Newspapers / Marion Record (Marion, N.C.) / Sept. 19, 1895, edition 1 / Page 4
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4 The American Manufacturer otei that latest reports on the movement ol ircn ore from the Luke Superior region plate that tip to close of June tlio f.hi!Ufnts nreateil 3,142,757 ton", an iocrease of 037,315 torn over thf c of the fi rf-t six months ia lS'Ji. Country Produce Market. RicwsD. VA.-BrTtr.n-Fancy dairy 17 tflV ; chr)!' dairy. H"j io,, -"v lUl.V.i m-li'im More ("packed;, ll12e.; common era !. ftS'.. Foos-In r-rit.-s, u-ar 1-y nnd fresh, Hi.: n eratea f-e-h an-l Hin. 13?.; ia barrel ) and ly.i-H i fi-sh). 12. 13 roiLTPY-' tixk-iiH (large), per pound, 10.'.;'lu-k. flivei, per f.oun.l. 7 Ji.; hens ;,ivJ, ..r i.'.wd'J. 7.: f-rnall chickens. 5oV:il.-.-K-.nivM-r 2535c,, roo' W" fold i. iy20c. hj i". jjif Sr.- k -Calves, pr pound pound. 1 a 4-. . steers, per pound. 2Ji . rprine 1 tW'-hoi-e.per pound, 3arl-:.;bogi iBCcts hvJj4?o-H wnsi-mall. well-saoked per pound. lir 12v; larg-, well-smoked, per pound, !K 10-.; Hi de., per pound 8a 9c should'TS, smoked, 77e. Him Ayr. Tam.ow -Dry flint. Pr poaad, llrfi 12.; dry r-alt-d, per pound. Wi.; ireen wilt-d hid-s, fitfSH-.; ereen hides 4 1fif.. t:rn patted f-alf kins, 65W73C; tallow 3 lVat 1-2-.; I -s wax 25c. Veof.tam.f.s-Irish potato, per barrel, Urge, f 1.2-Vo fl.50; pmall Wo75i.; onions tl.SOti.f'O per l.arrol. Farm -Watermelons 510c; apples, pr barr- flOO. ?2.00; pears, 1 1.50(3-3.00 per barrel; cholei peaches 11.2511.50 per Tnishel; eommon, 751.00. I he Prevailing Malady In tli' ' 'ciiii i i o t .-:n. 'r).;ihly mora. tfiHH i hi f... it i i.f ii- 'p'f fiiflt-r from p i-i;i mi l !mit t ft. I t,-v hit I t ! p.n n ! s I 'n',. - ii 1 1 a i e l wn . Ii;ii f M' tt nd i. i it ; li. ii Mil mi-lit t n v i mi-- .': t h'. t r n.-n;,.-. h. r-d .p. J. 1 .1 ! ho li. '! viih-!- f il, Tyio-i ' I -iiff-i;. I ! fit d.' iiiiudii to he IIK-i'. l ' l ll:l-l I "I III' l! I " I II I V p!"H- ti iii t ' ' : I m. I i" i fin! v -i r.-i t . d t i'n i n H ' W I', '. '' 1 lit I Ml.-- Il.l' vi.r-l f iisi.-.-ff fl . .. : t I n -..I.. 1 v iU d-n- id.i. pji,' j 1 1 1 . foi' ( ijiiiimi pt ifiu Ims no pfiiii.l n-i a''itli itk d nd tin.-- F. M. Aith'ur, h. ij.-m : i . I'. i .11. ilo , N. V., M.iy'J Tlise ninrpnnla t C'arua! Bad m tlu-y ro, Ilinilrcorns will remoT tLeru, nnd t In ii yoi mri walk m you hk. Th Trt l.nxntlrn Trinrlpl Of Hie i la n t s ii'-ed in nmrnif..f t m hur Hio idem. ir,t n in. fl r, Sj nip of I 'ik-. I" a l- rmaiintly ben-fifinl f.T(tnn the hi: inn n c; stfiu, whil flic f lifiiji vi KrUMo rUn t and mirifral solu. tloim. usually W,M hi neliririft, are imtiii.v. nrmly liijiirimis. Ptdng vll informed, you will ui-e tlie fnif retnedy only. Manufactured ky lit C'ttliforiilA Kltf !yrup C'f TlTH ftond frto ly Dk. KiimkM Onilt Jir.HVr. KvKriiHEK. No tU nftf r firnl (Ihk's uc, 1hi v l. iii i-nw. Trent tsr- unit JIJ.'UMrml bot tlulru-. L:-. Kline, mi An h St., I'hila., I'a. Mm. Window' Siiotfilni; Syrup for chtldrem terthint?, H'diens the fruirn.nilimu Inflamma tlon. filUys puln. fiirs wind culic. 23c. a bottle, Kirrlrnr l.rmU Alnoy Mathers to Ha y "lTfie I'urk' r's Cincf r Tonic" lipcaunn it H cool for co'.dn, :tiii anil ulni'it uvrry weakness. The word-havp ili lTi-rriil meanings to a p!r HualM.a Kentuckinn, and an nvernjre man. For tln npi-t;f man ynod spirits leiicn'l on ood diuet inn. inry to iniv ifood il i-rcrl ion? A Kii'iiiiK T.iii-il" Bflr furh inenl. thHt's all. 1 1 nfTHf t d w 1 1 li poi f c i v-i I i snr 1 horn p. soil's Kye w ;iti'i I rni;iil -sel I Hi '$ pet lnttle & D f M ICT Jim 71i.il H P- Sar.anparill.a has an unequalled ree.'rd fiT ,iiie1 tho liirpest pales In the w: I !, and enres vlieii all others fail. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is tho Only True Blood Purifier l'r "vin.-nUy in tho pnl'lii eyo to lay. fl, Fl f.'r !."; 1 1 ::-.!l' t 1 ft lloOI)'rt. E!nlA Fl!!! 't lmrninnioTMly witli (IUJU D ritia llood'.4S.i i S.r-:ip.irill:t. The Greatest Tledlcal Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery, DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered In one ot our common, pasture weod a remedy that cures evi-ry kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a eommon pimple. !! has ti I.' l It in over eleven hundred cn-i', and nev-r failed exempt In twocaios (h'Mh thunder humor). II hn now in Ms poa-viipslnn nynr two hundred rertirt-cnti- of its vnlui nil within twmty rnils of I'l.istnn. K-nd p-.sial card f r !".ok. A I f-nollt is always ex petiern'fd from the flrt ldtle, and a perf-ct e.ir i wiirrantJ when the rlk'lit ipiantlty is takfn. When th Iuiik's are uffeete , (t causes hooting j a n", like needle passtni; through them.; the ame with the I.iver or U iwels. This H cause I y the ducti Velnjt stopped, and a! way disappears in a week after taking It. Ucad the labeL If the Dtomaeh is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the l est you can get, and enough of it. Io, on tablcspoonful in wator at bed time. Bold by all Druggists. HUDSON'S BUSINESS UNIVERSITY I HAm.OTTK, N. C. S40 ? Tavs for Complete lousiness 'ourse. Actual Business from start to flni-h. Th" only Tusiness ColleK in the South that you can trv before paving the tuition. iend for Cataliiue. .1. K. 1H OSON, Prin. Waller Baker & Co. LiiW Tb I iifnl MtaalfcctvTrrt of PURE. HICH CRADE ' Cocoas and Chocolates JV' On thli CabHikiiL It tmt4 HIGHEST AWAR08 Com th gml industrial and Food expositions in europe and america.' Cnution: VT'. f V Ubt'.aed wniptu on cut (.wit, toatumrrt hoold mtt nrt uil eur tUr iMbu'ir-lura, nm',T. Itrckitir, Ma. ! rrtotn c tv.il pcktf . SOLD BY QBOCERS tVERYWHERE." WAITER BAKER i CO. ITO. DORCHESTER, MfAS.' D TO AVOID THIS IT HI 0 TETTERINE H. Tb outT pkletM and himlut rim fur tb wurst t ji Ttlr, R ncwarta.Bal on m i tf r Kims, .B7 reach atch. . cnutd alp. (, ciim, piia- 'R r own ii on ivy r pUa Ml, la in art all nciu. ftp4 Mo. ia Mo.p or iuk to J. T. Bhsptrtaa, SaTinnth Oa.. far an sax. U jool ara(iit4oB'tBapH. m i .1 mra oyrua. Taataa tMuxL Vm I I FIVE LjYEPICTDRES WORDED BY ISKV. DK. TALSIAGE. Stephen Gazing Into Heaven Look ing at Christ atoned Dying Prayer Asleep. Text: "Behold, I see the heavens opened." Acts vli., 56-60. Stephen hi 1 bien preaihlnaf arousing ser mon, anl the people could not stand it. They r?erdv5 ! to do as r."n sometimes would like to d in this day. if they dared, with eon;'? j.l-t'n pra-diT of rl(fhte.jusness kill him. The only way to silence this man was to kno-k the breath out of him. 8o they rushed Stph -n out of the vaes of the city, and. with curses and whoop nnd bellow, thy bi'j'itld him to the id iff. as was the cu- toni wh-n tliey w:tute 1 to take away life by ''oiitii". Having brought him to the edre of the i litT, tb-y p.j;.!ie l him r,fr. After he lia l fal!n thy came and looked down, and se -ini' tint h wk. not yet de.rl thev began to .Ir-.'i r-t .-neH upon hiri!, ptone after stone. An. i 1 th:K horrible rain f missiles Stephen ela n! or. upon his kit': and folds his hands, w!iil h; I loo 1 drif s from his temples, and then. lo.i'.i'iL' vp. h" rnakej two jirayers f ne ! r i.nr.s. if nn l one fr,r rnrrderers. ''Lord J-su-. rec 'in' my spirit." That was for h'r.i - ' J., r I, hi v not this s!n to their f-hLT"'. " '1 'nl was for his mur Wers, Then, from h';i fi I loss of blood, he swooned a way I f--i ar!e.p. I want t- y'.vrx you to-day fiVQ plitares: Step!;.-ri cir.'ii.' ino heaven, Pf'phen look in.'t Ht CUr k. :- !ephi n rt-.nl, Stephen in his ilyiii.-j 1-i .iyer, .J'er.h--,n asleep! Fir-t. I i ;-t S.opVt ynt'n into heaven. F.-foi e ymi t't'e a l -;io yi.ii want to know win re y-j iirM t,'oin; to lau '. J Wort you rlimb a ladder v.u waul to know td what point the Udder feaehe.--. An I it was ribt th:tt Mcpheii. within a fevv moments f bert ven. shoub b" trazinij into it. We would .II i'o wll to bo found in the yarne posture. 'I here is enoueji in heavn to keep )4 (jaz iri'.". A m-in ff larire wealth may have stntu i;rv in ti -hall, nn I .aMitins jn th sitting r i.ivi. ii n 1 wrks of art in all pnrt3 f-fth" le use, but h I as th-e!ii'f pbduresin the art t. nlW-ry. ni'.d lhr- hour aTterhour y it ial ! with i-iitaloue and piae-i and ever inere;i.iii adn irntifin. Well, h'-;vi n is tlii ("ilbiy wln-re (l ,d his ,'Hherel th chief tr .isurep f.f His lenliri. The whole Universd is His pahic:. In tiiis lower room where we (top theif ar many a lormni'iits, tessellated floor i f 'nlhi, nd i n thi winding eloml f I iirs iiie tn tidi-d out nnv.'i;i's wi which eoininiiile nriire iid purple and safTronnnd jfold. I I:i t heae:i is the gallery in which the i-hi-f Kb.ii.-s are R.-ithere .. Tiieie aro the briiditest robes. 'J'h"re ar t!.' richett crown1--. There are the highest exhilarations. yt. .f ilm says of it. "The kiii's of the earth i hiill briii's tln ir honor and lory into it." And I ce the pr-c.-s.Mon forming, and in tho line come all empire--, and the f-tare. isprin'J tip into an arch for th hos's to inarch under. They keep c.(,.j, (0 j, sound of eart h.piake, and the pitfh of in'iilnn' he from the mountain.-, and tin! Il.i th'-y i.ar is the flame ofa consuming world, nnd all ln-awn turns out with harps and Inimpets and mvria I voiced ac-himaiii-n of nnelic dominions to wcl foiri. (licrn in. an I ho the l-ins of tho earth briiis their honor and Kbuy into it. o you wonder that (food people- often Maud, liko Stephen. Ivokii.tf int' heaven liav ) many friends th"ie. There is not a man here so. isolated in lifo biit (here is soma one fn haven wth who u he once shook hands. As a man Kds older the number f c(.estj;)l Rciuaitifiuiees very riipi lly n.nltii li. w" hava not bad or: Klimjioeorthem sip.fetha niht wo kl.-s. d then, if.ioiiby. in. 1 th y w-nt away, but still we stand paxini; t hnuen. As when som of our friends jr., jpih th- sea. we stand on the dock, or f-n the sdet.ni tuir, i.nl watch the:i an I after awhile thi hulk of the ves y disappi ars. and t lien tin r- is only a patch of sail on the s!;y, nnd soon that is jfoir, and they arc all out of siulit, an I yet Wo stand looking in the s:mi-i iir.iion." Ho wh-n our friends e.. awiiv from us into th" future world we keep look in? flown through ths Narro-.vs an 1 uaini; ami ;iziu? as t!ioiii:h we exp"-ted that th-v would d int? ,ut nnd stan 1 fn s .aie clou. I and -rive us one glimpse of their blissful nnd tra:isflnured fa-cs. While, y.m ion? to ! i:i their ernoanion shio, an I the years and the davs ? i with st: -h te.lium tint they break vour loart. an 1 the vipers of pain a-i I s rrov and bereave ment keep trna vin? at your vitals, von will -Ian', iike Stephen, iM.m? into heaven. V -ll Won b-rif they have -hanKe:! sinee vou -a v th.-m last. Vmi woii'.i-r if they voull ic,-o;; i;z.. your faee now, so ch;in ed has it been with trouble. You wonder if, amid the myrial delights they have, they care ns mu-h for y.-u as they n-e l to when they W'" ' a belpiti? ban I nn I put their sh .uld'-rs un b-r your burdens. You won der if t Ivy lo,k miy old.-r, and sometimes in the evenin? tide, when the housr. is all 'tiiet, yon wonder if you should call them by their first na ie if they would ,,ot an s vi-r, n'l I perh u s som titn m yo t do ma'co the experiment, and wh-n no one but 5o l nnd v nirself are ihere you distinctly cnll their names and listen and sit pizin? into heaven. Tass (n now nnd sen Stephen looking upon Christ. Myt"lsavs be saw the Son oT Man nt the ri?!it hand of ; o l. Just how Christ looked j;, (his world, just how He looks in heaven, we cannot s-nv. The paint ers of tho difT.rer.t a?es have, tried to imn?ino the features of Christ nud put them upon canv is, ,iu wo ill hare to wait until wi(h our own . y.-s w-s.-c Him and with our wn ears we c,-. n lo ar Him. And yet thern is a wnv of scein? jijin andh-arinc Him now. I have f., ted you that unless you see and hear Christ on earth v..u will never see and hear Him in heaven. i.- v- ; !,.:-.. a is: I.-!io!d tho T.amhof r C.'.n y.-u r..-t see llini? Then pray to "I t tn!.e Co- s -a'.-s .dY your eyes. L"iok hat va - try to look thaf way." His voice, orv.es (i.ovn to von this b;v--co:n's down to h- bliul.-st, to th- d-aVst soul savin? I. -i-k unto Me. ail ye ends ,.f the earth", and ye saved. r,,r l am (; , t ,-,j taPM js uon be." Pro lainati-m of universal cmanei naiiou for all slaves. Tall me. -H who know most of tb.- world's history, what other king rer a';e,i the abandon- i. and th'i forlorn, and the wn-f.-he I. and the oulca-t to come, and sit I -side h niV Oh. wonderful invita tion: r.vi take it t-.lav and sand at tho head of th darkest n'lev ill nil thie eilw and say. '-Come! Cloth, s for your ra?s, salve for your s u-"s, a throne for vour eternal jeiiiiu?." A Christ that talks Iik that and acts like that nnd pardons likj? that do you w.eider that Stephen stoo I lookin? at Him? 1 hope to spent eternity doin? the same thirii,-. l must se Him. I must look upon that fae once clouded with my sin, but now radiant with mv pardon. I want to touch that hand that knocked ofT my shackles. I want to hear th voice that pronounced my delivernuce. V.chold Him, little children, for if you live to threescore years and ten you will se none so fair. Behold Him, ye n?ed ones, for lp. only can shtue through tha "irani of your f;itlin? evesisht. Behold Him. earth. Behold Hire, heaven. What a moment when all the Nations of the saved Miall gather around Christ! All faces that way. All thrones that way, pazin? on Jesus. Mis worth If all the Nations knew Euro the whole earth would love Him too. Ipas on now and look at Stephen stoned. The world has always wanted to get rid ot pood men. Their verv life Is an assault upon wickedness Out with Stephen through th-Kates of the city. Down with him over the precipices. Let every man come up an 1 drop a stone upon his head. Bat th e n.cn did not so raii"h kill Stephen ns they killed th-rusel vcs. Every stone re lounded upon them. While these murderers are transfixed by the scorn of all pood m-n Stephen lives in the almirationot all Chris ten lorn. Stephen stoned, but Stephen alive. So all eood men must l-e pelted. "All who will live nodly in Christ Jesus must suffer persecution." It is nn eulogy ot a man to fav that everybody likes him. Show me any one who is'dolnjj all bis duty to state or church, and I will show you score ot men who utterly abhor him. If all men speak well of you. it Is because you are eiriier a tabard or a" dolt. IT a steamer makes rapid progress through th waves. th water will boil and foam all ar niud it. Brave sMdiers of Jesus Christ will he ir th carbines click. When I see a man with v jice aa 1 money and influence all on the ri?ht side, and some caricature him, and some sneer nt him, and some denounce him. and men who pretend to be actuate! by ri?ht m dives eon.-pireto cripple him. to L-'t him out. to de-troy him, 1 say, "Stephen stone ." When I .see a man in some great moral or rli?ious reform haltlin? a?ainst cro?hop.3. exposin? wlcke1n-s in lii?h places, by active means trying to purify the church and better the worlds estate, and I flndjthat the ta-Spapn-rS ftait?irr-.t.'n1 EtoCt. nnl repn, even good men. opjose h?m an l deuoua?e him because, thou?h he dos good, ho does not do it in their way, I say, "Stephen etoner."" Bat voa noticf, ray fri-nds. that while thsy a.rulto.t fMephen they did r et succeed real iy in kidi n him. You may as 6;ult a H'.oi man, but yo i cannot kill hi a. Oa the "ay of his iatit Stcp':ea spike b--fcre a few people in the sanhe-lrin. This Fabbpih morning he nidre?ses Chri.-rtec-dom. r.iul. the a post I stood on Mars hill A-idresaing a handful -of philosophers who knew not f) much about s-lence as a modern s.-hoo'irirl. To-day he talks to nil the millions of Christen lorn aV.ut the won ders of jastitlcatif-i nnd the g'.or!'.-? of th resurref.tion. John Wesley was bowled down by the aiobto whom he pre died, and they threw bricks at h'rn. nn I they de nounced, bim. ani thv Jos! lei liim. anl They spat uron Mr. ar I yet to-day. In a!I lands, he is admit te I to b the great father of Methodism. Booth's bullet vacate 1 the rretiidential chair, but from, that spot of coa?'iiarei Moot on the noor in the tox or Ford's Theatr there sprnot, up the new life of a Nation. Stephen stone J, but Stephen a'ive. r.iz on now and f-e Stephen in his dying prayer. His first thought wa not how th stones hurt his head, nor what would be come of his boiv. His first thought was about bis spirit. "Ljrd Jesus receive my spirit." The murderer standing on the trap door, tho black cap being drawn over his head before the execution, may grimace about the future, but you and I have no rii.-ime in e n'e?dng sme anxiety about whM we are going to come out. You art riot n'l body. There is within you a soul. I S':" it glam from your eyes to-day, nnd I P-e it irra liatin? your countenance. Some times I am abashel before an audience hot because I come under your physical ryesieht, but because I realize the truth that I pf-ind before so many immortal spirits. Th pro'mbllity is that your body will nt laM find a periulchor in some of the cemeteries lh-it surround this city. There Is no doubt that vour obsequies will bo decent and respectful, and you will be able to pillow your h".a l und"r the maple, or the Norway spruce, or tb eypresa. or th blossoming fir, but t.iiSTpiiit ajout which Stephen prayed, what (lir-ction will that take? What guide will escort it What gate will open to re cHveit? What cloud will be cleft for its pathway? After it has got beyond the light of our sun will there be torches lighted for it the rest of the way? Will the tonl have to travel through long deserts bef, it reaches the trood land? If we should lose our p ithwjiy will there be a cactle at whose irate we may ask the way to the city? Ob, this mysterious spirit within us: it has two wings, but it Is in a ca?e now. It is locked fast to keep It, but lot the door of this cage open the le-ist, and that soul Is off. Eagle's wing could not catch it. The lightnings are not swift enough to come Up with it. When tho soul leaves the body it takes fifty worlds at a bound. And have t no anxiety nbout it? Havo you no anxiety about it? I do not care what you do with my body when my soul is gone, or whether you be lieve, in cremation or inhumation. I shall fileep just n well in a wrapping of sackcloth n3 in satin lined with ea-jle's flown. But my s juI tiefore I clo:-,B I his discourse I will flr-d out where it will lan I. Thank Ood for the intimation of my text that When we die Jesustakes us. That answers All questions for me. What though thero were massiyfl bars between hre and the City of til?ht, Jsus could r -.5 nov. them What though there were rent SahAras ot darkness, Jesus cou'd illume them. What though I get weary on the way Christ could lift me rr. His omnipotent shoulder. What though there were chasms to cross, His hand could transport me. Then let Stephen's prayer be my dying litany. "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." It may be in that hour we will be too feeble to say a long prayer. It may be in that hour we will not lie able to say the Lord's Prayer, for it has seven petitions. Terhaps we maybe too fee ble even to say the infant prayer our mothers taught us, which John Quincy Adams, sev enty years of nge. sal 1 every night when he put his head upon his pillow: Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep. We may be too feeble to employ either of thop- familiar forms, but this prayer ot Stephen IS so short, Is so concise, is so earn est, is so comprehensive, we surely will be able to say that, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." OH. if that prayer 13 answered, how sweet it will be to die! This world Is clever enough to us. Perhaps it has treated us a great deal lvetter than we deserved to be treated, but if on thedying pitlowthero shall break the light of that better world we shall have no more regret than about leaving a small, dark, damp house for one large, beau tiful and capacious. That dying ministerin Philadelphia, some years ago, beautifully depicted it when, in tho last moment, he threw up his hands and cried out, "I move into tho light!" Pass on now, nnd I will show you on3 more picture, and that is Stephen asleep, With a pathos and simplicity pecular to the Scriptures the text says of Stephen, "He fell asleep. ' "Oh," you say, "what a placethat was to sleep! A hard rock under him, stones falling down upon him. the blood streaming, the mob howling. What a place it wastosleep!" And yet my text takes that symbol of slumber to describe his departure, bo sweet was it, so contented was it, bo peaceful was it. Stephen had lived a very laborious life. His chief work had been to care for the poor. How many loaves of bread ho had distributed, how many bare feet he had sandaled, how many eotsof sick ness and distress he had blessed with minis tries of kindness and love, I do not know. Yet from tho way he lived, and the way ho preached, and the way ho died, I know he was a tnborious Christian. But that is all over now. He has pressed the cup to the last fainting lip. He has taken the last in sult from his enemies. The last etone to whose crushing weight he is susceptible has been hurled. Stephen is dead! The dis cipleseome. They takehim up. They wash away the blood from the wounds. They straighten out the bruised limbs. Thev brush back the tangled hair from the brow", nnd th"n they puss around to look upon the calm countenance of him who had lived for th" poor and died for the truth. Stephen a-le.p! I have seen the Pea driven with the hurri cane until the tangled foam caught in the rigtrin?, and wave rising above wave seemed as if about to storm th:? heavens, and then I have seen the tempest drop, nnd the waves crouch, and everything become smooth and burnished although a camping place forthe glories of heaven. So I have seen a man whose life has been tosed anl driven com ing down at lat to an infinite calm in wbii-h there was a hush of heaven's lullaby. Stephen a-b-ep: I saw such a one. He fought all his days against poverty and against abuse. They traduce i bis nam-. They rattle I nt the doorknob while he was dying with duns for dents he could not pay. Yet the pea-e of God I rooded over his pillow, and while the world faded heaven dawned, and the deep ening twilight of earth's night was only the opening twilight of heaven's morn. Not a sigh. Not a tear. Not a struggle. Hush! Stephen asleep. I have not the faculty as many have to tell the weather. I can never teil by the setting sun whether there will be a drought or not. I cannot tell by the blowing of the wind whether it will e fair weather or foul on. the morrow. But I can prophesy and I will prophesy what weather It will tx when you, the Christian, come to die. You may have It very rough now. It may be this wo-k one annoyance, the next another annoyance. It may be this year one bereavement, the next another bereavement. But at th last ChrNt will come in, and darkness will go out. And though there may be no han i to close your eyes, and no breast on which to rest your dying head, and no candle to lift the night, the odors of Goi's hanging garden will re gale vour soul, an l at your bedside will halt the chariots of the king. No more rents to pay, no more agony because flour has gone up, no more struggle with "the world, the flesh and the devil," but peace long, deep, everlasting peace. Stephen aMcp! Asleep iu Jesus, blessed sleep. From which noue ever wake to weep; A calm and undisturbed repose, Uninjured by the last of foes. Asleep in Jesus, far from thee Thy kindred aud thy graves may be. But there is still a l-V:vsed sleep. From which noue ever wak- to wep. You have -u enough for one day. No one can successfully examine more than Jlv pictures in a day. Therefor- e stop, hiv ing seen thi cluster of ilivine liipha-ls Stephen gazing into heaven. Stephen lo j'iing nt Christ, Stephen stoud, Stej h-n iu fcir dying praver, Stephen asleep. BILL AEP'S LETTER. HE HOPES THAT ALL THE BOYS WILL SEE THE JIXPOSITIOlf. William Telia of His Experience la Raising Silkworm. The expedition ceta bigger and bigger. The managers hare budded wiser than they knew. n'l everything i onoerning it eeems to prosper. It will be a great show and a great fChooL I wish that every youth in this southern Und who ia over ten jeare cf age could visit it. They would learn more in a dv than they can learn in a jeir from books. iTie sight is the very beet receptive of knowledge. The beet way to study geography is to travel, and the best way to study art is to see things made by the art!' or the mechan c- I fee that a Philadel phia t-i k house will have s Ik worms there mak ing thtir cocoons and wdl r?el the silk from them and spin anl wtave it into cloth and will ell yon a crava for a t-ong. I make mention of this because when I waa a hd my father carried on that same bnsineaa of making c ilk in Lawreacevill", Ga., and for tlree years I bad to pick mulberry le vet in their season ac 1 feed them to the greedy worms. I hl to get up before, day ana go to the morqs multicultus orchard and pick the learcs while the dew was on and carry them In acks to the silk h. me and soitter them all over th-j bmdlcs and the tr.edy worma would cat them all up before breakfast. The big w-orms thst w; re two to two and a half inches long wore kept in o-ie row of hurdles and were given the coarser leaves; smaller ones were praded down according to age and the little worm', half an inch long, bad to have the young and tender leaves. When the worms were full grown and had devoured till they had Bluffed themselves with mulberry fiber they settled down to business and fpun their wind ing sheet in the shape of a c icoon. These co coons were beautiful little things, about as large as a pecan nut and of the same shape. They were of different colors. Some were pure white, some green, some pink, some red, some yellow and all were bright and glossy. The worm got smaller as he wrapped bis web around him, and by the time the co coon was dohe it bad changed its shape and turned into a chrysalis, an ngly brown thing that bad neither head nor tail Visible. It pass el into a comatose condition for awhile and then came to bio agnin and cut its way out of the cocoon in the shape of a butterfly or large flutleiing moth and crawled aboni over the hurdles to find some place to lay its eggs. These eggs soon batched out into little silk worms that went to eating leaves just like their greedy ancestors. But. we dident wait for many to cnt their way out of the cocoons. We put them in a pot of hot water and they staid comatose all tho rest of their lives. We Would have per haps a hnndred coccdns floating on the top of the hot water and with a tiny brush would catch up the delicate fibers of Bilk from thirty to forty cocoons and make a thread of all of them together, and having fastened that thread to a reel close by we would turn the reel Just like our grandmothers used to turn it in wind ing spun truck turn it until it clicked and then take the cut eff and begin again. Just so we n eled the raw silk and kept putting more cOcooha in the hot water. In thiR way we reel ed off every bit of the winding sheet' and left the ugly dead chrysalis floating on the water. When they accumulated so as to be in the way we skimmed them otit aud threw them away. This is only an outline of the business, and 1 want tho young folks to see how tho thing is done from the tiny little egg to the raw silk tipon the ret 1 and from there to the loom. My father was a pioneer in the morns multicaulus craze, as it was called, and I think the only man in Georgia who made silk and sold it. I renumber that one year he sold 600 worth at one shipment and he sold some other smaller lot'. He would have continued the business but his tres took the "die back" or some thing and he bad to give it up. It was said that the continued 6iripping of the leaves will kill them in about three years, for the leaves are the lungs of plants and they can't keep on making new lungs just to please silk worms. These tret-s wre grown from cu tings and we began to etrip th'ni the second year when they were about as large as a broom handle. They had no branches and were about as far apart as oung apple trees in a nursery. We strapped cbf-m like pulling fodd r, coining down with both hauls and leaving only a few leaves at (be top. It would have been good fun if it bad net Irt-en so nionoton' us and required so much i f Ben Franklin's advice about "early to bed and erly to rise," etc, I bav.mt gotten over that habit yet, but it hasent made me wealthy or wise. I never have found out how one woi m can get red silk out of a mulberry leaf and another one will get white or yellow. I lua'd Captain Evan Howell make a spee.-h once and li j got eloquent and humble as be said: "My friend, we are helpless aud ignor ant creatures . We know noth ng hardly about the mysteries of nature that are all around na. Toe pood book says; 'Oreit ii the mystery of of godliness.' We cant tell why it is I hat when a goose -eats grass fie grass turns to feathers nnd when a horse eats grass it turns to hair and when a sheep eats gras it turns into wool." And lie might have added and when a worm eats mnlb rry leaves it turns to silk. The exposition has been a great strain upon Atlanta, but that town is smart and gamey and will make it a grand success. When the scheme was firt proposed we outsiders never said any thing to discourage it, but we smiled and whis pered was there ever such cl eek. Bight after the great Chicago fair and right in the middle of a financial panic for a little city of only 100,000 people to propose such an absurd pcheme is perfectly ridiculous. And to think had their say. lUis a very amusing idea for a South Caro'ina man and a Brunswick preaoher to write up and sy they will not come to the fair nary step if the stret car fare is raised to 10 cents. Why, this is a free country and those ;-entlemen can stay at home or they can come and patronize tho Southern railroad that will charge 10 cents, too. It does not seem to be the pi ice. but it is the raiso that arouses their Hid gnation. But this little episode will all settle down. It reminds me, however, of the time when we proposed to build a public acade my in ltom , and it was to cost $1,800. The boys had put me forward to run for mayor and the issue was "academy" or "no academy." Of conn-e I wa for progress and the noisiest and bitterest enemy I had to contend with took the s'teets and ileclnred that I would tax the peo ple to death, and he for one was not going to ttand it. Looking over the tax books at bis sworn return of bis property I found that his purl of the academy wonld be 47 cents. Sol p'easantly showed bim the flgnrf s and told him I would pay hjs part if he would hush and be of rhe impudence of as'iing for the patronage of the national government and an appropria tion. But tb manacers k-pt right on and have never faltered for a mom?nt. And they got ih Smithsonian institution anl the Liberty bell and they seriously discna-ed the proctica- iiility or t)3i rowing- the BarthoMi statute of liberty from New York harbor and putting it up in CUra Meet. I Fte that the ho'el department is all right and that the visitors will le fed and sheltered decently. There ho been a littl- flirtation co ins on about tbs street car lines charging 10 ctnU, but that is all buncomb, I reckon. It Is a right big rumpus about a Tery little mutter and I reckon will die out after a fe w more have Lunhed- Now let evertboly buh about this car fare busineas, for the p-ople are tired of it and in thie parts are not making any fuss about it. It will cost our people from two to three del ars ech to go to the fair and enjoy the 1 iy and come bock borne and talk about it for a iii n'h an 1 we are not going to miss it for 8 cent-; we are not built that way. I should thtnk it would remind a newepaper man of those amu ing fellows who ever and anon get mad iih the editor and write to him to stop their f aper. But I don't reckon the fair will bust up on account of tho absence of any man who swear, be wont com if he has to pa'y 10 centi to the street cars. I hope not. Bill Abp Ic Atlanta Conititntlon. AN AUDACIOUS VILLIAN. Tries to Smash the Old Liberty Bell With a Sledge Hammer. The Columbia Liberty Bell special train ar rived at Areola, Ills., Saturday evening and about 2,000 people gathered to see it While Manager Knapp was giving a history of the bell and the guide were hoisting it to ring it, a man named Matthews rushed through the crowd and struck the lower rim three bard blows with a sledge hammer, making three dents in it. The bell was considerably damaged. Manager Knapp said he would trust to th people of Areola to prosecute the vilUan who bad so grossly insaltM American pride. Major S. A- D. McWilliams, ot Fourth Rg-im-nt, I. N. G., effwted the arret and Matt, -hews waa locked up. THE MARKETS. FEW TOM OOTTOS TCTCitS. Cotton quiet, middling uplands 8k middling gulf,8 1-2. futures closed steady. Sales 97.700 bale. September...? 87(S?9 October 7 90(5 91 November .7 965 97 December... 8 045 05 January 10-? 11 February.... 8 1518 March 8 203l April. 8 25S26 May 8 80 S 31 XJTXmJOOL COTTOS HABEET. Cotton qolet. Middling 4 9-32. Fataxes steady. Sales 6,000; Ameiican, 5,500. Rent. 4l??17 Jan. A leD... iso Sept A Oct. 4 1617 Oct aV Nov... 4 15fl8 Nov. Dec... 4 16 Dec. A Jan.. .4 17 Feb. A Mar.... 4 13? 20 Mar Apr... ..4 21s Apr A May. ...4 22b May A June. .4 23?24 CHICAOO GBAIW ATD PBODCCE. WHEAT Sept 56 "i Deo. cob Sept 31 K oats Se t 19S POBK Oct 17 LARD Ot 5) RIBS Ot 5 30 Dec May Jan Jan. 5. . . . Jan wh 9 50 5 75 4 80 HOME COTTOJf manET. Hal- Char- Col Our elith. lofte. nnibt. cton. Good middling H 8 7 X 7 Strict middling 1 7 95 7 1-2 7 Middling Vi 7) Vi 7'j' Strict low middling.... Vi 6 45 Vi 7 V Low middling 6 95 79 V Tinges V Clean stains Vi BALEIOH EW t'OTTOX. Good Middling.7; strict middling, Vi middling, V4- BALTIMORE PBODCCE MABS.ET. Flour Steady; Western superfine ?2.20o 2.40; do extra -2.502.75: family 32.93-? 3.25; winter wheat patent t3.35S3.W; spring wlseat.patent 3.40'o3:70; do straight 3.40. Wheat Firmer and dull;pnt and month GOXaGOS; October olJ-frSeiX; December ttffo .$!; .steamer No. 2 rod 57.J''S57i; Southern wheat by sample 69?;i; do on grade 571fSfi0.. Corn Firmer; spot 40 bid; R-ptembet 33 asked; October 39' asked; the year 34' (a 34 1-2; January 34 34 Y; Southern white corn 40; do yellow ctrn 41. Oats Stea lv, some activity ; No. 2 white Western 26 1-227; No. 2 mixed western 2424'. ByeDull, very littl demand; No. 2, 4t. Hay Steady; good to choice Timothy tl4.50 15.00. CHARLOTTE PBODCCE VABKET. Cabbage New per crate 1 25 Extra flour Sack, 1 W Family 1752 25 jt,l bolted, 46 lbs. per bushel, . . 46 O il?, 32 It's, per bushel, fit Potatoes Irish 40fo 50 " Sweet 33o 40 Onions Select, per bushel 50(4 60 Country Ham 10edl " Sides lx4 " Shoulders t Lard N. C., Chickens lOfti 15 Butter 15 Eggs H1'2 BALEIOH TOBACCO MARKET. Smokers, Common 3 Good f. a 10 Fine H a 12 10 a Hi 16 a 20 Cutters, Common t rOOd Fine 22 2 5 10 16 35 a 27 a 8 a 4 a 15 a 25 a 55 Fillers, Common Green (rood Wrappers, Common " trooa " Fine Market active for all grades. NAVAL STORES. Wilmington, N. C Rosin firm, strained. .Yli good strained, Spirits turpen tine firm, 24p25.V; Tar Arm, at 1.20; crude turpentine steady, hard 1.10, soft, 1.50, virgin, 1.80. New York B o s l n quiet; strained. common to good 1.471.50. Turpentine easy at 27j' 28. Charleston Turpentine firm at 24. Rosin firm at 1.10. Cotton Seed Oil. New York Cotton seed oil stronger; crude 24, yellow prime 27; off grade 26. BICE. The rice market was quiet at Charleston. Th quotations are: Trime 5 a5V; Good 4 a 4 ; Fair 3X3?i; Common 2aa. FRUITS AND VEOETABLE8. Lemons, 360's, per box 7.50. Kaisins.loose per box 1.75; cluster, per box 2.00. Mixed nuts, per pound 10c. Red onions, jver bag 2.00. Virginia peanuts, hand-picked, per bushel, 1.25. Grapes, 2 to 30c. per basket. Turnips, per barrel, 1.50. Beets, per barrel, 2.50. Cabbage, 6 to 7c. Bananas, 1.25 to 1.75 per bunch. Coeoanuts, per 100, 4.00. White beans, per bushel 2.50. Northern pears. 4.005; Northern potatoes, 2.00. Northern apples 2.50. COC3TRY PBOPtJCE, Country Butter Choice Tennessee 18a25c, medium 12K to 15c. i Cow Teas 65c and 70c. per bushel. Poultry Grown fowls, choice 8.00 to 8.25 per dozen. Chickens 1.25a2.50 per dozen, according to size and quality. Dncks Muscovy 4a4.50. Geese, young 4.60 per dozen. Eggs Eggs 12fc. per dozen. Wool Washed 15o per pouad; unwashed 11c Hides 11c to 12o. Wax 25a to 37c Dairy cattle of St. Louis are dying by scores from anthrax, which is also raging in Randolph County, Missouri. FARMER BAILEY '3 ESCAPE. AO THE IS.1KK KXTKIIIEXCE OF JOHN II. LOITIX. A Uappy release After It ith Had About ;iven From tSf Cmicofiin, Clinton, A" C. We had been reliably informed that J. F, Bailey, of Warsaw, Dublin Co., N. C, had been cured cf ensumption, nnd sent nre porter to gee him and make a report, Ireliov ing that the facts would be wclco.ne to miny leaders of this par or. We foun 1 Mr. B liley Strong in the belb f t'-at he lia 1 had con fumpticn, tbf ulIi l is physician, Dr. W. T. Kennedy, Mat. d the eae in a little different way. Thedo.torf.-itf!: "Mr. Baib-y w.is fuiTering from overwork and f-hronic ir.atarbil r opsonin?, with R.i-nn of the symptoms of chronic rheumatism and a general run-down condition of h's system. "Boils prevented him from work a part of the time. Bronchitis and s -itting of blood were sourc-s of frent annoy ihc to bim." It is probably true tbit the doctor was cor rect, though w'.thout doubt Mr. B:iiiey would eventually havo gone into consumption, ns this di.-easn frequently follows the. symptoms and conditions above pi v.-n. He was thor oughly cured, however. Mr. Bailey said to the rci'ortu': "Iu theppring of "04 I begnn farm work. Boon I found my health f .IllDg and a ha -k-inpeough my constant fmpanion. "I grew so weak that I could no lonper work. My crush became so severe that I was noaMo to sleep, and I was constantly fcpitling up blood und corruption. My phy-t-iei.in could rive me no r-.i.-f .in 1 I eoutin tied to grow weaker an 1 wakT. I had well nieh piv.-n up all hop ji Iiviu?. muti less bdng restored to my usu. ftreapth. when a friend called mv attention t i.istimonials as to the v.due of Dr. Williim-' I Ink T.lls for Pale People. I at onte b ft off using the medi.-ine j roseriW'd by rnv hvsician an l bepnn to take the Pink rf'.lx. I f.dt the pood H.-ds of this wonderful me,hin within thre days. In less than two months' time I was a w.-U n.au, and thre br.xe of Dr. .Williams' Pink Pi I is did the work. '"Is it any wond-T." q':-rieI Mr. Bailey "bat I sing the naSs-j of Dr. Williams1 Pink Pills uh.'D they ha-- done so mii"h form-? But for the timely u ofth-m I would to-day ! in my tmve and I want the world to know of tneir incalculable value as a miieinc, Th reports hrsving beard that Mr. John Id. LoTtin, ol Warsaw, had ln cured of rheumatism by th. u-! of thr box of Dr. Williams' Pick Pi S. itt'-rvicw I bim with thefcll:h,g r-sult Said Mr Loftiu: "I suf fere' juten-iy y;th rh-oruatisra f.r tea months. I m entirely help! for two deaths. I tried arious remedies tut none .f them di I m- iiiy poo.1. Having heard of Dr. William' rink Pills and th-ir wonderful eurative ower. I pr'ound a tx and began the use ot them with wonderful effect. In two weeks" time I was able to leave my bed, and in a few months' time I was able todo manual labor, r'ro'u h.-Jjde to mansal labor is a,y exi eriruee, nud I nttr bute this pre:it U-.i.'Kt s.lelv to the us.' of Dr. Wiliia nV l ink Pi.L-." Dr. Villiam'a Pink Pill.- contain nil the elements !.?. .i.ary to pive new lift, and rieb n s.s t'j ll.e t bj-rl and restore shattered teiyej. They ate. fer sale by all trii5.Tt.. or iray by htiC cr rr.atJ from Dr. Wiilinrrs MeUiciPi CoLipr.ny, K'henect.ily, N. Y., for 60 cents per box, or six boxes for f 2.50. Highest of all ia LeareaZBg Power. Latest U. S. Gor-t Report A SPEAKER SQUELCHED. aIosy of Anarchist Not Fermitted y Ithodlt rrencliersoi inicafo. Eeir Hardie, tho English labor leader, now In this country, disturbed the fwxiateues? ot fb weekly meeting of Methodist clergymen at Chicago by a llery Socialistic speech, and was greeted with sucu a storm oi ministerial disapproval that he was compelled to aban don the floor. Hardie had been invited 10 address the preachers, aaa wuu f-everal IO"al socialists Riiennei me meeting. The Englishman proceeded to air hts views, louuiy ppmuu- . v.. 1.1- nn.l llnillll V.iltrlv 1a. ei vy uia jiiciAus, cu- - -- nounced the execution of the Chicago anar chists an-i euiojrii' "mu i-'""" new religion. The storm which greeted the statement almost carried Hardie off his feet. IIalf a dozen preachers at a time bitterly de- 1 ih. anntlmanta prnrfSSKih and the speaker was ccmpellel to sit down. The ministers men aeuvuuw iu i".us speech and speaker, ant lUrdio left much offended. A Pneumatic float. The pneumatic boat of the Interna tional Pneumatic Boat Company, New York, will bo useful to sportsmen and travelers. It resembles a horse collar made of india rubber cloth, but tho interior is provided with rubber boots and trousers, into which the user thrusts his legs, bringing tho boat up round his waist. He then walks into the water and inflates the collar, which buovs him rip. Of course he ctin pro pel the boat by treaoing the water or bj rigging up a nail, and he remnina quite dry. The "boat" is easily car ried about. - A return of the strikes of 1893 in France, Just poblished. shows that they numbers I 631. Four thousand three hundred and eighty-aix factories and mUiej wore affected, and 170,121 workmen took part inthestrikes, 1 he number ot working dajs last being 3, 174,000. De&fueM Camnet be Cared fy local appUcatloite. me they cannot reach the glaeaMd portion of th? ear. There is only ene prat? to cure deaf neas, and that is br coBMtitu ttsoal reflaedietj. Deafness is caueed by an in flamed oonditlon of the mucous Uuiag of the Eastacaian Tube. Wbrm thi trbe geta iu. flamed yon have a rumbti&g strand or iro per fect hearing, and when it is entirely ctoeod Ieafnn is me result and tmlee-t the inflam mation can be taken out and thU tube re stored to tts normal oonditlon, bearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are r.auqed by c larrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the muoons surfaces. We will give One Ltasdred Dollars for aoy ease of Dnnf qmm (cAUsSd by catarrb) that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHtafler & Co., Toledo, O. PT Sold by Drop gists, 75c. Tahiti, in tho South Seas, Is aow light I by electric lamps. OMEN'S FACES like flowers, fade and wither with time; the bloom of the rose is only known to the healthy woman's cheeks. The nerv ous strain caused by the ailments and pains peculiar to the rex, and the labor and v? orry of rearing a family, can often be traced by the lines in the woman's face. Dull eyes, the sallow or wrinkled face and those feelings of weakness" have their rise in the derangements and irregularities peculiar to women. The functional de rangements, painful disorders, and chronic weaknesses of women, can be cured with Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. For the yonnr girl just entering womanhood, for the mother and those about to become mothers, and later in "the change cf life." the " Prescription " is just what tbey v c d; it aids nature in preparing the system for these events. It's a medicine prescribed for thirty years, by Dr. K. V. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the Invalie,,s' Hcltl and buigical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y K Fertilizers A! should conuun a hlali W insure the largest yield 9 of the soil. . .;. , Write for our "rrtatr.;uuwie. a S?T:t bfX and T is brim full of useful infermatiea for farmers. It will be sent tree, a will nuke and save you nwsy Address, . vvk! J EVERY By J. Hamilton Aycrs, A. M., M. D. Thin is n most Valua ble Hook for tlic IIotic- lioltl, teach in k: an It does Mytiiptoiiis 01 ci 111 ere 11 1 Disease, tlic Cause anil Means ol Preventing stieli i rrcvcnimK: suen s. and tlic Simplest lti n-llla-1l n-illltllp. Disease Remedies wliieli will allc viatc or cure. -.r ..'-'. " . 598 Pages, Profusely Illustrated. The IVk.Ic is written in phin cvery-t!.iy Knlivi. an 1 is fr"- '' n the technical terms which rcnelcr me.t I-rt'r H'vV.-i i .ibi:- ' ' the prnerality e.f reader. Tills ISok is intended tit IK' oi Service in the Family 3 is wtndc-1 t 1 ? undented by- all. ONIiY 60 CENTS POST-PAID. (The 1 v.v price er,!y hem male po iUe by the iri.uniivr edition i:n'e ! ' Not only does this iJoofc" contain so inucli Inf .rrrnt!-n Re'.i" " ' Disease, but verv properlv j:is a Cornj kte An.ilv i e -'n" - ' pertaining to Courtsliip, Marriage and the proiftif tlon and Rearing cl Healthy Families; Toii:Tin;it wnii Valuable Recipes and Prescriptions, applanation oi Botanical Practice. Correct use ol Ordinarj Her"-- New Edition, Revised & Enlarged with Complete Index. Wth this Book in the house there is no tcu for not know in- what to jo ir.j'' emergency. ljn"t ww until you have illnes in jour f.iuuly Utoic J r .-r, -send at nnce for this valuable volume. OMTjY OO 033rTrfi X'OOT-I'-A-IU Send postal notcjor po-taee &timp e.f any icii' irunatlon net larger than 5 cent- BOOK 11111- HOUSa 1U4 LEONARD STREET. N. Y. City Bcsenftll fcj Hfttrlellr BtfftbftU by eTedrieity receive! a .rK.aT at Plm TK vtemefteal tet at Palmer's TK. f --!, 4 Q terJar and was at once bnti led . sis ml Tha stare is fitted an R. . ., ground. Tb players sre sm;i Oqj stationed in their respective p is por. Tie catcher standi behind the piL AC playa bacV or "off the bat aa ths circumstance elenubv H mores on a gort ot wheel. Th? r tUnda in tho Lox. The uujjujj ttacoht behind the batUr an 1 snti. late wyith tt emphasis. Oa liao axe the ,,oaacher" wu nTl their hand ia a delirium of basebol freasj. The umpire aatomaticiU. raiaes his band. The batter, as it coq. jued from the depth, alowly emerg, from trapdoor at home plaia wj tales position. A globe in the pitch ex's bead, denoting tho ball, oddenly fithe4 and tho ball U in plajv It out, and thea biases in the pitclur'i hand. Thus baJI or atriaa" j, noted. When tho ball is knocked tint, aa electrio lamp abota tho eldd. notes wbioh direction it roes, anj ka other flash on tho ground inoUa where it etntok. Kepeted flaahea d. zioto ererj moro of tho ba'lnnhlit again readies tho pitoher'a hand. batter, vhen the ball is hit, eenrrits off for the first bag. If ho is out he drops through a trap door. If not, L continues around tho circuit until t reaches homo or ia pnt out. Et plaj is called. A green flanh denotes a foul. The way tho figures run, tlile, emergo from and drop throngh tlie trapdoors is cxtreinolj interestiuc, ISe w York Tribanc. rtUINSOV rilllX AND FBTFRTO-flC Cotii you a) east a bottia If It car ytj and not a ai.c' cr-rit aalasa it duaa. Wbat doe ita-ira Int. Chilli ind Favar. Snil. Hillr.u V.nr. Srd. TlPHOID rtTt. 41 h. llniorrhrla ath. nDot F.r.r. Sill Matll- 7th. Nr.aalia. ttb. l.aiiripp. ' ' Mastybiakif ona boli; lai . ilk Tr dk'riVtal It. A. B. e;isl)Ic. 8a?nntti, i . rmpritor SAW NULLS CORN AND , FEF.D MILLS.' Water Wheel and Hay Hrsests. BEST IV IKK UiMIT. Del.eaoii Mill Ml(. Ca., 83, Aitaata. a. Ofiat Sale Parker, Hakrr and i-itbry Braecb IX)Urr". rrtm wit 1ow. 8in(cl barrnl, $4 'it; 4uiilf, I raUEile loatlerv, I Xi; riflM, ii.tv air rtSva, l.on; repeaUnf, tl.90; rivi.lvri, H'-., U- f I.7S. let of four. Kr-nd ktampa lor tri rrM pk-.iorl! ratalfHrae. li. a u. rolriom Armiim , 514 r. r n 1. - PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Clcantri aud brfina th halt. riomutri a Imunot fifiui. Never Falla to Htor Gray Hair to i'a Youthful Color. Cure aeaip dic bur taUuf. Oc.nd 1 1 'Wit lrrurit ASTHMA I POPHAH'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC POrHAH S ASTHMA SPECIFIC OlTaa rolif In SITS minute". B.nr) .IforarUCEtrlaJ jpackac. Bflii? ti j UrSKRUita. Oae Boi lanl pottpaia loa rvceint of SI-. Sit Umli-S JaddreaaISrS. rural, tim. ra kHfTTreifedfrii. 1 ' rJuir cru wita TaikW 1 I liaiSa Hit J rarad awar MBweeitueeleM. Frwa tf4 lyniatatai raaaiy aiaaaa-at. tod tf Ma day at teat. rw-fitri. mi all ayaiBtaai ara f 0)OKf intfcnotilalt fairaraiaua curwi are- FSSK. 8. N. U. 38. lor rau vropa y percentage of Potash to J and a permanent enrichment Q - - - . 1 Ki. A MAN HIS f j wiuan n u I mm OWN DOCTOR . . rA .'.Lo V a y.yjj ; Tr W'-f ;'-.;' .4'?' -C?
Marion Record (Marion, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 19, 1895, edition 1
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