MEN'S GARB FOR WOMEN. Dr. Mary Walker Inaiata Thnt Pres ent Feminine SI) lo» Arf lu beulthful and Immoral. Dr. Mary Walker for well-nigh 45 years has preached dress reform for women. Her ideas, as much as her pe culiar adoption of male attire, have made of her a national character. She is now past CO years of ape, but is .more than ever committed to her ideas. j. In a recent article published by the Chicago American she advocates the adoption by women of male attire for the following reasons: Did you ever watch Flora MacFlim sv stepping on or off a car? Could there be anything more grotesque? As the car approaches she grabs fran tically a bunch of dry goods which has trailed for blocks behind her in the mud. Swishing them about her until she has bound up her knees as if in a vise, she essays to step into the car. Fiut the yards of lingerie and dress hamper her. It requires the greatest effort to mount the step. It is often times accompanied with the sacrifice of her expensive costume. The other day as I left a Broadway car behind a Flora, I inadvertently stepped upon her ladyship's train. The rip of the sheeny silk brought terror even to mo. She glared at me fero ciously. "I will pardon you," I said, "for tak ing- up so much room; it seems hardly necessary that you should have a dry goods roll trailinp behind you." Bind your waists in steel splints and what happens? Congestion of the stomach and intestines. Congestion begets inflammation and the latter ex citement of the part inflamed. In my common sense attire I can travel faster than any other woman. My form of dress has to overcome a liphter atmospheric pressure, less spe cific gravity. I can swing in and out of a car in less time than it takes Flora Mac Fli msy to pather her skirts daintily. There should be no sex in dress. A ■woman should not be forever pro claiming as from a sign board: "I am DP.. MARY WALKER. (Has Preached Dress Kfform for Women lor Nearly 45 Years.) i & woman!" Why is it necessary for her constantly to conjure uj> thoughts of sex difference? I think it im moral. To-day we call love a passion. True love is a quality of the mind, not of the body. Until men love with the mind woman will not have her right place in the world. Passion is brutal; love is divine! Does the modern form of evening dress—undress I call it—appeal to the passions or the souls of men? Do the yards of dainty laces, the variepated hosiery, the thousand and one what nots of the modern maiden's gown ap peal to the purer or baser idea? There would be fewer crimes against women if ihe suggestive in woman's wardrobe were eliminated. Modern forms of dress accentuate rather than subdue these evil sug gestions. "What is most daring?" is the question ■with the modiste, not "What is purest?" A woman's charms of person and mind shou'.d be her store of wealth. At present her physical charms arc paraded before the world that all may see. She does not so parade her beau ties of mind. Sometimes her physical charms are counterfeit; they are used as a snare. She cannot counterfeit her mental qualities. In trousers, waistcoat and frock coat woman would find protection that she much needs. She would be freer of motion and limb, would have better health, a cleaner mental condition and lie man's superior in the thinps she should have most c-f—of purity of body and mind. Snner or later my ideas will bear full fruit. The wheels of progress and intellectuality move slowly. Ido not expect to live long enough to see my ideas of dress the vogue. I shall have to fiie; then the seed that I have sown will ripen and prow and bud and bloom and IV Well, perchance I may be forgotten. It matters not so lonp us I line b*tn even a means to a good •ad NEW TYPE OF BEAUTY. Atthontch nut Fifteen Yrari of A|t Hlti Xmlilt la Froponneeil a ltura Avla by ArtiotH. rhiladclphians are raving over • new type of American beauty exem plified in the person of .Miss Evelyn Florence Nesbit, of that city. She it but 15 years old and two years ap« went to Philadelphia from Pittsburgh with her widowed mother. Her fa ther was the late Winfield Scott Nes bit, one of the foremost lawyers ol Pittsburgh. Her mother, Evelyn Florence McKenzie, comes of a dis tinpuished southern family, and she was a celebrated belle in her youth. It was not lonp after her appearance in Philadelphia that the beauty ol Miss Nebit was remarked by man; MISS EVELYN NESBIT. <Hailed by Artists as a New Type ol Amtricau Keauty.) of the leading artists and sculptors. Already her face has been put on canvas by such painters as Carl Blen ner, Carroll Beck with, Levy and Irv ing Wiles Church. It is Kvland W. Phillips, the artist photographer, who claims the honor of having first discovered this new beauty. Last October he arranged to have her come to his studio and pose for several pictures, which were later placed on exhibition at the Photographical society and created wide discussion. In speaking of Miss Nesbit, Mr. Phillips said: "Miss Nesbit has a mobile face, yet she can chanpe her personality is looks, pesture and effect quicker than anyone else 1 have ever seen. She can change her whole expression in stantly from sorrow to gladness, every feature adding to the total Miss Nesbit is a great beauty. She has a splendidly developed head and a face showing unusual character. About her fore head there are lines of exceptional beauty denoting great intellectual power." Besides her beauty, Miss Nesbit is endowed with a gift of dramatic tal ent and emotional capacity sufficient to warrant her in hoping to attain success on the stape, for which she is now preparing herself. HOW TO BE HEALTHY. Take an Air Ilath livery Morning and Every Nit hi for (lie llenetlt of MIIKCR-M ami I.UIIKM. Two baths, say the newest health authorities, should be taken every morning. For no less important than the tub buth for the body is the air bath for the lungs. Perhaps you have never taken an air bath and mistakenly fancy that it may be necessary to turn yourself inside out to accomplish it. On the contrary, the directions are extremely simple. You need no apparatus and it takes but a moment's time and very little effort. Every night the lungs become filled j up with impure air and more or less poisonous pases. A person may go all day without riddinp his lungs of th-jse impurities. Therefore it is as important to bathe the lungs every day as the body. Few people know how to breathe correctly. The lunps are not filled by merely expanding the upper portions of the chest and raising the shoul ders. The entire front of the chest should be forced out as one inhales. There are a number of exercises for expanding the chest which you can i practice in your room as well as in a | gymnasium. A doorway will serve j as well as the most complicated pym- I nasiuin apparatus. A narrow door ; way is preferred. Stand directly un j dor the frame and place the hands | fiat on the doorcasinp, the tips of j the finpers cominp at the heiplit of i the shoulders. Walk through the I door without removing the hands un ! til you are arms' lenpth away. This I draws back the shoulders and brings the important chest muscles into play. Try this for 15 minutes every niirlit and morning. It will heln to wake you up when you rise and "help you to pet to sleep quickly when you po to bed. Another plan is to expand the chest the same way before an open win dow. Stand about a foot back from the window, placinp the hands on the window frame on either side at the heipht of the shoulders. Without movinp the feet, let the body swing forward as far as possible and return to a perpendicular position. Prac tice this about 20 times nipht and morninp at intervals of ten seconds. Another exercise bath for the arms and lunps is to stand with the heels together and take a deep breath. Then stretch one arm backward and upward, then the other, meanwhile movinp the body backward, forward and to the sides while expelling the breath slowly.—N. Y. World. Ilnekwheat AliMortiM Keroaene. Kerosene stains in carpets may be eradicated by spreading buckwheat flour over the spots. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 20. 1901. LARGE DIPPING PLANT. Texas Ilaa a Cattle Ilnth Which, for Sice and EfTcctlveneas, la t\ ltb out an Equal. The government bureau of animal industry has recently, through a se ries of experiments, solved an impor tant problem bearing upon the health of cattle. It is the establishment of large dipping vats in the center of the stock" raising districts oi Texas nnd the south for immersing cattle in a chemical solution which effectu ally destroys parasites infesting their skin. When cattle from a diseased territory are to be shipped into a non infected district it is important that they be freed from all pests. The best and only remedy has now been found to pass the cattle through a BIG TEXAS DIPPING VAT. disinfecting bath, or, as it is termed, to "dip"' them. "Dipping" infected cattle into a saturated solution of sul phur in extra dynamo oil will destroy all parasites. Recently the Fort Worth Stock Yards company built a large dipping plant and placed it at the disposal of the bureau of animal industry, where the first demonstrations have been carried out. One of the problems in regard to the bath was to find a chemical oil which would not have an irritating and heating effect upon the cattle. For this purpose a number of samples of various lubricating oils were examined, and one of light spe cific gravity, called extra dynamo, was selected. A train load of 311 cattle was dipped in a large vat of the stock yard m July last. These cattle were raised and bred in Texas, and were infested with Texas fever parasites at tne time of the dipping. The weather, which hail been remarkably cool up to this time, suddenly changed to intense heat, and, it being desir able not to expose the cattle to the sun immediately after the dipping, they were not passed through the vat until after sunset, ily 11 o'clock at night all had gone through without a single accident, and they were at once loaded on clean cars, bedded with hay and shipped to Rockford, 111. Of the 311 cattle all save four ar rived in good condition at their des tination. The casualties were princi pally caused by extreme heat during the first day of travel nnd the con finement incident to shipment. A careful examination showed that not a single parasite had survived. Most of the cattle showed absolutely no indications of having been dipped, the skin being soft and flexible in all cases.—N. Y. Herald. FEEDING SOAKEETCORN. When Combined with Good I'nxt urage It Afford* an Ideal Summer Itutlon for IMifa. There appears to be quite a differ ence in the opinions of breeders in re gard to feeding soaked corn to the spring pigs during the summer time when running on the pasture and at a time when the old corn is hard and sometimes difficult for young pigs to eat. I have a decided preference for soaked corn, getting the best growth and better results than from feeding the dry corn. My plan is as follows: I get two barrels that will hold water, and then pour in one the quantity of corn that 1 wish the pigs to eat during the next 30 hours' time, then I add to the corn clean water until it is covered some three inches, leaving it to soak for 30 hours. I then commence feeding from the first barrel, and at the same time fill the second barrel, which will be ready to commence on when the first is fed out. After the first is fed out, clean the barrel arid fill it as be fore. This is a clean, easy digested, wholesome food. The corn has lost nothing by the operation, only the heated or burning feature of it, which is injurious to all young, growing stock when fed to any extent. You can feed this kind of food without danger of splashing it over you, which is not the case with slop made from mill feeds, which not only gets on your clothes, but the pigs as well in feeding. This manner of feeding will make rapid growth, and when on srood pasture a complete ration.—J. G. True blood, in Swineherd. Windmill Power la Clicnp. A windmill will pump water for stock, irrigation and all other pur poses; it will turn the wheels of the mill; it will wash, churn, turn the grindstone, turning la>th«, cider press, etc.; it will griud bones for the hens, saw wood, chop feed, t-'lircd fodder, shell corn, run fanning mill—there is no end of the jobs it can lie set to work on if properly harness-ed. Without a single exception the windmill is the cheapest power nature put* into the hands of man. Every farm should have a good, standard niia.de windmill —Mittux Journal. Same Old Trick. After six months of darkness the arctic wn creeped shvly over the edfte of the gla cier. Air. Ojibiworkky had jnßt returned from the Eskimo club. "What time is it?" to pry into family affairs, we M'ill draw a veil over the scene that followed.—Phila delphia Record. Danit'r In Old Sayinra. "What a fine head your boy has," said an admiring friend. "Yes, ' replied the fond father, "he's a chip of the old blo^k—ain't you, my boy?" "Yes, father; teacher said yesterday that I was a young blockhead." —Stray Stories. OolnK Too Far. "This reckless speculation must be ■topped," said the earnest citizen to the trust magnate. "Indeed it must," agreed the latter. "In deed, it-must. Why, yesterday two < r three fellows who are not in our crowd at all niade several thousand dollars by taking fivers. That sort of thing won't do."—Ual tiinore American. Do Your Feet Ache and Hum? Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes Feel Easy, Cures Corns, Itching, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Smarting, Sore and Sweating Feet. All Druggists and Shoe Stores sell it, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad dress, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Rcy, N. Y. "Doctor," said the stingy man, who was trying to save a fee, meeting l)r. Sharpe on the street, "what do you think of this? Very frequently I get severe pains in my feet. What's that a sign of?" "1 should say that was a sign of rain," replied the doctor.— Philadelphia Press. Relieve V.lioopiim Conch With liox&ie's Croup Cure. Xonausea. SOcts. Carpenter—"Well, boy, have you ground ill the tools, as I told you, while I've been out?" Hoy (newly apprenticed)—" Yes, master, all but this 'ere 'andsaw. An' I an't quite get the gaps out of it!"— Punch. I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumption ■ saved my life three years ago.—Mrs. Tho.s. Robbins, Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17, 1900. A relic of the old masters —The ancient ichoolhouse.—Philadelphia iiuiletju. Ilia Proper Introduction. "Really, your face is very familiar, sir; but you seem to have the advantage of me in names." And she looked at the distinguished stranger with a puzzled air. "I fancied," he mid, "that you would know me. My name is Bangs, and four years I had the honor to be your but ler." " , The face of the lady blazed. "But a remarkably lucky series of stock investments," he went on,"have enabled nie to become your next door neighbor." The lady's face softened. "So pleased to renew nur acnipintance, Mr. Bangs," she smilingly said.—N. Y. Tele gram. How He Saved, Corporal William L. Dawson, just re turned from soldiering in the Philippines, walked into a Salitia real estate office the other day and planked down the cash for an SO-acre farm. He had saved $2.0<)0 in less than three years of army life, and the item reminds us of the remark made by a Topeka soldier boy. having no reference, however, to Cor poral Dawson: "You say you can't understand how a sil dier can bring back from the Philippines more than his entire pay amounted to?" said the Topeka boy. "Well, ain't you go ing to allow anything for poker?"— Kansas City Journal. ♦ Every time you get drunk, and adver tise your folly on the streets, you are fight ing yourself. Every time you do a bed ac tion, you are fighting yourself. You hsve a hard enough time getting along, at best; can you afford to light yourself?—Atchison Globe. • ITe —"Yes. 1 used to write verses to her." She —"Pretty bad ones, I'm sure." He— "No: the very lie*: on ttie market; Ros setti's, for instance."' She —"tin. they weren't your own, then?" He—"Pardon me, 1 putin a good deal of original work. I changed tiie name of his girl, wherever it came, into the uawe of mine."—Biook lyn Life. iff - DEATH] begins in the lt's lt's the infections, but endanger the lives * '; of all their friends and relatives. There's only one certain way of keeping > r clean inside so as to prevent disease and that is to take CASCARETS. M! Perfect disinfectant and bowel strengtheners. All diseases are -a { niinr ?" bowol trouble!, appendicitis, bll- All In I IITPPII TorUBE: Fltoiw..™ I lllch iotmno,,, bad breath, bad blood, wind 1 111 II II HEu | LCII <hf Or»t lioi or fASrAK- I ill ill on " ,fl ftomaili, bloated bowels, foul IlllliglUil I i ill ETB wa. "old. Now «« I» UVIIb mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, UUflllllll I LLU °*?Jl un . ?nd dizzrne°M Ul V('h f i n P v» t .rr 'l!"™ *"*' ,o *V "mplcxlon . lln ,i ar m.dlrlne In the world. Tbl'» » pr«Jrf and (liuinoM. H hen your bowels don't move regu- rreat merl(. and our be«t testimonial. We hate fultk »>«t larly toil are getting ttlek. Constipation kills more will nc-ll I AN( AISKTS absolutely iu<irantrrd to <-nrs or people tliail all oilier dikCRNCN together. It if* a money refunded. Oo buy Uxlay, Jwo WK 1 hoxe«i give tht*n» starter for the chronic ailment** arid lout; year* of fair, honeat trial, as per dimple direction*, and If yon *r» ~ huffcrintr that com<> iHcruurrU M n »»»«•#/»- not aatlMled, afUir u»lntr on© 50cbox, retnrn too DMii«e4*Oc ■IIn von if Art t!sr.» f«A«r& nl*T« l> °* »»d the box to u« by mull, or the fromm f'J?, «£■■ * S ?« .i 1 ??"/.' f ° r y whom yon pur ehiUed It, a«d B ef your money bar! for b«tk | Will never t<*t well and he well all the tivue Until l»oxea. Take our utlvlce —nn mutter w hat nlla y»o- »tmrttO' you put your bowels right. Take our advlee; nUrt d»y. Ileuith will quickly follow und you will !»!«■• tbe Amy , witlft CAM'AKKTS to-day, under an absolute cuar* you flr*t»t«rted the meo'CilMJA RETS. Hook fre« by mall. antee to cure or money refunded. no A«lUre«: STt'ULIMi liLflLDl CO., REW 10RK ox CHll'AWi. | I _Jl' _Jl' FOR SYSTEMIC CATARRH Peculiar to Summer Pe-ru-na Gives Prompt and Permanent Relief. Clem 112». Moore. Editor of the Advocate-Democrat of Crawfordsville, Ga». writes the Peruna Medicine Company as follows : Gentlemen—'• After four years of intense suffering, caused hv systemic catarrh, which I contracted while editing, and traveling for my paper, I tizve been greatly relieved by the use of Peruna. I gave up work during these vevm. of torture, tried various remedies and many doctors, but all the permanent relief came from the use of Peruna. My trouble was called indigestion, butt? was catarrh all through my system, and a few bottles of Peruna made ten: fcsU like another person, noting the improvement after / had used the first hattlz* Peruna is undoubtedly the best catarrh remedy ever compounded. -Clem <£. Moore. Captain Percy W. Moss, Paragould, runa as a remedy for catarrhal troaWe Ark., says:"l think Peruna is tin- and a tonic for geoeral doubtedly the finest and surest catarrh eon<l it ions. —\V in. I. Zonor. , .. , . , If von do not derive prompt and saiia cure ever prepared, and it has taken 112 } 112 ,H nst ! of P.rwuu. but two bottles to convince me of this write : lt once to Dr . Hartman, giving a a< ' full statement of your ease and he wilS Judge Wm. T. Zenor. of Washington, i, e pleased to give vou his valuable 2uS- D. C., writes from 313 N. Capital Street, vice gratis. Washington, D. C.: Address Dr. Hartman, President oT " I take pleasure in saying that I can ; The Hartman Sanitarium, Coinizabus* cheerfully recommend the use of Pe- I Ohio. A SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT J| for "hronlc diseases can onlv be Keen red through the employment of a specialist who has devoted yearn of btudy and experiment along the necessary lines. tpffi The? Interstate PhyMcUns League is an association of the mort competent, skilled Itaffords an opportunity for the sufferer to secure Individual treatment by one of Fs H® tho heading specialists iu the country at a cost which, under other methods, would bo fflj A thorough diagnosis Is made of every case which we undertake. Tho proper JBO specialist then take* the case in hand, {rives '.t the most exhaustive examination ami a takes up its treatment in a scientific manner. All sufferers from obstinate chronic diseases, such as dyspepHa and other dicrestir »§« aisorders. liver and kidney diseases, chronic constipation and diarthu-a. rheumati' ■V etc., are requested to send for prospectus telling in full tho methods of this associat' CINCINNATI 3? '/f\ $3. & $3.50 SHOES SK& fi -yp. r—„ Krai worth of W. 1.,. OoimlaK S'J and . J$V E'ELETS *ll. ft© ihoca in S-ft to ttft. My X " iU Kd "* l inc «•»»»»»«" equalled W---J - ■&,, -w i 9 not alon* > leather^ hat makes a first r* 0^ of the foot, and the construction of the shoe. It is mechanical skill and knowledge that have inade W. L Douglas shoes the t«est in the world for tnen. : r Take no mihitltnte. Insist on harin* W. L. I>onffl&s sht>es with name VS|»v and price stamped on bottom. Your dealpr should keep them, if he does not, Bend for catalog giving full instructions how io order by mail. W. Li, DOl'ti LAS, llrocliton. Muss. ■-^rtXh^k. EiIAIUCCD'C I EPCIICC MECHANICS, ENGINEERS, O LBuCHOE# FIREMEN, ELECTRICIANS, Eta. 40-page pamphlet containing questions asked by Examining Board of Engineers. C r"MT ETDETCr GrBORGB a. ZKtiXjKTI, I ri\CC. K«in r>4«. 1!« Noiilh Fourlli SI.. SI. I.«ala, Ha. SOZODONT far the Teeth each 25 s 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers