r The Carolina Watchman. J TT - VOL XVELL-THntD SEEIE3. '41 , SAUSBUBY, N. C., NOVEMBER 25, 1886. T' : X a "SO As a Leaf. JFading beneath onr;passing feet Strewn upon law and! lane, and street, 4)yed with the hues of the sunset skjr, Fading in glory silently, Beautiful leaves ! Never to freshen another spring, Jfever to know what the summer may bring, Withered beneath the dust and cold, Sooa to decay in the common mold, Beautiful leaves f So will the year? that change yorar tint Mark upon its their autumnal print; . . 11 i. 1 1 ' ' ' , I,.. t . r. A? TllllO . ... rSO snail wc iiiu ifuui me utt liiuv no m " J . i Beautiful leaves! But wlien the harvest .of life tapast, A ..A i ,.i k-i. an otornnl 5nriilr at last. L-...I.. ., . .. fnrlo !n a wirtrv eliiiio. .VIL'J HI. 1 1 1 1 " V. . - - o 7 May he who paints your brilliaat hue Form of our lives a chaplet anew. Beautiful leaves ! Brute Force Again. Edith: "f was so shocked last night T don't believe I will see Georjre if he -calls this evening1 Maud: "What did he do ?" Edith: "Why, last evening he sud denly took hold of me, twisted me around into his arms, and forcibly kissed me a dozen times. I don't believe your little Willie ever insults you in that way, does he?' Maud: "No, he's a regular gurap." s PURELY VEGETABLE. It icts with extraordinary efficacy on the tiver, dneys, and Bowels. AN EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOR Malaria, Bowel Complaint. Dyspepaia, Sick Headache. 5 Constipation, BUiouanegB, Kidney A ffeel ions, Jaundice, Mental Depression, CoUc Ho Household Should be Without It, and, by being kept' ready for immediate use, will save many an hour of suffering and many a dollar in time and doctors' bills. THERE IS BUI ONE SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR Sea -that yon get the genuine with red "2" on front of Wrapper. Prepared only by J. H.ZEILIN &. CO., Sole Proprietors, Philadelphia, Pa. PRICE, 81.00. A CAR LOAD OF VICTaR Brain BRILLS KELLER3 PATENT, for sale to the Farmers of Row an. Cheap for cash or well SECURED TIME NOTES. I This Drill stands at the very front and is unsurpassed by any other in America. It sows wheat and cloycr seed and bearded oats together with fertilizers most admirably. -The quantity per acre can be a changed in an instant bv single motion of the hand. Head what people who have used it say about it. Mt, Vebnox, Rowan Co, N. C. Sept. 15th, 188G. I have used the Victor Kellers patent Grain Drill for several years and I consider it a" perfect machine. 4ne can set it in an instant, to sow any quantity of wheat or oats per acre, from one peck to four bush els. It sows bearded oats as well as it does wheat or clover seed and fcrtizers to per fection. I know it to be strictly A No. 1. Drill and combines threat strength, with its other good qualities. W. A. Luckry. Salisbury, N. C. Sept, 43th, 1886. Last Spring j borrowed Mr. White Fraley'a Victor ("-Kellers patent) Grain Drill anl put in my oats with it. It sowed bearded and non-bearded oats to perfection. I believe it to be the best Grain Drill I ever saw. It sows wheat or oats and clover seed and fertilizer all O. K., and I have Iwught one for his fall's seeding of, the Agent, John A. Boydcn. Richard II. Cowan. Salisbury, N. C. Sept. 17th, 1S8$. I have used the Victor Kellers patent Grain Drill for the past ten years ami eon- siner it dv lar tne Dest Drill made. Te also used, the Bech ford & Huffman but greatly prefer the Victor, because it is much the most convenient and I believe one Victor will last as long as two Beck- ford & Huffman Drills. The Victor sows all kinds of grain satisfactorily. Frank Breatued.J For sale by " JNO. A. BOYDEN. Yours in Haste. I lore that dainty monogram, With three slim letters interlaced, Above the notes she used to write Singnig hem ever, "Yours in haste." The world was young, and so was I ; IIow sweet to think that in the whirl She kept one moment all for me, To glad my heart my radiant girl! The world is old, and so am I; And since my love because my wife It seems to me Ive somehow been Too late for everything in life. "With ribbons flying, gown awry, ith panting breath and boots unlaced, True to her vowa of yore, she's been, Both now and ever mine "in haste." lit Century. Dr. Talmage's Sermon. BUSIXES8 AND RELIGION. Energy of Soul is Wrought only in the tire. Text: Romans xii, 5-11: "Not sloth ful in business; fervent in spirit serving the Lord." Industry, devotedness, Chris tian service are all recommended in this one short text. What! is it possible to conjoin them ? Oh, yes ! There is no war between religion and business, between Bible and ledger, between churches and counting houses. On the contrary, reli gion accelerates b isiness, sharpens men's wits, sweetens acerbity of disposition, fills up the blood of phlegmatics, and throws moreyelocijky into all the wheels of hard worlc. To the judgment it gives more strength; to industry more muscle; to enthusiasm a more con centrated fire. You can not show me a man whose business prospects have in any wise been dispoiled by his reli gion. The industrial classes are divided in to three groupsproducers, manufac turers, traders. Producers, such as far mers and miners. Manufacturers, such as take the corn and change it into food, or the wool and flax and change them into apparel. Traders, who mae a profit out of the transfer and exchange of that which is produced or manufac tured. Now, a business man may belong to one of these classes, or he may be long to all them. AVhatever be your avocation, if you plan, calculate, bar gain; if into your life there come an noyances, vexatious and disappoint ments, as well as gains, dividends, and percentages; If you are harrassed with a multiplicity of engagements; in a word, if y-ou are driven from Monday morning to Saturday night, and from January to January, with relentless ob ligation and, then you are a business man or a business woman, and my sub ject is appropriate to your case. We are apt to speak o the toil and tug of business life as though it was an in quisition or a prison into which a man is thrown, or an unequal strife where, half armed, he goes to contend. Hear me this morning while I try to show you that God intended busiuees life to to be a glorious education and discip line, and if I shall be successful in what I want to say, I wil rub the wrinkles out of your brow and unstrap some of the burdens from your back. I have first to remark that God in tended business life to be to you a school of Christian energy. God started tis in the world, giving us a certain amount of raw material out of which we were to hew our own character. Every facul ty needs to be reset, rounded, sharpen ed up. After our young people have graduated from the school, and colleges, and universities, they need a higher education that which the collision and rasping of everyday life alone can effect.- Energy of soul is wrought only in the fire. And when a man for ten or fifteen, or twenty, or thirty years has been going through business ac tivities, his energy can no longer be measured by weights, or plummets, or ladders. It can scale anv neurit t. It can plummet any depth. It can thrash .my obstacle. iNow do you suppose that God had spent-all this education on you for the purpose of making you a more successtul worlding, of enabling you to more rapidly accumulate uoi lars, making you sharpe in a trade? Did God make you merely to be a yard i 1 1 i i i i stick to measure cloths, or a steel-yard to. weigh flour? And did He intend you to spend your life in doiug nothing but totmuner and higgle.'' My iriend, lie liuJs put you in this school to develop your energy tor liis cause and king dom. There is enough unemnloved talent in the churches, and in the world today, to reform all empires, and all kingdoms, and people in three weeks. 0. how much idleness amid strong muscles and stout hearts! How many deep streams that turn no mill wheels, and haul on the bands of no factory ! God demands that He have the best sheep out of every flock, the richest sheaf in every harvest, the best men of every generation ; and in a cause where i.1 X' I 1 T 1 T .l ine iewtons ana liOCKes, ana tne Mansfields of the earth were proud to enlist, you and 1 should hot be ashamed to toil. 0, for a few idlers and more consecrated Christian workers. Again: God intended business life to be to a school of patience. How many little things there are in one day's en gagements to perturb and annoy and disquiet you. Bargains will rub and men will break their engagements. Collecting agents will come back empty handed. Tricksters in business will play upon what they call the "hard times," when in any time they never pay. Goods placed on the wrong shelf. uasu uooks aua money arawer in a quarrel. Goods ordered for an especial emergency failing to come, or, if com ing, danr.iged in the transportation. j People who intend no harm going about shoping, unrolling goods they do not j mean to buy, and trying to break the dozen. Men obliged to take up other peoples notes. More connterfeit bills m the drawer. More bad debts. Anoth er ridiculous panic. Under all this fric tion men break down, or they are sear ed upon into additional brightness. How many you and I have known who, in the past few years, have gone down under the pressure, and have become petulant, and choleric, and crabbed, and sour, and pugnacious, until custo mers forsook their stores, and these merchants have become insolvent, and their names were pronounced with de testation. But other men have found in this a school for patience. They toughened under the exposure. They were like roCks, more serviceable for the blasting. There was a time when they had to choke down their wrath. There was a time when they had to bite their lip. There was a time when they thought of a stinging retort they would like to utter. But now they have con quered their impatience. They have kind words for sarcastic flings. They have a polite behavior for discourteous customers. They have fobearance for nnfortuuate debtors. They have moral reflections for the sudden reverses of fortune. How are you going to get that grace of patience? Not through hear ing ministers preach about it. Oh, no? If you getTt at all, you will get it in the world, where you sell hats, and plead causes, and tin roofs, and make shoes. and turn banisters, and plow corn. I pray God that through the turmoil and sweat and exasperation of your every day life, you may hear the voice of Christ saving to rou: "If patience pos ssess your soui, let patience nave a perfect work." Again: God intended business life to be to you a school for the attaining of knowledge. Merchants do no read many books, nor study many lexicons, nor dive into great profounds, yet through the force of circumstances they get in telligent on questions of politics, and finance, and geography, and jurispru dence, and ethics. Business is a hard schoolmistress. If her pupils will not learn in any other way, with unmerci ful hand she smites them on the head and on the heart with inexorable loss. You went into some business enter- prises, and $3,000 got out of your grasp. You say the 5,000 was wasted. Oh, no! that was only tuition. Ex pensive schooling, but it was worth it. Misfortune, with hard hand, comes upon a man and wakes him up, and by the very force of circumstances business men get to be intelligent. TraderSin grains must known about foreign harvests. Traders in fruit must know about the prospects of tropical production. Manufacturers of Ameri can goods must know about' the .tariff on imported articles. Publishers of books must know the new law of copyright. Owners of ships come to understand winds, and shoals, and navi gation, and so every bale of cotton, and every raisin cask and every tea box and every cluster of bananas, becomes li'erature to our business men. Now, what is the use of all this intelligence unless you give it to Christ? Do you suppose God gives you these opportu nities of brightening up your intellect and of increasing your knowledge merely to get larger treasures and grander business? Oh no! Can it be that you have been learning about for eign lands and people that dwell under other skies, and yet have no missionary spirit ? Can it be thr.t you have been learning the follies, and trickeries, and hollowness of the business world, and yet you are not trying to bring to bear upon them this gospel which is to cor rect abuses, abolish all ignorance, and correct mistakes, and arrest all crime, and irradiate all darkness, and lift up all wretchedness? Can it be that, not withstanding your acquaintance with tire intricacies of business, you are ig norant of those things which will hist the soul long after bills of exchange. and commissions, and invoices, and con signments,- and rent rolls have crump led up and consumed in the fires of a judgment day? Again: God intended business life to be to you a school of Christian integ rity ! No age of the world ever offered so many inducements for scoundrelism as are offered now. lhere is hardly a statute on the law books that has not some back door through which miscre ants can escape. How many decep tions in the fabric of goods! Commer cial life plies the land with trickeries innumerable, and there are so manv people in Brooklpn and New York who live a life of plunder that when a man proposes a straight forward, honest business it is almost charged to green ness and want of tact. Ah, my breth ren, this ought not to be. But I have to tell you that it re quires more grace to Je honest now than it did in the days of our fathers, when business was plain, and there were no stock gamblers, and woolen was woolen and silk was silk, and men were men. How rare it is that you find a man who can, from his heart, say: "I never cheated- in trade, I never over estimated the value of goods when sell ing them. I never covered up a defect in a fabric. I never played upon the ignorance of a customer ; in all my estate there is not one dishonest farth ing." There are those who can say it. They n?ver let their integrity bow or cringe to present advantage. They are as pure and Christian today as on the day when they sold their first tierce of rice or their first firkin of butter. There were times when thev i i 1 1 3 . t coum nave rouoea a partner, wnen tney couia nave auseonuea with tiie funds of a bank, when they could have sprung a snap ludgment, when thev could have made a false assignment, when they could have ruined a neighbor for the purpose of picking np some of the fragments; but they never took one step on that pathway of hell-fire. Now Once more : I want you to seek bus they can pray without being haunted iness Grace. Commercial ethics, busi with the chink of dishonest gold. Now , ness honor, laws of trade, mav do very mt-j cu rruu me uiine muiour HUH-1 ing or the day when, with a he on their soul, they kissed the book in a 1 custom-house. Now they can look in to the face of their children without ! thinking of orphans left by them-1 selves penniless and houseless. Now ! they can think of death without having meir Knees kiiock togetner, ana tneir hearts sink, and their teeth chatter. because there is a mdgmeutwhere all def . auders and jockeys and tricksters and charlatans shall be doubly damned. Now they can read in the Bible without flinching: "As the partridge sitteth on eggs and hatcheth them not, so he that getteth riches, and not by right, shall leave them in the midst of liis days, and at the end shall be a fool." Alas! if any of you, for the purpose of getting out of temporary embarrassment, dare to sell your soul, or any portion of it, you may wake up in the midst of your embarrassment and say: "No one is looking; this trans- action may Lie a little out or tne way but it is only once ; only one. that one occasion you may not wreck your spiritual nature, but On only you You despoil your business prospects. put one aisnonest dollar m an estate, but it will not stand. You may take a dishonest dollar and put it down in the very depths of the earth, and you mav roll on the top of it rocks and ami mountains, and on the top of these rocks and mountains you may put all the banks and moneyed institutions, piling them up heaven high ; but that one dishonest dollar down in the depths of the earth will begin to rock, and heave, and upturn itself until it comes to the resurrection of damnation. You cannot hide a dishonest dollar. In the review of this subject there are two or three things I want to say, and the first is, let us have a larger sympathy for business men. I think it is a shame that in our pulpits we do not oftener preach on this subject, and show that we appreciate the sorrows and struggles and temptations and trials of everyday life. Men who toil with the hand are very apt to be sus picious of those who move in the world of traffic, and think that they get their money idly, and that they give no oquivalent. Men who raise the corn, and wheat, and rye, and oats are very apt to think that grain merchants get easy profits. The first is very apt to be jealous of the other. Plato and Aris totle were so oppo;;ed to all kinds of merchandise that they said commerce was the curse of the earth, and they recommended that cities should never be built any nearer the sea coast than ten miles. But we have become wiser than that, and you know that there are no harder workers than those who plan and calculate in stores, and banks, and counting houses. What though their apparel be neat, what though their manners be refind, do not put them down as idlers. They carry loads heaveir than a hod of brick, they go into exposures keener than the cutting east wind, they scale mountains higher than the Alps and Himalay, and main taining their Christian integrity, Christ will at the last iiccost them, saying : " Well done thou good and faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over a few things; I will make thee ruler over many things ; enter thou into the jov of thy Lord." I also enjoin you to quit all fretf ill ness about business matters. Is there not something in your household that you would not give up for the worldly success other men have? Besides that, if these trials lilted you up you ought to bless God for the whip of discipline. The larger the note you have to pay, the greater the uncertainty of business life, the better for vour soul, if Jesus Christ leads you triumphantly J through. How do I know ? I know it by this principle that the hotter the furnace the better the refining. There have lx?en thousands of men ; who have gone through the ame path j 1 1 ! you are now going tnrougn witn an aching heart. There are multitudes before the throne of God who were lashed with cares and anxieties innumer able, and were cheated oat of every thing but their colfin. They were sued, they were ejected, they were impris oned for debt, they were maltreated, they were throttled by constables with whole packs of writs, tl ey were sold out by sheriffs, they had to confess judg ruetits, they had to compromise with creditors, and their h st hour on earth was disturbed by the fact that the door bell rung loudly and angriiy by the hand of some impetuous creditor, who was surprised that the sick man should be so impertinent and outrageous as to die before he had paid him the last three shillings and six-pence. Oh ! how men are tossed and driven! Ihad a friend who went from one anxiety to another; a good and great heart he had, but everything he put his hand to seemed to fail. Misfortunes clustered around, and after awhile I heard he was dead ; and the first word I said was : " Good ! he has got rid of the sheriffs, There is a great multitude of business men who on irth had if, hard. kaL hv the frrupn nf ftnd fboir x t . . . r . - j . v stand triumphant in heaven; and when the question is asked of them: " Who are they?" the angels of God, standing 1.1 i "ii i on the seas of glass, will cry out : j-?-were interviewed on the late.elec "These are they who come out of great tions. Roscoe Conkling was-in Boston tribulation, and had their robes washed the other day, and he expressed the and made white in the blood of the opinion in conversation with Oen. Lamb." Banks that last week's elections ware Lamb wen ior a wmie; out mere win come a time when the ground will slip from under your feet, and the world will frown and the devils will set after your soul, and you will want more then than this world can give you. You will want the eternal rock to stand or. For the lack of grace, you have known men to forget, and to maltreat their friends, and to curse their enemies, and you have seen their names bulletined among scoundrels, and spit upon, and blistered by scorn, and ground to powder. They not only loose their property, but their souls were mauled, and putrefied, and blasted for eternity. Yoii could count up scores of such per sons, while there are others who tossed, on the same sea, sustained by the grace of God, have all the time kept their eyes on the light-house. Men coming out of that man's store, say: "If there was ever a Christian trader, that is one." Stern integrity kept the hooks and waited on the customers. Light from the future world flashed through the show windows. Wrath never stamped the floor, nor did sly dishonesty cover up imperfections in goods. Love to God and love to men were the princi ples that ruled in the store of that Christian trader. Some day the shut ters are not let down from the store window and the bars not taken from the door. Men pass along and stop and stare, and go up to read a card on the door which announces: "Closed on account of the death of one of the firm." That death it is talked in commercial circles that a good man has gone. Boards of trade pass resolu tions of sympathy, and churches of Christ pray: "Help, Lord, for the godly man ceaseth." He has made his last bargain; he has suffered his last loss; he has ached with his last fatigue. The results of this Christian industry will bless his children after he is dead, and bequests to the kingdom of God will gather many sons into glory. Everlasting rewards in place of busi ness discipline. There "the wicked cease from troubling and the weary are at rest. The Newspapers and the President. Rochester Post-Express. Constant criticism of the newspa pers comes with especially bad grace from Mr. Cleveland; for he is their creature and they made him. There never was a public man whose reputa tion is so purely a matter of newspa per notoriety; and there never was a public man who was advanced so far in popular confidence and political honor upon so small a capital. He us a colossal example of what can be done by judicious advertising. He never hit upon a great idea; he never said a great thing; he never accomplished a great deed. He was a commomplace, honest, well-meaning, available man, unknown outside of a narrow ciacle; and the newspapers liftedShim out of obscurity, and put the Governorship and the Presidency within reach. And now that he has attained, simply through newspaper influence, to an honor that was denied to men like Webster, Clay, Calhoun, Chase, Seward, Scott, Tilden, Hancock, Seymour, McClellan, he keeps hurling from the "height that makes conspicuous abuse upon the newspa lers. By a curious conincidence, .two per sons with bullet wounds in the head were received at the London hospital on the same day June 19th. More re markable is the fact that, though in each case the bullet was driven ? into the brain too deeply for extraction, both patients have been discharged convalescent. i nesc marvellous re coveries from what, a few years as wo ild have meant certain death, illus trate the effects of superior surgical skill ;md the modern antiseptic meth od of treating wounds. M&naordie& c j n r. s DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, WEAKNESS, CHILLS AND FEVERS, MALARIA, LIVER COMPLAINT, KIDNEY TROUBLES, NEURALGIA AND RHEUMATISM. TT is A lag Invigorate ClT.J De- TT gives NEW LIFE to the whole SYSTEM by Strengthening the Muscles, Ton ing the NERVES, and completclyDU gesting the food. lightful to take, and of great value as a Medicine for weak and Ailing Women and Chil dren. O N T A I N S no hurtful A Bock, 'Volina,' by 1 e a d i n Minerals, is com posed of carefully selected Vegeta ble Medicines, combined skill, fully, making a Safe and Pleasant Remedy. hysicians. telling ow to treat dis eases at HOME, mailed, together with a set ot hand some cards by new Heliotype process, on receipt of xo c 8;i"nM tb Uter near For e by TI lmrtt n1 Ororr. yon not k. v TOLl.tl IVBIM1L, remit 1.0O, uJ fail ait sottle will tM wut, vunrsat rsrr a ojtlt st c Volina Drug and Chemical Company, ALTIXOKE, XBC ft. It Really is too Bad. Schenectady Evening Star. Two distinguished Rmib!icins. or ex-IlepuWicans whichever you please I - ... , rm- . . ri - . . . y ... ' -T an indication that the Republican party is falling to pieces under unwise management. About the same time Robert G. Ingersoll in a Chicago in terview said : The Republican pjtrty seems to have no definite aim, seems afraid to grapple with the questions of the day; afraid to express an opinion; and we have got to that point that the principal men iu the Republican party are seeking office." Alas, alas ! Idleness. Never be idle. Idleness means ruin just as stagnation means decay. You can ditch better things than early worms by rising early iu the morning sometimes that will paint your cheek, quicken your pulse, brighten 'our eye, and give you such an appetite as wall make breakfast a pleasure, dinner a treat, tea a delight and no room for sup per. Besides, it's only one early bird that catches the worm. Every early boy can catch the benefit I speak of. And what the boy learns to love tjie man will turn to account, while his hay will be better and more abundant than an idler's; and his corn, his carrots and his cucumbers will be tiner, better, and more abundant, too; and just when the idle man is thinking he ought to have a fortune, the ea;ly one will be wrapping his up and running oil to the banklwitli it. The boy who says it's music to hear the milk-man and chimny-swecp Chronic Catarih destroys the sense of smell and taste, consumes the cartilages of the nose, and, uuless properly treated, hastens its victim into Consumption. It usually in dicates a scrofulous condition of the sys tem, and should be treated, like chronic ulcers and eruptions, through the blood. The most obstinate and dangerous forms of this disagreeable disease Can be cured by taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I have always been more or less troubled with Scrofula, but never seriously until the splitter of 1SS2. At that time I took a severe cold in my head, which, notwith standing all efforts to cure grew worse, and finally became a chronic Catarrh. It was accompanied with terrible head aches, deafness, a continual coughing, and with (Trent soreness of the lungs. Mv throat aud stomach were so polluted with the mass of corruption from my head that Loss of Appetite, Dyspepsia, and Emaciation totally unfitted" me for busi ness. 1 tried many of the so-called spe cifies for tins disease, but obtained no relief until 1 commenced taking Ayer's Sarsanarilla. After using two bottles of a this medicine, I noticed an improvement in mv condition. v ncn i nau lasen six 1IM I 1 . 1 A I - 1 I bottles all traces of Catarrh disappeared, and niv health was completely restored. A. B. Cornell, Fairfield, Iowa. For thoroughly eradicating the poisons of Catarrh from the blood, take Ayer's Sar snparilla. It will restore health and vigor to decaying and diseased tissues, when everythlug else fails. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ay er & Co., Lowell, Mass. COMMON-SENSE LIFE INSURANCE BY AN OLD LINE COMPANY ? RENEWABLE TERM INSURANCE, AS OFFERED ONLY BY TIIE LIFE ASSURAN F NEW YO It challenges criticism. Is the Safest, most Equitable and least expensive system ver devised. It is regular Insurance within the reach and means of all the people, and has received the hearty commendation and endorsement of Insurance Commissioners, Ac tuaries and hundreds of the sharpest financiers and lcadim: thinkers of the day. Among all the Life Insurance Companies in the United States, Tni: PnoviDKKT show for the year 188": 1. Smallest out-go for Expenses .4.10 per $1,000 insured, 2. Smallest out uo for Death Claims. 5-.G7 44 " " 8. Smallest out-go fi.r Cost of Insurance .83 " M " 4. The lowest average rate of Premium 11.03 " " 14 5. The largest percentage of Assets to Liabilities 2.29 to each $1,000 6. The largest percentage of Increase in Nev Hijsiness. 98. &0 per cent 7. The largibt percentage of increase iii Surplus 04.99 pet cent Wm. E. Stephens, Secretary. SnEri.HD IIomans, President J. 6. YVYNNGcneral Agent for North Carolina, J. ALLEN I1ROWN, Resident Agent, fckdisbury N. C. C. G. YIELE, Special AgcntT lb-liable special and locaPAgeuts v. anted throughout the State. Apply to General Agent Greensboro, N. C. 48:tf. ECZEMA ERADICATED. Geatlcraen-It is dae rm to pj that I think I am enUrply Well of eeMma aft hayhvi taken Swlffe Spi-citic. I bave been troubled with it rt-ry litUe In ray f ace jIdcc bwt aprine. At the beginning of cold weather last (all it made slight appearance but went l,a ncverreturned. 8. 8. S. no doubt broke it up: at loart it.pat my eyrten. in gwd g tnd I trot well. It aWrBeneflUKi my wife ercatly n cane of nick headache, and made a pcriec cure of a breaking out on my little tare year old daughter 1 i""1 vn.m Watkiiuoille, Ga., Feb. W. J8S6. Kev. JAMi . M. 3SOKEI3. Treatise oaMooQ and Skia Diseases mailed free. . o- from between the sheets will mot likely take to his bed to escape his creditors by-and-by. ' ?j An Educational Truth. Ttrr State has shown itself a reryuetive frieml of education. It has stood np for our common schools and has demanded more funds for school purposes. It has recosfnizetl that true education that which, embraces mind, soul and body as leinr of the highest possible, value. There has been no flagsering or variable ness along i his lino. But it hits not jind will not accept the Northern idea that to educate the mind alone is to elevate citizenship and prevent crime. We have shown in the past from infontcstahlo evi dence that this position Is untenable, and such a theory is misleading and false. We have shown from the statistics of Massachusetts that crime was far more abounding there than among Southern whites, and such is the fact. Wilmington Star. He had Something to Say. 3i , Judge Have you anything to say before the court passes sentence upon yon? ; . Prisoner Well, all I have got to say is, 1 hope yer honor'll consider the extreme youth of my lawyer, an let me off easji ' James Russell Lowell is reported on good authority to be engaged to the dowager Lady Lyttleton. It 'hc ex-minister is fond of murders and ghosts he will have his wishes gratified in full. The best authen ticated of all ghost stories is that of which the hero was Thomas, the second Earl of Lyttleton, who died in 1779. Lady Lyttle toj was also- the mother-in-law of Lord Frederick Cavcfifiish, who was murdered in Phrenix Park, Dublin, m 1882. On the whole, Mr. Lowell is a brave man.- Balti more llcruld. Catarrh Is usually the result of a neglected "coM iu the head," which causes an inflam mation of the mucous membranc-of the nose. Unless arrested, this inflammation produces Catarrh which, when chronic, becomes very offensive. .It is impossible to be otherwise healthy, aud, at the same time, afflicted with Catarrh. When promptly treated, this disease may be Cured by the ue of Ayer's SarsapnriHa. ! suffered, for years j from clHmnic Catarrh. My appetite was very poor, and I felt miserably. None of the remedies I took afforded me any relief, until I commenced using Ayer's SarsapariUa, of which I have now" taken live bottles. The Catarrh has disappeared, aud I am growing strong and stout again; my appetite has returned, and my health is "fully restored. Susan L. W. Cook, 009 Albany street, Boston Highlands, Mass. I was troubled with Catarrh, and all Its attendant evils, for several years. I tried various remedies, and was treated by a number of physicians, but received ivn twnpflt. until I roinmencpil t.ikinf ver's Sarsanarilla. A few bottles . of thla medicine cured me of this trouble- some. complaint, and completely restored my health and strength. Jesso Boggs, Iiohnau's Mills, Albermarlc, N. C. If vou would strengthen and invigorate voursystem more rapidly ami surely than by any" other mcdiciuc, use Ayer's tsar- - . saparilla. It is the safest and most reliable of all blood purifiers. No other remedy is so effective iu cases of chronic Catarrh. Sold by ail Druggists. Price $1 ; six bottief, . SOCIETY CE m 5fe -