Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / Feb. 28, 1908, edition 1 / Page 6
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A SCHOLARLY SUN CAY SERMON BY XR. N. IvJ'GEE WATERS. fnbjeet: Joy in Wort. Brooklyn, N. Y. In his series of ecrinons on "The Choice of a Pro fession." the Rev. Dr. N. McGee Waters, pastor of the Tompkins Ave nna Congregational Church, Sunday preached on "How a Young Man May Find Joy in His Work." II said in the course of his sermon: The story of labor is a eheckercl one-. It is only in our highest civiliza tion that work is coming to its own. la bl3 savaco state man is the lazy amtma.1. Indeed, it i? not natural lor any animal to woik, save as it is driven to it by the whin of neces sity. This is the view of work we flml embodied in the old Genesis story, where labor is s?t ('own as a punishment f:r Adam's sir, where he is told, as he i3 driven from the Gardrn. "Thou shalt cat thy bread by .te sw?r.t of thy brow." This is riot only a very uninspired part of ths Bible; Tr.it thi.i sentiment certifies that It is n very old part. How labor was (l?3;-'sod received its nicit ti!s;:al il lustra -lie a from the life cf Christ. You iuuiher hew ovfr tl? multitude who heard Iliui. lie C3st a tpel!. All the pconla cald th.nl no man spake as Ho spake. The lortiEst sr.irits pressad r.bcut I lira and ask Ml Him if lis vrer. the Messiah. Yet they scare?I.v could believe for 3oy. And what was the basis cf their ttonbt? Their skenticlsra was ali in that question of their?, "Is not ibii tfco carpenter's sen'.'" V.cw mill a workman h the real Saviour.' They marv?ied at His wisdom. Thoy con fessed that He spoil? with authority. Tby followed Hhn r.3 she?i follow a s'ispherd. But lie v;?s a carpen ter, and eo the hUh and mighty set Ilia dotrn for n fraud. It was hs cau?ff their eyes were bcMen that tbev ralstcok the dignity cf toil for s disgrace. In scars parts of the world that is still trne. But increasingly the world is cominT to honor the toiler, "whether lie works in a profession or a trade, and is ccrrespondi.i.sdy corn Ins to dsiIse tho idler, whether he he rlcli posr. Now much the tcimea h..at-;s has done with its elcmcsmey 13 brln this about, and wita its grc-rt men, almost, all of thcra rem in 3 Irm the cabin and tho plow, we may never know. Certain It is that New Enstland was the first country since liv? land of the ancient Jews in which it was counted respec table to earn one's livlu.. I4tt!3 do we think, or have taken tlroe to find out, how much our work contributes to our happiness. Work is a great character builder. 1 snppose mrst of us work ia order ta cat. I suppose if we wera gener ally asked, we -would soy that the first requirement we made of our labor was that it should clothe us, a-nd feed ns, and house us. That is 'the 12rst requirement and the lowest. The second and greatest require ment a roan makes of his work, wbetier be Irnows it or nor, is that It shall roake a man of hbn. Your work must brinj? you fcr?ad. but no "less it ciijst bring you culture. Sonie tiov or other we are always pitying the boy who is born poor, or the yonnts man who fails at college. It ' Is a hardship and sometimes a pity, i .fc.&TE ss one man, however, more un- :ioriB;Eic tnan that young man, and that is the young fellow who is born fa a silken nest and goes through col lege in an automobile. There is 33c-tl;in3 wrong about a silken nest, J2ari Is nothing bad about an '( -''."iv PVPPr.f if Tvnil T.nt vmi 7mni ralsa an pa tin in rid'-rdown. -and it requires "far mora of a man to fUDijt to anything in college who through it in an automobile instead of walking. Vv'e are so made tbat we must have struggle. The ( "Teassn "why rich men's sons rarely -.aurwsiil ia anything, is because 1hey Tti.eor develop their muscles. There la no teacher like work. It must fcrJag; him bread,. but no less it must Ibrins? him culture. "The Man With the Hoe" be needs not so much pity. Moses was a herdsman; David was a shepherd; Jesus was a carpenter; Benjamin Franklin knew no college - ba was a printer's devil; Robert Burns knew no leisure he was a plowman; Abraham Lincoln wore no soft raiment; hut these are our stars of the first, magnitude. Even col leges can give eulture only through work, and there are some things col leges cannot teach. Literature and history and the liberal arts are at last the ornaments of life; even read Ion: aad writing and the rule of three are nil named the "conveniences of lire." Bat these are fundamentals in dustry, thrift, courage, honesty, "trntb, faith, hope, love. These ar,e the threads which, woven together, make the eternal life of man. If you bave forgotten these, "though you "have gained the whole world, you liave tost your own soul," and these may bs bad for the receiving in every work and railing open to men. When you stand before a task, look for a teacher. If It offer thee not wisdom, despise Its wage. If thy calling yfclfl thee not culture for mind and Tieart, It Is but a coffin for thy better -nature. Demand of your life work 1 bat it shall make a man out of you. Work is a great influence giver. And bere we come upon another telnode-r. It la not the kind of work joh da that givea you Influence so rr.rcbu That is what the world thinks. It is tho way you do it. QmOlty counts for more than kind. It la true, of course, tbat there are irfHR vocailojis that in thorn selves Jm the worker. AH labor that makes mercharidi'o out of men's rrj is a little -town out in Min-. nesota called Rochester. ' A few years ago when I was there it only had a few htfndred people in it. It was a nice little, commonplace, prairie town. It is not the capital of the State; it is not tho seat of the uni versity; the penitentiary is not even there; nor have they a church with relic working miracles. It is not the home of a United States Senator, nor any politician. And yet It is the Mecca of a pilgrim host. From every State in the Union,' from across tho sea, from every capital and country of civilization men are journeying to Rochester, Minnesota. And those who are going are the scholars, the authorities, the masters in surgery. What takes them there? Simply this: An old doctor by the name of Mayo has been practising in that little town for a generation. His two sons, now in early maturity, practise with their father. The fact is that they have been doing such marvelous things with the knife, and such fine work as surgeons, that the great, mas ters from Paris, Berlin and Vienna, as well as this country, are singing their praise, and go out to that little town to sit at the fe.?t of these men, r.nd pay homage to the superiority of tkeir work. It is ahvsys sn. If you are re rcembered at" all it is by the things yen have do:i2 veil whether you have raisrd a field of corn, sewed a patch cn a:i c'.d garment, made a j pv.v.v. kiu pie. "" written a poem. Wcrk is the great happiness ; hrliiger. You all know what a gamo I of nina y inz U. You set up so many j pin?, and you roll two balls, and you ! make a "strike" or a "spare," or els3 I you don't. The game is to knock over a3 many pins r.s possible. Men ' beccme very skillful in it and gain a great deal of pleasure bv doing it. Th it is the philosophy of all play. It is the erection of artificial difficul ties or harriers and learning to over- ccme them with ease and skill. That i makes the exhilaration cf tennis, and baseball, and bowling and golf. I am told, and I do net know any thing about It ryst!?, that therein lies the mania for making money. That is a great game. Now, in reality, work is just exactly the same thing. The difficulties to be over como are not artificial, to be sure, but very real. But they are there, and work is the game of bridging them over with skill and ease and joy. In its final analysis, for a healthy man there is no game in the world so exciting ana so exniiaraiing as his work. I suppose you long suffering folk who sit in the pews and are more or less at times tempt ed to somnolence, have never real ized that there was anything exciting about the preaching business. And yet I want to say to you that I know of no keener joy than when well and ready I take a theme and look it through and analyze It, afld illustrate it, and mark out the points to be made in its illumina tion, and then sit down to write a sermon. Your fingers will not flv fast enough. If it turns out well there is a great exhilaration and state of happiness and joy. Making a s-rraon is a great game. Now the reason that there is so much happiness in work is because of this fact. All true work is a man expressing himself. We have gener ally thought that work is drudgery. We want to think about work as ex pressing a man s message, oiepueu son's engine is Stephenson's thought dressed up in steel; Tennyson's poem Is Tennyson's thought set down in letters; Watts' "Hope" is Watts' heart hunger put on canvas; St. Paul's is Sir Christopher Wren's praise to God put into stone. Why, then, shall not the house builder make his house declare his thoughts? Why shall not the blacksmith make his "hammer and anvil express his hope? Why shall not the farmer pub lish his secret? Almost any man can learn the technical part of any work from carpentry to poetry but no man hath mastered a trade till it be comes a language through which he can express himself to all men. O, the drudgery of life lies in the fact that we bend above our work like dumb driven cattle with never a secret of our heart told in our work. And this shall be the joy of our life, that we make our vocation proclaim to all the world the truth that God hath put into our hearts! The Narrow Way. Matt. 7:13, 14. Narrowness is Christ's idea of the way of life, a straitened way, the way of truth. For a moment pause and ask: Could it be otherwise? It ia 11 o'clock, the orthodox regulator at the watchmaker's points with exactness to that hour. "Very narrow," exclaim all the cheap timepieces of the neigh borhood, and they persistently point to all hours from 9.30 to midday, but their boasted liberality is only inex actness, which is another word for untruth. So orthodoxy in the harbor channel marks with exactness each rock of sunken hulk, and puts its danger sig nals out. A liberal pilot might be careless of these signals, but the pas senger would prefer that the pilot should be overcautious rather than too liberal. H. E. Partridge, Pomo na, Tenn. A Prayer. Grant, we beseech Thee, 0 Lord, the Giver and Guide of all reason; that we may always be mindful of the nature, of the dignity, and of the privileges Thou hast honored us with. Grant us Thy favorable assistancs in the forming and directing our judg ment, and enlighten us with Thy truth, that we rJny discern those tilings which arr really good, and, having disco vcVed them, may love and cleave stfdfastly to the same. r. flUyfk -. nerae, we pray Thee, ...,.... darken the eyes of may nave u per- know both r-nch is by IXTEPNATIOVAL LESSO'V COM MENTS FOR MARCH 1 Subject: Jesus Feeds the Five Thou sand, John 6:1-14 Golden Text, Isaiah 40:11 Commit Verses 11, 12 Commentary. T1M13. 2S A. D. PLACE. Northeast shore Of Galilee. EXPOSITION. 1. The Hungry Multitudo and the Dismayed Apos tles, 1-9. Jesus had made a journey to an unfreqnented spot to be alone with His disciples for much needed rest and counsel. But He did not get the rest. Ho lived continually in a crowd (Matt. 4:24, 25; 8:1; 12:15; 13:2; 14:14; 15:30,31). There is noth ing more wearisome than a crowd, unloss the heart is very full of love. But vhsn we grow so tired of the crowd, let U3 remember how the Mas ter's llfo was spent. It was the inces sant "coming and going"' of the crowd that had driven Jesus to seek this seclusion (Mark 6:31). But He did not thus escape them. They fol lowed Illm. And how did He feel? "II 9 welcomed them" (Lu. 9:11, R. V.) Oh, wonderful love! His own need sinks out of sight as He beholds theirs. The desire and need of rest is forgotten and the whole day spent in teaching and healing (Luke 9:11, 12). Jesus waa interested in and so licitous ahout the multitude. They were never to Him "the common herd" or "the rabble." They were "sheep not having a shepherd," and Ho made Himself shepherd unto them. That throng drawing near the mountain was largely composed of tho poor, but the souls of the poor were as precious to Him as the souls of the rich (Matt. 11:5). If He were really the acknowledged head of the church to-day, ths church would not seek the boulevards where the few rich live to the neglect of the alleys where the many poor swarm. It was sevsral hours (as we learn by a com parison of the accounts) before this Crowd would need feeding, but Jesus considers their coming need at once, and sets His disciples to considering it. He takes it for granted that they ara to cat with Him. So He puts to Philip the question, "Whence are we to buy bread that these may eat?" Philip might well have done that, for lio had seen the water become wine in another hour of emergency, and he had seen other manifestations of the fulnes3 of divine power that there was Jn Jesus. But alas! Philip was like us, slow of spiritual perception and slow of faith, and as Moses was utterly at loss to know how God could provide flesh for 600,000 foot men in the wilderness, so Philip is at loss to sea how Jesus can provide bread for 5000 (cf. Nu. 11:21-23; Ps. 78:19). How often we are aghast at fhe great work before us, or rather before Christ, and the small visible resources at hand. Philip's answer is most amusing. He figures out just how much it will cost to buy enough bo that "every one may take a little." Ah! Jesus does provide "a little" for those who sit at His table. Philip, thougli, is quite a typical church treasurer. He believed in "carrying on the Lord's work on strictly busi ness principles." Andrew, for a mo ment, ventured a suggestion that there was a little boy present with five loaves and two little fish, but he was at once frightened at the appar ent absurdity of his suggestion and blurted out, "but what are they among so many?" But they proved to be quite sufficient among so many, for the Lord Himself took these in significant things Into His own hands and multiplied them. We oliten. are tempted to say of our insignificant gifts and possessions, "but what are these?" "Quite sufficient."' Jesus re plies, "If you will only put them into My hand." The lad who bad come along with his fire little cheap barley crackers and two little salt fish played a great part in that day's working. Jesus took him into part nership with Himself, and Jesus and he fed the multitude. A small boy with very meagre means is of vast account if he puts what he has in Jesus' hand, even though the An drews think he don't amount to much. Jesus left His question to work all day in the minds of Andrew and Philip. "He Himself knew what He would do" He always does. As evening drew on the disciples had not yet settled the hard problem and came to Jesus and told Him that He had better send the people away, for they certainly could not entertain them. They gave it up, then Jesus came to the rescue (Matt. 14:15; Luke 9:12; Mark 6:35). II. The Ever-Sufficient and All Suilicient Lord Jesus, 10-14. Jesus' answer must have startled Philip and Andrew, "Make the people sit down." However, they stood this test better this time than the former; for they did as they were bidden. It was well they did, for Jesus "distributed to them that were set down." We must obey if we would be fed and we must find rest at Jesus' feet if we would receive bread from His hand. Philin had tried to figure out how each might take a little, but Jesus distrib uted to them "as much as they would." What we get from Jesus is what we will. But they were all "filled" in this case and so always at Jesus table (Ps. 23:1; Phil. 4:19). "Jesus would not have His bountiful giving teach us wastefulness, "the broken pieces" must be gathered up. The disciples got a basketful apiece to lake away and so were well repaid for sharing with the crowd (Prov. 11:24, 25; Luko 6:38). The wonder ing crowd seeing the sign said, "This is of a truth the prophet." Of truth Her is, nothing could be plalnei that that. The man who has creatlvt power is surely the Son of God. fn ci settied regions the dog has more friends than the sheep, and It is useless io lock for new legislation 1h;it. will erive the sheen full nosses- on and outlaw the dog, laments the Vierican Cultivator. But the suc- the sheep colonizing plan in Massachusetts looks as if -N3 will find a way to make v of the dogs. Sheep Nnew life to the hill Vistern States, and ncourag?.Tne.nt. Will Gladly Answer the Questions of Ary Inquirer. It 13 a generous offer that Police Judge J. H. Wills, of Cloverport, Ky., inaiies to sufferers from backache, kid ney and bladder ills. Judge Wills knov3 tho value of Doan's Kidney Tills and will answer the questions any sufferer who ites to him. The liL-ltra cava T f 1 V c pleasure in recommending Doan's Kidney Pills to persons suffering from kidney disorders, backache, etc. It is the best remedy 1 have ever known and I will gladly answer any ques tions about it." Sold by ail des lers. 50 cents a box. Fcster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Moro Important. Tb know just how to sing a thing Desirable, but then It's well to know how not to sing And also where and when. Deafness Cannot Be Cured bylocal applications as theycannot reach th diseassd portion of tho ear. There is only one way tocura deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness is caused byan infl.imed condition of the mucous lining ot the Eustachian Tube. Whou this tubeis iu fianiod you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Dpafh63.?i3 the result, and unless the inflam mation can b3 taken out and this tube re etorad to it3 normal condition, hearing will be de3troyod forever. Nine cases out of ten nre causal byoatarrh, which isnothingbutan inflamed coiiditio i oJ the mucous surfaces. We will "i va One Hundred Dollars for any case ofDeainesi (caused bycAtarrh) that can CothacuraibyllaU's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars f roo. F. J.Ohewey & Co.,Toledo,0. Sell by Druggists, 75e. T.ko Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Women don't vote because rudo man has not yet told them in what they really believe to be all serious ness that they just shan't so there. Piles Cured in to 14 Days. Pozo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any caseof Itching. Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 davs or money refunded. 50c. No man can be a judge in his own cause. Mrs. Winsiow's Soot hing Syrup for CJniiaren allays pain, 0 res wind colic, 25c a bottla lie who seeks equity must do equi ty. So. 8-'03. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'j Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. Een Napoli. Here een Noo Yorka, where am I Seence I am landa las' July, All gray, a' ogly ees da sky, An' cold as eet can be. But steell so long I maka mon,' So long ees worka to be done, I can forgat how shines da sun Een Napoli. But O! w'en pass da boy dat sal Da violets, an' I can smal How sweet dey are, I no can tal How seeck my heart ees be. I no can work, liow mooch I try, But only sect an' wondra why I could not justa leevo an' die Een Napoli. G:m?r Growl m in Texss. Lo-k Don. tbo -fTIeia I Chinese in terpreter cf fhe Unk?i Stiff -s govern ment hers, mry hav? the distinction cf introducing into Texas a new plant which may open up a very profitable crop to - tho people of Southwest Texas. About a year ago, while In San Francisco, Lock Don secured some Jamaica ginger plants and brought them to San Antonio and planted them in his yard. The plants grew and flourished, and examination by experts in plant knowledge brings out the fact that this section Is ad mirably adapted for raising the plant. These facts were disclosed at a meeting of Business Men's Club by Edward W. Knox, president of the State Horticultural Society, and Dr. David Griffith, assistant agriculturist of Washington, D. C. The success in raising the ginger here will be communicated to Wash ington, in order that the Consul in China may secure cuttings from the roots to plant on the various govern ment demonstration farms in South west Texas. San Antonio dispatch to The Galveston News. COFFEE DRINKING A Doctor Says It Weakens the Heart. "In my opinion," eaya a well known German physician, "no one can truthfully say that coffee agrees with him, as it has long since been proven that caffeine, contained in coffee, is an injurious, poisonous substanco which weakens aDd de generates tho heart muscles. "For t'.is reason the regular usa of coffee, soon or late, causes a con dition of undernourishment, which leads to various kinds of organic dis ease. "Convinced o! this fact, I have often sought for some healthful bev erage to use instead of toffee. At last I found the thing desired in Fostuui. Having had occasion to for bid people using coffee, whose hearts were affected, I hav recommended Postuni as a beverage, since it is fres from all injurious or exciting sub stances. I know this from results in my own family, and among pa tients. "Hundreds of persons who now use Postum in place of coffee are erreailv benefited thereby." "There's a Reason." Name given by Pcstum Co., Battle Cre;k, Mich. Tt?ad "The Pvoad to Wellville," ia pkgs. of CA3Y CRIED AND SCRATCHED All the Time Was Covered with Tor turing Eczema Doctor Said Sores Would Last for Years Per ' feet Cure by Cuticura. "My baby nieca was suffering from that ieriible torture, eczema. It was all over her body, but tho worst was on lier face and hands. 8he cried nnt scratched all the lime and could not sleep night or day from the scratching. I had her under the doc tor's care for a year and a half and he seemed to do liar no good. I took her to the best doctor in the city and he said that she would have the sores until she was six years old. But if I had depended on the doctor my baby would have lost her mind nnd died from tho want of aid. But I used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment and she was cured in three months. Alice L. Dowel), 47G9 Kaston Ave., St. Louis, Mo., Way '2 and 20, 1907." Usage is thill-i'S. Hie best interpreter of FFTS, St. Vitua'Danee :N ervons Disease. per manentlycured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerva Restorer, 3 trial bottle nd treatise free. Dr. li. R. Kline. Ld.,031 Arch St. , Phila., Pa, Worry for worry's sake seems to be the working motto of many people. Why not the Natural laxative, Garliell T;? It's Pure, Mild and Potent. Made ci Herbs. Write for sajnples. Gariield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ignorance of the law one. excuses no Taylor's Cherokee Itemedy of Sweet Gum and Mullen is Nature's great reme dy cures Coughs, Cold3, Croup and Con sumption, and all throat and lung troubles. At druggists, 25c, 50c. and l.t0 per bottle. Sunday is not a day for legal pro ceedings. , If You Suffer From Asthma or Bronchitis get immediate relief by using Brown's Bronchial Troches. Contain no harmful drugs. At present I live in Lope, but the issue is in the hand of the gods. Pinder. Ml' AMFES LONG SUFFERING WITH NEURALGIA was ended by Minaru'a Liniment after all else had failed, writes J. B. Phair, of Ccu verr.ear, N. Y. To prove that it cures r.cr.-lalgi-.', rhcumctle pains, stifr", tore r-iucr'-cs or joint-, we will tend a special bottle Ivcj ipui, rsqnesi. Mlnar&o Liniment Co., Sonth lYanr;n-v-. M. A hundred years cannot repair a moment's loss of honor. Italian. Onions, Onions, Onions. COO bu. cf Salzer's Red Globe Onion per acre at 8Cc a bu. brings $480.00. That pays. 950.00 from 3 acres Salzer's Morning Star Cucumber is wejl worth taking along. C10 bu. Salzer's 12 Podder Earliest and Best Pea sold in the green state at SI. 50 a bu. makes -960.00 per acre. Such yielda Salzer's pedigree vegetables stand for. Fob 12c and this notice the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crcsse, Wis., in order to gain 20.000 new customers during 1908, will mail you free their great plant and seed catalog tocether with 1 pkg. "Quick Quick" Carrot t - I T-.l' i "11 l 1 1 .10 .. .10 .. .15 . . .15 .. .10 .. .15 1 IJi;g. earnest iupe .;aDO?.ge 1 pkg. Karjiest Emerald Cucumber.... 1 pkg. La Crosse Market Lettuee 1 pkg. Early Dinner Onion , 1 pkg. Strawberry Muskmelon 1 pkg. Thirteen Bay Radish .10 Kernels gloriously bcautnul flower seed 15 ..Total $1.00 Above is sufficient seed to grow 25 bu. cf rarest vegetable? and thousands of bril liant flowers and all is mailed to you rOSTFAID fOIt 12c, or if you send 16.', we will add a packasto cf Berliner Earl -'est Cauliflower. John A. Saker tsii Co., La Crosse, Wis. A. C. h. He who derives the advantage should sustain the burden. 1 rut JO LTli appeal to the Well-informed in every walk of life and are essential to permanent success and creditable standing. Accor- ingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of known value, but one of many reasons why it is the best of personal and family laxatives is the fact that it cleanses, sweetens and relieves the internal organs on which it acts without any debilitating after effects and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. It acts pleasantly and naturally and truly as a laxative, and its component parts are known to and approved by physicians, as it ia free from all objection able Biibstances. To get its beneficial effects always purchase the genuine manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug gists. CABBAGE AND L mza the wenuj oven to Always remember tha full name. or this signature on every box. Only One "Bmmo Quinine" That is Laxative Bionji oiuine. Look for the eignature of h. W. Grove. Used the World over to Oii n iold in nt Day. 2.rc. It is a very effective doesn't work at all. law that This woman says Liydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound saved ber life. Head ber letter. Mra. T. C. Willadsen, of Manning Iowa, mites to Mrs. Pinkham; " I can truly say that Lydia E. Pink bam's Vegetable Compound saved my life, and 1 cannot express my gratitude to you in words. For years I suffered with the worst forma of femala com plaints, continually doctoring and spending lots of money for medicine without help. I wrote you for advice, followed it as directed, and took Lydia E. Pinkham's .Vegetable Compound and it has restored me to perfect health. Had it not been for you I should bave been in my grave to-day. I wish every suffering woman would try it." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands oi women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear-ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration j -Why don't you try it? A' Mrs. Pinkbam invites all sick women to write ber for advice. She has gruided thousands to health. Address. Lynn, Mass. All acts are presumed to have beet rightly and regularly done. It removes the came, soothes the nerves and relieves tho aches and GOLDS AND GRIPPE 'rtf,j headaches and Nenrnlgia also. No bad effects. 10c, 26o uud 00c bottles. (Liquid.) Grown from pure bred seeds. Quality and satisfaction guaranteed. Early Jersey Wakefield; Charleston Large Type Wakefield; Early Flat Dutch; Late Flat Dutch. 1,000 to 5,000 at $1.50 perl,00fL 5,000 to 10, 000 at $1.25 r(er . 10, 000 to 20, 000 at $1.00 per 1, 000 20,000 or over at special rates. I guarantee delivery in eood condition. N. B. I make a specialty of a crate of cabbage plants containing 100 each of the foi;r varieties, deiivcied at any Southern Express Office for $1 00. ARTHUR V. PERSY Youns's Es'arrJ, S. C. A New Parlor Game For the Long Winter Evenings FREE Co to your dealer and buy a pound package'of "20 Mule Team" BORAX. Cut off the top panel from package and mail to Pacific Coast Borax Co.. New York, with 4c. in stamps and the WHIZ game will be promptly sent you Prepaid. WHIZ, the New Parlor Card game. Is composed of 44 handsomely printed cards inclosed In a flap case with full and complete rules for playing. En tertaining, instructive or educational, and can be played by all the family. Similar games cost 50c. in th shops. You can get it FHKK. Secoiiri flHwri Ban an4 liurl Ar fclud anr aiinnt fr. mv. where. V rH v fieluli t. MK HHitVD MAO P.. 1UM K.i.ry Kt.. Richmond V. So. 8-'8. If n filleted with weak eyes, use Thompson's Eye Water BEET PLAMTS - CAFUDSiyE CURES 66 WHIZ" For the next few weeks we will fill all orders for Cabba and Beet Plants at the following: prices: 1000 to 4000, $1 25 psr M; B0CO to 9000 81 00 per M; 10,000 at 90c per M; special prices on larger lots, cash with order or C. O. D. if preferred. We guarantee satis faction and safe delivery of plants. We have all the leading varieties the Early Jersey Wakefield, the mo?t popular early variety; th Charleston Wakefield a few days later but very desirable for garden planting:. In the later varieties we have the Succession and the Lat Flat Dutch, both producing large flat heads. Plants novr ready fof shipment; our personal attention given to all orders. THE CARR CARLTON CO., BOX ICO, MEGGETTS, S. C. r jt n cube a gqlo l-j gijz a.ir. Look Sic. 0 flh&ymrt X
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
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Feb. 28, 1908, edition 1
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