Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Nov. 29, 1891, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
FOB FAKM 1D GARDEN. KEW MliTHOD OF 1'ttl'MXO GRAVES. It it announced that it French grow cr has discovered a new method of pruning the grape The cut is made at the node above I ho point where it is intended iho end of the wood shall evenliuUly remain, at the name time destroying the bud found llio"e. Tlio stump thus left is removed the follow ing yeur, when Iho death is complete, and when at its base a collar has been formed, which soon closes after the dead wood has been removed to iis level. The theory is that under this method the wood dies slowly ai.d without decomposition of the tissues. N'ew York World. FI.OOll FOR A STACI.E. A ttab!e floor should be dry and 11011-alisorbeut. It should bo of miiiio durable tuuttM'ial, mid should not be slippery. All these good qualities are found in cement saturated with hot gai tar. Hut a pood floor may be made of hemlock plank throe- inches thick, or of the same plank double, hut the lower one may be one inch thic' and the upper one two inches. This makes a water-proof floor, suita ble to go over tt cellar. The floor should slope two inches in the whole length to a ll'ii id sullicieat drainage. An excellent ground floor has been made of cement and coarse coal n!ies sifted from the small dust. This ma teria! binds well and wears well. One part of cement is Used to live parts of the coarse ashes. T11K SILO. It is a Question whether it is wise o silo corn without cutting. Itut few do it, and is it not probable that in getting it out of the si.o and feeding it, the itai-t.it corn entails more labor and expense than it would cost to cut it into the silo? As to cuuiiig it when it comes out, that seems to bo out of the question. M'-nry Talcott of Ohio, who has tried both ways of siloing corn that is cut and uncut has con cluded that i! does not pay to put c rn into the silo uncut. shall never advise lil'ing silos with whole corn stalk. Wo havt? tried it two winter, but it doe not distributo grain evenly- It is a h ud job to cut it up in the winter time or get it out of the pits in any way orhapu to feel, and the cat tle have a big lime pulling an I haul ing to get the ears of corn before thev wiil eat up the u hole stalk. To fork cut out or p ill out or get out of a pit, from ten to lif;e;i feet deep, corn stalk wet, -limy, stringy si nil' be gets the highest ef exasperation and the givatel need for prayer." One man writes us that ho ruts it out with a broad axe. and another says he us. -a common I nr.- knife. Hut we doubt if it pays to silo whole cornstalks. Hoard- l.i;r mail. How ID I' Ml. WITH I'll! ItiV. To fail in thi' chicken business, Wil liam I'. K C''. in larin and Home, savs, clean your ;! house on.-e a year. If your chirks have 1 ee, let ili.m alone. If you run liml only one kind, borrow from your neighbor ami start right. If there ure niiy erarks in the house, don't i lose thrni. as you may wish to ascertain -(hat roup and re head are. In ca-c the roup appears, just let it run; it will stop after a while and so will the chickens, and then you can boast that ehirkeas don't pay. l-'or drink i:i summer, k"e;i a eess. pool on hand; if you have none, by all means make one. If your fowls pet cholera, simply give nothing; per haps tl.ey will get on all right: I Won't insure this, but it is a part of how to fail. Let your fowls roost in trees, and if you have no trees put up poles ten or twelve fret from the ground, us the higher you get the purer the atmosphere. Agai'i, you need not pay any atten tion to the nests; the hens will look out for themselves. If one should batch abroad, let her hover near the pasture so the little fellow can go out in the do7 nml catch the gapes; then you can (.live feed, for they will not cat for some time, as it will require nil their lime to open and shut their mouths. M .MrroMs ai i t'i:i: of i;i..v ki.il. The symptoms of blackleg it cattle are: The animal becomes languid, the ears drop, the eyes are red, the mouth and nose, hot ami dry, the pul-e rapid mid feeble, from 8't to 120 beat per minute. In a short time swellings appear about the loins, bark, head, neck, brisket or legs. They cause pains and siifTnes", and make the, niii. mul unwilling to move- The appetite is entirely lost and the animal does not chow the cud ; the bowel are consU. pntcd and t:ic urine scanty find dai k in color. In a short time the symp toms of exhaustion deepen rapidly, Mio animal cannot rise from the g-.oiuid, the eyes become, fixed and staring and the breath shallow, and j f 10 animal often dies in convulsions. The we! lings aro cool or cohl to the touch and ure not very tender or pain ful. They are dark or nearly black in color mi have the appearance of in or. tilieatioii. There is as yet no specific for this disease. Ono remedy is: Tuke chlorate- of potash half ounce, water one pint; mix and give three time? day. Another js chloride of limo two drachms, prepared cha'k one ounce, laudanum two drachm, mix and give in a pint of gruel every two or three hours. Stiil another is to take sulphite of soda one ounce, chlorate of potash ono ounce ; give in a quart of water two or three times a day. A help w ith any of these remedies is a seton in the dewlap, which should be smeared with irritating ointment and turned every day. If any of the ani mals dio they should bo buried or burned at once, as ihe disease is very dangerous.. :t. Louis I'epujlic. ax iiLiiti v.v.o. An herb bed is a necessary part of a good kitchen garden. Nothing gives so much variety to the table as the proper use of herbs and flavoring. Herbs are in perfection in flavor jut before their time of budding out for flowering, and they should then be ga heied to dry for winter use. The simplest way of drying them and the best is to cut off their roots and harg their stalks from the rafiers of l he kitchen where they aro gradually dried by the heat of the stove. After theb aic dried, they should be taken down nd the leaves stripped earcfu ly from the stalks, pounded fine and put away in air-tight tin boxes for winter use. It is linii h caier to buy the herbs already prepared, but there is an im measurable ditlercne-1 in the quality of herbs properly dried and kept but a season and tlnv-e which have been dried by the wholesale methods of dealers and may have been in block for years. The best time for gather ing herbs for drying is on a sunny day, when the leaves are noi wet with moistu e. All herbs, like fruits, should be dried rapi lly in order to re tain the aroma, and for this rca-oti many people put t tern o:i pan and dry them in the heating clo-e! of the stove which is u-.: 'lly under the oven. They believe that they dry more rapidly there than when hung on the rafters, but in some stoves this rlo-et is so situated that t Intro is great danger of the herbs becoming scorched. Ail the herbs used in the best French cookery in iv be grown in a iiiall plot in the ordinary bark yard in our cities with very little rare, in i:th-'-icut quantity f u- the use of the average family. Summer savory, thyme, suvet mat j-'rie, chervil and tarragon may be ral-cd in this way and diied for family n-r. though tar. ragon is rather better fresh and may be rai-ed with p irs'ey in a win. low garden in a l.itch ' i dsring tin r p'd month. t'lilv-'s ,!i 1 ;.. i- v i 1 also thrive wi ll in a winter window gar den and arc :l:i important part of the outdoor herb garden in sth.ut.cr. New York Tribune. I KM Wli i. l:t'l W I Clean up the baru-yard- now and get ready for w inter. Il-nigli treatment and fright cause cow to sla in!, in milk. lie careful with tic teams when you have f itigii.ng woik for t U'mii to d . I'ottiag sugar in butter, instead of adding to the flavor, detnc: fr -on it. Hot day and nights are as hard on hor-es as they are on people. ctue flll to prevent e Id-. If a cow's it ddei and teats are lio; dirty il i'i wash them; -Imply rub them oil u ith a eioih or brush, or ev, u the htuid. Sheds for the coits and idle horses are now in order. If you can fiord nothing better put up straw she K They are as good as any while th -v !a-t. A half day spent in pioVmg the burrs from the pi!iuv field now may stive several times as much labor later on in picking them from the mams and tads of the hor-es. Koinciiibcr that it costs as mu. h to keep a poor row as a good one. If a cow that makes ini pounds of butter will "av for keeping," then one that makes ' pounds will pay a profit of lou per rent, on the outlay. It is doubtful if it p.i to sell hay, even at a high price. lie'ter prices can be obtained for it when it is con verted into meat or utiik, a the ma nure will then he an i'em in the profit. The lab if of bating, hauling and shipping of hay should also he addeJ to it cost. The Morj of a Toiuhsimic. Above the south portion of St. I'au.'s rallied1 il is a figure of a plui' nix, a bird f.iinrd in fable, and the Latin motto "I!e-u gam" (I l,all rise again). 'Ihe story goes that lifter the siz s and position of the vast ilotne had been into ked out, a laboier wan tied to bring a stone (to be used as a guide (o the masons) from the rubbish of the old cathedral (hat had pel i -lied in ihe great lire of L in Ion. It happened that Iho stone the man fetched was a bit of a tombstone, w ith nothing of the inscription iefl but the word Kesurgaiil in largo letters. The inci dent being regarded a of happy oineti, this word was adopted as a motto for Sir (.'hi ist qiher Wren's no ble building. The pl.u'iiix was a bird that was said to live for live hundred years and then to burn itself to ashes, out of which it came w ith renewed life for another period of five cen- j t uries. In choosing t his bird, allusion j was intended to tho new cathedral rising out of (he a-lies of tho old. Little Folks" Magazine, A BORE AN CAVERN. It Inhospitably Resents the l trusion of Explorers. From It3 Mouth Rushes an Irresistible Blast of Wind. ; There is a cave near Kockwood, Col., a station on the lenver and Kio Li rand Kailroad, w hich has been vis ited by many person. No particular mention of tho c.ive lias been made, as it seemed to be little worthy of notice. On Sunday last a number of pleasure seekers left this city to join a paity at Hock wood w ho had planned ; to visit the cave. About 4 o'clock in the afternoon the members of the party, having disposed of I heir dinner, began to climb the hill, near the top of which (he month of the cave is lo- . rated. After much exertion the formest of tho party rearhed the mouth of the cave, and bring in advance of Ids companions, they weie s'.nrtled (o si c him fail ba kward into (he low oak brush, as if lk' had been thrown from a catapult. Mi coii anions, push ing 1 rw.'ird more vigorously, soon ;-amc U his rescue and found him recovering, not lunch hurt, but slight, ly tcri'.clied and somewhat d.i.'d. lie rould gie no explanation of his Hid den removal from the opening to the :avern. Curious to know what the cause was, ihe entire company in a body pushed up I lie hill, which ha a par ticularly strep de-cent near the mouth ef the cave. To the astonishment of the w hole number, the itistant after stepping in'o the cave llicy found themselves all piled tageiher ill a spot near where the lir-t had lauded. It took bi.t a little while to recover from h entanglement, when they began to inquire the c.itl-o of I !il b sudden e--itciueiit. They all agreed Ilia! they h d seen nothing to rau-e such a thing, and the;, were curious to kn w ih-' reason for the phenomenon. lit how to find out w hat thev wished was the thing to decide. At hist it was determined that the strongest gentleman of the p irty should gain a po-itioii at the s;,v. of the entrance, mi I thus protected, gel an ipporiiiniiy to n onuoji r,.. s,i, hiking a circuitous route and avoiding a position just in fr oil -f the opening, they soon f nml theui-elves c!oe be. side the entrance. ( 'ant i.-ii-i y putting his head o .tside Ihe piote.-'ii.g wall, the f rciuo-i rered it. His hut im mediately took flight down iho declivi ty, but he wa dins made aware of the exact stat' of all.iirs. The philosophy of the current f iir in caves suddenly dawned upon him. As is well known, the air of a warm day in summer i much lighter oil (he outide of a cave or cellar than it i inside, fouscqucu'ly, the cold, liet.vy air I u-hes out w i h great vio lence -enough in (hi i-.imi to raiiso the tioubte -p ii,en of and throw :ht' party down (he hill. I.iUr. relating this tale, an old timer (old your mi respondent of a foitner adventure of his at tin1 same place. On a cold day in the early winter he wa tracking a deer along lhi hi! side, when he was astoni-hed to see (he rave open up before him, Hid he noticed that the snow serine I to htive been disturbed very recently, is though a ho ly had b' en di jigged Into the entrance. Without thinking he stepped for iv. ud lo examine into (he cau-e of the li-tiirhed itoii.li'ioii of the snow, when he felt himself violently pn'led into Ihe cave, tie! force pulling him from tils feet, lie f, U a -1 k. and for a while was oblivious lo all around hi it. When hi senses returned In; found ho ivas lying by and partially upon the 'jody of a dead d .er. I 'pou exituiiiia lion he found ti e bo ly of the deer et warm. Tnis led to a el iscr exaiiiiiiu iou still. II ' at hist determined that the force of the current of air blowing uto the cave had drawn tho deer in, Killing it, bill that when he was drawn In the shock was somewhat obviated iy his i. liking the deer, thus saving litu from death. The exphinaii in is iilst the icver.e of iho ether, the air Jeing wanner in-ide of the cave than aut. Tho current flows into ihe cave Juiing (he winter, thus nccoiini ing for ihe strange affair. IVnvcr ('ul.) t-uil. The Lord's I'rnjcrin Stone. Two men are now loud at work cut ting (he Lord' prayer in letters an hich deep and six inches high on the fare of a big rock on the P.ristol road, aoar Itut hind, Vt. They are hired by Or. toeen, of Buffalo, who pays them H"' for the job. The rock is a big as x house ami stands at a bond in the road, which here t ikes a sharp (urn md goes up a steep hill, it is about ho hardest place in Vermont for a team and in the season when training s liveliest there is more cursing ihero 1 fvery day than anywhere elo in Ver mont. It is possible (hat lr. (ireen's dea is to furnish the drivers with : iome new quotations. He was brought ap in the vicinity. Chicago TojI. ; A Tennessee paper publishes a de scription of a single grapevine on the McCoy flats, near IVg Biasly inouii lain, that extends oyer five acres of round. it bcy only on alternate reari. qVAINT ADCIRI01S. Battles aro gouerally followed by rain. There is a Chinese singing school iu Ban Francisco, Cat. Londoners writo 67,511 letters a day, requiring SO gallons of ink. Vienna, Austria, is rapidly becom ing the most Jewish city in Kuropo. In a Georgia barnyard U a young fowl that is half guinea chicken and half just plain chicken. From a cypress tree cut down in Florida thcro were gathered l.S pounds of pressed comb honey. A curiosity in Uipley, Ohio, is n sunflower in full bloom growing from a crevice it t the top of a (all maple tree. A perfume lamp, which burns co logne and spreads a delightful scent about the room, is the latest household novelty. The limited amount of rosewood now used comes from South America, and costs tdiout 7.ij per thousand feet, board measure. W. A. Keith of Buchanan, (ia. , has found n hard flint stone in the heart of a solid pine tree. I low the stone got (here is a mystery. A Topcka ( K in.) child drank half a pint of kerosene the other day and experienced no inconvenience what ever us iho result of Iho accident. A Mexican woman lUo years ( id has tiled her final entrv for liiOaere of hind iu Stanislaus rouuly, Cal. She i the mother of twenty. live children. Tho report of the Ibg-strar tien era! of Ireland shows that upward of lOo.onO acre- of land iu Ireland have gone out of cultivation since 1N'. Chii-ago Ii: nearly twice as in any miles of streets as any other city iu the world, and almost four times as many as New York. Their total mile age is Sols). Chrbe.'iipie Lhmd, in C'asei Bay, Maine, has a population of -l'lno, near ly all of bom are named Hamilton. There are '.'' 0 people on lite island who never saw a steam car. There i to be no smoko at the World's Fair at Chicago in lf-'.'d, a the cominiltee on ground mid build, ings has derided .hat anthracite shall bit burned in all the furnaces. The (Ireat Ve(ern Kiilroa l, one of the wealthiest iu Kugland, litis de cided lo abandon the "broad gauge"' of rail. This railroad was (he only one in Kugland that clung I he svstem. h' dndeer lle-h, w hich is said lo he tender, delicious and nutritious, is legiihuly exported from (he arctic zuies (o Hamburg, (iermuny, where it meets eager demand at about 1'.' cents a pound. The caiaeonibs of Home e nf.i i (he remains of about (l.i'oo.eoii i,,;uiau brines and thoso of I'uri about ;i,i'oii,(iml. The hitler w en- formei ly stone quarries. Many of the victims of the revolution of 17'.'J-11 are buried there. A Chinese lauiidrvm.iu in Tern been County, Trxa, advertises his (staldi-liiiieiil iu the newspaper of the canity with display type ami a ijiiai ter-coliiinn hiiinoiou- cut show, ing (he "Moliean"' men driving in donkey carls (o his torr. The group of seven blight (ar, popularly known in America as iho "iir. at Hipper,"' ate referred to as "Karl's Wagon" in Cerin any, and as "I hailc' s Wagon"' in Crcat Britain, the notion being that they are ar ranged in tho form of rude outlines of a wagon. Mali's New Mining ( amp. La Plata City is a new mining camp located near Ogdeu, liah. Dis coveries were recently made iu Ihe mountains near there and ihe camp now has a population of about eight hundred people, nearly all living iu tenls. The enliro country within a ciiruil of live miles has heru'taken up with milling claims and every m an is a prospective u illioiinaiie. The town is fciiiiiitcd iu a narrow gulch nud on both hhv of it Ihe mountains rise in steep slope. The claim from from which tho town is named is in Ihe b iltoiu of the canon, and even (he sand of (he stream contains mineral and is to be racked for shipment. Business of all kinds iu the way of supplies and provisione is rushing, and hack line air doing n laud officii bii-iness carrying speculators nud miners into camp. A newspaper is being talked of. The signiticeiit sign, Chinamen, Take a Sneak." is postcif conspicuously on the outskirts of Kit (own, and thus f ir has been obeyed lo tin- letter. A survey of ihe country is now iu pi ogress to de termine lines and boundaries. Ogdci V ligan are courting tho new towr in every possiblo way to catch it; (rude, but up to date honors are even ly divided. Salt Lake (I'lali) Sen Unci. Ills Nose Out or Joint. A little fellow was taken into his mother's chamber to seo for the first time a baby rot her. Tho three-year-old looked the infant over with a calmly critical regard and then, turn ing to the maid who accompanied him, ho said, very decidedly : "Jane, you keep (hat iu tie kitch-LUte. Value of Miuntn, TVrhaps there never was given a more stnking instance of the value of minutes than the following: A party of ladies aud gentlemen were (town through a very large carpet w tablish- nient, a few days ago. They were i pcrmitied to look into every nock and ! corner of (he building except one. At .the bottom of a stairway they came j upon a ch sed door, upon which were the words "lVsilivcly No Admittance." The curiosity of the Indira was now awakened, and one inquired eagerly, 1 "What is up then?" "Tttat is our workshop," exclaimed the representative of the firm. "We have one hundred and fifty women on that lioor sewing carpets." "h. I should o like to set them at , work,'' said the fair questioner, with a playfully lesrerhing look. "lam sotry that I cannot take you up there," re, lied the linn's represen tative, "but the rules are very strict. Hcally, there is nothing worth looking at, and there air no trade secrets there. The reason why the linn interdict isitors i because tho presence of strangers in the room causes every Mo:g w. ih.. in to look up, and lakes her ultrntiou off her work from one to live iniiitiles. Suppose each woman lo.-i .- an average of two minutce. With one biindr-al and fifty women that means a los. to the firm of three bun tired minutes, or live hours of time. That is loo much to lose when we are working under a full head of ftrani, as we are umv.'' Teaching a bill to Swim. Iu dei p water, under the care of nn i xperieuccd person, a girl may bf taught io "wiiii in a much shorter time than by practicing in shallow streams, says a good authority. A rope can lie fastenr d around her breast in such a manner (hat it will oeitbrr tighten Of unh -', and if courageous enough, she ran, thus prepared, plunge iu head lirsh The teacher w ill show her the proper way t i ti-r (he arms, and, finding her self j r, 'tn ted by the rope, she will feel more faith in the exertion made. The aid of the hand i: hone'er, far better than this, us it ran bo relinquished ii:etiib!y. The la st method of teaching on this plan is for a good sw immer to carry the iearm r in the arms into Ihe water until bnast high, laying her nearly Hat upon it, and supporting lit r by placing one hand uii lef the eh) St, at the same time gi'.ing instruction ii-s to the proper iie tion of the hands, nring nud feet. In it few days ti.e hand may be gradually withdrawn, and the girl swimmer able to do without it. There are very many "doniV about swim ming. I'nlike l'mich's, tliey begin after the in l is signed, sealed and de livered, and yo'i ure n fair swimmer. Tno most important piece of negative advice is, i.m"t ecr lose your presence f mind. With that you are mistress of the situation, and other things; not ovi i ivhehitiiigly against you, can reach laud again. Idlsaii and the "Haulers," We were silting on the piftza of Thomas A- K hern's boarding lioiise at Ogdcii. New .Icrsey, a few evening? foico. Dinner wa jut over, and the great inventor, surrounded by a doZeil or more employees, was enjoying a cigar. "Bring out your fiddle, Theodore, said the wiard, settling into a rocking chair and addressing Mr. i.eman, a young civil ngineer, who, by the way, is a protego of Henry Yillard. 'Inc fiddle proved lobe n splendid violoncello, and "Theodore" proved to be the m.i(erof it. Shurtert, llee thovi n, Sorveise and a dozen other author wne exploited, but Ihe air was dampaiid the catgut stretched. I .cm an looked evod, lightened and retiglitened tho strings, but the discord ratno again ami again. "What's ihe matter?'1 suddenly in quired 1-1 li-oii. "Tiu-se sirings stretch in the damp air," was the reply. The big gray bead dropped down into it. favoiite po-iiioii on (be uplifted lighl hand and rested there a minute. "Soak Yin in petroleum. That will keep the wit out and prevent them from stretching," said the inventor; audit maybe that fiddlers nil! bless hint forever if tiny try this simple reini dr. Ornllfl ins a All. Tlie tiinli pusiiuiti ntiiiinel end tKf nnlvernni Bret-i tanrf nml aj jtroval t.f (' lejuant lliiuid (niit rctm ily, s ni ef Kit,--, nn the mit neel leii! !xntiv! kii..wn. illu-trnto tl.e rnlun of tin- iii.ilitifs en wl.ii li it sinr-s M Iwwcd atitl an- al iiml.aMly j:r:ii if itii lo tie CuUdrriiia t ij! Sj rui' l'oni.aut. ttnlystx li,ir-. li ivr ever tr.uii'.l iwcnty ii.ii, s vt iiliin cut' lietir. THE RECORD (.f.ui ,-.ni.li-le -.1 In ll..l Sar-acarllla ha n-f l.-.-ii surpass .1 iu ili lil.t.iry of msj Irloe Mel in- (sin.titit am uf lett ri fr.im p.ula l;.i u .ilm -I in .IHJiir. Imt w recur I hy Hood's Sarsaparilla Kim .rill yn: It an of thus wa vra all li . 'itT'T fr s r .fnl.i. Sal sH.um or any other ,'ni. : ,-.i 1...I t.i In ure i.l l or low taie of I ha M s(, III. I . 11) Hi, . I's M,r Uirirl 1 i. N II If ii.u .1- .a le lo lake lloorl'. yarsarllla do l.i I I r H .In r I l- I itv ali otlti-r. III! i.l's I'lIU t nln r lie the liver, regulate tha l. w. ls 1 ,le I 1,.. lull Ullllc. I rlll'.S-. DONALD KENNEDY Of Roxbuiy, Mass., says Kiiinok'.s Mi'i!ic;il Discovery l inos Ilnrriil OKI Sores, Doep-S-iito-I UK-cm of 40 years' i ft;iiitlin. Inward Tumors, and ' everv tliscasi! of the skin, ex cept Tliunilor Humor, and Ciiiu'iT that has taken root, i I'ria-, $1.50. SoUl hy every Drus'ist in the Uniteti States ' and Canada, I lie was Colonel by Marriage. A traveller in Texas pays he was rid ing along cattle trail near the New Mexico hne.when he met a rather pom pous looking native of the region, who introduced himself as Colonel liiggins, of Devil's River. "Were you a colonel in the confeder ate army?" the traveller asked. "No sah." "On the I'nion side, then?" "Xosahj nevah was in the wall." "Belong to the Texas Hangers?" 'No sab; I do not." "Ah, I sec; you command one of the Stale militia regiments." "No, sah; I don't. Don't know nothing about soldiering." "Where theu did yougtt the rank of colonel?', "I's a colonel by marriage, sah." By marriage? How's that?" "I married the widow c.f a kuniiel, Bah Kunnel Thompson, of Waco." U III Flghi la a fininht A lone (he I glit last nninne iho wn'.i i.tlur niattufacturor., (U t"i lelity Wall J'.i ter Company, of No, 1-' N .ritt LU-vemh stfee', l'l.ilaitrll liln, I I j.ia- ll.e 1 ill lie tlif ilvl. tigo o( tin r.toi in lice-, o u net llil- Irmn them tliio t. t-to l nn r luuct-m s-iitinn r iHiii)ilott il.eli ltlii,ltu uikI ivmha ecu. till, A I'ounoctiiMit merchant advertises 'iron beiltti-Hits ami bedding." FITS n'eppcl free by Da. KuxK's Great Nf.kvk KKstroitF.R. No flu after lirst diy's use. Marvelous euro, 'frost iir ami ft trUt boltiflrce. Dr. KllhC.sVll Area S( 1'bilx, 1'. The temple ef Ilcim-nmn-ji, t Ikrpiinl, begun in li'sUaml finished in 1 107, is uic t the ni 'i f.iiiniusreligioui.slriietuicsin Jniiriii. Hall's r(Brrh Tare is ll'i'ii l nt IsUkea internally, hold -' Irii,'i.si-, TV. Cehi is slii!cd abroad in krgs. From Father to Son. .frofula is a blood poison which It is a taint which must be eradicated from the system be fore a cure can be made. Swift's Specific, S. S. S., drives out the virus through the pores of the skin and thus relieves BOOKS, OM ft LOO AMD SKI1 DIStAM.S I lli:F. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO,, Atlanta. Ca. "August Flower" I lii'i J.tcn troubled five months with Dyspepsia. The doctors told me it was chronic. I had a fullness iftrr eating and a heavy load in the pit of lny domac-ll. I sufl'nvd fre quently from a Water Ilrash of clear (natter. Sometimes a deathly Sick ness at the Stomach would overtake me. Then aain I would have the terrible pains of Wind Colic. At such times I would try to belch and could not. I was working then for Thomas McIIenrv, Drujjist, Cor. Irwin and Western Ave., Allegheny City, P.i., in whose employ Iliad been for seven years. Finally I used August Flower, and after usiiij; ju-t one bottle for two weeks, was en tirely relieved of all the trouble. I can now eat things I dared not touch before. I would like to refer you to Mr. Mclleury, for whom I worked, who knows all uhxmt my condition, and from whom I bought the medi cine. I live with my wife and family at 30 James St., Allegheny City.I'a. tinned, John' I). Cox. H C. (I. ('.KEEN Stile Manufacturer, Woodbury, New Jersey, I. S. A. Tutt's The flrat rto oftan aatookhoa tha Inralld. giving rlaMtrlty of nilnil, honj anr of tMtliy, GOOD DIGESTION. I rrKUlar bowelaand aollil rth. I'rli , lie F.I.V'H C'RKAU I.M f rplinl Into S.uitnu In gulv klr l.rl-.l, rlfaiiKm the llea.1, Uila (Ha borisi ao.i C ut. a CATARRH. II. -a-li Miif (rui, Mia -. imn iRxrfali t SliiSI nr) n'' U'pf UlUll trllitio. avrla. a jcai. Bam(ia o4 Iim, ir. J . U. D Y E. tdiuir, Cuaaio, V. I. !MM Ko Pension. K fti JOSt.I'll II. IIUNTKI1. n AS111MU1U.N. 1. P ills Ul.siiS Kt:MKlV FOB CATAr.UU.-Hejt. Isieit to li. r ( tienpeai. lU-IK-f u immediate. A cuiu Is veruiii. li ( old in tlie Head II baa no equal. It la an Ointment, of which Boatilla. Filer, 80r. Held ti) Addicaa. loney MCNET Di CHICKENS IT TfOl' KNOW HOW To kri-p Uiem. bnt it la wror to let the poor ihin( Sillier and Die of the va r:ou 11a adiea whi. h nlflii Ihrm l:n In matorilv of crea a ('tire run d haie l.n n eflertcd bad the omier ioeeeM-d a lltl-e knnnl-nlt-e .iirh aa caa be pr urtd from lee -. niiiinnrn unt Hununtu Dine onnv f 11 al nrtniM'Wo. in fill P$k rttttaVRONab FihS (& t. 1 THI ORlOINAL AND GENUINE ThfplT fftfo. fcetrr. tit rtUmf' pt t It r itf- 1 5 VJ LaxHM. a U uto-i Vt'"i '' i4 a i-. i . t t ;;4 a-.-t w y ff tK.te tlb M-j-nhtenr,. Til i I . k V f L I fd. fiV'W. .M.'hft.mi fl.. U.jfi,inl, V ATI ptiu im IM AAA TrlineDlKl ' f-w.' 14 r aU La1 rHU !4f-v m COrVRlCHV (SSI i- It (joct back all tho money you've spent for it if there's neither benefit nor cure. That's what ontjht to be said of every medicine. It would be if th? medieiuo wore good enough. Iut it m said of only one medieino of its kind Dr. I'iercc's Golden Medical Discovery. It'n the guar anteed Llood-purilior. Not only in Starch, April and Mav, when tho sarsaparillas rlaini to do good, but in every season ond in every case it cures all diseases arising from a torpid liver or from impure blood. Tor all Scrofulous, Skin and Scalp Discasee, Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Biliousness, it is a positive remedy. Nothing else is as cheap, no mat ter bow many hundred doses are offered for a "dollar. With th'u, you pay only for the (jooit you get. And nothing else is "just as good." It may be "better" for the dealer ; but you are the one that's to bo helped. descends from parent to child. AFFLICTED FROM CHILDHOOD, Mis. N. Kltrte.r, ef ifacksy, Intl., sny: "Justir com pels me lo sy iuat S US. H. has workrU btlio short of a tairucla In my case, in rurinp tus of ugtrravated Scrofu la, whica kfllicted me from chilohood. It attacked my ibroatand nose, aad threatened my Inn us. My throat was so soro that I was ooaipolied to subsist on liquid food. When I begun S. K. d. I was in a wretched cundi tioa but commet.ccJ to Improve ut once, and am cow entirely well" the blood of the poison, ORATEFUU-COMFORTINa EPPSS COCOA BREAKFAST. "Tlf k ihTrnjrh knowing of tt.m fiftftiral liwl wh en jrovrrii tb i'i" r.tt n f i $m Van Mi l DUtrl 11 -it. h a earn ul t!k- f tUe ttn i mi cr ti-t t ol- if.'tiM ( mi, Mr, 'y t h ft cmrbrefcrl tabti lih a d.U.Ail-r nfu:ird bT traie wblob mar v u mau eta d.xjiori lull. It iM if to Ju4iv':j um uf 'i.tt arUeUd of dl- l thai a .sjciiHutioii nr r duaitr iuMl Uuuili vnxia anoujo id ronat every t:iJiicy lo ill. MiiulrJuf ttibtU mUJt r floating arounJ ut fr.lf 10 atiacx wbra'r iht U a wean punt, VCm ih-t etcapa manv a faial ttiaft ti artlu iir Mva wiil fartlfle 1 til pura N--l a .1 ynprrlX urUhptl frarna." "iHril rvte$ tianttU, R'c rlmpiy uriin hjillac wtr -t nult. Ko.d lu !ial-u ;M i nn. t r-H. i. lahrlle Mini J A M Hi tri'l ( ff . K-n ropaulo riii'm.l ere Wm lo !frn mi n'xrat i - none ? flow to ri.-k Oulft i CoodOue? Know impvrffi Hew. t.a mi UiAril ncaiiifft 1 I rrtuC. ? Irtfot nmnisr t 1 V"" mml ' IBti'taCur who Miutlt V poM.lle .' Tell tlie agr Iu v V I lirTtolhf Ulut to.all the Mtrrul Vtrlt "I tl' ' cliiJ .' ll., to si, c a Hoik I'r. prrlr.' All IliK . l-lislollirr Va U-.I.Ie llioraiatlon can la ohlalnaJ 111 ; rt.Jlug ci.r lOO-l'AOE I I.I.I'STIi ATFII IIOICSK linoK, wht ii n. or.ll ..r.arJ. 4 ; rsl, on rrn-li'to; vnij JJ irota la atawai. BOOK PUB. HOUSE. 134 Leonard St., Nw York City. PuifHionii iint n ..i.iiii.nsi! itnat'.rO r I. Iu' lrl. Jl .-rs ! nariani-r. nir lof l.as. A M t i-niili K b.iV.o. WMll-iToH. t . C. 4 ClM S)41I. O. PATENTS W. T. HirctraM, U shlnt'n. D. ( . 4U-aogr htiab frra. ( HI UTAUQUA JV.V.! w,t l.i rhaillnuqiin OMt'r, hinviir IH. Dnanl.1. N. V. MUSIC i e ri M. co , (rw. r nih a-.o, hi. ATLAS pJtSS! 25c. Wahj it i.i-..,t-.-..r. AIm a amu t ..r lUl-Tuia ttoti rIafiro . tUffm-iiE sui-k "in;iis frt-rni i.uvrrumrni, taiui I'r -Mfe 'al-i. ,ty o i ailJiras n-a I'm- lUi h, lj Moar l bi.t h. X JEKTILATEO CLOTHINP &,i.ni...l irt .11 cliini.ie auit var atlon of trn- .Ti.Iwr. . N'lfl lijr l-H'Il m rrr rnwili in piiuripji lllr. Illitsiiai.-.l ib-.i"! ei alM'D '. Ilnrdi rlolJ Kalirl. ('., Tray, N. V. a mull partli le It api.tl dritaelsH or sent tv n.ll . f. IU"- '' Chickens. a ntan who ilvotfd ttrt of hia I'ff iiiCoMiVfliN'S A rui I.THV YAKJj AS A -M'MN l-S. noi a a ia Ufrif. At ih liv ni vi U in a If and (aiui'v Te iwiulrd on tl. in k'JtNR Ihe ruliei t iu It attt'iiiittii a only a Utft( ul htt-aii V com Biaiul, and Ihe n auilHaaa f rain! it crm. adcr he hut ici t nut; h iiidiuy and l(t l.ii.iilrfl- of t.ilitabie f tin k t i ii in tXMi; wniii g W hat hf !enri. d ih1'' rur 1 U rnihud.a i th-ft bHk li'thM pttftpjiti ft 25 cants inumia. Il (. a' n it ha v loTVIrrl ai t Vurf fira"'. tiic.v l l'-f d fur Kufl nrd aVo fof F ..nn. nr. whi h Vow a rm hur for Hrcdn.B i'tir.ot at tt rv'-ry.hit p. mdtTl. ' btntid kMirv un ih;i ti W IHttilt T HOl'sK. 131 I -Kl.-Mll M.. N. V t'itfl 4mmtr u nmnlrfi l;i CHiCMCrifi Chemical Co , u I'KH a i I I'M) i IT T i TTi liMT fiTi "Murwui mir-inri XXX
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 29, 1891, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75