Newspapers / Charlotte Messenger (Charlotte, N.C.) / Nov. 13, 1886, edition 1 / Page 4
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FARM AND GARDEN. A Tidy Dooryard. A tidy dooryard, if it is clean and bor dered only by green grass smoothly cut with a lawn mower, is a certificate of re- j •payability for the owner. And every farmer may have this without money 1 and without price if he will only work j for it. Tba front yard may be plowed and harrowed smoothly and sown with timothy or other grass and pay in the produce for the mower and the weekly I mowing. The fresh young grass will I keep a yard full of hens—if nothing more—contented and happy and busy laying eggs. Thus far only the neat yard will be a means of grace, so to speak, tb the farmer, for it will lead him 1 to further efforts at improvement. He will soon be seen bringing in shade trees ; and planting them in groups here and there and cutting out flower borders and beds, and bis wife and daughters will ! catch the infection and be helping him with seeds and shrabs, and by and bv i that dooryard will be a pattern and an i example to the, neighbors, who will fol- ' low it,to the general improvement of the | neighborhood.-‘•JVsw York Time*. Currants. Fall is the time to set out new currant sprouts. E. P. Roe writes: Currants ai e but half appreciated by the world. Peo pie rush around in July in search of health. Let me recommond the currant | cure. If any one is languid, depressed | in spirits,inclined to headaches,and gen erally “oat of sorts,” let him finish his i breakfast daily for a month with a dish of freshly picked currants. He will soon almost doubt his own identity and may even think that he is becoming a good man. He will bemoregallant to his wife, kinder to his children, friendlier to his neighbors,and more open handed to every good cause. Work will soon seem play, and play fun. In brief the truth of the ancient pun will be verified: “That the power to live a good life depands largely j upon the liver.” Out upon the nonsense of taking medicine and nostrums during ' the currant season. Let it be taught at i the theological seminaries that the cur rant is a “means of grace." It is a cor rective,and that is what average human ity most needs, They are fast growers; i every cuttiDg of young wood six inches long will make a new plant in a single tv ason. And they will thrive almost any where. Wood Asbes. Wood ashes contain, in a greater or less degree, all the more essential ele meats or substances which form the food j of plants, except ammonia, or rather all 1 those which are not abundantly supplied by the atmosphere. The most abundant of these are potash and earthy phos phates. The quantity of these, however, i is very variable in the ashes of different plants. Those produced by beech wood contain about one-fifth part of phos- ; phates, while those of oak yield scarcely : any phosphates. The poweriul effor tof wood ashes in promoting the growth of clover of every kind is well known. In Germany often no other manure is used j for grass lands, and by these t rey are kept in the highest state of productive ness. Considering how indispensable they are to keep up the fertility of the i soil, they should be taken as much care of as money, for they are certainly most ; valuable. The following table contains a state ment of the quantity of potash contained in some of the common trees and plants: 10.000 parts of Oak. 16 “ “ “ Elm 39 “ “ “ Beech 12 “ “ “ Vine 55 “ “ “ Poplar 7 j Thistle 55 " 11 “ Beans 200 The ashes produced from the leaves of trees contain much more potash than | those of the twigs and branches and those of the latter more than those of ! the trunk of the tree; while the ashes of the two latter contain the most phos- 1 phate and carbonate of lime. The quan tity of potash in the leaves varies very much with the season of the year, being greatest in the spring and least in the ! autumn. In some parts of England) it is the practice to bum the stubble for the sake of the benefit afforded to the succeediog crop by the ashes, and it is a very com mon practice upon the Continent. Con sidering the value of straw for litter, this must be a practice of very doubtful wisdom; and where the stubble is not cut for litter, it must, when plowed down, ultimately afford to the land all that the ashes contain, and something more.— Cultitalar. Farm and Garden Notes. Feed fallen fruit to the pigs and de stroy insect eggs. The compost heap, if properly con structed and protected, is the farmer's bonanza. There appears to be an increase of ' swine in the Territories and on the Pa cific coast. The returns of the number of hogs for > fattening indicate about six per cent. r> ■ duction in numbers. Keep a barrel of lye convenient, and into it drop all refuse bones. By and by you will have an excellent fertilizer. D. G. Briggs, of Maine, prefers, of his experience in the matter, a silo built of wood to one built of stone or cement. Freshair-lakcd lime thrown about in the vicinity of p g styes and other places likely to emit disagreeable odors, will pay for the trouble. Soft wi oded plants should be placed nearest the light in the window garden, and the hard or smo .th-leaved plants occupy the background. The American Cnl'imlor tells its read ers to save all the feathers from chickens and other fowls. Is • the best for pil lows, etc., and put the others, which are rich in ammonia, in the manure heap. On many farms the pigs must be kent in close pens all the summer. Fuch pigs should have green food d' livered to them daily. Os course some grain is needed in addition to the green food. Milk is also good. J. A. Price, Scrantoo, Penn., advisos the employment of coal waste, reduced to fine dust, in agriculture. Hesavsthat the application of this coal powder to land darkens the soil, produces porosity and stimulates plant life. Cut out old raspberry canes immedi- j ately after fruiting. The raspberry plant loves shelter and coolness. The young cases should be fully shaded by luxuri j ant leaves, honee their natttral spi awling condition is the best during th&'hot sea ! son. Most amateur florists use tl >o large pots for their plants. Geraniun».s, helio tropes and many other kinds bl oom bet. 1 ter when somewhat pot-bound . When i large pots are given them thi y make a , groat growth of branches and give fewei , flowers. Turn the plants in the windlows around occasionally, so that all sidei. may have ' an eqnai share of the light and sun. Flants naturally grow toward the Bght, 1 and if not turned soon acquire that bent, lean-to appearance so often seen with pl ants in the window. Dr. Jabez Fisher tells :in the Uurtu | New Yorker that animal manure makes strong grape vines, but not much fruit, j and tend to induce rot and i nildew. On j the other hand, potash and superphos phate have quite the opposite effect, producing a large amount oV fruit of su perior quality. The ficus elastica is a plant exceed j ingly well adapted to window culture, because of its thick leaves of leathery | texture, which resist the dry air and I dust. Tffiey can be cleaned easily by : wiping them with a sponge or cloth. I One auch plant well grown is worth a dozen inferior plants. The damage of causing potatoes to rot by large applications of fresh manure is largely obviated by drawing it on the 1 land intended for potatoes the fall be ! fore. The manure is also distributed | through, the soil, so that the same quan tity does more good than would its ap plication in the spring. If sigaß of rain arc numerous farmers are always in a hurry to get seed in the ground, so that rains may bring it up But a heaivy rain always forms a crust over land wfth any clay in it, and it is always belter to defer sowing until after it has fallen, even if two or three days’ waiting isi required to get the land in ! tillable condition On no account should | wheat be sown while the soil is hot and iry. Walt for rain, even if the waiting lelays seeding one or two weeks beyond ’ :he accustomed time. If one wtants a perpetual bloomer and iomething which will make a brilliant. | >how, and isn’t very particular about lelicacy, ho can scarcely do better than 1 ;o try the double pctxmias. <>ur f'orists lend out some quite .as double as roses, : n all shades of magenta and crimson, ind most are blotched and striped with white, and some have elegantly fringed idges which give them a fantastic ap | pearance. The double kinds are not as rigorous growers as the single ones, nor ; is profuse bloomers, but they require no nore care, and will he favorites with :hose who do not like “particular’ slants. Fewer improvements hare been made n harvesting and husking corn than in 1 my other farm operations. It may be Decease fewer are ]>ossible. In the old fashioned way each stalk is taken in the sand, but not lilted. This makes slow work, but not hard; excepton the hands Cf we put stalks separately through any kind of a machine and do it rapidly, it nakes harder work still. Probiblythe mprovement most needed is in the corn itself. Some of the Dent varieties of torn open their husks so as to les-eu the abor of husking. This tendency may be | increased by proper selection of seed, cultivated corn does not require closely fitting husks as a protection, as wild corn night do. On many subjects the expression of J very positive views is generally in in- | verse proportion to This is specially true in discussing the com parativehardiness of fruits. Meu who know that a certain variety supposed to be iron-clad is really tender, because it was killed on their grounds, while less hardy varieties escaped, should explain the relative positions of the tree% Often i difference of a few feet, giving one tree the benefit of a sheliering bank of mow, will save it, whi.e a "supposed hardy variety, not having tttis advan tage, will be killed. Not cWcn an oak ran e-cape winter killing if Exposed in a place where the frost extends down to the lowest roots. Squirrel Pie Three young men of Charleston, Mo., 1 kill d twelve dozen squirrels in one day. A large gray squirrel was r aptured while swimming across the Pastuxent river in Maryland. This is said to be the first squirrel ever seen swimming across a broa i body of wa'er. A trackman on the Grand Trank rail way says an immense drove of squirrels cro-sed the tracks at Petrolia, Canada, completely blocking them. A hand-car which ran into the drove killed sixty four. Richard Chaney, of Denton, Md .ahot a squirrel in the woods and threw it across his shoulder. Famuel Anderson, another sportsman, approached Chancy j from behind, a d. seeing the squirrel’s bushy tail, thought the animal was sit | ting on a stump. He fired his gun and I shot Chaney in the neck. A pet squ'rrel was taker sick and its t tee; h grew so long that it could not gnaw. It was take ito a dentist, who ground the to; th down to their proper length. During the operation the squir rel kicked like a mule, aid its shrieks cause 1 people to run up the street io find out what was the matter. A pet squire! in Scranton, greatly irri tated a nut-seller by stea iug nuts from bis stand at cv cry opportunity. After j I the thieving had continued a number of j days the victim cempl ined to the quir- | reis master. It was t.*en discovered j that the little thi -f had stored fourteen quarts of nuts in its master s cellar. The I nuts were returned to their owner and j the squirrel was put in dose confinement. I Starvation in a Great Uty. “Thirty-seven is the number of deaths j ieported ini.ondon for the year lh-sdu« to ‘starvation or privation,’” says Tin \ St. James's Caret 7. “It is lamentable, and yet the wonder, .perhaps, is that iu : such a citv in such times the return is so ! small. The victims were of all ages and , trades, and included bookkeepers, fish ! hawkers, chimney Bweeps, infants and tl ; parish beadle. It is to he feared that the 1 return is iincomplete, llnubtlc. s ‘star-, , vation or privation’ caused all these. thirty-seven deaths; but as certain is it | I that they were re-ponsible fora great many more. It is difficult to say when a death in the cellars of the East End u not due more or less to starvation. Pri -1 vation it even a wider term.” A NEW TIETT OF CONSUMPTION, j And On, wlilcb Appeals to Common Sense, i Meor Curable Canes. (Med cal Stilus.) “Many persons die of Consumption who eouM easily be cured," says Dr. 8. S. Clark, I of Watertown, N. Y., “ir they would go at it right I have a new view of the disease. Consumption is not always of lung origin.” “How sol What is it then 1” “Many cases or consumption are second- 1 ary. The disease Itself prevails everywhere, , but the beett practitioners refuse to attribute 1 it entirely to inheritance or the weather. If ! a person lives in the most favorablo climate in the world and has any tendency to lung j weakness, if certain conditions exist in the system, that climate, however favorable, will not prevent developmeut of the disease. The disorder in such cases is only a secondary symptom iu the lungs of some other ailment, and can never be cured until approached through Its source.” “Yes, doctor; but what Is the method of approach!” "If you dip your finger in acid you burn tt; do you not?” “Yes." “If you wash this burnt finger every second with the acid, what is the result!” “Why, constant inflammation, festering and eventual destruction of the finger.” “Precisely! Now then for my method, which commends itself to the reason and I judgment of every skillful practitioner. You ; know certain acids ore developed in the body. Well, it the system ia all right those a ids j are neutralized or utilised and carried out. If the system is run down by excesses, anx iety, continual exposure or overworn, these acids accumulate in the bicod. If there is any natural weakness in tho lung, this a id attacks it, having a natural affinity for it, and if the acid is not neutralized or passed out of the syshem, it burns, ulcerates and finally destroys the lung. Is this clear?” “Perfectly! But how do you prevent the accumulation of these acids in the system?” “Irregularities of the liver and krndneys create this excess* of acid and the supply can be cut off only bycorrecting the wrong action of these organs. The kidneys alone should carry out in quaotitv, in solution, enough of this acid daily, wfaich, if left .in the blood, would kill four men. When the stomach, the liver and the kind’s are all conspiring to in crease the acid, the wonder is that weak lungs resistdeath as long as they do!” “But you have not told us how you would treat such cases.” “No, but I will. The lungs are only dis eaeed as an effect of this add or kidney poi son in the blood. After having exhausted all authorized remedies to correct this add 1 condition, I was compelled, in justice to my patieDte, to use Wasner’s safe cure; though i a proprietary remedy, it is now recognized, I see, by leading physicians, by Presidents of State Boards of Health aud by insurance physicians, as a scientific and the unit/ ! specific for those great organs in which over ninety per cent, of diseases originate or are sustained.” “Is this form of treatment successful?" “It Is wonderfully so, and for that reason 1 lam only too willing that you should an- ’ uounce it to the world of consumptives.” ' .Vote by the Publishers :—We hav received the above interview from H. H. Warner & Co., Rochester, N. Y— with the request that I i we publish it for the good of suffering peo- j' pic. In afoot note to their letter they say: “The experience of Dr. Clark Is not ! i strange to us. In ow corres|x>ndence we have round that many thousands of people ) are suffering from what they think is Con- j sumption, whereas the real difficulty is with i the liver and kidneys, proven by the fa t that when these organs are restored to health , by the use of Warner's safe cure, the con sumption disappears, and so ikies uremic or kidney poisoning, which causes so many symptoms of diseases that tho human system ’ is subject to. The same may be said of rheu matism, caused by an acid condition of the system. We insist upon what we alway have claimed, if you remove the cause, tne ! system will soon perfect the work already 6-r/un. Mrs. Rev. Dr. Theodore Wolf, of Gettysburg, Pa., wife of tho editor of the Lutheran Quarterly, said her friends thought her ‘far gone with Consumption,’ ! but after a thorough treatment with War-; ner’s safe cure, sho says; ‘l am perfectly '] well’ We can cite thousands of such eases, i butone is enough. If you publish the above article, kindly send us a marked copy.” We gladly give place to the article, tor if we can in any way stay the ravages of Con sumption, which carries away so many mill ions yearly.it is our bounden duty so to do.]—Pub. Origin of “Boots ami Sad lies.” Thiee cr four years ago I accidentally learned while at some French manaiuvres j that the cavalry trumpet sound called ! “boots and saddles'’ had not, as was sup posed any connection whatever with j boots. The true origin of the sentence l is the old Norman expression, outes la selle" (i. «., “put on the saddle”), from ! “Bouter”—to put on, affix. Equally by accident, at the German manoeuvres just i fini-hed I have ascertained the origin of our nord of command, “double march.” M e have in military matters copied much j from the Germans, especially during the ! life of Frederick the Great, toward the j close of whose reign our drill began to ; as-ume substance and uniformity. Well, j to this day, when a German officer wishes his men to proceed at a run he calls out; “Marsch, mnrsch!” the two words being uttered quickly. Thus, “Double march” is a most literal translation of an old established German word of command. —London Timet. A Faux Fas. The bashful youth had gainef a place At last close up beside her: A smile lit up the fair girl's face As blushingly he eyed her. Timid, he knew not what to say, But, with an effort, faltered: “How beautiful you'll he, Miss May, When you're grown up and altered!' | —George Birdseye, in Tid-Bits. 1 The Youth’s Companion. PRIZE STORIES: $1,500 First Prize Story "Blind Brother” will begin Jan. Ist. SSOOO Prize Serial and Short Stories. The other Prize Stories, eight in all, will be published during 1887. Frpp in Inn I IRR7 s; w II GO IU Julia I) lUUIi the Double Thanktgiving and Christmas Numbert. R**u Mon* OeStrPchKk, \>rßr£xcrJ<t'iMte?* r ,nc,utfgi Sample Copie* and Pull Announcement Free. ______ _ rioase mention ihi* paper. Address PERRY MASON & CO., PoMlshifS, 45 Tcfnph PflC», BaslOfl, Masß. Can Imagination Ell IT In discussing the death of a young j woman at Hackfcey, England, > inder cir cumstances in which a certs In insect powder largely figured, the Lot idon Lan j cstsays: As the powder appears, by '. Dr» Tidy’s experiment, to be perfectly hai vnless, the suggestion is not unnaturally made that I the deceased, who was post Ibly of an ! hysterical, lrighly-imaginativ e turn of ’ mind, took the powder in the full belief that by its mens her death m jght be ac complished. The writer of tl le article in our contemporary, we thin k wrongly, brings forvaird two remarkab Ic instances of what may be regarded ns practical I 'jokes with melaucholy term! nations. In the case of tho convict del lveredupto j the sciential, for the purpe ne of a psy- i cho’ogicalexpcrimentithem re was strap ped to a tabic and blindfolded, ostensibly j to be blcdt to death; a sip'hon contain- | ing water was placed ne »r his head . and the fluid was allowed to, trickle au- J dibly into the vessel below ii.at the same time that a trifling scratch with a needle j was inflicted on the cxrlprit*. neck; it is j said that death occuerod at the end of j six minutes) fear musl have played no l inconsiderable share In the fatal result, 1 and we do not know whether all the vital j organs were in a sound condition, j! though they were pri-ssumaiily so. The old story of the case of a college j porter is also one iu .point. The students 1 entrapped him into-'o room at night, a ’’ mock inquiry was held, and the puniah- a mentof death by decapitation decreed j for his want of consideration to the stu- j dents. It is a small wonder that, under [’ the dominion of fear and belief in the I earnestness of his tormectors, the sign of j | an ax and block, with sib-equent blind- j folding and necessary genuflexation, a smart rap with a wet towel on the back i of his neck should have been followed [ by the picking up of a corpse. * * j, Mr. Arthur Fhurtleff, Parker, Dakota, » writes that he suffered for two years with a | lame knee, which was entirely cured by the ; j use of St. Jacobs Oil. lie considers it a j most wonderful remedy. It conquers pain. ! An old head—the head of navigation. Mr. L. L). Vinson, Cashier D. & I. K. It., d has tried and endorses Red Star Cough (Jure. ; Senator Butler has written a letter to Hon, VV. A. Courtenay, dated Holborn. London 1 September in which ho expresses profound sympathy for ihe people of Charleston, and enclosed a check for &50 to be used for their benefit. fortune** Favorites are t hose who court fortune—those who are always looking out for arid investigating the r, < p lortunitios that are offered. »send your audress to Hallett & Co., Portland, Maine, on 1 they will mail you froe, full particulars about work that you can do while living at home, wherever you are located, and earn from So to per day and upwards Capi tal not required. You are started free. Both sexes. All ages. Some have earned ( over SSO in a single day. All Is new. The man who feels certain that he will not ! ( succeed is seldom mistaken. One of every five we meat has some form of ; Heart Disease and is in constant danger of sudden death. Dr. Kilmer’s Ocean-Weed Heart Remedy regulates, corrects and < ures Price £1 00—0 bottles 5 IX). ; Wonder if the sea serpent could swallow all the stories that are told about him. 400.000 Subsoriliers. If we cave a column to t lie youth's Comparr - J ion Announcement, wo con Id scarcely enume rate ifie.at tractions it. promises for volume. We are n'-t surprised that the Com panion provides something of interest for j every member of tho family. The Companion is [ published weekly, and fully illustrated. Its L subscription price is 31.75 a year, which, if j sent now, will pay tor tho paper to January, 168 k j ‘ISEMEDTI A Corrector, Nerve-Sest. "The Hearts the Scat of Life." One of every five we meet lias feomeform of Heart Disease, okidlß in constant dan ger of Apojiiexy or Sudden Death! SYIYIITOnS and DISEASE. For which tbis Remedy Mhould tie taken Heort-paina Palpitation Heart-dropsy Skip-Beat* Throbbing Spasms (Fit*) Numbness Purple-Lips Poor-blood Sbaky-Itferwes Syncope Faint-spells Hot-ffanhea Paralysis Heart-symputhetlc Rushqf Blood to tho Bend, Fcchlc-circulOr- Mon, Laivorcd-hrr/ithiruj, Heart-enlargement , Nervous (ion, Heart-rheumatism, Neuralgia and Valvular Disease. One MecVlno wfll not CuroeJlUnda of Disease*. I TIIIB R.EIYIEDY IS A SPECIFIC. It Pro went. Pulsy, Khoek, Sudden Death. Every irraedient is from vegetable pro ducts Tvhiiii- ktow in of every unfor tunate suflrrer. It contains no Morphine, Opium or injurious drugs. VS/“ V*iutacrt of impure Blood can escape its Purifying Influence . Price $l.O0 —6 bottles $5.00. HTPrepa red nt Dr. Kilmer’s Dispensary, Bifffhamton, N. Y., U. B. A. Lette u of inquiry promptly answered. Invalids' fluids to Health (Sent Free). SOL» HY ALL DRUGGISTS. The dangers of croup may be averted t>y using Ayer’s Cherry rector*’!. What with two eyes cannot see with one? T’other eye. A Case Not Beyond Help. Dr. M. tl. Hinsdale. KewnuM - . 111., advises us nt s remarkßdo euro of Consumption. He says: A neighbor's wife was attacked with violent luns dis ease, and pronounced beyond help ?””” k( ” ; sumption. As n last the fan,ll, was persuaded to try DR. WM. HALL’S BALSAM JOB THE LUNG’S. To tho astonishment of all, by the time she ; had used one half dozen bottles she was clwut the house doing her own work. I sow her at her worst and ha*l no Idea she could recover.’’ ! A pair of slippers-an eloping couple. | Bronchitis is cured by frequent small doses ' of Piso’s Cure for Consumption. ELY ’ 8 tATABHH ; CREAM B<LM.gjpf77l*^a I helped and ntrcrtW T 5”” “j 0 ft I me. I ( I «ur* head. J For / 'fefiEl week at a lime. .qJV- UH I could not see.— Mi nO I fieorgie S. ■!<' 'lsoN3 | JJartford, Conn, ; ,n?or»«ffiaßr-FEVER t agreeable to use. Price* • * • ■ • L&) cts. by mal! or ot druggists. 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A 575 TOP BUCCY. ■—*fff-iITTIMIIIWFT--| sssssi£ss3i^a£.« , jsaas m&sssxrn ■ • ■stauiH with tb. au>ve i ll^ll |,^' < ?.?*s? ar J* , 2 ,I *T® T >*f«n«r T nbbercoat Tha FD-il brandKtirrt* Tm"’' *' A QUESTION ABOUT Browns .Iron Bitters . . - [answered: : * The MtipuJias prrJ>*hly been sskotf thousand* nt times, **Hh#can BfWvn'S Iron Ritters cure eve Ty. thing J ” Well it doetm’t. -Hat it doe- cure an;' disease f.»r which a reputable physician would j.rcscnbe I HOI Physicians recognize Ir?m as the Lent restorative vent known to th« pr and innniiy of nny Fvllng chemical firm will subsUntr-to tho aseertion tuit there ere more preparations ot iron I hen of any ?if her sobetsne*’ nsea in mefbobie. ’l l:* rhowscon ci rdvely tliat iron is eeknpwl* *lg« 1 t * !>e the most impi irt&Utfact*irm sucoe.i*fu 1 r.ie-.M ;.l practise. It i». ! low over, a remarksblo Diet, that prior to the discor eryiif BROWN’IS IRON WTT|. KS no perfo, t !> Itetisfactoiy iron eombtnaMun h ever been va:h&. DOWN’S IROfl WSISS r-o-idtche or produce constipation—nil oilirriron tmuUcincNde. BROWN’S IRON RITTLHs ran-M IndlffCntiott« lllliOM«7tc*.S,Wcnltner% DynpeiMta. .Wularln, Chlil-i rtrnl Fevers, Tired Feclin«,tlener.il pebilkyd’nui imho Side, Back or fifnibmlleiulaeltv and Nfltural (gln-for all thone ailments Iron is prescribed daily. BROWN’S IRON BITTERS.£?32ft ininnte I.ike r.U other thoronch ioe<li< inea. it acts rlowlv. ■ When taken by nun the wrwnrtnp f benefit is renewed energy 1h- ir..?cles then Loc-mi firmer tho digestion inprntM. tne w'ffttllW artr <. In women the effort ißomially itiorri Mpi.l nrdtnarked. T)ieeyes begin at once to brighten: the ‘•kin clevrs up: healthy color co.neeto the chor k disappears; functional dernngeim-nts 1 r lar.and if a puiym* mother, abundant tnugenance H supplied for tho ?)ii!d. Remembei- Brown’s Iron Hitters in the ONLY iron mrdiiine that, is not injurious, i’hytl-iant and Druggist* rre-mmntd The Genuine has Trndo Mark and crrceed red lines on wrapper. TAKE NO OVIiEK. ■% tt* d M "If* O Obtained. Send stamp for PA 1 Kilfl 8 vJ I mentor’s Guide. )>. 1 tso- I ::am. Patent Lawyer, Washington. D. t. BEFORE YOU BUY A —WRITE TO HOTCHKIN CARRIAGE WORKS, SYRACUSE, N. Y. qrl.ow BBICEB TO MAJ-KlSafl. Ox-s: ifiEPIOHI BSEEGH-LOADIH Tcp-Snsp Action, I’isul (.rip. IMmimtlng Lock. FktnS Tore-rnd KffMmlnc. For too-l workmanshli-. couvsnieoc* of (nanlpaUliiiti, tispl end cion® o,I»- .1 1 r» jr. dur»MUty. and bean tv of flniah, ;fi.» Can Ima r- *- n .rqt an ! rbn}\.w tha world. Tbouuniit of tt.na» Guu* kuw IsMri «>:<l and thr demand for tkam i»rapidly InereSaivir. ’An would nrnat reaperlftally r«- eotnnienil all partie* ioteudlnK to pnrtkaaa a ringls breech loading shot gun. to give thi* a thorough exaailnatian before purrha«in*r one cf another fstiem. . mntrrna. U'Ula Itarrsl, 13 bore. iIi.CMI i 10 bore, Slfl.oo J Tw | f> | Barrel, 12 bare. SIB.OO I Bend Be. Id alarm* for cafalogna of Hollar gkataa, Stßaa. BevoUarv. Air Kiflrs. retire tiooilv, Guaa, eta. JOHN P. LOVELL’S SONS. Boston. Man. S N I - i. 5 tcusis #s«t mi tix; Best Couch Syrup. Taste* good. Use gS In time. Sold bv druagusW. SC»I rCII TfIMTLF. from Asthn alu 5 aiiuifus. cert at a euro fur Catirrh au I Broil ihltU Price mr If»t. ALOV, *'» boxes s'•. o. P ist nai lto alt parts or th.* w »rid. Address. JAMES P. Bsu.uaa, OiflO. SISS ROSE CLEVELAND, C'ouiniunuee a New fiio y iu Godey. OWE LADY WANTED .!■’il f Jn tfiiun to rat*ea club far GODEY'6 LADY'S BOOK. ffST Vift The eaxiett Mugastn§ to tcork \VwurJ T>* largest commissions jml f - R Wl ‘.'i. HAna/dr aiul bsauufuljprt )-wl A- j. VUminmegiteu to both Subscriber* Olub Bauerg. It u>iU vtv ,J&fotJfJKW nou to send lft cents for » 'Ww* Sample Copy containing full I varticvlnr*. with, club r<r-. Address, GOD S Bor 2 //. II jv l-.uU, Philadelphia, / Jenny June's Letters in 1887 iiodey. '• eaetoii
Charlotte Messenger (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 13, 1886, edition 1
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