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A . French - . Ylew Oi Affieiicn. Amprie .
The Kosinos of most Frenchmen lies
between Belgium and the Pyrenees, the
Mediterranean and the English Channel,
When they attempted to describe any*
are
however serious they may be, they with very
rarelxr fail to be comical in dealing
America. The latestunconscious hum. r-
1st is J.des Saussa, who has sense—entitled ^blished*
romance—-m a double
the “Soaete des Mouchards, tlie aefeon
being laid in France, Italy, Xulnlandand
theUnited States. He pays a delicate
-CO mpliment to this city % calling^ Eu- the
rendezvous of all the scoundrels in
«bffe 4>r two fangs, hke* boars, and au
insatiable appetite for what he calls fe
iodd, composed of much -whisky, httie
water, lemon and sugar. She keeps a
fashionable boarding-school intLouisiaua,
and drinks so freelv every evening mulculax that
«he is cai-ried to her room by -a
servant, especially employed : for the pur
pose. She is very fond of a certain Ma
jor Dick, also a devotee of ie todd, who
addressed her “in true American fash
ion,” as “Old Mule” and “Ancient Ro
mantic Brain.” He constantly uses the
favorite oath of fee country,_ “God me
damn, and when he is particulaily_ af
fectionate to Mrs. Bick-aits down by her,
and puts his feet in her lap. married, A woman
here “Mistress,”'and, is always addressed, if “Miss,” as
if single, as
»hae . rn» »
and My Gentleman. A lady should,
in writing to one of the other sex, cab
him “Honorable Sir,” or “Respected
Gentleman” and sign Iherself “Your de
voted Suitor” or Your truly respectful
est.” Saussa introduces us to two very
Prell , Ohio girl. habitually Snifor rides »„1 wild B-jr, horses
one of whom
through her native town bare-headed,
and the other, donning trousers and
high boots, goes forih to hunt rattle
snakes. Most Americans carry, we are
informed, a bowie-knife in their boots,
and the rich Southerners are always ac
compianied by two negroes to fan them,
Notwithstandmg the custom of gomg
armed, the average American is not ne
cessanly very fierce, and there are na
fives who, so far as known, have never
killed a single man. Different habits
•characterize different States. In Mirme
sota, for example young ladies of posi
tion enter cornfields during the season to
gather red com, and after a wedding
ceremony has been performed, all the
invited guests set to peeling apples, the
object being to see who can peel the
most in a given time. In several of the
States west of the Mississippi, which is
10,000miles long, and empties society into Gulf
Mexico, ladies of the best spend
weeks at a time in the Kooky Mountains,
of hunting their grizzly claws bears, trophies and w of ear their necklaces
as prow
ess. Every American will recognize this
faithful delineation of national scenes and
manners, and will wonder how a French
man could have been so very accurst* —
A Y. Times.
X _
A 4 Woman** W 8 Five-lHinnte Tall tal1,
of a five-mmute . call a woman will
im^terti-ukuifw a ■uVJfKl'
*
—that Mrs. atuckup has new tiunmire
the second time within three years,qf i m
Dot mistaken, and lace cuiTains with iam
brequins and her black silk dress made
rT.’ B1 ^ her hair do ?? u P m anewway,
higher than she 1 used to wear it not be
pnmino-a f 0 ™ 1 ! 8 a bit and ? her if r little viri’s oof her
han % banged , and all dressed i, in white i and ,
gomg to Miss ^ddigurlsscimoimtlie
an ^ * ie1 ’ C00 ^ 8 ^ oue maf l an( ^ s ^ ie
says she’s almost tired to death and is
going to Swampscott next week Spoodliugton and Miss
Flirt’s going to have young
after all and Miss Smiths going to
give her a pair of bouquet-holders she
says they’re good enough for her she got
them cheap up to Bagshop’s and Miss
Ferguson’s got a boy lots of hair on its
head and looks three months old every
body says and Steve Beaker’s awful dissi
pated father they say and that Lovewell girl’s
ordered him out of the house and
she's been taking on awful and de
dares she will have him and Stiggenses
have moved out of tow n and the Browns
have lost every piece thing and Miss Smith’s
bought a whole time the of husband cotton cloth and
—By this is asleep
or has fled. A man could never make as
much out of a week’s visit. All he would
remember would be that Brown’s got a
mighty pretty other wife, equally or keeps good cigars,
or some inconsequential
matter
specimen of the conversation of Fifz Ab
batross Y an Ambrosial, “an unmatrieu
year: “Miss Tank said as I ST bowed °T |
l°l a “ aterlah f or an adealist?’
Yes, rather, I replied, 1 so glad, she
sure you ri l contuiued. W V^. T C \r^r°’J ‘Don t you think
Daisy Mffier is few overdrawn to be the j
typical representation of the bestmthetic .
production of Boston culture, or do you
prefer the ideas of Joseph Cook?’ she
ventured further. ‘Yes, James is quite
too awfully clever, yes, indeed,’ I added.
‘Dp attend the summer school of philos
ophy dently. at Concord?’ she murmured confi¬
‘No, not to-day, no,’ I stuttered,
getting a little flurried. ‘Oh, I see, you
are one of those interesting atheists,’ she
continued. ‘Yes, I will get you some,’ I
uttered as I slid aw a y.”
—The other evening Richard Freethy,
abut her at Hone-dale. Pa., was re
turn ng home fom Wav mart, ten miles
d stant, where he had sold a load of
meat when, as he was passing through
a piece of woods, a powerful man
jumped rein-:, and into demanded the sleigh, reethv’s grabbed the
; money.
In tne struggle Freethy was thrown out
of the carrying sleigh. The the horses highway started on with a
run, man
them. Freethy retained his money and
was not hurt. 'The team was after¬
ward ound standing in the road five
miles away.
Miiteral ahd Farm Mahureb.— Dr.
Dawes says : “I may say that forty-two
pounds of nitrogen, applied in the* form
of nitrate of soda, with mineral manures,
with one acre of barley, has, for twenty
five years in succession, produced as
large a crop as an annual application of
fourteen icaia oi farm-yard dung por
•rare.”
THE TTORLD BANKRUPT.
_
rnr'Lnrsr« Amount Owpfi^r GoTpmment*.
An fegenions statistician, who had
been losing sleep m the pursuits c*f
science, has added up the nations of the
SHpS/fpp
will be a universal smash. The gloomy
view of the situation figures—total is supported by tlio
magnitude of the amount
weSelievofcsome^O.UOam^or ®D that, -
000,000,61®—and -exception it of is the plainly United true States,
with the
the civilised goverments ■oBtba world' are
rapidly increasing tfceiv (indebtedness. .
g ttt w* Relieve that this immense aggre
gateoMebt is an evidence Father of sol- :
as
vent, 'but that ltis so McWthat noextrava
gwioe can rum it All 4fce great pubhc the
ddbiB of the world sure the creation of
present century, and many of them of
thetpast twenty or cental thirty vears. At tiket
bevhiniug ^“t of the France had
all and EggW only a trHBn*
Italy, which is quite active ««
debtor, did not caasbae a nation thirty
wears ago and fee Un-ted States had no
« u blic or local debt of any amount twen*y
jv- ^ sars ago. coursed eighty fee
lf , in the years,
amtions of the world have succeeded sa
-ftoadiug themselves with a burdoa-cf
t 0 the whole ofethe estimated weskli
;, 0 f this country at the last census, it ie a
I proof that their material prosperity «*d
; accumulated resources have reached pio
^ ered impossiole ^ and i.»« mythical i«™ j-a m any
previous era of history. France, which
. 110w thrives aud }>rt*:i)ci'S luider an cn«-
! mous debt of $4,700,000,000, on which at
i p a y S an annual interest of $203,000,080,
« ; would have found ^.impossible .hi.h 100 years i.
.go to bo„w iho .... „,„t
mildly paid tor ijit®est Engiand owes
a debt of some $4,080,000,000, the fouu
dations of which wefce laid in the attempt
to prevent the French from being ruined
by a sovereign of their own choosing'.
But if England had had any idea at the
outbreak of the Napoleonic wars of the
outlay which would fee incurred, we may
be sure the ablest fianeiers would have
, S aid that there was no credit of gover
ment or power of authority which would
-suffice to carry so large a debt. Now,
triumphant Germany asks France for a
trifle of $1,000,000,008.as coolly as if it
were a bottle of wine *nd totally mort
gages the resources of t nation before a
nation is established. Was the world
any richer 100 years ago, when its lack
of credit prevented its borrowing money?
Is it any poorer now, when it has bor
rowed so much that a demand for pay
ment Avery would simple bankrupt answer it J to the question
may be had by merely considering where
all the money came from which is now
invested in the Grand Livre or ledger of
France, the consols of England, and the
bonds of other countries. Before the
country could borrow there must have
been, capitalists who The had nations the money could not to
lend—and to spare.
have borrowed unless the people were
able to lend, andif the world isable to lend
$20,000,000,000 or $30,000,000,000 it can
hardl be indangerof immediate hank
r «Ptcy. In fact, the debts of the nations
merely the of wi® sujph^of. accumulations the people, which a_
smaU l' art
have been made in Steam, a century electricity, of industry
and of progress. and
patent inventions have accumulated in
tlle world sucll a mass Q f wealth as the old
world never dreamed of; and, as the pro
pp ® ess „ s nccnrrinlntiori accumulation is is.going e-oinv on on faster raster
than the process of borrowing, the world
is -growing richer every day, richer in
spite of wars and armies and kings and
tariffs and tax-eaters, and other obstacles,
and there is no call for any learned statis
Jid the T futuie to .itupof ol an insolvent „W,Ui» world.
Peculiarities of Deep-Sea Animals.
Deep-sea . rule, have
animals, as a
. ^* have large
el lel ' n ® e y fis or very
e y as - As an example may be cited the
crustacean, astacus zalencus, most closely
2r I' 10 common cray-fish which
£ r ? f * - Huxl ey 4o0 has , fathoms. lately made It has illustri* »UH.
no eyes
narily .}> long , ^ one and of delicate, its nippers and possibly is extraordi- tJ<e
us ® 8 Jt reel its way with, as a
blind man uses his stick. There are also
Abundant hairs on the animal s surface,
?L ac 1 are l )r °bably organs of touch,
an ? deep-sea , Crustacea, however, have
“•
ver y large eyes indeed, evidently for the
purpose of making iise of some small
quantity of light which must exist in all
depths. In the absence of sunlight the
f aSy*SL^5 Sals thmnsetees X do^,ht rti?
ea ‘ ™
animals as in shallow water deepen emit Iteht
iu «»® deep sea; and the animals
with mT8 in . oba bly congregate round
them “
0 tlie ir way in the gloom
£ rom one hunch to another as they lie
scattered over the bottom, just as wa
ba if f ee l, half-see our way from lamp- j
f t to lamp . rM)st iu a nig ] lt fog _ H< lp
ose their way as we do somefenes, Aiany and
get iuto sball ,„ v uatcr , and a grwd
deep-sea animals liave from time to time
been picked elsewhere, up near the shores at
Madeira and and have found
their way into museums as great rarities.
No doubt the sense of touch is the one
mainly relied on by most deep-sea
animals. Very many are provided w ith
special organs the of touch, such as long
hairs, or, iu case of fish, enormous 'y
lone fin-ravs.
Chas. H. Palmer, a deacon in the
Baptist Church at Jackson, Mich., was
seeing a young lady home from Sunday
School recently, when it began to rain
and the two stepped into the deacon’s
store, where he told gave her some candy,
kissed her and her not to tell. But
she did tell, and after a long church
(rial a resolution was passed censuring
the deacon for indiscretion. It is a ques¬
tion in our mind -whether the deacon was
indiscreet or not. How did he know that
the girl would tell? He simply took his
chances on it, the same as anylxxly else.
If a man goes into the dry goods or gro
eery business indiscreet and fails, is it right other to say
that he was when men
are business. making If monev that is in the the same line of is j
case a man
indiscreet to try to do anything at alL— !
Peek’* Sun. I j
YmTHE comes in small packages, cut
vice by the baleful. .
ff(»i)EEFUL BEVEL VTIOSS OF THE
MICROSCOPE* i
-
Siw.vcry orme m«.i &.<.«.» «f
Mankind. The Bwtinwaud
u« Knvmc m.
sxrsftssssLM;,^ The breathe «nd live in is -charged
«%r we
with these deadly ftttle growths i« f*opor
non =«8 it is infected from various noxious
J ^ "disease 'KTmost
^ ‘ o: known, and the .
w} fare and heiitL of every individual de-,
pending so largely on the freedom natural! from
their destructive-ravages, it is but
-feat the reported recent investigators in •
.this field of saentific inquiryjhould be
with *,,„<• suspicion they haw at length
been thoroughly proven, and are now re
ceiving the unqualified endorsements.of
the world. leading But .scientific tittle else men is tallsed throughout of in die tae
schools andjejubs of science, a.*d the nr«Ii
omtfve of value of the Marvelous dis
covery which in .mediail is pronounced science itbe .of greatest modern
advance
times. L. FrencVsci- .
To PastreuR, the eminent . ,
ent.st, ^bably ^^'manv ‘honor millio,^ of
is due the of-first
pointing ouidhe terrible power of these
>erai& 'In recognition of hie gneat service
(he goveroiment has recently voted him
from the public treasury $10,<M0.00, -with
which to continue his experiments. He
&3X
* j tre*uelv dangerous. One form
lt iers eI
(,e proved by a series of vaccinations and
other conclusive experiments war. the
cause of dead; of many thousands of ani
mals and bends of cattle; another the ac
five agent S'ThfCloS'.f7h"!f in -the death of fowls S^-“ bpehol
- f relief that speed
imed outaaleans 0
py prevented a spread of the diseases and
ended their devastation.
Tyndall, wife the aid of other eminent
English investigators, made a number of
examinations of the floating numbers particles in of
the atmosphere.^d ound
}«"Jf 1 and h ^ ]y localities but few
„ erms Vere found, and these of the harm
les8 varieties, while in low damp places, the
crowded houses, aad unhealthy cities,
poisonous germs were extremely numerous
everywhere. ... , _
Dti - ^nentfon ,
' y „
vith the organismso f contagious diseases
has ma(Je ), ira a reC0 gnized authority upon
p,*, subject, by experimenting after the
methods of Villkmin, hae discovered and
published an account of one of the most
dangerous varieties, to which it is p roven
raor | to “ ny dlsease
‘"H^describes it i a simple cellular or
gan j 8IU belonging to the same order as the
bacteria. When dried the germs may,
without losing any vitality, endure great
extremes of temperature. Being as fine
and aa hght as dust, invisible to the naked
{£ ®7®> ' f fh* rinthmt m
d L ke seedSi t h e y may lie for month*
or years undisturbed upon the furniture,
floor, carpets, curtains, walls, or in the bed
ding, and only requiring a proper waken degree of
warmth, moisture and food to into
! f «> dc y« lo P; and 8 row - The y thn ye 8nd
bve in the blood, lymph, mucus andsecre- .
u»hiuh,“r the uun Zy atUck HW 7fee
cells that make up U li l i i' l .-D iy
albuminous fluid will furnish them with
food for growth, and a single drop is suf
ficient to contain hundreds. Examined
with microscopes of great power, which e#
lar S« tbe ™ so that they can be seen and
1 ue J 1U bodTeshavinrwhfn noaies, naving, when °Lure' active,
some middle power like of bow motion. They bend m the
a and straighten with a
jerk that sends them a few times their own
length. At the the temperatme of the human
are most active.
A heir power of increase or reproduction
*STS«rj5gf . sSSJSZ&SSl
will give rise to millions. The process is
by simple growth and division. Cold de¬
stroys or prevents their growth, and this is
why refrigeration prevents decay of meats
and other animal foods. Exposed to
warmth these sniaU organisms attack and
eat up tiie albuminous tissues leaving a
foul mass. The odors so common to this
organisms, process are given is off about by these minute
and the only indica¬
tion of their presence. This is the warn¬
ing of nature and it is an instinct to avoid
ail such smells. The foul breath, had odors
of old sores, etc., leads man to avoid these
germs their in a great in the measure. body The be danger imagined of
presence can
when their rapid increase is considered. A
few germs may be readily absorbed into
p«, tenor of the , s.m body through j s tne r fiisft long and
narrow respiratory passages of the throat,
chest and nose, which are lined with soft
membrane and covered with st.cky mucus,
in this fluid they find ready lodgment
and favorable conditions for development,
increase and growth. The “cold” or ca¬
tarrh, ozaMva. or chronic oatarrh, hay fever,
5tc. f are common manifestations of the
effects of one of the least harmful of these
germs from the or respiratory microzyf '-s. In the such discharges times
passages at
thousands of tiie living aniriialculm are
found. The fever, debility, pains “in the
bones,” loss of appetite, etc , are indica¬
tions of their depressing effects upon the
vital organs.
It is from germs of slower development,
however, that the greatest danger follows.
To the one most fully described by Koch is
due more deaths than to any other known
cause. Flint, According to the researches of Bat¬
ter, andDejerine over eight million
people die every year from this cause alone.
The annual deaths in France, England,
Germany, tion and and Russia from their destruc¬
was one a half millions. In the
United States and Canada over three
hundred thousand persons perished in the
last year from the baeillut alone. The most
common disease resulting from it is con¬
sumption ot the lungs, but otherorgans of
hg body are liable to be affected as they
that develop slowly be but surely in any organ
may in a weak or unhealthy state.
If active and healthy, the liver, kidneys,
and bowels have to a wonderful extent the
power of expelling tbese deadly an¬
imalcule or parasites from the system.
And this fact furnishes an important in¬
dication for the successful treatment of all
the parasites long list will of be maladies hereinafter caused shown. by these
as
The studies of Lahctrca, an eminent
Italian, and Wood. Fokmao and others, are
interestintr, as showing the large variety of
chronic diseases as heretofore classified,
fe** remh from these germs. Among fee
«»* l>,hou,! common torp,d were “liver hver dy3pepsia complaint.”
’ es8 or ’ or
indigestion, lung affections, bronchitis,
kidnev diseases, chronic diarrhoea, spinal
complaint, joint fever-sores, white swellings.
hip disease, rheumatism, malarial
diseases, such as fever and ague or inter-
^»Wtafcral l * iei *v weaknesses, and chronic Herrons catarrh debil
altjU y^nTS^'f^nlous^affection'p'of P r oz % n ^ ^* an y
and ?
the dndfwyl,* sk'ij , Y,,■which , v rtWl , *_
is but sowfn
Saw») T® .4!^ ^ .|yC
ofthe ssmbenlK hi X “X
‘
«, 0 ugh <£ly » lv „ s . P t Tttdi^e bore « sHirmH refatten
'*a»s un'N n* 1 * v u,abw S ry large ’ being Proportion prewat in. in iniW bail
wl^^c he U8 ? of f <at ®«P*® 1 “ c tre
ment staatiallf 0 . .
,££ ,.,,, '?® *?,, i^^view
rccomnu, number ,J^n steUil?3t^tah Vkw' the
to
The gj variety -auiaotoms were
f.« n «l to to
peculiate, »f the b 1 ?.'*^‘‘“‘v „fe Preecnee, uue
, , t a
___ _
system the effort, oP ie differeiit.-ort Kiistorid tlte
+ ^ C«tl3heJ A mong the mMt net
vari.bW ' ,B *' «««*». oeuetipatlon. poor or
hectic fe appetites dwrrhcea. bad breath,
» re cf' 3 P t,. whip
affected, .
1Z’'* ^-alt-rheum ^ryM^U boil* carbuncles fire,
al^grsSp St Anthony's
*ymptoms wer® common, awl
C ur«i rf, 4 )| M - v ^' saule n w, meJl118 iJ* certainty Ihe hectic were
’
. w
with thef backing Ken “ et with >n consumption,
. tearing . cough, night
e#tg or
| j(( ’ e 4arrh6ea,and<U.hersynH>toni.s due
J, rj® ro “ ' . , * >res, id cured absce-ses in the and same ulcers way as in were the
yr and other important organs
. ‘psive to acids the snd mineeal of poisons killing
tbese possess power of
8UCli fls Jllt tf> * dangeroua nature
po v,
^ito within the system it is
" e ? e9S *. resort to vegetable remedies in
° r h® alls ® t ' 1 ® blood of the germs
w " -thont , *° .'hjary to the patient,
. “ ■ n lerkan physician of laige expe
‘ fa i Jfciie treatment of all forms of
^ now conclusively shown
years of thl te "™ “J*''. n T* st '^
tion
in case the i. tttq TJloped ment o{ many thousands testedi of
and thoroughly whiopne
* ” .n of vegetable agents
V In cases scK yiarvelous success in their cure,
tion, tion or or sc w sstii! s; disease, as consump
organs, organs, wrpnlrrittkiM “^1° an ’ V* 1,1 " *** “,! 1 cists tasoi5 i»ttcimcu attended ‘* uenaea wife wl nuu great g girnv reat
wonderfu Hitwasfuand - to exert the - most
‘^nutritive ^ dn j Can( | restorative influences,
&"ted 0il properties of far the surpass
to° r by^ reme
e medical pro
iron fession and inf such . cases. nnfip . Hypophospliites, Hv
in buiidimr qi
sr«s 0
by him has
cess is in or years with the successful greatest sus
tice. vaet and most prac
The writl en experience of the , many suf- ,
ferers who t
endorse of its th" high^t^raisV value, their' sufli
cient to rilL j great Living witnesses are
everywnere vo umeg are
ana 801e,lI "'c. monuments to modern genius
Sufferl progress in complaint,” the healing giving art.
rise to V rom “liver
and othl blood,” consumption,scrofula, the
sulth'ofs i ftctmn^nd BBL- symptoms, K r^
briefly'r^KvlfTMo, __. tirid diorntm <reiw* remedy «n
reJi.-f da in this
prompt and Hrcreasflig an f>ermanent cure. this The
great demand for God
given and jieerle* remedy for so many an
parently different but really kvndre.1, ail
convenieiirf menls, ledlto its reparation m pure and
form under the name of Dr.
Pierce’s Golden M sdical Discovery. It can
be obtained the rorld over at drug and
general will stores, be found an 1 full directions pamphlet for its
use battle. in the that
surrounds-each It exerts the most
wonderful stimulating and invigorating
influence ion the liver, that
gland of the human system, which has
been not beat inaptly tli.f’ Through termed the "housekeeper increased
of our the ac¬
tion of the liver anti other eusunctory or¬
gans of the system, all poisonous germs
are rendered ‘inactive and gradually ex¬
pelled from the system with other impuri¬
ties. In some cases, where there are un¬
healthy discharges, as from chronic the nostrils in
cases of either acute or catarrh,the
use of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy, a mild
and associated healing antiseptic lotion, the Discovery. should be
with the use of
It isalsoadvisab'-e to use this lotion in other
local manifestations of disease of mucous
surfaces. destroyed By this means the germs membranes of dis
i Pare are and ,, the
cleansed before any of the poisonous bacilli
are absorbed into the blood. In sore throat,
quinsy or diphtheria, the Catarrh Remedy
In women where weakness of special or
fans is common and almost certain to lie
developed, down scions attended and by otherlocal backache, bearing
symptoms,
speedily restores the healthy functions and
assists in Wilding up and invigorating the
system. In where the bowels
any case have been
costive and are not regulated and acted
upon sufficiently by the mild laxative
cal properties Discovery, possessed by the Golden Medi¬
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pur¬
gative Pellets (little liver pills), taken in
small will aid doses materially of only in one establishing or two eacli day,
action, and in expelling the d healthy
ducing from the blood sense-pro¬
germs and system.
At the risk of repetition and by way of
recapitulation, that Golden Medical we may truthfully say
humors, from the Discovery scrofula cures all
worst to a com¬
mon blotch, salt-rheum, pimple, fever or eruption. scaly Erysip !
elas, skin, short, all sores, or j
rough in diseases caused 1
by disease germs in the blood, are con
quered by this powerful, purifying, and
invigorating rapidly heal medicine. under Great its benign eating influ¬ ul¬
cers
ences. Especially in curing has it manifested boils. its
potency tetter, rose rash,
carbuncles, sore eyes, scrofulous sores and
swellings, white swellings, goitre or thick
neck, and enlarged gland*. life.” Thoroughly
“The Wood is the
cleanse thie fountain of health by using
Golden Medical Discovery, and spirits, good vital di¬
gestion, a fair skin, buoyant
strength and soundness ef constitution are
established.
Consumption, which is serofutous dis¬
ease of the Kings induced promptly by fee and deadly
disease germ iaetUu », is pos¬
itively arrested and cared by this sover¬
eign remedy, if taken before the last stages
ef the disease are reached. From its won¬
derful .1 power over this terribly fatal dis
ease. when first offering this now werld
famed remedy to the public, Dr. I'ixacx
thought favorably of catling it hie “eon
snmption cure," out abandoned that name
as too refrtrictive for a medicine that from
its wonderful combination of germ-de¬
stroying, •» well as tonic, or strengthening,
alterat ve, or blood-cle nxing, anti-bilious,
diuretic, pectoral, aitd nuuiuva prvyer-
ties, is uneqw*!f*rt, not only ms a remedy
for consumption of the lungs, but for all
chronic diseases of rtte liver, blood, kid
"!( yon sallow fce^'dul^ color r of drewsy, skin, debilitated, yellowish
hare or
brown l?I§iS§iS spots on, face or body, frequent
ssyra*ass‘gKifsss: iisss.” In only part «f these
iau.ny cases remedy
symptoms such »«• Mses-f>r. experienced Pmrcc’s GsWcn As « Med
*for *U
ZT*' “ *“ etteCU
• ^ or weat i nnse , spitting night-sweats, of blood, short and
kindred affections, consumptive it is sovereign rem
a
In the cure of bronchitis, severe
»«g hs and consumption, it has astonished
the Sg£Egg nledical tZZ'iZ "'medfcal
when compared IlUorwv. with those of the Golden
Medical It rapidly builds up
p )Q system and increases the flesh and
weight of those reduced below the usual
standard of health by wasting diseases,
The plan of treatment that we have so
briefly outlined in this article for the lame
w " been ^bnowledged is to be the the belief 'most
sue es8{u) as it' upon
shared by the most skillful medical men
of the day, that the only way to get rid of
the noxious disease-producin^gcrms through the in liver, the
blood and system is
^ viidehare known lo act most
efflcien v jn restoring healthy action of
these organs are the ones most to be relied
u p or this purpose the Golden Med
Discovery is pre-eminently the agent
that fulfills every indication of treatment
The Young Man that YYlns.
A certain brutality of manners,
adopted from the English, is affected by
some of our young men. They lady answer whom
harshly, affect not to see a to
they owe civilities, and try to become
boors, even if they are not. This blood, style
is seen u. uch in men of mixed per¬
haps the half Germans, half French, half
English. It is a very poor style and be¬
trays the snob. It is not a common
American fault, still it exists. It should
be frowned down; it is the fault of niedi
ocre men. But, moderate as Houssaye nowadays, says:
“Young their men follies. are They afraid of
even hi are
excess; they cut grooves for their voices
to run in. They are bourgeois, who
carefully avoid fatiguing, much more ex
posing themselves. Haussaye does not
believe, evidently, that there are Sir
Philip Sidneys, “admirable Crichtons,”
in these days, but he is wrong. A ship¬
wreck, a battlo-lield, a field day in Wall
street, brings them to the front. Men
are as noble as ever; there are as many
heroes. The occasion (bids them, and
in every office, every merchant’s count¬
ing-room, in all the walks of the profes¬
sions are the silent heroes. What a hero
is the young doctor who works day and
night succoring the wounded, helping the
Bic L tending the dying! Wlmt a hero
the voung soldier who line first thor
onghly conqueredhunself! Imnk clerk, What a hero
is tlio young preserving Jus
honesty while there is temptation all
around him! What a hero the young
man Coing honest work anywhere! He
B hames the pouncet-box ^ hero; he is the
Hubipurof tteld of honoi , Women
love theso heroes. They are the in on to
marry. 'The'other toflul Mo very *tveiT Tor
the leadership of the German, but the
t rue women do not care for them. One
real man entering JY a dmwing-room with
, nis • reciiru , oi , work ( oeiunu l il d nun , wm wiU scare
away the fops aa ghosts retire at cook
crow .-—A merican Queen.
-St. Paul. „ “T ITT”” Mm, ,„„ has recently or
ganned its fouith _ (.ongregationftl
Church and Minneapolis its sixth
Ladies & "Tyy childrens TT boots . & . shoes , can t run
over if Lyon s Pat. Heel Stmeners are used,
“ 1 never thought but once,” said old
Deacon Webbing, “ that it was a sin to
steal an umbrella, “And when was
that?” asked a friend. “ It was when
dome pesky thief stole my new silk one,”
answered the deacon.
Chapped band*, fee?, pimple* and rough
fik j„ cul(!( j py u qng ,T uniper Tar Soap matt ■
by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York.
---
PtrR „ !“ hJr n ;i w?l from selected — It, vet
" n ‘ h « re;,J„/o1v/„^«nf«‘ It eetPatie^j I, K 8
i Y fatten W
w 0 aV e onee it prefer it to all oth
mhernll/ Physicians declare it mperior superior w to an all
'
.............
, olned ,, r „ f „ s .i„ ln , ................. -i l,*v« ,,rc
Bcribe(1 Wm ir , lll>8 jhbllll foi . »
?roalmimb( , r ot ^ anil „, w;lv ,ai, ««,.
()lle ln partleuter K i vm ; „„ by M v«ral
wl f “ l)8 ' «".* , « , " .. i »Uoh-co l | .J 1 , night , J . h*ule i„.,.iir>
fever, liHrnfe&hjg cough, etc. Ho rommenced i id
mediately to get better and v.sia * on restored to
his usual health, i liave found Dr. Win. UhII's
U dsani for tho Lung* the mo-d v;tlu ihlc expector*
ant for breaking up dirtiver-iUL' t.O' g’i* and colds
that, i have ever ufi. d." Dunio’a t'atarrh Hnutf
cnrci /Jtuurrh uud all afl‘.:t:t oija of ilie mucous
nieuibiHue.
The coo ftnlence of n n ndi tt %by mail or r*'Jre»* i*
LKWANPO’B FKKSCH {»yj: house,
17 T MMPI.K f'l.ACK, Bo.to.y, V. S. At
IdtxIIS* who are
reco.crlBf oauia, vital efa
declare in
jretcfnl trraua their
fipreclatloe of the ol
merlin Hoatett tr’t aa a toolc, Stomach
Bitten. Hot only
doee It 1 at p e r t
etrength ft to the netk,
£ but elee correct*
sar- en irrect tiUr acid
atate of tk * Atom neb,
m f inskee the bowel, act
I If give* at proper lnterral*, te
exeo thono
who eofferfrom rheu¬
matic and kidnoy
tronblee, wall and con
fclTTfftS quere fererand aa aapre
veuU aguo.
gorilla by ell Drug
giate end Dollar*
generally.
“THE BEET IB CHEA*EST.“
„!S„ THRESHERS a, 7 S.
(Bolted to ill nactlooa.j Wrtte for WWKEIlhut Co., *«ii*W. PwnpbkA Ohio.
and Prior* to The Aulbaia * Tutor
f&SPMiQS
a vsmtanzsssiVtesxsi
IF VOTJJT
WATCH woxk»
Has been ruined by incompetent send it by
men, oi needs repairing, e*
IEu>. only STEYEKS skilled WATCH FACTOE!: and most
where wurxmen employed. We
improved machinery is been dam
mate NEW any part that has
aged or worn, Prices for repairs will hr
given you before the work is com¬
menced. All work guaranteed. Uut
your name and address in the package
with the wateh. ItSySend for our IIXUB
xRATED catalogue a NO 1MUOES.
J. Manufacturers P. STEVENS of stem-windimr WATCH watch*. Cp
Factory au4 09ee 84 Whitehall SV*
ATLANTA.
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hpbwB
ffi
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ac
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‘ W EU* YlS! Sn
“! * • > v ,m
-
wmmm igmmm
m
iMiS 9
jSiM IS
ffi
liiaia®
•J
unwiT
flOlRiGlElT {TlNlOiT
! WfHjEjN
Yl mm 9 iL iBTf
*
- f. «*•'
A •KWTm WAMTKI) *« \h% B««4 wd Fm*«*
/V lac<d ling Pictorial Mati»hxl Baoka Ppujehim* and liblaa. CO., Atlaat^Uto. Pricaa fa*
83 par caat.
CO OB A WEEK in your own town. Term® Ann
IS outfit tr». Afldv’a H HAllott n OoJPortlond.Mt
FITS A I>Ymi EPILEPTIC Irian I.cmUmr Uincoiii Am. for entabli*he* Jtumalcf tho T,on,Ion Now'Sork Cure FITS. Medicine. of Fb}«* ns
over liubliHiiod 80 v'ear h*'* timd!ilg work iHin tills rphtifiiliy dlHu.ino, envoi} wlilrh by hin». no hoikwj Ho
Imu tiGtllooflils a on womUirful froo to any »nU
wlib ftlarKO euro
fprtv who nmy no ml tUolf •'xpresa on<i I’. O. AtiUiota Vtfl
Miivi' , omiv<'i‘«wlBlilniXnruioton*t«lios» Or. kliaaiti)l.lii. »u.jwJobuBt. .W«w Vyrk.. „ .
AS.
_ »«**•
TTfTXKL ORSiS. X.w Ktyl., or*. ***
XX 11 -T * mm i.T mt. Moat Xl.g.'it f-oaa. M
■f»». Low«»l Si'm: f*n».. FDLl.T W*S
vxirrmp. c.v» lir.Ttt u B»pn»u». it. t* *.
15 tt * 20 ^.'
r -FOB'
tel H Henttieugh tdfiS WHERE Byrup. ALL TsHttogoort CUf FAItS. I
4 IH Une in lime. Hnld l»y drngKlms. | 3
CONSUMPTION.
S72oo*U fB1 wiwaAddf y i'i 1 ?l > i a ri*“?i’*i?*^'
BETNOLDH’ IRON WORKS
D. A. M VI.LA NIC, Manager.
P.O.Box 1690, • - NEW ORLEANS, LA.
Mnnnfntlory UeynoliU* C!*lelirni«^ 1’Ifttfnrm
k rwn??x, S fi u !m"’m'il i'.x, vacuiTm i>ans[ J.ocoiitotlv*
Bteimisltlli nnd M«»k« I'alenl Dre.lgoliout Work.
•ml Rnljff.ftd Car !r>t- ’»<-rk a S|i«' and i«lty. Mnchlno Building Work ]*r ronhk
Cdluurite, HAiMnjft, Bin ksmltlilnp in
oral. tt. C. Tlm;»«’fl Pitfenl KLKVATORS for • tores. Hi
•oHclii d and nniimaififl made by tho Manager
) COLEMAN
% zM
COLLEGE, NEWARK, NEW JERSEY.
!0mlmi0>« ofN*w York. Portion* for all worthy
Mf« «cbn!w*htp, *<o. Write for etrew
hr*. COUMiN A PAL.Ud. Proprietor*,
nA rprAn«A'f"TlVfF'* ”
umIU
capacity 100.000 Barreto ___■*
n-i^a h .
S -
«• W. flBAT * ^Gray.vIHe, «».,
MERCHANT MILLERS. _
ONLY «SO
of fir t,hli k Philadelphia fcjrle. Equei Hiucer 8mi^f
• to any
lo tbe rKfirkot, •*«
eont> it (9 te it. *aam<n*d Thi* J« befte v**
pn'j f»r oompnnies the ruteU Miaa
rtyif ether All M&anlnss warrinbafi
Tut \ -eu ye»r«. 8ead /or fllaa*
tTfct‘..l AWr*t?(TiAflIJE8A. O^ -nlwr ead TeetiiDe*
'I. Ui North
T H t ■■'!* «*! f*-KadFIphlu. I O.v 17 Pa¬
DAKOTA WHEAT LANDS.
UO»<>#*• A <>f r.holct* R«!<'cti'>ni4 on th* of i*
N. V. /'Torn $ > to #7.5© f-*r ncr- r ft* Ifr
****•11 tl tt pir c*iit. Ff.r 'I* cc; ipfii.'i’, etc.,
clo*)* turn, fJVjLKH ADA US, Deorvrtxd, Minn.
WOm H SENDING FOR!
Hr. .1. If.
Cl'It i:n,” wlilch In u/Tcri d Free, po.tpald, to all mn
pllcant*. tlj.-m.rlvf. It contain* afflicted valuable wltn, in/orrruititm liable tor to any ml non dte
Bupooitc or SOHENlSK
ea*«of lh>: throat or limgx. Ad. Dr. J. II.
* SON, Arch St., I'tilladelpnla, i'a., I'. O Box 'ASH.
bfiNSUMPiiQlfp i ;.av« a pk,fiUlv« rtmtedv far tb« above ditWMMt*; by its
tifi« tfH/«KamiM of vunefl of the wont kind and of Trim
atanding Billow?, Lavo heor» cr-«d. lnd*«<i, bo ntrong mr falm
In us that 1 will Bond TWO BOTTLKfJ FHKK,
aether -vM* a V a/.I/ABLB THRATiSK on thU disoaao, to
any ' ettifurtr. (iive Expn*w and Y. O. addroaa. York*
Ctt. X. A. BLUiiUM. 1M Fowl fit-. How
PORTABLE
SODA
FOUNTAINS
Send for Catalogue.
Chapman ft Co.,
MADISON. I NO,
Pabikber»* V»k>n , Atlanta, Ga. ...Tali"
Strong’s Live;**. ros Sanative TJF9 Pills
tvi-aclj), A rperAy purtfylnv care tor <be liver blood, complaint, cleanidng regulatingfes from mite
rial Hint. A perfect euro Sold for ’ let headache, dn» cow
Btlpation and dyapoiwl* by ai: elite, loading addnol
glota. Foralnan, a wiih full parti
K. Hull A Vo.. Box 650, How York.