Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, November 02, 1900, Image 3

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    About
Womcni kind^
Tlvo Business Side of Art.
Women are winning success in the
''business side of art" in many direc
tions aside from the fashion drawings
that produce a good Income for clever
artists. Several preserving houses
employ women to design the labels
suggest names for the new brands,
draw the pictures that are used in ad
vertising and arrange exhibits at fairs
and exhibitions.
To Miitcli a Colored Border.
The handkerchief, plain white, with
a colored border, has long been in use.
Now comes a dainty scrap of a mou
choir, with one initial letter embroid
ered in delicate color. You have the
Initial iu pink, red, blue or black. The
Initial is usually colored to match the
border of the handkerchief, but you
can obtain a colored initial on a plain
white handkerchief with a hemstitched
border if you do not care for a line
of color on the edge.
Ditched* d'Aostn.
The Duchess d'Aosta, wife of the
heir apparent to the Italian throne, is
thoroughly English in her tastes and
ways, having been born at Twicken
ham during the exile of her father, the
Comte de Paris. The Duchess has
three charming sisters, the Queen of
Portugal, the Duchess de Guise and
the Princess Louise, who is ouly sev
enteen. All are said to be bright, un
affected English girls, notwithstand
ing their French parentage.
Iflntn For the Fall Bride.
Do not inaugurate any departure
from the usual manners and customs
of the place iu which you live. Let
the minister who officiates at the wed
ding direct, you as to the ceremony,
your ouly suggestion to him being that
the rites be very simple. Try, when ar
ranging for the wedding, to plan
everything so that there will be a
spirit of peace and calm in the house
when the hour for the ceremony ar
rives. Let all jarring, worldly sugges
tions be banished during the hour
when you formally pledge yourself to
the duties and lifelong responsibilities
of a wife, and receive the solemn
promise of protection and devotion
from the man who has chosen you.—
Ada C. Sweet, iu the Woman's Ilome
Companion.
A Schoolgirl's Outfit.
A young girl going away to school
does not need many frocks. For
every-day wear she should have two
wool or serge costumes of dark color,
prettily made, two or three shirt
waists to wear with short cloth skirts,
and a loosely-fltting dress for the gym
nasium. For church and visiting she
will require precisely the same dress
she would need at home—something
simple, yet becoming—nnd, if there
are occasional evening receptions at
school, she should have for them a
white frock made high and trimmed
with ribbon nnd embroidery. Her
changes of underclothing, stockings,
handkerchiefs, and the little accesso
ries which every girl prizes, should be
the same as at home, except that she
will need one-third more of every
thing, as, in absence, a wardrobe can
not be easily replenished. Every arti
cle must be plainly marked. A thick
jacket, stout boots, golf cape and rain
cloak are necessities. Ilats should be
very simple, and two are enough—a
toque or felt hat for every day nnd a
dainty little hat for Sunday, though
the latter may be done without. Even
in very cold weather, college girls flit
bnreheuded from class to class and
are uoue the worse. —Collier's Weekly.
Tho Use of l'erfnmc*.
Few people know how to use per
fumes, although everybody thinks it
Is a very simple matter. The delicate
extracts favored by the majority
should never be used by tipping up
the bottle and soaking a small part of
a garment. It must be sprayed
through a very flue ntomizer, and
even then used sparingly.
Sachets are everywhere among the
belongings of a luxurious woman, and
have developed from the originnl small
scented bag to generous proportions.
In Paris it is an ordinary thing for
closet walls to be lined with cheese
cloth or silk pads scented with pow
der, which must be renewed every
two or three months. Shelves are cov
ered with sachet pads of tho same
sort. Bureau drawers are liped with
them. Scented sachet cotton is used
by tailors and dressmakers for the
padding of gowns.
Perfumed flannel or chamois skin
soaked in perfume until it resembles
the old Cordova leather, or peau
d'Espague, Is cut into strips nnd
sewed inside gowns, hats and other
articles of wearing apparel. Air-tight
boxes or movable closets are made, in
which gowns may be hung while per
fumed oils are burned under them,
filling every thread of the goods with
fragrance. Even beds are perfumed,
sachet pads being put between the
mattresses and the sheets. Lavender
and orris are more used for these pads
than the heavier perfumes.
Small perfumed tablets, the size of a
nickel nnd a quarter of an inch thick,
are made to be tucked into a glove
while it is on the hand, or into purses,
card cases and pockets. Perfumed
boxes, escritoire pads and perfumed
sealing wax are used to scent note
paper. Small cones, made of charcoal
and perfumed oil, about the size of a
finger end, are burned for perfuming
a room. Incense burners of all sorts,
consuming perfumed oils, may give to
a woman's boudoir or salon the fra
grance she affects.
Pastiles dropped into the bath per
fume the water, and soaps, toilet
water, cold creams, almond meal, lo
tions, powders and rouges must all
have tlio same fragrance. Perfumed
hair washes are marie for shampooing
purposes. Perfumed toilet vinegar is
used for a tooth wash. Lip salve, eye
brow pencils, even the blue powder
and brush for painting veins, may he
had in almost any perfume.—Chicago
Chronicle.
igrreovdoir
CHAT
Three women graduated in the three
years' course at Chicago this year, re
ceiving degrees of bachelor of laws.
St. Louis is endeavoring to 15ad a
reform which shall substitute the
word "femmolin" for "bachelor girl,"
as an Improvement on "old maid" and
"spinster."
It is said that Mrs. Clemens (Mark
Twain's wife) plays a very important
part in her husband's literary life.
All that he writes passes under her se
vere censorship.
Lady Sarah Wilson, the famous war
correspondent, who endured all the
terrors and privations of the siege of
Mafeking, has returned to Loudon
from South Africa.
A woman owns one of the largest
orchards in this country. She is Mrs.
Laura A. Alderman, and owns 150
ncres and 8000 trees near Harley, Tur
ner County, S. D.
Miss ltose E. Cleveland, sister of ox-
President Grover Cleveland, lias pur
chased the Warren farm, at Isleboro,
Me.—one of the finest pieces of prop
erty at that resort.
Queen Christina of Spain is In the
habit of sending a confidential mes
senger all the way from Madrid to
London for the purpose of depositing
her wealth, which she keeps iu the
Bank of England.
The burial of Mrs. Gladstone in
Westminster Abbey recalls the fact
(hat tliis national distinction has been
granted in recent times to only two
others of her sex—Lady I'almerston,
in 1809, and Lady Augusta Stanley,
iu 1870.
Miss Mary Yardley, of Chicago, is
105 years old, and attributes her great
age to the fact that she has always
been precise and temperate in all
tilings. One of the rules of her life is
to retire at 9 o'clock every night, and
she has never broken it.
The revival of book-binding as an
occupation for fashionable women is
reported. Some beautiful specimens
have been produced by them, the work
including not only exquisite cover de
signs and illuminated pages, but the
actual binding of the volume from
start to finish.
Miss Lucy Skinner, of Royalton, Vt„
enjoys the distinction of being one
of the very few whose fathers served
in the Continental army from 1775 to
1783. Although her birthday dates
back of our second war with Great
Britain, she is not bent wt'tli age, but
stands erect. Iu mind as well as body
she is remarkably strong and vigor
ous.
Countess Castellane, formerly Miss
Anna Gould, of New York City, seems
still willing to gratify her husband's
most - expensive whim. He recently
secured what furniture experts de
elnre to be the most magnificent ward
robe set ever seen. The set was made
for Louis XV., and Is of tortoise shell
veneer, almost coveued with carved
brass. The price paid was $280,000.
Ifv\DS\ & c >
/■MQ.'
jf-gNCIES]
Silk and wool mixtures will be fa
vored tills fall, and silk will drop Into
the background.
Imitation overskirt effects are being
used on silk underskirts, but the over
skirt ns a part of the costume is a
thing of the past.
Persian and other Oriental embroid
ery designs are the newest idea in
shirt 'waist decoration, embroidered
bands being inserted diagonally at the
front.
A chic arrangement for the neck is
made of gold ribbon dotted with black
chenille. It passes twice around the
neck, through a gold slide, and is
tluished with a gold fringe.
A chou with two ribbon ends made
of black velvet and gauze is a smart
addition to the front of a bodice. In
fact, a note of gold seems essential.
Gold gauze will be useu extensively
for evening frocks tills autumn.
Shepherd's checked taffetas, In
handsome color blendlngs suitable to
the season, have been revived for the
making of shirt waists t.o wear be
neath short open Jackets of plain or
fancy wool autumn suitings and" for
linings, vests, yokes and separate
waists.
Hats to be worn with youthful cos
tumes of tweed and cheviot this fall
nrc Ladysmitli models of rough felt—
Sangller felts tlicy are called. Upon
them quills ana stiff feathers are se
cured with knots of brilliant gladio
lus-red or equally brilliant nasturtium
yellow velvet.
One of the most sensible trllies In
vented In years is the clasp for keep
ing short hairs in place when the coif
fure Is high. They are made not only
of shell—real and imitation—but also
of gold and silver. All are of the ut
most possible lightness, that they may
not drag the hair down.
Handsome qualities of lightweight
Venetian cloth, in blues, pansy and
rich fruit colors, including red, will lie
much used for the first wool costumes
of autumn. They are extremely plain
in effect, except the red suits, which
are trimmed' with flounces edged with
narrow felds of velvet of a deeper
shade.
FASTEST WHEELMAN.
FRENCHMAN WHO HAS LATELY
WON WORLD-WIDE FAME.
For One Tear He IVIII Re Known as
the Cycling Champion of the Whole
World—Has IIeu a Racing Man for
Many Years.
surprise. Jacquelln, however, made
one good win this year when he cap
tured the Grand Prix de Paris, which,
outside the world's championship, is
regarded as the blue-ribbon event of
the European path. The win, how
ever, was looked upon more in the
nature of a fluke, but since that time
he has shown consistent form, al-
Jacquelln of France, the new cham
pion cyclist of the world, is not un
known to fame, having been a most
consistent performer for years. That
he should win the title over one of
the finest fields that ever gathered for
a world's championship meeting is
surprising, for he has been regarded
for tho last two years as a good old
relic of former greatness, something
on the order of George Banker, the
American now racing in France.
Banker in his time held the world's
championship twice, but of late years
his pretensions to fame have not been
taken seriously.
If Zimmerman, Tyler or Windle
should come to life and win out over
the present field of American racing
men it would have occasioned no more
JACQIJEILIN.
though it was not thought to be of
championship caliber.
Four or five years ago Jacquelln
was the most popular racing man in
France and looked upon as a comer.
He divided honors with Morin and
Bourrillon, but he had the hearts of
his countrymen, for he had more of
FOUNTAIN PASTE BRUSH I
Below Is shown a newly patented
brush, which Is adapted to apply paste
or mucilage to surfaces without the
necessity of dipping tho brush in a re
ceptacle at Intervals, the main advan
tage of the Invention being the even
ness with which the paste can be
spread. The rear portion of the han
dle is formed of a collapsible tube, or
the supply may be obtained by attach
ing the end of the handle to a tube
leading to a reservoir. In the latter
case the reservoir is suspended above
j
___ ( j
CONTiiNUOLiS PEED DEVICE FOll
BRUSHES,
the brush, end valves control the
Bupply. When the paste Is supplied
through a tube the connection is made
by screwing the tube to the end of the
hollow handle, and the tube Is squeez
ed at intervals to force the paste
through the feeding tubes to the
bristles.
Tho NtrvKglo to Save.
I know men in this city whose strug
gle to save a dollar for a rainy day is
pathetic, says a writer in the New
York Press. Theirs is a generous na
ture. They take an occasional toddy,
perhaps, and being treated must treat
back. With money In pocket this Is
an easy accomplishment, and money
(lies when four or five good fellows get
together In front of tho bar. There are
clOße-flsted scalawags who will he
treated all day and never come back at
you, but they generally wear out their
welcome. They have big voices and
impress strangers with their apparent
goodfellowshlp. The man who stands
his treat right along has old R. E.
Morse sitting on his pillow every
■norning, after he has slept off his
drunk. When he looks at his empty
pocketbook, he makes vows, saying:
the true sportsman about him than
his rivals. Just at the height of his
fame he was drafted into the army
and his year of service set him back
in his racing when he again appeared
on the track. He found that his
lightning sprint had vanished and for
a time he devoted himself to middle
distance racing with not much suc
cess. This year he again turned to
the sprints and that the effect of his
army life have worn away is shown
by his surprising win in the world's
championship.
Several attempts were made to get
Jacquelln to cross the Atlantic and
race in America. That was wtien he
was in the heyday of his fame and was
regarded as the real champion of
Europe. But the Frenchman had a
horror of the water and although rich
purses were offered he turned them
all down. He did consent to cross tho
English channel once or twice, but
even this short voyage upset him.
NOT FANATICS,
mistaken Notions About Cause of Chinese
Disturbances,
It is a mistaken notion that the at
tacks upon the foreigners by the Chi
nese are inspired by religious fanati
cism. Indeed, there is nothing in the
three religions of China to arouse
fanatical emotion. It might be said
further that the religions of China are
less religion and more philosophy.
Confucianism is a philosophy, with
religion as an incidental. The Budd
hism of China lost in Its translation
from India its intense religious fer
vor, and converted its poetry into a
cold and unfeeling idolatry. Lao Tao
ism is about equal parts of religion
and philosophy, the religious part
corresponding to western spiritual
ism; the philosophy is that founded
and exploited by Loa-tsze, who was
born in the fourth century before the
Christian era. There is nothing, as
said above, in any of these religio
phitosophies to impel the greater por
tion of 400,000,000 people to commit
the brutal excesses recently recounted
by the cables from China.
Ronlly Too Pollto.
An American, who will never allow
a woman to stand In a street car if he
has a seat to offer her, met with disas
ter in Hamburg lately, writes a for
eign correspondent. He was not fa
miliar with street car rules in Ham
burg, and lost a. fare in consequence.
As he stepped on the car and took the
only vacant seat at the rear end, the
conductor lowered a sign that read
"Besetzt." He did not know that the
word meant "occupied" nor under
stand its signification. At the next
corner the car stopped, one passenger
got off and two women got on. One
of the women took the vacant seat and
quick as thought our polite American
arose and offered his seat to the other
one, who accepted it. The conductor
came from the further end of the car,
explained to the polite man that the
vehicle was overcrowded, contrary tc
law, and that as he was the one who
was standing he must alight. He did
so.
"Great Scott! If God will only forgiv<
me this time I'll swear I'll quit! 1
don't mean that I'll quit drinking en
tirely, but I'll quit hanging out
at bar-rooms and treating fellows whe
are of no earthly good to me."
FALSE TEETH.
What Itoconif-M of tho Myriads of Then}
Made Every Year?
What becomes of the hundreds ol
thousands of artificial teeth made and
sold annually? Before attempting to
answer the question it may bo as well
to consider how these artificial teeth
are made. When plates were discov
ered and the expert dentist was able
to supply a whole mouthful of new
teeth the teeth themselves were carved
out of ivory. But constant grinding
would wear away the ivory, and these
elephant teeth were not satisfactory.
To-day all artificial teeth are made of
porcelain, and will outlast a Methuse
lah. The porcelain material, which
contains various mineral proportions,
is worked up like a sort of dough or
plaster, forced into molds and fused
by intense heat in a furnace. Each
tooth is covered with enamel, and has
one or more metal pins in the back
to hold it to the plate. In large lots
these teeth can be made very cheaply,
but there is one item of expense that
cannot be overcome, and that is the
cost of the metal holding pin. The
only metal which will stand the in
tense heat of the porcelain furnace is
platinum, and that costs at tho rate
of a cent a pin simply for the raw
material. But as there are people who
are not satisfied with ready-made
clothing, so there are people who are
not satisfied with ready-made teeth.
False teeth may look Just as well or
better than real ones, but public speak
ers, singers and other prominent peo
ple want their own teeth reproduced
in all their peculiarities of form and
color, and fillings, if they have them.
In teeth that are made to order noth
ing is Impossible, from the short,
white teeth of normal youth to the
long, discolored ones of extreme ago.
And now for the answer to the ques
tion, "What becomes of false teeth?"
Sometimes they are lost, sometimes
stolen and sometimes left as a family
legacy. Generally, however, they are
burled with the owner and lie forever
hidden in the ground.—Cincinnati En
quirer.
Let me malte the superstitions of a
nation, and I care not who makes its
laws or its songs cither.—Mark Twain.
Striking Jupunene I.lnenft.
Japanese linen for tea table cloths la
a late Importation that has caught the
fancy of matrons of the smart set. As
is ustinl with Japanese blues, the shade
of this linen is very blue, and the whit
embioitu rvu orugous iliac oftenest or
nament it are just as hideously beau
tiful as they can be.
Cleaning Cfkrprt. on the Floor,
One of the newest discoveries of
the housekeeper is that a carpet may
be cleaned without going through the
trials of removing it from the floor.
All that she needs are a piece of soap,
a basin of warm water, a wet towel
and u dry towel. First, one strip of
the earpet must be rubbed down with
the wet towel. Then it must be rubbed
wltb the dry cake of soap, after which
follows a scrubbing with a wet cloth
until a foamy lather Is produced. Wipe
this awny with the wet towel, going
over It many times till the soap is all
wiped away, then linisli by a thorough
course of treatment with the dry tow
el. Talcing the carpet strip by strip,
go over the entire surface until it is
clean.
Th. Color or lillntl*.
The remarkable and widely varying
properties of the elementary colors
which compose white light suggest
that the employment of screens as
in the blinds placed over our windows
should be founded on a scientific basis.
Our knowledge of the properties of
each individual section of the spec
trum Is not exact, but this
much we do know, that the raj s of
least refrangibillty, the rod rays, are
without direct cheihieal effects, they
occur at the heat end of the spectrum.
On the other hand, the rays of the
highest refrangibillty contain the vio
let rays which chemically are exceed
ingly nctive. It is these rays which
arc concerned in photography and
doubtless also in the great process of
vegetable nutrition and growth. The
object of blinds is, of course, twofold—
to keep a room cool and to screen out
some of the light, so as to avoid the
bleaching of coloring materials of the
carpets and furniture. At the same
time sufficient light must be admit
ted so that the occupant may see with
out difficulty. What then is the best
color for this purpose? Since light ex
erts the peculiar action due to the ac
tinic rays which materially and whole
somely affect the air of a dwelling
room care should obviously be taken
not to exclude all the rays that are so
concerned. Thus ruby or ornnge-red
material would bo contralndicated.
Abundance of light is inimical to the
life of micro-organisms, so that a ma
terial in some shape of a compromise
should tie selected. The best for tills
purpose Is probably a dellcntaely oehcr
colored fabric. This would screen part
of the active light rays, and If of a
fair thickness the greater part of the
heat rays, while admitting sufficient
active rnys to allow of a wholesome
effect upon the room and its surround
ings. Venetian blinds do not allow
of the graduation, which is desirable
with cloth fabric. As it is well known,
exclusively red light has been used as
a therapeutic agent and apparently
with encouraging results, in measles—
Londo" Lancet.
L[>
J-j&Sk F{£€/P£S
Rlehnmella—Rring one pint of milk
to tlie boiling point; stir into it one
tablespoon of flour and one of butter
which liave been thoroughly blended
together; when thickened turn into It
three-quarters of a teaspoon of salt,
a dash of pepper, one pint of minced
cold roust veal. Grate a little nutmeg
or mace over It and serve hot.
Danish Pudding—Put one quart of
currant Juice and one pint of water
Into a double holler and let scald. Mix
together four tablespoonfuls of corn
starch, one-half pint of sugar and one
half teaspoonful of cinnamon; moisten
with one-hulf cupful of water and
stir into the scalding Juice. When thick
and smooth pour into wet molds, chill
and serve with whipped cream.
Sponge Cookies—Break eight eggs In
to granite or earthen saucepan: add
one pound granulated sugar'; set on
| stovo and stir constantly until well
1 heated through (not cooked); remove
j from stove and beat until cold; add
I pinch salt and due pound Hour; any
flavoring preferred; anise Is the Ger
| man favorite. Dip a teaspoon in water
j each time and put by the teaspoon on
I buttered tins; bake in moderately hot
! oven; will keep lor weeks.
Tomato Faroie —Cut off the stem end
of six smooth tomatoes, scoop out the
pulp and put It into n chopping bowl
With one enn of shrimps, one-half a
small slice of bread and one slice of
omion; chop fine nnd fry In a buttered
I pan until lightly browned; season with
salt and pepper and fill the tomato
I shells; sprinkle with fine breadcrumbs
and bake in a moderate oven for a
I quarter of an hour or until thoroughly
done. Tut a border of boiled rice
! around the edge of a platter, place
I the tomatoes carefully in the center
: nnd pour over them a gravy made of
1 one cupful of cream, pepper and suit to
taste.
ENGLISH DOCTOR'S FEES.
Larger than In Other Countries ant?
Fortune* Have lleen Amassed.
Perhaps the physicians of England
receive larger fees than their brother
practitioners in other countries of the
world. The greatest medical feature
of the century, as might have been ex
pected. has fallen to the lot of Sir
William Jenner, who died a short time
ago at the ripe old age of S3 years. Sir
William, who was always liberal in his
expenditure and his charities, left a
personal estate of the value of £395,-
900. In his palmiest days Sir William
more than once made £2,000 by a
single week's work, although natur
ally his average earnings were much
below this amount. He himself, how
ever, estimated his aggregate profes
sional income for the last 30 years
of his active life at over half a mil
lion pounds sterling, and yet this king
of doctors has been known to travel 1
to a distant suburb and talte a t',VO
£inea fee with a smile and a "Than.-:
you." Some of the largest recorded
medical fees, however, fall to his lot,
and he is said to have received £20,-
000 for his attendance on the late
prince consort and the Prince of Wales
during their two eerious. and in one
case fatal, illnesses. Sir William
Gull, who had nine years less of life,
amassed £344,023, the second medical
fortune of the century, Sir Andrew
Clark, with a still shorter life, accu
mulated £146,746. It is significant that
some of the medical men who have
reapted the largest harvests have been
proprietors of private asylums. Dr.
Paul, proprietor of the Camberwell
House Private Asylum, amassed over
£IOO,OOO, and Dr. William Wood, of
the Priory Private Asylum, Roehamp
ton, left £67,000. Fifteen physicians
who have died quite recently left he
hind them an aggregate fortune of
£2,000,000, or the gratifying average
savings of £133,000. Sir Morell Mac
kenzie is said to have received £20,-
900 for attending Frederick the Noble,
but at his death left only £21,953.
These fortunes become intelligible
when we consider that a fashionable
physician frequently earns frcm 100 to
200 guineas In a couple of hours' morn
ing consultations, and that there are
many days on which his fees amount
to 300 guineas or more. An ordinary
fee for attending a patient at a dis
tance of 200 miles from town would be
250 guineas, and for an operation at
this distance a fashionable surgeon
would get considerably mart. —Utica
Slob.e
BEAUTIFUL FEET BARE.
Prwient-Day Footwear Distort, the Ex
tremitles Abominably.
A man who denies that he is pre
judiced, but claims that he Is a good
judge of feminine beauty, declares
that there is scarcely a beautiful foot
to be found among the women of to
day. The high heels, the exaggerated
curve at the ball of the foot, the stifi
heel stays and the pointed toes, he de
clares, have distorted the foot in a
painful and ugly vianner. The ankles
are misshapen. In some cases the
bones are enlv.rged until they Wulgi
out so that every bone is perceptible.
The weight of the body thrown upon
the toes has caused them to spread
out. Crowded into pointed toes, they
stick up in clusters of knotty corns.
The foot should be as shapely as th
band. Footwear should fit as a glove
fits the hand. The perfect foot is
Blender, with an arched instep and toes
that lie smoothly and easily. The first
step toward acquiring a pretty foot is
to wear shoes that fit it comfortably.
The next is to take exercises that will
render the toes strong and supple. Be
gin by spreading out the toes to thl
utmost extent; then hold four toes still
and attempt to move the remaining
one. Every toe should be stralghte;
and shorter than the next one and the
arch should be shapely and pliant. The
feminine foot of today renders a grace
ful carriage an impossibility. And all
because Dame Fashion has decreed
that a short, high-heeled, pointed-toe
shoe is the correct thing in dressy
footgear, forgetting that there never
was a human foot built that way.
Where to Locate?
WHY. IN THE TERRITORY
TRAVERSED BY THE
Louisville
An d Nashville
Railroad,
-Tim-
Great Central Southern Trunk Line,
KENTUCKY, TENNESSEE. ALABAMA,
MISSISSIPPI, FLORIDA,
WHERE
Farmers, Fruit Growers,
Stork Kaisers, Manufacturers,
Investors. Speculators
and Money Lenders
<vlll And the greatest chances in the United
states to mnki '"big money" by reason of th®
abundance and cheapness of
Lund and Farms,
Timber and Stone,
Iron and Coal,
Labor—Everything.
Free sites, financial assistance, and free
dom from taxation for the manufacturer.
Land and farms at SI.OO per acre and up.
wards, and 500,000 acres in West Florida that
can be taken gratis under the U. S. Home
stead laws.
Stock raisin? in the Gulf Coast Distriot
will make onormous profits.
Hall fare excursions the first niwl third
Tuesdays of each month.
Let us know what you want, and we will
b'll you where and how to get it—but don't
delay, as the country is filling up rapidly.
Printed matter, maps and all Information
free. Address
R. J WEMYSS,
General Immigration and Industrial Agon)
Lou svilie. Kv.