TUB, SCHAOTQK TBIBVNB-SATURDAT MOBNINtt. SEPTEMBER 2H. 1895; 9 3 Facts j of ; Joterest Symposium of Information, Partly Grave, Partly Gossipy and Partly Gay. PTha congress of women.' acting under he ausnlces of ttie board of women kanagera of the Cotton States and In- Irnatlonal exposition, proposes 10 noia I series of meetings representing the Iganlsed work -of women-throughout k a gxnttntwv - Thalr natiffreSSeS. UPittn- niriv 1 II 1 1 It II 1 .A V 1 I'D 1 1 1 p i 1 . 1 . . A I. ,n la T..i Ol II iiih I'lllHIIIIB 1 1 ,1 vi . .1 1- r;,. MA, - ,A, I A. 1. . -1 wnM AUav un cements, a conunueu series or it i i 1 1 the organizations, uve tne uaugn- ii if a ill iiuiiii'i n. riu will 1 1 1 1 1 11 111 i-i-1- ..A nna A A. - l 1 W HQ meillirc-i o vai.uk nauuiini vuu,ii.a tA anlAtlAa anil not- IrullvliliiAla On account or me. grejii numoer 01 or ganizations which a1t ..Includes, .and, therefore, the great number of Inter ests and phases -of work to be present ed In ltstjenferences, the national coun cil of women is the only organization which will occupy an entire week. Thv will be In charge of the officers of the council, of which Mrs; 'Mary Lowe Dickinson Is. president. . Its meetings will begin on. the 7th and continue dur ing the 12th 'of October.' A portion of each afternoon will be occupied with presentations' of the' work of .'the or ganizations forming the council, which may be classified under the heads of education, religion.. 'philanthropy. In dustry,, moral reform; 'government re- Among tne subjects to be discussed n -rnA MfruiU'ii not . or ina Hpii . IUII .11.11 II 1 1 1 1 1 . 1 1 V 111 I A IK I 1 1 1 1 1 . i ne 'DHiuvauyn . ui me ruiurv. uj niinMAr Aliwi aa. i eumer, ut . ciira- ley college: "Woman's Problems In Practical Philanthropy," by Margaret .n... ii'it-i .....-... a.. ,Wa 1m y ii li-'KiiiB, utn iiiit?uuni vi nm llltn.ila InilluiJ..Sii)innl fnr .lraf "Woman's Position In the Industrial "World," by Helena T. Ooessman: "The Influence of Home and Foreign Mission Work Upon Woman's , Development." by I'mellne Burlingame Cheney; "Ed- ueattyn n Citizenship." by Kate Inlee Sherwood: "Woman's Place avernment. by J. Ellen Foster. 11 ay will be given to special council and will be occupied by mem- I of the cabinet of the council. which may be named: "The lion of the Cabinet," by May It Sewall. former president of the "The Relation of Art and Llt to Woman's Progress," by ks E. Bagley. of Detroit: "The kn of the-Home to Woman a In Organization." by Rachel Fob- lery, and the "Influence of Wo- Rellgious Progress," by Mary iry Adams, of Iowa. The subject cal councils will be discussed by lhirfelft. Nichols,' of Indianapolis. tiler- -prominent leaders . of local work. Including the presidents ii councils in Montreal and In the cities of the United States. kxpected that the work of the at vouncu or women or uan I which lady Aberdeen Is presl- rlllvbe present. Judging from congress of representative women tig the worlds fair In Chicago, from the great Interest in the meet- frthe last trllennlal held In Wash , thes seselops In Atlanta will geJy' at tended,' most Intelligently plated, ana will prove one or tne kttractlve features , of the coming; fclon. . . . i :o: lould have no stronger indication lvalue set upon home Interests In development of every phase of life on the part of the members National Council of Women of tilted States than the fact that. the cabinet positions, including !n, education, art and literature. inthropj and moral reform. Is one object Is solely to consider the re. .and the. Interests of home. chrtFoster'A very., the woman llead of this department, well- f n as ahe Is for her work In lines touchlng.the general welfare of women. Is Done the less known as mistress of thej lovely home whose hospitable doors are! always open .to the .world's work ers and as a' most perfect mother to the Httjle household group that Is growing up i therein. .Without abating her la bors for what ' some might consider wider fields. Mrs. "Avery turn's with un disguised delight to the study of this great field of the home. Into which she will put alf that enthusiasm and thor ns, mmii-u ui iier iuiis hiiu earnest n ir lilt! uTni;i:inirni ui ine nign- rl In 'Atlanta fla fmm f naer.Tne aiiantcea nr tha .nn,ii rr women managers of the Cotton States and International exposition. :o: Luclnda B. Chandler doesn't believe hat the "new'". woman" movement threatens the womanliness' of woman. "Can any man give a logical, sensible reason," -she -asks, '"why one-half the race Should be Instructed and suhtect to the dogma and statute of the other alf? And especially why woman should accept the opinions and Ideas of man In regard to what she should be or do any more than man should accept the opinions and Ideas of wo man In regard to what he should be or do? Nature has Invested woman with a supreme agency In endowing human ity. She, not man, Is the race builder, physically and ' psychically. Why should man cjalm that Infinite wisdom has failed to give her capacity to build herself Into womanhood? Why should lie aet up standards of life and con duct for er? We wait In breathless eagerness a true and reasonable an wer." -,,'; . In Prance a census of centenarians aa recently i been taken Out. of 213 of these less than .one-third or to be exact, so were men. This ,led to some amusing comment from certain Paris ians, more Ingenious than witty, to the . effect aat the reason for this surprls ' Ina comaaratlve. longevity of wnmin la their proneness to talk and gossip At ooaceivanje opportunity since ii cnatterinjc leans to the active Ion of the blood, and thus day renew! tne tissues of the body hders .the, frame particularly Here is only an additional yrf on the hanpr condition in ' many old ladles hare the a fi le over men. The supposed wit jmay 'be due to a deeply rooted valoualy. It pleases the men. ialnly does not harm the ladles, (same time; It must, says the Spnla Record, be- borne In mind 'male longevity Is largely manl- homes where the husband re Is wife of as many petty em nents aa. possible, and treats i'ery respect with the considers d kindness to which ahe Is en t .nla bands. . . ( ' ' riJOr-r 1 land, World: The word "wo a is denned 'In thedtetlonary as ,emale of the human race" noun, word ''woman as a verb Immedl y follows. wKh the definition "to e pliant." ; The new woman Is a hlnatlon of npun and verb and has t and molded the barriers that rar Vd and hid her as did the "India rolden and vaporous fleece" with estlala of Greece, mystifying and v without doubt, bar tfittittUMc It new creation la seen and f ad Dbltwn. Bhe Is a dlaeov it . issatarf . (mO Brou One I topic, ber I amotlV Punrl Wrlgl counts II Br- irN VaK2. covered herself and is particularly anx ious that that self-evident fact shall not be forgotten. At the same time, like ' all novelties, the market is al ready flooded with Imitations, with na turally unpleasant sequence. These Imitations, born In the brain of would be humorists ank caricaturists, are In a normal state of male attire and ag gressive, eye-glasses. Hut when these very original Jests are consigned to the waste basket and the new woman her self looked for, failure attends to some extent. Unprejudiced and Impartial eyes see only an old friend In a newer garb. The morning star of a new era beams palely above a brow that has serenity and thought. Dignity clothes her as a garment. Intellect surrounds her as a hulo. (Philanthropy and benevolence rest upon her Hps. sym pathy and understanding for a world that suffers unceasingly shine In her pitying eyes, and will and strength and endurance have curved and molded the chin and throat. Behind her are the weakness and indecision of a weak and Illiterate age. Before her stretches a path pregnant with possibilities. This woman of the nineteenth cen tury does not want to usurp. But she does want to assist. .Masculinity, with Its usual courtliness, would otlll spread the cloak of Raleigh', beneath her feet, but beyond she seees the mute figure of Justice, bowed and shamed beneath Its burden of bribery and corruption; she sees the wheels within wheels of a great nation turn upon pivots t per sonal ambition and private greed; she sees the white, pinched faces of a starv ing poor, and the silent, beseeching hands of the lame, the halt und the blind." Through Iron gratings and steel bars she hears the sullen curse and the smothered moan of the down-fallen and the hopeless. And ehe says to the in sulted and aggrieved gentleman before her: "Verily, thou art a willing ser vant, perhaps, but thou hast failed In thy task.' Thou art weighed and want ing." lAnd she puts the cloak aside and walks In the alleys and the byways and the tenement and the cellar, where walked the 'Nazarene'of old. And the great army Is slowly rising In little companies and coteries and bands and clubs and lodges and societies. lAnd the strong and gentle hand of this new woman gathers the homeless and friendless little ones to her knee; her eyos grow tender and pitiful as they rest upon the haggard despair of our Magdalens: her seal la unfaltering In clothing shivering limbs and carrying flowers and dainties to sick rooms that are bleak and barren and dreary with the hopeless dreariness ofabJect pov erty. .Bhe has faults, perhaps. Why not? Were she faultless herself she could understand less clearly the fall ings of others. But If she have faults, she has also strength and dntegrlty and pity and benevolence. She Is a mother of all charities and has nor eect, nor creed, nor race, nor belief. She does not claim throne or rostrum or oflice as her own. But she does claim the right to occupy each at times. And she will Insist that under purples and chair there be cleanliness and no wires. : LOVBLV WOMA:N Read by Edward Petoskv as a toast at a banquet given in New York by H. B. Dickinson. You runcl oat. Hoi-ran yod drink; You cannot laugh, nor can you wink; ' You canot walk, you cannot run; You can't have either daughter or son You can't be born, you cannot wed ; You can't be fondled, you can't be fed, Without woman, lovely woman. You can't sell cloaks nor run a "Wa"! You can't enjoy a loving kiss; You can't lose your temper, you can't fit a dress. And of marriage you cannot make a mess Without woman, lovely woman. Friend Dickinson could not pay a bill; He could not climb of success the hill; He could not have money filthy lucre to burn; He could not buy goods, he could not "re- turnV; He could not "discount," he could not "de duct"; . . He could not have "models," he could not get "stuck" Without woman, lovely woman; To put It In words very few and terse. ' woman Is the ruler of the universal she '.s the sun of our firmament, hy the gods to us as a blessing sent. So All the bumpers with sparkling wine, . And let us sacrifice at the shrine, Of woman, lovely woman. In Friend Dickinson's store may they con gregate. May they b with him early and late; 'May they hustle and bustle, sample and try; . With, him spend their money, barter and buy; And when people query: 'To whom does he owe his success?" The answer will be "To bis own clever ness, . . . And woman, lovely woman." . . SELECTED RECIPES: Crabapple Jelly, Wash the apples, re move the blossom end and cut in small pieces, but do not pare or core, for the skins and seeds Improve the color and quality of the Jelly; cover with cold water and cook gently until soft; keep them cov ered and turn the kettle often, but do not stir or. mash the apples; when the apples re-very soft, and the liquid Is red, turn them into a strainer cloth and hang it tip to drip all night; In the morning loll the liquid ten minutes, 'then strain again through a very fine cloth, and meas ure it; -allow a half a pound of sugar to a pint of Juice, boll the Juice alone until It begins to thicken on side of pan, then add sugar and cook rive minutes longer, or until It jellies, then skim and turn Into glasses, , Mustard Pickles. Take two gallons of vinegar, two large cupfuls of mustard, two.tablespoonfuls of salad oil, a little salt, and a tablespoonful of tumeric pow der. Mix together and allow it to stand undisturbed for a week. Then lake sun small cucumbers, six cauliflowers, half a gallon of small onions, one quart of nasturtiums, six heads of celery, and and soak all over night In a strong brine. Steam all the vegetables, except the cu cumbers, until tender. Add all to the mustard compound, and let them stand for another week. Then put In a kettle, add two cupfuls of brown sugar and one-half cupful of cornstarch. Boil well, and sk'm carefully. Add red pepper to the taste, let the vinegar boll, and then pour it over the pickles, 7 :FruH Cream. Three cups of milk, one cup of cream, one large egg, selecting one with yolk of deep yellow color; two full tablespoonfiils of flour, one cup of sugar, one level tablespoonful of gel atine (If te be molded), one-half pound of Bngllsh walnuts, weighed In the shell, one-quarter of a pound of figs. Hoak the gelatine In a little of the cold milk, sav ing two or three more tablespoonful of the milk to mix with the sugar, flour and egg; heat milk to near boiling, and stir In gradually the flour, sugar and egg, to which the cold milk had been added. When the custard Is cooked, add the gelatine, cream and one teaspoonful of ivarflla. Freese. After freeaing, before packing, add the nuts and ' flgs, which have been previously chopped. . beating the mixture well with a large spoon. Pack. - If In emptying cream for mould It should stick, put a towel wet In boil ing water over the mould to loosen It .Then, If It seems crsamy, set on ice a tew moments to harden. 'Grape Sweetmeats, a delicious Confec tion. Allow three-quarters of a pound of sugar to on pound of fruit, "elect Isabellas i or some good outdoor black grape. . weigh the fruit. With your fingers ' squeese the pulp from the skin of esch 'grape, throw'ng the pulp 'nlo one. bowl and the skins Into another. When Mih Is done put the pulp Into a porrela!n-llned kettle. on the lire. Heat gradually and then stew gently for abotlt rVfteen minutes, until, by testing, you will Und that the seeds-come out easily, i Turn (hem into a coarse sieve and press all the Juice and pulp through, thas ex tracting ell the seeds. Now put puln and sktns back m the 0re l the aaase kettle mt when stafc ad Urn -. , tlnue to boll for about thirty minutes. It should by this time be a rich, 1ark color and quite thick; If not boll Afteen, minutes longer. Put into glass Jurs when cold and set away for the winter use. Urape sweetmeat served wHh cornstarch pud ding makes a most acceptable dessert. It may also be used for the Oiling of tart shells. Red Tomato Preserve. Take medium sized tomatoes that are smooth and Just ripe; scald enough to loosen the skin, peel them, and 'to each pound of the fruit allow a pound of granulated sugar, the Juice and yellow rind of a half a lemon and a bit of g.nger root. They should cook slowly for three hours, when they will be ready to put away In the cans. Watermelon Sweet Pickles. Peel the green skin from watermelon rinds, and scrape off all 4 he red pulp, t il the portion left Is tirm and hard. Hoak in a weak brine for twenty-four hours, rinse and wt igh. Add vinegar enough to cover, and half a pound of Hiinsr for each pound of the melon. To each seven pounds of the rind add an ounce each of whole cloves, cinnamon and cassia buds. Cook till Die melon Is clear and tender enough to he easily pierced by a broom straw. The spices need only be added a few minutes before the pickles are to be taken from the tire. Preserved Melon Hinds. Pare the' rinds and remove the Inner soft portion, cut Into strips, squares or diamonds. Allow one pound of sugar to every pound of rind. If desired to have the preserve green, line the kettle with vine leaves, place citron therein, sprinkling each layer with a very little powdered alum, cover three layers thick with vine leaves, cover with water and let steam -together fur three hours, at no time allowing thiol to boll. Do not put the sugar in at this time. Throw the rind Into cold or Iced water, I,et it soak for four hours, changing the water every hour. Allow two cupfuls of water for every pound of sugar, bring to a boil and sk'm until clear; add the rinds, simmer gently for an hour, remove to plates to harden, put again in syrup, and simmer for thirty minutes, spread out again, and when hard put In an earthen vessel and cover with 'the syrup. The next day drain off the syrup and reheat, adding a strlp of ginger root and the Juice of one lemon for every' pound of sugar. Boll down until thick, when the preserve may be put away. AFTER THE HONEYMOON: Two arms around my' neck are twining two soft arms, so fair and white; Two eyes into mine are shining with a loving, tender light. Two red lips are, parted, showing teeth resembling rows of pearls; Odors sweet come to me flowing from a mass of dark brown curls. On my ear a' voice beguiling falls In mellowed accents down; Yet my face Is stern,, unsmiling, and i my forehead wears a frown. Thus I piny the unmoved tyrant; hardest role of all this. To refuse the dear aspirant what she begs for Just a kiss. For' I know these words of honey, these hugs, and caresses sweet. But forerun a call for money for a fall outfit complete. New Orleans Times-Democrat. NEW THINGS FOR THE TABLE: A macaroni server conslts of a broad lifter with one end In long sharp points. - A tea ball stand, which has a low shal low ball with broken edges, is among the season's novelties. . A 'late fancy for serving Russian tea are slender glasses set In . perforated silver frames. Russian silver teaspoons accom pany them. A lovely Ice spoon In silver Is about the size of a dessert spoon with a flat handle. Half the bowl Is open work to drain the water through. The latest thing In bon-bon dishes Is a miniature punch bowl in filagree silver, partially lined with rich silk, which gleams through the filagree. A most effective 6 o'clock tea service is of Ldmoges ware handsomely, decorated with pink. An oxidized silver spirit lamp In the shape of a temple accompanies this set. . The two-pronged butter forks, which were especially designed for handling but ter balls, are extremely popular this sea son, and some exquisite styles are shown In them. . . Among the latest fads are the silver silt dishes with enameled panels, showing tlgures, scenes and decorative work set In the gilt. The urns and platters are par ticularly striking. A chop set In the same ware consists of a rounded platter with scalloped edges and a dozen plates to match. The design on eaoh Is a wreath of pink blossoms on a White ground, and a band of dead gold. A pretty sardine dish In Dresden ware In a deep water blue with a flsh net In re lief, and In the folds of the net are places for 'the flsh. The decorations are em blematic, being nets, ropes and seaweed. The newest things In tablespoons shows the edges beaded and meeting at the top In the shape of a fan. A cunning little sugar bowl and cream Jug are absolutely plain, except thaton one side Is enameled a bunch of violets with their fQllage. An exquisite set of teaspoons matching this set have violet handles and at the top of the handle Is a life like violet with two tiny green leaves. IT WON HER: ''7' '. 8he questioned bim close,. but no. secret disclosed. As they sat in the gloaming together, About his past life; for the damsel pro posed. With rare wisdom, to ascertain whether Ho hail habits or faults which bis sub sequent years ' Might occasion her worry or.sorrow; But Ueorge ho was slick and allayed all her fears And doubts for the coming tomorrow. . "Now, Oeorge. do' you gamble?" The question came low And distinct, that he might understand. "No. Ethel, I don't; but I ought to Just now. For I'm holding a beautlful'hand." 'Twas a triumph of genius. It can't be de nied. By mortals but rarely possessed; Bhe quietly gathered her sleeves to one side 1 , And wilted away on, his breast, Joseph R. Parke, tin Detroit Free Press. HEALTH HINTS: . Soda and ginger In hot water Is a good remedy for bilious colic. It may be taken freely And as often as necessary. ftalt water Is a good tonic for the hair. Put a teaspoonful of salt In a half-pint of water and rub a little on the scalp every day with a small soft cloth. ( Equal parts of glycerine and rose water (two ounces of each) with two teaspoon fuls compound tincture of benzoin, will .clean and brighten the skin. An agreeable way of treating the eyes with saU and water Is to wink them In a -cup that Is brlmfnl. The eyes will be suf fused by simply winking the lashes In the water. Oatmeal used In the bath water, warm or cold water (make a bag f by Inches, and II H with oatmeal and powdered orris, one ounce of orris, ami use It as washrag) Will make the skin soft and white. A physician recommends for tan and freckles, which are the result of sun and exposure, a lotion composed of ten grains of cltrlniadd, one ounce of glycerine and one ounce of rose Water. Apply several times a day. For the hardening of wax In the ear. bend the neck over toward the shoulder and put a drop or glycerine In the cavity of the ear at bedtime. The next morning the wax will be easily removed hy very gently syringing the esr with warm water. Regular exercise will do more toward overcoming "redness of the face" than drugs; bathing, also, 4s Imperative, Take a bath every day, at bedtime preferably, and walk four or five miles, every day, regardless of the weather; do not drink anv aledhollo beverage. ' Wrinkles are best treated by application of some fatty emollient which will act as a food to the pores. The condition of the mind has much to do w'th wrinkles, and though It Is absurd' to say, "Don't worry," It is a rood nlan. at leart once a dav. to relax completely and rest for an hour or so. . a The cale woman should est a goodly amount of rare beef and drink milk as much ss she can. Red wines, vlu'ets, etc., are also good for her. The fleshy, red faced .woman, should, on the other hsnd, eat sparingly of such things and indulge In murth- - vegetable food and a large amount of fru't. The hair needs to be washed frequently during warm days, and here r a dainty Suggestion to fallow during the. drying process. Make an old faeh'inned can of soft silk and Kne It with a ttrin sheet of cotton batting, which has been heavily sprinkled with powdered orris root. Put this cae on while the hair !s drying, and for a long time afttrward a faint odor of orris will be percept'ble. Buttermilk, aa a face wash, possesses more mediCnal virtue than almost any otjier liquid used for the comnlexion. Taken Utteraslly, it Is also very flnees pec'ally for rheutnatlo trouble of -any sort and as a means of purifying the tilAmAut la 11 n awi II 1-wl fnr t ti' inimt It ' aeoesd te drMt la net Weather when Ire is apt at esBsn sesraaatss. ii should, therefore, be 'particularly taken when the face is Inclined to be blotchy and full of spots. To have bright,' glosssy hair one must apend a certain amount of time on Its care. A good Crushing for ten minutes, twice a day, is moat beneficial, and every woman who wishes to appear well groomed should practice It. All sorts of hair brushes are recommended, the latest being of whale bone. These are especially good for the scalp, making it feel as though it were being massaged. Vsed at night, and drawn slowly through the hair, the effect Is very soothing and often cures head aches, especially nervous ones. The rare of the hair during a serious and prolonged Illness demands some attention. Unless it Is a case of bruin fever. It is un necessary to cut lt qulto close; two or three Inches clipped at the ends will often serve the purpose quite as well. One of the reasons that hair fulls out after ill ness Is that it is frequently In a tangled condition. All during a tit of sickness the hair should he regularly cut at the ends and kept well brushed. This 'is not so dif ficult as on would imagine. All that is required Is to part the hair well at the be ginning of the illnesss ami plait it In two braids, one on each side of the head. If thli Is done, and carefully brushed and cumlied. the invalid will feel much more comfortable than otherwise, for the head will be cooler and the hair will not be tangled. NEW WOMEN AND OLD MEN: New women have the floor today; Old men are eldom heard. We hark to what new women say, We hang on ev'ry word. New women throng the city streets And climb the -country hills. With them old men cannot compc-to Excnpt In'paylng hills. New women have the public eye; Old men are crowded out. New women's alms are always high, Whatever they're about. New women tell us how t i vote. Through life they show the way. But all the cost you'll kindly note Old men still have to pay. New women talk and write at length On all the well-known themes; They show unwonted force and strength In philanthropic dreams. Old men aro quickly pushed aside Hy woman's vim and dash, But In the end It's not denied . - They must supply the cash. ' . New women do a lot of good, - We all, of course, admit. And doubtless If they could they would Do plenty more of It. New women are reforming all In Rlmost rv'ry clime, But If old men were not In call. Pray, would they have the time? Chicago Post. HOUSEHOLD SUGGESTIONS: Boiling water will remove tea stains. Dark blue drilling makes excellent kitch en aprons. Lemons may be kept in cold water, changed each week. Hot wood ashen on a cold stove will re move grease stains. - Mix a teaspoonful of powdered alum with the stove polish. Hrootns may be improved by dipping weekly In boiling water. Isinglass in stove doors may be cleaned by rubbing with vinegar. Silver should be dipped occasionally In strong borax water, bollintr hot. Grass stains may be removed by rub bing with molasses before washing. Orange or lemon peel will remove taste of flsh from steel knives and forks. Remove grease stains from silk by rub bing with magnesia on the wrong side. Lamp chimneys may be cleaned with a little carbon oil on a piece of newspaper. For removing mildew, spread soft soap over the stained spot and expose to the sun. Meat and fowl may be rendered tender If when boiling a tcafpoonful of vinegar bo put In the kettle. Brown spots on baking dishes may be removed by dipping a damp flannel In whiting and rubbing the spots well with It. In washing kettles and other, cooking utensils, both Inside anil out, nothing will be found equal to a kitohen brush kept solely for the purpose. Potatoes should betaken from the water and drained as soon as they can lie readily pierced with a fork, covered with a towel and kept hot fifteen minutes. Another brush may be kept for washing pelery, lettuce, spinach, potatoes, turnips, etc, where thorough cleansing With the hands Is a difficult operation. Don't shake table cloths, dusty cloths or heddlng out of the front window Re member that pedestrians psss occasional ly, and they will object seriously to your novel method of cleaning. Orease rtalns may be removed from an unoarneted floor as follows: Pour cold water nt once, scrape off the surface grease nd wash w'.th a solution of strong potash water, applied with a long-handled mop, as It 1s -not safe to bring the hands In contact with tho potash, AN OLD JOKE ENDED: A mouse ran by. flhe did not scream Or wildly raise her head. "I do not mind such animals With bloomers on," she said. Sun Francises Call. NEW, YORK GOSSIP. New Tork, Sept.. 27. After days. of sweltering heat, dusty, blistering pave ments, tho cool wave prophesied by "Farmer 'Dunn ihas at last arrived. A week or. so ago it seemed as thousti fall had really- come; the small boy made bonnrew on the coWble pavements, straw hats were discarded and then, to-.everyone's discomfiture, came the intense heat. The most pitiable ob jects In New York city on these hot days are the street sweepers, sweltering in the absurd garb of white duck de signed for them by Colonel Waring. After a dwy's wear their color is not recognizable, and -a more .wretched, dirty, aibject-looklng eet of people It would be difficult to find. The ifheatt'lrai season has now fair ly begun, ami already there have Veen several failures. It Is raWier droll, but at present there Is not one stock com lany playmg dn New York. I heard an old gentleman bemoaning this fact the other day. "What do the present pen eratkin know," he said, "of the delight ful comedies. "The .School for fcan- dal 'The' Rivals',' Money.' ptc-cth. for a stock company like twtcr iwanncK s to Interpret rhem, th'a't they might be appreciated." 'Notwithstanding so mwny new at tracitlons, the Garden theater, with "Tnilby." Is packed nightly. !t Is a play one can see again and again with out tiring. Snrnny has taken photo graphs of the different members of the cast and they are on exhibition in his window on Union Square. Although thev have been exhibited for months. there Is always a Inrge crowd gazing on the faces of their favorites, Tarry, the Llrd, Oeckoch. WalkHng down Eighth avenue the otticr day I heard a rather corpulent Oernran woman calling. "iDitiliby, Dril by, come In and get your dinner." 1 wondered Who had bpen "ble.wcd" with the name: Imagine my astonishment to find "Drllby" was a wretchttl looking little black dog! Trilby's fame is evi dently still spreading! i 'Musicians may rumple their fingers through their long hair and smile with delight, for the coming season promises In be a . very musical one. lntecd. There will be the opera, with 'Melba and Calve; Paderewskl. -he of the lion's mane, will also -no here; and nrher pianists of lesser degree, such as Fan Hie Blcomfleld. Zciwsler. Frieda Slmon snn. ftci Violinist will be legion. The most famous among these who will be heard are iMarslck. Ondrtcek, Itlvarde, Renwnys and the eons of ' Ole Hull. You see they are all foreigners with high sounding names, and there Is not, alas, one American among them. Now and then you see a bit of life. In New York, so pathetic, so delicate that It stands out as would a painting by Greux. -.On the corner of Sixth avenue and Twenty-second street there stands a beggar totally blind, who play heart rending strains on an old hand-organ. He is always accompanied -by a little black terrier. You might resist tlho blind man's appeal, -but never that of the little terrier As his soulful eye meet yours you always drop something In the little tin. cup; and doggie's tall would wag. arid he would look up in his blind master's face as though to tell him what had occurred. And npw Uie little terrier. Is dymg! There are tears on the blind man's face as he listens to his moans, and he lovingly rubs him. The little dog has teen his one true friend his only companion. - . Unaa Kaakaa Alexander. ' fa the Wonderland Of North America. Some of the Wonderful Scenes in the Far-Famed "Bad Lands" of North Dakota. Fargo, Aug. 12. We are loth to leave the world's greatest cralnary," as the Red 'River valley is called, even for beautiful rolling hills spotted with lakes, fur we find ibeauty In a plowed field and fields of waving grain with an occasional bunch of woodland, a house. then a one-story shanty, a stable and corral of the farmer. These little farms of green, black and yellow, which' rep resent the grain, the meadow and the plowed land, are Interesting to us, and even the black natural soil is not the least attractive element of beauty. For -fifty miles westward, through eight thriving and hustling towns in Cheyenne valley, we tlnd the rich dark vegetable loam which characterises the Red Itiver valley, when we enter the undulating prairie of the James River valley at Jamestown. The farmers, in speaking ot the excellence of their op portunities, say that they do not suffer materially either In wet or dry seasons. Their farms lie high enough to be se cure from the overflow of the Red and Cheyenne rivers. At Jamestown we en ter a rich agricultural region wnicn is equally adapted to wheat raising and Btock growing. It is claimed nlneteen twentleths of this county Is under cultivation and pasturage. Our stay at Jamestown was Interest ing and Instructive. It Is tho commer cial center of stock and wheat raisers for an extensive region of country, traversed by the three railroads which center here. It Is an active, growing town of 4.000 population located on a high, dry plateau, surrounded by ranges of sloping hills. The country between the valleys of the James and Missouri rivers is a high, rolling 'plateau; the general elevation above these two streams Is about 400 feet. It Is called the Ooteaux, an open prairie with an occasional plat of tlrwber on the shores of the lakes, with no streams, the drainage all going Into lakes and ponds. This is a stock raising and wool grow ing district. The soil along Is about two feet deep, with a clay sub-soil of eighteen feet. Before reaching the Mis souri river the country begins to dip, and at Bismarck we cross the Missouri river and enter the valley of the Heart river. The Capital of Dakota. Bismarck Is the capital of Dakota, with a population of 4.500. Its geo graphical position Is scarcely inferior to that of anv city between the Atlan tic and Paclflo oceans. It Is- situated on the east side of the Missouri river, which, with its tributaries, gives 2.000 miles of navigable water above to the north and westward, and about the same extent to the south eastward to St. IaOuIs. Its elevation is 1.690 feet above sea level. Its landing Is one of the finest on the great river, and the place has become, and will always re main, the center of steamboat naviga tion In the northwest. The government has recognized its Importance by mak ing It a port of entry. The United States signal otllee, United States Marine hos pital and United States court have also been established here. The grent bridge over, the Missouri here Is 1.500 feet long, and' with its amiroache over a mile. I't is built of iron and is 170 feet above the river.. The eastern approach Is exactly two 'miles In length, and the West approach Is 0.000 feet, with a down grade of fifty two feet to the mile. This Is a wonder ful structure of trusses, piers, girders and cords of Pteel and Iron, costing up ward of a million dollars, nnd univer sally regarded as a line piece of en gineering skill. The (Missouri river yellow nnd mighty It Is Hows south ward with a strong current. The town Is remarkable for It healthy situa tion, upon the high bluffs of tho river, with ample drainage.' The expanse of the country Is noted for its productive ness, the soil being capable of produc ing everything necessary for the sub sistence of a large poP"'at(on. The city has handEome public buildings. The elevators and rolling mills are among the conspicuous structures. An eminence of easy ascent within the city limits Is Capitol Hill, whose sum mit is soon to be crowned with state buildings of imposing achltecture. In a Curious' Museum. - Across the river fropi Bismarck lies Mandan. This region used to be the huntlnit ground of the Mandan Indians. (letting off at this station, we wander Into the wonderful Curio museum. where the owl, the eagle, the American lion and grizzly bear re found. Hece are specimens of exquisitely decorated not'terv. which ihad (been dug from bluffs two milts 'from .Mandan at the heart of the Missouri and tteart rivers, ll-re are the remains of a mysterious people, for whom the students 'have not been able to account. They ehow B knowledge of nrt which certainly was not possessed 'by the American Indiana as we have known them. The ceme tery of this gigantic race covers about 100 acres. This vast city of the dead Is filled with trenches plh-d full of dead bodies, botih man and beast, and cov-J ered with several feet of earth. In many places the mounds are eight ,td ten feet high and some of them 100 fcit or more In length, and when uncov frcd aro found, tot be filled wtth bones, broken pottery of dark material, and vases of. various bright -colored flints and agates. This hn evidently boon an ancient battle field whore thousands of men and horses have fallen. The In dians deny all knowledge of the mounds. rWfoo are these people and from whence did they come and how long have their 'bones nnd remains lain here i'S a question which readily sug gests Itself. Fort Lincoln. Five miles southwest Is Fort Abra ham Lincoln, Its white walls being prominent on the high ibltiffs of the LM Is smirl. It Is now abandoned. It was attacked on five different occasions dur ing the years 1S72 ami 1873 by the Sioux and repulsed with 'great lo.e to tho Indians. The gallant and Ill-fated General tleorge A. CuBter passed the lost two years of his life at this post and from this post 'he led the expedi tion ag.iinst Sioux that terminated In the bn'tle of the Little Big Jlorn, on June "., ISifi. where he and a large number of his olflcers and men lout their lives. ... Two Iron bridges over the Heart river give easy acces to the fort and the rich valleys of Custer and 1,1 title Heart respectively. At Alandan we make another change of time from Central to .Mountain .time, dating back out watches one hour, dlerc is the ter minus of the Dakota division of the Northern 'Pacific Kallmad and the be ginning of the Missouri division. - Missouri Division. After leaving IMandan the railroad rasix tthrough the fertile valley of the Heart river, where exists the famous prairie dog. (At Marmot, a prairie vil lage existed iterore tne rautrona ap peared and as the train advances west ward these curious little anlmnls are more abundant, their antlos affording much amusement to the passengers, The animal Is badly named, .having no more of a dog about 'him than an ordi nary array squirrel. He Is a species of marmot amd burrows In the ground Sis do wolves, foxes, raccoons, skunks. cite, on these treeles plains. He lives on grass and roots and ts exceedingly pro line. While not excellent eating, the young are considered as good as the common squirrel. They drg their holes In close vicinity and such a collection form a town, which sometimes extend over Immense areas. They are a prey to cougars, panthers.. wild cats, wolves, foxes, skunks and rattlesnakes, all kinds of wUd aaaaals, wttztoat seemlsf I regard the prairie dog as a machine designed by -nature to convert sage brush ounch grass into flesh-- arm thus furnish food, not only to the wild animals of the plains, but for mankind, which (would often starve ibut for tho presence of this little animal. He re quires no' moisture and the scanty grass 13 ail no needs to exist upon. Their numbers are incalculable. - For loo miles westward the annear- ance of the country la that of a rough ly rolling iprakrle; the road crceweo many water-courses; their streams are no puny rivulets, but rivers of consid erable volume and their tributaries meander In devious ways through forty miles of the land grant on either side of the road. .All this region Istthlnly In habtted, but possesses good water and an abunda nce of lign ite coal. At Sims Is a mine of superior quality, with an out- pui ui guv torus uaiiy. In Search of Liberty. Our atitentlon was attracted, to Heb ron, a new settlement, composed of colonists of the Herman Evangelical faith, of German-Russians, who mi grated from Russia to avoid military conscription and to find homes In a free country. These people are itlhrlfty and industrious, and tho best of the re sources of the country. They build substantial houses from the prairie turf with roofs thatched with straw. They raise line, sleek-looking cattle, and their grain was of superior quality, and showed attention. The soil through this section is of a vegetable mould, eighteen Inches to three feet deep, with a fine sub-soil similar to that of the James River valley. Along this vallev are excellent sheep ranch sites. Many springs of good water Issue from the out-cropping beds of coal In the bluffs bordering the valleys. Besides the fuel which Is furnished by the oak and Cot tonwood trees, this whole country is said to be underlaid with a bed of good coal, five feet in thickness, which can be mined by digging from three to fifteen feet deep. Near Gladstone these great fields of coal are of good variety for heating and cooking purposes. This coal Is apparently of a recent forma tion; a peculiar feature Is that It emits no smoke, or disagreeable odor, but burns like wood and equally as fast. Dickinson, 686 miles west of St. Paul, Is the most Important shipping point for stock on the road. Thousands of heads of cattle and horses are shipped eastward dally. Here are several brick kilns. Its sandstone being spe cially adapted for this industry. Bad Lands of North Bskots. Leaving Dickinson, we soon enter a region picturesque and singular enough, known as the 'Bad Lands" of the Little. Missouri. For. an hour the train pursues Its way on a down grade through scenery of which the world Is not known to afford a counterpart. At New England City, a, town composed entirely from New England people, we see the first of this strange phenomena In numerous buttes. which diversify the landscape.. The most conspicuous or tnese is square Butte, an deration rising 300 feet above the general level of the praires, having a. plateaus on its summit of fifty acres in extent, said to be fertile; producing heavy crops of vegetables, the potatoes alone yielding aw misneis to an acre. The term "Bad Lands" Is here mis applied Is an unfortunate misnomer fur It conveys the Idea to the traveler that the tract Is worthies for agrlcul tural and stock-raising purposes. Noth mgr could be wider of the truth. The fact Is, the . soil possesses fertilizing properties In excess, and the luxuriant grasses which here flourish attract herbivorous game animals In large numbers. The designation "Bad Lands came from . old-time French trappers and hunters In the service of the great fur companies, because It was a dimcult region to travel .through with ponies and pack animals. It should be called "Sculptured i.Aanas, or "ryramia Lands," for sculp turing It Is on a grand scale. Old na ture seems to have let herself loose. It might be termed the land of witchery, for it seems as if witchcraft must have produced so unnatural a region. One says "Trees where there are no trees; animals where no living thing Is seen, castles and ruined cltlics where none ever lived." These are contradictions that seem Inexplicable, '. The trees. nowever, that are seen where none now grow. are. pertrlfled: the animals are fanciful, rock animal forms; the castles and cities are formations of washed rocks and clays or butte for mations made so by the action ' of water. The horizon fairly teems with the buttes. cliffs and bluffs of this weird land; thicker and more com plex they become as we roll along and from them spring, aloft In endless array and multiform shapes, pinnacles, spires, domes and turrets, an Ideal piece of work In sculpture and archi tecture the like we never before wit nessed which simply beggars descrip tion. - An Indescribable Spectacle. These hundreds of buttes vary In height from 50 to 150 feet, with steep sides and rounded summits with vari ous colored bands of limestone, sand stone and. lignite lying In successive strata. These colorings are very rich; some of the buttes have bases of yellow. Intermediate girdles of pure white and tops "of deepest red, while others are blue, brown and-gray. Some of these elevations In the hazy distance seem like ocean billows; all colors and shapes are blended here in riotous profusion. In ages long ago, however, dense for ests existed In these Bad Lands. There Is evidence of this primeval growth In the abundant petrifications of tree stumps, 4 to 8 feet In diameter, which are in portions translucent as rock crystals and susceptible of a high polish, as our specimens will show. Here are fine specimens of fossil leaves, changed by the heat of the burning lignite Into a brilliant scarlet, while the coal, still burning, gives a plutnnlc as pect to the whole region, one fiery mass not far from the railroad being easily mistaken at night for an active vol cano, the cliffs having close resemblance to volcanic scoria. Among the many other fossil remains are oysters, clams, etc. . Farther back In this weird land are genuine trees, large, fat herds and ranches; the herds of horses and-cattle that we see graslng upon its thousand hills can testify that they are good lands. ' Such Is a noted region of North Dakota, and It Is worthy of extended Investigation by those who can afford the time to make It. being full of Inter est to scientists, and of wonder to pleasure seekers, John E. Richmond. vigor f ra Easily, Qalekly, Pinwrtly RNtentf. Wsakaeast fferveasassa, XMMiuy, aaa au we traia of ems iron early errors or uuer escsssea. us retails as ark, sKksesx. worry. etc. Fall strength, deveW apmsnt ana use given t iflvery onmi sbv nnws of the lay. SunpU, aat saeiaoaa. ioiwsh Impreveaumt Failure hnpostlbK 1,000 isfewacea. -Book,' i)fiaa7 srpasaanna aaa proof isisw ibbbssh ' f ICsW . U'sLaT bV. V i Give Away )A( SAnPLB sPACKA08 ' OF Dr. Pierce's- Pleasant Pellets To any one sending name and address to ut oh a postal card. Qace Used. They are Always In Fiver. Hence, our object in sending them out broadcast -ON TRIAL. They absolutely enre Sick Headache, Bil lousness, Constipation, Coated Tongue, Poor Appetite, Dyspepsia and kittdrcddc'range meats of the Stomach, j.iver and Bowels. Don't accefil some substitute said to bt "just as good." The substitute costs the dealer less. It costs you ABOUT the same. HIS profit is in the "just as good." WHERE IS YOURS? Addreu for fek Sample, World's Dispensary Medial Atsociatloi, Ma sal Mala St. BUFFALO, N. R EVA M. HETZEL'S Superior Face Bleach, Positltelj Remo.es Ut Facial Blemlsha No more Freckles, Tan, Sunburn, Black tie.ads, Liver Spots. Pimples and Sallow Complexions If ladles .will uso my Su perior Face Bltach. Not a cosmetic, but a medicine which acts directly on the skin, removing all discoloration, an one of tha greatest purifying agents for the complex Ion In existence. A perfectly clear and spotless complexion can be obtained in very Instance by Its use. Price, $1.00 per bottle. For sale at E. M. Hetzel's Hair dressing and Manicure Tartars, 330 Lack awanna ave. Mall orders filled promptly. lEwis: $3;ooe Accident Insurance The boat wearing, most stylish, and the greatest value of any $J.OO Mm'a ' Shoos oh the continent. Beet calfskin, dongola tops, solid leather soles, with all the popular toes, lasts and fastenings, aud Lewis' Cork Filled Soles. , EMeh pair contains a paid-up Acci dent Insurance Policy for 9100, good for 00 days. Wear Lewis' Accident Insurance Shoe once and you will never change. Tha insurance, goes for "full measure." Talk with your dealer who sella Lewis' Shoes. FOR SALE AT Globe Shoe Store 227 LICK1 AVE., SCRANTON, Pi ' EVANS 4 POWELL, Prop' ev m Mmm Mcwou. Asisesifi HEADACHE lXTtju-XS vtll care jou. a wonderful bona to uttri from Clds StrtTkrtil, IsfiMsia, 19i-oaekHI tmntriuittrth'f. AneflMeaS t,M,A- mnvunUnt Mir, ifeaeV to on Snt iiKimuon of ooki. Ceatlsaea vee ESM Peraaaent Cars UifaaUoanaratdornoTieT refunded. Prlea as) eta. Trial f rea at Urialsta. Rcctrtrred mall, MM. i7kcrilAiMtrTkmLTiata, Crt7SSXTBKJ.AS-TfS ' HFMTIini The snnut and Mfnt teaiaflf faa MCninUL. llrtlndtMaaea.Knmia.lh'a.Sait Baaaaild Sora,Prni. Cut. Waaaarfal ran, Mr forrlXRS. Prlae, as eta. at rtmg- r a aa StttsorbTisU arapms. AldreisaaboT. PWUSja .fV by Matthews Bros, and Jotui H. Phelps. Ccjlcxica Pressin. OR. HCBRA'S t VIOUiCREAf.1 Issasrs and; Tan, and re. ine sain w lis oTigi- sal fnahnMS. praducuiz a - feftfl BMlth (UB. a. JM Om-i-AA-tll fAMlC-7L- fmwatloos and .pcrtrotly barnleja A t all artifaicts, at mailed lor SOcta. ted foe Circuit, 1 VMMA Mnsj tOAP 1 sr raaaaanMi at a O. C BITTNKR 4 CO Tolkdo. Ola! pX-':.l.):l"",'"1 tow I aVttftvfillir BfS fcotk of Touuc aVad mtdfU ffcvl n and women. Thu UW11117, nifrtuij mm Em lJulfr.AL. Conramntioaa. 7. nluusaftiiiir d reiiu and ion w power or um Qm- tnvur urnni hddvubsJ on lor nunr uaaiwm ua IBSBiri iMake aaa riatmlaS taa rittS r TSUTil to tttf Mini Tir BMu7t3o aw box or S for wttfc rHi lea saavoatea ta care ar rfaa4 taa aaaar.S(M baaVaf " -a.Ural.C.,IW Xtmylf Far ivrJOHH M. tut-SiJ Mat. WrssBtas; ave. vj prae street. , , srran aT M. .Agss s aaaamviBlsa nasaMaaKStynrMDyiit. iiMrisaeaapaaMasfrr HfltMli. Mottas hack Am atal . . ' 1 . -