Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / June 9, 1881, edition 1 / Page 4
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Mercy. A balm thrioe blesaed, of unstrained mercy, falls Upon the stormy path existence treads ; And o"er the strife of passion, fondly calls On kindred pity, and unfaltering sheds Upon the darkest fate, a hope born light Yielding a heavenly calmness to the heart Not brightened by the guads of treasured art But purer. When o'erwhehned in hopeless night The sad condemned sinks, and superior might Exults, its rays from holy realms descend In their celestial power, and peaceful ends The torturing hopes, which in a kindly guise, Are yet the slough from whence despairs arise. Such mercy is; and through her, earth, is given The first pure foretaste of forgiving heaven. FARM, GARDEN AXD HOUSEHOLD. Ensilage, i" A letter to the Maine Fanner from Vermont says that quite a number of farmers in all parts of that state have built silos and filled them last fall, and, so far as can be learned, they hare met vith perfect success. General Thomas expects to get forty tons to the acre next year, and his estimate of its feeding value is that two tons will be equal to one ton of average hay. We can all see what an opportunity this opens to our small farmers in dairying. There will be no difficulty in carrying one cow to the acre, and making butter the year round. Twenty-five acres will be enough, then, for most of us. Mr. G. "ft". Whitney, of Williston, made a report at the Dairymen's meet ing of a series of experiments in high feeding of dairy cows, showing that with good average cows the feedings of a ton of mixed conimeal and bran per year gave a handsome profit in his dairy. The butter yielding increased from 150 pounds under hay only to 325, 408, -480 and 364 pounds in the four cows experimented with, besides great enrichment of the manure. Mr. Whitney is a thoroughly practical man, in whom our dairymen have great con fidence, and the results of his tests will give a strong impetus to high feeding in this state. "Ensilage and meal" are believed to be the words to conjure pro fits with. These, in connection with con tinuous dairying summer andwinterwill, it is hoped, enable our dairymen to hold their own against Western competition. Indirectly also these methods tend to great improvement in corn culture, in the use of tillage machinery, to the ex clusion of old-fashioned handwork. Curing Cheese. Prof. S. M. Babcoek gives the follow ing on curing cheese : "The high fla vors peculiar to the best factory cheese are only developed in a warm, airy place. A curing-room, should, how ever, be kept so dry that the cheese will lose its water very rapidly ; as in this case, although a high flavor must be obtained, the casein will not be thoroughly broken down, and the cheese will be hard and indigestible. The breaking down of the casein appears to be caused by some agent obtained, in the rennet, which in many instances re sembles an organized ferment, that acts very slowly when the amount of water present in the cheese is less than the casein, and stops its action entirely when the casein is in large excess. A good illustration of the fact that cheese will not cure when deprived of a large part of its water is furnished by the for mation of the rind, this being composed of a thin layer of casein which has par tially dried before the curing has made much progress. A rind will not form on a cheese kept in a moist atmosphere, nor on the cut surface of a cured cheese. I believe that lack of water is the chief reason why cheese made from skimmed milk is sod ifficult to cure. Analyses show that, although the percentage of water is usually high in such cheese, the ratio of water to casein is much less than in cheese made from whole milk." Don't Boil Your Milk. The animal albumen which milk con tains, and by which the nerves in the human body are made, is hardened and destroyed by boiling. In milk used by children whose systems are being built up and formed, this is of vital import ance, but it is to be seriously considered by adults whose nerves are repaired and strengthened by this albumen or nerve food. The above applies also to eggs and to all food. The French, who rare ly suffer from disorders of the stomach, never boil their food. Their cooks are taught to cook slowly and gently, so that their dishes are tender, nutiicious and easy of digestion. I am quite aware of the tendency of milk to hold and even promote the growth of germs, as well as of the typhoid fever some few years ago in Marylebone and Padding ton, and of the source to which it was attributed ; nevertheless, except under extraordinary circumstances and for a short time only, do not boil your milk. English Agricultural (iazette. Household Hints. Care of the Nails. Brush them care fully at least once a day, according to one a work, pushing back the flesh from the nail, thus avoiding hang-nails Under no circumstances bite them, but trim with either scissors or penknife. Do not cut the nails shorter than the ringers, or both will soon have a stubby appearance, and clean them with a blunt, not sharp point. Cake of the Teeth. They should be brushed carefully tifter each meal, and particularly after supper just before going to bed, as what particles may be left on the teeth after eating very soon destroys them. Brushing the teeth once a day with pure whits castile soap will keep them clean and white. If you cannot remove the tartar that may accu mulate by the use of a brush, take pow dered pumice stone, and with a small stick made into a fine brush at the end, rub the teeth carefully with the pumice stone. Oncea month will do for this, because, if practiced too often, it is apt 1 o destroy the enamel. Pckifying the Bbeath. Foul breath is usually caused by an unhealthy state of the stomach or poor teeth. If caused bv the first, the physician should be called upon ; if the latter, apply to the dentist. If from neither, take chlorate of lime, seven drachms ; gum arabic, live drachms ; to be mixed with warm water to a stiff paste, rolled, and cut into lozenges. These will arrest decay in the teeth and neutralize acidity of the stomach, and will also remove all trace of tobacco from the breath. Restoring the COLOlt of the Hair. When the hair loses color, it may be re stored by bathing the head in a weak solution of ammonia an even teaspoon ful of carbonate of ammonia to a quart of water washing the head with a crash mitten and brushing the hair thoroughly while wet. Bathing the head in a strong solution of rock salt is said to restore gray hair in some cases. Pour boiling water on rock salt in the proportion of two heaping tablespoonfuls to a quart of water and let it stand before using. Ammonia, if used too often, makes the hair lighter, and if in a strong solution, burns and splits the hair. M uck. The American Agriculturist says an acre of swamp muck of good quality, three feet deep, is actually worth $25, 000. No doubt such a statement is sur prising. So was the statement of Dr Lawes, of England, that a ton of bran fed to cows returned more than it cost in manure. The best muck, free from sand, contains two per cent, or forty pounds of nitrogen in a ton. Nitrogen is worth in the market twenty-five cents per pound, so that a ton of swamp muck is worth 30 for the nitrogen in it. All that is needed is to work up the muck, so as to make the nitrogen available. An acre of swamp muck three feet deep contains 2,500 tons, and would require eight months to draw out, at ten loads a day. Few persons realize the value of the fertilizing element of common waste matters which lie under their feet, and the innumerable tons of matter that may be available for fertilizing purpo ses, or that many of the idle and ne glected materials represent a vast amount of wealth. But it must be re membered that all swamp muck cannot be classed as of good quality some of it is next door to worthless. I'unuiug- of the Huuimiiisr-Uird. A friend has informed me of an in stance in her experience where the humming-bird has shown more cunning than its little brain would seem capable of manufacturing. The incident occured in Vineland, New Jersey. In an unused apartment of the house where the lady was staying, one of the huge spiders common in that region had built its strong web unmolested. Passing into the room one summer day, she spied a ruby-throat, which had flown in through the open vine-clad window, struggling frantically in the net of Dame Arachnid. The more the bird fluttered, the worse were its filmy wings tangled and fetter ed in the spider's meshes ; and unless help had been given, there is little doubt how fiie catastrophe would have ended. The lady hurried to the relief of the piteous prisoner, and handling it with the utmost care, freed it from the coils fastened to its feathers and bind ing its feeble members. As the bird lay in her palm at the end of the opera tion, it gave two or three gasping breaths and was still. Every muscle relaxed as in dissolution. The kind hearted liberator suffered a pang of dis tress from the conviction that she had killed the delicate creature by too rude a touch. After some moments of fruit less mourning, she laid the limp body down and turned sadly away. Quicker than thought the little trickster unfurl ed its wings and shot out of the window. Had it swooned from fright in the lady's hand, and recovered with the change of position? or had it actually feigned death, in order to facilitate escape, as some larger birds aro known to do ? Harper's Magazine. Beggars Classified. Like most widely-known men, Dick ens was so besieged by letter-writing beggars that he viewed every strange letter with distrust. All sorts of people pen these lettfcrs. There are the wives who ask for money without the knowl edge of their devoted husbands ; and the numerous husbands who take up their pens to ask for money without the knowledge of their devoted wives, and who would instantly go out of their senses if they had the least suspicion of the circumstance. There are inspired beggars, too ; sitting, musing over a fragment of a candle, which must soon go out, and leave them in the dark for the rest of their nights, when suddenly a small voice whispers : "Write to Mr. So-and-So, and he will help you." Akin to these are the suggestively-befriended beggars ; partaking of a cold potato and water by a flickering, gloomy light, in their lodgings, rent in the arrear, and landlady threatening expulsion into the street. There are nobly independent beggars; who in the days of their abundance, ever regarded gold as dross. The world may term it pride, paltry pride if you will, but they wouldn't take the dross ; a loan is all they want of you, and if you have the meanness to refuse it, count upon being despised by these great spirits. There are beggars of punctual business habits. These will make an end of themselves "at a quarter to one P. M. on Tuesday," and if no aid is in the interim received, it need not be sent, as they will then be "cold in death." And finally, there are the thousands who have invented some thing which will lead them straight to fortune provided they have an odd hundred or two dollars to start with. Life In the Land of the Sky. At the late meeting of the American Association for the. Advancement of Science, in Boston, the writer sought information from the professor J. 11. Procter about the homespun fabrics that still constitute the common wear of a large population inhabiting the terra (almost) incognita of the United States, viz., the mountain sides and valleys of Eastern Kentucky and Tennessee, Northern Georgia, Western North and South Carolina, and South-western Vir ginia, and was invited to explore a part of the region by him. This section is, we may say, somewhat larger than Great Britain, and contains more and purer iron and coal, equal de posits of copper, lead, zinc, and salt, besides corundum and gold in its mines ; it enjoys what is probably the finest climate on this continent ; it is perme ated by the most fertile valleys, and bears upon its hill and mountain sides the heaviest growth and greatest variety of hard-wood timber. If to this true mountain region be added the Piedmont and Cumberland plateaus on the east and west, the blue grass section of Kentucky, and the high uplands of Alabama and Georgia, the area will be enlarged to nearly that of France, and it may be affirmed that there is nowhere else to bo found in this country, in an equal area, such an op portunity for diversity of employment in agriculture, mining, metallurgy, or ariety of manufactures. Yet in the first two dwellings, built of logs, to which the writer was guided from the new town of Rugby, not only the house, but everything in or about it except iron and crockery ware, had been made by members of the family with their own hands. In the garden grew the little patch of cotton to bo ginned on a small roller gin, whittled out with a jack knife; on the hill-side ranged the sheep. Both the wool and cotton were carded with hand-cards, and spun on the spinning-wheel by the house-mother oi lier children, then woven on the hand loom, the frame of which had been fashioned with a broad-axe from the ouk of their own pasture. The boys were clad in butternut garments, the father in blue jeans, from the same loom. The sheets, bed-quilts, and blankets were truly hand-factured in the same way, while the beds were stulled with feath ers plucked from their own geese. In the next houso I managed to pur chase a blue and white quilt of very artistic pattern, and a striped cotton and wool blanket, both woven by the old lady, who seemed to think it infra . to sell the product of her own hands, and only consented when I explained to her that I wished them to keep as ex amples of what will soon become one of the lost arts. Her twelve-treddle loom filled about a third of the living-room. The writer is not a sufiieiont master of the art of picture-writing to dare to hope to give an impression of the scenes that are to be found in this "land of the sky," as it has been called. Ilarp-r Maqazine. Women in IVru, The Peruvian ladies do not work ; they consider labor disgraceful. Yet they are generally occupied. They rise early, take a cup of tea, and go to mass. Their walking suits are neat and pretty: in this respect they surpass us. The dress is black, and never touches the ground ; there is no fussing or fumbling with trains. A white skirt is sometimes seen a little below the dress, with a deep hem and two tucks, and always white and clean. Prunella gaiters are generally worn ; the hands are bare ; the man fa is thrown over the head, falling gracefully down almost to the bottom of the skirt, and gives them a charming appearance ; for it may conceal many defects of a face that is not handsome, and it sets off to advantage the charms of a beautiful face. A lady never goes out alone in Lima; two or three go together, and a black woman servant walks behind. Young girls are carefully escorted by their friends wherever they go, and are never permitted to see per sons of the opposite sex alone. All the matches are made by older people, and so effectually is this done that the ladies all marry, and none are divorced. The subject of dress claims most of their time and attention ; their ball dresses and opera and soiree suits are magnifi cent. Their boots especially are beau tiful. No people have naturally as small feet as the Peruvian. The ladies aro not very intelligent, and care little for music or books. They love to smoke. Although handsome when young, they scarcely turn twenty when they begin to fade. One thing always lasts with them, and that is their gait. Their movements are gliding and graceful, and the same is true of the men. On the street they never jostle each other. Their manners are excessively courteous; but their conversation amounts to little, being chiefly gossip about domestic affairs. Wonders of Broom Com. Broom corn is likely at no distant day to revolutionize the breadstuff supply of the world. A process has been discov ered by which the finest and most de licious flour can be made from the seed to the extent of one-half its weight, and leave the other half a valuable food for making beef and milk. The average yield per acre is three hundred bushels and in many instances five hundred bushels, or thirty thousand pounds, have been secured. Nor does it ex haust the soil as Indian corn, from the fact that it feeds from the deeper soil, and assimilates its food from a cruder state. It belongs to the same genus as the sweet cane, commonly known as sorghum, which as an article of food is growing rapidly in public esteem, and from the seed of which a most nutritious flour can be obtained, KILLED BY ONE OF HIS OWN SOLDIERS. Lieut. Cherry Asassiimted while in Pursuit oraRiiudofKobbern. Lieut Cherry of the Fifth Cava'ry, with a small force, was sent in pursuit of four robbers who had killed a ha'f breed named Bodeaux. Lieut. Cherry rode in pursuit the entire day, and, los ing the trail, camped at Sharp's ranch, twenty-five miles northwest of the po3t. The next morning he divided his com mand and started east to reach the ra tions sent to meet him from the post. About 10 o'c'ock, while riding along, with Sergeant Harrington on his right hand and Thomas Locke and James Conroy in the rear, a shot was fired from behind, and Lieut. Cherry, turning around, saw Locke with a pistol in his hand, which he pretended had gone off accidentally. When asked what it meant, Locke immediately levelled his pistol and shot Lieut. Cherry through the heart, killing him almost instantly. Locke then turned and fired at Conroy, at whom he had directed the first shot, wounding him and knocking him from his saddle. Sergeant Harrington, ac cording to his own statement, seeing his officer shot down, and a body of men rapidly approaching whom he believed to be desperadoes, but who were, in fact, a party under the leadership of Bodeaux's brother, fled, and, after rid ing down his own horse and Lieut. Cherry's, which had fo'lowed him, reached the post at 1H o'c'ock. Locke put spurs to his horse and escaped. Lieut. Cherry was a graduate of West Point, not more than thirty years old. He had won a high reputation as a soldier and frontier fighter by his con duct in the engagement at M:4k River, Co'., Sept. 1ST'.), between the Ute Indians and three companies of cavalry under command of Major Thornburgh. Ho and Capt. Lawson saved the com mand from annihilation. He was a man of tine stature, six feet tall, and well built, and was engaged to be married to a young !ady of a distinguished Pennsyl -vania family. The motive of the man Locke is not known. Animals Before an Earthquake. An Italian writer on the recent catas trophe on the island of Ischia mentions those prognostics of an earthquake which are derived from animals. They were observed in every place where the shocks were such as to be generally per ceptible. Some minutes before they were ilt the oxen and the cows began to bellow, the sheep and goats bleated, and rushing in confusion ono on the other, tried to break the wicker work of the folds; the dogs howled terribly, the geese and fowls were alarmed, and made much noise; the horses which were fast ened in their stalls were greatly agi tated, leaped up and tried to break the halters with which they were attached to the mangers; those which were pro ceeding on the roads snddenly stopped and snorted in a very strange way. The cats were frightened, and tried to con ceal themselves, cr their hair bristled up wildly. Babbits and moles were 5en to leave their holes; birds rose, as if scared, from the places on which they had alighted; and fish left the bottom of the sea and approached the shores, where at some places great numbers of of them were taken. Even ants and reptiles abandoned, in clear daylight, their subterranean holes in great dis order, many hours before the shocks were felt. Some dogs, a few minutes before the first shock took place, awoke their sleeping masters by barking and pulling them as if they wished to warn them of the impending danger, and several persons were thus enabled to save themselves. The great superiority of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup to all other cough remedies its attested by the immense popular demand for that old fashioned remedy, pyice iweuly-fivo cents a bottle. Never B rt urn. It is s;ad that vw out of every lour real in valids who go to Denver, Col., to recover health lu vcr return to the East or (South except as a corpse-. The undertakers, next to the hotel keepers, have- the most profitable business. This excessive mortality may be prevented and patients served and cured under the care of friends and loved ones at home, if they will but use Hop Ditters in time. This we know. See other column. Wreaths of delicate roses, ending in line sprays of rose leaves and moss buds, are worn under the oddly curved brims of the stylish and picturesque Spanish round hats. GOOD FAMILY REMEDY ! STRICTLY PUKE. vThis engraving represents tne Lungs in a healthy state.) What the Doctors Say ! DR. FLETCHER, of Lexington, Missouri, Bays "I recommend your 'linlHam' in preference to any other medicine for coughs and colds." DR. A. O. JOHNSON, of Mt. Vernon, HI., writes of soiiio wonderful cures of Consumption in his place by the use ot "Allen's Liauj Balaam' im. -f. B. TCKNJiK. BlountsviUe, Ala., a practicing physician oi twenty-fivo years, writes: "It is the beet preparation tor Consumption in the world." For all iic-.se of the Throat, Langs and Pulmonary Organs it will be found a most exciileiii Remedy. A3 AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL. IT CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANY FORM. i. K. HARRIS St, CO., Proprietors, CINCINNATI. O. Vr Sale by A IDruggiats. Hold by V. H. BROWN & BBC, BALTIMORE! (Elgin (HI.) Daily Leader.) The subjoined opinion, we perceive is by J. A. Daniels, Esq., of Messrs. Stog dill & Daniels, attorneys, La Crosse, Wis., and oppor.ra in the La Crosse Chronicle : Some time since, I wras at tacked with pain in and below one of my knee joints. A few apidieations of St. Jacobs Oil quieted the pain and relieved the inflammation. I regard it as a valua ble medicine. An Eastern paper savs : "It is Mrs. Carlyle who should have the monument for the fortitude she displayed in living so many years with such a man." (New Albany Ledger-Standard.) Speaking of Governors suggests the mention of an item wTe received from Mr. Henry A. Knight, Foreman at Chas. Waters fc Co.'s Governor and Valve Works, Boston, Mass.: I have used St. Jacobs' Oil among our employees and find that it never fails to cure. The men are delighted with the wonderful effects of the Oil, as it has cured them of bruises, burns, etc. Mrs. Jessie Fremont has organized classes in history among the poor set tlers in Arizona. "You Don't Know Their Value." "They cured me of Ague, Billiousuess and Kidney Complaint, as recommended. I had a half bottle left which T used for my two little girls, whom the doctors and neighbors said could not be cured. I am confident I should have lost both of them one night if I had not had the If op Bitters in my house to use. ' I found they did them so mueli good I continued with them, and they are now well. That is why I say you do not know half the value of Hop Bitters, and do not recommend them highly enough." B., lhichester, N. Y. Although the clocks are always strik ing, their hours of labor are never re duced. Boston Bulletin. Vkoktine is now acknowledged by our best physician to be the only safe and sure remedy for all diseases arising from impure blood, such as scrofula and scrofulous humors. Not all that heralds rake from cofiin'd clay, Xor florid prose, nor honied lines of rhyme, Can blazon evil deeds or consecrate a crime. The Friuiul of Delicate Indies Is Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. To follow foolish precedents and wink With both our eyes is easier than to think. Leland Hotel, Chicago, 111., finest location in the city, corner Michigan avenue, and Jackson street; fronting on the beautiful lake and park; two blocks from the custom house and post office. Newly furnished and reconstructed. American plan. Popular prices, $3 and $3.50 per day. Warren F. Leland, Proprietor, late of Delavan Hons", Albany. No preparatit n ever disci iwrcd except C.vitr.o I.1NK. a deodorized extract of petroleum, will really produce nw hair on bald-heads. It will be a happy day when the jnvut army of bald heads fully understand this. HENRI'S CARBOLIC SAI.VE Is tne BEST SALVE for Cuts, Bruises. Sores, Fleers, Bait lHicuni, Tetter, Chaiiecl Hauds Chilblains, Corns, aud all kinds ot Skin Eruptions, Freckles and Pinii'les. Got HENRY'S "CARBOLIC SALVE, as all others are count f -'it Price as cents. DR. iREEVs OX YJ EN A TEI HITTERS Jsthcbi'st remedy lor Dyspepsia, Biilionsness, Ma laria, Indigestion ami Di-"io.s o: the Blood, Kid neys. Liver, skin, ot--. DURNO'S OATA'tR'I SXUiT euros all affections of the ma-ious n -.u ot h.-a 1 and throat. DR. MOTT -s LIVER TILLS arj the best Cathartio Regulator. VA!iA ii.!i .ii i KARS . xi:vxr: FAILED To ("I'Kr. croup. S asms, Diarrho-a. I-seiiterv and Sea -i -i.ji.vs. taken iniernalh . an. I GUARANTEED pert.-cilv 1, armies ; ai.-o external h-. Cuts, Bruises,- Iir.ni- i.'n umatism. oi.l -or. . l'ains in tin- limits, back ar.d l iuvt. Sii,-h a n-niedv is li;. TOBIAS' VEX KTl AN i.i MV ! XT. No oi:r om-. iniiv: it will ever be without it ; ov.-rO.nt i u-siei:iRs sp it. Solitude i s";netimes best society, And short iTTm-iuciit r.r.-ces sweet return. Vegefine Will Cure Scrofula, Scrofulous Humor. VEGETINK will eradicate from the system every taint ot scromhi and Scrofulous Humor. It has ver mauentlv cured thousands in Boston aud vicinity who had been long aud l aiiitui sutlercrs. Pimples and Humors on THE FACE. Reason should teach us that a blotchy, rough, or pimpled s!:in depends eiititelv upon au internal cause, and no outward application can ever cure the defect. IXiHTlNi: is the great blood purifier. Catarrh. For this conulaint the onlv substantial benefit can be obtained through the blood. VKGi-TINJi is the groat blood purifier. Dyspepsia. If VEGETINK is Uien regularly, according to di rections, certain and speedy cure will follow its use. Faintness at the Stomach. VEGETINK is not a stimulating bitters which cre ates a fictitious apatite, but a gentle tonic, which assists nature to restore the stomach to a healthy action. Female Weakness. VEGETINE acts directly upon the causes of these complaints. It invigorates ami strengthens the whoie system, acts uikju the secretive organs and allays inflammation. General Debility. In this complaint the good efforts of the VEGE TINE are realized immediately alto? commencing to take it: as debility denotes deficiency of the blood, and VEGETINE acts directly u on the blood. Vegetine, PREPARED BY H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists. CELEBRATED "8 Why Sailer Needlessly with the convulsing, spasmodic tortures of fever and ague and bilious remittent, when Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, acknowledged to be a rea. curative of malarial levers, will eradicate the cau-te of so much Buffering. No less effective is this be-ignant alterative in cases of constipation, dvsper-sit. liver complaint, rheumatism, and in general debilitT and nervous weakness. For sale bi all Druggists and Dealers generally. CELLULOID EYE-CLASSES. representing the choicest selected TortoiBe Shell and Amber. The lightest, handsomest and strongest known. Sold by Opticians and Jewelers. Made by SPENCER OPTICAL JIFQ CO., 13 Maiden Lane. N. Y. E LOCAL OK Traveltn; ftai tilth advanced. W A GESpromptly paid. HL.OAN DCrilltil. All KX PKNMKN & Co.. 306 George St., Cincinnati O, Foe Dyspepsia, Indigestion, degression of spirits and general debility in their various forms, alw as a preventive against fever and ague and other intermittent fevers, the Febro PuosPHoitATED Euxib of Calisat.v Bak, made by Caswell, Hazard A Co., New York, and sold by all druggists, in the heat tonic: and for ra tients recovering from fever or other sickness it lias no cqnal. 1 1 SLiliiJii! liialiEII ! Neuralgia. Sciatica. Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell' ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds,' General Bodily PainSj, Tooth, tar and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs Oil. as a safe, sure, simple and rheap External Remedy. A trial entails but the comparatively triQing outlay of 50 Cents, and every one suffering with pain can ha-ve cheap and positive proof of its claims. Directions in Eleven Languages. SOLD BY ALL DETIGGISTS AND DEALEE3 IN MEDICINE. A. VOGELER & CO., Baltimore, Md.. TT. 3. A If you are In the inqniry Which is the best Liniment for Man and Beast this is the answer, at tested by t wo generations s 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 infiammatoryand morbid mat ter. It 6 goes to the root " of the trouble, and never fails to core in double quick time. ng 50 TEXTS A RlfYEAli MKOHAX B Bf ICAT, M O XTHL Y If IX THE WOULD IS IV THE f'lNCIX J NAT1AKTISAX a first-class raier, full Mechanical Xows. valuable Scientific and Send lOcentH for sample copies, club and pre mium rates. Address W. P. TIIOJH PSOX, Manner, CINCINNATI, O. Pool's Sipal SeiTBlrometer, StW?TO???? (J?-ASS AXD THERMOMETER COM iiJNLli.yrill indicate correctly an appmacliiuar storm, from 12 to 48 hours in advance. Invaluable to tarni ers and others, and will save manv times its cost in a single reason. Sample instruments bv e vires j 1 Liberal discount to agents and the trade, 'seiulali funds by registered mail, or T. O. Money Order. Address -.I.E. HUE, JiR., P. O. Box, Xo. 4, LITTLETON, N. C. IHS.SII ARP'S LIQUOR SAXHUIXARIA. This the Prewiptinn of the late Dr. Sharp, of Mississippi, B w ho sm-ct-ssf ally used it in tbroutruout the South m .the treatment of Piles, listulas. Fissures and kindred diseases. Chronic I)xi it,'r! also cured. Tli formula liasbien eiven i the Medical Journals of Mississippi, fcence its relia bility. Imiggists will supply you. Price H. Dn. Shaep MAsrFACTrntsa Co., Baltimore and New York. KUPTU Relieved and cured without the in jurv trusses inflict, by Dr. J. A. SHERMAN'S svstr-m. Office, 251 Broad war, New York. His look. with photographic like nesses ot bad cases betore and after cure, mailed for H cents. Beware of fraudulent imitators. TheO An honored publishing bouse whose historv is reputed to e realth has been estimated at $8,000,000, is that of J. B. Lipri most important pul; Dv them was in con J. B. Lippincott & Oo Publishing house of ourgn. beotiaud, and London, England, that of Chambers' Encyclopaedia, which, man:, years a- . published at the l P m b a" (so -!::!!.) lo BsttSWs Chambers' EncyeSopasdaa sK'sS as the result ol aiTintnre with the Uritisb honsp in nnsffm(.ii.'i. (if w.is sniili of the T.is-iincnMs MaMn name of Chambers, the same Encvclo- SSiRf Clfis pa"d'i;i was hromrht d;wu to tie- stil! lower price of $25. Now. in the glorious r year ol ls-U. moved, of eourse. u't the spirit ot rivalry, but by the generous and laudable purpose of placing useful knowledge within n ;i'li o the people, without regard to the question of profit or of loss to themselves, they are issuing an eoiti '!) n. this same great work, Chambers' Encvclo- m n ' pa dia. which is fri! r i- revised to aaie (edition ot ' 18-sixtv something with Yen- sus lunin -saltere IV). which they are ortrtv ing at the wonderfully low price of ?15 for iMfl 1 Hr the work complete, in lo great ocwo volumes. Even at this astonndiuglv low I0L If priee the-.- allow the large dis.-omi! . 1 per cent, when purchases are made in W Wl H hn-'e ipiantitv. Thearmy of the i.u.-rirj Revolution always rejoiees at the multiplication of good books at low prices, and the Am: i:kn !;'M,tt1-' chaxchcis delighted with the opportunity of uniting with the great publishing house ot Lippm ''' furthering the sale of this work: and to demonstrate the earnestness of their good-will they 1 r"; . - a long as the Lippincotts choose to continue the manufacture at this nominal price, to furnish the jwu with the Lippincott edi- n - . , B . tiou at tin- lo.v 1 t.' i f'J.50 per set (the 50 cents VfX( AHVOVtlCfim Atlt1 for cost of haii'l!"' delivered in New York r ' CC 4U V I 1 1 0 IS B II tB Htv, or sent hv y. or freight to any part of the United States or Canada. Considering the munificent liberalii y of t!:- LH'I'iJJ; cotts' terms, it has seemed a great pity that their modesty should prevent them from advert. sin-' '" ' " widely, and we therefore supplement their generosity by scattering this advertisement broadcast ler w at our expense. The Literary Revolution Has not the honor of a century's history, and its present cash capital is only about lT.".t"-''. Jt 1 started only sp long ago as September, 1875, with 70 cash and a few old books, and two, years tii r ai"J had reached th riicmitv nf small boy, and ter Of the l,l:.ee P - W MA W A 7 erous than customers for books. But by January, 1879, the Revolution had accumulated snihVieii; u? toprint one small volume, which was increased to a product in l.SS't of r,r mi- mitioi rhi :.. ts!.:i-m'- effaces and retail store now occupy entire a magnificent six-story Miilding 'S Broadway, and its factories several other Sr OO buildings elsewhere in the city, an; I gives employment to about 6m) hands. m one item of its present huve 1M ot "tan ard publications is an edition of Chambers' Encyclopedia, in 15 hand v beautiful cloth-bound v -1 nine. " ItlSScllmfF at flip lnw nmcA nf fi vc on n,.l .1 c-- r.n n-i.i-j;t;.. i. ......1,.., m.in-iiit " lu. London edition of lSO , ' ' i i uli 1 - " i J n uiu 18-sixty something, as Universal pincott's, with the alter- ugures) euch a i -1. cwunuers- i-.ncyciopmaia, nowever, is i work, edited and published for a foreign topics as American readers might desire. To supply uuuer xne uue 01 tne "Jutirary 01 iimversal Knowledge," a new edition in times, large type, m which a large P " iia mwra anout lo.tioti toiucs, coy- IIUIIIUIICITIL er ng about thoroughly Americanizing the work, aniir,maisj11, Z.C . v"c uiauiiiws , i ii eeill.. laiKl'l LyclopHHbas. Of this edition ten volumes are now iviuaiijiuK volumes ai miervais ui a iew aays tnereaiter. I'nce ier volume m cioin, Russia, gilt toil, 11.50. , - "First come, first served," is an old motto which we have supplemented bv "Lowest prires to eaniw purchasers, and accordingly, on this edition, we are for a few day offering the 10 rollout ""' "''"''1 " Vu lift price of fn.-;-,. This price will very shortly be increased. , ;hf. Ot course the 15,(HHJ tojiics and 3,000 pages of new matter added in this edition are not to be found hth tu the Lippincott edition, nor in our own ( edition. Both of them, however, are excellent works. reinar.t''' ehenp, and serve a good purpose for those who cannot afford the new and enlarged editi u. Sp' 11 fctni showing type mmmm no . m. ul K,: fuU particn- pVfk nftl ICftlin li 1 K al I BC U w: "J? lient Throughout the United States and Canada are prepared to either abundantly supplv or liberally slan r . 1 publications. We give liberal terms to clubs where no bookseller acts as agent. Descriptive catalogue J"' Illustrated pamphlet describing book-making and type-setting by steam will be scut free ou reouest. AMERICAN BOOK EXCHANGE, JOHN B. ALDEN, Manages. 764 Broadway, Xcw York. free "WW WMWBBM u v kx U K J m , rc-i Genera! Agents: t'i-:"t IHm 1- CtiiitiHiiV Mil n,.ovl. ..,.. c - iigau l. uanieron: Atlanta. Ga.. J. J. 4: S. P. Richards; Baltimore, . E. C. Harrison; 1U fe English; Pittsburg, James Robinson; Grand Rapids, Mich., Eaton, Lyon & Co.; MinneaiK mm Wtf KA TfTV n r i 1 I II il Hll Eattlo Creek, Michigan CXBSO, THE CaSk, Ifil TUSRCueiM raction and Plain Engines nnrl L.n.Ae "Sines E8tabH.hed management, or locationLrfc5. browi warranty given on all ourgd A muUthvie of special fea'nres and imvron. for 1881. together with npertar qunti? twn and material net dreamed of by othor Biab2i? Four razes of Separator, from 6 to kSS Capacity, for etfav: or 7tor po-xer. -"WSB Two styles cf " Mounted " Horse-Powers. 7,500,000 wstass constantly on ha-.id, froia vhich is built tw? comparable w ocd-wori of our machinery. TRACTION EM01HES Strongest, mott durable, and efficient ever made, g, 10, 13 Horse Fower. ..Fam?rSi ?ina Threshermcn are invited In tnvesbfrato this uiatchlets Threshing liichhierv Circulars sent free. Address Juucry. NICHOLS, SHEPAR3 & CO. Battla Creek. Michigan, T AGENTS WANTED FOR DIBLE REVISION The best and cheapest illustrated edition of lh Revised New Testament. Millions of peoi'in are wait i iff lor it. Do not be deceived bv the OV-a: John jmblishers of inferior editions. See that thecopvvo-i buy contains 150 fine engravings on stool and wood! Agents, are coining money selling this edition. Send for circulars. u Address National PruMSHrso Co- Z iladohhiaPa. Book for Thrcshermen Worth f 25. For sale for 25 cents. Theesheemax's Bookeeehxg, including all blanks nopilpfl to make settlements with customers Money refunded if not entirely satisfactory. Address Tlie Anltman & Taylor Company, Mansfield, Pdchland Co., 0. CHEAPEST Macanlay's History d En-rlanil.Slarsel'snn vols, cloth, gilt, only jCliambere' Eneyclope. V BOOKS uia, in mrse nvo vol umes, cloth, h.jso page8.4.MHi engrav ings, former priw &d0.00, for onlv 10. onnKespeare-8 complete Works, handsomely bound in cloth, N THE uikl-k. nu oia. only oil cents. Twine's History of Euslish Llter- "o, m iiouuouiuc 1ZU1U VUIUIUB, cloth, only aU cents. Other books equally low. Full descriptive catalogue Free. MANHATTAN BOOK CO., World P. O. Box 4580. 18 Vest 14th St., New Tort, colli Birt. A p?rmanert practical road vehicle with vhich a person can ride threi miU s as easily as he could wais on. Send 3-ceut stamp for 24-page cata logue. THK POPE M'P'G CO., Washington St., Boston. Mitt NATIONAL TYPE CO Y P Latent Styles. Largest Catalogue. Full information for 3-cent stamp. LoFe .t Fries.. Beit Assortment. PHILADELPHIA PA only" rrof.MAHilA'Uui. Great S i T-. 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National Pnb. Co.. Philadelvhia. Pa. Yfl 1 1 N ft M PNLearn Telegraphy! Earn Siu to $100 IUUI,J mtlia month. Graduates guaranteed paying offices. Adra.YAUXTTSE Bros., JawvTlWWia. DTORCES in anTState without 1 uhlicity. Send stamp for the law, G. R. Sims, Chicago. 4 GENTS WANTKD to selT'Visltinc Cards. Srnil i postal. E. L. Akehi-rst, I tica, N. Y. BEST T'U VSS ever used: descfTTt ive rir.-nl.ir? IM N. Y. ELASTicTRlssjtJofiSl Broadwav. XJ. 'r'ERRITORY assigned & Out fit for Ladies' Sl-oe Par l lor. ylSU. Address, "Lele's Seamles," rtica.j 2pi Chromo Cards latest sta les with name, H'c.rost tt paid. G. I. Reed & Co.,"Nassau, (Kens. Co.) H FA II-APM P 18 now POSITIVELY i l-eveilt?! 1 1 1- U nuili. Wr jt Dr.KKWF.PV. Aul-iirn-M . extend back into the last century, pud witiwj rincott & Co., Philadelphia.. . The li-r-est aw ivafion i-n-r i!- j i!.-!i..!i with ihcirrwu riiii-iilh-r.-. of l-'iin- i fnnsermeiiii (it 'mm ' i ft Mil J" army consisting oi one n lro.n the rharai Knowledge ' U 1 1 V '111 1 ..JVJ. 1UU UUlLlltlX 13 a 1 "in Hll ' 1 . ill the ease of the a tiou of a tew err. ...... 1 . , tl::il - a loreign worK, and it could market, would give as mn.-li ly be expeee'u prominence to A".1""--. j(-s we are no fifteen large e-tavo JOJ these aud other deficient OTr. f,,rce of Ami cnean editors ani " ;.( octavo i -.fr' '-- '"1 K it nearer 4 1 r -nt it.largi-rtha!i.I-l'-:ti luitll Al'I'ieioil s, auil Jf per ce'i!. larger 1 ll-i:' " '" .i ready for delivery. Volume XI. will be ready -1;lVj Boston, & Co.; .. i?. 4 & 3-J.HMJl (oil m Complete Steam Out flts of matchhs?al$M fl" t it H. L. Hastings, 47 Cornhill; Philadelphia. J.ea Cincinnati. Robert Clarke -t o.; i ', ' ": m, Stewart ,V Co.; Cleveland. Jngtiam.r .i.j; jV raucisco. CnnninghHiu. Curtiss - AVeich: p-J' J cumoiKi. 'I oas, S. M. AVdjiani ...
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 9, 1881, edition 1
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