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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1885-5-7, Page 2►iiiAli3�iN,Gr PAPER PATTERNS. The Scott Aott OJ. Canada Tem- 7:'•a4usel• of th' tuenicieality w1 lo Norway. ,1 s ant ig t . penance A( t• Yh (.' 1 f Oi 't l G' . t tortes t offoOCC era, committed 1 On one of the trains bound for New F -_ a oneci o avers induce hull I ! set atpar not less thou oue•third pat stow women Who Live Away from the ° W fount Jutsehei ,trtc•itore.i in 1 York, passing through this city the (rovi1e!1 out last tt'tcetc). Centers of Fashion are Able to cut laud leeked bay which I will can for 1 other day, was a crowd of girls They ' jfines received. a Mal to securt 1, Their Garments stylishly. convenience sake l3ruti.itial, '}'herb are ! were evidently from some college or I On Friday tut, :gray let, by .order of the : tions for hirrectiotls of this Ad. r _ -__.-_ _ ; fifty Bruysdals ill :�or►t.ty, and this i. t boarding-scltaol .near Boston, as they i tt ad l'erniterniaca Act the ene gine itaciva Oneott or often 1iearsof the severe fashions The ••constantly tired- recline so often „ not alts of them. That is all wthlcit 1 were in two Boston .$s Albany cars. ' beta adopted er the pelt of thin hauty, set "ye alder time; of plain skirts and need say. It foetus the head of a d cp i which way had all to tltemaeives, experie ,red i, WO et!srltt ti# iulpotetishrit k''t vitalit the shall . f such seeu- bodices, tine in material but simply constructed, even for "the Sunday: best," and we can but loot: in astonish- ment to see the contrast a few years have brought about. Wondering how this t revolution hail t taken plate theinnaturally thought t b Side uac> to some 1 zi wake tflgfee liming stated his them, :,b'Qct, he wee [ o:rii1; t,rd to a suite of i rich meadow -land and grassy umdulat- locked, they wonclered, and their won- ^coli espies on keep for site., or directlydee or • device., t • neon 1 t , • l tarp as 4 Gel tl•any r g, hills stretch along the fiord for der was increased to intense curiosity indirrc y, } i . wm� ta<• a ne •t I. N, :,s anumber.f a ro- when e r was ua D but "' ° is rlra rete tt n ¢ + , • deep and dark that the sun, save in the girls were they na ora oug _ ,alai purposes, or for one t t reporter for tilt' \env Yorl; ,l,itzl awl 3 o i t to 4 �° wee sense of atrruatll aa1 energy, w'.. revN • lled on a large fashion-bora:*' height of summer. can never look: into they were smokier, ears. •When they t. trade or rn.uufaotaro, shawl. within the y' e.hem white en the immediate shores trail the doors null found they were !county, by himself, Iiia oleik OrvaUt or tie- inlet well stacked With (lab: and lied- There was it crowd of Tale students at 1 . ado** we quote from the Statutes the fel. Ayer's sarsal genial, #weds asci tti'ielles the dock, and whitlow. and wolf-tisll. anti the station who left on the same train flowing: - other monsters. The landscape is at Most of them were leaking for a smoke bl avtl 1210!'t'uiea tato' a uI spa, Nutt prvwotes g e grand and gentle; migb t snow- : inn -car, and when they saw curls of PART 3. sac. mJ8. ^-•-Frottt the day iu Which :digestion of tht: laud a!atl the assiaattatiun Of one g g , to g J I dh: Act comes into force, no person, furless strengthening q!tutide;. The system being capped mountains cleft into gorges so ` •intake through the windows Ail the ears 1 It l a for exclusively eaorainentat or umbel- . tIIUS l,ar'It;UCute.t, the reeling titltitll} OIA:I411jes ante into force, kat :11e inforuiation of our ! blood ttu.l c egarnt vnfet b - t l of ° ing !t r barter, or in the consideration Of the 1 d from the estate a p they saw thea It dy b ...Mo. }aeon°I �•i lutxlt' ttt• circ leul.tnnees, i ?a near our lake auditing!. g ! which. am the sea. on theyrowd platform, and looked longingly ' becA'r.ge and pert of which is spirituous or, • s g e-elad slopes and ' they would like to be. 6 - t s :Tele sacramental ur- .., knew what to do. til! the inventive grassy ands covered- : part. s ra be made genius of man came to the rescue with :t 11 bac of ' f 1 ; miles, and . pretty ig a girls ding busily e•ng i••etl in cut, bonder, h 1 paternally K l ' the d that several of , pnrctamse of any other :property glen, tt, _t ` parous om er, w o rules pa erns y girls - la to Car, an lug "' and folding., paper". 1" : over his mountain valley, a river runs thein were smoking cigarettes, A t an. peeiih, any spirt of bt uor, or i is aNda. . i1 ht u ter • t . tit exiva more Mahar- Q ]i' h whole f h g d cigarettes, clustered 1 ani, nlixe'1 liqupi capable of be lug u t 2 !•!t1P ::bled t/-' :21i .ral,tlrt•.•9l:rlifr's' bllh. { teaving'8 a nide r p. , o .thrraise intoxicating. and who yet Iw•;uahe! ttz I.rt•p up with 'winds down with an everitowing stream ' into the windows of the ears where ' sea ser •, Prvvid The cuckoos eel always that the • the fashion., of tin d,.1, slit at a no, through heathery pin ptie et .rule for exc a t p i with wild roses it was evident that the girls were t 1 11 1 b . druggists and rend- nei bilberries. from some co age, ruse many ar a. only Gtt the Certificate G a c erley m.4u ' s were calling in the ! them wore society pins, and the appear 1, tr=ill the wine is rr4tuire:l for eeeraen4,ntat taper pattern.. This idea gave rise to wood as we came up. widgeon and once of the crowd was that peculiar to ° purposes. t,large w.e business, e.. �;eite rallywas 'tin�con ' wild ducts were teaching their young college boys -only these were girls. Sr n, -set. 4. deur of etso ctus iettheltd cn-' v e c h tnFu i , xi a u liquor at a ie t n r were playinga but nqn g P 'e cards. q *feed= with 1(1 .:Alt 4,f sewing -me- lila'--iii$- ter -c t h rake caro of utero -lues; av „ Sew ran) ,:trines thus combining the advertising q .ter -catchers flew to and fro -they have N were drinking; at least a reporter who "sat put•i,(,Fe.. dre.. shalt ba lawful onlg fly ;: no fear of wen in a place where no one g was attracted by the sight, and rade h such tarngttlst4 and, other vendors as may iw emcee then se fur 1 11 I es he:irtments. , cares to hurt them. Boats with tint- on the platform to Bridgeport, saw no ? •pe chilly lieeuted thereto * " ` the 101'number t ewer several tl l:bilge i leave started i ber were assini down the river to a ° bottles, or any sign that the gtris Hutt- " IA% to exceed one in each township, iter two a ..... ndel>s'rdeutly.:that one taste titin has : gn4 extrh tGWel :Hud in *+ides slot esr.ettin;, ''tell *sea up its. n etee.t,edtparttueat.. carr=1ui11 apposite the mouth. The lake fated their brothers ill anthin ltit the `one ter each gad ill itdtabitiiuta ; dung! �/ t raper l:ittcrtle having absorbed. all the1 d B!'rdok LooD B1T.TERS out at which it flows is two miles tong, card -p ay}uq au smoking. can • ,sue wb u for melie nal rurpodw. to be in 4 1O�dt •� y and ends 1.. a sAatit glop, closed uta bards lila attributed to the whole aplt:ll, time. and attention of the cont- by precipices at the head and on either • 'h ',atty.., via: tell memet=rite e patterns side. There was beauty here and grand- ere m:tlic:' i cur, foga of all kinds. front mutton to 1 "11'ht tt :a '11.41:1111!2°.4 lr•ii,tl ha: tts?I•n �llbinittt.tl. ; bllberri115, new ripe and as large as --designing' .tylei i, :t l,rt'fr.' on by it• grapes. Above all, we knew by past ...les-. .ta1r; tno-.lt' u;' iron p:t}u•r nr l experience that sea -trout Swarmed in shown own a 1 reetet tustwin„g,or plate, bonder 9 acqu acquaintance the. wo bad made river. The ade anti hu. txv n il,prt)vtat, e' 1n1n'tent tit. before, anti the old man. Iearning from #notate the design inelu•,ipuiuslin, l the pilot' who wewerc came on board at a Iheitt; t M"11tt•h• Varetui tD"iit: n" Per- to pay his respects. He himself was •.ctul)!r I.n.ltug the part, tl►,itther' got with bis son and the schoolmaster Beet and ltt;-r ll-lt t;tvnni I''1 t e l i tri +nt ' whit* ese 1 }tale and stout, age perhaps 60. with •a14,dcls, to ili.nrt` a .tart• :ind+h li,ll lig, + dark hale, which as yet had no grafi sin•, :tee #filch 1.1 a 11"""del. who ° streaks in it; is manner very much f a gentleman doing the honors of his nears the gla,ita ' t:t. till A=vert` len=til ; country and his dominion. with rough ... proverb, rh :alju ii•at anti the garment .nallelt-, 111tat 1...,;!011..!, riitit the prig- , dienity, *alai de.tt .., ! h , t -.''!It atlnttti Fs tin's dts lake, his river. all that lee had. :'at tt, the Alt .t1 iption.tvriter, who . he gala us free use of. The fish had ,, the cur window the girls were pia ing die ;dealt Art. l •nrefn.ly rip=en apart. at the sante thee net cattle up in ant' number yet, but whist quietly and methodically. They tat t+.•.xt: G.---1 r.rti.l'a t11at Mort orate t, .tt tri:itl� e• leu torsion that it naav In' ' perhaps there wiglat be woe. He ac- played just as fellows would, and the ; rttutl�xnta': camfur; • ti tLt, bti iursur of >;r,a.. `'.'''''''.'4 rt•pi;tet-,i frtltu the dirt etiun-i `` ceptcd a glass of wine. beim, temper- s whole thing looked so much like a mild - 4ua encs noel ns+altiatt alma or other liquors eat• ter.:!-. 111 aeeuuip.iny e.:Alt p:tttern, ate. batt not severely alnstemt�ue. The ;caricature of college loco on their way:.; t ;uut�ritiw t. may tl1t ll have glad a thr in tIin st te\t a„tut•: lire '•radar. ►►it4t t:t;:e; tit:• vnunner once touched nothingof that horns that it was hard to realize that , the tlaiiml gmm�titibt tender the oontlisonn It+•tr , ,t •,;:u tits t :and t Art; :eft a :stat kind -to -tellers they called themselves. 'that girls, too. might be Navin}; their ttit i. L, in suis aiII 6. li .•: tl'• •l , t 'Intel) 'art ittt°ia1�• In Alt tau The •were two tine-ltaol:in lues. but little, pleasures like the ulliursex.- -Nt:t4 , ern awe. i. Annexa the tGeulntactletrra. nt witntmt thelather's genii t v, and with alt ,'atm Alt s.ntities of net less than one pinit, to be 1 FOX stilt OSI OF crowd, as out of fifty or so In the car, rrlgorted item Lha ouch u•tes. slid to be newel trot more than tan, who were in one ,duly 1111 the certdacste 01 m lu1>dtexd luau heir. Corner of the ear, were stuolun;g and lug no iuterea t in the grant: by lila dont-: placing cards. ; gist or vendor ` - . and it shall be the duty Cigarettes were the only things the of the dtuggistx or other vendor to tile 1110: girls smoked. They bad no eigara or ; e: raif:eater and 1:cep a rtubder of all such "• pipes. Several of them had dainty sales. iedicalitig the vamp of the purchaser holders, and a couple of them ware ort- and. the quantity sold, ant to make an mine I deutlj-� moersellalttus, and had Seen use, al return of ell such salve en the asst of P4 AS 1110 daiutr ltstht-brown coloring. a •tuber in otery your to the t'olltetor et in- • lan'1 ilevinne within whose tesentle district showed. No laud talking was heard. l lea :minty is situated. • The girls were .at•Iag a quiet enjoyable : ,;sr;c• ii. -Provides twat any prudat't•r smoke in it ladylike way. None of the ,,.f eider or licensed disailler or brewer, liar - non -smokers seemed to think it at all ,»g a+li.ti:lury ru-bretrery in the county tuts out of the way in the girl$ who smoked.: st•11 thereat to drtt:gista or :Altera litenust to All were young looking, audit there seri the liquor he ham Ith autuetnrsd ; iu the were any teachers in the crowd they do ca' a ut ,► to or beer in quautities not 1el:a than not look it, t glut piu.ulls ; the .Thole to lw taken away From all that could be seen through It tine time and re�l nrd beitind the lounger .;ir=ate, ;ant lttri/ar"t,ii n• a• u1:uk4ed up 1 1 t d li of 1 ,�.e..,.---- .1 ort native �wins. when autlt.urlsett by the 114 lt1-:41Ah to title 411 11:'ttiufn-writ4't' I :irg•ht tiny of l+t11 rtghteou.nes•. \i4nti'eipat C-.tetucti ar ntlt't a^lthtiaitl', Art )tell "11„-.::: • 111 fly silt. rind li,t: a•ul tt1 a• itltcl4 .t of the mordent was a bear - ;t Marvelous Stream.. s u)y nnnatx•r ut rtnliun., hu1a1 urro to Ara. fur •wet•ti+nt� t') tl,e •1iltlt•r, wthit 1.,--"h11-.,"t • n tnie•14 they halt jn.t killed aniongthem, At a dltit-tneo of thirty miles south 1 sarramt•atat our}'•ales. 1l ht 1 ►m n„mmi.tintr n.nt tl;.r of the River lliatnnte our routegpassead l ;;Tn.•rtl:r, ti.--ltt:widt'a th t Un►t,. ex - by a natural object of considerable inte g e1''~•itety in the wh:desalt• trade aunt la'tt'use•l l terest-»a stream. or rather rill, of yel-o sett lay wh'ettselee, tufty self intnsiettinit lowish white fluid like petroleum issue •r t.qu-nr:: to Attu,,. t i s and (:rhes lieenst'.1, but , ing from the mountain 'Aide at a consid- -t,nlr lin qua14ti1ie: of not less )1ta11 ten eel.arabic! height anti trickling #low n the 1• lin. or 10 elle.: int v...to. OS 145• Lai k'tiIltl 11:1• i sla 14' 'till 141St ill fail parous soil of the son to let trete twill carry the same 1rs) anti the 1 valley below. The soure•e from width t+ee•tt art hunt,. it ftOWOlL wa? at the junction, where a i Seaere. 0--Dre�larc i that at arty ler:.ar- ' Interspersed t (entnuet 'satinet a pro•ineer, elilltiller, brewer, hard metamorphic recti, p 4 miuufactu rr_ iht,,e lint (►r hence. elle int•, with small crystals of amide, overlay frailly t alit 1 turutee 0 Ilene,. of baron(; Monti, a- stratum of volcanic- tufa. It was ttstsun to behert'that the ligttnr sobs rratdtt foruted like the erater of a volcano, .1,0 lortlItcith re,nov('tt b;otili l tbo lttnit of and full of black, bituminous matte o .kirt',', ready the t•t*v'•i•tl•t•- tel hold t11a a-.tttn„ 4 ;that t..,, .....,,............. . ...._ 4..tte:tt Innen conall4eteii."' til •n*' i ,.t' sheep. As the ltoels itl- "liitty :we they 111:141•' tB, tit different i R 8't tt:t' hear -i multiply alongwith. ,er,t,lt.;•' l:a :it, :arid t.;4' shooting of one IS an :one *„',rather. who 11:4' a st' re•in Alf ' ••t to tae it]'etltt 1I1nt'11 Of. This par- Iaea.ilr4't1lCttt known only to.the pro• ' •.•• " u,.1*O'I r't; Beall (:lint allure With ttrepares separate pattern. or . "'• .e.tt :r .I*t. Fn tin'rlgg111g,:tied honied tu•t'it'•r1 ut t11e garment properly en- "",ts age. grlunuig there. n. much to .ir`tta or tiltini, u•ti to ,nit troth creat rr.l.r4.t• the pleasure of the crew In gee out entail. lie mettle these pate-bo;lyd t • •t.hetru among the bilberries. - ;,at:erne Iei tar tit,t' serge `•11.0, to the %tk4tle, tri Lonyln(lf a Magazine. :titter•(, who +tart►# i t'iarrP large tables a �. ettit Ililtnteteee ,. t'et' .'t t1.-.ttt' papier in Amateur 1"hlrtUj•,rt1111tJ• -:t)e1•. of Inky :• retd before them. the .; ►,attern i, ttyutr marked upon tttetu and , ut wvitli Inre'e ablate, :ttt1 the11 is head- 'You have no idea how this busing,. el to girl., who with trainer tinges increasing," said :t trod-knatVndeal- ,. or in photographic materials the other vapidly fold :And plum. them Fat the en- I day. :elopes ne.w ill waiting. "We are selling thousands of dollars "Much art week is rttiuhetl in nn es. worth of materials to amateur photog- '.tbli'i4utttit at thi. land. u' tilt' cloth repliers now. You r+Lc, there are lots '14t4114, lfv•t• t:tint;, t" be eked bed of them that take ti fancy to the art. 's skillful tu•ti„ts, who are to Mint; o111 Mime of them at liter stub to New .it the rutr.t irracetnlln:Ulnnlr the curves. eeld , and various noveltiesrepreseuted .n the fa.11ion, to mance as acceptable a vood-cut as possible to line in the illus- trated eattalogue, upon the envelopes, g v ^ d •4rtr�ln mediums, Most Intl other .! ► „_ . OS houses issue 0 fa.hts.,n paper, a few .,pity and catching note, from the out- world ltt : r world helping the eireulation of what .without there would he a pure uulvertis- .ngsheet. " "Oh, res. a rood many; and they Ano these pattern!: ninth sought af- bnv the 'best and most expensive mate - ter?" rials. Why. : prominent physician in rt the Seen Aft hunts, fur C'tit.tt,tlptit41 uttt`itta hot and sticky. which could be stirred ! die tlaue,, up to the (lepth of about eighteen See. 10h. -Provides that the tn'ualty for hushes. the vnditt on of the Ilrt'ce.u41g pint of the' Floundering, in it was a polecat or tt Avt, shall be aG0 for the first offence, not Irss skunk (Mephitis varlans), having been than $100 for the stem' offence, and to be enticed to its fate by, the desire of se- iluprirttnetl for a terns not exceeding two euriug t4 bird caught in the natural } months for the third and fur every seine - bird lime, till a bullet from the revolver j (trent offence. Au employe 44 equally as of one of tine party terminated the "l'to as the principal. and all Inters, itic., skunk's struggles to extricate itself 1o11c144' bath Flt • *lac, 101... -Any l+rusrention for any such they see advertised as late as $i:. . w1iich it was hopelessly captive. The 1 i r, theivanay or a tut£ the f:e� 1tnt mcttrrlCEblul rel ht liIer ty- emir within whose official division the of - IOW pas committed -or by or in the iwvw ttr' any person. :,sr. 102. -•It shall be tee duty of such Collector or to bring suchprosecution, rilen v- 1 er he shall have reason to believe that a prosecution can tie sus1airted. Szc. 103 --.Such prosecution may bre brought ; - In Ontario before any Stipendiary Magis- trate or before any two Justices or the Peace for the county ; if the offence was commit- ted in a town, before the Mayor thereof or uny two justices of the Peace. Sac. 104.- If prosecution is brought before a Stipendiay Magistrate or Mayor, no other Justice shall sit or take part therein. Sec. 106. -Prosecutions shall be com- menced within three months after the alleg- ed offence, and shall be heard and determin- ed in a summary manner. Sac. 107. -Every offence against the Act may be prosecuted as directed by the 'Aot respecting the duties of Justices of the Pence out of Sessions in relation to summary convictions and orders ;' and all the provi- sions contained in the said Act she ba ap- plicable to such prosecutions and to the ju- dicial and other officers before wham the seine are hereby authorized to bo brought, in the same manner as if they were incor- porated in this Act, and as if all such judici- al officers were named :n the said Aot. Sze. 108. -In case a credible witness proves upon oath before the magistrates be- fore a prosecution is to be brought for the violation of this Act, that there is reasonable cause to suspect that intoxicating liquor in the respect to which such offence has been committed, is any dwelling-liouse,stole, &o., such magistrates may grant a warrant to search such premises, and if such intoxi- cating liquor be found to bring the same he- irs . e - int. SEC. 111, -By this section it would appear that appeals against convictions eau only be taken when the case has been tried before a Mayor, or before two Justices of the Peace. SEC. 119. -When in any house, eto., a bar, counter, beer pump, kegs or appliances similar to those found in. taverns where spirituoas liquors.are acenstomea. -to be sold, are .found in such places, such liquor shall be deemed to have been kept for' sale; unless the contrary is proved by the defendant ; and. the; necupant of the house shall be taken to be the person who keeps the liver there- in for 'sale, Penalties shall be paid to the Justices 'of the oabo'.and by them handed to the Inspec- at,d by him, applied as the Lieut. -Governor may. direct • where the Inspector is not the York anti buy cheap outlet', suc11 t►s , from tiro warm and adhesive emir Doer. -To move tAs lieu err gently, 3 to 4 1411*; tkoroughlp, 4 la 6 Rills. R rperissoe uFlld(Girin telt proper dole in each oto. For Constlpatlon, or Costttrenaai, no moody L s0 ettectiTe 5* Ulla ?telae. They Immo rarnisr daily action, and 111. store tho bowels to a healthy coodtttOn. For Indigeettan, or Dyspepsta, Assails F1414 aro laraluable,and* stun carp. Reart.buras bens of Appetit*, Toni $Iom*oh, Fletataney, 1atuttteaa, Egad. echo', Nmnivates, NAn4s.el, ere all ra141T14 and cured by Axt:tt'3 lux& In Thor Complaint, B1i1onaDlsarders, sacd Jaundice, Aura's T'rt.ta sbael,t be ;iron In doses large enough to excite the brit and bowels, ,salt remove eonstlpatloa. Asa ekaualag modicle* An the Spring, theft Pima aro unequalled. Worms, caused by a morbid condition at the bowels, aro expelled by tt o ie Pmts. ZraptlonI, Skin Dlsesmos, and files,. Oho emelt of Indigestion or Constii+attoa, ars oared by the Luo of Av ER's Putt&, For Cold', take Atari's Ptt.1.s to open the pores, remote Inflammatory secret:aea, and allay 15o favor. For Diarrhoea and Dysentery, caused by sudden colds, indigestible foal, etc., AIMV* rims aro the true remedy. Ithournellsnt, Clout, ;neuralgia, and $clnUeesotteu result trent digestive derange. moot, or colds, and disappear on ren ov4:g the cause by the use of Arrtt'3 Tumors, Droplet, Etdney'Complaints, and other disorders caused by dc•ti-4 obitruotton,, are cured by ASExt 3 11815. Suppression, and Painful Menstrua. Cion, have a sato and ready remedy in Well, of course. they are not satisfact0-' overflow from this fountain was, as de- rv, and then thus come hero and select seribt•d, like a stream of petroleum two first-class materials. costing from $100 or three feet wide trickling over a bed upward. ,home invest $dt1D, and some of pitch or some such substance, which extended to a much greater width along the edge of the running stream at its contact with it. Thismaterialwas of a -very sticky nature, becoming grad- ually harder as it spread further out, assuming the appearance of asphalt when it become mingled with the loose sand of the adjoining soil. While engaged in examining this natural curiosity, we came upon two small birds, caught in the sticky sub- stance at the edge of the stream; they were still alive, but upon releasing them both the feathers and the skin came off where they had come in con- tact ontact with the bituminous matter, so that we had to kill them to put an end to their sufferings. No doubt they had been taken in by the appearance of water which the stream presented, and had alighted to drink, when they dis- coveredtheir mistake too late. Their fate suggested the idea that in a dis- trict so devoid of water others of the feathery tribes trust constantly become victims to the same delusion in a simi- lar manner, and upon a close inspec- tion of the margin of the stream the correctness of this inference was es- tablished by the discovery of numerous skeletons of birds imbedded in 'it; nor were those of small quadrupeds, un- represented, among which we recog- nized the remains of a fox. -Froin "Across the Pampas and the,Andes." go even as high as $500." "1 suppose quite a number of wealthy • peoplelake it up for their own amuse- ment?" "Over a million patterns are sold this city spends :t great deal of ills 7early by one house. agene.es being es- tablished all over the world, though it ss conceded that the most substantial .:orders are from the growing west. and From towns where the facilities for old gaining reliable styles are fcew and fee - Ole. A love of being a la mode lies either latent or expressed in the heart leisure time in the summer in the prac- tice of the art. 1 suppose wo have sold. him not less than $1,500 worth of pho- tographic apparatus :rid materials du- ring the past year. We got an order from him yesterday for about $200 worth. He's at one of the seashore re- sorts for rest and recreation, and - trf every woman, and to the favored amuses himself by taking pictures. He ••nes living in the city :t walk down the •eading street or avenue brings to the :wind of both tunny and old some new :rloa of d: ess. with whish the country zir1 can only bo bie;scd by the advent et' a city visitor or by the fashion pa- ters brought by the kindly mails. Mese paper, are e;tgcrly waited for and grasped on their arrival. Each •new style is conned and criticised, and the want of the heart tilled and happi- ness made complete by the knowledge '.hat a few cents will bring the requisite eattorn and full directions for the mak- ing-of ak- innof the garment desired." "How many new styles are brought nut a month?" "From fifteen to sixty new styles aro manufactured monthly, and these 'sometimes form a nucleus for a two hundred -page magazine partially made op of stories, articles on art decora- -!ion, practical housekeeping, etc., forming still another solid medium for further circulation of the styles.manu-. actured. Twice a year styles are •killed' in order to keep the stock re 'Iueed to the proper number. The un- 1esirable.fashions are easily detected en. examining the orders, which reveal •tometimes a fickle and changeable pub- lie taste. A stroll through an estab- 0shiment like this described is interest. ing.as illustrating a manufacture well repaying the happy invention of the discoverer of a want long felt and sup relied with the. little oblon g envelopes 'ontaining the Mysterious angles, anrves, and curious shapes- `of brown tissue;• dotted and 'notched, called pa. gsar .patterns." purchased one of our large lenses. costing $450, and can take as large and fine a picture as any artist. Then there is another well-kuowvn professional man in the city who has purchased at least $500 worth of materials of us. and takes a great interest in the art "Are ladies affected by the mania. too?" "Certainly; a dozen or more ladies fromBeaconstreet and other aristo- cratic portions of the city have pur- chased materials of us. Some of them have purchased outfits costing $200 or $300, and even more. They take these outfits with them when they go to the seashore or the mountains for the sum- mer, and are able to spend their leis- ure in a very pleasant and satisfactory manner." "How long dons it take them to learn the art? 1 suppose they have to ac- quire some knowledge of chemicals, don't they ?" "Bless you,it's easy enough to learn. Chemicals? Catch ladies meddling with chemicals! No; they don't have to use 1110211 at all. The dry- slates are used now almost entirely. Yea see, it is not necessary to dovtelnp those pie: at once. Aplate can be exposed :ind then put away to be developed nt live person's Convenience." "How do the ladies succeed?" "Finely; some of theta make as flue pictures, as can be found anywhere."- - Bosten Glob°. ' Athletes, professional trainers, hunt- ers, mountaineers, all physically strong and perfect men, habitually breathe through the nostrils. This is claimed to be the reason for their freedom from colds. The time -lock is not, as is generally supposed, an American invention. 'The first time -lock was made in England in 18.31, but American mechanics have brought the device to its present state of perfection. Among the Geauga County records at Chardon, Ohio, is a musty old book, containing the license permitting Brig.- ham righam Young and Mary Ann Angel -his first wife -to enter into lawful wedlock. The document is datedFebruary 10, 1834. ter of Licenses where he is the complainant, counplaih'ant, then it shall be paid to the AYE R'S PI LLS. Sul: directions. an Ta;IJos languages, SO. company welt pall::ige. Pm:raaED ill" Dp.3.C.Ayer &Co.,Lowell,Mm. $oldby all Druggists. MIS OUT gad re=turn to 211 With 100411• 4ile tG '11get 1,3 return ltuul t4 Gulden Bre of Goods that will bring yon nt Moro mile) til ti anything el.,. 1u Au.eriva. Yost. 101(1ine if you start quits 4. CITY WV11LEY co Y•trinttuth. N. 5. 1885 13arp©r's Magazine. 1 LIai.ISTAT1;ll. With the new vrlutue. beginning in Decent Ater, ITArrnte's 31AGAZINI1 wilt conclude its thirty-fifth year. The oldest periodical of its type. it is yeti iu each- new volume, a encu' magazine not simply because it presents frest: subjects and now victures, but also, and eltioiir• becaueo Anti adv,uees in til a methrti 11 - self of magazine uialcine. In a wo,-4,-rho 3fa0- nzixE beeomes more and more the faithful 11(11;1'4;z: f curhrattrfaeeatuvdirt-oonmnLeading for 1885 1120 new serial novele by Co .STANCE FnNIuonF. WooLIoN anti 'V. I1. IiownLr.R; a new novel entitled ."At the Rod Glove ; ' descriptive ilia s trated vapors by F: li .3llnLNT, It, SwntN GIN. GOoRDsie3tlA'.s•AShnoytolIps 1t,18dn3nd iluhat elby 331731M important ponperaou Art,Scielce - , etc. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. Per Year HARPER'S MAGAZINL' ..........................44 00 HARPEIt'S WEEKLY 4 0(, 11/131PE tt'S BAZAR ' 4 00 I4ARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE. ........ 2 00 HARPER'S i'RAl2I{LIN SQL. ALL LIBRARY. 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