cooking ter aod til ‘they half-pint 2 Into stir the },, baked fuls will pount of it with a s Add t before itself to 17 & pint to this a tof cold together is excel. using. tter and to it a [hen the out ins out three taste. — ping of a quarter this re- h- brains. vell-lone inusually pain, full a3 beet id gravy wnture ot al, pork, less done ile ds to ecording he thick- yoking of n; fifteen yoking of nb, ham, wl the oven e fire toc Ok should cz of the y cooked. efully ob: at around he learner ifc can ba ey aad examined 1e or tivo an infal= that next should ba ye blue or raw look it felt tha d a little ts should bh the ex ich many Ky dics rallon of L salt and La teacup ipooas of tes, pour ith four, ge mush- tems, roil ten eggs, x sprinkle in butter, and cus stew ‘ten hich add h/salt and hrooms in resh exos ‘salt and l erumbs ven until large firm alks close 2 down 1a and pep. on each en twenty 18s witha )t. iop one wi add a ooms and c two an- tar with a and three mix with joms, boil 3, r-the bot- layer of over with { butter, n layer of read un- top with of cream —Parboil n and set rater, onc ey and a saucepan Bet over a quart ten min- . Put a: om of a 1shrooms, have the he stove biting in ex : Ind, recently, almost resulte the breaking loose of ~ mals of the menageri 3 nid! on of J : i 5 Haan, the latest eeper, to a near-by saloon to hive . veryang ily ‘a minute fortunately striking agains of the tent and narrowly oer? an hour, procured e jug had Silt “he hastened it refilled before the ‘mistake should be found i it was ‘not, long before the ele: gan to Jovelop Eymptoms of g yes. EE of the men took an elephant hook and endeavored to calm the excited ‘beast, ‘but the medisine was not: of a 3 Ame: motion he tha was seized by the unk, and after being ‘was vio about twenty-five feet, t the side missing a pole. With a single righty effort the ‘phains were broken and Babe was free. Staggering from side to side, eo the animal ‘commenced a wild ram- Angie the legs in =n passed off, “and in such a Babe was } yer, and free from him sick or kill him, taf ers of the emu and eagl ‘wearers: strength t “mies, and a little d inches long, of be throughe the septum of sof wh Rev. Mr, We arc pleased ‘to present’ y _ Btreet Christian Church, Lynn xl layman, ‘who ‘Knows w d hesitate to va Article of Meri and worth, from which he or his for which she found little Jel many things that promised well little. fall i rary 8 one e cou at tian 4 of henda gene 1 health is fm TOV eh PD { have no hesitation 1 jendorsing its. A, WILLIA TT Australian Sorcery. atives of Finke River, ne falls “sick or dies 1 itten, or hurt bs A the same time they: erers in the directing of their enemy io make 1 ich they also think they FOR THE wr OF OTHERS Williams Hearttly: En- dorses Hood's. Sarsaparilla. this from Rev. A. A. Williams. of the Sillsbee , Mass, : x see no reason why a clergyman, more than, erect’ hy spea t family have n signally benefited, and whose commenda- Pn 2 serve to'exlend those benefits t.yotin- “i Tere by nereasing thein confidence. has for many years been a sufferer from severe Nervous Headache ‘She has tried bug Derforined a fiiend gave her a lin. it foging surpiie My wife Bottle of ity, Sehitle ar er appetite 5 tter. Frum our exper lence with : Hood’ s Sarsaparilla its mers tle and effective. Try a box. = Price “Hood 8 hi are the as family oa sabiartio; gen PNU43 re ©: 3 Svein ant Nand 2 IONPR: XV, MORRIS, seoutcs Ci D.C, C aims. Leta atty lice, it RE | 84dd PPATENTHY © Rais Sirhan SESE -prge 0! one Ruptore IT 5 Resto Ls EVERELT 5 { hi EE okie 1 doe the VE Chicopee ¥ ‘alls, tt Send for 1 Tovah’ nd tos | plastron in blue and white ‘strives, Juvenile Toilets. Som> Pretty Costumes Ror Boys and Guris. Little Lord . Faun. leroy Styles Are Discardad, i " HILDREN'S clothes _ are included in wo. man's thoughts and {ributations of dress. Jlist now the fond mother is costuming lier hopeful son for carly winter. litt:e fellow has only Just hed his skirts of infancy taken off, the doting parent is ina ‘quandary. Her first : great struggle in the : matter, oF corse, is whether or not to cut off thie darlings pretty curls, either requests or insists—dceording as he ‘manages such family affairs or doesn’ t—that it is time for the boy to. be gis! inguashed from a girl. (The mother agrees readily that the skirfs must go. and some form of Trias. tahine leg. covering be substituted; but sheis . Bet Venn npr rah MANLY DRESS FOR A BOY, sure to have : a 200d cry over the cropping of his hair. However, it is. a plain and sure chronicle - of - current fashions = to write it down that short-haired little Boys are considered the correct thing in New York swe:dom. Lord Fauntleroy has gone clea1 out of sight, : if angtonly rely | i" an example of him seen, A PRETTY HOME-WEAE DRESS. Little boys not only have close-cropped heads thisifall, but their attire is completely free . from girlish’ shapes and adornments. The initial picture shows one of these small chaps, exactly as he appeared. It will be geen that no ribbons or any other flimflams were on him. His hat was not fibboned; his coat was a manish sort of reefsr, and even the knee-breeches, which ars still "Bov's BATLOR TG. | | A GIRL'S COSTUME. fashionably retained, were here Si placel by regular trousers. The material, mothers inclined to follow this model ay like to know, was heavy navy blue serge. without any decoration whatever. But such a suit would look well with the collar and with embroidery on a white or light ‘blue ‘ground, : : © The picture shows am boy, The coat is single-bre! i “and under | {it is a vest buttoned up to the fover ‘col coat is suitable for a boy of six | to ten s¢ ; i Tue revulsio against what we may cal stripe i i Arp The father | minature. lo _ orim, isa model that will be rather exten. Little - a play, 1 ne juvenile Wilet. 0k at 5 icturé for such a dress as fashionable moth- wm put on their little ‘daughters. for bomé wear. Int this case the gown was madeo? Bayy | ) ‘with, 4 narrow: white ha was white lace. sketched 3h they play- MODEL HAT FOR GIRLS. ed in Central Park. The boy was9 orib years old. ' His suit was nautical to some ex- tent, the trotisers being of navy blue, the blouse of white flannel and the collar of a blue which matched the pantaloons. The girl was a year or so older. Her gown was gray flannel and the Greenaway bonnet matched it in color. i ‘The picture gives an idea of children’ 3 fashions of the season. The boy’s sailor rig gives free play to his limbs. The girl's dress is equally comfortable, while a little | more ornate. . The hood protects her face “and gives a platuresque touch to the cos fume: 1 .In ‘making dolé of het little girls the mother will. endure no restrictions, = The juvenile belles are picturesque this season, . und often fantastic... The hat shown in the: picture, with the pretty face of a belle in gking out from its frame of sively duplicated this winter. Not only will ‘such Hats, made of soft felt and often trim- med with fur, be worn by little girls, but ‘ also’by young women. The very latest news of millinery is that’ bats wili be dressier than nsual and there: fore will be worn on occasions when hitherto bonnets were considered mote appropriate. These hats may be described. in a general “sway low crowned and wide brimmed. In some cases the crown is uniquely. pressed, and to the brim is given some capricious touch of adjustment.: Some of the bonnets show broad crowns with narrow cap-like Srims. fully in trimming hats, placed separately as ‘a rule, and not in a close group.” Thus it comes that finer and costlier feathers. will have to be used; Felt will be in ‘great fivor ~ alike for bonnets and hats. but they will be trimmed richly with “velyets, satin ribbons and braided chenille. The monthly debt = jed from ury, Depertment at ashington a. of igre of $689,090, 15 in | a 0 tober, The surplus : gold EL 401 19. The National debt, net, less the $131,013,401 19 cash’ in the Treasury, is $835,311,332 Od.of which 385, 082,020 i interest bearing, Twen ; v Poisoned by. by 2 2 Cow. Twenty persons living on a farm at Groitsy, a village: of Poland, have been poisoned by eating the flesh of a ¢ow’ that had béen suffering with cattle nlague. Ten of the persons who partook of the meat have died, after suffering great agony, and’ ihe physicians state that some of the others will not recover. - PROMINENT PEOPLE. a G LADSTONE'S physician ‘tori ds his ate tending evening receptions. Guy pr MAUPASSAXT, the famons French * story writer, 1s out of the lunacy hospital. J ENNYSON is believed to have made more money by his poetry fhan any other poet, GovEnNOR TooLr, of Montana, is ‘tha only one of the forty-four sho has no staff. AN American suthor in Paris named Harris bas received the Legion of Honor ribbon, Query Victoria, of Enzland, is said to be uisturbed because of the musing among . the Windsor troops. i ‘GENERAL RICHTER, confidential secretary and adviser of the Russian Kmperor, isa German by birth and a very devout Lu- theran. IBERE are three Governors—-the Caief Magistrates of Kentuckr, Maryland and dode Island — who bexc the name of rown. Davip Duprey Fiero has presented to the Washington and Lée University, Vir- ginia; his entire collection ot law books. Tae svhole gitt is valued at £25,000. TENNISON destroyed a mass sof his letters and manuscripts a féw years ago in a fit of alarm caused by his reading Froude's “Reminiscences of Thomas Carlyle.” THE birthdays of the Kibz and Queen of Portugal fall on the same uate, September 8th, a coincidence that does not attach to any ‘other of the European sovereigns. E.R. Gussy, of Tampa, Fia., is Collec- tor of Customs at that place a : years old, boyish looking, and is said to be’ the youngest Collector in the country. PArsoN Kneipp, of Germany, the basis “of whose medical system is water and oing barefooted, has been called upon for advices ; t by the Enpress of Austria. 2 MERRIWEATHER, of Ken- tacky. he was Henry Clay's sgcoessor in the United States Senate, celebrated his Shipaie birvidsy at Louisville ths other Covson. the composer, is an eccentric individual and will Sat work at his own time and to order, ts sail that he has twelve Baflaished ‘operas lying in his ‘manu: seript d ; lat er. Harrisonts portrait, st: not Ostrich feathers will be used pienti to ba ge galected, has | NEWSY GLEANINGS, Tar world has 430 paper mills. CHIGAGO handles 1300 trains daily, DaBOMEY has fallen to the French. Frost in Brazil has sent coffee up. CHICAGO i$ to have a Chinese theatre, RAINS have causad floods in England. © DEER are plentiful in the Adirodacie. © 1TALY is suffering from a lack of small com. CHOLERA ismaking appailing ravages in China. THE BE are 300 Indiar voters State of Washinzton. Apacsae Indians in New Mexico and Ari. in the new ‘zona are on the warpath. Tar Swiss Republic has been duped by a bogus Minister from Salvador. Tag Bolivian Congress has passed a law fixing the Presidential term at four years. THE railroads of the coun‘ry Wars riever so overrun with business as the are to-day. DYSENTERY i§ raging fatally in some districts in China, with 3044 deaths i in 15,- J cases. Tax Ohio River at Fittsburzy, Penn. is Joweér than for veers, and traffic has been suspended. DEER ara so pieniiful in Michigan that boys have to be hired to stones them out of ‘the turnip #elds. ABOUT £00,000 cases of unusually fine | sweet corn and 100,000 cases of succovasn is _the pack reported ror Maine. @ Tae girl baby born in the E guimaux viliage at the ‘Worla’s Fair, Chicago, bas been named Columbia Sasa. MAXY counties in Oxlahoma are so. poor that they have been nuable to comply with the Territorial Australian ballot law. Tre Missouri Pacific Road has given $10,- 050 to. the families of thoss killed in’ toe Hight wita the Daiton ganz at Coflyville, an. THE heaviest loss amoaz swine, acm dtoe tone Department of Azricuttaral reporcs is custained in tha South. Georgia lsais, with a loss of almost tin per cent. while | Rlaboma, Mississippi and Argasas ara nos tar behind, A GENEHAL rain th Ssionut ths North- west has given the railroad managers en- couragement in taeir effiris to raiss tha grain bloekade, Thay siv the rains will make the roads baianl stop farmers from hauling in grain. THE original Columbus letter, rez nly purchased in Europe for the Lisuox Library, reached the Custom House, New York City. 1t was put nander safe lock, for ths precious document has an invoice value of $7 30). There is no duty upon it, A ManitoBa Indian made a death-ei confession that he and a companion, while accompanying a Sir John Franklin Arctic relief expedition, discovered one of Frank- lin’s ships, but were atraiil to reporu if, fear- ing delay at a time when provisions were short: FROFESSOR FANCIULLE, of New York, hat been appointed leader ot tha band o: the United States Marine Corps at Washington, 10 succaei John Pailip Sousa. The new bandmaster is an Italian, having been born in Tuscany ani educated in the Conserva- ry of Music of Florenc:. THE heaviest armor plate ever made is now in course of preparation at ths Bethle- hem (Penns) Iron Works: Taéinzot weighs eighty-four tons, and when completed will be seventeen inches thick, Thais ‘armor will defend the side of the battleship Indiana, now building at Cramp's ship yard, Paila- delphia. = A PiMas Tnlian was about to shoot his squaw near Tempe, Arvizina, when the lat- ‘tér’s brother suggestsd that toe irate brother had better shoot him, which suzges- tion was prompily adopted, and the biz brother dropped: dead. Four Pumas, depu- tized as constables, subsequently pursued the murderer, and as he failed to heed their warninzs to stop he met with a similar tate at their hands a ak : THE LABOR WORLD, Textices are first in Prussian industries MINERS at Carmaux, France, have re | sutned work. THE strike of the printersia Pittsburg hag lastas over one year. THE pay of an ordinary: British constable is from $7.50 to 89 a wees. 3 TrE Bakers’ Unions of the States of New York and Pennsylvania are forming State | organizations, A CO OPERATIVE shoe factory is about to he established bv the Kaights of Labor in Rochester, N. ¥. “WaGEs for nviners’ have Been raised two -per cent. by the Seauylkill Coal Exchange, in Pottsville, Pana. Over seven thousand. applications were recently receive lin Paris, France, for fity- tive vacant positions. OvER 3,750,000 women are working for wages in Krance, and bundredsof thousands. are seeking work without being able to fin} ir. Unio brickiayers who were employed to build aa addition to the Butler University as Indiznapolis, Ind., refused to work on an old foundation built by non-union men. The trustess allowed tham to tear dowa the old wall, and then the work went on. Tre Order of Train Dispatchers was pers manently ‘orzanizad at Memphis, ‘tenn. with 152 charter members. The constitution and by-.aws embrace the protective featuras which caused so much discussion at the con- vention in New Orleans last June, Tue following are a few examples of the rate of pay of women in Lond: Making paper bags, sight cents per 1000; possible earnings 31.9 to $2.25 pa week. Buttons holes, six cents per doz:n; possible earnings, £2 per-week, Shirts, four ‘cents; each worier nding her own eotion can gat six done be tween 0a, m. and 11 pl im, Arran sevoratyears of struzgle, cotton inning of Chiness cotton by Chess hanis is establishsd in Snanghai. ~~ Five huadrst ‘ani fifty looms and 21,000 spindles tura out weekly 180,000 yards, thirty-six inches wide, of a superior quality of imitation American drill shesting, : Half the looms are of Knog: lish make and Halt. of: American. KoNEPERG, in Norway, (sesms to be a little paradise for ‘workmen. Of the 40) miners employed there every ons has a honse of his own, an { men having worked for ten years have a right to a pznsion of ten per cont. of their wages, wiicn increases every year two percent. After thirty years the pension would’ amount to a. .25 per month, or Suh © a man to live spon. teness from Jaf bet or ae kes is unknown in Konsberg. pal ~—Frox January 1 to October 31 there have been in Philadelphia 3,685 cases “of diph- | theria. Of these 1,095 were fatal. six cases were reported on Friday. Twenty- — Tur business failures in Germany dur- ing the fist six months of this year were 60- per cent. great er than ‘during a correspond ing period in 189%. ZA. W. Bexnerr, tHe telegraph operator, whose negligence caused a freight collision on the Fort Smith road, in Arkansas, killing two men, ig now a raving maniac, ~~THERE were 502 alarms of fire turned in .in Chicago in October,a larger. number than ever received in any month in the a; 8 id = > plentiful in on : that tae cattle: £5 apless for scalps, ‘other pa DAVID C. COOK. The Ploneer Publisher of Sanday-Schoal Literature. David C. Cook, of Chicago, whose nam: has become a household word through his Sunday school publications, is but 42 years old. He was born in East Worcester, N. Y. i > 1590, a sonof Rev, E. 8. Cook, a Mecihodist minister, and from a child an earnest and = devoted member of the church and Sunday-school. BS He began teaching E> in Ward's Rolling Mills Sunday-school, in Chicago, at the age of : 17, ‘helping also in one DAVID GC. COOK. and sometimes two mission schools of the West Side, meet- ing at different hours, until the great fire of 1871 changed his plans, and marked the beginning of his work on the North. Side. HNeeing the dis tress and pressing need for help, he left his home and rented rooms in one of the poor- gst and roughest neighborhoods of the burnt distriet, where, with three other younz men whom ‘he persuaded to join him, he ave himself to relief and mission work, ere on North avenue, in a German theatre and beer hall, was started his “Everybodys Mission,” aftersvard removed to a buil ing of its own near by. This mission, with at- tendance of 350 to 450, he started, bailt up and sustained without sid {rom any cnirch or society tor five years, until others were able to occupy the field. - He also organizad and superintended on the North Side, North Avenue Mission, Lake View Mission and Lake View Uunion schools, and, in Elgin, the (Frace Church School, besides several smaller enterprises elsewhere. His tirst publications were prepared only for his own schools, then, to divide the cost of type-setting. he asked orders trom others. No'one could be more surprised than he at the demand thus created. Afterwards his ‘rehools afforded a place tor first testing new helps and new ideas. It is te this love for the work, and close application to it, that schools are indebted for what he bas done tor the causes of Sunday-school literature. CaAUNCEY DEPEW carries half a mill- ion dollars’ insurance on his precious life. He do-s not know when he may be obliged to ride on sonie of the rail- roads in which he is interested. New Orleans Picayune. “Do vou love me?” soul. I ‘gwear it.” “Nay, do not swear. Speak it into the phonograph and thet will be enough.” —San Fran cisco Chranicle. “With all my Ilave You Asthma § Dr. R. Schiffmann, St. Paul, Minn., will mail a trinl package of chiffmann's Asthma Cure nee. to any sufferer. Gives instant relief in rst cases, and cures where others f Fone this paper and send address. Among Queen Victoria's choice china is a Sevres dessert service valued at $200,000: "Rev. H. P. Carson, Scotland, Dak.. says: “hwo bottles of Hall's Catarrh Cure complete. is cared my little girl.” Sold by Druggists, The cholera germ propagates so - rapidly that in 48 hours one will produce 280,000,000 others. A Complete Noworase: For One Gene. The Pittsburgh L Clironigle-Telegraph is sold by all News Agents and deiivered by Carriers everywhere, for One Cent a copy or Sie Cenls a week. * Tt contains daily, thé’news of the world, receiving as it does, the reports of both the Associated Press and the United Press. No sv avhich sells for (Ole Cent receives both of these reports, Its rans fe Financial Fashion, and Household Departments are un- equaled. Order it from your News Agent. Ir you ate Sonstipateth billous or troubled with sick headache, Beecham’s Pills afford immediate relief. ur: ‘druggists. cents. 0g, Ror Le g agceieD mels, and Paints which stain ‘the i injuréthe iron. and burn off. The Rising Sun Stove Polish is “Brilliant, Odor- Jess arate. and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. “German Syrup” Iam a farmer at Edom, Texas. 1 have used German Syrup for six years successfully for Sore Throat, Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Painsin Chest and Lungs and Spitting-up of Blood. I have tried many kinds o Cough Syrups in my time, but’z me say to anyone wanting sucha medicine—German Syrupisthe best. We are subject to so many sudden changes from cold to hot, damp weather here, but in families where German Syrup i is used there is little trouble from colds. John F.Jones.®@ This Trade Mark is on the best WATERPROGE COAT Hlpauratea in the World! Free. A. J. TOWER, BOSTON. MASS, PISO'S CURE FOR " Consumptives and people who have weak lungs or Asth- ‘ma, should use Piso's Cure for Consumption, It Jas cured thousands; it has notinjur- ne. Itisnot an 10 take. i i the best cough syrup. i _§bld evervwhere. B8e. ; CONSUMPTION. per aay, at 10 int | ana LIGHTNING § PLAT fhe "ol DE if tableware, &e. Plat i Buea of jewel soi ae i on all of ital ie Bold, silver or nickel. we, No capital, n ONE jOve. Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, snd acts geady yet promptly on the Kidneys, ; iver and Bowels, cleanses the tem effectually, dispels colds, or 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 Sens prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most Pe remedy known. : rup of Figs is for sale in 50a nd $1 Potties oy 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. SAN. FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK. N.Y. PN D 43 Tw DR. KILMER'S - OO 3 THE GREAT KIDNEY LIVER 22 a2 Dissolves Gravel, Gall stone, brick dust in urine, pains in orethra, LADDER CURE. sudden stoppage of water with pressure. ~ Bright’s Disease, Tube casts in urine, scanty urine. Swamp-Root cures urinary troubles and kidney difouition, Liver Complaint, . Torpid or enlarged liver, foul breath, bilious< ness; bilious headache, poor digestion, gout, Catarrh»- Bladder, Inflammation, frritation, ulceration, dribbling, frequent calls, pass blood, mucus or pus. g Guarantee—Use ccatents of One Bottle, it £ Dok ben efited, Druggists will refund you the price pa At Druggists, 50¢. Size, $1.00 Size. *Invalids’ Guide to Health” free—Consultation free. IDR. Kizuer & Co. BIXGHAMTON. N. X. Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies Other "Chemicals are used in the preparation of Ww. BAKER & C0.’S \BreakfastCocoa which is absolutely pure and soludle, | Yt has morethan three times Sugar, and is far more eco’ less than one cent a cup. nourishing, and BAS nomical, costing It is delicious, DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & €0., Dorchester. Mass. Institute of Shorthand, No. 1M Fifth avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. Gra. ham and Pitman systems. Private and asl instructions. Special speed classes for all writ~ ers, Good positions for competent students. Mar Kine Hahit Cured in 10 OPIUI 20 dn ¥ till cureds Brod STERHE NS, Lebanon, Ohio: Ohioe ‘IF YOU OWN CHICKENS . XOU WANT'E > YY THEIR THEM TO A WAY Jou merely keep them as a diversion. In ore 3 andle Fowls udiclonsiy, AL must Know something about toem. ~ To t this wa: selling a book tring ihe €X) erence of a practical po xper c= (Only 250. twenty-five years. ir Sy oA id aman ye put all his mind, and time, and money to niaking a suc- cess of Chicken raising-—notasa pastinie, Lut as a business—and if. you will profit Lie twenty-five years’ work, you Na save many hicks annually, nt is, that jon Potiltry ee purposes: ov : SEERA tpaid fo! “five gents er Book a Ss ST. NY. 0 straining after urination, pain in buck and hips,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers