X) THE DAILY HERALD i I'LATTSMOOTH, NEBRASKA. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2X, 1sS. MAIDEN'S OF YUCATiN. THE OEST EDUCATION. To rAMOUS FOR THEIR BEAUTY OF FORM AND FEATURES. Tliflr Lot la Seldom m llmppj Oua Slaking ( ISirrlUt-Vllt to Ilia Utc Maker A Tula of Woe fbrflneinent and Amlabil lf. Tlio iiu-ztizu women of tliat mcwt Inter filing country aro fumed for their beauty of form anil features, abundant eilky muck t res.M-s, largo dark eyes and eay, a . hfaiiiui iiiamiiTH. uencrauy iney aro us ((mmI uh they aro pretty; but their lot is Ht-ldi m a happy one; iicrliaps they aro loo numerous to be justly appreciated. About one In cilit enters the state of matrimony, and these appear to bo the least happy. Owing to a great excess of femalo opulution tho consequence of many revolutions and war with hostile Indians a largo number of women do- iK'iid entirely on their own excrtiors, and their held of labor is limiteiL Tliey are ma ein.ioyil In storm, such places being monopfiliAil by white I landed souths who think coarser toil beneath them. II iose individuals of the sterner bex ex t the gentler, under all circumstances, to remain at home, no matter how pain ful their iositioiu Orphans must cat the bread of dciM-mlence in the house of re lations or friends, and on no account shock public opinion by trying to earn a living away from their placo of abode, nor may they venture to dwell apart from elders who shall control theircvery movement. They may suffer everything except actual starvation, yet must sub- juii ii tney would 00 respected. A few are wonderfully clever at mak ing most Ixautiful fruits and flowers of uir, but cannot earn a living by it, the time anil care necueu in tno manufacture entailing so much expense that only the wealthiest giro an order on very special occasions. Nothing truer to nature than thso vegetables, fruits and flowers of sugar can bo imagined. A pineapple, an ear of corn, a golden kasliew, with its odd sliapcd appendage, a spray of snow v.i;i;e uiucrosfs an equally perfect in form and color; wlulo lartre. full blown roses, crimson, pink, and yellow, appear us if the frail leaves will fall from tho stem if breathed upon. Only tho taste convinces us that they arc not what they seem; and the flavors given to them by their skillful producers aro as delicious as the work is admirable. 21 A KINO CIGARETTES. Tho making of cigarettes affords em ployment to hundreds of girls, because men, women and children there indulge in tho use of tobacco. In city, town and village pretty scnoritas sit lehind the prison lite window gratings deftly wrap ping up tobacco in small pieces of the outer covering of maize, which, when toasted, imparts a delightful llavor to the cigarette. Twenty cents a day L the most that one pair of hand can earn. Dressmakers aro numerous, Others anxiously r-olicit ordcrj to embroider i fcilk, thread or worsted. Pillow laco was formerly manufactured in Mcrida, but Ix-ing expensive, thero was no demand for tho article. Less costly laces are largely used. f"o pjeztiza's holiday dress Is complete without ftmple flounces rf It; thi3 converts their simple ivhjte linen tr.iruients jnto CXjenf,ive attiie. Cheap la.ee is imported, but all who can. T:.nt Wlik-h Train n and and Brain Cether A Great Mistake. Eaeh year brings to the general public, Oji well as to tho educators, the convic tion that tho present system of education Li inadequate to the demands of tho day. The great public, which is more directly interested in school methods than tho ed ucators themselves, are waking to the conviction that there is much useless ex penditure of time and effort in puttintr tho boy and girl through tho course tit study in the Bthools. This conviction is not limited to any class of intelligence. It is iermeafing all classes. With this more complete view of education coiuei among the higher classes a greater re siect for skilled labor. In these daya when riches suddenly take to themselves wings anil fly away; when there may 1 luxury one week and enury the next, it is necessary for every ono to lo pre pared for these emergencies. Tho exi gencies in business life cannot always be foretold with accuracy. The laws that govern the evolutions of commerce are to a certain extent the same in their ten dency and as unerring in their effect as those that govern tho Volutions of nature. It has long Ix-en a crreat mistake of the rich to educate their children in the ef- floresences of know led ire. and to teach them to view manual labor as lowering in us lniiuences. istit self preservation is one of tho first laws of nature and there aro comjwiratively few people who wouia ramer starve to death than work with their hands. Tho instinct of na ture is strong with us all. and thero is that consciousness in every one, at least in nearly every ono, that forces liim to labor in order to save his own life. The complications of social conditions and the consequent coniietition in all depart- - ..... - I 1 . 1 - ... Hems ot uiuusiriai ami proiessionai me, together with these sudden disappear ances of fortunes, are impressing upon mo minus oi an, tno ricii as well as the xor, the necessity of leing forearmed. The man who is armed is always readv for an attack. Tho man who has a skilled brain and hand to fall back ujon is ready for an emergency. If society is to be comoactlv built and enduring we must all contribute our labor, not only to make it so, but to keep it so. We have now as much of the disintegrating elements as we need. These are tho criminal classes, the paujers, the insane, the bed ridden, tho homeless, the aged, tho infirm. We have in this wide domain many that are needy, but that are not vet tho wards of the public. With the increase of the population comes an increase in societv's burdens. Th mm- plication in social conditions must be evi dent to everyone that will take the trou ble to iienetrate the slight crust which enveloi life in tho United States. The only way to put an obstacle in tho way of this alarming increase in our non-producing class, or non-contributing classes, is to educate our children to lieconie pro ducers and contributors. Tho present system of education is good so far as it goes, but it does not go far enough. If all members of society were produ- A CURIOUS PRODUCT. INTERESTING FACTS CONCERNING SACCHARIN AND ITS USES. me a Sweet Manufactured from Coal Tur l"eil Now lu Cukr, Candy and Chnmpaipie Whut ao A nierli-uu Cbem Ut Nays Mt-dlrul I'm-. ine curious product from coal tar known as saccharin was introduced by u French chcmi&t two years ago, since when a factory for its production has been established in Westerhausen, near the old historic town of Magdeburg, in rrussia. .saccharin has Ijccome so for midable a rival of cane and beet root sugar formany manufacturing punxscs. that tho producers of these look upon the new material with Treat disfavor. Iite trench pajK-m slate that tho French sugar manufacturers have liegun a cam paign against it, and the Society of Ag riculturists have rictitioncd the govern "" "i i iuiuiu lis manuiaciure, as oeing prejudicial to tno beet root sugar trade, although experiments have shown that it is not noxious. It has leen found that in its pure ctate it is uiliicuit of solution, but this defect is corrected by the addition of an alka line bicarbonate that is added by small portions to tho saccharin mixed in the water. No heat is employed, as under me inuuence of heat soda will transform saccnarm into salicylic acid. Neither flies, bees nor other insects will touch saccharin in any form, but physicians are already prescribing it for patients afllicted with diseases which will not admit of their taking sugar. A gentle man to whom sugar was forbidden tried saccharin, using it alone to sweeten lemon juice and stewed cranberries, lie found that it would not mix, and ex perimented with various things to rem edy it, but was unsuccessful until he thought of glycerine; one dram of sac charin with- one pound of glycerine, heated to solution, makes a mixture closely resembling honey, and one that readily dissolves in water, milk, tea, colTee, wines and liquors. ITS SWEETEN ISO POWER. Saccliarin is used now in cake, candy and champagne. Its sweetening power is 800 times greater than that of sugar, and it has neither the lattcr's nutritive nor injurious properties. . It does not ferment, and is in no way altered by the action of yeast and other ferments. In addition to this, it has also antiseptic properties which make it useful in pre serving articles of food. It is a condi ment, or spice, and should never be tasted in its pure state, A distinguished American chemist, when asked for some information re specting the new material, said: "Sac cliarin is really in many ways a re markable product. It is the sweetest substance known. One part of it in 70.- jw i,ius oi uier win give ine water a Thm lroj notion of Petroleum. In tlie Itovuede Deux Momhsn.de Tchihatchef, whom it would pioiuiidy Ihi safe to take for n Russian, has u t.t l i'i ing article on the sudden rise of Kusi.iu as a comietitor of the United States i:i production of kerosene. Some abate ment may properly bo made from his confident predictions on account t.-f the unconcealed Partisan bias with whk:h lie writes; and tiis figures leave soiiu'lhing to le desired on the score of entire cl consistency and rccentness, but what he has to say is nevertheless well worth the attention of our oil producers. I!c iiia-ca it evident, in the lirst place, that the only rival of the United States at present in siht is Russia. Following a late French estimate of the world's produc tion of K.troleuiu, putting tho total at lOU.OOJ.UiK) hectoliters, it appears that the United States furnish Cl.oaj.Ouo, iusfiia 2.1.000.000. and all other countries only 11,000,000. In fact, while deposits of oil have lieen found in many parts of the eartli as in Bunnali. China. iVr.iii. Kgypt, New Zealand and mo:t of the European countries tin ir extent ii so limited and dillicuit of operation mi rreat that tho race has narrowed down to the two contestants named. The principal oil fields of Russia ;ue found within a limited territory, 'ihe famous wells arc almost i.U situated in the peninsula of Aspheron, which runs out into the Caspian sea ataixWnt not lar from t!ie southern icuseiau i.-ouudarv. Baku is the iort whence shi.-iincnls are made. The irreat natural ad vaiUa ros of the Daku held arc the compact terri tory to Ixj worked, the small depth of the well.i, and their great steadiness of How. The whole area worked does not exceed 1,100 square miles. Set this over against the area e:::::;:tcu fcvliio United States 571,210 square miles and tho riclmess of the Russian wells wlxich produce ' at least one-third as much as those of the United States, will bo at once perceived. Tho depth of the wells runs from 120 to ."540 feet. One famous well is but thirtv- three feet deep, yet out of it the oil jets up to tho height of 240 feet. M. de Tchihatchef asserts also that the average flow in the Daku region is yy,000 pounds per day, an against 2.".a00 in tho United States. New York Times. TTC3E MARCC3 OF PROGRESS g OUR LATEST IMPROVEMENTS ! "Compel It Ian In the Life of Trade," n If you harn not wn our lnloMt lmnrovn.1 mA. Cannot IimukIiia h) lively irn.l M or liow ,r. our rornlvtltoni lmv t work I . kX-u-iiii7 'IP??'" auk your rt-iaiiir ior iuo JA.1IM JTIKAN",' k;i MllflC or thu JA ll i tf J. aic.lMliiK to yournmsls. ' " -' "- at nilUK . ,.."U.,.Tr,y ".oue Keniilne unl- l.lilflr oiir tiAirm Mn.l rrl.e tlnmiml t.lnlnlv on !h mim reta er will .upply you with nh.M-. m, tn...l If you In.ut .Ioiik m; ir you J uZtVnlZt. ZTI rutallera wtllcoux jou luto buying luurlor Bliovs uoou which im-y make it Urncr iruliu ui r JAMES MEANS' 3 3 SHOE UNEXCELLED IN l STYLE UNEQUALLEO DURABILITY -5" A-ND ' .PERFECTIOH J Afi JAMES MEANS' $4 SHOE CANNOT FAIL - TO SATISFY THE MOST SHOfJ fcuph ha iH-i-n tho rpi ent proKran In our l.ranch of liidiiKtry that wo are now al.ln to affirm ihnt the Jam. Means l Shoe l in every rK't ikjiii.I to I lie hIioi'm which only fuw year ( wera reu.lll ateluht or ten ilo lam If you will try on a pair yon will ! eonvlnel that wo lo not eaRK ral. Our. are Ihe orlKiiial Uanil $4 SIkhii, and those who l.tillute our ayalem of IhihIiirhii urn unal.le t compete with ua lu quality of factory prixluctrt. In our lines wo are the liirKcst iniiiiufn.'tiirer In Die irnlie.1 stale. uue or our iravenux Raiemnen who In now vlHlllnir tho ahou retailers i,t tl.e iwm.. .. n n.i,. "I am more tluiii KallKlled with tho roKuttaof my trip. I have thun far aueceelel In plwlnif our full ii.-ui.-ii, .it r.rr. point m. nave viHueo - rie ifmn on 10 uv. i i Mountain IIckIoii wrtteHfroin there nn followH 1 am more thun ftattKtle line In the hnmla of 'A No. 1 tiulendiil rexion for ua to m- retail aliout doulilo the irieea T V, f"T"'? " i. VKU """r a pair mr biiih-k wmcn are not worth ox much aa our JAH'.!i niKANM' H.t end M l HilIK. Our hIkm-m with ili..lr v,.rv1. r..t.n . ' . . "'( "o" " " irM.-e wmcn uave niiiierto rmeu in I lie relali ruarketa here. xpiendlil rexioii Tor u U B.-II nhoea In, l.M-uiiKe iiiimI of tho retailer aro churKliix their -untmera u whli-h t'.e nlioeH have cot at wholemile. The continence In ti.at the and when a retailer put a full line of goods In hla alock they ut ouce beln to go olf like hot i-jikea, ao great Now, kind reader, lust atop and conntder what the atmva aK'nlflnx a-ssures you that If you keep on Imyliin hIiocs lieurinic no nianufMi-t urcr-.' nniueor fixed remit . ice Mtru' il on the hoIch. you cunnot tell what you are KeltiiiK and your retailer la prohahly making you pay iloulil what your Mioes have wt him. Now, can you afford to do thin while we are protectlnK yon by atnuipluK our name and the fixed retail price upon the nolo of our shoes before they leave our factory o that you .... w. mwic v jur y.ur hii.om tiiun iucy are worm f Wliaes from our celebrated factory are sold by wlde-nwake retnllrra In nil pnrla of the couutry. We will place them eually wUhlu your reach lu any Statu or Territory If you will tuel oue cent in a poHtal card anil write to us. JAMES MEANS & CO., 41 Lincoln St., Huston, Mass. i- pea el :m: a iisr, -DKALKH IK- SI OVES, AND ALL FURNITURE. KINDS OF ecrs 113 well as consumers there would be perceptibly sweet taste equal to one part less necessity for ixxrhouses. Practical of cane suirar in 250 n.irtn r.f n-ntr nV..i education might, and undoubtedly would, la solutiou of one in 10,000 is intensely i)ivier to wear tli.lt made in tho country, it Lcinrs handsome as weJJ as more dura ! !,. 'i :ii i-i not sold in tho uteres but in (lie public market place, where it is putfr ritil l.y ervant3; for, 6trango as it may npiiear. the most KiFerty stricken have luaivls, who, besides receiving no wages, fiv jueiitly hel; to support their mi& irt-sse-4. generally they have been given to the family, when children, by their iKireuts-too Kxr to provide for them. l.ry work hard for little food and scanty clotldng, cr. very faithful, and will bear hardship and til treatment; rather than Jeave those to whom they hav become txtt ached. Jieiijg directed to a family of girls who ftnpiwrted themselves, we made our way along n broken narrow sidewalk to house ' No. 4 in a row of dwellings, each con sisting of three rooms, and an outlfOlM fliat servetl as kitchen. We rapped with uf knuckles, and a sweet voice bade us ''come in." J'u-sliin open tho door, we found ourselves Jn i; room containing a Email table and .liree low scats, occupied by young women, whose fippeataneo in dicated tliat they seldom enjoyed a LeaiT ineuj, A TALE OF WOE. Ve3, they rould make all the lace wc il.'sired. if wu (rould franco money to buy net an-1 thread; they had pone, even I buy medicine for their eick "mother. Wo i-;-cJ them to resumo the work tliat :ir arrival Ind iaterrupted. This they ii;J, embroJJi Thig tho net with a long j:ne needle an. I Ciiffvitl drawn fromwlute ihi 't clotli. The debioq, Jjieir own imi-t-iii ii f native llowtrs, aro iac?d on vli:e iui-'r Hut Li tacked to the iiet. 4 frame ii iL--d only fop very wide lace. After our order was ejveifa tale of y.--o won iti:red forth, wihanapjea) fojr i.icnt, i- advance. A few days later b ijt-dJL,-)r came from our lace makers .i:t r.u furnizt letition for another tii-Ji ia-talirnfeCf, ;iud so on. every few iayj. Hie fu.'J price U-inj' pal J long bc r.re the lace va3 made. 'Vo pniraged t.:ie tti:aa:i 1 j make eight yarJs o? lac,, i.;!st'.vii inches wide, And" having jaid ... I'-.i vlT"l I'l ndrnnpn ilftrnp .I .tnin.il . - ------ - . , . f , M V. jjir-1:1:1:1 lour yards. Thce people etm ! I :-o:j tvtnty to tlurty-fivo cents .a day. ' I . ia tixiti" oi their xrheerless Itomes, rao.-! r.;:t'.:riii Jiveu. and continued foil, f hcr,e ij :i vi:vouic relineiuent and amiability : boJt these muiilens that 6urjriscs and charms. They seldom indulge in gloon) ! forebodings, and whjn things are at J their wurst make light of them. Their i aJinner may JiaTe consisted of but one tortilla, they may not liave a cent in their possession, or a tallow dj'p to chase j the darkness from their .empty room, Lut they will throw open the street" dooi . letting in a Hood of sweet moonlight and ; Laluiy air. A neighbor ha9 an old guitar, and slender lingers fall iightjr : uix)n Hie otrings, while plaintive voie ' Lleod ia soma sweet melody attuned to the sentimental verses of a native poet. Jt may bo a love song, or perhaps a lessen the tendency to crime. An idle brain is the devil's workshop is a saj-ing as true as it is old. Ihomas Carlvle s ringing sentences may Le emoted here. Says the great philosopher: "Produce. jiroduce, produce. If it be but the most infinitesimal part of a product, in God's latae produce it, 'Work while it i3 yet uay, for tno right comet h wherein no man can work.' " It ij tho business of those who direct education to consider these facts deeply. Detroit Free Press. The Young Man from College. College bred young men aro without experience on tho practical side of life. The pushing, alert business man is not particularly impressed with the value of a college degree in forecasting the mar ket or determining tho value of "job lots," because he knows business is not a theory at all, but a liard fact. Then, too, collegians often give themselves su x?rior airs, which do not go down with their associates', iho majfcrjty pf whom have received honorable scars in their tight with circumstances, and have little tenderness for carpet knights. More over, the impressionable and formative period of life haying been spent in the school room, they have not acquired that alertness, that power to grasp a business situation or problem and instantly solve it. Nothing in their school books taught them tho shrewd, watchful readiness competition makes necessary. Tase the young fellow svhq left school as soon as he had mastered the rule of three, and entered upon tho struggle for existence. His mind was open to all impressions he learned business with out knowing he was learning, as a child learns to talkj lie lias formed business habits unconsciously, ' His " mind ' was molded to alertness, rapidity of thoucht. promptitude of action, the requirements of business character. Let us illustrate. Take a little fellow of 8 or 0 years, brought, up in a well regulated home, and place turn besjjo the street Arab, bootblack or newsboy. Ou ihe score of mental activity and practical knowledge and shrewdness, the latter will run him to cover n two mmutes. jjoes not some such difference exist bet ween the edu cated young man and the one' to whom business has been a matter of daily lif e since early youth, wluch makes employ ers prerer tno latter.' uaidwin a Textile uesignef. Botrayed. The mlruster s wife sat on the front porch mending the clothes of one of her numerous progeny. A neighbor passing stopped In for a social chat. A large work basket, half fid, pf buttons,' sat pn tho floor of the porch. After various re marks of a gossipy nature, the ' visitor taid: "You seem to lo well supplied with buttons, Mrs. Goodman.' "Yes; very well indeed. " "My gracious! If there ain't two of the same buttons my husband had on his last winter suit. I'd know 'tui any where." "Indeed!" said the minister's wife, calmlr , "I am surprised to hear it, as ail tnese burtons were round in the con- sweet. in appearance it is a wldro crystalline powder, soluble in 230 parts of water at 23 degs. centigrade, and is easily soluble in alcohol and ether. Its scientific name is benzoyl sulphonie amide. "Curiously enough, saccharin is hi no way related to the class of sugars (carh .lydrates), either chemically or physio logically. Iti3 not only unferuientable, :ut it possesses an anti-zymotio action; that is, it retards the ammoniacal fer nentations in certain secretions. It is Indigestible, inert and non-poisonous, when taken into the stomach, and passes out unchanged. These properties e-ive it au tujioiiaui, piaco m tuetetics, phar macy and therapeutics, when mixftl with tho food of diabetic cr obew ;jaiieiii it enaoies tnem 10 indulge i.a sweetened dishes which ordinarily must q denied them 011 account of the injuri ous effects of sugar under such condi tions. A HARMLESS SWEETEXIXG. "It is a harmless and effective sweeten ing agent for bitter medicines, and. phemi cal combinations of it with' several alka loids, such as quinine, strychnine and morphine, have been employed with marked success. It is also given with other remedial agents, or In pure solu tion as an anti-fermentative medicine in various gastric and intestinal dis orders. "Besides these medical uses, saccharin is largely employed in Prance as a sub stitute for sugar n confectionery and liquors. One part of it to 1,000 or 2,000 parts of glucose (grape 6ugar) makes an equivalent to cane sugar for confec tioners' use, and one part of saccharin to 8,000 parts of liquid is considered suffi cient for making pweet .iqueurs. Al together there is good "reason for the concern felt by sugar producers on ac count of a substance, a teaspoonful of which will convert a barrel of water into good syrup and which does not de cay, mold or ferment, and lias no injuri ous effect upon the human system. "The chief difficulty in the way of its use is the high post pf production; but improved processes will doubtless be de vised which will bring its market value to a much lower figure than it now com mands. Frank Leslie's, Inlnition box. bo l thought 1 might aa u.-ll niir. frtni tn ennm imp crk Tvr-lintf nrniml flittir with a rlinrtiR- ITnrnpr'n o n A . ,! . " j - f. must vou go: tteu. 00 sure 10 can azar. again. Wesl 1 It 1 est Point Alliance. Doable Hit. said one as she finally , Vo fl "Well, good-by, turned to go. "Well, if you must go, good-by re plied the other. "Shestnutsr called the Italian who keeps the stand on the corner. , - Loth women halted and looked back at him in surprise and indignation, and it hi not unlikely that he has been overhauled by one of their husbands era thi&-Dav trcii J: ree Free. A teacher writes: ?'Qne of my pupils who had Loen teaching during the sum mer came to mo fa despair over a sum, 1 saying, -'I can't understand sympathizing fractions, " When we went to school, ' years and years ago, "sympathizing trac tions' meant broken candy. We under stood, but the teacher didn't. Times change, and we change w ith themX Tattooing Convicts for Identification. "The latest fad in prison manage ment," said a prison official, "is tattoo ing. It is a ready means of identifica tion, and is bound o become popular in prison management. My idea 3 to tattoo a convict every time ha ia imnriomwl and then we'll have his record as plear as the moon at midnight. Let pach penal institution adopt a different niars or monogram and he prohlem. pf identify ing convicts will be solved. It is the simplest and best system yet proposed. To some persons it may seem as harsh as branding, but it isn't. Tattooing isn't painful, and the marks could bo put 011 the convict's back, arms or legs, and would not embarrass refarmpd ppnvicts. Tattooing is now' followed in 'several penal institutions abroad." Buffalo Ex press. ' ' ' ' T1 Divining Rod. Oh, yes; there axe lots of peoplo who believe in divining rods treasure finders they call them. I know of ono being made for a man not long ago. It was a wand three feet long, of whalebone, and in ono end was a hole plugged up with two ounces of absolutely pure gold and a little chemically pure mercury; in tne other end the mercury was, witq pure eilyer, The rod was evenly balanced and turned on a pivot. The foolish, man who owned it paid SCO to have it made. lie Is to search for treasure, for buried bul- Pic; june. I - I A Manicure's Queer. Experieu.ee. We liave some very queer experiences m our traue. Vv e could not help it. Dut the strangest ono came under mv notice quite recently. A tall, splendidly formed woman came in to haw her "hands fixed," and while awaitiivr her turn attracted great attention by her ex treme beauty, which was of the creamv. oriental style. D;izzlingly white teeth and great, slumberous eyes softened an otherwise too coarse cast of features. But her toilet! That was superb, in such quiet elegance and taste. As soon as pos sible I hastened to attend to her. but other customers having come in in the meantime, she expressed a decided disinclination to have her hands arranged until tho rooms were vacated. I told her that would, perhaps, bo not for hours, but if she preferred I would attend to the hand dressing in an alcove, which was curtained oil at the extreme end of t lie room. To this she- consented, and when my toilet articles were ready she drew off her gloves. Whut was my surprise to see a cord-black lir.nd, ebony ia fjesh. She briefly explained she was a negiv. or deep mulatto, from New Orleans, liy every art of the face decorator and washes she had become whitened :.s I caw her, but her hands were more difiicult to iaur. ac and the wore gloves at evcrv pouii.-le opportunity. JOhe desired me "to mani cure, her hands as deftly ns possible m:d sho would have her maid srrairre the blistering process at 1k?u. I did"i;o and sho left in a few momenta closely gloved and I saw her enter her carriage. i-.uy sequently I learned she possessed iai meniio wealth, inherited, too. A very good, but vain woman, owning very thing that she wished except wliat she most desired, white skin, and thij she got by artifice and wealth. Manicure in Giobe-Deniocrat. HOUSEHOLD GOODS. -LATEST STYLES ()!'- WINDOW CURTAIN 55 KEPT CONSTANTLY ON HAND. PICTURE S-iRX SIXTH STREET, LET. 3'AIN IS MAUE TO LEU ( 1 ri r, t 1 p. r litffe M , ' "fc f f I O -i LY S3. IO rOTt hi: vi-:ekly iumald Demorest's Monthly Idagazine. - A WOKDEKFLL I'L'iiLICATlON. Toeti-y in tlio Nwsiaiers. There aro comparatively few weekly papers in the country that iay for jioetry. Ono can almost count them on one';! lin gers. These papers, require that contri butions shall reach a certain standard of excellence, and even then the poems must bo "timely." It is singular that papers that pay nothing at all get very excellent work. I havo known poenis rejected by the "pay" journals to date an almost worldwide reputation from their publication in the gratuitous col umn. The leading magazines pay good priccb for poetry, hut much that they publish is far inferior, as poetry! to that which ap pears in the weekly press at scantier rate3. The most valued contributor sel dom get3 more than three poems a vear into the magazines; anc these, paid "for, say, a$ ihe rate pf each, which Lz a good price, do not prove a bonanza. Writers of newspaper poetry fall Lnto ruts, which, seemingly, unlit then for better work. One sees but seldom i;i the great magazines the names cf i-cctu who appear almost weekly elsewhere. The young writer, who has but a frail hold on the paying papers, linds that ho 6ends ill too much poet jy, and too often; and when he has overcrowded one pigeon hole cf the editorial desk, his occii'iation languishes. Editors, fls. a rule, will ac- fcfept jufct so much of one author's work, and writers leam, by experience, that they must not milk the cow too often. T. C. llarbaugh ia The Writer. Many "nppoce IIKMOIIHST'.S MONTIII.V to be a fafhion magazine. 'J'hii in a great nilptaki:. It undoubtedly contains Die linet-t Kaphion PARTmknt of any magazine pubiinhed, but tliin Is the case from tho fact that jrrent mterpriie and cx pcriiMico ure nhown, fo that each department ia equal to a magazine in itself. In Demoiie8t'b yon get a dozen maiTSZines in one, and pcrtire nnnirc merit and i nut ruction for the whole family. It con tains Stories, Poems, and other Literary attractions. Including Artistic, Scientific, and IIoiihi hold matters, and is illuetratcd with original fcteel KiiL-ravine, Photogravures, Water-Colors, and fine Woodcuts, making it thu Mouei. Magazine ok Ahkkica. fcacn copy contains a 1'attern ordeii etitulini; the holder to the Felectlon of ANT PATTERN fllnptrated in any number of the Magazine, and in an if OF THB sizes manufactured, each valued at from SO cents to 30 cents, or over $3.U0 worth of iultern per year, free. Yearly subscription, 2.00. A trial will convince yon that yon can get ten times tho vuluo of the money paid. Single copies (each containing Pattern Order), 20 cents. Published by W. JENNINGS DEMOREST, New York. The above combination is a splendid chance to get our paper and. Dzmohest1 Wontuxt at a reduced rate, bend your subscriptions to this office. ... . .. Jonathan IIatt. J. V. iAiniiis. JWIOlVMAST HAW & WHOLESALE P.E.TSL 'AT MARKET. PORK PACKERS akl. dealers in BUTTER AX1) KG BEEF, PORK, MUTTON AND YE Alt. CITY HE THE BEST THE MARKET AFFORDS ALWAYS ON II AM). Lard, in cans ai 1 I i,)k, M Sugar Cured Meats, Kams. Eaccn, of our own make. Tlie best lininds of OYSTERS. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Now Comes the Canine Cere. The ccecntricitiea cf tho medical rri-o- fession vill neyer bo exhausted. An American Burgeon in 1m trayelj through Europe noticed tliat the peasants when hurt; fcy tilintei-3, thpr3 or other daa rrorpua eiibstancco would get their wouud3 licked by their dogs, and that they were speedily healed. Ac-tin? on thij observation he carefully c;:aniined tho tonjjue of the aniuialii, and recog nized the presence of a healing power of high degree. So convinced v.-us he of tho truth hia theories th;;t he has oix?ned a canine hot piral near Zurich in Switzerland, ' where dogs of various breeds aro utilized in licking the wounds and nervous centers cf the patients under vigilant meial control. A 1 readv wpndeifuj cures have been reported, and if the" theories pro Vuecetiully realized tlio canine cure may become the fasliion uble craze of the thousands cf visitors to ho epas .of Etu-opc. San Franc-Leo Cliruniclc. A Frieoaiy 8nzffeatoo, "Do you read all your etories pver lq proof, Sexibular?" asked Candidus, 'Every one of them," "And get $10 a eoluxen for them? "Yes.- -Two for the writing and eight f o Tending Iho proof, I Buppcsd'" LLarpei V raz?r: 0)g (oh xfz-l. 'will n o 2 u s z-xi U O - & 5 C 0 "s.1" I 1 HEALTH IS WFJITM I Ir. K '. Wis'.'s TCrt and l:r;il:i Tr-attu i.t a Ka;ir:iiit'e spi-ciiii" for lljtni lizifn CoiivuNii'ii':. Kit. Ntvi-iis N''i!i Ml-ia, UtT.U -:'.-Iik. St-i vciuix l"i 1. si 1 inn :.i. ..! l y tlif nfc i-i n'colni! ;r t; luic.-io. W :sk-f iitni sw. i-nt :i' J 't-- iv-ioii, S ( r.ii.t' "f t Ii f hi hi 11 ii-Miit il'K ill In -s:initv an I h 1 1 i ir t misery, ili c- Ulid '!mlli, ie!i:;i';:re dfl Ac. ffi.ins. Lof i 1 r"ow er in either H-x. I n viliii.lary Icsfch jiiidr-jer- i:;i niin-.-i ci:,i-u nv v r-t-rileii ! llm br:iln. selt;.!itist or vi-r-liifHi!;ei ce I'.h-Ii Iix nt ftilK one inur i IT- M-n tir.ee t, Villi a lix c:rsi li"xe for ..rj ini, suit Ijj- mail I'M inid en receipt of tuloe WE GUAltATiTEE SIX BOXES To cure niiv c:if . Willi e:ich ni-'ir reirlrif liy ii.s for fix !'). i:i-eiiin;iii iii v.ilh ?.r.im. we will mi-iiiI ti e piirelijiser i ur vri:i u puar.-ui-lee to letnru t lie r'n-ey if tliO i aln:i-i;l tii r not effei-t a eure. liu.'tr.n tec. l-uii U i-nlv lv V iil .1. "Wurri.rk Hole a ut. rhiMMiir.iitli.'tVei, or. c. sooirs, BARBER AND HAIR DRESSER. All work first-class; west Fifth Street. YfM. I. HROWNE P rional attention to my cure. to all tu!ae' Entiusf- XOTAHy IX OKI'ICK. Tlt!en Kmmlne.J. A lisfarcf "Vmr lied. In surance Written. Ftal Kitaie Hold. Better Facilities for making Farm Loan than