NEVT ABVERTISEAIENTS. Atlantic & IT. C. Railroad- 1- Xnf !- VrB TiMr; rj To take eftec-i M.-.y : i.XJ 31.13 lO :: a. m., Wednesday, 1890. G'JJ i ! I 51 i JMILY, Kxccpt t Sunday. STATION'S. Ar. 'V. Ar. 1 Lv M. i 30 :3 30 4 53 4 30 4 5'4 02 5 30 5 05 5 41 !s 00 0 42 0 50 (J 13 ; 42' 7 r.57 0l7 217 2H;7 7 M. P M P M 13 30 Goldsboro, Best', La CJran;?e, Falling Creek, Kington, Caswell, Dover, Core Creek, Tuscarora, Clark'H, Newberne, Itiverdale, Croatan. llaveloek, Newport, Wj Id wood, Atlantic, Morehead C'y, AJ lantic Hotel, Morehead Dp't 0 1 7 8 8- y 10 H u 12 o t 4 4 4 5 53 3 5G 06,4 21 4 35 ! 4 03 20 45 4s; n 50 l-V . Oi) 5514 055 hi) 09 10 5 31 5 415 000 396 44;o 5016 1 31 17 ! . 15: 37 1 ; 44 08 1 I 37 , I 511 4 01! 5 48 09 34 40 56 14 24 28 38 45 53 M 28 23 40 if; 23 31 M. 7 59 P M GOING WEST. 50 I HHi-nT. ! DAILY. .lay. j STATIONS. 2 r1 7 e. Ar. Lv. j Ar. j Lv, iA. M. A. M P M P M Morelmad Dp't 6 45! G 00 Atlantic Hotel,: 0 43 7 00 6 05 6 15 Morehead C'yji 7 02 7 07l6 n!o 27 Atlantic, j 7 18 7 186 47,6 52 Wildwood, 7 23 7 23; 7 00,7 05 Newport, 7 30 7 33 7 177 34 Havelock, 7 51 7 73,8 00,8 10 Croatan; 8 07 8 07 8 28 8 33 Itiverdale, 8 12 8 12, 8 41 8 45 Newberne, 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 5413 00 Dover, 9 48 9 48 3 25 3 4 Caswell, 9 5'J 9 59(' l 00 4 05 Kinston, 10 08 10 13 4 25 5 00 Falling Creek, 10 26 10 26 5 24 5 30 L i Grange, JlO 42 10 45 o 54 6 04 Best's, 10 56 11 00 6 24 6 34 Goldsboro, ill 30 7 20 a. M. A. M. A MA M Train 50 connects with Wilming ton & Weldon train bound North, leaving Goldsboro 11:50 a.m., and with Itichmond & Danville train West, leaving Goldsboro 2:40 p. in. Train 51 connects with llichniond & Danville train, arriving at Golds boro 2:55 p. m., and with Wilming ton & Weldon trai.i from the North, at 3 10 p. m. Train 2 connects with Wilmington t Weldon through Ireight train, North bouu'3, leaving Golasboro at 9:50 p. m. S. L. DILL, Superintendent. HOLLIDAY'S; . MA STITCH IN TIME SAVES NINE I" Doa't wait to get sick, but when you begin to feel bad come and get a dose of medicine and prevent sick ness. This is the proper use of med icine. Ifyouwilido this you will scarcely ever have a doctor's bill to pay or lose months of time, and put your friends and. relatives to such a deal of trouble. In addition to iay complete line of pure and reliable Drugs, I carry Warner's Log Cabin jlemedies, B. B. B., the S. S. S., Quinine in small and large quanti ties ; Simmon'. Liv er Regulator, Famous Specifc Or ange Blossom, Cuticura Jle nedies, Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription, the Golden Medical Discovery, Horse and Cattle Powder (1 pound packages prepared by the Herb Co. of W. Va, Quaker brand . ) Prescriptions carefully compound ed. Local and office practice upon re quest. Itespectfullv, augl tf DR. R. H. IIOLLIDAY BAIL?iOM HOUSE, NEAR THE DEPOT. Sample-Rooms and Special Convcnien ces for Traveling Men. The Fare is the best the market affords, whicb is always served J: good wholesome style. Board, per day, only $ 1 50 week, 4 00 month, 12 00 The patronage of the traveling puDiic is respecttuiiy solicited. W. E. BASS, epl9 tf Proprietor. THE Farmers' Alliance History AND AGRICULTURAL DIGEST By N. A. Dunnixg. Author of "The Phylosophy of Price," "History of the U. S. Dol lar," and Associate Editor of The rational Economist, official organ of the National Farmers' Alliance and Industrial Union. It will contain 800 pages, 48 ele gant photo engravings. It will be the greatest book of the period. .rriee: uiot-h, ?2.50i Half Russian, 5d.o0. bend for terms aid circulars to ALLIANCE PUBLISHING CO.. 159 N. Capitol St., Washing ton, D. C ear agents wanted. J. H. TURNER, Pi es 3f . A . Dunning, Sec'y. AFirst-CJlass BAEBER SHOP- If you wish a first-class Shave, Hair Cut, Shampoon or Mustache Dye, call at my place of business on Wall Street, three doers from the corner of M. Hanstein's, there you will find me at all hours. RAZORS SHARPjSHEARS KEEN! - r m - . t xi you want a good job don't fail, to call on me. J. H. SIMMONS, fcptl-tf Barber, SUNDIAL 05 AHAZ. 6ERMON PREACHED BY REV. T. D WITT TALMAGE, D. D. Tb Flight of Time Owl Rules tbe blud owi Ijbrak on tb Height of the Mountain Top Fall Report of B- : tnarkbl IKaooom. Beooelyx, Jan. 10. Dr. Talmages sermon this morning was full of brightness and good cheer. He might havo called it a receipt for happiness. The buoyancy and elasticity of tem perament which characterize hirr, wero conspicuous throughout, and must have been imparted to his hear ers. Hia text was U Kings xx, 11, "And Isaiah the prophet cried unto tho Lord: and he brought the shadow ten degrees backward, by which it had gone down in the dial of Ahaz." Here is the first clock or watch or chronometer or timepiece of which tho world has any knowledge. But it was a watch that did not tick and a clock that did not strike. It was a sundial. Ahaz, the king, invented it Between tho hours given to state craft and the cares of office he in vented something by which he could tell the time of day. This sundial may havo been a great column, and when tho shadow of that column reached one point it was nine o'clock a. m., and when it reached another point it was three o'clock p. m., and all the hours and half hours were so measured. Or it may have been a flight of stairs such as may now be found in Hindostan and other old countries, and when tho shadow reached one step it was ton o'clock a. m., or another step it was four o'clock p. m., and likewise other hours may havo been indicated. THEE MEASURE. The clepsydra or water clock fol lowed the sundial and tho sand glass followed the clepsydra. Then camo the candle clock of Alfred the Great, and the candle was marked into three parts, and while the first part was burning he gave himself to religion, and while the second part was burning he gave himself to pon tics, and while the third part was burning he gave himself to rest. After awhile came the wheel and weight clock, and Pope Sylvester the Second was its most important in ventor. And the skill of centuries of exquisite mechanism toiled at the timepieces until the world had the Vick's clock of the. Fourteenth cen tury, and Huyghens, the inventor, swung tho first pendulum, and Dr. iiooko conmveu tne recoil escape ment. And the "endless chain" followed, and tho "ratchet and pinion lever' took its place, and the compensation balance and tho stemwinder fol lowed, and now we have the buzz and clang of the great clock and watch factories of Switzerland and Germany and England and America turning out what seems to be the perfection of timepieces. It took tho world six thousand years to make the present chronometer. So with me measurement or longer spaces 1 i m tnan minutes and hours. rrr i i . iime was calculated from new moon to new moon ; then from har vest to harvest Then the year was pronounced to be three hundred and fifty-four days and then three hun dred and sixty days and, not until a long while after, three hundred and sixcy-nve days, men events were calculated from the foundation of Rome, afterward from the Olympic games. Tnen the Babylonians had their measurement of the year, and the Romans theirs, and the Armen ians theirs, and the Hindoos theirs. Chronology was busy for centuries studying monuments, inscriptions, coins, mummies and astronomy, try' ing to lay a plan by which all ques tions of dates might be settled and events put in their right place in the procession of tho ages. But the chronologists only heaped up a moun tain of confusion and bewilderment until in the Sixth century Dionysius Jioguus, a l toman abbot, said, "Let everything date from the birth at Bethlehem of the Lord Jesus Christ, tne baviour of the world." The abbot proposed to have things dated back-ward and forward from that great event. What a splendid thought for the world I What a mighty thing for Christianity I It would have been most natural to date everything from the creation of world. But I am glad the chronolo gists could not too easily guess how old the world was in order to get the nations in tho habit of dating from that occurrenco in its documents and histories. Forever fixed is it that all history is to be dated with reference to the birth of Christ aid, this matter set tled, Hales, the. oluef chronologist declared that ton world was made five thousand lour hundred and eleven years be fom Christ, and the deluge came t!irej thousand one hundred and fifty-ave years before Christ and all tho illustrious events 3l the last nineteen centuries and all tho great events of all tune to come have been or shall be dated from the birth of Christ These things I say that you may know what a watch" ia, what a clock is, what an almanac is, and learn to ap preciate through what toils and hard ships and i . rplexities the world came to its present i-nnveniences and com forts, and to help you to more respect ful consideration of the sundial of sAhaz planted in my text Wo are told that HezeMah, the ki::g, was dying o: .. oou. It must havo been one of the worst kind )f carbuncles, a boil without any cen tral core and sometimes deathfuL A fig was put upon it as a poultice. IIe;wkiah did not want to die then. His son, who was to take the king dom, had not yet been born, and He::ckiah's death would have been the death of the nation. So ho prays for-recovery and is told he will get well. But he wants some miraculous sign to make him sure of it He has the choice of having the shadow on the sundiftl of Ahaz advance or retreat j He 1 V TJ It WOllId Tinflwiinnrnnn. - -.-v.noiua rul t. ve the sun go down, for it al waya.tesgodown sooner or later. He a.: that it go backward. In other wove lot the day, instead of going on toward sundown, turn and go tov.T.rc run rise. I se the i:n alid km? hnlfttewvi TfTi and vt rapred i i blankets looking out tf- v.-:idowupon the sundial in the com -krd-' Whfia 4.t the sl.;vl ;vu.;y mi tne dial fho Ao wHLSKMUStwL Instead nt rm, on toward o'clock in the eveningit goes back wwaitl six oidock in tha - I morning. The fig poultice had been drawing for some time, and, sure enough, tho boil broke and HezeMah got welL Now I expect you will come on with your higher criticism and try to explain this away and say it was an optical delusion of Heze kiah, and the shadow only seemed to go bock or a cloud came over and it was uncertain which way the shadow did go, and as Hezeldah expected it to go back he took the action of his own mind for the retrograde move ment No; the shadow went back on all the dials of that land and other lands. Turn toH Chronicles xxxii, 31, and find that away off in Babylon the mighty men of the palace noticed tho same phenomenon. And if you do not like Bible authority turn over your copy of Herodotus and find that away off in Egypt the peoxle noticed that there was something the matter with tho sun. The fact is that the whole univeiro waits upon God, and suns and moons and stars aro not very big things to him, and he can with his little finger turn back an entire world as easily as you could set back the hour hand or minute hand of your clock or watch. At the opening of a new year peo ple are moralizing on tho flight of time. You all feel that you are moving on toward sundown and many of you are under a consequent depression. I propose this morning to set the hands on your watches and clocks to going the other way. I propose to bhow you how you may make the shadow of your dial, like the shadow on the dial of Ahaz, to stop going forward and make it go backward. You think I have a big undertaking on hand, but it can be done, if the same Lord who reversed the shadow in Ileze kiah's courtyard moves upon u5. While looking at the supdial of Hozekiah, and wo find tho shadow retreating, wo ought to learn that God controls the shadows. We are all ready to acknowledge hi manage ment of the sunshine. Wf stand in the glow of a bright morning, and we say in our feelings, if not with so many words: "This life is from God. This warmth is from God." Or we have a rush of prosperity, and we say: "These successes aro from God What a providential thing it was bought that lot just before the rise of real estate ! How grateful to God I am that I made that investment Why, they have declared ten per cent dividend 1 What a mercy it was that 1 sold out my shares before that col lapse I Oh, yes, we acknowledge God in the sunshine of a bright day or the sunshine of a great prosperity. Bu suppose the day is dark! You have to light the gas at noon. The sun does not show himself all .day long. There is nothing but shadow. How slow we are to realize that the storm is from God and the darkness from God and the chill from God. Or we buy the day before the market's re treat, or we make an investment that never pays, or we purchase goods that we cannot dispose of, or a crop of grain we sowed is ruined by drought or freshet, or when we took account of stock on the first of Jan uary we found ourselves thousands of dollars worse off than we expected. Who under such circumstances says: 'This loss is from God. I must have been allowed to go into that unfor tunate enterprise for some good rea son; God controls the east wind as well as the west wind." A LESSON TO LEARN. -uay menus, x cannot ioojs tor one moment on' that retrogade shadow on Ahaz'B dial without learning tha God controls tho shadows and that lesson we need all to learn. That he controls the sunshine is not so neces sary a lesson, for anybody can be nappy when things go right. When you sleep eight hours a night and rise with an appetite that cannot easily wait for breakfast, and you go over to the store and open your mail to read more orders than you can fill, and in the next letter you find a dividend far larger than you have been prom ised, and your neighbor comes in to tell you some flattering thing he has jusi neara said about you, and you una mat all the styles of goods in which you deal have advanced fifteen per cent in value, and on your way home you meet your children in full romp, and there are roses on the cen ter of the tea table and roses of health in cheeks all round the table, what more do you want of consolation? I don't pity you a bit You feel as if you could boss the world. But for those in just opposite circumstances my text comes in with an omnipo tence of meaning. The shadow I Oh, the shadow! Shadow of bereave mentl Shadow of sickness ! Shadow of bankruptcy! Shadow of mental on 1 Shadow of rjerseniitiATi t Shadow of death! Speak out O Kim- dial of Ahaz, and tell all the wf,nl that God manages the shadow ! I As Hezekiah sat in his palace win low, wrapped in invalidism and sur rounded by anodvnes and fn- plasms, and looked out upon the black hand of the only clock known at that time and saw it mov hav ten degrees, he learned a lesson that a majority of the human race need this hour to learn that tho M V mend a man ever had controls the shadow. The setbacks are some times the best things that can hap pen. lne great German author SWiiiw could not work unless he had in his room the scent of rotten apples, and the decay of the fruits of earthlv prosperity may become an inspira- u" jausiu oi a depression. Robert unamDers' lame feet shut hhr from other work, and he becamA tho world renowned publisher and helped fashion the best literature of the ages. The rjainful disorder lilr th 0 of Hezekiah called a carhrmolo 4 spelled exactly the same as the pre cious stone called the carhnnr-lo the pang of suffering may become the jewel of immortal valu. Y,r setback, like that of Ahaz s sundial may be recovery and triumph. I never had a setback but it turned out to be a set forward. You would have become a Christian if you nad not had a setback. The highest thrones in heaven am for setbacks. - In 1861 the shadow of the ouuuiiu 01 trus nation was setback aau aii tilings seemed going to ruin and it was set back farther in 1862 and farther in 18C3, and still further m 1865i but there is not an intelligent and well 1 balanced man, north or south, east or west, but feels it was set-back toward the sunrise. TURN TUB SHADOWS BACK. ButI promised to show you how gahadows might be turned back. rs by going much among the juuih? iwoDie, in most familv cirri s mere are granochiidren. By this Ci vine arrangement most of thepeonip who have passed the meridian of lifo can compass themselves by juvenil ity. It is a bad thing for an eld man or eld woman to su looking at the vivacity of their grandchildren fehou ing, "totop tnax racxet: lietter io:n in tho fun. Let the eigaty-yao3d grandfather jcxn tho eight-year- young granuson or graca.jausrue:-. jiy iatner anumomiT uvea to uveriii. ciiiiuxvH &uu graat.ynu aacnil uren aau greai-gTuiiucniiuren, ana uiviv uumtfivus w wvt i turned out ou this sublunary sphere, ana tney an seemea to cry :o tne o:c : folks "Keep young," and they didj keep young. Don't walk with a cane unless you havo to, or only as defense in a city afflicted with too many canine. iwn t wear gia.ises stronger tiiaci necessary, putting on numur t-i s when eighteens will do as well. Don 't go into the company of th-oso wLc. are always talking about rheums tism and lumbago and shortness of breath and the brevity of human lif 3. It is too much for my gravity to he x an octogenarian talkm:; about ti e shortness of human life. From all 1 can find out he has always been hem and from present proppects he is al ways going to stay. Remain younrj. Hang up j'our stockings 111 Christm; i time. Help tho boys fly the kita Teach the girls how to dress iher dolls. Better than arnica for yourstLl joints and catnip toa for your 6lcej lees nights will be a largo doHe of youthful compa:iionship. THE WORLD -IS GROWINO BETTER. Set back the clock of human life. !U.ok-n f hft K'nini' nf fhn cr:n-..-1'i1 -f o Ahaz retreat ten derrree: Poopk make themselves old by always talk ing about being old and wishing for the good old days which wero nevei a3 crood as those davs. From all can hear tho giandchildren are tiot half as bad as the grandparents were. Matters havo been hushed up. Ba it you havo ever been in a ixoi :il joining a room where some very ok1 people a little deaf were talking ovt-i old times you will find that this pt. does not monoiizo all tho young rascals. It may now bo hard to get young poopl-j up early enough in t.ht morning, but their grandvreTits al ways had to be pulled o.it of bed. It is wrong now to pUy majehievoue; trick3 on the unsuspecting, but eighty years ago at school tliat now venera ble man sat down on a crooked pir not accidentally placed there, ano purposely drove the sieigh richufs p? r ty too near the edge of the embank ment that he might see how they would look when tumbl od into tht snow. And that man who has so lit tk patience with childish exulieranc'e was in olden times up to pranks or.o half of which, if practiced by the eight-year-old of today, would sot grandfather and grandmother crazy. Revive your remembrance of what you were between five and ten year? of age, and with patience capable ol everything join with the young. Piii back the shadow of tho dial not lac degrees, but fifty and sixty and sev enty degrees. Set back your clocks also by enter ing on new and absorbing Christian work. In our desire to inspire tht yormg we have in our essays haci much to say about what has been ac complished by tha young; cf Romu lus, who founded Romo when ho was twenty years of age; of Cortes, wi had conquered Mexico rt thirty years; of Pitt, who was prime min ister of England at twenty-foui years; of Raphael, who di-xl ai thirty-seven years; of Calvin, whe xvroto lus Institutes at twenty-six : of Melancthon, who took a learned pro fessor's chair at twenty-one years; oi Luther, who had conquered Germany for the Reformation by tho time hf was thirty-five years. And it is all verv well f o- us tn show how early hi life one can do very great things for God and hr welfare of the world, but some of flu mightiest work for God has bee done by septuagenarians' and oeto deed, there is work which n: in such can do. They pres.orre equipoise of senates, of re!isr:lov nominations, of reform: iter r ments. Young men for acti.--i. men for counsel. Liste d of r:: -you beginning to fold ih. vonr ' gies, arouse anew vour '- With the experience von tained and the opportunities of sea-vationyou havo had d uiincr aloni hfe you ought to be able to do in one year now more than you did in ten years right after you had passed out of your teens. Physical power leas your spiritual power ought to he more. Up to the last hour of t.hfir IK-p what power for good old Dr. Archi bald Alexander, old Dr "TCVvvu r.Mi Dr. Hawes, old Dr. Milnor, okl'Dr i McRvaine, old Dr. Tyng, oi l Dr. j vu,uuxixi, om ux. uiialmers' wh.it have been Bismarck to -Germany and Gladstone to England, and Oliver Wendell Holmes to America in the time of an advanced a&e? lt say to those in the afterr.non r.r lifa. Don't be puttinar off the hnmp-. when God wants it off he will take it ou. JDon t be fne'hnfvl t r.f tne gnp. as many are. At the first sneeze of an influenza many give ur all as lost ' No new terror has come on the earth. The microbes as the cause of disease were described in the Talmud seventeen hundred years ago as visible lesions of dan in- ion t be scared out of life by ail this talk about heart failure. That trouble has always been in the world. That is what all the people that ever passed out of this life have died of heart failure. Adam had it, and all of Ms descendants have had it or will have it. ones. . Do not be watching for symptoms, or you will have symptoms of ervr oomeor you will yet die of bymptoms. bymptoms are often only what we sometimes see in the country a dead owl nailed on a barn door tc scare living owla Put your trust in God, go to bed at ten o'clock, have - " -1 bus. lucnes to let IK the fresh an-, sleep on your right side and fear nothing. The old maxim was right, "Get thy spindle and distaff ready, and God will send thee flax. TOWARD THE SUNRISE. " ' I'J vat wmle looking at this , sunaal of Ahaz and I see the shadow of it move l notice that it went back W i tsunnse instead of forward toward the sunset toward the rning instead oi' toward the night txio world is wilhn tO do and in hwnvmcM , v , m y Cases has donelt 5Tiere have a great many things been written and spoken about the sunset life. 1 LaT.o leof then mjrs-u.. . oat IV. I . i tar idea. The L -rl vri turned hack thatday-fiTwn ?L-t- t .r-rd sundown and started it tow.irsi .--r.nrLso is will- l in in do the snxoo :h r - for all cf us. mo taeol'jias y.-.,i- . tick to old relkriom fVr.Vrfllf" ..,-.t;i w j come eopori5cs vrouM not 'call it j anything but conversion. I call it a j change from going toward-sundown e to poinff toward sunrise- Tb' f tr- n - . who npf r trir-s: tot-nT-ru - , wno uerer trios to cnbucklo the cl a t Gf cva habit, and who keops sdl the - 0 the jki-rt and the present j freighting him. and who ignores the one redemption mado by the only One who could redeem if that tt.ph will examine the sundial he will find that tho shadow Is going forward ard he is on the way to sundown His clay is on tho nxul to nkrht All the watches that tick nil thr clocks that strike, all tho sandglasses that empty themselves, all the shad ows tnat movoon all the sundials indicate the approach of darkness. L.ut now, in answer to prayer, as in my text the change was in answer to prayer, the arJoumg Lord re veres things and the man starts to ward sunrise instead cf sunset. He turns the other way. The captain or salvation gives ram tho mihtarv command: "Attention! Right about face 1" Ho was marching toward in-diffei-ence, marching toward hard ness of heart, marching toward pray erlessness, marching toward sin, marching toward gloom, marching toward death. Now ho turns and marches toward peace, marches toward light and marches toward comfort and march es toward high hope and marches toward a triumph stupendous and everlasting, toward hosannas tliat ever hoist and hallelujidis that ever roll Now if that is not the turning of the shadow on the dil of Ahzv. from going toward sundown to going toward sunrise, what is it? 1 have seen daybreak over Mu2 : Blanc and the Matterhom, over the heights of Lebanon, over Mount Washington, over the Sierra Ne yadas and mid-Atlantic, the morn ing af ter a departed storm when the billows were liquid Alps and liquid Sierra Nevadas, but tho sunrise of the soul is more effulgent and more tr-ansporting. It bathes all the heights of the soul and iUumines all the depths of the soul and whelms al tho faculties, all the aspirations, til tho ambitions, all the hopes with a light that sickness cannot eclipse or death extinguish or eternity do anything but augment and magnify. I preach tho sunrise. As I look at that retrograde move ment of the shadow on Ahazs dial, I remember that it was a sign that Hezekiah was going to get well, and he got well. So I have to tell all you, wno are by the grace of God having your day turned from decline toward night to ascent toward morning, that you aro going to get well well of all your tins, well of all your sorrows, well of all your earthly distresses. Sunrise ! But, says some one, all that you say may bo true, but that does not hinder tho horrors of dissolution. Why, you who are the fiord's are not going to die. AM that the grave gets of you as compared with your chief, your immortal nature, is as the clippings of your finger nails as com pared with your whole body. As you run the scissors along the edge of your thumbnail and you cut off that which is of no use but rather a hin drance, you do not mourn over the departure of that fragment which flies away. Death will be only the scissoring off of that which could be of no use, and the soul has no funeral over that which would be an awful nuisance if we could not get rid of it. This body as it now is, what a failure it would make of heaven if our departing k:.v.1 cad to rx) burdened with it in the next world i While others there go ten thousand miles a ciMuito we would take about an hour to walk four miles, and while our u'eighbor lmmoi-tais could see ahumi'.-od miles wa could see only ten miles, and the fleetest and the heaitfiiost of our bodies if seen there would make it necessary to open in b-javen an asy lum for cripples. A a, ncr; one of tho best possible things that will Lumpen to us will be the sloughmg off of this body when we have no more line for it in its pres ent state. v hen it shall come up in its resurrected form we will be very glad to get it tack again, but not as it is now with its limitations and be- dwarfmente innumerable. Sunrise! There shall I bathe my weary soul In seas of heavenly rest. And not a wave of trouble roll Across my peaceful breast. SUNSH: "3 IS YOUR PACES. Sunrise! roomings a ; .lata or dirr get up cli:: the morrtii:. you feel h'i. sun shiiiii:. not see w;i :;t not like one of those - you had gone to bed i t sleep well, and you 1 and yawning, and ith is a repulsion, and lying t the morning .to your window, "I do ;ou find to smile about: your brig:; . :as is tome a mockery." But the i- u . ..h of the next world will bo a morm . ..r after a sound sleen. a Keep. taai v... 1 ... ... tninsr can disturb, and you, will my.-., the sunshine m your faces, arid in your first heaven you will wade down into the sea cf g'.avs mingled with fire, the foam on iuo with a splendor yoti never &v.v on earth, and the roll ing waves iire doxologies, and the rocks of th - i shore are golden and the pebble uf that beach are pearl, and the skies that arch the scene are a comminjiing of all the colors that St Jolai f -z7 on the wall of heawn the crima and the blue, and the saffron, and the orange, and the pur- iuc, tiiiu uie goio, ana tne green. wrought on those skies in shape of garlands, cf banners, of ladders, of chariots, of crowns, of thrones. What a sunns-3 ! Do you not feel its warmth on your faces? Scovffle McCoIlum, xne ayiug uoy or our Sunday schooL uttered what shall be the peroration of this sermon "Throw back the shutters and let the sun in!" And so the shado w of Ahaz'a sundial turna from sunset to sunrise. "How to Cure all Skia Diseases.!' Simply apply "Swavxe's Oint mext." N"o internaL medicine re quired. Cures tetter, cezema, itch, all erupiiciis on the lace, hards, nose, &c., leave the skin clear, white and healthy. Its great healing and cur ative powers are possessed by no other remedy. Ask your druggist for Sway.ve'h Ointment. . BEOW3PS IBOS BTTTERS AT.'tTPA ' ConUl!r,R One Ilondrrd Reclpra for mak- ig deUcions Candy cheaply and anicklr For ly-4 at homa This book ia riven awav at drmr aed general etoree, of ADVERTISEMENTS. Hp' Both tlie method end result whe a Svrup of Fisrs i3 taken: it ia pleasai.t and refreshing to the tsste, and tel.: Eently ytt promptly on the Kidnej", iver and Bo-ivels, cleanses the sj, s - tern enech:fj:y, di?pcls cold?. h"ad - aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. t-y rup of Figs is ti e oniy remedy ot its kind ever pro duced, plea ln U the taste and ac ceptable to tho stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its eSects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to al! and have made it the m&vt popular remedy known. Syrup of Fijrs is for sale in 50c and 81 bottles 07 all leadiaa; drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have if on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not ssceDt anv substitute. - CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CQ. SAN mNClSCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE. KY. HEW YORK. K. mm ' MH l.rett iTIIl.H I lJHadai.lH' Cure will ' laulnrinl ud All I forms of hwutache. PpopI w! Li v. hi.t-L : t I it is a God's MftKnins B S? ii'nkiin1." I'l.n". ant to use. No bat) w iri circi t. Cuto rcrtuia nnd quick. Fur sIe hv timerf. or Iiy mail ?S r-ntn. . BROWN OKI O CO., It.4t.TI HOBE. Jilt. A Household Remedy 4 FOB ALL BLOOD and DISEASES 0 f2 It Cure scnr.fv-;.. ulccrs, sait RHKUiu. ICZZH. ever form of maiMnKr: ilN EfiUJ-TION. be sides being eti cuiious in toning up the system and restcrir.3 the cons'.iiut'on, when Irrpn'rcd from any cause. Its almost 'siipsrnalurcl healing properties Justify U3 in guaranteeing a cure, if d'.rcitios uts fallowed. seht mi HXUPTRATFD RuuU of wnilcr.n Ei-OOD BALM CO., Atlanta. Ga, PiNEY GREEN HISH SCHOOL. Established in 1891. HUNTLEY, r t SON CO., X. V- Spring: Term Opens January 4th, 1892. BOTH SEXES AD3IITTED. Tuition varies from $1 00 to $2.50 per Board, in s-ood families, every thirg fur-ni-bed, at 5.00 to 86,00 per month. This School will be noted for its rock bo', torn prices, thorough discipline aDd modern improvements. ' Wriie for full particnlftrs. Addrcpa, G. I. SMITE, Principal, 7e 24 -lm . Tnntlgy, K..q. JEWELRY Al CLOCKS! 1 have just received a larae lot oi Elegant Jewelry. This I will guaran tee to the purchaser to be ju?t as rep resentad. I sell no cheap, ;'fire guilt" goods but carry a standard i,itk or gold frost ciooDS. The attention ot the ladies is called to the latest fctvlea of breast Piss thev are '-things of beauty!" The old reliable and standard SETII THOMAS CLOCKS always in stock, iu various styles ana sizes. t& Repairing 'of Watches and Clocks and mending Jewelry 13 a pociaJiy. All work I dc is guarantee! t ive en tire satisfaction. " - - Respectful! v.. 8ep5 tf . (i. T. 11AWIJ5. WHAT rn (is it 0 - HAS IT DONE ( CAN IT DO "Compound Oxygen Its mode of Action and Results," is the title of a new book of 200 pases. Dublishei Dy urs. tstaruev & alen, which gives to all inquirers full information; as to this remarkable curative asent. and a record of surprising cures in a wiae range ot chronic cases manv of them after beine: abandoned tu die by other physicians. Will be mailed free to any address on anrli- cauon. t . - DRS. STARKEY & PALER. jnio u GOODWIN & REMSBURB. . PEOPBIETOBS i ' Dirillo Ifnnhln VJn-nhn murwu maim iruiM iiAUTEB's Oli STAND, . FAYETTEVILLE, 11. C. Manufacturers of and dealers in Marble and Granite Monuments, Wrought Iron and Woven Wire Fencing. . BEST WOBK ! LOWEST PRICES I Guarantee Satisfaction! feb5 tf REMOVAL! -1. T GREGORY Has removed his TailorinirEstah. lisbment from1 his old stand' to his office on Sampson Street, neit to the M. E. Church.; . . . v , u The great and orirnal Iftadpr in low prices for men's clothes. Econ omy in cloth; and money will forcp you to give him a call.-- tgLiatest FaBhion plates al wa vh en hand. . 4 . ,. June 7th. 1 vr suSk mi m 1 over XSTSK 82& n Ihn or - SIMPLE WXC. j iu. v1GC trrto live, v . '''V rt , ' - 7- woNPEBFuuNy . ... .-: Highest TESTIMONIftLS. I Klpt of Price. gV5Hfii.. A i WINKELMANN A BROWN VlS&0 t Drutc Co. ttwm. Baiti.-noro. Md. V??.'?' . " " Sit&ka UQUDtt mil jreDVKBTlSEMF 'Eeiueiuber'that I Drv-Goods Wa ill be iad to have you befor buying SYe hava in stooi a line of rants vre nu f. If yoa liave cut. brue or sorn try ''Neval Lxne Oil, ' is the bst heaier we have ever s?on- We have jest received a Cno f Correctionprie Mens' Hats, lsto.'t styl and ro 1 -iiy, ja?t rweivwl. I ! lies1. OSV-e in t n"i at a low ! j ' 1 Try our Flour, "ir.m-vvood" ! iK 7 a n is now OTCo&red to all branches of ? i. And WLi seil we asi: is your patronage ana we -;rJl savo you money, as We P-'ovrose No v7 tl o?e who owe o. account, don't forg-el; that your account is due, forward cf money. :urs v.. XFAV 1 - -.-7" r. r-c TA T VVTC y v i p. n rtf r . i J " tail !74 sS ;J h-.. i I- S3 .-7 . K 4 T i - $1 i "J ! ' 3 &2JjJ trr:r-li te'A'S ICE SCHOOL. The Fall Sosslou pf tliis School will epen'en the First -SIonda.7 iu.'Augast, ISOl. The ' ma.ua rn ent xeil I be in the Lands of th present m'm cipal, J.i.D. zzill. Tuition fro::. 5-5.00 to 12.50 ior a term oi ivarity weeks. . Board, in -ood families "near school building; at from 6.00 to $7-50 per month. For anv fnrthpr inrlirtl,:.i u.S.1 Vro.v.3 towrabip, a(J- write to the principal. J. I). EZSELL Hobton, Xv C. Notice of Sale! RY VIHTUJ5 OF A JUDGMENT OF - thp f p rior Or-urt of thT.p&a county, ia belrs in twtoa-Grore township ad- het h Cox ud otfcfeia. oa thr Vt c;r? weaver Dum ut.a cont-iiriirf .n.r, ana moreorJesc. " Dex 22. 24 4t , 'y03'. Notice of Salft! QY-VmpE OF A JUDGMENT OP I conntj,laca of Tn. Fort vs. g.rab icjw., So ixiurmcD?.- r'.- ; . r 3 . 3 1. . ob btii H 1 ft ' A Cf fXA.. . . j . . ' t tito mortgas: de.-d. Utrtk !. 22, 18J1. 2t -i,a. case ct v. . Tort s. V,'. TT i.rjan and wife, the undereifrrea" will. 03 1st Jtondiy in Febrmrj, A. D. 189" at CcutthouHe :,rx CJiatoa, N. wy cr casb, accrtaiu tract r.P land we have full lino of and Motions come ia aut! examine "sir tt.?! m . f .: bri r.'l & CO. 1 t. serve tli public in Ton Gash, All .V C. f ' f neap: and settle, as we Tru.lv, 3 ? rf anager ot i.uiance Store. Ms i MmM Facilillss BUGGY AID CARRIAGE FACTORY r.T- 1 ;vi--rvVK V i' sJJ M v i-'!ic(rry is now run at full ca paci ty. J.l y hen vy work is no w done by steam pewer. I am turning out a large number of newhtyle Buggies and Hie.itons. We make to order, but always kwp a few Etvics on hand for exa'iiinr.tion. I will keep on -and a largo lot of Ve-tom Duggi (open and top) f rul IUkuU Clirts. They will equal i;i q ;a'ity mi;.' r.r' sold n low as any like goods ii; oiusivoro.aycttcviMfi or Wilmington. JT ItouM.l Shaves, Hacks mul all lA'-'i iools i.iuJo, unci liej.aiiii2 doue on short noiico. IIA11NESS, wmry, COLLAUS AND ALL IIARNKKS IIAItDWAUK. I will hereafter keep" in stock. J?y llarne.-3 2jc?uirtment Cacoasian Offick, onFayelteviH(. I btret t, nwr my Factory. rf-Le sure to sec my j-lyley t.t !T'-t my price before buying, llcr.pectfully,' iuiS-tf W.T. WILLIAMSON. HERE'S APOINTER. It' von wajii toke.-'p ported on the proresa of the Alliance and reform movement in the WVst (yon should read nih ::aLMim illililiUlUjD. PUBLISHED AT LINCOLN, NEBRASKA IION.J. UUltnpWS, Editor. Tho leading Independent pa per west of the Missouri river, bend for sample cony. . ouus'Tripuon price S1.00 year. s per ALLIANCE PU3. novl2 ff CO., Lincoln, Neb. Notice of Sale ! O V. V"u.r- in AN OP.DEU OF Y VIiniTF 'Kit: at tho tho las':- term tr b.j.i .uu.j.j m tuo counry, will sell tami,c 100 WS It Zt 'rtf-f ril?".0 4oor,in Oliufcn. on oar? 2.ini. ifioo ' The foremost of our pedodlcals.- cojucAirorjra . ciarixE or ; rHOTJGHT AKO " ACTIOS is TES WOULD. Aeamplepjrartii lllustrsrd protpec be sent for 2B cents. i' t5Tr;7, th toy . "-fKmvt of trv rwt. r iiwifc.,, """;nt ruEE. I'll--? ' i-;.?4 rJl hirh

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