Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / July 12, 1888, edition 1 / Page 4
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FOR FARM AND GARDEN. $? ' Mow to IlalcU DuckV Efrg. Ducks uro poor sitters and poorer mothora in fact the Peking are almost non-nttera. S.t your ducks eggs un der hens, or ia an incubator. Mako the bottom of tho nest of earth, and covei with hay or cut straw. After the first few days sprinklo the eggs daily with tepid water whou tho hen is off for food. Take the samo precautions against lice as you would when sitting hens aro on hens' eggs. Ducks' eggs are general!) fertile and hatch well. H the sitting h--:u or the incubators, at teud strictly to business, you may count on from 90 to 100 ducklings for every 100 egs set and they will "hold out," when you couut them after they are hatched. Ducks' eggs in an incubator require tho samo degree of heat as hens' egg.--I Prairie Farmer. Mo!utoe Affected with Rot. A few year ago the rot struck pota toes her j tho first week in September, and nearly nil tho farmers dug their crop3 at oi! c . Tho result was they had to kcej) picking over all winter, for many were so slightly specked with rot when dug that they wero overlooked. I did not dig my potatoes until some time during thclirst half of October. When I did dig them nearly half were so rotten as to ba scon at a glance. I put the sound ones i jl tho cellar and did not have to pick them over. I have practised this plan successfully for years. Potatoes intended to winter should rumiia in tho ground as long as possible without danger of freezing. Heat, I think, is what rots potatoes, and they will keep cooler in the ground than iu the cellar. AVheu rot strikes potatoes, if they are dug at oucu many of the affected ones will Lc overlooked and put in tho cel lar with the goo I ones, causing them to rot also, but leave them in the ground until cool weather comes and all the rotten ones cat be seen and avoided. New E .glaud Farmer. Sight Tra implanting-. It is claimed by seme that trees, if transplanted at night, will do better than if reset in the daytim?. We know that the sua lm an influence upon cer tain plants and flowers, iut to what ex tent it jillects trees is not definitely known. A party who desired to ascertain whether or not thcro is any difference between daylight and night planting, transferred ten cherry trees while the same were in bloom, commencing at 4 o'clock it tho afternoon, and planting a tree every hour until 1 o'clock in the morning, and tho result would indicate that the dark hours are better for the work than ttie light. Those trans planted during tho day shod their blos soms, producing little or no fruit, while thoso planted in thj dark maintained their couditiou fully. Ho did thesam-j with ten dwarf trees after tho fiuit was one-third grown. Those transplanted during the day shed their fruit; those transplanted during tho night perfected their crop, and showed no injury from having been re moved. With each of those trees he removed some earth with the root?. Americuu Farmer. Vrrtifiro in IEire. Horse vertigo or staggers h some times due to brain disorders, congestion, or the clucking of circulation from com pression of the jugular vein by a badly fitting collar. But the most common cause oi vertigo h plethora. The fa vored or petted horse is overfed, and men a nine violent exercise on a warm day and in the ttrong glare of sunshine produce vertigo, the animal throws up Mi head, hakcs it rapidly, or rears and falls backward, ai you have described. If the horse is fat hU diet should bo re stricted, and a rather laxutivo food should be given for a time. Avoid tiht collars, and h;ltcr tin top of the head from tho direct rays of the sun by a sun fchade. u hen taken out for a drive in hot weather place a wet sponge betwee : tho cars and make fa3t to the headstall or place uuder tho band on tho top ol his head. Siuuid the horse be attacked wiiue unving, stop at tue first sign of Uizzi ess and throw a handkerchief or blanket over his eyes to shut out the light. Then if cold water is obtain able, apply it freely to the head and neck. A few minutos' rc3t will bring the animal around all righA But the sunchade and wet sponge should not Le dispensed with during hot weather il the animal i suYjoct to vertigo. New York Su . Mirm Handy Cnrei. The Secretary of tho Connecticut Farmers' Association gives tho follow in for publication, raying it comes from one of the lw t iarmers in the state: I have seen orci in a while in the papers how to kiil ticks on sheep, to kill lies on cittle, to cure the gapes in chicken?, etc. To kill ticks on sheep I buy a ball of snuff, three or four pounds, or enough to go over all the hecp at once; I cut the snuff and pul verizi it on the table on a newspaper, put the snuff in a glass jar; I take the jir, a large peppor box and a table spoon, an I dip tho snuff from tho jar into tho pepper box half or two-thirds full, then I take the sheep gently, lay her on her side, open tho wool and shake the snuff on the 6kin in places three or four inches apart and close the wool. I put more of the snuff around tho neck, and in about three days, if it is done well, there wont bj ticks nor nits to send a telegraph despatch. The snuff is a sure cure. . To cure the colic in sh-ep, I dtooV. tablespoonfuh ol epsom salts i about a half pint of warm water and add one teaspoonful of essence of pep permint. I tako hold of the sheep and back her to some comer in the barn, then open the sheep's mouth with my left hand, press the left thumb against her jaw, then put a small funnel in her mouth ; the boy pours the salt while hold tho sheep. In about two hours the sheep will bo all right; if she don't get well in two hours I repeat tho dose. To kill iico on c ttlo I take about a pint of kerosene and rub it all over the cow with a woolen c oth then card against the grain and with tho grain. Sure cure. To cure warts on cows I wash the teats before milking and rub on castor oil I rub it on before milking. It won't drop into the pail like water. It limbers the teat'. I had a bal case this summer, the cow's teati wero covered with large wai ts so that they bled. 1 bought a gallon of castor oil, mod the most of it on her all summer. The warts are all cone; tnc castor on uiu ir. The cure gapes in chickens prevention is better than cure. The first year we came to this place, ten years ago, we brought out sevouty-tivo chickens; they ran out doors and at the sink spout a ijood part of the time. That year the chickens had any quantity of gapes. Next year when wo set tho hens wo put air slacked lime and su'p'iur in the nest?, took tho siak spout away, carried the slops and poured them under the apple tree and kept clean water before tho chickcus. From that year to this we haven't had a gap or a gape; as soon as tho chickens camo out wo givo them cornmeal mixed with water. Our neighbors h ive lots of gapes. I think dirty water is at the bottom of tho trouble. VThit to Cut Gran. The practise of most good farmers is to cut grass early, as soon as it is in bloom. The quality of the hay is not only better, but by starting eariy there is more time for cutting, curing a id se curing, in summing up tne results oi analyses of rearly all tho cultivated grasses, the analytic it cueiuist oi tne Agricultural Bureau say 4 it is apparent that in most cma th;i time of bloom or thereabout is tho fittest for cutting in order to obtain the most nourish ment and largest relatively profitable crop, and . for tho following reasons: The amount of water has diminished and the shrinkage will, therefore, be le:-s. The weight of the crop will bo largest ia proportion to the nutritive value of its constituent. Tho amount of nitrogen not present as albuminoids. will be at it lowest point; fibre will not be excessive as to preve it digestion, and the nutritive ratio will be morj ad vantageous. If cut earlier the shrink age is larger, altho' the fi :jre is less and the albumen a little larger. The pal- atability may be i .created, but the total nutriments to the acre will not be so large and the nutritive ratio will bo more abnormal. The disadvantages of late cutting are evident in the increase of fibre, destroying the digestibility of the nutriments and the falling off of the albumen by conversion into amides. This is uot made up by the largest crop cut. To our hay-making readers, says tho New York Independent, we would also oinmend this bit of timely and sensible advice from the New England Home stead: Cut the hay early when the crop is very lijlit. plow, harrow well, broad cast on what manure you can scrape up (or any good fciti iz.T will pay) and plat to fodder corn or millet. Both crops will be off in season for fall seed ing, when the manure ma le through tho summer will come into good me. This is the best way to treat fields that are nearly ruined by tho drouth of former season-, uuless you have manSre and time enough to grow a hoed crop. farm and Oardpn Note. Blackberries do bjst in a moist, shady lec tioa, no matter how dirty from weeds. A retentive soil is best for strawber ries. It should be well drained and kept in a ptroui condition, if necessary by bubsoiling. An excellent method of protecting the iron of farm tools from nut is to paint them with white lead and tallow. Tnis wi!l not dry and may be easily washed off with a little spiiits oftur- pcnti.ic. The garden should be near the house and free from shade. The secret of success in gardening, according tot New Hampshire man, as in courtship, us in small attention?, frequently and steadily bestowc 1. When the larmer shall begin to esti mate the value of sheep from the stand points of meat fertility, and general ad vantage to the farm, ho will not allots the market price of wool to detcrmino whether or not he will laisc them. To have abundant bloom, roses re quire close pruning, rich fertilizing with d.cayed cow-pen manure, a d some pjwdered charcoal; a mu'ch cf black soil from tho woods or c m-pen manure, and the flowers must not be permitt d t expand and fade on tho 1 u.h, but cut in tho Lu 1. Diagnosed by Telephone. Great are thj wonders of tho tele phone. :A physiciin reports to Gaillard's Medical Journal thit he wat save 1 a two-milo ri le through a driving storm tho other night by having the patient, a child, brought to the instru ment, and held there until it co.ighed. He diagnosed false croup, prescribed two grains of turpeth mineral, and turned in for an undisturbed sleep dur ing the remainder of tho night. He "ind the pitient in the morning doing ri ly -nder thj care of another doe-tit. QUAINT AND CURIOUS. A North Carolina colored man has a head which measures 32 inches in cir cumference. An Eaglishman has written a pam phlet to prove the pedigree of tho devil. He dates the old chap back 11,00( years. Among tho list of dologatos to tht Pennsylvania Stato Prohibition Conven tion appear tho naraos of thj Revs. Lusher and Booz. The skeletons of six men who must havo been giants were unearthed the other day, along with much pottery in a big mound near Kankakee, III. Immcnso numbers of stoats and wea sels aro being imported into New Zea land, in order that they imy destroy the rabbits which are a pest in that country. The appearance of womoa upon tho stage appears to havo been unknown to to the ancients, aud Charles II. is said to have first encouraged such a thing in England, i i 1662. Joe Mclvw, of Watkinsville, G.i., has a rather peculiar form of neuralgia. He can walk, talk, ride, read or s'aad in comfort, but tho miautj he attempts to swallow anything, even water, he suffers most violent pain. General Soabcin Starke of J-'ffcrion, Ga., born in 180), and jut now a shoe maker, has beaten the snare drum ia four wars, beginning under Jackson at New Orleans, and going through tho Seminole war, the Mexican and the war between the states. James Goudie who is living in Evanstoo, 1 1., claims the honjr of hav ing built the first ocean steamer, the Royal William, u vessel of 1C00 tons burden, which was constructed at Que bec in 1832 and made atrip from Pictou to London the next year. Oae of tho largest plantations in the South is that of M i jir B. W. B llamy, in J.'fferson County. Fia. It comprises 8000 iicres and nearly all of it is in cul tivation. M re thai 1500 colored peo ple aro employed oa tho plantation and Iho Major knows them all by nam.!. Mack Hamilton has recently per formed some wonderful feats of 3ating and drinking at II dona, Ark. Brides chewing and sw.illowiag iargo qui i ti des of porcelain and glass without harmful effects, ho drank a gallon of boiling water at a time us it hj enjoyed it. Eddie Williams of Franklin, Me., weut hunting and tho gun ho carried "kicked" very hard when he fired it. A few days afterward h: was taken ill and died. The recoil of the gun had caused concussion of the baso of thj braiu, pro ducing parti .1 paralysis of the spine and digestive organ?. The snnllest Laby in Chicago, was born a few days ago to Mrs. Danske, tho wife of a teamster. Tho diminu tive infant weighs sixteen ounces---one pound avoirdupois -and Mrs. Dansko rocks it to sleep in the palm of her band. The baby is perfectly formed and has a h?althy pair of lung. During the tima of tho Enpcror Ner va of Rome therj wero uiuo aqueducts which emptied themselves through 13, 594 pipes of an inch diameter. That constructed by Louis XIV. of France for carrying the Bacq to Versailles is 7000 fathom i long with 256 fathoms of elevation, and contains 242 arcades. The violet was the chosea flower of the Napoleons, and the scarlet carna tion of tho Eng ih II use of Stuarts. To this day mysterious hands yearly deposit at Frascati. aud in St. Peter's in Rome, where lie the remains of tho Cardinal of York and other members of tho House of Stuart, wreaths of scarlet carnations. Routing Great Speakers. Some of the most cxpciienced orators kavo been disconcerted by very trivial circumstances. Daniel Webster, rising to speak at a poultry show, was unable to continue ii rivalry with a giant Shanghai which began to air its lungs at tho same moment, and had to resume his seat ia confusion. Erskine was al ways extremely sensitive to a lack of m tvrest by hi3 audience. "Who can get on with that wet blanket of a face of yours before him?' ho said once to Gar row, who was engaged with him in a cause. His first speech in the House of Lords wa3 a humiliating failure, owing to the action of Chatham," who, as a speaker began, took up a pen and made a few notes as if with the intention of replying; but after li toning a few moments, he dashed pen and paper upoa the floor with a con temptuous smile. This indifference, real or pretended, completely upset Erskine, whose "voice faltered; ho struggled through tho remainder of his speech, and sank into his seat dis pirited, aud shorn of his fame." Burke was also extremely sensitive. Solwyn relates that he rose of one occasion, to speak, holding a bundle of papers in his hand, when a rough-hewn country mem ber started up and said: "Mr. Speaker, I hope the honorable gentleman docs not mean to read that large bundle of papers, and to bore us with along speech into tho bargain." Burke was so suffocated with rage as to bo incapt bla of speech, and rushed out of the house. "Never before,'' says Selwyn, "did I see the fable realized of a lion put to flight by tho braying of an ass." Gentleman's Magazine. An Agreeable Climate. Montreal Lady (to Americar finan cier) Do you not find our Canadian climate rather cold, Mr. Boodle: ? American Financier Oh, not at all; it agrees with me. I left New York be cause it waa too warm for me there, Texas Sutings. Bis Eaters. "The eaters of my time," trrota ICareme, in lh3: "were the Prince da jTalleyrand, Murat, Junot, Fontaues, the Emperor Alexander, George IV., 'and the Marquis do Cussy. Men "who know how to eat are as rare as good cooks. Look at the great musicians and physio ians," he goes on, with en thusiasm; they are all gastronomers; "witness Rossini and Boieldieu, Brous saia and Joseph Boques." The last named backed this up with his trea tise on "Edible Mushrooms," main tainiug that doctors who make a nama Corvisart, Broussais, and half-a-dozen others are epicures for their patients' sake as well as their own. They can get a convalescent to eat when nobody else can a fat which explains their success. Modern Lon don, too, we aro proud to say, can boast its successful medical gourmets. De Cussy it is vain to expect an au thority from him s-aid that Leonardo da Vinci, Tintoretto, Paolo Veronese, L'accio Bandiuelli, Guidoand Raphael, were all noted gourmands a fact whieh has not yet, perhaps, had its we'ght in estimating the naive abstinence of the pro-Eapbnel'tea, who might even havo been vegetarians almost to a man, to judge from the tvpe of their landscape- gardening. None of the foregoing groat men had the beatitudo of dying at table like some of the smaller fry. Dr. Gastaldy, a man with a wit and a palate so olten met with in the Al manac h de Gourmaiultt, died with a champagne-glass in his hand and a joke in his mouth, Griniod de la Keyniero's great-grandfather's death was exactly like in a fit of laughter, his lips still wet with Ay. Here is a fact for Mr. y". t n ... uaiton: nnanciai instincts, too, were hereditary in this family of farmers general of the revenue. Napoleon, as all the world knows, ate very plain food, and littJo of it. though always with hunger and rapid ly. A little claret was all he drauk; a single glass of Madeira would flush his whole countenance. He was neither an eater nor a judge of eatiDg, wrote Carenie, but he was grateful (was he?) to M. de Talleyrand for the style in which ho lived. He differed widely from that poor Stanislas of Poland, who fondly studied onion soup in tbe inn kitchen at Chalons. Napoleon had a strange theory about his bile. There is no personal defect that a man can not get nimseii to bo vain of, tor one reason or another. "Don't you know," said he to the Comtedo Kegur, "that every man that's worth unvthmg is bilious? 'Tis the hidden fire. By the help of its excite ment I seo clear in diflicult junctures. It wins mo my battle !" Caremo him self ate sparingly and drank nothing a sort of Moses if the promised land by choice. fill 1 1 I T- Alio SKeietqn I'aganini was an ap palling glutton, being ouly beaten in that by Cambaceres. 53uch men should be objects of pity alone, like the great Athenian chef, Archetrastes, who ate enormously and digested with ex traordinary rapidity. It could not have been assimilation, for, according to Polybius, he looked as if the wind would blow him away, and one could almost seo daylight through him. There is one clear old story that al ways comes up in talk about great eaters; it has been toUl oi' all sorts of guzzlers, from a city alderman to the ju ige of appeal at Avignon, under tho ancien rtgime. "And then, sir, we topped up with a gorgeous turkey, a fi rat-chop bird never tasted a juicier melt in the mouth crammed with trulHes to tho eyes bouquet h io word for it left nothing but the bones." "How many were you?" "Twol" "What! only two?" "Yes. Two. Why not? The turkey and oajgeJUr London Saturday Review. Worthy of a Laugh. Eldest daughter Mamma, who is this John Bright that the English pa pers notice so much ? Literary mother (reclining on a sofa reading Joseph Cook's last lecture) fohn Bright? Why, he's he's Let ne see ! Isn't he the man who invented Bright's disease ? "I haven't had no lesson since yester iay," pouted Johnny. That means you have had a lesson, n laid the teacher. "Who remembers A hat I said this morning about two neg ttives in a senteuce ?" "I do, I do," yelled the smart boy on .he front seat. "You said two negatives nade one infirmity." Texas Sif tings General Pkeievalsky, the Russian ilibuster, has set oat with a band of Cossacks for Thibet, with the aim of ;reating a pretext for Bussia to read ,ust her boundaries in that part of the ivorld. A Twenty Years' Experience. 770 I'roadwav, New York, March 17,1888. I have been using Allcock's Porous Pus r i rs for 20 years, and found them one of ths best of family medicines. Briefl . summi- g up my expiencc, I say that when placed on the em -11 of the back Allcock's Plasters AH the body wi h nervous energy, and thus cure f atigue, brain exhaustion, debi ity and kidney difficult es. Ft.r women and chil lren I have found them inva'uab e. They l ever irrit.te the 6kin or cause the slightest pain, but curj sore throat, cr juoy coughs, colds, pains in eide. back or chest, indigestion and bowel complaints. C. D. Fredericks. To aspect to KOt to heaven by singing is ;iutint; to cnams. Cures btj IN EVERY ONE A CURE. Return of PAiji ' AT U RUBGISTS'AND DEALERS'. The gHAs-AApEEiER Co Balto-Md GINSENG A! MW SKINS Bought for cash at hitrhest market prices. Send for circular. OTTO WAGNER. 80 Prince St.. New York. AH FPrln Ladies' book of Fancy work. 160 new crazv Stitches, 1 doz. Frineed Naokins.(GAe. 6red) 6 Curious Puzzles, with our Paper 3 months on trial, for 12 cents. YOUTH. Boston, Ma. Blair'sPills. Gres! English Gou! ani oi i n .i . . IUIBUnHUI6 MW Oval Bax. 34 i raaad. 14 Fills. Pure Blood Pigs, English Mastiff, St. . 3 lSfrnarrt & Foxhound Pups lore. Cataloiniee ISO engravings free. N. P. Boyer ft Co.. CoateBville. Pa 5 8 a 4t. BamslM worth SI JO. FKEE. Lines not under the horse's feet, write Brewster safety Rein Holder uo., Mouy, aicn. 2 CTDXpTC rge MAKIf'ACjE PATE It. V IXShlh Address Box 85. loledo. Ohio XiXt KUVELTIES for Aeais. tend lUu for catalogue, to wu. Novmlxt Co., Hartford, Com A Honse Wlio Can Talk! Everybodv has heard of n "horse laugh," but who ha ever seen an e iuiuo $U'tel with the power of -speech? Such an animal would be pronoun1 od a iniiMcle; but so would the tele graph and the telephone have be n a hundre 1 years ago. Why, even very recently a cure for consumption would havo been looked upon as miraculous, but now people are beginning to realize that the dis ass ia not incurable. Dr. Pierre's iolien Medical Discovery will c ire it, if tiken in time. This world-renowned remedy will not make new lungs, b it it will restore diseased ones to a healthy state when all other mexns have failed. Thousandscan gratefully testify to this. All druggis.s. Having soT a their wild oats prematurely some rapid youths essay to reap the same with a bicyclf. 'As glares tne tiger on nis rocs Hemmed in by hunters, spears nd bows, And, -re he b unds upon ihe ring, ' r elects the object of his spring." So disease, in myriad form.-, fastens its fangs upon the human race. Ladies who.sulftr from distressing ailments peculiar to their sex, 6hould use Dr. P.erce's Favorite Prescription. It is a positive curd for the most complicated and obstinate cacs of leucoi rh' a, excessive flowing, painful mo istruation, unnatur.il sup pressions prolapsus, or falling of the womb, we k bi:ck, "female weakuess," an' eversion, retroversion, bearing-down senations,chronie congestion, inflammation and ulceration of the womb, inflammation, pain an I tenderness ia ovaries, accompanied with "internal heat." When a lady is sowing, she is& reality not what she seems. Don't distrust eve-ybody by b wt'ng, blow ing and spii ting, but use Dr. base's Catarrh Remedy and be cured. It doesn't take a kitten Ions to win his purrs. wads m m i lias been before the public now about ten years, and in that time has proved itself to be all that it lias been represented. It is purely vegetable. contains nothing harmtul, and DOBS purify the blood and CURE dis ease as it puts the Kidneys, tlie Only oioou purifying organs in complete health. It Cures Permanently. We have tens of thousands of testimonials to this effect from people who were cured years ago and who are well to-day. It is a Scientific Spe cific, was not put upon the market until thoroughly tested, and has the endorse-i ment of Prof. S. A. Lattimore, M. A., Ph., LL. D., Official Analyst of foods and medi cines, N.Y. State Board of Health, and scores of emi nent chemists, physicians and professional experts. H.H. Warner & Co., dol not cure everytning from one bottle, they hav ing a specific for each impor tant disease. Fight shy of anv preparation which claims infallibility. The testimonials printed by H. H. Warner & Co. are, so far as they know, positively genuine. For the past five years they have had a stand ing otter of $o,UU0 lor prool to the contrary. If you are eick and want to get well use WARNER'S SAFE CURE. OLD Is worth Msm pet m. renin, rye bit a XX worth S1.00U, but Is sold at 25c a box by aeaterfc or a case of Catarrh in the Head which they cannot cure. 150 cans? OLJ A CATARRH IB THE HEAD. SYMPTOMS OP THE DISEASE. Dull, heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal passages, discharges failing: from the head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody ana putrid; the eyes are weak; thore is ringing in tho ears, doafness, hacking or coughing to clear tho throat, expectoration of offensive mat ter, together with scabs from ulcers ; tho voice is changed and has a "nasal twang"; the breath is offensive; smell and taste impaired; there is a sensation of dizziness, with mental depres sion, a hacking1 cough and general debility. Only a few of the above-named symptoms are likely to be present in any one case. Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half of the above symptoms, result In consumption, and end in the grave. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, less understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians. taoN Sense Treatment. If you would remove an evil, strike at its root. As the predisposing or real cause of catarrh is, in the majority of cases, some weakness, immiritv. or otherwise faulty condition of the cure the disease directed to the removal of that cause. Tbe more we see of tbw odious disaaso, and we treat successfully thousands of cases an nually at the Invalids Hotel and Surgical Institute, tho more do we realize the importance of combining with the use of a local, soothing and healing application, a thoroMjrh and persistent inter nal use of blood-cleansing and tonio medicines. I Chief I B Dciiivpc I In curing catiirrh and all which it in so freauentlv ! bronchial, and lung diseases, weak stomach, ca tarrhal deafness, weak or inflamed eyes, impure I lILURnUb. blood, scrofulous and syphilitic taints, the wonder- I f ul nowers and virtues of ical Discovery cannot be too strongly "si rC M A. Am WjI W imJ .aV 1 W AA . X'y 1 S J Sold by Druggists. 25 Cents a Vial. SEIKO PTJREXVir TEGETABI.E, Dr. Pierce's Pellets operate without disturbance to the system, diet, or occupation. Put up in glass viate, hermetically sealed. Always fresh and relia ble. As a gentle laxative, alteratlTe, or active pnrgauve, they Rive the most perfect satisfKct'.on. NERVES! NERVES!! What terrible visions this little word brings before the eyes of the nervous. Headache, Neuralgia, Indigestion, Sleeplessness, Nervous Prostration. All stare them in the face. Yet all these nervous troubles can be cured by using 1 For The Nervous The Debilitated The Aged. THIS GREAT NERVE TONIC Also contains the best remedies for diseased con ditions of the Kidneys, Liver, and Blood, which always accompany nerve troubles. It is a Nerve Tonic, an Alterative, a Laxative, and a Diuretic. That is why it CURES WHEN OTHERS FAIL. $i.oo a Bottle. Send for full particulars. WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO , Proprietors, BURLINGTON. VT. Butcher's-:- Lightning FLY KILLER Is quick death ; easily prepared and ust-d ; no danger ; flies aon't live long enough to get away. Use it parly, freely ; rid the house of them and be at. ne.ice. - Don't take anythhiR " just as ttood." There is nothln-x like the genuine Dutch er s. KRGD'K I) DTtiHElt, St. Al-ans, Vt. rnM I" WELL DRILL All cuttings of tbe drill in clay. sand, gravel, rock, Ac, are discharged at surf ace without removing tool. Noted for success where others fail. Drill droiiH 7U to HO times a minute. Profits large. Catalogue Free. LOOJIIH & NYMAN, TIFFIN, OHIO. II EG K-8 Improved Circular SAW MILLS EQUAL TO ANY. EXCELLED BY NONE. THE $300. Manufactured by the SALE! IRON WORKS, SAL KM, N. V. rcmes, .etc. Addrrt for JVice Ut. ttuWoiiu.FlttlbU'gh.FiC stamp Great 7ni Seiiit's. Tents. Breech loadHtr double Shoteun at $9.00 ; Sin! imrrel Bivwh l wdi-rs at $1 to $13 ; Kreech-loadinpr Kiil's$i..9 to 15; Uoulile-barrel Muzzle loaaem at t.) $:; ile!:tillCT ltitlrS f-sliootr, $14 to 3U: KOTumr', $1 to :) ; Klobjrt Killes, $4.50 to $S. Guns sent C. O. P. to cx:imin. Revolver bv mail to any P. O. Address 401I.N 8TOV3 liKEAT WESTERN UVS WORKS, Pittsburg, Prnna. JONES Jrea Ufert, Steal Biarlaii, Bra tmnmmm ui mnm mm QOO. auntlra this pMr m4 Um JMtC IF llHIHAMTII. BINttllAHTUN. N. 31 ASTHMA CURED metiate reiuj in lae worse catseHaneures coiniurv abloeleep;efToctacare?vriierea'lotherfaal A 81.0U,oDra8t8orbvmaiL Sample FREE M forstanm. DbTK. 8CHIFFMAN78t. Paul, Minn.M MILE Mgrease ktk l Pf1ie WORLD Ef Get the Qenulne. Sold Etch where. BLOOD POISONING, CANCEIt" nndTUIHOUS positively CD ICED or no i; y. A tlve-dollar remedy sent on receipt of fifty centu to prepay postage Address THE HART MEDIClNh CO., Cnionville, C't. TCV A C I A Nn 5,000.000 acres best agricul- CAAd LfllCl tnral .-Mid ernzin? land for sale. Address, fiODLE V Ac PORTER, Dallas, Tex. fCOPYMOIIT, 1SST. and restoring it to Ldition. As a Local Agent. system, in attempting to our chief aim must bo effects 'jpon the the various diseases with complicated, as throat. Dr. Tierce's Golden Med extolled. It has a specific Wr THE rrTLE Matchers. J Permkent Cures. PURELY VEGETABLE ! PERFECTLY HARMLESS ! Am a Z.TVEWL PllXy they are Unequaledl BMAliEST, CHEXPSST, EASIEST TO TAZB. Beware of Imitations, which contain Poisonous Minerals. Always ask for Dr. Pierce's Pellets, which, are iitue sugar-coated rma, or Anti-bilious Granules. ONE PELLET A DOSE. SICK HEADACHE, Bilious Headache, Dizziness, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all jlerange roenta of the stomach and bowels, are promptly re lieved and permanently cured by the use of Or Piercers Pellets. In explanation of their remedial power over so great a variety of dlsossrs. may truthfully be said that their action upon tbe system to univeml, not a gland or tissue escaping their sanative influence. KaBBfadond by WORLD'S DI8PEXS1KT 1EBICAX ASSVCIITIOIT, BUPPAXO, jim PMO-FORTES. ENDORSED BY THE LEADING ARTISTS, SEMI NARIANS. AND THE PRESS, AS THE DEST PIANOS HADE. Prices as reasonable and terms as easy as consist ent with thorough workmanship. CATALOGUES MAILED FREE. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. WAREROOMS, Fifth Avenue, cor. I6tti St., N. Y. N U 20 mran MtM Wholly unlike art i Aria I si si ems. I nre of mind wandering. Any book learned in one rendl-g. Classes of IOS7at Baltimore. IOO.j ot Det roit. 151MJ at Pluladilnhia. 11 13 at Waehitmton. at B inton. larso classes of (Columbia Law students, at Yalp, Wellosley. Oberhn, University of Penn , Mich igan un!ver ity. Uhautanqui, o. H.nnors'iO by Kichabd proctor, til Scientist. Hons, w w.abtR Judih P. Benjamin, .fudg Gibson, Dr. Brown. E. H. Cook, Prin. N. Y, State Noimal College, 4c. Taught by corresp ndenre. Prospectus Post FREE from PROF. LOlSE iTK, 237 Fifth Ave.. N. Y. OUR UTTIE GEM TIME-KEEPER" JUW wnai everjr-uuuy needs. A Perfect Time Keeper. ItiiNO HUMBUG, . or a cheap toy, bntathor oiighly reliable tellerof tho tinieoidav,inSflwA':M Bunting Cote, fully war- ranted. Cheap watches are poor time-kceprrs. The Little Gem can a!wnyi be relied upon. For. (or 25 two-cent tamp), wo S will send our Illustrnitit j paper entitled Toitth, IotG month and clve as n nre- M mium absolutely KRKEcf 25 contthc Little Gem Timc kprner. in a Handmmo Piano polished wood Cat, (me cut). For 10 eta. extra will send an ele Knt watch Chain and Charm. Money returned if not ajdewribia For a club of 3 and tl.lO wewilliHnd3subscriptionand3Time-kper.Writeto-daT. Youth run. co.. muu su. bostox, mass. CONFIDENTIAL! The Confessions of an Escaped Nun. Book is not on our list. EDITION LIMITED. Send at onco. Price Reduced to 35 Cents. Address A. CHASE, Dedham, Mass. ttttteaHSBawaBasa TRADE JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS., WARRANTED PURE White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Orange Mineral, Painters' Colors and Linseed Oil. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. m Liveat home an'l make more monryworkins for us than Ui anvthinfr else in the world Either sex Costly outfit FBKB. Terms KKtli. Address, TKl'E & Co., Augusta, Maine. its natural, thin, delicate, moist, healthy con- blood-purifier, it is unsurpaesca. as more ELOUS 1 iHIlS jg 6 'sSSSv M l PURE 5 cr I 3 VlO WHITE J l g - w V 1 ' m ' S TRADE SSMARK. it, issr.i effect upon the lininir mucous membranes of the nasal and other air-passafres, promoting tho natural secretion of their follicles ana ..nia kV.v onfran.no thu riiiionnnii nnd thickened membrane. which complicate catarrn are aiseaBi-s oi vuu nuin UJ"W"J( hranes, or of the blood, it will readily be Been why this medicine is so well calculated to cure tbcnx , As a local application for healing the diseased condi tion in the head, Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy is beyond all comparison the best preparation ever invented. It is mild and pleasant to use, producing no smarting or pain, and containing no strong, irritating, or caus iLwJ.iZ. w nnin. This Remedy ib a power ful antiseptic, and speedily destroys all bad smell which accom. panies to many cases of catarrh, thus affording great comlort to those who suffer from this disease. The Golden Medical Discovery is tho natural "helpmate" of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. It not only cleanses, purifies, regulates, and builds up the system to a healthy standard, and con quers throat, bronchial, and lung complications, nhim anv RuHi pilots but. from its specific lining membrane of the nasal passages, it aids brane to a healthy condition, and thus eradicates the disease. When a cure is effected in this manner it is permanent. Both Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy are sold by druggists the world over. Discovery $1.00, six bottles for $6.00. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy 60 cents; half-dozen bottles $2.50. , , , . , . A complete Treatise on Catarrh, giving valuable hints as to clothing, diet, and other matters of importance, will be mailed, post-paid to any address, on receipt of a S-cent postngc stamp. Address, World's Dispensary medical Association, No. 063 Main Street, Buffaix, N. Y. 3lZC OV PELLETS. O O O o o o ORIGINAL LIVER PILLS. 5J "1
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 12, 1888, edition 1
4
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