Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Aug. 9, 1888, edition 1 / Page 4
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TOR FARM AND (Mttl)EN. How to ttroy Plant JL!ce. Mr. J. N. Luta of Hawpatch, La Oraago county, after sovcral year ex perience, gives ao effectual remedy for these very troublesomo pests in a paper read beforo the I.linob Farmers' insti tute. Ho fays: Aphides, plant lice, green flies, are among the very worst of cur fruit pests. First, because of tho va-t number of species. Stond, bc causo of tho great number of p'ants, trco. grasses and shrub3 infested by them. Tuird, bccniso of their being so wonderfully prolific. It is impossible to describe them. Thoir presence will be known on tho apricot, plum, snow ball and cherries by tho curled up leaves, and if you care to see them juit unfold one of those curled leaves and you will be satisfied. If you will spray your trees and plants with tho follow ing emulsion, just as they are starting into growth, and again in one week, you will get rid of tho most of them: Take six eggs, beat them thoroughly with an egg-beater, put them into a pail, add one and one-half pints of kerosene, pump thim for at least one minute, then fill tho pail with water. Remember, tow, to pump thii again, just before you use it. This emulsion will kill the lici on your rosos and cabbages. In fact it is a universal lomo exterminator. Enrmle of Mquaalaes. There nro two insect imong many which attack squashos the squash vino borer and tho cucumber beetle. Tho moth of the first nam?d deposits its eggs on the stems of the young vioes near tho root?, about tho time they be gin to run, and tho youag larvae from them bore into tho stem. Tho full grown larva is nearly an inch long, tap ering to each extremity, of a whitish color, with a dark line along the back. Changing to tho perfect insect, it comes cut a handsome oL j ct, half an inch long, somewhat resembling the perfect iusictof the peach grub. The pres erve j of tho borer is indicated by the sickly appearance of tho plants. Ex ami no them and cut out - tho enemy. The moths may ba pre vented from depositing their eggs by banking up the young vines as they grow. The striped or cucumber beetlo is much more common and is rather smaller in sizo. It attacks squash and melon vines, without much preference for cith.T. Tho larva attacks the stem at or beneath tho surface, and the per fect insect or beetle eats tho tender stalk or leaves. It thus becomes a double enemy. There are differont remedies. For small patches of plants the thumb and finger closely applied is an efficient remedy for the striped beetle; or they may be excluled from the plants with boxei open at tho bottom and covered with muslin at the top. Paris green is the best remedy on a larger icale. Mix it very thoroughly with twenty times as much flour and dust it thiuly ever the plant. It will prove certain death to all that eat it. The larva should be cut out by hand. Chicago Times. Churning-ami Salting-. What make3 butter com . ? is the ques tion propounded by the United States Dairyman. It is cot known whether concussion or friction, or both, ciuse the separation of tho lutter from the buttermilk in churning. But we sus pect that concussion is the real agent that produces the separation, as wchavo really seen no churn that did not ia some way produce more or les3 concus sion. All the churns we have seen used appear to produce good result?, and we find every dairyman U satisfied with the work of tho churn ho uses, whatever the kind, stylo or patent. We cannot, there fore, recommend any style of churn as superior to another, but wo prefer the simple and less expensive form', as not only co ting lcs., but being easier to keep clean. Tho churning should be Btcady and not violent. A too rapid or sudden separation of tho butter from luttermilk is not dciirabl;. It is no recommendation for a churn that it churns quick. Such a churn is apt to injure the so-called grain of tho butter, and make it salvy and grca3y. The least churning that will separate the butter from the l uttermilk h the best. When to stop churning Tho im proved model method now in practice ly the best butter makers is to stop tho churn as soon aa the butter h collected in particles the sizo of a wheat kernel. Just before this, when tho first signs of the separation of tho butter h seen, tho ides of the churn are washed down with cold Water usudly below 60 de gree?, or about 55 degrees to not only prevent waste, but to harden tho but ter and make it easier to handle. When the granules are tho sizo of wheat ker nels the butter is drawn off, or the but ter taken out of the buttermilk, as the caso may be. If the butter is left in tho churn water is poured in to float tho butter, which is then gently agitated a moment and the water drawn off. This operation is repeated until tho water runs clear. Sometimes one of the washings is in brine, which co agulates the caseine into a soluble, form and prepares it to be washed out after ward. In this way it h believed tha purer, longer keeping butter can bo made. In some cases, however, butter makers havo customers who want a but termilk flavor in th ir butter. Thev. therefore, do not wash tho butter, or wa h it very little, buch butter mutt be consumed at once, as it will not keen. a Br this method of retaining the lutter in a granulated form only sufficient working is requires io eveniy wort in th Tho less working the better. 1 ho salt, after the Lutter it properly drained, cm be carefully mixed with - ... TT-1 .1 the butter by etirnng. nu-;n imr ougaly incorporated, barely pressing tho butter together in a solid mass is all that is needed. If one does not want butter very salty to the taste, it can bo even and nicely salted by completely wetting it with saturated brine, then carefully pressing the granulated butter together and leaving in it as much of the strong biino as will remain. Wo have seen butter salted in this way, and it was very evenly and completey salted, having in it no undissolved grains of salt, but it was not as salt to the tasto as some like. About an ru ice to the pound is good salting, but more or loss salt muit be used to suit tho tasto of customers. None but refined salt should bo put into butter. The principal office of the salt in butter is to impart an agreeable flavor in connection with the natural aroma of fine butter, but it U a fact that too much salt i jures good flavor, and it may, to some extent, ba used to cover up or neutralize bad flavors. Wo do not recommsnd its use for this latter purpose, preferring that tho natural flavor of butter from pure cream should be preserved. Farm Inventive Covins. An inventive genius or habit is most useful in farm work. There are numer ous occasions when some immediate de vice must be found to meet some unex pected difficulty, and unless this is in vented for the ccc.tsion tho thing is not done. It is an indication of a dull fac ulty when a person says "it cannot be done," and makes no effort to accom plish the purpose desired. But by re peated trials, after thought given to tho nature of tho difficulty, success is usu ally accomplished. This habit of self reliance is to be encouraged in every way, and its existence and practico are to bo found most where least expected and among the least intelligent farmers that is, those who have no knowledge of art or science and never read a book or paper. We recently came across a farmer with an ox harnessed to a cart in the most original manner. Tho cart was wholly of wood made with no other tools but an axs and an auger; tho har ness was wholly of thong3 made of hickory bark, and thi whip was a hickory sapling having a lash made of the bark of the upper part plaited in the round thong usual with the best leather whip?. Among such farmers gates, doors, hinges, aud many other necessary domestic articles are made of wood, and the lvil.it of making these things serve on emergencies tends to a habit of self reliance, quick apprehension, and in ventive appliance of the simplest mate rials tint urrisc3 even an educated mechanic. With an nxo on tho wagon or buggy---a spring, an axle, or a wheel may break the d -.image is rep tired in a few minute? by means of oak or hickory withe. More civilizjd f aimers would be helpless in such imsrgencies where they could not run to tho carpenter or tho blacksmith. Farm mechanics is truly a subject that deserves study and practice, and every farmer should at least bring up ono boy to thh practice which can hi learned at a trifling cost at an agricultural college. New York Times. Farm and Garden Notes. Keep the weeds well in hand. Don't let them get tho start of you. We do not know of any farm which will support a family without work or care. President Phillips of the West Michi gan Horticultural Society believes that unleached ashes is the be.-t fertilizer known for vineyards. Drain around the wells. Allow all surface water to flow away. It is a very easy matter to contaminate the drinking water, especially in spring. Hogs or pigs confined should have their pens kept scrupulously clean dur ing warm weather. Their health and tho health of their owner demands it. Burned bones aro useful in the poul try-yard, but do not equal thoso that aro procured in tho ground condition. Bones from tho butcher, pounded into pi.'ces, are preferred by the hens, as they contain more or less meat. Do not wait uitil you are ready to drive into tho hay field before you find out whether the mower and hay rake aro in working order, and don't forget tho oil jug the next time you go to town. A healthy and able-bodied toad, of industrious habits, will get away with and digest his own weight of insects during twenty-four hours. If you be of an insccticidal turn of mind, turn out by daylight and watch the toads getting breakfast. It is entertaining. Copper Becoming Fashionable "Copper is coming into fashion. What do I mean? Well, look at this lot of canes and umbrellas that I have just imported. You will notice that each one has a piece of ordinary copper wire around tho handle. "Gold and silver have be com a so common as heads for these articles that peoplo demand something new for a change, and you see tho result beforo you. Ju-t now great simplicity is af fected in thit respect, but I haven't the slightest doubt that when this metal bccm-s popular, as I believe it will, we shall see very elaborate personal orna ments made of it. "Indeed, I havo often wondered why copper was not more generally used be fore thii among civilized peoplo as a material for ornaments. Its peculiar color harmonizes perfectly with dark material and complexions, and it is c mparatively free from oxidization. B irbarous? Not a bit of it. True, the aborigines m ide use of copper to adorn their p-r? on?, and in that showed ex cellent ju Igment. In matters of tasto w mi ht frequently take lessons from thj sur.iges. Jeweler's "Weekly. STAGING IN RUSSIA. The World's Most Extensive Horse-Express Service. Coaching Along the Wind Swept Arctic Post Routes. From George Ken nan' a contribution to a late number of tho Century we quote the following: The Imperial Rus sian Post is now perhaps the most ex tensive and perfectly organized horse express scrvico in the world. From the southern end of the peninsula of Kumt chatka to the most remote village in Finland, from the frozen wind-swept shores of tho Arctic Ocean to the hot, sandy deserts of central Asia, the whole empire is one vast net-work of post routes. You may pack your portman teau in Nizhni Novgorod, get a pador ozhnaya from the postal department, and start for Petropavlovsk, Kamt chatka, seven thtumnd miles away, with tho full assurance that throughout the whole of that enormous distance there will be horses, reindeor, or dogs ready and waiting to carry you on, night and day, to your destination. It must, however, be borne in mind that tho Russian post route is a v.-ry differ ent thing from tl e old English post route, and that tho Russian horse express differ) widely, not only from our own wostorn "pony express," but from the horse expresses of most other countries. Tho characteristic feature of tho west European and American systems is the stage-coach or dcligence, which leaves certain places at certain stated hours, or, in other words, runs upon a prearranged time schedule. It is precisely this feature which the Rus sian system does not have. There are generally speaking, no stage-coach lines in Russia; the vehicles which carry tho miils do not carry passengers, and, away from tho railroads, there is no such thing as traveling upon a fixed timo schedule. You are never obliged, therefore, to wait for a public convey ance which leaves at a certain stateJ hour, and then go through to yout des tination in that conveyance, stopping when it stops and starting when it start', without regard to your own health, comfort, or convenience. On the contrary you irny ride in your own sleigh or carriage, and have it drawn b post horse. You may travel at the rate of 175 miles in 24 hour, or 24 miles in 175 hours, just as you feel inclined. You may stop when you like, where you like, and for as long a timo as you like, and when you are ready to move on, you havo only to order cut your hones and get into your vehicle. It makes "ho difference in what part of the empire you may happen to be, nor to what part you may wish to go. Sjnd your padorozhnaya to tho nearest post station, and in twenty minutes you will be riding away at tho ratj of ton miles an hour, with your postal order in your pocket and a hundred relays of fresh horses distributed at intervals along your route. The established rate of payment for transportation over the post routes of western Siberia seems to an American absurdly low. It amounts, including the compensation of the driver, to 1 1-8 cents per mile for every horse, or 3 3-8 cents per mile for tho usual "troika," or team of throe. In other words, two persons can travel in their own car riage with a team f 3 horses a distance of 20 miles for 68 cents, or 34 cents each. I used to feel almost tempted sometimes to wake up a driver at a post station, in themiddle'of a6tormy night, compel him to harness three horses and drive us 29 mile3 over a dark, miry, and perhaps dangerous road, and then offer him for this service tho pitiful sum of 68 cents. Trifling and inadequate, however, as such compensation may seem, it h large enough to tempt into thh field of entcrpriso hundreds of peasant farmers who competo with the Government post by fur nishing what aro known as "volni' or "free" horses, for tho transportation of travelers from one village to another. As these free horses are generally better fed and in better condition than the over-driven animals at tho post station?, it is often advantageous to employ them; and your driver, as you approach a village, will almost always turn around and inquire whether ho shall t ike you to the Government post station or to the house of a "friend.' Travel ing with "drushki," or "Mends," costs no moro thin traveling by post, and it enables o .o to see much more of tho domestic lif j of tho Siberian poasants than one could see by stopping and changing horse3 only at rognlar" post stations. Caribou of the Frozen North. Cari ou, an animal indigenous to arc tic climes, generally travel ii binds. There has been known to be as many as five hundred in ono drove, and during j severe snowstorms, when tho snow lies too deep, theso animals "yard up;" that is, they all collect near a spot of timber, whero they can browse and havo shelter, then commonco to tramp tho Bnow down all around so they can moro easily -walk to differont trees. It is when they are thus situated that tho hunter generally succeeds in making what he terms "good killing." "When traveling through deep snow these ani mals each takes in routine his turn to "break up." When the leader becomes tired he steps to one side and takes the rear until his turn comes rou d again. Bostwick (who has I cen pleasantly refused) Is this final, -Miss Daiy? Miss Daisy (who is coy) Y-ye?, ex cepting that I always ad 1 a postscript. And he got her. TiJ Bits. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. An aero contains 4,800 square yards. Smokeless gunpowder is the latest addition to the sciencs of war. FranfcTL-Jslio of San Francisco has worn a silver windpipe for 20 years. Skiold, the first King of D -nmark, is said to hive reigned ii the year 60 B C. Bats are numerous around Chiplry, Fla. Some boys killed a sackful a few evenings si oca. . A clam digger at Stonington, Conn., found a pearl worth $75 ia one of the clams of a late haul. Christianity was introduced into Scot land A. D. 201, during the reign of Donald L Joseph Pinion of Temple, Ala., found a rock about twenty milos from that place in 1868 that would cut iron, and he says there is a great deal of it. A chcc'.c f ourtc en years old was cashed the other day at an Alloatown (Penn.) bank. Tho holder said it had been all that time in the forgotten pocket of an unused vest. The most common stock expression in tho language is "Well," U3ei as an interjection. It may be given m ro meanings than any othor meaningless word of a few letters. An Indian fired at and wounded a panther near Moscow, Texas, the other day. The animal attacked the Indian, who defended himself with his knife. When his comrades came up, short'y after, they found both the Indian and the panthor dead. The wife of a Buffalo (N. Y.) physi cian has recently been adjudged Insane becauso of a strango mania for fans. She was accustomed, when out shop ping, to purchiso every fan she saw, regardless of cost, and accumulated a magnificent collodion. Near tho Ponto Fabricio in Rome, Italy, the river bed has yielded a great quantity of tcrra-cotta busts, miny of which have openings and show within rude representations of the lungs, heart, etc. They are considered dedicatory gifts in thanks for a return to health, perhaps once placed in a temple, of Apollo. Some ducks of a fho breed at Nor wich, Conn., had a way of diving and staying down. This led to an investi gation. Tho water was drained off and a colony vt seventeen snappi ig turtles found and made soup of. Tho ducks now conu up again when they dive. Stephen Mile?, seventy-five years old, blind of ono oye, infirm, and a parish charge, who hid never before been charged with any offense, was 6cnt to jail for seven days by an E iglish magis trate, in default of 17 shillings fine, be cause ho had been seen with a net, beat ing the furzo on a common, searching for a rabbit. When the first vessel completed the passage of tho then new Erio Canal, in 1825, there being no such thing as tele graph in those days, tho news was com municated to New York and to Buffalo by cannon placed within hearing of each other all the way along from Albany to oach cf tho othor cities. The signal was passed along in this way from Albany to New York and back in fifty-eight minutes. An Indian Potentate's Wedding. From early morning the windows and balconies were filled, and the roads were lined with crowds of eager spectators. At about 7.30 o'clock the Maharajah of Puttail, seated on a moving throne ( beautiful vehicle constructed for the occasion, and drawn by two elephant-), proceeded toward Sanaur, where tho wedding was to take pine 3 the samo evening. President Sir Dewa Singh rode alongside his highness on a splen did horse, with rich trappings, and the officials of tho State followed on ele phants, according to rank. The cav alry and infantry drawn up at suitable places on the road, presented arms as the procession passe. I. Tin Maharajah wore his rich wedding dreia, which was conspicuous not so much for tho famous argretto of diamonds and other histor ical jewel', as for tho strings of pearls, called scbra, hanging down from his turban, and glittering in the rays of tho sun. The scene was an imposing one. What with the booming of salute guns, and the beating of torn tons, the noise was deafening. Tho elephants with gold and silver howdahs, horse men and State palanquins cimo in regu lar succession, and woro followed by a regimental band of pipaw, who played on their instruments music adapted for the native ear. On the arrival of the party at a point about midway his hi ,hness was met by the people of tho brido's party. After tho presentations the Maharajah, mount ed on a gorgeously caparisoned elephant and accompanie J Ly his chief miniiter and high officiil1, went onto Sanaur. Hero separate camps hid been prepared for tho Maharaj ths of Jhind, Nabbhu and Dholeporo. . At night each camp was brilliantly i'luminatcd. At night tho ceremony called phiras, or ''tho marching round the fire," was performed at tho temporary residence of the bride. The guests we ro entertai ed for thrco consecutive nights, and tho Maharajah held a durbar in ho lor of tho occasion. He Forgot One Course. "It seems to me, Muiiv that we've had nothing but veal, voal, veal for breakfast all this week," rerrarked Mr. Bently. You forgot another thing we'vo had, Robert," replied th: old laly, quietly; "wo'va had growl, growl, growl lor breakfast every day too." And then Jonny Bently was sent away from ths tabic for laughing at "nuthiD."' Harper's Bizar. DOCTOR INGERSOLL. ffhe Amiable Skeptic Gives HI. TIew. n Medical Treatment. Col. Robert G. Lngeraoll has his ideas on doctors, and physics, and medical treatment as well as on some other sub- 3eThere is altogether too much gloom about most sick chambers," said he. "People tip-toe in and out, and wear long f aoas, and act generally in a way that would make even a well man sick, and is bound to make a sick man worse. I believe many a man has been hurried across the dark river by his horrible, soul-depressing treatment who might have become well, and strong, and use ful, if he had more sunshine and fresh air in his room, or the odor of flowers to offset the smell of the drugs, and smiling, hopeful countenances about, instead of woe-begone visages, whose every glance betoken the loss of hope and the belief in the speedy dissolution of the pain-racked patient. "I had a friend once named Haley, a royal good fellow, of whom I though! a great deal. On one occasion I re ceived word that my old friend wae ! dying and wanted to see me, so I went ' over to his house. I met his wife and ' she had a face as long as tho moral I lour onil fan imra mnro imtimnfrrrf n1ili Well, I went to see Haley, and there he lay counting the moments in a bitter fear that each would be the last. 3 don't know what particular disease he was troubled with, but either that oi the medicine had turned him a vivid saffron color. ' Haley,' said I, ' 111 be hanged if I'd want to die with such a complexion as that. You would be in a pretty plight to go mooning about the other world looking like a Chinaman I went on for a few minutes when the poor fellow began to enter into the spirit of the subject himself, and I showed him his face in a looking-glass, and that brought a smile. Then I turned to his weeping wife and told her to cheer up, that Haley was not going to die ; that he was good for twenty years to come. " 'The trouble with your husband is that he is scared to death,' I said. ' You all come in looking so downcast and sorrowful that you give him the im pression that he is done for and take away all his courage to fight against his sickness.' "Well, the result of all this was that Haley commenced to mend, and time and again since then he has said that my visit saved his life. "On another occasion there was a Major in the army, whom I knew very well. He was taken ijl and believed he was going to die. I believed he was merely homesick, or something of that sort. Well, I wrote his obituary and went to see him in his tent. "'Major,' I said, 'you are so sure of dying that I have written your obituary and want to read it to you.' He pro tested, but I kept on with the reading and detailed every pleasant incident of his life. Before I finished a smile flit ted across his face. After the obituary I read him a story of something that was supposed to have taken place a year after his funeral. It was a de scription of his widow's second mar riage. There were a good many more people at the wedding than at the fu neral. Well, this treatment had the effect to ehange the current of the Major's thoughts. It broke up his hallucinations, and he recovered and did good service during the war, and lived a happy life for years after. "Then there was a man from our town named Marcy. He got it into his head that he was going to die. At that time no one was allowed to leave the army for a visit to the North, ex cept on sick leave, or occasionally to accompany tho remains of a dead com rade. I saw Marcy and said to him : 'Now, Marcy, you say you are going to die. If that is so I don't suppose that a few days one way or the other will make much difference to you. I want to go home for a day or two about the 15th, but cannot get leave of absence. Now, if you want to do me a very great favor and quit this life, say on the 12th, I can get my coveted leave of absence to take you home see ?' But I knew my man and he didn't die. He got very angry instead, and recovered, but he declares to this day that it was my proposition that brought him back his old stubbornness and gave him grit to fight for his life. He always did object to being made a mere convenience of." How Wooden Spools Are Made. Birch wood is preferred. The birch is first sawed into sticks four or five feet long and seven-eighths of an inch to three inches square, according to the size of the spool to be produced. Theso sticks are thoroughly seasoned. They are sawed into short blocks, and the blocks are dried in a hot-air kiln. At the time they are sawed a hole is bored through them. One whirl of the littlo block against sharp knives, shaped by a pattern, makes tho spools at the rate of one 'ft second. A small hoy feeds the spool machine, simply placing the blocks in a spout, and throwing out tho knotty or defective stock. Tho maehiiui is automatic, but cannot do the sorting. The spools nro revolved rapidly iu drums and polish themselves. For some purposes they are dyed yellow, red, or black. They are made in hun dreds of shapes and sizes. When one sees on a spool of thread "100 yards" or "200 yards," these words do not sig nify that the threa 1 has been measured, but that the spool has been gauged and is supposed to contain so much thread. Golden Days. A Fill in Time, Save Nine t Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pel'ets are preventive as well s curative. A few of these ''Little Giants," taken at the i ight time, with little expense and no inconve lence, will ac complish what many dollars and much sacri fice of time will fail to do after Disease once holds yon with his iron grasp. Constipation relieved, the liver regulated, the Blood puri fied, will fortify against fevers and all con tagious diseases. Persons intending traveling, changing ditt, water and climate, will find in valuable. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pel lets. In vials convenient to carry. Hard Times. Bobley By Jove ! I can't see how old Grinder's clerks can afford to live on the pay he gives them. Wiggins Afford to live? Why, man ilive! it's because they can't afford to die. Funerals cost something now odays Judge. EXTERNAL USE of fiir And Sorene5s Resulting from e Diarrhea S Ub (fiesfaiTiadi well with S(Jacobs Oik Apply fbnijelslupol In lo( wafer and wrung, olf. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. "CHA? A.V0tER P9 Balto.Mo. Tttr larcrest milk-condensinc fact.nrv in the world is at Cham, Switzerland. Its output is 29,000,000 cans per annum.' From the Ex.Prestdent of the N,w York State Senate. STAR or Nbw York, enat Chamber, I -AiiABNY, March 11, 1SK6. f I have used Aixcock's Porous Plasters in my family for the past five years, and can truthfully say they are m valuable remedy and effect great cures. I would not be without them. I have In several lnstan ces given t ome to friends suffering with weik and lama backs, and they have Invariably afforded certain and speedy relief. They cannot be t oo highly com mended. Edmund L. Pitt? The tin can does not point a moral, but it frequently adorns a tail. A Woman's Confession. "Do yon know, Mary, I once actually coa temrtlated suicide?'' "You horrify me. Mrs B. Tell me about it." 44I was suffering from chronic wet knees. I believed myself the most unhappy woman in the world. I looked ten years older than I really was, and I felt twenty. Life seemed to have nothing in it worth living lor." "I have experienced all those symptoms mys-lf. Well?" "Well I was savel at the eleventh hour from the com mission of a deed which 1 shudder to think of A. friend advised me to take Dr. Pierce's Fa vorite Prescription. I did so. Jn an incredibly . ..v.. u iuS. Hie i rv- script ion' cured m, and I two Dr. Pierc debt of gratitude which . can never renay."" The man who has seen better days is now having very bad nichts. Are Yon Sick and Discouraged? If so yon are the case we want th e address of. We charge you nothing for a trial bottle. Wo cure nine cases out of ten of chronic constipa tion, diseases of the rrinary organs, liver and kidney trouble?, malaria and all brain and nerve troubles. Agents wanted in every town. The postage on one bottle is 25 cts. We leave it with yon to send it or not. We shall cure yon if you will give it a trial. It contains no poison Address the Hart Medicine Co., Union ville; Ct. News of the weak The hospital reports. If all so-called remedies have failed, Dr. Sage's Catarrh Kemtdy cures. Loud shoes Those that squeak badly. B. B. Bo fBotanic Blood Balm.) Observe the following editorial from the At lanta Constitution, the foremost paper of the South: "The Constitution has observed the growth of in Atlanta institution now famous well-nigh the world over. It is the Blood Balm Company who make B. B. B. We have watched the course of this medicine iu hundreds of cases that appeared to be hopeless, and it has worked amazing cures. We take pleasure in giving our endorsement to the men who make up this company. They are truthful, accurate and conservative business men or physicians. They have the confidence of the people among whom they live, and their medi , cine speaks for itself. A whole library does not outweigh the heartfelt testimony of one man who, in despair from a disease, no doctors have been able to cure, and other remedies aggra vated, finds that B. B. B. has restored his health, vigor and manhood. And just such tes timony the Blood Balm Company have by the busheL" No other remedy in thewor'.d can produce the number of genuine testimonials of remarkable and seeming miraculous cures as can B. B. B., made in Atlanta, 6a. Bead a few here sub mitted : KIDNEY WEAKNESS. For fifteen years my liver and kidneys have been badly affected not a day in that time without the headache. Since using B. B. B. Botanic Blood Balm I have been entirely re lieved ; no pain, no trouble at all, and I feel almost like another person. I am one among the greatest advocates of B. B. B. and you are at liberty to use my name. Mrs. C. H. Gat, Rocky Mount, N. C. RHEUMATISM. Newton, N. C, June 25, 1887. Gentlemen : I am pleasured in saying I have been a sufferer of rheumatism for ten years, and I have ex hausted almost every known remedy without relief. I was told to try B. B. B., which I did after long procrastination, and with the ex perience of three bottles I sow feel a healthy man, and take it as a part of my duty to make known your wonderful blood purifier to suffer ing humanity. Respt'ly, W. I. Morehead. BRIGHT'S DISEASE. I have been a sufferer from kidney and blad der troubles for several years. I have lately had what is termed Bright's disease, and have had considerable swelling of my legs and shortness of breath. The urea has poisoned my blood also. I used (B. B. B.) Botanic Blood Balm. Am delighted with its effects. John H. Martin, Rock Creek, Ala. TONIC. I have for some time past used B. B. B. as a purifier of the blood and to build up the sys tem generally, and consider it without excep tion the finest remedy of the kind in the mar ket Yours with best wishes, Arthur G. Lewis, Editor Southern Society- Dutcher's-:-Lightning FLY KILLER ! quick tth : wall? anvt ns,tl : noitanjw ; !tl doot M Huig miu-h tv iel wjr. Vf "fly. fwly : rtd th ttouw of thfin an;t be lVt take anrttitaK "just Mi gHd." Thw nothln Uk th ptnuln Dutch- JONES 060. mraMSnta. Par ftwpriMM Ala bam u4 mtnm jiats ir liMAMTii. BINUHAMTON. N. fc ASTHMA CUREP German AMhma Care newattatoglvetir German ArthnaCre newail to RiTet mediate reitin the wont cuea4nrarea oomfort- trial eanvineet Of moat Arvtieal. Price ftOe.wpd "tr7 DRBCHIETMAN. St. PnL Minn.H IT lL II la W p5l?e ft Sold by at drc Siste or grocera, or mailed, pojtagg Paidn receipt of S cents. T. R. DAWLEY, Manufac turer, 57 Beekmmn Street, Mew ork. R AXLE UucncAcc BEST IH THE WORLD UllbHllfc tr Oet th 0aale. aoldBramrhara. BLOOD POISONING, 3? the Urinary Organs positively cured or no charge. Our medicine is a preventive of Malaria and Yellow Fever. Full size sample bottle sent free on receipt of Bets, to prepay postafre. Address THE HART MEDICINE Cfc, Bo 301. UnlonTllle, Ct. Send for a Catalogue of tne COLLEGE OF PHYSICIAN AND SURGEONS, BA LTIMORE. HD. which offers the Student of Medicine superior advantages. DB.THOMAB OWE (Dean). 600 N. Howard St To tetntdaee.win wad plr of Ieadid (HxZ Inch) 8Cire IDEAL CRAYON-LITHO. PORTRAITS Clevel and-Thurman or H arri son -Morton with Ia.Oak Frame border for 50e. Geo.P.Houhtoh, Cincinnati ,0 Bead 1. Ibr LUt of Campaiga reqaUite. rAsiro Wajttd. TPYAft I Af!n5000,00l) acres best Ruricol I EAAw LAN II tural and eraiine land for Rale. Address.GODIiBr dfc JPOM.TSa.baIIas.Tex. RM SI Lira at home aad make more money working for n. Mi in liUsan at anything-aba In tha world Either sex. Coatlv .mtnt MSB. Tcnna rasa. Address, Tauc A Co., Augusta, Muiue. nOLDtswort tS00 par lb. Petars Eys Balre Is OT wortatUSS. mis saMLa Be. a box T irM u?n staJ iMidn Snsi r C. Tim toa ui Iim x tm UHS. DARTS TRIPLETS PhIi1miI H. t a. . PwrMoTi m 1 m, . . .. hnhtoB -f tuZ ""cja"U8 rnzeiortbe three w DaDlesat the Aurora County Fair in irk? would agree with them, i ; commenced th ofLactated Food. It helped S"mmeteiv and they were soon as well as ever md K' Lactated Food Is the best Food for bottle-fed babies. It keens them well, and is better than medicin W when they aro sick. THE MOST PALATABLE. NUTRITIOUS, and DICESTIBLE FOOD. EA8DLY PREPARED. At Druggists, 23c, 50c, SI.O0. The Best and Most Economical Food. ISO Meals for an infant for 81.00. S-A valuable pamphlet on " The Nutrition of Infants and Invalids," free on application WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., BURLINGTON, VT. B N C SO DR. SCHENCKS MANDRAKE PILLS CLEANSE the mucous mem branes of the stomach and bowels of all slime and foreign matter, start the secretions, Assist digestion and assimilation, nutrify the blood They relieve the liver of congestion, give it a chance to extract bile poisons from th blood, to make them into good bile, and to secrete just what is needed. They do not tear their way and irritate like most purga tives, but they treat all the surfaces and or gans, so that the entire system responds. They are based on scientific principles. They are entirely rational and natural. They always do what is claimed for them. They work on the system in the way chimed. They work together for the greatest good. They are not like new and untried medicines. They need no praise, but only simple men tion of merit. JST-Dr. Schenck's purely vegetable and wholly reliable family medicines are for sale by all Druggists. Every package has nratly printed directions for use. If you would understand yourself send for Dr. Sc-hcnck s new Book on Diseases of the Lungs, Liver and Stomach. Sent free. Address lr. J. H. Schenck & Son, Philadelphia. I n. PIANO-FORTES. ENDORSED BY THE LEADING ARTISTS, SEMI NARIANS. AND THE PRESS, AS THE BEST PIANOS HADE. Prices aa reasonable and terms aa easy as consist ant with thorough workmanship. CATALOGUES MAILED FREE. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. WAREROOMS, Fifth Avenue, cor. IBth St.,fl.Y. PURE W O S3 O 3 TRACK Umi MARC JOHU T. LEWIS & BROS., WARRANTED PURE White Lead. Red Lead, Litharge, Orango Mineral, Painters' Colors and Linseed Oil. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED- MARVELOUS nn M lillUM 11 DISCOVERY. Wholly anllke artificial systems. Care of mtnd wandering. Any book learned in one reading. Classes of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit, I500 at Philadelphia. Ill3at Washington, 1216 at Boston. Urge classes of Columbia. Law students, at Yale. Wellesley, Oberlin, University of Penn , Mich igan Unirar-itj. Chautauqua. Ac. Ao. Kndorsed by Ricbabd Proctor, tha Scientist. Hons. W. W.Ast JtTDAR P. Benjamin, Judge Gibson, Dr. Brown. K. H. COOK, Prin. N. Y. State Normal College, Ac. Taught by correspondence. Prospectus Post FREB from PRO F. IaJISE I TE. 237 Fifth Ave.. N. Y. 5 yShptCuhn-T-vovoivers, Seine3,Tent, Breech-Ioadlng double Phot (ran at $9.W; Sinarle barrel Breech-loaders at f 4 to $12 ; Breech-loailing Kitles $150 to $15 : Double-barrel Muzzle loaders at . to $) : Repeating Riflesu lii-?liooter, (14 t 130 : Revolv.!-', $1 to r ; Flobert Kitles, $2.50 to $S. Guns sent C. O. P. to examine. Revolvers by mail to any P. O. Address JOllv 8TOVS atAT WESTEItS HFS WORKS, PltUba.g, Vm. WE BELT ALL AMERICAN BICYCLES. And guarantee LOWEST PRICES. A. Wl fSITMP t.-. r f . nrlnn. O. in UTTU) lactory puce yvt.m, our price s40.. 60 in. " " .io, " " 35.00 48 la. M " ) 00, " ' 33.00. 4in. " " " 45.00, M " 3000. 44 in. " " " 40.00, " 27.00. Order quick. Also 250 second-band Wheels. Repair ing Nickeling. Bicycles & Gods taken in trade. Clftfl FARMERS OIUU SAW Circular 8a w Mil I With Universal J Loir Beam Recti- jf linear Simulta-jr" neous Set WortJT and Double t-, sentric Friction II t Feed. Manufac-x cured by the SAL.E.H IRON WORKS, KAI,KM, WELL DRILL All cuttings of the drill in clay, sand, gravel, rock, Ac , an diacliarfred at surface without removing; tewls. Noted for success where others fail. Drill drops TO to 90 times a minute. Profits largs. Oatdogne Free. L.OOMIS dc NY MAN, TIFFIN, OHIO. Great English Gout and Rheumatic Rtn$Mj reaaa. 14 rills. J o - I5 PURE S rf II WHITE CO I 2 S m FWOWES, Wood Plaasn. MILL 1 U-. i J. N. C. Hi
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 9, 1888, edition 1
4
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