ee —— ——— A —— _ IN THE WINDOW SEAT. One evening in an autumn old Wa in the cushioned window seat Kat side by side in converses sweat, As that old tale our young lips told We watched the shadows sway and greet Upon the walls. The burning logs Lay crackling on the biz brass dogs, Far back within the window seat, Half hidden by the curtain’s foid, You sat and swung your dainty ob Our brown eyes tenderly did meet’ As low wo talked, the story told, That evening in an antumn old, Things did not chance as they were toa Within the cushioned window seat That autumn time. Our story swoet 1s like some vague romance of old, Here in the after years we meet, When shadows oft from buraing logs Have lain athwart the great brass dogs, And clung about the window seat Half hidden by the curtain's fold. The paths wa trod have led our feet Apart till now; and years full fleet Have drifted by. Since we are old We smile at that old tale we told. But hist! Within the window seat, Half hidden by the curtain’s fold, Your daughter swings her dainty fest; And, madam, hear my boy repeat, With eager lips, a story told One evening in an autumn old —(. W. Coleman, Jr., in Lippincott, ———————— -— h ) T nd V4 $e frrimnmn i CAPTAIN TREVOIR'S GUIDE, — was o courageous offer tog, for much of | the track, it i§ supposed, lies under the! { enemy's fire. | tion, and 1 must say good-bye. { with you, dear friend; I will write you BY JENNIE 8, JUDSON. The bees-wax light in the wounded soldier's room was Rickering low; still the quiet voices did not cease Through the thin partit on the young girl in the adjoining apartment could not but hear them, whether she desired or not. She tried to read as she kept ner lonely vig'l, but—was that her name that had been mentioned? She lifted | her head in wondering excitement, “I met her at Inka ~prings,” said the young oflicer, ‘‘two years ago. She was the belle of the season there, and a belle worthy the title, I assure you. I never saw a more beautiful girl. Her hair was as soft and dark as a midnight cloud, her eyes were like flashing jewels, and her lips as red as a coral spray. But the <olorin her cheeks” -—reflectively— ‘ah! that was something lovely. It reminded | me of the light in a fire opal, which flickers gently tor a time, then breaks into a/flame.” “Why Trevoir, you actually grow | poetic,” laughed his wounded comrade. “Over the subject’s beauty, Edwin, not over the subject herself,” with a slight bitterness of tone, “*Why not the subject herself? she not attractive” _ “Yes, as piquant, bright, and spurk- ling as you can imagine. A perfect little humming bird, scintillating her beauty here and there, but with about as much heart as one of those tiny creatures might possess. At first [ enjoyed watching her | as onemight a lovely butterfly gathering sweets fréla every fower. She seemed so innocent, so joyous, so intoxicated with Iher own success. But I soon saw there was a ‘method’ in all this ‘summer mad- sess.’ She was after all,” with a slight sneer, “‘what is called ‘deep.’ ” The listening girl clasped her hands to her heart at these words, as if to quell a fierce and sudden pain. ‘The wealthy young man of the set | Was was by far the plainest and least inter- | esting of them all. Least inclined too, apparently, to pay Miss Garrett the hom. age she had grown to consider her due. At first I thought this seeming indiffer- =onoe piqued her to unusual action in winning his regard; but I found after. ward the motive was a more sordid one. She had determined to marry him for his wealth.” How white the girl's face gleamed in the feeble light! How hard and set her features! “I was a semi-invalid at the time, and as a looker-on could see all the points in | the game. Consequently it became one of unusual interest.” “Of too much interest for his happi- ness,” his friend thought sympatheti- | cally. . i “A valued friend of mise, youn Harry Yerger, who had just os from the University of Mississippi, was | one of the principal actors. I never saw | a young fellow more infatuated. Happy | as if in heaven when she was kind; ut terly cast down if she were cold or cares | Jess. 1 could but remonstrate with him, | once or twice, on his complete absorb- | tion, but I might as well have talked to younder image. And when 1 called Clayton Carrett a heartless coquette, and told him of her design to capture Whit «<omb and his wealth, he turned upon me dike a tiger. “Three weeks later, Yerger came one morning witk white face sad anguish. stricken eyes to say good-bye. He had been discarded, as 1 had so surely pre- dicted, and was to start directly for the East a ; ‘* ‘I do not blame her,’ he said loyally; “he did not love me,’ Jui " Ang Jo she led you on,’ I replied, ‘How hard you aro, Trevoir! how hacsh sou have always been toward her! 11 aor Jo what she was, and not because of any effort she put forth to make me.’ y pe * ‘Blind to the last,’ I muttered, nl jpined the Egyptian army that fall, and a month later was killed. 1can but hold Clayton Garrett responsable in a measure for his death.” A groan es aped from the girl's pallid 1 was lef and hp od into the seekers than lonely after H A Eo gayeties that 1 | i ersed the threatened path. : i i i woman who encouraged the honest love of a poor man, when she had no thought all the while but to sell herself to a rich one. She turned on me for an instant with hurt, wounded eyes, and I saw that my shaft had struck home. She was kinder than ever to Whitcomb after that, and when we all left a weok later she wore a handsome diamond ring, and it was currently reported that they were engaged. “No doubt she lives in elegance now in her New Orleans home, nnd is able to gratify every wish of her worldly heart, A humble home with one she loved and who loved her would be nothing to a woman like that,” he added, bitterly, “Such » home and such a love as you could have offered her,” thought his friend. “And did you never ask whether | they were really married or not(" he | asked, “Why should 1?” answered the officer, | wearily. “It is something I've tried Ah! have you heard,” he interrupted himself hastily, “that the Washington Artillery has been ordered to our relief, and that Whitcomb is in command? ‘Hence these tears,’ or rather this retro- | spect of two years agone,” | “Are they needed?” “Great heavens! Edwin, has no one told you that we are in a desperate strait: The bridge is burned before us, the enemy is at our backs, and unless we escape by some ford to-night we shall be attacked in the morning and com- pletely overcome. At nine o'clock, which is near, I am to meet at this house ‘a friend’ —so the note is signed —who is to show me the way to the ford. It i i i Jut it is time for prepara. God be in a few days if we are rescued from this snare.” And with a hearty hand-shake he was gone, A figure on horseback gate. *‘Is this the guide? tain Trevoir, as he advanced. “It is,” was the reply in a woman's sweet, low voice, “There is some mistake,” cried the young man in surprise. “No, there is no misteke,” the lady replied. **I came for this purpose from my father’s plantation, three miles below and near the ford, this afternoon, and have only becan waiting until the hour arrived.” “How did you reach here!” “I made a detour through the woods on the south side of the stream, and stood at the " asked Cap- " | crossed to this point in a skifl.” “Did you come alone!” “Yes, for could not trust the ser- vants in such a case, and my father and brothers are in the army. No one knows of my intention but yoursell and my friend.” “Then I beg of you, madam, to give me directions as clearly as you can, and turn back at once to the home of your friend. It is more than possible that the path lies near the line of the enemy's picket. I could not think of permitting you to accompany me.” “And 1,” she answered firmly, ‘‘could think of nothing that would induce me toreturn.” Ah! that sweet, tantalizing voice, where had he heard it before! “We must start,” she said “Follow me closely. Should I fall, push on as best you can uutil you see a large house well lighted. The ford is near. Should you fall,” with a break in the soft tones, “I will turn back to the camp and guide | another.” What a brave, unselfish spirit this was! What intrepidity was shrined in this weak woman's form! Bri athiessly and in silence they trav- The dark river rolled at one side of them; on the other, any bush or tree might hold a lurking foe. The might was dark and still. Each sound could be heard with startling distinctness. Suddenly a voice quite near cried out: “Who goes there?” The two urged their horses wildly for- ward, and a bullet whizzed past in the air, thea another, and another, but now they wie at last out of range, “Are you hurt!” asked Captain Tre- voir, with trembling anxiety, as they sla kened a moment their pace. “No: but’ that was very close, was it not!" “You should never have subjected yourself to such terrible possibitities,” be answered, almost angrily. “I was not thinking of myself,” she said. More than a mile of the winding, danger-beset path had been passed, and the worst would soon be over. Dut scarcely had Captain Trevoir and his guide started on the second mile when agrin the command “Halt!” was heard, and so near that they could dimly dis cern the figure of a man but six feet away. Agsin they urged their horses forward. Again eame the singing bul let. but this time it foupd a mark, snd its course was followed by a groan, “You are hurt! cried the young offi- cer, in gravest solicitude. i “My right arm is slightly wounded; I will guide the horse with my left,” the lady replied. “But for heaven's sake let us push on!" i Oh, the agony of the next few mo. | ments for The wounded guide! How bard to throw off the deadly faintness | which threatened each moment to over. | whelm her! She heard as in a dream the words, ‘We are safe at last,” when the | lighted house came into view; then knew no more until she awoke to find | ber head, with its mass of soft, loosened | hair, pilloned on the young officer's breast. He held her tenderly, and guided his horse as best he might, “You can tarn back now," she herself: *‘the ford is near, {and heaven is my witness, A quick and fatal revealation stunned m, “Is it Clayton Garrett or Clayton Whitcomb” asked huskily, after a moment's pause, while his heart stood still for the answer. “Clayton Garrett,” coldly. *‘Arnold Whitcomb was for years engaged to my cousin, who is now his wife. I was never influenced by the motives which two years ago, and again to-night, you 80 | freely attributed to me. under a mistake.” “Good God! Clayton, do you speak the truth? Have I in thought and deed so cruelly wronged youf If so"-—after a pause filled by fierce mental conflict ‘my suffering for the past two years will be but slight indemnity for the in- justice | have done.” ou labored “1 did not love your friend,” she con- | “If 1 had, | tinued, in quiet vindication. rich or poor, I should have married him; “‘that I did not ‘lead him on.’ | was too absorbed, perhaps too thoughtless as to results; but, oh! I was not a ‘heartiess | coquette.’” “Say no more,” he answered, a groan; ‘every word you enters my heart like a two-edged blade. My own weapons have been turned against me, i harsh, how unjust I have been! How cruel to the one who, despite all the unkind thoughts I have endeavored to foster against her, has been dearest of all the world to me for more than two years! My punishment will be bitter, but, Miss Garreit, you will have the sweet satisfaction of know- ing that you have been sud yet will be avenged.” “'o not speak to me 50,” she cried; “we have come through great danger together. You have yet to go and come again, time le “At peace bitterly, “when my whole heart is filled to breaking with love for you, and yours holds nothing but resent. ment for me.” They were riding now up the avenue to the lighted house, For an instant she lifted her eyes to his, but in the half light he conld not read their ex- pression, ‘Please set me down near this rustic bench,” she sad: *t will jeast alarm my mother if | enter alone.” He lifted her gently from the horse. “And is this good-bye!” he asked with whitenis B i p* “It is,” she answered coldly, must hasten on, dipatch ” “Then good-bye, Clayton,” in broken tones. “*May God bless and restore you, darling, and may He see fit to reward you nobly for this night's brave work.” No other word of SOrTOW QUAWDE 80 cruelly at his heart, and he was gone. ile had mounted his horse, “Arthur,” she cried wildly, ‘‘come back.” In an instant he was at her side. “I may never see you again,” she panted; *‘there must be truth between us now. It was for your sake that I acted as guide to-night. You have vouchsafed me soothing but pain from the first, but, oh! my love, | have siways loved you.” “Clayton, dearest, can this be true! I do not deserve such happiness. But, if 1 am spared, a whole lifetime of love snd devotion shall atone, This is our be trothal as well as good-bye,” he whisp- ered, as he clawped her close to his pas sionately throbbing heart, and left a Kiss on the tender, upturned lips. And on the morrow the enemy heard that a part of I orrest’s troop, whom they had considered as snared and hemmed in, had been guided to a ford, and bad thus escaped im the night —BLelord's Maja Sine, | ‘for you There is nced for great the —— The Madeira Archipelago. Though Madeira is the chiel of the Madeiras, it ought not to make one quite oblivious of the rest of the little archipelago Away tb the Fast of it are some islets rising steeply from the water so steeply, indeed, that except on the calmdst days it is impossible to laod on them. These are the Desertas. The largest of them is six mi'es and a half in length. Not a soul li.es upon them. This is rather odd when one remembers how the tiny, infertile rocks of the Faroes in the stormy North are peopled with hardy and happy men and women. The De-ertas, however, are devoted to wild goats and rabbits, who are rarely disturbed even by sn advesturous geologist, or naturalist, or the crew of a smack from the island beat upon picking the orchil weed from its rocks, North. east of Madeira is Porto Santo, about as long as the largest of the Desertas, and three miles wide. jagged, rising to about 1500 feet, sandy shore is a group of houses which goes by the name of the Villa. Here a lieutenant-governor holds proud rule | over the 1.50 inhabitants of the island, who earn a living by the grapes and sides, nude of trees os far as the Madeiras, In 1420 the Prince of Portugal seat an expedition to investigate these islands, new to msn- kind, They were then colonized, and formally annexed to the crown of Portu- al, It is curious that the Madeiras ould have been found completely destitute of human inhabitants at a Hime when the Canaries—their near neighbors «were all peopled by so called inns of avery remarkable type, -— Commercial Advertiser. I ————-————— —- The Pulse of Domesticated Animals, { befors us that | | have victory over all enemies, it must be br | & mind stayed upon God, and by an Ad A | walk with Him in cheerful and whole hearted | obedience, Lover and over again | chooses the | deliverer and judge, an with | PY Ibzam, Elon and Abdon; then they did | ULL | of the Philistines, who oppressad them forty | | years; i | rule recorded , Eh let us be at peace in the short | doubt shought it tras Its hills are bold and | But | where the lend falls to a level by the | i us . i | cised Philistines pratong and worshiping rain they coax from the ruddy and olive | & Porto Sauto | | received its name, as & mark of their | salvation, from certain Portuguese maria- | ers who in 1414 were driven out to sea SABBATH SCHOOL. AA INTERNATIONAL LESSON FOR DECEMBER 16, a Lesson Text: “Death of Sampson,” Judg, xvi, 21-81--Golden Text: Job xxxil., 9~Commentary. In all the Bcriptures the great trath is kept we would enjoy péace an Another truth brought before us is that God often mont funlikely instruments with which to accomplish His purposes, that no flesh may glory in His presence, And everywhere we are taught God's readiness to | forgive and to restore to favor and ussiul- | ness in some measure when there is a true | turning from sin to Him, either on the part | | of a nation or an individual, i earnestly, | | succeaded by Gideon judged Israel forty years and was | Abimelech, Tolan and Jair; then | they did evil again and were oppressed by | the Philistines and Ammonites eighteen | years: God then raised up Jephtha as their | wo was succeeded | evil again snd were delivered into the hands | God then raise up Bamson as A | Jeliverer and judge, and his is the last | in the book of Judges | the closing chapters describing the condi- | tion of things when “every man did that | which was right in his own eyes” None | of the judges in this book have so full | a record as Bampson, four chapters being de- voted to the account of his birth and life and death. No one ofibem wrought such mighty | acts, and no one proved himself so weak The socret of his might is found in chapters | j, ; 6 19: xy, 14; whatever mish HH bY i work fio did was by tha spirit of the Lord, | all that was weak and sinful in him was the manifestation of the flesh, It is just so with us today, and the only sure way is to reckon one's self dead unto sin and alive unto God; | be emptied of sell and filled with the spirit. 21. “The Philistines took him, and put : ’ out his eyes.” Behold him, a prisoner,a slave, blind and helpless, and consider who he ix and what be had been, His birth was fore. | told by the Lord, who appeared twice to iis mother and once to his father: he was a Nazarite to God from his birth, that is, one who was fully separated unto the Lord, hav’ ing nothing to do with the vios, either as to wine or grapes, and no razor was (0 Come upon his bead Num. vi, 1-8); as to his mighty acts, be had rent a lion as be would | have rent a kid, he had «lain a thousand men with the jawbone of an ass; when shut in a city by those who wanted to kill him be arow ih the night and took the gates and the posts and the bap on his shouders and carried them away to the top of a hill, and many other marvelous feats of superhuman strength Lad he performed, but now his power and | glory have departed from him, and he i= in the power of bis enemies, a poor, blind, help jess prisoner. What is the cause of this tor ritle fall, and why this reproach upon the Lord through His servant! For pot only is Barmmson disgraced, but the name of the Lord fa dishonored, The cause was simply that Namson had de- parted from bis consecration and bad given tis time and attention to thangs which be should bave been separated from Gelikie says that Samson, the fool of women all bis life, set in his blindness to do & woman slave's work in turning the band mill as be sat on the floor, which was the very superiative of humiliation. As he had sown, 50 he was reaping. “The heir of his head began to grow szain” Not that Samson's strength lay in his hair, but in his consecration to God, of | which his locks were an outward token: and | as we se the outward evidence of his separa. | tion to God returning. have we not reswm 10 | believe that in his heart there is Srue pen tence and a sincere return $0 the God of | israel, who bad so womderfully called him, Put who be had so grievously slandersd, Zi “A great sacrifices unto Dagon, ther | god Dagon js mentioned ten Lanes in samuel v, 2-7, and once in | Chronicles Xx, 10 It was the great national god of the Phils tines, The mame signides “fab” and Ms form is said to have been the face and hands of a man with the tail of a fish, Bacrificing unto idols is eniled in the Beriptores “‘sacry ficing unto devils” (Lev. xvii, 7; Deut, xxx), 1 17: Pa evi 87: 1 Cor. x. 90, and it is worth while to remember that If ws do Dot wor. ship in spirit and in truth the omy hiving | and true God, we are in some sense worship: | ing the devil and for just one act of worship from the Son of God be offered to give all the Kingdoms of this world and the glory of them (Matt iv. 8, ¥ he had tempted and overcome Sam son and now he has all the lords of the Phil | istines worshiping bim. 24. “They praised Sheir god If Bapwen | had only praised the living and true God by a whole hearted consecration to. Him, then these Gentiles had not had this occasion to praisg their god. If we considered thas every oun which does not glorify eur God only adds to the glory of the devil, perhaps we would be more esreful lest through us the great adversary gain any advantage Bs was | when Belshazzar aod his lords praiesi the gods of go'd and of silver, of bra, of iron, of wood and of stone, that the fingers of a man's hand were seen fo write the nation's doom upon the wall and that very nighs Dar | took the kingdom. (Dan wv, 4, #0) | people take to praisiag the devil their | is certain and ofttimes very swift th delivered into our hands In this and the preosding | his statement, and they no Nebuchadnezzar 1 that he sulwined Johoiakim, er xr | Jehoiakim into his hand.” would do well to remember that there is a | God in heaven who doeth according to His | will in the army of Heaven. and among the | inhabitants of the earth (Das fv., 55), and nothing can occur except by His perm sion, Pn "Kall for Samson, that he may make | * A great company of uncircum- This is what Satan desires, | and a servant of the Great fn their midst making sport for was vot there of his 52.4 gait 2 5 ; E 23 2 | used as food from th: mineral | gold, | tramways in the United States, ten | 30 be introduced and flow over them, | and then flow into the room, and so sup- | paration, the amount of | the time required for the digestion of Barak, (dideon or Jephthah, but rather acts of personal valor to avenge Israel o now see him in prayer, his last prayer, and strange ns such prayer may seem to us, God answered it a must ses Samson here on the side of the Lord desiring the overthrow of the enemios of the Lord, Bome one bas Suggested that he had better sight now than before he lost his eyes. It is not our natural sight, but the degree in which we see God or the measure of our faith which make us 0 bave power in His service, 20, “Samson took hold of the two middle pillars.” The people all watching, no doubt, to soe what new form the sport would take, wholly unconscions that in a moment they wood be in eternity, Bamson knew that be would die with them, but be knew Him whom he trusted; for a moment longer they are all in the same company, for a little while their bodies lay in the same heap, but what about their souls, which cannot die 90, “He slew at his death more than he slew in his life.” ‘Thousands out into the | unseen ina moment and they ways now separate; Samson, the only one among them | all who knew God, and be an unfaithful wit ness: but we cannot follow, let us rather | turn from this sad story to contemplate Him who was the only oct Nazarite during | His whole Jife that this world ever saw; never for a moment did He turn aside from | being wholly separate unto God, let us| rejoice that He who was made sin for us, is | become righteous to every one that believeth, | and that we are accepted in Him. — Lesson | Helper. ! stm —— Ed SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL ——— that the ony i article | ngdom | Scientists say is common salt, Dumb-bells weighing three or four pounds gre more ct cacious in impraviag the muscles than heavier ones. It is stated that an alloy made from copper and a new metal called silicium has the malleability and color of virgin | Petrified wood has been found in large quantities in the Hoosac Mountains, near Pinto, Eureka County, Nev. The speci- mests are oak and pitch Pp ne According to Professor Thompson, on wires near the carth electricity travels with only about one-half the velocity as it does on wires with a very lugh alti tude A Philadelphia engineer estimates ihat | a horse can draw on an asphalt pavement three times asmuch as it can on Belgian blocks and six times as great a load as it can on cobble stones, and estimates that the wear and tear of wagons and car riages on Belgian blocks about tem | times as great as on asphalt, is ~y i. There are now in operat according to Mr. W. I. Preece, twenty-two electric on the continent of Europe, and eight in Great Britain. Mr. Pree e predicts that the time is not far distant when electricity will have come nto general use in place of horses for the cars of city streets. The longest white pine sticks that were ever cut in Michigan, probably, | were recently manufactured in a mill at Caiiline They were six in number and ; feet long and 10x12 inches ia diameter. A stick of timber was sawed | at the Hastings Mill, Puget sound, re cently that was 106 feet long bY inches square, A curious paper by an English organ- ist upon “Melody of Spee hh," asserts were » 4 ~e | that & cow moos iu a perfect fifth and 'getave or tenth. & dog barks in ifth or fourth: a donkey brays in a perfect octa e: a horse neighs is a descent on the chromatic scale. Each person has | his fundamental key in which he gener. | ally speaks, but which be often trans- | poses in sympathy with other voi es, or | when be is excited. Where bot-gir pipes are used they do not introduce fresh air into the room, but 8 mply heat the air of the room, pure or foul, as it may be, unless, instead of | direct heat, these pipes are so arranged | | it enils somewhere as to allow fresh alr | | fiftecn years, nnd think them the best cathartic ply fresh air heated by pipes of hot air. | Yor th's method of indirect heating the pipes need to be kept very warm. The Table of Nulriment, A pint of white beans, weighing one pound, and costing seven cents, con- tains, according to the Americ Analyst, as much putriment as three pounds and | | & half of roast beef, costing eighty-seven | and a half cents, Of all the articles that | can be eaten, the cheapest are bread, butter. molasses, beans and rice. A pound of corn meal goes as far as al pound of flour, If corn and wheat were ground, and the whole product, bran and all, were made into bread, fifteen | per cent. of nutriment would be saved, | with much greater healthfulness, The following table shows the mode of pre- nutriment, and the most common articles of our tables: ood upon Am tof Nutviment Time of Quantity of Pood, ingestion, dann Cabbage, boiled. "» Venison, boiled... «++ 22 © - Rs ERR Poultry, roasted... ..... 2 vavebisenseissans V58 | EN Be BESEEBLURESTESEE Ome of this week's steamships brought overmore and prettier cane and umbrel- 1a novelties than have ever been import. 10t before. : ji 7 | tin #000 miles loog to keep Jock rabbits | Queensland. = NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOM Brown fur of all sorts is in high favor, Bear's fur is a great favorite for winter Red inall shades is more than ever in vogue, : There is a tendency toward fancy silks of every description, Cloth wraps of blue, red, or green are bordered with black fur. French ladies wear bracelets on the outside of the dresssleevos, Afternoon gowns for brides are made up in dull porcelain blue shades, . A favorite color is smoke gray made up in combination with silver frost. Braiding grows more snd more the rage for jackets, mantles, and gowns, A woman in New York makes her liv ing preparing call’s-foot jelly for the sick. Mrs, Cleveland now cosspietiouts figures asa patron of and leader in chu work, _ On stylish notepaper, the monogram is very large, covering in some cases half the page, Among the rich ribbons now shown | are velvet stripes on peau de sole grounds | with an ottoman border. are the correct thing in Basket patters Thick cords of silver silver waist belts, | rope are also worn as belts, The Countess of Pellegrini Day, one of the last of the grand dames of the 15th century, has just died in Italy. Mrs. Wordsworth, the daughter-in- law of the poet and last survivor of the occupants of Itydal Mount, is dead. Most of the popular handkerchief ex. tracts are made by skiltolly combining the odors of several diferent flowers. There is a decided tendency to reviv the use of iaces asa finish for the neck, the front of the corsage und the sleeves. Double jabots of lace to be worn | with a dressy toilet are made wide at the throat, tapering to s point at the waist | line, Neapolitan red is now a reddish brown similar to the old Bismarck brown. As yet it is seen only in expensive fab. rics, Very large cravat bows of lace, made | with two great loops without ends, are worn with tea gowns, jackets and blouse | waists, Princess Sophie of Prussia, who has been betrothed to the Crown Prince of Greece, is eighteen and ber fiance twenty. | ady Colin Campbell is accused of just enough eccentricity in dress to sug. gest an ambition to be couspicuous in pubiie Nuches of raveled silk, passed around the pack of the neck and pointed in V shape in front, are a fashionable neck dressing. Empire gowns for young ladies are made of fine woolen and have a striped seivage or gay Persian bordered elge for trimming. Fraulein von Domming, who received her troning in Philadelphia, is now a practicing dentist in 'W eisbaden sad has a very large practice. There are now four medical colleges for women in the United States. They are located at Chicago, New York, Phil adelphia sad P'aitimore. Fashionable Americans will avoid Lon. don this reason. 13y the express command of the Queen there will be little gayety in court circles this winter, Eruption ef the skin Cured. Buockviras, Osxranto, CANADA, December 2, 1885. 1 have used Braspnern's Pras for the past and anti-bilious remedy known. For somefive | years 1 suffered with an eruption of the skin that gave me great pain and annoyance. 1tpied | different Blood remedies, but, although gaining strength, the itching was unrelieved. 1 finally | concinded to take a thorough course of BRAN. | paeras Pros 1 took six each night for four | nights, then five, four, three, two, lessening | each time by one. and then for one month took Avsraaria ls buildin : a fence of wire wie out of Prom Republican Headquarters, Monavia, N.Y. May 5 187-0. ¥. Woon- [| wamn: 1 have been using Kemp's Balsam and 1 find it very effectual in relieving a congh with which I have been afflicted of late. Our druggists tell me they sell more of this than any other cough remedy. [can cheerfully recom. mend it. Yours Traly, J. J. Pass, Editor Re JGliomn, At all druggists”. Large bottled and Tun J army Is now will be GRD before Tong. EE a —— Dees the Earth Realty Move ¢ ortega »
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers