Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / March 12, 1891, edition 1 / Page 4
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NEW ADVERTISEMENTS CLIN TOX DRUG " STORE ! KSTABL1SHED J3 YUJtl COBKUFf LITERATURE DR. -TALMAGE PREACHES A RINGING SERMON 'ON A CRYING EVIL. Young tSfl. Arm ReShs MentaUj, MorlIr Physically Infected toy TcralciOB 3Boobs -2Kie ITronj Slant Br IUiiiteiaIIow U J) It. New Yokk. liarwh & Tne Poisons need medicine only when ihoy :ue sick and thir jives in d-jn-vor, then they wjint i) very bebt lh.it -;ui be had. Only uch is kept ; tUfllMXTox Dkl- Stoke; there can be found also a full line of Pat ent Medicines, Jential Oils I'r-fiuiu-rv, Trusses Knlih Tooth Brushes Medicinal Whiskey, Horse and Cattle Powders and the best remedies for all di-ea and ail nutit of' Horses Mule, Cattle, ' Hogs. Poultry, etc. Lee's Backache Plasters' In North Carolina's muiii' 'iliinf1. Their wninrr!M virtues fadeless t Kxert an iiitliicnc' sulilime In mininterinx to human ill ; And many u imnnlon our way, Lee Plaster doth allay. You can ure a bad cne i, J tack- aclie quicker with one. of lice's Plas ters than by tiny and aifter the back:tei.f can still wear the . i: , r u, plication, ri d. vvith coni fer! Ibr a month i longer. This j'laMer is a groat discovery, and it is hard to find any pain or ache that will i.ot yield to it. Prepared only '.V T. J. hVAi. Drucrsist. f.KK'S WAKT SI'l.ririC. A certain cure lot warts on horses and mules in Judge L. T.Boykin, Hie Kditorof Tiik Caucasian, dipt. Cornelius Paruick, Mnj. W. Lucius Faison. Messrs. A. l'crd Johnson, llei ry Ih Taison, Win. II. Faisoti, Hon. IJ.isc(inil) Nicholson jmd .hun dreds of others m Sampson and ad joining counties and throughout 1'asteiu Carolina will certify. Sold only by T. J. LEE, Druggist. VOUMS IX JIOIWKS. Lee's Worm Specific never fails to expel worms from horses and mules. Warranted in every ca.se. Sold only by T. J. LEE, Druggist. IIOIIKK AND CATTIjK I'OWDKUS. ' We ode- under this head ti;e best Condition Powders in the market. They are prepared by the leading Drug House of the United states, fro.ii the formula of the most dis tinguished Veterinary Surgeon liv ing. They are excellent appetizers a general alterative and tonic, and can bo relied upon & a remedy for all diseases of domestic animals. They are composed of Licorice-Hoot, Juniper Iterries, Flaxseed, Gentian, (linger, Iron ami Antimony. Sold only by T. J. LEE, Druggist. OTIIEIi SI'KC'rAIriES. 4-year Old Medicinal W us- Purc law. A Safe and CortainCorn Cure. Sure Cure for Scratches in Horses. Sure Cure for Eczema in Cuttle and Horses. Safe and Sure Cure for Lice on Stock. Specific for Staggers in Horses and Hogs. Sure Cure for Chicken Cholera. Scientific remedies for all discass and ailments of Horses, Mules, Hogs, t.-.tttle, Pouttry and Dogs. T- J. LEE, Druggist. Cctober 9th, 1C0(. -tf im i a n LAO ST Last store, on the corner of the ot the row North of Courthouse, is the place for . . lilt AN DIES, WHISKIES, It EE 11, HUM, ALE, GIN, " , WINES ami Liquors of all kind. Special attention to our ' Olovor Club Rye Whiskey! Tlio Ucst and Purest Whiskey In Town. Absolutely pure and guaranteed to bo better than any of the so-callqd 'Medicinal Whiskies" in the place. of perrucloti! literature fortaied the sub ject ot Dr. Talxaago's cermon today, which was the third ol tli series he is prcaciiina on the 4 'Tea Plagues of the Cities." The Brooklyn Academy of Music was filled in' 'the morningbya dense crowd eager lOt hear it, and at night at The Christian Jferald service, in the New York Academy of Music, the doors had to be closed long ljefore the hour of service, .there being 'no space available within the building for raoro hearers. So large is the number ofthose every week disappointed of paining admission that the project of hiring the Madison gquaro Garden has apain been revived. . One citizen lias oUcred to pay all the expenses if the Garden "can be secured and Dr. Tal mage can lje induced to preach in it. The text of the preacher'B discourse was tHkerl from fex. viii, C, 7: ''And the fros came np arid covered the land of Eg-ypt. And the magicians did so with their enchantments, and brought up fros tipon the land of Egypt." There is alniost a universal aversion to frotfs, and yet with the Egyptian they were hononxl, they were eacred, and they were 'objects of worship wliile alive, and after death they were em balmed, and today" their remains may be found xin;r;ng the sepulchers of Thebes. These creatures, so attractive once to the Egyptians,' at divine be hest becamo obnoxious and' loathsome, and they went croaking and hopping and leaping into the palace of the king, and into tho bread trays and the couches of the people, and even the ovens, which now are uplifted above the earth and on the side of' tlio chimneys, but then were smali holes . in tho earth with sunken pottery, were filled with frogs when the housekeepers came to look at them. If a man eat down to eat, a frog alighted on his plate. If ho attempted to put on a shoo it was pre occupied by ft frog. If ho attempted to put his headupon a piiloW it had been taken possession of by a frog. Frogs high and low and everywhere; loathsome frogs," slimy frogs, besieging frogs, innumerable frogs, great plague of frogs. What' made .tho matter worse the magicians said thero was no miracle in this, and they could by sleight of hand produce the same thing, and they seemed to succeed, for by sleight of -hand: wonders : may bo wrought. After JMoses had thrown down his stall and by miracle it be came a serpent, .and then he took hold of it and by miracle it -again became a stall, the serpent charmers imitated the same thing, and knowing that thero were serpent-ia Egypt which by a peculiar pressure on the neck would become as rigid as a stick of wood, they seemed to chango the serpent into . the staff, and then throwing it down tho staff became tho serpent. So ' like wise theao magicians tried to imitate the plague of frogs, and perhaps by smell of. food attracting a great number of them to a certain point, or by shak ing them out from a hidden place, the magicians sometimes seemed to ac complish tho same miracle. While theso magicians made tho plague worse, nono of them tried to make it better. "Frogs came up and covered the land of Egypt, and tho magicians did so with their enchantment, and brought up frogs upon the land of Egypt." A MODERN PLAGUE. Now that plague of frogs lias eoino back upon tho earth. It is abroad to day. It is smiting this nation. ' It comes in the shape of corrupt litera- of an incensed God. In the year 1SC8 the evil had become so great in this country that the con gress of tho United States passed a law g the transmission of bad lit erature through the United States mails; but there were large loops in that law through which criminals might crawl out, and the law was a dead fail urethat law of 1808. , But in 1873 an other law was iassed by the congress of the United States against the trana inission of corrupt literature through , the mails a grand law, a potent law, a Christian law and under tliat law multitudes of these scoundrels have been arrested, their property confis cated and they themselves thrown into the penitentiaries, where they belonged. HOW CAN IT BE FOUGHT? Now, my friends, how are we to war against this corrupt literature, and how Jire the frogs of Uiis Egyptian plague to be slain? First of all, by the prompt and inexorable execution of the law. Let all good postmasters and United States district attorneys and detectives and reformers concert in their action to stop this jjlague. When Sir Rowland Hill spent Ids life in trying to secure cheap postage, not only for England but for all the world, and to open the blessings of the postofliee to all honest business and to all messages of charity and kindness and affection, for all healthful intercommunication, he did not, mean to make vice easy or to fill the mail bags of the United States with the scabs of such a leprosy. It ought not to be in the power of every bad man who can raise a one cent stamp for a circular, or a two cent stamp for a letter, to blast a man or destroy a home. The postal service of this country must be clean, and we must all understand that the swift ret ributions of the United States govern ment hover over every violation of the letter box. There are thousands of men and women in this country, some for per sonal gain, some tlirough innate de pravity, some through a spirit of re venge, who wish to use this great avenue of convenience and mtelli cence for purposes revengeful, sala cious and diabolic. Wake up the law Wake up all its penalties. Let every court room on this subject be a Sinai thunderous and aflame. Let the con victed offenders be sent for the full term to Sing Sing or Harrisburg, I am not talking about what cannot be done. I am talking now about what is being done. A great many of the printing presses that gave them selves entirely to the publication of vile literature have been stopped or have gone into business less obnoxious. What has thrown off, what has kept off the rail trains of this country for some time back nearly all the leprous periodicals? Those of us who have been on the rail trains havo noticed a great change in tho last few months and tho last year or two. Why have nearly all those vile periodicals been kept off the rail trains for some time back? Who effected it? These so cieties for the purification of railroad literature gave warning to the publish ers and warning to railroad companies and warning to conductors and warn ing to newsboys to keep the infernal stuff off tho trains. rClUFYING THE XEWS STAND3.' Many of the cities have successfully prohibited the most of that literature even from going on the news stands. Terror has seized upon the publishers and dealers in impure literature, from tho fact that over a thousand arrests liave been made, and the aggregate time for which the convicted have been sentenced to the prison is over one hun dred and ninety years, and from the fact that about two inillion of their cir culars have been destroyed, and the ent sjyles of corrupt doors. Aitnougn coce of my God I warn you of the fact over tJiirty tons of vile literature have -that your children an? threatened with Seeydetroyed by tho Society for the! moral and spiritual typhokj, and .that Suppression of Vice, , still there is unless the thing be stopped it will bo to ' enough of it left in this country to them funeral of body. fuM'.niI of mind. funeral of soal. Three funerals in one day. My word Is to this vast multitude of young people: Do not touch, do not borrow, do not buy a corrupt book or a corrupt picture. A book will decide a man's destiny for good or for evil. The book you read yesterday may have decided you for time and for eternity, or it may be a book that may come into your possession to-morrow. TUK POWEIl OP A GOOD UOOiC A good book who can exaggerate its power? Benjamin Franklin said that his reading of Cotton Mather's "Essays to Do Good" in childhood gave him holy aspirations for all the rest of his life. George Law declared that a biography he read in childhood gave him all his subsequent prosperi ties. A clergyman, many years ago, passing to the far west, stopped at a hotel. He saw a woman copying some thing from' Doddridge's "Rise and Progress." It seeinod that she had borrowed the book, and there were some things she wanted especially to remember. The clergyman had in his sachel a copy of Doddritre's "Itisc and Prog ress," and so he made her a present of it. Thirty years passed on. The clergyman came that way. and he asked where the woman was whom he had seen long ago. They said, "She lives yonder in that beautiful housx" He went there and said to her, "Do you remember mef'' She said, "No, I do not." Ho said, "Do you iciuemljer a man gave you Doddridge's 'Rise and Progress' thirty years ago" "Oh, yes; I remember. That book saved my soul. I loaned the book to all my neighbors, mid they read it and were converted to God, and we had a re vival of religion that swept through t he whole community. We built a church and called u pastor. You see that spire yonder, don't you? That church was built as tho result of that book you gave me thirty years ago." Oh, the power of a good bookl But, alas!- for the influence of a bad book4 John Angel James, than whom Eng land never had a holier minister, stood hi his pulpit at Birmingham and said: factories, and then see the paper, white and pure as an infant's soul waiting for God's inscription. A liookl Exaiij!no the type of it. Examine tl print lag of it, and see the progress from the :i:ao when Solon's laws were wrijifii t-ii tv.k planks, and Hesitxl's -iw-ius a ry v ruU-n on tabks of lead, : :id tlrt fj-Utie commands were written on tables of stone, on down to Hoe's perfecting printing press. 'Abot'k! It to; the universities of the pr.-;f, nil the 'martyr tires, all the civilization.-!. ;dl tha battles, all the vic tories, -all the 'J fect.-. :.2I tho glooms, all the LrlgLtnes.?. ;.U the centuries to make it poble. A book! It It chorus -.f the ages; it is the drawing :;wi:i in which kings and queeiis an 1 r.i'nn ;-.o I jets and historians a:;d pm! . ;hcrs c.:ro out to greet you. If 1 wor.;!i!p,J any thing on earth I would v.:V-':; ll.'ut. If I L burned incense to :.;v iljl I. would build an :Jtur to ; 1m T-iank .God for good books, i.e.-u i;l )xk. Inspiring books. Christian !!;.. iooks ot men, books of women, I .rt'x f Jj.-L It is NEW ADVERTISEMENT?. 'Twenty-five years ugo a lad loaned to me an infamous book. He would lojui it only fifteen minutes and then I had to give it back; but that book has haunted me like a specter ever since. I have in agony of soul, on my knees before God, prayed that ho would ob literate from my. soul the memory of it ; but I shall carry the damage of it to the day of my death." The assassin of Sir William Russell declared that he got the inspiration for his crime by reading what was then a new and pop ular novel, "Jack Sheppard." Homer's "Iliad" made Alexander the warrior. Alexander said so. The story of Alex ander 'made Julius Caar and Charles XII both men of blood. Have you in your pocket, or hi your trunk, or in your desk at business a bad book, a bad picture, a bad pamphlet? In God's name I warn you to destroy it. ANOTHER WAT. Another way in which we shall light back this corrupt literature I the frogs of Egypt Is by rolling over them tho Christian printing pres3, which shall give plenty of healthful reading to jJl ad tilts. All these men ,and women 1 1 re reacting men ana women, wnat "e you reading? Abstain from all thore books which, while they had some good things about them have also an ad mixture of evil. You have read books that had two elements in them the ood and the bad. Which stuck to you? Tho bad! The heart of. most people i.i like a sieve, which lets the sm a mi f t ; a.i 2 lure, xiiese xrogs nop mro me store,- v.0; ca ;0 oc .fKirt Q ;f uie BUUJ.J, Liie umue, wie uuiih.ujg liuuse, a i. Full line of Family Groceries, (.'aimed Goods, Syrups, Tobacco, Ci- " BODEHHAMHER &; RESELL call Respect! ully mch20 tt invite you to RAILH0AD HOUSE,; NEARVfllE DEPOT - Siinijde-Rooms and Special Conrenieuf os for Traveling Men. : . The Faro is the bet' the ' market affords, which is always served in good wholesome style. Board, per day, only ? v $ 1 50 " 44 week, 4 00 44 -4 month, 12 00 The patronage of tho traveling public is respectfully solicited. W. e: BASS, sepl9 tf "Proprietor. CONSUMPTION BRONCHITIS SCROFULA COUGH OR COLD Threat Af sctica "Wasting of Besli Or any Die n teher th Throat and Zung ar Xnflattml, J.ach -of Mtxmt-gtK.T XirM Fmxocr, you cm b relieved and Cnrmd b- na m mm .mi rvn - WSIUIU . Jt lit .H Off t.Us;iii PURE COD LIVER OIL With Hypophospnites. " '"" PA LATABLE ! AS. 'f X IXJiC Ail for Beott't Bmxtition. nf Irliia ffiL piakatlo or $olicitat(oi induoe iovt -meorpt a tubiHtute. . ,.,.. . " Sold by all Druggists. v 1 SCOTT A BOWME,?herrrl8tNY ' ........... 1 1 I.. ; . r " vj i n x 4t1. nrnnnniA iivi-a . s SESSOMS-rHOTEt ItOSEBOBO, .aN3r,',G. Special ; accommodations for ! tbfe traveling public Regular boarder; will also, .be taken. ' " ; , ""'".,. . Mna.-J M. sessoms;; my?--tf . : " ,3?pprietress. "- -. .;. "?-.-'.v .:v. v.-'.- v'-'; ' ' -; . .'' ' " -- i;'' the factory, into the home, into the cellar, into the garret, on the " drawing; room t able, on the shelf of the library. Whilo the lad Is reading the bad book tlio teacher's face is tnrned ;the other way. Ono of these frogs' hops upon the page. While the young woman is reading the forbidden novelette after Tetiring at night, reading by gaslight, one of these frogs leaps upon tho page. Indeed, they have hopped upon the news stands. of the country, and tho mails at tho postoffice shako out in the letter trough hundreds of them. The plague has taken at different times possession of this country. It is one of the most loathsome, one 'of the most frightf id; one of the most ghastly of the ten plagues of our modern cities. Tliere.is a vast number of books and newspapers r prmtea and published which ought, never to see ' the light. They are -filled with a . pestilence that makes the land swelter with "a moral epidemic. The ..greatest blessing that ever came to this nation is that of an elevated literature, 1 and the greatest scourge- has been that of unclean ; liter- atfure. T-iifa last has iteVvicthns in all occupations and 'departments. - It has helped? to fill insane asylums and pent tentiarics and almshouses .and dens o shame. . The , bodies of tins infection lie in the' hospitals and in 'the ' graves, while their souls are being ' tossed over into a lost-eternity, an avalanche of horror and- despair. The London plague -was nothing to it. That count ed i$i victims pj thousands, but this modern pest has already': shoveled!. its millions into the harnel house of . the morally dead. ? The longest' rail;traih ,tliat ever rsn over the . Erie or. Hudson traeks wafe fiot ; 'long enoudi' xor large. enough to csa'beastliQ.adt-fhe cp mi-bad .books &Cid newsdarier -of ihia land.in Iba lastCferiifv Vtri" : The literature of. a nation-- dtsfeides-'lhe1 fate ota nation..; JLicod books, good morals Bail, booksr. bad morals. , ' -TBesrin with the, lowest of TtUt the lit- -feratiir, that;" ;whiqh does not even pre tend f 5 beBectble from, cover to ?onver ar bkcl?Mprosy. k There' are 4oauy .whose entire busmess it is to dis pose of that kind of literature. They display, it before the schoolboy, tin . his .Way home. . They get - the catalogues"! of schools and colleges, take the names ahd postoffice addresses and. send their advertisements, and their circulars!" and their I pamphlets, 4 and their books 4o : every one of them. ; SKTIJESO OUT BAD BOOKS. i Tn the possession 6f these dealers Jt .uuAi uieracure were louna rune nun dred thousand; names ' and postofnee addresses, to whom it was thought it might be profitable to send , these cor- How have so many of the news stands of our great cities been purified? How has so much of this iniquity been balked ? By moral suasion ? Oh, no. You might as w?5ll go into a jungle of the East Indies and pat a cobra on tho neck, and with profound argument try to persuade it that it is morally wrong to bite aad to sting and to poi son anything. The only answer to your argument would, be an uplifted head and a hhss, and a sharp, reeking tooth , stuck into your, .rt-.v;e.. Tho only argument for n cobra i ? shotgun, and theonlv argument, for tii?c-j deal ers in impure literature is ti:3 clutch of the police and bean j"xip ia tho peni tentiary. The law! Tho law! I in voke to consummate t!i worl; so grand ly begun! Another way in which we are to drive back this plague of Egyptian frogj U by filling the minds of wir young pooplw with a healthful literature. I do not mean to say that all tho books and newspapers ia our families ought to be religious books and newspapers, or that every song ought to be sung to the tune of "Old HundretL" : I. have no sympa thy, feith the! attem pt to make the youiig oia. a wouia ratoer. put m a crusade to keep the young young. , Boy- Jxpod.. and , girlhood mtistv.Jtiot be' ab- breviated, -But. there are good books, good histories, good biographies, good works of fiction, good books of all styles with which wd are to fill the - minds of the young, so that there will bo no mora room for the useless and vicious than there is room for the chaff in a bushel measure ' which - is - already filled with Michigan wheat ; " i!f -: t'- ; RCEJED BY rEBSJCJOCS BEADING. .Why are per cent of the criminals in the jails and penitentiaries of the United -States today under twenty-one years of agef . Many of them under seventeen, under sixteen, under fifteen, nnder-f ourteen, under tliirteen. Walk along one of the corridors of the Tombs prison in New York and look for your selves." Bad books, bad . newspapers bewitched them as soon as they got out of -the cradle jBtJW&reAofi all, those stories which end wrong. Beware of all those books which make the road that ends in perdition eein to end in Paradise.' Do not glorify, the dirk and the pistoi. Do not call the desperado brave or the libertine gallant ; Teach our young people that It.. they go down into the swain pa and marshes to watch the jack-o'-lanterns dance on tho decay and rottenness, they will catch the raa iaria and death. ' i ' ' "Oh!" says some one, I am & busi ness man, and I have no time to exam ine -what my children read. I have no time to inspect the books that come u,uiesu cor- i i..o.f.M i r rupt.things.: In; the year ,1873 . there ZT were one hundred and sixty-five estab-' lishmenti engaged in pulalishing cheap. ' corrupt hteratura, From one publish ing house there went out twenty differ- i ; j were would you have tune to go for the doc ,tor J- Would you have tim? to,watcb the1 progress of d isease ? Would you have lime for the funeral? Ia the pres- !i particles of gold fall through but Keeps tiio great cinuers. unce m. a while there is a mind like a loadstone, which, plunged amid steel and brass Clings, gathers up. the steel and repels the brass. But it is generally just the opposite. If you attempt to plunge through a fence of burrs to get one blackberry you will get more burrs than blackberries. You cannot afford to read a bad book, however good you are. Yon say, "The influence is insig nificant." I tell you that the scratch of a pin has sometimes produced the lock jaw. Alas! if tlirough curiosity, as many uo, you pry into an evil book, your curiosity is as dangerous as that of the man who would take a torch into a gunpowder mill merely to see whether it would really blow up or not. Jn a me nagerie a man put. his arm through the bars of a black leopard's cage. The animal's hide looked so sleek and bright and beautiful. Ho just stroked it once. The monster seized him, and he drew forth a hand torn and man gled and bleeding. Oh, touch not evil even with tlie faintest stroke ! Though it may bo glossy and .beautiful, touch it no, lest you pull forth your soul torn and bleeding under the clutch of the black leopard. "But," you say, "how can I find out whether a book is good or bad without reading it?" There is always something suspicious about a bad book. I never knew an exception something suspicious in the index or style of illastration. This vonomous reptile almost always carries a warning rattle. The clock strikes midnight A fair form bends over a romance. The eyes flash fire. The breath is quick and irregular. Occasionally the color dashes to the cheek, and then dies out. The hands tremble as though a guardian spirit were trying to shake . the deadly book out of the grasp. Hot tears fall. She laughs with a .shrill voice that drops dead at its own sound. The sweat on her brow is the spray dashed up from the river of death. The clock strikes four, and the rosy dawn soon after begins to look through the lattice upon the pale form that looks like a detained specter of the night Soon in a madhouse she will mistake her ring lets for curling serpents, and thrust her white hand through the bars of the prison, and smite her head, rubbing it back as though to push the scalp from tho skull, shrieking, "My brain! m brain!" Oh, stand off from that! Why will you go sounding your way amid the reefs and warning buoys, when there is such avast ocean in which you may voyage, all sail set? ' A book! We see so many books wo do not un derstand what a book is. Stand it on end. " Measure it the height of it, the depth of it the length of it, the breadth of it You cannot do jit. Ex amine the paper and estimate the progr ress made from the time of the-impres-sions on the clay, and then on to the bark of trees, and from the bark of trees to papyrus, and from papyrus to the hide of wild beasts, and from the hide of wild beasts on down until the miracles of our modern paper manu- witii thcee good U .;. ia.it wo are to overcome corrupt literature. Upon the frogs swoop with thi'se -.gks. I de pend much for the overthrow of in iquitous literature upon the mortality of books. Even god books have a hard struggle to live. Poly bins wrote foriy books; only five of theui left. Thirty lKiok of Tacitus have perished. Tv.vuty bocks of Pliny have perished. Livy wrote one hun dred and forty looks; only thirty-five of them remain. J3"tch Ius wrote one handred ilarn-s; only seven remain. Euripides wrote over a hundred; only nineteen remain. Varro wrote the biog raphies of over seven hundred great Romans. All that wealth of biography has pc.-ri.ihed. If gsjod and valuable book.- have such a .-1 regale to live, what must Jo the fate of Ifjse that aro dis eased and corrupt and blasted at the very fturt ? They will die as the frogs when the Ixrd turned back tho plague, The work ol ChristL ( jzation will goou until the ir w'i' lx? nothing kft but good books, and they will take the su premacy of the world. May you an65 1 live to fee the illustrious day ! COUI.TKRACT THE BAD Wmi GOOD. Against every bad pamphlet send good pamphlet; against every unclean picture send an innocent picture; against every scurrilous song send, a Christian song; against every bad book send a good book; .and then it will be as it was in ancient Toledo, where the Toletum missals were kept by tho saints in six churches, and the sacrilegious Romans demanded that those missals be destroyed, and that the Roman mis sals be substituted; and the war came on, and I am glad to say that, the whole matter having been referred to cham pions, the champion of the Toletum missals with one blow brought down the champion of the Roman missals. So it will bo in our.day. The good literature, the Christian literature, in its championship for God and the truth will bring doWn the evil literature in tts championship for the devil. I feel tingling to the tips of my lingers and tlirough alt the nerves ot my body, and all the depths of my soul the certainty of our triumph. Cheer up, oh men and women who aro toiling for the purification of society! Toil with your faces in the sunlight. "If God be for us, who, who can be against us?" Lady Hester Stanhope was the daugh ter of the third Earl of Stanhope, and after her nearest friends had died she went to the far east, took possession of a deserted convent, threw up fortresses amid the mountains of Lebanon, opened the castle to the poor and the wretched and the sick who would come in. She made her castle a home for the unfortu nate. She was a devout Christian woman. She was waiting for the com iirg of tho Lord. She expected that the Lord would descend in person, and she thought upon it until it was too much for her reason. In the magnificent stables of her palace she had two horses groomed and bridled and saddled and caparisoned, and all ready for the day in which her Lord should descend, and he on one of them and she on the other should start for Jerusalem, the city of the Great -King. It was a fanaticism and a delusion ; but there was romance, and there was splendor, and there was thrilling expectation in the dream ! Ah ! my friends, we need no earthly palfreys groomed and saddled and bri dled and caparisoned for our Lord when he shall come. The horse is ready in the equerry of heaven, and the imperial rider is ready to mount "And I saw, and behold a white horse, and he that sat on him had a bow ; and a crown was given unto him ; and he went forth conquering and to conquer, And the armies which were in heaven followed him on white horses, and cn his vesture and on his thigh were writ ten, King of kings and Lord of lords Horsemen of heaven, mount! Cava! rymen of God, ride on! Charge charge ! until they shall be hurled back on their haunches the black horse of famine, and the red horse of carnage, and the pale horse of death. Jesus forever ! ir iwi exican - Deafness Can't Be Cnrcd by local application, as they canno reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitution al remedies. Deafness is caused by aa. inflamed condition of the mucus lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets i&flained you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it Isentirely clos ed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed iorever; nine cases out ot ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the nuu cus surfaces. . We will give One Hundred' Dol lars for anycase of Deafness (caused ny iatarrn ) mat we can not cure by taking Hall'3 Catarrh Cure. Send for c; -euIars, free. An eminent surgeon says says that with four cuts and a few stitches he can alter a man's face so his own mother would not know him. That's nothing. Any newspaper an do that mach with only one cut. Ex. CaveaU. and Trade-Marts obtained, and ail Pat ent business conducted for Moderai Fees. Our 01 ice is Cqnesite U.S. Patent Office. and we eta secure patent ia lees time than those remote frsrpx Wathicsrton. Bead model, drawing or pntQ with descrip tion. We advise. If patcntafclc of turi. free cf cnarf e. oar fee not uae tui parent is Mecnred. A Pamphlet. -Howto Obtain I'atenU." with names of actual ciienta in y oar Suite, coantr, or town, sent free. Address, .- 6:A.snow&co. 1 napesita Patent OSce, Washington, 0. C yustang Linimeiil for NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. JlUa n WW NEw ADVERT rsru rx.ZT vtt lis. nn and Left Thursday, March 5th, for New York and Philadelphia to buy his Spring and Summer FOR Frfy THP STIk MUD, For Sale BY ALL zs- 5, Atlantic & N. C. Railroad- TIME T-A-SXjE lO To take effect 8 a. m., .Wednesday, May 28th, 1890. GOING EAST. I 1 jg 51 ! r. 2p Passenger. Stations. anw daily', j cgSa Except i ajH' Sunday. I Ar. J Lv. Ar. Lv. 'A. M. A. M. P M P M Goldsboro, ! 6 30j 3 30 Best's, I G 57 7 05 3 53 3 56 La Grange, j '7 20 7 30:4 06 4 03 Falling Creek, 7 48 7 53 4 21 4 20 Kinston, j 8 11 8 SOU 35 4 45 Caswell, ; 8 50 8 55 4 55 4 55 Dover, I 9 15 10 02i5 05 5 09 Core Creek, 10 31 10 36j5 19 5 15 Tuscarora, ;11 00 11 05:5 31 5 31 Clark's, 11 17 11 41j5 41 5 48 Newberne, ;12 15 3 00.6 00 6 09 Riverdale, 8 37 3 426 89 6 34 Croatan. 3 4S 3 50G 44t6 46 Havelock, 4 08 4 13 6 56 G 56 Newport, 4 37 4 4217 13 7 14 Wild wood, j 4 51 4 55 7 24 7 2J8 Atlantic, 5 01 5 01 7 28 7 23 Morehead C'y, 5 16 5 21 7 38 7 40 Atlantic Hotel,! 5 23 5 28 7 45 7 59 Morehead Dp'tj o 31 7 53 Jp. M. P. M. P M P M GOING WEST. 2 50 f "i. Passenger. -5 Stations. a ily. '.xcept .Sun- 5. day. . cj s r . Ar. Lv. Ar. Lv. a', m. a. m. p m p m Morehead Dp't 6 45 6 00 Atlantic Hotel, 6 48 7 00 6 05 6 15 Morehead C'y; 7 02 7 07,6 17 6 27 Atlantic, 7 18 7 18 6 47 6 52 Wildwood, 7 23 7 23; 7 00 7 05 Newport, 7 30 7 33 7 17 7 34 Havelock, 7 51 7 53! 00 8 10 Croatan; 8 07 8 07 8 28 8 33 Riverdale, 8 12 8 12,8 41,8 45 Newbeme, 8 37 8 50 9 22 1 30 Clark's,. 9 08 9 08,2 0212 12 Tuscarora, 9 18 9 18:2 24 2 30 Core Creek, 9 32 9 32 2, 54 3 00 Dover, 9 48 9 48 ! 3 25 3 40 Caswell, 9 59 9 59' 4 00 4 05 Kinston, 10 08 10 13'4 25 5 00 Falling Creek, 10 26 10 26 5 2415 30 La Grange, 10 42 10 45 5 546 04 Best's, '. 10 56 11 00 6 24 6 34 Goldsboro, 11 30 7 20 IA. U.i A. M. A M A M Train 50 connects with Wilmine ton & Weldon train bound North, leaving Goldsboro 11:50 a.m., and with Richmond & Danville train West, leaving Goldsboro 2:40 p. m. Train 51 connects with Richmond & Danville train, arriving at Golds boro 2:55 p. m., and with Wilming ton & Weldon train from the North, at 3 10 p. m. Train 2 connects with Wilmington & Weldon through freight train, North bound, leaving Golasboro at 8;o0 p. m. . L. DLLL, Superintendent. (lopsdiat : THE An NUHnURES AND PRODUCTS f THE UNITED STATES. cpmpnses twryrvtide made in this Counlrv-IndatedBid flifiJ ani - unto each article thcxamMfindaiirttsej THF RF5T MAWfFAflTIIRFRS (pm?!eti? in One Royal CWavoVsMowiOOQpr. mce in rjoth5. in Leather,;. , INDISPENSABLE - Ta Buyers or Articles mall lines and Invaluable as a Statistical work. OnJen received at office rfthisPaper. S7 fif..-n fr o LAj u Ia. Hats, and Shoes, Dry Goods! At present he is selling his entire stock at c 0 ST In order to make room. Call on him for BARGAINS. You can save MONEY if you are in need of a winter Vest, a pair of Pants, a Suit, a Hat, a pair of Shoes or anything in Dry-Goods For your SPRING- GOODS wait for his new stock . We extend an in vitation to all mem bers of the Alliance to call and see us and make this their stopping place while in Clinton. A big reduction in Flour. G. 1 a 1 A. O lute, Manager. YOUR nrnm mm mr a n nnn it A full line of flue MBS, BRMJDIES M yfflSKIBS , iu uara oi lionntaifl Dew Jast Mmi Call on WATSON & PEl-EHSON, CLINTON, N. C. IH1 tor LDSTtryilLIKS Htvvnnn. jjSALEM HIGH SCHOOL. u. . WTjLER Principal. A Boarding School For Both.Sexea SPRING TERM Stiu: fflS r .repamory, k T T T""-ijfr(33, TUB ,:Hfi-: i ' ' ..
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 12, 1891, edition 1
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