THEY CANNOT BE BLUFFED. est thing in the world,” sald Thomas A. McQuade, of the of police speaking detectives “We in Pittsburg. plek the e! and ou in street best man go out on the thieves as the ploy of the city. “We find that women are the arcful students of detective Inquire find acters of these book and detectiva works gentry vou will have slores their best 1 women, Women detective Lsolute Amol an a well ulated detective divisions. Whil do not employ any steadily, necessity to all ind use for one or moi in quently their work factory. “They are out which a man in most instance be hopelessly lest the me would have the all that sort of thing, but for the arrest slightly ne every respoct sent on ¢ In other right timo vy might be “No al has inal wit! bright, nervy woman i858 BOt aware gecures the evidence saved the notoriety The a gnilly because tl who exposad ker methods ha evidence and a defence Supt, McQuade and Capt declare that as long as the) charge of the local will in burg or hearing continue fo piay ia J ‘yp wition of criminals Telegraph oa th s Josh Chronicle PHOTOGRAPH MADE HE] The day after the bachelor nounced bir cugagement she €d a kt of ners rot Among the I r a pletur self, er. “1 woul ’ {or and pi wis taken by an amateur ph Ia't Richa anything,” she said gy truth, that pictare is the cans marrying him. Until | saw ) look thcre 1 had declared 1 nn: bi il have was ¢ just 3 hore for that, yezht, later had act hed a3 few the literary line 3 ge. day a friend describe ver me when 1 s +5 i + *¢ ni the locke d and spent a ing that pi hair, the lines mouth and eves, the goneral ew of approaching age, “You can't afford to wall years,” 1 to’'d maysell, with mercil honesty. ‘Judging by thal picture is now or nover. “That very night I wrote U I teid him 1 had recon and wags willing name the which shoenld not fellow my ckanzs to a tidy appreciation of his virtues. Hoaven forbid that be ever learn the real reason why | have desiroyed that graph.” New York * roy JOT ard to be far off Fi i atiritpted Pross. FASHION NOTES ek satin a: worn, Lght A good m taffeta hats ar inzertion: of lace. We are «ld that the days of v high, shaped ecliars are again upon 1s The =ironz vogue for blue among young girls has sent them searching for novelties in this beautiful color : ny the like ars teginming to appear. The “currant bun” advantage of being simply and padiiiotsly prepared. Smoke gray mulberry and mauve, fs one ¢! ithe new combinations in French millinery. A decp sine gray charmeuse (a peculiarly soft #llk with a satin fin fsh) shows velvet buttons of the medinom size. Hats cf plain and moire silk are bound with velvet, and vice versa, A comfortable English automobile coat is of violet frieze trimmed with violet leather and lined with squir. rel-iock. There is a real variety in muff shapes. At the present moment thers is considerable talk of plum and vio let shades. The long shoulder seam remains with the new blouses, and the sleeve wth the long mittenlike cuff« In the mixved leather a smart belt was shown, Plain colors are offered in all ma terials, from velvets and silks to gserges and broadeloths. ex used for coats, the squirrel-lined a black hat a suit of very good of the new stripe effects in dark green? one WITHOUT A MOTOR. know, Fred,” gald Mrs. down NO “Do LIFE you a it and motors, Jimmie e going { 11 thelr mie's re t logse Sleanor tells me ar have thought, must more sericus th: the D's in we have two molor cars, mt the poorest prople ¢ what that of do It 1 can’t ithout sat © fd mt vou in rail with FOR HIRE ason who yoar They them to are 100 th mes them pond not in { but a small one whole and but and dair graping, skirt ven lute clean abag ne for these Then taate? iaintiness + to of these all and nt i858 non« them taste iiine some would be dainty per i ake a peep into hep voir shoes peeping from ; Is the Are an fresh looks ger scarf soiled and the drawers partly open, revealing confusion within, and are there any little threads of hair attached to the carpet or floor cover ing? Perhaps not the whole ligt but a few, or one~—New York Mail. made bed? kicked up? % gg ad littered? Are ling MARY ANDERWUK. The richest Eskimo woman in America, Mary Anderwuk, does not count her waalth in stocks and bonds like Hetty Green, or in steel fixe Bertha Krupp, but In reindeer The possegaion of 500 reindeer, which are invaluabla to the natives of the arctic region, gives her an enviable social position among her people, for the reindeer means as much to the Buakimo as a horse did to a settler of our praries in the early days when the pioneer depended on his pony to | get food and water, and sometimes to | preserve tite itself. The reindeer is | the hors¢ of the far north, and the | where the vegetation is too scant to | Star, } ————— i Putting His Foot In It. i Whe Jack how can you call Ger [tie plain? I'd like to be only half as | good looking as she is!" “You are, Mabel, and yon know it!” “Jack!” | (Then he realized his blunder.) A Practical Museum. Permanent Exposition of Apparatus and Devices For Preventioa of Factory Accidents, By William H. Tolman. the curious sights in Amsterdam there Is escape the tourist. Leaving the royal behind him, cutting through the narrow streets, the numerous ; bridges of the Venice of the North, and making his way down a ted ) side canal, he comes upon the “Museum van Voorwerpen ter a Vorkoming van Ongelukken en Ziekten in Werk- plaatsen.,” Reduced to its lowest terms, Eng: lish the “Amsterdam Museum of Security.” This building contains a permanent exposition of apparatus and for the prevention of accidents in factories and workshops, so that manuiac- turers and all other employers of labor may see in actual operation the safety devices that guard the lives and limbs of their workers, This museum owned its origin to the Association for the Development of Manual Training and Hand-work in Holland. The labor inspectors of Holland find the museum is of the greatest to them, because it meets every the part of a superintendent that the safey-device In ques the proper operation of his machinery In 1889 an Important expo to laborers was held in Bs and other exhibits as the failure of the of £142,000 was security, The 1802 For the 1 propriation of §7.500 As its name nent exposition not but of the be workmen in prising all branches of The Cen MONG one that may palace crossing en in Fabriken this means devices that gervice ohiection on tion will interfere with for th presery succeed device effort not ition of An a collection did riin to government to co-operate i made Reich teichs appropri iintenay indicats only Farm Boys By Mrs 1... B Atwoo« ment, Perhanp to have perhag not all and on he keeps But own but appeared after my weonrd now aln first &F “ Honor Among Thieves.” By Josiah Fiynt. fo the is concerns fo execution in a d troubl AVETAE:L d The you, is plainly « Po may be everybody sa of any whict body of ne the a “honor” reality the purs aghbtaing in the iUnderwo world latter involved it is al infer, as Prey is we mething if the yaent By George and number, God this fac. is BH ible § TONE § fg without but spirituous liguors none probabil; amman nking of rhidden by JRBive indulgence, inde unced nany p ALTE nowise, bat hardly, xeopt by inference, a sinful. and th» practi Lemuel wont } : lation tween wine as best for thos iat b a hi y hearts,” and drink” for him that i ready to “drink forget his days of the great temperance to taunt the reformers with into wine, but the answer i be strong shoull more in the ribald wont irned water that the water perish,” eoi ling even that such and poverty, and rem crusade the ¥ promptiy given was y efaet became only unfermentsd grape-juice, and then invariably came the stern admonition: “Tcuch not, taste pot, handle noi!” No siogle text in the Bible probably has been pressed into servi more frequently thea this; and surely the meaning of none has been so generally and completely pe rverted The interesting fact is that instead of making the pron bition as commonly fnterpraoted, the Apostie distinctly forbade the Gentiles of Colossr to observe the injunction uttered by anothor——probably the gnostic philosopher whose teachings had mo distressed the goo’ Epaphras--From he American Review. & Fr ar Government Ownership By Robert IP’, Green. OW different would it be to overestimate the value to the people of the United States of the reservation, 'n ali future allotments of public lands, of all rights to coal that may lo therein! It is already a provision of law in this State and probably in all the States that deposits of gold and silver that may exist, even in jand already owned privately, are the property of the State, and may be worked only subject to the State's terms, and {tt would be no gréat extension of this claim, which hus always been nequiesced fu, if all minerals should be declared the property of the State. In order to protect rights already restricted to future finds on any property, courage prospattors to search awarded to those so fortunate The assertion of back to time immemorial, when gold and silver ulone were precious; but a wiser generation now country a fair share in the mineral deposits is to declare posits, without exception, il wa tnteinent Bavionr the be DR i) eftaar public or private, To en for: iron and coal deposits a ponsion might be a8 to discover such deposits, all mineral de to be public properiy.~New York Sun, GEESE, famed Rals also an im- been banner turkey State ing there y, stand 1d chick j1etin No griculture, trike prints gestion or alfaifa 1 and also gome ground oals clover hay grad for him ug gix months old i I until about Dr Vet heifers st iol be bre ff on monthe old © 4 i" ’ ighteen Roberts, Wisconsin ian David State erinar MORE COLTS IN THE COUNTRY The horse traders say more oolis in the couniry The enormous price of now ever before horses and mules have set many mers to work to raise their own stock “The price of Hestern stock has gone for this section to from now on, no price of cotton is,” said a dealer the other day. “You go West now,” he continued, “to Duy a bunch of mules and find that they will average away up towards two hundred dollars for big ones and Ifttle ones, to which must be added the freight, the feed bills, the trip expenses and many oth. er things, and they are away up yon: der before any profit can be thought of. We will simply have to go to making them at home as the day fou cheap stock in the West is over'"- Monroe Journal, ay it profitably matter what the FEED THE GROUND. One of the most successful farmers in the world says: “1 usually keep enough stock to eat all I raise, and 1 also take the chance of keeping 2 little more: for it does the farm no hasta to buy some feed, if needed” in commenting on this a farm paper says the idea here is to judiciously feed the ground, The wise practice in order to do this takes various forme. We have known a man to grow rich at farming who started on about fifty acres. He rented other Jand, but did all his feeding on the small tract he owned outright. The fifty acres thus became very fertile, in a imber rings for feed. Buy new corn before Begin increasing until they are ol November mix in a few good birds will » culls when marketing, thereby ex cting to get a better price. It works : ther way every time —Successful Farming "Possum. Preferably ‘possum should be cook ed over a wood fire in a Jog cabin and seasoned with the odorons bine smoke of hickory and ash as the lid of the oven is lifted now and again to give a glimpse of the promisel viand to those who wait with whetted appetite for the coming feast. With the ‘possum and taters there should be served either the ordinary Ken tucky corn pone—if such an adjec tive may be not improperly applied to anything so rare-—or the Olympian cracklin’ bread of the hog killing sea son. In justice to the "possum it must be sald that peither corn prone nor crackling bread is necessary, but 1% serves well not only to mop up the gravy but also to prevent the 'pos sum and the yams from melting in the mouth too rapidly for the flavor to be enjoyed in the fullest The finest ‘possums on earth are found in the woodlands of the Penny. rile district of Kentucky, and they reach perfection about the time the perfumed pawpaw becomes so ripe that it falls from the parent stem and reposes in all of its golden beauty in the orange tinted leaves that the earth has first claimed as tribute from the trees for her enrichment.-—Louls. ville Courier-Journal, Edward Carnage, a anelegged negro of Macon, Ga, makes his living by street exhibitions of high jumping. Getting someone to hold his crutch breast high he jumps over it like a kangaroo.