i Now York buys mors) lace than iwt Other city ia the world. All sorts of fimtnstio styles then dnys (ire rrroncouslj called "Empire." Apple prcon is to be one of the fash ionable color. It has al ready appeared in Tnris. Mrs. AVistnr, the translator of Gorrnnn novels, is tho dnuulitcr of the lato Fanny Kcniblo. Tho higher In rank the Japanese woman, tho more elaborate hor coifltirs is likely to be. la tho mtittor of crinolino there has been a great dcul of screaming before snyono is hurt. A brido recently married In London wore the wedding dress which had been made for the Princess May. Fashion plates show that tho sailor bat, with all tri inning nt tUo back, will bo i - with m again the cvning summer. For women with delicate, oval face, high foreheads and lou necks the Csdo gn coiffure is distinctly becoming. The Marquise Lanxi wrote "Basil Mor ton's Trjnsgrossiou" seated in tho chair In which Puo wroto "The Kiven." Mrs. Wliitelaw Koid wears a decora tion gold and precious stones pre sented to her by the Sultan of Turkey. Mrs. Olip'aant recoives about 500 for a story, nnd sho writes several every year in aJdition to other literary worn. The proper riper just now is to spear your headdress with a long thin blade of silver, finishoJ at ono end with a pink tc pai. What is known a fashionable mourn ing of tho period requires mora of tho most expousive crape for trim ntnj than ever before. Mrs. Annio Mooros, of Mount Pleas Bnt, Texas, is tho only womun w'jo acts as the Prcsidout of a National bauk in this country. : It is said that a kindergarten on tho west sido ot New York City is to bo named after Mrs. Cleveland and that sho will support it. There is a new "mmiaga dress mi tcrial," aJvertisel iu Lmdo i piprs a 'brides' satin." It is embroidered with oran flowers. A modol of tho red Gnpiro hat Ins come over from Paris. It is a stuuuiu article of head eir aal caauot fail to create a sensation. A ncwchatulaino is an enameled sword whose jewelei hilt is thrust through the wearer's dross. Tho watc'a harass fro.u the sword by a chain. Mrs. Picrpont Morgan, of Now York York City, has a m trvclously gorjeam dress of primrose yellow silk, embroil, ered iu white an i gold. Grace Greenwood, tho literary pioneer of American women authors, told a friend recently that sho couldn't toll more than ono story over one cup of tea. Tho milliners oiler all sorts of Fronchy bandeaux, diadems and aigrettes, of velvot, ribbon, buds and tinsel, and feathers for tho evening coiffure. Mrs. French Saoldou illustrates her lectures on Airica with a collection of costumes, cjokin.; utensils and house hold articles used by t'ie natives, i Tho typewriter has found its way into toy laly's boudoir, and she uses it in hor social correspon leuco. It is vjry otnv mental and tho type are old English, characters. Several society womon m New York wear regular crowns that havo baea pur chased from the impoverished Kings an i Queens of B trope or tro.a their iiavueii ate desceu louts. Very long, narrow hosiery cases, fash ioued of silk, overlaid wiiu painted French gauze and sprinkle 1 with soma subtle sachet, find a place iu the sooial damsel's chilTonuierre. Hood's Cures After the Crip It Restores Health and Strength. UK: 3Ir. liextrr Curtis Is well-known in WIm-uii.Iq a-saiuaniifacturer of itillar i.als ami IhjuCs for liursra, ami in a re liable buMiH'f man. " Madison, Win., Jan. ls'.cl. " Mtfsrs. V. I. II.xhI a. (., I,wcl, Mus. " 1 raiuiot speak in ton fuvorali'e terms of the kooJ imu iliisof II.h 1h SarNiiurllla. 1 have ha.lahal rmiuli for 2 wir,i oiiiIhk on after the Krlp. I t i-ii-al r liy-i. iaiw, went twice, toihe Hot .-print: of Arkansas, but al did no 1. Iitoia Lottie of Hc-od'a Baraapa rilla Hint It uave me n lu f at oni e. Tlie sec ond dose fceenieit to ku to t lie right spot. 1 afterward if.it tt Isittl,.,, ami have taken nearly ja'iv ' ""' 1 mm h U tter every So many im dleines are a lvertied tbat do notion!, 1 wouiii not say anytbinu in favor of Hood'sSCures any unU 1 wtt fully hatir-fi wuiili iryiiirf. 1 Iihu'Vi il, i K'MmL" it! XI Kli t I 1(1 it.. it it w, k- mI hikI IIuoU'm I'ilU fun- nil I.ivt-r III-," JmmtlM-r, I Kii. -ti-.u, Mi k lirjt.ii.-.-, ULCI;R5 SCROFULA RHI-UMATI5M BLOOD POISON uii vr rv knitirt-it til- ariiri!f f nun impure LWtl I'ur.'il t,v that itr-wr-fuiiiug Puok oo I11oh1 ami H'-fi 11m ..-- u.ai!ud freo. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC) OO.. TLMTA, a. A-SV ay 'Wife ttJWfcHtf hi go ACROSS BROOKLYN BRIDGE. TRKMKNDOUS RUSH ON KVEBT WORK-DAT KVKNINO. Peoplft Hompsvard iionncl Form a Unman Torront on tho New York Ride A Wonderful Scene. JUST as ft summer rain begins with big drops out of a half clear sky, so the rush to Brooklyn lets in around tho New York end of tho East Riter bridgo on every work-day evening. The Rapine; maw of the bridge has been at work lazily during the after noon sucking in a few strairlers and throwing out littlo squads of folk from the trains that run behind it. Dtit whoa Ave o'clock comes the drops of ths ap proaching tempest of humanity that is to storm the place liko a revolutionary mob around a Bastille bcin to appetr in Printing-house Square.' They come factor, and run together in littlo rivulets up Park How, down Chatham street, alonir Centre streot, and across tho City Hall Park all turned ono way, all streaming toward tho bridge. Even then they give no warning of what is to come, ex cept to those who know that the tort sot is as cortain to dovclop and as sure to becomo tremondotis as that tidal bore which daily swells the Sigdensy with its overwhelming flood. The black drops come faster and I thicker. They splah in sudden numbers from the near-by olllce buildings and tho horso cars. The little streams now lengthen out, and from far up and don the streets and across the park in Broad way. It is 5 o'clock, and the otRoos in the buildiugs that bold villagefuls are closing. It is no longer a sprinkle. It is a shower. Farther and farther away the human drops mingle; bigger grow the converging streams. At half past five the wholesale stores and tho warehouses are closing. It is a torrent now. At six the factories and the work shops thrust a myriad toilers upon the streets. The very clouds of the city's humanity appear to havo gathered over one spot. The usual onli iei no longer hold tho twodeised drops which now jostle one another o:I the sidewalks, into tne gutters, out upon the roadways, all over the park's asiihaltum. The outlook from tho upper stones of tho neighbor hood is upon a sea of people, iu droves like wild cattle, coining up as if out of the oarth from every direction, pushing, hurrying, covering every open space like locusts. Now it is a pelting rain. Half an hour pas ci, and the elevated trains, wnicn come like breatumj. absorb half tho crowd so fait that the station ataira become as the beds of inverted cataracts up which the dark torrent climbs reiist lessly. The horse csrs fro n both direc tions stop and discharge people as gum are wheeled up, tired, and dragged away on a battlefield. It is a cloudburst, and it has made a mill race something far bigger than that the swollen drain of a human freshet. Thirty thousand men, women and children are in tho torrent, thirty thou sand pedestrians in a ninety-minute down pour; for though the rush is between five o'clock and seven, it is thinned at both ends, and the bulk of it is com pressed in a period of between sixty and ninety minutes. This is not couoting the almost equal numbers that seek the elevated cars. The surging blaes waves, wnite-capped with human faces, hurl themselves against the granite steps Slat lead to the yawning iron throat of the bridge and spread over them. There is no more sign of individual motion than there is in the herds of sheep that one looks down upon from tho Colorado Mountains when t'ie droves are moving along the valleys like floating brown isl ands, as clouds move against the sky. Overhead on a trestle that crosses from the City Hall Park, another black cur rent, from the steam-cars, keeps pace with. the tide below. In that way tho exodus to Brooklyn moves over every thing ahead of it, as if, were the bridge to fall, the people would still keep straight on, tilling the river, and press ing forward upon the ua lennost bodies. We read about the Europe iu capitals, treated with the skill of artists, clothed with the glamour of tradition, and col ored by the fancy that grows richer with the distance of its subject. But what has London to show like that daily congestion at the Brooklyn Bridge? What crowds in Paris are to be meas ured with this? What E iropean city has even one of the many strange conditions that produce this scene? Here come the elevatel railways that carry three quarters of a million souls a day, the surface vehicles of the million and six hundred thousand people of M tohattan, the streets leading from the densest pop ulation in America, all meeting ia one little square, all pouriug out people, and all the people streaming into a great trumpetlike mouth of iron in order to be shot across a banging cobweb of metal threads iuto a city that has not its mate or counterpart on earth Brooklyn! It is like a city in some things. It is a vast aggregation of homes and streets and shops, with a governtnout of its own. Yet many things it has not got thiugs with which many a little too could put it to the blush. And every other city earns its own way, while Brooklyn works for New York, aud and is paid oil like a shop-girl on Satur day nights. "Stop shoving sol" "Lookout who you're pushing 1' 'Don't try to run over tue, I say." These are notes from the chorus of the solid mass of persons tbit crowd up the stairs to the bridge cars. On tho upper platform the train sweep awiy regiments at a time. Burly brid ;e policemeu are there urging every one forward, and at times until the news pipers cry out, periodically putting tneir hands on their betters aud wedgiu ' them iuto the cars, through three doors at once, as revolvers are c mrged. Tuere are fourteen other ways to Brooklyn, all by ferry-boats, and at the time of which I write all these are crowded. They are not mobbed like the bridge, to be sure, but tuey are packed with people so tliat you can only see the riuis of the decks as you see the edge of a grocer's measure that has beeu tilled with peaso. At first the big bridge hurt the business of the ferry companies, but after a while it built up a surplus aud (mid them back, just as our elevated roads in time increased the trurlic of the horse-cars. Iu a word, then, everything that is going to Brook lyn at nightfall is crowded. That is even true of the drays which start empty for the bridge that carries lorty-oue mil lions ci passengers in a year, aud for tue fumes, one couipuuy of which col lect thirty-six millions of fares annu ally. liarper's Magazine. The authograph of Cieueral Lrael Put nam avlu) lor vta. MISE WORKS. The eye of faith can see In the dark. Oak trees cannot be raiiod in a hot houso. Some of the most desdly serpents have the brightest skins. The biggest dollars wo see are thost just out o( our reach. The nickel plating docs not glvo any power to the engine. tt Is not what wo do but what we lovo that decides our fate. Smallpox Is not any more contagious than a good example. The man who is always looking for mtiil genoraity tin Is it. The emphatic part of our lifo is what wo do, not what we say. The shortct cut to wealth is through tho lane of cootentmont. The man who chases bubbles will bark his shins sooner or later. Ono of tho lasts of a Ana nature is tho effect joys an I sorrows have upon it. Too raci who oontrols himself makes unwritten laws for many other people. Them in who does most without a good motive, will have most to regret. Fill the place yo i no v have more than full and you will so ia have a better ono. A quarter in tho pocket will buy more groceries than a dollar somebody owes you. If you have no temptation, stopl Turn arouad 1 You aro going the wrong way. We are not in a c ndition to enjoy riches until we cm bo happy without them. Bo definite. Wnen a ships sails for Euglanl it steers for Liverpool, not Europe. We are not al .vays ig.iorant because we do not learn, but bectuso wo foriiot too miic'.i. People who boast that thoy never did any har.n are general. y those who haven't done uiuc i good. lUm's Horn. Pol, Iho Na'liaul Dish or It a wall. Poi, the groit food of the nitives of Hawaii, is rotde fro.u tho taro plant, a vegetable similar in sizj and shape to a rutabaga turnip, which is gro.vu in beds kept coustautly submerge 1 in water, a number of the bads beiug terinvl a taro "pitch." O.ving to the genial character of the climite the plant c t ib3 culti vate! throu ;liout the yo ir. It is cousid ere 1 to bs one of the mist nutritious foods knowu, aud is specia'ly alaptel for dyspeptics and persons troubled with stomach disorders. Tue process of making poi from the plant is to tint boil it an 1 remove the skiu, after whic'.i it is placed on large wooden trays and thoroughly pounded with pestles ot stone, smili quantities of water being added from time to time during the process of maceration. An hour or more ot contiuual pounding is required, when a substance like dough results, known as paiai. In preparing it for tho table, tho paiai is placed iu a wooden bowl, or calabas'i, and is al lowed to stand for a cou;ile of days, un til fermentation sets in, when it becomes poi, aud tastes, to tlie unsccustomel palate, like sour flour paste; but tho taro wnen boiled simply as a vegetable is very palatable. The natives eat poi sitting aroun 1 a large calabash and dipping into it with their fingers. The dish is known as cither one, two or three linger poi, ac cording to its consistency. One finger poi is the thickest form iu which it is served, and sufficient of it adheres to oue linger w'leu dipped iuto it to admit of its beiug conveyed to tho raiuth. A thinner forai of poi requires the use ot two fingers for the purpose hence two liugcr poi; and yet another, still further diluted, cannot bs secured from tho dish without the use of three fingers, hence its name. Dyspepsia is almst unknown among the Kanakas, owing principally, it is said, to the gcjoral use of this sal utary food. Demorest. riiundir Stir .11 iu a Zanzibar Forest "The most glittering spectacle that I ever wituesse I, said Myron Hunter. who is at the Lie ode, "occurrel in Z mzibir while I tarried withCo npanv ii of the Holstein G j-irds, which, with a number of other companies, was sla tionel there by the German Government. I was not in the German army, but I accompauiel them on friendly terms, sketching for himself. Ztnzibar furn ishes some of tlie fi test specimens of tropical foliage and plant life that ons can imagine. "The willow tree of that country is really boautiful. Oue afternoon, while out sketcUiug, I was ciug'at in a true African tliunder storm. Lou of thunder and lightning, but little rain. Tne rainfall was tu;rbieut, ho.vever, to over a neighboring willow with myiiads of drops, wlvcli, when a little later the sun 'hone out, reflected its rays in ever- hanging colors. Bit before this the tree was struck by lightning. Not enough to destroy it, bat sullbieut cur rent to spread from limb to limb and leaf to leaf, entering into every crystal drop that swayel with the wind tossed leaves. "The effect was marvelous. The rich reen ot the leaves set oil tlie gorgeous gems that glittered and sparkled richer than any diainoul set in gold. It w.is out for an instant, but that instant was utncient to give oue an idea what an E leu or a Hesporides miht look like. Vheu sue i tilings occur in the land of the sun, do you won ler that the Arabian literature abounds in rich faucv and gorgeous description?" lit. Louis Uloue-Di) nocrat. Til: S gnal Corps. The signal corps, Uuited States Army, as new constitute, is United to fifty men. The pay of a private in the corps is $100 per mutu,as agaiust tho $13 per month paid to au ordinary private in the ar.uy. jNaturally a-liiiissiou to the corps is much sought after by men in tlie ranks. It is customary wheu vacancies occur to give the first chaucji for eulistmeot to those soldiers who havo distinguished themselves by long service or natual ability. Admisaiou to the corps is by special eulistmont, and is properly looked upon ai a proinot.on. For fur ther information write to Oeoeral A. W. Greely, chief bignal olScar, United States Army, Washington, I). CJ. Tue.ro are no special enliatmqats f."-r arsenal duty in toe ar.uy. Tho iowi who are sta tioned at tne buildings are detailed from 'he runks as occasion may require. New York tjuu, TEMPERANCE. WKXT DOW. 'Twss not In old ocean's piMion, ' Twas not in the fonttVn din, 'Twns not in the an-No (Inrknssn, Nor yet in the tropic sun, 'Twas not In a leixr's prieon, ' f was not bv the evelono-fl (tie. Twas never en earthquake's horror, That ravished n f Uy from me. ThrotiRh the Kates of a sinful pleasure, llereltof his Ktleiu name. With nnusht but a smiting conscience, With who but hlmsjlf to blnmef He fought and he M.-the tempter Beguiled him with laughter and long, yorfcettln? his Wo I anil mother, My poor, weak boy wjnt down. For the brand of the beast besotte I, He bartered his manhood's crown, He broke the one heart that love I him, K'er Its idol we rase I to the groitn I, Dead, the ash-s that cumb-r the altar Where once the bright env era s lone, Life's love light is Ftirmided foi-ev -r, Bince my b y, my boy, went. down. Had the wave in pitilcs frensv But swallowed hnn up in the deep, Had the hurry nnd tumult ot eirnairs Sealed his eyelids forever In sleep, I'd have reckoned his early translslion Of the All Father's love bnt aiirii. But to stumble and fnll through tetnpUtion, a urns w uie s outer tiregsall its w.ne, Yes, mine is the same old story luat runs down thecvo eof vmr. From IU birthday, till time Is tioary. There are crowes lor mothers, atid tears. And the idols we press to our bosoms Lie shattered in fragments around; And the aihos aro cold on the altirs or our boy', iur boys, have gone down. O, the plaeue l more merciful, heaven. Than this blight on the bloom of our vouth. For the collin -lid hides but the vesturee, Ann the sou', dlsentliralle f. eoirs aloft, We, Niobe shudder an.l wonder. And etrtnrgle to bite back the moan; But the trellis in souls Is protect t. And our poor tempted boys must go down. Uerti-ule Stsnhnpe, in the Voice. nx CHKOXIC IKKKHUTZ'S riKOICNKRAOr. The inevitable a'cohollc degeneration of the chronic ineorinte is wll suite! by the Quarterly Journal cf Inebriety, as follow ! "The chronic Inebriate will be found, as a rule, defective in his entire system, both moral, physical and intellectusl. He is lit erally switched on" on the side track of pro gressive degeneration. His Intellectual ca pacity is only automatic and a tuin varnish of reality. His moral capacity is gone, and he is unable to appreciate between right and wrong. His physical power is ranidlv growing weaker, and receding iuto the most degenerate lorms." A PEMORALIZINO LAW. It seems th it a British law, which gives retail growers licine for th9 sale o' wine, beer and jplrits has been demoralizing tne households of B igland. JSy it a woman cm order thesj articles with her grocsries, hsve them in the bill as cofT-ie, tea or sugar un known to paterfamilias, and tipple in there cesses of her lions-. Polio and divorce courts have shown up this etXxt in startling abundance, and it is pretty sure that thou sands ot English wives and mothers, who wi.ul 1 not drins in pu die, wi I sip aud sip iu private till they are half-way drunkards. KOI A DRUNKS' UlSSr.l.A!. Mahome.'s injunction against the ue ot ardent spirits ia ao well obeys J, even at this late day, that it is an extremely rare sight to see a drun .ea Mussulman. A ja-Jy who has been mak.uj a tour of Kjypt, says that during a long stay in Cairo none of her party saw an intoxicate! man. She says that she asked her dra;onnn if he ever un der any provocation in lulel in suon ; drink, and he ansnrnre !: "It mv wife were dying and the doc-tor or.le.-t) I her to take brandy and she died witb that bran ly in her stomach Uol would not receive her iu heaven." WBAl OIXT. Touch a leuth has our American hibtt o. treating gone that to Ueolin j to aeeooi pany a frien I or acquaintance iuto a drink ing resort is to insult him. To accompany a friend into a inloni, remain any length of time and be bau e.l about, clawed all ov.r and slobSered on by the habitujo( theplaci is, to my min t, one of the most disgutiug and obnoxious thin;s a seJ.'-respecting man can bs cnllel upon to do. Tne man who is invited iuto a drinking den and refuses to accept the invitation may give otfeuoe to the fneud who invites him. and that friend will lie very apt to make no secret of his feelings; in fact, he bedevea it to be his privilege, nay, his duty, to openly oensurj the unreasonable person who rslus s to worship at the shrine of Bacchus at his bidding. The thought that the iuvitatiou in itself might be regarded as an insult would not be likely to enter the head of the man so acnstomei to the giving au i accepting of men invitation. If men must drink n 1 I know of no rea son above grjuud why any man should drink why not transact that business as they transact other details of every- iay lifer It a rusn wisbes to buy a pound of nails, he will no: stand for half an hour on the street corner waiting for an acquaint ance to come along t int he may iuviw him iu to sample nails with him. It it becomes necessary to purchase a pair of boots or shoes, a Irieud is not invited in to try them on or pass judgment on tie qitllity of the leather. Il a mau feels unwell and intends dosing himself, he never lingers before the door of the druj itorj intil some neighbor or passer-by may be invited in to swallow castor oil or epsom silts with him. It has always puzz,ed me to understand wuy man, the noblest an 1 most intell g-nt of all animals, will accept an invitation to take a drink when he is not thirsty without questioning the motives of the one who proffers the hospitality, or the alleged hos p.tality. To ass that same man to have a sandwich, a bowl of mush and milk, some pork and beans, a plate ot soup or even a bottle of castor oil would be to insinuate that he did not have money enough to pay his own way. Charge a man with being thirsty even after he has iufiatxi himself with a balf-k?g ot beer ask hnn to havd another drink after the drapery of his stomach has beeu straiued to the utmost ti retain what has ulreaiybeen oointuitael to it, and be will make the effort to comply with your re quest or els) decline witn thanks, if not too full for utterance. T. V. 1'owJurly TK VPKP ANUK NKWS AND NOTES. Temperance is a bride who makes her busband rich. One third of the 15,000 arrests for drunk enness iu Dublin last year were women. It is very silly to take a driuk whenever you feel like it, just to show people you can let it alone if you waut to. Health of the body, and intelligence which is the health ot the soul, are lost by one vios the Vice of inteuiperanoe. A Brooklyn liiuor dealer declares tbat 100,0) to 15',00d Brooklyn men wbo drink coum to New Yora to do it. Drunkenness has greatly increased in Ire land, the nuuila-r of convictions for the offence being 100,00 J in IS'Jl as againit 79. OoO in ltdjT. The Norwegian Total Abstinence Society comprises So J local unions, witb a total of about 100, (kw members; i 1,0)0 men, 41,000 women and 15,000 children under sixteen years, A declaration as to the use of alcohol as a medicine is going the rounds of the British Medical Association. It is said that over six hundred names bav been obtained against the use. If you have the good of society at heart touch not the intoxicating glass, for moat of the evils we have to deplore in our sooial aud political life are the offspring of this proline mother-vice iubinier iiice. A prisoner behind the bars in the peniten tiary of Michigan writes to boys as follows: "J.'jt cards and liquor alone; be in bed by tt p. in., and up by o a: in., eat regularly, sleep soundly, exercise moderately, pray constantly, aud you will never be behind the grates." You often hear inolerite drinking men say: "llriitKiug does not hurt me, because 1 do not drink enough. " If you reply tbat it may get the better ot biui and make hiui a drunkard, be will lauh aud say tbat he kuows what he's about; he can take it or let it alone. Bui it is a sura iact that about uiue out ot tea model ate Uriukiu uieu die dxuukardsj, The New Bread. The favor with which the now broad, made with Royal Baking Powder instead of yrast, has been received by our best housekeepers and most eiport broad makers it really wonderful. "It saves all the hard and tedious work of knead ing and moulding," writes one. 'Less than an hour from the dry flour to the most perfect loaf of bread I ever taw writes another. "Fmh bread every day," says another, 'and that the liahtrat, finest and most wholesome, is something to II vo tor." "We relish the bread bet- tcr than the old kind;" "it is ahead of thy yeast bread I ever baked;" "the bread was whiter and softer." "Best of all, writes An enthusiastic housewife, "we can eat the Hnynl unfetnented bread whfm freshly baked, or even when warm, with perfect Impunity. It it actually an anti-dyspeptic." "This bread hat 'nutty' taste, that is peculiarly pleasing," writes still au other. This is owing to the fact that the active gas-producing principle of tho Koyal is derived ftom the pure grnpo acid. The great valtio of this broad arises from the fnct that In it are preserved all tho most nutritive elements of the flour, tome of which aro decomposed and destroyed by"tho action of yeast. The loss of thefo properties ia what makes fresh yeast bread unwholesome. The use ot tho lloyal Baking Powder instead of yeast is found to niako a finer, lighter bread, devoid of all dyspeptic qualities. The same gas carbonic ia produced as where yeast is used, but it is evolved from the baking powder itself and not from the flour. Thereby tho broad il made more wholesome and actually anti dycplic. The gronter convenience, where a batch of tho finest bread can bo made and baked in less than an hour with no danger ot a sour or heavy loaf, must be appreciated by everyone The receipt for making this bread is herewith given, and housekeepers will do well to cut it out and preserve its To make ono loaf One quart llour, one teaspoontul salt, half a teaspoonful sugar, two heaping tcaspooufuls lloyal Baking Powder, half medium-sized cold boiled potato, and water, bift together thoroughly flour, salt, sugar and baking powder; tub in the potato; add sufficient water to mix smoothly and rapidly into a stiff batter, about as soft as for pound cake; about a pint of water to a quart of flour will bo required more or less according to the brand and quility of the flour used. Do not mako a still dough, like yeast bread. Pour the bat ter into a greased pan, 4Jx8 inches, and four inches deep, tilling about half full. The loaf will rise to till the pan when baked. Bake iu very hot oven forty-five minutes, placing paper over first fit toe n minutes baking, to prevent crusting too soon on top. Bake nt once. 1km' t mix Perfect success requires tho most care ful observance of all these details, and the author of the receipt emphasizes the statement that Hojal Baking Powdir only can be used becauso it is the only powder in which the ingredients aro prepared so as to givo that continuous action necessary to raise tho larger bread loaf. To every reader who will write the result of her bread making from this receipt to tho lloyal Bakiug Powder Co., 106 Wall street, New York, that company announce that they will send in return, free, a copy of a most prac tical and useful couk book, containing one thousand receipts for all kinds of baking, cooking, etc. Mention this paper. Tho Largest Plate or American Glass. There was recently finished at the Dia mond Plato Glass Works, in Koliomo, Ind., the largest plate ever cast in the United States. It is 150x216 inches, or 12 feet wide by 18 feet in length. This is by all odds the largest plate ever cast and grouud and polished in America. Other plates ns large as tl.is have been cast here, but ntver be'oro has one of this magnitude run the gauntlet of the finishing rooms without breakage. Iu diannpolis Journal. It is mill that the largest picco of mica in the world was recently takeu out of a North Carolina qu irry. It measures nine and a half by sixteen inches. The fiklll ana Kaewlrete Essential to the production of the most perfect and popular laxative remedy known have en abled the California Fig .Syrup Co. to achieve a great success in the reputation of Its remedy Syrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be the uni versal laxative. For sale by all druggists. There is more catarrn in this section of the oouutry than all other diseahes put together, and until the lat-t few yearn was supposed tn be incurable. For a great many years doctors iiroiiounced it a local diseahe, aud prescribed ocal remedies, and by constantly failing to cure witb local treatment, pronounced it n curable. Science has proven catarrh to be a coiihttiutioiial disease, and therefore requires const il ui ioual treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheuey Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure cm the market. It ta taken internally in doses from llldmps to a teasiKMiuf ul. It acts directly upon the bltMHl a'ld mucous surfaces of the system. They fry' lull for any case It fails to cure, bend for J.ivilars and testimonials. Address I1'. J. Cheney oc (Jo., Toledo, U IV Sold by Druggists, 75o Wanted. fitwu 1'ale reotile to buy 50c. Bot tles of t'oresiine HliM) I hitters of all dealers for&So. flives you Mrengtb and Vigor wdh the Freahucns of Vouth. Impaired digestion cured by Heechaiu's I'illa. Bcechum's no others. Sift cents a box. Hatch's I'niversiil Cough Hyrup costs no more than others and benellls more. If afflicted with anre eyes use Ur.lsaao Thomn-sonslve-water.Lriiv;iHts isil it -3.ner bottls PROMPT, COOP WORK. , . j MV '' suffered with such intense neuralgic pains in the fjee, khe thuuvht blie fourhouis blUcd Uer " hl w"n ST. JACOBS OIL, sad itcuitd her in CAUL SCUEIBE. "The Kore You Say the Less People Remember." One Word W th You, APO "German Syrup" I must sa a a word as) to the ef- hcncy of German syrop. I have used it in my family for iy lamily for B ronchitis, tne result ot ( result of Colds, with most ex- cMlent success. I have taken it my self for Throat Troubles, and have derived good results therefrom. I therefore recommend it to my neigh bors as an excellent remedy iu such rases. James T. Dnrette. Earlys vi'lc, Va. Beware of dealers who offer you "something just ns good." Always insist on having Boschee's German Syrup. MOV AY'S BU PILLS, Purely vtwtikh., mlM Miti rfUnh1v Ctuw ftrrfw I'lftivilon, mi.ifltt Almoriillnn una hfAlthrnl rrtn. Urity. Fnf tlir run of All 1 lunntrrs nf th fttomurl Liver, Bowels, Ul ut, DlwIUrr, NefTOUi DIaea- LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, INDIGESTIGH, DIZZY FEELINGS, BILIOUSNESS, TORPID LIVER, DYSPEPSIA. PFHKKCT DinKKTlON will tw urmmnlitihM by iMkinit Hft.lf Bt'R I -111. j their AM I IllUoi'K pmp Vrltra fhtr ntlmutnlr th liver In th nrrtl'in nf It Ml and tt Ilhirifi thrmin-ti th lillUry due!, Thv pill In tiH nf from two t four will qiitVkl rwilnt lb action of Mm llrsr ami fre flit jiatintt from thvr d(Mn1rnL Otxr or two of Krv1wn t'llla, Ukrn dally b tho Pi.nJt to litlhm naiii ami lor pMHy of th llrrr, will keep the yitcra regular and afyur healthy .lmtloii. Prk, DM. par bo. Sold by all druftglsra. RAP WAY A CO.t NEW 1TOUH Dr. Kilmer's SWAMP-ROOT V v unsay M, MH9.nKUMANMII.LKK, Saves Another Life! Suffered for Eight Long Years ! Mns. Mii.t.ttn Savs: "I hail Iwn tmnlilrd for elirht yeans with moiusch ami heart dltll eultirs. I llvrd moslljr od nil Ik, as every, thins; I ato distrossnl tue so. My kidneys and liver were In a tvrrllile state: was so run down and nervous that at times I couM neither sleep or eat. I was treated liy the Lest Thv- siciansln ChieaRO and elsewhere without any benefit whatever. As a last resort I tried Dr. Kilmer's Ks amp-Hoot, and before 1 had used the third bottle I ivaliied that 1 was rain ing in every way. Tfao uso of twani-Koot has made a marvelous S ure in my ease. Now 1 enjoy every thing that I eat, and ean (to to bed and vet a frnod night's sleep. Anyone doubting this statement may writs and I will gladly answer." Mrs. German Miller. ec.lth, 1S93. Ppringport, Mich. Cnaraatea lTss rtmtents of On Buttle, If yiw ars not U'lu'Sivd, Itnta fti wlU rrtuiMl to juu lit prtos paid. IaallSs' (iaMs Is Health" sad Oasallatlva Free. X J L-- Or. Kilmer S vo.. Bin? button. IS. T. ROOT A Bnwsrlsts, ftO. r SI.OS l.. A Pure Norwegian Oil is the kind used in inc production of Scott's Emul sion Hypophos phitesof Lime and Soda are added for their vital ef fect upon nerve and brain. No mystery surrounds this formula the only mystery is how quickly it builds up flesh and brings back strength to the weak of all ages. Scott's Emulsion will check Consumption and is indispensable in all wasting dis eases. Prprd h Rontt t towns. NY. All rlriirrlol.i. r.iinp t Cures Consumption, Coughs, Cronp, Hor rhrottt. Sold bv all Drupntt oa a Guaranty Garfield Tea sa t'uruoMrk Ht-(lau-hivlt-ttrksirtijiiU-ifti Hmv Doelinf III 1 1, gsvuuulr trw. llAkitUTKA('. SlV W 4lhHt.,.X Cures Constipation il rL0HSl ILa jiil ii'ss. ' RIIEUMATIHAI. Mr. WilK. t F. Cook, Canajoharie, N. V , writes: " Awoke one morniriK with excrut latitat paim in my shoulder. Tried various reliefs for sudden paint without effect ; went to my oliice ; the pam became insufferable ; went home at u o'clock and used 6T. JACOBS OIL! effect magical, nam cca&cd, aud at i o'Uutk w:it luwoik; cure permanent." NEURALGIA. Litti.k Ramos, Wis. PTHE KIND ! THAT CUREO Jt r I: H K A '1 ii 4 ':.sm n . j M lisxin. r. Finn rs-fn. f i tVrlnlh, N. V. R IIELPLFSS AXD &LH EKIXG, FAINT AND WEAK FROMrJ RHEUMATIC TOEMENT, Li Trr crura nt f U DANA'S. H 1 Pawa ARArAHit.r,A Co.! II O ttrtTi.rMrv I tit t. WT9 nM. k tirty. , , E3lim fmmr. K.-r thf Ut A yen 1 hsivr ht n anUVrrr wMh llhrnmiitUm. Pl'Mfl at ttniM I rould not stir my arm. "$ PshniM. Vsi itliriiNl with a hnrnin rnintlnii in mr t"tnch with setffrr imlni. iasn hail ttistt mv Anavasra trrr ilrawn mil n would bt t uliii nnd wmk. u 1 wuW kardljr t U DANA'S ii SAKSAPAIULLA Inr1 ttiT itnnwi'ti ( WFI.!,, no pit In in vnj$$ FJ Yountnily, IAMK1.C. tfioi.J;tT07J. plt'lnrtnn, tlir rll-lnnirn UrtifKiirt, MnlM..l f i Tort (Hi, N. viiiax It tuffldent ftuanuiUt uiti kt U true. " Dana Sarssotrllla Co., Baffatt, Main. wlth I'nffs, K.mimds sn1 I'ntnts which stslo ins bnt, injure the Intn sn,l hum ri'rt The ltl.ln Sim stov,. I'oh.l, in llrllllsnt. Odor less, DurslMe, nn.l the enn.umer iur. Ctir no Ua or glass iwkwe with every .ur. hse. S 4 9 S S S S iS Hi-i-ii S1! Did you ever want a" Tack? i s want a Nail? (all to find cither lack or nail when yu wanted to nsil or tsi k ? How handy then a package of ) (AUsUcstusuit,) ' nd a carton of HOME NVUS (all sizes for home uses) (j Dont pet cnught that way SRain. All ft ) dealersM'U llomcNailsaiiil ilomcTscks 5 ) Msds solely by tlie Atlas Tack Corn's, Boston ( av Wsre'ienie.-B -ron. Kiw Yo:k. Plitlt hihls, ? C'hl, sxo, ltJUImon, K.itil'r.iiri..-i,lotiii. fwier'.. Tsunton. M. Fairhtten.M.. 2 3SS9i . 9 9 9M9& 9&9&,9V9&9-3& MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS WITH II 1 HI THOMSON SH If SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. Mo tool! required. Utilr a hammer needed drive nt e'lnrh tnm efttity anJ quit k;, leaving the el inch in iitriv ftnvveth. H i'i'''" no m r to ho rnvle In ti- U-m hnr nor txirr i'r te Itn eta, Ther are alrmBT onh and Gamble. ilil!Um ddw In uttk All riwtti. itniforni r rte'i, put tip Itt boxes. Aid y vur slrnlcr for ilient. or enl 40a, ta toiupa tor a bo ui iou, ar(eJ kiala. alan'lilbjr JUDS0N L. THOMSON MFG. CO., w.si.Tiitn, SAI, v W. L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE noWp. v Do yoa wear them 7 When next In need try a pair, they will give- you mors comfort and isrvlca for tnt money than any other make. Bet In th) world. 45.00 4.00 13.00 25a 3.50 r; 2.50 92.00 II.'7S 2.25' W. L. Douglas Shoes art made In ill the Latest Styles. If you "wan u fine DRESS SHOE don't nay $6 to $9, try my $3.50, $4 or $5 Shoe, They will fit equal to cut tom mate and look and wear ai well. If you wlh to Konomlie in your footwear, you can do io by purchasing W. L. Douglas Shoes. My name and price Is stamped on the bottom, look fcr It when yd buy, Take no sub stitute. I send shucs by mail upon receipt of pries, postage free, when Shot' I,-h1.t cannot supply y OUi W. L. IJOl (il.AS. Ilroi klon, Mass. .uiu b THE OLD l .K-- JtH Mt res , -,--...aJ.,::IH'"t',!ln4,rV"- - ....sittj 'Ti; lirSU kVFRY Vn;n(4w VJCaS-Z-.T, AS S." i v , a ANY OTMf-'" ,0 WORN NICHT AND DAY. Hoi In tha worst ni uro mm riistr ulv Ut all cm-unuiiir47-a. J i AI.lSTBs(l'. FPerfect i i i aa. New I'at. IiuiiroTemenl Husl t'ni.aiitl rulea ff 'ineaurcri.t'iit fct-urelj vii. ii. v. iiuufM tatt. lfan.Ki.s) t . ,41 J(roud ay, N.V. Cilj, AniSIII MoriihinA Habit 4'uiDti II. IO I!WJJ toatSUa. Nullity tlllcured. GOITRE CURED j" touinuiilvM anil rowia , ho aae Hk niDKi or Aattv ; a vtu.ukaua fiao tCura tor I joatiiiupUou It baa .- I IbousMkuda. It baa not injur ' 3ii mitt it as nut lad to tak. ! it u U'.a beat oou ih rruu , tsiQ eferrwbrrri A. Li Z IS SLASTIO A 0 K&J? ROSS Jt W 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers