NEWS AND NOTES FOB WOHJEN. Flower jewelry is in demand. Trains have become narrower. Brocade satchels are fashionable. Turkish teas are the new sensations. Fan painting is the coming caprice. • Jet snakes are used for hat ornaments. "Koyal blue" is a new shade in cloth. Dressing bags are now made of lizaid skin. Reefers are in great demand for chil- j dren. Crepe and velvet adorn the same toque. I Bedford cording is made for carriage , cloaks. Short jackets are set aside as quite out ( of date. Stripes will reduce the width of a fat ' womau. Simplicity is the order of things in riding habits. The Princess of Wales is a first rate •photographer. Very becoming fichus are made of lace and silk combined. I A home for poor girls has recently been opened in San Francisco. Camel's hair suitings have figures ol Persian coloring in long, silky hairs. 1 Very narrow belts of silver and French gilt are worn with afternoon dresses. Orange-colored facings, cordtags, lin ings, and trimmings are iu high vogue abroad. I Miss May Lyle Smith, of Chicago, is the most accomplished lady flutist in this country. A London woman has a class of 100 cooks to whom sho gives "entire diuuer lessons." Many gowns now considered the acme of style are the counterpart of those seen in old portraits. Let no fat woman dabble in the fall, high sleeve. Every inch of c'oth adds a foot to her width. The heirs of a wealthy Austrian who died recently have given $15,000 to found a school of housekeeping for girls. The ideal umbrella is a dull red oi dark blue silk, with a natural wood stick and a small handle of Dresden china. The plateau hats appear to have taken the fancy of the people who ought not wear them—i c., those with perfectly round faces. Brocades are growing in favor in Eu- I ropean cities, appearing in more variety i and greater gorgeousntss and brightness than ever before* Miss Lincoln, daughter of the United States Minister to England, wore a white satin costume with silver trimmings to I the last drawing room. The Queen of England cares nothing 1 about old lace. She patronizes the j lloniton lace makers when any bridal vails or dresses are in request. The bridal train of the daughter ol Princess Victoria Louise, daughter of I Princess Christian, is to made at the Koyal School of Art Needlework. Mrs. Chauncev M. Depew dresses with great taste, wears very costly Jeweh when she wears them at all, and is a brilliant and accomplished pianist. The oMcer old fashion of cutting the bodice oil in a straight line around the shoulders, and finishing it by a broad turn-down frill of lace, has been re vived. _ __ _ Spring Medicine ( Is so important that * everybody knows its ne ; cessity and value. And there's nothing equal to Hood's Sarsaparilla To Purify the Blood, create an appet to and overcome That Tired Feeling. 100 Doses One Dollar DADWAY'S II READY RELIEF. THE CHEAI'KST AM) BEST MEDI CINE FOR FAMILY USE IN THE WORLI>. NEVER FAILS TO RELIEVE PAIN. Cures and Prevents Colds, Coughs, bore Throat, Inflammat ion, Rheu matism, Xeuralgia, Headache, Toothache, Asthma, Diffi cult. Breathing. CURES THE WORST PAINS ID from one to twenty minutes. Not one hour after xeadlmr this advertise ment need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. INTERNALLY, a half to u teaspoonful In half a tumbler of water will In a few minute* cure Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Vomiting, Heart burn, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, Llarrhrea, Colic, Flatulency and all internal pains. 50c. Per Hottlr. Hold by Driitffflata. QADWAY'S II PILLS. An Excellent and Mild Cathartic. Purely vegetable. The safest and l>est medicine in the world for the cure of all disorders of the Liver, Stomach or Bowels. Taken acoordinK to directions they will restor# health and renew vitality. Price, 2ftc. a box. Sold by all druggists, or mailed by RADWAY A CO., 32 Wirrin Street, New York, on receipt of price. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. THB USB OF CREAM. There are very few people who hare abundance of cream to use who make proper use of the advantage. All good housekeepers know, nowadays, that a cup of the best made coffee in the world is stale, flat and unprofitable without cream, unless, indeed it be drank iiftT dinner perfectly clear and strong. It is a barbarism that only a few of our cheaper restaurants are now guilty of, to offer coffee with milk. On the contrury it seems to us that tea gains nothing, I but rather loses some of its delicacy in I flavor when served with cream, gaining a body that is inconsistent with its na'ure. There are none of the break fast cereals that arc not doubly delici"V» served with cream. A pasty, half-cooked dish of oatmeat served with thin milk is quite a different dish from the same grain when each kernal of the mush is swollen out to full distinct perfection, and it is served hot with ice-cold cream. There is something particularly delicious in whipped cream served with any kin/l of sweet fruit. Preserves of all kinds are excellent with whipped cream, yet what a comparatively rare thing it is to see them served in this way, except in families where there is a French chef. The use of cream in soups and meat dishes is only beginning to bo under stood in this country. There "are few of the thick white soups that do not owe their perfection to the cup of hot cream added just before serving. Creamed chicken, or chicken served in a fricassee in which the yolks of eggs are freely used with cream, is especially delicious. There are few dishes of fried fish that may not be appropriately served a la creme, or in ereara sauce. Often a cream sauce is make of milk, and it is very nice made in that way, but by way of variety, make use of genuine cream and see how excellent the change is. Cro quettes and many other dainty entrees of meat owe their supreme excellence to the use of cream. Thus far we have not touched upon the almost innumerable de lightful desserts that may be made with a foundation of cream. Charlotte Russe becomes the simplest of desserts when once the art of beating cream is acquired. This can be done with an ordinary egg whip, but most persons can succeed better with a cream churn. The ordinary little churn of tin, a cylinder but two inches across, is of no practical value, and therefore a delusion and a snare. To be of use a churn should be a cylinder at least three and a half inches across, and about ten inches long. Cream can be rapidly beaten in such a churn. As the froth rises it is skimmed off on a sieve, which is placed over a pan to drip. There is always some cream in a quart that will not beat to froth, and this will drain into the pan and should be used to coffee or some other purpose. It is not necessary to beat cream to a froth in making ice cream, or in making desserts in which cream is used. Bavnrian creams and all varieties of mousses call for beaten cream. That grand triumph of the French chief's art, a gateau St. Ilonore, is made with a combination of puff paste and the boiled paste used for eclairs and cream cakes. Whipped cream properly flavored and sweetened and a suitable decoration of candled fruit com pletes the dish. An iced or cold rico pudding made with a mixture of whipped cream and boiled rice properly flavored is one of the best desserts we have.—> New Fork Tribune. SEASONABLE BOOTS. Soups present an excellent opportunity, writes Mrs. Parker in the Courier-Journal, for the housekeeper to display good tasto and judgment, in always selecting the most suitable kind for the particular oc casion and season. Tl?e heavy meat or lish soup appropriate for a mid-winter dinner is wholly unsuitable for spring and summer, when a light soup should be served. Many of spring vegetables make excellent and healthful soups. Tho following recipes for preparing them will be found reliable and economical: Sorrel Soup—Put two tablespoonsful of butter in a saucepan; set it on tho Are and let melt; putin a pint of sorrel and stir one minute; add a quart of soup stock, with salt and pepper: boil five minutes. Beat the yolks of two eggs, putin the tureen, pour the boiliag soup over; stir until well mixed. Serve with crutons. Artichoke Soup—Melt a piece of but ter the size of an egg in a Haucepan; slice one small turnip, half an onion and half a dozen artichokes, with a slice of bacon, add all to tho butter and stir over the fire for ten minutes; add a pint of starchJ let boil together until the vegetables ard cooked, then add a pint of water, season with salt and pepper, strain, stir in a tablespoonful of butter and the beaten yolk of an egg. Clear Soup—Melt a quart of stock gradually, bring to a boil, season with salt and pepper. Serve with ciutons, to make which, cut stale bread into thin slices, spread it lightly with butter on one side, and cut in small squares. Put in a pan and set in the stove until brown. Jullienno Soup—Scrape and cut ono carrot, peel and slice half a turnip, ono Irish potato, and put onto boil for one hour, then add a cup of shelled pea 3, a tablespoonful of (canned) tomatoes and rice each, boil until tender, add pieces of stock, season with salt and pepper, and let boil two minutes aud serve. Turkish Soup—Melt a quart of stock, bring to a boil, add half a teacup of rice and let boil twenty minutes, strain aud return to the kettle. Beat tho yolk of two eggs and add a tablespoonful of cream, mix in the soup and stir over tho fire for two or three minutes. Season ■with salt and pepper and serve. Asparagus Soup—Take three large bunches of asparagus, cut away the hard, tough parts and boil the heads until tender. Drain; take a pint of the asparagus heads and set aside, rub the remainder through a colander and mix with two pints of light soup stock, set on the tire to boil; season with salt, pep per and a teaspoonful of sugar. Cut the asparagus heads in small pieces, put is the soup, let heat and serve. A Trapper's life. I Queer Superstitions. Tho winter, though not Zulus of Africa believe that per citements, is a long and lonely w h o die sudden or violent deaths the work very hard. For six n>K e keen killed by the rainbow. _ A'l ece no liviug soul and have oH{ v {d ua ls among them who lose their dog for company. Very likalyKg by falls, drowning or wild beasts may bo poorly paid for your Hjgh because the rainbow has devoure trapped one whole winter rH{ r ka-la, or spirit. In the New lic caught four marten by my land K] eg there is, or was, a colony of pro- After I had been at it for a tinMj ona i disease makers, who live by col tliat there were no marten in theH; D g guch rubbish as the skin of a and as I happeued to have twH ana which a man has eaten. The traps with me, I started trappiH aD a akin is rolled up and s ' ow y ontl caught thirty-seven durB ne d, the result being that as it burns winter. I consumer of' the fruit becomes more When the trapping is at an A more sick until be makes tip his begin to think of getting yourKd to propitiate the wizards by pres market. The skins must first hcK. But even the wizards are not se to your canoo, if you are trappiaK. against such influences, and at times coast or a large river, or else outßy themselves discover that sombouy is settlement. The furs are made King their rubbish and so are driven bales of a size convenient for Aippeal for mercy. The custom o and carried out, a cache being nKiu« the "passing bell" took its rise your first load if you have to inaK] the notion that its sound won < or more trips. Then your oafc ( . away the evil spirits that «too» stowed and you set sail for your Vting at the bed of a Bick man for Ins which on this northern coast is geß. Abyssinian sorcerers attach to the Victoria, where the skins are soldlge of a person whom they wish to tor tion. m by inflicting injuries upon his like- Nothing definite can be said ab>< j ;. ni j ,l^[ l r^.- f . v & Co., l'rops., Toledo, O. earthquakes near new and full moil] by druggists, price 75c. exceeded the number at the AS A bankers recently formed nn asso very nearly iti the. proportion of sixl _ four. In a number of exccedinl To Hlnpel C!olH» ( elaborate calculations M. Briseo has i ftc bes and Fevers, to cleanse the system ileavored to show that, however the f| imll> . yct BO ntly,when costive or bilious, .ires were handled, they ahvays presJ' ( ' ho Woonpnu - i„.«ithv ac tnore than" a passing allusion to or weakening them, curious speculation. It does, howevtT "^ appear to be an inevitable deductiif rUS1 ° ——1— — ~ from the evidence, not only that eartfs Rfter .lay's use. nuakes occur more frequently at tll,j OUB rUr ,.,. Treatise and S3 trial bottle periods of new and full moon, but tlii I)r. Kiine.wi Arch St.. —y iln- I heir frequency increase at tiie time whelrhc Convroienm oi woiui 1 ' .. Ihe moon is nearest the earth and ditninl Krie Is ]°traeks between New York ish when it if most distant; and. ">*» change of.can .for any chuM Dver, th'it earthquake shocks are Kates lower than via. any other frequent when the moon is near thl buloU9 an " d Nervous meridian that when she is ninety def""" " [>rees from it. M. Perrey, the French! - •dentist, tried to figure out some connec faQk wl , lion between moon phases and earth-1 VII V ITfll Tl^ quakes as long ago as 1844.— 5t. 3 ' (l)j cj Republic. ' F BPB cured by The Cat's Toilet. , Mi As a rule, animals are clean by nature. I I V I 3 Brushes and combs most animals carry Kl I ■ US ad 1 with them. Cats, large and small, make according io the most careful toilets of any class of fciRECTIDNS with each animals, with the exception of some of I I ' the oppossums. The lions and tigers - i* ArtXl P' |H M [1 /V I ner as the cat, wetting the dark, India rubber-like ball of the fore foot and the DUNDS. CUTS. SWELLINGS inner toe, ami passing it over the face CHARLES *. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore. Ml. and behind the ears. The foot is thus % NY N u—l7 at the same time a face sponge and brush, - — CL , RE OUAUANTKED and the rough tongue combs the rest of IfIMFRING. FS-ici.-uer.nin .SEtHS the body.— Brooklyn C itizen. Bedford AV„ iiroouiy.., S. Y BEWARE I Cheap J S. S. S. WILpURE. j There is imitations ' My daughter had |of chronic ) Only 0118 < Eczema, which for |flve years « o o should be \ had baffled the skill ♦hnf They neveH commenced using S.g. Before ? OWer. $ finishing the second 1 the scaly ■> CUre ? incrustations had netdisappeared. I continue and are < using S. S. S. until slls entirely cured. I waited S before reporting the c 4 see if the cure was perma- Often > nent. Being satisfied!; she is freed from the an j......... \ noying disease for all tto come, I send you this. dangerous. ( Y. VAN, Bandy Bottom) V a. BOOKS ON BLOOD AND SKISEASES FREE. THE SWIFT Atlanta, Ca. Allayc l*rJn au^lailltllon, Apply uito the bottrxl*. lt ts Jt/ Absorbed. HBHBBBi&alDniggtoti or by mail. ELY BiiOS., jurcn St., N. St— [ scorn | {EMULSION! '] Pure Cod j j pjlkyfr Liver Oil and | j |:Kf HYPOPHOSPHITEB j | 17 f(j of Lime and | • Soda , lfl endorsed and prescribed by loading I I physician* because both the Cod Lhw OO \ and Jiy/Htphonphi ten ar« the recognised j agents lit the euro of Consumption. It is I as palatable as inlllt. ; Scott's Emulsion Kmulitirn. It J I is a tvondrrful t Irnli I'rmlurtir. It it the [Jieti for CONSUMPTION, 1 Scrofula, Bronchitis, Wasting- Dii- I MUM, Chronic Conghs and Colda. S Ask for Scott's Emulsion ami take no other. It's sometimes said patent medicines are for the igno rant. The doctors foster this idea. "The people," we're told, "are mostly ignorant when it comes to medical science. Suppose they are! What a sick man needs is not knowl edge, but a cure, and the medi cine that cures is the medicine for the sick. Dr. Pierce's k Golden Med ical Discovery cures the "do believes " and the " don t be lieves." There's no hesitance about it, no "if" nor "possi bly." It says—"l can cure you, only do as I direct." Perhaps it fails occasionally. The makers hear of it when it does, because they never keep the money when the medicine fails to do good. Suppose the doctors went on that principle. (We beg the doctors' pardon. It wouldn't do!) Choking, sneezing and every other form of catarrh in the head, is radically cured by Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Fifty cents. By druggists. EVEBYMOTHE" Should Have in Tbe Home. Hrop).vd on Su„nr, ChUdrfn bore M t»kc JO, A* o ''*""*!*™*f°l Bon- Throat, ToildUtln. Collo,."J ,J k „ Uevt* Summer Complaint tutu. 13ri»iHe« »• THINK OF IT. In t»<-r «« *KAK" I" f T" V l flrrt lir 1 s loitSHnv A (Vv—lt tc Kitty ycnri" rtnye I nr*» lear.,.-.Vo'f your JoMswm'f' Yi P t U |Vmy f"""* ' "T» ,rt Everv Sufferer .tic*. n«- to\i« llco.tKhe. [MphthoriH.Oouphs.Catarrt, Jor.™. Til' nn-"'» tn Body or Stiff JolnU or Mrwn. ~„n , | lh| P t I SA?SL« PUffilM^VN L 0 P C A O^^.si2s in734BPAPERS WlTc" «, linvc "Jlf.^Nr?*" wltk ui< v met% v«• j»i «• • Best Truss Ever Useifi I "° UI "l" rt" r BAGGY KNEES Wber J. j" OHKKL*!' 71/. W»«)'i.nt,.n Klri-M. Iloitoo. m I EWIS' 98 LYi I Powdered and Perfumed. la (PATENTED.) Strongest and purest Lye made. Makes the best perfumed Hard in 20 minutes without boil tuff. It is the Ix-stfor softening water, cleansing waste pipes, ■ ' disinfecting sinks, closets,wash mm I ing bottles, paints, trees, etc. ML PENNA. SALT MFG. CO., itfrrm | Uen. Ageuts, rbila., ra. PKO LOI3ETTE'6 WEW I MORY BOOKS. Crftlclf ii two went Memory •Nut At, 1.l ull Tables of Content* forwarde.l only tom vho send stamped directed en^ e .|P*^ l ., iliso l*n :tu.i 1-osT 112 Khr. oi uie AC< oi Never 1 .atinj. Addrosj IT ,ui"£rTK Ml New Yorfc^ •Many liws stiaJl be to ih* wicked."—***-fj;* N IDA Nil I'onltlve cure. Nervous «I*uy»lcalDe billy. Me nepreMlon. of OinfldenM, tatbn Hes teas Memory,etc., W»"J; Imunent. . X)unlevy's ireatiw tswlod) Dr* utiY Man i Co., I'M WnaWnut n Ave. Scranton.fi mi mm PBITP W. T. Fitzgerald PA VIMTS Washington. U. C I lv I 40-pnice Doeit free FRIZERA^E BIBT INfHK WOHXII %W u, 11 - ilj Pi'K'4 m ™ * "-.TTJL r Th _ BftfK duns •■« rtUabl- rill *r sal* Y®r THC ORIOINAt AWO Ladle*, uk l)rui|l«i kind Jk/Wi .sViiMrutiow 'm4tmtimn». HM lf,«U U*-' Drm WP ,, i 3 "German Syrup".. Those who have not A Throat used Boschee's Get man Syrup for some and Lung severe and chronic Specialty. trouble of the Throat and Lungs can hard ly appreciate what a truly wonder ful medicine it is. The delicious sensations of healing, easing, clear ing, strength-gathering and recover ing are unknown joys, tor uer man Syrup we do not ask easy cases. Sugar and water may smooth a throat or stop a tickling—for a while. This is as far as the ordinary cough medicine goes. Boschee's German Syrup is a discovery, a great Throat and Lung Specialty. Where for years there have been sensitiveness, pain, coughing, spitting, hemorr hage voice failure, weakness, slip ping down hill, where doctors and medicine and advice have been swal lowed and followed to the gulf of despair, where there is the sickening conviction that all is over and the end is inevitable, there we place German Syrup. It cures. You are a live man yet if you take it. $0 rp?rfoßlA S -f; UNEXCELLED ! AFI'LIEU EXTERNALS'* F° u Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Pains in t® Limbs, Back or Chest, Mumps, Sore ( Throat, Colds, Sprains Bruises, Stings ol Insects, Mosquito Bites. TAKEN INTEKNAI.I.* I. net* Ilk. ,« ' 'tX'crXiWift DinrrlHi n. nyxrnn-ry. l <>■■<- *- *' rk l'*T <,nC ( liarmlCNK. "«' h WnrrnlilrH nlno direction" Bcroiiipnnj In".I'EMETKA. WN^U\»lf""J«Vl? < l. Try 'tut,, *".d by a., d*.,- 11" 1 " 1 1 V \E\ V YOIIK. UK POT. •»<» Ml KHAN !-T.. >"■»_ -VASELlNE mmmmmat lully i: in 3%i ' ">«'•<>' nil» » - une oottle of yow-uao ... u uiicjarof I I,lf* 1 ilk*» of V tWt'llllC lyiilll|l , l l,r l " ' , I ouc iwu-ounoj uou.o ui W uile \ «»eiiuo. »l.l> , ir'li'i a' ** your Iruga"' /»»*jj-m, u j,i ,uiU o>r lnl„, .aoeu* t or „ t:lif»«l»rouitU .illil. l'°" -* ... Wl.-.K SFKVOI'S Wbetchkd ihortal"(tet QjUK W ||" kot- 1 v'lTli Vv'mr!"' sample CWT „0 ~-r ♦ Hustlfrswuiitiiliiww. w.u.wiu-". ___