Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / Feb. 10, 1881, edition 1 / Page 4
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fferer Say Die Never say dfe neror ny die; Lite's worth the living, it only we try Tho hand and the brain Were not given in vain; WcVe a battle to gain, And so never say die. Never say die never aay diej Ii carvings be low and it living be high, Tia reason the more Not to faint or give o'er; Better days are in store, And so - never say die. Never t ny die-never aay dto When night is at darkest the morning is nigh; Whether lar off or near, In God's time will appear Some blessings to cheer, And so never eay die. NeTer say die never say die; The soul that is steadfast may fortune defy In labor and art Let the hand and the heart Each do its own part, AnJ eo never say die. Never pay die never aay diet When cowards despair, be this our reply ; All that's noble and human In constant and true man, In brave, patient woman, Cries, Never say die. Never say die never say die; Lile is God's gift that we may not lay by Whatever befall Tia the duty ot all, Till Ho gives the call, To say, Never eay die. FARM GIRDER AND HOUSEHOLD Farm and tiarden Rotes. A bulky fodder is the natural food of ruminants. A uniform use of water is essential to the healthy growth of plants. Cornstalks contain more potash than any other fodder fed to cows. Pots containing flowers should be washed as often as any mold or fungus growth appears. When strawberry plants are set in rows three feet apart and a foot spart in the rows it requires 14.520 for an acre. Sheep manure is much richer than that of cows. Practically it is estimated at nearly double the value ot that of cattle. On many farms there are some old cattle and old sheep that can only be kept at a loss. It is economy to fatten them br the butcher. In all attempts at breeding domestic cattle no immature stock should be used . Mature sires find dams are essen tial if strong, healthy stock are desired. " Like produces like." According to Dr. Wiedebold, ungus growths in cellars may be combatted either by burning sulphur or by pour ing two parts of concentrated sulphuric acid over one part ol common salt, and so closing all openings as to prevent any escape of the vapors. Prof. J. F. W . Johnston, says : " It is certain that common salt has in very many cases been advantageous to the growing crop." He then quotes the re sults of experiments in which .wheat dressed with salt cave an average of eight bushels more than the same kind of soil produces without salt; barley gave an increase of twenty-one bushels an acre, and hay one ton increase to the acre. The scales which fly off from iron be ing worked at forges, iron trimmings, filings, or other ferruginous material, A worked into the soil about fruit trees, or the more minute particles spread thinly on the lawn, mixed with the earth of flower-bed3 or in pots, add greatly to the productiveness of the soil. For co ored flowers, they heighten the bloom and increase the brilliancy. The following fertilizer for hyacinth has been tried with great success: To a square yard of ground apply, when planting the bulbs, an ounce and a half of superphosphate of lime, half an ounce of nitrate of potash (salpeter.) and halt an ounce of carbonate of soda, all well mixed and pulverized in a mortar. Using this fertilizer as a top-dressing you may expect very fine blooms, and will not need fresh bulbs. Ground bone, bone meal and fine granulated bone are all merchantable articles nowadays, and 'arge quantities of this enconomical provision for poultry are used by those who understand its value. Lime is an excellent fertilizer on cla soils, on account of its power to render soluble many of the component parts of the clay, and also to make it more Dorous. Milk for Poultry. This is one of the very best things to give either young or old fowls. Most every breeder has tested its value and recommends it as a wholesome and nutritious diet, naturally adapted for young chicks and poultry. On every farm and in most all suburban homes milk is fed to pigs. This is one way to utilize it. But if farmers paid more at tention to their poultry stock than they do, they would find that they could turn it to better account by feeding it to their chicks and laying hens. All kinds of poultry are fond of milk. Although they soon become satiated if fed exclusively on grain, animal, vege table or insect food, they seldom refuse milk in any form fresh or sour, it makes no difference to them. Nowadays milk enters largely into the bill of fare for chicks and fowls. Fanciers have found out that it contains properties beneficial to their health and early de velopment. Almost the first fool and with many the first after the yolk is assimilated its soothing and nutritive effect is apparent, and if mixed with stale bread crumbs or oatmeal cake nothing is better. Now, for laying hens milk is nourish ing, and induces laying. Where it can be spared it is more valuable to the poultry stock than to any other. Ii farmers would give it a fair trial, and lay aside the fogy notions of their ances tors and look at things in a new light, they would abandon the practice of feeding their spare milk to pigs and give it to a better-paying stock. Poultry Monthly. SIlM Corson's Recipes. (spiced Beef . Use about four pounds of the flank of beef ; wipe it with a clean, damp cloth; rub into it the following spices mixed: One teaspoonful of salt, one saltspoonful each of ground cloves, mace and pepper, and a very little cay enne pepper. Roll it up and tie it in a compact roll. Put it over the fire in boiling water enough to cover it, and boil it slowly for two hours. Remove the strings and use it hot. with sauce piquante. Baked Onions .-Peel ten large onions without breaking the layers; boil them for half an hour in well-salted boiliug water, and drain them; when cool enough to handle cut a half-inch slice from the top of each, and take out a tea spoonful of the middle part; chop these pieces fine, mix them with half a cupful of stale bread crumbs, a saltspoonful of salt, quarter of that quantity of pepper and the volk of a raw era: use this forcemeat to stuff the onions, lay them on a baking dish, brush them with the white of the eee beaten a Httle.dust them with fine bread crumbs and bake them slowly for forty minutes. Serve '.hem hot. Fried Pumpkin. Peel a small, ten der pumpkin; cut it in slices half an inzh thick and two inches square, sprinkle each piece with salt and let it stand in an earthen dish for an hour. Then wipe the slices, pepper them, roll them in flour and fry them brown in enioking hot f&t enough to cover them: lay them on brown paper for a moment to free them from grease after thev are done, and then serve them hot. Squash ean bee cooked in the same way . TIMELY TOPICS. A quiet man traveling a short time ago by rail in England was annoyed by the noise which two or three men in the same carriage were making. One of them had been telline tremendous stories about himself in a loud voice and had tried once or twice to draw out the quiet man, but in vain. At last he turned to him and said, rather of fensively : " I fear, sir, that our noise has rather inconvenienced you' " "Not in the least," he replied. " I thought,' returned the noisy man. " that you did not seem interested by mv stories." Quite the reverse, my dear sir," said the quiet one ; " I was very much so in fact, I am a bit of a liar myself." Probably fifty years hence there will be abundance of trees in the West. Agriculturists are rapid lv awaking to the necessity of planting them. The tort Scott and Gulf railroad company has begun the planting of hundreds of trees on its lands. A Boston capatalist has engaged a company of raisers of for est seedlings in Illinois to break and plow a large area in Kansas, and plant no less than 2,700 trees to the acre, and cultivate these until they shade the ground. At the end of that time say ten years the plantations will be deliv ered over to the owner. No trees less than six feet high axe to be counted. The Fort Scott railroad has adopted this plan, one advantage of which is that the tree enterprise will be attended by ex perienced men, whose interest it will be to make as much of a success of it as possible. Blackfeet, Bloods, and Piegansare th6 Indians at the agency on the northern border of Montana, and their agent, Major Young, is able to report a good year's work done by them. They cut and hauled all the agency firewood, built all the agency fences, inclosed 500 acres of land, built log cabins, and tilled small farms. Running Crane seems to be the champion iaij ?r of potatoes, and tnese, with turnips and carrots, are the favorite Indian crops. Crow Gut, on one of the issue days last autumn, when his red brethren were crowded around the agency for their annuity supplies, drove up to the gate, his wagon loaded with his farm produce, and sold it by measure to the crowd as neatly as any white peddler could have done. Alto gether, these Indians, who were not considered the most hopeful, are evi dentlv coming on in civilized ways Yorfls or Tf isaom. Men of the noblest dispositions think themselves happiest when others share their happiness with them. Open your mouth and purse cautiously and your stock of wealth and reputa tion shall, at least in repute, be great. 'Tis an ill thing to be ashamed of one's poverty; but much worse not to make use of lawful means to avoid it. The reason why so few marriages are happy, is because young ladies spend their time in making nets, not In making cages. Men are sometimes accused of pride, merely because their accusers would be proud themselves were thev in their places. It may serve as a comfort to na in n our calamities and afflictions, that he who loses anything and gets wis'om by it, is a gainer by the loss. The qualities of your friends will be the qualities of your enemipn; ma friends, cold enemies; half friends, half enemies; fervid enemies, warm friends. ixluttony is the. source of all our in firmities, and the fountain of all our diseases. As a lamp is choked by a superabundance of oil,a fire extinguished by excess of fuel, so is the natural .health of the body destroyed by intemperate diet. On the surface of lakes that I have seen, just so long as the wind blew there was nothing but a great black rough ness; but when the wind went down, and the water was tranquil, then all the stars of heaven were reflected in it. So in the tumults in this life, in the thunder of anger, in the strife of envy and pas sion, men's hearts are so disturbed that the divine influences fail to reflect them selves therein. It is stated that French silk has become so inferior in quality, and American silk so superior, that many ladies in Paris have already sent to America for black silk, despairing of finding ever again a really good and desirable silk in the Parisian market. A New York boarding-house took tire the other night, and the flames got as far is the pantry, when they went out for want of fuel. Philadelphia News. FOB THIS FAIR SEX. Where B&ngfnc Originated! It has often been a subject of won er ment to us where our nrettv girls got the notion from of combing their front hair down over their foreheads, and cutting off the ends so as to make the inch and a half of hair which they keep hanging down nearly to their eyebrows and which is irresistibly associated in our min? with an imperfectly sheared mule's tail. The mystery we solved to our satisfaction last night as we dropped into Dr. Jackson's. The doctor received from New Zealand, yesterday, among quite a variety of fens and mosses, and other curiosities from that semi-barbar ous land, the pictures of two Maori- natives of that country a boy and a girl and the latter had her back hair looped upon the top of her head, and stuck through with white-tipped turkey feathers, and tho front hair was hauled down in front, the ends mingling with the eyebrows. So it is from the New Zealand savages, and not from the North American Indian squaws, ladies, that we copy the fashion. Columbia (& O.) Register. Idlea Patches. The beauties of the court of Louise the Fifteenth thought they had made a notable discovery when they gammed pieces of black taffeta on their cheeks to heighten the brilliancy of their com plexions. The ladies in England had before adopted watches, in auaint shapes, as of a crescent or coach and horses. An epigram was written : Her patches are of every cat, For pimples and for soars; Here's all the wandering planets' signs, And some ot the fixed stars ! The coach and horse patch was an es pecial favorite. Anstey, in his satire, The Bath Guide." enumerates " velvet patches" as among a fine lady's neces sities; but about the beginning of the present century they seemed gradually to go out of fashion in England. Fashion irotea. Linen " bunting," finished with rows of iaggotting, is the new material for window curtains. Ladies' street jackets are not bordered with fur, but have collar, cuffs and pocket welts made of it A fur border is thought to detract from the style. Plush and brocaded velvet fans come in dark Oriental colors, or in delicate evening shades, and are handsomely mounted with pearl or carved ivory. Biack basques and colored skirts are the latest combination. Big white buttons on overcoats are among the horrors of the winter. One-halt of tle lower part of a sleeve is occasionally covered with a netting ol jet beads matching a collar and cuff of the same material. Gray silk stockings embroidered in colors for the house, light tints for re ceptions, and reel stockings or those matching the gown for the etreet, is the rule in Taris. Some of the New York girls must look like small hussars in their red jackets braided with gold. Collar, cuffs aud j acket fairly glitter with metal, and the encci is decidedly military. Aprons are now shirred across their entire breadth, the fullness between the drawing threads being pressed into knife plaitings and turned under at the foot to give a full, putted look. Cashmeres are prettiest trimmed with velvets; cloths, as already said, with velvet or piush, but the prettiest fancy fabrics for trimming fine woolens are those of wool brocaded in tiny silk pat terns. The style is now more fashion able than Pekins. Plaited waists are again fashionable and are often made for indoor wear of material different from the dress. A flannel blouse of this sort is both com fortable and economical, inasmuch as it affords an easy method of utilizing old skirts, the bodies to which are worn out. Ladies who are making whole gowns out of the brocades now sold at half price are informed by Harver's Bazar that the dresses should be very simple in style, with peasant waists, broad collars, wide belts with sashes, close sleeves, and a ; full round skirt with no trimmings at the ba-ik. Many of the cloak sleeves are rather short, the lower part being turned back to the depth of ten inches. This gives a bright and stylish effect, as the linings v rc usually of some gay-colored plush The lower edge of the mantle not infrequently i3 turned up with a band cf the same, and the plush is then intro duced in the hat trimmings. bpun-silk stockings in solid colors on antique gold and all the lighter shades cf sulphur, cameo, salmon, straw and lemon are among the latest importations in hosiery. There are also handsome combinations of pale rose and bright. coral, light blue and garnet, dark myrtle green and carnation, mauve and cream, and royal purple and very deli cate lilac. A Fast Mare "Stranger," said the stage-driver, " this was how I found out her speed : I was driving alongside the railroad track just as a big load of hotel furni ture star tad. The freight car wouldn't hold it all, but they managed to saueeze everything in except a long bar-mirror, which they tied to the side of the car. The mare saw her reflection in the class and thought it WAS ATI nf h pr Vi rran - " - WW. uvaot; spurting for the lead. You couldn't have held her back with a steam wind lass. She just laid back her earn smrl snorted along like a twentv-inch shall. The passengers all began to get excited. iney rushed out on the platforms ana oegan to make bets. The condnctnr stood up on the seat and began to sell pools. The engineer pulled the throttle- valve wide open and tore alone- t. ninety-five miles an hour. Soon the mare was abreast of the cowcatcher. At San Bruno we had half a mil th lead. Near the Six-Mile house the train was so much ahead of time that it fell through an open draw and ever lastingly got smashed up seventy-two killed and 199 wounded. It was pretty rough on the passengers, but then we distanced the train, bet yer life. About a month after I sold that mare to her present owner for $60,000." HUMOROUS. The candle-wick is up to snuff. A young man w ith his first goatee may be said to have a tuft time of it. Old Nickelpinch says he has often seen men buck the tiger, but lor his part he would rather buckwheat cakes. Borne Sentinel. The fellow who drew the blind man away from the edge of the ditch said he had furnished a fashion for the ladies a pull back. Waterloo Observer. A Glasgow natter, describing Mr. Gough's lectures to the fair sex of that city, exclaimed with emphasis : ' Three thousand ladies hanging on the lip of one man!" Why is it that men always cross a muddy place on their toes and worries on their heels P .Rome Sentinel. To get Jver to the other side. Stevhenvillt Herald. We never yet came across a genuine Egyptian mummy that appeared in any way to be in a hurry, yet they are in variably pressed for time. Tankers Statesman. A new book is out entitled, " Links in Rebecca s Life." Rebecca was probably a sausage maker's daughter. What an eventful and mysterious life she must have led 1 When a grocer advertises every va riety of "raisins" for sale, does he in clude derricks, pulleys, Jack screws, yeast, rope and tackle and that sort of thing fLamvton. " Never borrow trouble," said a hus band to his wife. "Oh. let her borrow it, if she can," exclaimed the next door neighbor; " she never returns anything you know." " What must I do," asked a mean and conceited man of a friend who knew him wftll, ' to get a picture of the one I love mostP" Sit for your own pic ture," was the reply. "Providence helps a man who helns himself," except when he "helps him self " to some one else's property. Then he has to depend mainly on his legs. Middletoum Transcrivt. " Will you take 'em on the half shell P" asked the agreeable oyster opener. "No," said the stranger, regardless of expense, "whole shell or nothing." New Orleans Picayune. Harvey discovered the circulation of the blood, but a woman was the first to discover how to make it boil by the circulation of her husband's cash.- Fhiladcyphia Sun. The Detroit Free Press states that since a patent medicine firm gave Armstrong Swift, of Rochester, $500 for a new comet, the professor has discov ered that the firm's advertisements are very conspicuous on the fences of the moon." " What train is this P " asked the be nevolent Mrs. Girdelee, of the gate keeper, as she wis returning from her first visit to the city. " Tue mail train, madam." "Well, when'U the female train start? i ain'f .coin' to ride on any of your male -ains." MirfdUtown Transcrivt - Dill of Silver. While a whaler during thr last fishing season was lying in a sma' bay at the mcuth of one of the river which empty ihto the ocean on the coast of Alaska :i great many of the natives came on board to trade or sea biscuit, of which they are very fond, and fina'ly induced the captain to go up the river and fish for salmon, with which the river was said to be alive. A boat was fitted out, manned by four men and the captain, and they j went up the river fifteen miles, wbere they went ashore at the base of a hill about five hundred feet high, up which the captain and chief of the natives climbed, while the crew and natives fished. The summit of the hill was nothing but an extinct crater, in which the captain noticed that the rocks re sembled iron after it had been melted . He undertook to knock off a piece, but could not do it, as it seemed to bend, not break, under repeated blows with the head of a boat ax . He then struck it with the blade of the ax, and chopped it off and took it in his hand. The sur face where the ax had cleaved its way through the rock he saw was as soft nearly as lead, although it did not shine. He thought then it was a metal of some kind, and kept it. Specimens of similar character were picked np by others of the crew and taken to this city. The piece which the captain chopped off the top of the hill with the ax has assayed $6,000 pei ton in silver, and the loose rocks picked up went as high as $275 silver, per ton. A com pany of Oaklanders. to whom the rock was submitted, have chartered the whaler and the crew to make a trip in the spring to the scene of this remark able discovery, and a working party will be left at the location to dig out a cargo. San Francisco Post. Of late, the United States have been marching forward in the direction of technical training in art. Not in high art merely, but in the creation of all the elegancies of liie, which were once ex clusively imported. We now manufac ture hardware for Sheffield, cotton, yarns and prints and dress fabrics for Manchester, ribbons for Lyons, and are in a fair way to supply steam engines for Glasgow and Leeds, as we already do for Japan and Australia. In the finer c'asa of goods, such as Waltham and Elgin watches, and Newport watch cases, our Paterson silk weaving, and our silver tableware such as was pur chased by the Prince of Wales at the Paris exposition all tell a wonderful tale of progress for this child-nation of the world. A CfirtAin nhilanthmnuf in Ids fU:. pixiMituivjnaii u iuu kJi.io u I DOTS a lariTA nntnd'tv nf Tin Knit's STn..V. 8yrap every winter and donates the same to vuo puw Busenng rrom ooagns. "In an antrrv infitanf. a man mav An what a lifetime of rftnantannA nannnt undo, says Henry Ward Beecher. True, Mr. Beecher he may break an egg. Boston Post. 'The Doctors Said would never Iaiva mv hAd TVi- naa months ago, and now I weigh 190 pounds. I cannot write naif 0r what I want to eay, but Warner s Safe Kirinv nA T.i. rin ai - all.' H. O. ROTTRi. Ttih M .T Take Care of Will. In the British house of lords Lord Brougham once mentioned two some what remarkable facts, showing the necessity of having a safe place for the deposit of wills. The first case was one in which one of his noble friends, as a devisee, gained $150,000 a year. How the first lost it, and the last gained it, was by a will being found in a rusty old box, in an old traveling carriage, and which, therefore, might have been very naturally lost by accident or de stroyed from ignorance. The second case was one also in which some of bis noble friends were concerned, and the sum in question was no less than $750, 000. This sum would have been en tirely lost to the purposes for which it was intended, if the inquiries relative to the existence of a will with respect to it had been instituted in the winter in stead of in the summer. The will was searched for everywhere, but could no where be found, until at last it was dis covered in a grate, and stuffed like a piece of waste paper through the bars; if it had been winter instead of summer in all probability when the fire had been lighted it would have been destroyed. The hair grows about seven inches a year. Albany Times. On a shaggy dog it may, but there are human heads where the hair don't grow an inch in seven years. Buffalo Express. An exuberant youth hails a supposed acquaintance with "Hello, Joe!" but finding his mistake, adds: "Oh I excuse me; I thought you were another man!" Laoonio stranger answers, "I am!" Chicago Journal. A Chicago Broker's Happy Investment. Lewis H. O'Conor, Esq., whose office is located at 93 Washington street, this city, lately related the following in the hearing of one of our reporters as an ovidence of special good fortune : I have been suffering," said Mr. O'Conor, for a number of weeks with a very severe pain in my baok, believed to be from the effects of a cold contracted while on the lakes. I had been prescribed lor oy several of our physicians and used various remedies. Three davs ago I abandoned them all and bought a bottle of St. Jacob's Oil, applied it at night before retiring and to day feel like a new man. I experienced almost in stant relief, and now feel no pain what ever. Mrs. Jane H. Long, who was known as "The Mother of Texas." beaanse nf her great age and State pride, died at Richmond, in that State, a few days ago. Clevf lard Penny Press. See the Conquering Hero, etc. Among the most wonderful articles nf the period is St. Jacob's Oil. The Hon. ljeonard owett, of Chicego, pronounces it the most thorough conaueror of rain that he has ever known. Patrick comes to the Morgue to claim a lost relative. "Has he any peculiari ty by which he can be recognized?" asks the guardian. "Yes, he is dumb." Great Merit. All tbe fairs give the firnt premiums and ppeoial awards of great merit to Hop Bitters as the purest at.d betit familv medicine, and we most heartily approve of the awards: for we know they deaervo it. They are now on exhi bition at the State fairs, and we advise all to test theai. See aunther column An Arizona xn:tn was " esiucht out " without fo jd, and livt d. on rattlesnakes for four days. He had plentv of match es, and used to fry his snakes with sage brush. He says the flesh is nalatable and tastp lik rnhMt. TIID GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR RHEUMATISM, , NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, BACKACHE, G-OTJT, SORENESS or TH8 CHEST, S0RE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS AND SPRAINS, FROSTED FEET alTD EARS, 'i!HhnumiuiUUlll 33TT:Fl3rfil ASD mmnmnnm General Bodily Pains. TOOTH, EAR AND HEADACHE, ASD ALL OTHER PAINS AND ACHES. No Preparation on erth equals St. Jacobs Oil as a safe, BUM, simple and cheap External Remedy. A trial entaila but the comparatively trifling outlay of SO Cents, and every one suffering with painoan have cheap and positive proof oi JU claims. WBICTIOi,s IN ELEVEX LANGUAGES. SOLD BT ALL DRUQQISTS AND SEALERS IN MEDICIK. A. VOGELER & CO. Baltimore. JUd.. TT. s. A. Jj)I IDmat STOMACH Sleep, Appetite and Strength Return when Hostetter'g Stomach Bitters is sys tematically used by a bilious dyspeptic sufferer. Moreover, since the brain sympathizi s closely with tha stomach and its associate organs, the liver and the bowels, as their derangement is rectified by the action of the Bitters, mental despondency pro duced by that derangement die-appears. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. gifts H. V. Redfield, the author of Homi cide North and South,1' says of stealing in the two sections : Generally in the rural districts ot the South a man can live from tender youth to hoary age without a bolt or lock on his doors, and never suffer the loss of a dollar from thieves, except, possibly, a few trifling depredations among his pigs and chick ens. Skillful burglary, such as house breaking and safe-blowing, is excep tionally rare in the Southern States. There is a painful rumor afloat that the ice crop has been touched by the frost and that high prices may conse quently be expected next summer. Truth and Soberness. Wbat is the best family medicine in tbe world to regulate the bowels, purify the blood, remove oostiveDees and biliousness, aid diges tion and stimulate the whole system? Truth and soberness compel us to answer Hop Bitters, being pure, perfect and harmless. Bee 'Truths' in another column. Maiden lady's quotation slightly al tered from an old aphorism : " Wbere singleness ' bli 'ti follrto be wives." Remember that Kendall's Spavin Cure will do all they claim for it. Try a bottle. Bead the advertisement. Malarial fevers oan be prevented, also other miasmatic diseases, by occasionally using Dr. Banford's Liver Invigorator, the oldest gen eral Family Medicine, which is recommended as a cure for all diseases caused by a disor dered liver. Eighty-page book sent free. Ad dress Dr. Sanford. 162 Broadway, New York. Always keep Kendall's Spavin Cure in your howe. If your Drueelat will not get it for you end to the proprietors, B. J. Kendall fc Co., Enoabnrgh Falls. Vermont. Pure Con Lives Oil made from selected livers, on the seashore, by Oar veil, Hazard & Co., New York. It is absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it pre fer it to all others. Physicians have deoided it superior to any of the other oils in market. Git EAT IIOKmB A1KD1CINB. DR. TOBIAS VENETIAN HORSE LINIMENT in pint bottles at 90 cento: 32 years established. It is the b est in the world for the cure of Colic, old Bores Sprains. Bruises. Sore Throats, etc. TOBIAS' CON DITION POWDERS are warranted to cure Distent- per, Fever Worms, Bots, give a fine coat, increase the appetite and cleanse the urinary organs. Certl- nea 10 oy uoi. v. ucuaniei. owner or some or the fastest running horses in the world,and 1,000 other s jf.-vc. Moid rtvrtrn wrists. DtHt 42 Mnrrav Sr. N. V Battle Creek, Michigan, MANUF ACTUS EB8 OF THE ONLY GENUINE THRESHERS. Traction and Plain Engines and Horse-Powers. Host Complete Thresher Factory Established In the World. i 1848 A A VFADjQ o continuous and miccstqfiil bwr(. I I ErlllO nt, without change or name, J JL management, or location, to "back vpn th broad warranty given on att our good. STEAM-POWER SEPARATORS and Complete Steam Outfits of matchless qualities. Finest Traction Engines and Plain Engines ever seen in the American market A multitude of special feature and improvements for 1881, together with superior qualities tn construe' tion and materials not dreamed of by other makers. Four sizes of Separators, from 6 to 12 horse Capacity, for steam or horse pmcer. Two styles of " Mounted ''Horse-Powers. 7 ftAft AflA Feet of Selected Lumber )UVV)VVU (.from three to six years air.dritd) constantly on hand, from which ia built the in comparable wood-work of our machinery. TRACTION ENGINES' Strongest, most durable.and efficient ever made, g, 10 13 Horse Power. ?aEm?r9.a,,d Threnhermen are Invited to Investigate this matchless Threshing Machinery. Circulars sent free. Address NICHOLS, SHEPARD 4 CO. Battle Creek, Mlohlgan. BABY CABINET OEGAN-NEW STYLE THREE AXD A QUARTER OCTAVES, in BLACK WALXUT CASE, decorated wim GOLD BRONZE. Length, 80 Inches ; height, S3 In. ; depth, 14 in. This novel style of the MASON & HAMLIN CAT. INET ORGANS (ready this month) has sufficient compass and capacity for the performance, with fui parts, of Hymn Tones, Anthems, Scags, and Popuiji Sacred and Secular Music generally. It retains to n wonderful extent, for an instrument so small, tin extraordinary excellence, both as to power and quality of tone, which has given the MASON & HAMLIN Cabinet Organs theL- great reputation and won for them the HIGHEST DISTINCTIONS at EYEI;"; ONE of the GREAT WORLD'S INDUSTRIAL EX HIBITIONS for THIRTEEN TEARS. Evert o.n: Will. BE FULLY WASBAXTED. CASH PRICE f?. on receipt of which It will be shipped as directed. I OK EECEIPT ASD TEIAL IT DOES SOT SATISFY Ti:. PURCHASER, IT MAY BE BETUBSED ASD THE HOSf. WILL BE BEFrSDED. EIGHTY STTLES of Organs are regularly rr.a by tho MASON & HAMLIN CO., from the BAr V CABINET ORGAN at K; to large CONCERT O! CANS at $500, and upwards. The great majority zr at $100 to $200 each. ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE. CIRCULARS and PRICE LISTS free. MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN CO. 154 Tremont St, BOSTON ; 46 East 14th Bt, KEV YORK; 149 Wabash Ave.. CHICAGO. NCYCLOPEDIA iTIQUETTEi BUSINESS This is the cheapest and only complete and reliable work on Etiquette and Business and Social Forms. It tells how to perform all the various duties of life, and how to appea- to the best advantage on all occasions. Agent Wanted. Sen l for circulars contalnirg a foil ilescript:on of tne worn and txtra terms to gen s. AddreE8 National Publishing Co.. Philadelphia, Pa. SAWING MADE EASY A boy 16 years old ean saw off a 3-foot log la two minnte, Uurnewportabla Monarch Lightning Sawine Uaohlne rivals ll others. SSO cash will be givea to two men who Can saw as art and easy in the o4 way, as on boy 16 years old can with this machine Warns ted. Circulars sent Free. Agents want4 MCHAica uaEnrara saw co., . sua Raaeaipa St Chicago, EL WW Pricej $22. VImIsosIhvmmsI j a) BABY ) I m POP'S EXTRACT Subdues imfammotion, Acute atuf Oinmio. Contra on imontaff.,- INVALUABLE FOR Burns and Colds and Coughs, Inflammations Nasal & Throat Accuniulations Dischargej Lungs,Eyes and Throat Chilblains. RHEUMATISM AND NEURALGIA. No remedy so rea Illy and effectually arrsl thi"m. tlon anl discharges from Calarrhal A flection;: a; POND'S EXTRACT. COUGHS, COLDS tn the ITKAD, NASAI. m l THRmit DISCHARGES. INFLAMMATIONS an.l At ryt La HONS In the LUNGS, F.YKS. EAliS anl THROAT RHEUMATISM. NEURALGIA. 4c. cannot 1? ,nr,,f) eas'ly by any other medicine. For s-.nsitlvo 8n,) lC. casos of CATARRH use our CATARRH Y. :y, In all ca-suse our NASAL SYRINGE jv. 6ent in lots of $2 worth, on reroiptof jrir. f,tertl, POND'S EXTRACT Is p-.;t up only in bi.ttlo v'ih pi, tUr, Trade Mark on outside wrapper and word-. ToKD-; EXTRACT " blown in glass. iff" Our New Pinnphlet with H;-tnrv r.f r-vt Prop,.,, tions.scnt free. L A DIES- Read pajrs 13, IP, 21 and : POXD'S EXTRACT CO.MPAXV. 14 AVes Uth Street, Ynrfc, EIGHT REASONS WHY E NETER SELL POND'S EXTHUT IN P.l'J.K, BUT ADHERE TO THE RULE F ?FI1 INi ONLY IN OUR OWN BOTTLES. IV CLOSF.D IN HUFF WRAPPER. ON Wllirn IS PRINTED OUR LANDSCAPE TK DE-MARK. 1 It 'lis tXf tui'li:if r ri.t,m:n; l. a.vriEui title. 2. It .rtei-ts lie ron umrr in buying ?oni't Extract not weakened with water, whlih we founi vit done a few e.ti ayo, wh"n we were induced j fiirn-fh dealers with th" genuine hi tide in bulk. .l.--tt p tftf s the. coiiAtiuier from UDscrupi' lou pirtie ri lling cnrle.O eip deco ti-r.f to him a' Pond's Extract, for any j-erson can tc'I th" j:eMi:ni fn'tn the bottle .D i wnj'per. i- ntccf f he comumer, for it is not sa.' to use any therunkle uccoMiip to t;P fiireitic; spuen in our link, which sunound? ejh buttle of Ponl't EMra.t. .". If protect the coifiimer, fo- it is nM j:reeau!' to be deceived tud porl.aps indued by u-;p; other art!' b s nn r the 'mentions for Pond's Lxtrn t. O Soother n fie'e. iiijuuf.ictire or iiiut.iti.in b;;s tli" efi".t ilani- d for and alw-iy? prcdn.! x Pon l's Extract. 7 It It piejmlieinl to the reputation of I'mi'. Ext act tn li t" je ple uso a ccimtirlfit b in-vinj it tn be th- goMitue, f -.r they will nun.ln i" ) '! 1 n t injured by it. ellW-i. 8. Jii't ice to one of the be-t inf1l ii In the wood, and the hundreds of thou.-aml? ut; it, denial, Ib eve-y precaution apaii.M huvin- wak a .: injurious prcparatiors p.ilined oir as the genuine Tb uslt way this can be accomplished U to sell the '-em if rut up in .i tinilorni manner in oi r owx bottle. c m pK-te uith bull wrappers, trade marks. tc ltKHKMciOn t he genuine Pond's E. fiact is chfap. because it is strotiv', uniform am reliable, nur bonk of directions expla'ns when it can le diluted with wjter and when V be used, full 8irengti. HKli;.Tim;i; Th.d all other preparations, if colo' Jess., are mere de:ttionst boilings, or produoH simply obtain the odor and without the scit-nt:f),- oi p-aeticai knowledpeof the matter which many vts nf labor has given us. ItEnEtlKEII.ORK'VUW SOW Tha al" preparations purporting fo be superior to Pond Ex tract because they huve nAor, are colored simp y bei-an they have crude, una to unprofessional people usinc them, perhaps d!in?erous mutter in them, and Au never b- u-e f except under the advice and pre en,-4 n.f a physicim. KK1I i HBEIt AXI) MXOW-Thu our vv expensive nwhinerj Is the re?u t of thirty a:. f j peritnee ' the m.-stot which wa entirely jiivm t,- th1 work), and constant attentio-i tn the pro.-in. t;on of a 1 forms of ll.itn.une 's. and fi.it therefore e VionM know what we assert, that Pond's E.itr . ti.-t" ? -'. purest, and contains m-re virtues ot thp shrub tbfin any other production yet made. Our New History and Use? of Pond's JCt-a-t ?ni other preparations sent free. Lt HIES Kead pages 13. IP, 21 and 26 in our boot, which isfoun'i around each bottle, and will be snt free on application. POND'S EXTRACT COMPANY, J. IVect ltfh Street, EW YOlfcK. Hair lye is the SAFES! aii'i I'.ESl ; it act instants neousl v.pioduclng the mow natural t'aade or P. nek or Brown i does JNoT STAlK the Sk'IK an.l la RlRTAnnRfl'S 'W''1 " ' etauiiaro I nUUlVU Q ,,.,.;, aiin an(i a faTorlH i on erery well appointed to let for Lady or Geult maB. s..!d by Dm .jri.-t and ap p,id bv Hair Dn -s a D p. Ml Wil l,.niS! ,N.V O. N. CRITTENTOX, Agt CELLULOID SYE-CLA88E8 representing the choicest selected Tortoise Shell and Amber. The lightest, handsomest and strongest known. Sold bv Optician and Jeweler. Made by SPENCER OPriCAL M'F G CO.. 13 Maiden Ln. N. Y. This remarkable mei: cine will cure Slavics, Splint, Curb, Callous, ic . or ttiiy enlargement. an! will remove the bunch without blistering or cau inj? a sore. No remedy eer discovered equaia it f or certainty o t action in stop ping the lameness and rc- movinc the hunch. Price !100. Send for illti s trated circular (riving positive proof, and your nearest agent n address, .nenaail'a spav in t'nr la anlal liv Itnitra-iata. or ent by Dr. B. J. Kendall & Co.. Enoshurz Falla. Vermont. PL.AY-2 PLAVk! PI.AVm! Pl.AVs! For Reading Claim, for Amateur Th ent rirals. Temperance Playg, Drawing-Room Plays, Fairy Plays, Ethiopian Plays. Guide Books, Speakers.Pan tomirues, Tableaux Llghta, Magnesium LIrMr. Col or'dFIre,Burnt Ojrk.Tbeatrical Face Preparations, Jarleys Wax Works, Wigs Beards & MotiRtat heH at reduced prices. Costumes, Scenery, Charade. New catalogues SMit free, with full description & pricef. Samuel Fbfkch tt 80s. 38 E. 14th St.. New York. Literary Revolution Q PPNTS each formerly $l to f. 25 each: L. wall w Macanlay's Life of Frederick the Great. II. Carlyle's Life of Robert Burns. III. La martme's Life of Mary Queen of Scots. IV. Tho Hughes' Manll- C pCUTQ each, formerly $' M nesa of Christ. wtH'w each: I. Arr.H' Light of Asia. II. Goldsmith's Vicarof Wak-fle'.d. III. Baron Munchausen's Travels and 8urpn:ufl Adventures. For HlXrta.: Bunyan'sPilgrim'H Pro gress. Ill'st catalogue sent free. AMEK. BOOK EX.. John B. A Irion. Manager. Trihnno Bld'g. N. T AUKNTw WANTED For the HaudHoiuS' and CHEAPEST BIBLES S.uMi"ESse,,t' Extrs asrra' CASH PREMIUMS. 1UC1I j. n is ... iiipncyC ombf n 1 pr Mats, mu ersnT dvaaeed. WAGES promptly pal. SLOAN SALESMEN! WANTED A Month and Expense; M!l:nc to HEALERS , !:-..;.: 'iiwara answer. 8. fOsTiR CO., tui-.nnv.. v I A 111 P5 Don't ieaii this, but enclose a 3-o-nt a.niVIE.0 ttamp for "Important Information to R.D WM. O. HATCH, Bex 2', Wt's MjHh, Ma v. VnilMP llpU Lea in Ue'tgrapii)! Earrj40 to f lUUflU ULil month. Gradnates guaranteed ray ing offices. Adrs. Valwntine Bros., .JanesviJle.Wi; LX.EN'Pl llrain Fooii-cureHNrvouu Debility & Weakness of Genfve Organs.)? I -all drugtfi' Send for Clrl'r to Allen's Phar'cy, 3 1 3 First av.NY " k ; r 5 : Z 8777 A YEAR ana excuses to fcgoutH Outfit free. Addrew P. O. VICK EBY. Anmsia. Maine. GET IMCHSHilius uurRuOoerS aui b M ;!! Samples Free. Cook Hiall. C'wveland. O. PICfl'Q PIIRC for Consumption is aiso rlOU O VlinC best cough medicine. tft" i it m mmm
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 10, 1881, edition 1
4
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