Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / Oct. 27, 1892, edition 1 / Page 6
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rev. dr. talma GK THE RROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN DAY SERMON. Text: "Lift up thine eyes westward." Deuteronomy 27. Po Gort sai i to Moses in Biblo time?, anl fo He said to Cristoforo Colombo, the son of a wool comber of Genog, more than four hundred yavsa-zo. T1:a Nations had been looking rhiefiy towar 1 the tast. But while Columr.u as his name was oallel after it was Latinized, stood stuiyin? mans and examining glomes and reading" coc! mopraphy. Go I saii to him, "Lift up "thine eyes towar 1 the west." The fact was it must have seemed to Columbus a verv lopsided world like a cart with one wheel, like a scissors with one Made, like a sack on one side of a camel, needm? a sack on the other side to balance it. Here was a bride of the world with no bridegroom. I do not won ier that Colunhm was not satisfied with half a wcrld, anl so went to work to find the other half. The pieces of carved wood that w?re floated to the shores of Europe by a westerly pa'.e, and two dead human faces, unlike anything he had seen before, likewise floated from the west, were to him tho voice of God saying, "Lift up thine eyes toward the west." Old navigators said to youn? Columbus. "It can't be done." The republic of Genoa aid, "It can't be done." Alphonso V. said, "It can't be done." A comm ttee on mari time affairs, to whom the subject was sub mitted, declared, "It can't be done." Vene tians said, "It can't be dona." After awhile the story of this poor but ambitious Colum bus reaches the ear of Queen Isabella, and she pays eighty dollars to buy him h decent f uit of clothes, so that h may be fit to ap pear before loyalty. The interview in the palace was success ful. Money enough was borrowed to fit out the expedition. There they are. the three ships, n the Gulf of Cadiz, Spam. If you ask me hich have been the most famous boats of the world, would, say, first Noah's ship, that wharf ed on Mount Ararat: sec ond, the boat of bulrushes, in which Moses floated the Nile: thirJ, the Mayflower, that put out from Plymouth with the Pilgrim Fathers, and now these three vessels that on this the Friday morninr, August 3, 1492, are rocking on the ripples. There is the Santa Maria, only ninety feet long, with four masts anl eight anchors. The captain walking the deck ir fifty-seven years old, bis hair white, for at thirtv-five he was gray, and his face is rouud, his iuse aquiline and his stature a little taller than the average. There are two doctors in this fleet of ships and a few landsmen, adventurers wiio are ready to risk their necks in a wild expe dition. There are enough provisions for a year. "Cnptain Columbus, where are you sailing for?' "I do not know." "How lone before you will get there?" "I cannot say." "All ashore that are going!" is heard, and those who wish to remain go to the land. For sixteen days the wind is dead east, and that pleases the captain because it blows them farther and farther away from the European coast and farther on toward the shore of another country, if there is any. To add interest to the voyage on the twentieth day out a violent storm sweeps the sea, and the Atlantic ocean tries what it can do with the Santa Maria, the Pinta and the Nina. The mutinous crew would have killed Columbus had it not been for the gen eral opinion on shipboard that he was the only one that could take them back home in safety. The promise of a silk waistcoat and forty dollars in money to the man who should first discover land appeased them somewhat, but the indignation and blasphemy and threats of assassination must have been awful. On Friday morning at 2 o'clock, just long enough after Thursday to make it sure that it was Friday, and so give another blow at the world's idea of unlucky days on Fri day morning. October 12, 1492, a gun from the Plnta signaled "land ahead." Th tha ships lay to and the boats were lowered, and Captain Christopher Columbus first stepped upon the shore amid the song of birds and the air a surge of redolence and took pos session in the name of the Father, and the Sou anl the Holy Ghost So the voyage that began with the sacra ment ended with " J.oria in Excelsis Deo." From that day onward you say there can be nothing tor Columbus but honors, re wards, raphsodie3, palaces and world wide applause. Not nol On his way back to Spain the ship was so wrenched by the tempest and so tnreatenel witn destruction that he wrote a brief account of his discov ery and put it in a cask and threw it over board that the world might not lose the ad vantage of his adventures. Honors awaited him on the beach, but he undertook a second voyage, and with it came all maligning and persecution and denunciation and poverty. Ha was called a land grabber, a liar, a cheat, a fraud, a deceiver of Nations. Speculators robbed him of his goo 1 name, courtiers depreciated his discoveries, and there came to him ruined health and im pnsjnuient ani chains, of which h9 said while he rattled them on his wrists, "I wild wear tneui as a memento of the grati tude ot princes' Amid keen appreciation of the world's abus? ani cruelty, and with body writhing in the tortures of gout, he groaned out his last words, "In manus tuns Domiue commends spiritual meuai" "Into Thy hau ls, O Lard, I co n mend my spirit.' Of course he had regal obsequies. That Is the way the world tries to atone for its mean treatment of great benefactors. Fir1 buried in the church of Santa Maria. Seven years afterward removed to Seville. Twer. ty -three years afterward removed to a-i Domingo. F.im:;y l euuvei ioCuu.:. 'our postmortem journeys from seoulcher to sepuleher. V hat most impresses me in a'l that wondrous life, which for tho next twelve months we will be commemorating by ser mon an, I song and military parade and World's Fair and congress "of Nation, is something I have never heard stated, and tbat is that the discovery o:' America was a religious discovery and in the na-rie of Gou. Co'.umbu, bv the studv of the proph ecies, and r.v what Zeehariah and Micah and Davi 1 an 1 Is:ah had said about the "ends of the earth," was per;uae! t 50 cue ani lind the 'Vnds of the oarth." and h fe't himself called byGoi to carry Lhristianitv to th? "ends o. t;i f-nrth. ' .-.tkeidc v.!- no right here; iuSdeUtr ha? no right li'-re : v 1 bj-s lis ti has do " right her?. And -.-iGoiis no: apt to fail in anv of His un-M-t-taiu-s tat anv r.it 1 have never heard of II:s having anything tt iu. with a laiiur e), America is goin- to be GospeiizeJ and from the Golden Gate of Cali fornia to the Narrows o; New York harl or an J from the top of North America to the loot of South America, trom Bering straits to Cape Horn, this is goin to Le Iaimanuji's land. A divine influence will vet ssve?p the con tinent that will make in quit v drop flacked lime, ant make the most blatant in fiieiity declare it was only jodn when it saul tLe Bible was not true, ani" the worst atheism anucuu-e that it always did be lieve in the God of Nations. It wouli not do for cur world in its lost end ruined stats to have communication with other worlds. It would spoii their morals. Eut wait until this world is iullv redeemed, as it will bo, anl then perhaps interstellar correspondence may ! e ooene 1. The great Italian navigator also impresses me with the idea that when one does a good thin? he cannot appreciate its ramifi cations. To the moment of his death Co lumbus never knew that he had discovere 1 America, but thou;;ht that Cuba was a pirt , of Asia.- He tnnuztt the Island Hi pamola was the Ophir of Salomon. He thou?ht he ha 1 only opened a new way to old Asia. Had he known what North and South America were and are, and that he had found a country thre3 thousand miles wide, ten thousand miles long, of seventeen million square miles and four times as lare as Europe, the happiness would have been too much for mortal man to endure. He had no idea that the time would come when a Nation of sixty million people on this side of the sea would be joined by all the intelligent Nations on the other side the sea tor the most part of a year reciting his won derful deeds. It took centuries to reveal the result of that one transatlantic voyage. When Manhattan Island was sold to the Dutch for twenty-four dollars neither they who sold or bought could have foreseen New York, the commercial metropolis of America, that now stands on it. Can a man who preaches a sermon, or a woman who distributes tracts, or a teacher who instructs a class, or a passerby who utters encourag ing words realize the infinitudes of useful result? Every move you make for God, however insignificant in your own eyes or in the eyes of others, touches worlds larger the one Columbus discovered Why talk about un important things? There are no unimpor tant things. Infinity is made up of inflni tesmals. After the battle of Copenhagen, Nelson, the Admira', went into a hospital and halted at the ted ot a wounded sailor who had lost his arm and said, "Well, Jack, what is the matter with you?" and the sailor replied, "Lost my right arm, your honor," and Nel son looked down at his own empty sleeve and said : "Well, Jack, then you and I are both spoiled for fishermen. Cheer up, my brave fellow!" and that sympathetic word cheered the entire hospital. While studying the life of this Italian nav igator, I am also reminded of the fact that while we are diligently looking for one thing we find another. Colunioue startei to find India, but found America. Go on and do your duty diligently and prayerfully, and if you do not find what you looked for you will find something better. Hargreaves, by the upsetting of a ma chine and the motion of its wheels while up set, discovered the spinning Jenny. So, my friend, go on faithfully and promptly with your work, and if you do not get the success you seek, and your plans upset, you will get something just as good and perhaps better. Another look at that career or the ad miral of the Santa Maria persuades me that it is not to be expected that this world will do its hard workers full justice. If any man ought to have bean treated well from first to last it wa Commbus. He had his faults. Let others d:pict them. But a greater soul the centuries have not produced. This continent ought to have been called Columbia, after the hero who dis covered it . or Isabelliana, after the queen who furnished the means for the expedi tion. No. The world did not do him jus tice while he was alive, ani why should it be expected to do him justice after he was dead? Columbus in a dungeon! What a thought? Columbus in irons! What a spectacle ! In one of the last letters winch Coluuious sent to his son, he wrote this lamentation: "I receive nothing of the revenue due me. Hive by borrowing. Little have I profited by twenty years of service with such toils and perils, since at present I do not own a roof in Spain. If I desire to eat or sleep, I have no recourse but the inn, ac2 for the most times have not wherewithal to pay my bill." Be not surprised, my hearer, it you suffer injustice. Let us be sure that we have the right pilot, and the right chart, and the right captain and thr.t we start in the right di rection. It will ba to each of us wha love the Lord a voyage more wonderful for dis covery than that which Columbus took Aye, fellow mariners, over the rough sea of this life, through the fogs and mists of earth, se you not already the outline of the better country? Land ahead! Laud ahead! Near er and nearer we come to heavenly wharf age. Throw out the p anks, and step ashore into the arms of your kindred, who have been waiting and watching for the hour of your disembarkation. Through the rich graces of Christ, our Lord, may we all have such blissful arrival Oil From Corn. It will probably be a surprise to "many to know that there is a company which purchases corn solely to extract the oil from it. This is precisely -what a sugar refining company ia Chicago is doing, This compauy is the only one which has the secret of obtaining tho oil, and em ploys it alter the corn has been converted into a starch or glucose so that nothing will be wasted. The oil is a soft yellow liquid, and resembles linseed oil in ap pearance. Dr. Arno Behr discovered the process of separating the oil from the corn, and the doctor says this in regard i to the oil "It has been known for a long time that maize contained an oily property, remaining for some one to turn the idea to account. There is no dan ger of corn oil ever taking the place of linseed oil. In the first place, it will be ! too scarce. The amount of oil contained I in corn is only four per cent, of its total weight, and we lo3e almost half of it in I the process of abstraction, so that we I get a very small amount of oil after all. i The assertion ha3 been made that corn i oil can be put to little use that it can j not be employed in making either soap ' or paint. The great value of linseed oil I paints is that it drie3 readily, and it ha3 i been asserted that corn oil will not dry. Now, this is a mistake, and as a matter of fact, corn oil can be used in making paint or varnish, and also in soaps. It makes a splendid soft soap. That there are valuable ue3 to which it can be put is shown by the fact that there is a de mand for it in foreign markets.'' Amer ican Farmer. jne ai.ous airme itccora. Since ISSO the Government has issued an annual report of strikes. Between acd ISSO, according to this report, 1491 important strikes occurred besides many times that number of small ones. From January 1, 18S1, to Decembei 25, 1SS6, there were 3902 strikes, in volving 1,323,203 men and 22,304 bus iness firms. In the last named yeai were 1900 strike3 that caused a wage loss of $2,S5S,191 to the men and $3, 000,000 to the employers. The two most peculiar stnke3 men tioned in the reports are that of laborers on a dam in Maine in 1SS6 because thej were not allowed to smoke while ai work, and tbat of Medford (Mass.) ship builders in 1817 because their dailt rations of rum were curtailed. Killed by a Rattlesnake. Chattanooga, i ens'. Near Knuck .esvilU". F!;i., two eh Mien of F. H. Ash 1:1 re, were kil ed by a rattlesnake While at play in the woods they over tun.ed an old log, uudir which was the ii: ike. which bit the five-year-old girl. Hit bro.her, two years older, caaie to hei help, but received two bites. The chil ;irtu were taken Lome and domestic re meilies applied, but the Ifttle ones died in horrible aonv. "Mamma," said little J.hany, iif I swaHo.'.cia tuerji j:ne:tr woaid I die by BILL ARP'S LETTER. He Hies Himsell Once Again to tie "Wild ani Wooly" West, He Has Some Very In! cresting Things to Say on the ETe of His Departure. By the time this reaches your readers I will be in the Lone Star State again. It is n fun for me to leave home for u month, Lut I like Texas and am going back to perform my prom- j ises and see the brigh; side of her country and j h?r people. We always see the bright sidj when we go vifiting. When people co-no visit ing us at our house we are on our best Ichavior ! and everything is bw et and lovely, and when they go home they tell every b dy what a de lightful time they had and what a charm ng family and what good cooking ami what good beds to Bleep on, and somebody te is us what they Baid and that pleases us and makes us all as loving as a mutual admiration society. But it won't do for folks to stay too long any where, for it is impossible for in to keep tho bright side in view more than a few days at a time. There is a dark side occassional i:i every family and it will come to the frout tveiy now and then, for man is born to trouble as the sparks fly upward and woman is, too. It is a good thing to visit and be visired, for it Lre kri up the monotony of .domestic affairs and im proves our behavior and sharpens our wits and loosens the old gentlemen's purse htrinya and makes him more shifty in providing something to eat or to wear. I like Texas I reckon for tin seno reason that Mr. Stephens liked his little snarly, un friendly dog. When asked what wss the st-cr t of his attachment for the brute, he sa d: "Well, I like the little dog because he likes m? and tha: is reason enough." Iam going to T-xasthis time in search of the end of a rainbow that is over there. It stretchts from Ttxarkana to San Antonio, and I shall peruse the country all along the line and will of c urse see the bright and beautiful side and write about it; and y-mr rtaiers must take it with some allowance i'or I am an invited guest, and it would be very bn manners for me to find fault with 1 er country or her people. I am sorry I won't be her to vote for pure unterrifieddemoeray, but will in to do like Mr. Blaine did in tho Maine e-!i ction I will pair off with some third party friend if I can find one! Mr. " Blaine had to publish a card and explain why he didn't vote and he said he was 20D miles away from home on election day but he pnired off with a "democratic frie:id."" I liked that. I liked Mr. Blaine because be liked Ben Hill and was the first man to eend a check for S'jO for his monument. I like him because he is op posed to the force bill I don't like him for many other things too tedious to mention. But I don't reckon my one vote will be needed no how, for the third party is sick in Georgia and getting nicker every day and will be quaran tined before the election. Weaver and Fiel I and MrB. Lease are quarantined already. About nine years ago I visited Texarf for the first time and noted the state of public morals and found all the new towns in a wild, reckless, unsettled condition. Fort Worth Lad about 10,000 people and it seemed to me the devil was running the whole business, fcr the Sabbath was a gala day and she saloons were all open and the billiard balls were cracking and the faro banks in full blast and BDgardus was sho t inf? pigeons in the suburbs and the church b' lis rang feebly and few and they had just finish e 1 a four-story jail that was S0O fret long ani wasn't half big enough, they said. But the devil don't run the business now. Good men and women banded together, and more of them kept coming and churches were built and Sun day schools established and the Y. M. C. A. be came a power and they drove the devil out and now it is an orderly, God-f' aring city. Youm? men who are dissipated and reck'esa care noth ing abut the morals of a town, but when men of families who are raising up children around them move to a new pla?e they want a Chris tian morality for their children's sake, if noth ing else. A man may have no religion, but if he has children he won't settle in a Godless town. Texas is now as much a land of churches as any state in the union and is emphatically the land of ichools. I remember when it Was sup posed that it was the land of outlaws and refu gees from justice and my wonder now is what became of all the rascals who were 6aid to have run away to Texas? When I was out there last summer a man came up to me and s i id "how dy, major." "Well, tell me who are," said I. He whispered his name and said, "I knowed you over in Georgia. About twenty years ago I happened to kill a man over there accident ally in a fight and I didn't have no money to fee a lawyer and so I jiir-t stepped over here to save trouble." He told me hi name and I promised to keep his secret, for they said he was behaving himself. I " don't believe in hunting a mati down after ten, fifteen or twenty years and breaking up his family and carrying him back a thousand miles nd locking him up in jail. But it u done continually by thes? detective-: and reward hunters just for' the reward that was once off. red and never recall- d. Wc r- a 1 every little while of the an-est of some man whe ran away and changed his name long years ago, and behaved himself and married a good woman and was raising up respectable chil dren when suddenly a detective found him and 1 udely tore him from those who loved him and carried him aw ay to a distant state tc Erison. It is all wrong ai d does no good. He ad carried the burden of his crime like a nightmare for years and years. He had suffer enough. Thinking about Texas reminds nv- of what Henry Grady said to me some year ago whe: I told him I was going there. '"Ar- you n 1 afraid?" sail he. ".Afraid of what?" i ke1. "Why of robbers train robbers these fcllcv. -that hold up a irain arid go through ;t an 1 pr the muzzle of a derringer at a n an's Leul sue keep it there until he disgorges. I would like to see that done. I would give S50 to be on a train when it was held up. If I was traveling r ut there and knew what train they would stop. I would take it just to see th.? inn. The idea of two men attacking the engineer and rirman and conductor and baggage men and express men and brakt smen an 1 porters and messen gers and subduing them all and paralyzing a hundred pasiengere and tf.kin all their nv 11 ey is to me one of the raudes: and most extra ordinary pei f 01 mane s in ihe world and I wan: t see just how it i-j done and feel how a mai. feels while it is g"ing on de n't you?" "Not uuch no I don't," f aid I. "I don't se? any f an in it, nor grandeur; but it is certainly very ex traordinary. There is not a car full of passc-n-Sera on any western train thar has not go half a dozen loided pistols in it perhaps a dczn either in hip pockets or grips and why some fellow don't tqnit behind his seat an c'aoot tho robber before he sets to him. I don'i UEderetftud." Parahz;d," taid Grady, "the very audacity of the tiling paralyzes thern and I want to realize ir. I would look the feli-jn right in the eye and smile and say 'My friend, lets compromise this business let's divide yon take half ani I'll take half,' and I'd look so smi'ling and unterrified that he would pas; on. Don't you know that when three of the commune went into Rothchild's bank in Paris. duriDg the revolution, and demanded his mon ey under the cy of lirerty, equality and fra ttrniiy the old Jew never quailed nor trembled, but said, "Low much nioi.ey have I go!?" And they said. "Foity million; of francs 'Jhat is right, 6aid he. 'and there are 40.000,000 people in Fiance.' Th-n h threw thrvc francs on the counter and said, 'here are you s tell the rest to come and ff their. ' Thev ux.-k them sheeDishlv and went out. Now nobody evr etops to talk to these robbers or to reason with them, but they be come paralyzed and surren 1er. I would like to meet them and try a few broken remarks up-o:: them. They re de perate fellows, no doubr. but they are n.eu l.ke we are and have their good points. Jesse James was no brute; he had come chivalry about him and if he had had a fair chance would have made a splendid citi zen. I would like to command a regiment of fcuch men in a war wouldn't they whip tu ar my?" "No," s-aid I. "they wouldn't make goo-J soldier?. The best soldiers we had were men who wou.d not rob anybody, nor impose ou anybody cor be looking out for an insult. They wcre men who were more paecedble than emarrel- in their pockets before the war dident make tood sohtie s ana tney aocurea every uiw uu some pretext." Henry pondered awUlie and said: "Maybe you are right, but I would like to be on a train when it was held up." Gradv had great admiration for heroism of any kind, whether it was in William Tell or a newsboy whether in a general or a pugilist or an outlaw. How eagerly he used to listen to the story of Forrest with his 300 men following Strait with his 1,600 for a week and overtaking Lini near Rome and demanding his surrender and compelling it by his audacity. What a hero l e made of Lewis Graves, the saloon keeper at Uome, who jumped into the swollen river and siv da poor boy from drowning when nobody the dared do it! B it I am not going to carry much taoney on the tram nobody does now except the express, and there is no more danger in Texas than in Alabama or Florida. There is not as much down on di a. there ia north and west. I believe that the hard timei have done their w rst and better times are ooming. Cotton is poing up and politics will soon subside and the 1 bird party vanish away and if do elect d 1 over Cleveland and put Mrs. Frankie and Buth in the White House we will tee the dawn c f a new era and everybody will be calm and se rene. Bill Aep. in Atlanta Constitution. Enss'an Lock Peddler?. ne of the curious sights of the Ru sian streets, says Frank G. Carpenter, if the lock peddler, who walks about witl his breast and back covered with locks, y:hich are hung by strings over the shoul ders. This making of locks is one of thi great peasant industries. The locks art nearly all made by hand, and they are o) all sorts and shapes and of all prices, from half a cent up to 5. Some of then are so small that it takes a hundred t make a pound, and others so large tha one would drown a cat if it was tie around its neck and thrown into a pond Professor "WnaL animal ii most faithful to man?'' Lovesick Student .enthusiastically) "Women !'' Pick Me Up. The spectacles most admired by ladies ire gold beauz. Binshamtoa Republi cai. Th nt's What Brought the Factories. Cheap fuel and low freights are the neces sities of manufacturing. Two fuel-oil jjipe lines, tour railroads, ona a complete belt line, ive Urirhth these advantages and brought her lour factories as soon as the town was laid out by Jay A. DwigLji.is Jc Co. Chicago News. A French boy has broken two blacl cat3 to harness. Train Loaded With Store Polish. Last week Messrs. Morse Bros., proprietors of the well known Rising Sun Move 1'olish, lillod orders from two customers in the West for twenty-three ears loads of stove polish. As each ear contained 4UU gross, weighing 15 tons, the shipment to these two houses was ifJjO gross, or IU" t ms. The immense business done by this firm is a monument to the industry and hith grade of goods for which they have earned a re-nutation at home and Kroad.. Mullein leal is recommended as an ex cellent speciflc for rheumatism. When Nature Needs assistance it may be best to render it promptly, but one 6hould remember to use even the most perfect remedies only when needed. The best and most simple and gentle remedy is the Syrup of Figs manufactured by the California Fie Syrup Co. Tins labor cose in a ton of wire-rod 1 fl.r-5. The Only Oiie Ever Printed. CAN YOC FIND THE WORD? The?eisa3 inch display advertisement In this paper, this week, which has no two words alirie except one word. The saniu in true of ea'.h new one appearing each week, from The l)r. Harter .Medicine Co. This house places a 'Cres'-ent" on everything they make and pub lish. Look for it. send them the name of the word and they w ill return you book, beacti fcl iaxnoGUAPas or samples fheu There are over 15,000 Masonic lodrres .n existence. If your Back Aches, or you are all worn out, rood fur nothing, it is general debility. Brown's Iron Bitters w.ll cure you, make you strung, cleanse your liver, ana give a goou ap petite tones the nerves. The luxury of doing good surpasses every other enjoyment. Ovrt Or.n I'.ei iabi.k Kyk w atfii cares weak or .1 'ii'i.e.l eyes. ir Kian." lateil lids without pata. eiil-.. J"iTN I'.. Lien" t "reij C.. Ttristol, Va. The stooping bicyc: rider may be sup posed to be on pleasure bent. Boston Tran cript. Condin tor K. D. Loomis, Detroit, Mich., snys: "'Hie elite t of Hall's Catarrh Cure is wonderful." Write him about it. So.d by Druggists, 75e. A. Nelson, of Labanon, Mo., has planted a nursery of 80,000 appie trees. Who suffers with his liver, consipa tion, i ious ili-. poor blood or dizzine-s take Beet -Lani's Pi ils. Of druggists, -i cents. Wages navo declined in 229 towns iu Germany, out of 906. ruow. s Jron Bitters cures Dyspepsia, Ma laria. Biliousness and General Debi ity. Gives Strength, aids Digestion, tones the nerves trea e- appetite. The best tonic for Cursing Muthers, weak women and children. The Nation's railroads earned ?S7, OO'J.000 during May. If afflicted with soro eyes tae Dr.Isaac Thomp-t-on's Eye-water.Druggista sell at JSc.per bottle Swellings In the neck, or Got t re, caused me terrible suffering, and I spent an enormous amount o f money for medicines, in vain. 1 began to take Hood's Sartavarilla and in a few weeks I found the swelling very much reduced, and 1 could .Mr. Hiselow. lirrath u ith i'ereet Kns which I had not done for vears. 1 conunueu whu u a . -. il I ami am PcfHlflllf llf fu urett." Mrs- J. Bigei ow, Fremont. Mich. TlooiV Pilln cure liver ills, constiratlon, biliuusne j--, jaundice.sisk headache. 25c GuaranweJ f cure Bilious Attacks, Sick Headache and 'o i:allpwilon. 4'J in e&ch Uottle. l'rlee 'S-c. l or by druggists. Picture "7. 17. 73" and sample dose free. rl. F. SMITH t C0 Proprittort, HW tORK. , . Don't be a Slieep. Some one has said "all men an iheep," and certainly, in business mat ters at least, the exceptions to this rul ire only enough to prove it. Have yoi never noticed how a flock of sheep wil pile through a break in the fence for n earthly reason except that some old bell wether has gone ahead? The careful observer sees the same thing in the busi ness world. Witness the speculative crazes that periodically sweep over busi ness, and the gold craze of '49 in which a hundred lost their all for every on that "struck it rich." Don't be a sheep. The Ilorse Eeview. LESSENS PAIIMHSURES SAFETY to LIFE of MOTHER and CXiLD. h1 Mother's tho ordeal with little pain, was stronger ia one liour than in a week after the birth or her former child. J. J. "McCJoldrick, Beans hta., lenn. Mother'. Friend robbed pain of Its ( terror r.d shortened labor. 1 have the healthiest child I ever saw. , MUS. 1j. M. AutRSi V-OCIirau, S-rt v exnm. char? prenaM. on rr :eiH of jr.'.c.f 1.53 SwrVuttli. bJ:ik--ToMo:k-ri-n.vl,-.1tr BRADFIBLD REGULATOR CO.. For s-le y all Dru-gi-ts. AT LAN 1 A. OA. 1st 99 " I have been afflicted with bilious ness and constipation for fifteen years and first one and then another prep aration was suggested to me and tried, but to no purpose. A friend recommended August Flower and words cannot describe the admira tion in which I hold it. It has given me a new lease of life, which before was a burden. Us good qualities and wonderful merits should be made known to everyo::-- suffering with dyspepsia and biliousness." Jr.?SE Bark i-r. Printer Humboldt, Kax i PURELY a vegetable compound, made entirely of roots a.:ul herbs gathered from the forests of Georgia, and has been used by iv.iilior.3 of people with the best results. It CURE. All manner of Blood diseases, from the pestiferous little boll cr.i your i.o:;e to the worst cases of inherited blood taint, such as Scrofula. Rheumatism, Catarrh and SK1N01ICER Treatise on Blood tnd Skin Di-c.-ze- n.niled frea Swift specific to., Atlai.ta. 01 Ask your doctor what hap pens to cod-liver oil when it gets inside of you. He will say it is shaken and broken up into tiny drops, becomes an emulsion; there are other changes, but this is the first. He will tell you also that it is economy to take the oil broken up, as it is in Scott's Emulsion, rather than bur den yourself with this work. You skip the taste too. Let us send you an inter esting book on CAREFUL LIV ING ; free. Scott S: Bowse, C'lcmis:, 133 5.-u-.h j-.H Avrnue, Nrw York. Your .'iiijist keep celt's n:i:i:!:oa cf cod-liver oil ail dmiists every w r.L-rtf do. 36 WORLD'S FAIR WORKWOMEN AT HOME. Kit; PAY. Address, wit!: stamp, y. I,. KILMER A. CO.. South Itcud. In.l. Pisc'a Hem)? for Catarrh la ths Best. Kasist to Vw. and rhearen. ISold by druggists or sent by mail 60c. . T. Eazeltlae, Warren. Pa. rAFTIONi-Beware of as.:--ra sob. tltntln hoe without V. I., iloaulai ain.aBjfB. n-iM lamnpil fn battuni. tench aabstitQliona are Irauii.ilrtjt and fjubjact to proarcution by lavr lor ob linmt money un der false pretences. yp wtii fjun f tVL yv-a Vc A w.fk 03 u Jvy -V "A hp1 Flow n 1 , 11 j 1 1 - v;;-r r rim rrrM zrm imr w i WiMrV f -wr q Tirrr.i., . Will rlT exrlaslve jmim ( a dealer sir si reneral taerchmnta bere I ba areata. Wrjtn lor catalogue. Ii not lr ta yr plarw aeqd 4ire:t ta 'SiT. lauug kia-. alze ud - l'tac Lfs. W. ' 0. Iola. .'Jtackiaa. Mae " nn HOT BE DECEIVED with l;istos. Kn:tniris. ari5 1'nlnts vrhlch stain tli h:mN. :i Jure t!i irui-. and Uim f!f The Iiisini; Sun S'vn poiisii is brilliant. Odnr le.s. Durable. and tlie i-:iiMnir yns lor no tm or glass i:ictace vitli evny i"ir. h i-.e. L nirp If you wish to make MONEY ms MulLu your own honing, address inclu.lmtwt Mi U1IKA Li. 1IOYT. SoiUti llend, Id" LUXURIES LEfiKSViLLE BLANKETS. Housekeepers 51$ lb., 5. Carolina's Pride, 6 lb.. ?U It pair. Leoksvilie Honest Jeans Gray, Brown and Mat-k 'i'tc, -lOc. and Oc. per yard. Kersey Gray, l-'c. Brown, 4 Or. a yard; very good. Wool Yarn, all colors. 5c. a hank. If your dealer does not keep these (foods order of J. V. rC'OTT c CO.. Special Selling Agts., Greensboro. N. C. MV0MAN HAS Tery little desire to enjoy the pleasures .f life, and is entirely unfitted fjr the cares of hou-keeping or euy ordinary duties, if afflicted with SICK HEADACHE DAY AFTER DAY And yet there are few diseases that yield more promptly to pr..er medical treatment. It is there fore of the utiiuist importance that a reliable remedy should always be at hand. iurin a period of more than SiXTY YEARS there has ln-en no instance reported where such cases have not been permanently and PROMPTLY CURED the nse of a single box of the genuine and justly celebrated . C. McLANE'S LIVER PILLS, which may be procured at any I'rn? Store, or will be mailed to' any address on the receipt ot "ii cents In postuw stamps. 1'urehaser.-. of these l'iils should be careful to pro cure the genuine article. There are several counterfeit.-; on the market, well calculated to deceive. The M-nuine Dr. O. MeLane's Celebrated I.lvcr Pills are manufactured only by FLEMING BROTHERS CO., Pittsburgh. Pa. Will purify BI.OOI, rejrnlate KIDNEYS, remove LIV"R til-order, bulM bireusrtn. renew appetite, restore health and vi;.wroi youtu. uyspensia. lU'iiKestion, mature-: icei 111 atisoi utel y eradicate!. .Miu-i triiitenei, uraiu power iucreasea hone. nerves, mus cles, receive new force. Dnfferlujr from complaints ne- ly culiar totheirsex. usintrlt.hna rose LUhjiu oil chccU3,YL-autlaes Complexion. SoM everywhere. All penuine roods bear -Oe-rent.f Send us 2 cent stauip lor 32-page pamphlet. IB. HARTER MEDICINE CO., St. Louis. H. N. U. 42 YOU WANTT A T II E IB Til EM 7 0-- WAY eren If you merely keep them an a diversion. Ia or der to handle fowls judiciously, you rouat knew aometblng atwjut t):m. Ta meet thla want we art eUing a book giring tna experience On of a practical poultry ralner forlVIHJ &vb twenty -five years. It was written by a man who put all h!s rrdnd, and t'jtne, and money to making a uo rRicf Chlcktnra-'j.ns notaia pastime, but a a business and If you will profit by hla twenry-fiy fears' work, yea -xn ur man Cklcka a&fiuatf , " RUir.g Chicken " an4 tnake yocr Powla tan doi!ar for yon. Tfca Dolnt la, tbat you must be ab!e to detect tronwa la the Poultry ard as soon s it apj-r. and knw bow to r-roedy It. 1 his 1 00k will tca-:h yon. It tel s how to detect and care 4ie; to reea low CCS and also for faitecln: which fowls to aars rot Ueed eg purj-ose; ad eeryta"C- indZ 'tl JSou d know oa this .u.-Jret to n;ak. it Proha- Senl postpaid for twecty Uva cent In le. or """"Book Publishing House, 1.1.1 Leo-iKi St.. S. Y. Cr U6LA! FQR & GENTLEMEN. O N JTR U E ft a a m s g rV OWN CHICKENS W. L. DO jfO-i7 A eennlne sewed ahoe that wili not rip f naecair, 'ai A", Eiaalesa, s:nooih lust tie, Kexiijle, more comfortable, stydsa VsL.ti an1 lural'Ie than any otter shoo r.7er sold at tha price. ,'3. The cn!y 3.l0 S!mo tnndn with two eomplete "-NrJv flrn. Fe.-urniv r,ew-i nt tho t.utsidc hIjo shown In cut). - h Ri vr-s doniilo tl-e wear cf chcip welt shoes sol t at the ax;.e prir-. V r u-. h e?.si! v rip. havja only one sole sewed o a ii arrow strip or leath-jr en the tdge. &i.J wteaonce worn taroueh t.re worthless. Ti-e two Kolef f the V. I DOUGT.AS S1.00 Shoe wnen worn tcrouph cr.a bo rcnain-d as i::acy limes es jy-ry,os they will nercr rlpor iooen from the upper. VurcLaers i f footwear deiir.Cif to ec"no lOize.&Douid consider the superior o'iai.-- cf those shoes, and nt be lainced to ! ti:y cbeap v.-ell shoes sj1J at j " , vliigraly aptsfarance to t'-'ir"'1;! :eu V. I.. IOl ;LAr M' fcav thee 1 1 ar.-l ine caii. Sewed : 53.30 roli"- ani aLd S-i.00 7orsintieQ i Hoys' ?J.OO aad Youths ? 1 . 7 3 .S;hof ! S ho : Lao : S3. OO Hand fewed:? i-0' fri.Uil aau are of the same a-J standard of cent- (Of i, .
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 27, 1892, edition 1
6
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