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Show NATURE'S WONDEJEtS. BROWN IN MEXICO. Mexican Paper Attempts to Interview EX-GO- A A. V. MAN'S THIRD EYE. RUDIMENTS OF THE ORGAN A TRIP THROUGH MOST PICTDISCOVERED IN THE BRAIN.! The Hon. John Young Brown, who, AMERICA. URESQUE until ten! days ago, occupied the, post of governor of the state, ar- Scientists Are Intensely Interested the Across Lizards Hare It at the Top of the Story of an Interesting Kun rived in this city last night via the Mex"Overland Route";Skull and It M a Perfect Eye The Continent on the ican Central, in special officers' car, Pineal Gland. The Beauties of Colorado, Wyoming' says the Mexican Herald. Though the Idaho and the Great Northwest. governor was feeling rather tired after days'of railway journeying, he courteAN and all higher ously gave a short interview to a HerThe story of the "Overland Route animals have two bas been told in prose and poem by ald representative. The governor bears two only, and eyes those who have a rignt to claim the best .some personal resemblance to Isaac P o pu 1 a r says tnnTOleH era nf it- thn?- who tolled OVef Pusey Gray, who, until his lamented Science. All mamthe plains driving oxen in spans, which' death, acceptably filled the position of mals, birds, repnulled trrpt ruravans of freight; tndse United States minister here. tiles, amphibia and "Well, governor," said the Herald who hopefully bore the heat and burden fishes have thi3 f the day, buoyed up and encouraged representative, "what is your opinion number of eyes. mesby the hepe of an El Dorado in the of President Cleveland's special Even those animountains of the west great, noble sage?" mals which from "I have not yet read it. Our party hearted men who seught in, the glorious time immemorial west the reward which seemed never to saw the Mexican Herald of today, but hav lived in absolutely dark caves ome near their doors in the populous not yesterday. I would rather not exhave two eyes. In many of such aniast. They were brave.and press an opinion on the subject until mals, however, the eyes have been overbold and gentle, and the writer loves to I have read the message and other grown by the skin, so that these eyes hparine on the case. I am now would be useless for vision, dwell on their adventures and depict ir even if escapes, and tell of heartily in favor of the Monroe 'their now to talk from Its the, animal should come I decline but just their disappointments, and trine, hopes subterranean home to the TVn-is the story of the further on this subject. Wail till I've nf Hair In one sense-theii of chord a the read message." lives of many who read, and of several species of anitell- "What are your impressions of the mals of the mole and burrowing Bympathy is touched by the skillful mouse tribes. country as far as your opportunities Indeed, all the vertebrate animals have ing of the story. Everyone who has read these tales of the west has felt an of observation have gone?" two eyes, whether they use them or "Very favorable. What we have seen not. instinctive desire to see the spots, hal lowed at least in memory by some story, on our journey south through this hisNot all animals have these two eyes which has served to pass an hour away;- torical and picturesque land has inter- symmetrically placed in the head, one and each one has longed for an oppor- ested all of us very much. We started An each side. Certain fishes which aptunity. Those of the present aayof uthis from Louisville last Saturday, and ar- parently swim on the side, such as the TiYe& in Eagle Pass night before last the best of the earlier members turbot, have both eyes on one, the dark can for they mutual admiration society, by way of Mobile and New Orleans, side of their head. That this is not t hurs at due to a simple twist of the head has now make the trip in comfort, free from We stopped off twenty-fou- r luxuries the to all sW a been demonstrated by Prof. the iatter city. We intend peril, and surrounded by of Steenstrup Instead week in tnis city taking in the sights, more than incident to modern travel. twenty ago. years o look forwarfi to meeting the progres-whtoiling over the calcined track of ofthose j At times by what is termed arrested the traveler of the Mexican exe- chief able and preceded them, the giye r .m. development animals and even human ine uyeimuu cutlve as wen as my old and vaiuea beings day simply selects appear as cyclops, or having one j friend, Gov. Crittenden. We are going Route," the Union Facinc system, tuuu, But who ever heard of a eye only. as much at home as though in the quiet to a hotel, but probably we third man or beast? And yet in of some New England village, glides shall make our car our headquarters. recent eye researches prove that man and alI wish to say that we have been treatewiftly over a splendid roadbed, and all seem to possess the rudivertebrates lows his eyes to feast on the magnificent ed with every courtesy by the officials ments a of third eye. scenery afforded. of the roads over which we have txur-eleis not only very inThis a varied discovery is The route through Kansas and by the Mexican custom-hous- e cene of thrift and growing greatness, officers at Ciudad Porfiria Diaz, who teresting, but also remarkably instrucexamina- - tive, since the rudimentary third eye agriculturally, and when night has lowwithout our baggage passed of man has by one of the most noted eredher shades and the hours ofof rest of modern days been the beauties are passed, the grander came to MexiCo for rest philosophers BrQwn Qoy as one looked and upon being the seat of the Rocky Mountains are in view thQ careg of offlce after change soul. instinctively prepares uimscn w As organs by proper use develop in nas sirewu nature whicn In the wonders a Bake Shop. Runs This Dog bein profligate plenty within touch, alan enterprising barter strength and perfection, so they Abert, August Dencome use. of If lack for weak by many most, of the passing train. From doing business down near the French years an organ a should remain without ver to Cheyenne there is spread a owns an intelligent dog (Fifine) in time becomes simof hills and fields, dashing rivers market, his master's shop for him, use itsandstructure that keeps made more brooks that "and the complaining imperfect. If such a New Orleans correspondent pler the writes mountains the meadows green," and process continues.through ages an orhas Abert Times. of the Philadelphia d whose tops seem to reach a little bake room behind the shop and gan by constant disuse will become reand skies to the very duced to a me're rudiment of what it mingle their glis- as he gives his personal atten- - was in the tening peaks amid the shadowy clouds. tion toalways species using the same. the oven Fifine proves invalu-- I Thus The highest point on this "Overland species of birds that only walk The Houte" across the continent is 8,247 I. able in waiting upon customers.neck a and run, but never fly, hare only rudiher about carries strapped dog who hence those at Sherman; feet, mentary wings, as the ostrich, while in results of great altitudes are re- little bank whose slot is arranged to the eagle and the albatross the wings lieved of that apprehension, as very lit- receive .nothing more nor less than a are seen in a state of perfection. tle difficulty is experienced. One of the nickel. Now, in closely examining the skulls The customer may help himself to a wonders of the American continent, arof certain lizards it was found that tificial but interesting, is the Ames loaf from the counter but woe betide one near the top of the head under the monument, erected in remembrance of who tries to depart without depositing dark, opaque skin and often in the the work done by Mr. Ames in connec- the requisite nickel in Fifine's bank. very bone, an almost perfect eye extion with the building of this great east If more than one loaf is taken an equal ists, though no ray of light could ever 4tnd west artery of commerce and which number of deposits must be made in reach it. reminds one of the Pyramids of Egypt, ' the bank or Fifine will know the reason This eye shows a crystalline lens, a .and makes one wonder whether they, why. She knows very well how to use retina of very complex structure and too, commemorated ability and power her teethn case of necessity, though an nerve In fact, all the essenas well as served to keep the sacred re she is usually as mild as a lamb aad tial optic of a parts perfect eye. But being The Dale quite a favorite with her customers, but covered mains of their projectors. the opaque skin of the aniby creek bridge is another magnificent if her master should be needed she has is it mal, absolutely useless. specimen of human skill, and one corn- - only to pull the bell rope which com nerve is traced to the If this pares the handiwork of man with that municates with the bake room and he brain it optic is found to connect the eye of nature, which all around vies with it. is on the spot. Occasionally an ugly the pineal gland of the Idaho is entered at Border Station, an customer comes along. Recently, for with brain. The gland is, of course, appropriate name, and one then thinks instance, a tramp tried to work Fifine in no sense pineal of the word a real gland, of the great mineral productions of the for a supper, but the dog grabbed his a definite portion of the nervous but country through which he is passing ankle as he! was making for the door tissue of the brain, invariably located and stares anew at the creation of natu- without the formality of a deposit, back and partly over the cereral force, the Shoshone Falls, the great pulled the bell and kept him safe and just and imfroat of the rounded brain brum, geysers which abound in the parks, the scund till Abert appeared and a policemass which generally is considered to mountains ever seeming higher and man could be summoned. correspond to the corpcjrav quadrigemina fuller of poetry and romance, and chalin man. lenging; comparison with anything that Black Snow. ' The third eye of the lizard has yet been seen. It seems to the travServia, and vicinity was is called the pineal eye, spotted Bolqueit, on account of eler that what comes after must be a treated to a real meteorological pheof nerve connection its the with retina repetition, or some reproduction of nomenon on the ilight of the 9th ult., in something that has been seen on ths the shape of a "black snow." In ancient the pineal gland. Now, while in certain lizards the delightful journey, and he guesses that times such occurrences would have the stories of the parks of the great beeh thought to be a presage of a vis- highly developed eye is useless benorthwest must be tales of fancy, for if itation of the plague or some other dire cause it is covered by opaque skin, and in others even bedded In these cannot cause the mind to revel, is known to be It would seem deeply that In anbone, it Nowadays calamity. ear-liprobable indeed, must the best part of man, hia due to a species of fungus spore which of development this pineal stage imagination, be dulled and he an object is caught up by the wind and carried was not eye rudimentary but in conor pity. When, therefore, the grand- across a wide of before expanse country A use. stant very slight modification est scenery of North America, the wonsnow with finally along deposited being would accomplish this namely, the derful Yellowstone Park Is reached!, or rain. transparency of the skin covering the what a pleasure to feel that the power of eye. This is exactly the condition of Appreciation has been whetted rather VARIETY. normal eyes in reptiles the the than dulled, and that the grandeur an covers Is It but skin of the awaken them, transparLocomotives and Teauty surroundings steamship engines ent where it nef And embellished' ideas,; ami give the use a third of the coal mined in Engpasses over the eye. of some of the gigantic a mind skulls In and the of lieart greater degree ap- land. So of the earlier age of this globe, the whole route is an preciation.; for the manufacture of reptiles 17,000 .education, and an enjoyment at the ink havepatents been taken out in Great Brita- paleontologists have long ago found a ame time, ivhile the glow of hew health in."large, round perforation. Probably color and drives away the of was socket the the heightens the this third or pinThe eleven; cables now In operation weariness which, perchance, was the dil across eye! of the eal Ichthyosaurus, the the Atlantic have cost upward rect cause for the journey. While the1 of 14,000,0001 and the labyrinthodon. route just described has been through' But a much more important concluDown to the year 1890, Krupp had Colorado, Wyoming, Idaho; and the1 sion must be drawn from this discovNorthwest, I have not been unmindful delivered to European nations over ery, namely, that in all vertebrates, cannon, j of still another pleasant journey, which every, traveler through the west should The starfish has no nose, but the even including man, the traced of this To and The pineal through Utah, the whole of its underside is endowed with third eye remain take, viz.:. in state the union. ' While the sense of of lizards, being connected with youngest eye smell. , still in her maidenhood, she Is by no1 the large: pineal gland itself, Is but the to in the value of over Property least our of means 'the importance is left in the railway carriages oi nerve center, or optic thalmus, for this states. For scenery Echo, Weber, and third eye. In all reptiles and ambe excelled. The Great Britain every year. Ogden Canons cannot pineal gland U large; so it Great Britain owns 2,570,000 square phibia the fishes. valleys of Utah are rich in their pro4 Auction of fruit, vegetables and cereaisj m lies of territory in Africa, an area is also in In higher animals the cerebrum" dewhile the mountains' are daily disclos-- l almost equal; to that of the United wealth which will mineral yet; .a velops very much, overgrowing the ing States. , more posterior portions of the brain. cause the world to marvel. i The climate of Washington and Ore- if The perpendicularity of monuments By this preponderance of the nerve affected by lthe rays of the sun. The The western slope gon is delightful. on one side causes the material to mass the pineal gland becomes covered heat for chosen a spot be to seems pleasure; with cerebrum! and assumes more and health and comfort. One forgets the expand. form. But it remore of miles covered by the Exposure to sunlight Is one of the mains rudimentary many hundreds with obstinate pertinacity. It Is wheels and simply enjoys; best disinfectants for clothing: known. The light passing through glass will even always present in manthough which a here only the size of a pea and rudely is everyone universe.! It trip . not do. the the climate, should take, varying; resembling a pine cone In shape. It China consumes raises and more of seems' also degenerated In structure, altitude and general environments than any other : country in the business and care, and it can be taken ducks hardly any nervous tissue. world. On some ducki; farms' 50,000 a having These to "comfortably and at such reasonable facts of form and structure have r Unare cars of raised. the in the year splendid expense given rise to Its name, that of pineal ion Pacific System that it should be de: is Invaluable as a food for gland. Celery cided upon at once as the one next to ba those suffering from any form of rheuThe yoke of Christ Is easy only on undertaken. F, P. BAIOSIt. matism; for diseases of the nerves, and the willing neck. fcr nervous dyspepsia.5 Him on Venezuela. ' Blue-Gra- ss - , - - ; kind-hearte- d, irm doc-the- hair-bread- th j rs j He-Ti-t j j ( ; j i ..... j j t I . . to-nig- ht d, ; ; i pano-ram- ' snow-cappe- ' j testv-th- j j i . ! ; i so-call- ed I ' ' ef to-da- y; . ple-siosau- 16,-00- 0 j to-da- y. : " ; ; 125,-00- 0 -- ! - - ) - ; ever-turni- ng ' 1 ! : ' , I ; - ; - rus TAKING A BATH PROPERLY, WOMAN. EDITOR OF THE FUTURE Very Much Concerned Over the Evils of Some Timely Hints Upon an Important - Rum. Subject. HHKKE DID j. "Helen!" Bathing is a very important dally The managing editor of the future duty, according to the St. liouis spoke sharply. She was evidently yet few people knpw how to "angry about something, says an ex- take a bath to get the most good out of it. There are certain thing? that add change. "Yes, ma'am," replied the private to the comfort of a bath which should secretary, quickly responding to the not be missing from a wellfappointed summons. bath room. Every bath room should "Write a note to Miss Doolittle tell- have a cork or rubber, mat beside the ing her that we will dispense with her tub. Woolen mats absorb moisture and services in the local room in the become dingy and unhygienic. Every future." bath roon should have attached to the wall beside the rub, low enough td be "Yes, ma'am." "She is drinking too much," ex- accessible, two small wire trays; one I am to hold the sponge and the other the plained the managing editor. sorry for her poor father, who is a soap in the Intervals of bathing, when widower and has to depend on her for these articles are not in active use; support, but I can't help it. She will Every; bath room should contain a set of t Post-Dispatc- "This liquor evil is becoming a very serious matter," continued the managing editor, musingly.. "I don't much blame those pQOjcmen but in Kansas who have been holding prayer-meetinin the street in an attempt to break up the saloon business. They are taking long chances of insult, though. It's no place for men. I don't see what their wives are thinking of to let them do it. We'll have to have a good special on the subject before long. "Meanwhile," continued the managing edltcr, coming down to business again, "tell Mrs. Slasher that I want a good, stiff, editorial on the women who persist in going out between the acts to see a girl or get a clove. It's an insult to the gentlemen they take to the gs If you will cut this out aH with 15c. stamps to John A. Salzer 55! f!o... Ta Crosse.' Wis 'VAn nrtll ' : w" get fre8 . ... . . nankae'fi of above - - sTMt wu.ee seed our A Loveland girl ha written tn s of Agriculture Morton, asking him her a package of pansy seeds, and ages of Mourning Bride seeds, and tn, accept her thanks In advance. tJ else?" "Leave a note for Mr. Prett'yman about his society. Twice recently he has made the mistake of referring to Mr. .and Mrs. Jones instead of Mrs. and Mr. Jones, as every one knows it ought to be. It's inexcusable." $ "Yes, ma'am." "Then tell the city editor that I want a good interview with Mrs. Margin, the president of the board of trade, on the slump in wheat. There ought to be a good story in that. I understand that the firm of Mesdames Coupon & Bond was badly squeezed and that Jennie Plunger made so much that she blew in $200 or $300 celebrating with the girls on the board of trade and squared herself by buying her husband a diamond ring and a sealskin coat." With a wave of the hand the editor of the future dismissed her private secretary and gave her attention to an editorial on "The Absurd Claims of the New Man." v New Indian for Massachusetts. F. W. Putnam, Peabody professor of American archaeology and ethnology at Harvard university, has presented to Secretary of St.'ite Olin a description of an Indian which he thinks should take the place of the present one on the Massachusetts coat of arms. The present Indian is agreed by all who know anything about it to be but a poor representative of the type which was here In Massachusetts in the days of the early settlers and Secretary Olin has for a long time been anxious to remedy this defect. In his report Prof. Putnam gives a description of the accouterments and wearing apparel of the figure and gives his authority for the use of each article and also for their positions on the figure. He places the bow in the left hand and says that to place it in the right hand is as absurd as to represent a military officer with his sword hung on the right side. He says it is evident that the man who made the original drawing of the Indian knew nothing about Indians. He probably had never seen one and had made the drawing from his own ideas. The ridiculous blunders which he made have since been perpetuated and even incorporated into the state law. The design of Prof. Putnam will be submitted to the archives committee. Other designs will also be examined. Boston Transcript. How to Light a Cigar. "How many smokers do you suppose there are who know how to prepare a cigar before smoking it?" asked a drummer for a large Virginia tobacco house the other night. "I did not know a cigar needed any special tinkering by the smoker himself before lighting," was the reply. "That's where you make the mistake ninety-fiv- e people out of a hundred make. In future when you buy a cigar always bite or cut off the tip and blow through the cigar from the end you intend to light. If the cigar Is at all dry you will see a dust-lik- e cloud come out of the cigar. This cloud is made up of fine particles of tobacco, which, if they are not removed, lodge in the back part of the 'throat and cause QUEER STORY f . renMi sttg :;rsh A I i $1 ,ace Sir Elsie My husband is very hard to ni Louise He must have changed consiiWwf-sinc""siaerabij he married you. Free to "Comrades." The latest photograph of the- - N. i Eon I Walker, of thl Grand Army of the Republic. Write to I .jbv 1. uora, yuincy uuiiaing, Chicago and you will receive one free. I Mulatto women aire donninc rnia wtmea are throwing w"s.l"e into Xuuu selves the breeches. 1 commander-in-chie- f 1 them 0n ;had 'Dor ell. A 5 t -- ! o iruu ou rpc ervc "To fJ J iui punij "jgi cleansing, and renewing. The accumulations of wajti everywnere are being removed. Wlnter'i ttii Blues "j e, r of v..nature's ujureturnine indications life renewed force, and awakening pojrer, SQ) 0 Is the time for purifying the blood cleansing the system and renewing thi physical powers. Owing to close confinement, diminished perspiration md other causes, in the winter, impuritiei have not passed out of the system as thej should but have accumulated in the blooi tlve Many Happy Years. One night in 1801 a little girl about one y;ar old was deposited on the steps of t'te foundling hospital at Brest. She was dressed with much finery and a note w.iacueu uj ner sKirts toia tnai ner nme was Solange and that she would be reclaimed by her father, says an exchange. The claim was never made, J PJ however, and in due time the child was Is therefore the best time to take Hood'i transferred to the orphan asylum to be Sarsaparilla, because the system is not educated. As she grew up she demost m need of medicine. That Hood'i veloped a most extraordinary beauty; is the best blood purifier and but her intellect appeared to be very Sarsaparilla is proved by its wonder medicine weak and she suffered from frequent Spring cures. course A of Hood's Sarsaparill ful nervous fits. When she was twelve now may great suffering later on, prevent years old she was sent out into the streets to sell flowers, and her beauty and her modesty attracted many people's good will; but she grew weaker and weaker, and at last she died, or at least it was thought so. According to French custom, she was buried in an open basket, and, as it was winter and Is the One True Blood Purifier, All druggists. $L the soil was frozen, she was laid into Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mas the grave covered only with a thin layer Ills; easy to of sand. During the night she awoke, rlOOU S HlllS c"re to take, easy operate. and, pushing the sand away, Crept out from the grave. Not exactly understanding what had taken place, she was Cured quickly and eflectuan v by tiie use of I not so very much frightened J but in Kutnow's Powder & Cigarettes1 crossing the glacis between the cemeDv prommeiiif and recommended . nigniy prescribed tery and the fortifications she as sud- yirysicutns. valuable literature, icnaa. write lor and our iach Signature. package has denly stopped by the cry: "Qui vive?" and, s she did not answer, the sentinel Jgott fired and she fell to the ground. Brought TgOttl into the guardhouse, her wound was ,liow found to be very slight and she poon re,'!"er to covered. But her singular history and also her great beauty had made! so deep If youi druggist refuses to get them for you apply you an impression on a young lieutenant direct to KUTNOW BROTHERS. "i of the garrison Kramer that! he de- 52 4. 54 Lafayette Place, New York City. As wi termined to be her protector abd sent Large packages $1.00, postpaid. MALL ORDElty th her to one cf the most fashionable edu- PKOMPTLi DELIVERED. will cational establishments in Paris. Duryou ing the next few years Kramer was you much tossed about by the war; but - corr when in 1818 he returned to Paris he nt m n found Solange a woman, not st well begun is half done. Begin well by erettlnsr Ferry's Seeds. only beautiful but accomplished and 1 dowi let cnance determine spirited, with no more trace of IntelUas Ferry's your crop, but plant Meeds. Known ana soia lectual weakness or nervous fits. He he everywhere. married her and for several years the torn Before you plant, get l"Tou couple lived happily in Paris. Annual Seed Sarsaparilla 25ft ASTBRftA. Anti-Asthma- tic . : . Trade-mar- . . . t 1? k ; PLOT full-grow- Y Ferry's 1896. Contains more praol tloal information for .farmers and gardeners than many nign-- j text boolts. Alaiiea iree. priced D. M. FERRY CO., DETROIT, MIU., ter for The Position of Portugal.! e a an DON'T Qeet ? tte,a i dec GET in V'U stigBSk y ma, rirofa Kb. a tlii 53e SILIICKER : '; :Hie (i "Tou 13 WILL KEEP YOU Dig j tlij ir AERMOTOR CP. dowJSaSSl THE windmill businew!, because it n bitac Wind power to l.ti wna u we Ba "d7JlDd rPf rnli6 and wmwm supplies houses, ' -- A ; an !aclf' I Ptea$6? lit OF Portugal is a weak nation and seldom considered, in speaking of the powers of Europe,;; but she is in a position now to be of great Importance in the jcontro-vers- y between England and Germany. The only seaport through which German forces can go to the assistance of tfie Transvaal is on Delagoa bay which belongs to Portugal, and if that! power refuses to assent Delagoa bay cannot be used for hostile purposes without irritation." making war against Portugal. The situation is awkward for Germany, if PorA Snake Adjourned Court. tugal sides with England, as reported, George Stevenson, a traveling mu- for she cannot give the Boers the enseum man, charged his employer, Robcouragement of a military demonstraert Sidesworth, with stealing a raccoon tion without committing an act jof war and a big rattlesnake. Both "var- against a power with which ishe no mints" were brought into Judge! Byer-ly- 's quarrel; but it Is still worse for haa Portucourt in New York, where the ratwho finds herself between two fires, tlesnake 'escaped from Its box. Officers gal, in a fair way to be burhed whichand witnesses and iSpectatora bolted but ever way she turns. Philadelphia through the side doors and even Judge Ledger. Byerly, a veteran soldier, fled, making his exit by the fire escape. The rattler Something to Ponder Over. was captured but the case went over to The sailing tonnage of alj cotmtriea allow the court to recover his nefves. fell off 106,000 tons last year, as com pared with 1894. But there was an in- Russian Journalists. crease of about 824,000 tons in steam A congress of Journalists, the first a very significant of the tonnage public general meeting ever held in times. England leads in shipsign building. ex as a matter of course. Indeed, Russia, will meet at the per hibition at Nijni Novgorod next sum- cent of the new durtonnage lauiicheji mer. Among the proposals discussed was the year acquired by her, aling will be that for a "Journalist Hon was a falling off In the toHonor," to settle by arbitration dis- though there to tal credited her, as compared with putes between newspapers or writers. the showing for 1895. Nearly 20pei The Nile, from its delta to the great cent of the English output went to for lakes of Central Africa, is over 4,000 eign countries and more :tnaa on- fourth was secured by Japan.ji miles in length. all-Russi- 1 Snrlnrtimo rnntoo nca v. .. feet remedy, Syrup of Figs. One I will answer for all the family ana 7 f only 50 cents; the large size the genuine. Manufactured th 77 f trornia Pig Syrup Companybyoniv 404 I i for sale by all druggists. REAL LIFE. A Young: Girl Arose from the; Grave to i i ' Best of All To cleanse the system in a ! note-boo- k. 148 page catalogue! Cata.w i ! - theater." "I have that, ma'am," said Helen, "What looking up from her TtTirT paid shelves on vjhich should be kept, soap, tooth powder, a can of almohd meal, a Jar of cold cream, a bottle of ammonia, a bottle of alcohol, a bottle of lavendar or violet water, a bottle of listerine and a bottle of witch hazel. Of Course, the woman who indulges in lo ;ions and bleaches will keep them also. If medicine is kept in the bath roomj it should not be mixed indiscriminately- with the toilet preparations ;but should have a section to itself. The brushes which very woman needs for her bath are a flesh brush for occasional use, a rubber complexion brush and a nail brush. Some skins are kept smooth by friction; others are roughened. It will, therefore, be the part of wisdom not to indulge in continual scrubbing until one discovers which sort of skin one has. Cold wsiter is not cleansing. It is bracing; it i hardening and it helps to make jthe skin firm, but it is not cleansing. The shock of cold water application closes the pores at once and they retain all the impurities which they should cast trdt. So that the woman who wishes to be clean must wash in warm water every day and use her cold water sponge only as a, skin tonic. When one H fatigued a sponge bath with warm water and alcohol will restore one's strength and vigor. When one is not well a thorough rubbing down with oil is an excellent medicine. "I'll do it at once, ma'am." (JET eI; h, 1 have to go." YOU Had the Laaies. Ald cf;s Church out for tea, fortySociety of 'tW all pronounced the German Coff73 equal to Rio! Salzer;a you airabout it! 5 packages ' vegetable seeds $1.00 post r9 ' door. It can ua ,4 Jour ".better article for U"'Z.J(iti vise'( i and Fixed Steel yJTrTmes, Steel Keed Cutters on -- "d jo U nw v" appuc m winders, of tnes. articles that H wlU at 13 tne umaX prtce. iV"ior--' ' January lit Tanks and Pumps of all kinds. Send for tmiAvtj uub 0 ' 1 if C- Vol. Xlii. tnt rr. nAnvnr. to advertisers, When writing in XV. roti saw the adverUsement Pjpcfc O- |