Newspapers / The Wilson Mirror (Wilson, … / April 25, 1888, edition 1 / Page 2
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SUNDAY'S SERMON. ONE OP REV. DR. TALiMAG KR STERLING DISCOURSBS. Subject: "The Angels of the Grass. Text: "If then God so clothe the grass, which is to-day in the field, and to-morrow iscasttnto the oven; how much more wil1 he clothe youf Luke xiL, 28: The Kly is the queen of Bible flowers. The rose may have disputed her tbrone in modern times and won it; but the rose originally had only fire petals. It was under the long continued ana intense- gaze of the world that the rose blushed into its present beauty. In the Bible tmin, cassia and hyssop and frank incense ana myrrh and spikenard and cam phire and the rose follow the lily. Fourteen times in the Bible-is the lily mentioned; only twice the rose. The rose may now have wider empire, but the lily reigned in the time ef Esther, in the time of Solomon, in the time of Christ Caesar had his throne on the hills. The lily had her throne in the valley. In the greatest sermon that was ever preached, there was only one flower,andthatalily. The Bedford dreamer, John Bunyan, entered the house of the interpreter, and was shown a cluster of flowers, and was told to "consider the lilies.17 We may study or reject other sciences at bur option. It is so with astronomy, it is so with chemistry, it isr so with jurisprudence, it is so with physiology, it is so with geology ; but the science of botany Christ commands us to study when he "says : "Consider the lilies." Measure them from root to tip of petal. Inhale their - breath. Notice the gracefulness of their poise. Hear the whis per of the white lips of the Eastern and of the red lips of the American lily. Belonging to this royal family -of lilies is the lily of the Nile, the Japan lily, the Lady Washington of the Sierras, th Golden Band lily, the Giant lily of NepauL the Turk's Cap lily, the African lily from the Cape of Good Hope. All these lilies have the royal blood in their veins. But I take the lilies of my text this morning as typical of all flowers and this Easter day, garlanded with all this opulanceof noral beauty, seems to address us, saying: "Consider the lilies, consider the azalias, consider the fuchsias, consider the geraniums, consider the ivies, consider the tr-ira --in the inncirlar trio holirktiwrvse VnSlflftr the oleanders." With differential and grate ful and intelligent and worshipful souls, con sider them. Not with insipid sentimentalism, or with sophomoric vaporing, but for grand i - i i a J l uuu pracucai ana everjuay axiu, u. utxxi wt homely uses, consider them. - The flowers are the angels of the grass. They all have voices. When the clouds speak, they thunder; when the whirlwinds speak;, thev scream: when tne cataracts speak, they roar; but when the flowers speak, they always whisper. I stand here to inter pret their message. What have you to say. oh ye angels of the grass, to this worshipful multitude? This morning I mean to discuss what flow ers are cood for. That is my subject: What are flowers good for? L I remark, in the first plate, they are good for lessons of God's providential care. That was Christ's first thought. All these flowers seem to address us to-day, savin; "God will give you apparel and food. "v e have no wheel with which to spin, no loom with which to weave, no sickle with which to harvest, no well sweep with which to draw water; but God slakes our thirst with the dew, and God feeds us with the bread of the sunshine, and God has appareled us with more than Solomonic regality. we are Drophetesses of adequate wardrobe. If God so clothed us, the grass of the field, will he not much more clothe you, oh ye of little faith?' f Men and women of worldly anxieties, take this message home with you. How long has God taken care of you? Quarter of the journey of life? half the journey of life? three-quarters the journey of life? Can you not trust Him the rest of the way? God does not promise ou anything like that which, the Roman Emperor had on his table at vast expense 500 nightingales' tongues but He has promised to take care of you. He has promised you the necessities, not the luxuries bread, not cake. If God so luxuriantly clothes the grass of the field, will he not pro vide foryou, his living and immortal chil dren? He will. No wonder Martin Luther always had a flower on his writing' desk for inspira tion. Through the cracks of the prison , floor a flower grew up to cheer . Picci ola. M lingo Park, the great traveler and explorer, had his life saved by a flower. He sank down in the desert to die, but seeing a flower near by, it suggested God's merciful care, and he got, up with new courage.and traveled on to safety. I said the flowers are the angels of the grass. I add now that they are the evangels of the sky. 11. If you insist on asking me the question: V hat are flowers good for I respond: They are good for the bridal day. The bride must have them on her brow, and she must have them in her hand. The marriage altar must be covered with them. A' wedding without flowers would be as inappropriate as a wed ding without music. At such a time they are for congratulation and prophecies of good. So much of the pathway of life is covered up with thorns, we ought to cover the begin ning with orange blossoms. Flowers are rppropriate on such occasions, for in niiiety-nine out of a hundred cases it is the very best thing that could have happened. The world may criticise and pronounce it an inaptitude, and may lift its eyebrows in sur prise and ttiink it might suggest something better; but the God who sees the twenty, forty, fifty years of wedded life before they have begun arranges all for the best. So that flowers, in almost all cases, are appro priate for the marriage dav. The divergences or disposition win Decome correspondences, recklessness will become prudence, frivolity will be turned to practicality. There has been many an aged widowed soul who had a carefully locked bureau, and in the bureau a box, and in the box a folded paper, and in, the folded paper a hlf blown rose, 6hghtly fragrant, discolored, carefully pressed. She put it there forty or fifty years ago. On the anniversary day of her wedding she will go to the bureau, she will lift the box, she will unfold the paper and to her eyes will be exposed the half blown bud, and the memories' of the past will rush upon her, and; a tear will drop vupon the flower; and suddenly it is transfigured, and there is a stir in the dust of the anther, and it rounds out, and it is full of life, and it begins to tremble in the procession up the church aisle, and the dead music of a half century ago comes throbbing through the air; and van ished faces reappear, and right hands are joined, and a manly voice promises: 'I will for better or worse, and the wedding march thunders a salvo of joy at the departing crowd; but a sigh on that anniversary day scatters the scene. Under the deep fetched breath, the altar, the flowers, the congratu lating groups are scattered, and there is nothing left but a trembling hand holding a faded rosejbud, which is put into the paper, and then into the box and the box carefully placed in the bureau, and with a sharp, sud den click of the lock the scene is over. Ah. my friends, let not the prophecies of the flowers on your wedding dav be false prophecies. Be blind to each other's faults. Make the most of each other's excellences. Above all. do not both get mad at once! Re member the vows, the ring on the third finger of the left hand, and the benediction .of the calla lillies. ; III. If vou insist on askine me the Question: What are flowers good for? I answer, thay are eood to honor and comfort the obseouies. The worst gash ever made in the side of our poor earth is the gash of the grave. s It is so deep, it is so cruel, it is so incurable that it needs something to cover it up. Flowers for the casket, flowers for the hearse, flowers for the cemetery. w hat a contrast between a grave in a coun try churchyard, with the fence broken down, and the tombstone aslant, and the neighboring cattle -browsing amid the mul lein stalks and the Canada thistles, and a June morning in Greenwood the waves of roseate bloom rolling: to the top of the mounds, and then breaking into foaming crests of white flowers all around the pillows of dust. It is the difference between sleeping under rags and sleeping under an embroid ered blaaket. We want Old Mortality with his chisel to go through all the graveyards of Christendom, and while he carries a chisel in one hand, we want Old Mortality to have some flower seed in the palm of the other hand. . "Oh." you say, the dead don't know; it makes no difference to them." I think you are mistaken. There are not so many steam ers and rail trains coming to any living city as there are convoys coming from heaven to earth; and if there be instantaneous and con stant communication between this world and the better world, do you not suppose your departed friends know what you do with their bodies? Why has God planted "golden rod" and wild flowers in the forest and on the prairie where no human eye ever sees them? He planted them there for invisible intelligences to look at and admire, and when invisible intelligences come to look at the wild flowers of the woods and the table, lands, will they not make excursions and see the flowers which you have planted in affec tionate rememberance of them? When I am dead I would like to have a handful of violets any one could pluck them out of the grass, or some one could lift from the edge of the pond a water lily nothing rarely expensive, no insane display, as some times at funeral rites where the display takes the bread from the children's mouths, and the clothes from their backs, but something from the great democracy of flowers. Rather than imperial catafalque of Russian ozar, I ask some one whom I may have helped by gospel sermon or Christian deed to bring a sprig of arbutus or a handful of china asters. It was left for modern times to spell respect for the departed and comfort for the living in letters of floral gospel. Pillow of flowers, meaning rest for the pilgrim who has got to the end of his journey. Anchor of flowers, suggesting the Christian hope which we have as an anchor to the soul, sure and steadfast. Cross of flowers, suggesting the tree on which our sins were slam. If I had my way, I would cover up all the dreamless sleepers, whether in golden nan died casket or pine box, whether a king's mausoleum or potter's field, with radiant and aromatic arboresence. The Bible says, in the midst of the garden there was a sep ulcher. I wish that every sepulcber might be in the midst of a garden. IV. If vou insist on asking me the question. What are flowers good for? I answer, for religious symbolism. Have you ever studied Scriptural flora? The Bible is an arboretum; it is a djvine conservatorv it is a herbarium of exquisite beauty. If you want to illus trate the brevity of the brightest human life, you will quote from Job: "A man cometh forth as a flower and is cut down." Or you will quote from the psalmist: "As the flower of the field, so he flourisheth; the wind passeth over it and it is gone." Or you will quote from Isaiah: "All flesh is grass, and the goodliness thereof is as the flower of the field." Or you will quote from James the Apostle: 44 As the flower of the grass, so he passeth away." What graphic Bible sym bolism! All the cut flowers of this Easter day will soon be dead, whatever care you take of them. Though morning and night you baptize them in the name of the shower, the baptism will oot be to them a saving ordinance. They have been fatally wounded with the knife that cut them. They are bleeding their life away; they are dying now. The fragrance in the air is their departing and ascending spirits. Qhyesl flowers are almost human, Bot anists tell us that flowers breathe, they take nourishment, they eat, they drink. They are sensitive. They have their likes and dis likes. They sleep, they wake. They live in families. They have their ancestors and their descendants, their birth, their burial, their cradle, their grave. The zephyr rocks the one, and the storm digs the trench for the other. The cowslip must leave its gold, the lily must leave its silver, the rose must leave its diamond necklace of morning dew. Dust to dust. So we come up, we prosper, we spread abroad, we die, as the flower as the flower! Change and decay on all aronnd I see; O thou who chaogest not, abide with me! Flowers also afford mighty symbolism of unrist, who compared Himself to the an cient queen, the lily, and the modern queen, the rose, when he said: "I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valley." Kedolent like the one. humble like the other. Like both, appropriate for the sad who want sympathizers, and for tho rejoicing who want oanqueters. Hovering over the mar riage ceremony like a wedding bell, or folded use a cnapiec on the pulseless heart of the dead. Oh, Christ! let the perfuma of Thy name De waited around the earth lilv and rose. lily and rose until the wilderness crimson into a garden, and the round earth turn into one great bud of immortal beauty laid against the warm heart of God. Snatch down from the world's banners eagle and lion, and put on lilv and rose, lilv and rose. But, my friends, flowers have no grander use than when on Easter morning we cele brate the reanimation of Christ from the catacombs. All the flowers of to-day spell resurrection. There is not a nook Or corner in all the building.but is touched with the in cense. The women carried spices to the tomb of Christ, and they dropped spices all around about the tomb, and. from those spices have grown all the flowers of Easter morn. The two white robed angels that hurled the stone away from the door of the tomb, hurled it with such violence down the lull that it crashed in the door of the world's sepulchre, and millions of the stark and dead shall come forth. However labvrinthian the mausoleum. however costly the sarcophagus, however arcmteccuraiiy grand the necropolis, how ever beautifully partsrred the family grounds, we want them all broken np by the Lord of resurrection. The forms that we laid away with our broken hearts must rise again, father and mother they muss come out. Husband and wife they must comatnit. Brothers and sisters they must come oat. Our darling children they must come out. The eyes that with trembling fingers we closed must open in the luster of resurrection morn. The arms that we folded in death must join ours in embrace of re union. The beloved voice that was hushed must be retimed. The beloved form must come up without its infirmities, without its fatigues it must 'come up. Oh, how long it seems for some of you. Waiting waiting for the resurrection. How lonx! how loug! I make for your broken hearts to-day a cool, soft bandage of Eastei lilies. Last night we had coma in the mails a beautiful Easter card,' on the top of it a representation of that exquisite flower called the ,itrumpet creeper," and under it the in scription: "The trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised." 1 comfort you wis day with the thought of resurrecwon. , trv, t TCoiann was buried in bt. Jraul s cathedral, in London, the heart of allEng land was stirred, ine FOT1U" amid the sobbing of a nation. There were thirty trumpeters stauoneu " v, indmments Of music in h.ni tnr- tho siernai. and when tne illustrious dead arrived at the gates or fcc Paul's Cathedral these thirty trumpeters rave one united blast, and then all was si lent Yet the trumpets did not wake the dead. He slept right on- But I have to tell you what thirty trumpet ers could not do for one man, one trumpeter will do for all nations. The ages have rolled on,and the clock of the world's destiny strikes 9. 10. 11. 12. and time snau De no longer: Behold the archangel hovering. Hetates the trumpet. points it this way, puts its lips to his 1ir atiH t.hpn blows one lone, loud, ter rific, thunderous, reverberating and resurrec tionary blast. Look I Look! They rise! The dead! The dead! Some coming forth from the family vault. Some from the city cemetery. Some from the country grave yard. Here a spirit is joined to its body, and there another snirit is joined to another body, and millions of "departed spirits are assorting tho bodies and then recJotnmg wemseives in forms now radiant for ascension. The earth begins to burn the bonfire- of a great victory. All ready now for the pro cession of reconstructed humanity! Upward and awayl Christ leads and all the Christian dead follow, battalion and battalion, nation after nation. Up. up! On, on! Forward, ye ranks of God Almighty! Lift up your heads, ye everlasting gates, and let the con querors come in! Resurrection 1 Resurrec tion! ... And so I twist all the festal flowers of this church with all the 'festal flowers of chapels and cathedrals of all Christendom into one great chain, and with that chain I bind the Easter morning of 1888 with the closing Easter'of the world's history Resurrection! Mav the God of peace that brought again from, the dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep through the blood of the everlasting covenant, make you perfect In every eood work to do His wilL The Hollow. The hollow in the old oak tree, Where happy children play, Where woodbines climb and cling amid The roses' clustering spray. The hollow in the old oak tree, Where happy lovers meet, To linger long and whisper low Upon its mossy seat. This hollow in the old oak tree, . Where old men feebly come To tell their tales and crack their jokes Or ere they totter home. The hollow in the old oak tree One haunts it when the moon Gleams on the dewy wood walks, closa Beside the streamlet's tune. Upon the roughened bark to spend Hot kisses, passionat e tears ; To murmur to the old oak tree Life's grief for Love's lost years. All the Year Round. HUMOROUS. A promising band The engagement ring. There will be. no eclipse of the honey moon this year. The Envelope Trust does not appear to bear the stamp of public approval. A Michigan girl has found 2125 four leaved clovers, and is not married yet. 'Tm stuck: on that - girl," said the court-plaster. "Well, she breaks me all up, too," remarked the peanut candy. Stranger (to workman driving rail way spikes) : Are you working for the contractor of this road? Pat: No sor; Orm workin' fer the extender av it. "Lookout!" he exclaimed, suddenly; "there's ice under that snow!" "Yes," said she, as he restored her tenderly to the perpendicular, "I tumbled to it." In a Michigan town there i3 a girl whose height is six feet nine inches. When she makes up her mind to get mar ried you may wager she stoops to con. quer. It is in the highest degree improper and unjust to ridicule a man on account of his small stature. Because he hap pens to be little it isn't right to belit tle him. The hen, fool though she is consider ed, possesses in a marked degree the faculty of making much out of little. Feed her corn by the pint and she eats it by the peck. The original elements are earth, air, fire and water. Fire is' the most de structive and water is the most power ful. Fire-water, therefore, forms a com bination that is a teaser. First Bald head That's a beautiful piece tho orchestra is playing. Second Baldhead Ah, it is one that will al ways haunt me. "Why?" 1t is the only one my daughter knows. n A youth took of laudanum an oz Because he'd been given the bz By his prospective wife; But they saved his young life. Though his system received quite a jz. An Indiana judge did not know what a cartoon was. Jl lawyer sketched the body of a jackass with his, the judge's, head and face attached as a specimen and was promptly fined $25 for con tempt of court. Depot Master Don't you see that notice? "Gentlemen not allowed to smoke in this room." Seedy Individ ual It doesn't apply to me. Depot Master Why not? Seedy Individual TWarwa T'tn no orentlaman. They tell this story of Congressman Herbert of Alabama: . His' youngest daughter, who is at a Washington board ing school, was entertaining two young lady friends from her home. One day tho Congressman called and sent np word that he had come to take his daughter and "the young ladies from Alabama" to the matinee. Pretty soon Miss Herbert and a dozen bright girls, all from Alabama, came rushing down Stairs, exclaiming: "Oh, how perfectly lovely of you, Mr. Herbert, to take us ill." The Congressman made the best pf the situation and paid the bill grace fully. , A violent crank is, apt to give one a turn. - ' - " What Orir Will 8cnr These lCngiisb llcncef Wicked Macbeth, who murdered good King Puncam asked this question in his despair. Thousands ot victims of disease are daily ask ing "What will scour the impurities from my blood and bring me health?" Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery will do it. When the purple life-tide is sluggish,causing drowsi ness, headache and loss of appetitet use this wonderful vitalizer, which never fails. It forces the liver into perfect action, drives out superfluous bile, brings the glow of. health to the cheek ana tne natural sparKie to tne eye. All druggists. . Tt ia thA little thinra that tell" savs an old adage. Yes, especially the little brothers. A Pleasure Shared by Wemen Only. Malherbe, the gifted French author, de clared that of all things that man' possesses, women alone take pleasure in being possessed. This seems generally true of the sweeter sex. Like tne ivy plant, she longs for an object to cling to and love to look to for protection. This being her prerogative, ought she not to be told that Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the physical salvation of her sex'? It banishes those distressing maladies that make her life a burden, curiag all painful irregular ities, uterine disorders, inflammation and ul ceration, prolapsus and kindred weaknesses. As a nervine, it cures nervous exhaustion, prostration, debility, relieves mental anxiety and hypochondria, and promotes refreshing sleep. - Mayen't diamonds and rubies be correctly called Btrata-gems? When everything else fails. Dr. Sage's Ca tarrh Remedy cures. JACOBS Opal is the latest Parisian white. Some Foolish People Allow a cough to run until it gets beyond the reach of medicine. They often say, "Oh, it will wear away," but in most cases it wears them away. Could they be induced to try the successful medacine called Kemp's Balsam, they would, immediately see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Large bot tles, 50 cents and $1.00. Trial size free. At all Druggists. Do what you ought, let come what may. Itching Piles. Symptoms Moisture ; ' intense itching and rtinging; worse by scratching. If allowed to continue tumors form, which otten bleed and ulcerate, beeom nsr very sorej wavkk's Oint ment stops the itching and bleediug, heals ul ceration, and in many cases removes the tu mors. Equallv efficacious in curing all skin Diseases. DrtS WAYNE SON, Philadelphia. Sent by mail for 10 cts. Also sold by druggists. Farmers and others who have a little leisure time for the next w months will find it their interest to write to B. F. Johnson & Co., o. Richmond, Va., whose advertisement appears in another column. They offer gre it induce ments to persons to worn, for . them all or part of their time. , , If afflicted with ore eyes we Dr. Isaac Thomr OS's Eye-Water. Druggists sell at 25a per bottles. For 8 feci ax Rates for advertising in this paper apply to the publisher of the paper. j Lla Spring edicine At no thcr se.ioi docs the human system so much need the aid of a reliable medicine like Hood's Sar aapatillt as now. The Impoverished condition of the blood the weakening efftcts of the long, cold winter, the ost appetite, aud that tired feeling, all make a rot id spring medicine absolutely necessary. Hood's Sarsaparilia is pecuUarly adapted for this purpose and luvrcones in popularity every year. frfloodV'. Sarsaparilla Is carefully prepared from Sarrapartlla, Dandelion, Mandrake, Dock, Pipslssewa, Juniper Berries, and other well known vegetable remedies, in such a peculiar manner as to derive the full medicinal value of each. It will cure, when in the power of medicine, scrofula, salt rheum, sores, boils, pimples, all humors, dyspepsia, biliousness, sick headache. Indigestion, general debility, catarrh, rheumatism kidney and liver complaints. ' Piirif ie the Blood We aU Uke Hool's Sarsaparilla. it is so strenjth enlng." LizzntBAiFiKm, Auburn. R. J. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggist. $1 ; six f or 5. Prepared on! r by C L HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell. Mass. IOO Poses One Pol I a r GOLD Is worth tSX per lb. Tettifs Eye SJt is worth $1,000, but Is sold at 25c .1 box by dealers. ll AxKvl&J 1.. Li CURES Cots, Swelling. Bruise. !DP,. Strains, lameness, sSaw? Heels, Scratches, ContrUoa Wond5, stringhalt. or Plstemper, , Colic, Vhiti Evil, Fistula; Tumors, s"! bone, and Spavin in it, earw . Apply St. Jacobs Oil ia J with the directionswith Invaluable Tor the Use of H. Cattlemen. Stablemen. Kanchmen. Stockmen J" Ter. Farmer. . FOR FINE HERDS, C1I0ICE frrn Common Herds. 8IC Sold by Druggists and Dtalm AV- , THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO-... : "l aim anaiatin Hniinnci INDIES, THUS IS FOKTorlTU "?t fete lttlt tkm "1 "- MlLJ lk4.Ll.fk. be wfflhlgto dipoe of la bulk, for mTl tnrtUm feral to any one ospable ot purchasing largeir, we iiuiitCctfiag? malting fn oar obtaining tbe rutin: stack d fcilkial Satin JKibhon lCr-nmnaits ot rrmioftlKitTntf thesa houses, who imported the nucut pood. Tlim f4 be depended upon as au)terior to auyUiing to U (vwIm in the very best slorrs of America. Yet tbnirrpfaM t"re; noUiinfrHkcit ever knowu. A prsnd Unxw erla, ladiea; beautiful. elegant, choice ptxnU I.k.Iut-It free. M baro expended thuusanila of dullsrs in dinvti.v.aa' si offer an immensely, Tsricd, and iuot complete afAunaKmUr bona, in ereiyeouceirable rhadcailtidib.iKliHarcinai quality, adapted for neck-wear, l.nnurt ii!riiiy.ktmia, bows, carls, dress triniminps, silk ui'ilork.eU-,tc taa ot these remnants range three yanUand nmuJi alnrt Though remnants,all llie pattern arpurwiwlbitaiin. anay be depended on as beautiful, rrflnrd, uiu.iU kK. fiat. How to cct lx enntaininzat uaiptcS) Assortment oftliesf elegant ribbon Fn 'J" he l'raeticnl Motufkeeprr and LasW Filfnide ;omltniou, published nonik.'r bja. knowlcdged, by those connx ient to judrr, lw i! tat odical of the kind in Hie world. Very larp- nxl kmovaisi. lut rated ; regular price 75 cts. per year; kii1 rating will send it to you for a trial rear, and will aNetnri frcn box of tbe ribbons; 5J sub-riiti. tuand 2 boin, 6i . 4 Subscriptions and 4 boxes,!! 1 . mc-ccut pmu?if be sent for less than $1. G-t ii fri.-udt.iiyi forma ting 4 subscriptions and 4 boxes fur only $l;cai minutes. The above ofTrr is based on tii'u tct: Aotrrtas' the periodical referred to. for one yvar want it un-sfisst pay us the full price for it ; it is iu after jtn. tU mm. that we make money. We make this gmt t&a at once secure 25),IKW new subscribers, lio, w, a a year, and in years thereafter, shall rewstd tu wrt i rti cause the majority of them wiil wih tnrttw tions, and will do so. The money required is bnats f the price you would have to pay at auy umlmtmA smaller assortment of far inferior ribbuas. lH" known ; you wiU not fully appreciste it anffl fcyaii Safe delivery guaranteed. Money rsfandi'dtoirya""' fectly satisfied. Better cut this eat. or send s! iaet,fct ably it won t appearagain. Address, " H. Hsl.f.t-TT at CO- PCBUMIESS, PogTUTP at. Ayre gift l V much I ; i i 5 kii? TRADE MARK mi don't! DIE N THE H0l$ Gona mere tbe Woodbine T'J- Eats are smart, but "Kouch on PJ them, a ears out Rats, Mice, Bugs, Flies, Beetles, Moths, Ant&MJJ Bed-bugsrHen Lice, Insect i'ouui gtt Sparrows, Skunks, Wease!, Gc-PtJi mucks, Moles, Musk Rats. Jack Kw Squirrels. 15c. and Zjc. Dn "ROUGH ON PAIN" Plaster, Poroseo. 1 ROUGH ON COUGHS." CouffbsjU5t ALL sia'lTuMORs'cURED BT TCH "Rough on Itch" Oiutmenr cires i morfi. Pimples, Flesh Worms. ,.fTi. ter. hair tuieuni. x TOSieu r t u j rv s Ivy Poison, Barber's 1 tch, Sea w "Ttfj. Tlrutr. or mail. IS. b. t-- ' 60c. RflUGHgPU) fhirr "Pflpn. or HftTnorrhoids. I-cau. Sure cure. 50c. .Jar ins, Cl?edln Inicr! rr.n "V i V. . . 1 - or mil C. S. WELia, JcrsrjW - --rU n -Ti mm kb m mim w . -.fiC : a 1. stnrt I 1.1 U v 'rW as .Agents preierreu um . -a iae horses and .Ire their whole um v 7 Sntrs mnmcBtl TOST t-e vrntV7 y f. A. few vacancies in town V4 SOX & CO.. 1013 Main sr.. Iiichm -DJ, CUR Bat s c r r a FOR Es-Par-s Perfetf'ls- by colds, f-rrr. r rlCJHC. r Jn position. rncJir-. who orrlr of a dniwist onW of j VEf " .,.. - ---.- illVll III &Sffl&dSgoKaK5S EXHAUSTED VW11 FBAZER AXLE 0REASE BEST I TnE WORLD tr Oet tKn Oesnlnat. UdKan?hiw. (j'ORTHERN PACIFIC. LOW PRICE RAILROAD LAUDS and FREE GovernmentLANDH IT-XILUONS of ACRES oi each In Minnesota, North Dakota, Moutana. Jdano, u asnlng ton and Orwon. r J ruu KESTAfrrtcnlturaltirazlM arut Timler IjndsBowopeoioS-tter. Sent Free AdSsIi CUAS. B. LAMB OrtH. jy, A Great Medical Work fcfW and Uiddle-AseJ I u usy u u ii ti :i iui n 1 !SS KH017 THYSELF, PUBLISHED by lb 4"HMl'l Itoion. Mas.. U '31. eA ConsuitluR Fhvkiclan. More eh ytiiX W hT" t uv rnra T Ia mu. - - . - lor a time sjul then hare tbera retarn attain. I mnn a "l eare. I hare made th Aiamcxm ot FITS. EPIL EPSY or PALLING 81CKNKiiaaliflonerady. I variant ray remedy to care the wore, cases. Because thers haTe failed is no reason for not now reoeisina: a Mie. Send a ones for a treatise) and a Free Bottle tt my infallible remedy. Give Express and Port OQce. U. G. ItOOT. M, C 183 Feaxl tit. Neyr York! rremature ueciine. fc"r ia,..) miseries eoneiufnt tern substantial emt.o d WnJif the beat popular me,'ical fc.nUsh lanRaacre. fricf and concealed iu a V ample free it you send now jamc ims palter. 3" "7'airiV asrZ lain V; U, AW" MS
The Wilson Mirror (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 25, 1888, edition 1
2
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