Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / July 5, 1889, edition 1 / Page 4
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?. Isaa - . J r- FflM OF THE 170RD. -a. , ' The .Mightiest Weapon is the ' Gospel" - Dr. Tatmage's Sunday Sermon at the Brooklyn Tabernacle. Turn "There it none like that: give it w."I Samuel xxl.t l. . David fled from his . pursuers. The world runs very fast when it la chasing ft pood man. The country is trying to catch David, and to slay him. . David goes into tho house of a priest, and, asks uim for a sword or KDear with which to defend . himself. Tbe priest, not being accustomed to use deadly weapons, tells David that he cannot supply him; but suddenly tho priest thinks of an old sword that had been carefully wrapped up and laid away the very sword that Goliath formerly used and ho takes down that sword, and while ho is unwrapping the sharp, glittering, memor able blade, it flashes upon David's mind that this was the very sword that was used against himself when he was in the fight with Goliath, and David can hardly keep his hand off it until the priest has unwound it. David stretches out his hand toward that old sword, and says: "There is none like that; give it me." . In other words, "I want in my own hand the sword that has been used against mc, and against the cause of God." Ho it was given him. Well, my friends, that is not the first or the last sword once used by giant and Philistine iniquity which is to come into the possession of Jesus Christ, and of liis glorious church. I want, as well as God ' may help me, to show you that many a weapon which has been used against the armies of God is yet to bo captured and used on our side; and I only imitate David when I stretch out my hand toward the blade of the Philistine, and cry; "There is none like that; give it meP' . I remark, first, that this is true in regard to all scientific exploration. You know that the first discoveries in astronomy and geology and chronology were used to battle Christianity. Worldly philosophy came out of its laboratory and out of its observatory, and said: "Now, we wUl prove, by the very structure of the earth, and by the movement of tho heavenly bodies, that the Bible is a lie and that Christianity, as we have it among men, is a positive imposition. " Good ' men trembled. The telescope, the Ley den jars, the electric batteries, all in the hands of the Philistines. : But one day, Christianity, looking about for some, weapon with which to defend itself, happened to seethe very old sword that these atheistic Philistines had been using against the truth and cried out: "There is none like that; give it mot" And uopemtcua, ana uauieo, ana i&.epier, ana Isaac Newton came forth and told the world -that, in their ransacking of the earth -beta rem. thev had found overwhelming presence of the God whom we worship; and this old Bible began to shake itself from the Koran, and Shaster, "and Zenda vesta with which it had been covered up, and lay on tho desk of the scholar, and in the laboratory of the chemist, and in the lap of the Christian, unharmed and unanswered, while tho towers of the midnight heavens struck a silvery , chime in its praise. Wordly philosophy said: "Matter is eter nal. The world always was. God did not make it." Christian philosophy plnnges its crowbar into rocks, ana finds that the world . was gradually made, and if gradually made, there must have been some point at which tho process started; then, who started it? and K that objection was overcome, and in the first three words of the Bible wo find that Moses stated a magnificent truth when ho sakl: "In the beginning. " Worldly philosophy, said: "Your Bible is s most inaccurate book; all that story in the Did Testament again and again told, about the armyoC the locusts it is preposterous.4 rhore is nothing in the coming of the locusts like an army. An army walks, locusts fly. Ajq army goes in order ana procession, locusts without order." "Waitr said Cliristain phi losophy; and inl808,in the southwestern port of this country", Christian men wont out to examine the march of the locust. There are men right before me who must have no ticcd in that very part of tho country the oondng up of the locust like an army; and it was found that all the newspapers unwit tingly spoke of them as an army. Why? They seem to have a commander. Thoy march like a host. They halt like a host. No arrow .ever wont - with straighter ' flight than the locusts come ' not even turning aside for the wind. If the wind rises, the locusts drop and then riso again after it has gone down, taking tho same line of march, not varying a foot. The old Bible right every time when it speaks of locusts coming like an army; worldly phil osophy wrong. Worldly philosophy said: "All that story about tho light 'turned as clay to the seal' is simply an absurdity." Old time worldly philosophy said; "The light comes straight." Christian philosophy said: "Wait a little while," and it goes on and makes discoveries and finds that the atmosphere curves and Ixmda the rays of light around the earth, literally, "as the clay to the seal." The Bible right again; worldly philosophy wrong again. "Ah," says worldly philoso phy, "all that illusion in Job about the foundations the earth is simply an ab- , surdity. 'Where wast thou,' says God, Vhen I set the foundations of the earth.' The earth has no foundations."' Christian phi losophy comes and finds that the word as translated "foundation" may be better translated " sockets." So now see how it will read if it is translated right: "Where wast thou when I set the sockets of the earth l" Where is the socket ? It is the hol low of God's hand a socket large enough tor any world to turn in. Worldlyphflosophy said : "What an absurd ttory about Joshua making the sun and moon fttaTMl still. X It t.liA wnrlrl nA stnnravt nn in. , Jjtant, the wTiofe universe would nave been phy, "not quite so quick." The world has two motions ono on its own axis, and the othor around the Bun. It was not necessary in making, them stand still that both motions should be stopped only the one turning the world on its own axis. There was no reason why the halting of the earth should have iarred and disarranged the whole universe, oshua right and God right; infidelity wrong every time. I know it would be wrong. I thnnlc God that the time has come when christians need not bo scared at any scientiflo exploration. The fact is that religion and . science have struck hand in eternal friendship, and the deeper down geology can dig and tho higher, up astronomy can soar, all tho better for us. The armies of the Ixrd Jesus V Christ have stormed tho observatories of the world's science,'' and from the highest towers have flung out the banner of the cross, and Christaanity to-night, from the observatories of Albany and Washington, stretches out its hand to ward trie opposing scientific weapon, cry ing: "mere is none like that; givoltmor I was reading this afternoon of HeracbeJ, who was looking at a meteor . through a telescope, and when it came over the face of the telescope it was so powerful he had to avert his eyes. And it has been just so that many ao astronomer has gone into an ob servatory and looked up into the midnight heavens, and the Lord God has, through some swinging world, flamed upon his vision, and the learned man cried out: "Who am Ir Un done! Unclean I Have merer. Lord God l" Acainu l remark, that the traveling dis position of the world, which was averse to morals and religion, is to be bronght on our side. The man that went down to Jericho . and fell amidst thieves was a type of a (Treat many travelers. There is many a loan who is very honetit at home, who, when be is abroad, has bis honor filched and Ms good hn hits stolen. There are but very few men who can stand t he stress of an expedition. Six weeks at a watering-place has damned many a .. trtrn. Iu tho oldon times God forbade the traveling of men for the purposes of trades ixvause or. trie corrupungjrinuoiices atterm , J1 ; it. '!! rot'-.y mtn'i'lv""nnot stand j t- fir ,ine i -mother, tnm tney get Into tipain, on the Lord's day si ways go out to see tho bull fights. Plato said that no city ought to be built nearer to the sea than ten miles, lest it be tomptcd to commerce,, But this traveling disposition of the world, which was adverse to that which is good, is ,to be brought on our side. These rail trains, k hy, thoy are to take our Bibles; those steam ihips, they are to transjmrt our missionaries; Shew sailors rushing from city to city all -sround the world, are to be converted into Christian heralds and go out and preach Christ among the heathen nations. The Gos pels are Infinitely multiplied in beauty and power since Robinson.; and Thompson, and Burckhardt have come back and talked to us about Siloam, and Capernaum, . and fonrcaken, pointing out to us the lilies about which Jesus Breached. the bwwb vnm which fauiwas shipwrecked, the fords at which Jordan was passed, the Bed Sea bank on which were tossed the carcasses of the drowned Egyptians. A man said: "I went to the Holy Land an infidel; I came back a Christian. I could not help it." I am not shocked at the idea of building a railroad to the Holy Land. I wish that all thd world might go and see Golgotha and Bethlehem. If we cannot afford to pay for muleteers now, perhaps when, the rau train goes we can afford to buy a ticket from Constantinople to Joppo, : and so we will got to see the Holy Land. Then lot Christians : travel! "- God ; speed the rail trains,- and guide the steamships this night panting across the deep hi the phos phorescent wake of the. shining feet of him who from wave cliff to wave cliff trod tha stormed Tiberias. The Japanese come across tho water and see our civilization, and ex amine our Christianity, and go back and tell the story, and keep that Empire rocking until Jesus shall reign. "'" Where'er the sun ' Does his successive Journey run. And the firearms, with, which the infidel traveler brought down the Arab horseman and the jackals of the desert, have been sur rendered to the church, and we reach forth our hands, crying: "There is none like that; give it me!" r So it has also been with the' learning and tho eloquence of the world. People say: "Religioh is very good for women, it is very good for children, nut not for men." . But we have iu the roll of Christ's host Mozart and Handel in music; Canova and Angelo in sculpture; -4 k Raphael - .and Reynolds 'in painting; Harvey and : Boerhaave in medicine ;' ' Cowper and Scott in poetry; Crotius and Burke' in states manship; Boyle and 'Leibnitz in philosophy; Thomas Chalmers and John Mason Iu theolo crv. The most brilliant writings of a worldly nature are all aglow with scriptural allusions. Through senatorial speech ana tnrougn essay ist's discourse Sinai thunders and Calvary pleads and Siloam sparkles. -. " ttamuel Li. isoutnaru was mignty in mo court room and in the senate chamber, but he reserved his strongest eloquence for that day when, he stood before , the literary so cieties at Princeton commoncomont and pleaded for ,the grandeur of our Bible. Daniel Webster won not his chief garlands while lie was consuming . Hayne, nor when ho opened the batteries of bis eloquence on Bunker Hill, that rocking Sinai of the Ameri can Revolution, but on that day when, in tho famous Girard will case, he showod his affection for the Christian religion and eulogised the Bible. The eloquence and the learning that have been on the other side came over to our side. Where is Gib bons's historical Don? Where is Robosoierre's sword? Captured for God. "There is nono like that; give it me!" So, also, has it been with the picture mak ing of the world. We are very anxious on this day to have the printing press and the platform on the side of Christianity; but we overlook the engraver's knife and the painter's pencil. The antiquarian goes and looks at pictured ruins, or examines the chiseled pillars of Thebes, and Ninevah and Pompeii, and then comes back to tell us of the beastliness of ancient art; and it is a fact now, that many of the finest speci mensmerely artistically considered of sculpture and painting that are to be found amidst those ruins are not fit to be looked at, and they are locked up. How Paul must havo felt, when, standing amidst those impurities that stared on him. from the walls and the pavements and the bazars of Corinth, he preached of the pure and holy Jesus. Tho art of the world on the sidoof obscurity and crime and death. In later days the palaces of Kings wore adorned with pictures. But what to un clean Henry VIII. was a beautiful picture of the Madonna? What to Lord JelTries, tho unjust Judge, the picture of the "Last Judg ment?" Wiiat to Nero, the unwashed, a picture of the baptism in the Jordan? Tho art of the world still on tho Bide of super stitition and death. But that is beina changed now. Tbe Christian artist goes across the water, looks at the pictures, and brings back to his American studio much of the power of those old mas ters. The Christian minister goes over to Venice, looks at tho "Crucifixion of Christ" and comes back to his American pulpit to talk as never before of the sufferings of the Saviour. The private tourist goes to Rome and looks at Raphael's picture of the "Last Judgment." The tears start, and he goes back to his room in tho hotel, and prays Godi for preparation for that day when, Shriveling like a parched scroll, Tho flaming heavens together roll. Our Sunday-school newspapers and wall3 are adorned with pictures of Joseph in the court, Daniel in the den, Shad rack in the tire, Jfaul in tne smpwrecK, (jurist on the cross. Oh, that wo might, in our families, think more of the power of .Christian pic tures! One little sketch of Samuel kneeling in prayer will mean more to your children than twenty sermons on devotion. One pa tient face of Christ by the hand of the artist will be more to your child than fifty sermons on forbearance. The art of the world is to be taken for Christ. What has become of Thorwaldsen's chisel and Ghirlandajo's cray on ? Captured for the truth. " There is nono like that; give it me!" So, I remark, it is with '.business acumen and tact. When Christ was upon earth, the people that followed Him, for the most jpart, had no social position. There was but one man naturally brilliant in all the apostle ship. Joseph, of Ariinathea, the . rich man, risked nothing when he offered a hole in the rock for the dead Christ. How many of the merchants in Asia Minor befriended J esus? I think of only one, Lydia. How many of tho castlos on tho beach of Galilee entertained Christ? Not one. When Peter came to Joppa, ho stopped with one Simon, a tanner. What power had Christ's name on the Roman exchange, or in the, bazars of Corinth? Nono. The prominent men of the day did not want to risk thoir reputation for sanity by pro tending to be one of His followers, Now that is all changed. Among the mightiest men in our great cities to-day are the Christian mer chants and the Christian bankers; and if to morrow, at the Board of Trade, any man should get up and malign the name of Jesus, he would be quickly silenced or put out. In the front rank - all our . Christian workers to-day are the Christian merchants; and the enterprises of the world are coming on the right side. - There was a farm willed awaj some years ago, all the proceeds of that farm to go for spreading infidel books. Somehow matters have changed and now all the proceeds of that farm go toward the missionary cause. Ono of the finest printing presses ever built was built for the express purposo of publish ing infidel tracts and books. Now it does nothing but print Holy Bibles. I believe that tho time will come when, in commercial cir cles, the voice of Christ will be the mightiest of all voices, and.: the ships of Tarshish will bring presents and the Queen of Shoba her gkryjr -nd the wise men of tho East their myrrh afc Vankin censo. I look off upon the buiintte aen of our cities and ! rejoice at the prospect that their tact, and ingenuity, and talent will, after a while, all be bronght into tho Bervico of Christ. It will bo one of the mightiest of wenpons. "There is none like that; cive it me!" Now, if what I have said be true, away with all dowi)lieartxln'ss! If science is to l on thn riht sido, and the travli?v dis'io- learning of the world on the right side, and the picture making on the right side, and the business acumen and tact of tho world on the right side Thine, U Lord, - is tho kingdom? Oh, ' fall Into lino, all ye people! It is a grand thing to be in such an army, and led by such a com mander, and on the way to such a victory. If what I have said is true, then Christ is going to gather up for Himself out of this world everything that is worth anything, and thoro will bo nothing but the scum left, A proclamation . of ; amnesty w. goes forth now from the throne of God, Raying: "Whosoever will, let him 00016." However long you may havo wandered, however great your sins may have been, "whosoever will, lot him come." Oh, that 1 could marshal! all this audience on the side of Christ. He is the best friend a man ever had. - Ho is so kiud-i-He j; Is 1 so ? lovoly, so 5 sym pathetic. I cannot see how yon can stay away from Him. Come now and accept His mercy. Behold Him as He stretches out the arms of His salvation, saying: "Look unto Me, all ye ends of the earth, and be ye saved; for I am God." - Make final choice now. You will either bo willows planted by the water courses or the chair which the wind driveth away. WORK AND WORKERS; Attain the question of linen production In this land is being discussed, and some facts point to an early realization of such an In dustry. . . v. . Brooklya gravediggers will not dig for any but the body of a union man, and the Hearse-drivers' Union will not handle a non union corpse., 3 w . At Tabor City, Fla., 400 cigarmakers are out because the firm would not allow them to explain their complaint to their brother workers in the milL Thomas Delworth, a former slave, is presi dent of the St Catharine's (Canada) Builders' Laborers' Union. Bricklayers and masons get $3 for nine hours. At San Francisco the locked -out brewery workmen reduced their weekly living ex penses to $1 la order to Bend $00 to the Penn sylvania flood sufferers. . The cooks, waiters and bakers' unions of Ban Francisco are opposed to the eight-hour movement because they believe the agitation is ahead of its time. Twenty factories, having an aggregate capital of $1,500,000, have been opened in Florence, Ala., in the last seven months, giving employment to over 2,000 people. . One of the New York city branches of the Journeymen Bakers' National Union has secured an agreement with several employers by which the daily hours of labor are re duced from twelve to ten. Tho first cigarmakers' union was formed In Baltimore May 5, 1801. Baltimore was at that time the centre of cigar manufactur ing in the United States. Today the cigar makers have the finest trades-uuiou in North America. Chief Arthur of the Brotherhood of Loco motive Engineers, attended the meeting held in Boston, at which over 600 delegates were present. Ho denied the charge of having said tout he would never sanction another strike, and declared himnelt ready to sanc tion any strike that was really necessary. Master Workman John J. McGarry, of Local Assembly 3C50 of Missouri Pacific Railroad employes, who was arrested during the great Southwestern Railroad strike for conspiracy and acquitted, and then sued the company lor falne imprisonment, has secured a verdict for $1,500 from the Missouri Court of Appeals. ' At Paragould, Ark., the mills and stove factories' wages runge from $1 25 to $1 50 per day; farm hands, $15 per month. Corn, 50 cents ; flour. $tf00; bucou 10 to 12 cents. Rents are high. Board, $3 to $4 per week. Suction men get Gould prices $1 15 per day and pay $y 50 per week for boord. It is reported that a number of Philadel phia capitalists have just purchased 400 acres of laud 111 Tuzywell county, on tbo Clinch Valley Division of the Noriolk and Western Railroad. The price paid, was $15 per acre. Mud the intention of the purchasers is to build a manufacturing city. About 100 men have struck at tho Lochlel rolling mill, Uarrlsburg, Pa., and only the puddle mill is now in operation. The cause of thestrika was a request that the men work in the larger mill, wtiicb has been idle since the strikers there were discharged last week. The number of vessels which passed through tho Sues canal last year was 3,440 of a gross burden of U;437,85? tons. Al though the canal was made with French capital, Great Britain has secured the lion's share of the beuellts resulting from it. The Hair Spinner's National Uniou has nearly all the members of the craft in its organization, which is represented iu Phila delphia, Baltimore, Cincinnati and Indianap olis. Philadelphia workers do : more work and have longer hours for $2 per day than the Indianapolis spinners, who get $3 per day. France claims the honor of utilising the greatest head of water for industrial pur poses at Brignond, near Grenoble, with a turbine of !) teet and 10 Inches in diameter, which has worked since 1S75 under a bead of 1,031 feet, g.inga lorce of 1.500-horse power with a flow of 300 litres, or about 10.0 cubic leet per second. The United Order of Railway Employes, which is composed of the Brotherhood of Railway Braketnen, the Switchmen's Mutual Aid Association and the Brotherhood of Lo comotive Firemen, was organized in Chicago last week and officers elected. The govern ing body is a supreme council, composed of the officers and Bix others. The object of the uew organization is to secure united action upon all matters pertaining to the in tertsts of the men engaged iq the occupar tions named. Yarns About Hugo Sharks. Some heaty shark stories were told by two captains who arrived in Boston port the other day. The sharks are de clared, to be of unusual size and seem to be nearer land. Captain Thurston, of the fishing schooner SiBters.reportsthat Jie was fishing about twenty miles off Yarniouth, Nova Scotia, when a huge shark was hooked by the noee with a cod hook. They got the monster to the sur face alongside the vessel and tried to get a stout new rope over his head, but he bit the 1 rope right through again and again, as though it wore cut with a sharp axe. Then they'urove a harpoon into the back of his neck and held him while they got into a boat and attacked him with axes, killing him after a des perate struggle. The" sh ark proved to be too large to take on beard, so they cut out his liver, which filled two and a half barrels, and took aboard the head and tail, letting the body go. This is one of the largest , of ? the species ever seen iu these waters, being twenty-five feet long and estimated to ' weigh over two tons. His head was aa large as a hogshead and weighed between COO and 70) pounds. A good sized boy could crawl inside its open mouth. ' The schooner Minnie 0., Captain John Saun ders, captured a large shark off Yar mouth, light house a few days later. The shark took the bait and was hauled to the surface and harpooned. After half ah hour's hard struggle he was fin ally scoured. He measured twenty-five foot in longht nnd weighed about two tons. I Chicago Herald. : j Stilts iftio no better jn Vivcrsah'og Old but Good Ones. ' An old joko i9as good as a new on a to a person who has never heard it. Moreover, a good joke h worth repeat" ing, even if it ia old. Our readers may recognize some of the following as old favorites: 1 . . What is the difference between a fog and a fallen star? One's mist on earth and the other is missed in heaven. Why is a man called honorable who is up stairs beating his wife? He ia above doing a mean act. : , , What are the greatest astronomers? The starB, because they have studded the heavens for ages. r , . What is better than God, worse than the devil, the dead eat it, and if the liv ing eat it, they would die? Nothing. What 13 thieving in the outskirts? Ticking ladies' pockets. v In , what place did the 'cock crow when , al the world heard him ? In Noah's Ark. r r: f ' Wrhen does the rain become too famil iar to a lady? , When it begins to pat her (pfctter) on the back. Why may carpenters reasonably be lieve there is no such thing as stone ? Because they never saw it. Who are the best men sent to war? Lawyers, because their charges are so great no one can Btand them. Why is Satan always a gentleman ? Because being the imp of darkness,' he can never be imp o' light. If a church be on fire, why has the organ the smallest chance of escape ? Because the engine cannot play on it. Why are the : makers ; of the Arm strong guns the greatest thieves in her Majesty's service ? Because they rifle all the guns, forge the materials, and Bteel all the gun breeches. , Why was Goliath surprised when he was struck by a stone? Because such a thing never entered his head before. What color is a field of grass when covered with snow? Invisible green. If you had to swallow, a man, what kind would you prefer ? A little Lon don porter. : Why is a- solar eclipse like a mother beating her boy ? Because it is a hid ing of the sun. ' ' - . WTiat is the most difficxilt train to catch ? The 12 :50, because it is "ten to Due" if you catch it. " ' "Ah, said the fly, as it crawled' around the bottle, "J have passed ( through the hatching age, the creeping igo, and now I am in the .mucilage" then it stuck. Yankee Blad ' A Tfest Virginia Diana. Mrs. Jule Eastman, ' of West Vir ginia, is one of the mightiest hunters in all its mountains.. She i3 a dead' shot with the rifle, and has killed bear and deer by hundreds. She is 'big, black-haired, and ugly, but so indus trious and warm-hearted as to more than make up for the lack of beauty. Her carrying capacity must be some thing enormous, as she has been known to carry more than one hundred pounds a distance of seven miles without rest ing, and is said to have lugged a sewing machine all the sixty mountain ous miles between her home and Graf ton. In addition, she htts seven chil dren and lots of well-bred kinfolk who delight to visit her and to talk of her exploits. Pittsburgh Times. Hard to Walk. He had taken her to the theater and then to supper, and when they reached her father's door he said : "" "Well, I'll have to go." "You needn't hurry, William," she said sweetly. "I wouldn't but for one thing." -What is that?" "I've got to walk. The eveniDg's festivities ha e left me dead broke." Cakpeb I wish I had your voice, Fiddley. Fiddley (pleased) You do? Carper Yes, I'd tie a stone to it and drop, it off the bridge. ' Maiden ladies always betray their inmost thoughts by laughing. "He-he-he." '' A condition of weakness of . body and mfnd which results from many disorders of the sys tem finds its best and surest relief in Brown's Iron Bitters. Aa it enriches and strengthens the blood eo the stomach, liver and kidneys re ceive powers to perform their duties, and the depressing i nfhiences from a diseased and dis turbed condition of these organs are remove.!. 8ong of the drygoods clerk: delaine."' "Swining in "For seven long years I straggled away farming, running a mill, 5po., until I was for tunately Introduced to H. F. Johnson & Co., Richmond, Va., by my brother, and I went to work at once, and in wtwn month 1 had made more clear money than I had made in the seven vears before. They took me right by the hand from the start and- seemed to be very glad of tho chance to show me how to do it." This is abont what a young roan said a year or bo ago of the above-men Uoned firm. Since that time he has been steadily at work for them, and is now one of the happiest men in America. If you need employment, it would be a good thing for you to follow this young man's ei ample. A cat with its fur ruffled doesn't feel fur straight. ! IJellcate Women, Children and delicate women should not be forced to take the vile compounds which are usually given for constipation, 'piles, indiges tion, etc. Hamburg Figs are like preserved fruit, and are the best laxative known. 26 cents. Dose one Fig. Mack Drug Co., N. Y. Fall fashions can never bo popular with an scrousut. .' - - ' ' " . A JPicco ef Her Mind. : A lady correspondent has this to sayi : "I want to give a piece of my mind to a cer tain clous wiio nbject to advertising, whea It coei a them anything this won't coat them a cent. I suff-roil a living death for nearly two years with headachos, backache, iu pain stand Ingor walking, was being literally dragged out of existence, my misery ocreasod by drugging.. Atlaat,in deftpalr,I committed the sin of trying an adve Used modlclne. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, and it restored me to the blessed ness of Bound health. . I honor- the physician who. whon ho knows he can cure, has the moral courage to advertise tho act." The fiodicine mentioned is guirantttd to cure t hose elica'e dineases 1'ocuilnr to femulos. . ltoad printed guarantee on bottle-wrapper. . For all dorangemen'n of the 1 Ivor, stomach and bowels, tako Dr. Pioroe s Pellets. One a dosto. . . Hair may bcplnltad and yet be (to! den. 13 YC"3 FARM FC3 SALE SftKS IfoaddreMOwm Wmawr, am Broadway. M. ,1 B I prescribe sad fully 1 14!.. il tUm null penflc for the certain curt of this 1lene. Hxtnot mi G.li.IA'UilAirAM.-M. n. tteww. . , AtuterJra, . Y 1 TO 6 DATS. 4 i -, W bare Hold Il'jr G foi many yrn.ni, aiwl U da nvrn tua boL of enua-.Jfai-Uon. D. it. iJTCTTFi & CO.. 1 Cljicarn. III. ,1 Si,Cfls," am hjrfcwMttoia.' Clcci A roul tip Feeing, the waiter with a lead quarter; . , . .. j, 1 i" i' 1 11 1 1 11 y; ' i- There are people uning Dobhlns's Kleetrle Boap to-day who commenced its use fa lHOfl. ' Would this be the oaie were it not the purest and moat eeiwmlcai soup made. -Ank. yimr grocer tor it. Look out for iinllatlou. hvb- ' Nature's serial story The sflnal column, continued in our necks. K Orasen, the Paradlae of Farmer. 'Mild, equable pUroatr, certain and atmudant crop. Bent fruit, grain, graae and stock ooun-, try lu the world. Fall iu formation free. Ad dress Oregon Im'igrat'n Hoard, Portland, Ore. The frontiersman, who shot an Indian corpse didn't know it was Lo-dead, A rorket Cigar Case and five of "TsnslU'o Punch," allforigc. Were the dead langnaces talked to death? Ylake No Mistake If you have mode up your mind to buy Hood's 6araapartlla do not be Induced to take auy other. ' Hood's SaraeparUia Is a peoullor medicine, pos aeBBluj, by virtue of ita peculiar combination, pro portion and preparation, curative powers superior to any other article p( the kind before tho people. Po sun to get Hood's, "In one store tbe clerk tried to Induoe mo to buy, their own instead of Hood's Stwgnparllla. 'iMjlk he could not prevail on me to change. I tofd nlm I knew what Hood' Sarsoparllla was, I bod taken It, was perfectly Rationed with It, and did not want any other." Mrs. Ella A. dorr, 01 Terrace Street, Boston, Haas. - . Hood's Sarsaparllla . Bold by all druptlaU. $1; six for $5. Prepared only by a L HOon CO., Ipotheoariea, Lowell, Mass, iOO Doses Ono Dollar JONES 111a . PAYS THE FREIGHT. . 5 Ton Wilson Heiilca, Iron Levers. Htari Heart n ft , Braal Tare Beam and Bnm Box for SGO. ETeryatas Boole. For free trio 11a) iiiiuiHuii inn mna xinrem JONES OF BINGHAMT0N. ..BIMGUARITO.N. Vm.yJ. SMITHDEALa mKsySK DDI itenwa DT and McM O Hmlm, SBltM'! a COLLECE.iRlchrm.nd.VStlSr'': YANKKK MIXTirilK.' prepared by ChasvC Kraemer, Apothecary, 802 Marlon St, Brooklyn, N. T. .Guaranteed to cure Kheumatlsm, Oout, Neu ralgia and accompanying trouble. One bottle rea ders tho blood eon-rheumatic Price refunded If not satisfactory. $2.00. Cheaper to doctors. Send caxu, atampa or money order. -j . - 'RT?W Largo MAltltlAfJE PAl'KIt XlrXJ aui and partloulani of our aeeovlaUou that paya over SI. 000 AT MARUIAGK, A4 dreaa THE CXjRltBarONllKMT, Toledo, Ohio who havo used rico'a Cnre for Consumption aay It is BEST OF AI Jj. , Sold everywhere. JSc. j II A M C T D H Y . Book-ltreHng, BunlntHM Forma,' 1UMC Penmaneltip, Art'hm'-tto.Bhort-hand.etc,. I thoroughly tauKbt by MAIL. CirotiUre free. Uryant'a Callege, 457 Main Ht. Uuffalo, N. Y. S5 r SS a day. Samptea worth 84.15 Frect Mnoa not under horses' feet. Writ Brew ater Safety Rein Holder Co., Houly.Mlou. S2S m MOBsiffi&issa' JSmM IWBIHOAt, CO., Klchmaud. Va. AJILE 0DCACC BEST IJT THE WOULD U II LHUt ;- jr-Get tae Genuine. .Bold Everywhere, v. S nv TMftn'M f!nri for f!on- sumption isTHK BlihT for keeping the voice clear. U& cents. CHEAPEST AND BEST GERMAN DICTIONARY OF 624 PACES FOR ONLY ME DOLLAR. A FIRST-CLASS DICTIONARY AT VERY HI A LI, l'KICE. ft glvea Rngll h Words with the German Kiilv lents and Pronunciation and German Word with EliKUah Deflnltioua. Bent postpaid ou receipt of 91 HEAD WHAT THIS MAN NAYHi 8ai.m. Mass., May St. !m Bank Pub. TTmtM. 134 Leonard St.: The German Dictionary la received and I am mtintt plensed with It. I did not expect to tlnd such clear print in to cheap a book. Fleaae send a opy to v and Inclosed find (1 (or earn. M. I. lUsJUUt. Address BOOK PUB. CO.,, 134 Leonard Street. New York City. FOR -iilake '.Your FUME I Earn Puloraey They will, If you liandlo them properly, and to teach yen we arc now putting forth a s 100-PME BOOK FOR 25 CSIfTE. ' It embodies the experience of a practical man laboring for 25 years tmong Poultry as a business not as a diversion, but for the purpose of making dollars and cents. He made a success, ard tr ire 13 no reason why you should not If you will profit by his labors and tht prir.o of a few eT3 will give you thli. Intelligence. Even If you have, room for only a few hens you should know how to MAKE THtM PAY. This book' will show you. Among hundreds of other points about the Poultry Yrd (tteaohesi To Induce Hens to Lay, To Select ft Good Cock, To Select a Good Hen, Which Eggs to Hatch, When to Set for Early Broilers, What .to Food Young Chicks.. How to Arrange Coops, Handling of Eggs. About Watering Chicks, Arrangement of Perches To Prevent and Cur Roup, Abortion, Choi' era, Capes, Ac, ,40. CAEE0F TURKEYS, DUCES, GEE9E. The bst Chicken Book for the money ever offerod. tiJ one w'lh fowls can affcr to be without It. Sent postpaid on i ecelot of 25 cent s fa !lvc-r, postal rot or stamps (1 or 2c.. r?'- el 18 CURED HV 42)1 II nnn ft.'" .BALTO'MD TWEEHAS'A'VBBRH C U HV 2(1 CHEAPEST :- FAMILY.-!-ATLAS. r KNOWN. 7 191 Paces, 9 1 Full-Page Maps." - Colored Mai of each State and Territory in ttia ni)ltl StJt-8. Also Maps of every Country in the World. The letter preae givea tlie apiore inileaof . each Htate: time of mltlenunt: popnlatlnn; chief cities ; avenm tnraiwi'ature; ealoJT of oiHciala and thepriuhlpal poHtmastent in the Hlate; number cf . fnrnia, with thair productiona and the value thmof; difleivnt nmnufactniea nnd numlirr of rmr' T. . eta., etc AlBotht area of each Foreign Country; form of govrrnmcntj population; nrinoiial prod uiita And their money value; amount of irHde; religions nine of army; uiilcs of railroad and tclcKmrb: nunit her of horaee. Cattle, aheep, and a vst amount of in- , . formation vslnnhle to all. Poaraaid for ti5c BOOK PTUi. UOUS1C. 134 Laonavd Ht.. N. X. City. Ir VOW WISH A JOOI KRVOliVER'; SWM LMSSOH F purobase one of iht. cele. brated SMITH ft -WESSON arms, Tbe filiost email arras ever manufactured and the Prat choice ot an miww. Manufactured id cailitrea 32, .iu iiiK1. uMicm Knfntv 1 TarRt models. Oniiatrnctnd entirely or het iik , Ity wrnuiihl at cel. CBmuuy niKpecien lor wora nansMp and stock, t hey are unrivaled for flnl-h dnrnhlllty aadaeeorncr. Do not be deceived br , cheap iiiullenble rnnt-lron Imitntiena which ae often aoM for the Knnine aiticle ana are not cmlv unreliable, but dangerous. The SMITH Jc "WESHON itevolvers are all stamped upon the bar rels with firm's name, nddrese and dob8 of pat nt and are ffiinrimreed irfect in every detail. In aiHt upon havlniir the nuine article, and if jrone . dealer cannot aupi'ly you an order a- nt to xldrena below will receive prompt and cnrfiil attention, bftscriptive eataloime and prices t'irnislied nixn ate- plication. SMITH & WESHON, inrJXeiitlon this pap;-. hpi'lnvlicldt Alaeaia - - After ALL other f full, oooeult I 329H.15thSt 9 PHILA., PA. Twenty years' continuous nrootk-e In thn treat .j nxnt and euro of the nwfiil fffecra of early vice, -destroying botli mind aud body. Modlciuej and treatment for ono month, Vive Dollars aena ., eecurely sealed from observation to any oddreua. . . , Ilok on Hpeeial Dtscnaen Tree. DUTCH ER'S FLY KILLER Hakes a clean sweep. Every sheet will kill a quart of (Ilea, Htops biusKlns nronnd ears,' diving at eyes, tickling your nose, skips hard words aud so curt peace ut UifllliK expense, tioud '29 coma for A shoets o K.DUTCUKlt, Ht. Albans, Vt. USIC-ART-ELOCUTION Ucnerul Cnlture. Jleslruble Xaitliaa o'n to proKresNlvn students. All interested, Will rerelveviilnahlo Informailon Free, by addressing E. TOUKJiLlS. Boston, Masa, PEERLESS DYES (Hlere it Ss Want to learn all about A Horse ? How to riqk Out a A : ' ' toodOnef Knowlmpcrfeo-'V' ? 1 ; tloas and so Guard uRoinst ' , '. Fraud? Detect DltieiiM) and . , 'f t fTeet a Cure when same li . '. '" V ' poeadde? loll the az by -.jf - t V be Teeth? Wbattocalllihi b'nVrent Irti-of the Animal? HowtoSlioe'a Horse I'WlyVfAsyilSj and other Va n:ibla Jn'orniaUon i-xji be obtained bj leading; our 100-PAUE ILITlUHTHATEO II II It HE ROOK, whtoli we wiirtorn arJ, i. ia.d,onrectlHorouIyJ3 cents In Masuaa. . BOOK PUB. HOUSjG. 13A LeonarrfSt. New YorK City. D s i . BALE PV "ALL DRUGGISTS. - ' To Prepare Nests, Ju J clous Pairing, What Hen J to So!, Cera of BrooiIIng Hens, Know Unfruitful Eggs, When to Set for Caice ' Fowls, What to Fepd for Eggs, What to Feed to Fatten, To Get Rid of Yerm!n, About Incubators, To Provcnt and Ct'fO Pip, Lice.Scaty Legs, Indigestion,. &o., &c. mnirl and 1' Or. Lobb ' t n - Y.---V ! I Y r r
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 5, 1889, edition 1
4
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