V LADIES' DEPARTMENT. Woman as Worker. The notion that girls are too deli cate to be useful is limited to a com paratively small part of the globe. Throughout Asia, Africa and in large portions even of Europe and America there prevails an old belief that they are born to labor. In Turkestan and on the Tartar steppes the Kirghese aultanas and their daughters, and princesses in whose veins flows the blood of long line3 of kings, still milk the sheep, cows and goats and perform the menial offices of the household, as the Sanscrit maiden did 6,000 years ago in the same localities. They cook, take care of the younger children, make garments, cure the skins of the wild fowl, with the feathers on, for caps, spin cotton, weave cloth and tan leather by means of sour milk. Simi lar ideas prevail throughout India, China and among the native tribes of Siberia, who have been driven north ward by aggressive neighbors. The Tungusian girl gathers the snow, melts it, makes the tea and the fish Boup, sews and, being skilful in arch ery, helps to keep the larder, supplied with game. The Yakot and Saraovede maidens, and all who dwell along the Arctic Ocean, help in summer to lay up winter supplies, and in winter to perform all necessary domestic duties. The Abyssinian girl grinds corn in the simple mills in use in that country. The Kaffir- girl weaves baskets and draws water. The girls in the other part of the dark continent pulverize the grain, weave mats, make earthen vessels and are the hatters of their tribe. Life The Tenacity of ttomen. It appears from the gathered statis tics of the world that women have greater tenacity of life than men. Despite the intellectual and physical strength or the latter, the softer sex endures longest, and will bear pain to which a strong man succumbs. Zymo tic diseases are more fatal to males, and more male children die than female. Deverga asserts that the pro portion dying suddenly is about 100 women to 7S0 men; 1,030 men in the United States committed suicide to 2S5 women. Intemperance, apoplexy, gout, hydrocephalus, affections of. the heart or liver, scrofula, paralysis, are far more fatal to males than females Pulmonary consumption, on the other hand, is more deadly to the latter. Females in cities are more prone to consumption than in the country. All old countries, not disturbed by emigra tion, have a majority of females in the population. In royal families static ties show more daughters than sons. The Hebrew women are especially long-lived; the colored man exception -illy short-lived. The married state i3 favorable to prolongation of life among women. Dr. 'Hough remarks that there are from 2 to 6 per cent, more males born than females, yet there is more than 6 per cent, excess of females in the living population. From which statistics we conclude that all women who can possibly obtain one of these rapidly departing men ought to marry and that, as men are likely to become so very scarce, they cannot be suffici ently prized by the other sex. Modern Age. Healthy and Unhealthy Women. Dr. Hammond, of New York, in his much-talked-about novel, gives a capi tal idea of the healthy and unhealthy women of to-day. He pictures them at the morning meal. The first is Theodosia, of whom he says: "Perhaps there is no better test of a woman's health and beauty than her appearance when she presents her self at an early brekkfast. She is then more as nature made her than at any other period of the day, when art has been brought with a view of heighten ing her charms. If she has slept well, t argues to some extent a sound nerv ous system, and the effect Is seen in -he brightness of her eyes and the tone possessed by the muscles of the face and neck. Her intelligence is then at the maximum, and she feels the nental recklessness that is so generally he result of a sound, healthy sleep, and that is only a natural elation of the emotions, pleasant, doubtless, for her to exhibit, but far more pleasant io those to whom it is manifested." The unhealthy woman at breakfast Dr. Hammond dismisses, a3 follows: "Her expression is indicative of the discomfort she has undergone during the night, her movements are either painfully slow or aggravating brusque, her intellect shows stupidity, her emo tions are torpid, her perceptions dull. There is no better test of a woman's health than her ability to eat a hearty breakfast, and it might al most be said that her physical beauty is in direct proportion to the amount of beef-steak or mutton-chops she can put into herself at this meal. Certain, pretty women can always eat a hearty breakfast." Laced Herself to Death. A reporter of the Philadelphia Record has been interviewing the foreman of the corset department of a large fashionable store in that city. She told him the following story: " You would not have shoe leather discarded because numbers of foolish persons lame and deform their feet through excessively tight shoes, I sup pose? Well, no more should corsets be wholly interdicted simply because many women lace themselves to death." " Have you ever known of such a case?" "Yes. A handsome young woman used to buy eighteen inch corsets of us a few years ago. She was lady's maid to one of our wealthiest families, and was given to tight lacing, though no one would have suspected it save from a slight discol oration of her nose. But all the saleswomen thought that eighteen was her natural waist measure, and we used to rank her the most stylish figure that came into the store. One morning she was found dead in bed with her corsets on, laced to the very last notch, a victim of tight lacing, if there ever was one. The details were afterwards given to our employer by ths girl:s mistress. The girl had long been in the habit of keeping herself laced so tightly as scarcely to be able to breathe. Her fellow-S3rvants declared she would often tie one end of the laces to a staple in her bed-room wall, while seizing the other end with both hands, and then with this tremendous pur chase, struggle and tug until the stays were drawn up to the very last ex tremity. But this wasn't the worst of it, for she' had actually been in the habit of sleeping with them on in this condition. The 2os mortem showed that the ribs were drawn so closely to gether as to interlace, there being to ward the last such insufficient space for the action of the heart and lungs as to have caused her untold agonies, which were, however, uncomplainingly borne until death had put an end to them." '?That is a horrible story." "It is nevertheless true." Fashion iVotes. Bound and pointed waists are equally ! fashionable. j The Louis XV. casaquin is one of the dressy fall wraps. 1 Waistcoats of undressed kid are ' worn on the other side. , Tho pretty Moliero waistcoat is j moribund, but it dies hard. Opaline shot silks are favorites for ; dressy fall wear in New York. j Tho trimmed jersey is a popular in j Paris and London as it is in New j York. j Children'3 garments for fall wear are composed largely of plaids. . f Some of the new cheviots woven in ! bird's-eye effect are called Florentines. ! Iron rust red velvet is combined ef fectively with olive-colorod wool in : fall suits. j Gordon blue and Little Duke green j come among a host of new colors for fall wear. Military jackets and half military styles are effected by certain leaders of European fashions. For children's dresses, Madeira em broidery and guipure, both white and ecru, are much more fashionable than fine, flimsy laces. Travelling wraps, rain and dust cloaks, are made of checked and plaided tweed, or of brown pongee with vel vet ribbon trimming. Pink flowers on dark red or brown bonnets, white on black or green, ai poppy red on the light neutral tinU, is the rule for millinery. Hats in Paris are very high, and are trimmed with tufts of flowers, large ribbon bows, green grasses, green bearded wTheat, gold lace and red pop pies. , ' For evening wear the dotted net called point d'esprit is made up in puffs over a silk skirt, the full waist of the same lace, and a velvet corslet and sash. Changeable silk in black and gold is the newest foundation for black lace costumes. It i3 brocaded with seven pointed stars and is a revival of an old patera. Full tucked skirts, with low-rucked waists open in front, are shown for little children's dresses. These frocks are strapped across the front or laced, according to taste, and look very pretty. A long redingote for a girl of four teen is made of dark brown cloth in plain princesse shape with a pointed hood that ha3 a gay silk lining. The Arctic Summer. As the season advances, every cliff gets noisy with birds solemn rotjes, lively dovekies,. and tho garrulous myriads of mollemoke gulls, which swarm in the sea. The air is alive with the flights of eider and spectacled ducks, and on the rocky islets their nests swarm to such an extent as to allow scarcely foot-room for the travel er who may chance to land on these unfrequented spots. Seals are arriving on the coast in great abundance. Whales are "spouting" far out, or leisurely slumbering on the surface of the quiet bays. White whales and narwhals are making the sea merry with their gambols, and the Esquimau happy at the thought of endless blub ber and a sufficiency of food for the present considers that the future may look to itself. Even the hungry dogs participate in the abundant feast; though, for the most part, being useless during the period when the ice i3 off the sea and the snow off the ground these ravenous beasts of burden are confined on solitary islets to look out for themselves as best they may. On land, the ravens and hawks, which, with the ptarmigan, form the chief feathered winter residents, are joined by numbers of travelers from more southern lands birds of passage, which come here to rear their callow young, and disappear again at the ap proach of winter. During May and June they may be seen flying across the Atlantic, and any ship making for Spitzbergen or Davis Strait at that sea son of the year will be sure to be favor ed with . the visits of snow-buntings and other birds, which alight on the rigging to rest themselves during their long flight. Butterflies and other insects flit about in considerable abun dance; and almost every pool is full of specimens- of the little dytiscus, or water-beetle, which dart about from side to side among the water-weed stems. The white fox, now in it brown summer coat, i3 barking its "Aka-ha-ha" from the rock; the quiet glens are full of herds of reindeer; while the polar bear, lord of all the land, has come out of his winter hiber nation, and is ranging sea ami land ; alike in search of his prey. I j The Ancient Cities of Amarica. Tucson, A. T., is an an ient city. j Antedating Jamestown and Plymouth, j and visited first in 1540 by Coronado, it saw its first European settlers in ; 1560, and, its first missionaries in 1581. . i But long before the year 1840 there j was an Indian village, established on j i the site of the present city, so tha j j Tucsonians can, if they please, claim j an age for their town as great as the j : Santa Feans claim for theirs. For al ' practical purpose, however, 1540 is a i : date sufficiently far away, and if j j Tucson only continues to improve with ; age, or becomes as good as she is old, much may be expected of the place j Built by the Spaniards, who brought j so much religion to the people whom ; they conquered, San Xavier (San , Havier) is to-day one of the largest,, as i j it is one of the best preserved, of all j I the churcbes built during the years of j the Spanish occupancy of the south- j j west. Biding from Tucson for nine j j. miles up the valley of the Santa Cruz river, one has glimpses from time to j ; time through the grove3 of live oak . and muskete trees of the white wall3 ! and graceful towers of the church as j they stand clearly outlined against the sky beyond. It was down this valley ! of the Santa Cruz which is to-day at- tracting so much attention as an agri- cultural section that Coronado marched i on his way from Old Mexico in 1540; j and before the advent of thi3 intrepid j explorer and ever since the valley has. j ben inhabited by the Papago Indians, ! whose adobe houses with thatched j roofs are scattered along the road, lead ing to the mission. The Printer and the Press. Here's to the honest typo. Whose busy brain and hand Presents in most attractive forii The news of every land; The treasures of intelligence Are all at his command. Here's all success onto the press, Commissioned to proclaim The triumphs of inventive art, The meed of well-earned fame ; Unmask the face of knavery, And brighten honor's name. To write, to speak, without reserve, Let all the right possess ; Confusion to the tyrant clown Who would that right suppress, And everlasting honor to The Printer and the Press. C. F. Green. HUMOROUS. Members of a boating club should always be true to its scullers. The man who remains out till twenty four o'clock can be said to be having a high old time. Ic is no use telling the individual with a harsh voice that soaking it in oil might make it easier. "La! me!" said the old lady, '.'times do change. They now wear kids on their hands When I was a child they wore out their hands on the kids." "So you called that well water?" re marked the stranger, spurting the of fending liquid from his mouth. "Great Scot! how must it have tasted when it was ill?" "I think I will go to Ohio to live," said a maiden of uncertain age. "What for ?" "Because there is one factory there that makes 50,000 matches every day," she replied, with a sigh. One young man said to another: "It is a long way from this world to the next." "Oh never mind, my dear fellow," said the other; "you'll have it all down hill." Departing, I had clipped a curl That o'er her brow did hanjj ; She, smiling, said: "You're like a gun, You go off with a 'bang.' At which I pressed her lips, and cried; "For punning you've a knaok ; But now I'm like a fisherman, I go off with a 'smack.' " A new device for wedding break fasts is a pyramid of transparent ice having in the centre a photogroph of the bride and bridegroom. This is suggestive of coolness as well as ex clusiveness, A single shoe manufactory in Mas sachusetts turns out bv patent machin ery in twelve months as many pairs of boots and shoes as 30,000 shoemakers in Paris make by hand in the same period of time To. the city of Paris have been pre sented by the shah of Persia two diminutive camels ' no larger than ponies, which belong to an excee iing ly rare species of which the shah has four specimens in his private stables. "Why am I like a Wall-street finan cier ?" asked a young farmer as he re turned from the barn. "I give it up," replied his father. "Because I have been watering the" stock." Brooklyn Times. "Halloo!" stouled one boy to an other, whom he saw running wild y down the street. "Holloo! Are you training for a race?" "No," called back the flying boy, Tm racing for a train." "Going out with your bride to select your tableware, are you? Well, young man, let me give you a hint. Buy light cups and small plate-. Many a man and wife have been seriously injured in a dispute "by big plates." And old Mr. Budger chuckled and rub bed his head as th& happy couple passed on. Coral Fishing. Coral fishing is largely followed in Algeria, 40,000 to 45,000 pounds of coral, valued at about 38,000, being the yearly production; La Calle is the center of this industry, and there are employed annually 160 boats and 1,300 men. The coral i3 obtained by means of a wooden apparatus in the shape of a cross, having in its center a leaden slug or stone for ballast. Nets, the meshes of which are loose, are hung on the bars of the- bottom of the sea, and among the noks and crevices of the rocks. Thes nets, winding about the coraline plant, break up or tear off its branches, which adhere to the meshes. The apparatus is drawn up by the fish erman whenever he thinks it sufficient ly laden. There is also a net which is provided with large iron nails, having thus great force to break the coral, but this ar gjaxatus ia forbidden to be used. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. jfft who lives for himself, lives but for a litvTe thin- Silence la tne wit of ools an one the virtues of vhe wi3e- - " Every man's abiy ma-v strength eneJ or increased by tulture-' A man need only to coi rect himself with the same rigor he r.;i)rehendjrN others, and excuse others wlw1 tn' same indulgence that ie show himself. One of the greatest duties of parents is to help their children mark out an v aim in life. The mistake many fa thers and mothers make Is in being too arbitrary in this matter. Life is made up, not of great sacri fices or duties, but of little things. In which smiles and kindnesses and small obligations, given habitually, are what win and preserve thelieart and secure comfort. To grow old is quite natural; being natural it is beautiful; and if we grumble at it, we miss the lesson and lose all the beauty. To succeed one must sometimes be very bold and sometimes very prudent. Cayenne Pepper. Cayenne pepper Is said to be a native of South Ameri ca; it is extensively cultivated in Jamaica, and is often to be met with growing in the gardens in this coun try. It grows usually about eighteen inches high, and the pods or pepper are small and slender, about an inch in length. Cayenne is one of th strongest, purest, and be.it Btimulants known; it is also tonic It is very important to get the pure article without adulteration. In sudden colds, a tea of this pepper is good, also in debility of the stomach, colic, quinsy, disease of the throat, and dropsical affections. Combined with honey it may be made into a plaster, for rheu matism, gout, etc. Health and Botne When the Mason & Hamlin Company an nounced the accomplishment of a great im provement in Upright Pianos, which they would soon give to the public, much was ex- . pected, because of the vast improvements which had been effected by them in reed in struments, and the acknowledged superexcel lence of their organs. These expectations are fully justified by the pianos which tfiey are producing, which have extraordinary purity and refinement of tone. Every me chanic will see that the peculiarities of their construction must add greatly to their dura bility and especially their capacity to keep in good tune. This company have as great a future their pianos as they are already realizing D their orjrans, which are confessedly ui equaled among such instruments. Boston, Traveller. A good medical authority says beer is con- ducive to heart disease. ' No Phytic, Sir, In Mine!" A good story comes from a boys' boarding school in "Jersey." The diet was monotonous and constipating, and tho learned Principal decided to introduce some old-style physic in the apple-i auce, and await tho happy results. Orve bright lad, the smartest in school discov ered the secret mine in his sauco, and pushing back his plate, shouted to the jKHhigogue: "Mo physic, sir, i:i mine. My dad told me to use nut-bin' but Dr. Tierce's 'Pleasant Purgative Pellets,' and they are doin; their duty like a charm !" . They are anti-bilious, and purely vegetable. - Virginia's crop of peanuts is estimated at 11,010 1.0J bu hels this year. Any lady who desires further information than can be given in the limited public space of newspaper columns can obtain Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham'8 pamphlet "Guide to Health" by sending a stamp to Lynn, Mass. Of the tO.OdO Jews in New York city not one Li a baiteuder. "Hello."' we heard one man say to another, the other day. "I didn't know you at first, why, you look ten years younger than you did when I saw you last." I feel ten years younger," was the reply. "You know I used to be under the weather all the time and gave up expecting to be any better. The doctor said I had consumption. I was terribly weak, had night-swer.ts, cough, no appetite, and lost flesh. 1 saw Dr. lierce's 4Goh;en Medical Dis covery' advertised, and though it would do no harm if it did no good. It has cured me. I am a new man because I am a well one." Church bells are going out of use in every considerable American city. It's no secret nostrum. We speak of Dr. Pierce's Extract of SniarS-Weed, composed of best French Brandy, Smart-Weed, Jamaica Ginger and Camphor Water. It cures chol era morbus, colic or cramps in stomach, diar rhoea, dysentery or bloody -flux, and breaks up colds, fevers and inflammatory attacks. Since 1882 France has bad five epidemics of cholera. Hay-Fever. I have been a great sufferer from Hay-Fever for fifteen, years and have tried various things without doing any good. I read of the many wondrous cures of Ely's Cream Balm and thought I would try once mom In fifteen minutes after one applica tion I was wonderfully helped. Two weeks ago I commenced using it and now I feel en tirely cured. It is the greatest discovery ever known or heard of. Duhamel Clark,. Farmer, Lee, Mass. Price 50 cents. 25 Cent W ill buy a Treatise on the Horsb and Hta Diseases Book of 100 pages, valuable to every owner of horses. Postage stamps taken. Sent postpaid. New York Horss Book Co. 134 Leonard Street. New York city. "Koni;!ion Kits. Clears out rats, mice, roaches, flies, an ts,bed bugs, skunks, chipmunks, gophers. 15c. Drgts. To Match that Bonnet ? Feathers, ribbons, velvet can all be colored to match that nfUSi hut by using the Diamond Dyes. luo. for( color at the druggists. "Wells, RichardsoV, Co., Burlington, Vt , NTS TJ-39