Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / June 30, 1892, edition 1 / Page 6
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1 1 ououo CURE5 ALL 5 KIN AND BLOOD DI5EA5E5 nH i,r.nh. it wit'i vn-at .atliiaction for tha curei of firm una ttnrxi cf Frimsrr, Seonr1arT andTerttar Tcara and 6orei, Glandular Swelling, Rhcumatlim, Malaria, old vhropic Uic.ri t.iat cava reiKleo all treatment, atarra. blD Loteates, bczei-ia, Cbrvulc iruiale CuuiLiaiuU, Mar- eurlal FoW., TUer, S?a!J Head, etr., etc. T. . r. ?i a r-nwrtui nt'-, anil an exciiani apnr.ir, Ladle. ivhui tvttem rra boiionad and wbota blood If In an Impart nndit'on. !' to m.rntranl IrretpilarttlaiaTa CURES ALARIA cl.an.in proprtiji of' P. V. P., Prickly Aah, Poka Root tiv tii wuuilt-rlul tunic HUU DIOOU- anil rot-i'Miim. LIPPMAN BEOS-. Proprietor!. Druggists, Lippman'8 Block, 8AVAS9A3i GA A Happy Welcome Is guaranteed to those who will call at my Sal:o which is stocked at al! times with the Choicest of Domestic and Im pel ted Liquors and Wines. All the latest drinks compounded and manipulate by skillful men. DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED CIGARS, And a larire lot of line Tobacco. IYke Nouth Carolina ISKI-.Y MY l'LACK fS IlKAPrAK- Cokn Wit Jam es L, Dickinson. (At John G inn's old stand. LIPPMAN BROS.. Proprietors, Druggists, Lipnman's Block. SAVANNAH. G. SPECIAL RUN No. If). GREATEST VALUE 0 EARTH. r.vler' Famous Antique Onls Roll Ciir tiila Jeak complete, ace apeclul circular. No. 4004, 3 ft. 6 in. long, net 316.00 No. 4009, 4 ft. 6 in. ' fc $21.00 No. 4010, 5 ft. lonp, - - " $23.00 ,X 5eo new 150 PaB catalogue for 1892. Creatcutof about40 percentfrom former hat. BOOKS FREE, postage lOc. Shipped from St. Louis, Mo., or Indianapolis, Ind. BVXK COUNTERS A SPECIALTY. We refer to every Bank In Thirty States. TYLER DESK CO., St. Louis. Mo. PENNYROYAL WAFERS. A specific monthly medieino for ladies to restore and refr.ilate tho menses; producing free, healthy ami painless discharge. No aches or pains on ap proach. Now used by over 3u,ii00 ladles. Once used, will use aptin. Invigorates these organs. Buy of your drup-ist only those with our signature across face of laln'l. Avoid substitutes. Sealed particulars made. I 2c stump, ft. On tier box. Address, KUKKKA CHEMICAL COMPANY. Dictroit, illcu- For Sale by Dr. J. H. Powell, GOLDSHOKO, X. ('. IffT.JTeEl' r v .V I DIRECT 1 A ' fc I SAVE 1435 4 WEED vr,hlil. h vi.nii.-.,c i'.l tuumluni. Scroluiuui L I Ri ft '$ C CURES K H H wood Poison r nnriG ; PAUHZOO U WILLIAMS MFG. CO. " S?l KALAMAZOO. MICH. FARM AND GARDEN. GRUEN FLY OH ROSES. Vick tells that the green aphis which infests a great variety of cultivated plants can be destroyed and kept under by spraying the plaat3 occasionally, as it may seem necessary, with a strong so lution of whale-oil soap; or the liquid may be applied by sprinkling it on with a small whisk broom, being careful to have it wet the under as well a? the up per side of the leave. In greenhouses and conservatories these insects are com monly destroyed by fumigating with to bacco. Another method of using to bacco is to steep it in the greenhouse. New York World. A HONEY HOUSE. A suitable building for a beekeeper to work in need be nothing more than a simple, plain structure, cheaply made and about twelve feet square. A range of closed closets around two sides will be convenient for keeping utensils aud all materials used in the business. There will be ample room left for extracting, putting sections together, and making' hives, or packing honey for shipment and sale. It is indispensable for even a small apiary to have a special building for these purposes. As it costs only a little more to put a second story in it, it would be advisable to do this for use as a storage room for materials always needed in a bee business. It might also be desirable to have a good cellar under it for keeping the hives with the bee3 during the winter, instead of leauug them out of doors and unprotected. New York Times. SPRAYING. Do not spray the fruit tree until after the blossoms have fallen. Apple trees should be sprayed for the codlin moth about a week after the blossom com mence to fall, or when the fruits are about the size of hazel nuts. This is the right time to do the most good and no harm. The second spraying is most beneficial if done about ten days after the ; first. Peach, cherry and plum trees should also be sprayed only after the j blossoms have fallen, and usually not I until the latter part of May or early in j June, the curculio in the adult forml being killed then. Neither for the cod- j lin moth nor for the curculio is it of any j use to spay earlier, and spraying during j the time of blossoming kills the farmers' ! and fruit-growers' friends, the honey , bees, while they f re fertilizing tho bk3-; jocus, or, in other words, doing theirj share to insure a large crop of finely- ievelooed fruit. American Farmer. SKIMMED MILK FOR HENS. We have many time3 urged the feed ing of skimmed milk to laying hens, and will add that on the farm, where dairy ing is carried on, the U3e of buttermilk! will also be found of great benefit, and will very sensibly increase the gg pro duction. After a few days' trial the "biddies" will look out eagerlyfor your coming with the accustomed dish in band. Use it instead of water and the slightly saline quality will be beneficial. Either buttermilk or skimmed milk is excellent. The latter, of course, is not as rich and fattening as the former, but still contains much ot good. Should you be keeping a large flock of 'bens, and the choice lies between feeding the milk to a pig and giving it to the hens, decide in favor of the hens every time. The extia production for one year by the milk feed will buy all the pork your fam ily may need, and make your occupation much jleasautcr all round. New York Observer. CABBAGE AND SQUASH. The market gardeners near largo cities, with their bads worth from $509 to $1000 an acre, must economize in the use of land and produce as many crops as possible from the same piece in one season. This can be done by the aid of hotbeds in starting the plants and by fertilizing the land, keeping it up to a high state of productiveness. A mistake is ofteu made in planting two crops on the same land to mature about the same time. Au Eastern seed grower and market gardener attempted to grow cabbage and squash upon the same land by plant ing the squash seed in the cabbage row. The result was a maximum crop of cab bage and a minimum crop of squash. Another equally successful gardener planted the two crops Dut omitted the cabbage on every third row, planting! his squash seed there. The result was a large crop of both products harvested at: the same time. Squashes and peas can be grown profitably on the same land. One gar dener gives as a result of the crop? ; grown simultaneously a harvest of 200 " bushels of green peas and five tons of! squashes on the same piece of land. But when we attempt to get returns from either simultaneous or second farming we must understand that Und mutt be matured accordingly, as the soil cannot be cheated out of a crop. Irrigation' Aire. HOW TO RAISE HELPERS. "Right here," says Mr. King, in the Ohio Farmer, "I want to say a word about feeding those choice calves that are to build up our herd. I think it be3t for the cow, and decidely best for the calf, to let the latter remain with the cow at least three days. . I do not wish you to understand me to advocate letting the calf have all the milk for this length of time. Take all you can get twice a day ; the calf will be sure to get enough. When you do take the calf a way, the bet ter way is to have theaa in a stable and quietly drive the cow out, letting the calf remain, so she does not see you take it from her. Keep it where she can neither see nor hear it,if possible. Leave it alone lor twelve hours. Offer it some milk warm from the cow. It will gen erally suck the finger, and about the next feed it should drink alone. You should not feed it fresh milk right along. Give one-half skimmed sweet milk until two weeks old, when it will make a better animal for tne purpose you are raising it, if fed sweet skimmed milk with the addition of a very little oil meal or wheat bran better, in fact, than if fed on whole milk. This manner of feeding will give a grow thy calf of large eating capacity, which is very de sirable in a cow. We all know that the more a cow eats the more butter she will make. She needs a certain amount to supply her body, and all ovei and above that she puts into the bucket. Feed a calf on fresh milk and very rich feed, and it will get into the habit of laying on flesh, and it will be hard to get rid of this characteristic in the cow. It is a sate rule to discard any cow That gets fat while in full flow of milk. You may be sure her milk is deficient in but ter fats.'' FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Two-year-old grass seed is not worth sowing. Stump the World" is a popular Few Jersey peach. In light soils level culture is far the best for corn. Sowing clover and timothy together increases the yield. The "Columbus" is a new gooseberry attracting attention. Corn should be cultivated once a week until too high for it. Drill-planting of corn increases the yield 33$ to fifty per cent. The ice-plant is a pretty annual for a rockery or hanging-basket. Fertilizers are better foi corn than manure, unless the latter is plowed in the fall. Nearly all of the improved breeds of cattle originated within a stone's throw of one another. All young animals need exercise in the open air. To3 close confinement is sure to breed disease. Cut out tiie old wood from the hardy roses and shorten last year's growth, but not too severely. If the sows cau have comfortabb quarters in which to farrow, February pigs are better thin March. The ration that only sustains life with out growth is always fed at loss and should always be increased. Separate the brool sows and feed them less corn and more bran and oats. Make the change gradually. Keeping a dairy is a business that the farmer should know somothing alnut before investing too largely. Dry air slackened lime scattered over the foliage of roses, while the leaves are wet, will kill the rose sluga. The deeper the plowing for corn, so long as the soil is manured or fertilize! to the full depth, the better. Economical feeding involves a knowl edge of the needs of the animal as well is of the composition of foods. Most grass seed is bad. Not more than fifty per cent, of that sold will germin ate, and m some cases not more than five per cent. A popular orange in California is of pear shape, and is called the Joppa orange, because the seeds came originally from Palestine. Green manuring is an economical aud effective method for restoring worn land, and rye is one of the best crops to use for this purpose. Powdered white hellebore is the remedy for worms on currant and gooseberry bushes and should be applied promptly it their first appearance. A hen that costs $1 to keep, and pro duce 100 egg3 per year, besides raising a brood of chickens, pays as good a divi dend as any stock you have. One noted wheat grower says that for wheat he wants the ground fine and firm, and that there is little or no danger of having the ground too firm. Barnyard manure contains every ele ment that is found in plants, hence it is the one complete manure. Don't waste it, and then buy commercial fertilizers. A week may be gained in time by steeping seed corn in a solution of four ounces of saltpeter in a gallon of water and having it all soaked up by a peck of seed. Diversify the poultry business, a3 well as the balance of the farm industries. Ducks, geese and turkeys give as good return as hens, aud sometimes piy much better. Do not be persuaded that there is no profit in washing your sheep before shearing. If well done the added value of the wool will pay excellently; for the time and labor required. A number of small pastures re better than a single large one. Theygo farther and give more feed when the cattle can be changed lrom one to another, thus giving each a penod of rest. It is said that in firm land the lro3t will go much deeper than in land that is loose. As it is desirable that the frost should go deep it would appear very ad vantageous to have the land as firm as possible. Draining is generally admitted to be the correct remedy for wet lands, and for the bad effects from wet seasons. Now we must learn that it is almost equally efficient in preventing damage from ex cessive droughts. Dairying has a fourfold advantage over most other branches of farming. It brings spot cash, it yields more rnoney for the feed consumed, it saves the natural fertility of the farm, and it makes increased fertility easy. Healing the Breach, in Louisiana. Baton Rouge, La. Two conference coramittoes of the divided Louisiana Democrats have reached a mutually satis factory agreement providing for an amalgamation of the two factions of the party and the sending of a single Demo cratic delegation, uninstructed, to Chica go. The Foster faction has been recog nized as the head of the party iu the State. Uninstructed delegates at large to the Chicago convention were elected SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Canes are now made of paper pulp. Red hot irons touched to the flesh, a Berlin physician argues, will cure hys teria. A newly patented device makes the load of a car vary the leverage of the brakes. An atlas of the sky is now under way. It is a stupendous undertaking and will require years to complete. Professor Smith, of Rochester, N. Y., thinks that the latest arrived comet has been 8,000,000 years in getting here. Boiler scale is used as a material for cement floors in the Santa Fe shops at Topeka, Kan. With good ramming and puddling it makes a good floor. According to the Hatch Experimental Station of Massachusetts, electricity ap plied to the roots of plants give more satisfactory results than when applied above. The latest kind of lock for nuts on railroads, machinery or other places is formed of an elastic non-metallio wash er, to be placed on the threaded end of the bolt. It is confidently expected that long distance telephones will be in working order between the Columbian Exhibi tion grounds, Chicago, and New York and Boston. Mr. Kite, in his system of ventilation, employs a jet of water at service pres sure issuing from an orifice in the form of a Greek cross, for inducing the air current. These jets may be upward, downward or horizontal. The necessary equipment for six miles of electric tramway is now on its way from this country to Siam. Six genera tors, two complete steam plants, twenty car equipments and extra parts to last for six months make up the order. The road is to be iustaUed in Bangkok, and will be the first electric tramway in Siam. Electricity has now been applied to stone carving the blow being struck by means of Carstarphen'a electrical recip rocating tool. With this machine the stonecutter or tho sculptor can devote his entire attention to the lines his in strument is to follow, while doing the work more rapidly than by his own mus cular power. A magnificent specimen of the hama dryad, or king-cobra, twelve and a half feet long, has been shot in a tree a few miles from Castle Rock, India, on the Southern Mahratta Railway, and the skin has been sent to the Bombay Natural History Society. The existence of thia formidable Burma snake in Iadia has not been known very long. A Kansas City paper says that there is a boulder in the Ozarks which will at tract a jack-knife dropped nine feet away, and that along the line of the fifth principal meridan, in the counties of Carter, Reynolds, Iron and Washington, the lines of east and west surveys are de flected from the true course several de grees, the needle being atrected by de posits of loadstone. A new case of mimicry, observed by Siard, i3 reported. One is a saw-fly and the other is a fly. When both in sects are quiet, they resemble each other perfectly in color and patterns, and as the saw-fly is protected oy its unpleasant smell from the beaks of birds, it is prob able that the fly is mistaken for it by birds on account of the bad taste of the insect it resembles. The largest machine now in use fon sawing stone can deal with blocks three feet one inch high by eight feet three inches long and six feet six inches wide. The saw of this machine is seven feet three inches in diameter and is a steel plate mounted on a screw spindle, along which it can be shifted by means of large nuts so as to vary its position for a cut in any desired place. The rim of the saw is studded with diamond. Ed A. Babcock, of North Stonington, Conn., while crossing his rocky farm met an odd and brilliant-looking snake of a species that was supposed to be extinct in Connecticut, and after a lively chase captuied it. It is a little fellow not half grown aad is black, except that a broad golden band encircles its neck. It be longs to tire golden-band racer species, which grows to be ten or fifteen feet long and are swift and ferocious. Nesting of the Passenger Pigeons. Perhaps the nearest approach in mass and multitude to the shoals of fish once to be found off the American coast3 was ths annual passage and assembly for nesting of the passenger pigeons. Audubon once counted 163 flocks of these birds flying past in twenty-one minutes; and Andrew Wilson, from the data supplied by him, estimated tho number of pigeons passing over a certain observed area at 1,115,136,000. What ever be the value of this astonishing con clusion, it is certain that Dr. Sagnisch, a German naturalist, saw in one valley a wood nine miles long, in which the pigeons had occupied with their nests every tree and sapling across the breadth of the valley, some trees holding from fifteen to twenty nests, from which the young were shaken down into sacks, baskets and carts by the people who came to collect them. Not content with this prodigality of nature, the greedy pigeon hunters of Michigan have for years shot the nesting parent birds, together with the young, until they are stated to be "now un known in most localities over which they passed." Chicago News. Strewn With Corpse. Calcutta. The cholera is raging with increased mortality in Persia aud Afghanistan. In Turbatyshan the strfets are said to be strewn with corpses. Mol lahs parade the streets reading aloud the Koran and leading thousands who hone by such means they can escape the di sease. No physicians are at hand In the jail at Moulmeine, Burmsh, there have been already several deaths from cholera and the TOO prisoners have bten removed to Kyauktan. In Meshed, Fextia, there hive been ;V)Q deaths in two days. SELECT SIFTINGS. Few criminals of any kind live to be old men. , Plants grow faster between 4 ami o a,. j. mai at aujr w. day. The Ohio River, which is very nearly 1000 miles long, has a mean descent of only 5 inches to the mile. CawkerCity, Kan., has adopted an ordinance requiring every owner of chickens to keep them on his premises. San Francisco has an earthquake-proof hotel. It is constructed of iron, and in the form of two hollow squares, one within the other, arranged so as to brace each other. The arrivals in this country from Swe den, Norway and Denmark are next in importance to those of Great Britain and Germany, and exceed by one-fourth those from Ireland. In Burmah it i3 rather a suspicious thin to give money for a charitable ob ject.0 It is supposed to mean that the donor has been very wicked, and is de sirous to make amend. The original manuscript of the "Boo'i of Mormon" is now in one of the banks at Richmond, Ray Couaty, Mo., in cus tody of J. D. Whitner, a straight and non-polygamous Moraion. A red bird die:l at the advanced ae of twenty-three years in Zme3ville, Ohio, the other day. It had become so feeble that it could not mount its perch in its cage, but it sang until a year ago. A tree was cut m the Paget Sound (Washington) forest the other day fro n which seven cuts were taken without a knot, their combined length being 179 feet. The tree scaled 43,000 feet. Mrs. Sanders and liva daughters, of Henderson County, Tennessee, have feet which are marvels for size. Mrs. San leri wears r.umber fiftceu shoes and the youngest daughter number twelve. The average sized toot of this woaderi'ul six is number fourteen. Professor Lors, the Greek rifle shot, ii attracting much attention by his feat of shooting a glass ball froai his own head. The trick is performed by shooting at the trigger of a rifle held in a frame, with the muzzle sighted at a glass ball dangling by a string directly over the markman's head. A costly wardrobe is owned by one of the Chinese Ministers, whose magnificent and varied toilettes have driven the so ciety belles wTild with envy. The celestial dignitary never appears at public entertainments twice in the same costume, and his silk and satin garments aru valued at $150,000. Many readers will be much surprised to learn that at the battle of Leipsic the Russians brought into the field numbers of Baskir Tartars who were armed only with bows and arrows. So we read iu General Marbot's memoirs, written by himself and lately published. The Gen eral was himself wounded by an arrow in the battle. A Maryland farmer adopts this method of ridding his premises of English spar rows; Whenever they get too plentiful he equips each man on the farm with a flat board, and they all proceed after dark with lanterns to the bird-roost. The sparrows fly toward the light, and as they come within reach the iu jn with the boards knock them down by the score. Charles G. Leland traces the origin of the saying in reference to a small place, 4 the re is not room enough to swing a cat," to a superstition current in Tran sylvania. In this couatry, it is said, if a cat runs away, when recovered she must be swung three times around to at tach her to the dwelling. The same is done with a stolen cat by a thief if ha would retain it. Singular Prowew With His Rifle. The story of the hunter who twisted his gun-barrel and shot round a hill and killed a deer after many previous unsuc cessful attempts to bring him down has not beeu believed in some quarters. Ex-Lieutenant-Governor John Dagget, of Black Bear, in the heart of the Siskiyous, who is here, was recounting the other day what a variety of wild game there was in that sectioa. Black bear, deer, mountain lion and other animals, besides the finest trout, lie said, were in abun dance. "Deer are not allowed to be killed now," he continued. '-Still, if a man was out of meat and needed some for his family, probably he would not be inter feied with. A young man at Black Bear had a singular experience a few days ago. He had gone forth with his gun, when, hearing a rustling in the bushes, he raised his weapon to fire and saw just before him the body of a deer freshly killed. At the same moment a mountain lion aisappeaied like a flash in the bushes. He walked up and there found the deer. It bad just been killed, was eaten only about the neck and shoulder and was yet warm. "He picked it up and carried it home. It was a very fine deer." San Fnmcisco Examiner. Becoming Extinct. The pinnated grouse are now confined to th3 island of Nantucket, Massachu setts, where, under the name of "heath hen" or "heathens," as described in the proclamation just issued by the Government printeis they are preserved. The Carolina parrot, the one indigenous parrot of North America, is also vanish ing, and will sooa become extinct, like the Pallas cormorant in the islands of Bering sea. The last survivors of this, the largest of the cormorants, are thought to have perished, like the last of tin garefowl, by the destruction of their island by a volcano, and their disappear ance can hardly be laid at the door of American seamen. Chicago News. Nebraska has 6417 school districts, In which there are 383,115 children of chool age. Her school property is ral lied at a trifle less than 17,000,000. llELlGIOUSREADIXa SEND OUT TnE SfNUoHT. Vnd out the unli?ht, the sunlight of cW Shine on earth's aines till ills Jisai,ra,.'' oua are in waiting this message to lieur. Send ont the sunlight in letter anl wor '. ?peak it and think it till hearts are a"; Miri t'u Hearts that nrc hungry for prayer t;;i n heard. " " end out the sunlight each Lour and ead day, frown all the years with its luminous rav. Nourish the peeds that are sown on the way ?eiid ont the sunlight! 'tis needed on earth end it afar in sciatillant mirth. Better than go d in its wealth-giving worta! ?end out the sunlight on rich and on poor Silks fit in sorrow and tattern endure A.11 need the sunlight to strengthen a!1j cure. ?end out the untight that speaks hi r tnvile. Dften it shortens the lonj?, weary iiii!t. Often the burdens seem light for" aw LiV. Send out the sunlight-.4 he spirit's real ru!d: 'Jive of it freely this ;rift that's uns.ii.j ; Shower it down, on the younsr and tLe o! Send ont the sunlight, as free as the a'u ! Blessiip.;!! will follow, with none to compare. Blessing of peace, that will ri.o frvji de- spalr! ?end out the sunlight, you have it in you! Clouds may obseure it just now frvla yutir view; I'ray for its presence! Your prayer will come true. , fKllen l:ire, in Chicago Inter- em. B1IIXG YOl'E AMKX. No more important contribution. m th PreuLvterian, can he brought iv irnnr uieeting than an Amen put into plaT afth right moment. Comfort, inspiration, jor and revivals have been all worn uiit Jor want of Ihls important ertix. If a Christen man don't have it with hir.i and the instinct ive ability when to use it, his power of Met ing his fellow-men js gone. There ean be no substitute for it. A few years ago there was an effort to brim: it into its place by a time keeper and a bell. Vhen a man had prayed out his t;iue the bell startled him, and he was compelled to ue bis "Amen" as a stopcock to a lW; ing hydrant. But this wm an irreverent, jerk modi; of proceeding and as hostile to real tvotion as it was bad in manuers. A man oufM not to lose bis ability in this direction. He p not praving for himself or he iniirhi set bin toal at the night's end. He is praying for othi;, who may not have his devotion or" his vt locity, many will hear him who will belieye In directness of approach to a throne of grace, many will be young, and like fledglings, their wing will tire, or as Janet, the Scotch wife, wait ing for her husband's Amen smelled the burning porridge, and after worship, said. Jamie, 1 am sairly troubled, is it right to let (Sod's marcics spoil a-buruin while one is thanking for them?" Many of (Jod's dear servant are so long in getting warm-d up into prayt-r that both patience and porrkfr are spoii'ed for want of the blesed addend fiui. There is less trood in elaboration in prayer than anywhere else. It is right to stir up the pure minds of men by way of remem brance, but there is neither call for. nor rev fi'i)"" in. pretising the inspired dictum on he All-mindful. iiow otten we have been carried upward into the fellowship with (Sod at the start, and if the one who had borne us aloft in t!m spirit of devotion had only been as wise in his use of his Amen, we might have gom away saying: "How blessed is this hour ami place," but all was lost, and an evil, reaction ary spirit came while we waited for the. Amen, for when a vessel is tilled the cork ought to come next. The church has more, occasion to complain of Jong prnyers han indifferent pravers. Tsually long prayers spring from a want of variety of soul ami experiences and breathed from different personalities with their varied burdens, with their varied conceptions cf God and tne varied and various needs that we iong for we are satisfied if we can drop into the num ber our own varieties of sorrows, jov atul needs. KKI.IoIOrs ikkmn;. When we use the understanding ia our spiritual investigations in a way to depre ciate religious emotion, serious consi juei ces are sure to follow. Love, warm ami demonstrative.- is the truest manifestation ff vital godliness-. Joy iu the Lord a. joy thai expresses itself in a genuine mannei is al ways in keeping with the bet type of re ligion. Peace in the soul the peace of (iol is one of the chief qualities of tody character. All these belong to the emotional part of oiii nature, and when that is lightly esteenift.. Increase in these heavenly graces )" impos sible. Our age s one of marked intellectual activity. The training of our youth. iteciallw In the higher grades of instruction, is conducted with this constantly iu view. Our saidents are warned that they will rana low in life if unprepared to grapp abstruse problems, or to combat siiccessfii.lv with haughty scepticism. lint is this, after all, the highest preparation:' We think not To develop moral sensibilities, vrow m breadth of holv sympathy, and open the hidden springs t'li the soul Godwarcl this w culture of a superior kind ; it is that wni qualify the coining generation for lug" Mchievi ment. We plead not for mental sluirgishness. Mind, with all its wouderous capabilities. i" (Sod's gilt. Let all proper stimulus corr.eto it. Its far-reaching possibilities have nem yet been measured. But the danger i rather in bestowing upon the intellectual disproportionate attention ; ove rlookuyr tp care of the emotional nature in the strif- i"r high rank in scholastic honors. FRA YEH-.M EKTING l:ESOM."riO:SS". 1. 1 will make it a matter of conscience to attend "Not forsaking the assembling of you rsel ves together." i. . I will endeavor to bring othf ts--tnou wjth us and we will iotD" ... As 1 enter the room I will ste Savior's presence. "We would see 'e1!- 4. I will not choose a back seat.- ii pleasant it is for brethren to dwell uce.ii in unity." , 5. I will not seat myse'f as to keep otut" from the saiu pew. "Be courteous. (J. 1 will fix mv attention upon wt,rTr aud the word. -This people drawetli iw. unto me with their mouth, Lut their " far from me." , . 7. I will lead in prayer. "Ye also tap ing together by pravtr for us." . . 8. 1 will otherwise take part;r"Teacbm, and admonishing one another." ,. 9. My pravers and mv remarks ''-'' brief. "For "(Sod is in heaven anl upon earth, therefore let thv words be ie- THE TRIVIAL ROl-Nl. Pious old George Herbert told us Ion? tgj that the maid who swept a room for lot e God made "that and the action fine. our familiar hymn, it is The trivial round, the common n-W. Will furnish all we ought to t Room to deny ourselves. -ur ! v To bring us daily nearer ;!. It lifts all the drudgery of dai v N' TfCf' out of the reach cf common p . i keep saying, there is holiness'' "1.,l.'e,gUr. ness, there is "holiness" mi the shifiin face of the kettle faithful y scoured, n nobles man or woman in any station . saying: "This I do for Jesus' sake. I 1 daily duties just as I go up to nm''J"iaV. in remembrance of him."- Every rhri.
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 30, 1892, edition 1
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