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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1901-9-19, Page 3,t .t .a t+t+++4 r+•: ++t+4+++++++.1•++++•}++++++4444+444+444i+++i+ BEAUTY TALKS FOR WOMEN: 1414' A Professlentil (lives a rew hints on + PegNrring Your Appearance. iii+++++ KN el'1'I':ItiOit. pIan• tett 1)erasuda sequel Isny fur &quail Nosh. There is no reas„u in the world w'hteh can smiths the test of why uexaUn- 1 and en liould ao ttlreceive equal wagerwf, r tlequal work. The quality of the work cud sot the, u be hierluaturlgovierothe s space pail fur Tabor. If the W0iDarl performs her service In the ellghtert degree less well than the crew who tai ler eu- worker rite should be paid leer : but on the (ahou hand, U the man U the Inferior worker he should be paid leer Out tow wowed*. The old argument that a man taker up a laarhueid for life and a wuuIan for only a brief period pre - lees to marriage does out apply to Oe. profession of teaching. Men (dept teaching for a tusineme ee rn very largely w a ateppLIg stone to a permanent choice fur life. • of the tone of thousands of wen w1 outer the protestation only hun- dn•de rein/till lu It for n 111c work. Oil the other hand, eery welly wts turn wake It the only business of a life, It Ir not uuusual to find wo- ws* who have taught to the public s.lIuofe sur twenty -flee year* and 1 Nur deer the argument, once (high- I1lf(( that the board of Trade should quiver with puriteulr or that the Block Exchange should rustle with the (Ilan:i), skirts id hurrying brok- ers. but why should not light flau- nts, and broad, Tight etriaw hates be universally adopted In slut wea- ther? Men Aduld be better able to attend to their affairs and. by no meals an unimportant point. would need far leer to drink, for they would perspire Irrr, KM( shirts and stiff collar* rhouhl be put uway In hot weather. When they ubserb perspirutlou they become rlilculesau and w11e11 they preserve their rig- idity they are unhygienic. LINIIKKIE. Silk Petticoats -'rhe Ntralgl.t-Froel ]Model. In cheering a silk uudorekirt re• member to beware of curdy. The balk rubbing agalost the curd al• wuye wears out long b •fore the rest of the Nklrt. Silk p ttleoatu fit bet- ter wheal made in circular shutes and (uati•u''I at the ride. An attached ikons is almost universally seen on the emit -text uses trimmed with ruf- fles of point d'esprlt and narrow Meek velvet ribbon. Iy rPsln•cted, that the Malt mar - rice and must meerequently ribetys Nese wages tear chess scrutiny. Quality of Work the lest. It 4'N wire to apply to public st- eers the same Outna1021 souse and ,Y•eiwuty which u luund useful In priest. life. An employer eugaging to man bty,kkesemr, typewriter ur secretary ascertain' the quality of work the enudioitte eau perform and oll,re a Lwmlemut ttuOat IOU 11p- pn,Prtate. Tho utarrled .,r unmarried state orf the man doles nut enter lulu conselerateu. The quality of work of Oto toucher should, lu the amine uwuuter, set the ratio of wager. if The merrier and thuds "dimwit Iucum- la?ed with ILiiAnlal rerponriblll- tnen beyond hie buxom) It le the own aifeir and taxpayers should feel lei e ,Illjal4)n 10 ben on that account. Common gesso should dictate that if a fair return Is to gni given for work, plus aft amount sufficient to ...spinet a fondly, in order to eu- courage correct faunally ,life Judice sineild add the same amouul to the stihariem of women who are burden - ..1 with the r irport of famlller. Wooers' 'rewriters superior. \ Women llt utve demoatrated Must In the psotexeion of teaching they eau out duly perform their work equal , meth but popular se•Int;meul agree,' I it the ail r..ge wesame teacher les 'ill •rlor to the aserng.• mule teuh.,r. 't'o shit upon posing men teuelaere IMN)re thnn women teachers fur the ',one ark W a remnant of tradition elle!" o ewes uuudemnati.0 at the (:101s of every progressive citizen. t cared aualyrls of lie, ch..nw.rl osmernie editions of woolen will '.•teal the t t that the secret reta- ,uu for paying women lees than wee Ileo la the (net wen nre voting .1.izrus and ecu en are not. When thts thou Dment stamps its approval upon the Shan and leve: lour opinion elutil' be put into the leftist hot where it III b•• counted. of you have grIcealieer 'ou may right Ileal there,- It nada a dignity and importance to that rutin be dei not porileale before. He nifty inax and ga,urant, but "he's. a ma • for a' that." Then the Mime (I0'eram . • stye •o the wrhtonn : " Ivens agdnhiW ',haul t he reentry' at the 'allot ler if .on have grievance's other's m at right them," It c•lIenps•ne her as milt of society. She may be Wel edlMntel and Intelligent, but "rite's n veomno for a' that.' It ch''nprne her iuttillgence and courequeutly her 1:.id?. In Wyoming. where women have had equal suffrage with men for 14.4rty years, there la -a law . which ,.,mpwele employers to pay men and ((omen rep rally for equal work. \either the opinion* nor the writes+ of women are held to be chomp there. The wages of teachers should be g,•nemna. They hold the moot re- slunslMl' poadtlonv.In the community. In their hands Ile the future destlny of our land. The lenges of men timelier. 'should ant (-erne down to the level of the unmet'. P r en's son : , ohrmld n n hut the win R m fn• up oto the level of men N wnges. If thin In Im1'naelble they ahosld be ognaltze.l by raiding the wages of wr•men and Inwering the Wagen of min. Thin la the dlrtum of no theory of philanthropy, but the demand of Jostles, and fair piny. Carrie Chapman Catt,-- Preeldent Womnn'e Nntienral Suffrage A.lociatlon. HAVE )IURI SENSE TIIAN MEN. Women's Dress is (letter Adapted to Mummer edhe tV r Than Men's. Ti.' *40[1011 one meets in the city of the sweltering days of summer 0lnp01 I, arlably look land nal ail rule they do not suffer from the hent elm men do. in countries; where {treat heat Is regularly expected at e,•rt:tln arawrns. life IN adjnrtel td meet the rondltione. Mosinee.' is eleaodonet In the hot hours; leisure, few clothes', sleep and appropriate drinks reign In the place of affairs, whleh nre relegated entirely to the cooter portions of the day. in }:ng - hind, where great heat tin aro occa- sional and the people are plow to change their customs, the Incofl- of a . high temperature nn attenrpt of alleviation. \air\elmng,s nre made In the hours (f Mutineer,, and hominess .nen prt•- f•r to perspire ani to fret beneath silk "topper" ant a frock coat, th.ulgh they would ps.rsplre ieas find he far more comfortable in flan- n.•I4 and a "straw." Tile learned profeselon show n wider l'enYC of what le due to elimatle changes. t I!Cyen, masers and physiclnn" alikempreoerve the prnprietlee and in IInck (rete ?tweet to rhetr Swlirfartlon. COAT VIM NKXr W.NTICK With dare, at the bottom: stitched; velvet _ . ea new - VAIK AT VOK'!'Y. A Viet That May Account fur late Merriest'. IL was Balsas who dlwuvered that the woman of 80 Ir more farclu►tIug Huta the girl of "U. Now the Lady's' Ptetcrial puts the suulth of (emu- late churls u det+ade later, declar- ing tlutt the apple of discord Is due to the woman of 40. It Ir all inter- esting proferrurt of faith. and elle wonder. whether the general ee- uWe{htunee of It by tuauktud las any- (laing to du with that increasing tee - deny to deter luarrlage till late la life aitch ruuderu philosophers have often tottcetl and sometimes de- plored. 11 the w0wall of 40 le really the must charming woman It 'gouty sutural that bachelors rlwutd wish to remain bachelors until they are fit helpmates for her. There he how- ever. one rsflectluu that should give thew pause. However much more charming than the girl of ..0 the wo- loan of 40 may be, there rein/dam a tames probability that rhe may not keeps her charms esu long. That fact, ul.). should certainly Iso burue lu inial by ('oelulu in search of a wife. -Landon Dally Graphic. eceseltatel by our sheath skirt and el to the °limpet f combination ty. The fitted th bottom by it when t lite snugly made nee are tau 0o large 'cruse the /• with ails and The perfect fit ' prevailing mode o princess' gown liar unlver's:it adoption ulderwenr by feudal cherubs,.clis,• fh,lsbod at ruffle is very good cfe,ugh, but r(ruly. ant t.ob.much t waist. Those mao buttoNud down the trent arm beet. ,l combination corset walat a psttheral 1s anotbr_r good Idea aro brtll fitted to 'the fign ho waist lino by a ?,taut at beading. The R tains first pi ra t-Th-elclT P In cure de, and man new anal improved shaper are. ready for the coning autumn. A,variety of orm has been proton from past ex• •s'1 -lace to be needed by various fig. Tlr• n• west are not extrenle- bust� and hnav,' a very nice over the hip swell. A binding n finishing in 'bows dnintily antrums he top of moors. •A rewind task 0n' the f Int, 041 to which le fastened the hose upperters, luta become al- it. !:old and olives. clasps Inetaneve jewel Adorn tili A few pairs exhibit( seg, bat are rather 1p please moat. _Wo- \' ' 1', ' -1.. ere are far n lovable for lin- ,ft, fluffy ef- frame ilanr to nude 'atr ea t now are r.leg:uteri to •mesad\ place, and 11 at me e'11 ,nm of Ince, clnbrohlered Iles► or intim pnr- der- A haired of the Traillug Skirt. A curious legend of the " trailing skirt" is recalled by n ecrrerp ondeut (1 the leneloo Times : When the (trait great glary -house war built in Hyde Park Sir Joseph Paxton was asked hoW he Inten•lel to have the flouring swept um] cleaned. Ile replies that Iso arrangements for Slit. purpose were needed, um the ladle).' sktrts would 41. 401 this, space( being left between the planks ex- pr.wrly for this purpose% and the re- sult pcovwl the truth of his antici- pations, little foreseen by the waeirerr. 1 --- Some 1'uuderlugs. It be only the wotttn who has been marries nt least five years who le ,vmle•tent , to talk abut the Ideal Man. A mail describes. a woman by her face. u'woluan by leer elothea The thorn's remain lung after the 1000 luta withered!. In u contort for happiness it would paulnbly b • is tie between the young another with her first baby and the girl who her just got her fleet Beau. T0U can tell a great deal more aimed the quality of the housekeep- ing from the el*5hen than from the Wray the parlor looks. d short These and oa ow n0 ly w cure of rl IM/14t untie furl In a fe ed, are found las the Miaow Ci ta1(1 theatrical. men }'bat trimming e *away the asset fax Berle. The ,rat while roses, bow keels, buttri'j myria,M of floe lecke hnv their ponce. Rene *stitching les Ocularly favored on the new wear, noel elme of the designs In be-ti•ry nre truly beautiful. trend of the welrellm of refins5d women Ie to quiet effects i large. Showy p.ntterna of Ince or embroidery nre etehlom their chulee. Lure and embroidery combined on one Rnrment lar quite the mode. Pink. blue anal white riblem nM Ih'• air r r. n n I . adorning n l R I only shades ailed for g Yokes, holer..s ata I rni or collars are .till n11 seen nixie nightgowns, but the bolero le the newest. Notwlthetandteg the sheers white waist is n rummer garment the dated ihowI:igs of autumn crrsnt rovers are they s though h gaits no r Inlrnnte n Rb were to hp worn all winter. Fnncy nil.,ver tucks yamimer. some ; others Ianve yok'w, while alternate stripe of Lace inserting and tucks are seen Id nnnther motel. in ehnpe they con- form to the demnnain of the new .tyle figure, nnl will given perfect fitting effect io the out elite onbat. Flannelette night robe* for very se- vere weather .nre nppreclated by "frozen turnlpa," bat are not dainty •tough for picot women. m - P A Jap Wedalui*. The Jnzeutere bride, dressed in n twig while silk kimono and white veil, site upon the rigor facing her future hurhnnd. Two tablas eland near. Upon one nre two cups, a bottle of malt, and a kettle with two spouts. Upson the other are a miniature plum tin, typifying the beauty of the bride: a tnullature fir tree, which slgeiVlew the strength Ot the bride- gtot.m, and a *stork standing mem n tortolse. representing bong life and ih:appine+s. The two-apsute.l kettle Is pat to the mucks of the bride and hrtlegfo,sn alternately, shgnef}1Mg Oust they are to share each others ;op; awl sorrows. The bride keep* her tell, and It ,Ia used as' her Nhrund when she dies. - When They Smite. "1 don't understand. stew:ard, why - you and the ttewardeme Is,th want the name day netsurf.. I can't spare you both at once. You can hate tuanorr,w and the stewaraleem 11e' next day." 'Please, sir, we're goon' to get merited, an' I'm afraid It can't he done 'that way " 41aa14�wat, Deadly Feuds in Old Kentucky A Patch on a Pair of Trouselfs Led to a Thirty Years' War.... 7r�7P 7r'?!'� fe le Elrowhere the Southern ern mountain- Women are Sete from Mersa D er beside human life. us elwap; etre- and 1 have never beard of one who where lie le ready to let death set war subject to (moult. Attend to your Ile a ptrw.nal dispute; elrewlierx he uwn b*rluerr, ride with neither foc- le more Ignorant and lane he little (bas in net us' word, and y1u are 11141(1 regard for law ; elrswhere he waft copes miming the Kentucky muuu- dlr1.le1! agalurt himself by the war wafer when n fund lu going on and was tett tin tl11bl,'tYplleflt e Iltlunr than you aro crumring Broadway at oat as lawless ; elsewhere lie hail J Twenty-third rarest. AN you ride similar tIa11nIr11nlwr o1 feeling: and lilting, a bullet may plough through e 1:0110re an occasional feud, which the rued ten yards' ilk front of you. Ir 1:01100 ell to here 1 and (lure kb- That menus for you to halt. A m:ru1- dre11. But nowhere Ir the feud no 111111eer 0.114 twine cul of the beetle,' • .n l•1on. so old. sol perataterit, ms deadly, as In the K entiu'ky mauntatnr. Nowhere slue Ir their smell organiza- tion, such division of enmity to the limit of kinship. About 8S years ago two boys were playing marbles 1p the road along the Cumberland River -down In the Kentucky MouQtaJns. one had a Watch on Mei sent of his trowierr. Tho other buy made fun of It, and the, boy with the 'intuit went bums (lel 1041 hie father. Thirty years of local war was the result. The fee. theirfought on after they had for- gotten why they land fought at all. While or nnlz:Yt warfare Ir now over an occas nal fight yet comes over the Patch on Those Trousers anal o man or two killed. A country an big ne Rhode Island le still bitterly divided on the ru4J'ct. BI a race for this Legislature nut lung ago the feud war the mole issue, and, without knowing It, perhaps, a mountaineer carried that patch Ilk, n flag to victory and sat under It at the capl- tal-making laws for the rest of the edits. That 1■ the feud that has stained tate highland border of the State with Wood, an:1 abroad has engulfed the reputation of the lowland blue- grass, where there are, of course, no feud., a fart ttutt sometimes seems to require emphasis, I am sorry to say. Almost _every mountain county has, or has had. Its feud. 1t 1e the fend that nowt sharply differentiates the Kentucky moun- taineer from his follows, and It is extreme INolation that mates pos- ✓ ible bit. this age stadia a relics of me- diaeval barbarism. For the feud nasnne, o f course, Igmrauee. shift- lesenees, Incredible laivles+nese, n frightful estimate of the value of hu- man life; the horrible custom of am- and ask you who you are Itnd where Yon are going, and what your liei- nesm les. if your aanrwers are watir- fa ctory you go on unarllertnl. A,'k- Ing for 1' place to stay all night, you will be told, "Go to 8a and Stir house; he'll protect ye"; ate! Ile will, too, at the IIrk of his own life. when you are pearl the line of rurplcion and under lair roof. I There ore other facto that soften A tow tuareh Judguatttt of the uwu11- tulnoer (lel lila fend -harsh as their Judgment *bouts! be, Perrone' fealty , le the corm r -.lone of the feud. The mountaineer admits no higher law ; he ulderetotsds no conscience that win violate that tie. You aro my friend or my kinsman ; your quarrel le my spore whoever striker you *tritest me. If �yuu aro 10 trouble, 1 must not testi ngntnst you. If you are un officer, yon must not arrest are, you must send me word to come Into court. If l'ni innocent, why, may -b 1 I'll come. Moreover the worst have the dirt of rude virtue* already ineutIoned; turf, b. kler, the mountaineer it never a thief nor a rubber, and he 0111 lie about rate thing and 4.110 thing only, area that le laud. He has clears d it, blit hie cabin from the trees, lived on it, and he feral that any meanie nocereary too ho41 it are Jui,tffi- aMe. Lastly. rellal.nl le as honestly need to oloah deviltry as It ever was In the m4!d)u ogee. .t feud leader, who had about ex- terminated the opposing faction and lad i nn (111 man anywhere else ; and he would rather die than Weed. a awn be the back. 1n isms titan a year he whit alt.,1 while drinking trout a opting. Again, the secret of the feud le Mutation. In the ruouutalne the war kept on longer fur pommel Good for Bad Tooth hatred supplanted its dead Issues Itullronels and newspapers suave had thele influence ebewhere. Flee - where court circuit's include valley 4w'ple. TIiut the bnflusnee that has helped moat to break up the feud Is trigs! in the bluegrass's, for there Is no or- deal the mountaineer more hates than trial by a Jury of bigoted! "fur- rluers."-From an article by John }'ox, In 8':ribner. r • Sozodont It+44+4+4+444444444444++++ +$ WHY STUDENTS + • ARE DISLIKED. # a e++++++++++++++++++444.+4+ TWA thin Co11eg.• boy Is often too exuberant all who know li:m will ad- mit, but that helms as' mut h of ti Rule - mice us' Judge. }'rank Dotter. of the hatless Supreme l'ourt, d •roarer w.w. LiI (10 041JI1. '•Amon;( o.h :ire r things,' Lit' It 1115' JU•1414 lu a r.'tx11. uewrpaper art;cle, "1 would relurin tee col- lege situ lent or ktll Ida off, 1 k,1uck on Win. 1 ku..,w we pretend to dot on h.w mat infect to belt •vu that h, le the hopes cued Orbit tare 01 the State, bas it's a Ile. We. don't. No body but his mother dues. From ' tate time 14f first start• gut to eo u ser 'UMW( art (4111145 dbveaa Ill par ter tree l f become. an Inruflerabl. nuisance. If at that -stage of his cu riser Itis owe gull could be ditlded into 3,000 parte instead of titre and he left with only one of thew the relief to mankind and to Malawi. would be ineetituable, ti'e tune an ti: Gltitesiwal (revision of the whole 0. what lie' lute woul'l suffice the needs of any ordinary mortal. "Why Io I say these hard things, about him ? I say it bu►:uuse b • 1 • self-important,. rr.bsy, cuncelte.1, ig euraut of all practical wlseom, part- ies hair is the waddle, flaunts his fraternity badge and rebel colors In ao oIf..neive, challenging wort of way lu everybody's face anal prances up street yaw,;og Ills ear-splitting 00.1ege yell t., the fright and Mi- sted. of all timid, sensitive folk with In wound. 1 raw him at the Twen- tieth Kaniao reef ptbon, a bigger maxi than }'IWLon-bigger even than lien era' Hughes -making more rides• nn' tasking up more room than tile whet proms( Iols, elbowing everybody 'out of the way and drowning the %nicer ' Made a Good 'Fortunes for a mountaineer while doing It, for he kept hie men busy getting out timber when they weren't fighting, weld to me, in all seriousness : have triumphed agin my eneualre time and time agiu The Lord's. on my • • WHO IS LORD GREAT CHAMBERLAIN ? f� eie / >' Noe Bad for Good Tooth Sozodont 2Se Sozodont Tooth Powder 25c large Llquld end Pewits 7 C 25c. HALL a r1,C►):1...'{.w York. Thele L nothing Plsr un earth we nnroy-log us' pr04rurtivatien In do- (lsluna Du you 104)110151 that, with an en - eine like thin, I (0uld nfford to put northing Into the holler that would make the mac•hdtery run wild? Il Is all right in 'some cases to hank m1 u Farm's pedigree : but 1n m'.st melt there Ir something a great deal deeper than this matter of geneal- ogy. I will always rink a mut (f he is 1n (1e (lark and knows It, but I laysu't much use for a man wpm IA groping around In the dark and doesn't know it. The Sinal 9 111 IMOU•ntli 1TIRT THURSDAY MORNING MT D. IleOILLJCUDDT. - J Term. of Sabecrlptloas One month, in adr•uoe fl 11 1'ir•emonth., " Mx month.., 1 M °aeysar, " Ad♦erthlag Amts. Legal and other casual aA vertie.n.aese, oar tins for fled lneertiu 1. en 1 3 come per nus for each subwuueut Insertion. Measured by • nonpareil a sin. nosiness cards of ,lx noel end eerier. M pan Tear. Advertisements of Lest, Found, Ilsmy. , eillualfons Vso.nt, Sitar Jaen Wanted seal Bu.lnera Chance. Wanted, oot exceeding $ line* nonpareil. 41 per mouth. Houses ou tale and meso. o Salo, ret M 510eoel 8 line.. tl for nret ,nua� Sae- Mer Sequent mouth. lire.. '.lots. 40 1�° ■. At.y special actin.. the object of ""1.':110 promote the peouu1.ry beaeat .f say ual or company. V. be 00netdore4 an ed* men* and nherged eonoMM%*y. Lowe' roti, or In nouJarell type One cont pal word, no nollce ler Mee too. Local notices In`ordnary wading typo two cent. per word. No notice her le•• than deo. Notice. for chore ► ee snd Whet. nllgtsus and benevolent institutions. ball tate. Mr. i3111 Blopay'-Have you ever',- mane ver made a return call upon Mrs. Swsa- man A Int of Feminine Molly. A Mt of feenhtine folly' which' i;. so the crreet makers any. be0MinR nese commies than eter before. con - ohne In hating the 'skirt hook on the front of the cermet and the garter cl:iApa nn1 fixtures of the garters nt- tnche.l to the c,rreta refute of gold and often Jewelled. Corset and Rnr- ter sets for thea immerse are shown I 1 all of the swell cornet shops. and Women Mono, whether gnlded by , the prklvr of 1he Geta rum frons $10 the Ine4l et with whleh they nre , to (Roma that retirement mild extrata- gnnce.-New York Sun. Mrs. B111 slopay-Certainly not. Don't you know it isn't fashionable Mate retnrfrealtst Mr. full S'opay-Ger whls! I wish all hl 1 collectors were fashlopable.- 'atholic Standard. - here Is one thing about ern •iety that puzzles me," the hllowopher. "'WI t'r that 3" "The oith'r women nre all the time nntli,ur IT get "In tie young and pretty once want to come out." -- "Well, 1 r Ther gases. we outshone the• Fit:John n.; said Mrs. 'Spiffins to her 'modem . 'How 1" - 'It took four i they only had t1 sun wasn't more cliwetteri-Seen carriage - T to witters-Whnt- a(ters-Yea. I ea :lea the street "'('Marlen, tide paper isIym that brninworkprs should eat sit meals a day " 'Whitt'a that' Of cnnrae (!aln- workers need six meals a flus) to make t1101n able to earn three m is r, •'rc,lilral, or by the renew) In which they nor erv1u110n1y thought defirl- ef11. ,how nleil In thin matter how 1mitnbly In ndnpt enllume to ell - 111:,4" rind to remain cool, nether I A phy.Irinn ghee tin following and romfortnble, thong& ole man tante regarding proper sleeping shine ever no fl.reely. Do m�') went mom's for the children : to vnnnt their arperinr physllne The ennnleut and hest' room In the I1:4 they make N101) n enearnetire- bongo in not toxo gored kw' the child. w'•'•n the heavy trnmmlelo nt their -The apartment !hould iso 'entl- oee a enetnmes nn,l the easy enol- Intel during the night as well as the •4 that of their wives end stay. 'I oatthterm 7 On one aide n Week A seek eIa11d should never orcnpy ''^''t• leer hat, .tiff millet and Mark nn Inehle room. Fresh air lea prime "'de; on the other. a light bodice, nereaalty'. '1"11 or with only hieing nt the (Inn .10101 consume the air re - leek. soft, cord millets, open-work gnlred by the child. and are 'not nd- mocking*, light shoes and a tetra- clouden In a mteeping mom. • WA. r No 'sweeping .honed be done while ane dosibt. whMh Innen better. the children n0. In the room. if, iv there anymore hesitation In de- however, twenties, of Melanoma, this's staring which IN henithber rind bet- neceosary, divot the furniture and ter Adapted to 'tete,Ity In n lent floor with! a motet eloth and nine ft atnpclnp1we? We do not suggest carpet ewesyer inetesd of a broom_ sleep' in Rocros. moel- sald I144 t( 14)0)0 Ila, and. Pe, and the Inst Ir►n half full." MfrM Me lin mei 1lnrre- gm? him pas'+1- week. fay. n 'Oil uses to say," six+ said, tent\ fully, "that you 'oval air more than you a oil tell.' •• 1P",' he replied, carefemsty, that's why 1 a )peel _try l_11 Feely (co Ing down from the elek- rolm)-flea ma, father say. he'd like a bit of t nt you're cookie' be- fore Its dire. Pro.perlhe w -Tan go right back nn' tell yon.' father a earn't 'non It. It's for the funeral.-Monn- ehlne. "Ah ! that wee n raa one!" he exclaimed, after ,natehIn1( a kiss. 1aa ' maid e a mrvv i t I "''inti,' n 1 mh o 1@ P (o'nte.1 that he had missed her lips In him &mate and merely kissed her 0pen..t i chin. "it was under -done." Then he proceeded to overd) It. She -Rood by. Remembers me to your wife. He-Ol*, no; she has an excellent memory for old Nero. 'When Delia's young man cane ahs hem to put her parrot out of the room." "What for?" "'O, fnther taught It to screech 'Time to go,' whenever the clock at rlkee." Brielat Pp:trka. Afro. Brawn -Anything for me? Rera' l'oatmneter-I don't nee no - thin'. Mrs. Brown -1 was expeetin' n let- ter or feiate.nel from Aunt finely Bp rigge, tellin' what day she was cumin'. i Rnrnl Po.tmaater (calling to hip wife) --UTI ye ewe n p0stcatrd from Mrs. Brown's Angst linlly, tellln' what illy she wns eremite/ I His Wife -Yen, 'he's mmin' Thera - day. --Buffalo News,. 1 Pedantk Old Gentleman (le ire- tanrnnt waiter) -I believe It is Im- proper to speak dlarespeetflatly of ono's' elders ? Rastnurnnt Waiter -t') i've beard, ger. �.I'Palanth Old flentl.maa-Than 1 ile silent e.neerning file fowl have Just brought se. . 1 Earl Of Aacaster ad Marquis of Cholmondeley Whose Respective Claims to the Position are to b Tested. hnmh, a chola of cowardly nrsassins who enn b• hired to e1a murder for n gtlna n mule, or a gailonrot moon- shine. Now these nre the blackest Mind - "I" In the Daly letere of Kent,icky e the w cal 1 h Me -fin ren a maintain t f that rit/rr1 light of print through the press. There 1k another side, and it to only fair to whew_tt._ The fend is an inheritance. There were (midi before the war, even on the edge of the bluegrass; there were Fierce Venally FigktI In .the bnckwoo a before and during the Revohltloa-when the war be- tween Whig and Tory served as a retest for entlefying personal anl- ',msitten already existing, and It Is n wild fnney- that the Kentucky int main feud takes root In Scot- ian( For wills It hardly pr.- mablP brat the enemies of the Revo- lution ere transmitted to theCivil War, I is quite e more that what- ever 1 rvnr rncd L'tstinct, odd -world trait of chnrncter:, or morel en•l, the back- wombs:nen nitmy have taken with him Into the mwmtnane-It Is quite sure that that Instinct, that trait of character, that moral Male are living forces in him to-dny. The latewar Will, however, the chief canine of feedit When it came, the river bot- toms were popillatral1\� the clans were formed. There weee more alnvn- i ekk.rs au*«'g them s4hau among other Southern mountaineers. For hied! then) I vee, and e war rpt on more that rrit,oa the war d more evenly against them set then! fighting. When etoppel elsewhere, It Pimply with then*, becalm/ they wer Iaotaated, more evenly divided; \be - enuse they were n fiercer race, Oil b •ettlfse. the home had become pdr- Nona1. The little that Is going on not Or- man on for the mnme reason, for whII, chew enna h In '80 ipremised o•Ivditnt mR and '91. to pot an end to organize) fighting, It 1e it consistent feet that after the failltre of Baring Brother's and the 'stoppage of the flew 0f Fngllsh cnpltnl into the mountalne, and the cheek to railroads and civil- isation. theme fends *lowly 'darted np tootle. !Chen 1 "lnrt NI to the ('ulxhn (vnr, two r•ompnnl'a 0f atnt'. Militia Warr on their any to the mnnntninm to put down n feed. On tin dap of the Les (lunslmrle fight these fend,' - men (alight, and they loot pre•irely Ike many arm killed an the nougat R41era--ebglut. Agnln. while the trust may involve the sympathies of n eounty, the num- ber of men net en110 .ngnged In It are compare ticely few. Moreover, the feud le 'strictly of themaelven, rind In basal prlmnrily on n prltnrge ti it the• mo,untnlnrry. the world a,er, hen meet grudgingly surrendered to the Ines• the privilege of .rrnglne him prl- vntn wrong.. The non-pgsrtlatan end the traveller nre never mnineted. Pro- pertyof the beaten Retial le never touc ed. The 1 side nbI I gits a better and better Christian ever' yatr." Even the ambo*sh, the hideons fea- ture of the feud, takes root In the days of the revolution, and was bor- rowed, maybe, from the Indiana. 1111 - fort. the Irri•pctrm an who hated the onyx Mr. Roosevelt, describer. with horror their extreme nwlevelence, and their murderous dis- position toward one another. ele agty■ that whether a wrong had been tome to n malt {se'a'sonally or to hug family, he wourl. If n,ceennry, travel it hundred mike and lurk around de forest indefinitely to get a chance to *Moot his enemy. But the Civil War wan the chief cause of blontbhel; for there Is et lila nee, Indeed, that though feel- ing ietwwen fauuIiee was strOog, bkNid.11el ens rare not the Kng.bl. ee • s %nil.d 10 Cer- tain ae of fnf , n acs pre sailed, 1 eolnnuusltlea, al tenet, often yon will hear the (*a1 nemntaaneer Nay: "Folks. used to talk alxiut how for they could kilt it deer. Now hat's how fer they enn kill it foam. Why. I have knuwed the time when it man would hey been drily oaten the country fair drawin' it knife or a pietas'. nn' If it man was ever killed hit wee kinder necidental by it Bar- low. I reckitge folks got toed to were pone. nn' k)liln nn' ,liontln' from the bre.h endurin' the war. lint Wm been Retlirl' aloe Iter 11nc0, and now bite dirk nn' l5'inelneter MI (11e time," Even for the ambo"h there- Is an explanation_ "0)14 I know nip the exraee folke makes. Hite fair for one all 'tin fer t'olher. Y041 enn't fight n man f'ar n o' .your who'll shoot you In the back. A pore man can't fight money In the courts. Thar hnin't enn wit- ne"res in the sorrel but leaven, nn' dead men don't heir much to .my. I know hit nil. lei0ke like lou 0' decent young folks hell got torn to the Mee; times ars much of It geln' an' tlutr's me meet talk about M ranting from the brrah. i do reckon ht 's wn.s'n *tenni,' to take a feller o I rr'e life that n r w Y' It 'h n1,0 n fact that moat of the men who have been engaged in these fight.' were born, or were children, flaring the nine, and were, 111 Clllmaptellee, of the urntore and the mimic of the bands with his 1•Ilutic 'stuck chalk. Jay hawk : rah ! rah ! rah 1 'Wash- burn, rah! linker, hurrah !' ur what- ever the Infernal S;wn.h gibberish le. 1 have seen 'somewhat of this world no I think- hnvr rorreett I s mite s o 1 t q n good many people In it, :111.1 I give It al my, *mature and solemn Judgment, based upon a care- ful, 1111preJudlced comparison of the many clashes of people who eulllvnte the habit of making it holy show of them.rlvei, that, with. the exception to he hereafter noticett, the neerngr t•ollege student I; the most obtrusive and elephantine nem that fronts the grieve) and frowning face of hen(rn. I was n college mtudent one.. mymrlf. " Now, I nm out objectlug to what toile erentnre learns at school, It's what he 4l0e9111't learn that 1 1101 talking about. 11('e lazy. lie dnr,'n't design himself for any of the nem' work of tnankirid. Nolx'ly ever 11enn1 of a college student win was fitting himself for nny(Ithlg but one of the learned prufeNmiene. NO called -that ie, fine of the profeadons of learning how to Rye off the hnlanee of mankind. Moe going to 1s• a lawyer, n prenclu'r, a doctor, an editor, an author, an orator, n statesman, and no doubt- ing .thought ever ruffles, lhIa aeranoly egollntlt ::nal that when once lie vitiate Into the arena 1:1 nffatrs the things of this world will he mpealii) set to rlg(te. Accustomed to bloodshed, nn 1 buwhwhae�1ng from infancy. Bt111, among aing t tightens there 1s uftrat it strong prejtellee against the nmb0'.h, and In moat feudal, one or the other aide dl.eountenarr'ee It, and that W the faction tur.l- nlly defeated. 1 know of ono family that wee one by ono ex- terminated becansf, they refutral to take to the ''&sari." The last one kI11rY1 WWI a good-looking, genernud young fellow, eighteen yearn of age. Ile was urged to either leave the country qy take to the With for him enemy, who had taken to the hoe& for hon. }Im wouW rather Iles In the mountains fora year and die was lubecrlben who fall to receive TNMiesat regularly by mall will conhr a favor by ars qualnll,g us of the fact at ea early a date d possible. When • dodge of address b desired. boll the old awl the aew address should he atom Ptbllslw's Notice. .1 e. La Tonrrl. of Oodertch, 4as been ap pointed Locaa Travelling` Agent fort • Tame. ships of Ooderlck, Colleens, A •Id and Wewanosh. Lleal postmasters over the dletriot ars ale* empowered to receive .atseal:al u. as Tics Beau_ gr•yd All nom m11'04;4.0004 MWILLlOUDUT, Tart Telephone Gil 10. U R Tlii'-1L911 LY, sFPT (fl_ 1801 - TRAVELLING `LVID=. GRAND TRUNIC RAILWAY. ARatva Mixed 11.0 ►wk. St .d1 end Express. LIS p.m. Mixed TM Mall and Express 10.3• p.a DLPART. Mall and Kremer 7.11 a.m. M•.i1 nod Express. 2 ah Mixed ... _.... 1 au. DENTISTRY. rifleNICHOLSON. L n S., •�1 DL,TAL rnaeaoa. Rooms opposite the Peet OSse. Oold Tilling, Crowe and urNRs Werk • Specialty. Da Year. gzp•rtenee. _ '•''iliac,:10,0.1 on Weeinnoday aleen.00,a• et I p u4'. from May W October Inn*,slve.•' M. MAREE, DDM LDJC-bW AE IDJ• Surgeon- Latest and appreeed for all dental operations. Pretervedee et sat ural teeth a modally. 010e• • Ona wens •t. and 'guars tap st� Ertrenee ea Weir odic* clnea"1 on Wednesday aftertloon$, et I p. in.. trout May to Oct., Inclnelve. Telephone No. M. tr• M. TURNRCI,L 01.4.5.. LDM S. -DE• • ta1 Surgeon. ll.ala1, associated vet Dr. iN ion, of Montreal.) Ooll ems porcalale, ertltniel troth mounted on geld or alnminnai boned. S ,ectal ',petition germ' to th•reser. ••Uon of Its natural teeth. l aloe t�• Lean's sew block. Om cc rhosed On Woloner1nv mfrrnnnor nt 1 p.n..f May to October uwinnl. r... "hut 0hen he rituttliJ' ikwts land out the ran e1, -abutted, k)ng muff nrlel4 world Rete lata revenge. The world hint trite him up niel nolle It* big self over tura rind rnaohes the wind rmt of him, and then plekx him up and cicuckm hien Into a little l4' z 10 offices, with eoh.web, on the tolling ani* fly 'mocks on the win,owa and two broken -Meg elullra on the floor and a cozen Nemnd-hand book*, In a wobbly old cana with the llama bro- ken out, arid reinsuring to pay lite honed bill nay longer, green off and Irwvo.. Iain to learn' wbalann frog the, ant. "Nur have I any eplte of the col- lege .tudont, i only think he taken 'p leer much r(e)in rand 11111lken (00 ranch lxrlso and reale (00 much, money and le loo smart In elle budding days' of his career. If he tank& Only he in- duced to incudis /somewhat, t0 prac- tice et little the meekest habit of self- Pffaeemeolt, go mal and wink hie head, torn nn X-ray noon hie Inwnr,W and wave Mower an otive're mee him, we 10.11511 posedhly endure him Inetend of filling up with wlek.rl wlmhess for 11b ntemmeinnl4)n. itut has won't." {!'len yon nre strl.Ing to do tlunt wide!. la right be court Poole and nice In every any, lett tlnn't get "turned- The tuurneiThn man who wools to marry hnp- plly should pork ane n son.' mother and marry on,. of her daughterm ; any the boy'e skewer, than 11YO 'MP be on• wuI co. LIeO*Ia iVF CAMPIVN, Q.O.-IIAttH011'$ita�0014. Je atm, Notary. dao. (Moe over Mesterei Kali, aquere. Uoderlob. 1( t). JOWN$TON-BAnitIS'rxs, tlUu- Lil • •Iter, c onnlL4•ffooue , Koper u tear. Oflks. Cer. Hamillos and St. Amities streets, Uoderlch, Out i del r citimp,R .elior%n as petele, p01st.$7 Marttlma (loge, &c. Y,r1.1, sC, iamb door NIovIL nabs Private Funds to Lad •t of )Merest *l) t T lowed . PI rater W. lftOUDFOOT.A R C. WETS. GAf1ROW 11; 11lROW HAJllliJTER S. Attorneys, Sol tor.. &o.. {'Hdh. J. T.Oateow. Q.U..l:barlesDarrow. HATTERS. uTLiP HOLT, Q. BAIt(s'TRPis Navyl NdeCoerthetune el low rates of Inlara•1, ICICINSON & HOLMES l RRI4 met 'era8olicitnrs, 11_¢fwr.m i'nblT, eta ail. %R (Mace, est nowt 1 ICKINSON. DUDLEY 'mutat CHAS. SE•OER - BAll1U ST R.It 8OL letter. notary and em.veyaneer. (�f on Hamilton street o('p dte the .)nlborne Hotel, Hoderlch. Private funds to lead ea mortgagee at t per cent interest Y'armref aeon saabod• A O. WARP. CONvgtI� C'SR, Ira, A$ J• commbsioaer for takh.g ad reeslvlag r•o•gnaanoei of boll. & geirli. as' aa(asaw- Ilnn•, depo.Itbona or nnl•n/n dedication* In s eoneeruingi any n4tine, molt •r prwwedbg la Vol MEM Court •f J urea•. the Court d •tO d for Ontario. ns' Is any County or Nvtrea Court. Ail 1: a .•*aliens carefully • promote exiseut•d. Rifshi•n.. and P.0. Ile* Marton, Ont. 1dY1kf LOANS APR INIUW0IL if �J,rl �ETTO 1 �ND-A 1 of Private rends fee Invesilwasssi intl kssr. ed renes ems exposes on areadues owreaasa Apple to Harrow a: °arrow, .t so.. a.lrr'.-GNKI1Al. tf\lt ewe ItWK • sono Ileal Maolate and .Money Iseerdr!arasg Agent. only first -dans ca nennloe rel{yMelea1Rrf. Memel' in land nn .height Spur, at the rob real sf Inle.e,l ruing, ,n an way1s •u Q, 13.s bpoprrrower. 00lce: Second any p •st,.hest, Uoderlch. f11s1G�d 7w_ a..� AlleTIO.IRR*INtf• 'I`HOMAO OUNfRY, AUCTiONkf:R AND 1. Valmont., Onrlcdnh, Ont. ,iaiee attemped to In any pert of the neuter. TOITN 'NO& IlltMlrftA�T A�rtereeNgen se and fend vale (ter, lraeerl•h, Uwe. Slaw leg heel oonsiderahl. erpeilsnes •n W •na tl.,eerr(N. trade, haa w II* 1• In • peeltl► *hams with thornnsh ealldlsetlen •11 ser- t•inns enlrnse«t M ban. Orders Wit ee rton's Rotel, et sent by ..in In his .Aan/�ww,� Merle.P.O.,rarefelly attended 11. 3OH•l x01, tkwnty A n't1one.r, 01114111 SAsilASII YtC1 "run we LAMS, Eja.Dbk A.,t'L°ry