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ft er ~ ,-•. — s^i — w -^ -^ fol i-fourth series salisbury n c f thursday may 11 1893 no 12 wnaf is castoria castoria is dr samuel pitc?;cr's prescription for infant3 and children it contains neither opium morphine nor other narcotic substance it is a harmless substitute for paregoric drops soothing syrups and castor oil it is pleasant its guarantee is thirty years use by pillions of mothers castoria is tho children's panacea tlie mother's friend castcria castoria ca.frl«j««o wen adapted b ehfldrenthat c^toria ct re s colic constipation ••■*;___ virt ,,. : ., i , l!lil sour stomach diarrhea erue^tton ' "_•;.' ..' , . r .,,, rii h d kills worms gives deep tu-.d promotas 61 ""'" ','.'■' ,:.:;-.•;, n v gostion without injurious medication _-. . 4 of oa toria fas eo universal and i.j-'.i rso well tr.dtii that it «.■•■:-•! a vnik tor several years i have rccommondec . ro:in«i i > eu orss it few are tho y our castoria and riii»ll always continue tc - - do not k«ep carter do so as it las invariably produced lonelicia .. h ' results 06kakrtsfd d i^«f.p.,p m.i kcw york city ' i~<th street anil 7th avc new \ ork city tin ckstacb company 77 mu2bat street new york ctt7 ft el cures all sk!m amd — , - .--•* bch tk w r v vo v j*k '?•* {■** gluuu uulrjljl t rv 1 . i i i old ■.... ■. . -, ot.'zrfo \ '■' "' ' '' ' f t i , :.^ i :■■i ■.- : " 1 r _ ; 1 k l.-i ■rf p f . p trick j ii 1 -., toit 1u gig oj • ■•<*' y i i lip ■itoss . ihp mo wrjlps i » ■> •''■i i:,,i hart 1 i the use 01 m i ■r nine years i weui to 11 _- ■| . m-i il ithti.tpili liim-tors hut i : i ; ; ■rled boi anic uli i uium ii madi indwell 1 am veil known here 1 swamiaii.oa april 26 1889 having used three bottles of p i 1 for impure blood ami general weakness wd having derived great benefits from taeume having gained 11 pouuds in weight in f.mr weeks 1 take iv;it pleas ure in recommeudinp it to unfortunates like yours truly john morris office of j.n mcelroy,druggist i orl*nda fla .' pril2o,1891 j lrf.>*.sr lippman bros savan rah ga lior s;b l sold three bottles of p p p large bizo ye««t«rday and oue bottle m»ll btxe to-day tko 1 p 1 urc my wife of rheuma tism winter before last it came back on h«r the past winter and a half bottle flfto lire relieved her again,and she las a»i k»<i a symptom since i sold a bottle of p i p to a friend of tnin oti6 of his turkeys a small oiic'i took sick and his wife gave it a teaspoon ful that w:is in the evening and the lit e fellow turned over like he \\ t dead bat neit morning was up hollering aud well yours respectfully 1 x mcelroy savannah ga 1 i . 1891 messrs lippman bros . iv:mriah,ga dear sirs — i have suffered from rheu matism for v ion time find did not find » cure until 1 found 1 i p which com i leiely cured me yours truly eliza !•'. jones 16 orange st savannah agrelkblelpersouijin every town to take the^exclusiye agency of tlie _ world's columbian expo sition illustrated mihehtic33rqam of the fmr creat opporfanily to slake mouet f«r the n'exi vear ona ghanceiin a lifetime -'"■■nps tor sample copy and full particulars _ j.b ca?j!?b<-!aj pass 159 adams st chicago hi it 19 a du'jpy you owe yourself and fam l!y tc cct ti-.o bcml value lor your money kcononiizo in your footwear by pnrohnblnb v 1 linnzlna shoes whirh represent lh i beat value fox prices asked aa tiiousanda yjil jartiae no substitute.^h wo l ppuclas s3 hoe c^ktleijen toe best 3 hoe in the ttori.ofch the money a nu ; r.o t'cwoil shoe that trill not rip una ralf.*f!>'oir.l;"-3 einooth it-ride fleximp nio-s com r"r;':i.il t 1 hsb and 1 urnble than ony other shoe ever v>!d a tiie price equals cusiutu m.acoloeacosuug r'^vnuui !*■."> ttf\tid-bewe(s,flnecalfshoei th3 c'j r i most stylish easy nnd durable niioes ever sola r.t the price they eiiu^l flno imported shoes cosiiag 5j 5q police slior vrorn by farmers and all «&«$■t'):urn who want a pood heuvy calf ibrco soled c r ion edgoshoe f?a«y to walli in aud will c5 tb 5o fine i.i-u : , i'.'is fvnd s2.00 work u-a-i initraen's shoes will give im>ro wear for tli3 pjon^y tliau any other mnke t'mvaran 1 ''"'^"- vice ibc '" r-'"5 eiues 3ii9w liiiit woikinguien kr.vc iuuiid tuuout rvi»r sd.ott ona vonths si 95 school t-t0<;j^si s,il'o are worn by the boys evcry itnercv riioj.i-.si jorviccabk;bhoo3hold at thepriees i s s:i.cm hnnu-mi-wed.si.50 buuivci 2 00 nud 61.75 sliot-3 fo hi i s m-b aro inodr of t ho best don^ola oi fine c«lf ai desire j'hpvcru-^ry ivllsh,c nifortable andduru ble tii ;■>:/■sr : i<3 < quuibcubton iiiadorlious costing tr<ntx 4.i)0'to 86.0u i^-hes who wi*it to ecouotuuts la tholrluot-.vuar nra sndink thliout ciibiicn w ij doiiglasi name and trio price u btomped oa the ixitioin of each eh<w look for it 1>i li you irjy hewareof ileal<tkat(psiiptiuirti»»ub btitute other niakes tor them siu-lisuiintitut ions era traudnlent and sut)ject to prosecutum by law tor ob taluing inon.'v under falne pretences v 1 uol-uli as f ilroektou ill ass bold by hi 3 browns cures all female cjomplainta and monthly irregularity l-!u(wrtba>a or whites painin back or sides strengthens the feeble build3 up the whole system it has cured thousands and will euro you druggists have it send 6t:unp for book eii i v dbojjgoole t co lonlstilla ky ® why do yon 8ufp froza dj-jrjepda nd plck-hca<w!h q r?ndcrins lifo miserably wkea tbfl rszaedy is at jxrxs hnxta t xrill specdny removo t1 1i5a troot»l enable yon to oat and dlffcst yonr ooa v provs-iit hen-.lncho anil impart no en«oj-mct.t erfliro to v.-luch you hnvegl l),-pnartr.incer r>osc enuul price r 5 couts calcc 33 1'nrk placn n y | your ca5e ' is not i hopeless wp — v ml q-<tolm"ii5!£bt aids nature in natures own way . ' t costs you nothing to investigate a 4d-fiage pamphlet mailed free ufion application atlantic electropoise co 1405 kiw york ave washington p c i : 9 washington lettee from our regular correspondent president cleveland and every mem ber of lii.s cabinet are again at their desks all feeling better for their week cff 11 although none of them got any i r at still it was a change and every 1 body needs an occasional change i they were one and all pleaded to 6iid j the government finances in such a i s..tisfactoiy condition a lid with pros pects of eoutinued improvement j the free gold now amounts to about j 3,000,000 and i here is a very marked | decrease in the demand for gold for j shipment to europe while offers of gold continue to be mude to the treas ury it is now also known that the i close of this fiscal year will find the treasury with u surplus of nearly 3,000,000 available cash msfead of hie deficit which was a short time ago there have been so many erroneous i statements printed about the amount of gold in the united states that the official figures hi the latest statement issued this week are herewith present ed the total amount of gold coin known to be in this couutry is 532 513,105 and of gold bullion the most of which is in the u s treasury 80 529,774 making a grand total of 613 042,879 of this g..ld national banks hold 190,751,183 and private firms 35s,9'j2.3s5 according to the last report of the director of the u s mint senator mcphaf?on who is a mem ber of the senate finance committee ha been watching the situation very closely and he says of it : i do not believe there is anything in the money • situation that will necessitate the call ing of an extra session of congress earlier than the president intended — about september 15 the financial condition of the country is all right if he people will only let it alone the secretary of the treasury has the con sdence of the public which believi-s that he will be able to meet a:iy con tingency that may arise congressman john dewitt warner j of new york isn't one of those ho hink it will n quire six months or j more to get the new tariff hill through j congress he said : i see no reason 1 v a tariff bill should uot be put ■hroughin a inoi.th or six weeks after j ; he organization of congress the people put the democracy in power with a definite purpose and that pm-i l»ose should be carried out if you hired a contractor to build u house within a specified time and he failed lo keep his agreement would you look iround to get somebody e\>e to finish t ? of course a reasonable time should be allowed for debate on a tariff measure but all efforts at obstruction j should be and i belie e will be pruinp ly squelched there are yet some very desiiable places in both the diplomatic and con sular service to be filled by democrats j and it is expected that most of these appointments will be made by presi j dent cleveland within tne next few j weeks in this connection it may le interesting to note how the appoint ments already made in these branches of the public service have been disturb , ed among the states the diplomatic appointments haye gone to the f ol j lowing alabama tennessee new i jersey delaware missouri vermeil t 1 new hampshire california massa chusetts arkans texas seath da kota and illinois one each indiana georgia louisiana and new york • two each north carolina four and j minnesota five the consular a j point ments have gone one each to j north carolina georgia illinois michigan and maine two each to j massachusetts missouri mississippi , ohio and indiana and four to new york while that will probably have little to do with the president's selec j tions the candidates from those states j not mentioned above appear to be j more confident than those from the j states that have already secured some of these appointments the chinese minister claims to have , information which leads him to fear i that a conspiracy exists in the pacific states to do violence to the chinese residing in those states in connection ! with the enforcement of the geary ex j elusion law which goes into effect to | morrow and in accordance with his | request secretary gresham has wired i the governors of those states asking | them to take precautions for the pres , ervation of peace no steps will be | taken bv the treasury department to j prosecute those chinamen who h«ve failed to comply with the geary law by registering until the case involving the constitutionality of that law shall hare heen decided by the supreme court which has designated the 10th inst to hear the arguments president cleveland has made a few general appointments and appointed a large number of postmasters this week and it is believed that he is now considering the claims and qualifica tions of the long list of candidates for the very important position of public printer the lucky man who gets it i will have about three thousand places outside of civil service rules at his disposal the teacher as a moral force by mrs mart a livermore every well conducted school sur rounds its pupils with an ethical en vironment and they live in a moral atmosphere in the school-room which stimulates to right doing and is pow erful to repress evil tendencies the very discipline of the school exerts a powerful moral influence upon a child in the formative period of life he must be punctual in attendance and obedience to the inexorable laws of the school he must be careful of his school properly courteous to school mates and respectful to teachers he it be truthful industrious faithful lass work md persistent in pur-1 fie is nol tolerated if slovenly i ppearauc.e and rutidy in habits if persistently ill natured negli , and evil disposed he is dropped i the society of his fellow pupils is made to feel the weight of their iproval in short the child who mes a member of a whi conducted 1 is immediately put in training for the development of qualities with i which he cannot become a good uber of society he curriculum f the public school ot only educational but most eili i t in iis moral influence the read hooks are collections of literary | gems all aglow with moral and relig-j ions sentiment inculcating in the i strongest manner lie duties we owe to oik another to society aiiu i.r conn | try will loyalty to whatever is right > just true aijtl helpful to the world ] there is not a reading book in use that , does not teach the morality of the ten j commandments and the ethics of the i golden rule the study of history which as it has been written in the past is large the history of battles great warriors and conquest may be so taught by the competent teacher that the pupil shall be impressed with theawful truth that national righteous ness is essential to national perpetuity the lesson continually proclaimed by the dead nations that lie in the high way of the past like the wrong doing individual shall die ; and it is within the province of the teacher of history to make this cle.ir to the pupil lint the main factor in the child's j moral training is the personality of the ; teacher if he is the right person for the responsible place he occupies his ve r v prrxence is an education and the tones of his yoice the expression of his ; countenance his habits and manners all are felt by the children of his j charge who are infected by them as by j a divine contagion stevenson as a fighter u i have known adlai stevenson all his life said mr j 0 kobertson of peoria 111 at the riggs house la»t night in the hearing of a news report er and from his boyhood he has dis played remarkable nerve and startling j personal bravery when a boy he was j noted for his pugnacity and of all the j bovs in the county he stood the un questioned leader out incident illustrating his tem perament occurred while we were both altending a district school there were a numbe of bad boys practically men attending the school who had whipped the two preceeding men teach errand had compelled them to leave the county it happened that they were succeeded by a delicate little woman scarcely as old as her scholars | stevenson was among her scholar ad mirers the bullies made no trouble during the first week but in the secand they became unruly when asked by the t-cher to do their work they re fused and laugh ; d l,,r the ring teacher one morn ing,'pfe p to the blackboard ndj work out your examples 1 bud laughed at her nnd finally n marked k no i won't and you can't make me 1 every one in the school except oue burst into laughter that one was stevenson unable to bear the treatment my longer the teacher sat down at her desk and began to cry sterensun dropped his book and i leaping up shouted til give you two • seconds bud alsmith to get to work the bally laughed again but hard ly had he begun when a well-aimed blow from stevenson's fist stretched | him at full length on the floor he wan up in u second for an hour the 1 two rolled over the floor pounding scratching choking and biting then aumitb with his face pounded ill out of shape and covered with blood begged i for mercy he received it and not i once during the rest of the session was i an order of the teacher disobeyed — i washington news homicide in anson there was a cold-blooded murder near an*onville on the 3d in«t mr hubbard leroy was overseeing the j work on a public road about 8 miles north of here he had a dispute with a negro by the name of anthony har ris concerning the tool he should work with the negro harris struck mr leroy just above the ear with a hoe i mr leroy fell and the negro ran later in the day the negro was per suaded by other nfgroes to give him self up as ho would surely be lynched i he came to wadesboro late yesterday evening and gave himself up to the sheriff about 10 o'clock last night mr li'ror died he never spoke after lie received the blow he was a most | popular young man and is greatly mourned by his many friends harris is in jail he has the reputation of being a bad man kethodist bishops meet on tli3 31 instant the college of l)i>iiops of the methodist church sou h | began its annual session at the troost j avenue methodist church in kansas ljitv mo it is a secret session the j abject of the meeting is to arrange a plan of episcopal visitation for the year th bishops now here are john i c keener of new orleams a w.i wilson of baltimore it k hargrove uf nashville w w duncan of spar 1 tanburg s c chailes b galloway of jackson miss jos s key of sher man tex a g ha good of los an | geles cal 0 p fitzgeiald of atlan ta ga and e r hendrix of kansas city buhop j c granberry of richmond va is ill and cannot be j sent e>ides the college of bishops the j iliary board of church missions will meet there during the week wrote the story of her murder a dispatch from vandalia iii says j fourteen miles west of here mrs eliz ! abeth harper this morning cut th • throat of her daughter alice aged 15 with a razor and then cut her own j thr<»at with the s.inie weapon mrs j harper was insane the girl and her j mother were alone at the time the : kther died instantly the girl lived j eral hours and managed to get a ' piece of paper and though weak from the loss of blood she wrote briefly the manner in which she and her mother met their death suburban boom at jerusalem corner lots iu jerusalem may have t a novel sound to real estate dealers j ears but it looks as if they would vet j hold a place iu the speculative market j land a mile out from jerusalem that j thirty years ago sold for a dollar an , acre has been bought by the company owning the new jaffa and jerusalem | railway a fifty-three mile line of road | for some 83.000 an acre bethlehem and beit jela furnished most of the stonecutters for the new railroad im agine a strike ordered by the bethle j hem stonecutters union to secure 00 j instead so cents a day !— buffalo cotn nwrcial . m m ■a writer in an alabama paper sub mits to the farmers of that state tlu proposition that corn at ii per busbe which costs 40 cents to raise and cot tou at 1 cents per pound which costs the strongest possible reason why more j corn nd less cotton should be planttd t u is year it is as strong a reason on , this side of the savanna river as on the f highest of ail in leavening power — latest u s gov*t report i i rowder i absolutely pure manneri for visiting don't interrupt to cut one short in the middle of his story i unpardon able don't contradict difference of opin ion is no cause of offense but down right contradiction is a violation of one of the laws of good society don't be lang-winded when you hate a storj to tell do not go into ev erj detail and branch of at every word b direct concise clear and get to the point as soon as jou cau don't cling to one subject ; don't talk about matters that people gener ally are not intere?ted in ; in short don't be a bore don't repeat old jokes r tell time worn stories don't make obrions puns an occasional pun is a good j thing but a ceaseless flow of puns js j simply maddening don't tell anecdotes good or bad | more than once a very good thing j becomes foolishness to the ear of the ! listener after hearing it several times don't be conceited don't dilate on your own acquirements or achieve ments don't expatiate on what you hare or are going to do or on your superior talents in anything don't always make yourself the he ro of your own stones the last gun of the war i will give you a short and accurate history of the last gun tired by regu lar confederate soldiers acting under orders this occurred on the afternoon of may 0 1s05 at white sulphur springs near waynesville n c now for the prooff after the capture of ashe ville n c m in the last days of apr col jaiii^s li love of the first k<*iji iuent thomas 1 north carolina legion with 200 men fell back to balsam gap nine miles south of waynesviile col thomas with about 200 men part in dians occupied soco gap 15 miles west of wavnesville 1 as a commandant of the skirmishers of thomas legion | wa ordered to make my way from col i thomas at soco gap to col love at balsam gap with my sharpshooters i my route was via \\ hite sulphur j springs near waynesvilie where col i n c bartlett second n c mounted infantry for the united states army was camped i encountered some of col bartlett's men at the springs and charged them with my skirmishers ! driving them from the springs and killing one of col bartlett's men ' named arwood who now lie buried in | the federal part of the cemetery at asheville n.c he was doubtless the last man killed bv regular command east of the mis sissippi 1 yet hare his gun as a relic it t conley in atlanta constitution the north carolina teacher is mak ing war upon the management of the normal and industrial school at greensboro we really haven't gone into the merits f the complaint which seem to be in the main on ac count of some alleged omissions in the report made by the legislature of the school financial s.nd other but we venture to suggest that a good deal of effort will be uecessarj in order to dis credit ghas l mclvt-r before the friends of education in north carolina he and edwin a alderuwu have done inore for the cause in the pasi five years than any other hundred men in the state and none of their labors have had more beneficent results than those which finally effected the '- ■- lishrnent of this normal umi industrial i school for girls and if their i known personal integrity and zeal for i education were o»t a sure defence lg ainstsnch a tacks as the presenl i character and standing of tb i - i»f this institution should - .-. less unless something could be pj ! against it charlotte 0 ex-preside h 1 yes once said thi i salmon is the lioa in the path of amer 1 ican progress ' i true business principles it is as easy to be a rich man 9 poor one half the energy disp t •■in keeping ahead that is required catch up when behind would *%••' ••• d t ive more time to attend to buei j iess and add to the profit and repuu j ion of those who work f»r gaiu | ii ni>r jour engagements if jo i promise to meet a man to io a certai tiling at a certain moment be realy at the appointed time if you l ou bus iness attend promptly to matters on hand and then as promptly aooui i your own business de not stop to tell stories in busi ness hours if you have a place of bus»nea found there when wanted no mt cau get rich by sitting around si r . never fool on business matter h order system regularity liberalit promptness do not meddle with bus iness you know nothing of nr buy an article you do not need simp | because it is cheap and the an n who sells it will take it out in tr ide trad is money sprite to avoid harsh word ind personalties do not kick eveif toneiu the mth : more miles ca . b made in a daj by going ten(lily on than by stopping to kick i'&y as you go a man of honor respects his wor a.s he does bin bond aid but ne>n beg help others when you can but lever give what you canuot afford tc simply b cause it is faskionabl . learn to say no no nece*su t«.r snapping it out in dogfashiou but av it tiruily and respectfully ha but few confidents and the few»-r tht bitter use your own brain ratber than those of others learn to think and act for yourself be vigilant keep ahead rather than behind time young man cut this out if there be foilv in the argument let u know a snake in a hone i eye kred graven a sheepsbead b.i butcher has a horse upon whiciia deli cate surgical operation has wen per formed there are few similar cu.«?v on record says the new york world the horse some time go was trouble with its right eye a him grew e»ei the pupil and the horse became nervous and it times unmanageable dr william sheppard a veterinary snigei-n examined the eye yesterday and found a case of what is known a snake in the eye 1 when tue fi.tii w;ts removed sure enough there wa a little tvu rft ler an incision was inide 11111 od in the corner of the eye next to ttw nostrils and a small silver hook was imbedded when the little snake got near enough he was hookej anddra.n out the snake was 3 inches loaf and not larger than a horse-hair i i bead resembles that of an anacondn in its general features it was placed in a bottle of alcohol and will be sent to a medical laboratory at gla gow scotland it is thought the horr-e will lose the i«bt of the eye but is fortunate to survive tb deration as snake in the eye ik look"i ujicn ijv o.'i horseman as fatal a - tie emptiest thing in the world wi.it is technkallj called society a iliing 1 k '" tu is ounty the oi lv conditions ot entrance iiich it impo ses are that the applicant should iia a pur.-e ljig enough to stand t i:c ex pense f its inful frivolities and a mind little enough to bewtinfied wifh s puerrile amusements for hiph breeding intellectaal cultivation neb e character i makes no demands in jfei poisonous atmosphere christian faith al < oce fickens and die and ui . thin reneenugof it artificial _' i ;;. iun ra there js often ( r.n«l : moral rottenness that irouw - ; ■ra 11 .: ten i > and amasn » " '■' — nashville chris i m a ih ■*<■■-(; . l i .." pn ■• ■' i ster ■lord if i -.-,. ■••' ••""» j b • .'' - • i the dea n who next pm\ed ! we will ■- . ;■•■g-l
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1893-05-11 |
Month | 05 |
Day | 11 |
Year | 1893 |
Volume | 1 |
Issue | 12 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was |
Creator | McKenzie and Bruner, Editors and Proprietors |
Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
Publisher | McKenzie and Bruner, Editors and Proprietors |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | The Thursday, May 11, 1893 issue of the Carolina Watchman a weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
OCLC number | 601559261 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman | |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman | |
Date | 1893-05-11 | |
Month | 05 | |
Day | 11 | |
Year | 1893 | |
Sequence | 1 | |
Page | 1 | |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was 5240459 Bytes | |
FileName | sacw17_18930511-img00001.jp2 | |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:17:39 AM | |
Publisher | Hamilton C. Jones | |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury | |
Type | Text | |
Source | Microfilm | |
Digital Format | JP2 | |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive | |
Description | An archive of the Carolina Watchman a weekly and semi weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina | |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. | |
Language | eng | |
FullText | ft er ~ ,-•. — s^i — w -^ -^ fol i-fourth series salisbury n c f thursday may 11 1893 no 12 wnaf is castoria castoria is dr samuel pitc?;cr's prescription for infant3 and children it contains neither opium morphine nor other narcotic substance it is a harmless substitute for paregoric drops soothing syrups and castor oil it is pleasant its guarantee is thirty years use by pillions of mothers castoria is tho children's panacea tlie mother's friend castcria castoria ca.frl«j««o wen adapted b ehfldrenthat c^toria ct re s colic constipation ••■*;___ virt ,,. : ., i , l!lil sour stomach diarrhea erue^tton ' "_•;.' ..' , . r .,,, rii h d kills worms gives deep tu-.d promotas 61 ""'" ','.'■' ,:.:;-.•;, n v gostion without injurious medication _-. . 4 of oa toria fas eo universal and i.j-'.i rso well tr.dtii that it «.■•■:-•! a vnik tor several years i have rccommondec . ro:in«i i > eu orss it few are tho y our castoria and riii»ll always continue tc - - do not k«ep carter do so as it las invariably produced lonelicia .. h ' results 06kakrtsfd d i^«f.p.,p m.i kcw york city ' i~ | •''■i i:,,i hart 1 i the use 01 m i ■r nine years i weui to 11 _- ■| . m-i il ithti.tpili liim-tors hut i : i ; ; ■rled boi anic uli i uium ii madi indwell 1 am veil known here 1 swamiaii.oa april 26 1889 having used three bottles of p i 1 for impure blood ami general weakness wd having derived great benefits from taeume having gained 11 pouuds in weight in f.mr weeks 1 take iv;it pleas ure in recommeudinp it to unfortunates like yours truly john morris office of j.n mcelroy,druggist i orl*nda fla .' pril2o,1891 j lrf.>*.sr lippman bros savan rah ga lior s;b l sold three bottles of p p p large bizo ye««t«rday and oue bottle m»ll btxe to-day tko 1 p 1 urc my wife of rheuma tism winter before last it came back on h«r the past winter and a half bottle flfto lire relieved her again,and she las a»i k»'oir.l;"-3 einooth it-ride fleximp nio-s com r"r;':i.il t 1 hsb and 1 urnble than ony other shoe ever v>!d a tiie price equals cusiutu m.acoloeacosuug r'^vnuui !*■."> ttf\tid-bewe(s,flnecalfshoei th3 c'j r i most stylish easy nnd durable niioes ever sola r.t the price they eiiu^l flno imported shoes cosiiag 5j 5q police slior vrorn by farmers and all «&«$■t'):urn who want a pood heuvy calf ibrco soled c r ion edgoshoe f?a«y to walli in aud will c5 tb 5o fine i.i-u : , i'.'is fvnd s2.00 work u-a-i initraen's shoes will give im>ro wear for tli3 pjon^y tliau any other mnke t'mvaran 1 ''"'^"- vice ibc '" r-'"5 eiues 3ii9w liiiit woikinguien kr.vc iuuiid tuuout rvi»r sd.ott ona vonths si 95 school t-t0<;j^si s,il'o are worn by the boys evcry itnercv riioj.i-.si jorviccabk;bhoo3hold at thepriees i s s:i.cm hnnu-mi-wed.si.50 buuivci 2 00 nud 61.75 sliot-3 fo hi i s m-b aro inodr of t ho best don^ola oi fine c«lf ai desire j'hpvcru-^ry ivllsh,c nifortable andduru ble tii ;■>:/■sr : i<3 < quuibcubton iiiadorlious costing tr |
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