Newspapers / Orange County Observer (Hillsborough, … / May 19, 1898, edition 1 / Page 4
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Politeness of the Swedes. In Sweden, if you address the poorest person in the street, you must lift your Jhat. The same courtesy is insisted up- en if you pass a lady on the stairway. (To enter a reading room or a bank with tone’s hat on is regarded as impolite. What is Tetterine? It is a fragrant, unctuous ointment of gre’t cooling and healing power. Itisgood for Tet ter, Ringworm, Eczema and all roughness of the skin. It stops pain and itching at once, and if properly used will positively cure even the worst of chronic cases. 50 cents at a drug store, or by mail for 50 cents in stamps. J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga. A sort of opium is obtained from the com mon Lettuce. B. B. B. Never Fails to Cure All manner of Blood Troubles, Syphilitic and Mercurial Rheumatism. $1.00 per large bottle, 3 for $2.50. at druggists, or sent for price, ex press paid, by Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. E-Books of wonderful cures sent free. Moscow has a hospital large enough to hold 7,000 persons. Don’t TRY to keep house without Blue Ribbon Baking Powder. At all Grocers. B. R. B. P. Company, Richmond, Virginia. In Hamburg the authorities tax a dog ac cording to ils size. Lyon & Co's “Pick Leaf” Smoking Tobacco is the “best of the best.” 2 ounces and cigar ette book for 10 cents. Try it. The cathedral of Rouen boasts a clock which has kept time for 500 years. Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or SI. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. The finest shops in a Chinese city are those devoted to the sale of coffins. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 35:. The wise father always tries to bring up his children in the way he should have gone. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great N erye Restore r. $2 tri al bottle and t reati se free Dn. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila, Pa. A cow may have many good qualities, but she is.too modest to blow her own horn. ' No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, $1. All druggists. Railway engines are not allowed to blow their whistles within the city limits of Berlin. Anew kind of cloth is made in Lyons, France, from the down of hens, ducks and geese. ^ ^ 1 Tompson & Co., Druggists, Couders- port.. Pa., say Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the best sure cure for catarrh they ever sold. Druggists sell it. 75c. ‘ No machine has yet taken the place of na ture’s teasle in finishing various grades of woolen cloths. Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. The republic of Uruguay has more newspa pers in proportion to its population than any country in the world. I could not get along without Piso’s Cure for Consumption. It always cures. • rs. E C Moulton, Needham, Mass., October 22,1891. A woman can get a shiftless husband in about five minutes, but it sometimes takes a lifetime to get rid ef him. The men who used to start newspa pers are now starting lodges. There may be wars and rumors of war. but our darling little babies may sicken and die unless we give DR. MOFFETT’S Teethina (TEETHING POWDERS;. Teethina Aids Digestion, Regulates the Bowels and makes Teething easy. Nearly 70,000 tons of cork are .consumed By the bottlers of aerated waters, beers; etc., in England every year. Mrs. V inslow’s Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reducing inflama- tion,allays pain,cures wind colic, 25c. a bottle. Clouds more generally form in the upper regions of the atmosphere because it is nor mally colder in the higher regions. To Cure Constipation Forever, Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 253. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. It is said that Chinese cannot be telegraph ed, but that figures have to be used which correspond with certain words. ST-A II I S’ DANCE, SPASMS and all ner- vous diseases permanently cured bv the use of Dr. it ine’s Great Nerve Restorer Send for FREE SLID trial bottle and riStUe to Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch Street, Phila., Pa. When people throw an elocutionary note into their voices, it will not do to bank on their sincerity. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- Eurities from the body. Begin to-day to anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Younger sister (sentimentally)—“They Bay love is blind.” Elder sister—“And dumb, too, I think.”—Bazar. Experience And Mot Experiments, Should be Your Aim in Buying Medicine. Let others experiment; you should be guided by experience. Experiments arc uncertain in result; experience is sure. Ex periments may do you harm; experience proves that Hood’s Sarsaparilla will do you wonderful good. Thousands gladly tell what Hood’s has done for them. They want you to know and they urge you to ' try it. That is what is meant by the vast | number of testimonials written in behalf of Hood's Sarsaparilla. They give the re sults of experience and proyo that Moodus s S a Is America’s Greatest Medicine. Sold by all druggists. §1; six for $5. Get only Hood’s. HoMrrpi^^ ^F n il you don’t see what you want. look again, . and finding it say you saw it here. o 19 D JURIS WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use ~ Sold by druggists. mill HMM. PREPARED ESPECIALLY FOR YOUNG AND OLD. An Appropriate Topic—The Great Need of Reform—Churches Must Change to Work For Good—Religion That Will Make a Revolution in the Family. Text: “These that have turned the world upside down are come hither also."— Acts xvii., 6. There is a wild, bellowing mob around the house of Jason, in Thessalbnica. What has the man done so greatly to offend the people? He has been entertaining Paul and his comrades. The mob surround the house and cry: “Bring out those turbulent preachers! They are interfering with our business! They are ruining our religion! They are actually turning the world upside down!” The charge was true, for there is noth ing that so interferes with sin, there is nothing so ruinous to every form of estab lished iniquity, there is nothing that has such tendency to turn the world upside down as our glorious Christianity. The, fact is, that the world now is wrong side up, and it needs to be turned upside down in order that it may be right side up. The time was when men wrote books en titling them “Apologies for Christianity.” I hope that day has passed. We want no more apologies for Christianity. Let the apologies be on the part of those who do not believe in our religion. We do not mean to make any compromise in the mat ter. We do not wish to hide the fact that Christianity is revolutionary, and that its tendency is to turn the world upside down. Our religion has often been misrepre sented as a principle of tears, and mild ness, and fastidiousness; afraid of crossing people’s prejudices; afraid of making somebody mad; with silken gloves, lifting the people up from the church pew into glory, as,though they were Bohemian glass, so very delicate that with one touch it may be demolished forever. Men speak of religion as though it were a refined im becility; as though it were a spiritual chloroform, that the people were to take until the sharp cutting of life were over. The Bible, so far from this, repre sents the religion of Christ as robust and brawny—ransacking and upsetting ten thousand things that now seem to be set tled on firm foundations. I hear some man in the house say, “I thought religion was peace.” That is the final result A man’s arm is out of place. Two men come, and with great effort put it back to the socket. It goes back with great pain. Then it gets well. Our world is horribly distorted and out of joint. It must come under an omnipotent surgery, beneath which there will be pain and anguish be fore there can come perfect health and quiet. I proclaim, therefore, in the name of my Lord Jesus Christ—revolution! The religion of the Bible will make a revolution in the family. Those things that are wrong in the family circle will be overthrown by it. while justice and har mony will take the place. The husband will be the head of the houeshold only when he is fit to be. I know a man who spends all the money he makes in drink, as well as all the money that his wife makes, and sometimes sells the children’s clothes for rum. Do you tell me that he is to be the head of that household? If the wife have more nobility, more courage, more consistency, more ofall that is right, she shall have the supremacy. You say that the Bible says that the wife is to be subject to the husband. I know it. But that is a husband, not a masculine caricature.' There is no human or divine law that makes a woman subordinate to a man un worthy of her. When Christianity comes into a domestic circle it will give the do- minancy to that one who is the most worthy of it. Again: Christianity will produce a revo lution in commercial circles. Find me fifty merchants, and you find that they have fifty standaras of what is right and wrong. You say to some one about a merchant, “Is he honest?” “Oh! yes,” the man says, “he is honest: but he grinds the faces of his clerks. He is honest; but he exaggerates the value of his goods. .. He is honest; but he loans money on bond and mortgage, with the understanding that the mortgage can lie quiet for ten years, but as soon as he gets the mortgage, he records it and begins a foreclosure suit, and the Sheriff’s writ comes down, and the day of sale ar rives, and away goes the homestead, and the creditor buys it in at half price.” Hon est? When he loaned the money he knew that he would get the homestead at half price. Honest? But he goes to the insur ance office to get a policy on his life, aud tells the doctor that he is well, when he knows that for ten years he has had but one lung. Honest? Though he sellsprop- erty by the map, forgetting to tell the pur chaser that the ground is all under water; but it is generous in him to do that, for he throws the water into the bargain. The fraudulent man piles up his gains, bond above bond, United States security above United States security, emolument above emolument, until his property has become a great pyramid; and, as he stands looking at it, he thinks it can never be destroyed; but the Lord God comes, and with His little finger pushes it all over. You build a house and you put into it a rotten beam. A mechanic standing by says: “It will never do to put that beam in; it will ruin your whole building.” But you put it in. The house is completed. Soon it begins to rock. You call in the mechanic and ask: “What is the matter with this door? What is the matter with this wall? Everything seems to be giving out.” Says the mechanic: “You put a rotten beam into that structure, and the whole thing has got to come down.” Here is an estate that seems to be all right now. It has been building a great many years. But fifteen years ago there was a dishonest transaction in that commercial house. That one dishonest transaction will keep on working ruin in the whole structure un til down the estate will come in wreck and ruin about the possessor’s ears—one dis honest dollar in the estate demolishing all his possession. I have seen it again and again; and so have you. You have an old photograph of the signs on your street. Why have those signs near ly all changed within the last twenty years? Does the passing away of a generation ac count for it? Oli,no. Does the fact that thereare hundreds of honest men who go down every year account for it? Oh, no. This is the secret: The Lord God has been walking through the commercial streets of our great cities; and he has been adjusting things according to the principles of eter nal rectitude. The time will come when, through the revolutionary power of the G ospel, a false hood, instead of being called exaggeration, equivocation, or evasion, will be branded a lie! And stealings, that now sometimes go under the head, of percentages and commissions, and bonuses, will be put into the catalogue of 'State-prison offenses. Society will be turned inside out and up side down, and ransacked ot God’s truth, until business dishonesties shall come to an end, and all double-dealing; and God will overturn, and overturn, and overturn; and commercial men in all cities will throw up their hands, crying out, “These that have turned the world upside down, are come hither.” The religion of Jesus Christ will produce a revolution in our churches. The non- committal, do-nothing policy of the Church of God will give way to a spirit of bravest conquest. Piety in this day seems to me to be salted down just so as to keep. It seems as if the church were chiefly anxious to take care of itself; and if wo hear of want, and squalor, and heathenism outside we say: “What a pity!’” and we put our hands in our pockets, and we feel around for a two-cent piece, and with a great flourish we put it upon the plate and are amazed that the world is not converted in fix weeks. Suppose there were a ^ar and there were three hundred sand soldiers, but all of those three hunn dred thousand soldiers, excepting ten men, were in their tents, or scouring their musk ets, or cooking rations. You would say; “Of course, defeat must come in that case.” Is is worse than that iuthechurch. Millions of the professed soldiers of Jesus Christ are cooking rations, or asleep in their tents, while only one man here and there goes out to do battle for the Lord. -I saw in some paper an account of a church in Boston in which, it is said, there were a great many plain people. The next week the trustees of that church came out in the paper, aud said it was not so at all; “they were elegant people and highly- conditioned people that went there.” Then I laughed outright; and when I laugh, I laugh very loudly. “Those people,” I said, “are afraid of .the sickly sentimen tality of the churches.” Revolution! The pride of the church must come down. The exclusiveness of the church must come down! The financial boastings of the church must come down! If monetary success were the chief idea in the church, then I say that the present mode of conducting finances is the best. If it is to see how many dollars you can gain, then the present mode is the best. But if it is the saving of souls from sin and death, and bringing the mighty population of our cities to the knowledge of God, then I cry, Revolution! It is coming fast. I feel it in the airi I hear the rumbling of an earthquake that shall shake down, in one terrific crash, the arrogance of our modern Christ ianity. The talk is, whether Protestant churches or Roman Catholic churches are coming out ahead. I tell you, Protestants, this truth plainly: that until your churches are as free as are the Roman Catholic cathe drals they will beat you. In their cathe drals the millionaire and the beggar kneel sideby side. And, until that time comes in. our churches, we can not expect the favor of God or permanent spiritual pros perity. Where and when will that Revolution be gin? Here, and now. In your heart and mine. Sin must go down, our pride must go down; our worldliness must go down, that Christ may come up. Revolution! “Except a man be born again, he can not see tne Kingdom of God.” Whynot now let the revolution Begin? Not next Sab bath, but, now! Not to-morrow, when you go out into commercial circles, but now! Archias, the magistrate of Thebes, was sitting with many mighty men, drinking wine. A messenger came in, bringing a letter informing him of a conspiracy to end his life, and warning him to flee. Archias took the letter, but, insteadof opening it, put it into his pocket, and said to the mes senger who brought it: “Business to-mor row!” The next day he read it. Before he opened the letter, the Government was captured. When he read the letter it was too late. To-day I put into the hands of every man and woman, who hears or I reads these words,a message of life. It says: “To-day, if ye will hear His voice, harden not your heart.” Do not put away the message and say: “This business to-mor row.” This night thy soul may be required of thee! A Bullet Its Own Doctor. In spite of the terrible increase in the destructiveness of modern warfare, the tendency of the times is to make a conflict as humane as practicable. For this reason the use of copper-covered bullets has been frowned upon, and a Philadelphia physi cian has a plan that he claims will wonder fully mitigate the suffering of a man whose body has been perforated by the modern small-caliber bullet. Itis well established that the velocity and penetrating force of these bullets are so great that unless they chance to strike a bone they will pass en tirely through a man’s body without hip knowing it. The physician's idea is to at tach a small wad of antiseptic cotton to the rear of the bullet. This would be cov ered by the shell of the cartrid^^ and could not interfere with loading ci! firing. As the bullet passes through a person the wad will antisepticize the wound and pre vent consequent suppuration. It may be possible to so nicely adjust the adhesion of the wad. to the bullet that as the missile passes out it will leave the wad to plug the bole and stop bleeding. Ultimately this system might do away with the necessity of a large medical corps, as each bullet would carry medical treatment for the un fortunate it wounded. — Philadelphia Record. The Land of the Lazy. “In a late sojourn in Honduras,” said Mr. L. B. Givens, “I came to the conclusion that it was a paradise for lazy men. Every thing grows luxuriantly with but little labor on the part of the natives, and many crops do not need replanting more than once in eight or ten years. The country offers fine inducements to enterprising men, but it is hard on a white man used to civilized ways to go down there and dwell among an ignorant lot of natives who are 100 years behind the times. A man would have no congenial society, and might as well be in exile. The natives usually live in bamboo houses, though in the towns the dwellings are of adobe. Children go naked for the first two or three years of their life, and the attire of the adults is rather scant. The Government is liberal with concessions in order to encourage development of the country’s resources, but there is no gen eral rule governing the granting of privi leges, it all depends on how good a bargain may be driven. The climate is very salubrious, and laziness is about the only prevailing disease.—Washington Post. EX-CONVICT CANNOT CURE. Doctors Who Commit Crime Prohibited From Practicing. The United States Supreme Court af firmed the constitutionality of the act of the New York Legislature of 1895 prohibit ing persons who have been convicted of and punished for a crime from practicing medicine in the State. The question arose in the case of Walker vs. the State of New York. Walker had served ten years in the State Penitentiary for an offense committed in 1878 and after his release set up as a physician, aud at the time the law in question was enacted was practicing that profession. The Court held that it was within the police power of the State to enact such a law. GOMEZ’S WIFE AN AMERICAN. She is a Daughter of Henry Martin, of Nail’s Creek, East Tennessee. The wife of Maximo Gomez, commander- in-chief ofthe insurgent forces in Cuba, is an American woman. Her name before marriage to the great old soldier was Miss Pink Martin, and she was a daughter of Henry Martin, of Nail’s Creek, East Ten nessee. She married a Georgia man, and after he died she went to Havana, and there met Gomez, whom she married shortly after ward. As the Martin family was an old and wealthy one, Mrs. Gomez has had all the advantages, social and educational, of a refined and cultured American woman. CUBA’S FUTURE. It Will be Under the Stars and Stripes Until Peace is Restored. President McKinley has authorized as surances to be given that everybody’s rights will be respected, and that, when the people of Cuba establish their govern ment, it will be under the supervision ol the military authorities of the United States, and all qualified electors, whether combatants or non-combatants, will be given an opportunity to participate in the formation of the constitution. The island of Cuba will be under the Stars and Stripes until peace is restored and some guarantee can be given that no outrages will occur. A Great Year For Comets. great The year 1898 is the time appointed foj rhou- l the return of a number of periodic comets CURE FOK PTlEUMOhllA. Or, Charles Lundbeck Claims a Sure Remedy for This Dangerous Disease. Dr. Charles Lundbeck, who, with Dr. Carl Klfstrom, claims to have discov ered a positive cure for pneumonia, is a well-known physician and pathologist bi Brooklyn. The two physicians have been experimenting a long time on the cure and say that it works like a charm. No drugs are used. A quan tity of blood is drawn from the patient in amount varying with his strength. The average quantity would be about fifty grams. The blood is then prepared by a process in which beat and time play parts in making the desired serum. When the blood has been prepared it is injected into the patient from a hypo dermic syringe. Patients in whom the lungs had become solid recovered in from ten to twelve hours. The serum renders the bacilli of pneumonia harm less and thus effects a cure. Dr. Lund beck, as soon as he satisfies himself that his serum will act in all kinds of cases,- will publish his discovery to the world, after the custom of all men of science. Dr.Lundbeck has been in prac tice in Brooklyn for twenty years, and is prominently associated with Swedish singing societies. Dr. Elfstrom, his collaborator, is also a Swede and a graduate of the Ca$61inska Medical In stitute of Stockholm. Curious Florida Crabs. Haunting the rookeries of the birds in the southern part of the peninsula is a large blue crab. He makes a hole in the ground, usually under a log, and when, he hears a noise elevates his head and protrudes his eyes with startling effect. He is able to take care of him self, for his pincers are powerful and his shell is hard. He is often as large as a saucer. There is a perpetual war between him and the birds. He wanders among the nests at night and appropriates the bits of fish left by the nestlings and the young themselves, if he can find a mother off her guard. But he has to be sly or he is killed by the stroke of bayonet bill and eaten in his turn. When the plume hunters have driven off or destroyed the parents of a rook ery, these crabs swarm out and devour the orphan young in short order. But while the mothers are allowed to de their duty the crabs are ideal scaven gers and devour the refuse as well as the insects- that infest the bird cities. Their bright colors, like those of the tiger, make them less dangerous than their appetites would other-wise be. There is a little purple crab along the coast of Southern Florida which seems to feed almost entirely upon the fruit of the catcus. This it so much resem bles that you are suddenly surprised to see one of the succulent little balls move away from your fingers before you are aware that it is alive. Step back and the crab will resume its place and seem to be as curious about you as you are about him. —————raCNSAV. A New York man dropped dead when he heard a musical composition, which he had just finished, played for the first time. Coon-song composers will please copy. A Cheerful Woman. From the Democrat, Bre^? ^ Every woman cannot be beautiful, buta cheerful face often supplies the deficiency. But no one can be cheerful and bring joy to others unless they have perfect health. Fortunately, science has placed this price less boon within the reach of every woman as the following incident proves:: Mrs. Amanda Robinson, wife of William Robinson, farmer and stockman, near Howesville, .Clay County, Ind., is thirty- two years old and had for several years been in declining health and despondent. For three months she was not only unable to attend to her domestic duties but too feeble to be up and about. To-day sho is in good health and able to attend to her household affairs. She relates her ex perience as follows: “I was afflicted with female troubles and was in a delicate state of health. I lost my appetite, grew thin and was greatly depressed. After taking various remedies without being benefited I was induced by a friend to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. “Early in the summer of 1897 I pro cured five boxes of them and before fin- ishing the/ second box I. began to im-"' prove and by the time I had taken the five box^s I was able to go about my usual work and A Priceless Boon. )»ned takinir the nil “Our daughter Anna, twelve years old, was also afflicted with decline and debility. She lost flesh, seemed to bo bloodless and had no ambition. She took two boxes of the v pills and they restored her appetite, aided digestion and brought color to her cheeks. She is now in the best of health. I think. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People,-the best medicine we ever had in our family and recommend them to all needing a remedy for toning up and re building a shattered system. No discovery .of modern times has proved such a blessing to women as Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Palo People. They restore strength and health to exhausted women when, every effort of the physician proves unavailing. These vegetable pills are everywhere reeognizod as a specific for diseases of the blood and nerves. ©W® KWO^® Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50 cent 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 wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. wdFom Fie sms? rn SAN FRANCISCO, CAL ££lB3Vil±E, KY. NEW YORK, N.Y. BAD BREATH 44 K have been using; CASCAKETS and as a mild and effective laxative they are simply won derful. My daughter and J were bothered with sick stomach and our breath was very bad. After taking a few doses of Cascarets we have improved wonderfully. They are a great help in the family." Wilhelmina Nagel. 1137 Rittenhouse St., Cincinnati, Ohio. Pleasant. Palatable. Potent, Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c, 59c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, New York. 315 IM'P'-.Tf’l £$ ft^ Sold and guaranteed by all drug- eaStf" 3 gists to CUASE Tobacco Habit. Corn responds readily to proper fer tilization. Larger crops, fuller ears and larger grain are sure to result from a liberal use of fertilizers containing at least 7% actual Potash Our books are free to farmers. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., Now York 7000 BIOYOLES carried over from 1897 must ^ e sa °rijiced now. New w ^Iligh Grade, all styles, best equipment, guaran teed. $9.75 to St7.00, Hied wheels, late models, all makes, $3 to $!2. We ship on approval with out a cent payment. Write lis^l or bargain list and art catalogue ell ’98 models. BICYCLE FREE for season to advertise them. Send for one. Rider agents wanted. Learn how to Earn a Bicycle and make money. ^ F. MEAD CYCLE COMPANY, Chicage. Money in Chickens For 25c. in stamps we send a HD PAGE BOOK giving the experience of a practical Poultry Kaiser—not an amateur, but a man working for dollars and cents—during 25 years. It teaches how to Detect and Cure Diseases; Feed for Eggs also for Fattening; which Fowls to Save for Breeding; everything re quisite for profitable Poultry rais ing. BOOK PUBLISHING OSBORNE'S ad^edd ^^'fi^s^ Ga. Actual business. No text books. Short lame. Cheap board. Send for catalogue. CHARLOTTE COMMERCIAL W ^OLLESE, CHARLOTTE, N. C. No Vacations-Positions Guaranteed—Catalogue Free OFW and Liquor Habit cured in 10 to 20 days. No pay till cured. Dr. .1. L. Stephens, Dept. A, Lebanon, Ohio. THE KEELEY CORE - : DO YOU K^ •WHAT IT DOl 2 It relieves a per s 0 all desire for s ^ © drink or drugs, rest • bis nervous system • its normal condt , and reinstates a his home and bust For particulars add either of the follow The ^^^ INSTITUTE, Greensboro^ ^^ L st., ft.\\ „W asliington, 1), 1418 Madison Avenue, Baltimore, Jp PEOPLE ALL OVER NORTH CAROUNn f™«l John B - Wright, ot Creol, sells the best Pianos and Organs for thpi money you ever heard tell of. Write hi] CHICKENS™ MOB IF YOU GIVE THEM HELP. You cannot do this unless you understand J and know how to cater to their requirements- you cannot spend years and dollars learning in perience, so you must buy the knowledge acoif by others. We offer this to you for ouly 25 ceniJ YOU WANT THEM TO PAY THE OWN WAY even if you merely keep them as a diversion der to handle Fowls judiciously, you must something about them. To meet this want selling a book giving the experience / of a practical poultry raiser for V Viljy 0 twenty-five years. It was written by aman whnl all his mind, and time, aud money to making a ] cess of Chicken raising—not as a pastime, but J business—and If you will profit by his twenty! years’ work, you can save many Chicks annual and make your Fowls earn dollars for you 1 point is, that you must be able to detect trouh the Poultry Yard a~ soon as it appears, and how to remedy it. This book will teach you. It tells how to detect and cure disease; to feed eggs and also for fattening; which fowls to save breeding purposes; and everything, indeed , should know 011 this subject to make it profitable Sent postpaid for twenty-live cents in stamps, Book Publishing House 1 134 Leoxaed St.. N. Y. oil T HE H03TH CSRGLIM FENCE { Builds Osage Orange Dwarfed and Wire Fed A Iso Privet and Ornamental Fences for city 3 suburban homes. The old wooden fence 1 Iteatstheheartoutoffarming. Cheapest fend the world and the best is the Osage Orange our treatment. Liberal commissions given com agents. Send for circulars. Address 1 TAE NORTH CAROLINA FENCE COMPAnJ Nat. Bank Building- Greensboro, N,| MISSISSIPPI GIRLS' NOT AFRAID. Crape, Miss., says: 1 b used Dr. M. A. SirmnJ Liver Medicine 18 yJ W Itisthe best of all Lil T Regulators. It cures & I Headache, and isa gJ f deal more popular til “Black Draught” or 1 other liver medicinal 5^ this country. MensSruai Non-Appess’anoa. Absence of the flow may arise from so ■ organic defects or from abnormal con di 3 of the blood or nervous system. As the® approaches there are many symptoms® should be apparent to an intelligent metis When they are tardy, the attempt to e;: lish this function is attended with pat the head, loins and back, chilliness, ml and bloating of the abdomen. The tal merit necessary is moderate out-door eai cise, the use of Dr. M. A. Simmons Liar Medicine to correct the action of the di>« five organs and a dose twice a day for si; weeks of that great uterine stimuli Dr. SiliimonsSquawVineWine. Postmaster, MeteiJ and First Assist Principal Hcbrj Normal High Sell Fuller, Miss., will I am 25 years old, ■ my Father, ^hoc® when he was 75 old, had been and selling Dr, M.B Simmons Livl Medicine ever sia I could remember, J does all that is claiil for it, and is as staple as Sugar, Flour a Bacon. I consider it much Superiors “Zeilin’s Medicine,” which I don’t us:| any price. — Girls Approaching Puberty 1 Frequently suffer from irritability, resile ness, smothering sensations, palpitat:ob| heart, depression of spirits, nausea, coni pation and sometimes fainting spells. 1 Simmons Squaw Vine Wine, taken v the original Dr. M. A. Simmons Lil Medicine, quickly relieves these and oil distressing symptoms and assists natiul performing its natural functions at 1 proper time. Loolr Ont.—Don’t let the prepara® called “Black Draught” come into n house on the fraudulent pretension of “just the same” as M. A. S. L. M; “not” the same. If the component'p were the same there is as much differed between them a^ between day and oil Beware of all imitations. BEARING,zephyr .-JHaa doubling, UP-TO-DATE ’S MOTOR, 8 FT. FOR $6; 12-ft. forUL^i for $30. They run like a bicycle, and are madelii watch, every movable parton rollers. Doubles gea mill power. The Aermotor ran when all other m stood still, and made the steel windmill busin THE NEW BEATS THE OLD AS TH OLD BEAT THE WOODEN WHEEl Ch receipt of amount, revised motor (but not ivt or vane) will bo sent to replace old one then to I returned. Offer subject to cancellation at any tic L If your old wheel is not an Aermotor, write f« terms of swap—new for old—to go on old tower. ^ ou can P ut i 1 0n ? Aermotor Co., Chicago^ O OmOOB’ * ^BUILDERS’J 1 AMO JILL SUPPLY I Castings, Steel Beams, Columns and ( nel Bolts, Rods, Weights, Tanks. Towers Steel Wire and Manila Rope, Hoisting Eni and Pumps, Jacks, Derricks, Crabs, Chair Rope Hoists. %&~Cast Every Day. Make Quick Delivern LOMBARD IRON WORKSS SUPPL? AUGUSTA, GA. TEACHERS WANTED.-8000 vacancies. I 1000 teachers needed now to contract for next term. Offices in 10 cities. Union Teach- e s’ Agencies of America, Pittsburg, Pa A New and Quick Method for making your own. mattress, try it. Box ;.00, Franklin Grove, Ill. “Seyms' ! Thompson’s Eye Water 3580 O M S PAYS F R AY JONES OF BINGHAMTON N- and finding it say yon saw it here. FOR MAMES ©F 12 SEEOSI o » throughout the country as Seeds that Crow and we want to know if th- ers of this paper can tell the names ofthe twelve seeds shown below. We « educate you in knowing St EOS and therefore have made the following C« OFFERS: These 12 illustnations were carefully engraved from selected® “ which represents 12 well known vegetable, flower and field seeds, and we 1 $500. IM CASH FOR THE 12 NAMES. First letter of each is given: name them like this: Corn, Beet, Bean.ek be sure to give the number of each. All except one are natural size. Every person giving 6 names of the seeds' ceivea Four Dollar Prize by return mail. We want you interested in the Best Seecis that G row anfl J this educating seed offer to know whether you know good seed when you see it. To enter the CW. send 25 cents (silver or money order 1 and we will send you by return mail a 50c. certificate, good amount of seed to be selected from our catalogue any time within 2 years, also full particulars. Club 01- 1011 can’t lose a cent; if you don’t know all 12 seeds you ought to know six. that gives you a $4. prize, besw’ are sure of the 50c, certificate. Don’t miss tbSsoffer. Address, FAIRVIEW SEED FARMS. Box y 8 few # B 10 'O A M^-> © E3’®ssg^’
Orange County Observer (Hillsborough, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 19, 1898, edition 1
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