Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Nov. 3, 1887, edition 1 / Page 4
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FOR FARM AND GARDEN. Why Fowls Lose their Feathers. The feathers of fowls correspond to the hair of quadrupeds and are subject to the same natural conditions. Conse quently, when feathers fall out the causes are precisely tho same as when hair fal's off, viz., a disordered state of the skin and want of nutriment suffi cient to maintain the animal in a per fectly healthy condition. It may have enough food, and even too much, but not enough of tho right kind to supply he demands of the animal in regard to the growth of the feathers. Feathers contain a large quantity of nitrogen and some sulphur, and to supply these the fowls need flesh to contribute nitrogen and grain or other food containing the sulphur. Fresh bones broken in small fragments provide nitrogen, and clover, cabbage, and turnip leaves, grape and mustard seed have a large quantity of sulphur in them, so that if these are given regularly and corn is not fed to ex cess so as to excite inflammation, the fowls would not lose their feathers ex cept in due natural course when the au nual nuult takes place. New York Times. St raw Composts. James Perkins, a New Jersey farmer says in the Rural New Yorker: To re duce any librous matters to a manurial condition, without the aid of moisture, heat aud earthy matters are necessary. Where these arc properly applied, straw, hay,stalks or weeds may be very rapidly totted down. 3Iy mode of operation is to construct a pit or basin where it will receive all washes from the barnyard and hog pen aud other waste water. Over this pit I place a course of logs so close together that nothing can fall through. A pump runs down into the basin to the bam yard water. About two feet of straw arc piled upon the logs and then the pump is started. The liquid is pumped out and with a piece of hose thoroughly applied all ovci the straw. This piling and wetting is continued until the heap is as high as desired, and it is then covered with a layer abont six inches thick of muck, coal ashes, plas ter or common loam; the plaster is the best. To hasten decomposition after the lirst hjat has subsided, a hole can bo made in the heap with a crowbar, and another wetting given. A quantity of ground bone scattered through the heap when it is made adds to the manure wonderfully. Cara of Work Ilorses. Frequently the farm horse suffers from overfeeding, and from beinir worked on a full stomach; for farm horses cat all the time, and look lean and wire coated two certain proofs of chronic indigestion. Ilorses which have passed many hours in work, when re leased from harness are allowed to drink nil the water their exhausted systems crave for; then, with the material of a small iceberg in their distended inner organs, they are turned loose to further injure themselves by grazing in the pas ture; or, if the farmer is well to do, they go to the barn, and there, torment ed by flies, mosquitoes and other winged pots, devour a carelessly prepared ra tion, after which the remainder of the night is passed in stamping and fighting insects. Farm horses arc overfed, commonly, insufficiently groomed, and never judiciously cither housed or clothed. In summer, farm work ought to commence with the ris ing of th:s sun, and cease at nooa, when men and horses should seek the friendly shelter of the house and stable. The horses just from the field ought then to be stripped of all harness, have their eyes and nostrils washed out, t!i3 mar k of the harness also washed off, and then be well rubbed with a "wisp" which simple and inexpensive stable im plement is far better for the horse than is a brush, whose coarse stalks irritate the skin and temper of the suffering beast. The wisp soothes and causes a healthy action of the skin, when the horses have been thus attended to, and they have cooled off. American Agri culturist. Mineral Fertilizers for Grape i. Tossibly aside from our changeable climate one reason why the grape vine is often diseased in this country is from neglect jn properly fertilizing it. The stable manures commonly used have an excess of carbonaceous matter, and are besides too strongly nitrogenous in proportion to their miueral elements, inc grape vine is a I1b3r.il feeder, but this kind of manure makes it run too much to vine without furnishing the material for making f mi:. Boms kinds of grapes always set too heavily, often three and even four clusters on the present year's shoot. Think how many berries there are in each of these, and one to three seeds in every grape. In elab orating the sec 1 the vine requires plenty of potash and some phosphate. In the fruit these minerals arc also found, the pot ash being especially necessary in chang ing the green acid pulp of the v.nripcncd grape to the luscious clusters which are so palatable. The early growth of the grape to the time it attains nearly full size and forms seeds does not specially demand mineral fertilizers. But about mids ummcr the overloaded viue falters in carrying its heavy loal. The grapes refuse to color, and it is then that mildew and rot generally make their appearance, though the rot h a self-propagating disease which one in troduced perpetuates itself from year to year. European vine growers manure the vine maiuly with ashes, burnia - the trimmings ar.d applyiug th?m yjariy ti the root as part of their supply, fu mill ing both potash and phosphate. Thiuuing overloaded vines is always necessary with some varieties. Iu any ca-e di taseel bunches or berries should be cut out at once to prevent spread of the in fection. Cultivator. Farm and Garden Notes. The hog is a grass eating animal, though people do not always seem to realize it. Swine like both grass and hay. It is fortunate for many farmers that the house well sometimes goes dry, be cause it gives an opportunity for clean ing it. If it has not been cleaned for two or three years, pump it dry and go at it In a series of experiments made by the Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station on cabbago worms, tho most effectual remedy was found to be a mixture of one ounce of pyrethrum and buckwheat flour. If the pigs have not already the run of the orchard, turn them in, for the benefit of both. The windfalls will fur nish welcome growing food to the young animals and the orchard will be helped by the destruction of insects as well as by the manuring it will get. In this country nearly $ 3 worth of milk, cream, butter and cheese together are sold and consumed to every dollar's worth of beef. What is more, there is not much danger that the market for dairy products will ever be less than it is now it is practically inexhausti ble. Ducks arc not good winter layers, but they begin very early in the season, usually in February, laying their egg3 early in the morning. They should not be kept too fat. Boiled potatoes or tur nips, with plenty of grass, make excel lent food for them at this season. The black top Spanish merino is now Deing bred extensively i i We3t Virginia and Pennsylvania. They yield delaine wool and the carcass weighs 150 pounds. Breeders who have stuck to the Spanish merino for years are now going pell mell into breeding black tops. Strawberry season is over. Now, then, don't neglect the plants that have brought you both time and pleasure. Loosen the soil between the rows and apply a small quantity of coarse mulch. This will enable the plants to enjoy in comfort a season of deserved rest. One reason that dairy butter docs not bring the highest price is because too many farmers keep it i i their cellars. A cellar is no placo for butter, no matter how clean of well ventilated it may be. There will be more or less odor from last winter's vegetables that the butter will absorb. Dan Rankin, Madison county, 31)., is thought to be tho largest individual feeder of cattle and hojrs in the world. His farm embraces 25,000 seres, from which he gathered 1,000,000 bushels of corn, it is not an uncommon thing for" him to turn off as many as 5000 cattlo and 10,000 hogs in a season. It is thought that at no distant day the culture of the olive will become ono of the most important as well as profita ble fields of horticultural enterprise with up, as it is at present with many coun- tries ia the south of Europe, whosu chief revenue is derived from the ex port of olive oil and picked olives. The pig pen is often the most offen sive to the eye and the nostrils of any place about the farm, the miry filth often being a terrible commentary upon the keeping of swine. This need not and should not be. The pork from swine kept in a neat and cleanly pen is quite a different meat from that kept in a pen as described above. The proper way to remove a large tree is to first cut away the roots by digging a trench about ten feet in diameter around it, removing the earth and refill ing with new rich earth. This will in duce the growth of a great mass of fibrous roots around the ttce. The next year the tree may be removed, but the top should be cut back severely. It may seem a small matter whether grass and weeds arc kept closely cut around hedges or not. If this work is neglected the hedgerow expands, taking more room on cither side every year. Weeds and grass also furnish a harbor for mice, which girdle the hedge in winter, soon killing out the plants so as to make the hedge worthless as a fence. Both Lake and Farm. At Zirknitz in the Austrian Alps there is an intermittent lake that is a basin, which at one season of the year is filled with water, at another is dried up and cultivated by the farmers of the neigh borhood. The imperial forester, Wil liam Putick, has just examined the con struction of that basin and found, in one part of it, an immense cave called Kar lovca, which, when the surface of the water in the basin has reached a certain height, begins sucking up the water un til the basin is empty. This cave leads to a long series of underground lakes all connected with one another by a con tinuous current. Putick navigated the first five of them; Immense fields of sand and gravel accumulate and alter nately stop the current or are carriod oil by it. The roof of the caves in which this system of waters is located at many places comes down very low, almost touching the water, and in such places the moving gravel-beds frequently close the passage and cause the waters to rise in the higher cave. Putick, with three companions, was in one of the lakes ' when the cntranco was suddenly closed byji mass of rubbish tumbling down from the roof. For more than cirht hours they worked as hard as they could until they succeeded in opening a pits sage by the side of the main entrance, which was happily still found dry, and they were enabled to reach the surface ! unharmed. But their boat and tool I we: e left behind and will be recovered aain after the water sh'H have sub I sided. "PLAIN LIVING." Words of Advice to American Young Men and Women. Wise Methods for Building up a Pleasant Home. Rev. A. D. Mayo, in the course of a lecture in Philadelphia, said: "What the American people mean by plain liviug is saving from the lower side of life, in days of poverty, for the higher side, and, in wealth, directing the material outlay by character, intelli gence, refinement and a general sense of the fitness of things. It is showa that the yearly earnings of the American peo ple fix the limit of average family living at $500 or less a year. The central question of American society is: How can the average American family keep up a true home life on this sum? That life includes health, intelligence, moral ity and all the elegance and opportunity that a good family can get out of a moderate sum. It is a matter of do mestic education, equally important and more fundamental than the training of the schools, and which the schools, at best, can very imperfectly supply. It means that every American child should be taught that money always represents work by somebody, and how to use it on both sides of life, as well as to get it. Every American girl should be taught the art of home making; not the old housekeeping of the peasant, the slave, or the ignorant class, wliich is eternal drudgery, but the 4 'new housekeeping" which puts a superior womanhood into the hands and uses labor saving ma chinery, brains, character and culture to get the most out of the dollar. It needs more ability now to handle a first class house than to be a principal of a female seminary in the old time. We met a young lady, out of the upper 3tratum of New York society, who had come to a western agricultural college to study scientific housekeeping, be cause she had engaged to be married to a rich man and was resolved to fill her position with credit. The experts say that good cooking will save half tho material and greatly improve food. The American people waste more in slovenly and extravagant housekeeping than any other nation, and, in the long run, in flict a damage on the country which may be classed with that caused by the use of strong drink. Every young man should insist on health, comfort and respectability in his living aud then save for a home. The young man perverts the opportunities offered by organizations of an education al and social character when he uses their headquarters as mere club?, put ting off marriage. The young husband and wife should not 'flop' into a board ing house, but put head, heart and hands together to build up the true home. Only an educated woman a woman with a good heart, a level head and skilled hands can mike a good housu on small means. She can do it by "stirring in judgmsat," setting thd table aright and steering the boys and girls. Tho American civilization that is coming will be the most expensive thing on earth except barbarism. It can only be maintained by that style of plain living which in every region subor dinates the material to the spiritual, and by wise economies saves from the lower to spend on the higher side of tho national life. Where the Day Begins. According to the way in which this arrangement is now carried out, the first land that the new day dawns upon is Easter Island, about 230 miles west of the coast of Chili, South America. That is to say, the 2d of July breaks hero within a few hours of the 1st having broken on the American coast to tho east, and the two davs run on alonsr side the 2d in Easter Island and places west, the 1st in all places on the Ameri can continent. We may therefore realize this idea that nt 7.20 o'clock any morning of our lives in Great Brit ain, the next day is commencing on tho world, and is to be found at this littlo island in the Pacific ocean, whence in due course it will travel round to us. But to have thus the start of the world is not an unmitigated advantage to theso islanders. Suppose one of them sails cast to America, what is the result? Ho will find they keep the day thero under a different date, and he will have to reckon one day in his calendar twice over to put himself right with their notions. On the other hand, if an American cros ses irom east to west this wonderful magic line where the day begins, he will find the dates in this fresh part of the world are one in advance of him, and he must needs strike a day out of his calendar to keep up with the times. This fact was curiously illus trated in the case of Magellan, the Por tuguese captain, who sailed round the world from cast to west in 1522, and having crossed the magic line of "day's birth" in his wanderings, his calendar became of course a day in arrear. The sailors were completely ignorant of this, and finding, on landing at home, that their Sabbath was falling on Monday, they accused one another of tampering with the reckoning. It was not for some time that the true explanation was discovered. Chamber's Journal. They Left Him Out 'The true gentleman," said she, "will never inflict pain, and I never can re spect a man who is not a true gentle man." "Then, Mary," he said mournfully," "I suppose that I can hope for your love no longer?" "Why not, Edward?1 "I'm a dentist, vpu know CLIPPINGS FOB THE CUBIOUS. The Greeks called butter bpututos "cow cheese." . Pythagoras, who lived in the fifth century, B.C, is said to have invented harmonic strings. Eight thousand persons perished at St. Petersburg by the rising and over flowing of the Neva in 1824. The Alhambra at Granda, that won drous architectural monument of Moorish dominion m Spain, was built in 1360. An Illinois farmer has attached a churn to his wagon in such a way that the movement of the wagon churns his milk. An ivy vine has grown through the wall of the house of Arthur Westcoat of Atlantic City, and ornaments his sitting room. Before the middle of tho seventeenth century tea was not used England, and was entirely unknown to the Greeks and Romans. The largest "all bands round" has been figured out by a man, who states that if 32,000,000 people should clasp hands they could reach around the. globe. The antiquity of cities was, in order, Mcroc, Syene, Thebes, Memphis, Bu bastcs, Byblo3 or Babylon, Damascus, Sidon, etc., all built before the year 2500 B. C. Leaning against the wall, enclosed in a wToodcn frame, in a Murray-street, New York, store, stands a slab of cork 8x7 fect and from 1 1-2 to 2 inches in thick ness. It came from Portugal. Lightning lifted tho chimney from a lighted lamp in the home of John Mayo of Amcncus, Ga., extinguished tho Game, and deposited the unbroken chim ucy in an upright position on the table. Six thousand three hundred and forty one houses were destroyed by the burn ing of Moscow, when the Russians set fire to their ancient capital rather than have it fall into the hands of Napoleon Bonaparte. The fact is suggestive of the intensity of the strain of city life that while from 1852 to 18G8 the population of Chicago increased 5. 1 times, and the death rato 3.7 times, the deaths from nervous dis orders increased 20.4. At Acosta a Roman metal pen has been found. It is a bronze pen slit iri exactly the same fashion as the prescnl steel pen. The Dutch invented a metal pen in 1717 but it was not until many years later that the hand-screw press, which made the first cheap steel pen, came into use. Australia's Rabbit Plagne. Several of the worst pests of our fields, in the way of -weed, were introduced here from Europe as ornamental or use ful plants. From a similar ignorance or thoughtlessness, tho rabbit was intro duced into Australia as a pet, or possi bly as a harmless creature of th3 chase, and he has already proved himself more than a match for dogs and men. The London Telegraph tells us that Dne tract of scrub, or bu.h, half as large as Scotland, is already so overrun with rabbits that it is abandoned by the settlers. The soil of the scrub a mixture of sand and dust is admirably suited to the rabbit for burrowing in. The lack Df rain he does not mind in the least, or if he does mind, it ii to take delight in the drought. As compared with the wet, clayey soil of England, the dust of Australia is a rabbit's paradise. Nature practises a curious economy in allowing the rabbit to thrive. In the first place this animal eats the scanty herbage upon which the settler' sheep were pastured. Then the wild dogs, which were nearly exterminated, find the fat rabbits excellent food, so that the dogs ia turn multiply and grow strong. Thus the dogs become em boldened, and attack the poorly fed sheep. The country has therefore to bo abandoned to the rabbits and dogs. Ferrets and weasels have been im ported into Australia to prey upon the rabbits, but, strangely enough, theso natural enemies fraternize in the colonies. Thousands of bushels of poisoned . oat1 have been sown where the rabbits would eat them, but the increase of tho animals has not been stopped. The only protection to the fields of wheat against the mischievous visits of the rabbits is to fence with wire netting. Besides a fence such as the creature can not hop over, a strip of netting has to be laid flat upon the ground to prevent him from burro wing under it. At the same time that the rabbits are multiplying so rapidly in Australia, the' price is advancing in all the markets of Europe. A market value will prove more fatal to the animal than poisoned oats or weasels or a bounty on his ears. Once let it becoma possible to furnish' the rabbits fresh in the markets of Lon don, and what is now the pest of Aus tralia will prove a source of revenue to the settlers. Youth's Companion. Cows and the Moon. A little six-year-old granddaughter of a well-known New England clergyman, in doubting a statement by her uncle that the moon is made of green cheese, was advised by the divine to ascertain for herself. "How can I, grandpa?" ''Get your Bible and see what it says." 4 'Where shall I begin ?" 4 'Begin at the beginning." The child sit down to read the Bible. Before she had got half through the second chapter of Genesis and had read about the creation of the stars and the animals, she came back to her grandfather, her eyes all bright with the excitement of discovery. 4 1 have f oun d it grandpa ! It isn't true, for God made the moon before )le made auy cows." Troy Times. Had to Leave tho Work. ""'A nian arrived at a Dakota town one day recently to look up some accounts (or an Eastern agricultural machine company. He started out in the coun try, and soon met a farmer driving a team of mules and headed toward town with his whole family in the wagon. The Eastern man stopped and made some inquiries abont the road, and then said : "Splendid weather for harvest. " Yes, the weather's all right." "Well, there can't be anything else to hinder your securing the crop." "Yes there can, stranger, and thero is." "Broke .down?" "No." "Some of your family sick?" "No, they're all right you see 'em here." "Horses sick?" "1 drive mules they nover get sick." "Well, I don't see what there is to keep you frora staying at home and working to-day." "Mister, I'll tell you; it's circus day an' I jus' said to M'tildy, says I : 'M'tildy, them crops can go to thunder, I'm goin' to hook up an' we'll go to the show 1' They f ay this circus is a reg'lar big railroad show, an' none o' yer leetle overland concerns with a spotted hoss an' a cage o monkeys, .lim says he hears they got old Dan Rice for clown, an' I'd drive a huudred miles in the night jes' to seo him fool the riug-mas-tei an' mako him hoppiu' mad like he always nstcr! G'lang, there, Ben Butler, nona o' y'er hangin' back with y'er whipYtree under the wheel P Dakota 1'elU lou are frightened at that loud roaring noise, are you? Think it's an earthquake because it jars the win dows, hey? Well, it isn't it's simply a prominent citizen down at the Court House paying li s taxes. He has found out that they are $1.75, and he is mak ing all that noise about it. Ho paid $15 for cigars last month, and his bar" bill was $40, and only last week he wa3 fined $10 for being drunk and disor derly ; aud he paid all of these things and never even a little roar not even a growl. But, great Scott! listen to him now wheu he finds his taxes arfl $1.75! Just hear him howl! He Says the Government, general and local, is a fraud and a snare and a delusion. Taxes $1.75! Ho won't stand it! He knows when lie's oppressed and ground down ! A dollar and seventy-five Cents for a whole yoar's taxea ! Great heav ens, hs says, no wonder nien are bo cialists! Dakola Uelh Vr.l i: very th in t on tin? Weather. Two ladies who had not seen each other for year3 recently met in tho street. They recognized each other after a time, and their recognition was cordial. "So delighted to seo you again. Why. you are scarcely altered. " "So glad, and how little changed you are. Why, how long is it since we met ?" "About ten years." "And why have you never been to see me?' "31y dear, just look at the weather we have had." Leeds Mt ury. Postofficf.8 wore first established in Paris in 1462; inEng'and, 1581; in German-, 1011 ; in Turkey, 1740. Paid In (inld Coin. In Dec, ISSfi, 1. S. Johnson & Co., 22 Custom House St., Boston t Mass., offered fijrht premi ums payable in pold coin, which they wty crea ted a prcat Interest amoni? people who kept liens, m much fi, in fact, that they authorize us to say that they shall offer Nov. 1st, 1887, another list of premiums fur the bests results from the use of Sheridan's Powder td Make Hens Lay. Of course all who compete cannot get one of the premiums, but some of the last year's reports sent us show that ihe parties ought to nave been well satisfied if they had not received any other benefit than the in crease of epgs they got while making the trial. For example the first premium was twenty five dollars taken by C. A. French. Washing ton. N. H.,vho fed thirty hens the Sheridan's Powder for eight weeks. The first week he got only ten eggs; the third week the hens laid 201 eggs, and the eighth week 208 eggs. During the eight weeks trial he got 1308 eggs which, at tho price of eggs in Boston or New York markets in mid-winter, would have yielded 46,60, or 81.55 for each hen in eight wecks time. Con sidering the small expense of keeping a henno animal on a farm will pay like that. The fourth premium, which was ten dollars, went to Mrs. E. B. Carlin, Conklln Centre, K Y.4 who in the eight weeks received from forty hens 1707 egg Tho first week ehe only got 8f. rgs, but the last week 277 eggs. Tins clearly demonstrates that the use of Sheridan's Powder to Make Hens Lay will in crease the profit several hundred per cent. Johnson A- Co. will send two 25 cent packs of Sheridan's Powder postpaid to any address for 50 cents in postage stamps; or a large 2 M pound can of Powder for $1.20. To each person or dering a large can as above they w ill send free one copy of the "Farmer's Poultry Guide" (price. 25" cents). "All But" is the t'.tle of a story by Rose Terry ..ooke. Probably the history ot a billy goat. I'nlike other cathartics, Dr. Pierce's "Pel lets" do not render the bowels costive after .iperntkm, but. on the contrary, establish a per manently healthy action. Being entirely vege iiv.no particular care is required while using hcm. By druggists. A bald-headed book-keeper should fry lo wipe his pen on his lair. v rjis 'f t0l00rt reposiforcorpTjy MJ Be surp Little lBsrnbeOT Xicfl ijl tte p ear. f ui CEifiJrQcli' Cfltedijirid SVjbsFl will orjlyMjapf: afprphw Uffje I HF 1 .HaUVkva Vlfl- TR I illim V)T It would seem natural for a carpenter have a lumbering gait. Consumption, Scrofula, General Debility, Wasting Diseases of Children, Chronic Coughs and Bronchitis, can lo cored by the OS8 or Scott's Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil with Hrpophosphite. Prominent physicians use it and testify to Its great value. Tlease read lln fol'owing: "I used Scott's Emulsion for an obstina'e Cough vr.Vx Hemor rhage, Loss of Appetite, Emaciation, s eep Ies3nes3, &c All of these have now left, and I believe your Emulsion has saved "a case of well-developed Consumption.'' 'J. Findlet, M. D., Lone Star, Texas. The twc-legged crank is thehardest to turn. Professional Etiquette prevents sime doctors from advertising their skill, but wc are bound by no such convention al rules and think that if we make a discovery that is of benefit to our fellows, we ought to spread the fact to the whole land. Therefore we cause to be published throughout the land the fact that Dr. K. V. Pierce's "Golden Medi cal Discovery" is the best' Known remedy for consumption (scrofula of the lungs) and kin dred diseases. Send 10 cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce's complete treatise on consumption.with unsurpassed means of seJf-treatment. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Association, -603 Main Street. Buffalo, N. Y. Outward bouud A book. "1 want to thank you," writes a young man to B. F. Johnson & Co., Richmond, Va., "for placing me in a position by which I am enabled to make money faster than I ever did before." This is but a sample extract of the many hun dred similar letters received by the above firm. See their advertisement in another column. Paris eats forty-nine tons of snails every cL.y. Wrnsnn nnd Her Diseases is the title of a large illustrated treatise, bv Dr. R. V. Pierce. Buffalo. N. Y..sent to any address for ten cents in stamps. It teaches successful self-treatment. Electricity is a very serious matter, i nd yet Edison makes light of it. Pftrjiliirrft, Wive nnd Mother. Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, fre cecurely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi,Utica,N. Y. Royal. Gmte1 mends everything! Broken China.Ulass, Wood. Free Vials at Drugs & Gro Cur'ous'.y enough the man who is always in a pickle doesn't p eserve his temper worth a cent. Make Wo Mistake It ydu have made up your mind to buy Hood's Sar saparilla do not be induced to take oaf ether. Hood'i Safsaparilla is a peculiar medicine, possessing, by virtue of its peculiar combination, proportion aad preparat'oa curative power superior to any other article of tho kind before the pcjDple. Bo sure to get Hood's. "In one store the clerk tried to induce mo to buy their own instead df Hood's Sarsaparilla. But he eould not prevail upon me to change, t told him I knew what Hood's Sarsaparilla was, I had taken it, was perfectly satisfied with It; and did not want any other.' Mrs. Ella A. Goff, 61 Terrace St., Boston. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. $1 ; six for $3. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO.. Apothecaries, low ell, Mas iOO Poses One Dollar lUDDBR'S A SI RE CURE FOR Indigestion and dyspepsia. . Over 5,ono Physicians have sent us their approval ot DIGESTVLIX. saying: that it ii tho best preparation lor iiKJigesuon tnar tney nave ever usea. i We have never hoard of a case of Dyspepsia trher ! DIGESTYLIN was taken that was not cured. j FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM. IT WILL CURE THE MOST AGGRAVATED CASES. IT WILL STOP VOMITING IN PREGNANCY. IT WILL BELIEVE CONSTIPATION. For Summer Com plaints and Chronic Diarrtmea, which are the direct results of imperfect digestion, D1GESTYLIN will effect an immediate cure. Take DYUESTYLIX for ail paius and disorders of the sromacli : ther nil come from indigestion. Ask roiir drupsist for DIGESTYLIN" (price $1 per large bottle). If lie does hot have it send on dollar to us BndwPwiJl send a Ijott to you, express prepaid. Dd not hesitate to send your money. Our fcouae is reliable. Established tweMv five years. VM. F. Iv I ODE It tfc CO. Nanitfaciiiriiis Chemists S3 JohnSt.iN. Y. riv Ely's Cream Balm. Price SO cents Will do more in Caring CATARRH Thr.n S50I in tiny other way. ApP'J'Briim into each nostril iclV rr.oe, 2S5 Greenwich st,N.Y euano mm Do you want lo learn all about a .Cierse t How to Pick Out a CSood One ? How to Know imper fections rt nd so (jnard narainsi Fraad? How to Detecr Di sen st and effect a cure when same is possible? How lo Tell the Age by the Teeth f What to call the Different Parts of f ha Animal t llnwtn Shor n T1nrc Vrna?! v All this. and other Valuable Information relatiaa to the Eqninc Saeries ran be obtained lf reading, our 1D&.PAGK ILLUSTRATED HORSE BOOK, which we will for word, nr$ M5 25 CTS. IN STAMPS. UORSE BOOK CO.. 134 Leonard St., N. Y PEIIMN 5K!fiLf jiri FOR ONE DOLLAR. II 1 1 A first class Dictionary gotten out at umall J price to encourage the study of the Germs... Language. It srives Knsrli&h words with tK definitions, a vert ehnan look. Send ftl.lii) t ttcririan equivalent, ana ucrman words wnn Kngiisi. BOOK riTB. HOrSE, 13 1 Leonard N. Y. City, and get om- of lUf.- books liy return nuiK who want tlio nest. pelUm HOLIDAY k ever offered should send for terms and descrip tion Of The Royal Unllery of Pootry. n.n Art. 400 uperb Artitic Eneravingw. 400 Biographic. Crowning SJiViV 400 Author. Address TS 1. THO.UPSOX M'VR. t'Ow 757 Broadway. New ovk. AGENTS HANTED ftfiVJSa1 FATTEKSSS. ror malting lings, Tidies, Hoods, Mittens, etc. Ma chine sent by mail for ft. Seuu for late reduced price list. E. Rosa Ar Co., Toledo, O. SI00toS300 A MOVTH can he made working for us. AGENTS pref erred who can furnish their own horses and Rive their time to the bURinecs. Spare moments may be profitably emploved also. A few vacancies in towns and cities. Ii. F. JOHNSOX & CO., 1013 Maui St., Richmond, Va. B AXLE Mgrease RKMT TN THV. irflRll) XW Get tlie Genuine Sold Everywhere. SOLDIERS; all et Pensions, if M disa bled; unieerr travel pay, bountv collected: !), itfra ''relieved; 22 yearg' practice. Success or no fee. lw auit free. A. W . McCormick ft Son. WaahlBgtom, D, 4 Dl!fj DZHm Great English Gout and DlUlI S I IlISi Rheumatic Remedy. Oval Box, 34 1 roona, 14 Pills. "Oi to fts a day. Samples worth $1.50, FREE. 9 Lines not under the horse's feet, write Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co- Holly, Mich. nATCNTC Obtalne.1. Send stamp for UH I Cll I O Inventors' Guide. L. Biso- bam, Patent Attorney, Washineton. D. C. FDEE By return mail. Fall Deserlpttoa Major's New TalUr Kystasa f Iret Cattta. X002T CO, Ciasiaaati, O DEDSI I E. H. !1IC to Soldiers and Heirs. Sena ror dr ill el enlars. No fee nnless successful. E. H. GEIiSTON ft: CO.o AV ashinrtnn. Ti, o. OLD Is worth $500 per lb. Tettit's Eye Salve is wortbsi.uuu, out is soia ax zjc. a dox ny aeaiors. flDIHM Habit CUrel ntlfBctoTj before ny p.T. UriUUI Prof. i. a. BARTOK, SUfc Ward, Ctadaaati, k The luan who has invested trout three to five dollars in a Rubber Coat, and at his first half hour's experience in a storm nuns to his sorrow that it is ii AGENTS tXX mm WET hardly a better protection than a mos quito netting, nut only feels chagrined at being so badly taken in, but also J eels if he docs not look exactly like urn Ask tor the HSU UK AN I " Slicker does not hnve the yisii iirxxd. send for descriptive ti. a . : AijV AMiUl JX! 1.UI.M.LAL J. OAS. ASK IXn 1R. PIERCE'S PIJZXEtd LITTLE SVGAB-COATED 2ILZ8. Being entirely vegetable. (Tpm erate without disturbance to the MS SSM a laxative, alterative, or pSSSfe. Aj Pv these littlo Pellets give the C6e " satisfaction. 01 Wrfe vtj. SICK HEADACHE. Bilious . Headache, Dizziiiesjs, Constipa tion, Indigestion, Bilious AttackStand all derangements of 'the stom ach and bowel8,-re prompt ly relieved and permanently cured by the use -or tr. N Plnrrn'i Plnainnt Pnrvaiu. v. In explanation of the remedial power of Pellets over so great a variety of diaif?6 may truthfully bo said that their actionV'1 the system is universal, not a gland or wi0" escaping their sanative influence snir j druggists, 25 cents a vial. Manufactured it Chemical Laboratory of World's Dispen-c Medical, Association, Buffalo, N. y 00 H is offered by the manufactu, ersof Br. Sage's Cafe Remedy, for a Chronic Nasal Catarrh whiS they cannot cure. " SYmtPTOjilS OF CATARRH.i,i, heavy headache, obstruction of the 2 passages, discharges falling from the 3 into thf t.hrrnt enmntimoo nrnfn l"B and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, muoE? purulent, bloody and putrid; the eves are weak, watery, and inflamed ; there is Vinetoi in the ear deafness, hacking or couhine clear the throat, expectoration of offensive matter, together trith 6cabs from ulcers- tho voice is changed and has a nasal rn-anc-' breath is offensive: tmeJi and tastn paired ; there is a sensation of dizziness with mental depression, a hacking couprh and' eon eral debility. Only a few of the above-named symptoms are likely to be present in anv one case. Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half of the above symptoms re suit in consumption, and end in tho grave No disease is So common, more deceptive and dangerous, or less understood by physicians by its mild, soothing, and healing properties. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures the worst cases of Catarrh, " cold in the head," Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache. Bold by druggists everywhere; oO cents. "Untold Agony from Catarrh." Prof. VT. Hacsn'er, the famous mesmerist, of Ithaca, N. Y., writes: "Some ten years ago I suffered untold agony from chronic nasal catarrh. My family physician gifcve mc up as incurable, and said I must die. ily case was such a bad one, that every day, towards sun set, my voice would become so hoarse I could barely speah above a whisper. In the morn in my coughing and clearing of my throat would almost strangle me. By the uee of Dr. Sage 9 Catarrh Kemedy, in three months, I was a well man, and the cure has been permanent." "Constantly Hawking and Spitting." TffOMAS J. Rushing, Esq., S902 Pine Street, SL Isntis, Mo. writes : " I was a great sufferer from catarrh for three years. At times I could hardly breathe, and was constantly hawking and spitting, and for the last eight months could net breathe through the nostrils. I thought nothing could be done for me. Luck ilv, 1 was advised to try Dr. Sage's Catarrh lemedy, and I am now a well man. I believe it to bo 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 Cnro Catarrh. Eli Robbins, Bunyan P. O., Columhia 0, Pa., says: "My daughter had catarrh when she Was five years old, very badly. 1 saw Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy advertised, and pro cured a bottle for her. and soon saw that it helped her; a third bbttfe effected a perma nent cure. Sh0is now ? ighteea years old aud sound and hearty." . OS U 42 Great Starching AND IRONING POWDER. HOW TO WASH AND IRON The art of starching, ironing and washine fcrongbt to perfection in " Rough on Pist." Added to Btarcn gives splendid gloss, body, stiffness and polish. The only washing com pound that can be so used. Prevents starch rolling or rubbing up. Makes Iron slip easy. Saves labor. Saves three-fourths the starch. A revelation in housekeeping. A boon to vo raen. A new discovery, beats the world. Cleans nnd purifies everything. Invaluable as tee only safe, non-injurious and perfect washer nnd cleanser for general household purposes. OTADftllSMf 'A'he most inexperienced w I All Will 14 Ub girl can, with Bough on Dirt, do as nice washing and ironing as can be done in any laundry. Boiling not necessary. 10 & 25e. pkgs. at all first-class, well stocked Grocers. E. S. Wells. Jersey City. N. J.. U. S. A- EXHAUSTED VITALITY A Great Medical Work for Young and Middle-Aged Men. KriOW THYSELF. PURIilMlED by lit l'KABODY BI ERI CA 1. lNSTITTTE, No-4 Bullfinch St., Itoxion. Ill am. ffJI. H. PARKER, AI. !., Consult tug l'hvsician. More than one million conic? told. It treats uiwa Nervous and Physical Debility Premature Decline. Exhausted Vitality, Impaired Vigor, and Impurit!e of the lilootl. and the untoM siiserie concouent tner?on. Contains aw paeef lubsuuulal emboss d bin I in?, full gilt. Warranted ;he best popular medical treatise published In the Snilish language. Price only $1 by mall, postpaid, md concealed in a plain wrapper. Illustrative tumplefree if you send uow. Address a? above. Aame this vairr. GUNS CAIY AMMERIESS. ID AH THREE IARRCI. "' MANHATTAN HAMMERLESS. IPIEPEU BREECH LOADERS. Send for Catalogue of SpecialticE. SCn0VERLl0, DALY A GALES, SI and 80 Chambers Street, tfow York. JOR3ES PAYSttt FREICHT S Toa Waeon Scales. Irra l-errn, Slrai Mtiagt, SrtN Tan Ban mn4 Rram Bos fkf 380. Cvnr alw Scale. Par toe price IM ratio thin ppr Mrew jqms er iixmiiTiii. B1NGI1AMTON. N. . Assnt (Jtorcaant only) wanted In every town ft j It Is the unanimous opiu "on or Try i nstomers that ; your ' ! ansiil s Punch" is the est cigar th -1 a vo j ever smoked. Many c: aim .hit it Li as gool a tlio nmjority of those at 10c. Jomt A. Dadd, L'rupGi-t, Milwaukee, VTK Address R. VV. T ANSI LI, & CO., Chicago. Pi to Soldiers & Heirs. Scndstimp 5BI9IWll9 HAM, Att'y, Washington, D. C. for circulars. COL. L. mr finilin Mornhlne Habit Cared la lO IQLillll I to 20 Uy. o pay till enreJ. Ul lUL.i sir. J. Btcyheas, Lcbaaoa. Onto. We oiler the man who wants'service (not style) a garment that will keep him dry in the hardest storm. It is called TOWE1CS FISH BRAND SLICKF.lt," a name familiar to every Cow-boy all over the land. Wiih them the only perfect Wind and Waterproof Coat is "Tower Fish'.rand Sticker." a:td take no other. If venr storekeeper catalog e, A.J. Tower, a Simmons St., Ijoston. JI a,. TE '' One c One c Son A j Foi 1 Bac 1 A3 1 Mmli Br : r? j Ai TI Bi & A to to thi l0( in lU nc th dj bi 1 ol B CI 8 c . V, fl c t c t f;6 ft- t ... '.'A' R'-V 1.- i.
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 3, 1887, edition 1
4
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