Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / April 14, 1893, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.) / About this page
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KtTJDUS FACTS ABOUT BREAD INhieb Housekeeper Mtould Earnestly f '' Consider. ' A serious danger menaces the health of the people of this country iu the nu merous alum baking powders that are now being urged upon the public. There is uo question as to the detri mental effect of these powders upon the system. Everj Board of Health, crery physician,, will tell you of the unwhole some Qualities they add to the food. Some countries have absolutely pro hibited the sale of bread containing alum. , " Even small Hoses ,of alum, given to children, have produce! fatal results, while cases of heartburn, indigestion, griping, constipation, dyspepsia, and varum kindred gastric troubles from irritation of the raucous . membrane, caused by the continuous use of food prepared with the alum or alum-phosphate powders, are familiar in the prac tice of every physician. It is not possible that any pruden housewife, any loving mother, will knowingly use nn article of food that will injure the health of her household, or perhaps cause the death of her chil dren. Bow shall the dangerous alum powders be distinguished? And how shall the , danger to health from their usa be avoided? . Generally, alum powders may be known from the price at which they are sold, or from tho fact that they are accom panied by a gift, are disposed of under some scheme. The alum powder costs but a few cents a pound to make, and is often sold at 20 or 25 cents a pound. If some present is given with it, the price may be 30, 10 or 50 cents a pound. It ia impossible to name all the alum, powders in the market, but any baking powder sold at a low price, or adver tized as costing only half is much as cream of tartar powders, accompanied by , a present, or disposed of under any scheme, is of this class, detrimental to health, and to be avoided. But the easy, safe, and certain protec tion of our bread, biscuit and cake frdm all danger of unwbolcsomeness is in the use of the Royal .Baking Powder only. This powder is mentioned because of the innumerable reports in its favor by high medical authorities, by the U. S. Gov ernment, and by the official chemists and Boards of Health, which leave no doubt as to its entire freedom from alum. lime and ammonia, its absolute purity and wholesomeness. While its uso is thus a safeguard against the poisonous alum powders it is satisfactory at the same time to know that it makes the whitest, lightest, sweetest and most delicious food, which will keep moist and fresh longer, and that can be eaten with im munity hot or cold, stale or fresh, .and also that owing to its greater strength it is more economical than others. , These facts should incline consumers to turn a deaf ear to all importunities to huy the inferior powder. If a grocer urges the sale of the cheap, impure, alone brands, it should be borne in mind that II it because he can make more profit on them. The wise housekeeper will decline ia all coses to take them. 1 Take no chanctt through using a doubt ful article where so important a, matter at the health or life of dear ones it at stale. The various German fraternities oi 'Freemasons were incorporated into ona body by Jost Dotzingerin 1414. , Nearly 4,000,000 tons of coal wen ( mined ia Colorado during last year. S3 Vcrlhjf Hood's Cured When Others Failed Salt Rheum or Psoriasis-Severe Case. Mr. N. J. McCoun Kingsley, Iowa. "In 1879 1 Lad an eruption appear on my left log and arm, Sometimes it would ulcerate and on account of It I was unable to work a great deal of the time. I had seven doctors ex amine and treat me -without success. Some called it psorasis, some eczema, some salt rbeum and one knowing one called it prairie iicb. All the doctors in the county had a trial but none did me a particle of good. I spent all my spare money trying to get relief. Finally I was persuaded to try Hood's Sarsaparilla. After usinff one and a half bottles I saw the Iw-nefit. I have now used the third bottle and am completely cured. I received 'more j mm Sarsaparilla benefit from, three dollar' worth of Hood's f . l-.-aj n rli'thaa from the hundreds of dollars I jiiil for advice and other medicine. Any one (-j T 't? from ekin trouble will surely feet re ,f P'.-l's Sarsaparilla, " X. J. McCoun, :: KfiwisWWwav:; ; ; -I ' f b.-aj i.-to . . a Know This to Be True " Y iiwMf. X. J. Mi-Coun; saw bis log d ki-:: !-cf"ve taking Hood's Samaparilla and v :--!--rilily ft dieted; now fco is cun-d." . . V -,XI .-,-;Ht, "1"). A.OLTMAM.V, "II- E. KlI.lS. O, Bm. mtmv-' y r. jii fc:;f, ilintK'f y, 'Iowa.'' ft3tmm4P PHIa va tfct beot.'aftM'-dlBaav PUlaaa- EQUINE MEAT M FOOtX HOUSES BUTCHERED IN AMESIOA AND SOLD IN EUROPE. 4ccnrding to an American Consul, the Meat ia Bought by ttaet Poor ' ot Several Foreign Countries. ORSE meat for the use of Europe's poor." ' Thnt sentence is one that (T is creating no end of com ment these days, for it is the official re mark made recently by Unitea States Consul Roosevelt at Brussels. ' Still further, the Consul says that the meat is furnished by American specu lators. It ia a misdemeanor to sell horse meat -for food iu this city. It is a misdemeanor to cart horse meat designed for food through the city of New York. But if the meat can be taken to any one of the dozen big transatlantic liners and shipped without detection it isn't illegal for the ships to carry it. , It is this latter statement that tells the story of the reason why tho United States furnishes Europe with its tooth sontfi horse meat. The risk of detection may be great, but the profits are so large that the risk can be taken with impunity, la fact, a 1600-pound horse can be made to produce in cold cash at least $'30, and as the average weekly output of a horse meat slaughter house is 250 animals, you can easily see Jhat the business ia a profitable one. . Horse meat is not particularly unpal atable if it is good young horse meat. It is strong, rather "gamey" in taste, and has a coarse fiore which makes it rather tough, but if you are so poor that the purchase of beef is utterly beyond your means, a good substitute at four cents a pound would be horse meat, i "It has been fouud profitable," adds Consul Roosevelt, "to ship cargoes of such meat from New York to all points in Belgium to supply the tables of th& poorer elapses. Horse meat has become the daily diet of the poor of Belgium, Germany and Austria. A steady supply is constantly arriving at Antwerp, whence it is distributed to dealers from all Euro peaa cities, and thus reaches the masses. In speaking of this remarkable official story to Dr. Cyrus Edson and President Charles O. Wilson, of the ' Board of Health, both officers joined in saying that it was very probable that good horse meat was as life sustaining as poor beef. "But you can rest assured that if any horse meat reaches Europe, as Coasul Roosevelt says, it is the meat of wornout, discrepit, diseased animals, which have outlived their usefulness, and are only fit to kill," said Dr. Edson. Of course, their flesh is not- tit to eat, but the Euro pean peasant seems to have a strong stomach, and what would kill an Ameri can working man he seems to thrive upon. As far as our department is con cerned, we do not propose to allow horse slaughter yards to exist in this city. Outside of it we have no jurisdiction. We also take pains to see that no horse meat passes through the city or enters it, and that ia abouc all that we can do to save Europe's poor from horse meat bills of fare."- Hardly a mile from Long Island City, ' on the broad highway that leads to Win field, L. I., Is one of the largest horse slaughter houses in the country. ' It is an establishment unique in its fittings. Standing in the centre of a little plot of five or six acres of iaad is a two-story and attic stable. In the in terior of the stable the epace has been partitioned into two big rooms. One of the rooms has been turned into a regular stable, where the horses which the owner of' the place is to make into suc culent steaks and chops, calmly eat away and await their fate. The animals stand in a long line of stalls, and when a Journal man visited the stables recently, four worn-out old horses were the occu pants of the stalls. , It is but a step from these stables to the other room, which has been turned into the slaughter room of this great "horse-meat mill." The slaughter room has a masonry floor, set upon an incline. One end of - the room has a gigantio double tank, while barrels, and boxes, and hooks, upon which were hanging the remains of several horses made up the queer outfit. In the centre of the room is a post, to which was tied a big, i raw-boned, aged horse. A man dressed in blue overalls and flannel shirt was , standing over tho animal, with a gleam i ing revolver in hand. "Pop I" Thus the weapon spoke, and the horse tell with a ponderous slump, dead upon the masonry floor. i The Journal man explained that he wanted to buy some horse meat, and was promptly told that none was for sale. "I do not sell any meat in this coun try," said the owner of the establishment, who came to talk 1 5 the reporter from jhis neat cottage home, a few hundred feet from the stable. "It is against the law to do so, especially in this State, and besides, there isn't much demand for horse meat in America. Poor people here nearly always can earn enough to buy beef, but ia Europe they can't, so they buy horse meat. I did sell some horse meat about a year ago to a Ger man who Iired in Long Island City, but I was arrested and made to pay a fine of $250, and I shall soil no more in America." Sutton said that he buys horses of any one who has them to sell. His great source of supply is the New York street car lines. An average horse, he says, can be bought for $2. Sometimes he is gives horses that are utterly useless for draught purposes, providing , he will cart them away. "I make at least two cents a pound on every horse I kill. The cost ot turning an animal into meat, shipping him abroad and selling him is very small; so slight that there is fifty per cent, .of profit in selling horse steak at four cents a pound." Bat Sutton said it ia not only in the E&leof the horsts lor food that there is a profit, A hcrsy's hoot ain? head are sold to rlao tcskfr;; fcU hlls ha? nfiisl price among RioTe.mafcent :bia '.blood m .'Sutton bats th&t he shins abroad week ly about 10,000 pounds of meat, but that does not show thi number of ftof3es that he weekly slaughters as he says unfa ue vuij aouus me uesc oi uis weea ly grist of 250 head to his foreign mar ket. I just kill the poorcut ot my horses, said Sutton "and get what t cad out of them as average dead hons, and not as an article of food." But this single output does r.ot by ant means buow the exact shipments of horse meat abroad, ibere aro a half .dozen horse meat manufactories in this part of the country, while Cana U has gone 'into the business, too, shipping on a line of steamers, which run abroad from Montreal. Sutton says that tho weekly shipment of horso meat from American shores easily reachc a 500,000 pounds; lie adds that he think s this is a very low esti .mate. New York Journal. , SELECT SIFTINGS. Rata will not eat oranges though very partial to apples. Paper was made from rags as early as the Fourteenth Century. The cott of the Capitol at Washington has exceeded $30,000,000. Tho turtle lives for nearly a century, and the pike for about 175 yean. It is said that pigeons have been used as mail carriers for about 700 years. Turned-in toes are often found with preoccupied, absent-minded persons. One of the commonest salutations In Hawaii is "Alo ha," which means "I love you." Over 600 varieties of cotton are said to exist 400 in Asia and Africa and 200 in America. The Egyptians employed carayatic figures, afterward called carayatides, at least 2500 years B. C. An Ohio physician proposes to abate kissing, but the average young man pro poses with a view to keeping it up. The Florida coast has a floating hotel which moves from place to place wherever the best fishing happens to ba. Hawaii's flag bears stripes of red, white and blue a sort of outward and visible sign that the little isle has a kind oi affinity for the great Republic. The Australian colony of Victoria pro duced 663,000 ounces of gold last year, an increase of 41,000 ounces over 1391, and the largest yield since 1886. Governor Flores, of the Mexican State of Durango, believes tfcut he has dis covered the famous mountain of gold, the legend of which is a household story in Mexico. Thero Is a reptile common to the Sao ramento Yalley, California, known as the blowsnako. A fullgrown blowsnake thinks nothing of swallowing a half dozen eggs at a time. . . . There Is a carrot in Visalia, CalM of the Belgian variety, that measures eight een and a quarter inches around tho largest part and twenty-three inches in length from the leaves downward. The horseshoe superstition has been considerably modified in the mind of a St. Louis man. He found a horseshoe and nailed it over his door. A week later, as ho was entering the houes, lightning passed through the horseshoe and knocked him senseless. A relic of one of the most extraordin ary surgical cases ever heard of is pre served in the Military Hospital at Ply mouth, England. This is the heart of one Samuel Evans,' a private grenadier in the Second Regiment of Foot, who died in the above hospital on January 30th, 1809, sixteen days after he had been shot right through the heart. How Bnzzarus Kin Snnses. "I once observed," said Lamartine Gibson to a St. Louis Globe-Democrat man, "what was to me a new and inter esting sight-that of a half-dozen buz zards killing a snake. It was years ago, when I lived as a boy down on a farm near Sheboull, 111. One June morning I sat on a rail fence under a walnut tree, overlooking a field of growing wheat, when I observed high in the air two oi three buzzards sailing about, just as lazy and delightfully smooth as one could imagine, around and around in a circle. It was net long until several more arrived and then I counted a half dozen. They drew nearer from over a patch of woods and dropped near the ground in the next field. Here they circled about, every now and then swooping close to the earth, and all at once arose with a great, black, wriggling cord that I at once imagined must be a snake. The buzzard dropped the snake from about fifteen feet up and then dropped right after it and brought it up again. I jumped from the fence and ran across the field orer near where the battle, somewhat lopBidely, was progressing. The half dozen buzzards were close to gether, taking turn about at the snake, carrying it aloft and - then dropping it with a deadly thud. I thought at the time that a snake could not stand many alls like that, and so I grabbed a stick and ran near to where it last fell. My approach scared tbem away. One bird, however, made a swoop and gathered the snake by trie back but the beak grip was not strong enough and the ser pent fell to the ground. I reached there before the bird could swoop again, and stood guard over the remains. Tbe snake was stunned to death. It was consider ably torn a gat, long ' black snake fully five feet in length and one and a half inches in thickness. I added a few blows with my club for assurance pake and then walked away to see if the buz znrds would return. They had ascended high into the air, but they were still over the spot, circling about, awaiting my de parture. I drew off and sat down by the fence.' Then they came down. One seized the reptile and sailed away, closely followed by the other five. It was a buttle of birds then, and in.tLe scri31rr.fi.70 the reptile was frequently dropped. The coo test continued far oyer t- a'Cclj an i ' cut of my vision." I The annual allowance of the Crown Prince of Roumania is almost two and a half times as large a sum as the salary of tho President of the tfpitcd States. .. England continues to Increase hef itmed forco in Egypt, and France is therefore irnttf. Both tho method arid results when Sjrnn of l iirs ia tnkon; it is pleasant and refreshing to Uid tttelc, and nets fently yet promptly Oil tliO Kidney's-, aver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head ache? and fevers and cures habitual constipation. ' By nip of Figs is tho only remedy of its kind . ever ' pro iuecd, pleasing to thz tnsto and ac ceptable to tho stomach, prompt In its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the moet healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the iliOfit popular, remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wisnes 10 try it. uo not accept any eubstitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. touisvtue. A,fw vans. n.v. M is Your Blood? rmmmmirmtmma I had a malignant breaking out on my leg below the knee, and was cured sound and well with two and a half bottles or fV"?VTd Other blood medicines had failed l-TJ-V,' ! Other blood medicines had failed to do mo any good. Will C. Beatv, Yorkville, S. C. I was troubled from childhood with an ap gravatpd onwo of Tetter, and three bottles of fTTSTTvTI cured mo permanently. I Vt''?'''3 . Wallace Mann, ,rtt,f , . Mannville, I. T. Our book on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. SHILOHS CURE.' Cures Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Horo Throat, Sold by nil lru3ists on a Guarantee. B, N. U. 13. A Powerful Flesh Maker. A process that kills the taste of cocl-liver oil has done good service but the process that both kills the taste and effects par tial digestion has done much more. iiulsion stands alone in the field of fat-foods. It is easy of assimilation because part ly digested before taken. Scott's Emulsion checks Con' sumption and all other wasting diseases. IV tin red lit Sunt f & H twit a f'limiu Now Vol It. uid by ilrutftfisiLH jviy wiioro. n A Li m mmww Conanmptlrea nd people I who hare wek luags or Aitb- ma. should use Plso'a Cure for ! Consumption. It baa cared l thousands. It has not Injur ed one. j t is not oaa to I. I. l.hA tlAat. AiMiirh v i rt I Sold ererrwnere. 25c. If U nrwAPF op fraud. Ask for. and tanist upon having XV. Ii. DOUGLAS KUItES. None gen uine without V. L Jiouglaa name and priee stamped on bottom. JL00K S3 eoia every wuere. As A l I sold at m A made V The F I SOUGH CUB -V- Scotrs El Sold everywhere. S w 1 . v t , 4 - 1 merit: , linyBiBEjhgs . vivo exclusive to hhnc 1ealer fti ta. t rise lr titri ;'.) e. Hunt Idi' mlomyuitr pi 4-tin rn lul ---i-tt $ , h .! t isi7.0 and nviiilb wiiuifii. A t s. 1j iaii I j., nro tli; F6fSale: H.wU Til t T7e offer On Hundred DoHtTB reward tot any case of catarrh that cannot bo cured by UuungHAll's Catarrh Curs. .. JT. J. Chjcnbt & Co.. Props., Toledo. O, Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe blm perreotiy conoraui in au ousineBs ithubhu- tiona, ana nnanoiauy aoie rt carry ova auy uu- bsrauons made by tlielr firm, YfjxjT jS Thoax, Wholesale Drngcista, Toledo, Waxdixo, KISwan A Martin, Wholesale DruspitA1Tolcdo, O. . Ball's Catarrh Cure is taken intermyiy, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur- aces of the system. Testimonials sent free, 'rice 76c per., bottle. goJLdJy all druggists. The first offense maybe an Impulse; tb second, never. fo ff.AfBlt Summit can be had for Coujths and Colds of tfttt toMblo of the Throat than "liroum't Bronchial Trwfafr Trice cents. Sold only In boxet. ,' , Life is an agglomeration of iiiceagrui ties. Spring ia the jimmy" that opens the bud. , flrWfl's Iron Bitters enres Dynpepria, Mala ria, lillloitsnew and General Debility. Gives strength, aids Disrestion, tones the nerves creates appetite. The bwt tonic for Nursing Mothers, weak women and children. A man can afford to be critical, not having been born with the. iacumbancy ot nleasinif. If aflUcted with gore eyes uso Dr.Isaao Thomfl son's Eyewater jjruggtsts sell at 25c. per bottla. A New York man claim to have a famous Bible worth $L0,0OU. Malaria cared and, eradicated from the sys tem by Brown's Iron Hitters, which enr.cb.es the blood, tones tho nerves aids digestion. Acts like a charm on persons in a-aneraliU health, giving new energy aod strength. Iloir They Cnro for Jlorsos in Japan. "Wherever the Englishman settles, lit establishes for himself a comfortable !homc, and, naturally, after that is at tained, founds clubs ior divers athletic 'sports; so in Yokohama and Tokio there are regular races in the spring and fall. ;Thc care and management of the horses gives employment to a numberof peo ple in various capacities. j Tho Japanese horse, a pony with short j neck, busy mane, and thick hair, speuds : his youth, for the most part, in th mountains, where be learns to climb and gets hardened to the weather and lack of care. The horso used by tho farraei is seldom groomed except by the rain, and his fodder consists chiefly of grass in the summer, nnd dry foliage in the wiutcr; while tho gentleman's saddle- horse can count upon good attention. His fodder, consisting 'of wheat and beans for thero is no hay is given to 'him warmed, and no stable appointments are complete without a great iron fur nace for a fire, and a bath-tub; for a the gentleman refreshes himself after a ride with a warm bath, so his horse is treated to a similar luxury, which h greets with joyous neighs. The giving of a full warm bath to an animal of his size has some practical difficulties; but a high stout wooden tub answers the purpose. First -the horse puts his fore legs into the tub of warm water, and fellows himself to bo patiently Tubbed down by hand; then the tub is pushed back and he puts his hind-legs in, and, finally, he is rubbed dry with a wisp ol straw The native borse'Ownci believes in an occasional bloodletting to keep hi 3 stock in condition, and in many provinces the farmer cups his livestock every year; the horse is cast and held fast by ropes fastened to a polo while each kg is . bled. Dcmorcst's Family Magazine, A Kind-Hearted Giant's Embargo. A number of anecdotes have been told of late of the famous old Kennebec lum berman, Bodfish, whose stentorian voice resembled reverberating thunder and could bo heard distinctly "from Ken dall's Mills bridge to Ticonic Falls," 1 distance of two miles. An old-timer says Bodfish, who lived at Kendalls Mills, though a rough man in his ways, had t kind heart and gave aid to many pool people he thought deserving. Once t river driver was drowned at Kendall Mills and Bodfish , having subscribed, t handsome sum himself to aid his family, mounted a barrel beside the street, from which he harangued the people in aid of the sufferers. He laid down the rule that no man should pass that day until he had contributed, and in that way held up travelers all day lang, securing a con siderable amount by nightfall, when the odd embargo was raised. Lewiston. (Me.) Journal. Pins are found among the mummies of Egypt and in prehistoric caves. m CAivp1 efinA i riflf will Tint t-In rn1? OSLAS v seamless, smooth inside, more comfortable, V 'fi ' stvlish and durable than an v other shoe ever the price. Every style. Equals custom- shoes costing from $4 to $5. followini? are of the same fcl?h standard of $4.00 and Sj.oo Fine Calf, Hand-Sewed. ' ronce, farmers ana Jetter-Camers. . Sa.ajf and 3.00 for Workintr Men. 1 ..iV". .1 . 1 00 ana ai.v.c ior voutns ana Hew. . 1 i.7S iur luisses TT IS A. TITTITY von AM wtavtmr&i v get am oesi veane) tor yoor footwer try purohasin W. Xi- Donias fcinoe. wnica represent tna beat vatti at tae prices aaveruaaa ea tbousnnda can tea X. tlty. Do you wear mid rnei-l mrri-uH tmtbfriilfcawM hv ISPEUItl. &SBRC "Ge nmm mm i II Hi Jfc " r j 99 Justice of the Peace, George Wit , kinson, of Lowville, Murray Co.; Minn., makes a deposition concern ing a severe cold. Listen to it. "In the Spring of 1888, through ex posure I contracted a very severe cold that settled on my lungs. This was accompanied by excessive nighH sweats. One bottle of .I?oschee9 German Syrup broke up tho cold; night sweats, and all and left me in a good, healthy condition. I caw give German Syrup iny most earnest couimendatioii." e So Nftt Is Deoeived with FmIm, Bnamelt and Talnta which stain the bftndM, Injurs the Iron and barn red. Tbt Rlni.lt Bud StoTe Polish t DrlUIant, Odor. Ims, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tl ot rIbm package with orery purchase. fnf IIP 1 Morphine Habit Currd In 10 I to 80 days, wovay nil curea. lil lUfcki DR. i. STEPHENS, Lebanon.Ohio. IS U5EL65S. TACK! Two Companions TJged inallhomes. Home Tacks, sold by all dealers Home Nails. TI.IHBlSn ' PT.YMOIITIT ROCK ess tram liens wclKHIng 8 tn .10 pound each.! tat U, V. D. V. UN UAUT. Weil Mewtou, Pa. MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS' THOMSON'S F ! ! SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No iools rcnuirrd. Only a liawmer needed to rlv .biolHtplVimoTTth. Kuqulriiifir no ho'e to bo made ii Mh7r ZTrr lor tl.e Hiye.a Thc , ar. atron touah and durable. Million now In use. AU. leiufthv uniform or assorted, put up lit 40o AU your d-alr lor them. W ",,,.(i.0- m atnmpi for a box ol 100, assorteJ suca. .HAuiauy JDSON L. THOMSON MFG CO., WALTHA5I, MASS. . rery little desire to enjoy the pleasures of life, and U entirely unfitted for the can of hoiifwkepplng ol anyoralnary1iitIcs.irnmictnlwlth HICK IIKAD ACHE DAY A FT Bit DAY and yet there ar few diseases that yield niore promptly to prop medical treatmeut. It is therefore of tbe utmost tin. eortanoe that a reliable remedy should always ben and. During a period of more than till YEAR! there baa beon no Instance reported whpr suc-rl ensen hnve not been permuuently and PRO M PVl 3f CUlC Kl) by the use of a sinule lxz or the genntua " and jUHtly celebrated Ir.C. Mcl. ANE'M LIVF.K riLLH, which may be procured at any Drug or will be mailed to any address on tbe renolpt of 2S In poslngo gtamps. l'urchuanrs of those Fills shoulif be careful to procure tbe genuine article. There ara several counterfeits on tho market, well calculated to (iwolvo. Tho genuine Dr. U. Mclane'a Celebrated Liver Pills are manufactured only by FLEMING BROTHERS CO., Pittsburgh, Pa, am i n k a f . a a urt I LV MEDICINE; For Inil!gctlin. jilllousnrMi. Oomiilrxlon, unlv Hreulii, na all disorders ot the Stoiuacn, uver ana jiowis, RIPANS TABULES, . act ftuntly yet proinnily. I trfeet by druggists or Kent by innll. Box (1 Tlals),n, ruckaiffil hoits), (4. lill'ANS II K ICAt. CO., N ewJTorfc J IF VOU 11 1 H0MI .rsARE STRAIGHT'TACKS rl fM?iStf WHOLE'. TACKS4 -1"t TOVSHARP TACKS THt1 RIGHT SIZED TACKS TOR SUAIX HOMEAUSESfr j.t A woman I as ! I COT ctnetejs TOU WANT-13 -A v THEIR s THEM TO-I- -c-X X WAY yen If you merely keep them as a diversion. In or der to handle Fowls Judiciously, you must know ometblnit about them. Ta meet hi wn w.m ourag m oook giviujf tne experience iviug the experience AhIk IE, poultry raiser forlUillJ ZQCs s. It was vrkten by anion who pnl twenty-five years. It was written by anion who put all his mind, and time, and money to making a suo cesiof chicken raising not as a pastime, biit as a business and If you will profit by bis twenty-five rears' work, you can lave many Chicks annually, pi a practical " Raitlna Chickens." s and make your Fowls earn dollars fur you. f' ' point Is. that you nuist beahle to detect trnnhla In tae I'oultry Yard n. foon ai It aptji: vs, aiij itai-v l;.torriiH'iSy II, 'JL.in Look will tra-u y(.u, it ti lls aovi to a"tr;:t or.J euro di .ioi j u lcs fnt fr.-H ,iliU Hi"') I'T !i!l iftlil!."; Wrlcil t'.V.H TijB.lv-(!! ( iwuedinf 'pnrposeat eryth.tag,.-iBdead, ym : Boata aaow oa xmm aanjoci tfl suit n puntsw, . . 1 "t I .!';-.: t-'T tf..-y (,.---! in . i-r s ial Piihlihini umsvwum i v. V I ' r
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 14, 1893, edition 1
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