A MOST GRAPHIC STORY. It Is Taken Direct from Real Life, A CHARMING NEW ENGLAND LADY TELLS HER EXPERIENCE BOTH ARBMOAD AXD IN AMERICA, The unwritten romances of life are more wonder{ul and far more interesting than the most vivid works of fiction, The one we are about to relate occurred in real lite, aud is both interesting and instructive, Mrs. Jennie Ray formerly lived in Man- chester, N, H. Her home was pleasant, her surroundings comfortable. In tne vear 183) she visited England, wl while in that country began to experience strange sensa- tions. At first she attributed them to the change ol climate, but they continued and increased, until finally, like many another woman, she became utteriv dise raged, - It was while in this condition that Mrs, ilay returned to America and her home. Thousands of women who read this story can appreciate the condition in which Mrs Ray then wasand sympathiz» with her suffering. Iwo prominent physicians were calied and endeavore | to do ali in toeir power for her relief. In spite, however, of their skill Mrs. lay grew weaker and more depressed, while the agony she endured seemed to increase. It was at this time that a noted physician who was called declared Mrs. Ray was suffers ing from cancer, said there was no help, and toid her friends she coud not live more than av eek at the farthest. And here comes the interesting part of the story, which we will endeavor to tell in Mrs, Ray'scwn words. Sbe said: **Unknown to all these physicians, I had been using a preparation of which | had beard much. 1 did not tell the physicians because I fesred they would ridicute me, and pernaps order its discontinuance. During all the whiie that the physicians were at- tending me the preparation was steadily and faithfully doing its own work in its own way, and I had faith in its power. At last the doctor said there was no use of his com- ing, for he could do me no goo 1. 1 had suf- fered so much that | was quite willing to die, but it seems | was neaver relief than | knew Une week from the day the doctor last callad a false gr as a coffe Clip, an *h looked as thou bad been very lar it me. I sent f a doctor, and he decinred it was a fibroid tut said he had never known away of : gain hes mgivd efore. 1 immediately began Ur than Warne: 's Safe Cure, wh 8 I took untnown to the certainly rescued me from my firm beiliet that many to die of can mine, and if tl Warner's safe ( saved.” The above graphic true in every respect, now living at [42 joston, Mass, and above stated h who will g grant an intervie to any la .y y may oh her. lt is said that fiction,” and when t ing, heip.e which phy sider the r reason for he may be now and truthiul accor wih as lar one itseil { to ~ the remedy and which It is sad like A/n= the grave, alies wlio are no are cases induced to use v, ke we, might be ag ur West} i if wh Hsery “*(CClara, dear new engager t's very ember the “Why, “Didn't I wore it a Moments my pret ad Stone how did i Mr. Ring Gold a wae ft a Way, disease — Dr. Pierce's Discovery. In wd, too, by purif blood. W hie n and languid, or eruptions you're appes to take it, no ma at It’s easier to prevent tha have tO cure. For all disea pid liver or in sia, Biliousness, Scalp Diseases - SEASON. to sg canced by a tor blood, Dyspe; ful in, or even Consumption! {or Lung -scrofula), in earlier stages, the “ Discovery ” is the remedy that's guaranteed. does'nt benefit or you your money back. You pay only for the get. The proprietors of Dr. Sage’s Ca- tarrh Remedy lose #500 if you're not cured of Catarrh. They prom- ise to pay yon that if they can't cure you. What do you lose by trying it? Is there anything to risk, except your Catarrh? Ely's Cream Balm QUICKLY CURES COLD m HEAD Apply Balm Into each nostril ELY BROS, 56 Warren St, N. ¥ its only IM have cure, good you ! ) Syrup” Two bottles of German Syrup | cured me of Hemorrhage of the Lungs when other remedies failed, | I am a married man and, thirty-six years of age, and live with my wife | and two little girls at Durham, Mo | I have stated this brief and plain sc | that all may understand. My case | was a bad one, and I shall be glad | to tell anyone about it who willl write me. Paivie L. Scaegxck, P. | . O. Boxgs, April 25, 18go. Nomau | could ask a more honorable, busi uess-like statement, JE. DR. TALMAGE day Sermon. Subject: “The Resurrection.” feirness of death is ani the onlv ohjsction 1 have to this tex: is that n bad man uttered it. Nevertheless it is true, and in a higher and better sense than that in which it criginally uttered Years ago a legend something like this was told me: In a hut lived a very poor womau by the name of Misery. In front of her door was a pear tree, which wag her oniy resource for a living. Christ, the Lord, in poor garb was walking throvgh the earth and no would enter. tain Hin. In vain He knocked of palaces and of humble dwellings, Cold and hungry and insufficiently ecind, as He war, none received Him day to the hut of this woman, was Misery, she received Him, and Him a Yew crusts and askel Him to Himself at the handful of up all night that the waylarer might nave a pillow to rest on aue whose name warm as He departed what she would have Him do in the way of reward, and told her she asked, Allshe tree might be protectsd, and that the hoys who stole ber fruit, once climbing the might not be able to get down without consent, So it was granted, and Jimbed the tree were compelled there. After awhile Death « told the Pox in she must want to no one vid to Death, I will go i climb up into my Wir oo few pears snsented to b ue « her who stay all to go with him, go, for, however wants to go with a0, | 1 uid men sta tions sO young wh got over ® asad miles an hour intains and cities, us and ste lived since ¢ still alive, w iw to went rac FH eI or seventy {f gorgeous or seventy | sfrowstorms od yourself rdinary length enough bur. After filty HAVE seen 0 fifty or sixty enough sgh chills and w ugh blankets, In the nan life you bave carried . and 1 sigh tears, and suffered gh injustices, and enough pangs, and been clouded by encugh doubts, and surrounded by epotugh mysteries. We talk shout the shortngss life, but if we exer clsed good tense we would realize that life is quite long enough If we are the children of God weareata banquet, and this world is ovly the first course of the (ood, and we ought to be glad that there are other and better and richer cotirses of food to be handed on. We are here in one roon of our Father's house, but there are rooms up stairs, Thev are better | pictured, better upholstered, batter fur- nished. Why we want fo stay in the | antercom forever, when there are palatial | apartments waiting for our occupancy? i What a mercy that there is a lunitation to earthiy env.rosments’ | Death also makes room for impros plivsical machinery, Our bodies have wo | drous powers, but they are very limited There ars beasts that can outrun us, outlilt ns, outearry us. The birds have both the | earth and air for travel, yet we must stick | to the ope. In this world, which the human | race takes for its own, there are croatures | of God that can far surpass us in some thins, Death removes this slower and less adroit machinery and makes room for some- thing better. These eyes that ean sve half a mile will be removed for thoas that can | gee from workl to world, These ears which can hear a sound a few feet off, will be removed for ears that can hear from gone to zone. These fect will be removed | for powers of locomotion swifter than the | reindeer's hoof or eagle's plume of lightn ing’s flash, i lien we have only five senses, and to these we are shutup, Why only five senses? Why pot fifty: why not one hundred: why not a thousand? We can bave, and we will have therm, but not until this present physical machinery is put out of the way. Do not | think that this boay is the bess that God can do for us. God dil not hall try when he contrived your bodily mechanism. Mind you, 1 believe with all anatomists and with | SEOs, 3 antgmns i Hugn « folinge re, felt en Lave seen and inen shed en fe of do 1 A with the pealmist that ‘we ara fearfully and wonderfully made.” But 1 believe andl know that God can aod will get us better physical equipment, 1s it possible for a man to make improve. ment in almost anything and God not be able to make improvements in man's physi. cal machinery? Shall canal boat give way to limited express train? Shall slow loiter ive place to ogre that pianos Ban anciseo and New York within a minuts of communication? Shall the telephone take the sonnd of a voice sixty miles and instant. nite velocities and infinite jeneficent Death comes in necessary removal to make supernatural improvements, slow process of getting have a substitute Through prolonged stedy wa alphabet, and then we then we learned to read. and makes No izarned to sn Then the boo to word und from page to paze | waole days to read the haoks { that book of four or five | have ined one or two profitabl | feel we have done well, Taora { some swifter wav and {| way of taking in God's universe | and facts and emotions and | But thi cannot be done with | its ng state, Manv a brain gives | under the present facility, Phis whitist | mass in the upper cavity of the skull and 4 | the extremity of the nervous system | center of perception and sensation canno endure more than it now endures, But God can make a better brain, and He | sends Death to remove this {that He may put in a BOL we tag anil fron PAGE AR © russ 0H bow rit information vour brain i inferior brair superior bran { Ob, na, machinery —new driving wheel, new bands | new levers and new powers. | the resurrectionary process will have more knowledge, more acute ness, more brillianey, more breadth of swing than any Sir Willian Hamilton or Herschel or Faraday or Agassiz ever had m | state sll their intellectual powers bined. You see God has only just b {| build you. The palace of natu: the foundation laid und part of tory, and only part of one architect a8 made be when tl | Isanc in the ar Con your | ONLY wal nnniete John was right when he shall the life far t dizzy, And hind jinaranc ss? cant ) Own, Bn robin ho other tree ranch natty ens 0 ithe Y OREY 8S iy done Adi body , 55 that DOGGY In us AY thers are the gars Ox wi Dey are sear 2 parts are made for, but bave nod found ont { can tell them. They are the pralimina of the resurrection body. God does not make anything for nothing Phe uses of taoss now surplus parts of the boly will be demon strated when the gloriliad form is coas': ted pavaio human body naderstand. 1 ocists at es Now, if Death ciears t why paint him as a hobgoblin? him the king of terrurs? as a great sport? Why sistoh him with skeleton aad arrows, and staating on a bank of dark watsr:! Why have children so frightene! at his name taal they dare not go to bel alone, and old men have thar he way for all thie, Why erli 4 i 1 $ i t 1 i YOars where whera RIN they they Gone got together have more have moro saan, romn! jubilant soe where they have mightier | canacity to love you then when they were | here! Gone out of hindrancss into | bounded liberty! Geope ! (Gone where they tall we aiwevs talk about ab GY “1 wonder when they w Hark the WEL, Hark! t Perha s they are coming vay told at Johnstown af the flood people who had been for months # bereft for the first time g fort when the awiul flood came to think thas Lhe Prarts not The catastrophe, cople w ing cown on the bousetons they said: “Oh, how glad 1 ¢ father apd mothar are | not here, 1 1 am that the chil | aren are not alive y this horror!” Aad ouzht not we who are down here amid the upturnings of this life be giad that none of the troubles which submerge us can ever aflright our friends ascended! Betore this 1 warrant our deperted ones have been introduced to ail the celebrities of ome one has said 10 them “Let me introduce you to Joshua, the man woo i by prayer stopped two worlds for several | hours, lat me make you acquainted with this gr up of three heross-—Johu Huss, Pbilip Melancthon and Martin Luther, Aba! here is Fenelon i is Archbishop lLedghton! Here are ner and Ridley! Hero 1s Matthew Bimpson! Hers is poet 4 row--Jjames Montgomery and Anna Bar- bauld and Horatius Bonar and Phoebe Fu.mer and Lowell Mason .* Were your departed ones What oratoris Ww ere i Raphael ciety 1. about you as it friends and iil come up hers outside door of heaven | BWIngs « there ara feet on ths +21 1irS tip nT Lm nani ves OL Cot rad 1 ones were As the i present Lo seo ro float. or *'l music? and Hay- What colors fond of Handel pit with Ww heein, led on by they for pointing ou + * out { den, tures? all wings of Were they fond led on bv glorified 3 e, hurri- Kien into chstiot 1 sud cor rv® What eterna Milton, Shall they iked an Aan “ini 1 I said so myself This is Aro this stand 5 und any world since death entersd it i not breathe fonts snd incidents than a grave GRAS I walked i We “Naw is Miho fhe five sforis $igis & Fieey * 8 of poare, who rd Jesus, through minke ’ i} OW nav i {sd again frota the dead out that ureat shepherd of the the blood of the everiastin pariect in brouzo Ls ser, covenant every good word and work. I! Amer in the West Jah Flax the West is cultivated to.day successfully; but it thrives better on soil that has been well worked, tilled and pulverized. The seeds demand pleaty of fertilizer, both Flax in hand them over to the monster? JAll the ages have been busy in maligning Death, uring repulsive metaphors at Paath, slaniering Death. tn come down on the earth. Right alter the vernal equinox, and when the foywers ara beginainz to bloom, well may all nations with songz and with congzratuiation and gar lands cslebrate the resurrection of Christ, and our own. resurrection woean the time is gone by, and the trumpet: pour through the flying clouds ths harmonies that shall wake the dad. By the empty niche of Joseph's mauar- lsum, by the rocks that parted to let the Lord come through, Jet our ideas of chang. jury worlds be forever revolutionized. If what I bave been saying is true, how dif- ferently wa ought to think of our friends departed. Ths body they have put off is only as, when entering a Lall lighted and resounding with musical bande, you leave your hat and cloak in tae cloakroom, What would a banquster do if he bad to carry those encumbrances of apparel with him in- to the briltiant reception? What would your departed do with their bodies it they tad to bs en umbered with them in the king's Gone into the light! Gone into the muse! Gone nto the festivity! Gone among kings and qoeens and cone querors! Gone to mest Elijah and hear him teil of tao chariot of fire arawn by horses of firs and the sensation of mounting the sap. shire steeps! Gone to mest with Moses and fear lim describe the pile of black basalt that shook when the law was given! Gone to weet Paul and bear him tell how Felix trembled, apd how tha ship went to plecas in the breakers, and how thick was the darkness in the Mamertine dungeon! Gone to meet Jobin Knox and John Wesiey and Hannah Mora and Francis Havergal, Cone to moet the kindred who preceded them! Why I should not wonder if they hada larger family group there than thay awer had bere. Ob, how many of them have got together again! Your father and mother want years apart, but they have got toe and thelr ly bring back another v and God, who wade man who does these things, not be ’ and commercial fertilizers. From four hundred to six hundred pouads of min- The sced weed is imported After ution the same as any other i { i ! take care of itself, It is and if there is a market for the siraw the flax growers will have their profits nearly, if not quite, doubled. Labor is also saved seventy dollars’ worth of seed, straw, for the ordinary grass mower can cut the plates and bundle them into sheaths, Machioery, in fact, can per- form nearly all of the work, from the time the sceds are first planted until the straw is converted into fibrous material for wearing, Fiax is so exhausting to the soil that it should not be grown on the same field oftener than two out of every six or seven years, for repeating the crop upon the same ground for a number of years in succession will sure ly injure the soil permanently. New York Independent. Arizora has one of the greatest copper mives in the world, The Copper Queen is une of world wide reputation, and during 1801, with copper down tamlicu lously low prices and the cost of develop ment work running up into the millions, the mine paid a dividend of $850,000, i: remarked when be eseaped prison, iron the STATR OF OMI10, L'1TY OF as Con LOLEDO, { AS, me ard s day of Des A th As Wy, leap-year girl 2 little pop might i ; corn. Pint Werk take Hr taking PErBOns SLrong; | 3 Mr. Robert WW. Two Christmas Dinners - in '91 a Cood Appetite The Was Due sarsaparilia. Change fo ak IDay, Dex ¢ Ma Foi Dyspepsia f 5 wd att gs Fen § wy i he ‘ i wie Tstat t3 Sol than a smell.» {ono we Cres it For The fe vents | Las TE I found that or a Hood's Sarsaparilla Cures dyspepeia well and have mv i e 1 Both ww bl perfectly other ed DEsvin, 2 City, N.Y "Hood's Pills ~ Kennedy's MedicalDiscovery Takes hold in this order: Bowels, Liver, Kidneys, XK Frank Qutside Skin, You know whether you need it or not. Sold by svery druggist, and manufsctured hy DONALD KENNEDY, ROXBURY, MASS, PATENT Washington, Ib, OC, 40-page book free. ONE ENJOYS Both the method and resuits when Byrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts ently yet promptly on the Kidneys, adver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head. aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Byrup of Figs is che only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste ir ceptable to the stomach, prompt in ite action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most bealthy and agreeable substances, ite many excellent qualities com- mend it to all and have made it the roost popular remedy known. Byrup of Figs is for sale in 500 and 81 bottles by all leading drug. gists. Any reliable drugyist who may not bave it on hand will pro- cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute, CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. 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JONES, Manager, Springfietd, Ohiz, Urol Canes, 100, each; Yellow Jasamine, | for i | Bows, Wasminevow, L a dL "a FATAY KEATAY | TRAN . 5% i SR BR at nl ht poh 12 Ll did hk ; " “ . kT i 3 AL Snel MSS * . 3 wrfect Farm Pence, yo POI iar and Testivnoninis, miso Cathouse Flexitde Wire Nats, So. DUFUR & Qu, Bsltimore, Ma, Write for win Fenee, 1 Descriptive Orvis Tee aud Dower Guards