Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / Oct. 18, 1888, edition 1 / Page 7
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- - I The DR. TALMAGE. Pv " 1.1 BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUNDAY SE.1310N. .1 in n;i of gre it stature, whom -T- :tre jour ani tirent.r, .m'.c i ; fi ana su: on cuvtt jun; an I he !s sj.i of Hie giant. Jhtt u't,',i ht ! I y, ;c' . -Ion ithuti , the son of Hiiiv a, j ,V ?. hrr, tleio him."' i. Chronicles J hlforni-"' v,on l"'OioraT;ne.i, a:iu lor wnat ; i i nob Luis j:ub.sagi sup in uy a i tl) ) facred fc-i lutures as so;ne ;r!;;ph utterly obnoxious to ttie i jit his newspaper iuri:i;r h.s ab ut .t this hjcriptural errata' Iso, i-; v.o'ihhv haphazard about the f. a '" then t la-! jaaire ci MTipture was a eer iiitfii'Kd to be uut in n e Blhie as the P: '-Iii the i ejrinnin;; God created the Vaiid r.l.o eartii," or. ""God so Joved the a that 1L' jcnve his only bezoVen son. ' iFfifct ;t lor rny text to-day ue: au.se it mr-d v.-.th practical and tremendous WS- ' tl;' ;('oy).f! or iioa tne rniiisnnes naa been U.Eed.w;t;i the exception of a few giants, laiv't' giants is ino.stly extinct, lam glad v. T. eie is no use for ria:-ts now ex "to enlaro the income of musoums. But l were many ot n.eiu in o.uen tunes. ;h was according to tfce .bible, eleven four and a half inches hi;rh. Ur. if iio not beliave the Bible, the famous ( a s calar writer, declares that at . by an earthquake a monument was n ' otien, discovering the remains , ri:u;t forty-six cubits loivr, or -nine feet, high. Ho, v. hether t:-( t'er sacred or j! ofan history, you rem to the c onclusion that there were )-,; . Id. ii tunes eaes of hu ran altitude tro:s and appalling. David had :id tli3 skull of one of lhes3 giants, but wire other giants that the Uavidcan h lnvl ir it yet subdued, and o.ie of them in n.y t?xt. lie was not only of tatr,rt', but had a surplus of digits. tho i" l nary fingers was ann-jscd an iional iing.'r an I th.J foot h-ul als a fc: ;".ious au :c n tam. lie iiau tv.enty- t.rmiauticns to nnnas a:ui leec others have twenty. It was t'ne only instance of the kind. former, tne .earned writer, s?.ys that tne jy. ror or Java na-d a son enaowcu witn jsni" number of extremities. Volcatius, ji itt, had i-ix lingers on each hand. Mau Jkis in his celebrate J letters speaks of two i:ias near BerLn, similarly equippe 1 of ci and foot. All of which I can believe have seen two cases of the same physi fcnerabundance. But this giant of th3 is in battle, and as David, the dwarf rior, had dispatched one giant, tho ther of David sla3Ts this monster of I text, and there ho lies after tha Ee in Oath, a dead ciant. Kis stature ;iiot sav.' him, and his superfluous ap pen is of h:nd and foot did not save hira. vrrubibiiity was that in the battle his h finger on his hand made him clumsy in -.use of his weapon, an 1 his sixth toe p'.cd hi.; ga t. Behold the prostrate and tonnntVl gant of the text: "A man ,t of stature, whose fingers and toes were 'and twenty, six on each hand, and six leii font: isn I he also was th? son of the . hut when ho delie 1 Israel, Jonathan, son of Khimea, David's brother, slew ehold how superfluities are a hin.ler.mce ier thrill a help! In ail the battle at ,h that day there was cot a man with inary hand and ordinary foot and Jiiory stature tnat vas not better oil" than I'liysical curiosity of my text. As ysi' al sie is apt to run in families the obahdity is that this brother of David b did the work was of an abbreviated iture. A dwarf on the right side is "jnger th;.n a giant on the wrong side, and 1 tYti v .r. I v- mi,! mind nn.l ost.ihp nn.l fimmr- ir.itv that vim cannot use for Go 1 and the eterir.ent of the world is a sixth finger r.1 a sixth tee, and a territie hinderance. ' 9 most of tr-.e good done in the world, and imost of those Mho win the battles for the ht, are ordinary people. Count the fingers iheir right hand and the:r have just rive fmore and no less. One Doctor Duff ong missionaries, I ut three thousand mis Haries that would tell you they have only amou endowment. One Florence Night ale to nurse the sick in consjneuous places, t ten thousand women who are just as d nur. es though never heard of. The wamp Angel' was a big gun that during l war made a big noise, but muskets of or lary cal bro and shells of ord.nary It did the execution. Pies dent Tyler 4 liis cabinet go down the Potomac one y to expr r: merit with the Peacemaker, a jat iron gun that was to affright with its inder foreign navies. The gunuer touches oft and it explodes and leaves cabinet min ers dead or. the deck, while at that time all it 1 vi, our co were cannon of ordi b bore ii'olt) to be the defense of the nation, p, roady at the first touch to waken to duty. ' curse of the world is b g guns. Atter fp liitic" .. who have made all the noise li'.ilg tten?lav"m anber, I iiBXi day the poopl with the silent ballots i --ett1 everything, and settle it right, a Jlion of the white slips of paper they drop ak ng about as much noise as the fad of t apple blossom. Clear back in the country to-day there are 3thers in plain apron, and shoes fashioned ( a rough last by th shoemaker at the end the lane, rocking babies that are to bs the irtin Lutbers, and the Faradavs. and the iisons, and the Pisnvircks, and the Glad nes, ant the Washington, and the George hitefields of the year 1'JilS, and who will ike the 20th century so bright that this vuch lauded nineteenth in comparison will .em like the dark ages. The longer llVe tllS 1 Hl-a nAmm ;.ks. They do the world's work, bear 1 the world's burdens, weeping the grid's sympathies, carrying the world's con .ation. A-nong lawyers we see rise up a -afus Choate, or a William Wirt, or a S:im- tl frOUt hail i. lint, snmVtw n . morrow if there were not thousands of ommon lawyers to see that men and women rt, uie.r rigiiis. v alentine ,lott or a ,illard Pai ker rises up eminent in the medi il profession, but "what an unlimitel 'eep Aonl l pneumonia, aid diphtheria, )d sc:ir!' t fever, have in the world it were not lor t n thousand mnion iecrors. The old t hvsician in his ? rolling up the bine of the farmhouse, or ting on horst back, his medicines in the idie-bags, arriving on the ninth da- o': th.e rer, and coining in to take hold of the Ise of the patient, while the family, pale -th Riixiety, are looking on and waiting for i decision in regard to the patient, and Wing lam say: "Thank God, 1 have istere i the ea-e, lie is getting well,'' excates hie an admiration quite e,jnl to the inen Y of the names of the great metropolitan t is. i'itncoa.t or Gross, or Joseph C tehinson, of the past, or the iilutrio'-.s pg m.ai of the present. ht wh.at do v.e see in all departments? . . ine noz satisned wit.a ordaiarv shr r.f Crk and orti iiti i-v nti:s Iiif--ia S: !lJ see wr.at thev can do with n. hr.n-i t nve imgers tney want six. Instead of aai anoi aaa th.ey want, twenty-four. A ! rtitiu a-;. cant of money for live'ihoo lnd r tne S'.ij'p'.y of t-'o.-t w'ioti we leave be- j li.i us alter wo hav?. ilepartel this l.fe is loortant, lor we l!ave the lest authority I iyiiig: "II? that providetli not for h's I a"l especially those ot his own I is worse than an infidel." large an 1 fabulous sums for which jny struggD, if obtained would be a hin tmce rather than an advantage. Th peties and annoyances that those have is? estates have become plethoric can only 1 1 7 who Ps-Si them. It w.ll 1 z'Po. thing when through your industry lyliblic prosperities you can own the wnieh you live. But suppose vou f houses and you have all these rents YIect 4nd all those tenants to ple ise. )ose j-ou have branched out Fn riccesse. until in almos; I uiTvCiica y s j ha re inve?tmcii.s. f!r "Wall 1-5 . ;vt17"",:rr"- any of yrur mills. Epidemic of crime. cunts an i there are emh'izzlAmont.a ani k seondings in all directions, and yo:i wonder whether anv nf vour 1 m!.-i-o.5noi... nii 1 recreant. A panic strikes the financial worn, aDfi you are like alien uniera sky full of hawks and trying with anxious cluck to get your overgrown chickens safely undpr w,ng. After a certain stage of suc cess has been reached vou have to trust so many important things to other3 th.ot you are apt to beoma the prey of others, and vou are swindled and defraude 1. and the anxiety you had on your brow when you were earning your first thousand dollars is not equal to the anxiety on your brow now that you have won vnnr t)irlinnitro,i ti. ssnd. The trouble with such a one is he is spreod out lilre the unfortunate one m my te..t. "i on have more fingers and toes than vou know what to do with. Twi-ntv were useful, tweatv four is a hinderm-r Rurvnuitv. D's rneli says that a Kingof Poland abdicated his throne ani rloine 1 the people ,md teeame a ' carry nur-aens. Ami some one csVed him why he did so and he rfph' 1 : "Upon my honr, gpntiemen. the loid which I quit is by far heavier than the one you see me rarrv. The weightiest U but a st-.aw when compared to that world under which I labored, i have slept more in four nights than Thave durn? ad my riga. I be-rin to l e a i-Iing mvse'f. Elect wham you choose, for me who am so well it would be madness to return to court." "Well." Firs somebodv, "snrh overloaded persons ought to le pitied, for their worri ments are real and their insomnia, and th-ir nervous prostration are genuine." 1 reply that thev could cet rid of the bothersome surp'ui by giving it away. If a man has more .houses than he can carry without vexation, let him drop a few of tbem. If his estate is so great he cannot manage it with out getting nrvoiis dvs-vpsla from having too much, let him divide up with those who have nervous dvs-wps'a because thv cannot gctenourh. Xo! they trua'-d their sixth finger with more care than they did the original five. They go h'mn'nET with what they call gout, rind know not that, like the giant of my text, they are lamed by a super fluous toe. A few of them by large chari ties bleed themselves of th;s financial ob.'sity and monetary plethora, but many of them hang on to the hindering superfluity till death, and then as they are compelled to give the money up anyhow, in their last will and testament they generctsly give so"e of it to tin Lord, expecting no doubt that lie wid feel much obliged to the.;. 7hankG'ol that once in a tvhilo wo have a feter Cooper, who. owning an interest in the iron works at Trenton, siid to Sir. Lester: "I do not fed quite easy about the amount we are making Working under one of cur patents, we have a monooolv which sterns tome something wrong. Everybody has to come to u? for it and we are making money too fast.'' ' fo they relueed the price, ami this while our philan thropist was building Cooper Institute, which mothers a hundred institutes of kindness and mere v all over the hand. But the world had to wait five thousand eight hundred years for Peter Cooper. I am glad for the benevo'ent instltut ons that get a legiey from men who dur'ng their life were as stingy as death, but who in their last will and testament bestowed money on hospitals and missionary soeiotie; but for such testators I have no respect. They would have taken every cent of it with them if they could, and bought up half of Leaven and let it out at ruinous rent, or loaned the money to ce'estial citizens at two pei- cent, a month and got a corner on hams and trumpets. They lived in this world fifty or sixty years in the presence of appall ing suffering and want, an! male no eifort for their relief. The charities of such people are for the most part in "pau'o post future" tens. and they are goinr to do them. The probability is that if such a one in his last will by a donation to benevolent societies tries to atone for his life-time close-fisted-ness, the heirs at law will try to break the will by proving that the old nian was senile or crazy, and the expense of the litigation will about leave in tvie lawyers' hands what was meant for the American Bibie Society. O ye overweighte d successful business men. wlit ther this sermon reach your ear or youi eye, ltt me say that if you are prostrated with axioties about keeping or investing these tremendous fortunes, I can tell you how you can do more to get your healtt back and yonr spirits raised than by drinking gallons of bad-tasting water at c-aratoga, Homturg or carisoaa give to God and humanity ami the Bible ter per cent, of ail your income, and it will makj a new man of you, and from re-tless walking of the floor at night you shall haveeigbl hours' sDep without the help of bromide ol potassium, and from no appetPe you wil Uardly be able to wait your regular meals and your wan cheek will fill up. and when you die the blessing? of those who but for you would have perished will bloom all over your grave witti violets if it be spring, or g adiolus. if it be autumn. Perhaps some of you will take this advice, but the most of you will not. And vou will try to cure your svvollen ua.fi 1 by getting on it mora lingers, and your rheumatic foot by getting on it mora toes, and there will be a sigh of relief when you are gone out of the world: and whenovr vp-.tiT,5 tha min- win? urss: "li.essed are the dead who die in the Lord," iersons who have keen i ppreciation of the ludicrous will hardly be aide to keep their face straight. But whether in that direction my words do good or not. I am anxious that all who have only ordinary equipment be thankful for what they have an 1 rightly emplov it. I think you all have, figuratively as well as literally, fingers enough. Do not long tor hindering superfluities. Standing in the presence o this fallen giant of my text and in this post-mortem examination of him. let us learn how much better oil we are with just the usual hand, the usual foot. You have thanked God for a thousand things, but I warrant you never thanked Him for those two iinp'ements of work and locomotion, that no ono bur. the Infinite and Omnipotent Gol could have ever planned or made, the hand and the foot. Only that soldier or that mechanic who in a battle or through machinery has lost them knows anything about their value, and on'y the Christian scientist can have any appre ciation of what div.ne masterpieces they rare. Sir Charles Bell, the Finnish surgeon, on the battlefield of Water loo, while engaged in amputations of the woundelwas so impressed with the won Irons construction of the human hand that when the E.arl of Br dgewat-r cave lortv thou-.-md doi.'a-j foressi?-s o i the wi dom rn ! goodness of God. an 1 ei"h; books we re w ritten. Sir Chark-s Bed wrote his en tire book on tho wisdom and goodness of ;od as disp'aved in the human hand. The twenty-seven bones in hand and wrist, with rarlilagcs and ligaments and phalanges of the lingers, all m.ule just ready to knit, to se-.v, to build up, to pail down, to weave, to write, to plow, to P' und, to wheel, to bat tle, to give friendly salutation. The tips of the fingers are so many telegraph cilices by reason of their sensitiveness of t'ou h. The br.dges. the tunnels, the cities of the whole earth are the victories of the hand. The hands are not dumb, but of reu speak as dis tinctly as the lips. Wit!i our hands we invite, we rep?l, wo invoke. vr entreat, wo wring them in grief or c'as; them in joy. or spread them abroad in ienediction. The ma.forniation of tne giant's hand in the text glorifies the usual hand. Fashioned of God more equisiteiy and wondrously than any human 'lni'ehnn.sm tnat as ever vontri ved, I charge you me is for U.i ana the lifting of the worl 1 out o: ! its moral rred:ce.:r.ent. Emnlov it in tne sublime work of gospel handshaking. You can see the hand is just made for tbat. Four fingers just set right to touch your neighbor's hand on one side and your thumb set so as to clench it on the other side. By all its bones.and joints, an 1 muscles, and cartilages, ami liga ments, the voice of nature joins with the voice of God commanding yon to shake hands. The custom is as" old as the Bible, anyhow. Jehu said to Jehonadeb: "Is thine heart right as my heart is with thine heart? If it be, give me thine hand." When hands join in Christian salutation a gospel electricity thrills across the pahn from heart to heart, and from the shoulder of one to the shoulder of the other. Shake hands n 1 around. With the timid and for ti.er encouragement, shake hands. Wita the troubled and in warm hearted sympathy, shake hand?. "With the young man just en tering business, and discouraged at the small sales and the large expenses, shake hands. With the chil l who is new f rot.-. God, and started on unending journey for wnich he needs to gather great FUrply Oj. strength, and wr.o can hardly reach up tn you now because vou are so shake hands. Across cradles and dy and graves, shake hands. With your enemies, who have dona all to " de fame and hurt you. but whom yen can afford to forgive, shake hands. At the door of churches where people com i in. and at the .door of churches where prople go out. shake hands Let pulpit shake hands with p-'w, and Sabbath day shake h-m Is with week day. and earth shake hands with heaven. Oh the strange, the mighty, the un defined, the mysterious, the eternal power of an t:or;e-t handshaking. The difference be tween these times and the millennial times is that now some shake hands, but then all w II shake hands, throne and f cot stool, a?ros3 seas nation with nation. God ani man, church militant and church triumphant. Yea; the malformation of thi fallen giant's loot glorifies the ordinary foot, for which I fear you have never onc-e thanked God. The twenty-six bones of the foot ara the admiration of the anatomist. Tee arch of the fco': fashioned with a grace and a poise that Trajan's arch at Beneventum, or Constantme's arch at Rome, or arch of Triumph at the end of Champs Elysees could not epial. Those arches stand where thev were planted, but this arch of the foot is an ad justable arch, a yield ing arch, a flying arch, and ready for move ments innumerable. The human foot so fashioned as to enable man to stand upright as no ether creature, anil leave the hand that would otherwise have to help in balancing the body Lee for anything it chooses. The foot of the camel fahicnel for the sand, the fr.ot of the bird fasliioned for tbo tree branch, the foot of the hind fashioned for the slippery roik, the foot of the lion fashioned to rend its prey, the foot of tha hor.-a fashioned for the solid earth, but the foot of man made to cross the desert, or climb the tree, or scale the cliff, or wa;k the earth, or go where he needs to go With that divine triumph of anatomy in your possession where do you walk? "in "what path of righteousness or what path of sin have 3-ou set it down? ATI: ere have vou left the mark o: yonr footsteps? Amid the petrifactions in the" rocks bcive b?c:i found t!:c mark of the feet of birds and leasts o? thousands of years, ago. And God caa trace on- au tha footstep.? or your lifetime, and those you made fifty years aco are as plain as thore made in the last soft weather, all of them petrifiel for the Judgment Day. Oh, the foot! How divinely honored not only in its construction but in the fact that God represents Hint ;elf in the I'ib'e as having feet: "Tho couids on the dust of His feet :" "Darkness was un i-r Ills feet;" "The earth is My f ootst.K)!." And representing cyclones and euroclydons and wh.rlwind3 and hurricane j as winged creatures. He descrilies Himsa'f as pitting IPs foot on these monsters of the air and walking from pinion to pinion, saying: "He walketh unon the wings of the wind." "Tl.ou hast put ail things under His feet," cries the psalm'sfc. Oh, tho foot! Givemetlu auto biography of your foot from the t rue you stepped out of the crad lie until today and 1 wi l tell your exact character now and what ara your prospects for the world to come. That there might be no doubt about the fact that both tnese pieces of divine mechanism, hand and foot, belong to Christ's service, both hands of Christ and both feet of Christ we,-e spiked on the cross. Right through the arch of both His feet to the hollow ot His instep went the iron of torture, and from the palm of bis hand to the back of it, an 1 there is not a muscle or nerve, or bone among the twenty-seven bones of hand and wrist, or among the twenty-six bones of the foot but it belongs to Him now and forever. Charles Reade, the great writer, lost the joint of his forefinger by feeding a be.ar. Look out that j our wlioi hand get9 not into the maw of the old Cerberus of ierdition. Sir Thomas Trowbridge, ot the battle of Inkermann, lost his foot an i when the soldiers would carry hira away, he said: "No, I do not move until the battle is won.'' So if our foot be lamed or lest let it be in tha service of our God, our home or our country. That is the most beautiful foot that goes about paths of greatest usefulness, and that the most beautiful hand that does the most to help others. I was reading of three women who were in rivalry about the appearance of the hand. And the one reddened her hand with berries, and said the beautiful tinge made hers the most beiutiful. And another put her hand in the mountain brook, and said as the waters dripped off, that her hand was the most beautiful. And another E lucked flowers off the bank, and under the loom contende 1 that her hand was the most attractive. Then a poor old woman ap peared, and looking up in her decrepitude asked for alms. And n woman who had not taken part in the rivalry gave her alms. Ani all the women re olved to leave to this beg gar the question a to which of all the hands f resent was the most attractive, and fth aid : "The most beautiful of them all is the t ne that gave relies to my necessities," and ,a ine sc eaid her wrinkles and rags ani her decrepitude and her body dis jppeared, and in place thereof stoo 1 the Christ who long ago said: "inasmuch as ye d d it to one of the least of these ye did it to lie!"' and who to purchase the service of our hand and foot here on earth or in resurrec t'on state, had His own hand and foot lac erated. A Bashful Bridesroorj. In Alpha'-etta, Ga-, F.s jtiire Lud ridge was engaged to perform a marriage cere raouy. 'I he groom whs A iexutiutu- .j&uiea and ihebiido .Mih i.dith Mn.th. while the bridal pa-ty stood in uy Lsquirc's oltice awaiting tlu prionu u cv "f the ceremony, 31 r. da i.e-. excue:l him-elf from tiivi company, and, 1:1 ountiag a horse wh"eh ho found outride, gal loped away at a fuiious rate. neliad wai-pere- d to the groom-. nan beitue he L-it that he w r e ! be;! cm; : 0 ma: v.-.th the utmost ;i.s.i;i ; ;(. .;-.:;; d aic Pi ge 1 a nil ed t the firooinsmaii and U bn::g me hen h s p'u e. "' 'i h and t iie itvii ; A t lis ;-o fCiu.sh I m.ic; up my and n;. rooms ;;ge Cc i vi ;i t i d.d ; -u:i:iy we-.-: !. tac i.r.du said : Whoa m.nd to do anv thing i never let anything stauu in mo way." " 'etc Y"t h World. U3 The ftorgeons Peacock Throne. The Peacock Throne was the creation of the renowned bhah .lehau, a monarch distinguished even to this day lor the splendor of his buildings, and for the wealth of their beauty. This th rone is fituated in the Hall of r'rivate Audience, in the city of 1 elhT, in India. It is a mass of solid gold, flanked on eitlnr side by two peacocks vrith spread tads the taili studded with sapphires acd rubies, emends, pearls and diamonds. The value of this wonder was estimated at thirty millions of dollars in our coin. Mian Je'. au is the Jlniperor who rea'ed the exquisite and iccomr -arable mau soleum to the memory of his young wife the Taj Mahal. Lalla 1 ool-.h was daughter of Aurungzebs, son of Jehau. Courier-Jour nal. lie Took no Credit for It. "I thiDk it is very kind of vou to let the little boys of the neighborhood eat all the green apples they want from your orchard," said a visitor to a farmer." "Oh, I don't claim no credit for that,' replied the honest granger. "'ou see my oldest son is the oniy doctor in this section.'' The Idea. "DOCTOKIXK OLD TIME." 1 Striking Picture A Kevival of Old Time Simplicities. In one of Harper's issues :"s given a very fTn! illustration or' Roberts's celebrated paint- in. known as "Doctoring Old lime." It muh taller, represents a typical old-timer, with his bel a ia I lows, blowins the dust from an ancient clock, with its cords and weights eareftrdy secured. One of these clocks in this genera tion is appreciated only as a rare relic. 1'be suggestive name, "Doctoring Old Time," brings to our mind another version of the title, used for another purpose "Old Time Doctoring." We iearn, through a reliable source, that one of the enterprising proprietary medicine firms of the country has been for years in vestigating tbe formulas and medical prep arations used in the beginning of this cen tury, and even before, with a view of ascer taining why people in our great-grandfathers' time enjoyed a health and physical vigor so seldom found in the present generation. They now think the have secured the secret or secrets. Thev find that the prevailing opinion that tnenexistai, mat - mature naa a icuicuy for every existing d.sorder, ' was true , ana , aCllIlg UJlUtr UCllCt, utli gmiiujjaicuw 1 used the common hen ana mams. .-on- tinual trespass upon the forest domain has made the se herbs less abundant aud has driven them further from civilization, until they havebeen discarded as remedial agents be cause of the difficulty of obtaining them. H. H. Warner, proprietor of Warner's safe cure and founder of the Warner ob servatory, Rochester, N. Y., has been press ing investigations in this direction, into the annals of old family histories, until he has secured some very valuable formulas, from which his firm is now preparing medicines, to be sold by all druggists. TLey will, we learn, be knovrn un lor the per.eral t.tle of "Warner's Log Cabin rem edies." Among those medicines will be "sarsaparilla.'" lor the blood and liver, "Log Cabin "Lops and buchu remedy;' lor tha stomach, etc., "Log Cabin cough and con sumption remedy," "Log Cabin hair tonic," "Log Cabin extract,'- lor internal md ex ternal use, and an old valuable discovery for catarrh, called "Log Cabin rose cream." Among tho list is also a "Log Cabin Piaster," and a "Log Cabin liver pilL" From the number of remedies, it will be seen that they do not propose to cure all diseases with one preparation. It is believed by many that with these remedies a new era ! is to dawn uon EnfferSv. humanity and that tho close of the nineteenth century will see these roots and herbs, as coinp undid under the title of Warner's Log Cabin rerasdio.?, as popular as they were at its beginning. Although they come in the form of proprietary medicines, yet they wdl be nouo the les3 welcome, for suffer ing humanity has become tired of modern doctoring and the public has great confidence in any remedies put up by the firm of which H. H. Warner is the head. The people have becom? suspicious of the effects of doctoring with toiso.ious drugs. Few realize the injurious effects followiug the prescriptions of many modern physicians. These effects of poisonous drugs, already prominent, will Inrcome more pronounced in coming generations. Therefore we can cor dially wish the old-fashioned new remedies the best of success. A young Arab in Alg'ers has discov ;red in a hole in a reck napoleons to the ralueof 100,000. FamouM Women. It is a s;guificantfact that most of the wo men who have achieved fame in art, litera ture, cr "affairs," have enjoyed vigorou- health. This shows th-t the mind is never capable of the severe and contina-xl appl.ca tuui nee ssarv to creative work, unles-s the body is at its best The woman who aspires to fill an t xalted place anions her associates, must be free irom nervous debility and fe male weaknesses. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre scription will banish these, and it is war ranted to restore those functional harmonies which are indispensable o health As a spe cific for all those chronic weaknesses and ail ments peculiar t women, it is unecpiaied. The United States have never sur rendered the right of privateering. Tbe- Coiiuiiou Liut. There is a place no love can reach, '' here is a time no voice can teach, There is a chain no power can break, There is a sleep no sound can wake. Sooner or later that time will arrive, that piaco will wait for your coming, that chain must bind you in helpless death, that sleep must fall on your senses. But thousands ev ery year go ua'imedy to their fate, and thousands more lengthe n out their days by heedful, timely care. For the failing strength, tte weikening nreans, the wasting blood, Dr. Pierce's GoMen Medical Discovery is a wonderful restorative and a prolonger of strength and lifa It purifies the blood end invigorates the s stem, thereby fortifying it against digease. Qfdrnggdts. Some one says that wealth is a shadow. Tt is a pleasant reflection to many of us. Delicittcr tuitiirru, umiua Mothers, Overworked Men, and for all dis eases whre the tissues are wasting away irom the inability to digest ordinary ftod, or from overwork of the brain or body, all such should take Scott's Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphite. "I usetl the Emulsion on a laclv who as delicate, and threatened with bronchitis. It put her in such good health and flesh, that I must sav it is the best Emulsion I ever used." L. P. Waddell, M. D., Hugh's M lls,-. C. Fomelbini,' new in Chicago. A doctor Df that city makes dimples for young voiaea at 50 a dimple Cireitt lmleJen. 8 .mc of th-- greatest nn n that ever lived were of -m-il statue nmi iiisagmficant appear owv. The ren.'er -will rea-tily recall many instances. Vet y small are Dr. Pierce's Pieas nt. 1 ttrgaivM pellets, has they are tar more eflVct. ve tl'an ihe bue, olef fashioned pdls whi'-ii ure s,. .ifficult to suallow an.lso harsh i. tbeir w.-tv 11 1 Ii " Pellet" are g-ntle and iipv r tause constipation. For liver, stom ach end luvvel dtr.Mgneuts they have no equal. An Iowa judge lias decided that a nan cannot make lis own family. cider to be used by W. L. Douglas, the best known shoe man ufftctuier in the world, was horn at Plymouth, Mass., August 22. 1S15. When he was s-ven years old he was bound out to learn the sh-je-making trade. His early life was a hard one, but he did not complain. He had an ambi tion to bo master of his trade; he worked hard and learned all Le c-odd. Having saved a little moii'-y by hard work at the ber.ch. he began to manufacture shoes ut brecktm, I'-jav., July G. l7t:. liis knol etige of the business gave hi:u a great advant age over his competitors. He worked hard aud saved his money; his bus.ne-s tegsn to increase and in May. his alvertise ment tirst appeared in the papers, advertis ing W. L. Douglas's .Shoe. He has since acid ?d several other kinds. Tvhich he descrilies in Li-; atvei tiseinent tbat appears in this j a p. r lri jn time to time. It is a lad 1 nown by those who eur his shoes that he gives more value for tbe money than any other fch-je manufacturer in this country. W. L. Doug las's factory is 420 feet long, 30 feet wide, three ttories high; he employs otJ workmen with a pay roll of .4,wx per week. His sales are 1.S0O pairs ter day ; his business is oaerea-ing very rapiuiy and will rtach over i,(KXt,(OU this year. He pays the highest wages paid in the city, and is highly regard ed by those who work lor him. If you ere in want of a pair of shoes it will pay you to go to your dealer and examine a pair before you buy any other make. There is one thing cer tain, you will find bis shoes the best value for the price, and free from she ddy. W. L. Dr,u"ias bmltuphis reputation by making honest shoes. Amblgnon!. latecomer (at breakfast) "How's ths hash this morning, Bob?" Bob Tine!" Idea. Remember Allcock's are the only genuine Poitocs Planters. They act quickly and with cer tainty, aud can le worn tor te.s v.ith'Ut causing pain or ir.c diveniew e. They sre in valuable m cases or Sp nal Weakness," Kidney and Pulmousry Difii.-ulties. ilalaria. Ague Cake, Liver Complaint, Dyspasia, Strains, Rheumatism, Lumbago, "Sciatica. Heart, Spleen and Stomach Troubles, and all local pains. Beware of imitations, and do not be de ceived by misrepresentation. Ask for A LLC-OCR's, and let no exp'aaatioii ;r tclicitation induce you toai-cept a substitute. Children try for Ir. . Tf o -MM nriil toU o rvma;,.;. tr-itV, l.Los. ure, you may know that it is not in any wav otrer.sive to tae taste. Children lite ha.u- BURG FIGS, and rt is no longer necessary to t,;t tnPm with Cstr-oil cents. Dom, one Fi?. Mack DrUi: Co., I. Y. Conventional 3Ionn" IteMolniiano. Whereas. The Moron Route (L. A. & C. Ry. Co.) desirrs to make il known to the world at lare that it forni3 the double con necting lir.k f Pullman touris-t travel be tween the winter cities of Florida and the tummer resorts of the Northwest; and Whereas, Its "rap'd transit" Vystem is un surpassed, it's elegant Pullman Buffer Sleep er and Chair car srvice between Chicago and Louisville, Indianapolis and Cincinnati unequalled; and Whereas, Its rates are as low as the low est; 1 hen t e i Jiesolccd, Tfci-tin the event of starting on a trip it is good policy to consult with E. O. idcCormick. Gen'l Pas?. Agent A'nou Route, 1S5 Dearborn Sr., Chicago, for full particu lars. (In any event send for a Tourist Guide, enclose 4c. postage.) If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Thomp son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at25c. per bottle THE ONI,Y Brilliant Durable Economical Are Diamond Dyes. They excel all others in Strength, Purity and Fastness. None others are just as good. Beware of imitations they are made of cheap and inferior materials and give poor, weak, crccky colors. 36 colors ; 10 cents each. Send postal for Dye Book, Sample Card, h"rect!cr.s for coloring Photos., making the finest Ink or Bluinf (10 cts. at quart), etc. Sold by Druggists or by WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Burlington, Yt. For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles, USE DIAMOND PAINTS. Gold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only 10 Cents. f CELERY 1 COMPOUND D me s CURES I PROOFS "Paine's Celery Com- j NCUrSISIcl pound cured my nt-rv- ous sick hcarlachcs." """ Mrs. L. A. Urizntnek, San Jacinto, CaL raorvous , r . - "After using six V.ot- PrOStratlOn tics of Paines Celery! Compound, I am cured I ot rheumatism." ! Rhfllimfltkm Samuel Hutchinson, wneumaiism Soinh Con.ish N H "It has done mc more GV ICinQV pood fur kidney disease than any other medi DlSOSSOS cine." Geo. Abbott, Sioux City, Iowa. AJJI) "J'aine's Celery Com pound has been of great f LiVCr benefit for torpid liver, indigestion, and bilious- Disorders nrss" L,ZBET" c- Ldall, Quechce, V:. jj GATARR j ELY'S CREAM BALM COLD IN HEAD kj EI.Y EROS.. 56 Warren St, X. Y. ARE YOU F.1&RR1ED? this society, which pays its members $250 to l,eMK lt Mrriace. Circulars free. H. W. MUTUAL KX bQWitmi SOCIETY, Box 846, Minneapolis. Hum. BLOOD AND BRAIN. Pure blood is -what oils the machinery of life, eases every movement of the hody, removes still ness of the joints, drives out pain from the nerves, stimulates the brain, protects the liver and kidreys from irritation, enables physical exertion without fatigue, prolongs life, and makes men and women perfect in health and feature. Good blood and rood brain ure inseparable. Aim to keep the blood pure by using the only true blood remedy, B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm.) Miss S. Tcmlinson, Atlanta, Ga-, says: For many years I have been p.fTiicted with rheu matism combined with severe kidney troubles, indi gestion and nervous prostration. BllCUmatisa Several physicians, were em ployed and numerous patent medicines resorted to without benefit. At last I began the use of B. B. B and its ertect was like magic. Kheumatic pains ceased, my kidneys were relieved, and my constitution improved at once." Z. T. Kalhrton, Macon, Ga., writes: Tire? years r.go I contracted a Llood poi-on. 1 applied to a, phys.iciaa ut cn:?, aud his treatment came near iaiuEg me. 1 cm; uvea 01a pn; s:aun and ill. n v ..r.i t j Kentucky 1 riot Sr.nrS then went to 11' t Sijrir. re.aained two months, but nothing- scen:ed to cure me permanently, uiihoujrh t jrv pcrary relief was given me. I returned home a ruined man physically, with but little prospect of ever getting weiL I was per-uadsd t ? try B. B. C., and ta my utter astoras.iruei:t it c;u;:uJy i.-'a e j every uker."' t V. C. McGaughey, Webb City, Ark., writes : j " I owe tlie conn' 01 1 of my life to a use cf B. B. S. I was troubled with blood poison Ead Biocd fyr !;v-cr s-x v". arci fcurd no relief cqul to that givea by this valuable remedy." J J.Irs. E-ania GrLTdh-., Uritln. Tr.a.. rr'Vs . j " The doctors said :.;y boy tw:-.'.v. ears old had , scrofula, liis knees were crawn up au i joints -.vert stiff, and for three years he ld bctn Scrofula unabletowalk. One bottle of E. B. B. has done him so much good he caa row walk, and his pain has ceased. Its action cn mv bv roe lvn nmnouirpH rrKt '."n.dprful." (3? tonou trailacarfc. Loo Uabtxs were rot hot hon?cs and the people who dwelt in them were not hot-house growths,. They were a hardy, healthy generation auu the rem edies used were simple prepirat'ons reproduced in. Warner's LO Cabin Cotili and Cci tumpt'on Remedy and "Warner's 'Tip pecanoe, " the jrreat stomach torus. Vf Fl SEU ALL AMKHICAX And eruarantce LOWEST TRICES. A. XV. GI MP & CO.. DaTlnn. U. Larzeat retnf I atockin America. r.2 in OTTO, factory price $tio.O, our price V. Win. " " :., " " :"tr 41 iu. ' " 5ceo, " 45 in. ' " 4.ve, " " 3i.m. 44 in. " " 40.0U. " L7.. Order fpilck. Also 2V) second-band Wlieels. Repair ing & iNickelinj. Bicycle di linns taken in trade. 1 VFRSlP,"j Bi( I I EaMliVl H.r.in frr, E .v ViiowwLiTe Fnflof thrilling advecrnre. yon have teen ict ilia not to tet. Nearly CMB0V.JS1 lWitifully lOc ti. W. Lk-arcs:cwn, 111. firil ..,.-(. I, f it-. IF THERE IS HEARTBURN ;our rructatior.s, pr.in and distention, you know that the food is f?rrstent:ng. not d--1:15. C!em thfj mucous hr-ins by using flaTv'rr.r.e r-. rTnnour.'cd in Ur. Schenclt's Mai.vI.'KC I "ihiz ::;.t c-r.!y clvantes the surfaces 1 ut tits the sccrcticr.s gaiaj ani improves thc-:r qur.hty 3 that there w;'.l be no mere sourness. DYSPEPSIA has a hundred shapes. Always painful and distrr: Tne Storr.arh must be treated carefully .uid prristc-ru!y. 1-V.r thi? purpose ihcru is nothing in nature hkc Mardrake. Dr. Sche nek's M -.nih akc I 'ills never foil. . COSTIVEWESSi A d.tDoro'-.s condition of ho.vels, leading to infUra ion, piles, ruptarc, hemorrhage. Due t i kd li:;e.t:on. Never was a coe thn th Mandrake Villi vsould net cure. '"diarrhcea r.r. l painful irrcgtilari'.y of bowels owinj to the irritat'on of iNe mucous linings 1 y the pa?-u?er ;.o'.-rr.r.'i indigested food. Cleanse tnd iooihc the linings and tee thr.t the stcm.-.'h steps ir.ip--.r.:r; cn the bowels. bch-i;ck"s Ja.dr2ke Pills are soverc:r,u. f l r i"Hlf Vj v Truyuiia Prirp 1:5 rt". jer toxj 3 Ih-X'-s f r r ci.; cr fi't ! innj, p.'a- free, ul i-.-rij-t ut i't.t:. J. II. fevlivn k. A. 1-ou, l'liil. Any b"ok leurnpd In one roadlnj. Mi-.id wai.ilcrinsfiirpd. Sprut. iiijr withoiil note. Wholly unlike nrtiticial nyvlmn. Piracv rnilrmiirt tiv Supt-vnif Court. rt-i induix-nn'Uiw U i-)rTtfi'iiU:nco tlassea. PrtiPiKi-tus, with iimons of Dr. Win. A Ham mond, '.lit uoil'i-fant.il Srecialist lu Mind disesaa, liaiiieHireenle-al'Tlioiiirfioiitthe ffreat l'pycbol osritit,.!. M. iliii-Uly, I). Ii.. Kditor of th Cfcria tian.Aiivota.tr. Kx liari i'ructor the focientiBt, and "tlu-ra, sent p-wt f rr by PROF. A. LOlSKTTlx il Fifth Ave.. Kw Tort. r 1-11 SlV! Sent on trial. Freight Wi2Ui025' paid. Fully Warranted. 3 TON $35. fltlier sixes Drooortion- 2liki ate!y low. Agents wrH y-.i. U unrated L.ata.OU free. Mention this I'rc-r. merits wantt!. lnn h.r. 7A new arti-!s. Catl'Kne and samples frw. C. E. Marshall. UK-fcix'rt. X. Y. WAITITh TO BIT V A FA It M in this locality. IIWil L.U Curtia Wriyht.-Jja Lroadway.N. f. DET10TWES Waotcl in ever Conutr. Shrewd men to art under instraetUa In our Secret Service. Experience not nernssry. ParticulariftM, Grannan Detective Bureau Co.41Arcii9.Cinci2saU.0L ilrwrili !?l -5U FrH Ife Lines nt under the horse'i W Rrpwstrr Safety lieln Koldei reet. write te Ider Co. Holly. KU-b OPIUM 111 Treatment. Unmm IPIUM HABIT Dy. HaniUrimn or Iloma Trial Free. No Cure. No Par. Th e at honi' and man ni'.n- mttwy wui..n i u than nvlhintrelw in Ihe wr.l l'.if ki .:8t VKhk. Trm Kkc Ad1r-ns 'I Kin .. Auiruoi. Mmm. 1 T . J V . lxw)--j--pijnr, Hu!iii8 Fona lVnraanKh:p. Arithirietiii. Short-hand, eta- thoronirlily taiiirlit lv MAIL. Circular fret. Bryuut'n t wllrur, -157 Main Kt.. Buffalo. X. TL. Beware of Fraud, a my name and the price are stamped ou lim bottom of all my a.jvtuised Eboea before leavinc tiie f-iclory, widcli ljiotect the wearers azatnst liicrli prices and interior poi.iis. If a dealer onti- W. L. IoBla' t-iioes at a re duced pi ice, or sav lie hits tfjem without my iiannt and prieo buuuped ou tiic tuttu:, j ut liitn du'u as If aud. DOUGLAS FOR ;j:xTi.i;virx. N T. KS -r V..VX TllItKAI to f'-et. fy j.aaa-i-tMC'i uid WJ LI sir. DOl'nr.AS SI KOI:, the original end cuiiv h i'i'i--evvet v-it Si t-U. L'iuuU cu. tm-ni:i.Se -!..- roMir fr.r,; i; tr, XV. L. liOVd LAS 3.. l'OLJCF. SHOE. Fnilr-i l M- n an t l. t' -r .rr!i r- il wi ar tin m. h:nv,tn fi-i a a !Ia:id-S". t.i fcl;oc. N'oTackf or Wax Tlin-ri i t l.urt t!i- f-t. XV. I DOKJI.AS fiSHt MIOK 1' r-c-l-ed ft-r livuvwir. ( : r r ' i i XV. l. Irf .L ::.. V encMS.'.'G MAN'S Stl!M I. t:. ,.t - iv. ! ...! f..r lo;.ii wear: !. I .:l-l.. t-. : !-n.i a v--ar. V. L. l)tl ;LAS S ; slfK YOU. liOYS i. th Ih.sT Sc-i:.H. !n.in i'iottI I. XV. L. DOI ;I.AR1.;3 OCTH'S School Kho" Kiv- tiiu tiiiall a tl.ui.ee to w;ur tbe Le-t i:i t!'- or! !. A".l i:r.i-i i ri;rr' . Butt"'! sn. I ,sr. Tf not wM .v v..i r ieaiT, wruc XV. l IvOCGLAS. BIfOL-KTOV. ?T. Hit.. TV..4 UJ UTotcTnuntif uaibipiuui CC3l. Bra frfd tia irn H m -4 3 bH'Cfi, Tin o: Irj'-ite. hurt til XV. L BKAKOBLICXZKia warrmMe4 wawrrrnof, aaa vTl ky ym drf Is Tha w roaiJiEl. rucukii a penct rMiaf eoat, addle. BeararcorimltatioBa. koaa rnala withaot tha rtaa rinatrctrd tlmioirM Ira, A. J. Tow, Koto a. HE
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 18, 1888, edition 1
7
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