Newspapers / Orange County Observer (Hillsborough, … / April 12, 1900, edition 1 / Page 4
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—-- Future Pavements. Teacher-“Now, little girl, I have told the class about the wicked place being paved with good intentions. Now what do you suppose heaven is paved with?” Little Girl (with a delightful recollection of a fresh-aid picnic)— “Ham sandwiches, bananas, an’ pie/’— Harlem Life. Last year 4,700,000 cubic yards of ma terial was dredged out of the Duluth- Superior harbor. O -*^*6». ^^^ -^^ ^ -^-^^ ■^^ O $ Spring 1 1 Annually Says Take . I Hood’s j ; Sarsaparilla; ^ In the spring those Pimples, Boils, £ 2 Eruptions And General Bad Feelings a indicate that there are cobwebs in T the system. It needs a thorough brushing, and the best brush is J Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which sweeps all humors before it. This great medicine eradicates Scrofula, suo- 7 dues Salt Rheum, neutralizes the ^ acidity which causes Rheumatism— I in short, purifies the blood and F thoroughly renovates the whole 7 physical system. A “Hood’s Sarsaparilla has been a taken in our family as a blood puri- F fier and spring medicine with satis- y factory results.” Lenar Richard- 4 SON, 135 West William street, Bath, A N. Y. Be sure to get Hood’s. O ^^ A Story of Twins. Lloyd Lowndes and Richard Lown des, sons of Governor Lowndes of ^Maryland, are twins and look very [much alike. According to a story go- sing the rounds, Richard was traveling ^through Ohio a year ago, when a man came through the cars and slapped him on the back. “Hello, Lloyd,” he said, “stop over and spend the night with me at Chillicothe.” Richard said he wasn’t Lloyd, but the man wouldn’t Relieve him, so he stopped over. Among the people he met was Miss May Quinn. She liked him and he diked her, but Richard had been mar ried for several years. So he told his Brother Lloyd about her, and in proc ess of time Lloyd went to see her, fell In love, proposed, and was married last week. When he told his fiancee that he was not the Lloyd she first met, but that the first Lloyd was a false. Lloyd and really Richard, he had a hard time convincing her he was speaking the truth. Philadelphia has 41 wards and two Branches of the city council. Chicago has 35 wards. A MOTHER’S STORY. Tells About Her Daughter’s Illness and How She was Relieved— Two Letters xo Mrs. Pinkham. “Mrs. Pinkham :—I write to tell you about my daughter. She is nineteen years old and is flowing all the time, and has been for about three months. The doc tor does her but very little good, if any. I thought I would try Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound, but I want your advice before beginning its use. I have become very , much alarmed about her, as she is getting so weak.”— Mrs. Matilda A. Camp, Manchester Mill, Macon, Ga., May 31, 1899. “ Dear Mrs. Pink ham :—It affords me great pleasure to tell you of the benefit my daughter has received from the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com ¬ pound. After beginning the use of your medicine she began to mend -rapidly and is now able to be at her work. Her menses are regular and almost painless. I feel very thankful to you and expect to always keep your Vegetable Compound in my house. It is the best medicine! ever knew. You have my permission to publish this letter if you wish, it may be the means of doing others good.”—Mks. Matilda A. Camp, Manchester Mill, Macon, Ga., 'September 18, 1899. So. 14. C HOICE Vegetables will always find a ready market—but only that farmer can raise them who has studied the great secret how to ob tain both quality and quantity by the judicious use of well- balanced fertilizers. No fertil izer for Vegetables can produce a large yield unless it contains at least 8% Potash. Send for our books, which furnish full information. We send them free of charge. GERMAN KAL! WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. Dr.TALMAGE SERMON THE GREAT DIVINE’S ELOQUENI -HESSAGE. Subject: The Rome Life—It Points Out the Duty of Parents and Admonished the Children—Don’t Strife the Young People With Religion. [Copyright 1900.] Washington, D. C.—This discourse of Dr. Talmage will interest young men. while it is full of advice and eucoatagemient td parents who are trying Id bring up their children aright? text, Proverbs x., 1, “A wise sou t^arketh a glad father, but a fool ish sob is the heaviness of his mother.” Ill this graphic way Solomon sets forth the idea that the good or evil behavior of children blesses or blights the parental heart. I know there abb persons who seem to have no especial interest in the welfare of their ’children. The father says: “My boy must take the risks I took in life. If he turns out well, all right. If he turns out ill, he will have to bear the conse quences. He has the same chance that I had. He must take care of himself.” A shepherd might just as well thrust a lamb into a den of lions and say, “Little lamb, take care of yourself.” Nearly all the brute creation •are kind enough to look after their yuting. I was going through a wood^ and I heard a shrill cry in a nest,, I climbed up to the bird’s nest, and I found that the old bird had left the brood to starve. But that is a very rare occurrence. Generally a bird Will pick your eyes out rather than Barten der her young to your keeping or your touch. A lion will tend you if you come too near the Whelps. Even the barnyard fowl, with Its clumsy foot and heavy wing, will come at you if you approach its young too nearly, and God certainly intended to have fathers and mothers as kind us the brutes. Christ comes through all our households to-day, and He says: “You take care of the bodies of your children and the minds of your children. What are you doing for their immortal souls?” I read of a ship that foundered. A life-boat was launched. Many of the passengers were in the waters. A mother, with one hand beating the wave and the other hand holding her little child out toward the lifeboat, cried out, “Save my child!” And that impassioned cry is the one that finds an echo in every paren tal heart In this land to-day. “Save my child!” That man outthere says; “I have fought my own way through life, I have got along tolerably well, the world has buffeted me, and I have h d many a hard struggle. It don’t make much difference what hap pens to me, but save my child!” You see I have a subject of stupendous import, and I am going, as God may help me, to show the cause of parental solicitude and then the alleviations of that solicitude, The first cause of parental solicitude, 1 think, arises from the Imperfection of parents on their own part. We all some how want our children to avoid our faults. We hope that if we have any excellences they will copy them. But the probability Is they will copy our faults and omit our excellences. Children are very apt to be echoes of the parental life. Some one meets a lad in the back street, finds him smoking and says: “Why, I am astonished at you! What would your father say if he knew this? Where did you get that cigar?” “Oh, I picked it up on the street.” “What would your father say and your motbersay if they knew this?” “Ob,” be replies,“that's nothing. My father smokes!” There is not one of us to-day who would like to have our children copy all our examples. And that is the cause of the solicitude on the part of all of us. We have so many faults we do not want them copied and stereotyped In the lives and characters of those who come after us. Th^solicitude arises from our conscious insufficiency and unwisdom of discipline. Out of twenty parents there may be one parent who understands how thoroughly and skillfully to discipline; perhaps not more than one out of twenty. We, nearly all of us, err on one side or on the other. Here is a father who says, “I am going to bring up my children right; my sons shall know nothing but religion; shall see noth ing but religion, and bear nothing but re ligion.” They are routed out at 6 o’clock in the morning to recite the Ten Com mandments. They are awakened up from tiie sofa on Sunday night to recite the Westminster Catechism. Their bedroom walls are covered with religious pictures and quotations of Scripture, and when the boy looks for the day of the month he looks for it in a religious almanac. If a minister comes to the bouse, be is re quested to take the boy aside and tell him what a great sinner he is. It is religion morning, noon and night. Time passes on, and the parents are wait ing for the return of the son at night. It is 9 o’clock, it is 10 o’lock, it is 11 o’clock, it is 12 o’clock, it is half-past 12 o’clock. Then they hear a rattling of the night key, and George comes in and hastens upstairs lest he be accosted. His father says, “George, where have you been?” He says, “I have been out.” Yes, he has been out, and he has been down, and he has started on the broadroad to ruin for this life and ruin for the life to come, and the father says to his wife, “Mother, the Ten Com mandments are a failure; no use of West minster Catechism; I have done my very best for that boy; just see how he has turned out.” Ah, my friend, you stuffed that boy with religion; you had no sym- pathey with innocent hilarities; you had no common sense. A man at midlife said to me, “I haven’t much desire for religion; my father was as good a man as ever lived, but he jammed religion down my throat when I was a boy until I got disgusted with it, and I h iven’t wanted any of it since.” That father erred on one side. Then the discipline is an entire failure in manj households because the father pulls one way and the mother pulls the other way. The father says, “My son, I told you if I ever found you guilty of false hood again I would chastise you, and I am going to keep my promise.” The mother says: “Don’t! Let him off this time.” A father says, “I have seen so many that make mistake by too great severity in the rearing of their children. Now, I will let my boy do as he pleases. He shall have full swing. Here, my son, are tickets to the theatre and opera. If you want to play cards, do so; If you don’t want to play cards, you need not to play them. Go when you want and come back when you want to. Have a good time. Go it!” Give a boy plenty of money and ask him not what he does with it, and you pay bis way straight to perdition. But after awhile the lad thinks he ought to have a still larger supply. He has been treated, and he must treat. He must have wine sup pers. There are larger and larger ex penses. After awhile one day a messenger from the bank over the way calls in and says to the father of the household of which I am speaking, “The officers of the bank would like to hiive you step over a minute.” The father steps over, and the bank officer says, “Is that your check?” “No,” he says; “that is not my check. I nevermade an ‘H’ in that way; I never put a curl to the ‘Y’ in that way. That is not my writing. That is not my signature. That is a counterfeit. Send for the police.” “Stop!” says the bank officer. “Your son wrote that.” Now the father and mother are waiting for the son to come home at night. It is 12 o’clock, it is half-past 12 o’clock, it is 1 o’clock. The son comes through the hall way. The father says: “My son, what does all this mean? I gave you every op portunity. I gave you all the money you wanted, and here in my old days I find that you have become a spendthrift, a libertine and a sot.” The son says: “Now, father, what is the use of your talking that way? You told me to go it. and 1 just took your suggestion.” And so to strike the medium between severity and too great leniency, to strike the happy medium between the two and train our children for God and for heaven, Is the anxiety for every, Intel ligent parent; But for the most part the children that live sometimes get cross and pick up bad Wttrds in the street or are disposed to quar rel with brother or sister and show that they are wicked. You see them in the Sab* bath-school Class; They are so sunshiny and bright you would think they were al ways so; but the mother looking over at them remembers what an awful time she had to get them ready; Time passes on. They get considerably older, and the sou comes in from the street from a pugilistic encounter bearing on bis appearance the marks of defeat, or the daughter practices some little deception in the household. The mother says, “I can’t always be scold ing and fretting and finding fault; but this must be stopped.” So in many a house hold there is the sign of sin, the sign of the truthfulness of what the Bible says when it declares, “They go astray as soon as they be born, speaking lies.” Some go to work and try ’to correct all this, and the boy is picked at and picked at and picked at. That always is ruinous; There is more help in one good thunder- storm than in live days or cold drizzle. Better the old fashioned stylo of chastise ment, if that be necessary, than the fret ting and the scolding which have de stroyed so many. There is also a cause of great solicitude sometimes bedaUsd oUr ydung people ar$ surrounded by so many temptations. A Castle may not be taken by a straightfor ward siege, but suppose there be insidsthe castle an enemy, and in the night be shoves back the bolt and swings open the door. Our young folks have foes without, and they have foes within. Who does not understand it? Who is the man here who is not aware of the fact that the young people of this day have tremendous temp tations? Oh, how many traps set for the youngl Styles of temptation just suited to them. Do you suppose that a man who went clear th the depths of dissipation went down in one great plunge? Oh, no! At first it was a fashionable hotel. Marble floor. No un clean pictures behind the counter. No drunken hiccough while they drink, but the click of cut glass to the elegant senti ment. You ask that young man now to go into some low restaurant and get a drink, and lie would say, “Do you mean to insult me?” But the fashionable and the elegant hotel is not always close by, and now the young man is on the down grade. Farther and farther down until he has about struck the bottom of the depths of ruin. Now be is in the low restaurant. The cards so greasy you can hardly tell who has the best hand. Gambling for drinks. Shuffle away, shuffle away. The landlord stands in his short sleeves, with his hands on his hips, waiting for an order to fill up the glasses. The clock strikes twelve—the tolling of the funeral belief asoul. The breath of eternal woe flushes in that young man’s cheeks. In the jets of the gaslight the fiery tongue of the worm that never dies. Two o’clock in the morning, and now they are sound asleep in their chairs. Land lord comes around and says “Wake up, wake up! Time to shut up!” “What!” says the young man. “Time to shut up?” Push them all out into the night air. Now they are going home. Going home! Let the wife crouch in the corner and the chil dren hide under the bed. What was the history of that young man? He began his dissipations in the barroom of a Fifth ave nue hotel and completed kis damnation in the lowest grogshop. Sometimes sin does not halt in that way. Sometimes sin even comes to the drawing room. There are leprous hearts some times admitted in the highest circles of society. He is so elegant, he is sb bewitch ing in his manner, he is so relined, he is so educated, no one suspects the sinful de sign, but after a while the talons of death come forth. Whatis the matter with that house? The front windows have not been open for six months or a year.- A shadow has come down on that domestic hearth, a shadow thicker than one woven of mid night and hurricane. The agony of that parent makes him say, “Oh, I wish I had buried my children when they were small!” Loss of property? No. Death in the family? No. Madness? No. Some vil lain, kid gloved and diamonded, lifted that cup of domestic bliss until the sun light struck it, and ail. the rainbows played around the rim and then dashed it into desolation and woe, until the harpies of darkness clapped their hands and all the voices of the pit uttered a loud “Ha, ha!” The statistic has never been made up in these great cities of how many have been destroyed and how many beautiful homes have been overthrown. If the statistic could be presented, it would freeze your blood in a solid cake at your heart. Our great ^Lies are full of temptations, and to vast multitudes of parents these tempta tions become a matter of great solicitude. Begin early with your children. You stand on the banks of a river and you try to change its course. It has been rolling now tor 100 miles. You cannot change it. But just go to the source of that river, go to where the water just drips down on the rock. Then with your knife make a chan nel this way and a channel that way, and it will take it. Come out and stand on the banks of your child’s life when it is thirty or forty years of age, or even twenty, and try to change the course of that life. It is too late! It is too late! Go far ther up at the source of life and near est to the mother’s heart, where the character starts, and try to t ike it in the right direction. But, oh, my friend, be careful to make a line, a distinct line between innocent hilarity on the one hand and vicious hilarity on the other. Do not think your children are going to ruin because they make a racket. All healthy children make a racket. But do not laugh at your child’s sin because it is smart. IC you do, you will cry after awhile because it is malicious. Remember it is what you do more than what you say that is going to affect your children. Do you suppose Noah would have got his family to go into the ark if he staid out? No. His sons would have said, “I am not going into the boat; there’s something wrong; father won’t go in; If father stays out, I’ll stay out.” Are all your children safe? I know it is a stupendous question to ask, but I must ask it. Are all your children safe? A mother, when the house was on fire, got out the household goods many articles of beautiful furniture, but forgot to ask till too late, “Are the children safe?” When the elements are melting with fervent heat and God shall burn the world up and the cry of “Fire! Fire!” shall resound amid the mountains and the valleys, will your children be safe? 1 wonder if the subject strikes a chord iu the heart of any man who had Christian parentage, but has not lived as he ought? God brought you here this morning to have your memory revived. Did you have a Christian ancestry? “Ob, yes!” says one man. “If there ever was a good woman, my mother was good.” How sho watched you when you were sick! Others wearied, if she got weary, she nevertheless was wakeful, and the medicine was given at the right time, and when the pillow was hot she turned it. And, oh, then, when you began to go astray, what a grief it was to her heard All the scene comes back. You remem ber the chairs, you remember the table, you remember the doorsill where you played, you remember the tones of her voice. She seems calling you now, not by the formal title w.t i which we address you, saying, “Mr.” this or “Mr.” that, or “Hon orable” this or “Honorable” that. It is just the first name, your first name, she calls you by this morning. She bids you to a better life. She says: “Forget not all the counsel I gave you, my wandering boy. Turn into paths of righteousness. I am waiting for you at the gate.” Oh, yes, God brought you here this morning to have that memory revived, and I shout upward the tidings. Angels of God send forward the news. Ring! Ring! The dead is alive again, and tixo lost is found! A CHEAT TRUCK OARDEX rexlffi May Supply Us with Our Early Vegetables. From recent developments It Is ap parent that the Southern States will not possess the monopoly of supplying northern cities with garden products, says the Philadelphia Record. The science of refrigeration and the con struction of refrigerator ships and re frigerator cars has reached such a high state that it is now possible to raise fruit, it might be said, in almost any part of the world, and carry it to any other part. The fact has been for years demonstrated by the shipment of carcasses from Australia to England by the shipload, where an enormous trade has been built up. The same principle can be applied to the transportation of fruits. A very large proportion of the product of California is now shipped eastward in refrigerator cars, and some of the finest fruits on display in the East come from that State in this way. The agriculturists in the South have re cently had their attention directed to the advisability of diversifying crops by the high price paid for garden pro ducts. The market garden has of late years become a very important factor iu southern agricultural economy. Enterprising capitalists, since the de velopment of Mexico by railroads have been looking at the possibilities of cli mate there, and have taken steps in some cases to establish plantations for the growth of fruits on a large scale, which it is their intention to ship by re frigerator processes to United States ports and then to inlaud points. The schemes read well, and apparently are well based. There appears to be no reason why garden truck could not be raised in Mexico and delivered safely and profitably to a great many cities and towns throughout the United States. A great many products there are four to eight weeks ahead of the South. Dairy farming has become very profitable. Milk in large cities sells at 25 cents in Mexico; butter at 3G to 48 cents a pound. Labor costs only from 12 to 25 cents a day. Sugar cane turned into brown sugar yields from $70 to $95 an acre gross. Green barley and corn are raised in large quantities for fodder. Cattle raising since the Spanish war has been greatly stimulated, and the western cattlemen are now there lay ing the foundations for big ranches. Wheat is cultivated on the high table- lands of Central Mexico, but it is not as good as that grown in the States. Such products as coffee, vanilla, rub ber, cocoanut and cocoa are all raised in certain sections and raised profita- blyr Money in Lullabies. A new industry is that of lullaby tinging. Young women who are study ing vocal music very often turn their growing talent to small account, at least, by going to nuiseries two or three times a week to sing to the chil dren at bedtime hour soft, crooning lullabies. It is in households, of course, where the mother has no singing voice, and who believes in the influence of sweet and correct singing on the de veloping ear of the child. This may seem the exaggeration of detail, but in these days it is the trifles that are considered in their bearing upon the large results “The Only Thing That Gives Belief.” Mre. M. E. Latimer, Biloxi, Mir.s., had an itchy breaking out on her skin, and »he sends $1 for two boxes, saying: “Tetterine is the only thing that gives me relief.” This is strong language, disinterested and voluntary. It cures ill skin diseases, tetter, itch, eczema, salt-rheum, etc., and never fails. 50c. a box at druggists or send stamps to J. T. Bhuptrine, Savannah, Ga. Not So Looney. Lunatics often assume a superiority of intellect to others which is quite amusing. A gentleman while walking along a road not far from the side of which ran a railway, encountered a number of insane people out for ex ercise. With a nod toward the rail way lines, he said to one of the luna tics: “Where does this railway go to?” The lunatic looked at him scorn-; fully for a moment and then replied: ! “It doesn’t go anywhere. We keep it here to run trains on.”—Agate. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, ! ’ Lucas County, 1 Frank J. Cheney makes oath that be is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. ’ H i nEY * Co., doing businessin th eCity oil oledo.f minty and State aforesaid, and thatsaid firm will pay the sum of one hundred dollars for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of BALL’S Catarrh * URE. - Frank J. ( heney. ; Sworn to before me and subscribed in my , ( ; presence, this oth day of December, | 4 sealV A. D. 1886. A. W. GLEASON 1 1 I binaru Public. ; Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and { acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces , of the system. Send for testimonials, free. . F. J. * HENEY & Co., Toledo, 0. 1 Sold bv Druggists, 75c. , Hall’s Family Pillsare the best. ■ An old man wants to marry a young girl. Relatives appeal to the courts to stop ik Now if every man had to : satisfy his family before he perpetrated matrimony, how many marriages would there be in the year ? Defined. From Brooklyn Life: Teacher— Johnny, you may define the first per son. Johnny—Adam. Dr.BulPs ’’“ r "“ 8 B w t)ic troublesome cough Cough Syrup cures iu a few days. Price 25c. at all druggists. ON 10 DAYS TRIAL. Aluminum HU-T PROOF Cream Separator*, sizes 1 to 15 cows, price from #4 to $8 according to size. “I p-'o-Date” 4 hurns, sizes 1 to 15 cows, prices $5 to $9. They make 15 pei- cent m-irp butter. Catalogue and terms free. Don’t buy until you hear fr in us. We are manufacturers and sell dire' t to the consumer where we have noagents. We pay Freight not Express. GlBbOA-S'*” W'RT - F G. cO., GIBSONIA, PA. AGENTS,^? ' the neg 0problem and all his best speeches. Whit - and colored people are giving advanced orders. A bonanza for agen s. Write to ay. We would like to engage a lew able white men to suneilntend agen s. J. la. INJA CJEXO 3L> S» c& CO No. 912-924 Austell Building, Atianta, Ga. DYSPEPSIA! No Medicine to Swallow! cured bv Absorption in 90 days. If not benefited money refunded. Book free on application. Send #1.00 for a PAD to the 8 MANNING GROCERY CO.. Manning 8. C. SOLS AGTS. lOR N. C.. 8. C. AND GA. o-s'.cy * Cubes where all else pails. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Sold by druggists Here It Is! Want to learn all about a Horse? How to Pick Out a Good One? Know Imperfec-; tions and so Guard against Fraud? Detect Disease and Effect a Cure when same is possible? Tell the Age by the Teeth? What to call the Different Parts of the Animal? How to Shoe a Horse Properly? All this and other Valuable Information can be obtained by reading our 100-PAGE ILLUSTRATED HORSE BOOK, which we will forward, post- paid, on receipt of only 25 cents in stamps. MOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, ^ Leonard SA, New York City GREEN SHO KO, N^T For the treatment of THE LIQUOR, OPIUM, MORPHINE artf other Drug Aadictions. The Tobbacco Habit, Nerve Exhaustion WRITS US FOR 0UIIIBOM WIND-BOOK. Mrs. Window’s Soothing -yrup for children 1 teething, softens the gunv,reducing ^nania- ■ tion. allays pain cures wind co in 25c a bottle, - VITALITY low, debilitated or exhausted cured ; bv Ur Kline’s Inv gorating Ionic FREE $1 ; trial bottle for 2 weeks’treatment. Dr. 'line, | Ld. 931 Arch St., Phi adelphia. Bounded 187L . A free medical dispensary has been opened in Chinatown, San Francisco. The Best Prescription for Chills and Fever is a bottle of Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No cure—no pay. Price 50c. White opossums are occasionally caught in Ohio county. Ind. Thirty minutes is all the time required to j dye with Putnam Fadeless Dyes. Sold by I all druggists. I use'Piso’s Cure for Consumption both in my family and practice.--Dr. G. W. Patter sox, Inkster, Mich,, Nov. 5. 1894. Painters in the car shops at Knoxville are working 15 to 17 hours a day. THE -^^^^^^ COOPER BEE WOK 1 ’* ^ Monuments and Headstones, All sizes and prices, De livered at your Depot same price as at Shop. Write for Catalogue. WJ a-HE A NATURAL HAtoETIC OIL FROM MAS. Disc overed by t! B JONES, D Ilan. Texas . in 188.v. The most wonderful discoveryof the age anda guzzle to he medical world Rheumatism,acute par. uiy-is spinal affections, stiff jo nts. erysipe as, p les; catai rh &c. &c.. j iehi to this Oil like magic aud postlvo jy cures in 8 to 20 days. Sample can 50c. ) ost paid. J,000t Slim >n al« tree.fiGENTSWANTED! THE BROAD RIVER MEDCO .Agents for N.C.& S.C.,Seaton Greene,Mgr.,P.O.box No. L Henrietta, N.C Fun of “Auto” Men. It seems that one of the latest fashi Ions of the automoblllsts, motocy- clists and various “chaffeurs” of the auto kind in Paris is to tear through space with escape pipe wide open, emit* ting a succession of explosions that for frightful noise can discount a switch engine. They are not obliged to leave the escape open and make all this noise, but “it sounds big,” and they do it. Recently Beconnais on his tricycle, going at fifty miles per hour in the heart of Paris, scared a cab horse into running away, and the cab- I by is now in bed. A noise that will scare a Paris cab horse must be some thing more than the rattle of a boy’s hoop, or a nurse girl with a baby) carriage. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All j dn g'i.-ts refund the m mey if it fails to cure. k. W. Gkove’s signature is on each box. 25c. Out in the frontier the word gun was applied almost exclusively to pistols. * Human Nature’s Failing. The average male employe is always a good deal more grieved when he has- to^work ten minutes overtime than he is pleased when the boss lets him go some night an hour early.—Somerville Journal. New contracts with the United States Government allow army surgeons pay during authorized absences. FOB DOCTORS AND LIVfBYM S PECIAL BUGGIES with long bodies and drawers under seat, Steel or Rubber Tires. Fancy Buggies with stick seats. Buggies with Wire Wheels, Pneumatic Tires and Ball-Bearing Axles. Buggies for everybody. SEE OUR AGERT OR WRITE DIRECT. I ROCK HILL IS3ra?7?&^3!KB22SE3Z!saEszsEraB&EaaBara BUGGY CO,’ ROCK HILL.S.C. j^lNGMESTEK, Factory Loaded Shotgun Shells. “ Leader” loaded with Smokeless powder and “ New Rival” loaded with Black powder. Superior to all 'other brands for UNIFORMITY, RELIABILITY AND i STRONG SHOOTING QUALITIES. i Winchester Shells are for sale by all dealers. Insist upon ihaving them when you buy and you will get the best. twra>sw&@8&®aaws39@M^M^i3w@«wwa»ie&@a«se9 IlHrUMVTISM. FAINIVBACK. L.GKIPPB, CROUP an.1 A OL-B. Grandmother used It. why not you? It’s the greatest medicine known. Sold by all druggists and general stores. Made only by GOOSE GREAsE LINIMENT CO.. Greensboro. N. C. W. L. DOUGLAS 83 & 3.80 SHOES IW ^Worth $4 to $6 compared sx with other makes. Indorsed by over 1,000,900 wearers. The genuine have W. L. Douglas’ name and price 1stamped on bottom. Take no substitute claimed to be as good. Your dealer should keep them —if not, we will send a pair ^ size, and width, plain or cap toe. Cat. free ffitmm w - L OOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass. I spen RETURNS &^^ LnlllUU tog Co., E. LasVegas, N. JI., for circulars. Agents Wanted £?^^ ^^ terms. C. B. Anderson & Go.. 872 Eun St., Dallas. xex. Mtrue food for the price BRAIN,NCRVES, W? MI'SCLES'”BLOOD. ^ 5cientific.Treatment for all manner of NERVOUS DISEASES. cKaaRycB. Dpi STOLiTenn UM Don’t Stop Tobacco Suddenly ^^; srsw^ and notifies you when to atop. bold with a guarantee that three boxes will cure any case. RAF ft ril^ft is vegetable And harmless. It has onred thousands, it will curTyon. Atoll druggists or by mail Preps^ $1 a box; 3 boxes $2.50 Booklet free. Write EUREKA CHEMICAL CO., LaCrosse, Wla. A TTENTION is facilitated if yon mention this paper when writing advertise rs. So.14 0 0 0 ^ ^ V NEW DISCOVERY; gives Lr i w x^ a W^ • quick relief and cures worst cases. Book of testimonials and 10 da rm’ treatment Free. Dr. 11. BL. GEEEN’SSONB. Box B. Atlanta, G*. JUST THE BOOK YOU WAMT.-.S CONDENSED ENCYCLOPEDIA OF UNIVERSAL KNOWLEDGE, «•» treats upon about every subject under the eun. It contains 530 pages, profusely illustrated# end will be sent, postpaid, for 50c. tn stamps, postal note or silver. When reading you doubt* =s AN ENCYCLOPEDIA =« will clear up for yoB ' U has a com plete index, se that It may be A referred to easily. This book is a rich mine of valuable O 0 | - Information, presented tn MI interesting manner, and is 0 B well wo rth to any one many time* the small sum of FIFTY CENTS which wo ask ter it- A study of this book will prove of incalculable benefit to those whose ednoption has been neglected, while the volunis will also be found of great value to those who cannot readily command the knowledge they tenftwiutxxd. BOOK PUBLISHING MOUSE- 134 Leonard SUN, Ya0IW»
Orange County Observer (Hillsborough, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 12, 1900, edition 1
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