Newspapers / Chatham Citizen (Pittsboro, N.C.) / Sept. 22, 1897, edition 1 / Page 3
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i story who are in me naxut or usia visiting people may the following little woman wnose nuaoana A'-GREAT SALMON RUSH. very Tv-ell sent for tite doctor; i MU "" ? -ill send him some medicine -which J.... i, hnd cone the old woman eat TVfl atly puizled. rtvnmbont position a recumbent kept repealing. "I At last she thought. L..0n-f cot one. 1 :,i nT0 anl see If Nurse Lown has -I .h It'll-1 LUV. , she went and said to the t e3e to Aeccr.lir.?!y Vrirp to j a recumbent position to i1-1 . Jl.l to taKe some weuituie mr is- j me ! nurse, who-was equally as I t ;5 tbe oM woman, replied: . l.-ct 5- w - jl bare THE FISH ARE SWARMING UP THE CO- LUMBIA AND FRASER RIVERS. ter. An equable degree of modern warmth is best. Home and Farm. your keep. Jiis Uravery. .'T piinlily John, dear, won't you i ..v r,f her? r, uiiQkly Certainly. No serrant Y "e-f erare me- (A little whlle aff fvarr. cacm! Mrs. Blinkly has to ten you uiai sue warns to to the office. t L B ! you after I have gene Desperate Waecri i tj you liavoa't been takin' a bath m f eatVy hatr Itclared Mr. Weary Wat- i I'll hare to own up," assented - vr Dismal Dawson. ; -Wliut d'ycx mean by itr ' -Election bet; that's aU. Indlanapo- j Zs Journal- - ' ' iwo fmsrt Thins?. I .' c-ene A public eating house. Pert rAnfa nddressing waitress: "Bring me ; pn OI VOUr ULg UK-uita, miss. Yes. sir: u you prumoc to eat it on She "Wns "la 'Ednb'f. p,c-iiliam Well, if you want to know It. I married you for your money. Mrs. Benharn I wish I could tell as 'easily what I married you for. Judge. it Tl ; it !!?. irv.e M-'-H iaa J.T r.vfilatinff Irritating Itch. ribes Tetter, Eczema and Other bUd I ) i-en!s will euro them - stop the itch i .t-;its pays for a box ot Tettertne at ;..r jH..stji:;i.l for 50 cents la stamps Sii'ij.tri'io, i.iv:i;irah. Ga. Adrantajes of WeU-Bred Stock. It is particularly in the time rhen all farming is least prosperous that those who have been careful to secure only the best bred animals have the advantage. The first effect of a de cline in prices is to make the scrub animal unsalable at aiv price. 'All through the period of depression the scrub stock farmers are changing from poor or inferior stock to that which is better. Bythe time they .have all secured the best stock the times will have improved to as to make farming profitable again. It is really a case of cause and effect, though not often' recognized as sucn. Badly Planned Mangers. Tons of hay may go to waste on many farms from badly planned man gers, out of which horses and cattle work the hay and drop it under their feet to soil and waste it. The best rack is one out of which the animal gets only just what he holds in his mouth. This will be eaten and not dropped and wasted. Where hay is very cheap this is not a matter of so much importance, but it is best not to despise small savings. Every ton of hay wasted means labor and wear and tsar of tools, if it does not mean cash, and the labor is needed in other de partments of most farms. Deafness Cannot Be Cored ' hj local application?, as they cannot reach the c;rfs?cl itonion or tae ear. l here is only one way to cure deaf ns, nnd that is by constitu- 'tiof.al rcme-lis. D-afnessls caused by an n flmied cou'ii.ir.n of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in fl -Tssed you have a rambling sound or imper fect iieni-irisr, and when it is eutirely closed l)efttes i ; the result, and unless the inflam mation in be taken out and this tube re f.ortd tj its normal condition, hearing will be d'-n joy-d f orcver. Kine cases out of ten are caa't by catarrh, which is nothing butan in famed oadition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hnnd-ed Dollars for any case of Leafnes; (caued by catarrh) that can--not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F. J. Creset & Co Toledo, O. ; Pold by Druscist. 75c. ' Hall's Family i'ills are the best. - . , Length of Grain. There is often quite a difference in the length of grain grown on different portions of the same field, and one of. the common errors on the part of the man who runs a binder in harvesting such fields, is in neglecting to adjust his machine to suit the different lengths asthey are encountered. On9 side may be long, the other medium, yet he goes through without adjust ment, the result being that the long bundles "spread out" like a turkey tied by the feet; while the short ones are "choked." Tie 'em around the waist, friend; that's what you there for. The Epitomi3t. are r I ne Fiso's Cure for Consumption both ia mv fninily and prac tice. Dr. O. W. Patteb ,s. Inkiier, Mich., Nov. 5, 1SH. i Fits permanently eurea. iMomsornerrous 'r,?ss aitr first dav's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise free Da. R. II. KxuiE. I.tL. J1 Arch StPhilaPa. ' If arreted witb sore eyes ue Dr. L Thomr fctk Ere water. DraieUts sell at 25c a bottl t THE CHIEF-THING r In Maintaining Good Health is Purey Rich, Nourishing Blood. Th? blood carries nourishment airl farn Ishes support for the organs, nerves and muscles. It must bo made rich and pure If you would have strong nerves, good digestion, sound sleep, or if you would " t ril of .that tired feeling, those dis agreeable pimples, eczema, or scrofula. -So medvine is equal to Hood's Sarsapa trilla for purifying the blood. It Is a med icine of genuine merit and will do you 'wonderful pool. Try It now. are the oily pills to take Hood's Pills with Hood' S irsaparill. Tha4 to Do "With the Old Males. Now that you are through breeding, the males should be separated from the hens. To allow them to remain is to injure both. If the cock is not to be retained for service next year, dispose of him at once, if possible. Get him out of the way. Sell him if yon can, otherwise kill him. A cock that is to be used another season should be very carefully treated while moulting. There should be some small pen or yard about the place where he could be kept alone and fed to induce a quick molt and a profuse growth of new feathers. Poultrymen often complain that the cocks take longer to moult thai the hens. We think they will find this altered if the cocks are confined where their gallantry to the hens will not keep them from getting all the food they need, and their association with their mates call to the reproductive organs nourishment which at this time of year is needed for new feath ers ana tne general recuperating 01 the whole system. Farm-Poultry. . fiMlliO 1 CORRESPONDENCE INVITED. i4 Dominion Iron dc Hail Wks. Richmond. V -OS? mi; Five Cents will buy a ten-or. package o! Hoe Cake Soda- and an elegant plated tea spoon. Ask your dealer for it. If be hasn't got It, drop us a card and we will see that you get it. Roinoke Chemical " Company, . ROANOKE, VA. Wild Carrot. As wild carrot is a biennial it is not hard to destroy it, provided it is kept from seeding. But this simple cutting is very hard to do. No matter how close it is cut to the ground, side shoots will sprout out even late in the fall and ripen some seeds before win ter!. At the same time this cutting xrtll make the root branch out. and get so firm hold of the soil that it is almost impossible to pnll it up. If there are scattering stalks in the meadow or pasture select some time when the soil is wet from recent rains ahd pull up the plant by the root. It is necessary to get hold very close to the soil, or better still, hold of the root helow the surface, as the point where root and top join is a favorite one for breaking. With a spade make enough of a hole around the root bo that it can be taken firmly by the, hand. In rich soil a root of eight to ten inches will often be drawn. But the plant will thrive where' there are only three or four inches of soil over the roots. There it is apt to be. neg lected, and the small plants there left to seed will fill the soil of neighboring fields, where thev are carried by birds. Some of the winter birds live on wild carrot seed when they cannot get any thing else to eat Boston Cultivator. Breeding- Dairy Cows. 1. Select the best cows in herd, or that yon can buy, to and dispose of the others. 2. The best cow for the dairy it the one that produces the greatest amount of butter fat in a year (for food con sumed) when being rightly fed. 3. Test your cows by weighing the milk of each cow for a year, testing it occasionally with the Babcock milk tester, and know how much butter fat each one -does produce. 4. To renew or inci ease your herd raise the heifer calves from your best cows. f. Use the best dairy-bred sire you can get; one, if possible, that has a long line of ancestors, and have been first-class dairy animals. 6. In this wayrou can make each generation better than the preceding one, if they have at all" times proper care and feed. 7. It Is neither profitable nor nec essary for a cow to go dry more than four- to six weeks. 8. Especially should your young cows be watched and not allowed to acquire the habit of drying up too soon. 9. Darken the stable in which the cows are milked through fly time. It will not only economise the patience of the milker, but the cost of milk production as well. 10. Keep a record of the time when cows are bred, and have no guesswork about the time of calving. 11. Provide a roomy, box stall, and allow the cow to become " accustomed to it a week prior to calving. -12. Bich foods should be withheld for a short time prior and subsequent to calving. 13. The' udder should receive prompt attention. An obstacle may be removed from the teat the first hour that might baffle science later. 14. A pail of scalded bran should be given to the cow as soon as possible after calving. 15. The calf should be permitted to nurse the mother for two or three days. ' 16. After separating the calf from its mother, feed the natural" milk as 6oon as drawn, for a week or ten days. 17. Then begin gradually to substi tute skim milk vith oil meal jelly stirred into it. 18. Scald the calf's feed pail daily. 19. - Feed three times a day and not more than three quarts at a time until the calf is well started. 20. Warm the milk by placing the I vessel that contains the milk in hot water. 21. Warm the milk to ninety de grees. 22. Don't trust your finger, but a thermometer. It will save many a calf's life. 23. The man whose ideal of a cow is high, coupled with good care, feed and gentleness, is sure to receive the highest profit in milk and pleasure that can be made in dairying. 21. Always clean out the box stall after a cow has calved therein, ana thoroughly disinfect it with a solution made of one part of sulphuric acid to nine of water. - This is to prevent septic poisoning of the next, which may easily occur. 4 25. Do not milk the udder out clean until the fourth day after . calving. This will often prevent a chill, which often produces milk fever. : V r Poultry Notes. If your flock is yarded, plow the runs and give them fresh scratching ground. ' If your hatching is over, separate the males from the females arid give the latter the run of fields or or chards. . i Chickens grow wonderfully during this month; therefore feed them well and rHve them Dlentv of range and i A Four-MUllon-Dollar Catch -How Fiah Jammed Ins Creek Formed a Natural Bridge Seine Fishing From the Shoie-A rhenomlnal Tear. Advices from the Fraser and Co lumbia rivers, as well as from Alaska, indicate that this will be the' biggest salmon year within "a quarter cen tury, says the Washington Star. .The fish are running upstream lit erally in swarms; so close do they run in fact, that a canoe paddled over the surface becomes an instrument of death, killing handreds of salmon in its passage. Iu the upper tributaries of the Fraser the crush is tremendous, and the certain result will be the prac tical damming up of these narrow mountain torrents with solid masses of dead fish. But, while the waste is expected to be very large, the canning output will also greatly exceed that of previous years. Dr. Tarleton II. Bean, director of the New York aqvarium, who has won both fame and wide experience as a member of the United States fish com mission, is authority fpr the following statement: "It may confidentially be asserted that British Columbia and Alaska will this year, boat the . record with their fish output. The conditions for sal mon have rarely been so good, and re ports of a mammoth rush upstream come pouring in from the northwest. It is stated that, so tremendous is the influx of fish, that hundreds 'are actu ally forced out of the water and into the boats. "The salmon pack, or canning out put in 1891 a good year for the Fraser river fisheries was 400,464, valued at $2,351,083. With these fig ures as a basis, it would hardly be an exaggeration to say that these seine fisheries, with their trratly increased facilities and larger number of hands, ought in 1897 to turn out canned fish to the value of about $1,000,000. Sta tistics are less exactly taken in our Alaskan fisheries, but they also ought to show a marked increase. In addi tion to all this,it must be remembered that the Indians do a very great deal of mivateer fish'inir. In fact, the aborigines largely subsist on dried fish, the "bucks" netting them and the squaws cleaning and drying. "The salmon industwf is doing wonders for British Columbia. New Westminster, the capital of the fish eries, had in 1881 a population of 3000 souls. Today the population has quadrupled, exceeding 12,000, and this exclusive of Indians and transient laborers. In the fisheries and can- A y SN V . f ning lactones over ouuj peopie are now employed, according to the of ficial reports. These are almost al together Chinese and Indians. " The fishermen who are paid per fi6h caught, regardless of weight, about six cents number in their ranks Eng lish, Scotch crofters, Irish, French, Japanese and Indians." John A. Fraser, R. C. A., the well known landscape painter, spent many years on his namesake river, while preparing a series of views at the in stance of the Canadian government. Asked concerning the fisheries, he said: "To begin with, bo3t fishing does not exist for more than a few miles above the delta of the Fraser. Be yond that point all Celling is done from the shore by men and sometimes in exceptional years, with the aid of horses. The net used differs largely from the seines used iu Alaska. lean com pare it to nothing better than a huge hammock 6lung by both ends to a pole. Night is the time for fishing operations. The men arrange among themselves for certain stretches of river. Below the delta line they cast their nets from boats with high, plat formed sterns. Further up, the river heincr unnavicrable on account of its moonlight, and, this time, keen eyes can see within its meshes the silver scales of the salmon, wriggling and struggling for a freedom that is his-no more. Then comes the quick blow of the killing club, and the dead fish is tossed into the creels." - The work of canning, according to Dr. Tarleton II. Bean, and Mr.Fraser, usually lasts about two months. The Chinese can clean about 1000 fish in a day. Sometimes the canners turn out 75,000 cans in. twenty-four hours. fierce current and sunken rocks, they tten that, cast from the bank. A good man can .il0. . QUAINT AND CURIOUS. A famous Koman glutton always wore gloves at a feast so he could han dle the hot meat sooner than the other guests. According to Nature, the firing at Portsmouth, England, on June 26, was distinctly heard at Hungerford, Wiltshire, a distance of forty-five miles as a crow flies, and also. 'at Great Malvern. Among the portraits recently ac quired by the trustees of the National Portrait Gallery, London, is that of Sir Francis Ronalds (1788-1873), the inventor of the first working electric telegraph. It is claimed that the perfume of flowers disappears as soon as the starch in the petals is exhausted, and it may, it is said, be restored by placing the flower in a solution of sugar, when the formation of starch and the emission of fragrance will be at once resumed. ' "Joseph II. Thompson, who died recently at his home in East Orange, N. J.,, was 82 years of age and came of a long-lived family, the average of his ancestors for five generations hav ing been 82 years and that of his wife's ancestors for the same time a year more. 1 The Boston museum of fine arts has come into possession of the wedding gift of George III of England to his bride, Queen Charlotte, presented by him at their marriage in 1791. This relic is a chatelaine watch, with belt clasp, band, and pendants, all of the finest gold and thickly incrusted with jewels. , ' , . Many gold ornaments have been found in a tomb in the Etruscan ceme tery, at Votulonia, making the discov ery one of the most notable of recent years. A necklace, eight large clasps, two large earrings, some hairpins and other articles of jewelry, together with a sword, are among the objects. The treasure will go to the Florence museum. ; In a French churchyard is a monu ment bearing an inscription of which the following is a translation: "Here lies Jean Pinto, the Spanish vocalist When he reached heaven he united his voice with the voices of the archangels. As 60on as He heard him the' Diety cried, 'Keep quiet, all you fellows, and let us hear alone the illustrious singer, Jean Pinto !' " The lord mayor of London is en titled to wear an earl's robe whenever a crowned head pays a visit to the city. The last lord mayor to don an earl's robe was Alderman Kniil, on the occasion of the visit of the King of Denmark, four years ago, to be present at the marriage of the . Duke of York. The. number of London mayors w ho, during the present reign, have appeared in this guise may be counted on one hand. Mental Telegraphy. ' "Let me takfc your hat, John, dear, ril close the door. You're tired, I know. Give me another kiss. What's one ? r "Thank you, my dear. 7 Xou are very thoughtful." "Of you, always, to be sure, you poor, dear boy. I have the nicest supper for you. Look ! Some lovely biscuits, the kind of cake you like best and your favorite preserves, too." "How kind of you 1" "Not at all. It's a wife's duty, yon know, to study her husband's w.shes and comforts." "Why ! so it is." I had quite' for- BUCKINGHAM'S DYE For the Whiskers, Mustache, and Eyebrows. In one preparation. . Easy to apply at home. Colors brown or black. 'The Gentlemen's favorite, because satisfactory. B. F. nI.L a C.X. rropridova, Kaaku, K. XL Svud bj all rjrax'.jt& GIIIGKES EARN LiflllE 1 it tou ts ran aixr. To eaaaot ilo Uita aalea yoo- Bn.trn1 tbem aa4 kaow bow to eater to their requirement; aat yoa caaaot pood aal dollars ter.n bf x- pwtocw,o rnm mat bo, the knawledf acquwoJ by otbers. We oil or tbts to yoa (or oni tS mau. ROOM'S ?4EPSIN? ChillTonic TASTELESS ANO CUARANTEEP TO CURE CHILLS & FEVER, DOES KOT lJCHK THE STOMACH. W. A. McLartr & Ron. Dime Boa. Texas. layt Wa want notae-more of Ramon's Pep- in Chlr. Tonic, as it Is the best wa ever han dled. My son prescribes It In his practice and ins It Is the only Chill Tonic which even a child can take without Injury to the toma h. You may send me 1 gross of the ltamon's Pepsin Chill Toalo and 1 gross of Ramon's Tonic Liver rills." For Sale by All Dealers. FBEPABED T . BROWN PF'G. CO.. CREENCVILLC, TERN. ARKANSAS LADIES DONT LIE. HaJrern, Ark says: nave used Dr. M. AlmnioDi IJTer Medicine 10 years, and find It a great deal better than "Zellln's Regulator" and -Black Draught. It has been of greatbeneflttomyDaMgh- -ter and Niece during their monthly troubles for Ob traded Menstruation. There should be no hOXOO Without IU YOU WANT THEM TO PAY THEIR OWN WAY. i If TO morety keep the a dlroytoa. la or bs baadto rewla jadtetuuslf, yoa ntuM kaor something aooat them. To meet this want we ars seUtas a book ftm the experience fl-l- OC. of a pracCMd! poultry rawer forlUIllJ tweatr-flT year, it was written by a maa who put ail aia mino, aaa ume, aa money k bi&kiui m w i of Chtckea raiala aot a a paeUme. out an a tmila and U yoa wUt proAt by hie twenty-" year' work, yoa eaa saro maar Caiek annually. aad mean your rewu oara aouare tor yoa. at potat la, that yoa mast bo able to detect uuuble la the Poaltry Yard a aooa as K appears, aad kaow bow to remedy It. This book will teach you. It tolls bow to detoot aad car d(enae: to feed for vsaaadalaotarrattoalnr: which row U to re for fereedlav pni pceee. ana rvrytninr. wa.i, yon abootd know on tam (abject to stake It proflmti. am Boat postpaid for twenty-fire coats la star Book Publishing House 134 Laos a o St. N. r. City. FOR CHINA, CROCKEIIY L.A3IPS. - SK5D TO OB CALL OK Hi, MOOKE & KYLE, Vo. 8 W. Trade St., Charlotte, N. C AXso . ... . JOBBERS OF TOYS. Cheap China, f.am'M and 1aTrare. Will , g:veyouOL.D TARIrr PKIUbSf. inour retail u"paritneni we carry tue Mnusuroo-t line of Dinnerware. Cut Ula'a Wed; e wood, Bric-aBrao and House Furnishings carried by any house la the Mate. Our prices aro the lowest. Jol&TjL Farrior, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER. ixspectob or SOUTnERN AMD 8. fl. L. WnTCflES. No. 4, South 1rron Strt, Charlotte N. C Diamonds, Watches Clock. Jewelry and hpectacle. Silver and l'Ute 1 Ware, Wed dln and isting Cards Engraved.. Mall Orders fcoUclteJ. The The Tarn of Lift. r- eettaiionot Ui tnenoea uFTJallV fto ears between the aires -of forty and fifty., Great Irregularity takes place in the periodto discharges for oma time before the final cessation, the female usually experiencing sudden Cashes of beat, f uUneas in the head headache and other evidences of constitu tional disturbance. The nerrous system ynpatheticalljrcsponds,and thera Is grea Irritability and melancholy, the patient la discouraged and has a cense of fullness ox Buflocation. . At no time la her life does a woman need more constant care and watchful tender ness, noihas more need for a remedy to Inylgorate and strengthen ber. ThebowebJ should be kept regular with Dr. M. A. Sim mons LiverMedlclne.and If Dr. Simmons Squaw Vine Wine Is used during the whole of this critical period. It w ill lnngorate and enrich her blood, soothe and strengthen her serres ana thus- reuere ui ennenng aoa AGENTS WANTED where to selltweUd . . . & i i .I.. vaiuaDie, inaispensauia uousruoiu amort. Bnd 26 cent9 In stamps for com pleta sample outfit and full rarticulars to C. W. rcTtcs, S3 a. Try on Bireet, ChnrlottN. C. Saw Mills, jiUi ami ueary, and supplies. CHEAPEST AND BEST, i tjsT"Cat every day : work 1W hands. Lombard Iron Works and Supply Co., AUGU3TA4 GICOICGIA.: enable her to pass saf sly through the dan gtn, prolong Ler life an dafiordhcrstreszt. ana joy la ncr declining years. Fine Bluff, Arav, writes: Dr. Ml. A. Simmons Liver Medlcino has been a God send to myself and family for 20 years. It cures Chills and If evers, Blllona Foy ers, Sick Headache. I think there Is no compari son between It and 'Black Draught" and "ZelUn'S Liter Regulator.- rnUfifii of Blood In Head. Where there, la rreat determination Ot blood to the bead, the blood-ressela of tha brain become-greatly congealed, and there exists flushed face, aiddinesa, especially on stooping:, ana mrooumg jmi u u Increased bT movement. It may be caused by living too freely; too late rising in the murmur, -iuuiuu. " -( Menatrnjil deranrements in females will nwiainn It. Dr. Simmons Sqnaw Vino Wine la especially xnado for this aod it cures. t ESIi I STATE IHIstiei elu for fI per Kalian. Alto wapie.-ujrnr maie rmm ante, "want to thank you for the Maple Kynin recipe which 1 find l excellent. I can n-com oat-ad IS hUchiy to any and every one." It. 1'. Joncn. Car-tersTllle, Ox. 8eod $1 postal r.!-r and ret revlpo vr $l sd1 1 wm aaa cycioaia w.vv r-'i;- cw erlne a'l dtnrtment. Ilonanza for Agent. J. S. LOTeFEIClI. - - MorrUtowu. Tenn. ROBERT E. LEEc The soldier, citizen and christian Lero. A freal aaw book Jnat ready. rlTinp life nnd ancentry. A ny'T maker. Ix-1 and traTfUnS arente wanted. Ho4 I'U1HJ6U10 CO, 11 and Main bU, Kicumond.t a in Is I nb unAKLU I lev IHicQiJSiiilili, Hi g PRIVATE OlARLOTTE. X C.Ao.5IO X HOSPITAL Trton 61. Pickling- Eggs When Plentiful. In preserving eggs for winter nse, it must bo understood that the whole secret is to keep the porous shell from admitting the air and moisture. If this can be'done the eggs will keep iaJing hens perfectly clean shade during the hot dayi. If jou have not done so, now is the time to plant late cabbage. . There is nothing that fowls will relish bo much during winter as a crisp head of cab bage. " "The best is always the cheapest; the cheapest is the most costly in the end" is a good thing to have in mind, if given a reasonable construction when buying poultry or eggs. . Tt won Id be a eood thing for all poultry men to plant some egg gourd seed and raise their own nest eggs. The egg gourd is a perfect imitation of an egg, and will deceive tke -wisest old hens. - ' It is at night that fowls seem to take disease. During the day they are active and at work, but at night they cannot change their positions on W am a 1 1 the roost and are consequently neip less to avoid damp drafts of air. One who reduces the matter to fig ures finds that just eight minutes a week will keep the premises of fifteen and Iree in AED8 ran bo saved with out their knowledge oy Anti-Jag the marvelous care for the drink habit. Write Benova Camlcal Y n VAJ.. W vaA w mi , aj iaformatioB (in plain wrapper) mailed .fres. hfn n AT A CF J OLD I iia thAirt cf stsck rat siits la oa of the leriest f-oid prepexoea m tela. iax One aaadred and aiaty acica. nateateo, eoW-beannr rroumd aad eolid eneuataiak Of 87 OO ote. Subacno- limned, ad tram. Broker BBBT A. BLOCK. Dearew. Cole. Ma&ct uw. hUai ExcaaaC- GANGER CTJILIID AT HOXEl end mP tat hook. Dr. 4. . HARRIS h 00. FUe SuiktUa. CUteaaaati. Ohio. 5I?AYErVS COLLEGEB?yS" ping- Best, Cheapest . Situation guaran ;:?.:: & Ulcere Cured. I too. treatment 81. A. Robibtb, NewBerne,N.C. & N. U. No. 3797. n Best Coufh errup. Taves Good. Use fnr nnite a leneth of time. A pickle first is made as follows: One bushel of fine quality stone lime, eight quarts of Bait, and sixty gallons of water. Slake the lime well and then add the water and the salt, stirring well until all is settled and cold. Draw off the clear brine into a water-tight cask and then put the eggs in as soon as taken from the nest. When a layer of eggs about a foot deep is put in, a little of the milky brine, made by stirring np some of the very light lime particle, .hrmld ha allowed to settle over them. Thi put in a similM - layer and repeat the operation.- Fill the barrel ;witU . & fftrs within four or five inches ox me with a factory cloth; on top of this . cloth spread a layer of lima that settled in making the pickle. The pickle must be kept above this lime to keep it cool and moist. If the eggs are to be sent to market they should be taken out of the brine carefully, and after being thoroughly wined. rack away neatly. They must v iir.wo,l tret too warm eummer tim, nor too cold in the win d. Typewritiag. I top and then a. a a from vermin. OI course iae worK must be done at the right time and under favorable conditions. . The French minister of agriculture has published a report of certain ex periments upon the effect of cold air upon incubation of eggs. It was found that fowls hatch much larger and stronger broods during the months of February, March and April than during the warm months of June, July and August Extreme cleanliness should be the rule. Houses, roosts, dropboards, all need special attention. Clean your dropboards every morning and kero sene your roost?, upper ana unaer side, every week. Nests should be kept fresh and aweet until moulting time. Do not let the lice get a start. catch hundreds daily. Two hundred fish at 6 cents a fish means $12 a day; and that is no unusual wage in the season. Below, the delta I have heard of $100 being earned by two men in a single day or, to be exact, in a single night. "That 1897 is to be a banner year I have heard from various friends at New Westminstea. Strange as it may seem, the canning people are not always elated by banner years. So much salmon drugs the market and even hurts the canning industry. . "Nobody who has not been in the northwest can have any notion of the awful inrush of salmon during a very big year, like the present. On one occasion I crossed a tributary of the Fraser river literally over a bridge made of salmon. The fish were quite dead, and had begun to putrify. Forced from the main stream into the tribu tary by the terrific legions of upgoing fish behind, they were driven into a long reach where the water grew shal low and the rocky banks very narrow. Here they became an absolute wedge a jam, like the human one that oc curred on the Brooklyn bridge years ago. Not a fish could move forward or backward, and thus imprisoned, as in a vise, and without water, they died by hundreds, under the scorching sun. "It was quite easy for my Indian driver to take the horse and buggy across this extraordinary natural bridge, while I followed on foot. Judg ing by the height of the river banks, and the extent of the fish dam, I should say that there was an actual waste of fully 2500 or 3000 fish in that jam. Subsequently I was informed that such jams are by no means un common. aren't you pleased?" Oh! Of course, of course, my darl ing, only- " Well, only ?" "Nothing, nothing but, you've been down town this afternoon,haven't you?" "Whr. John, how did : you guess ? Yes." "And to the milliner's ?" "You're a mind-reader 1" "No, not at all." (After a reflective pause.) "Well, here it is." "Oh, John ! $10 1 You dearweet, good hubby." ' - .1 . "Urn yes ain't I? But.come on, let's have that delicious supper 'now. I need it" (To himself, as he spreads his first biscuit): "Mind-reader, I guess bo. I thought she was talking through her hat, and she was." Phil adelphia Bulletin. A Remarkable Pond-Lily Pond. "One of the most beautiful floral exhibits in New England," eaya a Connecticut man, "is upon Tadpole Pond,' a famous pond-lily pond on the line of the Norwich and Worcester railroad, one mile above Jewett City, Conn. The surface of the pond is now a mass of pink and white pond- lilies, and their fragrance is carried for miles by the summer winds.. No one knows how long this remarkable garden of pond-lilies has been in ex istence, but for many years Tadpole's lilies have been sought by picnic par ties from nearby counties in this state, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Cartloads of the flowers are carried awav. but there seems to be no dimin ution in the snpply. The railroad J 'comes suddenly upon the pond, whicn and in an instant w "Out . of sight 5MDI(inGT0BACCQ Kada from tho Pnre-t. Wpeat and Sweetest leaf crown in the OoUlra iklt of North Carolina. Uj arctte Book coos with each t-o. iouch. ALL FOR io CENTS. A Pleasaat Cool and Delightful 3mokc Lvom a Co. Toaacco Wowaa. Duwwani. W. C. aOYOU SPECUUTE7.il1 twoatock.; tlW Invented Iran tX profit, write uwaa. I hsvs exrlortv la- e Information on Immediately will make Hveau.U Wall -. Pi. 1 --r-n-OSBORNE'S J lna. Gi Aetna! bonneee. Ketesty S2Z iSSrtuia. Cheap board. Bead for osialoseo. GUFFERINC IN SILENCE. Women are the real heroea of the world. Thousands on thousands of them endure the dragging torture of the ilia peculiar to womankind in the silence of home. Thev suffer on and, on weeks. months, years. . The story of weakness and torture is written in the drawn features, in the sallow skin, iu the list less eyes; in the lines of care aad worry on the face. .... Inborn modesty seals theirlip3. They prefer pain to humiliation. Custom haa. xnade them believe the ouly hope of relief lies in the exposure of examina tion and "local treatment." Take ten cases of Vfemale weakness and in nine of them "local treatment" is unnecessary. There is no reason why modest, sensitive women should sub mit to it McElJlXIirS . H WirJEOFCARDU! is a vegetable wine. It exerts a wonder fully healing, strengthening and sooth ing influence over the organs of woman kind. It invigorates and stimulates the whole system. It is almost infallible in curing the peculiar weaknesses, irre gularities and painful derangements of woman. Year after year, in the privacy of home away from the eyes of every body it effects cures, trans or cjrdci u id for si.eo bottle. Deal wm la laedK-lne aeU It. l ira bottle autuUly crtre tlie -rorai cajftta. .1 8. N. S7 57. CRT TAB GCfJUISD ARTICLE! Walter Baker & Co.'s Breakfast COCOA Pure, Delicious, Nutritious. Costs Less than ONE CENT a cup.' Ee sure that the package bears our Trade- Mai k. all the canning, Chinese, who are at once cleaner, cheaper and more easily managed, do roost of the work. "The night fishing is very picturesque. You see the dark figures of the fisher men, standing in bold relief against the moonlight. Then high in air whirrs the big net, sweeping at the end of its iron-bound pole. Deftly, silently almost, it cuts into the swift current of the Fraser. There is a minntfl or two of waitincr. and then. The horses of German cavalry regi- ,vith 8wisn and a great scattering of it divides in halves, and in an Formerly the Indians did nearly the passengers detect the fragrance of - . I a 1 ' 1 1 t A 1 en. 4 V. A nt-inrlAWI the canning. Now, however, the me lines auu inrow uV the better to view tne wnmuui aim unusual sight In one section of Tad pole there is a large tract of lilies, the blossoms of which are of so rich a pink as to be almost rose-colored. - They are of exceedingly rare beauty, ami are much sought after by collectora." (EstabUsbcd 1780.) Walter Baker & Co. Umitcd, . Dorchester, Aloss. Trade-Mark. in ments are to be shod with paper shoes. recent experimenta having proved their durability and lightness desir able. . i spray, up comes tne net, dank and dripping from the river, having de scribed a rapid semi-circle under water. Once more it is whirled across the Correct. Teacher A rich man dies and leaves a million dollars one-fifth to his Bon, one sixth to his daughter, one-seventh to his wife, one-eighth to bis brother, and the rest to foreign missions what does each one get? Littlo Willie Brief A lawyer. ruck. '. such schools rarely or never IF YOU Besides schools rarely wish to be fitted for Basin ess ! the shortest time and at the least exDciwse. act to be sure of a aTOod po-ition when competent, learn the bet eyetcms of oTENOGItAPxl V and HOOKKEKPJN'O, and success will be positively guaranteed. ThorooscLly taught by mail or per sonally, Students fitted for responsible pot-itiona in conn ting-rooms and offices in from one-balf to two-thirds the time required elsewhere. Don't throw away time and money by r oinz to tempora ry whools when H will cost you less to attend the 11E3T. We always have a number of students in' 'attendance who have left Inferior teachers In distrust. Mich people often tell us that ix months here IS equal to a year, in any otaer bcxjh. obtain positions for their graduates. offer for first information of a vacancy for a Bookkeeper. Stenographer. Clerk or Teleirrapn Oph-tor, which we successfully fill, and supply competent asslfctanta Refer to Bankers. Merchants ani prominent patrons 5 REWARD i. Vn.ln.it hniMi wltru.ot rnirr. to KinicrL J tn imMt overr county In the United Hi a tea. Thousands of testimonials on request, btud nts enter an time. Ho vacations, expenses moderate, vrnie ior our catalogue. DTy.aareekiBeaipleynieBt aadrrililaatostady, sead tea two-cent stamps far fir easy lesoeae (by mail) la SLMPLLFIED SHORTHAND. , - - -UOrtsi te;sU2.ttilXUt. CttWIPij Pnst, Esr5S"-lcexs"o, Tot. uT"
Chatham Citizen (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 22, 1897, edition 1
3
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