Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / June 30, 1892, edition 1 / Page 7
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WISE WORDS. The genuine ideal is as sexless as a ray Di-.UT is as often escape I through .15 through strength. It ir. i t have been a masculine power . ; : t.'nv.i-'l woman's heart for forgive- I i iter necl of an all-seeing eyj y. ir; the proverbial falling sparrow standi ,,(.. '-vviiitc-ljlackbirJ." 3 vi is a remnant composed principally ; -.Titinients and instincts left over t!i l ist state of existence, v is like electric and magnetic ..: y.iu one in its nature and in reality t.r:r:tive by a divided double cur . .:i ! corresponding poles. r.i . t man's or shall we say a wo . ,' -philosophy will enable her to :, .: tin; burden of humanity which her , .- pay b is imposed upon her. If to whom love is forbidden ba t , v a!v to love she will probably cs , i;, !i "npUtion and consequent disaster. be strong enough to love she may - disaster, but not temptation. Th Migli dishonesty may seem to :; ..:ir:-'.t like the bay-tree while virtue ; : ili like a forbidden thorny hedge, i ctii plain to all that the shade of the obnoxious and its branches with-ir-:h, while the pricks of the other ;,::) hurt unless struck against. Tiio Roumanian ha, in every walk In ::,;, t lierce and savage pride which r v- s hi:u to abhor the idea of medicine v; d s:;rgery, and to consider the loss of i ihnb as terrible as that of life itself, lie h;s become accustomed to the idea :L:it only beggars are so disfigured, aud l)-li"ves that no necessity should ccm truia him to such a loss. PROMINENT PEOPLE. ( -i -ail Wilde is about to revisit this c !!!.;ry. .' n i ti'.so.v, the comedian, is worth overa ji.ii-t.T if a million. I x V'Ki'x Natalie-, of Servia, hasdram-ht-r matrimonial experiences. Mi-. I'. s. CJraxt has concluded to spend r,. df i he .-Timmer r.t Cranston's, West J', '. Y. ! : i i v KD Kipling's contributions to the Li i, . ii limes are paid for at ttio rate of $j.V a letter. Ji tu t: Lamah is frequently seen in Washington at an early Lour doing the faiii i',y marketing. C: k:n Vk'tdhia, of England, is gradu .'y ' iii iei moiled to her various royal rel- i: !'.! u ii Ii whom she has not been on good ! i;r,-, U . ( '.ark Kcssell, the popular novelist, lh--i conceived the idea of writing a story Li!" imprisoned on board ship for insubor- .i!ia'i.n. " sicvoit Giovanni CJiolitti, the Italian niier, is tl.e youngest head of a Ministry ?':at It my has had since Cavour. lid is taiviy fifty years of age. ( I 'M Mi DoItE ELHRIDaE T. GERRY will ivet a home in ZS'ew York that will surpass in inaniliceiice any private residence ever j aicil on Alanhattan Island. ' kvkkal, Loxgstheet has become very miii tu with advancing years, and is so deaf t!: o -.11 conversation with him has to ho i u;i"ii miinrougn an ear trumpet. Cakuixai, Manning did not leave prop erty enough to pay his funeral expenses. 'I hoe amounted to $2100, aud to meet them a -ulisi -ription was started among his rela tive i-ii'i intimate friends. i'Mkx in Washington are represented as -"ii.- wild with envy at the magnificent a rube of the Chinese Minister. He never -ii ' -ars at any public entertainment twice in the same costume, and his silk an 1 satin r inin iits are valued at $1."0,OUU. Km sox received a fee of $40,000 for his ('pinion as an electrical expert w hen he was employed by the company organized to bore ' In- Niagara power tunnel to examine the ground, study conditions and plans, and give an "pinion as the feasibility and practicabil ity "f the work. Tin: United States Alarine Hand will soon 1 - ;lu servieeof John 1'hilip Sousa as lead er. He will, in about sixty days, take charge of a musical organization at Chicago at a -alary of SCGOO per year. Air. Sousa 'a- f r twelve years served the baud and the i sil iicof Washington with reat merit. Poisoned Mrs. Mary E. O' fallen, a nurse, of Piqua, Ohio, was iM)isoned while assist ing physicians at an au topsy 5 years ago,and soon terrible ulcers broke SOS uut 011 her head, arms, r"?V-ft3 tongue and throat. he x'v Wl'i1,t'd b,lt Wlbs., and . r. L. 0Tallen.s;uv I10 ..rosoect of heln. . -he h-xan to take HOOD'S SARSA PARILUA and at once improved; could soon '-' : ; 'ii oi lied and walk. She is now perfectly ' !i. sei-lis 1l.'s pounds, eats well, and does the " 1 : h luf a large latnily. HOOD'S PIL.L.S should e in every fam 'i.eilieini chest. Once used, always preferred. iW'ieo RIPANS TABULES rwilatej tL?o sioujrtch. !I.T ana bowels T liurii'y the blood, mro safe aad if j fecf.ial. The htst irenvral family Z CoDitipation. I'yspepsla, Koui Breath. Headache-, Heartburn, l ocal of Appetite. llBUtal Deprewloa, 4 J'tLiful Dycflgtion, HrnpfeB, Sa'Jow Coir.v,itiion. Tirfd btiUnK. ud pvrry svmptom or dMr.a rultinir from impure Wood. r a failurs by the stoinaoh. liver or intt-bVliiesT perforrt. 1'ieir prow fuactiou. r't i.'.mii ifjven to! cTf .-.patipy are bcueRW by taking iTADI L F. after J raohmvV,. 1-rtee, by nmil, 1 (frcs3?3 ; 1 bottle lf. Ad-I dr.-se-HSKIPANSCHKMIC4LCO.,10HpruoeSt.J.T.Z Amenta V antrds E1UIITV pe r .ciit (irvDU 2 66 Mothers Friend" KftKES CHILD BIRTH EASY. Colvin, La., Dec. 2. 1386. My wife used MOTHER'S FP.IEND before her third C'-inar..?ment, and says sha would not bo without it for hundreds of dollaro. DOCK MILLS. Sent by express en receipt of r"CP, $1.50 per bot tle, liouk " l o Mothers " mailed tree. GRADFtELD REGULATOR CO., rem by all CRuaaiGTa. ATLANTA, OA, no not be CPCFivrn Mtli imsis. Kiiuniel, and Paints which stain tin M in is, injnie the Iron, and burn off. 'HtH llisiiiij JSou Move PolisU 1. iiriiliant. Odor less, !)t'i;i!)!e,:i!ul trie coiisuuier pays lor U0 tla cr glass j.uflnvfe with every purlwse. ssissEaSassii REV. DR. TALMA GE tup: uimjoklyn mvikk's sun day sekmon. "uu.iiaus v i ,f ii i ! 1 T,and hel,mets aud swords. Soldiers other nhiirrhae i ' Z. 1U..LU r.f r'-i j 1 ,,1LLmSonliie armor of God, and who may feci themselves to he "S 0u1 raw recruits. "Alasterlv re peat is a term of tea usedia military cir cles, but in religion there i no such thin-, tt is either glorious advance or disgraceful and ignominious falling back. It would he a btrange thing if all our anxiety about, men ceased the moment they were converted You would almost doubt the sanity of that farmer who, having planted the corn an 1 seen it just sprout above groun I should siv Aly work is all done. I have kj more anxiety lor the field." No. Tuere is work for the plow and the hoe, and there must be a careful keeping up of the fences, au i there must be a frightening away of tha birds that would pillage the field. Anl I say the entrance upon Christian life is only the implantation of graca In the heart, lhere is earnest, hard work yet to be doue and perhaps many years of anxiety before there shall be heard the glorious shout of Harvest home." The beginning to be a Christian is only putting down thefoimdation; but after that there are years of hammering, polishin-r carving, lit ting, before the structure is com pleted It takes five years to make a Chris tian character; it takes twenty years it takes forty years, it takes seventy year' if a man shall live so long. In other words a man dying after half a century of Christian f.XAPoieC?, feSls that he La oaly Earned the A J Cs' of the glorious alphabet. The next year will decide a great deal in your hisUj-y, young Christian man. It will de cide whether you are to be a burning and shining light of the church, or a spark of grace covered up in a barrel of ashes. It will decide whether you are to be a strong man in Christ Jesus, with gigantic blows striking the iron mail of darkness or a bedwarfed, whinning, grumbling soldier that ought to be drummed out of the Lord's camp with the "Rogues' March." You have only just been launched; the voyage is to be made. Earth and heaven and hell are watching to see how fast you will sail, how well you will weather the temptest, and whether at last, amid the shouting of angels, you shall come into the right harbor. May God help me this morning to give you three or four words of Christian counsel, as I ad dress myself more especially to those who have just now entered the Christian life. My lirat Word of counsel is, hold before your soul a very high model. Do not say, "I wish I could nrav like that man. or snenir like this man, or have the consecration of ttiisoue." bay: "Here is the Lord Jesus Christ, a perfect pattern. By that I mean, w ith God's grace, to shape all mv life." In other words, you will never be any more a lauaii man you strive to oe. li you build a foundation twenty by thirty feet you will only have a small house. If you build a foundation one hundred by one hundred ieet you will have a large house. If you re solve to be only a middling Christutu you will only be a middling Christian. If you have no high aspiration in a worldly direc tion you will never succeed in business. If you have no high aspiration in religious things you will never succeed in religion. You have a right to aspire to the very highest style of Christian character. From your feet there reaches out a path of Christian attainment which you may take, and I deliberately say that you may be a better man than was Paul or David or Summerlield or Doddridge a better woman than Hannah More or Charlotte Elizabeth. Why not? Did they have a monopoly of Christian grace? Did they have a private key to the storehouse of God's mercy? Does God shut you out from the gladness and goodness to which they were introduced? Oh, no. You have just the same promises, just the same Christ, just the same Holy Ghost, ?"ust the same offers of present and ever asting love, and if you fall short of what they were aye, it you do not come up to the point which they reached and go beyond it it is not because Christ has shut you out from any point of moral aud spiritual eleva tion, but because you deliberately refused to take it. 1 admit that man canuot become a Christian like that without a struggle; but what do you get without lighting for it? The fortresses of darkness are to be taken by storm. You may by acute strategy flank the hosts of temptation, but there are temp tations, there are eviis in the way that you will have to meet face to face, and it will be shot for shot, gun for gun, grip for grip, slaughter for slaughter. The apostle Faul over and over again represents tue Christian life as a combat. "When the war vessel of Christ's church comes inco glory bringing its crew and its fassengers it will not come iu like a North Liver yacht, beautifully painted and adorned, swinging into the boathouse after a pleasure excursion. Oh, no; it will be like a vessel coming with a heavy cirgo from China or India, the marks of the wave and the hurri cane upon it sails rent, rigging spliced, pumps all working to keep her afloat, bul warks knocked away . 1 see such a vessel coming and get out my small boat and push toward her, and I shout: "Ahoy, captain ! What are you going to do with those shiv ered timbers? That was a beautiful ship when you went out, but you have ruined it." "Oh." says the captain, "I have a fine cargo on board, and by this round trip I I have made ten fortunes." So I believe it will be when the Christian soul at last comes into the harbor of heaven. It will come bearing upon it the marks of a great stress of weather. You can see by the very looks of that soul as it comes into glory that it was driven by a storm and dashed in the hurricane, but by so mucli as the voy age is rough, will the harbor be blessed. "If ye suffered with Him on earth, ye shall ba glorified with Him iu heaven." Aim high. Do not be satisfied to be like the Christians all around you. Be more than they have ever been for Christ. My second word of counsel to those who have recently entered upon Christian life is. Abstain from all pernicious associations, and take only those that are useful and benefi cent. Stay out of all associations that would damage your Christiau character. Take only those associations that will help you. A learned man said, "If I stay witti that man Fenelon any longer I shall get to be a Christiau in spite of myself." In other words there is a mighty power in Christian associations. Now what kind of associa tions shall we, as young Christians, seek after? I think we ought to get into com pany better than ourselves, never going into company worse than ourselves. If we get into company a little Letter than ourselves and there are ten people in that company, tea chances to one we will be bettered. If we get into company a little worse than ours?lves, and there be ten people in that company, ten chances to one we will be made worses than we were before. x ao noc precena to point out any evil In fluences, but are there not some surround ing influences that are pernicious to your growth in grace? Stand back from that fur nace in which so many young Christians have been destroyed. In this church there is a large company of young men and youn j women consecrated to Christ. I know of no better than they are. Young convert, I invite you into their friendship. Contact with them will elevate you. All hail, young followers of Jesus Christ, my joy and my pride! My heart thrills at every step of your advancement. I talked, with you in that hour when you most tried to break from siu, and now I re joice as I see you putting on the armor of a conflict in which God will give you present "aay ior battle. Ve have had Sf7 ?? th'S Chur,ch new enlistments, and 1 shall address mvself to ti,,, .. . 7 is au j anu everxastmg victory, etana off from all eVil associations. A man is no better than the company he keeDS. Go among those who are better than you are and you will be made better. Go among those who are worse than you are and you will be made worse. My next word of counsel is that you be actively employed. I see a great many Christians with doubts and perplexities, and they seem to be proud of them. Their entire Christian life is made up of gloom, and they seem to cultivate that spiritual despondency, when I will undertake to sav that in nin cases ouc or ten spiritual aesponaency is a judgment of God upon idleness. AVho are the happy people in the church to-day? The busy people. Show me the man who professes the religion of Jesus Christ and is idle, and I will show you an unhappy man. The very first prescription that I give to a man when 1 rind him full of doubts and fears about bis ffrerciai interest is to go to wont lor trod. Ten thousand voices are lifted up asking for your help. Go and help. I have another word of counsel to give those who have just entered Christian life, and that is, be faithful in prayer. You might as well, business men, start out in the morniug without food aud expect to be strong all that day you might as well abstain from iood all the week and expect to be strong pnysicany, as to De strong witnout prayer. The only way to get any strength into the soul is by prayer, and the only difference between that Christian that is worth anything and that who is worth nothing is the fact that the last doss not pray and the other doej. And the only difference between this Christian, who is getting along very fast in the holy life, and this, who is only getting aiong toieraDiy, is tnat tne nrst prays more than the last. You can graduate a man's progress in religion by the amount of prayer; not by the number of hours, per haps, but by the earnest supplication that he puts up to GoJ. There is no exception to the rule. Show me a Christian man who neglects this kind of duty, and I will show you one who is inconsistent. Show me a man who prays, and his strength and his power cannot be exaggerated. Why, just give to a man this power of prayer and you give him almost omnipotence. This afternoon you will see two Sabbath school teachers. That one does not gain the attention of her class. This one does. What is the difference between them, their intel lects being about equal. The first thought only of her own apparel. The other came from great prostration before God in earnest supplication, asking that God's mercy.might come upon the school and that in the after noon she might gain the attention of those five or six immortals that would le around her. The one teacher has no control over her class. The other sits as with the strength of the Lord God Almighty. Another word of counsel I have to give Be careful in Bible research. A great many good l ooks are now coining out. We cam not read half of them. At every revolution of the printing press they are coming. They cover our parlor tables, and are in our sit ting rooms and libraries. Glorious books they are. We thank God every day for the work of the Christiau printing press- But I have thought that perhaps the followers of Christ sometimes allow this religious litera ture to take their attention from God's Word, and that there may not be as much Bible reading as there ought to be. How is that with your own experience? Just calculate in your minds bow mujh re ligious literature you have real during the y ear and then how l.iriro a oorti m of the Word of God you have read, and then con trast the two aud answer within your own soul whether you are giving more attention to the books that were written by the hand of manor that written by the hand of GoJ. Now, you go to the drug store aud you get the mineral waters, but 'ou liavo noticed that the waters are not so fresh or spark ling or healthful as when you get these very waters at Saratoga and Sharon getting them right where they bubble from the rock. And I have noticed the same thing in re gard to the truth of the Gospel; while thera is a good deal of refreshment and health of the Gospel of God as it comes through good books, 1 find it is better when I co;m to the eternal rock of God's Word and drink forth that fountain that bubbles up fresh aud pure to the life and the refreshment and the health of the soul. Bead the Bible aud it brings you into the association of the best people that ever lived. You stand beside Moses aud learn nis meek ness, beside Job and learn his patience, be side Paul and catch something of his enthus iasm, beside Christ and you leal His love. And yet how strange it is that a great many men have given their whole lives to the as saulting of that look. I cannot understand it. Tom Baine worked against that book as though he received large wages aud was in spired by the very power of darkness, con fessing that all the time he was writing he did not have the Bible anywhere near him. How many powerful intellects have endeav ored to destroy it. Hume, Bolingbroke, Voltaire have been after it. Ten thousand men now are warring against the truth of (Sod's Word What do you think of them? I think it is mean and will prove it. I will prove it is the meanest thing that has ever been done in all the centuries. There is a ship at sea and iu trouble. The oaptam and the crew are at their wits' eud. You are on board. You are an old seaman. You come up and give some good counsel, which is kindly takeu. That is all right. But suppose, instead of doing that, in the midst of all the trouble, you pick up the only compass that is on board and pitcti it over thetaffrail? Oh, you say, that is dastardly. But is it as mean as this? Here is the vessel of the world going on with sixteen huudred millions of passengers, tossed and driven in the tempest, aud at the time we want help the infidel comes aud he takes hold of the only compass and he tries to pitch it over board. It is contemptible beyond everything that is contemptible. Have you any better light? Bring it on if you have. Have you any better comfort to give us Bring it on if you have. Have you any better hope? Bring it on if you have, aud then you may have this Bible and I shall n?ver want it again. But I can think of a meaner thing than that, and that is an old man going along on the mouutains with a staff in one hand and a lantern in the other. Darkness has come on suddenly. He is very old, just able to pick his way out amid the rocks aud preci pices, leaning on his staff with one hand and guiding himself with the light in the other. You come up and say. "Father, you seem to be lost. You are a long way 1 rom home." "Yes," he replies. Aud then you take him by the hand and lead him home. That is very kind of you. But suppose instead of that v,ou should snatch the staff from his nanus ana uun it over tne roess, ana snatch the lantern and blow it out? That would be dastardly, contemptible until there is no depth of contempt beneath it. If you have a better staff, give it to him. If you have a better light, give it to him. When God has put the staff of the Gospel in our hands and the lamp of God's Word to light our feet, are you going to take from us our only support and our only illumination? I love the sting of the wasp and the rattle snake better than I do the man who wants to clutch the Word of God from my grasp. Cling to your Bible! If this Bible should be destroyed, if all the Bibles that have ever been printed should be destroyed, we could make up a Bible right out of this audience. From that Christian man's experience I take one cluster of promises, and from that old Christian man's experience another, I put them all together, and I think I would have a Bible. You see, my friends. 1 have not tried to bid the fact that I have large expectation of you who have entered tbeChristian life. Do not be discouraged. Press on toward the prize; God beside you and heaven lefore you. Keep your courage up. Look in thirty years from now upon this church. Another man in the pulpit. Other faces in the pews. Another man leading the song. Others carrying around the alm lxes of the church. All changed. Thirty years have gone and I look into the faces of the people, and I say: "Why, it seems to me I have seen these people somewhere, but I cannot exactly say where. Ob. ves. .iow. I beziu to think. These were the converts In 1392 and 1890. Why, how you have changed f "Oh, yes," they say, "of course we have changed. Thirty years makes a great change. I $ay "How many wrinkles there are In youH faces ! "Oh, yes," they say. "thirty years make a great many wrinkles." 'Have you kept the faith?" "Yes, we have kept the faith." "Where are those people who used to sit in the pew with you?" "All gone!" "Then I say, "Well, I feel lonely; come, let us sing one of the old hymns we used to sing thirty years ago, in 1S92, on communion day. Any of you know the old tune? Some one hum it. Yes, that's it, that's it. Now, altogether, let us sing, just as we did in 189 : There is a fountain fitted with blool. Drawn from Immauuert vein?; And sinners p'.uned beneath ttut dooJ Lose all their guilty etaius. " The dying thief rejoice 1 to see That fountain in his day: And there may I, though vile as he. Wash all my sins away." NEWSY GLEANINGS. Vesuvius is again active. General business is on the mend. There are 527 missionaries in Japan. Damages to crops by rust are reportea from many places. Pigs are being sacrificed by Western farmers to save the corn. Cattle feeders are very much at sea in their prognostications for the future. There are thirty ordained colored clergy men in the Protestant Episcopal Church. Tennessee's State report on cotton shows decreased acreage of twenty-two per cent. Wholesale desertions from British war ships are going on at Halifax, Nova Scotia. Guatemala, has granted a subsidy of 1,.W,000 to the Northern Railway Com pany. An enormous increase is reported ia immi gration from Upper Alsace. Germany, to America. A sentry at Berlin, Germany, bayoneted a siiectator who had thoughtlessly stepped into military grounds. Immigration agents in Canada are remov ing families from Upper Michigan to the Northwest territories. German? has abandoned the proposed Berlin exhibition because it may interfere with our World's Fair. The damage by thejcent floods is esti mated to 150,000 in the aggregate, from the upper rivers to New Orleans. Th e Iowa People's Party elected Mrs. M. J. Coggeshall, a prominent woman suffra gist as a delegate to the 5St. Louis Conven tion. Th ere are 6295 Chinamen attending Sunday-schools in the United States and thirty five per cent, of the pupils become Chris tians. It is estimated that the cholera epidemics of the past year caused 50,000 deaths in Mesopotamia, 10,000 in Syria and 15,000 in lJersia. A blizzard raged lu the Northwest. South Dakota and W yoming were covered with snow, and crops and live stock suffered greatly. The Ohio penitentiary's population has reached high-water mark, the count bhowiug 1794 prisoners confined within the walls at Columbus. 200 convicts are now nightly sleeping on cots, owing to the overcrowded condition of the prison. There are only twenty female convicts. THE LABOR WORLD. ( New York cash girls get $1.50 a week. The formation of a National organization ' of engravers has been set on foot. The Calif ornians are alarmed by reports that Japanese cheap labor is being brought in. Chinese laborers are to be imported into Africa to teach the natives how to cultivate tobacco. Australian colonies are proposing com bined action against the importation of colored labor. The sponge industry of the Bahama Isl ands employs 500 boats and nearly 5OL0 workmen and boys. It is calculated that the aggregate annual income of the working classes of England is about $1,500,000,000. The National Federation of Sailors, re cently organized in Chicago, is taking steps to form an international organization com prising America, England, India and Aus tralia. A law in operation iu Missouri compels railroad companies to till or block all switches, frogs and guard rails with the lest known appliances for the protection of em ployes. Governor Flower has issued a pardon to Joseph Barondess, the leader of the New York Cloakmakers' Union, who was con victed and sentenced for extorting money as a condition of ending a strike. The report of the Secretary of the Order of Railway Telegraphers to the convention at Chattanooga, Te.in., showed a member ship of 2(5 000, with a protective fund of $80,00 ) and a general f uud of $40,000. The superintendent of the new elevated road in Chicago makes all applicants for conductorships sing him a song or two. He is determined to have clear-voiced young men who will not mumble hoarsely the names of the stations. In the United States the average expendi ture per family is stated at $611 in the cottc n industry and only $394 in the woolen indus try, a difference of $217, while the difference in income is only $5, and that in favor of the industry in which the expenditure per family is least. Origin of Our ITeeds. Most of our weeds, like much of out vermin, have come to u from beyond the sea . Just how they emigrate in ever case will never be known; some came m legitimate freight, but many were "stowaways." Soaie entered from bor der lands upon the wings of the wind, on river bosoms, in the stomachs of mi grating birds, clinging to hairs of pass ing animals, and a hundred other way besides by man himself. Into the Ne England soil aud that south along thi Atlantic seaboard the weed seeds trrsl took root. Also the native plants, with a strong weedy nature, developed ints pests of the farm and garJen. Many oi the native weeds are shy and harmless in comparison with the persistent and pug nacious ones that have like vagabonds emigrated to our shores. Why should it be that plants of another country not only find their way here, but after ar riving assert themselves with a vigor fat surpassing our native herbs? Dr. Gray, ia writing upon this point, says. "As the district here in which the weeds of th Old World prevail was naturally forest clad, there were few of its native herw which, if they could bear the exposure at all, were capable of competition in the cleared land with emigrants from the Old World." The European weeds had through long ages adapted themselves to the change from forest to cleared land, and were therefore prepare! to flourish here in the rich forest soil that was sud denly exposed to the sun and subjected to other new conditions by the feilmggf the trees. Popular Science Monthly, jstate or Ohio, ;itt or Toledo, i Lccas County, f Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the eenlor partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing businetis ia the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said liria will pay the sum of Jluufor each and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of nalA'B Catarrh Cure. . , Frank J. Cheney. sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this Gth day of December, A. D., laad. I i A. V. Gleason, J SEAL VTTTT , , notary ruMc. Hall s Catarrh Cure Lj taken Internally and acts directly on the blood and inacous surfaces f the system. Send for testimonials, free. c. , , , F. J. Cheney Sc Co., Toledo, O." bold by DruistA. 75c. Within the past few weeks seals have been caaght off the Connecticut coast. The Ouly One Evor Printed. CAN YOC riXD TUE WOltl? These is a 3 inch display advertisement in this paper, this week, which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true of each neu- one appearing each week, from The lr. Barter Medicine Co. This house places a "Crescent" on everything thev make and pub lish. lAKk for it. send them "the name of the word and they will return vou hook, beacti- FUI. MTHOUUAPIIS or SA.Ml'LfcS I KEE. There is a decided falling off in the cot ton acreage in South Carolina. For Impure of thin Blood, Weakness, Mala, rla Neuralgia, Indigestion, and Biliousness, take Brown's Iron liitrers it gives strength, making old persons feel young and younf persons btron pleasant to take. Frotestant natives iu Africa are waging a war of extermination oa Catholic mis sionaries. Ladies, la.hes, think of the -mr;iui'me:its vou have broken and the li-apjH.im mei.ts ,:,,-gejUU-nt toothers jwid i i -hap lso to oiir- h es ill on account of headache. Bradve'rotiiie will cure you m flit ecu minutes. Fiftvcentu. Too much silver in Havana has caused a great depreciation in the white metal throughout Cuba. For Dyspepsia, Indigestion, and Stomach disorders, use Brown's Iron Bitters. The Best Tonic, it rebuilds the system, cleans the Biood and strenKtbens the muscles. A splendid ton ic for wak and debilitated persons. The Mississippi is changing its course nesr Memphis, Tenn. Bke hav .s I'im.s act like made on the liver and other vital organs. One dose relieves sick headache in 'M minutes. The maple sugar counties in Ohio are in creasing. OIVJ3 KXJOYS Both the method and results wheii Syrup of lig.s U taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures hahitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptahle to the stomach, prompt in its action and. truly beneficial iu its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and SI bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAH FRANCISCO. CAL. LOUISVILIE. KY. HEW YORK. N.Y. My niece, Iitneline Hawley, w-as, taken with spitting blood, and she became very much alarmed, fearing that dreaded disease, Consumption. She tried nearly all kinds of medi cine but nothing did her any good. Finally she took German Syrup and she told me it did her more good than anything she ever tried. It stopped the blood, gave her strength and ease, and a good appetite. I had it from her own lips. Mrs. Mary A. Stacey, Trumbull, Conn. Honor to German Syrup. YOU NEED NOT FEAR that people will know your hair in dyed if you use that perfect imitation of nature. It imparts a k1s.v rolor and frli life to the hair, l'riee, SI. Office, Z'J I 'ark I'lace, . Y. Treated FREE. Positively Cured viiu Veelulle Kemeuies IlivecnrM inounan uh ui ca-. urr pn v- n uuced hopele'R br bet phyMoiariH. From tirst ymptotlS ruprdly disapiif-ar; in lu d;iy t tlnri of ail tymptoins removed, ."v-nd for fr-e b.ik of testimonial ot miraculous cures. 1() daV treatment free by maii. If vou order trial. -nrl lu:. in -tsmpfl to pay poM e. Hit. II. II. CKF.KN Ar M(. Atlanta. Oa. "German Syrup" Ms Hair Ove LOVELL DIAMOND CYC! CS &3 Fcr Ladles and i Diamond F'ame, Send 6 cents ia logoe of bans, h-ji cataisgc mas- JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO., Si i COPYRICrtT It's Jtying in the faca of Nature to take the ordinary pilL Jnst consider how it acts. There's too much bulk and bustle, and not enough real good. And think how it leaves you when it's all over ! Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets act naturally. They help Nature to do her own work." Thev cleanse and renovate, mildly but thoroughly, the whole system. Regulate it, too. The help that they give, lasts. They're purely vegetable, per fectly harmless, the smallest, easiest, and best to take. Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Constipation, In digestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the Liver, Stomach and Bowels are promptly relieved and permanently cured. One tiny, sugar-coated Pellet for a gentle laxative three for a cathartic. They're the cheapest pill you can buy, for they're guaranteed to give satisfaction, or j-our money is re turned. You pay only for the good you This i true only of Dr. Pierced P ATE MTS&SffAWKf: Dutcher's Fly Killer ia sure death. Every sheet wttl kill a quart of flies, and secure peace while you eat, Sulet when you read and the comforts of a nap In ie morning. Get Dutcher's and secure best result. FEED'K DUTCHEE DRUG CO., Sr. Albans, Vt. iattaLalJaHMMa Consumptives and people who have weak lungs or Asth ma, should use Plso's Cure for Consumption. It has cured thousands. It has not Injur ed cue. It is not had to take. It is the best cough syrup. Bold everywhere. SSe. IF TOU WANTTT A THEIR THEM TOA iiL X TV A Y even If you merely keep them as a diversion. In ol der to haudlo Fowls judiciously, you must know someti)!iii alii:nt t:iein. lonnit this want wear selling a ixrm jrviig tlie experience n,. I w )C of a racfcal poultry ralfr forlWHIJ aWls twenty-five yenrs. It tiiu written by a man who put all h:s m:ii 1. an 1 time, and mouey to making a sue rensof Cuiflfenrr.ij'i.ijf uotasa part line. tt a business a :d if jou will profit by his twenty-fiva 1 ears' work, you can save niauy Chicks annually, " Xatrfna. CMefcen." and make your Fowls earn dollars for you. The Bolntls,ttatyouniUiJt be able to detect trouble In tbe Poultry Yard as soon ay It anpears, and know bow to remedy it. 1 his ofc will tach you. It tel!s how to detect and twe disease; to feed ro Mrs and also forfattenlu; which fowls to save for toeediux mrM: and everything indeed you ahouid know oil tt It sucject to rrake It profitable. Sent postpaid for twenty-flva centa la 1c. or 2c ami8 Book Publishing House, LIVER PILLS DO 50T CBIPE K0B SICEBT. Ear core for RICK TIEAI AC TIE., Sntpi.red d.tfoa.eona pstico.lorf ia j;anu. iojyuoi ill orgar.a, n-n-.iT Biitiu BT.rsl ffert on Kill Iic-ysar.2lUtdder. CosqtKC Isllioos nervous) oiat- . U-wl XJaILY actio. Botify complexion by purifyinJE Mood. FCBELT VfcOETAiSUr. Tbe doe is nirrly fl)net d to rait ease, at ons plllea KTfrbctoomuch. f.aclr vial contain! 42, carried in vest Xxki-t. like lead p.ncil. Iimtinesa man's yrss 4 convenience. Taken et:r ttn sugar, feoldsvsry ytitn. All gen u.i. e S".m1 bear'-Creacent." (nd2-cer.t stamp. Tea get 32 page book with samplsv DR. MASTER 8ESIC1NE CO., St. Loalt. Mfc S X TJ Cents. Six styles Rl Iril 1 9" l imm.. VGU CHICKENS Ii jIIIk 2 JKv in Pneumatic Cushion and Solid Tires. W-5 IS II II Ster Drop Forg ngt, Steei T" Mj JJ Tuotng, AO; jsiace ban ceanngt to a.l running parts, including Ped Suspension SsJdl. Strictly HIGH GRADE in Every ParticulAr. tUmps for our 100-pare Illustrated rattv Klflcs, KctoItti, Sportiag Goods, etc Mfrs., 147 Washington St, BOSTON, MASS-
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 30, 1892, edition 1
7
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