Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / Aug. 18, 1899, edition 1 / Page 4
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Are Yon l'intr Allien' Foot-Ea7 It Is the only curs for Swollen, Smart, tag. Tired, Achlnx, Burning, Sweating Feet, Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's ?oot-Ese, a powder to be shaken into the ihoes. Sold by all Drujjglsts, Grocers and Shoe Stores, 25a. Sample sent FREE. Ad tress, Alien 8. Olmsted, LaRoy. N. . An automobile club has been formed in Boston, ' Deaaty 1 Blood Deep. Clcao blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by itirrina uo the lazv liver and drivinz all im- Euritiea from the body. Begin to-day to anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug fists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, SOc. A "War Cry" is to be printed in Java in the Malay language. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for tny case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney ft Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che- . . 4-. .. I. a 1 irn K.: Anil TutlloVtt Vl i m nf 1 !ectlr honorable in all business transactions tnd financially able to carry out any oblisa iion made by their Arm. IVest & Tbuax, Wholesale Drftggist3,Toledo, Ohio. (Valdino, Kivnav & Marvix, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Hairs Catarrh Cure is taken internallr, act us? directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Drujjgists. Hall's Family Pills are the best. New South Wales contains more flower lag plants than all Europe. Don't Tobacco Spit and Sraoks Toar Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag oetic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 80c or 11. Cureguaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Danish lighthouses are supplied with oil :o pump on the waves during a storm. Ever Have a Dog Bother Ton When riding a wheel, making you wonder for a few minutes whether or not you are to ret a fall and a broken neck ? Wouldn't you have given a small farm just then for some means of driving off the beast ? A few drops of ammonia shot from a Liquid Pistol would So it effectually and still not permanently Every'bicyclist at times wishes he had one, Twenty-eight varieties of the lemon grow ca Italy; in France, eleven. To Care Constipation 'Forever Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic, Wo or 250. if C C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund mosey. Music boxes for bicycles are new manu factured by a firm m Hamburg, Germany Mrs. Wlnslow'sSoothinii Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottle. There are ,24,000 Gaelic-speaking High landers in the city of Glasgow. No-To-Bae for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50o,(L. All druggists. ODe-thlrd of the population of the world' speaks the Chinese language. "Honor is Purchased by Deeds We Do." Deeds, not words, count in baitles of pca.ee as tvelt as in war. It is not tuhat we say, but what Hoocf s Sarsa.pa.rUUt does, thai tells the story of Us merit. It has won many remarkable 'victories over the Arch enemy of mankind impure blood. Be sure to get only Hood' s, because An Acrobatic Crow. Herbert Oxley, a Norristown young man, has a talking crow which is a very remarkable bird, indeed. He yluckac. the creature in its infancy froni a plumb tree overhanging-the Perkiomen. and for over a year he has spent two or three pleasant hoars eveiy evening in educating it. .The crow can swear in the following languages: Italian, German, Span ish, .trench, ureekancl Cttmese. Its etar feat is performed on a small up right pole. It climbs to the top of the pole and balances itself there on its beak as au acrobat would balance himself on his head. Then it begins to fan the air with its wings and to re volve slowly. The beak bites deep into the wood, the wings whir faster, and soon the inverted crow is twirl ing round and round with the rapidity of a whirling Dervish. It keeps this up until exhausted, when it falls off the pole in a dazed condition into the waiting hands of its master. There are many crows rhat can talk they learn easily if their tongues are split but very few can spin around on their beaks. Philadelphia record. LETTER TO MSS. riNKBAM N. 93,jt4 " Dear Mrs. Pinkham For some time I'have thought of writing- to you to let you know of the great benefit I have received from the use of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegeta ble Compound. Soon after the birth cf my first Mrs, Johnson Sa ved from Insanity lay Mrs. Pinkham cnild, l com menced to have spells with my spine. Every month I grew worse and at last became bo bad that I found I was gradually losing my mind. "The doctors treated me for female troubles, but I got no better. One doctor told me that I would be insane. I was advised by a friend to give Lydia E. yinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial, aHd before I had taken all of the first bottle my neighbors noticed the change in me. . I have now taken five bottles and cunmt find words sufficient to praise it. I advise every womaa who is suffering frm any female weakness to give it a fair trial. I thank you for your good medicine. Mrs. Gertrue3 M. John os, JosEsnoEo, Texas. Mrs. Perklaa' Ittr. "I Itad female trouble of all kinds, had three doctors, but only grew worse. I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills An! tted the Sanative Wash, and can not praise your remedies enough." M.u. T.i stj Peeemjs. PEAflT- La. UafxaUua i DR. TALMAGi?S SERMON. SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Subject: The Glories of Heaven Christ's Attractiveness Painted In Glowing Col ors From Ivory Palace, to the Agony of the Crucifixion, Copyright, Louis Klopsch. 1899.1 Washington, D.C. In this discourse Dr Talmage sets forth the glories of the world to come and the attractiveness of the Christ, who opens the wav: text. Psalms. xlw, 8, "All Thy garments smell of myrrh ana aioes ana cassia out ox tue ivory pal ace." Among the grand adornments of the elty oi runs is tne cnurcn or jNotre Dame, with great towers and elaborate rose windows and sculpturing of the last judgment, with the trumpeting angels and rising dead; Its battlements of quatra toll; its sacristy, (run riDuec ceuings ana statues o! saints. But there was nothing in all that build ing which more vividly appealed to my plain republican tastes than the costlr veBtments which lay in oaken presses robes that had been embroidered with gold and been worn by Popes and archbishops on great occasions. There was a robe that had been worn by Plus VII. at the crowning of the first Napoleon. There was also a vestment that had been worn at the baptism of Napoleon II. As our guide opened the oaten presses and brought out these vestments of fabulous cost and lifted them up the fragrance of the pungent aro matics in which they bad been preserved filled the place with a sweetness that was almost oppressive. Nothing that had been done in stone more vividly Impressed me than these things that had been done in cloth and embroidery and perfume. But to-day I open the drawer of this text, and I look upon the kingly robes of Christ, and as i nit them, Hashing with eternal jewels, the whole house Is filled with the aroma of these garments, which "smell of myrrh and aloes and cassia out ot the ivory pal aces." In my text the King steps forth. His robes rustle and blaze as He advances. His pomp and power and glory overmaster the spectator. More brilliant is He than Queen Vashtl moving amid the Persian princes; than Marie Antoinette on the day when Louis XYI. put upon her the necklace ot 800 diamonds; than Anne Boleyn the day when Henry VIII. welcomed her to his palace all beauty and all pomp forgotten while we stand in the presence of this im perial glory, King of ZIon, King of the earth. King of heaven, King foreverl Her garments not worn out, not dust be draggled, but radiant and jeweled and re dolent. It seems as if. they must have been pressed 100 years amid the flowers of heaven. The wardrobes from which they have been taken must have been sweet with clusters of camphor and franklh cense and all manner of precious wood. Do you not inhale the odors? Aye, aye. "They smell of myrrh and aloes and cassia out of the ivory palaces." Your first curiosity U to know why the robes of Christ are odorous with myrrh. This was a bright leafed Abyssinian plant. It was trlfollated. The Greeks. Egyptians, Romans and Jews bought and sold it at a high price. The first present that was ever given to Christ was a sprig of myrrh thrown on His infantile bed in Bethlehem, and the last gift that Christ ever had was myrrh pressed into the cup of His cruci fixion. The natives would take a stone and bruise the tree, and then it would exude a gum that would saturate all the ground beneath. This gum was used for the purposes of merchandise. One piece of it no larger than a chestnut would whelm a whole room with odors. It was put in closets, in chests, in drawers, in rooms, and its perfume adhered almost in terminably to anything that was anywhere near it. So when in my text I read that Christ's garments smell of myrrh I imme diately conclude the exquisite sweetness of Jesus. Would that you all knew His sweetness! How soon you would turn from all other attractions! If the philosopher leaped out of his bath in a frenzy of joy and clapped his hands and rushed" through the streets because he had found the solution of a mathematical problem, how will you feel leaping from the fountain of a Saviour's mercy and pardon, washed clean and made white as snow, when the question has been solved, "How can my soul be saved?" Naked, frostbitten, storm-lashed soul, let Jesus this hour throw around thee the 'garments that smell of myrrh and aloes and cassia out of the ivory palace." Your second curiosity is to know why the robes of Jesus are odorous with aloes. There Is some difference of opinion about where these aloes grow, what is the color of the flower, what is the particular ap pearance of the herb. Suffice it for you and me toMcnow that aloes mean bitterness the Torld'over, and when Christ come3 with garments bearing that particular odor they suggest to me the bitterness of n Saviour's sufferings. Were there ever such nights as Jesus lived through nights on the mountains, nights on the sea, nights in the desert? Who eyer had such a hard re ception as Jesus had? A hostelry the first, an unjust trial in oyer and terminer an other, a foul mouthed, yelling mob the last. Was there a space on His back as wide as your two fingers whore He was not whipped? Was there a space on His brow an inch square where He was npt cut of the briers? When the spike struck at the instep, did it not go cl ar through to the hollow of the foot? Oh, long, deep, bitter pilgrimage! Aloes! Aloes! John leaned his head on Christ, but who did Christ lean on? Five thousand men fed by the Saviour; wbo fed Jesus? The sympathy of a Saviour's heart going out to the leper and the adultress; but who soothed Christ? He bad a fit place neither to be born nor to die. A poor babe! A poor lad! A poor young man! Not so much as a taper to cheer His dying hours. Even the candle of the sun snuffed out. Was it not all aloes? Our sins, sorrows, bereavements, losses and all the agonies of earth and hell picked up as in one cluster and squeezed into one cup. and that pressed to Hislips until the acrid, nauseat ing, bitter draft was swallowed with a dis torted countenance and a shudder from head to foot and a gurgling strangulation. Aloes, aloes! Nothing but aloes. All this for Himself? All this to get the fame in the world of being a martyr? All this in a spirit of stubbornness, because He did not' like Cffisar? No, nol All this because He wanted to pluck mo and you from hell. Because Ho wanted to raise mo and you to hearven. Because we were lost and He wanted us found. Because we were blind, and He wanted us to see. Because we were serfs, and He wanted us manumitted. Ob, ye In whose cup of life the saccharin has predominated; oh, ye who have had bright and sparkling beverages, how do you feel toward Him who in your stead and to purchase your dlsenturallment,'' took the aloes, the unsavory aloes, the bitter aloes? Your third curiosity is to know why these garments of Christ are odorous with cassia. This was a plant which grow in India, and the adjoining islands. You do not care to hear what kind of a flower it had or what kind of a stalk. It is enough for me to tell you that It was used medicinally. In that laDd and In that ge, where they knew but little about pharmacy, cassia was used to arrest many forms of disease. So, when in my text wo find Christ coining with garments that smell ot cassia, it suggests to me the healing and curative power of the Son of God. "Oh," you say, "now you have a superfluous idea! We are not sick. Why do we want cassia? We are athletic. Our respiration is per fect. Our limbs are lithe, and on bright cool days we feel we could bound liku a roe." I beg to differ, my brother, from you. None of you can be better in physical health than I f.m, and yet I must say we are all sick, I bavetakeu the diagnosis of your ens and have examined ail the best authorities oa the f ul.ject. luid ; I have to tell you that you are "full ol wounds and bruises and putrefying sores wmcn uavenor oeen Douna up or mollified with ointment." The marasmus of sin is on us the palsy, the dropsy, the leprosy. The man that is expiring to-night in the next street tue allopathic and horaeo- pathlo doctors have given him ud and his friends now standing around to take his last words Is no more certainly dvlntr as to his body than you and I are dying unies? we nave taaen tne medicine from God'f apothecary. All the leaves of this Bible are oniv so many prescriptions from the Divine Physician, written, not in Latin, use tne prescriptions or earthly physicians, but written iu plain English, so that n "man, though a fool, need not err therein." Thank God that the Saviour's garments smell ot cassia! Suppose a man were sick, and there was a phial on bis mantelpiece with medicine he knew would cure him, and he refused to take It, what would you say of him? He Is a suicide. Aud what do vou sav of that man wbo, sick in sin, has the healing medicine of God's grace offered him and refuses to take It? It he dies, he Is a sui cide. People talk as though God took a man and led him out to darkness and death, as though He brought htm up to the cliffs and then pushed him off. Oh, no! When a man Is lost, It is not because God f ushes bim off; it Is because he jumps off. n clden times a suicide was buried at the crossroads, and the people were accus tomed to throw stones upon his grave. So it seems to me there may be at this time a man who is destroying his soul, and as though the angels of God were here to bury him at the point where the roads of life and death cross each other, throwing upon the grave the broken law and a great pile of mlimproved privileges, so that those going by may look at the fearful mound and learn what a suicide It is when an immortal soul, for which Jesus died, put itself out of the way. According to my text. He comes "out of the ivory palaces." You know, or if you do not know I will tell you now. that some of the palaces of oil en time were adorned with ivory. Ahab and Solomou had their homes furnished with it. The tusks ot African and Asiatic elephants were twisted into all manner of shapes, and there were stairs of Ivory, and chairs of ivory, and tables of Ivory, and lloors of ivory, and pillars of ivory, and windows of ivory, and fountains that dropped into basins ot ivory, and rooms that had ceilings of ivory. Oh, white and overmastering beau ty! Green tree branches sweeping the white curbs. Tapestry trailing the snowy floors. Brackets of light flashing on the lustrous surroundings. Silvery music rip pling on the beach of the arches. The mere thought of It almost stuns my brain. and you say: "Oh, if I could only have walked over such floors! If I could have thrown myself in such a chair! If I could have beard the drip and dash of those fountains!" You shall have something bet ter than that if you only let Carist intro duce you. From that place He came, and to that plaoe ne proposes to transport you. for His "garments smell of myrrh and nioes and cassia out of the Ivory palaces." What a place heaven must be! The Tullerles of the Frenoh.the Windsor Castle of the Eng lish, the Spanish Aluambra, the Russian Kremlin, are mere dungeons compared with it! Not so many castles on either side tho Rhine as on both sides of the river of God the ivory palacesl One for the angels, insufferably bright, winged, fire eyed, tem pest charioted; one tor the martyrs, with blood red robes from under the altar; one for the King, the steps of His palace the crown of the church militant; one for the singers, who lead the 144,000; one for you, ransomed from sin; one for me, plucked from tho burning. Oh, the Ivory palaces! To-day It soemsto me as lithe windows of those palaces were illumined for some great victory, and I look and see, climbing the stairs of ivory and walking on floors of ivory, some whom we knew and loved on earth. Yes, I know them. There are father and mother, not eighty-two years and seventy-nine years, as when they left us, but blithe and young as when on their marriage day. And there are brothers and sisters, merrier than when we used to romp across the meadows together. The cough gone. The cancer cured. The erysipelas healed. The heart break over. Oh. how fair they ore in the ivory palaces! And your dear llttlo children that went out from you Christ dla not let one ot them drop as He lifted them. He did not wrench one of them from you. No they went as from one they loved well to one whom they loved better. If I should take your little child and press Its soft face aealnst my rough cheek, I might keep it a little while, but when you, the mother, came along, it would struggle to go with you. Aud so you stood holding your dying child when Jesus passed by In the room, and the little one sprang out to greet Him. That Is all. Your Christian dead did not go down Into the dust and the gravel and the mud. Though it rained all that funeral day, and the water came up to the wheel's hub as yon drove out to the cemetery, it made no difference to them, for they stepped from the home here to tho borne there, rignt into the ivory palaces. All Is well with them. All is well. It is not a dead weight that you lift when you carry a Christian out. Jesus makes the bed up soft with velvet promises, and He says: ."rut her down here very gently. Put that head which will never ache again on this pillow of hallelujahs. Send up word that the procession is coming, lung the bells. Ring! Open your gates, ye ivory palaces!" And so your loved ones are there. They are just as certainly there, having died in Christ, as that you are" here. There is only one thing more they want. Indeed, there is one thing in heaven they have not got. They want it. What is it? Your company. But, oh, my brother, un less you change your tack you cannot reach that harbor. You might as well take the Southern Paclfio Railroad, expecting In that direction to reach Toronto, as to go on in tho wav 9ome of you are going, and yet expect to reach the ivory palaces. Your loved ones ure looking out of the windows of heaven now, and yet you seem to turn your back upon them. Vhen 1 think ot that place and think ot my entering it, I feel awkward. I feel as ometlmes when X have boen exposed to the weather, and my shoes havo been be mired, and my coat Is soiled, and my hair is disheveled, and I stop in front of somo fine residence where I have an orrand. I feel not fit to go in as I am and sit among the guests. So some of us feel about heaven. We need to be washed; we need to be rehabilitated before we go into the ivory places. Eternal God, let the surges of Thy pardoning .mercy roll over us. I want not only to wash my hands and my feet; but, like some skilled diver, standing on the pier head, who leaps into the wavo and comes up at a far distant point from where he went in, so I want to go down, and so I want to come up. O Jesus, wash me',in the waves of Thy talvatloa! And here 1 ask you to solve a my.-itery that has been oppressing- me for thirty ars. I have been asking it of doctors of ivinity who have been studying theology half a century, and they bave given me no satisfactory answer. I have turned over all the books in my library, but got no solution to tho question, and to-day I come and ask you for nn explanation. By what logic was Christ Induced to exchange the ivory palaces or heaven ior tne cruci fixion agonies of earth? I shall take the first thousand million years in heaven to study out that problem; mean while and now taking it as the tenderest, mightiest of all facts that Christ did come, that He came with spikes in His feet, came with thorns in His brow, came with spears in His heart, to save you and to save me. "God so loved the warld that He gave His only begotcon.Son, that whosoever telleveth In Him should not perish, but have everlasting life." O, Christ, whelm all our soul3 with Thy com passion! Mow them down lite summei grain with the harvesting sickle of Thy gracel Ride through to-day the conqueror. I Thy garments smelling "of myrrh an i aloe I and cassia out of the Ivory palaces!" HYDROPHOBd It has been asserted by many friends of animals, who rightly object to the annual torture and slaughter of dogs, and even by some physicians, that there Is no such disease as hydro phobia, or rabies, as it is more cor rectly called. Those who have studied tho subject carefully, however, are certain that there is a disease of dogs, which is communicable by one suffering from it to other animals and to man. But this disease Is very rare, and probably not one person In a thousand bitten by dogs Is in any danger of it, and not one dog killed among five hundred sup posed mad dogs is really mad. The word hydrophobia ia a misnom er, for a mad dog has no fear of water, and will run through a shallow pool without the slightest hesitation; the fear is that of drinking water or ot swallowing anything, either fluid or solid, as the attempt Is almost certain to throw the sufferer, man or beast, into spasms. Another popular error concerning rabies is that it is a disease peculiar to "dog-days." Vital statistics almost everywhere show that as many cases of the, disease in the human being occut during the winter and spring as in summer and autumn. The only way of transmitting hydro phobia is by inoculation; that is, by the introduction of the virus into the body through a wound of the skin oi the mucous membrane. The mosl usual way for this rare event to occui is, of course, thi tgh the bite of a rabid dog, cat or other animal. It Russia tnd some parts of Europe peas ants sometimes contract rabies from bites of mad wolves, and this is said tc be the most rapidly fatal form of tht disease. But not every bite, even of a gen uinely mad dog, is followed by, hydro phobia. If the animal's teeth, for in stance, have passed through a man's trouser leg or boot, the saliva, whicl contains the virus, may be wiped frorx the teeth. In the same way a mad dos that bites a flock of sheep usually in fects but one or two, the wool for thi most part removing the polsonou saliva before the jaws close on th flesh. Rabies was formerly always fatal but thanks to the discoveries of Pas teur, this result may now be prevent ed through a course of "anti-rabic inoculations, provided this is begui within a few days after the bite is re ceived. Many people who cannot bathe in the sea are greatly benefited by the sea ail and by taking sponge-baths, or even tub-baths, In salt water in their own rooms every morning, this being fol lowed by brisk rubbing with the rough bath-towel. The tonic effect of this procedure is marked. . Tarn entireT7uretl"o"f hemorrhage of lung! by Piso's Cure for Consumption. LotusA Li.n'daman, Bethany, Mo., January 8, 1894. One hundred and nine thousand locomo tives are at present running in various countries. Edacata Tour Bowels With Caacarti. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c. It C C- C. fall, druggists refund money. Germany has about 25,000 physicians and surgeons. What does it do? , It causes the oil elands in the skin to become more active, making the hair soft and glossy, precisely as nature intended. It cleanses the scalp from dandruff and thus removes one of the great causes of baldness. It makes a better circu lation in the scalp and stops the hair from coming out. II Prevents m n Circs Boldness Ayer's Hair Vigor will surely make hair grow on bald heads, provided only there is any life remain ing in the hair bulbs. It restores color to erav or white hair. It does not do this in a moment, as will a hair dye: but in a short time the gray color of age gradually disap pears and the darker color of youth takes its place. Would you like a copy of our book on the Hair and Scalp? It is free. It yu 4a ant obtain all the bn6u you expected from the use el the Vigor write tb Dor'.or about It. AfiiJresi, VS.. J. C. ATER. Lo-Jmll, Man. " ,-. .-regglS A " I lirl ' 1 VKWtiTHimrriTWrt Hi h til M !r" l " 1 I HI r I Miff 0 A- A tasteful appearance in dress often comes as much from good laundering as from the quality of the clothing. Good laundering requires good soap and Ivory Soap is the best. The fading of delicate shades is frequently the ruination of an expensive garment. Any color that will stand the free application of water can be washed with Ivory Soap. corrroGHT isaa ay thi moctm a oamblx co. Cincinnati M'KINLEY'S NEW BARBER. President McKinley shaves every morning Avith' punctual regularity. That he wields the razor himself i3 not generally known. It i3 rare that a barber performs the duty for the pres ident. He cannot cut his hair, howev er, nor can he keep his razors in that condition which his heavy beard re quires. Thus he Is not independent of the barber. Up to two weeks ago Charles Lemas, a colored man, who ha3 tonsored every president including and since President Johnson's day, trimmed President McKinley's hair,; and occasionally shaved him. But Ie mas died. Then the president looke1 about for a new barber. He remember ed the colored man whose chair he al ways sought in the Ebbitt House shop when he was a member of congress This barber was in his mind when Mr McKinley first came to Washington, but not desiring to disturb any of thf established institutions at the whiu house, he continued Lemas as his pre decessors had done. The new man is Henry Wilson, s colored man, 48 years of age, who was employed at the Ebbitt House barbei shop for twenty years, and who for the last six years has been the proprietor of his own shop. He has already cul the president's hair and removed tht! presidential whiskers, and is elated al, the honor of serving the president ol the United States. He has performec; similar services for a great many pub-' lie men. He was a favorite with Vice" President Wheeler. He made the ac-. HENRY WILSON, quaintance of Mr. McKinley while the latter was a guest at the Ebbitt during his years as a member of the house. The president has fifteen or more ra--zors, which are, cared for by his bar ber. They compose the finest set in Washington, all being of the beit make. The steward of the white house notifies the barber when he is wanted. The president sits in a common chair, and chats with the barber while the latter works over him. The president is not fussy, and is the delight of bar bers because he is so easily satisfied. He never complains that the razor? Hurt his face nor criticises. Louvre Pictures. No picture Is hung on the walls of the Louvre in Paris until the artist Lhas beftn dead ten yftars BARTER'S HMK 1 To .. 4. T1. a Is what Uncle Sam uses. RH P 1 1 M i T 1 5 M v v 11 E I-Sample bottle, 4 days fl LU III fl I Idol treatment, postpaid, 10 cents, , Al.KlANr.BB Rem kdt CO. . 24rtQreenwlch 8t. , N. Y. MTM'TTn'NT TUIS PApKR WHEN REPLY lUjil 11U1N INQ TO ADVTS. NYNU32. You Will Realize that 11 Cleanly." - AM Zr . - - Lazv Xi Mr I have been troubled a great deal witla a torpid liver, which produces constipa tion. I found CASCARETS to be all you claim (or them, and secured such relief the first trial, that I purchased another supply and was com pletely cured. I shall only be too glad to rec ommend Cascarets whenever the opportunity ia presented." J. A. Smith. zwzu susqoenanna Ave., Philadelphia, Fa CANOV CATHARTIC TRADI MARK RCaiaTCRIO Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Tiite Good. Da Good. Keer Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 2ac, SOc v w n i no I I IWfn. ... Sterllat RcaM; CoatMVi Callage, Meetnel, Hew Terk. S3 Hn.Tfl.RAn ?011 nri t"rant.eedby all drug-nU-IU'DHU si -o CXJ K K Tobacco Habit. For headache (.whethpr sick or nervous), tooth, aehe, neuralgia, rheumatism, anilagn, pains and weakness in the back, spine or kidnevs, pains around the liver, pleurisy, swelling of the joints and pains of all kinds, the application of Had way's Heady llelief -will afford immediate ease, and its continued use for a few days effects a permanent cure. . A CUBE FOR ALL Summer Complaints, DYSENTERY, DIARRHEA, CHOLERA MORBUS. A Lalf to a teaspoonful of Eeady Relief in a halt tumbler of water, repeated as often as the dis charges continue, and a flannel saturated with Heady Eeliei placed over the stomach or bowels, will afford immediate relief and soon effect a cure. Intebnally A half to a teaspoonful in half a tumbler of water will In a few minutes curs Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Vomiting, Heartburn, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Sick Head ache, Flatulency and ail internal pains. Malaria in Its Various Forms Cured aud Prevented. There is not a remedial aent In the world that will cure fever and ague and all other malarious, bilious, and other fevers, aided by TADWAY'M PJI.I.S, so quickly as UADWAl'S 1IKA11V ItELJKI". Price, SO rents per bottle. Sold by nil Driivgix'tB. RAPWAV& CO.. 55 Elm street, New York. Dr. Bruce's Globules Greatest medicine on earth for rhllla, fever, Kile, and aU forms of malarial poisoning. Kecom mended ami prrHoribed by phvsl clans of the liiueBt Maii!iiijr. Fcr 25 v'ews uld only to physicians; now placed on salo to in public. Thousands of unsolicited testimonials at test tbeir worth. i5c. a packaee. Send for test! monials, circular?, etc. N. li. HitHJJS, PHARMACIST, Cliltmi SprinN, N. Y. TilSrli U JOHNSON'S MALARIA, CHILL3&FEVER Crlppe and Liver Diseases. KNOWN ALtnnt;ctiHT. di)C t8T0PPED FHEF " Permanently Cvrail IminltyPrevonttdby W NERVE RHTDRFR 1?" .,ri,'r1 Tie and $ trial kottl Tree rlt p.Uonli, tbtj (ijmieipreM cbrj.ouy when rml-rnt. Send to Dr. KUdc, Ltd, Belle lnilituu of Medietue, KM Aroh St.. PhlUd.Iphla, Fa. Successfully Prosecutes Claims. 1 Lot. Prtpc pl Examiner U.B. Pension BurBaS I 3jrraiu civil war, ISadj udicaiiug claims, atty sine I CONTRACT10 cure yKoT ... . . ,f,w 1 nerve trouble or iim mil W rite for testimonials, form of contract UnALlrilJl Ac., of lllood Food, It liei.m-iiic J.f alitiiinv. Little Liver Pills, Ifrad-eeii i rn I7' r. U. P. STKUMAX, Attica, I. Yt DDHDCY NEW DISCOTERT; ) W O 1 oiokroliaf aa ear, want eiM. Enk af tMitmenialaaad ( dava Uaatn.at !. Br. X. eaim'a totff . Baa D. AMaaia, Cat flllHfS wmui ill Iict Line Beat Cough Syrup. Tantes Good. Cse iu hdib. p-oici or nrvea ts. Thay Live Well Who Live if Ycu Use n o m TP Pi!
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 18, 1899, edition 1
4
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