Newspapers / Charlotte Messenger (Charlotte, N.C.) / Feb. 3, 1883, edition 1 / Page 4
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FARM, GARDES AKD HOUSEHOLD. Bluer Milk. When a cow nears her period of calv ing the quality of the milk under goes a change, and it is frequently bitter. There is no help for it but to let the cow go dry. But some times there are other causes for the change, and a pinch of saltpeter or a spoonful of salt put into each pail of milk may remove the bitterness. Some times the cow may be out of health and the blood is charged with bile. Then the eyes appear yellow and the milk is of a yellowish-green tinge and the bile may cause the milk to taste bitter. If such is the case a dcse of salts (eight onnces) with an ounce of ginger given to the cow may remove the trouble. Weaning Young Pigs. The time of weaning may depend on the disposition to be made of the dams. If these are to be bred again for fall litters, the pigs may be weaned when eight or ten weeks old. In this case it is best to wean gradually. Withhold the sow's feed altogether, and let her be shut away from the piss. Let them be together at first twice and then once a day for a few days, when they may be permanently separated; or, if this is too much trouble, take the larger pigs away, and let one or two of the smaller ones run with the sow a few days. If the sows are to be fatted in the fall or fall litters are not wanted, they and the pigs may he safely left to settle the qnestion. It will, however, save the sow and pigs some worrying if they are separated. At three months is a very good time to do this. flow lo Feed Poultry. Attention must be paid to the quanti ty and quality of the food given to ycnr fowls if you wunt to keep them in thrift and good health. While it is most es sential to be careful not to over-feed, the extreme of under-feeding must be avoided. It should be borne in mind that it is not the gross amount or quantity of food that we give our fowl stock, but the mode in which it is dis tributed to them that tells to the best and most econmocial advantage. A variety of diet for fowl or other live stock is a veiy important matter to be remembered by poultry keepers, both on the score of economy and for the best good of the fowls themselves. Upon any one kind or regular supply of food alone, poultry will very soon get cloyed and lose their appetite for it. If you scatter over large quantities of food among the docks, or more then they need at a feeding, they gorge them selves, and will very quickly become cloyed, however choice maybe the food you afford them. It, therefore, becomes necessary that ways and means be pro vided to vary the sustenance we furnish our poultry with, and this can be done upon system to good advantage. For this reason we deem it impor tant frequently to remind those who are endeavoring to breed poultry to fair profit, no matter whether for fancy or market purposes, that a fixed system should be adopti d and adhered to con tinuously, if we would make the most as the food given the fowls and chick ens. It costs no more really to ass rd them variety than it does to stint to a eingle kind. They are infinitely better off through ' this provision, as it in volves no greater expense. We earnest ly advise the widest range be given to such varied feeding, wherever it can be done conveniently.—[Poultry Monthly. Recipes. Apple Sauce. —Pare and core your apples and just cover with water ; put over a good, hot fire, so that they will boil immediately before changing color. Do not stir while boiling, but keep shaking at intervals to prevent sticking. Sweeten to taste and mash with a silver spoon. Pvanish Onions.— Peel off the outer skins, cut off the pointed end like a cigar, put them in a deep dish, and put a piece of butter and a little salt and popper on the place where the point has been cut off; cover them with a plate or dish and let them bake for not . less than three hours. They will throw out a delicious gravy. Lemonade.—Bix lemons, one pound 61 a pofcud of lump-siiear and a pint of ttoiling water; rub the lemons with Htmefit the sugar, peel them very thin, strain the juice, put it with the lemon peel and sugar into a jug, and pour over it one pint ot boiling water ; cover the jug well with a cloth to keep in the steum, and let it cool. This must be and diluted with cold water to makp three pints. Minced Meat Croquettes.— Melt a good-sized piece of butter, add to it a tablesj.oot ful of flour, mix well, then put in a few mushrooms minced fine, pepper, salt, spices to taste, and chop ped parsley; moisten with a small quan tity of good stock, put in. any cold meat quite free from fat and minced fine. This mixture should present .he ap pearance of minced veal. When quite hqt stir into it off the fire a couple of yolks of eggs strained and beaten up with a little lemon juice. Let the mix ture get cold, then shape it into the form of cutlets, egg and bread-crumb them, then, after an interval of a couple of ttous/doit again ; then fry in plenty of hot lard and serve with fried parsley. The Zenana societies, which provide facilities for educating to some extent the ( womeh and girls of the East, are in creasing in number and adding yeaily to their forces. One of the societies, which is supported by the Church of England, reports 1,399 pupils in Zenanas, besides 16,643 scholars in schools. It employs thirty-tyrotafigsionaries, and its field in the East* extends from Bagdad to I ’■Sfc&fclrf;,* FOR THE FAIR SEX. Fashion Notes. Fioelle, or twine color, grows greatly in favor. Bnohes outrival ruffles or plaiting for dress trimmings. Brilliant red, bright bine and old gold are popular shades for parasols. Kate Greenaway figures appear on borders for trimming aprons and dresses. Batiste and nun's veilings take the place of the white and tinted mulls of last summer. Striped hosiery retains its popularity in spite of the efforts to render it nnfashionable. Little girls wear their hair flowing at the back or aranged in long, loose curls, but banged in front. An imported Env lish riding-hat is a felt hat turned up in three corners and decorated with feathers and a rosette. Paraffine dissolved in naptha is nsed to treat silk and other fabrics, and it is said that the most delicate hnes of material thus prepared will not be injured by ice cream or any foreign substance. Courtship and Marriage In Germany. As most gentlemen in Germany derive their income from the Government, which gives them enongh for comfort but not for extravagance, their wives are obliged to be very carefnl in their expenditure, and their daughters are brought up in strict economy Therefore, after a German yonng lady has left school her real work begins. If she happens to have a great talent for music, everything else is given np, and she devotes all her time and energy to the cultivation of that talent, until she appears as one of the great players of Germany. If it seems likely she will remain in mediocrity, she is not enconraged in throwing away her time in musical practice, but she then qualifies herself for being a help to her mother by learn ing cookery dressmaking, ironing, pick ling and preserving vegetables for the winter. As a rule, German gentlemen do not care for beauty in a wife if not accom panied by more enduring qualities, and they are very cautious in choosing a partner for life. Before ingratiating himself with the yonng lady, the gentleman first asks her father's consent to visit at his house that he may observe the young lady in her domestic relations toward her parents, sisters, brother and servants. If her conduct toward them is irre proachable and he thinks she will make a good wife, he engages himself to bet by exchanging rings, for in Germany men all have wedding rings. The young lady then begins to make her trousseau, which is no trifle, for not only has she to provide her own ward robe, but all the furniture, household linen, ornaments, crockery, pots and kettles—in short, everything necessary for the new establishment. In fact, unless the outfit of a bride is large enough to till one of Pickford's vans, it is described by the gossips as a very shabby affair.—[Girls’ Own Paper. Women at* Doctor*. The success of some of the ladies who have graduated from the women's medical college of Philadelphia seems to answer the question whether women can safely be entrusted with the healing of sick humanity. One of them, Dr. Emma Boon, has just been appointed assistant physician to the insane in the Philadelphia almshonse, and another. Dr. Emily Dubois, district physician in two wards of that city. The Philadel phia Times adds: "The list of those who have gradua ted from the college and have earned sufficient recognition for their skill to c immand public positions is a credita ble one, Dr. Alice Bennett is the chief physician in the female department of the Norristown insane hospital. Dr. Anna Kngler is the assistant physician at the state hospital for the insane at Harrisburg, where Dr. Margaret Cleves, a graduate of the lowa medical college is the chief, and Dr. Jane Garver is another assistant. Dr. Agnes Johnson, of Zanesville, Ohio, is the assistant physician in the Ohio, insane asylnm. One is the resident physician in the nursery and child’s hospital, Staten Island, N. Y., and another is the assistant resident physician of the same institution; another is the resident physician of the house of mercy for girls iq New York city; eight are assist ant physicians in the woman's hospital in this oity, which is attached to’ the college itself, and in the New England hospital for women and children at Bos ton. In addition to these, several are consulting and visiting physicians to hospitals and charitable institutions, and are members of the consulting boards ; one is physician to the state industrial school at Lancaster; some are visiting physieians to schools for girls; one has been the city physician to Sprinefield, Mass., and another is health officer to the city of Uharlotte, Michigan. M. Alexander Bt. fves is reported to have sueoeded, after many experi ments, in extracting from sea-weed a substance like that of a composition of starch and sugar, which ia well adapted for the economical manufac ture of certain attich s of commerce such as imitation leather and transpar ent toys, etc. The sea-weed previously wsshed in pure water, or water impreg nated with a little lime or potash, is dried and then pounded or ground ac cording to its variety and introduced into s conical boiler. A soluble sub stance is extracted by a bath of hot water or steam and the residue on cool ing becomes'gelatinous. < POPULAR SCIENCE. French hydrographers find the water oi the Mediterranean sea to be salter than the Atlantio. Os 1000 ounces of healthy human blood, 781 5 ounces consist of water and 318.5 ounces of solid matter. Herr Kohlransch has recently made : experiments disproving a common notion that snnshine affects the draught of a chimney. Seeds of the Victoria Resi‘i had to be transmitted from America to England in water, before the first plant was raised that came to perfection. Extended microscopical examinations have convinced Professor Beinsch that coal is largely formed ofremains of a low order of marine life, and not entirely from land plants. Ninety per cent, of the yellow sand of the Sahara desert is fonnd to be quarts grains, the angles >-f which are remarkably rounded—evidently by at trition threngh the action of the wind. Dublin is to have an elevated street railread operated by electricity, which has the remarkable feature of stopping instantly at street crossings, the trains, and lowering them for the accommoda tion of passengers to the pavements. In Fiance there is a railway in opera tion on which the cars are propelled by electrical force, and lighted by the same agency. Pearl Fishing on the Pacific Slope. Pearl fishing on the coast of Lower California is an important industry, no less than 1,000 divers being employed in bringing up the costly black pearl, which is fonnd in a great state of per fection in the deep waters of La Paz. The pearl oysters are found from one to six miles off shore in water from one to I twentv-oue fathoms deep. Merchants 1 provide hats, diving apparatus, etc., for the prosecution of the business, on con dition that they can purchase all the pearls found, at prices to be agreed upon. These boats, which are usually of about five tons bnrden, sail up and down the coast from May to November, searching for treasures. The product of a year's work is about $500,000, esti mating the pearls at their fiist value. Perfectly Amazed. In the Ban Francisco Evening Bulle tin, we observe that Mr. Rosenthal, of the well-known printing firm, Rosenthal & Roesch, -538 California street, that city, said to one of their reporters: “We all know of Bt. Jacobs Oil, and are perfectly amazed at the snddenhess of the relief it affords. If yon know of any one who is suffering whith rheu matism, braise or sprain, tell them to use St. Jacobs Oil. A man who buys a glass of beer in lowa on Sunday renders himself liable to a fine of from SI to $5 Certainly an elegant remedy for all aches and pains is St. Jacobs Oil. says Dr. J. Tomer, oi Shirrell s Ford, N. C., in the Ravenswood (W. Ya. News. How rare is that fine courtesy which is uninfluenced by rank or wtalth, but treats all worthy men and women with equal deference and consideration. “THEIR OCCUPATION GOXK-” It. V. Pikbce, M. D., Buffalo, N. Y.: I was attacked with congestion of the lncg«, over the liver, severe pain in the joints, a burning fever, and general giving away of the whole system. Failing to find relief in reme dies prescribed, I tried your “Golden Medical Discovery.” It effected my entire cure. Your medicines have only to be used to be apprecia ted. If every family would give them a trial uine-tenths of the doctors would, like Othello find their occupation gone. Yours trulv, L. B. McMILLAN, M. D., Breesport, S». Y. “Dear me !** said Mrs. Partington the other day, “young girls nowadays are not what their mothers used to be. Half of them are suffer ers from nervous perspiration !*' Could llardlv Staid on Her Feet. R. V. Fielbce, M. D., N. Y.: Dear .Sir—l must tell you what your medicine has done for me. Before taking your “Favorite Preecrio ! tion” I could hardly stand on mv feet, but by following your advice, lam perfectly cured. The “Favorite Prescription’* is a wonderful medicine for debilitated and nervous females. 1 cannot express how thankful 1 am to you for your advice. Yours trulv. Mbs. CORNELIA ALLISON, Peoata, la. An Ohio man unpinned a tidy from a chair and wiped his nose upon :t. I: takes an Ohio i man to solve mysteries. Now we know what in thunder a tidy is for. The World’s Dispensary and luvalida* Hotel, at Buffalo, N. Y., destroyed by fire a rear ago, is rebuilt and fall of patients/ For “Invalid’s Guide Book,” giving particulars and terms of treatment address, with two stamps, World's ' I>i>pknsaky Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. Mary Clemmer says that only one girl in fifty can be happy as a clergyman’s wife. Bhe tried it, and she didn’t get to see a circus for eleven years. Gratitude Reread Expresralao. Hampton C. H., N. C n May 2,1881. H. H. Wabner A O'.: Nir*— I The result of your Base Kidney and Liver Care in mv cats has been astonishing, so much so that 'I can find no words in which to express my indebt edness to you. Rev. W. H. 1 rentiss. The moat sensible people of the country live at Lansing. Mich. A bntcher-sbop in that place bears the sign : “dosed till meat gets cheaper.” Ktdaev Disease. Pain, Irritation, Retention, Incontinence, DepoHit»,Gravel, etc., cured by “Buchupaiba.• SI. Send for pamphlet to E. S.Wells, Jersey City, N. J. A Wisconsin woman has kept silence for fifteen years to spite her husband fur request ing her to shut up. Ma\be is spites hua— maybe so. The Fraser Ante Grease Is the best in the market It is the most economical and cheapest, one box lasting as long as two of any other. Oae greasing will last two weeks, it received first premium at the Centennial and Paris Expeditions, also medals at various State Fairs. Bav no other. There Is Treahle In Stare For those wh> neglect to rectify irregularities of the stomach, liver and bowels, which they foolishly imagine will “ come right of them selves. '* Os this silly error such persons are usually disabused by the development of some s-erioua chronic malady, traceable to what thev were pleased to consider a trifling disorder of the above named associate organs. Such a culmination is easily avoided. A course of Hostetter’a Stomach Bitters invari ably bas the effect of renewing the secretive action of a torpid liver, restoring healthy di gestion and assimilation, and rendering the habit of body perfectly regular. The activity of these all important functions being restored, and the entire system toned and regulated by this incomparable corrective and invigorant, no danger to the general health is to be appre hended trom causes which, if not eradicated in . time, will assuredly undermine it. If a Chinaman works for les-* wsgea than a J wh:te man. it is because he is obliged t>. We don’t Iwlieve one can be fonnd who wo lid re fuse $4 per day. Menhxan's Peptonized beep tonic, the only preparation of bdef containing its entire nutri tions jprupfffiw, It contains blood-making, force-generating and life-suet aining proper ties ; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debility; also, m all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, overwork or acute disease, par ticularly if resulting from pulmonary com plaints.' Caswell, Hazard, & Co., proprietors, New York. Sold bv druggists. Ho, Ye Baldueads!— There is just one way, and no more, by which you may be cured—use Carboline. a deodorized extract of petroleum. It will positively produce new hair; there is no substitute for this marvelous hair renewer. 4 BRAIN FOOD.—Most reliable toaift A for the Brain sad Generative Oichds. It; rcwntUhO* cares Nmow Debility and restores Tiiißiuvm. R)’.d bvdnwistß. Sit tttorSA Free hr mA’l on receipt of price. JOHN H. ALLEN. I fcemtst. 31A First Avenue, .xw itrs “Ananias, Jr.”: How cau you learn to be a first-class liar ? Get engaged to two girls and the faculty will sort o' conic to you. i ALWAYS KEEP COOL I t# i t JRML /Q 1 i "jigE \ >4P!|i li \J It Valp lUaj \ Ji, /i<! _ CT / l> I fl J#i» i_J ]o> VJ Z » 15 ■? '■ To stick to yon; subject ana the truth is an excel- i lent plan, amt . whether it be in \\ questions of ■V nance or fishing, i or any topic what ever,civil or polit ical, always keep I c«x»l and toll the m truth. However, alatlicrc is acer- Bftnin ran’■gin al jr> lowed i<>r lying, •> when it comes lo > fcdiing, (hat is per . mined in no other Qv subject, and no T\donl«t our friends VJ iu the picture ar3 i::<'Hiring in that kl special employ- Ir meat, as well, per- F. hap?, as in a utile h\ scientific swo*r ■ Ung. Their bodies Vy«nd tempers are 1/ hot nnd the air i* ft! cool 'as they should 1 be,butarenot,)and I .theyareapj-arcr.: V ly in the condition I when it is much ft easier to Alrhcumatbm tn;.:i Hi'i-ii. i:i w hit h case Ml t would be w ell If for them that they I 1 o provided with I a bottle of i?T. L» J acobs On, the *' Great Gorman Remedy for this as well r. VVr ]ulnfii! ailments. rr/.t kail its r i j?s to Tin: hast. “ilcllo, iVoiiyl rv i i.i i!ic trouble 7' “Oh, T.a all broke up.” w.n the response to the in quiry cf an old shipmate of William o. Pennis ton, one of Farramit's war-worn Veterans, well known in therioulttcm s v:i «nos this city, who came tlscAmt ri rn 3icc yesterday. I“I thought I vr>*n«d r.udvr tho batch??Um ! time,” continue* I lJenui c t<-:i. “I never suffered so much in my life. I b;.d the r’ nnvitic gout so bad that 1 could not pi t off ihe !».■*! or put my fiotto the few, aud would have been the revet If a friend had not ieronuacmlc<l Ft. Ja< ons On. tome, a hesitated so:r.e time before getting a Kittle, thinking it wasßno?h*Tcn<M ft ho-*; adver tised iK*4rums,but was finally indue*-*! to give it a trial, and a lucky day it was for mo. Whv, bless my stars! afterhalfihigthclimMhnrough’v with the 0:1 I felt relief, and ray faith was pinned toSr. Jacoban l his Oil after that. I freely say that if it had n tboenf «rBT. Ja* <*uhO:.. i shoul-t, in a. I pmhabilty, be si ill housed My foot pains me t*utlittle,aud the swelling Hwentircly passed away. It brats anything of the kind I have ever heerd of. and any person who doubts it send them tome at laakbouthTcuth tA.—i‘tuluddpkux Tima. ■RKFRIGkR .4 TOR With Water. Milk and Butter Cooler. Best Food and Ire Preserv er. Ontennral Award. 4*».Goi» sold. bend lor Catalogue. ALEX. M LESLEY. Manufacturer. 13 J7 Broad* av.N.Y. Also Manut’r of the CHILLS M ro~ EIORT’S STANDARD CORE PILLS. budv Yejreta’le. No Quinine. Meienrv or Pois of aa, kind. Pleasant to take, no griping or ~ad elNcta. Prescribed bv Phv« >c*ans uni sold by Dnncwxst* ever; w here and s*t cents a box. Cct* C*x. 197 Prari Street, New York. ®on m Blood. aa*l wfU oomi leie.v cfc the blood ia th* cans* mateai ia threw month*. Anv person who wth take one nil each BtehMrom 1 to 12 weeks mar ba watered to pound health ts *uch a thing be LA JOMNMIX A CO., Itwaion, >laaa M MmeHy Baugar, >le. IFAAF Out .Haunt*.' IJvewef the J a area JESSE isss AND We*»«,,*H*K,*»e ki.Unf. the hams, aaw m Jawe* atter death. Tit,-wife, hit L U A kl If burn .!» . the Font. f llAllß •hoH-.a-Vr .he. P , f . ■ enctarxac <*»»• Cr.tteade*. 4VKKT* lAM EC 1 JAMES gggg.aj-gaßss 0.r.T..T. rr.'£r: L^r.,7 4 .. cv ry:,. PtNsiuws<&i ft .«« t lim.iM.tr* *r nrurt tarcM mu m (Xd v »■! IHa—a Thoctaada *f |>r«su aer« a-« 1 1 ,JV WCfTRARK aud i'ATLNri |W«latent, ra. Soldi* ra jflfi laadwmaaWwrenuwd.Wwat.taadasU. ftnldien f /*■ and knpxjrr tr« art t Mi at.»c». Ser«t *f, >/;Tf SLjKft'iSitsßSßSgci Utl USt NDNE6UT the fESI . CV J-EGBEAT Y\ " f etTRiUO tYf SOLD fe V 4CC GBOCf * piima salt mp £ rr.FHitt DARKiE and the CABBAGE. IT IS THE MOST ATTRACT IVE NOVELTY THAT HAS EVER APPEARED. ; IT Tfl CUT OUT the NATURAL ~*IZ2 of the CABBAGE, with the head of a bright eyed little darkie peeping through the centre. It is rich in color and has the effect of an oil painting, and has an easel hack. A work of ert that cannot be confounded with cheap plaque and card pictuics, something that the greatest newspaper in the United States endorses. The New York Hc taid of April 2 states: •• A crop of cabbages, with the head ot a eyed little darkie peeping through the centre. lioa just made its appearance, and has been classed among the pseudo-nathetic production* as tb** Darkit Cabbagr. The design is excellent, aa 1 h the work of an artist from the Munich Academy.” Seed Twenty-five Cents in pa-tage sta 1 pj to GILLEBPIE & MOODIE, No. 71 West Broadway, New York, and it will be carefully mailed to you. ggMB— EBBBSmfmW 111 I I Sells at sight. Country Merchant* supplied LANE & BODLEY C 9. AWARDED GOLD MEDAL BY THE j ATLANTA COTTON EXPOSITION, OH THEIR Steam Engine and Saw IK Exhibited at Atlanta la 1381. j Manufacturers of Steam Engine?, Boilers, Saw Mills, Gang Edgers. Lath Machines, liaa and Spoke Machinery, Shafting. Hanger.*. Pul leys, Couplings, Gearing, Grist and Flour Mills Send for Special Circular of our >o. 1 l’luntati js Saw Mill, which we sell for S2OO. Special attention given to Plantation Ma chinery. Illustrated Circulars free. LANE Sc BODLEY CO.. John «£ Water its.. Cincinnati , O Payne’s Autmriatlc Engines- ReliAlil-'. PirairlT and MiymM 1 hurt I'Oicer tntft lex* fuel and wider lha i any olhet Engine built, n<>t fitted with an Autoiua ic Ovt-otf. Send tor Illustrated Catalogue "i." tor iult nuation A Pncfig. li. W. Pavnk & Hush, Box MOU, Corr ng. X.f. P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE ICTORIAL HiSTORY<™ WORLD Embracing full and authentic account* of ever* na , tion of am-ieut and modern time* and including a ; his ton of the rise and tall ot the Greek aud Roman I empire*, tho middle age*. The crusade*, the feutai ■ ♦stem, the reformation, the diecovery and ■ettlw m*’u» of the New World, etc., etc. U contains 07‘i due historical engraving*, and ia the most complete History of the World ever published. Send tor speck Ckj page* and extra term* to Agents. Address National PuBLUtBiNo Co.. Philadelphia, Pa. HEALTH IS WEALTH! Da. E. C. Wkhts** Nerve and Brain Treatmxst a specific for Hysteria. Dizziness, Convulsions, Ner vous Hea ache. Mental Depreaeion, Loss of Memory. Premature Old Age, caused by over-exertion, which leads to misery, decay and death. One box will cure recent case*. Each box contains one montn’s treat• ment. One do'lar a box or six boxen for five dollar*: sent by mall prepaid on receipt of price. We guar antee six boxes to cure any case, with each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied with five dollars, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to return the money if the ireatui* nt does not effect a cure. Guarantees Umied only by G. J. LfTli.N, Charleston, fit. C. * Order™ by mail promptly attended to. MAKE HENS LAY. An English Veterinary burgeon and Cheruiit. now trayelir.K i n this country, sa>a that most ol the U.irs* aud Cattle Powder* sold here are worthless trash. U* says that Sheridans Condition Powders are absolute* ly pure and immensely valuable. Nothing on earth will make hens lay like Sheridan'* Condition Pow ders. Dose, on*-t*-asi>oonful to oue | iut of food, sold or sent by mail for 8 letter starm * I 3. JOHNSON k CO.. Boat on, llassformer! * WrvorMj TDIITU ,s ■Hiffn.liwwraa't* I n W I n -.«»> •• era*. MASriNAX it-llnu / »•<» aa* Wnael all ki* ranU with W / bMTfcv ral»r«f tjm. aad Uet -4 fcair. ra«-1 • oaaarr Vtl < rs ;HI ku,l«a* ,r nf*. M>rl* .. .ell) \ ; ; pr«lK**a. rath >u*. U<M u* ptara J at. and gVL teM at ountit. Daw) mmri (a ail a** .ti»*«4. aaarara hW. L. Nan.ax lo MM fn. lirawa. Mara NECtW EVERY ONE music IVIII fret valuable Information FULL by acudlot; for *ir*ular to f.. TOI'UJKK, Boston, Mail Pierce’s Perfect Pad. Sur* cnr« tor Asae and Malar n in all^2 raiA Sut free to auv ad«lr****H 11-011 receipt of »I 00-1,, 1,, r. PIERt fc Lywatharst. N..L. ftllßFAl IMFKOVKII ROOT BEBK* Hlnr\' *>fic* |a* kage ntak>« . r > ga’.lim* l IlfllftaW delicious, wholesome. Temperance beverage. Ask jour druggists, vreea. by mail tor *c. c!e-HIHKS, «a N I»ela Ave. Phils. B W tt 114 _ \GENT* naHAtn.OO datlx selling mounted •• Lira or CTnuirr.'* T-n Event**: T tolotw. Chrom<». I, tn.*r« h. ICx22 inche* Thousand*eold. 1 Mailed an when . R q. Luxmw Pub V •. Pruv .B. L THRESHERSSH ft*. TUB ifLTMAJ» aTAYLOBCO.Hu-arfS.l' ~ ■" SllSSlfcra ftifiMsPm. amyl** f&ylggßS AlHllfifi Womhlne llabtt « nrod In P Uft IUIyI 1»h- J - NTWHANa Lebanon. Ohh> YOllftlß MPN If vou would learn Telegrai hv m ,UUI,U four mouths, and be certain of * situation. Address Valentine Bros., Jatiesrill**. Her Week can lie made In any locality OtlU Homethiiig entirslv new tor agents. out fit two- G. W INOHAH AM * 00.. Boaton. Mam- __ I IklV(*Ht:»W in any Htats No puhlclty. ln. o*e -1 I* patibility sufficient cause- G. Ih Chicago.
Charlotte Messenger (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 3, 1883, edition 1
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