Mexia Evening Ledger (Newspaper) - October 31, 1899, Mexia, Texas MEXIA EVENING LEDGE VOL NO. 176. OCTOBER N. ED. AND an HI Wind That Blows Nobody ache or pain or If the that directs your to necessity of purifying your Mood by taking Hoof Then your body receives for ihe purified Mood gots tingling lo every ft it ihe remedy for til ages and both FOB WOMEX AND HOME ITEMS OP INTEREST FOR MAIDS AND City I have fifteen Utre off this editor to be married City hurry And get the name of the bride and all that and It there's anything sensational enlarge upon it I shall ex- half a Get a hustle TUB QUIP CUBE THAT DOES Laxative Bromo Quintan Tablets removes the that produces E. W Grove signature is CD box 25c. Be n gentleman under any and all nip QUALITY AND FAME AND EXCELLENCE ARE FACTORS IN SUCCESSFUL Important Functions of f Tn presenting Interesting phases of scientific and economic newspapers give information of as great value in their advertising columns as in those de- voted to the publication of the cipal events of the and the fame of a product Is extended be- yond Its natural limits into foreign lands and a large demand created Great Britain and her col- and the principal seaports and cities of and It pleasant 10 note the tell of the points ex- on which BO great a success IB We refer to the now Id- laxative of product of the Fig The merits of tils excellent Orel made known to the world through the medical journals and newspapers of the United and lb one of the achievements of the press It IB now well that of Is an proved lo the most eminent it Is simple and effective pleas int to the taste and to the and not only prompt In its in m lal ts but liee fiom am It Is to as the of the be it 1s people who ami who well and feel well and nell on all sub- n fi lal n r to ret the genuine ies is by the Fig o Dr pait in life i done GENTLY ON THE LIVER AND BOWELS THE EFFECTUALLY Fall the Little Feather How It Be by an Our Cooking The Seven ACM of At lirM the Infants warm and well mouthed and In plight The giddy a waif and Any old thing that hinders not her The smart or According lo mood or whim of all the bridal wreath and veil Which marks life a great event and turns scale The by Worth Which pajs sighs and looks resigned The well-planned bonnet of the hides Times ravages from her alone Last scene of the ruche and wot Sans ribbons or R. Feather Feather curling is a business by It- and to excel in It requires long practice It saves time and patience to pay some one else to do but a few directions will be for you might find yourself so situated that you would be obliged to do it Take an old feather to practice ii toe of Harper's Buy a regular curling they are kept at most hardware The blade is a peculiar and and has a Have ready a tle of boiling and hold the head of the feather over the steam for a few moments Now take the feather In both spreading out the flues to their full pass back and through the steam but do not let it get too In the same manner wave It from side to not up and for a few to dty it When dry enough it Is ready for curling Begin at the stem on the right holding the feather with the fingers of the left hand un- and the thumb on The motion in curling is outward and taking a few flues at a time and the feather should be so curled that the en da are bidden or rolled As the broad part of the feather Is reached the knife must ex- tend farther not making as abrupt a curve When the head Is reached a short curve is all that Is and you begin to curl the opposite side you change the position of the left hand This time put the band over the feather instead of but the tion of curling is the After both sides are curled the stem at the head be and this la done by Holding the feather firmly with the thumb on take up a few pressing them ly against the thumb lay them over the Do the same en the op- and continue to do this four times By looking at a well-curled feather you will get a clearer Idea Of as It Is something that really re- quires to be To curve the place the blade of the knife underneath the stem and press the Beginning at the work up to the head until the desired curve Is common form of neglect is the shoulders which are allowed In hood to grow lopsided and take on an ungraceful stoop Often they are crowded ill-fitting corsets that they seriously the collar bone Instead of such thay should be level large Insensibly descending and well poised making the waist appear round and smalt Mas sage and oils will do much to tone up the neglected while the skin can be whitened and made beautifully Him by this which Is of Spanish origin Beat the whites of four eggs In lose water adding a few grains of beat until the pane is thick position on a layer of old linen and apply to the and shoulders at night French ladies are so expressive with their give them as their is a part of French con- An authority on this sub- ject says difficult habit to is that easy lazy manner of sagging when in addition to sleeping on high makes BO many round shoulders and sunken People should always watch themselves and when the discover the straighten b t it is so easy to settle down In this war after years of Indulgence In the habit many discouraged and prefer to grow me warn to be eternally In quiring a food sitting The Joints you were given you to bend and It 1s almost a crime to Mf at If m BO or FALL f Fall In two shades of dull Design in black velvet plied to by silk At the bottom of the skirt IB a circular attached In turn to ing a novel fullness are rated by lapped Yoke and sleeves are stitched with a shade of other vital organs Hold in the throw the chest bend from the hips and so contribute to the perfection of your your beauty and your Plain For tbe Mule Frock of light blue trimmed with bands of darker of white OUR COOKING One cnp of one of three of two one-half cup of two teaspoonfuls baking This should be spread over a On top of batter peeled and ed. In the hollows put a bit of butter and a drop of vanilla Bake and eat warm with Pickling Take whitest and closest crs in spread on earthen cover them with and let stand three days to draw out all the Then put in pour boiling salt and water over let stand over then drain with a hair sieve and put in glass up Jars with vinegar cover One cup of two cups of one cup of sweet five four cups of one teaspoonful of ing flavoring of any Take of Hie batter and one cup of chopped raisins and citron and a little Bake in Jelly the layer in the with Jelly Fried Select largest and finest oysters and wins them by upon laying another over Roll each in beaten then In cracker en mbs with Which has been mixed a little Fry In mixture ttt equal parts of lard and Line and elm a plate with Fill with one and one-half cups stewed and sifted one cup sugar with one salt spoon each of ginger and cinnamon and one-half one egg one cup boiling Bake one USES FOR JT MAY BE UTILIZED FOR OUS for Explosives SUCH Dynamite and til First Hade Into In S New uses have been found In many foi an Interesting count of which has been furnished to a firm in The writer flour Got made by sawdust to a powder and is used for two general the manufacture of especially dynamite and the manufacture of leum and or artificial There Is no manufacturer of in but from the sentative of a firm In Saxony It has been ascertained that wood flour lun been used In the manufacture of as a cheap substitute for ial Is the standard rial foi that The many supply of Infusorial earth from one source at between Hamburg and and Wheta that material became scarce and expensive because of Increased demand ments were made as a substitute From the best Information that can be obtained II is regarded inferior to Infusorial earth for making explosives and Is only used when extreme cheapness of product is or the Infusorial earth be obtained Wood flour has also been somewhat extensively used In the manufacture of a kind of floorcloth made by laying a coat of hardened linseed oil mixed with ground cork on a canvas net or but it v. as found to be inelastic and for that teason Inferior 4o cork BO that Its use hag been so far as can be ascertained abandoned by most German makers of linoleum If used at all for this it is done and would be regarded as an adulteration The third and by far the most important use of wood flour in is foi the ture of or a kind of artificial which is extensively produced by several large firms and in notably the woiks Paul in by Hermann Jaritz Co. of and by Paul at Silesia is used as mg for corridors and for public such as and restaurants It is a substance between and practically vious to and being a non- conductor of Is warm In winter It also used an flooring on German war because it has most of the advantages of wood and not splinter fiom shot nor take RAILS GROUND TO of the Wear and Tear on u As consumers of steel the in 11 roads 4n the vicinity of Pittsburg lead the world During the thiee months 170 miles of new steel averaging pounds to the yard have been put down or distributed within miles of the center of the bays the Pittsburg Dispatch There are yards in a which would mean for one line of rails in 170 01 or sav 53 pounds for both lines of or 269 283 tons of steel rails ed in one yeai for Pittsburg ninety per cent of which was for re- on old Hues There is what of a y regarding where I the steel worn out on a big road goes It is ground down almost to im- Far from It. does your teacher ever hife you read in She naa us rent U to j perceptible dust by the constant tion of the grinding wheels and this friction la per cent greater on curves than on straight stretches of track The wear Is also much er on ascending grades on a straight trark than on a descending grade On curves the wear is almost lateral or horizontal while on straight track it Is with a slight nation toward the inside of the rail next to the flanges of the wheels The millions of tons of steel ground down to dust by the wheels of trains In this country are lost It cannot be re- gained for scrap because it settles down Into the Is brushed away by the rush of air caused by the ly moving like the star dust which falls upon the Is lost forever In as civilization and the wheels of civilization move the railroads of tbe chief railways as well as part of the adjoining will become thoroughly Impregnated with steel and iron dust from the grinding up of rails and be- cause It must be remembered that the wheels grind the rails and grind the wheels shower of Iron and steel dust Is our railroads at a rapid and Life is more and more of a machine every rfay I I understand you ried your STANDPOINT OF TWO Vlie You to rnce In Hie yon ever asked tlM older member of the in- to the gas at the have jou not tbe edly different effect tbe mind exerted by the coming of the ber equinox and that of The arrival of the fall equinox to the whole human tribe that of the spring with Impatient I contend that these effects versal an I that their causes are liarly simple Of 1 am talking about latitudes approximating our In the decline of the as the sun Is rushing as the are growing gray and as tbe wane and the nights when no longer one can comfortably sit out of the the raw September days which are chilled and fills the sensitive soul with anticipatory heralds of tbe stiffening about to be laid on its b corpse In a give warning not only that the melancholy are but that the long northern desolate and will soon It is different in middle Then the patter of tbe ping rain holds out a song birds are seeking summer again The reviving trass and der mounds which burgeon the of ing trees speak the Incensed language of life and love Tbe restored brooks babble that they have thrown off their Dally the sun burns more ardently upon all tbe pulses tbe earth The air Is full of promise Man feels hope and born he knows not move the deeper fountains of his heart The talker paused and those who listened looked duly Impressed by the depth and port of bis sentiment That they did an of who to captain his eleven this thing of brawn and In a characteristically phrased said don't you know Winter's the of all the jear when a real man really has i eal skate ten miles on crinkly with Sand her behind tinkling to tbe fact of a fast and with one hand at What's the matter with Thanksgiving and the game on the gridiron It or with meriy or glad New at balli and the op- etas and the and the dear tle dances dead wrong these September heralds of melancholy talked about are heralds of fun Haw about The major looked long and longingly upon the voting man's glowing His voice shook a little as he put his hand upon Junior's der It's all in the point of my son he tald I was and now am I said the of uf More Mian 125.000000 grains nine have been consumed by American tbe past In some cases who were In the hospitals in Cuba and Porto Hico used much as oOO giains a and hardly have failed to ute the drug at of their It Is suited that the people the United States consume of the of the the drug being used in the of many patent bitters cold ns well as In pills and in and a able is consumed In the facture of hah The official ures in the bureau of show that there were last into the United 750 grams of and as there was no export of this means that the consumption quinine was about twenty each inhabitant As is well kn quinine Peruvian and bark are the products of tbe which is a native of westerns America more particularly of Teru and Ecuador tit a small part of the supply from that region At present of the quinine consumed In Java from cultivated vears the Dutch government to undertake tbe cultivation plant from Peru Finally this Wlis and a large of specimens of the different were obtainable by who took them to Java In 1832 The government aUo started plantations in India which now duce large quantities of A New York that a perfect foot Is ae long bone In forearm which front mist to tbe is tbe Arms are sometimes put of it is 'a disproportion Is usually lion of of In nudi It found generally that the U too short tor of the