Newspapers / The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, … / Jan. 17, 1912, edition 1 / Page 7
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r’ ’ ivood, 5 ;able, 6 ■e, 300 i well, ; north )c road, i srder to )MPY i.ROLINA King R If. A.Oan- iew York. I. Get one mges and ry descrip ikets. Lap- |d Harness. SAW CO. Ill Carolina f 0 Irezdy when y«n come. j rural districts lial pleasures* is too \irgent* h/hen robbed me |ta]k with rieigh7 •\\s of tlie day^ a telephone irt in the country!; NY dtate HOW TO CURE CONSUNPTISN It is One of the Most Curable Chronic Diseases in its Eearly ; Stages. Important Ad vice. Consumption is curable. T :iis does not mean that every case of consumption can be cured. Ad vanced cases yield very slowly to treatment if at all. It does riot mean that anyone having ori- sumption will get well without making t)ie supreme effort of hss life. Alerely hoping to get v eil will avail little. To cure even an early case of consumption re quires an unyielding determirai- tion on the part of the patier;! that he will love according to well detined sanitary and hygieniic laws. . ■ The first step m the cure of the disease is to recognize that the disease exists. Once estab lished, make no eitort to dodgje the fact: Then away with t’iie idea that the illness is “only ; a deep seated cold” or “simply a bad case of stomach trouble, f’ The issue must be squarely met:. Remember that early cases of consumption are frequently diiig- nosed as malaria, dyspepsia,*etc. Better far, to take the view that the trouble is consumptipii uid find out later that it is riialaria or something else, than to under estimate the importance of ;:he trouble. The second step is to provide a place for living and steeping in the open air. By all means live out of doors in the open air sunshine whenever the weati:er permits. If you can't camp Oa£, put up a tent in your door yard, build a sun parlor on the south side of your house, or enclose a porch as a sleeping apartment. Don’t permit the sides of tae tent to be down, or the windcvvs of your sun parlor, porch, or sleeping apartments to be do:; ed except, to exclude rain or ;3nof, saltpetre, Dissolve the saltpetre in warm water and stir thoroiigh- The following morning cut up the^hogs as usual, and pa6k in barrels. Put the sides of the meat or middlings in the bottom and the shoulders next, and the hams on top of these, all with the skin side down. ^ Weigh the meat down well arid pour the brine ovier until the meat is com pletely covered. The^i cover the top of the barrel with some go3>d thick covering that will prevent evaporation'. Look at the meat often enough to see that the brine has not evaporated so as to leave any meat expoc^d. If it should be come exposed more brine should be added. The meat can be left in the brine indefinitely, but if it is desired to smoke the meat, it should^ be>taken out in about six weeks. A Free Note Book 1912 Calender for Our Readers. We take pleasure in announc ing that any of our readers can secure a pretty vest pocket note 'book and calender by sending 4 jne-cent stamps to D. Swift & Co., Patent Lawyers, Washing ton, D. C. In addition to the 44 blank pages for memoranda, it contains calenders for 1912 and 1913, the population of the 600 largest cities, 20 in each state ac cording to the census of 1910, the population and area of each state, the number of electoral votes each presidential candidate received from each state in 1908, the number of Democrats and Republicans elected to Congi-ess by each p.tate in 1908 and 1910, a chapter of useful household in formation, and a chapter of use- fuUaw points for every day use. This book would cost 35 cents at a book store.^ Proper diet is of the greatest importance in the treatment of consumption. Consumption is a wasting disease. To counteract this tendency and to build up t he body it is absolutely necessary that the consumptive be given nourishing foods in abundance. Milk and raw eggs are perhaps the best articles of diet kno .vn for this purpose. Individual cases will differ greatly, but i:ia general, a consumptive will need a.pproximately the following dai ly allowance of food: two to threje quarts of milk, three ts eighit eggs, four to eight onnces of meat, six to eight ounces of of buUer, one helping each of cereal, potatoes, and puddini?, two to four apples and the juice of a lemon. Some patients will be able to increase this allov/anee 50 per cent or even more, white others will do better on perhaps 25 per cent less. Plenty of rest is absolutely nee ; essary. Keep a careful tab on the body temperature and if the evening temperature runs as high as 100, decrease the amount ox physical exertion to half. Above all things, avoid patent medicines, cough cures, “con sumption cures," and whiskey c'r; other alcoholic diinks. Be cheer ful, keep clean, bathe daily, fol low the instructions of a compet ent physician, and your chances, for recovery will be excellent. For further information on this important subject write to the State Board of Health at Raleigh for literature or to the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, at New York City. They Had The Doctor Going. College boys, whether of the old world or the new, are fond of mischief, and quite as ready to play their pranks on the most dignified members of the com munity as on their o^vn comrades, A well-known veterinary surgeon of Lemberg, Austria, was recent ly called to the telephone, when this convei’sation followed: “Hello! Is this Dr. N.?" “Yes. What do you wish?'* “My horse is standing stock still on his hind legs, with his forefeet in the air, and nothing can make him come down on all fours. Did you ever hear of such a queer case? What shall I do about it ?" “The case is extraordinary,” replied the astonished doctor. ‘ ‘I can give no opinion without see ing the animal. Where do you live ?” “Carl-Ludwig strasse.” “And your name?” “Sobieskie.” Here the doctor rang off indig nantly. The horse in question was the bronze animal which up holds upon its back the fine equestrian statue of John Sobies- kie. King of Poland, which orna ments the Carl-Ludwig strasse in Lemberg.—Youths Conipan- ion. M Alamance County Teachers' Ass'n Graham, Saturday, January 20, 1912, 11:00 A. M. PRO^AIW 1. Reading Course III, IV & V Chaps. The Teacher and the School— Prof. J. A. Bivins. 2. Announcements about the work in the county--Supt. Robertson. UNION DINNER. 3. Demonstration Lesson in Primary Reading—Miss Ma ry Carter. 4. Conference— Observation from the above Reading Les son-led by Prof, Bivins, -Every tesicher in the county is earnestly requested to attend this meeting. The teachers’ meeting now is a vital part of our school work and no teacher can afford to miss it. If you are a teacher in Alamance, we shall look for you on the 20th. J. B. Robertson, Supt. She Learned The Lesson. (From Lippincott’s.) A Baltimore lawyer had an office boy who was given to tell ing in other offices what happen ed in that of his chief. The law yer found it necessary to di>- charge him, but, thinking to keep him from a similar fault in the fa lire, h^ counseled the boy on his departure. “wilti-;, you must never hear anything that is said in the of fice,” he said. “Do what you are told to do, but turn a ct6af ear to conversation that does not include you.” A happy inspiration! He would see thatvthe stenographer learn ed the same lesson in passing, so turning to her, he said: “Miss Brown, did you hear what I said to Willie?” ‘ ‘No, sir, ” she returned promp- ly. DECIAKES COLLEGES OLD MAID FACTORIES The Best Way to Cure Pork. Denouncing colleges as “old maid foctories, ” and blaming women for being so fond of so ciety and automobiles that they cannot find time to raise fami lies, Dr. Robert J. Sprague, of Amherst Agricultural College, has found what he considers one of the greatest evils of higher education. “The business life wears off that restraint between the sexes i that causes interest,” said Dr. j Sprague, “Women become so| accustomed to the constant ana of men and vice marriage isn’t .00 A system of curing meat has been followed by Prof H. S. Mob* ley, Fayetteville, Ark,, with suc cess in his family in Virginia from generations to generation since Colonial days. It has been tested by hundreds of people in many Southern States, and every , , ,, . , one has found it more reliable 1 daily society tor home curing than any other | niethod. Prof. Mobley furnished: ?.Vm f; i r i his method to the Agricultural' . 1 he woman finds she ismak- 1 /epartment of the Rock Island linos for distribution, I iortable home. Why should she A day should be selected for; haa iiiiing when the temperature is; fhe professional woman has iow enough to insure a thorough i her own slie need not toolinfy by the following morn-'8'et it from a husband. Is it a ing', the hogs being dressed and dreads to ex- hung over night. I On the morning of the day the! 1 good horse and ws^on, $165. cash. 1 good typewriter, bargain at $35.00 cash. Me R. Holaiid BAD CASE - OF GRIP Caused Sore Throat ind Ton- siiitis. Restored by l^eruna. Mr. W. H. H o u s 1 e y, Greenville, Tennessee, writes: “Five yeara ago I took a very severe cold ■which resulted In la grippe. I never was so bad off. 1 was in bed several weeks, and when I did get up I had tonsil rtis and s o throat. “I tried to cure this for eighteen months, but it gradually got worse. A doctor advised me to have my tonsils cut out, but I did net like the idea. Another doctor examined me, and told me the same thing. I finally got a bot tle of Peruna, and after I had taken one bottle my throat was better. I bought and used a dozen bottles, and aaw I was going to get well, and I did.” Ask Your' Druggist for a Free Peruna Almaiac for 1912, 1 •' ® Mp. W. H. Housley. Your— V^al at the highest cash price in the County. Always rea dy to buy. Yours to serve G. E. Cook Phone 4606 Elon College, N. C. THE Charlotte Observer The Largest and"Best News paper in North Carolina. Every day in Year, $8.00 a Year. The Obbbkveu consistB of 10 to V2 pages daily and 20 to 32 pagee Sunday ]t handles more news matter, local State, national and foreign than axi;y> other North Carolina newspaper. THE SUNDAY OBSERVER is anexceiled as a news medium, and also filled with excellent matter of a mil celianeouB nature. Addresp THE OBSERVER CO.. Charlotte, N. C. hogs are killed, for each four hundred pounds of meat make a brine as follows: Twenty gal lons of rain water, thirty pounds ot salt, eight ounces of baking soda, ten pounds of brown sugar, one gallon of molasses (use good molasses, not the adulterated Kind). This fluid should be boil ed and skimmed in the morning wu ^ shady place. When cool, add five ounces of change for dependency, for a husband with an income perhaps smaller than her own, for the monotony of a home, and for the cares of babies?”—Boston Dis patch to New York Herald. Red Indian Brand Liver Pills are the easiest and most pleasant Laxative Purgative on the mar ket. Ask your druggist for a sample, and if he has none, write The Mrs. Joe Persons Remedy Co., of Kittrell, N. C. for them. Simpiicity to Mark Marriage. Washington, Jan. 11.—Simpli city will be the keynote of the wedding of Mrs. Oliver Cromwell , and Edward Stoleshury, of Phila i delphia, on January 18. ! The ceremony will take place in the drawing room of 'Mrs. Cromwell’s residence. She will not wear a hat or gloves, and her gown will simply be a hand some one for ordinary afternoon wear. The house will be prettily decorated, as it is for all society functions. Only the children of the bride and bridegroom the latter's law partners will be pre sent. This announcement comes as a surprise to Washington society, which was looking forward to an elaborate church wedding. The ceremony will be performed by the Right Rev. Alfred Harding, Bishop of Washington. ECZEMA CURED Advertise in the Dispatch. Pimples Disappear and Complextion Cleared Over-night. New York:--Thousands are taking advanta.y;e of the gener ous offer m;:.de by the Woodworth Co. 1161 1 oadvvay, New York City reqwosi.ing an experimental package oi Lemola, the new skin discovery, which is mailed free of charge to all who write for it. It alone is sufficient to clear the complexion over-night and rid the face of pimples in a few hours. On the first appli cation of Lemola the itching will stop. It has cured thous ands afflicted with Eczema, Teet ers, Rashes, Itching and_ Crust ing of skin scalps of infants, children and adults. It, is good for the preservation and purifi cation 01 the skin, scalp, hair and hands for the prevention of the clogging of the pores the usual cause of pimples, blackheads, redness and roughness and also the treatment of bums, scalds, wounds, sores, chapping as well as the toilette and nursery. .■i”"' '■ r I r • i/- j'' on 1881.—Cured daugbter of Paschall Lunsford of Scrofula. Mr. Lunsford has been Register of Deeds of County of Durham. 1891.—Cured Indigestion and skin diseases , in family of S. P. Saterfield, of Roxborp, N. C- 1901 .T-Cured Rheumatism of 10 ^ears standing after Doctors had failed. Increasing his weij^t &6ixx 135 to 170 pounds, in John C. Rankin, Pres, of the Spencer Mountain Cotton Mills, Gastonia, N. C. 1911.“Cured wifeof J. E. Crutchfield, Burlini^- ton, N. C., of nervo usness, ^ We have testimonials that show one continuous record of su^ess for 30 years, made by the same formula and in the same old way. cure In digestion,Rheumatism,Ec zema, and all forms of Blood troubles. Mrs. Tremlnier, our represent ative will be in Burlington and Graham for two w6eks, and if you will drop her a notice or leave word at the drug st0res asking her services, she glad to call on you. CHRISTMAS g NEW YEAR Low f-Ioliday Excursion Rares VIA SOUTHERN RAI UWAY Account CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS the SOUTHERN RAILWAY will have on sale f rom all stations very low reduced fare round trip tickets on December 15th46th-17th-21st-22nd-23rd-24th-25th-30th, 1911, and Jan. 1st, 1912, with final return limit to original starting point not later than January 8th, 1912. In addition to the dates mentioned above, tickets will be on sale from Raleigh on Dec. 18th. For all information as to these round trip rates, also Pullman reservations, etc., call on your nearest Ticket Agent or write or, wire the undersigned. J. 0. Jones, Traveling Passenger Age?nt, i 215 Fayetteville, St., y I^leigh, N. C. , t
The Twice-A-Week Dispatch (Burlington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 17, 1912, edition 1
7
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