r THE ROOF OF THE WORLD. aareo Polo'a Account ol the Plattau of Patnlr and ft luhabltautM. , In leaving BadnKhaii yon ride 12 'jays between oust jjnd northeast, ' jien ng the j-fvor flint runs ( strong h land belongin to n hrothor ;f the Trinp of Biidn.shnn and con fining a good many towns jjhid vil lage and scattered habitations. The gooplo are Muhunimednns and val "ani in war. At tho end of those 13 ira vnn onmn tn n nrovilice of HO treat size, oxtondina indeed no moro Ann throo days' Journey in any oi- rocuon, ana iui r umiuu. Pio people worship Mohammed and hey havo a pecmJinr langnngo. l ney ro gnllnnt soldiers, and they have a ft much ns to say count, and they ire liegomen to tho Trince of Bada ihnn. There are numbers of wild beasts f all sorts in this rrpion. And ;hen ma leave this nttio country ana ride throo dnys northeast, always iimnng fnountains, yon got to stieh a might that it is said to-bo the high est place in the world. And when yrvu hare got to this height yon find i crnat blko between two monntnins ind out of it a fine riveT running thrmish a plntn rlothod with tho finest pasture in tbo world, inso mnch that a lenn bennt there will fatt'nj to your heart's content in ten days. "Tber are (treat nnmbers of all Kinds of wild bumt.-, among oth rs wild" sheep of great size, whoso hrns are a R'K'd palms in lonjrtb. Fmtn these horns the shepherds nnko Rrent bowl to cut. from, and they nun the lu rrs also t' ineloso fcibls for their on it In ,'it nigl.t. Mi-spot Mnreo was tnld nn that ho wolves wirn numerous and kill- t many of those wild !ieep. Hunee luantities of their horns and bones were lonml, ami tnesit wero mnoo Into treat henpn hy tho wayside in order to trn'de travelers when snow was on thn ground. The plain is ealb-d Pamir, and you ruin -across It mr l nays inro i.'i ther, flhdint; notliins hut ri dtsert without hahitntions or any preen tiling, so that travelers are ohlicod t.i carry with them whatever they- I h.ive need of. The reion is so lofty J and cold that you lo not even see any birds fly iiifj. And I must notice j aliw that beeauHe of tliis prent cold j firo tloos not burn so brightly nor pivo ou so much hnnt as usual, nor does It oook food so effectually. Now, if wo go on with onr Jour- Tiey toward tho east-northeast, we j travel a good 40 days, continually passing over mountains and hills or hrongh valleys and crossing many Vora and tracts of wilderness. And all this way you find neithor hab itation of man nor any green thing, but, must carry with you whatever you roquiro. Tho country is called Dolor. The people dwell high up in tho mountains and are savage idol aters, living only by the chnso and clothing thomselvos in the skins of boasts. They are in truth an 4vil race. "Tbo Story of MurooPolo," by Noah Brooks, in Ht. Nicholas. Titled Hacsara. "Yon would bo astonished if you knew tho number of letters I receive at the bogiuning of every season from titlod rsxiplo who proposo to stay at my hotel, entirely ut toy .ex pense, during tho holidays," said tbo proprietor of a south ooast hotel In tho course of a oonversution the writor had with him recently. "Ha many Americans and mer chants from tho midlands who have tnado tboir pilo hope to scrape up acquaintances which may lead to tie marriages of their daughters with aristocrat during the sumuior seoaon that tho way in which they eioot thoir hotel , is to see what Mod persons are staying where they wish to go, and the hotel at which there are tbo most promising titlos and nnmos is invariubly the one se loetod by them, whilo thoy make a point of indulging in every extrava gance just to prbjudioe their victims I in. their favor and exhibit to thorn Klieir wealth. "Tha arutooracy know this full wril, and impecunious baronets are csfxicially willing to tako advantage Of it. They know the value of thoir tititia to uuoua trade advertisements, and many of them get thoir summer holidays at good betels absolutely flea in this way. Kieh merubanta ata the people who make hotels pay, t4 wa proprietors know that noth ing attracts these so well as thu names and titles of baobelor baron eta; honoe we are generally quite willing to entertain these queer pro noala. )-Fuarson's Weokly. ObIoihi and Slaap. In Borne, Ga., lives an Ingenious faruior who was told that onions yore efUoaoious in oanBiagjleep. Be- ing kept awake lata every night by tha noise of tba numerous baaua who oamo to sea bis daughters, he rosolvel- to try tba onion prescrip tion. Uo did not take it bimsolf, linwever. hilt ton fin Vila HniH,ht.1P1i pat then) every night at supper. TaM. family now retires at an early boar every night, and peace reigns in the bouaiihuld, The onion is mighty and will prevail Richmond (lud,) Reg ister. - . " ; . CELTIC LULLABY. Alanaa Nul dbaa, my bripht haired ehtld. Hleop iweatrri ilwp, my waite lam b aula Rvtt your rod lip Moiutug to 'y. Tha me otillaB. da dbut-a roa. Ont on iha raworUuid 'Ms lonely nteht. Pale burn the jack o' tho l&aiaura Hunt, Tn tfough of thu wild Ihw gultia 1 hear Angela if Go!, fttinrd wi'll my dvar. Prom harm and avlla ahinfci him wall, Thu p rila of niabt awl Uio fuirtra' apalL Whc-a unlaiaa tlaaoo In ibe morning light My joy will wake liaa i floff'nd bright M:tcushla atorin. oh, aoftly nlvejjj, w (Liktt bantfbtx walling th, night Mjwt 8vrcjpi. Tour aweul lips turning, thoy to my Thn mo rulbt. na dbucn mo. -J. B. Doilur.l In CnthotM World Whrnra Came Soma Flnwara. From tbo Alps' camo the rannnotr-Ins- and from Itnly the miirnorictto in 1S2S, rosemary from the south of Europe In 153t and tho jasmine from Ciroaasln about 1518. The yoaf 1SR7 sn-w the introduction of fonr time honored favorites, the auricula from Switzerland, the pink from Italy, tho gillyflower and onrnation from Flanders. Spenser, by the way. In the "Bhepheardo's Calendar" (1579), classes the carnation, whioh he calls "coronation, " with the purplo ool Tjrnbine and the gillyflower as lov ers' flowers. Now, the carnation is generally STtppoae1 to have derived its namo from fbe carnation or flesh color of tho original species. But tho word nsed by Bpenser suffgests that "carnation" is merely an ah breviation of "ooronatlon, " in allu sion to the erownlike appearance of the flower and its specific name, Botonica ooronaria. Tbo rhilolenieal society's Nfw Em?l sh Dictionary does not. decide which of tho derivations is the only trno one, though one mnst have originated in a mistake. Anyhow the shorter form was common In Hhakespenro s time, and wo have It, on Damo Cjnickly's authority, tba Bir John Falstnff "could never abide i onrnation ; 'twas a color he never i liked." lavender was imported from I tlio south of Europe not later than j l.jHH and the labnrnnm from Hun gary about 157R, while Sir Walter Itnleieh is orelitxt with havinif j brought tho snowdrop back with i him from his short lived colony of I Roanoke, an island off North Caro i Una, in 15X4. Chambers' JonrnaL Old Tavwrn Rntatarara. Thero were tho Kjn, tho Dog, tba Triple Tun and, more famous still, the Old "Devil in Fleet wtreet, near Tumplo Bur, and almost opposite Kt Dunstan's church. Flore wore held I those convivial exerotst'S ovor which Jonson ruled with a deMpotio band. and hither to him came flocking the poets of the younger generation ilerrick and Falkland and Sir Ken elm Digby, Marmion, Randolph and Brotne, the dramatists, and many mora It was a species of lit erary clab- Its members were "suai od of tbo tribe of Ben" and called bis sons. The dignity of sonship was accorded to ilerrick, and throughout his after life be always looked bock to his connection with the old poet with a peculiar relish. With tba ex ception of tho classical writers and Ben Jonson, tbo only poets cele brated in his verse are Beaumont, Fletober and Don ham. But to Jon son are consecrated several of his lyrics, and in all of tbom he is spo ken of as tho ohiof of pouts, "ths rare aroh poet." Be sings: VMl me a mlflhty bowl Up to tha brink. That I may tlrWk Cnto my Jouaua'a aooi Crown It airain. attain. and thrioa rapaa That happy haat To drinh to than, my Bern, and writes an epitaph tor him, which begins: Bra llua Jonaun with taw raat Of tha poeta, but tha haaa. Ckintlemun's Magasine. The latest development of that fancy whioh makes men tans to oddities la club life is sa saaujisiioa of umhi abunl town to be known as the "ttoeiety of Pointed Beards, " I DudeHtuud' that this otganlsatioa bos fitted itaelf out already with a oua stitatiuu and bylaws and all the verbal parspiiernalis of s olub. Its general obarsuter nisy.be inferred from section t of article i of the ooo tltution, which is as follows i "Mo oos aball be eligible anless be bove a oarefully cultivated beatd of aat oral and perauual growth in good staod lug sud turuiioaied in one ayuunsuioal puiul a half iuch from the apex of tbe ohiu of autneient evideuoe to preclude eouuoveiay. Cholly jfcnloaattiooaar la tisw York Seoorder. Iha Kama Crlpala Cnah, A magazine writer says that Crip ple Crook got its name from a trio of pros poc tors who happened to atop on the banks of tbe stream beoauae their mule bad gone lame. They discovered signs of gold and decided to stay awhile. -AShile patting np shanty one of the man fell from the -toot and struck on tba dogwhich they bad with them, breaking his. own arm and tbe log of tbe oanlne. This made three orippAe, in oawp; honoa tbe name. tunoe by tbe oasts of fortune, be wise, betimes, lot thon repeat too 4ate What tbou- winaeet ia prodU- gaiiy spanv What thoq losast ia prodigally Joai Quarlos, AN ANCIENT CUSTOM. Tinnnlnc For tna ll(nttl" a ratara at Weridlitff Cerainnnlea. Mr. Wos B. Smith writes to Tho' Democrat of the Inst tinioho attend ed a wodding whoro running for the bottlo was a fcaturo. Of oonrse in these dogonorate days a wedding is not nooossary to precipitnto a chnso for tho receptacle, but accounts of tho former onstom may not be un intorusting. Tho practice was in vogno nmong tho aristocracy of England as far back as tho sixtoonth century. It was handed down to America through tho early colonists, but has long sinoo boon out of dato here. " Tho last chaso of this kthd, says Mr. Smith, that v;r. jicrformcd in this section occurred in November, 183N, at the wedding of Kmannol Mann, father of Judge Ttussoll Mann of Paris, and Kllen Snorlrn'?8,laugh ter of David HnrHlprac a, aftervard county Judge of Harrison. The groom is still lU-injf at Millorshnrg. Emanuel was tho son of Peter-Mann, a Nicholas oounfy farmer of consid erable wealth and intelligence, and, of course, Ellen was a young lady of prominence. So, thon, tho wodding was quite "swell. " As tho custom was, on tho morn ing of tho wedding tho guests as sembled at the homo of the bride to await the coming of tho bridegroom and his attendants. About one hour before the expected arrival three of the younger gentlemen, Mohsts, Da vid Henry, Jack Barrett and Iong Sam Van Hook, equipped with whip 1 and spnr, mounted thetr snorting j Hteetls and prepared for rho race. ; Off they wont, catirnt and sterd i plying iiion fhe horses' hides, over i fences, ovor ditches, thronirh the fields, across the meadows on they raced to meet the bridegroom. At ! last tho bridal proccRMion wns sisrht- ed, tho "bait, ninn " rifling in front and holding in view tho much prixed bottlo of whisky The race then n gnmod fresh tr iportionn. Faster flow the steeds. Thicker urow tho dust behind them. Now narrott is in front Over tho next jump Long 8am loads hy a none. Henry leads st . the next jump. Now iill aro to gether Down the -itraitrht they come as one team. Tho riders are whipping for their lives. Onemi.rn bisb, one moro stride, a nuproma effort, and Jock Barrett oaptured the bottle. Now Jack has won tho right to head t he procession. Proudly riding in front, shaking the bottle above his heud in the prule of supremacy, be guides thu way to tbo bridal par lor and the ceremony is endtxL The bottle, surrounded by a gay array of acoon torments, with exquis ite floral decorations of mint, was proudly stationed on the sideboard all tbo livelong duy, that lie who would might pnrtako of its contents without let or hindrance. Mr. Smith adds that no one so far forgot binvelf as to imbibe too free ly. Mr. Hnodgrass was a preacher in the Christian church and a modol of piety.- Though the bottle was master of the occasion, the preacher totoJ!!".00. all efforts on tbe pax t of the younger folks to dance, play "old Sister Phibe,"or even play "pleased or displeased. " Cynthiana (Ky.) Dem ocrat. Sir Edwin Landaeer. the famous animal puintor, bad on old servant bis but lor, valet and faithful slave named Willuun, who was pturtiou lurly assiduous in guarding the out er portal No one could y any pos sibility gain direct aooess to Sir Ed win. Tho answer would invariubly be, "Kir Hod win is not at W Tbe prince oonsort himself unoe ro eolved this answer when be ceiled, amplified on that occasion by tbe ae srmance that "he hud gone to wed ding," an entire fiction on William's part, as tbe prince foand out, for, un walking boJdly in and round tbe garden, be utioed Sir Kd win looking out of bis studio window. This was the faithful attendant who one day, when a lion bad died at "tbe sou" and bis corpse oame up in a four wheeled oab to be painted from, startled his master with tbe ques tion, "JHeasa, Sir Uedwin, did you border aliou?.", Han Francisco Ar gonaut " U ladhaia-a Da hat. Charles Wyndham, the nglisb actor manager, who has bod control of tbo Cxi tor ion thou tor in Loudon fox- 30 years, is fond of telling bow be made his first appearance on the stageTwben a youngster. "1 remem ber I bod to say the line, '1 tun drunk with love and enthusiusm,' " be says, ''But I was so frigbtenod that I simply blurted out, 'I am drunk,' stopped and ruabedoff the stage amid roars of laughter. " j Anaoaaelns Ute Baby 81Mk lu sending announooment oarda of a baby's birth the baby 'a name ia printed in full on a small card, which ia inclosed with the parents'"" cr.rd. If desired, it niay be attached to the large card by a bow of very narrow white satin ribbon, or silver cord. The data of birth in added, but not tbe weight of the baby, nor any oth er partioubtra-of any sort whatever. Ladies' Home Journal. TRAVELING IN CHINA. fhe Aluat SerlouN Drawback la tha Slow nM of Travwl. A' journey to Europe. is such tin ovoryday affair that peoplo who wish to be looked upon as traveled now turn tholr attention in othor di rections. The Ost-Asiatisohe Lloyd, Shanghai, points out that China is a oompnrativoly now flold to tho . ex cursionist and thinks tho westorn publiowill bo-glad to bo informed of the mode of travel and its cost In tho Flowery Kingdom. The most se rious drawbaok to a trip through China appears to be tho slowness of travel. The Lloyd says: "There are very few straight roads in China. Tho actual distance botwrtyn two commercial centers may bo comparatively short, hut the roads are so tortuous that traveling requires much tirho. Thus tbo dis tance lKtweon Yunnan -fn, the cap ital of tho province of Yunnan, and the Yarigtso port of Hakow is, on an average, covered in Hf days. The distanoo is, as the crow flies, H25 miles, but the traveler goes over twico as much. Tho distance travel ed daily varies, of course, with the character of the eormtry. In south ern Yunnan, where horses and sedan chairs are available; 'JO to 3fi miles per day may be accomplished. A sedan chair with three carriers (one as relief) costs 1 a day. Coolies earrying 70 to SO jiounds, reoelvo Ii5 to 10 cents a day. A ha crura ire horse costs all trritfl twits a, day and, carries twice hs" much as a enly, but its 'owner mtwt bo tinid. sirntelv for lendinnr it. Bullocks carry nbont lfiO ponndw, hut. only advance a the mt of s to 13 'miles a day. "In rthansi and Shensi two wheel ed ivtrts are nwed ; also -wdan chairs, earned Is'tween two mules, ltatrgairo and merchandise aro transported on chairs, which carry JOOpotinds each, at a iost of io 1- cents a in tin. In the lloniin provinco wbtsdbarrows aro used, small ones at JO to Soenfs a day; largo on, pnshod by two men, twice "that sum. In traveling on witter the rout in yj to 15 twnts for n distance of 100 11 ibon 30 miles) for each pirsin. Meals wt on an avernio cents. With re gard to seonrity, it must be admit ted that trnvoling is much less dan gerous in ('lilnu Chan may be sup. pood. Tho renin roads urn general ly safe. Attacks from "robbers are much more likely to happen on less frequented byways, In districts where the imputation is not very numerous guards ure stationed along the road to protoot the onrnvaiis. Tins is oHeontlly the case on high ways used for tbo mails. It is, how ever, advisable to travel urmed, es pecially if one carries articles of value. " Lwnx, the American cyolist, pass ed safely through Chinu. It was in passmtf through tbe country of tbe bloodthirsty Kurds that he met his fate. Literary Digest In a very interesting paper in The American Monthly Magazine, writ- the "Boston Tea Party. " sbe tells of the sly Irishman, Captain O'Connor, who tried to capture a pocketful of tbe seised tea, and of his punish ment. Let mo add another similar tea party anecdote, ae told me a few years ago by Isaac Pitman, an old tune resident of Boston, then He years old. Mr. Pitman said his fa ther was one of the Boston tea party, though the young Mohawk was only 1:4 years old at tbe time and joined the patriotic baud more for rollick ing fun than for noble revolt against the British yoke. He saw O'Con nor's ooattaila turn off and O'Con nor badly battered and braised, and soon de tooted another of the party in the act of surreptitiously filling with tea the great flap pockets of his ooat The young patriot crept up un seen and unheard behind the sneak and cautiously lifted tbe ooattaila containing tbe precious "China horb" and softly emptied tbe oua tents of the pockets into tbe sea, A few minuttst later he.beacd the tea stealer bitterly bewailing tbe loss of hie office and bouse keys, which he said "some one must have stolen. " The gay young Mohawk hud emptied tbe keys with the pilfered tua into tbe Boston harbor. Alice Mors Earlo in American Monthly. " " . .. Ti iM" ' Tha Maaane Way. ' , It was just af tec their first tiff tol. lowing the bonoy moon, and John was trying to make it up. "Do you know why 1 oall you the queen of hearts?" be asked, "Yea," sbe replied. Thia wasn't what he expooted her to say, but be bad to go ahead, "WhyV" be asked. "Because when 1 married I took the Jack," she answered, Ho made no further attempt to make it up for 35 minutes. Chica go Poet. ' orklna kUataka. "Did you boar bow Jorkma acted when bis house was on fire? The on ly thing be tried to save was the rag bag. 'V "Yes, but bo thought his wife's diamonds were in the ragbag, while Loll the time they wore safe in the ash heap. "Detroit Free Press. STILL A BACHELOR. But Ba XfaS ftocnathlng to Bar la His Own Xefnro. "Not at all, not at all" instated a Washington bachelor, who would ba a most eligible and substantial mat rimonial "prtzo if ho woro loss "sot in his way, "I mnot at all oynloal, and if there be ono oroatureof all tbe' Lord made in tho beginning that I think ia moro admirable than any othor creature or than all tho othor oreatnrea that! croaturo is womnn, but when it oomeg to an indissoluble tie thereto, thon I beg to be ex cused. "Of course. I hnvo a reason,' ha oontinned. "If a man did anything without reason, he wouldn't be much of an improvement over tha womerr, but I havo an excellent rea son for being a bachelor at lensti, for tho present. Perhaps when 1 am grown older and my years are ap proaching the limit I may take a wifo, knowing that if I make a mis take I won't bave very long to suf fer or that she won't if she nhnnld make a mistake, hut while I am still in the thirties I. shall keep those years entirely from the olutoh of any aspiring feminine. " Yes, " be continued, ' ' yes, I know I used to tut quite ladies man, or rather qu1f the man who was pret ty sure to marry tho first ohanoe he had, which the so called ladies,' man never does, but I was saved in time, thontrh I lost the irlrl I was'ongaered to in the process of having my eyes opened. "Tell you about it? Certainly I will," he langlied. It isn't any more than rtizbt to my fellow snffer era to show them the way out. Yon know, I"Was about half engairod to a girl llve'or hix years nco she's well married now and one day I .hap pened to drop into a certain fashion, able millinery shop where all the lieet people iio, I don't, know why I should have mine in there, hut I did It thl day, and before I had been in there two iniiintm I heard a welt known voice in active uae of lan guage that was fairly making the hair curl on it helpless girt clerk. I listened until I felt tho chills chas ing each uttmr down my liack, and then 1 went out. That mht 1 called on the poesexNor of the voice, hut I had lost interest, ami after one or two attempt I sueeended in lutvlng langnaite applied to me that mode my huir curl. After that I made it my business to drop into millinery Hhopa of the hlglMtr cIoms whenever t oonlit, and In one ir two place I oould hide away for half an hoar at a. time, und tho number of lutml sorpely drmsMl and elegant young women whom I havo beard abusing tboir mothers, tbe clerks und every body else, with now and thon an emphutia word thrown in, frighten ed me so thu I liuvu loHtmy, nerve, und I'm going to wait awhile and forget how unlovely it ixtinpered daughter of fortune may lie when she tries. Kithor that, or I'll marry one of tbe clerks in tbe millinery store, and "he'll he so grateful to me tor rescuing her that she will find her greatest happiness in being my slave forever. " Moral. Bonnets, .not tempera, aro for exhibition in millinery stores. Washington Poet, Novelists, as a class, already take themselves too seriously. Atlaa hold ing up the world is only a figure symbolic of the novelist's conception of his own place lit the scheme of -the universe of today. To tab nov elist tbe novel ia ideutiual with mod era thought that is, it ia tbe only adequate vehicle of expression to all the moods, broudings, hopes as pirations, groping, philosophies and whatnot of modern life. If only tbe playwright and the editor oould be brought to shore with the novelist this seriousnesa of self view, half the reforms necessary to modem civilisation would be accomplished at a stroke. Accentuate tbe surlous nesa of novel reading, lay it us a du ty upon tbe oonecienoue of novel readers, regardless) of tba inevitable reaction on novel writers, and the effect upon fiction production ia im possible of estimate. tiaribnet'ai H "Isn't it awful?" said Mrs. Jonka to her busband. ' "Isn't what, awful?" quuried Jonka, ' ,- "Houston's boy was run over and received infernal injurioe' "Internal, you muan. " "No, I muan infernal. I know what I'm talking about,''' After quarrel of five minute Jenka, produoed a dictionary, and with ooaaiderabla trouble managed to find " infernal. " "There," be exulaimod, "t told you ao 1 Infernal meansv relating to the lower regtooav" , l" Well,"repUod Mrs, Jenka and there was a ring of triumph in, her voice "ain't that whore be was in juzed? "London, Answers. OtOajaTiiu, j' "Why do you aay olden times?" asked a little girl who bad, been, lis. toning to a Bible story. "Times are ever so much, older now thaa they were, in those days." Brooklyn Eagle. IT. COSTS MONEY In rtnv line of rafcUanfca to" krvp a plant equipped1 with nil thtt imr provements of this protrrrmve'' age. The Latest in Laundry IVIachinery la a eollnr 8haper by ft PennrryBl vnnialanndrymnn. At connlder abln exrfnsn wehRTe eeriircd thief mnphihf. Yon (onbtlfm noticrd' th improvr-mpnt in onr collaTf for thp pant two wwks. OUR PATRONS MAY REST ASSURED That w rvill apare m pxpenafi' to tfxe t.hrm thf lipst porwiblr) work. Rememher onr motto,. "Watl fartlon to every pimtonwr.'' Any work not sntiHfnctory will ls don over free of chn.rtr. - ASHEVILLE STEM LAUNDRY, 43 W. College Street. OVERWORK - INDTTCXtl- Nervous Prostration Cmaplata Rtmrf by tha Vtt of ' Ayers Sarsapaiilla " Soma ynra tiito, iui f rminlt of ton floaa attention tn lmNlrta, my haslth failed, t ltarama wrah, riarvmss, wan iinahla to limk attar mr intoraats, imm( inanltaatml all tha iymploma of a d . lina. I tmilr thraa liottlwi f Ayer'H Baraapsrilla. Iwhiui to tmpmv otesew atiil irrntluitltT tnpranaatl mr wafitht fmm tnm IrauitraU unit t wanly-HTiT'te two linntlrml wurul. Sluca than, I and inf f&uuljr Uava naatt tbia inadtotaw whan rwatlad, and wa ata nil ia tbw heat nf tutnlth, a tact whteb wa itttrtbutw t Avar's ftantariarllla. I laliave nr chlW draa won Id liava haan fathorlaaa MmIs haul It not Iwas lor Avar' tlanapartlla, nl wliieb ptanamttott I nan nut aay low much." If. (. lliaaun, Pnatmaalar sad ' Plaster, Klnard', 8. C. A)8rrsSarsapariIIa tCCCVIM ftCOAL AT WORLD'S nUL AYlR't mielsav Oeotor'a aUUaw CURED AT 73 TEARS, Or. auks' new Heart Cora Mo oatoar fsaUSsHiwetta asw aawS i Hare Is a vntajjla pawiaraa. 7S yaaje tk Ewlth atmns urajmooa lomwimua, who Jiaurt 1'Himi ii iwn. Ua tuuk Uw taa r Uttreaiului new aawadaau weak , I Mtctv. Dm. ttOI.' thtnbwii brua ymmrm u mutm MiMt of tkm Uut bwbti t . now ilia for mm to xu ou iiMk a dtttajF aiwtU mntici LutM fruilntc. I WI niwn pAvlptti-tiou, liurutkHft uf brvtf-tl. sui4 Uiiwa P-UDa Uta4iliaifwU um h-aijittiMMk Vai phMiuajAaf.iilii (or oh ku U tulvua. ktMplitu quittw lu Att.ni Uiattw liNmimsjtitisjil -"-t Dr. MilesT Hew Heart Cert,, 4uh) befom I tacwl totibtt ttW fti-nt buttl I fouuU Um mwtiiciott ttm. a if i ri min t I riivt. ttui atwti fout IxvUm ia taii aatl ua ftHiafi suUruijr wila I aut 73 ttr ot afr anU uvt beitl & sH'UUKti eWfhlUw ptt,tab DKMaiCilltMi eVii sujr Ii ft, bufcl wiU twfc allow Uiu u urwvwuA Kiviu my tvutlfouuy to um ttTvuboui-wi jour alUtftblti IOMMiy )Uw WFUUItft ltl 1)1. I UO this to airuw my suprtAMttMuaul t r. Htxu-fcOrjrt. SAAtUKI O. &.i W Dis MittMi HerwOr ismU on Doiir. u&muUM Uiikt. the tirnfe buitt "wnl badiiuh, Ad UruKKiatedtiU i.aiiil, butt It, for rax or It will rjofiviit, ptrpttiJ, oa io of ur.r bj Um. mium i-.otiaw.i4 CtK jtAw--. Dr Milesfc Heart Cure Z! SOI,T BY AM, TiRrnRTW!. J" :.t 4" Ca 1 ' DW4- . fjaMWSa O. Scoaa, kUawkMftfaw)

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