HOW TO (iKT RICH. Zvery (irrnl ForJunr 'l«df by Somf Short Road n> Wenllli. The desire to see something of tlie famous mining region of the ltocky Mountains let! me, s-vernl years ago, to puss h portion of my summer vacation in the vicinity of the world renowned I'on .stock Mines. While idling nliout and absorbing, as it were, in formation thru; -h the pores of my skin, a similarity of tnstes brought me into dailv contact with one of the Flood, Mackey & O'Brien syndic ite of Bonanza Kings, and the inelegant but forceful philosophy of his great accumulator of wealth made a lasting impression upon my mind. Sitting ineevening in hisroomand enjoy ing at once his nunilit humor and his fragrant Havana, 1 remarked, "Captain, one of the old proverbs recites that 'there is no short road to wealth, 1 but you have found one. You are still a young man, com paratively, and are quoted a multi-million aire." "Yes," he said, "and of all the un true savings some of the proverbs, pop ularly supposed to embody the wisdom of the ages, are the most false and misleading. Look, lor a moment, over the list of wealthy men whose fortunes amount to $50.- 000 and upward, and point out tome, if you can, one single individual who has not ac n • ' ; s money by some short road to wealth.' 1 " k uu days of man are few, and time is not giveu in thisaue of the world for men to ac cumulate much wealth except by means of special openings, and by taking advantngeof the nigh cuts." "You may be right," I said, •'but where one man succeeds in reaching his j»oal by a cross country road, do not the many fail?" "No," said he, "Didn't I see you starting out yesterday by the main road to the camp on the other side of the moun tain?" "Yos," I snid. "Well," he replied, ' you could have taken the trail over the hills, sive 1 pro-.ably two hours'walking, and reached the camp in absolute safety and ■certainty, only you did not know of the trail. It is just so in business, the man that wants to travel with an ox team and ride in the wagon, must go by tiie big road, while the fellow who goes by the trail will get there first, and if there is only one supper to be ha 1 at the station the cross country traveler is the one who will eat it. Take my own experience, which is simply an il lustration of the way every fortune has been made. 1 was keeping a little store here and barely 'making longuo and buckle meet,' when I hul nil oppoituntity to get hold of a block of stock in the il'en infant Comestock Mines. 'I chawed it o"er' for three days and decided to take it in, and that move lead naturally to al that 1 have done since, and proved the foundation of my for tune. I bought more stock, as 1 had money; bought stock in other good mines, and before 1 knew it 1 was well fixed." "But," 1 said, "prices here are so high that there is little chance for a man of small means." "That's true," ho replied, "but there are plenty of gootl properties about here, and their success is oniv a question of means au i good management. Then, too, if you want to do something in mines, I will tell you of a field where you can do bi' ter than here, and one that in my opinion is Lre best on the American continent. I shoula have gone myself to it if 1 had not been so heavily interested here tliatl could not get away. 1 refer to the gold region of North Georgia. There is the first, tin ,as 1 said betore, I think the best turning region in this country." "Why," I said, "is not mere heard about it?"' "Because,"' ho replied, "planting was the great absorbing industry ot the iSouta before the war. That region during the war was the battle ground, and miners were forced into the West, where, in the meantime, the centre of the industry has become established. In Georgia you can get hold of mines on the basis of SIOO,- <IOO that in the West would lie worth a million, and to make them success ful you only nee 1 money to operate and efficient manngeuo lit. There you can work out doors every day in the year; labor which is high here is cheap there; fuel and water are abundant, and the ores generally in larger bodies, tqually as rich or richer lhan ours, unit the cost ot milling, owing to the softer walls about tlio veins an I lower wages, is less chun one-quarter of the cost fcr the same wor* here. Naturally I was interested to look up the history of the t'oinstocl;, and I found that stock quoted at Sh.i 0 per share in file early days o; operations, sol i soon nlt<r as high as tli'B) per share, and that upwards of t-HOO,- 000,000 were paid out in dividends to share holders. To a knowledge of these facts, and a sub sequent thorough acquaintance with the Georgia gold region, winch my friend, the Captain, has not overestimated, may ha di rectly attribute ! the formation of the At lanta Gold Mining Company. The company lias carefully selected its property, has placed in management of the *ame men of experience, trie t in tlie busi ness, and now places before you the oppor tunity to secure some of its shares at fifty per cent, of their par value, or 15.00 per »hire. The money you pay for these shures wiii be used in erecting complete and suit able reduction mills, and the officers of the company leel sure that at the same time than you are furnishing the funds to put the property upon a paying basis; you will be planting your own feet upon one of these "short roads to wealth" which have enabled every rich man in this country to reach his present position. 1 he stock is lully | ai i up and non-a-s Ms able; the total amount of stock is SIUO,OJO, and $50,000 of this amount is uevoted to the uses of the treasury of the company. The company has reserved the to advance the price ol its shares without for mal notice, and the demand for stock is such that an advance is now in contemplation, but is not as yet ordered. The Houtliern Ranking and Trust Co., of Atlanta. l*a., one of the strongest financial institutions m the South, acts ns transfer agents lor the company, am to it all order's for stock should be adoressed, accompanied either with New York exchange or post office money ord« r for the number ot shares ordered at $5 each. There are now 143,000 nautical miles of cable under the different oceans, which require thirty-seven specially equipped telegraphic ships to keep them in order. Denmark has a system of benevolence by which the honest poor of sixty years of age are insured against want. It is on the presumption that they havealways paid taxes. Indigestion Cured troubled with distress in •ITI my stoma'-ii and indiyes- Sfc tion " vhen 1 took w ■ rsaparilla the k r' effect was surpris int». it Kavo mo great relief, and I now eat B*ss6^without that terrible dis \%m. W.ide. tre-s. I also rest well at Alffht and am in «ood general health, for all of » * , h , l HOOD'S SARSAPARIL LA. AN M. \\ Al»k. Hoot and fcinoe dealer, 17 Merrimack Street, Lowell, Ma.>s. Hood's Pills cure liver ills, constli it ousnew, jaundice and sick headache. Try them* v N L— :c* CUKBS RI3iNG bk <EAST .-. "MOTHER'S FRIEND" IVXfTS? offered child-bearing woman. ! have been a in nl-wife for many years, and in n«c where "Mother's friend" hart »•<•< nu-. .1 it has aeeomplished wonder, aii'i relieved ninth •ufferiujf. It is the l>e.«t r» meH\ fur ri f !ni: of the breast known, and worth tlie price for that •lone. Mas. M. M. Jim RTHI. Montgomery, Ala. I can tell all expectant mothers if thev will nse a few bottles of Mother', Friend tlie'v ill go through the ordeal without anv pain and ■offering. MRS. MAY BHAKHAM. X. I». Used Mother's Friend before birth ot my eighth child. Will never ewe its praise. Mas. J. F. MOORE, Colusa, Cal. Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price, $1.50 per bottle. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., dd by all drugging. ATLAHTA, <;A. GALLOWAY AND ANGUS CATTLE. There is considerable difference be tween Galloway and Angus cattle, although both are black and hornless. The former belong to the west coast of Scotland, the latter to the east coast and the neighborhood of the city of Aber deen, whence they are called sometimes Aberdeen or Aberdeen-Angus cattle. These are liner in form and hair thau the Ualloways, which have long, silky hair aud a stouter build. Uoth are good beeves, but the Angus are the better milkers aud give exceedingly rich milk. —American Dairyman. THE COW STALL. The cow stall is having much atten tion and ingenuity lavished upon it, but the horse worries aloug with the most objectionable kind of imprisonment in the narrow quarters where he is fastened in a painful manner. A few days ago a stable was burned, and a valuable liorse was slowly roasted to death, because held by a chain that could not be loosened or cut. Imprisonment iu chains is a refinement of cruelty awarded to pirates and the most atrociou3 criminals; and this because of the extreme torment of it. It breaks the heart of a sagacious horse and is the cause of those uuavail iug protests, the constant kicking and pawing—eloquent remonstranca against the cruelty.—Chicago Sun. SOWING RYE. Rye is a crop easily raised and is sub ject to fewer casualties than wheat and grows freely on soils tha' will not produce remunerative crops of other grains. It may often be profitably sown In the fall on light soils ns a kind ot supplementary crop which may be used for winter pasture wheu the ground is frozen, and also be cut for soiliug in earlj* spring, when the green stubble can be turned under as a fertilizer for a coming crop. On ground well adapted to the 'ulture of the sweet potato rye is an excellent crop to precede it, and, whether pastured or cut lor soiling, the remains of the rye when plowed under will bo of considerable benefit to the root crop. Then, if equal care is taken to turn under the sweet potato vines after the harvesting, successive crops may be raised with but little fertilizing material other than what is furnished by the rye aud the potato vines. The 1 latter contain much fertilizing matter, I which, if all saved, will go a good ways toward making up for what is carried off in the tubers. The trouble iu such cases often is that the rye is so promising iu its appearance in the spring that the in ducement to keep it a few weeks longer for the grain and straw is too strong to permit of its being plowed under for green manure. While the amount of fertility derived from the green rjc j would not be large, the cost of the seed I would be small, and the seeding would j be done at a time when farm work is not pressing. It would therefore seem that such a use of land at a season wheu it would otherwise be unemployed might often be advisable.—New York World. CUTTING OFF THE BLOOMS. The old fancy that cutting off the blooms of potatoes will increase the weight and quality of the tubers seems to have broken out afresh, but careful experiments made in England and Swit zerland disprove this. The theory was given to the world by a German ex perimenter, who published the results of j a series of experiments which showed [ that a considerable gain in the weight and quality of the tubers resulted in i cutting off the blooms. An account of a series of experiments made by an intelligent Englishinau seeai 1 to be so thorough that it is worth while to give his results. His expeiiments ex tended over a period of three seasons, with but one variety, Paterson's Vic toria potaso, a profuse bloomer, and at that time in general cultivation in Eug- ! land. In no single j'ear was there any j difference in the quality and weight of I the potato, anil the average results showed that there was no gaiu derivable i from this operation. Thorough experiments were made in , Switzerland to test the truth of this I theory. The many varieties of potatoes | grown in that country were subjected to I tbe experiment. The test was carried j through several seasons iu order to make the result more accurate. At the close ol the experiments the conclusion reached did not corroborate the theory advanced by the German experimenter. The Englishman, after reviewing the experiments made in Switzerland and those by himself, draws this conclusion: "This system, therefore, is of no use to j us while we have our present varieties of j potatoes, no matter what it may be else- j where, and if properly tested it will iu I all probabilities be found to be of little value anywhere."—American Farmer. REMINDERS. Two beeves can never be made fat i> a pasture that has only grass enough fo. oue. To keep the poultry free from vermin, their quarters must be kept absolutely clean. Do not expect to sell butter at top price to private customers unless it is top quality. The only way to grow heavier crops each year is to make the land coutinually richer. Few farmers are so situated that they cm afford to keep a cow merely to raise her calf. The best way to keep up with agri cultural progress is to take a live agri cultural journal. To determine whether green-soiling really pays, let us suggest that you try it for yourself. If tobacco is to be made a paying crop it must be given the very best land on the farm. You can never grade up your stock un til you begin to use bcttei animals for breeding. The fastest way to make money in the dairy is to keep always weeding out the poor cows. Th? only way to free the farm from weeds is to cut them always before they goto seed. 'The best success with sheep is attained only by those who believe in both wool and mutton. Stock that is continually tempted by weak fences should not be blamed for becoming breachy. Sweet potatoes cannot be kept through the winter unless you handle them gently when harvesting. The farm will never give you com plete satisfaction so loug as you have to buy fruit from your neighbor. If the weeds have possession of the bed this fall you can hardly expect a good strawberry crop next spring. If the "first-class farmer" would maintain his rank he must keep on studying and learning all the time. If you expect the boy to love the farm you must permit him to get some enjoy ment from it as he goes along. Something new must be planted every week if we wish to maintain a good gar den throughout the season. The wrong way to make money from hogs is by beginning to feed thein only "when big enough to feed off." Youcau never keep up with the work on the farm if you ever put off until to morrow what can be done to-day.— American Agriculturist. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Plant deep in dry weather; shallow in wet. Ascertain the merits and demerits of a cow before buying her. Drive a horse with a rein that both you and the horse can feel. If you want your berry bushes to be productive keep theui cut back. There is generally lime enough in the soil, but its presence is indispensable. There aie few breeds but what will lay well if they are well fed anel cared for. Buckwheat hulls produce piles in pigs. Therefore, it is not very well to use them as food for the pigs. It is thought that pigs grown from old dams exhibit greater vitality thau others, aud arc less liable to disease. Set the first, laying of both turkey and duck eggs under hens; more eggs and better fowls will be secured. The cholera symptoms in poultry in a nutshell are' Intense thirst, debility, prostration, greenish droppings. Young chickens will eat wheat or j sorghum seed when two weeks old and they will be better than soft feeds. In very hot weather see that the chick ens have some chance to get into the shade. Too hot a sun is not good. The enterprising farmer will hasten the fattening of his hogs, so as to liavo them ready for the market in the fall. Stone drinking vessels for poultry arc I better thau tin ones during the summer; j water will keep cool in them longer, j A wide wagon tire is a road maker, I not a rut cutter. One secret of the good roads of France is the wide tires in use there. Lice always attack the poorly-kept, ill fed chickens first. Coal oil is said to bo destructive to them, but must be used with caution. Having a system will save time; have a time for feeding the fowls, for gather ing the eggs, for cleaning out the poul try house and for cleaning the roosts. While liberal feeding is necessary to secure a good growth, poultry should uever be so well fed that they will not j willingly forage for something to eat. Au old gobbler or pea fowl will often | get very troublesome in fighting the other poultry; when this is the case the j quicker they arc got rid of the better. The cost of feeding a thoroughbred flock is no greater than for scrubs, while | such birds give their owner far more I pleasure and he can occasionally sell | fowls or eggs at a good price. The farmer who raises hogs the flesh ' of which is line will be able to get more | thau the maiket price if he once secures i a reputation for such. The big, coarse, ' aud over-fat pork will not bring much \ money, for the simple reason that it does | not sell very good when placed on the t market. All farmers do not use coal, but those j who do can make good use of the ashes, j It is well known that excellent walks can ; be made of them; but they are valuable for another purpose. The hogs will be benefited greatly if the aslie3 are fed to them. They correct the acidity of the pigs stomach, and do a vast amount of good. The Berkshires are one of the oldest breeds in existence, and one of their drawing car ls is a disposition to take ou 1 from the start a great amount of flesh j and fat. Another point in their favor is | the immunity which they have from dis | case. This is not saying that they are disease proof, but on account of their strong constitutions they are more ab'.e •'> keep disease at bay. Trees Which Hear But Once. The sago palm tree bears but one crop 'of fruit. Its load of nuts is its first and final etlort in the way of fruit bearing. The nuts become ripe and are strewn in I thousands around the tree until the I great stem stands up by itself, empty and J bare. Tha branches turn brown and firop one by one to the ground. Inside j the trunk the work of decay is going on | until what at one time was a mass of i white sago and pith becomes nothing but : a collection of rotten brown fibers. One i day the trade wind blows more strongly *.ian usual and the leafless column of the | trunk falls with a crash, destroying in | its fall many of the young palms that j are already springing from the nuts scattered some months before. The tali ! put or Palmyra palm, a native of Ceylon, ! is another tree which flowers and bears fruit but once. When about eighty j years old, which is when it has attained its fuil growth, the flower spike bursts from its envelope with a loud report. In the course of fifteeu or twenty months it | showers down an abundance of nuts, aud this effort to produce a uumeious j succession proves fatal to the parent. | The fruit is round and very hard, about the size of a cherry, and so abundant that one tree will produce sufficient to j plant a large district. Brooklyn Eagle. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. 80AP MARINO. The following is a good recipe for making soap: To one pound of potash add three gallons of water until it is dissolved; then add three pounds of any kind of soap grease, the cleaner the bet ter, to the lye, and set it to boiling. Let it boil slowly go that it will not boil over. It usualiy becomes soap after boiling from one to Ave hours. If it boils down before it becomes sap, add sufficient water to keep the same quan tity in the kettle until it is soap; then add nine gallons of water and stir well together; when cool, this will be a beau tiful white soap if the grease was clean. —New York Dispatch. CHECKER IIOAHD WORK. Woven or checker board work for cushions and anti-macassars is quite popular and not at all difficult to make. For hard usage the wider kind of mohair skirt braid is most serviceable, but satin ribbon is, of course, much handsomer. Select two colors or two shades or the same color and cut the ribbon into strips of the required length; pin each strip to a cutting board or table and weave cross pieces of the other shade in and out with regularity. The intersections should afterwards be secured at the back by an invisible stitch or two. A broader plain ribbon or a piece of plush, match ing one of the shades used in the weav ing, may be sewed on for a border, and for an anti-macassar lace or fringe can be added to the lower edge.—New York World. THE HOCSEWrKE'S TABLE. Here is a list for the materials most commonly used in the kitchen, writes Maria Parloa in the Ladies' Home Jour nal. The spices are all ground; Ginger—l heaping tea»poon£ul, ounce. Cinnamon —1 heaping teaspoonful, { ounce. Allspice—l heaping teaspoonful. gen erous measure, J ounce. Cloves—l teaspoonful, slightly heaped, t ounce. Mace—l heaping teaspoonful, J ounce. Nutmegs 5 equal 1 ounce. Pepper—l heaping teaspoonful, J ounce. Salt—l teispoonful, jounce. Mustard— 2 rouuding teaspooufuls, J ounce. Cream of Tartar—2 tcaspoonfuls, slightly heaped, J ounce. Soda—l teaspoonful, slightly heaped, J ounce. Powdered sugar—l tablespooufut, -J ounce. Granulated sugar—l heaping table spoonful, ounce. Baking powder—l heaping teaspoon ful, i ounce. Butter—l rounding tablespoonlul, ounce. Flour—l rounding tablespoonful, J ounce. Tea—3 scant t-ablespoonfuls, J ounce. Collee, roasted berry—l tablespoon ful, J ounce. Bread crumbs, grated—l cupful, 2 ounces. English currants, cleaned —1 cupful, G ounces. Hice—l cupful, 8 ounces. Indian meal—l cupful, C ounce?. Chopped meat—l solidly packed cup ful, 8 ounces. Pastry Hour—l cupful, 4 ounces. New process tlour—l scant cupful, 4 ounces. Butter—l solidly packed cupful, !> ounces. Sugar—l cupful, granulated, 8 ounces. Liquids—l cupful of ordinary liquid, 8 ounces. The cups used in these estimates hold half a piut, old measure. ABOUT COOKrNG MEATS. The orthodox rule for the cooking of meat, fish and fowl is to allow a quarter of an hour to every pound; yet this re cipe neels tj be mixed with brains. Some families like rare, others well-done meats; again, a joint may be unusually thick or remarkably thin. Again, full grown and mature meats, such as beef and mutton, are best with the red gravy oozing from them; while immature, or white meats, such as lamb, veal, pork, etc., are absolutely dangerous unless done through to the bone. A good rule is to allow twelve to fifteen minutes, ac cording to the taste of the family and the thickness of the joint, for the cook ing of every pound of beef and mutton; fifteen to eighteen minutes for the cook ing of every pound of pork, veal, lamb, ban, bacon, fish and every kind of fowl. Accidents happen, however. The oven may be too hot or too cool, the tire too slow and— what not. So a cook should learn to know by the appearance of the meat itself when it is sufficiently cooked. How can this bo done? By carefully observing the appearance of the meat around the centre bono or bones. If the learner be in doubt, the blade ot a knife can be run in about half an inch at the bone, and the meat slightly raised and carefully examined for a moment or 1 two. After one or two trials this will be found to be an infallible method. It is quite right that next to the bone beef and mutton should be red and juicy, but if the beef be blue or the mutton has that strange raw look peculiar to mutton that has just felt the heat of the fire, the joint needs a little more cooking-j while meats should be white, even to the bone, with the exception, perhaps, of lamb, which many people prefer with a little pinky juice oozing through. Fish—Fish is not eatable till the flesh separates easily from the bones. By running a knife in a little way, say un der the fins, so as not to spoil the ap pearance of the fish, this can be judged of. Chops, Steaks or Cutlets—An inch thick mutton chops or steak, put over a clear fire on a piping hot gridiron, gen erally takes about ten minutes to cook; pork chops and veal cutlets a little longer but the rule ol finding out whether they are rooked or not by examining the bone also holds for them. Turkeys, Chicken and Fowl of all Kinds—Look between the leg and the body of the fowl, and : f necessary, slit the skin a little with a sharp knife, and if the flesh there be still raw looking the bird is not cooked enough. Salt Meats—Salt meats are not so easily tested as fresh meats, yet even here look at the bone. Beware of al lowing the meat to cook so long that it raises itself from the bones, as it were; for then it is what is graphically known as being "done ij rays.''—New York Recorder, Josephine was twenty-three when she married Napoleon. If there is any change in bathing dress fashions it does not appear. Florence Nightingale recently cele brated her seventieth birthday. Two of the graduates this year at the Chicago College of Law were women. A niece of James Kussell Lowell, Miss Ruth Burnett, is to become a Sister of Charity. "Tear bottles" are being revived in modern wares and are again fashionable bric-a-brac. Seven of the eight graduates of the State Library School at Albany, N. Y., this year were women. Women nowadays who never had their ears pierced are s*id to be of more con sequence than those who have. The Lord Lieutenant of Ireland has the privilege of kissing all the pretty girls who are presented to him. Old fashioned Panama hats, such as the Cubans used to wear, are now bent into a fashionable shape for women. A recent wedding present was a set of solid gold chess men, and an ebony chess table, inlaid with gold, for the game. Ordinary ten cent fishermen's hats, trimmed very elaborately, are worn by the fashionable womeu at the seaside. Milady's cabinet for curios is now made to revolve like a book case, and has very ingeniously contrived glass sliding doors. A black pearl necklace worn by Lady llchestcr at a recent entertainment is said to be worth $125,000. There is only a single row of the gems. Queen Sophia, of Sweden, is rarely seen by her subjects. She is a pale, middle-aged lady, almost an invalid, and appears only at long intervals in public. Miss Susan Whitcomb Hassell, of Rcdfield, was nominated for State Su perindent of Public Instruction* in South Dakota by the State Convention of the Independents. What is believed to be the largest rauch iii the world is owned by a wo man—Mrs. Richard King. It lies forty five miles south of Corpus Christi, in Texas, and covers 700,000 acres in ex tent. It is quite noteworthy to what an ex tent feathers are worn this season, tiue, in no wise to the exclusion of flowers, but the decree seems to exact that none but seasonable flowers shall be worn. Two women have been appointed bridge tenders in New Jersey, one at Green Bank and the other at Lower Bank. These are believed to be the only female bridge tenders in the world. The height of fashion in Paris is a dark blue used in combination witli emerald green, so we may be prepared for the appearance of this somewhat incogruous combination in autumn fabrics. The prettiest Japanese fan of the season is gold and silver flecked, open worked spaces filled In with net, on which is painted a foliage, cluster or single wide petaled flower. The outside is cord laced up and down. From eastern Asia comes a plant the flowers of which contain a quantity of juice that rapidly turns black or deep purple on exposure to air. It is used by Chinese ladies for dyeing their hair and eyebrows, and in Japau for blacking shoes. Sixty-five branches of the Young Wo men's Christiau Association have been started in India. In several of these so cieties the membership is composed al most entirely of native women, but in others caste differences arc forgotten and dark and fair meet upon an cqml footing. The distinguishing mark of a real Parisian toilet is a touch of black, deftly added. A favorite method of its ar rangement with slight women is to make a belt with loops of ribbon hanging about the waist, which gives a pleasing fulness to the slight figure and is sug gestive of Venetian slashings. Kate Marsden is one of the world's true heroines. At the age of fifteen she accompanied the Russian Army on its Bulgarian campaign as a member of the Red Cross Society. In lato years sho has labored among the lepers of South Africa and Siberia and believes sho has found a remedy for the terrible disease. The University Club ol San Fraucisco is to have an annex for ladies. There are only four large cities in this country that have taken the "unclubable sex'' and given them a portion of the build ing. They arc the Metropolitan of New York, the Hamilton of Brooklyn, and the Somerset and Algonquin of Bos ton. Perfumes, to be agreeable, should float about the garments, but never overpower the senses. The odor should be subtle and suggestive. Handkerchiefs aud gloves are best perfumed by keeping them in sachets powdered with the favor ite violet, heliotrope, or whatever the preferred scent may be. It is nice also to have small sachets. Mme. Carnot, wife of the President of France, is the antithesis iu physical and mental attractiveness of the preceding mistress of the Elysee, Mme. Grevy, for wnereas the 'atter was a plain and practical old lady, devoid of the graces which the French demand of women iu official station, Mme. Carnot is as charming as she is clever. Yellow is a practically favorite color of the season, and if carefully chosen, suits blondes and, brunettes alike. There is one tone of clear pale, primrose yellow, especially becoming to a dark complexion, which will take the delicacy out of a fair one. A peculiar greenish tiut of yellow, well suited to the sweet pea tinting of blondes, no brunette stiould attempt. The Queen of Italy, once one of the most beautiful girls in the kingdom, is now one of its handsomest women. She is bright ami witty in conversation, and learned, with a leaning toward blue stockingism, but without pedantry. She is universally admired and loved by her subjects, and the attachment King Hum- Dert has for her is a rare example of conjugal devotion IU i. royal household. Steel Maicnet* That Wane. Steel magnets lose their permaticn magnetism at the boiling point of almonu oil. Steel not only WHO* its magnetism but becomes non-magnetic when beated to an orange color. Silvanus Thoni|>noii says that the sudden slumming on of the armnture of a permanent magnet is liable to deteriorate the magneti: m, ami that the sudden detaching of the armature i of advantage to the magnet.—Boitoi Transcript. A iiiuinn la lomr. And with it achitlK hones, chilly feelings, rack ing rnngha and catarrhal cold a. All tln-« symptoms count as nothing if you use I)r. H«»x aie'a (Vrtain Croup Cun* at the first appear nnre of them. Th* \trertte*t of n/' rtmr<ht.* tor serious congestive attack.*. Sold by prominent druggists. JiOc. Manufai tur«*d hv A. I', llox sie,liuffalo. N. V. In a choir of bixte 11 little girls at St. James's Mission, New V ork, na tionalities are said to he represented : Poles, Swedes, Danes, Bohemians, Ilun garians, Germans, French a d English A. M. Priest, Druggist, Slulhyville, Ind.. says: "Hall's Catarrh Cure gives the lieat of satisfaction. i'au get plenty of testimonials, as it cures every one who takes it." Druggist sell it, 76c. ScuiiVY and scorbutic affections, pimples, and blotches on the skin are caused by iwpurt blood which Heechain's Pi 11a cure. Have you Rheumatism? Atkinson's (loin and llheumatic Keinedy will surely cure it For sale by all ilrst-claas druggists. ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results -whec Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the tasto, and act; gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tern effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and 31 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAH FHANCiSCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, Kt. A£L* tORK. h. Y. KILMER'S Kidney, Live>-and BiadderCur®. Itheimßafism, Ltimbafro. pain in joints or back, brick dust in urine, frequent c alls, irritation, intiumation, gravel, ulceration or catarrh of bladder. Disordered Liver, Impaired digestion, g'ovit, billious-heaunch©. SW A "HP-HOOT cures kidney difficulties, La Grippe, urinary trouble, bright's disease. liiMHsre Blood, Scrofiiie, malaria, «en\ weakness ordcblllty. (itmrsntee l'»r content* of OH« Bottle, it no. bciv afltert, Druggists will rohind to you the price paid. At Druggist». 50c, Size, SI.OO Size* M lßTftlida f Guide < Henlth'Trw- Consultntion inm. DR. KLLILBBI Co.. BLNGIIAMTON. N. Y JErlv* RADWAY'S READY RELIEF. NEVER EAILS TO RELIEVE PAIN. The Cheapest and Best Medicine foi Family Use in the World. ft •urpinuf* all other remedies ID fbe wonderful power which it pome**** of t-uriug RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA. The applloatiou of the RKA.DY HELfEF to the part •r p%rt» whore (he difficulty or pain exists will afford ».n-aa l comfort. For Mpraia* Bruise*, nackache. Pain in the Cheat •r SLU-A, ('old*, ConK«stioq«. Inflamqi:ttioa«. I.umba go, Rclatlcu lacht*. T«tothach*.or any ether Fsiu, a few npplicat ion# act like magic, causing the pain ttf ißM.lUtlv *top Thirty to 60 drops In half a tumbler of water will In a few m'.uuto* cure Cramps, Spatmt. Hour Stom ach. Nausea, Vomiting. Seasickness, Palpitation of th« Heart, Chills and Fever. SUIMEH CGMPLAINTS, Piarrhcsa. Dysentery. Cholera Morbus. Faintnes*, Heartburn. Sick Headache, Colic, Wind in the bow. els and all latarnai Paius. Travelers should always carry a bottle of KA!>- WAV'S READY RKI.IEK with them. A few drops In water will prevent sickness or pain from change of water. It i« better than Freuch Brandy or Hitters a* a stimulant. Price .10c. for Bottle. Hold by Drugglsta. MI | RAllfil K &::s Wi Li IIUIIIILA« rkanititf W. L. Doug lit* Shoes, r.Vu? faTO?,'.".' n'-W;: <fco U-T;KENO Brns?-.T,TE. M> 3 OflVfc GENTLEMEW, THE best shoe in the world for the money. jEfsfak. any otbtr ihot i rcr sol • ■ * kL .3s !■ nml iluiid-nrw c»l. flue .••»:.* \ tw*s 11.. r «tvliah. ■■ "T r.»«T r».l tl'.l'%'•!' ho •• r»i»r Ht'ln !'!.<> «-<;UaI K2* U hM#» jrnjn-r.. I *hoes <*« *t ik'•"m $- • ? ffe.' \*tf3£ 112 C Q .->0 l*ollce Shor. w! ~ l.yl.rnm- .-'M thrr* who / "» *1 «PO ■ Wl.ni A KOO<| h»* >* ' <" ■*l 112. 'li I •■« '•! -lioo, I $2 w1 " " 1 IB YS * I ■ Anic C' ?»;| l ,i. 9i'2. >O. '.*2 ' ' *1.75 | ASK FOR W. L DOUGLAS SHOES If not for nnlr In )onr nlnrr m<nd iflriri to Partorv. mlmiiiiu l*itiil, «•»«• 11 ml '» ulih Miiuird. Po*lnar frrr. \Vfell givr exi'loni v<• note to nbnr «I»mi!»•»•» ""•J trtinn I mrr* I ohania where 1 ba»e no aural*. Write lor 4 utalniuc. W. L.!>««»:»»•• l»ro« Utoti, tlnao. JOHNSON 8 Anodyne Liniment. L NUKEAK yOTH Of ORIGINATED IN 1810, IHINI 07 IT! ALKC3T A CEITTUII. Er«*rr Y very family *h«»uld keep it at hand, for the ei.inin- n ill- of life liable t" occur t«» any <»n* It is Soothing. lb-Mima and Penetrating one«« used si way* wanted. Sold everywhere Prtei Vie.sts.9t Full yartii'ulara free. I !t. Jo&INKoN Jt < Bukt< n. Mass. "German Syrup" Justice of the Peace, Georpe Wil kinson, of Lowville, Murray Co., Minn., makes a deposition concern ing a severe cold. Listen to it. "ln the Spring of 1888, through ex posure I contracted a very severe cold that settled on my lungs. This was accompanied by excessive night sweats. One bottle of Hoschee's German Syrup broke up the cold, night sweats, and all and left nie in a good, healthy condition. I can give German Syrup my mostearnest commendation." ® the hands, injure the iron tnd burn oil I The Rising Sun Move Polish i- Hrllllant Odor I toss Durable and the consumer pays !ui uo tin I or glas* puckage with every purchase. Its Origin and History; PREVENTION AND CURL An interesting Pamphlet mailed to any ad dress cm receipt ol Stamn. Dr. LH. HARRIS Pitta u :. P.u _ Unlike tlie Batch Process No Alkalies —on— AjV Oilier I'lieniical* %3te/ arR in tllo preparation of w. I'AKEIt & t'O.'S I I'tyßreafefastCocoa OTI i '\ V which i* nl'fiohitrly bff| •;I \i pure untl soluble. ■IE '*•! li It has moreth'in three timet Ml ! Ii • the btrrti'jf h <<l ('"«-«>;i ntixeii f U ltl ' Sta'rcli. Arrowroot or .Stijrar, and is far more eco nomical, costing less tlutti otic cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and EASILY MQHTEI). Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKEP, & CO., Dorchester, Kau. JANSSfN'S II 1 l» lirniiiluin . N. \ . " BKSI (iOMItS A I LOW I-SI I Rll k'S* Bicycles All part* nud repali'lux. Atiilctic ml »ii«•>« , l«* ' '»t lornis. Tctiuls. Hus«»i>;i'l ;md I'«mh Hall OotltliK »"1 sujipiien, Caps, lhdts. sii.Hath Kcws mid sweat ers. I'hotoKraphlc MippliM and I'rliitinir Kstlmatea furuished. KiTt.-* ?. \ ir« ex|n-r:« IK KDF.U |(K \\ . J \ < (MII'-AN*. Q4 0 .HO Il»rt.id\v;i>. N. V.. Q4[l olu oi™ FRAZERGREAIE IIKHT IN THE WOUI.It. itF wearing quaittlai urn un •■!'• - MlQftUy out-lasting i h roe nirecteu by heat. ; i?" CKT TIIV. <ii:M INK. FOlt SA!.K »t\ l»l Al.Ki:> if Ni.KAI > # r. tfiiiJSf • the -it«»tiiH< - li *»nd M<w»dfl,^ I 2 11« u • !'WH. f «mllv a •j it-.-'.t I it 1 t }'ninf\xi lMifCHti.m ''iijM • - ler.rr .rmMoir oc dl ■ j Jbio«>d oraTailun-»»v th« i. ji.m. . t ito pwrform theii protwi un. ; ■ . ••• • i Jor®r-«atlnaart;t>onerttedf»> •• '' s•' * x 1,1 ! *,' af ! , r 5 WHY DIE WITH CHOLERA When YOr ran tlv,- wHt, ,• r. it for 'i:s .i-' simple and wonderful i" ii I' ' ii-rt-l ,r 1 lif«- saved for '25 .: <> li v « - ' f ' I • v<l i "' s * 4 \Di i can llenlth A•* l_ GOING TO BUILD? s>ml f.tr lUii-iriil.-l • .1 . ,'i'' Minu- .IWIHII- I'll 1.1-- -IIOI' I 1 ■ I- !< XODCHN IMM ->l-.r». lit " ■ s ' r " iPARFIE" 1^9 112 .J .. II I> u:. a»•« 9 1J ,1 • J «J«SJ JJ• ! Bf.aiASAU.UH! > W . 'iOICUIS, ! Blfc.WOC"v?JVi nhi "< • P; >'cou'r «. • i.ms. j IsyralalMtwai W» • -•*• PATENTS - . ,:;v •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers