Newspapers / The Standard (Concord, N.C.) / Jan. 31, 1895, edition 1 / Page 4
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( V ( i 1 i- , LIT TUB NJfAPS. A western debating society is wresting with the quesdon wLetaer the rungs of a ladder are put in to ate the eides or- hold them toe If this society fails to Bettle it it raigtf be referrea to the French AcadeirVScie&ce to tackle after . i: has settled the question as to why a cat, when thrown up, falls oh its feet. 'The first real estate entry of rec ord in Kanawha county, W. Va., was made January 2, 1795, andia of 15,000 acres of land to Phineaa Taylor, of Yaterbury, CoEn., who was the grd father of Phmeas T Barnum, the great showman. The property has been in litigation al most ever sice. A mau whose wife is a hard work er in the woman's suffrage movement, saya that now when his wife comes home, she hardly says a kind word to him, and has only praised his bisDuits cnce. c The people in rior-i. ' ?wns are suffering ficm tramps, ad the tramps ere uflli:irjr from froz2n oranges. They die by th3 wayside and are buried at the expense of the counties. A. biii piohifciang the display cf ftKcigt flags on public buiUiacs jr.iiiti the Cenei&l LxcuViy of New Twenty fpmiliea in the town of Busk, Wis., are reported sh'-rvinrr, and (rov. Uphain has been appealed to for aid. Ths sufferers lost their property in the forest li-es last fall, The Caacaska, Marion Butler's paper, Tuesday published pictures of the newly elected United Whites Senators. Under his own picture 1'lr. Butler prints hia name "Hon. Llarion Butler," while he labels his colleague simply "Jeter C rxiich ard." Mr. Bntler is doubtles acting on the principle, "Blow your own horn or it will not be blown." Ral eigh Observer. The sum of $l,500,000.in geld was witS'drawn from the SuVTreasury aLNew "York yesterday, of wl:ich . $COOO,000 was for export to Eu rope. The.rioDstitution vrM be seniovei f ro tn the Portsmouth JTavy 5?8ft. to 'Washingc-cn, trhcre it in tc do service s a training ship. The CornptrcIIsr cf the Currency has appointed,) Ivlaishsil Winchester of Baltimore, National Bank Ez mricer for the State of Maryland, yice L B Ksinp, resigned. A great many aniqu e suggestions have been made by parties who wish to help advertks the (Jotter State and International Exposition to le held at Atlanta. A characteristic one comes frcm Texas. A gentle man from that State wishes to drive ten white horses tandem through all the Southern States, making a tour of nine months, Tuning eyery town and hamlet. Tha horses are to be richly caparisoned, end the leader is to carry a banner with legend announcing uut he is on ius way to the Exposition. One hears a great deal these dajs st-oat tne devotion or tne race to d jthe indiix-irence cf wealth to the needs of ineir poorer brethren, but statistics cijCir-iledgSjiw that daring hist year coze than Thirteen million dollars was bequeathed to charitable, mis sionary and educational institutions in this country, to say nothiug cf the millions given to charity by generous persons whom death has spared tc continue to do good to other fellow men. A large retail store in Chicago has placed on the inside of all its doors, in such positions as to be seen only by persons going out, signs inscribed: Lxany a .customer sets this, thinks a moment, and goes back to make an other purchase. , A well-put adver tisement asks the same question while answering others, thus render ing a double service which as often , spares the purse as it helps the tired memory. Through the sadden cessation of the picking and packing of oranges throughout almost the entire State, hundreds of men in Florida were left without occupation or resource, ""theae men are ccrcpJic.3 tc get lafrvTnTfTftfia" and way, in an other. And that man, is not most of them, are worthy and deserving, Lighly probable. AjQteer case of jinsani ty was de'1 ,oedti-Mr, Downing'a mill st " , T tntday. A mill They vtreVorceu to bind hii and take him to jsiL Theae are twenty men in the Logan county, Kentucky -jail. 'Ihe February term of the circuit court has on its docket for trial twelve murder cases, and the The Kussell yille Heiald says that "the juries in some cf the cases will have to be chosen where the newspaper findE not its way." The great secret of life is good conduct It brings all the rewards that are '"Yorih bavin. 7. ELECTRIC BREVITIES. Willis P Sergect, cf Amasbary, Conn., one cf the best known car riage manufacturara in Kiw Eng land is dead, eed 80 years. A T Hay, inventor cf the celebrat ed Hay s?eel need in a number of krge railroad bridges, died yesterday at Burlington, Iowa,-aged 63. The Pullman trial, which was to have began yesterday at Chicago, went over until Tuesday because of the illness of the pullrnan attorney. W bile responding to an alarm of fire at Albamy, N. Y., yesterday the driver and laderman were trown from their truck. The driver, Eobert F Gilmer, was hilled sad the ladder nan, John F Einary, willdit. The Chicago police Tuesday right arrested Enos Crowell, Jay Croweil and JJcimis Liaher, all of whom si e said lo be implicated in the ditching of the Grard Trunk pasassger train at Battle Ccek July 17, 1S94. Joseph B Plants, the fugitive Magistrate from Kaaaiuio, who is charged with embezzlement, was rested in Seattle, Wash., Tuesday Pianta says he t.III return home without , extradition papers. The Canadian officials have been notified. A letter has bc.cn received at Bos ton from Paul M Swuin, the well known drug broker of that city, whe mysteriously disappeared more than a year ago. lie is living in obscurity in London, England, and the letter i3 a request to send him his persons.! cHects. S wain is penniless. At the November term of the Hagerstown (Md.) Cirit Court, Jonathan Smith, of Pleas Valley, zo'.ohiqu. cnu seniciiou k-ntkry. nia wife, a?ei atouTCO jiiis, died vesierdty morning froui grief, brought on by the frailly Cis grace. Counsel for a, majority of the atr.ni'Kniflpra r.r ; V.:r. L-er;;' Tin and Investment Conpaay of I'ew York have obtained from Chief Jus tice Daly, of New Haven, Conn., an order compelling the lately-cppoint-ed recci vera to apcar on Friu.y and she w car.ee why they ihcald not be removed. BKEEZY 1.ITW. Visiloi. Ma jour town a religious town ?" Native. "You bet !" visitor, "Any buskers aaiong you ?" Native. "Mighty few nov; we've got a medicine what knocks the chills sky-high." Atlanta Consti tution. Aunt Amanda. M ronder why tbut city boarder of ours only wears a .Hlf pair of eye-glasses," Uncle Sild3.,"Oh, I guess he's only half ks near-sighted a3 he m.ikea out to Le." New York Advertiser. Eiger Maiden. "Well, BpfeinaTd, did papa Eay ?" Rpj-?cled suitor (about to depart). Mt cannot be expressed in words. All that I cm tell you is that bis answer gave me great pain." Truth, Mrs. Pelt. "Bid she catch a noble man ?"' Miss Hyde. "Ob, no." Mrs. Pelt, "Ah, one of the land ed gentry?" Misa Hyde. M persume so. At least ae was after she 'landed' him," Detroit Free Press. "From the description o'iye heard av the Sharra Disert," said Pit to Mike, "sure the climate av the place must be similar to an iver lasniing Sunday wid no side doors." Wash ington Star. Fond Mother. "Clarence, didn't 1 overhear you praying at bedtime for God to keep Willy Wiggles from harm daring the night?". Little Clarence. "Yep ! I wanted him spared, so's I cold lick the stuf fin' out of him today." Puck. Club man (rather full), "I wish you'd (hie) take me homaJ Do you know where (hie) I live ?" Police man. "What's the name of your cook?" Life, Insomnia is a frequent forerunner of insanity. Thia explains why so A NOVEL, AIXIAHCE. "Wednesday's Atlauia Journal, in speaking of the political utuatiou in North Carolina, puts it as follows : "Yesterday a Populist in nomi nating one of the men whom the fusionists in North Carolina have elected to the Senate declared that the Populist and Republican parties "have married," What a matri monial aihauce that must be 1 What can we expect of the offspring of such a union ? 'So far as their professions go no two parties are farther apart than these which we are informed "have married." Their union on principle is im possible and w henever it is formed it is merely to secure and divide polit ical plunder. This was clearly the case in 1'orth Carolina and is the case whuievcr such a marriage oc curs. What will the Populist Sena tor from North Carolina, one of the political children of this manage, think when he finds in the Senate Republicans likeFrye of Main who declared that they had rather lose their seats in that body than be parties to an alliance with the Pop ulists? It must be remembered, howeyer, that .Republican Senators cf thia stripe invariably co:ae from st:.tes where Populist votes were not needed for their election. Otherwise they would prob ibly have fallen' on the nccli of Populism and swern eniernal aSnity for it. In North Carolina the marriage cf ihe ltepubhcau and Populist parties wa3 necessary and therefore it was consuls triat:-d with due oere monies and v ith jiol'tering pr .tes tations cf afi'ectk-j. In truth Jpoiitics makes strange bedfellows." A TTi:i,I. DIGEfTED SHOT. The Baltimore Sun expresses the feeling cf every true Southern ;man in the following paragrph : "The Populist of the North Caro lina Senate emphasized their little ness yesterday by voting down a joint resolatioa which has passed the House to adjourn over until Monday ia order to observe today, the birth day of Gen. Robert E Lee. These legislators might well stop one d in their ch gernus ami, extremely tTSin legislation whicr they are rushing through at breakneck speed to ::ay a tribute to the L-.emory of Lee, in whose splendid c.raer and exalted character eyery Southern man especially 'should take pride . It Ecsn.3 alcacst inexplicable that in Nonh Caroliaa, which furnished thousands of galltnt soldiers to the Army of North Carolina, which fur nished thonsaus of gallant so:die: to the Northern Virginia, a single man should be found unwilling to honcr the memory of the distin guished ioldier vrho ir.d that army to so many brilliant victories." John Wesley ai:utic Farmer. A farmer went to hear John Wes ley preach. was a man who cared little about religion; on the other hand, he wa3 not what we call a bad man. His attention was soon excit ed and riveted. Wesley said he would take up three topics of thought; he was talking chiefly of money. His first was, "Get all you can." The farmer nudged a neigh bor and said: "This is strange proachiup, I never heard the like before; this 13 very good. That man has got things ia him; it is admirai ble preaching." John Wesley dis coursed on "industry," "activity," "living to purpose," and reached his second division, "Saye all you can." The farmer becime more excited. "V'as there ever anything like this?" he said. Wesley denounced thrifi lesauess and waste, and he satiriz d the wilful wit-Redness which lavish ed luxury; ana th.3 farmer rubbed his hahd3 es he thought, "All this I have been taught from my youth up," and vvbat with getting, and what with hoarding, it seemed to him that "salvation" had come to his house. But Wesley adyanced lo his third head, which was, "Give all you can." "Ah, dear! "ah7 dear;' said the farmer, "he has gone and spoiled it all." Onward. "They're After Hint." A lady recently .visited our city. and upon seeing another lady, a friend whom she had not seen or heard of for some years, entered into a confidential talk which resulted as follows, and told to our reporter : "And so you are not married vet?" "No." "Engaged ?" "No." .''' "Expect' to be?" " "No." " "What's the matter ?" "Well, papa says that my husband must be a keen and experienced man, of good health and good habits. Mamma says he must be frugal, in dustrious, attentive and moral, and I say that be must be handsome, ""hin", talented and rich We are CilAKGE rUUCUO'lE HAKE. "Prom his brimstone bed nt break of day, A-walklng the devil is gone, To visit his little snug farm on earth, 2. And see how his stock went on." Thus in the byjgones sang Colo ridge; and away back in the 50'e Fenimore Cooper wrote: "There is a tendency at the present time to court change for its own sake. This is erronftously termed a love of- re form. Something very like a revo lution is going on ir. our midsK while there is much reason to ap prehend that few real grievances are abated; the spurious, too, exclusively occupying the popular mind to rens der easy a distinction between iLeui." How very applicable in this para graph of Cooper's to our present time in the old North State. Conserva tism has taken a back seat and a general oyerturniug is the order of the day whether any good comes of it or not. A few montha ago, on the intro duction of the telephone and phono graph in the Ind an territory, the Comanche Indians were dumbfound ed so it is with the reasoning and reasonable people of this grand old commonwealth. They stand aghast at the wholesale onslaught upon the wise, just, equal able ilud economs ical laws under . which we have progressed and prospered. With i expression akin to awe they, behold the irtroducticu of measures untried coupled with the extravagant acts of by -gone radical legislative rascality. The grizzled i-teran who obeying the call of his native Etato, donned the gray, and through leaden hail, followed over bloody fields the im mortal Lee from Meadow Bridge to Hairison's Landing, who tramped from Manassas across the Potomac to Sha-i'Sbui's; who f-caled the thesigh of Cemetery Eidge, or hand to hand defended the blcouy angle at Spottsyivauia and the crater front of Eichmond look with shame and humiliation at the insult to the memory of their dead chieftain and their crippled comrade. With sor row they hear of the proposal to de prive their disabled of the pittance granted by a grateful people. Those who ha 1 ' 1 1 Illeputdican under ile literate and irresponsible County of ficials dread a return to the dark days cf reconstruction. Behold ail pre cedent trampled underfoot and i ie Lieutenant Governor deprived of hit; prenogative of appointing Sent'- committees, and eyen have jjthe.y at- j tempted to deprive him of his s at, in yiolation of tin state constitution, by electing a'president of the Senate. They are attempting to thwart the. will cf the people by abolishic;;- rha cilice of county cominissicr.ers and by "ways that :-re dark" hedg ing in enough magutrates of popu listic persuasion to supplant Demo cratic commissioners with "Trus tees" of their own ilk. That great populistic idea. Therailroad commis sion is under ban because endorsed by the Deaiocracy. The State guard is to be relieved from duty and the Naval Reserves will be sent to Davy Jones' locker. All this and more they are doing or trjing to do. In fact, about everything that has bean done since we were rescued from Republican thralldom in '76 is to be ovei hauler; and changed. Well may the mourn ful wind3 among Carolina's winter ; clad foress echo and the murmur ing of her icebound riyors re-echo from mountain top to seashore to her sons. "Wilt thou behold me In rav woes. And wilt thou not reach out a helping hand. To raise rae from amidst thia plunge ot sorrow." But the demagogue must have his war cry as well as the Indian and be will continue to cry aloud without ceasing as lonjr as he can . make dupes enough to foist him into office. Happy is he who beholding these reckless changes can say: "This folly, Helena, is no fault of mine." , lld Too Ever Try Flectric Bitters as'a remedy for your troubles ? If not, get a bottle now an get relief. This medicine has been found peculiarly apaptcd to the relief and cure of all Female complaints, exerting a wonderful direct influence in giving strength and tone to the organs. If you have Losa of Appetite, Constipation, Headache, Fainting spell, or are Nervous, Sleepless, Excitable, JWel anchol or troubled with Dizzy spells Electric Bitters is the medicine you need . Health and strength are guaranteed by its use. Large bottleB only 50 c at Fetzer's Drug store. G. G. Mozyck, paymaster of the South Carolina and Georgia Rail road, was held up by highwaymen Wednesday afternoon and robbed of $350. The robbery took place on King etreer, . Charleston, and was perpetrated by two negroes The S3E WAS A RELATIVE. S cist Cmled Arooud to Oeo lio-.v ttie Coi.IciuuctI jHu I't'lr. leat in the Sheriff's Oific.) l-.lkiug with him about a man ia his elta'-ge who wu& to be knigt'd tbrc dja later, v. hen a 'woman was f;nrurced, and iu walked a fernalo who had pa9?d fifty. Hr f:i"e wr.a v.'riukled hix hair thin and white and her voice seemed to com-3 out of 3 ; e 1 aii "!rrl : "ilev yo' got 3 run in thi3 veic prkon nmnel Tn.inis Jackson ? ' "Yes'ci," replied the official. "Lid ho kill scn-.cbo ;.iy abc.uc three montha ago "Us did, ma'aiu." ' And he has bin tried for murder and sentenced to ba hung?" "He is to be hung on Friday, ma'am." "He is, eh ?" she quired as she took a pipe from her pocket and proceeded to 11 and light. "Ar' yo the man who's goin' to hang tini ?" "I shall have to carry out the law?" "Yaas, of co'se. Folks have get to be hung, and we've goi to bey oher folks to hang 'em. Eow does Tom b'ar up under it ?" "Very well, indeed ma'am. I think he will die like a man." "Ha will, eh? Weal, that's more'n he ever lived. Tom's alius Din mignty oncry." "Are yoaa ic-ktive'?" "Used to Le his wife, but durt left him. Yaas, lived with Tom fur sixteen years." "And you have come to say fare., well to him ?" No, sir, I'm on my v.'ay to Coir. !insvil!e, and thought I'd just run iu fur a miuit. No, I didn't keer to see him, bet yo' kin suy that I called." "Y'pu" "Anc that I'm swrv he's lo be huoir." "Yes'm." "iiut that as Ions: as he's ot to ! be hung and can't git out cf it thar haiut no ueo in fussin' 're end." "Yes'm." "If he axes fur auythia' yo' khi say that I'm well; our boy Sam ar' well; the dawg ar' dead, and I've jast put in two acres of co'n and arc ge,ttin' ready to 'go to camp meetin' next week. That's all. Soma folks hev got to le hun?, fuel other folkes hev got to hang'ero, and Tom Tackson mignt jest as wellbepnt tin' his time on the gaihia as lofin' around and v.icbiu' ho waa rich." Me:nphi3 Avalanche. lOTiil Hi !tS;;4ioi:;; Ijy tl-e i:oi:i li. Mi'L.y of our citizens Kno that charges vero pref-.. rdgrttUEt Mrs. Cole, teaca&r ia ILo graded seaool ol tLiJ city, by Dr. L M Archey, fur conduct unbecoming a teacher, atjd maiiiffsta':ioB3 cf kmper acd ill treatment of children. There was no teslimouy tha. lore evidence enongh to sustain the charges against Mrs. Cole, and the board, composed of Messrs D B Col trane, chairman, Y J Ilii!, A E Leniz, W R Odell, J A Cline and Rev D J Satterfield, Sad for dei'oad ant acquittal resplendent and adept the following resolution uaarmm ously : Resolved. In the judgment of this board the testimony given by the pupils of the Cth grade and the other witness s examined not only does not sustain the charges, but is to a large estent complimentary to Mr?. Cole and has tended to strengthen the confidence cf -the members of the board ia her ability as a teachir. A Household Treasure. D W Fuller, df Canajohario, N. Y., cays that he always keeps Dr. King's New Discovery in the hovi and his family fcsu alwas found the very best results folio v its use; that he v.ould not be without it. if pro curable. G A Djkeman, Druggist, Gatskiil. N. Y.says that Dr. King's New Discovery is undoubtedly the best Cough remedy; that he has used it in his iurnily for eight years, and it has never failed to do all that is claimed for it. Why not try a rem edy so long tried and tested, Trial bottles free at Fetzer's Drug store Regula size 50c and $1 00. A Train Wrecked. Birmingham, Ala., Jan. 25. Southern Railway train No. 62, west bound, was wrecked near Moorehead, Miss., at 1;30 thia merning, derail ing and overturning the engine, baggage, mail and second class cars. It was the wrrk of rain wreckers, who removed every spike fro u one of the rails. Engineer Graham Jones and Fireman Harvey Voo.Ia, of Columbus, were caught under the engine and terribly sca'.dvid. They are in a critical condition. Baggage Master John Tate, of Winona, was severely injured. " Kisa Singlewun.. "What a patcfal thins Lvddy Black k I" His ThiL gummy. "Why, what has ehe bejn saying now i . Misabinglewun. 741 just happened to say she'd no.verjeee 45 fcgain, and ahe aaid : 'Not yhen I V, r S &'4 F. i ti . 4 I j . i MADE FROM I ABSOLWTCLYPUREj f3f!i wt, 1 iJ'eaior m coozivg ara heating stoves and manufacture of tinvai-el roofing, ctling And pj, kiin.s of ebcet iron . vrorks. I sra ruakicg a line of E'jjd tinware at rP A X IE1 jET Lari c.iTis 23 Bnd 60eta each. Repairing done at short notice. I am f.iil manufactur ing1 FE.'"!.dl63 bt-.d harness and Lecp ia stock a full lino of 3 V-.1 (TV, Wi pads, briu'ea, etc. ? ff f - t 5 S I TIIE ADVERTISERS FOU 1895. Morning, Evening, Sunday and En nr? z. j -j?.iti'on j." Aiij'ressive I!eiui)I,nn JoiirnalM of S!i UigbCMt t'i.s.H COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER. 1- s tcblisbfc;'. 1707. Pnblishe-1 eyery cv tiiiiaiT. iiCff York's oldest ei en ini;; newspaper. Subscription, 6.00 MORNING ADVERTISER. Published every morning- The leading llcipblit:an newspaper of the i!;;v. Cluuu ni.nl tearless. Miu SUn:;AY ADVF.R'iiSER. ... Yviix i. :v: p;-iU5'a.- i'unday r. 'i . v i.I. .eii'.bUcau L-Lj,t 2" to i.C l:;:;t'3. .'uoSrip r.cver Sfeiiipk-s fics. sentf! w-tatvl ;-ery- viuto ioval conm-issions. A'Jdrt-33 TiiE ADVEUTlSrit, 'J P..rk No,v York, Have You Keaij i'kb Philadelphia Times TillS MORNING ? The Tijie:; i.-i tho moat extensively circu-etod and widelv reud uews- faper pubiisUcd in PetaKylvania. es disoubsioa of public irsn ftud pubiie uiefisi'iiis ia in the interest o infcgrity, hoSaai goTiiriiiant uz.l pi-osperjiis industry, and it tno?:s no party o porsonul al!e;ii?.iiCrj in irtatiiiff pauli's isfcuo. Iu the broadest Mid bent bc-u&o u fatutiy and general newsparcr. The Times aims to havo tLo l.'irjr est circuUti.,u by desetviuu it. and claiuiS lhat it is un!.ii-pSbSLd iu ali tho et-soatu-ls of a grout iaetropoii tan newspapsr, Specimou copies of any edition will be sent free to any ono Bonding their address. Terms Df.il j, 3,00 por annum; 1-00 for four months; 30 cents per month; Sunday odition, twenty-four large, handHoma pages 168 columns elegujtly ilhislratvd. 82 00 per an nam; Daily and Sunday, 5.00 per annum; 50 ceuta per month. A.Veek ly edition, 50 a year, Address au iottera to 1 IMES PHILAD2LPKIA. PA. BOM HIDE EUIL1.IID RAPIDLY READ THIS AXD THINK IT OVER1 We want 1C0 men who have energy grit. V a will give tnera a situation in which they.caD make money rap idlythe labor being light and era ployment the year round. liequires no capital or great education. Sonce of our bese salesmen are country boys. Young mon or old will do. Remunerations is auick and sure. We have need for J00 men within tho next 30 days. Do not wt et time, but write at onee to U. C. HUDGINS & Co. Publishers, j23 lm Atlanta, Ga. j B Lin b OS IS TK BEST, jg, NO SQUEAKING. $5. CORDOVAN, r iv. n tx oimvi clllu wux F1NTC 'iF&!-?JlSAS-3!l 'Z- -"'V 3.-..'PCLiCF.3Sous. : EXTRA FINE. r0MK4 BOYSSCKOfiLSriQEi f&M'M. -LADIHS. lf-aZlKZm'H Tt.3;.Cj 6Ml;'W cURHAhTrO; U.S.A. Wjf 4riS: f3 9s. send fob caTUjosue W l.OOUGLAS , 'rfm'j??s- BROCKTON, MASS. You can save mnner by purchasing W. 1m Douulas Sbees, Befcusa, we are the largest manufacturers of adverUbtd shoes ia the world, and guarantee the value by stamping the name and price on the bottom, which protects you njainst high prices and the middleman's profits. Ourshoe equal custom worK in style, easy fitting and wearing qualities. We have them sold every where at lower prices ior the value jpven than any other make. Take no substitute. If your feebler cannot supply you, we can. Sold by , UEIL1G & IlENORIX.. ,: lit. n -J. N. C. "Christmas FOR BIU FOLKS, LITTLE AND ALL KINDS OF FOLKE. Tlie Furniitinj Store presents for husbands, wives sons and daugkters, mother and sisters. THti FURNITURE STORE presents foromebody else's daughter and perhaps soiaeboly Iss's sistcrand your own dear "JULIR-ANN" No place like the FURNITURE STORE. f" Everybody concedes the fact that if you want a present for a BRIDE or GROOM the Furniture Store of CANNOMS, FETZER & BELL is the place to get it. P. S. AJcarsload of precentsjnst in. C. F. & B UP TO Le ueu"!, and us wo must have trade fit- nny cost, we ere oHriusr fepi'ci.ii inducomeuts on id! our instruments. Special induce ments! Why, they are simply wonders at our "flHrd tin.e rr.ee p." ifathor .liloult for to quoio prices here, but we fraaraotoe lhat a visit to our w troomsiii make you buy. S5peci.it inlucoments for cash; special indrcementa on instil-. iante; epociol inducsmentB iu s'ipiior iaetruments Steiuwsr, SIuHOii & Hamlin, Mutbu.-he.lt, iSt-3niii(r. Greatest list in the woiM f 'hot;Be from. Come and eea jiist oro and test if the above i3 not correct, or write for catalogue. - . .. . ' ill asd MW; lis MAIN IIOUS11 CIJAi'lLOTTS BRANCuI, v - V 'i V 7 Y V 1 i i y s V f -4. i l t i I i I t I t t I I l I i PRICI'IY ASH, POKE HGJT AND POTASSIUM -" I'iitiiuO Ifer BhsuniBiisni and Scrofula P. P. P. pnr!9e3ti)fclooi1, tclHsop ti.a Troak aad dabiUtato.1, Klvea Eirenia to Treasonea oervw, expels ' 5lH6ados.gi7ln7 the p.-itient besltb aud , lispploesa where sickoosa. Rlnoiny feelings und lassiendo first prevailed. For prliary.iiecondary and tertiary oyphihs, for blood polsonlrs. mercu rial potsoD, malaria, dyspepsia, ond In oil blood end skin diseases, like blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcers, tetter, scald bead, bolls, erysipelas, eczema-we msy say, without fetr or contradiction, that i. P. P. Is tho best biood pnri&er In the worid.an: makes positive, speody and permanent cures In all cases. . Ladles whose Eystems are poisoned end whose blood is In an Impure condi tion, due to mecstruil Irregularities, are peculiarly benefited by the won derfnl tonie and blo'nj cleansing prop erties of P. P. P.-Prlckly Ash, Poke ttoot ana potassium. fiFEiKcrrauj, Mo., Aup. 14th, J03. I can speak in the highest terms of your oeJicine from my own personal Kuowledo. I was Effected with heart disenso. pleurisy and rheuraatlara foic 35 years, was treated by the very best physicians ana spent hundrocj ol' col lars, tried every known remedy with ort finding relief. Ihcvj only taken one bottla of your P. P. P., end can cheerruliy say It has done me more food than anything I have ever taken, can recommend your medicine to oil fiuS&rorfi ol the above disease. MRS. M. M. YEARY. EprlasSeld, Grees County, Mo. The Things We Prize Most If i are not the cev.-p-aws and rimcracts I e garher about us. Every life, of course, has its sacred tinseled treas ur;s, but ia this practical work-a-day v.'orU man is prone to value most thori things which serve him best Not much sentiment in this, per hzp;, but some sense all the same. The McCormick Machine cf Steel ti'tes first rank the world over. h'usJreds of thousands of grain growers cjll It the best harvester and bbe'er that ever went into a grai.-i field, ana tis y prize it according'"- it isn't ccsritneat with them it's just pUin, cld-forhroned cora Sion senvj. They like it best be cause it serves tlicra test. it costs more money than some harvesters, but that's because it's core valuable. Its advantages more than onset the sdded cost. The "Machine of Steel" is built to harvest the grain crop of tiie world, and to da it better than any other machine. Perhaps yon tray care to ttnow mere about this harvester. Uur catalogue will interest you. . ' l KeCoRKiCK Harvest;3 machine Co. CHICAGO, IfU f orke Si Wadavoi odh, Ageat. j Presents." FOLKS DATE! khi im ho. SAVAKNAIL GA. W. M. WI1EELEE, Makager. mwm ilea, Blotches and Old Sores Catarrh, Malaria find Kidney Troubles . Pricklv Ash. Poke Root and Potas- !un, ue reutet blood purifier oa CirtS. ABSsnEaw, 0.. July 21, 1801. Oa. : Deak yips I bouftht a bottle ol r 'osr P.P. P. at Hot SDrln?s.Ark..anr It has done mo more (rood than k" tH mouths' treatment at the Hot Sjrlag " buau i::ree uin-ties j, u. ij - Eespcotfaily yonrs, JAS. M. nt:wtoit. Aberdeen, Brown County, O. Ca?t. J. D. Jobnstoc. To alt vhom it may concern: I here ty testify to the wonderful properties of P. P. P. for eruptions of the skin. I suflered for several years with an un sightly sad oisatrreeable eruption oa dy but in valn.nntll P. P. P. was used, an". 3n now eiiureiy curti. (31iaed by) J. D. JO:3gTOS. Savannah, Co. SJiln Cancer Cared. TesHraonyfrom tAe Mayor of SetprtiuTex. Seqcis, Tzx., Jannarj 14, 1893. Messrs. Lii'Pman Bkos., savannah, Ga. : Gentlcmtnl have trlel your P. P. P. for a disease of the skin, usually known ps sicln cpucer,of thirty ycars standing, and found fcrcat roliof: It Tnrihea tne blood and removes all lr- Titatlon from the seat of the disease and prevents any spreading of the m. sores. I have taken flveorslx bottles ' '3J and feel conudent that another course will effect a cure. It has also relieved Eue frna Indication and stomaotl troubles. Yours truly, CAPT. W. M. ETJST. Attorney at Litv. ALL DEUGQIST3 SELL IT. LgPPBf3A?l BHOS. rEOPMETOES, Eilppman's E:of li.Jiavannnb, Oa - 1 m9 ' -JP 1 - I ZL ; I -9 w, I 7 1 l'-T "1.
The Standard (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 31, 1895, edition 1
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