Pi v: 1 obalcco: S : ; . .- 1 . No crop varies more in qual--ity according to gifadejof ferti lizers Used than tobacco. Pot Mash' is .its most ifnportant re quirement, producing a large yield of finest grajlejeaf. Use - only fertilizers containing at least 10 actual ; V :! Potash (K.O) i j -;iin form of sulphate. To in ! isure a clean burning leaf, avoid fertilizers containing chlorine. ; H Our pamphlet are not deftising circular boom hag special fertilizers, but are pmctical works, contain Ling latest researches on the subject of fertilization, and iare really helpful to farmers. They are sent tee for lue aslunff. y - i- GERMAN KALI WORKS, i? " -.. or Nassau St.. New York. f Georffeville, CabartutfXJo., N. 0. I MALE and FEMALE. & r. -. "- ' ' f W.M. BROOKS, A. M., (tTnjv. N. C.) Principal. s The next session willopen Ansrust 5th, and will continue 10 months with a short f vacation at Christmas.; Discipline wise- Sly but strictly enforced; Pupils charged i from date of entrance till close of five months term. No detuctiona except in i cases of protracted siekniss for one week or i ii iv. BATES OF TUITION PEBIfcUNAB MONTH: fl.00 ! Second Reader, Speulnjj.Jand Second - i reaaer, r : f Intermediate, Spelling, Beading, Ele r merits ol Arithmetic, Primary Geojr- -i raphy. Primary Grammar, . . - j Higher English,- Grammy Arithme- A tic, etc.. ' i Hlsrher Mathematics vrttlrbheor more of the followine: Lj-itin. Greek. 1,25 1.50 ;2.oo "f : French or Spanish, I 2.50 to 3.00 ' f Tuition payable monffjly or quarterly. t Knard. lnclndmr lip-Mil ftil. ft... Sfl.fXi ' to f i .00 per fjnonth. Georsreville is Bituattd hear the mno Hion of Dutch Buffalo and Rocky Biver. i i in ; South-eastern ptftt , of Cabarrus I j i county, ten miles frogi Concord, in ii healthy country, TIte Academy is j i large new building; rell suited for i school purposesr Th school ;will be ! Btrictly non-sectarian. 1 Pupils will be required to attend Divjne worship and Sabbath School. - . f , . i j '. There is a tri-weekly . mail from i j Greorgeville direct to Concord and back i.j on Tuesdays, lhursdajrs andSaturdays. , i a nrst-ciass pracucing ; pnysician re- ; ! Bides m the village. I 2 jl Parents tnd guafdiajns interested in J 1 1 education are cordially! invited to visit I the school. i ii ' For further iniormalion addressthe i rincipal. , ,V . s t: The modeh. stand ard Family ' Medi cine : Cures the common every-day ills of humanity. a o if More Crtal9 Safe and ERecft-re Remedy for SORE, WEAK ami INftAMEO EYES. rrodurinj iMng-Sigtedneas, ana , jr Restoring the Sighl of the old. nCnres Tear -Props, Grnlatlon, Sty i Tnmors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye Lashes; AND PRODTJCING QtfiCK RELIEF -J AND PERMANENT CUKE- : Also, eqnally tiEcorlojfs Trbea tut fa Sores. Tttmnix- t i . r r SOLD BY fell DRtirTS j WINE OF CXRDUlJ : 4 I I" i HAIR BALSAM - iicsnie ana Desatino the hair, ii ftomotas a UrrurUnt growth. re 1 .Sail' to its Youthful CeXo-rT Curw sealp diui-.a it hair tailing, - Ann . i r. A. n ,r t , y, 91 only sirs Cv! St5 1 pu?5nnre inctto to test. Makd vsiking eaiqrf Uctt. at Bruggi ( Itauggista. r u jyepara jswnes, jr vs. Trie Nugget Gold Mining Company. -' t appearing to the satisfaction of the court from the return of Jno. A.lma, sheriff of wwMiiuuuuuij,norin uaruna, ana from JBlavlt of Morrison CaldwvU, Attorney for rir rviu " . ue aooveiBnutiea action. Won and that no officer or aeent of riAftit. ants, nor any one of the defendants can, after T, . l"" iu me ooaio, ana. It tnrther appearing that the cause of action rose In this Btate, and that plaintiff Is a .res- "l s"" sua nas a cause of action gatost defendants, it is now on motion of -Morrison Caldwell, attorney for plaintiff reared that the summonsiln the above? GeoigeYille Academy rh ocrvBu uji puoucauon m Concord Timbs, a newspaper pubUahed Jni5Sbarru.2?unt- c- tor six consecutive Shuno1UfylnI the aefendanta, the Nugget Gold Mining Company,, that aT warrant of attachment was taken out at the time of the Issuing-of the summons in i above action Now, therefore, the NuggetGIMlntng Company arc hereby notified that Richard Barnes, Jr., has commenced an action agufnat them for the recovery of Ona Thousanrt Seven Hundred and Eighty-Six-" dollars Ti Blghty-two ceuts, fl,!86.&) "ue foralar? and money advanced to defendants, and has tafcenout a warrant of attachment against thfc property of defendants In Cabarrus county, and said Nugget Gold. Mining Co are Jirther noUfled to appear at the. term of the . Superior court of Cabarrus county to be held on the 6th Monday before the ,1st Monday la March, A. V. 1896, and answer or demur to . the .complaint whioh will be filed on or before He Srd day of the term, withl the time re quired by law. or the plaintiff will apply tor theTelief demanded.) 1 "iaiiylor TUI 7th day of December, 1$P5- I , Clerk Superior Court Cab? rrus County. I K.XC Ktn N POPPING BUEDS K THE AIE. : ' A Most Ingenlons Scbeme for Extermlnat i lng English Sparrows. . ... A good story is told In the Louisville Commercial of a - clever saleman 8 scheme for introduolng fcls brand ol baking powder in a Western town. Those wrho know of the incident say that it originated in the mind of Com modore Delevan Peck, of this city, and the clever young man was introducing Thepure Baking Powder. ' The Com mercial's story is as follows: v "One of .the slickest men I ever saw was a young fellow out West, . who was selling baking powder, and was up to alt the dodges to advertise his goods. He happened to strike one little town in whleh English sparrows were a great nuisance,! and the authorities had of fered a bounty on sparrow headaA The baking powder, man saw a golden op portunity to give his goods a big repu tation, and offered to exterminate all of the sparrows In town inside of two "His proposition was gladly accepted, so he began his work. He selected a large vacant lot as the scene of his ope rations, and every evening would go out there with several bushels of corn, which he fed to the sparrows until they began to get acquainted with him and came to the lot in bigger droves every day. In the meantime he had sent East and bought a barrel of empty capsules, which he had filled with; the baking powder, and then put salt, on the out side of them. V " ' ' "When he saw that all of the spar rows in town were coming to the feed ground, he had a large tank of water tlaced there, and was ready for the -uma-r On this eventful even ing he took his salted capsules of bak-ro- rnwrlfr to the lot. instead of corn and threw them out to the unsuspecting sparrows. Of course, the salt maae ine ,ri- thirstv. and they immediately flew to the water tank and drank, tva Twiiit was somewhat awful. and V "The water melted the capsptes and made the baking powder Tise. The poor little birds tried to stay on the ground, but the baking powder WM too strong, and compelled them to rise straight up into the air, and finally popped them open. The spectators could plainly hear the sparrows pop, and said j that It nrrnnded like the popping of a paper hi?. It rained popped sparrows all night. It is needless to say that there is only-one brand of baking powder for sale in that town " . Hearing Distance. An inquiry was recently made in T v A An Q f ft the greatest distance at which a man's Voice could be heard. lea vine, of course, the telephone out of consideration. The reply was most in terestlng, and was as follows r Eighteen miles Is the longest distance on record at which a man's voice has been heard, This occurred In the Grand Canon of the Colorado, where one man shouting the name "Bob" at one end, his voice was Dlalnlv heard at the other end, which is eighteen mlle away. Lieutenant Fos ter, on Parry's third Arctic expedition, TViiinrl that he could converse with- a man across the harbor of Port BoweU, a distance of 6.69$ feet, or about one mile and a quarter; and Sir Job.n Frank lln said that he conversed -with ease at a distance of more than a mile. Dr, Young records that at Gibraltar the. hu man voice has been heard at a distance of ten miles. ' Sound has remarkable force in water. Colladon, by experiments made in the Lake of Geneva, estimated that avbell submerged in the sea might be heard a distance of more than sixty miles Franklin says that he heard the strik ing together of two stones in the water halt a mile away:. Oyer water or a sur face of ice sound is propagated with great clearness and strength. ' Dr. Hut ton relates that on' a quiet part of-the Thames nearChelsea he could hear a person read distinctly at the distance of 140 feet, while on the land the same Could only be heard at seventy-six feet Professor ..TrnflaU. -Whpn Jx0 . Mount .ner-rtrana the report of a pistol shot no louder than the pop of a champagne bottle. Persons in a balloon can hear voices from the earth a long- time after they, themselves, are inaudible to people below.Harper's Round Table. The Baron TVadenl. Some years ago, when the boom was raging in Southern California, a great seaport city was about to be built. It was called "Ballpna." Beautiful chro-mo-lithographs of a magnificent har-bor, with grea't ships riding at their anchors while long trains of cars were lqading at vast docks, were scattered through Southern California. It was whispered that "the Santa Fe road was behind it" People began to think they had "better get in on Ballona." A party of gentlemen jwent down from Los Angeles to look at it. Some of them were financially interested in Ballona, md Borne of them were not yet. Among the latter was a foreigner, a genial French baron. The party dined co piously at an adjacent hostelry, an men went to look at the harbor." Most of the party were a-trifle sur prised when they saw . the narrow slough which was called . "the harbor." However, three of them got into a boat to cross "the harbor." The baron waa one. Of the other two one was a hard ened Joker, and the third ah officer high in the United States army. , On the way over, the joker conceived the Idea ol rocking the boat and scaring the baron. The general seconded him.' They suc ceeded beyond their expectations. The baron protested-that they would all be drowned, but the Joker and the general kept on. Finally, the terrified baron stood up, but being very ta-y. his Cen tre of gravity was' too high. He fell out of the boat, amid cries of alarm from those on shore, for the baron had fallen into the fathomless waters right in the middle of the "har bor." However, to the great surprise of the intendlng-investors on dry land, as well as to his own, the baron picked himself out of three feet of Water, and waded ashore. The Jest was ah excel lent one in the beginning, but, as it practically - squelched "the harbor' scheme, the Joke may be- considered to-be on Ballona Instead of the baron. Argnoaut. -' '', 'y Unpleasantly Situated. t First office boy Do you like your Job ? Second office boy Naw! ;The type writer is 35, the bookkeeper's sore 'cause he can't be -a dude on 98 a week, the Installment company took the head clerk's bicycle away from" him last week 'cause 'he hadn't paid up on it, and the boss won't let me wMstlo. any where. Pittsburg Bulletin. Twenty Years Proof. Tutt's Li ver Pills keep the bow els in natural motion and cleanse the system of all impurities An absolute cure for sick headache, dyspepsia, sour stomach, con stipation and kindred diseases. "Can't do without them" iv. r. , bmith, Chilesburcf, Va. writes I don't know how I could do without them. I have had Liver disease for over twenty years. Am now entirely cured Tutt's Liver Pills Or. Milefi' ZW Granville county under "Reform" has a negro jailer, and upon the au thority of the woman herself the Ox ford Ledger charges him with having debauched ODe of the female 'colored prisoners who has Bince given birth to a .child. It costs about as much to be stingy as it does to be'extravagant. ' TTTHEN fhey fmt VV man in jail, he cannot follow his XUViVjrl natural j life is ; ti aiural inclinations. enjoyment, of iimited. lie eat what be wants to-he is lim ited to a very frugal diet. He is alive to bean t e-, but life doesn't possess very many.; advantages. i Ate not all these things equally true of a drspc ptic ? For all of the real enjoy ment he gets out of life, he might as well be lu jail.. He can- sot eat what he likes, nor as much of it as he would like. If he transgresses any of the rules of his diet, he is punished for it He suiters much, gets little sympathy.. Dvsnensia starts with indigestion, and may lead to almost anything. Indigea-' tion means a variety of things it shows itself in many ways. Atfirst, perhaps a little heaviness in the stomach, a little sourness,, windy belchlngs and -heartburn. Headaches begin to come pretty soon after that, and biliousness and a fonl taste in the mouth in the morning. Chronic constipation, is almost inevitable, andit is probably the most serious trouble that ever takes hold of a man. Its seeming simplicity is the thing that makes it moat dangerous, because , it leads : to neglect Constipation jneans that the body is hold ing poisonous, impure matter that should be gotten rid of. The poison is being- re absorbed into the blood and the whole body is being filled with it Impurity in the blood may lead to almost any disease. There is no telling what may come of it Constipation is the start of it alL And yet people are careless about it It is the most serious thing in the world, and the easiest to cure if you go about it right' Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets" eu tocstipatfotv 7 Cure it positively, certainly, infallibly.-:" Cure it so it stays cured. Cure it so yon can stop taking medicine. ? ! v And that is something that no other remedy in the world wilf do. - i Positively cured by these 1 ; Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue rain in the Side, TORPID LIVER, They Regulate the Bowels- Purely Vegetable. PiH. Small Dos, Srrtil Prscp. . r PARKER'S UAIB BALSAM Cleanses and beactlftsf ths balL Srnr to Bestows Grayl Cop seslp disesiea a hsir filling. 3V TVT1 1TST, BriSllt JDOV Or Girl . In this and every town in the vicinitv where there is not already an asrent. to tell the New York IecLjer, America's Greatest Story Paper, by the veek and act as agent, making 2 cents on typif copy sold. No charge being made for unsold copies. No Possible Risk. For full particulars call at the office of this paper. . 1806. The Sau.' Batimore, Md: , 1896, The Paper pob mk People. Fob the People and with the People, Honest in Motive, Fearless in Expression. - P Scusd in Principle ' Unswerving in Its Alleoiance to Right Theories and Right Practices. ihs bnn publishes all -the news all the time, but it does not allow its col- uujuu w ue uegraaea By unclean, inv moral or purely sensational matter. jl i a n t s . Jiiditorially, the bnn is the consistent and unchanging champion and defender of popular rights and interests against political macmnesand monoDolies of v- ery cnaracter. maepenclent in all things. jl .. -r . - O extreme in none. . it is lor gootl laws, gwu government ana gooa order. By mail fifty cents a month. Six dol iars a year. Th BAltlniorA Weekly Man. t me weekly bun onblishfiB. nil tht news of each week, eivinsr comnlpt oonnis oiaiieveuts ol interest t.hmnk. ute world. As an agi-ioultnral papr uio v eemj: nun is .unsurpassed. It s ouiwu uv wrirars oi DrAftniui omin. ence who know what farming means and what farmers want in an aericnltnral journal. It contains resmlar renorts of the work nf the agricultural experiment station throughout the country, of the proceeaings oi tarmers' clubs and insti- tutes, ana the discussion of new meth ods andideis in aaricnlture. Its marVct reports, poultry department and veteri nary coiumn are particularly valuable to country readers. .Every issue contains stories, poems, household and puzze TOiuuiiM, a vaneiy oi interesting and in structive selected matter and nther ton. tures, which make it -a weloome -d m cwy ana country homes alike. - jne aoiiar a year. Jndncements to geirers-up ei clubs for the Weekly Sun Both the Dailv and Weetlv S nil rr nil iree oi postage in the United States, Canada and Mexico. Pavh. 7 . , . " M 14. AC oiy ju aavanee. Address A. S. Abell Company, Publishers and Proprietors, . Baltimore, Md. GOOSE-GREASE! Will cure you of ; KHenmatism,Neuralgia, Pains in Head, Back and Sides, wnen aU other remedies fail, i It ia the I ucest juuiment on earth lor man or beast, Alffajs Soli Unflpr -a truarantee. j If it does not do all that is claimed yf , luiwu as ana eret vonr money. f Or fiale hV all Tirncnriata t,A .1 store keepers" "& Manufactured only by ' -RIVERSIDE MEDICINE CO., nan- i-iy. - t . Ore Hill, N. a 'the mm 1 r;,- -; J ... A b; jmiTTLE t : IVER When they put a man in jailj he can not follovc his natural inclinations. He eanuoteat what he wants to he is "lim ited to a very frugal diet. Is - it not equally true of a dyspeptio ? For all ot the real enjoyment he gets out of life, he might as well be in jail. He cannot eat what he likes, nor enough. He suf fers much, gets little sympathy. At first perhaps a little heaviness m the stom ach, a little sourness, windy belchlngs and heartburn; headaches and billious ness and a foul taste in the mouth in the morning.- Chronic constipation is al most inevitable, and means that the body is holdiner poisonous, impure matter that : should be gotten rid of. - The poison : is being reabsorbed into' the blood and the whole body,' Impurity in the blood may lead to almost any dis ease. Constipation is the start of all. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure con stipation, cures it so it stays cured. ; No other remedy in the world will do that. Send 21 cents in one-cent stamps to World's Dispensary Medical - Association,- Buffalo, N. Y., and receive Dr, Pierce's 1008 page Common Sense Medi cal Adviser, illustrated.,: - Faith in God is the noble conduct; doubt and "paralysis, very breath of breeds inaction . If we could trace Dyspepsia to its source, it would lead, back to onr kitch ens. In fact, the secret of good health is good cooking. If well cooked, foods are oartiallv dieested. if poorly cooked they rre less digestible than in their raw state. It you are a victim of faulty cooking that . is, if you suffer from Dyspepsia, the rational cure must be looked for in an artificially digested food, and a food which will at the same time aid the digestion ol other foods Such a preparation .yiitually rests the tired digestive organ", thereby restoring them to their natural btrenstn," The Digestive Cordial, as prepared by the Shakers of Mount Lebanon, is just such a preparation, and a single 10 cent bottle will convince you of its value.' If your dru! jggist ddesn t keep it, he will be glad to get it through his wholesale house. - ; Laxol is the best medicine for chil dren. Doctors recommend it in place of Castor Oil. The best regalator to regulate" a people, is Simmons Liver Kesrulator. ; It regu lates the liver and the liver , regulates the person. If the liver is regular therr health is eood. but if wuersriah or dis eased then there is constantBiliousness, Indigestion, Headache and all the dis orders of the stomach that one-hears of Try .Simmons Liver .Regulator ana provethis. - ; There is not much left' to a msn when h has intellisrently consented to enter upon a couis9 of action that he knows to oe wrong. - , ' - ::-;;.; To preserve a youthlul appearance as long as possible, it is indispensable that the hair fbonld retain its natural color and fullness. There is no preparation so effective as Avers Hair Vieror. prevents baldness, 'and keeps the scalp clean, cool, and healthy. i . , . jsome people look upon religion as a means for escaping from the painfn consequences ol their own wrong ac- UU11H. - When moist needed it is not unusual for your family physician to be away from home, bach was the experience of Mr. J. W, Schenck, editor of the Caddo, Ind, Ter., Banner, when his lit tie girl, two years of age was threat ened with a severe attack Of croup. He says. "My wife insisted that 1 tro for the doctor, but as our family physiaian waa out of town 1 purchased a bottle of Chambei Iain's Cough Remedy, which relieved her immediately. I will not be without it in the future." 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by D. D. Johnson. The pilsrrim who keeps steadily step ping forward day by day will at last get into ine aingaom. Tlcton is manageToTtheTVneTeb a pretty-western Tioyeen-'Berrt State Hotel, at Dennison. Texas, which i AT A l: - xl.-l . uid iravciiu xueu esy la one ui lue oesi hotels in that section. In speaking of Ohamberlain s Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy Major Picton says: have used it myself and in my family for several years, and take pleasure in saying that I consigr it an infallible cure for diarrhoea and dveahtery, ! always recommend it, and have fre quently administered it to my guests in the hotel, and in every case it has proven .- itself wcrfchy of unqualified endorsement. , For sale by D. D. John. son, Druggist. It is not safe to jndze a man's-oietv TT - b his facility in using a set of well- soundmg phrases. ; " -' A nk Preslaent. Mr. W. T. Nelson. President of the Second National Bank, of Jaokson Tenn,, says: , "For Indigestion and Nervous trouble, I would rather give up the use of any remsdv I have ever tried than King's Royal Germeteur. A a nerve tranquilizer, restorative, it is all tnat can Da desired, it is not aharcotio -in any sense, but produces the haomest effects- upon the disordered ner- vous system. I consider it an invalua ble remedy, and have for vears been recomendmg it to my friends." New package, large bottle. 108 doses. Srt. j or sate Dy r . is. i etzer, JJrnggist. The babit of doing ' one's "work thoroughly well contributes greatly to the virtue of sf If .respect. - The wife of Mr. D. Robinson, a nrom inent lumberman of Hart wick. S, Y. waa sick with rheumatism for five months. In soeafcing" of it. ' Mr. .Robinson saysi "Chamber Iain's. Pain Balm is the only thing that' gave her any rest from pain. For the relief of pain it cannot be beat." . Many Very oaa cases oi rneumattsm nave been cured by it. ' For sale at 50 cents per ootue oy,-u. u. onnson, uruggxst. Some men imagine thev have been very brave when they have simnlv been very nun. . To remove dandruff. keeD the acaln moist, clean, ana nealtny. and give vi. tality and color to weak, faded, and gray hair, use Ayer's Hair Vigor. It has no equal in merit as a hair dressing anar ine prevention ei baldness, scalp humors, and dandruF. . ' ; : Jncfclen Arnica Halve. The best salve in the world for mini bruises. Sores. Ulcers. Salt Rheum. Fe ver Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands. Chil blains. xJorns, and all Skin Ernfttinna. and positively cures Piles or no tav re quired. It is guaranteed to give per fect satisfaction or. monev refnrwl Price 25c. a box. For sale by P, R. jPetzer. .. " - ". When Baby was sick, we gave her Castarta. . When she waj a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castdria. When she bad Children, she gave them Gated. To the People of Cabarrus County. , ' ; v Palmer, Ellis Co., Tex. my who nas oeen afflicted with hex 11,- A'hree , bottles of Sxr, , uie ux uarani and two pack ages of Black-Draught .Tea have dona her more good than anything I have ever tried. - I can safely recommend it to all afflicted women. A trial ofWine of Cardui Treatment or l emale Diseases costs but $1.25, and a fall course S.'S tm it. mo u from nearly all dealers in medicineiin county. WHE5 LHTO0L1T WAS SHOT. Surratt's Waltez Boy Tells What Hi Sirs. Knows. " ; Nathaniel Sirams, who In the earlj sixties was Mrs. Mary B.- Surratt's col ored waiter by, lives north of Oxford, Pa. He Is a native of Prince Qeorgo't county, Md. . Slmms says when four teen years of agre he was bound out tc Mrs. Surratt, there being seven othei colored boys on the place. ' He . teftaTlii "the Philadelphia Inquirer, the following respecting his mistress: U " . "The missis lived at Surrattsvllle, about seven miles r from' Washington, and, being a lady of wealth, owned con siderable of the village. : She possessed fine features and a temperament that was excitable. Her favorite hobby wm riding horseback. I have seen her put one hand on the saddle pommel i and vault up into the seat without assist ance." Mrs.. Surratt was fond of wine. She could wield a rawhide with vigor, and it always came upon the backs ol us boys so unexpectedly. ; S S "She entertained frequenUy. ' John -Wilkes Booth was a; frequent visitor at the house, he being very intimate yvlth my mistress' son, John Surratt. Booth, a kind of a helpless fellow, required a good deal of waiting on, and from him ,1 received my first money I, could say was -mine. About two months before the taking off of President Lincoln Booth wag ' at the .Surratt mansion steady. ' A few days before the shooting of the President, Mrs., Surratt and i went into Washington, and, she bought nine or twelve pistols at a gunsmith's. They -were put In a little coffin, whioh the undertaker , hauled in his hearse f across the eastern branch bridge." The guards supposed it: was a funeral," and made no attempt at searching, 'i Mrs. Surratt, after reaching home, hung the pistols around on the walls of .her room. "On the night of the assassination Booth; and John Surratt ate supper to gether and left the house. About mid night Booth returned, and I heard Mrs. Surratt clap her hands - and exclaim, I'm glad the old rebel Is dead' meaning our noble Lincoln. That same night I helped Booth into the saddle, and he shot down the pike, as if demons -were after him. On opening the house next morning I was surprised to see the nlasza and yard full of soldiers. One of them asked if Booth had been at the house during the night, and I replied that he had. In a short time my mis tress and all hands about the place were taken Into Washington." Washington Star. - " ' ' ; ; Onr Amerlcaa Ulrls. . ' S The American girl has been discussed and analyzed until one would think the subject had been exhausted, but a new development in England lends' to "the discussion a revived interest. It is one of the amusing signs of the times that the British matron, after having for many years utterly disapproved of and loudly condemned everything connect ed with our young countrywoman. now endeavoring to find out the secret of her attractions, - and to teach her "IttUe ways" to her-own somewhat stolid brood. To tell the truth, sae fairly frightened at the Influx of. Am ericans into the peerage and the coun try 'farr'ires.' and since she finds she cannot kill with disapproval, she see mi inclined to imitate. ; But here comes a difficulty, an in seperable obstacle of race. What an American pan 'do, witli a sort of airy audacity quite her own, is apt to be, come rather heavy horse-play with her English cousins. The explanation of this seems to be that the American type is more splrituelle. Our women may be eccentric, unconventional and even sometimes what might be called fast, but they are rarely, if ever, coarse. An innate refinement and coolness of temperament saves them from vulgar ity, and gives to their manners the Oar ing courage of originality that for eigners admire." One of the happiest and most: satisfactory".' of diplomatic marriages in Washington was -the out Come - of" ft rlrnmilmia "tvrort1rl -Irtlrfc a new French secretary up to his host ess with an absurd speech, which he had conscientiously and seriously learn ed in English from. his tormentor, she assuring him it was "the thing" to say on taking leave. How Impossible such a childish trick would be In a London drawing-room, or from an English "Mees,' and yet the result in this case waa a wedding".' .; : l thought w would find you alto gether English," said a friend to "Hei txrace" on her first visit to her native land after her marriage. "No. indeed!" answered the latter in mock horror. "I consider my American accent and manners my most cherished possessions. They are my greatest cards oyer there! We had a fire at- Castle, where I was stopping last year, and I lost a lot of my clothes:' i hope you saved your pretty gowns, said the prince o me afterward. 1 saved nothing but wy American accent, sir, I answered. 'Well, then, you are aU right,' he returned, laughing. New xork Tribune. Literary Lunatics. v ; Are literary men more prone to in sanity tnan others 7 , Dr. Toulouse, the celebrated Paris alienist, answered this question after' the suicide of HiDDolvte Raymonds; ? the' Trnch -writer pf com- eay, penpal aisoraera among men of letters." said Dr. Toulouse, "always ap peal more forcibly to the imagination than ordinary cases of insanity. But we must not conclude .that madness is more frequent among them than in other walks of life. The English have a saying that great geniuses are all madmen, hut it would be going too far to assert mat a man goes Insane be cause he becomes a passionate follower of art or literature. There is no special form of insanity whioh attacks artists or writers, but the celebrity which the ouuceasiui uuee acnieve xascmates ' a great many men who have talent, but who also, have abnormally emotional temperaments. . ??The active' brsdn work, tiie feverish impatience v with which they seek " to gain fame, and often the 'privation tha$ they endureall these favor the development of the germs of madness which lie dormant4n many brains, and which would never have mods them selves manifest . If these persons had adopted a "calm and more veaetativa mode Of eXlstftnoe. It la mv nntnlnn that tba-Me M my most artists an ri writers Is .of a sort that 1' especially favorable to the - hringiog'-tiut in full force of any tendencies ' ti :in.uinit which may exist in embryo In the brain The sllgbtest thing may then unbalance xne mina. ana it is mat which too often Lively -at a Cricket. . ' Althousrh in tha first inof-n. . na 9 Wf uiv juaneys become as lively as a cricket wfxm impulse is giyen to them with Hostet- Kisowmacn wiers, a promoter of av tivity m these organs which corjnteraots .Duucuov w ineirietnargy and disease. Inastion Of the kldmawa. it ahmM h. membercd, is the first stage of those uisrous renai maladies against which the resources of medical s;ience are too often exhausted in vain, i'eril is f ore- rpULuea Dy tne Jiitters, which averts -Urania aisease, diabetes, dropsy L t, y " hohujbs ariBinc irora a bladder.- Equally efllcaQiqui? is it uuotsuik , uu eraaicaung malarial, billiousand neryous ailments, dyspep. SI. COnsttriTltion ftllfi rhpnrrmttiTTi A detite and sleep are improved and con valescence hastened bv iU hflnnflxant action.- Either when health is nlio-hw or seriously imoMred. th vn1n nf tv.i restorative and DrevnntivA mAHininu speedjlv made manifest. Dandrun? is an exudation tmm Hia pores of the akin that spreads and dries form in ar aenrf and nan sin - tha ai X fallout. Hall's Hair lienewer cures it. Memphis Appeal : Marion Butler, of North Carolina, turned loose in : the senate yesterday. We venture the as sertion that no man that ever sat in the body ha? so firm a grip; on fame as Marion Butler. . .Butler reminds you of Danial Webster. lie is so different. We seriously doubt whether there is any living thing, ffom a -man to a bacillus, that has as little sense as Marion Butler of North Carolina. This is why he will be so famous. Peffer of Kansas, got mighty when he .. laid : in his brain supply, but Peffer is to Marion Butler as Jove is to a woman. Yet this thing can open its mouth and talk for hours on'a stretch, and at a distance of a hundred yards looks ; almost "human. UNTOLD MISERY KROJC - HEUmATISm C. H. Sing, Water Valley, Kiss., cured by ' Ayer's Sarsaparilla "For five years, I suffered untold misery from muscular rheumatism.;; I tried every known remedy: consulted the ;begt physi cians, -visited Hot Springs, Ark., three times, spending $1000 there, besides doctors' bills; but could obtain only temporary relief. My flesh was wasted away so that I weighed only ninety-three pounds; my left arm and leg were drawn out of shape, the muscles isA.iSMa'. '. , being twisted up in knots. I, was unable to "dress myself, except with assistance, and ; could only hobble about by using a cane. I ; had no appetite, and was assured, -by tisV doctors, that I could not live, j The pains, at times, were so awful, that I could procure relief only by means of hypodermic Injec tions of morphine. I had my limbs bandaged in clay, in sulphur, in poultices ; but these gave onlytemporary relief. Alter trying everything, and suffering the most awful tortures, I began to take Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Inside of two months, was able to walk without a cane. In three months, mv limbs began to strengthen, and in the course of a year, I was cured. My weight has increased to 165 pounds, and I am now able to do my iuh uay s worx as a rauroacf DjacKsmtm." AXUM'S PIJ.LS cure Memdaehe. ChamberJain'j Eye and Skin Ointment Is a certain cure for Chronic Sore' Evea Granulated Eye Lids, Sore Sipples, Piles, Eczeraa, Tetter, Salt" Rheum and Scald Head, zo cents per box. ftor sale Dy .druggists. TO EOSSS OWITESS. For putting a horse in a fine healthy con dition try Dr. Cadv's -Condition Powders. They tone up the system, aid digestion, cure loss of appetite, relieve constipation, correct kidney disorders and destroy worms, giving new life to an old or over varked horse. 25 ner package. 'For sale by druggists ILL S IMPROVED CHILL TONIC ,jBalerlr to Jk.lt ttlktrs, - It is a true Chill Cure in combination with Liver Tonics. When properly taken it never fails to cure tie most ob stinate'oase of Chills and Fever. Where others fail it will cure. ' It is pleasant to take, and contains nothing to injure the most delicate system. Babies take it easily. As a Tonic it is without an I equal. Guaranteed by youro4ruggist. JcTice 50 cents per bottle. iFr a ale at thedruar stores in Concord. Ycigt & Co., Bhattaaooia, Tenn. P1NE0LA COUGH BALSAM Is excellent for all throat and lung in- namniatlons and I for asthma. Con sumptives will in-1 variaDiy derive beneSt from its use as It quickly ia toe cougn, I renders, expecto ration easy, asarst- j iug. unvure in re; stortug wasted tissues. There is a larye percent age ot those who suppose their Cases to be COnftlimntinn wVin ftr. nnlu aiifTor- infrfrom a chronic cold r deen Seated couch often aggravated by catarrh. Both-remedies are nleasant to uan: Pt1a nt iVamk I!.itt ow. per vuiiie : - t-ineoia itatsam. zsc . in quantities or 2.50 we, will de ivet free of ex press or postage, on receipt ot amount. ' 1 BI.V nUATUrUQ E13 TIT U . IT 1 r rate f u fgom f brti ng 5 Breakfast Supper.' By a thorouirh knowledge of irrift nnrnmi laws which froveru the operations of diges tion and nutrition, and by a careful appiica- uuii m i,no iin propeiTie or wen selected i Cocoa. Mr. Kdos has nrovidrt tnr rasf and supper a delicately flavored bever- age wmcn may gays m anj ovy dtn.aor' bills. It Is by the Judicious tisa or guoif tides of diet that a constitution -may be gradually bunt up until strong enough to re sist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us readv We may esr-aDemanvafAt-.nl short h. ins: ourselves well fortiflp.fi WIMt nnro i and a properly nourished frame" Civil Per-1 vice OTaqeimpiV Wlttl DOllinir Wa- lL JS.m. W ,-POFnd tin's, by JAIUKN EPlS Wf t 'i T.M.. TrniT.oTiof.,. -V" jl wiLm iiiv. u." nulla l ... . . i i . i 'is a x Local -Disease and is the result of colds and Budden climatic Ids tic If Hjasrv 5 HJUJ cuuuges. hi can be cured by a pleasant remedy which is a applied direct ly into the nostrils. Being QUiCklv Rhsnrhfwl it rlvaa weisonce-. : E JlSt4im iv XJSF-Zt ,yi.P "-IVI is acunowiedsred Stfelhiub ure for Nasal f - .-. u.u u nesu ui i nay f ever of n erotecS-ihe mmbcofai! restores t,h nonui rt . , xr''S BLTlmoxilEHtTM VarrenSt. Yr.rl. I Wit Ms . a . -I 4ne nret of American Newspaper?, I CHARLES A. DANA. Editor. - The American Crtnotftntinn a X i , , : . " ... u, uucnuLCll- w A mrioau Spirit. These ioi. ittob, u Binae time loreyer. TrQlTlT Kir vtoniJ . . . - j - . - ,.j uau. ujf man, a yeaTl The Sunday Sun Is tho greatest Sunday Newsbaner in I , ijuo woria. -r, 4. "- Ifjpe 6o. a oopy. By mail, $2 a year. ; Address THE yi?t New Yorlc. " AT- . ... ... . I Sspst 11 The Only , World's Fair S JsaparliL GH CATARRH t-si - - mm . 1 j Castoria is Dr Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Inffcuts - and Children. It contains neither Opiuxri, Morphine not other Narcotic substance. It Is ti harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty ""years' use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys "Worms and allays - fevcrishiiess. Castoria prevents vomiting1 Sour Curd,1 cures- Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic Castoria relieved teething troubles, cures., constipation an d flatulency. Castoria! assimilates the food, rcg'ilafics tho stomach, and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas torla is the Children's; Panacea the Mother's Friend. Castoria. Castoria Is aa excellent medicine for chil dren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its good effect urxm their children." r-: Da. Q. Q. OSOOOD, -:'LoWeU, Haas." "Castoria is the best remedy for children of which I am acquainted. I hope the day is not ; far distant when mothers will consider the real Interest of their children, and use Castoria in-' stead of the various quack nostrums Vhich are destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, soouiing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending tham to premature graves.1 : ; 1 Pb. J. F. Ktschkuok,' j Conway, Ark. The Centaur Company, ; TT CURES BLOOD IDISEjLSSS. Physicians endorse P. P. P. as a eplendid combination and prescribe it with reat sati.s actionfor the cures oi all forms arid stages of Primary Secondary and Tjertiary Syphilid, SypJi- HP (Dares ilitic tlhenmatism, Scrofulous Ulctrs and Soref, Glandular Swjelliogs, Khenmatisny,1 Halaria old Chronic Ulcers that have resisted till treatment, P. - Vnre Catarrh, Skin Diseases, Complaints, Mercurial HeadJ etc., etc. P. P. .lis a powerful JP. appetizer, builuicg up tbe system rapidly. Indies whoso systems are poisoned. aui whoso Uood is in an impure condition, daw to menstrual P. P. . P. j i Cares Malaria. i - ' . ' -,. . ! , irrfgnlarities, are peculiarly benefited by the yvouderfnl tonic and blood cleansmg properties of P. Pt P. Prickly Asb, Poke Root and Potaar sinm. t " " J ; :- ' IP IP 3? CURES DYSPEPSIA. LIPPMAN BROS., Proprietors, PggistSj Lipprnan's J31opk SAY'AK- ; NAM, OA. - I Diseases mmm: 1 NOW- $ I . TO BUY FURNITURE'. , The Acrn'; cf Loff rices is , - Gooils Never Will bp Cheaper. The Factory 'siave all agreed to advance" their prices, but before they put vp their prices I had been into the market and bought the -aBidegt unci . (Cheapest Stock evef before seen In this section of the. country, . Eyerj' one who sees my stock says; it is Wtitol-ia tety if Slyls,. "Cnaqnui 'mi- Ikitj. "- CAN - 3flYEY0U , MONEY, I WEITE ME BEFORE BUYING, j : E.;E. ANDREWS, . Leading Dealer in Furniture, Piarcs" ard Organs, . 16 and 18 V. Trade Street, , CHARLOTTE, N. C Agent's profits per month. Vlli ywwyprove it or pay lorteit. Kew sr Holes just ouLJA fl.BO sample and terms Try us. Chidester & Son, 28 lid nd St. free. I New YDrlf, JTOTICK. i - I WAirr every man and Woman In the TTnlted Btatea interested ia the! Opium and Whisky aabits to have one of raj books on these dis ease. Address 15. t. WnnlloT. Jktlr.r. . dox tas, and a wul b sent you tree, 7 What is , j V : . ..... ,r ... - V - i: -Castoria. ,i -. . " Castoria ia bo well adapted to children ths( I recommend it as superior to any prescriptia, known to me.. ; i H. A Archsr, 5L d , 111 So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, li. V :; Our physiciana in the children's depart ment have spoken highly of their experji ence in their outside practice with Castoriaj and although we only have aniou a.j medical supplies ; what is known as rejiCi products, yet we are free to confess that t merits, of Castoria has won us to look witt ' favor upon It. . UKITXD HOSPITjU. AKU DlBPKJSAET, . - ; " ' Boston, aasj. C. SarrrH, fVes., Murray Street, New York City. P. ALL SKIN .P P. ; , Eczema, Chronic Female Poison, fetter, Scald j ' . ' toni-i antt an excellent IP. IP. Bok on Bloodl mailed free. IS YODR TIME ! '45 .4. EHNYROYAL PILLS .V wrlelnnl ud Only Crnnlns. ift:v 2rCl Jy rHfcic. uoici xt ; j7.V.-yl fim-or VMchtMtrt nali,k VI . DrajtciMs stjimpa tut panicniara, tratuvnniaL- '1 puci ri iraaM," in letter, rr r?Tur" M4brj "uwa, j , M uuma.m. a NfcTitiose, Mri wuh blue ribbora. Titkc W S? Ino ollorw Refu. dangtnyHM rubstitu- v ff hot tmU imtaXin$. At Drnitcnta, or oeo'i fftla has no show with Dr. lUles Pain Pill