Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / April 22, 1880, edition 1 / Page 4
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Endurance. How much the heart may bear and yet not break, How much the flosh may suffer ami not die! question much, it any pain or aohe Ot bouI or boily rriii- our end more nifrh- Death chooses his own time, till that is come All ovils may he borne. We shrink and shud lor at the surgeon'" knife, Koch nervo rocoiliug trom the aruol stoel 'Vhosoeilx'e soeuia searching lor the quivering lile; Yet to our some the bittur pns revcul That still, although tha trembling flesh be torn, This, al.no, cun he borno. We see a sorrow rising in our way,- Ami try to floe trom the itppro.icliin;; ill; We souk some sniiill osc:pe, wo woup and pray, Hut when the blow t'ulU, then our hearts are still Not that the pain isoi ii s sharpness shorn, But think it can he borne. Wo wind our lilo about another lite; We hold it olo.soi, do nor th in our own -Anon it luinttt and tnils in dtmilv strito, Letivingus stunned, and stricken tiiidiilonc; But, oh! we do not dio with those we mourn; This, also, can be borno. Heboid, wo live through all things, famines thirst, Bereavement, pain, nil griot and ininoi-y, All woo and sorrow ; lito indicts its wor.it On soul ami body, hut wo cannot dio, rbough we bo sick and tired and taint unu worn; Lo all things can bo borne ! Elizabeth Aktrt Allen. r AICU. li IK I) ICS AM) ll(M MOIIOLU. Tloiisrholft Hints, TO PttF.VK.XT THE FuliM TfUX OK . Crvst on Tr Ketti.es. Ket'p hii oys tor bIu'II in youv tea kettle", .ind it wil prevent the for'iiation of :i crust on tl.i inside of it. ! tutnu-tiiig ilio sdiny .:ir tides to itself. Following ii n recipe for po'.i-diin:: wood : Take ti piece of pumice-stone tun water and pass repeatedly over the worl until the rising of the grain is cut down Then take powdered tripoli and linKee linseed oil and polish the work to ! bright surface To Extkatt Paint fkom .Vitx Sh.k and Wimi.Kv ;cis Saturat. the spot with spirits of turpentine. :m let it remain several hours, then rub i between the hands. It will crumbli away without injuritiL' either the coloi or texture of the article. If you intend papering a painted wall you must tirst get oft' the paint, other wise the paper will not stick. To di this mix in a bucket with warm, watci a sufficient quantity of peariash or put ash, so as to nvike a strong solution Dip a bru-diinlo tliis, and with it scout off all the paint, finishing with coli water and a flannel. Stains occasioned by fruit, iron rust and other similar causes, may be re moved by applying to the p:irts injuivc aweak solution of chloride of lime tin cloth having been well washed or o soda, oxa.ic acid, or salts of lemon, it warm water. The parts subjected ti this operation should be subst .juent' j well rinsed in soft, clear, warm water, without soap, and be immediately dried in the sun. To lilUHVK St'AINS FIti'M I!i;oai i turn Take an ounce of pipeclay tli.i: has been ground tine, and mix it with twelve drops of alcohol, and the saint .U:tutity of spiritsof turpentine. When ever you wi.sh to remove any stain from cloth. inois-u a little of this mix ture with alcohol, and rub it on the spots. Li t it remain till dry, then rub it off with a woolen cloth, and tin spots will disappear. To Extua'T Ham ipity h;'.m Bit Tin Take ftnall quantity that is wanted for immediate use. For a pound of the butter, dissolve a coup it' of ten spoonfuls of saleratus in a quart of boil ing water; put in the butter, mix it well with saleratus water, and let it remain till i old; tin n take it off careful iv. and work a ti aspooiil'ul of salt into it. Put ter treated in this manner answers vr wen to use ia cooking. Subsoil Plowlnir. A. L. F., Somerset rounty, Me., asks our opinion concerning the practice of subsoil plowing. It is to be recom mended where the underlying soil is equal to ttiat on the surface. In the case of a sUong, deep, loamv soil, that for years has been plowed but three or four inches in depth, a large number of rootfl will be found two f-et or more deep. Those with a portion of the salts contained in the lower soil can advan tageously lie brought to the surface. Where the upper layer of soil 1 as be come filled with vegetable matter, then a mixture of a few inches of the under soil, whether clay or loam of a sandy or clayey nature, will have a beneficial ef fect. On the other hand, if you propose to subsoil in a location where there is only sand or gravel to bring to the sur face, then you will simply make the poor exchange of a few inches of good soil and fairly productive, for a worth less and entirely barren soil. We have in mind an amateur farmer who. having read of the wonderful effects of suhsoil ing, determined to test its merits and plowed under a thin sod, bringing to the surface only gravel. After t he job was completed his field appeared like a new graveled road, though as an agri cultural experiment it was a failure. The soil, though thin, which he had turned under had taken ages to aceumu ' late, and had produced fair crops of . corn and barley. By judicious manage ment Ids land in its original condition would have produced a fair crop ol (rasa. The material now on the surface, worthless for present crops, would re quire hundreds of cords of manure to fertilize. At the outset it would neither poduce buckwheat nor clover, lfy first applying manure in liberal quantities, then green manuring would aid in sup plying tha needed elements of a fertile soil. Judgment Is necessary in every farm operation. No set of unvarying rules will give remunerative results, lie fore attempting subsoiling or even very deep plowing, mnk sure that the soil below the surface is worth biinging up. In nanny cauea, it wouid be hi tter, if it were possible, to sink the subsoil till deeper, instead of bringing it any nearer the surface. Moston Cultivator. Halt ns a Fertlllxer. " I want to know how to use salt as a fertilizer, in what quantities, and how applied. Is salt that h;is been used in preserving meat of any use as a fertilizer? And what kind of land is salt best adapted to?"' Your question suggests another, i. e., "To what extent is common salt a fer tilizer, or food of plants?" That the soil is often improved by free applica tions of salt is scarcely to .be denied, but this is far from proving that the salt is in itself a fertilizer. More than a cen tury ago (17 Its) Hrownrigg, an Kngiish writer on the art of making salt, de clared that the soil of the whole king dom might be made rich by applications of salt, but in practice i: was found that in many instances the applications of this substance had no apparent effect. Lime may be placed in the same list with salt, an indifferent fi rli'.izer ot it self, but, acting upon matter in the soil, it increases fertility. Sail destroys ver min in the soil, ami their bodies are dis solved and become food for plants. It also furnishes a small eiuantily of soda; it converts many noxious and refractory bodies in the soil into principles of nu trition, and t hereby stimulates and ac celerates the secreti-.ms ol growing plants. Lands near the sea coast are less likely to be benefited by salt than those inland; and position and the con dition of the soil should always betaken into consideration in using salt as a fer tilizer. The u-uai method of applica tion is to sow broadcast, if over train in the fall or early spring, at the rat-.' of six i to eight bushels per acre; but if bc'orc i the crop is put in. tb n double this quantity may be tipp i. d with safety mid i often with bi netit. Did sait from pork j and beef barrels, or that used in salting fresh hides, is as good and sometimes I much better than the new and clean. We would advise ali to try salt on a small scale at fust, as no one can teii in advance of its use just what tlc'ciectl will De on the .and or the growing crops. Some farmer. find salt a very cheap and valuable fertilizer, others just the re verse; all probably owing to d i Herein e in soil ami locality. .Yta.' YvrJe Sun. A Coming t'omet. The ustronoiiu r royal of England in forms the Washington nstronomers that a comet has been seen from the ob servatory at Cape Town. South Africa. The question naturally arises whether tliis is the gr-'at comet wlio-e appear ance was announced by Hr. Could of the Cordoba observatory in South America. The fact that Cordoba and Cape Town are both in the southern hemisphere, and in nearly the same latitude, is an argument in favor ot that supposition ; but. on the other hand, there seems to be an irreconcilable variance in the ac count of the comet's motions. Dr. (ion id described his comet as moving north ward, while (iili, the South African ob server, reports that the comet lie sees is moving southward. Neither of these :'omets, if there be two, has ye been seen from any American observatory. We are yet ignorant whether the com-i ing comet is niereiy telescopic, like llmt if last year, or one of tli. se stupi lulou naked-eye lellows that in the ages ot superstition were dreaded as portending j great wars. The belief in the bellicose i -ignilieaiiec of comets is not yet ex- ; liiU'lli.-hod. Probably the majority ot j uneducated persons regarded ill? comet j ot I 1 1 as a ton runner ot the war ol IMJ in tliis country, and of the three tremendous closing strugir'es by which Europe finally shook IV the grip ol N'apoleon. The great comet of 1-13 war near enough to the Mexican w ar to b. regarded by the superstitious as a celes tial prognostication ; and who does no! remember fmw direful appeared the uti naralleVd comet of ls."i-i, in the dny when the possibility of civil war was on every tongue? The comet of Hfil. nearly as huge as its predecessor, seemed to tin superstitious a second sign of the great fratricidal struggle. So the comet of ISTjdidnot fail to find believers who connected it with the rumblingsof com ing war in the East, and when, two or three years later, Russia's army marched unon Constantinople, such iieliev.r were assured that the prophecy of the comet had come true. Thissupi rsti;ioi: will probably always linger in the bu rn in mind, and. should the comet thai :s now visible in the southern heaven sweep into its perihelion passage arour.d hesun with a train of light siretehln,' half wa" across the sky, there will n -. be wanting )m rsons to point at tlcnov. augmenting armament of the gr-1 . powers ot Europe, and to predict m gf :v clash of arms. In this th'y w ill hav. tiie support of t tte astro iog rs. In at i-trolojica; almanac pub.ished in L n don, and of great authority nicoiigit palrous. there id a picm ia! pro,. I. y fie. the year ld, in which e heiinetn woman, armed with a sword, doin -nates over a field tilled with tramping amies. The publisher prudentiy post pones the ielter-pres-i explanation o! iliU formidable picture to n- xt yiar's almanac. In the meantime, those of us who are not superstitious may expect the come' with equanimity, and fearless, y hope that it belongs to the largest and most brilliant species. The work of the Swiss earthquake commission will be watched with much interest just now on i.ecount of the great number of earthquake, some very fit of supreme anger, the cook seized a destructive, that have disturbed differ- ' Mkof hot mush and threw it full in the ent parts of the earth within the last few ' f llPr antagonist. Five minutes months. The commission have dis- j lMrr tll(; owner of the mansion, tricted Switzerland for the purposes of aroused from his slumbers by the noise, observation, and each district has a ' rushed into the kitchen, and was liter chief observer assigned to it.whose busi- I aI!? astounded by the scene that met ness it is to make the inhabitants svrve ! view- masses of mush were as Lis assistants by distributing among ! "'ng in all directions. The ceiling. them a pamphlet describing the phe- walls, carpet and various articles in the nomena of earthquakes and the best ; apartment were copiously ornnmented means of observing them, and blank j wit1' bi i'l'nks of the smoky corn forms containing a series of questions, I pound, and the irate domestics, with carefully prepared and intend, d to form j tl,oir l'an,,s madly mixed up in each a skeleton history of every earthquake 1 other's hair, were plentifully bespat t hat is observed. Instruments for mea- i tered with it- The battle had betn a euring the force, direction, duration and ! ,lot one in more senses than one, and soon, of all eartliniinke shocks. re tn I after a while, when the combatants be placed in the hand-- of skilled ob servers at certain stations. Inmates ot prisons are always fed on plain food to prevent the n from break ing out. Togie them i ich rations the kei pi i s think w u!d he ia-h Y tki r.. S'uLi'J it. FOB THE FAIR SEX. Fashion Holes. The fashion of wearing powder In the hair for evening toilet is to be revived. The fez shape for ladies' indoor caps, either for morning or evening wear, ia much used. Two bouquets are now always sold together one for the hair, the other for the corsage. Sleeveless habit corsages of velvet or satin are worn over ball dresses ol tulle or gauze. Spanish lace mantles are very large wide scarfs and in the shawl shape formerly worn. Heliotrope and cream will be the fashionable contrast of color for early spring millinery. Tinted pearl and enamel buttons have eyes in the middle so deeply indented that they tire invisible. Gray and purple are much used to gether in brocades and in the different materials of a costume. Lilac dowers of two kinds and shades are fastened together with a silver rib bon for corsage bouquets. The favorite fabric for summer coats for small children is white cordun-tte, i. e , fancifully figured corduroy. Black tulle and black satin, bright ened with jet. forms a number of the toilits prepared for evening wear. ruffed or plaited plastrons take the place of waistcoats, but they are unbe coming to tiny but slender figure. A great panache of two or three os trich leathers, placed far back on the left side of the bonnet, is very stylish. Light woolen and silk and wool ma terials will he more fashionable for full dress even in the summer than silk it self. The high flaring Valois collar, kept in place with wire, is found tinning new -ivies of neck garniture on the richest toilets. Ecru hiee of the same shade as the cliudda cloths ani'i Fieneh buntings that they trim will be much used this season. Ecru of a darker and richer shade than of former seasons appear inmost of the latest importations of spring dresses. When a floral tablier is worn, the eoitl'ure and corsage bouquet flowers must correspond with those sewn on the tablier. Ladi'-s' morning and evening caps tire made of figured tinted foulards and satins in preference to lace or tulie. and the fez shape is preferred to all others. A new idea in wool suits is the use id cords and tassels arranged merely as festoons or passed around the hips with the ends h inging to the feet directly in front or else on the left side. Colors in hosiery correspond to fashionable hues in dress goods. Favor ite colors in plain and clocked hose are gendarme blue, sapphire, garnet and old gold. Koman stripes and tartan plaids remain in favor for both women and children. Striped petticoat skirting has been lately turned to ti new use. and that is for making neat plain bodices to match the skirts, with a broad scarf twisted round the hips and looped long at the back Ftiis material is warm and thick, but answers very well for skating and tennis dressi s. The bodice is tight fitting, without trimming, except bows at the throat and wrists, and is made after the style of the Jersey bodice. It is either opened and neatly hooked up half-way down the front, or up the back, and is joined to the skirt under neath the broad scarf, and just below the hips. .tmrrlrnn Wlvtt of Forrlcn THptnmnf The number of American ladies who are wives of gentlemen of the foreign legations 'stationed here is frequent 1 the subject of comment, but it is tmt generally known that there are sevnai other countiy women occupying simi lar positions i i St. Petersburg, in ad dition to the wives of the gentlemen ot our own legation there who may lx married. The wife of the German min ister and his fust secretary of legation at the Russian capital are New Yorkers; one was Miss Jay. and the other Mi-u von Hoffmann. The wives of tin-Hel gian minister there and his secretary are also A nn'rican. Mrs. Plunkett, formerly of Philadel phia, whose husband was secretary ot theliriiish legation here several year ago, went with him from Wajjiingtor. !o St. Pcter-lmrg. where he o ctipiis the same position. Mrs. Giesvenor. whose husband is also nttaehid to tin British legation in tin latter city, is tin daughter of Professor Wells Williams, of Yale college. Her husband is a near relative of Earl Grosvenor, who is vis itimrthis country, and n son of Lord Ebury, of England. It is known that it every court of Europe American iadtfd are well represented among the wives of Europeans of high position. M'iishint;tvit Star. Th Bnille of lb ( oka. Two domestics, a cook and chamber maid, got into a quarrel in I'ittsburg. From words they came to blows. In a had been separated, it was found that each of them h.-ul been burned more or less by the hot mixture. Smoking lumps of the stuff clung to their hair and garments, and on the whole they were in a pitiable plight. The proprie tor did not stop to inquire into the cause of" the trouble, hut then and there dis charged the females from his employ. An Irish r'ihing Village. I did not greatly care how much 1 muddied my nkirts among thse poor villagers, because I learned to laugh and weep with them. Uncared for nnd for gotten by the world, they seem to have but one earthly hope, America, t.nd one dread, hunger. The village possesses no postoflice; the e is no magistrate within many miles; and the priest, two leagues distant, serves numerous villages as forlorn as this, and people are born and die without any official note. Many suppose that the parish priest is the most powerful man in the kingdom; and it was a subject of supreme surprise and commiseration when 1 informed them that the queen was a widow. Dn Sun days the inhabitants of the village ap pear, washed and shaven into a ghastly pallor, iu the single street that leads up from the sea. and remain ail day long gossipingand lighting, through sunshine and rain, as if these achievement formed a part of thir religious duties. Now and then the spoils of a wreck are wasued to their shores, and whin the c tast -guards dispute with them what they consider tin" bounty of the sea fierce encounters take place, in ore of which, not h ng In fore my arrival, a poor villager had been killed. There vas sc ire ! :t wel!-thtitchcd cabin in the village; the floors of most of them were as muddy as the roads, and dotted vi:h little pools of waM which seemed a refreshing feature to the ducks that came in in quest of food. The most sheltered corner of the cabin is devoted to the pig, and the chickens seize upon every coin of vantage for a roost. Nets hang from the rafters, nnd the equipments of the boats arc disposal in whatever dry nooks the habitation boasts of. The warmest spot on the hearth Is u-urped by the eat, cherished with great care as the protector against their terrib.e enemies the rats; and be side it an old woman, who did not se; m to have changed her clothes siace In r youth, cod l i d the latest born of the household. The village was pervaded with so strong an odor ot fish and tar that less agreeable emanations were unnoticed. The dung-heap was zeal ously guarded by the door I have seen i'., indeed, in the very living-room of the occupants as the riches that were to prosper their next year's potato crop: and every morning the pig was sent out to walk, with a solicitude for his health not bestow, d upon the other members of the f.imily. Thrse people spent three fourths ot their time in idling and gos siping. 1 saw poor haggard old women at the doors of their cabins, or by the village well, who had to crouch like apes to make flieir rags cover them, so mad for gossip that they forgot their hunger and the rain that soaked them ; and day afbr day old men gathered on the slieiteri d side of a wail, and talked with as much interest and gravity as it they had never seen each other before, and every pcitai was nn unheard-of marvel. Troops of half-clothed and half-starved children sprawled in the mud, fought among themselves, or with loud yells crowded about some poor ass. inflicting all the torments that their un tutored imagination:? coulr suggest, while their mothers, can in hand, whispered, with amazement written on their faces, of all they had heard or seen or dreamed of sim e jestirday in a illnge dependent entirely upon itscli for its topics of interest. Hither, I learned, the pries', ennx once a year to hear the confessions ot the inhabitants. They repair to one ol the cabins, where, while the pig. chick ens, ducks and "-- are kept in abey ance by the 7."a!ous host and hostess, the rite is celebrated. Among these people, whose only extravagance seems to be on the score of tie r religion, lie is en tertained and result-d in a manner quit i out of proportion to the means of hi. enlertainers; an 1 when departing, aftri the manner of the fund mother in t hi story book, who whipped her children and put them to bed, he gives them ali a sound rating upon their idleness and renii-sness in their religious observ ances, and receives in return. " Lone life to your ivvcr nee." and "God speed," from his humble flock. J. L. Cloud, iti Uarytr'f Mn ;n:iii . Russian Churches of bold. The magnificent church no-.v being completed in Moscow has a thick plating of gold on its dome and cross. TP is fa.shiop of gilding church towers u universal in Bii.-si i, ;.nd it has bn n cal culated that enough gi ld is thus lying idle to pay off tic nation: ! ill bi. The I.-aae cathedral, in S; . Petersburg, lias a platingof gold three-. jtnirters of nn inch thick over the wl.o .e of a dome as large ns that of St. Paul's in London. The Church ot Our Lady of Kazan has" a massive altar lunii'ureof solid silver. During the gnat lire of Moscow, in the molten gold and sLver were seen flowing like w.it'T from the burn ing churches, am! the new addition to them represents an outlay of fully fl5.IHU.0HU. In drilling a well near Chatfield, Minn., the nu ll dug down fifteen feet through thesoil, then came to solid rock, through which they drilled to the depth oftwi nty live leet, when their drill came in contact with an elu) log fully one. foot through, which was in a good state o preservation, r.issing through the log, the men struck solid rock again and drilled many feet before finding water ' An Indianapolis, Ind., letter says: A pair ol si le-lace kid shoes have been made in this city for a Mrs. G.-itc9, ol Brown county, who is twenty-three years old, weighs 517 pounds, and is seven feet and two iin In s in height. The shoes arc number littei n. just ine foot in leugth and between four and five inches iii ii. Lotsof men will waste a dollar's worth f time heating a salismun down ti ve cents on his price. SUulnnviHt Herald. Within less than two years nineteen persons have liecn put to drat .1 in Huia or political ollenses. Tb9 0Mt of Dr. Bull's Cough Strap is onl 25 o -nts. A bottle will couvime ereo the mo,t lDaredulon of it n Hellenes. Tror.Tivr. Ilv ,:t ae v..u will prevent run- of t.'io cMevis preri lmg ia the Hpriug SD1 bammet seisnn. Tlir Vallate Hrll '. Mnrahnil. Mich. Will mill Oieir oeloi r-it'Hl K wcro-Vultiic llta to f.if affiti'tod npon 30'taya trial Hpemty enrps guarsntiwl. Tbeymsm what tliejr say. Writs to them without delar. Words of Wisdom. A good conscience is a continual feast. Politeness costs little, but avails much. Betier is a portion in a wile than with a wife. He that lives in leisure is dead v. hiie he lives. Envy no man's talent, but improvi thine own. Keep your own counsel; you wil! hi the gainer. The reward of work well dime is hav Wig done it. Haste tiips up iis own heels, letter and stops it -j; If. 1'ise with propriety is the fo'indatio:. of true ( !e.;:itlce. Many take less care of conscience than their reputation. Diligence is a fair foitun1, nnd indus try a good estate. If you net with a vit v to prr.ise onh you deserve none. None have ii s-s praise than those vl t hunt most a l,r it. Fast men. like fast rivers, are genre ally very shallow. The gay soul of dissipation never hail n thought unse!!i-h. Happiness is a bird that owns noeagf but the pure b, sou:- Trifles make peif ctioii, but perfec tion itself is no trifle. If rare merit be the rarest of all rare things, it ought to pass through some sort of prohai Ion. In all the guilty train of human vices there is no crime of deeper dye than that of ingratitude. The tire fly only shines when on the wing. So it is with tin1 mind; when once we rest we daikcn. As the pearl ripens in the obscurity of the shell, so ripens in the tomb e.il the fame that is truly precious. Every man endeavors with h's ut most care to hide his poverty from others, and his idleness from himself. Pursue what you know to be attain able; make truth your object, ni.d your studies will make you a wise man. Whoever is honorable and cv.did. honest and courteous, is a true get. tie man, whether learned or unUarue-h rich or poor. We bear within us the seeds of gre -t-ness; but suffer them to spring up. and they overshadow both our sense aril our happiness. Character i : power; it makes friends creates funds, draws palronage sine support, and opens asure way to honor wealth and happiness. The way to acquire lasting esteem is not by the fewness ot a writer's faults, but the greatness of his beauties, ntn! our noblest wo:ks tuv g m-rally most teplete with both. Why differ viitU burl oolj if ouo bottle of IV. Hull's Cough Syrnp i.l o.iro a Coagh of tliii woist liiiid. P'r. Hull's Oongh Sirup is oM for S5 cen's per hottlo iu every refpo.-taM drug tore iu lh Tinted Mate. "Quail on toa-t " was what he or dered. ' (J'laii on trust" was what the innkeeper tailed it some months afti r. l.irue sales iudicato tin) mtn its of all cood articlOH. Druggist sell more of .-. Itali a ItibT Sv-rnp tli-m of all other remedies for tho caie of Biby Liiscrders. Diamond (lathering. A correspondent describes how dia monds are gathered in South Africa n follows: After a man buy.? his "claim." he first sinks his anchorage, for the wire for his buckets to run upon; then hi? uprights for the "jumpers;" thowim pass over these nnd are anchored on tin top, or the reef, as it is called. Tin rr are two buckets with four wheels whiih run on these wire ropes, or track you might call it a hoist line and a down haul rope, attac hed to the bucket, com pletes the hoistinx gear, with the excep tion of the motive power, which may bf steam, horse or Kaffir. From my place ot business one can see the buckets pass ing up and down from sunrise till sun set each day. The buckets containing the "diamondiverous" soil is carried te the washing machine, which grind away until all the heavy stones fall and work down to ihe bottom, and diamonds be. injij the heaviest of all stones, they, ol course, get down below everything. Once or twice a week they have a "wash-up," when the cylinder of the machine is emptied and the "stuff" as sorted and parceled according to size, color and shape. The diamonds are either sold in the loe-al markets or sent to England. They frequently sell for better prices here than in England that is for small lots NATURE'S RLMEDI Tr Rut r Iioai fi.anis Vegetine Purifies the Blood, Renovates and Invigorates the Whole System. ALL WRITERS AM) THEIR .NAMES ARE LEm. SAV THAT TO HAVE GOOD HEALTH You Muit Have Pure Blood. ttemiter, Have You dot Scrofula, ScroftiloH Humor, t'aneeroua Humor, Vaueer, or Any Vlm aar of the Woodr You Can Positively be Cured. Thousands of Testimo nials Prove It. Dri'inrl1!. Chemists, Speak, Inorse and heeuiiinieiid It as the Rest and Only Reliable BLOOD PURIFIER. Mostksil. Jan. W, 1HS0. II. R. Htuvfks. E" : bi-ar Sir I do not bkf lo writ tnlluiolllala lor a.lvertiad tuedictnea, but the Km Im-ii. Ill it at ao many of my rumomira have otilaitl'rt I mm 111 imoof VKOETINK oompela ma toaav I hat w.th all t-ipi-rleno of ovr twfuiy-flre y. ara, tioih In r,at HnUln and Ibla country. I bayi" novr knowa such a nwlul rumwly rl.rd lie lora the public. J. 1). I. AM BROKK, AmuUiiI of III. Apothcarla Company of 1iiidOD. M.'iul.frof the l'harn:accutirai K.K-ldyof Ure.t Hritain, I.ici-litlan 111 Fharuiiiy of I lie I'i.IIckk of Wivuli lana anil SnrK-on. Corufr Hoir llama and Mi-ibll r)lre. Votrotlue is Sold bj all Drujrurlsts. t'onaiuuiitlnii Currit. An ctl ptiiH ciau. n Uifil from prm-tli'S. Iisvlim bail i-lneort hi IiIh hintitu tv an Kst Inuli liilmion arytuo forniiiia of s sinii le vi 'iul'lo P-iuiMy lor lho speedy si'il in rii.niKtit cur.-' for Ce S it':l"''. Hroii. et.ii, Ciitariti. Aniens, m il nil Turc.ii ami l.uiii; Air, i tioli-, ii i a I oi-ll ii f mi i radical cur.' for NervoiiK tJrtienv nn.l nil Ni-rv. am Own .ilulnlw, ulo r lisvlnif te Inl iin iveii.lerlwl riiintlvii ioim la tliiniMiiuils ol e.P4, i,n IVIi il IiIk iliily lo inla It known to lii niflnlni? f. Hows. Ai-tiu'ril liy i-nrn luut'teaud a cenm- I r inn li'iiuou hiITk'Hii?, I Mill b,-iiiI lr.( ol olini-Ki- tn all who ili-s.ro I', lila n - y Iu (inrm-in. Vp m li.or Kmilinli. with full Ulric Iio'ib lor (-H'l'-irait! an I iii:i:. S.'ni l y ma'l l aiMroHtlai wiMi Ma u naiimiK tins laiwr, W. W. autan, 149 I ovt' M . -V. H n-ii-ntsr. . V. A CAKI To all uo are suffering from the er rors ulul in icrclioni i f yon! Ii. ucrvui!" vrlciii . urll- tlM-ar, liws ot mmtiooil, ite.. I will himiiI ll Hi--i-iluM'.mt liill .-lire y. li, 1 lll'.K of l.'II.Mt IK. Tim V' nit re i nil :i ili-i-oii-pi't I'V .i nitoKiuunry iu sou h Aiie ii.-a. s 'ml n s.-lf-j iilr.w-.il rnvoiov lo Hi.- i,v. .toxri'H T. I SM N . si hi ton I'.. N.T Hy. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS A.cmo lji-rx-y ot liioginpHy. I -tan tnr.l l'.io..i,.,t oiu I in.'.iijilmln-il jl !.'! A cuii't'.iiow n-ii"il i" oi e be-ta .t,,i roi.ll ty l . ei a'ii c:.ll!i-l lilt, ill. 1 1 . tel.'.O nts... hi I pi. ! s .; .oiit4ir.li.M- r..-i-n.-li in i.uai.' by M U.v: i:,,t rl l;-,rti.-.' I'v ' a i.e: Vat.omi I.' Ii; itib'- I.; Vailin l.elte r.' I I V laHi-r Hum-, n: M iry. y.i i n i. i s otK.-tn lan.lrii 'i.wn.-f Au-.'l.y Vi.-t.-l' I; llariiil...).' !.. I'I'i h. Ai.el.l; ( ar.' by l.i-l.l.'ll. Ori.ii.mrll.'bi I ...tni:..- 'W. l am Pat.' I jrMae.ii l.;Ti.!umli.i."..i Ion ic :i; vVet i.i C-lo.-.n-,'liy Troilopo. -'I Mr 'Tic I I -a-y II -viilatloi .' fr-1 an : lie '.el. .n III; 1 o-.-r v. -.. n 11.11 ivnl-. AMI-:l-'. HOOK l-.rll Wl.l'. Ti ilinnr lliiH.lilia. N. . A WATCH I'll It I I I T i K T S , An .-1-i.eoit li'fo w-utrli, nun ri. Ii y oliu'-il ca-L', -uie.l'l l-'i- i iOi-r la.K or i- i.e. :n..n. i-.tl I"' . ut lo any r. a.e i ol tic" .n.r"ii ivcut of ."0 rl.. or .ili-h illi c-i.i.in ict.ti lie I fon'o i. No!ici-..-sti i.i'l yon cot I.- sttisfi.il fl'i Hi rinaiai. ot He n.il. ' . le r wn In.' II a t Lit el two -.., Ks r. lain I" ii- ii I ni l una: .ti it. y r. f sn.l vonr i. cn-v. II o -e! I .in- l i' Ul .1 li.nH It" uvi r S..-OI. Mitiv 1 -r r!i" ..r.I. rnu. oil.-.- or :. r a lanloni I nn.. Alli-- lb'I.liKN it ( O. P O. II' A Ii7 t, "I. Ma'. " JOSEPH a TOED, Knuinver ami Jlarhinlxr. PATTERSON, ti. J. AND 10 BARCLAY ST., N. Y, K.nl. ll.'ii.. Jni. H'ii'P.c.1 U.iUiini.' M n-liin. ry; S't.i.11 I'ul'ii.h' iili'l ll.-il'-ra of : il. riplioii: HoiMii'K iiei.-ini i r lor niiiii -, " . Htl"i- ami i i-r.n-iv.- n aiinl.li n i -r n.-w l'..t' l.l IL X- i 1' '- tat'lp KlW'ti. : 'ti'- I'lijc..'" nro a k'O7'!' mi 1'ini.'. luriil . r I.i. I " :'. a'..l are .nlli.'.ul' y ;.,l:ipt. 'I fr 1. I. i- "f .'ii i.tiiir.l .O..I ll'.v'.l.l i' 1 nil'i--h.'L So'ii! for . -oi iplii.- i-.l. -iitarf. A 1 1 1- -Bl'.'V.'. PACtNTi ATty N?K TKC HSST0RYtW0RLD 1. C. Hlili.- . .7 Ui . !'.!.' ii'.i! r: il :' ..."I laiH) l-irc .I..I.1'.'.- .- 'm HI ! Hf. an 1 - I'e IliO-t i-i'iul-i-.i' lll-i.'i.i el on-M. ; .1 i-i.-r l-ii'-'! il. b flln at awlil S.nlt.'i' u-m.'ii i - ae.l.i'ra t-riui. to .;:-ti-., a:"l . y I' '' ' r I' in ..y et it Ii. ch. ;.!! N irf'.-... l': ii. Co.. i'b'l.i.. I n. ii. ,. : K .'. in.YoiiAi.Nt;. . . 5f?i4 ' '" VV;,;!"';',.' ''e, if : ' : "u--.int. iiur 'iii-l i ' k- r : :.i., ;':;r;;..:: (9) J.F:4Ti'TC0.. .r., r.. .aTTLF B OR O VT. S.il!tti-s , S-a.ii. in, li lliT.il Maii.i,' :h, i'. N'ir.ll Cli.ill.a. ft-.. 11 iltli-i. ! . M I. W.-iii n.'ii.t our K. "tr.i-VoltTp I!. an I oil., r M-i'tr'!- Ai-et ef tilal for !W .'ji- to t ". a!lt..'t- l.i.-. Nn ."ii' I', tiiin.v ii'.l li-.-c -i ff s ! -Miua: c ic. . i -'i.i! i- - l.si.r, h.iti. lth-.liii.-tiH!:i.l'i.r.K,-.-. -. A i.n.,ri,r!r'..ii-a!i'.t.i - r eo p.-. v. Mi. toll.ib- II. II Co.. .'l,ir...,ll. iliili. o-irv iik- I.-no it i: mi in n.t.-.-r. m:: rv, il CI... tl, .-:iml l'ri i.( O'i I'I.h. It 'a no ' I 'i. l.oii..-, hi. I ii : i. i- i::vii '.i.i. .: a -! 1-r.- '.. .1 ny iln n.iut li in l.l !!.-. i, ; . . m.:i I y .ti .ii- . i- i . 'I ,Ur. l' -.-.. I..-. '. l.lfni iflmi A .-!'. I of... .I.t . -'.r. .M a -.1. t.i 1. S. .. r . ;r. ll ... . .i l m, r A iwltr.V I.si.il, I'.'.. N -i i. I eo'iQirt-. in the -n-t t h..' ir.ii tt.( u.au hft. Ail t-A: IhLpu l!:rr,in:h t iff re M n lari.ir::j'n:Vt. all pi' ,r.l. i; ri '; urteko S ' -i : rJ ' !. '- ' ' '" ' ;'.','' I B f! a 5 ; J fs ;; ; ". ''u.'vl? 2 f 8 r i' 1 --'insitu-: r.'7 '. .'' i.'iiti.i..-.;-' r.,i.r...s. W.i is I alK.-tU.. S. Id ., .! I.y .1 I' Mil l l u, M. I, i, l i.ili Ma., I'Liladu..!'. MILITARY AND BAND GOODS llUTI IV A CHAD All. It) Xnlilen l.nnp. New York. rVnd for TalaWit". Low :rlri. CATARRH ! Vauti tla i perrumii ulHlct- cd with a-alC.itarrli to ail'il firir ail.lr.a. Willi SpoataRfBtannnitc U.K. ST i ki.ii.k. No. 'li ll.rl.ru Ave.. Halm.. Mil., a il ho will a. ndtlinii Sure I'nre. QAU. bALAKV liirwnmb. All EXPENSES adoacwl. WiOKI prompll. p.M. SLOAN A li. JQO oors; si. I Inrlnnsll. U. l.-l. irlerr. VOUNCMEN I month. Ki.-rv r iitiut.'i.'ii i.cirn lvi si a-.- y .nd ran, lot 111X1 a lnonlh. Ki.-rv ir iitiijt.'i.'Haroiito.'il a pHynir .l. nation. Ad'ra II. Val-i I n.'.Ma'iai : 4anivilli.Wia ITAMTK.li -iiinv a-oiaiu tali" on'i 'for l ii H Ihtmiik Fun. Hi l't 'tui'n. eiooil wo. It an i .rood piy. A.llr,-" HTlioinp.on, S JCi(HJ,4'll ... S.Y. r T"! V TO ' H Mx'for !' rnia. i) lli I. it'lit out. I'. M. KAIKMlU N T, ri-no's. ais'in wieiip i. TIXYir Tn .lnU- Voiir llwnHI II UK It JlU M sTM''S an.l INKS. 'atln;iic fr-. T. N. Ill Kl'OX. .M ItorthiniH Htrwt, N. Y. IMPERIAL CAKDS, ,:,V,,...U h.it'KW.KiP, 17 I' 'on Kiiirf, N.w -.rk AurntnWnnlril for MtiatrM l-ilniif i-oIh.1 J t l Kf lllltlTlir.lt, a ihrllllnu now Honk. f. inn fro. W. H. llltVAH, Kill., imi N -till SI.. Ml Ixiuia. Mo. HH V Crali-a A Un,fu.Hf. Umt krfr tna.le. ' rHt wvt rn linn Wnraa. I'etliiirit. I'a i A KP!K. Sl.-n.l.iml n iiiV.'an !.. i"...",. t -i $66; m DR. CLARKX JOHNSON'S Indian Blsoi Syrup. LABORATORY, 77W.3d St.,Kew York City uu or nmar CZTT. rrBADI KABX.I Tfpepit, Lire .1juct Hhrtttiz't. rf., Strops!. Heart fHicasr. DtUownna, A'trvoua FttbUity.ttc, The Best EEIJEDY ENCOT to Kvo. ! 70,009 AGENTS RATE SOLD SI ME 1879 9.000,000 BoU.es. 77u'j Syrup Possesses Yarial rroptrliea. Tt Mlmnlnfrs the Pytynlion In (nn HntWn, rhlch ruDverts the sttirrla anil i,(tr rftba food Into Kloraao. A dfflcl'nrv In I'ytyttlln r.mtara Wind nnd flouring of Ire' food In tha tuiiinib. If Iho nmlloliio la tukra Immcill. airly alicr callus; luc formcntailua of food Is rrvrnird. It nets npon ih T.lwT. linots npon Iho HldnrTm, It If rculntra the Ilowela Il PurlBra the lllood. It Quiets lb erTons87Stcos. IlPronntM Dlcrallrn. It Nonrlshoa, Htrrncihrno nun InTf.aTatao. Itimrrira oil the OM Ulnnd nnd mak'-a rw Il epena tho pnrniof the skill nad lodurra flPill'Wy Frrapiiiition. It asntratizes Iho hereditary taint, err poison In tl a felnod. which renrrates Scrofula, Kryaiurlaa, and ail manner of aLin d;n.'ai3c3 r.nd inrnal buniirs. lliors ara no fpu-ita t mploved In ita mannfactttr, and I: can be Ukrn ly tuo moat ddlicata bain, oc l y tie airail and feol le. ian en'.y Umt nfiund ' irntton to directions. rEICE CF LAE33 BOTTLES, 81.C0 rSICS OS SHALL BOTTLES, EO Rsad the VOLUNTARY TESTIMONIALS of Persons who havo been CURE.D by th ut of th BLOOD PURIFIER. For Blllonaness. I.acKEL Iln.i.. Uiolimou'l Co., N. C. Dear Sir I have been troiililsrl with flii ionsncs. ami Inilijrraiion, ami could flail no tvl.ef until I triH your linliuii Bloo'l Syrup. Tli cure wns mat velinn. Let hip stiifC't trial ol it to those sflVotOi! I J. W. SNEAD. A Valnatlo Moilicino. Laurei. IIii.i.. Kiclimonil Co., N. C. Dear Sir Allor t!ie ue nt your Inilian niouil Syrnp, whwvliy I havo been crentl.T bonofltci, tny only roiet U th it I iliil nof knowil it bofnie. I prniioiiiico it a vftlimMu msilicine- A. SMITH. Pais in tho Breast. Lavrki. IIii.i., Richmond Co., N. C. Dear Sir I was fur ft Ion); time stiffon'tie, from a 1'nin In tho ltrou.it. I Nni;;l.l fioiii your Afc-nnt B.unc ol your tntliun II!o-nl Syri;p. ind ini.-o Inkinit il lino loll no syiiii'oius ol t lie psiu. My lricmis huvu o U ttn J ll." nil apeak in the highest tciini of it. A. 9. McMClL. lUtsnmatism Cnred. I.At'RiL Hi li, Richmond Co., N. C Dear Sir I wns aiitionnj; with ItliPUmntinn in tuy Hack and Shoulileia, nnd iIik-ioh .: sol iiiinl i.i riii. At tin. Mit'm'.-'ii'll ol a Iriemf, 1 trivd your prcnl ln.linii lil.iml S rup, nnd Ui thu snrpi iae ef nil, 1115 -oil included, hii imino il.aia uiue waa wurked. Let all wbo nre tioulileJ lieh Kntumulism il a triul. J. J. WlUliHT. Osneral De1)iUty. RtrrnEitroiiDTOtt, Rutheifurd Co., N. C Oeir Sir For a lonp time I havo boon sul loiiiig with V oaLnt I 11-e.l some ol your great Indian HIikmI S. r ip and it did me morn good than auyibiii 1 ever ID'.k. MATILDA BUTLKR. For Headache. Kcthibforhton, Ruthorlord Co., N. C. pear Sir I was a snffcror with Sick Hea l ache, until I oli ained sums of your t xo.I!i t.t Indian Blood Syrup, and lisviiiK ezpeiiriicii l iis benefit in my own cao I cwi hav no hesitation in rc-eonum-nding it to others J. I.li BLANKORD. Sure Core for Djapepela. Oak Sfrings. Rutherford Co., N. C. DoarSir I anrT-rei' witi llvapep.i lor s longtimo; fiMid would n it aly 011 tny alomiich I nl some of your lndinu Iiiood Syrup end it cured mo, V. 1. CAKLILK. Dyspepsia and Indigestion. IitsiiT Fobk, Terson Co., N. C. Dear Sir 1 havo used your Imlian Ul.iol 8yrup for Dy-pepsia i f 30 ycniV eiandtn and have received much roll of thcrelnuii. L. IJiK Lire Complaint. Bisht Fobk, Person Co., N. r Dear Sir Your truly valuable Inditn Bio . I Syrup is the beat uiO'ticine I oyer need 'oi Lirer Complaint and Sie-k Ifoadnohe. V. i'AINTEK. For Asthma. If kstib's Stork, Person Co., N. C. Dear Sir I wns troubled with Asthma lor Ore yours, and I'niied to find relief until I tried your Indian Blood Syrup, wbioh has greatly benefited me. 8. C. CLATT02L Kidney Disease. Cntito Gordo, Columb-.a Co., N. U. Deer Sir I am pleased r state that your reliable Indian Blood Syrup has cured me of K lim-y Diaeaae and Gravel. Heietof ire I bare norer lound its equal. D. H. MANEK. Diseases of tha Stomach. TlRBWAT FEBBT, Ci'llllllllilS Co., N. C. loar Sir I have me 1 your evoelleut Indian ''.'.H.il Syrup lor Diaease of Iho Stomach, with v. Inch I was berertly afllioted, and a lair trial bas cured ue. GEORGS GORJi. If ever Fails t Cora. Heitm'i Stosi, Person Co., N. C. Dear Sir This is to certify that I was afflict ed with severe Pains, aud your Indian Blood Kyrup speedily cured me. HISS Z. BROACH -dyspepsia and Rheumatism. IImtib's Stor, Psrson Co., iST. C. K.ar Sir The use ol your nimble lud aii Hl'iil S)iii. l.aa (really benefltoit me loi 11, jei i'ia and lilisumatiaiii. BM VUi CLAtfOS. n W it CURES ua.r aw hi wn
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 22, 1880, edition 1
4
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