Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / Oct. 5, 1894, edition 1 / Page 4
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REV. Dll TALMAGE. TIU. BHOOKLYN DIVINE'S BUN OAY skhmon. Tut! "Then snld they nno him;. Say now shibboleth, and he -said, sibboleth, for ne could not frame to prononnee it right Then they took him and slew htm at the pas eaijes of Jordan." Julges xlt,, 6. Do yon notice t tie difference ef pronnncln tlon between shibboleth and sibboleth? A. very small and unimportant 'difference, yon say. And yet that difference was the differ ence between life and death for a ereat many People. , The Lord's peopK Gileart and Epbraim. got into a grent fight, and Eph raim was worsted, and An the retreat eatue to the fords of the river Jordan to cross. Or der whs jrlvn that all Epbraimitea coming there be stain. But how could it be found out who were Ephrnlmifes? They were de tected by their pronunciation.- Shibboleth. was a word that stood for river. . . , The Ephratmitea had a brogue of their wn. and when they tried to say shib boleth" always left oat the sound of the "b." When it was asked that they say hib boleth, they said sibboleth and were slain. ' 'Then said they onto him. say now shib boleth, and he said sibboleth, for he could not frame to pronounce it rlsrht. Then they took him and slew him at the passages ot Jordan." :. A very small difference, you say, between Gilead and EpSralro. and yet bow much intolerance about that small differ ence ! The Lord's tribes In our time by which I mean the different denominations t Christians sometimes majrnlfly a very ' sranll difference, and the only difference be tween scores of denominations to-day is the difference between shibboleth and sibboleth. The church of God is divided Into a great number of denominations. Time would lall me to tell ot the Catvintsts. and the Armini ans, and the Sabbatarians, and the Baxterl ans, and the Dun leers, and the Shakers, and the Quakers, and the Methodists, and the Baptists, and the Episcopalians, and the Lutherans, and the Congregational teta, and the Presbyterians, and the Spiritualists, and a score of other denominations of religion ists, some of them founded by very good men, some of them lonnded by very go tistf men, some of them founded by very bad men. Bat as I demand for myself liberty of conscience most give that same liberty to every other man, remembering that be no more differs from me than I differ from bim. I advocate the largest liberty in all religious belief and form of worship. .In art, in poll tics, in morals and in religion let there be no gag law, no moving of the previous ques- , tion, no persecution, no intolerance. : Yon know that the air and the water keep pure by constant circulation, and I think there is a tendency in religious discussion to purification and moral health. Between the fourth and the sixteenth .centuries the church proposed to . make people t Lin It aright by prohibiting discussion, and by strong censorship ot the press and rack and gibbet and hot lead down the throat tried to ma Ire people orthodox, but it was discovered that you cannot change a man's i belief by -twisting off his head nor make a man see differently by putting an awl through his eyes. There is something in a man's con--science which will hurl off the mountain . that you threw upon it. and, unsinged of the fire, out of the flame wiU make, red wings n which the martyr will mount to glory.-. In that time of which I speak, between the fourth aid sixteenth centuries, people went from the house of God into the most ap palling iniquity, and right along by con secrated altars there were tides of drunken ness and licentiousness such as the world never beard of, and the very sewers ot per-. tlttion broke loose and flooded the church. ' After awhile the printing press was freed, . i and it broke the shackles of the ' human mind. Then there came a large number of bad books, and where there was one man hostile to the Christian religion there were. twenty men ready to advocate it, so I have not any nervousness in regard to this battle going on between truth and error. The truth will conquer just as certainly as r that God is stronger than the devil. Let error run if you only let truth run along with It. Urged on by skeptic's shout and tran scendentalisms spur, let it run. God's angels of wrath are in hot pursuit, and quicker than eagle's beak clutches out a hawk's heart God's vengeance will tear it to pieces. I propose to speak to you of sectarianism t Its origin, its evils audits cures.. There ' are those who would make us think that this monster, with horns and hoofs, is re . ligion. I shall chase .it to its hiding place - and drag it out of the caverns of darkness and rip off its hide. But I want to make a distinction between bigotrv and the lawful fondness for peculiar religious beliefs and Tories ot worship. 1 nave no admiration, tor a nothingarian. In a world of such tremendous vicissitude and temptation, and with a soul that must : after awhile stand before a throne ot in sufferable brightness, in a day when' the rocking of the mountains and the flaming of ' the heavens and the upheaval ot the swas " shall be among the least of the excitements. to give account for every thought, word, action, preference and dislike, that man is mad who has no religious preierence.. But our early education, our physical tempera- mnt, our mental constitution, will very much decide our form of worship. A style of psalmody that may please me may d isplease you. Some would like to have a minister in gown and bands and surplice, and others preier to have a minister in plain citizen's apparel. Some are most impressed When a little child Is presented at tne altar an-inblarl rvf VlA wnAI- ftf ft holv bene- diction "in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost," and others are more impressed when the penitent eomes up out of the river, his garments dripping with the waters of a baptism which signifies the washing away ot sin. Let either have ' ' his own way. One man likes no noise in, ' prayer, not a word, not a whisper. ' Another man, just as good, prefers by gesticulation and exclamation to express his devotional, aspirations. One is just as good as the other. "Every man fully persuaded in his own ' mind." ; . r . George Whltefleld was . going over a , Quaker rather roughly for some of his re ligious sentiments, and the Quaker said t 'George, I am as thou art. - I am for bring ing all men to the hope of the gospel. There fore, if thou wllfnot quarrel with me about my broad brim, I will not quarrel with thee about thy black gown. , George, give me thy band." " ' r- - '' . ' In tracing out the religion of sectarianism, r bigotry I find that a great deal of it comes from wrong education. in me nouw There nre parents who do not think it wrong to caricature and jeer the peculiar ' forms of religion in the world and denounce other sects and other denominations, r It is very often the case that that kind f education acts Just opposite to what was expected, and ( the children grow up, and after awhile go and see for themselves, and looking in those churches and finding that the people are good there, and they love God and keep His commandments, by natural reaction they go and join those very churches. I could men tion the names of prominent ministers of the gospel who spent their whole Hie bombard- ing other denominations, and who lived' to see their children preach: the gospel in those very denominations. But it is often tbecase that bigotry starts in a household", and that the subject of it never recovers. There, are tf-nsof thousands of bigots ten years old. I think sectarianism and bigotry also rise from too. great, prominence of any one .nomination in a community. All the other agnominations are wrong, and his denoml t tt'on f right because his denomination Is t;4 most wealthy, or the met popular, or i . mom influential, and it is "our" church. "our" religious organization, and our flnd "onr" minister, and the man s hi head and wants other denomina to knew their places. , ;1i a greist AgsX better ia aay community when the great denominations ot Christians are about equal in power, marohtng side by side tor the world's conquest. Here outside prosperity, mere worldly power, is no evi dence that the church Is acceptable to God. Better a barn with Christ in the manger than a cathedral with magnificent harmo nies rolling through the long drawn aisle and an angel from heaven in the pulpit It there be no Christ In the'chancel.and no Christ in the robes. Bigotry is often the child ot ignorance. You seldom fin I a man with large intellect who is a bigot. It is the man who thinks he knows a great deal, but does not. i? That man is almost always a bigot. The whole ten dency of education and civilization- is to bring a man out of that kind of state of mind and heart. There was in the far east a great obelisk, ind one side of . the ; obelisk . was white, another side of the obelisk was green, another side ot the obelisk was blue, and travelers went and looked at that obelisk, but they did not walk around it. One ' man looked at one side, another at another side, and they came home eaoh one looking at only one side, and they happened to meet, the story says, and they got into a rank quarrel about the color ot that obelisk. One man said it was white, another man said it was green, another man said . it was blue, and when they were in the very heat of the controversy a more intelligent traveler came and said: "Gentlemen, I have seen that obelisk, and you are all right, and you are all wrong. Why didn't you walk all around the obelisk?" ' Look out for the man who only sees one side ot a relitrious truth. Look out for the man who never walks around about these great theories of God and eternity and the dead. He will be a bigot inevltablyr-the man who only sees one side. There is ne man more to be pitied than, he who has in bis head just one ideano more, no less. More light, lees sectarianism. There is noth ing that will so soon kill bigotry as sunshine God's sunshine. ' So I have set before you what I consider to be the cause of bigotry. I have set before you the origin of this great evil. What are some of the baleful effects? First ot all, it cripples investigation. Ton are wrong and I am right, and that settles it. J&o taste for exploration, no spirit ot investigation. From the glorious realm of God's truth, over which an archangel might fly from teternlty to eternity and not reach the limit, the man shuts himself out and dies, a blind mole un der a cornshock. It st ops all investigation. Another ureat damage done by the sectary lanism and bigotry ot the eaurcn is tnat u disgusts people from the Christian religion. Now, my trlends. the church ot God was never intended for a war barrask. People are afraid of a riot. You go down the street and you see an excitement and missiles fly ing through the air and you hear the shook of firearms. Do you, the peaceful and in dustrious citizen, go through the street? "Ob, no," you will say : "i ll go around tne block." Now, men come and look upon this narrow path to heaven, and sometimes see the ecclesiastical brickbat flying every whither, and they say "Well, I guess I'll take the broad road. There is so much snapshooting on the narrow road I guess I'll try the broad road !" ; Francis I so bated the Lutherans that he said that if he thought there was one drop ot Lutheran blood in his veins he would puncture them and let that drop out. Just as long as there is so much hostility between denomination and denomination, or between one professed Christian and another, or be tween one church and another, so long men will be disgusted with the Christian religion and say, "If that Is religion, I want none of it." Again, bigotry and sectarianism do .great damage in the fact that they hinder the triumph of the gospel. Oh, how muoh wasted ammunition, how many men of splendid intellect have given their whole lite to controversial disputes when. If they had given their life to something practical, they might have been vastly useful! Suppose, while I speak, there were a common enemy coming up the bay, and all the forts around .the harbor began to fire into each other, you would cry out: "National suicide! - Why don't those forts blaze away in one direction, and that against the common enemy?"" And yet I sometimes see in the church of the Lord Jesus Christ a strange thing going on church against church, minister against minister, denomination against denomina tion, firing away into their own fort, or the fort which ougbt to be on tne same siae, in stead ot concentrating their energy and giv hut one mighty and everlastingvolley against the navies of darkness riding up through the bay! " What did intolerance accomplish against the Baptist Church? It laughing scorn and tirade could have destroyed the church, it would not have to-day a disciple left. The Baptists were burled out ot Boston in olden times. Those who sympathized with them were imprisoned, and when a petition was offered asking leniency in their behalf all the men who signed it were indicted. Has Intolerance stopped the Baptist Church? The last statistics in regard to it showed, 25,000 churches and 3,000,000 communicants. Intolerance never put down anything. ' ' In England a law was made against the Jew. England thrust back the Jew and thrust down the Jew and declared that no Jew should hold official position. What came of it? Were the Jews destroyed? Was their religion overthrown? No ! Who be came prime minister of England? Who was next to the throne? Who was higher than the throne because he was counselor and adviser? Disraeli, a Jew. What were we 'eelebratiner in all our churches as well as synagogues only a few years ago? The one hundredth birthday anniversary .of Monte flore, the great Jewish philanthropist, in tolerance never yet put down anything. But now, my friends, having shown you the origin of bigotry or sectarianism, and having shown you the damage it does, I want briefly to show you how we are to war against this terrible evil, and I think we ought to began our war by realizing our own weakness ana our lmpenecuons. ii we make so many mistakes in the common af fairs of life, is it not possioie tnat we may make mistakes in regard to our religious affairs? Shall we take a man by the throat or by the collar because he cannot see re ligious truths just as we do? In the light of eternity it will be found out, I think, there was something wrong in all our creeds and something right in all our creeds. But since we may make mistakes in regard to things of the world do not let us be so egotistic and to nnffed ud as to have an idea that we can not make nny mistake in regard to religious theories. And then, I think, we win ao a great deal to overthrow the sectarian from our heart and tbo sectarianism irom the world by chiefly niiinrlnif in those things in yphinh tta no-raft rather than those in which 1 we differ.. s Perhaps I might torcefully illustrate this i truth by calling your attention to', an . inol- dent which took place about twenty years . aeo. One Monday morning at about J ; o'clock, while her 900 passengers were sound '; asleep in ner nanus areammg oi nome. iuu Renmer Atlantic crashed into Mars Head. Five hundred souls in ten minutes landed ia eternity ! Oh, what a scene 4 Agonizea men .. and women running up ana aown megan A nlritchinff for the rigging, and the plunge of the helpless steamer and the clap ,' nintr nf th liAnds of the merciless sea over tne crowning ana me ueau iutow iwu tm.' Ttpntd Into terror. Tint ee the brave auartermaster pushing out with the lifeline until he gets to the rock, and see these fishermen gathering up tne shipwrecked and taking them into the cab ins and wrapping tnem in ino nanneis wuv and warm, and see that minister of the gos pel, wltntnree otner men, gerunw wro ltfe'ooat and pushing out for the wreck, pull ing away across the surf and pulling away until they saved one more man. ana men getting back with him to the shore. Can those men ever forget that night, and can they ever forget their companionsnip in peril, companionship in struggle, -compan lonship in awful catastrophe and rescue? Never 1 Never ! In whatever part of the earth they meet they will t.e frlend9 when they mention the story of that night when the At lantic struck Mars Head. Well. my. friends, 'our world has gone into a worse shipwreck. Sin drove U on the rocks. The old ship has lurched and towed in the tempest ot 6000 years. Out with the lifeline I do not care What denomination carries it. Out with the lifeboat I I do not care what denomination rows It. - Side by ' side, in the memory of common hardships, and common trials, and common prayers, and common tears, let us be brothers forever. We must be. . . And I expect to see the day when all de nominations of Christians shall join bands around the cross of Christ and recite the creed ? "I believe in God, the Father Al mighty, Maker ot heaven and earth, and Jesus Christ, and in the communion of saints, and in life everlasting. Amen !'.' , SELECT SITTINGS. Nearlj everybody smokes in J apan. - Some butterflies lay over 100,000 eggs, . . . : Palms are grown from seed, never from cuttings of the leaves. Rockland (Me.) has a champion ' game cook with a wooden leg. , Madagascar sheep have a covering of coarse hair, like that of goats. It is said that a goose or a duck has never been ran over by a vehiole. Books printed . from stereotype plates1 appeared in Paris as earlj a 1798. ; , v . .' ' Two girls were arrested in Johnson, Wash., ..recently, for giggling in church. . ' The tame duck, and not the rodent, is the favorite article of diet of the Chinese.' .:. tl, . : California lemon growers now ship the juice of the fruit East instead of the fruit itself. Of the total population of the United States, little more than one third are married. - , The natives of Mahoot, in the in terior of India, dye their noses blue just before entering battle. A species of water lily with roots as Urcrft a a man's leg grows in the Cas cade range. These roots the Indians cook and eat. . . - The largest bronze statue in the world is that of Peter the Great, at St Petersburg, Russia, which weighs about 1400 tons. Soap is first mentioned in the ninth century. It was alluded to as La use in Germany for cleansing oiotmng ana as s.n excellent medioine. That in soveral districts of Kurdis tan the wealth of the individual prop- ertv owner is estimated in goats,' ana he is taxed so much per goat. Abel Brane. of Wheeling, W. Vn., has a tame hawk which hunts up the tnrkevs that have strayed away from the farm and drives them back. Bald-headed men in the .House of Commons are - many. Of 600 mem bers voting- in a recent division 100 were wholly or partially Daia m tne crown of the head. New Hampshire was formerly called Lacnia. It received its present name in 1692. beincr first called New Hamp shire by Captain John Mason, who had been a resident oi nampsnire, England. . . ,. The Egyptians had four separate and distinct styles or forms of writing the hieroglyphic, the hieratic, the enchorial and the Coptic The hiero glyphic was probably in use' as early as the year 4000 B. C, and at first was made up entirely of pictures. About the year 2000 B. C. the hieratic, form or style was introduced. In this the picture hieroglyphics were greatly simplified, finally developing into forms purely linear. . Process of Drying Fruits. The latest report of the Bureau of Statistics gives some interesting figures on the fruit trees of California. There are 2,000,000 apricot trees and 2,500, 000 apple trees bearing fruit, 5.000, 000 peach, and altogether 37,000,000 fruit trees, or an area of 100,000 acres. That gives half an acre of fruit to every man. Pears grow all ver the State, and the pear is the most pro ductive and healthy of California fruit trees. Near San Jose there are some pear trees that produce 2500 pounds of fruit a . season; or forty bushels. The earliest and latest fruit is shipped East, the canners take a large quan tity, while millions of pounds are dried. The process of drying has ohanged within recent years. Formerly large quantities of fruit were dried by ma- nhinerv. bnt now the machines are abandoned or only employed when the moisture in the air prevents perfect enrinc In drvinz in the open-air the peaches and apricots are cut in half and spread upon trays about three feet square, the cut side of the' fruit hninor nnnermost. The fruit is then exposed to the fumes of burning sul phur for three quarters of an hour. The fumes tr event - oxidation and reserve the natural color of the fruit, which otherwise would become dark and nn attractive in arjoearanoe. Two to four days are required to thoroughly cure them. When the curing process is complete the fruit is covered up and dropped quickly in not water, in oraei to kill the eggs of insects that may have been deposited there in thou sands. . Then the fruit is packed and it . . vr ir i. shipped lo tne canners. new vr Sun. : . f Baby's Sitting Posture; - Careful mothers give much atten tion to the first sitting posture of i child in the baby carriage, where the continued motion may exert a wrong influence in curving the spine; says the Philadelphia Ledger. Miss land ley a physical cnltorist, observes that "careful thought should be given to the chair that succeeds the high, cnaur at the table. This must have the seat of a length to correspond to the child's thigh from the back' to the bent knee. Then the leverage of the spine in supt porting the body in its correct sitting posture is brought from the "extreme lower end, instead of- at the waist, as is the case when the chair is too deep for the length of the child's thigh. The back of the chair ' should be straight instead of hollow. - ' The Mysteries ol Medietas. 'When . a person takes a dose of medioine," said a- doctor yesterday, he never stops to consider what a wonderful provider nature is. - When you consider that we are able to girl drugs which will . go through the en tire system without having an effect upon any part or organ until it comes, perhaps, to some nerve upon which it expends all its force, it is indeed a miracle of the most wondorful kind. We don't know why it does it, but we know what it does. The progress in materia medica has been wonderful By proyings the speoilio eleots of drugs have . been disoovered, B aa& they can be given with speoiflo re suits. Medicine is gratuUy eraerg ing from the dark valley of guess work in the bright sunlight of scienoe. The modern physician does not make a mixture of seven or eight drugs, hoping that some one of them will produoe the eSect desired. lie does not take chances upon striking a remedy one ia seven. He knows no just wbt drug will prbdace there- suits he wants and he prescribes that. attended a man the other day who had not been sick for twenty or thirty years, i .weut, inco nts room au i, after observing his sytnpto asked for half a glass of water, into which I dropped a small pellet, at trittirate. The old man looked at mo after 1 had given him a dose of it an I then smiled. 'Well, doctor, he said, 'you treated me for this complaint when I was sick many years ago, and I must say the remeuibranoa of the taste of the medicine you gave me tneu is sun vivid. I don't think that a person oonld have mixed a more horrible con coction than that was. Now you treat me for the same disease and the drug is almost tasteless. Row do you aortonnt for that? u'rogress, x re plied. And progress it is! Every day increases our knowledge or arugs and our power to alleviate suffering and save hnman life." Pittsburgh Dispatch. Tirlnes of Hot Baths. Warm baths will often prevent the most virulent diseases. A person who may be in fear of having received in fection of any kind should take a warm bath, suffer perspiration to en sue, and then rub dry. He is advised to dress warmly to guard against tak ing-cold. If the system has imbibed any infectious matter it will be re moved by resorting to the warm bath if the latter is taken before the infec tion has had time to spread over the system ; and even if some time has elapsed, the drenching perspiration that may be induced by hot water will be very likely to remove it. In cases of congestion, bilious colic, inflam mation, etc., there is no remedy more certain to give relief than a hot bath. In cases of obstinate constipation, also, wonderful cures have been wrought.New4York Dispatch. " The young of several species of ser 'pents retreat down the throat of the mother when pressed by sudden dan .ser. A New Brick. A Pittsburg firm is introducing a new brick, known as the lookjoint. It Is said to make a stronger wall than the ordinary brick, and from its peculiar shape it requires no heading courses or wall ties to bind it, and is also ' more economical. - Bricklayers can lay only 1000 of these per day, as compared with 1700 of the old shape, but when it - is considered that the lookjoint in twice the size of the other the economy - is apparent. Philadelphia-Times. : Deafness Cannot be Cared by lotal applications as they cannot reach the aiseasea portion oi i ne ear. 'mere is only one way to cure Deafness, and that is bv constitu tional remedies. Deatne-4 is caused by an in- lamed condition or the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in lamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deaf ness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tubn m. stored to Its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing bnt an in- named condition of the mucous surfaces. . We will Klve One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deaf ness (caused by catarrh) that can not be cured by HaU's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. ... jr. vhkwst as vo uoieao, u. EJ"Sold by Druggists, 76e. - tiOirnox has 805 mala ud branch post floes... . - Th;- Trae Laxative Principle Of the plants used in manufacturing the pleas ant remedy, Byrnp of Figs, has a permanently beneficial effect on the hnman system, while the cheap vegetable extracts and mineral solu tions, usually sold as medicines, are perma nent ly injurious. Being well informed, you will use the true remedy only. Manufactured by the California Fig byrnp Co. PxjncsYLVAJm has 1200,000,000 invested ia Iron and steel mills. ? - That Everlasting Irritating Itch. ... That dencribes Tetter, Eczema ,and ither t kin diseases. 50 cents will cure ihem stop the itch at once. 50 cents pays for a box "of Tetterine at drug stores or post paid from J. T. Shup-' trine, Savannah, Ga. . . ' Hot ef Ameriean' slate is married Eastern Pennsylvania and New England. in Slooplcss nights Blake you weak and weary, unfit for work, IndisDosed to exertion,- Tbey show that your nerve strength is gone and that your nervous system needs baUdingtup. The mms parilla urest remedy is yT-J- Hood's Barsaparllla. OlCS strengthens the nerves r't4B1 .pretea an aDDetlle.and elves sound.refresh- insr sleeD. Get Hood's and only Hood's. Hood's Pills cure allliver ills. 25c. THE Ua S. Government Chemists have reported, after an examination of the different brands, that the ROYAL Bak ing Powder is absolutely pure, greatest In strength, and superior to all others. ROYAL BAKING POWDER COMPANY, 1 06 WALL ST. NEW-YORK. Ifew Use for Natural Gas. ' The possibilities of natural gas evi dently have not yet been exhausted. The latest use which would seem to have been found for it is the making of ice, the idea being to simply expand the gas from its usually high initial pressure down to or near that of the atmosphere, nature having dono all the preliminary work of compression and cooling, making the gas ready to absorb heat from ite surroundings im mediately upon being released from conSnment, All that would be neces sary would be suitable coils or oham bers into which the gas could : be . al lowed to expand. It has been calcu lated out quite plausibly,' in fact, that with an .ordinary gas well, furnishing 2,500,000 cubio feet per dayj; some thing like fiftj tons of ice could be turned out daily at an oxpense of about fifty cents a, ton. The gas iofces nothing but its pressure, retain ing all its calorifio value, and hence, all its virtue for rolling mill and glass works use, for heating brick, lime and pottery kilns, and the endless number of other furnaces to which it is adapted. In a certain . way, therefore, the gag may be regarded as affording some thing for nothing a desideratum to which many in this world are con stantly looking, forward. St. Lnuw Sl&r-Sayings. Smallest Bird Known. Tht ily eater of Cuba is the smallest bird know to ornithologists. - It is about one-third the size of the hum ming bird. In the year 1592 Kesaoa Espisioto, a man of fabulous, wealth, caused 7000 of these birds to be caught with nets and made into a pot pie, whieh he' ate at one Bitting, and even then he complained of being hungry. Espisioto was a man of most capricious appetite. ' ' : V 'YiBTBthac, the most daring speculator oi tBeCaicago gram pit, has gone crazy. . P All AGF3 1 And conditions to Ufa, are liable at times, to need -an Invigorating. Tonie; a Begulator of the natural, periodical function, and a Soothing and Brao ing Nervine. For tbis purpose Dr. Plsrca's Favorite Prescription is the only medicine so certain in its curative action that it can be 0iaran Used. Your money is returned if it does not cure. In Maidenhood, Womanhood, and Motherhood, it Invigorates and braces up the exhausted, run-down, overworked and delicate! allays and banishes all Nervous Weakness, Fits, Spasms, Hysteria, Chorea, or Bt. Vi tus' Dance; corrects all unnatural Ir regularities of monthly function and cures Periodical Pains, Weaknesses, Hearing uown sensations, Back ache, Catarrhal Inflammation, Ulceration and kindred maladies. For those about to become mothers, it is a priceless boon, for it lessens the pains and perils of childbirth, shortens " labor" and the period of confinement, land promotes the secretion of an abundance of nourishment far the child. WALTER BAKER & GO. The Largest Manufacturer! of PURE, HIGH GRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES On thU Contlntnt, hare nealrtd SPECIAL AND HIGHEST. AWARDS n all their Goods at tht v CALIFORNIA MIDWINTER EXPOSITION Their BREAKFAST .COCOA, Which, nnUk th Dateh FraecM, It nuuU without th in of Alkalies or other Chemtcale or Dtm. It abeo- lutelv our and aoluble. and eoata leaf than on cent a cup. . SOLO BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER. MASS. RUPTURED HORSES. COLTS. &c, cured by owner.. Information free. , MOORE JJtOS., Albany, 2f. 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City. . - r iZTfrfi -rrrn (Trti if President Harper says that he en tered upon his duties at Chicago Uni versity opposed to co-education, hav ing great misgivings because of tho presence of the girls. 1 He now de clares that the young women's depart ment of the .university is the .only one that never gave htm any trouble; . A wnr, cvoud in AsJa throws a ehadoir over all Europe. Little Korea may ia the end upset a half dozen thrones, orl; Tribune!. . . . This May Interest anil Prollt Yen. A great many people who are empolyed oni" rartiauy, or working at ww ngures, wouia nnu It to their interest to correapond with B. F. Johnson & (Jo., Richmond, va. They wish to employ men and women of the highest and hest timracter to ruprobi'iii mum in eucn local- TheTrenoh levy n tax ou coffee to the amount of S'Mfl a ton. Mrs. WIdbIow's Poothlnoc Syrnp for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. &c. a bottle Kbw HxurBHiBX.haa 690 colored popnli. Uon." Verl'o PIovap Rnnr. t.h creal blood DUrifler. rives freshness and clearness to the complex Ion and, cures constipation, 25cts., 60 eta., $1 . A arais curl Ino iron started a t200,000 train El Paso. IlL If afflicted with sore eyes ue Dr. Iaae Thomp son's Eye water.Druggists sell at Stfc per bottle DO YOU We offer employment to S men or ww wompn in each county 'hat '-will WANT pay S45 a month. No capital r- ... . . quired AddrcRS P. W. Z1LGLKK ft WUKIVT O.Boi 1950, rmladelpula, Pa. LEARN TELEGRAPHY Uallread Buslnena and Shorthand. W teaa them and furnish situations. New catalogue frM COUCH & LUU Eft HKEL, Hcnoia, tia. MONEY urinar Wheat nom at lowest prloes of this century ana securing tne advance certain to mum soon.Tou can make as much by carrying it on small margins as by buying outright $10 will margta against a 1 cent decliueand secure you nil the ad vance. Send tor our free i ooldet "How to Trade." C.F.VanWlnkle&Co.,Room 45, 23i La Jaile St.,Chlcag IIIMDI UP Tney n0P BkIP JumP- dance, turn sonv UUiilrl nil ersaulta almost Incessantly from DCA IIC gual to May. Wonderful product of a DCHllW Foreign Tree. Oreatest curiosity to nraw crowds wherever shown, on streets, In eh op vrlndAwa. etA. ' Ju.tt ImnnrtAJ. iCvnrvtjorlv wantje . one. Full history of Tree and sample jumping Bean to Agents or Str.-etmen -45 cents, postpaid. 8, 6tc; s, 1; 12, (1.5U; 10.1, 10. Huslt otder and be first. Sell quant ltlei to your merchants for wiudow at tractions and then soli toothers. Quick Sale. Try 100. Big Money. Agents' Herald, No. 1 49, J. B., PJMla., P. W.L.Powclao V ClnW& N SQUEAKING ' S. CORDOvAn. FRENCH. ENAMELLED CAin 4-&3 FlNECALF&KWJGAKH 43.55 POLICED Soles. 2 J17J BoySchoqlShoex LADIES- . . .SEND FOR CATALOG VH W la DOUGLAS BROCKTON, MASS.: $ x an cam ssvs moaev dt wsansi is . XV. h. Douglas 83.00 Shoe. -, Because, wa ere the largest manufacturer of , this grade of shoes la the world, and guarantee tnel value by stamping the name and price on the ' bottom, which protect you against high prices and the middleman s profits. Our shoes equal cottons work In style, easy fitting and wearing qualities. . W have them sold even where at lower prices foe : the value given than any other make. Take no sub ftitute. If your dealer cannot supply you. we can n Consnmptlve and people who have weak lungs or A t li ma, should use Piso's Cure for Consumption. It has eared thousands, ft has not Injur ed one. It Is not bad to take. It is the best cough syrnp. bow everywhere. 8c. f I? H. N n 38. J J. Hamilton Ayers, A. K., M. D. This Is a most Valuable Book for the Household,, teaching as it does the easily-distinguished Symptoms of different Diseases, the Causes, and Means of Preventing such Dis eases, and the Simplest Remedies which will alleviate or cure. b93 PACES, PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED.' The Book is written in plain every day English and is free from the technical terms whieh render most Doctor Books so valueless to the eenerailty of readers. This Book is intended to be of Service in the Family, and, is so worded as to be readily understood by all. .Only 60CTS. POST-PAin
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 5, 1894, edition 1
4
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