1 lie Carolina
Watchman.
I a
VOL XWn.THIRD SERIES.
SALISBURY N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1837
- -
, X 1 11 4 . e - - . -. - . --.-..wfMaiM
NO; 33
- . -i t
What He Low'd.
He lowM he caret! not for the train,
, 1 j u:f ..iv -
lint dimply low'd, as he passed on, 1
'twere cheapo for to" walk.
I
He low d he cared not for the rain, he
a. - - ll 11
warn t a sicKiy ieuei
And on the crosshe sot himself,
with a gingham uin-bre-rella.
He low'd his dinner time was nigh,
he low'd It with a sigh.
n I 1 11 T l. ,.1 ...JL.l '.1 ; 4
iut wuy .buouiu i u , :
n it i .i mo nn rvirr l rt 111 CHI
He low'd he'd rise and walk the track,
he was behind the time,
But the engine come, that '"coon" was
struck, ' and he's gone the new air
line.
For ten or twelve years I have been
severely afflicted with Catarrh. Never
before found such decided relief as from
V.lvU Cream Balm. I consider myself
cured. J. W. Buffixuton Mcchanies
ville, N. Y. (Price SO cents.)
"Do you think," she asked dreamily,
as he snt beside her in the circus, "that
this is the same elepitaut I saw when I
was child?" "No," he answered,
with scornful candor; "yon know ele
phants only live to be 2B0 years old.'
It won't be this year. Detroit Free
Press.
LOOK OUT!
Compare this with your purchase:
As yoii value health, perhaps life. -examine each
package and be sure you get the Genuine. See
the red Z Trade-Mark and the full title
on front of Wrapper, and on the aide
the seal and signature of J. II. ZeiUn A
Co., a in the above fnc- simile. Remember ther
no Other geuulnc- Simmon Liiver Regulator.
P
IEDM0NT
MADI
HICKORY, N. C.
CAN'T BE BEAT !
The
r ennri uMinvn Tlinv nmMiT
to,
right
square
AT THE FnSNT!
It Was a Hard Fight But They
Hava Woa It !
Just - read what
about them and if
people say
vou want a
wagon come quick lv and bin
one, either for cash or on time.
Salisuuky, N. C.
Sept. 1st, 1SS6.
.Two years agvl bought n very iiht two
harsc Picamopt waon of the Agent, Jno.
A. Bwydea; have use-1 it ne.tr'y all the time
inee. have tried it severely in iiauliiiu saw
lojs ant other heavy luails, ainl' li.ive not
liad to pay o;ic eeiit lor repairs. I look
upon the Pied.itont waon asthe best Thim
ble Skein wagon m ule in the United States.
Th : timber used in thein is most excellent
u I thoroughly well seasoned.
Tckxes P. Tinm.vsox.
S.vr.isr.uitY. X. O.
Aug. 27th, 1S8G
Alout two ye trs a'jn l hoalit oJno. A.
nylen,ao:ia-horse Piedmont vai(iii which
h:w done tnOeh service and no pai t of it
has broken or given a -vay and eoust quen
ly it h:u eost npthin Ibr repairs.
John D. IIexly.
SALisncnv. N. C.
Sept. a I, I8sC.
Eighteen month? ago I Umht of John
A. Boyden, a 21 ,y. U Thimble Skein Pied
mont wagon and have used it pretty mm 1
M t!ie tune and it has provetl to he a Hrt
rate wam. N:thin abont it has iiven
way a id therefore it has required no re
purs. i T. A. W.viro.v.
Sept. Mill. WC.
mrtntiis airo 1 boimht of tin? Aent, m
S tlisburv. a 2J in Thimble Skein Piedmont
wagon
-their 1 1 htes!; one-horse w:ion
uve kept it in atnust constant use and
during the time h ue h in'e I on it at lea. t
loads of wood and tUut wiihont any
' leak i-e or repaits. L. R. V.i, ro..
Restlesskess.
a stuictly cocei,i Hfl&
FAULTLESS FAS'.ILT IRS;
feodum?
B&S5S, A.
PrTlLArELPHlA. WM
Price ONE Dollar BH
WAGONj
AT
A Beautiful Story.
jfAiuAin riwM a mkkch of hen. ci IAKN
A- battle, at tu-cumbia.
.
Danng the waiter of 1803-64 it was
yas.
QC
v .
my fortune to be president of one
. ,
the courts martial of the arm
North Virginia. One bleak December
morning, while the snow covered the
ground and the winds howled around
our camp, I left my bivouac fire to at
tend the session of the court. Y uid-
for raile3 aloftg nnccrtttia paths,
. . . . i
I
at length arrived at the court srroudd.
at liound Oak Church.
it. x. .1 i - . J.. . i. if "a
xj.iy uicr u.iy
ii uau oeen our uiuy to try tne gumni
S:,ldiers of that army charged with
violations of military law; but never
had 1 on any previous- occasion been
greeted by such anxious spectators as
on that morning awaited the opening
of the court, Case alter case was
disposed of, and at length the case of
"The Qon federate States vs. Edward
Cooper," was called charge, desertion.
V low nuirmer rose spontaneously from
1.K 1 Itl J
the battle-scarred snectators. as a vonns?
.n V n P
artillery manrose trom the prisoners
beDch, and in response to the question
"Griilty, or not Guil y?" answered "Xot I
auiity;'
The Jtfle Advocnfe was proceeding
Lto open the prosecution when the
Capri, observ ing that 'the prisoner wits
unattended by counsel, interposed and
enquired of the accused, "Wno is your
counsel?" lie replied: "I have no
counsel." Supposing that it was his
purpose to represent himself before the
court, the- Judge Advocate was in
structed to proceed. Every charge
and specification against the prisoner
was sustained. The prisoner was
then told to introduce his witness
es. He replied, '! have no witnesses."
Astonished with the calmness with
which he seemed to be submitting to
what he regarded as inevitable fate, I
said to liim, "Have you no defence?
Is it possible that yon abandoned your
comrades and deserted your colors irr
the presence of the enemy without any
reason?" He replied: "There was a
reason, but it will not avail me before
a military court." 1 said perhaps you
are mistaken; yon are charged with the
highest crime known to military law,
and it is your duty to make known the
cause which influenced vour actions."
For the first time his manly form trem
bled and his blue eyes swam in tears.
Approaching the President of the court
he presented a letter, saving as he did
so, "lucre irenerai is what aid it. l
ipened the letter and in a moment my
eves in led with tears. It was passed
from one to another of the court until
all had seen it, and those stern warriors
who had passed with btonewall Jack-
son tnrotijfft a nunureu oatties, went
il 1 1 t Villi - i
like children. Soon as I sufficiently
recovered mv self-poessiou, I read the
letter as the defence of the prisoner.
It was in these word:
My Dear Edward: I have always
been proud of you, and since your corir
nectton with the Lonfederite army 1
have been prouder of you than ever
before. 1 would not have you do ari'
thing wrong for the world; but before
God, Edward, unless you come home we
must die! Last night I was moused
bv little Eddie's crying. I called and
said, "What's the matter Eddie?" and
lie said "Oh, mamma, 1 in so hungry!"
And Lucv, Edward, 'Otir darling Lucy;
she never complains, bnt she is growing
thin ler and thinner eveiy day. And
before God, Edward, unless you come
home we must die.
Your Mary.
Turning to the prisoner I asked,
"What did vou do when you received
this letter?" He replied: "I made aj
pilcation for furlough and it was reject
ed; again I made application and it was
rejected; a third time 1 made applica
tion and it was rejected, and that night
as I wandered backward and forward
in the camp, thinking of my home,
with the mild eyes of Luy looking
upon rae, and the burning words of
Marv sinking in my brain, I was no
longer a Confederate soldier, but I was
the father of Lucy and the husband of
Mary, and I would have passed those
lines if every gun in the battery had
fired upon me! I went to my home.
Mary ran out to meet me, her angel
arms embraced nre, and she whispered,
'O! Edward, I am so happy! I am so
glad yoli got your furlough!' She
must have felt me shudder, for she
turned as pale as death, and catching
her breath at every word, she said,
'Have you come without your fur
lough? Oh, Edward, Edward, go
back! go -back! Let me and my chil
dren go down together to the grave,
but (), for Heaven's sake save the
honor of our name!' And here I am
gentlemen, not brought here by mil
itary power, but in obedience to the
command of Mary, to abide the sen
tence or. your court.
Every officer of that court-martial
felt the force of the prisoner's words.
Before them stood, in beautifie vision
the eloquent pleader for a husband's
and a fathers wrongs; but they had
he3ii trained by their great leader,
Robert E. Lee, to tread the path of
duty, though the lightnings flash
scorched the ground beneath their feet
and each in his turn pronounced the
verdict guilty. Fortunately for hu
ni;yiity, fortunately for the Confeder
acy, the proceeding -of the court were
reviewed bv the Commanding General
and upon the record was written:
- Headquarters, 4. N. V.
The fitidinr of the co-art is approved.
The prisoner is pardoned; and will re
port to his company.
R.E. Lek; Genii.
During the gecond battle of Cold
Harlor, when shot and shell were fal
ling "like torrents from the mountain
clo il," my attantion w udirecte 1 1 the
fact that 033 of o ir b itteries wa$ beinsr
siieac3i bj tns c i3i:itratei tirj of the
namy. Whan I re ichaJ the battery
ii. ' j
every fpiu out one liatL oeen UlSUl Ul
tied, and by it stood a solitary Con fed-
crate Sohlier, with the olood "streaming
from his side. As he recocnized me. i
he elevated his voice above the roar of
k..nl :.!. i "t i
oue shftl, Mt. M mtk . M 1 ' ,
mm muu. urtMierai. i nave
honor of M and L , l niised
I my hat. Unce more a Confederate
shell went crashing through the ranks
, of the enemy; and the hero sank by his
gun to rise no more.
Heaven knows; mv countrymen, I
loved the cause, but this in which we
are now ' engaged, is no less sacred,
i We will do our" whole duty in this
Mmiuuitu, tilin, II UV., Ill lilt!
T ? i n p . . . ? . . T
campaign, and, if need be, in the rao-
uieiii oi ueain, nre tne last shot in our
batt for th homr of M d
jJllCy J .
J -,, .. . , ..
1 1 ms little srory is so good that it
will do to reproduce once a year.
It Does Not Pay.
It does not pav to have the mother
and children of twenty families dressed !
1 1 . t mm i
in rags ana starved into the semblance I carpenter and butcher shops, will be
of emaciated scarecrows, and living in quickly transformed into the most deli-lfovels-t
in orderthat the saloon-keeper's ; cate instruments of the surveyor's art.
wile may dress in satin, and her chil-
uren grow iat ana neai ty, ana live m
a bay-window parlor. It does not pay
to have ten smart, intelligent boys
turned into hoodlums and thieves to
enable oue man to lead an easy life by
selling them liquor. It docs not pay
to give one man, for a trifle, a license
to sell, liquor, and then spend an
enormous amount on the trial of Tim
McLaughlin for buying that liquor and
then committing murder under its in
fluence. It does not pay to have one
thousand homes Wasted, ruined, de
filed and turned into hells of dis
order and misery, in order that one
wholesale liquor dealer may amass a
fortune.
It does not pay to keep six thousand
men in the penitentiaries and hospitals,
and one thousand in the lunatic asv
lums, at the expense of the honest, in
dustrious taxpayers, in orderthat a few
rich capitalists jfnaiy grow richer by the
manufacture of whiskey. A saloon
keeper sold a drinking man one pint of
new mm, making fifteen cents clear
profit. The man under the influence
of that pint of rum, killed his son-in-
Pi ll i ii-
law; ana h:.s apprehension, eoniine
ment in jahY execution, etc., cost the
county more than one thousand dol
lars which temperate men had to earn
by the sweat of their brow. It does
not pay ! The loss sustained by socie
ty, morally and financially, the sorrow
and suffering, the misery and destitu
tion, produced and augmented, and
what is infinitely a greater considera
tion than all else, the destruction of
soul and body, the inevitable result of
using and trafficing in intoxicating
liquors these all attest the truthful
ness of the verdict it does not pay !
Reader, it does pay to lead a temperate
life; to be an honest and upright citi
zen; to exert a pure and holy influence
upon mankind and to honor God by a
righteous use of all His gifts. We be
seech you, then, for your own soul's
sake, and for the sake of suffering hu
manity, "touch not, taste not, handle
not, the unclean thing."
VA Literary Cariosity.
The Royal Library tit Stockholm con
tains a remarkable literary curiosity,
called thedevil's code, which is said to
be the largest manuscript in the world.
Every fetter of this gigantic piece of
work is as beautifully formed as if it
were minutely and carefully drawn,and
it seems almost impossible that it should
have been "clone by a single human
being. The devil's code was brought to
Sweden from Prague after the Thirty
Years' War, and the Deutsche Huus-
f ratten Zeltung tells the following
story of its origin : A poor monk who
had been condemned to death was told
that his sentence would he commuted
if he were able to copy the whole of
the code in a single night. Relying
on the impossibility of the task his
judges furnished with the original, pen
and ink, and left him in his well-barred
prison. A drowning man catches at a
straw to save himself, and the unfortu
nate monk begin to try his last impos
sible task with the vain hope of accom
plishing it. Before long, however, he
saw that he could not save fiis life by
i i i i -1 i
nis own wean exertions. Atraiu or a
cruel and certain death, and perhaps
doubt Ug the promise of a better life
hereafV-r, he invoked the aid of the
Prince of Darkness, promising to
surrender his so'ul if he were assisted
in his-task. The dark spirit appeared
as soon as he was called, c included
the contract, sat down like any,
copying clerk, and next morning the
devil's code was finished. Pall Mail
Gazette.
Ko HDps of Enlinj th Siriks.
Pittsburg. Pa.. June 3. The failure
of yesterday's conference b?tweeu oper
atives and strikers to agree upon a set
tlement of the coke lockout, U regarded
as fatal to all hopes of ending the
st ike. H ere are !3,0U0 m?n out.
ry
The Fate of Old Saws.
A cart, heavily 1 den with a peculi.ir
and apparently miscellaneous assort-
nient of rubbish, was making the way 1
laboriously through a west side street
the other day when it attracted the at- '
jtentiou of an inquisitive passer-by. I
! A closer investigation disclosed the fact
igation disclosed the fact
that the rubbish consisted of broken,
distorted and worn-out saws of every 1
description from the cumbersome cross-
cut saw of the lumberman to the finest
and most fragile of the cabinet-maker's
instruments
"What do yon do with this stuff?"
was asked of the good-natured driver
! who sat on his lofty perch in imminent
danger of being bisected bv the teeth
of a villainous looking cross-cut" be
hind him.
"Come along, and I'll show you," he
replied.
The stranger mounted the wagon and
was driven a short distance to a large
manufactory not far distant, which be
longs ton well-known Fulton street firm.
The so-called rubbish was dumped into
the yard, and after being quickly a
sorted by workmen was carried into the
building.
The mystery of the proseedings was
then explained by the superintendent
as follows :
"This apparently worthless collection
of refuse," said he, "has a value beyond
calculation. These old nieces of steel.
which have done years of duty in the
The material of which saws are formed
is of the finest and best-tempered steel
and is just suited for our purposes. If
yon will step this way I will show you
the result."
The superintendent then led the way
to a room in which stood a caseinclos-
! iug a collection of sextants, compasses,
graduated rules, etc., all highly polish
ed and of exquisite workmanship.
"This," said the speaker, "is what
becomes of old saws." New York
Neics.
It is Well to Remember
That anxiety is easier to bear than
sorrow.
That talent is sometimes hid in nnp
kins, audacity never.
That good brains are often kept in a
poor looking vessel.
That an insect has feeling and an
atom a shadow.
That the most brilliant roses bloom
among the sharpest thorns.
That the time to bury a hatchet is
before blood is found upon it.
That no mm is born into the world
whose work is not born with him.
That mistakes are often bought at a
big price and sold at a small one.
Tht leisure is i very pleasant gar
ment, but a bad one for constant wear.
Thut the best way to keep good acts
in memory is to refresh them with new
ones.
That if it were not for emergencies,
but little progress would be made in the
world.
That it is often better to go a good
ways round than to take a short cut
across lots.
That the statement so often m ide in
print that "rest makes rust" is the
veriest rot.
That the lightest of labors are a bur
den to those who have no motive for
performing them.
That men often preach from the
house tops while the devil is crawling
into the basement window.
That contentment is a good thing
until it reaches the joint where it sits
in the shade and lets the weeds grow.
That tears shed kipon a coffin will
not blot out the stins that may have
been cast in life urion the stilled heait
within it.
That many a man sets up a carriage
only to find less of enjoyment in it than
he has had in holding the ribbons from
his "one boss shay'
That if we would do more for others
while we may we should have less re
grets, when too late, that more had not
been done when "it might have been."
Good Housekeeping.
Hot? Did You Liks the Sermon?
Let us, if only for the sake of vari
ety, change this trite commentary on
our Sunday engagements. How did
von eniov the Prayers? How did the
reading of God's
Word
effect you ?
How much reality did you teel in con
fessing your sins? How many of your
sick, weary, sorrowful and sinful
friends did you remember m your
knees? How much did your thoughts
go with the hymns you sung? How
much did you pray that the servant of
God might be blessed in his word, and
that your own soul might be humbled
and assured in the love of Christ?
And how far has the prayer been
answered? Oh, but you say these are
really private questions. Then put
them to yourselves, dear friend. Ex.
A Hey7 York Man Oats 20 Yeara.
New York. June 3. Morris Marx,
convicted of manslaughter in the tir.t
decree in having poured vitriol over
' his landlady, was seateuce 1
to-dav to
. ,i
2 year in the State prison.
Mini Healing and Mini Reading.
A physician in extensive practice was
hitely asked: "What proportion should
you say of those people who send a
servant flying to your office with 'Come
right away!' or make
jingle with, 'Come as
can!' are suffering chief!'
the telephone
quick as you
can! are suffering chiefly from miagi-
nation?" Stroking his beard, the
learned medicine replied: " Well I
might
i
safely put it at two-thirds.
When I arrive, the mere announcement
that it is nothing serious allays the
fear. While I am writing the pre
scription and chatting pleasantly on
some other topic, the last stage of con
valescence has been nearly reached,
and when I say, in assuring tone 'Take
this and you will be all right in the
morning,' the case is settled." In this
connection the doctor was asked what
he thought of "mind cure," which is
now making such a furore. "Medical
ly speaking," he replied, "it is a hum
bug; bnt with patients whose supposed
sickness is 'all in the mind,' it may
work." To this the respondent sum
moned the courage to ask: "Well doc
tor, if your estimate of the number of
lackadaises and hypochondriacs in the
community be correct, why is not the
mind healer a useful member of society,
seeing that to those who have faith in
him he effects as ood results as yon
minus the drug?" Here the doctor
abruptly cut off further debate; but to
the mind of the untutored layman,
the latter question seems not so entire
ly out of order. Bozton Globe.
Odd Discjvery of an Invasion.
The way in wjiich the process of vul
canizing rubber came to be discovered
by the GooJycars was told to a Times,
reporter some years ago by John Dix
on, one of Goodvear's employes. The
mm had a haoit or cnewmg ruooer
11 11 Ml It
much as the modern school
irirl chews
gum. Unci day, while Uixon and an
Irishman were carrying some rubber
on an iron handbarrow to the oven, the
Irishman was taken witl
ing as he passed a barrel of sulphur,
and involuntarily spat out his rubber
cud. It fell into the barrel. Setting
down the barrow, ho made a grab for
it and recovered it. 1 he sulphur, how
ever, adhered to its moist surface, and
he threw it down with an expression of
disgust. It fell upon the barrow, and
was put into the oven with it. When
the barrow was taken from the oven
Dixon saw that the little piece of
rubber had put on a new appearance.
He examined it carefully, and became
convinced that he held in his hand the
key to the discovery Mr. Goodyear had
been searching for. He took the little
thing to Mr. Goodj'ear, who, when be
saw it became much excited. Dixon
told him the circumstances under which
the change had been effected, and Mr.
Goodyear set his son and Dixon at
work experimenting. It was several
months before they succeeded, but they
finally learned the secret of making
vulcanized rubber. New York Times.
Louder, Gabriel!
One of the best replies ever made is
sail to be that of the brilliant but
erratic Tom Marshall, of Kentncy, in
answer to one who interrupted him
while he wjis speaking to a vast audi
ence in Buffalo, N. Y. When Mar
shall was eloquently describing the
glorious liberty, and each sentence fell
from his lips as chaste and beautiful
as the marble block that couios from
the sculptor's hand, some political op
ponent in the audience cried out:
"Louder? Louder!" Marshall did not
at first tumble to the trick, but on
being interrupted by the same crjr,
he paused in his magnificent flight of
eloquence and said:
Mr. President: On the last and
final day of this, our" mortal earth,
when the angel Gabriel shall take his
departure from the blue dome of heav
en and, placing one foot on the rolling
sea and the other upon the land, shall
lift to his Iq s the golden trumpet and
announce in his clarion notes that time
shall be no more; when amid the gush
ing melodies of angelic choirs he shall
announce to the pale formi of the res
urrected dead that the day of immor
tality is at at hand, and the souls of
men shall rise from the tomb, I have
no doubt but that some d d fool from
Buffalo will start up and cry out:
"Louder Gabriel, Louder."
A Brooklyn m in who was looking
about Dakota last fall came across a
deserted sod house, and on the door was
written with chalk the following:
"Two hundred and fifty mile to the
nearest rai'r oad; one hun Ired miles to
the nearest p m! -office; six and a half
raiL's to wood; three miles to water: six
inch? from hell
G;h1 bless our home,
w i f e'x f bl ks ." V o 1 -say
more. And yet
d er. Did he exre.t
Gone to live with
times coald not
th.t man w is a ki
to have water nht m his doorvard.
and a uniformed letter carrier to deliver
his mail? Denrer Tribune.
Beautiful woman, from whence earns
thy bloom,
Thy beaming eye, thy features fair?
What kindly hand on thee was laid
Endowing thee with beauty rare?
11 ;Twas not ever thus," the dame replied,
'Once pale this face., these features bold,
The 'Favorite Prescription' of Dr.
Pierce
Wrought the wonderoua change which
you behold.''
Friendship b a golden coin that
bright.
us VI !l
hthi
u n:ig.
Good Use for Unions.
Those who are in the habit of indul
ging in raw onions mav be consoled
for the mature and able bodied 6dor
which wraps them as a veil and causes
men, women and children to flee rom
their malodorus vicinity, by the fact
that onions are he best nervine known.
No medicine is really so efficacious in
cases of nervous prostration, a:l tiiey
tone up a worn out system in a very
short time. Their absorbent powers are
also most valuable, especially in time"
of epidemic. It has repeatedly been
oljserved that an onion patch in the
immediate vicinity of a house acts as a
shield against the pestilence, which is
very apt to pass over the inmates of
that house. Sliced onion in a sick
room absorbs all the germs and prevent
contagion. During an epidemic, the
confirmed onion eater should eschew
his usual diet, as the germs of disease
are present-in the onions and contagion
can easily result.
A Holiday for the Wife.
Give Tour wife a vacation. She
needs one. Little cares a:e harder to
bear than greater responsibilities, and
she has many more cares than her hus
band, and sometimes as great responsi
bilities. A woman's work is never
done. And modern life has increased
and intensified it Cares have multi
plied faster than conveniences. Life
is more complex, it demanckare great
er and more numerous, society more
exacting. Who needs a vacation if she
does not? And she cannot get it at
home. The more quiet and restful
the home is to you, the more evidence
that it is a care, if not a burden to her.
A housekeeper can no more take a
vacation in her home than a merchant
1 . 1 -mm .a
in his counting house
h,ven
though
ner absence occasions inconvenience,
give her an occasional vacation. .
Selected.
The South is full of booms, and
there are many obscure places appeal-,
iug to the public for favor and money,
but it would be difficult to find a town
which has so many attractions as a lo
cation for manufactories and a place of
residence as the beautiful old city of
Nashville. Nashville is the wealthiest
city per capita in the South. She has
been unconsciously working np to her
present great enterprise for a hundred
years. The town of West Nashville
is immediately west of the old city, and
the location combines charming scenery
with the most complete advailability
for manufacturing and business pur
poses. It will be rather strange if Jhe
auction sale of lots to be held by the
Nashville Land improvement Company
the 2 t-lh, 23th, 2 th and 23th of this
month is not a brilliant success.
"3The joys of parents are secret, and
so are their griefs and fears.
1 TRADE
MARK.
OntloiTMTi Tt1s da mm to wit that 1
taken Kwift'e Specific. 1 have Ixx-u trutilrfpu with il wry little itr mj face kiucc last ririDf.'.
At the beginning of cold wither list fall it titedc a alight appearance, bat wept awi.y an-1
i.aa never returned. S. S. 8. no doubt broke it up: at least It put my system in good cftitditlcii
and I pot well It also benefited my wife RKatly In rac of sick headache, uiid made a perfect
cure uf a breaking out on my little three year old daughter last samnu-r. I
Watk!nvillc, Ga., Feb. 1, 1836. lUtv. J.U1J2S V. IL XOHRIS. J
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free.
The Swirr Srecrnc Cn., P rawer S, Atlanta, Ga.
Aug. 28, 1S86. ly
Thonaauxl Trial .
mailed to j (w
Bmmmm lien taulnrcs proportion
rALifiljt.in whamtuiilc u full treat
cant ond troro restored vobeulth by usool V
iW SEMINAL PASTILLES,
A Radical Cure lor I.reroaaDebU:tr,jrran'':
tie At-1 Mn. Tostod for Kigat Years in r
iQuouii 4 nr.r.ri i .ley atnnmyeij itbi(tj jirmnsii .rwi j
ad and broken dowa men totbofnii onjovrmat of
S?rfeet and fall Manly Btrensjth and Viimronnh'aelth.
Totho&ewhoeaCer from tho tnwny obwrora n neees
Prnia about by Indiacrotioa.Exiorom.Ovor-ih'nin,
Work, or too f reo Indnlrcenrn, wo nsk that yon eend us
ypr iudo with fitateraent of yoar trouble, and aodnre
XXUAXlAf JKAOB FRKS, wi'h JUcsf 'd rarai.hlet.An.
RUPTURE3 PERSONS can havo FREQ
2o:ly
mm
CASHAGAINSTCREDIT
FARMERS
Look to Your Interest.
One Dollar in cosh or barter at .1. Rowan Davis' store, Mill Bridge, Bowas
county, will buy more goods than one dollar and fifty cents on a credit with
thosestores which sell on mortgage If you don't believe it, try one year and sc
what vou will save. Come and examine
Spring
And especially the Price3. Just received Dry and Fancy floods, hxr, Hats
Piece Goods, Hardware, &c. I am now in receipt ol" the best line of
GROCERIES
Ever in stock, consisting of Syrups, Coffee, Bacon, Rollejj Mill Flour, Kev
Orleans Raw Sugar, and many othe things cot mentioned. Fresh Garde
Seed for 1887. Give mc a call. Respectfully,
'AX
Southerners the Strongest Friends of
the American Union. -
What a remarkable man is Jefferson
Davis. He liveirto witness the death
of nearly all his contemjHimries under
the old government, and has seen a
large majority of his tradueers consign
ed to the grave, ami yet he lives on and
not only does not lagSupcrflu0us on
the stage, but retains to a wonderful
degree the brilliant and vigorous! intel
ligent which has characterized Iris re
markable career. W henevcr H proper
occasion offers is he heard fnm; and
when he puts in his blow he retires grace
fully until another call is nimle-t upon
him. His latest speech to the Southern
boys was tot he effect that we sue iow in
the Union, and next time it is broken
the attempt must bo made from another
quarter. A senfinent which hns been
crystaiized in the Southern hearty and
strange as it may appear, yet ltisja fact,
thut the strongest friends of the Amer
ican Union to-day arc'to bejottnd in
JL . 0' ii Pi.'
me oouiucru oiuies. ". i
Royal Grandeur in Afiica.
The author of "Notes in SoutH Afri
can Hunting" llatcrthe following: I
went to call on a king ,wifh (a man
wno Knew u:e proper way 10 an u.
We called in after a long day's shoot-
1.1
nip.n i) uiiiijr nun nun. in . lv hic um
man." On arriving at a circular mud
hut, we hitched our horses to a log and
walked in. No one was to be seen, -so
my friend set to work to shout. Fancy
shouting for a real live king 3 Pre
sently a hideous old hag, with a small
freehold garden on kcr, and clot lied in
an old skin that a London bagman
would pass by in disgust, came in and
told us that the chief had been unwell
all day, but would come out and see us.
This meant that he had been asi drunk
as Chloe for a week past. Soon a blear-
eyed, filthy, smelly, disgusting, old
drunkard came in and sat down.; on the
floor with a grant. Then he asked for F
some tobacco. As we had onlr good
tobacco, we said we hadn't any.; Then
he asked for brandy; subsequently for a.
coat, a pair of trousers, some boots, or
a hat; and the interview fi'nisheif up by
his trving to sell us a dozen "of his.
wives for a bottle of brandy.
Ql
The Citadel of Chivalry!
A young lady said at the recent meet--ing
at the Woman's Christian Tempers'
ance union in Savannah: "Cpivalryv
which has fled from all other quarters,
has taken refuge in the newspaper of
tices." Its unnecessary to state that
this young lady is the prettieki and.
11. it il
imguiesyt representative or no .sex, in
Georgia
-Nashville Union.
The stamps we pay two cen4 apiece"
for costs the government seven, cents a.
thousand. The government evidently
wants the cjirth. Puck.
ERADICATED.
think I am entirely veil r.f eezem.i after haviaj
dim (or there trouble, and all OwaeSm.
w boss onlrajBi Is to h lead thatrri-
CUUEU toossMU. dues not MB
viiu attention to Luj:t.rn, er justinis
oriseoiirenitDc in aer wit 7tdl
n icienLise nodical ftWMM Bydlrsrt
nScsnecis felt without delay. The salami
tionsnf the hnmnn areanum wJst Tk
i :r-;,nn 10 vie m omirti
wasted subnet Inc rlezncr.rt of lifaarsciren hae, (alt paries!
becomes eaearXaiaod issarflyipaas both sasjsgb aiihssltfi
TSLil7EErf.--Cir8y.a,3. gco EeiH Ttst If
HARRIS REMEDY CO.. Kfo Cmnrn
BOOM W. Tenth Etroet. CT.LoiTM. nr
Trial of our Appliance. Ask for Tcrm
my excellent line ct
Goods.
J. ROWAN DAVIS.