Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / Aug. 9, 1889, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
nr EOuiKE i H rrtTAii2fAGns sermon at sx. ' 1 VAVii, MINN. The Brooklyn Divlno Discourses Upon . tbe Depth of Christ's Vicarious : Sacrifice, ' Text: " Betievcn the Lord JtsusChriat and thou thalt be facett." Acts xvL, 81, Jails are dark,dall,damp, loathsome places even now; bat they were wore la the apos tolic times. I imagine to-day we are stand ing in the Philippian dungeon. Do yoa not feel the chill? , Do you not hear tike groan of .... - I . I. - aM ;, bare not seen the sunlight, and the deep sign of women who remember their father's house and mourn over their wasted estate? listen again. It is the cough of a consumptive, or the struggle of one in the nightmare of a great horror. You listen again and hear a culprit, his chains rattling as he rolls oter In his dreams, and you says: "God pity the prisoner." But there is another sound in that prison. It is a song of joy and gladness. What a plaeo to sing in! The music comes winding through the corridors of the prison, and in ail the dark wards the whisper is ' beard: "What's that? What's that?' It is the song of Paul and Silas. They cannot sleep. Thevhave been whipped, very badly whipped. The lone gashes on their backs are blooding yet. . They lie flat on the cold ground, their feet fast in wooden sock- ' eta, and of course they cannot sleep. But they can sing. Jailor, what are you doing with r' these people? Why have they been put in here? Oh, they have been trying to make the world better. Is that all? That, is all. A pit for Joseph. -A lton's cave for Dan lei. " A blaring ' furnace for Bhadrach. Clubs for John Wesley. An anathema for Philip Melaucthon. A dungeon tor Paul and Silas. But while wo aro stand ing in the gtoom of the Philippian dungeon, . and w hrar the mine-lintr voices of sob and groan and blasphemy and hallelujah, sud denly an earthquake! The iron bars of the prison twist, the pillars crack off, the solid masonry begins to heave and all the doors wing open. The jailer, feoling himself re sponsible for these prisoners, and believing, in his pagan ignorance, suicide to bo honora ble since Brutus killed himself, and Cato killed himself, and Cassius killed himself puts his sword to his own heart, proposing with one strong, keen thrust to put an end to his excitement and agitation. But Paul cries out: "Stop! Stop! Do thy elf no harm. We are all here." Then I see the .jailor running through tho dust and amid the ruin of that prison, and I see him throw ing himself down at the feet of these prlson mtL M-vinsr out; "What shall I do? What shall I do?" Did Paul answer: "Get out of this place before there is another earthquake; put handcuffs and hopples on these other prisoners, lest they got away?" Kq. word --. of that kind. His com pact, thrilling, tremendous answer, an swer memorable- all through earth and heaven, was: "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved." Well wo have all heard of the earthquake in Lisbon, In Lima, in Aloppo, and in Caraccaa, but we live in a latitude where severe volcanic dis- turbanees are rare. And yet wo have seen fifty earthquakos. Here is a man who has been building up a large fortune. His bid on ' the money market 'was felt in all the cities. . He thinks he has got beyond all annoying rivalries in trade, and he says to himself: 'JTow I am; free and safe from all possible .perturbation." But in 1837, or in 1857, or in 1873 a national pernio PIU iaC9 VUQ awiiwaviuua vs. vmw w w- world, and crash! goes all that magnificent business establishment. Here is a man who has built up a very beautiful borne, HiaJ uaugnters nave juss come irom rn j , r with diplomas of gradnp p sons have started M life" sTemperate and pore. .- n.ii r.la nvmni lichen rn.rn atmelr thtrn la a. fa&Dnv and unbroken f amllv circle. 1 But there has been an accident down at Long Branch. The young man ventured too far out in the surf. The telegraph hurled the ; terror up to the city. . f An earthquake struck .under the foundation of that beautiful home. The piano closed; the curtains dropped; the laughter hushed. Crash I go all those domes tic hopes and prospocte ana expectations. So, my friends, we have nil felt tho shaking down of some great trouble, and there was a t time when we were as much excited as this ' man of tho text, and we cried out as he did: "What shall I do? What shall I do?" Tho same reply that the apostle mode to him is appropriate to us; "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved." There are some documents of so littlo itn- portance that you do not care to put any tnoro than your last name under thorn, or even your initials; but there are some docu ments of so great importance that you write out your fullname. So the Saviour in soma parts of the Bible is called "Lord," and in other parts of the Bible He is called "Jesus." 1 and in other parts of the Bible He is callod "Christ;" but that there might be no mistake about this passage, all three names come to- i, gether-r'The Lord Jesus Christ." Now, who is this being that you want mo to trust in and believe in? Meu sometimes come to me with credentials and certificates of good character, but I cannot trust them. There is some dishonesty in their looks that makes me know I shall be cheated if I con- , fide in them. You cannot put your heart's confidence in a man until you know what stuff her Is made of, and am I unreasonable to-day when I stop to ask you who this is that you want ma to trust in? No man would think of ventur ing his life on a vessel going out to sea that , had never been inspected. No, you must have the certificate hung amidships, tolling how many tons it carries, and how lone apro -. It was built, and who built it, and all about it And you cannot expect me to risk the cargo of my immortal interests on board , any craft till you tell me what it is made of. and where it was made hiiu wusiijgm. v cen, men, xasx you wno this is you want mo to trust in, you tell me He was a very attractive person. Contem porary writers describe His whole appear- aneev as being resplendent, There was no need for Christ to tell the children to come .. to Him. 'Suffer littlo children to como . unto Me," was not spoken to the children; it was spoken to the disciples. The children r came readily enough without any invitation. No sooner did Jesus appear than the little : ones jumped from their mother's arms, an , avalanche of beauty and love, into His tap. Christ did not ask John to put his head . down on His bosom: John could not help but put his head there. I suppose to look at Christ was to love Him. Oh, how attractive His , manner. Why, when they saw Christ coin in g along the street they ran into thoir houses, '. nd they wrapped up their invalds as quick ' as they could, and brought them out that He might look at them. There wrs some thing m pleasant, so inviting, so cheering in 1 evorything He did, in His very look. When these sick ones were brought out, did He say: - - - e - , wuw w uutu Mo with these leprosies ?" No, no; there was , a kind look, there was a gontlo word, there was a healing touch. They could not keep away from Him. In addition to this softness of character, there was a fiery momentum. How tho kings of the earth turned pals. Here is a plain man with a few sailors at bis back, coming c't the sea of Galilee, going up to tho palaeo of the Caesars, making that palace quake to . tns foundations, and uttering a word of tuo ;.irth, and tirough all tho heavens, and through all ages. Oh, tie was a loving Christ, liy t it was not effeminacy or insiiidiry of el tr'WJter; it was accompanied with majesty, ir.ticite and omnipotent. Lest the world . should not. reaJLsa llis earnestness, this Christ mounts the croiis. 1 You my: "If Christ has to die, why not let film tie somo deiwily potion and lie on a coiw ti in msd Lriflit and bcantif ul home? If r J' '.i i.':" JS-, t ln v. or Id must heal tiio I -" 'ii'ii tl y.c.n-U nf fie npikoa. Tiio 'iywi Ul must Uatcu ' to tho cfc-it' ('aH to of the- Bp Into the faoo of His anguiKh. And so the cross must be lifted and a nolo dug on the top of Calvary. ; It must be dug threa feet deep, and then tho cross is laid, on the ground, and the sufferwr is stretched upon it, and the nails are pounded through nerve and . muscle and bone, through the right hand, through the left hand, and then they shake His right hand to see if it is fast, and they heave up the wood, half a doses shoulders under tbe weight, and they put the end of the cross in the mouth of the hole, and they plunge it in, all , the weight of His body coming down for the first time on tho spikes; ' and while some hold the cross upright, others throw in the dirt and trample it down, and trample it hard. Oh, plant that tree well and thoroughly, for it is to bear fruit such as no other tree ever bore. Why did Christ endure it? He could have taken those rooks and with them crushed His crucitlors. He could have reached , up and grasped tho sword of the omnipotent God, and with one clean eat have tumbled them Into perdition. But no; He was to die. ? He must die. His life for your life. 1 In a European city a young man ' died on tho scaffold for tho ' crime of murder. - Somo time after the mother of this young man was dying and the priest came in, and she made oonfeesion to the priest that she was the murderer and not her son; in a moment of anew she had struck her husband a blow that slew him. The son cams suddenly into the room, and was washing away the wounds and trvinir to resuscitate his father wnen some one looked through the window and saw him, and supposed turn to do ine criminal. That vouner man died I or us own mower. Yoa say: "It was wonderful that ha never exposed her." But 1 'n von nf a erander thing. Uluisc, the Son of God, died not for Hi motner, nor for His Father, but , for His sworn enemies. Oh, such a Christ as thatso loving, so pa funf an 1 f , r i n cin ir can vou not trust Him? I think there are many under the in fluence of the Spirit of God who are sayinj: I will trout Him if vou will only tell me how;" and the great question asked by thou sands Is: "How? Howr,' . And whde J nnMtkni I look un and utter the prayer which .; Rowtand Hill so often uttered In the midst of his sermons: "Master, helpp How are you to tm.ofe in rnirfat : Just-as vou trust any Vnn tract vniir nartner in business with Imnnrtant thines. If a commercial v,. 4ro vnu . note oavable three months tuv von nxnect the uavment of that note t t.h mA of three montha You havepor- f..nflilniii!s m their- word and in th5i v;f.-r. fr strain, vou CO homo erpectlnff fhora will h food on the table. You have confidence In that. Now, I ask you to hr.vo the same confidence in the Lord Jesus m,rft Ha nvs: "You believe I take away your sins, and thoy ore all taken away "Whatl" you say, "before I pray any more? Before I read my Bible any nfnm I rrv over mv skis any V a. this moment. Believe with all Tour heart and you are saved. Why, Christ tn uyirna of neonle every day. What ii that? Confidence. If these people whom you trust day oy ay are mors worthy than Christ, if they are more faithful than Christ, if they have done more than Christ ever did, then irive them the preference; but if you really think that Christ is as trustworthy as they orr, then deal with Him as fairly. "Oh says some one in alight way: "I bebeyethat Christ was born in Bethlehem, and I behove that He died on the cross." Do yoa tflievo It with your head or your heart? I will illus strate the difference. You are in your own house. In the morning you open a news paper and you road how Capt. Braveheart on the sea risKeu nis nxo ior m buwwu i his rmfsnno-eriL You say. "What leuownemust nave dooiii juja iarauy - r . . . . I TTI A I,' servo verv well of the COULtis You fo the newspaper and sit down at 'inio table, and L oorbeff Jcr net think of that incident again. That is historical faith. But now you are on the sea, and it is night, and you are asleep, andyou are awakened by the shriek of "Fire!" You rush out on the deck. You hear amid the wringing of the hands and the fainting, the cry: "No hope! no hope! We are lost! we are lost?" The sail puts out its wings of Are, the ropes make a burning ladder in tho night heavens, the spirit of wrecks hisses in the wave, and on tho hurricane deck shakes out its banner of smoke and darkness. "Down with the lifeboat!" crios the captain. "Down with the lifeboats !" People rush into them. The boats aro about full. Room only for one more man. You are standing on tbe deck beside the captain. Who shall it be? You or the captain? The cap tain? The captain says: "You.? You jump and are saved. He stands there and dies. Now, you believe that Captain Bravehoart sacrificed himself for his passengers, but you belioveit with love, with tears, with hot and long continued exclamations, with grief at his loss, and joy at your deliverance. That is saving faith. In other words, what yon believe with all the heart, and believe in regard to yourself. On this hinge turns my sermon; aye, the salvation of your immortal soul. You often go across a bridge you know nothing about. You do not know who built that bridge, you do not know what material it is made of; but you come to it and walk over it and ask no ques tions And here is an arched bridge blasted from the "Rock of Age." And built by the architect of the whole universe, spanning the lark gulf between sin and righteousness, and all God asks you is to walk across it; and you i tart, and you come to it, and you stop, and you go a little way on and you stop, and you tall back, and ' you experiment. You say: "How do I know that bridge will bold me?" Instead of marching on with firm step, ask ing no questions, but feeling that the itrength of the eternal God is under you. Oh, was there ever a prhsa proffered so cheap as pardon and heaven are offered to you? For now much? A million dollars? It is certainly worth more than that. But cheaper than that you can have it. Ten thousand dollars? Less than that. Five thousand dollars? Less than that. One dol lar? Less than that.. One farthing? Less than that "Without money and with out price." No money to pay. No journey to take. No penance to suffer. Only just one decisive action of the soul: : Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou, shalt be saved." Shall I try to tell vou what it Is to be saved? I cannot tell you. No man, no angel can tell you. But I can hint at it. For my text bring me up to this Eoint "Thou shalt be saved." It means a appy life here, and a peaceful death and a blissful eternity. It is a grand thing to go to sleep at night and to get up in the morning, and to do business all day fooling that all is right between my heart and God. , No accident, no sickness, no per secution, no peril, no sword can do ma any permanent damage. I am a forgiven child of God and He is bound to see mo through. The mono tains may depart, the earth may burn, the light of the stars may be blown out by the blast of the judgment hurricane; but life and death, things present and things tc come are mine. Yea, further than that it means a peaceful dath. Mrs. He mans, Mrs. Sigourney, Dr. Young, and al most all the poets have said haodsome things about death. There is nothing beautiful about it. ; When we stand by the white and rigid features of those whom we love, and they give no answering pressure of the hand and no returning kiss of tbe lip, we do not want anybody poetizing around about us. Death is loathsomeness, and midnight, and till wringing of the heart until the tendrils snap and curl in tbe torture, unless Christ shall be with us. Z confess to you an infinite fear, a consuming horror of death, unless Christ shall bo with me, I would rather go down into a cave of wild beasts or a jungle of roptilos than Into tho grave, un less Christ goes with me. WiU you tell me that I am to be carried out from my bright home and put away in the darkness? I cannot bear; darkness. At the first coining of the evening I must have the gas lighted, and the further on in life I got the more I like to have my friends round about rae. And arn to bo put off for thousands of years in a dark place with no ono to xprak to? Wheu the hulidavs mms and tho gifts nre dijtribuftr V, shtUl t icM ro jov tt'io JM?ft-y- Chrisfi3a4i.-crb9 iHy. Km Year?" Ah, do not point down to the hole in the ground, the grave, and call it a beaatt f ul place Unless fliers be some supernatural illumination I shudder back from it. My whole nature revolts at it. But now this glorious lamp is lifted above tbe grave, and all the darkness is gone, and the way is clear. I look Into it now without a single shudder. Now my anxiety is not about death; my anx iety is that I may live aright, for I know that if my life is consistent when I come to the last hour, and this voles Is silent, and these eyes are closed, and these hands, with which I peg I or your sterna satvauon to-day, are folded over the still heart, that then I shall only begin to live. nas power Is there in anything to chill me in the last hour if Christ wraps around me the skirt of His own garment? What darkness can fall upon my eyelids .then ' amid the heavenly daybreak? O Death, I will not fear thee then. xacK to thy cavern oi aarxuess, taou robber of all the earth. Fly! thou despoiler of families. With this battle ax I hew thee In twain from helmet to sandal, the voice of Christ sounding all over the earth and through the heavens: "O Death, I will be thy plague, O Grave, 1 wiU be thy destruc tion." . . To be saved is to wake up In tho presence Of Christ You know when Jesus was upon earth how happy He made every house He went into, and when He brings us up to His house in Heaven, how great shall be our glee. His voice has more music In it than is to be heard in all the oratories of eternity. Talk not about banks dashed with effores eenos. Jesus is the chief bloom of heaven. We shall see the very face that beamed sym pathy in Bethany, and take the very baud that dropped its blood from ths short beam of the cross. Oh, I want to stand in eternity with Him. Toward that harbor I stoer. To ward that goal I run. I shall bo satisfied when I awake in His likeness. Oh, broken hearted men and women, how rweetit will be in that good land to pour all of your hardships and bereavements and losses into the loviW ear of Christ and then have Him arnlain whv it was best for vou to be sick, and why it was best for you to be widowed, and why It was best ror you to pe Dersecuted. and whv it was best for you to be Wed, and have Him point to an elevation pro portionate to your disquietude here, saying: "Yoa Buffered with me on earth, come nn now and be riorified with Me in heaven." Somo one went Into a house where there had been a good deal of trouble, and said to the woman there "Yoa seem to be lonely." "Yes," she said. I am - lot el v." "How many in the family?" "Only myself." "Hava vou had any children?" "I had seven chil dren." 'Where are they?" 'Gone." "All ...... AA 11 tl SSjftt sbrea. 1 and said: "Oh, sir, I have been a good mother to the grave." And so there are nearw here that aro. utterly brokon down by the bereavements of life. I point you to-day to the eternal balm of heaven. Are there any here that I am missing this morning? Oh. you poor waiting maid I your heart's sorrow poured in no human ear, lonely and sad! How glad you will be when Christ shall dis band all your sorrows and crown you queen unto God and tho Lamb forever! Aged men and women, fed by His love and warmed by His grace for three-score years and ten! will not your docrepitude change for the leap of a hart when you corns to look face to face upon Him whom having not seen vou love? That will be the Rheoheri not out in the ni watching to. . keep off sunlit hilL ThaJUC!Ti k. t.h or our saivIWOfnot amid the roar and crash and boomgf battle, but amid His dimhanAeA 'Dinar victorious fesfchritv. That the Bridegroom of the Church com in z from afar, ths bride leaning upon His arm while He looks down into her face, and says: "Behold, thou art fair, my love! Behold, thou art fair P ABOUT NOTED PEOPLE Corporal Tanner smokes Incessantly. General Sherman loves cheese sandwiches. Lord Salisbury spends $100,000 a year c servant hire. Paris has a female wrestler. Her name i Jeanne Du Rosay. Kagy Ferenez, a peasant of Bares, Hun gary, claims to be 121 years old. John G. Whittier, the poet, is rooming through the White Mountains. Samuel J. Kirkwood, Iowa's war governor, is now living on a berry farm near lows City. Christine Nilsson is very lame from rheu matism, and is troubled with a defective memory. Robert Browning has presented the Shah of Persia with a gorgeously bound set of his works. Anne Perkins a Cleveland newsgirl,dressei in a Turkish costume while - vending her wares. Lncas Silva, who was a doctor in the inde pendence army of Bolivia, has reached hit 139 th year. Irou Eagle Feather, a Sioux Indian, has just completed the scientific? course at Dick inson College. Andrew Carnegie works hard on his mem oirs, but be ft ill insist ttuy will not be pub lished during his lifetime. Daisy Chamberlain, a sister of Jennie the Cleveland beauty, is to make her debut in L ndon society next season. Ex-Governor and Ex-United States Sena tor Koss, of New Mexico, is now setting type on tbe ttanta Fe New Mexican. ' Ella Wheeler Wilcox is encased upon a short story, which she believes is tha strang est piece of prose writing she has ever done. The Shah of Persia is not tho man he was on his last visit to England. He is more ir ritable and likes to sleep a great part of the time. William O. Fitzgerald is a clerk in the New York Custom-house and has been years in the employ of the government He is a deaf mute. Herr Arthur NIkisch, of Lei pile, who is to conduct the Boston Symphony Orchestra, is a short, lithe man, with dark and sallow face and expressive eyes. Mrs. Harriet De Bar, widow of an actor well-known years ago, is now nearly 8 years old, but scarcely less sprightly than when she appeared in pantomims, more than 35 years ago. Mrs. George H. Corliss will erect a Una building for the Young Men's Christian As sociation at Newburyport, Mass., as a me morial of her late husband, the famous engine-builder. Prince Ferdinand, of Bulgaria, it is rumor ed intends to assumi the title of king od the 14th day of August, the anniversary of the day on which be took the oath of allegiance to the Bulgarian constitution. It is rumored that on bis marriage with Princess Louise of Wales the Earl of File will be made Duke of Iuverness. That title was borne by tbe queen's uncle, the Duke of Sussex, and thus has a semi-royal dignity. Edward Bellamy, the author of "Looking Backward," thinks that the cause of com pulsory education in the United Stat de mands a school year of not less than 35 weeks, and continued tuition until the sze of IT. FIRE IN A COAL MINE. Two Men and Thirty Blule Supposed to' Have Been Burned. Afire started in Shaft No. 3 of the Trstt coal mines, six miles from Birmingham, in Alabama. : It is supposed that a seam of coal is burn ing, and there seems to be no way of putting the fire out. Two men and 30 mules were (n the mines when the fin- Itroke out, and must have suf fori'd hi.rriiili iliatof, as thev were cut dT from air ani the burping shaft was the only means el escaoo. ... : -. L--- , A Cheap Girl ta Woo. I knew a young fello'w who was vary sweet on a Scotch npinster. She -was a -wealthy Scotch spinster, but if there is a kind of woman -who must be loved economically and for herself alone it is a Scotch spinster. Scotch spinsters are warranted to , make good -wives all the time. ' It is awfully hard to be untrue to a Scotch woman. She makes you so very comfortable, and Nholds you to her sot so much by her heart as by your bank account. She doesn't always want mew bonnets ; she is rather liable to object even to your having a new hat until the old one is quite worn out. A Scotch wife can keep her husband neat and trim and herself and her chil dren as well at a smaller expense than any others. She doesn't want diamond earrings for her birthday. All you have to do is to show her your bank book and kiss her, and tell her you owe the big balance to her, and she is quite satisfied. This young fel low did sot understand the Scotch spinster, and when he thought to please her he sent her a lovely and ex pensive basket of flowers. He went up to receive her thanks and smiles, and he was quite , knocked over when she told him he hadn't a big enough salary to waste it buying flowers for her or anybody- else, and she was sorry to see he was so extravagant, because other wise he was "a very pleasin' young man." He lied himself back into her good graces by saying he had got the Sowers for nothing, and he thought he could not make better use of them. She smiled graciously, and said : " Seein' they did . na cost you any thing, it's a great compliment." She was a woman after all. She Got the Needle After All. Nineteen years go this month a woman residing . uere accidentally pushed a needle into her breast. She iiad been sewing on fine muslin and ihe pushed the point of the needle through the lapel ' of her basque while ihe inquired the cause of aijuarrel be- P1? aear by. In a paroxyinTf tears the founger child threw 'herself into the trms of the lady, and as she did so the aeedle was pushed to far out of eight ;hat only the eye was visible. A quick movement to rescue it resulted in an jutire disappearance of thejtoe teel. No mconvenien crJa' enced and the incisf. eVY" Forgotten, troman. w aeni was entirely 5ew evenings ago the ibout .j naa carried the needle for so many years, was iw &ened out of a sound sleep by a culiar pricking sensation in the ;hroat. Rising up in bed she began to sough, ihe pricking became more levere, but the sharp substance ap peared to be, rising in her throat, thrusting her fingers down as far as possible, she caught hold of an object ind drew it out. It was the needle that had been journeying about under ihe surface for nineteen years. Kings ton (N. Y.),Freeman. Ether Intoxication. The curious habit of taking ether as an intoxicant is becoming dangerously prevalent in the north of Ireland. The resident physician of Londonderry Lunatio Asylum states that quite a number of cases of insanity have been produced by the constant use of this drug. One wholesale druggist iu Dub lin sends hundreds of pounds' worth north every year. On account of its extreme volatility the intoxication it produces is eo transient that a person may get gloriously drunk and become completely sober in a couple of hours. But the reaction, though at first im perceptible, is apparently cumulative tn its results, and ultimately leads to mental derangement. One well-known gentleman, incredulous of its effects recently took a dram and got so drunk that he broke a window in his ethereal exuberance of spirits, and but for the kind offices of a friend would have Kent the night in a police station.--mdon Figaro. Oub greatest hold on happiness, is to tread firmly and faithfully in the path erf duty; knowing and practically sub-' cutting to the knowledge that in seem ing loss is sometimes the greatest gain ' tor iu. -. . : .- - - It Don't Fay To use sneertain means when suffering from diseases of the liver, blood or luni.8, auoh as biliousness, or "liver complaint," skin dla-: eases, scrofulous sores or swellings, or from lan scrotal (commonly known as oonsump-: tion of the tangs) when Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Disoovery to roaraateod to cure all tlveaeffeotions. if taken InUme.or money paid for it will by promptly refunded. S900 offered for an lnearable ease ef Catarrh u tb Head, by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Uemedy. " Hush money The wages of the baby's nnrse. The Mother's Friend, used a few weeks be. fore confinement, lessens the pain and makes labor quick and comparatively eay. Sold b all Druggists. A lawyer is never so blind but he can cite authorities. . . Do You Have that eztrei&e Hied ferHof, languor, without peetMe or treng-th, Impaired digestion, and a geo tal feeling of aUaery It Is ianpoMtble to dMerlbol Hood's Barsapartna Is s wonderful medMae for creating aa tppeUtA, promoting dfgeeaoaaad ton lag vp the whole system, giving strength and activ ity fa pleoeef wrsfcnses and debility,.. Be tare to get Hood's. "I take Oooi'm BknaperlO rrcry year as a tonlo with atost satisfactory reeolU. I recommend Hood'l SerMtperlU to all who bar fhet miserable tired foaling. "C tAMurn, S4t Bridge St., Brook lyn, V. T. Hood's Garcaparllla Soltfjw all draggteta SI) six forts.-Prepared only by Oil faOOD a CO Apothecaries, Lowell, Hess. I bo Dotes One Dollar fl . 1 ana fa'i'iy n 1 1ore Big m ttv onlj 'J!7V? 1 the certain com ; to DATS. I of thlsd mw. , 4 ' .. 7 . . u u.u.4AunAiiAa,H.D.. eMMSM-wt. Amatrrdnm, Y, I art7yM . We bate cold TOg G for naaGiaKiaalSa many year, end It hat , V Cblo. s0A D. . DYCHE ft CO.. V .7 W t Chlcaro. 111. Trad Xmm 431.00. EoldbyDnigits. yVWJV CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH fiiS FC.rJYHOYAL PIUS. if! ij ThM.l;r relict pis fcri. Hr,. . ju mum, i.anir-. aK it Munt j.e rllr tank irnrr tt fur .he Hh a f t riiTisi 11 mm Mivcanir DOXRBt. strain l v ri H I ill Ml U t' rl ilUOD . i U klsai.i)l..a kt -. ,t Jl i. ltnti- for paTtiUfitvr m'i Hr ivf far HewMleet ; A child who has once Uken nsjnbnrt Fisjs M acutbarUowtUneveraBain look on them m medicine, bat will be likely to ask for them, Skder the tapreislon that they are elmVlr pre served fruit. 23 cents. Dose - one Ihi. Alack Drug Co.. N. Y. , ' ' j , -. . tit None but a thorough bass vocallBt win Utter forged notes. , i i i . - .. - 'penny wise and pound leoliah" are those who think it eorwvnw to nse cheap ;od and roSln .daps, in.W of the goedj elS Dobbits Electrio aoap: for ale by all I reoers since MO. Try it once. Be sure, buy genuine. There Is now no bustle about the girl of the period, and yet she is as noisy as ever. If afflicted with soreeyesuse Drlwiao T,lomP son's Eye Water. Druggists tell at 35o.per bottle Namby-Ihear, Putney, thst yoa possess an estimable wife. Pambjr (satllyJ-No, she possesses me. ... Old smokers prefer 'rTsnslll's f unch" Pe Cigar to most 10 centers. v t.li ,nn...v.n. nntit nnntilTMS i the America's cup, the British would nevef get Ponraren aoons iu . r, v" - 1 it conQUsno xAxaxr. Believes and cures EHEUHATISH, KEtntALGIA, Sciatica, Lumbago. ToctbieH Epniirs, BRUISES, Earns and 8calf At Drugglat and Dealere. w TMI CHARLES a. V06ELER C04 BsluMort, . DUTCHER'O FLY KILLER Kskes a clean sweep. Every Dec win mu 4w Stops bURslng aronnd n, diving at eyes, tickling year nose, skips bard words and se enrea pace at trifling expense. Bend 'iS cent for 0 sheets to V. PUTCHJaB, 8k AJfcaaa, Tt. y S I O-A R T- e to C UT to L General Cnltare. ealrbfePlMj; nnnn to BroirrMlTe atvdant. An Intereettd will rererVe valuable iBformation jpree. '111 rererve'faiuameimtwma'iwB Jf r, t, ' by addresalDg . TOCKJEE, Vostoa. Maw. MEDICAL CO.. Itleheaond. V. m. 1 te 98 a dar. Samples worth Free. Unes not under aoraes' feet. Write Brew eter Safety Rela Haider Ce Holly JMlrh. who bsve naed PIfo'j Cure for OonmirapHon ray It 1" BEST OF ALL. 8old everywhere. 2So. (fl and TTIttafee TXa ! 1 tu eared at heme wlta I ant naJn. . lvwk of na. k:i1 ttenlara sent rKKaV keZte Q. M.vroorxsT. M.Dl 'AUMita,ua, OOoo H WaUeUaU St. CHEAPEST : FAMILY : ATLAS KNOWN. qtctjlm'V so ohhnttjei:: 191 Pages, 91 Foil-Page Maps. Colored Mape of aaoh State and Terrltorr in the Tnitnl states. Alao Maps of every Country In the World. The letter prm aires the atinara mil a of earh 8tat: time of wittleineot: poptilati.nn; chief cltine; areraffe ttmperatniv; valary of otnciala and t he principal poatniaatTa In the St; nnratxir of farms, with tnrlr prodiKtionaand tlie value thereof; different manufavtiirra and nnmber ef erailoyea, etr.. etc Alwottw area of eeoh Forebm Country; form of government; population; principal pnxtacoa and thair money value; amount of trade; rnligion; lKof army; milea of railroad and telegraph: lium tver of boraea, cattle, ahecp, and a vat amount of ill fcrraation valuable toall PestpMd for liSe, BOOK PUB. BOUSE, 1!M Ieonard 8U. N. T, C1U. MARIC4 PENSIONS KEilW?5 Kfe n.rJTTv 7tZ,7&7f. W. BOSS, cuciwtuo aa.hiat, . c (mmm B've Qo M BRYANT & STRATTON Business CoUegp Ik Keeping, Shot BanO, TelepravhVt se. T ATTTQTTTT T C TTTT ' Write for Vtitaloffu and, full information. JUU UlO VlJjXi!yt iXAaj Si A. SA - U mWm V .;, "? for FOR ulaEce Your -Chickens' larn They will, if you liandle them properly, and to teach yon we are now putting forth a - 100-PM1 BOOK It smbodlai tha ancnarlAnra of imong Poultry. as a btjslnass not as a diversion, but for' the purpose of making: dollar and navnta. He made a success, ar d th to Is no reason why '.you should not If you-wlll profit by hla labors and the prloe of a few eggs l will g-lve yeu this tntelllg-ence; Even If you have room for'only a few henayou8hould kncAv howto MAKE THEM PAY. This book will show you. Among-hundreds of other points about the Poultry Yard it teachesi To Induce Kens to Lay, Te Sslsct a Good Cock, To Select a Good Hsu, . Whloh Pans la Hatch. ' t Whta to Set for Early Brotlsrs,' '"' 9 VThat to Feed Young Chicks, How to Arrange Coops, Handling of Eggs. About Watering Chicks, Arrangement of Torchee To Prevent and Cure Roup. Abortloi, Chol . era, Gapes, Ac, &a. The best Ghtcken nook for the money evar offered. No one with Fowl? can afford to be without It. Sant postpaid en receipt of 25 cents lt tllver, postal riote or stamps (I or 2c). CHEAPEST AllD BEST GERMAtl DICTIOIIARY of ea4 pages ; poa oicly cse ccLun.v; a. .. M.i IFIBST-CliSS DICH0MT At TKUV ISAIALI. PRICE 7 ItrlTF(ll h' Word with the German Kqnlya IraCT rronunelutlon ant Oernun Worts win Katuaa DeftulUoaa Seat postpaid ea reueipt of tl KKAO WHAT THIS HAH JATBi . , . Mill.. WT SL 133V 0i pub. kirn, IN t"!";'-., f am noik The German Dictionary la rveelvri ' '?h,2 a&eed with lt. J lVif iad Inclosed ftad $1 fo same. 4 , i asanas BOOIC PUD. CO., 1S4 Leonard Street. New York City, - I.- '"V 1 After ALL otaert ... fail, consult 329H.1EthSL f PH1LA.. PA. Twenty yeere eonoaotte preotloe to the aV meat and etir. et the wfilW "Sfcii SdtoiUnMfwoe month. Five a1r2eB securely eoala from obaerrotlon to any address. Peek ea Special Diseases free. " m- VAWaTB rOK'B& TIMJ rpHE VIROlNllA BUSIlffftSS OOLLKOK, Boolc-keeilnc. Ooin;roii Benches BurtneaB Praotics. Shorthand, 'f jpe-W-ritio. 'lZt feumanihlpihowa.BlrtMUhiL ladifldnal I """ tirS. Both Sxs Adraltfuit. Otdat Awistn'i t r fltnw Buimait uotwsrem i hV i , i ,,B. tDttnth I ' ' ' ' ' "" 'Wtfgrciiola FAI.jin BUF,,COI IiBlil7. - . HrJunlarahin and Kositiob. 8.1 U. Agents wanted, f t au hour. 50 new artWea.CatTgi and sample free. C K. MirtfiiAix, Buffalo, K. PEERLESS DYES Are theJBES'R Sow sr XtKoomtsBk TTKI-P WANTKII. Johnnlown Book In lota of II nrtr. ti) per oent uu. Kimiia i.n-' J uti na- To WN PU3. CO., ID 8. rfintU btraat. Fhilailolpbia. AJILE GREASE . t7OettheOenu1ne. any Plan's Core for Oon Miinpllon la THE BKB'f lor keeping the voice clear. i otsnts. 11 K TO A .uilATilMH le uiode working elU for u. Auats preferred wbo eaa rurulnU a horae and give tielr whole time to tbe Imatnees. Spare momeuta may be protltahly emplored alao. A few vocauclea in town and cltioa. II, V. JOHN. SON A CO., 1000 Mala .. Ulchmond, Vo. if. J3. Fleam tnt op rind luitlncil experifno. Afottt mind abynt tending irtamp for reply. S. f. J. Oe. IHI ere' Want te learn all about a Bene 1 Bew to Pick Out a CeodOner Know lmnorf eo-J tlona and ao Gnard acalnnt Frand t Detect Disease and Fffecta Care when earns u poaalble ? Tell tliT age by he Teeth T What to call ; h; Diaerent Parts or the Animal? How to Shoe a Uorae Properly I AU thla end ether Va aable Informalioa eaa be obtained Uf reeding our ICe-PAOU II-U'8T1UTEB paid. on recrintof Mir it5 rentafa IrSMlFP.. BOOK P.UB. HOUSE. 134 Leonard St.. . .. Now York City. 1 1 (bJ5yTpl. SALt BY ALL DRUSWISTS. w ..13 Eubhey. - . - ; - FOE 25 CENT a nrintlnalmin'l.hnria. ntc To Pranare Nesta Judicious Pairing, What Hens to Set, Care of Brooding Kens, Know Unfruitful Ecas, When to Set for Choice What to Feed for Eggs, unai io i-eoa to ranen, V f!t DM u r . wuwi itiu vi ivniiin, About Incubators, ftlTTii) 6 Ilr 8 nhh 10 l a VmWJ It-'-.DsS tr Tt" V 7 To Prevent , and Cure f Pip, Llcs.Scaly Legs, Indigestion, to., &o. I
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 9, 1889, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75