Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / May 24, 1895, edition 1 / Page 4
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True Naaio I Cldna. More than a thousand years before the Christian era, the Chinese wero a people ruled by a dynasty ot kings, bat there is no authentic history of them prior to the Chow dynasty. The Celestial Empire has in its time borne many old names, for it was formerly the custom to change the name of the country every time a new dynasty gained control of governmental aSairs. Thus, in the i ncient writings,, we find it referred to as Hai-que, Cham-que, Ilan-que, etc. , acoording to the name of the ruling monarch. The true name, according to Oriental scholars, , is Chum-quo, which means "the cen tre kingdom of the world." The early European explorers, especially th Portugese, corrupted "Chun-que"into "Chin-que," and from this word later navigators evolved the word "China." New York Dispatch. . rutaeomcterv , . A pulaeometcr has been invented which, it is claimed, it is possible to tell to a fraction the exact condition of the heart beat. An electrio pen traces on prepared paper' tho ongo ing, baitings and precise peregrina tions of the blood, showing with the fidelity of science the strength or weakness of the telltale pulse. This should, it ia considered, be of special advantage to life insurance doctors, s veil as to the profession at largo. Invention. Catarrh Cannot Be Caret With local applications, as they cannot reach Um seat of the disease. Catarrh Is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to curs It you mast take internal remedies. Hail's Catarrh Cur is taken internally, and acts di rectly on the blood and mucous surface. Hairs Catarrh Cure W not a quack medicine. 1 1 was proscribed by one of tho best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of fthe best tonics known, com bined with tho beet blood purifiers, acting di rectly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect fcomblnation of the two Ingredients is what produces sueh wonderful results in curing ca tarrh. Send for testimwiiala free, i F. J. Chenxt & a i Propa,, Toledo, O Bold by druggists, price 75c A man in Melbourne, Australia, has k trained kangaroo. He makes it jump long distances by prodding it jrith a red-hot poker. Its longest jump is thirty-four feet seven inches. The Meet Pleasant Way Of preventing the grippe, colds, headaches and fevers is to use the liquid laxative remedy, Byrup of Figs, whenever the system needs a gentle, yet effective cleansing. To be benefited one must got tho true remedy manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. Fcr sale by all druggists in 50c. and $1 bottles. fa JtfMnlgan State census shows a ooon iatiotx on Jane 1 last of 2.241.454. A Gloomr Outlook ie that of tho dyspeptic, but his face will brighten when he knows that Uipans Tabules cnre that terrible disorder and will make him cheerful and happy man. - 'Chicago Dvggors are organizing a trust to pool thair receipts. believe Piso's Cure for Consump tion saved my boy's life last summer. Mrs. ATyLTTsT)rrrnrAss T.pTlrw HTili Oct. 20, 1894. uBMTnnas oi goia nave Deon maciein Korea. Mrs. Wlnslow'g Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cores wind colic. 2T. a bottle Chbistsias Dat witnessed six murders Wttbin the borders of Florida. Karl's Clover Root, the great Wool purifier, gives freshness and clearness to the complex ion and cures constipation, 25 cts., 50 cts., $L "rscERiro weather la Florida, the coldest In sixty years, destroyed half the orange eran. If afflicted with sore eys use Dr. l?ac Thomp son Eye water.DruKglst s sell at 25c per bottle Scrofulous Taints Lurk in the blood of almost every one. In many cases thoy are inherited. Berofula ap pears in running sores, hunches, pimples end ; caneerou. growths. Scrofula can be oared by purifying tho blood with Hood's oods Sarsa- parilla Bireaparilla. T h i 1 retires err oat remedy has had . wonderful success in iyfV&ffc earing this disease. It thoroughly eradi cates the humor from the blood. Hood's Sarsa parilla cures the sores and eruptions by removing the Impurities in the blood. Hood's PHIs cure all liver ills. 25c. - The Greatest fledical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery, DONALD KENNEDY, of fiOXBURY, MASS. uvi mis uciicr uay Dciurc ycoicruuy. . Penn Yan, N. Y.,Nov. 28, 1894. Your Discovery has done so much for me lam only too glad t9 tell everybody, about my case. " When I began taking it, one year ago last July, I had DYSPEPSIA in Us . worst form. I was constipated, so much v- $o as to always use injections, and I had a constant PAW in my STOMACH nM LEFT SIDE. My knees were stiffs and I could not sit down on a stool or get down to fix anything on the floor. But now I can sit, or get down on my knees, or do anything in my garden. I feel like a new person. You must know 1 J teas discouraged, as I have lost two sisters ' and an older brother with STOMACH TROUBLE. But I truly ttJeiieve if they had known of your remedies they wotitd be well, as 1 am. You can fix up my letter to suit yourself, only do publish it, that women may know v??iat the Discovery has done' for pj. - Yours truly, Mrs. MAZY C. AYIiES. fofid postal card for Dr. Kennedy's Book. i , sat-"-. - "nt r- ' ' ''-J "the All ILliS f AILS. I f :. LiUi. a bjrufi. Tann'i Good. Use I i '"' a 9nit ly dnmMa II FARM AND GARDEN. COOD BAEN CATS. The cats that remain all the time around the house Boon become lazy and good for nothing as mousers. This is not true"of the barn cat Keeping1 close to the fire, as most house .cats do, they eoon become so worthless that mice may be all over the houso without their noticing, one of them. The cat was made for aotivity, and its thick fur coat, always warmest in win ter, is its best protection against oold. Boston Cultivator. . EOOfcOMY. IN NiANTTNd. , In small fruit growing a change ot crops should take place without wait? ing a year or two for the plants to grow. When my strawberry bed has but one more year to grow I sot in the rows raspberries. . The raspber ries are ready to bear as soon as the strawberries are given up. No year is lost. So in my raspberry gardens I plant pear trees, and expect them to be in good bearing by the time the berries are worn out. A red raspberry plantation should be good for twelve years or more if properly cared for and manured. The pears will by that time be giving heavy crops. There is such a thing as alternation of crops for fruit as well as grains and vegeta bles. 'Apples planted again in old apple orchards do not thrive as well as on fresh ground. American Agri culturist. HOW TO HANDLB AND KEEP POTATOES. "Potatoes should be handled very carefully, as they easily peel their skins and bruise, when rot is certain to unsue. 1'otatoes should be kept at a temperature of from forty-five to fifty degrees in a moderately dry, well-ventilated apartment, from which light must be carefully excluded, else the potatoes will develop a strong, rank taste. They are a bulky crop, and every time they are handled unnecessarily involves a cost which materially re duces the profit. The earlier farmers can sell the better, as keeping in win ter involves further work and loss from rot, while later on the weight and value of the potatoes will bo greatly reduced by the growth of the eyes. Judging by the present outlook, it will pay every grower who has po tatoes to take the best care of them. New York World. TBELTjISINQ grapes. drapes trellising according to the Mnnson system has proved so success ful at the Oklahoma Experiment Station this year, that Professor Wangh unhesitatingly recommends it for adoption in general vineyariing. Ac cording to this system, posts etand six fe?t out of the ground. At the top a crosspiece two teet long is nailed, and at each end of this a wire is ruu. A third wire is run through the middles of the posts eight inches below these two, so that the three wires set in a sort of V shape nearly six feet from the ground. This great height is an es sential feature of the system, and should not be modified. On this trel lis the grape vines spread out as they do where they grow wild in the woods. This furnishes a shade for the fruit. At the same timo the fruit is so far above ground as to be 'safe from the intense reflected rays of the sun, which caused more damage in Oklahoma vineyards the. past season than all other causes combined. The trellis alo has many other advantages and only a few disadvantages. Farm, Field and Fireside. KIUPTING CATTLE. The golden rule in shipping all kinds of cattle is to get them as fast as possible from range, ranch, farm or feed-yard to market. It has been proved time and again that a range bullock shrinks every hour after he leaves his native haunts. It stands to reason that all cattle will do so, but natives do not fret, nor are they lia ble to gctjso buifled as the ' former. Since the invention of patent cars, such as Street's and other varieties, parties a long distance from market have been greatly benefited, says an exchange. One only needs to go down to tho stockyards and see the cattle rolling in every day from points 1000 to 1500 miles west without unloading to find out how much better cattle shipped in this way look than those that have been knocked about at the local feeding points, and have had to be unloaded and loaded probably a couple of times betwixt their point of shipment and their destination. The outward appearance is nothing to the inward look when the hide is off and the bruises show up. We be lieve that all cattle, whether natives or rangers, should be sent to market without unloading. We . have cattle reaching us every day from a distance of 1200 miles that 'stay in the oars all this distance. They are fed in the cars and watered also. The old-fashioned railroad feeding-yard is a thing of the past so far as it usefulness is concerned. Just as we believe it is better to kill cattle as near the feed yard or range as possible, so is is bet ter to run them to the central mar kets with as little shrinkage and bruis ing as possible. New York World. a new cabbage moth. A new cabbage moth made her first appearance here about three years ago. The first warm uiglit3 in early summer she comes in through the open window and hovers around the lights. She is a night worker, as she is not to be seen on the wing by day light; but I find her in silent slum ber ; between the leaves of the cab bages. Her body is half an inch in length, very slim, and fashioned like the common cabbage moth in struc ture She carries a small shapely head and long slim legs. Her color, a light green, wings transparent. She is a pretty moth and oovers each egg, after depositing it on the under side of the cabbage leaves, with a white filmy covering. After the eggs are hatched, the tiny worms live for sev eral days under their filmy blanket, and then they creep out into the warm sunshine and begin their life's work of devouring the cabbages. They do not become as large as the common cab bage worm. Fires kindled around and among the oabbages will not only de stroy the new moth, but also the com mon moth. . The common moth is not a night worker, but as she works only when the 6un shines, she is attracted by the light and the warmth of these fires the same as by the sunlight. In sects destroyed by lights and fires at night, save tho fruit and the vegeta- - bles, and much hard labor, ns well .is valuable time. Torch' lights among tho fruit trees, in the evenings, de stroy insects that you fail to see by daylight. New York Tribune.- PARM AND GARDEN NOTES. ' ' Sheep are delicate feeders and will reject anything that is not perfootly sweet. It is hopeless to expect sheep to eat the butts of corn stalks as a cow will when they come from the silo. It makes little difference how rocky land is for grapes. They have beei known to flourish where it was neces sary to carry Boil to cover the roots when planting. A farmer said before the Iowa Insti tute : "It has been proved that clover sod is as good to produce corn as the virgin soil. 'Farmers are just awakon ing to the importance of sowing all small grain fields to clover. It is tho only wholesale fertilizer we have dis covered." Keep the back barnyard as neat as the front ; have the manure pile, the old board pile, the rubbish pile, al ways under cover. Make the neatness of your plaoe noticeable, and teach not only your own boys, but the whole neighborhood, lessons of beauty and thrift. Sheep and hogs are good in orchards hogs preferable to sheep, because they root the ground over and pre pare it for an application of fertilizer. Neither class of stock is sufficient for the full amelioration of the soil to bring the orohard to its best produc tive capaciiy. Excepting the golden rod, milk weed and ragweed, all the rest of our weeds have been imported. Those foreign weeds are the most trouble tome and persistent. ' If it was some one's duty to keep them from the highways, these pests would not travel so fast. Italian bees are now conceded to bo the best bees for this country. New varieties come up every season, are given a short-lived boom and drop below the horizon, to again appear briefly in a few years. The Italian has been tried and has not been found wanting. They are the best. When your cream foams and swells In the churn don't pour hot water into it, but warm it up to seventy de grees, if need be, by warm water to the outside, and mature it more be fore you attempt again to churn. Ma turity and warmth within certain safe limits will generally knock the obsti nacy out of winter cream that does not want to yield up its butter. Vines have been frequently known to do well where their roots were be neath buildings and the vines brought out at the foundation. They never fail in such plaoes for want of moisture, the natural dampness of the soil being sufficient. Very often buoU vines will come through the winter uninjured, when those in the garden or vineyard are seriously damaged. The clover hay harvest should be gin as soon as the field is well in bloom, and every care possible exercised in curing and harvesting the crop, and whi?e all undertakings are uncertain in which the weather takes such an im portant part, much may be done to offset the uncertainties by extreme watchfulness and care, and no dairy man can afford to withhold these in such a case. Tho peach may be budded on the plum, but there is less advantage iu this than is commonly supposed. The peaoh tree is usually hardy enough to live, and if the crop suffers it is from freezing the buds when too far ad vanced. This, of course, the plum stock cannot remedy. It is a mistake also to suppose that, peach trees will not do well on heavy soils. They only require soil that is well drained and from stagnant water at any season. Many mistakes are made in setting out shade trees. Evergreens ought never to be set near the house. I They are useful as windbreaks in the North and West, at some distance from the house, where they may be set in . . eiumps or hedges, but never on n lawn. Grass does not do so well undef them as under deciduous trees, and so many of them drop cones almost the entire year that they are unsightly and interfere, with the mower. Bnies lor Uum Chewing. The visible working of the jaws in chewing gum is not a pleasant sight, and that it exasperates sensitive peo ple beyond measure is not unnatural. A Buffalo coachman lost a good posi tion the other day, because he would persist in chewing gum on the box while driving. The severest criticism levelled at certain regiments of the Massachusetts National Onard at a recent inspection was that many pri vates and some officers chewed gum on parade. The only persons who really ought to .be allowed to chew gum are policemen, on night service only, and members of football teams in actual conflict. Buffalo Commer ciaL SELECT SIFTINGS. It takes a snail exactly four boon day and five hours to travel a mile. The Russians are the most roligiout persons on the face of the globe. Single stones in tho walls surround ing Baalboo weigh 3,000,000 pounds, each. . , . T . - The slashes or openings iu an outei garment to show tho one beneath were formerly called pantos. ' Vienna, Austria, is . to have an . ele vated railroad with the wheels on top of the cars, which will hang suspended from the rails. ? - Robbing graves is the only c?imi under Chinese law for which the thief may be justly killed on the spot by any one finding him out. There is a miniature Indian corn grown in Brazil. Tho c&rs are not larger than a little finger, and the grains are the size of mustard seeds. To prevent lamp chimneys from cracking put them into a kettle ti cold water, gradually heat it till it boils, and then let it as gradually cool. ' . In 954 a drought began in Europa lasting four years. The summers were intensely hot and the faunae prevailed everywhere; 3,000,000 people died of hunger. In Napoleon's early wars one out of each twenty-eight was killed, and in the early British conflicts as high an average as one death to each nineteen engaged is reported. The ears of most defensive animals like the rabbit are turned backward, because those creatures are in con stant apprehension of pursuit; hunt ing animals have their ears turned for ward. . . Allen W. Whittington, of Wilkes County, North Carolina, is tho oldest magistrate in the State. Ho is now over ninety-four years of age, and lately married Miss Marian Vannoy, aged forty-one years. A great sensation his boen causa I in Austria by the imprisonment of a fourteen-year-old boy on the charge of high treason. , Ho was triod in secret and condemned to hard labor in prison for two months. - In the year 1803 a perfect shower of stones fell in the farming country adjacent to L'Aigle, France upward of 3000 separate stones falling upon p wedge-shaped section of country eight miles long by about four miles wide. Tho battle of Gettysburg resulted in the gieatest loss of life of any bat tle of tho Civil War. There were 3070 Federal troops killed, 14,497 wound ed and 5150 missing. The Confed erate loss was 2592 killed, 12,703 wounded and 5150 missing. The Tosenilto Park Threatened!. Galen Clark, the guardian of the Yosemite Valley, in his report recom mends that mueh of the underbrush in the valley be cleared out. He de clares that the Indians by their an nual burning over of the valley kept down this young growth, which is now a hindrance to tourists- and an obstruction to clear views. Mr. Clark declares that there is serious danger from fire, both in tho valley and in the Mariposa big tree grove. Two hotels will bo open next year in the valley, the Stoneman and the Senti nel. Upon tho latter improvements have been made amounting to $20, 000. New York Tribune. A WOMAN'S NERVES. THE STORY OF A WOMAN TO WHOM NOISE WAS TORTURE. Profltrntcd by the Lean Excitement Pbvsician Baflled By Her disc (From the Gate City, Keokuk, Iowa.") Mrs. Heleu Meyers, whoso home la nt 3515 Vernon avenue, Chicago, and whose visit to Keokuk, la., will long be remembered, was nt one time nflTcted with a nervous malady which at times drove her nearly to distrac tion. "Thoso terriblo headaches are a thing of the past," she said the other day to a Gate CUy representative, "and thero is qulto a story in connection with it too. "My nervous system sustained a great shock some fifteen vers aso, brought on, I believe, through too mueh worrying over family matters, and then allowing my love for my books to get tho better of my discretion whero my health was concerned. Why, whenever my affairs nt home did not go along just as I expeoteJ, I would invariably become prostrated from the excitement and I would consider mys?lf fortunate indeed It the effucts ot the attack would not romain for a week. I was obliged to give up our pleasant home not far from the Like shore drive, because I could not stand the noise in that locality. I could find no place In the city which I deemed suitable to one whose nervous system was always on the point of explosion. To add to my misfortunes , my complexion underwent a . change and I looked so yellow and sallow that I was ashamed to venture from the house at all. " 'Madam, said my doctor to me soon after nn unusually severe attack of tho malady, "unless yon leave the city and soek some Flaoo of quiet, you will never recover. So concluded I woul l visit my undo, who lives in Dallas County, Iowa, and whoso farm would surely bo n good place for one in my pitiable condition. I picked np the Gate City one day and happened to come across an interesting recital of the recovery of some woman iu New York State who was afflicted as 1 had bwn. This woman bad been curod by Dr. Williams' Pink Pilla for Palo People. I thought that if Pink Pills cured that woman they mijjht do the tame for me. I began to take the pills according to direc tions and I began to foel better from tho start. After I hai taken several boxes of them I was ready to go back to Chicago. My nervousness was gone an-i my complexion was as fresh ns that of any sixteen-year-old girl la Iowa, and Pink Pith is what put the color in my cheeks. No wonder I am in saoh high spirits and feel like a prize flgbter. And no wonder I like to conio to Keokuk for if it had not been for Pink Wills bougbt from a Keokuk firm I woud not have been alive now," laughingly concluded the lady. . Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain nil tho elements necessary to give new life and rich ness to the blool and restore shattered nerves. They are for salo by all druggists, or may lie had by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., foi 50 cents per box, or six boxes for t2.50. Highest of all in Leavening Power. rrV a Consume the Smoke an I Save the Fuel. Homer T. Yaryan, proprietor of the local hot water and electric plant at Toledo, has donionstratod, says the Manufacturing Gazette, that not only can smoko be suppressed, but a saving of twouty per cent, on fuel bills can be effected. This is accomplished by feeding the fire from underneath in stead of from tho top, as has been the custom ever since coal became a fuel. A mechanical stoker introduces a uni form quantity of fuel at regular inter vals under the boiler,, and tho com bustion thoroughly oonsumes all the gases and smoke from the green coal as it passes through the bod of inoan descent coke abovo it. . The coal with which ho fires his boilers is the poorest kind of Hocking valley slack, and is obtained for the freight and the nomi nal charge of ten ' cents per ton for loading at the mines. Atlanta Con stitution. There is little difficulty for tho far mer ns far south as Virginia and Ken tucky to grow two potato crops a year. A Qentle Corrective what you need when your ver becomes inactive. It's hat you get when you take r. Pierce's Tleasant Pellets; re free from tne violence and the griping that come with the ordinary pill. The best medical authorities agree that in regulating the bowels mild methods are pref erable. For every de rangement of the liver, stomach and bowels, these tiny, sugar coated pills are most effective. They go . about their work in an easy, and natural way, and their good lasts. Once used, they are always in fu vor. Being composed of the choicest, concen trated vegetable ex tracts, they cost much more than other pills found in the market, yet from forty to forty four are put up in each Rented plnsa vial, as sold through drSggists, at the price of the cheaper made pills. L " Pleasant Pellets " cure biliousness, 3ick and bilious headache, dizziness, costive- ness, or constipation, sour stomacu, loss of appetite, coated tongue, indigestion, or dys pepsia, windy belchiugs, '. heart-burn," pain and distress after eating, and kindred derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels. Put up in sealed glass vials, there fore always fresh and reliable. Whether as a laxative, or in larger doses, as a gently acting but searching cathartic, these little " Pellets " are unequaled. As a "dinner pill," to promote digestion, take oiie each day after dinner. To relieve the distress arising from over-eating, noth ing equals One of these little " Pellets." They are tiny, sugar-coated, anti-bilious granules. Any child readily takes them. Accept no substitute that may be recom mended to be 'Must as good." It may be belter for the dealer, because of paying him a better profit, but he is not the one who needs help. ... A free sample (4 to 7 doses) on trial, Is mailed to any address, post-paid, on receipt of name and address on postal card. Address World's Dispensary Medical Association. Buffalo. N. Y. - WALTER BAKER & GO, The Largest Manufacturers or PURE, HIGH GRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES On this Continent, ha kmItM HIGHEST AWARDS fromthafiwt - . 1 . t i t"-i w inaustriai ana i-ooa M EXPOSITIONS; k'Mn Cnrnnoonrf Amprloa M 111 LUIUr)U ailU J""UiiUU V&BB t?oUk th Dateh Proct M, no AftjJ yon and totubto, and coitt Uu Aim mtctnta ayp. OLD BY OROCEB8 EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER. MASS. 3. N. U-4 1 The Tobacco Crop requires a'large amount of sulphate of potash. Experiments show that the largest yields and the best quality are produced from , fertilizers containing . . V '"..- ' Not Less than 12 Actual Potash.- Purchase only fertilizers containing this amount actual, potasn in the form of sulphate. We will gladly send you our pamphlets on the Use of Potash. : They are sent free. It will cost you nothing to read them, and they wil save yen dollars. - GERMAN KALI WORKS. 03 Nassau Street. New York. - ScdtfslEmiiisioe - hi" , ; -Urn 'Air rf,rTt-rAM WW x-tr T?ryTWCTiy . of Cod-liver Oil, with Hypophosphites . of Lime and Soda, is a constructive food that nourishes enriches the blood, creates solid flesh, stops wasting and gives strength. - It is for all : - Wastlrag like Consumption,' Scrofula, Anaemia, Marasmusj or for Oougha and Golds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Longs, Loss ofTlosh and General Debility. Scott's 'Emulsion has no equal a3 Nourishment for Babies and Crowing Children. Buy only the genuino put up in salmon-colored wrapper. m Send for pamplel on Scott's Emulsion. FREE. "' Scott & Downe, N. Y. All Druggists. 50 cents end $ J. - . Latest U. S. Gov't Report , 7b The Greater New YorSr. Some of the larger cities that are to j j ..a.MMvvi. J content to boast of their acreage. Chi cago has tho biggest municipal acre age in the country, covering over 160 square miles, while New York covers only about forty. Some idea of the sardine civilization of New York can be had by reflecting that it covers but little more ground, than Boston. - What is still more astonishing is that when the Greater New York comes to cover 818 square milos it will still be more densely settled than Chicago. We' fanoy Boston to be ,' a very crowded city, with 18.5 persons to tha acre. I New York has over 68 persons to the1 aore, and Chioago, with all her boast- ing, has but 10.7 to the acre. If we. are to estimate population by thej aore it greatly disturbs all previous, calculations. When the greater me-j tropolis is completed it will still havo more people to the acre than London.' Boston Gazette. ' 4 CRtCHTON'S Vy mo School or Shorthand rh Bnxt and Chuaport Bminwis OnllcR in Amnrlen . Four Penmon. Time abort. Ctloao tr. AddinM Sillivan & Crichtoii, Pijror St., Athkt. Oa. SEEDS fcUTTA I J! to all farm -: 25 years In business: Inrgwt tobacco seel fmm lu tho world. Rrpulatlon of our B eds b ooi I to none. Caiaiogiie malti-d frep. Larger num ber of Improved variolic s t'tnn can o found on any other list and ot lower price. It! KAGt.ANi) EE!G,0.,lIyoo,IIollfaxOo.,Va "WHITE AS A SHEET." MANY rwplo.look like "pale 1 death" from Anemia, poverty of blooi. . ' It's most often claused by Ren- ( trai acDUity iroin iacK or nutri tion. A remedial agent of undoubt ed efftVacy ia BIPASS TABULES Thflv l4nut the hous in onler" k hv pRtMrinr th'J di restive fune- 1 firms TlioRii who iisa them in- diciously are properly nourished 1 ana soou m r ! RUDDY WITH HEALTH!" WX:: Douglas THE BEST. FOR AKINC?- 3 COEDOVAN, FRENCH &. ENAMELLED CALF. !4.93.5? FlKkCALF&KANGARDOl 3.Epp0LlCE,3SOLW. "" EXTRA TINE' 2.i.73BQYS'SCR00i.S!lQE& ' LADIES " Over Ona ftiiHloa Peop:-3 wear tne W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Slioes AIloursnoescroeqaaiiiysat.!stcwij . They give tho best value for the monev. I ncy rauai wiaiwui ' ti 1. .....ini. niffilitlon nra inaumnRfled. The nrtcea are unuorm, sismucu on duiv 1 ueir p. -i : . , r " , Protn $ to $3 saved over other makes. II your dealer cannoc supply jruu ti sesiss M Mm, Mi wmmmm mm OS
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 24, 1895, edition 1
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