Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / Sept. 29, 1892, edition 1 / Page 6
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REV. DR. TALM UK MiY". liOOKLYN PIVINK'S IT. DAY SKKM" N Tkxt: "And an highway shall be there, and a way, and it shall be called the tray of holiness; th unclea-i shall not pass; orer it; but it shall he for those; the wayfaring wen, though fools, sliall not err therein. No Hon shall be there, nor any rarenown beast shall go vp thereon. It shall not be found there, bvt the, redeemed shall ira k there, and the ransomed of the Lord shall, return and come, to Zion with songs and everlasting joy nnon th'ir heads; they shall fihtainjoy a. :d fIadness, and sorrow and tifihiny shad lee away. Isaiah xxxv., J-'.O. There aiv thousands of people here this morning who want to thul the right roa ). You sometimes se a iif-rs mi halting at cross roads, and vou cnn tell lv his iooks that h wishes to ask t iiesti)ii as to wht direction lm had b?tt r titKe, And I stand in your present?? tliis morning couscous of tln fct them are many of vou here viij realizj time there are a thouan 1 wrong rot Is, bur. oiny one l ight one, and 1 take il for nra:ited tint vou httvo cx.'iie in to uck which one it is. Here is on-oad that ojx'ns widely, but 1 have not muc-i fnitli in it. Threare a great many expensive tollgates scattered all along that way. In lee 1 at every rod you must pay in tears, or pay in Hageilations. On that road, if you get through it at all, you have to pay your own way, and sined this differs so much from what I have heard in regard to the right way, I believe it is tue wrong way. Here is another road. On either side of it are hoti-es of sinful entertainment, and invitations to come in and din? anil ivst. but from the looks of ttie jeople who stand fin the piazza 1 am very certain tnat it is the wrong house an 1 the wrong wav. Here is another road. Is is wry neautiful and m&OHdaiuized. The hois s' hools c.atter and wrinsr. and they who ri le over it sp.u along tha highway until mi Menl v they Ji.ni that the road breaks over an embankment, and they try to halt, and they saw the bit m the iiK.utl' of th- tlery teed and cry "Whoa! whoa!" Hut H is to late, and crash ! they go ovei' tiie euioatiUuini. We shall turn this morning an I see it we Camus fiinl a different kind ol a road . You have htari of the Appian Way It was three hundred and fifty miles long. It was twenty-four feet wide, and on tritlirr idu the road was a path for foot paFseugers. But I have this morning to tell you of a roa 1 built before the Appian Way.and yet it is as good as when fir.-t construed. Millions of souls have gone over it. Millions more will come. Fu.-t, tin's roa I of tha text is the King'.-i highway. Well, my Lord tue King diciieJ to build a highway from earth to heaven. It should siian all tlie chasm of human wretch edness; it should tunnel ail ths mountains of parthiy uitncuity; it should be wide enougu and strong enough to hold fifty thousand millions or the human race, if so many of them should ever be born. It should be biasted out of the "Rock of Ages,'' and cemented with the blood of the Cross, and be lifted amid the shouting of angels and the execration of devils. The Kmg sent HisSon to build that road. He put head aud han land heart to it, and after the road was completed, waved His blister! hand over the way crying, "It is finished. " Still further this road spoken of is a clean road. Mauy a fiue road has hero;tie miry and foul becausi it has not been prop erly cared t or j tut my text says the uu clean shall not walk on this oue. Room on either side to throw away your sins. In deed, if you w ant to carry them along, you are not on the right road. That bridge will break, those overhanging rocks will fall, the night will come down, leaving you at the mercy of the mountain bandits, and at the very next turu of the road you will perish. But if you are really on this cleau roaJ of. which I have been speaking, then you will stop ever and anon to wash in the water that stands in the basin of tha eternal rock. Ave, at almost every step of the journey you will be crying out, "Create within me cleau heart !" If you have no such asoirations as that it proves that you have mistaken your way, and if you will only look up and see the tlngerboard above your head you may read upon it tue words, "There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof is death." Without holiness no man shall see the lx)r d, and if you have any idea that you cau carry alonz your sin?, your lusts, you wor ldliness and yet to the end of the Christian race you are so awfully mis taken that, in the name of God, this morn ing 1 shatter the delusion. Still further, the road spokeu of is a plain road. "The wayfaring men, thougu foois, shall not err therein" that is, if a man is three-fourth au idot he cau tiud this road just as well as if he were a philosopher. Many a man has been familiar with all the higher branches of mathematics and yet could not dc the simple sum, "What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul? ' Many a man has been a line reader of tragedies and poems and yet could not "read his title clear to mansions in the skies.7' Mauy a man has botanized across the contiuent an I yet did not know the "Rose of Sharon aad the Lily of the Valley." But if one sbail come in the right spirit, asking the way to heaven, he will fin i it a plain way. Tue pardon is plain. The peace is plaiu. Everything is plain He who tries to get on the road to heaven through the New Testament teaching will get on beautifully. He who goes through philosophical discussion will not get on at all. XTbrist says, "Come to Me. and I will take all your sins away, and I will take all your troubles away." Now. what is tha use of my discussing it any more? Is not that plain? After this Bib.e has pointed you the way to heaven, is it wise for me to de tain you with auy discussion about the nature of the human will, or whether the atonement is limited or unlimited? There is the road go m: it. It i a plain wav. Still furtlier, tins rond to heaven is a safe read. Sometn es th-traveler in those an cient highways w..ui i t-iink himself perfect ly secure, not; knowing tuere was a lion by the way i urving is ht 1 deep between his paws, and then when tbe riiht moment canu-. uud-r the leu-.ul spring, the man's life was gone an 1 there was a mauled car cass l.y the ruaoMde. hut, sivs mv text, "No lic-n sr.a.l le tl.ei-.."' i w.sh I could ruaka yuu iee: this u-oruiug v.mr entire se curity. 1 tell . .u ulainiv' that oue minute alter a man l;as b-c.v.r.e a child of God he is as safe as thou Ji lie in i boeu ten tncusaud years in fceaven. H' may siip, he tnav slide, he may stiMU'ie. uu he cannot be de stroyed, '.l-yt bv thj po.er of Hod through faith unto co u.'iete salvation. Everlasting ly sate. The severest trial to which vou can sub ject a Christ an man is to kilfnim, and that is gin-v. In other words, the worn thing that can happen n child of God is heaven. The body is only the old slippers that he throws aside just be.ure putting on the s-anJals of light. His soul, you cannot hurt 't- No t res can consume it". No floods can drown it. No devils an capture it. His soul is safe. His reputation is safe. Everything is safe. "But." you say, "sup pose his store burns up?" " Whv,' then it will only be a change of invest lrients from earthly to heavenly securi ties. "But," you say, "suppose his name goes down ua W the "hoof of scorn -nd con rem ; t?" The came will be so much brighter in giorv. "Suppose his phvs ical hea'ta fails?" God will pour into him the fieo's of everlasting h-alth. and it wid not make any difference. Eartblv subtrac tion is bea.venly addition. The tears of earth are tbe crystals of heaven. As thev take rajs and tatters an1 put them througa the pdoer mill anj they co.ue cut beautiful white sheets of paper, so oftaa toe rags of earth.y destitution, under the cylinders of death, come out a white scroll upon, wfcieb shall be written eternal mancino". Stili further, the road spoken of ia a pleas ant roaa. God gives a bond of indemnity aeainst all evil to everv man that treads it. U things work together for good to those who love God." No eapon foraaed against them can prosper. That is the bond, signed, staled an ! delivered by the President of the universe. What is the use of your fretting, O child of God, alout fool? ''Behold the fowls of the air, for they sow not, neither do thy renp.nor gather into bands, yet vour luaveuly Father teedeth them." Ana will He take care of the sparrow, will He take care of the hawk, and let vou die? What is the u-a of your fretting about clothes? "Con j si ier the lilies or the field. Shall He not n uch more clothe you, O ye of little faith?" Ob, this Kind's highway ! Trees of life on eulier side bending over until their branches itorlnck and drop midway their fruit and shade. Houses of entertainment on either si !e of the road for poor pilgrims, 'lables spread with a feafet of good things and walls adorned with apples of gold in pictures of silver. I start out on this King's highway, and I find a harper, and 1 say, "What n your name?" The harper makes uo rpouse, in'.t leaves me to gut-ss, as wich his eyes to ward htaven and u hand upon the tre b!"iig stroigs this tune cdiips rippling outui -on the aii : "The Ird is mv lii.ht and -r-v sal vation. Whom shall I fear? The Lord is tl e strength of my life. Of wl oni shall I be afraid?" I go a iittle farther on the same road and meet a trumpeter of heaven, and I say, "Haven't you got some music for a tired pi.jrim?" And wiping his iio and taking a long breath, he puts his mouth to the truai pet i-.nd pours forth this strain : "They ball hunger no more, neither shall thev thirst any more, neither shall the su:i light on them, nor any heat, tor the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall lead them to living fountains of water, and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes." go a little dista nee farther on the same roid, and I me?t a maiden of Israel. She bus no harp, but she has cymbals. They look as if they ha 1 rusted from sea spray, and I say to the maiden of Israel, "Have you no song for a tired pilgrim?" And like ths ciaug of victors' shields tue cymbalsc ap as Miriam begins to oiscourse, "Sing ye to tha Lord, for ti e hath triumphed gloriously; thi horse and the rider hath He thrown into th sej." 1 pursue this subject only one step fa : her. What is tha terminu-? I do not ore tow tine a road you may put me on, I want to a now where it -'umei out. My text declares it, '-The redeemed of the Lord come to 7a on." Vou know wait Z on was. Tht w.!s the Kind's palace. It was a mouur din la-tnes-. I- was imnregnaole. And so heaven is th fastness oi tue universe. N howitzer "ias Ion; fuougu ranae to shdl tho-e tower.-. Lt all the batteries of earth and h-il tduz aw.-iy; rheycaunoc hrea-c in these gates (iiuralter was taken: Seoi. topol was ta!;e:, Bahvion Ml, but those walls of iisivcii snail never surrender eitaer to humanity or sararnc hesiegement. The Lord God Aimiihty is the uefene o. it. Grat capital of tue - iiiiversi ! Terminus of th-- King's highway When my last wound is healed, when the last heartbreak is ended, when tae last tear of earthly sorrow is wiped away, and when the redeemed of the Lord shall coma to Zion, then let the harpers take down their harps, and all the trumpters takedown their trumpets, and all across heaven there be chorus of morning star?, chorus of white robed victors, chorus of martyrs from un der the throne, chorus of age, chorus of worlds, and there be but on-j sonjf song, and but one name spoken, and but one throne uonoi e-1 that o" Jesus onl v. The Sullen Hamster. As the squirrel was said by the old Norsemen to bring all the news of the animals to Thor, because he was the merriest auJ most sociable of beasts, so in the talk of the Russian peasants the hamster is the synonym for all that ia sullen, avaricious, solitary and morose. Even in color he is unlike any other animal, being light above and dark be lo'.v. This gives the hamster somewhat the same iucongruous appearance that a pair of black trousers and a light coat lend to a man; in other respects he is like a large, shaggy guinea pig, with vtry large teeth and puffy cheeks, intc which he cau cram a vust quantity oi ry t or beans for transport. Each hamster lives ia a large, rootu. burrow all by himself, in deiense o! which he will tight like a badger against aoy other hamster who may try to enter. Family life he wholly avoids, uevei allowing a female inside his burrow, bul keeping her at a good distance and mak iug her find her own living for herselt and family. The last burden is, how ever, not a serious one, for by the timj the youug ones are three weeks old each discovers that family life is a great ini?-ta'-ce and sets oil to make a bacaelor bur ro .v for itself aid save up beans for the winter. For, ir. addition to its other amiable qualities, the hamster has that of avarice in a marked degree, and heap? up treasures of corn, rye and horse beans fat in excess of hisoA'u private wants for the winter. His favorite plan is to dig a number of treasure chamber, all co n municatiug with a central guard room, in which toe owner eats au.i grows fat until the hardest frost begin, when he curls himself up to sleep uutil the spring. But this life of leisure does not begin uutil the h.u vest has been gathered. While the craps are ripeuing, the hanstcrs worK .'ucessautly to increase their hoar.l, and as much as three huu dred weigiit of grain aad beans have been takei from a hamster's burrow. Alter harvest the peasant often search with probes for the treasure chambers of the robbers, and during the present scarcity iu Central Europe they will no doubt exact a heavy tribute from the hamsters' storei. Spectator. Chi iiimoji Destroys lisea-' fJfr.n. After prolonged research an 1 txperi i icuis in I'dsteur's laboratory, M. Cairn berlaud is reported to have come to the conclusion tin', no living germ of disea-e can resist the antiseptic pover of esenci of cinnamon for more than a few hours. It destroys microbes as effectively, it' not as rapidly, as c rrosive sublimate. Even the sceat of it is fatal, and M. Chamberiaud holds that a decoction of cii namon oujjht to be taken freely by person living in places affected by typhoid or cuoiera. There is nothing ne .v in all this. In the oldest knmv.i medical prescriptions for infectioas di etscs cinnamon vas a prominent ingre dient, audit was in great rej.iesc durijg tha plagues of Load n. Ttierc is no re ison lor doubting that the p'aysiolans of those earlier days were as familiar with its medical properties a vvti : oujr. New York Herald. '! igo brewers Lave formal ft OiHuoo cprcbiae to purchase lvv! saiooDt. DOWN IN A SALT 'MINE. WHAT MEN DO THERE A THOXJ. SAND FEET UNDER GROUND. olid 3fass3 mt Sale Broken Up by Blasts -Hauling the Salt by Mule Power . -r "V" TT"HEN the signal for the car to descend sounds, the first Y Y thing to do is to hug your hat down on your head for leeps, and by the time you have got that set accomplished it seems as though you were going down at about the .rate of a thousand miles a minute. You have seen one streak of greased lightning chase another well, it's bo comparison. It teems as though the cablo has been cut, and you are just dropping down to the bottom. You can't see, and the only thing to be heird is that terrible roar of the air as you rush through space. Af ter Ihe first two or three hundred feet there is a feeling it would be hard to ex plain, eort of a goneness as it were, and jou don't care much whether school keeps or not, and the changes are so dif ferent and varied that one begins to wonder what wil come next. , When near the bottom the car on which you are riding begins to slow up, and then comes the most peculiar ex perience of all. You imagine that you ro shooting upward, and you will soon be among the stars. You can imagine the sensatioi. irom going down at the late of about one hundred miles a minute to yoicg up at about seven times that rate. Finally the car lands at the bot tom of the shalt, and you breathe a sigh of leliet as you step out. Well, the first tiiiug you do is to look for salt; it's there, all around you, above, beneath, on all side, but it don't look much like salt near the bottom of the shaft, aa lights are burned constant ly and the smoke has blackened the tsalls. You look away to the east, through a long, dark tunnel, and you discern in the lar distance some flicker ing lights, and you are informed that they are light used by the workmen who are engaged in mining the sait. Your guide steps up to a iqhu uer where yon land and swys- "Three Hght3, plea-e," and three tallow t-audles are handed out. It may seem a little strange that tallow candles are u?ed in this age of kerosene, gas, and electricity, but such is the case, tend they are the only lights used in the mine, and each man carries one, and tliey are hung up from the ceiling where the mining of salt is going on, aud they are the handiest lights that can be used. They don't purchase these lights by the dozen or hundred, but by the cartload. The caudles were lighted, and with ttem in hand we followed the guide and proceeded to make a tour of the mine; we might add, a partial tour, for it would take a person something like a week to walk all over tho mined terri tory. We followed the guide along through dark and winding pathways, until we rcttcned a point where the workmen were busily engaged mining the salt. They were not at work with picks picking it out, as might be snp posed, but were breaking up the large lumps and shoveling it into the cars, tha salt having been blasted out ahead of them. While some were engaged iu shoveling the rait, others were drilling holes into the solid mass, making ready for a blast, machines run by compressed air being used for this purpose. As heiore sUled, the main tunnel runs directly cst. and is nearly a half mile in length. Ncir the shaft two other tua els brauch oil- from the main tunnel, one on either side, and run parallel with i. Theif. wc believe, are termed air shafts. Fom theso shafts rooms branch oil both noilh and south, and in theso rooms is wheie the salt is mined. Thesa rooms a"e nothing more nor less than short tunnels, and ia time will probably be lengthened out as far as the main tun nel, or even further, as they can go miles in any direction and still be in the salt. The rooms are, perhaps, twenty or thirty feet wide, and from seven to eight feet in height. A section of salt some thirty feet in thiekuess is left between each room as -a support to the solid mass above. A thickness of five or six feet is left sbtve is a roof, and a substantial roof it makes, as the salt in its natural state is almost as hard as rock. There are uo other supports than the columns iif salt that are left. Mil lhese rooms mentioned there :ir9 fifty er sixty at the present time, and tue workmen arc distributed about, working in several rooms at a time. There is no necessity of a foreruuu in each room, ni the number of carloads of salt delivered at th- shalt tells the tale as to whether the men ate shirking their duty ur not. A railway runs through the m'ain tunnel aad branches eztsnd in all directions. The cari are hauled from the several rooms by large, powerful mules, ami there are somj thirty of these in the mine. There is a b'.acksmith's shop in the mLe wliere the toois are repaired and the u:u!es are shod, aud there is also a large stablo where the mules are shel tered during tlie night. Ot eonrse they would Lc well sheltered in the mine, any way. but if allowed to ream abont they could Cad nothing to eat but salt and th rtiiiyad tr.;ck, and the average mule canno: exist on i. diet of this kind. This stable is far ahead of the ordinary stables about the co.intry, aad there is every convenience and luxury for his muleship. The stahha are some foity or fifty feet in length and twenty or thirty feet wide, with wood rloor r.nd wooden stalls and mangers. This is the oulv combustible euwfaDCf. li.efcTs abour Cue" mine, and there ?.re no xposed lights any vhere about it. Directly in the rear of the stables i? w'-ni i." known as the barn ysru. This is a large room cut in the solid .! , e id here the maies are turned ut for r?vu??rttio.2. 0De ".rmgine that a salt mine is a bad plre to v.cr'.;. bu: aside from the lact 'bt - .s n little dismal, there are ro bi l thirts about !. Unlike :; coal mine, i: " tlen, un th-re is iiinot ua wven '-t -j ei-.'.-J.'c ;.-ar rouuJ, racg .Cj' :r;. , rift ibt degress to sixty de grerf, winter and tuxuir. The ventil ation is perfect, ana tne systern-tor sup plying fresh air is not excelled by any mine in the world. In some of the pas sageways the rdr rushed through with such velocity as to extinguish lUtt lights. The experience in going up the shaft is somewhat different from that wj It going down. The signal is given from below alter you h:ve been saiely sta tioned in the car, and away she goes, your hat sinks down firmly on your iiead, and your clothing seems to sit tight down tight whrre it belong?. A ;,erson who is a little weak in the knee would al9o have a tendency to sit right i'owu tight oa the'botto.a of the car. The roar of the wind as you hustle up toward daylight is about all that can ba heard. When near the top the epeed is lessened, and it is then that one im agines that he is going down again at the rate of about 1000 miles a minute, but finally the daylight begins to peer) down at you and you are landed safely on top, only a few seconds having elapsed since you walked upon the car below. Geneseo (N. Y.) Democrat. Trees Which Heat lint One. The sago palm tree" bears but one crop of fruit. Its load of nuts is its first and final effort in the way of fruit bearing. The nuts become ripe and are strewn in thousands around the tree until the great stein stands up by itself, empty and bare. The branches turn brown and drop one by one to the ground. Inside the trunk the work of decay is going on until what at one time was a mass of while sago anil pith becomes nothing but a collection of rotten brown fibers. Oae day the trade wind blows more strongly than usual aad the leafless column of the truuk falls with a crash, destroying in its fall many of the young palms that are alreaiy springing from the nuts scattered some months before. The tali put or Palmyra palm, a native of Ceylon, is another tree which flowers and bears fruit but once. When about eighty years old, which is when it has attained its fu'd growth, the flower spike bursts from its envelope with a lou 1 report. In the course of fifteen or twenty months it showers down an abundance of nuts, and this effort to produce a nuraeious succession proves fatal to the parent. The fruit is round and very hard, about the size of a cherry, and so abundant that one tree will proiluc2 sufficient to plant a large district. Brooklyn Eagle. There were 15'J0 railroad accidents in Xev Jtisty last year. The World' Pair has already cost nearly nine millions. Vaiuleriiill's Way. A writer iu the Figaro throws an in-tere-tiug ligiit upon Mr. Vatideibilf's method of b iving pictures. Tho mil liouaite, it seems; went otice to Meisson ier and asked him which of his works w:i, i his own opinion, his chef d'ouvre. Meissouier auswere I: The Chess Play ers." Whom does it belong to?" was Mr. Vanderbilt's next question. "To Heir Meyer, of Dresden,' was the an swer. Tnat very night Mr. Vanderbilt dispatched a secretary to Dresden, who went straight to Flerr Meyer and de manded to know his price. '$$0,000,' replied the owner, thinking that he had effectually frightened his interrogator. "I take it," said the secretary to the great astoaishment of Ilerr Meyer, and take it he did. Pall Mall Gazette. The educational syste n ol'Aut"raTii !i under the protection of the Government, which supplies schoolhouscs, teachers and m( ney, and the system is generally good. At a Paris fair a prize was awarded ti the man with the most monstrous nasa affair. The World's Fair has already cost nearly nine millions. P. K. C'oburn, Mirr.. Clarie Scott, writ find Hall's Catarrh Cure a valuable remedy. " LrruggiMs it. T-V-. 1'overty may Le iucui, b it it's not or namental. I w your Back A cba, or yon all worn out, rood for nothing, it is fteaend debility. Brown s Iron Milters w.U cure yon, make yon strong, cleanse your liver, and aire a good ap- in-tiie tones the nerves. There goes Blobski, the booaaeraat? poet. "How did he get that name?" By bis veries always coming back to him." Philalelnhia It --cord. Ora Old Rzlublk Itk watcb cow weak or Inflamed eye, or frrannltd nd without pin. ri cent. Jons R. DlCKF.V Vraf Co-. Brlt-1. Va. If a?!ii ith rore eye tit Ur.lsnac TLotnn-on-- tlye-uatcr.lJruifisU kmII at Oc.per buttle .Every maa's ideal woman is oue wm would believe he caught whiles m the river if he told her so. Ye iis:n G. uj. Scrofula Afflicted me four years blotches all over my body, swelling In my Deck, and In less th&n a year had lost 40 lbs. I was Induced by H. L. Tubbs, our druggist, to try Hood's Sarsapa- T-ill a and the blotches Mr. G. W. Duaer. ana jum; in my ne k dis-apiK-red, and I soon bvgau to gain In flesh. In 4 months thre vs r.one of the dLease left In my syetr ru, ;.! i w n well and strong as ev r." G. V. l'o.-. tn. -eola. South Dakota. TZo'f rHTF " .. l-rer family catlmrtlc, C s-. c i rya box. Onlr -' cts. Qosnoteed to cor BQions tttekf, 8iek Heed ache aad Constipation. 40 in seen tools. Price SBc. Tor saia by drugyisu. Picture "7, 17, 70" and sample dose free. ' ' "M7H A C0 Proprittori, HEW YORK. Small. The T,rne Laxative Principle Of the plant used in manufacturing the pleasant remedy, Eyrup of Figs has a perma nently beneficial effect on the human system, while the cheap vegetab'e extracts an.i min eral nations, usually sold as medicines, are permanently injurious. Felngwell informed, yon will use the true remedy only. .Manufac tured by the California Fig Svrup Co. When a man sits and look dreamil? out into the nijht, it is not near so likely that he is thiamin.; of hU girl u that he is calc.ilatia ; so ut'.iin; a'jaat a dollar. Th Oaly One Ever Prided. CAS VOD FIND THE WOIID7 The-elsa3 Inch display ad ver l-emenl lo this pap-", t Li- eek, which has no two words ali e except one word. The sa-ue is true o' each new one iM-ttnnc n-h week, from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. Thihoue p'acv a "Crescent" on everything they masennd pub lish. Look for it. send -tbera the nume of the word and they will return you book. ueACTi roL i.tTHOciiAPna or sampled ritxc. it was a rauca too sa lien move. For just bj'ore h3 scoc The worls that t:d tiic oi h'u lov 'tlxt ni toijci br.iij-. Brown's Iron Bitter cures Dyspepsia, Ma laria. Biliount"-s and Geneiai Debt ity. Gives Strength, aids B Ke-tion, tones the nerv- creare-appetite. The b.st tonic for nring Mothers, weak Wjmea and children. 'I've lost five pjuj is ot lleh oa vo n account," sighed the b itciier, as a do rau oU with a steak. Tesi Sifting. MF.DiCAi.scipncphasa'-hieved a great triumph in the product ion of B--rhum's l'ills which at 25 cents at box replace a medicine chest. Tiie luxury of d-."m- every ot.ier en jo? n-iv. jooJ surpasses There are 525,000 Congregationalist3 in the Unit-ja States. rjJMBlBBBsflBB ? CURES ALL. I DISEASES) hi,r.ilLARITIJE i " ip-" 1 PECULIAR I ' TO WOMFNi- Have az:3 ana" recommenced it to my friend. All .IsrlveJ great bencfitfrom its use. Mes. Matilda Larsox. Peoria, IN. Ect r?mo-ly I have ever used for irrpgular nir-i!-.,.r,:a'-lon. Mrs. G. Jett, .v.-cra'ocr, lSS. Sclma, Col. I have Eufferod a grat deal from Female Trc-.ils;, JsaJ think I am completely cured by JIes. tMA F. Swoan, Mansfield, O. Doo!r ' To Woman" mailed free. BHADFH.LO REGULATOR CO., For sole by all Druggist. Atlanta, Ga. Flower 99 I have been troubled with dyspep sia, but after a fair trial of August Flower, am freed from the vexatious trouble J. B. Young, Daughters College, Harrodsburg, Ky. I had headache one year steady. One bottle of August Flower cured me. It was positively worth oue hundred dollars to me J. W. Smith, P.M. and Gen. Merchant, Townsend, Out. I have used it myself for constipation and dyspepsia and it cured me, It is the best seller I ever handled C. Rugh, Druggist,. Mechanicsburg, Pa. $ MERCURIAL Mr.J.C. Joneof Fulton, Ark., snys of I K N I About ten years ago I con ' J ' tracted a severe cao of blood poison. Leading physicians prescribed medicine after medicine, which I took without any relief. I also tried mercu rial and potash remedies, with unsuc- RHEMT cessful results, but which brought on an attack of xnercurrl r cumathm that made my life one of agony. After suff ering four years I gave up all remedies and commenced using S. S. S. After taking several bottles, I wr.s entirely cured atid ablo to resume work. is tho greatest medicine for Mood poisoning to-cicy on tho rr.arlrct." Treatiso cn r?i-il : I F'.ln Eicrr.s" r.:z'S.el Iree. F'vht Srcciri.: Cu.. AU..:iir. ta. YOU CMI BORROW MONEY To purchase real estate, ereot buildinr or make oth er improvemf nt or pay off rnrumbrkDm at cot of AhwiITT 1 nT- r'f ttv loltiincr fK.f ITI A T 1 t VIiJ. TJ " T Ti'i"" SYNDICATE. T6 Mont(fimery St., Jrsyy City. N J. eeeegwyj j J A the sioDiarh. livrr and boi- J , fectr.al. The t-et o-ral tamlij m3 icine known for Biboufn 4 Contipation. Dyspepsia, Kuul Breath, neadache. Heartburn. Los tf Appetite. ilecL&l LHrprfH? 103. rSunnil Disstion, Pimple. Sil .w rr.ninl.rin Tirwl V--nr.tr n terery frtnetom or dit-e rWulun from irorure? t Diooa. ora r J to perform 1 JoTr-eUu; JdrtaTHE KITANS CHEMICAL ( u .lu8pnjer St .S.Y. . Au 11 finiri cit.il. m (wr it.i pr.ou CA FTIOK Beware of d-nl-r ab- I Hiiaiutkti wlthoat W. I.. Ionglaj rie ata.iaed on bottom Hack eakatitatlaBa mr trmmAmlnt an. vfaject to vrooecatioB by lm.tr for ofe- a ! money oi tf iorfalao pretence: A telaalvo to akao ItO far fatabMii. I fn.t hit -a M. mi "August j.8 1HIS IS THE feen J eielaalvo aalo to akoo oaalara oaa tira wrh Pate. ii.nii-!s. and Paints Trhirh ftain tn hruvls. injure the Ir.-f. and l.urii f ff Tiie Kisini? Sun Stove Polish U l.nlliait. f.il' r less Durable. and the consumer p:s lur j.u tm or glass parage "h evpry puha-e. YOURsoftss CORNS, BUNfUN. tentter fiiJ cm r.s rew appllcatltm of -roOTISX." 50c by!njgiflsta or mail, fcend f?r teg. UmuolaU. B. V. LCDLUX CO., Swajtoh. Ohjkx fruit and ornamental; Stoek. Ordr now. li 'i i" ('..:.-I' - se i- K Kl:. ELIWAKCER & Dim .'v'r : Plso's Eomedy for Catarrh Is the Brst. Kaslert to T"si. mil Oipappt. bold by druisut or sent by nail. 50c . T. HazeltlDe. Warren. Pa. LUXURIES LEAK3VILLE EUKKTS. n ,us. lt-pers 5i 11).. ?.. .:;rt !5r..i H fr. i. . ; 1! , Fli -r pair. I-aksvllIc U.r.ri-t Jt-ji.-"i -a; , I'. aul 15U t Z5c 40r. iiid ic. J. ar 1. 1. ;-i -- Uruv. ;i !-.. Prown. -I - a a; i; i.tji. V. . I Yum. all colors. Sr. a bank, li your : ..l,r d. not ke'j l!!-" :-xl.-f.rl-r f J. it . M'.'ri' k- t O.. Si-ial Stlliii Am- , tii -eilro. .N. '. Its Origin and History; PREVENTION AND CUBE. An interesting Pamphlet mailed te any id dress on receipt of Stanm Dr. L H. HAEEI3, Pittsburgh, Pa. RELIEVnS all Stomach Distress. REMOVES Nausea. Sense of Fullaesu, Congestion. Pais. REVIVES Failing ENERGY. RESTORES Normal Circul&Mcn, find WA2X3 to Toe Tips. BR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. SU Louis. M9 rou ?TANTr a -r t ii e i n THEM I'O-L -X- WAY en If you meroir tecp them a d!Tcrkn. In or der to handle i-wls Jud:cl'U.ly, yu must know foiriFtbltiK btxut t. rm. 1 u turet ibl wbnt wearf eliing a ixx.k gir.vg :l e exfrr!ens fr',v ife ot a practical pot-1 try ram-r forw-i twentj-nve yean, li as written by avian wl.n -all h!a mln 1, and five, aud i; .n-y to niakinit a u eMof Cblt kt nra'j ii: nota ra?"ltr. i:t bua'neg aid If you villi profit V Lit twnti-iwg yeaxi' work, you An mti man'CIlcki anuualy. Ml A '( V 4 VA Halting Chickens." ana make yoar Fowls enrn dollar fo jon. T point Is. that you mu-t Le tb to drvt t.-tt!f ; tto Poultry Vrd -xjti a i It hi : r. nn d tocw bow to remedy It. i his took w;:i 3 t.-J. It telia bow to d 't -v and tur d!-w. tr lc icandali-oforfait r.!i!x; wfclch fuw ; v fle ', n brtrl 1. p-..ri-oc: an 1 everyt'-lrg. , r ja bou.d kne! w on tbi ui ject to mate H ; ' 'i e- 8ent postpaivi f .r twrttv-flva cent In " Bcok Publlsi.ins House, S. N U tf. L. tranlne newtd shoo 1 K.-.t w ill r.r.t rip.: V-f: TREES ray m Mm IF YOU OWN em ljmP$, 1: I f i i TN -vt t A ii:; DOU&iiS rOlS nFWTLEMEV. seamless, amoota inside, fi :iu. i-ioro cc::.i f . r and durable tcaa any oiLcr En-? ever v ! a- r- iTjaUcustom-ina.le?hoc5Costi::rfri :n ?l to . The only :i.OO Mioe inadf itii t"o r1rn.!.' '? olee, fpcnrrly a.wr-f. at the ou:s!d"c r "; ;." ' wfet?b ilutibie the wear of cheap w-::; Z'-l.-' aame price, tor 6r.chetily rip, tiv;-? r r j - ;. y-, to a narrow nrin t leather oa tie vU-;-;. z-1 " worn through are worthless. , , . c-, toc-v. Tho two oolp'jftheV. T..DOf Gl Ty wnen worn tsronrn cr.n ts t' :- B.iea&ary,a3 tiiey r.; never r: v - zniXe.En-. cf :r.--- tO r.y Ct tn-i Jm-s. . . ... !ia i-. trd -.:t..o ..;i'- --'i : tr.'l VJ.Od 'Vo.-! ,;:r::i. :i S3.001:'a-. i .- 4.. 1 f.l.?.-,resil r-r are cf the f.:: ' ea.lera aid eeneral tnercaota whi-r? : far aala la ngr alaee itrad Airect to t ulr'- 0IMlfmt k.il MS ize mai wjaV -a. Ymmjm ft Wi L Uimsl, reste&i
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 29, 1892, edition 1
6
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