Newspapers / The Standard (Concord, N.C.) / Jan. 14, 1888, edition 1 / Page 4
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QUEEN OF FLOWERS. A. Short But Entertaining. His tory of theRoe. c ..14-uraffrtn Dates Back Thousands of Years. n,o T-nsA savs an exchange, Is the fl.oi TonrfisentatiTO of a .'. very large UVl i family, including the apple, pear, peacn, cherry, apricott, as well as the rasp berry, blackberry and strawberry. All these are more or less beautiful in flower, but none of them have giver themselves up wholly to blossoms, quite to the neg lect of useful fruit. . But , the rose proper has also a fruit, only it is hardly ever eaten by any creature, animal or bird. . This rose family has certainly been m cultivation for many thousands of years, as calcined apples are found in the refuse heaps of the Lake Dwellers. Of our floral rose we have accounts running back to 1,000 years before Jesus. Solo man speaks of the Rose of Sharon, though it is uncertain to what he re ferred. Herodotus speaks of double ro3cs, and Pliny tells of roses cultivated by the Romans at Preneste, Miletus, and other places. Virgil describes roses that bloomed twice a year. Among the more ancient sorts are supposed to have been the centifolia Rosa Qallica and damask rose. The Remans had learned the art of forcing "roses for winter, and used the leaves for perfume. Cleopatra received Antony in a room ankle deep with rose leaves. The rose has figured for 2,000 years as a symbol. The church used it as a religious sign with the cross. The Pope still gives a golden rose to a prince who is recognized as the most devoted of the friends of the church. In political affairs it has figured as the emblem of kings and kingly houses, as in the War -of the- Roses, between the houses of York and Lancaster, in England. The Greeks dedi cated the rose to cupid, because its charms ' are accompanied by thorns, as in love. ;; "Sub-rpsa" is a phrase that arose from the fabled gift of a rose by Cupid to the god of Silence. In their poetry they represented the origin of the rose to have been the dead body of a nymph. , Flora finding her, begged the gods to help her change her friend to a flower. Apollo gave life; Bacchus, nectar; .Vertumnus, perfume; Pomono, fruit, nd Fora added flowers. So there came to be the gem of flowers ; in reality a goddess. To crown 'with roses has been a spontaneous tribute of great antiquity. The Romans crown with roses on festive ' occasions, and use them at funerals. UUU blio ij 1-311113 Lilt 11 use at- funerals as heathenish. One of the fathers of the church urged that as the Lord was crowned with thorns, the rose with its thorns should not be used by Christians. TheArab3 discovered how to make rose water, and used it fot religious purification. This was used by Christians in baptisms. The origin of the different species of roses we now have are not easy to trace. Our rose catalogues give us Hybrid, Perpctuals, Tea, Noiseitis, Hybrid Teas, Chinas or Bengilsj " and. several classes of summer flowering roots. These are crosses for-th jnoat, and selections from the old Damasons Rose and Centiflolia and Gallical The most recent in origin fa-CIv" Tea, supposed to be a cross of the Hybrid Perpetualsand Teas. The distinct object of florists is how to create a stock of overblooming roots perfectly hardy. AUjsffort in the way of seedlings should look to that. The chief objection to floral decoration is now the expense of winter protection, and the time taken in preparing for both wiuici auu. oprmg. Apart, irom me Hy brid Tea family not much progress has of late been made. At present the best plan is to buy everbloomers of good size, plant in well-prepared beds, and renew each spring those that perish in the winter. Many, however, can not afford the expense, and must content themselves with the hardy roots that do not bloom so freely. Bury Him Deep. He was gay as -a lark as he walked down the street, and his smile was bright and his footsteps were fleet, and the keen light of hope was bright in his eve and his IOV was com nipt and liia 1 courage was high, you could roam the earth o'er, I ween, and not see such awon drously jubilant fellow as he. All care less he went where his aimless feet strayed, till ho came to a street where a bag-piper played. ' Then his jaw fell down with a sickening thud, and his face trailed along on the ground through the mud, and his heart dropped down like a chunk of lead, and he said: "In one hour and I shall be dead. So bury me deep in the cold, green ground, encased in some good non-conductor of sound ; and that bag piper there, that murderer of tune, hang him to the car of some mighty balloon, way up 'mong the stars let his body swing forth, but dig my grave down to the centre of earth. For in one nar row universe you must agree there is - not enough room for that fellow and me." Yankee Blade. t A Big "BulL" A traveler being on the box of an Irish mail coach on a very cold day. and observing the driver enveloping his neck in tne voluminous folds of an ample "comforter" remarked: "You seem to be taking good care of yourself, my friend?" "Oh, to be sure, I am, sir," answered the driver, "what's all the world to It man, when his wife's a widdyt" FOB FARM AND GARDEN, 1 Th Parent ot the Cut Worm, i TWre several kinds of cut worms, and these are the larvae of various moths which usually fly at night and lay their eggs on the ground near tne roots 01 grass or in strawberry beds. To repress these pests lights may be kept burning in tubs of water in meadows or gardens; they are attracted by the lights and fall ino the water. If a film of kerosene is poured on the water the moths will be killed quickly. There aro seven or eight distinct varieties of cut worms known, and some of them de stroy the buds of dwarf pears and app'e and cut the fruit stems of grapes, while others cut off the fruit stems of strawberries and the stems of potatoes, young cab bage, peas, and other vegetables. An. effective remedy is to dig over the garden with a table fork, around the vouncr clants. and kill all that are found. Several thousand may be found in an acre. New York Times. Convenient Endboard. Says a contributor to the N ew York Tribune: Decidedly the most conven ient attachment to a farm wagon I ever saw came under my observation recent ly. "Wagons now are usually made with double boxes. The hind endboard of the lower box in question is divided in two pieces a third of the distance from one end and hinged so it can be opened outward. A strip of board is riveted to the short piece and laps over on the long piece and is there fastened with a hook and staple. To uuload ordinary wagon boxes of corn in the ear, potatoes and other vegetables in the bulk which are to be shovelled out, it is a great bother to pick up by hand until the floor of the box is reached so that, the shovel can be used. With - this box place two baskets or crates on the ground beneath, withdraw the hook, give a slight pull and the end board drops out when the shovel can be used at once. It is also very convenient in loading live pigs, calves, sheep, eta, when the top of the box has to be covered to keep them from jumping out. Animals -which cannot pass through the opening standing can be thrown on the side and shoved through. Protecting Newly-Planted Trees. Newly-planted fruit trees need pro tection .fltora rabbits and mice. They need also protection from the dry weather and from the frost. The wounded roots and the young wood de prived of the supply of moisture conse quent upon transplantation suffer with out some protection on the surface, such as coarse manure, which is the best, to re tain moisture. The stems are easily saved from injury by vermin, by wrap-t ping old newspapers around them for two feet from the ground upward. Tarred paper should not bo used, nor the dark roofing felt, for these are both injurious by reason of the ab sorption of heat from the sun, which thaws the bark, and the following freez ing or cold nights. Thousands of trees have been ruined by the use of this so called protection. White paper reflects the heat and is not injurious, but rather the reverse. A coating of mixed cow manure, clay, and lime and a 'little car-, bolic acid or strong-smelling super phosphate of lime applied to the young trees from the roots upward, will keep off Xhe rabbits and mice both. The latter are easily destroyed by leaving baits of cornmeal and rat poison mit.'n holesojinbloclVoo "about the orchard. iNew lork Times. Utilizing: Coarse Fodder. Corn fodder, Btraw, and even " marsh hay at times, are the sole dependence for feeding. In such cases these infe rior fodders may bo made up by the addition of the richer foods which can be purchased and used at such a. profit as will be satisfactory to the dairyman. And in feeding these coarser fodders, the use of root3 with them will be found exceedingly valuable. The succulent root being almost wholly digestible, aid very much in the digestion of the coarser fodder; and for winter feeding a supply of mangels or sugar beets will be indispensable for the most profit. In a similar way the use of malt sprouts steeped in water, which makes a sweet semi-liquid pulp of an agreeable odor and taste, mixed with cut straw and corn fodder, has been found to keep up the yield of milk ; and with a slight increase in the mixed meal, or ground grain food, to prevent any deficiency in the yield of butter. Well-cured corn fodder, or the stalks of the corn crop, cut before frost, or as soon as the grain has bet n glazed and stacked so as to preserve the greenness and sweetness of the leaves, has yielded, with the addi tion of a peck of sliced roots, as much and as good butter as that made from the best of clover hay. American Ag riculturist. Making Cream Chnrn Easily, A lady, who is an experienced and successful butter maker, thus explains how she makes butter come quickly as cold weather approaches. She keeps the cream crock in the cellar as cool as possible, and as the natural result it is too cool for good butter making If the cream is directly heated over the fire it is apt to make butter soft as every housewife knows. What she does i tn take a quart or a little more of sweet milk, heat it quickly over the fire and then mix it with the cream already in the churn, adding enough to bring it to the right temperature. The butter comes very quickly by this method, and it is not soft Lite in the season. It is not a plan so well adapted to butter making in hot weather, for then the cream unless kept on ice, usually needs no warming. Some use hot water instead of milk, but the advances of the ' latter is" thai thewarmT sweet Mlk imparts a better flavor to the, butter and greatly improves the buttermilkybesides, of course, making more of it. . There is probably only a very small increase of butter, that . comes directly from the heated sweet milk. ; Possibly this furnishes no butter; but it does sep arate the butter particles more perfectly from the cream than is possible other wise. The yield of cream and butter from milk should under no circumstances na'turally increase in proportion to the milk as the amount of butter is lessened. A farrow cow five or six months after calving gives less but richer milk than she does at first. But what avails this to the butter maker, if he or she cannot separate the butter from the cream in which it is enclosed? Adding warm sweet milk seems to entirely remove this difficulty, and has many other in cidental advantages. ' Feeding Hosts. Professor Henry of the Wisconsin Ex periment Station has recently given some very interesting results of the feed ing trials with hogs at the station. Lack of space pi-events the publishing of Prof. Henry's report in full, but the following are some of the deductions drawn from the experiments: "When hogs are fed a ration rich in carbhydrates, but lacking in protein, like cornmeal, we find: 1. That there is an excessive development of fat not only on the outside of the muscle i and beneath the skin, but also among the muscles. 2. That tho muscles of the body fall to develop to their normal size, especially some of the . most im portant ones, as those along the back. 8. That an abnormally small amount of hair and a thin skin results. 4. That while the brain, heart and lungs do not seem to change in we ght, the spleen, liver, and kidneys are unusually smalL 5. The amount of blood in tho body is greatly reduced from the normal C. The strength of the bones may be re duced one-half. It would seem that wc may concludo that a system of feeding which robs tho hog of half his blood and natural strength of his bones, and produces other violent changes, is a most un natural one, and must, if persisted in, end in giving us a race of animals which will be unsatisfactory to all concerned. From parents thus weakened must come descendants that will fall easy victims to disease and disaster. Knowing the facts as here set forth, can we any longer wonder that our hogs are weak in con stitution and easily break down when attacked bv disease? Nor is thh all: the meat from such animals can hirdly be of flavor and composition satisfactory to the consumer. In order to improve old methods without extra outlay of money, first of all, we must see to it that breeding sows are fed a proper ration in which protein compounds form a liberal share. The young pigs must likewise have a" goodly allowance of protein, while tho mature hogs, when fattening, can be fed a lanro proportion of carbhydrates, especially if we wish to make a large proportion of lard. The food articles at our com mand which are rich in protein are skim-milk, buttermilk, shorts, bran,, peas, green clover and the lilke. Without attemntinrr tn rules the following statements are sub mitted: Durinvgcstation breeding sows should Have only a small allowance rot corn, the feed bein? mainlv that which will go to give her younjr good sound bodies. Such feed would be shorts (middlings or ship-stuff), bran, skim-milk, buttermilk and clover. When suckling her young, of course milk is one of the best articles at our command. "When weaned the pigs may get, say two parts of milk by weight, one part of shorts and one part of cornmeal. A run on good clove, would go far to make a good framer When nearing maturity the ration can be changed more and more to the car bonaceous, and for the last two months, when fattening, the feed can be largely corn, if one desires fat pork, but if lean, juicy meat is desired, the muscle making foods must be' continued. Antwerp. Among the most interesting places that I visited was the city of Antwerp, writes T. W. Crawford from abroad to the New York World. This city is chiefly interesting on account of its modern development. We have been taught to believe in the United States that there is no enterprise or push in any of the European cities. Antwerp is certainly an exception to the average European rule. It is growing today as rapidly as any Western town. Some of its suburbs look very much like those of Chicago. Block after block of houses arc going up in various directions. It is the shipping interest which is making Antwerp. It has a beautiful harbor where a number of great steamship lines discharges freight and passengers for all parts of Europe. The new growth of this city is most remarkable, for the reason that cities rarely die .and come to life again. Antwerp in the fifteenth century was one of the most powerful and prosper ous cities in Europe. It had then a population of one hundred and seventv- ouu tnousana. it was the home of Rubens, Van Dyck and the greatest painters of any time. It fell off from that time through the process of decay until the population at the beginning of this century was down to 43,000. Now it is back again to the population that it had in the fifteenth century, when it was at the height of its prosperity. Its growth now i3 solid. Thero is plenty of money in town. The people all seem to have work. There are no beggars of any account and absolutely no distress as you see everywhere in England. 1TJ1E ENIGMA. Wkat tne 8clntin World Wants to xvnovr. a ft 1 on.no O Offer. W 1 have published In our columns from time to time different . advertisements inre- Bar&,to?ri$it' Dl8ea8e i its cures. What is this terrible disease? . a b?ve t?keu trouble to make an In vestigation from the best sources, and we give the results to our leaders. . . mZ SI fI 113 J8 th6 general indiffer ence riven to kidney disorders. The kidneys do not sound the alarm of their diseased con dition, owing to the fact that they have very Tew nerves, hence few suspect that there is nny disease in them. Irritation, Mamma, turn, ulceration set in. and then the little tubes, of which the kidneys are full, are de stroyed and thrown off, and from this fact are called tube casts. As soon asihis begins to take place It Is onlv a Question of how fast decomposition goes oh before the disease results fatally. If the proper remedies are taken before final de composition or waste of these lubes com mences or becomes too far advanced, that is the only and last chance for relief. It Is at this point or before that Warners safe cure proves so beneficial, and may cure or stop the wasting away of the kidneys if it has not ad vanced too far. '. The most remarkable thing of all our in vestigation is the fact that the patient with bright s disease has no exclusive symptoms, but has the symptoms of every common disease. .First be may possibly feel a dull pain in au Eenera'ly upon one side, which does not debar him from his usual business rou tine. After a time he may begin to feel neuralgic pains, or have a slight attack of what he may call rheumatism, or headache, with high or dark colored urine, with an un pleasant sensation in its passage, and after standing showing an unnatural condition. J inter on, come tired feelings, loss of ambi tion or vigor, or loss of or failing eyesight, winch is very common, with a distressed con dition of the stomach. Any one of these symptoms is liable to occur. This no doubt explains why the proprietors of Warners safe cure are curing so many dis eases, liy regulating and building up the kidneys, symptoms of general ilFhealth dis appear. Tbey justly accuse the medical pro fession of treating the effects and not the cause. Finally if this disorder is neglected the patient either dies of appoplexy, pneu monia, heart 'disease, blood poisoning, con sumption, or any other disease that the sys tem is most subject to. There appcaKs to be some one cause for nearly every other ailment of the human system, but up tr the present time no one has been able to fully account for this terriWle malady. We understand that the people of Germany have becQme aware of its fearful fatality, and have k offered 400,000 marks i 100,000) to any one &hat can satisfactorily explain the cause. 1 Major Ames's Impatient Patient. V "Talking alout remarkable cases of recovery,' said Mayor jA.mes, the other - evening, to a throng of listeners, "there is one I would like to put on record. A young Irish boy a while ago was run over by the cars on the (Man to'a road. His right leg was badly crushed, and I was obliged to perform sin amputation just below the knee. Hestood the op eration manfully, and looked as though he would pull through. When I called to see him the next day hisV mother said, 'He's gone to a picnic at TiYhite Bear Lake.' I " To a picnic V I yelled. ) i' 'Yes, he got a pair of clrutches and hobbled off.' J "Well, I thought I wouldf wait to see whether he was alive or dea d. Not be ing summoned to go to the flake to take care of him, I went to the house again during the evening. There was the pa tient, that I thought rClust be dead, smoking a pipe. 'I)oes;n't your leg pain you V I asked. 1 " 'Not much,' he said, 'only I hit the f tump on a car stepf and it hurt me some. ' f "I thought sure h-jp was going to have a serious limb as a Result of his indis cretion; but, would you believe me, he was out again in ten davs with his leg almost entirely healed. ,r St. Paul Globe. : A Noted Prineess. The Crown E'rinccss Amelie, of Portu gal, whose dejiath is daily expected, is a daughter oythe Comte de Paris, and is in her twenty -third year. Her father was on Gen. IcClellan's staff during the War, andis a pretender to the throne of Fyrancc. He is the one selected to deliver au oration at (.ietLysburgh, July 4, 1888, at the reunion of the armies of the Poto mac and of Northern Virginia. She was married to he Crown Prince . Charles, Due dc ISragance, at Lisbon, on the 22d of Slav, 1880. She is a tall, handsome woman, and noted for her benevolence. She has a profusion of auburn hair and a 1 e . ... . large ioreneaa, wnicn indicates great firmness, of which she has often given proof. She is very intelligent and spirit uelle, her chief characteristic being sim plicity in everything and great dislike for frivolity. She is a brilliant conversa tionalist, and is noted for her great re gard for the comfort of her guests. She has always adhered to the strict discipline under which she was brought up by her mother, and until her marriage always retired at 9 o'clock. TnEmost novel complaint. of impure milk reported is that of the London boy boarded out under the poor-law regulation who reported that the milk given him out of town, instead of being taken out of clean tins, had been squeezed out of a nastv cow, and he "seed 'em a-doing of it." " The ladiea Farorlte. The newest fashion in ladies' hats will doubt less cause a nutter of pleasurable excitement among the fair sex. Ladies are always sus ceptible to the changes of a fashion plate; and the more startling the departure, the more earnest the gossip over the new mode. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, is a positive cure for the ills which afflict females and make their lives miserable. This sovereign panacea can be relied on in cases of dispUremen s and all functional derangements. It builds up the P?or, haggard and dragged-out victim, and gives her renewed hope and a fresh lease of , It is the only medicine for woman's peculiar weaknesses and ailments, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers, that it will give satisfac ,lnineverr ca8e or money refunded. Read printed guarantee on bottle wrapper. During cold weather the ball room belle in decollete costume is dressed to kill. .Smell In a Drag Store. What smells most In a drug store? Your nose. But when you have a cold, nothing. Cure coughs and colds by taking Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mul lein. By means of a solution and an instrument called a Nebulizer the worst case of 'atarrh can be quickly and pleasantly cured. For par ticulart address. City Hall Pharmacy, 264 B'way, New York. Free pamphlet. The Plain Truth Is that Hood's SarsapariUa has cured thousands of people who suffered aeverely with rheumattem. It neutralizes the lactic acid In the blood, which causes those terrible pains and aches, and also vitalises and enriches the blood, thus preventing the recurrence of the disease. These facts warrant us In urging jrou, If 7011 suffer with rheumaUsm, to give Hood's SarsapariUa a trial. Having been troubled with Inflammatory rheu matism for'many years, my favorable attention was called to Hood's SarsapariUa. I have now used three bottles and can already testify to beneficial results. I highly recommeud it as a great blood purifier." J. C. Atebs, West Bloomneld, N. Y. Hood's SarsapariUa Sold by aU druggists. $1 ; six for $. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD ft CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses One Dollar THOUSANDS ay that ELY'S CREAM BALM eared them of CATARRH. Apply Balm into each nostril. Broe.,285 Greenwich 8t.,N.T. I rw uJtj"''r Good Financial Showing, The Freedman's Aid Society, has es tablished 24 schools, employing 124 teachers, with an average attendance of 4,506 pupils. There are fifteen schools for whites, with an attendance of 2,000. To carry out the work on the plans pro posed for next year will require almost $250,000, and of this sum only $700 is on hand. Since its foundation the socie ty has expended almost $2000,000 in the work of education in the South, and has school property of almost $1,000,000 in value in its possession. . The receipts for last year were $184,424.55, of which sum the conference collections amounted to $85,030. Bequests yielded $24,000.35. Of the receipts of $184,424.55, only $20,057.55 was paid by students. The total expense for the yeaT amounted lo $183,680.. The Cutest Little Things. ' "Cntel" he echoed. "Well I don't know as the adjective would have occurred to me in just that connection. But if you mean that thf y do their work thoroughly, et make no fuss about it; cause no pain or weakness; and, in short, are everything that a pill ought to be, and nothing that it ought not.then I agree that Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets arc about the cutest little things going! Anew society in New York has organized for the study of politics. Itching- Piles. Simpfom Moisture; intense itching and stinging; worse by scratching. If allowed to continue tumors form, which often bleed and ulcerate, becoming very sore. Swayne's Oint ment stops the itching and bleeding, heals ul ceraiien, and in many cases removes the tu mors. Equally efficacious in curing all Skin Diseases. DIt.S WAYNE & SON, Philadelphia. Sent by mail for 50cts. Also sold by druggists. Consumption Sorely Cared. To the Editor: Please inform your readers khat 1 have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy fkkk to any of your readers who have con sumption if they will send me their Express and P. O. address. Respectfully, . T. A. BLOCUM. M.O.. 181 Pearl SU. N. Y. Evolution. Tight boots make a corn, corn makes whiskey, whiskey makes a man tight. Mild, soothing, and healing is Dr. Sage's Ca tarrh Remedy. The National Farmers' Alliance, Shreve por., "resolved1 against foreign pauper labor. Life is burdensome, alike to the sufferer and all around him, while dyspepsia and its at tending evils holds sway. omplaints of this nature can be speedily cured by taking Prickly Ash Bitters regularly. Thousands onoe thus afflicted now bear cheerful testimony as to its merits. If afflicted with eore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle. IT 15 A PURELY VEGETABLE PREPARATION! PRICKLY "ppipmyaSH Plc-ril SENNA-MANDRAKE-BUCKLi AND OTHER EQUALLY EFFICIENT REMEDIES It has stood the Test of Years. in uuring all Diseases or the BLOOD, LI VEB, 8T0M J3 ACH, KIDNEYS.B0W H rT e jl T. t la .. - Blood, Invigorates and BITTERS uieansestae system. DYSPEPSIA, CONSTI CURES PATION, JAUNDICE, AlLDlSOkSESOFTHEl SICKHEADACHE.BIL IOUS COMPLAINTS, it c disappear at once under LIVER KIDNEYS STOMACH ANO its Deneacial lnnaence. It is purely a Medicine as ii3 camaruc proper BOWELS ties forbids its use at a horrorarra If. aniens aat to tne taste, and as easily taken by child ALLDRUGGISTS ren as adults. PRICKIY ASH BITTERS CO Sole Proprietor, ST.I.OLISCDd Kansa. TlTT PRICElDOLLAj I V jut! la j g) CaTA tMEDy 1 or a case of Catarrh in the Head which they cannot cure. V fc'ivM , y Jtessiim CATARRH IN THE HEAD. SYMPTOMS OF TIIE DISEASE-Dull, heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal passages, discharges falling from the head into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyea are weak ; there is ringing in the ears, deafness, hacking or coughing to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive mat ter, together with scabs from ulcers ; the voice is changed and has a "nasal twang"; the breath is ftffensive; smell and taste impaired ; there is a sensation of dizziness, with mental depres sion, a hacking cough and general debility. Only a few or tho above-named symptoms are likely to be present in any one case. Thousands of cases annually, without manifesting half ot the above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in the grave. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous, less understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians. Common Sense Treatment. If you would remove an evil, strOte at afs root. As the predisposing or real cause of catarrh is, in the majority of cases, some weakness, impurity, or otherwise faulty condition of the system, in attempting to cure tho riispfuv) our chief aim must be directed to the removal of that cause. The more we see of this odious disease, and we treat successfully thousands of cases an nually at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, the more do we realize the importance of combining with the use of a local, soothing and healing application, a thorough and persistent inter nal use of blood-cleansing and tonio medicint-s. . uHItr I hicb It is so frequently tarrhal deaf ness,- weak or inflamed eyes, impure blood, scrofulous and syphilitic taints, the wonder ful powers and virtues of Dr. Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery cannot be too strongly Sofd by Druggists. 23 Cents a Vial. BBIKO PURELY VEGETABLE, Dr. Pierce's Pellets operate without disturbance to the .system, diet, or occupation. Put up in glass vials, hermetically sealed. Always freehand relia--i-Pnule laxa"e alterailTe, or active pnrgauve, they give the most perfect satisfaction. ST. JACOBS OIL. WHAT IT HAS DONE. . Relief. In any climate at any season one or two applications of St. Jacobs Oil relieves; often cures permanen tly . This is the average experience in ten years. Cures. The contents of a bottle have cured thousands of extreme chronic cases. Used ac cording to directions there is a cure in every bottle. The Testimony. Thousands of testimo nials substantiate the above statements in the cure of all kinds of painful ailments. The Proof. To make sure of thjs show ing, answers to inquiries concerning the per "nianeiicy of the cures resulted as follows; That from date of heallmj to date of rexfionsa every cure has remained permanent williout re currence of 'pain. Its Supremacy. The twenty million bot tles sold can be justly rated as so many cures ; in almost every case a irimuiont cure. Its price is the surety of every bottle being the same, every bottle being a cure and the poor are protected.' Sold by Druggists and Dealers Everywhere. The Charles A Yogeler Co.', Balto., Md. MARVELOUS nn DISCOVERY. Wholly unlike artificial systems. ' Any book learned In one readings ... Recommended by Mark Twais, Kiciiard Procto, theScleutlst, Hons. W. W. AsTOn. Juih P. Bbmja Jill. Dr. Minor. Ac Class of 100 Columbia Law stu Sente ; 100 at Mertden ; 2' at Norwich ; 330 at Oberlln College : two olasses of M each at ale ; 400 at Uni versity of Peiin, Phlla. ; too at Welleeiey College, and three large classes at Cbatauqua University. Ac Prospectus post free from . BOF. LOISETTE. ZV7 Fifth Are, NewYork. KIDDER'O MY A SURE CURE FOR INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA Over 5,000 Physicians hare sent us their approval ot DIOESTYLIN, naylng that it is the best preparation for Indigestion that they hare eer used. We have never heard of a case of Dyspepsia where DIGKSTYLIN was taken that was not cured. FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM. IT WILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION. For Summer Complaints and Chronic Diarrhoea, which are the direct results of Imperfect digestion, DIGESTYLIJ will effect an Immediate cure. Take DYOESTYIJN for aU pains and disorders of the stotsach ; thev all come from Indigestion. Ask your drWKlst for DIOESTYLIN (price tl per large bottle). If fee does not have it send one dollar to u i and we will send a bottle to you, express prepaid. Do not hesitate to send your money. Our house Is reliable. Established twenty-five years. WM. F. KIDfiER & CO., niauafaeturinc Chiniai SJJa t. If . T BRONCHITIS. HAY FEVER, and all DIs eaea of the BLOOI, can be enred only by DVh HAIR'S SYSTEM of Treatment, whlca is now recognized by the medical world ai the only one that will positively and permanently cure Asthma, its kindred affections and all blocl diseases. Not only does it excel all ocber methods in giving quick relief, but it absolutely cures tho worst cases permanently. Thousands have been cured by It. Convincing and conclusive proof wili be found in my 64 page Treatise, sent free. Ilf D W UAID 233 W. FOCRTII ST., Lift Oi III nMm, Cincinnati, 01110. $230 A M( X TIT. AoftitsVT.inted. 90 best sell in? articles in the n-orld. 1 samnle Y.. Add ress J A 1" BlOJfSaA', VetruU, Mich. II t IIC 8TCPT. Book-keeping, Penmanship. A nthmetic, nUitlC Slurtha-id..t, thoroughly taught by mail, l ir cularsfree. ntmsrs COLLKUE, 4iJ St., Buffalo. N. V. 1 l.IHniaeColleire,Phila.. Pa, Sifna tions furnished. Life Scholarships S lO. "Write. fCOPYHlGUT, 1SST. 1 is so wen caicuiateu Local Agent. complicated, as throat, extolled. It has a specific MOT MM PLEASpN? 1TTIlF 1IVER pills. n PURELY VEGETABLE! 1 A a LIVER PI hey "e ledI SMALLEST CHEAPIST, EASIEST TO TAKE. 7 77 contain Poisonous Minerals. Always ask for Beware of Jimtations hich ."OTsuirar-cpatrt Pilte. SICK HEADACHE, mZsHi Pellets. In explanation of their remedial gland or tissue escaping their sanative influence. 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SOLDIERS! all get Pensions, if H disa bled; OfHrers' travel pay, hmmtv rnllprted: Deserters " relieved ; 22 years' practice .Success or no fej. Laws at free. A. W. McCormick & Son. Waihlpgtoa.1 DI.ss'a Dill a Great English Gout and Dlall S llliSi Rheumatic Remedy. , OtI Bx, 34 rownil, I t Pills. PATENTS 1 ingrton, I. C. Send obtained by E. H. GET. STOX A- CO., Wash. for our book of instructions. FmmftF By return ajall. Fall! 91.U C.ulns. MOODY A CO.. Fall Beserfptlea jBtmm ml ur..m . CjBoinnati. tt 5 tm 88 a day. Samples worth 11.30, FREE. Lines not under the home's feet. Krewster Rafetv Rein Holder Co.. Ilollr. Ml-h. write G O Ij I is worth $"KW per lb. Pettit's Eye Salve is worth s 1, tm). but is sold at 26c. a bn by dealers. A. N. V. .Two 'Si. fcrii'V effect upon the 1 ning mucous memoraiin ui uii-iu iV, , air-pas" ws, promoting the natural secretion of their follicles and irlan thereby softening the diseased and thickened membrane, d ringTt to its natural, thin, delicate thj d tion As a blood-puritlcr, it is unsurpassed. As those diseases which complicate catarrh are diseases of the lining mucous mem the blood, it will readily be seen why this medicine . .t. nnMli n ,i il fine w euro mem. imrinn fnr ripnllnff the diseased condi tion in the head. Dr. Sage's Catarrh ltemedy is beyond all comparison the best preparation ever invented. It is mild and pleasant to use, producing no smarting or pain, and containing no strong, irritating, or caus nthpr nnisnn. This Hemedv is a power ful intiseptic- and speedily destroys all had smell which accom panies so niaiiv cases of catarrh, thus affording great comfort to those who suffer from this disease. The Golden Medical Discovery is the natural "helpmate" of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Itemedy. It not only cleanses, purifies, regulates, and builds up the system to a healthy standard, and con quers throat, bronchial, and lung complications, when any such exist, but, from its specific offer's imon the lining membrane oi tne nasai pwuir. inatt'iially in restoring the diseased, thickened, or "'wu,d brnne to a healthy condition, and thus eradicates the disease. When a euro is effected in this manner it is permanent. Both Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and Dr. Sage's Catarrh Itemedy are sold by druggists e world oven Discovery $1.00, six bottles for $5.00. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Itemedy 60 cento, half-dozen bottles $2.50. , v, na , A complete Treatise on Catarrh, giving valuable hints as to clothing, diet, and other matters of importance, will be inailea, post-paid to any address, on receipt of a 2-cent postage stamp. Address, .World's Dispensary Medical Association, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
The Standard (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 14, 1888, edition 1
4
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