Newspapers / Salisbury Globe (Salisbury, N.C.) / April 3, 1890, edition 1 / Page 7
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CANARIES. HOW THE LITTLE SOXGSTERS AUK 1S1IED AND TRAINED. 'airing ami, 3Iatc!iin; Preparing the Breeding Cage Suitable Footl --Teaching Them to Sing ami Perform Tricks. In breeding1 canaries the male disliii- ,;iiim.u iiuiu iuk iciauii; uy lis Uflgni- uess of color, lively manner, somewhat larger and more symmetrical body, slen derer legs, brighter color around the eyes trvin the other parts of the body should be younger, than the female, and not ex ceeding live years old, this disparity in age insuring a majority of males in the offspring. Never permit two crested birds to pair, as their young are fre quently bald or otherwise disfigured about the head. The pair chosen, a suitable breeding age, either single or double, should be .selected. This, whether of metal or Avood, should contain a slidingdraw at the bottom;- so. that the refuse may be re moved witEout unnecessary disturbance to the bird, who at this time particularly requires quiet The single cage gener ally In use is about eighteen inches in length, the width and depth each twelve inches; the double cage is half as large Jigain, and is preferable on account of its containing a partition, by which the birds may be parted at any time without greatly molesting them. Should an old breeding cage be brought into use again it should be thoroughly cleansed with .scalding water for the purpose of re moving all vermin. Securely fasten two nets (first covering ihem with flannel; in the ends of the cage. These should be about four inches square and two deep, and may be made ol willow, tin, wire or wood. A good home-made nest may be made from an old cigar box, but, whatever the material be, care must always be taken, to leave ventilation opening in the bottom of the nests. Nesting fiber, consisting of cow or deer hairs, fine moss, cotton wadding,r manilla cut in inch pieces,paper shavings, t te., should be, strewed on the bottom of The cage. A piece of mortar from the Avail .of an old building should also be placed in the cage and the bottom drawer thickly covered with gravel. The place selected to hang the cage should be where, little noise or confusion will occur ami out of ill drafts. During breeding, in addition to the regular food, the birds should be given hard-boiled', egg chopped or grated, mixed with soft cracker dust. This egg food should "be given fresh every morn ing, and if not eaten dining the day hquld be removed at night, for if per mitted to get sour it may cause the illness of the birds.; This same diet should also be given a few days before mating. The female -r is the nest-builder, the male contentinghimself by transnortinjr the material to her. During its con struction she is incessantly in motion. and usually about eight days elapse after --.making before the first egg is laid. Theu cucTf" succeeding day-1-generally at the same hour an egg is laid until they number ike or six. The laying concluded (occasionally this occurs when two eggs nave oeen produced) tae setting com-. mences.. The period of incubation is thirteen to fourteen days, when the first , J 1 1 ' . i ' i- . j V r iK'ugiiiJg iiiukcj j is ajjpeuraucu, 10 ue 101 lowed (generally 'at twenty-four-hour in tervals) by the veniaiattef of the brood. If W .botfld be taken out of teT Care r' ; 'e nanaiing as no olc and cxamked before a stronMiSSi .I nose that are clear and transp:irWT?r7 valueless and m,-iv m .lrsiJf!?rZ.uti those s ' Til uiooci vessels are nvipl Mud sTrimilrl 1p. returned to ihe nest. The female is not without faults. Some arc bad nest-builders. Some in sist on laying their eggs upon the bottom of the cage, while others -maltreat and -will not feed their young. Such birds should be dispensed with for breeding purposes alter been displayed The young male generally such conduct has once being hatched spends most of The egg and v -i r 1 out his the time feeding them, food should now be mane- iresti at least twice a day, and a dish of toaker or boiled rape seed placed in the cage for them. If it becomes necessary to feed the young by hand, it should be done with a quill cut to the shape of a blunt pen. , Four quillfulls about ten or twelve times a day will satify the cravings of the youngster. . ' As a rule, they begin to see when they are cine days old, and after the thir teenth will feed themselves. When a month old they may be removed to an other cage, but the same food must be continued until after the first moulting, which begins when they arc six weeks old. This first moulting continues for two months, and is the most critical and dangerous period of a canary's existence,. The cage should be hung in a warm nook, out of all chilly araugnrs, arm egg food furnished in abundance. A small piece of refined-licorice' should be placed iu the drinking water. Young birds should invariably be .placed within hearing of a good song ster. The ear and memory of the canary are unsurpassed by any of the. feathered species',- and the youngsters will readily imitate tie notes of other varieties. Those who can ' introduce as tutors such song birds as the nightingale, skylark, or woodlark, will find themselves repaid for their trouble with a rich melodious song otherwise unattainable. If an air is to be taught the bird should be taken as soon as it commences to war- "ble to a separate room, out of the sight or ' hearing of other birds. The desired air sUu!d be played several times a day on a I'inl organ or flute; while thus being in stnit toa the room should be darkened, or the (-.. e covered, in order that the atten tion of the bird should not be diverted irotu it lesson. Li; from .their delicate structure, are tn.ul !o to endure any but the most gentle handling, thus their training re quires Sl eat patience aud extreme gentle ness. ; The utmost pains should be ob served -ii- t to frighten the bird, as a slight fright may render him so shy as to -tie feat a. 1 your effortsto obtain bis con fidence or affection. Thdrfol lowing plan is the simplest and most generally successful The trainer opens the door of the cage and teases the bird gently with a soft feather. This he does until the bird pecks at the feather, then at his finger, and at last conies out of the cage and perches upon his hand, lie should then softly stroke its feathers, caress it,- and offer it some favorite arti cle of food, which the bird soon learns to take from his hand. .He then begins tp accustom the feird to a peculiar call or X whistle, carries it upon his hand or shoulder from room to room in which all the windows are carefully closed, let it fly and calls it back:. As isotfn as the bird becomes obedient to the call in the presence of other persons or animals, the experiment should be cautiously repeated in the open air until at least it is re warded with perfect success. It is, however, very hazardous to take the birds into the open aij, as they arc liable to be enticed by the cries of 'wild bird3. The tamed bird may then be taught a number of amusing feats, though, per haps, this requires more time, labor and skill than most amatetirs will care to ex pend. Some simple tricks may, how ever, be taught with ai reasonable amount of pains and patience!. A very neat ar rangement consists ofj an inclined plane outside the cage, upon which a little wagon may be run or a little tray slide containing bird seedi. To this vessel is attached one "end of a string, the other end heading up the plane and being secured inside the cage. This is ar ranged so that when the bird pulls the vessel up it is drawn to an opening sufficiently large for the bird to secure the seed, but not large enough to per mit its escape. To teach the bird to draw this vessel up he; must be kept with out food until he becomes quite hungry, and.th.en he will peck at anything in the cage. The string should be so arranged that he can seize it without trouble, and the apparatus should work smoothly and re quire little strength. The seed vessel should be in full sight so that the bird may be tempted by the seed. At first he will peck at the string as he would at any thing else and will nliturally pull it'up without any idea of the result The re sult once achieved, he may be relied upon to repeat the performance, and also in stinct 'will teach him to prevent the vessel sliding back by placing his foot on the string while he cats. Canaries, may easily je taught jto wear little bells, of which they become inor dinately proud. ' Such tricks as jumping over the trainer's finger, taking articles, such as a miniature basket, gun, etc., may also be taught witjh comparative ease when once properly tanked. "When a bird has learned to pull a stlring or seize with his beak what is presented to his notiee,- accompushment may be applied to many tricks apparently very fson with a faculty for cumcult. . A per invention caa'ar- range many little contrivances, more or less elaborate, which will be a constant source of pleasure to the proud trainer and his friends -Chicago Tribune. IIow the Woodcock Feed. A writer in Forest and Stpeam gives the following account of the way he saw woodcock 'Boring" for worms one moon light night: "The birds would rest their bills upon the Inud and stand in this po sition for several seconds, as if listening. Then, with a sudden,! swift movement, they would drive, thebill its entire length in the soil, hold it sd for a second, and then as swiftly withdraw it. Though I watched the birds carefully with the glass, I could not detect the presence ol a worm in their bills! when they were withdrawn. But a subsequent process gave me the clew to their method of feeding. After having bored over a con siderable piece of ground a foot'square or more they proceeded to execute what jooieu coimeuiiyaiKe a war nance uruu thy perforated teritoryj. They also oc casionally tappi the ground with the tipnTWf .iiieirrvifJtt.s. My intense curiosity to bflpw tho . ip-'T-ble utility of this pro-ces-8aVBS?fta by seeing a WqrVrawl half-length, from one of trie Qfiori'ugs, when it was immediatelj pounced upon -and devoured by one of the woodcock. Presently another worm made its appearance,, and so on until the two woodcock had devoured as many as a dozen of them. Then the 'vein' seemed exhausted, and the birds took their leave. I have subsequently studied the philoso phy ot this method of digging bait, and have come to the conclusion that certain birds are a great deal wiser than certain bipeds without feathers. If you will take a sharpened stick land drive it into the ground a number ot timesi, in a spot which is prolific with jworms, and then tap pii the ground with, the stick for a few minutes, you will find that the worms will come to the surface, and that they will come up through tile holes which you have made: t account lor it by the sup position that ; the tapping of the stick somehow affects the wo.'ms the same as the patter of rain, i' and it is a well-known fact that worms come' jto the surface of the ground when it rains. The antics of the woodcocks after they had made their borings, then, were simply mimetic, and intended to delude the worms into the belief that it was raining in the upper world. . The worms, being deceived, came up and were devoured. All this may seem ridiculous, but, if it is not true, will some naturalist please state how a woodcock can grasp and devour a worm when its bill is confineo in a solid, tight fitting tunnel of soil, and also how it is enabled to know the exact spot where it may sink its bill and strike a worm? And further, of all those who .htwe seen a woodcock feeding, how withdraw a worm from its bill?" many ever saw it the ground with Taken at Her Word. 'I was settling down! to work," said & book agent pestered man, 'when a pretty woman entered my office. "Noone would .suspect that she was a book agent. She placed a volume in front of me and be gan to talk. I told her I would not buy the book if I really wanted it. 'Nevei mind,' said she, gayly. j'lt won't costyou anything to look at it. i As she desired, I looked at it. I read the introduction and then Chaper I. It was 10 o'clock when -I opened the book. At 11 o'clock the pretty, book agent had become uneasy. I never raised my eyes. Another hour, and she was pacing up and down the floor. At 1 o'clock, when she had nearly worn herself j out, I laid the book down, and, putting on my hat and coat, said to the exasperated woman 4 ' That's a clever book. . I rfgrct that I cannot read more of itl but I i&ust away to dinner.' ' . 4 She was mad , but she didn't say a word. Grabbing the book, she it into her s&tched and made shoved for the street." Boston Globe. A Midnight Tragedy. Two lovers lean on the garden gat; : The hour is late. At a chamber window her father stands, And rubs his hands. - I . For a while he watches them unawares, Then goes downstairs. ' - . j ' He looses the dog from his iron chain The rest is plain. t - - ' The moonlight silvers the garden gate; Th9 hour is late. Sotnerrille Journal. WORDS OF WISDOM.- Be useful to yourself first, your friends next and the world afterward. The greatest man living may stand in need of the meanest, as much as the mean est does of him. 1 Some men are so unselfish as to be willing to live in luxury, and abstain from work for fear they will rob the poor laborer of his mean3 to obtain a living. The progressive man depends upon what he learns, but the man who is proud of what was taught to him will exhibit his ability to follow the usual custom. Men and women, to lead worthy lives, must have a just respect for themselvef and a just respect for others. Whatever tends to realize and to strengthen these promises human welfare. . The wcrst things are the perversions ol good things. Abused intellectual gifti make the dangerous villain ; abused sensibilities make the accomplished tempter, abused affections engender the keenest of all misery. Not a day passes over the earth but men and women of no note do great deeds, speak great words and suffer noble sorrows. Of these obscure heroes, philosophers and martyrs, the great part will never be known till that hour when many that were great shall be small, and the small great. Many persons think that there cannot be too much of 'what is so good a thing in itself as sympathy. The duty of its cultivation is clear ; but it is not yet so clear that a wise cultivation includes pruning as well as nourishing. So long as it is abundant it is not expected to be discriminative, and thus sometimes, run ning to seed unchecked, it develops intc rank injustice. The People of New Guinea. - But little knowledge' of the interior oi New Guinea, the second largest island in the world, can be obtained from its peo ples, which consist of a great number of isolated tribes, differing much in ap pearance and language. These commu nities live at constant feud with one" another, and can give little information of tribes beyond the limitsi of , their re spective domains. There are a variety of types among the people, the prevail ing characteristics of race being those known as the Papuan, which are found especially in the southeast of the island. In this type is found long frizzy hair, which is dressed by its owners into the form of a mop; a skin removed just s shade from black; a prominent aquiline nose, depressed at the point; and pro truding lips, which cause the chin to ap pear to retreat. Leprosy, elephantiasis, itch, and ophthalmia are frequent among the New Guinea natives, and fully a third of them are afflicted with a malig nant ringworm caused by a microscopic insect. Among certain coast tribes of the island the intermixture of Arab and Malay blood has produced a fairer type of people, superior to the Papuans ; other New Guinea tribes resemble the Polyne sians. In the mountainous northern part of New Guinea, at Andii, are the Arfaks, which are degcribLd" ty D'Albertis as a film. twH. nTniij, people, superior to na tives of the coast. J'The type of the mountain tribes is generally Papuan, and the expression of hAirountenance is melancholy. Amongf. according to this explorer, are u?inos' and s?me .reacb.es . even the averA3 Pacinc island standard. They haven single namo foi New Guiena, nor any idjj of its extent, only using terms signifying 4 'great land" to distinguish it from the adiacent islands. Harper's Weekly. A Centra of Bygone Greatness When the train, after traversing the oasis of Bokhara, Central Asia, for ten miles from the modern town, pulls up at the station of Bairam Ali, in the midst of an absolute wilderness of crumbling brick and clay, the spectacle of walls, towers, ramparts and domes, stretching in bewil dering confusion to the horizon, reminds us that we are in the centre of bygone greatness. Here, within a short distance of each other, and covering an area ol several square miles, in which there is scarcely a yard without some remains oi the past, or with- a single perfect relic, are to be seen the ruins of at least three cities that have been born and flourished and have died. In these solitudes, moreover, the trav eler may realize In all its sweep the mingled gloom and grandeur of Central Asian scenery. Throughout the still night the fire-horse, as the natives have sometimes christened it, races onward, panting audibly, gutturally, and shaking a mane of sparks and smoke. Itself and its riders are all alone. No token or sound of life greets eye or ear, no outline re deems the level sameness of the dim hori zon ; no shadows fall upon the staring plain. The moonshines with dreary cold ness from the hollow dome, and a pro found and tearful, solitude seems to brood over the desert. The returning sunlight scarcely dissipates the impression of sad ness, of desolate and hopeless decay, of a continent and life sunk in a mortal swoon. The traveler feels like a wan derer at night in some desecrated grave yard, amid crumbling tombstones and half -obliterated . mounds. A cemetery, not of hundreds of years, but of thou sands, not of families or tribes, but of nations and empires, lies outspread around him, and ever and anonj in fall ing tower and shattered arch, he stumbles upon some poor unearthed skeleton of the past. Car son. Axoxg aDout this time oi the year the railroad resignations are numerous and frequent. There is some particularly pleasant unwritten rule - in every railroad office which enables a man to "resign'' whether he wants to or not. No railroad man is ever vulgarly 4 'fired1' from a rail road position. It is always politely given out that he has ''resigned." .Said the smiling young man who is the architect of the Chicago Herald's railroad column: "I could' a tale unfold,' but -it would hardly do. I diligent ly and dutifully re cord these alleged railroad ' resignations,' dav bv dav, and I know, awav down deer in my own heart, that I am assisting the various roads in letting the victims down easily in the face of what is really a per emptory' "notice to quit.' I believe, thousrh," he added, "that it is. right te spare the boys the ignominy of a dis charge, and I do my part in the matter.' In any other line of business a man would get a plain discharge, but railroads are sc addicted to red tape that they cannot re sist the opportunity offered to receive and accept a resignation. CURIOUS FACTS. The tooth extracted from a thirteen-year-old horse at Towsontown,.Penn., weighed a quarter of a pound. - A Kalamazoo (5Iich.) groceryman gives away a copy of "Stanley's Travels" with every pound of cheese purchased. On trie West Spanish Peak, Col., R. L. Smith trapped a handsome golden eagle that measured 7 feet 4 inches from tip to tip. " ' A meteor that cast a shadow and ap peared as large as the full moon was re cently seen by the people of Noblesville, Ind. ; Some unknown person has been send ing onefthousand-pound notes in anony mous letters to various charities in Eng land. . J. Hayes, of Birmingham Township, Penn., planted a patch of potatoes on February 5, and he expects a crop of new potatoes by April 1. Edward D. O. Moore, of Brooklyn, claims o have solved the problem ol squaring the circle and has written a pamphlet to prove it. Sheep are now sheared by electricity in Australia, Frederick Wolseley, a brother of Lord Wolseley, having invented a machine! for the purpose. One orange grower of San Diego, Cal., keeps trees from being plucked of ripe fruit by putting up placards: "These oranges have been poisoned." A Santa Rosa (Cal.) furniture man re cently filled an order for a mattress. It . was seven feet six inches long and will be used by ja newcomer1 from Missouri. Tweniy-one tramps met in Decatur, Neb., and ordered meals at a restaurant. After thy had eaten they compelled the proprietor to accept ten cents as payment in full, j A quantity of fish shipped to Reading, Penn. , from Maryland were found to b alive when unpacked, and when throwm into a tank of water darted around a1 lively as. ever. A London confectionery store gives to every purchaser of a shilling's" worth 9 ticket entitling the purchaser to have one photograph of herself taken at an estab lishmentr up-stairs. ' A colored man who attempted to rob a store at; Palmetto,- Ga., thought ha would enter by way of the chimney. About half way down he stuck fast and yelled for some one to help him out. A dudish bird that lines its nest with' the down of certain flowers is the lan ceolate honey-eater. The nest is shaped like a hammock suspended from twigs, and is very deep. The ground work is of grass and wool. William Lauderdale, who lives near Rowland's Mills, N. J., recently killed sixteen crows and lamed two with one shot, so hat he got the whole eighteen. The 'crows were gathering on the carcass of a dead sheep, and he fired from be hind a bush house. A peculiar accident happened to Mrs. Marshall of Dubuque, Iowa. While laughing!- heartily -at some joke she opened her mouth and was unable to shut it again Medical aid was called, and. the jawbone had to be broken before the mouth could be closed. There is talk in France of utilizing wa ter courses as a railway motive power It is proposed that the trackhall be lai4 on n embankment in the puddle of th current, and that the - locomotives shall have paddle-wheels dipping- into the water anetrevolved by it. Mrs. W. C. Goodwin, of Sanf ord, FIaM has lost a pet canary. The bird had Mrs. Goodwin's possession for been in fourteen years, but for the past .year has not warbled a note until recently, when, to the surprise of all, it sang for a few mo ments and was quite lively, then fell from Its perch and died in a moment. ' Where Wild Fowl Go. Until the acquisition of Alaska by the United States it was a matter of wonder where certain wild fowl went when they migrated j from temperate climes on the approach! of summer, as well a3 snow birds and other small species of the feath ered tribe. It was afterward found that their habitat in summer was the waters of Alaska, the Yukon River and the lakes of that hyperborean region. A reporter recently interviewed O. J. Green, of Nor ton Sound, Western Alaska, and he con firms the (statement of Dal 1 and others. "People wonder where the wild fowl come from," said- he. "They see the sand-hill ! crane, wild goose, heron and other fowl every spring and fall pursue their unwearied way, but, like the wind, they do not know whence they come or whither they go. Up on Golovin Bay, on the north shore of Norton Sourid it the breeding place of these fowl. All the birds in creation, seemingly," go to that country to breed. Geese, ducks, swans and thousands upon thousands of sand-hill j cranes are swarming there all the time! - They lay their eggs in the blue-stem grass in the lowlands, and if you go up the river a little way from the bay the noise of the wild fowl is almost deafening. Myriads of swallows and robins are there, as weir as millions of magnificent grouse wearing red combs and feathered! moccasin j. This erouse turns white as snow in winter. You can kill dozens of juicy teal ducks or grouse as fat as butter balls in a few moments. The wild ;fowl and bears live on salmon berries, with which all the hills are liter illy covered." Sitka Alaskan. A Millionaire's Philosophy. The following story illustrating tht Astor philosophy in money putters is told of this late John Jacob Astor by the man who jwas the other actor in the scene. 4l went to Mr. Astor,'.' he said, "with a business proposition which demanded an investment of $100,000 on his part. j: While listening to the plan he kept groping and feeling about on the floor for something he sseemed to have dropped. ! When I had finished he said readily: .'All right; go on. with the af fair;' rilifurnished the money.' At that instant a man entered to tell him that one of his buildings had just burned down. j " ThatL happens nearly every day,' he said, with the utmost concern, and went on feeling about with, great care for that something ou the carpet. 44 4I finally asked .him what he had dropped. ! :- 44 4 Why,' he said, raising bis head and looking as woebegone as a small boy, 'I dropped ten cents here . -few-moments ago and! I can't findt. If a man buildings; burn down, they are gone and he can't help it, and he is bound to let them go. j But a man wito deliberately throws away ten cents because he"won't take the trouble to find it is not to be forgiven." Ncvt Tori: Sun i Mashed Potato Salad. Boil and mash one quart of potatoes Make a dressing of two ounces of fresh butter, one teacup of milk, two table spoonfuls each of mustard and sugar. Season with salt and pepper. Rub the yolks of two hard-boiled eggs to a pow der, and add vinegar to moisten. Chop the whites of the eggs very fine and mix in. Put a layer of the mashed potatoes in a salad bowl with a spoonful of dress ing dropped over it in spots, then another layer, then the dressing, until the bowl is filled. Put the dressing on top. Garnish with parsley and sliced lemon. . Thinkers Will Heed Thin. - Not one physician in a thousand has ever succeeded in relieving a perso . suffering from weak and wasting or consumptive kidneys, yet they continue to experiment, and after the death of their patient ask for their-fee. The kidney is a delicate organ, and yet good health in a large measure depends upon Its proper ac tion. Let the kidneys become sore or inactive, and uric acid is' eliminated from the effete matter that passes too slowly out of the sys tem. From this cause arises many . mysterious pains in the back, side, shoulder, joints and limbs. A feeling of ennui comes over the vic tim. The world seems dark and gloomy. The nerves become shattered ; suicide is contem plated, and one's condition is most pitiable. IJr. Bull's Sarsaparilla contains such herbal Juices as weak kidneys demand. It has re ieved and cured many cases that doctors gave up as hopeless. . It checks decay and aids the kidneys in a performance of their natural function. - - - - - - - - The ebb and flow of matrimonial f elicit- i dependent upon the tied. ' Tfce Ladies Delighted. The pleasant effect and the perfect cafety with which ladies may use the liquid fruit laxative, Syrnp of Figs, under all conditions make it their favorite remedy. It ia pleasing to the eye anl to the taste, gentle, yet effectual in acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels. Say nothing good of yourself, you will be distrusted, say nothing bad of yourself, you will be taken at yoor word. Dr. Bull'! Worm Destroyer ia wonderfully efficacious. I prescribed it in several instances and it never failed in a single case to have .the desired effect. I know of no other worm '.rem edy so certain and speedy in its effect. J. P. Clement, M. D., lllanow,Ga, 4-- . On a teacher's asking where the Spanish Ar mada was first seeiLf a boy promptly replied : "On the horizon." State of Ohio, Citt op Toxxdo, I Ltjca8 Comrrr, S. S. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing businesjs in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, arid that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Ca tarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY, i Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D., '86. i A- W. 6LEASON, SEAL ( ) yt Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and Rets directly on the blood and mucus surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. IS'" Sold by Druggists, 75c. If afflicted with sore eyes use Df.Isaac Thomp son's Eye-Water.Druggists sell at 25c per bottle. rvcu sevEtrrv To cure Biliousness. Sick Headach. Constipation. Malaria, Lirer Complaints, take the sal and certain remedy, SMITH'S BILE BEANS Use the 8MALTu SIZE (40 little beans to the bot tle). They are the most convenient; salt all ages. Price of either else, 25 cenU per bottte. . IflCCIM at 7. 17. 70r Photo-rmrM- panel sUe of this picture tor 4 j. t. sunns ft co.. Makers of "Bile Beans." Bt, Louis, Mo. BUSINESS NASHVILLE, TENN. Vic "V!1o-o ihniio-rt rat I r i f a in fa nir '" has more than 600 former student occu py! ng gora poiiiion, maur oi. mem re ceiving salaries ranging from $900 to Sl.- .inA rumiinin Vftr rirnilnra nrlriresti It. W. JENNINGS. Prin. J W. L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE And Other Adrertteed Specialties Are the Bees In the WerM. I' one genuine unless name and price are stamped on bottom. SOLD EVERYWHERE, if your dealer wm not applT you. send postal for instructions now to buy direct from factory without extra charge. W. U DOUGLAS, Brockton, aua NORTH OR P 5 T MAKE ONE OF THE . - BURLINGTON ROUTE THROUGH ST. LOUI8 Kansas Cltv. St, LINS FROM ,ND CHICAGO h, Denver, St Paul and ipoiis. The BeefXiae iftr.pl FIate Nerth stad West Mll!Fkcikc Coaut. HOME SEEKERS' EXCURSIONS ! E educed ILites of cSne fJbP&lAhm round trip bars beri nude br the Burltnatsa ltQate to point in Colorado, Wyoj-tiBf vLTaAa' Montana, North and ofetUllla&t& Northwestern Iswa, MinnesoianrtVfiBcenain. fP hMm m1 April 22nd and May 20th, good for 30 days. For r ites and further nfrtnatioo apply to la ticket agent ut tue Burlington Host, .or mddrws. . HOWARDEUJOTT.- (ica'i " , A - ' "" Mo. FfcaS?tf ltP, Cewl Aat. B.F. BLAKE, TriST rrVt Sc Pass. At. tHAS. FtLUDIXM, Ti av. Paaa. Arrt . 38 Wall 81.. Atlanta, Ga. ENCK'S TONIC Is a Positive Cure for DYSPEPSIA And all Disord m of the Digest Ire Orpana. It is likewise a corroborative, or strengthen ing Medicine, and may bt -taken with great benefit in all all DruggMt. Price, SI 00 per bottle. Dr.Schenck'a Kew Book on Lungs Lirer and Stomach mailed free. address, Dr. J. H. SCHEKCK L SON, Philadelphia. and WH1SKZY HAB ITS cared at home with out pa la. Book of par ticulan sent FREE. t r mAir r w vr r 'litliiiA-tia- Offlca 653 WWtkaU St FIFTV CKSTi A YEAR. Highteensaess Christian Exaiteth .' ' " I'atrlot, a. Morriatown, Katioo. ' Trial, 3 mo ', 13 eta. Tew. JEFFERSOII DAVIS puhuated! " r T... .i. .V Ttanlfntlr Ulna. i arte eoiuous m " T", ...,.t trated. Local and General Hnie?:J?plf? oats oiaa w 1 - DCttCinilC SUHK f OK ALhsr SO PAY. it c f . ;,tJ,' m ,. ,i nGniMfi 4 w0 3HABE17S GRAND3TA, Tbo worM is even as we take It, . And life, dear child. Is what we moJb It." - This sense, even if it is not Shakes pearean, Indeed, it is the openins stanza of an anonymous Doem. It was the senti ment of an old lady to her grandchild MabeL And many a Mabel has found it to be trne, and she has made ber life a very happy one because she has taken cture of her health. She keeps on hand a sapply of Dr. Pierce Favorite Prescrqitioa, amd so is not troubled with those wasting diseases, weaknesses,, "dragging - down " sensations and functional irregularitie that so many women endare It is the only medicine for womenr solli by droggists, under a positire guarantee from the manufacturers, that it will give- satisfaction in every ease, or money will be refunded. This, guarantee has been printed on the bottle -wrappers, and faithfully carried out for many years. " Favorite Prescription " is a legitimate medicine, not a beverage. Contains no alcohol tb' inebriate ; no- syrup or sugar to derange digestion. As peculiar in its reme dial results as ioits composition. As a powerful, invigorating tonic, it Unequaled a a "Liver 1PI11. Smallest;. Gbeapest, Easiest to Take. On Hay, Setgaroated Pellet a Dose. - Cures Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Constipation Indigestion, Billons Attacks, and all derangements of the stomach and bowels. & cents, by druggists. The Severest Storm,. , The "great gale" of 1703 which raged over England and other portions of En rope for an entire week, reaching its greatest height on the night of baturday, the 27th of November,, was the greatest gale ever recorded, and in its results as jdisastrous as those of any of the hurri canes, cyclones or blizzards of America or the ' tropics. The loss sustained in London alone was calculated ac 2,000,.- 000, an$ the street were sfyewn with the ruins of f fallen houses ,-: th number oz persons drowned in the floods of the Sev ern and Thames,, and lost on the coast . of Holland or in ships blown from their moorings and never afterwards heard of, was estimate at 8.000w This was ex clusive of the men on- board the twelve men-of-war, with IJ8Q0- men and 534 guns, were lost within sight of shore. Seventeen thousand trees in Kent were torn up by the roots, ' and oa an estate in Gloucestershire 600 trees, all about eighty feet in height, were thrown down within a compass of five acres. The Eddystone lighthouse was destroyed, multitudes of cattle were lost, and in one level 15,000 sheep were drowned. Hoi. "Wonder. A play written by an armless man has just proved a dead failure at a London theater. Ia the language of onerof the newspaper reports, "it' failed to catch hold of the public.' This is not to be wondered at in view of the circumstances of its origin. A witty French general who had lost both his lower limbs in battle and retired to live in poverty on a pension, was wont to remark jocosely that his campaigns had left him literally without a leg to stand on. Accident or affliction had in this case left the armless dramatist with out a grip upon his public, that was all. Bo comnletelv does the success of a man's work depend upon the success of his Hfe that it is worse than useless for him to attempt to secure the former at the expense of the latter. VATGHE&: J. P. 8TEVEN8 & DRO., HOW CASE Wall and Praseriptioa Casaa. Cadar Chasw. Barbae rornftora, Jswalry Trays. Stools. Cabiast wocfcW all kinds. Complete outfits (or stocaa. Band for Catalogue. ATLANTA SHOW CA8E CO- CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS iv tnsn viahvND Mm AMD. Safe an4 unj ndisMe. T art las. u vnffw war hhw wranA. la rrm, raeuiiM sexes, seawa wtta Mm rtbboe. Take mm ether, ail nilli 1 Is peMsbeerti boxes, plsk vrappcrs. aie aaaarereas catutterreUa. aead 4a. fiaaii for parttcatsra, leausaaak -HrUettar Laaiea," letter, bj ; talcMcr Ckmm l Ce Saalna Su TrUia. ta IVlonroe Ink EratSr Remores Wrltia? or Blots la Two Is ec en da and teaTes paper perfectly smooth. bampJe by mall 35 cents. Areata Wajttea. SOLE AGENT - W. K. MESEKOLK, tPRDTGVlLLEi SUEQLiHAJi'NA CO., PZKNA, CJ 1 f Satin Sc Plaab BcrmuutU f or Crazy OF " Patch. a large pkg. prer pteeea. assorted eel. a our ilL tory psper I mo. 10, Ta LHOm (Uaet, S. Leeis m ami fl A HlBriV Oilr Cert aad WB I I J. k BTfuruasB. 1 WMM A V aa P ISO'S REMEDY FOB CATAKKH. Bet.- Easiest to C"?e. Cheapest. KeUef is immediate. A cure is ccruun. lor. Cold ia the llead it baa no equal. - u It li an Olnta-.t. cf v'zh a rt nostril, ''rrice,. t'c'.itjc';- 1 imparts strength to the whole system, and to the womb and ltx appendages in particular. -For overworked, " worn-out" 11 run-down " debilitated teachers, mill in-, ers, dressmakers,, seamstresses, "sSxTp-eirls,'1' Housekeepers, mirsme mothers and f eebk women generally, Dr. Pierce Favorite jrrwcnpuon is zo greacess earituy Doon: being unequaled. as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic, or strength-giver. As a soothing and strengthening nervine. " Favorite Prescrrotionw & nneauated and is invaluable. tin allaying and subduing nervous excitability, irritability, eihaua- I tion, prostration, hysteria, spasms and other distressing, nervous symptoms, - commonly 1 attendant upon functional and organic dis ease. It induces refreshing sleep and re lieves mental anxiety and despondency. A Book of 160 pages, -on 4 "Woman and Her Diseases, their Nature, and How to Cure them," sent sealed; in plain envelope, on receipt of ten cents, ia stamps. . - AssociATioir, 663 Main Sar Buffalo, imjC'-Z DR. PIERCE'S PELLETS Purely Vagetable and Perfectly, Harmless. ' Growing Too Fast become listless, fretful, Without ener gy, thin and weak. But vou can for- i V tify them and build then up, by the KID OF PURE COD LIVER OIL AND HYPOPHOSPHITE3 Of Lime and Soda. They will take It readily, for rt is al- most as palatable as milk. And it should be remembered that IS 1 PEE. f TEHTITE OB CUBE OF COUGHS OB COLDS, i IN BOTH THE OLD AND Y0UK3, IT IS 1 UNEQUALLED. AvollubstUUlons6ffcred. March, April, Wlay are the Months; ' when the Blood should be renovated with , ; -: Ayer's Sarsaparilla and the System, fortified for the change of Seasons. - ."Prepared hyi Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., .Jjowell, Mass. FTOTT WISH A GOOD RTCTOL.TER rnrtbiM one of tae oele- brated HM1TH U wessoif Tba cneat amaril i erar znaoafaotiired sad ttM frrat eholaa of mil aioarta. Maanaotvred ia cMbiM 93. SS and M-KA Bis. fiaoraoTUisa acuata. Baxarjr uamaaanaaa sjm 'laTvaaiBoaeia. uosfunowa enunuy ot st a a I frv wraitkt ataal. earafnllT lnsxerftal icrr nri manaa'p aad stock, tbey are BBrlraM for tmiuhi JartsMlltT a dacea-racr. DoDoibadaetitadbr cheap aaal " cMi.lrra lasltatiaaa bUl araorteB aoid tor taaMiTaiiM totlci aad are no cnu unreliable, but aaojreroraa. TTM baflTH M wjcshuh ueoiTra are au autmpra mom the baa. Iwitb firm's kaxaa.addreaa ana flaSea of pateabj asd are traairaattcteel parfaot ta tvmry detail. lm Btetvpoa bavlBC the reaala artiole. aad it nnt dealer cannot sapflr 7n an erdas aeai ta addrea below will raoatra prompt asd eaiwral attemttoa. Deaerpti reoatalne-an ai-1 orkna fn rats bed aooa a- puoaum. SMITH & WESSON, grUaatloB this papr. tjl-atrltsgfloU. Mass. AFTER ALL OT tTet, Philadelphia. Tweatr rears' expadenoa ta speelal dlaaasas: enraa th worst eaaaa of Wrooa farcail or writ for question list aad book. tniTCHTC BCIteinifO-HowfarcaC a Pea rnibiild ra.lslUHsioii. Sand for di gest of Fensioa and BctnVf laws. Head for IuTentors Guide or How to 8rt a Patent. Psraicx Q ytaasu, AHoraej as law, waaiusUa, v. u P ATCyTC No Psteit. Ma Turt Book lrrJr X preserfba aad folly an. pacific for tba certain cur' , of this d !. m - O. H.INO.RJLH Af .M: V.. AXBatardaia. if. Y. Wt bT6 sold Six n lot many years, and it baa riTCW tue Bea w m. a taeUoa. a. O. H. DYCTTE & CO., ' f!blrarri Irrfk. Car. 1 11.00. SoljitylCtfUta A H. U........;.....T:....FcoTten.lS0X r j x t3 i-i V, 1 TO r. mmi Paspondeoey, Dimness flatoa, Lane U! xOfeilar t0DATS. , a sarest it mm to I f aaasaaarlalare. w fc ( TaTdeiyl-a TiriijasalttlCt. V CLaauaatiJL 'ill
Salisbury Globe (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 3, 1890, edition 1
7
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