xEfls AND 'OTES FOK irOMEX. r 'ftteht fai among the pretty , n tslk woman suffrage. iLii! Laugtry, the actress, claims It "inly iori-o n'oireu parrleuers (iro ia great de sn,'l m EnpUnd aud Germany. FntterSv bows are very popular thi! tlr h:i'1 re seen tn almost every ln h '1 an atlemP 18 being ,iP f a allowing women to If.-te-ll-j Parliament. Mr. Cl ' eland, wife of the Presi , f '"trs her hair in the style 011 " "Diana knot." fhp Iiar'nfss Emma Sporri, of ,Nor r9v is !-n"l to be the best known wo ,.:rii m northern Europe. O'lfr Vvtoria haii sixty pianos at iij'crne. Windsor aud Buckingham faiaC Many of them are hired. um ImI novelty in the way of a ,,1, j -iff is mounted on a long ivory , m V t j enable one to powder the (jpI, tb' ne- k when without a maid. l oH V im?, a direct descendant of .. tiij Pitjairn mutineers and ft noiu'iii f iiior than usual intelligence, ,f miniJ-' a history of the Pitcairn IV fr-' "mw elected a ,.), ! . i the Yacht Rieing Associa t,L, , f (irent Uritain is Miss Mabel i ,t Smthmui'tou, who owns the. Mv!s:i Marc-lies, of Paris, is the t.,,.-t i !i : ji ;i - vficai leacner miue wona. She Lis trained nearly all the great ,inL,,.r. inh exoneration, including Veil.?, i ';ilve aul Eanies. llf ... w is ! Mme. Tetrazzine, the n.(f.t H!'!''!is prima aonna in Boutn :ii-!'';. f-re recently seized for nh' ii it was found that all the FrUij ina.l of paste. i,) i!i- are preater favorites with (;. !':M-!-!iues than ever, but they gin; hi'; lurL'er aud sit down more roF- '' 'he head. The prettiest ore entirely vcred with flowers. U:-- linker, who is professor of flfffk wil Lntin at himpson College, Tnl'SNn l- only thirty-two. and it is Mi'l tLa' "lien she was fourteen she tr insisted f neof the plays of iEschylus. lnih tte M. Yonge, the Eng lnh m iter, is till and inclined to t'Hitm" nr nair is wnue sne is v mi lii (seventies and she has Uise 'n'k brown eyes that are fall of f.Y'!''.Ss!"ll. t i. sa; 1 that the Khedive's mother t-.is j.;cke.l out as a bride for her son tb i'unresf. Namie, daughter of the Snlti'i i ' linker, who was born in ml is said to be beautiful and highly i nltured. The nc pradee in swivel silks are in ereat use for afternoon dresses for tbe .D'.ii'.nz seasou. They are of hand- i tome qinility. they quickly shed dust, In nut wrinkle, and are pronounced absolutely fast color. The Empress of Austria has a pa thetic delusion. She fancies that her iinlj.'ij.j-y son, the Crown Prince Rn 'i'lil'b. is still a Kihy. A big doll has Inn vivm her, which she fondles and Iter ''uRtiintly by her. Satin ribbon, three inches wide, fi.Me-l h tha width of the ordinary i.illsr an I fastened at the side in a Miicy butterfly bow, is a change from h shure.l velvet collar, that has re rHvetl th'- apjiroviil of Mamade la Mode. Miss Alice E. Harden, of Madison, M'iti. , ms distinguished herself and nirpried her neighbors by shooting a 1'iR wililof. MitB Haydcn, although frajrtU- tistern girl, handles a rifle nitli the ese hu I skill of an old hun ter. 1 he Pi liioesi Beatrice closely fol 'dws all the topical songs, and after ilnmei nt P.aliuoral the Queen fre- luetit!- listens to a medley of popular mis I'luyed by the Princess, who in ill theatrical milters is thoroughly tip tvde.te. In rstate of "Princess' Kaiulani, (-. i.in- t.j a lase report of her trus e, is not very extensive. It consists ff s'tii thing a bushel of jewels, ton. i.n, Mu-k. a little real estate al i Munli interest in the property left ly her mother- ' V C-'iitet of Silence" is the novel pLtf rt'iiument tobe given by tho mem Vr ! woman's sewing society in 'ndiaiiap.'lis. Last year the first wo tcau t,. speak was miet for only three tiinntt'." The winner held her tongue fr" unif'ten miuutes and twenty ' Mrs Susm Stewart Frackleton, of Milwaukee, Wis., has attained great 'listnvtion - a potter. SheisPre'si 'eni "f the National League of Min r'al iViiiUrs, and is the author of a "r'h hich is ust-d ns a text book at 'ii South Kensington Art Museum, I-eul'ii 'ho Kmjiress Frederick has induoed Perhti societies of amateur photog ipjirs to co-ojjerate in bringing "'"in hu international exhibition of vb. uy by amateurs in 1895. Her Majesty has undertaken to be a I'stroLess. Hud has reouested Trincess U'.niy ;i.-t us i,or substitute oa the reuin-Mt.. Iv'U t " cures a softer shade of PieH- thai, the brunette. Too bright ill giv t,. the fair-haired, i!' sm'.mi.-I oni'iti a owallow washed i'ut !oA. P., ,t is well to know that i lie. n-il as all others, can be u,-l nn ren.lered v.-earable by 1 ..if beauty if judiciously Linlo K,ttv Blank, aged four, ,t lu-r ,h.l!V cheeks with brick ' n 1 n-ior aul blackened dollv's ..-it "s with mk. An aunt in the '"niy.!,., mnyed her cheeks and f. i 1,.,, ,.y0ijruwe!t believing that m utte.'npiaa a caricature, beat 1 'luuiv I'h... i.eople of Still "'e'. Mi.;. . ,.rued the cruel aunt lu leave tu-. n. -b- Ttl tiUC cake of Princess Vic '' r M- ht t waS oi a roval height. It ,Hs nux,,l. baked, decorated and a!!Telt. Cob in bv Messrs. Gun , A I''' t m-aph is appended. It t-Hnds tive feet siv inMla" in hoifrfct. weighs a hundred and fifty i iis. lieiutr. therefore, a little bur r &u-l a little heavier than the bride wrs-rit or? permanent progress has T3en le it. fcbeep culture during the last ears. the C hicago Times avers, trio, j. ... '-".mug tte last half century, ROUSEHOLU AFFAIES. TOLxamsa steel avd bbass. Fine emery paper and sweet oil are all that are necessary to keep ateel bright ; while a cloth saturated in ker osene and dipped U whiting will be found besl for Cleaning linware. Strong arnmonia should be poured over old brass to clean it, then thoroughly scrub with a scrubbing brush, and presently the brass will shine like new metal. Stair rods should be cleaned with a soft woolen cloth dipped in water, and then in finely sifted coal ashes. Then rub them with a dry flannel until they shine and every particle of ash hat d sappeared. TO PUT AW At WOOLEN O ABU EST i If the housewife is a good hygienisl, she has a great deal of wool in her domain, because she knows better than tongue can tell how nesessary all wool garments are to the preserva tion of health in cold weather. 8he religiously. superintends the making, washing and mending of these gar ments in all sizes, from those worn by paterfamilias to the minature ones af fected by the baby, and when the time of year comes to put them away, she neatly darns even the very tiniest holes, folds the garments smoothly, and envelops them entirely in cotton cloth which she snngly ties with string. These tidy rolls or bundles are then laid in a trunk or chest, which is care fully closed away from duet. Two or three times daring the summer the wools are taken out and hung out in the air, after which they are carefully, returned to their cotton wrappings again. Detroit Free Press. TO STIR OR TO BEAT. Every young housekeeper should thoroughly understand the diSerence between stirring and beating. Many dishes are spoiled because theaa things are not clearly understood. In stirring the object is to combine the ingredients or to make a substance g'nooth. The spoon is kept rather close to the bottom and sides of the bowl aud is worked around andarouud in tb.3 mixture until the object is at tained. Baating is employed for two pur poses : First, to break up a substance, as in beating eggs for breading or for custards; second, for making a sub stance light by imprisoning air in it. This is the case when we beat the whites of eggs, cake batter, etc. The movement is very different from stir ring. The spoon or whisk at every stroke is partially lifted from the bowl and brings with it a portion of the materials that are being beaten, which carries air with it in falling back. It is not the number of strokes that make substances light, but rather the vigor and rapidity with which the beating is done. When using a spoon or whisk for beating take long up ward strokes, the more rapid the bet ter. The spoon should touch the bot tom of the bowl eaah time and the mo tion must be regular. Another wav to beat is to use tho circular motion, in case the side of the spoon is kept close to the side of the bowl. Tha spoon is moved rapidly in a circle, carrying with it a portion of the ingredients. iew York Yorld. RECIPES. Apple Tapio:a Pu doing Pare aud core enough apples to fill a dish. Put into each apple a little lemon peel. Soak oue-half pint of tapioca in one quart of lukewarm water four hours, a Id a little salt, flavor with lemon, pour over apples. Bake until apples are tender. Eat when cold with cream and sugar. Chantilly Basket This basket is nrettv, but skill is required to make it successfully. Make a cement of sugar boiled to crackling height. Uip the edges of some macaroons into it, and line a mould shaped like a basket with them, taking care thtt the edges of the macaroons (ouch easb other. When wanted, take it out of tho mould, fill it with whipped cream, and t is then ready for the table. lime, two or three hours to set. f'.hneRA Cake Pie Three eggs, one cupful of sugar, cue quart of soft smearkase. Mix well ana pour mio a rich pie crust. Bake without an up per crust. This makes two pies. Smod Rolls for Luncheons Take a piece from your bread dough and roll it out half an inch thick, brush the top with melted butter, and covet thick with cinnamon and fine white suiar ; commence at one side and roll up as jelly cake; then cut it an inch thick, and lay in a pan a" biscuit, close together, anl let them rise and bake twenty minutes. r.ovnmda Onions Stewed Boil the ouions whole for half an hour in water with plenty of salt. Draiu and re turn them to the stew pau, with a small piece of butter or dnppin? and o little pepper and salt. Cover the pan as closely as possible to keep in the steam, and let the onions stew gently for two or three hours, accord ing to their size and quality. Baste them with their own liquor occasion ally, and take care they do not coo bo fat as to cause this to dry up and set burnt TVinr of Wales Charlotte Lay think slices of auv kind of delicate iik in a deeD pudding dish ; over this pour hot, boiled custard, made from the yokes of three eggs ana a pirn oi milk, sweetened and flavored to taste. Do this several hours before the disa is to be served ; just before serving, put a layer tf sliced peaches or .orri ni-or the pake : have the whites of the egfis beaten to a stiff froth, with a Mtle sugar, and put over tne fruit. Put it in the oven a few min utes to brown. Sterilizing Jlilk by tlecti icitj. A method of sterilizing milk by the aid of an electric current has been de vised bv two Dutch inventors. Mauv pro os&ls have been brought forward recentlv for sterilizing water in this wav, but milk has proved a much more difficult fluid, because of the large amount of pabulum for micro organisms which it contains. The milk to be sterilized is submitted to the action of a strong alternating current, which is applied to it in the ordinary dairy utensils. New York World. . REV. DR. TALMAGE TIE BR)3iLYN DIVINK'8 SU DAT SERMON. Texr : ''Felix trwnblwl and answered, Go thy way for this timf. When I have a con venient season I will call for the 'Acts xxiv., 25. A city ot marble was Ce?araa wharves of marble. hous ot marble, temp" en of mar ble. This belni? the or linnry architecture ot tha place, you may Imagine something of the ftp'.endor of Governor Felix's real lenoe. In a room of that palace, floor tessellated, win dows curtained, ceiliu? fretted, the whole scene afBu-nt with Tyrian purple and stat ues and pictures and carving, sat a very latk complexioned man ot the name of Fe lix, and beside him a woman of extriord'. nary beauty, whom he had stolen by breik Jnr up another domestic circle. She was only eighteen years of ape. a prineess by birth, and uuwitti&giy waiting for hrdoom that of being buried alive in the ashes and scoria of Mount Vesuvius, which in sudden eruption one day put an end to her abomi nations. Well, oha afternoon Druailln. seated In the palace, weary with the maentQcent stupidi ties of the place, says to Felix : "You have a very distinguished prisoner, I believe, of the name of Paul. Do yon know be Is one of my countrymen? I should very much like to see him, and I should very much like to hear him speak, for I have beard so much about his eloquence. Besides that the other day, when he was being tried In another room of this palace and the Windows were open, I heard the applause that greeted the speech of Lawyer Tertullus as he denounced Paul. Now, I very much wish I could hear Paul speak. Won't you let me hear him speak?" "yes," said Felix, "I will. I will onto him up now from the guardroom."' Clank, clank, comes a chain up the marble stairway, and there is a shuffle at the door, and in comes Paul, a little old man, prema turely old through exposure, only sixty years of age, but looking as though be were eighty, lie bows very courteously before the gover n or and the beautiful woman by his side. They say : "Paul, we have heard a great deil about your speaking. Give us now a speci men of your eloquence." Ob, if there ever was a chance for a man to show off, Paul had a chance there 1 lie might have har angued them abcut Grecian art, about the wonderful waterworks be had seen at Corinth, about the Acropolis by moonlight, about prison life in Philippl, about "what I saw in Thessalonica,' about the old mythologies, but "No "' Paul said to himself, '! am now on the way to martyrdom, and this man and woman will soon be dead, and this is my only opportunity to talk to them about tha things of eternity. And just there and then there broke in upon the scene a peal of thunder. It was the voice ot a judgment day speaking through the words of the decrepit apostle. As that grand old missionary proceeded with his re marks the stoop begins to go out of his shoulders, and he rises up, and his counte nance is illumined with the glories of a future iife, and his shackles rattle and grind ns he lifts his fettered arm and with it hurls upon bis abashed auditors the bolts of God's in dignation. Felix grew very white about the lips. His heart beat unevenly. He put his hand to his brow as though to stop the quickness and violence of his thoughts. He drew his robe tighter about him. ns under a sudden chill. His eyes glare, and his knees shake, and as he clutches the side of his chair in a very paroxysm of terror he orders the sheriff to take Paul back to the guard room. '-Felix trembled andsaid : Go thy way for this time. When I have a convenient season, I will call for thee." A young man came one nigbt to our ser vices, with pencil in hand, to caricature the whole scene and make mirth of those who should express any anxiety about their souls, but I met him at the door, his face very white, tears running down his cheek, as he said. "Do you think there is any chance for me?'' Felix trembled, and so may God grant it may be 60 with others. I propose to give you two or three reasons why I think Felix 6ent Paul back to the guardroom and adjourned the whole subject of religion. The first reason was, he did not want to give up his sins. He looked around. There was Drusilla. He knswtbat when he became a Christian he must send her back to Aizlue, her lawful hnsband, and he said to himself. 'T will risk the destruction of my immortal soul sooner than I will do that.'' How many there are now who cannot get to tie Christians because they will not abandon their sins' In vain all their prayers and all tlieirehurchgoiug. You cannot keep these darling sins an 1 win heaven, and now some of you will have to decide bat ween th3 wine cup undiiulaw.'ul amusements and lascivi ous gratifications oa the one hand and eter nal salvation on the other. Delilnh sheared the locks of Samsou ; Sa lome danced Herod into the pit ; Drusilla blocked up the way to heaven for Felix. Yet when I present the subject now I fear that some of you will say : ''Not quite yfet. Don't be so precipitate in your demands. I havtta tev tickets yet Unit I have to use. I have a Jew engagements that I must keep. I want to stay a little longer in the whin of con vivialitya few more guffaws of un?lean laughter, a few more steps on the roil to death, and then. sir. I will listen to whai you say. 'Go thy way lor this tim". Wueii 1 have a convenient season, I will call for thee.'" Another reason why Felix sent Paul lo the guarJrcom and adjourned this subject was he was so very busy. In ordinary times he found the affairs of stale absorbing, but thoso were extraor liirary times. The whole land was ripe for insurrection. The Sicarii, a band of assassins, wpre already prowling around the pala. and I suppose he thought, I can't attend to raligion while I am so pressed by affairs of state." It was business among other things that ruined his soul, and I suppose there are thousands of people who are not children of Go 1 because they have so much business. It is business in the store losses, gains, uufaithful employes. It is business in your law office sub poauas, writs you have to write out, papers you have to file, arguments you have to make It is your medical profession, with its broken nights aud the exhausted anxie ties of life hanging upon your treatment. It Is your real estate office, your business with landlords and tenants and the failure of men to meet their obligations with you. Aye, with some of those who are here it is the an noyance of the kitchen, andthe sitting room, and the parlor -the wearing economy of try ing to miet large expenses with a small in come. Ten thousand voices ot "business, business, business" drown the voice of the eternal Spirit, silencing the voice of the ad vancing judgment day, overcoming the' voice of eternity, and thev cannot hear ; they can not listen. They say. "Go thy way for this time." Some of you look upon your goods, look upon your profession, you look upon vour memorandum books, and you see the demands that are made this very week upon your time and your patience and your money, and while I am entreating you about your soul nnd the danger of procrastination voussy: "Go thy way for this time. When 1 have a convenient season, I will call for thee." on. renx, wnv oe cotnered about The af fairs of this world so muoh more than about the affairs of eternitv? Do you not know that when death comes you will nave to stop business, though it be in the most exacting period of it between the payment of the money and the taking of the receipt? The moment he comes you will have to go. Death waits for no man, however high, however low. Will you put your office, will you pet your shop in comparison with the affairs of nn eternal world, affairs that involve firon?. palaces, dominions eternal? Will vou put 200 acres ot ground against im mensity? Will you put forty or n fty years of vour life against millions ot ages? Oh, Felix, you might better postpone everything elae, for do you not know that the upholstering of lynan purple m your palace will fade, and the marble blocks of Carea will crumble, and the breakwater at the beach, made of great blocks ot stone sixty feet lorn?, mut giva way Merore the per petual wash ot the sea, but the redemption that Paul offers you will be forever? And yet and yet and yet you wave him back to ! the guardroom, saying "Go thy way for this time. When I have a convenient season, I will call fcrtnee." t Again. Felix adjourned this subject of re- ligion and put off Paul's argument because Ine oouia not give np tne nonors of the world. He was afraid somehow he would be com promised himself in this matter. Remarks I he made afterward showed him to be In ' tensely ambitions. Oh, how he hogged the , favor of men ! I never saw the honors cf this world la tuwmm nvniuwa. nit uyjwciwy ) muon as la the life and death of that wonderful man, Charles Sumner. As he went toward the place of burial, even Independence Hall, In Philadelphia, asked that his remains stop there on their way to Boston. The flags were at half mast, and the minute guns dh Bostod Common throbbed after his heart had ceased to beat. Was It always so? While he lived bow censured of legislative resolutions ; how caneaiurea ot tne pictorials , how charged with every motive mean and ridiculous ; bow all the urns of scorn and hatred and billingsgate emptied upon his head : how, when struck down in Senate chamber, there were hundreds of thousands ot people who said, "Good for him ; serves him right bow he had to put the ocean between him and his maligners that he ml 5 at have a lit tle peace, and bow, when he went off sick, they said he was broken hearted because be coum not get to te frestdent or Secretary of State ! O, Commonwealth of Massachusetts, who is that man that sleep in your public hall covered with garlanls anl wrapped in the Stars and stripes? Is that the man who, only a few months before, you denounced as the foe of republican and democratic institu tions? Is that the same man? Ye American people, ye could not by one week of funeral eulogium and newspaper leaders, which the dead senator could neither read nor hear, atone for I wenty-flve years of maltreatment an I caricature. When I see a man like that, pursued by all tho hounds of the political kennel so long as he lives and then buried under a great pile of garlands and amid the lamentations of a whole nation, I say to myself : What an unutterably hypocritical thing is all human npp'.me and all human favor ' You too'i t wi'nty-'ive years in tryin? to pult down hii fame and then take twenty-five yeRrs in ti j ing to build his monument. My friends, wa! there ever a better commentary on the hoi lownrss of all earthly favor? If there nro yonutr men who read this who are postpon ing religion in order that they may have the favors of this world, let me persuade then of their complete folly. If you are looking forward to gubernatorial, senatorial or pres idential chair, let me show you your great mistake. Can it be that there is now any young mail saying: ' Let me have political office, let me have some of the hisrh positions of trust and power, and then I will attend to religion, but not now. Go thy way for this time. When I have a convenient season, 1 will call for thee" " An I now my subject takes a deeper tone, and it shows what a danserous thing is this deferring of religion When Pnr rhain rattlel down the marble stairs of Felix, that was Felix's last chance for heaven. Ju lging from his character afterward, he was re probate and abardoned. And so was Dru silla. One day in the southern Italy there was a trembling of the earth, and the air got blacl with smoke intershot with liquid rocks, and Vesuvius rained upon Drusilla and upon her son a horrible tempest of ashes and fire Thev did not reject religion. They only pu It off. They did not understand that tha day, that that hour when Paul stood before them, was the pivotal hour upon which every thing was poised, and that it tipped th wrong way. Their convenient season cam when Paul and his guardsman entered th palace. It went away when Paul and h; guardsman left. Have you never seen men waiting for a convenient season? There ! such a great fasoination about it that, though yon may have great respect to the truth o. Christ, yet somehow there is in your soul the thought : "Not quite yet. It is not time for me to become a Christian.' I say to a boy, "Seek Christ." He says, "No. Wait until I get to be a young man." I say to the young man, "Seek Christ." He says, "Wait until I come to midlife." I meet the same person in midlife, and I say, "Seek Christ' He says, "Wait until I get old." I meet the same person-in old ags and say to him, "Seek Christ." He says, "Wait until I am on my dying bed." I am called to his dying couch. His Inst moments have come. 1 bend over the couch and listen for his las', words. I have partially to guess what they are by the motion of his lips, be is so feeble, but rallying himself he whispers until I can hear him say, "I am waiting for a- -more convenient season," and he is gono ' 1 I can tell you when your convenient season will come. I can tell you the year. It will be 1891. I can tell you what kind of a da; it will be. It will be the Sabbath day I can tell you what hour it will be. It wl be between 8 nnd lOo'clock. Inother word-, it is now. Do you ask me how I know th is vour convenient season? I know it be cause you are here, and because the elec sons and daughters of God are praying for your redemption. Ah, I know it is your convenient season because some of you, like Felix, tremble as all your past life comes upon yon with its 6in, and all the future lifo comes upon you with its terror. This night air is aglare with torches to show you up or to show you down. It is rustling with wings to lift you into light or smite you into de spair, and there is a rushing to and fro, and a beating against the door of your souls with a great thunder ot emphasis, telling you, "Now, now is the best time, as it may be the only time " May God Almighty forbid that any of you, my brethren or sisters, act the part of Felix and Drusilla and put away this great sub ject. If you are going to be saved ever, why not begin to-night? Throw down your sins and take the Lord's pardon. Christ has been tramping after you many a day. An Indian and a white man became Christians. The Indian, almost as soon as he heard the gospel, believed and was saved, but the white man struggled on in darkness for a long while before he found light. After their peace in Christ the white man said to the Indian, "Why was it that I was kept so long in the darkness and you immediately found peace?" The Indian re plied: "I will tell you. A prince comes along, and be offers you a coat. You look at your coat, nnd you say, My coat is good enough.' and you refuse his offer, but the prince comes along, and he offers me the coat, and 1 look at my old blanket, and I throw that away and take his offer. You, sir." contin ued the Indian, "are clinging to your own righteousness ; you think you are good enough, and you keep your own righteous ness ; but I have nothing, nothing, and so when Jesus offers me pardon and peace I simply take it." My reader, why not now throw away the wornout blanket of your sin and take the robe of a Saviour's righteousness a robe so white, so fair, so lustrous, that no fuller on earth can whiten it? O Shepherd, to-night bring home the lost sheep! O Father, to nignt give a welcoming kiss to the wan prodigal ! O friend of Lazarus, to-night break down the door of the sepulcher aud say to all these dead souls as by irresistible flat: "Live! Live!" Pablic Baths in Japan. "Nearly all American and Euro pean visitors to Japan speak with ad miration of the publio baths of that country," sid Oscar T. Newman, of Loudon, England. "In the city of Tokio there are between 800 and 903 publio bathing establishments, each frequented daily by at least 300 peo ple, who pay for the privilege so small a sum that no one is too poor to af ford it. Outside of these baths the Japanese are much given to bathing in their own homes. They are one of the cleanest races in the world. Trav elers from the Western world fre quently express regret that in Europe and America there are no such estab lishments. "We have, it is true, pub lic baths in about all our cities which are open in the summer, but practi cally none which are warmed and open in the winter like those of Japan." St. Louis Globe-Democrat. 'ames of Fruits. The very names of many of our fruits at once suggest their foreign origin. Corinth was the sponsor of "currants," and Damascus of "damsons;" we have borrowed the word "gooseberry" from the French "groseille," "apricot" is derived from Arabic, ''peach" from the French or the Italian, and "to mato" from the Mexican Aztec "tomo tel;" while th? word "cauliflower" is almost comically close in its deriva tion from the Spanish 'col-y-flor," cabbage and flower. London Telegraph. Bestin the MoscI;. A dynamometer for the measure ment of muscular strength is being introduced for gymnasium purposes. In future there will be no groping in the dark when the young college ath lete is taken in hand by bis tfainers for preparation for the boat race of the football match. Every important muscle in his body oan be tested, and its strength or weakness at once indi cated. In this way man's weak point is discovered without serious loss oi time, and special attention can thence forth be directed toward the "leveling up" of his physique. The old method of testing a man's muscle by its size, or even by its hardness, will no longer be used, and strength tests will supersede these unreliable sys tems of measurement. The muscular strength of tha various portions of the arms ant legs can now be differ entiated. As a sample instance of the possibilities of the new method, it may be stated that by ascertaining the strength of the abductors of the leg by the dynamometer, a bad gait cau promptly be cured, as the proper ex ercise for the weakened muscles can at once be determined. The dynamometer is hung on two heavy, iron rods, placed in a vertical position, with their ends fastened securely to the floor. It cau be adjusted to any height to the waist, feet or neck. The muscles tested are directly upon a lever which is connected with a pis ton working in a chamber filled with oil. The pressure is transmitted to a column of mercury, and the result in pounds is recorded in a slender glass tube. New York Witness. Simple Cures tor Grave Maladies. We read so much about the heroia operations resorted to in cases of ap pendicitis that widespread alarm has been occasioned among timid persons who imagine that they have swallowed au orange, a grape or a raisin seed, and wait with terror the possibilities of an obstructiou in the appendix vermiform. A Utica physician says that olive oil will remove such obstruc tions iu almost every instance, and that resort to the knife is utterly un necessary. Now, J observe, a Cali fornia gentleman insists that the freo use of prunes is a sure preventive of appendicitis. He tells how the chil drcn in the Santa Clara Valley eat ber ries and grapes, cherries and other fruits nearly the year round and never think of spitting out small pits or seeds, and are not troubled with in testinal obstructions. He says this is because thev partake freely and daily of prunes, with the laxative effects of which my readers are, uo ilouut, la miliar. An old lady, whose good judgment is proverbial, speaking in the same line of thought recently, remarked: I don't see whera these new-fangled diseases like appendicitis come from We never had them in my lounger days, and I was nurse and physician in a village of a thousand persons for more than twenty years. A good dose of castor oil was always a safe and re liable remedy in such troubles of tha etomaeh and bowels. We think too much of the notions of doctors who want to make new discoveries, and we think too little of the good old castor oil, blue pill, herb teas and onion poultices. New lork Mail and Ex press. Tha ChaijeaMe Flower of Calm. The botanical oddity of the Flowery Kingdom is the flowering tree, Known to the scientists as the Hibiscm ran- tabilia. Its beautiful flowers, geuar- ally double, are pure snow in the morning, bright pink at noou aud of a deep, blood red at sunset, fading into a 6ky-blue by bedtime. The leaven of this particular tree somewhat resemble those of the grapevine, bein ? deeply notched, or serrated, rough and of variable lengths. Ine trea is not only a native of China aa I Japan, but is found in great profusion in In dia, Corea and Siam. The "Cham eleon flower" (so called on account of its changeable colors, because not yet scientifically identified and named), recently discovered iu the Isthmus ol Tehanutepee, is only an American variety of Hibiscus mutabihs. Iu case of the former, the colors do not pass abruptly from one shade to anotl '.but change gradually from the soft white of the morning to the pink and red of noon and evening, and thence to the blue of night. The Tehauntepec tree is larger than its Chinese relative of similar habits, and the flowers have the pecnlarity of only giving forth perfume when they are red. Several other species of Chinese shrubs and trees bear flowers which change color dailv, chief of which is the Oriental hydrangea, which changes from bright green to a deep pink. St. Louis Republic. Equal Suffrage. A petition with nearly half a million signatures attached has been presented to the New York State constitutional eovention now in session, askins that women be allowed the right of equal sutlrajre. Chronic Indigestion Kept me in very poor health for flvs years, I began to take IlooTs SarsapariUa an.l my digestion was helped by the first three 1'.s. Hood's Sarsa 1 parilla l have now taken over "V -g - -a si t four bottles and I firm- I UiW ly believu it has cured V nie, an 1 also savd my aW ''r life. Mbs. It. . I'nincz, Cushviile, X. Y. Hood's Pill? are purely vegtuble. Do You Wish the Finest Bread and Cake? It is conceded that the Royal Baking Powder is the purest and strongest of all the baking powders. The purest baking powder makes the finest, sweet est, most delicious food. The strongest baking pow der makes the lightest food. That baking powder which is both purest and strongest makes the most digestible and wholesome food. Why should not every housekeeper avail herself of the baking powder which will give her the best food with the least trouble ? Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift or prize, or at a lower price than the Royal, as they invariably contain alum, lime or sul phuric acid, and render the food unwholesome. Certain protection from alum baking powders can be had by declining to accept any substitute for the Royal, which is absolutely pure. A Taxidermist's Revelations. The Fall Mall Gazette, in an inter view with one of the leading taxider mists of London, brings to light some curions facts about rare birds and their eggs. "Of course," Baid the great taxidermist, "you know I have made some dodos and a great auk. No? Evidently you are an amateur at taxidermy. We make 'em of grebes' feathers and the like. And the great auk's eg ?, too I We make the eggs out of fine porcelain. I te 1 you it is worth while. Ihey fetch well, one fetched $1500 only the other day. That one was really genuine, I believe ; but, of course, oue is never certain. It is very fine work, and afterward you have to get them dusty, for no one who owns one of these precious eggs has ever the temerity to clean the thing. Even if they suspect au egg they do not like to examine it too closely. It is such brittle capital at the best. You did not know that taxi dermy rose to such heights as that? It has risen higher. I have rivalled the hands of nature herself ! One of the genuine great auks." his voice fell to a whisper "one of the genuine great auks was made by me ! And, what is more, I have been approached by a syndicate of dealers t stock one of the unexplored skerries to the north of Iceland with specimens. I may tome dav." His First High Silk Hat. Says Colonel Tom Moonlight, the new United States Minister to Bolivia "1 never wore a high silk hat except once. It was when I was Governor of Wyoming anl we were celebrating Fourth of July or some other holiday. I was told that the Governor ought to wear a tile, and bo 1 put one on. I had not gono fifty yards before a cowboy, just in from the plains, sent a bullet through it. He said that a man ouht to have better sense than to wear a rilk hat in Cheynne, and, to tell the truth, my sympathies were with the cowboy." New York Ledgei. Bob Mawsley, of JacEsonvure, ra , has a pair of young eagles which ha has trained to carry through the air a basket containing his seven-year-oil boy. His only regret is that he cau't enjoy a trip himself till he has caught a few more of the birds. THROW IT AWAY. P There '0 no lonfr cr any uc-ed cf wparitur clumsy, ctiafliijr TriiHn, wblch giro only urtful rviit-f t Ut-t, never cure, but oif en ti.fiict ereit injury, iixluciiitf hifiumiration, sUaujuliitija iid denth. HERNIA Iiupturc, no matter of how lony stundinir. rtr of whnt size, in t rcuiDtiy nnd permanently cured vitbout the knife nntl without pain. Another Trlumr h !n Conseructiro Surgery is the cure, of HPTT MOT? Q Ovarian, Fibroid and other 1 U rtlUIUJ, vnrictics, without tuc penis of cuttinx cpcrutinns. FILE TUMORS, F&xubandotnVr aifteases of the lower bowel. i-roinpUy cured without pain or resort to thi kuil.;. Omrt Vr n in the BladJor. no mritter how D 1 Ull El larpp, ia crushed, pulverized, and washed o:it. thus avoiding cutting-. 0'DT'fT'DT7, of urinary pasfiiw is D 1 lilU 1 UIVi also removed without cutting. Abundant Kerereccea, and Pamph lets, on above disess-s, sent sealed, In ptom en velope. 10 cts. (-tamps). VTcrld's lusrF.li baxt Uaoicii. Asscciatioh, liuOalo, n. V. UNIVERSITY GOLLECE OF MEDICINE, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Hl'KTER McUUIB-E, .11.1)., LI..D., Pres. J S. A.WHITE. A.M., M.U., 8ee.de Treas. A HIGH GRADE INSTITUTION aSWon, MEDICINE, DENTISTRY. PHARMACY. A DIDACTIC ASD CMXII A1. C OI.CEIiE. CONDUCTED BV VTRCCTORS. The Ket alar Reunion bealns September 1 Mb aad eaatlaara sevea Months. For flfce nnne II r. J. AI.I.IQ HHIICIK. or. -t'j. Richmond. Vn. 1 il WHAT ) ITS rcTRAFFeT? end for ear Ppertal ltarala 1. 1st el eccoas-hand and shor-wera Wheels. We iktc net jot what Ton wtnt. rtr4l,lM;l?L9 rRrk Tf AM.. AUET WASTED. HIjH CHATE 613YCLE F93 $43.75 ot Mmlarl ma mat hh gr4 qanlltr. which w arorlooxir nxt ar t ie rii lo- prio. A rsr ;St tat m-tilrt:-li d'iribU wheel at a tar gla. Tost srefull li gents' wheel, ball bejiii ; an l H:ui with pnsnrna'io tiros. Iteo-t j t' jxaB'e express chvic. an 1 we will snip C. '-. U. $ t 73. with too prlvU-ge of oismlns'.l n, t as!re-l. Aoplr to our s?nu or direct !on. OCR fPOKTINC GOOD I.IE IS LSEXCEI.L.ED. Ben-I tea eents ihe ai-toal ct of irn'Imf Iu tftip rrr moeer for laige fllostratei four hun-(jj-wl pace rataioTue. contaiu-n; all k.nOs of sprtta Cojds sal ba jdredj cf ether articles. JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO., 131 Broad TM.andlJ? Washington, fm. DOMTO. Tli? (''cna cf SmMlpor. Trofessor Guamuri, of the Univer sity of Pi a, is uXlhe same opinion as that published by him in 1892, viz., that the process of population, both of cowpox and smallpux, is originated by a parasite which develops iu the epithelial cells. Ho has studied both the morphology and biology tf this organism. It is capable of amuebio movements, which can be seen on ex amination of lymph taken from the initial vesicle at the temperature of the human body. By thin proces-t Professor Guamuri has also verified the multiplication of the parasite un der the microscope, and the fact of phagocytosis by polynucleated, leu cocytes. With a stain of gentian an I methylene, the structure of this low organism may be studied.- It consist of a roundish body with a clear out line. Frofessor Guamuri hai suc ceeded in reproducing the parasite in the cornea of rabbits with inoculation of the same lymph, aud he has verified the fact that no other source of irrita tion is capable of producing anything of the appearance of the same parasite in the cornea. Trofesaor Guamuri be lieves that it is a zooparasite belong ing to the class of rhizopode, and flint it is the cause of both cowpox and smallpox. ' Over fifty per cent, or the coses or croup in Sweden and Norway ar fatal. ' T Cleaase the System Effectually yet gently, when costive or billons, sr when the blood is impure or sluggbb.to per manently core habitual constipation, to awak en the kidneys and liver to a healthy activity, without irritating or weakening them, to dis pel headaches, colds or fevers, uao Eyrnp of rit'S. Tax manufactured pro luct of Great Britain amounts to about ti,100,000,000 a year. Hall's Catarrh Care is a liquid anl is take internally, nnd act direc ly on the blo-xl ami mucous Rurfaces f the system. Writs for tes timonials, free. Manufactured by F. J. CuEf.tr & Co., Toledo, O Amebic locomotives have been adopted as the standarl for Japanese railroads. Khiloh'a Cars IaeoM on a unitu t h. It tun Inclpler.t Con sumption; It k the li;jtCo igh Cure; &c, 50c., SI Moss than 7,000,003 Dales of cotton have ilrealy been marketed. ltr licted wi .h sore eyea Ufe Dr. I -a c Th- in iv son'fcEy wafcw Drugris's sell at 2c por b At CunaillTM and peoala who hava weak langi or Asta sia, ahonld sae Plao'sCarafor Consumption. It baa rareS theaeakaa'e. ft has oct Injur ed one. It la not bad to take. It it thi estooocti rrn. Bold etarywlMr. Me. it n - n i" Cn ' Caakeatadewerfclasfav 3 7 ID Attn e.lrUepcfrTlwboe 4"' VWUiutbMi a bursa and trl A YEEKSS p throatfe ths aoaotry; a lesny is sat nennirt. a vacancies la towns en4 rtUea M a and o na of good chfiracu-r wtll Sad cats aa eseeptioaal opportunity fr prottlabis 0 07 men t. 8. ar hoars mr n1 to food adraa asa. H. F- J O II S0 1 Ac CO., 11th and Main Bis-, Klchssead. V. 8 N. U-.24 Diamond Cycles ARE THE BEST MADE. A I.I. THE LATENT I.M PRO VfcM ESTl. LSIkS lllfill ;RADE IN EVERY REI'ECT. TUK TOVRIST'! FAVORITE, THE WONDER OF THE ACE. CALL. AKD feEE IT.