-Jyy . i a 'ir-.-,-t . -. 0. VOL XVII.-THIRD SERIES SALISEUEY, H. C, AUGUST 5, 1886. 42 r I 1 l 1 I mm J a fill Ji4aiivii f- m iiiiitiiii X IIC; WCll Ulllld !T d lAJlllllClll ; ; ; BEAD THIS COLUMN CAREFULLY. Meroiieu & Bro's. THE GRAND CENTRAL. FANCY AND DRY GOODS ESTABLISHMENT OF SALISBURY -:o:- fofthis season their line ot Dress Trim min"s is unapproachable. . j a'VuH line of Kosary Bead Trimmings, fancv Balls and Crescents for Lambrequins. Special bargains in Hamburg and Swiss Embroideries. Large varieties of Buttons, , large and wnall "with cHisps t. 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. Araacnc and Fillaselle Silk Floss in all shades. The best 50c. Corbet ever sold. A Cull line of Warner's Corsets. "Paraso!s from 15c., to $6.00. Hare bargains in Kid and Silk Gloves and Mitto,f all shades and quality. A complete liue of Undressed Kids for . Ladies. . An unequalled assortment of Ladies and Misses Hose at all prices. RIBBEB 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 vvant Straw Hats, Fur Hats and Shoes for Gptlemen, Ladies, or Boys, you can find them here. The more careful you read the more you will be convinced that they have the best jjtock in town, and'ill sell to you at prices to com oete with any one. In all the recent popular shades of DRESS GOODS They have aH Wool Nun's Veiling at 25c. Batistes and. Embroidery to match. Embroidered Etomine Roles, Embroid ered Zephyr Robes, Full liue plain Etomine Dress Goods, Combination Wool Kobe Dress Goods, Brocade Combination Dress Goods, Striped Combination Dress Goods, Bouclay Canvass Plaid Dress Goods, Sheppard Plaid Dress Goods, Cotton Canvass Dress Goods, 15c Satteens, Crinkled Seersuckers, Ging hams. WHITE GOODS. In White Goods you cannot be pleased better anywhere; they have Linen De Dac es, India Linen, Persian Lawn, Victoria Lawn, White and Colored Mull, Nainsook, at all prices. All Shades of Cheese Cloth, Calicoes, 58 xjB3 at 5c. per yard, Cossimors for Gent's wear, all prices, Cottonades from 12c to 80c Ladies and Misses Jerseys, a full line. Cur tain, Goods in Persian and Russian Drapery, Curtain Hollancrin all shades, Oid Shades, in all colors, Curtain Poles and Fixtures, Linen Lap Robes 75c. to $1.50. MERONEY & BRO. ' iG-.Gm k SALISBURY, N. C. 7 3 BEST EEMSLY KNOWN FOB- CATARRH SORE MOUTH SORE THROAT In all forms and stages. . PURELY VEGETABLE K0UIRE8 N& INSTRUMENT. It Coras whara others failed to give relief. Dr.B. l, Davis, Athens, G.i., says: "I suffered with Catarrh live years. But since using CKUTAIN CATABKU CUttK am entirely free trom the dis ease," Dr. O. B. Howe, Athens, Oa., savs: "CEKTAIN CATARKII -CT'HE corwl me ot a severe ulcerated sere throat, and 1 cheerfully endorse It." Miss Lui-y J. Coolc.Oeonoc Co. (ia., wrt?s, Sept. lUh, 1S85: "One bottle of your remedy entirely' cured mi; of C ituruwltu whie'u i had suffered grtatiy for live ye;trs." J. H. AUifood, Atliens, Oft., writes Sept. 2, "I hd severe sore twront mon: than two weeks; was entirely cured by CKUTAIN CAT AH It li CL'KEin onday." CAN YOU DOUBT SUCH TESTIMONY? WE THINK NOT. Only a few of our nitny cortltleates ar given here. Otu,;M ctn be ojt.ilneJ from your druggist, or by Milresslnif 3 C. CO., ATHENS, Ga. For Sale by J. II. ENWI3S, Salisbury N.C. :tj. I certify that on the 15th of Ftdmi- .ary I commtiicnced giving my fourj 'children, aged 2, 4, 0 and 8 years, respectively, Smith S Worm Uil, and .and within six days there were at. least 1200 worms ex pcllecl. One child! vpassed over 100 in one night. J. E.IMPSO.V. Hafl Co., February 1, 1879. Sir: My child, live years old, had( symptoms of worms. J tried calomel and other Worm Medicines, but fail" u to expel any. Seeing Mr. Bain's certificate, I got a vial of your Worm, Oil, and the first dose, brought forty "Worms, and the second dose so many were passed I could not count them. S; II. ADAMS. " cT 7 . 0 The Two Lights. "When I'm a man!" is the poetry of youth. "When I was youngF' is the peetry of old. "When I'm a man," the stripling cries, And strivesHhe coming years to scan, "Ah, then I shall be strong and wise, When I am a man." "When I was young," the old main sighs. "Bravely the lark and linet sunjr There carol under the sunny skies, When I was young." "When I'm a man I shall he free To guard the right, the truth uphold." "When I was young I bent no knee To power or gold.'L "Then shall I satisfy my soul With yonder prize, when I'm a man." "Too late 1 found how vain ths goal To which I ran." 'Whcnl'm a man those idle toys Aside forever shall be flung." "There was no poison in my joys When I was young." The boy's bright dream is all before, The man's romance lies far behind. Had we the present and no more Fate were unkind. But, brother, toiling in the night, Still count yourself not unblest, If iu the East there gleams a light, Or in the West. Blaekwoods Magazine. Mr. Davis at Home. E. Polk Johnson, in August ,; Bivoae." At the door of the mansion a lady met me with the stately grace of our Virginia grand-pa rents, and, after receiving my letters of introduction, gave a gentle welcome to Beauvoir, pre senting me to her voung daugh ter and another lady of the fam ily, then going awa' to find her husband, Mr. Davis not having yet made his appearance to' his family. v After a while, a step was heard upon the gallery, then an erect, though aged gentleman, clad in the neat garb of the old-time southerner, appeared at the open doors of the hall, bearing in his right hand a stout cane and the inevitable slouched hat, "which no other man than a southerner ever did nor ever will know how to wear. He advanced with that easv, courtly grace wnicn can. only be fully understood and ap preciated by those who have known the gentlemen of the old regime Kindly words of wel come were spoken, and the stran ger speedily forgot that he had ever been a stranger. These greetings over, Mr. Davis turned to his wife and daughter, whom he met then for the first time during the day, saluting each cv: inquring after their health with a gentle solicitude entirehr unaf fected. Then followed rapid in quiries after the health and wel fare of old friends in Kentucky, during which the clear memory of the man was shown. Calling them by their baptismal names, he would ask after the children of his former friends whom he bad not seen for years. These same bovs and girls whose names he so readily recalled are now the parents of the gsand children of those whom Mr. Davis knew in the years when he was most familiar with Kentucky. He ap pears to have a remarkable mem ory for names. Kelating an in cident connected with his not very remote visit- to his birth place, at Fairview, in Christian County, Kentucky, he gave a happy illustration of this faculty He said at the old-fashioned bar becue given in his honor during his, visit, much attention was shown him bv certain elderly ladies of the neighborhood which ha had left when a boy of eight vears. One lady was especially attentive ana anxious that no one of the vians should fail to reach the guest. As the dinner progressed, his mind reverted to his bovhood days, and he recall ed a sunny-faced little girl whom he had called his sweetheart at I the mature age of eight years, she being, perhaps, a year young er. So he asked the lad v,-' ' W hat had become of Patty Bell?" A blush of gratified pride swept over the dear old lady's face as she responded, "Why, Mr. Davis I am Patty Bell." Not the hon ors won on the field in Mexico, tlve civic crown earned in the Serrate, nor the high duties of a 'proud presidency had driven from his mind the name of the Tittle beloved one, though Time with a merciless hand had carv- ee! strange lines Upon her face when they two met again upon the declining sjope ot life. X War Pictures. A Company has been organized in Cincinnati, under the auspices of the famous scenic artist of that city, Matt Morgan, to present a series of accurate and historic pictures of the. decisive battles of the late war between the States. These great pictures, now approach ing completion for the Northern Vic tories, are toheexhibitedthrougpout the country under the direction of competent lecturers: well known officers of both armies. And it is with the same ex perienced assistance combined with the data of accepted historical records, and the abundant valued contributions from the veterans of both sides, that the brilliant artist, Matt Morgan the favorite pupil of the celebrated London scenic artist, Sfcansfield, places upon canvas, with wonderful yet truthful effect, the thrilling scenes of the drama of the civil war. To the undersigned has been en trusted by Mr. Morgan the pleasant task of gathering together the mate rials to be used by the artist in delin eating the victories of the southern Armies, and he will also superintend the painting of the same. These immense pictures will include among others, the exact representation of the capture of Fort Sumpter; The First Manassds; The First Day at Shiloh; Gained Mill; The Second Manassas; Sharpsbnrg; Frederickburg; Chancellorsville; The Second Day at Gettysburg: Chickamanga; Kennesaw Mountain, and the Naval B.ittle be tween the "Virginia" and the "Con gress"' and "Cumberland." No Southern victories have ever been painted upon such a large scale: the pluck, heroism, and devotion ot the Southern soldier and officer have never been represented on canvas. It is important, however, m this en- terprize, in order give these repre sentations a character of personal in terest to the surviving comrades, and to those who fondly cherish the memories of fallen heroes, that there should be as many as possible of the faces and forms ot the gallant soldiers engaged in tae several conflicts, wno can oe readily recognized." The artist makes this a special feature in all the battle scenes he so strikingly and so attrac tively dehneatest. Accordingly,. I have the honor to re quest the surving officers and soldiers of the late Confederate armies, to semi to me, at No. 80 Carondelet Street. New Orleans, until September 1st and after that date to Matt Morgan s Art Rooms, Cincinnati, O., their pho tographs, stating the regiment to which they belonged, or the position in which they served in any of the battles above mentioned, that their portraits may appear irt the painting. A photograph taken at the time of entering the service, appointment, res ignation or discharge, would be preter mit because ifc is desired you should look just as you did in the grand old days that tried your manhood and your pluck. The photograph will be returned as soon as it is transferred to canvas, un der Mr. Morgan's supervision. Tae pictures above mentioned are especially designed to interest the Veterans who followed the standards of the Confederacy; and it should le a pleasure to the survivors to furnish these photographs, incidents, etc., to enable the artist to make a correct and vivid representation. The grand paintings of Gettysburg, Shiloh, Atlanta, and Mission Ridge, now exhibited in Northern cities, could never have been painted but for the zealous aid Of the soldiers of the North. I appeal to my comrades of theSouth ern armies to give equal assistance to the artist in his good work for their fame. Very Sincerely Yours, W. Miller Owen, Lieutenant Colonel Artillery, Army of Northern Virginia, ( Brigr. and Inspec tor General, Louisiana Nat. Guard. ) Dr. Talmage's Views of North Carolina. A correspondent of the Asheville Citizen interviewed the Rev. DeWitt Talmage, who is sojourning in Ashe ville. He gives his impressions of North Caroli, from which we take ex tracts: "I hayje just been taking my regular "constitutional" as our English friends would say, and what a charming sec tion of country you have to stroll over through lovely valleys, over majestic mountains near clear rippling streams and altogether in the midst of pure oxyginated air which seems to buoy you up and make you breathe free, deep and-futl. This is charming and invigorating climate, and makes one wish for the garden from which all the tribes of men have proceeded, especial ly during these months in which the earth, in the flush and fairness of a new vitality, appeals to the finest and most delicate or our senses. Progress seems to be the watchword everywhere in the South, especially so in your own State. Fill your villages, towns and cities with laboring looms and manufactories of all kimjs and descriptions. And why shouldn't you ? What advantage over Nortii Carolina have the sterile vrock-heds of New Eng land that could not be easily retrieved? Capital? Massachusetts did not al ways have it, bait made it inihe .face of competition. Besides the greatest things have small beginning neither Man chester nor Lyons were built in a year. You, young men, must learn to be fatient and persevering. Utilize your ovely French Broad and your eupho neons Swannanoa, then operatives, and spindles will not long be silent for want of hands to make them buzz." "What do you think of Western North Carolina so much as you have already seen." "The pen of a Longfellow nor the brush of a Messonnier can do it justice. Here I sit and watch nature, in all of her grand formations. Wonderfully grand and majestic these silent senti nels of God's own handiwork beauti ful and charming these fertile valleys ripe with the golden grain of harvest time, refreshing and soothing these mountain streams of pure chrystiline water wending their way to the ports of commerce navigation and trade, restful and passive Skyland with pano ramas of floating beauty in ever chang ing cloud, recuperative and health restoring this oxyginated and balsamic air fresh and uncontaminated giving new zest to life and building up worn out tissues of the human frame.'' "Are you favorably impressed with this place the metropolis of the sky as a place of resort for the invalid and the health-seeker?" "It is indeed a garden of recupera tion. All the conditions seem favora ble. If there is any one who is so constituted so that enjoyment can be had in life and can't find it here, rest assured such a person will not be able to find enjoyment in Heaven when he gets there. What more can one ask for than heafhful climate, pure air, good water, unsurpassed scenery and congenial peoptev estern North Caro lina to-day offers more solid comfort, hope and happiness to the invalid and health-seeker than the whole Materia Medka from the time of Escalapis down to the present time." "You think then, Doctor, that we have a region here especially adapted to persons in quest of health, besides a countrv offering inducements to the pleasure seeker and the tourist. "Un questionably, and there is, no reason why in winter the people of the Northern States should not nock here to inhale the pure mountain air and es cape the rigid winters of our section and on the other hand the people of your low-lands from the States espe cially of Georgia and Florida, and in fact throughout the whole territory of the South should come herein the summer to recuperate in order to pre pare for the duties of life devolving upon tnem. As the lowlaf?ds in winter are con ducive to man's well being in a certain measure, so also are Nature's elevations restful to man in the noonday heat of a tropical sun. The one place we labor and strive for the goods of this life, the other we rest in passive longings for the ideal and regain in health, without which life indeed, would be a bore and a torment." "You will remain with us for some time I presume doctor. Will you not?" "Yes, I shall be here during the whole summer. I find that I become more and more in love with the place as the days slip by. Everything is so conducive to happiness here. 1 find that mv life here is one of complete rest, an outing of intellectual enjoy ment free from heat, free from the cares of busy life communing with Na ture in all of her lovely forms which seems to speak in prophetic words of the love of a great, blessed and benefi cent Creator." Clubs are Excepted. New York Times. Raleigh, N. C, July 25. A new and important question has been raised un der the local option law since liquor was voted out of Raleigh Township. The law makes it unlawful to sell liquor until the result of said elections has been reversed by an election. There is a corporation in this township known as the "Capital Clu V and, among other thingsnncidentaj to the main social purposes, the said club fur nishes refreshments to its members such as liquor, wine, lwer, cigars, and meals, for their convenience and ac commodation, at a price fixed by the House Committee, intended to be just sufficient to cover the cost of the same, it not being the object to make a pro fit'upon the article so furnished. The steward of the club was indicted, and upon a special verdict embodying these facts the Superior Court, Judge Phil lips presiding, adjudged the steward not guilty upon the ground that there was no sale in contemplation of law. It is contended by the State that there is no exception in the local option law, and that any disposal of liquor for money without profit is a violation of the law. All the cases quoted in support of the position taken by the club were on in dictments for retailing liquor without licence. When Chief Justice Waite was here in June last he gave it as his opinion that the club had a right to let its members have liquor as stated, and did not violate the local option lav. hiso doing. The case was appealed by the State and will be decided by the Supreme' Court at the October term next. Uncle Sam welcomes into his do main 3200 babies a day, not counting those "who cf-ma hv ea. Industrial School. Raleigh has been selected as the loca tion for the industrial school to be es tablished by the State of North Caro lina. The decision of the board to put this school into operation without ny further delay is a very wise step. The South needs industrial schools, and every one that is established adds to the prosperity of its people. With the rapid development of industrial inter ests there is an increasing demand for young men of good technical educa tion. Unless the South makes provi sion for preparing her own people for such work, the demand must be sup plied from other sections. The full importance of preparing the rising generation for the thousands of open ings for profitable employment that the industrial development of the South is making, ought to be fully impressed upon the business men of that sec tion. The young men of the South have a wide field of employment open ing Before them, but training is needed to enable them to fill .the most respon sible positions, or else they will ouly be "hewers of wood and drawers of water," while others reap the benefits of thor ough technical education. Baltimore Manufacturers Record. Reflections From tthe ' Wilson N. C. Mirror. Enthusiasm is the blossom of which all true greatness is the fruit imagi nation the germ of all glorious deeds; and few were distinguished for high practical greatness who could not refer to a childhood of enthusiasm. It is the romance of the boy that becomes the heroism of the man. Marriage is the golden vestibule to the grand and magnificent temple of the purest and sweetest comfort and happiness thatearth contains, and re ciprocal love is the organ, divinely tuned and heavenly toned, and from which float out in streams of delicious rapture the grandest harmonies and most thrilling symphonies of human existence. The man who can make one person drown a spell of the blues beneath the radiant waves of merriment, or change one growl of despair into a boisterous, billowy flow of laughter and hilarity is a blessing to any community. Yes the man who can make a gleam of joy rip ple o'er the wrinkles of care, and paint one star of cheer in the sky of gloom is to be appreciated, for humor is that bland philosophy of life, which knits up the tangled threads of trials, smoothes over the asperities of trouble, and sweet ens the acerbities of bitterest natures It is that radiant silver thread with which the sombre fabric of every day occurrences are beautifully embroider ed with those brilliant stitches of the mind rpwhieh are always pleasing and refreshing. Scratch the green rind of a sapliug, or wantonly twist it in the soil, and the scarred and crooked oak. will tell of thee for centuries to come. How !k forcibly does this beautiful figure teach the lesson of wrong tendencies to the young mind! A contented heart is better than a full purse, for the one feels sunshine in everything, 'and hears a song of joy in every ripple of life's delightful cur rent. A little cramped up heart can not send forth noble and generous emotions A rank and foul-laden weed cannot emit sweet fragrance. A head properly constituted can ac commodate itself to whatever pillow the vicissitudes of fortunemay place under it. The dark deep shadow of Asrael'r raven wing has fallen across the sun light of Judge Connor's home again and on Friday a sweet little child was borne away from the lullaby of a fond motheri caress," and is now one o that shining band whose stainless lives make Heaven so sweet, "so bright and so beautiful. Andwhile the paren stem will feel the loss of its pure and sweet and beauteous bud, it is well with the child, f or God has placed it in the vase of immortality, and it will live there in everlasting bloom and fra grance. A little hearted creature can do 3ome mighty little things. The recent stringent prohibitory li quor legislation in Georgia has led to the adoption of regulations under which not exceeding four ounces of liquorfcan be sent through the mails. The bottles are to be enclosed in tubes of tin paper mache or wood, packed in cork, crumbs or felt. In this way li quor can be sent to any city or town where there is a postoffice. no matter how strict the local laws may be. Ben Fmn m m ofm iswijft b it r; tr "111. ' r. . take the Watc2i oa eai,; K R. Plain Words from Brother Watterson. Louisville Courier Journal. The average Englishman is a snob. From the duke to the costermonger, each order in this vast series of social strata licks the foot of the order above it. The English male is a selfish bullv. The English woman is a slave. The j.rvj- ;a .-. sham. But. while the purse holds out, it is resplendent indeed. The bully in the men makes good soldiers. The power of England is undeniable. The slave in the woman, when she does not elope, makes excellent housewifery. The domestic fabric of England "is respectable and orderly. But the Chiireh Hie Str.h nd the home, built upon a complex feudal system, depend upon the poise and balance of classes m the, relation winch now exists, and which, with trifling incidents not se- ; riously disturbing the personal life of hngland, has existed since Magna Chart a. As an American, I have no right, and certainly have no wish, to com plain of this, or to criticise it. If I do not like it, as I do not, I can lump it. England was made for Englishmen. A Saw ..without Teeth. A saw without teeth, that will cut a steel rail in two minutes is in opera tion at the Central Hudson shops in Green bush, N. Y. The saw is run by a ninety horse power engine, more power than is required! to run all the other machinery in the shops, and is 38 inches in diameter and three-eights of an inch thick at the edge. The disk is made of Bessemer steel, and runs at a high rate ot speed. While in operation a band of fire encircles he saw, and the many sparks tlymg rom the revolving disk resembles a display of pyrotechnics. To keep the saw cool and prevent it trom cracking, a tank of water is placed above the machine, from which a small stream runs down and drops on the saw while in motion. By this plan one saw will cut nearly 3.C00 rails before it is worn out. A steel rail, after about six years' constant use becomes battered -at the ends, and by cutting them off the rails can be used in branch and switch tracks. Kails are cut by this machine for the whole line of the Central Hud son railroad. The saw. while cutting, ears down hard on the rail, the end of which is left as smooth as the bottom of a flat-iron. One remarkable thing about the machine is that the chips cut from the rail fly back under the saw with such force as to form a solid piece of steel nearly as firm as the rail itself. Scientific A merican. A Zoni Priestess mWashinjton. Washington Correspondence Cincioatti Com mercial. TheTrincess Weli-Weh of the Zuni tribe, who has made such a hit here in Washington societv, was out on the avenue yesterday alone. She made quite a sensation. She was in full Zuni dress. Her head was bare, with the exception of a few ornaments twisted in her long, straight black hair. A blue blanket, beaded and ornamented, formed the main garment of her dress. Hervhite moccasins and enormous anklets played in and out from under this blue blanket dress with an easy, loping stride, which could not be imitated bv any woman in high-heeled shoes. She completed her out-door attire with a fiery red satin umbrella, which she curried close down over her head, as delighted vvitii iis brilliant color as a child. She had not walked down the avenue when it began to rain. The Princess showed that she was prudent in the use of her civilized finery; the red umbrella was shut up with a snap and stowed away somewhere in the folds of the blue blanket dress, while from another hidden pocket she drew forth a black cotton umbrella, which she hoisted in place of the red one, aud resumed her swinging walk with her usual stolid composure. The Princess has a perfect passion for shopping. Eyery piece of money that she gets it is at once expended. It is the delight of her life to get away from the people with whom she is stopping to go for a several hours' tour of the stores. Al though she is a priestess at home, one of a band of six who have taken vows of celibacy, yet she is as fond of bright articles of adornment as the most finical of societv dames. The Mania For Dosing. Boston Herald. It is about time to organize a move ment for preventing the intemperate use of "temperance drinks." The manner in which mineral waters, acid phosphate, "nerve food" and '"lactart" are swallowed at all hours of the day and by all sorts of men, with no rea knowledge of their nature or effects, is quite as astonishing, and in many cases, no doubt, almost as pernicious, as the habit which it in a measure -supersedes the taking of the matjnal cocktail, the mid-day beer and the postprandial wine or spirits. Much of this guzzling is due to the mania for dosing, which is almost a national characteristic. If, owing to improper eating or any othei cause, a man "doesn't feel jnit right,'" the first thin hp does is to take a drink of something, hit or miss, w hite if he "feels bad.'" a do?o of patent, medicine or some other nostrum, follows. seme ;nrm ' 0f the prr-raratior... ar rharr potent a nature that they should be used sparingly, and commonly only uPon e advice of a physician". To tne ,Rtomch f1" purge ne ows with mineral drinks, in the P8 f5 wner often indulged in, w wesaiyjlwiiQ the health. a ti u person in an approximately normal condition there is nn i.ol eiher stimulants, tonic, "nerve foods," Uurahre?' or other disturbers of Mature, U foo' fr"t in abundance, ra" .th a moderate supply of wafr tna,fc cool, without being iced, tea and for those who must nave "something , else constitute a ?unVne.r regimen that is not improTed J umg OI any sort. Jones for Congress. "And the ass opened its mouth and spake." Charles R. Jones Calls five persons (his band of sup porters) the people." Hath thy fail uretojgrasp the mint made thee mad ? y Thou wilt indeed make Rome howl for "Rome hath no party" but thee." i'har. Evening Chronicle. The poetical works of thejate King Louis II. of Bavaria are unique. Only one copy was printed by the Kings order, and up to the time of his death it had been seen by no one except the King and the printer. The man who worries about things that cannot be helped is sa wing-timber for his own coffin. To nil who are suflerins from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weak ness, early decay, loss of manhood, &e., I will send a recipe that will cure you, Kiiek of Cuakok. This great remedy was dis covered by a missionary m South America Send a sel ( addressed envelope to the Rev Joseph T. Inmax, Station D. jVeio York City. 4:lv NOT SEARED. But the Heart-Throb . True Manhood. or Sparta, Ga., Sept. 22 1883.- To the Con- stitufittn, Atlanta Were I to practice decep- 1.. l : l . .i r ... i i .1 .1 M 1 in 111 u eusc uite mis. 1 would uiuiK mac my heart had become seared beyond recog nition. To be guilty of bearing false testimony, thereby imperilling the lives of my fellow-" mn, would place me beneath the dignity of a gentleman. 4. The facts which I disclose are endorsed and vouched lor by the community in" which I live, and I trust they may exert the influ ence intended. For twenty tong years I have suffered untold tortuns from a terrible pain and weakness in the small of ray Luck, which resisted fill modes and manner of treat ment. For a lou lime the horrifying pangs of an etiuy cancer of my lower lip has adder to my misery and suffering. Thin encroach -in-r, burning and painful sore on my lip wa pronounced Epithelial Cancer by the prom inent physicians in the section, which stubbornly resisted the best medienl talent. About eighteen ononthsago a cutting, piercing pain located in my breast, which could not be allayed by the ordinary modes of treatment, These suliei ings of misery and prostra tion became so great that, on the 18th of July, a leading physician said that I could not live longer than four (fays, and I had about given up in dispair. The burning and excruciating ravages of the ennccr, tho painful condition ot my back and breast, and the moid prostration of my whole system combined to make me a mere wreck ofdbrmer manhood. While thus seemingly spspended on a thread bet ween life and death, I commenced the use o.f B.H.B., the grandest blood tned icine. to me and my househobl, ever used. The effect w as w onderful it was magic- al. - The excruciating pains which had tormented me by day and by night for twenty years were soon held in obeyance,, ' and pence and comfort were restored to a suffering nian, the cancer commenced heal ing, strength was imparted? to nry feeble frame, and when eisfhL. bottles had been used I was of the happiest of man, and felt alxtut a? well as I ever did. All pain had vanished, the cancer on my lip healed, and I was pronounced cured. To those who are afflicted, and need a blood remedy, I orae the use of B.B.B. as a wonderfully effective, speedy and cheap blood pun tier. ALLKH (Irast. Sparta, Ot., Septemlwr 22, 1885 I saw Mr. Allen Grant, when he was suffering with epithelial 1 attccr of under lip, and after using the B.B.B. medicine, as stated alove, I find him now almost, if not per fectly cured. Signed, J. T. Axdrews, M. D. SrARTA, Ga., September 22, 1885. We take pleasure in certifying to the truth of the above statement, having supplied the patient with the Blood Balm. Signed, IIozier & Yardkmak. Druggist. Sparta, ja.. September 22, 1885 I often saw Mr. Alle-n Grant when suffering from epithelioma, and Irom the extent of the cancer thought he would soon die. He now appears perfectly well, and I consider it a most wonderful cure. feigned, H. H. Lewis, Ordinary. A BOOK OF WOXDEKS, FREE. An who dftjrw taU intermit ton about rhe canse ind ewe ot BVyxTColson-, Porolula and Scrotulcus Sn etUDga. Ulcni'S. r. KL.i nr. ins-n Knlnei ( oin plilata.Cii irrn, etc. , cm secure by mall, free, a ,ory ot onr tt pne Iiiu3t rated Bodr. of Woodr. aifed wltb tn most woadcrtul anil startling no, of ever before 1 coiv u. " Address, BLOOD BALM CO.. Atlanta, G3 HPTTTQ T A'PITT? -v i- f-wt n at .Oct lining D'Uciu(U Symce Kt yrjjrf jMftgi Iftlli J Tim naiiiii If you '."act to keep up wit a tbe trrrei i