Newspapers / Maxton Scottish Chief (Maxton, … / April 8, 1890, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Maxton Scottish Chief (Maxton, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
0iM J A DEMOCRATIC JOCBNAL THE PEOPLE AND TUEIB INTEREST. VOL. IV. NO. 38. MAXTON. N. C, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1890. $1.00 A YEAR The Maxtor XJniM . i i T0WN DIRECTORY, g Y vf r LEAN Mayor. -U-M.-NATT ,, BLOCKER, Commis sioners. K, Town Marshal. LODGES. NEWS SUMMARY, FROM ALL OVER THE SOUTHLAND. Accidents Calamities. Pleasant Hews ud Notes of Industry. VIRGINIA. 3. G. Brain. reDrtsentin? a larire En- VI,II I S OT HONOR, No. l,22JLmeets ! piish syndicate is trving to buy eight o' K'-n and fourth Wednesday's at the lamest tobacco factories in Danvillt. u V. M. J. B. WJSATHEKLY, Dic- 15. F. McLEAN, Reporter. A., meets every Sunday at 7.30 Y M f m. W)l. ijlauk., rresiaent. V A X ION' GUARDS, WJI. BLACK .4 I ' R. m'-fts first Thursday nights of i t At. . . a. . ftl CJI'KN FRIENDS meet c-n second -ir7 f urth Monday in ' cacti month. A rrn Shaw, Chief Counselor ; S. W. rham, Seoretary and Treasurer. MATX LODGE, KNIGHTS OF jpyilFIYS, meets every Friday night, x i ' tirbt in each month, at 8 o'clock. ROIUX N COUNTY BIBLE SOCIETY H M -Ear hern. President. XV V Mrlianhifi 1st Vic President. !). h (J om, 2nd Vice-Piesident. f.ruwn, fcecreiary. . Black, Treasurer and Depository. KTECrTIVE COMMITTEE. J.-i.h Evans, Rev II G Hill, D D, .3 S Black, Rev t J P Meeks, T Fi inlayscn, Jr.s Mct'ollurn, -! '.'Smith, Duncan McKay, Sr. H Brown. Dr J L McMillan. AT DirfNti CpMMITTEE. Smith, 1) U McNeil, J A Humphrey" iJ next meeting 'Lumberton, N. C. l next, meeung-r-iiiuibuwj', juajr ?iti. atl l: o'clock a. m. L'iS.if-. mid Testaments can be purchased ,.f Win. black. Depository, Maxton, N. C, at-.'-'- Il i nnhos and Bible Societies in the ru'iu' v ifivit'-d tosend delegates. K .1v;,r-l all collections to Wm Black, 7?YnT. Maxton. N C. CHURCHES. FRK-BYTEKIAN, REV. DR. H. G- IIII I, Pastor. Services each Sabbath f t M. Sunday School at 10 A. 31. Prayer meeting every Wednesday nft' tnoon at 5 o'clock . METHODIST, REV. J. W. JONES IV-t-.r. Services each Sunday at 11 A M. Sun-'Qav School at 9 30 A. M. MASONIC. WAXioN LODGPE A. F. & A. M. me, k l .-t Friday night in each m' !ifl! at 8 p. m. GENERAL DIRECTORY OF 4 Robeson County. liii fjtaat.r. .E F. Payne. J?resent;itive. T. M. ( D. C. o intv ' mnii?-Kners, Watson. Regan. ) E. F. McRae. ' W. P. Moore, B. Stancil, T. McBryde. J. S. Oliver, f. . C. C. B. Townsend. fibfitT. II. McEachen. Ifor! Deeds, J. fl. Morrison, TrTiT'i. W. W. McPairmW. I J. A. McAllister Jid of Education - " J. S. Black,, J. S. McQueen, fripr. Pub. Instrvn, .1. A. McAlister. 4? T:r , a" Supt. of Health, Dr. F Lis R larg and organiz ; thcra ia one sto:k com jany. He was aho in Lynchburg, n! it is said that he obtainel options oi several large toba'ro factories in th:.i cty. A case hss 1C2Q arranged at Norfolk to test the coaHitutiouility of hi meui inspection law. A f tir will be held at Danville for the benefit of ihi Confederate Veterans Home in that ct"y. The embryo city of Glasgow, jus'. ; bove the cocflueoce of James and North rversat Balcony Falls, is rapidly loom ing up as an industrial centie. The Rock bridge Company, of which ex-Governoi Lee is president, Hon. m. A. Anderson, vice president, and Maj. Miles M. Martin, general manager, have already accom p bhed much in the lajing out of the own, grading tt:eets and constructing !lOUSC8. A sad and most shocking double trag- dy occured near Lynchburg Wednesdiy. At Ba-d Eagle Dam on Jame9 Rivci, while Janus Campbell, a most worthy frmer, was burning a plant bed, his Mi tie daughter's clothes look fire and sh; was burned to death in a few minute3. )on after hearing of the sad accident. he near relatives of the family, living o:. thcoDDOsite side of the river, Mr. and Mrs. Ruhird Hight, took a small boat and attempted to cnsi the river which was high, to help the afflicted. The boat went over a dim, both were drown ed, and the bodies have not yet been found. The drowned left three chillrcJi helpless at home. TENNESSEE. The question of i-suing 500,000 of ihirty-year 5 per cent, corporation bonds for permanent improvement oi the streets of Chattanooga w is submitted to a vcte of the people Wednesday, and was rati fied by a majority of 688. The Woodbury mining company arc developing a siher mine at Lascasses. :iear Wooubuiy. William Silvey, of Flowery Branch, la., arrived in Chattanooga in search of liU wife and two children, who left home 'ast Sunday. lie found them living with Tames McDaniels, wlio has a wife and hree children living at Flowery (Jranch. The Police arrested .McDaniels and Mr. Silvey, but .he Recorder dismissed the case on the promise of Mrs. Silvey to return home .viih her husband. They left for hame, McDaniels remaining. At NsEh7ille, W. T. Ownb scored his .'ccond tignal victory in his libel suits jjgainst the Nashville American. The American filed demurrers to Ownby's bills . . j j .ii- : i l : l i ...It. in lae secoua anu iuiru uuei nuns, brouirht bv him, stating in substance, tht. nlaintifPs retition failed to make a Tlir pxportations from Florida for the last m mouths of 1S89 were valued at $is.4 rs.sol . Among the articles ex portfd were 2,700,000 pounds of sugar, 12,o0thead of cattle, 140,000,000 cigars, rth of alligator hides, $9,111, 740 u,,rth or -lumber, $1,087,114 worth rf fruits and vegetables, and $305,000 Torth of sponges. An English military captain, recently ... . . j vk'-d to resign on account ot nis age ano to make mom for a younger man, re plied to the authorities that if they "-iM 5end on a dozen of their strongest y'mc men he would walk them for forty ni'o.- 4Vin 1tar tViem to the tOD ol h' highest and steepest hill in the neigh rorh.-od. The authorities declined the rhillrnge, and did not press for ie re fc'Cnation. It i retorted that the British Govern r-p.t i? preparing to make a thorough r-t of the Zalinski dynamite gun.! and that important orders have been given tc v company with that end in view: iv.r Government," says the New York Y-.r. - has mven the cold should ert to th 'Uimite gun, and if it were not (or the interference of Congress it would have t'a e-ived no encouragement whatever from th Ordnance Bureau of the War De Tart ment. That foreign Governments should appreciate the merits of the new scheme for operations of warfare more quickly than our own would be exactly in line with what has happened before. "When the Hotchkiss gun was invented by an American, it was offered to our crernment and the offer declined. The company went abroad and established immense works in France and now it ca? had the satisfaction of selling large numbers of its guns to our Government, "hich has to import them. When smoke-lc-5? powder was invented by an Ameri can, it was first offered to this Govern-aer-t and declined, and now the - army navy officials are endeavoring to se cure possession of the secret." oase of libel and should be dismissed. Judge McAllister overruled these de murrers, ana both tnose cases wiu go u trial upjn their merits. A similai de murrer in the rirt suit was previously overrule 1, so tha": Mr. Ownby's three damage suits for $25, 000 each are all yet in good standing in court. NORTH CAROLINA . The town commissioners of Marion Uqo doridfl l to issue license to sell li quors in that town and have fixed the license tax at $750 . A baf has been opened in ths Flemming House, and others are in prospect. Mr. Blanton, late of ths firm of Blan ton & Dyeart, will establish a bank in Marion. The lot has been bought and themiterial for the building is being placed on the site. The manufacture of cigar boxes is a new enterprise to be 6et on foot in the Twin-City at an early date. Miss Elise V. Lee, a Presbyterian mis sionary, of Mills river, Heoderson coun ty, will start the first day cf Aprial for Matamora, Mex. She goe undtr the auspicei of ihe Presbyterian Mission Board and will join other missionaries in Mexico. The grounds for Trinity College are being prepared at Durham. They will embrace 60 acres. eacb, all of which is held by Aikes citi zens. The South Carolina Riilroad'i earniagi for February show up handsomely, the increase of total earning over February, 1883, being $22,845, or 18 percent. The passenger earnings iocrca-cd $2,725, oi nea'ly 13 per cent.; the freight earning $19,072. or over 19 per ceat., and tin tonnage 27,697 tons, or 43 per cent. W. P. Frost and others, of Charleston are organizing a stock company to de velop? phosphate lands in Florida. GEORGIA. The cotton receipts at Savannah this season will fall but little short of one million bales. The incorporators of Augusta's new glass factoiy announce subscription of $46,003 to the enterprise. The city council of Columbus has placed upon the people the responsibility if determining whether it is advisable that an expenditure of 110,000 should be incurred by the tity t3 aid in the hold ing of an exposition this fall. An elec tion is to be ordered. The Continatl hemi:al Co. has leenfincorporatedJbj S. K. Platshek and H. II. Livingston, with a capital stock of $5,000 to manufacture drugs, chemic als, etc., in Savannah. The mellon growers of southwest Georgia are preparing for the handling of the biggest crop of watermellons that Georgia has ever known . Tuesday the initial s'ep toward an organization of all the fruit, vegetable ana mellon associa tions was taken. The season of the mel on opens early la June and this year wili not last lorger than forty-five days. Dur ing that time it is estimated that nearly 12,000 carloads of melons will be ship ped to tho noith, east and west. OTHER BTATE3. The low lands of Mississippi and Ar kansas are completely inundated, and the floods are practically btyond con trol. A company his purchased 2,000 acres of phosphate lands Citrus county, Flu., near Dunnellon, of Senator Mann at $40,000. A Jacksonville firm has just received a large order for Florida live oak tiiubei to beshipped to South Africa. The tim ber is designed for strength aid durabil ity as is especially required in all timber which 13 used in connection with heavy drilling and hydraulic machinery. Doolittle's Two Wives, Birmingham, Ala., April t. Spe cial. Edward Doolittle, an engineer on the Alabama Great Southern railroad, was killed in a collision on that road February 12. A few weeks later his widow, Mrs. Josephine Doolittb, lilcd in the probate court letters of adm'u'n tration. Mr. Mary Doolittle, of South Carolina, through her attorneys h is file I notice of a contest of the letters of admin istration. Mrs. Mary Doolittle siys she, too, is the widow of the dead engineer. She says he deserted her and their three children in South Carolina, a few years ago, and she only heard of his where -abouts and his second marrie when she read in the papers a notice of his death. Doolittle had been living here about three yeais, and had an excellent character. Both women have maniage certificates, and the case promises to 1 o an interesting one, from the fact the dead engineer left enough property to make a fight for its possession . A Confederate Camp in New York, . New'York, 'April 1. The Ex-Confcd crate so'ldiers of this city propose to in auerurate a camp of ex-members of the Confederate army and navy, itecenuy a mcetiDg v?asheld and a committee ap pointed with this end in view. A cir cular letter has been sent out for this purpose. Amen jj other things the tetter declares that the public has no more conservative or patriotic citizens thaD those who fought on ihe other siae n the late war. Ex-Confederates were ask ed to meet and renew the tnenasnip and maintain the sentiments of fraternity born of hardships and dinger shared cu tb.3 battlefield. It is proposed also to cout h widows and orphans of de- ,nlci Mmrftdfg. Anions: thce whose .vo-v - T Q nomoj ara signed to the call are . o tt;io Vomi-Jne H. Stewart. S. Calhoun AVt.f T, --J . " Smi h and Thomas L. Snecd. Mrs. Harrison at Asheville, Mrs. Harrisoa and party arrived at Asheville, N. C. from Chattanooga wdnpsdav. and remained in their pri vate car till morning, as accommodations Does Farming Pay! The State Chronicle, of Raleigh, N. C, after commenting upon the loss sustained bj farmers in the cotton section, says : While this temporary depression rests heavily upon a large hodj of on farmers, it is gratifying to know that in the tobacco section of the State, although the crop has not been large, the farmers have been paid larger prices for their tobacco and are more prosperous than for years. And the best part of this is that the bright to bacco belt, which was once supposed to embrace only a tew counties, ex tends from the Virginia line to Pitt rounty on the one hand, and to couth Carolina in another direction. Five years ago Nash county had never raised any bright tobacco and its farmers did not know that the soil was adapted to it. A number of farmers tried it, and now Nash ranks with the best of the old tobacco counties. On the 14th day of February Mr. R. II Ricks, a prominent farmer of Nash, sold in Henderson, 22 lots of tobacco, 4,579 pounds, for 1,934.77, an av erage for all grades of $42.25 per 100 pounds. lie had in tobacco last year 45 acres and will average for the en tire cror45 per 100 pounds. Mr. Ricks says that farming does pay, anu will this year plant 75 acres in tobac co. What is true of Nash is in less measure true of Wilson county, which is preparing to follow the example of Nash. Vance county farmers find that farming pays well. In December. 1889 Mr. D. Y. Cooper bought afarn. of 519 acres, oi miles from Hender son, for which he paid in cash 5080. This year the crop of tobacco alone on that farm will bring him from 0,500 to $7,000. Mr. Cooper owns three farms near Henderson which cost him about 10,000. They pay him an nually a 20 per cent, dividend. Of course he has the best tenants that can be had, and makes every edge cut. Rut so do all men who under stand their ..business. What enter prise in the State is paying so hand some a dividend ? Mr. Cooper says that raising bright tobacco' does pay, and pay handsomely. Oh the same road, and m tho same neighborhooa in which Mr. Cooper's 518 acre farm is situated, are other farmers who have done quite as well with tobacco. Mr. S. II. Satterwhite, a progressive voune farmer, sold the product of two onm for fift95.50. For about 200 acres of land he paid SI ,000, and now from two acres he gets nearly enough in nv the nurchase Dnce. The value of his tobacco crop alone this year will hn about 5.000. and it has uot cost m . . him to exceed Si, 000 to make it. 15e cUno th t.nhacp.n. he has made all his vuv " F supplies. On the same same road Mr - - . i . mi It Frank Wortham and Dir. l nomas n Floyd, both progressive young farm ers made a success. Mr. V orthan sold one 2-horse load of tobacco foi SG50.55. His crop will bring him about 84,000, and he made it and bh sunnlies at a cost of about fci.vuu - ... n ii Mr. Floyd, with two horses, wm sen Ms rron for 3.000. Iu this same HINTS FOR STOUT PEOPLE BY A PBOPEB ' DIET TUX WglOTCT v AV EASILY BX BJ5DXTCED. Processes of Nutrition Starvation and Violent Exercise Unneces saryDiet for a Stout Person. The most recent investigations, says Dr. Walter Mendelaon, show clearly that the albumen in the food is th principal iource of the fat formed in the body. This albumen, sfter it has reached the cells of the tissues, undergoes certain chemical changes by which part of it i converted into fat, and part goes to the nutriment of the tissue cells. Many ex periment hare been made which prove this conclusively. Thus dogs fed on lean meat accumulate considerable fat. One fed on lean meat and palm oil, which contains no stearic acid, stored up fat, having the usual amount of stearic acid normal to dog's fat. It is not asserted that all fat deposited is formed from albumen. A certain amount of that taken as food is stored up. But the increase of body fat occur ing after eating much fat, though in part a direct result, is chiefly brought about indirectly, the .food fat shielding from oxidation that which has previously been formed from the albtimen. Thus, when a dog is fed on meat and mutton suet the dog gets fat, not because the mutton suet is changed into dog's fat or is deposited as suet, but because the more ready oxi dation of the feuet prevents the fat proper to the animal's tissues from being de troyed by the various activities of the animal. It is in the same way the starches and sugars act. They are not ordinarily con verted into fat, but are so converted only when taken in abnormally large quanti ties. But when taken with the ordinary food, they are more easily oxidized than the proper fat of the body, and so the proper fat accumulates instead of wast- itf- ' rhe sources of fat in tne ooay were found to be three : First, the splitting nn of the albumen of the food; second, the transfer of that fat digested as food ; and third, fat formed from starches taken in too large quantities. The next step was to consiaer wnai con ditions of the body tended to hoard up this fat. It is known that all the cells of the body have the power of splitting up relatively complex chemical com pounds into bodies of simpler composi tion. It is further known that certain external agencies have the power of modi fying the chemical powers of the cells. Thus quinine, alcohol, morpnine,; iow temperature, deficient food supply, de ficient oxygen, diminish the powers of the cells, while excess of food, high tempera ture, and muscular activity increase them. It is further known that the disintegra bility of the different classes of food brought to the cells varies. Of the three classes into which all foods may be di vided the albumens (lean meats) are most easily split up by the cells, the sugars coming next, and the fats last. It has been determined that the fol lowing quantities of the food classes are equivalents in that each yields an equal quantity of energy measured as heat . Fat, 100 grams; albumen, 211 starch, 232: cane sugar, 234 ; glucose, 256. From this it appears that an accumula tion of, fat will most readily occur when the diet contains an overplus of fat. II it be supposed that a man who required 11R rrrami of albumen and 259 of fat should take albumen only ho would hav beans, aspara-, tomos. best tops. stc. i ounces; farinactons dttbes. seen as potato, hominy, rice, maccaroni. etc., 3V,' ouacaa or these may bo omitted and a corfwponrilnt amount of crecn vexetsWes sabstiUrtsd; salad, with plain drsssiaf, 1 ounce: frtdt, S)f ounce; water sparingly. Sapper er Lanchson Two eocs or has msat, 5 ounces: salad, throe quarters oS as ounce; bread, ons shes; fruit. 3 oubcss; two ounces of bread (two sUcrt mav basnb stituted for the fruit, tsa, or coffee, 8 ounces; no beer, ale, cklr, cnamptgne- wteea, or hard liqnors muss bs taken. Milk, save as an addition to tea or caff es. most bs taken rarely. It is important to remember that as the fat becomes reduced the diet must be modified somewhat, giving mora of the tweets and fats, lest toe albumen, ai well as the fat of the body, be con sumed. Under a proper diet the patient feels better instead of weak or in any way worse, A feeling of lassitude is an in dication that the muscular tissues, as wall as the fat, are being reduced. It is Im perative that the patient rbpuld not bt impatient or in a hurry to get lean, ll ic only by slow degrees that the cells can be habituated to a mode of action in harmony with the welfare of the whole system. ; pay r i-at six nounds of lean meat alone U keen un his supply. But he could no1 neighborhood wc might give the cxpe- digest so much meat as that. If he took r Kr fTontlpmen who will an- th albumen and excluded fat, he would Ill'UW Vl vrmw h,-" -' 1 . , . swer the question, Does farming have to take a pound ana . quarter . l I a- -i,- tnr thm ft nmitted. ?" in the affirmative. n " h. II me man aie an mice ' - would need 118 grams of albumen, 101 of fat, and 368 of starch. An excess m any one would produce an accumulation of fat. Now, ordinarily no man habitu aiivoAts meats composed of any one oi any two sorts of these iooo. u uc u.u he would hardly accumulate an overplus nf fat. because the monotony of the die! would produce a lack of appetite, ana sc K wnulri nnt heeome ODCSe. ruv on MARYLND'3 TREASURE SHORT. An Honorable Name Now in Disgrace Through D'shone8ty. Annapolis, Md., April 1 The Gov ernor sent a message to the togis Mure to night transmitting a communication from L.Victor Btugnim, State comp troller. The comptroller stite-s that he has discoverer a misappropriation oi State securities in the hands of State TraaiirpT Stevenson Archer. Treasurer Archer is ly;Dg critically ill at hi home TTihond of the S'ate Ticasurer v 1200,000. The involvement of the name of State Treasurer Archer, with Uiegui Scientific Hair Spltttlirf. Professor J. T. Richardson, of the lick Observatory, in speaking of the nicetj required in astronomical observations, aid to me sometime tr: "Few persons are aware of the nicety required in astronomical observations. The rod used iu measuring a base line is commonly about ten feet long, and thl astronomer may be said to apply the very rod to mete the distance of the stars. An error in placing a fine dot which fixes tht length of the rod, amounting to ona thousandth of an inch the thickness of a single silken fibrewill amount to ar error of seventy-five feet in the earth'i diameter, of three hundred and sixteea miles in the sun's distince, and to mora than sixty-five millions of miles in that of the nearest fixed Ur. As tire astrono mer in his observations has nothing further to do with ascertaining lengths or distances except by calculation, his whole SKiu anu aruuee ic Luniv'u ; exhausted in the measurement of angles it being by these alone that anacea in accessible can be compared. Happily i a My of light is straight; wert it not so in celestial apaces, at least, there would be an end of astronomy. Now, an angle of a s s ud 3600 to a degree is a subtle thing. It has an apparent breadth utterly inriiiWa to the unassisted eye, unless jropanied with no intense a splendor as in the case of a .fixed star as actually to raise by its effect on the nerve of sight a spurious image having a sensible breadth. A silk- work fiber, such as has oeen mtnuonw, subtends an angle of a second at three and a half feet distance; a cricket ball two and a half inches iu diameter mutt be removed in order to subtend a fecontJ to 43,000 feet or about eight miles, wneo it would be utterly invisible to the naked sight, even were it aided by a telescope of the same power. Yet it is on tht m.itrA of one sincle t econd that the as certainment of a sensible paralUx in anj rlxed star depends; and an error of one thousandth of that amount a quantltj still unmeasurableby the most perfect ol instrument would place the star too fat or too near by 200,000,000 miles, a spac which lisrht requires 118 days to travel. Neva York Star. i . Squirrel Shootinr. If the tree is not hollow, then look for the foxy little fellow generally on some one of the larger limbs near the body of the tree; or fork of large limbs. Inspect the limb inch by inch. Don't try to take in the whole top at once, but dwell on a point, and perhaps you will obaerva a paw or a few hairs, or more probably one aide of the head sufficient for tha eyes to observe you ; or when watching intently and shifting your position yoti will ee a ouick. slight movement, there by detecting the fellow in trying to put tt,. i;mK more ntCtUSlIV Dfjiwcca UWi IUC UUIU Jkv. - 19 $1,425 has been subscribed thus far in Charlctte to celebrate the iUin oi juay, Mecklenburg Ind;pendenc9 day. SOUTH CAROLINA New York capitalists have secured an nniinnMi hMit .oe acres of land on both sides the Saluda river, near Green viile, with a view of erecting a cotton factory. The Department has established a poscoffice st Lindsay '8 station on the 3 C's Railroad to be known as Lindsay. Mr. John D. Taj lor has been appointed postmaster. W . K. and Arthur Pelzer and othera, of Charleston, have organized a $200,000 company to erect a fertilizer factory at Montgomery, Ala. The cotton-seed oil mill and fertilizer factory at Spaitanbuig to beerecttd will be known as the Proiuco Mills. The capital stock will be increased from 25,000 to $50,000. A commission was issued at Columbia for the orjranization of the Aiken Pine v r . - Elixir Manuiaciunng oaipauj w , Medicinal Tirtues or Ike Apple. The medicinal virtues of the apple are being sounded on all sides in Europe. It is said to neutralize the evil effects ol eating too much meat , and German chemists state that it is richer than any other fruit or vegetable in phosphorus, an element which is of use in the re- nwl of the essential nervous matter of the brain and the spinal cord. Com mercial Adztrtiter. Ken for the purpose ol manuisciunug i and' sellirg "MoselejV Aiken Pine Kewspapers in California claim Elixir " a medicine and tonic made from figg can be raised in that State aa gt the leaf of the pice tree, me "P"1 ' tny of those max are xmpozreu. stock is to be $3.JC0 in shares cf ilOO that good as nnTrrted to cveiT one mat his menu able to lullv rcauze w. 11' U m i.Kn. Ko amMint nf defalcitioo the State h secure-. could not be furnished at thi hotels or ( mcf funds of the ie. was fo account of the gTeat crowa visuing luciw Manager Steele, of the Btttery Park Ho tel, ;endered the hospitalities of h. house during ihi day. At 10 o'clock a committee of citizec took the party in charge for a two hour drive. At 12 o'clock lunch was server for the guests and committee at the Bat tery Park. Tie party left in the after noon for Washington. They were en thusiastic over the beauty of Ashevil e, and Mrs. Uarrison told the AtsociateJ Press representatives that ehe intended sending the President there this summer. The GeoTgi Editors. The Georeia Prisi asscciatbn visited k- nb-tronical expontion at Jackson rille Fla. where t'nev were received and shown about by Director General Mo ran, S-cretrj Adtm and Representative Dillon. and you. If you have the ability to detect diner- v.. ?t,.(ta of mlor the more toc mixed diet, containing plenty of fata and ful w be in discovering the starches, a liuie more uuuucu j needed to mainUm the equilibrium oi lai and flesh may be eaten. This surplus of albumen fat would make itself apparent in the form of the eater. In treating obesity, the individuality must be kept in mind, but in general the aim must be to make the consump tion of fat exceed the production, in the great majority of cases, in spite of what fat neonle sar. the cause oi uw iv is the eating of either too much food or j .x spring into view. food of an improper quality, combined j UT m und as fi with a lack of exercise." u remains, therefore, suitably to regulate the diet and exercise, bearing in mm a mat me change must be gradual to be beneficient, and that anything approaching to star vation must be avoided It musv oe game, because he hugs the limb closely, spreading himself out as thin as posaibla. his color blending with -that of the limb. If you prefer to shoot alone, have a boy with you, and if you use a rifle, the beat arm for the purpose, take a stand from the tree as far as you can see well into the top, with your gun ready to bring to the shoulder in an inttant; then ttad tout bov to the opposite tide of the tree to make a racket, and you will see your far from the tree as you can well do and see into the top. My experisnce U the nearer the horizontal the line of aim is the easier the shot. Of course you will shoot off-hand and at tha head. Fort and Stream. a. th nsrtv entered the building the tuan to ffive mucfl albumen and sso vm p1-""" - j i 1 Oh 1 . a mlrm Proclflnt I . .? i t:..1. ..,1 .wMil Thl 1 KnH nUfpi snintea airs. Dillon made a short speech of welcome, k;k renlied to by President W. L. Glcamer. The visitors expressed themselves as delighted with the expo sition. The party spent a portion 4i .rt.nnnn in siht seeinsT. and at ui oii"v- r - 3:30 o'clock took the steamer IL B Plant for a trip up the nver to Sanford: Tha editors were jrueats of th Plant In nmrnv nd will be Efiven - a WtklUCUk VAiA J V trip to Cuba bj that compinj. .itiT.W little fats and sweets done in order that the cells, from the abundance of nourishment brought tc them, shall be capable of great chemical activity ; and further, that the tissue fat formed from the albumen shall not be preserved from oxidation by the presence of the more readily oxidixable fata and starches. For a diet list for a corpulent person the Doctor recommended the following: A rrorinlr to a hizb authority in tha e i:.v .... th decision has been Am vt -..cf. and soars are nerearter to be banished from all fihtinz letteU. Alliance Agricultural Works. Major George Christmin, Jacob Wisa Ur, and Mr. Prince, representing the Farmers' Alliance of tha United States, have concluded to establish the Allirnc agricultural works at Iron Gate, Al leghany county, Virginia. The wwkJ mill employ froa 300 to 500 hands, and their products will go to every sub-Alliance in the country, repreaeating four oiUioa Besbera. cup 6 ooneaal tea or eot- (2 ooncesa ox creau; wwt . fl- or 1H onnmat. I etahSTvueT 1? TSSfffSk fit. I Ex-Prtiident Cleveland it prime mover x m MUKntfl tVui bt1 h!rthdsT 1 of lion. Allen G.Thurmao. in NovembtT
Maxton Scottish Chief (Maxton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 8, 1890, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75