Newspapers / The Gazette [1891-1898] (Raleigh, … / Sept. 18, 1897, edition 1 / Page 4
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Using Iionx, Words. .--;' Doctors who are In the habit of .usfog long -words Tv-ben" visiting people may fate ft flint rrom the following little story: An oJd woman -whose husband wna not very well eent for the doctdK wbo fame and saw the old wife: "I will send him. some medicine which must be taken In a recumbent posi tion." k After he had gone the old woman sat down greatly puzzled. "A recumbent position a recumbeint position!" the kept repeating. "I haven't got one." At last she thought, 'I will so and Bee if Nurse Lown has got one to lend me." Accordingly sJie went and said to the nurse: : "Have you a recumbent position to lend me to take some medicine in?" The nurse, who was equally as Ig norant as the old woman, replied: "I had one, but to tell you the truth, I have lost it." Ilia Bravery. 1 Mrs. Blinkly-John, dear, won't you discharge Mary? You know1 how afraid i am of her? - " Mr. Blinkly Certainly. No servant tan ever scare me. U little while af ter)Mary, ahem! Mrs. Blinkly has asked me to tell you that she wants to Bee you after I have gone to the office. -Brooklyn Life. I)cpprate Woarcr. "If you haven't been takin' a bath I'll (eat my bat!" declared Mr. Weary Wat tins. i "Guess I'll have to own up"' assented Mr. Dismal Dawson. . "Whut d'ye mean by it?" k "Election! bet; that's all." Indianapo lis Journal- " T wo 8iii a r t T U ins. Scene A public eating house. Pert youth addressing waitress: "Bring me one of your dog biscuits, inis." "Yes, sir; if you promise to eat it on the mat." Tid-Bits She 'Was In Doubt.' Benham Well, if you want to know it, I married you for your money. Mrs. Benham I wish I could tell as feaslly what I married you for. Judge. That Kverlntting Irritating Itch. That rt.-'s-'rt'oe Tetter, Eozpm.a and Other skin 41? eases. .r) TTiti) will euro them - stop the itch at if.'i. -' c uts j. -I- fur a box o( 'J'etterine at OniK sf-i v. or postp.-iM for ri0 cents in stumps from .J. 'I'. Sluij. trine, j.'tva.ir.ah, (Ja. Deafness Cunnot r.e Cured by local applications ivr. they cannol. reach the diseased portion of the enr. There is only one way to cure ileai'iiess. uni that is by constitu tional renicilie. D-afness ii caused bj' an n flamed condition of the mucous liningof the Eustachian Tube. When thi. tube ffets in flimed you have a ruruhlinK sound or imper fect hearing, iiml when it is entirely closed Deafness U the result, ami unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tube re Btored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyt d forever. Nine cases out of ten ore caused by catarrh, which is nothing butan iu Jlauied 6ndition of the mucous surfaces. v will give One Hundied Dollars for any case of Ienfnem (caused by catarrh) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. Chenky & Co., Toledo, O. I Fold bv tinitrifists. 75?. liall's Vainily I'illsare the best. ... ; ... T use Piso's Cure ffir Consumption both in niv family and praclice.-Dr. W. Patteh so'n. ink.-ixr. Mi.h.. Nov. ft, !. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness alter first dav's use of lr. Kline's (Jreat Nerve Restorer. &2 irial little and treatise free Dn. U. II. Kline, Ltd., Kit Arch !st.,Phila.,Pa. If Afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. I. Thomr f ens Kye water. Druirirists sell at 25c, a bottle THE CHIEF THING In Maintaininrf Good Health is Pure, Hich, X-Jourishincj Blood. Tho blood carries nourislmivnt and furn ishes support for tho orani, nerves and muscles. It must ) made rich and pure if you would liavo .strong nerves, good digestion, sound sleep, or if you would be rid of that tired feeling, thosra dis agreeable limpl-.'s, eczema, or scrofula. No medicine is equal to Ilood"s .Sarsapa rilia for purifying the blood. It is a med icine of genuine merit and will do you wonderful tcood. Try it now. Unnrl'e Dll!e are the only pills to take nOOU 5 rlllS with Hood's Sirsapariil i. C O U R F. S P O N r ) E X C E INVITED. Old nonunion Iron fc Kail Whs, Richmond. Vn Five Cents will buy a ten-oz. package of Hoe Cake Soda and an elegant plated tea fpoon, Abk your dealer for it. If lie hasn't got it, drop us a card and "we will see that you get it. Roanoke Chemical Company, ROANOKE, VA. THE CHARLOTTE PRIVATE HOSPITAL, U C'llA HLOTTE, .VC.No.SIO .. Tryon Ht. W &2S ZS2S'iES HIHSH5H5Z5ESaS252i2E5Z5I5H52a5Ki6 PrtliCBl N. Y. Full Information (In plain wrapper) mailed free. A Mountain OF i COLD! 100 8HAHE8 OF STOCK FOR $10. ?0 In one of the larret sold properties in Colo rado. One hundred and sixty acres, patenter!. gold hearing ground and solid mountain Ox OtO. subscription hmileri. Ad dress. Broker REN A. BLOCK. Denver, Colo. Membei Colo, Miniag Stocji Exchange.. mm ri m iuuxiii at jlujiUj send itumn r.... JF XI IP mm TTTT1TI A m TT-1 iTn rik Bulidlnx. Cincinnati. Ohio 5THiYCnC CHI I CIC Baltimore, Md.Short- w nihil sj wwi.ki.Uk Hand. Type writir,. uumiroinuj . ocst, vueapeat . euuauon guaranteed . In u ?nU?? 'f"" Tared. I mo. treatment VtfW MUM' 81. A. Robe uts, KewBerne.N.C 8. N. U. No. 37 '97. uvula iincnt kll CLOL rniLOt IJ Best Cough Byrop. Tantca Good. Use f' IIILJLV U1ULUL .11 r IT T.IIO in tune. roia py omgiristR. ni is IHfll xni ins rvi nl R CI I t ARD can b saved wlMi BS B B ill mm out n""lr knowledcn l,y IJ H Q fri? M Anti-Jau tho marvelous I IS a 111 hi rore for the drink liabit bP 1 1 W BH H W Write ltenova Chi flu ii The Cotton Crop as a Whole isNo Better Than Last Year's. BIG OFFER FOR A FARM, Badly Katcn By Crabs The Boy Murderer Married Other North State Items. The second session of the Veterinary Association met in Charlotte with Dr. Ellis, president, in the chair.. The fol lowing members were present: Drs. Ellis, H. G. Bessent, of Durham; B.D. Griffin, Concord; Chas. H. Lockwood, H. F. Bauer, J. W. Tetty, Greensboro; E. E. Terry, W.C. McMackin, Baleigh; J. W. Eollins, Afheville; II. B. Mur ray, Hickory; J. M. Quinliven, T. B. Carroll, "Wilmington; J. E.Petty, Titts- boro; Charles H. and Robert Hatfield and B. E. Harper, Washington. The officers of tho association are: Presi dent, Dr. Ellis; vice-president, Dr. Ihos. B. Carroll; secretary and treas urer, vr. J. Y. I'etty. ine secretary and treasurer read their reports, which were approved. President Ellis' address was listened to with marked attention. It was encouraging and helpful to the advancement of veterinary science. He urged the importance of strict sanitary regulations in regard to milk and meat. 'The veterinary surgeon," said Dr. El lis, "stands between the diseases of the lower animals and mankind. Especially is this so in reference to tuberculosis (consumption. ) We think the day is near at hand when all cities will have inspec tion made of food." Instances were mentioned by the various surgeons present of cases where nersons had got ten consumption directly from the milk of a consumptive cow, one case being known of now in Greensboro. Ine strictest inspection and test along this line was urged. Dr. Bessent read an interesting paper on teanus (lockjaAv. ) He stated that ho had cured two cases. Dr. Petty also stated that he had cured two cases, but by very different treat ment from that used by Dr. Besseut. Dr. Crowell's paper on glanders was helpful in the information it imparted, and discussion it provoked. The Asso ciation decided to mett in Greensboro in December. - The State Commissioner of Agricul ture stuya as to the cotton crop that in iiiauy places it is fully as good as it was last year, but that as a whole it is no better than last year's crop. There has been a wonderful change for the w orse in the past thirtv davs. The crop has failed aud is yet failing. In some sections it presents a reallv pitiful sight. Thirty days ago there was a rrand prospect. Unless rain comes quickly, the deterioration will go on verv rannil lhe falling olt m the condition of the crop is greatly to be deplored, as fanners had given it more care than ever before, and had expend ed several millions of dollars for com mercial fertilizers. There is consider able rust on the cotton. The Commis sioner of Agriculture says tho rigure3 of the estimates on the corn crop were never so high as those on cotton. The early cool weather and the worms caused much damage aud affected the stand. It is quite safe to say that neither cotton nor corn will be above the average. The Secretary of State gives me a 40- cent State bill dated December 24, 124. It was put up in a letter by William Hill, Secretary of State, in 1S28, and as it was torn, is fastened to a paper back by a pin of the period. This is an un polished affair, with ahead inadeof two turns of wire and looking like a remote ancestor of the present highly polished pm. lhe 40-ceut note is payable at the State treasury, and is signed by John Haywood, Public Treasurer. It bears a portrait of Sir Walter Baleigh, aud the engraving is really excellent. Ral eigh correspondent Charlotte Observer, 'Jth. ' A special to the Raleigh News and Observer siys that the bodies of a white man and of a negro, both badly eaten by crabs, were found with a wreck on the Tyrrell county shore of Albemarle sound. The white man were the uni form of the United States life saving service. The two men are supposed to have perished in a severe fdorm. Avery Butler, who Avas pardoned last week, is said to have been married in Kentucky some three years age, Avhile at large, after escnping from the peni tentiary, lie Avill probably go to Ken tucky soon to ee his Avife. At present he is Avith his mother. His relativ es are all delighted to have him free and with them again. - Sampson Democrat. The Agricultural Department will is sue no crop report for September, for the reason, Secretary Ramsay says, that the crops have finished growing. In the bulletin there will be some com ments on the crop, but these will be merely conjectural, as thero are no fig ures at hand, no inquiry blanks having been sent out for the month. An offer of 20,000 has been made bv a Northern syndicate for the Hamruie farm, containing only 400 acres of land adjoining the Cheatham gold mine, Avhich is being worked to great advant age. The" Hammio land is said to be very rich in gold deposit. Oxford spe cial Charlotte Observer. It is reported in Winston that the Winston-Salem division of the Norfolk and Western Railroad will bo consol idated this month with tho Shenan doah division. The Roaring Gap Hotel, including buildings and furniture, hare been sold by Trustees W. F. Vogter and Frank Pries. It brought &".000. the nur- chasers being Messrs. H. Or. Chatham, of Elkin, and W. C. Field: and R. H. Hackler, of Sparta. The property originally cost $14,0000. The fodder on 1,400 acres of corn at the Halifax State farm is ready to be pulled, and there is a pressing requisi tion for labor. Many of the convicts in the penitentiary will be sent there. The total valuation of the property in the State, Avith tho exception of Wa tauga county, inclusive of telegraph, raihvay and steamboat property, is re ported bv the board of equalization to bo $2S2,9Uti,24:j, against $230,801,531 last year, an increase of over $2,000,000. It'cost the city of Raleigh something over $14,000 for its fire department last year; Charlotte $17, 159. 77,' and Wil mington, $15,043. 42. Greensboro Rec ord. The News and Observer tells of a case near Raleigh where a woman has given birth to four children in eight monta. noai ez uiem uvea. ff3 C Advantages of AJVell-Bred Stock. It is particularly in the time when all farming is least prosperous that those Avho have been careful to secure only the best bred animals have the advantage. The first effect of a de cline in prices is to make tho scrub animal unsalable at any price. All through the period of depression the scrub stock farmers are changing from poor or inferior stock to that which is better. By the time they have all secured the best stock the times will have improved so as to make farming profitable again. It is really n case of cause and effect, though iu't often recognized as such. Badly Planned Mangers. Tons of hay may go to waste on many farms from bally planned man gers, out of which horses and cattle work the hay and drop it under their feet to soil and wast9 it. The best rack is one out of which the animal gets only just what he holds in his mouth. This will be eaten and not dropped aud wasted. Where hay is very cheap this is not a matter of so much importance, but it is best not to despise small savings. Every ton of hay wasted means labor and wear and tear of tools, if it does not mean cash, and the labor is needed in other de partments of most farms. Length of Grain. There is often quite a difference in the length of grain grown on different portions of the same field, and one of the common errors on the part of the man who runs a binder in harvesting such fields, is in n?glecting to adjust his machine to suit the different lengths as they are encountere 1. One side may be long, the other medium, yet he goes through without adjust ment, the result being that the long bundles "spread out" like a turkey tied by the feet; Avhile the short ones are "choked." Tie 'em around the Avaist, friend; that's what you are there for. The Epitoniist. What to Do With Iho Oi l Vlale. Noav that you are through breeding, the males should be separated from the hens. To allow them to remain is to injure, both. If the cock is not to be retained for service next year, dispose of him at once, if possible. Get him out of the way. Sell him il you can, otherwise kill him. A cock that is to he usea anotner season should be very carefully treated while moulting. There should be some small pen or yard ab.ut the plaee where he could be kept alone and fed to induce a quick molt and a profuse growth of neAV feathers. Poultrymen often complain that the cocks take longer t. moult tha l the hens. We think they Avill find this altered if the cocks are confine 1 where their gallantry to the hens -will not keep them from getting all t lie food they neod, and their association with their mates call to the reproductive organs nourishment which at this time of year is needed for new feath ers and the general recuperating of the Avhole system. Farm-Poultry. "Vihl Carrot. As wild carrot is a biennial it is not hard to destroy it, provided it is kept from seeding. But this simple cutting is very hard to do. No matter Iioav close it is cut to the ground, side shoots will sprout out even late in the fall and ripen some seeds before Avin ter. At the same time this cutting Aill make the root branch out, and get so firm hold of the soil that it i almost impossible t p ill it up. I f there arc scattering stalks in the meadow or pa dure select s-riie time w hen the soil is a et from recent rains aid pull up tho pla it bv the root. ft is necessary to got hold very close to the soil, or better still, hold of the root below the siufa'e, an the joint where root and top join is a favorite one for breaking. With a spade make enough ofji hole around the root so that it can be taken Firmly by the hand. In rich soil a root of eight to ten inches will oft en be drawn. Rut the plant will thrive where there are only three or four inches of sr.il over the roots. There it is apt to be, neg lected, and the small plants there left to seed will fill the soil of neighboring fields, where they are carried by birds. Some of the winter birds live on Avild carrot seed Avhen thev cannot got any thing else to eat. Boston Cultivator. Pickling KjfRH Wlion rieiiMfnl. In preserving eggs for winter use, it must be understood that tho whole secret is to keep tho porous shell from admitting the air and moisture. If this can be done tho eggs Avill keep for quite a length of time. A pickle lirstis made as follows: One bushel of fine quality stone lime, eight quarts of salt, an'l sixty gallons of watar. blake the lime Avell and then add the water and the salt, stirring Avell until all is settled and cold. DraAv off the clear brine into a water-tight cask and then put the eggs in u soon as taken from-the nest. When a layer of eggs about a foot deep is put in, a little of the milky brine, made by stirring up some oi tne very light lime partu-Iei?, should be ailoAved to settle over them Then put in a similar layer and repeat ine operation, rill tue barrel with eggs within lour or hve inches of the top and then' cover with a factory cloth; on top of this cloth spread a layer of lime that settled in making the pickle. The pickle must be kept above mis ume to Keep it eool and moist It tne eggs are to be sent to market they should bo taken out of the brinfl carefully, and after being thoroughly wiped, pacK away neolly. Thev 'must not be allowed to get too Avarni in summer time, nor too cold in the win pr. An n uable degree of modern warmth is best. Home and Farm. . Breeding Dairy Cow J. 1. Select the best cows in your herd, or that you can buy, to Keep, and dispose of the others. 2. The best coav for the ciairy is :u one that produces the greatest amount of butter fat in a year tor iooa con sumed) when being rightly fed. 3. Test your coavs Dy weigumg mv milk of each coav for a year, testing it occasionally with the Babcock milk ester, and know how mucn DUiter iai each one does produce. 4. To renew or mci ease your ncra raise the heifer calves from your best COAVS. 5. Use the best dairy-bred sire you can get; one, if possible, that has a ong line of ancestors, and have been first-class dairy animals. 6. In this Avay .you can make each generation better than the preceding one, if they have at all times proper care and feed. 7. It is neither profitable nor nec essary for a coav to go dry more than four to six Aveeks. 8. Especially should your young cows be watched and not allowed to acquire the habit of drying up too soon. 9. Barken the stable in which the coavs are milked through fly time. It will not only economise the patience of the milker, but the cost of milk production as well. 10. Keep a record of the time when oavs are bred, and have no guesswork about the time of calving. 11. Trovide a roomy box stall, and alloAv the coav to become accustomed o it a week prior to calving. 12. Rich foods should be withheld or a short time prior and subsequent to calving. 13. The udder should receiA-e prompt attention. An obstacle may be removed from the teat the nrst lour that might baffle science later. 11. A pail of scalded bran should be given to the cow as soon as possible after calving. 15. The calf should be permitted to nurse the mother for two or three lavs. 1G. After separating the calf from ts mother, feed the natural milk ns soon as drawn, for a week or ten lays. 17. Then begin gradually to substi tute skim milk Avith oil meal jelly lined into it. IS. Scald the calf's feed pail daily. 1';). Feed three times a day and not nore than three quarts at a time until the calf is Avell started. 20. Warm the milk by placing the vessel that contains the milk in hot water. 21. Warm the milk to ninety de grees. 22. Don't trust your finger, but a thermometer. It will save many a calf's life. 23. The man whose ideal of a cow is high, coupled with good care, feed ami gentleness, is sure to receive the highest profit in milk and pleasure that can be made in dairying. 21. Always clean out the box stall after a coav has calved therein, and thoroughly disinfect it Avith a solution . - ..... ... ma' e of one Dart ol sulphuric neni to - a nine of water. This is to prevent septic poisoninc of the next, which mav easil- occur. 2.". Do not milk the udder out clean until the fourth day after calving. This Avill often prevent a chill, which often produces milk fever. Toultry otf . If vour flock is yarded, ploAv the runs and give them fresh scratching ground. If vour hatching is over, separate the males from the females and give the latter the i nn of fields or or chards. Chickens grow aa onderfullr during this month; therefore feed them well and give them plenty of range and shi'do during the hot day.. If yem have not done so, iioav is the time to plant late cabbage. There is nothing that fowls aviII relish so much during Avinter as a crisp head of rab- bage. "The best in always tho cheapest; the cheapest is the most costly in the end" is a good thing 1o have in mind, if given a reasonable construction when buying poultry or eggs, It would be a good thing for all poultry men to plant some egg gourd seed and raise their oAn nest eggs. Tho egg gourd is a perfect imitation of an egg, and Avill deceive tire Avisest old hens. It is at night that fowls seem to take disease. During the day they are active and at work, but at night they cannot change their positions on the roost and are consequently help less to avoid damp drafts of air. One Avho reduces the matter to fig ures finds that just eight minutes a week Avill keep the premises of fifteen laying hens perfectly clean and free from vermin. Of course the Avork must be done at the right time And under favorable conditions. The French minister of agriculture has published a report of certain ex periments upon the effect of cold air upon incubation of eggs. It Avas found that fowls hatch much larger and stronger broods during the months of February, March and April than during the warm months of June, July and August. Extreme cleanliness should be the rule. Houses, roo3ts, dropboards, feed troughs, drinking fountains, all need special attention. Clean your dropboards every morning and kero sene your roosts, upper and- under side, every week. Nests should be kept fresh and sweet until moulting time. Do not let the ace get a start. The horses of German cavalry regi ments are to be shod with paper shoes, recent experiments having - proved their durability and lightness desirable. NEWS ITEMS. Southern Pick Ups. f7T, -VacV. tri'l la Xr. Knoxville Railway will ask subscription' from the city of Nashville. Ron nW TVTnrfrftn of Alabama, has sailed on the steamer Australia for Hon olulu from San Francisco. Tn Misfiissinni a nesrro woman sup posed to have smallpox goes to church; she is run off and the next day her dead body is found. Ann Hughes. Busnected of having small nox. avas brained with a bed slat by panic-stricken negroes at Columbus, Miss. Mrs. Richard Milliken, of NeAv Or leans. La. . widoAV of a susar planter, has presented the Charity Hospital, at Saratoga, N. Y., with $75,000. Two children of Joseph Creery, aboy and a girl, aged respectively 10 and 12, were burned to death at Fairmont, a 6uburb of Richmond, Va. The schooner Wade Hampton, Wil mington, N. C, for Charleston, S. C. , was wrecked on the north jetty, Charleston. The creAV were rescued. Henry Wall, w ho was lynched by a mob at Friends Mission, Va. , on suspicion of having assaulted Miss fc'adie Cook, is believed to haA-o been innocent. At Charleston, S. C, Harry Nohrd ren, 15-years-old, Avas killed by being run over by a South Carolina and Geor gia railroad train. The boy was steal ing a ride on the train. Horace S. Perry wb3 hanged at Deca tur, six miles from Atlanta, Ga., on the 8th. for the murder of Rely Lanier. His Avife and fiA-o children were with him, and when he bid them farewell he com pletely broke down. The following North Carolina fourth class postmasters Avere appointed on the 8th: D. P. Ferguson, Rryson City; J. D. Spiny, Gilbert; Amos Lain, Mul grove;J. 11. Rlalock, Old Fort; .3. A. Jones, Richmond; J. T. Poindexter, Stony Knoll. Little Johnnie Austin, aged 10 j'ears, Avho, it will bo remembered, killed Kell Caton, aged 10 years, in Charlotte, N. C, with an ice pick in a fit of anger be cause Caton told on him for stealing ice cream, Avas arraigned in the criminal court last Aveek and found guilty and sentenced to two years imthe Mecklen burg county jail. " The sum of $10,009 has been appro priated to put New Orleans in a clean condition, aud $40,000 moro Avill be forthcoming, if required; the statement is made that thero has been but one case of yellow fever there this sum mer. At Riloxi there is a quarrel among the doctors. President Lewis, of the board of health, has resigned. There are thirty-eight sick people at Ocean Springs, and 400 people who have not had thefeAer. All About the North. White Caps have warned all worth less uegroesto leave Rartlett, Texas. Tho coal strike in Western Pennsyl vania, Indiana and West Virginia is ended. W. D. Ilirth, of Rostou, is to be superintendent of the next United States census. David Pierce, of Pomona. Cal., is dy ing from blood poisoning that folloAved the bitejof a mosquito. Five hundred cornice and skylight workers in New York 6truck for $3 to $3.50 for an 3-hour day. Through the operations of the big packers in Chicago, 111., prices of meat on the Pacific slope are being forced "P. Walter Kennedy, of Tittsburg, Ta., has been appointed minister of mines, raihvays and Avatenvorks of China. The Massachusetts Prohibitionists have nominated a State ticket, headed by Professor J, Rascom, of Williams- tOAAU. In New York, George Mollinari, a laborer, drauk two flasks of Avhiskey one after the other and then fell to the floor a corpse. Ryactual count 10,000 people between July 1 and August 28 left the Pacific coast for the gold regions of Alaska aud the Klondike region. Wild horses have become so much of a nuisance in Northern Arizoua that Attorney General Frazier has been asked if they may not legally be slaughtered. Criminal records of Greater New York show that 373 persons committed suicide from January to June, the ma jority being men, and the popular methods shooting and poison. Twenty-one men dead and forty in jured is the result of the firing on the miners by the deputies in Pennsyl vania. Warrants have been issued for the arrest of the sheriff and his depu ties. The schooner Grace, of Ranjror. Me., capsized and sunk twenty miles east southeast of Tybeo Island", near Suvan nah, Ga. She sailed from New York with a cargo of salt for Savannah, and four sixteen-ton guns for tho Tybee fortifications. The captain and crev.1 of seven had to row twenty miles to reach land. Miscellaneous. Francis Aurelius Rulszky, tho cele brated Hungarian, literateur and phil osopher, is dead. Aged 80 years. A copy of Japan's formal reply to HoAraii's offer to nibitrate the mattrr in dispute has been handed Secretary out'i iiiuu ui asuingiou. It is stated that Consul-Generol Leo win not return to his post at Havana and that ex-Uongressman Aldrich Avill be appointed to the position bv October let. There is talk of Anderson, the cuampion oicycast, Avlio made n rac nrVAIitft r vaA- ... XT J 1 1 naiueL a uiiiu up i.onu last year racing against ft 8. A. L. train bntv .frr Charlotte and Monroo. Of Kentucky's 11,000,000-bushel crop of wheat G5 per cent, is still in the farmers' hands. The price of bread is rising slowly in London, and the outlook for the Avinter is of the gloomiest kind. The city re quires 70,000 quarters of foreign Avheat Aveekly, independent of flour. A ct blegram from Madrid, Hrain, un der date of tho 10th, savs tho insurgents have captured Victoria do Ins Tunas, Cuba, a port defended by seA-cu forts' and the Minister of War has called Captain-General Weyler to task. A dispatch from Honolulu, via. Vic toria, B. C.says: Attempt to bring no gro laborers to this country has failed. The matter was referred to some South ern Senators for an opinion. A tc!egran brought here on the 2Cth bv a steamer knocks the scheme in the head. Th Southerners, including Senator Mor tran, object to any attempt to tako theii labor from them. BUCKINGHAM'S DYE For the Whiskers, Mustache, and Eyebrows. In one preparation. Easy to apply at home. Colors brown or black. The Gentlemen's favorite, because satisfactory. R. P. CALL fc CO., ProprWon, Xariioa, N. H. Eoid by all Drugglita. ML ON'S 'PEPSIN Chill Tonic TASTELESS ANO CUARAWTEED - TO CURE CHILLS & FEVER. DOES iVOT l.H HE THE STOMACH. W, A. McLarty & Son, Dime Box, Texas. :ay: "We want some more of Ramon's I'ep 1n Chill Tonic, as it is the best we ever Ma iled. My fon prescribes It in his practice ani ova it is the only Chili Tonic which eren a ?htld can take without injury to the Moma-h. Vou mav fenl me 1 cross of the Ramon" Pepsin Chill Tonic and 1 gross of Ramon's Ionic Liver Pills." For Sale by All Denlero. PREPARED BY ESOWN MfO. CO., GREtfltVlLLE, IKH. ARKANSAS LADir.S DONT UE, Malvern, Aik., savs: II&T6 UBed Dr. M. A .Simmoni Liver Medicine 10 years, and find It a great deal better than "Zellin'a Refrulator" and "Black DraufcV It haa been of great benefit to my Daugh ter and Niece during their monthly troubles for Ob structed Menstruation. There abould bo no homo without it. Tho Turn of tff. ' - The cessation ol tbe menses VTB&uf fi(S Curs between the ages of forty and fifty. Great irregularity takes place In the periodic discbarges for oms time before the final cessation, the female usually experiencing eudden flashes of heat, fullness in the head headache and other evidences of constitu tional disturbance. The nervous system eympnthetlcallyroBponda,and there is great Irritability ana melancholy, the patient 19 discouraged and baa a cense of f ounces or suffocation. At no time in her life docs a woman need more constant care and watchful tender ness, pothaa more need for a remedy to invigorate and strengthen her. The bowels Bhould be kept regular with Ir. 91. A. Sim xnons Liver Medicine, and if Dr. Slmmona fcquaw Vine Wine is useddnring the AvholQ of this critical period, it v ill invigorate and enrich her blood, soothe and strengthen her nerves and thus relieve the suffering anil enable her to pass safaly through the dan gers, prolong her life and afford her fitrengtl) ADd joy in her declining years. rmo Bluff, Art, writes: Dr. M. A. SimmooiLircr Mediclno has been a God send to myself and family for 20 years. It cures Chills and vers, Bilious Fev ers, Sick Ileavdache. I think there la no com part son between it and "Black Draught and "Zcllin'i Liver Regulator." Fullness of Clood in Head. - Whero thero Is preat determination of blood to tbe head, tbe blood-vessels ot tho brain become greatly congested, and thero exists flashed I aco, giddiness, especially on stooping-, and throbbing pain in the bead, increased by movement. It may be cansea by living too freely ; too lata rising in tho morning,combincd with au inactive, life. Menstrual derangement in- females will often occasion it. Ir. Simmons Squaw Vine Wine is especially made for this, awl it ceres. "Out of sijght" S'lOIUHG TOBACCO Male from tbe Purest, PJpest and Bweetest haf grow n In the uoiuen lieu or porin larotina. iig' arctts Book goes with each 2 ox. pouch. ALL FOR io CENTS. A Pleasant, Cool and Delightful 3moke. t Lvon aV Co. Tosacco Works, Durham, N. C. no YOU SPECUUTETJdS.t: "two Htock: tllW invented Immediately will mak 600 profit. AVrito Chss. Huohf-s. 6 Wsll Ht.. N. Y (0 'Mihedd eMat AvKOtn. -s. Actual basin. Notes X WuokV ttUort tint. Chaap board. 8od for oatalofii. '''' V-t EXTRA GET TnB OENUINR A IITICI.I. t Walter Baker & Co.'s Breakfast COCOA Pure, Costa Less than ONI$ CENT a etip. Be sure that the package beats out Trail Mat k. !i a" ftl Walter . , r . , , ItoHliiAS enrh arhAola rare.! nr nrv (mmmWeZSr' (Established 1780.) Trade-Mark. O r ClUf A r r first Information of a vacancy for a Hnok keener. a H K Cm YV A IV LJ stenographer. Clerk or Telccrapn Oprrator, which . ... . . we auccvKnfully 1111, ami miimiIv omtieU'nt aanlRtabta' to buslneas honaes without charge. Itcfer to Hanker. , Merchants and prominent Daton. In almost every county In the Unftod Siat. Thousanda of te,tlmonlnlaon rwwiL P btud! ents enter any time. No vacations. Eipensc moderate. Write for on r caUWae iryosiareMeklnsTesnpUrMPMtandwilllnaTlo.tnilr.aeDd teai Itvo-cent alaiup. far five eavay len, (by mall) U Hl.tlPLlFIEU SMOKTII A VI). H ,r Addreia (mtaUon thi'jmptr), c.t. UAIXIB, Prildnt, rgughktti, Vtw Vcxk.' CHICKNES EARN MONEY tr TOO OITt T!im IIKLP. . . Ton cannot do tUU unlem you unirraUnl them a.Dd know bow to rater to llielr requLremenU; aa 1 you cannot apervl yew ami dollar learning by Iiertence, so you must buy the knowledge acquit! iy otbers. We offer tbl to you for only 23 cent. YOU WANT THEM TO PAY THEIR OWN WAY. eren if you merely keep them a diversion. In or der to haii'lle Kuwla Judiciously, you mutt know something lKut them. To meet tlil want wear selling a Oook gllii tli eerleno ft niv 0K of m practical poultry ral-er furUIIIJ UC twemty-ne yearn, it w writlou by a man who jiut all tili mhi'l, an-t time, an 1 tnouny to maklun a uv ceuof Cblckeu raisin not a iatln-, Imt an a business ami If you will rrofU by his twenty. n years' work, you can mnuy Chick annually, an! mnice j our fowls earn dollars for you. 1 hi point Is, tunt you niu.it be ablo to delect trouble hi lbs 1'oultry Yard as soru as It appears, nod know bow to reme ly It. '1 til. book will ivacli you. It tolls how lo detect and cure dispose; to feel f ir eggs and also for fattening; which fowls to Rare f.if breeding- uroc; and cvcryl'iliiE, liidol, you Should koow on tills tuttjoct t make It rofluile. fecnt postpaid for tweuty-tlve cents lu stamps. Dook Publishing House 1 3 I I,r.OMAnr Sr.. N. Y. Cits CHINA, CHOCK KK? LAMPS. FOR FEND TO OK C ALL ON M00KE & KYLE. No. 8 W. Trade St., Churlotie, N. C. .... ALU J .... JOBBERS OF TOYS, CheHnChlnn, l.ani't rind fildsnwsrf, Will g veyouOLD TARIFF PRICES. In our I etail Iicpai tiiK-nt vt-furry tin tiHinltoniot ltnc of DinnervnH ( tit ;ln Wedgewood. Bric-aMiac a'nl IIouxo 1'urnUlil nu cairh-il by any house in the Mat'.. tJur prices are tlio lowest. loliu JLiirrior. WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, ixsrecrort or SOUTHERN AND S. fl. L. WfUGHtS. No. 4, FouUi 'Jrjon Street, th nlotte, N. C. Diamond, nt lie. (.1 rk, Jewilry and Spectacle. Silver ami Vlutel Whit, Wel dine and Vis tlns Curd 4 Kn raved. .Mali Orders Soliellrd. AGENTS WANTED. iJS.sa.JSK valuable, indispensable1 household articles. Cend 26 eeutu in Mami' for cornMe wimple outfit and full partieulnra to C. W. 1'ETrKa, 23 H. Tryou Street. Churlottc, N. 0. Saw Mills, Light iiml 1 1 envy, and Supplies. CIIII.U'K.ST AM) HEST. Jt7"Ca'-t every day; worn 1U Imnd. Lombard Iron Works and Supply Co., AUGUSTA, tJKOltOIA. hade on ycua kiichsh ::;v: f w I'llnuti-s which nlw.,,1 II. BY a NEW iOCES!?. M'lls tor fl iw-r call"ii. A!o Maple Sueur tmilr from Milne. "I xvmiI to ilinnk vou for the Mu li- M nii rfli w hlch I flni l excellent. I crtu ri conniciwl It hlfrli'.v lo nnv nl. l everv oik-." K-v. Mini I". Jones, i;nr r-rovlllo (il ScikI ftl lioMnl (inter niwl vet wln it Bi nnil I wi luM ryeloieclli of i." recipes eov- A.ln. I .1. ,...., .....I, t!..i t.-fi f..r Atrfiifst J. X. LOTfPi.M II, 1orrt-iou n, Iritu. ROBERT E. LEE. The Si-Mier, elllX'n inl chiis'ian liffo. A (; book ri-inly. clvini! Iilc and ancestry, tusker. I'f l iiml traveling ai'fn wantl l'UULISIJI.Vd 10..11 ami Main Sin.. Itlchi A grat hew iik'iit III IV A f. ttiond.Vs. OUFFtlRINC IN SILENCC. Women are llic real licrcs of Iho Ajrorld. Tho;i?anJi ou tliour-.ouds of tbern enJure tbe dragiiiij torture of tbe ills peculiar to ncr.ia:iLi:id in '.be silence of Lome. Tbcy sufi r oa a.i'lou wetlts, xnontbs, years. Tlic tlory ri weakness aud torture is wiiitcn in V:e drayn features, in the shIIoav t!;in, fu tbe list less eye?, in llic liacs of caro'and Avorry on tbe face. Inborn modesty seals Ibeirlips. Tbey prefer pain to lrimiliation. Custom bn made tbcm believe tbe only liope of relief lies iu tbe -expo; uie of examina tion and "lcal treutm. nl." Take ten cases of "Jcinalc weakness" anliunineof tbcm "local trcnttncnl" is unnecessary, There is no rcasou why modest, bcnsitirc women should sub mit to it. McKlLKEE'S ' WtPJE OF CARDUI is avetjetable wine. It exerts a wonder fully healing, flrenptbenini; uud sooth ing influence over the organs of woman kind. It invigorates and stiiuulotrs tin whole aystem. It is almost infallible i'l curing "the peculiar weaknost.es, irtP' gularitica and painful derangements 1 1 woman. Year after year, in tbe privacy of home away from the eyes of every body it effects cures. ' MVIXE OF CJnni l tm Bold for $1.00 a bottle. Ielcr In mrftlcln s-ll It. 1 IVO bottles nauallr riru t lie rrorat cava. H. N. U. No. 37- '97. Delicious Nutritious. Baker & Co. Limited, Dorchester, Mass. IF YOU wiHli tn flir llnsirifss in the aliortcst tima anil at tha leant expense, hu1 to he nure of a ........... ii. i i n in nif..MM()(Al'in snu UUUKKLKPINii, ami wim ns W 111 be posiUvrly Kuararitcied. ThorouKlily taiiKbt by mail ortxT sooallr. btudeuts lilted ur rPHpiiriolMe iKisitlont in counting-room unit onir-ca io frm fiiie-blf to two-thirds the tinn required clwrtber. Don't throw away time anl money bv moIdz to ternpor' ry sx;hool w hen it will cost you lets to nttru.l tna IlEbT. Ae always have n nutnbi Y ot atudutela Attendance w ho have It it Inferior teachers la dihxunt. huch i-ori!e often tiill us that IX months mm IP SIP VTSVfcl ft nero is equal t a yenr in any otu?r Khool. tVt.n .....n f,. r.. n..i- .... .I........ nI
The Gazette [1891-1898] (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 18, 1897, edition 1
4
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