Newspapers / Charlotte Messenger (Charlotte, N.C.) / Nov. 24, 1888, edition 1 / Page 4
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REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN I> I TINE’S SUNDAY SERMON. TiXT: “TVo cubits and a half wax the length of it. and a cubit and a half the breadth of it, and a cubit and a half the height of it.”— Exodus xxxvii, 1. Look at it—the sacred ibest of tfco an cients. It was nltont five foot long, three feet wide and tlireo feet high. It was within and out of puro gold. <in the top of it stood two nugels facin'! each other with outspiead wings. In that ■acred box was the law, and there were in it a great many precious stones. With that box went the fate of the nation. Carried in front of the host, the w aters of the Jordan parted. Divinely charged, cost ly, precious, momentous box. No unholy banns might lay ho d of it. It was called the ark of the covenant. But you will under stand it was a box, the most precious bos of the ages. Where is it now? (loneforever. Not a crypt of church or museum of the world has a fragment of it. But is not this nation God’s oho en f>cople! Have we not passed through the Ke I tsea? Have we not been lei with a pillar of tire by night? Has this nation no aid: of the cove nant? Yes. the ballot box, the sacri d chest of the nation, the ark of the American cove nant. In it is the law, in it is the divine and the human will, in it is the fate of the nation. Carried in front of our host again and nga-n the waters of national trouble have jiurtod. Mighty ark of the covenant, the American ballot box! It is a very old box. In Athens, long before the art of printing, the people dropped pebbles into it to give ex pression to their sentiments. Afier that beans were dropped into it—a white bean for the affirmative, a black lean for the nega tive. After that, when they wished to vote a man out of citizenship,they would write his name upon a shell and drop that into the U»x. O’Connfell and Grote and Golden and Ma caulay and Gladstone fought grtut battles in the introduction of the ballot boxes in Eng land, and to-day it is one of the fustn- s -s of that nation. It is one of the corner stones of our government. It is older than the consti tution. In it is our national safety. Tell me what will be tlie fate of the American b illot box, the ark of the Ams rican covenant, and I will tell you what will lie the fate oi this nation. Give the people once a year, or once in four-years, an opporturiityjto express their political sentiments, and you practically avoid insurrection and revolution. Either give them the ballot or they will take the sword. Without thy ballot box there can be no free republican institutions. Mil ton visiting in Italy noticed that on the sides of Vesuvius gardeners and farmers were at work while the voleano was in eruption, and he asked them if they were -afe. “Y. s," said the farmers and the gardeners, “it is safe; all the danger is before the eruption; then comes earthquake and terror, but ju-t as soon as the volcano begins to pour fort h lava we all feel at rest’’ It is the suppression of political sentiment, the suppression of public opinion, that makes moral earth quake and national e&rlliqunke. Lot pub lic opinion pour forth, and that gives satisfaction, and that gives |><-uee, and that gives permanency to good govern ment. Ami yet, though the ballot i.ox is the sacred chest and the ark of the American covenant, you know as w II a. 1 know it hns its sworn antagonists, and 1 fTopose this morning, in God's name and as a Christian patriot, to set before you the names of some of the sworn enemies of this sacred che*:, t he ark of the American covenant, the ballot box. First, I remark, ignorance is a mighty foe. Other things being equal, the more intelli gence a man has the better he is qualified to exercise the right of suffrage. You have been ten, fifteen, twenty, thirty years study ing American institulinns; you nave can vassed all the great «|iiestions about tariff and home rule and all the educational quest ions, and everything in Americen politics you are well acquainted with. You consider your self competent to cast a vote next Tuesday, and you are confident. You will take your position in the line of electors, you will wait for your turn to come, thy judge of election will announce your name, you will cast your vote and pass out. Well done. But right behind you thcr • will come a man who cannot spell the name of comp troller, or attorney or mayor. He cannot write, or if he can write he uses a small “i” for the personal pronoun. lie could not tell on which side of the Allegheny mountains Ohio is. Educated canary birds, educated horses know more than h«/ He will cast his vote and it will balance your vote. His ig norance is as mighty a< your intollicence. That Is not right. All men of fair min t will acknowledge that that is not rigid. I nti! :x man can read the Declaration of Inlepr-n 1- eoco and the constitution of the I mt *l States, and calculate the interest on the American debt, and know the difference be tween a Republican form of government and a monarchy or a despot.siu, he is unlit to ex ercise the right of suffrage at any ballot box between Key West and Alaska. In 1872 in England there were 2.000,000 children who ought to have been in’school. There were only 1,333,(MK), in other words, about 50 per cent., and of the 50 per cent, not more than 5 per cent, got anything worthy the name of an education Now, take that foreign ignorance and add ittoou> American ignorance, and there will he in November thousands and thousands of jxoplewho are BO more qualified to exercise the right of suf frage than to lecture on astronomy. How are these things to be corrected? By laws of compulsory education, well executed. Igo in for a law whicb.after giving fair warning for a few years, shall make ignorance t* crime. There is no excuse for ignorant* on these subjects in this land.wlicre the common schools make knowledge as free as the fresh air of heaven. 1 would have a lioard of ex amination seated beside the officers of regis tration, and let them decide whether tin* men who come up to vote have any capacity to be monarch* in a land where we are all man archs. One of the most awful foes of the American ballot Ijox to-day is popular ignor •nee. Educate the people, give them an op portunity to know and understand what they da If they will not take the educa tion. deny them the vote. Another powerful enemy of this sacred chest, the ark of the American covenant, the ballot box. is Kpurious voting. In JN'O, in Brooklyn, then- were a thousand lining re corded of persons who bad no residence here, and if there were a thousand attempt' d fraudulent totes in the b**st«ity on the con tinent, what may we expe l in cities not so fortunate? What a grand thing is the law or registration! Without it elections in this *®®ntry would 1*» a farce There must Ihi a Scrutiny on this subject. Tin- Jaw mus*. have keenest twist for the neck of repeaters i*>rno tbing more than slight fine and short im prisonment. It is an attempt at the un-an-tst ation of the Republic when a man attempts put in a spurious vote. In olden tirn*** when men laid unholy hands on Die nrk of the covenant they dropped down dead. Wit ness (Txzah. And when men attempt, to put unholy hands «m the Aroeri an ballot Ih>x, the ark of the American covenant, they do wry# extermination Another powerful foe of tins sacred chest Is intimidation. Corporations sometime* domnnd that their emnloree vote in this an 1 that way. It is AUfufly done. It is not positively in so many words ilemanded. but the employe un derstands be will be frozen out of th estab lishment unless he votes as tl*e firm do. So Ton can go into villa# k whore there «ro «•*- teblishmerita with hundreds and thousands of employe*, and having found out th poli ties of the head men In the factory, you < an tell which way the election h going' Vow. that is damnable If in «nv pre met in t:»o Unite! Htiles a min • fiMi|o{ vot* m !»•» i pleases, there is «»•«••*lung . ifu’l. ur<w, -. How do you treat that mpo» • differently from wlint y u l<»' »' h v • *i m/ tou do not Msrlfni with the riu.ht of » j frags. But yon cell him m o y<..ip p-iv-Pv office, and you find fault with h ■ vvm rm { ffer • while you Ml Mm them •««.#, I or an mint, or a niece,or a nephew that must have that poe'tion. You do not. say it is be cause he voted this or that way, but he knows nnd Gikl knows it is. If that man has given to you in hard work nn equivalent for the wages you pay him, you Imve no right to ask anything else of him. He sold you his work; he did not sell you his fiolitica] or religious principles. But you know as well as I do there is sometimes on that sacred chest, the ark of the American covenant, a shadow cor porate or monopolistic. Another powerful foe of that sacred chest, the ark of the American covenant, the ballot box, is bribery. Ycrv often it. is not. money that bribes, but it. is office. “You make me President and I’ll unite you a Cabinet officer; you in ike me Governor and I’ll make you Surveyor-Gen eral; you make me Mayor and I’ll put you on the Water Board; you give mo position and was given away threo months befor the elec tion. Two Jong lines of worm fence, one worm fence reaching to Albany and the other to Washington, and there a great many citizens astride the fence, nnd they are equally poised, and they are waiting to see on which side there is most emolument, and on this side they get down. But bribery kicks both ways. It kicks the man that of fers it and the man that takes it. Bribery PI give you position.” That is the form of ; vino often nnd often in these great cities. I no not say it is in our city, hut you know again and again throughout the land these have been the forms of bribe offered. So it M ofien the case that, bv the time a man comes to an office to which ho has been elected he is from the crmvn of head to the sole of foot mortgaged with pledges, and the man who go s to Albany or to Washington to get an office is applying for some position wbio* . .-.lav you will admit to be one of the might iest I'o«*s of tho American ballot box. Another great enemy of that, sacred chest is defamation of character. Can you find out from the newspapers when two men are running for office which is the best? How oft-n in the autumnal elections the good man is denounced and the bad man applauded, so tliat you can come sometimes to no just opinion as to who is the best man, nnd there are hundreds and thousands of electors who go up to vote so utterly befogged they know not what they do. Is not that a fearful in fluence to be brought upon the ballot box of this country? it has been so ever since the foundation of this Government. Defamation! It is the cm so of the Ameri can ballot box. Just as soon ns in the great cities a man is put up for office he is made the target. The fact that In* is up is pritna facia evidence that he must Le brought down. His public life nnd his private life are scruti nized, uud nil the electric lights are turned on. How often it is that men have gone down under such things. In every autumnal election the air is filled with carrion crows scenting carcasses. Caw! Caw! Caw! There are newspapers in the United .States that in the great auiumnui elections take wild license lor liberty. They are filled with caluniy. The editorial columns of such papers reek with it; their columns are slurb d with it. There are newspapers in the United States which in the great popu lar elections breakfast and dine and sup on indecency. They wallow in it. Swine like tho m>ro. They give more for one quill full of it than a whole hogshead of decent pro duct. There are in these great autumnal elections men sitting in editorial chairs who writ, with a quill, not plucked from the stu pid goose or tho sublime eagle, but from a turkey buzzard! Ghouls! Ghouls! They tip tho city sewer into their editorial ink stands. Defamation oi character is one of the curses of tho American ballot box to-day. In your great presidential elections who can teil from what he reads who is the man he ought to vote for? Bad men sometimes ap plauded, good men denounced. Another powerful foe of the sacred chest, the ark of the American covenant, tho bal lot Ik»x. is the rowdy and drunken caucus. The ballot box does not give any choice to a man when the nominations are made in the back part of a grogg< ry. When the elector comes up he has to choose between two evils. In some of the cities men have come to the ballot liox to vote, and have found both names such a scaly, greasy and stenchful crew they hail no choice. You say vote for somebody outside. Tlr n they throw away their vote. Christian men of New Yojrk and Brooklyn, honorable men. patriotic men, go nnd take possession of the caucuses. First having saturated your pocket handkerchiefs with cologne or some other disinfectant, go down to the caucus and take posses sion of it in tho name of the Lord God Almighty and the American people, though after you < oino back you should Imve to hang your hat nnd coat on a line in the bock yard for ventilation. Now, how are these tilings to bo remedied? Borne say by a property qualification. They say that alter a man gets a certain amount of property—a certain amount of real estate —he is financially interested in good govern ment, and ho becomes cautious and conserva tive 1 reply, a property qualification would shut off from tho ballot box a great many of the l**sfc men in the land. Literary men are almost always jKior- A pen is a good imple ment to make the world hett*r, but it is a very poor implement, to get a livelihood ordi narily. I have known score* of literary men who never owned a foot of ground and never will own a foot of ground until they get und?r it. I’ro lessors of colleges, teachers of schools, editors of news; aj*ors, ministers of religion, qualified in every possible way to vote, yet no worldly success. There has been many a man who has not had a house on earth who will have a mansion in heaven. There are many who through accidents ot fortune have come to great success while they are profound in their stupidity, os pro found m their stupidity os a man of large fortune with whom 1 was crossing the ocean, who told tno he was going to see th» dykes of Scotland! When a member of my family asked a lady on her return from Europe if she had seen Mont Blauc, she replied: “Well, really, 1 don’t know; is that in Europe!” Ignorance by the square foot. Property qualification will not do. The only way these evils will l<e eradicated will bo by more thorough legal defense of the ballot box and a morn thorough moralization and Christianization of the people. That ark of the covenant was carried into captivity to Kirjath-jearim, but one day the people hooked oxen to a cart, and they put tuh ark on the cart, nnu the cart wus taken to ./erusaleiu the ark of the covenant coming with the snouting and thanksgiving of the people. And though the American ballot box, the ark of the American covenant, our sacred chest, has l*e n carried again and again into captivity by fraud and iniquity and spurious voting, I believe it will be brought back yet by prayer and by < hiistiaii consecration, and will be set down in the mid-d, of the temple of Christian patriotism. Whose responsibility ? ours and mine. You have not only a vote, you have a prayer. The prayer may be mightier than the vote. Oh, as citi/en s of this Ix-autiful city, and of this Bti»t“, nnd of this nation, let us do our whole duty. We cannot live under any other form of government thau that which God has given us in this country. The stars on our flag are not the stars of a thick ening in ',lit, but the stars sprinkled amid the bars of morning cloud. We arc goiug to have one government on this entire conti nent. l>-t the despotism* of Asia keep their feet On the Pacific coast ami let the tyrannies of Europe keep their feet off the Atlantic coast. We are going to have one government Mexico will follow Texas into the i nlon, and Christianity and civili zation will stand side by side in the halls of the Monte/muo*. And if not in our day, I b n in the day of our children, Yuca tan and Central America will come in do minion, w idle on the north Canada will be ours, not by conquest—oh, no, American and i nglisfiswords may never c ash blades— but we will woo our fair neighbor of the North, and then England wdl say to Canada: “You ore old enough for the marriage day,” and t. i«n, turning, will say: “Giant of the West, \take your brib*.” An I then from Baffin’s layto t -e farm-'on there will Im one gov * i imi'Mit tind-T mis with one destiny—a fr.-, moiLpofed. Am ricaifc cont’.ient Gmtsavotlio city qf Brooklyn! < <f ti ?ayft Lh oi Now York! Owl Hrt tin Vumi .. !i ‘ 1 HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. Good War to Cook Tomato*, A good RDd unusual way to cook to matoes is the following: Peel and aliet eight tomatoes. Put them in a coarse cloth and press most of the juice into s bowl. Save the juice. Chop the ten* toes and mix in two tablespoonfufa m melted butter. Stir up well, put ia t buttered mold, fit on the top, set n s pot of boiling water, and keep at a fast boil for one hour. When done turn exst on a flat dish and pour over it the fei» lowing source: Heat the tomato juice, stir in a tablespoonful of butter rolled i» flour, season with pepper, sugar and salt, and boil one minute. _____ i Sanitary Bedrooms. “Woolen carpets are filthy,” says Dr. John Crowell in Popular Science Neirt, “and it the good housewife does not be lieve it, let her look across the room when tho sun is shining through it, and see the dust constantly rising. This process goes on night and day, and Is unavo d able when the floor is encumbered with the woolen covering.” Hard floors, without cracks or seams for dust and vermin, painted walls, simple furnish ings, because of dust and “germs,” an open fireplace, sunshine for disinfecting nnd drying, no draperies to catch and hold dust,the iron or brass bedstead and hair mattress—these constitute the es- { sentials of a sanitary sleeping-room. The old-fashioned wash-stand is recom mended as far more desirable than set bowls with hot and cold water, as these are rarely trapped properly, aud so be come sources of pollution to the bed room.—Law of Life. \ Suggestion tor Old Boxes. Do mothers and nurses know how much enjoyment and fun can be had out of different styles of boxes that we so ruthlessly destroy! If all the members of the family will save the boxes they will find, some stormy day when children are forced to remain indoors, that a trip to the attic (where the boxes can be kept) will afford a great deal of amuse ment. The little girls of the family will select a good-sized box for a new kind of doll’s housp, and mamma or nurse ran easily teach them how to cut cardboard furniture to furnish this little house. If it is summer time, make a tiny house out of nn old cardboard box, and paste on to it dried moss, then set it on a shingle and have a little gravel path leading up to the door. On one side have a bit of looking-glass fur a pond, and some branches of evergreen boughs for trees. You can add whatever elsu you like to make it look like an old fashioned farm house. '1 his simple toy has kept little girls happy for whole summers. The boys can use the boxes for thea tres, Punch and J udy and many different kinds of shows. The baby will be amused with an old tin box, some beans or pebbles put inside, and the outsidecovered with some bright colored flannel after the cover is firmly fastened. This will make a good rattle, and if a string be tied to the box it can be drawn on the floor, or be sus pended from the chandelier and swung if the baby is too young to walk. All these simple thugs have been he’ps to many mothers and nurses on rainy days, when the expensive toys of the nursery havo grown old and the lit tle children are longing for something new. When you go away from home for the summer put some boxes and bright col- 1 ored papers and cloths into your trunk; you will find ihem useful and very ac ceptable when the children cannot hare their own nursery or the toys it contains. —New York Graphic. Things Worth Knowing. I. That fish may be sealed much easier by dipping into boiling water about a minute. a. That fish may as well be scaled if desired before packing down in salt, though in that case do not scald them. a. bait fish are quickest and best freshened by soaking in sour milk. 4. Thutmilk which is turned or changed may be sweetened or rendered tit for use again by stirring in a little soda. 5. That salt will curdle new milk, hence in preparing milk porridge, gravies, etc., the salt should not be added until the dish is prepared. (i. That fresh meat, after beginning to sour, will sweeten if placed out of doors in the cool of night. 7. That clear boiling water will re move tea stains and many fruit stains. Pour the water through the stain and thus prevent it spreading over the fabric. H. That ripe tomatoes will remove ink and other stains from white cloth; also from tho hands. !). That a tablespoonful of turpentine boiled with your white clothes will aid in the whitening process. 10. That boiled starch is much im proved by the addition of a little sperm or a little salt, or a little gum arabic dissolved. 11. That beoswax and salt will make your rusty flat irons as clean and smooth as glass. Tie a li m> of wax in a bag and keep it for that purpose. When the irons arc hot, rub them first with the wax rag, then scour with a paper or cloth sprinkled wilh salt. 12. That blue ointment and kerosens mixed in equal proportions and applied to the bedsteads ia an unfailing bedbug remedy, aud that a coat of whitewash is ditto for the walls of a log house. 13. That kerosene will soften boots or shoes that have been hardened by water and render them as pliable oa new. 14. That kerosene will make tin tea kettles as bright as new. Saturate a woolen rag and rub with it. It will nlan remove stains from the clean varnished furniture. 15. That cool rainwater and soda will remove machine grease from washable fabrics. Holler Explosion by Kimlergartei Process. The force of steam boiler explosion can be illustrated by getting a tunc mad by a tinsmith, say half an inch in diame ter, and closed at oue end. lut apfec ice the size of a cherry, or half a tea spoonful of water, into the tube am cork the open end tightly. Suspend th tube over a flame so that the ice melt and is converted into steam. The corl will be forced nut with a loud explosion Candle bomba held over a flame will ex plods In a similar manner. Water wil produce 1700 times it* volume of lie*ol —fWwior. Millionaire Flood’s Gold, j Flood’s estate is valued by good , judges at $15,000,000. At the height -of the bonanza excitement, when sharos on the leading mines brought $1)00 and paid S6O a month dividend, Flood’s wealth was rated st $40,000,000, but I then came the great shrinkage in Corn stock values, which cut down the for -of all the mining millionaires fully one-half, and Flood’s losses by tho Nevada Bank wheat deal were fully $5,- 000,000. The property will probably be equally divided between the wife, son and daughter. The latter was always Flood’s favorite, and at one time she possessed in her own right $6,000,000 I in real estate and Government bonds. She gave much of this tp ljolp her father out of his embarrassment a year ago, but still owns about $2,000,0U0. Young Flood isshrewd, but has no stability,and the old man never trusted him in any Urge deals. —san Francisco Alta. Youngest Wearer of Penal Stripes. Probably the youngest convict in tho United States is now in the Stute prison in Nashville, Teun. His name is Can Jordan and he was sent fiom Memphis. He is less than eleven years old and is j small for his age. He was convicted of having stolen $5 and ventenced to three years in the penitentiary. When the first night of his incarceration came the guard did not lock him in a solitary cell, but allowed him to lie on n b'anket by the stove, where he sobbed himself to sleep. He has a widowed mother in Memphis. Frsmtke District Attorney or\v'cslrhrslcr Co., New York. White Plains, N. Y., April 10th, 18S6. I have received many letters in reference to roy testimonial, lately published, com mending Allcock's Porous Plasters. I cannot spare the time to answer them in writing, therefore would again say, through the press, that I have found Allcock’s Po rous Plasters invaluable as chest protect ors anrl shields against coughs and colds, furthermore, I havo found Allcouk s Plam tkrs unequaled for pains in hide, back and cheßt: - Nelson H. Baker. A report comes from I.os Angeles. Cal., of the discovery of an ancient tem ple on San Cleminto Island, just oil thq coast Conventional “.Vlonoii” ltesolatlons. herenn , The Monon Route (L. N. A. & C Ry. Co.) desires to make it known to the world at large that it forms the double con necting link of Pullman tourist travel Ik»- tween the winter cities of Florida and the summer resorts of the Northwest; and Whereas, Its “rapid transit” system is un surpassed, its elegant Pullman Buffet Sleep er and Chair car service between Chicago and Louisville, Indianapolis aud Cincinnati unequalled; and Whereas. Its rates are as low as the lc west : then be it Resolved, That in the event of starting on a trip it is good policy to consult with E. O. McCormick, Gen’l Pass. Agent Monon Route, Tho United States is the only civilized country in which in recent years there has been a large increase in the produc tion of wool. No opium in Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Cures where other remedies fail. 25c. At a recent sale ot ttnort-nom cattle ( atCres«o. lowa, forty-eight head brought 1 $5585, which was au average of $147 for j the cows, and for the bulls sold, $ JP..SU. , A Radical Care far Epileptic Fits. To the Editor—Please inform your renders that I have a positive remedy for the above j named disease which I warrant to cure the ! worst cased. Ho strong is my faith in its vir tues that I will send freo a sample bottle and 1 valuable treatise to any sufferer who will give me his P.O. and Express address. Respy, i H. G. ROOT, M. C.. 183 Pearl St., New York. | ■ "• ". «-4r EtY’B Catad nl4 npciMDt.ugjjTAßHH I was surprise oflj iS ? £'AMB^'SS after using Ely* E9 «H 1 Cream Halm (worn months to find fh<-| fHAYFEVER'p £A right nostril. trhtuAMhs AyV was closed for 3 L~m yea rs was open an d free as the other. 1 ’ lli fed eon/ thankful.- It. 11. Cressengham u.SA.I *<l7s-18?A St., UAVIPFIfFrs Brooklyn, MiA%a m f_ bvbß A particle is applied into each nostril and is aggreeable. Price 50 cents at Druggists; by mail, registered, flO cents. ELY BROTHERS, ftfi Warren Ht., New York. WE.c,V“ m It has permanently cured TiioirsANns of casea pronounced by doctors liofsj lesa. If you have premonitory symp toms, such aa Cough, Difficulty of Breathing, Ac. t don’t delay, but uso PISO’S CURE foyi CONSUMPTION immediately. By Druggists. 25 cents. WW amt WSlWgaf To »ny New Sub»cribor who v.ill send us this Slip, with - AOO CA name and P. 0. address and 51.75 .n Money Order, txpre,. 11l *2.50 lilustratec PAPER FOR FREE TO JAN, 1,1889, WEEKLY ONLY $1.75 'uottxVthi VuPPUMrNfVIho C >R T BMn 0 M i 'list and** *’* SIIHHIPIT!RTIC l FOUR HOLIDAY NUMBERS, 1 tt,. f* Thar ’ i “ , c ivl 'iK Chrlstmoe Now Year’s-Mater. , How M-hold of Adrrnter., TraV. ’ i MtW SSUK. SpeHmew CnpN uml Colored Aouioatieemcnf free, Plw*e mention this ftuUieatwn. Atkin m PAM IG s>j, 4j Temple Place, Boston, Mass. An Old Reliable Firm. One of the most pleasant and satisfactory experiences in businesn’is the evidence of con fidence occasionally t-bowii by the public to a long-established firm. The John P. Lovell Arms Co., 147 Washington Street, received a few days ego, from u man in Tennessee, of whom they had no previous knowledge, a reg istered letter containing u Fire Hundred Dol lar bill, with an order for sixty-six dollars worth of goods, rtqu* stiug the change to l»e returned. A careful ex limitation of the bill proved its value and the order was filled as desired. The sender lived in a remoto local ity where the Postofflce win his only means of communication ami the Dili re.erred to was his most conv nie nt sum to enclose. It would Hot lit' remarkable if lids firm, who havo been 4d«*i» n h*l with his : '*al Dock Square for ri[,h >t” - dd thus win the o l# Kng landjpetpl ■ • Maut their surcteU in \.n n out of the southn rupu. . throughout the Unfted Kt no who has seen their advert i» men. if. Rifles, Ilevolv ers, Cutlery, Hpomn-g Gujuds nnd Fishing Tackle in tins paper t an feci perfectly safe in sending them auy amount of money and be sure to get the fuU value in return, or if un satisfactory in any way, their money refund ed. Allot our remit*;s wonting good* in theirlme will th* well to semi hots, in statujiK for their large 10) 1*0:40 illustrated catalogue. A crust 01 stile bread will remove spots from wall paper. With groans anti sighs, dal dizzied eyes, He seeks the couch and down lie lies; Nausea olid faintness in him risf*, Brow-ra'driny pains assail him. Hick-headache! But we long comes case, His stomach settles into peace, Within his heml tl.c t robbings cense— Pierce’s Pellets never tail him! N r will they fail any one in such a dire predicament. To tin < r '- the bilious, and the constipri'ed. th y arealike “u friend in need and a friend indeed.” .American evaporated apples are largely sold in Germany Consumption. Srrnfulr, (Ccmithl Debility, WiiNltr;; Discnwr* of Chililivii. Chronic Coughs and Bronchitis, cun be cured by the use of Scott.’* Emulsion <if Pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypopbosplnli**. Prominent physicians us tit tn l testify to its great value. Flense rend the following: “1 used Scott's Emul.-Un foran obstinate Cough with Hemoirhagc, Ix>ss of appetite, Etna ciation. HUepb .‘-sues&c. AF of these have now hft, and I believe your Emulsion has sav'd a case of well i’«vFloj>td Consumption. —T. J Findley, M. l>., Lone Star, Texas. The favorite lint in hair is one shads lighter than bronze. til. d llilbll*. Habitual centalput l n glvi s rise to piles and to other dingeruus and painful affections, all 1 of winch may be cur.; tby tho us lof HAM BURG FIGS, a fruit i.ixative which even • children like. 'cuts. Dos., cue Fig. Mack Drug Co., N, Y, It is claimed that cigarraakers and tobacco stripper: are never attacked by yellow fever or smulljyox. Don't hawk, hawk, blow spit uni disgust everybody with y< iir offensive breath, but use Dr. Sage’s Catim u Remedy and end it. A Rtw ian S'gh—Sib» rta. U acts at the same time ON I H THE NERVES, THE LIVER, . H <!■ THE BOWELS, ■ and the KIDNEYS 1 ■ 1 This combined action gives it won- O d J derful power to cure all diseases. 11 1 Why Are We Sick? H P| remain weakened and irritated, and ■■ or torpid, and j tis nous humors are therefore forced iiko the blood that I I | should be expelled naturally. U p., V r-o j CELERY ‘ A S ~ ' | COMPOUND Q WILL CURE BILIOUSNESS. PILES, W COKSTIPATIOK. XJDNEY COM PLAINTS. URINARY DISEASES, I I i. FEMALE Wr.AXNES3,BHEUKA- Li TISM. NEURALGIA. AND ALL tjM H NERVOUS DISORDERS, U Why suffer Bilious P tin-? ant! Aches? I CTB Why tormented with Fi'.ei, Ccnfctipst’onl R [HR Whj frightened over Disordered Kidneys? EjZ Why enduro nervou* or ii*.k headache*? I WELLS. RICHARDSON A CO.,Prcprietcrr, p catarrh! where nil other reme.Uc* f.iH. Our j met hurt «.r direct itiirt ct> tlnnou* medication of the whole r«*>[<inv ■ lory system covet ,im a f iv«m*l,fe CuiitiM oi climate- No ('Bioko «»r dlnaifreeable ortor. ILL! r i , VH I * KOOK giving full I l.imie li u-.freeupon COKXCH S KSE CATARRH CURS State ML, < bleutfo, 11L hk- ' *■ J y> |i n PIW! BBINOILiCKnii mmnMwaPOroaL w 4 HOI k«o )t$ « X* /C Y f »v \•. >1 >'**• • •••». Th* new roMMHi. Kijriunta • » oum m*i. . i 4uH f\ \ A • »»<*!•. hew.re »l Imtutlwaa. hex.* *.n.ti.« wuh.wt V , A 1 * |Fre».j** trade mark. m«*irai** C»t*l»f«* Ire*. A. /. T*w*r, Imioo, Mm* ammsvzL. ..... - ..• Horn? flogs, like certain spice trtMi arc valued only for their bark. A Modrat. Henulllve Woman often shrinks from consulting a pbysfefan about functional derangement, and prefers t»suffer in silence. This may be ami*inlren feeling, but in is one which is largely preva lent. To all such women we would say that one of the most skillful physidausof the Jay who has had a vast experience in curing dis eases peculiar to women, has prepared «t remedy which is of inestimable aid to them. We refer to Dr Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip tion. This is the only remedy for woman’s peculiar weaknesses and ailments, sol l by druggists, under a positive guarantee from the manufacturer, that it will give wit isfao tion in every case or money refunded. Hea guarantee printed on Imttle wrapjier. The Crown Prince of Austria i* •• gave l upon a history of tlie Auxirf monarchy. latnrrh fared. A clergyman, after years of suffering from that loathsome disesfe, Catarrh, and vainly trying every known remedy, at last found a prescription which completely cured hu I wived him from death. Any sufferer irom this dreadful disease sending a self-addr«-»sd stamnsd envelope to Prof. J. A. Lawr noo, 8R Warren Bt., N. Y. will receive the r cipe free of charge Two old women recently fought Vs the streets of .Guadalajara, .Mexico, oval the love of a mhn eighty ycais of If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Thotm* ‘son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at2sc. per BEST AND CHEAPEST ORANGE LAND IN THE WORLD. For I’nrttcularN uiul Descriptive CircsisV nddres* (lie BARTON LAND AND WATER CO., LOS AM: ELKS, f A L. CONSUMPTION I Imve a-po«itiTf > rvmcdy for the .iboro <I»-.%•*•; l>» k u c thoummviof rvn of tiiu worst kinrt :ind of lon* o * tdifur haw been ennui. Hostron* t*my faith in its •.Tlt u yth>iS i will wnrt two bott'e* together with a %a‘aiiMe treatise on this diwaso to nnv xtiff-»r<;r. Give Expr.-w* nnd I*. O. mlilnn*. T. A. SLOCUM. M. C„ 181 Pearl ,-L W. Y >** ■tely low. Agents well paid. free. Mention this Paper. OSGOO 7 * 4 ‘"^OKPSOIT.' EincbrntciL K PEERLESS DYES SoujßfDßi t” ‘nr. CfiDAJC f We want to buy several in this 1«» aliijr. raHßs i Curtis a Wkioh . broad «». N 4 ARE YOU MARRIED t should join cictv. which 1 ays its member- t 94,00a :.t map ri:*-. finulars Ir.i-. N. L K DOW* Mi..n r s.M’iiiTV. ) <>x SlilTatßßHpola, ...a, _ AP to nn a day. Sainplcn worth |Uj cut? 21m 1 .innt not umler the home's feeL « rih‘ Vr lirewutei Itciu Holder Co., UoUcj . MlrA ODIIIA UAD?T Painlessly cured in 1 to • ■ I'll* nflOil Pays. Sanitarium or •loots r’catrn-nl. Trial Free. No Cure. No Pa\ Tit Mow wo UrtneilT ('«»., I.» Fwvett-. In«U linue ST I'D V. lkKik-VoepiiiK.nuslnej-t* 'orm% HUInC Penmanship. Ar:tlino »!c. hhort-lia:i n thorotiKbly taii’/ht 1»v M\lL. Cin.nl r- tt hrySHt’fc College, 499 Maiß Bt, bt’lT»; -. N. t ni ■,). Dili* Cxeat English GeatooH Diair S rlllSa Kheumatic Rer auj. Oval liox, ;i I: round 14 Fills. # Ml W I .We at home and make more money working ftn "ttkew liUanrt »» anvthlnreu** in the wor*d KHIkV CW'tMS fufct . Tcrxua VUKB. AJ.lrea., T*t’H 4 l-O-. Augtw*» 4l*w% A Rents wAnted. $1 un hour. r«rt new-article*. f 'i.r|'a»K* Aaii'l sainpleK frw. C. K. Marshall, l/ockpor. X. % DETECTIVES Wanted In evf*r» Ccontv. Shrewd men to»rt under inau • ittonS In our Secret :-U-rvi.:.-. Kxperienee n<.t - ,«fr«» UnutnSß Itpfectlrc Kurcnn C 0.41 Arc*4s.Ch2b -*0 " CAUTION Beware of Fraud, u my name and tin prim are (damped on the bottom of all my ad\-iUa«4 ■hoes before leavm? the factory, which i tote-rs the wearers again*’. Idelt prices and inferioi . o«eic If s dealer offers W. L. Dourlhm shoes • riw duceti price, or says he has theru w ithout ni< name aud price sumpeu on tlie hoUooi, put him uusii m ■ fraud. e ___ $3 SHOE. GENTLKX BW. Ttw only wlf ».! SKAMI.I SS Sim. . tn-llr. NO TACKS or WAX Tllltl I» to L'irt the easy ns hand-m wed aii<| \ It.^ NOT ltll*. W. 1.. IIOIKILAS 94 SHOE, the . find and only lim l-scwcd welt «4 r!w.e. t.,ua cus tom-mad. shoe* 1 ostinfr from to \V. 1.. DOIIOI.AS 53.5 U I*OI.ICE K OR. Railroad Men and Letter Can !t-r<* all se*> t*.» m. Smooth In-Id- a* n Hand-Sewed hhue. No x u or Wax Tin- ;nl to hurt tlie fe«’». TV. L. IHH’GI.AS S'i.ROSHOE h un- «|ieS for hewvy we -r. |{. *t < nlf for the prl . .W. 1.. limiGLAS B«.»A Hold* HUi MANS SIMM. U tin- l»e*t In tie woi ’ r>4 P* l * oiipht to wear a man *♦-«#. \>. 1.. itocci.AH s; shim; iou ; ova Is thebe-' > I Mm«* In *ho world. \V. L. fiuKjUM *1.75 YOUTH’S S thm* (flvi *-mj|| Hoys • chance lo «t r UN bot shoe* in :‘h* wofld. All mad" > 1 Co’.-Tess. Mutton and ?.S4-e. ih>. tlUblrfis?»US!* w L - uovl
Charlotte Messenger (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 24, 1888, edition 1
4
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