The Carolina Watchman. ' -. l f. -- .' k ' t si,-; ii .jf'i?' -:. - ... ! ' . , -1. .i 4" .r-t )? i--. 1 i .THIRD SALISBURY, N. C, THUSSDAY, DEGEMBEE 23, 1886. - si t i HO J riimtt sj BB11B1BjpIIIpBBjsaaBaa Persimmons smrDed t JSew iorK from Marshal ville, Ga., wje said to have t?-Z hjaw J 1 from jVlarsbalviiie arc siu tw uc awrreimted somethinff over men dol- lare oer bushel We feel pretty safe in Yenturinc the suggestion that the per- simmon omrbt to be cultivated in this county not only as an article for ship ment, but for the valuable wood. The trees might be transplanted on worn out fields. Danbury Reporter A capital suggestion. There is money in the persimmon; gathered, seeded and evaporated they are nearly equal to dates and raisins, and sell freely in the city markets. It is only of late that the timber of the persimmon has been recognized as valuable. We first found it out from Wm. M. Barker, the carriage maker of this place, a few years ago. iFor "Bide sticks" and "quoins" in a printing office, it is ne plus ultra only excelled: by iron. The w Gate City Guard," an Atlanta military comply, have made up 40, 000 for a European tour, and a grand parade all over the old world. PURELY VEGETABLE. H ict with xir aordinary eflR cacy on th TIVER, DydEYS, JL m . and Bowels. AN EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOR Mala-rU, Bowel Complaints, Uynpepsla, Sick Headch( ConstipaUon, BlUouauesa, Kidney Aflbctlona. Jaundice, McnUU Depression, Colic. A lo Household Should be Without It, and, by being kept ready for immediate use. will save many an hour of suffering ana many a dollar In time and doctors' bills. THERE IS BUT ONE SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR Sea fast you get th genuine with red " Z" on want of wrapper. Prepared only by J. H. ZEILIN & CO., Sole Proprietor., oie rrepnei PRUCK, 91.00. Philadelphia, Pa. A CAR LOAD OP DRILLS 1-KELLEE3 PATENT iot sale to the Farmers of Row an. Cheap for cash or well SECURED TIME NOTES. This Drill stands at the very front and is unsurpassed by any other in America. It sows wheat and elover seed and bearded oaU together with fertilizers most admirably. The quantity per acre can be changed in an instant by - a ingle motion of the hand. Read what people who have used it say about it. Mt. Versox, Row ax Co, X. C. -Sept. 15th, 1886. I hnve nted the Victor Kellers patent Grain Drill fur several tears and I consider it a perfect machine. One 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 oat? as well as it does wheat or clover seed and fertizcrs to per fection. I know it to be strictly A No. lr Drill and combines great strength, with its other good qualities. ! W. A. Luckkt. -' S.vt.rsDVKT, N. C. Sept. 15th, 1886. Last Spring I borrowed. Mr. White Fraley's Victor (Kellem patent) Grain Drill and put in my oats with it. It sowed bearded and now-bearded oats to perfection . I believe it to be the best Grain Drill I erer saw. It sows wheat or oats and clover seed and fertilizer all O. K , and I have bought one for tins fall's seeding of, the Agent, John A. Boyden. Hit' HA ED II. COW AH. X v 1. Samsbcrt, N. C. Sept. 17th, 1886. I have nsed tile Victor Kellers patent Grain Drill for the past ten years and con sider it by far the best Drill made. I have also nsed the Bechford & Huffman Drill, out 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 Drill?. The Victor sows all kinds of grain satisfactorily. , Faakk Bukatiied. ForJssleWy SS5 mm Grai JN0. 4. BOYDEP, For the Watchm an. Mr. Editor Will the Rotationists .wvr . , ... vv, ,.....i.wv, please tell us what Rowan has lost by retaining good officials? What evil portends now? Are the present in cum- bents planning to shuffle the mortal coil and 'slip through the key-hole some night1 and carrying the offices with them ? "Others are, prepared, let them have a chance." The voice of business econo my sav8 "Men Dreoare for their own hnfiinp f.h imlilu- r-.ilU t.lipm to mil. ijc affairs." What! Give every man an office who has prepared himself for business? No. What ones then, those who clamor ior it r xso. une rotation- wy vu&Mmqmcu wita iue uohmuu ist says 'pass that class by'. Impossi- i tional theory of the Government for lie to give every one a chance. jthe President, in whom executive pow- The office is created as a rmblic ne-' er was expressly lodged by the consti- eessitv. Une man One man is selected and 999 disappointed. Just think of it! How j many men in Rowan, who, in their own estimation, are competent to fill j county offices? Shall we undertake, at the jeopardy ot county affairs, to rotate all these in? I repeat, "The office is a public necessity," not a creature, born for the accommodation of men in rota tion, and to rotate good men out of office is unwise. When wc rotate a good man out, we may rotate a sorry one in. Not every one who has the oooAr la ruin will make an officer. Some lack natural endowments and can nev er attain to superiority as officials. Some are wilfully, and others unavoid ably unfit. Is it to be supposed wejean rotate often, and not occasionally, get an officer inferior to those with whom nobody finds fault. Turn good officials out, just to give somebody else a chance! Let the trustees of our University turn Dr. Battle off just to give somebody else a chance. We would all call them a '''pack uv phnls." The writers knows different counties in which the public work has been done so carelessly that it is not to be depended upon. One in stance: a paper, when called for, was unregistered, and after long search, was found among the waste of the office. Another, when called for was unregis tered and lost: anotner, the commission ers had to appoint a committee to get the public business as nearly right as 2ossiblc; another, the sheriff failed, the bondsmen ponied up about 4"f6000.00; another, (the sweetest of all) the sher iff failed, the bondsmen appealed to the Legislature, that gracious body passed a special act for the relief of the boudsmen, and the people lost the taxes which had been collected. Do we need any more? Can we not remember when we had at least one officer who was not loved as the brethren should love each other? But, maybe there are some disgrunt led fbne Is it the loaves and fishes for which we are democrats? Then shame upon us. It is as impracticable to try to give every one who thinks he is prepared a chance. Rotation will in crease the host of aspirants, and not only that, it is best for individuals, as well as more safe for the public that good officers should be retained. B is a good farmer. A is rotated in. This raises the fire in B. A is retired and B is rotated in. This raises the fire in C. B is retired and C rotated &c, ad infini tum. Now what benefit is it to these men? They were all content and doing well at private business lxjfore that ro tation wheel began to rolL Now A has a taste of town life and tries to stick well, stick it is, sure enough. A poor man with a large family sticking in town, and nothing to do. B goes back to his farm which is badly out of re pair, just two years older, with from i$350 to $500,00 more cash than when he left, and besides this cash, his fami ly is stuffed full of hifaluten town ideas, and the whole layout find themselves with a superabundance of distaste to country life. Contentment, which the good book says with Godlinesss is great gain, is gone, gone, gone. C opens a little store on his mother-in-law's farm. D, E, and F, rotate in and we haven't time to see how they will come out. we repeat again, ul he ofiicc is a public necessity and not a position prepared for the benefit of partisan leaders ' and it is unwise to rotate. Respectfully, C. W. CORRIIIER. Congress. TENURE OF OFFICE LAWS. The reader is referred to our Wash ington correspondent for Congressional news, but hi addition to the following will interest many of the readers of this paper. IN THE" SENATE?rjEO. 14. , The Senate took up the bill repealing the tenure of Office laws. Edmunds opposed the bill. The law had been in existence nearly 20 years. Pres. Johnson (to restrain whom it was enacted) obeyed it, although he believed it unconstitutional, and ail his successors had recognized its validity as a guide -or restraint. This bill was brought forward in apparent aid of their friends on the other side, and to relieve the President of difficulties and embarrassments now attending remov als and suspensions. It mi an n vitation to him to make short work of the whole civil service business, and to expel from office, at once, all officers who are within the purview of the Statute. Hoar advocated the passage of the bill It had been reported from the judiciary committee last session, but on account of the controversy then exist I ing with the President ou the saliiect 1 ng of the offices, he had- not deemed it wroper to ask the Senate to act upon it. . m - . - - i But as that (jnestion had .subsided, he now deemed it proper to ask the Senate to vote whether it would return to the ancient policy of the Government to the rule which. had existed from 1780 to 1807, and which, notwithstanding the condition of the statute books, had practically existed since the accession to power of General Grant in March, 1869. President had recommended its appeal so that he fHoar was acting under pretty substantial Republican authority in trying to get rid of this legislation, n seemea to mm to ne to- tntion, to be compelled to answer to ! that responsibility when its instru- J raents were forced upon him against his will, or in whom ne had no confi dence. While expressing himself in full sympathy with the principles of civil service reform, he still declared his convictions that the people of the United States expected and demanded that no man should be kept in executive employment, who had no confidence of the person responsible for the success of these executive functions. Executive session adjourned. If there has ever been in the history of this couutry a greater violation of the rules of common decency, not to say of good breeding, than the publica tions in the press about Mrs. Cleveland in the past month, the Chronicle has neither seen nor read of it. It was once a maxim "want of decency is the want of sense." Mrs. Cleveland can not walk to her conservatory to pluck a flower, go to church, take a ride, take her husband's arm-in short do any every day thing, without the world hearing of it through the papers. These things are bad enough but might be exeused. But there is no palliation or excuse for the recent allusions to Mrs. Cleveland of a nature of which the public has no right to know or to speak. She is a woman her home and home interests ought to be as sacred and as free from prying into or talking about as those of any other Americau woman. The papers criticize Mr. Cleveland be cause he often rebukes them for the character of the news they publish and their reckless disregard of the private rights of individuals and public officers. There is no private citizen who would submit to have the most delicate subjects of home life paraded in the papers. Why should a public officer be so treat ed? It is true that it is a tax upon greatness for public men to have all their affairs publicly discussed, but it would seem that it is asking too much to expect a man to quietlv submit to having his wire s name bandied about in the papers, especial! v in delicate family matters. There is, just here, great need of reform. Raleigh Chron icle. Well said, brother Chronicle, and we hope the North Carolina press will make a most obstinate exception to the practice so denounced above. All Wool Goods. From the New York Star. The prestige of the "all-wool" has had a deeper signification, a wider in fluence than can ever be generally known or acknowledged. It is part of the greater feeling, the finer feeling, the subtle expansion of later times. It requires better, more ca.eful treat ment than mixed and stiffened fibers, and it produces more harmonious rela tions between its wearers and the out side world. It falls softly into folds; it does not rustle or irritate; it acts soothingly upon the nerves and upon sense of those with whom it comes in con tact; it does not startle the currents in mind or atmosphere. This influence i3 all the more inportant in these days of in cessant movement, excitement and vi bration. It is restful and tranquilizing to soul and body. This growth of the manufacturing interest in wool in this country has been so rapid that the figures can hardly be believed. The first woolen factory was established in a small village in Massachusetts about the beginning of the present century. Its size and the amount of its product a 1 1 may he estimatea rrom tne enterprise of the second, -built in Uneida county, N. Y., and which turned out the unpre cedented quantity of twenty-five yards of cloth per day. Now not one mill, but hundreds, turn out as many thou sands. In fact, though we do not as yet produce the finest dress materials, our manufacturers furnish two-thirds of all the cloths, flannels and blankets used in the United States, and there are special kinds of "American" cloth and blankets thai are largely exported. Nothing finer than our Oregon and California blankets can be found in the world of their kind. Mercury. There are only four localities where mercury or quicksilver can be found in abundance.' These are California, Austria, Almaden, in Spain, and Peru. The mines in the last mentioned place were discovered in a curious manner. Cinnabar, the soft, red rock of which quicksilver forma a part, when ground very fine, makes a beautiful red paint. The indians. used this to ornament their bodies' on great occasions. This caused the country where they lived to be examined, and the cinnabar was found. Th Romans used this hun dreds of yeais ago in decorating their images. It is of great value now, in our times, and we call it vermilion rri.a i.ua r-J. ii -jzJL u The othei part of the rock, of which we nave spoken abore is composed of sulphur. The cinnabar is crushed and exposed to heat, when the quicksilver, in form of vapor, passes into a vessel suitable for the nurnose. where ii ia . purpose cooled. Then, beiHtf, reduced to its liquid state, it is pure and fit for use. It is then very largely employed in separating metals froin the rock to which they cling. The rocks are crush ed fine, sifted, and washed until as much of the gold and silver is removed as possible. Then it is placed in a bottle with the quicksilver, which seems to absorb it at once, separating it entirely from every particle of sand or rock. If the metal to be cleaned is gold, you will see a yellowish mass of a sort of paste or amalgam mi in is is heated, and the mercury or quicksilver. flies awav, leaving behind it pure goldit climb out, and I was making a move in Although mercury is so useful in many ? that direction when I heard the faint ways, it is also a deadly poison, and its vapor so dangerous that, in search of it, many persons have lost their lives. Not many years ago the mines of Austria took fire, and 1,300 work men were poisoned, many of then dy ing in consequence; and the water used to quench the flames pumped into a river near by, caused all the fish in the river to die. Mercury is carried about in sheepskin bags and cast-iron bottles. It is so heavy that an iron stopper is screwed into each bottle. Have an Object in View. Young man, have a purpose in your heart. Now what is your purpose in life ? Is it that, under ail circumstances, you will do wnat you think right? Or is it to become rich at the expense of principle and right? The first purpose you shall have is to care for yourself. Young men nowadays don't; and when the body is wrecked, they hobble about through life making everybody about them miserable. Find out what diet best agrees with you and adhere to it. Daniel began by abstaining from wine. This would be a good start for you, young man. Next, take care of your intellect. Study; if you have intellect improve it. Many hard-worked men have acquired profound education by be ing studious during small intervals of leisure. Get an hour a day if you can get more. Devote half of it to study of the Bible, and divide remaining thirty minutes, say, between astronomy, botany and geology. Do this one year and you will be surprised at what you have accomplished. Then take care of your manners. The manners of Ameri cans are degenerating. There was a time when a young man would not offend a lady bv puffing cigar smoke into her face. Now I see it done on the street cars every day. Imitate the sweetness and gentleness of Daniel. Be affable, suave, courteous and kind. Never utter a thoughtless word that will pain. Start in life with the princi ple "I'll be a gentleman, come what will.". M. Schudder. In a Panther's Den. The lumber firm in which I was employed desired to establish a camp near the head waters of the Wolf river, Wisconsin, and I was instructed to look over the ground and report. I left Shewano in August in a j-kilE taking with me provisions, lire-arms, and a camping outfit, calculating to be gone about twenty days. I was accompanied by my dog, a large and savage blood-hound. With my ax I cleared away a place for the build ings, blazed the way to a spring, and cut down a number of small pines to lie ready for fire wood when winter and the men ar rived. I had a small tent with me, plentv of good provisions, and the first two or three days and ni. Ids passed without a'arm. One night as I sat smoking at the door of my tent I heard the cry of a panther from a jungle across the river. There was no mistaking the sound. The man who has ever listened to the long-drawn crcam of a panther, will never confound it with tl.ecr , 4f any other wild least. This feilow screamed out three or four times, with an interval of about five minute between the screams, and then he was suddenly answer ed by his mate, who was ou my side of the stream, and apparently not more than twenty rods away. I've had to do with various wild beasts in my time and I never weaken anything to weakeu a dog like the yell of a panther. That dog of mine wouldn't have hesitated a moment to attack a bear or a wolf, but the yells of those panthers made a coward ot him in no time. He crawled into the tent and I conld neither coax nor drive him out. However, I don't blame him so very much, for every xc'A sent the shivers climbing up my spine in a way to make me ashamed of myself. 1 heaped on the wood until I had a big fire, ami after the beasts had called each other a few times they censed screaming, and the woods were as silent as a gravc-yard. In about an hour the dog regained his courage and came out of the tent and began snufiing around. By and by some smalt animal rau across the open ground in our front, and the dog ut tered a bark and dashed after it. I beared him rushing through the woods for two or minutes, and was about to whistle him to return when there was one loud, fieice yell from one of the panther, a yelp of t rror from the dog, and I knew that he was a goner. I whistled and called, but I had s en him for the last time. I got but little sleep that night, feeling that I was at the mercy of the beasts it they had a mind to atta k. Directly after breakfast I started1 but in the direction the dog had taken, and after traveling about 250 feot I came Upon the spot where he met his death. I think the panther had leaped dowu on him from a trce and secured a great advantage, for there had been no struggle. The pine-cones were splashed with blo.id and tufts of hair could be found here and there where the dog Was dragged off in the direction of the stream. I had with mc a doubli-barrelcd shot gun and a revolver, and I determined to revenge l TiScr' death. I had net iced a heap of ?rift- distance up the river, antl on the toner side, and from this heap a talk.n trce bridlfcf, tjje gtream when J came to inspect this tree I fonnd mo e blood and tufts of hair, it was plain that dog's body had been carried across to some den in thedrjlTf-wood. I crossed by the lojr "C s . f iupim of limbs, and trunks, and dead logs which hd been left there on the low ground id high water. It- looked like a good place for a pnntUerVdun, and as I cnrefuHy moved about I held the gun ready for a shot. My idea was to descend the heap and look for the opening of the den, bnt I de scended in a manner entirely unlooked-for. A limb suddenly jave way under my feet, and I went crashing through the pile, which at that spot contained a hollow as big as an ordinary bedroom. Both barrels ot the gun exploded as I fell, and the un was lost from my grasp. I landed iu a heap on the ground, surrounded by br ken broaches, and enough daylight came down to eunble mc to see what sort of a place I had fallen into. It would be no creut job squeals of kittens, and looked down to fiud a pair of wee little panthers under my feet. Scattered around were bones and pieces of flesh to tell the fate of old Tiyer. I was in a panther's den, and as I realized it my heart jumped into my throat until it seemed as if I could not get my breath. I was thoroughly rattled and ready to run, and for two or three minutes I made frantic efforts to clamber out. As fast as I reached a limb it broke under my weight and let me down again, but I was still trying, when I heard one of those panthers yell out. It wasn't the cry of the previous night, but a snarl of rage, and I knew I was about to be attacked. Now, for what follows I have received the credit, of being a very great man, but I am ready to confess that I never felt myself more of a coward. I was at bay, and cowards will fight when driven to the wall. I just bent over those cubs, drew my revolver, and in about a minutes I caught sight of a pnnthei'shead as she work ed her way in through the drift. I took quick aim and let her have it, and she did n't kick a dozen times. I knew the other one was aiound somewhere, and I didn't have three minutes to wait. He came for me by a different route, and he was almost upon me before 1 fired the shot that finished him. The kittens were about two weeks old, and fflter the old ones had been finished I knocked the little oms ia the head. When I returned to Shewao, I carried the paws to prove that I had destroyed four panthers, and, as I told you, I got the credit of being a lion-hearted Nimrod. I deserved not one word of praise. I simply had t he nerve to use my revo'ver when pinched, and the k i 1 i i n of the first beast by one onilet was simply a lucky shot. The season is coming around for burning off tobacco plant beds, and we are led to offer a few words on raising tobacco next year. It is well kuowr, to those who are informed on the mat ter that the State cannot profitably compete with Western planters on common and medium who make, as ex perience has proven, five pounds to our one and at a cost proportionately less. We have now come to the point that we want to make this a planting com munity. Curtail your crop one half, and improve its quality and try to make fine muhogony, if you cannot cure lemon colored leaf. DanYAiry Repor ted. The Ashe'ville Advance says: We arc in formed that a Northern company is contem plating the erection of paper mills on the French Broad river near the city. Such an enterprise with the facilities afford here, would no doubt be a paying institution. No section of the South offers better induce ments for paper milis than Western Noitii Carolina. Whatever a man doo3 on rented pro perty is labor lost. What he does on nis own house is an investment which is sure to bring year after its ample reward. INFORMATION MANY PERSONS at this season suffer front -neither Headache, Xcuralgla, JihcuiHatisin, Pains in the Uinbs, JtacJe ami Sides, Had Blood, rJnUge.itlon,Dyspcpsla, Malaria, Constipation A Kidney Troubles. --Y0UKA CORDIAL CURES RHEUMATISM, Bad Blood sod Kidney Trouble. ,y cleansing th blood of nil Its icupurlUbs, stteutLening all purls of tUe body. VOLINA CORDIAL CURES SICK-HEADACHE, Keurnlfla, Pains in the Limbs, Back and Sides, by toning the nerves and strengthening the muscle. --VOUrtA CORDIAL CURES DYSPEPSIA, Indigestion and Conrtlpalion, by aiding tbe awlm llaiintrof th l'ood through the proper action of the) stomach ; It creates a healthy appetite. VOLINA CORDIAL CURES NERVOUSNESS, Depression of spirits and Weakness, by enliven ing and toning the system. VOLINA CORDIAL CURES OVERWORKED and Delicate Women. Puny and Sickly Children. It is deltghtf ul and nutritious as a general Tonic. Volina Almanac and THarr . tor 1887. A handsome, complete and useful Book. relHnarbow to C'L'RE DISEASES at HOME iu n pleasant, natural way. Mailed on receipt of a Sc. $(agQ stamp. Address VOLINA DRUG & CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MO., U. 8. A. WEAR7UNBEVEL0PED V V : S r.f . h 0 M A S HO H V K 1, V ?'tCi E V. .PBV OWI l KTk SfVrVIKN rcn.k.M i bii inutrmiinir n VIMt w-m nt 1 , , 1 ; : 5 I I W "It i11. ojaj run 'n our vnr-r. in Tfriy to ir.oui- hhou- in . r. tun riii rary. tn fnnwr am v- y ln'i:-- ,i.;q - ..! I r,...-..,n- jjgjv r 5jagj ci'T'iUr giy-'K iii arifuiir. b ador -in F"m Vlti'i'.'vL (.') , ETtfjj7ETTrjj?m Sa5Lii5a5, THE USUAL TREATMENT s very unsatisfactory, as tbouKitida or iftespaMng patients can tc-btlty. On thlt. point xtrustwortUy incur a 1 writer eajr: "Proper locr treatment Is positivt iv neee.3:uy to success, hut many, it sot most ot the remedies In generaHiw by physicians afford but temporary beneQtjA care certainly can not be expected from 3nuffnxvi'iers. douches and washes." Ely "a CreamBalm is a remedy which combtnes the iinporuvorrcuulaltes of quick action pe tftc curailTc poyucr with pcrtcet safety acd XiTiTlTYraaX s m - i ii n rn ti -v K mm llBlBlrf L'fiJ " Taiiff Reform. Pnim the N. T, Star, Dec. 12. In pursu ance to notice given Mr. Morrison made his morion on Jnne l T last, and it was) voted down by yeas 140, nay 157. Since then Mr. Cox of .New York. :i Democratic tariff reformer, lin& been elected to till a rarancy j tnen existing, and Mr. Price, KcpnblicHn, of Wisconsin, and Messers. Arnot tnd Dowd ney, f New York, Democratic protection ists, have tiled. The present majority a gainst consideration, assuming that mem bers have not altered their minds, is jast twelve. Bnt things are now seen in a differ ent light. The situation has changed. Ar guments against tariff tinkering on general principles, or favoring the present tariff be cause it has not had what protectionists call a fair trial, have lost their grip. The over powering logic of a constantly increasing surplus which under the existing laws tuav be $600,000,000 before the $250,000,000 of 4Ts become due in 1891, forces upon reluc tant Congressmen practical consideration of the very troublesome question. That Mr. Morrisons motion will prevail is no longer doubtful. A change ol only seven votes it necessary. More than that number of the thirty two Democrats now living who fol lowed Randall will refuse to accept the same leadership now. Kor can the Repub lican leaders hold their men on line to pre vent what amounts to consideration of any tariff measure. The time has goue by for that. The-Morrison bill then will come before the House. It4s not the one he orininal'v framed last winter. His committee altered it in divers particulars and added to it the lull of Mr. Hewitt simplifying the laws re lating to the collection of the revenue. It puts on the free list timbers and wood in various forms, salt, all fish except ancho vies and sardines preserved in oil, raw wools, woolen rags, etc , flax, tow, hemp and sulv stltutes therefor, hemp seed, jute butts, jute sunn and sisal crass and- other veireta- table substances not specially enumerated or provided for. Changes are also proposed in the cotton, flax, wool and sugar schedules, the sucar duties being deduced 10 percent. The schedules of chemical products, earth Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Will cure a Cold more thoroughly and speedily than any other preparation In use. This medicine U especially beneficial in all affections of the Throat and Lungs, and affords effectual relief even hi the advanced stages of Consumption. Thousands of cases of Pulmouary diseases, which have baffled every other expedient of human skill, have been completely cured by the use of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. For fifteen years I was afflicted with Lung troubles. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral relieved the distressing symptoms of this disease, and entirely cured mc. It is the nio9t effective medicine I have ever used. -C. M. Fay,;Prof. of Anatomy, Cleveland, Ohio. While In the army I contracted a severe Cold, which settled ou my Lungs, result tag in exhausting fits of Coughing, Night Sweats, and such loss of flesh and strength that, to all aoDearmice. Consuniotion had laid its death grip" upon me. My com rades gave me up to die. I commenced taking Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and it CURED ME. In the twenty year that have since elapsed, I have had no troablc with my Lungs. B. B. Bisscll, Editor and Pub lisher Republican, Albion, Mich. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral cured my wife of Bronchitis, after friends and "physi cians (so severe was the attack) had almost despaired of her life. She is now in per fect health. E. Felter, Newtown, O. "When about 22 yearsof age, a severe Cold affected my lungs. 1 had a terrible Cough, could not sleep, nor do any work, I consulted several physicians, nut re ceived no help until I commenced using Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I continued to take th medicine, and am satisfied it saved my life. C. G. Van Alstyue, P. M., North Chatham, N. Y. I Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ajer & Co., Lowell, Maw, Bold by Druggist. Price $1; alx bottles, $5. COMMON-SENSE LIFE INSURANCE! BY AJN OLD LINE COMPANY ? RENEWABLE TERM INSURANCE, AS OFFERED LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF NEW YOB,: It challenges criticism. Is the Safest, most Equitable and Icaat expensive system ever devised. It is regular Insurance within the reach and means of all the people, and has received the hearty commendation antl endorsement of Insurance Commissioners, Ac tuaries, and hundreds of the sharpest financiers and leading thinkers of the day. Among all the Life Insurance Companies in the United States, Tntd Puovide'nt shows for the Vcar 1KS.5: 1. Smallest ont-po for Expenses 2. Smallest out go for Death Claims 3. Smallest otit-o for Cost of Insurance 4. The lowest average rate of Premium : 5. The largest percentage of Assets to Liabilities 6. The rargest. ercentae of Increase in Ne.rv Business. 7. The largest percentage of increase in Surplus. Vx. E. Stkvhens, Secretary. J. O. J. ALLEN BROWN, Resident Agent, Salisbury N. C. C. O. VIELB, Special Agenr. Ib licbln special and local Agents wanted throughout the State. Apply to Genera Ajrnt Greensboro, N. C. ECZEMA ERADICATED. ssssssaaaBBSSSSSSMSsSsaaa Gentlemen It 5s do yon to mj that T thirA I am entirety well of erstms after havtiy taken Swta'a hpcelac. 1 liars txii tr.wt.ied with it rery tittle in roy imcm since ls-t NntSjSj At the begianiug of cold weather lust fall it made a alight appearai.ee. bat wwt assny an aa r-cVmtuW. 8. 8. a. no doubt broke it uk at taut it IfV'tJ" "jElc and Icot well It also benefited roy wife greatly in eae of ie headache, and la-slc a ir.w. " - , . . . . . ., . - . .1 I l 1 mmt Mummer WjiaviSerOa., Fob. 13, KM. mmm . . -: a -afJ xresuae oa mooa aou aaon enware and srleMwarc. metals and are also changed, it may be that the House will not the bdl in its present shape, but it to all soi k ot 'amendments, from the A , . . . .r . . , inwai to one inscrunjr an entirety after the enacting ctaiw. op will lie offered Mtv Randall to a whiskey tax, Mr. Kellv to wipe out t tax, Mr. Hiscot-k to do away with the tax, and Mr. Wilkes to restore the amy ot imi. ine gentlemen wko wa increase taxes on tin platen, cotton ti steel rods, reatly-madc-clthing, ete have also their day in court and be a divide the House upon any high-tariff position t ney see fit to offer. Out of it nil. tarn; reform will gainer, and if a bill satisfactory to majority of Democrats docs not House, it will in no wise be the fnnlt oft who believe in the President's m Secretary Mannings report and the C platform. -,-,- The Whale's Breath. Whales do not spout waten they vapor or breath. When a whale spouts, his "spout hole," as whalers call it, is always above water. The enormous volume of the whale's breath, expelled suddenly into the different temperature of the air. causes the white, bush-like vapor to remain suspended for a mo ment, like the steam from a locomotive. The only time a whale spouts liqnid it when he hsis been mortally pierced by a lance, and then he spouts warm blood. The sound of a whale s spouting is like the roar of a locomotive blowing off steam. - cultivate torbearance till yc i t a i Ja . rour heart vields a fine crop of it. Pray for a - short memory as to all unkiudnesses.- Spurgecn. - ' 4 ;1 If you want to keep up with the times take the Watchman -you cau't be left. gsit Last year I suffered greatly from aColdt which had settled on my Lungs. Mv physician could do nothing for me, and, my friends believed me to he in Constnnp tion. As a last resort, I tried Ayers Cherry Pectoral. It gave immediate re lief, and finally cured me. I have not the least doubt that this medicine SAVED MY LIFE. I am now rnddy, healthy, and strong. 3 a tauie ju. AUuenuU) i acu, l c.:t. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral cured me of Throat and Lung troubles, after I had been seriously afflicted for three years. The Pectoral healed the soreness of the Lungs, 'cured the Cough, and restored my general health. ---'Ralph Felt, Grafton, O. Twenty years ago I was troubled with a disease of the Lungs. Doctors afforded no relief, and said that I could not live many months. I commenced using Ayer'a Cherry Pectoral, and, before 1 had finished one bottle, found it was helping me. I continued to take this medicine until a cured was effected. I believe that Ayer'a Cherry 1'ectorul saved my life, Saiuuel Griggs, Waukegau, 111. : ir. ONLY BY THE . . -.4.10 per $1,000 insured. ....... o.G7 " fl.&l " u " 11 95 " " ..2.29 tneach $1,000 . 98.90 per cent . .64.99 per cent SnKPPAUD IIokab, President WYNN, Geneml Auent for North Carolina. ft Iter. J , at -OlUZCi. waantlMl fsn mrto tv, s, AttanU. Ca. moat new oiu 4 bo ish the wwf ' mm pnse the: hiea I, -I i - 7t. X - i i V f- - 4