arter of rs long. d up for ched to- rd forms med, the ‘bow of ring ate rovides a | which to g cheese them too ould ba but ba 3 Je nd stay >. Ween rita rica yur chafe pooniuls ne (thin repaveds chopped und salt, aber and odful of 3 thick, over. one ~ years ot . with the railway business.— Ohizago Post. great p PLEASANT LITERATURE FOR FEMININE READERS. gd nd % > © SHE'IS A RAILWAY PRESIDENT. ~~ Mrs. Hattie M. Kimball is, probably, the only female railway President in the world, She was elected to the Presi- 4) “dency of the Pennsboro & Harrisonville [Railway Corapany, which has its termini _ in West Virginia and Pennsylvania, the i Sih: mouk and will assume the duties of e office next year, Mrs. Kimball is the widow of Moses P. Kimball, and] gz the life of her husband she 3d him in the management of many rises. She is about fifty and thoroughly conversant : : : | 7° WHAT THE FASHIONS PROPHESY. -. In the old days the stately sleeve puffs “were filled with paper or feathers, to pre- serve. if peculiar stand-out effect. Wait a bit and you will see history repeat Ztself in this as well as in the crinoline. “The crinoline is not in yet, but it is com- ing, as all signs prophesy. . ds done now to give sweeping, spread- Everything 1g crinoline effects, and all is ready for dé advent. Fashion is a wily goddess and cautiously moves in the accomplish- mt of her purposes, shocking us not insurrection by the abruptness of innovations. Lace of every kind is © #he trimming of the evening gown for old and young alike.—New York Sun. A BUNCH OF ‘‘DONTP's.” irls, don’t believe implicitly every-’ thing he tells you when he is wooing Don’t let: him win your love too y; men do nct like that; they would _wather have a little trouble to gain you. t worry the life olf of him by him, ‘‘why do. you\love me?” does not always have an wuswer for Don’t bother him too much about ‘your Hats and gowns; a man likes to hink you dress to please him, but he has other things to talk about. ee don’t ‘accept him with reserves for one else; love him, be good to him, your best to make him happy.— lusic and, Drama. THE SPINSTERS. “Mrs. Mary A. Livermore lately spoke , Boston on “The Women Who Do Not .” Bhe said: +This world would not be what it is “to-day were it not for the work of un- ed women who have gone into {hospitals and prisons and among disease AN rrow and suffering, laboring for dove with the spirit of Christ. ¢*‘Byery woman’s heart thrills when she galls the voli: Harriet Martineau, the ioneer of the higher education of men, leaving behind her a literature nor, i high ethics; Sarah Martin, who came before Elizabeth Fry a son work; Florence Nightingale, the pioneer of sanitary work in war; the Cary sisters, Abby May, Frances Power “Cobbe and Harriet Hosmer. +. ¢¢Tha world is glorified by its un- married women and filled with their good deeds.”’— Womankind. A SERVICHABLE LONG CLOAK. “A serviceable long cloak in Conne- _“amara style, costing but little if ond has ‘seven a moderate knack of the dressmak- Zing art, can be made of any of the very wide German broadcloths shown in such _ a variety of handsome colors this season. | Dark wine red is an excellent choice, as’ dt is sure to prove becoming, and its very ucolor imparts a look of warmth and com- dort. Line with wine-colored cotton ~~ plush and face the long, loose fronts with wine surah. Get one yard and three- © quarters of the surah, and cut itin two strips for the facing, Shirr the cloth only about the neck in yoke form, and ido not shirr the cotton plush. Have hat fitted fir:t, and made to lie very close over the shoulders. White Thibet ior shaggy black fur are either of them sed to trim these wraps, simply forming “=m soug collar around the throat only, or ' used also as bands to go down each side Buttermilk is said to be a true milk peptone, and, with the exception of koumiss, is the most digestible milk pro- duct at our command. - Extracting sections that are partly filled 18 a fussy sort of job. Isit not better to feed to the bees, and then ex- tract. if necessary, from the brood combs. : ‘*The Douglass spruce is the great timber tree of the Rockies and the Sier- rag. In the Hast it will thrive any- where,” says a member of the Associa- tion of American Nurserymen. ‘Whole oats, wheat, bran and corn meal form an excellent ration for young stock. The health and complete and systematic growth of the body are best secured by feeding a variety of grain. From experiments made with blue grass by the Iowa Experiment Station it ap- pears that this grass is richer in albumin- oids and crude protein than timothy, red top, orchard grass or low meadow hay. What may be a. perfect animal in the eyes of one breeder will fall short in some of the essential particulars with an- other, mainly because some breeders will consider some things more essential than others. ; 4 Bis Breeding to chunkiness and lard is ruining the swine of the gountry. It seems to be the hog ideal of some men to get as much grease as possible inside a certain amount of skin, Muscle, sinew and bone should be developed. It has been discovered recently by medical men that ‘‘lump-jaw,” as itis called, or lumps found on the jaws of cattle, are sometimes caused by decayed teeth. 1Itis not known how much the poor brutes suffering with the tooth- ache. ; No difference if a hog will eat almost everything placed before him, he should not have everything that his corrupted appetite craves. Clean food will make clean pork, and only.clean food is healthy and will make perfectly healthy meat. * 2h A cow that jumps fences needs atten. tion, but; not’ s6 much in the way of pokes, blinders, knee bands, etc., as plenty of food. Cows don’t jump fences just to show their skill, as boys do when they stand on their heads the day after a circus leaves town. | Do not let the hens in damp locations, ‘as it is a mistake to suppose that moist nests are necessary for sitting hens. Such nests may answer for midsummer, but at this season of the year. the best results will be obtained in hatching when the hens have dry, warm, comfortable nests, When the chicks are out do not feed me d which rs, as they will | CURIOUS FACTS. China takes most of our cotton. The Chinese reckon this to be yeaf 7,910,341. . ; A doctor says that one person in nine is left-handed. The Thames (London) police force consists of 200 men. : The Island of Malta 1s the most densely populated spot on earth. ; On the average a boy costs a parent about $200 a year until twenty years of age. : Apple trees set out eighty years ago in New Haven, Conn., bore excellent fruit last fall. A colt with horns a foot long is owned by a farmer named Kavanaugh,ia Scriven County, Ga. Si In the city of Berlin, with a popula. tion of 1,315,600 there are but 26,800 dwelling houses. #4 . From the American aloe tree is made’ thread, ropes, cables, paper, clothing, soap, sugar and brandy. i as In Fiji, the Friendly Islands, Samoa and New Britain, 100,000 natives wor- ship in Methodist churches. ; Trains loaded with geese arrive daily at Berlin from Russia. Ten thousand came recently on a single train. : A spoon for measuring medicine, by which a dose ean be administered with- out spilling, has been invented. Nl ' A gannet, a bird rare in New England, was shot the other day at Middleton, BR. I. It measured six feet from tip to tip of wings. 5 ches Nota drop of rain fell in the United Bates #Oon one Sunday in last October. This is the first time this has occurred in eighteen years. : Three women, now over eighty years of age, are living within a stone's fro : of each other near Norwich, Conn., who have each been struck by. lightning a various times. Among the delicacies to be obtained at a Japanese railroad station are slice lotus roots, roots of large burdock, lily bulbs, shoots of ginger, pickled gree plums and the like. TRA ee In Austraha, where deadly snakes abound, it has been discovered that strychnia is almost an infallible cure their bites. The antidote acts quickly, snake poison slowly. All physicians use it. Se It is estimated that the treasure lying idle in India in the shape of hoards o ornaments amounts to $1,250,000,000 A competent authority calculates that in Amrista city alone there are jewels to the value of $10,000,000. A soso (N. H.) mule, finding its neck so syollen by some affection that it couldn’t feach the ground to feed stand- ing, laid down, and after eating all the grass within reach on one side rolled over and finished its meal on the other. A floating island in Sadanga Pond, which is about a mile in length, near Jacksonville, Vi., covers about one-third of the surface and is about two feet in’ thickness. It bears cranberries, and if drifts from one part of the pond to an- other, according to the direction of the = wind. : . A monument of granite is in course of erection at Mile Hollow, on the outskirts = of Bordentown, N. J., to mark the spot from which the locomotive John Bull No. 1 started on its first trip on the Camden and Amboy Railroad in the fall of 1831. This is said to have been the first’ locomotive to run a mile in this country. Food Before Sleep. Dr. W. T. Cathell has entered a strong protest against’ the old fashioned idea that people should go to bed coms paratively hungry. He is of opinion that fasting during the long interval be- tween supper and breakfast, and ‘espe- cially the complete emptiness of the: .stomach during sleep, adds greatly te the amount of emaciation, sleeplessness and general weakness so often met with. It is well known that in the body there is a perpetual disintegration of tissue," sleeping or waking; it 1s therefore natural to believe that the supply of nourish- ment should be somewhat continuous, especially in those in ‘whom the vitality is lowered. As bodily exercise is sus- pended during sleep, with wear and tear correspondingly diminised, while diges- tion; assimilation and nutritive activity continues as usual,the food furnished during this period adds more than is de- -stroyed, and increased weight ‘and im- proved general vigor is the result, = All animals except man eat before sleep, and there is no reason why man should forme an exception to the rule. Dr. Cathellis satisfied that were the weakly. the ema- ciated ‘and the sleepless to nightly take -a light meal of simple, nutritious food before going: to ‘bed, for a prolonged: period, nine in ten of them would be thereby raised to a better standard of health. He has found that after direct- ing a bowl of bread and milk or a sancer . of oatmeal and cream before going to bed, for afew months, a surprising in~ crease in weight, strength and general © | tone has resulted. Persons who are too stout and plethoric arc recommended to follow an ' opposite ecourse.—QCourier~ Journal. al An Effect of Smokeless Powder. Judging by the observations of an English officer who attended the late = French military maneuvers, the use of smokeless powder is likely to have a pe~ culiar effect on the morale of soldiers in battle. He says that again and again he found himself in a position where he could. hear volley after volley, field guns, too, sometimes being fired, so far as sound covld indicate, within 800 yards, and yet after gazing intently for minutes he tried in vaih to discovpr the where abouts of the firérs. = One moment * sound would seem tobe quite close, b a puff of wind would cause it to a “to come from miles off. If th 3 dden, and a