'FOR COUNTRY, FOR GOD, AND EOR TRUTH."
Single Copy, 6 Cents.
VOL. XI.
PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1900.
NO.. 21.
1.00 a Year, in Advance.
ABOUT WOMEN.
One woman has put several ounces
of wisdom into a truly womanly post
script. She has returned from a year
of Europe. In writing a note to a
woman friend she used up the space
of the note proper in urging an early
visit. "Do come soon." she said.
Then as an afterthought she added,
"I will not give you a detailed ac
count of my travels."
Max O'liell, a man so spiritual that
heSan divine the recesses of even a
woman's heart, puts into the mouth
of the happy wife, in his latest sketch,
the following definition of happiness:
"To be loved by a husband of whom
you are proud. To be rich enough to
afford all the necessary, comforts of
life. To be poor enough to make
" pulling together ,a necessity."
Such is Lord Kitchener's reputa
tion as a woman hater that the queen
herself felt called upon to ask him
during a recent audience, if what she
had heard of him was true that he
did not care for any woman. lie re
plied that it was true with one ex
ception. The queen asked him to
' tell the name of the exception and
. the gallant warrior replied, "Your
Majesty." The queen was amused
but she was also pleased.
If that charming woman, the late
Kate Field, did not marry, it was as
suredly not because she did not have
hany admirers. A Washington lady
Smas in her possession a little old bit
' 0t yellow paper upon which is penj
cileda boyish scrawl. It was pre
served by Miss Field from her little
girl days. The scrawl runs thus :
"wont yue mete me down by The
Gate after school You nowe I Love
yue."
On the other side of the bit of pa
per is the address thus :
"Miss Kate Field, Esq., last seat
next. to the Door goin out."
It must have been like a breath of
the forgotten perfume of yesteryears
when the clever, kindly woman hap
pened upon this little old piece of
yellowish paper on a rainy afternoon
of rumaging.
Mrs. Sallie Marshall Hardy, who is
a descendant of Chief Justice Mar
shall, visited the Supreme Court
Chambers in Washington recently
and was introduced to Justice Harlan
by a functionary of the court, says
the Chicaso News. She was then
seated under the bust of her distin
cuished ancestor, and Justice Har
lan whispered to Chief Justice Fuller
"That little woman there under
Marshall's bust is his great-grand
daughter."
The Chief Justice looked toward
the little woman and then said :
"Tell her I am afraid the bust may
fall on her."
"I'm not afraid," replied Mrs
Hardy; "nothing on earth could
please me so much as to have my
great-grandfather's head fall on my
shoulders."
Catchy Sayings By Traveling Men.
Talkative Fafcts.
You cannot serve God and womeft
Of two evils' choose the prettier.
Where there's a wont there's a way.
Nonsense makes the heart grow
fonder.
Whosoever thy hand findest to do,
do with thy might.
The wages of sin alimony.
lie who loves and runs away
May live to love another day.
Some schemes are like mouse traps,
easy to enter, but not easy to get
- out of.
Thank heaven for the law that has
a sucker born every minute.
A still man is dangerous.
Censure and disgrace never cured
evil habits, but multiplies them. To
counteract an evil propensity we must
take awav the opportunity for its
exercise.
It's hard work getting to heaven
"without a good wife to steer you.
Mark Hanna has put up the sign,
"Traveling men will please keep off
the earth.
Home is where we are treated best
and grumble most.
"Business lies are lust as black as
any other.
Let him that thinketh he standeth
take heed lest he fall.
The Mayor of
Atlanta
Water.
Again In Hot
Atlanta, May 7. The city council
tonight adopted a resolution calling
upon Mayor James G. Woodward to
resign his office. The resolution was
the culmination of a sensational sermon
last night by Rev. L. G. Broughton, in
which the minister made a violent at
tack ou the mayor's personal habits.
The resolution call upon the mayor
to resign before the next meeting of the
council, two weeks from to-day. The
leader of the opposition to Mr. Wood
ward says he is in honor bound, under
the terms of a statement made last
Bummer, to resign. The mayor to-night
declined to say what his action would
be. His term expires January 1, next.
As a matter of precaution for the
health of the city of Salisbury and
county of Rowan, the Board of Health
of Rowan county declare it unwise to
have any large gathering in our city on
account of the prevalence of smallpox
in. other sections.
ASTRONOMICAL EVENT.
A Total Eclipse of the
1900.
Sun May 0th
Mary Proctor In New York Herald.
The astronomical event of 1900 will
be a total eclipBe of the evn, which oc
curs on May 20th, and will be visible
through the Southern States. The cen
tral pathway of darkness, wherein the
eclipse will be total, is fifty-hve miles
wide and extends from New Orleans to
Raleigh, and after leaving Virginia trails
over the Atlantic Ocean and south
easterly across .Portugal. Spain and
Northern Africa.
The duration of total eclipse varies
from one minute and fifteen seconds in
Louisiana to one minute and and forty
five seconds in North Carolina. Along
the lines on each Bide of the central
line, as shown in the map, the sun will
remain hidden for only an instant. (See
trot. Tood s "New Astronomy," p. m.
Astronomers are making arrangements
to observe this glorious spectacle, and
H is to be hoped that their efforts may
be crowned with success.
A total eclipse of the sun takes place
when the moon, coming between the
sun and the earth, hides the light of the
moon and causes darkness for a few
moments wherever the shadow trails,
The moon being an opaque body casts
a shadow, and since the moon is
sphere the shadow presents the appear
ance of a long, narrow cone, stretching
away into space. The tip of the shadow
trails eastwardly along the earth, and as
the earth is moving in the same direc
tion the tip of the shadow may be com
pared to the point of a lead pencil
marking a line on a whirling ball, repre
senting the earth.
The densest part of the shadow
wherein the eclipse is total, is called the
umbra, and rarely exceed 160 miles in
width, while on each side of it is a less
dense shadow, from which the sun's
light is only partly hidden, and this
called the penumbra. The shadow
glides through space at a rate exceeding
2,000 miles an hour, and as the earth
is turning or rotating in the same direc
tion at the rate of 1,000 miles an hour
the greatest velocity oi the moon's
shadow will be 1,000 miles an hour. To
aa observer the shadow seems to ad
vance with lightning rapidity, and some
times it Beems to travel in wavy bands
the waves being a few inches broad and
several feet apart, rushing along with
the velocity of an express train.
Professor Langley in his "New As
tronomy" giyes an account of an ob
server who describes the terrifying ad
vance of the shadow as overwhelming
He was on the Superba, at Turin, at
the time, and he remarks, "I felt al
most giddy for a moment, as if the
massive building under me bowed on
the Bide of the coming shadow."
Frequently the effect upon the be
holder is of something material sweep
ing over the earth from the west and
with considerable speed.
Another obseryer said that at the ap
proach of the waves of shadow he found
himself listening for the rushing noise
of a mighty wind. It has also been
noticed that the shadows of the leayes
are sickle-shaped during the waning
light of the sun lust before totality.
While awe-inspiring, yet a total
eclipse of the sun is most impressive
with the swift onrush of darkness from
the west, the flickering quiver of the
last-expiring gleams of sunlight and the
sudden fall of night when the silvery
radiance of the corona, or crown of
glory, surrounding the sun becomes
visible, the dazzling glare of that lumi
nary being hidden by the dark globe of
the moon.
As the moon approaches the point
when it will be exactly between the sun
and the earth a peculiar darkness creeps
over that part of the earth m the neigh
borhood of the shadow, and the light
of the sun grows dim. The sky assumes
an ashen hue, as before a storm, and
the air becomes decidedly chilly.
Flowers close their petals, as at night,
and others that give forth their fra
grance at night are sweetly perceptible
as long as the sun is obscured. Even
the birds are deceived by the unusual
appearance of the sky, and fly home to
their nests in the trees.
Legs Broken, for love.
Logansport, Ind., May 7. The
vaunted feat of Leander in swimming
the Hellespont to win the fair Helen is
eclipsed by Hbe martyrdom of Louis
Hoen, who had his legs broken to take
the bows out of them because his sweet
heart objected to curved lower extre
mities.
Hoen is wealthy and he is handsome
of face, but was afflicted with a pair of
bow legs. He loved a lair young wo
man and she loved him, but could not
gain her consent to take Hoen as a
husband that is, with his deformity
unchanged.
Hoen was determined to win his lady
love at any cost, so he appealed to a
Logansport surgeon, who consented to
straighten the defectiye limbs. The
flesh was cut away from the bones and
the latter were fractured with a chisel.
Both legs were, put into plaster casts
and the bones have almost knitted
together again. The operation was ex
tremely painful.
Hoen will be one inch taller when he
is able to walk and his extremities will
be as comely as those of the average
man.
In Chili masons get forty-seven cents
a day.
THE IlUslI DOCTOK,
II a mors of His Practice In a' Remote
Country District.
There are two enemies bard to con
quer in this country of the young, says
a writer in the Nineteenth Century.
One is belief in witchcraft, the other a
love for "matter out of place." In my
district the people really believe in
Leprechauns, or little people. They
still visit a wizened witch doctor to have
"dead hands" exorcised from bewitch
butter, and they hunt mythical hares
as often as living red games.
Quite lately I was asked to visit
maiden of half a century who was pos
sessed with a "demmur." Now I know
Lizzie Redmond is only suffering from
loneliness, pure and simple. Her tiny
shanty, dumped down in a narow
boreen, is surrounded by acres of golden
gorse, miles of peat land and ftajds of
silky bog cotton. No neighbor, however
enlivens gray existence for poor Lizzie,
Whatever is nonunderstandable to the
unprofessional mind in Sallyboggin is
called a demmur," and is treated as
profession of the Evil One. Hence
found Lizzie lying on the mud floor of
her cabin in a "stripped" condition
On her naked breast was a penny. On
the penny an end of candle. Over both
penny and candle rested an inverted
tumbler. A "wise woman" was stand
ing gazing earnestly at her handiwork
and muttering a charm.
"Ah! doctor, darlint," screamed
Lizzie, triumphantly, as I entered the
room, "it's a live demmur! And the
wise woman has located it, doctor
dear. See it a-leppin' an a-risin into
the glass."
I took in the matter at a glance. The
wise woman had first exhausted the air
by lighting her candle end and immedi
ately covering it with a tumbler. This
oi course, acted as a kind of cupping
glass, and flesh rose into the vacuum
in vain l demonstrated on my own
arm (burning a hole in my shirt sleeve
aa I did so). Lizzie saw the" "too, too
solid flesh" thereon following the law
of suction as well as the demmur under
the breast bone. But she clung to the
belief in the wise woman, and I was
dismissed with ignominy.
In Ireland we do not take offense at
this kind of treatment. I wrote to
Lizzie's landlord, Lord C , saying the
woman was growing "softe," and by
return post received a 1 not to pay ex
penses of a change for her. A short
spell in Dublin worked wonders. The
demmur no longer set her heart a
gallopin', and "the joulting of the train
stopped the beatin' ov hpr poolse.
My skill was equally slighted by an
other patient. She told me her liver
was troubling her, pointing at the same
time to a spot high up undr her left
arm. "God bless us, woman!"
roared, "your liver does not lie there
"I thiDk I ought to know where my
own liver lies," was her dignifaed, in
sulted reply. "Haven't 1 suffered from
it these twelve years?"
A third patient was more grande
dame than either of these twain. On
being called in my "token" being a
certain red ticket I asked: "And
what's the matter with you, Mrs,
Doolan?"
"I'm thinkin' that's for you to tell
me," was the haughty response, just as
if she were paying me a five-guinea fee,
I have, of course, a due circle of pa
tients who firmly believe in every bolus
given by any Esculapius. To one such
went my friend, the vicar, lately.
"How ars you to-day, Mrs. Neale?"
was the question addressed sympath
etically to the greatest grumbler in
Sallyboggin.
"Ah! very, very bad. 'Tis thedeges
tion. vour reverence! Like a hive of
bees a-buzzin' an' a-buzziu' in my
buzzum."
"Is it always the same?" inquired
the vicar, his eyes twinkling, but with
immovable face (for we learn to com
pose our countenances in Ireland).
"Nay, not at all, your reverence. 'Tia
often like a load ov ricks, a-poundin' an'
a-poundin'. But " and the wrinkled
smoke-grimed old fsce brightened
"but the doctor God bless him is af
ter eivin' me a description, and if it
don't cure me, he'll describe me agin."
The Verble Ileal Estate Brought $31,000.
Salisbury, May 8. The commission
er's sale of the real estate of the late
John H. Verble was concluded this
morning, the aggregate of the bids, be
ing $31,000. The largest single items
were disposed of to-day. These were
the livery stable occupied by E. K,
James, $6,000 bought by P. H. Thcmp.
son, and Moyle'a bar building, $4,920,
bought by James Moy le. All bids are
left open for a 10 percent, increase un
til the 18th inst.
The Windsor (Bertie county) Ledger
recently had the following paragraph:
At Windsor court last week a judge,
jury, seven lawyers ana tniriy-nine wit
nesses were engaged lor four whole days
deciding to whom a $4 hog belonged.
No danger of losiDg liberty in a countrj
as free as this. The humblest gets his
rights. This $4 sow stands for the
right of property, which is always held
sacred here in North Carolina.
The Populist national convention met
at Sioux Falls, S. D., yesterday Senator
Butler, who is chairman ot tne national
committee, and others from the State
are in attendance. The conyention is
expected to nominate Bryan by accla
mation, but who will be nominated for
Vice President is not known.
DILL. AllP'S LETTEK,
Of course Atlanta will raise the money
to uniform the poor old confederate vet
erans and pay their way to Louisville.
That battalion of one- armed one-legged,
one-eyed heroes of the lost cause will
be the most significant feature of the
reunion and will make more lasting
impression upon the rising generation
than anything else. "That is genuine,"
.1 Ml mi l-a .11
iney win say. xnose old fellows were
certainly there and they have not re
pented of it. In fact, they are proud
of it. It will teach the youth of the
other side that our boys were terribly in
earnest ana that neither time nor
poverty has obliterated a single feeling
or emotion that possessed them when
they faced the guns of the enemy nearly
forty years ago. They are established
in the faith and will die, not believing
they were right, but knowing it. That
word "believiDg" is a misnomer, a kind
of compromise. It does not fit us. We
knew we were right then and we know
it yet. A good many of their soldier
boys believed they were right and knew
no better, for their politicians fooled
them, but more than half of them
dident believe anything about it and
dident care, for they were hirelings and
fought for $10 a month and nothing
else. They were hungry. It seems to
me if I was a northern man I would
say to my people "We can't do any
thing with those confederate veterans
just let tnem alone. They were con
quered and that's all. We piled four
to one on them and wore them out,
and that's all, but such fighters the
world never saw. They never had but
700,000 men in the field, all told, from
the beginning to the end of the war, and
they have put a million of our folks on
the pension rolls, besides all that they
killed. Good gracious, boys! Let's quit
talking and quit bragging, and when
them fellows down south want a reunion
let's bid them godspeed and say, 'Go
it, boys! We are betting on you. Get
together by your campfires, as it were,
and retell your old war stories, and let
the tears from your old watery eyes
glisten again, and after it is all over
then go back home and tell it all to
your wiyes and children, and then
yes, and then and then lay down and
die.'" Well, that's just what the old
vets are doing. They are dying pretty
fast now and there will hardly be
enough left for another reunion. Our
hope and faith is that our boys will
keep the campfires burning and gather
around them and tell what their fathers
did. Let those memories survive the
flight of time, just like the historic and
heroic deeds we read of. The older the
better. We have in our family an old
paper that gives an account of the battle
of Lexington during the first revolution
and along the margin across the top
are pictured seventeen coffins, and on
each coffin is a name, and one of these
names is very dear to us, for it is the
name of an ancestor who fell in that
fight. That ancestor never fought for
a juster cause or on greater provocation
than we did, and our children should
be proud of it.
An bo let the old battle scarred veter
ans go to Louisville and have perhaps
their last lovefeast. Atlanta will, raise
that mo ley. We love to look over the
published names of the contributors
and to rejoice that there are noble men
and women left who may have forgiven
but have not forgotten, we measure
people by their charities, their willing
responses when called on for a cause
like this, and I would be ashamed to
see my name in the column with less
than a dollar attached to it. If I could-
ent give more than a dime or 25 cents,
I would say mark it cash and go on. A.
man who can't afford to give a dollar
should not be called on.
Louisville is going to give a royal
welcome to "the veterans and I hope
every one who can go will go. Louis
ville is the most intensely southern city
in the union more so than Nashville
or Chattanooga or Atlanta, or even
Charleston and its people never do
things in a half-hearted or penurious
way. The last time I was there I saw
the blue and the gray each about 300
strong sitting in the same hall listening
to an address for the benefit of confed
erate veterans. Yes, the Bame kind of
veterans we wish to uniform and send
there. These federal soldiers came out
and paid their money to show their
sympathy for the cause, of the poor
soldier. That sympathy has existed
in all civilized nations and Sterne never
wrote a more touching thing than when
he wrote about Uncle Toby, who when
told that a poor soldier was dying at his
gate, seized his crutch and hurried to
him, exclaiming in his emotion, "He
shall not die, 'by God!"' That oath
was set down upon the book, but an
angel dropped a tear upou it and blotted
it out forever. So go ahead, Captain
Dearing, and ask for the money, and
am sure it will come. Atlanta never
fails in a cause like that.
I am an optimist now. The. spring
has come at last and the birds are sing
ing and the roses are in bloom, and the
sweet little children are all so happy, it
makes an old man happy, too. Our
ittle ones help me to pick the straw
berries every day and it pleases them to
take a sugared dish full to the sick folks
near by, and to tell how pleaued they
were to get them. How charming it is
to witness the daily expansion of their
minds and hearts and emotions, and
isten to their losing prattle. The little i
five-year-old looked ,with aetonishmenf
at our turkey gobbler a a. he gobbled an,
said, "Gran'ma, he must be sick, I
reckon, for I think he is vomiting."
They entertain me every day and won't
let me look on the dark side. The fact
is, there is no shadow over this blessed
region, for we have peace and plenty.
No famines like they have in India. No
war like that which rages in the Trans
vaal and the Philippines, no floods nor
cloud burst, no mine explosions, no
pestilence, no great calamity of any
kind, and all our citizens, both black
and white, are peaceful and law-abiding.
Some dirty scoundrel did Bteai poor old
Widow Holmes' well rope last night,
but that's the only devilment I have
heard of in a long time. So mote it be.
Bill Arp.
Suicide in Charlotte.
Charlotte, N. C, May 5. Samuel
H. Hawkins, Jr.. wheu. fired a bullet
into his brain yesterday in his room in
this city, died this afternoon at 2:20
o'clock.
Mr. Hawkins went to the Buford
hotel early yesterdayynorning and was
assigned to a room, and the clerk says
he appeared to be in a normal condi
tion. About 11 o'clock yesterday morn
ing a shot was heard in the hotel and
on looking through the transom of his
room, a eery ant saw the unfortunate
man lying across the bed with blood
flowing from a wound in his head. He
had a 32 calibre pistol firmly gripped in
his hand.
The door was bolted. It was forced
open and doctors summoned. The ball
was found to have entered the right ear,
passing around the brain and lodging
over the left ear. Efforts were made
to remove the ballet, but it could not be
found.
After being unconscious for about
five hours, Mr. Hawkins, about 5:30,
became fully conscious and talked
freely with several friends in hia room.
He said he felt pain about his head and
when Rev. Dr. Hoffman, of the Epis
copal church, told him that he was
going to die, he simply remarked: "Is
that so?" he then repeated a prayer
after the rector. In explanation as to
the cause of his act, Mr. Hawkins said
that he had undergone more than any
of his friends imagined, and could stand
it no longer.
All the trouble that his friends know
anything of is that he had worried a
great deal over some annoyance he had
caused his friends by his indiscreet i
actions some months ago, and it is sup
posed that he had brooded over the
matter until he was prompted to end
bis life.
TlUman's Retort to a Hiss.
Ann Arbor, Mich., April 29. Sena'
tor Tillman of South Carolina lectured
here last night under the auspices of
the Good Government League, his sub
ject being "The Race Question in the
South."
The incident of the evening was his
diatribe against the negroes. The audi
ence was composed of students. Di
rectly in front and alone sat a colored
student, and the Senator looked at him
in making his remarks.
"lou Bcratch one of these colored
graduates under the skin," he said,
"and you will find the savage. His
education is like a coat of paint, like his
skin."
There were hisses from several parts
of the house. Senator Tillman smiled
and retorted!
"You must excuse me for my frank
ness. lbere is nothing ot hatred in
my nature for the negroes. When that
man who hissed gets ready to give his
daughter in marriage to a negro and
proves by his actions, and not by his
hisses, that he means business, I will
apologize, and not before."
The applause which greeted this re
tort was tremendous, and there was no
more hissing during the evening.
North Carolina Colleges Desire to Up
hold Athletics.
Charlotte, N. C, May 7. Repre
sentatives of a number of North Caro
lina colleges and high schools met at
Durham Saturday afternoon and organ
ized an association to eliminate profes
sionals or paid men from participation
in college athletic contests. Stilgent
resolutions to this effect were passed.
The University of North Carolina was
represented at the meeting, but refused
to join the organization.
The following colleges and high
schools joined the association:
Trinity college, Wake lorest, Elon
college, Guilford college, the Agricul
tural and Mechanical college, Oak
Ridge institute, Homer's echool, the
Trinity Park High school, Whitsett in
stitute and the William Bingham school.
Minister lillls a Stenographer.
Charleston, S. C, May 4. One of
the moBt seneational homicides in the
history of Bamberg, this State, occurred
there this morning at 10 o'clock, when
Rev. E. Johnson, pastor of the Baptist
church, shot and almost instantly
killed W. T. Bellinger, stenographer of
this judicial district. Trouble between
the two began yesterday over the run
ning o' a line fence between the prem
ises of John R. Bellinger, father of -the
deceased, and the Baptist parsonage, at
which time, it is eai 4. "vda were
passed. Jls' AV Bel
i: 'J '
linger.'
ven'
THE SOUTH AFKICAM WAR. -
Baltimore Sun, 7th. '-
Lord Roberts keeps hammering away.
Hia latest move is to carry the crossing
of the Vet river, 55 miles north of
Bloeraf oatein and 200 miles short of his
goal Pretoria. NewB of this was
cabled by the British commander-in-chief
in a dispatch made public" by the
London War Office yesterday.
Boers are on the north bank of the
Vet in considerable force. Their object
seems to be to delay Lord Roberta aa
much as possible until he reaches
Kroonstad, 60 miles north of his pres
ent position, when they are expected to
make a determined stand. There was
a long battle at the Vet river before the
BritiBh crossed.
It is believed in London that the
crossing of the Vet was not effected
without considerable loss. Loid Rob
erts cables: "Our casualties, I hope
are not numerous."
As he advances Lord Roberts opens
the railroad behind him. Trains are
already running aa far north as Brand
fort. Winburg, an important place,
has aleo been occupied by the British.
General Barton's brigade, which
crossed the Vaal river at Winsorton,
Cape Colony, continues to push on, but
is compelled to fight hard for all it gains.
A dispatch to the London Daily Mail
from Lorenzo Marquez gives uncon
firmed rumors that Mafeking has been
relieved and that 3,000 Boers, under
General Lemner, have been captured
at Fourteen Streams. As Lemner was
fighting last week near Thaba Nchu, in
an entirely different field of operations,
the report of his capture is open to
great doubt.
Baltimore Sun. 8th.
Lord Roberts is playing the same
game of war that defeated Cronje and
won Bloemfontein using great masses
of men with skillful strategy to crush
the Boers.
Dispatches sta,te that he is able to op
pose five British to one Boer at every
point where there is fighting, and so
his progress is rapid. His latest success
is the occupation of Smaldeel, an im
portant strategic point nine miles north
of the Vet river and 63 miles north of
Bloemfontein. -
From Smaldeel a branch railroad
runs to Winburg, 29 miles eastward,
which town has been occupied by Gen
eral Hamilton. By seizing this road
the British commander-in-chief is able
to put himself in an exceedingly advan
tageous position for the advance on
Kroonstad, his next move. After his
fast progress of the last few days a halt
is likely, so that the immense British
force may be consolidated in positions
where each division can protect the
others.
According to a dispatch from Smal
deel, the British advance had a tempor
ary Bet-back. Lord Roberts' troops ad
vanced from Tafelkop in two strong
columns, but the Boer general Delarey
repulse one of them. This success for
the burghers was futile, however, as the
other British column outflanked them
and forced them to retire.
A scheme of the Free Staters which,
had it not been discovered, would have
enabled them to strike serious blows
has been unearthed by the British. At
almost every farm house Mauser and
Martini rifles, with large supplies of
ammunition, have been concealed. Aa
Lord Roberts advanced the Free Staters
were to rise as an army in his rear and
threaten his communications.
Did any one ever meet the man
who bought a brownstone house with
the money he saved on cigars ?
Look In Your Mirror
,Do you see sparkling: eyes, a healthy,
tinted skin, a sweet expression and a grate
ful form f These attractions are the result
of good health, if they are absent, thsre
Is nearly always some disorder of the dis
tinctly feminine organs present. Healthy
menstrual orrtna mean health mnA H......
everywhere.
makes women beautiful and healthy.
it stnkea at the root of . all their
trouble. There is no menstrual dis
order, ache or pain which it will not
ture. it is ior tne oua - -.ri fj;e
busy wife and the mat
the change of life
rrisia in a wot
strength