Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / Sept. 8, 1899, edition 1 / Page 4
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Beauty la Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No fceauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- Eurities from the body. Begin to-day to anisb pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and thai sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. AH drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 23c, 50c. The first Christian Endeavor Society ot Bpain recently celebrated its eighteenth anniversary. "For the Sake of Fun Mischief is Done." A 'oust amount of mischief is done, too, because people neglect to keep their blood pvre. It Appears in eruptions, dyspepsia, indigestion, nervousness, kidney diseases, and other ailments. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures all diseases promoted by impure blood or lnu state of the system jo) aa ways ill Pill Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. Cause Per fect Digestiun, complete absorption and healthful regularity, i'or the cure of all disorders of the Btouiaeh. Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder. Nervous Diseases. LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, INDIGESTION, DIZZY FEELINGS, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, BILIOUSNESS, DYSPEPSIA. PERFECT DIGESTION will be accomplished by king Radway's Pills. By their ANTI-BILIOUS properties they stimulate the liver in the secretion of thd bile ami its discharge through the biliary ducts. These pills in doses from two to four win quickly regulate the action of the liver and free the patient from these disorders. One or two of Rad way'e Pills, taken daily by those subject to bilious pains and torpidity of the liver, wiil keep tas sys tem regular and secure healthy digestion. Price, 25c. per Box. Sold by all Druggists RADVAY & CO., New York. "I bare gone 14 days at a time without movement of the bowel, not being able to move them except by using bot water injections. Chronic constipation for seven years placed me in this terrible condition; daring that time I did ev erything I heard of but never found any relief; such was my case until I began using CASCARETS. I now have from one to three passages a day, and If 1 was rich I would give 1100.00 for each movement; It la such a relief." avlmer . Hunt, 163S Russell St.. Detroit, Mich. Pleasant, Palatable. Potent, Taste Good, Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, lCc, 20c, fiOc ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Rtaadf Compur, Chicago, Boatful, Btw York. 33 nil CUM ATI Gill CURED Sample bottle, 4 days' KiltUIYiA I lOlYl treatment, postpaid, lO cents, ALEXAtrDEB Remkdt Co. , 24t)Green wich St..N.Y, ER'SDPM Is what the largest and best A Shrinking World. The remark in the House ef Com mons on Thursday night that trans portation is the question of the day, reminds us that one of the marvels of the age is the rapidity with which formerly remote quarters of the earth are being brought close together. Ac cording to the Russian minister of railways, when Russia's new Trans Siberian railroad is finished the trip around the world can be made in thirty-three days. 'When Jules Verne just twenty-five years ago sent the 'fictitious Phineas Fogg around the earth in eighty days this exploit was deemed to be about as near the abso lutely impossible as at the time Puck's feat was of putting a girdle "round about the earth in forty minutes." Two women, traveling in opposite directions, beat Fogg's mythical ex ploit a few years ago. When the Rus eian railroad is buLU, however, the record of their joumeying's will, in the comparison, seem like the old etage coach and sailing vessel travels do to da j. Doable Headed and Doable Tailed Snake. George Sloan, a farmer living in the Knobs, near New Albany, lad., has brought to town a freak snake. It lias two heads and two tails. One head and tail are those of a black snake and the other of a cowsnake. The two necks are each about one foot in length and one inch in diameter. Th-3 whole snake is four feet in length. The creature was caught while killing chickens. i 1 Is vour breath bad? Then your best friends turn their heads aside. A bad breath means a bad liver. Ayer's Pills are liver pills. They cure constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, sick headache. 25c. All druggists. Vadt your moustache or beard a btautlfui riirniit.u mi'O nvc for th DUUMHUnHJ?! O Ul u VYhI?ke 18 ySu candv I J fft ) I 1 ) DR TALMAGFS SERMON, SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE Subject: Advice For the Vacation Take the Bible AlongPleasure Seeker Ad monished Not to Leave Religion Be hind Temptations at Watering Places. Copyright, Louis Elop3ch, 1899. Washington, D. C At thl3 season of the year, when all who can get a vacation are taking it, this dlaoourso ot Dr. Tal mage Is suggestive and appropriate. The text la John v., 2, 8: "A pool, which is jailed In the, Hebrew tongue Bethesda, having five porches. In these lay a great multitude ot impotent folk, ot blind, halt, withered, waiting tor the moving of the water." Outside the city of Jerusalem there was a sanative watering place, the popular re sort for Invalids. To this day there Is a "dry basin of rock which shows that there may have been a pool there 360 feet long, 130 feet wide and seventy-five reet deep. This pool was surrounded by five piazzas, or porches, or bathing houses, where the patients tarried until the time when they were to step into the water. So far as re lavlgoratlon was concerned it must have been a Saratoga and a Long Branch on a small scale, a Leamington and a Brighton combined medical and therapeutic, Tra dition says that at a certain season of the year there was an officer of the govern ment who would go down to that water and pour in it some healing quality, and after that the people would come and get the medication, but I prefer the plain state ment of Scripture that at a certain season an angel came down and stirred up or troubled the water, and then the people came and got the healing. That angel of God that stirred up the Judaeaa watering place had his counterpart in the angel of healing who in our day steps Into the min eral waters of Congress, or Sfcaron, or Sul phur Springs, or into the salt sea at Cape May and Nahant, where multitudes who are worn out with commercial and profes sional anxieties, as well as those who are afflicted with rheumatic, neuralgic and splenetic diseases, go and are cured by the thousands. These blessed Bethesdas are scattered all up and down our country. We are at a season ot the year when rail trains are laden with passengers and bag gage on their way to the mountains and the lakes and the seashore. Multitudes of our citizens are away for a restorative ab sence. The city heats are pursuing the people with torch and fear of sunstroke. The long, silent halls of sumptuous hotels are all abuzz with excited arrivals. The antlers of Adirondack deer rattle under the shot of city sportsmen. The trout make fatal snap at the hook of adroit sportsmen, who toss their spotted brilliance into the game basket. The baton of the orchestral leader taps the music stand on the hotel green, and American life has put on festal array, and the rumbling of the ten-pin alley, and the crack ot the ivory balls on the green balzed billiard tables, and the jolting of the barroom goblets, and the ex plosive uncorking of the champagne bot tles, and the whirl and the rustle of the ballroom dance, and the clattering hoofs of the race course and other signs of social dissipation attest that the season for the great American watering place Is In full play. Music! Flute and drum and cornet-a-piston and slapping cymbals wake the echoes ot the mountains. Glad am I that fagged out American life for the most part has an opportunity to rest and that nerves racked and destroyed will find a Bethesda. I believe In watering places. They recuperate lot active service many who were worn out with trouble or overwork. They are national restoratives. Let not the commercial firm begrudge the clerk, or the employer the journeyman, or the patient the physician, or the church its pastor, a season of inoccupation. Luther u&ed to sport with his children; Edmund Burke used to' care3S his favorite horse; Thoma3 Chalmers, in the dark hour of the church's disruption, p'.ayed kite for re creationso I was told by his own daugh terand the busy Christ said to the busy apost!e3, "Come ye apart awhile into the desert and reM: yourselves." And I have observed that they who do not know how to rest do not know how to work. But I have to declare this truth to-day that some of our fashionable watering places are the temporal and eternal destruction of "a multitude that no man can number," and amid the congratulations of this season and the prospect of the departure of many of you for the country I mu3t utter a warn ing, plain, earnest and unmistakable. The first temptation that is apt to hover in this direction is to leave your piety at home. You will send the dog and cat and canary bird to be well cared for somewhere else; but the temptation will be to leave your religion in the room with the blinds down and the door bolted, and then you will come back in the autumn to find that it is starved and suffocated, lying stretched on the rug stark dead. There is no sur plus of piety at the watering peaces. I never knew any one to grow very; rapidly in grace at the Catsklll Mountain House, or Sharon Springs, or the Falls ot Mont morency. It Is generally the case that the Sabbath Is more- ot a carousal than any other day, and there are Sunday walks and Sunday rlde3 and Sunday excursions. Elders and deacons and ministers of relig ion who are entirely consistent at home, sometimes when the Sabbath dawns on them at Niagara Falls or the White Moun tains, take a day to themselves. If they go to the church, it is apt to be a sacred pa rade, and the discourse, instead of being a plain talk about the soul, is apt to be what is called a crack sermon that is, some discourse picked out of the effusions of the year as the one most adapted to ex clto admiration, and in those churches, from the way the ladles hold their fans, you know that they are not so much im pressed with .the heat as with the pic tnresqueness of naif disclosed features. Four puny souls stand in the organ loft and squall a tune that nobody knows, and worshipers with $2000 worth of diamonds on the right hand drop a cent into the poor box, and then the benediction is pro nounced, and the farce is ended. The toughest thing I ever tried to do was to be good at a watering place. The air is be witched with the " world, the flesh and the devil." There are Christians who in three or four weeks In such a place have had such terrible rents made in their Chris tian robe that they had to keep darning it until Christmas to get it mended. The health of a great many people makes an annual visit to some mineral spring an absolute necessity, but take your Bible along with you and take an hour for secret prayer every day, though you be surrounded by guffaw and saturnalia. Keep holy the Sabbath, though they deride you as a bigoted Puritan. . Stand off from gambling hells and those other institu tions which propose to imitate on this side the water the iniquities of , Baden Baden. Let your moral and your immortal health keep pace with your physical recuperation and remember that all the sulphur and chalybeate springs cannot do you so much good as the neaiing, perennial nooa mat breaks forth from the "Rock of Agea." This may be your last summer. If so, make It a nt vestibule oi neaven. Another temptation hovering around nearly all our watering places is the horse racing business. ve an admire tne norse, but we do not think that its beauty or speed oueht to be cultured at tne expense ot nu man degradation. The horse race is not of such imnortaneo as the human race The Bible intimates that a man is better than a sheep, and I suppose be is better than a horse, though, like Job's stallion, hia neck be clothed with thunder. Horse races in olden times were under the ban of Christian people, and in our day the same tnct itntinn.. l;3,,;comq op' under fictitious nunc. A "'-A.summer meet iu;r," ;il3io. J-itlve religious ex:rcis!. A an "agricul tural fair,;! 7" tverythinj that A--zrfi --' Bit under these deceptive titles are the same cheating, and the same betting, and the same drunkenness, and the same vaga bondage, ana the same abomination that were to be found under the old horse rac ing system. Long ago the English government got through looking to the turf for the dragoon and the light cavalry horse. They found out that the turf depreciates the stock, and it is worse yet for men. Thomas Hughes, the member ot parliament and the author known all the world over, hearing that a new turf enterprise was being started In thi3 country, wrote a letter In which he said, "Heaven help you, then, for of all the cankers of our old civilization there is nothing In this country approaching In un blushing meanness, in rascality holding its heaa high, to this belauded institution ot the British turf." Another famous sports man writes, "How many fine domains have been shared among these hosts of rapa olous sharks during the last 200 years, and, unless the system be altered, now many more are doomed to fall Into the same gull?" With the bullfights ot Spain and the bear baitings of the Dit may the Lord God annihilate the infamous and accursed horse racing ot England and Amerlcal Another temptation hovering around the watering place is the formation of hasty and lifelong alliances. The watering places are responsible for more of the domestic infelicities of this country than nearly all other things combined. Society Is so artificial there that no sure Judgment of character can be formed. They who form companionships amid such circum stances go into a lottery where there are twenty blanks to one prize. In the severe tug of life you want more than glitter and splash. Lite is not a ballroom, where the music decides the step and bow and prance and graceful swing of long train can make up tor strong common sense. You might as weli go among the gayly painted yachts of a summer regatta to find war vessels as to go among the light spray of the summer watering place to find character that can stand the tost of the great strug gle ot human life. In the battle of life you want a stronger weapon than a laee fan or a croquet mallet. The load of life is so heavy that in order to draw it you want a team stronger than that made up of a masculine grasshopper and a feminine butterfly. If thero is any man in the com munity who excites my contempt and who ought to excite the contempt of every man and woman it is the soft banded, soft headed dude, who, perfumed until the air is actually sick, spends his summer in striking killing attitudes and waving senti mental adleux and talking infinitesimal nothings and finding his heaven in the set of a lavender kid glove. Boots as tight as an Inquisition. Two hours of consummate skill exhibited in the tie of a flashing cra vat. His conversation made up of "Ahs!" and "Ohs!" and "He hesl" There is only one counterpart to such a man as that, and that is the frothy young woman at the watering place; her conver sation made up ot French moonshine; what she has in her head only equaled by what she had on herjaack; useless ever since she was born and to be useless until she is dead unless she becomes an intelligent Chris tian. We may admire music and fair faces and graceful step, but amid the heartles- ness and the Inflation and tne lantastic Influences of our modern watering places beware how you make lifelong covenants. Anotuer temptation tnat novers over tne watering place is that of baneful litera ture. Almost every one starting off (for the summer takes some reading matter. There Is more pestiferous trash read among the intelligent classes in July and August than in all the other ten months of the year. Men and women who at home would not be satisfied with a book that was not really sensible I And sitting on hotel piazza or under the trees reading books the index of which would make them blush it they knew that you knew what tne book was. "Oh." they say. "you must have intel lectual recreation!" Yes. There is no need that you take along to a watering place Hamilton's Metaphysics" or some ponder ous discourse on the eternal decrees or "Faradav's PhilosoDhv." There are manv easy books that are good. ' You might as well say, "I propose now to give a lit tie rest to my digestive organs, and in stead of eating heavy meat and vegetables I will for a little while take lighter food, a little strychnine and a few grains ot rats bane." Literary poison in August i3 as bad as literary poison in December. Mark that. Do not let the frogs of a corrupt printing press jump Into your Saratoga trunk or White Mountain valise. Are there not good books that are easy to read books of entertaining travel, books of con genial history, books of pure fun, books of poetry, ringing wltn merry canto; books or fine engravings, books that will rest the mind as well as purify the heart and ele vate the whole life? There will not be an hour between this and your death when you can afford to read a book lacking in moral principle. Another temptation hovering all around our watering places is intoxicating bever ages. I am told that it is becoming more and more fashionable tor women to drink. I care not how well a woman may dress, if she has taken enough of the wine to flush her cheek and put a glasslness on ner eye she is drunk. She may be handed into a $2500 carriage and have diamonds enough to astound the Tiffanys' she Is drunk. She may be a graduate of tke best young ladles seminary and tne daugnter ot some man in danger of being nominated for the presidency she la drunk. You may have a larger vocabulary than I have, and you may say in regard to her that sho is "con vivial," or she is "merry," or she is "fes tive," or she is "exhilarated," but you cannot with all ;your garlands of verbiage cover up the plain fact that it is an old fashioned case ot drunk. Whether you tarry at home which will be quite as safe and perhaps quite as com fortable or go into the country, arm your self against temptation. The grace of God is the only safe shelter, whether in town or country. There are watering places accessible to all ot us. You cannct open a book ot the Bible without finding out some such watering place. Fountains open for sin and uncleanness. Wells ot salvation. Streams ' from Lebanon. A flood struck out of the rock by Moses. Fountains in the wilderness discovered by Hagar. Water to drink and water to bathe in. The river of God, which is full of water. Water of which it a man drink he shall never thirst. Wells of water in the valley of Baca. Liv ing fountains of water. A pure river oi water as clear as crystal from under the throne of God. These are waterlngf places accessible to all ot us. We do not have a laborious packing up before we start only the throwing away of our transgressions. No expensive hotel bills to pay. It is "without money and without price." No long and dusty travel before we get there. It Is only one step away. In California in five minutes I walked around and saw ten fountains all bubbling np, and they were all different, and in five minutes I can go through this Bible par terre and find you fifty bright, sparkling, fountains bubbling up Into eternal life healing and therapeutic. A chemist will go to one ot these summer watering places and take the water, and analyze it, and tell you it contains so much of iron, and so much of soda, and so much of lime, and so much of magnesia. I come to this gospel well, this living fountain, and analyze the water and I find that Its ingredients are peace.par don,forglveness,hope,comfort, life, heaven. "Ho, every one that tblrsteth, come ye" to this watering placet Crowd around this Bethesda. Oh, you sick, you lame, you troubled, you dying, crowd around this Bethesda! Step la it, oh, step in ltl The augel of the covenant to-day stirs the water. Why do you not step In it? Some of you are too weak to take a step in that direction. Then we take you up in the arms of prayer and plunge you clear under the wave, bftplng that the cure mav be as iudden ayl as radical as-with Captaia Kuaman, vho, blotched and carbuncled, Stepped into the Jordan, and alter the sev enth di came up, bis skin roseate com t 1 " 1 n, t';e flesh of a little chili. fishing With aa Umbrella. For the first time in several seasons the weak fish are running in the waters Df the Hudson off Sing Sing. Qnite a number of fishermen have made good strikes, the catches averaging about two and a half pounds in weight. Sand worms, shrimps and shedder crabs may be used with good advan tage to inveigle the fish to bite, and it is believed that the fish will remain for some time if a heavy storm does uot come and freshen the waters of the river. , There is also an abundance of crabs,- and perch may be caught by the score. The favorite way of catching these plucky pan fish is with the aid of a dipsey.- This is a contrivance made out of an old umbrella frame. The handle is cut off and a stout cord at tached to it. Then a hook is attached to the tip of each rib with a foot or so ii snell. The hooks are baited with small pieces of saudworms or shrimps, and then the contraption is dropped overboard, handle end np. The perch nibble at the bait and finally hook themselves, the umbrella ribs acting as a spring. The dipsey is often pulled up with a perch on each hook, New York Sun. A Big Scotch Station. A large railway station has recently been completed at Edinburg, Scot land, by the reconstruction of what is snown as the Waverley station. It sovers twenty-three acres, of which eleven and one-half acres are under roof. It has two main line platforms, ;wo suburban platforms and fifteen platforms for stub tracks, the total :ength of platforms being 13.9S0 feet. There are eight main tracks through the station and fifty-six stub tracks and sidings. The 228 switches and 290 signals are operated by 538 levers in four signal towers, the largest of these having 260 levers. The num ber of people departing from and ar riving at this station is estimated as at least 13,000,000 per annum, or 37,000 per day. On a busy day there were no less than 1196 train movements, of which 649 were passenger trains. The Dthers were empty trains, through freight trains and engines going to and from the water cranes and turn tables. Where Oar Immigrants Come From. The Militar Zeitung publishes an interesting article on the escape over the frontier of men liable to military service in Austria-Hungary. It state that a large business is carried on by the agents, chiefly foreigners, who as sist these men. The first essential is a passport, and . this is generally forged. It is known that 1000 men weekly, jjtheir way to the frontier, pass thrdtgh Vienna alone, and as most of these are young men, it is cal culated that during the year at least 30,000 men of those who so r ass are escaping from military service, Most of these go to America, whei e, it is believed, there are at present over 1 A A AAA 1, A U i it, Austro-Hunganan Army or rer in the On one occasion at the mcbil of a body of reserves, out of 5lj only 1500 appeared: the grea of the 3500 had succeed in es America. London Times. Ask Your Dealer for Allen 's Foot Ease, A powder to shake Into your shoes; rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen. Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease mates new or tight shoes easy. At all drug gists and shoes stores, 25 ets. Sample mailed FEEE. Adr's Allen S. Olmsted, LeBoy, N. Y An artesian weli giving a flow of 500 gal lons a minute has been opened at Waterloo, Ont. 00111 Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak mer strong. All druggists, SOc or $1. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New VorlL The Society of Friends has opened a new place of worship at Amboniriana, Mada gascar. State op Ohio, Citt of Toledo, i Lucas County, i8 Frank J. Cheney makes oath that helsth senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing businessintheCityof Toledo, Countj and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ose hundred dollars for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be ".ured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my I i presence, this Bth day of December, seal- A. D. ISM. A. VV. Gleason, ( . ) Kolatu Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surface of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. The Boston City Hospital took care o) 10,000 persona last year. .Ever Have a Dog Bother Tot, VThen riding a wheel, making you wondei for a few minutes whether or not you are tc get a fall and a broken neck ? Wouldn't you have given a small farm lust then for some means of driving off the beast ? A few drops of ammonia shot from a Liquid Pistol would ao it eneciuauy ana still not permanently injure the animal fcucn pistole sent nostDaid for fifty cents in stamps b niDS bv New York Union Supply Co., 15 Leonard St., New York City. Every bicyclist at times wishes he had one. St. Petersburg is tal in Europe. the unhealthiest cap!- JSdacata Tour Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c It C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. Forty-three Popes reigned during the building ct St. Peter's Cathedral, Borne. i No fits or nervong. of Dr. Kline's Great 'trial bottle and treatise free Da, R. II. Kltne. Ltd.. 931 Arch St..Pnila..Pa. It has been estimated that steamers ar twenty per cent, safer than sailing vessels no shildren's Coughs and Colds. Mrs.- M. G. Blum, Sprague, Wash., March 8, 13U4..- Thepruce timber of Norway and Swed en la nearly exhausted Mrs. Wlnslow'sSootUlnsr Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces itillamma. Uon, allays pain, cures wind colic. 2re.a bottle. In line 12,000 microbel would reach onl. one inch. - No-To-Bo (or Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, fL AU druggists. An artesian well in Missouri has haon Snuikto a depth olllOOleet. i 4- .miiim wiminivcomptly gave If Dot had played with common soap What wreck there'd be to-morrow! Her hands all chapped, her dress past hope,' Her toys a tale of sorrow. But mother lets her play like this And wash whate'er she chooses. For not a thing will go amiss When Ivory Soap she uses. IVORY SOAP-99, PER CENT! PURE.' COPYRIOMT lltl mt THE PROCTER fc GAMBLE CO. CINCINNATI Trusted His Dog Too Far. It is not always safe to put too much trust in a dog. An Ellsworth man had a highly' prized dog, and when a neighbor presented a bill for two hens which he claimed had been killed by the brute the dog owner was grieved and positively refused to believe the charge or pay for the hens. A few days later the Ellsworth man . 4 . J. 11. was driving oy tne iarm wnere tne hens had been killed. The dog was with him in the carriage. He drove into the farmer's yard to prove to him that his dog was not guilty. "Let out yoar hens." he said, "and I'll call the dog out of the carriage to prove that he will not kill hens."- It was done. Before the dog could be stopped he had killed four. The owner of the dog, who never dis honors a just bill, pulled out his wal let and settled for six hens. .Bangor (Me.) Commercial. A Man For All That. A poor man. with a ragged hat "and dirty trousers.aparently a day laborer, was one of five on a Madison avenue car. The man next to him on the and, away feempt r way r man her his s word. place. She took it without s word. Soon a man sitting beside her got off the car. The dirty man took his place. The woman glanced at his trousers and edged away from him. The poor man looked tff into the mist, some of which was in his eyes. New York Commercial Ad vertiser. To Core Coaitipatlon Forever Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. lOo or SSo. JlC.CC. fail to cure, druggists refund money- There are 32,000 recently vaccinated arms In Fall Rl er, Mass. ANY a dutiful daughter I I 1 - 1 . A AT ,J ,J ignorance or perhaps neglect. The mother suffered and she thinks her daughter must suffer also. This is true only to a limited extent. No excessive pain is healthy. ' Every ' mother should inform herr INDULGENT PJJOTHERS Many a young girl's beauty is wasted by unnecessary pain at time of menstruation, and many indulgent mothers , with mistaken kindness permit their daughters to grow careless about physical health. ' Miss Carrie M. Lamb, Big Beaver, Mich., writes: "Dear Mrs. Pinkham A year ago I suffered from profuse and irregular menstruation and leucorrhcea. . My appetite was variable, stomach sour and bowels were not regular, and was subject to pains like colic duringmenstruation. I wrote you and began to take Lydia E. Pinkham 's Vegetable Compound and tised two packages of Sanative Wash. You can't imagine my relief. My courses are natural and general health improved." Mrs. Nannie Adkins, La Due, Mo., writes: DearMrs. Pinkham I feel it my duty to tell you of the good your Vegetable Compound has done my daughter. She suffered untold agony at time of menstruation be fore taking your medicine ; but the Compound has relieved the pain, given her a better color, and she feels stronger, and has improved every way. I am very grateful to you for the benefit she has received. It is a great medicine for young girls." fc "Don't Put Off Till To-morrow the Du ties of To-day." Buy a Cake of W. L. DOUGLAS S3&S3.50 SHOES "i'N Worth $4 to $8 compared wit other makes. Indorsed by over 1,000,000 wearers. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES THK GEM'ISE hT W. L. Doul name and prle Maaped on bottw Take no substitute claimed to he as good. Largest malcert of 3 and 13.50 shoes In the world. Your dealer should keep them If not, we will send yon a pair on receipt of price. Stat klad of leather, size and width, plain or cap toe Catalogue C Free, W. U DOUGLAS SHOE C0 Brockton, Mass. fftUlt.il UI.DIUUtiS UIUUU1B5 Greatest medicine on earth for cbilla, fever, a true, and aU forms of malarial poisoning." Itecommended and proscribed by physi cians of the hiphettt elnntlln. For 25 years sold only to physicians; now placed on sale to the. public. Thousands of unsolicited testimonials at test their worth. 25c. a package. Send fcr testi monials, circulars, etc. N. B. K KI(;(iS, PHARMACIST, ClU'tou Springs, '. A'. I CONTRACTU cure you of any form of or if it nit Write for testimonials, form of contract ITiALAnlA fee., of Illooil Food, Kueunintic Lightning, Little Liver Pills, Hcad-ecii. Corn Digper. I. P. STE1MIAN', Attica, N. Y. ine greatest n u inUNCnN'S remedy Tor jwi. w M ALAR I A,CHILLS& FEVER, Crippe and Liver Diseases. f- ' KNOWN AttDBtccBTs. y JDC iuDlUla Washington, 1).C. TflT? rTrTTn'M TH3 paper when reply lyLDlN 1U1N INGTOADVTS. NYNU-34.- V1 CUHES WHEfiT JouKh byrun. Tastes tiood. in time. Sold by druggists. M1 fcays in pain for her mother's 8w Successful ly Prosecutes claims. Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. 3 yru in civil war, 15 adj udicating claims, at t t sine J Beat self for her own sake and especially for the sake of her daughter. Write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., for her advice about all matterg concerning the ' ills' of the feminine organs. mm it
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 8, 1899, edition 1
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