ogress
K. JACOBSON,
Editor.
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if th
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Tuesday, MAr ID 1S9G1
A life of honesty lis the.
illustration of true religlor,'
only
iThe
only religion to ' be preferrdd is
that which is; capable of prdduc-
in an -upright life, for tho proof
of the truth of religion is onO v to
be found in the way it work
not
heir
i A
ln the way it talks, "by
fruits ye shall know j them.
man may have twenty creells to
:... i v. i -' n
.3 iiive so any suite of
clothe.-, but unlecs jheleah
s a
eteaii -fe hewi1 have a
Trni and unpleasant tbsti
future. You may prav n.'l
vNery
h.the
day
Stiuday, but if Voa sand your su
gar on Mocdajf.thjO sanded A
ngar
and uoc te. prayers
will 4
ettle
your fate. When true red
gion
ets.a, strong hold cn a md
n it
make3 him honest in a
trade or in selling goods by
horse
SUD-
pie and insures the deliverjy of
goods that are sorutKin"
like
in-
sample you need tir 't stop t
qittro whether t3 Confesei
bn of
Faith or th, Wethouist discipline
ia Denm jt for vou want it
yourself and you want, it a J
! the
I "the
t:ime
earliest possible moment,,
church is taking up so mvl
in discussing what to bfcijene aijd
whom to believe that there, is. r.o
time left to pursuaee men t live
right. A bad I iff .enveloped in a
sound orthodox. cretjd. is a iioo!
deal like a toitring ruin cohered
with ivy apd? honeysuckle
It
looks wellfrom the outsidq
j and
long
t the
ihold
a tha
you get a fine impression so
as vou fail to investigate bd
moment you crosa the thrd
and get on the insido j'ou sa
wretched humbug it is.
this sort of honey-uck!e
which di-su-iss the con;ni
of tiie populace a. id oris;
U is
IViD" I
Kense
nates
nail or the seveie nti
pisms
against religion. Tais in a
mistake, for a moments th
fta
kght
win b.iow mat religion anta
Ihy-
pocracy are by no meaps. inter
changeable terms- This mhy be
a pretty baa world but prea
pheis
can never alter its
cmpl
exion
by rauglin.i oyer, Us churdh cr
that church, but when the J
be-
gin to. tsll then tha diffe
fence
between heaven and I13II id
the
nest
difference between I an h
aud a dishonest life they wi
11 fill
the pews and there will be cjhaiis
in thi aisles. Heresy hinting
may be a pleasant fanaticisr 1 but
hunting the evils of society and
tunning them to earth would be
a much more profitable business.
A learned discussion of free will
and fore knowledge may serve to
exhibit scholarship but a practi
cal debate on how to alle riale
the missions of poverty, shu ; up
evil rt sorts and make (hi3 tity
morally he althly would at ract
the attention and command j the
respect of Ihe entire commuhity
it the church could once see j the
necessity of taking up this kind
of work, 1 he indifference off the
pcopie wouiu cnange to enthusi
asm. A. man must make him
self honest or he will 'never be-
come6o, God furnishes the I ' op
4- :t .1 1 b
puituiiiLjr uul notuing more,
T-I ' , : . . I '
-inure is more uprignrness now
than ever before, but iths subply
is not equal to the demand. We
need it in public office and
pri
vate l:fe;on Main and Water
streets, in politics, in 1 tlie hbme
and in the church. , When ihev
fill all our stations then will the
new day dawn
Small and Large Industrl sj
. 1.: I
The following editorial from
the Wilmington Messenaref! is
so nearly in line with whall we
have from time to time peen
advocating that was necessary
to our prosperity we reproduce
it heie : j
Some twelve years ago
Connecticut editor was 4n yil
mington. He made ah off-hand
talk that was instructive in
he
I he Washington Pr
Sunday Musings. j
Mayor's office. He told his
hearers that his own little State
was rich, and had been made
so not by the great millsbut by
the indefinite multiplying of
the numerous smaller indus
tries, He said a visit to that
State would show how Connec
ticut had a vast number of man
ufactories and that almost eve
rything used was made. He
told of how the oyster i'nteresi
had been developed in Long
Island Sound. He said origi
nally the oyster was not found
there. The oyster boats (pirates
perhaps) went down to Chesa
peake Bay and loaded them with
oysters, and taking them to
ong- Island Sound Wanted
then. This'industwas dili
gently prosecuthxroni vear to
year. He suj ?tiiat as he spoke
was wortfr to Connecticut
so ?2,.aOO,009 or $3,0C0,X0 per
annum. Here is a lesson of
thrift arid enterprise.
i The Messenger has long' been
persuaded that North Carolina
needed very mucJi a multinlv
ing of the smailey industries,
which are vesy many. Wil
mington to-cJay ought to have
at least terv etjtton. mills' alone.
It ought to. have ffr,v cotton
manufacturing establishments.
Look 30 Char) 0tte. Behold
whktha inla nd town, with
Inofecne half t'ae natural, ad van
iages of ov r city, has accom
plished. 7 t has some nine cot
ton mills and scores of other in
dustrial enterprises. Whit has
dono it l? There is but one ans
wer "her men of enterprise.
Other towns in our State have
gone rapidly- ahead under the
same spirit. In Souh Carolina
and. elsewl iere there are striking
object lossons to be fouabN
towns Lhat hav sprnng up
almost in a night, and. simply
by manufactures. Whart makes
Augusta, Ga., the go-ahead city
it is ? Its great 7itanufacturing
industries. Wtiat pushes At
laaiia. to the front so rapidly ?
To a very large extent it is her
smaller industries as well as
large-manufactories.
Washington has railroad and
waterway .communication into
the iuterior and is near the
ocean. Why shall it not go
bounding and booming ahead?
There .an be but one answer,
and every intelligent citizen
knows -what that is. Capital
ists should come this way and
look around and view the situa
tion. It is most; excellent for
situation. It is but a few miles
by water from the ocean and
the summer resorts. Good in
vestments might be made here.
Tnere, ought to be here now one
or more large furniture facto
rii. There ought to bea half
hundred establishments here
that are not here, Whyshould
there not be a shoe- ancL boot
manufactory, and so on ?
Every plough, every vehicle,
every bit of furniture, every
harness and saddle, every farm
ing instrument should be made
in North Carolina. Let all
unite in the good work. Pull
together and not against each
other. Talk up 'A ashingtcn !
The Republican State Ticket.
Democrats will view from dif-
fereat standpoints the probable
eTect of Judge RusselPs nomina
tion for Governor by the Ilepub
lican. There are thoe who will
maintain that his nomination is
the beat thing that could have
happened for the Democrats;
that .he is weaker than either
Dockery or Boyd would have
been ; that many negroes will re
fuse to support him on account
of the many mean things he has
said about their race, And that
many white Republicans will re
fuse for various reasons to fol
low his lead in short, that he
cannot begin to poll the full
strength of lus pai ty ; and fur-
ther, that his vii-d"ctivtuess and
bitterness will inflame, consoli
date and harmonize the Demo
crats as nothing else would1 have
done it. This opinion, toav it may
be said, is shared by $ojt)& Re
publicans. We devoutly hop- that this
view of the case is, the correct one
but to be entirely, candid we must
say that we do. not believe it is.
The Messen.gek can but regret
Judge Russell's nomination. We
had hoped; that either Dockery
!or Boyd would win. They may
be stronger with their party, but
considering the possibility of the
election of a Republican Govern
or :and such a possibility must
be considered God knows we
prefer the reign of either of them
to that of Russell.
We believe Judge Russell is
the meanest man in the State.
It is no new opinion with us; we
do not say this now simply be
cause he has been nominated,
but we have thought so for vears.
II a is vicious, vindictive and
malignant. If hois elected Gov
ernor it wi?l bo lis chief joy to
use all the power he can employ
to humiliate and degrade th le
spectable and intelligent people
of the State and to elevate and
exalt the vicious, the ignorant
aDd corropr. Totally unscru
pulous and filleit with Jbitter
hatied of 1enioeratP. all the
malice and venoi that h:is filled
his soul duriog p-H thet' ye.-rs of
Democratic cvmtroi i "Nonli
Carolina will ba roj'ieI "Hit cn
hia j political enemies, if ho "it
elected,, iifi will be well-nigh in-toio-ruo-lo
in North Carol? na 1 or
some of us. These nrethe tlnr ;s
that niako us say that y.e regret
li is nomtr.ation.
"iittt ho must. nor. ha fleered.
Tbs is die thing lor jvet l)en:-
Ovrryt every mo n who leves his
State to say. and having saiil it,
se'; tliat tho wo-d- come true.
But we want ;o ware those Dem
ocrats wli believe that , Uassell
is 11 weak candidal a. id will be
easily beaten, agiiit over-conli-deuce.
H is being ennied now
by f-omo of his party, but before
the harvest is past a)'d th' sum
mer is ended those who rail at
him now wilt have rallied to his
standard almost as . one man.
They -annot do otherwise and
they will not do otherwise. A
few here and there will refuse to
vote for him -but they will count
as nothing compared with the
hosi that will inarjh under his
banner.
Just why tlje Republicans
namevl lam for so responsible a
position is unexpla5nable except
on the theory the Republican
pvvrty in North Carolina is un
worthy to be trusted with the
'Stte government which is true.
Ex-Chairman Smith's Views.
; Ex-Chairman of the State Dem
ocratic Executive Committee Ed.
Chambers Smith, on being asked
the question, "What course do
you think th- Democratic State
convention should pursuo as to
nominations?" said :.
"It. is certainly the wi-e -ourse
it seem? to me, for. the State con
vention to e'ect delegates- to the
national conv.ert.tion and a State
comnsittf ., a. an then adjourn
until aftet, the national cjnven
tion. We in.She present state of
afairs ahouhiQ'it make a platform
end nomjjiiiit? a, ticket, inciudi.-ii;
electors v ho are State officers,,
until ater we know what the
national platform is; otherwise
we rgjght b' nlaced in the posi
tion, of nominating (State) elec-t-3
on a platform antagonistic to
the national ilmform, and this
nvht- b3 a little awkward. If
we adjouri;, as i nuicf-tf d' i. i ove
we have the wholn .'-ituation
fore us when we write a platform
and nominate candidates, smd
can act in melt a way. as wil1 ieT
Jdound to tho advantage of the
Democratic party and the Stte,
and this all patriotic citizens
wish to do." .
When. Women Vote.
An exchaue discourses as
follows on what will happen I;
when women vote :
Itockaby, baby, 3-our mauaaa-
is gone ; she is out tc a cascus
and vill be 'till dawn ; slss has
worn., papa's trousers and in
them looks queer ; so hushaby
baby, y our papa is her:
Rockaby, baby, your mam
ma's a terror ; .she ha& run three
conventions, declared for their
fellows ; she's great on a strad
dle, "way up" on a vote: so
hushaby, baby, 3 our papa's a
"gots."
Rockaby,. baby, the dishes
are clean ; papa's done scrub
bing and put. on the beans ;
your mamma is late, she seems
always to lag, but heaven help
papa if she coiries with "a jag."
Rockaby, baby, I'm glad you
cant talk, for papa got lone-
fsocae and went out for a walk ;
be was met by a widow, a regu
lar dream, and your papa's a
dandy but not of the scream.
So hushaby, baby, for flirt
ing's not sin ; your daddy was
tempted she tickled his chin ;
she was so plump, so pretty, so
trim ; so hushaby, baby, your
dad's in the swim.
A Distrusted Northerner.
The Fayet'.evilles Observer
says :
A Northern raan and a Repub
lican, a Mr. Baker, ot Fall River,
Mass., arrived ia the -cifv last
niht with his eyes opened'. Mr.
Baker was sitting in front of the
LaFayette Hotel listening to a
number of centtemen dlscnssing
politics. He suJdenly arose from
his seat and said: "Gentlemen,
you are all strangers to me, but
if you will allow it, I want to
unburden my mind of an humble
thought. 1 was bom and rean d
in Massachpsetts, Ihe hot lcd of j
abolition, and b ive " been taught
to believe.all i.iy life tbat the
Rupublicans and negroe3 were
bafcly treated by the Democrats
of ths South; in fact that they
were still little better than
slaves. Last Friday I stopped in
a Southern city, the ciiy of Ral
eigh, for the first, lima in my life.
I heard rhr. Uer was .1 Repub
lican rat C'nvt iitinn in session
and I went,' rhargt-d with sympa
thy ior the oppressed Republi
cans, f t rood and gazed at that
liowiiug. ftetl.ing, cursiag
mob,
ai:d 1 u ' a few moments was suf
ficient f' convinco -me that if
t hi- w "R-pubiK-anism in'' the
ouil. then God deliver her from
it. L" J am a Southern Dem
on: at i:i he.irr. wild soinM'f not
by rcv.cine
Nas3, Oats and Fodder.
Tuo Republican nomine j for
Go.er.ior. Danitl L. Russell,
merits the indignation andpsu
prem contempt of every white
man in North Carolina. Before
hi 1 oniinali'Mi heaouiessed a
er.,wd of negroes in Raleigh,
ile said with many other things:
"If I ran elected Governor I
p:mi-o you vhat the nags who
pH me there halI have aii the
atj and fodder there to give."
Think, whilt men, c!: such lan
ruage from a man aspiring to the
Execuriv ' ffice or. our grand old
Jt.ite. Did tho -'savuge'' Rus
ell i:ican vh it he said ? If he
lid .ofr, then he n n hypocrite of
in jneanest and darkest grade,
and jo hypocrite should be made
Governor r th; State. If he
did mear whnt he said and the
IViESSBxanR a.-j no right to doubt
,ii-, then he ritmds to degrade
h; State. Th- "nags" are n
ol :.er name or hi:-. "sav-3gV
and means the negroes. He roes
not propo?- to give soma oats
and fodder t bis "nags,"' hut he
promises to giv all not even
mui handful of oats or bls.de of 1
folder to b'j'jri vejt tr nior. The
Y'ielcerl ''savage'' will make one
i
the "nag-" hi" private secn-tary ;
should Hit' re b t a vacancy on the
Supreno Court or .Superior Court
the place will be tendered one of
the" "nags should "thr re be a
vacancy in tl Ilnited. States
joaiii'ue. cauPoil ly tiie o-:itn ol
t.-re or fllh oi the present Sena
tors, then mi of the u.iag:' will
bd appointed In fact, all the
appointments f the Chitf Exec
utive -will b gvveri to the 'r,ags."
Ivlark his w rds, avl the oats and
fodder wj'iI I-3 given his "?av-
!gi-s' t.ioderdiz . th.e term,
'tis" iua:"' who elected .him
t ! fli. niii ' office' of Governor.
Tlsis ajt j ir.n iisk? tl;e wh'tc
I'op'alists re j'itso with his hnn
g' horde t assi're his tdection.
AV 01 our 10011 lists swallow the
j fi te and suppo; t such a revenge-
ii ! t Harriet r; lie wants to pun
tin 3 democrats and .treks the
ftrri ;e of t j:vei aor to umtifv his
f-desiro. u'oall ltnse!l extend,
i ciPiii
I
ctern ;ne . 1 7 j. ceded to a
white
Vii'ld lie be i.npartial in
:-M the d'llies of" the' office?
No,
Mich a man ha 3 too muuh of the
i--irit cf the hi serpent to deal
; tstly and fiirJy with those of an
opposite political fai'h. lie pio
poses to reward the '"nags" re--irdless
of cohisequeuces yes, if
every man, woman and child in
the State rrle disgraced. Re
member his words whito men
froio now until ihe day of -Iec-tion
and w uar. ycu go to the polls
kill old ':na"' and all ti e "'sav
age"' "nags" with your paper
ballots. iSuch "nags" joung or
old should not be allowed to oc
cupy responsible places in the I
old North State.
Harrlty's Bold Scheme.
Although it is about eonceeded
on all sides t hat thosilver Demo
crats will control tho Chicago
Convention, yet Mr. Jlairity the
National 1 K mocratic chairman
bays t'e couvontion will be coa
xroled by gold men, that his com
mittee will i meet pi ior to the
convention to make up its roll
and unless the gold sentiment
prevails he 'will place sufiicient
delegates on the roil to make a.
majority.' This is a bold
stateuifnt and s.oes to show to
what extremi-R the honest mon
ey (?) men are determined to go
to. carry their end. If Mr.'Har
rity ier&istH in executing this
bold i-chemo j he will t-ound the
death knell of the Democratic
party. . No p&rty can surive the
will of tho majority being fitilled
by the sharp : tactics of the mi
nority. The silver wing of the
Democratic party contend hat
the two metals prior t' 1873were
on an equal basis and the gold
standard is a letter day innova
tion, tbsl j-? foreign in all the
3
tenantR taught sby the t founder
of tha party. Under this basis
the prosperity of the country was
one continued march of wealth
and improvement. The cry of
distress was unheard of in the
land, prosperity waa confined to
the high and low alike and the
bloated millionaire of mushroon
growth was hardly known. Eut
how is it today now, that wo ?-e
livii" under (lie T;rd standard
that Mr. Harriiy and his friends
would go to such extremes to
keep saddled 01 the country?
Business failures are occu-ring
all over the land. Tactories in
gold standard New England aie
beinst shut down, or running on
short time, 1 he cry of abundant
harvest is heard, but no money
to pav taxes or purchase supplies
outside of the home, in faci; our
history ha. not recorded such
universal depression and ha.
tines. The question naturally
arises and it is one that-, every
voter in the land should ponder,
if we are now having alP this
financial distress and we. are liy
insr under the honest money
policy today, what, encourage
ment have we that the future
has any better in sto-e for us as
lonr as it continues. If tho con
tinuance of the gold standard is
the panacear of our futureosper
pcrity, why ire we not pr pros;
ous today? If 'honest money is
the cure all wliy are the learners
leaving New York l-'den with
our gold, -and we havinsrro resort
to repeated isue of bond3 to keep
up the Nation's credif ? If Mr.
Ilarrity will answer these question-,
to the satisfaction of the
silver -delegates5 io Chicago then
perhaps they may submii to a
little of his bulldozimr. but until
this is done he had better move
a little cautious. If the silver
delegates are in tho majority,
which present indications indi
cate, they will control the con
ention. The gentleman might
" Something to
The largest piece .of tgbod
rooacco ever soia pr 10 cents
-r, - .and
The 5 cent piece is nearly as?
arge as you et of other
high grades for 10 cents
171 s-v " ,
v mental Fund United.
Our people can advacce thoj Vance Monumental fuaJ
using Jree Coinage Soap, 16-1, and Free Coinage Baking nan:
ing Fowders 16-1. On everv box of these goods sold, will be giv-
VIANCE jVIONUMENTAL I- UND.
Correspondence solicited at .Washington, N. C. 1 confidently
expect the co-operation of the ladies. There are 9C counties in
tho State, at$S0. a county would orive the monument the hand
?,rm sm ?f so- These goods
. 1. uumuij.iu. j. vvrignt,l.
H. BUSMAN'S
I
We don't care il yon are a "ii'old bu"
or a "silver bii2v von've heard a silver
dollar is vroitli but
ffivery 011 more 'oods
lar than any other house in the State.
We can make your home comfortable
with all kinds of Furniture and House
Furnishings,: at the lowest prices.
As we are agents for the southern
lurniture trade, we always lookout ior
bargains and divide with our custo
mers. All our goods go now for 80
cents on the dollar we need room.
rb , V H- SUSIVIAIM,
Cheapest and Best House in North Carolina.
learn a little profitable experi
ence from the history of the last
Republican Convention in this
State when Chairman Holten
tried to fix the. slato to meet his
ends but the convention rubbed
out the names aud done its own
slate making. If the majority
of the Chicago corirention are
for silver they will nominate a
silver candidate for President
whether it suits Cbairman Har-
rity or not.
People find just tho help they bo much
need, in Hood's Sarsaparilla. It fur
nishes tho desired strength by puri
fying, '-vitalizing- and em-icbing tho
blood, and thus builds up the nerves,
tones the stomach and regulates the
whole system. Head this: j
"I want to praise Hood's Sarsaparilla.
My health ran down, and I had tho grip.
After that, my heart and nervous Bystem
were badly affected, bo that I could not do
my own work. Our physician gave me
some help, but did not cure. I
to try Hood's Sarsaparilla. Soonlc
do aU my own nousewui.. .
Hood's Pills with Hood's Sarsaparilla,
fcn-.r Tifrra done me much good. I
will not be without them. I have taken 13
knf fioanf Hood's Sarsaparilla.and through
the 'blessing of God, it has cured mo;
t nrnrfced as hard as ever the past sum
mer, and I am thankful to say I am
well. Ilood'a Pills when taken with
Hood's Sarsaparilla help very, much."
Mbs. M. M. Messejtqkk, Freehold, Penn.
This and many other cures prove that
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. tt
Prepared only by C. L Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.
act easily, promptly and
rlOOd S KIUS effectively, iscenis.
Crow About
,
are for sale bv E. Peterson, !
J. Stilly and Fenner Phillips
J. M. GRAY. -
L
GO cents. We will
for the silver dol
gotagt-school
rr the children cro to school? AvA
and happy? Is school-life a pleasure? .
being made ? Or is the opposite true ? ',
each day bring a headache ? There is iv, ,
is imperfect. The color gradually k,-,.
only a little effort is followed by cxk,-.
school means to come to the end of ll
health. What is the best thing to do ? 1 ,
ScotlS emu 1
of Cod-liver Oil, with hypopho.spk
nourishes the body and makes red
The hypopliosphites are tonics to th- i:
m-nta? activity during the day cud rd:
Don't let you child get thin and v.-ov -
Emulsion; insist on a generous a:::
cud the vigor of youth will ret;n i:.
4 V- m
Establis ed (390.
7
T. Fi Park.
Commission. .Morelianls, .
fc Shippers. Eecoivors r,' :
orn Fruits nnd r :
1314 E. C'.ry St , III
Correspondence .solicited. AU cr.'m
prompt attention- We cn tfinii -h any Kn.-i " ;
Please mention thii paper.
rM3w Iron-clad )Liv
cry, Feed & Exch;.
STABLES
Has no equal in safety and convenient-, l! :
pess street opposite the stand be form, i i
mammoth and well constructed Ki'abh' mid i i
Hent. It has an iron roof and kMcs nroiin-l
A man on hand day and nisnt ard the v-iy I.
to horses stopped "with mc by tl-e (lay or m
the livery lino can be furnished satisfactory '
I
I'
C H. Hill, - Rropric
Respess Street, Washington. :.. i'
Prizes to be CIveiiAway.
!,Tbe fprb ' -be s of T! e IIipv
Ilorae u ,'' an e'eg:tt fin
toned V , -j ! .-'no, valurl at
3j0 00. atso fret-Jo Jhf 1 er
pdn Bending ii?'n tae "a'get 'ijt ol
words c iislruo f 013 ihe letters
conbvi'ed i'l be tiauia of the r well
kuown pi'b'ici'Oti .
"THE HAPPY HOME."
Additional 'es?nt3 cons;sltnji of
Bicycle, Goh- Watches, t'ilver
Watchee, Sewirg Machine", Music
Boxes JSiitc 1)' esses, China 1) nrer
Sets, and man" valuable and jusp
ful articles, w'1' a'so he awa:dtd
in order of n-e ': acd every pc-scn
fendiog not h'-s than len words
vrll receive a v ecnt -.f value.
Uie either paira' o- fii.r'?r ho-da
hut-not bo:L', ari rse no 'e er
lu the eaire wo J roo trr?s ttiaa
it ai peas i 1 tbe .
T U E iiAL'PV HOME."
Thisisa pooo'a man ofjpLrc
dccvig j.i o r.ew hoa:eJ this pop
ular pub :hatT0.i, wh' n bus ;:i its
three years ex'stoce received a
happy welcome in niary thoiHunds
of homee.
As the objest in gjvaig awuy
these valuable present" is to adver
ti;e and attract attfntio i to THE
UAl'PY HOME, which is n hand
somely illustrated mcni'.Iy publi
cation devoted to Literiture,
Fashior, Stories nud Art, eveiy liet
of words must b cc -jmr-unied
with three two-cent stamps (,ix
cents) for a Irial ' topr of this fav
orite home journal contain rig full
particnlirs list of ,p ei?eitP, and
rulea regarding conteHt You may
receeve 9 valuable award for jour
trouble. Addies THE HAPPY
HOME. SCO Dearborn St , Chlensjo,
III,
t Co.
IL
Sailing between Baltimore and
Norfolk, touching at Old Point Com
fort via Chesapeake Da? and I tie his
torical Hampton Roads.
An Inland Sea Route, tbroueh
warm boutuern watis. Tiis. tnaK-
bifacent eamers "Alabama", "Vir
ginia", "Seaboard" and "Caston"
leave datly except Sundavs, at 6 30
l'. M. Iioni above ones, anivmz a;
destina:ioa at 7 3 a.-
The Materoom are large and
coinnipdioug, and have 1 lectiic light
1 he cuis.r.e is uiequalied in America.
JOHN R. SURKwnOD,
(Veueral Manager.
E-W. 'i HOMl'SON,
Traflic Manaffcr
HOOD'S PIDLS are furelv vrcvtable.
C.
perfectly hortaleRS. tlwavi reliable
tA beneficial.
E
OLD - REUAI
A - TRIAL
MINT M ;
How to Cute V'i
Th1 to' u li ) h i'..t
until bis ncrv'.i
affebtod. :
and happsnc--, I " i -too
set i f :i li"" '; ''
j toba--co t o ;i n i 'i . ' ' 1 '
a tit iiuulu.'t t 1m i li - -icravfu.
"l 'i "'
cure for tin- lo:: . i
forma, cm fully i
foni'ut i of an n ' '
cia.i who lian "
practice mice i -; it
It is purely v.-" t . '
pcii'tcfly hatinlt - '
ttie tobacco y-u " 1 '
'Haco-l'uro " I 1
when to M"p. We )
atitoe to cure 1 ' 1 '
with .hree 1 :
w!.h i p r v .i.t .
Cuo" is uoi a m:"'
tificcure, that 1 u
oi will powe r ii't v.
tenrc. It leave- 1 1 . -and
free from i.i "'i
look 3-our i 1 t iln a ' 1
Cured by
r.;;r.-
Tlnlv I'
f-utti hiniorc 1- ' ! '
origina?s of whic li a
to inspection . th f
ted.
Day ton, rc a la 1
1895 i;nrek.i C lit hu
La Crosse, Wm 1
fortv vtars I usril I' '
forin.. For twenty 1
time I was :i rtat 1 1.
al dtbility and li it
fifteen year 1 In' 1
couldn't, I took
among others '' N
Indian Tocacco A '
Chloride of GuM," :
of them did 111" th.'
I'inatly, bowrvei . I
lour "llaco-Curo"
Cund ire ot the In'"'
and i have mcrca- '
weight and nm i'
numerous ch'-s .n. I
u mind, I 1 on I '
per upo-i 111 y t li 1 -coiidiltaii,
"v ovis t esp'. c In! . 1 .
I a-itnr , I", 1 ) " 1
Sol.l by a l 1 1, 1
box. three b 1x0 n
me nt f 2. 5.) r b 1 "
Kuat antee or . p 1 1 ; ' ' 1
of price, Wi lie I it ' 1
Uureka ClitKal
Crosse, VVU, aii t '
" , - 4ASl'I'.i'.I 1
I have be'ii . 1 1
abjut two years v 'i
tiin of 1! s ' '
trctsing disc3-e 1 "
to do my Ii'j.imi
t Jiise pain i it in '
been using II'1 '
bow my appi i ii'- 1
-tomache has been
S. A. Abjxandey, 1 ' '
Ilocd'
egti'j.i.
P. 11, On. I