Newspapers / The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, … / Nov. 23, 1906, edition 1 / Page 10
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CRISIS Ov GIRLHOOD A TIME OF PAIN AND PERIL Hiss Emma Cole Says that Lydta H Plnkharc's Vegetable Compound haa Saved Her Life and Made Her Wall. ITo\v many lives of beautiful young |irn have been sacrificed lust a? they were ripening into womanhood ! How many irregularities or displacements have been developed at this important period, resulting in years of suffering t Misj Fm m a A mother should come to her child's aid at. this critical time and remember that Lydia 10. Pink ha in .s Vegetable Compound will prepare the system for the coming change and start this try ing period in a young girl';?> life without psiu or irregularities M Us KmrnaColc of Tullalioma.Tenu , writes: Dear Mrs. Pink ham 441 want to tell you that I 1m enjoying bet ter health than f ha\<? for yeara, an 1 Iowa it all to Lydiu JO. Pinkham's Vogutable Com pound " When fourteen years >f ago I suffered al most constant pain, and for two or thr"o years I had vorenem and pain in my side, headaches and was tizzy and nervous, and do* t(.is 'dl failed to help rue " Lydia K Pinklmm *tV v?? ihlo Compound was recommended, and after taking it ruy health began to impro-.-o rapidly, arid I think it saved my life f sincere!\ my ex fieri ? nee will be n b- lp toother gins vlvar ? pass ing from girlhood to womanhood, for I know your Compound will do asiTtu *h for them." If you know of any young girl who is sick arid needs motherly advice ask her to write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass , and she will receive frc ? advice which will put her ou the right road to a strong healthy and happy v imtinhood. Mrs Pinkhnm is daughter in-law of Lvdia K. Pinkham an 1 f >r twenty-tive years has been advising sick women free of charge Some people are unable to respect those th< y feel sorry for HICKS' :apudine immioiatc.lv cv ats HEADACHES ^Srr.'iM up COLDS bd in d to 13 HOURS BR Trial 3c?ik iOc. Ai Pnitttai W. L. DOUGLAS ?3.50&'3.00Shoes BEST IN THE WORLD r l Douglas $4 Gilt Edge c:inotbi>equalled3tai<)pM3fl/, W\ IVY tel.- w* I ? .'I! i" I li" in -' J I " rs"}) \ 111 iti? <*ouiif i v . t ,s JfJ 1 ?SnJ/or (V01) I I J/ I : ow-l r RSP shoes for Everybody at all priced M.m/? Shots. $ft to $1 00 B)'/V $:i o*i 30. Wowou's 8ii ^, $4 CX> t . 31.OO i.ii-i' & Children s Sti Md. $:.? 2~J ' ? #1.00. Tr\ I.. Dou^lus Hiiiiii'i. ?, >!????????. it ml 1 L?1Jrvn'h i>Ii?.???*; for -stylo, tlf :iu?l wear they ?>xcel other inakN. If I could take you Into my large factories at Brockton, Mass.,and show you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes ere made- you would then understand why they Hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any oth-or make. Wherever you live, you cao <htuin W. L. Douflat shoes. hh nume and price it stamped or. the bottom, which protects you against high prices and InU'rlot shoe*. TnW- no sybtti* tufc. Ask your dealer for W L. Douglas shoes and insist upon having them. fas t Color user1 they w/// not wear brassy. V\ rite for lllio-.tratcd Catalog of lall Styles. L. DOUGLAS, Dept. 15. Brockton, Muss. Re Knows 1 the kind of i-\. Waterproof l'i. Oiled Clothingi t that stands thevj hardest service f DoY)iiKnow? \ }\ A 'ih Made for all kinds of wet work or sport SOLD EVERYWHERE Ir~ s? I ? j ?o*t? CO ? O&T0* v ? * 1 I The Top 91' Quality ~ [Snowdrift nmmim f Made under U5.Govemment Inspection I; ' ?? '?? ? ?? ; ? ' ? ' W ( ? ( The Southern Cotton Oil Company PCIMSIONf Oft Writ* me a: cmee for >l?nlis au.i initructlom. I n*. A rhar^'-. No Peturiou, No Pay. A i tro*? W. if. WILLS, vVuis iiuil'liasr, 4l2lu>ilau;< \y\, Wmh U. C. Pat*ut?au.i llark-t Solicited. t , Nome f it Sii|>crstR Ion. N pnleon Bonaparte showed u tnor I bid horror for cats. The night be fore the battle of Waterloo a black | | rat passed near him, and at the sight I the great warrior was completely un | MTTli lie saw un omen of defeat. I llonry III. of France swooned when ever he saw a rat, and one of the Ferdinands of Germany would trem i hie In his hoots if a harmless tabby I got in the line of his vision. Among the Romans the cat was I 1 a symbol of liberty. The Egyptians I held the animal In veneration t/nder , 1 the name of Aelurus, a deity with j ; a human body and a rat's bead. , Whoever killed a cat, even by accl- j | dent, was put to death. Diana as- j ? sinned the form of a cat and excited 1 the fury of the giants. Still Knocking. Gunner Have you heard the lat est. Guyer?What is It? Gunner?Why, a Connecticut mllk I man has grown tired of civilization, | told his dairy and is going down to 'he south sea to raise cocoauuts. Gnycr Is, eh? Well, I'll bet a liamond against a tig the milk In 'hose cocoauuts will have water in It. Chicago Dally News No Model For Him. Dr. Stephen H. Koblin, pastor of the Columbus Avenue Untversallst Church, Boston, was calling on an old lady, one of his parishotiers, be i fore going away on his summer va j cation, when his church is always | closed The old lady evidently does i not believe in ministerial vacations. | for she said: i "Doctor, remember Satau never i lakes a vacation." | "My dear madam," answered the | doctor, I never did believe in tmi- I , tatlng Satan."?Boston Herald ODDS AND ENDS. ??? I A bn< hi-lor says that if he had to choose ht yv?'?mi two ?* v 11 m he would mar ry the one with the noet mon?g. j A woman of more or b*s< experience s.tvs It Is easier to bos* hall' a dozen 1 men than it Is to control one hired girl. I Some men seem to think they can purchase a mansion In the skies on tin* i installment plan, so they drop a penny 1 into the contribution plate every Sun 1 day. i Content Is nothlnfc but living a whop. I piiik big lie One of the nicest thing* about t iking the pledge I--* when you break it The reason there aren't more sinners I in the world Is there aren't more peo 1 pie. If life is a burden to you it's a safe ' bet that you are a burden to your | I neighbors Spankers. Mrs. Gunner?It i,s queer how re markably good the children have I been since we returned from Cairo. Mr. (ftinner?Oh. they are wise I Mrs. Gunner Wise to what? Mr. Gtinner?To the fact that 1 , brought back a collection of hard Egyptian sandals. Chlcag6 Daily i News. Consul J. .1 Brlttaln, of Kohl, rt I ports that Joseph Restucci, a me I chantcal engineer of the Royal Ital ian marine, has recently invented a new diving machine, which has I proved a success in experimental | tests made with it in deep-sea diving. llow'? Thin ? WeoflerOno Hundred Dollar* Reward for ucy ca.'Mi of Catarrh that cannot he cured by I bull's Catarrh Cure. K J. Chknty A Co., Toledo, 0. W?, the undersigned, have known F. J. J ( heney lor the last 16 years, ami believe him I I erfeetly honorable in all business transac- j tlous and 11 nana!ally able to carry out any 1 obligations made by their firm. NSkht A Tbuax, wholesale Druggists, To ledo, O. Walpi.no, Kinnan A Mahvim, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's < atarrn Oureis taken!uterually,aot ingdirectly upoutheblood and rauououssur laoea of the system. Testimonials sent free. Prioe,75e. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. lake Hull's Family lMlls lor co list i put ion. i Cambridge, Mass., provides for privilege of study and travel one year in seven for public school teach | ers. A teacher draws a part salary and has regular position on return. A \\ .'ll-Knoun Ueineuy. One of the oldest, safest aud most fa vorably known rtuin'dies m the world to day h Rrandreth's Pill* a blood purifier and laxative, being purely vegetable they cau be used by old or young with perfect safety and wnile other remedies require increased doses and hnully cease acting altogether, with Hrandreth's Pills the same I dose always has the same effect, no matter how long they are taken One or two pills taken each night tor a while is the best thing known lor any one troubled with constipation, indigestion, dyspepsia or any j trouble arising from an impure state of > the blood. llrandreth's l'ills have been in use for i over a century and are sold in every drug j aud medicine store, plain or sugar-coated. Miul Of The Honeymoon. "Finished your honeymoon yet?" "I don't know 1 have never been able to determine the exact meaning , of the word honeymoon." "Well, then, has your wife com- I menced to do the cooking yet?"? I | Houston Post. 1 ECZEMA AFFLICTS FAMILY. I Fattier and Five Children Suffered Foi Two \ ears Willi Terrible Kciems? Wonderful Cure by Cuticura. "My husband and live children were all afflicted with eczema. They had it two ! years. We used all the home remedies we could hear of, without any relief, and | then went to a physician and got medicine two different times, and it got worse. It I affected us all over except head and hands, j We saw Cuticura Remedies advertised and concluded to try them. So 1 sent for $1.00 worth, consisting of one cake of Cuticura Soap, one box of Ointment and one vial of Pills, and we commenced to use them. 1 do not kuow how to express ray joy iu | linding a cure, for two of my children were sb bad that they have the brown scars on their bodies where they were ?ore. Mrs. Maggie 11. Hill, Stevens, Ma ' son Co., \NT. Va., June 12, 1905." I Where The Money Flies. Hick*?Y 09, I've been to New . York since I saw you last Wicks?Yea? You didn't stay ! long. I Hicks?No; It's hard to stay long | in New York; It's so easy to get I ?hort. Philadelphia Public Ledger. RAM'S HORN BLASTS J 4 UK man who X aroundwith KM his family tree sS in his lint bears little fruit to V to the glory of God; 3 They who f 1 ?, on His promises are able to the poor with sorrietliiii}; more I man promises. When u man thinks he is beating the devil hollow, he tinds he has a hol low heat. They who pursue wealth seldom re alize they are being pushed on by the devil's whips. Often a man who hustles most in the crowded street is in a hurry to go nowhere. When the preacher is listening for j human endorsement he often misses the divine direction. So long as the husband and wife ; keep close to Jesus they will not get i far from one another. 1 Many a man who is great on n train of thought gets stalled because he has i 110 t ruction facilities. There are t<><> many willing to seek j the Kingdom Hint, it they ran have the first ehauee at its contracts. The true saint is never satisfied to , be solitary. Genius is simplicity and sincerity ' seeking to serve. The only safe forms are those that are fruits of faith. It is better to be (iod's bramble than ! the devil's bay tree. The affections of learning ean never have the same effect as learning. If this world could be saved by talking words, the inilleniuui would dawn tomorrow. If you look like Jesus, people will \ feel that some joy has come near i them when they see you. When the devil gets to talking to the preacher about his genius, he needs to keep an eye on his grace. It doesn't look well for the preach er to whack away at Sunday amuse- ' uients when he does nothing but play all the rest of the week: There must be a good deal of grace ill the hearts of those who ean worship . God in the church in sipte of all that 1 the choir does. PIONEER DANGERS. The llrst settlements In what Is now the town of Salem, Maine, were i begun In 1815. The dangers were many, says a son of one of the first settlers, in "Salem's Old Home Day," and owing to the number of wolves, ; It was absolutely unsafe for children, or even grown people, to go far from j their homes. When Klbridge Blake was a small I boy he had a narrow escape from a tragic death. He and his brother i Daniel were sent for the cows one night, and were told to bring home son: ? "frown stuff" dried branches ?with them. Klbridge looked after the brush, while his brother drove the cows home. It was perhaps half a mile i from their borne, down toward the 1 Ktngfield road, all woods, except small clearings where the cows pas tured. Klbridge, emerging from the thicket w ith his "brown stuff," found ; lilmselt confronted by a pack of I wolves. He was near a small, slen der tree, and as rapidly as possible i he climbed it, until he felt that it was bending, lie knew that wolves can- . not climb; but it the branch which he was grasping w ith both hands should bend low or break, he would be at their mercy. His screams and shouts were final ly heard by Mr. Brlggs, who lived about a quarter of a mile distant. Mr. Briggs, recognizing it as the ! voice of a child, and suspecting the cause, ran speedily up to Mr. Blake's, and breathlessly Inquired if all their children, nine in number, were at home. The answer was that they were all there but Elbrldge. "Faith, then," said Mr. Briggs, "the wolves have got him." The older members of the family and a number of workmen who were employed 011 the brick walls of a new house rushed to the rescue. Elbrldge heard the noise in the dis tance of the rescuing party, and took courage. "The wolves," he says, "ap peared to look at each other, and to v under what turn they had better takb." The yells of the rescuers had the desired effect, and at first sight of the men, the wolves scattered and fled in .all directions toward the woods.? Youth's Companion. DIDN'T KNOW THE CITHER. The inability to read a cipher once tost a notable of France his head. When the Chevalier de Rohan was I In the Bastile his friends, wishing to I :o let him know that his accomplice i had died without confessing, passed 1 the following cipher, written on a shirt, into his dungeon: "Mg lulhxeeclgu ghj yxuj; Im ct ulge | ?1J." The cipher was not a difficult one, being arranged by a complete trans i position of the alphabet: but de Rohan did not have the clew, and ha i juzzled over the meaningless words in vain. A solution of the riddle meant the I guillotine or lii3 freedom, but the juzzle was beyond him, and he plead ?d guilty because he could not de ripher "Le prisounier est mort; il l a rien dit." (What JOYThey BRliN<* I | To Every Home j Ias with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play?when in health?and I how conducive to health ihe games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they | enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome | diet of which they should partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved, | not by constant medication, bu ; careful avoidance of every medicine of an injuri- 1 ous or objectionable nature, an_ if at anytime a remedial agent is required, to assist nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure 1 and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs has come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knowledge and use. Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, because j I they know It is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputa- ! I ble physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained, by an ! | original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially and [j presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are 1 i used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy and hence j we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not approve of patent . medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication. 9 ?? Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs ? I* always Has the full name of the Company?California Fig Syrup Co.? plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size I only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having f| printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. If you fail to get the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have Jr. i a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial for the parents and the children, II ^whenever a laxative remedy is required. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. cue 10c. package colors all fibers. They dye In cold water better than any other dye. You can dye any garment without ripping apart. Write for free booklet?How to Dye. Bleach and Mix Colors. WON ltUK DRLti CO., I uioavilie, Missouri A Theatrical Superstition. They were rehersing a new play and everyone was nervous, for the first night was close at hand. The play was a tragedy, yet at its end the dying heroine, as the curtain descended, said: "Three beers, please." Those words concluded the play. Yet they were entirely out of keep ing. The concluding words should have been: "I die, but since I have saved you I die happy," or some thing to that efTect. A- dramatic critic new to the busi ness asked how it was that the trage dy ended with "Three beers, please," and the stage manager said: "Superstition. It is always thought bad luck in rehearsals of a new play | to speak the last sentence before the opening night. He who has the last sentence to speak substitutes some meaningless phrase for It. If he dared to speak the true phrase the prospects of the play would be thought doomed." ? Philadelphia Bulletin. Feats In Bricklaying. In the erection of the House of Representatives office building, adja cent to the United States Capitol at Washington, an interesting fact has developed in connection with brick masonry work. The first brick was laid at the site on the afternoon of July ,r>, 1906, and on July 3, 1906, there had been laid in the walls 11, 000,000 brick. This is believed to be the greatest number of brick laid on any building in one year in the United States, and probably In the world. One of the causes conducting to this record-breaking feat was the remarkably "open" winter of 1905 '06. in those winter months the work continued almost without, in terruption from either snow or cold, and not more than twelve or fifteen days were lost during tl.o entire win ter by reason of weather conditions. ?Scientific American. COFFEE IMPORTERS Publish a Book About Coffee. There has been much discussion a? to coffee and Postum lately, so much ; in fact, that some of the coffee im porters and roasters have taken to type to promote the sale of theii wares and check if possible the rapid growth of the use of Postum Food Coffee. | In the coffee importers' book a j chapter is headed "Coffee as a Medi cine," and advocates its use as such. Here is an admission of the truth, most important to all interested. Every physician knows, and every thoughtful person should know, that habitual use of any "medicine" of the i drug-stimulant type of coffee or j whisky quickly causes irritation of | the tissues and organs stimulated and j finally sets up disease in the great i majority of cases if persisted In. It may show in any one of the many or gans of the body and in the great ma jority of cases can be directly traced to coffee in a most unmistakable way by leaving off the active irritant? ; coffee?and using Postum Food I Coffee for a matter of 10 days. If the result is relief from nervous trou ble, dyspepsia, bowel complaint, heart failure, weak eyes, or any other , malady set up by a poisoned nervous j system, you have your answer with the accuracy of a demonstration in mathematics. "There's a reason" for Postum. I Painting On Metal. Carl Lunde, a Norwegian artist, has made himself famous by painting on metal, an art even the Japanese have failed in, great as they are as metal workers. Lunde decorates or dinary tin with characteristic designs in colors and illuminates an ordinary tray or plate that would otherwise he cheaply japanned. The method is his secret and only one of many clevernesses he employes to render utility artistic and decorative. Every woman likes to tell how much 1 better health her husband has since he married her. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Svrnp for Children t eething, softens t begums, reducesinliamma tion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 'JSca bottle Don't expect a square deal if you are not a square man. CONSTIPATION. is so distressing, yet so 9 Easily Cured If you use^"regularly Parsons' Pii[s Mild but sure in effect. . Put up in zl?ss vials. I 25 cents. Sold by ail dealers. I I. S. JOHNSON Sc CO., Boston. Mass. ?fnt (itn. It..ok of teMlmonlnW au l l? Ua,^'irra'uirDl ?>r. II. 11. l.mUPB M)Vn, Boi B, Atlanta, ??. IN i illo rAl'Kit. iT WILL f'A i ? HURT, BRU3SE OR SPRAIN THE OLD-MONK-CURE RELIEVES FROM PAIN Price 25c and 50c No More 1 Cold Rooms | If you only knew how much comfort can be derived from a PERFECTION Oil Heater?how simple and economical its operation, you would not be without it another day. |H You can quickly make warm and cozy any cold room or hallway?no matter in ^ what part of the house. You can heat II water, and do many other things with the ^1 I PERFECTION ? Oil Heater Q (Equipped with Smokeless Device) Turn the wick as high or low as you can?there's no danger. Carry heater from room to room. All parts easily cleaned, (lives E8 intense heat without smoke or smell because equipped with smoke less device. ? Made in two tinishes?nickel and japan. Brass oil fount beauti |H fullv embossed. Holds 4 quarts ot oil and burns 9 hours. Every heater warranted. If you cannot get heater or information from your dealer, write to ^?>5 nearest agency for descriptive circular. i T,'i?ayb LamPS( and steady light, simple con Rjjj strnctionandabsolutesafety. g*9 Equipped with latest improved burner. Made of * ypQ brass throughout and nickel plated. An ornament to any room whether library, dining-room, parlor or bed ? room. Every lamp warranted. Write to nearqpt agency if not at your dealer's. STANDARD OIL COMPANY
The Smithfield Herald (Smithfield, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 23, 1906, edition 1
10
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