Bloomington Progress, Volume 18, Number 46, Bloomington, Monroe County, 14 January 1885 — Page 2

;r Devoted to the A.dvancein.en

BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA, WEDNESPa

:iuch ; sho i the weeks coiue to could have sho should should ask Could she to thought loved him? th. Then, ild she be til hor life? ih with this

od at bora.

the

r

iruary, Miss i cozy place. p.t upon the a. A Btrip de through he windows with symslowly to u-ir. Clemwhite rng need up octock, whioh side upon lining, when Elliot Lindn the man, w, triumphYou under- . She spoke ;o down. I brave. You There ia no

marry. He

,im. I like

!" She had

toward the ate, and her

jre her. JL

, Clemeaoe,

gs to wear; s beat I've

him. And !" do?" asked id tell him can't love

heart-free. Cr. Iindsey. irted men I iveled man; in. paintings a coming to Lofk will be

objections." leauty unem--, for that" iat she liked to Clemence they sat is

him," said i express ihout eyelids

brightened re beautiful; d! Perhaps

Your face sly minx, I t droop be ' What do . Mly. -aough fer a her long; his Lis eyes are turning gray.

mistaken in cat him. ncceed. Be but he will iwii much in o much like But I car. oek struck 10. idio this min-

r pupils will

ap stairs.

if you need

toly suppose ne, and your

vou wanted.

toning a posse.

on." she said,

chilly winter

li in earnest

ailed at Fan-

said, author

mv life out

3."

ided, sympa-

eraence proeverv day.

,e only thing

and stay at

ling a pal-

once,

Clemence

waited

lOwrpal

i ii - Meoee.-

' TOKO,

"Mile.

anything Tam so dis-

to make mere

roke; a single .-knife in. her

t1.it swiftness, If installed as on household, the spent only' io; Clemence occupy after- - lent visitor. Ssd to admit at the pros-

iM help fall3 aid. "Do at you are a have a-deli-n sort of tender, timid

Year hair is

id everything

Awnat maces

lad sprung

before her, passionate and imperious.

"Zen won't tell Jam mat. ion musn -. yon shan't! I-will not allow you to spoil everything V ' "Spoil everyth'ng ?" Fannie repeated, laughing hysterically. "Let mo go, Clmence. Perhaps I don't know. At least he has not spoken yet" Clemence stepped aside. Tannic, ' for heaven's sake, don't throw away this chamje. Don't be foolish reflect how much it all means I The slim, little black-robed figure passed slowly from the room. "You mustn't, you shan't!" Clemence's words still rang in the girl's ears. "Don't throw away this chance. Reflect how much it means :" Surely Clemence had u right to say these things, Clemence had done jo much for her in the past three months. Clemence had lonared to secure her a

happy-future. Clemence would be so disappointed! Instead of all that

-Clemence had desired for her, she

would go back to the troubles of the past the gloom of a boarding house, the slender income from her pupils and what few orders she could obtain. She

mhrbt fall ill. become destitute; and

here, here was sure escape. Oh, it was a axeat temptation, a great temptation! j

LShe was busy with conflicting thoughts. 1

She groped Her way ao nm to we nau, and entered the drawing-::ooni. "I asked for you," he said, with gentle emphasis, when they ltad exchanged greetings. "I think you must know why I asked for you.' She could only look at him while he spoke. They were sitting side by side I . ' ... - X 1

upon a sola, yet ne ieit as u sue must shrink from him. " Especially if she meant to deceive Mai.

She could hear other sounds than his

low voice. She could hear the words

of Clemence Arlington, a ringing sort

of monotone. She could see everything

about her with unusual clearness, lhe

luxury of the great draw.ng-room came upon her with a mighty pressure. Her

heart went out wren passionate yearn- . . I . 1 1 1C t L 1

us to au tmngs ueaumui. ouo uiuuu delight and comfort as her due.

She heard him speaong, yet t.ne could not lookjipon him. His vowe, falling distinctly upon the light and warmth in which" she rested, was like that of some one speaking sentence which should consign her to everlasting

darkness and misery.

"I hope, he said, "1 hope teat you

can care for me!"

And now she knew that she must

speak. She turned heT gaze to iest upon his face. How gray his eyes

were! wnat an anxiois ngut tnev heH. Sho remembered shot Afterward, and she remembered, noting just bow

carefully his hair was brushed away

from his forehead,

"I am sorry." that scorned the bur

den of her answer. She had risen, .md he, too, stood up and leaned compas

sionately to her. L am sorry; you must forgive me I did not deserve' it, She trembled on the verge of sobbing. "I thought I uhould care for you in that wny but now 1 know how I should wrong yon. Only believethat I am sorry. I shall just go back to my hard lot you can never know. It has been a great temtation !"

He fell back, pale and startled. "You don't care for me!? he said, with piteous comprehension. "Well, I will go." But she sprang toward him, impetuous, tearful. "No, no! I do care only not in that way too much to wrong you. Do not go!" Now she sobbed hard. "Hush !" he said, gently ; "do not cry, dear child, do not cry. Shall we. be friends? Perhaps in time you may care for me as I would have you OrJy do not cry !" ' Six months later they were married, and Clemence Arlington declares she never met or heard o:' happier bride

than Fannie Bae. But a woman's heart

k something beyond ;he comprehension of ordinary mortal i.

tvomaw Gossip, A l'nxilo. 'Wo two had a row, Somehow. Perhaps aho waB fretful anil I rtUln'rrare, Or, perhapt I did something that sho coulun t

or, -, i Or. perhayw a depression adv meed In the air. But however that bo, the .list irlmnoo was there. And a storm hogan to bxew. At first it muttered And hard words were attend; Then harder and harder, until thincs rew

bnpromely unpleasant tor eou m u m,

Ana l came io iuiuh

Ot the graveof amonlshiiwh03oJoe9re should So I kceKcd hr pardon what else oonld I do?

e aeoiareu sne w rrj j. wxjv And the tempest's frown Bmoothoa slowly down. And it rumbled, and sltlhed. And whispered and died Awav. Tot all I can say . To this very day Is we two had a row fomohow. But 1 couldn't make out What bronRlit it about, And 1 don't know now. VanUn Fair. From tlm Nursery.

Dude (posing for a lwld, bad man) "How does water taste, Miss Belasvs?" Miss B. "You don't moon to say they've brought you up all this time on milk?" Life. JPoor German Girls, The girls in Germany outnumber the boys by several millions. This, and the fact" that many men are too poor to marry, leaves about 5,000,000 women who have to remain single. The rich girls get married, but the poor ones stay single and are forced to shame or hard labor. In Munich no young man is permitted to mary until he has proved to the authorities that he is abloto support a wife. If children are born and the parents cannot support them, the state; holds the city authorities responsible for their maintenance. When an unmarried German woman becomes old and poor she is miserable indeed.

Sho cannot starve, so sue carries burdens in the street MU Perkins. The Hereto Motlier. We see a household brought up well. A mother who took alone the burden of life when her husband laid it down,

without much property, out. .of ner penury, by her planning and industry, night and'day, by her fullness of love, by her fidelity, bringing up her children : and life has six men, all of whom are like pillars in the temple of God. And O, do not read to me of th e campaigns of Caser ; tell me nothing about Napoleon's wonderful exploits; I tell you that, as God and angels look down upon the silent history of that woman's administration, and upon those menbuilding processes whioh w out on in her heart and mind through a scovo of years, nothing external, no outward development of kingdoms, no onipii'ebuildings, -can compare with, what she has done. Nothing can compare in beauty, and wonder, and admit ablen ess, and divinity itself, to the silent work in obscure dwellings cf faHhfnl women bringing up t'iieir children to honor and virtue and piety. I tell yon, the inside is larger than the outside. The loom is more than the fabric. The thinker is mora than the thought. The builder

is more than the building. Henry Ward Bencher. Soma of the SocfeS of Beauty. .

place of your terrible rangement." Two or three years ago a It. ental parentage on her fathe spent a season in London society.

coriplexion was urown rouevea uy ytlow, her features lare and irregular, bui, redeemed by a pair of lovely and expressive eyes. So perfect was hor taste in dress that she always attracted admiration wherever she went. Dressed in rich dark browns or dullest crimsons or russets, so that no one ever noticad mr.cli what she wore, ahe so managed that suercrestions and hints no more

of brilliant amber or pomegranate soarlet should appear just where they impart brilliancy tohei'deop coloring, and abstract all the yellow from her skin. A knot of old-gold f,atia under tho rim of her bonnet, another at her throat, and others in among the lace at lies wrists, brightened up the otherwise subdued tinting of her coatnuie, so that it always looked as though it had been desijjned expressly for hor by some great ccJorjBt. Here rouge was unnecessary.

Tiie Surroundings were arranged to sm the complexion, instead of the complexion to suit the surroundings. There can be no doubt as to which is the method, which best becomes the gentlewoman. In addition to the disagreeable sensation of nmking-up, it must bo remembered that the use of some of the white powders eventually destroys the texture ot" the skin, rendering it rough and course. Rimmel, the celebrated perfumer, in his "Book of Perfumes." says

that rouge, being composed of cochineal aad saffron, is harmless, but that

-white cosmetics consist occasion

ally of deleterious ' iiubstanees

which may injure tho health. Ho ad'

vises actors, and tictressea to olioso cosmetics, especially the whito, with the

e.tatost caie. and women of the world,

who wish to preserve the freshness of

their complexion, to observe thefollow-

mtr recma: uoen air. rest, exercise,

and cold water. In another part of

this nleasant book its author says that

sehonada, a cosmetic used among the Arabs, is a aite innocuous, and at the

same time offecsual. "This cream, Vi-hich consists of sublimated benzoin, acts upon tlie skin as a slight stimulant, and imparts perfectly natural colors during some hours without occasioning tho inconveniences with which ISuropean cosmetics may justly b reproached. " It is n well-known fact tha bismuth, a white powder containing sugar of lead, injures the nerve centers when constantly employed, - and occasionally causes paralysis itself. In getting up the eyes, nothing is injurious that is not dropped into them. The use of kohl or kohol is quite harmless,, and, it must be confessed, very effective, when applied as the famous recipe for salad-dressing onjoins wltfc regard to tlie vinegar by the hand of

I ii miser, juoaern Egyptian iuuies iui i their kohol of the smoke produced by

burning almonds. A small bag holding the bottle of kohol, and a pin with rounded point with which to apply it, form part of the toilet paraphernalia of all the beauties! of Cairo, who make tho immense mistake of getting up their eyes in an oxactly similar manner, ,!ius lrvingfo reduce 'tho' endless variety of nature to one common pattern, :i mistake that mar be accounted for by

the fact that the Arabs believe kohol t

be a sovereign specific agajast ophthalmia. Their Kntrhsh sisters often

make tho same mistake without the . . 3

same excuse. A nairpin steeped in

ev. many the day . Last sum. custom to gO i.. ing from Q'.iee. down the East Rive

boat As soon as he g. placed a square basket, w. riabiy carried, on the iloor, lifted the lid and produced tht an immense cigar case, a piece oi, candle and a box of matches flavin,, placed these handyhe unfastened his cuffs, drew tbem offand laid Ihem in the basket. Then he removed his necktie and collar and deposited them by the sideof his cuffs. Ther. ho unfastened his capacious vest aud allowed the breoze to fan his prodigious breast. Ho was now ready for business. He lighted a match and ignited a piece of wax candle, which he laid in a secure spot. Next ho drew from his cigar case throe, four or five cigars, as the fancy took him. Procuring a rubber band from his vest pocket he cunningly twisted it around the cigars so ai to unite them all abreast. Then he put the small ends in his mouth and applied the wax candle to the other ond, passing it slowly from one to the other of the cigars until all wore well lighted. Leaning back he on'oyed life, Bending clouds of smoke into the air. He has made a great variety of answers to persons who have questioned him as to his nassion for smoking. To

rmche said, "Mv doctor tells me to smoke." To another, "I smoko because it" To another. "I smoke be

cause my wife says I musn't." To annt.hnr. Tt8 none of vour business"

with a word liefore the "business" seldom tolerated in print. Those who know him say he is a very jolly man end a skillful bush) 083 manager, He

is nearly fifty years of age. Brooklyn

sSagle. ,

There is as much, a "fashion" in complexions as there is in bonnets or boots. Sometimes nature is the mode, some

times art Just now the ktter is m tho i iaTflpblack is' the usual method of dark .1 l- .-1. .... n i. ruin Anlv ,rt 1 . . . -. . , , i -1 I " .

ascendant, though, as a rule, only ui

that inferior phase whieh lias no'; reached the "concealment; pt art" tho point where extremes meet iand the perfection of Rrtifico presents, all the ap

pearance ot artiessness. no one oi ar; observant turn of mind, who is accus

tomed to the sight of i.ngnali maiaii and matrons, can deny tkitmaking-up,

as at presont practiced, partakes or the amateurish 'e'ement. Impossible reds

and whites grow still impossibly red

and whita from week to wen unacrrno unskilled hands of the wearer of "false

colors, who does not like to ask for

advice on so delicate a subject j for, even

were she willing to corneas to th; nractice. the imputation of experience

conveyed in the asking for counsel

cning the eyes in England, retribution following sooner or later in the sha-ie nf a total loss of the eyelashes. Eau

de Cologne is occasionally dropped into the eyes, with the offe.-t of making

them brurhter. The operation is pain

ful, and it is said that half-a-dozen riiwnn of whiskv and the same quantity

of eau de Cologne, eaten on a lump of sutrar. is ciuite as effective. Lotufo n

lette:

Filters.

A coed filter has come to be a neces

sity, at least in our cities and large towns, and whereves tho drinking water is drawn from rivers, lakes, ponds, ett. Into these every sort of impurity may

find free entrance from sowers, the

mifltht be baldv received,: and would drainane of farms, dead fish and other

scarcely oe m gooa taste. ; animals, ana massesi or ueuiyiuB vugcThe prevalent and increasing short- i tables. Boiling the water may kill the sightedness of our times is, perhaps, microscopic parasites (bacteria) that partly the cause of the excessive usa , cause infectious diseases, but it does of rouge and powder. Tho wieldcr cf j noirfree it from its visible, disgusting

the powder putt sees nerseit aiar on , ns matter. it were. She knows that she cannot A good filter accomplishes two things : judge of the effect of her' complexion it strains out the grosser impurities, with her face almost touching its reflex and it also destroys so many eminent tion in the glass, and, standing about a chemists now believe much of the yard off, she naturally accentuates her, finer impurities by oxidizing it really roses -and lilies in a way tiiflt looks very j burning it up. pleasing to her, but is rtttlief startling j This fact, that niters actually destroy to any one with longer si jttt. Nor can i impurity, is among tho Into discoveries she tone down her rouge with the pow- j of science. It was found, when the deced hair that softened tjhe artificial , Thames received all the sewage of coloring of her grandmother when sho ; London and the other towns on its hed-her day. Powder is only occasion , banks, that the filter-beds contained ally worn with evening drtas., and it in but little impurity co-upared with the by daviight that theBO dreWfal bluish great quantity of filth they must have 1 " Jl 1- A.1 I J. i ...... A .1

Didn't Like It. There ara two classes of conserva

Jives those who preserve the ota be

cause it is useful, and those who adhere to it because it is old. Sometimes this attachment to the ancient paths

becomes such a "craze" that every

change is viewed as an evil.

Our ancestors were pious anu mi-

lirrhtmied. vet so conservative were

many of them that they resisted the in (reduction of stoves into the meetinghouses or a base-viol into the choir.

Fifty years aao some of the members

of a Now England parifh, not seaing

the conne -tion between a coiu cnurcu and warm piety, called a meetir-g to

nn if the town would vote to put in

two stoves to warm the meeting-house.

After a long debato, in which it was urged by the conservatives that it would bo extravagant and injurious to

heat the church, the town voted to

place therehvtwo largo wood-burning

wtoves. One man was so opposed to the inno

vation that for several Sundays after

the introduction of the stoves, he acted

nut a Htrikinf? nrotest. His pew was on

tho wall side of the house and by a largo window. Though it was winter, lie would enter his pow. raise the window, take off his coat, and sit in his shirt-sleeves. Another strong conservative livod m an adjoining town. A bass-viol was introduced into the choir, and he denounced tho instrument as a device of Satan. Leaving his own church, he rode several miles to another meetinghouse, so thfct he might not hear "the devil's music." The poor man was doomed that S.undav. "When I got in sight of the meetinghouse," he sail to ft friend, to whom he unbosomed himself, "there was a man with a goon (liassoon), and dagon I bassviol ) was there too. Sol jist got onto me ould meer aud cum home." Even the pitch-pipe was offensive to him. The choir once failed to got the correct key. "Ah, Johnny Smith!" he called out to the chorister, "ye maun blaw your

whostle again!" ro(7' Companion.

to .

numbv gards as Then, hava. process with pi

lirst liowor, it we.

the next promising u. . s

of food for itself and of .-fitting

for its future bttlo ones. In doing so,

it of course fertili-.es all tlie blosxoma that it visits one after another bsdast-

inr tliAin snocessivelv with eacliotner s

nolleu. When the youna grubs

hatched oat. uowover, tuey uincuvoi--

the base deception all too late, and perish miserably in their fallacious bed, the helpless victims oli misplaced parental confidence. Even as Zeuxis deceived the very birds with his painted grapes, so rattleida deceives the ilies

themselves by its ingenious mimicry ai a putrid beefsteak. In the fierce competition of tropical life, it has found out by simple experience tliat dishon

esty is tho best policy.

On most, mountain Dogs in unsatn

one can still find a few pretty white

flowers of the rare and curious grass of

Parnassus, Their have each five snowy

petals, and at the base of every petal

stands a uttie lomea organ, witn eigut or nine thread-like points, terminated, apparently, by a small round drop of pellucid honoy. Touch one of the drops with your linger, and lo! you will find it is a solid ball or gland. The flower, in fact, is only a plaything at producing honey. Yet so easily are the tties for whom it caters taken in by a

showv advertisement, that not only will they "light on the blossoms and try most industriously for a long time to extraot a little honey from the dry bulbs, but evan after they have been compelled to give up the attempt as vain they will light again upon a second flower, and go through the whole performance, da capo. The grass of Parnassus thu s generally manages to get its flowers fertilized with no expenditure oi! honey at all on its part. Still, it is not a wholly and hopelessly abandoned flower, like some others, for it does really secrete a little genuine honey quite away from the sham drops, though to an extent entirely incommensurate with tho pretended display. Most of the flowers specially affected by carrion tties have a lurid red color and a distinct smell of bad meat. Few of them, however, are quite so cruel in thir habits as rafilesia. For the

most ptrt, they attract insects by tha'r

appcaranco and ottor, out rewiru wine

services witn a little noney ana owier allurements. This is the case with the curious English fly-orchid, whose dull purple lip is covered with tiny drop i of

nectar, lickea.oir DysueierMuna .K u. Tho very malodorous carrion, flow.s (or stape'lias) are visited by bluebottles and fleshflies, while an allied form actually sets a traji for the fly' proboscis, which catches the iuser.4 by its hairs, and compels him to give a sharp pull in order to free himself; this pull dislodges the xollen, and so secure tho desired cross fertilization. The Alpine butterwort sets somewhat similar gin so vigorously that when a weak fly is caught in it he cannot disengage himself, and there perishe3 wretchedly, like a hawk in a keeper's trap. Coro-

hill Mag mine.

into beast-!

.Jizeherfeeljy; to enter?

M i , it , !i ! . 9 : Pleaders at the bar

lii'wqu'itiws. The bashful and gentle iiiowjuito is the Wendell Phillips of anima t.;rhie. The mosquito does

titmga by in-st. :.gfc The song of the i miunniiii is, 1 urn. S .veet Hum! A

mofiu,.o nnisi.-i his own. bissayness. A mosquito is hi a theatac it has wings and tiis.- I ;

bni'st a

reds and whites look their '.worst,

On the other hau l, 'lcrr are soma women so clever at v. .lijiiitf :;p :1 rr faces that one ali i-isi ! ,ui Uw condone the praoi.'-c in ildi'. Nation of the result. The.- we iu mH minority, and are lik'-lv tr. ii-:n:iin for their 'secret is of : .'..n't -sebkrtK' t" bo

shared. The cK -t in- r "-iivi of t i-o c cleverly manafcu c-n:p!? war cm.m!s

no trace of art.

Notwithstanding the ivt !!.:.

these skilled artists, att occasuw.u

burst of confidence fonsl revealed a

few of their means of accomplishing tho great end jof looking pretty. "Do you often do that?" said

If

intercepted.

Tho chemists were at first puzzled, brt they were at loagth satisfied ithat thi- s-r-fat bulk of it was burnt by the owg.-n ff tin- nir, it being known that ft ji'ni of -:ir '.in;-. tfnaeioiisly to all HuHac an I iicn, f. t . ry particle of -tnl.-t Mine!' niter .... itci1.

ti i..'.i-t i -stiaiiM i arf a ureat n-ore

if til!! ri'V umlenns i.rr wi.itf Kiiu.l - iii? t ier t!- StlbstiXli -c l'tl'ie i'.I h- (I -1 ' rt Mitb'ri

from three to ' ',i , f.n-.i h mv should be renewed i t But much of the impurity u r'-!:iiu(t

one of those clever ones, a matron of at the top of the strainer, and hence,

87, who looked like a girl of 19, to a unless it is frequently removed, it works

Jehu Superstitions. After sailors and gamblers, tlie allnight hack-drivers are the most superstitious people I know, says an old detective. A cat crossing ia fronv of a "night-hawk's" "outfit'1 is considered bad onough luck to dwarf the nigbt's

A Frenchman's Views or hieavro. In European countries, when men suddenly acquire wealth they go slowly and imitate the habits and conventionalities of the well-bom and high-bred families. This is true in some degree of the seaboard cities of America. But in the West there is a swagger which is perhaps born of the cons'-kusneM of aelf-eainod wealth, and so c: poiwwal

power; and thin begets a raw and pro- i

nounced social late, x i.-as su , u in new house on the north side of the

nitv that are "cautions" in the way of

! auilinir one thin to another. Commo

ou fright, Did I?" was ttu -pose I try it

A; . - J'Oint Hop l.:-

crashed a few final i6rsai stopped, wlilflS. the voise of a ?o.

tie lady in pinTNyas heard -yav

top of her lnng: "Don't .

U8tle hang like a diisy!"

no died recently in Eit hmtm,

va.Bgeu ioi, wno never hud I

Georgfttshington's bodyservant. &ui

did not reqaniiier ever Having s.v.; hj

xne granoswavt'i tawMpdley lias oeived flattennMgeis toTu'rn.

A witsess. m '"OTtr nucs. lawyer as to the p -uot-a: reptanother witness, as askul -"U : individual was not a notori "Why," said he, "v t .-.u- t(y is what I call ) ii.ter.-uitto: That was very p-q-har. OK3! :'UVf. Sb had snob patf i riBh' lvff And wavintthali : i " A nancy nose aivi c .- Hi. And stately nuxnv r ! k t" ' But oh, there was ;. iit.le fonli One blemish all I !!se c ia This lovely rosetuM S:ai i Sho had alas! ah- had a It is said thst the ' u

does not care uracil Icr j:-i

who is in very poor hoar. I)

Alfonso asked her what be f tor her on her birthday, a: she wanted a nke shawiL would you prefer?" "Black a dear. You know your health t carious." Texas Slfiings

At a fancy dress parly a j was dressed in a maryelot

green and re a, .in waicu eyes were fiuppoeed .jjj&B

more or less resemmxasmm lobster. "What do you rffi M.?" a genUeman'mrrdr;

took their places m a set. see?" she returned laugllbu salatl." "O !" was bar parth while he flashed a quick verv liberal exposure of w "but hiven't you forgotll the dressing r-Bo0n Coj A r01'.T'8 THOUGHT. I saw tbem last nig ht lewiliM-oye ' ' Two thiKtle-dow bsngn awe ny ! You ratelit know l.y the Uttto' H"p&te ' That he wonfd a bicyelo ride. And you might hare known, too, o: i her cheek. And her flyaway hat ana the rea Idta l- l tsmk-1 H:. hat im fl'-eafc- . , , 1'i :;itse t!.c v v auet.t to oc siutl

I We I, t!i?rj stm sl'p f - i-., .ta i.r of p un i int. .,imrnv r.it lc i; in hor , I Wl'.ti a 'tongue that went un witmiil'n hum I . , I... ., ..n,.1 in f,." n . rl.'r:

But I thounht, as 1 heard Bwinexa-" vows, . . - And indnleins ia tore a bppy dr I would sooner liii out to keep ot t Tfien provido thit same girl witl'. i "Yes, Biddy Muldoon, Mt-ip in' in eiroumsthances. JjashtMoikekemhomo wid a tin glimmer pantsi an wint out to Roman pinwheels fer Jinurian the nixt he was a howlin ft land, an' thin he goes out a:u her up fer Butthlar, an' nixt iwallops Nick Cleary fer nf dhrunk wid him fer the glorj John. Bechune the four : Moike ia doin' glorious, an' poles are runnin' Moike wil1 votes iu sivin lyarrude, biBthc $7 eaeb. The counthry ip

Biddy, but for downngutr

sarobin'

- - .t

.-rx-

X

4&

warrud worrukj"

Dusmess, uut a wnite cat inouua u p. .. . -...j.-h-- fti.. .lemoral ization for the niirht. Some H faut :is a descnption that 9naUteaab

"hawks" immediately begin to drink, ! in order that they may forget the ap- j paration of the white cit, and when a ,

-numi-iiawK - is viaiiou wiui nuv ticni-

iisni tremens re does hoc boo auauoo, like the ordinary sufferer, but hundreds of white cats crowd before his vision. A driver of an all-night hack never puts his left foot on the wheel first upon getting upon the box; ho thinks it bad luck, and nothing can induce him to open the doe r of his cab or carriage with his left hand. If a shoe becomes loose on one of the horse's feet that's a iA nmcn. and causes the driver to be-

lievo that some bud luck is in store for

Hftintelv nothing in American life. One

of these houses is a castle. It is a bit of architecture suitable for the banks of the Bhine, or to be placed in the center of some vast historic estate. Here it is on a piece of land about the siae of one's hsnd. Here is a pile of atone in the iniiJut of surroundings that make the home a jest One bursts out laughing to see this "ca';leR stuck within ten feet of a narrow city street Tlinn there are two wealthy brothers

t who have built two great houses of ! somber mien audbunglingpi oportions, ! and stables to match, all on a lot of

land the size of a saucer. But

country where gentle-nt a

Toe j'

. si");!.-' ' of Uoi .

. . YT, XI. -. , . . c.mann. 1. 1 1 IF, in 1 II

SSWEd. bcloM sddeni; hidTs wear unCleane41 apHt fa . JVom view and causes darkness to ' firewood or "kindling," ' and wear

0.1 thuHtro, t" the "hawk" grows t monu

rer happens wor.

:in loui ca::oiin!c?.

Jlakinf 4 How. .'.ipMi.lic, tr.vl o'. is ! 'io p of salutation, alsjonder celt-' stances, in privates and, w cir umstanjees, it should b cordial, respeotful, or -forme clination of the head or a g tho hand or cane suffices tet

except when one would be sj

erential to age or positi ing a lady, the hat sho

A very common inodoJK a

New York, at presi

tbi vounirer.men. ia to lerk

and'sling it on af hastily aS

As haste is mjomponuiB i and as there an old pantc that "everTpicture must be I longej shorter time, th Bijjituner of i-emoving t ration, w not to be Fp, u;ressement a man pi !::, . rdjiatel . 1

.. :ereat. t.at Io-

r. 9

oat. arl . H

b'.-tt'.'. Ml p.

i

friend who was vigorously, rubbing her

oheeks with a coarse to.wel after a plentiful application of coM water. "Yes, every time I come from a waC ride, or drive. Why?" "Well, no wonder you look older than you are. You i re simply wearing yonr face out!" "Kutl must wash?" "Certainly, but not like that Take a leaf out oi my book; nevr wash your face just before going out into the air, or just aftor coming in. ( Nothing is more miurioiis to the likiu. Come to

the glass.

dowr. into the filtering substance, and all tlie water must work its way through a mass of filth. A filter whose straining-pot can be tnni'?d bottom upward, without taking

it from the faucet, is the' only safe ono. j Of course, when turned, the impurities I are .t the bottom, and are washed off by the flowing water. Youth's C'om- ! itanion. I The Well-Uresse 1 Man.

golden rule in dross is to keep

rl;S. Is t'lf pttK- . .ii'nnliou ir.iu! v

io, :!a. that " 'r!.b h i. n tlr't niii ' '

uiiik;: iU:sl"!.ss (. 'd. ...' ii i.t liin-Kitf the night will cl.auati their luc; . nit

reitia" dr'-. a cigar pit.:

i a S-'o

-Letter in Boston Htrel'1-

1 he

The

clear of extremes. 'Che well-dressed

Via vou notice u drawn look man never wears anything peculiar,

about your eyes arid a general streak- 1 and his garments are of tho bent iness in the cheeks? That is the re j material, one suit that costs $.")0beinK suit of your violen; assault upon youi preferable to two suits that cost $2:5 complexion just now. Yon look at this ! each; and the tailor's rid:, be it obmouient ten year older than you did ' served, is just the same in both casea. twenty minutes ago in the park." We ro bound to add, however, that "Well, I reallv do. I look old enough , ths gentleman who litis but ono suit into bo your mother; but, then, yon are i stead of two cannot escape embnrrasswoiideiful. You always look so youn;! ! merit when it cornea to sending his

and fresh 1 "Because I nevor tr. so badly as you y

water, andif 1 6titi:i ;:-t tint i im.

ch water filter. : - 1 .t.. t'-f

n .' yto-ir-i l; It I

j- soar

li.de park - Vante.

dinner I always'- ;ii " ! ' v. ah r. tt.!di:., just enci;rl ..' h c.t ' u,akv pleasant!.) ,i:.. , vy ji.ojf" and very rim iu .! t-fe

l-UM

j trousers to the shop for tie purpose of ' i- iviiiff the wrinkles uroused out of

levn. The proper cut for coat and . - tl. ..i . ..I.J..K .1.. , t tit ar...rr

. IShl. 19 lMill lilt II lllUtLV 1,111,111 tlV DllllKH round the waist and loooo over tlie

.net.t, as tno ponte ciwzen is inus.au-

nonfehod at every turn that he wm not

mlv Irok better but :Upafiel Mtter if

iwi.. n

"i, !: ami c i.: their .; ff iii- iithl 1..".' I

J he 'l",u!ii rtmnt. oi il ui aft( ii. ! i t e':

thrown away by a weil-it.-oss t iu:iii and quickly smoked is though; ' riitj; .1 1 ..1. ,11 il. i K . . .. ... 1. n xnlv

r u.. a l i. mut l., ;.ilHf mwer it tn

seen ou uut struma ai uiium ' jh, i i i;i,f ratho.-r than witn

poucy players, n tney are mciuj mj wja "ts- -7. , w-,, may make a 5 bill, but by the time the crfor. The writoi has lean ed 1.-.. r.i .a iw,;,,i.t and the nfonc experience that tho finest

well -.of.

f

(ji.HiSio;i and ttii.ern.'arii, ,0 ti'i t

he sstaada straight.

horses' scant feed

uolicv slins are paid

much left, and tho rag-tag hackmanof the wee small hours comes back udder cover of darkness the next night just as poor as ever. Philadelphia Times. How Coffee Is Griiied. The reason that lite coffee is not quoted high in this market is that only the lower grades of Brazilian coffee are called Uio coiTee. The best coffee from Rio de Janeiro is called "Java, Mocha," etc Yo jseothe planters send their eolfee to Kio, and then it is all mixed together, the good and the bad, in order to get an average price. When it gets here it is .taken to largo coftoe houses, where the work done in Kio ih

undone, the conoo ueiuK

into different grades, given VW l'---Hio. iiinltc- '1

nUiW t t,ioi.

'l'r; on a house top shj P'nuteil (luce, in four -er.J

t;gUt, cool co'.om are iWt-r:u , ci-uie th.v telle. t He wan ra.v"

ilf.hf, ?M ttier-bj ...i-wu uii 1 r.nd c.mtnictio.i "f tin metal shrink ing ot n" l.-a-da ua. il- Iia'o'iiiv f t

in ijv . .tins. 1U:' uu:i-:uuia-

11 3'iiiim'vr v.u oc 111C--

f '. iv nt. 1

a uara

from

t. 1.

is lwught and the WTong experience inar-o"."-. x, r . ..iff .. . nnat- Aonnnmifihf niomAnr,

for there ojr r "7 Jw,; tT

tnat can ue '

sometimes toe case in couniry

!tfttH ; l'.'i':- ' lenpt t?ie I raais i sfret

. rca. io .Intrd

n ". ' ho the

1

! ' 'J' iw er;

whieli if.

ui th

art

lion ;-i

to it Wljauip'WJ ..(Oil shoi .a snri n

:a a

sorted out

and. variousnamctt

t t MO V CftllPd i l.'t, Hl'Il'l of tin .!... i'. ui:' iJra-!(.-.'..!'olU'C'., I'Vil'

r:i

ul

h

i cb .t-.a the wronnetwa.

a vell-bred man, meeting public pbice, though eho is tno -wife, mother, or i. - tlu-.hho may lave parte but . i.;lf nn hour before, will ! . .. .1

& aei-ientiauy bh " w mere acquaintance.

are ignorant oi tne reiuww. them his deferential manner is a lady." The Mentor Ayres. .

houses, wliero tne rooi is a conspicuous object in the architecture oi the building, a dark color be indispensable, the use of pure Venetian rod darkened with lampblack is recommended ai the moiit durable and economical. If by some process tho oil usad in roof painting oould bo prevented from becoming hard and brittle, it would be n great gain. Tho poorest oil paint, however, if better than neglect; and the best ooonomy consists iu keeping tin entirely and thoroughly protected from the corrodinpr influence! of damp

ness. Old paint, which lias become

"fatty" from expoauro to tho ntmcpher'e, is bettor than now for roof pitint '"n? Not i drop of turpeuline tUould

It.- iis'-ii r such work.

; in ! .SifiiKS tc

is no poetry i

that vrears a

in tit,o

A Chess Scheol, There ia a cheas school in

its salaried professors, anjt the game is held in very Had Paul Morphy cone to C

W travehi t wentrfW.oars ap

have met nn iint

''"' ':

DIB pOWCID ujb

tl

mist well

best Ohttt u

, i i

a Piay a mmmuv

of games hin lyrog hiu ores closed.

tion el tne game, nrr.vlem, is known all om' ' J4 ono of the most dMS.f vised-

"Theke are two ways this question," said abank l a temperance meetwKi

4?

i i