Show 7 i 1k l I J ro w 1 6 M f I T I I f t 1 LITTLE ILLS g Ways of Vnii < iui < < liiiiKr the mosquito and Ueliei r Many Minor Ailment + 1 Ail-ment + o t I > A mixture of glycerine and carbolic acid is said to supply a wonderful protection < pro-tection from mosr uitos as well as a I cure for their bites Take about twenty t twen-ty drops of the acid and put it into a I bottle containing an ounce of glycerine and half an ounce of rosemary water t C > r v A r y i Ys i N alt f I r rt r fJt t r bl 4 S i l t < I j I MAJUE JIXTOEVETTIJ COLLAR If used freely at night the sting of the Insect will be almost miraculously cured and disfiguring blotches removed by morning If the odor is too disagreeable a few drops of attar of roses will make 4 the remedy pleasanter and leave it quite as efficacious INSECT BITES 4 Salt will relieve the pain caused by the stings or bites of insects if dampened damp-ened with water applied to the affected part and bound tightly with a bandage Ammonia is also of ereac service especially es-pecially for wasp stings to which also an indigo bag may be applied with good results Flea bites are relieved bv vinegar vine-gar TENDER FEET 1 After a long walk or much landing when the feet are very tired it is a good plan to bathe them in water in which charcoal has been boiled or friction with gin and water will give speedy relief re-lief Another remedy under the same conditions is to put a handful of common com-mon salt into a footbath of hot water Feat are apt to be sensitive growing hot and irritable when the skin is dry < < a 1 9 I r y Jt J f frl > l J i l f i I VIolin Poplin and Jetted Ginpnre and fails to perspire In these cases a salve is very comforting and the following follow-ing will be found ejPnaciDus Zinc ointment oint-ment cold cream and spermacets in eQual parts i When there is copious perspiration of the feet It often arises from const u 10 > tional weakness and a tonic should be prescribed by a physician In this case it is unwise to bathe ths feet too frequently fre-quently an 1 the waer shouH contain a solution of borax tlin should be freely I powdered with lycopo l Hum or with equal parrs of oLirch and sub trale of bismuth The following is also helpful Oleate of zinc 1 drachm subnitrate of bismuth bis-muth 2 drichm betanaphthol 2 grains To be rlusreJ frequently over the surface RED HANDS Red hands are often benefited by frequent fre-quent baths in oatmeal watei that is take fine oatmeal boil it in water for about an hour strain hen night and morning use the liquid o trash in it must hoer be male fresh everyday every-day as it bom spois Far exceptionally red and hirrh Jrtnls a few grams of chloride of i irvj may be pa f n1y fc < dol to the sort ant water you wash in but remembor to remove your iiips < r they will be tari < id INDU 1TON Cider has osaii lately recommended s a remedy f J r certain phases of ndiges tion In cases wnp fool nssimilnn is too hurried the cider is said to be beneficial and j > i tIv js acid favors the action of the gastric juice For gouty people cider nas ilso been recommended recom-mended beca ifp it corrects the formations forma-tions of the uric acid to the presence of which gout is due Indigesion in children can Je reI by care fu ll w ViIre ant vigilnntlv j preaching he wholesome doctrine of mastication Teih the mild that every morsel he swall > Vb niLi I111 chewing it thoroughly is MJ much poison to his body Children ara tenacious of life and F 1 µ 4 4 t1 Y fi S 5r ti f + i4 rte 1 r t + 1 l J CARRIAGE TOILET may be made to believe the truth of this statement FOP CUTS A powder for arre ring bleeding is made by mixing together Equal parts of alum nutgalls gum arabic and gum benzoin these first being finely powdered pow-dered Another recipe gives equal parts of alum sum tragacenth and taumic acid Each powder is used by sprinkling sprink-ling and pressing a little on the wounded wound-ed part For slight cuts these powders will be found efficient and especially in the often persistent bleeding which follows fol-lows shaving AXY WIFE TO A > Y IICSBAND Today if I were dead and could not feel Your kisses or your tears upon my face If all the world could give of woe or weal Could find within my heart no resting place You would not think of any bitter past You would not chide me for a carel sword s-word You could not be so cruel at the last As to condemn me unconfesed unheard If I were lying wrapt about in white With flowers all around me on my breast And in my hands and on my face the light That angels shed upon their dead at rest If I were lying thus and one should say Such bitter things as you have said tome to-me With sternest anger you would drive away That one and swear twere all base calumny Ill not rebuke you though my heart be full I dare not chide I too may be astray Experience yet may teacha bitter school are what to do and what perchance to say And yet I ask you humbly tenderly If I should answer nevermore your call Would you not grieve of all most bitterly For words and deeds that are beyond recall Pearsons Weekly > SHE TURNED HIM DOWN He Was IVot Up to Date and Coulil Not Win Her Heart Everybody onl the train going through to San Francisco said she was the handsomest girl in the United States and every one of the dozen single sin-gle men worked his level best to get an introduction The young man worth 3000000 finally accomplished the feat through her father and for the moment mo-ment was happy Then she queried Sir can you back pedal your wheel 11 cannot he stammered in confusion con-fusion Can you mend a punctured tire Nno What do you do in case of a collapse col-lapse she continued looking him straight in the eye I get a policeman to take me home he softly answered Father what sort of a bird is this anyhow demanded the princess as she turned to the old man Hes got a carload of plunks whispered the governor in her ear But he does not ride the bike ur travel on my shape and wealth put in the young man as he bowed low before her They are both n g sir The man who wins my heart must be a scorcher and able to make the tour of Europe I on a bike Go take lessons tumble over on your ears get up with a determination i I termination to conquer or die win success suc-cess and then write me a postal card father remove the menagerie and bring in that chap with the bicycle hump on his backNew York Sunday Sun-day World A GREAT DIN EIt Because Enjoyed l > y a Great Quartette Quar-tette Pltey Are Still Alive The greatest dinner that I ever sat down to says Watterson in the Cour lerJournal I consisted of a leg of mutton mut-ton dressed with mustard a bit of hot younger and richer than he is though he still has his ancestral acres That was a dinner FOR BLACK EYES It is often the case that people meet with accidents and bruises that cause disfiguring discolorations from which they suffer not a little embarrassment and annoyance It is worth while to know that there is a simple remedy and one quite within the reach of every one Immediately after the accident mix an equal quantity of capsicum annum with mucilage made of gum arable To this add a few drops of glycerine The bruised surface should be carefully cleansed and dried then painted allover all-over with the capsicum preparation Use a camels hair brush and allow it I to dry then put on another or even a third coat as soon as the first is entirely en-tirely absorbed A medical journal is authority 1 au-thority for the statement that if this t ry i b y 8u1 1 v H FOR THE M ORNING white bread and some fresh butter with half a jug of fine whisky to wash it down It was in front of New Hope church in the summer of 1S94 Someone Some-one had sent Eustis a leg of mutton Someone had sent Yeatman a Earge pillbox pill-box of butter Bragg General Polks cook had some flour Eustis and Yeat man invited Governor Harris and myself my-self The governor happened to have a key which fitted General Polks medicine medi-cine case All of us united in making the robbery of a vial of Irish whisky the general himself being absent and that was the dinner Glorious dinner Please God the quartette still survive < to tell the tale which they do whenever 1 they meet and can get an audience Eustis is in Paris ambassador the same cool selfpossessed man in diplomacy diplo-macy he used to be under fire able brave and lazy Harristouching the eighties is the dashing brilliant imf im-f t f v ° f 1 4 FALL FASHION HINT ti petuous boy he was 32 years agoand tUlver or gold or neither I look toward to-ward him as I write Yeatmaln obtrusive ob-trusive only in his courage on the battlefield bat-tlefield lives the life of cultivated leisure leis-ure and unambitious rusticity which delighted him most when he was both L < t r 9 l f a h la I d J II t I r J vJy a J yr rY t y r it r i gh r 4 DAfIX AGTTOIX WRAPS I course is pursued immediately after the injury discoloration of the bruised tissue tis-sue will be wholly prevented It is also said that this remedy is unequaled as a cure for rheumatism or stiffness of the neckNew York Ledger A SAFE RULE ur never need a family Bible to tell me how old a girl is I can hit her age every time How do you do it By the songs she sings Chicago Record Re-cord I I When patent leather shoes begin to look shabby rub on sweet oil with a piece ot flannel and polish with a clean piece W COST OF 3IAJRREAGE CERE3IONY A clergyman in Kansas married a couple the other day and received in payment a barrel of beans He came from Boston knew beans all right but > didnt like them to eat However they proved salable A Vermont bride is worrying for fear she is lightly valued for she heard that the clergyman who recently performed the ceremony in which she took a leading lead-ing role offered to trade the unopened envelope containing a wedding fee for a watermelon The envelope contained a punched 3cent piece I There are plenty of toll bridges along I the upper Connecticut and plenty of near people on both sides One of theseno matter whether in New Hampshire or Vermontrecently gave the minister who married him to the best wife in seventeen states an envelope enve-lope containing one 2cent toll ticket The same clergyman performed another an-other ceremony with more satisfactory financial results After it was over the groom gave him a pair of cheap gloves which he turned over to his wife She flung them into a drawer in disappointment disappoint-ment which was moderated some months later upon finding a S5 bill in each finger and thumb Hymen is one of the most unimportant unimport-ant functions at the Budapest celebration celebra-tion Just now One of the features is an illustration of peasant wedding customs cus-toms and the committee offers a weeks entertainment to the couples who submit sub-mit to a public wedding The idea has often been used for advertising purposes pur-poses in this country I l i rx i r r y J r p I E > r V r r r 4 t a e t i a jk L fJ4 r i d J j1 1 1 kr U f r 1 f 4 t Ws z A W BEEN AX NEW OEX5THIS WEEK I t 1 1i i G y t d 1 1 r V 1 t 1 I r P 711 y 7 1 r I d1 4 6 I 4 1 K If 4 QIt 2 r t cl I 2t 1 I JI t 4 ki I 1 J 1 TWO LATE PAtS SIYLjSJ g |