Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / Oct. 28, 1898, edition 1 / Page 4
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V. St. Jacobs On. earea Eheam&tlsaa. St. Jacobs On. cam Neuralgia. 8t. Jacobs OiLOures Lumbago. St, Jacobs Oil cures Sciatica. 8t. Jacobs Oil cures Sprains. St. Jacobs Oil euros Bruises. St. Jacobs Oil cures Soreness. St. Jacobs Oil cures Stiffness. St. Jacobs Oil cures Backaohe. S r. Jacobs Oil cures Muscular aches. Australian rabbitskina are being eon verted into sealskins for the American marfcst. ' No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weai Men strong, blood pure. 60c, SI. AU druggists. Tb first envelope ever made is in the possession of the British Museum. For Whooping Congh, Piso's Cure is a suc cessful remedy. M.P. Dieteb, 6? Throop Ave.,' Brooklyn, N. Y.. Nov. 4. 1894. i Is all Spanish-America the Indians form, the great mass of the population. . ! linn . Pi ts permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $3trlal bottle and treatise free Da. II. H. Klisb. Ltd.. 931 Arch SUPhllaPa. The marriage of minors in this country are six per cent. X ': i jTo specific for local skin ailments can cope in popular favor with Glenn's Sulphur Soap, liiil's Hair & Whisker Dye, black or brown, 50c Plate glass was first Picardy, France. made in 1633, at Fall Medicine Is Fully as Important and Benefi cial as Spring Medicine. Hood's Sarsaparilla is just the medicine to keep the blood rich and pure, create an appetite, give good digestion and tone and strengthen the great vital organs. It wards off malaria, fevers and other forms of illness which so readily overcome a weak and debilitated system. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. Hood's Pills cure indigestion. &rats. m Uncle Sam's Swaf Tooth. America's sweet Joth is said to be abnormally devela. The consump tion of sugreacaes the astonishing total o5oo,000,000 pounds; butonly 5:$igtith of this is raised at home. 7st year nearly a third of the supply f.Axa& from Germany, and eight per cent, more from the rest of Europe. The West Indies sent twenty-four per cent, and the East Indies fourteen per cent. Fully half the sugar imported came from countries no better able to produce it than is the United States herself. Last year we raised 125,000, 000 pounds of beet sugar. There are those who prophesy that in another decade the entire amount of sugar, needed for home consumption will be produced within our own borders. The present average is about seventy three pounds a year each, or a pound a day per family of five. The nicknames of some of th new States: South Dakota, Swing Cat State; Washington, Chinook State; North Dakota,Flicker-tale State; Mon tana, Stub-toe, State; Nebraska, Black water State; Nevada, Silver State. , There have been 300,000 volumes published in America and England in the last sixty-three years. YOUNG AT SIXTY. Serene comfort and happiness in ad vanced years are realized by compara tively few womn. Their hard lives, their liability to se rious troubles on account of their pecu liar organism and their profound igno rance concerning themselves, all com bine to shorten the period of usefulness and fill their later years with suffering. Mrs. Pinkham has done much to make women strong. She has given advice to many that has shown them how to guard against disease and retain vigor ous health in old age. From every cor ner of the earth there is constantly com ing the most convinciug statements from women, showing the efficacy of Lydia E. Pinkhara's Vegetable Com pound in overcoming female ills. Here is a letter from Mrs. J. C. Orms, of 220 Ilorner St., Johnstown, Pa., which is earnest and straight to the point : Deab Mrs. Pinkham: I feel it my duty to tell all suffering women that I think your remedies are wonderful. I had trouble with my head, dizzy spells and hot flashes. Feet and hands were cold, was very nervous, could not 6leep well, had kidney trouble, pain in -ovaries and congestion of the womb. Since taking your remedies I am better every way My head trouble is all, gone, have no pain in ovaries, and am cured of womb trouble. I can eat and sleep well and am gaining in flesh. I consider your medicine the best to be ad for female troubles." The present Mrs, Pinkham's experi ence in treating female ills is unparal lelled, for years she worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for sometime past has had sole charge of the correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailing women during a single year. TryQrain0! Try Grain0! Ask ydu Grocer to-day to show you g package of GEAIX-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it, like it. GRAIN-0 has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is mads from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without d'trcsa. the price of coffee. 15 c.;nts and 25 cents per package. Coll by all grocers. Tdiizi Coffee Looks like Coffee I.m'. ;! T-y.r rr-t er ! jwj C TUrjT-O Accept imitation. ' . DR TALMAGES SERMON. SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DiVlNE. Subject: "The Bounded Reindeer"-Let Those Who Are Pursued by the Hounds of Persecution Kan to the Glorious Lake of Divine Solace. Tixt; "As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after Thee, O God." Psa. xliL, 1. . David, who must some time have seen a a deer-hunt, points us here to a hunted stag making for the water. The fascinat ing animal called in my text the hart is the same animal that in sacred and profane literature is called the stag, the roetuck, the hind, the gazelle, the reindeer. In Central Syria, in Bible times, there were wbole pasture-fields of them, as Solomon suggests when he says, "I charge you by the hinds of the field." Their antlers jutted from long grass as they .lay down. No hunter who has been long in "John Brown's tract" will wonder that in the Bible they were olassed among clean animals, for the dews, the showers, the lakes washed them as clean as the sky. When Isaac, the pa triarch, longed for venison, Esau shot and brought borne a roebuck. Isaiah compares the sprightliness of the restored cripple of millennial times to the long and quick jump of the stag, saying, "The lame shall leap as the hart." Solomon expressed his disgust at a hunter who having shot a deer I is too lazy to cook it, saying, "The sloth ful man roasteth not that which he took in hunting," , But one Jday "David, while far from the home from which he had been driven, and sitting near the mouth of a lonely cave where he had lodged and on the banks of a pond or river, hears a pack of hounds in swift pursuit. Because of the previous si lenoe of the forest the clangor startles him, and he says to himself: "I wonder what those dogs are after." Then there is a crackling In the brushwood, and the, loud breathing of some rushing wonder of the woods, and the antlers of a deer rend the leaves of the ticket, and by an instinct which ail hunters recognize the creature plunges Into a pool or lake or river to cool ! its thirst, and at the same time bvjts ca pacity for Pwitte-'anfiHlJ)ngsrgiuiming to get awayfrom the foaming harriers. David sajJto himself: Aha, that is myself 1 Saul alter me, ADsaiom alter me, enemies with out number after me; I am chased; their bloody muzzles at my heels, barking at my good name, barking after my body, bark ng after my soul. . Oh, the hounds, the hounds! But look there," says, David to himself. "That reindeer has splashed into the water. It puts its hot lips and nostrils into the cool wave that washes its leathered flanks, and it swims away from the fiery canines, and it is free at last. Oh, that I might find in the deep, wide lake of God's mercy and consolation escape from my pursuersl Oh, for the waters of life and rescue! 'As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after Thee, O God.'" The Adirondacks are now populous with hunters, and the deer are being slain by the score. Talking one summer with a hunter, I thought I would like to see whether my text was accurate in its allusion, and as I heard the dogs baying a little way off and supposed they were on the track of a deer. I said to one of the hunters in rough cor duroy: "Do the deer always make for wa ter when they are pursued?" He said: "Oh, yes, Mister; you see they are a hot and thirty animal, and they know where the water is, and when they hear danger in the distance they lift their antlers and sniff the breeze and start for the Baquet or Loon or Saranac;'and we .get into our cedar shell boat or stand by the 'runaway' with rifle loaded and ready to blaze away." My friends, that is one reason why I like the Bible so much its allusions are so true to nature. Its partrides are real partridges, its ostriches real ostriches, and its rein deer real reindeer. I do not wonder that this antlered glory of the text makes the hunter's eye sparkle and his cheek glow and his respiration quicken. To say noth ing of its usefulness, although it is the most useful of all game, its flesh delicious, its skin turned into human apparel, its sinews fashioned into bow-strings, its antlers putting handles on cutlery, and the shavings of its horn used as a pungent restorative, the name taken from the hart and called hartshorn. But putting aside its usefulness, this enchanting creature seems made out of gracefulness and elasticity. What an eye, with a liquid brightness as if gathered up from a hun dred lakes at sunset! The horns, a coronal branching into every possible curve, and after it seems complete ascending into other projectionsof exquisiteness, a treeof polished bone, uplifted in pride, or swung Sown f or awfulcombat. The hart is velocity embodied. Timidity, impersonated. The enchantment of the woods. Its eye lustrous in life and pathetic in death. The splendid animal a complete rhythm of muscle, and bone, and color, and attitude, and locomotion, whether couched in the grass among the shadows, or a living bolt shot through the forest, or turning at bay to attack the hounds, or rearing for its last fall under the buekshot of the trapper. It is a splendid appearance that the painter's pencil fails to sketch, and only a hunter's dream on a pillow of Hemlock at the foot of St. Regis is able to picture. When, twenty miles from any settlement, it comes down at eventide to the lake's edge to drink among the lily pods and, with its sharp-edged hoof, shatters the crystal of Long Lake, it is very picturesque. But only when, after miles of pursuit, with heaving sides and lolling tongue and eyes swimming in death the stag leaps from the cliff into Upper Saranac, can you realize how much David had suffered from his troubles, and how much he wanted God when be expressed himself in the words of the text: "As the hart panteth after the water .brooks, so panteth my soul after Thee, O God." Well, now. let all those who have coming after them the lean hounds of poverty, or the black hounds of persecution, or the spotted hounds of vicissitude, or the pale hounds of death, or who are in any wise pursued, run to tne wide, deep, glorious lake of divine solace and rescue. The most of the men and women whom I hap pened to know at different times, if not now, nave nad trouble alter them, saarp muzzled troubles, swift troubles, all-devouring troubles. Many of you have made the mistake of trying to fight them. Somebody meanly attacked you, and you attacked them; they depreciated vou. you depreciated them; or they overreached you In a bargain, and you tried, in Wall street parlance, to get a corner on them; or vou have had a bereavement, and, instead of being submissive, you are fighting that be reavement; you charge on the doctors who failed to effect a cure; or you charge on the carelessness of the railroad company through which the accident occurred; or you re a chronic invalid, and you fret, and worry, and scold, and wonder why you cannot be well like other people, and you angrily Diame tne neuralgia, or tne laryn gitis, or the ague, or the sick headache. I saw whole chains of lakes in the Adir ondacks, and from one height you can see thirty, and there are said to be over eight hundred in the great wilderness of New York. So near are they to each other that your mountain guide picks up and carries the boat from lake to lake, the small dis tance between them for that reason called a "carry." And the realm of God's Word is one long chain of bright, refreshing lakes; each promlbe a lake, a very short carry between them, and though for ages the pursued have been drinking out of them, they are full to the top of the green banks, and the same David describes them, and they seem so near together that in three different places he speaks o" them as a continuous river, saying: "There is a river, the streams whereof shall make glad the city of God;" "Thou p.'ialt make tbwn drink of the river of Thv pl;urtK:" "Iti'iu gr-'rttlv tnn.,'ifr'i it Witj t La river But many of you have turned your back on that supply, and confront your trouble, and you are soured with your circum stances, and you are fighting society, and you are fighting a pursuing world, and troubles, instead of driving you Into the oool lake of heavenly comfort, have made you stop and turn around and lower your head, and it Is simply antler against tooth. I do not blame you. Probably under the same circumstances I would have done worse. Bat you are all wrong. You need to do as the reindeer does In February and March it sheds its horns. The Babblnical writers allude to this resignation of antlers by the stag when they say of a man who ventures his money in risky enterprises, he has hung it on the stag's horns; and a proverb in the far East tells a man who has foolishly lost his fortune to go and find where the deer sheds her horns. My brother, quit the antagonism of your cir cumstances, quit misanthropy, quit com plaint, quit pitching into your pursuers, be as wise as, next spring, will be all the deer of the Adirondacks. Shed your horns. But very many of you who are wronged of the world and if in any assembly be tween here and Golden Gate, San Fran 3isco, it were asked that all those that had been sometimes badly treated should raise both their bands, and full response should be made, there would be twice as many hands lifted as persons present I say many of you would declare: "We have al ways done the best we could and tried to be useful, and why we should become the victims of malignment, or invalidism, or mishap, is inscrutable." Why, do you know the finer a deer and the more elegant its proportions, and the more beautiful its bearing, the more anxious the hunters and the hounds are to capture it. Had the roe buck a ragged fur and broken hoofs and an obliterated eye and a limping gait, the hunters would have said: "Pshaw! don't let us waste our ammunition on a sick deer." And the hounds would have given a few sniffs of the scent, and then darted off in another direction for better game. But when they see a deer with antlers lift ed in mighty challenge to earth and sky, and the sleek hida looks as if it had been smoothed by invisible hands, and the fat sides enclose the richest pasture that could be nibbled from the banks of rills so clear they seem to have dropped out of Heaven, and the stams-ot its foot defies the jack- shooting lantern ahd-the rifle, the horn ana tne nouna, tnat aeer tire1 mus nave u they must needs break their neci in the rapids. So if there were no noble stu-.io. your make up, if you were a bifuroated nothing, if you were a forlorn failure, you would be anowea to go undisturoeu; out the fact that the whole pack is in full cry after you Is proof positive that you are splendid game and worth capturing. les, tor some people m tnis wona mere seems no let-up. They are pursued from youth to manhood, and from manhood to old age. Very distinguished are Lord Staf ford's hounds, the Earl of Yarborough's hounds, aud Queen Victoria nays eight thousand five hundred dollars per year to ner Master ot Bucknounas. But an or tnem put together do not equal in number or speed, or power to hunt down, the great kennel of bounds or whion Sin and Trouble are owner and master. But what is a relief forail this pursuit of trouble, and annoyance, and pain, and be reavement? My text gives it to you in a word of three letters, but each letter is a "harlot if you would triumph, or a throne if you want to be crowned, or a lane u you would slake your thirst yes, a chain of three lakes G-O-D, the One for whom David longed, and the One whom David found. You might as well meet a stag which, after its sixth mile of running at the top most speed through thicket and gorge, and with the breath of the dogs on its heels.has come in full sight of Scroon Lake, and try to cool its projecting and blistered tongue with a drop of dew from a made or glass. as to at tempt to satisfy an Immortal soul.'when fly ing from trouble and sin, witn anytning iejs deep, and high, and broad, and immense, and Infinite, and eternal tnan ttoa. tus comfort, why it embosoms all distress. His arm, It wrenches off all bondage. His hand, it wipes away all tears. His Chrlstly atone ment, it manes us an ngnt wua tne past, aud all right with the future; all right with God, all right with man, and all right for ever. Lamartine tells us that King Nirarod said to hi3 three sons, "Here are three vases, and one is of clay, another of amber, and another of gold. Choose now which you will have." The eldest son, having first cuoiee, cnose tne vase or goia, on which was written the word "Empire," and when opened it was found to contain human blood. The second son, making the next choice, chose the vase of amber, inscribed with tne word "(ilory, and wnen opened it contained the ashes of these who were once called great. The third son took the vase of clay, and, opening tt, found it empty, but on the bottom of it was in scribed the name of God. King Nimrod asked his courtiers which vase they thought weighed the most. The avaricious men of his court said the vase of gold. The poets said the one of amber. But the wisest men said the empty vase, because one letter of the name of God outweighed a universe. For Him I thirst; for His graee L Deg; on His promise I build my all. Without Him I cannot be happy. I have tried the world, and it does well enough as far it goes, but it is too uncertain a world, too evanescent a world. I am not a prejudiced witness. I have nothing against this world. I have been one of the most fortunate, or to use a more Christian word, one of the most blessed of men blessed in my parents, blessed in the rjlace of my nativity, blessed in my health, blessed in my field of work. blessed In my natura. temperament, uiesseu in my family, blessed in my opportunities, blessed in a comfortable livelihood, blessed In the hone that mv soul will go to Heaven through tne pardoning mercy of God, and my body, unless it De lost at sea or cre mated in some conflagration, will lie down in the gardens of Greenwood among my kindred and friends, some aireaav gone and others to come after me. Life to many has been a disappointment, but to me it has been a pleasant surprise, and yet I de clare that if I did not feel that God was now my Friend and ever-present help, I should be wretched and terror-stricken. But I want more of Him. I nave tnougnt over this text and preached this sermon to myself until with all the aroused energies of my body, mind and soul, I can cry out, "As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after Thee, O , when some of you get there it will be like what a hunter tells of when push ing his canoe far up North in the winter and amid the ice-floes, and a hundred miles, as he thought, from any other human be ings! He was startled one day as he heard a stepping on the ice, and he cocked his rifle ready to meet anything that came near. , He found a man, barefooted and in sane from long exposure, approaching Mm. Taking him into his canoe and kindling fires to warm him, he restored him and found out where he had lived, and took him to his home, and found all the village in great excitement. A hundred men were searching for the lo3t man, and his family and friends rushed out to meet bim; and, as had been agreed at his first appearance, bells were rung, and guns were fired, and banquets spread, and the rescuer loaded with presents. Well, when some ot you step out of this wilderness, where you have been chilled and torn and sometimes lost amid the icebergs, into the warm greetings of all the villages of the glorifled.'andyour friends rush out to give you welcoming kiss, the news that there is another soul forever saved will call the caterers of Heaven to spread the banquet and the bell-men to lay bold of the rope ia the tower, and while the chalices click at the feast, and the bells clang from the tur rets, it will be a scene so uplifting I pray God I may be there to take part in the celestial merriment. "Until the day break and the shadows flee away, bs tbou like a roe or a young hart upon the moun tains of Jther." i A Japanese admiral receives, vy u : r,r.in)iiif ,;. 1 0 M'lv,-r dollars aywar. a b J admiral 4W0,-. whim Wtvm Dollar Poitac Wot Letters. , W. V. Bailey contributes art artioU to the Oentury on "The Pony,Ex press," from St Joseph, Mo., to San Francisco. Mr. Bailer ears: The letters, before being placed in the pockets, were wrapped in oiled silk to preserve them from moisture. The maximum weight of any one mail was twenty pounds; but this was raTely reached. The charges were originally $5 for each letter of one-half ounce or less; but afterward this was reduced to $2.50 for each letter not exceeding one-half ounce, this being in addition to the regular United States postage. Specially made light-weight paper was generally used to reduce the expense. Special editions of the Eastern news papers were printed on tissue-paper to enable them to reach subscribers on the Pacific coast. This, however, was more as an advertisement, there be ing little demand for them at their necessarily large price. The Kins ot Bells. The two biggest bells in the world are the one in Moscow and the one at Mengoon, Upper Burmah. The former is the bigger, but it is oracked, while the latter is in working order. The weight of this huge bell is about ninety-eight tons, the circumference at the base being fifty-one and one half feet, and at the top twenty-six feet. It averages over a foot in thickness and is over twelve feet high. The bell was cast about the beginning of the century by King Bodawpayn as an accompaniment to the huge brick pa goda which he never finished. It is said to have been cast on an island and rafted across. No proper meana yet .exist for striking the bell, but when hit with a heavy piece of wood it gives out a deep vibrating boom. The Inoffensive Burglar. Householders, particularly they r6f the weaker sex, who live in perpetual terror of burglars, will be pleased to read a reassuring statement in the September Pall Mall Magazine, to the effect that only in one instance out of every 336 burglaries is violence offered to the inmates of a burgled house. Moreover, as more than one third of all convicted burglars are youths between the ages of sixteen and twenty-one, the average burglar may not be so formidable a person as he may be pictured by the startled imagination of a householder who is preparing to "go downstairs" at three o'clock a. m. Tne Meaning of the Letters. Harry and Ethel, twins, aged five, reside in Cincinnati, and are descend ants of a soldier grandfather. Dur ing the recent Grand Army encamp ment held there a banner with the let ters G. A. E. was displayed on the house opposite their home. "I wonder what those, letters stand for?" asked Ethel. "Why," replied Harry, "it means that gran 'pa's all right." Philadel phia Inquirer. His Subscription. One morning a gentleman called up on Douglas Jerrold to solicit a sub scription on behalf of a mutual friend in want of money. "Well," said Jerrold, "how much does Smith want this time?" "Why, just, four and two naughts will, I think, put him straight." "Very well," answered Jerrold, "put me down for one of the naughts this time." San Francisco Argonaut. A Town of Churches. The town in England best provided with places of worship is the ancient one of Eochdale, where there aie 145 churches and chapels. Fifty belong to the Church of England and ninety five to the Non Conformists. A Giant Phonograph. A phonograph is being made for use at the Paris . Exhibition of 1900 which is expected to be of sufficient dimensions to be heard by 10,000 per sons. A Domestic Incident. From the Observer, Flushing, Mioh. . "Early In November, 1834," says Frank Long, who llvos near Leanon, Mich., "on starting to get up from the dinner table, I was taken with a pain in my back. The pain Increased and I was obliged to take to my bed. The physician who was summoned pronounced my case muscular rheumatism accompanied by lumbago. He gave me remedies and injected morphine into my arm to ease the pain. "My diseasel gradually became worse un til I thought that death would be welcome release from my sufferings. Besides my regular physician I also consulted another, but he gave me no encouragement. On Getting Up From the Table. "1 was finally induced through reading some accounts in the newspapers regard ing the wonderful cures wrought by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peopje, to try them. I took the pills according to direc tions and soon began to notice an improve ment in my condition. Before the first box was used I could get about the house, and after using five boxes was entirely cured. "Since that time I have felt no return of the rheumatic pains. I am confident that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills saved my life and I try to induce my friends wko are sick to try the same remedy. I will glaily answer inouiries Concerning my sickness and won derful cure, provided stamp Is enclosed for reply. Feanx Loko." Sworn to before me at Veniue, Mich., this :;n .lav f April, I , Th Eternal Cycle. A friend hands in the following, calling it "Perpetual Motion." The more you read it and think of it, the more there seems in it: "The duck eats the worm, The man eats the duck, The worm eats the man, The, duck eats the worm." Akron Beacon Journal. The skeleton of 'a man wa, un earthed recently near Elkwood, Ind., with an Indian arrow imbedded in the jawbone. Follow It Up. Sit down and cool off suddenly, and then regret it, for stiff ness and soreness is bound to follow. Follow it up with St. Jaoobs Oil and you will have nothing to regret from a prompt cure. The Wyoming wool clip this year weighed 14,000,000 pounds. Beantr I Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. Ne beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c Germany Imported $22,500,000 worth of petroleum last year. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of tne ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and thia tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing butan in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Huudied Dollars for any 3ase of Deainess (caused by catarrh) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh ture. Send for circulars, free. F. J. Chestey & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. There are about 350 female blacksmiths In Great Britain. Special Kates South. The Southern Railway announces special ,ow rates to Asheville, N. U., account of Medical Association Mississippi Valley. Nash ville, Tenn., October 11th to 14th: Chris tian C hurch Convention, October 13th to 21st. For full particulars call on or address, Alex. S. Thweatt, Eastern Passenger Agent, 271 Broadway, New ork. Bailey's Mistake is the name of a post jfflce in Maine. To Core Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic 10c or 25c If C C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money The loftiest cliff on the coast of England is Beachy Head, height 564 feet. To Cure A Cold la One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Ai Druggists refund money if it falls to care. 25v. Great Britain spends on tobacco and pipes about $70,000,000 eveiy year. Educate Tour Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation torevet lOo, 25o. It C. C. C, tall, druggists refund money. No particular form of religion receives official recognition in Japan. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 2oo.a bottle. Teeth are stained in various colors among Ihe Malays. "A tap worm eighteen feet long at least came on the scene after my taking two CASCARETS. This I am sure bas caused my bad health for the past three years. I am still taking Cascarets, the only cathartic worthy of notice by sensible people." usu. w. cuttuSi uairu, mass. CANDY Pleasant. Palatablo. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Merer Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 26c,fi0o. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Iterll.c R4jr Cobubj-, Ckletg, M.atrtil, Ktw Ttrk. SIS KO-TO fs 1 1 Sold and eimranteed by all drug HU Klsts to CIHK Tobacco Habit. I i CATHARTIC TinRA Oil mask iwvrmepf (SOL Payable semi-annually at the Globe Trust Co., Chicago, 111. The3e bonds are a first mortgage upon &e entire plant, including buildings, land and other property of an Industrial Company located close to Chicago. The Company has been established for many years, is well known and doing a large and increasing business. ' Th8 officers of the Company are men of high, reputation s esteemed for their honesty and business ability. They have made so great a success of this business that the bonds of thi3 Company are rarely ever offered for sale. A lew of these bonds came in to our hands during the hard times from parties who had purchased them several years ago. We offer them in issues of $100.00 each for $80.00 and accrued interest.- . For security and a large interest rate these Industrial Bonds are recommended a3 being among the best. First-class bonds and securities of all kinds bougnt and. sold. Kendall & Vhitlock, Bankers and Drokers, S3 Exchange Place, New York, is Like a Good Temper, "it Oheds a rihtnecG Seems to Gel RApe.' One .complaint seems to get rl f j tumn, and that is neural gia-'T "soothe the pain, strengthen the nerves and rid the system of it, use St. Jacobs Oil, the best known cure. t The maximum annual rainfall at Manila is 102 Inches, the minimum 82. Doa't Tobacco Spit and Smoke loir Lire Airay . To quit tobacco easily and forever, be magv oetlo. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-Bao, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, S0a or ft. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York) The parchment ot the .best banjos is made of wolfskin. THE EXCEIENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the Califobnia Fig Sybup Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. i only, a knowledge of that fact will 1 assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high standing of the Cau-1 fobnia Fig Syrup Co. with the medi- cal profession, and the satisfaction j which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes: the name of the Company a guaranty j of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FEAA'CLSCO, Cat. tOriSVILtE. Ky. NEW YORK. K.T. o u fX .f5 o : g a o a wo-s o5 MAGNIFIED. Sim o J "2 fcgfi Hit UJ Pi -- J ui to M n 2? KSaO VIMVTVK l el So. -PATENTS-- Procured on cash, or easy Instalments. VOWXE3 Jt BDKX8, Patent Attorneys, '237 Broadway, N. Y. DDnP 3 V K EW DISCOVERY; ds a V 0 auiokraliaf and earaa wont outi. Sand far book of testimonial and IO dya traaf oat Frea. Dr.X H CKEEM'a S6NS, AtUmta, K Tlie Best BOOK the WUBt Beautifully bound and sum nt- uotisly illustrated' price 82 i. free to anybody sending two annual subscriptions at $1 each to the Overland Monthly, BA.N I'KAiSCISCO, Sample Overland, ftnr HTf'M'TTfi'NT THIS PAPEK WHEN KEPLY. I.YXJJJ.1 llUiH J ING TO ADVTa. NYNU 4 1 I y AN TED 039 of bah ealth that B-I-PA-.V8 ' will not benefit. Send 5 eta. to Ripans Chemical Co., NewVork, for 10 samples and luou testimonials. If afflicted with sore eyes, us Thompson's Eye Water r s-i-f. LUKtS WHHtfr All Hsf f All 5. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Cse in um. sola Of clrusDiKt.fi. PER bTcmsjIVJ I nvcryvhcre." ink a 1 "E w 0 I.
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 28, 1898, edition 1
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