Newspapers / Marion Record (Marion, N.C.) / Aug. 22, 1895, edition 1 / Page 4
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Hrousht to Llfrtat. At a Reuer.il election in England, a candidate tiereonilly unknown to the voters of a certain borough was asked ly artj leaders to stand for it. He Lieloage t to a good familj, and was a tiarrisier of promise in London. Ilia path to success was open, as tbo borough belonged to his partj. Bat when ho raouutel the platform to nidrftss the electors, after a sentence ix two he suddeJly became pale and confused, his eves fixed on a board op posite on which was scrawled with charcoal, "Forty pounds!" He tumbled through ft short speech, and thfu hurriedly left the stand. A few days later he ro3e to speak in another town, and again the myster ious words written in black on the wall confronted him. Again he left the platform, and that night retired (ro:u the contest for the seat in Parlia ment. Not long afterward he disap peared from public life, and retired to an Kuglish colony where he hid him self on a ranch. 'The words, it was found, referred to a theft committed in his youth, which ho supposed had been forgotten. Aleiis l'iron, the Trench poet and satirist, sought for many years to ob tain a s"it Hin-ii the Forty Immortals in the French Academy. He was rec ognized among the poets of his day, mi l w,n confident of hi ultimate al ini'Mon. when a vile ode, written when h- .is a boy, was brought to light. Hi) 1 li knew that the door of the Acn k-iny was closed in his face for ?ver. fn both of the great political parties of this country there have been iu M ui'tt.'M of men eminent in mental abil ity, who have failed to receive the high political honor?, bfcausrt of the t-halow of Koine fault or folly of their larlier d-iyn. lU hiii l nil tho happiness if life, be lnii I even tills love, thero is such a thiir; us l i.v. 'Vho lreaks it always j'nv-tin.) p'Mi i!t v." (lol in'iy forgive 1 1 ii, bit the lilies on his face, the taint in his soul, remain to tell of tho vi "f hit early layj. Youth'd Com puuton. Traint'TTlaiiic. I have recently ha 1 in my liouie n wonderful txunjiio f thy "train;! baby." ft could "jo to bleep all lom-y hisHf lf. " Iut, by tho way, hif mother never talked baby to bin;, but plain Kuglih in few word, and he fceemel to utilerstaud every word. Th"ii, to see a busy, active baby ten months or a year old, sit at the. table and never "muss tho table cloth," or raed lle with the lis!ie-, or tip over the glass of water or nan-jo, all within reach, although ho active he had all the time to jump or perform harmless athletic, probably in training for football or baseball. And as he had his proper lunch beforo tho first course, ho rarely asked for anything at tho table, and if ho did, he knew thnt "So, Tjoe" meant no. Then, did you ever think a ten-months-old baby could be trained ti help mother, rather than be "always a bother" aud hindrance? Lee wai encouraged to help mother, nnc thou rh Mr. Jones was perfectly able to u- a luuso girl to wait on ivt , fdi" hi I train" I him beforo he wm i year l 1 no that when fihe had swept he wanted on his dusting cap, aud, with his little, dusting cloth, won! I rreep round an 1 dust tho chairs, etc., as htfjh o s ho could reach. Now thi is no fancy sketch, but is just what any mother can bring about. Chica go Advance. At NYi-t Ko-Uporr, Me., Daniel Andrew--, w!i it ninefy-.uv, recently h-dpc I to string ) ) rods of wire loncc over Soruce Mouutaiu. FITS stopped free by lin. Ki. ink's ( J it fat Nfrvk li-f-T !. fh. Nn i". i r.lt t irt ilnv's n-o. Mnrvclois inn'-. Tr.-n t i it tt 1 l'.Mri'l bot tle frr.-. lr. Klin-.Wl Arch M., I'liila., l'a. , 8100 Iimril. ttiOO. Thr.wbr of Cm t. ;.t- v;:i V j.VnnM to leiirii tti.t I hfre H lit ha a (.. i!n-:i(!f(l (:; ); that nci-u-o h.n I n fll) t i-'i; in a l'iis (i.-ii, and tli it n iM'r-.rili. Iii'i'.i t'-ilnrih J'litnM Hi only imo ear.- ,v ,,,, lo .ha m-tn .aI mi. r..;iy. r iturrit tirtri k a cui- tLltll'i.iiiil lniii.t, lti'i res ii C.l.Mli'M iiu,l l.-f.ilin.Mit. Hull's I'humiK Cur.i m tnl.eiiiit lei'italiy, net ii' ilir.vt y ihk.ii tV, b'ool .ml Inn oti.i wi-mii-i t-f tin e tli. reiy Mill Villi.- til f.HlU.I.'tl.-tl ri!:t) ll'ti'i f. ; Ii riving I'k- ln(..it m i ii.;tb .y l.iiil.if ils. up t)n tMti-lilii'i.tit nn t ffs.Miio it..t!i'M i ! l i i, ' i ?"rk. 'I'U M-;ri-t.r! I. . v,. .... f ,,.TV j' Its onmt v, is t ' ut i .--v - 1. r i.,,. ijiin Hro.l Ii,. ,, 4 f.,.. ,. ,.st ,, (l )f tlli f. t(,(1!lli ben t f. l ..i 1. , ,,.,,, A.i !i . 1 ' 'kmv .t ' i. (.Jo, (J. I !. ..n.y lrt!ii.t', TV. A New View of ur. It U i!i'ii,l ; , - ..if.ii 1 1," t r iCt- of thu lit.-m i ii f , in inli. i- p.... 't.. i-i-, : l,.,.- f, -.v p. l.M.,u ,i . "I n m !' ". ' K Ii.m! ."('' I t.ni t -. vi . i'i.m : tr. ;iir.'. M. t illUV. IH I -M ji( I HI i i ! t t I,.. I,..t t I I, "f .'II your mis ! i. .ui 1 .1 l. ivcf hip iii . T.t"i! WiiijIiI i( ..ii ;mi cm' 11. lv new x 11 w of life. I'liir nn l lii.rtni(. (JimHtr rmi-MvuN t., .Vil. npp.vai t li- ( ', f. U'l'iM UntiM tfiiif ly. Syrup of Fi. It fi pl-csaiit t-.ttiot,,?-,. t.y.ctinK cently on lh- ki.lny. !,,,T mt.1 U o,M..8 ;. tern rfT fully, it .wm.M th,. 1,1. Ii nnl romfort vf n iio m it. a,i wit li mill,, ni It Utlic tnut ami only r-nn.ly. Mrn Wln-low'sSoothin? Pynp forrhtl-trn toct lit uir. nft .-us Ilp piim.. r.'iln. h iiitSritpt. tlon. alliiv I'nin. nn v i . c.V. t..:t'f AVlft nttft "MoTiifR'n FrttFNn" bo fn-frt rliilit -W!inui( kly rv ivvt. .iitT.Mi' I mt littlf; rt-rovi ry t :pi.t K. F.. Johnston, hut mln. Al.i. I'U.i-.. i'ur. I th- inf.tif'n. t hr.-ik nn r liil.lr. uV 'iuch mvl r.iliK ....Mv- t. l'.n-Nr. N" -u. V;ini., Mm v. li s. - Mother AiprreI.to the ;o. l Work of ri tier's liiTici-r Tonic. it li it -i n i inf iie.ili t i.w...;, , t,i tt,,. jxiu-.tri! k i nn.l ll'TX nil.. Ifnfllii t.l with orfi4 it lr. .:i.-- Tiinni . urn's Fvo lv.Uvr. Iirucci-t--.-lint i- pel i.tlo IVJakes the Weak Strong noM'i. ?.ir?;rariila tones and itrcnslh..,, tn- .1iS-..(ivo crsaiw.orratw na rrtit, ru 1 ood's Sarsaparilla 1 tho one Truo Blood Turiner. Hood's Pills jSuiyaaag.r SAW MILLS kkim'u". water VVheels and Hay Presses. I. , . ,l!1:sr 'M"K .MAl.KKT In , 6,ZV- Tk V - . -...i n, unirpiat Lillys TEARS WIPED AWAY. DR. TALMAfiE'S SUNDAY TIIE3IE Jesus Sympathizes With All Thosi Who Arc In Trouble. Text: "And Ool pba!l wip away all tears fr rr their eye?." Revelation vi!.. 17. Rilin:r n"r-'s.-i n Wi-ilrn pr.vr. wll I flow f-r up tr tie- loi'i of the carri;i?e whe -A. and while a lonv"lif-tiin''e from nny .-helter. there f aTf a fu l'ln fliowr. nn l while therain faMintr in torfnt-". the Min wa !iinin? n- t riclitlv ;i: I fvr Pfiw it phin and I th .ti-.'lit what a leH'itifiil f-r-eoteijle this i'! So th t'-r -.f th Jii.l ri not mi Inipht r l'.r;i. 11 1 r toi on p:mi" I 1 ntr;"' in Ood'3 t -in I f ,,.l.-n '-inliL'lit. Yo'J rernf-niher th 1: !. ,tfp; whi-h I' tvi 1 Ih-j 1 a' 'ontaio ius if nr. . Mftd Mary tar-. and Paul's tar. nn I liri-t's tearr. and the harvt of joy that i-t to M riii' tr-ii 1 1 s..in ot te r. (' I tnr th'-re. f'nj rounds thun. God 'V.-.v- th-iii w:ir.' to fall. God xii-tl4.- t i-p. A i . i-i taken of them, and thre .- a if - r I :n lo tli" mo'nf-ni whn thy ire I.'im a:: 1 n- toth'- pl.T'i ot th"ir sravi. i f.11. f l ad m-n are not kept. Ale.x-Mi'lf-i 01 ! 'rr"'T had the hair flipped fr n hi. h-'iia-M a" I mulfi aa I ma a u'rat a '' iili'.nt hi- erif. lint in all th v '.! of li n v-ii thf-r- 1.- 11 ot fii" 'if Ale.a'r"ors toar-. I sp -ak -if tli" ti-ar ot God' eiildrn. AU.J. i:v. th v an- falling all th tiirif! In unr: "iii r you ; i.:m tin!'-.-; bar th jrrowlinir tliim a.i v.u .-' Ihre i- a fd-irrn rnilerf nrav. 1 u; ynii kn..w from the jl ri ft of th ''i;i'.' t'tit it will not foiT' anv n)iie 1, -ar y.ii. So though it may all I rit'lit aioun I aootit you. there is a shower ..f trou:.!'- s'tu- wh'TH all the time. Tear-! Tfif-' V.'liat is the hh of th'm anybowV Why ti snh-ilil iite laiiifhler' Wiivimt iftl'"lhi. a not Id wli-T-all the peopl" are w ;ll an I clf.-n 1 .lra:i?f'r--to pain and a-diPi? What isiifii of nn -.-i.-tTii f-torrn when wo i:ii"iu h.ive a if-rp' tual nor' welter." Why. win 11 a fa -nily i-. put together, not hav; Ih.i nil stay, "r if tlii'y must hi tranp'anf- I to hi V" oth'-r horn"-, then hav .! liiem all I I vi---!h" family reeord t'-llim. a slorvol u-.r.t 1 ia'-s and hirths, hut of 11 death? Why ti.. 1 have th' hnrvi'fd eha' e.i -h other wilh- ui 'a icoii-ir tfil? Why th' hard pillow, 1'ie h ird Tii.t. the har I striiMe? It i- easy en i i rli lo fTpl iin a h mile, or a r-u- 'es'. .r a firjci ' ulat ion. Init I'ome now and to insr tll y.iin- ili.'liuiiarie.. and all your philo.f ipiiies. an I all y..ur relitfif.ns, and hel. m explain a h' li. A iierni-it will tell you th.lt it i-i 1'iM.le up uf .-alt and lime and other e.n.ipo ni'i I part-!. I, ut h iuis"thechief imrri'ilif nts he ,vid ff a soured life, the viperine Hiinc a hitter memory, tho fragments of a l.ri.k-n heart. J will tell von what a tmr r. Il if au'f.nv In solution. Hear, then, while I i'i-;-'.ilir-e of the uses of trouh'.f-: I'ir.t. it is the design of trouhle to kerr tii:s wrld fr'im hems; loo attra-Si v. Some tiling must he done to mak us willing to uir this e.isteii"e. If if wer not for trr.tiMe. Ihi WoM would h n troud enfiilh lo'iiven for me. Vou audi would In willing t-. taken h-aso ..f thi life for lOfl.Om.OOl yi iu-a if thi i " were no trouhle. The earth enshi.'iio I and upholstered and pillared and i-bari 'Mii-red with sii'di expense, story of f iiifr worlds eould enchant us. We w-'.tild say: well euou'il a'on'. f" vi. 11 want to din nn l have your ho ly di.--inW'L'i-aicl in the dust and your soul un out on a e..et i;il adventure, tiien you e.m iro. 'I.' ihis w rid is Rood enough for mo!'' You Mi-M :i well lto tf .1 man who has hist en "r .1 th.- Louvre at Paris and tell him to h. 'istf 11 off to the mature jrnlleries of Venien ' rinrene.. ' Why," he would say. "what i. ih.' ii-e of inv Koing there? There are 1! n! i an Its and Idtihenses and Itujihaels h"re t!mt I l-.aven't looked nt yet." No man va:1 t'i jro out of this world, or out of any hons". until he has a hetter house. To fiire ihi-swis'i to stay here God must sorivhow r-vife a disgust for our surroundings. How .hull He i'o It? He cannot afford to deface IF.s h tr7,'n, or to tear off a fiery pan d fro u th smisff, or to subtract an anthor from t'm va! it lily, f.r to Kmlsh the juintrent aroma ir.en the mignonette, or to lraj the ro'vs of !h' mr'rniiif in mire. Vou cannot exnee a Christopher Wren t mar his own Sr. Paul's C:;'!)e l'a'. or n Miehal Anelo t dash out h:.-; own "Ln-t .1 ud-ment," r a Hmdel to dieor. his "Isimd in K-'vpl," ait 1 you -an- len ev;.fef Clod to !-poil the arh i fe.'t u r and v.iusie i.f His own worh". How. then, an we to he ma dewilliii to leave? Here is where Irinihleeomes in. After a no: 11 has had a Rood deal of I rouble lie sim-: "Wei!. I nm re:vly to . If there is a hoii.e f.i::V, hf re whose roof doesn't l-ak. I would li lo live there. lr tlvr is an a'mosphi" somewhere that does not du tres the lr.n'--, I would like to bro-ithe it. "If tlmre is a soi.'lv S'lmewh'-re where ther is no tittle taltl", I would Ilk ' to live th"re. If there is a home elr d-. s-.:n.-'.vli'r wiser-. lean lin-l mv l--t fri'-n h I w il I like to no th-re." use 1 to rea 1 th- r'iit part ui the r.ibie ehieilv. now h" reads th P'-( part of th' Uib!" eh! !! v. Whv !' is eh.v.H-e! C -iie.. used he :i!ii world w is i-i;: ; for It'vdat ion.' Ah, hi hi"ily to know how v'.iis a ,i!i nit its .'..l .i '-il . elii'dly i!iioi to rid v.as made, and live ihere. II 1 1 -1 ho V eori-tni tio;. ...v h know- how t lr ii 'xt !i"v it an I wi th-v .lr.. H-.i 1 r. 'ii'.! ion tee t i::e -s .is-..,.'. Ti;.. ,.l,l ; Go-1 . re i(e 1 t ie do- u t I in ill him st.'I V. " I - I V a !O V 'Vhe.e Il" I-. ,..! ti-;.-St.'iv, the l.eeini.ii. heavens n u I tii" e-uth."' hllU mueh :;.s Ih 1 ell liev peavi'Il 1111 I .1 Il 'W ear'h." Tne dd man"; hand t r- ii ! ;..s h. t urni i-vr th'n apo:alv tie !e;if. an I h ha ; t" t ak" out his handkei ''hi. f to v. ip bi ; s e.'t.l h-a. Thai book of Itevelati'-n is a pf.sp-iv.v of i.iee ",'iny ieio w"ni'ii h" is soon t.immi t'i:iO ; thee i'iutiv in whi.-h he has l..(s a! 1 '' I lid :;(. and hv ihi-'s npene I. and i'i i-i-i'Ois l uilt. Vet tie-r ' are 1 eoj.le her" to wb nn th: wer! I i.. l-iik-h!er tlmn heaven. Well, dear souls. I d i' t hl:i'n" you. It is natural, r.u' after it whil" y m will be ready to U". It .i-:;o( uniil .1.!. ha I tien worn out with ; re iveruent- t!i;it le wante 1 to see (; . It v a ; ii-.t untd the pr01Me.il g,.t tire 1 of living ;;i" -i.w- th" h'v;s that he want" ! to u o to his f:i'h.-r'.-- hous". It is the mini-try of trouble to mak" this w ri t worth l"ss and h-avut worth nere. A'.'io'. it is the use of trouble to m-tke us ii- I . ur depetideneo Upon trod. M-n think 1 hut ibey fan do anything until Go I shows them they noltiin': at h'1. We lav out ii' meat piu-. and we like to execute them. It I -oks bi.-. (i .. comes and tnkes us down. As Prometheus was as-ault.d by his ene ny, wliert th" lane.' .-tru.'k him it opened a eteat mm !Pn' that ha I threatened his death, nn 1 he ti-t well. So it is the nrrow of trouble tIntl"t-out ureat swel inss of pride. Wu ii' e. feel mir dependence upon Go 1 until we l;. t trouble. I whs riding with my little hil l iilcii;- the road, and sh nsked if she miiint drive. 1 said. "Certainly.'' I handed over th" reins to her. and 1 lml to admire th" ul '" with which she drove. But after .iwhil. v.e met a team and we had to turn out. The road was narrow, and it was sheer down on both sides. She handed the reins over to me nnl said. "1 tHiik you had better take churKeof the her-e." So wt are nil childreu. and on this roa 1 of life we like to drive. It uvea in' s-.i h au appearance of superiority and l--wer. (t looks Lie;. But itfter awhile we m.-et some .Testa. "aii I we have t. turn fuit, and he r a I i- narrow, aud it is -heer down "it b..th -ides; an.l th"n we ar.' willing that G d should take th- i-on ; and drive. Ah. mv frien !s. we Cet u-.s'.' s often l-'aus-' XTe do n,.t h.'tn I over the reins -o mi iii ii,m, VTier a man h us ha 1 trouble, praver is with him n takinc hol l ,,f t ie arm of" C, vl and .-ryi-icoiit for help. 1 h ive lie ird .vtrn-'st prayers 011 two or thne -! ins that I re member. One ..11 th" C.n'inna'i express train. Loim: a! forty mil.-s the h mr, thetrain jumped the tra'k, an I we wer r a eham eiehty feet .Jeep, and the men who. R feT minutes before, had lw..n swarinc and bias 1 'hem in u (i d, U'jan to pail anl jerk at th- U-ll rope and cot 111. m the hu-ks of th" sea's. an, l . rie,l out. ' O G- 1. sjivh ns'" Tlier was another time. a.!out RiV miles ut at sea. on n foundering steamer, after thela-t lifeboat had been .spin finer than kindliitif wood. They prayed then. Why is t you s often hear people, in recitinc "the la-t exp-rienee of some friend sav made the most beautiful praver I ever h.-ird." What m:tk-s it beautiful? It is th -arn i-tness of i Oh! I tell vou. a man is in earnest wh-n his strit.pelan l uake 1 sfil w.t-les out in the soundless, shoreless, i,0(. tomless in of iternity. I is trouble, my fri-nds. tiif.t makes us teel on- depen deiiee np,.n Cod. We do not t.now our own Weakness or God's tr-n 'th until the last plank breaks. It is contempti ble in ,M w;,en th re is not nine: else to t.tk" l".l I of that we e.it.-h hold of G1 onlv. v hv. y u d . not know who th Lord is! lit i- not an nutoerat seated far up iu h pala -e from which He emerEes once a year.ureceded by heralds swimrin? swr Is to clear the way. No. But a Father wiiline. nt oar call, to stand by us 111 every crisis au l r reiicameut of life." I tell you what some of yon busi ness mn make me think of. A youa; maa ros oft from home to earn his fortun?. H-j proes with bis mother's consent ani benlic tion. She has Urn wea'th, but he wants to ma'te his own fortune. He noes far awav, falls sick, nets out of money. He sends for the hotel keener where he is stayin?. akin? for lenience, and the answer he gets i". ' If you don't pay ur Saturday night, you'll be remove t to th? hospital." The yourui man sn'ls to a comrade in the same building. No help. He- writes to a banker who was a friend ot hi deass-I father. No re'ief. He writes to an oil s"h j .dmate, but nets no help. Saturday nicrhf eijir.a. -m, he is moved to the hospita'. G?ttins there, he is frenziel with crief. an t 11 - borrows a shet of papr and a post acre stamp, an 1 h- sits down, and h writes nn.", styimr: "f'e.ir mother. I am sick un to death." Cm".'' It is ten minutes of M o'clock when sh-? Rets the letter. At 19 o"- I the train starts. She is fl ve minute front the depot. She g.-ts there in time to hive five minut-a to spare. She wonders whv a train that cau go thirty mibis an hour e .inn.it c sixty miles an hour. She rushes iio the h-j-,'tl. 8iiea: "Mysou, what di -r. all th s m tt? Why didn't you sen 1 for me.' Vou .-"nt to everybody but me. You ku-w I eou' l and would help you. Is this i'i" rew tid I get for my kinlness to you al wns?'' She bundles him up, takes him hone nnl e -ts him well vry soon. Now, om of you tr-at G l just as that yonn min tratei his mother. When you get into a iln tn ?ial p"r.le.xily, you call on the ban ker, you call on the broker, you call on your ere mor ?, you can n your lawyer for legal ooutisel; you ca'l upon everybody, and wh-n vi 1 ertnnoi. trt a-iyhelp. then you g j to Go Vou sav: "O, Lord, I come to The Help me n)W out of m.v perplexity." Aud the Lor I 1 ne, though it is the eleventh hoif. He say.- -. "Why tid you not ?en.l for M before? A one whom his mother eomforteth. so will I comfort you." It is to thr f.v us bi?k upon God t oit we have this ministry of tears. A'lain. it is thi use of trouble to eapvi ttte us for the olTd-e of pyiupat'iy. Tho .ries(.c. under the old dispensation, v.er.i s t apart by having water sprinkled upon their hands, feet aud hea l, and by the sprinkling of tears people are now set apart to the offl -e of sympathy. When we are in prosperity we lik" to have a great many young people niotind u. and we laugh when they laugh, am', we romp when they romp, and we sing when they sinpr; but when wo have trouble we like plenty of old folks around. Why? They know how to talk. Take au aged mother, seventy years of ng' and she is almost omnipotent in comfort. Why She has len through it nil. At 7 o'clock in tho morning siie goes over to comfort a younn mother who has just lost her babe. Grandmother kuows all about, that trotible. Fifty years ago shi felt it. At 12 o'clock of that day she goes over to com fort a widowed soul. She kuows all about that. Siie has been walking in that dark, valley twenty years. At 4 o'clock in llr" ufteriioon some oni knocks at the door, wanting bread. She knows all about that. Two or three t im"s in her life sho came to her last loaf. At 10 o'clock that night sh noes over to sit up with some one severely sii-k. She kuows all about it. She knows all about fevers and pleurisies an 1 broken bones. She has been doctoring all her life, spreading plasters aud pouring out bitter i!rops and shaking up hot pillows au l eon triving things to tempt a poor appetite. lrs. Abernethy and Rush and Hosack and Harvey were sat doctors, but the greatest doctor the world ever saw is an old Christian woman. Dear me! D wo not remember her about the room when we were sick in our boyhood? Was thero auy one who ouldeverso touch a sor without hurtint; it? Wiieu I began fo preach, my sermons on . th ; : uoje.'i oi trouble wer;j all poetic and in s ui blank vers. but God knocke lthe blank vts out of mi long aero and I have found out tha: I e.iun j: comfort petplo except as I myself have b?en troubled. God mako me ih" sou of consolatiou to tho people! I W'-iu Id rather bo tho means of soothing one p-rturbed spirit to-day than to play a tune t!i if wou'd s"t al! the sons ot mirth reeling in the fiance. 1 am tin herb doctor. I put iuto the cal dron the root out of dry ground, without form or comeliness. Then I put in tin rose of Sh-iron and the lily of the valley. Then I put into tho caldron some of the leaves from tin tree of life and thebraueh that was thrown into tho wilderness Marah. Then I pour in the tears of li ethaay and Golgotha; then I stir them up. Then I kindle under l he caldron a fire mad-.) out of the wood of the cross, and one drop of that portion will cure the worst sickness thnt ever afflicted a human soul. Mary and Martha shall receive their Lazarus from tho tomb. The damsels shall rise. And on the darkness shall break the morning and God will wipe all tears from their eyes. Jesus had enough trial to mako Him sym pathetic with all trial. Tho shortest verse in tho Whin tells tho story, "Jesus wept." The scar on tho back of His either hand, tho scar on the nrch of either foot, tlm row of scars nloug the lino of the hnir, will kei.p all heaven thinking. Oh, that Great AVeeper is just tho one to sileuco nil earthly trouble ivii.n nilf nil ufnlna .,f ... .-1 1. 1 if rtr I ,.l r!"..l!l Why, Ills step is softer than tho step of tho dew. It will not bo a tyruut bidding you to hush up your crying. It will bo a fat her who will take you on His left arm, ITif face, oeaming into yours, while with the sort tips of the fingers of the right hand He shall wipo away all tenrs front your eye?. Friends, if we could get any appreciation of what God has in reserve for it, it would make us so homesick we would bo unfit for our everyday work. Professor Jjeonard, formerly of Iowa University, put iu my hand n meteoric stone throwit oft' from sonie oth er world to this. How suggestive it was to me! And I have to tell you the best rep resentations wo have of ' heaven aro only n'-rolit.-s flung off from that world which rolls .ut bearing the multitudes of there deemed. We analyze these aerolite? and find them crystallizations of tars. No won der, flung off from heaven! '-God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes." Have you any appreejation of the good and glorious times your friends aro having in h-aven? How different it is when they get news there of a Christian's death from what it is here! It is the dilT-renca between em barkation and cop-.ing into port. Everything depen.ts up Jn whi-'h sid of the river you stand when you hear of a Christian's death. If you stan I on this side of the river, you mourn that thy go. If you stand on the oth-r side of th river, you rejojee that they come, (bt the differen-e between a funeral 0:1 earth an 1 a jubie in heaven between r pn-vn hure aul triumph ther oarting here and r-union there! Together! Have you thought of it? Th-y ar together. Not one of your denarte 1 ; jn 0n bind and Knottier in an -tiir inn 1. nut together, in dif ferent rooms of th- stm- hou-e the house ! of m my man-ions. Together! j I never more appre datel that thought thai whn w laid aw.tv in h-r last slumbar my si-ter Sarah. Stan b.ng there in the vil lage eemefery. I look-1 around and said. "There is father, there is mother, there is grin Jfath"r. there is grin ln .th"r. there ar ) wh )! cir.d.-sof kiu Ire 1." and .1 thf-uihtto i myself, ; Together in the grave Log-nhr j in glory." I am st imnr-sset with the J thought that I do n t think it is any fanati- ! ''' n when some on" is giug from this w tI I toth nxt if you m ike them th j b-vtrer of dis)at"he to your frieu is who an , g me. saying, "Giv. my lore to my parents. 1 give my 1 n my chil lr m. " giv my ! I e (. mv 1 1 eo r.ru les .vh nr-i iu glorv. ! u I t-.dl th--n I am trying to fight the go i i fight of faith an 1 I will join th vn after i awhile.'' I l.eliev the me i-e will .d"- ' l v ej nri i h.di-T" it will in-re-is. th 1 ;:!u ln-ss of th os ? wh a-- b -f.-r" th ; throne. X '.'-ther are they. at t(l .;r t tr . j My frienis, takj th:s zul ch.'-r homo j w.ihyou. The tear of tiere.iv? nent that . . mr. . y.e.ir cheek, an 1 of persecution, an i I ft'. ti. are nt always to b- ther". Th-s j m 'Iti-Tiyhinlot Gi'l will wipe them all ; awy. What is the use. on th" wav to sue't l a eoasn ur.fionwhat is the ue of fretting : h i -uc auythin;.' h. what an exhilaration ! if ' liihttob ' t:t Canstian work! See yoU j th t innaeie? against the skv? It is the city j .. our G I, an t we are appr' .a-hing it. oh, I 1 t u s b busy in the days that remain for us! i I rut this balsam on thewounlsof vour j h-ur. K:oice at the thDug:.t of what vour I ileparte l f,-iad- have g.u rid or. ani'that ( v.. i ha-.? a pr 'spe.'t o! P-i-:i making your , cvn-s.Mpc. Iiareii-er;uliy th ministry of ' i i . :ut I exuli at the thought that soon It j I- : I - fn li. j 'l h re we shall march rip the heavenly street j Au I go ju I oir arm? at Jesus's feet. ' faf-t uin Th -mis I.. H .rv. the ,K... a,t, x BILL ARP'S LETTER. OISSEBTATIOX UPON nAPri NESS AND CONTENTMENT. The Rich Declare That Wealth Does Not Brlnjc It, While WUllam Sayt It Helps Considerably. Tie Lines are masculine ma ad and (fillet men more thn women. Wom;n ht mere grief and torrow, but when there ia no greit trouble in the hon?e they are na'nra'l more cheerful than the men. I notice it very fieqitcntly tht.4 lrhile I am worried and per plexed about temporal thing and can't ice my way out and finl nnvlf in a fii of the L!u?',idt wi'e and danzb'eri keep their ipiri tip. n 1 o'her w. men cone and fo and t'k and langh j ami av 1'nght tiling". J'hat is all rivdit. l: woul I be aw f ul for the ttho'o family ;o have the Hues at the same time. In fict. nobody ought to have them and nobody i ohlijred to thiTj tLeat. Jhey creep a -altl lly upon h man cmetime. and if he does nt fight thf-ni cfl he is titt p-or company. My w.fe eayg I look like I dident ltvc a friftid in the world, 'lhe b st remedy is to qu t ttd k ing and go to work. Do semi hing work in the gardt.li, chop omo woo1, fix the wi do curtain , tie tip U.f U iWers, swing the j,ran children do o:utLing to divert yonr ni nd from yourself. It ih l etter to read a ntory than to think and brokl over trouble that may nev t come. 'Jbebslyis io inyH'erionsly conn, e'e 1 i li the mind that lhe bhus impair digestion, and that causes loss of appetite, and the AM thing a man known be is sit k sore enough. I Las been suppose 1 that the bcert was ihe tet of the afTeciions and emotions, b it that is a mii-take. It in the st mach, and if that is out of order the whole b.xly is sick. The Bib c tells about bowels of nt:-rcy and bowels of com panion. AnoM ex Rood way to drive off the blues i to wii'e k'tteru to kindred and fricn 's and ventii t': ynr troub f s and abuse eomebody. G.vc jonr fe lugs an explosion and you will rind r lief. 1 had mch a letter from a tiiend the other day and he wound up bv savin.': ''And now I think I feel lietter, plague take 'em." Siimetimfs a i w fr-.m the oiuer side produc r a reaction. Outsider the folks around yon who are worse on itnd yet keep cheerful ami thank-fnl- "yonder coiiKa the old man with h's wooi," faid my wife. Yes. lie is about as old a I am and is wealing my old hat aud coat-, thnt she gave him, and like the "non of Alknomo be tievi-r complains." He livcja six milts away. He cuts a loud of wood one dy and hauls it io town i ho next dny wi It a yoke of steeis, and wh' n he can't sell it for 7t emits he knows be c n haul it to my house and Mrs. Arp will tal.e it- He ahva.K wears a mi do and says: arc getting along fairly well at my house ; your pe-'p'e all well?" He throws two or thr " chunks of li;htwood on top co as to keep th-' con! in good liumo:-. Oxen are an awful slow motor in the-c lightning times, but they ar. fheup mid don't die and nobody will steal them an I they puit au infirm old man better than niiilrs. They never run away or kick or pet out t f temper. A ni.in can diiveoxeu until he ge s plow anil amiable and serene. Ho lieconuM tlimikful for what litt'e he has cot and he go to meeting on Sundays and chews his tobm co and enjoya his religion- Toor folks oitht to enj iy i bgion, for they don't have much else to enj y. Just think how many things lhe up per t rust hav to dis'raet their niin.lf front the comforts of rrligion. There aro the shows and theaters au I stw.'n S'K'ieties and the par.'its and buggy l i !es and bieyeb s and shopping ami fashion magazines and uoinp; to the springs siul visititm and receiving visits, besides the domestic affairs of pnlting up jelly and jam and p ckles and preserves- Tha old w i1 hanb-r has nnno of these things, but ho does haven few tests of Scr pturo that are worth them all and moro, too. The meek shall inherit the earth and the poor in spirit the i in.doui of heaven, and if there is anything else to inherit I tlon't know it. I'o?ls. philosophers and r'ch men have all testified to the vtnity of rieh--8 and yet tv ry ra t al i f llf.-nt wants more than they have got. And ho do I. Sem ; or us are fools enough t It !ii vo that we want money to do god with and help other people. There are a fe v rich men of that kind, but they ara rarp. Tin re are still left h"re and there at lonely di-tanc s a Peter Cooper or Peaboly or George W. Seo t. who do not wait nntil they die to do Rood with their nionej-. Carnegie and Itoekfeller giv oft" a slice occasionally, but. they hold fast to the bi end of tho ropj snd ke- p on piling up. TlnNewYotk oill 6ent out inqniiit-R not lon ai;o lo all of th') m l!iona r s to kn w whether or not great riches brought happines. Cs rie'i'j said: "Wealth brings hupp ness fnl wh .11 the possr-fsor feeds the hungry, elotl ei the nuked, endows institutions of learning, founds hospitals and does other countless go I w.M ks." UcUft l'tTRaid: "Wealth does not brii g hnp pii es; for ne man thinks himself we.ilt'.y. N" mmi is so rich but what th re are o'h rs rieh r th:in h- i, and that fuel mitkf-s him feel por. Pmctieall.-, there is no sit"h thing as a lieh msn. Money is like s ra berries and 'cream i.obfnl , t-ver gt ts entiiisjh. T) m't yon t'-in. yo 1 hiivi had enough. Loiel.' ai'l her au r. I miv think so. anntif. but I don't f 1 e.' sti I E lil. No, the facf is that great weul h bii'ins'unh.sppiiw s ." ltn. II 'a e said: "Inches are all vanl-y and v. x ition of spirit. Few people have any id a. of "be trouble and inc uivmi' noes that weabb lni'ips. Tho rich never ask such a fo.di h qno-ii ion a 'do. 8 wrslth brin- bappinosi-?' A rich iimn is cons antly in ihe fn blie '' P -vhcv is impossible for him. T. t public i- .u- rions even to know how heopen3 his letters and puts on his shoes and what he has feir Lreak fas'. An incognito is impossible. No, riches do not bring happiness ntr contentment." Itussell A. Aluer savs: "Meu are no happier when rich than when p or. A millionaire is no happier when driving a JoO.O iO horse than a clerk who gets only $15 a week and is out driv ing a livery stable horse on Sunday evenings with his Inst, girl by h's side.'" John W. Mm-ky said: "lam utrprisd that any one would for a moment think that riches brought happiness. 1 was happier dniinirmv tan, mi iiKgirs Willi jxivt-i iy 11ISI1 1 imvn I'Yer te tiKince. I en) iyed ttie tml, priv.it ion and ha'dsbip I nidiirel to win wealth. When ewin.inj,' pick and shovel as a miner I was as happy as 1 ever can le." Ivi r. Morton said- "When I wis a poor youns man of twrnty yea s, cb rkin in a conn try More I nsed to think that if I tvtr cot to lie wor h tlOO.OtiO I B'onId b? the h-piest man ' al ve. Now I am worth that and more, but f- I that I am no bappirr than in mr poorer days." j ueorpc vt. i'ullnian pm : "I am ceitainlv no happier than wren I had not a dollar that I ce n'd call my own pave ti at for wh:ch I worked from morn till nicht. I can wear but one anit of clothe3. 1 a'e three Fepiare mcala a day then and can eat 110 me.r now. Then I had no re aponsib'.Iitie and cnld po to i-lef-p when my head touched the pillow. Now that I have vast int resta and business cares rcstin r upon me, I cnno pe. p Jik I did then. I was happier then than I am now." An 1 many tthrrs answere d on the nam9 line. Now the qne-tion f'niM np why don't they lighten the load? If th" Mirp'ns Irinpscare and tronble, why d n't ihv s'op tryinc to male it bi?uei? Why not divid out the r-aro-sibi itj? I kn iw lota of men who wonld hIp to carry the load. In faM, I wonld volnn teer my own (services. 1 don't understand whv these men ail write one wav and do another way. Hut maybe it ia the force of habit like tire p-kt fallow who had ataid in Jad bo lontf he We alH-.ke t Re mm cnni in h;. I tnt we Ike him still mor if he be come hii i own eiecut. r and docs not hoi 1 on to his richf-i until enm deith tins t prize his hand open to , mk h m let co. It peems to me there would I lecreat reward jn helping the unfortnna'c. I I Rome men say tht povertv and misfortune ' j from bt.J eondn-t and bid miniKement. ; j Well, ir does as a cencril rnle. but there are so ! many p'lns that it can hardly he called a ' j ml". Good lnck has made rainy a man rich, but he thinks it wsa his smartness. And bad j luck has male many a one poor. The Germane j ; have a word f . r an nnln-kv man lhat we ha ; ! no equivalent for. Td.ey c 11 him a achlemiel l tint is a poison who never prospers, with : whom tv.ryt hing goes wronp, misfortnne baa i I marked hi-r bad luck f. i:o him. Yet u ; thonsh rrovidence had pitr on him. ti e settle- ; ; niiel is al -ays sr.ol t a'nrel and bjihtdaeartel. j A smile illumira'f s his fce, jut s ich a smila ' j a our wocl harj'er wear. I re-kn he ia a schltmiel. Bat the good Lord shapes the lack to the burden. Tie German echkmiel is con- ! scions of his misre rtaDe and w.ll sty with a merry twinkle t f the eve: ' I ain't no'geot. I ; got no sens-. I ila a ts-bleniieL , I know some such peopbj pood people they j : ate, t'o, bnt bad lnck has fo'lowedthem ever since I knew them bad lnck in a money wav, : ' I meao, bnt I like to meet them. they are so 1 cheerfnl and anrableand ther linen so marnlt i J t a joks. Bux Am, la AtlanU Constitution, THE MARKETS. TEW YOEK COTTOTI rUtlM. Cotton quiet. Middling uplands 7 0-16; middlinz suir. 7 13 16. Futures very firm. Bales ST.TCO bales. Annit. 7 27(529 December.... 7 43g i 1 Septemter...7 27(23 Janu-ry 7 49 ototr 7 S3fa 34 February . . . . 7 54? 55 November. . .7 SS' 33 March 59'aGO LIVEBPOOL COTTON MABEET. Cotton firm. Middling 3 29-32. bales 6JM. Aug. Sept.. 3 565 57 &Pt. Oct-3r53 O- A Nov' ...3 5S 5i Nov A Dec. .5 1 , Dec. A Jan.. .3 61 b Jan. A Feb . ..S 63 Fe'. A Match. S 6364 Mch. A April. 4 01 b . Apr. A May. . .4 02fa0i CHICAGO ui-' wheat Aug.... 65f Sept. cots- Aug .... 39 Sept oats- Aug.... 21S Sept rcEK Sept 'J' Jau LAKD Sept 6 15 O.'t p.ies sept 5y2'- Oct . HOME COTTON M A K.A LI?, Kat- Char- Cot- C1it lett. umt'la. le-l'n. IH IK 6 7-16 eiirh. Good middling Jtr St riet middling Middling H Sfriet low middling 7 I.W middling 6)s Ticges.... Clean stains IH 7 7j' hi 6 11-16 65 7 6 Deep stains and blues. SEA ISLAND COTTON. Medium fine slightly off color. 17al8; me dium fine 22a24: tine 24a2S; ejetra tine 30a3a. E tLTIMOBE TKOrrCE MAT.KET. FLorn- -Quiet, Western super 2 6G 2 80; do extra 2 ;0fa3 20; do family 3 45 3 75: wjuter wheat patents 3 85 4 00; spricg wheat pat ents3 W5 4 10 , . Wheat Weak. No. 2 red spot and Aug. 6!T .V r 69::; Septembe-- TO1 S 70. steamer No. 2 red 65 1-265 3-1 South ern by sample, 70(a 71; do ou grade G7(a u. Cobs Dill!. Mixed spot and Ausriut 46s; Septemlier -IS'V asked; steamer niix'M Southern white 4'.50; do yellow r2 NATAIi STOKES. Wilminirton. N. C Rostu dull, straineel, 1 15; good strained. 1 20; Spirits turpen tine steady, 24",;Tar linn at 1.35; crude turpentine steady, hard 1.20. soft, 1.60, virgin, 2.00. ... New York R o s i n seady; s-trained. common to good 1.52,' (5 1.57j j'. Turntine quiet at 27 27;4' Charleston-Turpentine firm at 21;. Rosin firm at I.Oji 1.15 . Cotton Seed Oil. New York Cotton see,! oil piiet and about steady; prime crude 21ff25: prime crude f. o. b. mills liS 22;otT crude 22(o 23; better grades 2S(& 30 nominal; primo Mtmuier yellow 27; off summer yellow 2),''; prime white 30r? 31. KICK. The rie market was quiet at Charleston. The quotations are: l'rime SaS; God 4 a 4;2; Fair3.ia3?4; Common 25a3. IRt lTS ANI VEGETABLES. Lemons, 30's, per box 4.00. Raisins.loese. per box 1.75; cluster, per box 2.00. Mixed nuts, per pound 10-. Kgyptian onions, r bag 2.50. Virginia peanuts, hand-picked, per pound 5e; North Carolina peanuts, hand picked, per bushel 1.25. White beans, per bushel 2.50. COUNTRY rnopccK. Country Rutter Choice- Tennessee la25' medium 12J to 15e. Cow Teas 65e and 70e. per bushel. Poultry Grown fowls, ehoi.-o 3.00 to 3.25 per dozen. Cbb-kens 2.25a2.75 per dozen, according to size and quality. Ducks Muscovy 4a4.50. Geese, young 4.50 per dozen. F.rjfrsErjgs Vto lo 10 ? per dozen. Wool Washed 15c per pound; unwashed lie. Hides lie to 12c. Wax 25e to 27c. I.1MK, CEMENT AND PLASTER. Alabama and Tennessee lump lime K5"; Eastern Rock port. Maine, lime 1.25; car-lots, 1.10. Cement Rosenthal 1.40 to 1.65; enr lots 1.25. New York plaster Taris 2.00. Laths 1.50 to 2.00 per M. Tortland cement Belgium 2.40 to 2.75. Euglish Tortland 2.50 to 3.00: Belgium, car'ois 2.00; English car lots 2.25. TIMBER AND LUMBER. Meichantable 14.00 to 16.00 for city sawed; 12.00 to 14.00 for railroad; square and sound, 9.00 to 13.00 for railroad. 8.00 to 11.00 for raft. Dock timber 4.50 to 6.50; shipping 8.50 to 10.50. Shingles 5.00 to 7.00. PHOSPHATE BOCK. Crude 2.75, delivered at works; hot air dried 3.25, free on boa'd; ground rock 5.00, in buli". A 37i7':!y Turiie K inter. Xevcr beforo were turtles bo numer ous, fat ami lirge in the tributaries on the south s.My of tho Biz Sanely, iu Kentucky, as this year. It is au uu explainci fact that while turtles nbonnel in the streams on the lower si ie of Big Sun-ly, very few are ever found ou the upper siie. 'lhe theory advance.! is that the multiplicity of niu.skrata in the lower streams accounts for tho turtles. Jvtst Fork is the best li-hing grouinlin the State, for turtles, ii'i'l the stream is alive wilh muskrats. These creatures li a hole iu tho creek litnk below tho water's surface, but turu the culraii'.-t! up so that the rooms iu which they live are tlry. Into these holes crawl the turtles. Dick Carr, of Ashlan l, is the chatn- j pion turtle catcher. With two a3sist i nuts, iu a very light skiff, Carr hunt? j for them. He wmlcs about, au l with ! ft lonpr, sharp oak stick prols the mirl 1 an. I searches the banks for muskrat ' h iles. Wheu a turtle is found in the iuU'1 it is prie-1 out au.l lace l on its b tek on the creek bunk. Whenever a rut-hole is tliscovcretl Carr thrusts hia arm into it its far as he can and rarely fails to find n turtle. Last week he caught 11S turtles ia four days, eiht beia found iu one r.tt hole. The turtles are brought t shland, and sold us ordered to local ! s.tloons, hotels uu I restaurants, and j ' . ,. . r,-,i. mauy me i-ui)ji.m m viuv,mju, u.v i bur? and all the email cities along tho Ohio. Several others beside Carr catch turtles for a living, but he is the boss of the business. In almost every yard up East Fork the natives have from one to a dozen turtles penned up to sell. Jake Henry, who lives in a doublo j Jog house about sixty miles troni here, his in one room a general country I store. He ofteu trades pork and crackers for turtles, and out in his . rear yard razor-baekc I hogs and l sometimes a scjre of turtles liht for the slop in tho trough;. Catchiug turtles is tiresome work. Carr always ! works with bare hands but most of the hunters use a heavy glove to pro- ; tect then from the sh-ir;i edsjes ol tho turtloV, (-hell and the vinous teeth of the easily augered mnakr its. The av- , eragc weight of thes ir-i'.'u water ter rapins ii about five 0.1 but "pute a number vA-ihia; t eaty pounds nro bagged, tied oaco in a wuilo a twenty fivc-poundcr de'ivht the eher. Tlie prices raugo lroin nay cit'-s io each. New York Kecrder. An In errs' in? r'A'.nilj. When Mr. an I Mrs. Jerry Coleman calle I th1? roll at their breikfa-;t table the oih-r morniuj, they saw twenty BJiding fa?ai, t'n3 fi-nily hvin? besa doubled by the marrUe of the pair the tlay before. Mr. Coleinm, who it Cuairui'in of th towu of Elton, Urown County, Wisconsin, is a wid ower with ten children. He marrie-1 Mrs. Dennis Fitzgerald, a widow with tea children. The ceremony was ob served at the Roman Catholic Church, in the village of Humboldt, and the children of the happj pair, all of whom were present, occupied the en tiro front row of seat". Chicago Times-Herald. -cM J gnu at iilC0,33J. Tlie Ittsst In Soap Bnbble. Mate a fluid in this way: Get s rake of palm oil soap, shave its par ings as thin as possible and drop in a big bottle filled with distilled vater. fShake tho mixture very vigorously, then filter through gray filtering raper and mix the remaining fluid d mix tbe remaining num tLird of its bnlk of pure with one "Ivcerine. Keforo usin;; shake welL Get a small Alasa funnel about two inches in diameter, says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, connect it . , , T t 11,. .ni 0 tube of India rubber, and you can blow bubbles with this apparatus that vill surpass tho rainbow itself in brilliancy and beauty. Ye., there is a lot of trouble in getting your scientific I Lpe and liquid ready, buf think of 1he fport iu the end. Just imaino a bubble twelve inches across! You can blow them in this way by putting them upon a big iron ring very care fully, of course whilo the metal ia et with the prepnretl solution. Get a ring that is quite rusty that as mres a good result. A string of bub bles two or three inches in diameter can b9 kept intact for ten or twelve hours. M. Izern has communicatee! to the Academy of Sciences a new method for obtaining soap bubbles lasting a much longer time than those obtained from tte the soar water cenerally used has recourse to a resinous Boap made by the following formula: Pulverize together ten grammes of pure resin and ten parts of carbonate of potash; add 100 parts of water and boil until complete tolution ; we obtain in this wav a thick solution, which mav bo kept in stock to bo diluted for use with from four to five times its volume t of water. It can be kept indefinitely, j even when exposed to the air. The bubbles produced are very persistent, nnd, consequently, can b made use ful in the study of the phenomena re lating to thin laminae and in making photographs iu which soi bubbles ( play u part. AVrile nn'erl lttor.. Tho popular womau does not writi doleful le.ters; .she waits till sin is iu a better frama of mind before begin ning them, for she retlizes that ther- are burdens enough in life without a iding to them by inflicting pessiinis ti? epistles on her friends. If she writes a letter of condo'enc3 it seems to come from the heart, for if it does not Round that way 6he will not let it? coldness further grieve a bereaved one ; and if she sentls con gratulations to a bride or a mother she makes a point of recollecting or looking up some rousing good wishes that have the ring of genuine inter est. One woman drops a frngrunl flower in a letter, not to a gushing school girl, but to an old lady or a tired mother of an exacting family, and by this bit of sentiment not sentimen tality keen? her memory green in the h-arts of her friends. New York Herald. Highest of all in Leavenbg Power. Latest U.S. Gov't Report The disappearing guns at Fort JTnmilton, New York Harbor, have been made available by an electrical contrivance for aiming them. A London .restaurant is siid to use an olectrically-heatel plate to keep one's food warm. There is no danger of receiving a bhock from touching the plate. In the Potira Conrt-Trio I and Judgmr-.it in it FTr. Some time Jtrle Andy E. Calbotin. J'lde of the po ire 1 ourt fif AHant, bad oc 1 ai'n to a scntf nee that wa vrKtifyinii to him. and if iijil w.II t:k b nlvict ii'i:li miT r n: will be all-tiatnl. The J-Hgf t; nlij;ct io nervoiM cick he-dachea an1 dy pepsi.-i. lb r . if hi -ntennr: ' J win a ur 'at sufTrer from nervous p'rV bea l.i'-lii and have found no leintdy po efTtc live a Ty ner'ri I lyip-p-'f a Kem:i1y. If takm whea tlis headache first begins it imariablj f lire-." I'r; 50 cents per lottlc. Tor ia!e by a'l rtT'iKi-its. Wh en You Come to Itcallze thnt your corns nr. gone, ani no ptin. how t rateful you feel. The work of Ilin 1 ereorns. Ijg. Don't Irc Tour Feet. Jfany men do 1-ecause the nrve centw. weakened by the long-contirund Wi of to baeeo. l-eeome so affeetcfi that they are weak, tired, liftdesp, MhUp, He. All this can b a.-ily overcome if the ioh&co user wants to fojit and gain mantiex, Drvm ower, and 11 joy vigorously the good things of life. Take No-To-Bae. Guaranteed to cure or money refunded by Druggists everywhere. Book free. The Kterling Remedy Co., Nw 1 crk Cit v or Chicago. Bntixh alodrers are moving for the ree tion of a great monument t Profewtor Hux ley's memory. no von EXPECT To Become a Mother? If bo, then permit us to fay that Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescriptien is indeed a true "Mother's Friend FOR IT MAKES Childbirth Easy b v nrpnarintr th cyrteni for partutition. thus assisting Na ture and shorte ninir " Labor." The painful ordeal of childbirth ii robbed of its terrors, nd the dangers thereof greatly lessened, to both mother and child. The period of confinement is .tlio shortened, the mother strengthened and an abundant secretion of r.ojrishnient for the child promoted. Send twenty one (21) cents fo- The Peo ple's Medical Adviier, 1 000 pat;es, over yn i!lutrations, giving all particulars. Sev eral chapters of this great family doctor book are devoted to the consideration of diseasi-s peculiar to women with sugges tioui as to successful home treatment of fame. Address, World's Dispensary Medi cal Arvjciation, Huffalo, N. Y. 9- Exhausted Soils f are made to produce larger and better crops by the j ) use of Fertilizers rich in Potasf Wiiteforour "Farmers' Guide," a I. 3Vee Wustrated book. It M is brim full of useful information for farmers. Jt will le sent fiee, and & fa will malce and save you money. Address. f' f GERMAN KALI WORKS. 93 Nwa Strtrt. Kt Vok. lemte Rheumatism. IVom (he Keoieee Courier, TTafta&i, 5 Por several years Mrs. MaryHaater vt' ol Mr. William Hunter, ot Moaatala 'r' Ooonee County, 8. C, was a constant nt ferer from rheumatism aai could flal n0 . lief, even though she consulted the best K tora tried every remedy prescribe! v ! the most eminent physicians of the s Bat she flnally stumbled, as it were m&IIMiia hiii wrrmrvtit ha. uicui.u.u " .. . u ur3 u. 01 turn m gi pie, bat nevertheless n most rem.t.ti 1 " X?enea,"e'lsl l the benefit of suffering humanitv ; it . c- BOUtcu v au mici imit iwa .mag aer P'tj!ij "Yes, It is true that I hal cbrr.i' rh mat ism of long staalins," svid Mrs. HiaJ to a reporter, "ani the mj?t celebrate 1 fvT siclans ot South Carolina coull .. cure. But I have boen cur.l. an.i th 1 ' pletely." And she spoke the wor Is wtth bright smile and cheerful counb'tnn v. "I am sixty-six years of a? " ih United, "and about five yeirs a;; I t, .... C03- suffer from acute rneuinatisni. Th a t could find no relief. 1 could not remim j'i'i in any position, either lyin. sittm-, ing or standing. There was no rt ii r for me, and thus it continued until 1 fe j..,. became a burden. Daring th- y ir I.j suited several ot the most capable ani xl nent physicians of our State and t't th prescriptions. But short and teai.r.trv the relief afforded by any of them. .nt.l'j,l!E failed to give auy relief at all. Tli mvi would return with accumulated f .r ., , j every periodof temporary supi'ti-i . i,, 4njK 1 last it uwmn l th.it m v w id Ii I "About this time I revived a .-tt-r fr)a j my sister, Mrs. Lneinda Stiw.irt. ..f txv ' who wrote nt to try Dr. William' P411U. 1'ilU. for Palo ropb. an I she told m h . v tu j. good tby had don hfr. Kh' In 1 t,tl feir seven years ana had ha I tv . ir paralysis. None or th" do "tor . . f x-u; j could l anything for hir, .oil b. r ur seemed irapo.isibl. But sli" w.r. t .1 1 t,y friendt' try Dr. Wtllian I'm 'i l'.ll-. .,1 1', nt last did so. She wrotf tli it ' . t, , 1 p, oniy nan a oox tvii"n sue xporion . n j. eided chanjT for tin' better, and s m iiflt like a young girl aain. ev'n th .jj,., t4. ver ftrty ye irs edd. l.t a slurt ten was cured, and she is i"W i-nj ivm ...v.i halth. , "But, eveu after r."'piving tli-it l.-tt..r ,. was some time lie fore I '.n-i "iit. I to trv t!i pills. I continued to reei'ive-1 r".t m-tit fr.i jihysieiaiis for a year or tiin U- m,.. little or no faith In patent nifdieiui ,t H!)(. kind. But tlnally. ix'iiig rHdii''d t h .tir 'xtrentity, and nil els f.tilimr. 1 -n--l ii-iM-t to write for one Imix of the pills, an I .li I .iA Within a wee'v afttr beginning ! t'ik thi?i I eoinnienet'd feidjng Imtter, and wh-n th llrst Ih. was use.l I ..r.b're I sot l ,. j;,,, t wo mum Imxis elT'"'! I my cure, an I th.n l-rmatieiitl v. too; for during tli" .,-t yar I have ben entindy free from rlieii'ti.vi'-f.nn;. and count my eiip eoinpli't". Sui.-.i "ii h;ivii given the pills lo olier iii'-iu'mt i.t my f;i:nilv, and in 110 insi.in -e have Iti.'v I uh t give .-peed y and prtiiatient n-li-f. I v ii vitn-ed that tli pills are .-ill tTt.it r Wili ianis elaims for IIumii. and mor t. . jj.. fully re-'omtneiid them to all sufl.Tr." To cuiitlriii ljer statement d f i -t-- ly n I all doubts, Mrs. Hunter made tho f dlowin affidavit: Sworn to iM-foro me this, the :i.!i .,iy of Mav. A. !. 1SX. ( L.S. K. T. Jati. ks. Notary Tu'-li . Mrs. Hunter is well 11 11 I f.i v irablv kn-irn. M'lllg til" Wife if tme uf tnue.'s l!i-t -n1" ?es.tul and sulist.-iuti.il farmers. No m -aa doubt her stat"oi"iit for a moment, an I mviv af her neighbors, moreover, are 1 igni.mit aer remarkable euro. lie at.rieot er.ip in ' iI v sli..rt th's season i'.ifornia is .-on) i-- tiv L.ondon co!tinns American?. to be rrowdel with The Greatest fledl;al Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS,, Has discovered In one of onr eommon pasture wei-di a rcn.edy that cures every kind of ! umor, from tho worst H rofula down to a common pimpK Ho has tiled it in over eleven hundred enses, and never failed except In two -we fboth lhurid"r humor). II h-is now ia his popsr,f-'don over two luiridr''! '.rtlfl cates of its valu". all within twenty mi!' of Boston. Hon ! postal eard for Uifik. A benefit Is always exi.i-rien'f l fromtbs flrt bottle, and n p-rf" t cire is warranted when the right quantity Is taken. When the lun-?s uro aIT:ted It oi'i ebooting fains, like nwli'-a ja-wit through thm; tho Fain with tho I lvf or U-jwels. This U causo 1 by the do't telng stopped, aud always di.i p-ars lo week aficr takin-? it. head the If the Ftomach is'foul or I ilious tt will cause Bqu-n .i-h feelings at llrst No change of diet ever necessary, t-ii the best you can p-t, and enough of It Do3e, one tatdeff.ooiiful in witter t bel time. bol l by all Druggists. W K V A NT irrTg HKl-l lw floor. frt-r 1. ti'. n. I'lrannni '.f lru, ,,. IM)fSTHMb'fl!l.IMII.o f o . born, Ky. . JOIINWON'M rillM, AND FEVER TOlIC 0H foa f) CMtl bott' If It fir" 71 ixl not line's nt uo lf it dot. Willi do It 1st. f 'bi'U ani Fr. ln1. H li'rai Kr 1. Ttpboid KtT. 4l h. Hfnorrh(l Fr. 6f u. I tonga FTr 6th Mm.ii tb. If.rj.rn . Monr btektfoncboit li Aik foor 4 ,r,E tt. A. B. OlB,l,4 . hitinaih, tit . f"V TO AVOIft THIS TJ2 TETTERINE 0 II. Th o Trr 1 1 4 on Th osir i!nM -. I'". rt' itt tb fi f r ,rrv Ufn-t itch, rbm'. I. .h, i7 ti nit Iw' I (tia.-- or flttk to J. T WM hnnb .. for - t- dxogjut d I -P t. 'J PARKER'S HAIP CALSAM Clauv r. I ir-A f Uur to f youthf-il Cure P ! b 8. N. IT. rj.
Marion Record (Marion, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 22, 1895, edition 1
4
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