HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1891-2-12, Page 3caught.
Id. E. Barre, in Photographic Time, :
They wore sitting by the fireside
On a very frosty night,
And their Ilea& were Mose together
As they talked 0—we11—tlio weather,
Or,porhaps—the 'quint" fight,
As their chat grew more engrossing
Near and nearer yet he drew
Till hor fair hair brushed his shoulder,
And in trembling tones he told her
Of the—sorrows of the Sioux,
Then he put his arms about her
In the dinily-liglatal rmom.
And they saw naught but each other,
Never hoard her bad small brother
Stealing softly tlaroubli the gloom;
Till a flash dispelled the darkness,
And a shrill voice cried with glee:
'Taught your photo—you and bister—
Pa will like to know you kissed her—
Buy the negative from me?'
rhe wreaksReception.
Buffalo News
The Tenderloin Club received 'tother day,
And the freaks of Now York were there;
The Lobster 13oy had plenty to say,
And the Fat Women all looked fair.
TheBird Man and the Turtle Boy
To the Witch of Wall Street made love,
And the Bleetric Girl in the height of her joy
Gave the Skeleton Dude a shove.
This roused the Samoan Warriors brave,
And the Tatooed Man looked mad;
The Albinos hurried about to save—
The Hypnotist looked sad.
The Human Braes Band begsn to play,
To the Leopard Boy's brave song,
But nothing the toznpest of wrath could stay
Till the "growler" was pushed along.
Women and Their Ways.
The University of Edinburgh contem-
plates opening its doors to women students
Miss Este Steele is the first woman to
receive the honor of a full professorship
erom the Royal Academy of Musics in Eng-
eand.
Stenographers and typewriters can be
had in Mani:tees at e4 a week. Cooks at $30
a month cannot be found, to supply the
demand.
An " eupeptio lunoh-roona " for the
cepecial benefit of dyepeptio diner e has
recently been eetablislaed in New York by
Dr. Rose W. Bryan.
Pretty floral necklaces of white violets or
chrysanthemums closely massed together
after the fashion of a dog-oollar are now
worn with evening dressee.
Lillinokalani, who becomes Queen of
Bewail by the deeth ot Kitlakana, her
brother. is the wife of an Englishman,
Lieut. -Gen. John 0. Dominic'. Her desig-
nation as heir apparent was due to the fact
that she was the only member of the royal
family who had children.
Mme. Barrios, wife of the celebrated
JE'reeident and a woman of eurpaeeing
beauty, is now staying at Washington. She
was married at tbe age of 14 and is mothere
of six ohildren, yet she looke as fresh and
radiant as a young girl. She is very so-
compliehed, speaking five languages with
fluency. Her fortune is said, on good
authority, to aggregate $6;000,000.
A fashionable London tailor has just
completed an elegant peliesa for the Prin-
cess of Wales., It is of violet velvet, lined
with ermine and trimmed with a paesemen•
terie of violet and gold. Another band.
Boma pelisse is of eoarlet cloth, gathered
into a yoke of sealskin. An olive-green
cloth penes() is lined with blue fox far,
-whinh 18 rolled over in large revers to the
/cot of the gown.
Malting a Flome.
It seems a pity that the young woman
who is about to establish a home and has
a euro of money to spend Inc its garnishing
cannot be persuaded from laying it out all
at once. She robs hereelf of so much
future enjoyment. The spick and span
BUB of furniture whiob are carelessly
ordered from an upholsterer, and carried
home and stood around her parlors by his
men, will never affordher half the satis-
faction she can get in a ronm for which to-
day she buys a chair, and next week, seeing
there must be a table to accompany the
chair, eh° snorts on a fresh shopping excur-
sion, and finda a table which is exaotly what
she wee looking for ; and in another month,
discovering the need of a bookcase or a
screen, she has again the delight of the
hunt, and the gratification of obtaining the
prettiest screen and bookcase in the city.
Snob a room is a growth, a gathering to.
gether, of household treasures little by
little, and piece by piece. Each artiole,
bonght only when the need arises, or when
something is happily found to just meet
the need, will have a family history which
makes it an entertaining as well as a valu-
able poeseseion. Each couch and.footstool
is an achievement; each rug and curtain
represents a triumph. Such a home, built
,up gradually, with careful planning in each
part, with thought and loving consideration
In all its details, acquires a meaning far
deeper Than could be purchased by the
longest purse from the most fashionable
cabinet-makero—Harper's Bazar. •
For Your Husbands.
Gloves are indispensable to the man that
aepires to be well dressed.
The wearing of evening gloves now ranks
among the edicts that may not be ruthlessly
broken.
The delicete shades in pearl of undressed
kids, with a narrow cord embroidery upon
the back in self.color and with a single
large pearl button, is the ultra feetidione
type for full dress.
The foible is an expensive one, because
The everiing &wee musk be immaculate. A
Boiled pair of evening gloves would be
deemed as great a solecism as a shirt front
that betrayed a previous wearing.
The white faledress cravats have finally
felt the effect of the tendency to bigness in
neckwear. They have been latterly worn
in widths from 008 10 one and a half inches.
The latest examples spread out to greater
widthe at the end.
Overgaiters continue to be sold by the
men's furniehers, although it would seem
The hatter raight more reasonably add them
40 his stook, having them to match the
various derby nolorings of the 'season.
Aiwuredly the overga item should aomport
with or match the waistcoat, overcoat, hat
or Dome other portion of the attireewther.
win they are featured to a too dominant
degree.
The Montreal Court of Appetite decided
yesterday that the stealing of a cheque did
not oosne within the Larceny Act.
THE CURATE.
we tends his flock on Sunday,
Makes parochial calls on Monday,
And on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday
He may generally be found
In the ,Iiickost Of the tea fights;
Friday and Saturday are off -nights
Devoted to the sermon which
On Sunday he expounds.
Lady Londonderry, wife of the ex Lord
Lieutenant Of Ireland, is considered one of
ihe handsomest women in England, though
ber face looks expreesion. Her husband is
a prominent turfman and keep a lags
racing stud at Vifinyard.
Tun German Reichsteg yesterday resolved
to renew the boyoott on the American hog.
Herr Broome!, however," held that it wee
un-Chrietittnlike 40 Make the people's
necessariee of life dear in etioh a barberOne
=Antler.
TEILEG-Ranala EitiMnerAmr.
The Very Rev. Edward Hayes Plomptre
Dean of Wells, le dead.
Maria Claattoway, formetly custodian of
Shaktmeare's birtbplace, is dead.
At Winnipeg yesterday the thermometer
registered 32 below zero, and at Qu'Appelle,
42 below.
The Diamond Palace at San Francisco
was entered rooently and $7,500 worth of
jewelry taken.
the Crimes Act has been put in force in
the town of Carlow and rovokeci in portions
of Sligo Counto.
A ennoicate of Boston commercial men
has been formed to test the legality of the
McKinley tariff.
According to the United States comma
bulletin there are 5,304 Indians in the
State of New York.
Rev. Joeeph Parker, of the London Cit,
Temple, has denounced Mr. Gladetone e
Religious Disabilities Bill.
Rev. Dr. Stevenson, a weleknown Con-
gregational minister, who was onoe pastor
of a church in Montreal, died in that city
yeaterday.
A bill introduced into the Italian Cham-
ber of Deputies on Saturday to provide
extra taxes was defeated, and Signor Criepi
has tendered hie resignation.
Bishop Hennessy, of the Dubuque Dice
oese has founded a new Cetholio order to
be known as the Sisters of the Holy (Woes.
The naission of the order is to teach in
parochial schools.
Attaohmente of $23,000 have been tiled
against the Union Investment Company of
}lenses City. The paper of the oompany
has been going to protest. The oompany
has a (Aped of e1,000,000.
A leiter from Bay City, Mich., announces
that °apt. Crosby, a well known saner, is
on his trial there for murder. Ile has been
a ehipmigger in the western city for some
time. His trial cloture in Maroh.
Letters patent have been issued r the
formation of a company to be kno an as
" The Canadian Land and Investraent Co."
It is worthy of note that one of the incor.
poretoes is a lady, Mrs. Jessie Flora Rose,
ot Winnipeg.
The Papal Congregation of Rites has
decided not to beatify Columbus. A promi.
nent member of the congregation told a
journalist of Rome that Columbus was a
perfect gentleman and an excellent Catholio,
but not a saint.
Rev. Albert Hale, D. D., well known
throughout Central Illinois as " Father
Hale," one of the pioneer Presbyterian
preachers of the State, died Friday, Emma
91. He was for twenty. seveli years pastor
of the Second Presbyterian Church, of
Springfield.
Eddie Davis, an 8.yeer•old lad, of King-
ston, was out sleigh riding yeaterday. He
jumped on the tongue of a sleigh loaded
with hay attached to another sleigh ie
front. By some means he fell off, tried to
get out of the way, and was run over by
the freighted rig. He was instantly killed,
the weight crushing out his life.
It is announced by the physiciane Ber.
tin and Picq, of the Nantes faculty, who
recently injected 15 grammes of goat's
blood into the thighs of two patients, that
in the mote of both patients there has been
an abatement of the fever. One of them, a
woman, whose temperature prior to the
injection was 102, shows a decline of two
degrees.
There have been many statements in the
newspapers about the prevalence ot high
play in English private houses. London
society has been scandalized in the lest few
days by the expulsion of a young Scotch
baronet from one of the wet end
°labs for cheating at cards. This young
genine adopted the plan of laying a highly
polished cigar case on hie knee, so that the
color of the cards might be reflected on its
et:tease as he dealt them.
Sara Bernhardt arrived at New York
yesterday.
Mrs. Roches has just died at Kalkeeka
BEA., aged 111 years.
George Morton, of Sturgeon Bey, aged
26, was killed by a tree falling on him yes.
terday.
The Barnum Wire and Iron Works expect
to remove from Walkerville to Toronto
about April lst.
During the fine weather of het week
eeveral farmers near Calgary sowed wheat
se an experiment.
The prinoipals of the city Public+ Sohoole
in Toronto have petitioned the School
Board for an increase in salary.
Whilst coasting yeaterday Charlie, the
10 yeer-old son of T. G. Smith; of Wark-
worth, broke his arm in two placee.
Sir Arthur Sullivan's grand opera,
" Ivanleoe," produced in London on Satur-
day night, is pronounced a success.
Preeident Carnot has declined to com-
mute the sentence of death passed upon
Michael Eyrand, the murderer of. Gouffe.
Mr. James McShane, the people's oandi-
date, was elected Mayor of Montreal yes.
terday over Mr. Grenier by about 5,000
votes.
The Socialists of Chicago have adopted a.
resolution demanding that the managers of
the World's Fair shall employ only union
labor.
Rev. Dr. Rand addressed the Modern
Language Club of University College,
Toronto, yesterday on the poems of Charles
G. D. Roberts.
The big lumber deal between Gilmour
and Rathbun, Trenton, is off, and the
former have put men at work getting the
mills ready for viark.
The directors of the Manhattan Elevated
Railway yeeterday purchseed the suburban
rapid transit road from Drexel, Morgan et
Co. and their associetes.
Yesterday judgment was given by the
fall court at Winnipeg sustaining Mr. Jus-
tice Killam's deoieion that the Manitoba
School Act ie constitutional,
President Harrison in an interview said
that Congress was responsible for any fail-
ure of the peeper amount of money or
suppliee to reach the Indians.
In the British Colombia Legislatute
yesterday shill, introduced by Mr. Beayen,
proteoting newspaper publiebers from un-
warrantable prosecution in oases of libel,
was voted down by 23 to 4.
Walter Raison, 7 years of age, was run
over by a Street oar in Toronto yesterday
afternoon, and one or hie legs was so
eeverely mangled that when the lad was
removed to the hospital it was found news.
eery to amputate the limb.
The new Kook Institute for the treat-
ment of consumptive patients was opened at
196 Eget Broadway, New York, yesterday.
The building is a new 4 -storey briok
struttertre, fitted ttp with all hospital
conveniencee, and has room for 35 patients.
A Madrid deep/Itch sage : The revited
rehires ehow the election of 314 Govern-
ment candidates, 60 Liberals, 35 Reptiblit
cane and 7 Carliste. No Socialista heve
been returned. A feature �f the election
was the abetention of the laboring °lame
and Anarchists from the (touted, The
large Coneervative immunises are *scribed
to dissension between the Liberals and the
R epublicans.
The /irk annual convention of the Stone-
rURB011ai International Union was opened in
Syrecuee yesterday, about 40 delegetes from
16 States and Carteret being present. It
is expected that it will take from 8 to 10
days to transact the business of the con-
ventk n.
The Paris Figaro publishes an interview
in which the Pope is represented as saying
that to eupport et good republic ie to fight
against a bad one, and tbat as tbe forma-
tion of a Catholio party in France is Me-
poeeible the Catholics ought to support the
Government.
With regard to the Italian Cabinet crisis
it is generally believed that Signor Crispi
has reached the end of his political career,
and that bis reinstatement is an immesh
bility. It is not thought the change of
Government will have any effeot on the
Triple Alliance.
Of a party of forty men engaged in re-
opening oommunioation with enow-blocked
villages between Dimitzana and Tripolitzs,
in the More, fifteen have been frozen to
death, and a number of others have been
so badly frost-bitten that they are not
expeoted to recover.
Mr, Edward Franks, clerk for Messrs.
McCleary & McLean, lumber merchants, of
Thorold, died Sunday night, He attended
to his duties on Saturday as usual. During
Senility night his wife heard a gurgling
noise, and he breathed her name and ex-
pired. His parents reside in the neighbor.
hood of Brampton.
On Saturday evening a young man
named Watson was killed near Paris. He
worked for Mr. H. Moyle, about two miles
from Paris on the Brantford road. He was
in the habit of coming up on the train
from Brantford and jumping off at the
crossing near Mr. Moyle'. On Saturday
night he evidently was the worse of liquor,
and when he attempted the usual feat he
stumbled and fell under the train and was
instantly killed.
The dissenters of Nottingham and
neighborhood have declared a vigorous war
against the Mormons. Rev. Mr. Ward, an
anti•Mormon missionary, delivered a few
vid lecture upon the subjeat last night at
South Normenton, the strongest Mormon
centre in England. Mr. Ward declared
She Mormons were as great polygamists as
ever. The matter should be eubmitted to
the House of Commons and the Mormons
nompelled to abandon Mormonism or leave
England.
An alartn of fire celled oat nearly the
whole town of Friars Point, Miss., early
yesterday morning to find the town jail in
flemes and the prisoners shrieking for aid.
Tbe marshal, WE 0 had the key, lived some
dieter= from the jail, and before his ar-
rival the prisonere were beyond human aid.
This morning only charred heaps of bones
were found. The prieonera were three
negroee, confined on trivial charges. They
started the fire by trying to burn the door
down that they might escape.
Mr. Justin McCarthy, speaking ettiver-
pool yesterday on the Irish qaestion, said
that if the minority would not yield, the
majority might as well disband. He was
prepared, he said, to accept any settlement
making for peace and union. The prospects
of an agreement being reaohed were hope-
ful. Tee Imperial Parliament must settle
the land question before or concurrent
with the Home Rule question or never
settle it at all. The Mall were quite oom•
petent to reorganize the constabulary as a
civil force.
Andrew Douglas, a man aged about 70,
was found dead in hie brother's barn yes-
terday rnorning at Pickering. He was shot
through the head, and held in his hand a
38 calibre revolver. There was found on
his person about $250, and also a receipt
for a $6 revolver, the deemed having been
in Toronto teat Saturday. He lived with
his brother George Douglas for eeveral
years. He was a bachelor, was supposed
to be fairly well off, and has always ap
peered perfectly sane. It is rumored that
some financial diffioulties were troubling
him. He also left behind him a note say-
ing he was tired of life.
Ten thousand shoemakers are on strike
for higher wages in Vienna.
York County Council yesterday deoided
to go back to the toll -gate system.
The annual convention of the Dominion
Alliance opened in Montreal yesterday.
Alexander Walters, harbor master of
Belleville, died yesterday in his 73rd year.
A mortgage for $30,000,000 has been
filed by the great Northern Railroad at
Ellensburg, Wash.
The revenue of Hull is less than the ex.
penses, and Mayor Eddy says unless some
rented iel steps be taken the city will go into
bankruptcy.
The firm of Parker and Popham whole-
sale merchants and clothiers, of Popham,
have aseigned, with liabilities amounting
to about $78,000.
The result of the Boulogne conferences is
to be announced and a modus vivendi pro-
posed at'a meeting of the [sections of the
Irish party to -morrow. •
Both Houses of Congress yesterday
passed a bill extending to 30 days the period
for the appointment of a Secretary of the
Treasury to succeed the late Seoretary
Windom.
A constitationel amendment preventing
lotteries has reached the Governor of North
Dakota for his approval. It will have to
be submitted to the next Legislature and
then to the people.
Mr. Cyrus Bell, of Windsor, died end.
denly at Ridgetown yesterday. The
deceased was well known throughout West.
ern Ontario. He was apparently in the best
of health an hour before his death.
A bill has passed the upper branch of the
Indiana Legislature prohibiting the pump•
ing of gas. This practically prohibits the
piping of gas to Chicago, as pumps would
be necessary to force it from the field to
the city.
A colony of Hebrews from Russia, cone.
prieeog 160 families, will arrive in St. Paul
and Minneapolis this week. They were
sent to the United States by Baron Hirsch,
who donated a large sum of money for the
purpose.
In a wrestle at Hopkinton, Mass., yester.
day, Alicheel Maloney was thrown by
Cheries Hifferty, his head striking the
floor and fracturing hie skull. He died in
a few hours, leaving a wife and three
children.
The Winnipeg Board of Trade, at ite
annuel meeting yesterday, adopted a reso.
lotion condemning the Dominion. Govern-
ment for the manner in whioh it has dealt
with the improvement of the Red River
navigetiort scheme.
Colin Lamont, employed at Patterson's
Hotel, Rodney, fell from a ettoond etory
window of the hotel last evening on to the
hard pavement, being badly shaken up and
severely injured hie Opine. Hie recOvery ie
conaidered doubtful.
A railroader, who has arrived at Winne
peg from the welt, ailY8 there le grumbling
In British CelteMbia et the aotion of the
CI, It, R, in hiring Chinese laborere while
white men are gent% about idle in Ranh of
work and almost starving.
The death is announced of Rev. David
Biokell, of Mount Forest, after a short M-
oen, from inflammation of the bowele.
Mr. Bickell had beer in the ministry for
the past eight yeare and was a promising
young divine of the Presbyterian Churola.
He leaves a wife and four ohildren.
A fire broke out in Mr. El. Hannerht hotel
at Bast Tecnpleton 0300 1,0 o'olook leek
niaht, whicla cieetroyed the building. me
fire heated over three hours, and mush
difficulty was experienced in keeping ad.
jceining houses from igniting. The building
is a total lose and the damage will amount
to $4,000,
Between 8 and 9 o'olook yeeterday morn.
ing, as John Meyer was haulieg cordwood
into the Grand Trunk yard at Hepworth,
part of the load on whit% he was pitting
slipped forward, throwing him in front of
She sleigh, where he was dragged a con.
eiderable distance. When picked up life
was extinct.
The Manchester Ship Canal Company,
engaged in digging a ship canal from
Manobeeter to the sea, has appealed to the
corporation of Manohester for assistance.
The Canal Companyea etatutory borrowing
powere will shortly be exhausted, and
1,700,000 will then be required to pueh
he work to completion. The appeal was
referred to a speoial committee.
A bill has been introduced in the lower
branch or the Minneeota Legislature pro-
viding that any publio officer, state,
municipal or county, accepting any gine,
free pass or other favors not granted to the
general public trona any railway or other
corporation in the State shall be held
guilty of felony, and be puniehed by a fine
not less than $1,000 nor more than $5,000,
or by imprisonment in the State Prison not
less than six months nor more than one
year, or both.
Baseball.
Toronto Empire: Shall we have an
International League baseball club in
Toronto this year? Some people say we
onght to and others say it won't pay. The
probabilities are that the latter are right
and that the best course to pursue is to
wait awhile and give the desire for the
game a chance to increase. The ancient
enthusiasm has undoubtedly vanished, but
some day it may return, and then baseball
will have an opportunity to once more take
root. At present all manner of profits.
sional athletic sport is at a decidedly low
ebb in Toronto.
Keefe, the pitcher, proposes to stie the
Players' League ospitaliets for e2 000,owing
to him on playing material supplied to
Brooklyn, Buffalo and Pittsburg.
Mike Kelly, tbe great, esys : " I want
von to arty that I am done playing ball.
Under no circumstances will I ever play on
She same team with Clarkson, Bennett or
Pop Smith. I could have jumped the
boys last summer and got $15,000 for doing
it, but I [Week her out, and I don't want
any of those people in any tem I play ball
with. Should I deoide to try it once more
Cincinnati is about the only plane I care to
go." Subsequently he said ; " I suppose
that I have been a ohump in not getting in
out of the wet when I hart a chance. I'll
bet Ward and Ewing are getting e10,000
eaoh for next year, and both fixed their
deals long ago, I guess I have stood mat
for the benefit of Ward."
The Weddings.
At the end of the first year comes the
cottoenidettaedding.
At two years comes the paper.
At three the leather.
At the olose of five comes the wooden.
At the seventh annivereary the friends
assemble at the waolen.
At 10 comes the tin.
At 12 years the silken and fine linen.
At 15 the crystal wedding.
At 25 the married couple that have been
true to their vows for a quarter of a oentury
are awarded with silver gifts. From this
period forward the tokens of eeteem become
rapidly more valnable.
When the 30th anniversary is reached
they are presented with pearls.
At the 40th come the rubies.
At the 50th occurs the golden wedding.
Beyond that time the aged couple are
allowed to enjoy their many gifts in peace.
If, however, by any possibility they
should reach their 75th anniversary they
are presented with the rarest gifts to be
obtained, at the celebration of their dia•
mond wedding.
As Good as a Novel.
Bt. Patti Globe: Wife—What are you
reading, Tom?
Hubby—The mortgage on our house and
lot.
Wife—Dry reading, isn't it ?
Hubby—Oh, no; it is increasing in
interest.
Italy has offered the Garibaldi family
060,000 for Capreva.
Lord Tavistook succeeds to the title and
estates of the late Duke of Bedford. He
is said to be a purse proud men, and as he
has an income of a million and a half a
year we shouldn't wonder if he was.
Cardinal Levigerie, who hes become
prominent through his efforts to suppress
the slave trade in Northern Africa, pro-
poses to reclaim the great Sahara
Desert, and for this parporie has oalled for
volunteers in the work of irrigating and
planting.
Boston's system of parks inoludes 1,042
sores, and the city has expended upon them
for the purchase of land and construction
about $6,000,000.
" Old Hutch," the Chicago weat raider,
is said to have been compelled by his
family to give np epeculation, and thee his
familiar figure will be seen no more in the
Board of Trade building. Many will say
it is a good riddance for Chicago.
Miss Alioe Perry, of Bridgeport, Conn.
summoned a doctor in haste, saying that
she had swallowed her false teeth and was
in instant danger of strangulation. On
consultation it was decided to resort to
tracheotomy. Dr. Sanford and Dr. Payne
got their instruments ready and were
about to administer ether to the woman
when one of them stepped on some object
under the edge of the bed. Picking it
up he found it to be the missing plate and
teeth.
"Bine Jeans" is turning people away n
New York.
The two new words of the year in London
are " spoof" and "wide," To spoof a naan
means to pot up & wicked trzok on him.
When you say that a man is wide, you
mean that he is something more than wide.
awake, smart or clever.
The Scotch railway strike, the greatest
railway strike over known in England,
cotta the companies .C127,000, while the
loseee of traders and men employed reach
half a million.
It is said that Fruit( Mayo, Louis
Aldrieh end Mateo Raeltin will be seen in
a joint starring tour next season, the
repertoire being Davy Crockett," " My
Partner and "The Cannok."
•
o
eteete
l'Amottalk•zkNN,N.N.\. -No§ks,„
for infants and Childrefl.
oCastoria is so well adapted to children that Castoria cures Colic, Constipa
1 recommend it as superior to any prcriptdon Sour Stomach, Diarrhcea, ErustaPtsn.•
known to meHAging Worms, gives sieep, and peoractee die
." . , Ancasa, AL D., gestion,
111 Bo. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Without injurious medication.
THE Crezreurt Couriary, 77 Murray Street, DT, te.
nee etittet
eate ifeeteleitettoettettott
CARE Olif FURS.
How They Are Ruined By Being Peeked
in Boxes.
The care of furs might well be given
speoial space, but a word or two here must
serve, says the New York Times. Perhaps
the most usual mistake made by women in
She care of their fats ie to keep them laid
flat in the boxes in which they ratty have
been sent home. With seal this is a par-
ticularly grave error, as the least pressure
assists the reivanoe of the crushed look
which overtakes it soon enough at best.
Furriers keep their far garments hanging
and ladies should do likewise. The motha-
line bags selling from 60 cents to $1, the
cloth for 25 cents a yard, are conven-
ient coverings for them, but bap of un-
bleached muslin will do almost as well,
if tightly made. " Coat.hangers" to sup-
port the shoulders are useful, as they pre-
vent the garment dragging its weight upon
the neck and collars, and thus injuring its
set when on. To paok a fur garment in
the ordinary manner of woman's packing
is tatal. A boa may be wonderfully fresh-
ened in appearence by shaking it upside
down, claming the fur to stand out in that
round, fluffy way which makes the boa
each a pretty setting for fair faces. Boas
should be looped in long loops be-
fore hanging Eo that the strain may not
rest wholly on any one point. If they
are ornamented with ribbons, they may
be hong by these. All Inc houses have
storage safes, where wraps are kept in
safety through the summer months at
nominal rates. Fors which have been wet
should not be dried in a warm room.
Women who wear furs should be careful
not to dress their hair too low, or rather
too loose. The oadogan and other droop.
ing braids wear the Inc more rapidly than
is realized until the damage is beyond
repair. Taken in time thia injary may be
overcome, but it is safest not to incur it.
Furriers unanimously urge that tura need.
ing repairs should be brought to them in
tbe summer season, as the work may then
be done with muola more convenience to the
house and with greeter eatiefaction to the
wearer.
Let Him Be Banged.
Roohester Herald : The Boston Elks
have suspended John L. Sullivan. But
unless they have suspended him by the
neck the country will not be afforded much
relief by their aotion.
.70/1213111=1111MIIIIMW
en
For the WoNiderful Success
of Hood's Sarsaparilla,
the Most Popular and
Most Extensively Sold
Medicine in America.
Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses great
M medicinal merit, which it positively
demonstrates when fairly tried.
2It is most economical, being the
only medicine of which " too
Doses One Dollar" can truly be said.
3It is prepared by a Combination,
Proportion and Process Peculiar to
Itself, unknown to other preparations,
and by which all the medicinal value of
the various ingredients is secured.
4It effects remarkable cures where
other medicines have utterly failed
to do any good whatever.
a It is a modern medicine, originated
:Or by experienced pharmacists, and
still carefully prepared under their per-
sonal supervision.
a It is clean, clear and beautiful in
dde appearance, pleasant to take, and
always of equal strength.
7It has proven itself to be positively
the best remedy or scrofula and all
blood disorders, a.nd the beat tonic tor
that tired feeling; loss of appetite and
general debility.
8Itis unequalled for curing dyspepsia,
is
headache, biliousness, catarrh,
rheumatism and all diseases of the kid-
neys and liver.
It has a good name at home, there
being more of Hood's Sarsaparilla
sold in Lowell, Mass., where it is made,
than of all other sarsaparillas and blood
purifiers combined.
in Its advertising is unique, original,
dt, honest, and thoroughly backed up
by the medicine itself.
A Point for YOu.
If you want a blood purifier Or
strengthening medicine', you should get
the best. Ask for Hood's Sarsaparilla,
and insist upon having it. Do not let
any argument or persuasion influence
you to buy what you do not want. Be
euro to get the ideal medicine,
Hood's
Sairsapanila
Sold by all druggists. 51; six for 55. Prepared only
by 0.5. 0001) & 00., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
MO Doses Ono Dollar
CARTEKS
ram
IVER
Pous.
URE
Sick Headache and rereve all the troubles
dent to a bilious state of the system, mien am
Diziuess, Nausea. Drowsiness. Distress after
eatflag Pain in the Side, 8.:e. While their moan
r markable success has been shown in =tag
SICK
Headache, yet CARTER'S LITTLE Livna PlIza
are equally valuable in Constipation, c
and preventing this annoying complaint, w
they also correct all disorders of the stomach.
stimulate the liver awl regulate the bowel&
n'aeri if they only cured
HEAD
Ache they would be almost micelees to thole
who suffer from this dIstressdng complaint;
but fortunately their goodness does not end
here, and those who once try them will flnd
these little pills valuable in so many ways that
they will not be willing to do without thane
But after all sick head
is the bane of so many lives hat here is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it
v.rhile others do not.
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER TILLS are very BM011
and very easy to take. One or two pills make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
please all who use them. In vials at 25 cants; .
eve for 51. Sold everywhere, or sent by ma&
CABTEll MEDICINE 50,, Ilcia
12il1. Small S Iris,
A+0.0.1...aganraratell __1.11211
AS QUIOK At ('idir TWLEPOISB.
.4. Well -Told Si ory for the Intemperate.
One night a well known citizen of a
western city who bad been walking for
some time it, tho downward path, came out
of his house and started down town for a
night cf carraval with some old companions
he had prnmised to meet. His yoene wite
bad besought him with imploring eyes tb•
epem, the evening with,her, and had re-
minoed him of the time when evenings,
paps( d in her company were all too short.
Bio little dauehter had clung about hie
kooseani coaxed in her pretty, wilful way
for pato. " to tell her some bed.titne
stori-4, • but habit wee 6tronger than love.
for child and wife, and he eluded bartender
questioniug by the deceits and excuses.
which are the convenient refuge of the-
intempernte, and so went on his way.
When he was some blocks distant from
his home he found that in changing hist -
coat be had forgotten to remove his wallet,
and he could not go out on a drinking bone
without money, even though he knew his
family needed it, and his wife was
economizing every day more and more in
order to tnake up his deficits ; so he
hurried back snd orept softly past the
window of his little home in order that he
might steal in and obtain it without run-
ning the gauntlet of either gnestions or
caresses.
But 0.N he lookea through the window
something st,..yed hie feet ; there was a fire
in the 1.rat,-, within—for the night was
Chili—and it lit up the little parlor and
brought cut in startling effect the pioturea
on the hearth Then- in the soft glow Of
the firell,ht knelt his child st her motherts
feet, ita em til 'movie clasped in prayer, its
fair head bowed ; end, as its rosy Eine
whispered each word with ohildieh distinct-
ness, tbe fattier listened, spellbound, to
the words which he himself had eo often
uttered at his own mother's knee.
" Now I lay me down to sleep.
His thoughte ran baek to his boyhood
hours, and as he compressed his bearded
lips he could eee in memory the face of
that mother, long since gone to rest, who
Vaught his own infant lips prayers which
he had long ago forgotten to utter.
The ohild went on end completed her
little verse, and then, as prompted by the
mother, continued,
"God bless mamma, papa, and my own
self,"—then there was a pause, and she
lifted her troubled blue eyes to her
mother's face.
"God bless papa," prompted the mother,
sof tly.
" God bless papa," lieped the little one.
" And—pleaee send hire home sober "—
be could not hear the mother as she said
Ibis, but the child followed in a nlear, in -
attired tone:
" God—bless papa—and please—send
him—home—sober. Amen."
Mother and child sprang to their feet in
alarm when the door opened so suddenly,
but they were not afraid when they eaw
who it was, returned so soon; but that
night, when little Mary was being tucked
up in bed, Ober such, a romp with papa.
she field in the sleepiest and most contented
of voices:
" Marrone, God answers most as quick tue
the telephone, doesn't he 2"—Selected.
Richest of Dressmakers.
Mrs. Liddy la the richest dressmaker in
New York. She is said to be worth about
e1,000,000. Real estate is her hobby.
Mrs. Katherine Donovan, aged 45, ia
worth 5500,000, all made in dressmaking.
She lives in New York.
1' Riding is my life," says Mrs. White,
worth $750,000, all made in New York
dressmaking, She in a clever horse
woman.
More. Switzer, dressmaker, New York, ise
worth about $500,000.
—Heart failure may now be considered
the (Male of so many eivaroes.
—That is quite a decredee in salary
which redtesee the indent° of Lord Bevel.
stoke, head of Bering Brotherie banking
house from 5200,000 to $20,000.