Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Feb. 17, 1887, edition 1 / Page 1
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w M 7 Steffi mmm. . - r M ..- It v ..fe ,sjSd I'PllMjj fc. as! , .'-- f 9" & A" VOL ZVUX-THnLD SERIES. SALISBURY, N. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1887. i aaV mW f m J I rj'r '"v- i n e Vv q tr- ri Tn o n 1 1 Jill I Ci ? c i I I i 1 1 in mj ----- - wv&m:!'.- MO 17 iya .. K Some of the President veto mes sages are spicy. In one case, Saturday he stated that the array record sjiows that the claimant, spent most of his terra of enlistment in desertion. 'Thus, he said, "exhibited the 'long and faith- ful service and high character of the ntexae agitation in intellectual and Mr. George proposes to operate. Our claimant' mentioned by the committee jftnded circles in Great Britian, and the purpose-now is to simply indicate the as entitling him to consideration. I neg meu in the Kingdom were among views of eminent writers who are in withhold my assent from the bill, be- thoae who thought it important that it harmony with Mr. George iu the opin cause, if the facts before are true, the snould be replied to. lr. George is an ion that no man has any right to own allowance of this claim would be a extreraist in some particulars. Rev. i the land that it belongs to the race traversity on our whole scheme of pen- Dr. McGlynn, the Catholic priest just 'or races who dwell upon it sions and an insult to every decent now figunng m conspicuously in the When eminent writers in Europe, veteran soldier." In another case the, nUbiie prints, is an avowed disciple of j and some men of marked ability in the President quoted from the hospital re- jfr George. Dr. McGlynn say: United States hold the views indicated, cords to show that the claimant was jfy doctrtiiie about land has been J and when societies and clubs are organ not sick, but "completely worthless, made clear in speeches, in reported in- jged propagate opinion and create a obese and lazy," and did not consider it torviewsand in published articles and I J voters wbo glmU antagonize by the ease with which special acts jng long as I live, that land is right- who are proonetors of the soU it is were passed, sought relief iy sncn tne property of the people in com-: time tor intelligent men to he on the means twenty years after his claim had moa, and that private aurnermp of land alert and to watch narrowly the trend 9 jAj- J I iU., UAMMhn RriMMn ma s fist t n at it stilt i n t-S i H;r hli i O.I mi 1 V it oeen rejecieu uj n icipwh These instances are examples of the fraud upon the public hidden under many of the pension bills. Our demo cratic executive has shown, however, that he may be trusted to expose it whenever opportunity offers; ,ven recKonrag raaKesia.s,n,gx, , , , . p- i and the way to make reckonings even is to make Iheni often. Zfoutn. PURELY VEGETABLE. H Mte with e xtf tord inary efficacy on th T,VER Kidneys, J -i and Bowels. AN EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOR Mlrla. Bowel Complaints, Iyppia. Sick Headache, ConMtipaUon, BlUowane . Kidney Affections, Jaundice, DeprehSion, Colic Ho Household Should be Withont It, and, by being kept ready for immediate use, will save many an hour of auflerlfig and many a dollar in time and doctors' bill. THERE IS BUT ONE SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR "2" f Wraooer. Preaared by J.H.ZEILIN 4, CO Sole Proprietor, Phil.d.lphia, Pa. PUCK, ai.OO. 1) J IEDMONT WAGON MADE AT HICKORY, N. C. CAN'T BE BEAT! They stand where they ought to, right square AT THE FRONT! It Was a Hard Fight But They Have Won It ! Just read what people say about them and if vou want a ml wagon come quickly and buy one, either for cash or on time. Saltsburt, N. C, Sept. 1st, 1SS0. Two years ago I bought a very bCtwA. horse Pietiinont wagon of tlic Agent, Jno. A. Bojilen; hare nsei'l it nrar'y all tlierrrde sinrc. have tried it severely in liauling saw logs and other heavy loads, and have not had to pay one cent for repairs. I look upon the Piedmont wagon nsthe best Thim ble Skein wsion made in the United States. The timber nsed in them is most excellent and thoroughly well seasoned. Turner P. Tiiomvson. Salisbury. N. C. Aug. 27th, 1886 AbouMwo years ago I bought of Jno A. Bnd 'n, a one horse Piedmont wagon which has dime much service and no part of it h broken-or given away and consequent ly k ha$ cost nothing for repairs. John D. Heni.t. RureniTDr XT r Eighteen months ago 1 bought of John A. Boy ilen, a -4 inch Thimble Skein Pied mont wagon and have used it pretty much all the t mc and it has proven to be a Sift- A. f a! 1 A. ! i rate wa ron. .Mnnnr iwitil lias mven away and therefore it has required no rc Ptr. T. A. WaryrtiN. SAMSBtTRY, N. C. Scut. 81 h. 186. 18 months aio I ltouglit of the Agent, in Salisbury, a 2 in Thimble Skein Piedmont wagon their lightest one-horse wa-'on I X. ...... 1 . . If nave aept ii m almost constant use and uunn the time hive hau -d-on it at least 73 loads of wood and thTt without any break a-e or repairs. ,. R. Walton. The Land Question. From Wilmington Star. Henry George, as the Star has fore said more than, once, is a man of vurr mri -KUifv His wArlr onti. u Progress and Poverty " created matter what civil or ecclesiast ical lavs : uyu. would bring about instantly, if I could, such changes of laws all the world over as would confiscate private property in land without one penny of compensation to the mi. teal led owners." '. , f Now how far that correctly repre sents Mr. George s policy as he would Hiiuiv it IO mi cuuuu y we uu nut i :l t iu. , , t .1 i this country we do u farther he adyo cates in his book, unless we ha for gotton his exact position, and it has been some time since we read any part of his powerful work. The platform of the Trade anrV Labor Organizations of New York Citv. adopted lasf'S'.p- tember and prepared no doubt , by Mr. George, does not o as tar as the above declarations of principle by Father Mc Glynn goes. This-land question is important. It is destined to become more important. It U sure to be discussed morennd more in years ahead, and it may become the great question on this continent. It is well for all to have some knowledge of its theory and remedy. . In the Asheville Advance of the 18th alt., there was a clear and well written pa;er of nearly two and a half columns on " Henry George and the L:uid and Labor Club" of that town. It is by Mr. Locke Craig, and it exhib its no little ability. We refer to it now because tha Star had something to s.iy of the Club at Asheville of which Mr. Craig is the founder; we believe. Mr. pruig says: "The priuciple purpose and controling policy of the movement of which Henrv j George is the leader, fa to do away wtih the ' present sysletn of land ownership. Iu his position on thi- subject he by no means I stands alone, being supported, with one ! or two exceptions by all the leading thinkers of this century; such as Goethe, I Thomas Carlyle and Herbert Spencer. t Oarlyle, in his own striking way, well expresses their views when- he says, 'Properly speaking, the land belongs to these two: to Almighty God, and to all Hi i Children of Men that have ever work well on it.' Or as Henry George expresses it, 'What God has created for the use of all should be utilized for the benefit of all." "Land they' do not recognize an prop erty; that alone is property, or subject to private ownership, which is the product of labor. By land is meant land in its natural state, unimproved by the appli cation of labor; in so far as it has been improved by the application of labor; in so far as it has been improved by human industry, by building, clearing, drain ing?, etc., in so far it is the subject of private ownership. But these are not included in the term land'; t hey are not land but the products of labor; whatever value iudividual industry has added to land, that of right belongs to the indi vidual." This is sweeping enough. The American people as yet are far away from -all Socialistic theories, and this land question is the chief corner-stone of Socialism as expounded by its ablest Advocates. The people in the South will not look with favor unon any movement that proposes "to do away with the present system of land owner- lup. It is too radical, too revolu tionary, too destructive for the conserv ative opinions und traditions and prin ciples of the Southern people. nut this theory ot Henry George is by no means a new theory. He is fol lowing in the wake of many famous writers. Adam Smith a name with ont a rival in economic science held this that no man has a right to be the absolute owner of anything which has not been created by his or somebody's else exertions. He held that nothing is really property which has not been produced by human industry, and, therefore land can not be property. The position of M. de Lavelye, and the able sir Henry Maine, of fingland. is fiat the ownership of land is of com paratively recent origin that in all primitive societies the soil of the earth was held collectively by a whole tribe or settlement, as is the case to-day in the Russian Mir, the German Mark, and the Swiss Alltneud. Herbert Spencer holds this: "For if one portion of the earth may justly become the possession of an indi vidual, and may be held by him for his sole use and benefit as a thing to which he has air exclusive right, then other por tions of the earth may be so held, and eventually the whole of the earth's sur face may oe so held, and our planet may thus lapse altogether into private hands; and if the land owners have a valid right to the surface of the globe, then it follows that those who are not land-owners have a valid right to the surface of the globe, than it follows that those who are not land owners have no right at all to ifs surface. Hence, such can exist upon the earth by sufferance only. They are all tresspassers. Save by permission of the lords of the soil, they can have no room for the soles of their feet. Nay, should the others think fit to deny them a rest ing place, these landless men might equitably be expelled from the earth al together. Equity, therefore, does not permit property in land." be- Mr,. Spencer is perhaps the most in- fluential thinker and author among Hvino- Englishmen. We do not enter upon a discussion of the plan by which or r.ne age. l nis iana question is grow : : v i j a- ing serious in England, for a few men now own the whole country. One Englishman actually owns 80,000 acres of land in that comparatively small country. A few Englishmen have al most entire possession of the soil. Rich men of the United States are "gobbling up" the hundreds of thousands of acres, and foreign corparations and individ uals are buying up land by the hun dred thousand acres also. So the land Question may yet prove to be a trenien ons factor in American politics. The Physicians' Lien Law. From the Ral. News and Observer. Since there has appeared in the pub lic press a communication favoring the passage of a physician's lien law, sign ed with the intitials of a well known doctorit becomes incumbent on some one to say something on the other side. Your correspondent asserts that no inconsiderable portion of the best phy sicians" have left the state on account of inability to collect fees. This I emphatically deny. A goal many first class men have left to go in to better and larger fields, some of t hem proving suc cessful, while a number, finding they did not possess the qualities necessary to success in those larger fields, have returned and becorr quite successful among a people jwhose characteristics they better knew; and others, owing to the immutable law of the "survival ofthe fittest," have dwindled into pro fesiofial insignificance and nothingness just as they naturally would have done had they chosen any other walk in life. The doctors are as well paid and as much appreciated as any other class of professional men the state. Among the 1,500 doctors in North Carolina I should say, judging from personal ac quaintance, that there are at least 100 who have succeeded in every sense of the word who have accumulated a com petency, gained the esteem of their fellow citizens for integrity, &c, &c, and have been successful in the treat ment of diseases. I claim that this is a larger per cent of success than has attended any other business in the State. It is said that ninety-five per cent of the merchants fail. Only one farmer in thirty makes more than a bare living. One lawyer in twenty gets a fair practice. The medical men who are petition ing the legislature for a lien law seem to have forgotten that we have had four bad crop years, and that every class of business is suffering, and they ought to. have the manhood to stand the general distress as much as any one else. If they have not the business qualifica tions to succeed in medicine, and find they are not making a living, there are other walks iu life open to them. A man who is not succeeding in one thing cannot do worse by changing. I am well tware that there are a great many honest and qualified doctors who are not doing well, so far as money is concerned,but that is their owp fault,and no act of the legislature can change it. They are wanting in business tact and method, and, without these no man howevergreat his scientific attainments, can hope for final success. To protec this class of men a lien law might not be objectionable, but I do not think it could benefit them. Those who can not succeed under the existing circum stances would not be likely to do so under any other. r Until all the rascals are driven out of the profession ( and I am sorry to say we still have some among us) this lien law wouidfhe a very dangerous experi ment to the people. Give a doctor who is a rascal the certainty of getting his fee from the poor as well as the rich and the temptation to keep his patient in bed will be so great that he cannot resist it. Better let the laws remain as they are. If a doctor has the elements of success in him, he will sooner or biter succeed any way. If the medical pro fession is so sadly in need of a special lien law for their protection, is it not reasonable to suppose that the various other classes of citizens equally en titled to the sympathy of our law-makers, who are now barred by existing laws most have some redress also? Our legislators, in their arduous ef forts to protect certain classes of peo ple, have already cumbered rur statute books with too much of this class leg islationlaws that (superinduce dis honesty and work injury "to the masses. Let equal and exact justice be meted out, and either let the laws stand as they are, or, instead of tawing them for the special benefit of one or more classes, repeal them altogether. H. 0. Hyatt, M. D. Is It Chance or All creatures eat and drink. They all find it pleasant work; and it is as pleasant to speak about pleasant things. They are so made as to like it. and they are made to like the food that is best for them, and to like nothing eke. They are able to eat what is good for them, and are not able to oat what would be bad. In every instance it is so. Thus, the month or every creature revealf nearly everything about the creature. It tells whether the creature be animal, fish, insect or bird; whether it eats vegetables or flesh ; whether it chews its food before swallowing it, or chews the cud, or does not chew it all. Some birds find suitable food in worms, and small fish, which creep about in water, on the banks of shallow lakes and rivers. But how are tbey to ob tain their food when it is under water? They have long legs, like stilts, to wade in water; and they have long necks and long bills, so as to reach anything at they bottom. Long tails would be water; and they have long useless and inconvenient to them, for uic wiw wuuiu uuuuic in iuc w.iicr,mi be a trouble and a burden in seeking food; so their tails are short, while their legs, necks, and bills are long; all just as they ought to be. Does all this look like chance work ? These wading, long legged birds find their food in clear water, through which the bottom can be distinctly seen from the top; but ducks find food in dirty water, and mud, so that they cannot discover it by sight. How then do they find it? They have to feel for it. Most birds have no more sense of feeling in their bills than we in our teeth-, but the duck h;is a verv sensi- tive skin fixed just sit the end of its mouth, which becomes soft in water, and by which it can easily distinguish eatables from pebbles and muck If the duck were a long legged bird it cculd not walk so well on the mud in which it finds food. Its feet would sink and sfick fast. It is therefore made with short legs and webbed feet to swim, and even when the water is too shal low to swim in, the webbed feet sup port its body on the mud. Could anything be better than this? Do you think it all came to lie so well and wisely done by accident? or does it not rather look as if some one had thought about it before He made t'jeni; and had contrived it all? I may here add, bv-the-way, that the sensitive skin at the end of a duck's bill makes it "weatherwise." There is a strong sense of feeling there, owing to its being full of nerves. In dry air it becomes dry and stiff, but when the air is very 'damp it imbibes moisture from the air, which the duck feels to be pleasant, ahd thereupon begins to quack noisily, jus boys in the street shout when they are triad; thus the loud and general quacking of ducks in dicate rain. Whenever we see working tools we know to what trade they belong, and the kind of work they are intended to do. Each tool is designed to do a par ticular kind of work and no other. Saws cannot drive nails in wood, not can hammers cut through timber. Now, it is just so with the mouths oi living creatures; they are working tools, and each is exactly adapted to its work, winch is to eat the very food which its owner best likes, and which is most useful to it. For instance, the hoi has no desire to eat flesh, nor the tiger a liking for gras. The tigei stomach could not di'st ura.-s. nor could that of a horse digest fe l. If chance had been the world's creator the tigher might have had grinding teeth, the horses, oxen and sheep tctth to tear. But it is not so; the mouth and teeth of every living thing are erfectly suited to the work which is best to be done for the well bein of each, y The same is noticeable in the strength of the jaws. Look, for instance, ;.t the monkey and the squirrel. The squir rel is an industrious little fellow in his way, but the monkey is not so patient; he would quickly eat what he has got; and then be intent on some mischief or some prank. Both animals delight to eat nuts. But the squirrel, who cannot bend bothanns like the monkey, holds the nut in his mouth with both paws, and likes to nible at tne shell until he gets to the kernel; whereas the monkey puts it into his mouth, gives it a lusty crack, and eats the kernel at once. This is what e:ich likes to do, and accordingly the monkey ispiqvided with strong jaws, but the jaws of the squirrel are light, just as required. The front teeth with which it gnaws, are very sharp; so, also, is the front teeth of a rat, the beaver, and the porcupine, and of all animals that have to nibble to get at food. And what is remarka ble, the substance of which the poii.ti of the teeth are formed is so hard as to never wear away. Where it not so, their constant gnawing would wear the teeth down. Even the edges of hard steel saws wear away in work, and so would the nibbling animal's teeth, were the edges made of bone the same sub stance as the other p;irt of the teeth; but the edge or point of each tooth is formed of solid enamel the thia glaze kind of material with which teeth are covered to protect them. This enamel is so hard as scarcely ever to wear away by biting. How well all this is done. Could chance have done it? The largest teeth are those of the hippopotamus- or river horse, as the worc means. They are like a set of tusks in its month. It lives on reeds and coarse, thick vegetable matter. It has just such teeth as are fit to tear and to divide tough and hard plants. It eats enormously: if it did not it could mat live, for its food contains little nourishment. And that it may be able to eat enormously, far more' than the elephant, it has a stomach which holds five or six bushels of food, and the large canal of its bowels are two feet round. Here, again, you see how one thing exactly suits another, and all these things agree with the places reedy islets-where the big beast has to live. If an infidel telw jom that chance arranged all this, he must be wicked, or elsj he must 1 mad. Tbe rhinoceros, like the hippopota muses a huge beast it is supposed to be the unicorn of which Job speaks, because it has one horn. It feeds on branches of trees, but very often it can not reach the branches, and in no case can it climb. How then is it to obtain food? It has a horn with which to rip and tear up the trees, that the branches may be brought down. A hollow horn, Hke that of the ox, would hot be strong enougn Tor the work, so its Horn is solid horn, if made of bone, for it might break, in breaking and tearing up great trees; so it is fibrous, and will bend rather than break; and the skin out of which it grows is of like hardness, that it mav yield to pressure. Were the horn fixed over the brain, that delicate and vital organ might be injured when the animal punches a tree, so it is fix ed over the nose; and having a thick, strong, short neck, the l)east uses his horn with sufficient force to tear up trees and split them to pieces. Noth- Mm x ins: would do it it were different to what it is; but nothing could possibly be made as it is bv chance. The Surgical operation of trepanning or trephining the skull, a few years ago discovered to have been common with prehistoric man, has since been found to have continued in quite extensive practice from the most remote period to our own times. A trench anthro pologist, M. Vedrenes, mentions that native families of Montenegro and of Algiers have made a profession of tre panning for ages, and he notes as a cu rious circumstance, that the miners of Cornwall retain to the present day the same implicit faith in efficiency of the operation for the removal of blood-clots, etc., in head-injuries that is held by these distant semi-barbarous tribes. INFORMATION MANY PERSONS at this season tuffer from -f either 1 Headache, Xeuralptm, Rheumatism, Paine in the Limbs, Jlark ami bhlcs, Bad Blood, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Malaria, Constipation A Kidney Troubles. -IQUIA CORDIAL CURES RHEUMATISM. Bad Blood and Kidney Trouble, hj cleansing tha blood of all iu impurities, strengthening all parts Of the body. V0L1MA CORDIAL CURES SICK-HEADACHE, KenraVtrla, Pains In the Limbs, Back and Sides, by toning the nerres and strengthening the muscles. VOLINA CORDIAL CURES DYSPEPSIA, Indlprst ion and Constipation, by aiding the assim ilating of the Food through the proper action of tha stomach ; it creates a healthy appetite P -VOLINA CORDIAL CURES NERVOUSNESS, Depression of splrita and Weakness, by tallrex Ing and toning the system; -VOLINA CORDIAL CURES OVERWORKED and Delicate Women. Puny nnd Sickly Children. It is tMightful and nutritious as a general Tonic. Vol inn Almanac and Diary, for 1 SS7. A hondKome. complete antf usefu! Book, telline how to CURE DISE ASES at H0.MK in a pleasant, natural way. Mailed vu receipt of a Sc. postage stamp. Address VOL.' r. A DRUG A CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, M D., U . S. A. THE STAR A. Xevrapnper anpportlng the PrlnHstlea ot n Democratic Adiulnlstrasllan. Published WILLIAM i n the City of New York. DORSHEIMER, KIUTi l(, Daily, Weekly, and Sunday Editions. THE WEEKLY STAR, An Eight-page Newspaper, Issued every Wednesday. A clean, pare, nrtgftt stud liit reatlas FAMILY PAPER. It contains the latest news, down to the hour of going to press. Agricultural, Market, Tachion, Household. Financial and Commercial, Political, Poetical, Humorous and Editorial Dcrriine:.i, all under the direction .f trained jiiuraaUKt "f ihc Utiiic-t aMity. I'a c-.lumn will he fouud crovdc-l with good things from beginning to end. rig'.nal stories by distinguished American an.! forehju writers of fiction. TERMS OF TKE WEEKLY STAR TO SUBSCRIBERS. Pre of l'ota?e in I'ni'ed States nl Canada, outside t.-.e Unills of cw York City. ONE DOLLAR FOR ONE YEAR. Clubs of fill o the s .me V O. address, with an additional copr 10 .ryni sr of Clu"b, . . l.(-f F0n THREE MONTHS, on trial, 26 cents Kprclstl term nnd x ; ra.rd!uar IstdsH nf-ni in nirenta and c iiTuwrt. K.nd for Clreulatra. THE DAILY STAR. Tea Dh.t Stab contains til tha news of the !ay In an uttrcil.e form. 1 special correspond eoc- jr v-j.hU frui London, I'ari-, Merlin, Vienna and Dublin, 1 a co.nmendable feature. i VshiiUtoov AH any. and other news centers, th Wet rrrr-pondetrt, specially retained by la Mn, furni'1' thelatest new by telegraph. In tit rarv features are unsurpassed. The Financial and Market Reviews are unusoally fud and e:uph te. TERMS CF TKE DAILY STAR TO SUBSCRIBERS. Frte of P 'Stasrei n'.ne United ftat. s and Canada, t- side ic limltsof cw or ny Erery Day.for one year including Funday). Daily, wlfh-mt Sun day, one year. KveryDar, i months, Dt lr, without Sunday, abtnvntha, . , Sunday, without Ia:ly, one year, . t: - 6 0 1 330 301 1 SO dddresM. s-xifcj STAR, BroaA ay and Part PJaet, Kew Tor r y W aV X ATI 1 1 lllt 1H fill t i Inl fill ' X X New York, Feb. 9. The W nank was organized toduv by t a: 4o" r r J president, and F. Blankenhern as cash-' nnstnt uA v ui.. i..-.. ... "V Manning and .1 onion will leave the U. .Treasury to accept the above posi tiorts. Whit Kiver Junction, Vt., Feb. 9. A most careful revision, the accuracy of which is ind asp u table, shows the number of the killed to be 32. Injur ed, per surgeons' official list, 80. - BoMTOXeb. 9.; The employees of the Cambridge horse railway decided this morning to tie up the road. -Their grievance is that the new time table whmh wsmt inti ftW Af .,.!.. v .1. ' v ww iiiiit vnuvc estern untenable then to do their ten honrSi10- - T.fre WT iwiJ 3 work inside of twelve bours as promised ! Knnns on the ear,(id what by the cotm an v The officers of the company make no further attempts at reconcil iation but will fizht the strikers to the ,n on end. This strike, with that on the South Boston road, make the number of rail roud men now out about nine hundred. Patterson, N. J., Feb. 9. A general strike of silk dyers has begun here. They demand a dollar a week more wages and that fifty-five hours shall constitute a week's work. One thousand and five hundred hands are out. It is thought fn many quarters that the President will veto the $75,IR)0,000 "dependent parent" or "universal pau per pension bill, as it is alternately called. Strong pressure is brought to bear upon him so to do. Among the most active in opposition to the bill now are several -Congressmen who voted for it. This measure has not received popular indorsnient, and the representatives want to be on the right side ot the question. Geologists have described Britain a swarming with a multitude of forms of gigantic reptiles, some of them sixty feet or more in length, during the reptilian age the middle period in earth's geol ogical history, when niollusks and rep- x r i . ii v ill i uies att-aineo tneir culmination and de cline1, and when the first manic alsand the nrst birds apjieared. A sink ing picture of England at a later epoch the middle Quartermary is given bv Owen: "Gigantic elephants, of nearly twice the bulk of the largest individual's that now exist in Ceylon and Africa, roamed here in herds, if we may judge from the abundance of their remains. Two-horned rhinoceros, of at least two species, forced their way through the ancient forests, or wallowed in the swamps. The lakes and rivers were tenantad by hippopotamuses, as bulky and with as formidable tusks as thost of Africa." Three kinds of wild oxer, found subsistanee in the plains. Then were also gigantic deer, wild horses am boars, a wild-cat, lynx, leopard, a Pr't ish tiger larger than that oi Bengal, an. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral AVni cure Cold moro thoroughly and This medicine U cpccially beneficial in all affections of the Throat and Lunga, and affords effectual relief even in the advanced ttaC8 of Consumption. Thousand of cases of Pulmonary diseases, which skill, have been completely cured by. fifteen years I was afflicted with Lung troubles. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral relieved the distressim; symptoms of this disease, and entirely cured oic. It U the tnoit effective medicine I have ever used. C. 31. Fay, Prof, of Anatomy, Chrrclaad, Ohi. THille in the army I contracted a severe Last year I aflered greatly from a CoH, Cold, which .settled n my Lungs, result- which 'had settled on my J.uog. Air ing in exhausting fits of Coughing. Night physician could do noth tag for me. nl Sweats, and such loss of flesh and strength my friends believed me to be in OooMMB that, to all appearance. Consumption had t ion. As. a last resort, I tried Ayer's laid it" death grip" upon me. My com-J Cherry Pectoral. It pave immediate re rades gave mc up to die. I commenced j lief, aud finally cured me. I hare not taking Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, aud it i the least doubt that Ibis medicine CURED ME. In the twenty years that have since elapsed, I have had no trouble w ith my Lungs. B. B. Bisseh, Editor aud Pub lisher Republican, Albion, Mich. Aver's Cherry Pectoral enred 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. TTbcn about 22 years of age, a severe Cold affected my lungs. I had a terrible Cough, could not sleep, nor do any work. I consulted several physicians, but re ceived no help until 1 commenced using Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I continued to take this medicine, and am satisfied it aaved mv life. C. O. Van AUrtyuc, P. M., North Chatham, X. Y. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Aver & Co., Lowell, Must. old by Druggists. Price $1 ; six ooUim, H- TRADE ECZEMA ERADICATED. Oradrmee Tt is data rnn f any that T tbtafc 1 ant nth4T trail ef eeaam aft) takes Swift's :si. tfic. 1 tUvc been trmi bird with it vary luus) la ny fscn sajapB la . ik. kuh,nt .1 M .rh. r lut fall it m-ule attoh iumi mr tmt meat i I'M x mm amea s. J. f. i0"jik nrnf it up: at leant it put m r hsvi ronnnv- sad I cot well It st benefited my wife rmtly in e. ntf tick baniacb-'. and maos a rutoot cure of a brcakiatt not on tnr little tluot year uU djttrbtr last aaianM-r. . . Watk:urrtll, r.a., Feb. 1, l&S. lime. JAMt'j V. U. 1ZOCSXS. treads an Buoa and SUn Disease ntslVd fn. it another and even more terrible carni- vurutw moiMter witn, saijfe-Hhuped lef quadrupeds , ' . "V e carcase and feeb- im I nrp (wiw aw bear larger than the Rockv grizzly, a gigantic beaver, wolvea, and vinous smaller animaLs down to mole, rats and mice. Remarkable Cora. Among the especially interesting nnd substantially valuable exhibits in the line of farm products at the late Texas State Fair, was a half bushel of corn developed ami rsMMt lyy Mr. weiDoruot w el born Hrus.. ton, Bowie county, Texas. mar as is- -w - - . ia I 1 i liiuciics in uuiueter. IU remarkable) the grain is seven-eighths This corn shells on Jfff Aew Boa- T lie cob is length ten rows of ilfcfe4 an inch long, quart to the cob. The Welborn Bros. gathered this (vry dry ) year hundred bushels from ten acres. average of eighty hiikhels to the acre, and this with only eight-furrows to the row. This corn, which he has named "Jeff WellKirn's Conscience," he states matures two weeks earlier than the common white corn; it is also extra firm, but not flinty. Messrs Welborn 's corn attacted universal at tention, nnd so numerous were appli cants for a few grains that the exhibi tor was forced to withdraw it from exhibit. It was awarded both first and second premiums, the first being . a splendid wagon (offered by' the Keat ing Machine and Implement Company) the second, twenty dollars worth of nursery stock. farm and Ranch. In an English discussion of railway speeds it appears that rigid tests with a Bristol and Exeter engine, with 9-foot single driving-wheels, gave 80 miles an hour as the greatest attainable rate down an incline of 1 in 100. Oh a level or ascending grade the maximum can be but little more than 60 miles an hour. As thee engines were designed exjecially for giving' the greatest pos sible speed, it is affirmed that no mod ern motors a.e adapted for beating their records, and that reports of train running at more than 75 miles an hour even for the shortest distances, must be due to inaccurate timing or other errors. Eight years of almost continuous personal experiment has confirmed tha early view of Dr. J. M. Anders that house plants are entitled" to a very high rank among sanitary. In a new work he everr asserts the conviction that living plants serve as an efficient protection against consump tion of the lungs, besides rendering im portant service in other conditions of lisease. An abundance of flowers, in leed, seems to offer an imperfect substi- ute for out-door life when in-door life s unavoidable. peHly than any other prprirtion in have hafQed every other expedient of hi the uso of Ayer's Cherry PcctoraL SAVED MY LIFE. I am now ruddy, healthy, and strong. ! James M. Anderson, Waco, Texas. I Ayer's Cherry Pectoral enred mo of i Throat and Lung troubles, after I had lut n seriously anlicted for three yean. tThe Pectoral healed the soreness of IM Lungs, cured the Cough, and restored my general health. Ralph Feit, Grafton, O. Twenty years ago I was troubled disease of "the Lunrs. Doctors af no relief, and said that I could not Hrs many months. I commenced um AmP Cherry Pectoral, aud, before I liad Stashed ; one bottle, found it was helping me. I continued to take this medicine until a ! cured was effected. 1 believe that Ayere j Cherry Pectoral saved my life. Samuel Griggs, Waukegan, III. t fwrrr ernrr r-v. irrye-t Atlanta, oc 1 , i-1 1 i 1-i - .
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 17, 1887, edition 1
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