Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Oct. 27, 1887, edition 1 / Page 4
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.... i ! J4 ;6 it 1 h During the last fifty years, the Wheat production of England has been reduced one-half, while its value is not more lltan one-third. This accounts in a large meas ure for the decline in the rent of wheat lands. Tho first Chineso physician to be cgularly licensed and authorized to practice in this country was registered in New Orleans recently. He is a grad uate of a medical school in China, and asked to be allowed to practice among his own countrymen in the Crescent City. rr A professor has given up his chair in Edinburgh University to devote himself to work in behalf of the understrata of society. Says he: "Let Greek die; lcj Hebrew die, and learning go to the dogs. But, let human beings live, and let brotherhood, charity and fraternal feelings prevail." There aro in the world four great masses, or accumulations, of gold, all ol which are partly in coin and partly in bullion. The amounts may be stated approximately a follows: United States Treasury, $282,000,000; National Bank of France, $237,003,000; National Bank of Germany, $107,000,000; Bank of England, $100,000,000; total, $720, 000,000. One of the latest freaks of military science is the training of watch dogs for sentry dut The French War Minister has given orders that dogs shall be tried in connection with advance-post duty and taught to bark at the approach of an enemy or stranger. Dogs are also to be used as scouts; and if they prove use ful, they arc to be attached to all tho line regiments and stationed regularly with the double sentries. "Letting loose the dogs of war'' thus promises to have a literal as well as a metaphorical meaning. A statistician of benevolence has just recounted large endowments amounting to $10,000,000 which have been given or bequeathed to religious and secular institutions withiu the past three mouths. Among them are 1 0 acre? of costly land for a park in one city, $IS0. 000 for the embellishment of a park in another, $100,000 to one university, $1, 000,000 to another, $1.0,000 to a hospi tal, and so on to the end of the lit of all the free institutions that feed or heal the bodies of the poor, minister to their souls, or cultivate and enlarge their minds. The consul of the United States at 3Iaracaibo, Venezuela, report the dis covery of a white child, a little boy, in possession of a white woman living near the border of the Goajira peninsula, who had received him from a band of Indians the latter stating that they found him abandoned near Bahia Honda and that he spoke no Spanish nor any Indian dia lect. The boy is intelligent, but ha the Albino peculiarity of being nearly blind by day, although by candle light his sight is perfect. He is supposed to be a survivor of a wreck and to be a native of the north coast of Europe, perhaps Sweden or Norway. The consul became godfather to the boy. The thieves who ransac'i vacant dwell ings in New York have nothing to learn in the way of disarming suspicion. A resident in an up-town street, when about to go into the country this sum mer, said that he felt .juite safe regard ing his house, as a widow who lived op posite was worth a dozen policemen. She saw everything and knew every body, and no thief could carry oil a coal scuttle under her eye without haviug a hue .and cry at his heels. When the New Yorker returned from his vacation he found that Mshmi-c had been raided, and that his neighbor had watched the proceedings in serene contentment. The thieves had provided themselves with a key togged with his name. They had put on overall and jumpers to look like honest workmen, and had driven up to the house in a cart with an imposing dis play of tool. But their finest touch the device that blinded the widow was the calling of a police officer to point out the house for them. They ascer tained when tin officer on the 1;at would put in an appearance. Then they waited till he had passed the premises, drove after him to ask where Mr! Blank lived and brought him Uwk to show them the place and sec that all was right. That settled th 'if standin' for the widow. TIkj absentee had over rated her ar utencss. Instead of being as good as a doen policemen, oae offi cer was jiiite too much for her. Narrow Escape From Aiijrry Bee. A farmer who is an expert in the cul ture of bees declares that they aro the most interesting of creatures, and that their "cutoncss" is wonderful. Like all living creatures, the bee has a natural enemy; in this case it is the moth miller, which sometimes drives the swarms to desperatiou and frenzy. Then it is that the wary keep a safe distance from the hives.. This particular bee owner once saw a peculiar hstancc of the bee's ha tred of black objects. It became neces sary in some way to rearrange some thing belonging to tho hive, when, like a host of furies, the enraged inmates flew out en masse and attacked the dist urber of their peace. Quick as thought the farmer s wife ran and threw her white apron over the husband's head, where upon the bees did not alight on him, but instead .attacked two innocent black hens who happened near by, and stunj; them to death in less time than it takes to write the story. Bees are "kittle cattle" indeed, as the farmer declared, yet bee culture has its charms and i growing to be an industry among women; and it is said that it can be wade to be very profitable if rightly managed. Boston Post. FOR FARM AND GARDEN. Manure for Permanent Pasture Of the relative merits of artificial and farm manures for permanent pasture Dr. Voclcker says : "Unfortunately, the application of artificial manures to permanent pastures is often disappointing in an economical point of view. As a rule, no artificial manuring mixture gives so favorable a return as good farm-yard manure, or the manure produced by the consumption of cake, more particularly decorticated cotton-cake, on the pasture. In many cases the most profitable way to im prove permanent pasture is to feed off the grass, giving from three to four hundred weight of decorticated cotton cake per head of cattle; and, on the whole, those farmers who apply farm yard manure liberally to pasture land, and grow their roots and cereal crops with artificial manures, derive more ad vantage from this practice than others who apply artificial manures to pasture land and common dung to cereal and root crops." Stirring the Soil. Every time the soil is stirred it changes the relative position of the un prepared plant food that is in the soil, and this change of position encourages and hastens decomposition. Farmers will understand that a manure heap that is entirely inactive will be set in motion by pitching it over; by thus stirring it up the air is let in, and decomposition is hastened; so with the soil, after it has laid undisturbed some time it be comes inactive, and settles together so but little air passes through it, but the moment it is stirre I up by cultivation, the air is let in, and active decomposi tion of the fertilizers applied takes place, and it i thus that much of the manure that is applied to crops is hastily converted into plant food. When the soil is in a condition to rapidly convert manure into plant food, it is also in the right condition to keep up that rapid circulation of air and moisture that is needed to carry the prepared food to the roots of the growing plants. Mir ror and Farmer. Moisture in Corn Fodder. The excellence of cornstalks as feed for milch cows is more largely due than is commonly supposed to the water they L'ontabi. This is also true of the same feed when put up in ensilage. Of course a cow can drink what she needs, but she is not tempted to drink so much, es pecially if the water be cold, as she is obliged to take with her feed when giv en in the form of ensilage. Beally dry cornstalks, as thev will be after bcin repeatedly frozen in Winter and not exposed to rain or snow, are not good for much for cows. Hence they are bet ter fed early in the Winter, reserving hay uutil toward Spring. Iu putting up cornstalks there is no disadvantage iu having them moist enough so that they will heat a. little. M ike tall, nar row stacks of them around a pole, and they will keep moist and the stalk will be less harsh and sharp than they would be if kept where they would be entirely :lry. If much damp then care should e taken not to put into close mows or .arge stacks. A little heating docs no larm, but too much may easily leave a olackened mass fit only for manure and lot worth much even for that. Ameri can Cultivator. JI5eU'(s in Animrtl. This disease is produced by an imper fect nutrition of the bones of young an ma!s. - Sheep, pigs, foils, and puppies iuiler from it more than calves. It is also common in the human family. In 'oals whose dam i worked hard, and which are not allowed to suck often mough, and iu animal born in menag sries, it is of common occurrence. Ani uals born with it will generally die, leath being preceded by paralysis. In certain families the affect ion i? hcrcdi ary, but anything that undermines the reneral health may develop it in an ani mal predisposed to it. The first indi cations of rickets are a swelling of the jones, and inflammation of tho perios :cum. Afterwards the bones, especial -y those of the legs, bend and become listorted. The chief treatment must consist in removing the cause of the nalady by giving nutritious food, free iccess to its dam, tonics, lime water, xnc dust, iron, tod-liver oil, and laxa ives when desired. A dry, airy sleep ing place should be provided, and ac cess to open air, sunshine, with gentle exercise. Where the legs are crooked suitable splints and bandages should be ipplied. American Agriculturist. Bird Helpers. Mrs. Mary Treat, the well-known cn :omologist, writes in the American Ai; iculturist prefatory to her new enlarge! wlua.e (r Injurious Insects of the Farm md Garden : I wish to add my testimony in a few vords, by way of preface, in favor of the various birds that visit our gardens and m hards, in the capacity of helpers, as hey feed upon some of the most nox ous injects which we have to contend vith. First and foremost among these help rs is the purple marl in. It is the gen ral impression that this bird takes in ects o dy on the wing, but it does more ban this. I saw nu ubers of them this ast summer taking the rose-bugs from lie grapevines. They swooped down ind picked them off without alighting. They circled around in companies back tgain to the tame viae, each otic snatch- g off a bug as it passed. And not nly the rose-bug falls a victim to its ippetite, but it even stoops to take the i loralo potato-beetle. This has bee o -n by others in our town, as well as b nyself. Put up boxes for the in irl'n; n 1 s:e that the English sparrow do lot get possession. The oriole is another great helper. II knows how to pull the bag-worm from its case, and does it systematically and rapidly. The tent-caterpillar and fall web-worm it also has a liking for4, if ruthlessly tears tho tents and webs tc pieces and destroys untold numbers. Al low no gunner to shoot one of these beau tiful, gaily dressed birds On your prem ises not even if the lady of his choice is pining for a skeleton to perch on hei hat. For several years past the leaves o'. our elm trees have been ruined by the clm-bectle. Last year I noticed the cedar bird devouring the beetles and lar va This year our elms arc compara tively free from the pests. The leave? are scarcely injured at all, and the eedat bin Is arc obliged to look close to liud i beetle. They hunt over the trees it small flocks. They also destroy manj other injurious creatures. This bird likes berries. Raise enough for them as well as for yourselves, and they will pay yot back with interest. The cat-bird and red-eyed vireo boll cat the uusavory pear-slug. But it is not necessary to mention the good ser vices rendered by our more common birds, such as the robin, brown thrush, catbird, bluebird ami wren, as all ob serving horticulturists arc aware of the good they do. Our winter birds are alsc doing good work. The seed-eating ones pick up great quantities of the seeds ol noxious weeds, Avhilc our woodpeckers, jays and chickadees arc constantly ot: the lookout for hibernating insects. Spare and encourage the birds, both win ter aud summer, about your home grounds and fields. Farm and (iarden Notes. A hog's skin is waterproof and has nc pores except those on the inside of the front legs. Seven or eight weeks' old pigs should be weaucd for their own and theii mother's good. Haw onions, chopped fine and mixed with the food twice a week, are said tc be a preventative of chicken cholera. Boots arc excellent for sheep in wintci and are especially important with heavy grain feeding to keeping the digestive organs in full vigor. Many of the ills affecting the hogs arc due to filthy pens. It is not so much in the amount of tilth that the difficulty i met as in the dampness caused by the filth. As soon as the crops have been re moved from the garden plot plough il and allow no weeds to grow, which will greatly lessen the garden work next season. To train a flock of sheep raise a lamb at the house, teac h it to come when called and then put it with the flock. By calling the petted lamb the others will follow. (Jive the hogs pure, fresh water tc drink; swill will n.t answer the purpose of water. A very little salt, wood ashes and charcoal should be thrown in theii pens at times. Keeping a close watch over the plough point, and having it sharp, oi replacing it frequently with a new one, will often save ten times the cost of the plough in labor. A cow in milk should never be driven faster than a walk. Jood cows have large and well filled udders, which cause pain to them if they are hurried or driven on a run. Fine manure for crops is more valua ble tlmn coarse, liens can break up manure better perhaps than anyone ol the machines invented for the purpose. Scatter some wheat over the pile and turn them on. Hun green clover, rye, wheat, oats or corn through the fed cutter, set to cut in half-inch lengths, and feed to fowls confined in yard. This is the soiling system applied to poultry keeping, and works admirably, as those know who have tried it. There is nothing that will fatten a pig as quickly as sweet potatoes. They are superior to corn for that purpose. Pick out those that are marketable and boil the culls for the pigs. They may be given to steers also and can be fed raw or cooked. "To (irin Like a Cheshire Cat." The county of Chester gave origin to the saying, "to grin like a Cheshire cat," which is still in vogue in many districts of the north of Eng land, says a writer in All the Year Bound. Several ac counts have been given as to the birth of this suggestive phrase. One, which appears to be the more plausible, asserts that the wild cat continued to in habit the peninsula between the De and Mersey long after it had disappeared from other parts of the country. The face and the mouth of the animal, were very wide, and the "grin" was so ex ceedingly formidable that it may easily be imagined how the saying "To grin like a Cheshire cat,'' came to be a com mon one among the peasantry. It is also said to have arisen from the fact that Cheshire cheeses were, at some distant period made in the form of the cat indigenous to the county. We arc told that the cheeses were embellished with whiskers and tails and we may suppose that their mouths were accorded a sufficiently wide grin to give the cue to the saying. Didn't Hold Still. Judge (to Pat, who had been arrested for beating Mike) Well, you did pound him, didn't you? Pat jL:; ycr Honor, I shtruck him on the nose, the ugliest part of his ould see. Tllfliro (in fiRf nn?cTivrtttlOn 1i la nnw! Iu"t look at his two black e Pit-Well, he did i't Ik M ib$l lieu I shtruck him. lEv' GLASSWARE. Interesting Facts About the Glass Industry. Giassmaking as an Occupation in Ancient Times. Glass from the earliest historic agca has been a favorite medium for the ex pression of beauty. The fluid character of the original substance permits it to be moulded to an infinite variety ot forms, and the most delicate shades of coloring may be infused through its crystal clearness so as to adapt it to the luxurious uses of the table. The high est development of art is in the produc tion of cameo glass. Evidences of this art in its perfection are very ancient, and even in the beginning of the Chris tian era very beautiful and expensive ar ticles of glass were in use. At that time also -glass in its common forms was a cheap article. At 50 B. C. a cup and saucer of glass could bo bought at Rome for money equivalent to our cent. Il lustrating the other extreme, it is his torically narrated that the Emperor Nero paid a sum equivalent to $250,000 for two cups of moderate dimensions. Window glass did not appear until the third century of the Christian era, and it did not come into general use until the fifteenth century. In Hitil only the principal chambers of the king's palace in England had window glass. Egypt offers the earliest positive evi dences of glassmaking. Glass bottles containing red wines are said to be rep esented on the monuments of the fourth .ly nasty, more than 4,000 years ago, nd in the tomb? of a very early period :he process of glassblowing is represent ed iu an unmistakable manner. In the rime of the Boman Emperor Hadrian, imong the chief industrial occupations if the inhabitants of Alexandria is mcu ioned glass-blowing; and during tho eignof Aurelian, in the third century, ;lass formed a part of the Egyptian ribute, showing it was then an article )f manufacture in Egypt. The delicate joloring of glass, that adds so much to ts beauty, was known in ancient times. These colors are produced by a mixture vith metals; for instance, blue is pro luced by cobalt, green by copper, and oscor ruby by gold. The great site of he manufacture of glass in the middle jges was Venice, and its articles of m tn lfacturc were exported all over the world. I'he glass trade of Venice has been su perseded by that of England and Cer nany. Silicon, of which there is 00 per cent, n good glass sand, is the principal in gredient in glass. Lead enters into the superior qualities of glass, giving it learness and brilliancy, and the musi cal ring of a glass article only comes "roni bad glass. Crystal glass is bad zlass, which is also termed flint glass. Only lead glass can be cut. Lime is low greatly used in the manufacture of lass, pressed glass articles being made )f lime glass. In its manufacture the L'nitcd States has an advantage over ther countries on account of its great-m- talent for the use of machinery. Pressed glass articles are now exported Tom the United States to all parts of he world. The value of our exports cS glassware grew from $'is0 j I in 18T7f :o SX;?t:,01 in 1SS7, of which the Dulk was pressed glass. In 1SS7 we ex ported $1.",0.m worth of window glass. While the eastern part of this country vas formerly the seat of the principal jlass industry, it has moved west of ate years, owing largely to the back wardness of the eastern manufacturers :o take up the making of lime glass. t. Louis is now an important glass manufacturing centre,' but the greatest imount of business is done in the Ohio ralley, of which Pittsburg and Wheel ug are the chief glass towns. The nat iral gas of this section has given the ylass industry a great impetus. Heavy rlate window glass is manufactured argely in the west, but the glass used n the cast is mostly imported from ? ra u ce. Com m e r c i a I Ad ve rt ise r. A Synonym for Man. Is "insect" a good synonym for man? The poets think it is, but I confess I do lot agree with them. Not because the word is itself absurd as applied to crca :ures with solidly continuous bodies like nen and women (for poetry does not of iccessity concern itself with the real ncanings of words), 'but because lam 10 pessimist, and think much too well )f my kind to allow that human beings ire cither reptiles, vermin or insects. What "vermin1' arc I do not know. In western America the red Indians are called vermin by the blackguard whites. In Australia "wild horses" are vermin, so on the continent are wolves; in our English game preserves so are hawks, dwIs, jays and weasels. Professional "vermin" killers mean by " the term moles and rats. Patent "vermin" kill ing powders and pastes are directed igainst blackbeetles and crickets. -In hospitals "vermin" means lice. So that anything between a red Indian andj. a louse may be "vermin." GcntlemaVs Magazine. The Ugliest. The ugliest man in the known world is an Eastern Prince. Conscious of hi? misfortune, no looking glasses were hung in his palace. Visiting a neighboring Prince, the ugliest of men was accompa nied by his Vizier, and they came face to face with a m irror, when both Lurst into tears. "Moderate y0ur gnef mv faithful friend," said the Prince, "you see I am quite resigned." "Oh! It is not that, my noble mas ter," replied the Vizier. "You have suly seen yourself for a single instant. I have tc look at you every clay." CLIPPINGS FOB THE CURIOUS. Paris eats forty-nioc tons of snaila every day. Stone bullets Were used In 1514; those df iron aro first Mentioned in 1550. The value of property annually de stroyed throughout tho world is put at 58,520,000. Sumatra has a flower which grows tc nine feet in circumference, and weighs fifteen pounds. The art of engraving originated in some experiments of Maso Piniguerra, a Florentine, in the first half of the fif teenth century. It was Henry Lee who gave to Wash ington his immortal title, "First in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymen." There is a difference of eighty-one years in the time which the Jews spent in Egypt in the account of Exod.;s and that of Joscphus, the former making it a period of 430 years, and the latter 511. According to the statistics the average man throughout the civilized world an nually consumes 445 pounds of grain, 70 pounds of meat, 7 pounds of butter and 20 pounds of sugar, of the total value of 5 Ks. The people of Siberia buy their milk frozen, and for convenience it is allowed to freeze about a stjick, which comes as n handle to carry it by. The milkman may leave ono chunk or two chunks, as the case may be, at the house of his customers. Till the fifteenth century no Chris tians were allowed to receive interest of money, and .lews were the only usurers, and therefore often banished and perse cuted. In England, under Edward VL interest was forbidden entirely from re ligious motives. One dollar loaned fot ono hundred years at 0 per cent., with the interest collected annually and added to the principal, will amount to $:10. At 8 percent, it amounts to $2,20:?, or nearly seven times as much. At 12 per cent, it amounts to $84,075, or more than four thousand times as much. The Medical and Surgical He porter' says that travellers in the sleeping ctr should have the bed made with its head toward the engine; the dust will then be driven to the foot, where it will do the least harm. A light cap for the head and a loose blouse to take the place of the coat are desirable. Slippers should uot be worn. An "Electric" Fraud. Tohnny Norton, who a few years ago was pretty well known all over the country as the dcetrie boy," is now working in New York City as a coinposi lor. In reply to the query of a Sun re porter as to what had become of his electric ity, he said : "That was one of the best "fakes" of the time, and there was lots of money in it too. "When I was on exhibition I was enclosed in an Dblong stall about seven or eight feet iong, the front of which was like a nar row counter. Opposite the counter was i rail which allowed the visitors to pass n single tile. A long strip of cocoa mat ting served as a carpet for the passage way, and also as a cover for a sheet of dne which extended beneath it, running the length of the stall. My box was similarly invested with sine and matting. Attached tothe sheets of metal, but hid den from view, where the two poles of a galvanic batten-, one under my feet and the other iu the passage. Now anyone passing over the sine and touching aie, behind the counter, completed :he circuit and received a shock. So iid I. The matting, of course, had to be kept damp, water being the con iuctor. It was surprising what intelli gent people were duped by this trick. Why, I was kept shaking hands and being lingered from morning until night. Many's the $2 note I received from doc tors and others for a couple of drops of my blood for analysis. In fact, my arms j were covered with scars made by scien I title dupes boring for my electric gore. One evening three or four voting stu- rlents came in to unmask mc. One of them made a wager that he would elec trify the audience the same way if he was in the box. I immediately invited him in and he accepted the challenge. I then retired, but before doing so I pressed a hidden button that cut off my wire. He, of course, failed, and iguo miniously retreated after being guyed unmercifully by those present. This proved me genuine to the satisfaction of everyone in that town and I became fa mous. There was lots of fun in the busi ness, but I had to give it up, as the con stant strain caused by the battery was too much for mc." Lord Eldon and the Decalogue. You will perhaps be surprised to hear that I was first brought into notice on the northern circuit by breaking the Ten Commandments. I was counsel in a cause, the fate of which depended on our being able to make out who was the founder of an ancient chapel in .the neighborhood. I went to view it. There was nothing to be observed which gave any indication of its date or his tory. However, I observed that the Ten Commandments were written on 'iome old plaster which, from its posi tion, I conjectured might cover an arch. Acting on tins, I bribed the clerk with tcnshillings to allow me to chip away a partf the plaster, and after two or three attempts I found the keystone of an arch, on which were engraved the arms of an ancestor ot one of the par ties. This evidence decided the cause, and I ever aftcrwat&Jiad reason to re member with some satisfaction havino broken the Commandments. Detroit Free Press. Fobks are a comparatively modern invention and were first known in Italy toward the end of the fifteenth century. They began to be known in France toward the end of the sizteenth cen tury, and were introduced into England in 1606, just fourteen years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth. Life in the lrtri ercrri is possible, for a short time to the robiist,- but the majority of refined persons would prefe'f immediate death to existence in their reeking atmosphere. How much more revolting to be in one's Eelf a living sewe: But this is actually the case with those in whom the inactivity of the liver drives tho refuse matter of the body to escape through the lungs, breath, the pores, kidneys and bladder. It is astonishing that life remains insueh tt dwelling. Dr.- Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" restores normal purity to the Kj stcm and renews the whole be ing; UI aim to tell the truth." "Yes," interrupted an acquaintance, "cut you are a very bad ihot." liimgTronblcii and Wasting Diseases can bo cured, if proper y treated in time, as fehown by the following statement from D. C Freeman, Sydney: "Having been a great sufferer from pulmonary attacks, and gradually M as' ing away for tho past two years, it affords me" pleasure to testify that. Scott's EmdiSion of Cod Liver Oil wllh Lime and Fd-lahas given me great relief and I cheer fully recommend it to all suffering in a simi lar way to myself. In addition, I would say that it is very pleasant td take.'' English statemen live longer than American taie-men but they tlon't have so much lttn "Her face so t air, as flesh it seemed not, Hut heaven sy portrait of bright angel hue. Clear as the sky without a biune or blot, Through goodly mixture of complexion due. And iu her cheeks the vermeil red did show." This is the poet's description of a woman whose phys cal system was in a perfectly sound and healthy state, with every lunction acting properly, and is the enviable condition of its lair patrons produced by Dr. Pierce's "Favor ite Prescription." Any druggist. Hardly anybody would c.ire to change places with the turtle, and yet he has a ureat snap. The great sticeess of many agents employed by B. F. Johnson & Co.,of Richmond, is a pret ty good evidence of the excellencf! and popu larity of the Itook.s they offer to sell through theiragents. This is a reliable house, and any contract made with thorn you can depend on will be faithfully carried out. In t' e bright lex con of specu'ation there is i.othing no uncertain as a sure th n r. For weak lungs, spitting of blood, shortness of breath, consumption, night-sweats and all lingering coughs. Dr. Pierce's "Uolden Medical Dis -ovcry" is a sovereign remedy. Superior to cod liver oil; hy drtiggi?t. A bald-headed fcor-k-keeper 6hotild fceVer try to wipe his p rt on his l a r; PnrpltHT", Wives ami .Unt'ier. Frhd for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, fru rccnrely sealed. Dr.J. H. Marchisi,Utica,N. V. "IiOyai. 1'i.rE mcuds everythins! Broken China, Ukii-s. Wood. Free Vials at Drvigs& Uro Electricity is a very serious matter, f nd yet What is tho Use :"f yoiir l'aing yourself around, day after day, without sny lire or activity; feeling all tired out aul miserable, when you mi!M be a (miVk and lively and strouK a-; ever ? T.ike care of yourself at mice, or In the depleted condition of your system, a com plaint otherwise trivial niay fasten upon you with serlousor fatal result . H-d Sarsmirilla is just th rrte,:it ine yon uee 1 to bail I up your entire sys tern, to purify and ipiu-ken your blood, and to give you appetite and strength. "Hotnfs Sarsnpariila as a blood piirtilc has no equal. It tones the system, strengthens and iuv'i? 'rates. giving new life. I have taken it fir kidney eomplaint. with the best results." D. R. SAe.NUERS. -I '"ar street, Cincinnati, O. Hood's Sarsaparilla i'd hy all ilnicist. Si : six for 5. Prepared Oflly ny C". I. H.Ml CO., Apothecaries, Ijowell Mass. IOO Doses Oris Dollar n r-1 V c I rasm Ka m r if urn nribi.nw d z ... . .. ... j- CATARRH, Not a Liquid or Snuff. App IU in .lilociicii notril J iLY lilies, ;3-Cireenwirh ht.S.Y KIDDER'S A SURE Cl'RE FOlt INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA. , ,,ver 5.11110 Phystctans have sent us their approval of DIGEST LIX. saying that it is the best preparation tor IuulRpstion that they have ever used. t ,,av 11?ver hoard of a case of Dvspepsta when DIG EST Y LIN was taken that was not cured. FOB CHOLERA INFANTUM IT WILL rrUE THE MOST AGGKAVATED CASES. IT WILL STOP VOMITING IN PREGNANCY. IT WILL ItKLIEVE CONSTIPATION. For Summer Complaints and Chronic Diarrhoea, which are the direct results of imperfect digest lou, DIG EST Y LIN will effect an immediate cure. Take DVGESTVLIN for ail pains and disorders of the stomach: they all come from indigestion. Ask your rtriiKKlst for DIGESTYLIN (price $1 per large I'Ottle). If he does not have It send one dollar to us nnd we will send a bottle to you, express prepaid, no not hesitate to send your monev. Our house is reliable. Established twentv five ve:l'- W.U. I .KID DE It & CO. i III mi n fact ii it n z Chemist N3 JobnSt.iN.V. DAIY HAMMHtrss n ai v tiipce r adofi MANHATTAN ?AMMERLESS. IPSEPEtt BREECH LOADERS. Send for Catalogue of Specialties. scjaovjERMara, daly as gaies, C4 ana 80 Cnasibers Street, New York, HERMAN FOR ONE DOLLAR. A Itrst class ni. tlonary Rotten out at small price to encour.;srr the r udy of tho G, rina. imufuE. iiMt- r.iigiisii words Willi tl- Gorman equivalents, and Gennau words with Enli: definitions, a verr che.ip b-olc. Send Si. GO t BOOK PUB. UOI SE, 13 lfB,rt ft.. N. i Cliy and get oiw ot ! v Look romrn c si AGENTS WANTED ffinffSWE rATii!.KiNS, for making Bugs, i noes, rioous, lumens, etc. Ma chine sent by mail for $1. Send for late reduced price list. E. ltoga & lk.t Toledo, O. AXLE Mgrease BEST IN THE WORLD UT" Get th Genuine. Sold Ererywbere. Pensions to Soldiers & Rein. Send stamp for circulars. COL. L. BING HAM. Att'y, Washington, D. C. Rlaip' Dill Great English Gou! and Dlall S rlllSi Rheumatic Remedy. Ot1 Bx, 34 1 round. 14 Pills. nATFWTQ obtained by E. II. CJEI I niKtont 1. C. Send forour book of instructions. KERBRAND FIFTH WHEEL 8TSKK Improvement. IIEItBItAN'D CO., Fremont, o! C An increase may be due. Ad BICIJaIIIIiIA iress M,LO B- Stress Co., failtfUf HW Grover Bd'g. Washlngt'n.D.C So to $8 a day. 8amples worth fl.50. FREE. uiuc. uui uuuer hib nvrse s ieec. write Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co.. Holly, Mich. PATENTS Obtalnei. Send stamp for ir Inveutors' Guide. L Buo. h iiam. Patent Attorney, Washington, D.C. PALMS' Rnnlne Collecr, Phtl Pa. sttua. tions furniahed. Life Scholarship. 840 WVite G FJ?J2 ?5?0 P?S ,b- rettlt'a Eye Salvo Is viui,uw, uui m wmu ai sw. a box by dealer. IS? V, " "tah Brand" FESAZE MHAf AWLS YU? , tid yiiieei dull, languid, low-spirits ilf less, and j2Sc"-ilwbly miserable. Imfh t.'i,, ii-m, uuu juuk"'iijiii'i; HilffiaUH, I 'Dt II till fullncss or bloating attCf opting, or of "i,n ness," or emptiness of Btotnaeff in th r ing, tongue coated, hitter or i.-l ,? mouth, irregular appetite, dizziness. fi ( -ni: headHches, blurred eyesight, "floating siU.'k". before the eves, nervous nmstmiil haustion, irritability of temper, hot t hJ?' airernaiing viiu eiuuy sensations kT.;:'' biting, transient paina here and thm . P: disturbed aiid unrefreshing sleep, Wint',r indescribabkj fcciiiJgr of dread, or of inipf'iui' ino- I'rihimtfri' 7 "I'Ml't- If you have all. or anv efmsirlernbio of these symptom you are Buffering i'rm that most common Cf American irmindi,.,. mat most common cr American !rmlafi(.g" Biiious Dyspepsia, or Torpid Liver, awiicj.,.. with Dyswepsia, or Indigestion. The ,,,.; complicated ronr disease has becom,. tj torns. No matter what $tw it lia ,: ,.,, Br. Pierce's ;ldeii j?3Y:llca) m -; will subdue it, if taken according t. .is,.,.;. UonS for a reasonable length at trn. It cured, complications multiply an.? l onsnrm, lion of the Luriff?. Skin Diseases, Heart Jii Uhcumatishi, Kidney Disease, or other rraJ-,' maladies are quite liable to r,et in and, semr or later, induce a ratal termination. Dr. Pierce's Uoldcit jflcdir.il Dis. rover jr acts powerfully upon the Liver. L through that jrreat blood -piirif vin cleanses tho eystcin.f all blood-tahiH and it ' purities, from irhatover cause arisin'f It u equally efficacious In acting upon the Kid neys, and other excretory organs, cleangimr BtreUjrtheninfr, and hoalin- their disease .1 an appetizing, restorative tonic, It prou'iot. digestion and nutrition, thereby build in both flesh and strength. In malarial districts this wonderful medicine has rai:iei ,,,,.: celebrity in curing Fever and Agile. CJiiJJsar'i Fever, Dumb A.orue, and kindred disease " Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical bu corery CURES ALL KUfAQRs, from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to the worst Scrofula. Salt-rheiirn. " Icvcr-sorrs " Scaly or Hough Skin, in short, all diseii.;? cau-d by bad blood are conquered tiv thi powerful, purifying', and invigorating inMi. cine. Great Eatinj? Ulcers rapidly heal undi-r its benign influence. Especially has it mani fested its potency in curing Tetter, Eczema Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncle?, Bore Eyes, Scroll ulous SoreS and Swellings, Hip-joint l)iwne "White Swelling"' Goitre, or Thick XecV and Enlarged Glands. Send ten cents in stafnps for a large Treat me, with colored plates, tin Skin Diseases, or the same amount for a Treatise) on Scrofulous Affections. "FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE." Thoroughly cleanso it by using lr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and c ; digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spirits, vita; strength and bodily health will be establibi i. CONSUMPTION, which" Scrofula of flic Lilllgs is amslpfl and cured by this remedy, if taken in th earlier stages or the disease, from is mar clous power over this terribly fatal dir-ra.'. whei first oifering this now world-famed n m cdy to thci pu'dic, Dr. Pierce thought srriniisii of calling it hid "Consumption CniK." tint abandoned that naM? lis too restrictive f a medicine which, from t wonderful com bination of tonic, or strengthening, alterative, or blood-cleansing, anti-bilious, pectoral, iind nutritive? properties, is unequaled. not only as n remedv for Consumption, but tor al Chronic Diseases of the Liver, Blood, and Lungs. For TVeak Lutigg. Fpitting of Blood. Short ness of Breath, Chronic Na.?al Catarrh. Bron chitis, Asthma, Severe Coughs, and kindred affections, it is an efficient remedy. Sold bv Druggists, at $1.00, or Six Mottle for $5.00. Send ten cents In stamps for Dr. rierce'9 book on Consumption. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main St., BUFFALO. N. Y, UN 17 41 WELT'S' HAIR restores (7 ray Hair toorlRi isalct lor. An elegant dress ing fcoftens and beautitie;; No grease nor oil. A Tonic Restorative. Frevents hair coming out ; strengt neiis. If you aro losing your grip on life Try "Wells' Health Renawer." Goes direct to weak spots. For iveak men, delicate wolaeu- P.UCHU-PAI5A der. Inflammation. Irritation of Ki'lneys and Bladder, Pior.e or Gravel Ii?ar-es of t no n es tateGlan1, PropeicaltfwcJjiiWS, Iucontine!:-: .or over Continence, leases of the Kidneys and allied Orgaiis in either sex. ?1. I'mgKisH for Ex. 6 bots., 5. E. S-Wells, Jersey City, N. J . Solid Rolled Gold Rings almost Encasement Rlnr, 10, tody'a Gold Shield, 10c. Flated Band set with two Fluted Band with orn- lovcly Jtluo 1 urniioUe mental viip, Austrian ftttd Brilliant, loc. Diamond netting, lie Popular FIt Rnnd. Rhine IXond'ome Cameo Diamond tcttlng, 25e. 80 centn. Th above enls represent six of the lutes' and most popular dflcn" manufactured in die rir.sr line. The prii rs t name litre are sp il limply to introduce our groodi. We iruarar.te- tach of theb" ri'.i-ato be made of Solid 18k. Roiled tJoH l'late. Other deal ti ebarce from 1.D0 to fl.SO for rings not half a pnorf. Wewi! cheerfully refund the money to any dissatisfied customer'. Wit" each ring we lend our Large Illustrated Catal-(nie of Va'-!i-i Chains, Charms and other Jewelry. We take postage stamp" tl came as cash. Rings sent post paid to any peetothVe'in the I nit? PI., B hut not to Canada. Slentinn fhi tisi. pendyniiraddreaa tc Tho Domestic Mfg. Oo. Wallinford,0onn. lo you mii lit iw Iciirn all about n (IsriM ? Hew lo Pick Out a (JooilOnef How to linv Imper fect inus Had no laiiard acainm Fraud t I low to Detect DfaeoMv and effect a cure when lime is poaaible How to Tell the Ag by the Teeth? what to call i he Different Hnita of th Aniiiml f How to Shoe a Horse l roperly AH ihl and other Valuable Inlorination relating to the nnlne Specie ran be obtained by HOK!K HOOK, which we will forward, ?ff;r?ftW 25 CTS. IN STAKPS. HOJtSi: HOOK CO., 131 Leonard St.. X. Y. opiun Morphine IlaMt Cured fu IO to 2p days. Io pay till rare. Dr. J. Stephen. Lebaaoa. Ohio. Die Best Waterproof Coat. BALSAM II T II .Ml 14 miiKim ur SLICKER Ht!F52SAOT SWpKEa I.vrrrmrtted waterproof, nnd wHl Troop v ,t iry inthehatfdeytBtorm, The new POMAi EIj SUCKLH U a pm 'ci rii::: ? cui. wuaie. seware ot imitations, iinv r-r5i:T:i- w:Uio. t t.iv trade-marlt. Illustrated Catalogue tree. AJ.'. jwrtron,iLisj. jr.
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 27, 1887, edition 1
4
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