Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / March 30, 1899, edition 1 / Page 4
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"Peace Hath I Her Victories &p less renowned than war," said Milton, and now, in the Spring, is the time to get a peaceful victory over the impurities which have been accumulating in the blood during Winter s hearty eating. The ban ner of peace is borne aloft by Hood's Sarsaparilla, It hrlnir rmt nl comfort to th wary ody rnck" by fain of nil sort ami kind. Ita bonclil ttx-t provo It to b the irrtnt f'in! to I" rHl upon tor Tlctory. Itoo'l's nrrer 'linappoint. 8't Rtfum-"r mother w serious ly afflict.! with salt rhrum and painfnl run ning mrm. No ml-ino hHwt lr until Hood's HrAtrili was umsL, which mad. hr entirely wrll." ra K. Maiplmtosk. JM Dsarborn Street, C hicago, 111. T'rAd rellno-"I b4 that tired, dnll feeling, dyep -psla, hesdarhws and etiktnif rp but Hood's Harsiparllla mado tu a nw inito. I fiMvrr wax letter than Dow." Jons Mack, Oskslooia, Iowa. cftacdA SaUabwdtfa Hood pit is eurjkeritiB. ""n-,fr,AtinJLJ i Yh on I yVnltUrYl to is k mtilh Hood HsrtspsrtlU. "Chouie" Seymour. Seymour, the actor, wan locally known n "ClionHi-," because on one occasion, when playing Othello at tho Limerick, Theatre, he, In the well known iaHnKe, "Excellent wretch! Perdition cntcli tuy Houl, but I do lore thee, and when I love thee not, chaon Is come ngnln," pronounced the won! "cLaoh" oh If written "chouse." Sey mour hated the nickname, and it 1 re corded of hi in when one night he was pluying Otlcllo In the dying ncene a Tolce from the house roared out, "That'B Mesncd good, Chousef Then the audience wltneSHCtl a singular spectacle. Othello Hat bolt upright, hook hU flat In the direction of the disturber, nnd In a voice of rage In vited him. If he were n man, to come down nnd have his head punched. There being no answer to his chal lenge, the hapless Moor solemnly turn ed over ami proceeded to die, to an itblignto of t itters from tho entire house. The Aivmnut. AN OPERATION AVOIDED. Mrs. Itoao Gaum Writos to Mrs. Finkham About it. Sho Says : DkabMrs. Pinkham: I tako pleas ure in writinjr you a few lines to in form you of tho good your Vegetable Compound ha3 dono me. I cannot thank you enough for what your medi ilno has dono for me; it has, indeed. helped me wonderfully, For yean I was trou bled with an ovarian tumor, each year grow ing worse, un til at last I was compelled to consult with a physician. lie said nothlngcould be done for me but to go under r.u operation. In speaking with a friend of mine about it, ehe recommended Lydia E. rinkham's Vegetable Compound, say ing she knew it would cure me. I then sent for your medicine, and after tak ing three bottles of it, the tumor dis appeared. Oh I you do not know how much good your medicine has done me. I shall recommend it to all suffer ing women. Mrs. Rosa Gaum, 720 Wall St., Los Angeles, Cal. The great and unvarying success of Lydia E. rinkham's Vegetable Com pound in relieving every derangement of the female organs, demonstrates it to bo the modern safeguard of wo man's happiness and bodily strength. More than a million women have been benefited by it. Every woman who needs advice about her health is invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. PROOF. It Is an easr matter to cUlm that a re tne I y ba wonderful curative power. 'The manufacturer ot BHEUHACIDE lenve It to t.hoe who bar been perma nently nnd positively cured i f Rheu matism to nmke clnfm. Among those who have recently written ua volunta ry letteta eaylnv ther had been cured are: Kev. J, 1 Foster, Haleiich. N. i;.; Mr. J. K. Robinson, Editor. Qoldboro, N. C. Dally Aruv,Mr A.Daus, prom inent merchant. Mai, lMr.W.R, Jjnke.a railroad raan.Kansaa Clty.Mo. Hhenmirlde Will tire Yon. Manufactured by The B0BBITT DRUG CO. RLKI;ll. N V. Sold by rmgitpnerl y. Trice 11 per bottle AGENTS WANTED iVcZn7,7cor;Thrilling Stories of the Spanish American War by Returned HeroesVSto Halted. Tot term and territory, address D. E. LUTHER PUB. CO., Atlanta, Ga. 3 the 0iti you tht 1 A i If 1 Frank B. Trout, of 103 Griawold Ave., Detroit, Mich., says : "At the age of fourteen we bad to take our daughter from school oa account of ill health. She weighed oaly 90 pounds, was pale and tallow and the doctors aid he had anaemia. Finally we gave her Dr. Williams' pink Pills for Pale People. When ahe had taken two bozea she was strong- enough to eaTc dct uea, ana in lew tnan aiz months was something like herself. To-day she is entirely cured, and is a big, strong, healthy girl, weighing .130 pounds, and has never had a sick day since."-J?rfr- Evtninc Nrwt. ' the gnuinc OT.VfilUamv' Pink Pill tor PU People art old only in packages; the rfTtppcY always bearing the fvll name. At all dTuggntk, et direct from the DT V(ii;ms Medicine Co . Schenectady, 50ptr box f GIE4T FttEST Flit Tweslj-eliht Tlomid Sahara MOes BsraeJ Over la IS71 Xa 1S74 some banters started a prai- ri fire In Bon Homme County, v. i.. opposltt Nlobrars, Neb. There was a strong southeast wind, and It swept to the northeast for over 300 miles, lick In up the dry prairie grass and ro1!- Jnsj up great column of araoke on tho soft Keptember ahr for upward or a week. Tb!s one was comparatively narrow, being kept from spreaaing u the west by the Missouri river aua from maklnz much progress to the east at first by the Jim river, and later bv the wind, which shifted more to the east, bat in some places the tract burned over reached a width of sev enty-lire miles, and It averaged, per haps, fully fifty. It found few streams to Impede Us progress on that side or tne Missouri; what few It did encounter it had no difficulty in leaping. Indeed, the dis tance fire will Jump In crossing these prairie streams, where the grass grows rank and tall to the very water's edge, seems almost past belief. In case a fire cannot cross in one place there U usually a place where It can, and bo it rushes on, frequently leaving large unburned Irregular A-shaped places along the streams or lakes, but leav ing the country as a whole, black, bur ten and forbidding. This firo took over a week to eo rather more than 200 miles. This may seem slow, but several things must bo taken into consideration. In many places the grass was short, which nec essarily hindered Its progress. There was little or no wind during the nights so It, of course, traveled slowly then At other times, when it got anions stretches of blue-Joint or other tail grass, It, like any other prairie fire, traveled at such a rate that a horsi be he ever so fast, could not keep ahead. The front was, of course, ir regular, nnd, as usual, it would fre quently happen that two long advanc ing arms would Join several miles ahead of the main line of flame and rush onward, forming a new front and leaving a rapidly disappearing lslaud of unburned grass behind. The left of the mighty advancing column of flame was retarded the sec ond or third day in passing through the liljou hills. Later the right be came entangled among the Wessing- ton hills and fell behind. It finally died out among the coteaux close to the Missouri river, In the neighbor hood of Le Beau nnd Boise Cache creeks. In fact, It was the river that stopped It, for had It not been there, or had the wind got into the south, it would have swept on 250 miles fur ther. out of Dakota and on Into tho British possessions, no one knows how far. Probably about 28.000 square miles of prairie were burue over by this moving sea or fire. About thirty hunters and a few families were caught In that fire and burned to death. " ' Preserving the Sku. The treatment of the skin of tho face has always excited a great deal of comment. Some people will de clare that It Is best to wash the face with soap and water and allow na ture to do the rest. These are gen erally people who have remarkably good skins, nnd do not need to be careful of them. Those who ore troubled with pimples of the ugly lit tle things called blackheads feel that more care must be bestowed. The removal of blackheads is thought to bo a difficult matter and few under stand what causes them. They are nothing more than the accumulation of dust and flying dirt lodging in the pores of the skin, and held there by tho oil that exudes In greater or les3 degree from these pores. The par ticles become black from the dust, and as they are Imbedded In the pores mere washing of the face will not re move them. The only" way to get them out is to press them out with a bodkin or wide-eyed needle. Pressing with the fingernail should not be re sorted to. The face should be washed and steamed before beginning to re move the blackheads, .then the irri tated surface should be soothed with an application of benzoin and water. If this solution is used constantly the DiacKneaas will not continue to ap- pear. American Exhibits at Paris. Hundreds of American horseles3 car rlages and vehicles of all kinds will be i seen on the streets of Paris during the i great universal exposition of 1000, Contracts have recently been let in various cities in the United States, notably' Chicago, for the building and equipping of about 5,000 electrical car riages. American railroads are pre paring to make extensive exhibits at the Paris Exposition, and some of them will be full of novel and striking Ideas. One plan, which has already received the approval of a number of tho leading railroad companies, pro vides for the construction of an enor mous upright relief or profile map of the United States, on which every line of railroad In the country will be marked by electrical devices. New York Journal of Commerce. Three German cities possess electric mil y. So. 13. Any Girl Can Tell t A physicfen vho m&kes the test and honest &bcut it can tell you. that, in many cases.the numoeT of ted corpuscle in the blood is doubled &FteT & course of treatment with 0t. Willi&mV Pink Pills for Pale People .That this means good blood may not be enmelv cle&T from doctor's statement, but any vino has uied the Dills can tell that it means ted lips, bright. gooa appeuxe. aosence or headache, and that it trans forms the pale and sallow gi-rl Into a maiden who dlows with beauty which perfect health alone can give. Mothers whose dauohten OTorf debilitated as they pass from oWlhood into womanhood.. should not neglect the pill best1 euapxeu. jot uu paTiicuior in. 3 i He and Mrs. Arp Overwhelmed at tho Interest' Shown. GIFTS AND SOUVENIRS FROM Friends Near Home aid Friesds Abroad- Kind, Lotiax Greetings of Chilare.i, kin dred and Treads. The celebration of onr golden wed ding is oTer and my good wife and I are till marching to the end of the jour ney. The fiftieth anniversary of our wedded life brought no change and did not for a moment stop the ticking of tbe marble clock upon the man tie. The days and the weeks and the months are till coming this way. We did not cross the Rubicon nor tho Jordan nor the Htyx, but only net np another mile stone and marked it fifty, rtowweare on the last quarter stretch ncaring tne goal, and if it wai left to ns we would make it on even race. Lirth and mar riage and death are the most notable events in this life, the most pregnant with fate, and destiny, of happiness or misery and it becomes ns to pause oc casionally and ponder them. If we can do this with serenity and gratitude it is well tor there is no comfcrt in mel aocholy. Ana so we were maue nappy on oar wedding day, and are happy yet as we recall the kind loving greetings of children and kindred and friends. A ehade of Badness came over nsof course as we thought of the missing one, tho youngest boy afar olfm Mexico, but he will come some of these summer days, and bring his sunshine with him. He always brings it and he always sends it in his letters, lhere is no better sign of a bov tnan for him to write home of ten and regularly, and Carl does that. Mr. Craig, of Macon, sent ua by ex press prepaid a pretty iron double seat lor tho verandah or the lawn and wrote. "I made this with my own hands for your golden wedding. My wife and I wanted to show our love for your son vari wuo was so goou ana Kma to our dear boy whde he was sick in Mexico, uur ooy came noma ana died, but we have not forgotten Carl, God bless him. " What a comfort Jto a parent are the letters from tho children. What comfort are good, kind letters from friends known and unknown and we have had them by tho hundred during the past two weeks, and telegrams, too. from New York to Texas nnd from the islands of our new domain. Wo were amazed overwhelmed and wondered what we had done to provoke such interest in our honiu af fairs. And then the press has showered its benedictions so lavishly that I was constrained to whisper when will this thing stop where will this bird light. vveareproua ot an tni3, imt not vain and we are more gratified than proud, but the query is still with us "What have we done and is not this all a dream? And then there are the beautiful gifts and souvenirs that kept on coming from friends near home and friends abroad. Ihey crowded our tables and adorned the walls. These golden presents glad dened our golden years and fitted the golden wedding so appropriately, and the flowers did, too beautiful flowers from .Brooklyn and Attauta and Home and Mobile and Marietta and all laden with pretty sentiments and some with tne ever living linos lrom Mrs. liemans: "Bring flowers, fresh flowers for the bride to wear; They were born to blush in her shining Ainu. Yes - all is for the bride. She lets me look at the beautiful things, and even to handle them, but they are all hers ex cept the gold headed cane and the French Clock that my dear old college mate, Jim Warren sent me. And she has given me one of the gold fountain pens and a pair of the cuff buttons and the new fangled carvinrr fork that I thought was curling tongs for my scat- A 11! fl . . -m- tereu nair. j i seems to me that l am a little humbl r than I was before the wedding, for sho claims all the pretty things, from the massive golden ladle of Mrs. Akin and the beautiful golden chalices of the Constitution and the lovely spoon service of the Homo and Farm and tho gold mount ed umbrella From Kansas City, down to the golden bookmark and the golden toothpicks. Thero are scores of other beautiful things in class and gold, and they are all hert?. I am no longer the cashier of this bank, for the bride has put away the goldon coin, though bug says sue oniy wants to Keep it a while and will then give it back to mo. I remember when my father got a pen sion of $700 lor a poor old man who owed him $90 and had owed it for years. Father counted ont the gold and gave it to him, thinking that of course ho would pay the debt, but he wrapped it up carefully and put it away down in his pocket and started for his horse, who was hitched to the rack near by. As he was about to got up father said to him, "Mr. Jenkins, lthouehtyou told me you wouiu pay me wnen you got your pension?" "Yes, I did, Asa," aul he, "and I'm gwine to do it tomor row shore. I jest wanted to take it all home and let tbo old woman look at it and feei-of it and co.untit.and we would sleep with it in the house ono night, Asa just oae night, Asa. " And sure enough he did bring it back next day aud raid the debt and put the rest in my father's fe. 1 know that my bride will do that, 00. Fifty years ago she premised me verytbiug she had cr was goiug to .ave aud .so I will wait. She has. al ways given me everything that came m her except tho children, fcjhe claims nl of them and still speaks of them as Jly children my boys and my girls." van Howe: J, mv old friend, came to our weddinjr and brought his good wife with him. You see, I was at his fatb er' wedding long before he was born and I wauted him here, but when he was called upon to respond to Judce Akin's beautiful speech, I thought he went b little out of his way to say that every man was mado better by his wife ttnd that he had reason to believe' that his friend, Bill Arp, was indebted to vlrs. Arp for his fame and name and good repute that she was the powei behind the throne the guiding star the pitot at the helm, the inspiration, -ind all that sort of thing. My wife wa utand'ng mokly by ray side ": heard it all, and it seemed to me she straightened up a little and seemed taller as he spoke. He continued on that line until I began to feel like I was nothing but an old ship that my wife was steering through th'i breakers. I saw that his remrks were very grateful to Mrs. Howell, for she stretched up a little, too, and as I looked around upon tne matrons they were all stretchin np, and'my fear is they will stay so. don't think I will invite Evan to c I Onr next wedding. And now comes tho aftermath the second reaping of thia harvest of love. We must answer all these kind letters. ana we must thank the donors for all tlie-f gifts. It will take time, but it will be a labor of love. Mauy-ol the letters are in verse, and what is re markable, most of the poems are from our aged friends. Just tasa n.te of this from Dr. Alexander, the veteran physician of Atlanta. Who would have thought that he would have turned bard in his seventy-fifth year? He sent me a beautiful cane, and the following verses, were wrapped around it. May the good Lord lead him down gently to to the grave: - "I never can forget it whatever time f destroys -The dear old time in youth's Bweet prime, 1 Wheu 'Bill' and I were boys. in GOLDEN I It b the on bright memory so earUn ly dro allovf. For sweet bells chime of that dear time When 'BUi a&d I were boysl 1 was there when 'Bill was married. in the pleataat far-away. To the fair and noble womaa Whom be weds agaio today. uis goidea-riarriage time it is. An, time no - to destroys! For they love tch other better tbaa When 'Uili and I were boy! "Well, here'i a greeting to yoa, "Bill Ana blessings on your iue. And love and joy forever lo your jewel ox a wife! To me yoa re both a memory rso eurtn arofs ailora, Thank God we're still as hippy aa When 'Bill' and I war boys! "You need no staff to leaa on, 'Bill,' lor loves vour staff and guide. And love has led you safe thus far, And love is by vour side: Bat take this staff, old comrade. W ith your golden wedding iovs And lean upon it for those days When Hill and I were boys! "James F. AtEXAspEB. "March?, 18111." Oh the dear memories that these lines crowded on me the branches where we fished for minnows and perch and horny-heads, the shoal creek where we seined ana tne mill pena wnere we jumped from the springboard and the water seemed a mile deep, and the trees we climbed for chestnnts that seemed a mile high. What a fine coon dog was Rover, and what a good rabbit dog was lag. But the long red hills have shrunk and the mill pond is but n little pool and the trees have been cd down and the dogs we hunted with aif dead. Alasi now cruel is time. And here before me are some tender lines from old Colonel Gibbons, who has passed his four score .years. He adds another verse to "John Anderson, Jly Jo. too ooes my dear old partner, Judge urannam, ana ue says that Dr. Deems wrote it. And an old lady from Washington, D. C, sends still anothei verso and says it was written by a man in Uhio. iiere are three different ad ditions to the poem and all are beauti ful. And here are several lovinjr verses from our cherished friend, Captain Cal noun, who is no spring bird or bard. but is old enough to write poetry. There is a man who always brings Bun shine. His life is a struggle and strain. bat "like; tho sun of Alknomok, he never complains." Then there is tho double-hearted eem from cur nuknown friend. "Dnnne !rown," with its graphic illustrations. coming prettier or more appropriate was ever written or designed. Ha is both a poet and an artist, and the crem is to be encased in a golden frame and placed upon the golden papered wall. And dear, good Charlie Hubner never forgets or neglect3 to "write the riirht thing iu the right way aud at the right time. Ani then there were the golden wedding's golden bells that were rung to sweet music by Colonel and Mrs. Boy Mason, of Richmond, Va. JJesides all these tfiere were beautiful prose poems by Uncle Remus, Frank Stanton, Wallace Reed and Frank Rich ardson, and Mr. Knott, of The Home aud Farm, and Mr. Einstein, of The New York Press, aud Albert Shaw, of Ihe Review of Reviews, that have been placed carefully among our wedding treasures. What shall we render to our friends for all their benefits and benedictions? Why, here is a massive wedding ring that Dr. Benham, the old est and noblest Roman of them all, sent to my wife to be placed by me upon her wedding finger as I renewed the prom ises x maue uer ou years ago. And iiere is another that our dear good friend. Joe Brown, sends. It is exquisitely engraved oroiciea iears, trolden Hearts," and his letter is another gem a prose poem that is worth more than the ring to mo, for I am not a woman. And here is a lvlondike nugget sent from a friend who lives m tha far oft state of Washington and is now mining in Alaska. And here, hanging on the parlor wall, is a beautiful picture of John Anderson my Joe, and his lovinj? Bpouse. It is encased in an exnnisit? golden frame, and nothing can be more tenderly pathetic than this sketch.. t 11. . -111 . wnere ma goou 01a matron is smooth ing the thin and silverv hair of hnr life-long companion as sho sings, "Now we must totter down, John, but hand in hand we'll go." This came from Mrs. Ward, of Birmingham, a dear old family friend, who was a school girl in pantalettes wheu we moved to Rome in '01. She, too, had to flee from the foul mvaaor m o-t the same night my wife and children, did acd when they two get together I tell you they make the vnnkee fur fly and the yankees' ears bu-n when thoso who wear them are talked about. Did you ever trv to drive an old hen with a brood of right joung cnicivens out ot the earden V ell. that s the way these two mothers nea ana aoagea and raised their feath era, ana prancea around all over th country trying in vain to find soma place where the foul invader could not come, isut let that pas3. After fiftv years, let all sad memories be smoth ered, and all rosentmeuts buried. We have many dear friends among those yankees and ou this glad event they have all been kind; very kind ihe lawyers tell us of a statute tf Ilia ll'mifaffAnn . 1. " L m v j.iu tawuua nuicu 13 caned v Biaiuie 01 repose, and which quiets title to land and cuts of punishment for crime. The Jews made a jubilee of every iiiueinyear anci proclaimed liber ly inrougnout the laad and cancelled mi ueuw uuu gave tna land and the cattle rest. And so now let us have rest uuu peace ooiu in ooay and in mind, icas ia an very sweet and varr nratf says my wife, but we must work on' She made up her bed thia morning as usual, and is now pewin? new buttons on my old vesU But I can't help see ing the new rings on her fiagsrs and the golden biar pin that Major McUol lum gave her in her hair. As for me I have my orders, for it has lone- ben my habit when I get a new suit of alothes, to keep them on as Ion- a3 uho will let me; and sometimes whtn tho is not looking, I work in them. Already she has pat my weddiu- suit way, and I wiil not get it again until Sunday morning. The truth i, I don't see much difference between now an I then between tho past and ths present I. am still the boy. She wants me to ormg in some coal right now. ' Thero is no sfgu of rest for me In this our year of jubilee. BiU Arp. in At!r.na Coiistiiu'.ian. No Trifling- With the Queen. The Spanish .government has order ed the. prosecution of Gen. Weyler's organ, El Nacional, and of several Re publican and Carlist newspapers for publishing, with offensive comments icivi wm me vueen xtegent was auout to abdicate and to marry an Austrian Archduke. Officers Reprimanded ueneral loung has issued an order severely criticising the commissioned officers and finding of the court-martial in the trial of the rioters of the Fifteenth Minnesota Regiment, which oucurreu iiar cn 4th ana 5th in Augusta; Ga., wheu one of their number vas killed by aiilb&n-kbSr. Stranded in New York. TheJT colored families numbering 104 persons in all, who are stranded ia Jersey City, after having come from the West to eo to Liberia, as is alleged, under a contract with the International Migration Society, have been notified by the Central Railroad, of New Jersey, that they would have to leave the rail way cars in which they have remained since arriving in Jersey City. . Ilerr Huby, the kaiser's barber, who is responsible for his majesty's aston: ismng mustache, has been decorated several times. His "tousorial parlors" Are tho best-paying iu Berlin. - NORTH CAROLINA NEVSt Borne tfcieTeseatered Mr. J ohm OIojj tos t emoKe&onsa, at Axuugioa, mmm ttole all the meat he bad, elevea pieeee and eome sausage. Ue got on the track of a one-bora wagon and follow ed it for ten miles ia the direetien of Concord, tdl he came to the hills ei this ide ox UuEalo creak, wntre to tracks left the road. Mr. Gloaaoa and party vent only a abort distance lata the wood. whrt ther found a 4asrt- ed ona-horse wagon, ia which was all hi meat, tome corn which bad been tolea from Mr. Oeorga liagler, and a hand saw and other shop tools, stoiea from Mr. J. X. Ilogera. About fifty yars away was a dark bay horse, about two jears old. lue inievea &a cea, leaving everything. Recent rams swept away tha mill dam of Walker's & Co'a. roller mill at Oak Ridge. Sixty feet of aolid mtr sonry went from the middle, creating a roar which awoke poople a mile away. The new county bridge below the mill was swept away. 1 be damage is em- mated at $1,000 to the mill property. This is a .Terr old site. Lord Corn wallis camped at this mill on the 1 1th of February, 1731, a month before the battle of (J udford Court Home, as be was trying to intercept General Greene on his way to Virginia. Oa the follow ing day the bugler was killed by Tar ieton'a men. In the decisions rendered the other day, the Supreme Court held that the Fellow Servant act is constitutional, and again in another case that the fail tire of a railway company to properly equip its cars with safety appliances is negligence and makes it liable for damages resulting from each negli gence where an employe sustains in jury. B. B. Raney, of Raleigh, has given that city $35, 000 for the public estab lishment and support of a rublio li brary. Thus, one by one, our cities are falling into line. Which will fol low next? Raney and Fack have mada their names immortal in Raleigh and Asheville, and thousands will call them blesBcd. Who will emulate their ex ample. N. O. Journalof Education. Mr. Joseph Lee, who lives in the western part of Cabarrus county, awoke and found his house on fire. The alarm , was given in time to save his family, but too late to save any of the fnrnitura or any part of the house. The loss amounts to several hundred dollars and he carried no kind of insur ance. An order has been passed by tho committee on public buildings and grounds in Raleigh, to pave the street on the west side of the Supreme Court. It has also been ordered to put tiled floors in the offices of the State Auditor. The cost for tiling both offices will be about STCiO. Another organization incorporated iy the Secretary of State is the benev olent Society of Fayetteville, to be known as the Independent Order of True Reformers. Their business is to "nurse and assist the sick and dis abled, and to do all other - acts of a Christian and benevolent nature." The secretary of state has issued ar ticles of incorporation for to the Rev olution Cotton Mills company, of Greensboro, with K Sternberger, Moses II. Cone and Caesar Cone as incorpora tors. The capital stock, is placed at 300,000. Smallpox continues to abate in the State, though there are still ' a good many cases in Alamance county, ihe quaratine in that section is pretty rigidly enforced. Elon College, Gib- sonville and Graham are quarantined against the whole of Alamance countv. The consolidation of the Winston -Sa- lorn nnslnfiicn mAfinn ihn ldrcr9t and only first-class office iu the State. The consolidation is to take effect July 1st. This will give the main office nine let ter carriers and seven clerks. The wife of Prof. Scribner, the head of the mechanical department of the Agricultural and Mechanical College, in Raleigh, died after a snort illness, of pneumonia. She was only 2a years old, and leaves four children. The old building at the Institution for the Blind in Raleigh is to be made almost entirely new. The legislature made an appropriation of SI J, 000 for this purpose and the directors have de cided to begin work at once. Through the Citizens' National Bank of Raleigh, Treasurer Worth has sent SSO,000 to the Bank of the Republic, New York, to pay the interest on the 0 per cent, bond?, which falls dne on the 1st of April. Quite a party of Moravians will leave Winston the first of next month for Herrnhut, Germany, to attend the Synod, which opens there in May. Daniel Bridges and J. O. Baiiuy have been confined in jail in Raleigh on a charge of burning barns in New Light township, Wako county. Deputy Collector J. P. H. Adams captured a 125-gallon registered brandy still and the owner thereof near Wako field. i The Odell Manufacturing Company, is now building at Concord the Iarcest weaving mill in tho State. It will be equipped with five hundred looms. a Monument to Patrick Walsli. Augusta, Ga., will erect a monu ment to her late mayor, Hon. Patrick Walsh. The idea is to eroct a bronze statue ou some one of Augusta's many beautiful squares. Not only will Au gusta do her part, but the entire South Twill be invited to assist in commemo rating the name of Iho man who, standine with Henry "v7. Grady, was foremost in the tight for the recognition of the South's possibilities and the fur therance of Southern development , wor,n Isb4en feet Ions at LASCAKETa. This I am sure has caused mv toking Cascarets, the only cathartic worOy of notice by aensiblo people " wor"y or trEO. W. UOWLES. Baird. Ma Pleasant. Palatable., Foteni. -Tufo uooo, eTer Sicken. Weaken, or GrlpeTlfc. ac' Utc siL.SR,E CONSTIPATION. ... BIHI8 Keay CcM.y. nia, TMt. ,u VZZ.V2 Thompson. Ey Water Taper llatli Kobes. Bath robes made of paper are now manufactured, and their use is becom ing quite a fad. The kind of material used resembles blotting paper. it quickly dries the body, and as the pa per Is a bad heat conductor the much dreaded cold after the bath can be avoided. Whole suits are made -of this, paper stuff, including coverings for. the head and-feet. One advantage of the fad is the cheapness of such a gar ment, making it possible" for the poor est person to own one. " CATHARTIC vwaps mawh weoisTraco To An Excellent Combination. The rlfant method and beneficial effects of the ell Jcnown remedy. wb,-i nw Vina, tusnnfaetured t'V the Caufoksia Fia Htbip Co., illustrate Ihe value of obtaining the liquid laaa tiTe principles of plant known to Le medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most ref rehing to tne taata and acceptable to the ytem. It Is the one perfect strengthening laxa tive, cleansing the system effectually, dispelling cold, lieadaches and fevrra gently yet promptly and enabling one to overcome habitual constipation per manently. Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and sub stance, and iU acting on the kidneys, l anri lrttrl without weakening or irritating them, make it the Ideal laxative. - In the process of manufacturing flgs are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal qualities of the remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants, by a method known to the California Kig nmrr Co. only. In order to petit s beneficial effects and to avrid imitations, please remember the full name of the Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. 8AM FH AiT CISCO. CAX IXtn8VTLLE. XV. PEW YORK. W. T- For sale by all Drureista. Price 0c. per botU KdUon'a Plan for Removing Stow. Edison's latest suggestion Is that snow can be removed from city streets not by melting machines, but by port able steam power compressors, which will scoop up the snow in steel scoop buckets and squeeze it into cakes 12x 12x12 inches in volume, which will be practically solid ice. Carts and men following the compressor can take up the cakes with tongs as they drop to the street, says Edison, and a market can be found for enough snr.w cubes to pay the Interest on the cost of the machinery; Beantr Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. Jo beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic rlean vour Mood and keen it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Rcgin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c There is a vast difference speaking "one to another" about another. between and one To Cure a Cold 1a One Tiny. Take Laxative Bromo Qulr.lne Tablet. All Drugglfets refund ir.t.nry if It falls to euro. Sle. It is stated that nine-tenths ot the mohair plush used ia the United States is manufac tured at Bap ford, Me. Don't Tobarro Spit and Sraoka Toar life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be ma? cetic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take f o-To Dac, the wonder-worker, t bat makes weak men strong. AU druggists, 50c or CI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Keiaedy Co., Cbicaco or New York. The Cargo of the first fchlp of the new line between San Diego. Cal., aud Manila, con sisted ot whiskey and Leer. educate Tonr Tiowela Wltn Cnaeareta. Candy Oatliariic. cure constipation forever. 19c, c. K C c. C. fall, drugguu refund money. Hereford, Eud. per hour. bricklayers get 13 cent9 Ko-To-Bae for FUty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco Lablt cure. maUes weak Ibea sirontf, blood pure. bJe. ti. AU tU usgibt Baltimore, MJ., I to have a boxa product show. To Car Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Cauil v Cathartic. 10c or Be. tia&C fall to cure, druggists refund moticr A Texas ranch has an area ci 5,000 square miles. Mr. Win flow'uSoothiniri'y run for children tcetbing.oftenathe fiim. mincing ititl.nna t'icn, allay pain.cures wixx l colic Hi m Itv'M . II. IT. Gkf.en 's Sosr, of Atlanta, Ga.. are tne only eucrssful Lropy hpeclal:t ia tho world. co their liberal offer in advertise- ment in another column of this paper. T I am entirely cured ot hemorrhage of Innirs byPiRo s cure lor ouMiinption. i.oi is Lindam ak, lSethanj, Mo., January P. H?Jt. Deafneaa Cannot Be Cared tlooal remedies. JJeafnoca l cauiwvt oy an in- named oonuulnn 01 tne mucous lining or am Kustachlan Tube. Vhn this tube et in flamed yoa have a rambling sound or Imper fect haarin. and when it is entrely closed Deafness la the result, and nnleos the inflam mation can be taken out and this tuba re stored to ita normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of tn ar j caused by catarrh, whicb. is nothing bilt an lnftamod condition or the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafnescansed bycatrrb) that can not be cared by Hall's Catarrh Cure. eai for circulars, free. h J. CHENEY & CO- Toledo. O. Bold by DruggUts, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best milM 1HE0IFFEREKCE Between a NEW FLORENCE AND ANT GIBER WAGON. THE NEW FLORENCE has Spring under Sand UoUterirt fmntand be tween the Holster and Axle briiind whic.h createsal'.ve weight, makes the Drnftllht er, saves the Team and prevents ii per cent, ot tho uscal breakages. If yoar denier does cot handle this Wagon write direct to FLOREKCE WAGON WORKS, FLO RE ME. ALA- O nd receive fell Information w!th Cnta. Prices and lestimcnialn. AN FELL fi',1 BALLOON! Sprained Lis Pack and Ankle. Knock ed one of His Fins er ont Joint- l"e-d COOSKGKEAM; I.IM.IKTand was ont in lew days. - II ( am err Time If You IVI1I I'm ft Kfht. I'c Plenty of 1L DYSPFPtlA ! W hTe J whstyon aeed- te rliwiit, huti Car for Mwtfh 1 r nhles. Xo Frre Fakr. Hmt Oood Square Deal. One week treatment. One Urllsr. iail. Adcrss,X. E. tm. Co., toa 7. t lot luoatta D R O PS YK5c rM. Bock of taMBanisiaci I II 4m t itntstu Free. Br. H. H. CKEts's SOS! Bex D. AUacta tts. 25.0CO Son; Books for Soldiers. Recognizing the good results that accrue from soldiers singing when on the march the minister for wr of England has just ordered 23.CO0 books of patriotic and military songs as an experiment. These will be distri buted to the men in . infantry regi ments and classes for sieging will.be instituted in.the barracks. A aimilar experiment, made in France by Gen. Poillowe of St. Mars, has been at tended with marked succes3. the num ber of stragglers on the march being reduced by 70 per cent owing to tha singing. frfl O by local applications, a s they cannot reach tha diseased portion t the ear. lhere U only on mrm tnrnriiHitifnpa. nnd tbatU br ConKt lu- n .iiiii I ifi m m a ass m a i RAtTS HORN BLASTS. 1 r TRIALS meH the trass eat -acter. Virtue ie fier than My f the arts, naif hearted ssrvlce ie alwsye bard. N'ofloci bo ita tha door of oppor tunity. Small boats hoald keep sear thashor. Love tems daly into Wt Bigotry is not peculiar to rehfion. Meditation is tenia for poor ory. V . ta lire ia the rtoaa clouds. Inordsrtedoiieht. it i teeeeserr to Le fight . The wiec of richss are poor aids to v....o1 flight More oul. are throng eemee. than by sermons. Kind word-, like ffi-rat flowers, are admired by aJL Tulicr sits on tha face while princi ple fighU the battle. An iceberg in the rulpit cannot kin- .11 a r in the ISWS. pres doe not maks character. Lot it often proclaims it. Modern theology teaches tha. can fell np instead of dowu. Thosa who know when to pvs. knew wbtn to be silent. The man who confesses his ignorance ia on tho road to wisdom. Fidelitr ia little things, is one of the surest teits of character. Iova is . like s convex mirror it broadens what we ee in it. The Pioneer Medicine Ayer'i is Before sarsaparillas were known. nity t have confidence at once. If you want an experiment, buy anybody's Sarsaparilla; if you want a cure, you must buy Ajujers Tte StnipirilU q &k tuit Siroprill. fmow COTTON is and will con finuc to bo the money crop of the South. The planter who gets, the most cot ton from a given area at the least cost, is the one who makes the most money. Good culti vation," suitable rotation and liberal use of fertilizers con. taining at least 3 actual Potash will insure the largest yield We will send Fre. upon application, pamphlets that will interest every cotton planter in the South. CER.TAN KALI WORKS, JJtmm. Spalding's V""" Trade-Mark Means ' 5 "Standard 7 of m IU..H S on Athletic Qoodo ' InoistuponSpalding'o IIcWuie CaUIsv Fre y. -A. O. KI ALDIXO a EO, 6l KM CUudS WrfUi ALL liii ikilk. I C Girt k IT COSTS YO J UOTHIXG I e e. Clerk... I CVnatS. las Jfo-aicc. l-.I iorrta-. 1 ' I Kara. Uv rm. - . T Ckra. rUnt, . I JU'K i . X fWclsSlr .,.- I le. an i JU Rather. frit U tit SCi, fuJa.'.X IT ay ar wo aVOna fcuaia lav V tat aa4 terrttorr la ttm onuatryr Way t our ruai Baa d-uhil parlf 4 at Ins t a rt rcorr Our rrGMVrwa tUlboatT. W t.irk toCar. AAJreaata H-A way, . . lUtWS Mtr A S3. CaRavm. Cf ; Saw Mills SI29 TO S929 00 TTItk Improved Hep and lUlt I KAVVA. ril l mm4 TI KTII la l Engine, Boilers anl MwL.-. :r AU Kl4a M-l RaJr f bni"s.r ii. rwitiBc. io- r oIvm mm4 I ttllac. LOMBARD IRON' :UFr It ; ). AIUIOTI. at. LOT M IMI" 't til l - - at M 1. S'U. 1. ..ltlX. S' i j fm Sarsararilla years ago, xr DCgan xts work, bincc then you can count the sarsa parillas by the thousands with every variation of imita tion of the original, ex cept one. They have never been able to im itate the quality of the pioneer. When you Aucfs on a bottle of sarsa parilla that is enough; you can Q000R1SYCLES 10. h.' a w ttm bil .a , r' M S3 t ami m I UUMmBlOYCIS ii. f. lrn rr t -mmtmr, lis, III- ntT3PvSTCTra nice i l PI FtraaBectfyCtr I I I r 1 fcUK' 'MAT M U V- CEKVE KSTCSER TnUmn4U trial tattle ll.llil tt M In. t.1 lMMrfltCut.MMl, Ow risMller a4 flat. tl. 1 rrrk mmtUtrrm ravs m - lua mm4ri mt .m snwla. AIm ad mimm tit Crmt BW, mm m Mrvr K. C". rUA. Jfejl 11 Tmr rr era for mumm. r4l. tlmrmtmTy, r4 Mills, KMtl M. trrs i.rs) nkellrr. HaUII aUa(,Mil 1 1; U661 tyailTra-CBta of hmmtr thai H ot n(it w-bl eta. to lUMuOmlnl Co.. Tjrk. tot loaaaaril talto.f l. KSTirB Ulrs IH writ. 4ertv !.' m.im? tmt It l.l .U.la beat r- atral ssalttsf mm. torn, t S . liWi tmU mi WTtato4 U MmXSV tHU.t.Twy, r HHIilillHVt f III I ?"''",ft- : tar.. 4 W. U-T. I Jill tBl Ktl. rtta ta- 1 i HI I GEbmiZTmZm:' U I 1 IB DOLUAIS WOITH FOR lOOb f"J I I M ffm pm amt. fj, mwt. mm?m ftn. I J I tMf.w.-utiM- ui .i, mm i. I I a lim iimmiW mmtrnm" ir4 m"t' r ' i - f (J Uum immrnt .11 Mm( mmr 9mrm tM.usalHm.wMll WS VaIH,WIW4.M fsali JSw mXJtm mmw,mM. !?IIVJ . - kita.-fc ' 1 - Km, gQ . 1
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 30, 1899, edition 1
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