w w m - s"ss ' " 'rt3 VOL XVin.-THIRD SERIES. SALISBURY N. C, THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1887 ,4 NO. 23 Hie M W 1 1 aK TIT. rV'l BBT BBBB PB ssl7 assl Basm SSSSl BBSS BBBB W MM Tf d lUllllldll. i Looking ITp. Agriculture is looking tip! Men are eoiiHn,T careworn, and sick, and bank rupt, from their counting-houses and tUcW workshops to cultivate the smll iff re s a hearty welcome to them on the thiv.-hold of Eighty-seven, and let us -11 old farmers, practical farmers no Tone "as UUV use iui jiuiiimjui iiiimcio - eail. avor to command resject for the I'littivation of the sou. Lot us be ink (liu-tnous, Honest, rigntiniiiueu ana weti i behaved, nd let us improve the "good lvheritage" left us by our fathers. ' Farmers have been crowded to the wall about long enough, and made pay two large a share of taxes. It was not io in the gocd old times, when George -Washington was a rarmer at jiount . Vernon, and Thomas Jefferson was' a farmer at Monticello. and John AdaniB was i a farmer at Quincy, and iTimothV rickennir was a farmer at wennanw UrrionhT was then thought of in the council of the nation and of the State, production of food crops.- As for booms When laws were passed, regard wajs they must be made. They never come had to the .interest of the farmers, aujl to those who idly wait for them. Or- these farmers in turn made their pro-I l- n r j r - i , i i , ... 1 u ganize immigration societies and farm ftssion honorable by selecting eaiidll- , n , . . . dates from among themselves. Politics , f re c,ubsi as other enterprising people r.iged Hlien, as they always will rage, in the State are doing. Stir things up but the farmers kept a good gang of vourselves and yon will attract theatr olficers in tfee fieldbf Governmeiit, and iention of others. A supine and ap fliere was lume 01 the mean nnsrepre- i i , , .... , . . . - M.tatlon and the Judas-like treachery VJ hV attitude, instead of ex whieh is now practice in the selection citing sympathy, has a contrary effect, of Candidates. Hen Perley J'oore in People seeking opjiortnnity for the in- k (hietictrii ( 'ultirator. PURELY VEGETABLE. It ict with exif acrdinary efficacy on th TIVER, KDNEYS i and Bowels. AN EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOR Malaria, Bowel Complaints, Uyitpepsla, Sick Heitlacli, Conittipajtion, ItiUouKiieaM, Kitluey AflecUons, Jaundice, Mental Depression, Cnlir. No Household Should be WUiioot It, ami, by r itit;ko! ready lor immcdiuto use, will .save many an hour of BUtlerine and luuuy a duilur in timo and doctors' lulls. THERE IS BUT ONE SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR See that you get the genuine with red Z" on front of Wrapper. Prepared only by J. HuZEILIN Philadelphia, Pa. & CO ., Sole Proprietor, n:ii i, si.uo. II I'ttit rt -m r m ttt a y- yw -t MADE AT HICKORY, N. C. CAN'T BE BEAT! Thpy- staiixi wh(r6 they ought to, pigiit square at the mm It Was a Hard Fight But They Have Won It ! Just read what people say alnu.it them ail if you want a wagon conic quickly and buy one either for cash or on time.; Salisbury, N. C. Sept. Lst, Two .years ajio I bought u very lijjht two horse Piedmont wajjon of the Agent, Job. A. Uyden; have xisi it in-ar'y all the time sincu. linve trit( it severely in hanlin; sjiw lops and other heavy loads, and linve not had to pay oue cent for repairs. I look upon the Piedmont wagon as the best Thim ble Skein wagon made in the United State. The timber used in them is most excellent uud thoroughly well seasoned. TUKNKB P. TlIOMASOX. Sai.isdury. N. C. Aug. '27th, 1HSG AboHt two years a so I bought of Jiio. A. ihiydea. a (Htc horse Piedmont wagon which lii ilrlue ill lie Ii serviee and no pait of it h;is broken or given away and consequent br it-mis cost nothing for repairs. John I). IIkkly. Samsbcuy, X. C. Sept. 31, 18S6. Eighteen nlonths.ago I bought of John A. Hoyden, a 2 inch Thimble Skein IUed Biont wagon anil have used it pretty much ill the tune and it has proved to be a firt rate waon. Nothing about it has nivcn away and therefore it has required no re fairs. T. A. Walton. SalisbchYj. N. C. Sept. m'h. 1886. 1s months ao I bought of the Agent, in Salil,urv, a in Thimble Skein Piedmont wagon tlieii lijjhteut onc-liorse natron I have krjit it in almost constant use ami 'Junior the time h ive hauled on it at least f? loads of wood and t'i:it wiritoul any Make Your Own Hoom. The New Orleans Picayune com- ji 'lf citing oil .remarks made by the More-. oase Seutmei, says : i men house Morehouse parish is one of the best in North Louisiana. The land is rich and the people are industrious, honest ! , xt and I intelligent No people are j uttijic ,io muse uv tii uvi cjp j.1 rnt il i I themselves. There are in the parish magnificent forests of timber, while the soil is capable of producing everything the people can need. They have an op portunity to make themselves inde pendent if they will use the means j - hcj cijnmi6 nMuui-u w sustain man and beast, and instead of spending all their energies on cotton tl,em only make cotton as a cash croP wnne attention is paiu to tne vestment of capital or places to live will always avoid a- dead community. It will not do to sit still and lament dull times. The only hope is in the mani festation of a proper energy. Get up and go to work on a new line if the old routine fails. This is the age of hard work and small pay. Then work the harder. Make your own lx)om." 1 : This is terse, and to the point, will do for us as well as them. If display energy and enterprise we sure td attract attention, and the It we fire re- suit will lie such a boom as we have ! nivpr li;nl TAXES. List-Takers and Assessors Duties of Boards of Commissioners Under the New Law. The following sire the provisions of the law p;issed tvt the recent session of the Genera) seinbly in relation to the appointment of ILst-tiikers and as sessori : Section 2. The Board of Commis sioners of each county shall, at their session held in the month of April, one thousand eight hundred and eighty seven, and every fourth year thereaf ter, appoint three discreet freeholders in each township, who shall list and assess the real and personal property in said township ror taxation, lheselist taliers and assessors shall ascertain the true value in money of every tract or parcel of land or other real estate, with the improvements thereon, and person al pmperty, and assess the same in ac cordance with said valuation. Said hoard of list-takers and assessors shall nir't't at some place in their resiiective townships on or before the second Mon day in May, and elect one of their num- her chairman. The board is hereby authorized and empowered to adminis ter oaths in alheases necessary to obtain full and correct information concern ing any taxable real and personal property in their respective townships, so as to secure a proper assessment of said property: The assessment, when made, shall be in force until altered as may be provided by law. Sec. 3. The board of county commis sioners shall have power to appoint oue or more list-takers and assessors for years in which there shall be an assess ment of property, for any town or city in their respective counties having more than two thousand inhabitants, and one or more list-takers for such town or city for the years in which there shall not be an assessment of property. Sec. 4. The board of county commis sioners shall, at the time of the ap pointment of Hie "list-takers and asses sors, issue a notice to thorn, summon ing them to meet at the county seat on the first Monday i.i June, for consul tation with the board of commissioners for the purpose of taking such action as will secure uniformity in the assess ment of the real and personal property throughout the county. Sec. 5. Each township board of list takers and assessors shall advertise in tive or more public places in the 'town ship, immediately after their appoint ment, notifying all tax-payers to re turn to said list-takers and assessors all the real and personal property which each tax oaver shall own on the first day of June requiring said return to be J , i i r a made to said list-takers ami assessors during the month of June, under the pains and penalties imposed by law. Each of s;ud list-takers and assessors shall attend at two or more places in the township for the purpose of listing taiuly be doubted if a fleet could peire and assessing the property. - j trate. As a variation on this plan, the Sec. 0. The board of list-takers and substitution for the oil in such a system assessors shall make return of their as-'of pipes of gas, natural or nianufactur sessnients to the board of county com- 'ed, is described. The air surrounding missioners on er before the first Mou- the vessels could, be, charged with day in July, and annex the following enough gas to form an explosive mix afhdavit, subscribed and sworn to before t ure, which would ignite from the - - i :l iust ue o tie neaee. who shall certify Hi.- same : e, th.'lisUak. in- :is.jojsors of . township of .county, make oathf that the foregoing list contains, to the best of Qurno edg(?- tbc nnd peinal property required by law to be assessed in said township, and that we have assessed every tract or If1 of 5ind; ?f ttbr ref! and I11- al property, at its true value in money, anJ have Jndeavowl to do equal jus-' tlce to tne mimic ami to tne tax-payer- ii era concerneu. Sec. 7. The chairman of the board of list-takers and, assessors of the several townships shall compose a hoard of equalization for the county, and shall meet on the first Monday in July, The chairman of the hoard of county commissioners shall be chairman of ' said board of equalization, and shall lay ble on such short notice being employ before the board of equalization the re- ed. This includes the fleet of harbor turns of the list-takers and assessors, and river vessels of every type, the Said board shall equalize the valuations scows and floats of the larger sizes, tng so that each tract or lot or article of pen- boats, and even canal barges. .;, Extem soiial property shall be entered on the porized torpedo systems might" be pro tax list at its thie value in money, and, vided. Neither should it be forgotten for this purpose they shall observe the that we are but a few hours from Pitts following rules : burg, with its supplies of iron and steel, I. They shall raise the valuation of and that timber in eudkss Quantity 1 such tracts or lots of real property as, in their opinion, have been returned VV ith these existing resources, we be below their true value, to such price or lieve much could be done within the sum as they may believe to be the true stipulated time. What we wished to value thereof. elicit was an organized plan for utiliz- II. They shall reduce the valuation of ing these ready resources only, such tracts and lots or articles of per- Now, owing to the action of Con- sonal property is, in their opinion, gress in providing large appropriations, have been returned above their true it seems probable that the creation of value, as compared with the valuation a navy is but a question of a few years of real or personal property of such for us. The action of this Congress county. In regard to real property, will doubtless influence its successor. they shall have due regard to the rela- tive situation, quality ofsoil, improve- nient, natural and artmciai advantages possessed by each tract or lot ill. They shall not reduce the aggre gate value of the real or personal pro perty of the county below the aggre-; gate value thereof, us returned by the assessors. Sec. 8. The board of countv commis sioners shall allow each list-taker and assessor such" compensation as said board shall deem just and proper for each day actually engaged m the p.r- iomiance oi nis nuues; saiu . ooaru oi county commissiouers shall also allow ' a- mm.: each member of the board of equaliza tion such jierdiem for the number of days actually engageiMn the perform ance of his duties as the said board of county commissioners may deem just and proper, and in addition thereto, mileage at the rate of five cents for each mile necessarily traveled in attending the meeting of the board of equaliza tion. The per diem and mileage allow ed, as provided in this section, shall be paid by the county. Sec. 'J. The board of county commis sioners shall, annually, at their April session, excepf in the year when there shall be an assessment of property, ap point one competent person in each township to list all the lands therein at the valuation assessed on the same, and all personal property in sajd township. Said board of commissioners shall allow such township list-takers such Compen sation for their services as the board shall deem just and proper, for the number of days actually employed, or engaged, to be paid by the county. See. 10. Each township list-taker, ap pointed under the authority of the pre ceding section, shall advertise in tive or more public places within the township, immediately after his appointment, notifying all tax-payers to return to him ah the real and personal property which each tax payer shall own on the first day of June, and said returns shall be made to the list-taker during the month of June, under the pains and penalties prescribed by law. Each list-taker snail attend at two or more places in each township for the pur pose of taking a list of property for taxation. The Defence of New York Within Thir ty Days. We recently suggested a problem for solution the defense' of New York Harbor, and destruction of 1 a fleet at tacking it, all operations to be com prised within thirty days. A number of communications have been received in reference to this subject, but very, few of the writers have fully appre ciated the conditions. The thirty day limit hits , been generally over looked. One writer describes a gunboat with turrets, protected by rollers, intended to deflect the balls. Another proposes submarine boats. Various more or less elaborate plans for establishing fortifi cations are suggested. Some plans suf ficiently novel and ingenious may be especially noted. The utilization of the oil stored in largo quantity about mxr city is proposed. Pipes are to be laid under the waters of the harbor and bay, and are to be provided with open jets. On the approach of a hostile ; Heet, oil is to lie forced out through the I . i : i. proper lines of pipe, so as to confront or surround the invader with floating oik Ity fire boats or projectiles, the oil is to le ignited. A sea of fire is thus 'produced, through which it m:ty cer- boiler Ii res or tne snips tnemselves. ' I no iZiv mu wo old overcome and reader insensible the crews, if it attain- ed such proportions in the atmosphere. The barges and other such vessels, some writers suggest, should le loaded with stooe and ink an side of the channel, so as to narrow it. Thechan- nel thus narrowed could be filled with torpedoes. A fleet entering the harbor JuM necessarily come directly over them, and could then be blown up. A circular floating battery rotated by the tangential discharge of water, and car- i i . ry"g comoinea wood and steel turrets. is another siicreestion. But as will be seen from this resume, the full problem has not been grappled with. The port of New York was to be assumed in its present condition. Within thirty days the defense was to be organized, only the material availa- could be sent down the Hudson River. and soon the United States may be a rival of England in the production of ironclad ships of war and torpedo boats. Scientific American. How Postal Cards are Made. To follow the process of making the postal cards one has only to climb up to the highest building on the hill, where in a back room, a crowd of girls snrf. thp rocs that, have inst coiin in from tlje diff .rent rag collectors. The girls cut off aU the buttons, take off the buckles, and sort out the rajrs. The sorted rags are placed in a chopping machine which treats them like sausage meat, and after making the old dresses and trousers into squares and triangles, too small for even a baby's crazy quilt, it whiffs them into another machine, where the dust is shaken out of them and they are cleaned. From that on the life of the rags is a succession of baths in chloride of lime and other bleeching and cleansing chemicals, with occasional visits to vats and rips through sets of sharp knives and fine toothed rollers. Finally the many colored rags come out in a nice white mush that looks like thin flour paste. This is shaken over wire to get the water out of it. and put through a few score rollers ami a glue bath before it conies out as postal-card paper. At the end of the long rolls that have been squeezing it dowli thin enough and putting the pale gloss on it the long sheet of postal-card paper, several yards wide, is either cut up into sheets 21x30 inches, as it is rolled up, four postal-cards wide, to lie put on the automatic presses that print from a Iroll. Each sheet will soon lie forty postal-cards. VV hen the paper has been calendered it is taken from the paper-mill, a few feet, to the postal card factory. In the big room of the postal-card factory are a dozen men, t wo dozen girls, a Urge Campbell press, four small cutters and a big cutter, stack of boxes, large tables, and a web of gearing ami belts overhead. The sheets arc taken to the press, where two feeders feed forty-one a minute 1,700 postal cards every sixty seconds. The postal-cards are printed from steel plates so hard that there, is not a. file in the factory than will make an impres sion on them. Each card has a sepa rate steel plate, and the eighty that are needed to make the impressions on the two sheets are wedged in the end of the press. The plates come from Wash ington, and last two years without re newal. The sheets of postal-cards are carried from the press a few feet to the feeders, who are women with long experience at their work. They are paid 4 1 cents per 100,XX, and can feed from 500, (XX) to 000,000 a day. The sheets jus they come to the feeders have previous ly been cut into long slips one card wide and ten long. The women feed them through another cutter that turns them out separate cards. Three girls take the cards from one feeder, one girl counts' them to see that twenty five are in each package, and the other two put paper binders around the pack ages. In a press a feeder feeds double, or two sheets at a time, and can feed lour sheets at a time. After leaving the girls at the fe ding machines the postal cards are in bun dles ready for sale, just as they look in a country postottiee. But before ship ment they are boxed. Twenty pack ages of twenty-five each are put in a pasteboard box that by contract must be muslin bound. Five girls put on the muslin binding and are paid fif t?n cents tor binding 100 boxes. Other girls take the packag s of cards and put theiikin the boxes, which are then ready for shipment. No smaller orders fh;in 500 are filled. Orders of 10,000 and over are put ip in wooden cases, the largest single package lieing 1kx that holds 2jJU0 card.s A Sun. WONDEEFUL, IP RELIABLE. A Process Which will Revolutionize the Art of Steel Toolmaking. Washington, March 24. Two Ker. tuckians one of them a blacksmith recently called at the Navy Depart ment and announced that they had discovered a process of treating steel which, if their claims are borne out by the facts, will practically revolution ize the art of steel tool making. They did not divulge the nature of the inven tion further than to intimate that it related to the chemical bath in which the tool is imraerged in the tempering process. The callers asserted that by their method of treatment the com monest grades of metal, such as shear or cast-steel, could be tempered, in the matter of hardness and toughness, as to fully equal the best grades of tool steel. An ordinary pair of cheap cast-steel scissors could be treated, without dis connecting the blades, so as to cut and hold an edge as well as the best English tool shears. An experiment was made on the blade of Secretary Whitney's pocket knife, with the result that it was pos sible to cut or whittle Ian ordinary steel key without apparent injury to the bhwle. Moreover, the results of the treatment are asse.ted to be so under control that it is possible to temper steel to any degree of hardness or toughness that may be required by the use for which it is intended. So impressed was the Secretary by the claims of the inventors that, after con sultation with the chief of the Bureau of Ordnance he decided to permit the process to be tested experimentally at the Washington navy-yard. Commo dore Sicard accordingly ordered speci men bars of steel to be prepared, and and the experiments have already be gun. Xenophon. Xenophon was an Athenian wboliT ed about four hundred and fifty yur before Christ. He was a celebrated general, historian and philosopher. He was a learner at the school of Socrates and counted as one of the most gifted desciples. The life and the teaching of the great philosopher haie been giv en to us by the writings of Aenoybon and his sober and practical style give a good idea of the original. Qiiintiliai. a iioman orator ana critic savs or am- onhon : "The Graces dedicated his-lan guage, and the Goddess of persuaeiou dwelt inion his lips." His style wiw pure and sweet. axw-T he seems to have been a man of elegant tastes and amaeible disposition as weU as of extensive knowledge of the- vnkL Perhaps his greatest exploit as a gen eral was the leading of the Greek truops across the mountain ranges and the plains of Asia Minor. This was after the battle of Cunaxa, where the young er Cyrus was defeated and slain. Xen ophon hiul joined this expedition against the brother of Cyrus, Artaxerxe Men onion, with ten thousand Greek tnxips. After the defeat many of the Greek leaders were treacherously murdered in the Persian camp. The Greeks were al most in despair. They were two thou sand miles away from home, siirronndwd by enemies, and the only way or reuvut lay across mountain ranges, deep and rapid rivers and broad deserts. It seemed as if fatigue and starvation, and the hostility of those whom they must encounter would effectually pre vent their return to their native land, but Xenophon roused them from their despondency, rallied the forces, and they began to march. It was a time of great suffering, for they had literally to fight their Way. But when they reached a Grecian city, after untold cr ilt it was found that of the ten thou sand led forth, eight thousand six hun dred still remained. During the latter part of his life at Cornith, having been expelled from Athens, though the decree of banish ment was revoked, he never re turned. His literary work was perform ed during these later years. Of all his writings, his Anibasis has been pro nounced the most remarkable. It is a work giving an account of the nations of the interior of Asia Minor, and of the Persian empire and its governmeiit. He died at Corinth, in his ninetieth year. INFORMATION MANY PERSONS at this sramm auffer j'rotti f cither IIeadaehet Jfeuralglmt Ith eumatistn, r.iin.i in ths I.imbs, Hack and Side; Had Jiltxtd, 'Indigestion , lypeia, Malaria, Const i pat inn Jl hidn ,j Trouble. - VOLINA CORDIAL CURES RHEUMATISM. Bad Blool anl KWiwy TronM. bjr cleansing ttto blood of ul I iuluipurttivs, aircBfthcniDg all frU of the lody. -t VOLINA CORDIAL CURES SICK-HEADACHE, Nrnraliria, Pain In the Uuifon, Back and Side, by touing tuc nerves and strengthening the muscles. h VOLINA CORDIAL CURES DYSPEPSIA. rndigertlon and Constipation, br aiding the awlm llutinsrofthe Food through the proper actttia of Ik stomach ; it creates a healthy appetite. i VOLINA CORDIAL CURES NERVOUSNESS, Depression of spirits and Weakness, Ly enliven tug and toning the eyfctem. -h VOLINA CORDIAL CURES OVERWORKED and IVlloaff Women Punr and Sickly Children, it is di li'htful and nutritious as a general Tonic Vol iiia Almanac ami TJiary, for 1HK7. A ii.irwtvmie. complete I PWiK. t.'l!iu.-?liow to C I KE DIMEAE3 al HOME i it a ph-asaiil, natural way. Mailed wu receipt of a Sc. postage slump. Address VOLINA DRUG & CHEMICAL CO. calt. car., MO., U. S. A. XftfsTrTiTflWX The Greatest of Great Walls: Says a correspondent of the Milling World, who has recently been travel ing in China: Of course we had to go to the great wall of China. This country abounds in great walls. Her mural de fenses were most extensive walled country, walled villages, walled palaces and temples wall after wall and wall within wall. But the gre .test of all is the great wall of China, which crests the mountain range and crosses the gorge from here some forty miles away. Squeezing through the hut deep gorge and a deep rift in the solid rock eut out by ages ol rolling wheels and tramping feet, we reach the great, frowning, double bast ion ed gate of stone and hard burned brick one archway tumbled in. This was the object oi our mission, the great wall of China, built two hundred and thirteen years before this era; built ot well hewn stone, laid in regular courses some twenty leet high and then topped out with hard burned bricks, filled in with earth and closely paved on the toy with more dark tawny brick the ramparts high and thick and cas tellated for the use oi arms. Right and left the great wall sprang far up the mountain side now straight, now curved, to meet the mountain ridge, turreted each three hundred feet a frowning mass oi masonry. No need to tell you of this wall: the books will tell you how it was built to keep the warlike Tartars out twenty five feet high by forty thick, twelve hun dred years it kept these hordes at bay, nor mat, in tne main the material used upon it is. just as good and firm and strong as when put in place. Twelve hundred miles of this gigantic work Uult on the rugged, craggy mountain tops, vaulting over gorges, spanning! suemis netting tne nver arcn ways with huge hard bars of copper, with double gates, with swinging doors ana oars set thick with iron armor a wouder in tive world before which the eitl time classic seven wonders, idl gone now save the great pyramids, ware toys. The great pyramids have 8TTU0OjUU0 cubic feet, the great wall (vi5(ji)t)UJl)(J0 cubic feet. An engineer in Stewart's party here some years ago gave it as his opinion that the cost of this wall, fig uring labor at the same rate, would more than equal that of all the 100,000 miles of railroad in the United States. The material it contains would build a wall six feet high and two feet thick right straight around the globe. Yet this was done hi ouly twenty years without a trace of debt or bond. It is the great est individual Labor the world has ever known. Prof . Kost, who is conducting a geo logical survey of Florida, is making smuc very remarkable discoveries. The professor ha& made a report in which he tike the position that Flor- - uia was not .dwavs a mere peninsula Ages ago there was uo Mexican gulf. From what is now the northern and eastern shore of the gulf an area of land stretched over the Antilles all the way to Veneznela. The theory of the geologist is that this tract of land rest ed on no very solid foundation. Upon innumerable cond columns, sea weed, drift wood, and mud and sand from the lulls of Georgia and Alabama, washed and lodged for hundreds tf years, grad ually forming ""a lake of lakes, moras ses, sand beds, subterranean rivers and enormous springs, ebbing and How ing CASH AGAINSTCREDIT FARMERS Look to Your Interest. One Dollar in cash or barter at J. Rowan Iavis' tor, Mill Hrjiltfo, Rowan county, will buy more ool.s titan ur dollar id fifty cents n a ereilit witk those stores which sell on mortgage. If you don't believe it, try -oue year and uom what you will save. Cjiiio and examine uy excellent Mac of Spring Ami especially the Prices. Just receiw!! Iry aal Facy kw1s, HbocH, Hate Piece Goods, Hardware, &c. I am now im reeijtf lc teat 4ie of GROCERIES Ever in stock, consisting of Syrups, Coffee, Bae, Jfcjfler MH1 Flour NW Orleans Raw Sugar, and immy other thiags not mentioned. xh fiardosi Seed for 18S7. Give me a call. UesortfeUy, l:im 23 MARK. ECZEMA ERADICATED. Or.tWrprn K is Anr xrm In pay fhat I think I am er.tir ly well r,f frrw! n' haa teken Swia'n Siuecilic. i jtv been tnuhll with it v.-ry hulc in my far ittw la4 atansv; At lln- betriunin" of "ll weather U- tail it mjde a Iil;UI :i.pearanc. bat went aw aliJ nas itever returned. 8.S.S. ihiUimiU lrokc it up: at hml it put my Kyatent iuifl miwiiiirti stmI I if well It ali-o benedleal uy wife 'W-atly n i-a f nick UeatlachV-. uud I. ..!- jrlc. tune .if a breaking t on my liul three year oiU l;iu;'tii-r la.- Mirnm. r. WassUswviQe, Us,, Feb, IS. 1HW. Ii". J.O.Lo . -I. G... Treatise Oil liiuxi and SLia Iieaacs maiWJ free. Tan Swift Specifk; CVv . Iirawit 3. Atlanta, Go. - with the tides of ocean."' Concerning the inhabitants and deni senaof this prehistoric land little is known. Fossil revelations suggest enough to satisfy the wildest imagina tion. Prof. Kost says; On the borders of these waters of bays and rivers there grazed a unique monster, semi-reptile fish, allied to the present juanatea, but vastly larger, and which existed in immense herds. In n great buy that extended up northward, between the Ocklockonee and Sope hoppy rivers, these monsters also a n ot heir coaster, the charc harodon exist ed in amazing numbers, so that mom there are depths of phosphate, deposits there exceedingly rich in jhosnborio acids, all afforded by marine and am phibian animals. In these deposits their fossil bones lie iinbedded:in great numbers. But the times were .turbu lent, as these bones were broken in great fragments, there seldom being pieces of more than two or three. pounds weight. In Alachua comity, especially in the south port, thereof, there was a rich savanna, herded by the rhinoceros, mastodon, camel, horse, ox, lama and goat. Among these were-harboring in the tangles of chapparul, cactus, palms and divers vine, a tierce species of the lion, and a variety of the leopard, tiger and hyena, that were ever watching for their prey among the smaller of the laud animals. A very large bear also was common. But an earthquake period made a wreck of this beautiful land. Shock and volcanic convulsions shattered the plateau, sending the fragments into the sea, and leaving a few mountainous islands and the projecting strip now known as Florida, iso much for what pwas perhajyie. tthe- fairest portion of the- olii oouth nfljwri -ttfcua ages ago. remaps a gieat civilbtatioci went down in the teiiitH-;d wreck. lVis-siblr the ruins of stately cities strew the bottom of the Mexican gtlf. Who knows ? Atlanta Comfit utiiMtL A happy home is the brightest spot ll ill S - i on eart a tnai tne eye ot i looks down on. Love and peace in his home send sunshine around a man wherever he goes; disorder and troulUe there is misery everywhere. There are few worries of which a man cannot how and then shake otf. bat who can shake himself free from the skeleton in the closet, from the worry in the household, and the blister on the heart? A day will tell how many a man carried that, without wincing, down to the grave. When . a husband and wife are help meet to each other in the best sense, (worn wwer. tuvr auuwuutw piau in the hkseT then the. man who has a when order, love and jjoodness prevail hard battle in life to fight can leave his. straggles behind him when he enters there. With all our faults, we are the ! most home loving of people, and that i is- the reason why we are the greatest of I 1 11'! . I I 1 people. Whatever helps home-life, is a national blessing; whatever hurts home life, is a national curse; and the greatest curse that can't touch these blessings is what would tamper with the home. Oue of the finest kuatitieft in a hu man being is tliat line sense f delicacy which renders it iutpossilde for him ev er to be an intruder or a bore. A young man in Louisville, Ky., was choked to death while kissing a girt That girl had evidently not been kissed for some time. Goods. J. ROWAN DAVIS. 55 - x