Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / Feb. 23, 1893, edition 1 / Page 4
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l i i i Thrca Li-vs s - -r s 1 a :gi iwoo Sore EyCp Patois n 1 Id '1 Vti Female Complaints Rheumatism AND ALL Inflammation : Soft only In our own bottles. All druggists. POND'S EXTRACT CO.,765th Ave.,N.Y. 3 n. tr3 fai e.a 51 3 Es2 ,S U3 iia 8B;;B a It's rcEiarkal.-lo specific notion ripen the affected parts gives it supremo control over riles, however Gcvera. . Abo for J-T-;!.', Scalds, Eruption, . SfiJ Jiueitm dv. Testir-v .nlak fr m all classes prov !t3 eme-aey. Jt'rieo Wie uc j ! lv;;; ;:,-jto orsont by nu all on. .reeoipt oi r waI I.y. k,Q;f Ota ire., Lai A. a. -s' ci:4 s?. Y'? ii sL -71 f-' ,J Bfege $rx :-i ? r. h U A"i Sr' j S H -' 'i , fcfJ pj ' St Cures ai 1 i 'i Monthly f:-?, Painirf i f-l-o. buiiJs ii'.viu sands i t it. Send irregularir.'I.-t:! EackorSi:'-'i. lipthowholjcVi' and wiil cm j yor. Btarnp for boolr i :!;.; or ' v i! 1 ; ii7 tor - ;5" .-. Ita 1 1 ... . ': t , Vi : r" r . v.-h!-'h contains 3RADFI EL'C REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA, CP. fob SAT.r ' y- an no gists.-' Baby Ono3Iontb. Old Broken Cut With Sores. Tried Doctors and Faitti Cure. No Benefit. Now Perfectly Well. Completely Cured by Seven Dollars' Worth cf Cutlcura Remedies. When my baby was ono month old his face brose ont with pimples. I ihoueht it was the hives. I tried everything that the doctors guve me, aad it ouly seemed to make him worse. I tried one faith doctor, but he did not do him any good. My baby's face was a solid scab ivom those pirn pies. I used Ave boxes of CiTicritA, mx cakes of Octicura Suap, and three bottles of t'UTicrm UE3olvbnt, which, enred him. Mv little boy is three yeare old now; he is just aa large anil wp!1 a chiiu as yoa would want to eee. L. K. UUiiE. 4I8Eaot Pecan St., Sherman, Texas. Pome yr9 aeo I was troubled with vc-rv tad cne of Eczema, , ne of the tett uhvsiuiaiu iD Kichoiond, Va., irh 'ie I live, s iid he would rather have a cae of ffmall-pos for lie could cere that. He and others could do nothing for me. I tried the Oitticura liRMEDiEs, and have been" pefma re' tly cared. Fir f?m? tim ? I have leit that it my duty to voluuteer and tell Vint pf the ei!!caev of ihre T.'tloablo reinedieM. itnt I h n-;g!et J it umiljPfiw. . tilAS. II.jCOIJETf"D.I.,"' nf, y.'ii .i :.;(? Theological Seminary, iciira w n.iood and fiia I;:rificr, internally, and u... tb? are.tt- Ssia Cnre, and 'CTicCRA ex.-j;i!'te Skin Heamint r, est( rr.ally, in r, r. - i j,-,-4:!y tare every di--.'W and - "o-l b!(KKl, with bw of Ci. . j- '... , irnr.i jmu,-!t-8 to s;ro;'ula. V'e. Pricn. ',rTirrr,.5.'c.: prAr ::.T. i'rcjian ii i.y tb..- I'orTtii t-.'-i-- .t. "niiiiii;Ai?i.)N-". ttos;on. ule, mailed fre. BOTANIC BLOOD BALM , THE GREAT REMEDY FOR ALL BLOOD ftND SKIN DISEASES . Has been thoroughly test! by em inent physician and the people for 40 years, and never fnila to care qmcJilv and ierin&nfintlv SCROFULA. ULCERS, ECZEMA, KHEUMATiSfJ, PIMPLES. ERUPTIONS. and all mnnrter ot EATING, SPREADING and RUKNIXG SORl-S. Invariably cures the most loathsome blood disuses if liirti-tions are fol lowed. Price 81 ptir bottle, i bottles for $5. I'or SENT FREE woxbmIx-l fuBrs. 0 BLOOD BALM CO., Allan'a, Ga. irr?tt- ai:d iMr !itionts can also obtain lluj liier.tine iseo of charge. Thin r.;rpJr k.-w tieon rrcp.wd by tbe Reverenit Fs'o-- li.M'a:;, .f I'ort Vi avtie, lad., i .ice ibi(i, and ISLOv,- ijropsri j utiii-Thia liirectlou by tlie K'ED, CO.. Chicago, 11. ; So!l?:y ri:-2f:Us at 8 1 per So2o.tG for 95, r-ar.ro i-":zc. f.U -Ti. C '?;tf;s for a. . , "AXl KtSIS " prives Instant .r .....l n .n..ii;i.lA KiriiLt itiiti L"5 nit iuiii iiiiiiu fik Cure for i'ilM. Prieo$l. liy 5 ii-t!irjri5rsoriU!ii!. ruinipies ". L-rr?r. A(Wress"A.NAKKSIS.' 53 :4io. New Voik Citv. 3v .r-.' 1 M' f. if Ml . .. -.-r;i;-2d:., .rc-.l. rotib, risar.pcd.ana I : - .'; r. J r.- i 'l iis-rii.i Soai-. . fli ;--::7 T"- i ran-'...-. -!-.- ? Tbe liret and only tusLuaaacc-M pl.uier. If mA Paying : tW Bills - I dt M trs Wilson Advance, THE TRUE PREACHER DR. DIXON DEDUCES A FEW LESSONS FROM A GREAT EXAMPLE. The Effective Preacher Must K a Jianlj Man and Realize His Close Kinship With Others The, Fatherhood of God mid the llrntheruood of Man. Nkw York. Feb l'J. Rev. Thomas Dixon preceded the sermon of the morn ing in - Association hall by a review of recent efforts at Albany to relieve crim inals of the interference of law. He said Attain we are treated to the spectacle of criminals applying to the legislature for ti charter for crime. The Brooklyn officials about to be con victed of the abuse of their positions rush to the legislature and with monumental cheek tisk that a special hill he passed by which they may escape. -, The impudence of this brazen proposi tion is simply sublime. And what shall we say of a legislatnre chosen to make laws for a great state and yet low euorgh to pass the measure and send it to t,he governor? Let us thank heaven that in New York at least the governor has the veto power. All honor to Roswell P. Flower,, chief executive .of the Empire State, who threw this infamy baek into the faces of the party leaders who handed it to him! Jlr. Flower's choice of executive language has not been eminently pious on all oc casions, but it has been vigorous We niusf not be too critical of forms always The governor evidently floes some think- ; ing tor nimseu. uei mm continue oust f i- 'it w . . : ness at that stand awhile, and the people or xsew l orif are certain to give mm a .permanent job. ! Let the governor get his good right I hoot ready to kick some other measures : back, into the assembly. ! If the infamous Endres bill for the abolition- of .Iction against crime ever ' comes I ie fore him. the governor will have another brilliant opnortrpity to show ; that he was bora of Christian parentage and still holds an old fashioned faith in honor and decency. And we believe he , will be equal to the occasiou if it arises ! This bill is the product of the gain . biers, criminal saloon keepers, confidence men. readers of villainous books and owners of obscene pictures. It has leen ; on the calendar of the legislature for many years. Everjtyear there appears some rascal en the fioor mean enough to reintroduce it. its sole pnrxxjse is to prevent the de tection and punishment of crime. If it should become a law. it would practi- cany aorogaie tue ponce powers ot tlie p.tate. . It poses under the high sounding and virtuous title of the "antispy" bill. Well might we repeat today, "Oh, liberty, how many crimes are committed in thy sa cred name!" That sucl; an infamous measure should be int.rotluccd.iuto a jnodera legislative body is a sad. reminder to us of the close relatious between the sewers of our cities, and the halls of law. This bill provides that if any man at tempts to enforce the law and uses the ..methods of the detective to procure evi dence he shall be held guilty of the crime itself. It is an ingenious piece of villainy and appeals londly to that sup posed honor among thieves which a long suffering public is expected to applaud and support, i The Christian public will look to the ; governor to stamp his foot upon this ; and all such measures the moment their ' beads are lifted from the dirt of the as sembiy floor Liberty is our watchword. Liberty i- holy. But liberty to commit a crime with impunity is not liberty. It is li cense. It is anarchy. r PHILLIPS BROOKS. The men whom thongarestnie. John xvii,6. To thousitnds of men who never saw Phillips Crooks: who never heard him. the announcement of his death came with the dose consciousness of personal los3. For my own part, I feel as if one of my own heart's blood had been taken from the world. ! He was one of the world's great preach ers. Every now and then some little quill driver that makes about $2.50 a week in .writing will come out with this tre mendous question, "Why has the pulpit declined in power?" I always think of that old problem of why was it, if you put a fish in a bucket of water when the water was on the scales, that after the fish had been put in it weighed no more than before. Men argned over that for years before they thought of putting the fish iu ami weighing it, when they found it weighed as. much more as the weight of the fish. So men discuss today, "Why is it that the pulpit has declined in pow or?" The pulpit today has a power it has iiever had in the history of the world There are nun today in Gods pulpit who as individual tower high among tiie . stars, as did t)ie great giants of the past -The ran!; and file have lWn nimm for greater noweri T::mkof an army of 100. in America trained men. OiM! ministers' pu-fceu meu 4 marching tiiought W.IS ever may be the colors of ts or tl:V !ifT"T..tw...i il,..t 'AH 'gillie uiHlivmc tlnfiu- lOo.(toi) men animated with one thought and sustained in th::t halt!- by the. living spirit of the liviii iod! There never w;s an hour when the pulpit had such resistless power as ii has to.lay.and the only time when it is weak is when the man in it is not conscious oi the fact that iol has given him a lever ::;e with which U overturn the world if :e pulls strong enough on it ... SOL'liOES OF HIS, FOWKIt In what (lul the tower and miccem oj 'uilhpn B moks mainly conxiztt First n the inherent grandeur of the ''tuiuhood of the man. . tic was a niunln man I ,t - ... S..1 tLl.lt in the t'. ristian niinistry. as nowhere i - Ise. ma:; .-t:;;,S is the basis of all inherent . wei A man is sacred because his .amnhood. !. riCTvd. Von can lay as many ; nan. Is 0:1 a man as yon . please, wrap ' i'.-nud him an many oolies as you please, ! take him through as many ecclesiastical ! proc. sses as yon please, ordain him in a j cathedral if yon iC0- i,nt aueHS tiotl ; or.huued him from his mother i womb your ordination is a mockery; ' unless God has set .tlie. seal of hi:? own 1 heart and life on his brow-, unless God's image is cut i:i . his -personality. Only manhood is sacred. Every man is great ! m proportion as his manhood is groat, i and he who has a greater iiersouality and fci enter uiannooo iniin the mt-acher Ill the imlpit is a more Sacretl man and ph. I " ""Hiiiier lnuncoco over j .... .. ;i tue xxoa, , tie tva an honest man. He could not i I1 WithUt .... ..,.-.l ,.f m., noiiesi opinions, j eniui trom his Father's house He did not ..n-ttch mere theories. He: Sixth-Another reason why his success preached what he be ieved in th -Wha "r..l . 3 , ... of,f ?t soul und life, and what he ' couki not speak from the innermost , depths of his peat eoul he left unstiid. everTwVI w f f T0 ,' e.erj word that fell from his hps. I becotxer-His power consistetl in his catholicit,,. in th. Iirpnilti, w - - .....,. ... 111.1 III- pathies and his views He was born into a ritualistic church, and he wore the forms as an honcfet niaii wears his clothes. Ho never used forms for the purpose of exhibition. The church in which he was born and to which he ministered was laree enonnh to hold him. j ' and tlntt (hetfrnrdefit coirTlinienttht-.t I can pay to the Church -of England t?v , dav. I mean, when I tpeak of the church even ita ' eivlesiastical, mechanical ar rangements. It strained toward the last, but it did hold liiui r lie was rash enough to hplieve in the broad basis of h fraternity of spirit ami of heart, ami it ditl not shock him to sit on the platform with ordinary Presbyte- nan or LJaptist or aietnouist preacners He did not Worry about apostolic suc cession. He believed in that wider, truer church universal His soul was a truly great soul, and for that reason he was ic- eapanle ot Final! tnougnts. small jeai- ousies of man with man. of church against church, of ecclesiastical, machine against "those who are outside of the ma chine. For Unit reason" fin all men never liked him i i:;:i!l men, whose souls felt secure simply within forms, never agreed with his policies or his principles or with his methods of enforcing his thought or his life work ' TiiK TKL'I.Y OKKAT KOUU. Great souls are never capable of small thoughts. Von 'remember when Jenny Lind gave an entertainment- in Leipsic On one occasion .Mendelssohn was pres ent, and they were given agreat ovation. The great crowd thundered its applause and continued until Mendelssohn said to Jenny Lind that she must go forth and say something to the people. She said the would if he would go and make the speech. So arm in arm these two great musicians came before the people. When the tempest of applause which greeted their apjiearr'.Tu-e had subsided. Mendels sohn in the most graceful way paid the highest and most delicate compliment to the great simfer1 and proposed tliat the cheers of all Leipsic should be given to her. Then, while the building echoed with one of Mendelssohn's songs, they went back to the room behind the ros trum. There was no jealousy between two such souls. A great many small musicians that play the second fjddle. that just kin.vv how to rcrapea little, are mighty in jealousy, but great souls are never jealous ' So of this preacher. Small thoughts were impossible to him. lie saw the good in all church.es, and he saw good outside all churches.- lie w;is a high priest of the race. lie saw good even in these low evangelical churches that, from the high church point of view, are very low. Phil lips Brooks even held old fashioned re vivals in Trinity church.. Ele preached about a chtivcb outside, the church, and the most eloquent, most powerful pres entation of that church outside 1 ever heard from mortal man came from his great heart He was the bishop of this great church universal. .Third Not alone to his catholicity but also because of his projihetic power his success is due. The true preacher of God is a prophet, not a priest. It was his peculiar func tion to prophesy. I do not mean to predict future events. The work of the proyhct of old was to give new vicirs of God and of truth. Tlie Aaronic priesthood ended with the Christ, and from the Christ went forth the line of those who should prophesy, and who in his name should unfold new views of God and of truth New -theology? Yes, his theology ws not only new; it was the newest theology. And to.get from him a sermon was to get from God's own life a new breath, a new revelation, a new view of truth. 111? FQRESAW THE KlCTTEi; TIME. He was a prophet in the true and high sense of the word, and therefore he was progrexxire. He did not stand still or bow down to dogmas. He would not limit himself to ecclesiastical conclusions of councils or great men in the past With his great heart fixed uixm the spiritual realities of truth." he pressed forward, onward ever, from day to day never pausing in. that upward, march to ward the summit of truth, toward the full revelation of God If yon want to know what a preacher in the SOth cen tury will preach, study the life of such a man. Fourth His success -rested on another thing his tremendous earttexfuwa. No body went to sleep while hv preached. His intensity of soul wan inchthitii swept him along outside of t imself. The human tongue could not utter what hi? heart felt fast enough. I have sat lief ore him and watched the play of divine passion cross his face flushed with the tumult of struggling for utterance! not be lorn fast enough, those great eyes, as throna great thoughts Words could And through h the windows of his soul, i could see the beating of angels' wings against the prison bars of language! Re was in dead earnest, and only that ...i ,.r , A . kind of men can move the world. Martin Luther was a man of tremendous ear nestness. Ignatius . Loyola, who led tht Church of Rome against Luther, was a man of tremendous earnestness, and such Was his power even on Catholicism that Jesuitism at last absorbed Romanism it self. Savonarola swept Florence with resistless power becanne of th:it mag netic, indefinable power that displayed itself in his earnestness. Beecner was v. man of power, an epoch shaping ran, a man who made and . unmade theologies, because of that divine spark of clnur.c ter. Earnest men in-poliiics, iu religion, in history, are the men who make' his tory. In a man like Blaine, who could impress himself upon his generation a:ul have so enthusiastic a following through the years, there sl.nmhered the inhereut powers of a 'great persoual earnestness and enthusiasm. Fifth Phillips Hrooks' success. tto. i rested on another thing namely, that j he had fakli in and love for his fellow I , man. j THE EKOTIIERHOOD OF MAS. j He loved Ids fellow, man, and any man , that loves his follow man is going to I niake enemies. Therv never was a sweet l ar soul than Brooks' tender, earnest, J kind, loving. Yet how many little ec j i-lesiastics in all this big world hated the 1 Bound of his name and would go posi i lively into ecclesiastical jimjams when 1 his name was mentioned! He really so intensely loved his fellow man that, whether it clashed with ecclesiasti ; cism or not, he spoke out of. the great . love of his heart whnt nrwl h..n ,-,,-, j there. Tliink of a man of that charac- ! ter, that temper, being hounded by here- j sy hunters! Yet it. is true. For years ; before he died the ecclesiastics even ! within his "iUierar church had out their 1 sleuthhonnds hunting through every ; forest burning throngh his great ser-mons-nt!sing l!tTe, there, yonder, get- ; ting together everything tliat might pos- i Rll)1-V l,tilr 0,1 the question as to whether or noi r.e were walking along the way that their fathers walked in the past. he heli,.v...l i not omy loved ms fellow man. but man. made in the image or tjhi Tl :t was one of tho earilinal princu - les of his life. In th lr,v,w the bear iu n-s. the prisoner in stripes' hr.f! li- Ws Master: ! a vit:,l m f sritnal X him -tJod spint " That the theme that he voiced &f thtVU ' fond the inmost depth of man s w.n The pw-nliarity of his p'rtswhiiia whm tiuit i, .n'.. ... with a spiritual intuition the thin-s yoa lia.ll.eeu thinkin alxt Ho believed m the world of spirit -as against tho mat ter, which is its mora shadow. He was a conductor of the divin spirit on hi-1. to men; Tyndall is authoriiv for the stiitement that h-v i. iv- .n ". ;V . "::.."r' 3 ered a remarkable fact in the transmia- won ot muHiu. There wn-s a piano on tnts first floor of a building devoted to the instruction of tiiusie and a hall on the third floor, and the experimenter thought it might be possible to transmit the music from that piano into the hall, that the audience might hear it. So he opened a hole through each of the floors and took a wooden rod and connected it f from the sounding board of the piano to . the rostr.nm in the hall above, and then there was given a magnificent piece of tnnsic on the piano below. The director above could hear the music transmitted by that piece of wkx1. But the audience could not hear it. Then they placed a violin on top of that piece of wood, and instantly that bony caujrht the -melody of the piano below and reproduced it perfectly, so that the great crowd, heard every note. The)- also used a harp with the same results.' There are great souls whose personali ty seems to have the power to transmit the very, throb of God's heart unto men. As you .heard that man speak ; you felt that God' himself was striking the keys, and that along every scale of his life there was coming forth the music of the spirit world! ; Therefore faith to him was a mighty theme because' he believed in spiritual realities "All things are possible to him that believe.th"- what a sweep that sen tence from his lips opened to me when 1 first caught it! How vast the horizon opened .liefore him when he gave, that sentence! No limitations "all things possible to him that believeth." No great preacher, no man who thus speaks from the heart of God can speak without be iieving great things that it is possible for man Co do all things. ' leeause the sprit is the real thing, and matter but the shadow. KA1TI! WOli.'CH WONPKKS. A vessel was going along the seas on the. 24th of last December. She had en-" countered fearful gales, had hailed from Jamaica, bound for Providence, and was loaded with logwood. In a ter rible stonu the ship sprung h r timbt rs and began to leak. The captain, tried to relieve her by working !.. primps, ,1m t at last began to tter-pair. f'e righted a;; American steamer approaching and gave signals of distress The stea-uer came iloiigsideV'aiid the captain an.l his crew abandoned the ship. The first mate of It this steamer. looking on tlie vessel, said to thecaptain. "I ship can be saved and .carrit : iaii.lo.it u lievcth::t iO bov." and' he asked permission of hi:; em tain to go aboard of her ami take ru men: Both captains tried to dissuad him. but the prize was great, and he Hcvd it could be done, iio he did ant cui away troia tlie steamer, on her way. And working and m,'-.in thry got those feet order ami righted tl; 'Vent per- V:Vt and. brought her before, the'wind intothe har bor of New York, whe-r:- all hi r . cargo belonged to tim m- three brave men. who believed th-ut from the-jaws of si raging sea that 'ship conld 1k brought into port The man y, ho bt lieved it was possible m.-ide it possible. 1 It was this ijreat thougl-t that was o-;e of the keynotes to his ministry.' He be lieved in man and had faith in God, and this great theme of faith and its divine power to transform and iiiutnine and lift np was one of the mighty themes of his great soul . , Such a man can never die. A distin- : guished art critic sail that he saw a pic- j ture once.in an art gallery of poverty and I misery in a faraway desert of Russia. So realistic was the picture that he said throngh Ids whole lifeathonsand pictures ' were made because of that. . He. could -j see it reproduced in every life of suffer- ; ing that came before him; that it came ; back sind lived and lived as long as he : had poA-ers to think. i That is what a canvas cim Jo in tiiis ' world it can live and live. And what will we say of those spiritual pictures that the great artist painted when he saw God, when he say.' his eternal realities; Hid that picture? Destroy that man? He died? hi possible! . Eo lire today lie; lives i farerer. So live those' pictures of G-d's revel:.; ion. of man's destiny. ion know the old,, story of Tv Erahe, who in Vu2 saw a new star ap I car in a certain constellation, and it Ehono with such brilliancy, the astrono mer tells us. that it could be seen at noon day. They watched it with throbbing hearts until they saw it month aftti month fade and at lart disappear, arid a 6tr had been lost flora the constellation of the heavens. S: the preacher, from the point view of the world, tells us how great men of the world pass away; bnt such a man as this does not nass awav. ,0? 7 , , ' ft, ' or tllC clouds that ohsenred the star, the hreak- ueatii tor t ing away of the inists that hang low on the earth, rim when the mists ele lear away the star ham: ;iu;s i:i toe sky with "TeateT brilliancy. ai:d we hear the words of the Master, "They shall shine as the stars forever." When centuries shall have rolled by and -your 'children's children shall teach their children, that star shall gleam in the sky. and many a wayward boy coming over the seas of life shall catch its rays and find harbor, man never dies. He lives in truth, in God's life. buch a spirit, in Vic'-tiitH 0 "Christian Science. " If a child may fco lawfully left to perish (as was the case recently in Haverhill) from want of . the known means of saving life, in case the child's natural protector" and providers choose to claim their neg lect as an nc1. of faith, it would seem to logically follow that slaughter of the in nocent and helpless' is coven.-1 by the same mantle. And that is precise ly "what was claimed in an instance which dis graced our commonwealth and horrified the country not a groat many years a-o There are just as many texts to be cited m proof that the prayer of faith .will re store life as there are to show that it will fteul disease. 1 Accordingly a pious fanatic, neither more nor lets irrational than others whose zeal stops short of his estrone, ' deliher ately cut the throat of his sleeping babe, in order, as he rrid. that an unhelievirg V-I-Vl.l ..;,rV4 1 .. it n . - ....... .liiin u- i tit- witness or a nur; cle Uric t a;;t to work 'iiu-h Abmhani exT-ected God uto.n Isaac v,'hn the i-Mtr nf tbt-faithful prepared to offer up his only ton in s.;eriute. FYrLans ci--trv point i.nt a tii: tinction betv.-een the i'aiih in at that v WllUlll ueii leef jtml tl. r.i-Ti!, l::ere .inercifnllv. shivs v-v-;tl tlw. keen edired lrriifc The pveii ?!:-e 1 l;at the interference liuman hr.v ih srch c;ise :v. that :. riiiv-rr,i! of iu:n n; hi' v-'!idl he an uudrte invasion S i.uiltoritv or re.-;tricii.,ti fvn lh''r;y j;, t;r,.i osteiotlH P::ront:. auth ont v oes not stut.hoii'e brnvnlifv nil te!i erty 1(h s not int-lude t liberty tobr-ah the laws of i:lfln in tht nai.je ot ttiit h m ( io:l liutt,-.,, a.i.-,. tiser Wis Whc-n a man's feet sndilenlv I!.- .,nt rroin under him and he nearly cracks hi -skull on I he icy pavement, when h thereby tears a hi- triangular hole in hi:- trousei-s, to say nothing of Li eakin In. Hash, siirains his ankle' and frartnres hi! wrist lne. hut still gets up and walk off. it is a st.-n that even the force of gravity can't keep a good maii down. It is also a ood omen for the saloon kper and the family physician. -New York Herald. A Cmiipl:Miiil Kconumist. In l7-:u. or sis late as ixa"), the hoop skirt was practicable., but rapid transit and tho other new conditions of life in cities make it impossible now. Balti more Sun. . In the Mountain Regions, "Down in the mountain regions oi Virginia," said ono of the commercial travelers so numerous in the city yester day, "there rtill exists a good deal of the old fashioned piety which prevailed in the days when it was customary to run a dagger into an obnoxious parson's giz zard and then pray for the repose of hia soul. I was traveling on. horseback of course throngh that region last sum mer, when I came across an old fellow half hidden in the underbrush by the side of the -road. "He was sitting so qniet and bis weather bea ten clothes so well matched j the prevailing tints' of the locality that 1 I should have probably passed without ! seeing him if my horse had not shieL When he saw that ho was discovered, he stood up and looked at me for a mo men t or two without speaking. Ashe had-a rifle that looked at that instant to be near 7 feet Icmr thrown across his arm. i felt it my duty to bb sociable. 1 said: Hunting?" No," said he. "I hain't. Tm a-waitin fer Jim Allison to come this way, an if the Lord is willin I 'low to blow the top of his head off." Indianapolis Jour nal. French Polities uml Petticoats. It is possible that it may sometime dawn oven on Frenchmen that petticoats and politics make a poor combination. .Gambetta t!i- -1 Hi mistress shot by ht r . .. i "'".r7?rora initted suicide on lacj,ia.v of the wom an he had drawn' from her husband. Baihr.t owes his fall to the extravagant outlay which preceded, accompanied and followed his elopement with another man's wife, Clemenceati ostentatiously breakfasted, and bade goodby to his mis tress before his last duel and has lost in influence r.ince hia wife left him. M. de Froyeinot suuVrs in public repute from his open and public habits. The list by no means stops here, .and the real diffi culties of the French republic are little likely to disappear nntil the French de mocracy n ;.-. ires at least the same out ward decency in public life which ob tains here and in England. Philadelphia i Tess Close of n l ine A flair. They are savimr that a (ertnii. fVm. monweah h avenue young huly is in all ways '-up to date." Rc cently a society num. who Wiis stirptsixd to have aspir:? .lions, not wholly hopeless, for her hand, while waiting for her to descend to the drawing room, embraced the opportuni ' ty and the pretty housemaid. The lady, entering at that moment, simply ro uiarSled, 'i th:nght I told you. Mary, to receive your guests in the kitchen." Bos . ton Courier. Mi Testlf To tha E!fi?acy cf the' .it'-' A? cradlittte. PeNrrsi ot:tr,-areiy cbeorbfii or. tha r of vIJd di-.isen i -ora Tvitiia all yield to thu r tonS ii:-.t !rrl3 Tnrdy. It 13 an trawinalc.-l trsnl :, brlHlsnpt'ioold fir.rt feeble, enres all i!is;a.S4 or.R'ng from Impura Mrnxl or TrL-akcwx! vitality. fcoiMlloratrcatico. ExJimiao tho proof. I.toUs c-n " Eixxl ami Skin Diseased " iiiailod Croe, Druggists Sell It. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta. Ga. eg- iiC 1 ana M-.fRri 1; 1) ysars from shock in mv 0-&l, so i.iuoh so that h,. ti.ii. i 1 .'iuu i i.s.-ct to r. i-iivcr. I t-.:k laoliaioM from uiuu . i.c LciB, i..t.u.i i! ..t !: -t K.ay ifho.f until 1 i-vifc 1 aor iv'Lii Ni rvt? 'i-v :i 'I,,. v;;.l ,iC;i,. ,v;;ov ,j ,!T!i'K''!i.;;.,c,iit,i lao. a. V. KW'iaT, Ky,,'i'vbimary vW,i:-3i: . fcW.m-uy yu.-irs I v-a sk-kly tnd very n'erir us, KO tli.U. tlw iost tiling ruut.l frign.n too Mil lay clci It 1 .; tij In ivaa i:r.rir.mbii;;i ,i-n.l 1 wai ho iiZi.;il.:c to u,- f.a v iiouaewin k. 1 - "' ". iit-lui:t!rat ni iHpresr-;! Nnyf ovei-y o:n ; i . elKn -;.. 1' mt i K'oeni' Norve lc-i j.-. imt.Ji -a. hn.rt !ii.-:i).J,1 iu'o, 1 s.m Ur.in ixrvi pi-.s.i. ran Oik. hi. -v well u.i JVU p.-i J -h'i ,'-: t'- " Kl ISA iidLit 1 -or YOUR CASE IS NOT HOPELESS AIDS NATURE IN NATURE'S OWN WAY. IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO INVESTIGATE. A 40-fiage Famphlet- MAILED ' yiZEE ufvH application. ATLANTIC ELECTROPOISE CO. ' 1405 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. -to O O 0 O o o 6 fWT! o as on anti-lilllons nwl atitl-malarial remedy arc wonderful in t!ioir .ejects aV iu frccinjf tbo fiystem of biliousness VsJ antl malariaw Ko ono living ia- Tl re o m a .- . should fco without thoi: eprei cnt3 axaieits oi cizuia unci iver, ilambr.pn!, biiotts colic, rtncl'j-ivca & tho eysiviu strcacrtli to resist nil tho SB evils of art tihea;i :.y a-.l i;-ptii-o sit- Vrlcv, S3e. OSUcc, ii'J f.: Vlsx-c, IT. Y. . a Q O Q Q O O O r $0 for a Pair ef t (Custon-MadeV J1 from Manufrs' Epnmacts. Satisf aci ion guaranteed or money refunded. , emm SEND YOUR ADDRESS FOR SAtfPLF And instructions tor Self-Measurment. PI EDMCNT PANTS COM PA WINSTON " TV'OTCK Notict: is hereby .ivcti that an ap plication wiil be tnatle al ihe present General Assembly of Ko! h , aroiina io incorporate the State liank ui w ilson. S A. WCUDARD, Attorney for Attorneys.' This January iSth, '1.93. : J.. U.iVI Isseniujrthc singer Scwtiijr'MacSiinc'in U ilson Drop him .a card if you arc tl'ijnking" of buying or cxcb.-tnjns ma-cbnic-s. Vou rail buy the be .tj warhoie 611 earth by paying 5.00 do!!, then f I ! - Hi ' J oW-finxa ..:r. !a j . I U b-l v C-.rr.tap3 ss::-l Cel.t has I V"A j -"rr-c ? rlhtof.o a:;t:j.odes. . Cxth-Js3 a.-.iz-icl.iacittopaeal sad :1 f&K?$ Jf-y?to2 tio liccrica cf I flr f-a tticsotv-Lo depend sotcly ca tfco viJ'-Jj' .yfA v.hyslslaa'a rttll. Thcra I:, rol h c i t " t il r:c i i;c:otflr.ot lr.imcii C'llC 1 . . T ' 5 . - . .. i., J.aiy. iJiJ. Liwer r It is . a. wonderful remedy, which is alike benefi cial to you and your children. Such is &afs Emulsion ' of Pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophos phites of- Lime and Soda. It checks wasting- : in the children 'and produces sound, healthy fiesh. It keeps, them from taking cold and it will do' the. same for. you Scott's Emulsion cure3 ConjLs, Colds, Consumption, Scrofula and all Anaemic and Wasting- Diseases. Prevents wasting-ia children. Al most as palatable ssitiilk. Get only the genuine. Prepared by Scott h Bowne, Chemists, Now York. Sold by all Druggists. A. BRANCH, Fresident. ' A. P. BRANCH E reiricli & . Co., BANKERS v.. TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS IN ITS FULLEST SCOPE. SOLICITS THE. BUSINESS OF THE PUBLIC GENERALLY. ! Cooke,Clark & G0.; SUCCESSORS Tip I.UTI1ER. SHELDON, j Sash, Doors and Blinds, Builders' Hardware Paints, Oils, Glass, Putty, - jBu i 1 dm r Nc. 1 6 West Side Market NORFOLK, VA. n n Mm Ti I l I . Ill I: ! I l 1 1 G OVESI GLOVES! Cashmere Jerseys, Foster Hook Kids. Mousquetaires, Blacks, Tani, Grays. Also a nice line of White Sham ois Skin Gloves. . : . . HANDKERCHIEFS AND MUFFLERS ! Linen Embroidt red. Linen Scallops, Plain Hemstitched Silk, and Embroidered Silk lor Ladies and Gentlemen GOODS FOR FANCY WORK ! China Silks for Draperies, Stamped Linens, Gray Cov ers, Table Scarfs. &c, Zephyrs; Saxony Yarns, German town Wools, Embroiderinqr and .Knitting Silks. Wash Silks in all Shades. Also a full line ofgMILLINERY at Honest Prices. ' " MRS. S. I. GRIFFIN S. H IIclWGS x Co., . -ie Dealers in tern Richmond, S- H. Kawes&Go. DEALERS IN . GOA1 Richmond, Va. JOHN GASTON, Fash i b nal)le Ba rb e r , Nai-h'St., IV ILSON, N. C. Easy chairs, razors keen; Scissors sharp, lint-n clean, For a shave you pay a dinnf Only a uicklc to get a shine; Shampoo or hair iut Po:npado;ir You pay the sum of twenty cents, more "TOTICK. By virture of a decree of the Superior Court made in the civil action wherein Elizabeth Dixon, a'dmr of Icssc 1'.'' Dixon, was plaiutii';, and Elizabeth Williams and U tr,. Ann William's De fendants, 1 will'sc!! at the Court Ilonsr. door in Wilson on Satui'dav the 25th i day of Pebrtiary, 13.03, the fojlovving c!t- I scribed property :' One piece or parcel of land lyin;: and bcinjj siltnue i'n the ' county of Wilson, Toisnot Township,, adjoining the lands of Gray L. Williams, JJ. Batts, Sallie Faymer and others: Containing: one hundred, one and one- nalt acres, more or less. 1 Tekms: One third cash. "-Balance, ' due Dec, isi, 1.X04: ' F. A. WOODAKD. Commissioner. F. A. .t S. A. Woodard, Attorneys. 1VOTICK OF SALE. ;. -Li Under and by virture of a decree ' of the Superior Court of Wilson county. in the proceedin":' pending therein 111 1 wl.icli Simon Barnes tt. als arc pe-i- : tiouers, and - Priscilla Harnes Ft. Art' arc defendants, I shall, tin Monday ' M -1 n il , ,K iC II r . . . 1 . ..w.i ijin, iw,. sen nr ease, dv pul lic action, at the court liotisc ih.r in tlie town of Wilson N. C, the tract of land described hi the petition in said proceeding, situate in C township, vYilson county, N. C , bound ed 011 the North by the "lands of IVrrv Hooks, on the East by the! lands o'l" 1 etvr I.. Barnes, and IVnitiiah ll.-.m,- on the . South by the lands of IVter l' Barnes; and on th u-t-i l.. ih 1 ..,.1.. of Thomas Ba.ss,.containiris; fortv seven and one half acres, more or less' . F. A. DANIELS. mar-13 Com'missioner. Cheap pants at cost, at Young's. Lime, 1 1 , i to. til i I 1 1 1 .. .l aii A- V pic mi. Virginia, j ' J-C Assistant Cashier . HALES, Cashie AND, Twi a 1 c r i a 1 Square and Roanoke A ve., j cIk, ! Vv ilson countv. N. C. i!ii; is i drator of . late of on county, N. C. -this is to notiiv all perstins Jiaving claims - against the j estate of said deceased to exhibit ihem e ur.dersitrneil on or before tin. lay of January. jSo.t. or this nolire be plead in bar of their "recovery. persons indebted to said estate wiil ase make immediate ii ayment.- 1. ,.M- OWKNS, .AdWiin;stiatir. 1 Ins January i-Siii. i8pu 1-. IJKU'i ON, Atfy.. IF YOU WISH Mi an n PATRONISE . W. BATTS. . Everything y(u need 1 can ftirnish. , : , Imiv -your pr()visions and then if you want a first, i nip. oi uk:" uesi viiGKcr in town we f a:i In s nous misivthat too.. The f, A. C. Mountain Whiskey gallon. - f. Cash' o for- on! 1 :' wiyen fi iVrlptluc'.:. : aUt. kinds of cou;rirr ("jive rne 'ii ;o ii a trial and I your trade in nil , convince more foods t ami il:e li:iin( "tha: i .'oii ban artv man -In town for 1 1 1 .. ii:t-sney. . ' I loping" to receive all Irom you, 1 am Respecifuly, j NO. AY. BATTS. Tarboro- St., , Wilson, N. C. v ... 1IAVK VOI'U WASHING D-JNK AT 1 (.RKKNSIiORO 1 Steam Lamnlry. fyj I i. 'i'l-' i.ti rates 10 . , w ....... . .... immt s. Letive onb-r i ..i ai 1 r. Aiuiorsiiii s 1)1 ie - '1 t 1.M RS ' . t-1 mow rbrvV - - ""'f e,ie. tha; do lHit ia-1 Yii Jll.il- l.t'J U iTi.TI, r ..... E.-flA-si"i'''i 5 Uv. J:i!'l,U'-H tollow Uii.-L ( . . f -A. ' ' '' ! Warranted tor Flva Years. HIGH ARM OITLY f fSrsraL : ' Drop LsafjFaney Cover, Largv Draw era Uickel Eings, Tucker, SsfSer, Binder ! Four Widths cf Eemsiers. . HIGH AR MACHINE HAS A SELF-SETTING NEEDLE, ANO SELF-THnEAVSa SHUTTLE., Sent oh trial DelivcrcJ in your home free of freight charges. liuy only of Manufacturers. Save-Canvassers' Commissions. GET NEW MACHINES. Send' for a Machine with name of a business man as reference, and t-e will ship a trial Machine ar ouce.- Address for Circulars aad Testimonials. do-OpsMiVs j&Ivinjj MscMiis Co.' 9 S. Jivu St.. PriiU-aJuJw..9 I Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat- icnt business conducted tor Moderate Fees. Our Office is Opposite U. S. Patent Office , und we can secure patent in less time tutu iliuse remote xrom asnington. J Scud model, drawiusr.or rrtiofo., with dscrip Jtion. W'e advise, if patentable or not. free of cbarge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. 5' A Pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patents,' with sent ftce. Address, 'C-'A.-'SNOW&CO.! Opi. Patefit Office, Washington, D. C V TLANTIC COAST LINE WILMINGTON &W1 IT CNR. R AND BRANCHES. A N I) I I O RI N CE R A 1 D RCA D CONDENSED SCHEDULE TRAINS GOING SOUTH. I HATED Janiiaiy 'JU'iii, 2M c . . p i I'M r Ml P M A M ! , Aav( Vieldmt ... 1 :; 5 tVi 1 II ail Ac UdC'iy .Miuu:i 1 : j (t l ; 13 Siil Arrive Turboro.. J 2 3'. ' - I.eJve l4uibo.'o...-j 12 ' Lv Hcky Sftninl. Ieive Wils:. n Leavo Fclma I.v Fsyellevi'le.. Ar:ive bin itiiM. r r-a ' i Ml I 15' :j on i-Si . i; : i s 1(1 in it) i'.i;r V M : ti 4S 7 : H47 10 :15 1' M A M i 7 rs .i'-itKi 1 M Leave AVps-.-n ! i.iave tIolash .ro f.eave Matrriolia. .' Ac Wilmington...! :i at ii cm ; 1. M .: II :t5 1 i AMI TWAINS GOING .NORTH. DATED January 1st, IMW.i C e C 5 F, a A M 1 r, I'l A 51 II 4H I N I lis 1 M ! 7 t Yl :ai ! A M si mi 11 4!l V2 M Leave I'loreneo I.v Kayetteviil Jit ave .Si-iinn Arrive n ilson.. t " c"3 ; a m I Si Ml'., i u K! ;., P M (11 !':(.! 1(1 1!.'! 11 l.-i I'M 4 (XI f.40. ii fi'.l 7 4 I'M I.v Wilmbifrtffn,, . l-aye -Mirii-)i4.. beavo Ilnld.slKiro A ri ive VVilu,ji . . . I JO I . A M 1 io ; 2 :t" 'i AM 1 s-i.s P M 1 1 : 1 (K V M 7 4U 8 ;d I.eavi; Wilc-ii.i... A r- Uocltj; Mount., A rri vt- Tii rboro . . j Leave1. Tarliorri. ... P ,' J.v It. eky ?!:utit. Arrivo Welilen... 1 .v. ! litKJ f f ! "i r ii :r V M Trains on Scotland Neck i'.iane leave W'eldon 5:15 o m; Jialifax, . nit arrive Scotland NVck .6:2?; t" , J.-.-' yille, ::5-S "p ni:" Kiii-tiii i,xu ' ..i. lt- turniiii; leaves Kinstoiv j Grccn- vjiie, -. ti:22 a ni; arriving; at I lalil'ux n:cO a nr. Vt:it'on 11:20 a ni, 'daily, except Jnunday. I .., ? i rains 011 V a:;bin;'J.n branch leave C.ont '.Washingln. 720, a m,, arrives at 1 i'-r ,ar,1H-! 8 50 a m. Tarboro 9 501 tlurn mg Ita ts Tatboro 35 ' p. m, IV.rmcle j 7 35 p m, arrives Vv'ashin.srton 9 00 p ni, r ill . 'hilly exct pt Sunday. Conr.ecis with '! 1 , t rcips on Scotland Neck Branch. Train leaves Tarboro. via. Alhem.irlf. &'-K:ilcifth R. R.; daily, except Sunday, 5 40 p m, Snmlay 3.00 p m; arrive Ply-' ir.ouiNi o:.s J n tn, ;:2o"i) in. Ri-tnmiiw leayt-i. Ply month daily, except Sunday 5: jO .1 lit, Sunday iotOO a in- arrive i arl..fo 10:25.3 in, and 12:20 a 111. 1 ram err Midland N. XT. Branch leaves e.;h,.-iKio daily, except Smulav, feioo'a tn; ;k : ivc Smiibfield 7:30 a m. Rctnrn ck leaves Himlhhc-ld 8:00 a m; arrives b'.'idsi (no o:?o .-i ni r I ram -on Nasi-.ville Branch 'leaves iMxJ.y Blount 6:15 pin; arrives Nash yule 6:50 p in; - S!iin.oe, 7:15 p m. Kettn-.nn lcatcs' Spriifliope 8:00am; ;Yl?iu'1"'-. S:'35 h m; arriving at Rocky ioonnt 9:15 a m,. daily, except Sunday. I rani on f.atta P ranch Florence R R leaves I.atta 7 30 p m; artive Dunbar 040 p in. Keturriino leave Dunbar 6 00 a mv arrive La tta 7 15 a ni. e Daily except -Sunday. '. - Tr.-tin on Clinton. Branch leaves-JVar-saw for ;iiii!iii !a.ily,c.cc-.t .Sunday, at 6.00 p m, and 1 1:30 a in. Returning leaves Clinton at 8:20 a m, and. tio' p m, ...onnectin;' ai Warsaw with Nos. 4f, 40. ?3 ruuf 78. ; f J l.iiiv No 7S tua.kes close connection . Weldon fi,r aii poiTits" North, daily, all rait via. Kit hnitnid, and daily, e :e;t Sunday, Bay Line, also at R ky Mount daily except Sunday with Not folk and Carolina Railroad for Nor- ' tolk jmkI all points north via Norfolk IU11N F. DIVINE, ' e.enerr.1 Sup t. - 'Xr 'll' ut" -.anaer ;.- iCNEKSON, 1 rat aflic Manasrer. Call and Eee our Preminms. 1M f. 15 s:.o
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 23, 1893, edition 1
4
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