Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / Aug. 26, 1898, edition 1 / Page 4
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1 f Beauty la Blood Deep. Clean blood meats a clean skin. No fceauty without it. C&scarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by tirring up the lazy liver and driving all inv burities from the body. Begin to-day to Danish pimples,, boils, blotches, blackheads, trad that sickly bilious complexion by taking Uascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drug' gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 23c, 50c. During the month of March there were 199 accidents on the railways of Germany, Involving the loss of forty-eight lives; of the killed, twenty-eight were -officials, and -only three passengers. : BrtcTclUts and Dog. ' ' It frequently happens that a bicyclist would like to drive on an annoying dog, but doesnt want to kill the beast, run the risk of a bullet hitting a bystander, nor attract the attention which a cartridge explosion is certain to do. The dog Is consequently encouraged to try hi3 trick on the next rider. A soundless pistol, eh oe ting water, ammonia or other liquid, is vicious animal, and still not really Injure it. A few drops of ammonia in the eyes, nose or mouth of any animal give it something to think of other than bothering a cyclist. It la a boon to wheelmen and wheelwomen. The largest dwelling houaa in the world Is the Freihaus, in a suburb of Vienna, con taining in all between 1200 and 1500 rooms, divided Into upward of 400 separate apart ments. To Core Constipation Forever. ' Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic, 10c or 23c, If C C C fall to care, druggists refund money. In battle only one ball out of eighty-flvo takes effect. When Hot Don't sweat and fret, but keep cool and take Hood's Sarsaparilla. This is good advice, as you will find if you follow It. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is a first-class sum mer medicine, because It is so good for the stomach, so cooling to the blood, so helpful to the whole body. Make no mistake, but get only j4-I Sarsa OOQ S parilla America's Greatest Medicine. Unnrl'e Pille CTlre Liver Ills; easy to I1UUU O 11119 take, easy to operate. "We" Gave Them Fits. A email Canadian boy whose lojalty to the British flag has got him into no end of scraps with patriotio American youths of equally tender years came up to his father shortly after the bat tle of Manila was fought, and with a woebegone expression said: "Say, father, didn'tthe English ever lick any other boats without losing a man?" The father was forced to con fess that they had not. "Well," said the youngster, "I guess the Americans aren't so bad, after all, are theyF' On the Fourth of July when young America was celebrating the naval vic tory at Santiago the youthful upholder of Great Britain was in the midst of a band of ultra-patriotic boys setting off fire crackers and cheering with the best of them. "Here, boy! What are you cheering for?" asked his father. "Cheering for? Oh, say, father, didn't we give those Spaniards fits I" New York Commercial Advertiser. it HIM Kb X mM rAUM. Women Everywhere Express their Gratitude to Mrs. Pinkham, nrs. T. A. WALDEN, Gibson, da., write: 44 Deab Mbs. Ptskham: Before tak ing your medicine, life wa3 a burden to me. I never saw a well day. At my monthly period I suffered untold misery, and a great deal of the time I was troubled with a severe pain in my side. Before finishing the first bottle of your Vegetable Compound I could tell it was doing me good. I continued its use, also used the Liver Pills and Sanative Wash, and have been greatly helped. I would like to have you use my letter for the benefit of others." ' nrs. FLORENCE A. WOLFE, sS riulberry St., Lancaster, Ohio, writes i " Deab Mks. Pixkham: For two years I was troubled with what the local physicians told me was inflamma tion of the womb. Every month I suf fered terribly. I had taken enough medicine from the doctors to cure any one, but obtained relief for a short time only. At last I concluded to write to you in regard to my case, and can say that, by following your advice I am now pefectly welL" rira. W. R. BATES, riansfield, La., writes : il " Before writing to you I suffered dreadfully from painful menstrua tion, leucorrhcea and sore feeling in the lower part of the bowels. Now my friends want to know what makes me look so well. I do not hesitate one min ute in telling them what has brought about this great change. I cannot ; praise Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound enough. It is the greatest remedy of the age." s 4I have--' Insomnia, over twe have e-e oy 1 M r DR. TALMAGI7S SEKMON. SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BYTfclE NOTED DIVINE. "Silence In Heaven," the Subject The Mighty Import of the Cessation De scribed In Hevelatloue Half Hours Which Have Determined Destinies. Text: "There was silenoe in heaven about the space of half an hour." Reve lations, viii., 1. "Take this watch and keep It,", said a dying Christian as he ploked it up from the stand at his pillow, "I have no more need of it. I am going where time shall be no longer." But it seems from my text that heaven was at least once measured by an earthly time-piece. The busiest place in tho universe is heaven. It Is the center from which all good Influences start; it is the goal at which all good results arrive. The Bible represents it as active, with wheels and wings and orchestras and prooessions, mounted or charioted. But my text de scribes a space when the wheels ceased to roll and the trumpets to sound and the voices to chant. The riders on the white horses reined in their chargers. The dox ologles were hashed and the prooessions halted. The hand of arrest was put upon all the splendors. "Stop, Heaven!" cried an omnipotent voice, and it stopped. For thirty minutes everything celestial stood still. "There was silence in heaven for the space of half an hour." , From ail we can learn it is the only time heaven ever stopped. It does not stop, as other cities, for the night, for there is no night there. It does not stop for a plague, for the inhabitant never says, "I am sick." It does not stop for bankruptcies, for Its inhabitants never fall. It does not top for Impassable streets, for there are no fallen snows or sweeping freshets. What, then, stopped it for thirty minutes? Grotius and Professor 8tuart think It was at the time of the destruction of Jerusa lem. Mr. Lord thinks it was in the year 811, near the close ot the Diocletian perse cution and the beginning ot the wars by which Constant Ine gained the throne. But that was all a guess, though a learned and brilliant guess. I do not know when it was, and I do not care when it was, bufof the fact that such an interregnum of sound took place I am certain. "There was silenoe In heaven for the space of halt an hour." And, first of all, we may learn that God and all heaven then honored silence. The full power of silence many of us have yet to learn. We are told that when Christ was arraigned "He answered not a word." That silence was louder than any thunder that ever shook the world. Ofttimes, when we are assailed and misrepresented, the mightiest thing to say is to say nothing, and the mightiest thing to do is to do noth ing. Those people who are always rush ing into print to get themselves set right, aooompllsh nothing but their own chagrin. Silencel Do right and leave the results with God. Among the grandest lessons the world has ever learned are the lessons of patience taught by those who endured uncomplainingly personal or domestic or political Injustice. Oh, the power of patient silencel Eschylus, the Immortal poet, was condemned to death for writing something that offended the people. All the pleas in his behalf were of no avail, un til his brother uncovered the arm of the Prisoner and showed that his wrist had een sacrificed for his country at the battle of Salamis. That silent plea liberated him. The loudest thing on earth is silence It it be of the right kind and at the right time. There was a quaint old hymn, spelled in the old style, once sung In the churches: The race is not forever get By him who fastest runs. Nor the Battel by those peopell That shoot with the longest gun. My friends, the tossing sea of Galilee seemed more to offend Christ by the amount of noise it made, for He said to it: "Be still!" Heaven has been crowning Kings and Queens unto God tor many centuries, yet heaven never stopped a moment for any such occurrence, but it stopped thirty minutes for the coronation of Silence. " There was silence In heaven for the space of half an hour." Learn also from my text that heaven must be an eventful and active place, from the fact that it could afford only thirty minutes of recess. There have been events on earth and in heaven that seemed to de mand a whole day or whole week or whole year for celestial consideration. If Grotius was right and this silence occurred at the time of the destruction of Jerusalem, that scene was so awful and so prolonged that the Inhabitants of heaven could not have done justice to it in many weeks. After fearful besiegement of the two fortresses of Jerusalem Antonio and Hippicus had been going on for a long while, a Roman soldier mounted on the shoulder of another soldier hurled into the window of the tem ple a 'firebrand, and the temple was all aflame, and after covering many sacrifices to the holiness of God, the building itself became a sacrifice to the rage of man. The hunger of the peepie in that city during the besiegement was . so great that as some outlaws were passing" a doorway and inhaled the odors ot food they burst open the door, threatening the mother of the household with deatn unless sue gave them some food, and she toon them aside and showed them that it was her own child she was cooking for the ghastly repast. Six hundred priests were destroyed on Mount Zion because, the temple being gone, there was nothing for them to do. Six thousand people in one cloister were consumed. There were ' 1,100,000 dead, according to Josephus. Grotius thinks that this was the cause ot silence in heaven for half an hour, It Mr. Lord was right, and this silence was during the Diocletian persecutions, by which 844,000 Christians suffered death trom sword and fire, and banishment and exposure, why did not" heaven listen throughout at least one ot those awful years? No! Thirty minutes! ,-The fact is that the celestial programme is so crowded with spectacle that it can afford only ono recess in all eternity, and that for a short space. While there are great chorouses in which all heaven can join, each soul there has a story of divine mercy peculiar to it self, and it must be a solo. How can heaven get through with all its solos, as well as all its recitatives, with all its cantatas, with all Its grand marches, with all its vic tories? Eternity is too short to utter all , HCll 11 .V. Wnmntia rf fha no of tllfC iut a 1 r-umPns k "t we now know of ot Him after If my text heaven for fLwn startled Si -i .tes thlr eatly "just see 'arth ,od Salk v yjftres i, i.i be no i busy we 1 to us the orld never fever and flying from who faced he railroad laces la or they them ,vn through miner, who JtiQ bottom of tiie waters rush r',the rope would 'J put a bund to his sick child the rope for hlna 'Ten mem tue are probably at the other end of the gallery," and then giving the command to the other miners till they digged thomselves so near out that the people from the outside could oome to their rescue. The multitudes of men and wom en who got no crown on earth, we will want to see when they get their crown in heaven. I tell you heaven will have no more halt hours to spare. Besides that, heaven is full of children. They are in the vast majority. No child on earth who amounts to anything can be kept quiet half an hour, and how are you going to keep 500,000,000 of them quiet half an hour. You know heaven is muh more of a place than it was when that recess of thir. ty minutes ooourred. Its population has quadrupled, sextupled, centupled. Heaven has more on hand, more of rapture, more ot knowledge, more ot intercommunica tion, more of worship. There is not so much difference between Washington, a mudhole seventy years ago, and Washing ton now, the most beuatlfuL city on earth) not so much difference between New York when Canal street was far uptown, and when Canal street is far downtown, as there is difference between what heaven, was when my text was written and what heaven is now. The most thrilling place we have ever been in is stupid compared with that, and if we now have no time to spare, we will "then have no eternity to spare. Silence in heaven only halt an hourl My subject also impresses me with the immortality of a half hour. That half hour mentioned in my text is more widely known than any other period in the cal- i endar ot heaven.. None of the whole hours ot heaven are measured off, none of the years, none of the centuries. Of the millions of ages past, and the millions of ages to oome, not one is especially measured off in the Bible. The half hour ot my text is made Immortal. The only part of eternity that was ever measured by earthly timepiece was measured by the minute hand ot my text. Oh, the halt hours! They decide everything. I am not asking what you will do with the years or months or days of your life, but what of the half hours. Tell me the history of your halt hours, and I will tell you the story of your whole life on earth and the story of your whole life in eternity. The right or wrong things you can think in thirty minutes, the right or wrong things you can say in thirty minutes, the right or wrong things you can do in thirty minutes are glorious or baleful, Inspiring or desper ate. Look out for the fragments of time. They are pieces of eternity. It was the halt hours between shoelag horses that made Elihu Burritt the learned black smith; the half hours between professional calls as a physlclal that made Abercromble the Christian philosopher; the half hours between his duties as school master that made Salmon P. Chase Chief Justice; the halt hours between shoe lasts that made Henry Wilson Vice-President of the United States; the half hours between canal boats that made James A. Garfield President. The half hour a day for good books or bad books; the half hour a day for prayer or indolence; the halt hour a day for helping others or blasting othere; the half hour before you go to business, and the half hour after your return from business; that makes the difference between the scholar and the ignoramus, between the Christian and the infldtl, between the saint and the demon, between triumph and catastrophe, between heaven and hell. The most tre mendous things of your life and mine were certain half hours. Bemember, we are mortal yet, and can not endure the full roll of heavenly har monies, and cannot endure even the silent heaven for more than hall an hour. Harm the clock in the tower of heaven begins to strike, and the halt hour is ended. De scend! Come back! Come down! till your work is done. Shoulder a little longer your battles. Weep a little longer your griefs. And then take heaven not in its fullest half hour, but la Its mightiest pomp and instead of taking it for thirty minutes, take it world without end. But how will vou spend the first half hour of your heavenly citizenship after you have gone in to stay? After your prostration before the throne in worship of Him who made it possible foryou.to get there at all, think the rest of your nrst halt hour in heaven will be passed In receiving your re ward if you have been faithful. ,' I have a strangely beautiful book, containing the pictures of the medals struck by the Eng lish Government In honor of great battles; these medals pinned over the heart ot the returned heroes of tho army, on great oc casions, c the royal family present, and the royal bands playing the Crimean medal, the Legion of Honor, the victoria Cross, the Waterloo medal. In your first half hour in heaven in some way you will be honored tor the earthly struggles In which you won the day. Stand up before all the royal house ot heaven and receive the insignia while you are announced as victor over political misfortune, as victor over the droughts and freshets of the farm field, victor over the temptations of tne stock exchange, victor over domestic in felicities, victor over mecnanic s suop, vioi tor over professional allurements, victor over the storehouse, victor over nome worrlments, victor over physical distress, victor over hereditary depressions, victor over sin and death and hell. Take the badee that celebrates those victories through our Lord Jesus Christ. Take it In the presence of all the galleries, saintly, angelic, and divine, wnue an ueavoa chants: "These are they who came out of great tribulation and had ' their robes washed ana made wnue in tne dioou oune Lamb." Thy saints in all this glorious war Shall conquer though they die; They see the triumph trom afar, And seize it with their eye. If heaven is all this while halted, what will It be when on the march? " If haven is all this while silent, what will It be when in full triumph? Many years ago, at th Crystal Palace, in New JtorK, Julian gave a great concert, 3000 voices and 3000 players, upon instruments. He eontrolled that great harmony, beating time with hand and toot, and to myself, who had never before heard music on a grand scaie, u was over powerine. But oh, when they shall come from the north and the south, and the easti and the west, and sit down in the temple of God and the Lamb, and Christ shall rise, and all heaven shall rise with Him, Ha 6hall control tnat narmony wun once wounded hand and once wounded loot, and it will be like the voice ot many waters and the voice of mighty thunderlngs. Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive bless ing and riche-j and honor and glory and power. Amen ana amem A NORWEGIAN'S PRAISE OF US. Captain Gade, of the Royal avy, Com pliments the American Cuuneri. Captain Gustav Gade, of the Royal Nor wegian Navy, has returned to Washington from Santiago, where he witnessed the de fctruction of Cervera's fleet. He was sent by his Government to study the war. H? said: "I think the battle at Santiago wai the grandest sight that has ever been wit nessed. Your gunners are wonderful marksmen, and the work ot your navy hai set at rest forever any doubt in the minds of suoh nations who may have been so de luded that Americans do not know how ta fight. "Your army i3 a fine body of men. Youi regulars are without a doubt as well drilled as any European army, and they ap pear to me physically and intellectually fai above the average of European soldiers. Pensions For Our New War. Owing to the number of applications foi pensions being received as a result of th war with Spain, Commissioner H. Claj Evans, ot the Pension Bureau, Washington, has established the "Division of '98." T this all applications originating through service in the present war will be referred Medical officers of the PensionBureau est! ntate that at least two-thirds of the mei who have been sent to Cuba and Port Bieo will eventually become pensioners. Miles Tracked by a War Chest. For several days preceding the tim that General Miles finally left foi Cuba there was muoli speculation about the headquarters of the arruj in the Department building about the date of his departure. Inquiries were made of the General himself, and he is generally accommodating to men oi the newspaper profession, but these inquiries were of no avail. Then re sort was had to General Alger, the Secretary of War, but he, also, vouch safed no satisfactory or definite reply. With this state af affairs it was nec essary to resort to strategy, and strategy successfully solved the problem. It was said by one of the old and observing employes that oo the day General Miles departed from Washington a war chest, which is al ways located near the door that leads into his own office when he is in town, would be taken away. This chest 'what it contains is not generally known accompanies him on all his travels. Therefore, for two or three days many eyes were watching the wax chest, a square box bound with iron bands and painted a dark gray.' A1 last, on the morning of the day that the General really did leave for San tiago the war chest was not in its ac customed place. The newspaper men at the Department took the risk to an nounce that the General would depart for Cuba that evening, and it was printed in the afternoon newspapers, and sure 'enough it turned out that General Miles - did follow the war chest, starting on the journey that took him to the headquarters tent of General Shafter. Crows Chase a Cat. "Caw! caw! caw!" shrieked a couple of crows in the "nurseries" near Chamounix drive in the West Park recently. Park guard No. 88, who happened to be on the drive at the time, cocked up his ears. "Some thing wrong with those crows," said he to a cyclist who had stopped near by to rest; "never heard them caw that way unless there was, something up." The incessant cawing grew louder and closer each moment. Suddenly out from a bunch of small trees dashed a big black and white tomcat, running as fast as he could. Two infuriated crows were hovering him, taking turns at swooping down upon him and pecking him viciously with their sharp beaks. At each attack the cat accel erated his speed, and, with bristling tail, simply flew over the ground. The crows pounced upon him unmercifully, until finally, when the chase had al most reached the two Burprised spec tators, the cat took refuge in a culvert which runs under the drive at that point. One of the crows alighted on the edge of the culvert, and then, catching sight of the two spectators, turned and flew back to some tall pines back of the nurseries. "Well, what do you think of that?" exclaimed the guard. "Did you ever see a crow chase a cat before? Never? Why, a cat can lick any kind of a bird. That cat must have been robbing their nest." Augusta (Ga.) Chronicle. A Turkish Admiral. An Admiral of the Turkish fleet, seasick in a storm, was disturbed by a grating noise. He inquired whence it proceeded, and, on being told it was the rudder of the ship, he desired it might be immediately taken off. Tit Bits. How's This t We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any cae of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F.J. Che ney lor the lat 15 years, and believe him per fectly honorable in all business transaction and financially able to carry out any obliga tion mide by their firm. . West & Tkuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Oh o. Waldinq. Kittnan & Marvih, Wholesale Drusteists. Toledo. Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur. faces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pills are the best. It has been demonstrated that African elephants can be domesticated. They make valuable beasts of burden, as they climb mountains with remarkable ease, are sure footed and can swim swollen streams. Don't Tobacco Spit sod Smoke Yonr life airayj. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak met strong. All druggists, 60c or tl. Cureguaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co. , Chicago or New York, In Germany and Holland girls are chosen in preference to young men in all occupa tions where they can be advantageouslj employed. l"lve Cents. Everybody knows that Dobbins' Electrii Soap Is the best in the world, and for 33 yean it has sold at the highest price. Its price it now S cents, same as common brown soap Bars full size and quality. Order of grocer. .Adi At Whatcom, Wash., a woman working for an evaporating company peeled 15,491 potatoes in twenty days and'earned t20. Educate Tour Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25o. If C C. C. fall, druggists refund money. It Is only in France that the French popu. lation does not Increase, as in Canada Algeria and Tunis it increases rapidly. To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 35o In Switzerland the citizens are compelled to Insure themselves against accident ani sickness. Mrs. Wtnslow's Soothing Sjrup for chlldrei teething, softens the gums, reduces infiammiv tiorx, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c. a bottle Hamburg's (Germany) Improved appar axusfor burning garbage does the work fo; . about nine cents per 1000 pounds. I can recommend Piso's Cure for Consump tion to sufferers from AsthmA. E. D. Town sex d, Ft. Howard, Wis.. May1, 1SW. The vocabulary of an oinarlly lntelll gent educated person lnclui only abou' 40D0 words. No-To-Haj for Fifty Cf its. s men strong, Diooa pure, soc, IL ,w JtlliJ lllllv X akes wr tean times as fast as a horse oi l i Some persons say they are never influenced by an advertisement. It is not expected that any one will buy Ivory Soap solely because it is suggested by an advertisement. If you have never used Ivory Soap, you may be Induced to ask some friend about it ; should you find as you probably will that she is enthusiastic in its praise, then ymi may try it. Millions of people use Ivory Soap ; they use it because they like it. You too will like it. There is a difference in soaps. CpyiUhw I9S6. B ffttut 4 0M Co., ClnrtimW, iS) ad way's Pill Purely vegetable, mild and reliable. Cause Per fect UlgestiSn, complete absorption and healtnrui regularity. For the cure of all d scrders i of tne Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, luervous Piaeases. LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, INDIGESTION, DIZZY FEELINGS, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, BILIOUSNESS, DYSPEPSIA.. PERFECT DIGESTION win be accomplished by taking Badway's Fills. By their ANTI-BILIOCS properties they stlnuiUte the liver tn the secretion A Mia mil n rliHihftriz thronsh the binary ducts. These pilla in dosea from two to four will quickly regulate the action of theliyer and free the patient from these disorders. One or two of Bad way's Pills, taken daUv by those subject to bilious pains and torpidity of'the-uver, will keep the sys tem regular and secure healthy digestion. Price 2&c. per Box. Sold by all Druggist. RAD WAY & CO. New York. nrTTFFTfnyTTHls PAPER WHEN REPLt lyitiiN llUiN ING TOADVTS. NYNU-38 rapiifr. II ts rVHtHfc ALL Hat tAILS. Best Cough bjtud. Tastes uooa. I la tltn. Sold bv drucirlst!,. PflirJTMLLSCEILIW HURfiLO WATER COLOR PAINTS FOR DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS SSr.SSS MURALO' paint dealer and do your own decorating. This material is a HARD FINISH to be applied with a brush and becomes as hard as Cement. Milled tn twenty-four tints and works equally as well with cold or hot water. . " , , , CySE'D FOR HAaiPLE COLOR CARDS and if yon cannot purchase thla material from your local dealers let us know and we will put you in the way of obtaining It. . THE MUHALiO CO., NEW BRIGHTOX, S. I., NEW YORK. BICYCLISTS NEED A LiQ.yiD 50s. . 1 m ts- PROTECTION AGAINST DOGS OR MET, WITHOUT KILLING OR MAIMING. LOTS OF FUN TO BE HAD It is a weapon which protects bicyclists against vicious dogs and foot-pads; travelers against robbers and toughs; homes against thieves and tramps, and Is adapted to many other situations. t , It does not kill or injure; it is perfectly safe to handle;"lTnakes no ' or smoke; breaks no law and oreates no lasting regrets, as does the bullet f It simply and amply protects, by compelling the foe to give undividc ' tion to himself for awhile instead of to the intended victim, ., It is the only real weapon which protects and also makes run. la"-" lots of tt; it shoots, n.Jt once, but many times without reload " protect by its appearance In time of danger, although loaded or ' It does not get out of order; is durable, handsome, and nickel Kent boxed and post-paid by mail with full directions how t " In 8c. Postage Stamps, Postomce Money Order, or Expres" our reliability, reier to B. a. 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The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 26, 1898, edition 1
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