fill a 1 TTT 1 J a. VOL XVIII, THIKD SERIES. SALISBURY XT. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1887 - NO. 26 i ,i - ' , C-h-o-o! C4i-o-o!! C-h-o-o!!! The business jwrtion of Onancock, Don't sneeze, sneeze, hawk, hawk, spit, Accomac county, Virgiuia was destroy blow, ami disgust everyhody with your rf b fire Tuesday njght of last week, offensive breath. If you have acd, T . "?nmn. : ionm waterv fliscnarges iruui me uusuuuuujics, ? v. ,. i . : , throat disca.se, causing cnoKing sensa tions, cough, ringing noises in head, split ting headache and other symptoms of nasal catarrh, remember that the manu facturers of Ir. Sage's Catarrh Remedy ofler, iu good faith, $500 reward for a case of catarrh which they cannot cure. The Remedy is sold by diugguts at only 50 cents. Sentence of Murderers. Last summer a great sensation was caused by the killing of Student Freeze at the State University by a nioh of Negroes. The murderers escaped but were afterwards captured in various pa of the Stete. The trial of three of them Pat nek Brewer, r rank Kir- , , , u I , i. T by and Jesse Harris has been in pro- greis at Hillsboro. It ended in all be- ing convicted of manslaughter. Brewer i was given ten years and tlie other five f years in the penitentiary. , " The people, are whirled from one part ; of the British metropolis to anotlieV bv underground railway trains, on which the fare varies from two to four cents; the greatest proportion of the Hickets are sold for two cents. The trains are runit intervals of from a minute to a minute and half. Nobody hsis ever been killed on this underground road, although more than 80,000,000 passen gers are carried over it in a year. -pps --i PURELY VEGETABLE. H act with extraordinary efficacy on the TIVER, HDNEys, 1 -i and Bowels. AN EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC FOR Malaria, Bowel Complaint t, Djrapepaia, Sick Ueadadte, Cunatipation, UUiooaneas, Kidney Affectiona, Jaundice, Mental depression, Colic lo Household Shonld be Without It, nd, by being kept ready for Immediate Ue, will save many an boar of suttering and many a dollar in time and doctors' bills. THERE IS BUT ONE SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR See that you get the genuine with red "2" on front of Wrapper. Prepared only by J. H. ZEILI N &. CO., Sole Proprietor., Philadelphia, Pa. 1'iUt i:, Sl.oo. IEDMONT WAGON, MaoE AT HICKORY, N. C. CAN'T BE BEAT! Tbtey stand where they ought to, right sqiiare 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 wagon come quickly and luy one, either for cash or on time. Salisbury, N. C. t Sept. 1st, 1SS6! Two years ajn I boti ;ht a very light two-Ijorse-Picthnojit wagon of the Agetit, Jim. A. Boyden; have used it netfr'y all the time since, have tried it severely in hauling saw loga and other heavy loads', and have not had to pay one eent lor repairs. I look upon the Piedmont wagon as the bcstThiin- ble Skein wagon made in the United States. Tlu timber used in litem is most excellent and thoroughly well seasoned. - L TCKSKU l. TlIOMASOX. Saupbuuy. N. C. Aug. 27th. 188G About t wo years ajro I bought of Juo. A. Boyden, a one luuse Piedmont wagon which has done much service and no pait of it has broken or given away and consequent ly it has cost nothing for repairs. Joux D. Hexlt. Salisbury. N. C. Sept. 3 1, 1886. Eighteen mouths ago I bought of John A. Boyden, a Svtnch Thimble Skein Pied mont wagon and have used it pretty much all the time ami it has proved to be a firft tate wagon. Nothing about it has given away and therefore it has required no re pairs. T. A. Walton. Salhbury, N. C. Sept. 8th, 1886. 18 months a I bought of the Agent, in Salisbury, a 2 in Thimble Skein Piedmont Wagon their lightest one-horse wagon I 'l:tv. L-..t.t . SL. I ....... . ...... u .. . I " v- i III II 1X1 .1II1IW.-1 H MI?M RHI U -t. tlll'l duri,,.. the time hive hauled on it at leat T5 loads of wood and that without any breakage or repairs. L. R. Walton. & """) wv,wv, iuoui.h,c, v a f,wv. A construction train on the Ohio River Railroad went over a trestle at Willow Isl and, on the 13th, killing three persons and badly wounding eight others. The Chickasaw Indians have, doubt less, a just complaint against Texas cattle drovers passing through their territory to market, on the ground that instead of passing the highway in a business manner, they loiter on the and their cattle on the , . , n,. . fields, thus depriving them, the Chicka- " - . tll of grass for. their own cattle, This loitering is ofien protracted through the summer in making the transit, thus, besides eating up the grass, thev spread cattle disease in the , " .. T ... , . ., lnd,a" In this and similar ways the white man has always created trouble with the Indians. Sumac. Persons having money to Jn vest in some enterprise that will pay per cent?, are advised to take a fair Sumac under consideration as offering im portant inducements. A company was organized at Lynchburg, nine years ago, to utilize the large quantities of Sumac going to waste in that part of the State. The capital stock of the company is now $25,000, arid the busi ness has paid ten per cent., which is better than raising half a bale of cot ton to the acre, and even better than selling goods on a credit. The subject certainly merits consideration. The Lynchburg-mill grinds annually 1,500, 000 lbs., which pays the producers about $1 per hundred pounds. From "Town and Country," Boston, Mass. A Bandmaster's Reminiscences of the Great Civil War. BY W. H. NEAYE. CHAPTER III. It was some time before the great mass -of North Carolinians devoted as we have seen, to peace and national union could or would believe that they were, as mere atomic automata, plunged into the horrid vortex of a fratricidal, suicidal war. It seemed only the mock ing diablery of a suffocating nightmare. out with, a full comprehension of its terrible reality there came an entire re vulsion of feeling, that of sel-preser vation. Patriotism is not, by any means. a cardinal virtue; for, when divested of vague sentiment and mock heroics, the residue on strict analysis presents only these simple, selfish essences, love of life, self, home, tamuy, tnends, neighbors, and all such as are connected bv direct community of interest.' This theory is based on the same general principles that actuate true religion as evolved by Jesus Lhnst when he said "If you do not love your brother (man) whom you have seen, how can you love your rather in Heaven whom you have not seen?" I make this observation in no polemical spirit, but as suggestive of the injunction, Judge as ye would be judged," or, "Put yourself in his place.'' It is due to the large-souled men of North and South that I here reproduce a noble utterance of Col. Jones, of the Sixth Miissachusetts Rejnment, in his address at their reunion, in Boston, April 1(J, 1883 :k,Time has tempered the bitter ness of the conflict, and, ;is we look back, we realize that, though mistaken, the masses who fought us so gallantly were inspired by motives as high and holy to them as ours were to us.1' I now re sume. Society marks were levelled, prft tern. and humanity was in aseething,feverish whirl, volunteering for short and in definite terms, buying up revolvers, con verting files into monstrous knives, etc., a vague feeliug seemingly pervading many that the prospective lighting was to be on the ancient-style of single com bat ! All restraint being off, couchant secessionists were now rampant, ex acting, and dictatorial. Many of them snubbed and derided those who had cluug to the Union; and some said they did not want nor need Union men in the fight, while others even went so far as to say that, while Union men might be allowed to fight against the invaders, no rank above a private soldier should be conferred on them J But, despite the vaporings of the secessionists,there were not enough of them in North Carolina to have formed the rank aud file of due full regiment; and, after the holiday effervescence of the first few months, nearly all of them who had volunteered to fight as officers resigned to obey (?jgatls to fill safe and lucrative post positions at home. The men who stood staunchly by the Union while they could were the men who did the fight ing for their homes, after being render ed powerless to do aught else. It was the urgeut appeals of this class to re main with them and get up bands to il . L I 1 11 inspire mem on xne marcn anu cueer . 111 11 W-era m-camp that decided me clearly .against my interests and inclinations resist the offers and entreaties of relatives and friends in Europe, and to cast my lot with the South, of whose terrible outcome I had a vivid premoni tion. Moreover, I had always been treated by all classes in the South with extreme kindness, respect, and liberal support, and to leave them because a fortuitous cloud of Calamities hung over them, for , whose presence they, as a people, were no more responsible than I was, seemed to me as nothing less than cowardly desertion and base ingrati tude; and, much as I suffered and lost by it, my conscience still approves the stand I took. Digressions thus at the outset must be made, for though I mean to present only episodes of the war in army band connection, yet; in order to clearly define my position and actuating motives I must present such happenings as induced me to forego my intention of returning to Europe. The whole war sell erne was, original ly, a huge game of bluff, aggravated bv the criminal folly of the leaders, respec tively, .North and South, imbuing the masses with the most Quixotic ideas of their own prowess, with a correspond ing underestimate of the courage and physical endurance of their opponents, for instance, on the one hand, li0ne Southern man was equal to ten Yan kees"; and on the other, "A handful of Northern men, armed with cornstalks, could route a whole Southern regiment.'' The true observers and serious thinkers of both sections knew better, but their statements and counsels had no saving influence. Much as I deplored and condemned secession, there were some of its notable exponents in North Carolina for whom I had the highest respect, and whose memories I snail always revere, because all manly virtues were theirs, and, politically, they proved their sincerity by the sacrifice of everything dear to them. I will name only one, and I do that because my first venture as a band master within hearing range of hostile guns was made under his auspices. I mean Col. Chas. F. Fisher, of Salisbury, killed in the first battle of Mauasses, father of the famous Southern novelist, whose nom de plume is "Christian lieid" (Miss Frances Fisher). He was wealthy, and, as president of the North Carolina Railroad, very influential. He raised a full regiment the. Sixtl North Carolina of picked men, large ly at his own expense; and, having had 41 military education in youtii, lie, as its colonel, soon had it finely discip lined. He was also, like prominent men in every State, full of State pride; he therefore engaged my Salisbury Bund, at fifty dollars per day, net, to escort his regiment to Virginia, when ordered there, hoping and believing that this band would eclinse all th bands from other States in the Johnston and Beauregard armies. We joined the regiment at Kaleigh, July , lboa, and moved at once by rail to Virginia. At Richmond halt of one day was made and we were reviewed on the Capitol grounds bv President Davis and Col R. E. Lee, and, good heavens ! strutting between them was a dapper, smirking merchant of Salisbury, the most gor geously broad-clothed, tasselled, tin selled, feathered, and festooned little man I ever saw, and who, for his blatant secessionism, after it was fixed fact,- consummate cheek, and ir repressible elbowing push had b&n in stalled State commissary of North Car olina ! ! This was indicative of one weak and detestable trait of Jeff. Davis, in ..that he favored fawning 1 sycophants and crushed, sis much as he could, all who dared to diner tram nis views, a thorough egotist and auto crat. This I knew from his course as Secretary of War under Pierce; but this execnxble policy or impolicy as Presi dent of the Confederacy was as yet un developed, and he was the idol of the dazed imisses at that time, "Hurrah for Davis" filling the air whenever he ap peared or Uu name was called. After a day's feasting and gush we tick a train for Manassas. The.pe iple along the route seemed in a enronic state of jubilation, and gave us a con tinuous ovation. It may have been a sort of hysteric excitation affecting all classe, but I was impressed with a con viction that neither soldiers nor people believed there would be much of a fight nor duration of war worth speaking of; for, iu every detail, our trip seemed merely a gala-military excursion. I then imagined and afterwards knew that matters and things in the North were boiling and bubbling in like man ner. We got to Manassas Junction, Sun day morning. The "spread of canvass" seemed interminable, extending we were told-far beyond the dip of the horizon, right and left of us. Strict discipline did not seem to dominate the camps, for the "show-off" music we played when our' train halted in the centre of this vast encampment drew a motley throng of soldier-looking men around opr car, many of whom were members of the numerous band gath ered there from all the Southern States. Among these I had many acquaintances who got into the car or reached through ita windows to "shake." The only man I found in sympathy with my apprehensive forebodings that war's barbarities were certain and soon to be upon us was "Jim Smith," an English man, leader of the band from Richmond. He also told me that the only tine bands in camp were his and Oe.ssner's from New Orleans, aud that mine, beinir I from North Carolina, w;is a genuine surprise to all, for it was as good as it very much excelled theirs. Towards evening, before we had a chance to hear any of tbe bands, our regiment got orders to join the forces of Gen. J as. E. Johnston, at Winchester, j Y e reached that city next day, after , dinner, debouched from the train and took our first foot march through town, and joined Johnston's army four miles j beyound it, and our regiment was at ; once posted m a held of cut and shock ed wheat. The advance and attack of Geu. Patterson was momentarily ex pected, and I freely confess that my fancy was painfully exercised with very ripe fears of the onset, and, although I repressed all outward signs of trepida tion, my all absorbing desire was to be orderedjar to the rear instanter. Non combatants who have been similarly situated can readily imagine the serene feeling of relief that ni -d me when Col. Fisher came to u4 and said, "Neave, take your band into Winches ter and put up at a hotel; you would only be in our way and in needless danger here." Did I feign a mild sort of protest? Not any. I never obeyed an order with such joyous alacrity be fore nor since. We found many spruce, ornately embellished military in our hotel and about town, such as are always found in t.e far-off rear "just before the battle." They are mostly of the commissary and quartermaster kid ney, with a sprinkling of medical gents, in soldier toggery, who attend to commissioned combatants that have become suddenly sick from goneness of pluck and palpitation of the heart. This class of soldiers (?) are, by nature and opportunity, pre-eminent as "mashers" of soft-horned commandants and sus ceptible females. After supper our band was trotted around under the wings of these ardent worshippers of "the sex" and safe posi tions, serenading the ladies till bedtime, when it was proposed to go out to head quarters and give Gen. J. E. Johnston a serenade. 1 objeeted-to this as utter ly incongruous in such a crisis; that Gen. Johnston was not a "carpet knight," but a brusque, matter-of-fact soldier, over-loaded at present with most vital responsibilities, who would be annoyed,- and possibly feel incensed and insulted by soch an inopportune serenade. But the enthusiastic projec tors of this faux pas were positive that he would be delighted with our "splendid music"; so, with the excep tion of myself and one oi the band Theo. F. Wolle, now teacher of music in the Moravian College at Bethlehem, Pa. it was unanimously voted proper to give Geu. Johnston a dose of our delectable music. Under such pressure I withdrewjpy veto and went. At the elose of our first piece a grim orderly, as stiff and straight as the musket he hugged, marched up to us and spake thus, "Gen. Johnston says stop that damned noise and get away from here, or he will have you all arrested for dis turbing him !"' Any attempt to de scribe the effect of this terse address would impugn the imagination of the reader. In short, therefore, he ordered us to "git" and we "got, you bet '; but we hadn't got far before a "wind" storm of the most profuse, anathemati- cal, and hydratongued profanity broke out all over that discomfited, self-sold crowd excepting Wolle and myself, who fairly screamed out laughter all the way back to Winchester. As Gen. Patterson had not advanced, Col. Fisher rode to town next morning and settled up in full with me, giving separate passes home for each of the band, saying his expectations liad been overfilled, since the North Carolina band was generally conceded to be by far the best that had come to the front. He invited any or all of the band who desired to see the impending battle fought to remain and mes3 with him; and several of us did, for in the then excited and expectant condition of the people it would have been deemed dis graceful iu a uniformed body of men to he seen and heard as a band returning from the seat of war before a battle had been fought. The result is a matter of history, so I will only briefly outline its effect on Col. Fisher. Patterson slipped off from Johnston; but the latter, an old, shrewd soldier, understood the game, and made a counter move, a.'rpid, forced march to Manassas, and got there at mid-day, when the battle ("Bull Run") was almost fought out, and Beauregard w;w iu much the same predicament that Wellington was in at Waterloo when Blucher re-enforced him, for, using his own words, "victory hung in the balance," perceptibly in clining to the Northern sice. But Johnston soon turned the scale over whelmingly against the North rn troops. As soon as his regiment took posi- tion.Col. Fisher advanced alone, to reconnoitre, it was supposed, and was shot iu the forehead and instantly killed. He was warned against this foolish temerity, but followed closely, by his faithful negro servant, who at once seized and carried his corpse to the rear. I always believed that it would have been far better for the South and the whole country if the result of that battle had been reversed. Jim Smith got back to Richmond and stayed there; but he took with him from the battle-field several of the in struments and the monster bas drum with its baud card painted on the off Ifead of Joe Green's American Band, I of Providence, R. I. As Joe and his band had been the giusts of Jim heirs; members of other bands said omun, ra menmona, just one year previously, the big instruments of the band coming back to him in this way furnished tbe points of Jim's joke par excel lence-io me whenever I saw him, as I always did, when passing through Richmond, all during the war. After the war I lost track of him, hav ing never stopped over in that city since. I am therefore unable to state how Joe Green and Jim Smith adjusted that instrumental muddle, if at all. C5 EUL T' 1 . . Ken Who Get Along Best, It seems a pity to say it, but obser vation sustains the statement that men of course fibre, obtuseness of feeling and cold-headed circumspection in dealing with their fellows get along better than men of chivalrous instincts, deli cate sensibilities and that generous credulity which those practice who, never meditating wrong th ..nsclvcs, never suspect it in others. The gentle man in the best acceptance of the term, finds Jordan is a hard road to travel, and often sigs to be at the end of the IT i a journey, lie is annoyed by the imper tinent mquisitivenss, saddened by the meanness and often robled by rascals who have taken his measure as the hawk does of some gentler bird it selects for its prey. The public, men in the country, who had a high code of ethics have been constantly misunderstood. The rough and ready class will not un understand reserve, and the schemer and scamp laughs at honesty. Even in the very domestic circle too fine a sense of the proprieties misses its mark, and society only recognizes surface manners. It does not care to go deeper. In fact it dares not do so. It is a mel ancholy thing that the man who edu cates his children as nearly as possible to the ideal plane of thought and con duct simply prepares them for sorrow and mishaps. What a transition from the ingenious, confiding and noble-spirited young man of twenty-one and the sobered and handsome man of fifty who has seen all illusions trampled in the mire. Still, for all this, it is best to aim high, live purely and sincerely, and and even at the cost of isolation, pre seeve your own soul from stigma or stain. Even the world does late justice over the graves of those who had the courage to speak and act the truth. Would Pay for It A gawky young man and a shy, "hang-back" girl, walking arm in arm, attracted much attention as they walk ed along the street. The young fellow had told a hotel clerk that he lived near Carney Fork and that he was on his bridal tour. "Lou," said the husband, stopping near a fruit stand, "order what )er ap petite is er cravin' an' blamed et ldon t pay for it." The wife selected an orange, and the husband, as he handed over a nickel in payment, said: "Oh, when I go on a spree uv this sort, I never let expenses skeer me off. Podner," nodding at ti e fruit dealer, "this is my wife, an' you bet I'll stan' by her. W hupped in er head uv er feller that had cou'ted her six years, an' jes' nachu'lly tuck her away from him. Lou, order whut 3'er apjiertite is er cravin' an' blame ef I don't pay fer it." She took a nickle's worth of candy and as her husband handed over the amount, "Oh, it ain't often in a man's life that he gits on sich er sloshin' 'round spell ez this. Lou, I'm with you an' I want yer to un'erstan' that I'll lam down the cash fer enything yer or der. Ef yer'd married Andy Buckuer yer raout stood 'round here witerin'fur things. Lou I'm yore husban', ain't 1?" "Yes, Dan." "Then order what yer appertite is er cravin'." Sir E I ward Thornton has been se lf cted ly the Council of Foreign Bond holders at London to reresent them on conference with the Virginia commis sion appointed by the Legislature to settle the debt question. Sir Edward sailed for America on the 16th. He who is most slow in making a promise, is the most faithful in the per formance of it. INFORMATION MANY PERSONS at this Buffer fr -f cither Headache, Xcuralgia, Rheumatism, Pain in the J.imht, Jlack and Sides, Jiad Stood, Uy est Urn, Dyspepsia, Malar la, Constipation S Kidney Trouble, -h V0L1H.A CORDIAL CURES RHEUMATISM, Bad Blood and Kidney Trouble, by cleansing tha blood of all its iuiyurltlca, strengthening all part of the body. VOLiKA CORDIAL CURES SICK-HEADACHE, Kraralgla, Falna in the Limba, Back and Side, bf toning the nervea and strengthening tbe muscles. -h YOLINA CORDIAL CURES DYSPEPSIA, bating of the Food through the proper action of tha stomach ; it creates a healthy appetite. Indlsestion and Constipation, by aiding the i -h VOLINA CORDIAL CURES NERVOUSNESS, Depression of spirits and W siirntsi, by atw ing ana toning we system. -i VOLINA CORDIAL CURES stnd Delicate Women. Puny and Sickly Children. It is delightful aud nutritious aa a general Tonic Yolina Almanac ana Diary for IKK 7. A hndMau. complete ....! Sim. l.llln.l.nalAlTUR ....... 1 . . MfUI? 7., .. ..1 . . n.nMlm.a Hulled on receipt of a 2c postage stamp. Address VOLINA DRUG A CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, KD., U.S.A. aaaaaaaaaU-ll Ja aiuaiiiaix a vi i u n l u . a V M I 1 a-BTTOI S may A "Talk" to Girls." The girl of sixteen, who will neither sew nor do housework, has no business to be decked out in finery and rambling about in search of fun and frolic unless her parents are rich, and in that event she needs the watchful direction of a good mother none the less. There is no objection to fun, but it should be well chosen and well timed. No woman or girl who will hot work has a ! right to share the wages of a poor! man's toil. If she does work, if she j makes the clothes she wears and assists 1 in the household duties, the' chances are she will have enough self-respect to behave herself when playtime comes, : bnt if she should still be a little "wild," , the honest toil she has done will confer upon her some degree of right to have : COMPARATIVE WORTH BOriL (Absolutely Put). .. GRANT'S (Alum Powder) .. HTHVObUVS (Phosphate) freeh HAXFOmvS, when freab. CHARM (Atom Powder) AMAZON (Atom Powder) CLETELAXD'S PIONEEB (8a n fTaaeteeo) . PUCE'S MOW FLAKE (Groff 'a, St. LEWIS'. CONGRESS BECKER'S CILLET'S HAN FORD'S, when not freeh ANDREWS & CO. (contains alum (Milwaukee.) "Kegal." BULK (Powder sold loose). e ........... nSSE-SSBI BUM FORD'S, when not fresh . . .g EEPOETS CF GOTORNMEITT CHEMISTS As to Purity and Wholesomcncss of the Royal Daklng io'.vcr. "I hare test cd a paeliafp f Roral Bakin? Towdcr, trhicb I purchrcl i:i tli open market, and liatl it eompof-cd of iurc and rholcsome iJtprcdicnia. It taacrcaia of tartar powder of a high degree of merit, and duca net contain cttb r dura 01 phosphates, or other injurious substances. ' 12. G. Lovr, l'h.D." "It It a clentillc fact that the Coral Baking Towdcr is abcolutcly pure." "LL A. iiOTT, rb.D." - I have examined a package of Royal Baking Powder, purchased by myself to the market. I tind it entirely free from alutn, terra alba, or any other injarioaj sub stance. IIe.nhv Moktox, Ph.D., President of btevcnj institute of Technology." " I have analyzed a package of Royal Baking Towdcr. The material.) of which it Is composed are pure and wholesome. 8. Dxxx liwz.-, Stato Assaycr, Mass." The Royal Baking Powder received" Ah highest award oyer nil competitor j at the Vienna World's Exposition, W3 ; at tbo Centennial, Philadelphia, 137C ; at the ' A""-"1" Institute, and at Stato Fain throughout the country. Mo Other article of human food has ever received such high, emphatic, and uni versal endorsement from eminent chemists, physicians, scientists, and Boards oX Health all over the world. Now. The above D i cn am illustrates the comparative worth of various Baking Powders, as shown by Chemical Analysis and experiments made by Prof. Bchedlcr. A one pound can of each powder was taken, the total leavening power or volume to each can calculated, the result being as indicated. This practical test for worth by Prof. Echcdler only proves what every observant consumer of the Royal Baking Powder knows by practical experience, that, while it costs a few cents per pound more than ordinary kinds, it is far more economical, and, besides, affords the advan tage of better work. A single trial of the Royal Baking Powder will convince any fair minded person of theso facts. . Watto the diagram shows some of the alum powders to bo of higher decree of strength than other powders ranked below them, it is not to be taken as indica ting that they have any value. All alum powders, no matter how high their strength, are to bo avoided as dangerous. Ovar 1a Tborouuul Trial A rarsawre tnauad U .! tfm ti.i.iu n 1 t..Arvirti.in JOm sriw Lient a a id wero rwturad to b 1th by anu of S : P. fr tS f M A I ntPTMICOV HARRIS' OCRUKKL rftOMUXOO PRO WeaknMand)raII9cajia die As4 lien. Tested for Eight A Kadicaiuareior weroasiJetuii7urca&ic Yonn.-rorMitl t Years in xni tboosand cases taey absolutely restvo prematura; aowf anl hndm Mm mm InOiA frill misnMStO! portent aad fall Man 1 y Strength and Vigorons 1 Health. rapt name with etntmnt of your trrrahlfx, and secure TRIAL PAOKAOK PltKK. with 1! last 'a Pampklete. RUPTURED PERSONS can tiavo FREJ 25:ly CASH AGAINST CREDIT FARMERS Look to Your Interest One Dollar in cash or barter at J. Rowan Davis' store. Mill Bodge, Itowssm county, will bny more goods than one dollar and fifty cents on a vredit witss those stores which sell on mortgage. If you don't helicve it, try oimj jettr IMM what you will save. Cjutj and examine my excellent line of Spring Ami especially the Trices. Just received Dry and fancy I roods, Mjoca, Piece Goods, Hardware, &c. I am now m receipt of the best lute of GROCERIES Ever in stock, consisting of Syrups, Orleans Raw Sugar, ami many other Seed for 1887. Give me a call. UespcctluUvy l:im TBADE Ontbinen H is da ym to say that T think I am entirely veil of eczema aftrr harta takea Swift s stutiuc. I lute lii tnulk-l with it Tery little in my fac riuee lart epri ng. At the beciimiiiz of cold weaUM last fail it isumIm a ulijflit &uuKarauc. but weajt hwh-v and aai acverrattiriM-d. S. S. s. no dout broke it try: at least it put my syiteiaJji boo -nu nK-n and I "ot well It alwi benefited my wife greatly in case of sick headache, aad made a rfccl cure of a breaking out on my little throe year wU daughter hut anromer. Walking illeTba., Feb. 13, IS. Hzv. JAAtES . M. KOEEIS. Treatise aa Blood aad Skia Disease maiW inc. irvu.uu wu Ta Swift ??PKcrrw ., Trwcr 8, Atlanta, Ca. her own way, ill judged though it may be. The wild girl usually aspires te prominence in some social circle or other, and her manner and conduct are in a greater or less degree designed te attract the following of men. She should remember that followers are not always admirers, and that the most sincere admiration a man ever feels for a woman in a drawing room is when he looks upon her aud says in hit own consciousness: "She is "a perfect ladj." If you want- knowledge you most toil for it; if food you must toil for it; and if pleasure you must toil for it Toil is the law. - Pleasure comes through toil, and not by self-indui gence and indolence. When one gets to love work his life is a happy one. of BAKING POWDERS. 4 IViii tririr',lt-r iB53 1 tm taiss iinssilas awl all Qaaaka, oiiiy aim is to Weed tbotr rio Taka a SURE KcanT thaftBL&A .L 'tEU LiotekixIj. Alm IV orioeonTciueaeaia ear war. Tm ron tcientJic medical nrineiales. Br application 10 ia RW 01 unrur iu waadanhnatiTw ttemema ef MSs erect sea iasfc. taa become c.'i(r:'ai and rapidlypiirj both tnmtUi kn of the hnrnui orguwn THEATpTEIfT. Ono Moats, S3, two Xaa.H Bnt, Ef HARRIS REMEDY CO.. Rre Cttrwm, 8O8U IT. Tenth Street. ST. LoTJTH m Trial of our Appliance. Ask for Terms I Goods. Coffee, Bacon, Rotter MEll Floor, things not mentioned. Fresh ii Tscutafal stored. TV tZal J. ROWAN DAVIS. MARK. ERADICATED. : ."ft WjdgjjjjsZji

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