Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / March 8, 1895, edition 1 / Page 2
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The ncanokQ Jeanbrie rihe Official PapeW Wash ington OounW Published Every Friday by The Roanoke Publishing Compact. ' Subecnrtlon price, $1.00 per year. AdyortiaementJ Inserted at low rate. , Obituary notices exceeding M-n line, flva cento aline. Count the word. allowinc eight to the line. nd end money w ith MS. for all in excess of ten . '"rTie editor will not be responsible for the vlewa f correspondunta- , , All article for publication tunit be accomoanied bv the full name of tue writer. Correspondents are requested not to write on but oue side of the paper. All communications mnt he sent In by Thursday morning or they will not appear. ' Address all communications to THE ROANOKE BEACON, Plvniouth. N. C. We appeal t every reader of Tn Hoanok Beacon, to aid in making it an acceptable and profitable mediant of new to our citizen. Let Plymouth people and the public know wnat i going on in Plymouth. Report to w all iiunn of new the arrival and departure of friend, social event, deaths, worioua Hhwh, aocideiiU. new buildings, new enterprises and improvement of ...... .h.r.ot.r nhuni'Miii luiMintt indeed FHO" 11 vmw-w, ... . anything and everything thai would be of mtereel to our people. FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1895. One reason why many a prayer is not answered is because there are too many articles asked for in one peti tion. If you want bread, pray for bread, don't wander around asking for plum pudding, a mortgage and a pest-office. If you are lazy and wait ing for somebody to take yon by the hand and -steer potatoes into your mouth, pray for common sense, ene rgy and push. There is a science in prayer. A. little work is good to throw in at times enough to keep you from drying up. Greenville Reflector. " The present Legislature of North Carolina has done some very censur able and some very foolish thing, but Ibeen presented to it is one to abolish the State Geological Survey, the value of which is recognized by every intel ligent man in the State who has given the. subject the least thought, oris m the least familiar with the work ilia fiAt to tliif rhaQn vvnr si I i-pa1 v ' - - tj brought into some counties ten times a wiiistli ia if liua nncr ill? liaa invaluable service in makiug known, in an authoritative way, some if all of the resources of North Carolina, of some of which we have as yet but a very vague conception. Instead of abolishing the Survey it should be fncrnrarl 11111 ninm r In rnn nrli 1 v pnnirt. peu, 10 expeaue ana enlarge inugoou .work it is doiii". The man who wants it abolished is short on bruins . Fripat nis:ht the Fusionists showed, more plainly than ever be fore, a total want of capacity to leg islate and a painful lack of leader ship. They do very well to carry out cut and dried programmes or dictates of caucuses, but when left lo themselves to assert original and in dependent thought they are perfectly helpless, as shown by the proceed' ings last night in the Semite. The bill to create six new magis t rates in every township, and an ad ditional one in incorporated town.-, came up for consideration. Senatoi Moody, who essays to be the leader, early displayed great anxiety. ' Senators Adams and'Dowd calleu attention to the immense cost in vol vnd in the bill in the way of supply ing Codes, Acts of the Legislature, .Justices' Dockets, &c. They assert ed. that at the very lowest calculation - .the cost would, be $25,000 or $30, 000, and it might reach $50,000 Feeling the force of their argument Senator PaUdifon offered an amend men t providing that the cost of books &c, should not be paid by the State, which amendment whs adopted. This amendment being so foolish and inconsistent, produced 'universal confusion. Senator ' Moody Fortune, Starbuck and other , held hasty conferences on the floo of the Senate Chamber to devise some method to extricate themselves from the foolish dilemma in whic they were involved. They admitleo that they were "in a hole they had , "made fools of themselves ;w char pil I twit 'flirt lYmiili&trf h:ld pone lack on the agreements. of the cau mis ;" ,and coufusiou became con relink"! . The bill passed its third -Jv, alter being amended 'by ,1 J by a Krna.ll yore. Then Paddington amendment was strick en out ; and the number of new magistrates in each township was reduced to three, and the bill pac Fortune, Candler and others displ ayed great feeling and complained that this was not carrying out the promises made to the people, and cau cus agreements. Hoover, Bellamy. Lindsey, Sharpe, Sanders, and others together with the Democrats, voted against the bill. Fowler did not vote. Hoover and Lindsey, well known Populist, denounced the measure and characterized it as a return to the condition of things that obtained in 18C8-'9. It is gratifying to see that there are some of the Populist who have come to be independent enough to protest and go on record against these old time methods and meas ures of the Republican party. Raleigh North Carolinian. "Perhaps you would uot think fo. but a very large propoitiouof dispases in New York cornea from carelessness about catching colds," says Dr. Cyrus Edsou. "It is such a simple thing and so common that very few people, unless it is a case of pneumonia, pay any attention to a cold. There are a great mny cases of catarrh and consumption wh' ch have their origin in this neglect of the simplest precaution of every day life. The most sensible advice is, when you have oue get rid of it as soon as possible. By all mej ans do not neglect it." Dr Edson does no tell you how to cure a cold but we will Take Chamberlain's Oough Remedy. It will relieve the lungs, aid expectoration, open the secretions and soon effect a permanent cure. 2" and SO cent bottles for sale by Plymouth Drug Co Wunson "What do you do when ycnr boy asks you a question you cannot answer? Meunison Te 1 him he is impudent." Mouumeutal liar a good many grac- stones. Albany Argus. Judging by his record as a lender in war Li HuLg Chang ought to be an immeuse success as au enyoy of peace. Chicago Racord. A severe rheumatic pain iu thn Uft shoul der had troubled Mr. J. H. Lopr. a well known druggist Dea Moines, Iowa, forever six months At times the paiu was so severe that he could not lift anything. With all he csuld do he could not get rid of it until he applied Chamberlain's Pain BaIiu. ' I only mode three applications of it,"besa)B, And have since been free from all paiu " He now recouimeuc's it to persons similarly afflicted.' It is for sale by Plymouth Drng Co Dents the Elfrel Tower. One of nature's strangest freaks, one of the greatest wonders of the world, is the Devil's Tower, or, as tho Sioux In dians call it, the Mateo Tepee, or the Bear's Lodge, which stands on the banks of the Belle Fourche Itiver iu a northeastern county of Wyoming. The country for fifty miles around consists of high table lands, deep canyons aud narrow, fertile valleys nothing to in dicate the possible existence of any such freak of nature. The tower is a gigantic column, a monster obelisk of lava, which rises to a height of seventeen hundred and twenty-seven feet, almost twice the height of Eiffel Tower. At the base the Luge shaft measures three hundrod and twenty-six feet through in oue di rection. Huge crystals of the volcauio rock, measuring one to three fet through, start at the base and run un broken to the top, giving to the col umn a peculiar fibrous appearance, even when viewed from the table laud-i, forty miles away. How did it get there ? How wa3 it made ? Once in awhile, in the present age, we have heard how portions of the bottom of one of the oceans Lave been pushed up by volcanic forces, and even a new island added to the charts. .Ages on ages ago similar volcanic forces started a jet of lava up from the bottom of the ancient geological ocean that covered all the Northwest at that time. The squirt of molten rock evidently did' not break through it into the waters above, but froze, as an iron man would say, in the hole it had made. This slow cooling off, the gradual loss of its fiery energy, probably lasted for many long years, and gave time for the par ticles to arrange themselves in the huge crystals that arouse all of our astonish ment to-dav. An Illustrated Phrase. The Pelican .Ab, my dear sir, you just till the WUW v . ... kwiib-"1 wmrf- i TALMAGE'S SERMON. THE BROOKLYN PREACHER MAKES A TRIP THROUGH THE SOUTH. (nrge Crowd Oo to' Hear Him at At. i lanta, Oa. Subject : "Th Circle of th Karth-'-Ood'a Moral Government anU Spiritual Art-anceinent. Rev. Dr. Talmage, who is now making n ien dajs' tour of the southern cities, pica clieil .it Atlanta, (la., Sunday. Tho throngs in and riumt the audh-nco hall were beyoud estimate. The subjert chosen was "The Circle of the Kn ih." the text beiiitf Isaiah xl. 22, "It is h that, silteth upon the eirule of the earth. n While yet people thought that the world was fiat, and iIuuiskiuIh of years bi'fore they found out that it was round, Isaiah, in my text, intimated the 8hiiK! of it dud sitting upon the circle of the earth. The most beautiful figure in all geometry is the circle. God made tho universe" ou the plan of a circle. There are in the natural world straight lines, tingles, parallelograms, diagonals, quad rangles, but these evidently are not God's favorites. Almost everywhere where you will find him geoinetrizing you will . find the circle dominant, and if not the ' circle, then the curve, which is a circle that died young. If it had lived long enough it would have been a full orb a periphery. An ellipse is a circle pressed only a little too hard at the sides. Giant's Causeway, in Irelaud, shows what God thinks of mathematics. There are over 85,000 columns of rocks oc tagonal, hexagonal, pentagonal. These locks seem to have beeu made by rule and by compass. Every artist has his j molding room, where he may make fifty sliajies. but he chooses one shape as pref erable to all others. I will not say that the (iiaul's Causeway was the world's molding room, but I do say out of a great mnnyfigures God seems to have selected the circle as the best. "It is he that siltelh on the circle of the earth." The stars in h circle, the moon iu a circle, the sun in a circle, the universe iu a cir cle, the throne of God the center of that circle. When men build churches they ought to imitate the idea of the Great Architect and put the audience in a circle, know ing that the tides of emotion roll more easily that way than in straight lines. Six thousand years ago God flung this world out of his right hand, but he did not throw it out iu a straight line, but curvilinear, with a leash of love holding it 60 as to bring it hack again. The world started from bis hand pure aud Edenic. It has been rolling on through regions of moral ice and distemper. How oug it will roll God only knows, but it will iu due time make complete circuit and come back, to the place whence it started the baud of God pure aud Edenic. The history of the world goes in a cir cle. Why is it that the shipping in our day is improving so rapidly ? It is be cause men are imitating the old model of Noah's ark. A ship carpenter gives that as his opiuion. Although so luucli derided by small wits, that ship of Noah's tune beat the Majestic aud tne Htruria and the City of Paris, of which we boast so much. Where is the ship ou the sea to-day that could outride a deluge in which the heaven and the earth were wrecked, lauding all the ias8engers in safety two of each kind of liviug crea tures, thousands of species t Poinologv will go on with its achieve ments until after many centuries tho world will have plums and pears equal to the paradisaical. The art of garden ing will grow for centuries, aud after the Dowuiugs aud Mitchells of the world have done their best in the tar future the art of gardening will come up to the arboreeence of the year 1. If the makers of colored glass go on improving they may in some centuries be able to make something equal to the east win dow of York minster, which was built in 1290. We are six centuries behind those artists, but tho world must keep on toil ing until it shall make the complete cir cuit and come up to the skill of those very nieu. If the world continues to improve in masouary we shall have after awhile, perhaps after the advance of centuries, mortar eoual to that which I saw last summer iu the wall of au exhumed Eng. lish city, built in the time of the Ro mans, l,C0O years ago that mortar to day as good as the day in which it was made, having outlasted the brick aud the stone. I say, after hundreds of years, masonry may advance to that point. If the world stands long enough we may have a city as large as they had in old times Babylon live times the sizu of London. You go into the potteries in England and you find them makiug cuh and vases after the style of the cups aud vases exhumed from Pompeii. The 'world is not goiug back. Oh, no; but it is swinging in a circle aud w ill come back to the styles of pottery know its long ago as the days of Pompeii. Ti.e world must keep on progressing until it is in the right direction ; the curve will keep ou until it becomes the circle. ... Well, now, my friends, what is true in the material universe is true iu God's moral government and spiritu arrange ment. That is the meaning of Ezekiel's wheel. All commentators agree in say ing that the wheel means God's provi dence. But a wheel is of no use unless it turn, and if it turn it tuius around, und if it turu around it moves in a cir cle. .What then? Are we parts of a great iron machine whirl'. d around whether we will or not, the victims of inexorable fate? No ! So far from that, 1 shall show you that we ourselves ulai t the circle of good or bad actions aud that it will surely come n round again tons unless by divine intervention it be hin dered. These bad or good actions may make the circuit of many years, but come back to us they will as certainly as that God sits on the circle of theeailli. Jezeliel. the worst woman of I ho Bible, slew Naboth because she wutited his vineyard. While the dogs were eating the 'body of Naboth, Elisha the prophet put down his compass and marked a circle from the dogs clear around lo toe dogs that should eat the Ixaly of Jez.-la-l the murderess. " Impossible !" the leo plesaid; "that will never happ'ii. " Who is thatleing flung out of the pa lice win dow ? Jezeliel. A few hours alter th. y came around hoping to bury her. They find only the palms of her hands and the skulls. The dog that devoiuvd J"s'td nnd the dogs that devoured Nalioth ! On, what a swift, what an awful circuit ! But it is sometimes the ease that tl iJ circlo sweeps through a century or through many centuries. The world started with a. theocracy for government -that is. God was the president and emperor of the world. People tot tired of a . theocracy'. ' They' said. "We don't tjapj Ood directly in torf erring with th affairs of the world; jrive ns a nwm arehy. " The world hao a mmnrniv. From it monarchy it. is uoing to liuvt a limited monarchy. After avhil- tne limited monarchy "ill In? jjlven UK,Miid the republican form of. government will lie everywhere domi.iaiit and fecojiiiltn X Then the world will get tired of the r Iiublican form of government; and U wi I laveau anarchy, which is no govern ment at all. And the" H nations, find ing out that man is not capable of right eously governing man. w ill cry out for a theocracy and say, "LetOd come back and conduct the affairs of the world. " Every step monarchy, limited iimn nrchy, republicanism, anarchy only dif ferent steps between the first theocracy and the last theocracy, or segments of the great circle of the earth ou wlucli God sits. But do not Lecome impatient because you can not see the curve of events, and then-for. conclude that Go'i' government H going to break down. ; i tory tells us that iu the making ol I ho pyramids it took 2,000 men two years t drag one great stone from the quarry and put it into the pyramids. Well, now, if men short lived can afford to work so slowly as that, can not God in the building of the eternities afford to wait? What though God should talse 10.000 vears to draw a circle? Shall we . take our little watch, which we have to wind up every night lest it run down, and hold it up beside the clock of eter nal ages? If, according to the Bible, a thousand years are iu God's sight as one day, then," according to that calculation, the 6,000 years of the world's existence have beeu only to God as from Monday to Saturday. But it is often the case that the re bound is quicker and the circle is sooner completed. You resolve that you will Jo what good jou can. Iu one week you put a word of counsel in the heart of a cSabbatlt school child. During that same w eek you give a letter of introduc tion to a young man struggling in busi ness. During the same week you make au exhortation iu a prayer meeting. It is all gone; you will never hear of it, perhaps, you think. A few years after a man comes up to you aud says, "You don't know me, do you ?" You say, "No, 1 don't rememb. r ever to have seeu you." "Why," he says. "I was iu the Sabbath school class over which you were the teacher. One Sun day you invited me to Christ. I accepted the offer. You see that church with two towers yonder?" "Yes," you say. He says, "That is where I preach ;" or, "Do you see that governor's house? That is where I live." One day a man comes to you aud says, "Good morning. " You look at him and say, "Why, you have the advantage of me; 1 can not place you." He says, "Don't you remember thirty years ago giving a letter of intro duction to a young man. a letter of introduction to Moses H. Grinuell?" "Yes, yes, I do. " Ho says, "1 am the man ; that was my first step toward a fortune, but I have retired from business now and tun giving my time to philan thropises and public interests. Come up uud see me. " Or a man comes to you and says: "I want to iutroduce myself to you. 1 went into a prayer meeting in Allai.ta some years ago; I sat back by the door; you arose to make au exhortation ; that talk changed the course of my life, and if ever I get to heaven, under God I will owe my salvation to you." In only ten, twenty or thirty years the circle swept out aud swept back again lo your own grateful heait. But sometimes it is a wider circle and cloes uot return for a great while. 1 saw a bill of expenses for burning Latimer und Ridley. The bill of expenses mih: One load of flr fafrots 3s. 4d. Uavtaite for four loads of wood 2s. Item, a post 1. 4.1. Item, two chains 3s. 4i. Item, two staples iki. Item, four laborers "a. M. That was cheap fire, considering all the circumstances, but it kindled a light that shone all around the world and aroused the martyr spirit, and out from that burning of Latimer and Ridley rolled the circle w hler and wider, start ing other circles, couvoluling, overrun ning, circumscribing, overarching all heaven a circle. But what is true of the good is just ns true of the bad. You utter a slander against your neighbor. It has gone forth from your teeth; it will never '. come back, you think. You have done the man all the mischief you can. You I rejoice to see hini wince. You say, j "Didn't I give it to him!" That word has gone out, that slanderous word, on its ioisonous and blasted way. You think it will never do you any harm. But I am watching that word, and I see it beginning to curve, and it curves ; around, and it is aiming at your heart, j You had better dodge it. You can not dodge it It rolls into your bosom aud i after it rolls in a word of an old book, i which says, "With what measure ye i mete, it shall be measured to you again. " I You maltreat an aged parent. Yoube i grudged him the room in your house. Your are impatient of his whimsicalities and garrulity. It makes you mad to hear him tell the same story twice. You I give him food he can not masticate. You wish he was away.- You wonder if he is going to live forever. He will be gone very soon. His steps are shorter and ! shorter. He is going to stop. But God i lias an account to settle with you on that I subject. After awhile your eye will be dim, and your gait will halt, and the i sound of the grinding will be low, and : you will tell the same story twice, and ' your children will wonder if you are go . ing to live forever and wonder if you will uever be taKen away. They called you "father" once; now they call you the"old man. " If you live a few years longer they will call you the "cjd chap I" What are those rough words with which your children are ac costing you? They are the echo of the very words you useU in the ear of your, old 'father forty years ago. What is that which you are trying to chew, but find it uumasticable, and your jaws ache, and you surrender the attempt? Perhaps it may be the gristle which you gave to your father for his breakfast forty years ago. A gentleman passing along the street saw a sou dragging his father into the street by the hair of the bead. The gerrtleman, outraged at this brutal cou duct, was alxnit to punish the offender, when the old man arose and said. "Don't hurt him; it's all right; forty years ago this morning I dragged out my father by the hair of his head t" It is a circle. My father lived into the eighties, and be had a very wide experience, and he said that mallroattneutof parents was always punished in this world. Other sius may be adjourned to the next world, but, maltreatment of pal-eats is punished in tiiis world. -' The circle turns quickly, very quickly.. Oh. what a stupeuuous thought that the e-i-iod and the evil we fctart come back to ml DoTtm know that the . Judgment Day will be only the points at which the Hrcle joins, the goon and the bad we have tloue coming back to us, unless dnii e intervention hinder coming back to ns with welcome of delight or curse of c ndemnatiou ? Oh, I woujd like to see Paul, the inva lid missionary, at the moment when hia influence .comes to full orb his influence rolling out through Antioch, through Cyprus, through Lystra, through Cor inth, through Athens, through Asia, through Europe, through America, through the First century, through five centuries, through twenty centuries, through all the succeeding centuries, through earth, through heaven, and at last, the wave of influence having made full circuit, strikes his great soul. Oh, then I would like to see him! No one cau tell the wide sweep of the circl of his influence save the one who is seated ou toe circle of the earth. 1 should not want to see the counte nai ce of Voltaire when his influence comes to full orb. When the fatal hem orrhage seized him at eighty-three years ot age his influence did not cease. The most brilliant man of his century, he had used all bis faculties for assaulting Christianity, his bad influence widening through France, wideniug out through Germany, widening through all Europe, widening through America, widening through the 115 years that have gone by since he, died, wideni ig through earth, widening through hell, until at last the accumulated influence of his bad life in fiery niirge of omnipotent wrath will beat against his destroyed spirit, and at that moment it will be enough to make the black hair of eternal darkness turn white, with horror. No oue can tell how that bad man's influence girdled the earth save the one who is seated on the Circle of the earth the Lord Almighty. " Well, now," says people in this audi ence, "this in some respects iu a very glad theory aud in others a very sad one; we would like to have all the good we have ever done come back to us, but the thought that all the sins we have ever committed will come back to us fills us with affright." My brother, I have to tell you God can break that cir cle and will do so at your call. 1 can bring twenty passa. es of Scripture to prove that when God for Christ's sake for gives a man the sins of his past life never come back. The wheel may roll on and roll on, but you take your position behind the cross, and the wheel strikes the cross aud is shattered forever. The sins fly off from the circle into the perpendicular, falling at right angles with complete oblivion. Forgiven I Forgiven I The meanest thing a man cau do is, after Borne difficulty has beeu settled, to bring it up again, aud God will uot be so meau as that. God's memory is mighty enough to hold all the events of the ages, but there is one thing that is sure to slip his memory, one tiling he is sure to forget, aud that is pardoned traugressions. How do I know it? I will prove it. "Tneir sius aud their iniquities will I remember no more. " Come into that state this morning, my dear brother, my dear sis rer. "Blessed is the oue whose trans gressions are forgiven. " But do not make the mistake of think ing that this doctriue of the circle slops with this life; it rolls ou through heaven. You might quote iu opposition to me what St. Johu says about the city of heaven. He says it "lieth Jour square. " That does seem to militate against this idea, but you know there is many a square house that has a family circle facing each other, aud iu a circle moving, and 1 cau prove that this is so iu regard to heaven. St. John says, "I heard the voice of many angels round about the tin one, and the beasls, aud the elders. " Agaiu he says, "There was a rainbow i rouud about the throne. " The former two instance a circle; the last either a circle or a semicircle. The seats facing each other, the angels facing each other, the men facing each other. Heaven au amphitheater of glory. Circuuifereuce of patriarch and prophet and apostle. Circumference of Scotch Covenanters aiidThebau legion and Albigenses. Cir cumference of the good of all ages. Pe riphery of splendor uuumtgiued und in describable. A circle I A circle ! But every circumference miidt have a center, aud what is the center of this heavenly circumference? Christ. His all the iclory. His all the praise. His all the crowns. All heaven wreathed into a garland rouud about him. Take off the imperial sandal from his foot and behold the scar of the spike. Lift the coronet of dominion from his brow and see where was the laceration of the briers. Come closer, all heaven. Narrow the circle around his great heart. O Christ, the Saviour I O Christ, the man 1 O Christ, the God ! Keep thy throne forever, seatei ou the circle of the earth, seated en the circle of the heaven 1 On Christ, the solid rock, I stand; I All other ground Is sinking sand. Burning Pain Erysipelas In Face and Eyes Inflammation Subdued and Tor tures Ended by Hood's " I am o glad to be relieved of my tortures that I am willing to tell the benefits I have de rived from Hood's Sariaparilla. In April and May, I wa afflicted with erysipelas in my face and eyes, which spread to my throat and neck. I tried divers ointments and alteratives, but there waa no permanent abatement of the burn ing, torturing pain, peculiar to this complaint. I began to take Hood's Sarsaparllla aud Felt Marked Relief before I had finished the first bottle, I con tinued to improve until, when I had taken four Sarsaparilla bottles, I was completely cured, and felt that aQ slras, marks and gymptoms of fliat dire com Jpmm bad forever vanished." Mss. IS, . ;0iawa; HdlBbcro, v.': 7iecch$in. f Mj.e ytiffa nrf prnrrrt j'Jl pfMpt, V?t I HOOD'S VTORFOLK a sotrrnERN RAILROAD COMPANY. Schedule in kttect habch 1st, 1895. The Direct Short Line between Plymouth TCdAntrm. Ttatf-rA North Carolina and Norfolk and all points North. Steamer leaves I'lymoutn b-jhu a. m., ua juacaej Ferry lU:il0 a. m. Mail Train leaves Edonton 1:25 p. m. daily, except Sunday, arrives at Norfolk 4:25 p. m. V.rntAM Train leaves EdeDtOD Daily except Sunday at 8:00 a. m. arriTaat Norfolk 11 a. m. . r.onnPfiiion made at Norfolk with all rail and Steamer Lines, and at Elisabeth City with Steamer Nense and New Berne, Mon day, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday for Knnnnbn Txlnnd. New Berne and Atlantic & N. C, K. B. Stations. Also Wilmington, Newberne and nonoik it. it. The Company's Steamers leave Edanton l ho n m. aa follows: Steamer to Mackey's Ferry daily (except Sunday) wun passengers lor itoper, x-auu-go, m haven, connecting with Steamer YirglBM Dare tor Makley vine, Aurora, ctoutn ureeK. Washington and intermediate landings. Dailv. (exoeDt Sunday) for Mackey's Ferry and Plymouth, at 1.30 p. m. Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday for Chowan Itiver, Wednesdays for Avooa and Salmon Creek, and Monday and Friday lor scuppernoug itiver on arrival oi no. z Train. Norfolk nanaAnoer and freight station at Norfolk and Western Railroad Depot. Thronch 'tickets on sale and baeeaee checked to all principal points. O EASTERN CAROLINA DISPATCH FAST FBBIQHT LINE. AND PASSENGER ROUTE. Daily all rail service between Ednton, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Norfolk lhrou? hoars, as low rates and quicker time thau by any other route. I irect all good to be shipped by lutst eru Carolina Dispatch, as follows: From Norfolk by N. B s. K. K.; Baltimore by r. W. & B. R. R: President St. Station, Philadelphia by Pennsylvania R. R. Dock St Station; New York by Pennsylvania R. It., Pier 27 North River, and Old Do uiiuiou S. 8. Co., Pir 26. For further information apply to J. II . SMITH. Aetnt. Plymouth, N. C , or to the General Office Of the . S. K. K. Co., Norfolk, Va. M. K. KINO, General Manager H C H0DUINS.G. F. 4 P. Agt. EXECUTION SALE. North Cabolina, ) In Superior Washingtou County Court. Spbagoins Buck fc Co., vg - Execution Sale. H.D. Cbaddock ) By virtue of au Execution r issued on the 0th day of January 18U5, from tbeUuperior Court of Washington county on a judge ment rendered in said Court on the Ttti day of May 1894 is favor of 8 B Kpraggias & 8 D Buck and against H D Craddock and placed in my haoda oo the 9th day of Jauu. ary 1895. 1 aball eil by public outcry at the Court Houh door in Plymouth. N C , on Monday the 4th day of March 189tt, the interest of the said II D Craddock in the following described laads lyiug in Washing, ton ooonty . C: -- i; - ' 1st the land ou which the store houie of the said Craddock new ttands adout three miles from CresweM, N. C, and adjotnlng the lands of O J Spear, Edward Ilassell Sc. others contained 9 acres 2nd A tract of land on the Newiand "?oad . adjoining the lands of John Jones and others . containing three acre,' 8rd A treet adjoining the lands of Stephen Clifton and others containing $ acres more or less.- 4th A tract adjoining the lands of . Bailey Phelps containing . IS acres more or les $tb A tract adjoining the lauds ef E H Leary and others contain, ing 5 acres. 7th A tract adjoining the above containing 5 aerei more or ! ThtaSSLi An nt Lnnin 1OK . Lxti Blovnt, Sheriff of to aahlngton County, HILLI1IERY- Next and fashionable Millinery anel Fancy Goods are now opened at my store in Roper, und I invite the pub lic to cull and see them before buy ing. New Hats trimmed 1n the latest styles by an artistic milliner just from the North. ' If you want nice, stylish goods at low prices, call early and be suited. MRS. M. E. AUSB0N, .ep28.tr Eoper, II. C. jr. iac. wigging, DEALER IN NOTIONS. NOTIONS. ALSO Heavy and fancy groceries, cigars, tobacco, snuff, vegetables, fruits and all Family &upplixfiu I can offer buyers such prices on the above named goods that it will pay them to call. J.HvWIGGinB, Water St., neti to Bryan's, Drng Store, Plymouth, N. C. my 16-tf T, B. Wolfe, D. D. C PLYMOUTH,. N. O CTTeeth filled or extracted without pain. THE COim 1AIBLS W0E&5, Established 1848. lit to 115 Bank St. Norfolk, VA. MONUMENTS, GRMVSTONSt ramn W.U I II..LI. .... 1 -'Granite. - j Low prices quoted en worn dt-
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 8, 1895, edition 1
2
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