| THE REALM OF FASHION. # r Charming Wnlst » Ming. Gray cashmere, plaid ribbon and silk embroidered edging combined, to make this charming waist, which, says May Mauton, is as simple in con- MISSES' WAIST OP GBAY CASHMERE. struction as it is stylish in effect. A fitted lining, made with the usual darts and seams, closes in the center front, over which the Russian blouse with left side closing is effected. The LADIES' PELEIIINE CAPE. yoke is simulated by rows of insertion ] overlaid by alternate rows of the nar row plaid ribbon, the pattern provid ing for the shape on both back and front. The fashionable sleeves are closely fitted byS double seams, the full epaulette being, gathered at the top, falls in graceful folds. The blouse or pouch effect is confined to the front, the back being drawn in slight fulness at waist line, the under [arm portions presenting a smooth appearance. This desigu is suitable for wash fabrics as well as for wool or silk and bright-hued ehambrays, plaid ginghams, flower sprigged organdie and other cotton goods can be charmingly decorated ** with laco or embroidered edging and Hion in this style. Velvet or a v ! bbon, braid, gimp or applique effectively trim waists of noi and the lace can bo esired. The yoke and dso be of contrasting ul suggestion where a be made over. To cut is% s of fourteen years pjv ul forty-four inches Cape. 's the velvet on, and the ■>r it seems, styles is in black # applique plisse of new feat >t desired, •out it, as re cut to- getlier, being shaped in six sections that fit the neck comfortably, and can either be joined to the top or left partly open, to form tabs through which the plaited mousseline falls with a soft, becoming effect. Each section should be interlined with canvas before joining. The cape or pelerine portion is shaped in circular outline and joined to the lower edge of yoke, the stole being joined to the right front section of yoke. A very handsome jeweled buckle decorates the front, the closing being invisible in centre. Smart capes in this style are worn by both young and middle aged ladies, the former preferring generally to omit the stole front. A handsome silk or satin brocade lining adds much to the attractiveness of this dainty top garment, which can also be developed satisfactorily in silk, satin or cloth, or of material to math the gown. Braid in different designs, passe menterie, fringe, ruchings or moss trimming, will provide suitable deco ration. To make this cape for a lady «112 medium size two and one-quarter yards of material twenty-four inches wide will be required. Ladifta' Dressing; Sac(|ue. The utility of this comfortable lieg lige will be readily recognized. It is here represented in fine French cam bric trimmed with embroidered edg ing and narrow insertion. The full fronts join the back. in under-arm seams, the tops being gathered and arranged on the lower edges of.the deeply pointed yoke. The closing is effected by buttons and buttonholes through an applied box plait in center front. A turn over collar completes the neck. Moderately full bishop sleeves are gathered top and bottom, straight wrist bands and a frill of em broidery giving a graceful finish. Flaunel, cashmere, china silk, cam bric, nainsook, lawn in plain, striped or figured varieties may all be used to develop this useful sacqne. Lace or embroidered edging, feather stitching LADIES' DRESSING SACQUE. or frills of the material will provide a suitable finish. Drawn to the figure with a girdle of ribbon deftly tied at the left side, this garment may be made quite attractive and becoming. To cut this sacque for a lady of medium size three and one-half yards of mater ial thirty-sis inches wide will be re quired. Strange Klondike Outfit*. There is a picturesque side to this great Alaskan movement, and no city | can bear stronger witness to that fact than can Seattle at present. The most interesting subject at this time relates to the various methods of trans portation needed to carry supplies down the Yukon River on the ice when the early rush to the Klondike begins. Boats being out of the question, ani mal and steam power are the two po tent agents to be relied upon. And the various forms in which this problem is to be tested constitute a distinct chapter of the story of the Klondike. The form of animal power most ready at hand is, of course, the horse. But "the horse has proved a poor friend in Alaska, owing to the food problem. This has led to various experiments in the use of animals. Oxen, mules, goats and even elk are now at Ska guay or beyond, to be used as pack animals. The handling of these ani mals about the water front has been one of the sights of Seattle during the last two months. Mules and oxen are common, but curiosity is excited at the sight of four or five goats being driven tandem, and an elk, horns and all, trotting along a business street drawing a sled, looks like a picture from a Santa Claus book come to life. But the most interesting and the most useful feature of the matter is the dog team. Nearly every outgoing steamer is carrying several dog teams, and the next three months will thoroughly de termine whether the dog is to become i recognized factor in the winter traf fic over the Yukon country or whether he is but an experiment to be made a makeshift until something better be discovered.—Leslie's Weekly. Convincing:* "Now, my son," began the father, the next morning. "Never mind the lecture, pop;didn't you ever paint the town?" "Well, my boy, it's a great many years ago, at least fifty." "Fifty years, pop! Don't you think the town needed another coat?" It Will Pay. It will pay to carefully read the descrip tive advertisement of Alnbastine appearing in this paper, explaining the difference be tween those goods and kalsomines. Con sumers should bear in mind that Alabas tine is unlike all the various kalsomines sold on the market under different names. Alnbastine stands pre-eminent and alone as a durable wall coating, and all consumers in buying should see that the goods are in ! packages and properly labeled. The Mocking Bird. Few persons in the south are aware t of the fact that tho mocking bird is I found only in the south. Mason and : Dixon's line is the north boundary line of his home, and it is seen in the north only in captivity. It is by far tho sweetest singer of tho feathered tribe. Switzerland may rejoice in the tuneful linnets; la bello France glory in her soft-lhroated orioles; tho Medi terranean isles exult in their liquid voiced songsters; but our dear south land excels them all in the possession of the heavcn-voiced mocking bird. I was told once of a young man who lost his mind because of the death of his betrothed a few months before their wedding day. The girl was not un like dozens of other girls of the same community, except that she had a gloriously rich voice ot peculiar sweet ness. During the weeks of their be trothal the young man, au ardent lover of music, would insist at every visit on song after song. When she became ill and could sing no more for him he would wander out into the woods to listen to the birds. She died one day while he was away in the woods. It happened on that day he had been thrown into transports of delight with the sublime music of a mocking bird. When the bird had ceased lie wandered back to tho home of his bethrothed, to learn that her spirit had departed during his nbsence. That was eleven years ago, yet that young man finds his love again when ever he hears the stmg of a mocking bird. He believes her spirit visited him that day in the woods in the form of the mocking bird that had sung so sweetly.—Carrolltou (Ala.) News. Moat Remarkable llook. The most remarkable book, so far as its appearance is concerned, is neither written nor printed. It is injtlie Imperial Library of Paris, and the letters are ;ut out of tissue paper with a pair of scissors. A sheet of blue tissue, in which the letters are cut, is placed be tween two pages of white, and so the aiatter is read. Marine Development. A writer in tho Engineering Maga zine says that during the last fifty years the size of steamships has been multiplied twenty-fold, the horse- Dower employed to drive them has been multipled forty-fold aud the speed with which they traverse the sea has been increased three-fold. Life of Telegraph Wires. Telegraph wires will last for forty years near the seashore. In the manu facturing districts the same wires will last only ten years, and some times less. ALABASTINK IS WHAT ? Alabastine is a durable and natural coat ing for wuils and ceilings entirely different from all kalsomine preparations, made ready for use in white or twelve beautiful tints by the simple addition of water (lat est make being adapted to mix with cold water), put up in dry powder form, in 5 pound packages, with full directions on every package. WHAT A HI: KAI.SOMIXES? Kalsomines are cheap temporary prep- Women And the Wheel. From the Gazette, Delaware, Ohio. The healthfulness of bicycle riding for women is still a disputed question between eminent physicians and health reformers. Used in moderation It su rely creates for women a means of out-door exercise, the benefit of which all physicians concede. Used to excess, like any other pastime, Its effect is likely to be dangerous. The experience of Miss Bertha Beed, the seventeen-year-old daughter of Mr. J. B, Beed, 335 Lake St., Delawaro, Ohio, may point a moral for parents who, like Mr. and Mrs. Beed, have experienced some concern for their daughters who are fond of wheel ing. In the fall of '96 Miss Bertha who had ridden a great deal, began to fall in an alarming manner. She grew steadily paler and thinner, and it appeared she was going Into consumption. Best and quiet did her A no "ffl clan found her VOJ rWWffif T| pulse at 104 -a ilrlH ■ Thinking this /'v'A yT"\ v, j ™ maj have been U*\ ' """ " ' jjf due to tempo rj> \ i U rary nervous ness when he z-DiSl Wt'Fl examined her, //EPf ■ H " irs W " L he watched her IfUj' closely, but her pulse continued ft.Ty at that rate for two weeks. Ho Mr was satisfied then, from her high pulse and steadily wasting condition that she was suffering from amemiaor a blood less condition of the body. She became ex tremely weak, and could not stand the least noise or excitement. In this condition of affairs they were recommended bv an old friend to get some of that famous blood medicine Dr. Williams' Fink Pills for Pale People. They did so, and almost from the first dose Bertha began to improve. She t continued to take the pills and was by means of those pills made entirely well, and more grateful people than her parents cannot be found in tho whole State of Ohio. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have proved a boon to womankind. Acting directly on the blood and nerves, they restore the req > uisite vitality to all parts of the body; , creating functional regularity and perfect harmony throughout the nervous system. The pallor of the cheeks is changed to tho delicate blush of health; the eyes brighten; tho muscles grow elastic, ambition is created and good health returns. Curiosities of the Dank of England, Some of the curiosities of the Bank of England are well worth describing. In the printing room a man sits at a little table, and every three seconds a machine hands him two complete live pound notes. If he sits there six hours he receives over seventy thou sand pounds, and in 300 days over twenty millions in paper mouev! It is a strange duty for a man to have to perform—to sit at a table to receive from a machine twenty millions a year! The vaults where the gold is stored are still more curious. In the ante chamber to the gold king'B throne room are a few men attired in almost mediicval costume, commanded by a very modern personage, who wears a frock coat and a silk hat. The latter, with the assistance of auother, who is also sprucely dressed, unlocks the iron gates of the vault. Around the well white-washed cellar are arranged trolleys, upon each of which rest bars of pure gold to the amout of £BO,OOO, the particular vault to which visitors are admitted containing two millions' worth of bullion. Through the thick wall can just be heard the confused murmur of the myriads above, who are hurrying, working f.nd worrying, eagerly endeavoring to obtain some trifle of the treasure which rests so placidly on the trolleys. Has there ever yet been a millionaire miser who has built for his gold such a throne room? aud did he sit there through the days thinking out the good and all the evil which these millions might be made to do? But millionaires are sel dom imaginative. In another vault every note which is returned is stored for live years, and here is kept one, for twenty-five pounds, which stayed away for a hun- I dred years. It has been calculated that during that period the loss on the note in interest amounted to over six thousand pounds. —London Truth. To Make a Mirror. 11l a new process for silvering glass it is practicable to give a fine polish to the silver after it is spread on the glass. This is acco aplished by means of two solutions w tich must be pre pared with great are, inasmuch as delicacy of treatmei tis required. To a silver-nitrate solution is added, drop by drop, sufficient ammonia to redis solve the original precipitate, caution being observed to avoid au excess. Afterward enough distilled water is added to make the liquid measure one liter. A second solution is prepared containing ten per cent, of formalde hyde. The mirror-maker selects his plate of glass, aud after polishing it deftly with rouge and chamois skin, wipes it perfectly dry and clean. Then a rapid mixture is made oftwopartsof the silver nitrate solution, and one part of the formaldehyde solution, this mix ture being poured evenly on the glass. From ten to fifteen minutes will be re quired for this application to be com pleted, and then the plate may be washed with water aud allowed to dry. In the production of an ordinary mirror the dull upper side is treated to a coat ing of varnish, but if the silver side is the one to be used, as in optical in struments, the layer of silver is to bo polished with fine rouge. The attempts to make mirrors of tin amalgam, ex perts say, have not yielded satisfactory results.—New York Times. arations manufactured from chalks, clays, whiting, etc., are stuck on the wall with decaying animal glue. Alabastine is a ce ment, which goes through a process of set ting, hardens with age, can be re-coated and re-decorated from time to time with out haying to wash and scrap* off its old coats before renewing. MUCH SICKNESS Farticularly throat and lung difficulties wrongly attributed to other causes, is the result of unsanitary conditions of walla and ceilings. Think of having bedrooms cov- Fl«li Multiply Rapidly. One of the proofs of the wonderful •way in which fish will multiply under the proper conditions is given by the great increase of striped bass on the Pacific coast. It is only a few years ago that this fine fish was totally un known on that coast. A fairly large shipment of adult fish was sent there from the East about ten years ago and distributed in the waters around Sac ramento and San Francisco. Since then the fish have increased so rap idly that they are a glut on the mar ket, and the regular price is only a littltf over five cents a pound. An example of the great increase is given in the tables prepared by the United States Fish Commission a few months ago. They show that in 1893 the fish dealers of San Francisco handled 80,793 pounds, and in 1896 they handled 363,747 pounds. It is estimated that greater quanti ties of gold and silver have been sunk in the sea than are now in circulation in the whole world. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoko Tour I.iffe Am j. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, lull of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac. the wouder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or fl. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Bemedy Co., Chicago or New York. Krupp has over 20.000 guns of large cali bre for the armies of Europe. Why Suffer Like Job When St. Anthony's Ointment will heal all sores, new or old, or money refunded, 50 cents per box, all druggists or St. Anthony M'f'g Co., Chicago, 111. Two-thirds of the ships of Great Britain are built on the Clyde. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. s2trial bottle and treat! se free Dn. B. H. KLINE, Ltd.. 931 Arch St.,Phlla.,Pa. The finest garnets In the world are found in Now Mexico. Mrs. VVinslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, Sac.a bottle. Glasgow has 1,003,000 people and but 49-1 doctors. CANDY m CATHARTIC CONSTIPATION^^ 25c 50c DRUGGISTS l>Mii.u!rnt: v curr'ihy uslnjf DR. WHITEHALL'S RHEUM ATIC CURE. The surest and the beat. Sample sent * REE on mention of thin publication. THE DK. WHITEHALL MEGRIMINE CO.. South Bend. Indiana. * Ask any disinterested mechanical expert and he will tell you ARE THE BEST - They are absolutely uniform in quality and finish. Yoi# have the added satisfaction of knowing no one can buy a Columbia cheaper than you. We sell for one price only— the advertised price. Columbia Ss? Ghainless, . $125 Hartford Bicycles SSO Columbia Chain Wheels, . 75 Vedettes S4O and $35 POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn. Catalogue free from any Columbia dealer, or by mail for one 2-cent stamp. jpmmmmmmmim i PAINTS W ALLS'CEILM6S CALCIMO FRESCO TINTS FOR DECORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS paf psMnTrom y o ur f grocer or paiut dealer and do jour own kal- U«IbWIIHw somining. This material is made on scientific principles by machinery and milled in twenty-four tints «,nd is superior to any concoction of Glue and Whit ing that can possibly be made by ha. 1. To BE MIXED WITH COLD WATEB. t»T!iG\D FOR SAMPLE CO, .OK CARD* and if you cannot purchase this material from your local dealers let us know and we will put you in the way of obtaining it. THE: IHURALO CO., NEW RRICIITOIV, S. 1., XEW YORK 11 Better Work Wisely Than Work Hard." Great Efforts are Unnecessary in House Cleaning if you Use ered with layers of molding (tour paste to feed vermin, with paper to hide them and to absorb tho moisture of respiration, and an animal giuo culturo ground on Its fuce for disease germs; this having strong color; added, like a colored shirt, to hide the dirt; then think of"the nasty practice" of repeating this papering, without remov ing the old, and a number of times, at that, as many do. Then think of a room coated with pure, porous, permanent Alabastine, which is retinted with but little trouble or expense, and ts purifying and sweet-smell ing and fills cracks. Wall paper tree NO WOMAN IS EXEMPT. *~ Regularity Is a matter of importance in every woman's life. Much pain is, however, endured in the belief that it is necessary and not alarming, when in truth it is all wrong and indicates derangement that may cause serious trouble. Excessive monthly pain itself will unsettle the nerves and make women old before their time. The foundation of v/oman's health is a perfectly normal an#l regular per formance of nature's function. The statement we print from Miss GER TRUDE SIKES, of Eldred, Pa., is echoed in every city, town and hamlet in this country. Read what she says: " DEAR MRS. PINKHAM:—I feel like a new person since following your ad vice, and think it is my duty to let the public know the good your remedies have done me. My troubles were pain ful menstruation and leueorrhoea. I was nervous and had spells of being confused. Before using your remedies I never had any faith in patent medi cines. I now wish to say that I never had anything do me so much good for painful menstruation as Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound; also would say that your Sanative Wash has cured me of leueorrhoea. I hope these few words may help suffering women." The present Mrs. Pinkliam's experi ence in treating female ills is unparal leled, for years she worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and i for sometime past has had sole charge of the correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailing women during a single year. All suffering women are invited to ; write freely to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., for advice about their health. Mni 11Q M and Liquor Habit cured in IIUII IBfl 10 to 80 ilars. No pay till linilßWl cured. Dr. J. L.Stephens, Wl I Vlvl Dept. A, Lebanon, Ohio. nrißßrn T ° r v °">" ' nj a ' '■"**. nkuutrn The N. C. & Rubber Mfg. Co., IHIUUDjII lu Uuios et , lOLEOa. OHIO. OMtataa fm. MENTION IN"' Sgg would be dearer than Alabastine If cost o removing paper Is considered. TO DEALERS. Do not buy a law suit or an injunction with cheap kaisomines, which are all imi tations of Alabastine. Dealers assume the risk of a suit for damages by selling an in fringement. Alabastine Company own the right, oovered by letters patent, to make and sell wall coatings adapted to be mixed with cold water. Alabastine Co., Orand Rapids. Mich.