Newspapers / Charlotte Messenger (Charlotte, N.C.) / Oct. 30, 1886, edition 1 / Page 4
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FARM AND GARDEN. Roup. This is considered one of the most dreaded diseases, with a single exception of cholera, that poultry is subject to. Cause.—lt never comes without a cause, and may be traced to damp, filthy, ill-ventilated hou cs, crowding too many fowls in one building without paying any attention to sanitary regulations to keep them in good health. The disease is highly contagious, is communicated by the effluvia arising from the discharge as well as by the contaminating of drinking water by the sick fowl's beak while drinking. Treatment.—Remove the diseased fowls as soon as noticed from their well comp nions, to warm, dry quarters; give the following: Add to a small teaspoon of lard as much flour of sul phur and o quarter teaspoonful of black pepper, mike into three pills; insert them at the back of the threat, so the chickens will swallow them. Then grease the head well with lard. You will find this will relieve them, and perhaps cure. Feed soft cooked food with onion cut up in it: feed no grain till entirely cured. And if the nostrils and eyes are closed, take chlorate of potash solution and warm water, equal part-, and bathe the head till the nostrils and eyes are re lieved. Toole and Herat's. It must be a very bungling farmer who cannot afford to have from $lO to $25 worth of shop tools anu a good place to keep and use them. The in erest on such an investment will be less than it' may cost to make a single trip to the village to get some small but very indis pensable re airing done when harvest is driving, and perhaps several men wait ing with nothing to do but to figure up how much they will get for the time they are idle. Some men ha. e very lit tle faculty in tho use of tools, but if there are two or three boys in the family there will probably be at least one that will learn to use tool-, if he cau have them to use. VAle awe lived very near a shop we should about as soon think of trying to get along without a plow or cultivator as to get along without a good haimer and monkey-wrench, and yet until mowing tea bines came into gen eral use and wrenches were put in as a part of the outfit by the manufacturer monkey-wrenches were quite rarely found on farms. An old pair of broken-jawed pincers were frequently the nearest ap proach to a wrench when a nut needed to be taken off for putting a new point to the plow. We know this, for we nave had our fingers pinched many t incs try ing to do just this thing, before good wrenches became common. No larnq onttit is complete without two or three • sows, a claw-hammer, a hatch'd, a square, some planes, a set of bits and a bit-stock, screw driver, a few gimlets, awls, punches, files of different shapes and sizes, two or three chisels, a mallet and a good work-bench with vise at tached.— Cultivator. Bee Notes. in order to ward off disetse incident to bees, I recommend a trough or some other wooden vessel, set not far from the bee stands and partially filled with water and some good rock salt, say about oue pound to two or three gallons of water. The vessels should also have a few cobs or sticks pliccd in them, to serve as fl cuffs for the bees to light on. Foul brood is io be dreaded bv all, and should be strenuously shunned. 1 have often seen bees infected with foul brood, but have never had it in our own apiary. We think a good plan for the safe winter ng of bees will be best accom plished by spreading the brood combs so that a greater number of bees can clus ter between them, insuring a greater quantity of heat smong the bees. All stocks should be carefully looked aftet. to see that each one ha- a suffi ciency of honey as well as good clean combs and a good p:olific queen. Always try to build up a good home market for your surplus honey, which is much better than shipping to woalesale dealers and often getting left out in the cold. I have never recommended others nor have we fed our own bees on glucose at any time. But if it becomes necessary to "feed bees I prefer feeding good syrup prepared from granulated sugar, and this only in such quantities as to supply each destitute stock in the fall ready for wintering. It requires from fifteen to twenty pounds of honey to last a good stock of beea through tnc winter, yet we have often wintered on a much less quautity and had them come out in the spring tn good corn! tion. Those who can do so will do well to use mats over the brood nest as a means of absorbent, as well to exclude cold air and retain a more even temperature ofj j heat—one of the greatest essentials in successful beekeeping.— J. 3i. iltckt, In diant. Farm and Garden Notes. A little milk and meal will keep the i calf growing. Cows worth mucii as milkers are vora- . eious and not dainty. Cut blighted branches from pear trees, ' and remove all dead limbs from fruit trees. A light soil, a little shady, and made rich with well-rotted stable manuae, is j the place for pansies. Cotton seed meal is hard to digest, and ought not to be given to breeding cows or to young stock of any kiud. Butter t inted before it goes to the churn, no possible aftt r cur.- can make good, or keep it 1 1 to eat until winter. j Green smartweed bri-kly rubbed on the necks, sides and other exposed parts of rows or horses will prevent hies from attacking them It ia best to cut up com before the stalks become hard and dry. Fodder as j well as hsy may be injured by waitiug 1 until it is too ripe. If young pigs are over-fed they sud denly stop ediug, be ni*e convulsed end squeak and drop dead. It is a bad rule to give pigs all the food they will eat. If the clover should have a rank growth be careful about turning rattle into fre-h t.eUs on account of hoven. Hoven may be cured, however, if taken in time in a number of ways. Young stock that bat been stunted in 'their earlier days will never fully regain ithalooa. and become aa large and wall developed as if it had been kept growing steedily from its first appearance. It is recommended to cut off the tip ends of the new growth, both of the maim sh ots and the aterals of the raspberry! and bluckbetry bushes, to make strong, i stocky plants, and greatly increase the!, product of fruits. A writ, r for an Fngl ah paper "finds oat meal the best staple food for chick ens." He generally wets it with new milk and gives it immediately after mix ing it. al’owing none toremain after each feed. o more food shcttld be mixed at a time than the chickens will eat. The Amerivtm Aoricuburut thinks 1 -, tnete is no otner patt el t..e . u.on »«vr< the pre ervwtlou of treen fodder by j means of silo can b* made more useful i than in the South. The cow-pea, so | valuable a- a fodder plant, promises to j be of the gre dost value as ensilage. The common cause o* failure in grow- , ing potatoes is lack of mo&ture at the time the tubers are setting. In a well ! cultivated piece on a < lover eod plowed under in the spring, moisture will be at- | tracted to the sou from the de aving sod. The loose sod holds considerable ■ air, which, as it cools, deposits moisture ! ju-t as it does oa the outside of a pitcher ] of water in hot weather. It is not so much what a bushel of torn may be worth on the farm aa what It may contribute that is important. When converted into butter it is most sasily transported, and also more readily salable. In the conversion of corn into iny concentrated or higher-priced pro ducts, manurial matter is left on the 1 farm instead of being carried away, as I when the corn is sold in its grain form. Gapes will seldom appear when tha water supply is pu;e and wholesome. The continual use of sulphate of iron to the drinking water is almost a sure pro- j -eutive against gapes. Take one- ; quarter of a pound of sulphate of iron : tnd pound it up fine in any old vessel strong enough to stand the pounding; j pour upon it one gallon of boiling water, tilow the contents to stand two or three lays, and then use in quantities sufficient to give all drinking water the character istic taste of iron. The greater p-evslcnce of injurious in iects has made the ap le crop nearly or mite as difficult to -.row as that of other fruits formerly supposed to demand mu h : more attention. The idea that the app e j needs little - are is now one of the chief I obstacles to the cultivation of this fruit. After the trees get to be of bearing age, or rather, after they t-cg n bearing, heavy manuring -nil he req ared at least every | ilternate ear. Whether there is a crop or not borers will ntd to be looked ift.-r and every veer when the blossoms I have fallen the trees should bo sprayed | with Paris green to destroy the codling ! worm in the young fruit. As many of our readers ra iv not know | the value of the different kinds of feath- ; ars. we will state that like ever thing , else, they sell according to quality, at I p esent prime live geese bringing IT cents ! per pound; mixed white and gray feath ers, 40 cents; damp and musty live geese j feathers 35 cents; mixed geen* and duck, 1 M cents; good duck feathers, SO cents; dry picked chicken. S cents; sc.ildc I. 1 : cent; turkey, from body, T cents; same, j lamp and poor, 3 rents; turkey tail fe ithers 10 cents; tu-keywiug feathers. | - cents. These prices, of course, tiuotu- 1 »te. but they will enable oar readers to j form a comparison of their value. The natural and apparently easiest way to lead a row is to tic a rope around her horns. But if she is not thoroughly broken, this gives her too much advan tage, she can. if she will, pull by the ttoras 80 as to require the whole strength of a man to hold her. But if after pass ing the rope around her hot us a halter is made of it so that the pulling is Irom the nose, it is a very different mat er. Thee a small boy can manage any ordinary animal. With a regular halter, anv cow can be easily taught to lead. II she proves very refra tory a ring through \ the nos -. and the rone or string attached to that will easily master the' most ob durate puller. After harvest is done, if the work has not before been attended to, the fence corners should be cleaned up and all weeds burned. This work i* much more neglected than it used to be before mowers and reapera came into vogue. It is something that has to be done by hand, and the difficulty now is to get men who will swing the scythe faithfully. Many hired men if set at this job considei it an invitation to take a day off. and will fool away all of an afternoon doing loss than a man ought to do in a c uple ot hours. The difficulty in getting fence orners cleaned oat is the cause of many weeds in field-, and one strong treason ' for abolishing all interior fences. Poetical Grammar. The following verses are old, but an 1 well worth republication and preserva tion from oblivion, for theyarv doubtless j the briefest grammar of" the Englisl ! language in existence: »• Three little words you often sm, I Are articles a, an, and tho, IL A n< un’s the name of anything. As school, or garden, hoop, or swing. 111. ' Adjectives, the kind of noun. As great, small, pretty, white, or brown. IV. Instead of nouns the pronouns stand— Her head, hit lace, your arm. my hand. | V. Verbs tall something to he done— j To read, count, laugh, ting, jump, or ran VL I Bow things am done the adverbs tclL { As slowly, quickly, iU, or well. VII j Conjunctions join the words together— As men and women, wind or weather. VIII. 1 The preposition stands before A noun,asm,or through the door. IX. The interjection shows surprise. At Oh' how pretty. Ah how wise The whole are called nine parts of spee-h Which reading, writing, speaking teach E*-S*nator Cnnkling ia one of the in corporator* «f ‘Tin Autom itic Feltvet- Company. * which has a paid up capita of so*.\o t>. and tvhn h ltd nils to 1‘ tii Ibh a pneoir atic tube serv.ee all throng! Ne« Vnrk City- A DESPERATE ENCOUNTER. Elijah Ceek's Terrible Baverlenee Gives fer the Besets es Others— Living Wit. The following graphic description will be and with Interest by all: "Dbjls Sxa—Any one who has over felt a j blames, at the pit of the stomach, loos o t ap latlta, aervonanase, sleeplessness, doll hsad- Sohee or strange pains through the back can en ters txnd tha oondltlon I was In two years ago. t thought I could readily throw those things off, bnt they kept returning. Conse quently I grew worse every day until last spring, when I sent for a physician. He mid I had a fever. I told him what con ation I was In with my water. At drat he i paid no attention to It, bnt finally said he would taka tome of my urine home and an ' alysa it. The next day ho came and said there was soma ritfflcnlty with my kidneys. My sickness . continued until my urine was a sight to bo hold. Another physician was called. He pro* nounced it Bright's disease of the kidneys, and sold t here was no cure ior it He did all he could, but to no effect I then tried every remedy I could hear of. The r aim was so se ver* THAT IT SEEMED I MUST DIE. I SAW a newspaper a iverilsement of Dr. Kil er’s SwampaKoot and sent e cht miles to get the medicine. When I had used one bottle, it cleared tuy water so thero was no sediment !in the bottom of tho vessel. I continued ; taking the medicine nnd kept gain j inc. 1 have taken eight bott.es in all and consider myse.f to-day as well as i ever, and can now do as much labor as any man of my ags. While talking with our druggist a few days ago about my case, he 6aid he was selling a great deal of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root and that he had never sold a Med icine that gave as much r-: act.on. Oh! I often tuink how much suffering I migut have avoided, both ni.ht an.i day, if 1 haaonlv taken your modicines when I first felt my kidney troubles com I g on, Yours with»cs; ect, _ (Signed) ELIJAH COOK. ' ! P. S.—Tills will be of groatboneUt to others, and yon may pnh.ish it. You need not take my word alone, for I can give you the follow ‘ tag references: 1 Simeon Lip<s 11. Clapper, R, S. Taber, C. O. Pierce, H. J. Warner, D. D. Pickett All«f Charlni ville, Schoharie Co., N. Y. H 1 The above testimony is only a fair illustra »of letters received daily showing the won *ul results attending the use of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root Kidney. Liver and Blad er are. Sold by Druggets. Price SI.OO-fl ties, fiS. If your druggest does not sell it mod to Dr. Kilmer & Co., BlTCOT? AMTOIf. N. Y, ■■. . - Rules for Highways. 1. Make the public roads neat and smooth, and pleasant nnd profitable to travelers and in d.iving to market. 2. Never throw rubbish of any kind into highways in order to get r.d of if, , nor deposit cord wood, logs or timber at : roadsides to frighten passing horses. 3. All owners who build their houses facing square tha public roads should show at least the same respect to these roads that they do to their own fields by ! excluding all weeds. 4. Remove all loose stones from the > wheel-track once a month, and all fixed j stones which strike and break the wheels, ; jar the loads, rack the harness and tire : ithe horses. j 5. Where fixed stones cannot be re j moved, cover them well with gravel 01 other road material. f>. Remember that a fixed stone may ‘ strike different wheels a thousand times | like a sledge hammer, and cause a hun ! dred dollars of damage. To remove it j might cost five cents. 7. Never make a highway of muck, soda or soft material scraped from the ! side ditches, which is worked into deep 1 mud in wet weather, but draw them into ’ the barnyard for the compost heap. 8. Where the road bed has not a dry | bottom cut a ditch in tho middle three feet deep, and lengthwise with it, with side escape ditches at depression!, and fill it with gravel or broken stone, coarse below and finer near the top. 0. Plant shade trees three or four rod.’ ; apart along the line, to allow air to cir culate, sun to shine and mud to dry. 10. Keep the roadside smooth, mow the grass for hay. aud thus secure a good track when the center of tho ro id is en cumbered with impassable snow-drifti ill winter. , 11, In windy places make the wind-j ward road fences of barb wire, to pre- j vent the accumulation of drifts of snow. 1 12. Never make the public highway > barnyard, nor leave wagons, plows and machines to encumber the road. 18. Never endanger those who travel by driving unmanageable or fractious horses to frighten and annoy other hornet. Bell the unruly animals or put them to steady home "labor with other horses. 14. Never drive horses across a rail- j ' way without first looking both ways, or, if in the dark, without listening. It is : better to take this care one hundred I t mes than tn be crushed by a locomotive j once by it« neglect. 15. Never keep a noisy, barking dog, to bark at quiet pnftcngors or passing teams to terrify horses and cause them to run away, upset carriages and break limbs. The observance of these injunctions will give smooth, hard, satisfactory roads lor farmers and travelers to pass over, bring their farms nearer to market, increase the value of their farms, make pleasant neighbors and attach boys and young men to the country. Country Gentleman. The Wealth of London. “Carp,” the correspondent of the Cleveland Leader and Herald, tbui writeaof the wealth of London: Tho value of the property in Lond-m ovtvies the wildest at earns of the wraith of Monte C'risto or the Arabian Knights. The land in the city of London proper, j which makes only about one section (032 1 arrest of the TOO sections, or the TOO 1 square miles of the city, has, during the day, a population of 80.1,000 business i men and their employes, and TO, OOO j vehicles enter and leave thia territory I daily. The traffic here is one perpetual 1 jam, and the property is the most i till able in London. A piece told there the other day which brought a price equal to (10,001,000 an acre. London property has doubled in value in twenty years, and this increase stili goes on. There are 1,500 churches in London, and if all tho people wanted to attend, only one tenth ot them could be accommodated. The railways of L ndon have 75n miles of track, and the underground railways alone carry every year more than twice as many passengers as there are men, women and children in the l n ted Sta'es. There ue nearly a thousand omnibus drivers, ind all of the omnibuses have seats out side on top, and in ide as in America. Em h bus earns on an avers e (TO a week, end the average fare is live cents. There ere also TOO tram cars and it is estimated that each bin driver make* eighty miles every week, equal to a dis tance around the world every six years. Extravagant Politeness. I received a letter a few days ago from s Cuban, says a Havana letter. On the upper left band corner of the outside of the envelope were the Initials B. I- _P* Now, any one who has studied Spanish i knows that B. L. P. or B. L. M., inaletter of extreme politeness and etiquette, are used at the close of a letter; but the use , of the initials on tho envelope I hardly think is as familiar to the general stu dent of Spanish. This is very usual, both ; here and in Spain, on letters of some reremony, and is de rigueur on the envelopes of ceremonious notes, invita tions, etc. Ladies writing to gentlemen or to each other, or gentlemen writing to each other, use B. L. M.— ü ße o las mane*” ("I kiss the hands.”) Gentlemen writ ing to ladies B. L. P .—"Beto lot pies," (>‘l kiss the feet.”) The compliment, of course, for the hands and leet of the party written to. The many expressions of friendship, respect, etc., used at the close of a Spanish letter are not sufficient without the usual B. L. M. or B. L. P. The following effusive form is much used in wr.ting to a person even of very I slig-t acquaintance: "With the sincer est professions of sympathy and friend ship from her affectionate servant who jB. L. P.” (kisses her feet), etc. To use one set of initials for tho other shows great ignorance of the etiquette and con | variances of society. A Cuban lady of my acquaintance re ceived on her fete day the usual compli ment of a visiting card under covet from a gentleman. On looking at the envel ope sho threw up her head with a jerk, and remarked that “one could easily see that that man did not know anything, or he never would have put B. L. At., instead of B. L. P., on an envelope sent to a lady.” I must acknowledge that I could not appreciate the nice difference. But, after all, on reflection, there certainly is some difference between B. L. M. and B. L. P., and it is only a matter of Spanish taste which is the most agree able proceeding. The Inventor of Salt Herring. At Bierwich, in Holland, honor is -about to be done to the memory of a I great Dutciimm whose name and whose : achievements are probably unknown to ! the rest of Europe. This month will i mark the fifth centenary of the memor able discovery of William Buckets, i Buckels was a Zeeland fisherman, and his 1 discovery was simply this, that salt fish i will keep, and that fish that can be kept I can be packed and can bo exported. Be fore his time herrings had to be consumed within a few days of their capture. Buck uls salted them.' It does not sound like a great discovery. One rather wonders that the system had not been applied from the beginning. However, in 1386 William Buckels salted the first hundred of herrings, and having salted them he picked them in barrels. This exercise of common sense resulted in a singular development of the resources of the coun try. The English fisheries were not as prominent 500 years ago as they are now, and Hollaud had for a time almost a mo nopoly of a mark t which she was able to create and to supply. Buckels had not to wait 500 years to have his claim 1 to public gratitude recognized. Charles V. had a statue erected to the herring sailer who became the benefactor of his i country. Queen Mary of Hungary,how ever, paid him even greater honor. Dur ing her residence in Holland she dis covered his tomb, and, seated upon it, ate a salted herring. And this month his fifth centenary is to bo duly cele brated.— Pa.'l Mali Garette. Chinese Competitive Examinations. Students preparing for competitive sxamination may like to know the sort of questions with which the Chinese stu dent, under similar circumstances, has to g apple. The Imperial Gazette is good enough to publish the subjects for three prose e-says, and a verse competition -et m the examinations for tho degree of Metropolitan Graduate: (A) "Tru- Chang, being asked how a man should conduct himself so as to be everywhere appreciated, replied: “Let his words be sincere and truthful, and his actions hon orable :nd careful. Such conduct may be practised even among the ru ic tr bes of the south cr no th. When he is stand ing let him see these two rules as it were fionting him. When he is in his car riage let him see them attached to the yoke, then he may bo able to carry them into practice.” (B) “The course of the mean cannot be attained to.” (C) “To take example from others, to practise virtue is to hold them in the same prac tise; therefore, there is no attribute of the superior man greater tlmu his help ing men to practise virtue.” (D) Sub ject for verse competition: “The early morning red is harbinger of rain.” It mny be admitted at once that these sub jects arc stiff, and we should especially like to see what a body of English com petitors would make of “the course of the mean cannot bo attained to.” The idea, too, of the two rules attached to the yoke of a carriage would form a puz zler to the majority of English boys.— London Standard. The Chinese have a weapon which the San Francisco papers term a “fan inife.” The blade is of finely tempered iteel and very thin, and the knife re->en>- jles a fan when not in use. Hall's never fails to chock falling o( the hair. Gives universal satisfac tion. As a remedy for throat and lung troubles, we recommend Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. The damage at Savnnnaii, Go., by the shock on 21st inst., is estimated at *3,000. Seven hundred and fifty dollars in one month's time. It seems Use a big profit for one canvassing agent to make, but Mr. W. F. Hopkins, of North Carolina, who is working for the publishing house of It. F. Johnson ee Co., of Htcbmond, Vu., did it anil is still going bravely ahead This was done with no capital worth speaking of. Dublin, Texas, lias just had a *200,000 fire. Mima I.title Fortunes max lie hail by all who are sufficiently intelli gent and enterprising to embrace the opisir tnnftiea which occasionally are offer,*! them. Ilnllctt& Co., Portland, Maine, have sonns thing new to offer in tho line of work which you can do for them, and live at home wherever you are located. Profit* immense anil every worker is sure of *5 a day; several linve made over *SO in a single day. All ages; both sexes. Capital not required you are sttrted free; all particulars free - You hail tietter write to them at unci'. Spain has 600 Ccncrals, 1,368 Colmmßj 2,000 Major - , '.OOO Captains and 18,000 i ientenants. -- The family of Horn W B. Mr. F. tracted a severe c ‘ ,ld ' H " n 0 „uml.cr o he could not speak. He tn effort of'two faji«Ho £ve ‘ t h«tire,3 m. M. nJ lx I m cured him. . Earthquake shocks were felt on &v" g Ga n ' : Charleston and , tbev were considered the severest since Au gust 31st. _ - The farmers, Tn their swamps, we re sure^ Could find the roots and plants that cure If by their knowledge they only For just the disease each one grew. ■iwfcsV ..rave now and “Swamp-Root try— -1 (for kidney, liver aud bladder complaints). As on tots remedy you can roly- The King of Austria will soon visit the King of Italy. _____ Hints to t'oiißUinPlivci. onsumptives should uso foofl as nourishing M ran be {.ad, and in a shape that w 11 best agree with the stomach and taste of the par exercise is earnestly recommended. If you are unable to take such exercise on horseback or on foot, that shoald furnish no | excuse for shutting yourself in doors, but you should take exercise in a carriage, or m some other way bring yourself m contact with the °*Medicines which cause expectoration must be avoided. For five hundred years physi cians have tried to euro Consumption by using them, and have failed. Where there is great derangement of the secretions, with engorge ment of air-cells, thero is a’ways profuse ex pectoration. Now Piso's Cure removes the engorgement and the derangement of the se cretions, and consequently (and in this way only) diminishes the amount of matter expec torated. This medicine does not dry up a cough, but removes the cause of it. When it is impossible from debility or other causes to exercise freely in the open air, apartments occupied by the patient should tie so ventilated as to ensure the constant acces sion of fresh air in abun< lance. The surface of the body should lie sponged ns often as every third day with tepid water and a little soft soap. (This is preferable to any other.) After thoroughly drying, use friction with the hand moistened with oil, Cod-Liver or Olive is tho best. This keeps the pores of the skin in a soft, pliable condi tion, which contributes materially to tho un loading of waste matter from the system through this organ. You will please recollect we cure this disease by enabling the organs of the system to perform their functions in a normal way, or, in other words, we remove obstructions, while the reciqierative powi r> of the system cure the disease. We will here say a word in regard to a cough in tho forming stage, when thero is no constitutional or noticeable disease. A cough may or may not fore shadow serious evil: take it in its mildest form, to say the least, it is a nuisance, and should Ik.* abated. A Cough is unlike any other symptom of disease. It stands a conspirator, with threat ening voice, menacing the health and exis tence of a vital organ. Its first approach is in whispers unintelligible, anti at first too often unheeded, but in time it never fails to make itself understood—never fails to claim the attention of those on whom it vails. If you havo a cough without disease of tho the lungs or serious constitutional distur bance, so much the better, as a few doses of Ptso's Cure will be all you may need, while if you are far advanced in Consumption, several bottles may be required to effect a permanent cure. Commercial drummers arc* admitted free to see Myra Goodwin io “Sis.*’ A not bet* Life Waved. Mrs. Harriet Cummins, of Clnclnuatti. Ohio, write*: *: Earley last winter my dimghtfr wa*attaeked with a severe cold, which settled on her lungs. We tried several medicines, none of which seemed to do her any good, but she continued to get worse, and finally raised large amounts of blood from her lungs- We called in a family physician, but he failed to do her any good. At this time a friend who had been cured by DR. WH HALL*B BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS, advised me to give it a trial. We got a bottle, and she began to Improve, and by the use of three bottles was entirely cured. Farmington. Mo., had a quarter of a mil lion fire on the 23rd inst. Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is agreeable to Use. It is not a liquid or a snuff. 60c. orelm y b!lm. latahhH Cleanses the Head. Allay, Soree. Restores FEVER Smell , Hearing. quick Relief positive Cure. A particle Is n iM ,HodBWp-—— U S I Into each nostril and UAV.CpWC » agreeable to use. r Ee ▼ Ka 50 cts. by maU or at drugjrfsta Send for circular ELY BROTHERS. Dnigglsts.Owego. S. Y. Us E WANT YOU! WW, W1 , * or teoDULU need ng ■ W profitable employment to repieeeut us in every j^s^SMco^Jssihu Holiday BOOKS. AT half HOLIDAY PRICES IF BOUGHT NOW ! [Bit h 8 Bar * ain When you can gat " n 1 I* -11 - 8 * they are not oflbrod ovory day. DICKENS* LITTLE POLifQ swsaz L 1 1*2.«U tWIIIMIKK v,y.V fn '*'>.lßt>,e,ortli*foilr»ol>iii*«s FOR #.KJ.S^stories ▼o um. 1 ctmt.il,. Tbs is,™ T.r ’"V '"'tplr takra Vow'H'T 1 We Vo nil,, i .-out.,a. urlT.', I '"’ *“S Giber Tale. T bounl In clots VolutlM, 3 contains The Ir« w".is "''J“' l Otbcr Talc!' tILT J>'e*. Vfiliim* 4 cifiui DI The ifclv H*Mik*\VltkWt f*rrelli»*. 134 L »°nard Bt.. w. Y. Clty. IdUCKt f) Walerproofcoa Itamj.-iVi’o 1 *"-eiju, tten'twserrnurm— In IB ErcrMade. B' A HEBICAL VICTORY! Cures Briqbts*lWsease. Catarrt of the Bladder, Torpid I- rer. It dissolres Gall-Stonesand Orarel. - SYJJTTOKS ar.d CON2ITIONS of Urine for which this Remedy P/I Vfl ehould be taken. Scalding Stoppage Wood-tinged 0-4—if Diabetic Albumen Brick-dust Dropsical Dribbling Milky-pink JR-S — Headache Frequent Coetlvcnew rJHfty Boncache Nervous Redish-dark Uric-acid Settling* Catarrlmcbe Backache Nerveache Phosphates Bad-taste Foul-Breath Gali-toler it IS A SPECIFIC. Every dove ffoev to Ihe vpot. Believes and Cures Internal Slime-fever 1 Canker, Dyspepsia. Anmmia, Malaria, Fever and Aguc,Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Enlarge, mentof the Prostate Gland, Sexual Weak ness, Spermatorrhea and Gout. It Eliminates Blood impurities. Scrofula, Erysipelas, Sslt-Itheum, Syphilis, Pimples, Blotches, Fever-sores, and Cancer-taints. It lea most Wonderful Appetizer, Builds np Quickly a Run-down Constitution. 0F“Tell your neighbors all about it. Sic, 11.00 —6 bottles $5.00.« ircd at Dr. Kilmer’s Dispensary, ■ igbaraton, N. Y., U. 8. A. f Guide to Health (Sent Free.) ers of Inquiry promptly nnawersd. BJALLDKIgOISTjiJ i C*CATCH THISTLE FTME**!*«»«rolWfrvn O Atthm 1 1 1 5 min it-*, t ~ *ftAl»» ours f>r Catarrh , and Bronchitis. Pricep*;r b >*, •LOh • boxss IQ." ; Post ii«ld to n'l mrt4 or th ? w »rlj. Ad lr?*s, J A - V. MORRISON. Btu.Air.Jt, Ohio. 5 THINGS of CAPITAL and KNIGHTS of LABOR ! ) IY Great-Greatest Hit! Price . (1..*0. Warned! Ladle* and Gent* to j Address J. E. Walker. 7 East »th St., New Yor*. 4 NTiZflStA*—Better than Qulnlns. For portion 3 /\ lain addr.-ss, dnekwing 4 cents)“Axtxzuxa Cube." • I Philo., Pa. 1 3700 to S2soo,Ur^l‘. t expense, can be ma<le working for us. Agent* ! preferred who ran furnish their own horaot and givo their whole time t<» the busines* B Spare moment* may be pre fLably employe-1 also. A few vacancies in towns and cities B. F. JOHNSON & CO.. 1013 Main St., Uich »iond, Vo. e >, i r ' *** ” ~ " ~ UNRIVALED ORGANS 1 O. th. EASY PA VVtF.NT srstem, frum *3.ii Z per mouth up lW style.*, to s*xn Send for Cat a alogue with full particular*, mailed fr- e. ' UPRIGHT PIANOS. Constructed or th* new method of str nglng. os similar :cruia .-sni for descriptive Cata o/ue. MASON A HAMLIN ORGAN AND PIANO CQ. Boston, New York, Chicago. > H N V- 43 BEFORE YOU BUY A . | -WRITE TO | HOTCHKIN carriage worn ! SYRACUSE, N. Y. _ t V7' ow PRICES TO DEAl.Eltn.jq_
Charlotte Messenger (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 30, 1886, edition 1
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