Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / May 18, 1888, edition 1 / Page 6
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THE MOEGANTON STAR, FRIDAY MAT 18. 1888. THE STRUGGLE. Body, I pray you let me go!" (It is a Soul that struggles so.) Body, I see on yonder height Dim reflex of a solemn light; A flame that shineth from the place Where Beauty walks with naked face: It is a flame you cannot see, Lie down, you clod, and set me free. Body, I pray you let me gol" (It is a Soul that striveth so.) Body, I hear dim sounds afar Dripping from some diviner star; Dim sounds of joyous harmony: It is my mate that sings, and I Must drink that song or break my heart, Body, I pray you, let us part Comrade, your frame is worn and frail, Your vital powers begin to fail; I long for life, but you for rest, Then, Body, let us both be blest. When you are lying 'neath the dew I'll come, sometimes, and sing to you; But you will feel nor pain nor woe, Body, I pray you, let me go." Thus strove a Being: Beauty-fain, He broke his bonds and fled amain. He fled: the Body lay bereft, But on its lips a smile was left, As if that Spirit, looking back, Shouted upon his upward track, With joyous tone and hurried breath, Some message that could comfort Death. lCanske Dandridge, in the Centura. Atufc Tabitha's Mission. TV" .- i." : BY ADA M. TROTTEH. j "Talk of Peter the Hermit. fin. lftted Aunt Tabitha, as she walked into her nephew's house, "I wished I could hoist a banner and attract some attention to God A'mighty's laws of health." John's house was as pretty as good taste could make it when hampered by email means, but Aunt Tabitha viewed it with disfavor. Her healthy sense of smell at once detected that no windows had been opened in the reception room since the previous evening. The air was heavy with gas, and the portieres seemed specially designed to impede ventila tion. Upwent the windows in a trice, the portiers were pulled back, and Aunt Tabitha stood by the door, swinging it back and forth to drive out the clo3e air. This done to her satisfaction, she went upstairs in answer to the call of: I "Auntie, do come up and speak to me." The speaker was lying on a couch in a darkened room, which also bore tokens to Aunt Tabitba's keen senses of lack of ventilation. Before saying a word to the invalid, she threw oven the window and let in some fresh air, laden with sun beams. ; "Oh, Aunt Tabitha, please don't. I've got such an awful cold." "That is only too evident to the eye," replied Aunt Tabitha. "I hate to look at an unhealthy person. Your hair has 'lost its lustre, your cheeks are sallow, your eyes red and watery, and you look decrepid generally. Preserve me from young woman who goes in for enjoy ment of poor health." W "Aunt Tabitha, how can you be so cruel? You know I can't help being so aeucate. I just get one cold on an- other," said her niece. "Lon't see any reason why you, at twenty-five, should be less healthy than I, at sixty years of age," said Aunt Tabitha. "I must say I am sorry f 01 John." This was too much for Mary, sweet tempered though she might be. She sat up and looked at this dreadful Aunt Tabitha, who sat up smiling and brisk, very young for her sixty years. . "Sorry for John!" she cried. "Why, auntie, you know he is just wrapped up in me." "Well, with my experience tf man kind, I should say he'd soon get un wrapped," said Aunt Tabitha, suddenly holding a hand glass in front of her niece. "Look pretty, don't you?" Marry was not a vain woman, still she colored with annoyance. Then sho sneezed violently and took refuge again in her pillows. ' "I'm not fit to talk to anyone to-day, M she said. "Do come and see me another time, auntie." "You want me to go, I see. Well, Tm not going till I've had my say, and if you are a woman of sense, you will listen and give up once for all this semi Invalid condition which is making you an old woman before your time." I "But, auntie, I can't help myself. I catch one cold on another, and it just Keeps me weak." ! "You catch cold because you do not obey the simple laws necessary to keep your body in a healthy condition." Laws! I can't see what laws have to do with me," replied Mary, crossly. "Keep to the laws of health," said Aunt Tabitha, "and be strong; break them and, be sick." "I don't break them," said Mary. "The long and the short of the matter is this: I am a delicate woman, and the climate is too severe for me. The doctor says I ought to go to Florida." "Bosh! You are my own niece, and I know you started with a fair constitu tion. Apply your common sense to your daily life and you can be a well woman in a few weeks," cried Aunt Tabitha, with spirit. "Oh, if I only could," groaned Mary, with another sneeze. "If I lived as you do, improperly clothed, fed and. warmed, I should coon be in your condition," said hei aunt. "Aunt Tabitha!" 'I mean it. Nature has given you a large frame, but you ignore the fact, and make your waist so small, you look like a dyspeptic wasp." "I never knew anyone who could say such unkind things as you do," said Mary, with a laugh. "Oh, that's my mission," cried Aunt Tabitha. 'Tmfor common sense versus drugs." "Well, go on; I suppose I've got io hear your lecture some time or another," groaned Mary, with a spasm of sneezing. "As the case stands," said Aunt Tabitha, ' 'I am decidedly sorry for John. Money is spent lavishly on medicines and tonics for you money that should be in vested in real estate, or in buying books and pleasures for you both. Now, instead of this, apply common sense to your daily life. If you are downstairs have your bedroom window open, so as to keep the a;r pure for the night. If you leave the parlor open that window, if but little, so that your lungs will have some thing better for food than devitalized air. You have no open grates, no chim neys to ventilate your rooms with, and in consequence must keep your attention very carefully on the necessity for change in the air." "But, auntie, if I kept opening and shutting windows like that, I should catch cold all the time." .; "Not if your body was properly pro tected by undergarments of wool. Wear warm vests and thicker gowns and keep your house cooler. Never let the ther mometer get above sixty-eight degrees. By keeping your house so warm you make the contrast between the open air and the house too great, and thus render yourself in a condition to catch cold. There is another thing that will help you to resist cold. Eat nourishing, plain food, and let hot cakes and sweet trash alone. Your body is not well nourished. Your appetite is poor because you live in unwholsome air. Take a brisk walk daily, rain or shine, and you will soon get a healthy desire to eat." "Anyone would think, to hear you talk, Auntie, that health depends en tirely upon one's own exertions" said Mary, laughing. "It ought to," replied her aunt, merrily, "for certainly some people think themselves sick by their own exer tions." "Well," said Mary, rising, "lam go ing to act on your order. If I die of my efforts you must consider yourself the electric spark that killed me." " Oh, you don't come of a short-lived family," said Aunt Tabitha, as she made her way downstairs5, " but if I were you I'd sooner live than exist." WTiththis the good woman disappeared. They heard the front door shut with a hearty bang. Aunt Tabitha was on her way to Deacon Margrave's house to see Mamie, who was down with nervous prostration. Mary left her place on the sofa as the door closed on Aunt Tabitha. Then, being a woman, she went to the mirror to find out if she really did look so for lorn as auntie pictured in her extremely personal remarks. The result was not j pleasing. Where had her good looks gone Her countenance was one which depended on health for its attractiveness. As she glared at her reflection, lack lustre hair, hollow cheeks and eyes, she tersely exclaimed: "You're a fright!" She was able to note that her whole appearance was forlorn. Her collar was tumbled, and the shawl in which she had wrapped her shivering frame wa3 dowdy. To do her justice, she was not a vain woman, nor inordinately fond of dress. But John was very particular, very neat, and certainly liked his wife to make her self look charming. Strange to say, the more Mary forgot her pain and aches, the less violent did they become; there is something in "mind cure" after all, as all sensible folk well know from personal experi ence. The day passed on, finding Mary very busy doing a variety of household matters that had fallen into arrears late ly. She found herself vowing "I am not going to be sick any more, if com mon sense can keep me well." The clock struck six. It found Mary in her room, in a pretty garnet cash mere dress, fastening some dainty ruffles in the sleeves. It found her, too, con sulting the glass a little anxiously, to see if she were still disagreeable to be hold. Aunt Tabitha's scathing remark "I hate to look at an unhealthy person,' recurred to her mind, as she stood doubtfully gazing at the mirror. John came in, bringing a friend with him, His cheery voice was lowered to a whisper as he said : "We shall find mv wife on the sofa asleep, perhaps." 'No, you will not," breathed Mary to herself, noticing with a keen pang the delected tone of the speaker. "She is not here. I am afraid she is not so well as usual. I'll go upstairs and see after her when I have lighted the gas." As he turned to leave the room a light foot ran downstairs, and though the owner arrived at the door a little breath less, she was not more so than John. Poor John ! He expected to see a pale, depressed creature, shivering under a shawl, too inert to eat, or to talk with interest oa any : topic but that of her own ailments. Mary gave him a little pinch as she passed him to welcome Mr. Vane, but ho continued to stare at the bright appan. tion as though he had never seen his wife look charming before. "Why, Mrs. Bayne, John told me that you were quite an invalid." "Only a cold," said Mary, suddenly overcome by a terrific sneeze. "But I am much better." "What !" cried John, blundering some what. "You told me this morning it was in its worst stage." "Nonsense, John; don't you know that is hours and hours ago. Come and have some dinner, I think that is the bell." At dinner she forced herself to eat. and found that in enjoying John's amazement her spirits were rapidly im proving. She made herself so charming to Mr. Vane that he enjoyed every hour of the evening. She asked John to sing, and played his accompaniments," to his great happiness, for, be it known, that if a man has a voice he likes to show it off to advantage. Will, backed by commen sense, finds a way. Mary's "enjoyment of ill health" came to an abrupt end. Her house was kept reasonably cool, her body well nourished and sufficiently clothed to enable her to withstand the eccen tricities of the climate. Last, but not least, she daily took a brisk walk, rain or shine, and wore her dresses loose enough to give her lungs free play. John grew every year more devoted to his cheerful, healthy wife! "Common sense versus drugs," says Aunt Tabitha. Yankee Blade. A Kansas Wolf Drive. The prairie wolves, or cay otes, have long been a source of constant annoyance to the farmers about Nortonville, Kansas. They visit the barnyards almost nightly, and make off with sheep, small pigs, chickeus, etc., and so cunning are they that it is seldom, if ever, one of them is caught. Recently the necessity of mak iug united war of extermination against them began to dawn upon the minds of the farmers, and accordingly they held a meeting and laid plans, which resulted in one of the most exciting and successiui won drives ever Known in that part of the State. The round-up ground was a beautiful pasture field about one mile north of Nortonville, and the lines extended for three miles in every direction from that point, making a ter ritory six miles square. It is estimated that from 1000 to 1500 men participated I A in the drive. Promptly at 9 o'clock a. m. the lines were formed and began their long and tedious march to the centre, none but officers being mounted, and only two in each company of fifteen. About a dozen wolve? were routed out of the brush before the lines had advanced a quarter of a mile, and so great was the excitement that the commanders lost all control of their men, and no sooner would a wolf be seen than the gunners would open fire upon him, amid shouts of approval from the crowd. Notwith standing the great excitement which prevailed, it was believed that not one wolf succeeded in making good his es cape while on the march, the men hav ing dispatched the wolves' whenever opportunity presented itself. When the center was reached, about noon, only one wolf was to be seen. There was a solid line of men all around him, in a field of 1C0 acres, rendering it utterly impossible for him to escape. He would make a dash at the lines first at one point and then at another, only to be beaten back with clubs or frightened by the yells of the crowd. He continued this game for about fifteen miuutes. and finally took refuge in a deep ravine in the centre of the field. Two or three horsemen rode down to the ravine and were trying to force him from his hiding place, when a man who had not partici pated in the drive advanced and delib erately shot him. Then it was that the excitement was at its height. The men were fairly wild. Threats of tarring and feathering were freely indulged, and had it not been for the coolness displayed by Commander King, it is believed that he would have been roughly handled. After the commander had succeeded in quieting the men the scalp of the wolf was unanimously voted to the editor of the Nor tons ville News. Jenny Lind's Last Appearance. I was much interested in an account that my guest gave me of Jenny Lind's last appearance in public He was pres ent on the occasion, which was a charity concert gotten up by Mme. Goldschmidt j herself over twenty years ago. Sheiad engaged the best vocal talent then avail able Titiens, who was then in her su perb prime, and Giuglini, the wonderful tenor, and Lablache, still in possession of his incomparable voice, and others of almost equal note. AIL sang their best and sang superbly. And then there cme upon the platform a plain, olderly lady, with heavy Scandinavian features and a red nose, simply and rather oddly at tired. "And when she sane- " contin o ued Mr. Vezin, "all the rest vanished into nothingness. Even in her decad ence Jenny Lind was greater than any other singer in the world. Moreover, when she began to sing her plain face lighted up and she became beautiful with a beauty born of inspiation.,, Paris Letter. 1 THE SUNDAY SCHOOL IN TEK NATIONAL LESSON FOR MAY 20. ISiste. V. S6. After the institution of the Lord's Supper, perhaps near midnight, our Lord, with His disciples, left Jerusalem, and on their way to Uethsemane crossed the per turbed waters of the Black Brook, tinged and darkened by the blood of the Temple sacrifices, fit symbol of how His own sacrifi cial blood should soon flow, making forever after needless the offering of bloody sacrifices for sin. Our Lord leaves eight of his disciples at the entrance to act as a guard. Three are al lowed to attend Him toward the centre of the garden. From tbese He also later with draws. There are times of sorrow and trouble when, though our friends may be near us, we still desire to be isolated, so that we can the better unburden our hearts to God. The best practical remedy we can re sort to in time of trouble is braver. The hrst and best person to turn to for heln is God. Like Job and Hezekiah. when trouhlA comes we must go to God in prayer. Nothing w tuviai w wo iu.iu ueiore mm. V. 37. Peter, James and John seemed to constitute a holy triumvirate. On other oc casions these three disciples had been favored by our Lord to see His power and glory as was not accorded the others. They alone be held the brightness of His (tlory on the Mount, and now the depth of His agony in Geth semane. They alone were permitted to see the first manifestations of His resurrection power. And yet, of these three favorites, to John our Saviour was most attached. Jesus has sanctioned and sanctified by His example individual friendships as not con flicting with the exercises of a universal lore. We also learn that they who live nearest to Him and imbibe most of His spirit, are re warded by views of His power and glory such as other men never receive. Many reasons and theories have been as signed to account for the fearful agony of Jesus in the garden. Some say that the thought of death ending all hope of human ac hievement clouded His soul in such dark ness. Others contended that His agony was caused by the failure of His kingdom and by His disciples forsaking Him. Such views make our Lord appear weaker in manhood than many martyrs who died at the stake. The intense anguish of Gethseraane is a knot that nothing can untie but the old doctrine of our sins having been imputed to Him and that He who knew no sin became sin for us, and that in our stead He bore the curse of the law. It was not the fear of death, nor the treachery of Judas, nor the infidelity of the discip.'es, nor the thought that His mission was a failure, that made Him sweat drops of blood, but the accumulated sins of the whole world laid upon His pure and stainless soul. He was prostrated with sorrows not His own. Our sins made Him sorrowful unto death. Our sins fevered frame and sent the fiery darts into His heart, to make each pore of Hs body force forth drops of bloody perspiration. The concon tration of all sin in all its forms with all its terrible guilt, wps the bitterness of that cup from which he drank. V. 38. He acquaints the disciples with His condition. It gives some comfort to unbosom one's heart's sorrow to a friend. The seat of His sorrow was the soul, showing us that Christ possessed a true human souL His sufferings were not predominately corporeal. cut mental, we naci s:nneu in both our bodies and souls; therefore Christ suffered both in body and souL AT VX1 rpi. . . V. 39. The centre of heaven's c'orv and the object of the angels' worship is now prostrated upon the earth in earnest prayer. Thick as the cloud was, He could still Fee God as His Father. In deep sorrow we should each claim God as "my Father." Whither shall the child go, but unto the Father! He begs of the Father that if man can be redeemed and God glorified, if the divine plans can be carried out, that He be spared the further drinking of the cup of suffering. His aversion to pain shows that He was truly man. But though His human nature made him shrink back for an instant from the anguish, yet beneath there lay, millions of fathoms deep, unmoved and immovable, the intense desire that His Father's wish and will should be done. This prayer of Christ sanctions our goin to God when in great afflict ion and asking deliverance, but conditioned upon His will. We cannot know always what is best for us. Hence it is best after we have iisked to refer the matter back to God's wisdom and love. All things are possible to God, but all are not E roper. What seems desirable to us should e sought conditionally. All suffering should be received as the appointment of God. v. w. As if a deadly vapor from the bottomless pit had steeped their spirits, both groups of disciples were stupefied with sleep. A 1 ,.-. :a. . A. . e - . -t nuu jci il wits ijul n nuut ui interest in 1119 Saviour's passion that made them sleep. Luke as a physician tells us that from sorrow they slept, xxii., 45. The same three disciples at tne transfiguration experienced an equally mysterious sleep, Luke ix., : reeble nesh is not yet adaptod to higher spiritual manifestations. Religious .services seem to have somnific influence on some. Acts xx., 9. Our Lord smarted out Feter because he had been foremost in promising and boasting how iaitmui ne would De. V. 41. Some watch without praver and Eray without watching. The two must go and in hand. We must be wide awake, 00 the alert to see the evils and dangers about us. And at the same time our hearts must be lifted up to God for grace to resist evif and to do good. The mariner at night look np to the stars for direction and with his strong hands turns the rudder of his ship. The Lord gave His disciples a gentle rebuke (v., 3.), but now He offers an extenuating plea for their drowsiness. We do not read of one word that they had to say for them selves, ineir sense ot weakness closed their mouths. He offers the plea that while the spirit is willing to bear the trials which come to life, the flesh, that is the natural feelings, through fear of danger and suffering is weak. This was true both of Christ and His disci ples. His flesh was weak in the hour of His terrible suffering, so that he shrank back for the instant from the pain, but His willing spirit buoyed Him up so that He was victor and did the will of His Father. The disci ples had a willing spirit, they bad made all manner of promises of faithfulness to Christ, but the flesh was so weak that in the hour of trial they failed entirely, so that they all for sook their Lord. 'In His case the spirit over came the flesh; in their case the flesh got the mastery over the spirit. V. 42. His " prayer is not now that the cup may pass from Him, but that He might be enabled to fulfill the divine will in sacrificing Himself. The continuance of the trial He regards as God's answer to His first prayer. He accepts the fact that man cannot be re deemed except by His drinking the cup of God's wrath. The wish to escape His passion is gone; the will of the Father is now su preme. V. 43. The craving for human symrjathy caused Him again to go to His disciples. Im- Eotent as all human means are, we still in the our of deep sorrow wish the sympathetic touch and word of those near us. How dis appointing to our Jjor.l in this respect wero the disciples. Though thev continued dull and sleepy He did not further rebuke them for it. It seems by the expression: "their eyes were heavy," that they made some at tempt to drive away tho dull sloth, and hence Jesus looked upon them with some compassion. Carnal security when it once gets hold is not easily expelled. V. 44. He prayed tha third time, saying the same words, showing that there is a repeti tion in prayer which Is not formalism, but the evidence of the most intense emotion. While the disciples forgot their sorrow in sleep, Jesus conquered His in prayer. The threefold prayer reminds us of the threefold victory over Satan, when he tempted Jesus. V. 45, 4l The time for sympathy and vigilance are past. In the distance, issuing from the grove wero to be seen the lanterns of the Roman soldiers, led by Judas, coming to arrest Jesus. The hour of II is enem ies and the hour of darkness had now come, further watching was needless. "Rise, let us be go ing." not to escape, but to confront the traitor and his band. What sublime hero ism! How victory rincs in his voiw! Man was defeated in a Garden, and the Man tri umphed in a Garden! Ifson Iltlper. TEMPER C E. Battlo Hymn of Temperance. In the battle of the ages Dawns at length the victor-day. Long desired emancipation Hastens on its blessed way. The fulfillment of the Scriptures, When Messiah shall have sway. The truth goes marching on. Glory, glory, Hallelujah! Glory, glory, Hallelujah! Glory, glory. Hallelujah! The truth goes marching on. Loud and glad be our Te Deum; Wrong is bowing to the right. Superstitions are receding. Overmastered by the light. Cruel customs are expiring. Hoary errors take their flight. The truth goes marching on. (Chorus.) We have sundered chains of bondage With the loyal battle sword. Yet there lives the liquor bondage, Deep detested by the Lord, And against it he has uttered Maledictions of His word. The truth goes marching on. (Chorus.) Let us strike against the demon That is drinking up our blood ; Let us meet him with the weapon! That are furnished us of God; Let us conquer 'neath the banner Of cur common brotherhood. The truth goes marching on. (CAorvsJ Let the work of Reformation Rise like ocean billows strong; The decree of the Almighty Is to overthrow the wrong. And we swell with holy angels The truth goes marching on. (Chorus.) Uev. F. Denison, in Providence Outlook, Uev. Sam Jones on Whisky. The liquor traffic ought to be made so odi ous that nobody but an infernal scoundrel will sell it, and nobody but an infernal fool will drink it. Separata these liquor dealers from their liqucr, and they will be all right. The church that will house a man who rents a house to sell liquor is a hateful hypocrite. Some of these churches here in Atlanta are doing just that thing. If there is a man or woman in this vast audience who never bad a relative or leved one hurt or ruined by whisky, 1 want him or her to stand up right now. You have all had a brother, or a son, or a father, or a son-in-law ruined by whisky! My goodmss! these sons-in-law. I'd rather have a boa-constrictor around my neck than to have a drunken son-in-law. The devil can not do any worse than that. Some of you old hypocrites that are dilly-dallying with the whisky question are going to get caught that way. The devil is going to slip up on you with a drunken son-in-law, and I'll bet be will make you Prohibitionist with a vengeance. I Jock around your city and see the bar rooms as thick as the stars in the heavens. Each one of the three hundred bars in At lanta represents, at least, ten confirmed drunkards. Three thousand men in At lanta, across the line, are gone to ruin! You ran stop it if yon want to. There are church members enough in this town to turn out any day and vote liquor out of it. You don't want to have a fuss. Well, 111 tell you every good man dreads a fuss, but he don't fear anything that walks on the earth. Gcd despises a coward. I had rather die at the mouth of a cannon doing my duty than to run away from it because 1 was afraid. God intrusts all the noble causes on this earth to men who are game .Veio York in dependent. Felons and. Felons. According to the New York Sun Barca Greeley, of Corry, Fa. (a brother of the laU Horace Gree ey), says: ' The only time thai a man is excusable for getting drunk is when he has a felon on his finger." Mr. Greeley should bear in mind that from "getting drunk" many men have made felons of them selves. Some cures are attended with toe much danger to be recommended for populai use. Mr. Greeley's felon-remedy is one ol them. The JXoneer. W. C. T. U. Bulletin. The IV". C. T. U. of IhieWo. Col., will erect a Temperance Tabernacle this summer. There is a prohibition clause in every deed given to property in Terra Cotta City, Cali fornia. ' The Supreme Court of Colorado has de cided that wines, spirits and segars are not properly included in a hotel bilL Mrs. Ormiston Chant of Edinburgh, Scot land, is a member of some branch of every temperance organization in Great Britain. The Russian government is contemplating a resumption of its monopoly of the liquor traffic which it abondoued twenty-five years In his recent address in Chicago Bishop Ireland amrms there is a reign of lawlessness in Amprim. anil the saloon ia the center of the rebellion. The Grand Lodge of the Mississippi Ma- sonic Fraternity, where three hundred dele gates were present, passed a resolution, with bat one dissenting vote,forbidding the admis sion of saloon keepers as members of the order. i Dr. S. H. Bergen, of thirty-five years practice in Toledo, Ohio, speaking of the effects of beer, says: It kills quicker than any other liquor. Pneumonia, pleurisy, fever, etc., have a first mortgage on the beer drinker." He Knew His Worth. When the Vanderbilt lines wanted the late T. J. Potter as General Manager of the "Bee," John Newell, President of the Lake Shore Road, conducted the negotiations, and it is said the following interview took place: Mr. Newell ".Mr. Potter, the Yanderbilts want you as a General Manager. - What' will you go for?" Mr.Potter (unhesitatingly)-4 Forty thousand dollars a year and full power to do as I please." Mr. Newell "What! Forty thousand dollars a yearl" Why, that is more than I get as President - of the Lake Shore I Mr.Potter (again un hesitatingly) "Well, that may be, but, then, you know, I am a better xman." Chicago Times. Called Oat or Town. Citizen (so little boy) "Is your fathef in, Bobby :" Little " Boy "Xo, sir; pa's out of town." Citizen "Gone on busincssl' Little Boy -'I dun know. I heard liim tell ma that he wouldn't be bac uutil she had got through cleanin'houseT Mebby it's business an' mebby it's pleas ure. I dun know." Bazar. A Montana miner who couldn't pay ft debt of $43 offered to let his creditoi shoot twice at him with a pistol at a dUtance of 200 feet. The offer was ac cepted, and tWt bullets were planted ic the debtor 8 body, though, he was no! seriously wounded. ELy Catarrh UntAm dALm Gitcs TdU J at once and Curt COLD IN HEAD CATARRH r HAY FEVER Xot a Liquid, Snuff or PoitdiT. Frte from Jnjuri ois lrugs arid of- fenrizs odors. HAY-FEVER " A r-artiele of the Ba'ra U arr'1 tnro f.vh i-ri U sjreeable to o and i quickly aborted. t2 axAf cieancing the n&sal passes ol Mimi-J ju cau:rg lieaJUij aecrrUoas. s It a'laTtpain ml inflarama'Ion, protect tVr-rm. br&nal hnir.rs of tue bead I rem additional cm. completely fecal the sores and rewtorta Uie r-ne of ute and tmeTL Beneficial reauiia tre ty a few ar-plicaiioca. A thorwjh trtatmmt mill curt. Price CO certs at drCjrc'- by taxu, rrtrrx CO ccirU. Circulars aent fre. HT BROTHERS, TJnjgcisU, Owro, .". y. Cat tor fa In Not a. Blood DImik. No matter what partsJt my flo2r tSKt, ra. tarrh always eUru in the bead, and bfclnijrt; in -.- -fctad. Tb?re U no mystery ahool.the onj;:n r4 U.i dreadful dieue. It brshi in a m-c'-t-d c.il Cue of the kid that U ur to be b-t?rr tn a fftr dsT." Thousand of victims know how it uby ad.experience. ITy1 Oram Bahn Cures tuua Ju the bead and catarru la alliu taes m JHE flLLEGEB QRGflHS o. H C2 M H P r5i $275 ORGAN X $90.00. Stool and Book Free. Other Wautiful bXyUs tronj. 850 to 8275. Circulars free oa a('plic&Liea. Special 30 Day offer now ready. fhe old- orpan mact-facturer tn WaahHurton, N. J. SO yrarm tnamtlarturing oryaat. This ortnui will be Sent on 15 days' tot trial. 'j,000 .f these orjraua now In use. Thry ar beautiful, thry a re tc-ct they arc ULtig eArA tLti niasnfai-turer, XL. W. A m ora. Washington. SL 3m MILLER BROS. STEEL PENS TILE BEST IS USE. " Yhcn not Tor f ale by Ical dealer, we wiJl maI U leading Mrles in u boxes of 1 doxen ech, t receipt ot SllZi. 4 ttvles School rens, 1 bozrs, 1 dox. each. 0.45 4 " Business" 1 . 4 Buiaca & Stubs, 4 boxes, 1 dox. each, .44 iibx ZhZ ITT US 102- ami COL HsfccCic. i ! Mexican Mustang Liniment CUIU3S Sciatica, Lumbago, BheumatiiEi. Burasi Scratches, Sprains. Straias, Stitches, Stiff Joints, Backache, Galb, Sores, Spavin Cracks. Contracted Muscles, Eruptions, Hoof Ail, Screw Worms, S winner, 8 addle Galls, Piles. Scalds, 1 cr;ZI Stings, I "t I Bruises, I Bunions, Corns, THIS CO OO OLD STAND-BY accotnpltabes for everybody exactly whmt Uclaimtd for It. One of the reaaons for Um great popolartryf the Mustang Liniment Is fouad In Its salver, applicability. Everybody nedsaoch a medlclM. The Lnuberaaa need It In caaecf atddent. Th e II a wi fe neds It for ccmeral f amOy in. The Caaaler nee4a It for bU Uams and bia The Mechanic &eaU It always oa bJa work bench. The Mlaerneedjltlneaaeof emerfeocy. The FleaeerPeda caatft along without tt. The Farmer noada It In bia bonae, bla atabla, and bla itock yard. The Steamboat maa er the Boatnaaa aoetfa It la liberal supply afloat and aabore. Tho Here-faac!er aoeda It-It Is bla tt friend and safest reliance. The Htock. grower needs It It will save bna tnousanda cC dollar and a world of trouble. The Railroad ana needs It and win need It as long aa bla UXe ta a roan d of aeddenta and danger. The Backwaadaanaa needs It. There ta nota tng like It as an antidote for tbe dangers to Ufa limb and comfort whJcn surround tbe pioneer. The Merchant needs It abo&t bis store among bla employee. Accident wUI happen, and wbea tbeaecome tbe Xortang liniment la wanted at once. Keen a Battle ta the II a a sc. TUtbebetot economy. Keep a Bottle In the Facterr luhnaaedlate use In case of accident aaves pain and loss of wage. Keep a Battle Always la the Stable for aae when wanted. EffeeU of Frost on Fish. A week or two ao there were part graphs in several of tha papers describing the Urge takes of conger eels ia the channel during the cold weather. A correspondent sends me an interesting extract from a book of the late Frank Buckland, which contains an explanation of this phenomenon tbe explansticn being that the frcst causes the air in the bladders of the fish to expand, and to brings them to the surface. In one year as many as 60 tons of fish were caught in this way by the Hastings boitmea. I should think the conger is even mora glad than the rest of us when the wind gets into a warmer quarter. Truth. . tmsmsmssmsmaa
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 18, 1888, edition 1
6
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