Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Aug. 25, 1887, edition 1 / Page 4
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FOB FARM AND GARDEN. Hen Manure. It is ;afo to estimate that the manure from hens is worth at least one-half the cost of the food, if properly kept and judiciously applied. We know a straw berry grower who states that the manure from 40 hens doubled his crop on one acre compared with another acre not so treated. His method was to scatter the manure plentifully over the plants in January, before the spring growth com menced. In this way the rains carried the manure to the roots. A calculation will show that the value of the manure was greater than may be supposed. He estimates that he gained 1000 quarts of berries extra, which gave him a profit of three cents per quart, with prices very low. This shows that from the 40 hens he got enough manure to produce $30 worth of strawberries extra, after pay ing expenses of picking, etc., which of course represents the value of the manure at 75 cents per hen. The manure is therefore a very important item, and de serves to be included in the estimates of the poultry account, as in some cases it may pay for nearly the whole of the food consumed. Chicago Herald. Transplanting Cabbage Plants. Charles P. Sanders of Schenectady, N. Y., writes as follows in the American Cultivator: "In your issue of July 2, it is stated that cabbage plants should be transplanted after a good rain, or if transplanted in a drought should after wards be watered. I raise about 100,- 000 heads of cabbage every year, and have raised them extensively for thirty years, and my experience has taught me to avoid advice based on thcabo ve state mcht. I never water cabbage plants and never transplant them after a good rain. I sometimes transplant after a slight rain when the ground is just dampened. "I plow the earth fresh and then trans plant immediately, before the top dries ; that is, transplant the same day the plow ing is done, commencing to plow the ground for cabbage after noon, and if very dry, quite late in the afternoon, and just as soon as the ground is plowed 1 transplant. Thus the plants have from twelve to twenty hours start be fore the ground dries or the sun strikes them. When the earth plows up very dry, I commence plowing and setting out the plants late in the afternoon, and some times "puddle" the plants, that is, put them first in water and then in dry plaster. I never wet the ground, since such a practice in dry weather causes the surface to harden and to bake. Seldom, perhaps not one year in twenty, do Ave have the earth too dry to transplant cab bage, and frequently we are troubled with the earth being too wet. Setting out cabbage with wet earth, the whole is apt to be packed about the roots and plants, and if followed by dry weather, the earth will harden arouud the plant and injure its growth." How to Grow Fodder-Corn. It has become a common practice among our farmers to grow fodder-corn, with which to eke out their pastures when the dry weather strikes them in the summer. The term "fodder-corn" is used by common consent to designate corn grown especially for fodder, cither for soiling or for curing for winter feed. We wish to say a few words about the best method of growing fodder-corn. The custom used to be to sow it very thick so as to make the stalks grow slender, under the impression that they would be better relished by stock than the coarse stalks of the full grown corn. Many still continue to sow fodder corn in this way; but it is a great mistake. When so thickly grown it is but little else than the crude fibre and water, con taining a very small percentage of nutri ment. For soilim?. for curing or for ensilage it is better to grow fodder corn not more than twice as thickly as we grow field corn. Planted in drills, dropping the kernels four to six inches apart with the rows three and a half or four feet apart, or planted in hills eighteen inches apart, Avith three or four kernels in the hill, the roAvs as far apart as we have just indicated, will give much better results than planting more closely. We must let in the air and sun shine in order to develop the gums, starches and sugar, which give the stalks their nutritive value. Cultivating and stirring the soil help fodder corn just as much as they do field crops. For early feeding it is best to plant early, so as to give the corn a chance to reach full ma turity before being cut and fed or other wise disposed of. Do not allow the corn to harden, or the stalks to ripen, but to reach the green corn stage of the ear. This is the time Avhen it is in its best con dition and the most valuable for food. Live Stock Journal. Preserving Eggs for Winter. Many various methods are recom mended for preserving eggs, yet very few manage to keep them in large num bers. Limited supplies are stored away for family use, and others are kept in cold storage, at the great commercial centres, but the business of preserving them foj the market has never become general. There are many obstacles to success, which are not always considered. First, only fresh eggs are suitable, yet it is dif ficult to secure them unmixed with older ones. A single stale egg may cause the loss of all in the same package. Second, eggs from hens which run by themselves will keep much longer than those from hens which are kept in company Avith males. A fertilized egg will keep only one-third as long as one which is sterile. This should be kept in view, and the males separated from the hens at least ten days before beginning to save eggs for storage. An egg which is unfertil ized when placed in an incubator, and kept at a temperature of one hundred and three degrees, will remain unchanged and fit for the table at the end of two weeks, while a fertilized egg, under similar conditions would either be two-thirds incubated or rotten. The difference in keeping qualities of the tAvo kinds of eggs is equally great in a cool room, though not so rapidly manifested. A third important point is to turn the eggs half over at least twice a week, to keep yolk from adhering to shell. If kept in a room Avhere the air is cool, pure and dry, no salt, lime or chemicals are needed. The eggs may be placed upon racks, to' which access is had for turning. But the difficulty with, most cellars and even ice-cooled rooms is that eggs kept in them through hot weather, arc liable to acquire a musty flavor. If packed in boxes Avith oats or corn, the boxes may be turned every fcAV days, as indicated above. American Agricul turist. Ashes For Potatoes. A correspondent Avritcs : FeAV farmers realize the value of ashes, otherAvise one would see them spreading the same on their grass lands or applying ashes to their cultivated crops, instead of selling them to the soap men or alloAving them to so to Avaste. As an illustration of their value I send you the result of care ful experiments as made two j'cars on my potato crop. The first year the potatoes were plant ed on broken up ground, and 300 pounds of superphosphate per acre were put in the hills at planting time. After the potatoes Avere hoed the first time forty bushels of hard Avood ashes were put on per acre. As the toavs Avere 100 hills long, one bushel was thus applied to every two rows. On tAvo toavs I did not put on any ashes, and Avhen the potatoes Avere dug the tAvo rows Avithout ashes had, of merchantable potatoes, 192 pounds, while the tAvo adjacent rows, Avhich had been dressed Avith ashes, gave 248 pounds of potatoes, making fifty-sis pounds of good potatoes as the direct gain for the application of one bushel of ashes. Last year on the same kind of ground, with 3,000 pounds of phosphate placed per acre in the hills at planting time, and with ashes put on just after the first hoeing at the same rate, namely, one bushel per each two hundred hills, I har vested from the two toavs on which ashes had been applied 533 pounds of good potatoes, a-d on the two rows upon Avhich no ashes had been applied 483 pounds, showing a difference of fiftv pounds of merchantable potatoes in favoi of the application of ashes. 11 a bushel i ashes aviII increase the yield of potatoes almost a bushel, Avith perhaps one-half the value of the ashes still remaining in the ground, will it not pay farmers generally to use all the ashes they have in hand, and even to purchase in the villages, where they can often be had for fifteen to twenty-five cents pei bushel, rather than do without this im portant aid to farm crops? New York Herald. Farm and Garden Notes. The proper temperature for churning is about 00 degrees Fahrenheit. Toe violent churning produces excessive fric tion. Confinement in small "henneries" may do in some instances, but hens do best, are healthier and lay more eggs if al lowed their liberty. Where much poultry is raised on a farm, it is recommended to include a fcA Guinea fowls to serve as a practical pro tection to young chicks from hawks and enemies which may be scared away by the alarming cry of the speckled birds. The Chicago Times employs these axioms: Grass is the most important crop produced in the country. The better the crop of grass the larger the number ol horses, mules, cattle and sheep can be kept. If grass be not their principal food during the entire year there will be no profit in keeping them. They will keep in good condition if they have nc other food than grass. To start a meadoAv or a pasture the land should be properly prepared in the fall, Avhen the seed may be soAvn on a light snoAv and left Avithout covering. Foi permanent pasture tAvelve pounds ol timothy, eight of biennial red clover, sia of orchard grass, two of meadow fescue, three of redtop, four of rye grass and two of peat meadow should be sown to gether to the acre. San Francisco's Chinatown. ChinatOAvn is one of the first places visited by the Easterner. The people, their merchandise, their manner of liv ing, are all strange and curious, and one finds no end of interesting things to see and hear. The influx of eastern visi tors this year has created an unusual boom in Chinese curios. The prices asked for most of the things arc tAvice that of a year ago. However, if one has enough of the trader in him, he may buy things at his oAvn price, for they will bear beating doAvn, and finally offer the goods at the customer's price before al lowing him to leave Avithout buying. They are a queer mixture, this product of an old, old civilization. San Fran cisco Letter. Strongly Pnt. What a pity that the good things ot the pulpit can't be laid before the world like the printed pages of the press! Here is a bonmot which I desire to res cue from oblivion. It was from a pulpit in the suburbs. The subject: "Sowing Wild Oats." "Whatsoever ye sow, that shall ye surely reap," says the good book, and the pastor thus reasons there from: "You can't expect, my hearers, to raise hell in this world, and reap heaven hereafter. Minneapolis Tribune, CLirriNGS FOR THE CURIOUS. Grist mills are an Irish invention and were first run in Ireland in 214. A recent writer on China puts the population of the empire at 450,000,000. In Greece, according to Herodotus, Solon was the first who pronounced ora tion, B. C. The ship Mayflower, of the Pilgrim fame, was chartered in 1659 by the East India company to get a cargo of rice. She was lost on her homeward voyage. Virgil, br Publius Virglius Maro, was born 70 B. C, near Mantua. At 33 he wrote his Eclogues, then his Georgics, and at 45 his Eneid. He died 19 B. C. The geographical centre of the United States is a point near Wichita, Kansas, which city is nearest to it. The centre of population is not far from Dayton, Ohio. It has been computed that the death rate of the globe has been 67 a minute, 97,790 a day, and 35,639,835 a year, and the birth rate 70 a minute, 100,800 a day, and 36,792,000 a year. The making of woolen cloth was be gun in England in 1331; but its manu facture Avas not known in France in 1646. How to dye and dress it was not known in England until 1667. Forks are a comparatively modern in vention and were first knoAvn in Italy toAvards the end of the fifteenth century. They began to be known in France to ward the end of the sixteenth century, and Avere introduced into England in 1608, just fourteen years before the Pil grims landed at Plymouth. Bells were invented by Paulinus, bishop of Nola, in Campagnia, in or about the year 400. They were first used in France in 550, in Greece in 864, and in the churches of Europe in 900. They first appeared in Switzerland in 1020 ; and the first tuneable set of bells knoAvn in England were used in Croj' land Abbey, Lincolnshire, in 960. The original form of oath to be taken by a baronet in England on receipt of his patent reads as folio avs: "I, A. B. Doe, swear that neyther I nor any other to my knowledge has or haith given or promised, procured or consented to give or be given any gift or reAvard, directly or indirectly, to any person Avhatsocver for procuring his majesty's favor on my behalf to create me baronet," etc. Pearl Divers. No white diver ever tried pearl fishing in Torres strait who could begin to fill the place of the amphibious natives. They work for hours at a time, at depths of 90 to 100 feet under Avater. They are more venturesome, too, than the Avhito divers, and think nothing of sticking their hands into all the holes in the coral, although the marine monsters they find at these depths are not always pleasant acquaintances to stir up. The white divers were found to be useless as Boon an the shallow waters around the Island Avere Avorked out. When the fishers had to go out to sea for shell, the black felloAvs proved that A 1 11,, 1 , t iney coum stay uncier longer and tro deeper than the whites. The result was that they drove their Avhite com petitors out of the business The supply of divers for the purposes of the first-class pearl shell trade is not abuudant even anions the natives, and the ri-alry for their services is so great that they command enormous wages. Many of them get $100 a month and a good percentage of the pearls they find. Black fellows Avho can stav be- loAv many hours in ninety feet of Avater often earn from $2000 to $2,500 a year. though in any other business they could not command $1 a week. After eight or nine months' hard fishing they usual ly strike work Avhether the bosses like it or not, and oil they post in parties of five or six to Sydney, where they lead riotous lives for a month or six weeks until all their money is spent. Agents of the white employers always go along to induce them to spend their cash as fast as possible and get back to work again. -New York Sun. Slimmer Evening Pastimes. If one can but keep up Avith the pa pers and magazines, many helpful hints may be culled, which will serve to en liven our dull fancy and provide amuse ment for social gatherings. A "Quo tation Party" is the latest pastime de scribed, and really it is hard to conceive of anything more practical in the way of entertainment. Each guest is invited to bring three or four quotations, and Avhen the company has assembled the exercises are either read or repeated, aud opportunity given to guess the author of each. The one who is fortunate enough to guess correctly is given a ribbon, and at the end of the evening the finsspss- o i or of the most ribbons d raws a rri7o which must be of a literary character a book or magazine or something of that sort. According to the cleverness of the company, the evening will be bright or dull. The influence will in any event be educational, and will induce thought and study. Rose Crosby. A Quarter of Twelve. Mrs. Gingersnap (to her spouse who gets home at 3 a. m. in a condition of demoralization) Well ! this is a nice time of night to be waking up everybody in the house ! What time do you sup pose it is now? Gingersnap Quar (hie) quar'er of twelve b'my watch. Mrs. G. A quarter of tAvelve, indeed! What a fool you must be to say that Avhen the clock has just struck three. t G. Wcll-er-isn't three twel (hie) twelve? a quar'er of Loud crash in the hall and servants called to carry Gingersnap up stairs to bed. N. Y.. Tribune. . HORSE MEAT. Its Extensive Use Among Poor People of Paris. the Cutting Up and Carrying Off a Dead Horse. I was told that a dead horse was not by any means a dead' loss in Paris, writes a New York World correspondent, and I accepted this statement as the only rea sonable explanation I could discover ol the really destructive cruelty with which one constantly sees these pool animals treated. I was directed to shops where viande de cheval is frankly sold. I went to a restaurant Avhere I was as sured that this delicacy would infalli bly be served up to me for beefsteak, and it was. But still- I vas unable to grasp the idea of the horse as an estab lished fact in food -a coveted article of diet until one night when I had ocu lar proof of the supplementary career of usefulness upon which this faithful ser vant of man only enters AA'hen he has toiled his last Aveary course over the slip pery pavements of the capital of Europe. We had been wandering away from the great thoroughfare, and had turned off from the Rue du Temple into a street so narrow that we seemed to have dropped into a crack between the tall, ffrim. smoke-blackened old houses on either side. This "crack" was endowed with alleged sidewalks. They Avere about fifteen inches Avide and looked like an indefinitely protracted doorstep. No mortal but the thin man of a museum could possibly .walk on them. We es chewed them and trotted contentedly through the middle of the street Avith the rest of the populace. The smaller shops along the way Avere alight and so Avere the lamps, although overhead the tops of the high houses and the quaint, irregular roofs, Avith their picturesque chimney-pots, were still flushed Avith a sunset color of the pink anemones from Nice that Avere piled up on so many of the flower barrows along the boulevards. We passed the venders of marrons ro tis, Avho appear to groAv in the angles of Avails, so surely do you find them estab lished there, with their little smoking furnaces and bag of shining chestnuts. We glanced at the stall of the woman who stands all day frying potatoes to a warm, broAvn crispness. At the evening hour she has many customers, men, women and children. We stopped to watch them and directly perceived that a little farther along the street quite a crowd had gathered, and avc hastened to add ourselves to the multitude. Reaching the edge of the motley throng, avc climbed upon a bench stand ing in front of a lavoir and looked over the heads of the people. After all it was only a poor horse dropped dead in his tracks no uncommon sujht. 1 stepped down and turned to go, but Sketchem clutched my sleeve and cried "wait," I got back into position and looked. Several men AA-erc tugging at the beast; dragging him onto a large cart a sort of animal ambulance. The Avagon he had lately drawn stood by with empty harness. Presently they had him in place, on his back, Avith his hoofs kicking at heaven. Then a sturdy, red-cheeked, black eyed fellow, picturesque in the lamp light and the blaze of a torch fixed at the tail of the cart, appeared on the sc ene. A brown woollen cap Avas pushed far back on his head, the sleeves of his blue blouse were rolled to his shoulders. He jumped upon the gray carcass and stood grasping one of the stiffening legs. He smiled at the eager-looking crowd, and his Avhite teeth shone in the torch-glare. I caught also the gleam of a long, bright knife in his hand. He fell into a sort of an addrcss-ovcr-Ca?sar's-body attitude. "Is he going to deliver an oration on the virtues and vicissitudes of the defunct beast, or is he about to hold a clinic in the street ?" I turned with a smile and this ques tion to Sketchem, who Avas too busy Avith pencil and paper to heed me, and I felt the smile withering on my lips as the meaning of this extraordinary spec tacle dawned upon me. I had seen enough. I slipped doAvn and sat on the bench as the people pressed forward, literally clamoring to be served from this impromptu butcher's shop with various cuts of viande de cheval. Undoubtedly the creature had died from the same ultimate cause as did Jennie Wren in the nursery rhyme, but what disorders or disasters had led to this fatal condition none of the eager purchasers of his still warm flesh seemed to feel in the least concerned about. What the Baby was Thinking. Mrs. Fogg: As I came by the station just now, I saw a baby in its carriage. It was amusing to sec the little thing watch the locomotive as it rushed past, and until it was out of sight. I wonder what the little darling was thinking of? Fogg: That depends. If it was a girl, she was thinking, "splendid," "just too lovely for anything," or something of that sort. If it was a boy, he might have been mentally constructing a smoke consumer or patent coupler, but proba bly was considering whether it was best to invest in the road's common or re ferred stock, its first, second or third mortgage bonds, its equipment sevens. land-grant eights, or car-trust thirtcens. Boston Transcript. The sun uses its power of brightness to shine; the violet on the banks uses its fragrance to breathe it forth, and all things are using their powers up to the highest capacities. All but man; man alone is guilty of what may be called the great sin of unused power. The Gardens of Egypt. At the beginning of March the- gar dens of Egypt are really wonderful ; the orange and lemon trees spread their most pungent odor; the rose trees are covered with innumerable flowers; the palms, with their green and white crowns, swing there in the wind; the oleanders there border the avenues ; on the lawns anemones, an nual and perpetual flowering pinks, chrysanthemums, violets, zinnias, peri winkles, snap-dragons, mignonette, pansies, and petunias blend their in numerable colors with the green of the trees, bushes, and shrubs. Groups of bamboos lift here and there their lopg green or golden stems, drowned with an immense plume of pretty little trembling leaves. One comprehends oh seeing these stems, which assume in a few months enormous proportions, the cruelly ingenious punishment of the Chinese in binding a criminal to a young bamboo. The plant grows and the wretch is quartered in a few weeks.. No wood is lighter or more useful than that of the bamboo. One does not un derstand why the Egyptians neglect to plant it along the canals and on every cultivated land, where it grows so well. But what gives, at loast during winter and spring, the most smiling aspect to the Egyptian gardens are the great sheets of rose bouga:nvilles that cling to the walls, the trees and groups of foliage, and which display everywhere the varied and exquisite tint of their flowers. The bougainville is certainly the finest of climbing plants. During five months it flowers under tho winter sun, takes shades of extreme delicacy one might say a light rose ..trait, tho intensity of which every play of light varies. The aloes, the agave, attach themselves on rocky slopes. On the banks of the water courses the blue lotus, and the papyrus still revive antique reminis cences. Grass cannot bo raised in Fgvpt. The layer of soil is so thin that tho sun dries it up immediately, and unless the grass is onstantly sub merged it turns yellow and perishes at once. It is not the boat alone that produces this result, for there is a cry much line grass in the tropics : but tho heat, accompanied by tho shallowness of the soil, renders the culture of grass impossible in Egypt. It is Avith diffi culty that a few isolated blades oJ grass spront during winter along the Nile and the canals; they disappear as soon as the spring begins, so that everywhere in tho country where arti ficial cultivation finishes the dry and baro desert begins. In the place oi grass a pretty little verbenacea is used, and this is encountered everywhere, tho Famo as grass is encountered in America. L rcoklyn Magazine. Experimental Yellow Fever. Dr. Carlos Finlay, of Havana, has published the results of several experi ments he has made on the inoculability of yellow fever. Ho performed the op eration, or rather got it performed for him, by musquitoes, which he caused first to sting a pat ent suffering from yellow fever and shortly afterward a healthy person who was to be iwith his own consent, of course) the subject of the experiment. He found that the disease Avas only inoculable from the third to tho sixth day. When two mus.juitoes were employed, so that a double dose was given, the symptoms of tho experimental disease was more than when only a single nius juito was used. Of eleven cases of inoculation, six Avere efficacious, one doubtful, and four negative. Tho period of incuba tion varied from five to fourteen days ; the symptoms consisted of headache, pyrexia, injeotion, with sometimes an icteric tint of the conjunctiva, and in some cases albuminuria. The fevei lasted, as in the ordinary form, from five to twenty-one days. Tho author believes that this method of producing m uncial yenow lever win ultimately be found very valuable as a prophy lactic against the natural and danger ous form of the djsease4 Law et. A Perilous Postponement. To postpone, when t' e duty for immediate iction is clear, is alw ays unwise. Especially is ;. to when increasing ill health calls for a re sort to medi at ion. Diseases of the kidneys and gladder are often of swift growth alwavs of atal tendency if not comba'tel at the outset. IVc have all-even those of us who are n-t re markably avcII instructed-heird something if t. e dangt-r attend ng Blight's disease, dia lete?, and other diseases of the kidneys or j'adder. Let no one be foolhardv procrastinate if he perceives the renal organs i o be inactive. Ho tetter's Stomach Bittersaro I eculiarly a "ap e 1 to overcome this inaction, t sulliciem ly stimulate, w.th mt exciting, the .v'fineys and bladder, infinitely wthis diuret c o bJ preferred to the impure and fiery stimu lanis of commerce.which prove the bane of un wary pei s his wit h a tendency to renal Iroibl s. i Hey are likewise incomparable for dyspepsia debility, fever ana ague, and biliousness. The chiropodist away at the foot. gets ahead by working Especially to Women. "Sweet is revenge especially to women," said the gifted, but naughty, Ixrd Byron. Surely lie was in bad humor Avhen he Avroto such words. But there are complaints that only wo men suffer, that are carrying numbers of them down to early graves. There is hope for those who suffer, no matter how sorely, or severe! v, ln ,1,r- v- Pierce's "Favorite Prescription!" !arc in its action it is a blessing, expcciaUy In women and to men, too, for when women suf fer, the household is askew. A dumb wite may be said to be an unspeak able blessing. Children Starving to Denth On account of their inability to diest food, will find a most marvelous food and remedy in Scott's Emulsion of Pura Cod Liver O 1 with Hypophosphites. Very palatable aid easily digested. Dr. S. W. Cohen, of Waco, Texas, says: "I have used your Emulsion In Infantile wasting with good results. It not only restores wasted tissues, but gives strength and increases the appetite. I am glad to use such a rcl able article." It is a p iradox that of all shoes a fe:t shoe is the least felt. An Offensive Breath Is most distressing, not only to the person a.f. flicted if he have any pride, but to those with whom he comes in contact. It is a delicate matter to speak of, but it has parted not only friends but lovers. Bad breath and catarrh are inseparable. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures tne worst cases, as thousands can testify. The parlor is probably the most frequented of all court rooms. Piles Cured for 25 Cents. Dr. Walton's Cure for Piles is guaran teed to cure the worst case of piles. Price 2i cents. At druggists, or mailed stamps taken by the Walton Remedy Co., Cleveland, O. It is foolish to bandy words with a chenvsti he always has a retort handy. n luL! 0rSa"c weakness or loss of powet JSi her i?5' however induced, speedily and y cured. Enclose 10 centVin stamps for book of particulars. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. ro"0iJ' The bootblack shines while he works, but the lazy mm whines while he shirks, Pnnghiers, Wives and .Hntlior i. Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, f re securely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi, Utica, N. Y. rMA1,61?' me2.ds everything! Broken China.Glasg. Wood. FreeViais at Drugs & tiro If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr Isaac Thorn p. son's Eye-water. Druggists sell .at 25c. per Lottie There is a long haul and a short haul, but there jloesn't seem to b any hau. together. If a roueh disturbs your sleep, take IVs'i Cure for Consumpt.pn and rest well. Tirod Languid Dull Expresses the condition of thousands of people at this season, the depressing effects ot the iVarift weather and that tired feeling are quickly over come by the use of Hood's Sarsapari&w It gives strength In place of weakness, gives tone to every organ, creates an appetite and purines tile blood. Give H e trial now. "I have been troubled for many years with violent headache. Hood's Sarsapar ilia did me so n.ucli good that I feel like a new belngk 1 earnestly reeoniiudud Hood's Sarsaparilla to all who suiter with headaches.'' Mas. E. Satchell, Gates Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Hood's Sarsaparllla Sold by all druggists. $1 ; six for $5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO.," Apothecaries, Lowell Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar KIDDER'S A SURE CURE FOR INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA. Over K,nm Physicians have sent us thetr approval ot piGESTYLTN, sayin? that it Is the best preparation for Indigestion that they have ever used. We have never heard of a case of Dyspepsia when DIGEST YLIN was taken that was not cured. FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM. IT WILL CURE THE MOST AGGRAVATED CASES. IT WILL STOP VOMITING IN PREGNANCY. IT WILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION. For Rummer Complaints and Chronic Diarrhoea, which are the direct results of imperfect digestion. DIGEST YLIN will effect an immediate cure. Take DYGESTVLIN for all pains and disorders ot the stomach ; they all come from indigestion. Ask vour uruKKisc ror muuii'iJAH (price fi per large bottle). If he does not have it send one dollar to us and we will scud a liottle to you, express prepaid. I not hesitate to Boni y.r - mntiay. Our liOUMia reliable. Kst:iniishHl twentv Ave years. WJI. V. IvIIHlElt ds CO. Mann tincturing Chemists, 83 John St., N. Y. EXHAUSTED VITALITY A Great Medical Work for Young and Middte-Aged Men. KI10W THYSELF, P,J?!,.'',!M,F.J'r ,h PEA BODY MEIII CA1. INSTITUTE, No. 4 Uulinnch St., Boston, Dins. Will. II. 1'ARKKK, M. I).! !,ousoltinK Physician. More than one million i-opies ipia. It treats upon Nervous and Plirslcai Debilitr. Premature Decline. Exhausted Vitality. Impaired vizor, and Impurities of th 131oo 1, and the untold wineries i eonseqnent ther.-on. Contains iu paces, lubstantlal emXoss d bin lin. full Kilt Warranted aie best popular ma.llcal treatise published in the fcnjlish language. Pric on!yl l.y mail, postpaid, nd concealed In a plain wrapper. Illustrative tamplejrre it you send now. Address a i above. Aamc this nauer. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE. Tlio only S3 SEAM LESS Mioo in tno world. Flnegt Calf, perfect fit, and warranted. C'onjm-ss. Button and Lace, all style toe. As YJ i nose costing: s or Vi.-SA W. T. lMtl!nt.8 Vi Wt.OO SHOE exce the 1 Shoes adver tised by other nruis. Hera. ti pne. tamprd m twtt.ni of rat Bho.l Bovall wear the TV. t. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE. If voiir dealer does no keep them, send vour name on oostal to W. L,. DOUC.I.AS. Brockton. Man. i ll BOYS! learn nil about n CSsi-m How to Pick Out n lioodOnel How to K now I inner lertionn nnd o i. ii a ril ngainki j'racd? Ifoiv in Detect UitteaMC nnd effect a cure when ftnme is rouble ? How to Tell the Ave by the Teeth? Vhnt to call the DiO'erent 1'artx nnd other talnnble Information relating to the Equine Specie enn be obtained b HOItb BOOK, which we will forward S5?r:?;xW 25 CTS-,M stamps.' IIORSE BOOKt'O.. 131 Leonard St.. N. Yi JONES lro l.errrs, SietT Hearing, Brail 960. wt Scale, ror rn. prlc Mat ' Per addreai JONES OF IN8HAMTIII. BINGHAMTON. N. T, ! ana nrsui bx Or we Agent (Merchant only) wanted lnevcrytowafel We are sollinc: four times many "Tan Kill's Pu cV ppain.-t any other cigar and have only had t.ieui in the cas a w ek. J. A. Toziek, Druggist. Broekport, N. Y. Address K. W. TAXSIL.L. & CO., Chicago. fPERMAN SSS! FOR ONE DOLLAR. A first class Dictionary gotten out at smal price to encourage the study of the German " . - - r - - - - ....... i.. vr.ua niMI IliU Tinan equivalents, and German words with English neflniiions. A very cheap bnok. Send Sl.UO to BOOKI'IJB. HOUSE, 131 Leonard 8"., & x vitjTf and get one of these books by return up ail. UJI HOLL INCSWORTH'S " CELORE" nR l wl rii CnrfiM Mai ASIA Thills artA T. U beni Ilc. m stanin for packing and mailing and S 1 when cured. CKI.t'-K H curs in 10 days or no nay. Address CULUltUCO. 1 303 Columbia Ave. Phila, Piso's Remedy for Best, Easiest to Use, (A if (A LrVS jyj In Sold by druggists oi 50c, E. T. Hazel tine. BEST IN TI1K WORLD UlltHOC tW Get the Genuine. Sold Everywhere. Reward for aay rasa of Klaaey Trouble. Ner vous Debilitr. mental or l'nyalcal Weakness: that Botanla Werve Bitter fait toenre. SnCia. Herb Medicine Co. IS IV. Ill l r.. 1-fciU.Mnfciv 1m Sold by all Druggist. OPIUM Habit Cll red Migrant."-. hfnrr any pay. I' rot J. M. 1URTON. 85th Want, ClaeiBaaU, O. IIIIIKK Improved Packages. ROOT BEER gals, of delicious, spxrk- .dc. Makes in liner, wholesome tw'veraxrA. KnUl Uv rlmiififtt! rnn.il mi for25c. O. E. UIKKS. 46 N. D!a. Av.. Fhila.. Pa. S5 to flS a day. Samples worth 1.50, FREE. Lanes uot miner tne norse s reet. write BrewMier Safely Rein Holder Co., Holly, Mich. OPIUi I? ' !" cured. lir.J. bictlies.... i. .ci.au on, Ohio. RTHCLC fy i urvn m".LL ..FnI1 ecrlptloa El iPP Moody V-w Tailor Syafem or Ilresa talnfc Cutting. WOODV t CO.. Cincinnati, a lr. 1 . I TOX CIO., Wah. lnctODf 1. C. Send forour book of instructions. flPtlin Hab,t Curd Treatment sent on trial. Ill IUU Humane UEMBDTCoMLaFayette,lnd, CV ron O GENTLEMEN Ufa Q i ? 1 r jet i Bjk i i v THE SUPERIOR DRILL CO. SPRINGFIELD, 0 Manufacture the Best CIDER Sy us for AttVnaV Tha Original aw L IT J e, -uvfeatWe LIVER llEWAIin Of IMITATIONS. ATTv Z1TTLE SVOAIt-COATJED PILLS a laxative, alterative," r M ta&?.?Kn. luu "ittst perfect SICK HEADACHE. Rilions Headache Dizziness, Constipa tion, liidigrcHtioi), Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the etom ach arid bowels, are prompt ly relieved and permanently Pierced Pleasant Purgative Pellet, In explanation of tho remi-dial power of t i,,. Pellets over so jrreat a variety of dis, u may truthfully be said that their n.5 o' J tho system is i universal, not n giumi or tisC, escaping their Banativo innwm-e. s1)( T ' druggists, 25 cents a vial. Mnniifartuni uZ Chemical Laboratory of Wonr.o's I)isiesV. v Medical Association, Buffalo, A. y. ' is offered bv tlm U1 aRC'H Catarrh 4.1 '"'l -i nr. " J' "r a wise ot Chronic Aasnl Catarrh wlii.-h they cannot cure. SYMPTOMS OF CATARRIJ.-T),,, I passages, discharges falling from ti,' H niium, Buiuviiuirs proiiiKo. wuti-rv and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious. .mi ,V purulent. Woody . tx, ,-ti-s nrf, weak, watery, and inflamed; tlii're isYiiiinK in the ears, deafness, hacking or eouirlfuiK to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive matter, together with scabs from ulcers; t in voice is changed and has a nasal twan' w breath is offensive; 6tneli and taste are iii paired; there is a sensation of dizino-s. ivit-i mental depression, a hacking cough and K' R eral debility. Only a few of the nbovi-imrin ;l symptoms are likely to Ikj present in any ono case. Thousands of cases annually, wit hour manifesting half of the al)ove evmptonis re sult in consumption, and end in the grave. No disease is m common, more deceptive and dangerous, or less understood by plivsiciann. By its mild, soothing, and healing properties Dr. Sage's Catarrh Jtcmedy cures the wm-Pt cases of Catarrli, cold in the lica-l," Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache. Sold by druggists everywhere; 50 cents. "Untold Agony from Catarrh." i Prof. W. Hausner, tho famous mesmerist, of llhaca, N. Y., writes: "Some ten years .!.' I suffered untold agony from ehroliii; n;is;il catarrh. My family physician gave me i;s incurable, and said 1 must dio. My ;isev;n such a bad one, that every day, towards sun set, my voice would become eo hoarse 1 muld barely speak above a whisper. i:i themorriinx my coughing and clearing of my throat would almost strangle me. By tho use of Dr. S;ige"& Catarrh Remedy, in three months, I was a wt ii man, and the cure has been permanent." "Constantly Hawking and Spitting' Thomas J. Hushing, Esrj., 2'jo Pim snrt, St. Louis, Mo., writes: " I was a great suili p i from catarrh for three years. At times I could hardly breathe, and was constantly-hawkit;? and 6pitting, and for the last eight months could not breathe through the nostrils. I thought nothing could be tlone for v.r : Luck ily, 1 was advised to try Dr. Sage's ';it:ur!i ltemedy, and 1 am now a well man. 1 beljevi; it to be the only sure remedy for catarrh now manufactured, and one has only to give it a fair trial to experience astounding results and a permanent cure." Three Bottles Cure Catarrh. Eli Bobbins, Ruinan P. O., Chimhia Co., Pa., says: "My daughter had catarrh when she was five years old, very badly. 1 saw Dr. Sage's Catarrh llemedy advertised, and pro cured a bottle for her, and soon saw thai it helped her; a third bottle clieeied a perma nent cure. She is now u;btccii years old and sound and hearty." B N U i'2 CURES WHERE ALL ELSE MILS. tt-niigh Syrnp. Tastes good. Use in time, oia ny srr.rrr:s!ri. . FOR HORSES. Uvilla, W. Va., ) Nov. 17, 1 886. j Recently I bought a young horse. He was taken very ill with Pneu monia. I tried to think of something to relieve him. Concluded what was good for man would be good for the horse. So I got a bottle of Piso's Cure and gave him half of it through the nos trils. This lidped him. and I continued giving same doses niirht and morning until I used two bottles, horse has become had The per- lectly sound. 1 can re commend Piso's Cure for the horse as well as for man. N. S. J. Strider. COOES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good, in time. Soid by druggists. This is what killed your poor father. Shun it. Aroid anything containing it throughout your future useful (?) careers. We older heads ob ject to its special 'Kough'nees,' nntl'Trnni away time UUM I rUlf a. and money fn futile efforts with insect pow-fc der, borax or what not, used at random au over toe oouse to gee rid of Roaches, Water-bugs, Beet-1 lea. For ss or a ntgnts gnruiKie ' "Rough oh Rats' drnxrwder. L . about and down the sink, drain nine. First thine in the morniner wash it all away down the ednlc, drain pipe, when all the insects from garret to cellar will disappear. The secret is La the fact that wherever insects are in the house, they must DJ1 A ftUEO drink during; the night. IllfAuifCO Clears out Rats, Mice, Bed-bugs, Flies, Beetles. "Rough on Rats,? is Bold all around the world, in every clime, is the most extensively advertised and has the largest sale of any article of its kind on the face of the globe. DESTROYS POTATO BUGS For Potato Bugs, Insects on Vines, etc. , a table spoonful of the powder, well shaken, in a keg of water, and applied with sprinkling pot. pray syringe, or whisk broom. Keep it well Burred up. 15c, 25c. and 1 Boxes. Agr. also. MineuaaBaTp nT.rAffa nrnu BED BUGS, FLIES. . ants. water-hues, moths, rats, mice. narrows, jack rabbits, squirrels, gophers. 15c. DM!JA Dill a Great English Gout and DIull S rlllSi Rheumatic Remedy. Oval Box, 34 round, 14 Pills. GRAIN DRILLS. MILLS and HAY AtsnniEuii fa 9 jgBes, nnanannaataoaanagaBowiii .. m "ROUGH ON RATS." . Ill ftoarhfii 4. M . pa VS fur a Lire Scholarship in the IP LC 11 OLKMAN Hninea t OI-l-KtiK. 111 : ark. New Jerskt. Positions tot (III craJrntrs. .National patronage. Write WlJt frMr.,,at ,, jhH.K.UAN. TOOLS on the market. The SUPERIOR DRILL has no Equal. Farmers, it will pay you to circular and prices. -TUT ran fn
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 25, 1887, edition 1
4
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