Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 27 November 1894 — Page 3
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THE! ARE HARRIED.
Czar Nicholas Wedded to the Princess Aiix.
A MAGNIFICENT PAGEANTRY.
Thfi Marriage RCRFN'onip!" T»!IP la tlie AVinter lai u:e Accurdiiig to tiiw Ritual of the Greek v.. *,
Demonstration in tlie Streets in Front of "tho Iioyal Palace After the Wedding.
ST. PETERSBURG, ISTUV.
Nicholas II. was married to Princess Alix of Hesse-Darmstadt yesterday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock in the winter palace, with all the ceremonies of tlie orthodox church. Before 7 o'clock in tlie morning large crowds of people were assembling on the Newsky prospect in order to secure places along the route of tho royal wedding precision. From the Auitchkoft' palace .to the winter palace the whole avenue wa.s lined with troops.
At 11:J5 a. in. in th.3 distance was suddenly heard the fraud .swelling strains of tlie 31 rt I ion rt! itliem, and all along the route the multitudes uncovered in anticipation of the approach of the bridal party. Soon after there apper.rod an open state carriage dniwu by four white I horses. In this vehicle were the
rV^Pfck
NICHOLAS IX czar and his
brother, Grand Dn.'co Aliehaol. They both wore the umtorm or hu/,/. n-s of the guard, aud were greeted with a voeiferous outburst of cheering, which was ronewed again aud again.
The czar's equipage was preceded and also followed by the detachments of
RMXCEOS ALIX. czar himself, Handkerchiefs and hats were waved in the air and the most intense, uiiliuiMasm prevailed. I
After the'carriage of tlie'princess and the czarina followed a long train of carriageB with the royal guests, including the Prince and Princess of Wales, the Princess lrine of Prussia, the Grand Duchess Sergius and other prominent I members of the imperial famil}-, as well as all the wedding guests.
Military bands were stationed at various points along tlie route between the .two r. i'ocrT ,"k' th?j each stm- op- he national anthem as the cortege approached. The national hymn was thus sounded iu the ears of the imperial party along the entire route.
Reaching the winter paiace the royal party entered the Malachite liall, where the bridal procession was formed. At its head were the court functionaries and then came the czarina, escorted by the King of Denmark, her father, the czar and Princess Alix came next, followed by the Prince and Princess of Wales and| the other members of the imperial and royal families, another party of court otiicials bringing up the rear.
The procession first slowly traversed the concert, hall, the panels on the walls being the silver plates upon which the •:*Russian people presented to the lat$ czar bread and salt during his journey through the empire and upon the occasion of his coronation. A largo crystal candelabra was suspended from the ceiling.
The Nicholas hall was next entered by the westing party. It was deeora'-ed with white and gold and adorned by richly embellished panels, the work of famous artists. In the center of the wall was a striking portrait of .Nicholas I.
The bridal procession then traversed the fore hall, splendidly decorated in empire style, the field marshal's salon, where a variety of large war paintings adorned the walls, and thou passed through the famous Potroffskv hall, in which stanrls the throne of Peter the Great and which is graced with ancient furniture of oxidized silver. Prom this mag'H'e -tp the procession slowiy iSoed through the hall of the Court of Arms, named after four enormous allegorical figures of Russians holding in their hands the escutcheons of all the governments of tllie empire.
The bridal proees-ion then found itself in the Piketnay room, which adjoins the church. In this room remained the majority of the, otiicials and the members of the lesser nobility, only the imperial family aud their royal guests and the indispensable functionaries passing into the small chapoi, which is a most gorgeous little temple, giittoring with gold and stucco work.
In the center of the chapel stood a holy table, ou which had been placed the gospel and a cru*K. Between tiie table and the. altar were multi-branched candelabra with lighted tapers. Behind the table facinsr the attar stood tlie proto-presbytery Yanisoheff attired in gorgeous vestments of cloth of gold. Close behind the bridal pair the imperial and royal spectators, formed a semi-circle.
When all the wedding guests were assembled, the marriage ceremony was carried out according to tlie rites of the Greek church.
The ceremony was concluded alow minutes before 2 o'clock. The c/nv aud his bride then approached Ji Dowager Czarina to green and thank her. hlie embraced k. so.i and iii.s iTe, »iUr which they were embraced and kissed the King of Denmark and their other relatives. Kverybody was much moved aud tho bride, was tears. The czar was very pale aud was visibly alVected.
The wedding proeess:on was then reformed and the guests re-entered their carriages.
When the newly wedded pair arrived at the An fob oil' palace they wire received aud welcomed by the Dowager
r:
1
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-27.
1
al des
gardes and hussars and lancers of the guard, all in brilliant gala uniforms. Then came a superb landau, also drawn by four white horses, in which was Princess Alix I and tne czariua. They received if possible oven a I or e. arty I greeting the
'imsmsmmmm.
Czarina, who had preceded them for this purpose. Later the czar and czarina, accompanied by Grand Duchess Olga, youngest sister of the czar, appeared at a window of the palace overlooking the Newski prospect. Here they stood for 15 minutes, bowing repeatedly in response to th« acclamations of the multitude gathered outside the palace. Grand Due!1*'"? wtl' girlish enthusiasm,
I }n 1
v-
Czar
crowd.
Tue iefcuiiig on the arm of her hnsbaud. .«•••.:
rtyh
on Ms* throng.
There were ocvvnw similar demonstra-
-f eL.-r4 el'j-V.ion, dur-
ing the next hour. I The brirle'^ uicss was white, richly I embroideied with gold, aud„on her head was the I .\H b- lonji'ig to the costume and ornamented with dianionds. At tho top of the kokosimik was a small crown of diamonds. Tlie bride's mantle was of pmple velvet lined with ermitio.
The head dresses of the other court ladies were of ancient gold brocade adorned with samphires, emeralds and rubies. iici v.ozv of the famous lied iiussars of the guard, with a do?i:n-.u
i'vorv.
the r.^iit
shoulder. Tiie Prince of Wales and the Duke of Saxe-Coburg aud .'orha, wory Iluscihtu uniforms, while tDuke of York wore a naval ani.orm. All the royal print.es ore tiie cordon of the Order o£ bt. Antli-ow.
The czar issued a manifesto later in the day in honor of his marriage, which remits variou.-, u~"oi,- to the crown, including the repayment of the grants made to the on ..ecouut of families. He also wholly remits arrears of taxes and ih.vs ,-d tiL'~ ifr,s or shortens bUuvcucvs o*. lmpiicOiiiiiLUt, poli'fo "i e.*' :rd labor. The prosrcution for treason of Qlleuders who have remained undiscovered for 15 ycai'.' will be abandoned. The indulgences to political prisoners will be decided upo-i after a report has been subniitUJ lo ^he by the min- I ister of the interior. Amnesty is granted to the participants in the Polish rebel- I lioa of 18o3, and they will be permitted to reside anywhere in Russia. Their civil rights, but not their property, wrill be restored to them.
BURIED
1
WITH HONORS.
The Itemuins
TIFFIN,
of the I.ate General Gibson Laid to ltest.
O., Nov. 27.—General Wil
liam H. Gibson was buried yesterday afternoon. The obsrtquies attracted to the city one of the largest crowds in its history. The state officials arrived in a special train h\.-ui Columbus, and specials were run on all the roads entering the city.
The body was taken to St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal church after brief services had been held iu the house, and in the lectureroom of the church, surrounded by hundreds of lovely floral tributes, it was allowed to lie in state for two hours, during which time not loss than 15,00G people looked for the last time upon the face of the dead.
The services in the church consisted of psalm reading by Rev. Dr. Bigger, scripture lesson by Chaplain H. II. Bush of the Forty-ninth prayer by Dr. F. y. Hoyt and a memorial address by Dr. N. 8. Albright. Governor McKinley made a brief address and Chaplain Lozier o? Iowa sang the deceased's favorite song.
Tho general's old warhoin-e, with military accouterments and boots is iuspurs reversed, followed the hearse from the church to the cemetery, where the interment took place according to the G. A. R. ritual, unoer tho direction of E. E. Nutt, department commander of Ohio.
STRIKE
I E N I N
One 33an 31av
Cuiise a Strike Among tho IVIa.srtUlon miners.
MASSILLON,
E RSONO,
O., XSOV. ^7.—Trouble is
brewing among the Massillon miners. It is now two months since the agreeiuev was entered into to arbitrate the dispute which caused the eight months' strike, and the men are restive under the delay.
The immediate occasion of the difficulty if- t."e pros*•:!!
o*
BHAZIL,
f'
a minor named
fcjtut who is employed at the Upper Pigeon Run mine. During the long strike fcjtuU worked for the Wheeling oud Lake Erie railway and his job there was conditioned upon his signing a contract not to join, tho American Railway union. The miners regarded this as a violation of the principles of their organization, and want him excluded from all the mines in the vallev.
Fell Through a Trestle.
Ind.. JNov. 27.—William Car
penter, a prosperous farmer residing neai Cloverland, brother of Hon. W. s! Carpenter, Republican candidate for congress from this district iu 1892, was family injured Saturday night by stepping from a Vaudalia passenger train 11. I.! i*l',i i"U'ii 1 some reason on the bridge near the depot., ami Mr. Carpenter stepped from
the train, thinking the depot had been
reached. He foil 0 feet. *u
Took the Wrong iUedicine.
SrniN(IFIKLI», O., Nov. 27.— Dr. A. A. Baker, tlie widely known president of the Champion Chemical company, is critically ill and is believed to be on his deathbed. His illness is due to swallowing a big dose of morphine, which he took by mistake for an ai. ti-billious powder.
Kijircsn KoblnTfi Captur «i.
O. T., iNov 27.—Advices
received here yesterday state that several members of the gang that attempted the express robbery at Canadian City, Tex., Saturday, have been captured iu the Antoiope hills in the Cheyenne country. iJccails are lacking.
.luptiii Keady l-'or i'eace JV« otiiitioii.s.
ROMK, NOV.
27.— An oilic.al dispatch
has been received from To do saying that .lapau has intimated tluit as s.ion as China ma make peace proposals Japan will accept the good o:rices of tiie mted States in tho negotiations with Pekin.
Oimrr.-h-d Willi His HrotIir. !-.\v \oKK, Nov. 27.—Rosa no Mareeglmo quarreled with lus brother, (:«ouuio, ye.-.tOL' day .vi-oruoou in a sab ion on Mulberry street, liosarto »ra..hed h'nen-o in tho left lu-oast,. killing him almost instantly. Rosario escajx'd. ol I jiitor.
IMAIHSON, ind.,
The.mas
1
liov. ::7.—Colonel
1J.
Wright, who has edited
ro papon than any man in America, rtie yerit rIuv morning at iJrooksburg, th ., cuuniv.
-*.1* dor 5
Vfc,
A New York Syndicate Takes the Entire Lot.
THE PRICE PAID WAS 117.077
It Is tlie Expectation of the Treasury Officials That the Deposits of Gold For tho Payment of the ltonds Will Bo Made
Very Promptly and tiie Gold Reserve Restored. '4-
WASHINOTON, Nov. 27. Secretary Carlisle yesterday acted in the matter of the allotment of the $50,000,000 5 per cent bonds, bids for which were opened at the treasury department Saturday. He accepted the proposal submitted by the syndicate represented by John A. Stewart oi: tlie United States Trust company of New York and others to take the entire i:ssu' at 117.077. 'j i.-i v. a.pi .nion of the tie-s.:)Liiy officials that the deposits of gold for the of I'.iu b^i.u.s lit be iiuuit.' e±y promptly and as the understanding is that none of the gold is to betaken from the treasury, an early restoration of tne gold reserve to above the $100,000,000 mark woli be the result. The bonds, including premium, will realize to the government about $58,500,000.
The gold balance which is now round numbers $57,500.000, will, if the expectations of the officials regarding the deposits of gold for bonds are borne out, be increased to about $116,000,000. Before yesterday, however, there had been £t.5~0.000 in gold drawn from trie subtreasury at xVew Yoirk presumably to be used iu pay,aunt of the bonds.
Assistant Secretary Curtis heard unofficially over the long distance telephone from New York during the afternoon that $8,000,000 in gold had been deposited in the subtreasury there for bond payments. The bonds are deliverable* as soon as the gold is deposited, and as the bureau of engraving and printing has been busy at work! preparing for the issue, they will, it! is expected. soon be readv for distribr tion. bonds which as follows:
The denominations of the syndicate will t«ke are Coupons, $50-$25,000 $100-425,000 $1,000-134,950,000 registered, §10,000$15,000,000.
Tiie conditions on which the bonds are accepted is shown by the original proposal of the syndicate, whiel] is in the following terms, minus the names of the companies composing th^ trust and the denominations wanted: "We hereby propose, under th|) terms of your circular of Nov. 13, 1804, to purchase United States 5 per cent 10year bonds described in said circular of the the face value of $50,000,000, and we agree to pay therefore at the rate of 117.077 and accrued interest jjer $100. This bid is for the whole $50,000,000, but not for any lesser amount. "We further agree, upon due notice of the acceptance of this subscription, to deposit the amount thereof in gold coin or gold certificates with United States assistant treasurers at either Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Cincinnati, Cliicago, St. Louis. New Orleans or San Francisco, in accordance with the terms of said circular. ••Wo uesixe (regi?te7*ed or coupon) bonds in denominations as stated below and we wish them to be delivered to us as follows: $40,000,000 at New York, $3,000,000 at Boston, $3,000,000 at Philadelphia, $2,000,000 at Chicago and $2,000,000 at San Francisco or other United States treasuries as may be approved by the treasury department."
OTHER TOWNS WANT HIM.
William McDonald
IN
MIDDLETOWN, O
Captured at Kich-
nioud, lnL
Nov. 27.— Chief
Anderson received a telegram Monday from the chief of police at Richmond, Ind., stating that William McDonald, who is wanted in this oity for receiving goods uader false pretenses, is now in the custody of the police of that city. It will be remembered that McDonald was the man who sought employment with M. Sternbergor, the well known furniture dealer, about two weeks ago, and wher. given charge of an amount of goods skipped with the same. When captured at Richmond he was attempting to play the same racket on a merchant of that place. Chief Anderson left Monday morning for that city and will return with his prisoner. The catch is considered a good one, as: McDonald is wanted at Dayton, Springheld and Columbus on various charges.
Soft Food and I lot. Drinks. PORTLAND, Ind., Nov. 27. David Boyd lias brought suit against Beniar S. Wilson and William Rider of Redkey, claiming $2,000 damages. The defendants are officers, and the plaintiff al1MM «:.(!•'• be -.-..s 7-..., down Wi!*v,
and Rider while tln-y were ptu-.suiug a law breaker, and that they fritrhtened
HIJIU I 1 1 J.1 1 t-
ho,r'se
^L1:,
lus
turned. Boyd was thrown out and badly hurt, his injuries being permanent. He claims that he is unable to eat anything hard or drink anything cold.
Foui Head in B«»1.
Sr. Louis,
NOV.
vi7.—Thomas Bot
tom, a traveling salesman for a Sc. Louis medicine house, was found dead in bod yesterday at the Belvedere hotel. I A half emptied bottle of morphine, I found in the room, indicated that death was due to poison, and the case is believed be one of suicide. No reason, except financial embarrassment, is known for his committing suicide.' Deceased leaves a widow and several cliildren living at 5 Cottage Court, Boston.
HHX-IIIOII
Ansign.
COLUMBUS,
O., Nov. ~7.—Seymour
Brothers, slioemen, failed yesterday ev!ning, assets about .'^JO.OOO, andliabilities in excess of that sum. They operated two retail ston:s this city and
one each in Mount Vernon and Mansfield. During tho day judgments were taken against the firm for $!0,0 )o.2.S, and a chattel mortgage given for $:j,I 000. I Mot (tor and Ciiild Fatuity Hi:l iu it.
B.u „i,,„i- Ne-v. ^7.- s. Kate Douov.in and her a-year-old daughter, Annio, wore fatatlv bume-.i yesr.i\rlay affcoruoon iii their iioino,. l.-'ris iy street, averly. Tlie aconient was caused by the ehihl ptiiinig a laarp o.f a tiible.
A^iir'.vi,1.
dition of .II tor of tne Vico voraoie.
1-ii.son [inproving. (J., ov. ~7.—The cons!ary 'oVinson, dnugUprcM.miil, cjnt-nues iu-
1 1
5hT
Ai »,V
In hi» lauyh.
But last week Colonel Babcock brought a serious charge against Bailey. He said he had gone to work what is more, he had tho evidence to prove it.
Things looked really badly for Bailey. The work was no harder than that involved in drawing the pay attached to a political office, but it was work, and he could not deny it. So he took refuge in technicalities. Mr. Kellogg was trying tho case, and to him Bailey made thif p1".^. "If it pleat tie i* a'-l, "the members of this socioty must not do any work of any kind?" "Tliey must not." replied Colonel Babcock sternly. "They should not indulge in any kind of effort?" "Certainly not," again interjocted the colonel. I "They cannot consistently tako action of any description?" "They assuredly cannot," "Then," said Bailey triumphantly, "I would like to know how they are going to expel a member that means action." And President Kollogg sustained him, holding that it would be impossible constitutionally to even take
a vote on the charges. —Chicago Tribune. ,,
MONOCLES IN EUROPE.
house
waa^over-
It is by some thought to give an aspoct of determination and ferocity to the wearer, whereas eyeglasses lend an air of feebleness.—New York World.
Held IJj at, His Oivn Door.
SPitnwviELD, O.. Nov. 27.—Nc-wfus PapaMii, a fruit dealer, was held up at midnight in tb.e shadow of his own door by a masked man, who, at the point of a revolver, robbed him of $27. Numerous similar jobs are now credited fco tlie same masked man.
Misled His Msi'-lt.
GALLU'OLIS, O NOV. 7
i- I
A.V'v
GEMS IN VERSE.
The Last Leaf.
I saw lnm once before, As hu passed by the door, And again The pavement stones resound As he totters o'er the ground
With his cane.
Tlicy say that in his pi iliK, Ero the pruning knife of time Cut him down, Not a better man was found By the oner on his Foiuxl
Through the town.
But now ho walks the stri •ot". And he looks at all he meets, Sad and wan, And lie shakes his treble head, That 11 seems as if he said, "They are gone."
The mossy marbles rest On the hps that he has pre^t In their bloom. And the names he loved to hear Kav been carved for many a year
On the tomb.
.My tjrandnirimnia has --ed— l'ooi- old lady, she is dead Long ago— Tliat !',• hail a Koman no^o. Ami hia! cheek was like a roso
In the snow.
But now his nose is thin, And it rests upon h.- dim Ll'ce a slaft, And a crook is in hi~. hack. And a melancholy crack
I know it is a sin For one to sit and grin At lam here, But tho old three cornered hat Ainl ihe breeches and all that
Are so queer!
And if I should live to be as Tne last leat upon tho tree In the spring Let them smile, us I do now, At the old torsaken bough
:^y-
£T~'
1
Their IIws Kellcved to Bare Originated In tlie British Army. In every capital of Europe the monocle is common enough. It attracts no attention on the street. In a row of men at the theater a considerable proportion are sure to have it Perhaps half the officers in the Gorman army wear monocles. They are to be seen in abundance at any meeting of the French academy, Even socialist deputies in France are not ashamed to go among their const-it- I uents wearing them. A session of tho English
of commons glitters with
solitary eyeglasses. The single eyeglass is said to i,,.»o 0. igmatuvi auioug tho officers of the British army. I
About the beginning of the century an order was issued that army officers should not wear eyeglasses or specta- I cles. It was supposed that they gavo the wearers an unmilitary appearance. The order caused sevoro inconvenienco to many short sighted officers, and one of them, belonging to crack regiment, invented the single eyeglass. He claimed that, being an eyeglass, its use was no contravention of tho order which prohibited spectacles and eyeglasses. It soon became very popular in the army and was afterward adopted. On account probably of this origin the singlo eyeglass is very generally worn in Europe by army officers.
Joe Hall,
colored, got mad at a stock buyer and {Seizing-a piece' of timber throw it at him. Tiie missle missed its aim and struck John Curry, a prominent liveryman, fracturing his skull. Hall had his preliminary hearing before Mavor Alexander and was bouud over to
HOW TO PRESERVE PENCIL SKETCHES
Valuable Ones May Ee Kept Indefinitely by a Utile Care at First. Pencil drawings may be rondered ineffaceable by a very simple process. Slightly warm a sheet of ordinary drawing paper then place it carefully on tho surface of a volution of white ror-in
I to becomo thoroughly lnui^eiieu. Afterward dry in a oi i.i\ ... vi"" KtI pel' prepared iu h.i.-j \vuv has a very smooth surface, in drawiu,.r, the paper is to be slightly warm for a few moments. This process riay prove u:-clr.I f'"" nrr:oryah' of plans or designs when want of timo or any other cause will not allow of draft -men lvpiv.ducing them in ink. A simpler plan than this is to brush over I the back of the paper containing the pencil sketch with a weak solution of I shellac in alcohol. Chalk and pencil j: drawings may be fixed, though not so til
or ni-.'Mr i5 by *1h nhov^ uv-'liod.-. by washing them with skimniilk or wi.h vi'a.o, 1 .• jiuiv iho.uiii a liule isinylass or gu:n. When milk is used, great care mc. be tak that no crenm it would cause tlie i'u:."','. An :sv wav
re mail: diawie
Where I cling. —Oliver Wendell Holmes.
DAWSON'S NARROW ESCAPE.
He Couldn't I!e Expelled From a No Work Club For Obvious Reasons, Bailey Dawson was in danger of being expelled from the Society of Christian Repose. The object of the society, as ita name indicates, is to discourage endeavor of any character, and its members, who comprise such well known old residents as Colonel A. M. Babcock, A. N. Kellogg, founder of the newspaper publishing concern Frank Parmelee of the bus line, and others, are men who think they have done their work in life and now only ask for rest. They meet at the Grand Pacific hotel and do not even talk much, preferring to sit in the easy chairs in the rotunda and look at each other.
in
If.
1"
1
1
Lr,
into a shallow vessel and lay the drnw'.ing Hat upon t.he surface ot' tho liquid,
after which remove gently and lay it I in an inclined position on white blot-., ting paper to drain and 1 rv.
Pour half
switened, i: well whi. •. put them into a ct st( adily over tlm 1 tard is produce:!, takieg boil, or it will be spoiled
Remove from
the fire and put aside until cold then add half a pint of whipped cream to tho custard aud either a little liquor or a teaspoonfnl of vanilla essence. Ascertain that the mixture is sweet enough and add some dried cherries and pineapple cut into small pieces and a few drops of carmine, just sufficient to give a pale pink tint.
Pat the mixture into a pudding mold with a cover, or an ordinary round cocoa tin that will hold a pint will do quite as well, provided it has a well titting cover. Stand the tin in a zinc pail, and pack it around tightly with equal quantities of rough ice, broken up into fairly small piece?, and f-eer.ing so It. About 3 pounds of each will be required. Then cover the pail en'.'rely with a thick blanket and stand it in a warm corner of tho kitchen, near tho fire, but not too close, for 3 hours. Then turn tho pudding out of the tin, knocking it on tho tabio if necossary to loosen it, and servo at onco.
I How to Clean Chamois Gloves. The best way for cleaning chamois gloves is to put them on the hands and wash them in lukewarm water with white soap. Rinse them in clean lukeI warm water and squeeze them as dry as possible. Then dry thoroughly whiio still on the hands with a clean towel, peel llieni off tho hands and hang an open window, first carefully pulhng I them into .shape.
SsSiii llow Artists'^rodels Are Paid. The regular rate in the art schools is 333-3 cents an hour, or $10 a week for six days' work of four hours each. If no complaints are made by tlie art student or class monitor, the model gets a 2~ per cent premium. "Good days" aro few and far apart, for the poses are 2o minutes long, with only five minutes' rest, and in difficult positions more than human nature can endure. To get off tho pose an instant or to keep it in a lazy manner provokes complaint, and although tho croaker may bo the veriest bungler it counts agaiu:t the poor mudel, who may be trying to earn an honestlivelihood.
How to fhon.o (inc.d 1/iz Malv«s. Bad digestion wilt often assert itself in bi'oken or chapped lips, sores in tho corners of the mouth, fever blisters and a coated tongue. Chronic soro mouths should be rubbed with sweet oil or pure glycerin at night. In the morning wash with a solution of alum or borax, a teaspoonful in a tumbler of water. Camphor ioo is both healing and cleansing. Good cold cream is not a bad salve. All the druggists have supplies and cheerfully dispense 5 cent quantities. Citron ointment is ono of the old reliable lio salves kept by ail chemists, it is applied to tho soro with a soft linen cloth. When the mouth is sore, tho diet should bo changed to vegetable foods.
How to I'oil Halibut.
Tie it nicely in a linen cloth, put it in a kettlo of cold water, enough to eover it, aud add a tablespoonfnl of vinegar and a little salt, and after the water begins to boil let it boil-'from 15 -to 20 minutes, and the fish is done. Lift it out carefully and let it drain a couple of minutes before serving. Egg sauce is a drawn butter made of milk instead of water, with hard boiled eggs chopped fine and stirred in just before serving, Pour this sauce over the fish and gar- I nisli with sprigs of parsley, and it is I ready to serve. The potatoes should be peeled, and if not small enough cut as small as walnuts, boiled or steamed, and rolled in melted butter and chopped parsley before serving.
How to ili-move Dried i'iiisit. To remove paint that has dried in a fabric put tho soiled spot over a dish and pour spirits of turpentine over it and let it stand for several hours. Then tako tho fabric iu tiie hands and rub briskly. To remove paint that has just been aequired pour coal oil on the fabric. A brisk rubbing with a clean cloth will bring the paint right, out. Hang the garment i?i the air, and the coal oil aud turpentine will evaporate. If in haste, rub in gasoline and hang in the sun.
How lo 'lost XutlHOJJS.
-i.Piiek them with a pin, and if they lire good tho oil will instantly spread around the puncture.
THE TURFMAN.
More).: will race no more. Tho next thing is to be a cork track. Tho gray gilding Silver Ore, SJ: by St. Bel, is blind.
The horse of the future must be bred iof a spccial purpose. A
•".John it. uenrrv will bo thn lirsc horse
of I/O I vl v.'irL
Junto
A
I ITc.rso wintered i:i '!"e.:v
•in" :cod. is likely that i.m .. .n ,i iiCuniiii. !:~.i h::vo often beem, iada with good results. ,iiv. Hi o' '. •in^- too to hi.' too short, '•"ar ch took rec-i
Johg, }\'t his stride
:ixi
v-ftuir trotting
orus better tlu.n ~:'4U durihg the present Beai-un. Texas i= now a profirable ni.-.ri^et for blue grass breeders uf thoroaghbreds and trotters.
Sehreih.-r has signed felix (irr to rido a a -y v.-.il he 0. (. J. i:. .':riifird will bfl ii hine in
at!'.')n/i i!i- cie-icvn .siars wi.,. v. Calii'of:.ia (hi'-ing Iiio winter. Vile i-a!'- of hi'Ves for lho ',1 them-elV.-.: in
VOJ n. A..a«»
illicit a
lio display
I'M. 0.
..
tlie New
•i* realized
a jialatial will do
Byron McClelland is to ercc rcsuh ncn Lexington.
ri!os
Licixf- I.
c. I
a pint of boiling mi! a basin containing rwo •ggs. Stir tho ingredients, an sau'vpan and stir ••o until a thick eusiva it does not
N'.i
varre'.s
out of ih" iirrviM.x's of Henry nf winning Miiirrh :ha. Orv-. of T'.Vi'iful Trolls, dam at eight, 2: 0 performers, is still living and is now In li'-vi ci to fxJ to a son u'l
1-"
renter
i'avoriti- for the i/cioy. iio is a mil brother to C'hiidwici: ami is tiie property of H. iJcCabiMnt, th.L- „ojyner,,..o£ L,inglass.-—-Horseman. ii*.
O E
roundabout fool,
A rn'uie i.=
ridge. ••.'Rank and richer are still chains.—Ruffini.
—Cole*
chains of
ild, but
Of all virt!:•_:» justko is the b«-st. Valor without it is a common post-—Waller. In tho meanest hut is a romance, if you but knew the hearts there.—Van Enso.
What is birth to a man if it be a stain to his dead a:ir:v.tor.i to h.i vo i..:ft such an offspring?—Sir P. Sidney.
Thero is as much responsibility in imparting your own secrets as in keeping those of your zu '-rhbor.—Darlev.
Gloom and -ess are poison to us, tho origin of hysterics, which is a diseaso of tho imnginai! by vexation and supported by fear.—Sevigne.
Perhaps ron-.e habitant of fa roll star, born to the horhago of loftier powers, although wo cannot scan his flowing world, yet surveys ours.—M. E. W. .Sherwood.
Men peri.?hed in winter winds till one smote tiro from liintsionus coioiy hiding what they hi Id—tho rid \'uk treasured from the kindling son.—Edwin Arnold.
Should on•'• tell .you that a mountain had changed it hi-o you are at liberty to doubt it, but if any one u-'is you that man has HI .T 1 his character do not believe it.—ilohaiinncd.
Not by appointment dowt met delight or j'v"- They ne?d rot, our .j .. 'arcy, but round c^iuern£ tin- Mnxst, lifo they on a KU'hlon grett us uh a smile.— raid AVIUSS'' V.
CHICAGO CU'TwZTS.
Ten pira'e.-? have been ea,»turi.-d on
the
Chicago v-wr, but hicacio's streets ore still full of th'-m.- New Y:rk World. Thero aro ladies in Chioago who lieaff with unconcealed envy that Mrs. Vanderbilt is to gee .(io0.o(i0 out of hor divorce. —St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Chicago claims to bo larger than
Now
York, but if she succeeds in driving
out
nil the gamblers she will have to fall in behind St. Louis.—Galveston News. A Chicago wife murderer of tho nam© of Kurtz has been v. it-ing a novel. Itwili bo fully up to the Chicago standard.
It
would not be below.—Albany Journal. Chicago is rr-v» »ip in the luxury of a lndy sandbiiggor, who clubs women In their own homes to rob them. Tho kind of criminal that Chicago cannot produce is hard to find.— Mihvuukeo Newn. .*
Pirates have been uL..o»erod who occupy a boa tho use in the Chicago river. Men who would prv.fer to live on tho odoriferous Chicago to confinement in iho penitentiaiy .".re tho most debased of humankind.—New York Advertir.er.
In Chicago the children get lessons 'n penmanship on typev. wnlk to school on bicycles, lc:irn foreign languages by phonogra and calculate tho increase in population by geometrical progression. Who shall i.eny that this is progress?—* New York Sun.
THE vriTjn.
Mr. Thomas [lardy, the novelist, is descended from tin: Hardy to v/honi the dying Nelson said, ''Kiss nie, liaidy."
Emile Zola has become a lover of the bicycle. A recent issue of La liieycletto' contained his picture in tho costume of a wheelman.
F. Marion Crawford has no fails about the circumstances under which he writes. Ho can work anywhere and labors on hia-. novels while traveling. HS
Louiso Imogen Guiney is one of tho most promising contemporary American poets. She wa.s educated in the Bostonschools, and the Elizabethan era has been her absorbing subject of study. "Gyp, tlie writer of sensational novels, is Mine, de Miirtie. Hhe is -1-1 years old, was born in rlrittany and is a greatniecoof Mirabeau. married at IS), and her ehlest child, a boy, is X.M) jcars of ago.
William T. -Adams, who is practically unknown by that name, snys he soon tired of his nom do plume of "Oliver Optic," under which he has written 1'JCi books and l.UOO newspaper stories, anil endeavored, to change it, but his publishers would not listen to the proposition.
PRINCESS ALIX'S NCW NAME.
Princess Alix is now grand duchess of Ulagovernaja Yclikaja hnagiua, but she must, be enmen k.-.u... ..j ....American friends simply Alix until they can practice on the Kie-o-o. twist necessary to do her uew title justice.—hi. .liouis PostDispatch. ,* i., ".
Kroni this time fort!• i'rineess Alix will iie known as Alexandria Keooorovna, with the titles of grand duchess and imperial highness, it would be a .st retch of imagination to say that t-he has gained much in tiie ehaime, even if the lirst name was trille sawed off. 1'ittsburg Dispatch.
.1 I,
