TUB CCHAUTOIT TOIBUHTS-SATUIIDAT ITOIOTITO, JULY iiT, 1895. 0 ' V ' . ; Facts ' of Interest To Women Readers. . v U Symposium cl Information, Partly Grave, Partly Qosslpy and Partly Gay.1 tax BACHELOR'S BONOl ., I. Ths swish of peltlcoaU I bate Ana alio furbelows. . rm quit unwilling- now to mat . As every maid well knowa. The downcast eye. The plaintive eltib. 1 acorn It all with laughter. ' tne slmpta'SMlil Whose waya are staid- " I know what she la after. A long fat puree 8he'a not averse. For that's what ihe la after I II. To kiss a rlrl I would not dream. I did once and ah fainted. The taste upon my llpa did seem Aa though her llpa were painted -. The falt'rlng voice -. la not my choice, I acorn It all with htuuhter. She sliths and atnira ' For dulnty ring That' one thing ahe la after. - A wedded blade 4 I'd not be made For that'a what ih la alter. ' ' ' III. '' . 80 In thta world I've not a mate,' ' The maids do ittrely know me; And then at nleht when I am lata -1 find no wife to blow me. No check, no 111. No wifely-bills - To make the brain it row dafter. From maiden' beck I'll be no wreck, I'll scorn It all with laughter. 80. Cupid, off. 5 Thy ware I scoff - tly purse la what you're after. Syracuse Post. II II II There ta a fund of truth In these re mark 'by "Amber:" "Fifty years ago there were no telephones, mo call for typewriters nor stenographers. The a vomica of women's advancemen t were not opened, tecause in those days there "were no Irnes of advance. As well say that the freight cars In the shop are maliciously held .back anl their utility belittled, when the roadbed Is not jvt laid through the wide country they are Intended to traverse as to say that wo man has been kept 'back and deprived of her rights until recent developments have launched her as the new type. The cars are ready when the track is laid. The woman was on haml when the op portunity presented. Because a few women have battled for the day of their sex's recognition is no reason they should be especially glorified. As well laud the men for their eagerness to open the doors for the cars to run out of the shops. All their eagerness to do s was of mo aval! until the tracks were laid. There never was a man or woman yet but what wis bound to rise and progress and climb, provided the yeast principle was in their souls. As well try to keep leavened dough flat as to keep a great soul down. Poverty never yet forged a chain strong enough to bold a man prone, provided he was bound to rise. !! II II , ,(!; : NOT NEW WOMEN: How grand that statue standing there, With torch aloft In Freedom's air, Whose woman's lines. In shapeliness. The beauty of our laws confess. As from the throne of granite, so Proclaims to us sweet Liberty; But not to us alone; a shar Awaits all people everywhere; And we, admiring, lift our hands To her, the goddes of all lands But how would she look In trousers? Chaste Dlan, Ilk a wheeling star, Above the madding crowd, afar, Swings regnant in her radiant aro, A thing of beauty, and a mark For Art (o aim at. Poising there, The genius dt th upper air. She stands tiptoe, a beauteous sight. For earth to gase at, day and night But how would she look In trousers? T'pon that wondrous dome of steel, Which all th roads to Rome reveal At Washington, a goddess stands, 1 The proudest In a thousand lands. And with a firm, unchanging gaxe, Keeps watch and ward upon the ways Wherein the Nation Valks; she feeds ' The danger that each law conceals, , And waits, enamored, for the fight That dares maintain the people's right But how would ah look In trousers? In gilded, glorious Paris, there Is found a woman's figure fair; A'poet's dream In marble white. The passage of an angel's flight In cold hard stone; a Venus mould, Eternity cannot make old; Armless, but armed by beauty, sh Has conquered Art and Poesy; ITnwrfnkled by joy, unstained by tears. Half clad. shs stands the Only One, A passion and a benlson But how would sh look In trousers? 1 -W. J. U, in N. Y. Bun. .: w , 11-11 II ., "Only now and then a public woman lends herself to methods so undignified .as soo Wing and vituperation. The day for that has happily gone by, and yet, do you-think a. congress of men would be tolerated who Should fling out so bit- ' terly against the women aa some of our women, in talking about men, yet do? Do not man always do our sex honor, sometimes with a lavish excess far be- . yond our merits? Have w not yet to complain of any lack of courtesy sc. corded to women aa wives, mothers, slaters and sweethearts, wherever in telligent and honorable men are met to tether for th making of speeches? The lak. would not toe too wet a place to drive that convention of men Into who should assail women a I have heard nice, motherly appearing women assail . the men la 'hen conventions. He to a brute,' tyrant and a 'monster.' He ts 'unclean 'despotic' and 'Impure.' Mow,, all that la wrong, and sensible women know K. There are bad men; there are bad women. There are peaches blown tn the bud with worm blight, bat doe that condemn all the orchards? I am tired of the attempt to blacken the character of the every day, average man. He 1a a 'brick' in business, tn social life and In love, and I like him. I thank him for doing so much of life's uncomfortable work for tne, and If lie will be so kind, I am per fectly willing that he nhould go on build In tires, killing chickens and casting my vote at the polls while I am kept safe and clean behind the scenes." htt II II The triteness of the saying that then are no such things as trifles la born out by asoiT which Major Handy teftl about Mary.Andaraon'a Bret professional ap. -eweraoneln Voxvpf wfctoh event th Imajef - wae eye 'witness. ' Th juy. esjwrn tbealsr "wast crowded with an audience tadwtip tn part of Americans, who. were tasf to applaad) anything tne AfceriOM tetrWiaJa or did; but la remter part of aullea ;jDnglph Brat raJsMet tiMrtali pK and gallery, will- aw w 0 enterxainea, ut incredulous and full of prejudice, altos Anderson was nervous. The play waa "Ingomar" and tier part of course, waa Parthenia, Th performance went tamely, and de spite the seal or tho Americans, the audience waa evidently settling down the conviction that thing were not go ing well. The turning point came un expectedly. MU Anderson waa scarce, ly audible when ehe came to speak the lines; "Two soaks, with but a single thought, Two hearts that 'beat aa one." Then came from the gallery the piping voice of a cockney urchin, loud enough to be heard all over the house: "Oh, do speak a little louder, Mary!" The ap peal was so pertinent and plaintive, ami withal so kindly meant, despite the familiarity of the address, that ev erybody broke into laughter and im mediately following the laugh there was a storm of applause for the chup In the gallery. Instead of being thrown off her balance. Miss Anderson Plopped. waited for the noise to subside, and smiled In eymathy. (From that mo ment her success was assured. When She spoke again her voice waa all that could be asked. The other players keyed themselvos to the same pitch. and everybody on the stage and before Vhe curtain was In a good humor. All went well, and the entertainment closed with an ovation to tine American ac tress, in which Americana and Kngltsh were equally enthusiastic. Thenceforth Mary Anderson waa a favorite In Lon don. II II I! ' - THE CYCU5 GIRL: The hammock girl I out of date, The carriage girl passee, . The girl who rides the bicycle ltules all the world today. She flashes by with graceful speed, As If she rode on air. And as she glide along, he finds Admirer everywhere. Let Bishop Doane and Bishop Coxe Abuse her as they may. The cycle girl Is here brand-new. And she Is here to stay. She doesn't care how much they fuss, For she knows she's all right. And, even as they grumble, they. Must own she' out of sight. So here's to the sweet cycle girl. In bloomers or In skirts. She's worth a dosen of the girl That lounges round an t flirts; And here's a wish for Bishop Coxr, A-rulltng on the fence; That he may live and grow In grace, And some day have more sense. Somervllle Journal. II II II To the (Plttsturg DUnpaitch it looks as If the contemporary hubbub over the at tempt to drop the word "obey" from the old-fashioned marriage service was an other case of much ado aibout nothing. "It is cot in evidence," observes our Smoky City contemporary, "that the new wives are either more or less obedi ent according to whether the word wua pronounced or omitted from the ser vices that united them to their hus band. During the awea that wives were enjoined to love and obey their lords they did pretty much aa they pleased. If they were told to do any thing they did not like they were usual ly equal to the emergency of having the order reverted, and as long aa they were mindful of the Injunction to 'love' they were Upt to yield becoming obedi ence. The omission of the word from Che 'new woman's' marriage service will hardly make any difference. It the new woman is capable pf loving and she would probably resent any Insinua tion to the contrary she will be Just as obedient to her legal spouse as her mother was. If there is no love in her matches then ehe bad better drop the whole marriage service as Inconsistent and repugnant and substitute a legal contract approved by the leading law yers." I! II II If we may believe an "old fashioned" correspondent of the "Sun which shines for all," though why she should call herself old fashioned does not appear on the surface of the views she ex pressesthe idea seems to be growing more and more prevalent that women should have some specific occupation, whether they be rich or poor, and they are being educated with this In view. The question of a woman's career should depend entirely upon the neces sities of the case. If the daughters of a family appear to be better endowed with the capacity for earning money than the men, as now seems frequently the case, then duty and loyalty should cause them to be the bread winners, and common sense, which is a foster child of necessity, should regulate all such questions of need. The next twenty-five years are going to see a very different class of women workers than exists today ,and the allround college girl Is going to wrest from her brother the place which he now drops Into before reaching out for himself. Some of these women will ba the sup port of families from necessity, but there are others whose superabundant energies and inherited shrewdness will tempt Into legitimate avenues of trade for the pure and simple love of riches. If women of fortune can Increase their holdings by speculation In real estate, as many a woman has been known to do, Is there any reason why she should not succeed along the lines of trade? It behooves that class of men who at present monopolise the clerkshtpa to In crease their capacities In every possible way If they do not wish to be ousted by the "coming woman." II II II For our pxrt, however, we prefer the opinions expressed by another Sun con-' tributor, who writes: "It Is useless for women to claim equality with men. They are not equal and never can be, In dustrially, Intellectually, or n any way which demandssustalned effort through days, month and jreUr. Women are physically debarred from that equality they love to clamor about. Then they demand equal pay with men for equal work. But hi their work equal to men's except fitfully? For a time, perhapa, yea. But after a little women either go all to pieces from th physical strain or etoe a long rest become Imperative to avert an utter breaking down. Then ever after there is the haunting, ham pering dread of smother collapse. It Is true that women oocMkmaHr reach ttt same results aa men ; ibut for such weary paths! Women alwaye do things In the hardest possible manner, while men se lect the most direct methods, and work In the easiest way. Men are ecooomicjul workers womew are not Women are Industrious, painstaking, conscientious, rarinnH m tneirwerk: but always at a heavy eott te themselves, while men, wita tittle trouble, and ao snifferlM. do Just as much. Instinct, insight, intul- tlon. arc all well enough, and help In a way; bat they are not aelf-eupporUag, and do not figure ep the question of equality of men and women on the basts of work. Men are by nature and train ing practical, and the (practical human being Invariably holds the advamtage. The women who can be aetf -supporting should be If the need exists; but ocsy la this case. I am very much ta favor of every human being doing what haa to be done m hla or her lot. And I am nut In favor of waiting time In speculating concerning the ethics of the situation. Then there are women who can acd women who can't. II II II ; THE HEROINE OF FICTION: I once had lovely golden hair Or raven hair no matu- which; I was as good and swan and fair As any angel In a niche. Or, if I did a little wrong It waa to prove me human st til. My feeling were extremely strong, . But I had disciplined my will. A change has come-and what a change! With awful problem I am vexed; From crime to crime 1 ruckles! range I know not what will happen next. From frantic woe to frantic bliss. From frantio wrath to fraullo glee I never wished to be Ilk this! 1 can't make out what's come to mo done are my gayety and cheer, , done la my hero bold and true) '.' 1 In my hysterical career I very often lung for you I ' ' Now me, all other woe abovoa . My bitter destiny compels To wed a nmn I do not love. Than fall In lovu, with ioniu one else I Yet me how would you recognise, O, hero, If you met me now I What icorn would lighten from your eyes And comiKuto your manlv brwwl The modern hero 1 have found, t'pon the whole, 1 do not llko. He's either stupid or unsound. And If I were not worse I'd atrlk. But I am worse. I never guessed How bad I could ba till I tried Compelled too often to arre.it My headlong course by u!cuK And though I cause from guilt and slang A fresh reprieve I fain would beg; For other authors mem t j hang Theories on me Ilk a peg. Ah. yet I long a little ha:-o " .VlfV Of happlneaa and love to llnd; . Again I would be gay and fair. ' Loyal, and chivalrous, and kind! Ah, do not bid me rant and rave; Ah, do not bid me preach and bore. Olve me back my Hero, true and brave, Whom I shall love forevermorc! . May Kendall, In Lougmau'i Mugaaine. II II II "There la a sentimental side to this question of women working. I am not sure that woman la not better for hav ing an easy time and I am sure men are bettor if ithcy seouro it for her. Sometimes I really wonder If any of us, by and by, will ever be itaken care of again, men are so fond of having their work done for them. Why, a great pro portion of the men who first opposed everything expressed by the term ad vancement of women have been won to active advocacy of the movement merely by perceiving that to a greait extent It operates to relieve their re sponsibilities. But the women upon whom the burden will fall do not seem ta realize what they will have to as sume! The average woman Is always hampered, consciously or unconscious ly, by the sense thalt her work is a tem porary thing. No amount of denial al ters the fact that every normal woman would rather have a happy marriage than any other career! In 'the depths of her iheant she d roams of it, and as she works there Is always a recognition of the hope thalt the golden apple will fall into her lap, and toM be ended. I despise the heterodox theories of mar riage which are so often put forward. I do not think it Is a matter for public discussion, and it generally appears that those who rush Into the discussion In prlift or on the platform are talking from the point of view of an unsuccess ful personal adventure. Now an indi vidual failure should neither change the public view nor be counted against the Institution. Those who would force this issue are apt to be persona who ave un willing to tand the responsibility of their own acts, and so denounce mar riage. A (Iter all. It Is only a pitiful minority raising this outcry. The great world goes on marrying and giving in marriage. Borne of these alliances may turn out badly; but, for all that, the true woman will still find her greatest happiness and her highest career as the loving wife of the man who loves her. For his sake self-denial and renuncia tion are her choice, while men willingly work their Angers to the bone for the women they love. Those who love and are loved do not quarrel wilh the In stitution of marriage." II II II 1 HEALTH HINTS: The cause of baldness Is, says tho Brit ish Medical Journal, a question which hus a personal Interest for many people In these days, when the "new man" finds it almost aa difficult to keep his hair as the "new woman" does to And a husband. The theory of the baldheaded man gen erally Is that his exceptionally active brain has used tip the blood supply which should have nourished his scalp; but those whose crop of hair still stand untouched by the scythe of time unkindly hint that this explanation Is of a piece with Ful ataff' excuse that he lost his voice by "singing of anthems." Then there Is the theory of the hat, which we are told makes for sanitary unrighteousness In two ways allowing no ventilation, and by Its hard rim cutting off the blood sup ply from the scalp. Again, there Is sebor rhea, which prepares the way for fungi that blight th hair. It would have been wonderful If that pathological scapegoat, Indigestion, had not had this particular misdeed laid to Its charge. We are not surprised, therefore, to rend that dys pepsia Is the great cause of baldness Th best way to escape baldness Is, therefore, to be careful In our diet and above all to avoid Irregularity in meals. New York Herald 1 More than one scion of nobility Is placed upnn onion diet to correct the humor of his too noble blood, th orders being three lurg Spanish onions, boiled In' two waters and dressed with pepper, salt and butter at dinner, and again at lunch, with salad of the young shoots at breakfast, plenty of sour oranges accompany this, and laxatives, not purgatives, nightly. Plnospple juice, taken a tableapoonful In a little water hourly, or one In three hours. Is alio an admlrabls blood purifier. Ths stalwart peasants of th mountains In thee south of Frsnoo curs all diseases with garllo leek and hot water, and truly one might have a worse choice with mors to prescribe from. The extent to which European fruits navs corns to be treated with poisonous ohemloais to give them a rresh appear ance Is said to bs appalling. A Belulan periodical glvas the following facts about some 01 in cnemrcai wnion ars USta: Aoatat and sulphate of copper have for a long 41ms been employed for ooloring plums that are too green. The color of lemons Is "Improved" with cltronlne and naphthol yellow, and ths green spots are Imitated by means of diamond green. A pleasing color Is given to strawberries by sprinkling them with sulpho-fuehsine or rhodamin, or else a mixture of rho damlne aad aao-rsd Is nssd. Nothing is easier than to glv peaches a beautiful color. Ta this effect there Is employed a mixture of rhodamin, aao-rsd and dt- renin, which is applied by. means of a brush and a perforated plate of sine The melon Itself is not spared. Atroptodln or aso-orangs ts Introduced into the in terior by maans of a tuba, and ear ta taken to add a little essence of melon. Apples and pears come in their turn, and pretty varieties of them are obtained by means of aniline color, which attack th desk aa well as th epidermis. - Fow people know how te tak proper car of their nails without the assistance of the manicure; and yet with a small amount of trouble even th ugliest nails can in a short time become beautiful. Of eoum. It is difficult to altur th color and shape thereof, but with om attention they may b considerably Improved. A correspondent of Vogue writes: To be gin with, the hand should always b washed In very hot water, or, better yet. In warm oatmeal water. Falling this, a few drops of tincture of bensoin in the water add greatly to th whiteness and softness of the skin, and also conduce to the beautifying of the nails. When the hands are thoroughly clean, rinse them In clear, warm water, into which a tea spoonful of almond meal has been thrown. Dry the hand on a soft towel and Im mediately rub them with the following mixture: One part pure glycerine, one part lemon Juice, one part rosewnter. This can be prepared either for Immediate use or kept in a bottle for three or four days at, a time. Twice a week the nails may be rubbed with this varnish: half an ounce pistachio oil, 32 grain tuble salt, ta grain powdered rosin, a grain ground alum, H) grains melted white wax, two grain fine, carmine. These Ingredients should be thoroughly mixed over a spirit lump, made into a kind of pomutum und preserved In a small glass or porcelain jar. It should be applied to the null by a tiny wad of medicated cotton and allowed to remain for half on hour. The thin membrane at the root of the nail should then be carefully pushed back with tho rounded end of un Ivory nail llle, anil the little. "Idle skins" that often grow at th root of the nail cut away with a pair of very sharp scissors. When thl Is done the nail should be polished with the so called "diamond powder," a small quan tity of wlik'h ts put on a chamois-skin nail polisher. TI10 hands are then washed In hot oatmeal water.well dried on a very fine towel, and finally the nails are pol ished once more with a fine chamois. lld you ever hold a watsh and see for how many second you could keep a stream of air flowing Into your lunKS? If not, make the test, und you will find that, no matter how small the stream, you can not kenp It constantly flowing In for mora than lifteen, twenty, or possibly thirty seconds; but If you will try two or three time each day you can double the time within two weeks. The boy or girl who will try this and keep It up regularly for a year will not be likely to die of con sumption, and should they ever become public speakers or singers they will be very thankful that they commenced when young to take "lung baths." II II II SELECTED ItECiriCS: Gooseberry Pie. Put one pound of sugar to one of fruit, cook until it begins to Jelly, then spread over rich puff paste already baked, sprinkle the top with pow dered sugar. Chilled Ttaspbrrrles. Cover the rasp berries with orange Juice, then sprinkle them heavily with sugar, and put them in an Ice cream freezer for thirty minutes. Serve with plain cream. Orson Currant Pie. Take one pint of green curramts, two tablespoonfuls of flour, two of water and a teacup of suKar. Line a pie pan with put! paste, put In the currants, etc., cover and bake 'wenty minutes. Sauce for tho Above. Take two cupfuls of he cherry Juice, stir into it a heaping tablespoonful of cornstarch, and bring it to a boll In a granite or porcelain kettle. Sweeten to the taste, which will probably require from a half to three-quarters of a cupful of sugar. Canning Pieplant. Pick when It Is long and good, cut up and put In glass fruit cans, press down, cover with cold water, seal and put away. It will keep fresh till It comes again. In sections where the fruit is scarce it can be so easily raised and Is so easily kept. Rich Currant Pie. One teacup each of grean currants, sugar and swct cream, mixed. Line a pie pan with crust, bent an egg, stir tnto the mixture, pour Into the pan, lay over bits of butter, cover with an upper crust and bake. Let cool and sprinkle the top with powdered sugar. Raspberry Charlotte Rusne. Line a mould with stale sponge cake; whip a pint of sweet thick cream; sweetened with two tablespoonf ills of powdered suimr.and I flavor strongly with fresh raspberry Juice; Wuit t h a ,r,a.n -. r ,IA I -...,. .1 1 1 . v. ...v . ... vii iv v u'lim mniu, 11 11 ine mould; garnish the top with raspberry Jelly. An Excellent Lobster Sauce One hen lobster with coral; two-thirds of its weight of good cream; one-third of fresh butter. Cut tho lobster In small pieces, mix ltvwlth the coral, and put It into the milk sAid butter. Let It get thorouL'hlv hot and season with salt and a dash of cayenne. Current Jelly. Put your fruit Into a stone Jar, which must be placed Into a pot 01 not waiter, and keep It boiling until your currents aro easily squeezed. This method gives less trouble and obtains more Juice. Measure one pound to every pint of Juice, and put upon the fire; let It boll for twenty minutes. Don't paste up while hot. Gooseberry Jam. Pick Ihe goosebcrrries Just as they begin to turn. Stem, wash and weigh. To four pounds of fruit add half a teacup of water; boll until soft, and add four pounds of sugar and boll until clear. If packed at the right stage the Jam will bs amber-colored and firm. and very much nicer than if the fruit is preserved when ripe, Carrrots (An Entree). A delicate en tree Is made by grating ten smnll table carrots, and putting them In a snunepan with t'hree ounce of buttur. Let them simmer gpntly fifteen minutes, then add salt, pepper, a very smnll onion chopped tine, and a teaspoonful of chnnued parsley. When tho carrots are tomler, drain the butter from them and serve hot. This Is a nice dish to serve with roast beef. linked Gooseberry Puddlng.-Put some gooseberries Into a Jar, nnd put the Jar into boiling water; let It boll until the gooseberries are quite oft: beat them through a coarse sieve, and to every pint of pulp add three well-beaten ognts. an ounce and a half of butter, half a pint of bread crumbs and sugar to taste. Put a border of puff paste around a pie dish and put In the. mixture after hnvlng beaten it well. Bake forty minutes and serve. Baked Cherry Pudding. Beat with the yolk or two eggs two tablespoonful of butter and four of sugar; stir In two cup fuls of sweet milk, tho beaten whites of the two eggs, and one pint of flour Into which two heaping teaspoonful of bak ing powder have been carefully mixed. Into tho bottom of a large dish put a layer of pitted cherries an Inch or more In thick ness, snd after sweetening the cherries, turn oft the Juice. Then pour over tho batter and bake Immediately. Gooseberry TrlnY Htew and pulp the gooseberries as above, and add, while warm, on 'tablespoonful of butter to every quart Add the well-beaten yolks of four eggs, and one and a half cupfuls of sugar, or mor if needed. Put into small glasses, leaving apace at the top for the meringue. IJeat the whites of the oggs Into a perfect froth, with three tablespoonful of sugar. Heap thl on top when th fruit is Icy cold. Whipped cream may b used In place of th meringue if preferred. To Cook Canned Lobster. Drain the meat thoroughly, then spread It upon a platter, and pick out the coral. Rub the coral smooth and mix with It the braided yolks of three hard-bollad eggs; mince the lobster meat fine. Make a batter of milk and flout1 and one or two eggs; beat all ths lumps out of the flour, and add the lobster and coral to this, season with salt, red pPPr and a Itttl lemon Jules. You need flour enough to make a batter stiff snough to hold th meat In shape. Form It Into hot cakes and try In hot butter. DAINTY SUPPER DISHES. Basis Suigestioas for the Boasekeeper Who Woeld PtMse. From Good Housekeeping. It Is not always easy for the house keeper to find a pleasing change of menu for this-meal, and, in conse quence, the supper table often becomes "stale and flat," If not "unprofitable" Tho following recipes will all of them be found excellent and serve to add a sploe of variety: Baked Cheese One and one-haf cup fuls of grated cheese, one-half cupful of very fine bread crumbs, one eupful of milk, one of egg, beaten separately; dash of pepper, pinch of salt. Bake half an hour In hot oven In a buttered dish. Puffs for Tea One cupful of corn starch, two-thirds of a cupful of pul verized sugar, one-half cupful of butter, four well-beaten egjrs, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Hnke in gem Irons or patty tins In a quick oven. Turk's Head One pint of flour, one pint of milk, two eggs, butter half the size of an egg, a little salt. Mix the flour and butter, -then add the yolks, beaten very light; then tho milk, and lastly the whites, well beaten, lluko in a quick oven and serve at once. The following; English cakes, which go by the name of "Pints d'Amour," and are often served at English 6 o'clock tea, are dainty and much liked. They are easily made, us follows: Make a rich puff paste and roll It out thin. Then, with tin shapes, cut tho paste out In sizes, each larger than the other. Place them In pyramidal form, live or six in number, nnd bake in a moderate ly hot oven. When baked 1111 with dif ferent colored sweetmeats, as pine apple, cherries, quince, strawberries, etc. SlDDEl DEATH oit Tho best wearing, most stylish, and the greatest valuo of any $3.00 Men's Shoes on tho continent. Best calfskin, don;;ola tops, solid leather soles, with all the popular toes, lasts and fastenings, and Lewis' Cork fUled Soles. Each pair contains a paid-up Acci dent Insurance Policy for (100, good for CO days. Wear Lewis' Accident Insurance Shoes once and yon will never change. The insurance goes for "full measure." Talk with your dealer v. ho sclk Lewis' Shoes. FOR SALE AT Globe Shoe Store 127 LACKS. AVE., SCMNTM, Pi EVANS & POWELL, Prop'ri DUPONT'S WINING, BLASTING AND SPORTING POWDER ttanttfactnrad at th Wipw&lloprn Mills, Lo sera county, Pa., and dt Wd mingtoo, Delaware, HENRY BELIN, Jr. Oeneral Agent for the Wyoming District., 118 WYOMING AVE Seranton.Ps, Third Hatlonal Bank Building. Aoxncica : THOB. TORD, I ituton. P. JOHN B. HMITH HON, Plymouth, Pa, B. W. MULLIGAN. WUke liarr, P. Agsnts for ths Repanao Cbualcai Cos. tH&T'ff Hlfn Bsplosiies, "A dollar tattA it a dollar tamnt." TtSsTadtos'Kalld rmieh nongoUKIdasj. torn Moot doUvuui Ism uyohora In th C&aa receipt or ljn, mjdiot wnirr, or l'oaul Note tor tt-to. Knuals 7ry wf Us host sold la u rMsil Men for Si.M. W k this hoot oamiliw, UMnfor smt. afilfS jm, siyM sua lormr. snd If any on fa not ssudlrd wa win nrnna in money send snotlMT pair, tipar oa or uommos Benar, widths V, f. B, k BR. 1 to aa Ban ss. BtndlfyrMmtl at mill tt foa. Illustrate Uala. Iflgn FRC? Eoteh Shoe Co751?o Efttiat term t JJtaltr. rFSTAni.tSHED 1070.1 GILNOOL'S CARRIAGE WORKS, Carrhgrs. Bn.ilnesa Wsimis, Hepslrlne. Hon Hhoeln-, i'sintisg and V (jholstorinr. Noa Us, 821, t, m tturouth atrial, Burauton, Pa. nra? REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY. Maria a - . 1 VISA W fwell Man ' of Me. MtbDar. TUB QKIAT SOtb sxixixi3'oxx unvi juixjtt prodarr tba abor results lapd day. It acts Kwwfnllrandqoloklr. Curt wsaa all oUiarslail. ang sua will rataia ttwlr tort suaaood. aad old ana will laomr Uialr roathral ataor b ailii BRT1VO. II qoleklf and aurtLy rwtoros Karros Sai, Last Tltalltr, ImpotMKr, Nlfhtljp Bmuauoaa Lost row, ratlins atemary, WmUbs DImhi, ens' all aflat f ssK-akaa or aseaai aad iaalaoratton. wkiah amlt oa tor stadr, baataass ar marrtase. II aetealr eon ty Marling tl tba Mat of disss, bnl las area! terra fcoole and Moo4 balldar, aria. lsgMk tba piak (low to nsis ahaafcaaadra slerlat she Are af yanth. fl wards off laaanity an Osaaaasuea. last ea havtag RKVITO, aa II aas be naarlaS la vast aaaaal. Sv auil 140 sot pack, ar sU lot M.M, with poet I gasnaass a wttmt MTU. MUICINI CO II User st, CMMMM, 111. Wm Ma ft Xnttaewf M 45 TTsV ." nay. What is Dlj Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It 13 a harmless substltuto ' for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves . teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Castoria assimilates tho food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sloep. Cas .toria is tho Children's Panacea the Mother's Friend. ) Castoria. "Cutorti Is an excellent medicine for chil dren. Mother have repeatedly told me of its good effect upoo their children.1' Ds. O. C. Osoood, Lowell, Has. Castoria Is the best remedy for children of Which I am acquainted. I hope the day is not far distant when mothers will consider the real Interest of their children, aad use Castoria In stead of thevariousquack noKtrumswhich ore destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending them to premature graves." Pa. J. F. Kiscbelos, Conway, Ark. The Centaur Company, TT Murray Street, Hew York City, (AUTI0 TO our patrons: Washburn-Crosby Co. wish to assure their many paCi rons that they will this vcar hold to their usual custom ot milling STRICTLY OLD WHEAT until the new crop is fully cured. New wheat is now upon the market, and owing to the excessively dry weather many millers aro of the opinion that it is already cured, arid in proper condition for milling. Washburn-Crosby Co. will tako no risks, and will allow the new wheat fully threo months to mature before grinding. This careful attention to every detail of milling haa placed Washburn-Crosby Co.'s flour far above other brands. MEGARGEL & GONNELL Wholesale Agents. IRON &MB Bolts, Nuts, Bolt Ends, Turnbuckles, Washers, Riv ets, Horse Nails, Files, Taps, Dies, Tools and Suj plies. Sail Duck for mine use in stock. SOFT - STEEL - HORSE - SHOES, And a full stock of Wagon Makers' Supplies, Wheels, Hubs, Rims, Spokes, Shafts, Poles, Bows, etc, TTE1IEBE SCR ANTON, PA. OAK BILL STUFF. I HALT Hill! TELEPHONE 422. EVERY WORflAN nuUPbss needs s rsliabls, oothly, ragoUtlng tatdtaloa. Only harmless UMpuKstdngssiMaMbeaaea. U you want tba bail, (el Dr. Peal's Pennyroyal Plllo ThsT are srenpt, safe and certain In ranlt. The tannins (Dr. ftai's) oarer tissp naint. Beat anjrvkara, 11.00, AdlreM Fa Mssiouia Ce UoTolaaa, 0. For salo by JOHN H. PHCLPS. Pharmaclat, cor. Wyoming, Avsnua and 8pruce Strsat, Soranton Pa. HORSE - SHOEING REMOVED. DR. JOHN HAMLIN, ' The Acknowledged Expert la Horseshoeing and Dentistry, Is Now Permanently Located on West Lackawanna Ave Near the Bridge. . Castoria. " Castoria ts so well adapted to children thai I rhcommeod it as superior toany prescription knowa to me." H. A. A whir, it. D., Ill So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T. " Our physicians la the children's depart, mmt bare spoken hiulily of their experi ence in their outside practice with Castoria, and although wo only hare among out medical supplies what is known as regular products, yet we aro free to confess that th merits of Castoria has woa us to look wita (uvur upon It." United Hospital sd Dispexsirt, Boston, 21us ALLS C. Bsito, iYe., r STI 11 Commoutioaltl ,. Bld'g, ScrintQD, Pi Stocks, Bonds, .and Grain, - - Bought and sold on New ToA Exchange and Chicago Board , of Trade, either for cash ot on margin. O. duB. DIMHICK, 41 Spruce Street. . UCAL STOCKS I SPECIALTY Ttf taken BOO i N 1 ((L H LUMBER CO 'i.i . A V