Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 28, Decatur, Adams County, 25 April 1895 — Page 2
HELPFUL FARM HINTS SUGGESTIONS FOR THE AGRICULTURIST AND STOCKMAN. How to Make an Ice Box at the Cost of One Dollar Mending Fences in the Spring Habits of Bees-To Prevent Halter Pulling. An Inexpensive Ice-Box. Refrigerators and their plebeian cousins. plain ice boxes, are now sold in the stores at prices that are within the proverbial “reach of all,” so to speak, but there are some people, nevertheless, that find it advisable, if not convenient, to make one at home. For their possible benefit the accompanying ent is printed, with a description of howto make the box therein shown. The arrangement consists of two boxes, the larger one about three feet square and the smaller one just enough si taller to allow a space of about three A'! / \ CHEAP ICE-BOX. inches between the two around the four sides and also at the bottom. This space should be tilled closely with sawdust, or with fine charcoal. Line the inside of the inner box with zine and through the bottom bore a hole that will admit a half-inch lead pipe. The lead pipe must be long enough to carry off the water that will come from the ice. This box will be found a good preserver of ice. and it should not exceed one dollar in cost, if made at home. Oats Too Expensive to Grow. The low price of oats is due to the fact that they can be so easily grown. They are sown in the West especially on fall-plowed land, or after corn without any spring plowing. If the season is favorable this easily produces a good crop. Rut when we consider what the oats take from the soil, it is found that this easily-grown crop is very nearly the most expensive that the farmer can sow. Oat roots fill the soil much more thoroughly than does any other spring grain, not excepting wheat. The oat leaf is not broad, and if it were the plant is not one of the kind to extract from the air the nitrogenous elements with which the grain is filled. We do not wonder,therefore, that many Eastern farmers are dropping oats out of the rotation. If it is not convenient for them to buy what oats they feed, they can grow enough for home use. But for most kinds of stock a mixture of oil meal with ground corn furnishes the oat ration in a much cheaper form than it can be got in the oat grain.— American Cultivator. A Movable Pigpen. The illustration, reproduced from the American Agriculturist, shows a very complete pigpen that can be moved about from place to place to secure fresh ground. The construction is well shown in the sketch, the only point not shown being the partition that divides the pen into two equal parts, the part under the roof being thus shut in to provide a shelter against SERVICEABLE PEN FOR PIGS. cold and storms. The trough pulls out like a drawer to be filled, or may be made long enough to be left half within and half without the pen. There is. of course, no floor. Mending Fences. Every spring there is sure to be some trouble with fences. Winter winds have more free sweep than they do while trees are In full leaf, and the freezing and thawing of the soil is sure to tilt posts that are not deeply set in the ground. These posts should be driven down with a heavy beetle while the ground is still soft, it takes but a few blows to put the post where it belongs and compact the soil around it. Loose boards and broken wires can now be replaced. The breaking of wires is caused by th« contraction of the metal during severe cold. When the wires are set on the posts in warm weather some slack should be allowed for this. Working Farm Horses. A fault in handling farm horses, of which not a few of us are guilty, is to keep them idle much of the time. If work is properly managed, horses can be used 234 days out of the year. Ground can be plowed in the fall, fence material be hauled in place, wood be sledded up and gullies be filled in th winter. When work is so managed, less horses will suffice than when their work is put into 180 days of the year. I find that our horses work on an average of above 230 days of the year and have lasted an average of fifteen years. Coarse Feed with Grain. Grain is, so far as nutriment goes, quite as cheap as hay, and bay is even cheaper in proportion to its nutriment than is straw. But some portion of the less nutritious food has to be given with grain as a divisor, lest it should beat in the stomach and do injury rather than good. With a very concen-
trated ration, as with oil meal or cotton seed meal, good bright straw is better as a divisor than is the best hay Well-cured clover is Itself a strong food, and contains besides its woody material too large a proportion of nitrogenous matter to be the best divisor for linseed or cotton seed meal. Potash for Corn. We hear a great deal about the need of potash for the potato crop, but it is quite as necessary for corn. The latter crop requires a great deal of potash, and if the mineral can be given in the form of wood ashes it has an additional benefit in making the vegetable mould decompose more rapidly, and thus become available for the crop. Totash and decomposing vegetable matter make nitrate of potash one of the most stimulating of all manures. It is usual to drop a handful of ashes on each hill after the corn is planted. That is rather late for the best effects. A much better way Is to use rather more potash, and broadcast It over the corn ground as soon after it is plowed as you can. This will mix the ash thoroughly with the soil, and set the vegetable matter to decomposing by the time the corn is planted. Extra Manuring for Strawberries. The strawberry ripens earlier than does any other of the small fruits. It begins to flower and make its growth before the air has imparted much warmth to the soil and when its stores of fertility are therefore smallest For these reasons extra manuring is requited to produce the best crops of strawberries, no matter how rich the ground may be. There should be a good supply of mineral manure, especially of potash. This is necessary to keep the foliage healthy and to promote ripening of fruit. If stable manure is used for strawberries it should tie well com[>osted and be applied very early in the spring. In this way, the nitrate it contains will be dissolved and carried to the roots. Wood ashes with composted stable manure furnish what the strawberry plant needs and In its most available form. Trough Under a lump Rpout. When pumping is stopped water will usually drip from the spout and when a person is in a hurry he at once removes the vessel and allows the dripping water to fall near the pump. The consequence is a slippery platform and muddy ground all around. This can be avoided by a trough under the spout like that shown in the illustration. It X'' z TROUGH UNDER THE SPOUT. does not interfere with filling the pail and will catch all the water that drips. It is connected with the well by a box reaching through the platform, or it may connect with the pump box. Habits of Bees. It is said that under favorable circumstances a colony of 30,000 bees may store about two pounds of honey in a day. Os 30,000 bees in a hive, which is a moderate sized colony, hal' of them stay at home keeping house, tending the babies, feeding the queen find guarding the stores. In fine, clear weather, a worker may gather three or four grains of honey in a day. As large colonies contain as many as 50,000 bees, it may be seen that possibly 25.000 individuals are out seeking honey. The amount each one brings in is infinitely small, but there is strength in numbers, and one can readily Imagine, by watching the little workers pouring into a hive, that even the few grains at a time will fill up the cells quite rapidly. But a single bee would make slow work of it, and would, if continuously occupied, require some years to gather one pound of honey.—New York Ledger. Canning Peas. Green peas are readily salable at all seasons of the year. Recently one of the largest vessels that ever came into Philadelphia brought hundreds of tons of canned "French” peas from England. They do not differ in the least from the kind grown in this country every year, Why cannot farmers grow peas in large quantities for canning purposes? By co-operative effort an outfit for canning peas could be introduced in every community, not only providing a profit to growers, but also affording employment to many in pickling and hulling the peas. Halter Pulling Prevented. To break a horse of halter pulling use a strong halter and pass the tie through the ring in a post or manger and tie to one fore foot at suitable length. I improvised this plan when I o CURE FOR HALTER PULLING. saw a mustang pulling badly and it broke him in a short time. The strap around the leg should not be sharp or stiff and the limb should be protected by a piece of thick wool or cloth.—H. B. Frink in Farm and Home.
Baked Veal. Take two or three slices of veal steak, put them into a bake pan. cover rather thickly with fine bread crumbs seasoned with salt, pepper and a very little mace. Lay two or three thin slices of salt pork on the top of each steak and put one or two slices on the bottom of the pan; pour In about a cupful of hot water, and If convenient drop in a sprig or two of parsley. Bake until tender, basting every fifteen minutes. Add a little hot water as the water In the pan boils away, leaving enough for gravy. When done, place the steaks on a hot platter to keep warm while you make the gravy. Cook one scant tablespoonful of flour In one tablespoonful of hot butter till smooth and brown, add a little hot water to the gravy in the pan, scrape the sides and bottom of the pan carefully, to remove all the browned parts. Strain this gradually into the butter and flour, stirring constantly. Add the juice of half a lemon, and season with pepper and salt Turn the gravy over the steaks and serve at once. This is an inexpensive dish, but if carefully prepared will be found very palatable. The Chafing-Dish Party, So great is the rivalry among the owners of fine chafing-dishes and choice recipes to be cooked in them, that cooking clubs, of both men and women, frequently meet and prepare a luncheon or ten-o’clock supper entirely over the chafing-dish. Each person brings or sends his dish and the materials for making it in advance, and the feast is cooked course by course by the different chefs. To prevent a superabundance of one kind of food, each guest is notified of the dishes that will compose the menu, or permitted to send in word of the concoction at which he is most skilful. In this fashion a chafing-dish party may have much of the delight and terror of a summer picnic. Ice Cream in Cups of Flowers, Ice cream in the cups of flowers made of candy and tinted are furnished by fashionable caterers. At a luncheon not long ago the flower-cups were large lavender orchids; the same colored flowers, though they were natural, and not the creation of the caterer, were used in the center of the table, where a beautiful cluster of them was fringed by a mass of maidenhair ferns and then by a border of violets. The same violets were, though it was not apparent, made into separate bunches, and from each of them a lavender satin ribbon extended to the plate of a guest. After they were seated the ribbons were drawn forward and each woman had a bouquet of violets. Dressing for Oysters. A piquant and very good occasional dressing for raw oysters is made from a tablespoonful of chopped shallot, a teaspoonful of chives also chopped, a saltspoonful of salt, a saltspoonful of white pepper, freshly and coarsely ground, five tablespoonfuls of tarragon vinegar, and a tablespoonful of lime-juice. Put the ingredients together, mix them well, cover, and stand an hour before using. Coffee Cake. One egg, one cup of molasses, one cup of melted butter, two cups of brown sugar, one cup of strong, clear coffee, five cups of flour (reserving a little to flour the fruit), one teaspoonful each of soda, cinnamon and cloves and one nutmeg grated, one cup of currants and two cups of raisins seeded and chopped. Mix in the order given and bake in one loaf. Cheese Sandwiches. Cut up fine any bits of cheese that cannot well be used any other way. add a little cream or melted buter and let it heat slowly till the cheese is melted and the whoe becomes a paste. If liked, season with salt, cayenne pepper and mustard. Spread this mixture on thin slices of bread and put together. Pineapples Are Wholesome. Ripe pineapples have been put upon the list of food especially healthful for persons troubled with indigestion, the juice being especially valuable in such cases. In countries where the fruit is indigenous its value as a remedy for dyspepsia is weii known. Useful Inventions. A Chicago woman has invented a useful fish-knife that scales, cleans, and bones a fish without mangling it Another useful Invention discovered during the year is a new liquid that makes lace curtains absolutely proof against fire from gas or lamp flames. Eggs. Ornithologists say it is a general rule of nature that the smallest birds lay the greatest number of eggs; but in the humming bird this rule is reversed. It lays only two eggs, which are white, round, and of the size of peas. The tiny bird is so fearless at the time of nesting that it has been known to attack and blind a person when searching for its eggs. The Reins of Conversation. The reader of human nature finds no difficulty in solving small social problems. For example, one never need be bored by constant talkers or cast into the shade by brilliant ones. It is only necessary to say to one of the former, "Now talk to me,” to silence her completely. and no woman ever lived who could appear other than imbecile after being told that she was expected to be brilliant. The dullest person remembering these rules, may have the rein, of conversation in her own hands-
DURANT TO BE TRIED. HELD FOR THE MURDER OF MARION WILLIAMS. Brief Story of One of the Most Horrible Tragedies in the History of Crime—Four Victims of a San Francisco Fiend. Bodies Hacked to Pieces. W. H. Theodore Durant, of San Francisco, medical student and assistant Sunday school superintendent, is to trial for the murder of Miss Marian Wdliams in Emanuel Baptist Church library Friday night, April 12. The coroner jury has found that the young woman came to her death by his hands. There has been no more sensational murder mystery in the criminal annals of the Golden Gate city than the case of William Henry Theodore Durant, charged with the double murder of Blanche Lamont and Minnie Williams, against whom is the suspicion of having stabbed to death a young drug clerk named Eugene AV are. The mystery and sensationalism surrounding the case are heightened by the disappearance of two other women known to be acquainted with the alleged murderer, a Mrs. Forsythe and Miss Agnes Hill. While the police have accumulated a mass of direct and circumstantial evidence against Durant, the prisoner coolly denies his guilt and claims that he will prove an alibi. If it shall be shown that Durant is the murderer of Blanche Lamont and Minnie Williams the strange case of “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” will have been outdone in real life and will have furnished the strongest kind of additional proof that “truth is stranger than fiction.” So far as outward appearances go Durant has been a model young man. who neither drank nor smoked; the assistant superintendent of a Sunday school, the librarian of a church, of gentle demeanor and Christian spirit. Such he appeared to be to those whose good opinion he sought, but some of his associates say that in private he was blasphemous and foul-mouthed; that he practiced all the vices he pretended to abhor and that his V s ? THE MURDERED GIRLS. remarks about women were particularly offensive. It is a case that has no i>arallel except the Whitechapel horrors which startled London and all the world a few years ago, and the case of Jack the Ripper lacks, so far as known, many of the psychological features of the case of Theodore Durant, for there is nothing to show that Jack the Ripper pretended to lead an exemplary Christian life while committing his atrocious butcheries. The combination of saint and fiend in one human being deepens the mystery of the Emanuel Church murders, and has aroused universal interest in the case. Work of a Fiend. The developments of a week have been sufficient to cause the greatest excitement. First came the finding of the nude body of Marion Williams, a young girl who bad been missing since the day before, »n a closet off the library of the church. It was terribly mutilated. The finding of this body, startling as it was in itself, gave the police an idea which they were not slow in working on. The close friend of Miss Williams. Blanche Lamont, had been missing for more than two weeks and a search for her had been in vain. But upon the ghastly discovery in the closet a thorough and systematic examination of the building was decided upon. Away up in the belfry her body was at length found, nude like that of her friend, and also horribly mutilated. The clothing which was torn in shreds from the body had been tucked into corners and holes in the dusty old belfry. In the two weeks during which it had lain there a heavy coating of dust had settled like a shroud over the body. Upon this discovery the excitement in the city, which was intense before, knew no bounds. Other Developments. To follow the various steps by which the police advanced to the point of arresting Durant upon suspicion of having been the murder would be as unnecessary as it would be tiresome. He had hardly been arrested, however, when it seemed apparent to the authorities that if he were guilty of these crimes he must also have committed two others which were causing the detectives a deal of trouble. A few months ago a young druggist named Ware was found murdered at the foot of his stairs. He was a very close friend of Durant. This was one of the mysteries. The other was the sudden disapI W. H. T. DURANT. pearance about a week before the discovery of the bodies of the girls of a woman named Forsythe. She was a friend of Durant and was last seen in his company. So much for the first chapter, that of the mystery. The second is not a w i* less sensational. The Victims. The two girls were close friends, as before said. They were also friends of Durant. Mrs. Ada Foraytiie was also a
member of the ' and although her met two girls. She was seen with Pursnt about a week ago: since then s missing. Druggist Eugene of Durant’s closest friends. It I said that the latter became jealous of him on account of some girl, and that t the reason for his murder. • Here are some of the most features of the evidence against Duran Ware was stabbed eighteen times b? a ■ 1 A. ft Bl - ii My i&s -th - I I • <4k A. tW'mwW THE F.MANt EL BAPTIST CHVBCH. man who held his throat with his right hand and used a dagger or knife with the left. Blanche Lamont was strangled by a left-handed man. Durant is noted for his dexterity in using his left hand as well as his right. On the day of the disappearance of Blanche I,ainont —she whose body was afterwards found in the belfry—Durant was observed by the organist coming down from the loft in a most excited and nervous state. He explained that he had been up there fixing some electric wires and had been overcome by the gas. Three of Blanche Lamont’s rings were received through the mail by her aunt on the day her body was found. On the paper in which they w ere wrapped was Durant’s name. In an overcoat pocket in Durant’s dressing room at hume was found .Miss Williams’ pocketbook. These are some of the links in the chain which is being forged about Durant. MINT SHORTAGE $90,000. Something Over That Amount Makes the Total of the Loot. Superintendent Mason of the Government assay office in New York has been in full charge of the mint scandal iuves-
tigation at Carson, Nev., for two weeks, and it is understood that he has completed his investigation and forwarded his report to WashingIton. The total shortage will reach a trifle I over $90,000, which I is due to the stuffing ’of the bullion deposits with gold bricks. It is understood, also, that his rviw»rt will exonerate entire-
*■ AjrS* BUPT. ADAMS.
ly the present administration from any wrong doing. The only loss discovered since the present administration came into power was one bar of gold valued at about and there is good reason to suppose that this was taken by a part of the same gang that manipulated the goldbrick trick under the other administration. Just as soon as these discoveries of fraud were reported to the Treasury Department. which was about the middle of February, three of the shrewdest detectives in the secret service were sent immediately to Carson City. They were not long In getting on the track of the offenders. They discovered that several of them were still employed in the mint, while the chief culprit had left the service. They then set about locating h-m. It was found that he had gone to San Francisco, where he will be arrested at once. His arrest has only been delayed in order to secure further evidence and if he should make the slightest attempt to leave San Francisco he would be apprehended immediately. Thompson McDaniels, a veteran of the Black Hawk war, died Friday at Kansas City, aged 90 years. Jagolkowsky is the deposing name of an anarchist recently sentenced in Europe to penal servitude fur life. Albert George Sandetuan, tbe new Gov£“l*3.3 'w Ba “ k ° f Engl “ d ’ " m lajd. He is a wine merchant. Li Hung Chang is said to be gaining flesh. Its too late for him to turn the scales m favor of China, however. The Rev. Otis Wing, the oldest Raptist minister in America, is seriou.lv ill „ his home in Newton Junction. N. H. Dr Dwight author of "Man and the vlaciai Period, says that man has not been on the earth more than 8,000 years Zola has completed the first sketch of his novel on Rome, but the book will not be ready for publication till next Janua“ thit h E - has announced that he cannot undertake to either read or answer any letters that may be addressed The Emperor of Germanv. it is has decided to honor Bismarck by Lvine his head stamped on the future i^ e o ? German coins. issue of illiam Harcourt rChancellor of the Exch™ U e r h ? npHsh back to the use of manuscript irh r< ? e livering his speeches. * B<,ipt wh ‘ , ° *>• has been awarded the T ff ß School, for the i R n <> dr m^ 1 from antique casts. ° Grawm S
BROVER ON FINANCE. TEXT OF HIS LETTER TO THE CHICAGO COMMITTEE. The Preaident Very Plainly Defi Bn Hia Position on the Silver Quest!*, —la Unquestionably in Favor of “Sound ||onejr*” Following is tbe text of Preside Cleveland’s reply to the invitation of Chicago business men to address a mertiaj to be held there ratifying the Presidents attitude on the money question: Executive Mansion, Washington. D. C_ To Messrs- Wui. T. Gevrae W. Smith. John A. Roche, T. W. Harvey. David Keiiv and Henry H. Robbins Gentlemen [ la much gratified by the exce» dingly kind complimentary invitation you have tender'd me on behalf of many citizens of Chlcagr.tr t>e their guest at a gathering in the interssound money and wholesome finiacUi loctrine. My attachment to this cause in so nd 1 know so well the hospitality sr.i KJ. ess of the people or < nicag > that my p* r . onal inclination Is strongly in favor oCic--eptlng vour flattering iuvitati u, but mr Judgment and my estimate of the pr of my cfflcla! place oblige me to forego tta j enjoyment of participating in the occui w i you contemplate. I hope, however, the event will mark the ! beginning of an earnest and aggressive ef- | fort to fllssemlnate among the people uh and prudent financial ideas Nothing more important can engage the attention <rf j*. triotie < Itliens, because nothing is yjta! to the welfare of our fellow countrymen tad to the strength, prosperity and honor of w nation. The situation contenting us demands that those who appreciate the Importance thh subject, and those who ought to lie tbe firr, to see Impending danger, should u. loogg remain Indifferent or overconfident. Bound-Money Sentiment. If the 8 .und-money ».] |j the land Is to save m- from mischief and dis aster It must be crystallised and comblaed and made Immediately active. It Is danjerous to overlook the fact that a large nuaLer us o r people with want opportunity, thus far. to examine the question in ail ita aspects, have nevertheless been Ingeni ;»iy pressed with Bp4 i »».s - -■ - . .. time of misfortune and depn ssion find wilt Ing listeners prepared to give iredenevta any s< heme which Is plausibly presented u a remedy for their unfortunate condltfoo. What Is how needed more than anythingel« la a plain and simple presentation of :1k argument In favor of sound money. Ta other words, It is a time for tbe American jwpi a to reason together as memlwrn of a rreat na. tlon. which can promise them n continutMi of protection and safety only so long a$ td solvency ia unsuspected ami honor unsuUkg and the soundness of ita money un<;ne> tinned These things are 111-changed forth Illusions of a debased currency and gr ind. - t disregard of our financial credit and rnercfal standing among tbe nations of th« world. If our people wore Isolated from a’ and If the question of our irr* r 4 be teated without regard to our relations u other countries. Ita character would bes fitter of comparatively little imp-nance If the American people were only concerned '3 the maintenance of their precious life « themselves they might return to the 0.1 days of barter, and in this primitive ids 2*? acquire from each other the materials ti supply the wants of their existence Rut |f American civilisation Is satisfied with this it would abjectly fail In its high and noble mission. Temptation of the Farmer. In these restless days the farmer Is ed by the assurance that, tin ugh our rency may be debased, redundant and on- . such a situation will Improve the price of his products. Let us remind hia that he must buy as well n« sell; that bis dreams of plenty sre shaded by the w taintr that If tbe price of the thing* he tai to sell Is nomfn llv enhanced, the s’ of ths things tie must buy will n-t n • 1. stationary; that the best prices whb h ch*tp money proclaims are unsubstantial ami elusive. ana that even If they wore r»;i aud palpable, be must necesaariy be left far behind in the race for their enjoyment It ought not to l»e difficult to convin- e t!.* vagt earner that If there were benefits ar - t from a degenera fed curren-y. they would reach him least of all and last of all In as unhealthy stimulation of prices an Increases cost of all tbe needs of bis home r. > M long bls portion, while he Is at the same tins vexed with vanishing visions of increased wages and an easier lot. The pages fMk tory and experience nr** full of ’ - • An Insidious attempt Is made to < rate • prejudice against the ad of a wfs anil sound currency by the Insinuate • T.-rs r less directly made, that they b. • z to financial and business classes an-l ar* therefore not only out of sympathy with the r> mon people of the land but for selfish aud wicked purposes are willing to witta Interests of those outside their clr* I believe that capital and wealth •>’ rt combinations and other means. * tn-tlmH gain an undue advantage: and It must be conceded that the maintenance of a currency may. In a bmm*. be h ' - ■ a greater or less Importance to Individ to cording to their condition and clrc 'instance!. It Is. however, only a difference in degree, since it Is utterly Imnoesible that any on« In our broad land, rich or poor, whatever may be bls occupation, whether dwoPlnf ia a center of finance and commerce nr In i rem.ee <‘<,rner <»f nnr <!<«ni:iin can be r®'/ benefited by « financial scheme, not alike beneficial to al! our people, or that any one sh.fi'd be excluded fr»»m a common ana universal Interest In the safe character tod value of the currency of the country All in Business. In our relation to this cnestlon. we are all in business, for we al! buy and sell: 8 ■ al! have to do with financial operations, f t wo all earn money and snend It. We ran not esesne our Interdependence Merchant! and dealers are In every n- Ighborhoo-i. and each has its shops and m.iuufactoriei. Wherever the wants of man exist, bislnew and finance, in some degree, an- found, related In one direction to tho«e whose wantl they supply and in another to the more extensive business and finance to which th*y are tributary. A fluctuation In prices at th! seaboard Is known the same day or hour to the remotest hamlet. The discredit or de predation in finan- lal centers nf anv Mrw of money in the hands of the pe pie is * B lgna! of Immediate loss everywhere if reckless discontent and wild experiment should sweep our currency from Its safe support. tbe most defenseless of all who suffer In that time of distress and national discredit will be tbe poor, rr they reckon their loss In their scanty support, and the hborel and workingman as he sees tbe money b p received for his toll shrink and shrivel In h’s hand when be tenders It for the necestn aunply his humble hone Disguise it as we n 1 ay, the line of battit ’S drsw- hrfn-enn the f-■ mos -so " ren 'l Rr, /. t V:’ Si ‘ ai '- rr H * brieve that if <>nr people are afforded aa intelligent opportunity for sober thought they will sanction schemes that r M«n. nor that they will consent by under* mining the foundation of a s«fe currency t® ardangor the beneficent character and of their government ' o-v truly. GROVER CLEVELAND Accepting Defeat. Doubtless a defeated candidate sot an nffi Ce might be benefited by learnlnf the lesson of this incident—but probably he would not heed it It is said that Herr Steinitz, the veteran chess-player, and for many year* champion of the world, seeing defeat was Inevitable In the concluding game of his match with Emmanuel Lasker, rose abruptly and shouted aloud, “Loof live the new champion!” The Women. In Dutch Guiana the women can? upon their persons all the family Ings in the shape of heavy bracelets anklets, neck’acos, and even crowni of gold and silver. They wear weighty earrings, and huge rings, six or eight Inches in diameter, dangle from their noses. Culture, having licked the whol* world into shape, has at last attacked the 4evil himself. But the devil wd l •Und a good deal of licking.
