Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1895 — Page 3
THE INDIANAPOLIS JOUENAL, FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1895.
3
The New York Store Ctahlled tWM.) This wiJ be UMBRELLA DAY -n ' , A great big lot bought from a mm in New York who too: a little bit of a price raher than wait. And thats the same thing we are ping to do take little bit of prices. 3 LOTS 3 PRICES.
AI!26-In. Egllsh Gloria Urn brcllasparagn frame. In a va ritty of handts, including natural wood, slier mounted, ring, . celluloid and .orn. 57c 69c 98c PettisDryGoodsCo PERSONAL AND SOCIETY. Mrs. E. S. t. Seguln has returned from Iluronia Bead. v .Mr. and Mn J. H. Claypool and ion have gone to Atiaitlc City.. Dr. anJ Ms. Long have returned from an extended Eastern visit. Miss Eleano Kctcham has returned from a two weeks' visit to Maxinkuckee. Mrs. L. H. Eads has returned from a f ve weeks' visit o her mother In Cincinnati. Mrs. C. V. Lefler has returned home from a thre weeks' trip to St. Joe, Mich. Mayor an;? ;Mrs. C. S. Denny will & to Cincinnati tomorrow to make a short visit. Mr. Edwa-d Gates will leave to-day for Eay View. 3ich., to make a visit to friends. Mr. William Graydon and Mrs. A. F. Hall will go to Wawasee to-day to spend ten -days. Miss Blarrbe Albertson has gone to Chicago and lock Island, 111., to visit relatives. Miss Kale Spiegel and Josie Hermann have gone to Pine lake to spend several weeks. ' Mrs. P. Blair. Miss Susanna Pray and Miss Ertma Little have returned from Petoskey. Mr. aid Mrs. Thomas II. McLean will spend Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Doxey, In Andersen. Jlrs. Rachel Nesbit. Mrs. W. W. Woolen and mther, Mrs. Evans, have gone to St. Joe, Mich. Miss Harriett RItter has gone to Cincinnati, and later she will go to Nova Scotia and Beaton. Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Comstock will leave to-day for Duluth, to be absent three or four weeks. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Higglns and son will leave to-morrow for Ottawa - Beach, to spend a month. Mrs. Harry Gates, who Is spending a few days at home, will return to Maxinkuckee to-morrow. Mrs. Mary Campbell and daughter. Miss Mary Campbell, will go to Boston Aug. 19 to spend two weeks. Miss Katherlne Lemcke left yesterday fcr Evansvllle, where she will visit friends for & week or ten days. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Louden have returned from Hot Springs, where they have been for several months. ' Mr. and Mrs. Francis T. Hord and daughter Eleanor, who have beea at Nantucket, are expected home this week. Mr. and Mrs. Bert J. Muller, of North Mississippi street, are now summering at lakes Roumona and Creve Coeur. - Mrs. A. A. Barnes gave a theater party a. Wildwood Wednesday evening in honor Mrs. N. A. Gladding, of Memphis, , . i Mr W. A. Ketch am and daughters and Miss Daisy Wilson will go East next week to spend a fortnight or three weeks. Mrs. Dllks and daughter NelUe will leave Wednesday for Salt Sulphur Springs, Va. and Ashevljle, N. C. to spends two works. Miss Annie Sloan will visit Miss Ida Pomeroy. on Ft. Mary street, for a short time before returning to her home in Cincinnati. Mrs. C. B. Lockard left yesterday for Atlantic City, where sho will Join a -party of Philadelphia friends to spend the month of August. - The Chapel Club wa entertained by Mrs. George IL Boyce Wednesday afternoon. The house was decorated with roses and weet peas. Sir. Page Chapman and Mr. 0to Hauelen will leave this evening" for 7iu Claire, Witf., to visit Mr. George Chapririn for ten days or two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Speers, of New York, will come this week to visit Mr. Speers's sister, Mrs. Bement Lyman, and family, on North Pennsylvania street. Miss Mary Denny, who la visiting Jn .Swarthmore, near Philadelphia, will return home early in September, accompanied by Miss Hanson, who was her guest last winter. Miss Violet Coen. of Chicago, formerly of this city, will com to-day to visit Miss Corella Taylor. This evenlntr Miss Taylor will entertain a -few friends in Mis Coea's honor. ' Mr. and Mrs. M. Xlmmaster entertained a number of frlanda Tuesday evening last at their home, No. 3S Tecumseh avenue, "complimentary to Miss N. June Murray, of Milwaukee. Misses Katherlne and Eleanor' Porter, who have been visiting at Maxinkuckee, returned home yesterday, accompanied by Miss Phipps, of Baltimore. ho will be their guest. Mr. and Mrs, Charles Dryer and Mrs. Dryer's mother, Mrs. Sloan, of Cincinnati, will go to Toronto and other Canadian cities next week to spend . the remainder of the month. Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. WTayne. of Philadelphia, have come to this city to reside. Mrs. Warfle is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Dllks, and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne will reside with them. Mr. H. J. -Mllligan, who has been East. Is expected home to-day. Mrs. Milligan end daughter, who went . East with him. will go tc South Hampton, L. I., to spend the remainder of the summer. Miss Nellie Whltcomb, who has been visiting Mrs. and Mlis Stevens in Chicago, went to Maxlnkiickee yesterday, wher she will join her torother. Mr. George Wbltcomb, and spend a few weeks. . Mrs. E. K. Wetherald. of Connersvllle, who was Joined here by her daughter, Mrs. Van Arnsdall. of Wabash, and who have both been visitin.cr Mrs. J. B. Whelden. have returned to the former's home, in Connersvllle. Mrs. Joseph Robinson and daughters Anna Belle have returned from Long Island, where they have been for a month. Miss Josephine Robinson, who went with them, will not return for three o four week. Mls3 -Louise Garrard, formerly ;of this city, who Is at Clark.burs. Va..will return here to reside Aug. 15. -Miss Garrard will have the position of curator for the Propylaeum, suoeeding Mrs. Clara H. Hall, who will go to Washington in Mrs. Somer's school. ' - A party of about twenty went to Mlllersille last evening on their wheels and took upper, returning by moonlight. The meet was at 4 o'clock, at the corner of Pennsylvania arvl Seventh streetr. Mr. W; "t. Nohte, Mr. W. T. Barnes and Mr. C. IZ. Coflln were at the head of the party. The bort of managers of the reformatory took dinner at the institution yesterday, and had as their guests of honor IM, Marie Haslep, the nrst woman physician. Dr. Martha J. Smith, the second physlcUn, and Dr. Sarah Stockton, the present physician of the Institution. Dr. Haslep went from th institution to China, where he was a.nvdial missionary for seven yejrs. Dr. Smith went to the Insane hospital, where she iS'tationrd at present. ' , BALLAKD-JAYV ''. Cpecial tn the Indianapolis Journal. niCIIMOND. InJ.. Aug. i.-a wejdln o! prominent joung people occurred last evening at the home of the bride's parents, Ir. and Mrs. Ell Jay. their daushter. Miss Mary, being united in marriage uith Mr. Edgar Ballard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Addison Ballard, of Pliintlcld. Ind. The ceremony was the one In use among . the Friend?, and was witnessed by about thirtv ...... i. t iXw unjrrni was Jiis Anna fct PlalnfleLI, ani to-morrow evening thv rrj!! te tendered reception by . his parf Later cn thy will return here and -Jj with the briie's parents.
irrpoH,- u; iona, a cousin or the brkle and the beat man was Mr. Frank FJalJanl! ft brother of the groom. To-morrow Mr t.-.d Mrs. Ballard will leave fr
AN APPEAL FOR AID
ILC0.91X WALLER'S . FAMILY STRANDED ON ISLAND MAURITIUS. (iurrrnmrnt No 3Irnns of Helping; Them Public Debt Statement for July A German Quarantine. WASHINGTON. Aug. 1. All the members of the Waller family are at last out of Madagascar, but their misfortunes continue, and Mrs. Waller, wife of the harrassed ex consul, is now, with her little children, helpless and stranded on an island at the other side of the globe. A letter received by Paul H. Bray, Waller's son-in-law, and a dispatch received to-day by the State Department from United States Consul Campbell at the Island of. Mauritius, both contain notification of the arrival of Mrs. Waller and her four children: at Port Louis, Mauritius, from Antananarivo, Madagascar, about the middle of June. The letter said that the mother and children were well, but that Mrs. Waller was suffering intense mental distress owing to her husband's misfortunes, and the hardships she and the children had to undergo. They did not know how they were going to reach the United States, being without money. Hearing of the appearance of the United States cruiser Castine In Madagascar waters, the mother and children had made their way from the interior of the Island to the coast in the hope of securing passage to the United States, but met with failure and disappointment. Mr. Ethelbert C. Woodford, an American engineer from New York, who had been In the capital of the Hovas on business, generously succored them, and paid their passage as far as M&ritius. Mr. Campbell, the American consul there. could do nothing more for them than ' to cable to the department an appeal for assistance to enable the mother and children to reach the United States. The department is unable to grant relief, and It will be necessary to look to friends in this country for aid. QL'ARAXTIXn AGAINST LIVE STOCK. Nctt Restriction Ordered by German?, and Wbat They Signify WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. Secretary Morton has received through the State Department a document from the United States embassy in Berlin -announcing the establishment by the Bundesrath of an obligatory quarantine of ruminating animals and swine imporUd by sea. The action was taken in order to prevent the introduction of Texas fever, pulmonary consumption, mange, sheep pox, swine pest, swine plague, foot and mouth disease, etc The' duration of quarantine is fixed at four weeks and an additional period of observation of five months at the place of destination. The imperial chancellor, however, is empowered to reduce the time of quarantine, as a special concession, to ten days In the cre of animals from countries where the diseases do not at the time exist. In such cases there will be no observation period. In cases where there may be some, special danger, the entry of cattle will be forbidden altogether. The occurrence of contagious diseases among animals tn any- quarantine station will result in Immediately stopping the admission of cattle thereto and the animals already there will be slaughtered and the station barred from further use until it Is completely disinfected. These quanantine regulations will go Into effect Oct. 1 next. Dr. Salmon, chief cf the Bureau of Animal Industry, says these regulations have no particular significance for American shippers as the importation of cattle into Germany from this country was prohibited altogether on tha pretense of the presencevof contagious diseases among our cattle. He attributes the regulations, which are regarded as very elastic, as a desire to secure the Importation of cattle by Germany from other countries than the United States, unless the German government intends to relieve this country after Oct. 1 from the prohibitive rule now in force. .PUBLIC DEI1T STATEMENT. - Increase for July In oiv Placed at ."" . 9.18,4.15,9.18. WASHINGTON, "Aug.- l.-The monthly treasury statement of the public debt shows the total debt on July SI, less cash In the treasury to , have been 1910,108,905, an increase for the month . of. $38,433,938. This Increase is due to the delivery to the London syndicate, during the month, of $31457,700, in 4 per cent, bonds, ' together with a loss of $8,990,822 in available cash. The debt Is recapitulated as follows Interest-bearing debt. 747,360.400; debt on which interest has ceased since maturity, $1,699,650; debt bearing no interest, $387,198,284; total, $1,127,258,435. Certincates and treasury notes offset by an equal amount of cash in treasury, $1,799,893. The cash in the treasury is classified as follows: Gold. $155,354,065; silver, 5512,746.149; paper, $133,276,791; bonds, disbursing officers' balances, etc., $13,920,823; total, $07,397,830, against which there are demand liabilities amounting to . $G20,248.3OO, leaving a cash balance in the treasury of $187,149,530. The monthly statement of the receipts and expenditures of the government during the month, of July shows: Receipts, $29,069,(27, as against $34,809,339 for July. 1894. The disbursements during July, 15. amounted to $38,548,053, as against $36.64S,5S2 for July, 1894. Of the receipts $14.076.&34 -were from customs and $12,838,405 from Internal revenue. During July, 1894. the receipts from customs were $S.437.2T,8 and from internal revenue, $25,200,487. The, pension payments last month amounted to $12. 75, 427. a reduction of about $147,000 from July, 1S91. - Iana for the Orinoco Syndicate. ST. PAUL, Minn., Aug. 1. Donald Grant. M. E. Clapp, W. H. Fisher and J. A. Bowman, of this State, have returned from Venezuela, where they closed negotiations for the operations of a syndicate which will open that country to American capital and give American manufacturers and wholesalers a larger market and closer connections 'with all northern South America than ever before. Part of the concession which is granted to this syndicate, it will be remembered, is claimed by Great Britain, now that the negotiations have been closed and the syndicate organized, as the Orinoco Company,- It will demand full protection of all it rights to the land by the ITnited States government. This is entirely likely, say the concessionaires, to force an Issue on the question of the Monroe doctrine between this country and Great Britain. Tho concession on the Orinoco river la said to be worth many millions. The Orinoco syndicate will be obliged, under the terms of concession, to induce colonists to locate, and they will open the mines and i placers. The latfer are largely on disputed soil. and. It 1 :aid. will quickly bring on conflicts with British authorities there. TIio ' Davenport 3Ijrntery. WASHINGTON, Aug. l.-Informatlon was received here to-day from the chief of police of Glasgow, Scotland, that Dana Davenport, the theological student, who has been missing from his home here since July 5, 'had 'been fatally injured) by a train in Glasgow. Davenport's father is an Episcopal minister here, and there is complete mystery surrounding his son's disappearance. ..Jt is supposed that young Davenport's mind became unbalanced through too much study. How he reached Scotland Is" unknown, no trace ever having been found of him from the day he was missed until he was picked up by the side of the Scotch railway. His name, ago and occupation' were all the Scotch authorities were able to obtain from him before he lapsed into unconsciousness. It Is supposed that hewas hit by a train and killeJ, though pome persons here, interested in the case think he had been murdered, as his gold watch was missing when he was found. Bank oten Outstanding;. WASHINGTON, Aug. 1. A statement prepared by the Controller of the Currency shows the amount of national bank notes outstandinK July 51 to have been $211,231,m. an increase for the year of $3,SW.ii9. The amount of circulation b.icd on United states nondj was fl84.sn.fl3, an Increase for the year of $5,521,499. The circulation ecureJ by lawful money amounted to $24. Tot -475. a decrease for the year of $l.t5,0&' The amount of United States registered bonds on deposit to secure circulating notes was $207,832.SOO, and to secure public depolta $13,328,X'0.
Crisp Hobnobbing; Jn London.' LONDON. Aug. L Charles F. Crisp, exSpeaker of the. United States House of Representatives, is sight-seeing in London. He recently vlsitM the place where he was born In Sheffield. Jan. 29. l$tS. while his parents were on a visit to that cit. lis ''
starts to-morrow in a steam launch for Oxford. The Bimetallic league has Invited Mr. Crisp to a conference, and he will b? dined previous to his departure for home bv the Speaker of the House of Commons, Mr. William C. Gully," and by Mr. John Hare, the actor. GenernI .Notes. rostmaster-general Wilson returned today from a two weeks' vacation in Virginia. Secretary Hoke Smith returned to the city to-day after a two weeks trip to Georgia during which he took part m the anti-silver campaign. Two hundred and fifty thousand dinars in gold will be shipped by the steamship Taale which sails for Europe on Saturday. The monthly statement prepared by the director of the mint shows that during July the total coinage of the United States mints amounted to $3,233,800, as follows: Gold. $2,910,000; silver. $77,000; minor coin. $18,800. Mr. Eckels, the controller, has returned from Illinois. Secretary and Mrs. Carlisle left for Chicago to-day over the B. & O. To-day's statement of the condition of the treasury shows: Available cash balance, $187,149,530; gold reserve, $107,236,486. CAN'T DEAL IN WHISKY
INJUNCTION' AGAINST THE Tit 1ST .MANIPULATION IX NEW YORK. Another Assnnlt on the Big Robbing Enterprise, vrltu n View to Choking? Oat Its Life. NEW YORK, Aug. 1. The litigation affecting the reorganization of the Distilling and Cattle-feeding Company, commonly known as the Whisky Trust, has been transferred from the Chicago courts to the Supreme Court of this city. A temporary injunction was granted by Judge Morgan O'Brien in Supreme Court chambers today upon the application of Guggenheimer, Untermeyer and Marshall, on hehalf of Frederick W. Anness, and George M. Pynchon, who own fifteen thousand shares of stock, restraining the reorganization committee of the Trust Jid the Manhattan Trust Company. Judge O'Brien's order enJoins the committee or any of them personally, or through their' agents or attorneys, from bidding on or buying the properties of the Whisky Trust under the reorganization agreement or from taking any action whatsoever by reason of the alleged ownership of any stock or money deposited with the Manhattan Trust Company. The latter company is enjoined from disposing of any of the moneys or securities which are on deposit with it. The Injunction is accompanied by an order requiring the reorganization committee to show cause on Wednesday next why the injunction should not be continued pending the trial of the motion to prevent the reorganization scheme. Richard B. Hartshorne, John I. Waterbury, Frederick M. Lockwood, Jules S. Bache, William E. Hutton and the Manhattan Trust Company are named as defendants In the motion for the injunction. The return day of the order to show cause may be changed to suit the convenience of the counsel for the reorganization committee, if a change be deemed necessary by them. Samuel Untermeyer, the counsel for Anness and Pynchon, the plaintiffs in . the action, when seen to-day declined to 'disclose the contents of the papers and gave as hi3 reason that he was anxious that this proceeding should not be made the instrument of a stock jobbing enterprise, and saying that he would prefer to have the true state of affairs come out in court. Mr. Bijur likewise declined to discuss the case. In a letter in reply to Mr. Bijur, Mr. Untermeyer says: : "Dear SirYour letter of yesterday, which was published in this morning's papers, was not delivered at my ofiice until 10 O'clock this morning, from which I infer that it was written for publication rather than' as a reply to the formal demand made on the trust company. : We must decline your invitation to settle this controversy in the public prints, as it is about to be submitted to the courts. We believe that the ends of justice will be best promoted by the orderly presentation of the cas in a forum in which my clients will not be subjected to irresponsible attacks. We are convinced that In appealing to the courts to put an end to this gigantic stock gambling concern, which has once been condemned to judicial death as a conspiracy against the State, and is nowbeing attempted to be galvanized into life for the purpose of continuing the same sort of business at the old stand, we are not. only protecting the interests of our clients, but are also performing a muchneeded public duty." WEATHER BUREAU FIGURES. Temperature Record Yesterdny Morning? uuil Lnut Nifrht. The local forecast official of the Weather Bureau furnishes the following observations taken yesterday at the places and hours named: 7 a. m. 7 p. m. Bismarck. N. D 8 Rapid City. N. D 74 71 Pierre, S. D 74 . 82 Huron. S. D .......64 71 Yankton. S. D St. Vincent. Minn 56 ' 72 Moorhead. Minn 62 76 Duluth. Minn 60 fiS St. Paul, Minn 58 76 North Platte. Neb.. 64 SO Valentine. Neb .....58 72 Omaha. Neb 64 78 Des Moines, la , 60 , 78 Davenport. Ia ....61 76 Keokuk. la 64 Concordia, Kan 62 84 Dodge City. Kan 68 S2 Wichita, Kan ....62 SI Kansas City, Mo 61 76 St. Louis, Mo 60 76 Springfield, Mo 64 84 Chicago. Ill 66 " . 68 Sprinsneld. Ill 61 76 Cairo. Ill 66 76 Marquette. Mich 58 60 Grand Haven, Mich 60 no Indianapolis. Ind 62 76 Louisville, Ky 60 76 Cincinnati, O 64 78 Cleveland. 0 62 7 Parkersburg. W. Va .....60 72 Pittsburg. Pa 60 . ' 70 Buffalo. N. Y oS 64 New York. N. Y 60 61 Ro.itor., Mass 61 Washington. D. C fi8 Charlotte, N. C 68 76 Atlanta. Ga CS 7s Jacksonville. Fla 7i 78 Chattanooga. Tenn 66 Nashville, Tenn G2 71 Memphis. Tenn CS 78 Vlckshurg. Miss 76 76 Fort Smith. Ark...; 64 76 Little Rock. Ark 66 76 Oklahoma, O. T 70 2 Amarillo, Tex ..66 Si Abilene. Tex 72 W Talestlne. Tex 74 S3 San Antonio, Tex 76 jm Galveston. Tex 80 81 Shreveport, .La 76 81 New Orleans. La 82 Helena, Mont 62 76 Havre. Mont 64 M Cheyenne. Wyo 62 ts Denver. Col 60 78 Santa Fe. N. M 60 .68 Salt Lake City. Utah 72 6 Locnl Weather Report. Bar. Thcr. R.H. Wind. W'ther. Tree. 7 a. m.JO.lS 57 North. Ft cl'dy. O.no 7I. nt... 30.0V 77 35 N' west. Pt cl'dy. 0.00 j Maximum-temperature, 83; minimum temperature, r3. : Following is a comparative statement of the temperature and precipitation on Aug. 1: Temp. Prec. Normal 71 .n Mean 6H .00 Departure from normal 6 .13 Departure since Aug. 1 6 .13 Departure since Jan I 273 13.68 C. P. R. WAPl'KNIIANS, 1-ocai Forecast OiilciaL FnrernKt for Krll-. WASHINGTON, Aug. l.-For IllinoisFair, followed by showers Jn afternoon In extreme northern portion; variable winds. For Ohio Generally fair; slightly warmer: wes;eriy winds, becoming variable. For Indiana Fair; variable winds. Extraordinary Rnlnfiill. LAWRENCE, Kan.. Aug. 1. The monthly weather 'report Issued by Chancellor Snow, of Kansas University, says the month of July Just closed was characterized by an xtraordinary rainfall, exceeding by far any previous July In thirty years. The total rainfall was 10.06 Inches, being 5.33 above July average. Aciirons and Iron Llnlnjs. Jno. M. Lilly,
FOR WOMEN'S READING
UNSELFISH FRIENDSHIP II ET WE EX WOMCY CAN" AND DOES EXIST. A Hook, in Which, to Record Family Events The 3Iodern Theory of Government by Lore Disputed. The cynical man (and f his name is legion) is inclined to scoff at any purely unselfish friendship existing between woman and woman. It is to be regretted, says a writer in the Philadelphia Times, that many women likewise voice this sentiment and pooh-hooh the factor; of genuineness as allied to any relation . existing between two of Eve's daughters. - It: must be admitted that when a .woman 'starts in to be ugly, cats are angels in comparison, and in the matter of criticism and condemnation the feminine judge is far more severe than her masculine prototype. ' It has always been a cau.se for thankfulness in the heart of the Writer that her life's misdeeds will hot-at the last day be brought up before some severe censor of her own sex,1 but this' fact does not lessen her belief in the sincerity "of affection maintained by some women for others. And where such a feeling 'does exist, can there be anything pleaaaner.J purer or more perfect? The real wonian 'Jriend is not a fairweather butterfly who vanishes at the first approach of storm clouds. No, indeed, illness and trouble conilng; into the life of the woman whom she calls friend but serve to bring out'all the" b'est in her nature. Self Is made subordinate and with a hearty good will she turns In to help by sympathy and deeds of purest charity, leaving no stone unturned to bring about happy results and finding no labor too4.hard if by such means she renders some service to the one whom she calls friend." And then, when the. clouds lift, what a congenial companion she proves and what royal good times those two have together, utterly upsetting the theory that women cannot be thoroughly contented unless enjoying the society of the sterner sex. The happy, helpful girl bachelor of these fin de siecle days has shown that she can get along very well without any assistance fiom the sex which once was regarded as a sort of Rock of Ages .to 'which woman must cling or be lost in the seething sea of her own misplaced Independence. Travel where-you will,' the thoroughness of woman's friendship for woman is demonstrated. Jealousy and envy, the two specks that men declare mar every un!o.n of this sort, are not discernible where the women thus allied have sufficient nobility of character and breadth of mind to recognize and rejoice in a superior beauty or talent possessed by another without that fact rankling until all harmony Is lost. A friendship based on these principles will thrive whether it. is . between two women, two men or a man, and woman, despite all the scoffing and .w'drdly wise comment to the contrary. -' ' . Ever Yonngr. Harper's Bazar. . The desirableness of. keeping young rarely crosses the mind of those who are now young. They see-others about them who have lost their blObm, embroidered their first wrinkles, snowed with white hair; but' been surrounded with themselves under they have always people older than themselves; it Is a part of life, a. feature of .the -world, ,for these others to be old; but for their parr they have always been young. And in some unexpressed way, probably the 'natural' feeling of the immortal being, they always expect to be young. Whether their expectation is realized depends almost altogether upon themselves. They think ho more about It,, however, till the ikst.gray halrVoomes like an admonishing ghost uncnSthe .iacene. At ''seventeen they were of ..t.he opinion, thai' the first thing in. the world was beauty. But at thirty-five they find it is better to be young than to be beautiful. And it very often happens, that the ' girl who was quite beautiful, with vivid color and sparkling eyes and fruity flesh and dimples, when not quite twenty, finds herselt at forty with none of these, and neither young nor beautiful. Yet if the ,weie really fine and fair at twenty, then at forty she has a right 'to be fine and fair still; she should hardly have gone off at all. It matters far less than you can- make her now believe that her eyes may be sunken a little, that the line from the nostril to the corner of the lips may Have' become, marked, that the color may bo.: less- persistent, that the dimple may show symptoms of becoming something deeper; .under certain .conditions all that is hardly, noticeable. Jf she has kept the spring that used to animate every motion, so that she,; moves now with a3 light a step, as erect a bearing, with as quick a grace, holds,. her head still like a llower atop of its stem, straight and strong, yet without the least-, affectation of juvenile frolicking . ways, r she will give only the suggestion of youth whenever she stirs. If she goes slow a ml wagging, with a stoop and signs of weariness, she will have an arm offered her, and it will be understood that ehe bears a. weight of years and needs it. If she dresses - still in the tints and stuffs that -suit her beat, not with youthful frivolities, but with no sign of surrender to age, she -will have the effect of still belonging to the forces whose uniform she wears. Rut If she wears sad and dull colors, relinquishing with reluctance last year's styles; and with but little regard to styles anyway,. she will be taken at her own valuation. More still, and of mere value than the other considerations, if she still interests herself in the things that interest-youth. Jias saved herself from the criticising and condemnatory manner which years sometime1 give to one's view of life, so thatthe young still find her companionable, she not only affects others as being young, but feels at fifty scarcely a day older than ever. If meanwhile she has taken alo to heart a practice of seeing only the brighter side of things, of forgetting herself and .remembering others, of looking into the next life as Into a further stage of the delishts of this, if she has filled her life and her soul with pity and compassion and tend$rne,ss, with love of Gcd and of her fellow-beings, age. even when it brings white- hairs and withered throat and dropping cheek, will seem not to have any trail of .eld, but rather to be a different and beautiful youth. . Praise for thc Wheel. New York Tribune," -' ' "I wish I could "ride 'a' bicycle," said, a sweet-faced- grandmother to .the writer the other day. "Great' things have come to ,'. women V, since I was young a whole new.-' world but I have never envied them anything, not even the higher education, , as "I( do these 'bicycles. I should like to ride on?.' . The speaker " was - an eminently feminine specimen of the ' "oil" . as compared ' to the : so-called "new" woman; consequently,.; the ftjling she expressed about the bicycle is perhaps the highest possible tribute to it as a sport for women. Indeed, the prime virtue of the bicycle In thls'.respect is that it attracts such a vast; number of women who would not" otherwise consider or attempt an active outdoor sport. To the nonathletic woman It has come like a revelation, and on this account; If on no other, it deserves the extraordinary popularity It hns won with her sex. The ea.e with which a wheel and the ability to ride It may be attained is perhaps the chief reason for this. Many a woman to whom tennlf, rowing, horseback riling, golf and the like were, even had she the inclination to try them, impossible, finis bicycling more or : less easily within her reach, and hence is led -to take It up. But there is another and Ftronger reason, subjectively, for the almost universal fascination that the bicycle has for wome,n. and that Is the independence of it. On a bicycle a woman Is Independent of many of tho limitations that ordinarily hamper her. She who docs not. rile; perceives this, whether consciously or not. and longs to experience the novel sensation; - while she who does ride feels, though perhaps unconsciously, too, the exultation of it. Khe is fre in a wayat last. .No woman ever forgets the sense of physical power and expansion that fills her when she first finds that ehe can ride alone, or the still greater triumph of steering her way through traffic, overhauling, sweeping past pedestrians swiftly movln? men whom, afoot, she could " not teglft" to keep pace with and leaving even ; horss far behind. The experience. , small as It seems. Is an important one psychologically, and though all but the superficial pleasure of it may pass ' unremarkeJly by the indivtdual.'she who has had it is never quite the same again. Although only in play, as it were, the ttr.3 of phyticil pow
er and Independence has been felt, and such sensations are epoch-making for individuals as for masses.
llntr.ntoekft to Sleep In. Philadelphia Press. Why spend lots of money buying beds for the summer cottage, or why Bleep uncomfortably on the wretched beds supplied? Try a hammock. It is delightfully comfortable, takes up little room at night, need take up none In the day, and costs very little. Beside, there are sure to be more friends than can have beds In the summer, but if It's hammocks the little cottage can boast of hospitality as clastic as the occasion requires. One small room that won't hold a bed will swing three hammocks, all the heads going on one hook, the other ends being bestowed as the room permits. Any hammock will do, but the best one is the regular sailor laddie's canvas hammock. Two widths of single sail cloth make a luxurious bed hammock. They are made without stretchers, and the ends are firmly lashed with small cord run through cordfinished holes, a heavy ring being set in at the end. The hooks must.be put up with screws, for nails are not safe. To make up the hammock for sleeping, first, a comforter, then another and a little blanket won't hurt. These should all be wider than the hammock is and their .weight should stretch the hammock out quite flat. Now the sheet, then the pillow to help hold the hammock flat, next the top sheet and a pair of blankets, and if you want to be very swell a spread. Whether you have the spread or not an extra comforter should go over the foot. All this sounds like a lot of clothes, but most folks are used to sleeping on top of a mattress that is impervious to cold, while the little cottage or camping-out house is often more chilly In summer than warm, else wny go away for the summer? There is an art in getting one's self snugly into a hammock an that must be learned. You swing yourself . between the sheets, the canvas promptly caves down delightfully, putting you Into a cozy pocket. Now you must roll to one side and tuck the overhanging clothes under, tnen roll the other way, and tuck the other side under you. Now up with your feet and down with them again, and there you are as snug as a pa.r of bugs unuer a rug. The extra comforter pulls up in tne night If needed, and may hang loose. After you have learned these hammock tricks you will never be wiillng to s4eep in a big, uncomfortable bed again, and nothing will seem more delicious than the sway that comes In the night time when you turn over. By day the clothes can be hung on a nail behind the door and tne hammock may swing with both ends from one hook. Try it. Fancy Work 11 1 nt. Mold crochet Is a favorite form of household decoration at the present time. Some of the newest book covers are made of tinted linen, painted -with gold and colors. ' . The old-fashioned Mlgnardlse braid has reappeared, and is used to ouf,lne patterns with very good results. Sachets composed of moire often have the wavy lines of the watering traced out in tiny spangles of beads. Pretty candle shades are made of vegetable parchment painted with oil colors and brightened with gold. Two wooden tobacco pipes, tied together crosswise with colored ribbons, have their bowls stuffed to do duty as pin cushions. Handsome tea cloths are now made of gold-colored linen. Round the edge runs a border, resembling black lace, and worked with black silk. A. novelty in photograph screens is made of three sheets of glass, bound and connected with straps of ribbons and decorated with bows. Egg cozies are made In the form of a water lily turned upside down, the stalk forming the handle. The petals of the flower are of white or . yellow satin, and the leaves of i?reen. The newest lamp shades have a frill of painted lace. The ground Is yellow, the details colored according to their character blue or red for floral motives and green for leaves or stems. Narrow pieces of sirk that are too small for any other purpose are transformed into charming sheaths for folding fans. Silk cord Is sewed around the edge and a loop of the cord left to carry the bag by. The Family Loir-Rook., Elizabeth Bisland, in Ladies Home. Journal. Perhaps one of the . most amusing and absorbing diversions " Is the keeping of a family log-book not an egotistic d!ary, but a big open volume in which the family doings are recorded each member, of the family taking, in turn, the duty cf setting down the day's events, and each vying with the jother in making this family history as gay and pleasant as possible. An endless series of Interests and amusements will arise from this practice, and the book will gain infinitely in attraction if it Is illustrated. If some one in the household is clever with the pencil so much the better, but occasionally the crude attempts of the unskilled are quite as amusing as if better done, and In any event one always has the Illustrated papers and magazines to fall back upon. It will astonish those who have never tried it to find how completely and cleverly any story can be illustrated by clipped pictures. The whole picture need not be used; a horse, a man, a dog, a house or tree may be taken out of some complete story and made to fit In as appropriately to the text as If drawn specially for it. Let the log-book He close at hand, with ink and pens always ready; a box of clipped pictures, a gum bottle and scissors always in place, and before long the family history will be growing into a delightful Illustrated story. s Discipline for Children. New York Times. A woman experienced In training a large family of children, and also In the management of institutions of reformation, gives it as her judgment that children should be treated like little animals until they are old enough to be reasoned with; then moral suasion. may supercede stern direction. She thinks that In their infancy and early childhood they should be made to obey just as we force an animal to obey, thus lmtllling a natural habit of obedience. This, whde the child Is impressionable, starts It on the right road, and when its reasoning powers begin to develop at two, three or four years the word obey is not so tremendous a mountain to climb for either mother or child, and moral suasion Is the more easily accepted by the little one. Obedience must, of course, still be enforced, but, as it has learned the habit, there is not likely to be as much difficulty as If no forcing had been practiced. Her opinion are of value, for her children are examples of the most beautiful obedience and respectful courtesy. One does not often enough see inherent delicacy and respect toward parents In children of the present generation; any near idea or old one in new form for the better training of young America in this respect should have a cordial reception. Are Women Grorrlugr Tnllerf New York Tribune. There afe indications that the American woman is gradually growing taller and larger. A few years ago the average skirt length taken in the fashionable dressmaking establishments was forty-two Inches, and forty-two Inches was the length used for all the model gowns sent over here from Paris, The model length has now increased to forty-five inches, and the Increase in other measurements Is in proportion. The middle-aged American woman show3 an Inclination to grow broader acrors thehips and shoulders, and stouter and thicker through the arms; but the college graduate, the university woman and the debutante grow more gracefully vigorous everv year. Tli typical college graduate is from two to four inches longer from the waist down than formerly. Her waist is fretting longer, her cheat fuller, and .her Imbs narrower. The middle-aged women grow corpulent and clumsy through indolence and indulgent habits of life, while the ever-increasing tendency toward athletic sports and outdoor exercises is improving the younger of the sex. The statuesque. Juno type, may yet express the American woman. Cntml for Fire Protection. In regard to the recent agitation looking toward the condemnation of the canal, F. A. W. Davis, of the Indianapolis water company, enumerated some of its advantages yesterday. The principal one mentioned by him is the safeguard against a water famine in case of a large tire. In such case the-sealed valve opening into the canal could be opened and water drawn from thi source. The canal is al-o useful, he says, for fire engines to pump water directly from it at bridges or along its banks. Do not neglect the symptoms of impure blood. Do not disregard nature's cry for help. Take Hood's Sarsaparllla and guard gainst serious illness and prolonged suffering. Hood's Pills for the liver and bowels, ect eoiib yet prcntly tr.i erctivcly.
Apollmeitts
"THE QUEEN OF
" First in Purity." BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL.
o Your o o o !! O ii that you have read that Santa Claus Soap is one of the greatest laborsaving inventions of the time. Tell her that it will save her strength, save her time, save her clothes. The merits of ) o o (I II o (I () o ) o
m am
appeal at once to every thoughtful Tvoman. It's the best, purest, and most economical soap to be procured. Sold everywhere. Made only by The N. K. Fairbanh Company, - Chicago:
Vf" vV-y- - - ' J
CULVER MILITARY -ACADEMY-
f s situated on Lake Maxtnkackae. Indiana, In a beautiful park of SO acres. containing rarapni. fine conr for caralry practice, track for bicycle and sprinting race, lawn tennla and ba ball errand, ffrmnastusa, 70x30 fect, alx flowing artian wells, etc. The lake Is one of tbe most beautiful tn tlie United Mates, coTers an area of about 12 square miles, is wholly fed by prln?s,bas beanttful gently sloptnr nnuy beach, and is a most pleasant and popular summer resort, affording opportunity for all kinds of aquatic sports. The Academy and Dormitory building ts eomp"te tn crery particular, entirely new, ABSOLUTELY FiUE tnooiMtnlhed in hard wood, heated by steam, lighted by electricity, has hot and eo'd water baths, lavatories, and all toilet conveniences. The course of study thorpnpbly prepares cadets for college, ctcntlflo achools. business. West I'otnt or-Annapolis. The Academy Is undr the supervision of a West Point graduate and ex-army offlcor of large experience In teaching, who will have direct control of the discipline of the cadets. - For further Information and catalogue address: Culver Military Academy, Slnrmont, Ind.
Arc you dunking of using it? Wc make a specialty of wiring and connecting up private residences. Headquarters for Gas and Electric Chandeliers. C. W. MEIKEL, 96 & 98 Easl New York St. Tel. 466.
THE MoEW AIXE ICIIARDS CO., WROUGHT-IRON PIPE and BOILER TUBES Steam, rT Fitters'
Gas ani Water ( ? Goods. Snoff Steam Pumps, Hill Supplies.
COPY OF STATEMENT OP THE CONDITION OF THK UNITED STATES BRANCH OF THE HAMBURG-BREMEN FIRE INSURANCE C01IPA1JY On the 30th day of June, 1895. lcaie l at o. 22 r n? ktr.et, in the cit of New York, State or New York. Home Office: Hamburg. tnn3iiy, . . y. o. ArTLl.D, Manager.
The amount of IU capital Is....:...........:.., Tli amount oMU casual iail up is
THE ASSETS" OF THE COMPANY IN THE IT. S. ARE AS FOLLOWS: Cash on hand and In the hamlsof agonuor othfr persons. an I in tank '. .. ?y,l",.U Bonds owned by the company, bearing latere at the rate ot per cent., at er schedule Med, market value , I Jtf.'RT.i') Debts ror nremiums i.iJM.:l All other securities accrucl interest . I.wi.mq
Total assets.
UAIIIMTIHS.
JsMiFn adjusted and clue ,. Looses adjtiJ-ted and not due Losses U!ialjutPd ;.. I,rsfres in su.pene. wait Ins for further proof . Anion nt nwwear)' to reinsute outstanding nsjs -Totalliatilltiej The gieateft amount in a:i) one risk, t'-M.OCO.
Mate of Indiana, fne of Auditor of state: I, the undenlrned, Auditor of State of tli? State of Indiana, h?rebv rertif that th above Is rorrert eor-r of the statement of the condition of the above-mentionM company on tli :uh dir of June, as fchotm by the original statement, ami that the said original utatement ts now on tile In thU offl-. seal In testimony whereof, 1 hereunto auiwribe my name an 1 affl mv effl ial th'.sr'li dirof July, A. . OAll.Y. Auditor of Mate.
COPY OF STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF THE UNITED STATES BRANCH OF THF LONDON and LANCASHIRE FIRE INSURANCE CO On the 30th Dav of June, 1893. ' I.ocit?l tt 15 Pate street, Liverpool. Knj'. u L J. S. UKLPKN, Manaj.r. - Weittru Iartinenr, Ctilrap, II'.
The amount of Its capital is.-. 'l he amount of Its capital pahl uji I
THE ASSETS OP THE COMPANY IN THE IT. S. AIlE AS FOLLOWS: Cah on hand and la the hands of ascut or othfr yrhnt ". UJ H QJ Kcal estate unincumbered.; ?.12i.ii lionds owned by the compaiij, bearing imere.-a at the rate or erceuta r bfd 1 flrd, . market taluf l,lt?oJ I ebts for premium .TUH H
Total akoets MA III It a ljuatcd auddtie. .... I uiljtiftied aud nt du , Losses nnau ftirted... i!.es in u-ii!ie. wumiitf lor inrther pnor. A 1 1 t hr la lino n I .i tt 1 1. com iu ii v Amount itecesaary to reliuiue ouufan liiig rbs. - - - - - - ------ - - - - - - . j .. ....-.. . Total liabdtt ies. ........... J ... The greatest amount in any one r:V. Sio.ooo.
State of In liatia, WUt of Auditor of Mate: 1. the wndcrfclffmNL Auditor f Ute of the Mate of Indiana, herrbv re'rttrvthat thr above 1 a correct rop of the statement of the condition of the aboverinentltnAd rompan on the ::;i div of Juu. lj. a shown bvtha original statement, and thl th slid original statrm-nt is iidv on nie in thUortVe. . ' ' skal.J lu testimony whereof, Ihrreunto subscribe ui) 'name ailaHH my nffl-ui sal. thla 2-tth d iv of July,!. .... A.. DAILY. Auditor of Mate.
Tf 13
Journal,
TABLE WATERS.".
(1 ( ( o () () ) i: ( () v?L Tools, Hose Goods.
62 & 64 West Maryland Street.
fl.SMOl , , i .. ..f ....IMVt.V .... i.y;t,',9 .20 HUES. .. y Ont-taa liu; ....J ........ - .... - .... - . - . - . - - - - ...... - . l.i.n.Ji
by IM1:
88
