Newspapers / Chatham Citizen (Pittsboro, N.C.) / Oct. 13, 1897, edition 1 / Page 3
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North Carolina tomti next T- 1011 K I f w.- ,rCi!-Vnlleo-e on the 15th instant, the Ka T( VaT) Times-Register, of tho 17th 'verv encouraging, indicating an , esfe'over the enrollment of last ees- I ijU nvu- - - -j ,iCD, r to' , w ! :J.vp iin2 ratrdnajreXor some years. The ce a,Je nearly all entering jVe re-n!ar courses for rradnation and ih? students asa whole wonld impress 5p0V. a who are at college for a purpose. q rsual many States are represented, nl a'o Korea and the Chicosaw Na :cu ,',f the Indian Territory. North 'gr0:iua, with thirteen student, comes oeit o Virginia in numerical order. V3,jjviliP, Tenn., Centennial Exposl . , lion. with the approach cf cool" weather. a ltbe closing days of the Nashville rx-H,'siticn, interest in that occasion ...-,:.li!v increases, and the movement to very encouraging, 'ihe i ca:bern Hailwav is tect rt-ute to Nashvill is the short and di- lle. Double daily feruce wiiii mroufu luumuu cars. rf j't aud Nashville Limited, leaving Vnrfolk dailv i):20 a. m., leaving Hal -.1 il T. 11 - k.'h ZAO m., leaviug Greensboro i-.-J-n ci . arriving Nashville 1:50 p. m. 'following day; Through Pullman jj-awiiig room car Norfolk to Nashville. vkL:nirtou & Southwestern Limited, .lm!v. with through Pullman car from Citv. Washington and Greens-1 ,,r "to Nashville, connection from GoMsWo, llaleigh" and all points in North Carolina. Laii on agent or rep resentative of the Southern Hallway for fiill information. A Ucanttful Blotchy Face. Hic'it off ? ou say. "Impossible!" And fo it c " i- t it. Eczema, lllugworm or anr other i :!,-!v r kin disease makes the handsomest - tV, icons. i ctterine'!m-ill cure them. It's tu-oi.lv euro ctrtain, safe, sure. W cents at ,:r: --t-. or !7 mail tor price la stamps. J. T. shui-trine. Savannah, lis. irow'a Thla T "" n ofTor Oni Hun-lred Dollars Reward for t',. "f O itrrh that cannot be enrod by 11 ilTi CiUrrh Cure. i J". Cii eset Co, Toledo, O. V. t'-.e nndersineJ, have known F. J. Che-r,- for the last 15 year?, and believe him per i";.n ;S' Iftn-iraWe ia all business transaction su I ;ui tncially abl to carry oat any obliga - ti -u :n i bv thoir firm. , a';.. r .v IUAX, Wholesale Drnggita,Toledo, u:i: V at.ci.vo. -KisxAX Jb Mabvix, "Wholesale Hr:-,;it-, Toledo. Ohio. II lii'i Crttirrh Cure is tak.ee internally, act-d:r- i! upoa tho llooi and m neons Bur ircs ' system. Testimonials sent Tree. It ' -. per bottle. Sold by all Drajjgi sti. 11 .:. i 1 "jiuily l'iila ara the cast- I Cure for Cnsnmptlon has saved me r..i:i-a doctor" bill. S. F. IIardt, Hopkins - l i sci-. Baltimore. Md Dec 2, l&ii. Y.U ; ermanfntly enred. No fits or nervous- :it, r tirstd.Ty9Uo of Dr. Kline's Great S i v ! trer. 2- trial bottle and treatise free 1 :. K. II. K u n e. Lt L. SJ I Ar, h St, Phlla P. ?Tr. 'Vins'ow's toothing Syrnp forcbl'dren t- t i r. softens the gums, redncinj inflama. r .--a ::1Lits paia.cnres wind colic, 25c. a bottle. More and Greater Are tho en res produced by Hood's Sana I aril! i th.ia by any other medicine. If yon are suITerins with sorof ula, salt rheum, Up disease, running sores, bolls, pimples, dy.-pepsia. los3 of appetite or- that tired feelinir, take Hood's Sarsaparilla. Toa may confidently expect a prompt and rormanent cure. Its nneqaaled record is dm? tD it3 positive merit. Remember Hood's Sarsaparilla I Hip hct in fact the OneTrne Blood Purifier. Hood's Pills do not cause pain or gripe. All druggists. 25c. ss. NJJ. No. 40 '97. ondiEte. On February 15th. 1808, a first-class passen- cr steanii-mp win sau airect ior the Uold Fields of Alaska, . FROM CHARLESTON S. C. F r full particulars address A. S. Emerson, '") Meeting Street. Charleston. 8. C. 20,000 ACRES FINE TOBACCO LANDS For pale on easy terms in West Florida. We are not land agenta -but own it ourielves. - IMKOOD LflftD CO., Box 53. Pensacola, Fla. I AltDS can t saved with out their knowledge by Anti-Jig the marvelous rare for tbe drink habit. Write Reno Chemical Co M Broad we r. H. Y. Tall hLfomatioB (la plain wrapper) mailed free. ASTHMA P 1 1 D C fl f Dr.Halr's cure UUilUUi haa brought hap- ulneei to si nee to sufferers. A fl.uO bottle and valuable rUe in trf. tou par ihe eipmaan. Address Dr. U. II MK. Dept. C3. Cincinnati. O. D. Pi R Rnk'ER'Q GreatYeg-etable BLOOD & IEIIi UniXLIt O LIVER CURB. Guaranteed Uirtr Keumatlsm. Scrofula, Syphilis, Con ytipation a Indigestion. Manufactured by l ookout Mountain Medicine C'rmpanr. tKEEMILLK. - - TEXAESSEE. KLONDYKE IS ALL RIGHT. fhjr pf Itoeaaairt lot stock wit eethiec M "talk" te tk u, iad l.ooo sules from hoeKf 1 wfli asU ytm dividend tarlnf Clordo Gold Mjx Srock far i cents a ikn.1 ' mnevn fraca iw harcs Bp. OfV-r itoik i ia eropeftiaa. A Mrs. Broker BIX a. BIXCS. Dmmtm. Cote. Masher Stock axcaaoce. Suue -f Syerj BtaktHg. SI. i:::;a: nv;?. f.::-clat:?.. Tlic-Best on tbe JIarket. 9 All Drugirtsta and Mercnants. MnTd by L. GERsTLE dk CO-. Cbattanoom. Tenn. P A t ! O C D tJTTRED AT HOJCEi mm ataap fa, UAllUlwllbook- Dr J-B- HAS&I3&00, vmiwHil BuUdlM. Qafteuett. Ohle n STRAYER'S COLLEGEt0?: BooUepis. Seet. Cheapest, Bltualion g-uaranteeo. i CilKi-S nikt Alt Ust taliS. ! Best Couga Srrup. Tastes Good. Ui Lfl lntimo. Sold oy amr9t. r - A b-1 r m DRW i.a. l , r I 1 SB m m M ABBBBBBBBBBBBmBMBal is the name to. remember when buying Sarsaparilla. It has been curing people rigHt along for more than 50 years. That's why- TRUMPET CALLS. nAia'allorn Sound, a Warning "Note to the Unredeemed. TT la the Imma. nsnce of God thnt slowly uplifts the "oria the Bib! will spend his time trying "to outwit his conscience. The preaching In which nobody hears God speak is not the preach ing of the srosreL Honest efforts make tho best friend 6hlps. ' Wisdom is the proper use of all means at hand. -The. lucky man plana well and works to his plans. An ounce of conscience Is worth a ton of explanations. It costs something to be a Christian, but lt costs more not to be. You can silence conscience, but you cannot take away its frown. Forbidden fruit Jn the heart causes the logic of the head to stink. Life Is not worth living to the man trho Is willing to do wrong to live. Some churches use out of date methods to fight an up-to-date devil. . Over confidence has slain his thou sands, but despair has slain his ten thousands. The devil's face may be seen withou a mask by taking a. look at the drunk ard's home. The religion that Is only seen on Sun day is not the kind that Is needed in the middle of the week. Tha man who enjoys God's peace Is the one who sought and found him when he had no peace. The man who IJmps and stumbles along Is the first to complain when any body else makes a misstep. Which is the greatest transgressor, the man who breaks the week in Idle ness, or the Sabbath by work. God is as certain to help the man who trusts In him as the sun Is to send Its light Into the open window. To rebels the state says. "Yield and' be shot;" to rebels against his kingdom ' God says, "Yield and be saved." There Is no argument for religion In heaven or earth that can persuade a man who will not give up his sins. Some Christians are pious sponges; only when, tribulation squeezes them the world Is better because cf them.. He who sows wild oats may espect to gather chaff, as that kind of .seed pro duces no grain. .The very straw Is in nutritions. If an official meeting was composed only of those actually at work, it would often be a duet between the preacher and the Janitor. 'The greatest proof of the divinity of the Christian religion Is that Its abuse and mismanagement by Its professors haant killed It long ago. , THOUGHT HE WAS A HS5&. ' Dilemma of tna Man Who nelawBvxai Bathtub Together. One ot tbe most idiculons sltoatloas which at the time bring the coldest sweat out of a man's brow, and ever after remain with him as a constant source of mirth, occurred to a Shelton merchant a few days ago. Ue thought ho would take a bath, and as his flat Is minus one of the chief requisites for the Job a bathtub he extemporized one out of a small washtub and en Joyed a cooling ablution. He bad Just concluded and stepped from the tub" for the towel, when sud denly" the top hoop of the tub burst with a sharp report, and the man saw to his horror that the whole contents of the tub would soon be flooding the floor. At the same moment he thought of the store beneath and the amount of damage the water would do as lt ran down through the ceiling. lie Is a man of quick thought, and In a moment he did the only thing possible, threw him self down beside the tub and, clasping his arms around it. held the already fast swelling staves together. lie was successful In keeping the water In but what a situation. lie dared not yell, forhe.was.hardly-ln a condition to receive callers, especiaKy"2i ? -fefiSTT that all lp the blck at the time were of the gentler "sex, and he realized at once that the only thing left for hlrn was to stay in that position until the return of his wife, who was out on a shopping expedition. Like the boy who saved Holland, he manfully remained In his most uncorw Ifortable position until relief in the shape of bis wife appeared. Then to cap the climax, .when, he asked her to get a rope or any old thing to tie about the tub, she, after a long fit of uncon trollable laughter, asked him why he didn't carry the tub and contents out to the sink room and pour out the water. With a look that froze" the smile on her face he did as she said, i and without a word donned his clothing and wandered out into the cold, unfeel ing world, a crushed and humiliated man.-Ansonla Conn., SentineL 9 4 : re. Tines an Manure. If pea vines can bo plowed under Trhile green, it may pay to make this use oi tnem, provided there is some crop to use up the fertility they supply. i J uneu, iub Tines Buuuw oecui ana put up ior winier ieea. xneyarencn in nitrogeneous matter, ana are especially valuable to feed with corn stalks, which ficient in nitrogen. - are da-1 Fatturlnr Cattle Across a Tllrhtrnr Many farms are so situated that the' cattle . must be driven across a high way to pasture. This almost always affords trouble. The cattle will break away up and down the highway to feed by the roadside, instead of crossing the road directly from the pasture gate to the lane leading to the barn. A de vice is shown herewith that may prove of assistance in such cases. A narrow J GriCS FOB CATTLE. land is built on each side of the road, extending well up to the carriage track but not close enough, of course, to prove any inconvenience to. travel ers. Two long bars of thin boards are then fitted to slide across the highway when the cattle are to be driven across, and then back again, out of the way of travel. A. bent rod of iron connects the two ends of the bars, so that both can be slipped across the road at once, the bend in the rod per mitting it to rest upon the ground so that the cattle can pass over it. To operate this takes but a moment's time. American Agriculturist. Harvesting Beans. ' Wherever beans are grown largely they are grown cheaply, end with far less taoor tnan is put on tms crop when grown in small gardens. Proba- bly in nothing is this saving of labor so great aS in harvesting. It was al ways the most back-aching work of our boyhood to pull beans, which was al ways left for the boys to do, because the work of pnlline is really within their power, and the boy, being small, did not need to bend his back so much as a full-grown man would do. It does 'Us good even now to think that the great bean erops of the country are mostly harvested by horse power. The bean harvester consists of a sharp cutting knife drawn by two horses straddling the rows and running just far enough under the soil to cut the root without pulling the stalk down and running over it. Then the beans are forked into windrows or heaps and left to dry out. It does not pay to rake them together, as the bean pods need to dry before being heaped up, and if a rake were used they would shell bally. The beans stand up after they have been cut, but the moisture from the root is cut off so they dry quickly. It is the best way to harvest beans even in the garden. Make a hoe sharp enough so it will cut off the bean Btalk just below the surface, and yet leave it standing. It is at least for a change easier than bending down to pull the beans, as used to le always done. Early'Corn Is Dest. Millions of dollars worth of corn is lost every year from failure of corn late planted, or planted on too poor ground to mature its crop. This soft corn has some feeding value, but more for ruminant animals than for the hog, which gets most of it. But even when put to the best use the nutrition is not in the soft corn as it is in the fully ripened grain. Not even remastication can get out of soft corn what is not there. Even in the arid "West, where corn dries up prematurely, the earliest planted earn fares best. winds ccaie", which witner the immature corn to almost nothing, the corn that has formed ear and grain has so much eared beyond even the power of the hot winds to wholly dissipate. Hence we always advise the early planting of corn. Even if the frost nips the blade just as it is pushing above the surface, there is vigor enough in the root to send out a new shoot. It is rather more serious if the frost catches corn when itis five or six inches high. Then the frozen leaf has often to be clipped off before a new growth will start. Yet we have seen corn even thus frozen down mature a better crop than that from corn planted after the frost was over. The root has been growing even while the top was frozen. Hence, though such corn wonld never have quite as big stalks as that which grew without interruption, it would have large and well-filled ears. Most of the stalks would have suckers, and these also would be well eared. Early corn always has more grain than late in proportion to its stalk growth. Tnrkeys. "We occasionally read of turkeys that weigh fifty or sixty pounds to the pair, and of even -heavier birds having been sold, or sent as a gift to the President or some other public official. Does it pay to grow turkeys of that size or nearly approaching it? In Bos ton market birds of even fifteen or twenty pounds weight, when dressed, though ever so nicely fattened, cannot often be sold excepting at a discount from the prices that prevail 'for birds of half those weights. They may be sold sometimes to be placed upon the table at some public banquet, where they are meant to be looked at and ad mired rather than eaten. Restaurants and hotels may buy them to serve up to their customers, when they are of fered at a price o little below the regu lar quotations, but the customer who wants twenty pounds of turkey for his family dinner at Thanksgiving time or other time, usually prefers to have it in two birds than in one, and he will pay a few cents a pound more for it to j have tho smaller birds. I Can the larger breeds be grown at i less cost per pound? This is doubt- f QJf to 8ay lho leastf though perhaps it has not been fairly tested. It may be true that the bronze turkey, which is a large breed, is more hardy than some 0f the amaller breeds, as its advocate ciaira. Itmay bethat when ranging in the field, and finding most oi its f00d in the insects there, it costs no mora a crow the lartre bird than the small one. but when it comes to be fattened for market, the grain required to make a pound of flesh upon one large bird will be enough to make a pound upon two smaller birds. What is desired for our markets is that the farmers should grow turkeys of eight to twelve pounds weight when dressed, well fattened, and with good tender meat upon them, instead of a combination of hard muscles and cords that might be very desirable in a draught horse or a working ox. Some turkey growers do not think it is necessary to feed gram but a week or two to the turkeys before kill ing them, allowing them before that time to ranjre for all their food, but those who have a reputation for send ing the best birds to markets, say that two months of liberal fesding is not too much to make the turkey what it should be for the table. The Rhode Island poultry men, whose products have a reputation as good as the best , sometimes buy turkeys, gee se or other poultry by the carload in other States or in Canada, and feed them for the market about two months before'kill- ing them. By this time the fowl are supposed to have been naturalized, so that they are sold as Bhode Island poultry, at a little higher price than Western or Northern poultry. Boston Cultivator. t A Labor-Saving Hay Gatherer. On farms where the hay fields are level and lying adjacent to the barn, it is now sometimes the practice to take a stout rope and with a horse at either end, "rope" a windrow of hay right into the barn floor.without tho nse of hayrake or hay rack. A plan less likely to have mishaps attending it is shown in the cut. The construe- tion of this implement is plainly KOVEIi HAT GATHEBEB. ahown in the illustration and needs no explanation. A horse on each side of tho windrow attached to the ropes will. gather up an enormous mass of hay and pull it into the barn floor, where the conditions are right. There it can be taken care of by the hay fork, human muscle not being called upon for any part of the work. If desired. the side uprights can be carried aove the rail, as well as those in the rear. rew rngiana nomesieaa. Dairy Notes. Each year it seems that a larger number of dairymen and farmers are beginning to believe that it is better to have their cows or a part of them, come fresh in the fall, and to give them their vacation or dry season be fore calving, in the hottest months, when the pastures are most likely to suffer froui drought Later, when fall rains have renewed the growth in the pasture for a few weeks, the cow will give nearly if not quite as much milk as she would have given when fresh upon the watery early grasses of the spring, and. the milk will be richer, that, is,' contain a .larger percentage of batter fat and other solids. r. a a a sue win go to ine Darn in goo a con- dition, and upon good, earlrjiut h I with a grain rajignj-fupon ensilage t. W hejiifc scua gram, she can be kept well u up in production until spring, when she will again increase her uoav. To those who eend milk to our cities, tho larger price paid daring the win ter months should be a great induce ment to adopt this practice. To those who make butter orcheeso at home in their own dairies, there are many things to recommend this plan. It is easier to protect the milk and cream against excessive cold in a properly built dairy room than it is even where ice or cold spring water are plenty, to guard against the effects of hot weather and frequent thunder show ers. Good winter-made butter, like winter milk, usually commands the highest prices in the market, and no ice is needed in its transportation. And not least is the difference between performing the labor of the dairy work in a room kept at comfortable temperature, and doing the same when it is impossible to keep cool enough to be comfortable. - It is easier to raise a calf during the fall and winter, when there is a comfortable barn and an abundance of skim milk to give it for the first six months, than it is to raise it " when the milk sours before it can be skimmed, and when the little animal must be tethered out in the hot sun and tormented by flies and mosqui toes. Then in the spring it can be turned to pasture, well grown, strong and-vigorous, in just the condition to profit by the succulent grass of the pasture. Of course, those who supply milk or cream to butter or cheese factories must try to have their milk while the factory is running, but if the farmers of ft neighborhood should be able to furnish the material to keep it running during the winter, there is no good reason why such a creamery or factory could not do its work as well then as in the warmer weather. ' Such ft change, however, would be of the most importance to milk pro ducers for the city, who lose much during the summer months by having ft surplus which the contractors are 1 ot tbe Pubho schools bo used pub not willing to pay for, and then lose Ko playgrounds. President Hubbed again in winter by not having as much as the consumers are willing to pay for. American Cultivator. CURIOUS FACTS. - Tortoises and turtles have no teeth. A cattle dealer of llaitland, Mo., is named Goodpasture. - Thirty millions of wooden spoons are manufactured in Russia every year. The Mexican flint knives were mado so sharp that they could be used for trimming hair. A Tampa (Fla.) barber has invented a portable shampooing basin for which he has refused $0000. Historians believe that the horse was first domesticated either in Central Asia or Northern Africa. Of seventy-three historio kings of Scotland sixty-one are said to have died in battle or to have been mur dered, t ' An outlaw, three moonshiners, and two other men were arrested at the Sunnelton camp meeting at Kingwood, W. Va. Nearly every manj woman and child in Egypt is a smoker of cigarettes, and a pipe is hardly ever seen in the mouth of a native. Cardinal Hichelien hated ' children and loved caba; when he died' his favorite Angora pet refused to eat and soon perished. The largest winged insect in the world is the Atlas moth of Central Brazil; ! Its wings extend fourteen inches from tip to tip. -The relatives of Joe Sullivan, who died in Oakland, Cal., and was seven feet eight inches in height, have put l v: . i . a guu.ru over ms grave, tearing mat a snowman will steal his body. One Of the visitors to the Tennessee Centennial was a Rutherford County man, eighty-four years old, who, un til his trip to the Nashville exposition, had never been on a railroad train. Fish poisoners have so polluted the streams near Valley View, Ky., that dead ush are washed ashore by the wagon load. Some of them weigh seventy-five pounds the fish, not the wagons. Mrs. C. Reyes, eighty-three years old and crippled, cultivates a garden by her own labor at St. Augustine, Fla., and one day she picked from it a thirty-six-pound watermelon and eighty pumpkins. An immense strawberry shortcake was made by John Southworth. of Lacon, 111. He was keeping house all nlnnp nnrl intended f(-v Vtava a rnra 80 te put fio quarts of strawberries in oa caie He ate aI1 ho could of il -- 6U'6UI and soon became bo uncomfortable that he died. John and Henry Webber, who had been separated forty years, daring which they exchanged letters once, met by accident in a grocer's shop at Presque Isle, Me. John lives at Mapleton, Me.,' and Henry in Idaho. Henry had come East to see what changes had been made in his absence. Harry Lauman, of Baltimore, shot at a blacksnake while hunting in the Blue Bidge Mountains near Buena Vista, and, missing it, ran away. The snake pursued him. He tripped on a vine and fell. The snake coiled around his body and was squeezing him when a woodchopper rescued him and killed tbe snake. It was six feetseven inches long. Bloantalii Fire. Texas, which has so many other queer things within its vast borders, now has a burning mountain. Not a volcano that does nothing but lazily puff smoke and a few ashes, but a mountain actually ablaze with a flame that may be seen for miles. Blue Mountain, four miles northeast of Marble Falls, is covered with a very close growth of cedar for thousands of acres. ! Fire Btarted in this cedar brake, it is believed, through the work of an in cendiary, and soon spread so that noth ing but a very heavy and continuous rain would extinguish the flames. The heat was intense and the spectacle awe-inspiring. Huge fire balloons, consisting of dense dark masses of smoke and gases, would float up from the center of the fire, drift a short distance on the languid wind and t apparently burst, Bcatterin.-- flames nvpP . . -rr.rxrz: - r. , . ,n , ,J nited.1 The long drought had made, everything so dry that the ceJar burned like tinder and the flames licked up hundreds of thousands of dollars j worth of valuable timber. As the production of cedar lumber is one cf the principal industries of the district near Blue Mountain, the loss is severely felt. t - Banchmen for miles around, warned by the flaming mountain, drove their cattle and sheep to places of safety. Kot since 1883 has there been a fire in that portion of Texas of such extent or bo .destructive. The loss will fall heaviest upon J. B. Pangle and Fred erick and Alexander Faubion. New York World. The Yellow FeTer Germ. Surgeon General Wyman of the ma rine hospital service has had trans lated the account written by Dr. San arelii of Montivideo of his discovery of what ! he claims to be the yellow fever germ, and which he calls the ioteroid bacillus. He says the bacil lus was '.discovered in .the second case examined. -The doctor dwells upon the difficulty of making sure of results, because of the numerous microbes found in yellow fever patients. The particular germ which he holds to be responsible for yellow fever, Dr. San arelli ! says, is found in the blood or tissues, and not in the gastrointestin al cavity. He notes the fact, however, that in yellow fever, as in typhoid, that the digestive tract is the seat of abundant bacilli coli, but he does not associate these with the .real yellow fever microbe. He concludes there fore that the virus of yellow fever does not reside in the intestinal tube; '.'and that its toxin instead of being absorbed by the intestinal walls is elaborated in the interior of these organs and in the blood. Washington Star. - Schoolyards as P nolle Playaronada. It now seems probable that the Board of Education will favor the suggestion of the Small Parka Advisory Commit tee contained in the letter of J. A. Biis to the Board that the playgrounds is an ardent champion of the plan, and manr others of the Board are known to be in faror bone. ; of it. NewYork Tri- Good Injrrtln Carp t. 2e. per yr4. JieaTy uniHseu Carpet. ae. per jrara. Fortneasklug,w mall you, free of all cbarree, our new Colored Carpet Catalogue, which shows all goods la lithograph colors. You can make your elections as well as If you were bere at tbe mlti, and aire t ronn 63 to 00 per nnt. nn.flt toii are Durlntr rur U czl 4lea:er. If you wish quality aa3Uiej.cf HICSI, jeq.g jrfumj-. Jolins Hfnes c Son, BALTIMORE. MD. Please mention thla paper. GEORGIA LADIES HATE SHAMS; WhileTiile, Ca., wrltCW llavo usrtl Dr. SI. A. 61m mon LAYer2Iedicine 15 years for Sick Headache, Costlveneaa, and no woman pass 1 up through tbe Change ot Lite should be without it. It acts on m more ralldly and thorough. j than the "Liver Regu lator" mado by Zeiliiror tho "Black Draught" mado by Chattanooga Medicine Company. . Nervoos Depression cf Women. A woman will often without knowing; II commit slow suicide for her family. Eba will think, toll and worry for her children. Too often they do not appreciate it. Ller tixod nerves and weary body at last reach a stage when she la almost powerless for any kind of mental or physical work, and sh la depressed and worried over the conscious ness that she la nnablo to perform her ac customed duties, ller organs of digestion are disordered and although there is a con stant disposition to rest, wakefulness and loss of power to Bleep are serious indica tions ot nervous depression. What she needs Is a course of lr. Simmons Squaw Vine Win to restoro a healthy functional activity and rivo tone and vitality to her nervous rystcm. At the same time the stomach. II ver-and kidneys should be rtlm- . nlated with Blsdlclno. Boll Ground, Oa., writes: I havo known Dr. M. A. Simmon Liver Medi etas 23 years, and that it cures La Grippe Head ache and other com plaints. I think it la stronger than "Zellln'a Regulator" and "Black DrangM," and that It gires better satiftfactlon. Paint in Losr Back. . After rjacbinr maturity, and especially 'tcr passinir through the experience ct after passinir through maternity, mewt women find their healtn seriously damatred. If not entirely Impaired. The painmi an lnr down sens ng and bear- In; down sensation in tho back almost every woman caa at t'-mcs expc woman cas at vines cxpcncDccx ouuo times tbeso are f ron ntcrlno displacement, bnt often ther aro Blmrly from weakness. Women who have to bear heavy burdens, to undergo ecrere fatlguo or to endure crush ing disappointment, aro subject to this and many otnerdiscasca. We cannot too strongly recommend tho uso of Ir. Simmons Squaw Vino Wine, tho groat female tonio and regulator.' ,.t"- - IP - f $ mX COnBFSPOSDtSCB TXTTTr Oil Dominion Iron .ail .WSTilichaiona1. Va PON'S ChillTonic TASTELESS ANO GUARANTEED TO CURE CHILLS & FEVER. PQF8 NOT IXJCKK THEPTOMim. W. A. McLartr A Bon. Dims Box. Texas, tar: "We want soma mors of Ramon's Pep sin Chill Tonic, as it isths best wo mhm. died. My son prescribes It In bH practice an-1 eirsltistba nlyCh.il Tonic wulcli eren a t Uld can take without in Jury to the rtoma h You mar sani me l cross of the llamon's Pei-sln dhlll Tonic and 1 gross ot IUmon's Tonic Liver Pllla." For Sale by All Dealers . raxrABto ir bkowh arc co., cittntvuic-Ttnn. REWARD. A friend of mine had th mlsfcrtoas o lose atr era! of hi Hgen and aaked m to adTartiaa for their return. Each bird t-.ai a ma-al fcand oa 1Y marked as foil w: UUnt. KK41. R3-J, Cl'Ul. C17MJ, C17IS3, CUM CH3U. Cll. TUTS. 28;, i'6SM, Tim, Ttii. JTZm-x, KSH. l lgeoa criers. kindly look through roar lof for ibuT bird A, liberal ra ward for each Mrd returned. J.FU L'ND, Ot aierf Hireet, New Yerk. FIR. Y. H, WAKEFIELD, m U Can bs consulted in LU oCca la CIIARLOTTK, N. C. , Ko. COO North Tryon Street, Oa any week day eioept tfednes layv His practice is limited to dlaaases of the EYE, EAR, HOSE AND THROAT. S.N. U. No.'3 '97. TE U iii.- w RIcs'sGoose Grease Linlracnl Is Iwsrs sold under a guarantee to tffr all aches and pains, rhecmativni. nenratcia, sprains, braises and barns. It is also warrant ed to car coldiscroup.conc'sandla txippe quicker than any known remedy. No cure no pay. 8old by all drosett and ceneral storVa. Made only by COSK OREAbE LINIMENT CO- Uksxsbouq. N. C AIului;!, T It ry ir rn t .red ! oa Spr lata bred Jack fiSV???! MtJmck -I. X. I " aUal Jurat 14 t hand hu-k I(rar rribl Jarka. IS 1 1 tn 16 r.U llsU SJ to toon. All ao ind. trU-d i 'Mw2S?e!2? I J W W h"eH v-Mp:.rte4mnt 1 reliable, l rtrr ub chance after r particular 4 Jack rnlr MocaPtna 'tire Iih, iwiaer Co na t y . U eer t. n R TESTIMONY OP A fWrtera Weekly.) It Is sometime a eevere a charity to hear a man cay 1. drinking tut can't. Very off, not on the tide oi sobriety and . slaoere. We hare known from pure cuSsMness. becaust- no'hlna bettor. We ha t know - lamented their weakness and r . Qght to keep sober. SomeilmL could be kept under for month?, unguarded moment It would r and send its rietlm back to hi ci We were talking with oar old l J. II Bennett, not long since anlh" that before be was cured ct tto llqaorif he raid be hated the stu. , would baTe beileTed him, yet such case. He often ahed tears over r . which be knew badibe mastery over V then would go and drink agalu. . rUxt - "How long baa It teen tluce you tc ... Keeley Treatment?" we asked htm. m fnll "It wlU be Are years tbe 5th ot X be replied. "Hare you bad any desire for ilqu menr - - I 4,Kot the least bit," be answered! '. a elder my cure permanent, and I never . in to want any more liquor. - 1 do not gi serious thought." TCU Mr. Bennett said further that he ued l be such a slave to drink that be could iLp'.r of a t int before breakfast. Now be would L soon think of drlnklog that much stump wa ter, in answer to our inquiry, he said ue na i no objection to being quoted publicly and hoed hi experience w uld influence others lo take the Treatment at the Institute In Greensboro, - . CHI'A, CROCKERY LAMPS. FOB EE5D TO 0 CilX OX MOOBE &.KYIE, Xo. 8 Y Trade St., CharlotteN. C JOBBERS OF TOYS. C.ep Chin. l-am-M 1 Ol assure, "Will ge you OLD TARIFF PRICES. Ior ctail 1 -!i rimtui w c.trrr t- -mndsome'l 1'ne of Dinnerwrt Cut Ql.i- Wed:ewiod. Bric-an-ac and Iloue Furnishings carried by any liou;e in the Mate. Our prices are the lowest. RICE, Pntits having ioa?h tic to sell or cl'n r.ce to buy will find it to their interest t com n:un cate with our buyers aud brokers or direct to us. . We ray the Hljibfst JIarket Price for Itouza Illce. CAROLINA RICE MILLS, r.OLDSIlORO, - - - - - N. C TASTELESS I3JU8TA3COOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE GO cts. C at ATT A. Itxa., NOT. IS, 1233. parts Medicine Co., St. liouia. Mo. -GcDtlemen:-Wo void last year. 600 oiles or OBflVE-S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC and haT -bought inree rtom already this year. In all oar perteore oi it yeart in u uma iraim". never sold an article that socn auiTersal aatia taoUon as your Tonic xoura truly. f - .- - from MiTTHMaA OR HARM- iiwiii MAN JUNCTION QUEEII AND .CRESCENT ROUTh Handsome Vcstibuled , ' Trains. BPayaMaVaHWMWaMBMi Through Pullman from Savannah, co la nbla, Bpartanuurjr, ajnevuie, ajjoxtu, Atlanta and Chattanooga to CINCINNATI. SHORTEST L1XE. FIA'EST 6EBTICE. O. L. MITCHELL, W. C. EINEAIi3U. District rasa, Aent, Gn'l raaa. ajreni, - Chattanooga, Tenn. . Cincinnati. Ohio. mi SMOKIHG TOBACCO Vads tram the Pores R!part tB5 S weetert leaf fror ia tbe Ooldea belt of Konh CaroUaa. Cigarette Buck goea wlta eck 2-va. poaca. - J.LZ, ron 10 CENTS, i A Pleaaaat. Ceol and Dellchtfal5molce. Ltok 4 Co. To sac co Woaas, Dumm. . C TOE aXOBGIA TTLKOBAPn scuoot. nine years. Sixteo liundrrJ cc- - Jeesafol fradaajes. Send ft illna trated catalcr Address OtOSClA TtLE0IU?a yMOUU Scseia. Ueerxl. - - f A - Ha Di 21 V.f I M Bfjar r Teaches telecraphy tboronghl, a4 -:C f. starts iu rraduatea ia the raiiwey SrTJp'V service. Only eicloaive Teleraj b IT' I School ia the Soo'.n. i:atbliLed
Chatham Citizen (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 13, 1897, edition 1
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