AdvertiKinKatei.. J""-I1" "','aeircalat!oBt taaUaar """""em U to taa lifntu ..!, t'.",'?. of -bo.. t.Tor. iU ha inserted at toe Iuiiowidb low ratal- I 1 orb, a la. a 1 aa l Inrb, tnunttiK .m 1 lorn . a aioaih...... . J :jw---r--":::::r.:u:::u t5 J mcties Bjonin...... ... larnea. . jear ...lata I rx-ho. t Biootfca . . - i Z a InctiM. year " .JvT s column. mBuw.......;:: io! cum in a I year u M . eolama, a aiuottia M M Ta.a nhruent Inwrtiong, c. r .n. AunoaiMraior p.ua titnilw NmKm. aa M Aaoitur a Notiren... . . . - --.... ....... .. ... La tra and aimiiax Notice. aa """lot.on or i-rorertntur.. 01 aa'eorpura, (loo or urlet; aod e,,a.a:uDi7atloDa tlaicBdia ,,,e-,," aay m alter ,. limited or ladl Tidual inierrvt musi I pai.l l,.r ar a.1 vertl'BULa ..T. ,nJ J" ,'r'nl'U ol a.l kiout ae.Uy aa4 .ft roc" at tba loaaai pna. Aa Jon tyoa loncet It. ,OBBI.,i,E!A., nn.l" , , .11. miiiiu 3 niKiiths. I.Tt Sf "jo " "" wiihiu 6 mouth, if ' I ! 't,1,U 'A UU-r-,.. tHicaar to I-:'1! h. tM ,,. the -w w",1 k .e uo .ton I oon.uli toeir -a lJ to Hdvapce mast not . La t .j.mt iwimit a itiuso who JAS. C. HASSON. Editor npo Proprietor. BK 18 A FREEMAN WHOM TDK THUTH HAIU FREK AM' ALL AHK B LAVES BKtUDl.' ,00".t!tHiOtiy umlersUMMl tree ,. ,.t i - 81. DO and postage per voar In advance. . ..r rc f" 8to1- " gun' VOLUME XXXI. . w'"B V'ui !..-ia--.- 't OtHOTWIM.- EBENSJ3UKG, PA., Fill DAY, SEPTEMBER S, 1897. NUMBER :M. . . - Q C If HIS 'fll' wHEre dirt gathers, waste rules. nr at SAVINC RESULTS FROM THE USE OF IN EVER. &EGUI5ITE OBl ''din COMSTRUCTIOl TEttHir5MfOMACffm (?., CLEVfLAtD. 0O. FARMERS! e im s. PROPRIETOR. 0 MORE DOCTORS FOR MEf -w I wi rr.iiiimptir, sent ue ta '; !! trim .Inst tl.n.k i.f it At i f..,i...l . ;L., t . .n. 1 S't.l. t. l" M. 1'itikliam. in it I '1 'jut : a: rj ni. 0 wr(,te to v, to!J in just wliat to . ....I i i . u I- -! IITAIlll now. fc JL" ' tlf" nlinnsrs anil ailment Witli' "ltil uJ restore" I1'" A-lruers,, ,,5, ,t a, a Btnndard artl- , wnt l.T mii. in form of PiUa ot r tii. . ... 1 1 oniToiiiiU Im no rival. n Jrej amwrra treij amwrra lett.ra f -LIC.1 of tamp for rplj. m!!! !.c,nt ' lor Mr. Pinltham slide to health no etiouette." If.r. "t.Lin and iimutllt. ' um .1 vilulhl. Inlarmati.n ! inH a... .... Oo., Lf nK, Maaa. ... GREAT HKmov !".,nterest to th Fair Sex. I .Til of unsightly . T- ' l K'l'a lirwi Tor thousands IT "'-'-m u,"''ur-l rr'U WUh !,kl'w'.:.i i.f trrimout ttirr. I" (. 1. ' . ,lur t"t itliy bo iatn. .!... "'""n. It r.iu,m ihr hair ;,, ''k',",t "'Jury to the in.t d.llata r""""r., ,',ur"',l Itrblnit enutlnn ami I r but kind IVrvKii a '' l.iu. ' itirc tlon. rn rltrt Zl'" lii. 1,7, '"ut "'" 1""" ' t-itii.K tl e IT W '"'"'' ar- Kirn .111. . 1. t--;cun J.V1 ""'" '"r lr,-ulr .r rail ... S " iUl AUIU i-lust.ui., I'a. SAPQL8Q OUALITIEtg SlPl IM DtAU i jCm;z king 1 orwHEa,jI i ' U U V U - x V XX B, on 11 RAD L . lllllco I AW J TOO Ilaviiio' nmdc- sonu; fkiisi.ve im- tmvonirnts in the OLD SHEIMKLE MILL vr are now propnre.I to turn out FIRST-CIiASS WOIUv on Short Wire. Solicitino a portion of your LUDWI 9 DENTITRY ! Ion"t voii know that vmi can liiivf tlue .-. :ivi-I ami .itT.-nr-i Vf leelh resuirrtl lo a lit'altliy conclitioii at a Very Moderate Cost? K.n.'t ytin know that Iran do your tipn tal work .1 irri'al ili-al v-hi-api-r llian V" fan yt-1 it ilnit' fist- !iTf? Don't yon know that it i a wry ianeT diix thinir to taks t hloioform. Kther or LaunhiiK '-as? H von don't know, romp to mv oltii e anti 1 will .It inonst rale lo von lh truth of the ahovf. Odontunder ! ThN N Ihf only alV anatt hetic known to-.iay to th n.-ntal irofe-;-ion. I haw the ex-lii-ive lik-'ht of Klxiit.nri. Teeth xtrai-tefl poitively without aiu. T.- th lilli with trolil. f 1 anil up. .'th till.-.l with alloy, vents and .K feiit. . 'lVeth filled with Silver, -" cent and renti. Teeth rleaneil. 2."eent-! and " cents. Teeth eMrni-teil. rein. i;oLi)ti:(nvNs as miv ASt."... Gold Filling:, Crown ani nn(l-eVork:iSpcciaU.y Keelinsr ronfident that loth prieeo and woik will prove atNia-lorv, I solii il your palronaire. Dr. Richards, M Kl.r.l lF.TIH, Julian St., Ebensburg. CORK SHAVINGS are Liht and Spring enough to in.-ike one of the nicest kinds of lieds. After a trial jou'll feel like recommending them to all yotjt friends. Get them from j-our deal r. 1 rbRN o o COTTAGE. a BY ANNA SHIELDS. Fern Cottage is leased for two J- ji'urs to a willow lady, Mrs. Ka 1. or. tlie brought ootl It-ttei s from New York, and supports herself hy eol orin tanhiou plates for a magazine there." -lhis was the last statement my law yer made upon the loii-w iuiU d recital of the state of my alVairs when I le tutiieil from a seven-years' aliseiu-e to take up my alnxle in my own home, lie had hy my directions reiiovattd and put into k'oiiil crtler the 'aifre. haml snine house that was my inheritance from father, frrand fat her and jrreat trrand fat her. passi n- in each general ion Ihroiih a course of modernizing that still left the stately, old-fashioned walls and extensive grounds intact. We 1 1 i I -tons were very fond of Hilton place and had ample means wherewith to maintain its beauty. Itut beside my own home 1 also pos sessed several houses in the village of Crawford and one cottage juM at the boundary line of mv frardcn. a pretty place that my mother had christened hern Cottaire. from the number of rare ferns that nestled in the little garden loider fani iful miniature grottos and piles of rock placed there. It as after t w ilijrlit on a warm Aj.ril eveninir that, passiii"; the cottage. I saw through open windows my new tenant. She was bemiiii' over a small table, ap parently drawing while the circle of btrht from a st 11, lent lump fell full upon her. I had fancied a ulrar. ci.mmon place woman. This wan w hat I saw : A figure slender ami graceful, with hands as white and perfect as if carved in marble. A face purely oval, colorless ami fair, with reirular features and shaded by hair of midnight black. Tu ice while I looked she lifted her eyes, "aijre. lustrous and dark, full of t-up-pres.-ed pain. A face that covered a heart full of bitter anguish, a brain sen sitive and cult ivit'.f. I am a physician, thonirh I have prac ticed little, preferring to write for the i se of younircr st inleuts; but I love my profession, and cannot tpiite keep its in stincts ipiiet when I etudy a new fa-e. And all these instincts warned me that here was a unman burning a candle al ready flickering at lx t h ends. I had uite forgotten that mine was not a strictly honorable posh ion. t hus spvinir on a solitary woman's privacy, when an elderly woman, seemingly nn upper servant of better days, came into the room. "Will yon never cease working?" she said, fretfully. '"When the iL'iv lifjht is p.ni', and you cannot sort your colors, von take up that draw Inir that is ruin inir your e es. Kest. child!" Then the voice I knew must belong to that face, full, rich, melodious, but freighted w ith sadness, answered her: "Kest! You know I cannot rest!" "l'iay, then. Do anything but strain your eyes any longer over that tine "work." The widow rose then, sweep! tip her heavy, black draperies across the room to the piano, where site played. Surely, if this was recreation, it was a pitiful mockery. Wailinp, minor music full of sobhinp pain. Heavy chords mellinp into sad refrains. A inuster touch, a rare over in the lonp, slender finpers only called out strains of heart bieakinp pathos. A soft rain drove me home, tint I mused lonp and deeply over my tenant. 1 called sexeral times, and received conr leous welcome, was entertained by strictly conventional conversation, heard the piano in some fashionable, showy music, and found the surface so ciety of Mrs. Kavnor, a pent I e, refined lady, at t ract iveand apreeable no more. 1 niiplit ha e accept ed 1 his for t he real woman, but I had a habit of Unpen up about my parden. and as t he draw inp room of Kern Cot tape commanded 110 other view, my neiphbor seldom closed the windows as the sprinp crept into summer. Paler, more shadowy, with added sadness in the preat. dark eyes. Mrs. Kaynor became almost ethereal as 1 he w arm w eat her stole somel hi up each day from her st renpt h, and I was not surprised nnc mormnp to see old Susan cominir hastily into my hallway. "Oh. Dr. Wilton." she said, "she has fainted oxer those horrid pict lires! Will you come?" I went at once, findinp my patient prostrated at last, and pently submis sive to all my commands but one, the most i. operative. "I must work." she said, "as lonp as I can hold a brush." "I'.ut you will die," I said, bluntly, "if you do not take a few weeks of entire rest." "Die!" she said, quietly, not as if there was nay terror in the thoupht. but as if it was a new possibility in some prolt lcm of life. "No. I must not die yet!" "Then you must obey me!" I an swered. "I will send a carriape every afternoon, with a i-areful driver, and you must po with Susan for a drive. You must be outdoors as much as ms sible. exceptinp tlurinp the heat of the day. and then, if jiossible, sleep." Her dreary smi le con ti rmed my opin ion that sleep was a rare visitor at her pillow, but she did not say so. Indeed, she made 110 complaint, e ideiitly allow inp my visits solely out of repard for Susan. And to Susan I turned at last for counsel. She had come to my house for some medicine I hail broupht from l'aris an opiate not yet in use in this country. And I pointed to a seat, s.iy inp: "Susan, I am past til) years old, crippled, as you see. seldom leavinp my home except for foreipn travel 110 pos sip. If you think you can trust me with Mrs. ltaynor's secret trouble, I may le able to cure her." The w '-" Tookeil startled for a mo ment, and then, burst inp in to tears, she said : "Oh, sir, it's awful trouble, and we don't want it to le know n about here!" "I'll not Ivetray you," I said, pently. "You see, sir. she is not a widow, after 'hinkinp herself one for four years! .le. Mr. Hay nor, sir. for she's never hid u-r name, is a bad man, a man who early killed her w ith his drinkinp and aii.Ulinp and bad company, lie spent .. i.-.c i..o..ev her lather leil tier, lie crippled her 1mv with a blow of "his drunken lists, and then he left In r pt;or and sick, and the Ihv all crushed. She worked day anil nipht for the child, lit tle Harold, and he prew to nine years old. but alw ays crooked and puny. Then Mr. Kaynor found us out, and he woidd have taken the child, he would, the fiend, because she loved it. So we stole Harold away in the nipht and sent him to (iermany with a friend. I'm tellinp iny stoiy all w roup, sir. We heard Mr. Kaynor was dead -heard it from his own brother, too, who believed it, and Miss Kdna Mrs. Kaynor. I mean thoupht herself free, when she let Mr. Duchesne come to ee her, aud ah. well, doctor, he wus a true man; penile, kind and lovinp. and so pood to Harold She thoupht she was a wid..vv, and her heart was sore, so sore you i an never micss. for hc was one to lake trouble hard - anil what harm, if the loved eai h other? They would have been mar ried if Mr. Kaynor had not come back, pleased as Punch to find he could make a little more misery for his wife." "lint he is not livinpnow?" "Yes. he is. sir; the more's the pity! Mr. Duchesne is in iertnany w ith Har old, and my poor dear is wot kinp her precious lile away to juiy for the baths for the boy. ami to keep Mr. Kay nor away. She pays him so much a mouth to leave her ill peace." "It is a sad story." I said. "And I was too hasty in thinkinp 1 mipht help Mrs. Kavnor if I knew it. We have no medi cines. Susan, for such misery us t his." I'.ut vet I was plad to have heard the story . 1 sent books to the cottage, and I went over frequently, tryinp to win the he avy-hcartcd woman away from her ow n troubled t houphts, anil ama.ed at her rare patience and courage. 1 hail done but little in my etl'01 ts to re store her health, when Susan came hastily to summon me one heavy Au pust day. "Come, please," she urped. "lie's there, hurt!" "Who?" I asked. "Mr. Kaynor! He came eursinp and swearinp because his money was not sent last mouth, and this iiioruiiip he went over to Crawford and pot drunk, lie was coiiiinp home apain, when he stumbled somehow aud fell under a hay cart. He's badly hurt. 1 think the wheels went over his breast. I supxse, bad as he is. we'll have, to nurse him." And bad as he was, tyrant, tormentor and traitor, the new patient thus thrown umu my hands was nursed as tenderly as if he had been both lovinp and beloved. Out of her heavy dcsMjiid ency, throwinp self aniile, Mrs. Kaynor lev eloped her charitable, forpivinp nature in the weeks of illness that fol lowed her husband's injuries, fatal from the first. 1 believe she would have kept him in life if by any self-sacrifice it had Im-cii possible, but she could only make smoother the passape to the prave. 1 had thoupht her own tenure of life but frail, but in her devotion she prew stronper. She pained sleep by actual physical exhaustion, and culmm-ss bv the consciousness of duty" performed. Susan, by my adv ice, prov ideil food that w as iioiirishinp in small quant it ies. and is the injured man passed toward the .oilals of eternity, we Kept his v ife , l oin i! ri vvlap her ow n life away by our united efforts. 1 would like, for humanity's sake, to write that the reprobate reformed, or even showed common pratitude for the care lavished uxn him, but he died as he had lived, sinkiup into stupor for days before the cud came, and never, Susan assured me. bestow inp one word of thanks upon his pentle. tender i-urse. It was a small funeral cortepe that left Fern Cot tape to take the remains of John Kay-nor to his New York home. I insisted upon cscortinp the widow, aud left her with an aunt, vv ho vv as sy ni pat hiiiii! and kind, but evidently spoke from her heart when the said to me: "Thank the lird, Jie is dead this time!" 1 scarcely expected Fern Cot tape to be occupied soon apain, but Mrs. Kay nor returned in a few weeks, workinp apain busily, for her boy, she told me, content to bear some further separa tion, as he w as paininp preat ly by the Cernian treatment. Hut the desolate yearninp was pone from the larpe. dark eyes, and health came back slowly in the winter months, when my ailvice was followed, and Susan puarded im patient apainst overwork. The piano ceased to wail and sob. and the slender tinpers found tasks in weav inp pladiler st rains. A year passed, and one eveninp, just before the Christmas time, I opened the cot tape door. I'pon my startled ears fell the sounds of soup. Never had I heard Mrs. Kaynor's rich, melodious voice in soup before, and I paused, as tonished, as Susan whispered: "Her boy is cominp home for Christ mas. Mr. Duchesne is brinpinp him. and we expect them any day. And Harold is perfectly cured." I did not po in. Such joy as ihat I felt should have 110 witness. They came, these eaperly expected travelers, just lief ore the Christmas hells ranp out their joy ful peals. The slender, handsome boy had his mother's f:icc, and was evidently cured aud on the way to a noble manhood. And of his companion I can only sav thai I have no truer or more valued friend than Frank Duchesne, who comes every summer with his beautiful wife and pretty children to spend Ihe hot months at Fern Cottape. N. Y. I.edper. Sentenee of I'rle.ta. A t I'rapue, in llohemia. nine priests have been sentenced to from 15 days" to two months' imprisonment, anil to pay heavy fines for havinp acted ille pally durinp the last elections. Sev eral pries to were arrested on the sjot, while those who took to flipht were pursued by socialists, who stormed buildinps in which they took refupe. Koand Ihr Ilonea. Fpypt's pyramid builders were can nibals, nccordinp to Mr. Flinders I'e trie's assertion. He has found lxinew, picked clean and separately wrapped up. in many tomlvs. 111. Narrow llarape. At an exjierience meeCnp of bachel ors one of the most popular of the for eipn lot confessed that years liefore he had laUired under the delusion that he was in love, and that he had escaped matrimony through the success of a rival. A JOB FOR 700 TURKEYS. Tarard Louir In am Orchard to Save It from InvadlaH Vra.alioppera. V. li. Hirmiiiphaiu, of Oakland, a few years apo purchased a lari-e tract of land in the river bottom below Pollas ky. aud has siuce put out over Is.taH fruit trees. There was a small orchard on the place w hen he purchased it, mik these older trees are in full beating while pe:ich trees but three aud fi iu years old have borne larpe crops. Tin soil is tleep silt, uiul very fertile. Mr Dinning ham put in a larpe pasolino en pine and pump, and puinj s water frou the San Joaquin liver to irripate with The orchard presents a very thrifty aj. pearance, and all the trees that are oh enouph are loaded with fruit. The other day 1111 uruiy of prasshop pers eauie down (from the hills to tin southeast and invaded one corner 01 tl. i rchard. They were too younpti tly much and could only hop and l aw I but they had a voracious appetit,-, am w ithin a few hours had eaten every leal from every tree over an area of tivt acres. There was in the parden tract nearly everythinp in the vepetable line, but thehoppcrsshowed no preference w hat ever, eatinp everythinp clean as they went. Squash vines that were Veiy thrifty, each of which covered a spat t of perhaps six feet square, were catei olT clean. Struwhenics were eaten without cream, mid every berry aim vepetable in the parden went to fatten prusshoppers. And there wen- mii Jions umjii millions of hoppers and hop pers. They are not of the 17-ycar vj liety either, but just common, every day foothill grasshoppers with a moun tain appetite. As their whips are not larpe c-iougli to euuble them to iialulpt the disposition so prevalent in both man and animal to hurry 0,11 toother lo calities in scureh of pieener or l.ettei pasTures, they just hop and crawl tipo.i the trees and vines, ami eat, and eat, and eat. It docs seem as if they can eat for -'4 hours without a rest. Mr. liirmiiipham at once put an ad vertisement in the Kepubliean that he wanted a thousand turkeys. A wapuu load of turkeys passed throuph Fresm recently en route for l'ollasky, but he wants all he can pet. As an experiment Mr. P.irmiiipham mixed with a quart of middlinps and a quart of bran on.- pound of arsenic and set the mixture before the invading army. They ate with a relish and-" marched onward, right on. Ilesavs he didn't find a dead grasshopper. Two yearj apo the hoppers invaded the same orchard. Mr. liirmiiipham found a Portupuese who had a band ot Too turkeys, and at once made arrange ments with l,i, to bring his turkevs down to the orchard and camp there. The owner of the turkeys had several well-trained shepherd dops, and with their aid 5 turkeys were allotted tt each row of trees, and herded slowly along, eatinp hoptiers. as they went. Men were sent in advance to shake the hoppers from the trees, and the tur keys did the rest. The hi pers were totally destroyed and the on-hard saved Fresno tCal. l.cpublicau. FLEEING FROM THE CZAR. A Slav l ulon) w lib MarUa of MiurLlr, antl llunuruii lulia t v tt-. A carload of Kussiau Mavs laid passed ihiough here, ImmiimI foi the jia. 1-aii.Is. west t.f Hi.Miiarck, v, h le I lu will locate. They are unable to .-pea Knplish. There v. ere il men i.i i, paity, besides Women and children '1 hey tame tiom eastern Kussiu, an. were averse to talkii.g about il.ti.- m. live country, and seemed to think the. were still under the power of thecir. Whether nihilists or not, s. me of tin members t.f the laity have si if 1 ret from the suspicion of nihilism. One the men, Michael l.odovitt-h. claims f be a brother t.f the famous e il,- ivu, Lodovitch. who has spent I ' years i the salt 1, lines of lower Sibeiia. An ot'ier emigrant, Tcsuh Slolsl..ck. v. a sent t; Silierin for life in 1 si. an still bears the marks of the sl::.c!.h with which he v as t on lined in ui!.-. prouud dungeon. On t lie colon.: 1 i . of the present czar, however, h.' vvri pardoned, with L'l.O others. I.:;t. r. I' r,l stock w as again arrested as a ; 11. j-ecie. nihilist, the same crime of whi li In was accused ami punished before, but he escaped. He was joined by his sis ter in P.elgium, and they at once start ed for America. Perhaps the worst example of Kus siau punishment in this party is Iv.i: Molosky, a Pole. He was never in Si beria, but for six years was kept i. the dungeons of Moscow. 'I hese dun peons are under the river, and. lie says are always at least two int hes dee wit h water that filters through the cement walls. From .1 line, Iss'i, to No veniber, isru'i, Molosky saw 110 ray o light, and his only companions were t hi rats. His olTense. so the police c rini. was an attempt 011 the life of Michae' Connor, a Kussiun officer of the car's guard. Molosky claims that he never had a trial, ami was only released on his promise that he would leave Kussia at iincp, otherwise sufFt r life impi ist n ment. At the Hiint where these e.iple will locate there is already quite a settlement of their friends, who pre ceded them about a year apo. Minne apolis Journal. CYCLING POINTS. If a cyclist in France fails to inform the authorities that he owns a bicycle, he is charged double tax. New Y'ork is following the leatl of other states, and prohibiting wheel men carrying children on their bi cycles. J. K. Snell, the Australian cyclist, re cently rode from Adelaide to Mel bourne a distance of 595ii miles in two days 14 hours. 3x minutes. Snell went the whole distance wit hout sleep. Another chainless bicycle has been put on the market, and now it is claimed that success is assured. We have heard this talk before. In the ltoston parks wheelmen are forbidden to stand or lean a wheel apainst any of the walls or fences. Per haps there is some reason for such a law. but it would be hard to find. Niagara is the first county in New Y'ork to adopt a bicycle tax. The new side path law went into effect April 1. It taxes bicycles 511 cents annually. Cp to noon, 1,074 licenses had been taken out. IVIinquents are liable to have their wheels seized nd sold. A RSI) 1(1) ISKMEKS. One Reason Why Medical Im- I rrtlullt and Uauraan of Some 1'ruplc Make Them KLmmf let In, for l- I'aklrn to I'rarllcc Thvlr Wile. I pun. "Nine out of ten jieople believe," said a surgeon to the writer, "that the eye can 1m- taken ou. for repairs, just like I lie works of a w ateh, ami again re placed ill the socket precisely as it was oc fore. A moment's reflection ought 1. show anyone how inqossihle this .voiild lie'. As a matter ot fact, the eye is held in place by 110 fewer than si.x taut muscles, and, in order to turn it out of the socket, at least four of these would have toleftlt through. ltcsides. it is connected with the biain by a thick neive which cannot Ik- stretched, and it is also connected w ith the inside of the skull by blood-vessels, and if these were cut they could never be re united. Perhaps a time will come when a dead man can be restored to lite; but you may feel perfectly nure that the re moval and restoration of the eye is a surgical teat that will never be per formed. "Another extraordinary popular I - lief is that respecting the nature t.f a common cold. You will hear the most intelligent men say inp that it is tlue to -tu excess of cold inside your body, and they will advise you lo use a luiistaid plaster "to draw out the cold. In re ality the cold is simply an excess t.f heat inside, and the mustard piaster is intended to draw out the heal. What hapK-ns when you pet a cold i.- that the ctH.iinp t.f the outside of the body squce s the blood vessels and forces a lot 11101 c blood into the lungs than can be act-oUiuu,dated, They become regu larly Hooded and gorged, and the result is really a feve:, though we call it a cold. "It seems a small th'np Ut make a mistake alsiut the value of beef tea to a sick man; but I can assure you that h 11 lid reds of lives have Wen lost under the Hpular error that beef tea is a nourishing food. It is nothing more ihau water in which the pleasant and stimulating salts of the beef are dis solved and has the same effect as a mix ture of whisky and I'Lina tea. I'.ut it has scarcely a particlo of nutriment, and lxth doctors ami pu-ilic have starved to death more people than I'd like to state through believing that it has. "Very similar is the In-lief tliat an egg is as good as a pound of meat. If you feed yourself 011 eggvi according to I his absurd theory, you will simply shrivel up into skin and bone. The real value of an egg is its weight in pood lcef ; so that it would take eight eggs of the leverage size to supply the place of a pound of meat. "Then there is the universal fallacy alx.ut the liver. I dare, say that a mil lion of money is spent every y ear on the livers of ircat 1 ',11 tain and alMiut nine hundred thousand t.f hat sum does harm instead t.f good. The liver is sub ject to about one hundred diseases, and the cure for any one of these may in tensify :.ny other t.f the ninety-iiiue. To take one case as an example: The liv er may Im- making too much bile, or it may Im- making tin) little. Obviously. I he remtily for one 01 these disorders would make the other worse than ever. So tiiat w hell a person recommends soiiiethinp as iM-inp piKd for the liver, just think that it may be gtMl for his !ivcr, but not for yours. "Women are far worse than men in their beliefs aioi,t the lxxly and itt; ail ments. I am quite sure that out of every luO children who die under one y.-ar old 5o are actually killed through the mother's Wlief that ft Hid is not Iioiirishinp unless it is solid. They don't understand that milk has an immense amount of solid matter dissolved in it, us sugar is dissolved in watt r; and so they give the unfortun ate children cornflour and bread, which they can no more digest t han they can tligest iron nails. The result is a short lile of misery and then death, while those tif us who manage to survive are made martyrs to dyspepsia all our day s. "Many beliefs are merely absurd without being dangerous. Hair, for in stance, is coiiqioscd of almost the same mat-rial as the finger nails, and it is perfectly tlead. Cutting' the ends of it cannot Hssibly make it prow, al though it tloes prevent the hair from splitting up; uor can the hair become white in a night, any more than a wig. When novelists, too, by the way de scribe a person's hair as standing on end they speak of a phenomenon that is perfectly impossible. Many of the low er animals have little muscles attached to the tiairs by which they can erect them, but human In-iiigs have no such muscles, nor any other means of mak ing the hair sta.nl on end except their hands or a comb and brush." N. ". Tribune. ABOUT PROMINENT PEOPLE. (en. Cadorna, who commanded the Italian trtwips when they ttMik jmisscs sion of Koine in ls70, died receutly at the age of hli years. Dr. Jameson, according to the CaM Tow 11 Times, will return to South Africa to carry the Khodes transconti nental wire to I-ake Tanganyika. The duchess of Y'ork was married July li, 1VJ3. June23.1s)4; DecemlH-r 14 ls'j.l. antl April 25. 1s'j7, are the dates of the births of l.er three children. Miss Mary Isabella Potter, who was ordained as an Kpiscopul deaconess in New- Haven recently, is the first wom an to take orders in the diocese of Con necticut. A movement is on foot to erect a monu ment to Henri "ieuxtenijs. the famous Helgium violinist. The monument will be erected at Yerviers, the birthplace of the musician. Gov. Kolx-rt L. Taylor, of Tennessee, who, it is saitl, w ill resign, achieved no toriety tlurinp his candidacy by playing a violin, while making speeches. He J now says he is "tired of the ingratitude of polities. Senator Wellington, of Maryland, in terests himself while the senate is in session in looking over new spaper clip pings about himself. He subscribes to a news-clippings bureau and reads every thing that is said about himself with a great deal of interest. AROUND THE WORLD BY CART. lojnfortahlr II..,.,... Vm,. ,l th- A novel epitlilioi, is that planm-d by Jonathan Ills. f Ailooi.a. fa., who j going aiotu.il the world in a cart. IU starts this spring, ai d t x , t-to com plete his journey by June 1. l-.,.i. His route, as plain,, d. i south t. Texas, aeio.-s Mexico to South Aiueiica. thence by steamer to Spain and soon. His Vehicle is homemade, f,.. t , , antl seven wide, and consists of f,., parts, braced together, st. as to cn.hu, any strain, (llsoii has ii nis l.,-d the in side in Hiishe.l maple am: adorn, 1 it with hand carvings of his own th-s-ii The interior, besides havii., ,), riK.uis, is charmingly conce - , .1 ;,, .;,, of convenience. In one room tl v , .i .md in bad weather dine then- :.!o Hut the iliiiiiiir-rooin is ,,,lt ,i,,,IS where the wagon cat: U- p,.:!,d 10. i pleasant eating place... t i,. .'avs o. t jf the week it is pla nn.-d to I - It w l.ei , the cloth can Im- spread und. r the t..,s and a good, cool drink obtain.-. from a spring'. The second room has .-. ...iuh and small table. The tab!.-t an used f.-i i breakfast tray or .111 b- cl.aicd at night and used for parlor fane. s. t ilso tltM-s duty as wiiiiijf t:,,i.. , ,- f,,, tMMiks and a smoking s. t. iln sl.l, of the room then- is a drc.-ii,f table that takes up the entire wall. It has drawers, a broad shelf and minor. vith shelves oveihead. 11,-ie 1 1;.- -,,-tire winter a.id summer wardrobe is -tored. The third room is a trunk n...m. Here chairs are stored, tables pil.-d up and hammocks kept for ui:( 1. -asni.t weather the plan is not to sle, p in tl.,. louse, but iu hammocks slung from trees. Ploisi,.,:s are to be ttought of the farii-. s, o far as K.svible, w ho ar-ex-M-ctetl t.. supply butter. i'L'l's Vej'ela- bles as-.! . ! !, 1. ens cheaply in ret in n for the plivil.-te ,,f I. Miking through the novel ..,i -. 'I he kit. hen is the most admired rin.m 3f all. Cups are hung' from h.H.ks. and plates set i.i lit tie grooves. 1 "a .-i ar,- .-n the walls; all is polished as bright as hands can make it. The most ingenious arrangement ,,f all is a sliding door by w hic!i t he w hole side of the "house can beopeio-d. "I he d.Mirs slide to one side and fii.ally come ompletely olT and may Im- laid under the cart or used for a tabic ui .1. r the trees. Sprinpfichl (Mass. IN publican. FUNERAL STREET RAILWAYS. Schrme l'roMril In St. I.ot.l. Which Will Ke.t net- font of lnrlal. Durin-' t!" ir: :: summ. r several of the strc n."! c. mpanics of St. Louis will! . tin in ...iv ..t ion of operat ing funeral ears over their lines. In the bill introduced in the coum-il a few days apo applying- for a franchise to extend the Southern Fleet rie road fn-ui its present terminus at I 'road way and Howard street to the fair grounds a clause is included ant horii :ig the com pany to run funeral cars, as v.eil as Ctiited States mail and express cars. As yet the company has formed no definite plan for the oM-rati,.u of ihese cars, and has set 110 time for the in auguration of this new departure. One or more cars, especially const rin tcd for funeral serv it e. will 1- ordered built, and the public will 1- given an opjH.t limit y to see to what advantage a funeri.l can le conducted on a street railway, as compared with the primi tive system t.f employing carriages and a hearse. The cars will be of the very tin.-st make, ami will Im' furnished as com pletely as the latest improved parlor c:.rs. wiiii silk draperies, cushioned chairs and eatM-tid tloors. The most favored funeral tars iu cities where street railway funerals have ceased to be eMTimeuts is one arramvd with two compartments so that th-' ask, t can be tarried into the forward room, while the mourners and friends are amply provided for in the rear com part meiit. The red iiceil cost is an argument in favor of st reet railway funerals. It i-; possible to conduct a funeral on the cars for ten dollars, whit h would cost not less than $.".0 if carriages and a hearse were employed. The averape charge for each carriage is live dollars, while a hearse costs from siv. to ten dollars. A funeral ear can In- s. cured for ten dollars, and will prov id.- ac commodation for the casket, pallbear ers, clergy man and lo mourners, and will displace a hearse and ten carriages. St. 1ouis K. public. MY LADY'S PARASOL. She Shoi:ll Have a l)ost-n How she t'au l.ei Alunu with Three. . Parasols have blossomi-d out into a variety and fresh iuqH.i tain-e in the realm of fashion which is really dis heartening to all women except 1 l.e icw w ho are blessed vv ith i.nlimiti-d incomes or a mind alMivc Ihe frivolous things of life. Fashion decrees that the up-to-date woman must have from six to a dozen tif these ex pensi v e t r.lles t o har monize rcsjMt lively with her various costumes, but with three, w ell s,-l, ctcd she can meet all the requirements of fashionable dress. One should be t.f changeable or foulard silk, or ecru batiste, another of bitM-adetl silk, and a third one of chiffon or lace to cai ry with thin povv us. 'I he chilToii parasol is a thinp t.f frills and rlntT. which is a puzzle to anyone except the ingenious designer who fashioned it. In this class of parasols there are various kinds similarly elab orate, made t.f net. lace and gau.'e. and the handles are of gold set wilh ji wels. with riK-k crystal and enameled Leads of tortoise shell or some choice vvimmI. Klcpant l.itH-atlt-,1 and iiit.iie silks are useil for covering, hut there ,-re ail sorts of less exM-nsive silk paiasols in plain colors, plaids and strics without lim it to the variety. Kcru lit;.-!e parasols lined with a color and trimmed with narrow ecru lace are extremely pretty and useful as well as ptnitl style, and a lacquered wood handle is sure to Im a desirable choice. N. Y'. Sun. A a lalil Idiot. "Of all the fools I ever heard of, Jim berson is the chief." "What of Ji m berson, pray?" "I'eeause his wife insisted that he should not stay around home while sh- was cleaning house, he thinks her love for him has waned." Indianapolis Journal. kcCENT INVLNTIONS. A newly des":g;-d bust f,.riu fordress luakcrs us.- is 11. id.- ,,f a s. rit of nou- ollapsil.:.- 1 i..id vertical stay s. w ith ad justable cross hands attached by means of t lauq.s. s.i they t an Im cxaiidcJ un til the pr per shape and size is ob tained. A hew medical inhaler for diseases of the h, ad and throat passages is ct.ui h.scI ..f a waterproof fabric, to be i-trcti-hcl over the mouth and liose. with an i.toinier at one side to produce vapor f 1 ..in 1 1- iiu-diciiie for the patient to breathe. l'.al.y cribs are ldnp placed on the market which can m- folded up in small space vvh. n not in use. the frame l l-.g formed ,.f l.n.r.-d 1;i.ui1h-i s which I'm k fast vv l.-ii t,i-ue,l to support a canvas crib which is attached to a piv oted framework. To prevent dust from getting tm the chains and gea r w he, s , f a bicycle the chain is s 1, rroui.d.il by a pair of tele scopic tidn-s. v. ilh drums at the ends to cover the -.'ears, the shafts projecting throiifh small holes in the side of the drums. '1 o raise bread dough after it has l-een kneaded a hew raising pan is fitted with a re-ervir underneath which it tilled wiia warm water to heat t"he dough t.. the 1 Ic lit tcuiH-rat lire w it bout the necessiiy of placing it on the stove, where it might dry out orburn. In a newly ,1,-sifned poultry feeder a double cone is placed in a frame with ihe iq H-r eo:.e much latfer than the smaller ,-ne to hold a large quantity of grain and the lower one opening dow 11 ward into a round tray with a flanire around its ed'e to prevent waste of the fe.il. In a new block sitrnal sy stem for rail roads the sii-mds are operutetl auto matically by the passing train, which closes the bliH-k as it enters and opens it as it , ntei-s tl. i. bl.H k. which U in turn closed, thus telling the next en gineer if there is a train close ahead of him. FASHION'S MIRROR. Ked blow aw ay s are the newest fti frettes f..r eveninir wear, and red gad flies hover over l.iue roses. Hack trimmings predominate on hif h -colored dresses, even for the house, to soften and tone down the excess of color. Cray and red make a pretty mixture, and U.tli are wcil worn. Watered silk j-opliu is new. and is certainly a very g.,o. weating material. The fash .on.d.le parasols have won dcri'i 1 bandies, the latest taking the s; n. I. lam ,- of a l.orse ciiestnut burst ii f !iom its prickly sheath. 'ihe lie-st j.-w.l.-il belts are worn. Sometimes sic. I. with amethyst, very o:ti-i; li.rqnoisc set in silver or ledliier w il!i jewels dow 11 the center. l'iack t !. th .aek-ts .oc now trimmed with while I.n-e applique, and v, ry smalt they look. , specially when they t.pea over while Watered silk waist coats. It is remarkable how much vivid red. is worn Im.iIi in the day and evening; 1 veil you:.f cjr'.s have jki; py-retl straw hats, surround. l with a ruche t.f the saiiit- shade, with an aif r, tie at the hack. s line! ilucs hlacl-. mosllv red. Koval blue is a color which fcpM-ara frequently iu the trimming' of other wise soln-r cloth gowns. One fetching little bicycle suit of tan Melton has coat rev ,-is faced with royal blue moire. 'Ihe demand for printed silk mus lin of a t.liny texture is hardly equal to th si pply . It makes the most sty lish bodices ami sleeves, falls into the softe. I folds, and seems eajMtble of tak inf a lovely range of colors. lk-ston lludpet. CAR. FOR THE EYES. Keep soap and dust out of the ey s. Never read or use ihe eyes for line work tluiii'g twilight. When t he ey es are w eak sleep all that is jHissible. Shade the eyes from the full glare of the sunlight. I.ct the light come to your eyes from one side or from above, not from iu f 1 out. Have an abundance of good, steady lit; lit for any work you may have on hand. 1 not w ork in a oor light, and avoid a g'aiiug light, as it may be as bad a too little 1,-ht. Do not use a flickering light for read ing t -r sew i np. I se a lamp w ith a larpe hut her, and Use gin-d oil. hen the ey es are hot and heavy lalhc thei.i in t old or tepid water, aud do not confine them Uhi closely to any sort of work. W h, -never the eyes ache or are easily fatigued use them as little as possible, and l,M.k up frequently from the work to rest them. W hen reading hold the held erect and at a distance from the light, and do not Im-ii.1 the head over the needlework. Avoid piH. ly-pi inted lM.ks vv ith ptnjr jiaper and h h . r tyiM-, and do not read when ridiup in cats or carriage, nor when convalescent from a protracted illness, nor when the whole ImhIv is iu a weakened state. NOVELTIES AND CONVENIENCES Stands for playing cards consist of a pi -reed work case of silver, mounted on end in an oblong silver tray. This season's products in hand-carv-d busts, statuettes and groups, iu ivory, delighted the holiday shop-M-rs. M ihogany cabinets in Ixvuis X. stvle attiact with the artistic mar quetry designs with which they are decorated. l'very traveler is alive to the desira bility t.f a large alligator satchel -.ompletely fitted with silver and cut glass af-fiui tenam-cs. The wearers of glasses appreciate the convenience and safety afford, d by cases tif velvet and leather, with sil ver trimmings. I'uique among rattles for children nre rings of -.carl or ivory, one-half of which represent!, the man in the Hiooii. while the tit her halt is furnished with tiny silver 1m-11s. In art furniture, nothing exceeds in M.pularity. j-erhaps. the small gilt tabl-s Mounted with Wnetiau pla.ucs. 1 which form almost t he ent ire top. t here J Wimr just niflieient gilt showing to I prov ide a suitable frame for the plague. f TTTT TAT