Newspapers / Marion Record (Marion, N.C.) / May 4, 1894, edition 1 / Page 3
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An Experience mm vunjurer. i ;norPBtiii2 experience with an IVvritian conjurer is given in Mr. War- rh- ' . i. . r -v 4. TU : urton s worn ui MSM"" uuujurer time to .nr. i - fa exhibition of bis skill. Tho magi- ian called a boy from the street and f .te a mysterious mars upon me paini if his hand, requesting nim to loolc jpadily upon the mark. This the boy !il for ten minutes, without any ef ct. The magician called another v. and r'icnted tho came thing. Ihi- boy, being suscejitible to tho in lencf, W8S M,(,B 'n a semi-mesmeric ,ndit-n. The magician requested Jr. Warburton to call up whom he iifihed. and stated the boy would see jm. Mr. Warburtou called for the ,; Lord Derby. The boy instantly ill out: "Here he is! I see au old nn, with spectacle, lying on a couch, vin" on a loim black robe." Mr. urbiirto:; n xt called for Lor 1 Nel u. The boy said: "Jit-re hois. I ,: h sol ii r with ona iirm." After lling for several others, tho boy ninth' described them, to the as uishiiifiit cf Mr. Warburton and hid :.-nd-i. He explains that the trick ,n-istcd in getting the boy to sus 1'iid his thinking faculties, so that he t iuld become in a semi-mesmeric con Hon. and thus b.s in sympathy with Jje iniu d of Mr. Warburton when he lhd for the different individuals. ide boy saw in a kind of vision the rr picture that was passing through r. Wurltui ton's min 1 when he called r tbete individuals. New York Sun. tn Seoul, Korea, men are forbMaen lie on the streets later than eig'it r.lock in the evening. When the irfew sounds the city gates are rlosed, men must withdraw from sight, ftid women are free to roam abc.lt ua sil uii o'clock in the morniaut. When Trnvrling f-tlifr n 'U a.-r! tn-nt, or Im Iness.tnke on in trip n !.! of Sj nip of Fiijs, as It acts r-t .-a-niii ly ami effe tivt-ly on the kidneys, ;;r nii'l low els, prevent ini; fevers, headaches ptli r forms of fiii'knws. ForwtlelnSOcents il'l f 1 Ik it 1 1,- !,y nil lrn-ling riniKgiHts. )Tfi tr l ot ween tho V n it oil Rtatea and Venes- tt!a li.V" KreJiMy dlminisho'l. I .iln lir l.ooUinv Hrtlrr. . i -I i v shown rlii'irini; sinns of In lit "ll HI r' lTV III A'll'll ! lllsini:.SH. If 'l'l ii i ' 1 1 1 1 1. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 , or h ive sKire timeoc , i!l. nniiMtillni'il ili-hiy to It. V. John i l!i IiiiioihI. Va.. wIihi hii iniike sui:- II- tli ii w ill U- woi th jour i oiisnlerntioii. Thk fruit erop will prohobly be a failure ta rrn i nrounri. Hnir-nitarrli 'lire Is a li.ii.) an 1 Is taken .rimllv. ii i.I hI .I n-rtly upon the IiIihhI I iiiiii'iii nrl;i,s of the system. !-eml f... -tiiiioninl-. In-.-. S.i. hy lniL'.Msl 7 w ''f!''; I'rons.. Iololo. O ;Thr flermnn Oov.rnment has to fne IIITI! ui'Il'll. m:hi- !. I 'rn. Sohk Throat, -h.nill ii v M ..K V Ihuiidiitil 7iirir." n ni'li- hill nut :fiili. s',,l,r ni in hoF(t. i i' ' 'iit . OBr.AT Hit! tain hrts 19.810 miles of rnll- rf is. Hfalloh's Car iM on a Knar iii t. It cures Inclptant CJoti iraption; It is tbe B jst Couuh Cure; &o., 60c, f 1 Tris contains elKhty-flve cotton seed oil If alt llrted wi.h sore ay m ur Dr. I o Th m Bn'iEje wtr DruKis's sell at 25c per b.ittU 31 r. ilf. Syniona Baltimore. M1. Run Down "hat Tired FeelingSevere Headaches, No Appetite (U Bottles of HoDd's Sarsaparllla Brin j; Back New Life. '. I. Hood A- V ... I.owoll. Ma-.: i-nr Sirs Hi fine u-in HikhI's Sar.saparil I ;is frouuent I v Hiek and did not know W'mt s the mail r with me. Olio day 1 lf"iild feel so tin-d I coul I hrdly stand, the it I mini I heiiKeverj hendarhe snd so . not knouini; what tho next day would Ifi'ii; lorili. I did not hive any apH-tite and I Was Greatly Run Down. tried n k mil ninny metliciiiei hut they did 9'' no piod. 1 1 1 vine heard a preat deal abnut J hi.I's Sarsapurilla I derided to try a bottle. Hood's5 Cures am Klad to ny I soin felt br-tter. I have now ed six buttle nti t feel as well as ever. It is t fn of i;rert bmietit to oi2 I have re- !un-d my npp t t and Now Enjoy Cood Health, an strongly rec mitnend Hood's !ar?aparil (! e .- lien I l l iol mediein-." M. Sv .:,;, Aisquil li St . H Ii imore. Mm-v !. I llniitl' PiIIm net e-iHilv. vet 'nnitliv Mini rill f 'lillv.eil l tic llMTiilel Ikiwi-Ih. renin. flATrUTQ TiioMA? r. sinrsoN. H" I 111 IO WahliiKioii. I. i'. No tv'a fr. iibiiI l-nirni ohinliinl wr.U) lor Invrnler'n Onhl Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies OR Other Chemicals are nsed In th preparation of W. UAKER & C0.8 reakfastCocoa vhich it absolutely pur and tolublt. It has morrlhnn three timet the itrtnylti ut Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or comical. corUng lest than one cent a rap. It I delicious, nourishing, snd auMi.1 DIGHTEP. a Sold byC racers evrrfwhara. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Man. Sips of Health. You don't have to look twice to detect them bright eyes, bright color, bright smiles, bright in every ac tion. Disease is overcome Scott's EMULSION. I only when TT FT X Etak tissue is replaced by the neaitny ind. Scott s Emulsion of pd liver oil effects cure by juilding up sound flesh. It s agreeable to taste and .asy of assimilation. frptrd bf Boot t k Bowbs,!T. T. AtHrsiriHrts. 1 1 inl ii 21 I REV.DR.TAJ.MAGE rHE BEOOKLTN DIVINE'S BUN DAY SERMON. Tr.rr: 'And Jaco't win left nlon. ant re mrexiM a ntnn 'nii'l him ttnlil ih P.i-. of the day. A ml trh-n gtr that he pr vailed not ngnimtt him lie touched the hol- thttjhicn out of join! o hr weall'l ifith hirn An; Anrll r .rt.-j. nte 70, f)f in 'H hrenkelh. he tnirt. t intl n i l. i :. is "ia" Genesis mil.. 2J-2S. jattle anl shwp and ports nn't carnols. .--j n rn 1 ne, present t nnt Jacob sen Is to train 1 trOOd Will of hi nfT..n.tu.l I . 1 in... nlifht Janoh hnlia h- ih. k-i. '.. T. ther Is no rest for the wary n an, no shining lad. I.ut .. .... .-.i me nuKeis lo-.vn tuto nis dream, iu ir, 1 iot TOinni, mat utits uutil the morn . With au nnbnnwn v;uin, ... 1. fry l to throw the other. Thn unknown visit to rev.-.ll hiM hllnorinp r.n.u. fr... .... t. wrenyhes JacoVs tbih boae from itusosk-t. perhnps maimln liim for lif. As on th4 moraine nkytht clusters of purple clou 1 be. CmtotiDOD llcn'muM if I-, I whom ho has l.een contending, nn I not on or his brother's coadjutors. ' Let mo iro cries the an! lifiin,. hin.i .. i, "1 crisiu litfhf. -Tho day breakcth !'' 7""'iw t pUoe.th.it Gal allows pood people so-net im'M to Ket Into aterriblo he Li i. w"' a koo 1 m:m. but hero iriti n,",,', inn miilut-lit to wrastlo ha tremen In i ii.n, 1.1... 1 JH'l?,r:-.F0r T'l'. a pit; for Daniel, a . w. .ir-u , ,r jj.ivin, oi-inronement and le : for John tha n ...,i. .. aift and the exeomiouer's ax ; for Peter, a ui, saipwreeK ; for John, deso Iato r.-itmos: for Vl.ll m '.!.:. cruelty ; for Josephine, banishment ; for Mrs. fn j h v 1 . 7 a (ininkarirs wife; J" """"J , aiunes mined ,y nn inluri KI mob: for Catherine iha ..i.i drownine siirirm r ... ..., .. " the bnffetlnof the Monlma'l populace; for John Brown, or Edinburgh, the pistol shot v,..,r,uuuw, ; ,or nn.,n MeKail. the 'aflold : for Latimer the !,.. . fn. i..i.. he For whom the rosks. 'the iribbeta! .uo ,uiii.iiie, me intimbscrews? For the HOD a'1 lauhters of the Lord God Al- .u.K...j. numo one saia to a Christian re former, "1 he world Is against you." "Then,"' "'"i'"i m iiKniasc rne world." I Will fro farther 1.1. I o tl.... tlan has his strung!. Th's man had his combat in Wall si rent. ihi. n n 1 I .m.o VMW VU 1IIUWI street ; this one on I ulton street ; this one on this one on Lombard street ; this one on the bourse. With flnnncial misfortune vou have .... . iun uiiuaih'ni wresiie. lied hot disasters have uronned into vnnr uin . , collar. What you boutrht von mnM .n horn you trusted fin. I Th,. hin pected would not come. Borne giant panic, .."..".imiiinniimi Krlp like doatb, took hold of you In an awful vmiu in ki. yOU have not ret esenruvl nn 1 if i n tain whether It will throw you or you will Here Is another vml in ( r.,nr.iA -hi, . bad appetite. He knew not how stealthily it was growing pon him. One hour ho woke no. He s-il. '-Vor h a..L-. f soul, of my family, and of my children, and . uuup mum iop mis : Ami, behold, he found himself alone by the brook Jab bofc, and It was midnight. That evil appe tite seized upon him, and ho seized upon It, and. Oh. the horror nt the ivmllwl Wfr... once a bad habit has aroused itself up to de- 3 "i me man nas sworn that, by the help of the eternal Go I. ho will destroy It, all heaven draws itself out In a long lino of light to look from above, and hell at retches itself In myr.nl Ions of spite to loo'i op from benetttb. I have seen men rally themselves for su5h a struggle, an I they have bitten their lips and clinched their flats and cried, with a Mool red earnest ness and a rain of scalding tears, "GoJ help me V from a wrest lo with habit I have seen men f ill luiek derenta.l Collin., fr... v,i., v.... relrinir on thnlr nwn ruanlnHnn. fkA.. V. . como Into the struggle, an I for a time it BTuiMCTi us 11 iiiej were pelting me upper hand of their habit, but that habit r.illiol again lis Infernal power an 1 lifte 1 a soul Hum im Biau'iiuK, nun wun n loroo uorrowo'I from tlio pit hurled It Into utter darkness. T-'i raff 1 nr. of I hi. niillnnaa.'n 1 1 the pictures and musical Instruments and the rich upholstery or his family parlor. After awhile I saw him fall into tho ditch. Then, in ino minnlgnt, when the children wore dnuminir Ihnir iivrnainst ilmimn al.,t rhio tlnn households are silont Willi slumber, an- K"i wHicno.1. 1 11 oar. 1 mm give the suarp shriek that followed the nt.-ih of hi nn poulard. Ho foil from au houorod social po sition j he fell fro ji a family clrolo of whloh once lie was the grandest attractiou ; he fell from tho houaoof Go I. at wao3i alterj ho had been consecrated ; he fell forever ! But. thnnlv Go t. I hivn a'ten unm Knrioi. termlnition than that. I bavo seon inoa propirj thajmlyji for sucli a wrestling. They laid hold of Go I's help when they went lut- combat. Thogiaut habit, regale 1 by tho cu; of mny tompta tions. camo Out strong au I doll mt. Th-iv cllncioJ. Tucr w to tlu writ hint anl distortions of nfoirful slruiglo. But tho Old finnl he rnn In ur iv ,r ., I , midnight alone, with uouo but Go I to wit ness, by tho brooic JablK)':, thi gia-it fell, an I the trill no'uint wreitler hrnV. ih'. iliirit- Hqss with ti-j ary, "Taami bo unto tsd. who glvelh " tho victory tliro'ijr'i our T,or.1 Jesus t'hrist."' Ther i is a widow's heart that first was desolated by bereavement and sinci by the anxieties nn I trials that '.;imo In the support of a family. It is a sad thing to sje a man contending for a livelihood under disadvantages, but to see a delicate woman, with helpless little ones at her back, flgtitingthe iriauta of pov erty and sorrow, is most alT-H-tini-. It was a humble home, an 1 passirnby knew not that within thoe four walls were diwp'ays of courage more admirable than those of Han nibal crossing tho Alps or the pass of T.ier mopy'm or B.tlaklav.i. where "into tho jaws of death ro lo the six hun Iro '." Theso heroes had the whole worl I to cheer them on, but there were none to appbui 1 the struggle in the humble home. She fought for bread, for clothing, for fire, for shelter, with aching head, and weak side, and exhausted strength, through the longnight by thebrook Jabliok. Could it bo that none would givo her helpi" Had God forgotten to lie gracious? No, contending soul' The midnight air is full of wings co-niug to I he rescue. She hears it now in the sough of the night wiud. In the ripple of thebrook Jabbok the prom ise made so long ago ringing down tho sky. "Thy fatherless children. I will preserve them alive, and let thy widows trust in Tie !" Some one said to a very poor woman, "How is It that In such distress you keep cheerful?" She said : ' I do it by what I enll cross prayors When I had my rent to pay and nothing to pay it with, and bread to buy and nothing to buy it with. I used to sit down and cry. But now I do not get discouraged. If I go along the street, when I come ton corner of tho street I sav ' The i.nr.i heir. me." I then go on until I come to another crossing of tho street, and again I say, 'The Lord help me !' An 1 so I utter a prayer at every crossing, and since I hnve got into the habit of saying thes 'cross prayers' I have been aldo to keep up my courage. Learn again from this subject that people sometimes are surprise I to tin 1 out that what they have been struggling with iu the dark ness is really an "angel of blessing."' Jacob found in the morning that this strange par sonage was not an enemy, but a Go 1 dis- Katched messenger to promise prosperity for im and for his children. And so many a man, at tbe close of his trial, has found out that he has been trying t throw down his own blessing. If you are a Christian man, 1 will go back in your history and find that the grandest things" that have ever hannoned to you have been your trials. Nothing short ol scourging. Imprisonment an 1 shipwreck could have made Paul what he was. When David was fleeing through the wil derness pursued by his own son. he was be Ing prepared to become the sweet singer of Israel. The pit an J the dungeon were the best schools at which Joseph ever graduated. The hurricane that upset the tent and killed Job's children prepared the man of Uz to write the magnificent poem that bat as tounded the ages. There is no way to get ,h. vhMff nnfnf tV.M V. t. ' There Is no way to purify the gold but to burn it. Look at the people who have had their own way. They are proud, discontent ed, useless and unhappy. If you want to find cheerful folks, go among those who have been purified by the fire. After Rossini had rendered "William Tell" the five hundredth time a company of musicians came under his window in Taris and serenaded him. They fuit upon his brow a golden crown of laurel eaves. But amid all the applause and en thusiasm liosslni turned to a friend and said, "I would give all this brilliant scene for a few days of yonth and love." Contrast the . melancholy feeling of Rossini, who bad everything this world could give htm, to the joyful experience of Isaac Watts, whose mls fortnne were innumerable, when ha Hn TIM hill of Ztoo yleUto A taoawHl svered tweeta Pror w reach the bearvnty Belli Or walk the go hi en tr-u. Then let our tongs aboun I And f very tear be dry We aro marohln tnrouvrb. Immanual'f groaad To fairer world on hi j . It is prosperity that kills and trouble that mtc0, WbUe toe IraeUtea were oa tQ marcn, amid great privations and hardships, they behaved well. After awhile they prayed for meal, and the iky darkened with a great flock of quails, and these quails feU In large multitudes all about them, and the Israelites ate and ate anl stuled themselves datll they died. Ol, my friends, It is not hard- ship or trial or starvation that Injures tha soul, but abundant supply. It is not the vulture of trouble that eats up tbe Christians life ; it is tho quills, it is the quails! You. will find out that your midnight wrestle by the brook Jabbo'x is with the angel el God, come down to bless and save; Learn again that while otir wrertilng with IrOdble may be triumphant we must ex jioct that it will loiva Its mark upon us. Jacob prevailed, but the an?el touched him, an I bis thigh bone sprang from its socket, and the goo I m m went limping on his way. We must carry throu fx this word the mark of Din combat. What p'owd thos- prema ture wrinkles in your f.ac. i What Tr dtene I your hair Wore it w is time for fristV What Hileneed forer-r so m 11 ni of the hilarity ot your household? Ah, It Is because the angel of trouble hath tou ;he I yox that yod ?0 limping on your way You need not be sUr pr,s-lthat ihcru who have pvel throdTh the fire do not feel as g.iy ns they ouce did, L10 not be out or patience with those who Come not out of their despondency. They may triumph over their os, nnd yet their gait shall tell yoa that they have been trou le touched. Are we s'o'm that we can, un moved, see our cradle rifled of the bright eyes and the sweet lips? Can we stand un moved an t sen our wardens of earthly de light uprooted? Will Jesas, who wept Him self, im angry with m if we pour our teats Into the graves that opau to swallow down what we love best ? Was L is vm more dear to Him than our beloved dead to uV? No. We have a right to wood. Our tears must come. You shall not drive them back to scald the heart. They rail Into God's bottle. Afflicted ones have died because they could not weep. Thank Go 1 for the sweet, tho mysterious relief t hat oomes to m in tears ! Under this gentle rain the flowers of corn put forth their bloom. Go I pity that dry, withered, parched, all consuming grief that wrings its hands and grin Is its teeth and bites its nails unto the quick, but canno' weep ! We may have foua t the comfoit of tbe cros, and yet ever after show that in the dark night and by the brook Jabbok we were trouble touched. Again, we may take the idea of the text and announce the approaeh of the day dawn. No one was ever more glad to see the morn ing than was Jaco!) after t hat night of strug gle. It is appropriate for philanthropists and Christians to cry out with this angel of tbe text, "The day breiiketb. ' The world's prospects are brightening. The church of Christ is rising up in its strength to go forth "fair as the moon, clear as the sun and terri ble as an army with banners." Clap your hands, all ye people, tho day breaketh. The bigotries of the earth are perishing. The time was when we were told that if we wanted to get to heaven we roust be immersed or sprinkled, or we must believe in the perseverance of the saints, or in falling away from grace, or a liturgy or no liturgy, or they must be Calvinists or Arrainians in order to reach heaven. We have all come to confess now that these nre nonessentials in religion. During my vacation one summer I was in a Presbyterian audience, and it was Sacra mental day, and with grateful heart I re ceived the Holy Communion. On the next Sabbath I was in a Methodist church and sat at a love feast. On the following 8 ibbath I was in an Episcopal church and knelt at the alter and received the consecrate 1 bread. I do not know which service I enjoyed the most. "I believe in the communion of saints and in the life everlasting." "The day breaketb.'- As I look upon this audience I see many 1 who have passed through waves of trouble that came up higher than their girdle. In God's name I proclaim cessation of hostili ties. You shall not go away saddened an 1 broken-hearted. God will lift your burden. God will bring your dead to lire. God will stanch the heart's bleeding. I know He will. Like as a father pities his children, so the Lord pities you. The pains of earth will end. The tomb will burst. The dead will rise. The morning star trembles on a bright ening sky. The gates of the east begin to swing open. The day breaketb. Luther and Melanchthon were talking to gether gloomily about the prospects of the church. They could see no hopes of deliver ance. After awhile Luther got up and said to Melanchthon "Come, Philipp, let n? sin tho forty-sixth psalm of David. 'God is our refuge and strength, a very pleasant help fn trouble. Therelore will not we fer, though the earth be removed and though the moun tains be carried into the midst of the sea; though the waters thereof roar and be trou bled though tho mountains shako with the swelliug thereof. Selab.'" Death to many, nay to all, is a struggle and a wrestle. We have many friends that it will be hard to leave. I care not bow bright our fuluro hopois. It is a bitter thiug to look upon this lair world and know that re snail never ngain see its blossoming spring, its falling fruits, its sparkling streams and to say farewell to those with whom we played in childhood or counseled in mauhoo I. In that night, like Jacob, wo may have lo wrestle, but God will not leavo us unblessed. It shall not bo told in heaven that a dying soul cried unto Gol for help, but was not delivered. The lattica may bo turned to keep out the sun, or a book set to dim tbe light of the midnight tapor, or tho room may be filled with the cries of orphan ago and widowhood, or the church of Christ may mourn over our going, but if Jesus calls all is well. The strong wrestling by the brook will cease , the hour ot death's night will pass along 1 o'clock in tho morning ; 2 0 clock in the morning; 4 o'clock in the morning. Tho day breaketb.. So I would have it when I die. I am in no grudge against this world. Tne only fault 1 bavo lo ilud with the world is that it treats me toj well, tut when tho time comes to go I trust to bo ri?ady, my worldly affairs all S'lttleil. If I have wronged others, I want then to bo surj of their forvennass. In that list wrestling, my arm enfeebled with ticknessan l my bea t taint, I want Jesus bc si leni". If there be bauds ou this side 01 the (loo 1 stretched out to hold me back, I want tho heavenly hauds stretched out to dr.iw vat lorw.ird. Then, O Jesu4, help roe oa and help mo up. Unfearing, undoubt iu", may I step right out into the light nn 1 bo able to look back to my kindred nnd friends w.10 would detain me here, exciaim iug : "L-t ui) go let me go. Xne day bruukelb. '" TTISE WORDS. Nature is undietilled art. Age is the natural enemy of maniincl. Beauty covereth s multitude of sins. A man is nearer woman's ideal than a woman is. When love fills the heart, the pockets may go empty. It isn't a sign of weakness for a man to be afraid of a woman. We pass through the gates of matri mony in a lustrous cloud of romance. A man's character is born rrith him ; he gets his reputation from other people. It is safer to trust a man as far as you can see him, than as far as you can bear him. Much money, much worry; little money, little worry: no money, no good on earth. We may love a pleasant sinner, while we may do no more than respect an ascetic saint. Individual men and women are frac tions. The family is the integer of human happiness. If a woman's intuition were replaced by reason, Bhe would be wearing whis kers inside of sixty days. When a man becomes so bad that women desert him, it is time for him to be heading toward a graveyard. When a girl is fidgety because the young man isn t where she is, he can stay away as long as he pleases, and ba welcome when he comes. Plowing Wells ot Konth Carolina. South Carolina has a large number of "cold" or "Mowing" wells. They are sitnated in the celebrated "Sand Hills region," and the majority of them are of enormous depth. The force of the current of air which con tinually comes from them varies in in tensity according to atmospheric con ditions, being particularly strong for several hours before and after heavy thunder-storms. St. Louis Republic. Tlheims has the hiuest ueatli rate of any town in the civilized worl t. It has 28.62 per 1000. Dublin is next, with 27.05. Then comes New York, with 26.47. and Vienna, with 25.07. Twisbae 23.51, . . BILL jVRP S LETTER. A TRIP ON THK GULF MAKES WIL. MAM'S HEAD SWIM. Royal Spott Angling for the Festive Grouper. My besd is swimming now very thing is swimming. We have been n the gulf toitv, anchored f r oat. oa the coral reefs, an 1 while we fi Led the boat wis gently iraving and n-cKin;; n il etesihsit wavta audnowifaat e rti at bum- tbe same mot on has fallowed us. Ine roem U twin n 1 ka a rxndn'nm. S. ndfor J L'e'.. tl e old vettran conductor on the Hate road, t Id mo tbat he cool I tell where the t ain was in ilie dar!o night bv tbe FWing of tlx car r nnd the cnivci. and I nut m the old sail tt ai d fi-benn n ran ell how der pine w'er j me u ream-us of the liil ows. WnJ Shaw is an o d alor. He live down the b.ij a few nils anl came tip thU running in bi-i own b at o ike ibe fami y to bc (.rouptr l ank. Jlr wi'e was af.-a'd to vt-n'n e. bnt the girU and I and J iiKk pa-age on tbe fat lull c aft, an I with a (om1 w ud we enmed tho htrbor and tl r nli ilie pa and were won wsy ont a vnp'e cf mile iuto ihc dark-green au;rg ot tn fcuir. The od maj w Known the bauws of 1 u e fish the ta p-rs and grnnts and gronrK-rs and red snappc-n i ml sharks. He LsspiHtkM b i three s 'ore y am and ten. bnt is vt live ? an dcbecr'ul a ncho-.d boy. The g r. san-j 1 1 mo of lie ir seaf r ng songs ' we send ded along and the no-J r Joined iu the chorus nd 1 d ibe liiavy bi-w like a tme cl orUter. lie ooK bis berriues from oi iecU on tbe chore 4ii I wh rt tl c I WD lima nut he cave Joe bii order, to let don u fail an 1 cas: anchor. "'We are now in the center of the enmrer bank." herald, "and if the roupcra are not at Lome they raigbt lo Ik." jNo , if yonti Is tret seanick vou muMt brve iteff. Feid the fcdu s bnt don't stop flhin. I had some lltwion lad en out 1mm las-, week and on f ihcm fe I the fishe ev. rv V n min utes, but she ui ve - stopped fl-binv and caught more p otipcr I ban any of us. ''What did she ru tie m w.tlir" Kaid 1 terv inno ntlv. Thev all Ln hid a' n e as he ipluV: "I cau't U II v n. i r sue ui.i n it take !i'cikr8t at my hon e. Ho I a I s Km ricited no i i lines of ten fathoms nut each mount, d wuh a lure book and a aniall book and double haded with minnie balls. We cat i nt into i-ix-fit bonis of wa'rr and tin n ": n the sport, ilwe wis no timi to say have von got a bi rr No watchine a cork. no p U to 6wins r. nnd. no 1 mbs ovi rhead. no no innc but to let the load drop and the coru s ip inroiigii i ur iiaml and then a v cor- onrd twinge at the bait and a pn'l npwar.: as he g n it or bc group- r at: ulod again! his su Men elevation. In t r-e hours' time we caught forty-five groupers and 250 grunts. Ibe ing', uau wai live meal irom small concha, but aa hkm a we caught fi.-b we cut them in'o lait. nbing the beads on the lartre hooka and strall pi c s on the ema'l' r hoiks. Tbe groupers wrigh Irom two to twenty rounds and are with out ici e.. They ate bak-d or roasted I ke I'lnckcni ami taste like channel cats. Tbe grunts are a i-pe ies of large bream, av raging an ui a poiinu apicc. lluy are known as the sailor' j y, ai d are the b st of pan fish. When tnken fr. in the hook th'V enint. makinir a ciouking noise just like little pigs when tuck- in. We were out about five hours, and our caich half fi led a dry cood a box that was three feet rqnaie. 1 never had tucb fishing bcfoie. One ot tbe g-rls caught two large gronp re and s v.iily-onc grim s. Another-caught seven gnuptrs, but her punts were not ocnnteJ. Jce Homctiires I n nu-lit no two at a time one on each book. We fished until the cords wore t nd' r hands lo the quick and we were actually tired of ea ch ins fi b. I thoucht about Mur phy and Thtodore Smi'h,and wit-licd that they hail been there. Tior Murphy, who. when tl e dogwood is in bloe'in, .oes down to the rivi r and watches . bis coi S all tho day long and comes borne ewiucinc two or three cats and an eel and a redhor-e and js happy. ne wero ni alter tarpon tbis time, but we saw a ccbool of tin m. with their silvery sides tinning to the sun as ihey sported on top of the water, ine OKI major caught a balloon Dsn. It was about cigh'een inches Ionic, and bad as an attachment a ba'loon filament on its breast. and this was i xpanded or contracted with its breath It was pure white and velvety, with b -antif ul lace iioiuls in resnlar rows all over it an l when distended would bold a hatful of air. The major said he bad boe n fishing here for en; in years and baa never seen one Del ore. Even Joe, who had seen everything, bad never eeca one. I's nu nth was small and fnll of sharp tectb, and it was puckered as if getting may to wiiistie. And Joe speared a stingiay. a venemous creature with a kind of whalebone tail al nt three feet line and astine at the base a st'ng that 1 oks like a large thorn from a black locnrt tree, but it is barbed instead of nnooth. The barlw of the grain or spear sank into his iiody and off he went for life and liber ty, carrying the boat with him, until he was ex hausted. The cii lii brouirbt bomb its tail and sting as trophi"s, but left the horrible creature in the sea- What did we do with Ibe flub we caught? Why tho old m jor walked np town after we landed and to'd the people there was a box of fl-b down there and they could go down and he p ihcnifwjivcs. Our g i ln are impplymg our table with fii-h now fresh nidi thatcobt nothing but ixirt. Iu fact, it is - pert all Hie time, for it is bathing or hi bins or shelling or crabbing near ly every dxv in tbe week. Ihey went ont dab- bine tbe other day win n the tide wag unusually low and bad uncovered the sand bants. In the skim of tho water w re numerous hoi s from f ur to six inches in diameter and in every hole was a crab. An expert runs bis band down and se zing a claw pulls wil lfa Btrong. quick J rk an I lets go j o-t a, qu ck, as soon as he is out. ice creature when in the h le is folded np and helpless, l nt as soon as bo is out he can s r ke a terrible blow with bid cl .wa a blow tbat will 1,0 tl:renju a mans band and nevtr let ro until it thunders. They brought lie me some that measured eighteen inches from tin to t p of their eavaco fingers. Ibeir flesh is fine ating, "they pay, I ut somehow I don't like to cat any.li ng that is ngly-r-e xs p, por- bp, a hic. Jus. Anw-paugli cuvius all a tr- at on Friday SI.e char er d a boat and took thirteen of its ! wn to i lie Indian piss ad gave us a splendid picnic th re fmin,' the palmottoes m il c ctn.i that adorn the inland. Old Dad wh ted his appetite on tho law coon ojstoia that abouiidd th re i ndln si I thoy were gexid. Thewonnii f Iks all bathed in the surf while we m ii bunted f .r rare a il lerntifiil fhe'ls. At the d liuerhonr wj gathered at Iho fi stive cloth ih.it wus i-prp;id upon the rtti 'j I each, and such a kciv rotis feast eon 1 1 not bo fonnd ont- s'de of Florida. In fac', the winter fare in Floiila txc 1-t that of amwhe:e else. 1 have been here ince the 15lh of D ocmber and we havj not b in without fioh grewn vegetables g nee I ci me. Fur three nvni h we have had s lawbniis ne-aHy every day fr elinmr. and I 11 they como. Ve had strawberries on tbat pane and ico wab r anl line--story pits and cake a 1 ni xed up, and chic! en and epgs and etc ter.'S too tedious to mention. We epent a happ.' !ay and wbeu our boat touched tbe wharf we were told to keep our seat for a few minute- Mr. Anglin. of Atlanta, was ine of onr party and he cot out hn koelac snd stood on t e wharf mid took us alive, boat and all, and has made a fine i iciuie vi the tbute n. And ao we koepon s aung in Cliarwater, for seme- b-xly inv.tca ns to a sail or a rule or a In -lie oi some noit almost everyday. We all stay well and good diges ion waits on a petite. Such di'ligbtfnl breezes don't blow tvei3 wh- re every day in the year. Such uniform good health was n vrr ciij yid. Mrs Annspaugh remarked yesterday that there lad been bnt two deaths tn Clearwater s nee she cin.e lieie tiirei years ago. rheie lias not been one since 1 came, fonr months aco. I he old Maj r 8baw sid he came nre eiali' y ars ago to die rasy of con sumpiion. Lnt soon got well and is now strong and acuve. And so alnvst evinrxxly nas simiUr story lo tell. 'J he wonder is tliat every invali I who ran cetheiedoea not come Bill Arp in A'lonta Cons i ntion. Gigantic Leares. What trees bear the largest leayes? An English botanist tells ns that it is those that belong to the palm family. First must be mentioned the Inaja palm, of the banks of the Amazons, the leaves of which are no less than fiftr feet in length by ten to twelve in width. Certain leaves of the Ceylon palm attain a length of twenty feet and the remarkable width of sixteen. The natives nse them for making tents. Afterward comes the cocoannt palm. the usual length of whose leaves is about thirty feet. The umbrella mag nolia, of Ceylon, bears leaves that are so large that a single one may some times serve as a shelter for fifteen or twenty persons. One of these leaves carried to England as a specimen was nearlv thirtv-six feet in width. The plant whose leaves attain the greatest dimensions in onr temperate climate is the Victoria regia. A ppecimen of this truly magnificent plant exists in the garden of the Royal Botanical So ciety of Edinburgh. Its leaf, which is about seven feet in diameter, is capable of supporting a weight of 395 pounds. Scientific American. Joe Griffen, a "Pittsburg newsboy, baa a bank balance of nearly $6000, aod io making from f 60 o $75 week. 5XWS A!TO K0TES FOR vTOXEX. The Infanta Eulalie is in Paris with her children. A woman's glee club of sixteen hag been organized at Chicago University. Of a total of 2531 students in the universities of Switzerland 242 are women Antoine Guizot, of Paris, has per fected an electrical apparatus to make dimples in flat cheeks. Bonnets are tending more and more to the elephant's ears fashion. Seme folks say donkey's ears.bnt that is not pretty. Viscountess Aoki, the wife of the newly appointed Japanese Envoy to the Court of St. James, is a German lady of nobis birth. Mrs. Potter Palmer has written a' letter to Mine. Carnot, thanktu French women for their co-opsratioa at tbo World's Fair. Womeu have used muffs since about 1540. They were first nsed by tloc tors to keep their hands warm when they rode from bonne to boas. Wives of Siamese noblemen cut their hair so that it sticks straight u;i from their heads. The average length of their hair is about an incli anl a half. "3everine," who is called inEuropa the "queen of interviewers," and ii one of the brightast woman journal ists in the world, is to visit this coun try shortly. In France, the Senate byllf votes to 79 has agreed to the bill admitting women who are carrying on business to vote in the elections for the Tribunals of Commerce. Pueblo, Colorado, women are hold ing weekly meetings to discuss lo.nl political issues. A law giving women the right to vote has been passed by the .Legislature. Womeu are steadily making their way into church offices. At Bedhill the Wesleyan Methodist Quarterly Meeting has appointed two ladies as circuit stewards. In Kentucky there is only one wo man who bas authority to oHiiate at a wedding in a clerical capacity. Her name is Munns, and shs is a licensed Baptist preacher. Lord Houghton has aaseptei the Presidency of the Bronte Society, formed for the purpose of collecting Bronte relics aii I establishing a museum at Haworth. The French Sosiety for tb.3 Am lioration of the Position of Women resolved to grant an aunuity t j girls of slender means elesiring qilify lor tne career of etruggist. Mrs. French Sheldon, the African explorer, formerly of Pittsburg, has formulated the scheme of colonizing the country with bands of men and women skilled in the different trades anel professions. A corps of women militia is tbe latest step in the emancipation of England. The ladies expect to fulfil all the War Office conditions of effi ciency and promise to be ready to take the held should war break out. Miss Mildred Howells, elaughter of William D. Howells, the novelist, has developed a decided talent for draw ing. It was first made public by her illustrations of a collection of verses and sketches for children several years aso. Two thousand women in California have petitioned ihe San Francisco newspapers to elevate the moral tone of their columns nnd furnish papers free from tho evils they eleplore, sen sationalism, personalities, vicious and debasing news, etc. Fraulein Windscheid, the daughter of Professor Windscheid, the famous authority ou Bonian law, has taken the degree of Ph. D. from the Univer sity of Heidelberg. She is the first woman granted such a privilege by the famous old college. A New Hampshire farmer advertises for a strong, reliable, healthy girl, who can milk, scrub, bake, husk corn, wash and iron, mend clothes, make bonnets, and who is not averse to a little outdoor work. For this he offers a good home "with board." There is somewhat of a swelling note discernible in the lines in which Mra. Jex-Blake, M. D. , announced that, after twenty-four years struggle, the contest for the medical education of women in Edinburgh had been brought to a successful issue. The Empress' Frederick, of Ger many, possesses a unique tea-service. The tea-tray has been buaten out of an old Prussian halfpenny. The tea pot is made out ot a German farthing and the tiny cups are made from coins of different German Principalities. The Harvard Annex (Radcliffe Col lege) now has in productive yielding funds from $210,000 to $220,030. Ten years ago Wellesley College had less than half that amount ; to-day it has a fund of not more than $203,033. Mount Holyoke Seminary has about $270,000. Laselle Seminary, Aubnrndale, Mass., is forming a boat club on unique conditions. Every young woman joining must be able to swim, to tread water while she removes heavy clothing and shoes, an 1 t bring a mate from the bottom of the tank to its edge. A spotted veil broke an engagement of marriage in Kedalia, Mo. The young man thought the spots were facial blemishea and took a trip to St. Louis, from whence he wrote a letter suggesting that times were hard and that the contemplated marriage might better be postponed for a year or two. He got his release by return mail. There is an old lady of Glenlyoa, near Crieff, in Scotland, Mrs. Kippen by name, who is in the position of bi ing able to say : "Bise, daughter, an I go to your daughter, and ask her to co to her daughter's daughter" in oth er words, she is a great-great-gran l mother, and what is more remarkable, all the five generations ara alivd. A movement is in progress to erect a statue to MissPalestrello, of Lisbon, Portugal. She was the daughter of a famous navigator and a part of her marriage dowry was a valuable collec tion of charts and mamoranda of her father's trips. She wa?, besides, an intrepid and enthusiastic traveler. In 1470 she became Mrs. Christopher Columbus. Tin Area of PiStsjnrr. Pittsburg, which used to be a little town squeezed down into the narrow triangle of the junction cf the Alle ghany and Monongahela, has grown into a city of nuusually large area in proportion to its population. The city engineers were cutting streets through dense woodlands more than twenty years ajro, and farms, miles from the city hall, wero held at speculative prioes. The city line is now more than six miles from the Ohio eastward, and its length between the Alleghany and Monongahela is between four and five raieg. Chicago Herald. 10USEKEBFIN6 IN CHINA nmnssK sekvants. ilaxb axt rEMALK, AKP HOW TBXT WOSX. rhelr Wayi Are PeculUr, Bt, After All, They Make Ideal Servant One Woman's Experience. T TOUSEKEEPIXG in China, or f?1 rather in Hong Kong, differs 1 ' mtcrially from housekeep- T ing in Japan. A multiplicity f servants must be employed in the ne as in the other country, but the rreat difference consists in the fact .hat in Hong Kong. nothing can be xnight for the house save through the sonipradore. A compradore, generally rpeakinpr, in places of business is the sashier ; in this case be is the middle nan, and it is useless to rebel against lis rule ; nothing can be done without lim. "Master" himself occasionally grows areary of the compradore'a ytke, and leclarcs ho will market for himself; t would be worse than useless for the Distress to do so, for the Celestials lave no sort of respect for their own r other women folk, says the Pall Mall Gazette. To market "master" goes ; he finds the shops full of meats and vegetables, but not a penny worth can he buy. Vo amount of expostulation avails him ; a thousand and one polite but diaphanous excuses are given him why the goods cannot be sold, and he is perforce obliged to have recourse to the compraJore8 again. One com pradcre usually serves several families, and as a rule serves them well. The "boy" is at the head of the servants, as in Japan, ami is p-iid about the same wages $10 per month. In most households he hires the re mainder of the servants. After him come the cook, the house coolie, and one or two small boys, "lam pidgins" who serve as apprentices, without pay ; then there is a scullion in the kitchen and the market coolie if the family live at the Peak. Usually an amah is kept who waits npon her mistress and does the house hold mending ; her pay averages from ten to twelve dollars. If there are children one or more nurses are em ployed, according to the number. At least four chair coolies are kept, at from six to seven dollars a month ; if the household is a large one, and off the line of the tram, a double number must be employed. Some ladies keep a Chinese tailor the year round, instead of an amah. He costs no more, and he can make dresses and many of the linen and cotton clothes of the men folk, which is a great advantage in that clime, where so many changes are necessary. Some families who aro very particu lar keep a "washman," others send all of the linen out of the house to be done ; this costs but little compared to London or New York prices. The ordinary laundry work done iu Hong Kong is very poor ; shirts and collars are passably laundried, but other things are badly done compared with the work of the Chinese out of China. Chinese servants are peculiar, and one must spend some time in learning their ways and habits, for they imitate many things without trouble, and, as a rule, do exactly as they are told ; still they will persist in doing some things in their own way. They can never be persuaded to do a thing which they do ' not wish to ; they will always take refuge in the laconic answer, "nosavey," which means they do not understand ; and, having once said they do not understand, nothing will ever make them confess they do. As in all Eastern countries, the lines of caste are strongly drawn, and tb.3 European women all white women are called Europeans who asks one of her servants to perform a bit of work not belonging to him soon discovers this fact. "This no blong my pidgin" is a refusal as unalterable as the laws of the Medes and Persians. An amah will refuse to carry even a small parcel for a block, and lose her place rather than do it. The chair coolies will carry "chits" and parcels, but it is beneath the dignity of a boy or an amah to do so. As a race the Chinese have no re spect for women in general, and an un mitigated contempt for any one in particular who chooses to w ait npon herself. They much more admire a woman who lies on tb.3 veranda all day reading novels and occasionally calls, "Boy, bring me my handker chief," or, "Boy, pick up my book," than they have for one who does these things for herself. A boy who has lived in a bachelor's house dislikes very much to go to live where the household is controlled by a woman, and in many cases an old and devoted servant will take his leave if the master brings home a wife. They cannot stand to be looked after in the careful way which so many women think necessary, and it is my opinion that they will take advantage of a wo man twice as often as of a man. How He Spelled His 'ame. The late Ottiwell Wood, one of the leading characters of New England was once summoned as a witness in court. When he was called and sworn, the Judge, not catching his name, asked him to spell it, whereupon Mr. Wood began : "O, double t, i, double n, e, double I, double tt, double o, d." The J ndge was too thick-witted to grasp the meaning of this string of words and letters, and, throwing down his pen in elespair, exclaimed : "Most extraordinary name I ever heard ; will you write it for me, Mr. Mr. Mr. Witness." St. Louis Republic. A madstone cured a Cladsden (Ala.) woman and two children who were bit ten by a mad cat recently. Another madstone owned at Wichita Falls, Texas, has saved 100 lives, according to the abatement of its veracioni Statisticians estimate that there are not less than 50,000 barrels of coal oil used every day for illumination, fuel, etc Your Heart's 9 9 9 9 9 iuc liiusi impui jnui ui your organism. inrrx- a -l fourths of the complaints to which the system b subject yf are due to impurities in the blood. Yon can therefore 2!L realize how vital it is to 9 Onr Treatise on Blood and Skin Disease Mailed Pre to any address. . x3.zSt3 Wliy nut. . ' When the Royal Baking Powder makes finer and more wholesome food at a less cost, which every housekeeper familiar with it will affirm, why not discard altogether the old-iashioned methods of soda "and sour milk, or home-made mixture of cream of tartar and soda, or the cheaper and inferior baking powders, and use it exclusively? ROYAt BAKtNQ POWDER CO., i t V Y " The Electric Cilj. Great Falls, Montana, appears to be fairly entitled to the distinction of be ing called the Electric City. At Black Eagle Falls, three miles above the town, an immense dam has been thrown across the Missouri. Not only are the street cars propelled anl lighted by electricity from the power houses, but they are heated as well by electric radiators placed in each car. Elevators, printing presses, cranes and all kinds of machinery are operated by the force. There are automatic ex cavators, electrio pumps anl clectria rock crushers. A not uncommon sight on the streets is a mortar mixer at-1 tached to an electric wire leading I a i . w.i Tn, i .. 1 cook by electricity, the butcher cm ploys it to chop his sausages, the grocer to grind his coffee and tbe tailor to heat his goose. Tbe subtle fluid is a welcome blessing in every home ; the housewives run their sew ing machines and heat their natirons by electricity; they have electrio broilers and tea kettles, and they bake their cakes in electrio wooden ovens that can be set away on a shelf like pasteboard boxes. New York Tele gram. - The timber Forty iu the Bible, The rain that produced the flood fell for 40 days and 40 nights, and after it ceased it was 40 days ..before Noah opened the Ark. Moses was 40 days on the mountain fasting, and the spies spent 40 elays investigating matters in Ca naan before making their report. Eli jah fasted 40 days in. the wilder nesss, and Jonah gave the people of Nineveh 40 days in which to repent. The 40 days' fast of Jesus is known to all read ers of the New Testament. St. Louis Bepublic. The "four oVlocks" open regularly at 4 o'clock rain or shine. It tha f oucwing letters had been written Ly your best known and most esteemed neighbors tbey coukt be no more worthy of your confidence than tbey now are, coming, ns they do, from well known, intelligent, and trustworthy ritiaene, who, in their several neighborhoods, entoy the fnUest confidence and respect of ail who know them. Tbe cubject of the above portrait is a well known and much respected lady, Mrs. John G. Foster, residing at No. 33 Cbapin Htrcet, Canondaigua. N. Y. 8be writes to Dr. R. V. fierce, Chief Consulting Physician to tbe Invalids' llotel and Surgical Institute at Buffalo, N. Y., as follows: "I waa troubled with eczema, or salt-rheum, seven years. I doctored with a number of our home physicians and received no benefit whatever. I also took treatment from ph Tiicia ns in Rochester, New York. Philadelphia, Jersey City, Bingham ton, and received no benefit from them. In fact I have paid oat hundreds of dollars to tbe doctors without benefit. Mr brother came to visit oi from tb West and be told meto try Dr. Pierce s Ooldu Medical Discovery. He bad taken it and U had cored bun. I have taken tea bottles of tbe Discovery,' and am entirely coram, and if there should be any one wtmhlBf any information I would gladly correspond with them, if tbey enclose return stamped ravetope." Mot iaaa reeaarkable is tbe following from Mr. J. A. Barton, a prominent aaercbant ot Jackson. If. C, who says : " I had been troubled with ski a disease all my life. As I grew older tbe msaaoa asemed to be taking a stiougei bold apoo ana. I tried many advertised remedies with no betM-flt, until I waa led to trylr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, vfbea I began taking it my health waa vary poor : in fact, several persona have atncetold me that tbey thought I had the eonaomptkm. I weighed only about ttSpoanda The eruption oa my akin was accompanied by severs rtctaing. It waa first coafined to my face, bat afterwards spread over the nock aad head, and the itching be came ttmpiy nbaratU. This waa ray coo dittoo when I began taking tbe Discovery.' tVhea I would rub tbe parta affected a kind mt brassy ecale wocud fan oa. Blood 9 9 9 9 9 Keep It Pure.cj 1 x SKTIt .fB'W:l For which nothing equals 8. 8. 8. It effectually removes all imrmritie. rloanaos the blood thor oughly and builds up the general health. 9 tVTrT ttTt'Vl M l"if fi I ertWle bJi ftuatl, M. Meed-? I ICS WALL 6T.. NEW-YORK. r.Yftv.i-rrtVf-Yr70VllT "T Vt? (.'emu: mo and Ills Iirarr George Ganr, an Apache Indian, aged about tweuty-one years, and a splendid specimen of physical man hood, returned to the Mescalero res ervation btt week from school at Mount Vernon, Alabama, having com pleted his education. Captain John L. Ginu interviewed Ganz in relation to the condition of the noted men of Geroiiiio'a Chirieabua Apaches, who spilled so nni oh blood in Arizona, New Mexico and Sonora a few years ago. Gauz says that old Geronimo baa aged so thpidly in the past few years, his liair now being almost aa white aa snow, though he in still robust and hearty. Nana has also aged until ha is decrepit and almost helpless. The desperate and seemingly implacable Black Maugus, who took his fourteen followers and left Geronimo because the latter merely suggested a second surrender to General Cook, and who, after his own capture by tbe troops under General Miles, fought tho sol diers in tho cars and jumped from a window while the train waa under full headway, is now a quiet, obedient sol elier one of our country's ilefenders. ' Geronimo would like to return, but is .' afraid the people of Arizona would' kill him if he did. El Paso (Arizona) A Voracious Enemy o! Fruit. A Northern paper says: If anything on earth is more voracions than tbe vedalia cardinalis, the enemy of the fruit scale, it is yet to be discovered. From the cradle to the grave it does nothing but eat, and when the board is cleared of the scale, it turns in and eats its own relative, until at last there is left but one big fat vedalia, with the concentrated blood in his veins of billions of insect victims. San Francisco Chronicle. : a : it1'' For a while I taw no change or benefit from taking the 'Discovery,' but I persisted in it use, keeping my bowels open by taking Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets, aad Using aa much outdoor exercise as waa possible, until I began to gain in nosh, and gradually the disease released its boid. I took daring the Sear somewhere from fifteen to eighteen bot es of the Discovery.' It has mow been four years aiuoe I first oasd It, and though not using scarcely any suae tbe first year, my health continual good. My average weight being 15S to 160 pounds, instead ef IZ aa it waa when I began tbe ose of tbe ' Discovery.' Many persoua have reminded j me of my improved appearance. Borne say I look younger than I did six veara ago when I was married. I am now forty eight years old, and stronger, and enjoy better health than I have ever doct before in my life." Youn tmi- x .-Jt t ' 1 i Thousands bear testimony, in equally strong terms, to tbe efficacy of this wonderful ram-1 edy in curing tbe most obstinate clmana. It roasts every organ into healthy action, port-' Sea, vitalises and enriches the blood, aad, through it, cl earn as aad renew tbe whom system, jail blood, skin, and aoalp dJeaaast, from a common blotch, or erapUoa, te the worst scrofula ere cured by Ik For tatter,! salt-rheum, ecaema, erysipelas, boils, car-,' buncies, goitre, or thick neck, and enlarged I glands ami swellings, it is an ajasqaeieoV remedy. Virulent, cvnUiqurM, blood-poisottl is robbed of its terrors by tbe 44 Discovery " ; and by its persevering us (As eaoet UtfnUd i system renovated and built tap anew. i A Book on Disease of the Bkin. with cot-' ored plaUa, Illustrating tbe various erno-f tions, mailed by tbe Werld's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y, oa receipt of sir cents for postage- Or, a Book on Scrofulous Diseases, as BhvJoiaa Disease, "Fever Bore," " Whit SweUiags," "Old Bores," or Ulcer, mailed for same amount in stamps. - 11,.!, W. l PQCOtVAS mm ttom woes, comae- vwm bett value for ths Ies asy wis. Na aad erte a Otc bourne. K"rj rfirriiiw3tf- lilWi 1 inr ipc4 Otc bourne. ry I v-rjKaAkM, late. Sec local paper far fell L. . 1 .1 m naihu siaasnui. 1 srH- ereysBsiL rwsfr. Vs ce get tie keel bargains ef dealer was pass, ear saeca. 8 1 U. .18 CevsaewttTee aad scop Is was aave warn leass er Asta a.enoeJa'BS rWsOBrefor Coesaaipttoa. It has esira ft baa aot la ram ri ona. It Is aot be4 tola. It is tae bwt eoaeh una Boss everrwaara. Sate. XT'. MM AS V i
Marion Record (Marion, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 4, 1894, edition 1
3
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