Newspapers / Hillsboro Recorder (Hillsborough, N.C.) / Aug. 25, 1887, edition 1 / Page 4
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'AGRICULTURAL TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE TO FARM AND GARDEN. Making Olorer Hay. Cat the clover u soon as you can tee any heads turning brown. Cut at this stage, the clover will make a less weight than if cut later; but it will have a greater food value, a larger part of it being di gestible. Aa the heads ripen, the per centage of woody fibre in the plant rteadily increases. Cut as soon as the earliest blossoms begin to turn, it is more troublesome to cure than if cut later; but this Is more than compensated for by the neater value of the second crop, whether it is cut for hay or seed. When cut at the right season, and well cured, the nutritive value of clover bay is fully equal to that of Timothy, and is greater in many food combinations, on account of its higher albuminoid ratio. Clover is injured by too much sun. A very hot sun is not desirable, as it "bums" the clover, making the leaves rt brittle that they will break off tl handling. If allowed to get too ripe before it to cut, or if cut when the dew is on, the effect is of the same nature. It will cure not a little in the cock, and this curing to more desirable than sundrying. The less handling necessary the better. The best weather for clover-hay making is when the sun is not very hot and the air to dry. The worst weather is unf or tunately, not uncommon hot sun and moist atmosphere; then the hay "burns oat," and sudden showers may be ex pected. Clover hay will not keep in a stack, unless the stack is protected by better material. In the West, where most of the hay to stacked, this is accomplished by patting timothy on the top. Large barracks open sheds are often used. These cost but little, and afford good protection. But nothing else equals a good mow; and nearly all the value of clover hay depends upon its curing and keeping. American Ajrieulturut. Treatment for Young Pigs. My mode of treatment for young pics. says a farmer in the Swineherd, is: In the first place after the pig are farrowed I am very careful to watch them and see that the sow does not overlay them and that their bed is kept clean and dry. I do not feed the sow very much for six or eight days, do not feed any slop until the pigs are five weeks old, then 1 do not give any sour slop, for it will give the pigs the scours, which will stunt or kill them. I do not allow them to have very much bed ding while young, and it should be changed twice a week. As soon as they are old enough to eat corn I sink a trough in the ground so they can get to it easy and feed there soaked com in it. If I want them for show pigs I give them all they can eat with a pint of slop to each pig twice a day; if I want them for fall trade, let them run on grass through the summer, and do not feed very much com, as I think piss kept in this wav will make bigger hogs with better constitu j tions than when fed too strong while young, as you are liable to break them down in the feet and ruin their constitu tions for breeding purposes, which to one of the main things we are looking after. My observation has been that p!gs fed for the show ring never amount to much as breeders; this to not always the case, but you will find it so nine cases out f ten. I have been in the show ring nine years and have ruined more good pigs by feeding too young than by disease. The best result I ever had was not to feed any com till the pigs were four months old, then when I be gan to feed them it would not be long till they began to curl their tails, and implement. The general laugh whit h oy tne time tney were six months old greeted the thought of such an ex they would weiiih two hundred to two , travagant absurdity had scarcely died hundred and fifty pounds; then yon are away when the unbelievers wire con not ashamed for them to be seen. I had founded to see the silken case (which thirty male pigs last season that I treated 'the "two crazy fellows' had fu!ly in in this way that were bard to beat, and j Hated by this time) give one final heave it was no trouble to find sale for them. 1 and then sail slowlv onward into the air. ana every man wne got one is well sat isfied. Too many get too anxious and feed their pij.ii to dsh while young. I know that was tie cae with mo when I first started in the business. A new beginner gcnerdly thinks ha knows more than the man who h;i ! n in the busi ness for years, and he finds out when it to too late that he knows nothinir about the business and if he had taken The Gardens M Eg-ypt. At the beginning of March the gardons of Egypt are really wonderful ; the orange and lemon trees spread their most pungent odor; the rose trees are covered with in numerable flowers; the palms, with their green and white crowns, swing there iu the wind; the oleanders there border the avenues, on the lawns anemones, annual and perpetual flowing pinks, chrysanthe mums, violets, zinnias, periwinklcs.snap dragons, mignonettes, pansies and pe tunias blend their innumerable colon with the green ol the trees, bushes and shrubs. Groups of bamboo lift here and there their long green or golden stems, which assume in a few months enormous proportions, the cruelly ingenious punish ment of the Chinese b binding a criminal to a young bamboo. The plant grows and the wretch is quartered in a few weeks. No wood is lighter or more use ful than the bamboo. One does not understand why the Egyptians neglect to plant it along the canals and on every cultivated land, whore it grows .so well. But what gives, at least during .winter and spring, the most smiling aspect to the Egyptian gardens are the great sheets of rose bougainvilleas that cling to the walls, the trees and groups of foliage, and which display everywhere the varied and exquisite tint of their flowers. The bougainvilleas to certainly the finest of climbing plants. During five months it flowers under the winter sun, takes shades of extreme delicacy one might say a light rose trail, the in tensity of which every play of light varies. The aloes, the agave, attach themselves on rocky slopes. . On the banks of the water course the blue lotus and the papyrus still revive antique remi niscences. Grass cannot be raised in Egypt The layer of soil to so thin that the sun dries it up immediately, and un less the prase is constantly submerged it turns yellow and perishes at once. It is not the heat alone that produces this re sult, for there to very much fine grass in the tropics; but the heat, accompanied by the shallowness of the soil, - renders the culture of grass impossible in Egypt. It is'with difficulty that a few isolated blades of grass sprout during winter along the Isile and the canals; they dis appear as soon as the spring begins, so that everywhere in the country where ar tificial cultivation finishes the dry and bare desert begins. In the place of grass a pretty little verbenacea to used, and this to encountered everwhere, the same as grass is encountered in America. The First Balloon. This narrow belt of level ground at Avignon between the foot of the wall and the brink of the Rhone witnessed 105 years ago a very strange and memorable spectacle, writes a correspondent of the l"ew York rimes. One fine morning in 1782, just about the time when many of the Frenchmen who had been fighting for American independence were begin ning to straggle home again, there was a great excitement in Avignon. Through the river gate the townspeople came pouring by hundreds and by thousands to crowd around a group of local officials and scientific experts who were standing on the bank beside a large silken bag, which was heaving and bulging in a curious way as if It were gradually in flated with air. The better informed among the crowd eagerly announced to their neighbors that the two men who were so busy with this bag of silk "two crazy fellows named Mont!olflerw -had undertaken to send it up into the air as an experiment, having been foolish enough to assert the possibility of mak ing similar bags of larger size to navigate the sky just as ships navigate theses, carry ing with them a number of men fully equipped with all necessary stores and palng over the town at a night of several hundred feet. The firnt balloon had been launched into space. BIr Salaries. There are a score of men in Kew York who are paid as much for their serviYes esv h year as the President of the United Rtalea Port t,niiaanl rlnllara a wear la some advice he would have been ev- i rtrj tidy salary, TVre are hundreds era! hundred dollars better off. I use : f mm who get 23,O0Q year salary, charcoal, sulphur, salt, ashes, and a lit- j d the numler who get from $10,000 to tie black antimony mixed together to j f 30,000 are legion. Very ordinary men keep my hogs in a healthy condition. j get from ..VOuO to 11.000 a year, or as much as a cabinet officer in. XSorvin Farm and Garden Notes. (irecn, President of the Western Union It Is often better to hatch the turkev , Telegraph Company. Is paid t'lO.ooo, eggs under the hen than under the So I I hatiocey M. IJtepew, .'re-blent of turkey ben, as the hen turkey is too im- the Kew York Central Railroad. Rich patient of confinement and is ant to lead ard M. McCurdy, President of the Ma her young or-s away at an early aye. ' tual Life Insurance Company get a like -Sever use sulphur on the bodies of "mount Joua nocy, rresiucntoi Ai..ms mag chicks, for -pes or any other dis-! E'prws Com pany, fares equally as well. rre-mcnt nenry i. iijae, i me r.qui table Life Insurance Company, is also on the list. George 0. Williams, President of the Chemical National Bank, the rich est banking institution in America, with young cmccs, for prs or any ease. Lard and suli.hur applied while in the downy state will cause sores and tor tors sometimes death. This we have found true to our ott, taledseY .aTTCid' KiTf old canes should not be cut out until late V! A3JliJ'hIJ .'A e jvttity. M ir-liu:il a one, ut tUW Park Bank, and President Tappeo, of ir.s uaiieun aationai uanx receive a like In the fall, but the new canes, which are to produce next year's crops, will be greatly benefited by cultivation. Young chickens, as soon as weaned, itfuld be provided with suitable perches. Mske them low and on a kveL It will be better for their health to get the young frwls off the ground as soon as possible. Do not neglect to provide a door or slide, la order to have tne talis flower to perfection during the winter months, they should be so placed as to be fully exposed to the sun as much as possible. They wia grow well enough In any light situation, but if flowers are wanted they . ..... a...... ... niia u exposed to tne sun. sun every twelve months. Watkinglo rom. Ths flakes Train, "You have heard the express! The naked truth' and perhaps yon do not know how it originated," Said the Rev. 8aa Jones in his Red Rock sermon yesterday. "I will tell you. Once unon a time Truth sod Error went in bathing together. Error came out first, put on Truth's clothes and ran away. And Error has been trying to wear the same garments ever since. Wbea Tral h came out of the water the only clothing The Sun's Heat. ' At a Royal Institution lecture, Prof. Sir William Thomson expounded the latest dynamical theories regarding the "probable origin, total amount, and possible duration of the sun's heat." During the short 3,000 Tears or more of which man possesses historic records there was, the learned physicist showed, no trace of variation in solar energy j an d there was no dietinot evidence of it even, though the earth as a whole, from being nearer the snn, received in Janu ary six and one-half per cent more heat than in July. But in the millions of years whioh geology carried us back, it might safely be said there must have been great changes. How hod the solar fires been sustained during those ages t The soi entitio answer to this question was the theory of Helmholts that the sun was a vast globe gradually cooling, but as it cooled shrinking, and that the shrinkage whioh has the effect, of gravity upon its mass kept up its temperature. The total of the sur.'s heat was equal to that whioh would be required to keep up 476,000 millions of mulionshorse power, or about 78,000 horse power for every square metera little more than a square yard; and yet the modem dy namiual theory of heat shows that the sun's mass would require only to fall in or contract thirty-five meters per an num to keep up that tremendous ener gy. At this rate the solar radius in 2,000 years' time would be about one hundreth per cent less than at preset. Why He Shot Himself. The London Teltgraph tells the fol lowing singular story: A tragical sui cide, which has a touch of romance about it, has just occurred at the prison of Korthause, near Prague. A young soldier named Kazowsky was standing guard there. In his early youth he had lost his father, not through death, but in a far more melancholy way. His father bad committed murder, had been pronounced guilty, and condemned to twenty years' bard labor. The young son was then eight years old, and his father's features remained firmly im printed npon his memory, as well as the whole painful impression of the event, which produced a severe shock npon his youthful mind. While standing sentry before the prison of Karthans, and seeing the con victs led past him on their way to the open sir, he recognized in one -of the hoary criminals his own father. He spoke no word, neither did he discover himself to his father; but on being re lieved from his post be quietly loaded his gun and discharged a bullet at his head. Dying, he coufessed to his com rades the horrible discovery he had made, and which had driven him to seek death at his own hands. P. T. Bakkcm his offered (30,000 for the capture and delivery to him, or bis agent, of tne famous sea-serpent oi Lake Chsmplain, desd or alive, provided that the serpent is more than fifty icet long. Eaper tally la Wessea. fl la ran, eaneclallr to woman." nil tha lifted, bnt naughty. Lord Byron. Surely be was id du niuuor wnen na wroia ruun arnnla. Hut tlierci are enmnlainta that oniv woman tuttvr, that art) wmint numbers of them Uwn to early gravea. Thu-e is bop far thnaa who auffer. no matter how eorely. or se verely, in Dr. K. V. Pie ' "Favorite Pre- Mrintinn" Safe In Ma action It is a Mean inc. ee pecially to women, and to men, too, for wbea women tuuer, uta uouscnoia is auew. Chatham Co. N. C, has a v nerabl male tliat is known to be nuy-aeven yean out. ' (blldrew "Mat viae T Death On account of their Inability to digest food, will find a most marvelous food and remedy la Peon's EncLSto of Pure Cod Liver Oil with HypopbospMtos. Vary palatable and easily dh 41. Dr. 8. W. Cone, of Waco. Ten. save: " I have need -four Kmulsitm in Infao- m amine' wnn good rrauiuk it not out ilorce waaiad timuae. but aires trencth en Increawa the aiipetita. I am glad to uae each rauawe arucie." PMa-htere, Wiveeaad Mother. Bend for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, securely sealed. Dr. 3. B. Marc Mai, L'tica, I .a aST Ska ak. a aa at 1. A .liLI. fte earners oi lime among farm crops, and I , tiLf a t m a.... a,.i. . this etplaln. the tnaVvelmis effect of i .J WKr lifl sulphate of lime or lend n!a,ter la mak I ?lS .JJ&foJ t"J C t. .1 - -a U ii v rjinisr a sau' n The Jubilee editorial in the British London Times was over eleven columns long. Cti.o pill botes trs spread over the lend by (he tluiuMiniis ettur having beea emptied by iilTeriiix humanity. What a meal of sicken. urAit-iiUi nice nj-ltcineUie poo etomacb has tt ttxiii Mt with. Too much strong medicine. I'rickly Ah hitters Is rapidly and surely tak ing lite place of all this ciaas of dnua, and is curing ail, the Ills arising from a diaoniered nmililioB of the liver, kUlaaya, SUanarh aud u,weia The "TV is tha name of a saw society fast pr ning, "aocuu purity la u, aim. Aa .BVe-e Breath Is most d tat rearing, not only to the Deraon af. flirted if be have any pride, but to those with whom be oooiea In contact, it i a delicate matter to speak of, but it lias parted not only friends lm Invert, bad breath and catarrh re Inatparabio. Dr. cage's Catarrh Remedy eurae we worst caeaa, aa inonsannaoaa testily. A sua motor Is the latest tnvontloa of John aricaaos who deaignad the "Monitor." No Invmtment Mrs so well as a good dura tion, as I i lenrl) efmwn by the r-wrd of the H offers the beet ad van tag- u aad enjoys the highest claas of natrooaga , for flfteea years It baa stood with the toremaet In preparing The best and surest EtBedr for Care ef all diseases eansed by any dersngemeat cf the liver, Kidneys, Stomach sad Bowels. Dyspepsia, Sick Betdache, Constipation, Billons Complaints and Kalsrlaof all kiwi yield readily te tha benefioeat InfiBeaotsf mm It Is nlesssntto the tarte, tones mp the ter,resiores aad preserves aeeutn. It is purely Vegetable, and cannot fH to ova beaescial. both to old aad young. s Woo Partner It Is superior to all others. Bold everywhs at 11.00 a bottle. Ill CHIT RUI IRON ATOMIC WH pnrlN the 1 , tha LIVI ead Biwroii tka HlUMulVI on or zui-w-w,'i , oilliu. lBrtle-tion.ton f Biraagia aaa iii-i - 01UMU mini -MHirw, alai aad aarne iwe aae aSnppliw Braia rowat. KIDDER'O bm s for roUege or bnal n OM. bono lor catalogue to . illfa Alumni of the Kioav ttcHoou LooisviLLa, K y. The lerpiaere A. U MdosaX&, PvisclpnL Tha Rlaeava-a fTawat . Jobs IT. Jooea. Tattle, Ky writeet I have we-w aaiunv n iicine lor arrrnieen rears. M muMi. II U.u IILUUm f If the ba I ever soul. It (ivaa Joy to every nnn uer. Wallalfa Wtl A m a,l,k J V-nt Krie Co Ohio, to tell the ladies everywhere ,rn,itB virf wiija M.r. mnrr a iron tofi for all irrularitiea, lt curr-i me when t physician aad all other retnoli m ralietL" Organic weakness or kaniof power In either set, however Induord, pawllly nod t'miaoenlly curwl. Knclo lonnt In atani(ie i"r i. .ia of particular-, world iispeneary mri.l a " ITOHaMh ... I. . Illrck Harria, a I'ollah Jew. died D Brooklyn. N. V., at the ad vanced -e vf luv years. ir amineq who son leyna, om in. Tbom peon's Kye-water. All druggiata nil it at . a bottio. Pise's ttetnHy fir Catarrb la strsoabbj te e-v it mwh a nqnin or a annn. sun. Good Health t - ., i ducu ay my inc. irmu oae amis n nravv win n uira- a -,.t . ink? of 100 pounds of rviium ner acre Tf "1.OT???5a LI"! "!t rare., f..U A brio, goodV. W , : llTati De more vigilant than ever daring i not weather as to tilth and feed. rpe j cislly guard sgsiiwt fewling grwen torn, j The stimulating power and comfort of wheat or any other grain not mstuM, ' evmpathy nonstan eipMw, ssvehewho M In any quantity they will rrdm-e has realised It. It has a nower. like tha cholera or I'm symptoms mwh the same magnet, usseen Imt rMent, whirl, draws I as ia atuu sn Uinirs. Uive tonics and to Itself ttje wandering scattersd parts I aeep en asoa ue Jeugsss euitare. else that exist arennd it, Tea masut ae-e wWbeeS nave Mandi keea ean. eenrr Vie M I M Sakliie Hnait I ll'a Thlaa-fftMae k n lltartt aaaiaaad ata-a the hftwal, end tafeegh that eerai all Me erg aa4 Uaaf thabatfy. It baa t IIW aattoe, a eauenwawmfcwaa4ea l fcaMeaWaaii toeteal trm a mm ret all aa . I....- eiw aiiS affata aaattar thfnaati the aaa . a OHkMae sad akin. II eAVtnallr akw weak. I -aaaa4 eaMlttaenf srsaa . lavlgnratrti (as a, aW , tsnas the iMaeeuoa and le,-arts life saS eajergy Sj aO the fteeetlona ef ttay laaty. Hood's Sarsaparilla atd ay aS Ar jggiaa SI I f as. ririrS m ny a I Boon a vo, Auomrsmm. Lnwmi. . J1 . IOO Do Ono Dollar A tiKKCiRs rust NMGESTIONand DYSPEPSIA. Orr son phvilctaiu have amt na their eeoroval of PKiK.MTVLIS, aavlug that It la the beat preparation (or IiKll-mUoa that they have Ter uaed, . We hava na-er heard of aeaaaof Dyaiiepna wnsre DIUKhTYLllf waa lakaa that was not curad. FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM. ft WIT.L CORK THK MOT AIKIRAVATKDCSSM. IT wnx BTtip 0m.su in rsunA.u-1. IT WILL RKUEVg CONbTIPATlOM. PorSnnmer ConiBlalnu and Chronle blarrhoa. which art the direct mull of Imperfect rtlseatton. DUiKNTYLIN will etrert aa unmea late cure. Take DYUKS'n' U.N tor all palm and dlanrdara of theatomach; they all com from India Uoe. aak our drugarui tor linit-sn i.in (pnoa s per large nttleLlfhe does not have It and one dollar to u and we will aande bottle to yoe,eaw pvevald. Do aot healtata to sand your mooay. Our notue Is rellaule. Eahllhel twentv S.eyean. v .il. r rk i ii ii r. i ex a u., Haaafheiarlag haaiiaiMl JehaMtW.T. I found a speevieor Has; Fever. For 10 peon i Kmbun a great eufererfnm Aug- "a till root Eljfe Cream Balm the only prev mtHoe I hoes ever found. Bay Fever inform houtd knots cf fts sylcaey. rrank & wts-MrYA. Pub- J Apply Balm Into each nostril, mitkNi ra (ar- S-, a.a. til a IP-weed ltaaaat aiooa. -park. ROOT BEER hog. whui-aoeaa ba-araga. Sold by drasgiata: auiiad Um ate. i). , UlikTal H. Itaa. Ave?. Fail., fa. to n day. Samphw w tk S1 JUL Llaea not ander the Sonea feet. Write Brewuer tte'j R-in HoMar Co, BoUy, Mlrn. S5 opiun M Me klae BahM Cvrrd to M te St Save, hm nev till eared. It. 4. Smken., lake nan. Okie. CVIOIW tSf QKOT.DIBa8 aadtbaW WldV aivaa n rnowMl f-a-roa all. ad avaK, U.iaetBloaekCeWealuaajtsa.D.0. i A niCQ U.f.5S? aSwIunal LADIES iTSbt babtwis wo lONIOa-f. aa4 .af-1, '"i!''':'F:t. ant uknrlaaat-aa Ua Oiuam!. SatS, W. ""SIA Z J-ttSStJA-Sa Slaa 1 ' THE CH.HAHTER MEDICINE COMPANY. . ai.Loew. aa s.iijiu "Jil A et r-"-"- -'") CURtS WHn ALL U I Cough Syrup, In time. Soli All' Taa Lea rood. DSS d by drowiiM, 2 1 In time. Hniii nTdnuwi-i-. cs. FOR HORSES. Uttixa, W. Va.. V Nov. 17, 1886. ) Kecently I bought a young horse. lie was taken terv ill with Pneu monia. 1 tried to think of something to relieve him. Concluded what was good for man would be good for the horse. Sofgotabottleof Piso's Cure and gave him half of it through the nos trils. This helped bim, and I continued giving same doses night and morning until I had used two bottles. The bone has become per fectly sound. I can re commend Pwo's Cure for the horse as well as for man. N. 8. J. Btbiuer. jaMeiKUHii;iia CUIUS wHtst Ad USt IAU : i at Okl. J lit 4 1 II icH I t J In tim. Hr'Tti hf Arntrrtwia. "-rgiTianTo Central Universitys a SS RICHMOND, KY. Nait Sesuo-opens bes.14,'87 r.U raaaHv. thameb ieetiw U-e. haalthr laea tine. aadarate aaiiaeaa. u hilurautiae aad Oalalugue aetiiy wi ii. itieatwa, w. vwa-aw. tl 1.1.9a. OriU -rest E9Hrt fle-l sad UVmli rilUs "ssiistane eoste?. S U SVe.3Si reeee, IS rilla. a "-a. aer'a'ii Ti T I etovss Btnistse, Washington. D. C. Ckne where the Woodbine Twineth. ' Bats are smart, but "Ro-ioh OS Bats" beats them. Clears out Rats, Mice. Roaches, W ale Dugs, riles, Beetles, Moths, Ants. WofiAhHo-a, Bed-bugs. Insects, l otato Bupn, Bparrowe, ikunks. woanel. Gophers, Chipmunks, Vol, Husk Rata, Jack Rabbita. Bquirre Is. 16o.Sa. HEN LICE. "RoDoS on IUts" haooonpletepr entivo Vid dretroyer of ilen Lioe. Mi n lM boa of 'Roooa on Bats" to S tall of whit-waah, keen It well stirred op while SM'lylng. IV hlte srau the whole In tenor of the ileonerr; InaldO and ouUlde of the noaU. Tlie curd adioal andooinplebs. DflTATil HlfflC w 1 n 1 w aw-aavtw For Fotato Hugs, Insects OS) Tinea, HUruns, Trees, 1 pound or half the eontrnta of n tl.Ot box of "Boron on Rats'W AgrW M s"4 eultural Rita) to be laorouffAir miM i,L nitxea wun one to iwo rmrreis eir of plasteT.orwbatlsbeitersir ' J T V slacked lime, kliicb depends w W upon thorougtl snixinr, so as) to own nletelv diatnhuln the poison. P prink lo tl on plants, trees or shrubs wbea damp or wet, and Is quite effective when tnlxrd with, lime, dusted on without tnoiatura. While bs its eonoentiwted atate It ia the moe nctlvo and strong at of all Bug Poisons; when Killed aa ahova la eomDarativsIr nartnleas to aul- roalsor r sons, In any qiunUtv they wculd Ifpreferrrdto tteeln liquid f onn, a table spoon ful of the full etrergm -ttoroa os ats tWder, well shaken. In a keg of watrr and applied with a sprinkling not, spray eytiugo or wbisk broom, will be found very effective-. Keep It weU stir 1 up while oebg. JoW J7 -all Drugrleta and Storekeeper s. I.V., SSc. L E. 8. VVatia, Chemlat, Jvnrf City. N. J. OOLVMB1 ATHENAEUM, A SCHOOL FOR YOUNQ LADIES. ax-n..(V.r ilanitffla where ta aend voor daughter to school, write for sn illustrs ted caUloKne giving full particulars, te RQBT. D. SMITH, Pres't, Celsahla, Tssa. MARLIN REPEATING RIFLE SMStan. "--aaa-- gST IM THI a a end abeelnt eaie. Stada ta all m laraWera-Uawae. IIAIjIiAlilJ wellavy. S!eeeia ead TeeeeS atlS Seed far HleMretad Caul a. SJUrtla SK vn. taavj tSkl ni aly nwi 1 fce V ' V Vaw -Sv w as, V. I in ai C'onew Me .taaa. J. P. STEVENS &BR0. JEWELERS. Atlanta, G a. Sand Sat Catalegaa. . BUSINESS e nalty at HM)IIK' BU'WITFa"! if V, Atlanta, I.e. O at taa sea) lOuaaUv. wartwl (Jt litrcgl . daaallae e . . 1 " asboola ia tha 4M gat tba a t Pr-H-I a. Jew. aaM.Hit.iMaHa'.-f"---i ITTT lara,.S n i at.atia".a. 1 r-e '- riQIII!! Habit Cured. Treatsent-astoatnea, UrlUld HrnAitsWKSivrlly-a.lw4- TTTOT fi 3l a. '( Ail dil lAuJ Wttvai w a -w ana - Ilirll UjTVip. TswUst grefmU Itl jrrr SSrVH fW Of ft'T'et, .w...'Vntrty.tie..-at The foDowtog words, in prates of Dr. Tmntu Favosits Psnacnli o as a moT tat tbnee OHrnte die aos ertd wen k asra peonllar to women, rniiat bo of late at to errry aulli-r from such maladies. They era fair SairpHw of Ue sponta awe eipn looa with whioh thousands giro utteranoo to their senos of fraUtude fur the tneallinsMO boon M bcalia wnasa nas 1 aa resturad to thata by tb use of this world-tamed aTcdiotoe, Vn. ttmax r. Bogwvir, WTis cwtat.rj wrttesi "I took rkrv bottles of your 'In rorlte P -viptioo ' aad one buttle of four , Pellets.' I da doing sf work, and have bee for tomn time. I bavw bad to employ betn f aliout Slstora fears before 1 onmiwi wed tak ing your m-kine. 1 have had to wear siit'portcr nvt of ue Uiue saw I nnve am wau as l ever 010." Mrs. MaV OlJAarm, of JvVwfeo, Otfn Ol ' Iftca, writes 1 " Vour Favoriu freeonptkia' S100 Tbsswi It 17. Joint K Rmu, of Sfinanhadk, Va writes 1 "My wife bad been suffering fur two or three Tears with femalo weakness, nod had pah out ooe hundred dollars lo pbystdans with out relief, ehe took Dr. FWces tsvorits Presort ption sod It did ber more gnod than all tha medlrina riven to bor hv tba tihval. dans during' the three years they bad bera practicing upon ber." Mrs. Osoroi Omosa, ef Waiuid. jr. r wntea: I was a great sufferer Irora h-jeor. rfaen, bearing-down nalna, and pain oontln ually non am my baok. Three bottle of your ' lavortt ftv-icrlptlotl reatored me to ( fees na Ith. I treated with Pr. fi nine tnonLha. without -aaelaine anv heneflt. Too ra- it P mt iptioa' Is in sjsato sarUu boon to us Tee Eeeitht Eartet Booi. ISBEWAflT Eei SlIPPCHTER. aside, and ferl SS haa wnrhail enniien In en 1 Again she wrltret "Having taken severs 1 bo4 tlra of too fsvovHO I'reerrifitAiin I have rw. ealned mf noailh wowdrrfuiiy. U the eeionia la ment of r-.vw-tf and frlrnda. I ran now b oa mi fast alt dsXa poor suAerins; woateo," ' auendlns; to to duties of ray nouAv hold. TREATING THE WRONG DISEASE. Many time women o-JI on tbatr fnmfly phyeiolana, siiffertng, as they tmagina, on from dyepepala, another front keart dTa-naw. snotli from liver or kidney dienasa, sooUM-r from Borv otis eibauetMHi or prostration, snot tier with pain ere or there . and Us this way they all pr -ot alike to themselves and their raxy-golng and Indifferent, or over-busy doctor, sonarala and dietinot Slaeae , for whlob be prnt-a his ; ills nod potions, assuming; th-m to ba such, when. In reality, tney are nil only syiapt is oana-4 l-y mmm womb dleorder. The phyateian, Ifnoraatof tba eauee of suffering, enoourar-e his praotkw until large bills are snada. The suIT-tIusT patlont fvts no better, but probably worse by una of tne dVlay, wrong treatment and OMWequ t eninplu-etlona, A prrm-f SurdK-toe like Dr. Pierce's rsrorlto Prewrfptlon, dtrerfr.1 10 ih tmm wotrTd have en Ural rexnoved tb esonsa, tboreby dkspailmf all thua diatroaaing symptoms, and tnantutinf ooafort Instead of prolooged nueary. A Wfarvelow Tare Mra, O. 1. tnurrm. ef Oyauil, UieK, wnteei "1 era troubled WHS) lomaie weutneen , inorrnea ana laiiina 01 ,iuw womb for seven rears, no I bad to keep tny bed tut a good part of t'ae time. I dnrtorrd with a army ot diirerrwt PtiValolaoa. I of money, but re Ived no avail ng bene tit, bersuaded tna to trv vmir roe. Ib-tnea. whlc I auea 1 Was pre judioed Sgalnet Shetn, and the doctors said they would "o mo no good. I Snaliy t4d tny bualnod that If no would gr ro soma OI your Be1Kina, 1 wwua vry 1 s nines the advlne of mr physician, lie gut me eli tiottles of th Isvorite Preeorlption,' also Sit bottles of tb IHerwvery,' foe ten dollar. I took thre bottle of 'DieooTe ry' and four of favorite P-eeortptiooV and I nave beea a sound woman for fnvr Veara. 1 tlieu iire toe balanoaof the tumiirH to Biy awter, who was troubled ia the same way, and saw red bw If In short ' time. I bar nut bad to lake any snsdlclne Dow tut auuoat fourtwars.' 3 ...... I Mrs. at. P. If nanur, of JTo. tf LerUiQtm SU, rRYS CIS! Ea fV- sarti -live y.wrs nsol 1 r . . was adreadtuTsuffe rfr 1 ut-rine truul.lf fllUD Having ibaueted the skill of thre pby- Slctana. I was oomnh-ti It diaoourdred.and en weak I emild with difficulty crnas the room alone. I began taking Dr. Pieros's Favorite Prc-..t1plln and aing tb (owl tret Um t rwoomtnen ded In his 'Conunoo fk-tis eainai Aavawr.' 1 oomrawooed to Improve at one. In three sooth I was prrerUg ewred, and have bad no troul.l since. I WW a tetter to my family paper, brie By mentioning bow try nermg 10 mma uta tuu paruetiiars i ai'untvi-. it bund red letters. health bad been restored, nod o to any oo writing me for them, and endnung etup for revtu. I bavw reoeived over four In reply, I bay desorihed my eas nod tb treatment twrd, and have earnestly ad need them to 'do likewise.' From a areas many I have reeefred enonnd letter of tltanks. stating that tliey bad eotnmenoed the one of Favorite Pnworii.tl'm,' bad sent tha SlJtO required for the 'Medical Adyle-r,' end bed applied the frmal 1 tmn tment so fully and BlsJnly laid down therein, and wr aiuuh bettor already." r " . . .,. I . I I tlElLGUX I iDOCTCSSal rent ptiyalrtana, and mnA le e sum it. At aat mr nu bleb 1 we ok to do, THD OUTGROWTH Or A VAST EXPERIIIKCE. The treatmetit of many thmieands of caaes Of tb' chronle weakne ae sod distn lug Hmnu peculiar to temalea, at the InvalMif Hotel and Hurghnl institute, Buffalo, N. T, a affiirded a vast eiperienos la nloely a-lnpilng and thoroorhly tne ting retiw-llp for the eurw of woman's peonllar maladies. Ir. Slcrew lavorlte Crreeriptloa Is th outaTowth, or muH, of this eat and valtiahl x rlonoe. Thousand of btlininlal, reoeived from patten ta and from physician who bar tested It to the nor ea-graraM and obetlnat osans whioh bad bellied th-tr skill, pro K to b tlK ntoet wonderful remedy ere r devteni for the relief and core of aiiffering women. It Is t moommended na a "cure-all," hot as a moat peHeot Bpeuno for woman's pepiillar allmonii. A powrrful, Invlgorwilnf tonle, ' ft linnart at wtn to tua whole evah-tn. and to the utorna, or womb and It an. pendaarn a, in partiiiilar, Por Ore ork"d, Srorn-oot," 'run-down, debilitated tea b eea. milline , ! makers , n-a matr " hon--lr is," h'iuwke, (w , miming Both er-, bou ii-iw ronton generally, jir, Pht ' Psroritn Prrwriptfon Is tb fr pat ret, earthly boon, b-lng unequalled as an spp"tinlng eordlal and r Jor-.il va tonlo. It rrookutreaig uua ana saWmllaUo of food, Address, en 1 Mnaea, weakness ef id mob, tndl gration, bkwting snd eniotathins of gna. An a aouthlng and ntrewgtkeiilng ttarvlnn," Favorite Preaorlptiiin" Is un quailed and I Invaluahle in allaying and Sul-iulng nervous rnnalilli'y, irritability, eihaueium, trri ration, byauna. Sfwems sna otn oiainw ung, nervous eymutom oommoolr attendant upon fuuetional and orranla aleeaae of the womb. It ImliH refreahlng l-p and reiievus mental ana arr 7 ann aiwponoeney, wr, fleree'a Favorite fief ilptlon I at legltlmala medlrlne, canrfnlly r inounded by an eaporieiHiod and skillful pliy.lciuo. and adapted to woman dullaal orrsnlritlon. It I purely yifetaW In it mmniailllon and p-rfeetlr harmieea hi it ffeotg m any condition of the srsiem. lavorlte freeerl ptlon i a poel tire car for the moat oompllnrt' d nnd ohatlnato raws of leuonrrbea, or "wbltra," e v iva flowing St monthly periods, pain fill m.fwtmyi"n, onnatiiral supnn-nkms, rlpiis or falling of the wonb. weak baok, "female woe l noaa," a nteveraion, . trorersloti. Uarln-down senanllona, ehmn M enngeetlnn, Innammatlon and Uiom itioti of the womb, Intlammatlntt, pain and ton m si 1 in 1 ovata, nooumitued wun " to In g-nanry, " Par He Prei tptlon Is motto s eordlaL," reiiovliig rwiwoav weaknea of Stnmaeb nnd otbor nmreatlrf syvptoma enmpKm to that onaditinn. IF Its uae I kept up hi lbs latter inomhwnf ' goetailnn. It so prepare tb sytteri 1 fordo llvory aa to greatly b en, snd many time slmost tlrely do sway With lbs Suffering Of that trying nrdeeL MtarltPr ri-dlOB,wk ta W r-inueo lion with the lies of Dr. Pteroe (olden M lral Iilenorery. and small laia. tire done of Ir. plet g Pnrgattv peilet (tittle Urer Pills), rure l.trer, K Idne y and lllsdd-r dla-aer. Their rbined wa ae removes blood Isli.la, and hNalahr can. omu and smilukm humor Iron th ay" -m. taverlte rreeeriyHlosiSJ N th only medloin for wmwn wM, by dnitstaia. under voelilve waraatee, f r,.,o tod manufaoturors. that It will rive aaii.rn. tioo In ovevy twee, or tn'.ney will be re funded. This wtiarant hae Vmmh. ,.a on tb bortUe-wrupper, and faHhfufly oee. nd 01 it for many year. I.arga bottle IteS r els boule ivt .'r a 4 tew tn numpi r.." Pi- roe's larr-, lllu-trsied 'lraatla iiflt r wwj mfm i WI Tl 1 WOmUJ-S D1STE5SJJIT nXDIOAl. AtwOCUTIO-fg Ke. S6I nala mrH, ITTJTTAIiO, X. .
Hillsboro Recorder (Hillsborough, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 25, 1887, edition 1
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