TILE DIAMOND CUTTERS. ONB HUNDRED MEN WHO EARN HIGH WAGES IN NEW YORK. in Occupation Which Require Va.. tlpnco nnd lollcncjr of Tonch Tho Various Processes Described. A French lnil of sixteen, busy amid (ho noise nnd bent of ft John street din mond cutters loft, wns Rlinpiusr, with his bare finders, n little mass of half mol ten solder just out of n gas-hented cruci ble. The solder liiy in ft small cup-like piece of copper, to which a stem ten inches long wns attached. After the mass had been patted into a swelling hemisphere the lad took a diamond from the bench beside him and embedded it in the still plastic mass. Then he wiped off Utile crumbs of the solder and pressed the stone this way and that until it was ilmost hidden from sii;lit. This done, he placed tho stem of the copper cup in a tort of handle nnd turned it over to the diamond polisher. A moment Inter the pom was laid upon a wheel that made 2500 revolutions a minute, and the work of grinding n new facet had bejinn. The fifteen diamond cutting concerns of New York polish 10.000 carats of rough diamonds each year, rather more than the annual output of tho Brazilian mines. One hundred skilled workmen are employed in the trade, nnd the bosses say that the diamond cutters of .New York nrc the best in the world. The busi ness has grown up within ten or fifteen rears, but already most of the appren tices nro native Americans. A clever lad brjrinniifjr the trade at fifteen may bo come a skilled workman in five or six years. The best diamond cutters undet favorable conditions earn from $10 to p GO a week. These arc bet tcr wages than those earned by any save the most famous foreign diamond cutters. Workmen licit are more intelligent aud trustworthy than those of Hollaud, France, or England, the chief diamond cutting countries ol Europe. Theft is common abroad, but unusual here. In looking about a diamond cutting establishment one would hardly suspect the precious character of the material in use. The floors are bare, the windows are open, and any one may enter by the door unchallenged. Much is trusted tc tho honesty of the workman, but sonu simple precautious are taken. When t diamond cutter receives an invoice ol stones he carefully studies each one, mio takes note of its color, size, weight and shape. Tho whiter ones look like bitsol clear alum, the darker like clouded quartz. The rarest and costliest stones arc of skj blue pink, and black. Ordinarily, how ever, tho pure water colored diamonc without tint or flaw is most sought after. When tho boss cutter hns made ac curate record of his rough diamonds h( divides them into groups of four or fivt and gives a group to each workman. From this time forth tho man to whoir they are intrusted is responsible for the stones, lie returns them each night tc the boss, and the progress of the work is carefully notod. In this way it is madt extremely difficult for fraud to be prac ticed. A cutter is seldom permitted tc polish a stone belonging to any one but the boss. Doubtless the workman would bo careful to avoid confusion, but mis takes might arise. Now and then i clever substitution is managed, nnd onct in a long while outright theft is com mitted. Tho first work done upon the rough diamond is cleaving. The stone is placed in a peculiar cement that softens easily and hardeno quickly. A little notch on the line of cleavage is made w ith anothei diamond, tho edge of an old razor is E laced in this notch, nnd w ith a sharp low of the hammer, the diamond i split. Of course, when a diamond can be worked whole it is not split. After cleaving comes cutting. The diamond is placed in a little mass of cement on the end of a stick nnd scraped with anothei diamond similarly embedded. The cut ter has six points presented to him, aud he begins with the one that seems most promising. His choice decides which shall bo the upper surface of the dia mond, for in the "brilliant'' cutting, which is tho most difficult and tho ont almost generally practised here, the ex posed surface is slightly flattened, whili the under side runs to the npex of a pyramid. In this way eight or ten facets are made. From the cutter the stone goes to the grinder, or polisher, who patiently turns it nnd turn3 it until the swiftly whirling wheel has cut upon the surface fifty eight tiny facets. These fifty-eight facets appear upon e-ery diamond cut as o brilliant, whether it be a ten-carat stone as broad ns your thumb nail, or a tiny spark not bigger than two pin heads. Now and then a stono is spoiled in the polishing', sometimes one is found that cannot be made to shape itself into the fifty-eight facets. The wheel on which the stones are polished is a soft iron disk lined with innumerable curved rays run ning from center to circumference." This is sprinkled with diamond dust and sweet oil. The moment a scratch appears on the wheel the diamond must be removed to some other part of the surface. The finished sto;,e conies from the tfheel covered with gummy oil, but a ten minute bath in sulphuric acid leaves the surface clean and brilliant. Diuinonds pendent from pearly cars or shininsr on snowy throat.; never look so beautiful as they look unset and heaped togcthei upon oiled paper at the diamond cutter's. Few large diamonds aie cut in New York. Diamond cutters smile when the "Cleveland gem"' is mentioned. Great things were expeted of this stone, aud it weighed fifty-four carats when polished, but color and cutting were a disappoint ment. A ten-c.irnt diamond is rarely cut in America. Most of the stones cut here weigh from one to the carats. Neither nrc very small diamonds cut by the New York lapidaries. Hose diamonds, which are slabs too thin to be polished on all sides, are not cut here, but re.shipped in the rough to be polished in Europe. There they are ground flat on one side and into fu'-cts on the other. Such dia immijMjticet with no sale here. NoJiing is wf.stcd at the diamond cutter's, lloort, which is the name given to diamnud clippings that cannot be polM;ed,is plitcrd in a steel mortar exactly ll':e un old-fa.-liioned cliuru and brayed hit, i powder for tho polisher. Not a Fiivfl.1 carat is lost, for the mortar is dust-pr-.-o!' ii'i'.l ihc pestle fits so close that tho p.ni l.s cannot rise from the bottom. A.;.? orl: .ut. ("a'jtleton, Yt., has the only slate pencil inil: iu the l i.ir d States. The daily pro duction i- o'V'UO. One man can sharpen HMO pencils dally on his e.nery wheel. The Pone's income iu 166S amounted SCIENTIFIC AND INPrSTRIAL. Galveston, Texas, is putting up a cotton mill to cost $500,000. Scientists declare that tho average sire of men's necks is decreasing. An electrical shoal water indicator has ust been devised by two Mexicans. Western manufacturers find that oil is a cheap and entirely satisfactory substi tute for hard fuel. Tho temperature in the deepest coal mines in the world is ninety-five degrees. They arc in France. Virginia City, Nev., has tho biggest flectric plant on earth. It has six 120 horsepower generators, and runs a mine ind mill. A rock" breaker has just been made nt riiicago which weighs forty-five tons and which will break a big rock at tho rate of two to three tons per minute. Tho Union Pacific has just ordered seventy-six locomotives from the Bald win Locomotive Works at Philadelphia, to be finished as soon as possible. The Vermont M icroscopical Association has announced that a prire of $250, given by a firm of chemists, will be paid to the 5rst discoverer of a new disease germ. A wealthy Spaniard, named Buenos, has donated to the Government the sum of 100,000 for the purpose of making rxperiients with a new submarine boat. Extensive works, to employ many hun dreds of workmen, are to be started in Germany for the manufacture of paper from iron nnd glass by a newly discovered process. A Scotchman, who evidently does not despise small things, claims that he has detected .10,000 dust motes in the thousandcth part of a cubic inch of the air of a room. London's smoke, it is said contains each day 800 tons of carbon, whoso waste is estimated at $13,000,000 yearly, while the damage to buildings is set down at $10,000,000. There are more paper mills running more machines in the United States than in any other country in the world. Gcr mnuy has nearly as many, but no other country has half ns many. The cotton industry is beginning to flourish in Greece and there are several mills among its classic isles in which both spinning aud weaving arc carried on. It is Greek cotton that is generally used in these mills. Coatesvillc, Penn., will soon have the largest steel-plate mill in tho world. The rolls will be 34x20, driven by a 46xC0 Corliss engine. The fly-wheel will weigh 100,000 pounds', with a steel shaft 18 feet in diameter. The statistics given by an English paper show that the modern labor saving machinery introduced into the foundries and machine shops of England hns enabled fifty workmen to produce as many castings as were formerly turned out by 208 workmen. As usually happens about this time of the year, a new substitute for white lead isaid to have been discovered. Each year somebody brings a new -one upon tho market with a great display, but thus far nothing has been discovered which satis factorily fills the place of white lead. The latest expensive whim indulged iu by the King of Wurterabcrg is the photo graphing of the moon to ascertain whether it is inhabited. lie has the negatives magnified one hundred thousand fold, nnd has thus far discovered ncbuhe covered with little dots, which he believes to be lunar people. Another unbreakable substitute for glass, a French invention, consists in im mersing wire in a heated stnte in a thin paste formed of soluable glass, gelatine aud glycerine, or glucose, iu proportions varying according to the use for which the material is designed. When nearly dry, the sheets are dipped in a concen trated solution of chrome alum or bichro mate of potash. Any desired coloring matter may be incorporated with the gela tine, and copal or other protective var nish npplied to the surface. A Monkey Trained to Stenl. There was told iu my hearing the other day, a tale which carries with it a moral. A gentleman who travels a good deal, being a batchelor with a good fortune and plenty of leisure, has, when in town, a suit of rooms at the house of his mar ried sister. He returned recently from a trip rather unexpectedly, reaching home in the evening. His sister, who received him, apologized for the fact that his apartment was not wholly in order. "Wo have a new chambermaid," she said, "and I haven't wanted to tell her too many things at once, and as I didn't know you were coming, I didn't bothei her about your room. I will send her up the first thing iu the morning." In the morning tho new chambermaid did, indeed, come the first thing, and the gentleman was still in bed. He, however, slipped into his dressing-room to remain until the maid should do whatever was necessary in his chamber, and taking a book he sat down to read while lie was waiting. Ue always carried with him a diamond ring, which had been his moth er's, which he sometimes wore and some times had in his pocket. This he had left with his watch on the stand, by the head of his bed. i He sat reading for some time, and even ifter he heard the maid go out he kept u with his book. Suddenly he heard a llight noise in his chamber, and, folding )is dressing gown about him, he opened he door and looked in. The chamber as nppurcntly empty, but his eye was :aught by a cord which seemed to extend 'roiu the open window toward the bed. foing forward to examine this he jier :eived a monkey, till then hidden from light by the bed, that, with his diamond ring in his clutches was making off. The owner of the ring shouted and run for ivard when the thievish animal dropped its prey and skurried out of the window, is fast as its skinny little legs would carry it, and, picking up the jewel to as mre himself that it was all right, the i;entleiuam reached the window iu time to see an organ grinder making off with the monkey on his shoulder. There was no doubt that he had trained the beast to climb into windows, nnd to steal any val uable upon which he could lay hands, and the incident may serve as a warning to those who allow orguu monkeys to scramble at will over their chamber blinds and windows. But the impressive aspect of the story, if one considers, is the position in which the chambermaid would have been put had tho owner of the ring appeared on the scene but a moment later. I'rovidence Journal. The yellow pine is one of the most abundant, cheapest and atrougtut of known wood. THE FARM AND GAItDEJf. riSBUDPtNO HORN'S. The corns of young calves may be pre rented from growing by the easy opera-' tlon of removing the germ of tho horn. The skin is cut and the flap raised to ex pose the small nub of tho horn, which is removed with a small sharp gouge or a knife at its junction with the bone of the skull. There is no union as there is afterward when the horn grows to and from the skull, and the nub may bo wholly removed. When this is done tho skin is laid back, and the wound smeared with tar, and heals very quickly. Thi horn is thus destroyed. AVw York Time, WATEnrxa the stock. Although some horses, unless very thirsty, only drink a small quantity each time, they should have it -all the mora punctually. They want that little just as badly as the horsn which drinks a grentor quantity. Many horses like to take their time to drink. They should be allowed that time, and should never bo hurried away from the water. Give them all the time they want. Some horses aro far more particular about the quality of the water they drink than others. They driuk only pure, cold wate with a relish. Given any othot they will not drink heartily nor thrive so well. All horses, and indeed all kiads of stock, do the best when they have purs water, and they should have it often. Even the hog. that is fed largely with liquid food, should have its drink of purs water often. Cows that drink impure water soon show the effect in the quality of theit milk. It is in dry, hot weather, nnd during long, hot days, that this subject is most important to the farmer. When the stock cease to thrive, the capital invested in them ceases to bear interest. l'rairti Farmer. HIXT8 OX HANDLING BEES. Just before swarming bees fill them selves with honey, which supports them in their new homo until they get to work again. This is an exceedingly fortunato thing for the beekeeper, ns it makes them much more kindly aud easily handled than they otherwise would be. With bees, as with men, they are best naturcd when on a full stomach. In the colder portions of the country protecting the hives is necessary, either by placing them in cel lars or packing in chart; in milder sec tions and in the South they will pass the winter well on the summer stands. In handling bees fearlessness is a wonderful protection. A person who fights them or tries to drive them away is quite sure to be stung. Still, it must be admitted that there is something about persons that gives to a few immunity from bco sting that other cannot obtain. The safest way for the average bee keeper is to protect one's self as" well as possible by the dress, use a smoker, and proceed as you would about any other work, taking care not to crush or injure a bee. Occasionally a colony will attack a horse that has been driven or led too near their stand. When this occurs they often exhibit a vindictiveness and pcrse vcranco that is not only wonderful, but dangerous. Horses that have been heated by driving and become sweaty are more obnoxious to them than the same animals would be when in their normal condition, grazing near the hive. There aro so many things to be learned about bees that persons without experience in the busi ness, who design keeping them, should buy one of the many books on tho sub ject or subset .bo for a good paper de voted to beekeeping. Act York World. GOOD BCTTER MAKING. It may be A. D. 1915 before tho co operative creamery, in some of its forms, will have superseded farm butter .making, however desirous we may be of its earliei adoption by dairy people in general. In the interval, nn immense amount of but ter will continue to be made nt the farm homes. That this butter would make a motley collection as in the past, none can dispute, but there is after all a constantly increasing amount of good butter put upon the market. If people could be in duced to discard their individuality in making, and adopt some few, deiinito rules, gb that butter-making could havo system and sameness about it, there would be a great advance made. Too jew realize that their way of making is not the method by which tho butter is made which brings the highest price. No one is selling butter now at advance, nnd paying prices, who still clings to "Grand mother's" way of making. Neither dots the market put a premium on butter made' from actively sour cream, nor butter with pronounced butter-milk flavor, or made sharp with over-salting. Butter, to bring a high price, must be of cream not over thirty-six hours old, slightly acid. It must be washed free from "butter-milk with weak brine, and salted not to ex ceed three-quarters of an ounce to tho pound. Butter also needs to bo packed in some of the cheap but tasteful pack ages now obtainable, and sent to tins mar ket immediately. Long-keeping butter is no longer called for. Butter is made to sell, not to keep, nnd the consumer says, "to eat fresh, not held until devoid of fine flavor, or aroma." The great evil is that so much butter is made by thoso who havo a few cows that they cannot make a specialty of fine butter-making, and so make ns best suits them. This butter made f.om old and often fermenting cream, is at tho start destitute of butter flavor. It fe not washed free from butter-milk, but "worked ovor" with ladles, "balled up" and sent to tho grocery store, unprotected from the light aud uir, and then con signed to tho "shoe box." When nt last, weeks, moy be, though it should only have been days at the most, this butter finds its way to the city market to be re jected and neglected, it is finally sold for a few cents a pound, and ateually scoffed at by the proscribed oleomargarine. This making of an originally good ma terial into a low-prieed, objectionable ur ticle, that does not attract but lowers thu price and lesens consumption, should bo stopped. It is both unprofitable and tin husinessl'io. The market wants good butter, and discards poor. Why, then, insist upon furryshing the latter? K one cannot make a line urticle and get a good price for it, either change methods, quit the business, or, what is better, patrouizt a co-operutive creamery. There the ma terial of a whole neighborhood can bo massed, rules of production adopted so that substantial uniformity will bo se cured, and a final product turned out that finds its way at popular prices to con sumers of good butter. The one ia money losing; the latter is money making. Which shall bo the choice?- American Agricvlturiit. Jk cvnn for n ntotKRA. ( ' A remedy for hiig cholera given by tht Georgia Department of Agriculture is, flowers of sulphur,, sulphato of iron (cop-' perns) and mnddcr, two pounds of each, black antimony .and nitrate of potossa (salt)etrc), half a', pound of each and two ounces of arsenic Mix this in ten gal lons of gruel for 100 hogs or give a pint dose to each hog daily. Give at to hogs both sick nnd well wlwro the latter have been exposed. Th sick must bo sepa rated from the ' well animals and both classes removed tonow nnd clean quarters or pastures. Burn tho old beds and sprinkle tho floor of tlic sheds with a so lution of one pint of p.irc carbolic aeld to ten gallons of softi water. All dis charges and impurities' should bo deeply buried or treaU-d with n solution of one ounce of chloride of zinc to two gallons of water. Tho persons attending 4h sick animals should not have anything ta do with the well hogs, and all food nnd water must be clean and pure. If these directions nro faithfully followed the dis ease may be stayed and stamped out. Every farmer should inspect his hogs and nil animals daily, and act promptly on the first appearance of disease. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Don't forget tho pickle barrel. Don't forget to keep the strawberry bed clean. Keep the young trees mulched or well cultivated. Kill the weeds early; do not Jet them go to seed. Bub the sprouts off the fruit trees be fore they become tough. Burdocks nnd thistles nro best har vested before they bloom. The grind stone is a "cheap hand" in tho hay field. Use him often. When you havo the money in hand is tho best time to count the harvest. Good oil, npplied ofteu, makes easy work, nnd saves the machine for next year. Alsikc gives smaller crops than red clover, but the quality of the hay is better. Japan buckwheat is one of tho "novel jies" that has come to stay. All reports pre favorable. . Treat nil raspberry nnd blackberry fprouts ns weeds, unless you wish them for setting out. -' You can't mortgago your crop or farm md keep on good terms with your credit ors and family. If you do not need the young beets for greens, thin them out anyway nnd givo ihem to the cows. Have a few bolts nnd nuts, also a wrench, chisel and hammer iu tho tool box of the mower. If you planted your garden in long rows, isn't it fun to run the cultivator up and down them? Vineyardists do not practice pinching off the ends of vines or summer pruning as much as formerly. Don't kill insect-destroying birds. They will save much more than they de stroy for any gardener or fruit grower. Orchard grass is n good drought re sister. California farmers pronounce it superior to timothy, red top nnd blue grass. Botauists seem to agree that wheats do not cross readily; indeed, it has been held that they do not cross at all, but ar self-fertilizers. To remove moss from tho trunks of fruit trees apply a solution composed ol one pound of couceutrnted lyo to three (rations of water. Professor W. A. Stewart enumerates among the protein or nitrogenous foodi for stock: Shorts, bran, oilmen! and cot tonseed meal, nil rich in protein; while of rough fodders clover hay is the richest. Shut the young turkeys in at night and do not let them out on wet mornings till the grass has dried off. Givo them water in shallow vessels. "Don't let the little.turkeys get their bai'ks wet till they are feathered" is n good rule. . The first thing to look to after you havo made up your mind to keep bees is pasturage. For, according to a bee keeper, a greater falsehood was never palmed off on a gullible public than that "bees work for nothing and board them selves." Tho only trouble Reported in tho use of arsenical poisons for destroying insects in orchards is iu the burning of the fol iage, by having the mixture too strong or putting it on too heavy; the latter often owing to tho fact that the machinery used is not of the best. . To exterminate raspberry bushes in pastures, cut with bush scythe and then stock the pasture with cattle to browse tho sprouts. Neat cattlo are much bet ter than sheep for exterminaiiug bushes and the coarse-wooled varieties of the latter will do more toward that object than those of finer grade. Taunlng by Electricity. I This talk about tanning leather in 0 few hours by electricity is nil rubbish, l'ou might s well try to iatten pigs by electricity. But leather can ho tainted in a very short time, although a erfcct article cannot be produced in less than live or six mouths. Some time ago Buffalo (K. Y.) man asked me how long it would take mo to tan a goat skiu and make a pair of boots. I told him it could !e done in twelve horn's. He bet nt rl 00 it couldn't be done. That night 1 went to a butcher and bought a goat. At ix the next morning the goat wns skinned, twenty minutes later I hail tlio hair oil the hide, colored and in the liquor. By noon it was dried, dressed, and dried again und glazed and ready for tho boot maker, who finished tho boots by fivi o'clock iu the evening. It cost the Buf. fnlo man nearly 6200 after tho wine nnd extras were paid for. It was leather, but it wouldn't do to risk a reputatioi on its wearing qualities. Atlanta Con tt Hut ion. A Family of Giants. Whenever there is offered iu the United Ktates a prize open to the whole couutrj for the family that has the greatest length, breadth and thickness, Walker County, through the Coulter boys, will be sure to take it. Of the six boys, going up bj steps and commencing at the lowest, Jim is six feet four, Mac six feet six, Will six feet six, Tom six feet seven, Oscar si feet eight and Richard six feet eleven. Tho parents were six feet four nnd five feet nine respectively. It is unnecessary to say that the boys in their rearing had the udvantuge of limestone water. Their weights run from 200 to 202 pounds, making a total of 13(17 pounds and an average of 22S pounds. ATiicoh (tfa.) NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. Ecru pongee is used for petticoat. Most Russian ladies smoke clgitrcttes. Large full slerves are made long enough to cover the wrist. Mrs. Pouthworth Is about to publish her forty-ninth novel. Largo, soft silk ties, tho color of tho gown, aro being worn. rrincess gowns are mado of Ind in silks and thin washing fabrics. There is a very successful woman drummer in the coffee trade. Palo pink underclothing is now occa sionally trimmed with black lace. Tho parasols carried in tho United States cost $14,000,000 annually. Insertions of lace and embroidery aro used in nainsook nnd lawn dresses. Some of the Paris papers have' started a crusade ngainst women who smoke. Worchester china is used for holding fniit nnd flowers in table decoration. Crepe Mousseline do Sole is a new ma terial for afternoon nnd reception dresses. Fans for mourning are made of blnck crape without ornamentation of any sort. Thore is an attempt to make popular again bright and crude tints for dresses. There are sold to bo thirty women butn-hors in tho Jewish quarter of Brook lyn. Silk gowns in Mark nnd white are most fashionable when designed in scrolls. Broad brimmed hnfs of silk mull aro extremely becoming to certain styles of beauty. At n new York wedding the other day the bride received $1,000,000 worth of presents. Batiste dresses, with parasol to match, will servo as all -day dresses nt tho water ing places. The professional duster has made her entry into tho business world of New York city. Dotted white mulle, Swiss and veiling gowns are in vogue, along with striped aud barred white dresses. The Cherokecs of the Indian Territory hnvo erected a new seminary for girls. The building cost $200,000. Julian Hawthorne's five daughters bear the names Hildegarde, Gwendolen, Gladys, Beatrice nnd Imogen. Queen Victoria is the richest woman iu the British Kingdom. She has accumu lated a fortune of $20,000,000. Handkerchiefs are tiny, dainty marvch of color and embroidery this summer, nud at the moment they nrc very cheap. Entire dresses of red sateens trimmed with ecru laces, are worn at Trend country houses nnd on the seashore. Seaside parasols are large nnd mostlj in bright colors, sometimes softened with covers or falls of ecru and cream lnco. Pslo silver gray gowns with panels, surplice waistcoats and rovers, cuffs and collars of tan color, are very effective. nelcn Gladstone, a daughter of the statesman, contends that higher educa tion docs not unfit women for domestic life. The woman who contracts to do house cleauiug from top to bottom lias become n very useful member of society iu New York. Mrs. D. G. Croly (Jenuio June) is English by birth. Sho came to this country with her parents when she was a little girl. The law passed by tho New York Legislature require proprietors of stores that employ female clerks to furnish them with seats. Mrs. Mackay, of many millions, is said to be fond of gray walking dresses. But for all that gray is very trying to dark pale skins. The white wool veiling gowns, with broche borders or stripes in white silk, are almost as effective ns white silk ones broche with silver. When walking out tho Empress of Russia always carries a largo fan, which seems to screen her face from those who stare rudely at her. Miss Mary Murfree, better known ns Charles Ft. vrt Craddock, is jietite in person, with dark hair worn in masses of ringlets over her brows. Queen Victoria's favorite musical com posers nro Mendelssohn and Sullivan, and the lntter's "Lost Chord" is the one piece of which she is most fond. Mrs. John W. Mackay, the wife of the California millionaire, continues to enter tain oil a most lavish scale. Her 'dinners are undoubtedly the best in London. "Zazcl," who gained renown by being fired from a cannon and making a great leap in the nir, is now Mrs. Georgo A. Starr, nnd is a teacher of acrobatics. New Orleans is productive of mnuy successful working women. The latest report is of two sisters who have gone into the dairy business aud are doing well. Tho White House cook is now a wo mau, Mrs. Cleveland's chef hnving been supplanted by Mine. Pelonard, who formerly presided over Lord Saekvillc's kitchen. Carrick cajic is fouud to be an ex tremely useful wrap. It is made of foui capes, one over the other, each capo be iug fully pleated, and is finished with a turu-dowu collar and tied with ribbons It has been suggested by a writer in llnrjier't Jinznr that Women take up th trade of upholstering. There is much about this handicraft that is computihlt with woman's dexterity, skill and strength. A Titusvillo (Penn.) paper tells of a novel wedding tour. Tho young man, who could not leave tow n, purchased $5 worth of tickets for the merry-go-round, and they proceeded to ride to thcii hearts' content. Mine. Rudoff, of New Orleans, whose husband was a well known chemist and carried on a lucrative business in drugs, became his successor after his death and is now the Secretary or the State Phar maccuticol Association. For tennis costumes a blouse and cap of colored surah are frequently worn, with white skirts of any material that tho young womau may happen to have in her wardrobe. But a touch of color must be somewhere, either iu cap, blouse or sash. ''Penny tee and pound foolish" arc tffosn who think it rcoooHM to ue cheap toda ami rosin boa it, liisUiudof tue good old lobbm's Klectrio irojp- for sale by all g-roc.ra since lboi. Try it oace. Bcsuru.buy gu.uirir. C'lLiroRNii sent 80W,lg tuud ot honey to Europe laM year. k your druggist for "TaBtlU's Panoa." fl Don't Par To n uncertain mmni hn an (faring from rilMmnennf the llvpr. biood or limns, anon as blllnnsneas, nr "llvor ooniplaltit." skin dls eaaaa, snrnfulon sores or swellings, or frmn lung scrofula (commonly known as consump tion of the lungs) when I)r. IMrrrp's ioldn Medical IMscovery Is guaranteed to cure all theea affections, if taken in time, or money paid tor it will by promptly refunded. 500 offered for an inonrshle rass of Catarrh in I he Head, by the proprietors ot Dr. Hade's Hemedy. TnrnK are about ,000 locomotives in the United States; A Hchool af iha Highest Order for Yonng Ladles. Ingham t'nlrersltr. La rtnv. N. v.. natnh. llshed over fifty years, offers superior advan tages In Its Lltorary, Muslo and Art Depait. ments. Kicellcnt homo. Attention given to social oultnre. ltntcs moderate. Pend for catalogue. Address Miss It. M. Webster, Principal. Tub llmhsor ni.tny Mlfllln County (Inn.) ttces are dying from fuenst sllnire. Forced to Leare Home. Over 80 people wore forced to leave their homes yesterday to call for a free trial pack agiof Lane's l'"amll"Mcillolno. If your Moot is bad, your liver a-.d klJieysoiit of order. If yon are constipated and hero headache and an nnalghtly complexln, dun't fall to call on any drugglat to-day for a free temple ot this grand remedy. The ladies praise It. Everyone likes It. I-srgs-slse package W cents. Tit: Michigan wool crop this year Is estima ted at ll.aoii.uxi poiiud-. Do You Hare that citreme tired fccllnR, lnnguor, without appetite or atrcngUi. Impaired illsollon, and a scl eral feeling of misery It li tmiw.Ulo to deKrlbe J Hood'a Sanapaiilla la a wondrrful medicine 8r creating au appetite, promoting dlReatlon and ton ing up the whole RyMcm. giving atrcnglh and aetlv Ity In place of wcakucaa and debility. Ho sure to get Ilond'a. x "I take n.iod'j SAreaiMirllla crery year as a tonic with mon antlftfectory rebuild. I recommend Hood'a Fai-flftpftrtUa to nil who have tlmt mUerahle tired feeling." C. rRMri.n, Sit Hrlilge St, Brook' lyo, N. T. Hood's Sarsaparllla Sold by all drufartata. $lialxfort.V Prepared only by C. I. ROOD CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mul I OO C os es One Dollar N Y N C 31 WAY'S READY RELIEF, THE GREAT COKQUEREEt CF PAID, Appllrit rxrernnllrt tnntnntly rrllrvra trrntiit. Itrnir. Ilarkfirlir. Puln tii ike CnrM or Mhlfn, Hfnilnriir, TooihnrU. or ntiv ntlt-r rxirrnnl in in. COMiKHTIONH, INVj.A .M H ATI ON. U.irninntlftin, Nriirnl gin. l.miiltngit, Scinlln, lnliiPi In Ine Small ot llir Itnrkt rlc CURES ALL S'JKrO COMPLAINTS, Crump Hinm. Hour Sfoitinrh. Nnuncn( Vnmliiiiir. Ilrtii'ibiii-ii, l I A IE It IHr.A, I'nllr, C'hftlrrn lnrliti, Faltitltig pc-ll. Imrr nnllr, Imlt in n tHpinilnl In hnt n turn blcr ofwuicr, 30c. a bolt I p. A t) lirugglita. An exrtMiynt nnti itillil Cntlinrtlr. !iirl Vfsrlnblp. Ttti Ltrt nud llrmt !1 rttlrtiift la tlic world lor ilia Cure of nil Jllsuritcri oi l ho LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. Trtken ncrorilti'ff to iHrrriton tbey will rrnturo lirnlih nun rrnrw vlmlliy Price 25eti. Box. 8ljy? 11 pruggiitt. 'AXLE UEMT I THE WORLD U II b fl t) eV y uet tji. oeauma. 8uld Krrrvrhare. llnMt TTIY. Book-keeinng. liufineHFcrm MW"L Prncnuaulp, Art lim. tic, t-hurt-hanu, ett II thoroughly tiuglit ly SlAJl.. luvtiiiiiR trei ttryanl'e l eilege. 43 Unu Ht., Iliiilalo, N. Y nKI.P WANTKti.-Jolinttoivu Book In lots ol llfty. u per i-.-nl. off. lletnll Sl.M. JOHNS TOWN l'VIl. I'O., 19 H. Nltilh Slm-t, 1'kllnilelplila. II UMUuti, U., Wuktagioa. Ik C Miu thl fp. 14 lr TlTl Uuiai-tlon is THE BhiVr to BtV1VJVY fr kf'us tho Toko v w Cil (clear. Jb ct-ult. SS to 8S n day. fftinpten worth f'l. 1 H Krre. Ltucet uot tinder bornen feet. Write Flrcw lor Ft I'M r It r I n HaMorCo,, Hully.M.r!) I and WbHkov HV I IfannMit t hfitnasllh DADWAr8 11 PILLS, r ji'S fi s ci si m nir. KOF.n rail's faviikitk roi.ir rtnxTi RK for all domett li' ajitinalfi, will rure v out of every Hw rar of cullo, whether flat iiiu or m kUiM-dli'. ltnroly more tbutl 1 or 2 dnMH lit 'eu,ry. It doe a not eon ktli.Htl'. INthi'r Lilt A n liiielliu - ant ( ifiilv li ! latitat A f twf 'Mi vmin it trial A" 14 A In n-oro than mim fane, our " -Vri1, irenu-i! pi-iuiily. t xpeitd n It w ent and u have a cure 'aSis' "' J't' ";! w lrl, Ld r-rrhap aave a valualile liorpe. If uot ut yoi pirJV'- ?l cU tv 5U cents for unp'e loitle. hclI .rrnld. tfPi yV'-vvJI clt tv to vents for vunn'e loitle. clI .rrnld. d JLi&'&'&K&'jJ . AcatM mi. Kiikiirt u v o.. nnuio rSiTi V."Jb, Jr A'VrSd r'a (iiiifc rohel We vhffrfvl!v rec V . J b-.- f, eite Mixture viyht ilhitQ ycith tveceu. if , I 'rnwnfr (.'. .W.. ti e beft ent'e medicine I have JSAAC MOM Horte Dealer, HrtHktunt .Vrtr York. FOR rti Iwo servants in two neialitorind Iiousbs dwelt But differently their of her i. hvmmm wmk (Hk4 t''w Mhmmatr beau-Bui D IP .T f " REMedy it cozt airsn paist. Matures and cures 1&EUMATISU, KKCItAI.QIA, Solalloa, lumbago. BEADACBK, Toclhkfhs, Sprains; DRVISF.H, Birnt and Soild At rirnggl.i. and neater. I THI MJUI a, VOOELH CO.. anle.ara. Hi. LATEST IMPROVED HORSE POWER MaehleeafwTSIIKeiniNtl t I I (INIM) Uraln.elM Slaeklae. fwNAWINO WOOD . . . fa n Clrt-Miar e ( rrnw. T HE f JXJl&x I BEST Uf&9 laiTORITT, BUMBILI n i JUAN IIH Of WORK kSTTXS A.W. GRAY'S SOUS; MIDOLKTOWN PniNJH, VTV 1r ton wihh a ;ooi i ItKVO IjVKR 1 purchti enn of th r1 hfntM HMITIl WKNMUK utns. The fluput pill arm vr nunufawtinvtl tirl lb fl rut a-hnlcA Of aiil dtttrlai MDiifrU'turM inrallbri 32. vinrl 4 im Hn oleordouM action. Hafrty Haimiirrlts and Trow. ointlrlft. VtntnirtM futtrrlr i hrmt oonl llv wpoiibIiI ttBl. narWiillv insit. ta, f.,r aork. iaanphi anil fttvi. thry ara unrtv.il. d fnr fltituh. durnhllliT nnd ncrurnry. lie not lMlrrtHd rlirap mallrttlilo rant-Iron Itnlioilouo wh( h rnrj. Ihiki liriirrtnrd t t-lron Itnlioiloiio whl b -muni aill-M and ar u nirmti. 'j'tis, KM I TII k re often nol.1 for thu rot nnir mtrtMiftiiie, rut diiirmnB. Th rla wtth firtn'n nam, ad1rrit nt 'at4 ot patent and ar cunrnnioril r-rfvt in tary dot ail. In-al-tnpoo hftvttia- tha (rmittia article, and if yonr rtralrr rami"t npply ) mi an vrAr n-nt to ddrM J-low wtlt rrivn prompt ani ramfnl attention. im"rptlvi)ctaloinir an 4 prima fnrnlfhri upMi au- ...con. njiitii & wknsON, gMcntlonthlp.rr. SprlnaneM. Ma... BUTCHER'S FLY KILLER Mrvkra a rlran aworp. T.crf fthort mil kill a quart of tiled, stop butttiiR around oara, dlvhiir ntfm, tlokluia your imhh, aklpa hard word and ao rur Pwirr at trlflinr rxponar. Send 'ifl crniafor nhretB to F. I'l'Ti'UrK, m. Alhaua, VI. &7R 70 '3 A MOTllcan bf road wnrktn 9 al for ua. Agents prrfrriTd u ho, raa furntatt ahnraoanfl firm thalr who time to 1h bualntMa. Spn.ro momenta mar bo profitably emnloveii ale". A trvr raroclln icwni and ri(fa. li. r. JOHN HON CO., Uvt Mala KU. Hicluiiond, Va. A' Jt. iVaM aott 00 nnd tunfa r.Tfrlwf. A'aifr Hi.nf. ch.to ao4inp ampfr rrv'y, i. F. J. Co who )inro mail Plao'a Cura (or Oonnimplio any tU 1 IHT OF AM Sold erarywhtro. Xo. PEERLESS RlVC9 Aro tho r.K1. V to fto -jd kt L nv io tar. Hi NEW TREATMENT. A appllod at ttio liollaad M"llcal4 Caocor Inailtut. nufTalo, N. Y.. remove Cancer Without pain or usw t knlt. Fontf of patlrnta peak Ih unquaJlflfnl ttmta of prnlflo of thr tivrj of UU treatment. Wrlto for circular. HOAeXANU Olr-JmlfcKl'O.. Uuflulo. N. V. Here Want to learn all about a Hon. f How to Pick Out a . OoodOa.F KnowlmperfeC'! float and k Uuaru against Freud t Detect Dlaease in 4 aMractaCure when mui. la poralbl.r Tell th. ago br be Teeth t What to rail th. Different Parte or the Animal? How to shoe e Horaa Properlr I Altai, end other Valuable Information ran b. obtarh.d b raadlng our U0PAtiK IM.tf.Tlt ATKU HWKeiK BOOK, which we will forward, reifc e:d, on receiptor salj 43 cente la llamri. BOOK PUB. HOUSE. 134 Leonard St., New York City ATI AO of U. S. and World Many i f Hit-in (.Mlorrd. Alio a aat sit o int of inloi . na tion rlattTty t dinVn-rH Htatc and Comt'i ie, Kom of (.nvrroiutnt, Vartii Prodiic-U aud Value, t v. Oiuy tV. In aumpt. ArttiiTM Hov'K I'fB. Hut St, Mi l.eon ml M., N. Y, itmrnntie la worth aonirtlilrt,. i'ollr muat ho oti iiaihi, roMdy urUrtitxlRt'af, cu lt 1 eh em Pa. 'niiifi:d lit: AOr-hMrl err teen. without it at fiB iiv have hnrtt. Sate and Fxr.'Htnve ii'fi, aftm( J.iAAU JK(.SA.S WALE" R V ALL Pnurcl'STB. rUM & a a ;yetluisnevsrnon2. 0000 MoKflefVU Sf Et Ss! r v. i v V V wT ' fw ;. fJi bus e with Sap oh
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers