A Majijtratp'i Offics. 3ViJo Mirror, the office of Justice of th Prace Is aTeriniKrtant on( gorxl for the preserratinn of peace, good order and bound Morals. It is h ioore potent ,md important factor than the Super ior Court, nad can wield a more bene ficial ad .-wholesome influence upon Ihe conduct of a community. How im pertent it is then that good men should Jiold the scales of Justice in this very impo.tent office. A magistrate should fl a man of strong and positive and decided conviction of what is right, ithd what is wrong. Ifc should have 4 tnind of his own, and not stand feady Jo be ,waved by the slightest (influ ence. Jle should be above prejudice, fiboxe temptation, and far removed rom the remotest semblances of brib ery and corruption. His official robe should not have a spot of suspicion on it, but be ready any time to be Md up for the most rigid -scrutiny aid inspec tion. The stream of Jiis adjudication, "however small and narrow and shallow its current, should always flow with stainless tides of crystal purity. There shouM be no dregs of corruption mingling' with its waters of justice, soiling "and polluting and coloring jfcheirflow. Every ripple should be as chaste as a moon Warn, and as .free from stain as the glittering rays which come dazzling down from the God of Day. TJie decision of a magistrate should command as much respect as the decree of the Judge on the Bench, and his ruKngs should be characterized by the same fairness and inflexibility, and stand as far removed from all sus picion of being weighed in the scales of undue influences as the sun is from the earth, The office of the magis trate is an important one--a very im portant one and should be filled only by men of good judgment, sound sense and with an integrity as bright and as spotless as the stars that gem ihe coronet of niglrt. Deaf and dead in every emotion of "fear, favour or hffectiou, reward or the hopeof re Ward," a magistrate should stand as immovable upon his pedestal of right and honor as a rock inbeded moun tain amid the raging of the storm. This being the case, the office of mag istrate is then robed in awe and re spect, and no decisions lire then re garded with the eye of suspicion. Kvery one who holds the scales of -justice, should be like Calpljurnia above every imputation of wrong and dishonor. They cannot be too careful, too painstaking, too jealous of their reputation and their honor, for when they dream not, the Argus eyes of the public are upon them, and the busy and k'-enlv sharpened scalpel of a well directed criticism is cutting down into theirotfieial nuotomy, anuexposihg all the gangrene or dishonor which may be festering there. The Fascination of Niagara. u Never " said an; old resident of the village, have I known of so many people going over the falls as during fl . . i-i . il. t.-- ne past six ukjuwis. jjanng mat time some eiglit or nine persons have been known to puss over, three of which have been deliberate suicides. It is u source of wonder to many people living here why persons will come from a dis tance to ,Niagara apparently to commit suicide. The press dispatch sent out from Biughamton under the impression that the last suicide was a Miss Mead, of that place, says that a young lady visit ed this placu a short time ago and has been "strangely fascinated with'Niag ' ara ever since." It is a well known fact that scarcely any two persons have the same impression when first looking upou the rapjds or falls. Only U few evenings since your co-respondent heard a clergyman in a neighbor ing city make this remark! "I never look upon Niagara above the tails but that there is a strong desire to get into the water, lie down and go with it. 1 have no thought of suicide, but it al ways seems to me as if it would be pleasant to go with the water." j A ladyi'rom Rhode Island was mak ing her first visit to Niagara, and was standing on one of the Sister Island bridges looking into the rapids under neath. She hurriedly took the arm of her companion and asked to leave the Et.j Upon reaching the center of it Island she sank upon a seat, (seem ly exhausted and very nervous. When asked the cause, she saidi: " I don't know wliatcame over me, but if 1 liad stood en the bridge another mo ment nothing couid have prevented me jumping in to the rapids." -! Why," . said her friend, udo you wish to commit suicide? " urou loroiu: saiu sne. " j was the furthest thought. -but there was an impulse which I could not control, and r do not think I jould dare live at Niagara." " Others have experienced .a similar sensation . Niatja ra Cor. Buffalo Ex press, John Brown's "Fort" jn Danger. John Brown's ufort," the old engine bouse used as a citadel by the -great aiiti-slavery leader and his followers thirty years ago as a place of refuse from the soldiers and citizens surround ing them, is to be demolished, and will disappear forever unless the as yet un- suDsrantiateU rumor that it has been purchased by4in 4ssciation of eastern gentlemen for removal to Philadelphia should be true. The Baltimore & Ohio Ifoilwfcidcompany redetermined upon a very decided change in the location of its main line at that place, the new survey running directly through the old engiue house. Tens of thousands have gazed with interest upon the ' fort " from car windows and plat forms since the war, and the demolition of the old building will be regretted by man v all over the 9tr. Harper s l. ..... a .J 't- Tl . firry osvcwv, Grampus, Porpoise and Whale. f Without consulting anilities on the subject, the idea that the Grampu. does nut belong to the whale species, turns us back from information deriv ed from an old sea Captain, Bradley, commanding the schooner Rienza, in 1837. His vessel passed through a school of the Grampus in May, of that year, off the coast of North Carolina, and he shot one of fheiu, the shot striking just below the dorsal fin3 too high up to kill but 4n the conversa tion whi h ensued at the time the Cap tain spoke of the Grampus, Whale and the Purpart 'as all belonging to the same family, and knowing nothing to the contraiy, the old man of the sea. has been authority for us until now, when, it seem, we have to stand cor rected by a man in u sky land, who, perhiipe, has ncvea been out of sight fof land in all Ins life, and kno.vy no great deal about fish, great or small, except what he in ay have learned from Naturalists, whose business it is to compare and classify subjects under- consideration The Ashevillo Cifiten lately had something about whales being on the North Carolina coast. The New York Times has a New York corresponnent who confirms what was said, but falls into an error which the watchful and learned editor of the Citizen is prompt to correct in the following way. He says: "The captain referred to falls into an error by confusing the whale and the grampus. They are both ceta ceans,l)ut of widely different species. There is about the same relation be tween the elephant and the tiger; the bulky whale much the larger animal, inoffensive in habit, feeding on infus oria? and other minute products of the waters, grazing as it were; the other, the grampus, tierce and quarrelsome; armed with sharp and powerful teeth. attacking the whale wherever he sees him: and if enough of them join in the attack, kill him and tearing his flesh into ribands. The whale is from sixty to eighty feet long, the grampus rarely exceeds twenty-five, and is rare on the southern coast, while the whale is not infrequent in the waters between Cape Lookout and Frying Pan shoals, off tape re.ir. Summary Punishment. In the matter of tolerating society nuisances, Americans are accused of being a long suffering people; but whatever their own practice, they will always be ready to cry: " Served him nint i in every case Idie the follow- ins. the story of which comes from England. In a railway carriage sat a pale middle aged ladya slender youth, hardly out of his teens, and a burly looking squire. At one of the stations a young man got in, holding a lighted cigarette in his hand, and as the smoke curled in the lady s face, sbeTcoughed. '"This is not a smoking carriage," said the youth. " P am not smoking," retorted the new comer. il I dare sayWny cigarette will keep till we get to the next station."- ' Tobacco smoke makes my mother ill, and I must ask you to put out your cigarette." " I'm not smoking, ancLl shall not do it." "Then I'll make you!" said the lad. His face had grown pale, and as he rose the other put out a formidable fist which would probably have crippled his opponent. And now a strange thing happened. The burly squire had hitherto remained quite passive, but he now produced something which glittered in the sun light; there was a click, and the young man with the cigarette, was securely handcuffed. ' You will pick up your cigarette and throw it out of the window," said the squire, who proved to be a detective dressed for some important work. The cigarette was clusily picked up with both hands and dropped out of the window. Just, then the train rolled r.. 4-. . a i mm .i suumii, auu me- young man. muttering, " Very sorry won't do it again had no idea" was given his liberty, which he hastened to use by slipping at oijce out of the carriage. Youth Companion. With All Thy Raising, Raiie Hoffs. We see a great quantity of bacon being shipped to this country, and when we ask some farmers why they don't raise their own meat thev answer bv saying, the hogs die with" jiholera and it is useless to fry to raise them. Yps the hogs "Hie with cholera and we mnt raising t hem f the worm eat up the cot- ion ana we plant still more the next year. Why not try the, hogs again, too? -Certainly men cannot raise cot ton at 8 cents per pound and buy ba con at froni 12 to 18 cents. It is true -that cotton is the only product Tn this country out. of which farmers can real ize money with which to pay off notes auu oiner aebts. Tnuts right, raise cotton, but raise hogs, also.' They are the crop that this con u try needs most. The hog crop is the cheapest crop that a farmer can rav e. They maturequick er, can be raised cheaper,and taken alto gether are cheaperthau any other crop. Any farmer who does not raise his own meat is to that exteut a failure, and if lie keeps it up will soon be stonnin un the broken wiudow panes with paste boards and pillow cases, and pay 10 per cent, interest for borrowed monev. If your hogs die, buy more while your money lasts or your credit is good. If the worm eat your cotton, brace it up with a pea crop and buy more hogs. A failure never justifies u give up. iThere is always one more i.h:.n. Pittsbunj GaztUe. Let Yq ix Mind Aid Your Hands. At the present lime there are too many who endeavor to be successful, or in other words who get their living, by "nmiu strenth aud ignoranc." This is" a direct result of the neglect of a proper education in early life. In some cases physical exerJon may be necessary to the accomplishment of the end sought, but in nine cases out of ten this Is a simple waste of strength through tjie neglect of mental train ing, aud reminds one of the philosophy of the proverbial son of Erin, who while not lacking in wit is not witty, for he will invariably attempt to make his muscle do what his mind ought to do, or at least what it ought to assist in doing. Good judgement is oftentimes more valuable than years of experience. Some workmen will not put the least bit of calculation into a piece of work, and they might work on for years, putting all their physical energy. upon ihe work, never for a moment doubt ing that that is the only means of ac complishing it. But turn to the proverbial Yankee, who is not particularly fond of exert ing himself physically, and who gener ally contrives to make his mind serve his body, ai.d quite. a difference is no ticed. Instead of hammering, straii. ing, and doing the work himself, he deliberately sits down tu " figure out " some device for accomplishing the same result. If a ififficult task presents itself, where apparently considerable muscle is required he looks the thing over, and generally contrives some means of doing it without," In other words, he lets his mind help his hands. Here is just where the intelligent and thoughtful workman has the ad vantage of the illiterate and ignorant, and is the reason why we find so many really good workmen, so far as physi cal force is concerned, plodding along, earning barely enough to support themselves. What American workman need is to cultivate their minds, and equalize the labor between the mind and body, resulting in a more perfect condition of both, and rendering their services more skillful and themselves more valuable workman. Let yonr mind help your hands, and yon will find your work easier, your lite happier, and yonr condition gener- ally much improved. The Practical Mechanic. Farm Improvements. Many a rur ilist can profitable em ploy his leisure this month in making permanent other improvements upon his premises. If the season be dry, draining may be done advantageously. Under-draining is nerded on many farms, and is an investment that would pay large dividends for a succession of years. It increases the fertility arid the productive capacity of the soil and man who augments; the productive power of his acres by increasing their yield, annually, adds materially to the cash value of his whole farm. Well laid tile drains are the cheapest in the end, and the mo.t effectual in fitting the land for cultivation; but stone d nins, brush drains or open d it t lies, if put at sufficient depth and provided with proper outlets, will do good ser vice while they last. Some farms have shackly buildings and fences that greatly need repairing- of new ones to replace them. Substitute gates, for crooked, warping, time-consuming bars, juid you will make a great lm- provt-ment. If you have plenty of material, build g od stone walls, or repair those out of order. On many farms the conveyance of water through pipes or logs toil e dwelling, barn, ect., will prove a most valuable improve ment, while the arrangement of water ing places for stock should not be overlooked. Other lk betterments" may be made about the farm and dwelling at this season, but our wideawak .1 1 . B II 1 reauers neeu no runner reminders oi the subject. Independent. 13 Your Soul Insured? " Fa," said a little boy. as he elimhe to his father's knee and looking iut his face as earnestly as if he understoo the importance of the subject, u Fn, f vour soul insured? " " What are you thinking about, my son?" replied the agitated father " Why do you ask such a question? " "Why, pa, I heard Uncle George say you had your house insured and your life insured, but he didn't believe you had thought of your soul, aud he was afraid you wouid lose it. Won't you insure it right, away ? " The father leaned his head on his h ind, and was silent. He owned broad acres of land that were covered with bountiful produce, his barns were even now filled with plenty, his buildiusrs were all covered by insurance; but, us if that would not suffice for tlie main tenance of his wife and only child in case of decease, he had the day before taken a life policy for a large 'amount; yet not one thought had he given to his immortal soul. Ex. With a view of attracting the at tention of the entire financial interests of the United States to the growth of the South, to the advantages of this sec tion and to the oportunities for profita ble investment of sill kinds that are to be found in every State, from Mary land to Texas, the Manufacturers Re cord will publish a "Special Bankers' Edition" of that paper, a copy will be sent to every bank (national State and private) i:i the United State?, to loan and trust companies, brokers, leading insurance companies, and financial institutions generally. Fortune knocks once at every man's door, but she doesn't so huntinr j through beer saloons for him if he i happens to be out. Puck- CHINESE PEDAGOGUES Although Glad to Get Foreign PupUj, They Are AhuieJ of Them. AH of us have our experiences of the Invincible contempt ia which we are held by our atolid mentors, who accept our presents with, the air of a chiet levying- tribute from his retainers. Amusing indeed are the ways in which the frowsy old pedagogues betray their feelings, and childishly ingenious the devices to which tbey have recourse in order to -preserve their assumption of tkeir superiority before their countryr men while disguising it before the forv oigner. Chinese etiquatte helps them, for they can put it on and off at pleasure, and trust to the foreigner not being cute enough to follow its ramifications. But sometimes even the ceremonial forms are a snare to thera. One who was in the habit of being reverentially bawed out of tha house after each day's lesion, and stoppad at the threshold to return the obaisaucas of his pupil, found on one occasion a sudden necessity for adjusting his dress, and in doing so omitted the customary formality. Struck by the singularity of the proceeding, the foreigner had the curiosity to follow the teacher into'thfi street, and there saw passing a Chinese Ting-ch'ai. in who3e presence the old teacher would not demean himself by doing reverence to the foreigner. Another kindly disposed scholar in duced his teacher to dino and accom pany him to a theater. Unpleasant as it is to sit near to a Well-nourished Chinese during tba time while bis thor acic air passagos are charged with ex plosiveness, it must be allowed that the courtesy of the Western papil was commendable. But the guest felt fidg ety, notwithstanding the sedative effect of pork and beans, and Boon found an excuse for leaving his foreign friend. He could not, in fact, endure being publicly seen ia the company of a foreigner. Needless to say that in the streets your well-bred Chinese walk, like the Lovite, on the other side when they see their foreign ac quaintances approaching. Chinese 1'imes. SENSE OF HUMOR. It Ia Well DevelojMMl Aiti-Mis tlie Natives of Yorkshire. Dr. Hook possessed a gift without which he could never have got on in Yorkshire, and that was a sense of humor. Sydney Smith said that it needed a surgical operation to get a joke into a Scotchman's head an opinion in which no one who has read Dean Ramsay's "Reminiscences of Scot tish Life and Character'" -ean possibly agree, and there is something akin in the grim Caledonian and West Riding humor. I was p.-eaching one of a course of sermons in the open air in a non-church-going part of a town parish, when I was pleasantly struck by tho polite attention of tho landlord of a small public house close by, who had placed a chair and table at my disposal for a temporary pulpit. So i remarked on it to one of my hearers. "Why, you sec." sail he. "he reckons on some of 'em dropping in for a glass when you've done."' A curate was trying to make a religious census of his flock, and asked a working man what religion he was. "Why, you may put me down a? tho religion of a wheel barrow; I gj whichever way they shove me," t. c whichever way suited his iutereit. Another man, with a grin on his face, "bxnted of iiis regular attendance at church; his comrades burst out laughing the fellow had just left prison, where attendance at public worship was, of course, compulsory. But Yorkshiremen men are civil after a fashion. One day I paid a visit to a hand-loom weaver busy throwing his shuttle, while his loom creaked and groaned so that I could not get a word in. So I asked him if he earned a penny in five minutes. "No;" he said, "how should I?'1 So I laid down a penny. "Now," I said, "let us talk for five minutes." The mm stopped, looked at the clock "Five- minutes is up," be said at the end of the time, our talk skin, but as these prove sive to patients, and did not give yery good results, he substituted others froni the fowl; and the wound, which measured three inches by two and a hahV had completely healed in two months. He had been equally success ful in other and subsequent cases. He takes the skin from beneath the wing of a chicken, carefully securing the adjacent cellular tissue, but avoiding adipose tissue. The transplanted pieces varied from a sixth to a third of an inch in size, and they were main tained in position by mean of a little cotton-wool and iodoform gauze. The skin of birds and fowls has the advan tage of being- supple, delicate, and vascular; it adapts itself readily to tho surface of the wound, and adheres without undergoing absorption. Medi cal Record. It is stated that two-thirds of tho woods used in paper-making is waste. though experiments indicate that this can be profitably converted into fer tilizers, It is related of a Lincoln, Neb., man that he journeyed to California iu arder to see an old enemv executed. Tuffs Pills To o u r e-cost i vencs 4 the medi e in e must be more than a purgutivv. To be per in Hit en t, it jnusUcoiitolu Tonic Alterative and Cathartic Properties. TnU'a Pills possess tbeevinUtieaa uu eminent degree, end Speedily Restore 'hut take hank vour penny : y 1 ko lie WWP i l the bowels tbetr Mntnol per i I altlo I M(fllon, eo etutentinl to regularity. I Sold Everywhere. Seeing the Wind Blow. ? Did von ever see tin iud? " . oec n . i "Yps. that's what I saul, U1U you ever see tbe wind?" asked a yachtsman a . .. iA.,tt (ho- woo was manning a uiui ... Highland watchim the yachts sailing on the lower bay. - t "No, I've never seen the wind " re plied his friend. MWeir, I'll tell you how you may. Take a polished inetalic surface of two feet or more, wifcn a straight edge; a large hand saw will answer the purpose. Select a windy day, whether hut or cold, clear or cloudy, only let it not rain or the air lie murky in other words let the air 1m? dry. Hold the nie talic surface at right angles to the wind i. e., if th wind is north, hold vour surface east and west and in cline it at an angle oHorty-five degrees, so that the wind, striking, glances and flows over the edge. Now sight care fully over the edge at some small but clearly defined object, and you will see the air flow over us water flows over a dam." Mail and Express. Oppos-d by the Farmers. A Des Moines special dispatch says: The movement of the Farmers' Alli ance against the Republican candidate for Governor and Lieutenant Governor nf Iowa is so open and pronounced as to cause great alarm among the cam paign malingers for the safety of the ticket. There are upward of 20,000 voters in the Alliance, most of them being Republican. Of late years they have largely divested themselves of par tizanship and voted as their interests seemed to dieiate. That thev wefe going nearly solid against the Repub-J lican ticket is shown by the publica- j Hon to-day of a lengthy review of tlie legislative records of Hutchinson and j Poyneer, the Republican candidates : for Governor and Lieutenant Governor, I from the pen of N. Ii. Ash by, the State Lecturer of the Iowa Alii nice. Smne time ago letters were addressed to both these candidates. A Safi Inv3stm3nt Is one which is guarantied to bring you satisfactory results, or in case of Jai'ure a returiroi the purchase pri e. In t his safe plan yon can buy from onr-ftdvcriised.dcug-rri rt: 4i bottle of Dt Kind's New Discovery for Consumption. It is guaianteed to bring reliel iaevrrv ease, when us d for my iilfcH tion of Throat, Lung or Chest, such as t insitiv.pt ion, Iniftjiuunation of Luul', I'ronehit is. Asthma, , Whooping Cough, Croup, etc., etc. It is pleasant and agreeable to taste, perfectly sale, and i an always be depended upon. Tiial bottles tree at Khittz & Co.. drug store. Withholding Salary. A case was decided at Watertown, N. Y., a fe days ago which shows that a corporation has the rht to withhold an employe's sa'a-v, or -a j o: tion of it, if he is caught in the art of ' stealing. Ex-Conductor Middieton brought suit against the Home, Water-1 town and Ogdensburg railroad for $130 . salary, which was willtheld from him j when he was discharged from the ser vice a year ago and it resulted in favor of the railroad company, the testimony ' f the Finkerton detectives having shown that the plaintiff failed to report Pares collected on the tr;;in, amounting in one' mouth to more than the sum withheld from him.- Xeip YinTT Ttle graut. An EmisLsnt Doctor's Proscriptior. Dr. C. P. Henry.Chieago.il!., .vim has praeticed an dieine in;inv years. sayJast Spring he ued and presnibed Clark Extract of Flax (Papillon) SULn Cure in 40 or "() cases, and never knew a ease In re it "ailed to cure. ' I know f no reined I can rely on so implicitly." I'ositive eure for all tliseatcs f the Skin. Applied ex ternal ly. Clai Ke s r i;ix bo:ip is nest tor JJ r les. Cure $1.0;) Soap 2.) cents, at Jno. II. ss' Drug Store. am cutting a swell," as the sur i reuiaiked while lancing a boil. Lady in South Carolina Writes: i 1 . 1 1 y labor was snorter ana less painiui on two former occasions: physicians lished : I thank von for " Mother's id." It is worth its weight in gold. rite the Bradfield Reg. Co., Atlanta, for particulars. Sold by all druggists. It is the court-ship that leads to the matrimonial sea. Sfeam, Air and Vacuum PumDs. Vertical and Horizon tal of every variety and VERTICIL PISTON. j Fond vt tito XTcwspper Prom 'Crew o. towa.-'Iainileflc i . .. ..o nnr rj'illh'lS Wt W. r.esHv nave m-i-i, . . ... . hnUirU $r run tct'Hy, wmwn u. . - ',,., ...,! iu- DtltV .IS Wl'ir n Miw.r,ii.i impel us to uVpnrt irom ... t.. a-iv to our reauers this and . ' r ...il... mlrtclv -the m distreWin iohnt anil I f""-" . ; Willi or- li.-htin -CUIW, 1 r,.!i.f mm "dK.ary remedies ami ft "US , ' "from TlK- r use. we ouiaineu H"TK -Chrkc's Extra, t of Fix ifM : Cou..h Cure, obtain'mir aTu.ost instant re th-! and a steady imprnvcn "us('M br -f lMttfcs nulv $100, Akhn Clarke's Flax Soap. BejH U' Uolh oftl.c alMjvt- for fertfi by J H There are over 3.000 spoken langua ge in the world, and out of nil human ity you c::iri find one man that uses a single one correctly. Merit Wits rsirt- ! ?v to our cilzirrs, that for years v- have lieeii selling Ir. Kwa " NW DiseoMi v for etmaaipl ion. Dr. Kin-V New Lite. Pi !!s, Hark leti's Arnica Sateand Electric -Hitlers ad have never handled remedies that .-ell a- well, or that have oivrn such uw-versal wUwlHclhm. We do j not hesitate t. tru uantce them rvcry-linw, I and we stand ready to reluntl the pur Inise price, if sati-'actoi'v results do not follow their its;. Thse reined lesJiave won tneir jretit p-ipularly n their merits T. . klutt. & Co.. Diu i:i-ts. WH LU cr" LABOR LESSENS PAIN T0 LIFE or diminishes oTHER ur BRADFIEU) REGULATOR C0.TLANTAM SOLO BY ALL DHUGSSTS. sold BY-STEcRE, WELLS A CO. PATENTS, CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS AND COPY RIG UTS. ObtUned, xnd allothn bncgt in Ujc U.S. Paten Oill'.-e .attended to for Moderate Fees. our office is opposite Liie I . S. I' ueot Office, anc' we can obtain Patents ia Ics tune tliaii thcfcere motetrom Washington. Send Model or ilruw ing. W'c ulvli-f ;iso p'aten abllii v-tree of charge ;and make AYtii;w.rjir Obtui'n Patent. We refer lier" to JJie Postmaster, tie Supt.o Monev order l lv., ami to oiHetalJ- of tUe V. S. Pat ent ofilce. Forctrcnlar. adviee. terms and refer enecs to a'.tia! :iiems in voui ov-trt ate or county writ to C.A.SNOW & CO. Opposite Patent Ollice, Wasblngt i D.C. Oct. 81 .'S3 tf. BUILDING TOTSlOR SALS. Persons wanting to buy building lots near Livingstone Colleiro ore rcciuestcd to inquire at THIS OFFICE. A V0I6E from Ohio. ller it a portrait of Mr. t.ai ri mi. of Salrm, Ohi'. ,He writes: "Was at work on a farm for Kt&O a month ; I now have on mgvncy ation Hud oitru make J$&0 u day." for K. C. Allen &Co'saHums and inibli- &ign d) W. H. UARKISON. William Kline, Ilinrisliur, I'a.. write, : VI have "iievt-r kmnvii llilnR lo ell like jour album Vtvifunlfiv 1 look Turdt-nt tnaoufrki fo pay r..e ovrr !.. ' W. J. EU iu.re, li.-ap.-r. Me., wriies: "I take an onlvr fur your album at aluinst evijry ione I visit. k . : Kit Di hen are Uoiup quit a w ell ; r a Biiiffle dn v . i k . ' vf hae not patc to (five ex--tr tct, fnmi ihMr letters. Everv one who take hold of this jrrand buoiiieaa .i U- s up praud prottls. - Shall we start YOU in this business, reader? Write to us and learn all about it for j-ouraclf. We are startiiifr many ; we Will stmt you if you don't nVIay until aHoiherfftMff ahead f you in vour part of the t-duutrv. If vcu take hold you will be able to lek up goid fast. QJ1 1 a il On aerouut of a lorn d uianufarturer'a aalie SA,4MMt (en loll: Pliol;!':iili Alliums areto be soldno th people for 83 each. Bound m Hoy a I Crimson Silk Velvo. . Plu.li. Charminirly deenr.ited inside. Handsomest albums in tlie world. Larj-vitt Size. tireaTeM buryaiin ever known Aleuts wanted. Liberal terms lii? money for agreuts. Auv one can become a successful apent. Sells itself on siht little or no talking necessary. Wherever shown, every one wants to pur chase. Agents take thousands of orders with rapitiitv uevrr before known. Great profits await every worker. Agents arc making fortunes. Ladies make as much "as -men. You, reader, randoaa well as anyone. Full information and terms froe," to those who write for same, with particulars ami terms for our Family liibles, liooks and Periodica la. After you know all, should you conclude to go no further, whv no harm is done. Address E. C. ALLEN .0.." AUGUSTA, M.,iE. HOME J Wk. Total Assets J. ALLEN BEO'WN, MOTHERS &akes,oTH EASY i P,''. Rin.ihRTLNS '" ABA ' " - Wk. -M Regular Horizontal Piston. The most simple, durable and effective Pump in the market lor, Mines, Quarries, Refineries, Breweries, Factories, Artcsicn wells, Fire duty and general manufacturing purposes. GST Send" for Catalogue. ' . iib a. i cameroii mm pomf wobk Fojr oy East 23aoSrnM$r Ntw York. Sash, Doors, Blinds. m AND CA8TINCS w ALL Miu rs. r- .... DEALEKS is Stfam Easrmes and "Rrnl pre C.. w "- vjLejimn-i, Steam Fittings, Shafting. pu AXSO H Maehittery of ull kin.ls repuired SilORT NOTICE. -Mar. LAND SALE! NORTH CAROLINA urFiU )UC nunHii wuuti i i j i U. W. ijOW-mnce,-Aam r of j son, dee'd, vs. Juiai Jatne Aujustu-s J.un.son, II r Uvv. In parsu'ance of an order of rior Court of Rowan -county the above entitled action" 1 Ml IV - . the S 1;i(t4t4 l lie umU. m sineu win sen on Aloiulay, tin 41 b day of November, ISbU, on the ouhlic outcry to theihihcsi- i,i,i,i,.i. '.v following described real estad- in .tw3 township, Rowan county, to wit- i tract of land adjoining the lands .0f t Leazer, L. R. Connelly and .). K Jamj son, containing 60 Acres, more a-leasl Wing a part of the land on wind, Jauiw A. Jamison formerly residtd, aiso ;lu u divided interest in a lot i.r laud adjoin, ing the lands of J. K. Jamison, j Weddington and others, containing tl acre, on which was fgrmerly located I cotton gin. Terms of sale made known on ('lvJ.f' sale. D. W. LOWRANCK, Adm'r f 50:t.s. of J. A. Jaffiison, dccy.l Uratge at Clement, Att'ys STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA i ROWAN COUhTY. j IS' the Superior Court, 1st ()ftM 1889. Kate C. Foster, Plaint ill". , -Against i I John S. Heuderson, trustee of Kate C Foster, and James Foster, Thus, K. Fog.' ter, Edgar B. Ramsay and wife Joiinie It. ltanisay, Defendants. Suit for ml e of Real Estate and xctUment of Trust Fv,vl. ' In the above entitled case it aiineafing to the Court by aihtn it f the 1'laiutiK that Edgar B. Ramsay, '-Hie of the liefend' ants, is a non-residi nt i f this Slate and cannot after due-diligei:ee he ftrrjiid- .: 9 It is ordered that I'uMieaiion he wade in the Carolina Wateli...an, a newspajjerj nubished in Salisbury, jnotifj intrtlie .'arid 1 Edgar B. ttanisay to appear at the iicxt term of our Superior tHyirt.-at tlie Court House in Salisbury on the eleventh Mon day after the first Monday ol September, A. l., 1889, and answer -or dumir to the-, eomplaint. J. M. 1IOHAM, Clerk, 50:6t. ' Superior -Cuui t, l u an eouoty, I NOSTH CAROLINA' Supeisioii Couwj ROWAW COUNTY ) - Nov!; Term, pp. Elizahet-h- Herman, r;laintlr - vs. '.. 1 James P. Herman, Defendant. ACTION FOR DIYOUCE. The defendant, James P. Herman, is hereby summoned to appear at a Sune i ibjr Com to be held for said eoiinty at the Court House in Salisbury on the 11th MoiuJayafter the first Monday iii Sep tember, 1889., to answer or demur to the-- V,'ll- 1 1 ll I I i K J It I i III lU UUII, illtU ItV UIW t i,:... i :.. i.:. ....,.,,. r th. said defendant take notice that if he fail to answer the complaint during said term the plain till" ,vill apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint. J. M. 1IOKAH, Clerk Superior Court. Theo. F. Kluttz, Plain tilf's AttV. 51:6r. COMPANY, SEEKING HOME PATRONAGE o...... A STRONG COBlPiNY, Prompt, Reliable, Liberal! - A gents in all cities and towii? in tl: .(idi J. RHODES ERGWNF, lWt C. Coart, Secretary. 750,0.00.. Agent, Salisbury, N. 0. capacity. VERTICAL PLUNGE -1 1 ' -