1 I THE CAUCASIAN i t ti r'.i nccordms t i'o-la. I t at ci i.i-.H. .. C. n 4c. m! eta-" mail rLLVIQX, X.C-MAY 21, You Should Read Tiio Story Entitled tex inns TO TWELVE! TIIE MENDING OF NETS. (Continued from first Pa;;e. mfmmn By iii. g. McClelland, Tlio Popular American Writer. iing iiomanco Plot Extraordinary! a We Shall Publish this Story OIK la thi't o rolnrnns. The first installment will soon upiitr. LOOK OUT FOR IT. Mr. J. A. Rustic, of Now York, h .s just duniitod !?i:J,32." to the en d v merit fund of Wake Forest Col- The Episcopal council of tlie East i:oceso of East Carolina convened h: New Berne on Tuesday. The Council of tho Diocese for West Car olina was in session in Asheville last week. An Arizona Yankee, who lives near the Mexican line, has hit on a way to evidc the egg tariff. He leeds his liens in Mexico, where grain is cheap. Then he drives them across the line to their nests in the United States. The 105th anniversary of the Meck lenburg Declarator af Independ ence was celebrated in Charlotte yes terday In fine style and with patri rtic spirit. The great sale of the lots of Dilworth.on Tuesday Wednesday and lo-dav. bruit's, as by magic, a new city into existence Dilwoith. "The City of Avenues." Last week a colored driver care lessly ran over and killed a white bov in Wilmington. The negro was arrested and lodged in jail. The colored people gathered into a mob and threatened to release the prison er. Tho military force had to be called out to sustain the civil au thorities. This is an evidence of deep rooted race prejudice that is not hopeful. The Royal Go 'graphical Society of London agreed in January, 1891, that the world's population was 1, 4S7,G90,()00. This indicates that there are thirty. one persons to the square mile upon tho earth's sarface The actual average, however, must be much greater than that since there are so many miles of the earth's sur face uninhabitable. During tho de cade between 18S0 and 1800 the world's population ' increased eight pr cent. A mass mooting of members ot farmers' and laborers' organizations and citizens generally met in Cin cinnati Tuesday, this meeting is not eeognized officially by any of the various organizations, but is simply ti kind of peopWs movemeut for expressing opinions aad consulta tion. Of course no third part will bo formed, and the straws on this occasion will hardly indicate the drift of the breeze. But the meet is called for February 1892 vvillsiz up the situation in a busine.-s like manner. The conciliatory and at the same eminently progressive spirit of the present head of the Roman Catholic church is exciting general attention. He has put himself on record for th higher education and greater emancipation of women, he discuss es the labor question from the stand point both of employers and of working men themselves, so it is said, that "the democracy of Amer ica, imported under other forms, will be the mold by which the future so ciety ant politics of Europe will be fashioned." Therefore he seems particularly desirom that the church should stand well with the govern ment of the United States, and har monize with its free institutions. He realizes that there is a mighty social movement among the people, and that they themselves will become th"5 governing power of the world. ' II. B. Randolph, Brunswick, Ga., writes : "I was tnder the car of nine different doctors, but not one did'rae the good that Botanic Blood Balm has done me." waters what are caljed gill nets, and tho flali put their beads through the meohefl and then cannot withdraw them because they are caught by the gilla. But gill net cannot bo of any service in religious work. Men are never caught for the truth by their head; it is by the lieart or not at alL No argument ever saved a man and no keen analyHUi ever brought a man into the kJn&dom of God. Heart work, not head work. Away with jour gill netal Sympathy, helpfulness, consola tion, lore, are the names of some of tho threads that wo need to weave in our Go? pel nets wlien we are mending them. TIIK WORLD'S IIKAIIT BL'KSTIXO WITH TttOCBLK. Do you know that the world's heart Is bursting with trouble, and If you could make that world believe that the religion of Jesus Christ is a soothing omnipotence the whole world would surrender tomorrow yea, would sur render this hour? The day before James A. Garfield was inaugurated as president I was in the cars going from llichinond to Washington. A gentle man seated next to me in the ears knew me, and we were soon in familiar con versation. It was just after a bereave ment, and I was speaking to him from an overburdened heart about the sor row I was suffering. Looking at bis cheerful face I said: "I guess you have escaped all trouble. I should judge from your countenance that you have come through free from all misfortune." Then he looked at me with a look shall never forget and whispered in my car: "Sir, you know nothing about trouble. My wife has been in an in sane asylum for fifteen years." And then he turned and looked out of the window and into the night with silence I was too overpowered to break. That was another illustration of the fact that no one escapes trouble. Why, that man seated next to you in church has on his soul a weight compared with which a mountain is a feather. That woman seated next to you in church has a crief tho recital of which would make your body, mind and soul shud der. When you aro mending your net for this wide, deep sea of humanity take out that wire thread of criticism and that horsehair thread of harshness, and put in a soft silken thread o Christian sympatny. xea, wnen you are mending your nets tear out those old threads of gruflness and weave in a few threads of politeness and geniality, In the house of God let all the Christian faces beam witn a loot tnat means welcome. Say "good morning" to the stranger as he enters your pew, and at the close snake lianas witn nun and say, "now aid you use tne music r Why, you would bo to that man a panel of the door of heaven ; you would be to him a note of the doxology that seraphs sing when a new soul enters. That man is a thousand miles from home, and he lias just heard by tele graph that his child is sick with scarlet fever, and his boy at college has got into disgrace, and he has had business troubles, and is so homesick he can hardly keep from crying. Just one word of brotherly kindness from you would lift him into a small heaven. I have in other days entered a pew in church, and the woman at the other end of the pew looked at me as much as to say, "now dare you? This is my pew, and I pay the rent for it" Well, I crouched in the other corner and made myself as small as possible and felt as though I had been stealing some thing. So there are people who have a sharp edge to their religion, and they act as though they thought most peo ple had been elected to be damned and they were glad of it. Oh, let us brighten up our manner and appear in utmost gentlemanliness or ladyhood. AVOID ABRUPTNESS. The object in fly fishing is to throw the fly far out, and then let it drop gently down and keep it gently rising and falling with the waters, and not plunge it like a man-of-war's anchor; and abruptness and harshness of man ner must be avoided in our attempt at usefulness. I know a man in New York who is more sunshiny and genial when he has dyspepsia than when he is not suffering from that depressing trouble. I have found out his secret. When he starts out in the morning with such depression he asks for special grace to keep from snapping up any body that day, and puts forth addi tional determination to be kindly and genial, and by the help of God ho ac complishes it Many of our nets need to be mended in these respects, the Wack threads and the rough threads taken out and the bright threads and the golden threadsof Christian genial ity woven in. In addition to this, we need to mend our nets with more threads of patience. It is no rare thing for a fisherman to spend one whole day before he can tako a St. Lawrence pike or an Ohio salmon or a Long Island pickerel or a Cayuga black bass, or a .Delaware cat fish, and ho docs that day after day without particular discouragement Bjt what a lack of patience if we do not immediately succeed . in soul catch ing. We are apt rto givetit up and say, "I will never tryiagain.' Into all our nets we necc to "weave all along the edge, and all throujtb tlio center, creat. long, stout thveacUi of Christian pa tience.' How patient God has been with us! Can wo iitot be patient with our fellows? I hadj presented me from Scotland a few daqstagoton ornament ed inkstand, tberwoodedSparts of which were made from; a rpiece- of a tree cat down by Mr.. Gladstone, at Hawarden, and sent by him. to Scotland by re quest , The mcident4reinixtded me of the fact that a woman a iho had long been on Mr. Gladstone' estate had a way ward boy, and mhor despair slu asked Mr. Gladstone to lake the boy in hand. While prune rwrmsterof England, with all the mightytaffairs- of the kingdom in his hand, lie , took that boy in his study and counseled him, and then knelt downline! prayed with him, and the boy -was snved. If we all had hearts of sympathy like that, s what would be-to us- impossible? "Is it not delightful that 2 can sing so well?" said Jenny Line! ia a buisttof Joy that she could help others. "Ia it 'not delight ful that 1 earn sing so wefjr And might we not ail say in thttnfc-fnfrgpfl, to God, "Is itnoi dehghtf ul that we can sym pathize with, other and encourage othersandi Eoelpothersandjssve others f THE THREAD OF FAITH. to&r oat all the tangled mesnes oz un belief. Oar work is successful accord ing to our xaun. iiie manwuu w lieves in only half a Bible, or the JUle In spots; the man who thinks he can not persuade others; the man who halts, doubting about this and doubt ing about that, will be a failure in Christian' work. Show me the man who rather thinks that tee garden' of -Men may have been an allegory, and Is not quite certain but that there may be another chance after death, and does not know whether or not the Bible is inspired, and I tell you that man for soul saving is a poor stick. Faith in God and in Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost aQd the absolute necessity cl a regenerated heart in order to see God in peace, is one thread you must have in your mended net or you will never be a successful fisher for men. Why, tow can you doubt? The hundreds of millions of men and women now standing in the church on earth and the hundreds of millions in leaven attest the power of this Gospel to save. With more toan tne certainty of a mathematical demonstration let us start out to redeem all nations. The rottenest thread that you are to tear out of your net is unbelief, and the most important thread that you are to put in it is faith. Faith in God, tri umphant faith, everlasting faith. B you cannot trust the infinite, the holy, the omnipotent Jehovah, who can you trust? Oh, this important work of mending .aw a our nets I u we coma gee our nets right we would accomplish more in soul saving in the next year than we have in the last twenty years. But where shall we get them mended? Just where old Zebedee and his two boys mended their nets where you are. James, why don't you put your oar in Lake Galilee, or hoist your sail and land at Capernaum or Tiberias or Ga- dara, and, seated on the bank, mend your net? Jotm, wny don't you go ashore and mend your net? No; they sat on the guards of the boat, or at the prow of the boat, or in the stern of the boat, and they took up the thread and the needle, and the ropes and the wooden blocks, and went to work ; sewing, sewing; tying, tying; weaving, weaving; pounding, pound ing; until, the net mended, they push it off in the sea, and drop paddle and hoist sail, and tho cutwater went through amid the shoals of fish, some of the descendants of which we had for brea&iast one morning wmie we a. were encamped on the beach of beauti ful Galilee. James and Jonn Had no time to go ashore. They were not fish ing for fun, as y6u and I do in summer time. It was their livelihood and that of their families. They mended their nets where they were, in the ship. "Oh," says some one, "I mean to get my net mended, and I will go down to the public library, and I will SCO what the scientists say about evolution and about the survival of the fittest,' and I will read up what the theologians say about 'advanced thought' I will leave the ship awhile and I will go ashore and stay there till my net is mended." Do that, my brother, and you will have no net left Instead of their help ing you mend your net they will steal the pieces that remain. Better stay in the Gospel boat, where you have all the means for mending your net. What are they, do you ask? I answer all you need you have where you are, namely, a Bible and a place to pray. The more you study evolution and adopt what is called advanced thought the bigger fool you will be. Stay in the ship and niind your net. That is where James the son of Zebedee and John bis brother staid. That is where all who get their nets mended stay. don't go ashore. I notice that all who leave the -Gospel boat and go ashore to mend their nets stay there. Or if they try again to fish, they do not catch anything. Get out of the Gospel boat and go up into the world to get your net mended, and you will live to sec the day when you will feel like the man who, having fo.rsaken Christianity, signed. "I would save a thousand pounds to feel as I did in lsUO." The time will come wnen you would be willing to -give a thousand pounds to feel as you did in 1891. These men who have given up 'their old religion cannot help you a bit. It is my opinion that the most of those ministers who jjave up the old re ligion ute in search, of notoriety. They do not succeed in attracting much at tention. They are tired of obr:rity. They must do something to attract at tention, so they sit down on the beach and goto tearing to pieces the fishing net3" instead of mending them. The staid old denomination to which they belong does not pay them enough at tention, so they attract attention by striking their grandmother. They do not get enough attention by standing in the pulpits, so they go to work and break the church windows. These dear brethren of all denomina tions, afflicted with theological fidgets, bad better go to mending nets instead of breaking them. Before they break up the old religion and try to foist on us a pew religion, let . them go through some great sacrifice for God that will prove them worthy for such a work, taking the advico of Talleyrand to a man who wanted to upset the religion of Jesus Christ and start a new one, when ho said,' "Go and be crucified and then raise yourself from the grave the third day !" Those who propose to mend their nets by secular and skepti cal books are like a man who has just one week for fishing, and six of the days he spends in reading Izaak Wal ton's "Complete Angler, " and Wheat ley's "Rod and Line," and Scott's "Fishing in Northern Waters," and Pullman's "Vade Mecum of Fly Fish ing for Trout," and then on Saturday morning, his last day out, goes to the river to ply hu art, but that day the fish will not bite, and late on Saturday night he goes home with empty basket and a disappointed heart Meanwhile a man who never saw a big library in all his life has that week caught with an old fishing tackle enough to supply his own table and the table of all his neighbors, and enough to salt down in barrels for the long winter that will soon come in. Alas I alas! If when the Saturday night of our life drops on us it shall be found that we have spent our time in the libraries of worldly philosophy, trying to mend our nets, and we have only a few souls to report as brought to. God through our instrumentality, while some humble Gospel fisherman, his library made up of a Bible and An almanac, shall come home laden with the results, bis trophies the souls within fifteen miles of his log cabin meeting house. VXSHBRMAjr TS COKXAXD. Xnthe time of great disturbance in Hades in 1S49 Maasaniello, a bare command of that city of six hundred thousand aouls. He took off his fish ing jacket and pat on a robe of gold in the presence of howling mobs. He pet bis hand on liia lip as a signal end they were silent He waved his hand away from him and they retired to their homes. Armies passed in review before him He became the nation's idoL The rapid rise and the complete su premacy of that young fisherman, Mas saniello, has no parallel in all history. But something equal to thai and bet ter than that is an everyday occurrence in heaven. God taL.es some of those who in this world were fishers of men. and who toiled very humbly, but be cause of the way they mended the j- nets and employed their nets alter they were mended, and suddenly hoists them and robes them and scepters them and crowns them, and makes them rulers over many cities, and he marches armies of saved ones before them in re view, Massanieiloe unhonored on earth but radiated in heaven. The fisher boy of Naples soon lost his power, but those people of God who have kept their nets mended and rightly swung them shall never lose their exalted place, but shall reign forever and ever and ever. Keep that reward in Sight - But do not spend your time fishing with hook and line. Why did not James the son of Zebedee sit on the wharf at Cana, his feet hanging over the lake and with a long pole and a NEW DOUBLE COLUMN ADVERTISEMENT FOR SALE, worm on the hook dipped into the wave wait for some mullet to swim up and bo caught? Why did not Zebedee spend his afternoon trying to catch one eel? No, that work was too slow. These men were not mending a hook and line; they were mending their nets. So let the church of God not be con tent with having here one soul and next month another soul brought into the kingdom Sweep all the seas with nets, scoop nets seine nets, drag nets, all-encompassing nets and take the treasures in by hundreds and thousands and millions, and nations be born in a day, and the hemispheres quake with the tread of a ransoming God. Do you know what will be the two most tre mendous hours in our heavenly exis tence ? Among the quadrillions of ages which shall roll on what two occasions will be to us the greatest? The day of our arrival there will be to us one of the two greatest The second ereatest. I think, will be the day when we shall have put in parallel lines before us what Christ did for us, and what we did for Christ the one so creat the other so little. . That will be the only embarrassment in heaven. My Lord and my Godl What will we do and what will we say when, on one side are placed tho Saviour's great sac rifices for us, and our small sacrifices for him ; his exile, his humiliation, his agonies on one hand, and eur poor, weak, insufficient sacrifices on the other? To make the contrast overwhelming, let us quickly mend our nets, and, like the Galilean fishermen, may we be divinely helped to cast them on the right side of the ship. For Cash at Lowest Cash Prices, OR ON TIE AT HDB PRICES FOR GOOD PAPER, THE LARGEST STOCK OF Dry Goods, Notions, Hats, Shoes, ever offered in Cliulon. Trunks, Handbags and Valises. Furniture and Matrcnses, Spring Beds. Glass, Crockery and Tin Ware, Wooden Ware, Cook Stoves and StovH Ware. Ready Mixed Paints, Stains and Colors, White Lad, Unseed Oil, Sash and Doors, Lime and Hail. Prices and quality guaranteed. Hardware, Cutlery and Guns; Plow, Plow Castings, Shovels, f pades, &c. 1,000 busnels prime White Corn, at market price?. Meat, Lard, Flour, Meal, Sugars, Coffee. Molasses and Syrups. Tobacco and Snuff, .and Cigars, at J. E. ROYAL'S. If children wh have passed the fourth year aro bathed carefully twice a week it oucht to meet all tho actual requirements, at least in cold weather. NEW A DVEUTI.5EMENTS. NE W ADVEUTISElEXTH THE OLD SAYIBJG! Goods Well Bought A Mcilf R E Id OUR STOCK IS SELLS WELL. WELL liOUGUT AND THEREFORE IT WHO ('AX REFUSE TO iUJY AT OUK PRESENT PRICES? We are selling ES We Have on Hand AT ALL Til A FULL LINE OF Groceries and Farm Supplies In general. We always lead in prices, WE DO NOT FOLLOW BUT LEAD. Have i nst received a new line of CALICOES, which we are selling at 5 cents, will cost 8 cents at other places. We pay at all times full prices for COUNTRY PRODUCE. Don't foiget the place, ALLIANCE HEADQUARTERS, In tho OLD MOSELEY STORE, CORNER FAYETTEVILL AND JAIL STREETS. Yours Fraternally, G. A. Clute Pants Goods at 10 cents per yard and upward. Coats at 50 cents and upward. Coats and Vests at 75 cents and upward. Pants at 50 cents and upward. Childrens' Shoes 35 cents and up ward, Straw Hats at 5 cents and upward. Wool Hats 35 cents and upward. Fur Hats $1.00 and upward. Whole Suits $2.00 and upward Ladies' Shoes $1.00 and upward, Mens' Shoes $1.00 and upward. April 12tb, 1891, MANAGER. ADVERTISEMENTS. CHAS. A. GOODWIN & CO., PROPRIETORS FavBtteville Marble worts lauteR's old stand, I FAYETTEVILLE, N. C. Manufacturers of and dealer in Marble and Granite Monuments, Wrought Iron and Woven Wire Fencing. BEST WORK ! LOWEST PRICES ! Guarantee Satisfaction ! feho tf i 4 , Again, In mending ounnets we need footed fishinsr boy. dropped. his fishing dso teput in i thetfhreada ofJhUthanjS 1 fofl and Jby gtricrga tetiamtook oo fit S 12!!!:! I 21 m 5iiiiio NEWADVERT1SJIENTS. Official Notice. The Justices of the Peace of Sampson countyt will take no- Ice that they are required, un der the law, to meet in joint ses sion with the Board of County Commissioners, at Clinton, N. C, on the 1st Monday in June, 1891, for the purpose of levyiutr the taxes and electing the Board of Education, and transacting such other business as may come before the meeting. The List Takers and Assessors hereto appoint, whose names have been heretofore published, are also requested to be present at said meeting for the purpose of discussing the manner of list ing property for taxation, in or der that tlie:e may be more reg ularity and uniformity in the listing of taxes, and thereby the tax list or sheets may be ireer of mistakes Bv order of the Chairman of f Board Countv Commissioners. O. F. HERRING, mv7-3t Ex-Officio Clerk DETTOU'S. NEW BUGGY SHOP-J I have opened a Buggy Shop at the staud. Warren I make Johnson old NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Hcan Mustang Linimen ror n UV mm and These prices .are not for common goods, thy represent goods worth double the price. We mean to well even i tiim.sare hnrd. We know our customers will need goods, and they will buy if they can buy them cheap, and in our store Is the pi ice to iuy. COME EVERYBODY. COME. Yours Very Friendly, King Clothier and Hatter. i Ul o Q A rc n o r-t CD O J w o CD a Xfl rH -4 93 FOR A POSITIVE CURE FOR IN . USE OVER 40 YEARS, S? PILE'S. Vs5 O I SIMPLE. EFFECTIVE. WONDERFUL. 50c. PER. BOX. BUGGIES, WAGONS, BO AD CARTS and OX CARTS and do ALL SORTS OF RE PAIRING. I make TURPEN TINETOOLS. In fact anythirg done at c. first-class Blacksivith Shop. I have not quit the HAR NESS BUSINESS, but am mak ing and kedping on hand a lar ger supply of Harness, Saddles, &c. than ever before, and at the lowest prices. You all know my reputation for good honest work. The work of the. Blacksmith Shop will be of the same guaranteed honest quality af at my Harness Shop. Bring me your work. Let me furnish you with what you need in my line. RespecttuPy, ap30 tf W. H. STETSON. Forty Years THF KlghKt TESTIMONIALS. At OnabU vr Mailt! vm WINKELMANN & BROWN Drug Co. rnb Baltimore. Md. rhs Grui German Headacha Cure will enre Berrou., sick. malarial and all forma of liar dacha. People who hava nffered. aar tt ia a God' bleesing BAP atankiaa. Pleaa aat to nae. No bad " cflscta. Care eartaia and quick. Tor ! hrr drneri.t, or hj mail crota, HIHSXIrHASJI ORT. JUK drneei.t, or ly mail crata. HEADACHE M LB Q.JLV! (tocerai aal STtKVGUS SmuTY, weosaaiaai ataayaaa aiiao, ut IBULdorlour. htel, Wilt 1U IOOD Ml; tun4. Mw t. ratarr. aa Btm.lk.aW) afc, lk.'VYILOrt.Or.t..L8.riKTHOir BOUT. ivMT aahUMai JtOM TKl TaliT a..rtl la a aa. Ia kMtlfr IVi la : hia .-id tm tin CaaUl.a, WrMattoah if mm, M-aUKB aaa ami Mutaimo ERI'tMEOI eiFALO, N. Y. Vwitk at. Claw Utht, u '55 If and WMikuy HsMxa S "V curt d at txiue with- paln. ttook nf pa r- WOOLI.KV.M.D. STATE OF NORTH CARO LINA, BLADEN CO. Jus tice's Court. M. R. Handon, ) Before vs. 11. B. Cnnuarie. Woodberry Lennon . ) ' J. 1. S.1ATE OF NORTH CAROLINA : To any Constable or - other Lawful Officer, Greeting: , Yon are hereby commanded to summons AVoodberyXennon to appear before me at my of fice in EUzabethtown, county of Bladen, on the 15th day of Jane. 1891, at 16 o'clock a. m., to an swer the complaint of M. R. Hendon for the non-payment of the snm of onn hundred dollars. Herein fail not and make due return of this summons. R. B. CROJH ARTIE, J. P. This 26th April, 1891. my 7-4t STANDARD- . For Sale o CD EH CD O -i i u 5 7 72 CO O ci c "J c x ci d 93 i , rf w a o i xi u G ea is O T3 s- o 0) a; IM at" rt i 'i. 3 O c3 C t5 O rr U c H H m w1, cs U3 (rt U3 C5 c 9 O as o BY ALL DRUGGISTS, EOLLIDAY'3 A STITCH IN TIME SAVES NINE!" Don't wait to get sick, but when you Degin to feci bad come and gvt a dose of medicine and prevent sick ness. This is the proper use of med icine. If you will do this you wiJi scarcely ever have a doctor's hill to pay or lose months of time, and put your friends and relatives to such a deal of trouble. In addition to my complete line of pure and reliable Drugs, I carry Warner's Log Cabin Remedies, B. B. B.. the 8. S. S.. Qmnina In mal! and large quantities; Simmon's Liv er ueguiaiur, famous Kpecific Or ange Blossom, Cuticura Remedies, Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription, the Golden Medical Discovery, Horse and Cattle Powder (1 pound packages prepared by the Herb Co. ofW. Va, Quaker brand.) Prescriptions carefully compound ed. Local and office practice upon re quest. Respectfully, angl tf DR. B. H. IIOLLIDAY. BRowirs moK bitters L Core Indigestion, Hiliou:-a, IjTpnia, v.i.- xw,erTuuaDeaa.aua(neruJ IXibtUty. Pbycl. daaa recommend It. All dealera ieU U. Genuina um uwa auu crwaaea rea uoet on wrapper. Everybody Needs At some time or other a little good Spirits. Remember that WATSON & PETERSON keep a full line of what you want. Also a full line of line WINES, BRANDIES AND WHISKIES. or your FAMILY GROCERIES, , Call on WATSON & PETHSON, ' CLINTON, N.C. NEW -ADVERTISEMENTS. Cave at a. snd Trado-MarVa obtained, and all Pat ent trnmnecs conducted for Modcrata Fee. Our Olfica it OpposHt U.S.Falenl Offica. !wM 'eC?rJ'"tent lnlcM time than tLoao remote from Warbioton. irndJ?od1-.draTJ"e ot Pnoto-. wh dcr!p u " eie. If patentable or not, free It Cb2T?- 9?L fe. ,not doe 1411 lt la aerwred. A Pamphlet -How to Obtain Patenta," with names of actual ciienta in your State, county, or town, cent free. Addrets, ' 7' e.A.srjow&co. Htpoaite Patent OBct. WuhingtM. D. C. 1 Jibtice to Creditors. HA VING QUALIFIED AS EX ecutor or the estate of Juij. an A. Killett's estate, I hereby notify all persona holding claims against said estate to exhibit the same, duly proven accord ing to law, to the undersigned on or before 'April 22nd, J 8 92 or their claims will be barred from coUectiou. All person indebted to said estate are requested to make mmediate payment. M.KILLETT. April 22, lSDl.ct Exocutor. To care BOiouneM, Sick Headache, Constl pation, UaUrU, liver CompUlnU, take th tale and eertaln remedy, uxax'TZX'S Notice to Creditors, HAVING QUALIFIED AS administrator of Rachel S!!i?y,Secea8ed notIeo u herby Si!?nafa11 1 Psons holding claims against said etate to present the same, duly proven incoming to law. bel?,r" Apil 20tht 1892, or thil noUce wiltbe pleaded in bar of their !JS?vef; All persons indebted to saia estate, either bv noteoranynnt Will DlAflSU UP- ; : AUTRY BAGGETT, p, . ' AdministTator. ierAtt'y, Henry Faisox. April 20th, 189U 22-Gt