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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1902-04-10, Page 3HEALTH IN SPRING, Nature Requires Assistance During These Months, To help throw earth° Impurities Mut Blotto Ammons'isitert During. the Winter Months — purgativep Should Not be Lieeet—it is a Tonle Thist Is Needed, In this climate there are many rate hOlIS Why people feel all out Or gear Lu the spring mottle*. Perhaps the chief of theta et the lOnt . lames in Imperfectly Vnatilattal offices., shape and laterite durina the winter menthe. You may feel butt there Is notlitea e.meoutt the matter ; you are) only a little tired atter sliaitt exertion, oe Perhapet your aPpetate Is flokle, or lietie pimpler emetic/11s on the t, kin show that the blood is not eet pure as It shoula be. If you feel tale way, not only your comfort but eatur health demands that you take plover steps to (amuse yourself of the Mood iMpuritles that are ree evolvable for your condition. You need a tonic, bloat, purifier, nerve strenegliener and general up.Idter of the entire twetern. Dr. Wallowa Pink 1-1118 for Pole, People meet all thee requirements more perfectly than any other medicine. Tema) are and not violent and weak- ening like purgattve meelleinea Nature doe e not require a violent measure In spring, 'but a helping hand to throw off the imparitles which haye ticcumulated during the winter, and ito toning and strengthening every organ and function that a condition of perfect health will pre- vail. Everyone—old and young— ()eight to take Dr. Williams' Plnk Piller in the spring. Them is no other Medietne will do you se much. good. Mr. Sanees Selmon, postmaster, Sal- mon Creek, N, B., says "Last spring I wart feeling deeldedly unwell. I was ;weak, dizzy at times, and continu- ally felt tired. My appetite was peor and 1 wits losing in weight, I tried seemed rnalicines, but nothing tile me any good until I began the use of D. Williams' Pink 1 ills, and a few boxee of these made me feel like a mew person. I would advise all who feel run down and out ef sorts to take Dr. Williami"Pink 1 ills." Dr. WilliamsPink 1 Ills are also effective In the cure of cal dieenses due toepoor, thin, watery blood or weak nervee, Do not _take a stibsta tote for these pills—it Is a witete of money and it menace to health to do so. See that the full name "Dr. Williaras' Pink 'Mlle for Pale People," is on the wrapper around every box. Bold by all medteine dealers, br sent postptad at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2,50, by addressing the Dr. Williams 'Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. Ever Seen This Done? Five Men come lu together. Each asks or all the others, "What are you going to have?" The bartender spreads out his hands on the edge of the bar, attentive and prepar- ed to work quickly. Every man in- sists on "buying ' • something to drink in his turn. Each takes what the others Insist on giving ham Each thinks that he is hospitable. But the bartender knows that these *nen belong to the Geeat American .A.sso,ciation efor the Manufacture of Drunkards through "treating." Each of those men might peahaps take his glees or beer, or eeontethieg worse, with relative safety, But stemdily as stampeded animals positing each other over a precipice, eLUJIL ineists on baying polsoe la his turn, And every one spends his motley to intake -every other one, if possible, a hard drinking and a wasted man.—New, York TOurnal. YELLOWSTONE ,NATNNAL PARK, eine of the most delightful spots on the American continent, and more easily reacted via 'Union Pacific than vitt any other line, is the Yellowstone National Park. The stage ride from Mediae by tbe palatial Concord Conches of the Monicla & Yellowstone Stage Company is through scenery bardi,y inferior to the park itself. Side trip, from Ogen, Utah, or Po- catello, Idaho, via armada, and Mon- & Yellowstone Stage Co., in both directions, will be furnished holders of all tioleetei (one way neat and, se-• viand class, regular tourist, or epee- roundetrip excursion tickets), sold at Denver, Cheyenne and points east, teaseing. tarough Ogden or Pocatello to points 3n the States of California, Nevada, Oregon, Washington and that part of British Colombia lying north of the State of Washington, upon application to 0. S. L. agents at either Ogdenoir Pocatello, at the very kw mate of' 040,50. , • This rate will Include -rail and stage fare covering seven and one-heaf cl•ays' trip, including all meals and lodging beyond Mopida. • G. G. Hating, G. A., 126 Woodward &Venue, Detroit, Mich, MARMALADE'S NEW, NAME. At the evening meal that delicloas table ttelicitoy Itaewn as narmalade Wan being passed, and the boy'e mother declined It. Ilis father, how- ever, helped himself bountifully when tite preserve watt IMO before him, WherenpOn the youthful jeeter looked thoughtful fur aeveral acoorido and 'Welly remarked: "I think that bet- ter be called papaiade." FOR EVERY WIDMER. A Manitoba Mother Gives Practical Advice on the Core of leobles. It is well known that nearly all in - feat troubles eprin.g from It disor- dered stomaoh. Indigestion in n, ebild will cause at first peevishness and eleeplessness, but other more- serious troubles will foilow fast, retail, as Colic or erampe, cOnstipletimein 'tome cases., diarrhoea he °there, with fatal results in snotty cases. The mother who negleots having constantly at band the means for treating these ills taker; an awful risk. efro. R. L. MeMillan, Log,oca, Mane Is one mother who is partieularly Well fitted to give advice on the care ed babies, kler Standard twelleine for the minor ailments of hem Intle Meat le Baby's Omen Tablets, nod dee says: "They aro the best metlichie 1 have- ever used fee infant oilmen -La / have given them toony baby for Indigetalonand stomach. trouble and they are prompt and thorough he melting a eure. No mother Should be a angle day with. out Ow Tablete in the bOttee." • alabeari Own Tableta nte for ren Of all Ages, and will care spelt troubles as emsetheationt cella emir ettennelo diarrhoea, tend ample fevers. They are Invaluable for teething Obildren and will break up odds and ler eV en t: Croup. (tea ranteeta to ton - 'tin no opiate or other harmful dreg. Thseolved In water tbey tam be latest With perfect weety to a new born babe. Sold by all deatere in Medi. eine or Mit pent pala at 23 relate II boa by addreesing the Dr. Wililemee afedielne Co., Wee1cs/111e, One. .1171 4, 4? k -u4. .,70k4 j,,I-ttgP14. eething 1» )(wog Hereto,, aeon after the cone; birth, tcot1- Ing aura niLhougli ln the majority of vows of elas meow tree portanee, Affintitle lutee whet aro enown toe mine, to role or teutperartr teeth, and a permanent sot. T110 curritna-ln of the perranneute 15 yllen the trouble etarts. The permanent grintletee (molare) puelt up front belove and force the crowns off, Mane of Gwen. ex.owne are rotted in the feed- ing Imre or ootteg horses same - team liowever, the crowmi (milk teeth) are not thed us they atonal be, food gataere undee.aeath, or eite sharp edges press the gums', with the result that the eon referees to feel, slobbers baslly, anti feetl-boa iti Many eases "tette; "museed up," awl he has a bred breath. The wool pm:- lod for tide to happen Is (tering the eeconO, third and fourth year of the con'a life, Winn, Welt Vents - toms appear, soft mashes Fhoul.1 take the place or Oluel grain, tile Vetere !marten should be consulted, and dilatorY eroWlie removed. If tide Is donerethe improvement notieed by the owner will b. alma; maaleal, The grinders (molars) are the teeth usually affected, the nippers rarely Claingee, however, occur In thoee teeth during eolthood, by mantel of which the observant ere able, to tell the mantel's age: At three years the centre pane Of tL itinerary' n ipp -.es eve cluinged for the 1 teger and permit meet ()nee ; at four, the pairs next the centre once ore exehauged, and at five yeare old the carrier pernutnente almear, nt whab time tin horse is mid to have a full mouth and has at•r1 v al at t ur it y, —Fa rm e r s' Ail- vocat et Care of Harness. The life of a set or liarnees may be very considerably prolongea by the exercise -of a little mere in Its treat- ment. When from accident or neglect Iturness lies been soled, it can easily be el:eternal bv washt et with coigne Reap. .A.s a dreestug for keeping leather or harness pliable, there aro many preparatioas' upon the market. Cod late oil of the eheatier grades Is pow largely- employed for thia pwe- peso instead of lite neat -foot welch our forefathers ueed in mob quart tIty for the presereatloa of Mir harness. 0,1e of the great advaa- tages of using cod liver oll Is that rate and mice usually give a wale berth to any 'harness or other ap- pliances (nestled with this oil.—Ex, Utilize the Hy -Products. One of the reasons advanced by Canadian packers fur the advantage the Ameroan packer has over them in being tulle to pay, on the whole, better pricee for live .stottle, le tho tact that the American utilizes the by-producto. From the blood is got Memel], need In the tate and in metiolite ; borne tine Imola used for gelatine, and handles for brushes, for uuttono, eice bristles for brushes; taeltage for artlacial manure, and eo on eso. that, as It Is aptly put, "mah- out; Is lost in Hie pig but ene squeal." With all the above, the packer has been ladling for further profits, no- vereang to the National Provisioner, wao states as follows ; "The oily, greasy, thick pig skin Is arousing new interest Heretofore, the slaughter house has not seriously bothered itoelf about eleaming the hog while his 'greenhide left on the enreaes and unencenibered with ex - pease brought 8 cents per pound and more as pora, or 12 cents pertpound whet weighed in as cured ham or anoltea bonen, The scientiet will not let thingalone, however, and it may yet pay 'to otrip the hide from tee hog for oommercial purposes. Tbe leather ottletter has demonstrated his ability to ohave hides almost into tiosue leather. With this implement at bits command and a new process in les poseession, an American in - Venter claims that he can split a pig skint to the finenese or a cologne bot- tle -stopper cover and manufacture that artecle at a ridiculously loevl price. He can make the finostrof im- ported' kid glove otook, can displace oiled paper with a better and a cheaper article, and do the same with the fine 'texture of rubber gooses now used foe wals•t shields. et hag hide can be treated so finely and split into so many separate ek ns as to astound the uninitiated. ;With thle prospect before it, the hog okit has a. right to cornooff and to eapeet much, in the near fature."—Fartneret Advocate. HOW TO MAINTAIN SOIL Vaal- . TILI1 Y. F. We Hodson, Live Steele Commationer "We an ,know that it is very de- sirable to have a fertile soil in which to grow erope," says F. P. Peek, of Michigan. "For success in farming depends largely on the fertility of the land. Every ono knows of many, once fertile farms which are not now producing half what they should—scarcely enough to pay for the labor necessary to produce a crop. It is more profit- able to farm, so as to maintain or *improve the eon thanit is to rob the soli of its fertility, and it the end bring ruin to the owner or the rarni." Hoar is this to be done? 1 bdieve our greatest loss of fertility is tile loss ofi lumina A. soil without hums will not carry a crop teuecessfully thtongh a drouth. A clay soll de- void of humus will be lumpy and hard, and will not retain moistare for very long. We all know the ef- fete; on the crop, and the great emount of labor required to pre- pare each a piece of ground for a orop. Hence our nem should be to Mem so os to produee and leave as match humus in the ground as possible. 31,111s Is best aecomplished by' a rotation of crop, and int 1 crop 111 the rotation should be clover, which le our greatest twit renovator. We should alm to feed everything, Or nearly everything produced on the farm, and If we add a little brat1 or eoncentrateil feed to the ration Of each animal, and carefully save and • apply all the Manure, it is easy to Sen that We slain maintaila and Probably add to the totality of the sell. Many matte/at tile ploughing eta det of green otops, bat unless it tarn!' Is very much run down, I Would riot preetice thee unless itt be tie bury a Keeond crop of clover, or a clever erop sowed to eroteet the ground during the tvinter. A. cover erop should Always he sow- ed whenever a piece 01 ground re. maine idle tiering the fell and win. ter. Molly tines we have a plate of stelible Whitth we intend to plant to corn or polettens, 00 Ole we call grow it erop of rye 00 pate and berley, either of which will nake a large growth and eau 1)0 Ploughed under In time to plant to awn. Title adds largely to the hut• TO ftEACOtsDtNONEDAY4 • Take LaxatiVe Ileceries quinine Tabs !eta All tiruggiets refend the motley, if it fail*/ to earn. 1 W, Grovel sap, nettle's' le 00 mu% box. 25n. , LUMBAGO CURED A Sertok18 Case 01 This Palartia Disease IS ReatOrea to 0004 Health. Satittleseteay improveineot Lewis to e (ioittIunel1reatinent whit: It Results in a Complete ea re—Aa loteresting Story whleh will no doubt. Pro% Aneone atiftering with loutibtego. Hielyrood, Ont., Mardi 24.—(Speu- la1)-4ir. itat. Pinnell, or this place, lute for the past two years been a great airforce with that matt pain - fel no etubborn Mimetic—Lumbago. The oath ite starered woe abinoet beyond deeeriptIon, and many were the medicieee tnld treatmentlie need to 'try to -get some relief. However, notlitlig he coulO find seemed to lielp Oita le the least, and lie became very aowniteorted, At hoot someone eitggeeted Deldire KldneY Plile, and Me. Pinnell, al- though velar skeptical, thought be would make one more tzeal for a cure aryl began to uen ti The fleet box did not de him very 11111011 good, but after Jot had used pert of the atoml he began to feet :e change for the better, sobe kept me until he had used In all Revert leuxee, when he was delighted to find that every symptom of the Lumbago had entirely disappeared. I Ills general health is much Im- proved, and he feels better to -day than lie has for years. To say that Mr. Pineal is pleased dues not begin to express ite Only those who have suffered as he did with this very painful disease. can understand the extreme satisfaction of oue who Ilan found a voritplete cure and restoration to health and strength: Lumbago is a direct result or d,is- ordored kidneye and should always be treated as a Kidney Disease. Efforts to cure or even relieve by outward applications are invariably unsuecessful. :Rubbing may In Itself for the time being produce a little relief, but In order to secure( a com- plete euro it Is absolutely necessary to go right to the rope of the trou- ble, The Kidneys must be restored to their normal condition. This le just What Dodd's Kidney Pills lo and tide done the Ltunbago very soon leaves, for without diseased Kidneys there can be no. Lumbago. 4010.1.11.....11•1111111111/ /MM. lims. of tile soil, and wile tend to carry the crop through a drouth without injury. Alt I sale, it should be our ahn to feet1 all or nearly all we raise on our farms for the purpose of keeping up the fertility or the farm, and I believe it to be more profitable to sell our produce hi the form of but- ter, beef, pork, etc., ,than to sell it In the rough. I believe our produce fed to good stock will bring us more than twice what it will sell for on the market. For example, I can feed a cow for 1e3c per day, and have her Ibring in Bric per day or more for butter alone, and t believe the same to be true with all other kinds of etock. Many advocate the use of com- mercial fertilizer. Of course, the basis of all net fertility is the amount of nitrogen, potash and phosphoric acid a soil contains. When we consider that au ordinary crop of wheat of , 25 bushels per acre removed about . 88.75 worth of these elements frone the soil, and a crop of corn nearly as much, we can readily eee that when a soil is exhausted' of these elements, it is quite expensive to replace them by using commereial fertilizers. Now if we need our crops on the farm, we can return about 80 per cent, of these elements to the soil in the inanure, and at the same time get twice tlett market value of our produce. We can readily see that it is more profitable to farm so as to improve our soil, than to sell our crops on the market, and at the same time be losing hea- vily in the fertility of the soil. I would not advocate the feeding of wheat but would sell it and pur- chase bran or cottonseed, meal, which is worth more for feed than wheat, and bas about double the manurial value. If I sold much wheat I would use commercial fertilizer:it freely, for it Is impossible to keep up the farm, and sell grain without their use. If we grow all the forage. crops we can and feed them on the farm, carefully save and return the manure, we need have but little fear about the fertility of the land. Stops the Cough and Works Off the Cold. - Laxative Bronio-Quinine Tablets ear° 84 Cold In one day, No Caro, No Pay, Price 25 cents. A. PHYSIOLOUICAL STUDY. ltire. Slitncliet—I do have suele a time gettiog my boarders up in the morning. I've tried bell -ringing, gong - banging, door-knockeng, and every.. tiling. I Boarder—That ehows that the I sense of Ireariteg is not easily aroused In siceptrt.g persons. 1 "I ahould say it wasn't." "No; there's no doubt on that subject. Try awakening the sense Of . einella I "Smell ?' But ,holw?" • "I think theta:tor of a broiling pow terhouse etea-k might be erfeetive." 0.••••••*6 •••••••••••41.•••••••••• A RELIABLE OFFER HONEST HELP FIRER TO MIN. — We a,re atethorized to state by Ma Carl Kunz, Second and Brady streets, Davenport, Iowa, that any Man who Is nervous and debilitated or who le suffering froln any of the varloue troubles resulting trom oterwork, excesses or abuse, such as nervous debility, exnauerted vitality, lost vigor, unbatartal arcane and leases, lack of developMent, eta, eau write to him in etrlet gonfidence and re - Mace, EBBE OF CHARGE, full In. Struotionit hoW to be thoronghly °deed. Mr. Kunz himself tvas, for a long Ulna a eofferer froni above troubles, and allottrytng in Vain teeny Delver - Heed remedies, became eantost en- tlrely diseoltraged and hopeless. Fine ally he confided in an old clergyman, whose kind and honest advice enabled Mtn to speedily obtain 0. perfect and permanent curetenoning to his oven eenrow that ea Many poor sufferers are being imposed upon by tinserupta taus quacks, Ma Kant Modelers it his duty, an ten benefit Man, to give hie felloW men the benefit Of his ex- periefiee ttnd mast to ti. cure. Having nOthieg to sell, he lake fer 110 Money, the proud eattsfaction of having dente a great steatite to one in tteeelt he riaittly &Madera an ample reward fen hie trotible. If yea Write to Mr. 1 Kent, and falcate his tedeelee, yeu can tely UpOri. being enrol and upon lame - late eeereoy as Well, addrest, as aboee, one/being a i• stamp. No attentiOn Will be glean to those writing Out ot idle ottriota nye therefore state that you really need a artre, .90000QC3000000C1000000000000000000009000,0900,0000000000000Q01190.00000K100510000000 Surntnery Fashion VVIiims: 58Every Woman a Summer Girl 1 1 Q°00000.090()00000CMCQ000001200goo01)00000*000.000Q000047440°.(300Q0000QQQ000000.0001) ...... . Br a tetesat letteecore. °. There live); no woman with soul fa , 110111 the 1 Mow, awl then there is ft tight. a round a atst, out on the dead or body to old that Note!. lin- I, Het bend of heitte lees', 00 arranged ; allirtwillet order, and Plolu, htrahelit goring stark. of hummer girliste iney 1 that it mite Woe,. to the arm, , eklet, of weep length, cioee at the liot be found within. Were elle in I trout maker; a short believe, as e ou 3. top ena grailitally widening Otte the Thms the most advanced stows of pert i vita imagine, hut elate, fileeves :ire lnY ellinW• 4 1170111.1.1 eleepair one glance at ibe rpeine I, illithuniable. 1 For t he LIIY• Shirt. Windom' would svaken her. Two 1 The girdle le in Moe, eat to a ! glaneee would draw tier into this entre I Point above and be/ow the belt, 1 W, ' , 11, ) t • 1waswan .. 1, 1 on 5(11111001 bargable Intent, while a hoot eW nd elt, anet; ti iilliiII tf 'ILilk atatia 'to iw Pia 00, each seam third glance would hem' her lenne Ii ,a,114.1 1"1`41, t"111 I'll that, But l'ile '91' "41 41111 ever's'. runening tininn nle. Oetermitied to votistrucet herself a I 31:11:(1.71.7"1 ille lumes 1/9 11u 1 hIluar'' ! Ill'en* then n*I4ne the eent wtnlgnan- gown that would place iter ol tee .. Aiel the Lice eirdit. is vertaitily I atilt). , out or eonte. telt:weal Moe were cut 1 But yott eannot be a iatruno r girl 1 posmibly, ia.. and taeicea with the 1 LC* Make. tt LUI•40,r tor the okirt. Two • . g . • law ekirt ie at, tight at: It 0011 1 exam. flowers, en 1 1:1088 were applied, in linen skirt and a. Hiiirt wolet limed or toreicie running Amdahl. With a simple bailor atoP :awe low- ' down from the welet to the \ 15Yioleult(Itost fatte 330) frill, tuelc and hiee above a neuritic.. eliot. tops, Then ecenes a bond of I cord, lace and embroider mail eon q In wail" glory gown ! have driven away the accusation or hi horrowed from the Dewlap, width eineelleiter as well as -the loubq or Her. is very full end is set upon the , ataahate aPPI•e.1 te eulecolored tatty Iron, your matereo. The skirt VPry !MU' Lk. 001 L01)1 10 MOM' ')13148'04 amnier girl le an emanates dangle -The waist wee trimmed wait two Yet there are those who eseert that git'rY EV(.11f 8411111110r WOI1M11 108151and 04141 0t'013181 the eoke, Or' VO•10.8 or these leave% one around 'the ter. wee of them were eet, in. one oboe the other, and etitcatel on. In the • of the front the flower deeigli wisiened and came op to a great pyramid witli the meta at the very Inc. a pyramid of Spanieh lace • eaught with varrow satin . rIbbotte. Meet at are to the el ' how with their real or !axe. And, lest the ft,lvera or the dremetelaker grow tile, there are trotertione of lave, only an Welt wale. eat in roWs arotnai tile sailor collar, and. upon the bioutee ',valet fool in the sleet' roW After row. there are two styles of summer ghee -1 (in° ef these gownu oat %there the acke soda come. The the crating girl with her blue eau- the woman. ga,as yw n t oulir;ottill'eteliwirnatitti a few flowere appliqued le la ample to make, vae etkirt anti her white shirewitlet Vienne-, In tias premiss of making a etoomer gown, eame the epplicatioo uf Meek satin ribeoli to the dram, NVOS PI1L IM 01 r01511 from the bottom of the ok rt up to the waist, the nowt four hashers apart, So as to etripe the skirt from top to bottom. Tbe satin ribbon wae runningly sate pal in under the lace figures and -the elite lay over them. Probatay Lite etriping wag done before the lace IMIX(Nti were applied. Tbere was a belt and etock of white. tamoner gown flails year is a romauce, melt an individual dreamt wrought out in wonderful colonel and executed with the fidelity ter a fine uotil.11.5,ereation. Von can't make one in eearustress. But you can save money a day and you will do well to ael. one tht modistes charge. And it is fat up in a. Weak, even with the lad on :our materiala if you cannot on ;mut time, It is just the season for work or be willing to pay the price tin> making of your own gowns. eat to "There are all kinds of girls--" $e runs the topical song % And tills eummer the sash girl will be added to the number. T/IP rash girl la one who always wears a sash. Ail her gowns are bunt for lads ornnment, and she is never seen without IL. Her reason for wearing. It may be one of several. 'Why She Wears a sash. The sash girl may wear a sash ' because ic is fashionable. Site may wear it bemuse she la fiat at the back—hollow tacked. Ellie may wear h. bemuse it gives height. all di hush of all things dreams up 0 gown the motile y. s- latlyeet..risInmlaesIni: ,wwear a sash because. a I Perhape ale weara it becanse the Imported Paris gowns nearl may be a ribbon one, and for this purpose there come ribbons its delicate as millinery ribbons, thin mousseline rilebons and soft figured ballot° ones, Perfectos she clinge to the liberty and the panne ribbons or Is decorative enough. to want the big flowered, affairs that come o. foot evide and sell very high. The made sash or the dress mater- ial Is a thing that 1,4 inert upon the imported gowne, Its design is very simple. In the front it 1), tucked, and there are home to shape It and give the long point. At the sides it la roiled Otto a soft band, while at the back it is tied In a tiny bow with two &tending loops but very long ends. Thai, -though a French such, is called the princese, for thl reason probably that it is worn so muolt with the princess gowns, whieh , are so very trying without' the east), ' belt or waiet trimming uf some tort, The Dutch tattle so called, is a tower arrangement in ribbon, with little windmill bows at the back of the ben. A foot lower the ribbon is tied la another Male bunch of loops. Below Hite the ends hang and there are bunches of loops near the end of each. Be difficult are these sashes to tie that they are for the most part made before they are put on and fastened with a hook and eye under the bow at the hug: of the belt. That is really the best way to man- age. The MI -White Howes. •The allay -late gowns are too deli- cately platined and -too beautifully chartaang for light conelderation, ilthey are beet 01 the thiunest ma- terial. India lawn is a favorite ; linen batiste is another. Fine linen comes Ulla year of just the right stiffness for handsome write, and there are so very many of the sheer Meru; with mercerized surfaee 4. They are Wit and expensive, but. you really, le you have social ambitious, must possess one at least, for It will be the accepted gown of summer for very. lave oecasions, A women who dresses a great deal has planned a white India linen gown for a June wedding. As a guest shawl!l be gowned in this dress made over. a glazed white lining. Beautiful lace insertion will trim I the skirt a little below the knees, 1 two rows of it going around the skirt.' Below Ole there will come more of ' the insertion, put on in the Vau Dyck order, all pants. top Laid bot- tom, to make a pointed lace -trim- med flounce, which in the back is quite deep. Between the lace points tucked lawn will be set in. Finally, there will o a delicate lace ruffle three ',name whie around the foot. Could anything prettier be Imagined than this white linen .gown, crisp, sheer and of silvery whiteness? The :Past Is quite a poem In the • shape of a blamed bailor vvalst, with deep sailor colher and beggy front, crowned with seraw sailor, svelte felt fedora, flat-topped Tam of strew, or ready-to-wear hat, and the frill - No More Wasik Presses. (t 1011 gowns are supposed to be weal /swim, whether they are in ed summer girl, Mat with the Hotline); muslin, lawn, batiste'cheviot, Ma - and tlie furbelows, the one who ham date, mercerized nuttertal or ehal- beeu called the fluffy eummer girl. 101. 'the very Idea of a cotton gown, An After -Easter Gown to Make a' 'Gies- Eyes Snap. Be that as it may—two kinds or one —it le certain that for a long time to come, certainly until the glorious Fourth sends its screech into the air, It Is the fluffy summer girl that we shall have In our midst and since she Is here, or coming fast, Is it not best to study her? For a Newport Summer. The moods and the tenses or the Hummer girl are many. It Is esti- mated that for a Newport summer no less than forty flutter drosses aro needed. This gives ane a new gown A day. counting the season at less than two months. To the credit of the coining Unify summer gown it may be elated that it can be reworn in the fall, for it is of a kind that is difficult to dIstingulah from the conventional gown of the amuse. And it Is certainly e.heaper than n fine reception or afternoon IgatoAlanvellIth woman—is milking herself a omen—such an extravagant gown eaell week. elle calculates that by the month of ;Nue Min will have ten or a dozen of the prettiest summer costumes In the world. Site Is buying the material cheap, for a few cents a yard, never paying; higher than intlf a (Whit, and She Is picking up odds and ends of lace, and the dear- est little bits of foulard, silk menu rad loulsine. Iri louleine cotton she rindn if prize, for it makes up like &ilk. The flowers form a Pelf -trimming and with In- genuity, and a little piain lawn of the coior or the flowers so 11111011 can be dem) In tbe woy of Ant name - Inge, staler and the ubignitous Saab,. A elortsing Glory (town. A morning glove gown rivals in prettiness ite attenetive mune, rt Is apple green with little pink flowers mom It. The flowers are dedeately unoblemeive, 3134 Miaow upon a 1101 - ton gown should be, and they show 33 ttialimity to.disaitin'ar at the 118035, 3)01 not stending ont in as meth 1)010110es as the vulgar pt.inis of two years ago. 'rho waist Oa tight fitting and cord- ed. No, that is not the way to tell IL It IS it Aldrl-waist with thio tneks. It le fated in the back rod so arranged at the eitlee that bones can be elmped ht the lining aw1 hold It to the figure. The front le a tat- grlieralltea.ggy 50 that it can be piled ont Over the gh.dle—for there ie a The Mu tucking la so fine that for e Mir life yon Vilna dIstingaiSh betWeen tune and meek 'rho eleeette are Uttered in this fine manner right to the ellente. Then there le ttWaff of pelt, piuk 1111,3 lawn, keit to lts essenee of recounnendation as well as of desirability, lies iin the fact that it will wash. But, do you realize it, the cotton gowns or this ston.mer are not In- tended to he laundered. They are too elaborately made for tltat. Their linings are too fine, their plan too ebtooln:rd. plicated, their trimmInge too delicate. One good soap Badding; Would ruin them, ir applied with the aid of 'houcklett and a Walt - .There diesI in New York the other day an old woman- who made a fat living washing valuable Moen and [Inc linens for the Yanderbilts, Bel- monts and other wealthy folk. At the time of her demise she was at work upon a 'Venetia.n lace [trade wbich cost $6,000. For yeurs 81)0 eleaned thaw fine material); \vial tuipittlue and with peculiar washing compound& of her own. It would pay any. summee woman -to give the subject of laundering her (i11 zooms careful attention, for the modistes declare that the elder obstacle to the making of pretty simmer gowns Is the :act that they eon easily and mast on that account be tubbed. Take emelt a gown as has just been made for the summer campaign. Its ountiwork, or, better to say, its material, is a very pale sun -colored. Initiate, all yellow, without even one little eittln dot to hel:> it out. It is made with elbow sleeves, very 1 4 MORALITY IN 1.** DRESSHABITS. ; *+4*+.1.44.444,44+4+++,****** r Harry aohnletou Is the latetit to declare that there is tie connection ktetween the nt..ral emote pr a people, or the degree of modesty they pus- iseeo and the. amount or elotaing theY wear. When &peke Oisceorered the very intelligent people of Uganda, ott the northern shores of Yleitiata. Nyanza, he founa to his aterprieo 'bat, they were cleat from Aead to foot 10 bark cloth. They took tile ftbroos inner bark of a certain tree 0,nd by pound- ing and working it made a fairly ser- viceable eubstitute for cloth. Speke has seen no other natiVee, 011 lUs Ioug Afrtean jourlley, wile: were not rath.er seantily attired. letit the Boganda belteve in garmetits that cover them from neck So heel. In fact, there were 'very few traces throughout tropical Africa, that are so completely clothed tis the nage Linda. When Stanley 'dotted the same people, years later, he fond thet Arab merchant& had carried Woe of cotton cloth to the greet lakes, Well- to-do Buganda were wearing flowing robes of Manchester cotton or ....Merle leant," as they °ailed the product of the New England loom. Every man and woman was enity dressed, all wanted cotton cloth, toed Staulay predicted a grestanarket for cottone as soon as cheaper transportation eliould lessen the cost. The railroad is near completed, though not yet open to freight traf- fic. The Baganda wilt be soon able to buy all the elteap. cotton cloth they want, to trelghto will be re- duced to about one-fourth or tlio price charged these raany yeors for costly carriage on the backs or mere After Jiving among tile Bagarola for a tang time Sir i Harry .Tohaston has recently returned to Ragland. He has sow.° Interesting facto to tell about these hundreds of thoesateds of people who live, oa the dieres of tate greatest .A.fricarv lake. He says that though they are a very carefully clothed natioa teed are almost snore squefamish a,bout any exposure of the person) than Euro- peans are, still they are very lax 10 morals. They are decidedly in- ferior in this respect to the leavir- °ado tribe who live to the. south- east of them. The Kavirontlo, 111 faet, are quite punctilious in their de- portment. The lateresting distinction to be mettle between these tribes is that while the Baganda, one of the few completely dreseed tribes in tropical Africa, have ate moral code worth tnertiooning, as far as, relations be- tween the sexes are concerned, the Kaviroado, one or the few tribes In tropical Africa that tvear to cloth- ing of any description, maintain a comparatively high standard or mor- ality. Tito contrast between these twc peopled is the most etriking tration, yet adduced itt support of tile assertion, often, made, that the moral standards in vogue among the barbarous peoples of Afriea can- not be measured lsv the amount ot clothing they weal.. The Meseta women also, who live further east, are completely differ- entlated from their halfeelad sis- ters of other tithes by the feat that no Ito 1..0a In the world are more com- pletely elothed than they are. Every line of their forms is entirely veiled by the flowing rotate that are fast - toted arouni their necks and drop te their feet, but no one has ever thought that the elassai WOMB were at all prudish, • • A traveller who has recently ro. turned from the line of the ligandr. Railroad says that a section of the afaeIsal people seems to be threatened with extinction. The daughters and mothere among them took a great faney to the Indian coolies who grad- ed the roadbed, a,nd when the work was done dud hundreds of the native* of India left the Mesetal eountry a great many of the native women tweet with t air artery Joh-nston eays thet through the efforts of the numeroua missionaries who are working among them, the Baganda, on the whole, are moving toward a higher plane of moraine.% These excellent men who have, at least nominally, converttal many thousands 01 the natives to the thrielian faith, are relieved of one burden which their brethren in some other mots of Attica, have thought it important to assume. As the Ilagandit are fully clothed it is not necessary to agitate in favor of' clothing reform. At many of the Congo mission sta. Hone, on the other hand, the teach. DK, whether wisely or not, insist in dressing the children of theiv schoois much as country boys and girls in America are dressed. Not a law sup- portere of miselonaree enterprise are Inclined to think that these teacher, are making it mistake in vlew of the fart hat trea.nty attire in that re- gion does not promote immorality or suggest impropriety and that the lit - tie boys and girls are undoubtedly iincomf•oetabie in a land of steady heat by being compelled to wear clothing that Is better adapted for it, temperate (inmate. THE IX)Olt OF A CHEESE. it>t113 Mni"! ago tile stationmaster at a small ortientry villages reeeived large citeeee deeitiedly "MOO ad - drama' to a Mr. Blank, tend labeled °leo be called for," elaye Ant/were. A fortnight passed, but no one eame to take it away, ea the following note was despatelted to the aenders "It the eheate watch wee sent here ailtireatied to Mr. Blank, iit not clatmed in two. Orate it will lx. killierl." The Conductor's Second Letter Confirms His Cure of Two Years Ago, and Proves that It was Permanent—Warm Words of Praise for Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills. Mono readerof this paper, and especially entroculers, Will remember the cure or C. P. 11, Conduc- tor Berryintie. of St. atephen, N. 11. In a letter retotival hest week the condattor states that he is real 10011, and that his euro, after ten years of suffering with kid»ey diseaties Is permanent, not havieg had a tomtit or ide oid trouble for OW yenra Berrynten's auto was suell a severe one, and Ole oure so remarkable, that malty write to oak him about it. lie never tires of revonimmuling 1)r. Cheat's Kidney -Liver Pills, but, ou the contrary, la glad or an opportunity to tell fellow-sufferere how lie was owed. In hit; letter of April 'ale 1000, in 1e-0100 his cam. le dencribed, Canduetor nerrymn wrote: . fit have been railroading for 23 e care heel for tell yeitee sunered front a Reverse eltSe of kidney mire lend baelcache, n. trouble commit to railroad men, It toted me all up to walk, and after walking up hilt r would Neva to lie dowmn to get relief, my back WM NO bail. 1 oda not sleep 10000 than half tlw night, and then didn't maul to get any reet. boti used all Forte of MetliCineEl anal was pretty badly discouraged When 1 heard of Dr. Chatiehe ney-reiver Pills. eater usieg 'Ewe boxes of this treatment 1 lenind et was helping nue anti five bovvie have made 31 eomplete awe. 1 UDNV arid sleep well, tny back Is ettong, and alie old trouble bas etairely disappear - ea. Shiny people to whom r hovel rerommended thetee pills have been ettrea. Anyone Melting, farther partieulari write 'me.' 'IllPte is' no ilorebtfoo: the efrieloiley or Or. (!ho' e lelane,y Liver Pi11# as a thorengir intro for beekachee kid- ney slIsetter, tend liver contplaint. They liatet titreet notion on the kicirleye, liver ant bowels. willelt is bound tie etrenittlieti, Invigorate, and regulate Metro orgetris. One pill a dose, 25 cane a boa. At all denlare, or Mat maitson, Bates an 1 Co.. Throat°. , .