RACE OF MOVEMENT. IS AN ESSENTIAL IN THE ART OF FEMININE LOVELINESS. eonariou* of Motion I* Typ ru 1 of Kettueiuvnt unit tiood llrci'd ug and In the .\nlurnl lulifrilauce 112 the Urutlenouiuu. t is au amazingly intricate problem iy any human mortal should raise his her eyebrows and proceed to scoft at other human mortal's desire to be at ctive and pretty. Surely the desire of s beauty seeker is contemptible only en it breeds vanity microbes and thus racts from the pursuit of mental beau ln rational, hygienic, good sense lutifying the tremendous value of hav • your wits with you is not overlooked. Vhy should one not wish to be sweet to dw, pleasant to talk with, dainty and ?ly to look upon? There is no reason the face of this happy old world of •s against it. It is entirely natural, oily consistent and quite normal. "hese are distinctly the days of correct oming. The dust must be moved from ?'s intellect and removed from the tips one's walking boots. In the most tri g detail the results of cleanliness are nifested. Togo about with ragtags iting from your silk petticoat is to iu t society—so long as you possess a die and a bit of thread and five rniu «of spare time. To perambulate like autocab is to make a waddling silly yourself and to impart a picture of :ward locomotion upon pedestrians, . are entitled to look upon pleasanter ts. To be stoop shouldered and dou up with a contracted chest is to lually nip off years of your life, one r the other, like the paper pages of a adar. nong the lessons to be learned in school of self beautifying is that of iring a graceful carriage. To lop lunge like a schooner in a gale, to k along with ungainly, angular des, as if you were made of sheet , with tin rivets for joints; to toddle j lessly here, there and off the side k, like a leaf blown from a tree —these hods of perambulation are not lovely, lly, they aren't. r omen of the stage understand better 1 any other class the tremendous iin ance of beauty of face and figure, even with these two very important lirements they realize that they are past graduates in the art of loveliness 1 they have cultivated a certain grace aovemeut. » move about with an unconscious • that is typical of refinement, good •ding and the natural inheritance of gentlewoman —that is grace, j make sharp angles of yourself every » you sit down and to look like a tele )h pole or a bent over Christmas iree y time you stand up—that is auk dness. verything that helps toward mental hysical beauty culture assists in tln urement of graceful movements, ithing exercises that fill out the chest, ns that are properly cut and fitted, sthenics that round the muscles and e the flesh firm. lie de Lussan. in an interview, was tioned concerning the cultivation of efulness. Being herself remarkable i well poised head and a charmingly eful carriage, she spoke with author 'erhaps you have noticed," she said, grace and ease of movement of a g child. But, strange to say, when child grows older it may develop the most awkward youngster in the d. My own experience has taught :hat that very awkwardness which s so inexplicable comes with the al of the age of self consciousness, forgetfulness of self is destroyed with it the natural ease of motion, tage grace must have a natural she continued. "Years of expe e will round off the rough corners h even the most graceful possess at but there must have been the inborn «tfulness of self to work upon. All » have seen women, and men, too, e every motion in the ordinary pur of life seemed the personification of •, and yet. that very same person, l a position where the gaze of others ed upon every act, develops the most rkable degree of irregularity of ment, plunging the individuality for me being into a condition so distort at the victim's own mother would tzzled. >, for that reason, I say that grace— mlarly stage grace—comes not of but rather after long experience has :ht back that lack of self conscious possessed by the child, le purpose must always be to throw e outer self, the constantly recurring hts as to what some one else thinks one. Interest the mind in the role s playing, but keep in mind thai poise and perfection of movement necessary to success. That is all. ittle details, like the pose of a hand, weep of a gown, will take care of lelves. As a matter of practice the ways and means to overcome ies. But while on the stage live >art and forget self." Chicago -Herald. 'IndlDK Dht« of the Week. prematurely aged young man ! duty It Is to get up The Rec "Answers to Correspondents" n says that queries of the same ; always come in bunches. They to be epidemic. Just at present at many people seem eager to what day of the week they were >n, and it keeps him busy figur ie dates out. He has a system he uses, and for the benefit of who may be in search of like in tion it is herewith given: Instance, take Jan. 15, 1808. A orn on that date writes to know day of the week It fell on. In to ascertain this divide the fig the year by 4, reject ; remainder, if any. To this div ajid quotient add the number of t the year to the given date, in ■, always reckoning 28 days In try: Divide the sum by 7, and nainder will be the number of y of the week, 0 signifying Sat- Here is the illustration, taking 18G8: 4)1868 467 A day* to Jan. IS IS 7)2310 335—S by this calculation, which is in , it will be seen that Jan. 15, •11 on the fifth day of the week, s Thursday.—Philadelphia Rec- Th* Two IMnnaolen. performance reaches the high nacle of dramatic wit," wrote is agent. that rather a strong state asked the dramatic editor. 10! We are getting $5 for gen nlsslon." It is sometimes true that we the pinnacle of price for the • of art!— Baltimore American. Be h Man First of All. beneath all discussion of elec d vocations, as whether I will lglneer or a clergyman. Is the for every youth who would successful, that he must be a it he ought to be a "full grown • the old version read squarely • too strongly; to be a "perfect success. lid that the United Slates se tt varieties of timber more or able in the new island posses d we are quite likeiy to get in to 500 different types of abo issedness also. X.l NO MAN IS STRONGER j THAN HIS STOMACH. The stomach is the vital center of the body It the organ from which all other organs are fed. A weak stomach | means a weak man. There never was a | strong man with a weak stomach. What j is called "weak stomach " is in genera! a j diseased condition of the stomach anil \ other organs of digestion and nutrition, | which prevents the proper digestion of j the food which is taken into the stom- ! ach, and so reduces the nutrition of the | body. When all food is taken away the body starves. When the food eaten is ! only digested and assimilated in part it ; only nourishes the body in part, and so j the body is partly starved. And this j starvation is felt in every organ of the ! body dependent on the bloou which is made from food. The great variety of the cures per- i formed ny I)r. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is due to its remarkable power to heal diseases of the stomach and allied organs. It cures through the stomach diseases seemingly remote, but , which have their origin in a diseased ; condition of the stomach and the other organs of digestion and nutrition. 1 " Weak " heart, lungs, kidneys and weak ness of other organs is cured with the i cure of the weak stomach. Mr Thomas A Swarts. Box 103, Sub station ■ C . Columbus, Ohio, writes: "I was taken very j sick with severe headache, then cramps in the stomach, and food would not digest, then kidney and liver trouble, and my back got weak so I ' could scarcely get around. The more 1 doctored the worse I got until six years passed I had be come so poorly t could only walk in the house by the aid of a chair, and 1 got »o thin 1 had given up to die. thinking that I could not be cured. Then one of my neighbors said ' Take , Dr Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and make a new man out of Yourself.' The first bottle 1 helped me so I thought I would get another, and after t had taken eight bottles I was weighed and found I had gained twenty-seven (27) lbs. 1 in at) Out six weeks I have done more hard work in the past eleven months than I did in two years before, and I am as stout and healthy to-day. I think, as I everwwas,l' 1 Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipation. Popular F.lectioii of Senators. The legislature of Wisconsin in com mon with that of several other states has asked congress to submit to the various states of the Union a constitu tional amendment providing for the i election of senators by popular vote. ! The present nn-thod of electing United States senators has not worked badly In Wisconsin, there rarely having been a deadlock or any scandal connected with the election of a senator, and as a , rule men have been chosen who en- I j joyd the full respect and confidence ' I of their ct ni'tltueuts and who would i have found it as easy to get a nomina- j I tion in a popular convention as in a | legislative caucus. In view of this the j | action of the Wisconsin legislature in ( ! recognition of a strong public senti- ' j ment in the state is all the more sig- j | nificaut. How much stronger should be the sentiment in favor of a change j in the method of electing senators in | those stales where deadlocks, factional 1 squabbles and scandals have attended 1 such elections and which have some times left the states unrepresented in the upper branch of the national legis lature! Unquestionably there is a growing sentiment throughout the country in favor of the election of senators by popular vote. Within the past four years the legislatures of the following states have gone on record as favoring the change: Arkansas, California, Col orado, Florida, Idaho, Indiana, Illinois, lowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi. Mon tana, Nebraska. Nevada, New Hamp shire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, I'tah, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming. This lacks only three of the eonstitu- ! tional two-thirds necessary to make the change. Doubtless other states will fall in line with those named above. Two causes are working together to create in the public mind the belief that the present method of electing senators should be abandoned. One of them is the apparent increase of legis lative snarls and tangles which leave states unrepresented and scandals too frequently attached to senatorial elec tions. The other is the growing con viction that better men will be sent to Washington when senators are chosen by the people at first hand and not, as now, at second hand. Frrnnn./« Ride. A pretty story Is told of how John 0. Fremont Informed bis wife of the joy ful news of his election as senator of California In 1850. The balloting of the delegates took place in San Jose, and Mrs. Fremont was at Monterey, and as a season of heavy rains was on there was but little prospect that her keen desire to know the result would find immediate gratification. Before a blaz ing fire that night sat Fremont's wife, her fingers for the first time fashioning a dress for herself on the trustworthy outlines of one that had been ripped up for the purpose. Her little daughter had been put to bed, and her compan ions for the evening were the Austra lian woman who had replaced her two Indian servitors and her baby playing on the bearskin rug near the fire. Besides the voice of the woman and an occasional chirrup from the baby she heard nothing but the storm with out till the door opened and a man, , dripping with rain, stood on the thresh old and asked in consideration of his sorry plight if he might enter. It was Fremont. He had torn himself away from his idolizing followers and ridden out Into the darkness and storm to tell his wife, 70 miles away, that lie had been elected to the United States sen ate. Though it was late in the night when he reached Monterey, he was in ' the saddle again before dawn and on his way back to San Jose, making in all a ride of 140 miles.—Argonaut. Venetian Women. Venetian women are the subject of envy, as they refuse to be influenced by fashion's caprices. Their costumes tire always dark, plainly made anl neither short nor long, and they always wear ' black stockings. The universal open air garment for all ages and all sizes in Venice is the black shawl, with deep silken fringe, folded with a sii u t point above and a low point below. Sometimes it wraps the figure about from head to foot. It is never fastened at the throat, ! and when it slips off it is gathered up ! with one outstretched arm. Hats are unknown. The heelless slipper of the eost is universally worn. In matters of dress the women of Venice are indepetid ent, wearing purely local clothes, but I with feminine inconsistency they follow the fashion of the outside world in the . arrangement of the hair, and the coiffures change from year to year, according to 1 the modes in vogue in Paris. 112 We are asked how few cows will jus t tify the use of a farm separator? W* should say 15, though we know of dairymen with only ten who think that they could not get along without one r We have a weakness for *i porch over the front door of the home and for a pretty vine to trail over the porch a clematis, a creeper, a Rambler rose or even just common old morning glories. ! THE C0l.nl! SCHEME. TINTS OF PAN-AMERICAN BUILDINGS WILL BE SYMBOLICAL. TOIH'N \\ ;!L Incliente I hp De velopment of Maii'm Color Senn«* unci If* Ketl iieuieiit—Director Tur ner Write* «»!' Ili* Plan. | The color scheme of the l'an-Ameri- I can Exposition follows the plan of ' sculptural embellishment conceived ! and being executed by Mr. Karl Bitter, j the Director of Sculpture of the Expo , sition, and supplements his work. As the sculpture will symbolize the prog j ress of the race so the color scheme ! will represent in epitome the growth of the color sense of the race. The colors at the main entrance to the grounds and about the Triumphal Bridge will be exceedingly warm, suggesting a wel come to visitors, and this part of the CHARLES Y. TURNER. N. A. [Director of Color, Pan-American Exposition.] Exposition has very appropriately been I dedicated to our neighbors in the West ern Hemisphere. All the savage races have manifested ! | a great fondness for strong, crude col i ors, and these will be found on the 1 | buildings nearest the main entrance. | The advancement of man in intelli- ' I gence and civilization has been marked i by a desire for more refined color com -1 binations, and the culminating point of ; subtlety and grace of color being in the | Electric Tower, which, repioseiiting I the highest advance in material civili j zation and occupying the leading posi i tion architecturally and sculpturally of 1 the whole Exposition, naturally enough i j has come in for the finest color notes. It is a happy feature of the color I scheme that the buildings upon which , j the artist would naturally lavish pow- j | erful colors all lie about the southern I entrance. A regular gradation from in i tense to less pronounced coloring is thus possible. As the majority of peo -1 pie will come in from the southern en- ' | trance they will get an impression of I bright, rich, fresh color. They will not, 1 however, have time to grow weary I with the brilliancy. Before their eyes 1 are jaded they will have got info the region of more softly tinted surfaces. It must not be supposed, however, that the primitive color schemes are in themselves harsh or bad or crude. Ya ! rlous devices have been adopted for se -1 curing harmony. For one thing, the greater part of the ! exterior wall spaces are all In warm | white. Color Is employed only at struc ' tural points in the architecture, as i about entrances. Furthermore, no '■ primitive color is brought into direct I contrast with other primitive colors: a j mass of ivory white always intervenes. This gives great brilliancy and pre ' vents chromatic discords. The quality | of white used on the buildings varies | from a "warm creamy white near the [ bridge to a cool ivory tone at the Elec tric Tower. As an essential means of promoting harmony green, in at least a few notes, is employed in the adornment of every building of the Exposition. The beauti ful translucent green of Niagara has ! been fitly chosen as the dominant color ! of the whole scheme. Appearing In its fullness in the recesses of the Electric Tower and in the restaurant group be -1 hind, it is everywhere repeated. Not a ! building but bears its echo mark of Ni agara green. J The color schemes of a few of the I buildings may be noted: Horticulture—Orange, with details In brilliant blue, green, rose and yellow. Governmental—Yellow, with details in primitive colors. Music Hall—lied. Machinery—Greenish gray. Restaurant Group—lvory, accented , with green and gold. Electric Tower—lvory, yellow, gold and green. The roofs of the Exposition are for the most part covered with red tiles, i though prominent towers and pinnacles will be In many cases decorated with j green or blue green or with gold, i All the buildings will have a play of ! colors about their entrances, balconies, pinnacles and towers. My idea is to j have the sharpest and freshest green known carried throughout the entire 1 scheme, and that will be my reference I to power. Green is one of the more re I cent and refirwJ colors. It has not long been used In art. Pick up any picture painted long ago. and you will look in j vain for a suggestion of green in it. The grass will be represented as brown. I They said it was impossible to seeurp i the grass green effect, but It Is dore 1 j nowadays. 1 The color scheme has for the most 1 part been worked out at my studio in I New York. The first step was to get [ from the architects small sketches of 1 all the buildings. Models were made 1 from these on a scale of one-sixteenth 1 inch to the foot which when proptrlt grouped on a platform 12 by 16 feet rep resented the entire Exposition in minia r ture. Each model was colored in ac cordance with the general scheme, and its relationship to surrounding build lugs carefully studied. Many of them had to be painted several times before i suitable results were secured. ■ Once the structures of the miniature ' city were all harmonious colored, drawings of the individual buildings were made, and the decorations accu rately worked out lo the last detail un til they were in readiness to be placed in the hands of the intelligent painter 112 decorator. When the time arrived to begin ' painting, it was found that the build ings in the middle of the grounds were the only ones on which work could be , done, tiitd then the value of my model was demonstrated. Mr. Washburne was enabled to readily translate from the model to the buildings without dan ' ' Tis Easy To Feel Good. Countless thousands have found a blessing to the body in Dr. King's New Life Pills, which positively cure Con stipation, Sick Headache, Dizziness, 1 Jaundice. Malaria, Fever and Ague and :i all Liver and Stomach troubles. Purely r vegetable; never gripe or weaken Only 25c. at Paules and Co s. drug store. facts Are Stubborn. < Druggists handle hundreds of kinds of medicine. They know better than any one else which remedies cure and which do not j cure. Tliey are in a - M • % -?- ! position to know. Ift LJ (Cl M 1 Dr. M. Baikman, 77 — = ~w~ a'' ' * Court St., 153 3 M i" Bingham- Sc' A. Xi Kennedy's Favorile Remedy for 18 years, and do not hesitate to say and stand up and be counted that it i- one of, if not | the best, on the market. I have used it 1 myself, and my family have also, and we '• have received great benefit from its use. j ' Although I am an M. I)., I am perfectly , willing to say this, for 1 know it's i good . medicine." l>r. David Kennedy's Favorite Rem edy is a perfect blood and nerve medicine. , It restores the liver to a healthy condition i and cures the worst cases of constipation. | I: is a certain cure for all diseases peculiar to ' 1 females. There is nothing like it for Kid ! ney, bladder and Urinary troubles. All drvyyiMti irll it for SI. ger'of breaking the harmony of the | scheme. The coloring of exposition buildings I has been undertaken a number of | times, but in most cases has been j abandoned before taking real shape. ! White has been most popular, though I it is severe 011 the eyesight. After the : numerous failures it required consider- I able courage 011 the part of the Fan -1 American Exposition builders to take t up the color scheme. Having started out, however, the} - are determined not to turn back. If the color scheme proves successful, as I have every rea son to believe it will, it will be a novel ty and mark a new era of Improvement in the treatment of architecture. The advisability of applying color to large buildings has always been questioned, j The matter needs a great deal of care ami thought. All coloring is the subject j of more or less criticism of an unfavor- , j able character. We will do remarka- ! bly well if we escape it at this Expo -1 sition. i However, we have put our hands to | ! the plow, as it were, and we must not ; j look behind. The time for the work is ( , limited, and all must be done during | the most unfavorable period of the j j year. We must employ a large force, j ; bring all our ingenuity into action and . j push forward. After the painters have j done their work I shall go carefully ! | over it.and skilled artists will supply 1 l tone if necessary. This will be equiva- j , lent to the "varnishing day"of the 1 ! artist. Then the result of our efforts to j produce a narmonious and pleasing | color scheme will go before the public, 1 and it is to be hoped that our critics 1 will bear In miml the novelty of the 1 undertaking and all the adverse cir cumstances under which we have la- J bored. C. Y. TURNER, Director of Color. Meet of American Wheelmen. At the annual meeting of the Nation ! al Assembly of the League of Ameri | can Wheelmen held recently in Phila ! delphia the invitation of Mayor Diehl i to hold the annual summer meet of the I League In Buffalo was accepted unani mously. This action 011 the part of the gov- J crning body of the L. A. W. meets with the hearty approval of the entire membership of that organization. For this reason the biggest meet in the history of the League will be that held In Buffalo during the week com mencing Aug. 12. Aside from the attractions of the L. A W. meet there are many induce ments which will cause cyclists to visit Buffalo at that time, among others the central location of the city, within easy touring distance of all the principal cities of the Eastern and Middle States and Canada, the cheap railroad fares, the desire 011 the part of all wheelmen to visit the Pan-American Exposition and Niagara Falls and the fact that a week of International cycle racing is to be given 011 the specially constructed quarter mile track in the magnificent Stadium on the Exposition grounds. It Is believed that there will be not less than 10,000 visiting wheelmen in Buffalo during the week of the meet. Pan-American Minim; Exhibit. Mines and mining will be represented at the Pan-American in a manner in tended to illustrate the importance and great progress of this industry. Mod ern improvements in metallurgy and the science of mini- g have advanced so rapidly and have attained such propor tions that the task is not an easy one. The Mines building is one of a group of three handsome buildings which have been arranged in the general form of a horseshoe. The Mines building oc cupies a position of a heel calk in the group. It is connected with the Horti culture building, which would corre spond to the toe calk, by means of one of the two handsome conservatories that flank the Horticulture building north and south. The Mines building is 150 feet square, bavins four corner pa vilions, each reaching to a height of lUU ; feet- A Coffee Barometer. A cup of hot coffee is an unfailing barometer If you allow a lump of sugar to drop to the bottom of the cup and watch the air bubbles arise without 1 disturbing the coffee. If the bubbles ; collect in the middle, the weather will be fine; if they adhere to the cup, forming a ring, It will either rain or snow, and If the bubbles separate with out assuming any fixed position change able weather may be expected.—Chica go Times-Herald. Those Boaton Glrlw. Carrie—That awful Tom Browne of fered to kiss me. Bertha—You don't mean It! Carrie —I do, and I told him if he did I'd slap his face. Bertha—And what did he say to that? Carrie—He didn't say a word, lie ' just kissed me. Bertha—And you slapped bis face? 1 Carrie —No; to tell the truth, I was so flustered I forgot all about It—Boston Transcript. If a man .vislies to raise 1 •.» horses to sell, be bad better dispense altogeth er with barbed wire on bis farm fences j where the horses and colts run. A j I barbed wire cut which will in 110 man- | ner injure the horse for usefulness will , always take s'S> off liini when he is put j . 011 the market. CIIIUIKKYS COLUMN. Kit talis 111 a lint. Where we were hoarding in tln- country there «'T( 17 little kitten-. Now I --ap pose those < if you who have kittens make great pels or (hem, and they are very tame, but the ones I am i?<>iiiir to tell you about were wild and would run away the moment any one came near them. One day a little boy left his hat 011 the chopping block near the barn and I found the three little kittens which you see in the picture fast asleep in it. How they got in there I do not know. I went to SEE 'EM "LOOK PLEASANT." the house for my camera, but when I re turned the hat was empty. Well. I had a time to find those kittens—one had hid den under the barn, another under'the wood pile and the one you see in the mid dle of the picture was under the piazza. At last we caught them and put them in the hat. But such a time as we had to make them stay there! First one would, go out and then another; I suppose they thought it was fun, but I did not. At last, after working nearly all the morn ing, 1 got them to behave like good little kittens, and this picture shows you just how they looked when I snapped the camera. —K. E. F. in Brooklyn Eagle. < hi next- Hoys' Many \nllles. Since the troubles between China and the other nations began the boys and girls of America have learned much about the children of the great empire of the yellow men of Asia. Few, however, it is probable, have.solved the question of Chinese names—a puzzle that confronts every city boy or girl every time he or she goes by the Chinese laundry on the way to school. But to the Chinese boy or girl it is doubtless all simple enough. Take the name of Li Hung Chang, for instance —the best known Chinaman liv ing today. Any Chftiese boy or girl wolild say it was easy enough. Li is his family name and means plum. The only differ ence between Li Hung Chang's name and the name of Mr. I'luni, who may live iu your town, is that the great I'hiuese diplomat "puts his hist name tirst ' and Mr. Plum of America "puts it last," where you should say any man's last name ought to be. The American boy or girl does pretty well these days if he or she is given more than three names, as Mary Ellen Jones or Charles William Brown. Some of them are presented with only, two, while once in awhile some of us are given four. But the Chinaman has any num ber before he grows up. As a baby he receives his "milk" name. Then when he enters school his "school ' name, and when he is grown his title or "life name.—Chicago Record. An Ancient Itnler. We read in the book of Ccnesls that when Abraham returned from the pur suit of Chedorlaomer, king of Elatn. who had taken prisoner his nephew Lot. he was met by Melchisedec. king of Salem, who offered him bread and wine. Salem means "peace" in Hebrew, and it was the name of the city afterward called Jerusalem, or "the inheritance of peace." - ■ —— 1 MELCHISEDEC. All that we know of Melchisedec is that he was "a priest of the most high God." He is the only gentile king men tioned in the Bible who was not an idol ater. This is strange, as the only peo ple of whom we know as inhabiting Jeru salem, before the Israelites captured it. were Jebusites, a tribe of Canaauites, worshipers of idols, from whom the city was called .leliiis. Those over whom Mel chisedec ruled must have'belonged to an earlier race whose history is lost. St. Paul writes in the epistle to the Hebrews that Melchisedec was without father and without mother, aud this led some men of the old time to believe that he was a celestial being—superior to the angels and much more than a mere ruler of men in the ancient'east.—Chatterbox. An Allvertinlnjt Scheme. Several old acquaintances of'the late D. H. McAlpin, the tobacco manufac turer, were discussing his business suc cess in an up town club, rtnd one of them told the following story as illus trating the farreaching effect of com paratively insignificant things some times. "It was after Mr. McAlpin was well started in the tobacco business," he said, "that an enterprising rival began to cut. into his business by advertising that he placed a dime in every tenth package of tobacco put up in his fac tory. One day a foreman of the pack ing room went to Mr. McAlpin and said: " 'I have a suggestion to make that promises to knock out this dime in ev ery tenth package scheme of your rival. Will you hear it?' " 'Yes; go ahead.' " 'Well, then, just put a dime in ev ery package of tobacco put up in our shop and don't advertise it. It will ad vertise itself quickly enough.' "Mr. McAlpin saw that the sugges tion was good, and he accepted it. It cost him a good deal of money, but its success warranted it. Within a few weeks farmers were buying McAlpin tobacco, knowing that they would find money in each package, and if they had found diamonds it would not have surprised tliein."—New York Sun. At the Michigan Agricultural college the other day a freshman held a crowd of bazers at bay with a revolver. One does not need togo to the frontier to 6ec real life nowadays. The strike of the Paris dressmakers Is not likely to interfere with the pro duction of those divitie creations of the Parisian modiste's art made id Amer ican cities. Among the many things charged against the late King Milan of Sc'rvia was a vast amount of debts. Job Couldn't Have Stooil It If he'd had itching Pile* They're ter ribly annoying; lint Bucklen's Arnica salve will cure the worst case of Piles on earth. It has cured thousands. For Injuries, Pains or Bodily Eruptions it's the best salve in the world. Price 'Joe. a box. Cure guaranteed. Sold by Panics and Co. druggists. THE INDIANS PAID. What (he White Men Charged Tliein | For Killinu One llunkt'y. lii "Iteminiseences of Old Times In Tennessee" a story is tolil of tho good faith ami honor of a party of Chicka saw Indians. While liunling onu fall they shot a donkey, mistaking the creature for a wild animal. They sold the hide, and it finally came to the hands of John Barnes in Lipton. When the Chickasaw 112! returned to the region of Lipton for their annual hunt the next fall, Barnes invited them to a shooting match, the prize to be the skin of a very rare animal. Thirty braves appeared at the con- ! test, and one of them won the prize. When he saw the skin, lie turned it 1 over and said: "Ha, ha, nie kill him! j Me shoot him! See!" And he pointed ; to the fatal bullet hole. Then Barnes told them that they had killed a donkey, a very useful animal, but lie was sure that they had done It by mistake, believing it to be a wild j animal. The Indians listened attentively to tiie white man's words and then con sulted together a few minutes. Finally they separated, each brave going to his pony, unhitching liini and leading him to the spot where a gang of white men stood, Barnes in the midst of them. Then one of the Indians spoke: "We sorry we kill donkey. We think he belong to the woods. We find him in cane. We think him wild. We sorry; now we pay. We take no white man's hoss, pony, nothing of white man. We honest. We have ponies, that's all. Take pay." And lie mo tioned to the long line of ponies, held by their owners. "How many?'' asked Barnes. "White man say," returned the In dian, "take plenty." The honor of the red men was not equaled by the white men. for. be it recorded to their shame, they took from the Cliickasaws •'!•"> ponies to pay for the accidental killing of one don key. II» ..nlilnc I'p the Mess. Lasting friendships are formed in the officers' mess abroad ship in our navy, but no effort is made to keep track of a mate when he is transferred. This strikes the landsman as a queer freak of nature, but the sailors accept it as a matter of course never to be ques tioned. Men get into pretty close com munion witty each other when they breakfast, dine and sup together for three years. As a rule, they learn each other's history to the minutest detail, unless a man chooses to be disagree able and distant. Close attachments grow up, yet when the inexorable or der arrives from Washington, sending the mess to the four winds of heaven, breaking up. as it were, tlie family, a warm hand shake ends it all. Each of licer goes into a new mess, and the old is forgotten. It was my good fortune to be intro duced to as fine a mess as ever broke bread together on a man-of-war. The devotion of the officers to one another was an inspiration. Finally the sepa ration came. One went to some navy yard, another to the Philippines, an other to China, another to Washing ton, etc. They were scattered all over the world. One day, meeting the lieu tenant commander, who had gone up for promotion, I inquired when he had heard from Lieutenant So-and-so. "Why, not in several months," he re plied. "In fact, not since he was or dered to his new station. You know we fellows don't follow each other's movements after a mess is broken lip. We form new associations, new friends, and the old drop out of sight. We never think of writing to each oth er. It is more than likely we shall nev er see each other again as long as we live, and we haven't the time or in clination to worry over each other's fate."—New York Press. Yonr Canary. Don't forget to give your canary the best of water and seed every day. See that he lias a good lisb bone. Clean his cage every day. Keep him out of the hot sun and the glare of night lights and yet let him have sunshine. Talk to him; talk to him with a kind voice. Let him out of the cage occa sionally. We give crumbs of bread soaked in mil!;. lettuce, chickweed, a little piece of egg. sometimes a little fruit, a nut and lets of good things and let liini eat or reject as he pleases. lit-member he is a prisoner in con finement. dependent on you every day for health and life, and constantly strive to make him happy. A little* 10 cent looking glass will add greatly to his happi:us- TaLe care (hat neither sun nor «,(!. •!• light reflected s!ia!l daz zle liini ".v men PbCiSta, It i..1 '»'• ia L'mlon r.I ".e there are no fewer l!iaii K'.OOO p > 1 musicians of v.ult.: . evades and tii.it more than half of these are women. There is, happily for many struggling women, a strong tendency in favor of women teachers nowadays, so far as pri vate families, schools and so on are con cerned, and a great many women are now being employed as piano tuners, an occupation unknown, so far as they were concerned, till recently, says Woman's Life. But throughout most of the bands and orchestras of the country generally— and this especially applies to the perma nent orchestras of theaters, watering place assembly rooms and so on—there is :i strung feeling in favor of female instru mentalists, ri:d a prominent agent in form.-. tli" writer 'hat l e has little diffi culty in tiie! ng lucrative employment for accomplished violiniste ;-i.*i 1 ly. Only a frw years ago the inclusion 'if women in an orehiv tra was the occasion of curi oils comment. Nowadays it l asses hs a matter of coir-se. I CATARRH Nothing I>n t a I oca ' or elninse of Q/DrrCOlD* limale u ill cure '"B CATARRH 'l'lluprclflc IN W YWM Ely's Cream Balm jt is qnicklv fever and cleanses the Nasal Passages. Allays Inflammation. Heals and Protects the Membrane. Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. No Mercury. No In jurious drug. Regular Size, 50 cents: Family Size. SI.OO at druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS. sft Warren Street New York Red I Suppressed Menstruation OrOSS PAINFUL Menstruation I anSV And a PREVENTIVE lor ■ IWW FEMAIE 111 I ■■■ IRREGULARITIES 111 Are Safe and Reliable. ■ 111 | The Ladies' a RICESLOO Sent postpaij on receipt of price. Money refunded if not as Yin de Cinchona Co. Oes Moines, lowa. D.L.&W. RAILROAD, TIME TABLE. In Effect September Ist, 1890 . GOING WEST .•'AS j ! _ . NEW OKK. PTM< A. M I».>1 i i Jiarclay Ht Lv. # ;;Q ! 10 Oo •••• Cri'stopher St..j 9 lu ou •••• lloltokrn .... 945 Jo 16 svranton Arj o * A.M ,I ' Ul> " M ' ijJJ ScaiBTOH | 10 IMJ :,6 | a4U JSellevue • # to v «S Taylorville iil i', a 03 ; 3 in J,aekawanna lu Zi *lO j; " , 4 iow , PltlSton 10 3J 21, 402 Susquehanna Ave...i lo 3E, * 2O * k'vii West Huston ;e 5 1" 8»i * 24 4 . V? ««« Wyoming 7 « i 0 11 *29 * ".? L, forty Fort . .... 4lb Bennett io a 36 "L.yj', Kingston I io s«>| a 42 * & • Kingston 10 ;>ti 244 * 3O ~ ?' Plymouth June... . 2 47 4 3a r M Plymouth nOS 252 Avomlale. - 2 r<7 .... ~ Nanticoke 11 13 302 .... ' Hunlock'f, | 11 la 310 .... Shiekshinny j 1130 324 .... Hick's Ferry j fll 43 33a .... Beach l aven j | 1148 342 .... Berwick I 11 54 34» .... Briar <Jreek 112 j 112 3 56 .... l.itue Kill lie i 830 i'l2 00 404 .... Espy i 8 3j| 12 15 4 11 •••• Blooinsburg I 8 4 ; 12 22 4 17 ••••! Kupert i 8 5 12 27 423 .... Catawissa |Bst j 12 82 429 . IJar:ville 1 9 Ml 12 47 442 .... | Chulasky | ... i 4 49 ; Cameron 9 2 12 67 464 4<> NORTHUMBERLAND 9 3ti l lo 60S 9OO Ar.IA.If I P. M. P. *•>. M. I'.M GOING KAST! I:" 7 ~ I tTATIOS*. ~A S PAS. PAS. . PAS. PAS NBW Y'AK riiivip- ni.j a.ui a.m.lam Barclay St. Ar 830 6IKl ! | |fl 4(j Christopher St... 3 (10 4 65: !.. .. 635 Hoboken 2 -17 4 4tv .... .8 26 Sera 11 ton 10 051 12 551 j 140 a.m.l p.m. ! ain daily' ! | P.M A.M. P.M. p. M. P. M. div Scranton 9 42 \ 12 65 4 66, 6359 07 Bellevue 9i* 4 60! 6 30|9 02 Taylorville 9 88! 445 6258 57 Lackawanna 9 3ti 437 6 »47 Uuryea 3 2:;; 4 34; 6 84^ Pittßton 919 12 17 429 6 811 Susquehanna Ave.. 9 isi 12 14 424 6 ;830 West Fittston.... »*2 ..... i 421 l 5 b36 Wyoming » ot>! la Oh' 4 lti! 50 822 Forty Fort 9a; ! 4 10; 4 ~Ba* Bennett 900 1 4 o'ij 4 824 Kingston, 8 67; 12 02 4 01i 4 821 Kingston 855 12 00 402 4 -[8 10 Plymouth Junction 850 [ 3 6". 4 4 8 l.s Plymouth 8 16 11 62 361 4 41.8 01 Avomlale 8 40 ! 3 4«. |B(X> Nanticoke 8 851 11 4.V 342 751 Hunlock s 8 27 3 34 i 7 46 Shiekshinny 815 11 3t) 324 73* Hick's Ferry 8 04 3 13 |725 Beaeb Haven 763 ' 3 07 7 12 Berwick 745 11 04 301 IT 06 Briar Creek 7:8 7 00 Lime Kidge 7 30 ; 2 48 852 Espy T!Ct 10 46 242 645 Bloomsburg 715 10 41 236 .... #39 Kupert 709 10 30 231 6 33 Catawissa 703 10 32 226 16 28 Danville 650 10 21 212 ®la Chulasky ; j6 07 Cameron 8 38 : ] '6 03 NOKTHCMBBEL'D... |8 26 10 00 150 5 Lv A.M. A.M. I'.M. P . M - P.M Connections at Kupert with Fhiladolphia 4 Heading Kailroad lor Tamanend, Tamaqua. Williamsnort, Sunbury, Pottsville, etc. At Northumberland with F and E. I)iv. P. K. R. for Harrisburg. Lock Haven, Emporium, Warren Corry, and Erie. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. TIME T4BLE In Effect Mch, 18th, 1900- A M lA. M.i P.M. P . M Scranton(D&H)lv |6 45 59 381 2 18 ii 27 Fittston " '• 708 flo 00l§ a 424 52 [***"| A. M. A. M. P. M. P.M Wilkesbarre,.. lv § 7 30 §lO 35] 30858 00 Flym'th Ferry '• 1 7 37 flO 42 ( 3 16 f6 07 -Nanticoke •' 746 10 s<J| 326 617 "'"] Mocanaqua .... " 804 11 07 846 637 Wapwallopen.. " 813 11 lti 356 647 Nescopeck ar 824 11 2o| 407 700 ]*"" A.M P.M. P.M. Fottsville lv § 5 50 812 01 $ Hazleton " 705 | 200 550 Tomhieken " 722 | 218 610 Fern Glen " 7 29, I 227 618 ] Hock < Men " 735 1 234 625 Nescopeck ar 800 j 300 6 50]*]]" t'atawissa.. .ar A. M A. M |P. M. P >1 Nescopeck 1v; § 8 24|§11 26 40757 00 Creasy •' 833 11 36 416 70y Espy Ferry " 112 8 43 11 46 112 4 24 7 2" E. Bloomsburtc, " 8 Catawissa ar 85611 57 4 35j 782 Catawissa lv 855 11 57 4 351 732 South Danville " 914 12 15 453 751 Sunbury " 935 12 401 515 815 A.M. P.M. P. M KM, Sunbury lv || 9 42j§ 1 10.§ 545 k 4t> Lewisburg.... ar 10 13] 145 618 Milton " lu 08: 139 6 14! 904 Williamsport.. " 11 00 230 710 9&o Lock Haven... " 1169 340 8 07j Kenovo "A.M. 440 900 Kane " I 825 P.M. P.M. Lock Haven..lv jl2 10^;1 345 i .... . . Bellefonte ....ar 105 it 4 44 Tyrone " 2 15; II 600 Fliillpsburg " 4 41Js) 828 Clearfield " 637S 9 09 Pittsburg.... " 655 111 :10 A.M. F. M. P. M.jF M Sunbury lv 950§1 55 j 5 25J8 31 Harrisburg.... ar; 11 3" Ji 3 15 •: 6 Ssj 10 10 jP. M. P. M. F. B».|A ii _ Philadelphia., ariji 3 17 :j 6 23 ||lo 20! 4 25 Haltimore '• 53 11 <i 6 00 9 451 230 Washington ... "§4 lojl, 716 1 10 55 jOS ...... A.M P, M. Sunbury lv §lO 00'S 2 031 Lewistown Jc. ar 11 40j 3 50 1 j Pittsburg 65">§113u A.M. P,M P. M. F M Harrisburg.... lv 11 46 || 3 45 j| 7 20 5102.. P. M. A.M.AM Pittsburg ar 6 55,'11 1130 || 150 530 P. M. P M A M A M Pittsburg lv 710 83< 1300 18 00 ... A.M A M P M Harrisburg.... ar |lss;| 3 4> 9 :«J i 3 10 ... AM A M Fittsbuig lv ; 8 00 P M Je. Je. " ; 7 :tt 5 3 '.O Sunbury ar ; 9 2t t 6 00 "]]] P. M. A M A M A M Washington... lv 10 40 1 75t 10 r« Baltimore ' 11 41 j4 50 840 11 45 Philadelphia... " 11 20 || 425 • S 30 12 26 ]]]]] A. M. A M A. M. P M Harrisburg.... lv 3 3.) 1J 755; 11 4< :4 00 Sunbury ar 505 [ 186 110 610 '"*] P.M. A MAM - Pittsl»urg I\ 512 45 ,i 3 IK' : 8 00 ('learfleld.... " -4 09 .... 928 Philips burg.. " Ist ; 10 12 Tyrone " 715 ;8 1C 12 30 "* Bellefonte.. " 8 31 9 32 1 42 Lock Haven ar 930 10 30 243 "]]] P.M. A MA M PAt i Erie lv J 5 35 I Kane '• s4O ti tK) itenovo •• 12 40 ; H 4.",! 10 a Lock Haven.... " 125 7 Ss| II 25 300 A.M !P M Williamsport.." 210 8 301512 40 400 Milton •' 222 9 19: 127 4 .'>2 "" Lewisburg " 9 051 1 1." 447 Sunbury ar 310 9 4t;| 15.') 620 "] A. M. AMP M P M Sunbury lv g 7 42 ; W 55 5 2 00 • 5 48 South Danville" 7 13 10 17 221 609 Catawissa "j 733 10 3.V 2 3ti 627 E Blooinsburg..'• 739 10 43 243 6 32. Espy Ferry— "j 7 4:i flo 47 f6 U« Creasy " 753 in 66, 205 *: 46 Nescopeck " 803 11 05 aOS 6 6f. : AM A MP. M. P M ! Catawissa lv 73h Nescopeck lv 511 35 S I 10 5 7 05 Hock (Hen ar 820 12 01 436 731 Fern (fieri '• 83; 12 071 442 737 •"* Tomhieken " 842 12 151 451 ?45 Hazleton " 902 12 35 5 I*4 805 Pottsville '• 10 oj. 220 'i ;»» 905 AM AMP M P M Nescopeck lv i S C:i U <>s ; 3 0.5 5 855 Wapwallopen..ar 8 li, 11 20 '3 19 709 Mocanaqua...."] 828 1132 329 7ai Nanticoke " 8 PM| I'lym'th Ferry fs 57 12 oa 35i f"62 Wilksban# ..." 9o& 12 lo 4 o."« 800 A St P 51 P MP M PittstoiKDAH) ar 59 39 Ilia 49 54 56 836 Scranton " " 10 08 I 18 *5845 9 05 I Weekdays. J Daily. 112 Flag station. Additional Train leaves Hazleton 5.15 p. m., Tomhieken 5.35 p. in., Fern (ilen 5.43 p.m., Bock (ilen 5.50 p.m., arriving at Catawissa 6.25 p. m. Pullman Parlor anil Sleeping Cars run on through trains bet ween Sunbury. Williamsport and Erie, between Sunbury »ii«i Philadelphia and Washington and between Harrisburg, Pitts burg and the W T est. For further information apply to Ticket Agents /. Ji, UUTCIITNSOA', J. It. WOOD, (Jen'l Manager. Gen'l Pa»» , n , r Ag. Shoes, Shoes St3riis:n! Ch.eap ! IReliatole I Bicycle, Cymnasium and Tennis Shoes. THE CELEBRATED Carlisle Sliops AND THE Snag Proof Rubber Boots A SPECIALTY. A. SCHATZ, KMC NEW! A Reliable TO SHOP Tor all kind of Tin Roofing, Spouting and Cenoral Job Work. Stoves, Heaters, Furnaces, ©to. PRICES TOE LOWEST! QUILITY THE BEST! JOHN HIXSON NO. 116 E. FKONT BT. JOHN W. PAENSWORTH INSURANCE Lift Fire Accident and Steam Boiler Offlc*: Montgomery Building, Mill street, Danville, - - Penn'a PHILADELPHIA & READING RAILWAY IN EFFECT MARCH HO. 1901 TKAINS LEAVE DANVILLE (weekdays only) For Philadelphia 11.25 a m. For New York 11.85 a m. For Oatawisaa 11.25 a. m„ 6.04 p. m. For Milton 7.32 a. m., 4.00 p m. For Willlamsport 7.82 a. m.. 4.00 p m. Trains for Baltimore, Washington and th« •South leave Twenty-fourth and Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia, weekdays—3.33, I.U 10.22 a. 111., 12.16, 1.33, S.OB, 4.12, 5.03, 7.36, 8.20 p. m., 12.21 night. Sundays 3.23, 7.14 a. m., 18.16 1.33, 4.12, 6.03. 7.26, 8.26 p. m. ATLAXTIC CITY RAILROAD. Leave Philadelphia, Chestnut Street Whaif and South Street Wharf. WEEKDAYS—Express 6.00,9.00 a.m., (Satur days only 1.00) 2.00 4.00,5.00, 7.15 p. m. Aj commodation 8.00 a. m., 5.30 p. in. Sunday Express, 6.00, 9.00,10.00 a. m., 7.15 p. in. Ac commodation 8.00 a. in., 5.00 p. ni. Leave ATLANTIC CITY DEPOT—'Week days— Express 7.35, 9.00, 10.15 a. in., 2.50, 5.30, 6.00 p.m. Accommodation 8.05 a. m., 4.05 p. in. Sundays Express—lo.ls a. m.« 4.30, 5.30, 8.00]). m. 'Accommodation—7.ls a. m., 4.05 p. in. Parlor cars on all express trains. LEAVE PHILADELPHIA. For CAPE MAY and OCEAN ClTY—Week - days—9.lsa. m„ 4.15 p.m. Sundays- 9.15 a.m. South St ~ 9.00 a.m. Additional for Cape May—Weekdays—s.oo p. m. For SEA ISLE ClTY—Weekdays—9.ls a. m. 5.00 p. m. NEW YORK AND ATLANTIC CITY EXPRESS. Leave NEW YORK (Liberty Street) 3.40 P. M Leave ATLANTIC CITY, 8.80 A. M. Detailed time tables at ticket offices. W- G BESLEK, EDSON J WEEKS Gen. Superintendent General Agent. Hew Coal Yard! R. J. Pegg, Coal Dealer, has re moved to his new COAL YARD. OFFICE: —No. 344 Ferry Street (near D. L- & W. R. R. Crossing ) YARD —In rear ofOttice. Robert J. Pegg, COAL DEALER Telephone No 158
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers