THE NEWS T7TTTTTT You can only One Less Than Two All the news of the day in a nutshell, together with discus sions' of public questions. THE - MORGANTON - HERALD Is the paper you want and the paper that ought to go to every home in Western North Carolina. Herald i - i months. Address, THE MflRftANTflN urDAi n Morganton, N. C. SOUTHERN RAILWAY." (PIEDMONT AIR UN EJ THIRD DIVISION. Schedule effective Norember.15, 1896. TM.Conden.cd Schedule i. Uony and anbject to change without SALISBURY, ASHgTlIXE. HOT No. 15. No. 11. tin 14 iu Daily. Daay. (Central Thne.) ?r?aUy?- 34 p.m. 10.47 a.m. " ....Hickory ?.. Is S ' 5"o2 m 10.10 p.m. 11.28 a.m. ...Mofanton. 3 i S'm 3M am ll.6 p.m. 12.12 p.m. " .... Marion..... " ail E "Sv aia ....12.17 a.m. 1.68 p.m. .... Biltmore .. Is m ...... ...... 12.25 a.m. 2.Q5 p.m. Ar.. Aaheville.... " m; ' ' Fourth Division. " -21 P.. ArHot SprinKs..Lv. H.30 a.m ............. 0.05 p.m. ..Morri8town..LT. 9 39 a.tn ; 1 11-20 p.m. Ar Chattanooga Lt. 30 a.m" 'JtSmJ: " J1..18' d?UZ: caTSr Punmaa una, uinmuia, wane vine ana incinnatl via F. C. & P . Colnmhia Tir-; '-.ca van Also Pullman Drawing-Room Sleeping Car. between Hot SSSt ASSS'SS- C" and New York in connection with Washington and Southwest T.i?,55i e Washington Trains Nos. IS and Id Nnrfnlb onH rt.tt..nA. t : ... . .. Chattanooga. BETWEEN ASHEVIIXE AND MURPHY. No. 67. ' ' I No Bx.8n. : (Central Time.) Bx.lnn. .. 7.00 a.m. Lv....Aaheville.... Ar. A no m 12.00 m. " ....Dillsboro... " 12 00 P'S 1.25p.m. "..Bryson City.." 10KOS""" 6.00 p.m. Ar..... Murphy ....Lv. 700 am Through tickets on sale at principal stations to all points. For rates or info.. 4 Apply to any agent of theCompany. l 'or ram or iafonnttioo W. u p D f I." r Ttv c - J .. W. H. GREEN, jt aa. v-ULr, General Superintendent. Traffic Manager Ommi " x Washington. D. C. 1800 Pa. Ave? wiSSnn wral Panger Agent, , get it for an outlay of Dollar per year. Cents Per Week. Reflecting happenings and gos- sip of interest in Morganton and Burke county; also giving the cream of the news of the neighboring counties. . ' Are comingon and you will want something to read. Hand or send us One Dollar and let The come to you for twelve J 8FBINGS AND KNOXVIXXJC. SleepingCam between T.v.,.;. - ..u.uuuga kiuukq. ruumu Can B.u.i. j ; ""-'a 1 AUU a . i . . . W. A. TUSK, r. 1 ... I A FAMOUS YACHT'S FATE. Commodore Colt's Dauntless, Anchored, a Floating Memorial. Full many a large and handsome yacnt nas lost her owner because he baa tired of her, or, again, because a reduced income forced . him to abandon the ex travagant luxury, but here is one that, losing her master by his untimely death, has been specially provided for iu her declining years. Steadfast unto the end, she was not Bold off for half price to get rid of her, but, like a faithful dog or horse that has outlived its days of use fulness, has bees allowed to finish out her life in quiet repose. It la only a few years ago that the schooner yacht Dauntless was one of the very stanchest boats afloat In a race across the Atlantic with the Coronet she did herself proud. Her commander was a commodore, and her graceful form was a familiar figure in the great yacht ing world. Now, with sails forever furled, with pennants hauled down for the last time and housing canvased over, she tugs at an anchor that seems des tined never to rise again. The master whom she thus serves in spirit was in life" Commodore Caldwell H. Colt, the only child of the late Colo nel Samuel Colt, the arms manufactur er. He died at PuntaGorda, Fla., about three years ago, while off on a cruise. This circumstance, together with his fondness for the boat, led his wealthy mother to preserve it. thoush no lonsrer of use, just a9 others lay away in a drawer the toys of dead children. So it is that the yacht idles her life wt. a silent memorial. In further remem brance of the dead man's yachting career the new Colt memorial house in Hart ford, costing several hundred thrnnaand dollars, bears on its facade a beautiful reproduction of the Dauntless in sculp tured stone and many other snzrestiona of the sea. Anchored off Essex, a few milpa nr. from the mouth of the Connection t rivor. the good old yacht is now living out her me oi ease, it is said that she will never again go into commission cer tainly not so Ions as the mother livpa. The spot is quiet, secluded and all that a retired favorite could ask for in her old ace, and the same waters that lan her side flow, 40 miles up stream, with in a stone s throw of the celebrated fao- tory whose machinery nrndnned thn wealth that purchased and maintained the boat Brooklyn Eagle. The Effect is Wonderful. Thousands of women r nArvnm tired, have headache. Bick stomach! fainting spells, dizziness, scanty or pro fuse menses, weak back, rnnilmotm. . their Bides. Shoulders nnrl limha aho constantly in fact they Buffer from 1 - . . Kcuoiat ueuiuty ui iiy wnoie system. The superior qualities of McElree's Wine of Cordui make it the leading remedy for this class of troubles. L. D. Pangburn, New Virginia, Iowa, says: "My wife has suffered for years from general weakness, pain in top of head, back and neck at times could not do her work. One bottle of Mc Elree's Wine of Cardui has given her instant relief." The effect ia ful. QUALITY IN OUR SOCIETY. An I English Visitor Finds Classes More instinct Than In England. We have known Mm. fl nf Vitth .va line for some years, and during her an nual visu to ixmdon have improved the acquaintance of ih lady. She has all the fascination of the attractive American woman. She is surprised and apparently delighted to see us, inquires how long we have been over and thinks it "too bad" that we nave not been sooner to calL She is dis pensing afternoon tea to a young man whom she introduces. His n nmo ia fa. miliar as that of a family of million aires, ana as sucn is entitled to respect He is quiet and reserved, bows ln tn each of us in turn and talks in a sub dued voice through his even, white teeth. Only a tone here, an inflection there, betray the fact that he is an American. His phrases are carefnllv chrwen rather superlative curiously in contrast wun tne quietness and apathy of his voice and manner. I take him tn he type of the society man. Mrs. U. is also a tvne. Her vivacitv is contagious and her conversation un flagging. She passes lightly from one subject to another. Everything she says is worth listening to. Thev are hntk m different from ordinary middle class Americans aa are the English classes distinct from the lower. It is a study in human nature that people speaking the same lantmase. living in the same city, influenced by the same leeiings, enouia be, in all things, so ut terly dissimilar as those who nnmnnu society and those who do not It ia not a question or education. E. M. Hart- mg in iX)ndon (jueen. Bucklen'g Arnica Salve. The best salvo in tho wm-M " " .VI lUt Cats. Braises. Sores TTlnora Hd. Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chap ped Hands. ChllhlAillH. flnrne or,rl all Skin Eruptions, and positively vuico t lies, or no pay required. It ia guaranteed to give peifect oaiaaiacuoii, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale oy Jonn lull, Druggist. Rhea Fiber. The claim is put forth by the London Times that the Gomess process for treating the rhea fiber is completely successful in rendering that plant a most valuable source of textile materi al. This process adopts aincate of soda for the elimination of the resins and effects it without the slightest injury! to the fiber. After the "ribbons" or strips of bark have been freed from dirt they are placed in weak acid baths for a night Next morning they are passed through a mild alkaline bath and then boiled in weak solutions of caustic so da to which zino has been added. When washed and dried by the usual me chanical means, the fibers emerge as a long silky floss, entirely free from the cuticle and resinous gums in which they were imbedded, being also clean, white and ready for the comb of the spinner. They likewise take the most attractive dyes and can be worked into every variety of fabrio, from the finest quality of velvets to cheap drills and delicate laces. The combined lightness and toughness of the fiber render it pe culiarly suitable for tents and ship can vas, and three -fifths more cloth of equal strength can be produced from rhea than from the same weight of linen that is, 1,000 yards of rhea canvas weighs only as much as 600 yards of linen, its durability and resisting power to strain being also mucfi greater. v For Over Fifty Tears Mss Winslow's Soothing Stkup has been year' b o? mZ7. S?.fJT tbcir cdren Mle teething, with per. feet success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. It will Trticll the poor little sufferer immediately? Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. TwrntZ five cents a bottle Be sure and ask for "Mrl !n",2r" Soothing Syrup." and takfnt other hind. . . . , dcc20-lT r-sT-:-. .11 "nuKau your cor t. An 1 dcrson's; he will pay you bpot cash. IK CASE OF SYNCOPE. MOMENTARY HEART PARALYSIS THAT REQUIRES STIMULANTS. Different Methods of Treatment and now They Should Tto Applied Whatever la Done Must Be Done Without Delay, Which Is Dangerous. It is an everyday occurrence to see persons in a weak condition, just np from a sickbed or under the influence of some great emotion, grow suddenly pale, lose consciousness and faint A more or less complete suspension of breathing takes place, corresponding to a check, or, at any rate, to a consider able decrease in the circulation of the blood. This condition is called syncope, and is in reality a momentary paralysis of the heart If immediate help ia not afforded, syncope may in some cases be the cause of death. Nothing is better known than the different means to be used in case of By n cope; the most important points are to facilitate the flow of the blood, to keep up what remains of the weakened energy of the heart contraction and tn removo every obstacle to restoration of tne circulation of the blood. From these points of view to place the patient in a horizontal position is a practice that ia as efficaoious aa it is habituaL ' In this way not only is it easier for the heart to keep the mass of blood in motion, but the head, which it is best to put in a lower position than the body, receives a larger, supply of blood than before, so that the lack of blood in the brain, the initial cause of the syncope, is very largely compen sated. To carry still further this reUtW congestion of the brain, it ha even been suggested to stand such patients liter ally on tnelr head, and by following this practice, as nearly as could be dona, Nelaton and Campbell reported case in which natienta were' brnncht hlr -. consciousness who would otherwise have infallibly succumbed. It is with a similar purpose that we should make all haste to remove th patient's corset, to loosen collar and cravat in a word, to loosen all the clothing and to carry the patient into the open air. In this way many ob stacles to the circulation of the blood are removed, but the special advantage in the practice is that the expansion of the lungs becomes less imrjeded and easier. If, however, in spite of these meas ures of relief, the syncope continues, we must have recourse to remedies of an other kind. numerous and varied in n. ture, but all designed to bring back and stimulate the contraction of the heart muscle. The return of eeneral onnwinnfnpa should be stimulated by sudden and vio lent shaking of the patient, by dash ing cold water on the face and by rub bing the skin with alcohol or vinf par. These are best applied to the temples, lips or palms of the hands. It ia alo well to rub the hands and feet, limbs and even the entire surface of the body in an energetic manner with a bair glove or any other rough tissue with which any stimulating lotion that may be at hand can be aDnliod. such aa bran. dy or eaa de cologne. The special senses should also be stimulated. The patient should be made to breathe any strongly smelling stuff that may be at hand sal volatile, vin egar, acetio acid or ammonia. By these different means, which are more or less energetic and almost always effica cious, ine stimulants of the heart con tractions bring back its beat, whila thA resumption of circulation carries once more to the brain the blood neoeasarv for its working. If these different means are still in sufficient, artificial respiration should be resorted to without delay. The pa tient should be placed on the back, the head as low as possible, turned to nn side and the mouth wide open. The op erator stands at the side of the bead. seizes the two elbows firmly and draws them as fat upward and awav from the body as possible, thereby-dilating the chest and allowing the air to enter the lungs. An assistant Dlaced bv the natient'a legs, rests both bauds on the sides of the base of the chest and brine trea sure to bear on it at the very moment 1 AS . . - wnen me patient's elbows are being brought back to the sidea aaain after having been raised to a maximum. In a word, the assistant acts in such a way as to help to drive out the air that has been sent into the lungs by the exten sion of the arms. Two skillful opera tors can in this wav. br working veil together, carry on an almost normal de gree oi breathing. It Is advisable not to tm ten nnfovi - rt - H -J I as the average human being does not oreatne more than about 16 timos a minute. If in one or two minntea the bas not come to an end. them Imnnu relying any longer on this measure, and ne cost to resort to rhythmical u-acuons oi tne tongue according to the method of 1L Laborda nf PH Thia method, which is constantly giv ing the most unhoped for results in cases of asphyxia, consists in opening the patient's mouth, in seizing the tongue wun tne fingers and a piece of linen and in drawina- it forward with strong rhythmical tractions. slni mnA methodically, 15 to 18 times a minute. j.ne return to consciousness is usually announced by the utterance of a loud. teep ana long expiration. W ben the natient has recovered fmm the fainting fit the rrncona is natural lv cured, but we have still to try to pre- vm recurrence or this disagreeable acoiaent. xniscan be done naturmllyby ascertaining its cause. Paris Herald. Improving. "I don't mind the citv no mnih nn I'm getting accustomed to its ways. " -Are your now?" " WelL I used to turn two someraanlts every time I got off a street car, and now i turn only one," Chicago Record. The ladv's slinner la Mnriul I- W - It - WMfMUJVU, IU the symbolism of flowers, to be a deo- mianuu oi war, or ratner or audacity, by the lady to the gentleman, equiva lent to the expression, "Win me if you can.' The mail ronta fmm Hew Vnrk Africa, via Panama, is 27 days long. Whv ia it that ... t ii . f ui.u ia uiu ana ae crepid at 45 and another hale and beartv at 80V it aw . . kju uu me care ne takes of himself. Often a man 'a body geta out of repair-the trouble grows until it lays him out in bed. Whenever a man feels that he is not aa well as he ought to be, whenever he U listless, without energy and without vitality, whenever he finds that he is losiue welch t and th.t.s j: oeiog --o uwuruinMT work give nnu?e.at,gu' he ne1 Dr.PiercV ?n -nv"ediCPUcover7- " keeps n?aT?rkin? with his active and Jnd h?dJi,npurf-he keP bis nerve. aVri-n" Vd constant nervous strain. He will not be hearty when hi -old. The -Golden MedSl Dioy! try cures many so-called diseases be- same thing-bad digestion and couae quent impure blood. The "Discovery "Z1 h apatite good, the digeetion ricrhDdapuTe.UUOD Dd lh" An important age often comes by telegraph, bat the moat important mes sage that ever was delivered to mankind lias been given to them through the newspapers. It Is given again in this article. It is the information that 98 per cent, of all csacs of con sumption can be completely and permanently cored. There ia no doubt about if. The statement ia not made recklcaslv. but after the ri. Serieuce of thousands has made it an in. ispntable fact. Consumption is not a dis ease of the lungs. It is a disease of the blood, which in weak lunged people man ifests hself by the formation of tubercle in the lungs and the wasting away of lung tisane. The cure for consumption is simple. It consists in the administration of a medi cine that will assist the lungs in throwing off tuberculous matter, and that will cleanse the system so that thia refuse matter will be replaced by strong, healthy tiasoe. That sounds like a very simple operation, and yet consumption baffled the combined med ical skill of the whole world fur hundreds of years. Consumption was considered in curable until the advent of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. This great remedy la the moat wonderful blood purifier and atrengthener that the world bas ever known. It ia the result of years of study and experiment, by a scientific physician and has been tested in every way by him for over jo years. It baa an unbroken record of success. It cures a great variety of diseases, because almost all diaeasea have their origin and support in impurity and weakness of the blood. Aa long as a man's blood ia rich and pure, be ia ia no danger from diseaaea. The blood is the medium through which food la carried from the digestive system to all of the tines of the body. If it carries impure things, or an insufficient quantity of good things, trouble will ensue. There ia nothing about that so very hard to understand. It is per fcctly plain and natural and rational. The " Golden Medical Discovery put the di gestive system in perfect order, purines and enriches the blood and so puts the whole body Into perfect tune. This talk 1s continued la Dr. Fierce! Connoa Sense Medical Adviser. This nt rrv book seat free oa reeeint at n pn-cpt stamps to cover cost of ma inn r esv. Won LP'S tHvru aaav hlanacsi atanrutmn. ft-tT-iK, N. Y. OFFERED A SQUARE GAME. nw a Toaag Lawyer Cotlet4 mils Chleag Caaablera. A young attorney Jut Btartlnff out in bia profession in Chicago was commis sioned to collect a nnuiU r of bills ty a prominent tailor cf the town. All tbce accounts were against gamblers. Some 01 then had bcn sued on and judg ment bad teen obtained. Thra inda. mem., however, had not bee n CollccUd. A liberal pcrcrntago was offered the a a lawyer 11 ne cooia soccrtU la collecting any of them. The attorney Lad bis own notion as to how to po to work on these account and listened to the tailor's ad vice about -going for tLcat hot" with a dubious smile. He selected a bill of t?a tnr m. .-.it of clotbrs agalnat a quite tir.tctl knight of the grevn cloth and proct-edrd to try nis pi an. trailing on thia taan, be told him that be bad cot come to threaten him with a la. suit or to bluff him; that if tbo bill was ctrrect be would call at any time the debtor would designate for a part or the wLole of tit bill; that if the debtor would say be would not pay the bill the lawyer would not call a train : that all be aaked was a am.x deal; that be would call only when the debtor made an appointment to pay money, aa be did not propose to inaugu rate a system f dunning." i.00 gambler beard him through with a perfectly impassive face and then said: That's fair. The other collectors didn't know their buineat, Tbey tried to bluff me. and tbev 'dunned ma Vnnr nm. is square one, and I'll give it a whirL nere is my card. Call Tuesday, and I will pay you half.- Have von rvt nv more bills again.it the boys?' KJa being told of the otbrr accounts he sat down, took a dna.n ti hi -,r,i wroto acrow them "CX K.," and said to the attorney, "Hand one of these to each man you ro to. tell him vonr n i you will get your money. ine lawyer did so. In not one single instance was a bill rennd iated. and In every case all appointments and agroc- mom to pay were kept with scrupulous fidelity. Every account was fiuall r,aid to the lost peuny, and the tailor won dered at the oollt-ction of tbeae. to him, defperato accounts. Saa Francisco Chronicle. Don't Farcr t This. We wUh wo rmil.t mr r..lt z V V . U 4 t J ,111- press upon the mind of every one the Tery great importance of curing a mI.i at once. A day's delav mar K th means Of fastening nnAn f . .v. - c ..o IMM.J.ITIII IU dreaded forms of disease so often the result 01 corns, such as diptheria. con gestion of th luniri in lnn...lU. it is of the utmost importance that """ reuaoie remedy, such aa we hare proved Symphyx to be. should be kept always at baud. A Juvenile Taste Eiplainad. Little Dov Our cook haa con awav. and I'm awfollr glad. .Now mamma will have to make the cake, and mam ma's oake is always heavy. Guest WelL I declara! Do vm v,m for beavj cake? UttlO liOV Yea. Ynn tn-t mnra rki. In in a piece. London Fun. Thia ia the Jitnf , . . -ui. aim acu- that. but What nonnU nu.1 . days is the ami bilious medicine. Sim rnona Liver Kegulator. the King of Liver Medicines, and better than Pills. I have used no other anti-bilious rem edy for six years and know from nre- ; "v ."- Mum 01 a constipated nab:t r.othinc rm.i. i. r. Craig, Ellenbury. Fla: Are You Afraid 6 TO READ DOTH SIDES OP TUB QUESTION? The New York Jodfnal is the only Metropolitan paper indorsing- Bryan and Sewall and it daily publishes Articles by the leading financiers of the countrr on both sides of the question. "Silver ' versus Gold." It is progressive, liberal and always espouses the cause of the marte. Every broad minded man should read it. whether Republican or Democrat. I IB M 111 Dallv .... t rv - ,v Bubacriptlon for On VIontn, uuuuuif ounaaj - . 40 cants Two Mont ha and a nif . . C1.O0 Send subscription to Hie New York Journal. QrcTjitUoa "prartatira KBW TORT. IlaJ Spelilag mi a TBesalt rUaaa. pK'plo who ft. t.tt baul are it onconinon, and tl.it dcf.ct'ls s'mrat alwajs tbe occasion of arrioae annoy, auco to tbern r.ml en:t arra3irnt to tbeir friend. Tl at bud p?Uing is catrd by a dittcam is a aiaten.rnt tbst will l-o toinnny, tot Ihtt rnch a state t f tbi: ?i exists is provrd try txcvl leut 1 icdivnl antboritica. Iu certain eon ditiv us ti trsia and fccrvni tLo ratient aln:-t iuvrriaMy wrirce "ot" In-lead of Mta" In aocllwr slightly varying form, instead of 'the' tbe Ural letter is omitted, and so i:i many other of tbe horti r words. This mzlxSy Ufually affects tbo brain only in connection with words cf one jllaM bot raso have orcurrcd where lougrr words hare been so distorted bat it was d. dealt to get tbeir Si-new. It ia a question whether oneticrM t corcfort'd by bviog told that bwl fpJit 4 wascaoard If metilal disca-- rr . botit-r bo would prtf.r t Lave tt lark tt accura y ar t riotan to ignoroijoo or carvlccancas. Xtw Votk Lcdgt-r. - Blind. Tata Kavw. Dick And bow did yon proceed t Fred Why, I Juat wrat up to ber and asked ber if sue would marry nxi Dick Without first telling ber bow much you loved ber and all that sort cf thing? Fred Of course. I did not wast to prejudice her judgment. Dirk iiy dear bey, doo't you know that when folks fall la low they don't have any judgment? Boston Tran-arrict LADIES WHO SUFFER ri r'-'-1 rnlHrHIUl ssmSj m rrofaaa, raiatal. aarrrw j or Irr-1 aaaaraauoa ar sooa rastorsd a sss'is ay BradScli'i Fcnnlc Regulator U Is a eoaaMaattoaj af r s dial avaas wfciea kaa t'a cwnt srtta U an sa tBoi loraMraiaaa Sva vsara. aa4 aaowa to act rpmc t ad oa U an eyrtanaiii fiaiata 9tj. It as buis aa irtva mm aa4 miii i Um aaaitfc 4 ta sf trlst weaaaa. It atnaid W UIm kv la itmma sTuu j mrmmucm Is Nraaa. tmp. yrM.lJ ri lay ov raJa. tal, a4 all Ucaa tgs. a aawald sm 11, aa aTSsSa amirraX taSa ata W m fev anv. Ut tarooaa ta ry taaaaaia a4 tatamrUMSu Tm auuenrio ncaLaroai co,awaarTa,sxa, aoka av an aavaajara. Tutt's Pills Cure AH Liver Ills. A Strong Fortification. Fortify the body against disease by Tutt's Liver Pills, an abso lute cure for sick headache, dys pepsia, "sour stomach, malaria, constipation, jaundice, bilious ness and all kindred troubles. "The Fly-Wheel of Life" Dr.Tutt; Your Liver Pills are the fly-uhecl of life. I shall ever be crateful for the accident that brought them to my notice. I feel as if I had a new lease of life. J. Fairleigh, Platte Cannon. CoL Tutt's Liver Pills Down In C.rOrrAm - n ua aava a saraata rz 11 - 1 la' now known a. vv V (l.7l2-. f? ,tZrnVTa trt;fio growing with Sera. -fm ' 0r' ;). "4 tu Caa For Rhcnmatiam. TAnnA l'ain la Inl.m.fl sutttirii1 Its wonJtt ful influence. j-fc.t.w. p. v. v: n hiu. 12?: 'r the country. Ueaue we tv&uS tii '?!????11 ort akejJucal lixiVI rT Read A Wonderful yvara: ,rw .ft ' laaTUSSTa ai yvara. aa4 asa ca Wl f mmtl j. a. ovraiaa. wva.. ru. Testimony from tr Mjyor. W. W. vrttDgm. Siayav mt afljaay. From Two Wall-known PTiyaklana, V salt far yaw r. r. ,4 CrcZx Zl?Jr - ad docs nov cv until . r.rSef,: irritability f disriUoaTaSTBr u a AIr.1 i-apore blood, wh ich ran . J m JT?0?01 th - to be ti r.f.(J.i cure. For sale by all drnrriiS rf rl' U tUnty and jvrrmanretjy I fPPIIIi b-, cTC-rrxt &au;imjM book. ax LotiJc U Is Utfim BSOS, rsaSa. Upwaao Block. SAVAimiM ci FOR SALE BY W. A. LESLIE & CO., MORGANTON, N. C. ' 1 ' v Xrct blie lYrpara-joa Lr As Csg Cat 5 tsxxta tUaia3ctli cf Protnofc s Dt4 SonXhreif ul -ness aMFa-stjCoaLiloj rktiaT Ojwrm.Morpluae not wi 2OT NAltCOTIC. i A perfect Rctnetlr torCotatss- tion. Sour Stocwuh.DuxTtaxA. iVorros Xxw-uisiorisJevmsh ocsioTxiLossorSLzrr. TacSuaal Sifnmtwn af !dlL .I'Ui.T Tit ' ACT CCHYCT VrolrTT.lt .Mr immm SM MSl r '-' i"t ii 1 w v-u. jSJw52i0.'. RHflTTFRRnVf mlSDc w SIX HANDSOME COLORED PLATES ADDED TO THIS YEAR'S V0LU7.TE. Miujom of Cop Ua bave ba sell ESTES 5c LAURIATa PIANOS AND ORCANS On Ilaay Trrtua. Aa4 a fan at afl limAm Uamcal ta trrata a a w lo.nl fr-, " a aiaaxtutia. -sm.Gm4 tar. r.r. Aatofcars. at m. Mane lka f4ra vn aa pM a4 aaaAis. adalrvaa. lae XmM tt Aac. 10. , esav, 3. C. HFlt f u have anr old bocks wall the backs turn off which joo wish to prccrc, eod them to Tut IIckald ofSce aaj have them erbound. It won't cost jou touch. r ZsZo VUQ?V'' ' W-JL Xr Superior To All Sarsaparillas. 1 1. ii..,v. , " " ca . . aswwva, t cl ticaiui afBi...i ... - . . . ' " rwovra ana a.cr;UaS thu U&t The Truth And Be Convinced. Cur. - - a jc t. Tucnatfaox rwac a c Hot tprtnsa turraaaavl. a Warla W s s . a iiim U VVV lmpl-a, Corwa 1 . - aa aw ,,aia a4 "a,laaaaartvava, Cas4. J. J. tcatJttToX. " a v A u c3cd by rTskiaes at tie trZe SEE THAT THE FAC-SIMILE SICNATURE CF. 13 o:r Tin: WRAPPER 0? E7E2T orrrijz op CASTOBIA ka i saiiwui; lUUU CTTMa ratJ4-1 a aa4 f 1 at aa. Every , Publishers, . . EOSTOX 11 as4 ta6Masaa4alal! w a4Mn rta . I o ovc a ne mim v, a 4 9m m nn tm tm teM if rr ! mmmm trmm oknfia, f , mmmA . -m ar W. i Jnm. m iw w v m Oia ha a.t pm-w X a aaiccv. " (- t n wtaJ ta 4 mss itUJ. a4 Mi 1 11 1 ! S ka. 1 C.A.SNOWcLCOj at 4 diowrv-L It Ut aa4 rrm ta tera , tixi!Ut. back !;-.., nrrrr ta OfTrf Uta illW-i. --- . . . 1 ra tit Ut tml Jl c,t -JU mrOr a a . ' Vr. . and CruotioAa vw av - mt .m a Cm. P. P. P.. (W.S U aourceca Lie. hu TV. rstca cocat (, -Druggists, J as " ai4 a - a J. ; iV 200 r-f 11 I I ass atfaa. I

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