Newspapers / Eastern Courier (Hertford, N.C.) / Feb. 27, 1895, edition 1 / Page 6
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THE ONWARD fURCH of Consumption is stopped short by Dr. Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery, If you haven't waited beyord reason, there's complete re covery ar..d cure. Although by many believed to be incur- "sy, T Uj evidence of hundreds of living witnesses to the fact that, in all its earlier stages, con sumption is a curable disease. Not every case, but a large per .cent age of cases ; and we believe, fully Jo per cent are cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, even after the disease has progressed so far as to. induce rene.ited bleedines from the lungs, severe lingering, cough with copious expectoration (including tubercu lar matter), .great loss of flesh and extreme emaciation and weakness. Do you doubt that hundreds of such cases reported to us as cured by 44 Golden Med ical Discovery " were genuine cases of that dread and fatal disease ? You need not take our word for it. Thej- have, in nearly every instance, been so pionounced by the best and? most experienced home physicians, who" have no interest whatever in mis representing them, and who were often strongly .prejudiced, and advised against a trial of "Golden Medical ,-Discovery," but who have been forced to confess that it surpasses, in curative power over this fatal malad), all other medicines with which they are acquainted. I Nasty cod liver oil and its filthy "emulsions" and mixtures, had been tried in nearly all these cases and had either utterly failed to bene fit, or had only seemed to benefit a little for a short time. Extract of malt, whiskey, and various preparations of the hypophos phites had also been faithfully tried in vain. The photographs of a large number of lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal catarrh and kindred maladies, have been skillfully reproduced in a book of 160 pages which will be mailed to you, on re ceipt of address and six cents in stamps. You can then write those cured and learn their experience. AddressWoRi.n's DrsrRN sary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. The Greatest fledica! Discovery of the Age. KENEDY'S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, OF R0X8URY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common pimple. He has tried it In over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in " his possession over two hundred certifi cates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from tho . first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. Wnen the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, .like needles passing through them ; tho same with the Liver or Bowels. This i3 cause J by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Head the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will ca.ise squeamish feelings at first No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the be.t you can get, and enough of it Doso, one tablcspoonful in water at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. RELIGIOUS READING. T.OFE OT. THE CHUBCBY 'I'M AFA la a. rr of irifT vartr toucmng in me aneetion wmcn SHE WAS BLIND. A blindness comes to me cow and then.. I have it now. It is queer, I can see your eyes but not your nose. I can't read , because some of the letters are blurred; dark spots cover them; it is mighty uncomfortable. - I know all about it; it's DYSPEPSIA. Take one of these ; it will cure you ia ten minutes. What is it? A Rtpans Tabule. beautiful and the devout Israelites, in the purer eras of their history, entertained for their temple and church. As we find it expressed in the Psalms, or exem plified in the conduct of David and Asapb, Ezra and Nehemiah, a sentiment more ex alted or honorable or lovely, is hardly con ceivable. It was the strength of patriotism made beautiful by the loveliness of piety ; the fervor of family and national attachment hal lowed by devotion and the love of God. Three times in the year the tribes were sum moned to the enjoyment of these sccial and sacred festivities, and as the period for set ting out upon the pleasing errand drew nigh, they cried with one accord, 'T was glad when they said unto me, Let us go into the house of the Lord." And as they pressed from hill top to hill-top, and at length caught sight of the distant colums of the temple consecrated by so many affections, and the scene of so many marvel?, they gave utterance to their pious admiration "Beautiful for situation, the joy of the whole earth is Mount Zion, on the sides of the north, the city of . the great King. As the mountains are round about Je. rusalem, so the Lord is round about his peo ple from henceforth even forever." Beach ing the entrance of the Holy City, the vast multitude probably often reaching a million in number lifted up their voicrs in chorus, "Our feet are standing within thy gates O Jerusalem ! Jerusalem is builded as a city that is compact together, whither the tribes go up, the tribes of the Lord, unto the testimony of Israel, t give thanks unto the name of the Lordi For there are set thrones of judgment the thrones of the house of David. Pray for the peace of Jerusalem, for they shall prosper that love thee. Peace be within thy walls and prosperity within thy palaces. For my brethren and my compan ions' sake 1 will say, Peace be within thee. Because of the house of the. Lord our God, I will seek thy good." A goodly and noble af fection, worthy of the embalming in divine song which it has received, and honorable to the devoute Israelite that cherished it as hi9 life blood. There "was neither bigotry, exclu siveness or sectarianism in it : it was a -just reverence for an object worthy of the heart's most fervent admiration. The church is still the place of God's abode. As the home of alltheassociaticns and mem ories of his grace in Christ, and favor to our race, it is still as wbrthy of affection and zeal ous interest as eve;-, i There is piety and dig nity and moral beauty sti 1, in the "sentiment that reverses the church, and re-echoes the song of centuries,4- "I love thy kingdom, Lord, 'The house of thine abode." Though the splendors of the temple , have long ago become jdim and Jerusalem has been trodden under feet, there is still a house of God, a bhekinahj raying forth as clear a light and a communion as genuine and lovely as ever thrilled the heart of devotee or sa'nt of old. The church of the great company of believers the aggregation of all the pure good and excellent upon earth those in whom the image i,l Christ is found, and whose names are written in the paims of the Almighty's hand. It is a dinified,venerable admirable body, containing more real worth, more pure affection more blessed possessions, more glorious hopes and more honored re lationships than any community on earth. If anything is worthyof our love and rever ence in this world, it is the church that Christ gave himself for the place where God re cords his name The home of every pure de sire, every noble purpose and disinterested sentiment. The memories of the mattyrs and the faith and heroism of the fathers cluster around it. The wealth of a thousand hon ored associations enriches it. To it belonged Paul and Polycarp, Luther and Augustine, Calvin and Brainard, Edwards and Howard, and every otherreally bright name or sacred memory that adorns the annals of our race. This sentiment needs to be more cherished at the present day than it is. There is not only nothmg to be'ashamed of in a connec tion with the church, but everything in it to be desired and held in esteem. As God's creat agency for accomplishing his purposes of mercy towards tho world, tho church de serves the intelligent love of every good man capable of desiring the world's goods. As the communion oj all the excellent and worthy and God-fearing people on earth, it is wonhy of all the bare, the kind offices, the sacrifices and the affection we can bestow. To promote its peace, to increase its means of doing good, to impart to it dignity or in fluence, i3 to add to; the Only effective force from Winchester, surprised by the attack upon them of the enemy was quieted by the only man who had a plan, and who came down among them and brought victory out of defeat Whenever a man is without a plan, he is always the subject of a man who has a strong, steady purpose. So when God comes to human hearts and whispers, it Is well for that soul to ask if it is a wise plan, and then listen to the One whoso plan a: ways strengthens the soul of ?.ny man. 0. P. Gif ford. A THOUGHT F03 EVEBY. DAY. We eee not in this life the end of human ac tions their influence never dies. In ever widening circles it reaches beyond the grave. Death removes us from this to an eternal world. Time determines what shall be our condition in that world. Every morning when wo go fofih we lay the moulding hand at-our destiny, and every evening when we have done, we have left a deathlt ss impress upon our character. We touch not a wire but vibrates in eternity not a voice but reports at the throne of God. Let youth especially think of these things, and let every one remember that in the -world where character is in its formation state, it is a serious thing to think, to speak, to act The Mentor. One of tne sweetest passages in tho Bible is this one: "Underneath are the everlasting arms." It is not often preached from, per haps because it is felt to be so much richer and more touching than anything we minis ters can say about it. But what a vivid idea it gives of the divine support ! The first idea of infancy is of resting in arms which mater aal love never allows ta become weary. 3ick-room experiences confirm the impression when we have seen a feeble mother or sifter if ted from the bed of pain by the stronger Dries of the household. In the case of our heavenly father, the arms are felt, but not jeen. The invisible secret support comes to .he soul in its hour of weakness or . trouble ; !or God knoweth our feebleness, he remem bers that W6 ai e but dust T. L. Cuyler, D. D. ' Truth must be sought, and that with care ind diligence befoi we Cud it. Jewels do lot lie upon the surface of the earth; high ways are seldom paved with gold; what is most worth our finding calls for the greatest learcb. Stillingflf et. by which mankind enriched or saved. are to be reallv elevated. It is to co-operate with to do good in the m on the largest scale. church too warmly fare can be too doings, nor sympathy with its too lively. N. Y. Evangelist. God in the grandest of his purposes. It is pst effectual manner, and No man ever loved the no sacrifices for its wel- great ; no interest in its tria'.s, can be i THE GREAT ABCHITECT. You have no plan concerning this dead earth be-.eath our feet, but by and by there drops huo it a living seed ; the seed whispera to tho dead earth, and the earth has sense enough to surrender itself to the living seed: and tho seed catches bold of it and builds it up into a beautiful symmetry which it would not have obtained bad if not yielded, itself to the seed lhat had a plan. The architect has a plan in his busy brain ; it is the business of the raw material to yield itself to the archi tect that it may more and more rise to the beautiful symmetrical beauty expressing the thought of God. That which is planless must always yield to that which has a plan. Thai surging confused army of men that ran dowr TEMPERANCE. THE HABDEST SALOON TO CLOSE. A prominent temperance lecturer safd re cently: "I am opposed to the opening of sa loons on Sunday, but the hardest saloon to close is that between a man's nose and his chin. Some people err for venial, or almost lovable reasons of geniality. They 'only take a little' they say. But the little becomes much. There is an old German proverb that runs: 'When the wine is in the can, the wits are in the head; when the wine is in the head, the wits are in the can.' It is a fearful thing to see man, made in the sublime image, 'a little lower than the angela, a pray to wretched drunkenness, yet I don't believe it's hopeless. I believe in the doctrine of tem perance through and through, and that it can be the saving of us, if we don't turn to it only when we feel real bad with pneumonia." COLD WATES SOLDIERS. One of the surprising features of tha ele gant reception tendered to the new chief of Governor Morton's staff, General Edwin A. McAlpin, at Albany, N. Y., recently, wathe entire absence of stimulants among the bev erages. The - general brigade and th doughty warriors who thronged his drsvring rooms satisfied themselves with mineral water and coffee punch, which last is simply clear strong coffee, mollified with sugar and. diluted "with lemon juice. The ' precedent was an unusual one for a military man to establish, and has excited .quite as mnA ad miration as surprise. It was a good exam ple for officers to set their men. A drunken soldier should never be trusted with a gun, and a captain who drinks while on duty can not expect his men to remain sobr. Pica yune. SCIENTIFIC TEMPEKANCE TEACHIXO. Fifteen million children in the United States are now studying the effects of alcohol on the human system. Scientific temperance teaching has also been introduced Into Cana da, France, England, Germany, Norway, ' Sweden, Fvussia. Denmark, the Danish West Indies, Bulgaria. Turkey in Asia, India, Siam, China and Japan "The Child" s Health Primer" having been translated into Chinese by an American missionary Australia, New Zealand. Hawaiian Islands and South Africa should be included in the estimate; and every State and Territory of the firty subdivisions of the United States (fi S3 only excepted) now enjoy the a Ivantage of a law requiring in struction on this subject. Thanks to tho Women's Christian Temperance Unios. THET WEBE ALL TirSY. In the town of X (Victoria) I had occasion 'to go and see the Mayor. I found him tipsy. On leaving his presence I went to the office of the Town Clerk. He was tipsy. From there I went to call upon the director of the principal bank. He was tipsy. The pro prietor of tho hotel where I was staying was in bed, suffering from delirium tremens. The same night at my lecture the police had to eject from the front seats two indi viduals who; by their conduct, were prevent ing the audience from following me. One was a prominent person of the town, and the other was the worthy representative o:tb.e, district Pfttliajmat. Q'uy AN ALPENA MIRACLE. MRS. JAS. M. TODD, OF LOXU RAPIDS, DISCARDS HER CRUTCHES. j - In an Interview with a Reporter She Re- -views Her Experience and Tells the Real Cause of the Miracle. . (From the Argus, Alpena, Mich.) We nave long known Mrs. Jaa. M. Todd, of Long Rapids, Alpena Co., Mich. She has been a sad cripple. Many of her friends know the story of her recovery; for the bene-; fit of those who do not we j publish it to-day. Eight years ago she was taken with ner vous prostration, and in a jf3w months with muscular and inflammatory rheumatism. It affected her heart, then her1 head. Her feet became so swollen she could wear f nothing' on them; h?r' hand wero drawn all out of shape. Her oye3 were swollen 1 shut moro than half the tim3, her knee joints terribly swollen and for eighteen months she had to be held up to b a dressed. One limb became entirely helplegs and the skin was so dry and crackedthat it would bleed. During .; thesa eight ye&rs she' had ! been treated by a scored physicians, and has also spent much time at Ann Arbor under best medical advice. All said her trouble was brought on by hard work and that mediciho would not cure, and that rest was the only thing which would easo her. Ater going to live with her daugh ter she became entirely helpless and could not even raise her arms to cover herself at night. Th3 interesting part of the story fol lows in her own words: j "I was urged to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People and at last did so. in three days after I commenced taking Pink Pills I could sit up and dress myself, and after using them six weeksj I went home and commenced working. I continued taking the pills, until now I begin to forget my crutches, and can go up and down steps without aid. I am truly a living wonder walking out of doors without assistance. ; "Now, if I can say anything to induce those who have suffered, as I have,, to try Pink Pills, I shall gladly do so. If othefr like sufferers will try Pink Pills according tp directions, they will have reason to than: God for creating men who are able to con quer that terrible disease, rheumatism. have in my own neighborhood recommended Pink Pills for the after effects of la grippe, and weak women with impure blood, and with good results." ; Mrs. Todd is very strong in her faith in the curative powers of Pink Pills, -and says they have brought a poor, helpless cripple back to do her own milking, churning, wasliing. sew ing, knitting and in fact about all of her household duties, thanks ito Dr. Williams Pink Pills. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills i ments necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are for salV by all druggists, or may bo had by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, Nj Y., for 50c. i per box. or six boxes for $2. 50 j . contain all the ele- BELONGED TO DANIEL WEBSTER The Historic Yellow Wagon JTow Stands in a New Jersey Plain. Daniel "Webster's "old yellow wagon" now stands in a dreary spot on Pettis plain in Greenfield, Nj J. Jlf it could speak it could tell an interesting story. Once the family wagon of the great statesman, then to be finally sold for a bull terrier and allowed to stand on a dreary old plain, filled with snow iD winter and be used as the roosting place of turkeys, tells In a I single sentence 1 c,irVffriB DANIEL WEBSTER'S WAGON. some of the mutations' of fortune that have come to the old carriage. Notwithstanding the! hard luck that has come to it in its old age, it still re tains evidence that it was honestly and faithfully made, and is capable of doing still further service. It was made foi Daniel Webster somewhere in New Hampshire about 1828 or 1S30. It was taken to Marshfield when the great statesman was nt tho zpnith nf his now- er and reputation. It I was frequently used by Mr. Webster and members of his family. It was then that the name "yellow wagon" was given it, suppos edly because it was (painted yellovv. Years after Mr. Webster's death it was found stored away on some beams in an old shed. It was sold to an expressman and finally passed to the ownership of Henry Wood of Greenfield. ,
Eastern Courier (Hertford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 27, 1895, edition 1
6
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