.-L- 0 ADVERTISING I? TO BUSINESS -WHAT STEAM LS TO- Maohinery, IbrOI GU ARE A HUSTLER IVKKTIi: Business. Democrat. A THTTK -o- TlfAT fiRKAT Pnor'KI.UNO POWF.K. Write up a nice advertisement about bu-ine and in-ert it in THE DEMOCRAT, ,n,l nll ''-''0 .1 change in business all M'llUll'l." PKOFESSIONAL. D u. w. o. Mcdowell, ();!i e North comer New Hotel, Main Street. Scotland Nl'K, X. C. Always at his office when not nioft-.-ionallv engaged el.-ewhere. 1 o i 20 ly D II. FRANK WHITEHEAD, Oilice North corner New Hotel, Main Street, Scotland Xkck, X. C. jfi"Alvvays found at his office when nt professionally engaged elsewhere. 7 0 lv D R. A. C. LTYEKMOX, mi mmmviuw ()i i ick Over J. D. Kay's store. Office hours from U to 1 o'clock ; 2 to o'clock, p. m. 2 12 ly SCOTLAND NECK, X. C. D K. J. H. DAM EL, -Drxx, X. C. Makes the disease of cancer a Specialty. ) 10 ly p.VVID DELL, Attorney at Law, EXFIELD, X. C. Practices in all the Courts of Hali fax and adjoining comities and in the Supreme and Federal Courts. Claims collected in all parts of the State. 3 S lv DFXX, A T T 0 li X K Y-A T-L A W. Scotland Xkck, X. C Practices wherever his services are icjiiiiel. 2 lo ly w, II. KITCHIX, Attorney and Counselor at Law, SCOTLAND Nkck, X. C. "Oiilce: Corner Main and Elev enth Streets. 1 f ly I. J. Mercer & son., ;2G East Main Street., RICHMOND VA. LUMBER COMMISSION MERCHANTS. (lives personal and prompt attention to all consignments of Lumber, Shin gles. Laths &c. 4 17 90 ly NEW eweiry Store After six years experience, I feel thor oughly competent to do all work that is expected of a WATCHMAKER and JEWELER. WATCH MAKE it and JEWELER. Ktkp:iiri:i & Timing Tine Watches A SPECIALTY. 1 also carry a full line of WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, M I'SICAL INSTRUMENTS AND FANCY G OODS. Xl Spectacles and Hi Eye Glasses Properly Z Eitted to the Eye. l h hM Sewing Mains THE REST OX EARTH. SEWING MACHINES CLEANED AND REPAIRED. SATISFACTION" Gl'A KAXTEKD. IP. Jf. JOHXSTOX, X .rt ,-,- y . j0xp,j. 10 0 Om J, H. LAWRENCE, Dealer in (ih'AIN, MILL FEED, HAY, CLO VER AND GRASS SEEDS. Improved Farm Im plements A SJ'EfTAIrV. Ajjcnt for Clark's Cutaway Harrow and the Doering Mower, A Model of Perfection. SCOTLAND LECK, N. C. 1 6 ly E. E. HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. IX. GREAT COLD FIELDS. SOME FIGURES THAT ABE A REVELATION. Two Hundred Miles cf Measured Vein Matter in One Township. AN INTERESTING ARTICLE BY A MINING ENGINEER. North Carolina "Takes The Cake. Charlotte Xcvx. In Sunday' Richmond Dispatch, Mr. J. J. Newman, a mining engineer, of Salisbury, writes : In your paper of the 4th instant you have an editorial headed "G ld in Abundance," in which you comii.ent on a gold field, the Wit waterstand of South Africa, with a cir cumference of 100 miles, and an area of 12,580 square miles. This deposit of eight blanket beds, 0 feet thick, 2,500 feet deep, you say contains 10,500,000 tons of ore, worth $7.50 per ton, and would be worth altogether $79,000,000, 000, etc. Now, you are wrong, 10,500,000 tons of ore at $7.50 per ton is $78,750,000, and if that was the worth in coin of each of the eight beds, the area would be worth only $0:50,000,000. Rut this is not what I started out to write. This country here also has a gold field worthy of comparison with that of the Witwaterstand. Take the ten counties of Nortli Caro lina in this gold-bearing belt alone, viz, (see map) Guilford, Randolph, Moore, Davidson, Stanly, Montgomery, Row an, Cabarrus, Union, and Mecklenburg, with an area of about one hundred miles long by about forty wide say 4,000 square miles, or less than one third of the Witwaterstand, and this is the richer of the two. Let us see about this, in comparison with your corrected figures. There are not fewer than twenty-five veins in each county, with a run ot twenty-five miles on an average of each, making 025 miles per count', or 0,250 miles for the ten counties, with 5,280 feet per mile, and an average thickness of three feet. Two thousand five hundred feet of depth, estimating 15 cupic feet per ton, will make 10,500,000,000 tons, which at $7.50 per ton, will equal $123,-750,000.0"-), which shows that this section is uch richer than the Wit waterstand field, though this field, has but one third the area of that in Africa. Now add twenty more counties in North Carolina in which gold is found, and this would make about the same area as that of Witwatersrand. Esti mating these twenty counties at half rate value in gold per county as the 10 already named, and we have North Car olina's possible gold product $247,500, 000,000, or $240,870,000,000 more than the corrected figures show the Witwa tersrand to be. Some inexperienced people will say tiiat this is fallacious; will say that it is wildcat reasoning, and a waste of time, energy and even patience to con sider it. But let us go a little further into the facts. To begin with, the best evidence of the resources and value of this State is shown in the fact that North Carolina's mineral exhibit has taken the premium over all the States in the Union at the World's Columbian Exposition. To show the extent of vain matter known to exist here, Morgan township, Rowan county, is about ten miles square. There are 200 miles of meas ured vein matter, carrying gold, silver, and copper in that one township. Some of the veins are eighteen feet thick, and worth $30 in gold per ton. The Big Sulphur vein in the Ran dolph shaft, at Gold Hill, at the depth of 850 feet, is fourteen feet thick and carries about $15 in gold per ton. There is one vein in this county that has been traced for several miles, and it is from thirty to sixty wide. It is worth about $7.50 per ton in gold, and about 10 per cent, in copper. At a depth of 110 feet it has native copper, is thirty feet wide, and worth $7.50 per ton in gold. There are hundreds of shafts and vein matter in the ten counties, show ing that the veins are true fissure ones, SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, and that they widen in depth and do not "eter out." This and much more can be aid of the gold veins. The same area con tains copper veins that earn,- enough ore to supply the world for centuries, and if projierly worked, would make the "Lake copper mines" dwindle into insignificance. Davidson, Rowan, Ca barrus, and Union counties have long lines of silver, lead, and zinc veins, some of which are worked to a depth o'f over 700 feet, and in one shaft in this county native silver is found at a depth of 110 feet in an eight-foot vein. One gold vein ha.s been worked 130 feet wide as an open cut, and is worth about $7.50 per ton. Many others, from three to sixty feet wide, have been worked below the water level, and found to have pay ore in them. So it is readily seen that the reasonings alone are not wildcat and fallacious. There are over 100 mines in this county alone ; yet every one is idle. Why? is the very natural question. Not that there is no vein matter here ; not that the veins do not carry enough ore ; not that the ore is not rich enough to be worked ; but that the ores are re fractory sulphide ores, from which the gold cannot be saved as by products, and at a profit, and less at a profit. Millions of dollars are lost thus ; but there is no reason why it should be so. The ores can be mined at as little cost as anv others in the world. The aver age ore is as good a any elsewhere, but it is refractory. Listen, then. What is now dormant, unprofitable, and lost can be made the most profitable, and this country rendered the richest in the world. Erect proper reduction works, and treat the ores for what they contain. An ore is not worth what it contains, but what one gets out of it. First, work the ores for the sulphur in them, and render this profitable for sulphuric acid, and agricultural fertilizers. Then the gold, silver, copper,, lead, and zinc they contain will be rendered free, and can be saved as by products, and at a profit, and without going to Africa or anywhere else. This can be made the El Dorado of modern times, and with the precious metals extracted at a prof it, forever settle the monometallic and bimetallic financial question. We have the richat country in the world, if we only take advantage of op portunities. After the Ball. Monroe Knqnirff. Monday night there was a ball in a building near Hnrgett's Stables and, M usual, the ball ended in a brawl. About midnight the peace of all those living in the neighborhood of the ball room was broken bv veils, screams, cries of murder, pistol shots, and other sounds connected with a midnight brawl. Men and women were all en gaged in a general row, the cause of which no one seemed to know. There was no clam age done exoept a few scratches and bruises. For a while it looked as if some one would be hurt seriously ior one fellow was down and both sides were fighting over, him and he received the blows of both friends and enemies. As soon as possible the row was broken up, the ball was over, and several of those who had partici pated in the ball and brawl were in durance vile. The Billville Banner. Atlanta Constitution. The recent cyclone caught us on the road, half-way between Chicago and Billville, and we had free transportation the rest of the way. We learn that the president makes a daily prayer. This bears out our state ment, made three weeks before the election, that a politician can get relig ion. We regret that we can't name any more children after Mr. Cleveland. All the young ones born in this section are boys and he ain't on that line. We ain't heard anything about the tariff, since they took down the demo cratic platform. All lynching is wrong, and ought to be stopped. Rope comes high, while wood is powerful cheap. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SAM JOITSS' 1TSIGH30ES. Eztracts From One cf His Ec:ent Scrams at CartersviUe. Concord Tinti. Absolutely, my nek'hlor- have got so they will lie in order to get grub, and after they get grub, will tell a thousand lies to keep from paying for it ain't it a fact? I would like to see - the proposition made understand. I say I do not make the proposition for every fellow in this audience that is in debt and ain't told any lies about it to stand up. If one of you stood up. I would feel like knocking you down for telling another. Manhood gone ; destroyed yourself. You have absolutely sunk yourself to-day where you can no more live and hold up your head and be a man than you can pick up a world and fly with it you know it. You women have entered into it just as much as the men. A woman that knows her husband is in debt and goes and buys something that she can do without is as much a criminal a.s her husband, and more too, for there is many a man that would have been out of debt but for his wife trying to pjay fashionablc, and trying to get in soci ety with some other kind in the town. It is a fact. You can no more keep up with the society gang of a town anil be honest than you can be drunk and be sober. Speaking about this society gang of course I have no reference to Carters viUe in the world, you haven't got it here, the thing has fallen through ab solutely, a fellow trying to keep up with tbft gang will surrender his man hood and lie down under a pair of pat ent leather shoes. That is the end of the whole business. I say nothing about the girls. I have never said anything about the girls. All you can do is to put a dough face oii her and make her look as re spectable as possible. A woman who will carry her hus band farther in nebt and know that her husband is already in debt, that woman is an enemy to her husband, and she destroys her home in the no blest sense of the word. Ask one of you women for a dollar for the cause ol God : "I ain't just got it." But if you want a ten dollar hat or a twenty dolllar hat or a twenty dollar dress, God bless you, you always get that. But if it is for the cause of Gdu, you ain't in it all. Get after you about it you say, "Why, my husband pays Tor me." And the old sting' dev il don't pay for himself. Electric Bitters. This remedy is becoming so well known and so popular as to need no special mention. All who haved Elec tric Bitters sing the same song of praisfc.- purer medicine does not ex'?t and it is guaranteed to do all that is claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all diseases of the Liver and Kidneys, will remove Pimples, Boils- Salt Rheum and other aflections caused by impure blood. Will drive Malaria from the system and pi-event as cure all Malarial fevers. For cure of Headache, Con stipation and Indigestion try Electric. Bitters Entire satisfaction guaranteed, or money refunded. Price 50c ts, and $1.00 per bottle at E. T. Whitehead it Go's Drugstore. He Breve it Heme, Wchstrrs Weekly. Senator Bate, of Tennessee drove the thing home when herefen-ed to the bold and defiant stand taken by Carlisle and Yoorhees for free coinage in the years gone by and said he could not unlearn their teachings of twenty years in an extra session of Congress called to re lieve an artificial panic. Senator Har ris, of the same State, put Yoorhees in a hole by quoting him to the effect that he could not vote for the repeal of the Sherman law last winter leeause it was a blow at siKcr. Yoorhees can not answer himself his words are down in cold type. Old Papers ! Old Papers ! ! At this Office by the hundred. NOVEMBER, 2, 1893. 2AT7ses c?.::zts. Clinton JtsHU'crnt: Seven I were b!ovnd"un in the crrme at P.h- an church, three miles -uth of hcrv. by the late -t or m. A pine tn-efel! acrt the .M-hH,l hou in tho church van! and mr.shed it n!mot t th ground. , Graham ClUanr: Burlington had' a mad dog scare Monday. A litt'e t-on of Henrv Willi- was bitten A n.:id- i stone was procured and applied. Sev eral dogs were bitten and the rabid cur and thoe bitten were di.-patched. Kin'ton Frrf I'l'?: Mr. W. V. Stanly's gin house and four bales of cotton, four or five miles from Kin-ton were burned ln-t Friday afternoon. The fire originated in the lint room, catching, it is thought, from a match In the seed cotton. Los- about no instirnce. One of the bales of cot ton Irf-longed to a colored man. and it is said he cried over his . Raleigh Xorth Carolinian: Eight drunken white men, armed with pis tols, took pos-ession of two passenger cars on a freight train for an hour and a half at the Johnson Street station of i the Raleigh k Gaston railwav. Thcv drovo the passengers out of the cars. The police were finally sent for, and when they came the roughs lied. They were from Vance and Franklin coun ties. Tarboro Southerner: The yellow fever scare at Williamston is all a hoax, there is nothing in it as the Greenville Jiejlector says : Our neigh bor town, Washington, was very much excited over a report that reached there last Thursday, that a refugee from Brunswick, Ga., had died at Wil liamston of yellow fever. Dr. Tayloe, Superintendent of Health, of Beaufort county telegraphed to Dr. Harrell, at Williamston, in reference to the m" ?!;? , and receieved (tie reply that the;, v. a no yellow fever in Wililamstoii. Wilmington Mrxsenijer: A liver colored dog bit ami terribly lacerated a son of Mr: C. TL Alexander on Mid dle Sound last Tuesday. The little boy was bitten severely in several places and received a large ga.-h in his head. Mr. Alexander Aas in the city yesterday after a doctor. The dog was a white one with livr colored snots and had a badge on with the in itials "C. W." on it. In attempting to rescue his child Mr. Alexander was also badly bitten. Wilson Advance: A man named 3leLeod, being quite drunk, walked off the rear platform of a Carolina Centra! train near Lincoln, moving at the rate of 30 miles an hour. He struck in the middle of the track and lay perfectly still. As soon as the conductor was notified he stopped the train and then had it slowly back ed until they reached McIx-hmI. The night was dark and the rear trucKs passed over the man before it could he stopped. Now instead of being thank ful that he was not killed by the fail he has entered suit against the railroad company for backing a car over him, and thereby endangering his life. We learn of a terribie and ahno-t fatal mishap that hapiencd to Mr. S. J. Finch and two boys, who live about thre miles from Lexington, who are in Chicago. On retiring, one of the young boys, probably unthoughtedly or ignorantly, blew out the gas. They retire onrl lifter ui lonf n timp i i .a ;.a ;.nible Nothinir like it. Trv it. oecomii;; aiiiii ii-jhi iakuci .. mi gas, they screamed for help. The landlord heard their cries, ran to their room and knocked down their door. (That is the way we hear it). He found them lving on the floor, insensible, but succeeded in getting them out, when they soon recovered conscious ness. It vvas a narrow esca;e and if thev had been left much longer thev all might have ieri-.hed before could have reached them, so say.-, the Lexington Dispatch. 8 SS fi f. Hjct-- rl'tui - eJe 'J k MDr.KLlNE'SGRKA NERVE RESTORER imr fo Jfervt Affrc-ions. Fit, t.yiLrytv. . fllrAi.oi r. it tek. a as tirmV j Fa. qttr first dw nv. Tretie -' trfl bou! frtt s ! 5'Fit Ptie-JU, r pau.p eiprfM cWjn o bo when bt brMK1 &h WASH OrjMHATl Q fKAlUS. SUBSCRIPTION PRICK Si o. NO. 49. I T! pro w a- a hiuiuird up nrth a:, i ' the New Knpliinler m hurry !.. Mint! the n- at harltt.n au -' ; VAIinaJ; an th .i !!:;;. t.r an! p:.-k ::x'-r- in KS.rsd.i- j " ! ftudu! th- Rtti.! -.k- t:!l i i I'm Mind." ho Kiid 'I ih i-iv.o !.! ' traveller would tell n.e m a d h.w to S. uth e i- .'" .eM iaM . . . t . s 'I've ln there a tliou.-and time-." I Wei!, how ?" Why,ju-t throw tli.it guide l.kj iwav. There i-n't. and never bu-! i been, nor ever w ill U. but one great j I straight ou-t line to Florida, lUvann.i. New Oilcan. Galve-ton and Mexico." "What's that "Why. the Atlantic Co a-! Line.' Now you ju.-t go into any ticket ofHce i in New York or B-ton wnd ak for i that coast line ticket. Then pin to xotir coat collar. Jump onto the i,ennlva nia road ana you'll 1k in St. Augu-tine picking oranges or at Tampa. Florida, walking onto a Havanna steamer in twenty-four hours. "What will 1 mv on the wa ?" "Why you'll slide through Wa-hing-ton and se Arlington Height-. Alex andria, Fredericksburg, where Hooker and Rurn.-idc tried to cross the Rappa hannock. You'll glide through Kii h niond, see Peter-burg and the Wilder ness fortifications. You'll hi Gold boi) and bo within a few mile of Aj pamatox and then drop down to Wil mington on the ocean. On you'll go sniffing the ocean breezes all the wax to Charleston with its palmettocs, and Savannah with its leautiful live oaks and hanging moss. You are in the tropic from Wilmington down to .Jack sonville, Palatka and St. Augustine, or around on the Oulf of Mexico to New Orleans and Galveston." "And no trouble at all '!" "Not a bit. You step into the Pull man at Jersey City and waik out of it in Florida. The Ooa-t Line is a great system. All roads wait for it and you can't get left. It don't run up on the Fterile. red hills, but down through the green everglades. It in the Sea Island cotton line, the rice and the palmetto lino. It is the antipodes, and that is what the live Yankee is hokii:;r alter." "Does the Coast Line make time?" "Why, it destroys titne. It kills it dead: Trains on time? Well, when the Atantic (..'oast, train pulls into Jacksonville over the Plant system, you will see the mayor and common council standing there waiting to set their watche." by the train, and if the train is five minutes iate the whole State of Florida waits for it." Eli Jer kins' Syndicate Letter. The wisest course in politics i- to vote for the lest man, and you cunnot le mistaken. So, in the u-e of blood nurificrs, vou can't le mistaken if you lake AyerV Sarsaparilla, 1-e.u-e all j parties agree tha- it H the be.-t the Medicine. Try it thi- month. Ii Should bs in Evciy Hra:e. J. B. Wilson :T 1 clay street Sharps burg Pa., !' he w ill not le without Dr. King'.- New Di-covery for Con sumption, Cough-and Cold-, that it cured his wife who was threatened with Pneumonia after an attack of "La (Irippe. when various other reme dies and several physichuis had done her no god. PoUut ParU-r.of Cook nort. Pa., chums Dr. KitigV Sow Di- covcrv nas aone ji mi u.on.- xm inan .mi-tliin" Vioef-ru-ed for kmiL' 1 rou- Trial - - Bottles free at L. I . N ir.teheaa v co Drug Store. $1,00. Large W.tle". V)c. and Bewaue of ointments fok Catahhh that contain .meil'tky, as mercury will surely de-troy the r-ense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucoid cutface-. Such articles should never 1-e iwhI except on i.reseriftions from reputa!le phy- ., i siciaes. as the damage they will do i ' Len foi l to the god vou can p ibly derive from therm Hall's Catarrh Pure, inanufacturexl by F. J. Cheney k Co., Tolcio. ()., contains no mercury and is taken internally, acting dire--tly un the bloo-i and mucous wurhi'-e of the sv stem. In buying Hall's Ca tarrh Cure 13 pure you get the genuine It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonial free. t7"siold by Druggists, price I'm:, per J bottle. v. V J , - rv r tv V. n. that I, "nr i;k m;ks WUh onr Aihort lament i .'' h- rrvl 1 in Pry hit. Ds Life Worth Living? That Jrpon? tiiwn thfl liver. If tho Uvir U inactive the who!. nv tcm i out of vtot tho trvAth u Lad, tiitttion jor, head dull or aching, energy ami hopfu!n4 pone tho fpirtt i th j n-K-ol, a bcarv weight cxiftii after rating, with peneral depomlcnev an l liif blue. The Liver ii the htUM'keejor of tha health ; and a ha mile, fhnj'lo remedy that act like Nature, doe not concripato nftrnmnU or require comts,nt taking, dtei not interfere with bu.inojN (r pleasure lur in its Uh make Sim mons Liver Kepilator a j medical erfeetion. " 1 Ir.ri1 il fli , ! k rw. iKtlAv Iytia. 1U, uinnt rvj Ifcr l-w. IImcUiU, It tK MdiuM lh nl I ." M. M.J'm, Mca j Take only the Ktnuitte, j Vtuh h pn e.e Wr)t iJ r.l Tr4 fit tf.gi.ati.it i4 J. II. 7I.IUN A VO, 1 1 w in Cria: aii kj 1i-i v-i ." Minpl v apply "Sw,iu:i''. Oml tuiMit . " N iiii.Tii.il inlii-iii.' m-UmI. ''in. teller, fveina. it !i. all einpti.u, i n lln f.tre. h;inb, no-. A'1 , l-iit,t (l.e -km rlear, while and hr i!:h . I ' rn-at healing and rii!,itie .m - -.--.ii bv no i iib.r nun! s . A-k vur di nggi-t fr . w a ne' M nl ii ! 1 1 . FOK oVFi: FIFTY VI! Al An (Mown WiiiTiuik l!i mi nv .M rs. Win-low V oothin Siup ha U-en UMd for over fifty m-hi bv million- of moflier- for tln-ir . lilMien w bile t.H-t hing. w it !i j-i f- i mi--. It -ootln the child, -ofi.-ii- tin" vMMiin, alhiys all pain uie- wind .-oh ,ti, -tlie U-t iciiMily for lu.mho.t plra.-ant to tin t.ele. " I'mii;-i-ts in every put of tl,.- World. Twenty ii' rent" a boll!.. Il- v.duo i- incal-ul.ili!.' Il-uie and a-k for Mr. Win-low ' S a h in1.: Svrup, and lakf no other kind. Fnuli-h Spavin I.iniinot rejnoxe all Hard, Sft or 'alloun-d Lump- und and 'It'ini-ln from hoi-'-. ltlood Spavin Surb-. Splint-. Shh n.'v. Ilinn woiui ti!!'-. Sprain-, and Swollen Tliro'urli, ( 'onidi-. Kt- S,.w .' by u-e of on bott! Warranted the mo-t wondrful Pi.-nn-ni 'ur.' ever known. Sold bo F T W hit die. id .x I'll, I IrUgi-'i-t-, Seoll.i'.d NeeJ... N. I'. 10 1 ly. jnCKI.KNS AKNU'A s A lA'K. The l.ot alvc in the world for I'ut-, I'rui-e-. Sore-, Fleer-, .-.ill l!la-niii, Fever Sore-, Tetter. 'hap-l Hands, Chilblain- 'oin-, and all skin F.nip tion, and jm-itivelv etire- 1'i'e- oi no pav required. It 1- t'i.i! iiiO.-l to i;ivi l-rfeet cat i-fae? ion ., or nio),e refunded Price ! cents 'T box. For Saie bv V.. T. Whitehead A Co. i n i s : i ii i -' n 1 1 1 n . i ii i -. HVMI'TiVf Moi-Uie; itl'ciH' It' h inir and ctinu'in ; rno-t at mi hi . worn bv scratching. If allowI n. oniitnm tumors from vhi'-h often bleed and ul cerate becoming very i-oie SVAV.M'n UlSTMI.M -top- the itch ins and ble-.!-itu heal- ulceration, in rrio-t r,i-e- remove- the turnoo. 'A dtu-M-t r by mail for .".M rent-. In ."w ,;. .'. ,','Ua,'';,,i',; itch on human and horn-- ariu all animal- curcl in ii.iih ' . Wool-ford'.- Sanitarv l.-.'. . 'Ho- ncer fail-. Sold by' F, T. U h.-ehe.ui .V I ruggi-t , .-cot land Ne k N. C. II 1 'Jl ly. FIT.-1. All fit- -n.pjl ftee , Dr. K'liiie'.- ' n a! Nerve iN-n.tej. No fit after iii-: la;. '- n-e. M !? -. :. ,- - im . Treat iw tii.il ! foe to I it .a.-e-. ,-erid to Dr. Kii.e, '.;',! A r h St, Philadelphia. J'. NKW Central : Met I have iu-t oj-nerl at my old r'and and a-k the patronage of the pubis''. I chall ke-p Beef. Pork, Fresh Fish And y-er- in a -on. I will pay highe-t ca-h prl'-e- for NICE FAT STOCK. Ite-peet fully. L ALLSBROOK S 151 :im Scthind Ne Jr, N. ('. MAS. VIOLA STAHR'S '63LDEH CAPSULES' vT Arebala and A 1 way ftrdullaliraiarnllc1r. Liii'!l-J f.r Irrpilttrt. V..Ac Huccifuay ujimIIu UKmaii'laof . la rir irnrty, (rmmuiUjea , wv-r fan. 1ti ft. An iujaquJlfcaferuan. I.A U 1 K hl'KCIFMJ 'IN' - i ; ! . L J