Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Sept. 15, 1904, edition 1 / Page 4
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, Points for Parents. "Study the child and discover where his greatest interest lies," says Mrs. Theodore W. Birney, Honorary Presi dent of the National Congress of Mothers, discussing the "Choice of Oc cupation," in the September Delinea tor. Mrs. Birney very warmly advo cates, a kind of natural selection Hvhich is indicated in the trend of the child's play. It is suggested, and with ' reason, that a child's toys and favorite pursuits are & sure index to its vocation. The plan is founded on child-study, and, as the author says, "If parents gave to the careful study of their children one-half the earnest thought that they bestow upon mat ters of minor importance, we should see far fewer 'round pegs in square boles and vice versa." Odds and Ends. British soldiers are provided with "boiled water for drinking. The water Is first clarified by a kind . of rough filtration through charcoal contain ing a certain amount cf potassium per manganate and then "sterilized" either by filtration or by heat, after which it is distributed to the troops by means of water carts reserved for "safe" water only. Heaven's house of lords is the house of the lowly. FITS permanently cured. No fitsornorvonS" riess after first day's uso oi Dr. Kline's Great NerreRestorer,$2trial bottle and treatise f roe Dr.B.H.KLiXE,Ltd.,931ArchSt.,raila.,Pii. The most widely known English writer in Japan is Carlyle. Tiso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds. Y. Samuel, Ocean Grove, N. J., 1'eb. 17, 190J. License ia paid in Londen on 7000 auto mobiles. It is not so much what you pay for, but what you get that needs close attention when buying funeral supplies, and so Btrongly impressed -with this fact are thos3 who know what they are doing that they insist on laying their friends away in "Natiosal" caskets. Unable to Answer. Judge Hewitt was on the bench in the western district of the state, and Col. Billings was trying a case before him, says the Philadelphia Ledger. :The judge overruled so many cf the exceptions of the lawyer that Billings got out of patience, and srjpke so se verely that the judge at last demand ed, in a voice of thunder: "What does the counsel suppose 1 am here for?" Col. Billings looked sadly discon certed scratched his head, thought a moment and at last, with a bland 6mile, replied: "I confess, your hcucr has got ma now." ACHED IN EVERY BONE. Chicago Society Woman, Who Waa So Sick She Could 3fot Sleep or Eat, Cured by Roan's Kidney rills. Marion Knight, of S3 N. Ashland. 'Ave!, Chicago, Orator of the West Side Wednesday Club, says: "This winter vviien istnrtea to use Dojui's Kidney Tills I ached in every bone ami had intense pains in the kidneys and pelvic or- gans. The urine was thick and cloudy, ami I could barely eat enough to live. I fplt n change for the better within a week. The second week I began eating heart ily. I began to improve generally, aud before seven weeks had passed I was well. I had spent hundreds of dollars for medicine that did not help me, but $6 worth of Doan's Kidney Pills re stored me to perfect health." A TRIAL FREE Address Foster Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all dealers. Price, 50 cts. Rapid GrowM. of Harbin. Harbin, the chief Russian city in Manchuria, shows a remarkable in crease during the last four years. Ir 1900 there was a population of 6,000, but in a year's time it- had doubled ltnelf and in 1902 it was nc less than 20,000. The increase in railway traf fic on the newly opened railway began to bring a large number of immi grants and in May, 1903, the returns give the total as 44,000. In six months' time it had increased to 60,000, ex clusive of the military, the employes of the railway being no less than 11, 000. It is said that at the beginning of this year the total was 80,000. ggjyk g"B"fev A Household Remsdy .r HlirPQ scrofula, UUI C ULCERS. SALT RHEUM, EC ZEMA, every form o,f m alternant SKIN ERUPTION, besides being efficacious in toning up the system and restoring the con stitution, when impaired from any cause, it is a BLOOD BALK fine Tonic, and its almost supernatural hesiiag properties u3tifv as in cusranteeina a euro of all blood diseases, if directions are followed. 81 FOB SAI.K BY T)RITKr:fSTS. II II QTNT EBCCBO'1K 0F wondf-rpcl cures,, J Ottl I I llCC together with v'.ctMe information.. BlC BAL C O .ftT LAN T A, GA., FREE BAMPLE Of "THE STORY OF SIT Liril AHB WORK," By Booker T. Washington. Bend ua your name and, addrees. We -want yon to have a copy of this Autobiography ot the greatest living Negro for the purpose of introducing- it in yo-ur community. Tr li n remarkable seller. War profit; agents are mak ing from S4 to SIO per day. Wiilr you intro duce it by eellir.s or getting V3 an asent? If so. EenJ at ence tor a sample. i J. I NICHOLS & CO.t 1 . Jl41n 4" Belling Price SI. 00. QlS-AustcU. BuilOini;. ;o. 84. Bore Eyes, Barry Co., Iowa City, la., have a sure curs jUJILLBGRG SPRINGS ' A College For Young La.dies. Located in the Allefhanes. Elevation, 2 ECO feet 3ry, pure air. and a variety of mineral wafers' fcnlvrrrity. collegiate and preparatory c.mrsc fpecial advantages in voice, piano, elocution and ft New England Conservati l v methods. Terms rnifSerale. Session begins &'pt.2?l4. Addrees J. 6KAHAM BATIKSOX, B8lnei5ti.;' VlUboto Springs, 1$ atU County Virginia. Bfi Agricultural. jl.. . v The Hen That Give Winter Eggs. Poultry houses should now be put in fehape for winter. Mend the windows and clean the glass. Coat felt roofs with hot coal tar and sprinkle with fine, sharp sand. Bank the walls out side with earth and leaves covered with boards. Store a few loads of gravel and dig earth. Arrange to make the roosting place extra warm by lining the walls and use of curtains. Hens which roost warm by night ttnd keep dry and busy by day will lay win ter eggSi If the new houses are need ed, now is the last chance for the sea son. American Cultivator. About Weeds. Whether fertile-or poor, the soil seems capable of producing weeds. This is due to the fact that as there are so many different kinds of Weeds on a soil there will be found some kinds that are adapted to the condi tions. Weeds are nature's restorers of fertility. The poorest soil will in time become the location of some weeds that alone will grow upon it, and as these weeds cover the ground they assist in the storage in the soil of the nitrogen brought down by the rains, while min eral matter is brought from the sub soil to the surface. As the soil becomes richer in plant food it gradually ap proaches a condition in which it can also support other weeds, and they promptly appear to do their part. When weeds are not destroyed, they should be kept down, for they are usually indigenous to the soil, and will sometimes defy drouth, cold, heat and close cultivation, but they are nev ertheless man's friend at times as well as his enemies. What is desirable with all weeds is to keep them under con trol, for should they assume the mas tery their eradication is slow and ex pensive work. Growing Rape Profitably. Most of the failures in growing rape are due to the impression that the crop may be grown on any soil one happens to have vacant. As a matter of fact, rape requires a rich soil; hence one should be well posted on the uses of the crop bafore giving up valuable soil to it. While rape makes its best growth when the seed is sown early in the season, after the soil has become warm, there is yet time to sow it and get good returns in any section where eight to ten weeks of good growing weather may be depended upon. Clay loam rich in vegetable matter is the ideal soil for rape, and if the field is divided by a fence so that a portion of it may be pastured at a time, its feeding value will be greater. The host way to pasture rape for swine" or sheep is to turn the animals on to it for but a small portion of the day, letting thein 'have the grass pasture the rest of the time. While fowls may use the rape field as a run, we have had the best success cutting the rape and feeding it to them on the grass range or in the poultry yards. Rape is one of the crops it will pay to ex periment with, at least to the extent of a small area. Indianapolis News. Tig and Poultry Cures. Not long ago we lost a number of fine hogs from cholera. An old friend came to us just after the plague had run its course, and when he heard of our loss, he told us how he had man aged for years to keep his swine in perfect health, even when cholera was an epidemic in his neighborhood. All through the year he once or twice a week would feed to each hog an ear of corn which had been smeared with freshly run pine tar. At first they wouid not eat it readily, but soon ac quired a liking for the taste. It is such a simple ounce of prevention that surely it will be worth while to try it. In the same connection, I will tell what I use for sorehead among my fowls, with the result that I have never lost a single one, nor had it to spread among my flocks. It is simply to grease the afflicted ones with an ointment made by stirring vaseline thick with sulphur. Lately I happened not to have any sulphur in the house, when a pullet was brought in with her head in such a condition that her eyes were aimost closed. I had her well rubbed over the sores with mercurial ointment, and then confined her. The application was repeated once a day or two later, and in less than a week she was turned out perfectly well. Mrs. Henry Wight, in The Epitomist. The Dairyman and the Cow. The- world to-day needs thinkers as well as workers. Some are content to work, and others to do the think ing for them. Some think and compel others to do the work. The dairy in dustry, especially, needs such persons. He or she who deals with animal life or animal products needs a more liberal education and more skill than the per son who deals with vegetable life and products. The lower form of life is utilized to sustain the higher. The dairy cow is a highly organized form of animal life. She is also a form of artificial animal life, made so by man, and in consequence, needs a superior person to attend her and supply her wants. Natural conditions are no longer consistent with her acquired habits. The herdsman who exposes his charge t snow, sleet and cold rain, hot sun, flies, scanty food, or gives her cruel treatment, fails in the essentials of successful treatment of the dairy cow. In the handling of . cow products great strides have been made in recent years The setting of milk in crocks has been superseded by the modern creamer, and this again by the cream saparator. Each step in advance re ouires more skill and forethought, but if they are lacking, the modern meth ods become a hindrance rather than a help to the dairy. The markets of the world are more exacting ach year. None but goods of the finest quality will pay for ex porting, ' and the home markets are each year more critical. More intelli gent and more skillful makers of dairy goods are asked for now than formerly. In addition to being able to make good Butter and cheese, men who mauags factories are suppose!, to be able to make out invoices of goods shipped, tt keep accounts, to figure fat due patrons from weight of milk And test, to test milk, cream, etc., with the various testers, and, above all, to keep things In and around the factory in a. most cleanly and orderly manner Profes sor Dean, in Farm and Live Stock Journal. '. ;,Li f- 1,- i i rr ir ' t , The Care of Trees. It is not reasonable to expect that every tree planter will have observed proper precautions in planting and earing for his ornamental and fruit trees. It therefore frequently happens that the removal of large branches becomes a necessity. The question arises, how shall this be accomplished with as 'little injury to the plant as possible; in other words, how shall the cut be made? Those familiar with the propagation of plants from cuttings, as well as those who have observed the results of pruning trees, will have noticed that when branches are cut at a certain dis tance from their origin, the stub which is left invariably dies, decay follows, finally the rotten stub breaks off close to its origin, and a cup, which catches the rain, is left. This is also an at tractive spot to many birds and rodents which are fond of nesting in such Pig. 1 Progress of decay due to im proper pruning, a, dead stub; b, decay of heart. places. They assist the natural work by excavating, and thu accelerate the work wmcn tne elements nave Degun. The result is that the branch which. was removed for the purpose of length ening the life of the tree and to im prove its appearance has in reality been the direct cause of its early de struction. The decay in the stub which breaks off near its origin does not stop at that point, but the factors which have been the cause of its decay and death con tinue their work upon the heartwood of. the plant until the hollow trunk of the tree only remains. On the other hand, if the branch is removed at an other point, the wound is rapidly cov ered by new growth, and In the course of two or three seasons it is practically impossible to determine where the branch formerly appeared. These re sults, which are so important to the life of the tree and to the success of the plantation, whether ornamental or economic, are well understood by all plant physiologists. The stub which is left when the branch is removed, if cut off at some distance above its ori gin, invariably decays and leaves a hollow branch, while the branch which, is cut off close to its origin almost in variably heals quickly, the new growth covering the wound. The accompany ing illustrations are taken from actual specimens. In order to facilitate the healing pro. cess in the plant, all wounds which arfr made should be left smooth; that is if it "is necessary to use a saw in re moving a large branch, the cut surface should be left smooth and clean, partic- Fig. 2 Results of correct and incorrect nmninff X rnwnrf m ofh rr1 - attar rwtx years; 13. incorrect method. ulai-ly around the edges. The satv should be sharp and should leave it clean cut, and this in turn should be made smoother by the use of the prun ing knife or sharp chisel, as the healing process starts quicker and progresses more rapidly when this precaution is observed than when a rough and jagged surface is left. It frequently happens that, in order to obtain the best results in removing large branches, two cuts should be made that is, the branch should be sawed off eighteen inches or two feet from its origin, in order to prevent splitting down and tearing off a considerable portion of the bark. After the weight of the branch has been lessened by cutting away the main part, a second cut can be 'made and stub held in po sition until the cut is completed, thus preventing the. splitting down and tearing of the bark which is likely to result from the careless removal of large branches. -i Farm Notes. The growing stock are carrying your poeketbook. Watch them. Last year you said you would have good pasture for all your stock. Have you? If you are raising calves (and you aught to be) the dry lot is not the place for them. Are the pigs in the clover? They ought to be some place where they can be happy. Is that pig in the pen near the kitchen? Somebody is losing some thing if it isn't. In all your plans for your young stock, don't be persuaded to favor any thing but a thoroughbred male. Now is the time when it's profit or loss on the lambs. Don't forget to see that they are doing their best." How is the rape doing as a pasture for hogs and sheep? Didn't you try it? Well; you missed another chance. Stock water is just about as import ant as stock feed. This has been quite a wet season over a very large area, and stock water is riot much of a ques tion yet, but be ready for August and perhaps September. The Adirondack Mountains embrace an area of over 2,800,000 acres, and in this great area fully 300 mountain paks rise to altitudes: ranging from 1200 tg 5000 feet " lil mm m i gMn i ft I hI An Original Subject. One of tha subjects taken up the other day by the Progressive Health Club, a . feminine organization of Chicago, was how to make husbands eat what they dislike. , . (The Modish Nightgown. . The modish nightgown is of the chemise order. It is made with low neck and short flowing sleeves and slips over the head. The neck is drawn up with ribbon threaded through hand made buttonholes. Woman's Trump Card. A woman's winning card is cheerful ness. She may be capable of countless self-sacrifices, infinite tenderness and endless resources of wisdom, but if she cloaks thesje very excellent posses sions under a garb of melancholy she may almost as well not have them, so far as the ordinary world is concerned. Where Woman Is Heroic. The determination to do her duty at all costs inspires the society woman of to-day as much as it did the defenders of the British flag at Trafalgar. She goes into action with a grim resolve to dance and dine as all her friends ex pect. Though her back is aching, her head splitting, and she knows she is grewsomely bored, she will heroically go through her day's program, fortified by the consciousness of having done her duty. Ladies' Field. Gorgeous Pillow Top. Given a square of art canvas and some green, yellow, black and red braid one may have a gorgeous pillow top. The canvas should bear a design of some kind in the centre, which can be embroidered in outline or cable stitch, and strips of the braid, which should be about half an inch wide, make a gay border. They may be ap plied with machine stitching. Where the strips cross at the corners they should be interlaced, basket-work fashion, ends three or four inches long being left to form a fringe effect. Lingerie Bats. The lingerie hats of exquisite batiste or mull or fine Swiss embroideries and Valenciennes lace are lovelier than ever this season and innumerable changes are rung upon combinations of lace and flowers. Nets plain or dotted with large chenille wafers are shirred and pleated into airy, broad rimmed shapes and trimmed with flow ers and soft silk scarfs. Shaded straws and straws of count less new weaves are shown. Linen hats inset with lace and picturesque in Bhape are among the new offerings as well as more severe linen models for outing and mourning wear. Garden bunches and flower wreaths divide the honors, and there are many flowers and bud fringes which are used profusely. Cockades, choux, ro settes, mercury wings, cupid wings and quills are called into service for the sailor hats. The Modern Trousseau. No one thinks of getting a trousseau nowadays to last fcr years, and if they contemplated such a thing it would be a dead failure. A modern bride gets an outfit for immediate wear. In dress we live from hand to mouth, and the gowns of three months ago are like the "snows of yester year." Women of to-day reset then: jewels almost as often as they order fresh garments. There is no saving in anything. They spend the money in quality, and not quantity. No bride nowadaj-s has an immense number of dresses; she is content with her wedding gown, the more gossamer the more fashionable; a traveling costume for going away, with a stoic and muff to match; four evening frocks, one black, one satin, one lace and one a tulle or thin ball gown; three smarter day gowns and a tailor-made or so would suffice a dozen of each article of underwear, and half a dozen petticoats of various sorts will pretty well complete the outfit. Is Woman the Equal of Man? Dr. Lyman Abbott, in the World's Work, says that doubtless the enlarge, ment of woman's educational and in dustrial opportunities has been accom panied by some intellectual errors and some practical evils. The most serious of these errors is the opinion that equality of character involves identity of function; that because woman is the equal of man, therefore she Is to do the same things which he does. Those of us who have been interested in claiming and pressing for woman this larger life do not deny there are distinctive feminine and masculine spheres of activity, and that each sex renders the best service to society within its appropriate sphere. What we object to is the endeavor of the male philosopher to evolve woman's sphere out of his own consciousness, and shut her up Yfithin it; what we insist on is that both sexes shall have equal liberty and equal largeness of life,' and that each shall find its appro priate sphere for itself. Tbe English Wife. "If you are thinking of marrying an Englishman and making his country your country," says an American girl who has done this, "do, begin imme diately to take an interest in politics. All the upper-class people being in pol itics in England, the woman who is not posted shows herself a horrible ig noramus, and it is difficult to cultivate a taste for public affairs when you have never before given them a thought." Miss Eose Kingsley, daughter of Charles Kingsley, when she was in this country a few years ago lecturing upon art, said that the least educated of the English girls would be ashamed to show the ignorance of politics of which an American girl boasts. All English girls of to-day are expected to be well informed in many lines, and politics is one of them. A bright Eng lish girl, Miss Lyon, who recently mar ried Lord Acton,' was noted for her ae complishments among thein a knowl edge of art, music, languages and poli tics. Nev York Press. Color and Texture. Those who study the art of dress are well aware of the effect of color on texture and of texture on color On this occasion we will deal with positive instead of negative examples. Taffe tasthe mania Of the moment looks best in black, gray or violet. Voile and crepe de chine do well in gray; canvas appears to advantage in blue, brown or mixed colors, and lace must be white, black or of a deep cream shade colored laces are unspeakable. Then the same applies to the matter of evening gowns. Crepe de chine is at its best in white, mauve and orange color; chiffon succeeds in black, gray, pale blue or pale green; velvet is good in gray, black, emerald green and ruby red, and satin satisfies in white, or, il' of soft texture, in palest pink, blue or yellow. This year materials are of op. posing qualities taffetas are bright and rather hard; voile and crepe de chSne are soft, while cloth and canvas lire firm and solid in texture. These differ, ences mean that more than ordinary care must be taken in the choice of then? colors. - - Paris Evening Gowns. There are 'several different models for waists, some of which call for long flowing sleeveg, and others that have only the band over the shoulders, and then the short sleeve drooping below. The long sleeves must be of the finest materials, unlined, and their length is only regulated by what is becoming. The simplest of all evening gowns for summer, and which can be made up with, very little cost, are the pretty flowered muslins and batistes that this year can be bought for very little money, comparatively speaking. While a silk foundation is of course always satisfactory, it is not absolutely essen tial with these muslins, and many of the smartest are made up on thin un derskirts, either of the same color or of some contrasting color. A charming little model for a flowered muslin has three flounces with rows of shirring at the top of each flounce, and bands of entre-deux and narrow lace on the edge of each flounce. The waist is in baby style with a deep bertha, the upper part of the bertha, made of six rows of shirring, below which falls a square bertha of the finest batiste and lace in sertion, and the whole gown is exceed ingly dainty and effective. Such a gown can be made at home easily Harper's Bazar. JL Bachelor's Tea Dish. A bachelor maid with a small purse and a large spirit of hospitality has conjured, up an afternoon tea dish which may be useful to others who have to entertain under difficulties. A delicious charlotte russe which would cost fifty cents if bought from a ca terer this young woman makes in her own sitting room for less than twenty cents. The materials are a pint bottle of cream, at ten cents, and six lady fingers at six cents, and a deep pint bowl with a good egg-beater are abso lutely necessary. If the hostess un derstands her work, the cream may be beaten in one minute, while the tea is brewing, but care must be taken not to knock the bottom of the bowl, as so many do. This is why a shallow bowl means failure. Don't omit a small pinch of salt. Slant the beater a little; don't divide the cream, and beat stead ily and briskly for the time mentioned. At the last few turns sweeten and fla vor. The lady-fingers should have been previously split and placed up right in a round glass dish. If stale they may be dipped quickly in orange juice. If the charlotte russe is made some hours before it is to be used, melt a teaspoonful of granulated gelatine in a tablespoonful of orange juice or water; add a small after-dinner coffee cup of boiling water, and when cool beat through the cream at the last. This keeps the cream "up" and gives also a pleasant smoothness. New York Tribune. TalHf About mankind One gveat secret of beauty is to dress in a modest, ladylike manner. Have a few good flowers on your hat instead of a mass of tawdry ones. No matter how fine your gown and hat, you will look badly dressed if your gloves are ripped at the finger tips. If you spend all your money on a showy gown then you have to buy poor shoes or wear your shabby old ones. If it is neatly made and well put on a gown that cost twenty-five cents a yard can look quite as stylish, as "one that cost ten times the sum. Simplicity is the keynote of good dress. Eccentricity is always bad taste; do not strive for unusual ef fects; be content with simple girlish styles. In buying a shirt waist, for instance, it is far better to choose one of fine material without any lace than . one that is of coarser material and cov ered with coarse lace. If you do your hair neatly and never wear a hair ribbon unless it is fresh and uncreased; if your collars are clean and your shoes neat and your dress conspicuous only for its modest harmony, you can be a very pleasant object to gaze upon. It is better to wear no ribbons at all than to wear crushed and soiled ones. Just at present so many girls wear their hair turned up in a braid and tied with a black ribbon. In many cases the ribbon is dusty and shabby. The style is pretty and becoming, but if you can't afford a fresh ribbon don't, wear one at all 3 ( iyrV "ft.. - Miss M. Cartledge gives some helpful advice to young girls. Her letter is but one of thou sands which prove that nothing is so helpful to young girls who are just arriving at the period of womanhood as Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. "Deab Mrs. PtstkhA-m: I cannot prlise Xydia E. Pinkham's Vegre table Compound, too highly, for it is the only medicine I ever tried which, cured me. I suffered much from my first menstrual period, I felt so weak and dizzy at times 1 could not pursue my studies with, the usual interest. My thoughts became sluggish., 1 had headaches, backaches and sinking spells, also pains in the back and lower limbs. In fact, I was sick all over. . V Finally, after many other remedies had been tried, we were advised to get Liydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and J am pleased to say that after taking it only two weeks, a wonderful change for the better took place, and in a short time I was in perfect health. I felt buoyant, full' of life, and found all work a pastime. I am indeed glad to tell my experience with Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg'e tahle Compound, for it made a dif ferent girl of me. Yours very truly, Miss M. Cartledge, 533 Whitehall St, Atlanta, Ga. " - $5000 forfeit If original of tLboue letter proving Genuineness cannot b produced. TEED BY A AAA BANK DEPOSIT 33K33 " Railroad Fare Paid. 500 y FREE Courses Offered. 4 . . ,IIL, , '"f Board at Cost. Write Quick EEORGIA-AUBAMA BUSINESS C0LLEGE.Macon.Ga. Slight Illness Treated at Once Saves Pain, Expense. A Doctor Book in the House is Invaluable. Its Need May Arise at Any Minute. A Few Dimes Will Purchase It. mmmmm -Before an After Taking.- possible by tho immenso edition, prints t) Not only doe? this Book contain so much . Information Ralative to Diseises, but also Valuable Recipes and Fre scriptions. Explanations of Botanical Practice, Correct use of Ordinary Herbs. New Edition, Revise 1 and Enlarged wit-Complete Index. "With this Book in the house there is no excuse for not knowin g what to do in an emergency. 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The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 15, 1904, edition 1
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