MillUjifl lmUMMijS Yljf jiff
n
.;' l; ft
3$ Wit
IS- PRINTED ALL AT HOME AND
i Office :
CAPT. EVKKETTS
GUARANTEES A LARGER C
TKIt
NEW STORE.
ft
CULATION THAN ANY
OTHER PAPER IN
8BB8CRIPTIGN RATES ! ' ' '
:: : u
-ne year............ $i.ou
Jir months .............. 7.1
Three months,.... .40
All sulwcriptions accounts must be
: J i a -
1 T: . ji
TlTnTT.rAvn nAmTffltr
1 - n
aiu in auvance.
R. W. KJVIGffT, Editor and Proprietor.
TERMS: $1.50 a Year tit Advanee'XWe wanta Thousand
S(P Advertising rates furnished on ap
plication ... Liq
..- ;lq
Vol. VIII.
M;ore Subscribers.
Rockingham, Richmond County, N. CL March 13, 1890.
No. 11.
PnBustTwn Rvk?y Thursday.
Job Work Neatly Executed.
Www i ! m$m
Be
If 70a have made up your mind to buy
Hood's Sarsaparilla do not be induced to take
any other. Hood's Sarsaparilla is a peculiar
medicine, possessing, by virtue of its rHml'ir
combination, proportion, and preparation,
curative power superior to any other article.
A. Boston lady who knew what she wanted,
and whose example is worthy imitation, tells
her experience below:
In one store where I went to bay Hood's
Sarsaparilla the clerk tried to induce me buy
their own i u s t e ad o Hood's ; he told me their 'a
would last longer; that I might take it on ten
days' trial; that it I did not like it I need not
pay anything, etc: But he could not prevail
on me to change. I told him 1 knew what
Hood's Sarsaparilla was. I had taken it, was
satisfied with it, and did net want any other.
Hood's
When I began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla
I was feeling real miserable, suffering
a great deal with dyspepsia, and so weak
that at times I could hardly stand. I looked,
and had for some time, like a person in con
sumption. Hood's Sarsaparilla did me so
much good that I wonder at myself sometimes,
and my friends frequently speak of it. " Mas.
Ella A. Govt, 61 Terrace Street, Boston.
Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists, 81; six for Prepared only
fey C.I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Haas,
IOO Dosee One Dollar
W. C. Douglass. Thcs. J. Shaw
HL1UGLASS & SHAW,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
ei unable, xi . J.
Will regularly attend the Superior Co urts
of Richmond. Office in Pee Dee House
during the terms of Superior Court:1
iy-
John W. Cole. Frank McNeill
cole$ McNeill,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
ROCKINGHAM, N. C.
Office on corner of Academy Square.
Burwell, Walker '& Guthrie,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Rockiiiliam, IS". C.
Office opposite the old post office.
For Fine Sewing Machines,
ATTACH IE MS. NEEDLES, SUPPLIES,
V n 1 repairs of the beat possible material,
appiy to
D. T. HARGROVE,
Laurinburg, N. C.
ATTENTION.
.
Cash Buyers or General
Merchandise.
Having just established ourselves in our
jew store, at the old stand, you will find
our ussi.i! assortment of Dry Goods, Gro
ceries, Hardware, Crockery and Glassware,
Wodenware, Hats. Shoes, Ac, complete
an 1 offered at prices that will
Surely Astonish You!
Bought for cash, and to be sold for cash,
only, we can offer you superior induce
ments, "and,, to verifyour statement, invite
you cordially to come and see for yourself
aad be convinced or unexcelled bargains.
Auction Sale Every Saturday
of all kinds of General Merchandise, in
good order and sold from regular stock,
which, if you don't want at my price, yoU
ean have at your o wn.
The only exclusive Furniture Store in
the town. Special attention is directed to
our elegant line of Furniture. Bedsteads
from $1.50 up; Mattresses, $2.50 up;
Chairs, $3 50 per set up ; Cane and Split
seat Chamber Suits, marble bureau. $17,
00. Other snits from $12.50 up. Wash
stands, Window Shades, Curtin Scrim, Ta
bl Oilcloth, ail latest desjgns. Toilet Sets,
Hat Racks,' Cradles, "Sates, Tables, Pic
tares, Picture Cord and Nails, Rugs, Mats
.c in fact, neatly, every article in the Fur
niture. and Uphostery line, all at bottom
J AP. STEWART.
FRrn u uvnc
i i i i i i i rj h v u iv n i f I rv I
Breeder of -all the leading varieties of
GAME FOWL,
inclutJing heavy-weight B. B. R.
Light Brahmas, Fekk strain .
White Plymouth Rooks, Frost strain
Eggs $2:50 per 13 or $4:00 per 26.
ORDERS BOOKED NOW.
Also Bull Terrier Dogs, Ayrshire Cattle
and Morgan Horses
Send $2.00 and get The Rocket
and the Atlanta Constitution 1 year
To Get
A Straw.
VYV extinct the following from the
l.'St issue of the Arizona Kicker :
We have just closed a hargain
with Henry Shane, ihn wnll known
contractor and builder, for a one-
story addition to the rear end of our
ffice, to he 11x14 in size. This
room will he usi-d as a gunsmith
shop under our own personal super
vision. This will give us, under nne
and the same root, a great weekly
newspaper, a joh and book office, a
grocery, a feed store, a hardware
store, a botcher shop, a hoot and
shoe store, a signal station, and a
un shop. Three years ago, upon
our arrival in this town, we slept
under a wagon for the first three
nights, and the first money we had
was a borrowed dollar.
Is it any wonder that our moon-
eyed, lantern-jawed, mule-eared
contemporary down the street gnaws
a file all day and has the colic all
night.
Notice. Parties addressing letters
to the Kicker will please add this :
"United States of America, Western
Hemisphere,' to the usual directions.
Wannamaker's postmaster in this
town is never certain what country
Arizona is located in, and this will
greatly facilitate his labors of distri
bution. The only qualification be
has got for the office is his ignorance
of orthography and chirography,
and his theory as to why jackass
rabbits were created bob-tailed.
Detroit Free Press.
Kept Her Seat
During the assembling of the au
dience before an evening perform
ance of the German opera at the
Metroplitan Opera House recently,
a woman in fashionable attire pur
chased a general admission ticket
and hurriedly passing into the par
quet, swept by the ushers and took
a reserved seat near the orchestra.
Soon a lady holding a check lor the
seat she occupied arrived and an
usher politely asked the first comer
it she had a check.
"No," she quietly answered.
"Well, will you kindly allow this
lady to sit here ?" continued the
usher.
"No. I am here now and shall re
main," was the reply.
"Why, madam, you must move.
I will call a policeman."
The woman calmly glanced up
ward at the rapidly filling galleries
and then, with a significant look at
the usher, said : "You touch me
and I'll cry fire and you'll have a
panic here."
The usher's face fairly blanched.
The woman was allowed to hold the
seat. New York Stiir.
An Insurance Company Forced to
Wind Up-
A Providence special says :
The secondary effects of the great
fires in Lynn and Boston last No
vember were developed to-day at a
meeting of the stockholders of the
Atlantic Fire and Marine Insurance
Company. The company was a
heavy loser in the first Boston fire
of 1889, its surplus being wiped out,
and its capital eaten into to the ex
tent of $30,000. The second Boston
fire gave it another set back. The
company owns a handsome five
story building here, which it is re
ported is" to be sold. The stock
holders voted to wind up the affairs
of the company and to distribute
the balance among the shareholders.
The capital is $200,000, and the as
sets are about 90 per cent of that
sum. In addition to the Boston
fires, the big blaze at Lynn gave the
company a terrible scorching.
Are you restless at night, and harassed
by a bad cough? Use Dr. J H McLean's
lar Wine Lung Balm, it will secure you
souna steep ana eltect a prompt ana radi
cal cure. At Fowlkes fe co's drug store.
Sick headache, wind on the stomach, bil
iousness, nausea, are nromntlv unA naree.
ably banished by DrJH McLean's Little"
iaver ana ivianey f eUets. 25 eta. a vial
Sold at Fowlkes 4 co's drug store.
When nature falters and remiirAa hetn
repru.it her enfeebled energies with Dr f
H McLean's Strengthening Cordial and
Blood Panfier. $1.00 a bottle at Fowlkes
oc co s drug store.
Duke Sons & Go's Factory Sold.
The Durham Sun brings news to
the efle:l that the great tobacco
manufacturing concern of Messrs.
Duke, Sons & Co.. have sold their
plant as in fact all other large ciga
rette factories in the country te
the American Tobacco Company,
which has a capital of $25,000,000,
to continue the same business. The
Durham factory willl he continued
under the old management, which
will be retained, and it will he a
branch of the American Company.
The name of the firm, which has he
come world wide, will also he re
tained. A formal announcement of
this big sale will he made in a few
days. A Durham boy is the presi
dent of this great company, Mr. J.
B. Duke, son of Mr. Washington
Duke. News & Observer.
Authors of Celebrated Hymns.
It is a question whether there are
a hundred persons to day who know
that the author of "The Sweet By
and By" is living in an obscure Illi
nois town, and not amid the greatest
uxury either. Tens of thousands,
perhaps millions of people, know
he hymn ; how many ever think of
Dr. S. Filmore Bennett, its aged au
thor? The hymn has brought him
almost no revenue, and even less
fame. Mrs. Annie Sherwood Hawks
is another instance, living in a small
nterior New York town, compelled
to resort to her pen for a living; yet
who has not sung her world-famous
hymn, "I Need Thee Every Hour?"
Prof. Gilmore, of the University of
Rochester, rarely receives credit as
the author of his wtdl known lines,
"He Leadeth Me." Fanny Crosby,
she of hundreds of hymns that are
sung every Sunday by thousand of
lips, lives in a side street in New
York city, almost forgotten. Al
though blind and helpless, she is
happy in the religion which fills her
blind and soul.-Philadelphia Times.
A Venerable Confederate.
A friend at Burgaw writes us of a
.privilege he enjoyed yesterday, in
dining with Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
Orr, of the Moore's creek section of
Pender county, at a birthday festi
val. The meal was nartaken of in
the same house erected by Mr. Orr
50 years ago. The old tjentleman
is now 84 years old and is a remark
able man. Old as be is his siaht is
yet excellent and he has never used
eyeglagses; he can make four tur
pentine barrels a day, can dip and
till two barrels of turpentine in one
day and can easily Hwalk 15 mile.
He was a gallant Confederate soldier,
having enlisted in 1862 in Company
B. 1st N. C. Battalion of Artillery,
Capt. C. D. Ellis, commanding. He
was then 66 years of age and he
served throughout the war. Wil
mington Review.
Not One in Ten
of the people you meet from day to
day has perfectly pure healthy
blood. The hereditary scrofulous
taint afflicts the large majority of
people, while many others acquire
diseases from impure air, improper
food and wrong indigencies. Hence
the imperative necessity for a reli
able blood purifier like Hood's Sar
saparilla, which eradicates every im
purity, and gives to the blood vi
tality and health. It cures scrofula,
salt rheum, humors, boils, pimples,
and all other affections caused by
impurities or poisonous germs in
the blood. All that is asked for
Hood's Sarsaparilla is that it be
given a fair trial.
Kilrain Sentenced.
New Orleans, March 3. A spe
cial from Jackson, Miss., to the As
sociated Press says: The Supreme
Court, today affirmed the sentence
of the lower Court in the ease of Jake
Kilrain which is two months im
prisonment in the county jail at
Purvis and $200 fine. The decision
in the Sullivan case will be render-
ed next Monday.
Children will freely take Dr J H Mc
Lean's Tar Wine Bang Balm ; unlike
cough syrups, it contains no opium, will
soothe and heal any disease of the throat
or lungs quicker than any other remedy.
Sold at Fowlkes & co's drug store.
Antidote for Tainted Meat.
A certain farmer in this county,
losing a quantity of meat during
the hot weather, took it off and
buried.it A few days aftjer.A.pegjro
told the farmer that he liked spoilt
meal, whereupon the farmer said
that he was welcome to it if he
would go and digit up. The negro
did so and was surprised tb find
that the taint had entirely left thej
meat, being absorbed we suppose
by the earth. He informed the far
mer, who took the meat; back to his
meat house, and is now using the
same. Clinton Caucasian.
Getting oat of Debt.
The Cotton Plant says: "Some
of the merchants complain that busi
ness is dull, and give as an explana
tion of this unusual state of things
at this season the fact that farmers
are saving their money. This is
ii imd for the fanners and will event
ually prove to be good for the mer
chants and the country generally.
The farmers in every section and
community where the Alliance ex
ists are making a noble effort to get
out of debt and in a condition to
run their farms on a cash system,
and the wisdom of this course can
not be too earnestly emphasized.
The Alliance has planted a new
hope in the breasts of thousands of
struggling and dispirited farmers,
and the dawn of a better day is al
ready seen. Let no man put an ob
stacle iu the way of aspiring and
struggling husbandmen."
A Statesman Speaks.
No man in the South was more general
ly more favoeably known, and no man's
opinion was more highly reverenced than
that of the late ex -Governor Perry, of
South Carolina. For some time previous
to his death Governor Perry was a sufferer
from indigestion. He took Dr. Westmore
land's Calisaya Tonic and wrote the fol
lowing letter :
Sans Sodci.
Gentlemen: I most cordiaLly recom
mend Dr. Westmoreland's Calisaya Tonic.
For several years past 1 have been trou
bled with indigestion and dyspepsia. My
son. Dr. Hext M. Perry, of Philadelphia,
who knows the ingredients which compose
your ionic, spoKeiavorauiy 01 1. in course
of two monihs past I have used four bot
tles, and am entirely relieved. Yours, &c.,
B. F. Peery.
Dr. Westmoreland's Calisaya Tonic is
sold by Dr. W. M. Fowlkes & Co., at 50
cents and $1.00 a bottle.
Part of the jewelry, which was
stolen at Rock Hill Saturday night
of which stealing an account was
given in Tuesdays Chronicle, has
been recovered. It was W. S. Fowl
kes' store that was robbed. The
Rock Hill Herald tells of the find
ing of the jewelry as follows: "Mon
day morning when the clerks in
Bryant & Avery's store went to
open up for the day's business, they
observed a package lying in the re
cess of the Main Street entrance of
their store, wrapped in a late copy
of the Chronicle, which upon exam
ination proved tb be the following
articles of the jewelry stolen Satur
day night, viz: 42 watch chains, the
two gold watches valued at $67 50
and $68, and the automatic' silver
watch." Charlotte Chronicle.
Pr-'O' s v. !) Jr.nl :
1 . e o. exposure a re
11 . r. :. '; a ami in :n-
vsvji.:Uie r f.edy ih
.t.a i- 0 1 i.i j iment ;
j u'vdr.e iafl.i tarna
st: O.f ; '. ': a ii
bago 3 . :: I a
D- I II Mr!.,
it wi 1 iu . ! ha n s
tion. Sold at l ow d cos, drug bicre.
Cairo, Ills., March 4. The Ohio
river is now over 50 miles wide at
this point. It extends from he Cairo
levee, whicn' holds it backed up 4o
feet above low water markt into
Kentucky, till it strikes the hills
there, foroiing otte solid sheet of
water, except for the narrow strips
of rock-bound earth upon which the
Mobile and Ohio and" Illinois Cen
tral railroads run south. A mile be
low here it joins the Mississippi,
which in turn extends into Missouri
a not h er 50 m i les , making tb e com - j
bined width of the two rivers ever
one hundred miles
Radam's Microbe Killer is 00
longer an experiment. It has been
been thoroughly tested for two years I
and has never failed in ;--trf ; caw
For sale by Dr. W. M. Fowlkes &
Co m pa ny mj, mm
Heed's First Address.
T
An exchange has given what pur
ports to; be the first public address
of Speaker Reed It is a miserable
perversion of history. We have the
best kind of evidence for saying that
Speaker Reed's first public address
was as follows (made at a school ex
hibition many years ago) :
. . -
I like to see a little dog
And head him on the pat
Er I like to see a little head
And pat him on the dog
f Er I like to pat a little see
And dog him on the head
Arrived at this point the future
Speaker was considerably mixed in
his own mind as to what he liked
to See. He made a few more at
tempts to define his wishes but the
audience hardly "caught on," as we
Bay. Sometimes it seemed that he
liked to see one thing and the next
instant be would waver, and his
preference would seem to lie in an
otner direction. After twisting a
couple of his coat buttons ofl heap
parently settled the disputed point,
and said quite briskly:
I like to head a little pat
And see him on a dog.
The audience would have-been
willing to give the future Speak?
another chance to state exactly what
it was he took pleasure in seeing,
but he seemed suddenly overcome
by some great grief, and withdrew
Irom the stage crying bitterly.
The inference of the audience was
that whatever it might have been
that the future Speaker liked to see
he had made up his mind there was
no earthly chance of his ever seeing
it. Exchange.
A Feathered Monster.
A well known lady of Florenee
concluded to kill a certain rooster
which belonged to her yard on ac
count of his proclivities to fighting
the other fowls. Accordingly : one
morning she made preparation to
slaughter his roostership for that
day's dinner. The chickens were
all called up and the objectional
rooster caught and guillotine ap
plied. But no sooner had the head
jbeen severed from the body than
the latter jumped on a little ban
tam which happened to be strutting
aoout the yard and walloped the
wind out of him. Finishing up the
diminutive bantam, the headless
rooster made for a large brahma
and knocked about a corn sack full
of feathers off him. . The head.
which had in the meantime been
lying on the ground watching the
proceedings, then uttered a shrill
uenani crow, ana tne noov once
more flapped its wings and fell dead
the next instant.
Many persons no doubt will dis
credit this story but it is given as a
straight fact and can be verified if
it should become necessary. The
name of the lady to whom the
chicken belonged is withheld on
account of her objection to apjiear
ing in print, especially in connection
witn such an incredible narrative.
but her character is beyond reproach
and no one who knows her would
think of doubting her word. Fiur
eoce Messenger.
... ,
PILES 1 PILES! ITCHING PILES!
Symptoms Moisture ; intense itching
and stinging, most at night, worse by
scratching. If allowed to continue, tumors
foroi which often bleed and ulcerate, be
coming very sore. Swayke's Ointment
Stop the itching and bleeding, heals ulce
ration, ana in most cases removes the to
mors. At druggists or bv mail for 50 cts
Dr. Swayne & Son , Philadelphia.
Remarkable Escape.
At the Winnebago paper mills, in
Wisconsin, last Saturday a work
man was sent to shovel enow from
off the roof. In jumping from one
ftgaf to another he alighted on a
j skylight which was hidden Irom
) viavus PT full twantv fuof anA rlr.
ed into the working parts of a 300
horse-power engine. The horror-
stricken employes rushed to the spot
to recover enough of his corpse for
burial, and as they looked they saw
him creep under a crank shaft And
walk out uninjured.
An Offer Declined.
He came tip-toeing into the cen
tral police station at midnight the
other night, and as the sergeant
ooked up with an inquiry in his
eye the man stretched out bis hands
and said:
"Put 'em on!"
"What?"
"The bracelets."
"What for?"
"Because I am J. the R."
"What are you driving at?"
"I am Jack the Ripper. I have
ripped all I care to. I now desire
to surrender and be hung."
"Humph! I'd sooner believe you
to be J. the L."
"What's that?"
"Jim the Loafer."
"And you will not arrest me?"
' No sir."
"Then I will return to my ripping
and the consequeuces be upon your
own bead."
And he walked out as stiff as
ramrod, and without one single
wink of his eyes. Detroit Free
Press.
A Pistol Sensation.
1 i
Yesterday afternoon a little sen
sation was caused in the city by a
report that Dr. Eugene Grissom had
Irawn and presented a pistol at Mr.
Geo. Williams, aclerk in the Racket
Store. It aunears that Dr. Grissom
entered the store and approaching
Mr. Williams nointed a nistol at
urn, saying that he (Dr. Grissom)
bad heard that Williams had been
circulating reports about him ; and
if such were the case there must be
an immediate settlement of the
matter. Williams promptly dis
claimed any share whatever in the
matter mentioned and Dr. Grissom
retired. In the evening, there was
a hearing before Mayor Thompson,
and he has so far reserved iude-
J o
ment. Raleigh Call, 5th.
Remarkable Rescue.
Mrs. Michael Curtain, PlainneR 111..
makes the statement that she caught crld,
which settled on her lungs ; she was treated
for a month by her family physician, but
grew worse, rie told her she was a hope
less victim of consumption and that no
medicine could, cure her. Her drueeist
suggested Dr. King's New Discovery for
consumption ; sue bougnt a bottle and to
her delight found herself benefited from
the first dose. She continued its use and
aft er taking ten bottles, found herself sound
and well, now does her own housework
and is as well as she ever was. Free trial
bottles of this Great Discovery at Dr. W.
Ii. fowlkes s Drug Store, large bottles 50.
and $1.00
London, the greatest city in the
world, has no Sunday newspaper.
Toronto, the finest city in Canada,
has none. There is not a city in
the world that would not be better
without it. The Sunday newspaper
will have to go ; some great souled
daily newspaper man will lead in
the reform, and every printer, proof
reader, reporter, pressman, and car
rier in the land will be glad. Chris
tian Advocate.
There are many accidents and diseases
which affect stock and cause serious incon
venience and loes to the farmer in his
work, which may be quickly remedied by
the use of Dr J 13 McLean's Volcanic Oil
Liniment. Get it at W M Fowlkes & co's.
Physicians prescribe Dr J H McLean's
Tar Wine Lung Balm ; in it thev find no
trace of opium or morphia, while its effica
cy in caring all throat or lung diseases is
wonderful. At r o w Ikes dt co s drug store.
Burglary Last Night.
Mr. I. H. Horton'8 Jewelry and
Racket Store was burglarized last
night and about twenty-two or three
pistols, a lot of dry goods, shoes,
jewelry, &., stolen. Admittance was
gained to the store by climbing up
on the board awning in front of the
building and boriug into a door in
the second story that opened npon
it, and from thence to the first floor
by the stairway. There is no clue
to the perpetrators of the burglary
Wadesboro Intelligencer, 6th.
Backfall's Aruica Salve.
The best Salve in the world for bruises
cuts, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores
tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and
all skin eruptions, sad positively cures
Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed
to give perfect satisfaction, or money re
funded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale
by Dr W M Fowlkes Co,
A Joke at His Own Expense.
The Hon. Roger Q. Mills has been
telling a story this week at his own
expense, says the New York Tri
bune's .Washington correspondent.
In the the exciting political cam
paign of 1888 Colonel Mills had a
rea not ngm on nana in uipowa
11 . f I . 1 X .4 !
district in Texas. One of the meet
ings which the apostle of a low
tariff addressed was in his own town
of Corsicana. The people lor miles
around poured into the town to hear
him. Colonel Mills was stirred to
his inmost depths. He hammered
... . . . - A
away in tnat speecn on tne tarin
question, to the exclusion of every
other topic.
The next morning the Texas
statesman was in his flower garden
and while standing near a higb
board fence, admiring the rose
bushes that flourished luxuriantly
there, he overhead the following dia
logue between two negroes who were
at work in the adjoining lot :
"Was you up at de big Democratic
meetin' yestidy?"
"Yes, I d rapped 'roun an' listen
ed to Col. Mills talk."
U0 AA T "
KJ'J UIU X.
"Could you make heads or tails
outen what he was talkin' 'bout?"
"Deed I couldn't. He kep' a
shoutin' 'bout one thing all the
time. He talked an' he talked
about de tariff."
"Dat was de racket de whole time.
I was dar. an' I don't know noir
what it was; but from de way bo
han'led hiss'ef an' pawed de a'r in
dat speech, you kin bet yo' boas
dollah dat if I was to- meet up wid
de tariff, I'd give it de road."
The Latest on In galls.
Senator Ingalls has received the '
following letter :
U. S. Senator Ingalls, Washington,
D. C:
' - . f
We would more cheerfully pay
$2,000 toward burning every news
paper and their editors that publish
your fool s-peeches than we pay two
cents to carry this to you. You are
certainly the most cursed, hell-bent
fool on earth, and how a crowd can
waste the time listening to you can
be accounted for only that they are
"U. S. Senators." Our estimation of
...
the body goes down nearly every
time we hear from it. We can con
gratulate you on being a successful
I 1 U .U.r- - !!
iucktv mauiuu. a uu are juv&jr vuui
you find fools to tolerate you. That
the devil is crowded with such as
you is evident or be would Abave
taken you alive. ... eotxii btnomtte
dqi at
Happy Ho osiers.
Wm. Timmons, Postmaster of Idaville
Ind., writes: "Electric Bitters has done I .7! "Jo
more for me than all other medicines com
bined, for that bad feeling arising from
Kidney and Liver trouble." John Leslie, wJ
tanner and stockman , of the same place,
says: "Find Electric Bitters to be the
best Kidney and Liver medicine, made
me feel bke a new man." J. W. Gardner. wn
hardware merchaqfc same town, esys.:.j.:
"Electric Bitters is just the tiling for a
man who is all run down and don't care
whether he lives or dies ; he found new
strength, good appetite and felt just tike
be bad a new leae on lite. Unly due. a
bottle, at Dr. W. M. fowlkes & Uo.s
Drug Store.
Young Lincoln Dead.
London, March 5. United States
Minister Lincoln's son died at 1:07
this morning. During the morning
the lad was in a comaotse condition.
He was unable to retain nourish
ment and the doctors stated defi-
Initely that his death was merely:
question of a few boors. He suffer
ed no pain. Mr. Lincoln and his
family were at the bedside of tbe
dying, boy from early in the morn
ing until he died. He passed away
quietly.
Tabkington PkauSe P. O.,
Liberty County, Texas.
Mr. Radam I have used William
Radam's Microbe Killer, and many
of my neighbors have used it with
most wonderful results in many
cases. Geo. F. Allen.
For sale by Dr. W. M. Fowlkes fc
Co.
"I have obtained all tbe informa
tion I desire on that point," remark
ed the man who sal down on a pita
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