WOMEN AND POCKETS. Some Pertinent Com by Kllza betli Caily Stanton, Fuuisut jtuffrngiiit Agitator. T-he dailj- press gave an account a lew days sin te of a young woman walking in the street with her blind mother, her pocketbook in hand, wlio was suddenly robbed by a man, who nas arrested and is now paying the penalty of his crime in jail. If the woman had had a pocket and her purse in it she might still be enjoying her money and the man his liberty. Going to see a friend off to Europe not long ago 1 saw a young woman hurrying to the vessel, her train in one hand, her umbrella and handker chief in the other and her purse held in her teeth! Ever and anon we hear of these val tiables snatched from their possessors, for which men and boys are arrested end punished. In view of this result the pocket is more than a question of fashion, it becomes one of morals; it is wonderful what dangers women will endure and inflict on others at the behests of fashion; if they choose to suffer the accidents that befall themselves, that is one thing, but to endanger the safety of others in crowded places is quite another. A young girl not long since, trying to pet into a car, incumbered with train, pocketbook, umbrella, cardcase and bundle, having an uncertain hold, was by a sudden jerk thrown to the ground and all her possessions scat tered in the mud; she was seriously irjured, and in consequence walked on crutches for six months. Perhaps the authorities of the church might do something to rouse j the religious sensibilities of the wom en in this direction. The apostles and prophets in Bible times did not think it j beneath their dignity to give women i tome directions as to their duties, and \ on appeal in our day might not be in vain. The discipline of the church re quires all women to cover their heads when they enter the cathedrals; Paul , advised them not to braid their hair \ nor wear gaudy apparel, but to mod- | estly cover their faces with veils. J Many of the books in the New Testa- | nient have special directions in regard , to the dress of women. And Isaiah j was quite strenuous as to most of the j ornaments dear to their hearts. In { the third chapter, sixteenth verse, he j tays: "Because the daughters of Zion j •re haughty and walk mincing as they ELIZABETH CADY STANTON. (Honorary President National Suffrage As sociation.) g", making a tinkling with their feet. "Therefore the Lord will smite the crown of the lnad of the daughters cf Zion. "In that day the Lord will take away the tinkling ornaments about their feet, and their caulf, and their round tires like the moon. "The chains, and the bracelets, and the mufflers. "The head bands, and the tablets, and the earrings. "The rings, and the nose jewels, and the mantles, and the wimples, and the crisping pins. "The glasses, and the hoods, and the j Teils." If it was thoiight worth while to put all these directions in the Bible | why should it not be as well to have J some provisions in regard to this mat- j ter in the canon an.d civil laws, and ■ men in high places give some direc- i tions to our daughters in this line? A student in one of our city colleges not long since, going to the black board, left her purse, containing five dollars, on her desk; when she re turned it was gone. The president j called his pupils together and stated j the casp. reproaching them for the i deed, saying: "But if the owner will j cut off the part of her dress that j trails cn the floor and make a gener- | ©us pocket in which to keep her purse i the will save her weak companions * from further temptation and herself j from greater losses."—Elizabeth Cady j fctantoij, in Chicago Tribune. . SponKinu Woolen* nt Home, Never in home dressmaking cut any I kind of woolen goods until they have been sponged, as cheap material is often not dampened before it is sold. 'Jo do this properly at home get an ironing board or table the. width of the goods and cover with tightly stretched calico. Spread your cloth wrong side up, cover with a linen cloth that has been well wrung out in water and then press with a hot S iron the lengthwise of the goods. Xev- i cr let the iron be still, and the goods! must fall evenly on the floor onto a c.ean cloth as pressed. It niA. llt'other. It Did. The fashion paper which announced that "there is little change in men's wearing apparel" told a sad, sad truth.—Bo&tum Advertiser. A CHEERFUL WINDOW. There In \othlii|t That AiltU Quite So Much Attractiveness to the Avernite Home. A small bay v\indow is hardly large enough to sit in, hence some means of utilizing its presence that will add at tractiveness to the room, without shut ting out any of the window's light, is certainly worth considering. The il lustration shows a scheme both at tractive and convenient. The low window sashes have below them a shelf that liljs the space of the bay window, VV/Mu /< < HI. , A A CHEERFUL W INDOW. while below this is a drawer that will serve many useful purposes. The shelf affords an excellent chance for placing an aquarium or large fish globe. Gold and silver fish are very beautiful when seen against a bright window. On the shelf may also be placed some potted plants. Above is a chance for & caged bird, showing between the folds of a drapery curtain, that hangs flush with the walls of the room. Shelves could be put across the middle of the side sashes, if desired, affording room for smaller pots of plants or climbing plants that can be trained to run up about the top of the bay window. — Webb Donnell, in Farm and Home. ODD WORK FOR WOMEN. New Mullen of lOamlnic a Livelihood Uevliied by Victim* of "Genteel Poverty." i Genteel poverty is one of the trag j edies of modern society. Yet out of i the evil comes good, and from abso j lute necessity clever women devise | new modes of earning a livelihood. Most of those who find themselves in reduced circumstances take up ordi i nary callings, but a few plunge out ! of the beaten path and make some idle ! accomplishment the basis of a paying vocation. One young woman uptown who in the past learned to make lace as a fad now puts it to practical use by repairing old and priceless laces. She carries what may be called a kit of tools, including a lacemaker's pil low. a full set of threads and various kinds of needles, and restores an in jured collar or an ancient fichu in the presence of the owner. The work is exceedingly difficult and the reward correspondingly high. Several women have taken up index ing. Their patrons aVe people who keep scrapbooks, and who are too busy, or. as is more often the case, toe negligent, to index for themselves. The woi'k is slow and laborious. It demands a wide literary knowledge and often a knowledge of French and German. The pay is moderate, being usually three dollars a day. Artistic and fancy bookbinding 19 practiced by eight or ten women in New York city. This is a skilled tradt of the highest class, demanding both technical skill and artistic ability. | Two of the binders have done such good work as to make them moderate ly famous. A Vassar girl with a penchant for chemistry found herself thrown upon her own resources three years ago, and adopted for her daily work the giving of instruction to members of her sex upon the «übjeet of cold cream. To tfie uninitiated this seems a very simple matter, but in truth it is very complex. It involves a knowl ! edge of the various fats and oils, in j eluding spermaceti, cocoa butter, wax, J japan wax, almond cream, lanoline, and such medical ingredients as ben zoin. camphor, myrrh, carbolic acid, sulphur, arsenic, zinc and white lead. Women who contemplate a foreign tour or who are to receive distin guished foreigners are often at a loss respecting the etiquette of European countries. They can get out of their trouble by taking a course of lessons from teachers who have lived abroad in days of wealth. At least ten bright young women have taken up derma tology with special reference to the hair and scalp. They visit their pa tients the same as physicians and earn a handsome living. At least two in this city clear more than S,i,O(K) a year Restoring old photographs gives profitable employment to a number of women who have become experts in the use of the camera. It does not pay very well in general, but now and then, when there is strong family lov*. involved, it gives very handsome re turns. One successful woman inlays books. —N. Y. Journal. Recipe for llrl ii l Snln«l. A salad for a wedding breakfast or dinner is made as follows: Shred a quarter of a new cabbage as fine as the petals of a chrysan themum. Remove the seeds from two sweet green peppers of me dium size and slioe them in very fine rings; then slice one medium-sized onion as thin as possible. Mix these in gredients together and lay them light ly in a salad bowl; surround them with quart*rs of tomatoes; pour a dressing over all composed of oil, vinegar, sail and pepper, and serve. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1901 nidn't IVnnt It railed Out. 'Mrs. Naggs Don't yon know that wear ing your hat in the house will cause your hair to fall out ? Mr. Naggs Yes; hut then T prefer to lose it that way. Chicago Daily News. There la a Clnu of People Who are injured by the use of coffee. Re cently there has been placed in all the gro cery stores a new preparation called liRAIN-O, made of jiure grains, that takes the place of coffee. '1 he most delicate stom ach receives it without distress, and but few can tell it from coffee. It does not cost over i as much. Children may drink it with great benefit. 15 cts. and 25 cts. per pack age. Try it. Ask for GRAIN-O. To be thrown upon one's own resources is to be cast into the very lap of fortune.— Benjamin Franklin. Lanr'i l'ninlly Medicine. Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick head ache. Price 25 and 50c. The ast ronomer is a space reporter.— Chicago Daily News. CotiKlilnsr I.ends to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the Cough at once. Goto your druggist to-day and (ret a sample bottle free. Large bottles 25 and 50 i-ents. Go at once: delays are dangerous. Roslvn —"I have brought you a box of chocolates. Have'you a sweet tooth, Miss Lovedove?" Miss Lovedove (naively) "Yes. and it has quite a cavity for choco lates."—Brooklyn Eagle. Each package of PUTNAM FATIEI.KSS DTBS colors cither Silk. Wool or Cotton perfectly. Bold by all druggists. It is generally believed that the expres sion "trumpet of the Lord" does not refer to the deacon who bleeps in the meeting.— Kam's Horn. Dyspepsia is the bane of the human sys tem. Protect yourself against its ravages by the use of Beeman's Pepsin Gum. Every man has a show in life, but few of them find it a circus.—Star of Hope. Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever ased for all affections of the throat and lungs.—Wm. O. lindsley, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900. Wise is the man who can pick out a good melon or a good wife.—Chicago Daily News. To Care » Cold In One Dny Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggist s refund money if itfails to cure. 25c. There are no harmless sins.—Barn's Horn. t'p AKiilnst Ills I.lmitation*. The poet's eye, iri a fine frenzy rcfimg, swept the walls and ceiling of his eight by ten literary laboratory. "It eludes me!" he muttered. Absent-mindedly he dipped his fountain pen in the inkstand and started his eye— same eye—on another frenzied roll. It rested at last on his rhyming diction ary. He pounced upon the book as a starving mariner on a raft in the open sea might pounce upon a pate de foic gras suddenly discovered dancing on the waves within reach of his hand. Ha opened it with trembling fingers and scanned its pages. A groan burst from his lips. "No!" he exclaimed, dashing the book from him and bowing his head on his hands in despair. "There is no nhyme lor 'month!' " —Chicago Tribune. "Why, Johnny, you've got a big lump on your head. Have you been fighting again?" "Fightin'? Not me!" "But somebody struck vou?" "Nobody struck me. I wuzn't fightin' at all. It was an accident." "An accident." "Yes. I was sitting on Johnny Brown's head, and I forgot to hold his feet."—lndianapolis Press. 'Twas Early Morning.—''When I leave you to-night," said Mr. Ift rem, "1 hope you—" "Gracious! Are you coming again to-night?" exclaimed Miss Tiredout. Then, for the first time, tile proximity of the mor row's dawn dawned on him, and he lit out. —Philadelphia Press. A very small boy was trying to lead a big St. Bernard up the road. "What are you going to do with that dog?" asked a kindly gentleman. "I can't make up my mind," was the answer: "not till I find out what the dog thinks o' doin' with me."—• Gaiety. * "I've promised togo into supper with some one else, Mr. Blanque; but I'll intro duce you to a very handsome and clever girl." "But I don't want a handsome and clever girl; I want you."—American Agri culturist. |o®o®o®®oo®ooo6oooQS®®®o®oooo®®o@®Qo®oooo®®ooo@®o®®oo I Piles Cured While You Sleep | 0 ,J ' OU are costive, nature is under a constant strain to relieve the condition. This causes a rush of blood to the rectum, and before 0 ' on £ con gested lumps appear, itching, painful, bleeding. Then you have piles. There are many kinds and many cures, but piles are not cura- KA Qija ble unless you assist nature in removing the cause. CASCARETS make effort easy, regulate and soften the stools, relieving the tension, and gjp giving nature a chance to use her healing power. Piles, hemorrhoids, fistula, and other rectal troubles yield to the treatment, and Cascarets A g quickly and surely remove them forever. Don't be persuaded to experiment with anything else! 3-of- "i ftnflfcrcd the torture* of tlie T damned with protruding piles brought on not I Affi -Tin by constipation with which I was afflicted for DO (sfl WtflSflk * twenty years. Iran across your CASCA- a P y w HET3 ia tho town of Newell, la., and clov DO fsa JtßSf&w ' fifSSr vWy never found anything to equal them. To-day * JC v entirely free nfl T® (rouble*, uppendlcltlt, hllioamrM, OFARANTEED TO ( I'REs Five year® ago the flr«t box of CAS- V ?i ,! «■** plood, wind on the Rlomaoh, bloated bou rli, foul month, CARKTHwunMoId. Kow It la over alx million hoxva u year, Brmler thiin uuy U\l AA l J 110 • "J art, K'tlon, plmplea, palnanftrr vatlnv, liver trouble, kullow con- almllur medicine In the world. This IN absolute proof »»f gri'JlT merit, and Vol dlMliieaa. When four bowel* don r t move retrularly yon are our beat testimonial. We have faith, und will nell ('ANCAKKTN absolutely ftrt Xk *# i- . ' onstlpatlon kills more people (hun all other dlaeaaea together. guaranteed to cure or money refunded. Go buy today, two i>Oc boxea, give CO v «•»? chronic allnenta and lonic ycur* of suffering that come them a fair, honest trial. a« per a'.mple dlreetlona, und If you are not nntlafled I:"* Jl°J B "»tter what alia you, a tart taking t'AHf A K RTM today, for after ualng one 50c box. return the unuaed ftOc box und the empty box to Uy . 1 and be weII all the t Ime uutll you put your howela ua bv mall, or the druggist from whom you purchased It, and *et your money X InJ VL "d v Ice; atart with fANCABETS today, under un absolute back for both l»oxe», Take our advice- no matter what all* you Mart today. (Vl X gnurantee to cure or money refunded. Unalth w 111 quickly follow and vou will bless the day you first started the use w Pfl 469 ofCAKCAKETH. Ilook free by mall. Add: BTKKLINII ttKBBDY CO., New fork or Chicago* fAj Try tirnln-O! Try Ornln-OI Ask your grocer to-day to show vou a pack- | age of ItHAIN-O, the new tood dfiuk that lakes the place of coffee. 1 he children may i drink it without injury as well as the adult, i All who try it, like it. GKAIN-O has that j rich seal bfowri of Mocha or Java, but it is | made from pure grains, and the most delicate j stomach receives it without distil**. j the 1 price of coffee. 15c. and 25cts. per package. Sold by ail grocers. Knslly Adlnsted. "Pardon me," said the busy man to the insurance agent who had forced his way into his office, "but I Bin not prepared to j talk to you to-day." "Don't let that worry you." replied the insurance agent, "I'll do the talking."— j Philadelphia Press. It 1» a Good Tillnsr. Everyone should be glad to say a good word for an article that deserves it, which ; accounts for the universal endorsement of \ the Sterling Remedy Co., makers of the famous Cascarets. Within five years the j sale of Cascarets has grown from a single box until last year it reached the enormous s ile of over 6,000,000 boxes. This is j ter of tiride to newspaper men because Can j carets nas been very largely and persistent- j ly advertised in newspapers for a number of years, and it shows that advertising of the i right kind will certainly bring success. All j druggists report an enormous demand for | Cascarets that is steadily increasing. They are put up in convenient form and the prices are 10c.. 25c., and 50c. a box. A 50c. box is enough for one month's treatment. Anyone who lias the slightest liver or bowel trouble J is urged to give them a trial. Home-Grown Luster —"Then you don't j bank much on ancestral pride?" "No; it ' is more to a man's credit to start from no where and be somebody than to start from 1 somewhere and be nobody."—lndianapolis Journal. Cheap It at ex to California. February 12th and each Tuesday there- | after, until and inc.uding April 30th, Special Low Rate Colonist Tickets will be sold via j the Southern Pacific's Company's "Ogden" and "Sunset" Routes to all points in ('alitor- j nia. The rate will be: From Chicago $30.00, from St. Louis, Memphis and New Orleans $27.50, from Omaha, Kansas City, i etc., $25.00. Corresponding low rates from j al! other points east and north. For particulars and detailed information 1 pertaining to the Southern Pacific Com pany's Routes, and these special rates to Cal- j ifornia, call upon or address W. (i. Neiinyer, G. W. A., S. P. Co., 238 Clark St., Chicago, 111. W. 11. Connor, C. A., S. P. Co., Chamber j of Commerce Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. <l. G. Herring, C. A., S. I'. Co., 711 Park | Bldg., Pittsburg, Pa. 1.. E. Townslcy, C. A , S. P. Co., 421 Olive j St., St. Lou s, Mo. <'. C. Cary, C. A., S. P. Co., 208 Skeidley ! B'dg., Kansas City, Mo, Force of llntiit. Would Bo Suitor —I desire to pay my ad dresses to your youngest daughter, sir. j Have you any objections? Druggist My youngest daughter is al- j ready engaged, young man, but I have an other daughter just as good. —Somerville | Journal. Spelt*. SO litis. per Acre Of this remarkable hay and cereal food i Adam Herwebo of lowa writes to the John 1 A. Salzer Seed Co.. La Crosse. Wis., the introducers: "Speltz beats anything and j everything I ever saw for stooling. for food and for yield, 112 could hardly believe my j own eves that I grew from one kernel of | seed 72 big heads." While E. L. Rogers. Castlemore, Canada, says Speltz yielded ! him at the rate of 100 bus. per acre, ft will ! pay every farmer on earth to try Speltz. . Write to Salzer to-day about it. [K.I "Where are you rushing so fast?" "l T p j to the health office to get vaccinated. ' 1 "Eh! Been exposed?" "Yep. Telephone girl this morning gave the pest house num ber by mistake!"— Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Remedy for the Grippe. Physicians recommend KEMP'S BAL SAM for patients afflicted with the grippe, as it is especially adapted for the throat and lungs. Don't wait for the first symptoms, but get a bottle to-dav and keep it on hand for use the moment it is needed. If neg lected the grippe brings on pneumonia. KEMP'S BALSAM prevents this by keep ing the cough loose and the lungs free from inflammation. Ail druggists, 25c and 50c. "Yes," said Charles,"l have had some very trying experiences in my time. I was struck senseless once."—Chicago Journal. IleKln with the llnliy and give Hoxsie's Croup Cure for Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis and Pneumonia, go through the family ending with the grandmother. Theodore—"He went so far as to call me a puppy!" Harriet—"And at your age! Hie idea!"— Boston Transcript. Poker and Polities. "Charley, dear,'* said young Mrs. Torkins, "I l.< vou ate not departing from the pre cepts * our forfath'ers and allowing your self to be dazzled by the pomp and glitter ol empire?" "What book did you get that out of?" ask>-i| her husband. "No book," she answered, stoutly. "I re membered some of it after reading a news paper article. But I hope you have not abandoned your old principles. Last night you were talking in your sleep, and you said several times that all you wanted was anotl.er king to make you all right. And after the trouble we had with George 111. it does seem perfectly foolish." —Washing- ton Star. Catarrh Cannot Be Cared with Local Applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Curt; is taken internally, and acts directlv on the blood and mucous sur faces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect com bination of the two ingredients is what pro duces such wonderful results in curing Ca tarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F.J CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. Sold by all druggists, price 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. "Say, ma!" "What is it, my daughter?" "When shall I be big enough to have a chaperon ?"—Town Topics. A fSooil 'l'll I■■ it to Introduce. When Mr. Thomas L. Cone, a druggist, re moved his business from Chicago, Illinois, to Preston. Missouri, he wrote: "I became well acquainted with the wonderful effects of Palmer's Lotion while living in Chicago, and desire to introduce it in this section, as I can recommend it for all that is claimed for it." The claim for Palmer's Lotion is that it will cure any disease of the skin that can be reached by external application, no matter how virulent or of how long standing. If your druggist does not happen to have it, send to Solon Palmer. 374 Pear' Street, New York, for samples of Palmer's Lotion and Lotion Soap. Failure is one of the things that are spoiled by success. —Chicago Daily News. AVtgefable PreparalionforAs- 9 ! similalingtheFoodandßegula- ' : J| Ung the Stomachs anil Bowel 5 of Promotes Digeslion.Cheerful- <jl| ness and Rest.Contains neither W. Opium.Morpliine nor Mineral. « NOT TMAKC OTIC. fteapr of GZillk-SAMIH PITCHER ; ffl flmtfjan Seal jllx.Smita » HotkrlU SaiM jhuxr Soed * flttxrtniie - im. I AMngNhbi Clarified Sugar atinte/y*' wi flavor. , Aperfed Remedy forConslipa- iSj ; Ron, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea JR Worms .Convulsions, Feveris- m, ness and Loss OF SLEEP. FacSunile Signature of NEW YORK. Humeirrkrri Rirnrtlnn. On the first and third Tuesdays of each month the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway will i-ell round-trip excursion tick ets from Chicago, Milwaukee and other points on its line to a great many point* irk South Dakota, North Dakota and other Western and Northwestern State* at about one fare. Take a trip west and sec the won derful crops and what an amount of good land can be purchased for a little money. Further information as to rates, routes, prices of farm lands, etc., may be ob tained by addressing F. -A. Miller, General Passenger Agent, Chicago, 111. Hypatia Roland (to the Browns' parlor maid i "Call me a hansom, please." Cad by- "I'm going your way, Miss Roland. We might go together." Miss Roland— "Two hansoms, please!"— Chicago Journal. \ Final ► '. There is an end to acute suffering when :• St. Jacobs Oil ► < ► promptly cures < <; Sciatica < > For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the J » Signature / ft W (\ Jp In Use \jr For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA TMi CKNTAun COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers