cm ! -r i - - - : 1 " - " ' ""' "' "" ' " ' ' -ti ' 11 " " " ' " JAMES G. BOYLIfJ, Publisher. - The Wadesboro Messenger and Wadesboro Intelligencer Consolidated July, 1 888. PRICE, S I .Oo a Year. NEWSERIES..V0L.Vn,..N0r52 Wadesboro, N. C, Thursday, May 3, J 894. . WHOLE NUMBER 702 23TV Impure Blood Opens the Way for Malaria ... . . j Hood's Sarsaparilla Makes Pur Blood and Cures Malaria. It is with pleasure that we call attention to the testimonial jjf Mr. A. M. Beck, who Is we known In Florida, and to the travelling public, having tor years been a railroad passenger con ductor and later, ticket agent at Jacksonville. "C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. : "Some three or four years ago I wrote to you In reference to the good my boy had derlred Irom the use of Hood's Sarsaparilla, and now allow me to say that the same boy and his mother became - Prostrated With Malaria and Hood's Sarsaparilla has again been used with satisfactory results. I do not believe you can find a much better looking child for his age, eight years, than our boy. For this picture of health his mother and also myself attribute it to the use of that most valuable remedy, Flood's Sarsaparilla. His trouble before taking the medicine was an affliction with boils, and a gen eral breaking out all over his body. Of course from such suffering the child became weak and food's Cures' a gt-neral prostration of the system was a natii-' ral result. We again resorted to Hood's .Sarsa parillawith wonderful success. The word grati tude but poorly expresses our feelings toward Hood's Sarsaparilla." A. M. Beck, Belmore, Florida. Be sure to get Hood's. Hood's Piils act easily, yet promptly and efficiently, on the liver and bowels. 26c. millinery can Conptnn'Iy arriving, and trimmed up wilh fauMoss laste by bij lish iern Milliner. l au'iful Lnce Windsor Ties, Hand kcrclitefs. Kid Gloyep, bllKli Nortf rtTTnn find MlHi u? ami mi ltd and nu;reriu other, ibings : pretty and reasonable in price at eaav Ss in National H tel Bail-lmg, Wade Sc. Wad'sboro" N. (J W. V. GRAY, D. D. S., (Office in Smith & Dunlap Building.) Wadesboro, North Carolina. ALL OPERATIONS WARRANTED. 6-tf ' O GEKERAHH:URAtiCEGEtfT Represents the leading Fire lnsurtnce companies, Ofnce Marn Street. Wadesboro. JS. C. ?. S. Cole, D. B. s., OfTers his professional services to the people of Wadnsliaro, Ansonand surrounding coun ties. Bridge and Crown work a specialty. Nitrous oxide gas administered for pain less extraction of rwtb. OiHce over L. J. Huntley & Co 's store. Anson Institute, WADESBOKO, N. C. D. A. McGregor, A B , Principal. TUB SPRING TER34 BEGINS iOSUAY, JAN. 8th, 1S94. VJ TCITION IN Literary Department $2, (3 ind H per month. " 5TTo deduction made for lost time. Board in private families at per month. Grind! Your Own Bone Pleal, oyste Shells and Com in the $5 Hand JSUli CF. Wilou's Pat.). Circulara Free. Address , rv ILSOM BROS. Eastorj, Pa. 100 per ct, more made iwltecpitig poults , ' Widnoon, Pa., Feb. 15, 1S91. Wiuson Bros., Dear hiKa: Hike the mill very much I bought of you. I grind all the chop I need, can grind 5 t i 20 bushels per day. It is ail excellent null f.r jci inding tone, shells, etc. It does all you claim for it. : Yours, J NO. COLEMAK. , Oxford. Conn , Feb. 17, 1S9V Mfss. Wilson Uuos: Received the Mill, No. 1 all O. K. It works very ni-ely. It is a great help to me iu preparing food for poultry. , Ilespc't yours, O. C. OSBORJf. Citask's Warf, Va., Jan. 15, 1S94. Mess. Wilkon Pros,. Kasto.v, Pa., Guntlkmex. The No. 1 Bone nnd Shell Will 1 r.Jeiei of you his licm received in gotid order. otn yt-ry W(.1J ple)ed with it work. It d'xti all yen clniin f nr it. THE MONOPOLISTS. THE COMMUNISTS AND THE DEM OCRACY. Baltimore Sun. A democratic majority in Congress strug gling to pass a reform bill to equalize tax burdens in the face or a coalition of monop olistic interests, illustrates the dangerous tendf ncy of concentrated wealth to corrupt and overawe the legislative power. Coxey's army, struggling over the mountains and through the valleys, begging free transporta tion by land or water, and in some cases taking it where it fs not given, moving on to Washington to demand that Congress Bhall do anrell by the masses as it has by the classes, And provide wages for poor la borers as well as profits for rich manufac turers, is theobversj side of the monopolietic medal. The two spectacles are contrasts and yet companions. The republic is between these two perils the manufacturing monopolies demanding to be favored by special legisla tion, and the mob demanding to be fed by the same means. The greed of an arrogant plutocracy is on theone side and the distress of a despairing proletariat on the other. Be tween them stands the government, for the time being in the bands of the democratic party. To that party belongs the double duty of setting bounds on the one hand to the aggressions of the capitalistic combina tions that have usurped the taxing power of the government for their own aggrandize ment, and. of firmly resisting, on the other band, all those communtie schemes for making the government support the people of which Coxey's army is a fantastic prod uct. It is eminently a time to recall the ringing words of Hon "John G. Carlisle, uttered iu t ie course of the debate on the Mills tariff bill iu 18S8: "No matter who may desert or who may falter, the gi oat fight for reform will go in. This country does not belong to either the monopolists or the communists, and the people will save it from both." In spite of all the laughter that Coxey's march to the sea has caused it is a serious symptom of the industrial and social conditions which thirty three years of protectionism, pater nalism, extravagance, corruption and class favoritism in legislation have produced among us. In all the seventy years prior to the war, during which democratic policies were nearly all the time in the ascendeucv. no such dismal demonstration as Coxev's army is waking was known. Under these policies it would have been impossible to col lect such tt hobt of idle and aimless men, with no hope left but a wild rush to Congress with a petition to be Employed, paid and 8U . ported at the national expense. Neither in all those seventy ante-bellura years was there ever seen a conipanion spectacle to that now presented in Cougress itself, where one Senator after another is rising In his place to plead for 40, 60, SO and in some cases lt'O per cent, tariff taxes, to the end that the few monopolists may go on growing richer, while the consuming and toiling millions go on gro trig poorer. Republican rule has given up JIcKinley's tariff and creuted Coxev's Commonweal I Army. The millionaires and the tramus are evolutiuus of the same perilous policy of making the government n, special partner in favored branches of business, and mercilesslv taxing all classes to make a few hundred men fabulously rich. Spreading Lroadcast the delusive doctrines that prosperity can bo mada to order by Congress, that cood times can be provided and hard times prohibited by special enactments, and that to give work and wages" so everybo lv who needs them is the prime duty of the general eov- ernment has been the inevitable result of the gospel of protection, as expounded by Mc Kitiley, Reed and the other leading lights of latter-day republicanism. Let us not laugh over loud'y at the Com monweal Army. There is nothing in its de mands that Congress shall find every idle man a job and loan money to every man who wnnts to horrow on bonds that shall bear no interest that are not clearly traceable to the vicious propaganda of protectionism. The logic of the Coxey programme is clear enough, from the McKiuley standpoint. If the great manufacturing corporations shall have congress make markets for their goods and fix prices and profits for them, whv shall not the individual citizen have Congress make a market for this labor and fix his em ployment and wages for him? Is, there any reason why 2,COO,000 persons employed in lactones shall bo provided for bv the eov- ernment at the general expense aud all the rest of our working people be left to shift for tuemselves; Have the coal and iron and lumber lords, already enormously rich, any better rigbt to be taken care of by tariffs thau Coxey's crowd of more modest mendi cants, who really are "hard up," have to be provided for by special appropriations for road-building? Coxey's procession of seedy and needy men is, it must be remembered, only the grotesque bimiiow oi a vast army of unemployed labor, estimated by protectionist authorities to number three .millions, who are staying sul lenly at home; while all the time the Mc Kiuley tariff rates, under which they were told they could not fail to have steady work and bitch wages, are still feeing levied for their "protection" at every port. If high taxes could help them, why are not-all the workmen at work, aud how did Coxey's un canny host spring into existence? With an 84 per cent, tax on ready made clothing, why are these men in rags? Did not President Harrison tell them all Jthat ' 'cheap coats macta cheap menf McKinley secured dear coats for them, and why are they not re velling in good clothes? With a 60 per cent, tax on carpets, why are there uny bare floors in the laud? With a 110 per cent, tax on blankets, why do not all these men sleep well covered? With q. 130 per cent, tax on worsted knit goods, who does any working man or his wife or his children go about shivering! No democratic tariff reform has yet taken one cent off these benevolent taxes levied for the tspeclal benefit of labor the manufacturing philanthropists of New York, New Englaud and tht other centers of tariff fed -industries block the way. And yet 3, OJO.tOO pairs cf honest hands are idle, and Wew York city points -with pride to the fact that its well-to do people havegiven $15,000, 000 the past winter to keep its working peo ple from starvation. There is a bad break somewhere between the rosy promios and the rueful perform ances of protection. Te farmer was to have a home market and high prices. Instead of that be has had, since 18B0, to sell more abroad than ever ad accept lower prices all the time. The factory operatives wee to have more work and higher wages. Instead of that they Lave had less work, lower wages, more strikes aud lookouts and harder times since 1893 than they ever knew before. Yet the republican leaders are so iufatuuted with their own theorif-s that tboy seem to believe themselves back into good times and secure prosperity by suffocation. The trutb is that the wretched system of protection, persisted in for three decades of constantly towering tariffs, has produced a national nightmare, in which the monopo lies are seen sitting astride Congress and blocking -the road to reform, while Coxey's forlorn army, with its crazy dreams of com munistic legislation, pursues its weary way to Washington to furnish the antithesis to McKinleyism, Inside the Capitol are the protected millionaries fighting for theif trib ute; outside, just directly, will be a mob of unprotected paupers, a small contingent of protection's three million victims, clamoring for victuals. Corporate greed aud commun istic folly will camp together at the seat of government. It is indeed time to lift the banner of true democracy higher and blazon on its folds the study declaration of John G. Carlisle: "This country does not belong to either the monopolists or the communists, and the people will save it from both." Army of the Untrained. Exchange, . Prob-iWy there is no padder fc a ture of the prevailing misery among the thousands of men and women who are out ,of employment than iheir inability to make themHelvea useful in any field of labor except some single industry or drudgery in which they have been engaged. They are equipped with brains, eyes, pare, arms and fingers all the paraphernalia of human movement and activity but their faculties are untrained. They are not masters of themselves. "They are like Shake speare's tapster at the Boar'a Head Tavern, who, although the son of a -woman, had fewer words than a parrot, his vocabulary having been limited to the simple necessities of hia occupation. It has been found impossible for the charitably disposed to set poor people at work who can only dig or drudge. The unemployed women cannot cook or sew or de any of the labors of careful house wifery. The men cannot turn their hands to any occupation of skill. The organ ized t ffort to set idleness ut work has thus boen baffl d. It has been eay enough to fi.id a man for the place, but hard to find a place fitted lo the man. This sad condition of off airs has served to strongly emphaneiz the value of manual training iu Ihe school. The boys should be educated in the physical use of their faculties, eo l hat I hey my more readily turn their hands to whatever occupation may offer them opportunity. For the r;i!s, there should be training in the whole round and reach of domes tic economy. They should know how to do everything that may need to be done in the house. Is it better to starve in the street than to know in what way lo properly boil poffttoes and make bread and do plain sewing There is no adrq mte supply in the household eervico neither is there any demjanirg quality in the work of the household. Our grandmoth ers, w!io did not live io the day of lectric illumination and sewing machines, could not only care for their kitchens andbed chambers, hut they spun and wove the clothes they wore ;and could, when necessary, cut out a coat or a pair of trousers a id make them with their own deft ting-rs. Their facility and diversity of capacity were probably neces&i'.ies of the day; but now und again we are remindeded that the time will never come when all arond abilit y lo take care of one's self aud of others will not be ihe best possible equip ment with which to fight the battle of life. - . Sam Jone's Prescription for Biliousness. . Galveston Daily News. Waco, April 16 After the tremen dous men's meeting last night Broth er Sara Jones was thoroughly ex hausied, and ho felt eick. Brother Jones is of a biliutis temperament, and his sallow complexion tells plainly lhat while all is well between Brother Jones and his soul there i war between him and hia liver. Brothor Jones felt bad at bedtime, and Brother Owens told him: 'Go to God with it, brother; he'll (straight en you out." 'Take a dose of pills "suggested the reporter. And Brother Jones fol lowed the advice of Oweria and the reporter, and as a renult when he got up this morning he was all right asd much refreshed. lie said: "Prayer was the thing, but I must admit that the pills did much good, and from now on my prescription for biliousness will be one prayerand thrte pills before bedtime " No other medicine has eoualled Hood's Sarsaparilla in the relief it gives in severe cases of dyspepsia, sick luadache. etc. WOMAN'S HEAD i level and her indr- . , . -o raeni good wnen she puus ner iaitn in ur. Pierces favorite Prescription. There is no beauty with out good health. Nobouy expects to become reallv hAjui- tiful from the use of complexion beauti . flers. Britrht ovar. V' ! . T- clrii, and ot. . US, cheeks, follow mod- , ... eraie exercise, rres! air, good food, and the judicious use at the " Prescription." All women require a tonic and nervine at some period of their lives. Whether suffer ing from nervousness, dizziness, faintness, displacement, catarrhal inflammation cf the lining membranes, bearing-down sensations, or general debilitv, the "Prescription" v........ lir3 u'.n;.MM tUJ!J (.urrwi3 ! -'-,-,n,.... t , ! .. . .. . JUDGING KINDLY. New York Herald. Neither do I condemn thee: go, and sin no more. St John, viii.,11. This is one of the roost dramatic and pathetic incidents in the career of Christ. There was no doubt that thia wo man had committed an offence for which, according to the Hebrew code, she merited death. The law was explicit and the punishment was relentlessly inflicted. It had been the babit of the people and the cus tom of the nation for twenty genera tions to hurl an immoral woman in to eternity aa ono throws a stone from a sling. The eneering scribes and haughty Pbariseea thought to embarrass Christ in the presence of the multi tude. They dragged the poor, trem blmg creature before Him, declared lhat she bad been taken "in the very act," and then with curled lipa waited Tor Hi8 verdict. It was a test case. Would He acknowledge the authority of precedent or would He have the audacity to repudiate the law which had received the sanction of Jehovah! In other words, would He surrender in the pinch, or proclaim Himself su perior to the Voice that thundered from Sinai t Jesus stepped across the boundary line which divided the old from the new dispensation when He answered that question. The Jewa had been taught to fear God ; He would teach men to love God. To them God was the implacable lawgiyer, who, as Anne of Austria once eaid to Riche lieu, "is a sure paymaster." He may not pay at the end of every.week or month or year, but He pays in the end." Christ would have meu be lieve that God is also a Father, and lhat we, as His children, ere to judge each other generously, because under like circumstances we might yield to the same temptation. To paraphrase, Christ ea;d : "Let your law be obeyed if you will have it so. But this wretched criminal must not be put to death by men who have committed the same of fence. If there are any among you who are wholly innocent let them execute judgment." Then followed that remarkable sen- . tence which startled the moral sense of the world : .'"Neither do 1 condemn the; go, and ein no more." Per haps the crowd were surprised; pos sibly many of thero shook their heads wuh indignation. The more conservative among them may have felt that the dignity of the law had had been outraged, that this Naza rene bad blundered in abrogating the custom established by Moses and ap proved by the prophets. But we can sen that a new princi pie was announced. Nobody will as sert that Jesus could do otherwise than condemn a criminal act. Hia whole career is a denral of such a stair ment. Neither will any one de clare that He weakly yielded to the pathos of ibe occasion, or that He re fused lo condemn in jorder to defy the Phariseea and scribes. " No such motive, but a far nobler one, ac'uated Him By the religion which He represented We are en joined to judge the fallen with Hie consciousness lhat we too may fall someday; lo hate the sin but love the sinner, and offer a helping hand." We are to judge . as one brother would judge another not with in difference to guilt, but with pity for the offender. Thia ia a most thrilling doctrine, and it opens up a series of duties which wo may find difficult to per form. It ia an easy thing to con demn a sinner, send him to prison, aud so forget all about him. It ia a very different thing to look on a sin ner with pitying eye and, while con demning what he has done, make him feel that yon atq hia friend and will help him to recover himself. The habit of harsh judgment is ungracious, ungentle and unchris tian, "but altogether too common among ua. We are prone lo at tribute a bad motive even where it would be possible to see a good mo tive. It is not too much to say that we rather relish a rumor which tells against a neighbor, and find a mor bid comfort in the thought that peo pie are not so good aa they preteud to be or seem to be. If a man gives largely to a charity our first impulse ia to declare thai there is a purpose in it which ia not quite as excellent aa appearances would indicate. If a woman com mka an indiscretion, either wilfully or through ignorance, we make it by our harsh criticism just aa hard for her to heal the wound as possible. In a word, we are not helpful to each other, and are much more inclined to shove an offender down hill thn to pull him up hill. We are more apt to look on the darkest side of other people'a lives and to ihink the worst of them than to look oa the bright ide and think the bePt of them. At the eamo time we would be glad to haye Ihem look at us len iently and find a good rather than a bad motive. Doing unto others, however, as you would have them do to you neither cuita our'convenience nor our appetite. .A painter of ancient times was commanded to make a portrait of macy, asked his sitter Id lean bis head on his hand, saying it would give a finer pose. He then deftly arranged matters in such way that the fingers of the monarch entirely covered the scar, and eo the portrait was painted wilb no scar visible. If we were to follow the example of the artist and charitably cver up the scare on the lives of our friend), or if, conscious that we need mercy ourselves, we should exercise Ibal virtue toward others, or if, na com roanded by Christ, we should make, not a weak, but a loving jnd-mnt of acts which come within our notice, we should soon hear the rustle.pf angel wings in this hard world, and the sweet perfume ot the millennium would bo wafted earthward. Gov. Vance a Prisoner The Trip From StatesTille to Salis bury. Mr. S. Witlkowsky, of Charlotte, who accompanied Gov. "Vance from StatesvilU to Salisbury when the latter wan a prisoner in 1865. told the story of that jurnoy at a memorial meeting in Charlotte on the 16 h, and the Observer thus reports bim: 'I was particularly fortunate in having hia VanceV frendship. which commenced in Statesville un der very peculiar circumstances, and dates back to the dark days of Arril, 1865. "Statesville was then cut off from communication with the outside world. Her two railroada and the telegraph line were destroyed. One afternoon a troop of United States cavalry, about 300 strong, came dashing in with carbines in their hands, and surrounding Gov. Vance's house informed bim that they had orders to take him a pris oner lo Washington, but would wait until uext morning. I waa request ed to drive the Governor ia a buggy to Salisbury. We started in the following or der: Four men on each side of the buggy, and the others half in front and half in the rear. 'Gov. "Vance was overcome by ihe surrouudings and 6hed tears, and I do not apologize for these teara they were not the trara of fear they wese manly shed in love for hia family and for North Caro lina. Presently ha turned to rr.e, and, wiping the teara Trom his face, said: 'This wiil not do. I must be a man, but I am not so much concerned as to what may be in Btore for me, but my poor wife and little children ihey were little thei)thy have uot a cent of moneyyand my poor State what :ndignity may be in store for .hert Many a man in my position, hav ing ships continuously running the blockade, would have feathered hia nest .by shipping cotton to Europe, and in fact I have often been solic ited to do so, but, thank God, I did not do it my hands are clean and I can face my fillow citizens and and say lhat I have not made mon ey out of my position. "We then rc"de on until we .were about twelve miles from Salisbury, wnen we ail sat down by a spring and had lunch, which we invited our guard lo share . with us. The Gov ernor had by this time recovered bis usual spirits and began to tell the guarda several jokes and eo gained or them .that I heard them say among ihemaelues: 'Why this rebel Governor ia a nice, jolly good fellow' so different from what they bad expected. "After lunch he was invited by the commander of the trocpa to ride with bim on horseback when he got tired of ridiug in the bug;y, which invitation was accepted. He thus rode six miles, when be again took his seat in the biggy, and we drove ahead without any guard at all unlil we came wilbin two miles of Salia bury, when we waited for the column to come up. 'The Governor remarked to the commanding orncer. 'captain, you are giving me a good opportunity to run away,' lo which the officer re plied: 'Governor, I know my man. Such was the great magnetism of Gov. Vance starling out surrounded by a troop of cavalry, he in the few hours bad gained their confidence and esteem to Ihe extent that they were willing to trust him. NThe officer in command then eaid trovernor, it you will give me your word of honor lo be at the depot to morrow lo meet me at the train. will not subject you to the indignh ty of marching that troop through the town, but will let you go in alone with but one officer, be Co go some distance behind you so as not to give the appearance that you are hia piiaoner.' The Governor tbanked him and we in thia way drove into town to Col, Shober's bouse, and while the beautiful and charming Misa Shober entertained the officer. Gov. Vanca went out among his friends to acquaint Ihem of the con dition" of things, and to borrow a little money, aa he" had not a cent. In later years, when speaking of the trip, he told me that all he could raise in that town at that time wa about 163. 'The uext day I went to the depot to bid him good by. where I found him in the cra surrounded by a number of officers, all as jolly aa If the Governor was an old friend going A SONG IN PROSE, i It Is .Appointed Unto All Men Once to Die. Anonymous. And I must die! Tremendous thought. Thia framo eo costly in it workmanship." and strange, will nol last always, but ia doomed to break and fall in pieces like a common reck of perishable clay. Heaven's balmy light and all Ihe nmiling scenery cf earth, the grand, the bright, the! beautiful alike shall perish from' these eyes. The? limbs eo active now aud full of strength, must lie as withered branches by the fallen trunk on which they grew. . And all the play of life shall slop ia univer sal death. Then Iho grave will do its work remote from human eyes, by dissolution foul, breaking the un sightly mass, and turning all back into its own dust. And I must die! Oht can lhat word be true, that the hour is coming, when the voice of death shall call for met I have stood when others died, a sorrowful spec tator, and watched aa one by one life's trembling props gave way, un til all were gone, and the fair fabric fell. And O! it waa fearful then, and shook the soul, only to see how death did do his work. But there will be a tragedy like this in which the ac tion of the dying scene shall all be mine. Othera perhaps may wait hard by the spot to tell their sympa thy in looka and words and woe, that break forth from the troubled deep wilbin. But they will be ipec tatorsonly; mine will be the actor's part. The darkened room, the couch of pain, the haggard, outstretched form, the trembling conflict then will all be mine, when the last convulsive gasp ia drawn, and the ebbing of life's stream dies In the veins. It will be eaid that death has come oo me. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report A little toy dog, all covered with dust. Bat sturdy and staunch be stands, And a little toy soldier, all red with rust; And his musket moulds iu bis bands. Time was when the little toy dog was new, And tbe soldier passing fair, And that was tba time mhen our Little Boy Blue Kissed them and put them there. Now, don't you go till I come," be said, "And don't you maksany noise." So, toddling off to bis trundle bed, He dreamed of bis pretty toys. And as be was dreaming, an angel song Awakened oar Little Boy Blue Oh, the years are many, aud.the years are long. But Iho little toy friends are true. Aye, faithful to Little Boy Blue they stand, Each iu the same old place, Awaiting the loach of a little band, And tbe smile of a little face. And they wonder, as waiting tbe long years through. In tbe dust of tbe little cbair. What has become of our Little Boy Blue Since be kissed them and put them there, Eugene Field. t !" 1 l"-t iH U MAY WEATHER. Prof. Hicks in Wori and Works. The month opens at tho end of of April's closing storm period, with storm disturbances disappearing in extreme eastern parta of the country and coaler wealber prevailing in central and western sections. An equinox of Mercury is central on the 3rd, and will cause cloudiness and tendency lo continued drizz'e. In the extreme north sleet uetd not prove a surprise. By the 4th decid ed change to warmer will develop in the west, aud during the 5th to 7th, reactionary storms will pass over the country, being central about the time of new moon on the 5ih. A sharp change to cooler will fo'low the disturbances at this lime, with strong probabilities of frost along the north ern side of the country from abcut 7th to 10th. From 10th lo li h is the next reg ular period of change and storm. A very warm wave ia apt to appear by the lllh, in western regions, and du ring the three days next following etorma of much energy and wide scope will traverse the country from west to east. Auother very cool wave for the season will come in be bind the storms causing several days of much cooler weather in the country . generally . Heavy rains may reasonably be expected during the last named disturbances name ly, about the lllh, 12ih, and 13. h. during which time a series of daily storms, rccurnug near ine same lime of lay, or night, for several days need not be unlooked for Wa:cb barometers, temperature and direction of wind; if barometer fails to rise after one storm passes, with wind still in east and south, expect another storm from Ibe west, and so on uutil conditions change. The cool weather following the storms of the last period will give place to warmer, and secondary storms will appear in many place about the 17th and ldlb, immediately after which, the barometer will rise rapidly to a very high reading, at tended by a sharp change to cooler. From 21st to 25th, falls the nex storm period, during which time it will grow vry warm, and many storms of ram, thunder and wind will appear. In all these distur bances, the intelligent use of the ba rometer, and correct observation of wind currents, will foreshadow wilb much certainty tbe coming and "the intensity of etorma. About the 27ih and 28th, wilK be central the last distbrbances of May bringing fair and cooler days and nights for the closing months. In the nature of things. May must bring more or less violence, in a me teorological way, but there ia a marked absence of disturbing causes, eo far aa other planeta are concerned. There are reasona to believe that storms will not be unusually frequent and hen vy; but it will be the part of prudence lo watch Ihem all, and be prepared to take refuge from all lhat may carry in iheir cloudy fold3 the desolators of towns aud haarts and homed. MM Li ira no &i MU t nv n ABSOLUTELY P3JRB LITTLE BOY BLUE. Tbe Spleen. not tbe ill burner you feel like venting upon some offender, but the spleen wear the stomach, which tupphes the iirnper amount ot blood to the sl-:nitiu during d'uetiuii. But both arehtV-H-t-d by a t r; , I hvtr. A t irpid lifer ?x , th ..'( The Eagle on the Coins. Harper's Young People. If you have a silver dollar ef 1SCC, 1838, or 1S33, or one of the first nick el cents coined in 1S59, you will find upon it the true portrait of an Amen can eagle, which was for many years a familiar sight in the streets of Philadelphia. 'Peter,' one of the finest eaglea ever captured alive, waa the pet of tbe Philadelphia Mint, and was generally known aa tbe 'Mint Bird.' Not only did he have free acce?a lo every part of ibe Mint, going with out hindrance into the treasury vaults where even the Treasurer of the Uni ted Stalea would not go alone, but used his own pleasure in going about the city, Gying over ihe houses, sometimes perching upon the lamp posts in the streels. Everybody knew him and admir ed him, and even the street boys treated bim with respect. Tbe Gov ernment provided hia daily fare, and he waa aa much a part of the Mint establishment as the superintendent or chief comer. He waa eo kindly treated that be had no fear of anybody or anything. and be might be In the Mint yet if he bad not set down to rest on one of the great fly wheels. The wheel started without warning, and Peter waa caught in Ihe machinery. One of bia winga waa broken, and be died a few days later. The superintendent had his boby beautifully mounted, with the winga spread to their fullest extent; and to thia day Peter stands in a glass case in the Mini's cabinet, where you may see him whenever you go there. An exact portrait of him an be stands in the caso was put upou the coins named. A Question or Law. Marion Record. Some time ago a well- known col ored lady of this place named Sina Greenlee, bad a claim against a col ored man named Jerry Garden Sina told Jerry that she ort to have something lo bhow for it, and Jerry gave her bia noto, which reada aa followsi Thia is to certify that I. lh sed Jerry, are in det to the sed Sina fur five dollars to be pade by Sept. 1st but on thia considerashun, that if I the sed Jerry, fails lo pay the sed Sina the sed Ave dollars on S-pt 1st, ihen the sed S na is to pay me, tbe eed Jerry, tire dollars. Yours Irooly. 'J eery Gardin. When the eaid Sina tried to col lect Ihe said note after the first of September, Jerry maio the point that the amount of fire dollars waa due him, and the case will go to the Supreme Court, our local tribunals of justice being unable to settle it. SIng. Let all young people who are ad dicted to ibe use of slang in any de gree take thia wholesome advice frona Mary S. McCobb: This 'sermonett" ia especially for you. dear girl-. The advice could be put in three words Don't do it. Possibly there might come an occa- sion, say once in a lifetime, when a good round bit cf the genuine article "slang" would prove funny. But to hear vulgar words used by a gentle girl ia almost invariably shocking. I remember passing two girla in ibe street, and bearing one of them say. I'll bet you a quarter. Jt gave me a shiver. Ana wnen a group of school girla fill their, conversation aa galas, tbey often do with one slang phrase after another, the effect on tbe outsider is painfully disa greeable. Tbe babit of talking slang grows rapidly. It ia like reporting a bit of scandal. Have you never noticed if you say an unkind word against a neighbor, how quickly a chance comes to say another! And with just that same appaling ease a habit of using carelessness, coarse word increaaes. Wesda grow rapidly. There ia plenty of good, strong English to give expression to wit, drollery, indignation or sympathy. without recourse to the phrases which belong to vagabonds- The street Arab picks up slang be does the ends of old cigars from the gutter. Surely a well bred girl ia not on the same level in her speech and manner. Why should she use vulgar words any more than ebe would stain her handsf. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve In the world for Cuts. Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores. Tetter. Chapped Hand. Chilblains Corns, and all Skin Kruptions, and positively cures Piies, or no pay required. It is guar anteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sai by r arsons as iiarxiisoru P izzi 10 Mason & Hamlin. "Mason & Hamlts: Dear Sirs: The best proof I can give you of my admiration for your pianos ia the fact that I have used one in my own bouse ever since com ing to thia country. I find the tony musical and eympalhelic. . and tLi piano stands in tune remarkably. Yours truly. EUILIO PIZZI." LHuBfl & Bates it Sontiiern Music House IS SOUTHERN AGENT FOR THE MASON 4. HAMUN PIANO. CHARLOTTE BRANCH, W. M. WIIEELEK, MANAGER. Abcrdcex, O.. July 21. 1S9I. -Messrs. Lippmax Bros . Savannah. Ga. Dear Siks I bought a boUle of your P. P. f. at Hot Springs, Ark., and It has done me more g.Mxl than three mouths' treatment at tbe Hot Springs. Have you no agents in this psrt of the country, or let me know bow much It will cost to get three r six bottles from your city by express. . Respectfullv yours, J AS. M. KEWTOX, Aberdeeu, Brown County, O. News awsvillk. Fla., June 5, 1S91. Messrs. I.ippmas Bros., Savanuah, Q Dear Sirs I wish to give my testimonial in regitrd to your valunble medicine, P.pp Cor the cure of rheumatism, neuralria. dv" pepsia, biliousness etc In fcirtl 1 was at tacted with bilious muscular rheumatism, and hae been a martyr to it ever since. I tried all mediciues 1 ever heard of.and all tbe doc-vnr in reach, but I found only temporary relief; the paixa were ao bad at timrs that I did not care whether I lived or died. My digestion became so impaired that every thing I ate disagreed witu me. My wife also suffered so intensely with dyspepsia that ber life was a burden to her, he would be con fined to her bed for weeks at the time; he also scfTerod greatly from giddiness aid ha of fcleep. Some time in March I was dvisl to take P. P. P., and before we (my wifaatid 1) had UnUhed tbesHxnd bottle of P. P. P , our c. ieiii)u U-i?na t improve, ily iams t! i.ll si much t!,at I have been bie to k, an I ari f ..!!: hks d-nj wbas I THINACURA FOR THIN PEOPLE. Are you Thin? Flesh made with TWnacura Tablets is a scientific process. They. create perfect as similation of every form of food, secretin the valunbU parts and discarding the worth- -ess. Tbey make thin faces plump and round out the figure. Tbey are tbe STAND AUD REMEDY for leanness, producing 13 to 15 lb, per month, conuiuine no arsenic, and ftlABAXTEKI) A If. SO Li TUT ELY IIAK.nL.ESS. Price, prepaid, tl p-r box, 8 for to. Pamphlet. "HOW TO GET FAT," Free. i luiatim.t CO., iJ way. New York. i,r I have this davniiftiii) of J. P. McKae. deceased , and br.x all persons having chunks azainxt t- r.luAdad in h&r of their rwMtwrv Pmiu indeU-rsl to the debased must pay at ouce, -1 . i i -. . . AlRji. JiASCj K. McRAE, . Aduuuistrauix ot J. P. McKae, V f Executor's Notice." I have this day QJl;3cJ aa Fs-a: r. tae 1h" Sbf.herd l.e .! w.l. J ,