KLe Carolina Watchman. 5 - . 1 VOL XIX. THIRD SERIES. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER NO. 4. 9 fc BPS Far worn-out," "rwtMlown," dcbimaicu school teachers. miHtm-rt. CTmsttx hoi c iMpm, ud orar-worked wtBiwn pcneraliy. SEISED lvortt, Of fctrwtonitJ ve tonics. It is not.". Cure-U, bat admlntWy MlMls a rtnsrhjeis of l?srpce, - Swc Oo for Oil tbOM JLs. wknMM and Diseases peculiar to Weaknesses and Diseuvs peculiar r mnwerfuL imiera! n well Uterine, tonic and nervine, anJ li.umrts viror and atrentli to the whole system. It promptly EES waaktieas of stomach inlijrf-stion. Motfr law ireak back, nervous piostration. debility and akaiulanwa. in either sex. favorite Prtv asiiption is sold hr druvnrists under mir V" n MMnt Rm wranner around bottle. rrtee 91.00, or ! bottles for SS.OO. rae treattse on utser..-s oi uiwn. imu lllustrntod with colored plates and mv- wood-ei it, sent Tor iu eenrs in smm 1.5. J as, Wnm.ns ihspkxsakt mibimi. mo5, 3 Main Street. Buffalo. N. Y. HCADACBEt ftflious IIaMjcae, id Const ipatton. pnmipny cur Dr. Pierces PefJct. Sc. a vial, by druaYisU. fx EDMONT WAGON, MADE AT HICKORY, N. C. CAN'T BE BEAT! They stantl where thev ought to, right square AT THE F33NT! It Was a Hard Fight But They Have Won It ! Just read what people say about them and if you want a wagon come quickly and buy one, cither for cash or on time. Sai.imjcky. N. C. rjrpt. 1st. Two years ago I lou-ht a very liyht two Kara Piedmont wagon of lUe Agent, Jno. A.. Bejden; have used it nearly ail the time ee. have trietl it severely in liaulnijr saw ors and other heavy loads, and have not had to pay one cent for repairs. I 1 .k apon the Piedmont wagon athe4et Thim ble Skein wagon made in the United Stnjtes. TU tinrtwr used in tltetn i most-exceljent sad thoroughly well aeaaoned. TuitNEa P. Thomao. Salsbckt. N. C. An-'. 27th. lee. AUout two yeirs nn I Imught of Jno A. Hoyden, aone "horse Piedmont wagon which baa done much service aud no prut of it has broken or given away and consequent Iv it haa cost nothing for repairs. Joun D. IIexlt. s BALf5BCftT. X. C. Sept. 3 1, 18C. Eighteen months ago I bought of John A. Boyden, a 2$ inch Thimble Skein Pied mont Wagon and have used it pretty much all tha.ttme and it has proved to Ik; a tir-t-rata wagon. Nothing about it has given . war and therefore it has required no re pairs. T. A. Waltok. Sai.isct:kt. N. C. Sept. 8th. 1886. 18 months ajo I bouaht of the Ajgenjt, in talisbury. a ti in Thimble Skein Piedmont wagon their lightest one-horse wagon I hare kept it in almost constant ue and during the time hive hauled on it l least 7i loads of wood and tbafwithout any breakage or repairs. L. R. Waltok. FOR SALE. One Brick House and lot, on the corner f Fulton and Kerr streets, about one acre in lot. One Frame House and lot on Lee street. One Frame House and lot on Main street. AUo shares in N. C. R. R. Enquire of Mrs. H. E. ami Miss Vic toria Johnson at their home on Main street. 40: tf GERMAN CARP:- I can furnish carp ...targe or tm:Ul. ta any auiintil y .for n oc!Une poa4f. For terms. aUdress W. K. Kit A LEY Sal saarr, N. C. 7:tf WEAK IUN DEVELOPED KKTto( kA.i,m.,m,..,. 'iwn inn run in or nwr. It S-nlT fo innu COUGHENOUfi i SHAVER, DEALKRS IN FRESH MEAT AND ICE. Tbe choicest BEEF the market atTords always on hand. 50:3m STOVES AND HEATERS. COOK STOVES 'AND RANGES. I have the best and prettist lot of Coal and Wood Stoves ever offered in tins market, many of them of the latest aud most approved patents suitable for par lors, dining rooms, stores, offices,ehurches, school houses, shops and sitting rooms. Laifee and small. Call and see them aud near prices. J Ms. Wm. BROWN. rn acres or good land. 6 mil nil from Salisbury, ca the Concord road w w terms reasonable for cash. '-C PiB2U! LPDWICS 5 a nw.w.wi -. T in.L iiimph i. no .flil.,M Ar nnmhn. Q'. t"i -.MiirrT.ihHTinri r tr sirrUf r.in,l,.n,n,l, ... yw F ;is ! CKmI BALM Cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Fain andlnnamma tlon. He ah the Sons. ' Bsstores I th.3 Senses of Tast : and Smell TRY THE CURE CATARRH is a disease of the mucous memhrane. geuerally originating: in the nasal pas sages and maint inning its stronghold in the heart. From this point it sends forth a poi.oiioa virus into the stomach and through the digestive organs, corrupting i he blood and producing other trouble some and daugeroua symptom?. . - - - ' " " v .': ' I --('! A pmicle la ftppltel Into each nostril, and Is ajrreeable. Price 50 cents ;it "lrujrist3: toy nuill re-.rlst.eren, cents. ELY BUOS., i33 Greenwich Street, New York. Subscribe for the Carolina Watchman. If You Wish a God Article Of Plug Tobacco, ask your dealer foi -T "Old Rip." CATARRH This .space is reserved for VV. H. Reisner, The Jeweler. J 27: ly THE ONE PRICE STORES OF KLUTTZ RENDLEMAN Are still oflMm tls Largest aid Best Selected Stock of NEW GOODS, At the Lowest Prices in Salisbury. We are Heeeivins New G-oods Daily. Big lot of Underwear, just in, at 25 cts:, to the best Lambs Wool. OVERSHIRT8, 75 cts. to $1 75. PURE WOOL SOCK.S, all color?, 25 cts. New Stock of CARPETS, RUGS and HASSACKS. NECKWEAR, enough for everybody, at prices that sell them. Big Assortment of CLOTHING, DRY GOODS and NOTIONS. HATS Boy's and Men's New Hats from 25 cts. up. Brass Bound Buckets 25 cts. Brooms for everybody, the biggest assortment in town, from 12$ to 40 cts. Sugars, 6T, 1, Si and 10 cts., and lots of Good Things. REMEMBER WE YOU CHEAP FOR YOURSELF. XLUTTZ & RENDLEMAN. 39:ly. a pti nam SEEKING HOME Fatroiap. AGENTS In all Cities, Towns .and Villages in the Sout). TOTAL ASSETS, - - $750,000 00. J. ALLEN BROWif, Eesideot Agent, Salisbury, H. 0. ran Sv I, r ppymasaaassgi mi.'d to . Ospvirv liMilarroiro:'rfuiij rALBoUt.uiwi)Oipwji'iir. lulitrsi-tj i u nueo.nte!7 rwr.-a rreir.f..cre:T r-jfe ad fnUMjal; Strength f YjmSSrn HssJth. T2akta!iot by JQMTattssE-vwUvaaKEa WetlL snstMS, Mbsa w ask that roa md us rmrfisaawitaststraMntetygortrocblw. asd securtt TSlALtAOXAOF. FRK?Vwtbd nuTWBSD rCKSOOT can tvo r r.SS 20:ly I1 hSIS& -.SEMINAL PASTILLE asH aaaaa hWeUIVWaV Unfailing Specific for Liver Disease. SYMPTOMS KUmr m bad su in lUiriUffffOi moth; tonrue coated white or covered with a brawn for; pain in me uhck. smex, or Jouits often lor itneumaiiaia ; sour stomach ; j appetite; sometimes nauaea and bnud), or indlpestloa ; flatulency and . eructations; bowels alternately oastlva and lax ; headache ; loss of memory, with a painful sensation of having failed to do something which ought to have been done; debility low spirits; a thick, yellow ap pearance of the Ekln and eyes; a dry cough; fever; restlessness; the twine is scanty and high colored, and, if allowed to ttand, deposits a sediment. SiMMOrfS LIVER REGULATOR iPURCLV VEGETABLE) Ik Renerally used in the South to arouse the Torpid I J ver to a healthy action. M sets with c xiraordinsry sfflescy en the and BOWELS. AM IT, ECTUAL SPECIFIC FOI j aXalarla, Bowel Complaints, lyppsia, Sick Headache, Coasttnation. BUftausateas. . Jiiiincy AiU'cllom, daanl lice. Colic flientai Depression, Endorsed by the mcof 7 THE BEST FAMILY MEDICINE for Children, for Adults, and for the Aged. ONLY GENUINE hat cur Z Sump in red on front of Wrapper. J. H. Zeih'n & Co., Philadelphia, Pa., SOLS PKUPKIKTOKS. friOS. t.OO. T BUY YOUR PRODUCE AS WELL AS SELL CASH OR BARTER. COME AND SEE FOR A STRONG Comjaij PROMPT! ii Reliaole ! Liberal ! J. RHODES BROWNE, JflfrsiDent. William C. Coakt St t utar?. vrrfd LM ki err en trnmaaa. fig all IKED thousand. . t.... on texzUac medical arfiwutln. Bvdinct or lassa ui any it Foondra rippxranom u Mai FIQiHur iU to lleatioatotlMl ssask - A'. funrf ioua of tha ka iKmiiPfil fe't WiUinut dfltT. The iu MMd ubntlac ckantnai life an c . m back. Ika patient TEEATMEMT. tJ UmXh. P. TtsKmlH tt, (7 HARRIS REMEDY CO., rc COaWn. 8O0W jr.TcathStrtet.ST.rJTTm n Tk Trial cfour Applianoe. AaX for Terms I BY J. J. BBUXER. , ,.-r- $ 1 The Winston Ttria-City Daili, says : ...... . i m All the iron and steel for the Texw State Capital at Austin was bought m England at $175,000 leas than the same could have been purchased for in this country, duty included. The Winston Ttcm-Ctty Daily says : Professor Proctor figures that the earth is shrinking alxut two inches a year. That accounts lor the nervous anxiety manifested by some people to possess it while it is of some size. The painting in the dome of the capitol at Washington is the largest in the world, and cost 50,000. The unfinished frieze work at the base of the dome is now being completed by an Italian artist who is employed" bv the government at ten dollars a day. Those in charge sent a long way for a cheap man. It is- auiiuiuited thwt the oleomar garine law will be severely handled by Commissioner of Internal Revenue Miller in his coniinsr annual reuor. Nobody complains of the license tax, he says, save the retail dealers, and he will recommend that this feature of the law be modified as it is oppressive and unjust under the existing condition. It is claimed that the law has actual! v worked in the interests of tl e oleomar garine men whom it was de signed to hurt. Government supervision and stamps simply give an official indorse ment to the article. The commissioner ! A says tne law n is been saccesstully en forced but its workings are far different in results trom wuat was anticipated by the dairy men. Rings in Trees. Mr. R. W. Furras, an agent of the U. S. Foresting Department, who has given much attention to tl e age ox trees, as indicated by ring, as well as to the age at. which different species of trees stop growing, says : Concentric or annual rings, heretofore accfcptrd a evidence, are not proof of the age cf the tree. And iu support of this as sertion mentions many ii stances of trees known to have more rings than years of growth, aud soni which had iTewer rings than years of growth. The variations are very considerable; some trees producing from two to twelve v it l rings in a year, ana others producing none. The trees east oi the Rocky Mountains, or alon the shores of tlu Atlantic, arc not so long-lived as those on the Pacific A TREIBL FIGHT. Eight Lions and their Trainer Battling in a Cage. A London cable dispatch to the New York oun says : Jvirly this morning there was a fearful and exciting battle iu the jubilee exhibition at Liverpool Delmonico, the most plucky tamer of beasts, h:ts been exciting the nerves of the visitors for a lonr time by trifling in a cage with three big forest lions Five more lions, of a different kind, but very big also, arrived from Africa yesterday, and were put at once into the big cage with the three already at home there. They had no training but Delmonico went in among them and thrilled the crowd that filled the menagerie by an unusually sensational performance. When he had done, Mile. Kora, hi partner, went in with the lions and took a little dog. I his was reteited four times during the day, and the five new lions were too much stunned by the huge, noisy crowd about th m aud the repeated visits of the lady, gentleman, and dog, to think of anything else Their astonishment had not worn off, and they were still quiet when left alone for the night by the attendants at 10 o'clock. Shortly after midnight, however, the n I 1 1 1 t atl.l menagerie was nuea wun a Trigiittui roaring and snarling, and a servant sleeping on the premises rushed in to find the big iron cage rocking and the eight lions fighting furiously, rolled up into a huge dark ball from which the blood-stained fur was flying in all di rections. The huge beasts rolled over and over, dashing madly against the si-les of the cage aud biting pieces out of each other with a ferocity that was sickening. All the sights organized to gratify man s fondness for lighting would have seemed the tamest child s play in comparison. After awhile it became evident that there were two distinct sides in the bat tle, and the new arrivals were pitted at unfair odds against the lions who had been in possession. The efforts of the servants to separate them only increas ed the r lory, and at last he rushed off for Detniouico, who was asleep uear I ;v ill Edge lane. The trainer arrived half clad and found bis lions bleeding fear- ftillv, but still fighting. rati i .ii i . ine uatne was narrowing down to a duel between two of the biggest lionp, which were rapidly biting each other to pieces iri trie middle of tne cage, uc- i& J Uttje ameneral, and for a few seconds there would be a wiW jlimblc of 8narHllg liom with a garage crunching of teeh to tell how the flesh was being torn. The ap Peri pearance of Delmonico with a red- iron produced an effect, and all the two chief combatanta stopped fiflitinrr and nmtnY&A ciilloiilx- rlnm-n lickioc their bloody wounds and snarl- ins encourasrement to the two leaders. , On these in their rage hot iron was useless, even when applied to raw flesh. The lions responded to the burning sen sation only by tearing away at each other mo.ie fiercely. k . -a . a at . At last Delmonico, fearing lie would lose bis two greatest actors, took a reso lution which would probabWoot hare occurred to any other man if the exis tence of the entire animal creation had been threatened. He entered the cage half-clad as he was and shut himself in. He next opened a door communicating with a second cage and drove into it like so many sheep the six lions that had been looking on. Meanwhile the other lions were still fighting, although much weaker. Del imrn iwr tempt to separate them were useless. They paid not the slightest attention to him, and although in their struggles they dashed against him, they were evidently unconscious of his presence. Before the tamer could form any plan to separate them the fight ended of itself. The big forest lion, who had lieen defending his home against the five strangers, rolled over on his back, growled faintly and died as the other seized him again by the throat. One of the front legs was gnawed off com pletely, a hind leg was chewed to a uulp, all of the inane and most of the neck was bitten awav, and the body was covered with blood, as was the entire cage. There was not on the dead lion in unbitten wholepiece of skm large enough to have made a glove. He had fought for his rights just as long as he had been able to work his teeth and claws. The victor seemed at first inclined to dash at the tamer and at the lions in the neighboring cage, but he changed his mind under Delmonico s eye, and after a weak but triumphant roar over the body of his victim he retired into a corner and moaned over bis wounds. Although conqueror, he was not to be envied. His mane was gone and his bodv looked as thtrasrh an especially wicked harrow had been repeatedlv 1 ragged over it. Blood trickled from a hundred ugly wounds, and there is little hope that he will live. Curiouslv enough, not one of the lions had its tail bitten off in the frav, which seems to indicate that some code of honor exists among lions which prevents them from making each other ridiculous even in the deadliest combat. The Widow's Daughter. Detroit Free Press. in tne winter ot ioo4, while a por tion of my regiment, the 23th New York Cavalry, was at Pleasant Valley, A a 1. a l lid., to obtain a reuxouat, worn was received bv the post commander that a Confederate scout named William Bax ter, but who was known lo us as "Bil ly Bowlegs," was on a visit to his mo ther, who lived between the Potomac at that point and a villiage in Virginia called Union town. There were a num ber of Col. Kane s "Buektaifs" scouting for the Federals and making Pleasant Valley their headquarters; and as 1 had been detailed on several occasions for cout service, and had made a good rec ord, I was instructed to select five men and cross the river and secure "Billy dead or alive. The fact that he was at home was fully established, and the location of the farm house was known a a 1 to two of the men who accompanied me. We were ferried across the Poto mac one evening at dusk, just where the long highway bridge had ben burned, and then we had a walk of about eleven miles to make. Although Billy Bowlegs" was a fearless man and a handy shot, we didn't figure that it needed five men to capture him. I he country between the river and Uniontown was then overrun with bushwhackers and gner HI las, and we anticipated more or less trouble with them. The scout had been twice captured by the Federals, and he was described to us as sleuder build, medium height fair complexion and dark eyes. Enough was known about his nerve to know that he would not be taken alive if he had any show to fight, and therefore as we approached the house about mid T a ..11 nignt iroui across a new we were anx iously wondering how we should get at hun. if we broke in we might and probably would find him in bed. It vsis a still, clear night, rather cold, and we hung about for half an hour before adopting a plan. Then we decided to break in the doors.. wo.of us weut to the front and two to the back door, while the fifth mail stood ready to re ceive the scout in case he dropped from a second story window, supposed to be in his bedroom. We crept softly up, and at a signal both doirs were burst -. No they weren't! Neither of them gave an inch under the pressure, and in response j to the efforts we made a woman's voice call out: j "Who is it, and what's wanted? ! LLf xl. J i i 1 vpen down!" the door or wll breek it "Wait one minuter She struck a light, and we heard her moving about, and in a cou pie of min utes the front door opened and a gray haired woman of 45 stood there with a candle in her hand. Union soldiers, eh? Come right in, she said, smiling, as if glad to see us. I posted three of the men around the bouse and entered with the other, and as soon as I was inside I said: "Madam, we have come for vour son. We know he is here. We shall take him, dead or alive." Oh, vou have come for Bill v. have youT exclaimed a girl about 18 years of age who came running down stairs at that moment. "Excuse me, gentle men, for not being fully, dressed, but yon didn't send us any word. one rauznea in a merrv wav. wniie CI 1 I 1 I 1 he mother smiled good-naturedly. She ad on a neat fitting calico dress, a ribbon at her neck, and except thai -her hair looked ''tumbled she looked as well prepared as if she expected our coming. "Yes, Jennie, they want Billy, -said he mother as she placed the ui wiMt on "And we are bound to take him, dead or alive!" I added in a loud voice, uspecting the scout was within hear- . ' "Oh, how sorry: laughed the girl. "If brother Billy had only known you were coming! But he didn't, you see, and so he went away at dark. He'll never forgive himself, never." "We must search the house, I said. "Oh, certainly: Mammy you light mother candle and I'll show the gen tlemen around. Perhaps the sight of Billy's old clothes would do them good." Well, sir; we minted that house from attic to cellar, and all we founl was an old suit of Billy's clothes. The scout had skipped, and the best 1 could do was to apologize to mother and daugh ter, accept a midnight luncheon at the hands of the latter, and take the back rack for the river. 1 11 own up, too, hat I was "dead gone" on Jennie be fore I left, and that I said to her, as 1 squeezed her hand at parting: "When the war is over 1 m coming to ask you to be my wife." "And and 1 II s ly say y-e-s, she whispered in my ear. W e eot back to the ferry soon after da light, and there met a Union farm er living neighbor to the widow. W hen he heard what we had been up to he asked: "Was the widow all alone?" "No her daughter Jennie was there." "Daughter Jennie? Describe her." "Good looking girl of medium height, black eves and hair, aud a sweet talker. I m going back to- marry her after the war is over. "Bet vou a farm you don't. That ar gal, Jennie, was nobody else but a T a a a that ar' scout Billy Bowlegs! He jist jumped into some or ms mammy s a clothes, and you pig head couldn t see through it. He was right. I met Billy in liar per's Ferry after the war and tie want ed to know it I bed trafcen out the mar riage license yet. Never Swear. 1. It ia mean. A boy of high moral standing would almost as soon steal sheep as to swear. I. It is vulgar- altogether too low for a decent boy. 3. It is cowardly implying a fear of not being believed or obeyed. 4. It is ungentlemanly. A gentle man, According to ebster. is a gen teel man well bred, refined. Such i man will no more swear than go into the street to throw mud with a chim ney sweep. 5. It is indecent offensive to deli cacy, and extremely unfit for human ears. 6. It is foolish. "Wartt of deceucv is want of sense." 7. It is abusive to the mind which conceives, the tongue which utters it, and to the person at whom it aimed. 8. It is venomous showing a boy' heart to be a nest of vipers; ami every time he swears one of them sticks ou its head. 0. It is contemptible forfeiting the respect of all the wise and good. 10. It is wicked violating the di vine law, and provoking the displeasure of him who will not hold him guiltless who takes his name in vain. Haiti more Methodist. An Indian Community. The population of the Cherokee na- 1 I L t A AAA HI li tion is aoout -,iav. a ue nauou com prises 11.000,000 acres of some of the finest land in the world. Of this 5,000, 000 are "occupied, and o,uuu,uuu are leased to cattle syndicates. The Chero kee country is rich in mineral resources Some of the finest coal beds in the country are now in process ot develop ment. It is well wooded, well watered, and is equally applicable to cattle rais ing or agriculture. The land is held in common. Any Cherokee citizen can cultivate as much land as he feels like, provided he does not infringe on the claim of his neighbor. He can fence in any amount of unoccupied domain he desires to cultivate, but must leave ; a sp ice ot a quarter of a mile between I . ' 7 .... , l .x. bis fence and that of tne next piania- tion. this vacant space is used as a common for grazing and road purposes, -Rochssttr Democrat. Words of Wisdom. No fears. one loves the man Mirth ia the heat ph vsician for man s toils. Mildness of address and manner is by nq, means an unimportant seasouincr to friendship. If yon are terrible to many, then be ware of many. Not bv years, but by disposition, it wisdom acquired. Wish to be what yon are, and con sider nothing preferable. The art of exalting lowliness and giving greatness to little things is one of the noblest functions of genius. Let us help the fallen still, thoogh they never pay us, and let t lend, without expecting the usury of grati tude. One of the original tendencies of the human mind, fundamental and univer sal, is the love of other people's priyat affairs. The man to whom virtue is but the ornament of character, something over C and a not essential to it, not yet a ma?- Promise not twice to any roan the service yon may be able to render him; and be not loquacious if you wish to be esteemed for your kindness. Never hold any one bv the button or the hand in order to be heard out. or if people are un willing to hear vou. yon had better hold your tongue than tnem. There are many shifts and charges. but if we stand still, and bide our time, the current which was thin way to-day, will set in an opposite direction to-morrow; and if it should not do so, what is hat to us ? The bitterest tears shed over graves are for words left unsaid and deeds left undone. "She never knew how I loved her." "He never knew what he was to me. l til ways meant to make mora of our friendship." Such words are the poisoned arrows which cruel death shoots backward at us from the door of the sepulchre. Where he Learned it. He was a pretty little fellow, but it wa his manners, not his looks, thai attracted evervbodv clerks in th stores, people in the horse cars, men. women and children. A boy four years old who, if any one said to him, "How do you do?" answered. "I am well. thanks," and if he had a request to 1 , MM- . make, oe it of friend or stranger, began it with "Ple:ise." And the beautv of it was that the "thanks" and "please" were such a matter of course to the child that he never knew he was doing anything at all noticeable. "How cunning it is," said a showy woman to his mother as they sat at the public table of a hotel oneday, "to hear the child thank tire waiters and say 'pLeW wften he wants anything. I never saw anything so sweet. My children have to be constantly told if W sal a. a. . - l want them to thank people. Hoar well you must have taught him, that he never forgets." "He has always been accustomed to it, said the mother. We have always said 'please' to him when we wished him to do anything, and have thanked him. He knows no other way." The showy woman looked as if she did not need any further explanation of the way in which habits are formed. Probably you do not.- Widt Awake. Ten Useful Maxims. 1. Never put off till to-morrow whnt you can do to-day. 2. Never trouble others. 3. Never spend your money before you have it. 4. Never buy what you do not want because it is cheap. 5. Recollect that pride is more irk some to be borne than either hunger, thirst, or cold, 0. Never feast so that you will he obliged to fast after it. 7. Nothing is felt troublesome that is done willingly. 8. Never anticipate evil an imagin ed calamity is always more painful than the real one. 0. Always take hold of things by their smooth handle. 10. Always count 10 before you speak, if angry if greatly so, count 100. A Large Estate. A broad land is this in which we live, dotted so thickly with thrifty cities, towns and villages ! Amid them all, with ever-increasing popularity and helpfulness, is Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery, giving hope and cheer where there is disease and de spair. Wherever there is humanity there is suffering; wherever there is suffering there u the best field for this greatest American Remedy. Consump tion (which is lungrscrofula), fields to it. if employed in the early stages of the disease: Chronic Nasal Catarrh, j yields to it; Kidney and lavcr diseases, t I J i... t If w,n want, lha B t vrem w i . . known remedy for all diseases of the blood, , ask tor ir. rierce s vomer a - cal Di-covery, and t ike no oiU.-. i a, - :