Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / July 29, 1886, edition 1 / Page 1
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hp I ,i rn hni WtpMti i nr A VyJ Vl JL JLAll T t I I V I It 11a - - . au acts; -set VOL XVII.-THIRD SERIES. SALISBURY, C, JULY 29, 1888. NO. 41 - ' . - . . - i 1 ; m BEAD THIS COLUMN CAREFULLY. orteg& Bro's. THE GRAND CENTRAL FANCY AND DRY GOODS ESTABLISHMENT OF SALISBURY ? For this season their line ot Dress Trini mins U unapproachable. A full line of Rosary Bead Trimmings, ftnev Balls and Crescents for Lambrequins. Special bargains in Hamburg and Swiss Embroideries. Lar-'e varieties of Buttons, large and null, with clasps to match. Largest and cheapest line Of Pearl Buttons in the city. Below all competition, they have the best line of Laces, in all widths, of Escurial, Spanish, Black and Colored, Oriental, Egyptian Cream and White. Arascn,5 and Fillaselle Silk Flos in all shades. . : "ftrerSl ; n. Aim, ijuo .... 'j- " iirasois.irom i. i T".vV. , Rare bargains inKid and & IK Uloves and Mitts of all shades and quality. 4 rnmolete line of Undressed Kids for . r r An unequalled assortment of Ladies and Misses Hose at all prices. RIBBED HOSE FOR CHIL DREN A SPECIALITY. Gent's Silk Scarfs from 25c to $1.00. - Just the place to get White and Colored Cuffs and Collars for Ladies. If you want Straw Hats, Fur Hats and Shoes for Gentlemen, Ladies, or Boys, you can find them here. H The more careful youjead the more you will be-convinced tliait they have the best stock in town, and will sell to you at prices to compete with any one. In all the recent popular shades of RESS GOODS They have all Wool Nun's Veiling at 25c. Batistes and Embroidery to match. Embroidered Etomine Robesv Einbroid- , i . i V. l KI..M I! t ! 1,1. ereu acpuyr uoues, r uu iuiu jn.nu iuuiuic Dress Goods, Combination Wool Kobe .Dress I Goods, Brooidc Combination Dress Goods, 1 Striped Combination Dress Goods, Booed ay Cauvass Plaid Dress Goods, Sheppurd Ptaid Dress Goods, Cotton Canvass Dress Goods, 15c SatteenspCrinkled Seersuckers, Ging hamSi. ' In White Goods you cannot be pleased - better anywhere; they have Linen De Dac ca, India Linen, Persian Lawn, Victoria Lawn, White and Colored Mull, Nainsook, at all prices. All Shades ot Cheese Cloth, Calicoes, 58 xyo ac oc. per yar, vassnuuiB mm uvm a wear, all prices, Cottonades from 12c to 30c Ladies and Misses Jerseys, a full line, Cur tain Goods in Persian and Russian Drapery, Curtain Holland in all shades, Oid Shades, in all colors, Curtain Poles and Fixtures, Linen-Lap Robes 75c. to $1.50. MERONEY & BRO. 46:6m SALISBURY, N. C- o C S z . . u 1 - - - lis 0 v 1 o - U t. tlo H3 (i c n O a S B W ?.' SO S' 3 re o S S 3 ' Cj c re a "ire. 2 5? Si on 1 . i BEST REMEDY KNOWN FOE CATARRH SORE MOUTH SORE THROAT In all forms and stages. PURELY VEGETABLE M REQUIRES NO INSTRUMENT. It Cares wh or b others failed to give i relief. --- Dr. B. B. Davis, Athens, Ga.. says: "I suffered VltU Cutarrh live veajs. But since using CERTAIN CATAIUUI CUKE am entirely free from the dls- Dr. O. B. Howe, Athens, Ga., says: "CERTAIN CATARRH CUKE cured me of a severe ulcerated sore throat, and I cheerfully endorse It." Miss Lucy JL Cook. Oconee Co. Ga.. writes, Sept 17th, 1SS5: "One bottle ot your remedy entirely cured me of Catartih with wUlch I had suffered greatly for five years." J. H. Alurood. Athens, Ga.. writes Sept. S.'SS: rtI had severe sore throat more than two weeks; was entirely cured by CURTAIN CATARRH CURE In one day." - CAN YOU DOUBT SUCH TESTIMONY? WE THtNK NOT. Only a few of our m my certificates are given hene. omrs can be ootaiued from your druggist, or tjy addressing 3 C. CO., ATHENS, Ga. For Sale by J. II. ENLSS, Salisbury S.C. 21:ly. I certify that on the 15th of Pebru- ary I commmenced ffivinir my loura 'children, aged 2, 4, 6 and 8 years, rcspcctivey, omit 11 5 worm vm, anu and within six days there were at least 1200 worms expelled. Oncchildj .passed over 100 in one mrht. J. E. Simpson'. Hall Co., February 1, 1879. Sia: My child, fife years old, liadi symptoms of worms. I tried calomel and other Wrm Medicines, but fail- 'ed to expel any. Seeing Mr. Bain'tri certificate, I got a vial of your Worm; lOil, and the first dose brought forty" p 11 1 a 1 vi in, sau me seconu aosc so manvl fwere passed I could not count them. S. II. ADAMS. 21:ly, The Poet's Heart. TUB LATE PAIL HAYSE. Day follows day; years perish; still mine eyes Are opened on the self-same round of space. You fadeless forests in their Titan grace, . And the large splendors of those opulent skies. I watch unwearied the miraculous dyes Of dawn or sunset; the boughs which lace Round some coy dryad in a lonely place Thrilled with low whispering (and st range sylvan sighs. Weary? the poet's mind is fresh as dew, And oft refilled as fountains of he light, His clear child's soul finds some thing sweet and new Even iu a weed's heart, the carved leaves of corn, The spear-like glass, the silvery irime of morn, A cloud rose-edged, and fleeting ftars at night. The Bravest Battle. JOAQUIN MILLER. The bravest battle that ever was fought! Shall 1 tell you where and wheit? -On the maps, of the world you will find it not; 'Twas fought by the mothers of men. Nay; not with cannon, or battle shot, With sword, or nobler pen ; Say nor with eloquent word, or thought, From mouth of wonderful men. j 3"P in "''P woman's W Of woman that would not yield, B(lt bmvely giientlv. bore her Dart L0! there is that battle field 1 V No marshalling troup; no bivouaq song; .No banner to glean and wave I But, oh ! these battles, they last so long t rom babyudod to the grave ! "Recompense." INSCRIBED TO SECKETAK V BAT ARB If KMT. IN HIS liEKEAVE- PACL H. H A YNE. The scythe of death hns cleft his hopes In twain. And mowed his Held of love till all Seems bare; Yet loss reveals an aftermath of gain, Uriel holds a benediction unavyare.f Of late Distrust and Envy dopged hlsj way. Cold Misconstruction watched his dourse apart; All sordid passions suind rebuked to-flay Before the pathos ol a breaking heart. While other hearts are softened by Ajfr paln, On Death's dark background Sympathy grows clear, The chaff of loss may hide some golden grain. And grief enfold a blessing unaware. A Country Painter's Viewsl ration. on Deco- The color of the outside of a house is of more importance than isj generally supposed, since next to the form itself, the color is the first impression the eye receives on beholding it. The greater number of country houses ill this sec tion have been painted white, partly because white lead is supposed to be a better preservative than other colors (though the white paint generally used is one of the poorest in this respect) and partly because of its giving an appearance of special newness to a house, which with many persons, i3 in itself a recommedaticm. It is however a great mistake to paint a country resi dence white. The first objection kfwhite is that it is tooglaripg and cbnspec nous. L scarcely know anything more un comfortable to the eye than to approach the sunny side or a house on one ot our brilliant midsummer days! when it revels in the fashionable pnritv of its color. It is absolutely painfhl. Nature, full of kindness to man, has covered most of the surface with the soft, re freshing shades that everywhere pervd vade the trees and grassy and even overhead, with the soft bluel skv. The secnd objection to white is that it does not harmonize with the country, and thereby mars the effect of rural land scapes. Hence landscape painters always studiouslv avoid the introduc tioii of white iuto their buildings and give them inste;id some neutral tint VV ith the readv mixed paints tnat are now on the market anv one an suit their fancy. Of course, in speaking o ready mixed paints, 1 rerer only to those of strictly honest qualities such as the town and country brand of Harrison Brothers & Co., of New York. The cool drabs, grays, duns and olives, trimmed in the reds, browns and oran ires, are in Derfect harmony with the genial character of this latitude. mmm Mv- Kope Elias of Proxy Fame. Who has ever attended a convention in this western country anl not en countered Mr. Kope Elias with his pocket fulLof proxies. He has been nominated for the Senate, sp says the Asheville Citizen, which pays him this compliment: This is a graceful and jusi tribute to one of the truest and moist earnest democrats and citizens of his section. In season and out, since his boyhood, he has labored for his section and his party, always for the good and promo tion of others, at all time at heavy per Wmal expense and sacrifices j never un- ftil now asking or receiving recognition. Mr. Elias is a gentleman of ability, of the strictest fidelity to his friends and his section of large acquaintance and influence throughout the State, and will certainly make an excellent Sena tor. We congratulate the district as well as himself and our party upon the selection. Hot Water Artesian Well at Pesth. The deepest artesian well in the world is that now being bored at Pesth, for the supply of the public baths and and other establishments with hot water. A depth of "950 meiers (3.120 feet) has already been reached, and it furnishes 176,000 gallons daily, at a temperature of 158 deg Fah. Tne mu nicipality have recently voted a large subvention in ,order that the boring may be continued to a greater depth, not only to obtain a larger Volume of watar, but at a temperature of 176 deg Fah. Vance's Greasy Fun. Senator Vance opposes the Ole marga rine bi 1 1, and very properly so. He made some remarks on the subject recently, which amused the Senate. Enough is reported below to give the reader an idea of the style: "I acknowledge the greatness of the cow. I acknowledge my indebtedness to the cow, which was one of my first acquaintance, and I must say to the Senate that great as she is, and wonder ful as her products are, and benefit as she has been to the juman family, I can not be made to violate the plain principles of the constitution and the ! plainer principles of political economy i tor the sake of protecting her products. ! It is suggested, why should we protect : one end of the cow at the expense of 1.1 " aiiuuier r Mr. Gray: "Why should we protect the udder of the pew at the expense of her nbsr Mr. Vance: "Very well put. Why is the product of her udder any more entitled to our respect and proctection than the product ql her ribs, when it comes in the shape of a beefsteak? In other words why is not the cow as great and useful when dead as when living It seems that she is greater, for if the Senator from New York is to be beliv ed, like Sampson her death has caused greater destruction than all her lifetime wrought the more cows slaughtered the, worse the chance of the living, or rather the less the value. Those "Sena tors over there know quite as well as I do that this bill is an outrage. Then why do they not do their duty by vot- lnsr acainst it? . 1 he reasons are 'exi gencies' and butter! Blatter, like con science, Moth make cowWherds of them all.1 Laughter. The necessity of grease to carry New lork two years from now is what makes cowdards of them all. Laughter. "Mr. President, I do not belive this in terests is declining, but if it is declining I do not believe that it is any more enti tled to help than any other interest that is declining; for there is hardly a pro duct known to our production in this country exhibited upon our markets but that has declined in the same ratio that the product of the cow has declined. But let the Senator from JNew xork console himself with the thought that his favorite animal, the cow, is so great that no other interest in the world could injure her but herself or her own progeny. . , 'Let the benator reflect that the glo ries of his favorite animal, though wa ning in the pastures of New York, are waxing mightier day by dav in the wid er praries of the west; and that no ene my to her has been so formidable as herself. Let him commemorate the vir tues of bis lost New Y'ork love and be wail the coming of the western charmer bv reciting the touching lines of the great poet, Byron, ition the lesser one, but purer and better man, Kirk White "Oh! what a noble cow was here undone, When Brindle's self destroved her favorite son ! Yes, she too much indulged thy fond pur suit, She sow 'd the seed, but death has reap'd the fruit. 'Twas thine own eenius gave the final blow. And help'd to plant the wound that laid her Tow. So the struck milker streteh'd upon the plain. No more through waving grass to browse asrain. Yiewed her own tallow on the fatal dart, And wing'd the shaft that quiver'd in her heart." Laughter. - Dangerous Tendencies. We are swinging very far from the original policv of our (jrovernraent We began by trusting the individual man to take care of himself, burdening him aa little as possible with taxes and laws. Little by little we are getting away from oufpriginal theory. We beginning to depend upon corporations to carrv on a crreat variety 01 enter prises. Our schools are supported or subsidized by the States. Prohibition ists demand that our appetites should be regulated dv law. Ureen backers want thfi government to assume the function of making money, instead o merely coining it. The Knights o Labor have vested schemes of govern ment interference to regulate wage and recast the statutes so as do away with the natural operation of supply and demand. Paternalism is rampart, with a thousand schemes by which men are to he educated, employed, or pen sioned by the State. The progress of these centralizing tendencies must soon be arrested or great meschiefs will ensue. We are governed too much. Philadelphia Record. Vance Always Standi by the People. Wilmington Star. , Mr. Randall, of the Augusta Chroni cle, says of Gen. Cox and Civil Service Reform in North Carolina: "Gen. Cox has heard something drop at home. He will be invited to step down and out. Even his own county went against him. A North Carolinian, explaining the situation, says: "To be plain, our Democrats don't like this d-d civil service business, as it is being administered here at Washington. 1 think, however, that Gen Cox's fre quent visits to the White House are the cause of his defeat. We judge from this that the great North Caro lina Senator, Zebulon B. Vance, un- derstood his people better than Oen. William R. Cox. Retired from Con gress, Gen. Cox may get comfort from the Administration." North Carolina. Polities. Raleigh, N. C, July 19. The Repub lican State Committee has been called ro nieei in tnis city on tne luth of ; August. Of the twenty members only three are in favor of callinz a State Convention. The other members be lieve that Republican organization and a State ticket will only serve to unite the Democrats and make defeat certain whereas no State organization and no State ticket will greatly encourage the divisions and disintegration now existing in the Democratic ranks. There is a large element of Republi cans who are determined to have a convention for the purpose of electing a new State Committee in order to prevent the present committee from manipulating the State in 1888 for some favorite for the Presidency. X. Y. Times, Rep. A Preacher's View. The Rev. Mason P. Pressley of the North United Presbyterian Church of Philadelphia says that the custom of clergymen in taking a long summer vacation has become not only an abuse but a scandal. He said in a neeent sermon: "It seems strange that min isters of religion are alone those who insist on this annual vacation. The doctor does not take a vafcation, as a rule, because he is loval to the sick and the dying; neither, as a rule, does the lawyer. Editors, do not go awav in the summer, or, if they do, they leave behind them the brain work that con trols the mighty arm-ef civilization the press. If the doctors and editors left there would be no one to cure the sick or minister to the needs or onr in 1 1 A tellectual life; and if the reporter oyal to the public and to his duty einains and plods about in storm and in rain and in snow and in heat, how much more reason is there that those men who profess to be God's people and the embodiment of everything good, should walk about in our midst, in this season of evil, and carry out the work for which they were ordain ed." Newspaper and Orator. Compare the orator, one of the nob lest vehicles for the diffusion of thought with the newspaper, and you may gam a faint glimpse of the ubiquitous pow ers of the latter. Thejorator speaks to but a few hundred, the newspaper ad dresses millions; the words of an ora tor may die in the air, the language of the newspaper is stamped on tables imperishable as marble; argument? of the orator may tollow each other so rapidly that the audience may strug gle in a net work ot ratiocination, the reasoning ot the newspaper may be scanned at leisure witnout a iear or 1 1 i 1 1 ,p o perplexity; the passion of the orator influences an assembly, the reeling 01 a newspaper electrifies a continent, the orator is for an edifice, the newspaper for the worlu the one shines tor an hour, the other glows for all time; the orator may be compared to lightning, 1111 11 A which Hashes over a valley tor a mo ment, but leaves it again in darkness, the newspaper to a sun blazing steadily over the whole earth, and fixed on the basis of its own eternity. Printing has been happily defined the art that preserves all arts. It catches up hi dying words and breathes into them the breath of life. It is the gallery through which the orator, thunders in the ears of ages. He leans from the tomb over the cradle of the rising gen erations. Exchange. Self Control. WTho does not admire the power and beauty of this trait! To my mind, it more than any other gives honor and dignity to its possessor. Witness two cases of behavior under provocation. Abuse borne in quiet patience awakens for the sufferer our ready sympathy; while one who rages and vows ven geance on his persecutors loses part of our pity in the scorn which he invokes. There is greatness in one who holds himself in submission. If it is "better to rule one's own spirit than to take a city, "how much better than to weild, through selfishness, the wills of our friends. Thtre vr those who, if fear ful of loosing their own way, will in dulge in a fit of passion, even to bring ing on illness, making all the other members of the family feci obliged to lay aside their own feelings and walk with the greatest fear of exciting such Consequences. Cases have been known where this person was not a -child, but the wife and mother of ajrown up family, father and children may de velope an unusual amount of kind thoughtfulness, rendering them very pleasing; but, alas! it cannot prevent the contempt they must feel for the selfish and passionate wilfullness which has wrought in them this result. You cannot afford to grow into such a char acter. Commence early to practice self control. Ch ristian I niou. Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Crawford, who had gone to the Red Sujnhur Springs, Va.. returned home Monjtuv ou a tele gram announcing thedai ierpus illness of their little daughter Carrie, three years of age She was stiffering from meninsiti., and died a fefcv nours after the arrival of hor parentis. Progres tire rarmer Moral Training Necessary. The illiterate, ignorant, superstitions scoundrel may steal a pig,n chicken, a five cent straw hat; but the finished, educated, polished villian will steal sil ver, gold, diamonds, 'and the liberties. the glory, the honor, the manhood of the people, and go unwhinped of jus tiee; while the crank and fool will get two or fiye years at hard labor in the penitentiary for his ignorance and wanjt4 of moral and religious training. The educational cranks all have thecart be fore the horse. They are howling for the cultivation of the mind, regardless of the soul of men. Let the moral, re ligious, and intellectual all go togeth er. The head and the heart must be educated together, and if eith er must be neglected, let it be the head. An educated brain without an educa ted heart, nine times out of ten, becomes a polished machine for mischief. Of all the villipjis in life the meanest and most dangerous to government and society is the educated, accomplished, polished scoundrel, whose brain has been trained and cultivated at the ex pense of the moral and religious ele ments of his nature Democrat. -Scotland Neck Remarkable State of Existence. A ten-year-old daughter of Mr. Samuel Reid, who resides about four miles from Winston has been afflicted in a very peculiar manner for several months past. The child is confined to bed and remains in a state of apparent insensibility for days and weeks at a time, . refusing nourishment during these periods, and food can only be giv en by main force. Occasionally she awakens, as it were, for a short time and calls for food, of which she par takes in very small quantities and then relapses again into her former state of unconsciousness. VV e are informed that the longest period of duration of one of these lethargic states has been from ten to twenty days, lhe little one, to all A 1 " 1 1 1 appearance, seems as it tne vital spark had fled, the eves are closed, respiration easy and scarcely discernable. and resists all efforts to arouse or awaken, and re fuses to speak, only at the lengthy in tervals above alluded to, when she calls for food. No symptoms of pain are exhibited and the case is as yet, beyond the skill of several of our most eminent physicians. Winston Republican. Eot Weather Drinks. As the warm weather approaches the medical journals are out in force with hvgienic rules. The leading medical 1 A 1 (I'll journal or r ranee nas punnsneu a pamphlet protesting against the ex travasrant use of artificial mineral wa ters, which, it sets forth, do double damage of chilling the stomach, thus laying the foundation tor gastric catarrh, while the limestone deposits in the carbonated waters finds its way to the kidneys and eventually produces Bright's disease. The pamphlet also protests against the use of ice water as a provocative of catarrh in the stomach. It further says: "Water should be drank cool, but not iced, with the juice of quarter or half a lemon in it. Min eral water should always be swallowed slowly. It is not the stomach which is dry, but the mouth and throat. If you toss off a drink of water you throw it through your mouth and throat into vour stomach without doing the former any good, while you injure the latter by loading it with what it does not re quire. Drink slowly, and keep the water in your mouth for a moment when you legin. If you work in a hot room in hot weather tie a damp cloth around your temples, and you will not experience half the cravings for drink you otherwise would. A Marriage Mix. I got acquainted with a young wid ow, observes a recent writer, who lived with her stepdaughter in the same house. I married the widow. Shortly afterward my father fell in love with the stepdaughter of my wife and mar ried her. My wife -became the mother-iu-law and also the daughter-in-law of my own father; ray wife's stepdaugh ter is stepmother, who is the stepdaugh ter of my wife. My father's wife has a boy; he is naturally my stepbrother, because he is the son of my father and my stepmother; but because he. is the son or my wire s siep-aaugiiLT, su is my wife the grandmother of the little boy, I am the grandfather of my step brother. My wife also has a boy, my my stepmother is consequently the stepsister of my boy. and is also grand mother, because he is the child of her stepson : and my father is the brother-in-law of my son because he has got his step-sister for a wife. I am the brother-in-law of my mother,, my wife is the aunt of her own son, my son is the gwindson of my father, and I am my own grandfather. Theater Fires. In the twenty-one priucipal theater fires of modern times, from the destruc tion of the Schouwburg Theater in Amsterdam, in 1772, to the burning of the Ring Theater in Vienna, in 1881, a total of 0,548 victims are chronicled. Anions the more anpaling disasters mav be given the Cape d'Istria Theater, with a loss of 1.670, on May 25, 1845; ' J I V. . 1 mrr I nufoi in V innnn n'ifh mid Ml LVIUK a u tv i iu. i i' una, o iui a loss of 1,100, on December 8, 1881. The Brooklyn fire on December 5, 1876. caused a !o of nearly 400. The State Industrial School. Yesterday afternoon the board of ag riculture determined to proceed with the work of establishing the industrial school, accepting the offer heretofore made on behalf of the city of Raleigh. We congratulate the board . on their de termination in this matter, and feel ev ery assurance that this important step will redound to the advantage of the people of the whole State and signalize the administration that will carry the enterprise to a successful issue. New then, let us all unite in a common effort to make the school efficient, practical and beneficial. New Observer. Items from the Immigration Dept. Mr. F. H. Putnam of East ham pt on Mass., has visited North Carolina several times and brings with him a party of prospectors and settlers each trip. He will again visit North Carloina during the next few weeks and bring with him seven prospectors who wi If very probably locate permanently in Western North Carolina. E. A. East men of St. Augustine, Fla. is .desirous of locating in our state and writes Commissioner Patrick; for informa tion relative to Western North Carolina. Several New York state farmers con template a visit to North Carolina in the near future for the purpose of looking up a location on which to establish a farm ing and manufacturing town. They can bring down a number of Northern farm ers and manufacturers if they are pleased and the advantages held ; out by our people are realized. Parties having land for sale would do well to correspond with L; A. Keipper Esq., of Smith ville, Ohio. E. Barrett of North Washington, Iowa, writes Commissioner Patrick that he will move South and as North Carolina is favorably considered in his section by farmers desirous of owning a Southern home he would like to secure all the in formation possible. It might be well for some North Carolina gentlemen who is desirous of disposing of lands to corres pond with Mr. Barrett. After the 26th inst., the fee for a Money Order for a sum not exceeding $5, will lie five cents instead of eight. President Cleveland once did local writing for the Buffalo Courier. Thus he posses as a sad picture of the possi ble retrogression or a reporter. Hart' ford Post. There is no reason why Christmas should not be made as respectable and quiet as the Fourth of July in New Orleans. X. 0. Picayune, An exchange says when an editor makes a mistake in his paper all the world sees it and calls him a liar. When a private citizen makes a mis take, nobody knows it except a few friends, and they come around and ask the editor to keep it out of the paper. I write to you all myself, I think these words and then I write them, and I love vou. I came last Winter time two years. Now the flowers grow up. Some red and some yellow and the birds are so happy. I think too at my home the birds must j be happy and vellow. I like to see the birds here they make me think of home. Letter from Indian Bou at Carlisle (Penn.) Industrial School. A. CARD. To all who are sufferinc from the errors ami indiscretions of voutli, nervous weak ness, early decay, loss of manhood, &c.,I will send a recipe that will cure you, Kuek of Charge. 1 his great remedy was dis covered bv a missionary in South America Send a sell-addressed envelope to the Hev Joseph T. Inman, Station D. Neic York City. 4:1 y PIAKO and ORGAN OUT SALE. Your Chance to Secure a Good! Instrument at a Bargain, Come up buyers. Here's your chance. 100 Pianos! 100L' Organs! to be closed out regardless of value. genuine Clear ance Sale to reduce stock. These Instruments are over and above . our regular stock; must get our mqjney out of them. i , SOME ARE new, not used a day; some haveibcen ned a few months; so mo wed six months or a year; gome used from two to five vein s. Some are good Second-Hand In struments tiken iu exchange and thoroughly repaired, renovated, ri-TKdished and made us uood as new. I IN THE 200 there are Square Piano-, Upriiit Pianos, Grand Pianos, Church Or gans and Parlor Organs, from orcr twenty different Mukers, ineludinj; CHICKERINO, KN ABE, MASON & HAMLIN, HALLETT fe DAVIS, MA'FffUftHEK, VOST, BURDETT, AHION, G ABLER, PE LOU BET, THONINGER, ESTEY, AND BENT. DESCRIPTIVE LISTS are printed, and a purchase. ran be made by correspondence as well as by person. Instruments are represented precisely as they are, and if pur chasers are not suited we refund their money. TERMS EASY Pianos $10 per month; Oratpn $5 per month. Great inducements to Spot Cash Buyers. Write, and wo will offeif bargains that will open your eyet. OVER TWENTY of these Instruments were old during Centennial week, but there are 200 left, which inu-t go in the next 00 days. From three to five afe sold daily Write quick, if m waut to secure one. This advci tiscment (in 50 good papers) wlH clear out the lot. WRITE FORs Piano and Organ Clearing tisemcnt. Write AT ONCE. Address HIDDEN & BATESiSflUTHERM RUPTURED PER60N8 have btSfbt0 "atTo TREATMEHT. 0 Hwto, ti . tWMoi. . Tim, I? Thjb mani who worries about thing! '1' 1 11 it a - . ml " that cannot be helped is sawing timber 1U1 11 4P UWU tUIUUi NOT SEARED. the Heart-Throbs True .flan hood. Bo or SpJrta, Ga., Sept. 23 1 883.-- To the Con Uittiiipii, Atlanta Were I to practice decep tion in a case like this, I would think that my heart had; become scared beyond recog nition. To ;be. guilty of bearing false testimony, thereby impending the lives of my feUow men, would place me beneath the dignity of a gk-ntlemaa. The facts which I disclose are endorsed and vouched for by the community In which t i:..-1 I T I- . .U . .1. . t. X llilj BI1U X HUH lUl'V U1UV L'ALTl lC llUlU ence Intended. Fo twenty long years I hare suffered untold tortures from a terrible pais' tad weakness in the small of my back, .which resisted an modes and teaotter mentl w a 1 a a a r ror a ion" nme tne norrirvmir panes ol an extinir en net r of my lower Hp has' added to my m i sery and suffering. This encroach in, laming and painful sore on my lip waa pronounced Epithelial Cancer by the prom inent physicians in the section, which stnbtjjornly resisted the best medical talent. About eighteen months ago a cutting, piercing pain located in my brensf, which could not be allayed by the ordinary modes of treatment. Thjjise sufferings of misery andprostra tion became so great that, on the 18th of July, a leading physician said that I could not live longer than four days, and I had about given up in dispair. The burning aud ixeruciating ravages of the cancer, the painful condition of my back and breast, and the rapid prostration of my whole system combined to make me a mere wreck of fofiner manhood. While thus seemingly suspended on a thread between life and death. I commenced the rise of B.B.B., the grandest blood med icine, to me and my household, ever used. Tlfe effect was vonderfnl it was magic al. I The excruciating pains which had tornented me by day and by night for t WrtltV VCill'-N U'fr Blllin 1M in itliaranAa and peace and comfort were-restored to a sufftrin; man. the cancer eommcneed heal- ingJstrength was imparted to my feeble franjje, ami when eizht bottles had been used I was of the happiest of man, and felt abotit as well as I ever did. All pain had vanished, the cancer on mv lip healed, and I wus pronounced cured. Toihose who are afflicted, and need a blotjjd remedy, I urge the use of B.B.B. aa a wonuertuilv euective. sneedv and clieaa blood purifier. Allen Ghast. SfARTA, Ga., September 22, 1885. 1 1 Mr.jAtlen Grant, when he was --suffering with epithelial cancer of under lip, and alter nsing the D.H.Ii. medicine, as stated atof e, 1 find him now almost, if not per fectjy cured. Signed. J. T. Akdkews. M. D. SjARTA, Ga., September 22, 1885. We tak pleasure in certifying to the troth of the -above statement, having supplied the patent with the Blood Balm. Sined, Koziero; Vardbmah, Druggists. SpRTA, Ga., September 23, 18851 ofttn saw Mr. Allen Grant whn suffering frorjji epithelioma, and from the extent f theli-atiecr thought he would soon die. Ha nov appears perfectly well, and 1 consider it almost wonderful cure. Signed, B. II. Lewis, Ordinary. A BOOK OP WONDERS, FREE. Afl wno desire full Information about the cause and cure of Blood PoIhods, Scrofula and Hcrofulous Swellings, Vicnre, Sores, Rheumatism. Kidney Coos plaints. Catarrh, etc., can Mecure by mall, free, a copy of our 3 page Musi rated Book of Wonders, nihil with the most wonderful and startling proof evef before known. I Address, BLOOD BALM CO., I Atlanta, Oa, "TttTTCJ P S PPT? mar be found n flte at O0& Aftvertuing Bureau (H) Bpruoe St.), where ! riWtracU may be mud.! lor It IN NEW f you want to keep up with the times talife the Watchm you can't be left. CLEARING Out Sale Circulars, and mention this adror MUSIC HOUSE, SAVANNAH. GA. uiddio DCMcnv rr K. Tmta Street. 9T. IT77. KO. FREE Trial of our Appliance . Ask for Terms! -I rv ;4 i . ' .if m Mm - 4 iyK'v' 4 - ' I' - u "if: ' v. i - x.. , - : f SI. A i . . I .
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 29, 1886, edition 1
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