Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 27, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 July 1894 — BERMUDA’S COLORING. [ARTICLE]

BERMUDA’S COLORING.

The Bide R-m’.nds the Traveler of the Mediterranean at Its Best. The attention of the traveler is at first attracted by the colors o? the waters as he approaches land and in the innumerable bays and inner sounds, says Harper s Magazine. The blue reminds him of the Mediterranean, where the Mediterranean is at its best, but among the islands the blue changes to emerald as vivid as the Pope’s ring, to Tyrian purple, to a blending of purple and maroon in the shallow bays, while if he looks across any wide stretoh of it there is an iridescent appearanoe, a shimmering of shifting oolors like changeable silk, only'.the colors seem m:.ro solid, and one doubts whether they are 6ky reflections and not solid colors of tho bottom seen through the transparent water. Fop the water at a great depth is absolutely transparent On the eastern coast Sicily, below Taormina, are seen just suoh wonderful colors along the shore, just suoh sparkling blue in the suu, ana there it is associated with agotfof romance and adventure, with suggestions of treasure wrecked along the coast in the galleys of Phumician and Greek voyagers. It is here difficult to believe that these brilliant colors are not inherent in tho water, and the fanoy is quickened by some of tho fish that sport in these ha'oyon seas. One of these is tho ungol llsh, flat and oval in form, of a cerulean blue, with two long streamers edged with yellow, apparently one of tho happiest, as he is ono of the m. st graceful, of all marine inhabitants. Another is the parrot fish, a larger animal, solballed irom his oolors of groen and brown, who moves about vigorously with his long fins that Imitate in their motion Ww,stroke and reelover if the Yale b aterew. His head is brown, his back is vivid green in shining scale', and his tall is brown again, with fine shadings of green. Ho knows that ho Is one of the handsomest of swimming things. Far irom tho Madding Crowd. This 1 1 What many a nervous sufferer wlahea lilniHelf everyday. jtolMwra will aoen be no necessity to foraake albeit somewhat noley—scones of metropolitan life, If the norvous invalid will begin, and peralat In the use of, Iloatetter’a Btomabb.Blttera, which will speedily bring relief to a weak and overatrung nervous system. Day by day the body acquires vigor through the lnfiuenoe of thla roliablo tonlo, and In the vitality which it diffuses through the syotem the nervea ooneplcuously share. Hleep, appetite, ijlgoitlon—all tbeae are promoted by thla popular Invigorant, and ts they are, who oan doubt that the acquisition of health and nerve quietude will be apeedy and complete? Constipation, blllouHnesK, malaria, nausea, sea iloknesa, and cramps In the stomach yield to thla remedy.