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pe Wic&tta Sarin, gagle; Ittesfcuj Hcrrtiittg, Hetettttar 12F 1893. WwjB g Better feeling better better in every way. There's more consolation in that than well people stop to ponder. To gct back ft esh and spirits is everything- s all ?J E5BlE of purcCcd Liver Oil with Hypo phosphites is prescribed by lead ing phybicians everywhere for ail ments 'that are causing rapid loss of flesh and vital strength. Scott's Emulsion will de more than to stop a IhigerinjrCougii-itfortifies the system AGAINST coughs and colds. Pmcredb) Pcotti Sone.. . A orucgiits. w.ajjm,i . mini FASHION NOTES. What the Wnnifn of Mjle Are Wearing Durlnjr i Fall Season. Following- the English fashion btraw hats will be worn until holidays. Some of the -newest of the.e have the brims faced with fancv braid in contrasting color, one specially handsome model i "being of black Milan with lacing ot lace braid in the natural color of straw. The trimming is of loops of the braid glossy wings and aigrettes in black. While round waists are still fashion able, there are many basque bodices of various styles. One inodeL is shown with no black seams, but this is desira ble only as a novelty, as the effect is by no means pleasing, save in excep tional cases. The stylf. and -figure must match to be harmonious 13normouG quantities of narrow vel vet ribbon are used for dress trimmings. Row upon row of this material is seen on cloth and other wool fabric. A white broadcloth has the lower part of the skirt almost cover jd with velvet ribbon, set oa in an open arabesque pattern. French lace and various imitation laces are much liked. Old-time black laces of various sorts are being hunted up among the family heirlooms. Black Chantill3 guipure and lirussels laoe v.ro the height of fashion. The finer and older, the more the lace is approved. . fabric that may be described as moire velvet is one of the new impor tations The smooth surface of the pile is slightly stamped to produce this effect, which is extreme pretty, mak ing the surface into fine watered lines, cry dressy and elegant. Black lace id used in enormous quan tities. Uuchings, collarettes, plaitings, shoulder milles, bertha flounces, wide or narrow bretelles, and, indeed, every imaginable way of disponing this ma terial eems to be approved. The fancy forchangfables is running riot. It has roaohed all classes of dress goods, even mohairs and all grades of huitings. N. V. Ledger. 'COYOTES HUNTING.' Rallevlae Zacli Other In the Chnsa After Fleet-Footed Ji'! Rabbits. "Did you evor soo a pack of coyotes R-rustliu' for grub?" asked an old Cali fornia miner qf a reporter recently. "I've lived on the desert for nigh onto thirty years,"' he resumed, "and seed many "a queer sight, but coyotes a rnstliu' for grub beats them all. Them animals 3re as well trained as any liody of soldiers ever was under Gineral Grant, They elect a captain, whether "by drawing straws or by ballot 1 don't recollect oil-hand. Jur.t at daylight a reveille calls tho pack together and they come yelpin' and liowlin over tho desert like a lot of things possessed, their appetites sharpened by tho crisp nir and eager for their reg'lar diet of jerked rabbit meat. The aant cour iers snhT around among the sagebrush nnd gieasewood. while the rest of the band form into a big circle, sometimes bprcadin' out on the plain over a radius rf two or three miles. The couriers head a jack-rabbit in the circle and the coyote nearest takes tip the ehate. "You know a jack rabbit can run ten times faster than a coyote, and when the one in pursuit gets tuckered out the next one takes up the chac. and f.o on till .the jack falls down dead from exhaustion. Then tho whole pack leap onto him. their jaws snappiu' like hhoepblades in shcarin' time. Then when the jack is disponed of another rovillo is sounded and the pack again form into a circle, and the circus is kopt up until every one of the yolpin', ycller devils has Katisilcd his appetite, Bometimes killin' hundreds of jacks and cottontails fur ono meal, fur a coyote can eat a jack as big as himself and then looks as if he was clean btarved to death 1 was clean through the late unpleasantness with Gineral lrant and 1 know what scientific gon cralin' is, and them coyotes know as touch as any soldiers that over lived nbout army tactics. The commander in chief is usually the oldest ctsyote in the pack, and he sits on a knoll where he oan give orders to hia lieutenants and aids, and what they don't know ubout ambuscades niRueuverin' and field tactics ginerally ain't worth knowinV The first settlement in Tennessee was made by immigrants from Xorth Carolina, led by James Robinson, on the Watauga river, one of the head 5trcams of the Tennessee in 1T0S. It waa on lands of the Cherokees, from whom tho settlers obtained an eitrht rear lease in 1771. They there organ ised thenisolves into a body politic and Bdoptd a code of laws signed by each kdult member in the colony. Others poon joined thorn, and extended settle ments down tho valley of the Ilobuon end other intervening regions to tho Clinch aud one or two other streams, while others penetrated Powell Valley, and began a settlement in the south west corner of Virginia. When Babv was ticfc, we pave her Castoria. Whea she was a Child, she cried for Castoru. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoriiu When sha had Children, she pivotheai Castcria TOP fi4L QaaW vm a i-iniiismn ej&5ij e - r u u THE WOMAN OF FASHION. A Bewildering Maze of Colors and Matoriala What Soma of the Queer Ktmei Mesm Effectlre Touches ot Color on Black Tha OTersklrt'a Steady Growth. rCOPTBIGHT, 1833.1 Joseph's coat of many colors was 'a dujl, uninteresting garment next the fabrications of the 1893 modiste. Even the number of the materials which it presumably contained is fully equaled by many a street dress of to-day. This matter of materials and color has be come to be a'serious problem. In the beginning not of the world but of the season color held high carnival; all her fays were in the mad whirl. Scarlet, on a black steed, rode rampant through the center; azure perched daintily on a white mare with snowy trappings; flaming orange &at jjroudly on a beautiful chestnut; deep, royal purple looked regal on a glossy bay; while in the maze of brilliant dancers there were magneta and Russian green, and yellow, and a host of queer, un namable bhades. Society came and looked on for awhile, seemed interest ested, and made as though it would put its stamp of approval thereon; when lo! before one could realize it, society had itself turned its back upon them, showing its disap proval additionally by the sober garb which it immediately pro ceeded to adopt. So that all the world was sobered for a time and went about in mourning robes. One saw black everywhere, from state ly grandmother to frivolous grand daughter. That the fair dames hankei cd 3priki BAVAXA BROWS after that gay maze of colors, how ever, was evident; for one began to notice bits of color in among the dark folds. They were very taking, these harmless little things, that made such a wonderful change in the black ef fects: and so society was encouraged to go on in the work. Very stcaltki-, but ery surely, the color crept in; and we now se,e the effects of it in the somewhat fantastic coloring that walks our streets. One readily dis tinguishes the woman of taste from the woman of color only. For a knot or two will make the one and a. perfect splurge of inharmonious shades will mar the other. That it is a season of color, one will grant when the long list of new tints is put before him. While black is still the ground-work, the sure foundation, it is so metamorphosed by brilliant ad ditions that we view it in altogether difterent light than of yore. Here are tho names of some of our fashion able shades. Santal, a rich red brown; platine, a graish white: cigale, true grasshop per tint: grenade, a plum red; matelot, deep tailor blue: vigne, a color that Solomon bids us beware of; chartreuse, a beautiful oranee red: lanrelle, a rich, deep pink: faison, a tender gray; many flower colors, as verveine, azalee, jaeinthc and a host of other naiies, representing I know not what tirts. Colors and materials are mixed in this array of names. There is peau de suede, soft and thick mohair, w ith long hairs: the Montrose, a white vigogne of great richnqss; the Strand, a cheviot of black ground with a figure in colors, running over: the Flamande, a fine diagonal on satin ground; Middleton. a snowy sackiug. with a rough and scraggl surface: Queenstown. an Irish poplin, and Eastbourne, a crinkled annure novelty. And so we struggle among fantasies and bewildering mazes of queer appellation. In Paris tho rather insipid rose color is combined with many shades of green, noticeably vert russe. Here we havc taken somewhat to cielwitn our black, and pale yellow is frequent! vein ploved with soft effect. Particularly in "the evening bonnet and dress is the yellow desirably For it combines exquisitely with the tiny jet crowns, or the jet or nament or fillet that takes the place of toque. To bo sure, it will be long be fore magenta will be overwhelmed, for it has a glow and brightness about it that the quieter tints lack. I saw yellow tastefully combined Ki.blajck inarriae,cicuk.which I fit.,, ,. , -U. 7 ; J V '. g, I Til i j' I AM SO HAPPY I u 3 BOTTLES OF Relieved me of a severe Blood trouble It has also caused my hair to grow out again, as it had been falling out by the handful. After trying many physicians in vain, I am so happy to find a' cure in S. S. S. O. H. Elbert, Galveston, Tex. S CI TI?P Byforringnutfcennsofjlis-wv;iVa-- case and the poison a3 wlII J3T"It is entirely vegetable and harmless Treatise on rlqod and Skin mailed freo bw:iT Spbcifio Co.. Atlanta, Ga, S caught bur a glimpse of as it passed. The black velvet turned back in big revers that were faced with creamy, rare old lace. At the edge was a tiny band of jet over pale yellow velvet. In the lap laj' a bunch of yellow roses. Then a rich brown melted off into the creamy color. It was a plain skirt, with three rolls of velvet running around, several inches above the edge. A neat, close-fitting jacket, ail of brown velvet, stopped just at the waist, turning away in front from the pale yellow silk that "was gathered into long puffs from neck to waist. A very neat astrakhan hat, of low crown, topped the costume. It turned up in a quiet edge, which was cut away just in front, where -wide satin ribbon, I braided, was drawn over to meet the a'grettes and black ornaments that rose tip. Two single black satiu choux finished the back. The overskirt idea is making rapid headway not so much in street wear as in evening gown. Even in the former, however, it is noticeable in the blight drape of the bkirt that hangs over, almost to the length of I - - - - AND SABLE B-tfXDS. the one beneath; in the fancy hip drapings; and in the prolongation of basques into pretty folds and falls. Two costumes are here reproduced that illustrate admirably some of the newest of the overskirt ventures. They have grace, a virtue which not all can lay claim to, and they arc not tooradi cal for the average American. One that I noticed is a black velours over a rich, dark red ground. The skirt is plain, with gathered back, sim ply edged with a band of brocade. Then over the plain bodice is fitted a second of the same dark brocade, cut round aud low at the neck, and edged with black feather trimming. This bodlco ia slanted off entirely at the left side, and rum round to the back at tho right. Rencath the belt, which is a slender band of feathers, falls the overskirt, a long, slightly gathered point of brocade, feather-edged. Short ruflies, in deep waves, faU over the sleeves. It is a dainty and very fetch ing costume. Another is a black pointille., whose full skirt, edged with astrakhan, is very slightly draped in front. The waist fits without a wrinklo; over it falls a quaint bolero turned back in revers that hang in coquilles, fastened back with black buttons and faced with magenta satin. Over the hips a full barque falls, turninc back in front after the manner of the bolero, and falling in similar coquilles. similarly faced. All the edges have tho narrow black astrakhan, even to the plain Henry II. cuffs that finish the big sleeve5. A mild overskirt is a cloth which falls within three inches of the feet, showing only a narrow brocaded edge on the skirt beneath. The upper skirt is cut in narrow widths, cadi joined to its neighbor by an astrakhan band The bodice is a basque, whoe cloth front has been cut entirely away to make room for the rich green atin that takes its place. From the waist line down the bodice is slit in tho center and embroidered at the edge. A full cloth collet, of the green vigogne of the skirt, is pointed in front and meets over the bust. Two snail inters mediate puffs, on the sleeves, join the tight-fitting enff and the immense upper puff. Eva A. Sciicbert. A 3tonarch" Trial. Mrs. Bingo The Rajah ha one hun dred and fifty wives. Woman in his country must be very different from women here. Bingo Fcrhaps not Possibly he was enrnnfdled bjr law to mrxx that aaar. STREET-CAR ETIQUETTE. He Offered Her HI Seat and She Finally Accepted It. "Take this seat, madam," said a young man, rising politely and raising his hat- The "madam," was a lady of uncer tain ape. who after boarding the car and casting a searching glance from one end of the seat to the other and then down the opposite side, had failed to find an interstice between the sit ters sufficient to afford even so thin a person as herself a resting-place. She had then seized a strap with each hand and a determined look and was holding on firmly when the young gen tleman aforesaid vacated his seat for her. "Before I accept your seat, young man, I must ask you what prompted you to offer it to me?" The donor was not- prepared ior such a query. He had been in the habit of relinquishing his seat to standing la dies unquestioningly, and having the seat accepted in a similar unquestion ing manner.' So he was at a loss how to leply. and stammered: "W-w-why, madam " "Yes. I want to know why," inter rupted the lady in a severe tone. "Did you offer me that seat because you thought I was too old and feeble to stand?" "Oh, no, indeed!' persisted the young man with unnecessarily forcible protes tations. "IJeeause if you did I shall insist upon refusing it. I'd have you to know, sir, that I'm not an old wotnau. I'm quite young, in fact, aud if you've got the impression that I'm old and feeble and that I can't stand in a street car for nine blocks, I must disabuse your mind of that idea. Was that your thought in offering me your seat. Sow,' confess! I want to know the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth."' The voung man by this time was very red in the f?ce. He thought it was verv hard to bb subjected to such close examination of his motives in performing an act of kindness, by tho beneficiary of that kindness too, and before a carload of people who were listening with deep interest to the dis cussion'of street-car etiquette, although the discussion was a one-sidod one. "Now," went on the cateehizer, with out waiting for an answer, "if, on the other hand, you tendered me j'our seat as a mark of deference and homage to the sex to which I belong I shall bo happy to accept it. ISow which was it?" As she seemed to have come to a full stop the embarrassed young man at tempted to answer. "I gave you my seat because I am go ing to get out.' And he did. As he jumped from the car without troubling the driver to stop the wom an settled herself in the seat he had vacated and gazed pationizingly around the car. Free Lance. REMEDIES FOR HAY FEVER. Bub Your Ears Until Kert and II ot anil You Will Huve Keller. The capriciousness of hay fever, or, more correctly speaking, hay asthma, is very well known, yet the treatment of this disease, for which innumerable lemedies have been recommended, seems anything- but satisfactory. Feber, of Hamburg, had such a severe case as to necessitate the use of closed carriages throughout the summer. His t very simple method of treatment was discovered accidentally, lie Had no ticed that in the winter acorwa ("cold in the head") had hot ears as a usual accompaniment, and that the cars re gained their normal temperature when the discharge from the nose ceased He determined to try a reversed ordp? of affect on the hay fever in the sum mer, and began to rub his ears until they became red and hot. It is now the third year that he lias been able to lead an endurable existence during the f hay fever season He says: "As soon as the least sen sation of fullness in the nose appears there is recognized a certain amount of pallor, in the ears. A thorough 1 ub bing of the ears at times even to con tusion, has always succeeded in free- ing the nasal mucous membrane from its congestion. The rubbing, however, must be thorough, and repeated as often as the least symptom of conges tion returns to the nose. Since using this means I have been able to take long, sandy walks, sit and even sleep with open windows or pass an evening in my gaiden without distress. Sev eral patients have ha(i the same iclief from this treatment, always in propor tion to the thoroughness (of the rub bing, and I hope by this means some other physician may be able to give his patients the same great relief. A recent issue of the Boston Medical and Surgical .lournal contained the following interesting item concerning "Hay Fever" and it- treatment: The treatment of hay fever is subject to criticism, such as comes to no other die.se. namely, from societies of the sufferers themselves. It is interesting to note that the patients are not as en thusiastic over and do not report such good results ss a society of their med ical advis-rs would be likely to do. The United States Hay Fever associa tion, which recently held it's annual mooting in Bethlehem, N. II . listened to papers on the disease from a pa tient s point of view. It appeared to be the ge nerAi opinion that the only certain relief was to be found in the "White mountains, and that most ther apeutic mesures are of little or no use and some of them even harmfuL The treatment hj local cauterizauon in the nose is often of benefit, "fant the benefit is generally only partial and temporary. N. Y. Weekly. Fnder what wa once Lake Ange line, near Ishpeming, Mich., arc said to he the largest iron-ore deposits ever discovered in the northwest. To get at the& dtpo.its all the water in the ' lake, which covered one hnndrcd and , j surly acres, and was eventv feet deep in places, has been unmoed out. It took a- pump delivering twenty thousand gallons pr minute from April until , July, running night and day. to empty the lakf Now there is a led of mud i from two to forty feet acvp. which H j will take sixteen months to dig and i pump out. I "BREVITY IS THE SOUL OF WIT.' GOOD WIFE! YOU NEED SAPOLIO ALWAYS AHEAD. PVlorld'aFa X ? rf - BENSON'S v POROUS PLASTER For "Superior qaalliy of Mediciaal Faster." miamiae Highest awards to SEABURYtJOHMOU, CHEMISTS, MCW YORK. PITH AND POINT. If you would discover poverty, try to borrow money. Sam's Horn. Can a hungry man make a square meal off of round steak? Lowell Cou rier. Very Dear. Nuwed "3Iy wife is the dearest little woman on earth." Olbach "Howmuch does she cos tyou?" Detroit Free Press. Tramp "Madam, I was not al ways thus ." Madam "No. It was your other arm you had in a sling this morning." Detroit Tribune. He "Don't you find that you are affected by your surroundings?'" She "That depends upon whose arm en circles my waist.' N. Y. Journal. When a man is self-made, he is gen erally the first to find it out; but when he makes a fool of himself, he is the last one aware of it. Uoston Tran script. "How did it happen that Miss Blanche refused you? It was under stood that you were her favorite." "The regular way the favorite didn't win.' Tit-Bits. An Atchison bride who said a month ago her husband was the sweetest man in the world is already beginning to say that he is the sw eetest man in town. Atchison Globe. Boston Woman "O I do so love the fields on our New England iarras!" Boston io culti- Xew York Girl "Whv?" Woman "Because they vated, 3ou know." "She has a very fine voice: has sho ever sung for you?" "No." "Have you pressed her?" "Have I pressed her?" I think, my friend, you are a little too inquisitive. N. Y. Press. "Your husband is so magnetic a man," said the visitor. "I know it," responded the wife. "I found a steel hairpin sticking to his coat collar the other day." Indianapolis Journal. Chevreuil, the celebrated chemist, it is said, eats only two light meals in twent3-four hours, and drinks noth ing but water. What an editor that man w ould have made. Boston Courier. Mrs. Wield ey "I can't for the life of me see why you think she is a re markable woman. I " Mr. Wick ley "She can remember the trump through an entire game of cards." Inter-Ocean. Kate "And before he went away he gave her a swret kiss." Aunt Mary "And pray how do you know it was sweet? Did Hettie tell you so?" Kate "No; I had it direct from Fred's lips." Boston Transcript. Maud "Charlie de Softleigh is an awful bore. He is always in love." Marie "I should think that would make him interesting." Maud "It would if it wasn't always with some other girl.' N. Y. Herald. "This half-dollar doesn't sound right," said the smart clerk, ringing the half a dollar on his counter. "Humph !" said his coarse customer, "what do you want for half a dollar, anyway? An operatic solo with or chestral accompaniment?" "One of the oddest pieces or work we have yet had to do," said a New York typewriter, "came in the other day. The manuscript, covering half a dozen loosely written small pages was in a woman's hand. It scheduled the daily work of a domestic servant. Tho request was that we typewrite it so as to leave a wide margin on the right side of each page. The lady had just hired a Swedish servant who speaks no English. Each item of the schedule s to be, repeated in Swedish on the margin of the page, and the English was typewritten that the girl might the more easily make out the foreign words." Children Cry for Pitcher's Castor'a. ri.LOUBAriD, Jr. 1'ieMileiit. J r.Au.r.N. jet I'lObldcnt. L.D.SKI.VKKa, CASbtSf . II. LlVI508TO. i fcaitl.au t,CaUter State National Bant or U'JCUJXA. ILAS. CAPITAL, SUKl'U's. $100,000 100.000 DlliECIOllS: -din II. Cirri. W -. Green. J. P. Alls,.t V. jO r n. I . V. IIeal . Iotalmrd, Jr.. A. H Tl r't-'-. - I. f?.nner, James U. LornU&nl. DAVIDSON & CASE IJCY""" Jolin Davidson. Pointier Lituilieruieo of bcdgnick Con my. I'SLUUJSIIlfl) :: llv.-i 1S70 niiijil-t5 Mock hh Indies. J,ah, etc., nlw a): at Pine Lnmh?r Doors. ?3tah, ou baud. 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