Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Feb. 9, 1905, edition 1 / Page 4
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MEDICAL EXASVi!fi9ER Of the United States Treasury Recom mends Pe-ru-na. " ''Another Prominent Physician Uses and indorses Pe-ru-na. DK. JXEWELTA'N JORDAN, Medi cal Examiner of the U. S. Treasury Department, graduate of C'-o.umbia 3ollege, and who served three years at West Point, lias the following to say of Feruna: . .. ; "Allow me to express my gratitude to you for the benefit derived from vour tconderful-remedy. One short n.onthhisbroughtfort'iavastihinoe id I note consider myself a, well wan after months of suffering. Fel low sufferers, Per una uillcure you A- constantly increasing number of pby oicians prescribe Peruna in their practice. fr, It has proven its niirits o thoroughly tha: B even the doctors have overcome then prejudice against so-called patent medi-, cines and recommend it to their patients. feruna occupies a unique position in medical sciesce. It is the only internal ystemic "catarrh remedy known to the, 7uedieal profession to-day. Catarrh, as , every one will adroit, is the cause of one half the diJWiaes which afiliet mankind. Catarrh and catarrhal diseases afflict one half of the people ot the United States. ) I Eobert R. Roberts. M. D.. Wash- i ington, D. C, writes: "Tnroujh my oitn experience I as t ial of many of my I a well friend, t and acquaintances who I have been curetl or relieved Perunz. I ca n confident ly recom- men I ft Jo those suferinj from sus.'t disorders, and have no hesi- i in prescribing it to J tat (on Catarrh is a systemic disease curable oniy by systemic treatment. A remedy that cures catarrh must aim directly at the depressed nerve centres. This is what Peruna does. . Peruna immediately invigorates the nerve-centres which gives vitality to the mucous membranes. Then catarrh disap pears. Then catarrh is permanently cured. 1 t-ilB3 am r Wl 1 ' t -x. .-Tr- tits au m I I Dr. Llewellyn Jordan, l I Medical Examiner United States! Dj Treasury. - to I If you do not derive nromnt and s.ttia. t t Ashes as an Aid. ; Ashes and. hen manure, if mixed to gether before being applied to the soil, result in a loss of ammonia. from the groves -were either cut down or re grafted with the seedless kind. Fruit growers wbb study -their "busi ness 'scientifically- know that seed is If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruua, write at once to Dr. llartruan, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Uarttnan, President of The . liartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ouio. - ALWAYS CALL" FOR A CIGAR BY ITS NAME MEANS MORE THAN ANY OTHER NAME EROWW BAITDS GOOD FOR PRESENTS "Xtrfest t tiler la the World." Hoodoo Window in the Post Office. Dozens of times in lis long term of office Postmaster Van Cott was asked to change the number -of the principal delivery window in the money order department to some other number than "13." No money is ever paid in at Dog Cemetery a Failure. that window, but orders for hundreds of dollars, which are cashed at the next window, have passed through It every business day for a great, many years. -Surely you don't believe in that i thirteen foolishness?" was the Post master's joking reply, whenever he was spoken to about it, and the hoodoo number remained. Not long ago a man asked of the clerk behind the window : "Do you find that 13 a hoodoo?" j The clerk ' looked up quickly. '" droppings that greatly lessens the produced in a' fruit tlitoufch' -fructifica tion" bjr the yelloAV pollen or flower dust that appears sd abundantly upon the stamens of flowers, if. the pollen could be kept away from the stigma of a" fruit flower, might it not be that the fruit would still grow while the forma tion of needs would be prevented? On that theory scientific apple,' cherry, grape and plum growers have been working patiently and quietly. In In diana ft woman farm ei', Mrst Mary E2, Grosb, of JCobfesville, has beeu eiideav orlng to develop a seedless tomato, and has at length succeeded. The fruit is uncommonly fine from . these seedless tomato slips, in general it appears that where the strength of the plant has not to go to the growing of seed the fruit is of superior quality. - In Colorado, similarly ,John F. Spen cer, shortly after the seecuess orange had come, to stay, began working over Ihe problem of bringing out a seedless apple! He how announces that he has .ittained his object. The seediess ap pie has at the end opposite the stem a slight hard formation somewhat like that in. a. .navel, orange,- but no seeds. Oddly enough, or perhaps it might, have been expected, the seedless apple tree does not have petalled blossoms. The apples grow out from little buds like the calyx of a flower. But it TVouId be a pity if apple blossoms should be done away with A California ' fruit grower, .Luther Burbank, has for some years been try ing Co get seedless plums. He has sue ceeded to a great degree, but riot en tirely. It is odd that the plum seed is still retained, though its stony coating has been nearly abolished. Mr. Bur bank believes that he will be able, af ter awhile, to get plums that are ail pulp. Trogress has been achieved also in the direction of stoueless grape growing, notably in Ohio. As fast as the growers develop anything new they report it to the pomoiogical department at Washington. 'Mr. Spencer has sent a number of his seedless apples there. The best lvews of all. however, will value. Tut the ashes on. after the ma hure lias been mixed with the soil; the .ammonia will be absorbed by it and re main for the use of the crop. Wood ashes make a valuable application to 'soils' deficient. in. potash, and hasten the decomposition of coarse manures.1 Grow Into Specialty. Some one has said "it is better to grow into a speeialtj thau- to go into it."' There is a deal of wisdom in the saying as applied to the farm. Almost anyliue of work is, all right if well conducted, but all wrong if it is not. First learn how, then it will do to go. am A good way to learn a specialty is to try it on a small scale and gradually increase. There are those who can comprehend the requirements of a line of effort without the experience, but they areuot numerous. Don't 15ury the Animal. - It is a loss of valuable material to bury a dead animal. Cut the carcass up into as small pieces as possible, placing them in n large box or cement ed pit, using both flesh and bones, as well as the entrails. Dry dirt may be used to fill the spaces between" the pieces. Use one part sulphuric acid and two parts .water, pouring the mix ture over ihe mass untiLit is thorough ly saturated. In a few. days the M-hole will be lit for use. but little odor being noticeable. Philadelphia Record. W P SCIENCE v M T Brace -End lot. Ket ii.e two end posts three feet deep. Put an anchor in end oi' each. Between posts at the top put a two by four stick. Near the top of second post ;tt- tach a heavy double wire, let it extend 1 IF All Souls' day in Paris revealed tha j shouldn't like to say whether I do or race tnat the dog cemetery, estab lished here four years ago, has proved a dismal failure. : Only a few wreaths not," he said. "A good many persons have asked me that question." i.ivn n Am , neu, sam me questioner, per- and several bunches of chrysauthe- j haps the influence will get around to mums ornamented the tombs on th so!inn day, and the few visitors to the cemetery seemed afraid of being seen 'paying their respects to tha graves of their deceased pets. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Klinc g Great Ner-eKestorer,t2trial bottleand treatise free Dr. It. H. Klin e. Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Fa. As early as 187-T the first commercial in stitute tos established in Tokio, Japan. A Guaranteed Cure For Piles. i . hhi? Blind, Bleeding or Protruding 1 ilea. Druggists will refund money if Pazo U;ntment foils to cure m 6 to 14 Under days. 50c. a new niw wnmsn -in visit the public schools of London. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Svrup forchildrea teething, soften the gums, reduces inSamma tion, allays pain, euro? wind colic, 25c.a bottle Payinff visits by airship is the latest Jastuonable novelty in Paris. the old man. some day, and then he'll think It is." Xew York Press. Statistics of Billiards. Taxation enables many curious ta bles of statistics to be compiled. It would probably puzzle the best of x.cglish statisticians to guess even approximately at the number of bil liard tables in use in England. There is no such difficulty in France, where the billiard table is a taxed luxury, and its relative frequency in com munes of all grades of population and wealth is made the subject of calcu lations as elaborate as they are in genious. In all France there are S3,676 billiard tables, divided among 18,601 communes, and realizing more than 40,000 in taxes London Tit-Bits. A LOVELY COMPLEXION risos i Cure Is the best medicine we overused xor all affections of throat and luinra. V?if. V' ,'PeLET' Vnburen, Ind., rebflO, 180J. The latest " fad in London is to hold paper chases m motor cars. T Cnr Cold In Om Day Jake Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. AH drugpts refund money if it fails to cure. . - ' "rove signature is on boi. 25c. A small, fai .sheep will alwavs brins a tetter price than a large, poor one. Dr. E. Uetchon, (WilE ,U ?,?1Jnfr?" oWl ? lhe requirement the production of the finest wool. A species "of sheep common in Sy ria Is so encumbered by the weight of its tail that the shepherd fix a piece of thin board' to the under part, where it Is not covered with thic wool, to pre Aent.it from being torn by the bushes Ho. Some have small wheels affixed to facilitate the dragging of these boards ftfter them. The tail of a common sheep this sort usually weighs fifteen pounds or upward, while that of a large species after being well fattened will neigh fifty pounds. A dude preacher generally produces dead sermons. g0 g Nw Tork tady Proves That Every Wo man Jtfay Hito It by Usinj; Cuticura Soup. Mrs. R. Reichenberg, wife of the wc'.l- iuu"" jeweiier oi iitj.iruiton fit., rsew lork, says: 'I had a friend who was just .y proud of her complexion. When asked what gave her such a brilliant and lovely complexion, she replied, 'A healthy Tvomaa can be sure of a fine skin if h will do as I do, use plenty of Cuticura Soap and water.' She insisted that I follow her example, which I did with speedy convic tion. I find that Cuticura Soap keeps the kin soft, white, and clear, and prevent reaness ana roughness. Irrigation In Dakota. A proposition is now on foot to irrl gate certain parts of North Dakota and eastern Montana whereby the govern ment is to put in irrigation canals and the settlers arc to pay $25 an acre for the service, payable in ten annual in stallments of $2.50 each. back near the foot of end post to an an chor, either a heavy store cr a stick four feet long with wire attached in middle. When everything is in place miM wire me last imng.--?. i i.?ano in The Fpitomist. t Care of Comb Honey. As soon as comb honey i sealed re move it from the hive, scrape all sec tions clean of propolis, then put it di rectly into shipping ctse.s and close tight. Keep it in a warm room till time to sell, never allowing it to freeze, as freezing it cracks fie comb, says The Farmer, and when warmed again it begins to leak out, m.tking a nasty, dauoy mess. Be sine your shipping case is tight, fo mat ants, millers or fi.es cannot get in. Do not put honey in a cellar, as the dampness bursts the cappiugs, the honey grows thin, loser, its flavor and leaks out,, while if stcrvd in a dry room it will improve and tJiicken. Xever pack two colors of honey to gether or mix it in the shipping cases. Keep the white honey by f.tself for a better price. Be very careful not to pack any sec tion of honey having a single cell of pollen in it. for it surely will have an egg from a moth miller in it. which will hatch out a big ugly worm to spoil the honey. If you haven't shipping cases ready fo pack the honey in as soon as taken off the hives, then store it in the supers in a dry, warm loom, tiering them tip ns high as you can reach. After two weeks fumigate with sulphur to kill any moth worms that may be hatching. Also repeat the fumigation once in two weeks till' cold weather. Ship all comb honey to market before freezing weather if possible. probably be that a seedless Georgia watermelon has been brought out as the result of long and patient effort. A Southern watermelon without seeds wonld be the perfection of fruits. As far as they have progressed the melon experimenters have obtained a fruit containing only a few seeds. It eems only a question of time when we shail buy in the markets all these. fruits in a seedless state. Christian afWork. ALL DONE OUT. veteran Joshua Heller, of 706 South W alnut street. Urbana, 111., says: "in lie fall of 1809 after taking Doau's jvmuey rius i tOJd the readers of this paper that they had relieved me of kid ney trouble, dis posed of a lame back with pain across my loins and beneath the should der blades. Dur ing the . interval which has elapsed I have had occasion to resort to Doan's Kidney rills when I noticed warnings or attack. On each and every occa sion the results obtained were just as satisfactory as- when the pills were first brougbt-to my notice. I just as emphatically endorse .the preparation to day as I did over two years ago." roster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, XT' proprietors. F6r sal by ail Crugsts! jricfCQ ccats per box, . : . Burt of Ohio, Citi of Toledo, i Lucas County. f Tkax J. Cheney make oath that he li senior partner of the firm of t'. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in tho City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of one hundred dol lars for each and overy ease of cATAuna that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarbh Cube. I'eank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my ( A ) presence, this 6th day of Decem- seal. ber,A.D.,188G. A.W. Gleason, JTTTr' L , Kolary Public. Hall s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Send for testimonials, . Cheney A Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. fake Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Th- T:e-tf Effotist. "Father,' .a ihe small boy, "what is an egotist?" "An egotist, my son, is a man who has the impudence to think he knows more than you do, instead of giving you credit for knowing more than he does." Washington Star. . Reserved for Humans. Cannibalism appears to be unknown among the, lower animals In a state of nature. In India some instances of snakes devouring one another have been collected, but it has been point ed out that in- every case cited tho snakes were of different species This, it is declared, is no more anact - - vulua.lou, -ucux me devouring of , hcju mouse vy a rat, able cannibalism was VoPfl r em t T . .. i onaon menagerie when a python ate another of its -own kind, but this was under the un natural conditioas imrjosed bv iif j captivity. ' "w Unquestion- noted soma Stock For U reed in s . A Moid about selecting breeding stock. It is doubtful if there is any branch of the poultry Industry that rc quired so much good judgment as the selecting of the breeding stock, as they are the foundation, of the industry. Pure-bred poultry practically has two values. A bird that has nice feather markings, although deficient in real business qualities, has a value with the fancier for exhibition. But the bird that is not sonicely marked, if plump and a good layer, is likely to make the best breeder, and is the bird that has the real business value. For where there is one bird sold for exhibition purposes there are 10,000 sold for what they will produce in the way of poultry and eggs. I admire birds with nice feather markings. But with my twenty-five years' experience in raising poultry and eggs for market I have found that the highest scoring birds do not always make the most profitable breeders. - A bird to be a good, profitable breed er should have a medium-sized and in telligent looking head, short beak, large comb and wattles (as they show health and vigor); short neck, broad back, broad, plump, full breast, medium short legs, wide apart, body medium length and not too deep, and with yellow skin. Birds of this type as a ru.e are good breeders and good layers, and as dressed ' poultry they command the highest market price. J. Alonzo Jocoy, in the Massachusetts Ploughman. Seeilless Fruits. " The common belief is that the seed less orange was originally a freak fruit that appeared in Southern California. Tbe real truth is, however, that the world is indebted for it to the United States Department of Agriculture. It is said that United States Consul Will iam F. Judson, at Bahia, Brazil, heard of seedless oranere trees that crew some distance away from Bahia. He- ob tained ciittings from the trees and sent them to the t Agricultural Department at Washington.' The department nur tured the sprouts carefully, and in time was able to send .buds from "them to several orange growers. " Some' of the growers grafted the buds upon seedling stock. A' California fruit grower was the first to produce the seedless orange.' From, him "other grafts were obtained, untilnt length thi old sceaiins orauge lielps to Eejtinneis. - There is a vast c'dft'erence between a mau who peddles poultry and one who breeds it. To be sure we have both, but I truly believe that for the good of the poultry industry wc- should, by some means or other, drive everypciii tr.v peddler from ihe busiue?!-'. I am not speaking now of the huck ster, whose business it is to sell and buy poultry for market, but I refer to the persons who buy birds from other breeders and then peddle them from piace to piace under the name of the breeder of sv;ch and such a variety. I" can not ee what glory a man derives from such a business. There may be some consolation in the fact that he "beats" tbe other fellow at the shows. but Avhat good does that do the. great poultry fraternity? ' Here is a man who has spent years in bringing a breed of fowls to a high place in the poultry "world, and when that man wius he has a heartfelt satis faction that he deserved all he got. Can the peddler say m much? I realize that I am on debatable ground, but I believe it is a cause that needs wist; handling. Suppose I send to a prominent breeder and buy a fine cock, take him to New York, and he wins. Who, then, is the real winner, myself or the man from whom I bought the birds? And is it right to show a bird that you did not raise, or that does not have the blood of your own strum in it as being your own? Here is a man -who sells eggs to a mau who in turn hatches and raises a lot of fine birds, and when tall comes round the man who sold the eggs buys the birds and exhibits them; iu this case the birds are rightly his own; they came from his yards directly; they have his blood in them. I cau see nothing wrong in suchwork. I must say that it "is little wonder that much of the wind is" taken out of the sails of the beginners when we come to see that it does not mean much to buy birds that will w-ia. It then be comes not so much a matter of who has the best skill iu rearing poultry; not so much iu the business for the pleasure own derives from being able to raise fine birds as it is to make money by buying and selling them. It has been my observation that these "peddlers" soon grow tired of their own game. Just so soon as the money end of the business begins to lag that soon they seek some other business. But not so with the true fancier. He is in the work for what pleasure there is in it, and the money part becomos a secondary matter. A man who is now a" prominent fan cier once .stood on the "floor of a big show just after the ribbons had been placed, and not seeing first come to his coop, said: "I am going home to work harder than evei and the fellows will find out that I can win yet." How d?d he do it? By buying the best bird in. the land ? No. By going into his. breed ing yards and mating with care the best birds he had and following it Up till the result was birds that would win. That man to-day finds much pleasure in what he has accomplished, and more than that, he finds . a great deal of money in his wallet. Tho world will reward a true man, I.vt him who will peddle, but as for me I want to have it said that what I show is mine and not Tom Jones' bird. Go i t. then, my dear beginners. Tfoer is much room at the top. If you want to be a huckster, be one, but if a true fancier, be one, and I surely believe that every 'lover of fine birds" will give you the welcome hand. when pnee you put your foot on the top round of the ladder. Win. Harris Ouyer, in iU In laitd, I'oultry. JourntU ' The A'Dabidextfous Societj', Of Lon don, has been'formed with the object-' j of - encouraging people - to- use both hands with equal facility. ; ' - A recent mechanical wonder 7 'If n telegraphic instrument which seuda iOOO' words a minute oyer lines -1000 miles in length." A; human operator can 'transmit fifty words a minute. , Welding by electricity is brought to such perfection that welding appar atus, can be carried to a railroad track and two rails joined as solidly as if they had come out of the rolling mill in one piece. ... A novelty iu stoves is n battleship i'ange,' with steel racks for preventing the pots and pans from going helter skelter iu a high sea, and with ingeni ous braces for holding the range it self in place. Though the ocean covers about three-fourths - 6f the surface of the carth it does not in the sauie propor tion provide for the wants of man. It is estimated ihat only about three per cent, of the people in the world obtain their living directlj- from the sen.'' . Dr. Wolf, director of the Koenings- stuhl Observatory, in Berlin! Germany, has discovered photographically a new planet.) of the thirteenth magnitude. It is presumed to be one of u. number revolving between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, of which number 50'. have been already charted. ' Last year coal constituted about forty per cent, of the total tonnage of the American railways. To carry a ton in Knglaud from ifie 'Yorkshire coal fields to London, a distance of 15S j miles, costs $1.87, while coal is carried from tho Carbondale coal, region, in Illinois, to Chicago, 27G miles, for seventy-five cents. - f v . r J Mrs. Fairbanks tells how neglect of THE MODERN! HORSF. He Must" Be a Beaar or Superior Iuleli: Bente TN'ow-a-lay. The horse is getting wiso. He al ways was intelligent, bur he has learned many things in the last lew years. A really successful horse to day must know a great many things not essential tv those clden horses who did not live in electric-lighted stables or ride up and down stairs ou an ele vator, and did not have their hair cut by electricity. -A horse to have a" ca reer to-day must not only have horse sense, but he must be acquainted with the ways of the world, says the Wash ington Star. He must be a "horse-of-the-world" or a "horse-a bout-town," if it be permissible to paraphrase those hard-worn phrases, "man-of-the-worhl"' and "man-about-town." Nearly every horse is becoming an educated horse. During the. last few years the horse has beeu taking a course in the study of automobiles, and already he has a very good understanding of the sub ject. Time was when a horse would forget his .spavins, sore shoulders or quarter crack and would jump a six bar gate at sight of one of these mon sters. Now he cau walk up to auto, look it in -the tamps and sniff its evil breath without breaklrg a trace or kicking in the dashboard. He can i.ow meet one of these benzine buggies ol a lonely road and a dark night with out throwing either a fit or his rider. The time may bo coming when the horse and the autoFill sleep iu the same stable and drink from the same bucket. There ras the trolley ear. w few years ago it was the abomination of every horse. Xow the horse would feel positively lonesome if he had all the street to himself and did not have his wagon smashed now and then as a diversion. The horse is learning. Mrs. Fairbanks tells how neglect of warning symptoms will soon prostrate a woman. She thinks woman's safeguard is Lycfca E Pinldiam's Vegetable Compound "Dear Mrs. Ptnkham: Ignorance and neglect arc the cause of untold female suffering, not only with tho laws of health but with the chance of a cure. I did not heed the warnings of headaches, organic Eains, and general weariness, until I wa well nigh prostrated. I knew I ad to do something. Happily I did the right thing. 'I took L,ydia E. Pinknam's Vegetable Compound faithfully, according to directions, and was rewarded in a few weeks to find that my aches and pains dis appeared, and I again felt the glow of health through my body. Sine I haw been well I hare been more carefuL I have also advised a number of my sick friends to take L.ydla E. PInkliam's Vegetable Com pound and they have never had reosca to be sorry. Yours very truly Mrs. May Fairbanks, 216-South 7th St., Minneapolis, Minn." (Sirs. Fair banks is one of the most successful and highest salaried travelling; sales women in the West.) When women are troubled with irregTdar, suppressed or painful menstru ation, weakness, leucorrhoea, displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feeling1, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, bloating (or flatulence), general debility, indigestion, and nerrous prostration, or are beset with such symptoms aa dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excitability, irrl tability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, " all-gone ""fend " want-to-be left-alone n feelings, blues, and hopelessness, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Liydla E. Pinkbaurs Vegetable Compound t once removes such, troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for you seed the best. " Dear Mrs. Pikk ham : For over two years I suffered more than tongue can express with kidney and bladder trouble. My physician pro nounced my trouble catarrh of the bladder- 3 1 Ji 1 I- ? 11. . - 7 - 1 1 cituseu. Dy tuspiacemem oi me wgicd. x naa a frequent desire to urinate, and it was very pain ful, and lumps of blood would pass Tiih tha urine. Also had backache very often. "After writing to you, and receiving yror reply to my letter, I followed your advice, and feel that you and Lydia K. Pinkham's Vege table Compound have cured me. lhe medicine drew my womb into its proper place, and then I was well. I never feel anv nain now. and can do rav housework with ease." Mrs. Alice Lamon, Kincaid, Miss. No other medicine fop female ills in tho world has received Such widespread and unqualified endorsement. Mrs. Pinkliam invites all sick women to write her for advice She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lymi, Mass. FORFEIT if we cannot forthiritL prodnco tha original latters nn"gnatnreio CboTa tcstimoidfcls, which will prove their absolute geimi:iene8. I.jrdia E. PiakUam .Medicine Co., Him. w . $5080 CAUGHT BY THE TIDE. Kronoinizinsr Vital Force. As a result 'of careful study and many exhaustive experiments the writer is convinced that the average man or woman uses up in the perform ance of ordinary every-tlay acts from three to fifteen times the amount of vital force necessary. Tbe vitality so wasted is in many cases sufficient to make all the difference between weak ness and strength, between sickness and health or between failure and success. The ways in which vitality is wast ed are many and various. We need consider but two incorrect posture of the body and excessive muscular action. Another, and most far-reaching factor in nervous vital waste is lack of control of the emotions. A bent body is strained by its own weight so we find that among people having such bodies ithe mere act of holding up the body in standing, walking and moving about requires from 'four to ten minutes as much vital outlay as the straight body. Dr. WVE. C. Latson, in Success. Tbe Kise of the Sea. The phenomenon of the changes in the level of the sea is one of which is well shown in .the ease of the Medit erranean. A recent brochure uresent- fhlef Had to Give Himself Up cr De Drowned. "Honest. John" Corbett, the veteran city jailer, has probably arrested as many criminals in his time and en gaged in as many desperate fights as any man, in the police department. Last night while seated in the police Etation he told of one of the first burg lars he ever arrested ia Seattle. "In those days," said Corbett, "we didn't have any uniforms, or anything like that. I was walking a beat away down where the Grant street bridge is cow. I saw a burglar, as I be lieved, with a bundle under his' arms. I took after him, and he ran. "The tide flats were just as muddy then asthey are now, and that thief ran cut into the mud. The tide was clear out., I didn't want to get ah. N over mud, so I shot a few times at the burglar. I shot av.ay all tho shell 3 I had and missed every time. I quit then. I waited there on the beach, keeping even with the burglar when he moved, until the incoming tide drove him in and I got him. It was either jail or drotcniug, and that fel low went to jail. Seattle Post-Intelligencer. . TATLOP'S CHEEOKEE REMEDY OF Sweet Gum and Mullen Is' Nature's great remedy for Cough, Cold, Croup, Consumption, and in all throat troubles. At druggist, 85c, 50a and $1.00 per bottle. fc C AAA BANK DEPOSIT 4J?9M W Railroad Fara Paid. 500 W GOOD POTATO .i f BRING FANCY PRICES To grow a larsre crop of good itocs, the soil must contain plenty of Potash Tomatoes, melons, cabbage, tur, .s, lettuce in fact, all vegetables remove la ge quanti ties of Potash frca the soil, buppi PotasJi liberally by t!ie use of fertilizers cortaininsr not less than 10 per cent, actual Potash. Better and more profitable yields are sure to follow. Our pamphlets are not advertising- circulars booming special tertiiizers, but contam valu able informs Lion to farmers. Sent free for the asKiug. write now. . GERMAN KALI WORKS New York 93 Nassau Street, or Atlanta, Ga. 22,'S South Broad St. FBEE rVninua CttmrmA S Board at Cost. Write Quick Ggstt's Planters and Distributors WE GUARANTEE THEM. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. Writ for Price and Catalogue. GANTT flFG. CO., Hacon, Qm. ed to the French Academy of Sciences WMIWUBMU BUSINESS C0LLEGE.Macor.6a. t h Whio A P fni-nkhoc IntornctiiKr inrnrmotinn ' 1 ' ' - Uilll llllI6 6ti UU. lurnisnes interesting information on this point, it being apparent that the sea has greatly increased in depth as compared to ancient times. Formerly a bridge 3000 feet long united Leucade to tbe Continent. Tor day it is submerged, but the founda tions of the work c-were discovered eleven feet beneath :the surface. It maj,- tneretore, be concluded that since the construction of the bridge the sea has risen at this point over nine feet. Similar incidents have been not ed at other points. , RlPAXSTABtrLESarotbebetJv. pepsia niediclue ever mode. A hun dred millions ot them fcavo been so'-' In a single year. Constipation, heart burn, Kick headache, dininesa. bad fcrcoth.eore thmatji.nl vrw uM. arlsintr from a disordered stomach ere relloyed or cured br Ripans Tb- Ana will MnaM .L , m Wtbtotwentyminut Cor aa ordinary occasion. All druggists sell taem. LOUISVILLE, KY. tiUbli.hed 1337 nif heat atarfcat price , .mi ter raw FURS and Hides. I TTOOI (IB CnudMira. Sour Stomach - In Perfect, Accoixf. One of the stories attributed to Bish op Potter concerns a young and inex perienced clergyman who had just been called to a city charge. At the end of the first month his salary was paid by a check and he took it to tbe bank and passed .itr iu at tbe payin"" it-iici 3 ttmuoiv. iue official looked at it and then passed it back. "It's per fectly good," he said, "but I will havv ioask you to indorjse it." The youn clergyman took bis pen and wrote acrossthe face of the check: ' "I "re spectfully subscribe to tho - .ntinients herein esm-essed,," ' - ,ijftei,McaT?t ,BJi fel like a new man. IfcaT. tthttteIV tTora dyspepsia and loor Stomach for the -last .two years. 1 have been takin midi. o;,S.t.0, drs.,b eoald find sS reifet for a short time. Iwill recommend Ce.sea.reti l my friends as the only thing foV indigestion and Sitio5t0S2S :Dd keep th Wel.aTn goSd con onion. They are very nice to eat." - ..Harry Stuckley, Mauoh Chunk, Pa, Best For . The Bowels 4 AND MILLSTONES ORN If in need of Corn Mill or MllU MIf f C t0AM ou will find it to yor iUlJulfO inlereat to correspond with CAROLINA MILLSTONE CO . ef Cameron. N. C. lanufac ierof OORN MILLS from tha famous Moore County Grft. WANTED-In each Ptato, Salesmen to sell J.-!5-tc!i5-Ajr?bac.o; Permanent Poitloa. CENTR.ALTOBACCOw6RKSCO..PenicVi.Va. So, 2. CANDY CATHARTIC trllll RiliIaXi' Pent, Taste Good. Do Oood. fold in inlt0 ?"k,n or GnD- ! 25c. 50e. Kerer GnaVlnt--711 genuine tablet stamped CCO. Unaranteed to care or yonr money back. Sterling Remedy Co;, Chicago or N.Y. 555,; ANNUAL SALE, TEK WIVM B0XE$ If affUcteil with weak eyes use Thompson's Eye Waier 4 . HI III J Cough Syrup. Tastes 3ood. Use la time. Sold by druratts. aiii 1 !
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 9, 1905, edition 1
4
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