Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / April 28, 1881, edition 1 / Page 4
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A Wife's Wonder. If I had never met thee, my beloved, As in this world, whore so much waste is is seen. Or scorning waste, might easily have been, I wouilor what my nature would have proved ! I am so much thy work: thy thoughts rule mine, Give them direction, lift from what is low; What grasp or play of mind I have I owe To the strong happiness of being thine. I catch thy tastes, enjoy what pleaM's thee, Learn what is beautiful from thy delight, Wait ou thy choosing to decide aright : 'Tis but thy shadow any praise in me ! To love, to pity, to forgive with ease, In othera' hopes and fears to claim a part Are but the o'erflow of a blissful heart ; And having thee, how should I fail in these ? If thou shouldst leave me: in that utter woe I wonder what of life could still be mine ! Would niiud bo ijuencli'd and heart grow cold with thine ? O God ! forbid that ever I should know ! FARM, GARDEN, AND HOUSEHOLD. Domestic Hints In making a crust of any kind, Jo not melt the lard in flour. Melting will in jure the crust. Water used in niixiug bread must be tepid. If it is too hot, the loaf will be full of great holes. To BorL Potatoes Successfully. When the skin breaks, pour off the water and let them finish cooking in their own steam. Steel knives may be saved from lust ing by being rubbed with mutton tallow, wrapped in paper, and put into a baize lined chest. To Remove Gbease Staiss from Wood. Spread some starch powder over the grease spots, and then go over it with a hot flat-iron till you have drawn the grease ; then scrape with a glass or a proper scraper, and repeat the starch powder and hot iron. Ammonia liquor mar be used as a finish, if the starch does not take all the grease out. Harmless Face Powders Rice pow der, though expensive, is warranted per fectly harmless. Refined chalk is the safest thing to use, and costs far less than if put up under some other name and sold in boxes. Casearilla powder is much used by Cuban ladies, and is con sidered harmless. Wash the face with thick suds from glycerine soap, and, when dry, dust on the powder with a puff, or piece of chamois skin. Hair Ixvigor ator. A wash to stimu late the growth of hair in case of bald ness is made from equal parts of the tincture of sulphate of quinine five grains in an ounce of alcohol. For those who will use hair oil, pure sperm oil of the very finest quality is the best. This must be procured in proper fresh ness and cannot fail being a powerful hair invigorator. London Purple. A new insecticide has been introduced which is likely, from its cheapfulness, to supersede the Paris green for potatoes and other plants. It is highly recom mended by Prof. C. V. Riley of the United States Entomological Commis sion, Dr. P. Collier, of the Department of Agriculture, at Washington, D. C, Prof. C. E. Bessy, of the Iowa Agricul tural College, A. R. Whitney, of Frank lin Grove, 111., and other prominent scientists and orchardists who have tested its value. Its destructive power is very great, while at the same time, it is verv cheap. Among its advantages are its extreme fineness, adhesiveness, its color and its cheapness. In color it is, as its name implies purple, its presence be ing readily tVetected wherever used, thus being ft safeguard against accidents. The experience with it last year was eminently satisfactory. It proved effect- j ual on potato vines in destroying the j potato beetle. For this purpose it is j mixed with water into a smooth paste, ! water then being added in the propor-1 tion of three gallons to each ounce, or j forty-eight gallons to one pound. It is ap- j plied to the plants in fine spray by means ! of a watering-pot. Or it may be used dry in the proportion of one pound of purple j to six pounds of plaster, the two ma-! terials being thoroughly mixed by pass- j ing them through a fine sieve. When; used on trees to destroy the canker worm, it is applied with water as for the j potato vine, except that a force pump is j employed if the worm has got into the j tree. A band of tow, well saturated with j London purple, and bound around the j trunk of the tree before the female in-1 sect (which cannot fly) has ascended, has i been recommended, as the insect would j be killed by crawling over a portion of j the poisoned tow. How Hoxh 3Iay Become IiiIVcMmI, iukI the Remedies to be Applied. The report on trichina compiled by the late Passed Assistant Surgeon Gla zier, of the Marine Hospital Service, for warded to the Senate by ex-Secretary Sherman in answer to a Senate resolu tion of December V.Mh, 1KK0, is now passing through the press at the Gov ernment Printing office, and will soon be ready for distribution. The work was commenced in July. lS7i, and nearly a year was consumed in the collection of materials. The report deals with every aspect of the subject, states that nearly all animals may be infected by the dis ease, and denies that hogs are infected through eating kitchen slops. It is further shown that hogs kept in stalls in which trichinosed hogs have been kept will become infected, and that the only means of prevention of this disease among swine are, first, that the stalls or pens in which the animals are kept be kept scrupulously clean; second, the swine must have good, clean food, and not allowed access to diseased meat of any kind. The not uncommon practice of throwing dead joultry, rats or cats to swine is shown to be a source of danger, and should be prohibited by statute; and third, as soon as any animal is sus pected of disease it should be separated from thtr herd, Agricultural Items. For Worms rx Hogs. Give a tea spoonful of copperas to each six months or over ; give half the dose to younger animals. Give by mixing with mash made of chopped grain. Put the hen in a warm place," say about 70 degrees, with plenty of sun shine ; feed her with corn and food con taining a good supply of phosphate of lime, and you have the hen in a place where she can't help laying. Ground for early peas is best manur ed in the fall. If that has not been done, plow in the manure early, letting the ground warm a day or two, then harrow and let it have a day or two more of sun in which to warm up. By this practice you will get peas earlier than if you put the seed into the cold ground as soon as plowed. A French paper relates the following experiment : A cow was milked three times a day for eleven days, and yielded 170 quarts of milk. With two milkings daily she gave only 14G quarts in the same number of days. Analyses, more over, showed that the milk in the first case was richer in butter globules by niore than ov-seventh than in the second case. In the Fish Market. The fish markets in Norway are worth seeing. We went to one in Christiana. The fish men and women were all seat ed in their boats alongside the stone pavements, shut in from outer water by great locks. Servants and housewives, with great tin baskets hanging on their arms, were bargaining foi the day's din ner. Codfish, mackerel, eels and lob sters were in abundance. Anchovies or a small fish so-called might almost be counted by the million. The fish women, with their loud voices, were contending with their customers as they have from time immemorial, and will to the end about price. Now, one made believe to go away, when a des perate shriek would summon her back again, and fish and money would ex change hands, buyer and seller each looking thoroughly victimized. The sun was pouring his hot rays upon the sparkling water, in which boats were bobbing up and down. At the stern of each boat a great bough was raised, as large as half a tree, and under the shade cast by the leaves sat the fishwoman. The position was strikingly picturesque. The scene was lively and enlivening ; the water was full of animation ; a babel of voices went on around,chatteringand bar gaining interspersed .with much laugh ter. Most of the fish was out of sight, swimming in the holds of the small boats, whence they were fished out with nets as they were required. These ear ly mornings in the fish market are one of the distinctive sights in Norway ; whei e people and customs join hands for the benefit ot the traveler. A Hint for Tired Housekeepers. I believe in systematic housekeeping when not carried to excess. It is very foolish to do work when you are not able, because it is the regular day for it. When a person is not well, it is best to do as you can, not as you would like. I am never very well, but still manage to get through with all my work. When I do not feel able to do all my washing in one day, let me tell you how I manage. I commence in the afternoon. (I know plenty of people will laugh, but never mind.) I clean all up in the morning, as carefully as though I were going to sewing instead of washing. Then, after dinner is all cleared away, 1 wash all the white clothes and have them ready to hang up in the morning. Then' I have the night to rest in. Let some poor tired woman try it, and see if it is not better than doing all in one day, and be then sick two or three days after ward. Chocolate. For those who wish to keep the im agination fresh and vigorous, chocolate is the beverage of beverages. However copiously you have lunched, a cup of chocolate immediately afterward will produce digestion three hours after, and prepare the way for a good dinner. It is recommended to every one who de votes to brain-work the hours he should pass in bed ; to every wit who finds he has become suddenly dull ; to all who find the air damp, the time long, and the atmosphere insupportable ; and, above all, to those who, tormented with a fied idea, have lost their freedom of thought, To make chocolate (it must never be cut with a knife) an ounce and a half is requisite for a cup. Dissolve it gradually in hot water, stirring it the while with a wooden spoon ; let it boil for a quarter of an hour, and serve it hot with rnilk or without, according to taste. The ('of ton Fair al Atlanta. The chances seem to be that the great cotton fair at Atlanta, Ga.. for which preparations have been made so long, will be successful in a marked de gree. The managers are sanguine, and after consultation with people accustom ed to conduct such displays, have been encouraged to enlarge the scope of the exhibition, so as to include the exhibi tion of other textile materials besides cotton. The exposition, as now pro posed, will be one of the raw produc tions of cotton, wool, flax and hemp, and the object will be to display, in the broadest way, the resources of the South as a producing section. The exposition will open about October 1, and is ex pected to continue three months. Princess Louise was 83 years old last week. This is the penalty of being a historical personage. None of her schoolmates arq over 20, FOR THE FAIR SEX. Fashion Notes. Fancy costumes have parasols and fans to match. There are many new materials in cash mere colorings. Spotted materials will be worn by leaders of fashion. Jersey suits are very popular for chil dren in England. Hoods will be revived and worn to ex cess on all kinds of wraps. Spanish lace will be the fashionable net for summer polonaises. Some touches of color brighten every black toilet that is not mourning. Worth is exercising his genius just now in creating Spanish costumes. Tournures are not yet .imported, but there is a tendency to revive them. Rich and substantial fabrics are nec essary when plain suits are preferred. Only one dressmaker a private one has as yet imported Jersey costumes. It is again fashionable to make chem ises with V-shaped gussets in the neck. A young girl always looks well in a simple toilet with a small tunic formed ' bv a scarf. New black Chantilly lace mitts are very fine, have very long tops, and are sold at very high prices. Surah satin and religieuse veiling makes a very lovely combination for summer evening dresses. Pompadour foulards are figured in designs that have all the artistic . merit of hand-painted figures. The pilgrimage suits is the latest nov elty costume, rivalling the Jersey in popular favor abroad. The Euglish gypsy is the first hat that young ladies will wear as bonnets in early summer. Large hats and bonnets, though not general, are worn more and more as the season advances. New chemises fasten by buttons hid den in the pleats of the embroidery and lace on the shoulders. All light, semi-diaphanous materials I require much drajnng and flounces and I pleatings to look well, i Coat sleeves of dresses are made very ! high on the shoulders, and stand up ward like men's coat sleeves. Jersey webbing is on the way from London to be made into seaside Jersey suits for New York women. The imported English gypsy hats have a netted cord covering the front and back of the turned up brim. Sunbeam cloth is an English novelty for shirts. It has a mixture of all colors of the rainbow in stripes. What 'Wife" Menus. Says Ruskin : "What do you think the beautiful word 'wife' comes from ? It is the great word in which the Eng lish and Latin languages conquered the French and Greek. I hope the French j will some day get a word for it instead of femme. But what do you think it comes from ? The great value of the Saxon words is that they mean seme thing. Wife means 'weaver!' You must either be house-wives or house moths, remember that. In the deep sense, you must either weave men's for tunes and embroider them, or feed upon and bring them to decay. Wherever a true wife comes, home is always around ! her. The stars may be over her head, the glow-worm in the night's cold grass may be the fire at her feet, but home is where she is, and for a noble woman it stretches far around her, better than houses ceiled with cedar or painted with vermillion shedding its quiet light for those who else are homeless. This, I believe, is the woman's true place and power." A Brave Woman. An interesting story is told of a young wife who went West with her husband, and there encountered all sorts of "hard luck." Crops failed, cattle died, the young farmer sickened. During all this time the young wife never grew dis couraged, but did all in her power to keep her husband from getting "the blues." But one morning the boy, who did the chores, came in and said he could not find the old cow on the farm. So our heroine set out with the boy in search of the lost animal, and finally found her where she had fallen, over between two large logs dead. The young woman was at last discouraged, and for a time would not go back with the bad news to her husband, but finally overcame her own feelings, went mer rily to the house and, upon entering, said : "Well, Rollin, our luck has changed." ' 'How is that ?" he anxiously inquired. "Why," said she, ."the old cow is dead ; you can skin her, sell the hide, and we will have some money." And it proved to be true, for their luck did change from that day. They sold ! out their interest in the farm and bought another one, began over, and to-day are well-to-do people. Does not this teach j a lesson to repining wives, and show what power there is in a hopeful spirit ? A mother, whose daughter had made her debut at a large ball the night be fore, meeting a gentleman who, although a little aged, was considered one of the arbiters of a debutante's fate, said, "What did you think of my daughter at the ball last night?" "Excuse me, madam," he replied; "but I am not a good judge of painting." "Yes," replied the lady, "but you never saw an angel that was not painted." -gBaeg;. . Very many well-meaning pooplo will pre scribe for your Cough and Cold, and you will lose time in taking their medicine ; ergo, take Dr. Bull's Cough Kyrup and be relieved at I onoe. Fnce 25 cent, WILD BILL OF MISSISSIPPI. Deserted Child Who Lived Alone Swamps Till Manhood. in Reading of the discovery recently of a wild man in the Antelope range of mountains in this State, recalls to mem ory the capture of a wild white human being " in the swamps bordering the great river of the West below the City of Natchez in the State of Mississippi, in the year 1824, who had grown from childhood up to man's estate without seeing a single person of his own species until he was found by his captors. Be lieving that the incidents of the story will prove of interest to the readers of the Examiner, they are herewith given. In Wilkinson countv, in the State above named, just above the old town of Fort Adams, there is a strip of country known as Old River, which was seldom visited by the pioneer settlers of that region, and then only for the purposes of fishing and hunting, as both game and fish were there to be found in abundance. In that year a party of hunters to their astonish ment discovered the naked footprints of a human being leading through the mud into the water of the old bed of this river. Their curiosity was the more strangely excited from the fact that no one resided in the immediate vicinity of that place, and the settled portions were but sparsely populated. To discover who it was that made the footprint they hunted several days in succession with their dogs, and finally brought to bay in a drove of wild hogs a tall, sinewy human being in a state of perfect nudi ty. He brandished in his hand a stout stick, with which he defended himself against the dogs, the hogs rallying around him, seemingly for his protec tion. He gave utterance to no intelli gible sounds, only yells of rage and screeches. They bound and carried him to the town of Woodville, the seat of justice of the county, some twenty miles distant. He was in every res5ect a ver itable human being, with a good coating of hair over his body, which, it is to be inferred, nature furnishes all her crea tures, otherwise unprotected, to shield them from the elements. He had lost the power of speech, which indicated that he had been left to himself when very young. By kind treatment he soon became domesticated, his faculty of speech was restored, and he gave this account of himself : WThen quite a boy. supposed some six or seven years, his ! father (presumably) came down the Mississippi River from some of the Western States and Territories in a flat boat with his mother, his elder sister and himself, and landed at the mouth of Old River, near where the town of Fort Adams now stands, where they re mained for several days. One day the father killed his mother and sister with an axe. Instigated by fear the boy ran off and concealed himself in a hollow log. His father hunted him, calling him "Billy," but he remained silent in j his place of concealment. Being unable ' to find the boy, he loosened the flatboat j from its fastenings, and floated down the I river, as was supposed, to New Orleans. I Left alone at so tender an age, in a wild, j uninhabited section, the law of necessity i became to him the law of existence. I The climate being mild, made it favora- ble to him. He selected a magnolia, or j bay tree, hollow at the base, which, in ! that section, grew to great size, and made himself a bed of leaves and moss, J where he stayed at night and took shel- i ter when it rained. For food, he sub- j sisted on frogs, tadpoles, such fish as he ' could catch, and the wild fruit that grew there in summer. Thus he managed to live until the time of his capture. The habits of this unfortunate being, and the changes which took place in him from the time his intellect began to de velop by coming in contact with civili zation, is interesting to contemplate. At first the emotions of shame he knew nothing of, and it was difficult to make him wear clothing when the weather was warm. Whenever hunger pinched him, and he could obtain nothing else to sat isfy his appetite, he would return to his original diet of frogs, raw fish, etc. An amusing instance of this kind occurred on one occasion. It was the fortune of the writer of this to be in the family who had "WTild Bill" in charge. On one Saturday he, with Bill, each on a horse, j with a bag of com, were sent to mill ! some miles in the country. Being de tained by the miller until evening, Bill j became hungry. Returning home, he ' heard a frog croaking in a lagoon by the j wayside. Instantly he sprang from his j horse and cautiously waded into the j water, stooping until it reached his chin, . so as not to alarm the frog. Guided by ! its croaking on the opposite bank, he moved slowly until he came within J reach of it, and darting forth his hand, ; he seized the frog, and taking it by the j legs, tore them asunder and ate it with ; a relish. For a long time he was irre- j sponsible, and required to be in charge j of some one to keep him out of mischief and trouble. On one notable occasion ; Mrs. Hammett, his guardian, wished to ' pay a visit to some of her lady friends in the town of Woodville, and her son, who was generally charged with the task of looking after Bill, being absent, she locked him up inside the house. Her return being delayed until evening, Bill found the atmosphere of the room oppressive, and denuded himself of his clothing. Being hungry, he concluded to do his own cooking, and endeavoring j to do what he had seen others do in this line, he put into a skillet a little of every kind of food he could find in the house hog's lard and ground coffee mixed in and putting it on the fire, stirred it until he thought it was suffi ciently cooked. "When Mrs. Hammett returned, accompanied by some of her lady neighbors, and unlocked the door, she found Bill seated ou the floor near the hearth with the skillet before him, lifting its contents with both hands to his mouth ; and expecting chastisement, he acked into a comer, licking his lips with his tongue. He was exceedingly fond of sweet things, and particularly of strong drinks if they were sweetened. For a drink of sweetened whiskey he would attempt anything. At one time he was promised a glass of whiskey and sugar if he would whip General Joor, who, in full feather, was mustering the county militia, according to the old manner of doing such things annually. To obtain the promised glass, Bill steal thily came up behind him, took him by the hair of the head and bore him into the dust on the street. Finding him self thus assailed, General Joor drew his sword and pierced Bill througli the thigh. From this wound he never fairly recovered. He was very agile and fast of foot. He could climb a tree with surprising quickness, swim and manage a horse with dexterity. It was with him as with a child. From the time of his capture ho knew not right from wrong actions until he was taught, and until his intellect expanded and he be gan to comprehend his true position in society he sorrowed over the reflection. He sickened and died in New Orleans in the year 1829, while in charge of a gen-: tleman who undertook to exhibit him for money. San Francisco Eeaminer. HUMOROUS. Thwarted Ambition. 4 Oh, dear !" exclaimed Penniman, "I wish I could excel in something! I do believe if I should kill a man it wouln't be anything but murder in the second degree !" "Miss, will you take my sinister arm ? "Yes, sir, and you, too." "Ican't spare but the arm, miss," replied the bachelor. "Then," replied she, "I shan't take it as my motto is, yo the irhol hoy or nothing." An aged negro was recently showing the scars of the wounds inflicted by the lash when he was a slave. "What a picture!" exclaimed a sympathizing looker on. " Yes," responded the color ed brother, "dat's de work ob de old masters." Childhood's Innocence. Somebody gave little Augustus two toys. "I will give this one to my dear little sister," he said, showing the largest. "Because it is the prettiest?" said the delighted mamma. "No," he replied without hesitation, "because it is broken." Rose Mc Whortleberry heard her mas ter remark at the dinner-table that Kismet meant "fate," and that is the reason she so astonished her mistress by remarking next day to Belinda, the chambermaid: "Oh, Belinda,' I can't hardly walk wid the chilblains all over me two Kismets." Drunken Stuff. How lmiuy children and women an- slowly and surely dying,, or rather being killed, oy ex cessive d ctoring or the daily nse of some drug or drunken stuff called medicine, that no one knows what it is made of, who can easily be cured ami saved by Hop Bitters, made of Hops, Jiuehu, Mandrake, Dandelion, Ac, which is so pure, simple and harmless that the most frail woman, weakest invalid or smallest child can trust in them ? Will you be saved by them ? Se- other column. At a eamp-meetin a venerable sister began the hymn, "My soul be on thy guard, Ten thousand foes arise." She began too high. "Ten thousand," she screeched, and stopped. "Start her at five thousand !" cried a converted stock broker present. Havk Vor Kkad It? H. 11. Stevens Book on Knsilagc, the preserving of green forage crops in silos, giving his own experience and the practical expel ience of 23 practical far mers ; 120 pages, elegantly bound in cloth ; price, 50 cents : sent bv mail, 60 cents. Ad dress II . II. STEVENS, 'Boston. Mass. He fenced that field so carefullv. Jav Gould used to work on a farm. And ; they do say he could fence more land into a forty-acre piece than any ten other men could crowd into a fifty. Vour 31ind will (.row Strong And great, not by what you reject, but by what you cordially accept and believe. Your health will improve just in proportion as yea obey Nature's laws. If yonrmiud is diseased refresh it with suitable relaxation. If the two great or gans of your body, the kidney and liver, are out of order "restore them by using Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cxire. The mind can be kept clear by care and the kidneys and liver by the great remedy above mentioned. A young man in a Louisville ball-room had his eye put out by his partner while dancing the racquet. We were afraid it would come to that yet. Fon Dyspepsia, Indigestion, depression of spirits and general debility in their various forms, also as a preventive against fever and ague and other intermittant fevers, the Ferro Piiosphorateu Elixir of Calisava Bark, made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic; and for pa tients recovering from fever or other sickness it has no equal. M One Cent will bay a PoHtnl Card On which to send your address and receive free 100-page Book, which treats of all diseases of the Liver, Headache, Jaundice, Constipation, Malaria, Dyspepsia, etc., and how to purify the Blood. Address Db. Sanford, 162 Broadway, New York. Why will men allow themselves to suffer and their noble horse, when Kendall's Spavin Cure applied properly will remove all suffering from man and beast. See advertisement. Bai-dheaded men are informed that there is but one avenue of escape from their affliction, and that is Carboline, a deodorized extract of petroleum, the great hair renewcr, being re cently improved, is more eflicacions than ever. Kendall's Spavin Cure always cures if prop erly used. Kead advertisement The Jreatest Discovery of the Age. For over thirtv-fonr years DR. TOBIAS'S VENETIAN LINIMENT lias been warranted to cure Croup, Colic, HpasniR, Diarrhea and Dysenterv, taken internally, and Sore Throat, Pain in the Limbs, Chronic liheumatisni, Old Sores. Pimiles. Blotches and Swellings, exter nally, and not a bottle has been returned, many families stating they would not be without it even it it was $1U a bottle. Sold by druggists at 545 and 50 cents. Depot, 4i4 Murray Street. New York. Twelve Ovid, X. Y., girls have emi grated to Colorado in the avowed search of husbands. : 1 j II iua aa nhw lau vhh W a- m-m m Z0! I ULV L2ALL!3eJI ' II ... rn KV w ! T Srrr- i II Family Remedvl I I II V'fr ill . if . v w if . i i x i ii rz. r i fc v i j zt U 1.- wl I I 11 I I II Lr 1 w St ! I rt I I I k 1 1 0Z ! Ill MM MM I II 1W VI n I W I i n r -vi I I ll i I if ii aii i . I I i r v i ii i i ii i i ii i i 1 1 i i i f 1 1 1 1 i j ii . xr ill u n w ;i j fiwis w it f ii r- l ll l1 a s i " I i j ;a. f M M M S How to Get Sick. Expose yourself day and night, eat too much without exercise, work too hard without .rest, doctor all the time, take all the vile nostrums advertised, and then you will want to know How to Get Well. Which is answered in three words, Take Hop Bitters. See other column. to a colored congregation in Washing - ton on Sundays, and during the rest of the week m employed as doortender for a gambling house. Irosolage or SILOS. Giving My Practical Experi ence. Also the Practical Experience of Twenty-fivs Practical Farmers With Ensilage and Silos. (GIVING their experience of feeding stock of aU J kinds with Ensilage, and the practical results, conclusively showing the undoubted success of this process the Ensilage of Green Forage Crops. By this process the fanner can realize five dollars in place of one dollar, as practiced by the old system of farming. Also wonderful experiments of feeding poultry at one-half the usual cost, on Ensilage. This book contains 120 pages, elegantly bound in cloth. Every One is Pleased With It iis leiiiK the most thorough and practical work yet published on this subject, and all are surprised at the very low price. For sale at all bookstores, all general stores and all news depots in every city and town IN THE UNITED STATES. If the work cannot be obtained of them, send for it by mail. Price of Book, 50 Cents. Tiy Mail, GO Cents. Send Postofhce Order if convenient. Address II. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. Shootinar Chills Down the Back, Dull iaiu in the limbs, nausea, biliousness, are s mptoms ot approaching lever and ague. Use with out delay Hostettcr's Stomach Bitters, which substi tutes ior the chilly sensation a genial warmth, regu lates the stomach, and inn 'arts tone to the liver. The bowels, the stomach and the biliarv gland being restored to a healthy condition, the disease is con quered at the outset. For sale by all druggists and dealers enTwrallv-. If you are Interested In the inquiry Which is tho best Liniment for Man and Beast? this is the answer, at tested by two generations : the MEXICAN MUSTANG LINI MENT. The reason is sim ple. It penetrates every sore, wound, or lameness, to the very bone, and drives ont all Inflammatory and morbid mat ter. It ' 6 goes to the root " of the trouble, and never fails to core in doable quick time, To Farmers fc Threshermen If jou want to buy Thresher, Clorer IluUer, Horse roicerx or Engines (either Portable or Trac tion, to use for threshing, sawing or for general purposes), buv ihe "Starved Rooster goods. "The Hrxt is the Cheapest." For. Price List and Illustrated Pamphlets (sent free) write to The Anltman COMimuiCSmtl tap Ohio iayior company. Mansneld, 11 jr live Uttl SAFMf acd BEST; it aou tiutaMa Dtoni!y,prodndn fta im nitural hl of Blct m Browot doM MOT AH thft StlN. ca u& Kpplad. It ii a ciantiait pre;. atlon acd aiavarifc n tvery well appointed ial Ut for Lady or inleuu s.,:u by Dies. fVU and a PjVo by Hnr Drcmri I pot. iv Vt! !.raSt..N.I O. K. ORTTTHNTOV. r Thia remcncaVto mnw cine will cure Spavins, Splint, Curb, Callous, Ac or any enlargement, and will remove the bunch without blistering or caus. irjr a ore. Ho remedy ev r discovered equal ltfoi certainty of action in stop, pins the lnmeneos and re- : ImOYmff thelillll.-h- l'r'u-ottl.nil Sn.il frr ill,..- -titrated circular eivinsnositive nronf. and vou 1 &5lncart!itK''t,saddrfsa. KendalliNpar iCVirt Cure ia ol:l by Jirucalata, o vnt l-y ir. E. J. lit udiii & Co., Kuorturg Falls, Vermont. BYE-CLASSES. representing the choicest selected Tortoise Shell and Amber. The lightest, handsomes and strongest known. Sold by Onticians and Jewelers. Made by SPENCER OPTICAL MF'G UU.,13 Maiden Lane, N. Y. S0BX3. 8KHT DISEASES. am PS mm OETROLEIIQ JELL? JSi ii ino mos. vaiuaoie ll I ill I BLe CATARRH. HEMORRHOIDS. Etc. Also for Congas, Colds, Sere Throat, Crrnp JErTry them. 25 and 50 cent sues (SBAND HEDAL, AT THE PHILADELPHIA EXPOSITION. 9ILYE3Z XOSIAL AT TfUg rAM POP'S EXTRACT Bubduet htfUimmatlon, Acuteand Citron ic. Control as B, Venous u... wucout, INVALUABLE FOR Burns and j& Colds anHr...L ! nfhmmfltinnc u, . ' aU0D5 Nasal & Throat Longs.Eres and T&roat cwiuain,. RHEUMATISM AND NEURALGIA. No remedy bo readily and effectually arrests the lrriti, Uon and discharges from Catarrhal Affections as POND'S EXTRACT. COUGHS, COLDS in the ITKAD, NASAL and Tnitni. DISCHARGES, INFLAMMATIONS and ACCPMm i TIONS In the LUNGS, EYES, EAKS and TJIROjit" RHEUMATISM. NEURALGIA, Ac, cannot l cmti J, easily by any other medicine. For sensitive and sever, cases of CATARRH use our CATARRH CURE (tv? In all case3 use our NASAL SYRINGE (25c). Vmt sent In lots of $2 worth, on receiptor price. Notetlu! POND'S EXTRACT Is put up oniy in bottles with pictm. Trade Mark on outside wrapper and words " Puvrrq EXTRACT " blown in glass. ' u a IT?" Our New Pamphlet with History of our Prepars. tlons, sent free. LADIES Read pages 13, 18, 21 and 26. POND'S EXTRACT COMPAXY, 14 West 11th Street, ffew York. EIGHT REASONS WHY WK NEVER S2LL POND'S EXTRACT IN &ULK, BUT ADHERE TO THE RULE OP SELL ING ONLY IN OUR OWN BOTTLES, LV CLOSED IN BUFF WRAPPER, OX Wincri IS PRINTED OUR LANDSCAPK TRADE-MARK. 1 It insures the purchaser obtaining th GKxciKE article. 2. It protects the consumer in buying Pond'i Extract not weakened with water, which we found w done a lew years age, when we were induced to furnlsb dealers with tUe genuine article in bulk. 3 Ii protects the consumer from unscrupu lous parties selling crude, cheap decoctions to him u Pond's Extract, for any person can tell the genuine from the bottle tnd wapper. 4. It protects the consumer, foritlsiroiMfo to use any other article according to the dlrectlonggivu in our book, which suriounds each bottle of Pocd'i Extract. 5. It protect s the consumer, for It U not agreeable to bedecciTed and perhaps injured by usin. ether articles an ler the directions for Pond's Extract. O 5io other aitlclo, maccfactura or nnlUttoa has the effect claimed for and always produced by Poni's Extract 7 It i prejudicial to the reputation of Pond'i Ext act to have people use a counterfeit Relieving it to be the genuine, for they will surely be disappointed, If n injured by Its effects. 8. Justice to one of the best medicine In the world, and the hundreds of thousands using it, demands, every precaution against having wcakano injurious preparations palmed off as the genuine. Thi oslv way this can be accomplished is to sell the GEsnsi put up in a unilorm manner in our ow boitlks, com plete with bnfl wrappers, trade marks, etc HKMEaiHKK--1 he genuine Pond's Ex. ti act is cheap, because it is strong, uniform ant reliable. Our book of directions explains when it can t diluted with water and when to be used full strength. llEUIMBEK That all other preparations, If colorless, are mere decoctions, boilings, or produced simply to obtain the odor and without the scientific or P'acticat knowledge of the matter which many years of labor has given us. ItME.ttBER. OfSKIVOW NOWThata? preparations purporting to be superior to Pond's E tract because they have color, are colored siuip'y becaun they have crude, and to unprofessional people using them, perhaps dangerous matter in them, and t)uM never be used except uuder the advice and inscription of a physician. JtliJIKMIJEU AXD KNOW-That our very expensive machinery Is the result of thirty years ef ex perience (the most of which was entirely given to this work), and constant attention to the production of all forms of Hamame'is, and that therefore we should know what we assert, that Pond's Extract is the beat, purest, and contains nore virtues of the shrub than any other production yet made. Our New nistory and Uses of Pond's Extract and other preparations sent free. Li A IHESRead pages 13, 18, 21 and 26 in our book, which is found around each bottle, and will be sent free on application ?0ND'S EXTRACT COMPANY, 1 West 14th Street, NEW YOKK AGENTS WANTED FOit Ot it g CENTENNIAL Cake nml A lil Itakiiiff !AII Honsrkeei'i-rs cannot aflorrf to do without it. Pricr ?3otn., also our UoiiiPMiir Clothe" S Sprinklfi. a ncw.novel, use- mi. raiml-Kciiinartu'ip. wee 30 ets. A rare oW'ortuuity if here offered A cents to make money. Sen ! lor our Illn" trutfl i.'irvulur and onrim- usuallv literal terms. Domes W. 5th 1st. .Cincinnati. O. tic Scale Co.. 194 A permanert practical road vehicle, with which a person can ride thre miles as easily as he could walk one. Send S-cent stamp for 21-page cata logue. HIE POPE M'F'G CO., SOt Washington St., Boston, Mass 13) AGENTS WANTED POP THE ICTORIAL IT HISTORY OF THE WAR This istbe cheaiiest and only complete aim reliahlo history of the Great Civil War)ulIished: it abounds in narratives of personal adventure, thrillinp 'inn dent, darinpr exploits, heroic deeds, wonderful escapes, etc.: and contains lite-like portraits n! 100 leading penerals. Kent! for specimen paircs aud extra terms to Atrents. NATIONAL PUB. CO., Philadelphia. Pa. TDIITU I8 MlilTT. The"oriin1 nd , llW I n only" frof. MARTINEZ the Omt Spanish Sen m l Wmrd will for S centa with height, color of eves, and lock of hair, ncml a cokr-t ' ricTvaa of Tour future husband or wife, pTrhoiol:i'&Ur preuicieo. wnn name, time and place ot meeum-. a iate of marriage. Monpj returned to !!! not fan. tit A.Uress Prc-f. L. Marline:. 10 .Monfjr W. Boton. !a JUDGE FOR YOURSELF By sending :.V. money or 4" age stamps, with ap''. you will re ceive lv return mail a correct fu ture of vour future husband or wy.e w ith name - date ot nntrriaee. Al W.FOX.Iiox 50. F ultonwiie.-vi; E MPI OYMPNT MICA Ii 6 it Traveling IlirUU I men I stale which prrteryrjl Also HAIjAHY Pfr mth. All EX PKNEg advanced. WAGESproniptly paid. piiUAf fc tin.. 1 0H ;ooi-fre St.. Cincinnati. O. r 1PP nikll O Viir Tiit-'i t Shooting ULHOO DHLLO ,M.r barrel of 2.T0 balls. Vi count to the trade. Address JireatWestern fiun Works. I'ittwlmrg.l'n. u n i; i Green l Corn Cutting Machines Iter ot C Jrerii Corn. I'.'iuals t.-n hi-tiuv ars, testimonials, etc., iiddiess yilljSr.i For Packer For circulars- t BARKEN, Portland ;7Vj Market Stre. nOOI Salesmen Wanted lo sell our tir.-t-ia tir.-t-da- last -selling goods on coir.iui chance to make money Send stamp tor ferm - .v J Steam 1'nb. Co..Varp-n.l . ooli. A si i-ii""" ticnlars at once. Phoenix salesmen!? wanted!!) A Month and Expense Expenses Hit! HCII'lPT to I'L.M f K3 I s:a.m:li:s k;:kk. STAMP to l inmira answer. 8. KirTt,ll 4 i " " m i " Sure relief CTTIM 1. HDDHr8PA8TiUh,r HI HI I j iaggSBa5aE3g-ha"'t-at"nr-Ma3:fc -fiPWrf PBTtT Complete Catalogues "I M'l OJCiJM X JXHjXj. si,. A: Musical Instruw ut. Ii.JE. WHIPPLE, P.O. Box 1511 .Jir,-L,--M $I"J H 11 A YEAR and expenses w I I ontfitFree. Address P.O. VICKtltY. ' I M I Augusta, Maine. YOUNG MPIlarn Telegraphy! Earn J i to Jjnw IUUNU mtWa month. Graduates P".rfn!I.i, paving offices. Adrs.VAiJESTnfE BwJs.,Janesvi.ie. i- AOEKTi WANTED tor the Best and J Selling Pictorial Books and Bibles. Pn s re dnced 33 per ct. National Pub. Co.. Philadelphia, r. $999 s xAr;.s.a?,Me PISO'S CURE tor Consumption is also the be1 couch medicine. Toilet Articlesrfroia lur Vaseline such &9 Pomado Vaseline, For the Vaseline Cold Cream, Treatment ofl Vaseline Campacr ice, WOTWDS. BURKS. Vaselino Toilet Soaps, CUTS. CHILBLAINS, are aapcrior to any alnuisr mm VASELINE CONFECTION An agreeable form of talc ing Vaseline internally. 25 CENTS AB0 RHEUMATISM. and Diphtheria, etc of all our goods. 9), EXTQUTlOft
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 28, 1881, edition 1
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