Newspapers / Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.) / Nov. 10, 1890, edition 1 / Page 3
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WOTS SPECIFIC. A rane , skin disease , ICSUI moni a fow days M. H.-Wm.TF-t'ppcr llorlborii, -Md. pecific I was cured several vmn ntro of white swelling In ny leg, by Hie use of 8. 8. 8., and have laid no svmpioms of any return of the disease, Jlany prom inent physicians aitcndiil me and all failed, but 8 8. 8. did iliu work. VhVlt V KlIIKPATRirK, Johnson City, Ten, Treatise mi Hiooil Skin Disease mailed fine Swift Pu riFir Co.. Allnt.'H. Oil PROFESSIONAL CARDS. DR. J. H. WILLIAMS, OFFICE AND RESIDENCE. 53 HAYWOOD ST. HourH-io A. IW. In . M. Mir. W. Stuart Leech. HHcc Rom a and it. Mi-A'iv ItulliliiiK, luurH--lii n. m tu 1 p. m. iin-l to p. in Tdcpo .1- No. 7. McptlH lIH'll ROBERT 11ROUN, ARCHITECT AND ENGINEER. CONDUCTS MECHANICAL CONSTRUCTION. (.. Boa ST. lloiidry tllouk luiviiiiiain A. H. COHH, STti A iJG S1AP. 1 sCK. l.VA.M. HUI'.'K, .nni-7illl.n OKNTIST, rttict-. J 1 1 Lew it'ri. Snath Mttitl Itxtrtit lim; With K ' I'tlMl'U with i.tT I I Ultt'lK.IU ..".!. tul.V. ' .lltl ...,$l.'M' IHttl UpWad Sot of icclh Si.un. .Ret., k. t nfuvth .tfH.IHi. No iK'tirr mude. tin mntti-r v h u vnti pay. tS'iiinlnvtl-ift iuatantird. ;Ir. J, H. 'Cr.vwfort!, XOOtll .1 Ullll )'iMun Avium-. m m i in,.: lm. Hi-, N. I'. ! - ACTU-K I.IMITKM li' Till- Jic, Kr, TliroHl mid Komc. nil I II it ' I M. A. NEWLAND, Attorney at Uw. .M ARION, IS. C. NVVt priwrtire lu thv KHh nntl l'.'lli h-li lit-inntrict-H K.irih cinliiin and mi th mi iinmi' Court inl the FWr.il Cn.irt r tin Win tern I'Uiritt nt North Cnrolnm tu...Hdlni i-.n, V. l'AVimi.i. 1 tin . ("Ml W II..VJN. MATT'N V IONHS. Afthtvillc. N. v'. Will nr.. tk-titi tin-11til nn-I iJih lu-li-n iiliH-ta. nrl in the Siiiithk L'nurt 11 North Cumlinii. ant) In thr l-rtlrral c'muku t tin- nl-n IMtru't ol Ninth Liirultnii. kucr tt I nnk 't A .-.villt. ltK- a txsi:t Arcliiioci and Conti ticior rinn, Mimltli nthm nnI rntimnti-i fur nUhi'd. Al' work hi my lino cniiirai tcl mr, nd do chnraco lor tMuwin 01 v-nlmtatii riwanlrd nir. kfurrmt'ii hnl lin(r .. ii)c: Nu. 12 Hcmlry niiuk, .Viirdi Onutt II. H. RBHVH. P. II.., II. K. HMITH l.lt t .t iintitilH nuiuiinu. uwr Hnl v 'Mul' i stti . 'ntti'H V'lli I wilt extitK'U'tl wiilinul i-nitl. vUh Ihrm ViUL'4tl "ti-, ntil ill i(ir f Im-iMilntitr cni ,.,.il. rl Mill- P l:AMSA, l. P.H llvntal fy Over the Nlinnl Hunh !' Alu-viTv. Ittir mini Iiufl'lintf. KKl'Nmt, rt:i 1 h rl Mtf i. irt-7iM1 r MOUSES r iiirr Child & U55LNSI-M(...h Ta UFE Or liiuiuieHFr iV- Uf -HIIIWW1-- - "jl'IKK M!g"HIOTHiili miutnu i CHILD BRADFIELD REGULAT ML ir ml HARE BROTHERS, 17 South Main fttreet, - Have everything In the line of FRESH FAMILY GROCERIES, unit Mil them thvap and tU-llver ihi-m at tour home quU'k itv hou- In the elty Prmh veiretalih-i Imm the country every morning. A trial will how you what we iun do. tMttretlully, PVMt17flir M RU IIMoTltlfMM. THE ASMFVILLF. AfhovlfK. r. . l'. -. TTTHE BEST KNOWN REMEDY. "H.u.v." (innw G In 1 ( A lln v.. lllintti !,,. I'n'Fi-nW Hlrlntura, Cimtiihia no nerlil or Milininin milmdineea, nml In cnnriililiTil hwHiilely lui rii.l.-ia. In pn-erlliil li plivKlelnim nml riOnilinni1ei llV llniirirlMtM. Prion Ml. 0 Rnlil l.jr llrilHicUt. ltrwiinitif Huh. .lllnl,-. c-iiH-riii-m (vl,li..N.(l, a HUM MAI.Ii II V HAYIOK SMITH, AIHEVILLE, N. C Swifts JOURNEY TO NAZARETH. PR. TAI,!IA.Ii Blpif IMlOiVItVIO Where the Blue Which Hull NlitHUjrou Itetip iualllee" l.iisl Look HI Mount lonV'.rou.:i till, varv and the Mount or Olivet. BnooKUYN, ?iiv. . Toduy Dr. Tal mKe iiciudiud tlio Jwviintli,. of IiIh ., oourse of Horiiioini on bin reeeut totir in PaliMtine. An on previous SuudayH tlie seriniiii wiu pmoolied before two laiyo uiidienccn, In the morning It was preached, in the Academy of Music, in thin city, anil lit oinlit llr. Taliinun preached it iikqIii in the New York Academy of Music, which The Chris tian llenilil continues to rent for tluwe. services. DnrhiK the six ineetin thus fur held in New York, flO.UIH) people have endciivored to hear Dr. Tuhmute preach. Of thiw ,'10,000 have been ad mitted and til). (II II) have been turned away fur lack of accommodation. Fol lowing in the sermon from the text, "Ho I lifted up mine eyen the way toward the north" (Kzekiel viii, fit: At 1 o'clock on it PucciiiIht after noon through DaiiuiHciis gute wo are pausing nut of .Irriisaleiu for a journey northward. Ho! for Hetliel. wli.li its stairs, the bottom step of which wiu a stone pillow: and Jacob's well, with its Immortal eollotpty; and Xiiznrcth, with Its divine boy in his father's earpenter hop, and the most Klorious lake that ever rippled or Hushed Hl'io Quillet', M aolllra-. Tim lAku where Jttis IiivihI u to: and Damascus, with its cnxilii'd stnt ciUIihI NtraiKbt, and a hundred places charged and suri'liared with apostolic, evanKclistle, pmphetic, piitriaruhal, kingly and 'bristly reminiscences. In traveling along the mads of Pal estine I am impressed, n I coulil not otherwise have been, with the fact that Christ for the most part went aloot. We find him occasionally on n boat, and onoo riding in a triumphal pro cession, as it is sometimes called, al though it seems to me that the hosiui nan of the crowd oould not have made a ride on a stubborn, unimpressive and funny creature hkethat which pattered with him into JeniMileiii very much of a triumph. Hut we are nun Ik to un derstand that gi'iienillv he walked. How much that means only those know who have gone over the distance traversed by Christ. We are ncciistuiuol to rend that Bethany Is two miles from .leniNileiu. Well, any uiiui hi ordinary health can walk two miles without fati.-uc. Hut not more than one man out of a thou sand can walk from lli'tliauy to ,1cm- sali ui without eihiiu-iinii. Ir is over the .Mount of Olive tun) you must climb up among the i- iHiug stones and descend where exertion Is necessary to keep you from falling proslrate. I, who am accustomed to walk fifteen or twen ty miles without lassitude, tried mrt of this mad over the Mount of (Hives, and conless I would nut want to try it often such ileinauil itisw it make uixin ones physical energies. Yet Christ walked It twice a day in the morning from Bethany to Jerusalem, and in the even lug from Jerusalem to iicthaiiy. CIIHIST'H WALK Til NA.AUKTH. Likewise it seemed a small thing that Christ walked from Jerusalem to Naia- reth. But It will take us four days of hard horseback riding, sometimes on a trot and sometimes on a gallop, to do it this week. The way Is mountainous in the extreme. To those who went up to the Tip-Top house on Mount Wash ingtoii, beforo the railroad was laid, 1 will say that this journey from Jerusa lem to Nazareth Is like seven such American Journeys. Hit, all up and down and across and recrosslng Pales tine, Jesus walked. A hub rode. David rode. Holonion nsle. Herod nsle, Antony rode. But Jesus walked. Witli swollen ankles and sore muscles of the legs, and bruised heel and stiff Joints and panting lungs and faint bead, along the roads, and where there were no roads at nil, Jesus walked. We tried to get a new horse other tluui that on which we had ridden on the Journey to the Dead sea, for he had faults which our close acquaint ancesliip had ilevelois'd. But after some exiHTimiMitiiig witli other quod rupeds of that NjMi-ies, and lluding that all horses, like their riders, have faults. we concluded to clnswe a saddle on that beast whose faults we were most prepansl to pity or resist. We rode down through the valley and then up on Mount Scopus and, us our drago man tells us that this is the last oppor tunity we shall have of looking at Je rusalem, wo turn our horse s head to ward the city and take a long, sail and thrilling look at the religious capital of our planet. 'I bis is the most impress ive view of the most tremendous city of ail time. On and around this hill the armies of the crusaders at the Unit sight of the etty threw themselves on their faces in worship. Here most of the besieging armies encamped the night before open Ins; their volleys of death against Jeru salem. Our last look I Farewell, Mount Zlon, Mount Moriau, Mount of Olives, Mount Calvary! Will we never sea them again ( Never. The world Is so large and time is so short, and thers re so many tilings we have never seen at all, that we cannot afford to dupli cate visits or see anything more than onoe. Farewell, yonder tin-ones of gray rook, and the throe thousand years of architecture and battlefields. Fare well, sacred, sanguinary, triumphant, humiliated Jerusalem t Aoross this val ley of the Kedron with ray right band I throw tliee a kiss of vaiedlotory. Our last look, like onr first look, an agita tion of body, mind and soul Indescrib able WIIKN IHRAKI. WAS IN ANAIIUHT. And now, like Kuikiul in my text, 1 lilt up mine eyes the way toward tlie north. Sear hero was one of I In- worst tragedies of the ages mentioned In the Bible. A hospitable old man coining home at eventide from ills work in tlie II. -Ms llnils lw strangers, a husband mid wife, proposing to lodge In the street because no shelter is offered Iii-ii, and Invites them to come In and spend the night in his home. During the night tlie million or too ncigunor hood conspired together, and sur rounded tiie houss, and left tlio woman io disirstep, and the hus- bund, tribes, jf wojye voiuuui I fill of Into tw it tn I'Ul'l tribe, mid I lii fnrv of the nation Was roused, mid a peremptory demand was made for the surrender of the us-ii---In,, nud. tint demand refused, hi one day twonty'l tliousiuid pedphi Were lelt dead on the held and the next day eighteen thoii-aud. Wher ever our hoiw today plants his foot in ! thiise ancient times a corpse lav. and lim rowls weiM crossuil by red rivulet ol earwig-.: vim U'ullv ,Ju(.i i in Now wo puss on where seven youths were put to death and their bodies gibbeted or hung in chains, not for anything they had themselves done, but as a reparation for what their fa ther and grnuillii'hcr. Haul, hail done. Burial was denied th 'se youths from May until November. Hi.pab, the mother of two of these dead boys, ap points herself as sentinel to guanl the seven corpses from liouk of raven and tooth of wolf and paw of lion. She pitches a black tent on the ns-k close by the gibbets. ' Kipah by day sits on the ground in front of lier tent, and when a vulture liegins to lower out of the noonday sky seeking its prey among the gthls-ts Kir.pah rises, her long hair Hying hi tlio wind, and, swinging her urius wildly about, shoos away the bird of prey until It retreats to its eyrie. At night she rests under the shadow of her tent and sometimes falls into a drowsiness or half sleep. Hut the step of a Jackal among the dry leaves or the panting of a hyena arouses her, and witli the fury of a maniac she rushes out iisni the rock crying, "Away: Away: 'and then, ex ambling the gibbet to sec that thev still keep their burden, returns again to her tent till some swooping wing from the midnight sky or some growl itig monster on the rock again wakes her. TtIK lAtSK WA'I'I'II OF ItlPAH A mother watching hnr dead children through May, June, July, August, Hep tember and Octols-r: What a vigil! Painters have tried to put iijmiii canvas the scene, and t hey sueeee.ied in sketch lug the hawks hi tlie sky and the um thers crawling out from the Jungle, but they fail to give the wanness, the ear liestncss. tile siiM-ruatunil courage, tin '.ntinitc self sacrifice of lti.pah, till' mother. A mother in the quiet home watching by the casket of a dead child for one night evens the artist to his utmost; hut who is sulhVjcnt to put upon canvas a mother for six months of midnights giiitrdiuu' b-T w hole family, dead and gibbeted upon the moiiutniusf (io home, Ripnb! You must be awfully tired. You are sacrificing your reuMou and your life for those whom you can never bring back again to your bosom. As I say that from tin- darkest midnight of the century It hi li turns ii sm mo and cries: "How dare you tell me to go home .' I am a mother. I am not tired. You miu'lil ns well ex pect tiisl in get tin-d as for n mother to get tin-d. I cared for those boys when they lay on my breasi in infancy and 1 will not forsake tlieiu now that they are dead. Interrupt me not. There sisimiui eagle that I must drive buck with my agotiired cry. There is a panther I must beat back witli my club!" Do you know what that scene by our roadside in Pnliwtine makes me think of,' It is no unusual scene. Kight here in these three cities by the Ameri can sea coast there ure a thousand cases this moment worse than that. Mothers watching boy that the rum saliMin, that annex of hell, has gib beted hi a living death. Boys hung in chains of evil habit they cannot break. The father may go to sleep after wait ing until twelve o'clis'k at night for the ruined Isiy to come home and, giving it up, he uiay say: "Mother, come to bed ; there's no use sitting up any longer." Mm mother will not go to bed. It is out. o'clock in the morning. It is half post one. It is two o'uliK-k. It Is half-past two when lie comes stag gering through the bull. Do you say that young mail is yet alive? No; lie is divul. Dead to his father's entreaties. Dead to his moth ers prayers. Deod to the family altar where he was reared. Dead to all the noble ambitions that once inspired him. Twice ileud, inly a corpse of .what he once was. Ollds'tcd before (toil and man and nugels and devils. Chained In a death that will not loosen its oold grasp. His lather li asleep, His brothers are asleep, his sisters are asleep; but his mother is watching him, watching him In the night. After be has gone up to bed and fallen Into a dmnken sleep his mother will go up to his room and seo that ho is properly covered, and be fore she turns nut tlie light will put a kiss upon his bloated lips. "Motlior, why don't you go to bedr "Ahl" she says, "I cannot go to bed. I am Kis pab watching the slain 1" TIIK I-OLIT1CAL JACKAIA And what are the political parties of thlsoonuiry doing for such cases I They are taking care not to hurt tlie feelings of tlie jackals and buzzards that roost on the shelves of the grog shops and hi sit, nlsivn the dead. I utu often asked to what political party I belong, and I now declare my opinion of the siliiical parties today. Knch one is worse than the other, ami the only consolation in regard to thou is that they have putre Hed iiulil they have no morn siwer to rot. I b. thai comparatively tamescene iimmi which ltl.'pi.li lisil.ed ! She looked upon only seven of tlie slain, Amer ican mi it IiitIiih mI arid American w ife IiinmI this moment ure lisikiug iikiii seventy hi th j slain, uhmi seven hun dred oi the slain, upon seventy thou sand of the slain. Woe! wis'! woe! My only consolation on this subject Is that foreign capitalists arc buying up the American breweries. The present owners sec that the rimini of that busi ness is coming ns surely lis that iod is not dead. They are unloading upon foreign capitalists, and when we oan get these breweries Into the hands of people living on the other side of the sea our Hilltleiil parties will cease to be afraid of the liquor trallle, and at their '(inventions nominating presidential 'uudldatcs will put in their platform a plank as big as the biggest plunk of the biggest ocean steamer, saying: "Re sol veil unanimously that wt always have been and always will be opposed dead on inmi'iMiimsm. vBut, I pmst ipfsniss .ur; Aajfc jstewi, slid hef.1 w liHeSli hI11 of UWeroth, sld t I i it l,.svi.'asifcijoi-ilsh Mary missed the boy Jesus on tlie way from Jerusalem tn Nazareth, going home now from a great national fes tival. "Where Is my child, Jesus 'r" says Mary,, "liem is iny-cliiid, Jesus?" says Joseph! 'Among the" 'thousands that are returning from Jerusalem they thought that certainly he was walking on in the crowd. They described him, saying: "lie is 12 years old, and of Wlt,J'Yl)I(,xitV .' b,f)'' ' jA Intt child!" (irent excitement in all the crowd. Nothing so stirs folks as the news that a child is lost. 1 shall not forget the scene when, in a great out dcsir meeting, I , ,w,uy. uiyauhiiig,, and some one step'd on the plat form am sold that a child was lost. We went on with the religious service, but all our minds were on the lost child. After a whiles man brought on the platform a beautiful little tot that lisik ed like a piece of heaven dropM down, and said. "Hero is that child. And I forgot all that I was preaching about, and lifted the child to my slmul der ami said, "Here Is the lost child, and the mother will uomo and get her right away, or I will take her home and add her to my own bi-ood !" And some cried and some shouted, and amid all that crowd I Instantly detect cd the mother Rverylssly had to get out of her way or lo walked over. Hats were nothing and shoulders wen nothing and heads were nothing In her pathway, and I realized something o what must have been Mary's nuvicty when si io lost Jesus, and what her gladness when she found her bov tu tlie temple of Jerusalem, talking with these old ministers of religion, Shammiil, Hillel and Uetirah. THK ANSWKll TO I'HAYKH. I bear down on you tinlay with mighty comfort. Mary and Jost-pl soia, wucre is our .lesusr anil you say, "Where Is.loim? or where is !' n ryf or when- is t.inorgef" Wi should not wonder if yon found him after a while. Where I In the same place where Joseph and Mary found their boy In the temple. What do I mean by that ; I mean, you do your duty toward tied uud toward your oiiiia and you will hud him after a a while in the kingdom of Christ. Will you say, "I do not have any way of hi mienciug my ciiiiiir i answer you have the most tremendous line of inHuence open right before you, As you write a letter, and then are two or three routes by which it may go, but you want it to go th quickest ronte. and vou put on it "vi, Southampton." or "via Nan I'raneisco. or "via Marseilles," put on your wilie about your child, "via tlie throne Mod." How long will such n goo. WISH taKo to get to Its destination. Not quite as long as the millionth pari of u second. I will prove it. The promise is. "Before they cull I will mi swer. rhal menus at your first mo tlon toward such pniyerful exercise tin blessing will i-ome, aiitl if the prayer be made at It) o'clock at night it will lie i.uswcrcil five minutes la-fore ten, "Before they call 1 will answer." Well, yon sey, I am clear discour aged about my sou, and I am getting on In years, and I fear 1 will not live to see him converted. Perhaps not. Nev erthvlcaK I think you will fli.'d liiiu In the temple, tlie heavenly temple. There bas not been iui hour In heaven tlie last one hundred years when parent in glory had not had uiinniiuiisl to them the salvation of children whom they left in this world proUigiite. We nfteu have to say "I forgot," but hsl has never yet once said "1 forgot." It may Is' niter the gross of tliirtv sum iners have greenej tlie top of your grave liiat your son may be found in the earthly u-iuple. It may Ih fifty years from now when some morning the towers ore chiming the matins of tlie glorilled in heaven that yon ahull find him in Hie higher temple which has "no need of caudle or of sun, for the Lord (iod and the Lamb are tlie !ght thereof." Cheer up, (Tiristiuii father and moth erl Cheer up! Wliere Joseph and Mary found their boy you will Uud yours In tlie temple. Ton see, Uud could not alTord to do otherwise. One of the tilings he has positively promised In the Bible Is ttuvt he will answer earn est and believing prayer. Falling to do that he would wreck his own throne, and tlie foundations of his palace would give way, and tlie bank of heaven would suspend payment, and the dark word "repudiation" would be written acrtsw the sky, and the eternal govern uiimt would be disbanded and HimI himself would become an exile. Keep on wiui your prayer, and you will yet find your child in the temple, cither the temple here or the temple alsive. THK MIII0KH OVKHCOMK. Out on tlie western pmlrioe was a happy but Isolated home. Father, mother and child. By the sale of eat tie quite a large sum of money was one night in that cabin, and tlie father was away. A rohlx'r who bud heard of the money one night lisikcd in at the win dow, and tlie wife and mother of that home saw him anil she was helpless. Her child by In r side, she knelt down and prayed among other things for all pnsligijs who were wandering up and down the world. The roblier heard her prayer nml was overwhelmed and entered the cabin, and knelt beside ber and began to pray. Ho had come to rob that house, hut the prayer of that woman for prodigals reminded him of his mother nml her prayers Is-fore he becamo a vagnlmnil, nud from that hour he Is-gun a new life. Yenrs after that woman was In n city In a great au dience, am the orator who came on the platform and plead gloriously for righteousness and (iod was the man who many years before hud lisiked into tlie cabin on the pnilrlc ns a robber. The speaker and the nudltor Immedi ately reoogulzt-d each other. After so long a time a mothers prayers an swered. But we must hurry on. for the mule teers and baggage n n have iMien or dered to pilch our tents for to-night at Bethel. It Is already getting mi dark that we have to give up nil Idea of guiding tlie horses, and leave them to their own sagacity. We ride down amid mud cabins and Into ravines, wliero the Horses ' leii'p" InmV'PpllTlfo depth, rocks Iwlow ftcksTrts-lrtn-nfidcr ! rocks. Whoa! Whoa! We dismount in . this plW, irictioVaMo for't11iiv tlilrig's in Bible history, tiie two more pi'imil neiit,',a'theliliV,W'ill V-eiifimirv; where of! old tlr'illftdftin1eW:Wjil'ftjPJf,.ol,'sl dreaiM. TlieJ M:iideirlM"of' iriis ' l-'t'lln't'1 ThcologiK'il senlMiu'y tii'H ' I ls t '! ' of th 'ptfphers!" ' Hen'rtteipifraoil' were Htted for the 'liiiiiWrvd niid 'tliotsi- of us who ever lia'd' f!i atlvuijageviitf, suiih institutions will everlastingly be, gruteul;'aiid hi tl'ie'eatndiir of' sainls, iwluVh I read wlfh c.-pVcljd 'iifl'.rilon, are the doctors of divlhity who blessed mo with their euro. I thank find that from these theologl col sL'iniiiartrs.tVi :v know tioiiilug forth a miignilieent crop of young iiiinisf iN, who ure taking lie pulpits iu all (mils of tlie. laud. I hail their coming, utid tell these young brothers to , siake o(f the somnolence of centuries, and gel out from under tlio dusty shelves of theological discussions which have no practical bearing on this age, which needs to get rid of its sins and liavo it sorrows comforted. Many of our put pits are dying of humdrum. People do not go to church liecause thev ciiu not endure Hie t 'chiiicalities and pn round explanations of nothing, and sermons about the "eternal generation of the son," and I lie ililli rclice del ween sub-lapsiii'iiuii in uud supra l..psari.iii ism, and about who .Mclehisedeek wasn't. Then- ought to be as niuel dilleroiioe between the modes of pre scntuig truth now and in olden time as beH eeii a lightning express rail train anil a ciuml houb, Years a;-!- ' - :t up to tb" door of a factory in New . ...gland. On the out side ilisir I saw thu words, "No iidluit tance." I wem, hi and came to an other door over which were tlie word .o in nun i . i nee. in course I went ill, and ca' i a to the third door in scribed witii thu words, "No aiimil tain"-." lii:e!il;, cnti'ml t,jH f,,ini,l tlio people i,r ale making pins, beanti fill pins, it rial pins, and tiolhlng but pins. So over tin, outside door of many of the churches has been pme ticnlly writ leu tli.t wonls, "No admit tance.' Home have ("nered end have Come to the iuide thsir, ami found lln words, "No iiilmittaii"e." Hut. per sisting, tin-j liave come in.-nlii, and found us soiiielin.r out ourlitile nice tics of belief, punning out our liitie dif tennces ol theological sentiment making pins! THK Ulllll.lt l lto.M ICAIM'll TOIIU-AVKN Bllt IIIO-I llc:illgllislCii Was Uutlll'l for that f..n. as dii'iita which Jai had, his head on a collection of stones. ue nan no ip.hi.io in mis ns'Ky region ill Hiiding a rm-ky pillow. Then- Is hardly anything else but sti ne. Yet the pcojiic ni those lauds li,ieuway oi urncm! ineir ourer garuieiit mi overtiieir liei.. and nice, nml sm-li n pillow I suppose Jacob had under his head. The ; U.inl was u-i ,1 in the Hi ble story, and you Dial it w.ix not a pil low of stone, but of stones. I suooosc. so inai li one piovcil to tie or uiievi n urface he would (urn over hi tin night and t ' another sioun, for witli such a hard Ik-! Ii r he would often cliaugu in the iii.-hi. Weil, that night (Jot built in Jacob's dreum a long splendid ladder, the feet of it on eh her side of the tired pilgrim's pillow, and tlie top of ii morticed in thu si, v. And bright hiiiiii'i-lais came out from the castles of uutl'cr au l gold nud put their shiiiins f et on the shining rungs of the ladder, and they kept coming down and going up, a procession both ways. I suppose tlie bad wings, for tlie Biblo almost always reiHirts them as having wings, but this was a ladder on which they uwd hands and feet to en courage all those of us who have no wlng to climb and eneotir- :a t us to believe that I we will - at we have od will provide n w.r. i el if we will employ the hand in ! ; sit lie will furnish the ladder '. . j man, do not wait for wings. i ugeln folded theirs to show you . - re not necessary. Is't all the , il" who have hard pillows, bard f -i ' -:.:iess or mini for siverty or hard !"f p rsist- enee. know that a hard pillow Is Hie landing plm-e of angels. They seldom desneud to pillows of clilerdovll,. They seldom build dreams in the biaili of the one who slccis easy. The gn'iilc-l. iln'iitn of all lime was that of St. John, with hi- head on the ris ks of I'atinos. and in (hat vision he heard the seven trutus'lssouiided, and saw all the smip of heaven iu pns-es lull cherub,!1. M'lapluc, archiiugclic. rile next liiosl iiieuiorable and glorious Irciun was that of John Hiinvnn. his pillow the coll spine of the Hi sir ol Bedford Jnll, from which he saw the celestial city, and so many enierlng it he rrieil out in hisihuam. "1 wl.-h tnv self anion : them." TIIK lllll-.AMs OK OKMI S. The next most wonderful d renin was that of Washington sleeping on the ground nt Valley l'or;.T. his head on a white iilloWeiiM of snow, when lie saw l lie vision of a nation ennuicl patcd. Columbus slept on a weaver's pillow, but rose on the ladder let down until he could see a new hemisphere. Demoet henes slept on a cutter's pillow, but on the ladder let down arose to see the mighty as-s'inblagi's Unit wen- tn be swayed by bis oratory. A rl, Wright slept on a bar Iter's pillow, but went up thu ladder Mil be could Hi' nil Knglaiid quake with I he factories he set going. Akensiile slept on a butchers pillow, and tisik tile ladder up till lie saw other generations h 'ImmI by his scholarship. John Asliworth slept una issir man's pillow, bin look the ladder up until lie oould set his pirycrs and exertions bringing thousands of the de-lilule in Knglaiid to sid vat Ion and heaven Nearly nil those who lire today great hi mendiaiellse. In sla'e.iuiuisblp, In law, III medicine, hi ail. !i literature, were mice at the f. sit of Hie ladder, and In their ImivIiimiiI had a pillow hard ns Jacob's. They who are Isiru at the top of tlie ladder apt to spend their lives in coming down, while those who, ore at the fisit, nud their head on ij,,,,, .., isiwiner, ii i nev iiavniue riaut Kind oi i (Imam, iiniabuint sum to rise. I notice that those angels, either In coming down or going upon Jacob's ladder, tixik It rung by rung. They did not leap to thu bottom nor Jump to the top. tki yon urn to rise. Faith for Infants 'CutarlaltsowitnadaptcdtorhlMmthst I recommend itiusiiiwricirtoanypriMcriptlua kuown tu im.." 11. A. Aiiciikb, M. D., 111 So. Oxturd St., Uruotljru, N. T. sent 3D added to faith, good deed to good deed, industry to industry, consecra tion to consecration, until you reach tlio top, rung by rung, (irudual going up from n block of granite, to pillar of throne. That night at Bethel 1 stood in front of my tent and looked up, and the heavens wero full of ludders, first a ladder of clouds, then a ladder of stars, and all up and down the heavens wero angels of beauty, angels of con solation, angels of (iod, ascending nud descending. "Sun-ly Ciod Is in this place," said Jacob, "and 1 knew it not. nut to-mglit (iod is in this place and I know it ! (Vhen Tliibr was sick, ws cato lisr CnstoriA. When she wus a ChiM, shn cried for 1'untoria. When Hhs tss'ainp Miss, sin cIiiiir to Cniitorla W'hi'u she had Children, she gave them Csstori A l ll III TcxtlM WrMl'Sl Mv vtisi is ot'long si.niding; lias bid' :kd iii.'iiiv pii sicinns; have tried everv ci-ii,-il v I could Inai- of. I, ut Hrndfiiiil ''i, I'Vnink- Kigiilnioi is all thai relieved inc. Wiiti- In '.-idl'vlil Kcgiilnior Companv. Vila! la. ('.a. I' i particulars. Itv ill; 'lniyL.'ls WANT COLUMN. II' 1.V7 i:n. IV tn 1.". t-ll net hi mil il l-ii-;iiiu j I' ll! it 1. mi i-eninni'iiliril Virini'ii ' in irivalt titmi y nr Ivfrl tn iniii ju Miiiitl nnlary. U'l ills, ' j if ssir: iv rv-icii. I MilH-ri , Vii, ; Il ly. UK ( !niiM. -t tin. T. o 'ri t -' Hi- wan I l at I.I HKK K WtiKKS. UtiHiia. N. C hl.l-: t nnv sil.'ti 7 pi pte in have llu-ii nnlen tit Wjtlianm S.- i1., . .-.7 !' I v,n"f, or tiii'itiL.' ntiil ii-. amriilk- I'll. mis, l 'rutins, Arc., hy I'rt.l' J. lliki-i I.IIW ax i t:h Winn), MiKhe-tl i rU'f paid fur 'J." tuAitv riUnmiiid, lr Micii Apiil tn oei l' (Itm SWANNANttA llnTi:!.. YAX. ' ! AT (INCH A tea- h.i ol' r.tvv:nit I - tie eitv mhiiiil M it In i l.trnnt.l iiciireil Inr 'tlie nur Nil. r M'i iimntli. Ailtrtn f. r. ci. ax tov. i-'ifltt Kui't City 8 h-initt. .".ST, S'th'.WWf OK STnU-X. I ' -ST. I sf I ii Snnril.i. al the iK-ar chat-. n ifulil Ill-mil 1 1 i.iiititella. K'aiii if I'eliiliiel to ! tmv mil. li ill S '! CK I tin H itun'tiv litnieh i 'I kry. eulitaininK I. 1 ket nud nih.iM l.t.ivi ai Til Knl'I'ICI.. stindiit ttttrninnit ii lirnwti ovcrcont, Ih men I' p"t au-li'lai ln -mp. A IiImt - re v 'i il ill U p ul in vLur. tiiK tn ii.i Uftat THIS i-l-I ICU. ft ,R ,l on,- inlk'll i-nw nml ,an- In- f. r i.trnvi-ill'riini mr lot ii i 'iik ti,i- , li-trio n-unril lor lirtr r.-l tn or -nii,iiicoloii ns t.i linn wln ir- 1,-i'U's II. U II. 1. 1 VMSIIN III, ll.n T iHU rofxiK ?nl'Nll. An ttlllun or 11.TM-. ui'h tin l iiuniiiul of l i niii v in ii ti'tnr e-m ' nvr nine hv iriii'U prnH-itv nml prilni Inrtliit adv i- IM 'IH III . Vlv N 1 .;. A Her Im piit'Uil no leil ' w Ic'i 1m imd linu , X-. Hi lA I'TUN A li. A TTI1N riiiN, IIHKSI. O .v NI KS. have lor unit' tie lilnur cart, niie top liiiiuv a'd one two ma. el link lininhcil huh-, nii'fil'le P r tie cf two lnrnr-all nv in h-iiI the tnHnwinu ptieeH. i'mikc tlie , in on, i n. !7.". nn. t II I TTFHw N, nnitldll Cor lltllfide and Hunt HtR. ViA' A7:.T. nM HHST. A nice llllfnru'dhr I rnoin In lliiule hliick. App'v p. V. I.. Il.il.l. IK k ION, iiiiviitH- rtiKit P l oeit , J?lW KNT Two tile. Iv tlltllthr.i ro niw. wl Imr with. out tumid. Tempi nn-ntitii'li'. Applv to I'. li, MITi IIKI I., inn Nihil JH pint m Ave, rnM Kt NT. , vrrv dm rtil'le r , Until' li-d, with I Mail tr el, linih 'on , c iirt nhhln hvi Apply al l'1TtN A Minn V li. Hut' I' rnatil lliihi r it - ot U t ni, I in v?. t k HV.sr. Two niilii-1 inli' bill" I ll'Hl t' II will liiml ill 57 mnilh .Mai Hite i. minni mntim.iitiliiiliU- fur Pp'' at :i.J HAll.uV hT HL'T. I l'M k(- put'. Ilnl tnll. IOM KliT. I'l'Hll-'llill ll'MIl!' lit Mil l.o. ntlmi. All i'"i"'" I linn o" fipp!. iitP'ii Ap- V I'riTT N AVKNTIi .-, J.-.,i . t- iirh 'ti rrpldi'Ucc. tint tllr rrian i ltv M'rtliimii fivMi-r fund, hnudi tm-tv nnd Mr,lt,iol. iomi-p ronil, tin.lils, tlti'tv n ml ' ;';v:,l",rnr',,.v,,,,w,:,",';l,i,, . 1 """'i "w" ''-li l.i-s-v Inti-i unr an : her. Il',llll. llNMIS-illll slv.ii 1st nn,, viimn. n i of Nnvi-mls r. i ouia-r oi-inoins in snniner unlv would iiuiiir H'r,ii,iicui nrrniunniriil with puny h-'Mngn wlnlrr irshuntv. Aililn m miiu.iu 1-, o. luck iiox oaa, 117 r iin r si -i -i nnrfl and Children' I fl-.-iefl, a- : p.fl n.-ii I :i ' ri't .no! Cantoris cures Colic, Conjtlnstlpn, .' " " ' ' I Hiir Kiuuiiu-li, T)lari-i(i-ii. tnu-iililnVi,'- "'"7 ?' ' ,t I " "Tf1 ima "1;u,tf' 'Wliuuui'iajuili.usiiii.'iilaitlon. , , ., , -c. Tus Cssrii'S CosrAHY, 17 Marrsy Strert, N. T. iIAew! v To AdvvrllHerH-' .,, , To insure change of advertisements ' ; running on regular contract, copy must ' 1 1 lie Iwoiik-il in bv 10 o'clock n. in. 1 Nothing Succeeds ' LIKE SUCCESS. The n-jiNuti KAIAM'K Iffif Miciiimi; kii.i.i-k in I j?f tin' iiMiMt wntldrrt'ul Hird- iciiif, is liriiiiiMt It ha never tntlid in any in Miimr, tn ititittt'r whnt tlu-1 incline, I'rtitn I.ICI-l-'thV tn the PintpU'M ilihcfinc known tothchu if ii n t.v-t tn. The Hi'iciitifle men of tn-dtiy e I ii I m and pi n vi tlutt every tlia en He in Fi.ADiM's mm uim- JxterMiiiifilei the Mii-rntirN nnd driven them -nit n' the ny-it ni, mill when that in done .on cannot luive nn m he or pain. No nit ler what tlie .li, Jim, wlu-tlKT a nimplc ensw i if Maliiriii l- vei iir a tmiihinritlon of din. . fifir., we cure ! hem ntl nt the mime time, an vr treat all Oitsvi.ticri eiinntitiitioi ally. tliitiu, Ciiiiit.pt tii, Littunh, Hi on v hit if, Klfjtttitnitom. Kiilnvy mid Liver Pismst; Chills umi 7-Vrtr, J'citwh Tnml.U s, in nil its hirws, mid. in Uict, vvt -v IHnvunv kin n to the Ihitmtti Srtvtn, BEWARE OF FRAUDULENT IMITATIONS. Si-e that nur Trmie-Mnrk :iHpeart -in each juii. iiimc nn ahove) Stml fur liiMik 'MtNtnry of the Microbe Killer." uivcti ii way hv J. Hm CiUANT, Ph. Sole Atftnt, AnheviHc. N. C. nnvl 7 di v tu In un ! SUFFEKCHS OF YOUTHFUL ERSORS, , I. tut ntiinhiioi!. e':rly dectty, etc., etc.. enn e ; .lire a hnir.e treat.ic trie, hv nddr i nf a fel- Utvnr, c w. l.i:i:K. ! (. Mi.t M, kuunokc. Va. LUi at: Alton R.K. I'ASTIiST Kol'l K TO uhus c;ty and the west, AnheviMe to Kiinsn Cttv In :t7 hur. A-luviile tn itier in ft I hour-. Aoiu viile tn San h'riuii-iMco, Cnlifornln. and P.ri!atK., i itgiiii, j r. itavM. Solid VrntiiitiWd TrnitiHSt. I.onln to Kan ni Citv. Kc1it:iti(- eli.iir ear Irve. Imh lull tin. n n, ulinn cull uu or write to B. A. Newlanil, tih'trirt Plissfni-cr Am-nt, Xn. Ill t",n,,ii ,,,., A-h. lllc. N.t. l.i-IIMii. li-s;. 1 V. .. Chlcini... III. TLANTiC CHAM l.l.Mi On line icu-r tills d.-up the fnlliHln i-hrd. ili w.ll Im- i nn nvtr I's'-Cliiniiao Invl.lim." No. r.a i.i iu-,-1, coitniiiiiii- a. im p. m Airivi-s nt Clinrl. stnll ll.rto p. ni. .No. fit! l.t lives Chioli'stiin 7.HI , ,n, Arilvi-s all.', liitnliln 11. ftfi a. m. Connrilini: with trains to ami from Mil Hants on H i- l hm Vtti'. Cnhiinhlii ft Au, nisla mi.t tolc.uililu n l.rnuvilli! Kuilrusds. Ilj,ilv KllllV T. M. ItMliKiuiN. t'.in. Pass. At. JA.1II-.S 1 HANK, -I1RAI.KS IK - familyghccerisa:;o provisions Acmt for Nriiij i" Wih Main k 'rn.d-n Mills. Anherillc, N. C. ESTEY. FISCHER. The WorM I'utii.Hiw, itiieiUalerf, unrxcelleil, iltiraiile and hrautitul I'lSCillCiil PIANO . Are n-i-einni, ii.l.-d In- the lt artists. C'nitic " nml rxntnlnt our kuihIs hrlbrv liuylng ,r1iw.'''' wh.n- at No. .. ration avrnuc. Tunlns ' nnil ri-iifiltinit n spi-clallv. 0. f WILLIAMS t CO:. Ji.li ilt.X'K 4-n ml FRESH Ctl.XSTANTI.V ON llANp.',',, ' , ' -i -, WtCATCR TO FAMILY TRADE j. is.uki;d & c6.y ' n i, Io i,l i No. i Court iii'iva il vr jsrrs A Ef MANHOOD ""! : -..ItsftKlrsriluna V.rl,oc,r.iur.i. rvu.M.tK," " It It,. IU.,.1, 11,'W n din-' Trri-.llH IMltTMInl M..M. Cd' J tiiori'i,y. 1-t.E n..aiir,it4-.uisi. leV TO WEAK MEH .JllW 1,1'a frnflVrlna fpnm lha mitm,ui nt vUut,,i .' Hrl 1 ssml s T.lunVil. irsatiNiiiilin-4H,tMuM5' linu is pMtlciiltrafnrunmariin, Fnclstt-akani -A, a in .nl.nJI.i mmllr.l anrk . 3,i,,7n5TLuiiV.".-5 " man who Is Darrons and MmUM AddiaJ 1,111 ' IM. HI I1M I U.C.S I .1 ' Jil . I S01A.IN.W1, "'I'1 ,('T7oTT,-o, hit '! Oil I lias lil. ,1 no -at i 1 1 H , ilil
Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 10, 1890, edition 1
3
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