Newspapers / The North Carolina Prohibitionist … / Feb. 10, 1888, edition 1 / Page 4
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ff7'. -S:f' ; p ' i. -4 . f TEMPERANCE. - The A B Ofif Drink. A Is the Alcohol deathlike its grip, -'""". B the Beginner who Vjusttakes a sip." ' - C the Companion who urges hiin oi, ; IV for the Demon of drink which is bom. " K the Endeavor he makes .to resist, : F for the Friends (?) who so loudly insist ' G for the Guilt which he afterward feels, s II for the horrors that hang at his heels. v ... I his Intention to drink not at all, : --s cf - J for Jeering that follows bisfalL .' K is his Knowledge that he is a slave, -' v Jj for the Lienors his appetites crave. "V M the convivai Meetings so gay, "-. ; - N is the No". which he tries hard to say. K 5 O for the Orgies which then come to pass, - i I for the Pride which be drowns in his glass. Q for the Quarrels that nightly abound, ;" f- It for the Ruin that hovers around. . f j. S for the Sights which his visionledims,-. ..' T. :- T for the Trembling that seizes his limbs.' - - XL for his "Usefulness, killed in the slums,, 5 . is wiw v agrariE no swutiy oe comes. "W the Waning of life nearly done, - ? Youth of the nation, such weakness is crime; Zealously turn from the tempter in time. , - K. JS.. Kidder, in 1 fmperarice Banner. J;' ''ylUfy: fi "'". ":. S:fi-ff'i& "' ' ' .Prohibition Enforced. . '''-"(" The number of convictions' for the viola tion of the prohibiotry law a the reeenses sion of the Superior Court, and theamount;of fines and imprisonment tmposod on the t bn- :, , victedindicate that the county and nranici pal omcials, the court and. the jury have faithfully performed their, duties. ; The facte; v show that the law can . be enforced, and the beneficial- influence is very apparent to . all" who look at things impart LaDy. ' The amount.' of liquor selling and drinking is much less' than where the law is not enforced. ,' While. . the amount purchasedfoat-of the Stete and bent to individuals, for their own use, through the express and other agencies of trausport, . may be considerable, it is Yery much less than has 'been-represented, and the amount " of drinking very far less, and the drunken ness mfcch less, than when prosecutions were ; not . successfully s made.5 . The .law is one ' agenpy in the promotion" of temperance, but . . it is obvious to all thought ul -citizens 4hat to - rely on that alone fe a very -grave mistake. Moral suasion, right instruction in the home, in the schools, in the press, in the pulpit, the corrects education of public opinion these combined are more powerfully effective than the law, and the aid.of these can alone render - the law practically successful. Those who - say the law must do everything arejust as . wide of the mark as those who maintain that . the law has baen a' failure. All. honorable and effective influences and agencies need to be invoked and kept :rxmstanly ia operation " against the drink and' drunkard evfl,- one -of the greatest that afflicts individuals and com , mumtiea Augusta Ufa.) Journai, . '' ..5. p f Tvhy Iiife Insurance Companic .-.Will Not Insnre-Beer Drinkers. " The following-extract from "the Chicago Heligio-Phi'.osophical Journal is commend ed to those 'Teformers" who would substitute beer and light 'wines for stronger alcoholic drinks: '-. ''Life insurance companies have no senti ment. Their business is one based purely uTK3n experience, from which cena;n inexora ble rules have been -established. .A life insur surance corapanv wiil not insure the life of a confirmed beer-drinker. Why?. Because it is a certain fact, as certain as a thing can be. that the beer-drinker ; cannot drink long enough to make insurance profitable to them. -1 hese institutions dread beer more than they do whisky, for its effect , upon the system is even worse. A non beer -drinker at forty is considered a good risk a beer-drinkerJ at that age can get no insurance at all.. - In - addition to sowing the seeds of disease and death in" the physical system, heer in large quantities is said to sodden the brain ami paralyze or vitiate the moral natures of its votaries. Careful observers assert that it is more brutalizing in its effects than either tp;rituoas or vinous liquors, in partial proof of which they point to the disproportionately large number of German name3 among the perpetrators- gZ -especially atrocious crime published in the daily papers. ; ..Alcohol as a'Medlcine. " - Dr. N. S. Davis, of Chicago, in a late letter to the President of the Maryland State Tem perance Alliance, :IS r. Higgins, writes--' : - "It is many years since I altogether aban doned the use of all forms of alcoholic drink in the treatment of disease) and with positive benefit to my patents.- In regard to substi tutes for family use in emergencies,-spirits camphor, aromatic' spirits of ammonia, tea, - coffee, art almost always at hand, and are more efficient for all the proper purposes for . .which alcoholic liquors are usually resorted to in families." , A Helprand Not an Injury. - In view of all the facts can it not be most truthfully said that prohibition not only doej not injure bet is a wry great help to any town? Before De3 Moines bad Prohibition it bad seventy s.;lo6ns, now it has none, ani yet, notwithstanding adverse circumstances it expended in 1887 for public and private im provements over four millions and a half of dollars, transacted a : wholesale, manufac turing and miscellaneous . business, of over fifty six millions of dollars, and raised its population from about forty-six thousand to over fifty one thousand; it has not received . one dollar of blood money from saloons, and is by far the most prosperous city in Iowa. , . "If that is the way Prohibition kills towns," .then every town cursed 'with saloons - may . -. - well pray for a similar death. Independent. National W, C. IT. Bulletin, - Dr. McGlynn has been "chosen7 president of .' the Brooklyn (Is: Y.), Central Temperance - . Alliance. .. - Washington, D. C, has twelve W. C. T. - Unious and nine Loyal Temperance Legions and Bands of Hope. . . New Haven, Conn., : has 425 licenced saloons; 233 of the licensees are of Irish - birth, Jill are Germans, 56 are Americans, and the rest are not classified by nation alit;es. .j.':;.-: .,-.K-- Kc'':-':f "''::. The Hope and Help Mission": for women, started one year ago by the W- C T. U., ot ; - - Washington, D. C has proved a success ' and far exceeded the expectations of its pro jectors. .- . ' '- '-'.- c . '4' Mrs..' Fannie M. Leiter, Estate Superinten " ' dent:- j6f Scientific rTemperance Instruction, for Ihe W. C. T.- U., recently addressed the "pastors' meeting .in Cblumbus, Ohio, on the ' subject of her work. - r- :KSry; j:; --- Mrs. Cleveland's first reception of the season .was attendediby, the most prominant people : . in social and political life. . On this occasion . no liquors were to be seen) but iced water i was served from a large stand by one of the J -gardeners. -,-', The Turks, - who are Prohibitionists by i order of the Koran, are working to abolish , ealoons kept bythe 'Christians":, in Constan 'J tinop.'e All drinking--places within 330-feet . from the houses of Turkish worship have been ordered closed,1 and ' the police are en forcing the decree. - ' . , ' In his annual message to ' the Legislature, Governor :-Larrabee, of -Iowa, declared : that " - the enforcement of the Iowa prohibitory law -had been so efficient in reducing crime that he recommended the consolidation of judicial districts, so - as to reduce the number of judges from 44 to 40. . - 'ri'Jjp6'?'3 .'---'--,' The Travelers' National Abstainers' Union. whose membership is chiefly among traveling showmen,, recently celebrated its seventh an - niversary at York, England, This society 1 . was organized in sw with rorty-iour mem bers, aud now - numbers 5,208.i ;Mr.t -P." -.T. - - Barnum;.is an honorary member of - the Union. .. :r -:i-C.:::,..rM-J-: H.W'Jr;;' Dr. Benjamin Ward Richardson has been giving a series of eight lectures at the Memo rial Hall, London, under the auspices of the United, Kingdom Band-of Hope JiniocIn . the last --address, which was in some respects . ..a summary of the course speaking of-tb " i' physical degeneration produced byaIcohbl,h9 . said itwas fortunate ts use had been confined V to man, or we should have had no animal tameable, workable ordible.. y 4 , Mr. Robert Graham,' of New Yprk city, - has, with great care, ascertained the follow ing faMs: "Preceding the presidential elec . ' tion of 1 884, there were held in New .York rity 1,003 political conventions congres-" ' tonal, . assembly, ldermanic, primary, etc. ".In these political -meetings the country is - largely governed. ; Two hundred and eighty three of them were held apart from saloons, ' ninety-six next door to saloons, and nan-: dred and thirty three in saloons.1 ' The Executive Committee ot the. Nation al - i Prohibition party, at its session on the day following the reaent conference held in Chi' '"'cago, adopted r the following resolution by . unanimous vote": "The Executive Committeo recommends the .menjbsra oE the party . at ' large to avail themselves, of their right, or privilege, of electing ladies -as well as gentle ' men as delegates to the State and-National " eouTeutioiis, - ; SOUTHERN I JTEMSJK INTERESTING NEWS COMPIIjED . J i'ROaf MANY SOURCES. i tf 'r Virelnla! " , W. S. Martin was run over and killed on tbe Norfolk and Western Road at Lovely ' Mount. , , . . " . ' . : Efforts are being made for the organization ' of - a merchants' and. manufacturers' associa tion in Fredericsburg. -- vMSpeaker and Mrs. Carlisle are ' visiting " Fortress Monroe. They .were received 1 with a salute of seventeen guas, - . ; . .;. ' : - - ' ' .William Jefferson was" convicted in the Oiunty ourt of . Montgomery: county, and sentenct d to twenty years in . the : penitett-j ' tiary.- -' .- ' --i .-. . :-. . . . ; v . - 't;.' i " A fine barn, tfilled with grain, and belong ing to Captain Robert Wright, of - Washings ton county, was destroyed ly firer Estimated ' loss about $2,000. ; J . ' ' , v:-' ..The little daughter of C iptalnl John N. i Opie, of . Staunton, was severely burnt, by har clothing Igniting from a stove, and it is t jared . Jliat she may not recover. . 1 . It has been definately determined by the authorities of the Richmond and Danville '-system ..to retainheir offices in Washingtoni This leaves Richmond out entirely, 1- . ; ; ' The harh and st bles of H. A. Taylor, in Dinwiddle county, near Petersburg, were de stroyed by an incendiary fli-e. Mr. Taylor "lost air h's crops, t wo fine horses and all hi3 firming implements.' . . -,. ; ; rr-. - Tbe Mayor of Upperville,G.:B. Gibson, was cut in several places in ajight with Recorder Lemley. The affair grew out of a discussion over a diamond wedding ring. - Mr. Gibson resigned the mayoralty office. - .; - ? - : ' In r the''-Montgomery - county court, at Caristiansburg, the jury in the case of Wm. J-ffersoh,- indicted for outrageous, assault, found .a verdict of guilty and fixed the pun jphmf C.fr -at twenty years in the peniten tiary. - - - - "' Bills " haye been reported in Congress for th j removal of the . political disabilities of Oris A. Brown, of Accomac county, and G. W. Harrison, w ho resigned his position in the -United, States Jsavy in 1861. and entered the fieryice ef the Confederate States. , .. . - - "-Governor Lee issued a requisition on the authorities of West Virginia for Wash Stuart and Alexander Willis, who are now in custody in Fayette county West Virginia.' - They ai-e charged , in ? -- Roanoke . county with the murder : of BurweH Snyder on the a6th f last Jtecemberiy' The bid church edifice at Read's wharf, Northampton -county, has been sold ' to ; the Wilmington f Conf ei-ence . of the Northern MethodisS.ChurCh, which is making vigorous efforts to regain the ground, on the .Eastern iShore of Virginia which it lost during, the war. i . . - - - - 1 The ice on the Potomac river is now so thick as to obstruct 'navigation and a long freeze seems nrobable. - - Oysters, fish and all the commeruo of the river is delayed. : Rep resentatives Brown and Lee are endeavoring to secure the passage of a bill for an ice boat, but hardly in time- to meet the necessities of this season. ' . ' Michael ' Holbrook, aged 65 years, and a soldier . of? the . 17th Virginia Confederate Regiment, was found in a dying condition on the track of the Midland Koadr near Alexandria. 1 He died within a few hours.. It is supposed that' he. was drunk and was; Struck by a train. " ',-.' : i : A three story frame building at Norfolk, ow.ied by Wm. Stevens, and occupied in the. lower floors by A A- Darden for the sale of liquors and cigars, and in the upper stories as meeting rooms for several cole-- d societies was destroyed by fire, originating from a de -fective flue, i - , . ' . ' i Hon. ATL Aiken", ex-judge and judge-, elect of the Hunting's Court if Danville, and City .Councilman EL S. Arnett had a per-, socal encounter at Danville. Tbe difficult w, grew out of a misunderstanding in regard to! a ' law suit tnow pending c gainst Arnett.' Several blows passed, and both ee'ntlemen, received, scratches and bruises. Both were fined by a justice. i; .- . : . " " ; R. N, Brooke, the artist, of Warrenton, and whose pictures adorn the Corcoran Art Gallery and the judges room of the Supreme -Court at Washington," has recently visited England in search , of the only , original portrait extant of Pocahontas. He found i? in the possession- of the lady of a deceased; noDieman, ana tne pnvuege or maKing n copy f -r the State of Virginia will be allowed him. r - The buildings of the Virginia penitentiary leased Jby the Davis Shoe Company of Boston, and operated as a shoe factory, was discovered 'on fire. --The flames spread, rapidly, and despite the efforts of the fire department the, bui-dings occupied by the shoe company: were totally destroyed, together with all the; valuable machinery and stock. The build ings burned, were three-Rtory bricks, and' covered an area of about 700 feet in length by 60 in width, .The loss to the shoe com pany is estimated at from $150,000 to $175, 000. Tbe amount of insurance is not yet; ascertained. ' The Syndicate of Northern capitalists, who rave been negotiating for some months past for the Upper Appomattox Canal, have pur-: chased a controlling interest in the property. The Canal runs from Petersburg to Farm ville; a distance of over forty miles, and is the most valuable property of the kind in the state. It includes two grist and flour mills located at Petersburg." The syndicate will shortly erect a number of factories at differ ent points on the canal, to cost over half a mil ion of dollars. -1 ;:. , : . - The museum of Richmond college has re ceived from Mr. K. JBL Blaktn?hip (president of the Old Dominion Iron and Nail Works company, a ' piece - of the Confederate ship "Virginia" that won the famous victory ia Hampton Roads in. March, 1862. The gift is a piece of iron twent y inches long by eight or ten inches wide and a full inch in thickness, evidently a part of the heavy iron plating ' usad to render the ship Inpregnable.' Its place in the mnseum is by the side of General Turner Ashby'S camp stool and other war relics, and it will be viewed with curious interest . 1 ":'- f-- . : -:X'. " " ' ; I West Virginia. ' "The Georges Creek and Elk Garden coal fields produced 3,327,530 tons in 1887. - - ' ::. f Mrs. John tW. Tabb, living near Gerards town, fell on t the ice and fractured both ; her arms below the elbow. . . r K " It is reported that several citizens of IiOgari county have been taken from their homes and confined in jail at Pikesville, Ky. - 7 f " " Work has' been commenced on the channel span of the Ohio River railroad bridge which crosses the Kanawha at Point Pleasant. '':? ; - Adam Bumgardner, of Upshur county,' was' thrown from a horse a few days ago, and so badly injured that his life is despaired of. . ' ' Measles are . raging about' Martinsburg. Four children have died with the disease in one family, that of Mr. Green Bi-oombaugh. - An infant child of John Carsont of 'Marion Wetzel county, was found dead in bed a few days ago. ? Heart disease is supposed to have been the caase. : - - . ! - '- "' . .;: ,- ; "the Gallipolis business men are- petitioning for a switch from the Ohio River Railroad to the river and also for a depot on the river bank opposite Wheeling. : ( - . - - - - Capt. James Yates, of Doddridge county liad a narrow escape from death a few " days ago He washout driving and his team went over a thirty-foot bank. - ' " . . . The Belle McGpwan, while lying at : the wharf at Harmar, exploded her starboard boiler.' The boiler is a total wreck, so are the steam pipes and all the fore part of the deck.; .Noninjury wasdone tothe engines or hulLT -George CVajghead, whose home is at Eliza '" bethtownj- near 'Pittsburg," was .terribly scalded. .The force of the explosion threw him quite a. distance, when one of - the steam pipes discharged, its full contents into: his faca and breast, The owners of the vessel live at ' Elizabethtown and are O'Neal, and Robinson. -The cause of the explosion is unknown. v ' -: Detective Burnett and Marshall Whitten, of I "Ashland, Kyi ; arrested Edward. Mace at Fire bery and murder. On tie night of December; 13 last the depot and express office at the EH .K. Junction, near Grayson , -Ky. , were robbed, mux me same mgne. tue nouse ul a. wetuwiy farmer named O'Toole was also robbed by a gang of meni O'Toole and bis wife resisted, and the robbers choked and bound their vic tims, Mrs. 0?Toolo dying from the effects.' Shortly afterward four men -were arrested and placed in jaiL - The "identity of -the fifth at the time was not known. . Evidence pointed, to iilace as being the unknown one who did :, the choking. He, agreed to return to Ken tucky without, a requisition, and was taken there by Marshall Whitten, -j , ' : " ; :' '" ':-V Maryland." r" ' '.,1 1 :. ? Florence Sowers, aged four, "'was painfully, burned at Elkton. The pay due the militia for last year's en campment amounts to f 15,663. A syttdicate proposes to continue the boring for natural gas at Cumberland, v .- . Frank Mooney, of Baltimore, was .acci dentally shot in the leg at Annapolis, t a ' Elijah 'Wagoner assaulted his Ison-In-lawk M. L. Main, at Westminster, with a cowhide'- A tenant-house on one of Hon. ; John Lee Carroll's farms, in ' Howard -county, was burned.- ..i-V -L-..''.. --. ' , - Roswell ' Woodward's dwelling, near Wash ington Grove, ! Montgomery county, was burned. -: '. , "- 'I'f'-'it '- ' - Wm. H. Fawcett,"of . Howard county, was "attacked by footpads on his wav home from Baltimore. - - " - - - i Some of the counties are having their school :boards appointed by the Governor instead of by the judges. . - , - Maryland has been called upon to ratify the boundary-line act passed by the West Virginia Legislature in 1887. ; - , - Samuel Wood, aged 75 years, residing 1 at Sudley, Anne Arundel county, fell on the ice and broke his thigh... j :-- ;- r .rv--:.. j: " The proposition .to remove the old . United States court-house from Baltimore to An-J napolis has been abandoned on account of the, expense, j ;; p,:ti ';. . -f -fii: - Two small children of Mrs. G. H. Clements, of Middlebrook, v Montgomery tcounty; were badly burned. . One of them is not expected to recover. -."! '. ". j;,. ; ;v:.--; -" .: The ' employes at the McCullough"? Iron Company's works of West Amwell, two miles north of Elkton, have been notified that' the, works will be indefinitely closed on Februarv ;U Congressman 'Rusk has" introduced a bill appropriating $650,000 to remodelvthe Balti more custom-house; also a bill appropriating $50,000 for the proposed monument to Francis Scott Key; at Patterson Park Baltimore. -' Mr. Reuben S. - Cochran, a - well-known blacksmith and carriage builder of Jefferson, Middletown ; Valley,- -dropped dead ' while at work in his shop.' His death is supposed to hav resulted from paralysis of the brain. . . During ihe year 1887, 82,311 tons of pig iron was made by West : .Yu-giniavfumaces. ; Of this amount 4.835 tons remained unsold at the end of the year. . The production of Bessemer pig in the .State during the year was 73,070 bms. --k .- . 1 -ji-- k - ' The horse disease that caused the death ol several horses of John Fenton and others, ol Cecil county, last fall, is . said to have again broken out on his farm, he having lost another horse. : State Veterinary Surgeon Ward has : been aske to visit his farm again. : , y J; A young man Uving in Tyaskini while rid ing home on horseback, .was accosted by a highwayman, who stopped his . horse, aftd pulled him from the saddle, :A hand-to-hand scuffle ensued, but he succeeded in beating his assailant off, after having hLs clothing 1 torn nearly off by the would-be robber. . . Tn a saloon at Annapolis Frank " Mooney master of 4the oyster schooner Lottie Nash, ol Baltimore, attempted to take a pistol from an Arnapolitan named Everett Hubbard. . The weapon was discharged, the contents striking Mooney in the right leg, near the hip. The wound, though - not serious,: is painful. Mooney will be removed to Baltimore. ; ; -. . , North Carolina. : Wayne county furnished eight convicts to the penitentiary last week. A gold reduction works is -in full- opera tion in Th. mas ville, employing over . fifty bands. . " A canned goods establishment has been organized in Charlotte, and will be in opera tion by May 1st. : v : :; . : . . . . ' . The net earnings of the Black well-Durham tobacco company for the year 1887, are an nounced to have been about $378,000. r . ' A new tobacco factory has just been com ple ed in Salisbury, and two cotton, factories are to be built there the coming summer. : ; - ' The First National ; Bank of Asheville, has been designated, by: the Secretary of the treasury as a depository of public moneyr. ; r Duringther first two weeks of" this -year, Messrs. P. H. Haines & Co.. of Winston, have shipped 65,100 pounds of manufactured tobacco, i " ' ' :1 i '- .- ' ' Five hundred and ten cases have, so far been docketed for hearing before the supreme court at the coming: spring term. Sixteen applicants for license have been registered. There was a falling off of 75 per cent in the number of Mortgages recorded in Row an county last year. Many o. her: counties of the State report a decrease, although not to the same extent. ' . ' : : ' ' It is announced that the first train over the Clarksville: and Oxford i raibroad will reach Oxford by the first part of this week. It is in contemplation to have a big jubilee on the occasions jju;-. ' $ : - - j- A post-offi5e will be established in a few days at t -e new town of Millbrook, five miles north, of Raleigh, on the Raleigh and Gaston railroad. A new depot has just been erected there and the place is fast building up. " Solomon Stinson, a highly respected citizen of Iredell county, was found hanging to a beam in a garret in bis - residence about twelve miles from States ville.. He was about 80 years of age. No cause can be assigned tor the act :.- j; . . ,- : 1 Five prisoners, four of whom were under entence to the . penitentiary, escaped from jail in Louisburg,- Franklin county. The sscape was effected by means of a crowbar furnished by outside parties.- A force of deputy sheriffs are in pursuit ' ' Charity Webb, a colored woman of Ral eigh, about 35 years of age, was burned to death. She had beea subject to epileptic fits and no one being present, it is presumed that it was while nnder the influence of one of these fits that she fell into the fire and be -ing unable to assist herself in any way, met her sad fate- Life was extinct when she was found. . , 4 R. G. Dunn, a wealthy resident of Raleigh has made public an offer to furnish ; free of charge for rent, any reasonable - number of acres of land, in Wa'ie county,f or two years, to any person known to be a practical tobac co grower, who win agree to plant and raise a crop on the same. - He also agrees to fur nish all the necessary timber for barn, build-" ing,: &c. Of course none other but a reliable person in all particulars will be selected. It is ah opportunity rarely presented, and no doubt a number of offers will be made. K -" - The supreme court has1 just made public a decision jrwhich may be of service- to the legal profession- and : which to some - extent puts a check to the almost , innumerable' cses appealed , from, the- lower - courts. It decides that the only ground on which an application to the supreme court .for a new trial below cm be based is the discovery of such new evidence as was proper to be heard below, and thesupreme court will not Inter fere because of irregularities occurring in the trial below, its jurisdiction as a court, of appeal for: the correction of , errors not ex tending to such cases, vy ; ;r Uv ...... - '-w.V DEATH' IN1 A broken; frog; :,::.-; f y , - ,; j i f t - r Three Persons Killed and Ponr Injured ': , ' iua Railroad Smash-Up.- :-: . The fast train bound east, on the New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio, was near. Steamburg i N. Y. when- the "wheels of the locomotive broke a frog in the track. , The baggage and smoking cars passed in safety, but the ladies1 car swerved and, leaving the track, plunged into the caboose of a freight train standing on a switch. "' . :"V; J-crvft'i-?'?:1 The side was stripped off the car and 're duced to kindling, wood, and the cabooso met' with a similar fate. In the latter were three railroad men eating " dinner. ' Conductor George Ellis, of Meadville, had;, his head crushed in and died a few hours after $ Brake man James Dean, of Meadville, was instantly, killed, while the other man on the same seat -escaped unhurt " 1 : ; ; . f . : ; -,:; - f 'fffr - : The ladies' coach- was -well filled : and the passengers had, many narrow escapes. - Miss Abby , of- Stirling, UL , wasdnstantljr Skilled, and her cousin and - her. aunt - were injured. William McNeil, chief engineer of the Edison United Manufactaning.Company, ot Coving--ton,: Ky., had two ribs broken and was cut about the head;; He is in hospital at" James town, N. Y. Mr. Kimball, o Bradford, Pa. , was badly injured. . t . , " John Doney and John Mack: escaped from Jeffars u Market prison, New York, by fili'ig a bar in . their cell window" and - lowei i ,g taemselves to the roof of the market I y a , rope 3( feet long made out ofbed clothing. i nis is tbe nrst escape from the prison" sinca it was built, in 1875. ' - " - CABLE FLASHES. " - It Isreportad at Constantinople that two mort , p-ussian raios upon iiuigana are Demg pre- parea. - . . .- - .' I A- despatch- from Rome ' announces " the death in that city of Mrs. "Mary Ho witt, the poetess and novelist. r.!'r 'ifeSr? ' The News states that the question of local government for Scotland will be dealt with y Parliament in a separate bilL - 7.1 ' The Somalis have murdered x' an English officer , (supposed to fee Major Hunter) and twen,ty-three natives of Berbera,. .' . - 3-' L: ; ; The nine missing members of the crew ol the French steamer Suez which founderedat saa recently after- havings been ; in collision, -have been rescued. i-r . ' . . . yv " Mr; Dodgspn1 H.iMadden '(Conseryafive) who again ran for Dublin University on his appointment as Solicitor-General ofc Ireland. I - The Norwegian ': bark Bertha, Capt." Alma." which left Wilmington, N. C, Dea 8 for the Unitedr Kingdom, foundered on Dec. 31 ofl Flores. - The crew was rescued and taken tc Lisbon. . . - , '-skix t!4giSm -Prince Ferdinand and party, who are mak ing a , tour of Eastern Roumeiia, arrived at Eski-Sagra. The town was iUuxuinated and the populace gave the r Prince: a -warm re ception. . . x . . - KVi'j f i The Austrian Reichsrath has approved the sugar bill in accordance with the majority re-: port of the committee,- and ; has rejected "the amendments fixing - the- bounty on a sliding BJale. . . ' : :. ..-r- -,'... The Antarctic Committee has issued a cir cular urging British merchants' and ship owners to combine for the purpose of despatcn ing ' two steamers to the South Pole this -summer..:.:;v;: ':- Several crofters of the Island of Lewis, Scotland, who have been on trial for rioting, have i been convicted. ' Some of: them were isentenced to a .year's imprisonment, some tc nine months and others to six months. . k-. The Fremdenblatt says - that the Turkish authorities have arrested forty-one insurgents, who were part of a band which was preparing to invade -Eastern Roumeiia and: instigate a revolt in Bourgas and Eski-Sagra. i , r . Sir William Vernon-Harcourt will open the attack on the Government when parliament meets, by offering an amendment to the ad dress in reply to the Queen's speech, condemn ing the enforcement of the Coercion act. -: It has been decided by the members of the Right in the French Chamber of Deputies to:, interpeliate the government in reference to its action towards the persons implicated in the sale of decorations. -. - " - : - Mr. M. ' W. Mattison (Conservative) has been elected without opposition to the seat in the House of Commons tor .the Walton divi sion of Liverpool, made vacant by the resig nation of Mr. Gibson, who recently accepted, an Irish judgeship. - - - . A sharp shock of earthquake has been fell in Scotland. It caused no damage. Shocks were also felt in different parts of England. Reports from Birmingham. Coventry and Edgbaston, a suburb of Birniingham, show tnat disturbances occurred m those places, in Scotland the shocks were especially marked at Dingwall, county Ross, and at Inverness. - countyTtreasury robbed, Discovery of tbe Defalcation Followed By Theft of the Books. The county of Sullivan in New York was recently agitated by a report of one special committee of the. Board of Supervisors that the county funds and. - accounts" showed a defalcation of over $13,000r :7 If. ' '" , I . They were startled by the discovery that all the thirty-five books of record and assess ment rolls, that contained the accounts of ex County Treasurer Starr,- had been stalen. An entrance had been forced through the rear door of- the County Building at lontioello, Mr. Starr held office from January 1 1876, to January 1,1888, and the books inclusive of those dates are stolen. - - -' " . ' - Starr was a popular official and his integ- rity was never questioned until recently, and it 43 feared now that the only reason for stealing the books is to thwart the invest:ga- tion now going on. by a second special com-:, mittee, with the aid of expert accountants. . The inculpated official has made the f oV lowing-- public i statement, i soon after the robbery was discovered, in which he says: "f :- : : '- :":"..;.-.":'-. ''-'.; -' "I have a word to &vy to my sureties, and to my friends if I have any lef t The report claims $13 00. I intend to remain in this, . village. :-I shall not fie j to Canada. I shall not transfer my property to avoid the con-; sequences of future litigation. ' j I shall pays no more attention to the work of the inves tigating committee. '- I desire a settlement of the affairs cf my office in the courts, as that settlement "will be final and conclusive," and there I can have-an opportunity to be. heaid in my own defence." , i 1 - LOSSES BY . FIRE. The Union City chair works of Moore & Sheeney, at Union City, Pa; , were destroyed by fire. Loss $70,000; insurance $15,000. - Fire in Chattanooga, Tenn. burned out tht .Commercial newspaper office and other offices.. The Commercial was burned out on .Novem ber 7. . - . ' ' Several business blocks, including the Post office and Gazette office, at Courtland, Trum bull county, O. , were des toyed by fire. Hall the business places in the village were burned. One of the stables at Fort Leavenworth. Kansas, in which were sixty horses belonging to Company L First Cavalry, was burned. Thirty-six - horses were suffocated, .y Loss . $10,000 to $12,000. , .. , ' Fire in the clothing factory connected with Wanamaker & t Brown's clothing house, ia Philadelphia, caused a loss of $8,000 to thai . firm,- -and froms $8,000 to $10,000 to J. L. Shoemaker & Co., leather goods, and C. M. Busch & Co. , bookbinders. Robert Killen, a fireman, was suffocated. - : .-3 : -- Warren's Block, AB. Clark's Block, Bower Block, "Harvey's storehouse, Murray's three buildings and D. B. Clark's two buildings at Van Ettenville, New York, were burned This covers anlarge part of the business por-. : tion of the town, . Total loss probably $20,00f to$20,000. i , . t y VERDICT-SERVED Hlfll RIGHT, He Started Out to Kill His Family And - c Got Killed. ' "i - At" Centre Sidney, t a town, c-I joining Augusta, Maine, a man named Edwai d .Wentwortb,-forty years of age, was. fatally: shot. l "e has a family of thirteen children, airof whom w ere at home but one. - He was very cru6l to them, and, after beating his wife, he struck one of his daughters and hod thrown her" down acd was choking her. ; . " rTbe wife remonstrated, 'whereupon he leaped up, exclaimingi will kill all of you.'-; He started (toward the wall where hungjii? vest containing a revolver, but one of the sons grabbed the pis ol and ran toward a bed-t room adjoining. :.The father followed, and catching up with the boy, was in the act of grabbing the revolver when it was discharged : in Soma way, the ball penetrating the fath- "er's chesty killing him instantly 34 'Q-t i g;fflgfpMARKETS. . ' BALTraoRE--J,lour City Mills', extra,$3.00 am.7o ; -Wheat Southern .Fultz. 96a98cts; Corn Southern White, 68a59ote. Yellow, 58a -59 cts. V Oats Southern and Pennsylvania 37a42c: s. i Rye Maryland and Pennsylvania 65a68cts. ; Hay-r-Maryland and Pennsylvania 14 50af 1500; Straw-Wheat,8.50a$9. 00; Butter, Eastern Creamery,82a33cts. , near-by receipts -I9a30cts: Uheese juascern r ancy reain, iy3 al3 cts., Westsrnv llal2cts. ; Eggs 22a23 -Cattle $2.87a4.87; Swine 6)a6cts. Sheep " and - Lamb 3a6cts ; -. Tobacco .Leaf -Inferior, la$2.50, Good Common, 2 50a 3 50, Middling, 5a$6. 00 Good to fine red, 7a$ : Fancy,: 10a$12. ' - - " Nkw York Flour-Southorn Common to fair extra, 3.30a$4.00; Wheat No.1 Whit a95cts. ; Rye State, 54a56jr Corn Southern Yellow, 54a5octs. ; Oats White State, S3a34j cts. ; Butter State, I7a28 cts. ; Cheese State,, llall:Kcts.; Eggs 23ai:4 cts. " -..t -: Philadelphia ' Flour Pennsylvania, fancy, 3.50a$4 ; Wheat Pennsylvania : and Southern Red, 90a91 cts ; Rye Pennsylvania. xrKAn4-c rVvrn Snthorn Yellow. 58a54 Cta. J I L4J X. LAJ. , w " 7 Oats 41a 12 cts.i Butter State, 33a34 cts.; Cheese N. Y. Factory, llal3 cts.; Eggs ' State, 22a23 cts. y - . : The ancients, were well ' acquainted with the elephant, which formed a part of the fighting material of every great conqueror's army T and sh'ared in all triumphal processions, but when Rome no longer sent out her armies to forage the -whole world, for wonders as well as iov. plunder the elephant became to southern- Europe a mythical I maryel only.. .:-'"..-:; -- '.;' - Wondkr fxjl stories are" told iy an cient writers of the feats of trained elephants, f Pliny says that they would haul javelins,-fi ght with each other as gladiators, and - dance "the Pjrrhio dances.- . Jfurfher, . that they .would walk forward and backward, "and even dancr on a. rope. - This latter feat, though - attested, by . such writers as Pliny,' Suetonius, Dion, and Alian, has : never heen credited by modern show- '"-" In 1256 iiouis tX."of Prance brought from Egypt an African elephant, which he " sent -to t Henry ;IIL of England.; This elephant was kept in the'Towerof : London, where, we judge, he had 4u''e comfortable :' quarters, . if ' the order given bythe King to tho sherifT was obeyed, to wit : "We command you that of the farm of our iity you cause, " without delay, to be built at our Tower of London one house of forty feet long and twenty feet deep for our elephant." What" became of this . well-provided beast and how long . he lived the his- , torian does not tell xxsffi -"-In 1629 the King of ' Soairi sent an elephant and hve camels to Hmg J ames I. of England. This latter monarch was extravagantly fond of pet animals and had quite a menagerie at his pal ace, so that it may be imagined that he was particularly well pleased with tin's gift. "Much . better - pleased," indeed, than the Chancellor of the Exchequer was, for the English - Treasury "was at that time sadly depleted. To pay the 150 which the King ordered given to the man who had brought the elephant. toolr away every penny in the:treasnry ana maae it necessary to reiuso , to al low the Queen money - for a journey which she had wished d make to Scot land.that year. And, when an estimate was made of the cost of keeping : the animal, and it was found - to be "275 a year,; it was no wonder that . Mr. Chan cellor's groans were both loud and deep. ;j And to make the matter worse an f additional . charge was made' for . "liquors for the olifawnte." His keep ers affirm that from the month of . Sep tember until April he must drink, not water, but " wyne,"... and from -A pril . until September he must have - " a gal lon of wyne a daye." It is to be hoped the Chancellor ascertained whether the bibulous ' propensities, belonged to- the olifawnte " or his keepers. This ele phant was kept very closely confined. The King ordered that he she edd not eren be led out to water, lest the un worthy populace should gaze upon him, and none but the inmates of the' palace or his keeper were ever permit-v ted to see him. : This elephant did not live lonor. ; : :ffffff ''' : ' Anxloas for Kotoriety. ' Chicago Reporter You don't deny that " you eloped with Mr. Flash," Mre. -Society ? :. -'.:. - -f: ; . ':fi- f Mrs. Flash -No, sir; I do not.' ' "Was your husband cruel to you?" t ,' "No. -y-wf---jff .yjvh ; ff-pC : "Didn't he lavish his wealth on you?" -Yes.". " f'ffi "Did you love this man Flash?" ;VNo.;:; l"Th'en why did you elope?" "I wanted to see my name in the so ciety columns of the papers." St. Paul Globe. P " ' . - ' - Questions AUng for the Wise. Whether, when you are going to have a '-'round" with your adversary,- it is necessary for you to first "square" up to him. . - -- I II Whether you would be correct in de scribing your music master as a "sound instructor."-. ? - - Whether " Woman's Mission" we ; hear so much about now should not ; really be sub-mission. - Whether, if a church organ could -speak, its firat words would be, '.'I'm blqwedl'', - - - It's Always the Way, - 3 a "Didn't I tell you so?n said a gentleman to an ckcquaintance whom be chanced to meet on the street; "it's always the way." "Whst'sal wavs the way?" inquired a mutual friend .of -' the two men who-Tiappened- along just then. ; "Why, lust ! this," replied the . first sneaker: 1 "you Bee Smith, here; the last time I met him ne Had one 01 tne. worst congas you every heard. He complained of a loss of appetite, of night-sweats, or low spirits and other -unmis--tatt able premonitory symptoms of consump tion. I told him to get a supply of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery at once. - Hdid so, and look at him- now! " Did you ever .see a healthier looki g man? The' 'Discovery has: snatched thousands from - consumptives graves. I knew it would cure Smith. . It's al ways the way." Sold aga'n Second-hand goods. -. She Broke the Engagement - because she saw that he had ceased to love her .! H T beauty had faded, her former high spirits - Baa giveu piwe aw is uuiruioeituue. - v iuu uaa caused this change? Functional deranerement: she was suffering from, those ailments peculiar-: tojiersex.- Ana so tneir two young lives arm ed apart.-, now neeaiess, now crueuxriad. sne -taken DrJ Pierce's Favorite Prescription she' might hive been restored to health and happi-v ness. If any lady reader of these lines is simi- larly afflicteddet her lose no time in procuring f the "Favorite Prescription." It will give her a -new lease of her life. Sold by druggists,under: a positive guarantee from the manufacturers, : of perfect satisfaction in every case; or money ;' refunded. See guarantee on bottle wrapper. - A man of deeds The notary. Consumption Snroly Cared. - To the EditoK--Pleaao. inf orm joar readers r that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely rise thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured.- 1 : shall be glad to send two Dottles of my remedr freb to any of your readers who have con-"; sum ?ion if they will send me their- Express, and P. O. address. Respectfully, - - . - T.A. SLOCUafcldtO. 181 Pearl SL K, X.4 '"He'gave me some pointers." said the tramp of a farmer; he Jabbed me with apitchfork.'. firis For The Nervous The Debilitated The Aged .:,-' : TJRBS Nervous Prpstration.Nervoua Head-" ' ache, Neuralgia, NervouaWeakness, , Stomach and Liver Diseases, and all affectioaa of the Kidneys. ; AS A NERVE TONIC, ft Strengthens . and Qolets the Nerves. , ::::vf.--:'c--- - AS AN ALTERATIVE: It Purifies and Enriches the BloocL-y.-:-;;-, AS A t AXATIVElt acts mildly, bnt furelT, on the Bowels. - : AS A DIURETIC. It Pegnlates' the Sid neys and Cores their Diseases. : '- - Eecomm ended by professional andbosinesa men, .' Price $x,oo. Sold by druggists.' Send for circulars. : WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Proprietors, PURLINQTONj VT, 1 1 clever surgeon to dress : - Consamptlon can ! Cure&.T .- 7 Dr. J. S. Combs, Gwensville, Ohio, says: "J have given Scott's Emuxsion of Cod Liver Oil ' with Hypophosphitey to four patients with better results than seemed . possible With - any remedy - All were hereditary cases of Luna disease, and advanced to that- state when Coughs, pain in the chea', frequent breathing, frequent pulse, fever and Emaciation.- - All these cases have increased ia weight from i6to 28 lbs., and are not now needing any" modi- : cine. -:. r- j - " Don't run against a chimney-sweeper; liable to bring toot again t you. - , he' We ought not to be too anxious to encourage untried innovation, in - cases of doubtful im provement, - For a quarter of a century Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy has been before the public and passed through the ; severest test and . is pronounced -the. most reliable remedy for that disagreeable malady. Thousands ot testimonials of its virtues. 60 cent i per bottle. By drugsistaf -r - fSii. 'T - Women have a tendency- toward anarchy.'' ; K. after a ten day'srtrial of Taylor'sHoSpltal Cure for Catarrh, the remedy fails to meet the : requirements of -the case the price will be re funded. Address, City Hall . Pharmacy, 864 - Broadway, JJe w York, for free pamphlet. " 4' woman leeis wnere man tamts,"; says a . writer. - i ee. uiais wny man ia Daia. . . ; :- The I beBt cough medicine is' iMso'sT Cure ior Consumptton. : Sold everywhere. 25o. . ;- -"- . "I of ten cut my the buzz saw, as : finger. oldest-acquaintance,, said ne toofc olf.a mill hand's - Ahnojt everybody . wants - a " Spring Tonic.'? : Here la a 6imple teetimoniali which shows how B. B B. is regarded. " 'It will knock your malaria out and restore your appetite : ' 1 SPLENDID FOR SPBIlSra TONIC. - , . AhxiwoxOn, GKa. June 30, 1887 - I suffered with , malarial blood poison more . or les3, all the time, and the only medicine that done me any good is B. B.B. It is undoubtedly the. best blood medicine. .made: and" for this malarial country should be used tiy every one in the spring of the year, and a sood in sum mer, fall and winter as a tonic and blood purifier.-""'." '."-..'':-:' ' f I'- GIVES BETTER S ATIS?ACTI0N. ff$cff.i:fff Cadiz, Kt., July 6th, 1837. jv Please send me one box Blood Balm Catarrh Snuflt by return mail, as one of my customers is taking B. B. B. for catarrh and wants a box of the snuft.5 B. B. B. gives better satisfaction. than any medicine I ever sold. I have old 10 nozen in tne past 1U weefes, and It gives good satisfaction.; If I don't remit all right lor snuff write me. - - -,; ;: Yours, ' :'- " ' ; :-":":v . .' V - -; W. N. Brandon. IT BEMOVED THE PIMPLES. ; Round Mountain, Texl, March 29,' 1887. A lady friend of mine has for several years been troubled with bumps and pimples oh her face and neck,.fpr which she used various. cos metic 3 in order to remove .them and beautify and .improve her complexion. ; but these local applications were only temporary and left her skin in a worse conditi m, -".if 5 ; I" recommended an Internal preparation known as Botanic Blood Balm which iiiave been using and; selling about two years; she used three bottles and nearly all pimples have disappeared, her 6kin is. soft and smooth, andH her general health much . improvedv She ex presses herself much gratified,' and can recom mend it to all who are thus affected.- :rf--KL::i:f- Mas. S. Ml Wilson. li you want te . lern all at bent aw a Ilorao f How ' it ritK uit t Good One ? Haw to Know Imper fectioua ana ao Onard njcainat Fraud f Tie w to Detert Diaease a n A (Tu nvA when same ia vf passible ? How i to Tell tbe Ago fey the Teeth f What to call the Different Farts of ht Animal? Howto Shnn a Harae Vroocrfv . All this. aad other Valuable-Information relating to the qalne .Sweciea can be ohtnioed by rending- osr lOO-PAOE ILI-rSTBATBl) IZORSK BOOK., which wc will forward, sasr-ki5r 25 cts; ia stamps. HO RSK BOOK CO.. 134 Leonard St., N. Y. . EVER FAflDER'S Sees some ?f her Poultry die each j-ear -without k no-win e what the matter waa or how to -efteet .a- remeay ji sne aoesrsra nlze the Diseases This not-MKht, as at -an; eas pence of 25 . cents (in. stamps) she can proenre' a. 100-Page BOOK. piving the experience of a practical Poultry Raiser not aa amateur, but a man working for dollars and rental durimr a Deriod of 25 year. It teaches yoa liow to lletert and Care Diseasest hew to- Feed for -Eigs and - also for s FaUeninat which Fowls to Save tor Breeding; Pur poses; and everything:, indeed, yon should anew on thi. sutjec. Pgd r 25c. - 134 Leonard street NY. City.: ISiiHy'sCreamBp CDC mass Is worth jjf I OOO to any MaL :Woian"or CliM ,J: -enBerln from :---. . CATARRH. vwwt Apply Balm into each nostril. XtST BROS. 235 Greenwich tit. K-. f- 1 Whnn aav enra I de not mean taerelVHn etoo tham " for a time and then have them retora turain. I mean radical core. I hare made the disease of FITS, EPtL-' EPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a Ufo long study. 1 warrant my remedy to cure the wore, eases. -Because others have failed is no reason for not now receiving a . cure. Send at one for a treatise and a Free Bottle , of my infallible remedr." 3ive Express and Poef Office, t H. 6. ROOT. HI. C 183 Pearl St. New York.- o FOB ONE DOLLAR A ff rst-class Dictionary gotten out 'at 'am V Wi price t encouras; wa siuay or .uie wrai r.iiinuni It a-lrea K.nzlish -vford wfta the Prrman eoui uivalents, and Osrnian wards wi Knrliah BOOIlrllB. HOUSE, 13t Ltssard St., N. Y. C'iy and est ana at these books by return mail. dooc, sua S ,H Eg a ease n-iwr th TT1T? WOTtLI- T- Get the ttenuino. : Sold Everywhere. SOLDIERS: rv relieved: 22 yean all set Penaiens, if M disa. bled; Offlcera' travel pay, bounty collected; Deeer ter nilavMl VI mn1 nranttcn. KuccefiS or DO fee. Lavs seat free. A. W. HoCormick ft Son. ITsaUstttoa, D,l So ia S a sar . Samples worth Slio, FREE. th knn fmt Write Lines not nnder Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co., Holly, Mica. HQUE STTJBY. Book-keeping," Penmanship, Arithmetic,' ShorSiand. Jte.,tUoroa-rhljr taught by mail Cirr jctjjarsfre. BKYAWS n.'jeufc. am at., sanw. . .. n 1 TC IITC ' Procnredj I : Prompt Attention ; Good .UM I bit I w Work: F Work; Fair Charges. Particulars :. ,1 FMf Chas. I Cooks, -RvratnrnmalL "Fall Deaeriatiea aBB jBttu muWJix at w vusuKuty SOLDTBES and their Widows,: Pensions now for yon all. AA. ton & Co., Washington, D.G J areas E. H. ielt GO JjD is worth $500 per lb." Tettit-Be Salva ta worth $1,0X1 cut is sold at 25o. a box by dealers. -The mau who has invested from three to fire dollars in a Uubber Coat, and at his first half hour's experience in " - a atorm finua to his sorrow that it ia ' hardly a better protection than a mos-- quito netting, not only feels chagrined at being so badly taken in, bat also feels if he does not look exactly like lt ; requires a wounded vanity. P J 0 yL : I V 12.: ... I mm lnJET - Ask for the" FISH BRAND " Slicker - ' li U t-l U J " ' and take no other, u your storeKeeper . ;jfi:. . i ft.inMt.inn,. 4 .T. Tnwit 20 Simmons St.. Boston. Mas. Goes IKH nnvr lire r ion DAAa Dcim iv, -wi li.. iv ..e--- -r wl i W w w m w w V. : J.i-J4,,i,i,,i .vjii.awl.ai.-i... IT.TT'TT TRADE MARlC NEUR AL G.I A . NervesEveryendof the thread-like nerves " - has each a latent power to cause excruciat- - rS .pain, the; limit of which is simply the limit of human endurance, and Neuralgia - has a few of these fibrous torments all pul3 ing painfully at once. ; 1 .-" . - CHARACTERISTICS. . Satlile Pain. Nothing is so subtile in ih Atjkproach;, nothing so flagrant, acute and -..-distressing, and certainly nothing yet dis- Vf covered io tdmpletely subdues its ravages - . and so permanently conquers- its pangs as -; -that above mentioned. - ' -'. -.'s-'---:: ". v . :, :- .:' -."'.-; STMPTOJIS. yRiptoiris.-Neuralgia is defined to be a :nK.ryeq.isease, the chief symptom of which .;i-i3-an acute"; rtairi. -tnterniittins; which fol , . lows the course of the nerve branch affected.. ; -. . ' .-; TREATSIKKT. --.Treatin.entApply.ST. Jacobs Oil frequent- . j-y,. Ktaiuv ruooing lueauiicieu pans; appiy T'.:tp the'f hole extent of the nerve soreness; keep up. a gentle friction until a burning sensation is irodueed... , - t$yfru0gi& ani'Deolcn Everywhere. ' THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Baltimore. Md. -' B N U C WELLS . HAIR BALSAM restores G ray llir to origi nal color, in elegaotdress' in, softens and beauUfies Nogreasenor -oil. A. Tonic Restorative. ' Prevents hair coming out ; strengthens, cleanses and heals scalp. 60c. Druggists E. S.WELLS, -ientr Cltj, t.ij. ROUGl!N0ATA0nii ssaasffsa , worst chronic cases. UneoasJed for .'atri hal throat affetittons, foiil breath, offensive odors, sore throat, ; dipUtheria, cold tn th bead. -Ask for ''Rough ow CATiBJiB.'' SOc. Di-uir. . B. S. IViui, Jersey City, N. J. LOOK YOUNG as long asyou can, pre vent tendency to wrin kles or ageing of tha skin by usitip LEAURELLt OIL Kemorea and prevent Wrinkleo, and rontrh ttCH of Flesh or rkm ; preaervea a, youthful, plamp, D-erh condition of the features; re moves pimples, clears the complexion, the only snbutance known that will arrett and pr. -veatteaaVarTto wrinkle $1. Drutrpists or iSxp. - C. S. TTKI.LS, Chcmiat, Itntj I'Ujj H. 1. DR.- KILMER'S UJ A GEEAT BLESSING TO WOMEN. Clnnrl Snaptoms and Conditions this . llCaU Speclnc will Kelleve and Cure. If Yfin"nave nervous or sick lieadache, Btpm- ' II I UU achache, backache, spineache, bloating, internalieat orscaldingAiriner ' If Y011 have chronic weakness, bearinar down I I I uU or pervetsions incident to life-change, If Vnit bave "uterine catarrh, suppressed or III UU painful periods, or ovarian dropsy, j( Vn 1 .have suspicious growths, disposed to' 1 1 . 1 U U humor or cancer, or hemorrhage, l Dii'lrlr P Quickly a run-down constitu-' II DUIIUS tiOBand brings refreshing sleep.. . If Will dispel those dull tired looks and feel li lllll ings, and bring back youthful bloom - and beauty restores the nervous sj'Stem. Hnth aitST&iTeittoTOBTy'rtiok and deUeate daught lliUllIClb "".' Mot a vestige of impure lilood can -escape its healing and: purifymg Influenco. Iff V.i value", good health, and hope for long I T I UU life, nse VFemate Kemedy." 4 A nV Symtoms eontlnned -.-with certificates of cures, lrQ C " "Guide to Health," free. . Also advice free. ITf. Kilmer & Co. Btaghamton, N.Y. Druggist J 1 i " r.lififS WHFRF AIL ELSE FAILS. " I I Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use i- : 1 ".believe Piso's Cure for..- Consumption saved ' my life. -A. H. DoweIiL, . -Editot Enquirer, Eden ' tcmVN. C, April 23, 1887. f j -Tho best Cough Medi- cine "is" Piso's Cure fob .CosasUMPTiON. Children "ItaHe it without objection. Byall druggists. 25c. mm r.HRFS WHFRF All RS f AILS. - BoetCougll Syrup. Tastes good. Use in time. ooia py arugtrmm. rwm T EKHnOSTED VITAL! T Y iiASmUii&lozl VYork fsr Yccsj KK0.7 THYSELF, PUBLkHHED by the PEA BODY MEDI CAL INSTITUTE, No. 4 Bullfinch t.,. Itoston, Mass. WIU. H. PARKHU, M.O., Nonsuiting Physician. More than one million copies told.- It teeata'n'BOn Nerron and Physical Debtuty. f'rematur Decline, Exhausted Vitality. Impaired Cigor. .and. Impurities of the Blood, and the untold ..c-awIas AJu.MnA. .hnwAn ,1.1....:. O, rfl mbetantial emboss d trtnllnsr. full gilt. Warranted tbe best popular me-1 leal treatise published In the KnsUah language.. Price only St by mail, postpaid. uid coneeaied ia a nlain wraooer. IUuMrcUiv tamplefree if yo.u send now. Address at above. JPAYStheFnEICHT 6 ToBr AVagon 8eala, - J- --- lr . Levers, Sirel Hckrioft, krteS QGO. .MU mil IF IIKQHsMTIIi hl-Lf nH!aiGpealEn3s!Goutan liI2!l 0 4 l!IG Bheumxiis f.srne.. Great English Gout anj UTaiasxt 341 reano. x fiiia. rrr rj. month. .lngarttclea K e U Addreat JA AaentsWanted. 00 b at -'!- In tbe world. 1 samDie i ,II''IIII'"'I 2",jE0i"X' ...We otter the man who wanta'serviee (not style) a garment that will keep jura dry in the hardest storm. It is called TOWEk'S FISH BRAND SLICKER, a name fanubar to every -Cow-boy all over the land. With them the only perfect Wind and Waterproof ' Coat la"" Tower's Fish Brand Slicker." i if t c.--4r...'-.!3r- Wif 1111 I 1 1 1 M U ii?!pia-; - IB . j 1 . frf 'JO 7
The North Carolina Prohibitionist (Bush Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 10, 1888, edition 1
4
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