, the following property : Two lots and one house, and blacksmith hop-on 'Union Hijl," near Salisbury on the Statesville .-mad; conveyed by the sajd Noah Headman to satisfy the debt provided for in said Mortgages TOBIAS KESTLER. By J. A. IcKcnzie, Agent. 21:4t g 3 a c -i t- . a o ? a - v -r JZ a o. 9 vac S t. A ' I 2 Z ' r.3 J. c ! n 2 2 ' & -B 5 " S B. S 3 P : 5" K a ?r " Ci t SS 2. mam raw 3 O 5 lHcnins h4 BEST REMEDY KNOWN FOE SORE MOUTH SORE THROAT In all forms and stages. PURE R 'GETABLE Ul tSNU IHSrrtu.fiLNT. X Otrsi whora ot h erg failed to give reUef. Sr. B. B Davis, Athens, Qa.. says: "I suffered with catarrh five years But since usinir CRUTAIN Catahrh ctKE amenUrely tree from th3 dls- .. o. B. Howe. Athens. Oa.. says: "C ERTAIN PAT.Mc HU ct'KK cured ine of a severe ulcerated re throat, aart I cheerfully endoive It." Mtsa Lucy J, CooV. i)coae Co. Ga.. writes, Sept. 17th, is$5: '"OaeDoitle of jour remedy entirely ctired me of Cat.irrh wltli which I bad suffered ereatly for flvp years." J. U. Allgood, Athens, Oa., writes Sept. 8, "85; "L had severe sore throat more than two weeks; was entirely cured by CEKTAIN CATAKKli CUKE In one day." CAN YOU DOUBT SUCH TESTIMONY' WE THINK NOT. Only a few of our m vny certificates are given here, others c in be obtained from your druggist, or by addressing -l 3 C. OO ATHENS, Ga. For Sale by ENNLSS, Salisbury N.C 21:ljr. I certify that on the 15th of Febru ary I comuiuicnccd giving my loui f children, aged a, 4, e and 8 years, respectively, smith s Worm Oil, and! and within six davs there were at least 1206 worms ex pelled. Que childl .passed over 100 in one night. J. E. Simpson. Hall Co., February 1, 1879. i-r 1 . Sir: My child, five years old, had symptoms of worms. I tried calomel and other Worm Medicines, but fail- w iu cajci auv. oeeing. .ir. rJailj certificate, I got a vial of vour Worm. I Oil, and the first dose brought fort muiuis., anu uie seconu uose so manvi Were passed I could not count them ! I S. II. ADAMS. 21:ly. CATARRH LY8 EQUIP A Song and a Prayer. A song for the girl we love-- God lore her! A song for the eyes with their tender wile, And the -fragrant mouth with its milting smile, The rich brown tresses uncontrolled, That clasp her neck with their tenderest hold; And the blossom lips, and the dainty chin, And the lilly hand that we try to win. The girl we love I God love her. A prayer for the girl we loved God loved herl A prayer for the eyes of faded light, And the cheek whose red rose waned to white, And the quiet brow with its shadow and gleam, And the lashes drooped in a long deep dream, And the small hands crossed for the churchyard rest, .'"!'. And the flowers dead in her sweet dead breast, The girl we loved ! God loved her t The Disappointed. There are songs enough for the hero Who dwella on the heights of fame ; I sing for the disappointed, For those who missed their aim. I sing with a tearful cadence For one who stands in the dark, And knows that his last best arrow Ha? bounded back from the mark. I sing for the breathless runner, The eager, anxious soul Who falls with his strength exhausted Almost in sight of the goal 1 For the hearts that break in silence With a sorrow all unknown-: For those who need companions, Vet walk their ways alone. There are songs enough for the lovers Who share love's tender pain ; I sing for the one whose passion Is given and iu vain. For those whose spirit comrades Have missed them on the way, I sing with a heart o'erflowing This minor strain to-day. And I know the solar system Must-somewhere keep in space A prize for that spent runner Who barely lost the race. For the plan would be imperfect Unless it held some sphere That paid for the toll ancPtalent And love that are wasted here. Ella Wheeler Wilcox: Frohibitionn Politics. The Greensboro Prohibitionists have nominated a ticket for town officers and will make a fight on that line. W e rer gret to see the question complicated in this way. Prohibition will come but not through a Prohibition party. It ought not not to be burdened with any man s unpopularity. The Greensboro nominees are all good men and yet it is possible that there are Prohibitionists who would prefer to vote for other men. The cause is in danger of losing vote:, when men must support a certain municipal tic et to secure prohibition. Our belief is that it should divorced from every other question, and the de sire to secure it in a day ought not to prompt its advotes to hamper it by making it carry men into office. No man can successfully defend the whis ky traffic. Let the fight be against that and not for office. The State Chronicle. Why do not the Prohibition men work under our local option law, which is similar-to that under which Georgia has become a Prohibition State ? By so doing the question is isolated from political and other ques tions and will go before the voters ot to.vns, townships and counties, on its merits, which is certainly the true method for obtaining a permanent tri umph. Ed. WASHINGTON LETTER. (From Our Regular correspondent. Washington, March 29, 1886. When the blind Chaplain of the House of Representatives, in his morn ing prayers, asked for the recovery of the Secretary of the Treasury, he ex- tends his invocation in a way that was quite unnecessary. He prayed that the President, his Cabinet, and the two Houses of congress might profit by this example of overwork, bearing in mind that the bodv has its laws, the study and the practice of which are obligato ry on every man of sense. So far as this busy, hard worked Administration is concerned. Dr. Milburn's petition seemed well enough, but it was felt that there was no need of placing before either branch of Congress, as a warning the results of over industry. There is little danger that the Senate will injure itself with hard work if its majority, in a time when hundreds t thous:inds of hungry men are wander ing with dispairing aimlessness down the highways and through the byways of the land, can nnd as its only issue the question as to the papers in some petty office. So long as the majority in tne highest legislative body of the nation, will continue,, for the length of three weeks, a pnvilidged collective scanlal monger, because the Executive does not waive his prerogative and give it access to his private correspondence. there is no need of prayers in behalf of over toiled Senators. The resident will continue to aston ish every one about him by the remark able amount of labor he performs daily No man probably has ever before given anything like as much intellectual strength and steadiness of application to the duties of the Presidential office He studies closely even the minor ques tions that come before him for official ! action, and every document that goes from his hands, if it be only a letter to an officeholder, is carefully prepared. Mr. Jordon, the United States Treas- urer, under the new regime, is" another practical worker and thorough business man. A short time ago a Congressional Committee asked him to appear before them and impart his views on financial topics. He responded that he was too busy during the day, but would be pleased to meet the committee at night, and so he did. A short time after Mr. Jordon was installed in his new office, he went to the Government Printing Office and asked to have a small job of work done that day. He was assured by some of the officials there that it could not be finished before the next morning. "I must have that printing to-night," in sisted the Treasurer. "It is impossible, remonstrated the others. Mr. Jordon threw off his coat, went to the desk, and began setting the type rapidly him self, while the clerks looked on in as tonishment. He finished a third of the work in fifteen minutes, nd turning to the officials, he said; uNow when I ask to have a certain job of printing done by a certain time, please remember that 1 know what lam talking about. it is useless to say thenvorK was ready for him at the specified time. When his resolutions finally got through the Senate by a mere majority oi one, senator Mmunas breatned a sigh of relief. Even this barren victory was better than he expected, fie was nervously apprehensive that a sufficient number of his Kepubiican brethren would vote against him to cause his defeat. Mr. Edmunds sudden anxiety to force a vote is easily explained. Had he allowed the debate to continue nntil the new California!! Senator, then en route for Washington, reached here, his little game would have failed, for the benate would have been tied. The political effect of the discussion will not be profitable to the Republican party .and the whole contest can have no practical result. Iso displaced official will be restored. No personal oaoers will be furnished and no reason will be w . Ill I i 1 1 1 i - - - m r m i given, it is wen Known nere tnat tne Republicans feel no elation or satisfact ion in carrvmg through these resolu ions by this meagre majority of a strict party vote. It was thought that the distinguish ed Senator from New York Mr. Evarts, would not dare to speak on the Ed munds resolution question because his ogic as an attorney in behiilf of a ben- ate pliant iff against a President defen- dant in lSoo connected so seriously witn his logic in behalf of a President de- fenndant against a Senate plaintiff in 1869. He did speak, however, and this is the way he explained his change of base: 1 might say. that when counsel ire urging and pressing proportions in view and in aid of adefendantin charge, those are scarcely judical opinions. flis explanation would nave been sim pler, at least, if he had said: "I was retained to attack the tenure of offic aw seventeen years ago: I am retained to uphold it now. ; To Rob Peter for Paul. is well to beware of the Greeks It bearing gifts. We do not say that the Republican party are necessarily mimi- d to the bouth. or would propose me;isures to harm it. But they will bear watching even when their advan ces are most friendly. This demagogue's trick, known as the Blair bill, should it become a law, will be the cause of endless trouble North and South. It will be a letting down of those consti tutional safeguards which defend so ciety against the insidious approach of a multitude of evils. It will rob hon est and industrious Peter to pay sloth.- al Paul. We consider almost all subsidy as unwise on general principles. m . m -a m M 1 . 1 1 But this would be or such a special ana peculiar character as to make it doubly TIT 11 1 Al TT I J so. we nope tnat u me nouse uoes not defeat it, the President will.--J5os- ton Post, Dem. Democrats Should have the Offices. Augusta Chronicle, Dem. It is part of the unwritten history of this Administration that a young Democrat from Tennessee called on President Cleveland shortly after the latter was inaugurated, and presented his petition for office. He was endorsed bv both wings of the party in his own State and approached the Executive with confidence. The President r.c knowledged the credentials, but asked : "What's the matter with the man who is now in the office ?" "Nothing that I know of,"aid the applicant, "except that he is a Repub lic in.'1 "Then why remove him?" The Tennessean laid his .paper on the table, and burning with the spirit of Old Hickory turned full upon the Executive and replied : "Mr. President, last year the people of Tennessee were called upon to give you their suffrage. It was not a ques tion of turning President Arthur out and voting President Cleveland in, save that one was a Republican and the other a Democrat." The President reflected a moment, and telling the young man to return next-day, tilled out his commission and issued it forthwith. There is a! moral iu this, which the President and the people must recog nize, it is that the vote of the people in the National election was a rebuke not a figure head; not to one man or a select cabinet of men, but to a nartv of men who had controlled the Government for twenty-five years, who had infested its offices and debauched its service and who had converted public place into public plunder. lhat vote was a rebuke to the whole party, to its malfeas ance, its tradition, its policy and its personnel. Does any body uoes anv ooav sunnosp that the people intended the reform to I ra nite nouset or at tne WaaL A x J 1 l.f f . K' few who wanted a comfortable berth: who, when installed, could look around him from his cushioned place and say: "JNOW is the great victory complete and Democracy is fully triumphant ?" Lnd anybody believe in .November. 1884, that the President would retattf in position, thirteen months after he was inaugurated, the great horde of Re publican placemen ineorgia violent, blatant demagogues and partisans who nad come down to us from tne hands of General Grant's partisanship or of Wkrmayes' imbecility? Was not every vote which bore the name of Grover Cleveland a protest against these men and their tribe as much as against Mr. Blaine and the few gentlemen who might sit in his Cabinet or stand at his sideboard ? Or did the election mean merely that the high mullein must be stricken and the toucher undergrowth suffered to grow rank and undistur- . " . . " bed. How Beecher Sees It. The Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. in a recent interview with a reporter in New i orit on the prospects ot tariff reform, said: "1 am inclined to think that there will be no great change in the revenue laws tnis year, me manner in which the pension list is being in creased precludes the possibility of re ducing the tariff for years to come. ,, I think, as we are now, every man who was in the war is entitled to a pension. The next step will be to pension the uncles, nephews and cousins to the second or third degree. Possibly before r ... V. - our legislators get through they will pension every man that was born with in the years that the civil war was raging in this country. It looks to me as if Congress were merely inventing a pension law as a convenient peg on which to hang up revenue reform." Politeness in Society. Christian at Work. Iti was amusing to read lately, cabled over the world, that Mr. Gladstone kissed the Queen's hand. The custom of withdrawing the glove in handshak ing lis now a thing of the past. It had its forigiu m the knight of the olden time, taking off his iron gaurrlet so as not to hurt his lady's hand, and has gradually become an obsolete fashion, though one vet sees a gentleman who considers it only due a lady that he should give her his bare hand. A young lady told me that she incurred the displeasure ot a provincial acquain tance because she merely bowed in stead of shaking hands with a group of gins, with some of whom sl.e had but slight acquaintance, when entering a parlor at a country afternoon tea They called it "putting on airs,'' when, in fact, it was their own ignorance of the social necessities of the occasion that was at fault. But the provincial young ladies evidently believed in handshaking as part of the code of manners. Yet, at the same gathering my friend said the 3oiuig people did not seem to see any impoliteness in whispering or giggling in the room, or rudely staring at any dress that dif- tered rroni their own style. What a very trying ordeal, too, is the loud- voiced greeting, where your hand is held and inquiry made after your wel fare and that of your family so as to be heard all over the room. THE DU.1HAI BUIL FERTILIZER Manufactured especially for Bright Tobac- col v e uuarantee every pound automa ted with Genuine Peruvian Guano. Will not fire the plant in dry weather. Insures a quick and vigorous growth and a large, bmulit, rich waxy Tobacco. Indorsed by the nleanters wherever used. Remember some Peruvian Guano is almost absolutely neWssary to grow larjje rich tobacco. Thi9 is the kind of tobacco that in in such de mand. TOE DURHAM BULL FERTILIZER for cotton and corn is Acknowledged, by leading planters throughout the state, aa the lest Guano for. the price ever ued. Guaranteed free from all Firey Anion is. tea or shodd? materials of every kind. These "goods are'fast bet (fuming the leader where- ever used, because they give the best field results. When von buy DURHAM BULL FERTILIZER you get value received, you are not buying water and sand. Every ton of our goods is warranted to be just as renrescuted. For ale by dealers at most rail road points in N. C. and Va. LOCAL AGENTS. L. C. Bernhardt, 1fitherspoou & Gibson, R. L. Goodman & Co., Hoover & Lore, Salisbury N. C. Statesville N. C. Moorcsv ille N. C. Concord N. C. Anolv to anv of our Agents or write di rect to us for Flemings Treatise on To bacco and Leading pi 'inters certificates testifying to the superiority of our Fer ijlizei. A DURHAM FERTILIZER CO. l;2m. Durham N. C. The President's Presents. i Indianapolis Journal. -Do vou know' said a friend of the Present to me the other day, "that flwr. rwij ;a u of,,;L4. in America in regard to receiving pres- . . " .... 1 - 1 U L i x-iciciaiiu lo 11IC O LI (4.11 ilCO l niaii ents? 1 remember hat a S' Chad. ter fais election, what - LTTr.-JZliS-TI iiQllr Hurl frt amnlir o mon ai h i 1 1 1 1 t t r rsr's from all over the county. You will November hardly believe it, but from to March he had eighty-nine dogs sent him. Mr. Cleveland is fond of dogs, but he made it a rule never to see one one of the gifts. As soon as they ar rived they were sent to the stable of the Executive Mansion and the pro fessional packer reshipped them. One day Mr. Cleveland happened to be in the yard when an express wagon ar rived with a dog. It was a splendid Newfoundland, 1 can tell you. When the President saw him he looked long ingly at the shaggy black creature, as if to say, 'How 1 would like to keep you, out he passed on, ana the aog was sent back whence he came. During that time he received no less than six eagles, splendid birds, but they were all sent back. Mr. Cleveland always sent everything back that could be returned 1 i xl J.1- 1 13 J. DU iaere was one inmg ne couia no1 return they were embroidered hat bands. Why, I do not exaggerate in the least when I say he received as many as a bushel basket full in a day. U have often seen, at evening time, du a iii a i i n .a bushel basket lull or tnese tnings m the library of the executive mansion at Albany. What did he do with them? He nver saw them; they were carried out by the servants and sold for waste paper or rags. I often used to think now many hours had been wasted by fair hands in marking the G. C. on these hat-bands. I was mistaken when I said he returned everything. He did keep one gift canes. Mr. Cleveland has the finest set of canes of any man I'll 11 TT11 1" 1 1 in the world. He had a cabinet made for them. There are ninety-six in all. and such beauties! He received a large number voted to him from fairs all over the country. He has over twenty five gold headed ones, a number of them very handsome. ' - - A man can no more be a Christian without facing evil and conquering it than he can be a soldier without going to battk facing the cannou s mouth and encountering the enemy in the field. Dr. Chapin. In a late lecture at Yale. Prof. Ar thur T. Hadlev stated that no less than 15.;00 persons were injured annually in the United, btates from the single di ty of coupling cars. This estimate is mide from statistics ot surgical aid given in 1 J . s'uch cases. A. CARD. To all who are sintering trom tne errors and. indiscretions of youth, nervous weak ness, earl v decay, loss of manhood, &c.. I will send a recipe that will cure vou, Kkee of C u a hoe. 1 ins yreat rc.nedv was dis covered by a missionary in South America Send a self addressed envelope tn the llev Joseph T. In man. Station D. Ncvc York City, 4:1 y NOTUhGF ADMINISTRATOR'S SALS OF LAND! Pursuant to a Decree granted by the Su nerior Court of Rowan countv, in the case of Chrisennurv Holshouser, Adm'r of Pau llolshouser. dee'd., against David Ilolshous- er ami otners, i win expose to puunc out 1 .1 T ! . ... crv to the lushest bidder, U.N 1 riri MISES ON SATURDAY THE 10TH DAY OF APRIL, 1880. the following described real estate, situate iu Rowan county, ad i joining the lands of Heiirv Peeler, Jeremial Kulltz and others, containing eleven acres being the land conveyed by Eli Holaht user to Paul Holshouser, by deed, dated Nov 5th. 1885 and registered in Book No. 54 page 201 of Public Register's othce of Row an countv. 1 tltMb ot bale: Une halt cash and the balance on a credit of six months with interest from date. Chkisknbuiiy Ilor.snoi'si h. Adm'r of Paul Holshouser. March 8th, '80. 21:0t SOMETHING NEW ! B- L A MP C II I M NE YS 3 will not break by heat, lor sale at ENNISS'. that DIAMOND DYES - All colors vou ENNISS' wish at DON'T FORGET to call for Seeds ENNISS of all kinds at TO THE LADIES Call and see the Flower Pots at ENNISS. WANTED IN SiLISBU Y n PTrgeilc Dusiness woman to soli cit and take ordersior THE MAOAM GRISWOcD PATENT SUPPORTING coA SETS. Tliese corsets have beeu extn.slvely advertised and sold by lady canvassers the pasi len years which, with tlxelxr sipo xrloXi"t3T, has created a Lakok Demand tor tliem throughout the United states, aud any lady who gives her iliae and energy to canvass- lmTror them can soon uuna up permanent aim profitable business. Tliey are not sold by mPivbauif. ani we G. V E EXCLUSIVE TERRITO- ov ihfiobT fflvluK the agent entire control ot the'se SUPERIOR CORSETS in the terrttor" as slirue: her We have a large number ot agents wno n :.ikintfa e -and sueeesa ael lag these irixxls. an'l ' we uSire Mien iu - i) uu. Aiiurew, is:in. War on the Boycott A Mr. Thompson has introduced into : the Kenteckj Legislature a bill which E2E J co.nSpirm8 together to injure or obstruct or lm- 4 g, hrm or company in thp luwriil rKniAAfinn n-F tro hncinooa i be liable to a Hneof from 8200 to vfvv anu imprisonment oi irom tnree months to a year, and that in the event ffm I001 C0Wy; th conspiratora Mian ue imprisoned iroin one to tnree years in the penitentiary. A Duel Between Women. Loxnox. March 25. A remarkable duel was fought on the field of Water loo to-day, the contestants being Mme. Valsavre, a native of France, and Misa Shelby, an American. The duel was the result of a dispute on the relative merits of French and American female doctors. After a stormy altercation Mmme. Valsavre threw her gloves in Miss bhelby s pace, and a duel was forthwith arranged. The weapons were swords. Miss Shelby was slight- wounded on the arm. The four seconds were Americans. These ex pressed themselves satisfied and the duel had been conducted fairlv, and that honor had been vindicated and the insult avenged. A Five Thousand Dollar Meal. Tqqo Mo vi Tn ! n &tm Tl'inftnVil' ramav i.iuuv jjLa,ci mi. cm aj v tt v, tiLvm a &a nn i , did not believe that savings banks were a good place to put money. He there- ore stored it under his barn, borne $5,000 were secreted under the barn floor, and when he went to get it the rats had chewed the bills in pieces. He took the remnants to the United States Treasury yesterday to get good bills in place of them. Ax. L.& 3i Si Mi Hi PIANOS AND 0R3ANS To be closed out Regardless of Cost. Our Annual Closing Out Sale, Preparatory to Inventory. Listen to the btory. Stock Taking is the time for Bargains Theu we clear out generally, and start new. 200 Pianos and Organs too many on hand. Must part with them. Some used a few months only; Some vear or so: Some five years; Some ten years. All in prime order, and many of them Repolished, Renovated, Rcstrung and made nice and new. Each and at are real bargains, such as comes along but once a year. SPOT CASH buys cheapest, but we give Very Easy Terms, it needed. WRITE for CLOSING OUT SALE CIR CULAWS. and MENTION this ADVER TISEMENT. i BARGAINS IN SMALL . Musical torments MARK DOWN SALE TO Dcminc OTr The knife put in deep. Times hard Stock too lare. A $20,000 Stock to be Retailed at WHOLESALE PKICES. An Actual Fact. ISee these prices: ACCOHDEONS. Six Keys, 50c ; 8 Keys, 65c; 10 Keys, 00c; 1 Stop", $1.25; 1 Stop, Trumpets and Clasps, $2.25. BANJOS. Calf Head, 4 Screws, $1 75; 8 Screws, $2.75; Nickel Him, 12 Screws, $3; Same, 24 Screws, $5. VIOLINS, With Complete Outfits. Bow, Cse, Strings, Rosin, Iustiuctor, $3.50, $5, $7.50. $10. EUPHONIAS With 4 Tunes, Only $6.50. The hiteat Automatic Musical In strument. ORGUINETTE and OUGANINI MU8IC. 35 feet for $1.00 post-paid. Our selection. Guitars, Cellos, Double Basses, Music Boxes, Orpuinettes, Organinas, Tamborines, Drums, Comets, Trimmings, etc., all Re duced, Down, Down. Terms CASH WlTlI ORDER. No Credit. Mmey refunded if goods do not suit. Handsome Illustrated Catalogue (no pages) free to all. MUSIC GIVEN AWAY. Send Ten Cents in postage stamps, and we will mail vou, free of charge, FIVE PIECES of VOCAL Hnd INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC, full sheet size. Also, Catalogue ot our 10-cent Standard Music. Better Bargains from us than any North em Music House can give. Order Trade a Snecialtv. Customers in all the Southern States. Letters promptly answered. Address Ludden & Bates Southern Music House, Sav'h, Ga. PATENTS L Caveats, Trade Marks and topyrigms Obtained, and all other business In the U. 8. Patent Otflce attended to lor Moderate ref. our onie Is opposite the L 8. Patent Office, and we can obtain Patents lu less time tUan tuose re mote (rum Washington. Knd Model r draw lnsr We advise as to patent ability tree ot charge; ai.d make A cluirg .mi we IVUatm Pal mt W'e lefer ler to the Postmaster, the Supt. ot Honey order Mv.. and to onieiaisot tne 1 . 8. Tat entomee. For circular, advice, terms and refer ence-,n actual clients In your own stateor county writ- to C. A, SNOW Jt CO., Opposito Patent ufLce, ahlijgtcta i . C. Oct , . tl lOO Buzz. Buzz. Buzz. THE BUSY BEES HEALING NATIONS. 1 From the Mountains to the Sea, Praia es Come Waited forB. B. B. MOTHER AND SISTER. B.B.B. Co.: Mv mother and. sister ulcerated throat and scrofula, and B. B. cared them. E. O. TINtlLEY June 20, 1885. Columbiana. 4 tit . ! GOD SPEED IT. B. B. B. Co. : One bottle of B. B. cured me of blood poison and rheum May God speed it to everyone. i W. K. ELLIS, June 21 , 1885 . Brunswick. Ga. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS. B. B. B. Co. : One of my customers, Rogers, was afflicted 25 years with a ble ulcer on his leg, but B. B. B. has curttd him. R. F. MEDLOCK. June 22, 1885. Norcross, Ga, BAY HORSE. r B. B. B. cured me of an ulcer with wab I Had been troubled rit'ty yean I am now as fat as a bay horse, and sleep better thae anybody, and B. B. B. did it all. - R. R. SAULTEB. Conductor C. R. R. RAILROAD TALK. Four bottles of B. B. B. cured me of a severe form of rheumatism, ami the number ot bottles cured my wife ot rheuma tism. J.T.GOODMAN, . Conductor C. R. R. MAGICAL, SIR, The use of B. B. B. has cured me of mack suffering, as well as a case of piles of 40 years' standing. Although 80 years old, I feel like a new man. B. B. B. is magical, si GEOB. FRAZIER. j WONDERFUL GODSEND; My three poor, afflicted children, wha inherited a tenible blood poison, have improved rapidly alter the use of B. B. B It is a Godsend healing balm. MRS. S. M. WILLIAMS, Sandy, Texas EASTSHORE TALK. We have been handling B. B. B. about 12 months, aud caii say that it is the best selling medicine we handle, and the satis faction seems to be complete. LLOYD & ADAMS, June 23, 1885. Brunswick Qa, j NVERY DECISIVE. The demand for B. B. B. is rapidly in creasing, aud we now buy in one gross lota. We unhesitating! sav our customers are all well pleased. " HILL BROS., JUnejM, 1885. Anderson, 8. C. j . TEXAS TATTLE. One of our customers left Ida bed for the first time in six months, after using only one bottle of B. B. B. He ha4 scrofula of a terrible form, that had resists all other treatment. B.B.B. now take the lead in this section. j LIEDTKE BROS. June 16. 1885. Dexter, Texas. R.T.HOPKINS 18 NOW AT THE Corner of Kerr A Lee Streets, with a lull line of DRY GOODS and GROCERIES. Also keens a First Class iOAHIHXG HOUSE. Cull and see him. 28:pJv. A ORGANIZED 1859 A Home Company SEEKING HOME PATRONAGE Cash capital $300,000 Total assets $750,000 Insures all classes pro perty at adequate rates. Losses promptly ad justed and satisfactori ally settled without Jiny litigation. J.EH3DE3 BBC WOT, Pros t J. Allen Brown, Agt, Salisbury, N.C. 24:!m. 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