Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / April 4, 1890, edition 1 / Page 4
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'... t ' STATE Or TRADE. ,t . " -'i, , Active Distribution ia Mtnplca of Mer chandiae tn the Weit, Special telegrams to Brudstrwt'a point to a taora active, distribution of stajJe mtr rhsnise amonj leadir.j trade centers, at' Ktasas C.tft Sa Loiis "and. Oaiaha only." There have been some gat in la the movem-ris , of dry goo Js and boot and shoes at Cbicago, but business there, ou toe whole, ah., no tuirkad improvement. Throughout the re gioo tributary to the three cities flint named the country roads are etill heavy, to the det riment of the jobbing trade and of farmers having produce or stock read for market. Dullness prevails at San Francisco, bat wheat in California is firmer on reports of a very nor crop this year, and Pactflo coast exports tbis week hare declined heavily.' Cattle and bogs at Western centres have been in better demand and blither. Mercan tile collections generally are slow. Trade South and West is stall somewhat interrupt- , el through fears of overflow, though less I hi n last week. , . Net railroad earnings of 107 railway com- , pimes ioi Januiry, as reported to Brad street's, aggregated 13,113,38, a gain uc la.3 Iter Cent, over January, IS5U. Uross earnings vain y.3 per cent. Slack demanit for coal m the E is t, an 1 heavy snow ana rain fails alon tu lines of Pacific roads accounts for de creased earnings of , Pacifio roads and coil . carriers. - - Wheat has been active and higher on shrinkage of stocks at home and abroai, and ' reported damage to the doinestto crop. Corn bad be.-n tinner after a moderate dec. i no. v Exports of wueat (nd flour as wha) from Um coast this we?k aggregate l,0,yyj bushels, against 3,0a7,03d bushels lt week - (owing largely to deceased Pucitlo coast clearances,) and as compared witu l,25tf,b3j lJUihels ia tue like free or 18bU Ttie total of exports July 1 to date is 77,va bushels, against 68,i8U,30o bmhel m a hke share of 183S-W. The report of 13tJ.000.CJO bushels of wueat in farmers' hands on March 1, ltJJ, is . stated to point to a surpiu for export from March 1 to June 30 next of 83,00O,tW0 bushels, . hi owing for visicle and invisible stouxs on July 1, 1890, equal to tnose on July 1, ISS'J. Tom rate of export thus far Uuriug March woo d aggregat d3.UUO,000 bushels for thi four; moata. ; . tiaar uas declined moderately in price, i 3 10c. Teas has beenstaady, but w.th weth.- . n. ss abroad on enlarged crop estimates. Cof lee has been animated on frea offerings an 1 realizing s ties, aud prises have declined. , Dry goods demand in Evfern markets ,. lucks snap. Price changes in cowton goods are toward a lower range. Pr.nt cloths, low grade bleached goo J 8 and prints ara lowr. Cotton and wool drBsgooi are most uct.Te. Iden'd wear woolens are quiet. Cotton eak- . ened early on news of Bullish coal strikes, but .reassuring advices, added to tba light port movement, overcame the loss. DISASTERS AND CASUALTIES. All the live stock in the Lower Rio Grande d'ttrct in Texas are rvport-d to be suffering from lack of water, and there nre fears ot heavy loss should the drought continue. There is no lack of grass. ' Henry Purdy, accompanied by his wife and daughter, was driving aoros toe t ravin of the Michigan Central Iioid, in Jackson, Michigan, when the wagon was struck by an engine, an J all three were killed. An epidemic of diphtheria is raginx in por tions or Luzerne county, Pa. Its centra id the district around Lib man township, ten in lei . from Wilkesbarre, and many deaths have oc curred, the duetts being of a malignant typ j. While descan Hn? a rain-way of the Phila deiphia Coal Company' Colliery, at Lost Creek, Pa., Foreman Ueaton attempted to light bis lamp. An exp osion followtd, which kii ei Frederick J. Fa.tz and Charles Link, miners, and, it is feared, fata ly burned II. a ' ton. , There is danger of another land slide In , Troy, Ne Yora-. A new' opening in War ren' Hi 1 has been discovered. Tue bank is 2J0 feet high and is cracked lor 150 feet in length along the ere Should it fall it would do great damage. Resilient ia the vicinity have been warned to move. Some have gone, but others remain. ' " The Denver and IVo Grande Southern R ill ' road, in Colorado, was o.ienei over the Can bres Mountaiu the other night after several - week,' trU'ort. The suow along th track tor , mil. is ten to thirty feet deep. Tue ope if ng oi the read will bring relief to tue people of some of the inter or towns, who were begin ning to get short or provisions. S Tretary Proctor has aatiicrlznl the Mis sissippi Rivtr Commission to .xpnd $ loo,uO0 I or tue protection of levees alo.ig the Missis sippi river in the fourth r'if.rict, which ex teudn from Warrenton, Hits, to the bal of the Passes, a distance of ini.ea. - To is is in addition to ths f 30,000 al.ote l to the Mo.--gansea levee. , A telegram from Tallulab, Louisiana, says that all west of there is a vast sheet of water to the hills of Bayou Mjcou The water in the overflowed section is not rising so rapid . ly; as it is finding its natural outlets. The road-be I of the Vicksburg. S'Jreveport and PaciSo R iilroad has several feet to spare, and thpre is but little danger of through trafflo being suspended. Hear Hot Springs, in Madison county, N. C, a few days ago, a twelve-year old son of 8. D. Chambers, accidentally shot and killed ' his mother. The father liad just returned from Hot Springs with a valise containing t ome articles for the family. He put down ids vause ana sieppaa out wneu tne boy looked into it to see what his fath-r had brought him. He found a pistol and said to his mother, "See what pa brought bora." The pistol was discharged, the ball striking ' bis mother in the breast. A collision occurred between two passen ger trains on tin Northwestern Railroad, at Laval le, Wisconsin.- These pas sen jers were lnjired: A. Welecbka, Miun4aplis, back hurt; John Snquest, Minneapolis, face cut b idly ; Aaron Auderson, Minneapolis, spine hurt; Eriok Jar 1 me, Rochester, Minn., 9 years old, skull fracturad and rib brjken, ' Martin Markham, Rochester, Minn., injure! internally. Oa ldy, namaJ nnknowu.was also internally injured. Manqueit and the Jardme boy will probably die. PLAYING WITH FIRE. Ten Farmhouse and Barns Bnrnrd v Cropa Consamed-Lou $200,000. Two sons of W. C. Weuster, while playing ; with fire on their father's farm, a short dis tance northwest of Wichita, Kan., startel a - prairie fire.' The wind was Llowiug a gal j uni the fire spread with great rapi lity io . wards the northwest and at the latest report hal burned over fifty quarter sections of Ian I, The bouse?, barns aud outhouses of tea far mers were destroyed and a great quantity of . grain and hay cjnsamed. Bo iar as can be learned the loss among the live stock was ' not severe. The fire has now about burne t ib-elf out, but it is feared that a hi?h wiud wbich still prevailsmay fan some of tbedyiug embers into a blaze. Loss 1150.000 to taOO.UUO. Canada" no more a refuge Embleaalement F-mtradltaMe by - the Treaty With England.' The conTantionsupp'ementary to the tenth Article of the treaty of 1S'J3 between Great Fr tiin and the United States concluded at 'Washington, July 13, 1SS0, and ratifications . exchanged at London, March 11.. 1830. has i l.-n proclaimel. The provisions of tht tenth ert ele are made applicable to the following a WiSional crimei: EoabeziVment, lsrc- ny, rpc ivinx any monT, valuable sscuritv or o'hr proprtf, knowing the sm to have heii emtwMieJ, stolen or franduWnily O" ti;: l. Fraud by a bailee, banker, agent vt--r. trusts, or director or member or of fi -r n-f aor eompany," mde criminal by tow j.v . rtf hrth efwntria; Perjury or suborn tios rperjOfy, . ,!. :rfi SOUTHERN ITEMS IXTEtoKSTIXO XF.iYS COMPILED FROn MANY SOURCES. A. new tribe ot Red Men has been instl iuted at Suffolk, Va. ' The Presbyterian churches in Richmond , Vs., baveorganisad a union. . . Danville, Va., is to have a new Methodist church, which will cost $40,000. j. . Charlottesville, Vs., ia to have a belt line railroad four miles in length. ; The Governor of Kentucky has signed the bill abolishing the Covington Council. A Big Stone Gap syndicate has purchased QUO acres of land at Graham, Va., at $250 per acre. Tba truckers around Norfolk, Va., re port great destruction to crops by the recent frees , The tobacco plants in Soutbside Virginia have b?en badly damaged by the recent freeze. Fire at Point of Rocks, Frederick county Md., destroyed five buildings, entailing a loss of 6,4 a An old can containing $700 in gold and sHver coin was unearthed on a farm near Greenville, Ky. ' . The postcfflce at Homer, Lewis county, W. Va., has been discontinued. Mail will be sent to Gaston. ... A financial exhibit of the state cf North Carolina, shows nineteen national banks with a capital of $i,43J,000. A seven foot vtiu of magnetic ore has been discovered on the mountain (arm of John Bowyer, near Bufordsville, Va. Rev. Sam Jones will begin his meetings in Richmond, Va,, Sunday, June $, andcou tinue them till Friday, June inclusive. Last week thj guests at Virginia Beach er joyed the novelty of seeing a school of wuales cloee in saore and as piayful as kit- t ns. .- " ' Black marble of a very superior quill ty.hus btwn found on Back Creeg, Botetourt county, Va., aud the owners hare been of fered large prices, f Sir. S. Diener, of Culpeper, Va. , kil'ed a chicken a few dags since, and on opening the gizzard, it was found to contaia twenty-four wh.te china buttons. A freight train on the Georgia Pacific railroid went through a trestle near Birm ingham, Ala. A conductor was killed and four man were hurt. One thousand logmen in Baldwin county, Ala., have struck for an increase in wages. The strike may extend to dock men aud stevedores at Pensacola. The maintenance and expenses of the Virginia oyster flaet according to the report, is nearly n va thousand dollars more than the revenue for the oyster ttx last year. M. J. Cheatham (white) was hanged at Grenada. Mis.'., for the murder of James Til man (colored,) and ws the first white man to be handed in the State for the killiug of a colored man. The annual statement of the state board of health of North Carolina, gives the mor tality statistics for the year just o Oieil. Whites, 13 5o, and negroes, 21. 68 per cent, ot population. , A three-year-old son of Mr. Wm. H. Eichelberger, of Frederick, Md., while play ing near a stove, overturned a kettle of lo.1 lug water, and was so severely scalded that death resulted. ; The Shenandoah and Kanawha Iron and Coal Company has mad arrangements to begin at once the erection of two- 100 ton capacity blast furnaces, a pipefoundery and rolling mill at Wayuesboro, Va. An electrical railway is to be built be tween Richmond and Petersburg, Va., pass ing near Chest erflald O. H. Ic is anuouno -d that the road will be completed and In opera tion within the next four months. , A pieturesquo character, who recently died in Washington county, Ga,, wai noted tor tradiog jack-knive. On tbe handle of every kniie he ever owned be made a little private mark, by wh.oa be could recogrdze it if it ever came into his hands again. The Randleman Manufacturing company at Ashboro, N. C, proposes to add 800,000 moie brio to its improvements this year. The increasa in its business and tbe growing demands for its goods necessitate more build ing and more mac unery. -Mr. N. Hock man, of Salem, Va., sold 26 a r -s of land ad j aniug his planing mill and the Norfolk and Western Railroad. The price to be paid is $GJ,000. It was decided to or ganize a company, with $100,000, to uevclop it, and in just threo hours every dollar of ih siock was secured. An English syndicate has conolu le i ne gotl itions lor tbe leading distilleries of Ken tucky. Among tbe establishments to be pur chased are Atuerton, Sberleys & Patterson'', of Louisville; Stag, of Frankfort; Tarr & Co. 'it, of Lexington; White's, of Paris, and Pepper's, of Lexington. Tbe boiler in E. "Wheeler's grist mill, at St. Albans, W. Va-, explo led tbe other morn ing. Five men were scalded, or struck by flying fragments ot timber. The boiler de scended tbrougb tbe roof of a dwelling house occupied by Captain M. Porter. The rear portion of the building was demolished, but no o ia was hurt. , It is rumored that one of the biggest at tempts at fraud, in wbich over a million do -lars is involve I, is soon to be brought to light in Stafford county, Va., by the arrest of a wea tbr Northern man. wbo bas for the past two weeks been shadowed by detectives. It U further alleged that a wealthy Northern corporation is also involved. , Robert Moseley, colored, was banged near Huntmile, Ala., lor attempted assauic on Miss Ellon Austin. He met his death within a few feet of a pit in which he had lain in watt tor tne lady, ana was onriea tuerein. About 500 men were in the mob, among them 11. ty colored man who approved tbe banging. The operatives of the Ettrick cotton fac tory, near ireterBburg, va., wno nave Deen on a strike for the oast two weeks because of a reduction of ten per cent, in their wages, made to correspond with tne reduction ot tbe hours of labor under the new law, re turned to work on a oompromisa basis of live per cent, reduction. -Ad vices from various parts of the rice belt iu tbe Carolines indicate that tbe plant ers are further ah sad with their crops than e7erbaiore. Tha fair weather wbicu has prevailed during almost the entire winter bas given them ample opportunity for get ting tbe crop planted, aud they have taken advantage of it every wnere. The movement on foot at Winston, N.C, tos.curea$50,000 joint stock tobicoo fac tory has mot with gratifying su.-c?. Al ready proposals for much more than the amount of stock first proposed for tne fac tory have been received, and now some of those most interested in the enterprise are endeavoring to increase the stock to $4)0,000, which would make it the big Bt pluj tact jry in tbe state. . Maysville, Ga. , a to wn of about one thou sand inhabitants near Athens, was almost sept from the face of tbe eartu by Ore, the entire business portion ot tbe Village being laid low. The fire was first discovered about 1 o'o.ock, aud an alarm soon brought out tbe entire population of the little place. Etlur.s to check me blaze were almost fruitless, anl before dawn the principal business square Whs in aaaei. Only, one store is leftiu th,? town and that is injured. , Thn Unite 1 States court at Lynch', urg, Va., is filled with cises for violation ot n.i 'terual revenue law, the iuajriiyot wnich are for retailing liquor without ttoeuse, t e parties in nearly every ease Uuvingsold irona a kg or can, and tbe offences were comiu.t ted in mouutains of Southwest .Virginia.; Nine teutbs of tnese cases ar sent to the grand jury upon information of men wno do it to obtaiu witness tees and mileage. I many cases it developed tbac tbe sauie wit cesaM appear at all tbe courts of iliaino:, an i wo loui bave some of lUese men ena jid .in . lbe protewioual witness bu-iue ibat they bave become exports. An Ideal Steamship. Drawings and propositions for a new ttyle of fast ocean steamship appear in the Americas Mail and Exnort Journal Civil Engineer B. Schieldrop, the author of the proposed new greyhound, claims that it will foe able to raise the record of speed across the Atlantic from twenty one to thirty-four kno1 an hour. This would admit of voyages between Queens town and Sandy Ilook in three days aud thirteen hours.i; . , . 7. 3Ir. Schieldrop claims that in the fun damental : priuciple V pon which the modern - transatlantic steamers are built and operated no real advance has been made since the Savannah crossed in 1819. He thinks that the trouble has been that 'the same boat has been "a mail convey ance, a hotel, a barn, and -a warehouso" all in one. ; lie proposes to build, upon i special model, a vessel for first-class passengers and mail which will possess the maximum of speed and space with the minimum of weight and displace ment. : By removing cargo space of the vessel now in use he proposes to lighten the structure of the hull and si ill keep it submerged to the same water line. This would give the hull a shallow and broad upper part and a narrow andtdeep lower part. It might be described as a combi nation of the centre-board type in the upper part and an English cutter in the lower part. ; - - A.s regards stability, the new vessel will provea mean between the cutter and the centre-board type. 7 He claims that on account of its fullness above the water line his plan will insure a dry deck both odmidships and at the extremities. The upper deck will be devoted to a spacious library, ladies': cabin, smoking saloon and music-room. The main deck will be taken up by a dining saloon, an ele gant after cabin and several high-priced staterooms. The dining saloon will seat 656 persons comfortably. - The entire lower deck will bo divided into state rooms of different dimensions. All of the modern conveniences will be at hand, and -cleanliness, it is claimed, can be more thoroughly secured than if steerage passengers and freight were car ried. Mr. Shieldrop says that his method would be in reality a fast limited express transit with Pullman accommodations. America as a Naval Porrer. , The advent of the. Americans on the high seas as the first naval power in the world is as certain as the rising of the sun, but hitherto the development of the navy of the United States has been slow. The Secretary of the Navy at Washington is, however, moving in the matter, and his latest report rec ommends the building of two fleets of battleships, eight for the Pacific and twelve for the Atlantic; twenty coast defense ships and five first-class tor pedo boats. This is, of couse, only a fancy programme. But it has substance enough in it to gke stimulus to ' the hope that before long an Anglo-American flag may bo unfurled which will represent the combined naval forces of the English, speaking ', world. Pall Mall Gazette: "The world grows weary praislnpt men. And wearied grows of beins praised " Bnt never wearied grows the pen . VTiich writes the truths that nave amazed tho thousands who have been ariven up by their physicians and who have been restored to complete tiealth by using-that safest of all remedies for functional irregularities and weaknesses.whi.ei are the bane of womankind. Wo refer, of course, to Dr. lJicrce's Fa vc rite Prescription, the only imarantfM cure for nil those chronic ailments peculiar to women. Read the guarantee on the bottle-wrapper. To regtilato the stomach, liver nnd bowels. Dr. PicvcQ's Pellets excel. One a dose. , Mamma What are you taWine your doll's bedstead apirt for. pet? , L ttlo Dot I'a (ooklu for bugs. Deafness CanH be Caved .v By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of tbe ear. Thereto only tne way to cure Deafness, and that is by con ttitutiooal remedies. Deafness is caused by Ki ii. flamed condition of tbe mucous lining ot e Eustachian Tube. When this tuba gets in Bamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness U the result, and unless the in nam (nation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, bearing will be de itroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an tn Bamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by Catarrh) that we cannot cure by taking Hail's Catarrh Cure. Keud for cirula s, tree. F. J. Chenkv A Co., Toledo, O. 0ST Sold by Druggists. 75c To hsve what we want Is riches, but to be Ible tod without it is Doner. "That Tired Feeling Has never been more prevalent and more prostrat ing than now. The winter has been mild and tin healthful, influenca epidemic and fevers have visited nearly all our homes, leaving about everybody In a weak, tlred-out, languid condition. The usefulness of Hood's Sarsapartlla to thus made greater than ever, for it Is absolutely unequalled as abnUdlng-up, strengthening medicine. Try It and you will realise Its recuperative power. " C "1 was very much run down in health, had no strength and no inclination to do anrthing. I have been taking Hood's Sarsapartlla and that tired feel ing has left me, my appetite has returned, I am liks m new man." Cbauxckt Latham, Sort Columbus, Ohio. 1 N. S. If you decide to take Hood's SarsapariUa do not be Induced to buy any other. Hood's SarsapariUa Bold by all druggists. 1, six for 5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD CO., Lowell, Mass. ' IOO Doses One Dollar 10 cure Biliousness, Sick Headache. Constipation. Malaria, Liver Complaints, take the safe , . and certain remedy. SMITH'S, BILE BEAFJS Use the SMALL SIZE (40 little beans to the bot. tie). They are the most convenient: suit all agea Price f either else, 8 cent per bottle, otfitst (coppers or iump). t -m ait tp if sV rf tf. W OJU1AU SJS XW liakers of "Btie Beans. ' fit, lonto. Me. 1JM sr rim TKCY ARE iii II R H h t Tlie Compass. Tho compass) needle points to the north because riaoticalljr the earth ! magnet, not differing essentially in its magnetic properties from a bar of mag netized steel. It has two poles of greatest intensity, and, like most large steel magnets,: there are several sup plemental poles of lesser intensity. Just as the pole of one bar magnet at tracts the end of another, so tbe mag netic poles of the earth behave toward poles of the compass ' needle, unlike poles attracting and like poles repelling each other. It is well to modify the statement that the needle points north and south. As a matter of fact, there are but few localities on the earth where it does point due north and south, , and these are constantly changing. An irregular line drawn from the mouth of the Orinoco Hirer, through the east coast of Harti, Charleston, S C, and De troit. Mich., represents very nearly the line in which there is no variation at the present time. In all the places east of this line the north end of the needle swings slightly to the west ward; in all places west of it, to the eastward. At the north of the Colum bia River the variation of the compass is about twenty-two degrees east; in Alaska it is from fortv to sixtv decrees east ; : midway, between New lork and Liverpool it ia aoout imrty-nve degrees west. . : The reason is that the compass needle points, not to the geographical but to the mageetio poles, and these do not coincide in position. The mag netic north pole is at present on or near the southwestern shore of Boothia Peninsula.in the northern part of North America. Its position is constantly chancing. and in the last five hundred years it has moved about half the distance round the geographical pole. During the three hundred years in which ob servations have been carefully made at the Magnetic, Observatory in Paris, the variations have changed from eleven degrees twenty minutes east of north to twenty-two degrees ten minutes west. In the United States the rate of the change in variation differs much in dif ferent parts of the country. In Wash ington State it changes at the rate of about seven minutes a year; in Arizona and New Mexico it is stationary ; in the New England State it is from one to three minutes per year. A Wonderful Fountain. The artesian well at Charleville, on the Warreeo River. Queensland, is the new est and most remarkable instance of the natural resources of marvelous Australia. The well is situated quite near ; the rail way station, but in one of the most un likely places that could nave been im agined. Who on ' earth would ; have expected that this artesian well, which is the best in the world, or at all events yields the largest amount of water, was sunk upon top of a sandy hummock? Yet so it is. ' - v Crossing the swampy flat leadinsr to this hummock, attention is' drawn to a wide channel cut through the dnlt sand, and it is explained that tho outflow of water had done this crc the apparatus for controlling it had been obtained. The bore itself looked a harmless enough kind of thing. It might have been taken for a rather high standpipe placed in an idiotic position in the bottom oi a noie sixty or seventy yards long, thirty broad, and ten feet deep. ' But a moment's ob servation showed that tho harmless-look ing standpipe had made the hole, As a matter Of fact, the water when it was tapped rushed up in such a volume that it washed away the sand around the bore in a few minutes, and cleaned out the foundations of the derrick and threatened to wreck the whole contrivance. If they had not got a plug in it pretty soon, it would have washed (Juaiievillc into the Warrego. J On top of the pipe there has been tixed a right-angle band, so that the water can be turned in any direction. Subsequently a nozzle, one inch m di ameter, was attached to the pipe, and when the water was turned on it ascended in an even jet to a height of nearly one hundred feet, returning to earth nVa heavy shower, or dissipating in ; mist clouds through which the rainbows played with an effect that was as beauti ful as it was wonderful. It seemed that the visitors would never tire looking at it They simply stood and gazed, hardly saying a word, for, iD the presence of this marvelous phenomenon, speech seemed poor and commonplace, and -tho mind simply gave itself up to childlike wonderment. Quec.nslander. A Bet Declared Off. A large yellow-and-white cat started to cross . Broadway, nearly opposite Park row one afternoon recently when traffic was at its greatest. ' Where she came from was known only to herself,, but that she was making for the friend ly shelter afforded by the rails of St. Paul's churohyard was apparent to all. Her chances ot getting across the street safely did not seem to be good, as she shrank back terrified from a passenger car, dodged under the wheels of an ex press wagon, and escaped being run over by one of Uncle Sam's small vans by less than half the length of her tail. Two well-dressed men from Phila delphia ' stopped in the middle of the thoroughfare to watch her. "Bet you she is crushed," said one. "Take you," replied the other. Just then the pole of a double truck struck the fifth rib of the man who had offered the bet, knocked his hat off, and nearly threw him down. mil roared tbe driver. "Hain't you got no eyes?" At the same moment ine man wno had taken the bet received a blow on the back of the neck from the off horse's head that nearly dislocated something spinal. . fcHo!" roared the driver. "Are you asleep?" - The men escaped to the sidewalk. "Where's the cat?" asked one. - ' "How the devil do I know?" replied the other. And as the venturesome creature was not visible, dead or alive, the bet was ordered off. a - i .s w t is ' i u i-j ss .. SOLD DIRECT T9 .HTTTE F08 CAUlCSUt ffiJCL IC3 CEVJWICX-wi Mors tseases are prefaced by nrins; brnr-a and perfumed soap than bv anything c.":. hy mn snch terrible risks when you 1 t pobbinul Kleetrlo Soaji Is pore atf pcriect. bobLiua'g prevents hands f rum cua, pa There ar those who never reason no what tlit y should do, Luton What ibey bave done. A pocket" tnetrn-oaf free to smokers of 'XansiU'a Punch" 6c. Cigar. . . After all, whv not etthe statre elevate it set Who Is to condemn it if It usts its wlugs and flies. - lisfnicted with poreeye use DrNaao Thorn p. lo&aEyeWater.DruKiclats sell at diaper botile An undertaker's favorite xrole Is box'n . KJVJOTtTjS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it ia pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on, the Kidneys, ' Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is tho only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to tho taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Strop of Figs is for sale in 50o and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try , it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAIt FtiAkQtSOO. CAU mtsvtiiE, r. HEW tOttK, M.t, La Grippe has Left the System badly debilitated in millions of casea. r Take ' Ayers SarsaparlNa . and restore Tone . . and Strength. It never fails. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Aycr & Co., Lowell, Mass. StOP tlfcLeStt Chrohic Cough Now: j For If you do not It may become eon- j J sumptlve. For Countmption, Scrofula, ) General JMtUitjf and Wanting JHstxues, I there Is nothing like TTi Ftmsiob Of Pure Cod Liver Oil and HYPOPHOSPHITES , OjT Zilmo and Boda. It is almost as palatable as rntlk. Far better than other so-oallod Emulsions. A wonderful flosh producer. Scott's Emulsion There are poor Imitations. Get the genuine. THE BEST EEMEDZ FOR Catarrh CHILDREN stiFrasua fbox COLD in HEAD SNUFFLES OR CATARRH. A nattalM is fttinltA.1! Inta aaah no"itrlt and Is asrM bla. Hnce Au eta, at draggisM ; or mail, regiBtered, id cts. KLY BHUf ilfcKa, jo Warren B.. iat Voci, Lloney in Chickeno If jrm know how to properly car. for them. For'5 rents in ataime jron can procure a UI0-PAOK BOOK Riving' tn txpnence of a praoti cal P. ultry HaiMT not an ama tur. but a man working for dol lars and cent during a pcricd of 26 ypara. It taaclira you how to jLvtect and Cure Diaeaaes; to Fe-d lTlr Krr and aloo for tvtteninij; which lo 1 to bava for Breeding yen should know on this subject to make it profit, tble. Pent potBd for a5c. BOOK PlIU. liOt'Hfc, 134 Leonard btieet. M. V. Clur. Ml is-" ... JWi'1 If JT .wh-.TSBSO "Mm in i 9A 7 i PIXIJM ICiilllKlll ttilt (iAlAiuiU. JJiji. Mk.ii.), w li.nl. Cheapest. Relief is imineduu;. A cure is ceriuiu ; tor Cold in the Head it hits no equaL ' I i ... It is an OlntiriPiit. of which a Lj noHirns. itich, wx noid ny nnipiriM.i or sent ny tn;u: b j s j sav .. h ss . VILGER H. HUB." AY lh . sUs - PAIMQ VNP ACHEG. '( I Spent 8300. In Vain, s V Wakamso, Ind., Aug. 23.1883. t " I S i flfcred all over ivitb pain and ntn-nt t3ur. oij doctors tyithont relluf : two or throj applicatious of tit. Jacobs Oil relieved mo. COXRAO D0KIUNC?. At f)Rt7GGISTS AND DEAT.KRS. THE CHARLES A. V0GELER CO.. Ealllmore. M. kaaS1 vi..wa"i' "'iliililSx- '4 ' There is po Moilioine like 1 3teB DR. SCt:iiCK'S PBULPOniC a syrup. It U plramnt to the tnsts and due out contain a particle of, opium nrnnyiliing injurious. It Ik the KretConphMixlicioeinthe World. F.irSslc biall DrnEKlat. t,lo l.O0" per bottle. Dr. Schenes'a B'li on Cunsump'ion and it Our, nmili-d free. Address .t w Mphno.k A Hon. Philadelphia. QRATBPUL COMFORTINQ. .. BREAKFAST. "Br a thorough knylelge of thn natural lawi whloa goTern the operation of dlgeitloa aud nutrl. :lon, and by a oaroful apolicatloa ot the fine proper. 1 Uet ot well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Epp4 has proriiied jut breakfast tables with a doUeatoIr flavoured tr ' wage which may save us many heavy doctors' bi la. it la by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a eonstltuuon may be gradually unlit up until ttrong enough to resist every teudoncy to dtvease. Hundreds or subtle mulad'.na aro fioatWtr around ns ready to attack wherever there ia a weak point. We may escape many a fatal haf t by keeping our elves well forUSed with pure blood and a properly loiirtihed frame." "Ciou Service Qaztttn. Hade simply with boiilntf water or milk. Sold wly tn half-pound Un by Uroours, labelled thus: I AMa Cl'l'd A: CO., Ho.nopauUo ChanUsts. ' LOMDOK. SSOLASU. By J. nanllten Ayers, A. M.t M. P. ThlsUamojt valuable byik for the hoi se hold, ... teaohinn as 1C 'does tlie eaitiiy-dUMoTalHhsd symp toranof dlfferout dlsoaios, th caoe.i and meaaa ef preeatlii suohdlsajes, and tho almp'est remndles wUloh will alinrlace or cure. 59 page prof uaely lllnftrated. Tha book It written In plain every-day Bafll-Ui, aud is frea from tha technical term whleh reailar most doetor books so valiieteis to the ireiier allty ot readers. Only C')c pojtpald. Olvesa con, plot? analysis of everything p$rtalnln to courtship, raarrlago and the prodiiottoii on'l rearing of healthy fanilllua) tiscother with valuable reel pea and pre scriptions, explanation of botanloal proottoe, eor reet use of ordinary herb. Wi'.h this book In the house there is n exome for not knowlnj what to , do in aa emergency. Send postal notes or post aye stamps of any denomination not larger than 6 cent BOOK IU!. UUOSS. Ul Utmui BUt B. X. fU& f. THE tVONDERFUL URGCHAIR. U.ilC0MBIN!NG5ARTlCLES fvV W W rURNITURE. (Q i.ria ihvm Kotafl at the law mtmuM Srak mkUtmttefiailary prion,. nail and ablp gooen to oe aid fur m duitvorr. brad stamp for Clata tocue. MamegoadtOti TO NIKS. si'tciAL rata adiUcxo lira, oex, i& k. eth t ftSUTMSI. ORTHERH PACIFIC. LOW PRICE RAILROAD LAHDS h EE Government LANDS. ftllMlUNM OF A (! It f. in Minnesota, Nona bakota, ilouta na, Idaho, Washington and Oregon. run ran publications with mops describing the Cr.U rUn beat -agricultural, Gracing and Tim per Lands new open to settlors. Scut tree. Address CHAS. B. LAMBORM, .rr Wen AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT lilt. I. OH It, It'J!) North Fifteenth Mreet, Philadelphia. Twenty years experience . In special dlseasesj cures the worst cae of Nervous ... Complaints, Bkod Poisoning, Blotches, Krnptlona, . Plies Catarrh, Ulcers, Sores, Impaired Memory, Despondency, . Dimness of Vision, Lung, I-lver, f C Moiiiach, Kidney (Urtglit'a Disease); conrtilmitlal. -i-I.V'Cali or write for question lut aud bookrT) ATI AQ'-f O.S. an4WorWK Many of them coHti-ed. Alia avsat amount ot iniorma tluo rrlatire to different Ktates and t'oualrls t orni cf Government, I'anit Products aud Valao,&o,. Only ITxi. ia Stamps. Address Boob foa. Uousk. VH Leonard HhN, Y AXLE GREASE BEST I tr ast tne ueuuine. eoia tverywnere. T,i WHISKEY HAB ITS enred at nome wild ont psin. : 13ooklf par liculars seat PRE E. uttics MH Whitehall ' if5.paovED EXCEUS03 ikooETon S; STdredt In 3uuoesijf)it oporrtuill. Unuwnt' . CI ..J (UHLItu(.. U.K. J Circu4 D at less cost tuansny otOer 6cer. Bent. liw aw sciorUluBCuto, tied, BIAlik aalaey.U. V. to iiutcn ie.rtfi'r porwneHcre oi teruis eve , E m P LO Y M E W TI FREES 23 bum pie. Ai;ot:ts wau''d. Tew (!oodc. Knli. cy g.en n.tt p x,, iddr-s wi h tnip . W K.TKaiuu ,BLio. Ml. LIFE IfCfEDeftU Ill;MOSt'POrt:iAR OF Wtrr tnaK UWIJ boo!: published n .JIMnM. tn .tiMl O-Mt. T'P 1 1 ! 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 V IllllE lUIUUiu . . .- - J tratcd. Local and Ccncrol agents wentcd. Complete mQt i.0a I- B. WOOIAVAKD, ialtimoro, A.d. nniltta H HABIT.' Only Certain nd llrlllfil easy ClfK Kin the World. DN LV V K K In the World. I4 ltoot Graft!-.KTeryth!n;! Vn larg-er stock iu U.S. No bet ter, no chenper. PTKB CO. MURSEBUia, Loulsiaua, Mo. ASTH M AaVsREgs-FREE i hf Mil safcrers. r. K. SCKlPr'a AK, tit Paal, liaa. 17 f CTT I N k'e estraiow. Wiit fo- Pi I '. L AO A J. will pay you. It out:. Coon. 0nnrO P,,A, Vnrrr, Immense tock chen p. H An riS sud U. for 0 sample vjiwsi Cst'loguci , 1 1 Ml g.tfrte. t.H.CHri:c;ftOo..PolBIl1N.V ' .. .. ..iu iu'y s" ".tfH Kik t as th Or.I eoolc n heccnacuro ol this diWHRn. O.K.l::'SltAHAM,M. D , .AmsterUam, N. Y. have aold P,lg O lor Bianv yvKn. and it has m Riven the best ol sans- taction, 1). R. x)VCHR CO.. Chicago, 111. 1.0Oi "AiibvCruciglsU. .Ji 1'anWlMMi ..At M l auM atrktcis. "bXA xrybyai f Olaetnnstl UN ".13 small narttrlf i armllod fat tha i irren,' Tn. w ' . t itUJUii C0 Cincinnati, 0, ?1 i . I .Hi r
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 4, 1890, edition 1
4
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