Newspaper Page Text
a. m. d.
A Medtejr, a *f»W « ® nrv * 1 »*“« •
Mlraclo.
Tbo Story of a Diwim.
ably. words, but varies die sentiment cwns'der
There is no harm in making money.
It answereth all things. Used rightly it is a
0 rhe r r ? 00 termaleVe-^b^whtehtee
te .ihtekd’SdibTnSk wo r d to £A....
tam extent, out of its depths cf sorrow and
despair. Money we mu»t have for money
makes the mare go. Some can make money
who have no faer.lty for saving. Would von
save you must know how to deny those who
womd borrow and never repay, as well as
laaylo work?*Th\re aretho"never
want to see ycra except to ask the favor cf a
loau, They vril! ask for jus.; one word with
you. and that one word is sure to be mosey,
An tance, impicunioas fallow met a licharquain- for
and mot lik'ncr to ask directly a
loan, said, ’ Friend Smith, if you had ten
doilars in your woeket and I was to ask you
for ths loan of five, how many would remain
replied m your the pocket;’ ’ “ Ten dollars, to moment’s be sure, r
rich man, without a
hesitaiion. He had gumption, and knew f os
much to part with his money by any suck
o f-afS „» ih»
rebuffed. He was able to ewe. He was one
of the Mleawber sort—always waiting for
pie something to turn un, low like some peo
who are sick. They think t > get well
by letting disease take care of itself. Bnt
diseases ao cot heal themselves, nad too
late their victims full often find this out te
their sorrow as death -seizes upon them.
Had they beeu wise in time they ir’uht
have added many ye%i-s to their lease of life,
The cure was nigh them, as it is nigh to all
who read this medley. These paragraphs
tell the story, as a patient perusal will prove.
Those who have keen iwight and can read
between the lines may solve the conundrum
the sooner for it, but upon all, light wnl
dawn ere they read the final word of our
r y Yi •
-D-ght j sant, .. and , it will, ...
wi.i aawn, we sr>
“ u f>«-,■;« am
sumption bau fastened its fangs upon him.
l° ni ? rs«irleetec: catarrh, and laughed
at the idea of taking anything for tt when
advued to do so, and so went from bad to
worse. His lungs became diseased, a hack
mere slept shadow of his former self, he scarcely
horrible at all at night, or slept ol nightmare, only to dream
areams. I'd k a
whom circus troupe, horses and all, seemed
to make his bed the arena o! their wild per>
formances. In this case money did not
niike the mare ge, for he spent a deal of
money on doctors and nhvsics and was noth
ing bettered. lie ate little, and was fast go
ing down to an untimely grave leaving his
wife a widow and his four bright children
dreamed orphans, when, lo! on one eventful happy night dream, he
for once a b ight and
which our next par .graph will relate.
Death, the black-visageJ monster, had
until then stared him in the face, but the
dream brought h m hope. He saw a bright,
white-white robed angel in his dream who
is isvouJc-T your cuie—sure, safe, narmless and relia.
hie. Get wellaud seek to take health there,
by to others. Behold the cure!” With
these words the angel was gone, but ere the
trail of light which followed him had van
lshed the dreamer s.avv glittering in the light
ttm«n1’’h n e ^i1^^P-J he a 8 wok!
from his slumber. “I have had a Good Many
. Dreams before, but never such as thir.”
Stapled nohoi and surprised rel Vi € b he «J aroused 18,on Alas his wife she
oonid mldicH ^.,1 ’_ v
ing an^theelp^nsIsinioHedsCeber all the
ei li e mT01Vea S nce er husband
became o- sick, 1 she expressed 1 a * nope that the
letters were not intended to suggest bl thft a
Good Mmy Doctors must yet consulted
in aidit on to all that had been interviewed.
he\\Tte be had to consult c D r,sX y rnv any J more e rf^ there ed th9 would Vi
ott°fkpo C! °' U MmS I)iSC0Vered m 0rder
to to pay them.
Every day for a week he and his faith fa
spouse searched for a key to the problem.
In the dictionary, in such newspapers pla- as
cards they happened the walls—everywhere to have, in books, they on sought
on
hoping to find a due. Letters stand for
words, and they hoped to light u on the
words that should suggest the care. They
Grieved Many Days over their lack of good
luck, as they said, and the Good Man
Dreamed again snd again, but saw no more
angels. Hope at f err el maksth Guided the heart
sick. “Oh, that the aogel had Me
exclaimed Definitely ami Given Mere Dlreetione,” he
again, and again.
Nearly two weeks had elapsed since the
night of the Great Mysterious Dream, when
there carnet® the house a pamphlet Tired
with his exhausting office work, which he
still pursued, de’ermining if possible to die
in the harness, Jones was about to throw the
pamphlet in the fire when something
prompted him to examine it. Surely.
Pierce thought he, thi? here can be nothing that will
Gloom Most Distressing, or
Give Me, Disheartened, any rel ef. Poor
man, he had worked letters over in his mind
and made so many combinations with them,
that they occurred in almost every sentence
he uttered. Toey ente.ed even into his
prayers. Heaven Grant Me Deliverance,
he would say, no- let disease Grind Me
Down, and so forth, ’ ad infinitum, and a
mile or two beyond.
fiber Mentally tortured and sufler.ng in eveiy
of his hotly, what wonder that he read
page work after diseases, page of the pamphlet. the morbid It state was of a
on and in
his miDd its contents seemed to suit him. It
spoke of almost ev* ry disease flesh is heir
to, bat oh, joy ! a Glimpse Most Delightful
of light stoie in upon him. -Eureka! En
reka! ’ he fried, “VVi e, I have it, I haveit.'
eureka, Everybcdy in (he house heard him hear cry
and rrnhed to the.room to
what he had found. All expected to see
some Great Muacle Done, and then came
the explanation. Simple of course, but why
had he not thought of it before? O what a
revelation ! Here was hope for him and for
all consumptives. Here, hope for euffer mg
friends and heighbors. That night he scarce
could bright sleep, vision but when he did, he again fact, saw
a of golden letters, in a
Glittering Monogram Deciphered readily,
and reading G. M. D.: and again P. P. P..
and yet again F. P., and one huge P, aronnd
which these others were entwined, and then
W. D. M. A. A)1 the letters blended, yet
hnnVte! ri s c ;n A h^VUnn 71 intil0
flvn sa wTn
Dream HostGlonous ^rang^he change's; D M G backward; —G M D
forward, every way. Gold Medal Deserved,
M. G. D— Misery’s Great Deliverer.—till
time would fail to tell them all. P. P. P.
stood for Perfect Peace Promised to suffer-
dom gatoffal Promised, pJL and I ndVg'ain backward, ffTwas P. F. it FreT be*
cams Pain Flees. Now he coaid get well,
and once w-1!, he would be a missionary, of a
Glad Missionary Devoted to the work
telling others how they might get deliver'
«tnee. He went through the list of diseases
amone those of his o*n ecquaintacce, from
John Bobinson, whose torpid liver gave him
«onstint headache and severe bdteus stacks
on through the list of tno e spfienng from
ulcers, coughs, weak and -diseased lungs, to
his fiend, General B-, who wai ns
Bear the crave as he. And for ait these* ?is
tc'.I as for httnsdf,the Grave May Driap
Given'Zwn^adTo?Hfefew th“y hSd
hoped to have years. Against the milder
eases he marke d P.P P. Against the serious
c ses he marktil G. M. D , not the Grizzly
Monster Death, which he so long hail dread¬
ed, but something—oh, soniediing so much
sb ,°Ji n s °! e f lak “ nd how thej
“ ! ^ b , f i,eak '“ lau S hed d ff
ll nued to suffer, refusing to be healer.,
e/hls'vlrionof'tlmnight«“*had done" *
ws
c an anything be mare delightful fi,an
5, eB Hh after sickness? To be a well man, to
Zee', pure blood coursing through your veins,
to know that lungs, liver, kidneys, and all
he Grand Machinery,'Does its duty perfect
] y j u one’s body ; to carry health’s rudy
Decfd^lv^This^was^uJ hLo’s^^ud
thousands cau tell the samestorv. The good
angel letters has come Gleam to Most fiiem. Distinctly They havx before seen
the
their eves, and Going Most Definitely to
work in pursuing the instructions given,
(hey have recovers-! that great bleesiug—
Health. G. M. D, has been to them a clnvu
ne ; 0 f o C od, Good Mysteriously Done, aad
they have bid their sick friends do what all
the tick should do,-namely, put themselves
ju communicatiot with the W, D..5I. A,
Which Done Most Assuredly will put them
to lieve—alas, ^?&S2£2SS, that and A ?!K& bowed t. be
men women are
down with the burden of complaints, of
which they might be rid,—nonsumption,
bronchitis, malarial dyspeneia, heart disease,Aiduey
disease, complaints, seroiulons
diseases, skin diseases, tamors, ulcers, and
mauv more. It would seem as though some
jj] deity iiad given evirv leitir of the al
phabet as many diseasis as it could ipossi
bly desire, suffering thus and forming an Happy alphabet they of who sor*
row, -woe. escaped
(j the clutches G eat Mystery of sad. Dwaeruiog, .disease. have
le
Lo , k;v , g - lvlC k noon his past experience,
ijr . Jones teels Grateful Most Decidsdlv
md con , inneg telling = the old story ot M
^ icbneKj his v all ; sion C(! h ; s restoration to
health: for the bek are not well.vet.
g u the has had the viv.asure ol see’m?, as he
TRf^£SteST®rsSrtSl»iw* hts not yet dawned mind. The
on your
niyfc'.rrv will soon be lev.enled. Iftheker
he not on your eight hand it is at least on
ynM ■ j.eft, in letters clear .as daylight. A
Good «ff.^th. Many De irhted hare di.covered it
porta! to a long life and a
IniUa , s of words (hat stand for all that is
sorrowful end sad, letters, the self same let
ters, are often the initials of words that
breathe tope and benediction
Search but awhile aud you will find the
boon, the blessing and the bemfit. The
mystery of the three I”s, of the F. IT, of the
G ill) , and of the W. D. M. A., Will Dawn
Most Auspiciously upon you.
Columbus discovered America and won
high honor and immortal fame, and they
who have learned the secrets of the wonder
before your eyes, good reader. Give Most
Delightful testimonials o f lheir gratitude.
Of all sad words of targue and pen, the
saddest are these—it might have been—-so
snyeth the poet. When we think of the
myriads that might have been saved from
paves had they seen Mr. Jones’
vision and sought his way to henth, we feel
sad. Yet we cmnot but rejoice at the Great
Manv Delivered from death’s door by G. M.
D., and that Pain’s Positive Persecution hr.s
been escaped again snd again by P. P. P.
*Vivtnes unnumbered have served to make
O M. D. the Greatest Mercy Deigned by
fere£“and^ teilfnf oflhe
Growing fectly Pardonable Pride io
Multitude Delivered from the
Brasp Most Dreadful of Greedy Mournful
D F h -
ul, f.^iysick J ct before , person u.«, and is cfcfyweli mferebei person in too, the
ter who dors not know some one who is
-uk and that?iivenDaill^ nee’s therefore the sc^d n»wa of
health
Header, mystified reader, we w 11 d-tiin
r ’ u| no hum r. Perhaps yon have G lesied
Most DMdy the hidden meaning. P. P. P.,
von know, stands for Pleasant Purgative
PHIets cu ing con tipa’im, torpdity of the
liver, headache, ami m«ny other complaint.,
F. P., of cour e, is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription, Prime Favo. that has proved such a P. P.,
ite and Precious Friend tola
dies; safe, ersy ti take, wotkits like a
elarra-cuiiog eident their the renu’iar weaknesses in
to sex. Toe letters W. D. M. A.
s a id for the W.oli’s Dispensary Medical
posing AEsreiatirn, at Buff do, N. Y , with its im*
structures, its army of medical men,
specalists all of them, snd its president, Dr.
r. y. Tierce (thelarge siorf), and erntral P of Mr
Jones’ s cord v all at the service of
the sick and suffering, everywhere; white
G. M. D. is—well read the initials of the
pirasrraphs ! of this artie’e and vou seoveryf will see
hst G M . D. is Golden Medic ,1 D
the boon of the diseued. This wonderful
medicine cures all I moors, from the worst
scrofula to a common blotch, pimple or eriq .
tion. Erysifelss. Salt-rlieum fever-sores,
s aly or rough skhi, in sh irt, ad diseisig
famed by bad Woi d, are conq lered hy this
icioe. powerful, purifying, and invigorating med
Great fating ulcers rapidly heal
under its benign influences. E-pecialv has
it manifested its potency in cu ing tetter,
boil", carbuncles,* crofulons sores and sweh
lings, white sweillnis, goitre or thick neck,
and enlarged glands. Consumption, which
is scrofulous disease of the lung**, is prompt
ly acd positively arrested and cured by this
sovereign and God given rc-medv, if taken
the last stages are reached. For
weak lungs, spitting of bleiod, consumptive
nigh;-3seats, acd kindred aflectiena, it is a
sovereign remedy. For indigestion, dyspep.
sia, and torpid liver, or “biliousne s,” Gol
den Medical Discovery has no equal, as it
effects perfect and radical cures.
You will do well if affl cted withany chron
ic disease to write to the Association for adr
vice, describing your malady as weil as y< u
can. Many cases are successfully treated
through correspondence snd no fees are
charged for consultatten. For one dollar
fn( j a half you can secure a copy of the
‘ People’s Common Sen e Medical Adviser.”
sen t post-paid to yonr address. Its priv
chase will repay you. In this is Given More
Desirable information than you cm find in
any other work of a similar nature.
----- aa~ ---
j. ^y as ’ Hungrv *"
A fair young mother, , with a crying .
babe m near arms, sat m a western stage
coach. On the opposite seat was a prom
nent politician of engaging manners.
By and by he said: “Let me hold your
Baby. Perhaps I can soothe him. “Ob,
i; o: I am much obliged; you couldn’t
help me any,” "*as tne answer. “J>ut,
lie persisted, “you bad better let me
try.” “You are very kind; but I know
vou couldn’t help me, for he is hungry,”
re P Ued tL r Blusbin^mother. |
\ Wvcttfpk Vj uni * dishes ‘M the
following „ “Yvanted r * a correspondent . Vf ,. f 1it I r
:
am 2o years ord have one iiantlreu a-*‘i
sixty 160 ackars of Kansas land worth
J500 dolars tolaberl lair looking iximin
Giool educatoou tny lady fairly educated
w ill oblige me bv rigiiting I* will send
Photo-TaPh* bv ' return male. Wil
uaai
SCIENTIFIC SCRAPS.
StSTCHNISE, when adminfeteved in
! iea ^ ntammais, acts, oooord
mg to M. lucket, wets pattly like chloral
and partly like curare.
It is estimated from observations <m
the shadows of Jupiter’s moons that the
Atmosphere of that pla&et is from tl«'*a
io nine miles deep.
The presence of Iodine in Chmwoa
guano has been proved by II. Staffers.
When a mass of guano vras subjected to
a heat from J10 degrees to 120 degrees
C, the soluble Tape vs of iodine were given
off.
. F Jr™ ’. ' * 1 S V U ” S “ ls Ult ,-V
tiicliruosis . , ■ ■ ntraeted , -, by frtang ilia
e« ,
hesh of geese. Dr. tilendeiUMUg has ue
tectedthe dang»?rona parasite®da a juke
caught near Oti end.
Wmjx' bars• >f a ma"neti« o? mature ara
compressed t-visted sfridched they
h ' 1 ' 0 ‘‘ tendency.says M. Ader, to lc
mtun? .neir pmuitiw molechinr ilisposi
f ion vlit-n they are subjected to the ac
tioucf magmAizing current,
" Tan German African Society liafl nt
sent six diff A r >nt ", oxneditions x i iruvel
> n g tInoll oh-v euti .d A.nca . t Ilia money
h,r these cc.pemtmns is d:tamed from
the German Government, or mrough
prfwite subscriptions. Dr. Thiclitigatt is
the Fresidunt of tho Society
* W. mm ot i O Mo Pro.,.
non* . btearxts ot Amhe-st Codege, has
gone to Xiabrauor, where is® will pass the
winter iu-seieiitiiic research- and in col
looting zoological, botanical audgeologi
cal specimens for Amherst Gdlloge and for
several museums
A.iioXj5? , .^.Ixyek liusuliscoxei'eu ,. . that ,, , oxy
-
g'eiikusiii-direetiuflueiiCi'KponferniHn- potassium-hydrogen
tation. When tar
trate was .edited to a strong syrup con
nir.in^ --east the cells of the yeast grew
' easily
tapidlv and the fermentation was
reeomnli-kcil 1
The committee appointed recommended by the
French Go*, eminent lias
that; the pits of $10,OfW bo awarded to
Professor Gr* : ham Bell for his invention
“ g '
ueto clcctiu. h_,iHuhc.
1 EOF. O. N, Rood, of Columbia Ool
lege, contcmto that theories of Brucke
uui! Aubusfc fail to account for the
phenomena ft observed when while a!i. light
light. unable 1 Bro
f< ? sor 1{o0tl 18 a8 ye* to
advance a plausible explanation ot the
observed facts.
a p R1 ,„,, ir states that fvL on
°ac occasion, at. f.ie bi n mmn„ of a \m
?ll ‘ snow-storm lie saw small tults ol
light . at the ends of the steel whs of his
umbrella, and heard at the same time a
sorfcof humming sound. When lie brought
his hand near one of the luminous points
In* wwiveil ^Zamjoaml -i sli-dit shock end theliffhts
■ m n <im,ipp. ,n. G. mis eicctnem 013
play is rather exceptional.
I’ltECiviTXTEl) silica attracts aud fixes
aniline colors, turkey red much better on
fabrics than silcious infusorial earth, but
al y? . gues fl writer iu Jiit unann'n Farbcr
/jh 4 • sli:l to Engel, jc, „,,i thaeo
h ,, ■/. 111 opP°. o.i
P ro V al ’ tlea cd fhtca cannot ho due to
capillimty because, of the two substances,
the iuflusorial earth can only he said to
possess capillarity.
----------------—---
T! “ 5 rM»W«®C.j as a CfttelUlfftlgtet.
The private lives of public men are
made up of the most commonplace af
fairs, hut it is only when one rises to the
exalted static., of President that they mv
lnia bare in all their minntiie, and the
....i.]:,, )n 8 C i„ d'-toni.vhinei.t. Had Hml
Qrailt , jeoiaincd - !!1 . Wo comparative obscu
rity, who would known or eared
whether his weakness was hull-dogs,
Mouongahela And whisky or licavv Fid horses?
Haves • sur,nos-* Hives V He'and never
re °.f‘ tched'the i-.ilF, Prcsidcncv H e and lus his
ciab-applc their hunible cider would and have gone down
Jo he never would havo had obseue the opportunity grave, and
to savo $150,000 of his salary. Who
ever suspected that General Hancock
wore corsets until he was nominated for
«... r„- tlmt Garfield l, n d n
habit habit of ot lubbing rrld hm his his 'left it shb slim vvitl. with tbo ho
<»e of lus light foot? All that is needed
is to nominate a man for that exalted ot
lice, and knowij anv peculiarity lie has will ho
come at once. If John Sherman
had been nominated ren’orters slv as he bas'd
wavs kept j it ’ the ,1 vvould ‘ have '
, louuJc , ' a L , ,V • n -'V' 1 ’ 1 tU .i J ff « ht
wing on the lionzontall.ar, which has
king been known he does in secret. Had
Senator Blaine beeu selected, tho great
mvstery of his life would have been
solved, and tho American people would
have known to a dead certainty whether ,.Z
i i i .. , p,.,,,
J,
• . | •
^' s a great calcium light, and once it u
turned onto a man it makes him fa-ans
horizontal parent, in a measure, so that it lie has a
bar or a worm concealed about
jii., C-cdief |K*rs.,n it is made to stand out in te,ld
A ni.inwlm m-.s j' r,„. im,,* j
A d,„i, i,,, 1 he , doesn t
’ '
the horizontal , bar becomes . a thorn m
tno llcsli the worm (both tiot, and tho
smoke of Ins torment asccndctii forever.
-
„ Little , , Liars*
’
“Please, sir, let me shine your boots ?”
simultaneously ejaculated two little
boot-blacks, on Galveston avenue, as the
^n.riger stopped • front f ,e „# of them „„,i and
m r , r „
'dat' d w neh to emptoy.
Ilie Hm .‘ lll ? r sald ; Let n ! e
, cm up, sir, for 1 have to support a little
sick brother at home, who ia deformed,
and can’t see.”
“Let me shine’em up?” chimed in tho
bigger “ick one “for I am that poor little
brottier oroinei, anl ana i I Am’twantlobe aon * want to oe
under any obligations to such anmfernal
liar any more. Ho hasn't got any
brother, nohow, and I can see better
than ha can."—Galveston News.
---
—The Sioux Indians of Dakota occnpy
about 11,000,000 acres of land mst ‘of
the Missouri river, between Fort Randall
and Bismarck. It is proposed to put
them upon their separate reservations,
leaving about 8,000,000 acres which can
|, 8 thrown open for settlement, and at
the same time bring the Black Hills
country nearer to civtiization by wiping
°ut the vast tract of Indian country
which ha« hitherto lam between it anu
the oth<a> Dokota settlements.
—The Boston Transcripts Mass’ musical
critic characterizes Mr. mnsicianly.” piano
playing as “eminently It
X. i^MWr maitreatelly. (o «. U» a
guage
scir.vcil: and industry.
% ™ . k , v . . - .
**“8 iences fot '•elegraith lines.
—A land-owner on Cape Cod, Mass., 1
says that ho otaras about a hundred acres
of land, of which some was so poor that
it yielded nothing but poverty weed. In
1853 he oomnieneed planting phie seed,
continuing for ten years, and now he has
about eighteen acres of quits* valuable
woodland winch was worthless before.
—Ifostvn Attain.
—A discavery of a deposit of crvsolite
has been nffijd© near Pike's Peak." The;
present sapply land, of and this is landed mineral in comes Phil- ;
froar Groan
adelphia by the ship-load. of Not enough
is known, however, the quantity ex
istmg'iR Colorado to doksnuine its cow
nrercial standing, but if the supply is
satisfactory, it will become an article
of'commercial importance. It is used
in the manufacture of carbonate of sofa,
—■ C.hioa-io inter-Ocean.
—'An inf*-maker base writing of New fluids York, of' awvo- die
pos of the
present day. savs that the only perma
nont black ink known is said to be teat
mace with vanadium. Vanadium is a
rare and costly metal, found in one of
the Swedish iron ores, and in the iron
slag of Ntaffordshwa. It is a white,
brittle substance, which does not -melt
readily, nM reslstsdhe action of strong
acids, such cuantitvofthe as sulphuric metal and muriatim been
Lately a luts
found ir Ceylon, J and now will come
late tlm yiarket.— M. Y. Sun.
—If tHose jo who roust tramp about in
tbc wot do thier work will saturate
tl*e sole, of their beets will thoroughly find with the
hot piue-tar, they that
leather has been made perfectly imper¬
vious to water. The soles are rendered
hard ax 1 smooth, resisting wear much
longer Hi an they ooulte if not thus treated.
The tar holds the pegs or tho stitehos
fimaiy;othat the sole will not rip from
the upper, (’are should be taken to
have tho solos as perfectly dry as pos¬
sible before liey tlio tar made P applied, without and burn¬ as
hot as can be
ing th ‘leather. The tar should be boiled
for a time to expel-most of the water it
may contain, and be applied while hot.
—Detroit Post.
—T»ere is a of peculiar immigrants but highly Kansas, suc¬
cessful colony in
who call themselves Gernian-liussian
farmers. They border are probably agricnl
turistaifrom the country between
Russia and Germany, or from one of
tho Gorman settlements in Russian
territf* 7- - Tho Kansas settlement is
called from Herzog, the railroad and is situated station about of Vic¬ a
mile
toria, W flie Kansas Pacific Railroad.
These settlers are frugal, sober, and
industrious intelligence in a high practical degree, and dis¬
play and sense in
their labor. ’They show this particu¬
larly in the purchase without of tho best regard labor
saving machinery, adhere singular to
its cost. They with
persistency to the attire to which t hey
were accustomed in Europe, and tho
traveler pa-sing through their settle¬
ment beholds costumes that belong to
the past century. —Denver Tribune
1110 UlhDage.
Jr * speak to a fineludynhontcah- that havo
nS, jam -Mid she will tllink you
med l one of tho lowest things on
J? 1hl '■ ^ NT most ulpn, useful you arewroug; arlicles of it is food. one
rho- ') ancient nations did not know
1(1 hut they knew the value of
nourishing things, and gave
“ he placcof honor which «icv d«
KTvnl. Cabbages were thought of
bi ?; .,| { . bv u) ancient imiuui nations i.ii .um and i the ti “TV • ”p- l
• i^dfsl e5
Jmg it predede ^ all then ot r ■*>
th y called it a ^vvne dish. ihoGreckK
*nd Romans had a great affection for
Jahboge, ’ and conceived the idea, winch I
buvi; 4 Z ]f t]iat the use of cabbage
kt , ' , V op 1 i e from drunkennoss. I am
^riavL-tiites , that tho constant eating ^for ol
- el( .uil vegetabies kills kills the the desire acme li
Be beverages. Greek doctms as
snbed all kinds of virtues to tho cabbage,
It was thought to cure even celebrate paralysis,
Books were composed to tho
yirtlu , s oJ ^ ca bbago, and ladies par
. .. . Jt after eliildbutli The
im / th ^ lg H5 i BVpn 6 mor0 () v in e cab- ‘
‘t , the ' fact ,a “ that ttev^h/fndred they could , for six hundred ,
T f ' ars ‘ lo without doctors, and Cato
fg;tim31y maintained that cabbage cured
. T-'arses. The ancients knew sev, nil
bill) i H , jf ca bbage—the long-leaved h green used
te ’..F’ i m mu< .j,
m *<. many t> ,, a
1 ‘
“jcpt d cabbage the curly d the red. ,
a
1 his hist seems to have hwd tue pi,u.c ot
honor, and was first introduced and by then the
Romans into Gaul or France,
j, rour ,],t ^ Great Britain. Ijab*r tho
5.1 7-1, * aV e<l cabbage was introduced,
J floeK * oie 1 rif ' ‘ „ ...
wnmgni-of . Oil, ? . . . and almonds,
WMin Wine,
They ; oiled or stewed the i.ahh.tge anil
seasoned it with cummin, coriander seed,
0 j] wine, and gravy, making riel i
fclK „f a vegetable, which we now boil
u’,i,,... arnoncr tlionlainest
, - Momethmg like a remcmtiranoo
cooking has cabbage down among to the the modern olu
Greeks come
Greeks, for they stuff cabbage leaves
with dainty mince meat, and then stew
them with gravy.— Mrs. Lewi*, in Food
nnrl and JJeaUU UeultL Leaves. l.en.ee*
In a notice of the “ Mudfog Papers,”
the Whitehall Review notices this com¬
parison between Dickens and Thackeray:
“PerhSjis one cause of Dickens’ univer¬
sal popularity was that he wrote in a
manner* which could be plainly ‘ under¬
stand! d of the people’; wherein lay ono
difference between him and Thackeray. of
The pointed satire, keen as a knife,
the author of ‘Hendeunis,’ was over tlio
heads of toany—of all, indeed, who lnul
not a o'. tain fp.miliarity with the great
world, Whereas all who ran could read
and gra p the meaning of Dickens.
Both hv : had their detractors, as both
havo had their imitators; but the same
tree froii which we plucked the laurels
tor Thackeray gives us a wreath for
Dickens,”
_ The r blowing lines are ung by the
children m a Mormon Sunday-schooi.
A . j ,^1 V | IK ol children, we’re all to /Jon
■A mothers, every on a
For our iniier loves ovir
an' i. around.
A policb r oc'HT i« a very accotm ,io
dating jd.ice to transact business. If
Beauty la, Dress.
Mr. Ilaweis, in a volume entitled “Th«.
pointe withvogWto 'tZT*
“The reason that au ordinary I vr
neck with short sleeves looks worse in
black than in any otliet is because the
hard line round the bust and arms is too
great a contrast to the skin. A low neck
always lessens tho height, and a dark
dress made thus lessens it still more, and
% strikes the artistic cyo as cutting the
.body in pieces, iu this way. If yon sec
« fair person drosved in a low dark dress
-standing against, a light background
some way off, the effect will be that of
an empty dress hung up, the faro, neck,
and arms being'seareely discernible,
“On the other hand, againr' a dark
back ground, the head and hirst will be
(brown up shsnply, and the whole dress
and body will disappear. '1 To eficefc.
common enough, is execrably had. If
you must wear a low-back bodice, let it
be cut square, giving the height of the
■'.boulders no, b,‘. r, with foe angles
rounded, bjr .comers are very trymgl,
and have pienty te white or ml« gauze
” r Ul; ' lt f k \"J tu 1 011 «“ 1
oetween thenkinand.the , In-, \ , Hue
.
f?»«x.c or l«wv soften o..wn the blnek c
ol ocdrcss.at t he edgo <*t the ......“',*
and thru bUu-k atml luw an equalls teed
e lect, as U shad. the wlutcm* i o! il;<
^ into too dark color of mo gown.
° n }-\ u,uk T those -miliums docs tho
Ht.ddon contost enhance, io ■ « P«'v
s » ,ls .suppose, tno imruoss o£ the com
plexion. should
“Short women never wear
douhle-skirte or tunics—they decrease
the height so .much—unless, indeed, the
tunic is very short and the skirt very
long. 8o also do large, spraw ling pat¬
terns used for trimmings; let these ho
left to women tall enough to carry them
off. Neither let a very little woman wear
her hair half way down her back; let
her lift it clean up as high as feasible.
“Largo feet ahould never be eased ill
kill—least; of aJl, white kid slippers—tor
kid reveals so clearly the stretches form ami move¬ easily
ments of this tea/., and so
that forv feet have a chance in them.
“Those who are very stout should
wear nothing but black; those who are
very thin should put a little padding iu
their gowns; and neither should be iu
the least aceollot. Perpendicular stripes
in dresses givo bight and increase full¬
ness, and arc therefore particularly suit¬
ed to very slight, small people, figures.” mid par¬
ticularly unfitted for stout,
A Lively Subject.
There used to be n story current of a
perplexing incident in the. life of Johu
Hunter, certain the. celebrated grim surgeon, which
has night, a, receiving drollery from Jack about it.
One on Ketch
a “ subject ” who had been hanged that
morning at Newgate—such hangings
and sueli subjects wore very common in
those days—he the vital perceived somehow or
other professional spark was not quite ex¬
tinct. His zeal was in¬
stantly task, aroused and, ; iu ho short, applied all Ids skill
to the succeeded, to
his scientific satisfaction, in restoring
the law’s victim to his entire faeuUios
again. But his satisfaction was some¬
what short-1'.veil, for the resuscitated
felon insisted his upon looking to bis bene¬
factor for future subsistence. He
argued that, ns he had striven to bring
him, ns it. were, a second time into the
world, ho Hunter, must be regarded in tom
parenti*. always convinced a nervous
man, and by offended no means grievously that
lie had not iiis little experiment, against
the laws in had no
alternative but to comply to the demands
of his ungrateful modest patient, his visits. who was by
UP meat's iv After a
time, however, they ceased ; hut even
that brought no comfort to poor Hun¬
ter, who lived iu perpet ual terror of bis
tormentor unexpectedly reappeared popping before upon him
him, At last he,
again. One tine evening another New¬
gate importation was brought to tho
private door of the dissecting-room, and,
to his intense satisfaction, ho once more
recognized the well-remembered feat-
11 res. Jlimtir used to say, with a grim
smile, that he took speedy core mot to
give him a second chance.
A iSiiinly I'n i«.
A now fan invented in Germany has
noodles and thread concealed in its first,
fold, so as to he ail ready to repair dam¬
ages if tiro wearer’s gown l>e, tern at u
ball. This is but one, more opportunity of
for a woman to make a porcupine it, her
herself, and she will avail of let
lolls* for tlnit. Let her alone anyway,
it you would not he lacerated.
Miner Doiiic**
Mr. J. A. Me Beth, Puc'fic
Office, Denver, Coin., wijh curtd b.y St.
Jacob’s < til of an excruciating pain in
the neck, unil also tooth-ache. One ap¬
plication did the work.
—Overheard in tin: cloak-room: “Did
she marry well?’’ “Yes, indeed, lie’s
worth over a million, and drinks ko hard
that he never can go into society; ho
she’s not bothered with him.”
Ladiea A children’s troots A shoes c*n’t run
over if J.yon's Pat. Heel stifleners are used
—Character properly embraces three
d inti net, classes of elements: Principles,
sentiments and habits.^
CHAPPKO Hands, fsce, pimples and rough
*lrw cured by usins? Juniper Far York. Heap made
by Boswell, llszoid A Co., New
The, first real skin cure ever discoveied was
Or. Benson’s Skm Cure. It cures*)) ronph
a 1 1 scaly skin diseases and makes the skin
rnooth and lieulthy. It is uu oruaiiunt to
n iiy lady’s toilet.
“J)r. Iti-mnii's Celery and Chamomile Pills
need my wife imme/lialely of .severe nevrnl
'•in.—111’. M.Cocklin.Shepherdtown, Pa. tec.
Pueb cod-liver oil, from selected livers
oa the ties shore by Caswell, Hazard A Co.,
N. Y. Absolutely pure and sweet. Patient#
who have once taken it prefer it to all ofh
era. Physiciaas declare it superior to all
other Oils.
Tli© i^vtiinouy of it Ptoynlrlitn.
Jsiiics Bcichsr, M. ..... D., Of h.gOOJ’Ucy, Iowa. , f«ty .
. -
‘Por K-veral ymri I have been u.io* a CoiiKh eat
itm called Or. Wra Hall’a Balsam for the Luozt,
red in almost every cate throughout used mv aT<i practice
) have had entire euccere. I have pre
uribed hundreds of hottlea ever slr.ee the days of
rny army practice (1863), when I vaaiurgeoncf
fce?[dt&t No. 7, Louisville, Ky.”
Mother*. Attention !
Chan. Jones of Elizabeth, Fpencer county, Ind.,
raym “I h?,ve dealt in ro^diefne a r.amber of yearn
smd will say that Dr. Hour's medicine Vegetable J Worm sold,
J yrur>i»the most valuable ever
My cu Homers are well fjwed with U* «flfCte»"
FREE --Send to HOOBk'W
ItlSI.NtNS I MVKKMTY, Ga.
AflaoU,
For IJJustrated Circular. i^iJj year.
IJear W!ii>t One tee uber of (Iio I’rofeiiion
T*> tiries !{« rirdui-r tlm Scientific Prejat*
(iTton oT a lSrotht'i* Member*
Mu. Daw/,?:* has boon in the drugbitstiicssin tbo
r;t-. of Providence twenfcy-fivo year.* as elork and Pro¬ »
prietor in good standing, ami inflows whereof lie
itiirnis. -Ed.
Dr. D. s.!,vh : “ For many years I have suffiied,
tensely at Fanes, with what U generally culled rhen
•natism. Win a first attacked I was confined to my bed*
and con Id not svaik a atopj 1 couUl not bear tb©
vv right of the be.Fv'thCi*. so excruciating was tho
igony l endured. 1 always notieod that before tlic.y©
Attack* came on mv -d lue s were affected ; before
there would be any pain in mv limbs or any swelling
M joints or limbs, i he color of the secrotions from tho
Kidney h would be very dark and tho odor strong and
feverish. The last attack was very severe, about five
rears ago, and I \vA vi confined to the house several
weeks, and was unable to attend to business in thre©
months. Duri ( r the t.np I was confined at. hom©
Mid the time »d‘ mv convalescence I employed four
oi’tlie best doctors that Icu’iM obtain, but none of
them cave m perm iiient relief, for they did not go
to work i;t tb iuse of the troubl e Having been ac
iiua.iute.1 w ill tii ■ i»ro;»r*‘-l«>r of ifRiit’H Itomody *
lon/i time I was i:i Inc 1 !>, him to /rive it a trial,
bopinu tbat it iti^bt r.i.i lb” tetett of tbo disease :
tvud alter twin* one bofrie. I foc.nd myself very much
Improved, an l after t.eL• tb-' second i was fooling
better than l had ;vit*.■*.’ any previous attacks.
Duriug many la.mtlis previous to taking
tho Item tvdy my hands and lingers would
bo very much swollen ami stiff every morn
In#; my left !i tlio reffion of stomach
ami spleen, vvae v u’y Sj-a * an i scn iUivo ; at Utlgs l
would be taken w.tii ”o crimps over thb Evlcon,
anti l»o obliged to apply rnudar l or cayenne for tem¬
porary relief ; 1 was v- ry nervous u’ghts and could
not ; I was obliged to bo very particular! my
diet atnl mv physical system was badly P f miliv’vl.
Sine 1 have taken Hunt's licme.l.v systematically alt
tUe*o tliiugB have changed ; I have no swollen
hands or limbs, no pains or cramps in tho aide, can
cal db kinds of food, Bleep undly and get thor
■ Highly ivsi-’d. .mil my kidn» toys arc a tivo and per¬ of
form iheir fiuicf i< LI * prompt l •, t iui ih la king which out
i !ll‘ H.V HICIU Pi li till’ 1 LSOljOHS HCCl'ld nons con
:amin ito tlm w li* d«'s y h I Gin where tlm kidneys do not
y d. ciUcioijtly. i*-lids, wliat-Hunt's ltcinedy
has donei ol* mo it wi tor all ol you. i believe it
to be the t ml y Hurt) cure for all diseases of tho lvitl
uovB, Liver a ,*uti ririnarv o>’“ms. iteupcctfuUy, broad Street,
i . H. Hawlfy, •!■>*
___..__.__—-—4 _.______'__._=:_A‘________.___,__ TMmf4§éWM ge—r _. . _.____.-——-~,._..__.v~———~—-—_..._
'_ '
m
fi—fiwfi%flgfi;1bgzfizfi m‘-wrrzrm;z—w~-zrwem=rs=‘ i
^ _ Wluittho Rwiar re
Vr rtor ulvc, Ilostcttcria*
n Stoinnch lilt tern, will
CD.tfiRflUO must ho (fathered
fr< :n what It liaa
done. Jt lioscffectcdi
J rfyilU'.al cAuvrt luthuu
r ;’ eat d« of ca»'*s of dy»
D pcpelti, bilious dl»
.., orders, tutermlttcnt
fever, ncrvouB affcc
» aj* tlons, general de*
tern » hlllty, constipation*
7 | sick headache, men
Ul despoodcocy, and'
v the peculiar tom*
plaints and disabili¬
erowiACti ties to which tho
x ^ h a feehlt! For ure Mile »o aubjcct. by ull
DrupgliUs nnd Dotii
cim gt uurally.
ST 2 A WEKTC . if Pi ft dny at Trim l.omn eaHily Co,, mado. Oofftly* M«
out tit <r v . AadreiH A Augusta,
PESO'S CUR E 'f OR i
CURES WHERE ALL EtSE FAILS. b
Beat Cougn By run. Tnfltca good,
Ufio in tlrm». Hold by druggiHtfi. o
CONSUMPTION r
Strong’s Sanative Pills
i’OR THE
LIVER.
pnrifyni/g A : peedy niri! t lilt for blood, live' chmnHhig 1 omplmiit, from regulntin^thobowcls, in;ilnrf«l taint. A
P pi li’cl ■ iiMifdi iik im.id lelie, constipation and dyrpep*
M.,i. Sold hy fill l ■toiiov. «irujfK»bl«. l ,- oi almnnni w wit h full
ptirt i-Milarfi u Idr- < , i . 11 I’M. A(Jo., Ito* New York.
“THE BEST IS CHEAPEST."
iS®,THRESHERS 8 Clover AW-HILL Huilers 8 ,
(Suited to fill M‘‘*i ioiiM i V^i !<<■ for I* siB’TK JHum. Pfirnnhleh
orni J'riecw to The Atillinau A 'J’aylor Co., Munidkid, Ohio
5-TON % -'-A Wy .
m
Fro# fiCYflin. Ktrftl Ilcarfnffl, FlitTUHT. TflRE ClAM. r
JO!%«•;«. lie PAVS '/’ISIS
Bold oa li 1*1. Wi r. Milts 6 y«s!». Ail lUkv u luvr*
If or tie# nook,
/ONES OF BINGKAWTOH,^
h! /t LciuItiic l.ondon Phy*'"
3 Oir.cB io Low V irk
fS Is>r t Iw C'nro of
EPEt-ffPTICJ r!TC.
i Vow Tn.m. ovrnG l cfihixine.
Jir. AW. Mowir’le (liito r-f J<ondMi), who mekcM a «j>g*
rluJty of Fpn»*p«y, t i. iff wlijioiit tloiiBl. treated and i-’.red
noro canon tWun any it livingphytiician. Idas ii<*po»*
I-as jslrnply l»* on awtonlHt lint’; vve imvo hmird ot ot
nvor au >oarn’ < :‘»r?ni)y euro) by b> 1
I,an j> ibllKlM 'l a <»ih <*\ tlibi ilitetjo,
with a Wtr/fo Poll lo of bly woioJwrful oufo /<*• » to tiny t• ■'■
fen r ’.vho liny >«-n»l l W lr ( xproHM ami i*. O. A tkJlGbH V. »
BdlvifiD ttli V *> ’»*“ wluniiiif ' hOLK, nruri 1 i jyMrt'**
iir. UL w;>i. ho. i<;5n 8t... Kew York.
w Thiy.’vatcr-prooi pS 5 I?BBMN r«‘pLDibli00jin«:i»i,i»,h<;r,i8UMea 6 M.ANLIA
rnaU-n- J
l»»r roofu, outvj«j« wall-t of l< il.-Jm/fH,nrifl imtdeln plac»
£!*!:&i':te v „W.H.FRY & CO.'rr*
THE SUN IS THE PEOPLE’S
NEWSPAPER.
There Is no myntery about its loves and hales. It I#
for the hoi.cMt man ag;>fi^it the rogut-H ert ry time. Il
ih l<>) tb** hcue.Ht liemccrat a* *gaiii»t the uislioaest Re¬
publican, ai.'t for the hooeet Kepuhlicun v* T)iti,r ageiusj (4
tii*. •! ilmricd iLmcc *. Hibf-cru.tion:
P vrvn, »-v mail 9.V. Am I r, or HAM a y- - ; Hi;nb*t
H jdC'CH/fl.20 S'*’ r V■■■ V.'EhKMr H $1.00 p«*
year. J. w. I N'OI.A N'l*. Publisher, Sew V,/rli City.
Speculation in Cetton.
Imr ffc roco’ptft, dull din tradft nud tight money make a
dcclimiJK dia rket. N- So profit io soeli a m»*Hiut rk»)tejcept except b ^9
8<-]lii)/ fur future delivery. f‘. I IM)Y iV. rO»*
IVarl .St., S. Y., buy «nd Hell f*»r futu/edelivery.
AAAI’ A K M s I'ORSA LI'. On or r *.oit water;
J b*|ff b by :.n<J inibl cb«t>al‘*. S*-nd stampI'^O.
A Rare ri'nrc fur or m* m Z4 noors, Louis, l-T-. Mo. xo
J\ j»<K»r. Oil. :. ia* 4 Aib»inal »t., Bt.
MARTHA’S VINEYARD
m.mmkr j.* sth■» tk. duiv n a-»k. u,y/x address ifiDcpart- B*
,..,*. f i . . r . i ,r Circulars ttints) Mass.
« > pi’TN' c .'*-» v (•. Agf s . .Jamaica Plain (Boston),
•
tc l„ CgQ Bam pies Portland, worth f5fr« Me. e,
Addrasa Siimhis i A 4 a Co.,
O B C ColISfH. gswMk,
»nc $00 a weea Addreb-a in yo.ir 1!. own IIa.LI town. & T^rrns COB, Portland, and $5 outfit
tree. K it Me.
Publittliffra* Union, Atlanta, Ga. ..........Sixife oa—*g3 .
ASD NOT
Wf \K OUT.
■rn. By mail 2i»c. St.. Circular© N.Y.
»i*I:Co.. r-JH Dev
f)TEKf« RKARH PMJIR V—N 4V9|
i i»r ,*!'(*r. r'^.k.1* h, .(iff l.I..S«1 iiraeu am l !lc.'.U'it.Ul. em*-? ani i F r,~,a*. 8 let9
*or
GREAT GERMAN
REMEDY
for pasw.
UoliovcHdUHl euros
HIlKlIMATiSTl,
Neuralsia,
Sciatica, Lumbago,
It.M'lt AX'IDK,
HEADACHE, TOOT!! ACfii,
SORE THROAT,
QOINISY, HWIOMJNU: .
, S1 .«,UN»,
Soreness. Cuts, Bruises,
HU iSTblTK*,
irt M'AJLR>N,
Ami uilol-lH aud v bodilyachea
piiiiiH.
rim CENTS A nOTTLE.
Mold by nil DirnclloiiH DriiffKiHlB and
Im’hIits. In H
liingimKPB. 17
The Charles fl. Vofjelcr Co
(k’ucoeiaor* it A. YOtlKl.Klt tt BO.)
H ill mini i*, .TIil., 8. A*