Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 20, Number 27, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 December 1889 — Page 6

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WOMAN MB HOME.

IMPORTANCE OF LOOKING NEAT AND ATTRACTIVE AT HOME.

Urs. C**h'» Unhappy Victim—A Woman Who Baa it Uaefol Has band—A Sister's Influence—Advice to Little Housekeeper*—Pointer* for BiuineM Women.

Every little while one finds in feminine journals a pertinent word to wives and mothers regarding dressing for borne eyes. And wisely. One cannot afford to look less well in one's children's eyes than in those of the next door neighbor or the veriest stranger, and if Arthur aad Stephen's approval was worth dressing for when they were sweethearts, why not when they are husbands? But abont undress. Do you remember David CopperfteJd's concern over the items of Dora's curl papers? Well, the most anobsurving man is quite as quick to notace if not to remark the details of feminine attire Because a man i* too good natured to comment upon what be sees, do not take it for granted that he is blind. Sterling worth in character may be relied upon to secure a goodly amount of love, but we are all agreed —is it not so?—that personal appearance has decided influence in our friendships and loves. Our friends and foes are, in a measure, what they look to be. Inherited features ire pretty much, though not altogether, befond our power to change, but one is after ill largely the reflection of her surroundings, and ttwse depend much upon herself.

In the matter of garments, one may have lilk or cotton ones, but the agreeable effects of one or the other binges not upon shekels, but upon the tact with which the goods are irranged and set oft That is, one may be "a picture" in a print dress or a fright in the lamo dress, with the differences of its hanging "at loose heels" and being worn with untidy person, and so on. The average woman, divested of tho various accessions that buoy her up in dress toilet, is pretty apt to bo unlovely to look upon. But how few women Ihink about it. Men are fastidious beyond their owu avowal, wives, and one needs to Ihink twice to think wisely before she makes herself a nightly fright Curl papers, oil becm eared face, hands in untidy gloves, and robed in ugly—and it must be confessed, not always neat—underclothing, and what is there in the portrait to remind one of the fair woman one finds on the morrow in the parlor) If hair must be curled, let it be by a patent curler that takes bat two or three moments in the morning. Only spinsters not afraid of their own shadows can afford to sleep in curl papers. Appearing in them in public should bo a capital offense.

Whatever cosmetics one cares or dares to use should be applied and worn only when one is at liberty to "»ek the seclusion that the dungeon grants." It would seem almost iuperfluou3 to say, however, that the fairest ikin and most elaborate coiffure do not require that one shall sleep in the plight so many women appear to think necessary. The European custom that gives to each individual a room—if no bigger than a closet— whero ho or sho is sole monarch, is a wholelome, happy arrangement, that may obtain nme day in our land. While husband and wife have but one sleeping apartment, that must in most cases do duty as a dressing room as well, one surely cannot afford to make her sleeping toilette less becoming than her prottiest day attiro, to say nothing of the artistic reason of wishing for one's own sake to be fair and sweet.

And tho means, supposing silken bed gowns ire forbidden by tho state of one's pursewell it is forbidden to no one to brush her teeth and hair before retiring, and to make her face and hands clean, and very often to take a hot tub bath, and to wear a fair, white night dress, bq it ever so simple. If high priced toilet perfumes are not to bo had—and One odors are always high priced—one may, by hygienic living, have a breath as sweet as new mown hay, and sprigs of sweet smelling herbs laid in bureau drawers lend their fragrance to t^e contents,—Pipah Sturgis.

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Mrs. Cash's Victim.

'Talk about tho dangers of tho amateur itage, of cigarette smoking—they are as nothing compared to the wickednoss of the first class dressmaker. You are a nice looking little woman, with a pretty figure, whi$h Tom has always liked to see well dressed, aud he thinks that if any woman docs understand the art of gowning it Is you. All your life long you have bought your materials at a first class shop, taken town to a fairly good dressmaker, paid a reasonable price for the making, suggested to the modiste a frill here, puff there, an artistic effect somewhere else, and wheu you wore the frock, it was with an easy conscience and a happy heart, which added to your good looks. Some day you enter tho parlor of Serpent, Cash & Co. suddenly your pretty gown has a second rate look. Mrs. Serpent admires your figure Mrs. Cash moans how unfortunate it is that you are not dressed properly, aud the company kits behind the desk and grins, knowing what the outcome will be. You see a wondrous gown, just from Paris, which is certain to init yon. You are induced to try it on, and then you hear the price. You shudder at it. You say you cannot get it but oht you do look so handsome in it. You know Tom cannot afford that money you know that usually you get three frocks for that amount but the style is so good and the voice of the charmer is listened to. You go out of that house with tho knowledge that you are going to get that frock, for you have been fitted for it, and you are the most miserable slave in tho world, Mrs. Cash has told you that you can pay $35 or *50 at a time on your bill, and get everything you want there. Well, you begin by paying your *25 or $50 you get more and more new clothes tho bill dow not come in for a year, and when it does you gasp with terror. Coats wero •old io you that you were told would cost nothing, and nothing, to Serpent, Cash & Co., ttH*ai»Si anything from $150 to $350. Still, j-on think that you can raise a few hundred dollar*, and that Tom may give you a little sxira money without your billing him what

It is for, and then you chirp up and remember that Mrs, Cash said you could pay a little at a time. awl. after all, it was just the bill joming in. l\xr little wretch! You have a feeling at your heart all the time novr as if you w«re a thief, and within a week you gefc an insolent n^u from Mrs. Serpent suggesting that you mult at oooe.—San Francisco Argvnaut.

A 8W«f,» loftaettep*

"I wonder," said Mrs. Eaton, "what makes Prank S»wv*r different item Tom BUke tal Bill iUrn«» TtwyVe Rood homes and goou but Itoi :u »l Bill are web as you Indians, una nwer to kttow UwdiflFter. between tU-.* uwl? .-f the bouasaml ouw rs."

Well, the faot «as that Frank Sawyer bad sorters, aad »t was feel thai title "ittsido of Siw w?i£ »swnae as '•outdoor*,'* wUero tho prawn* sw*i tetteeeee srf either «sr yo«»g«r sisters wr*v xh*ttautly »&• g,i.«

a

^nUt soan in our hearing not ioog

daae: "1 van tell what my aUfcr »s»er was to aw* all through my growing «£. I km* tto&bms of hear wdaft to Doe boy. fecog&itwd and coaipMtUt^y little of it as a

•hm

voung but now I have reached years of maturity I realize how much she did to mnlra home attractive and my childhood ,*^ very pleasant one." 1.5

And again, it was but a little while ago a lady was speaking of the gentle manner and unusual ability in entertaining shown by a young gentleman who had recently come into the community. "Oh, well," said a friend, 'Til tell you where be learned his ease and acquired such finished manners. He grew up with a lot of sisters, and they always depended on him to help them when they had company, and they consulted him about their fancy work and the arrangement of a room or tea table, just as if he was another girL"

Commend us to those boys who have grown up with *'a lot of sisters." We have often beard a gentleman remark regretfully: "I never bad a sister that was something I missed." We feel for them a genuine pity that, they should have nHssed so much. But do the girls of the family realize even slightly the great influence'1 they are exerting, or might exert, over their brothers?—Montreal Star.

Little Housekeepers.

Begin with your own possessions, girls. Reform your upper bureau drawer relieve your closet pegs of their accumulation of garments out of use a month or two ago. Institute a clear and careful order in the midst of tyhich you can daily move and learn to keep it so that it will be a part of your toilet to dress your room and its arrangements while you dress yourself, leaving the draperies you take off as lightly and artistioaBy hung or as delicately folded and placed asfthe skirts you loop carefully to wear or the ribbon and lace you pus with a soft neatness about your throat. Cherish your instincts of taste and fitness in every little thing you have about you. This will not make you "fussy it is the other thing that does that —the not knowing, except by fidgety experiment, what is harmony and the intangible grace of relation.

Take upon yourself gradually—for the sake of getting them in band In like manner, if for no other need—all the cares that belong to your own small territory of home. Have your little wash cloths and sponges for bits of cleaning, your furniture brush and leather duster, and your light little broom, and your whisk and pan your bottle of sweet oil and spirits of turpentine, and piece of flannel to preserve the polish or restore the gloss where dark wood grows dim or gets spotted. Find •at by your surely growing sense of thoroughness and niceness the best and readiest ways of keeping all fresh about you. Invent your own processes they will come to you. When you can make yourself wholly mistress of what you can learn and do in your own apartment, so that it is easier and more natural for you to do it than to let it alone, then you have learned to keep a whole house, so far as its cleanly order is concerned.—Exchange.

Housemaids In Uvery.

The custom of putting housemaids into livery, which is common enough in England,1 is beginning to be adopted in New York. The costume or uniform consists of a skirt of dark livery cloth—blue, green or brown—with plain front and broad plaits at the back a waistcoat of the same cloth, with fine crosswise lines of red braid, and a coat cut away in front and covering the hips. Metal livery buttons are used ou the coat and waistcoat. A small white cap, stiff white collar and cuffs and a white cravat complete the attire. A good looking maid with a good figure makes a natty appearance in such a livery, and Is particularly useful in households where only women servants are employed to attend the door and serve the meals. Where there is a butler, she is well equipped to take the place of "second man."

As a small minority makes up tho wealthy class everywhere, the customs and fashions that obtain in that class are an endless source of curiosity, speculation and interest. To a certain extent there is no good reason why this curiosity should not be gratified.. The rich art collector loses nothing of the jealously guarded privacy ot hits home life by sometimes throwing open hfe-gallery to the putmc—inatls, nothing which ought to cause him any pain or regret. No one need apologize for letting a little light in upon, th^domestic life of those who are known as society people. Let the doors of the closets where skeletons lurk remain locked leave the dust in the haunted chamber unstirred the rest may be revealed without offense.—Letter in New Oleans Picayune.

Sound Advice for Business Women. An editorial writer in The Christian Union said lately in a talk with "Business Boys:" "The boy who will succeed in the world is he who is content for a time to do two dollars' worth of work for a dollar." Business girls need to bind this precept upon heart and band. Determination to fulfill every obligation thoroughly, in spirit and in letter, should outrank tho thought of the money to be made by this particular undertaking. First, •excellence of workmanship then, what

fprice

will it command The girl who studies bookkeeping or stenography as a stop gap against the tide of impecuniosity until she can wed a bread and bonnet winner enacts the trite role of tho little Haarlem hero with his thumb in the dike leak.

She is like one who watches for the morning, and, in proportion as her heart fails at the delay of dawn, interest in her occupation declines. Judging by her standard of values the business laid itnportunately to her hand and the wedlock that may come, we may well remind her that faithfulness In that which is, least is the earnest of faithfulness in that which is great. The steadfast industry, the discipline of speech and conduct, the concentration of thought and energy upoi the matter set before one for accomplishment, that are essential to business prosperity, are tho best conceivable preparation for tho high and holy sphere Of wife, housekeeper and mother. —Marion Karland in North American Re-

An Economical Woman.

"Hannah's husband's sister sect her a barrel of old clothes while I was thftre," said an old lady after a visit to her daughter In the country. "She had the barrel opened in the thed chaml«r. It was filled with old dresses, underclothes and stockings. "You would be surprised to see the useful things she got oat of that barrel. She ripped up, washed and pressed two old dresses and made herself 6 morning dress out of them she found a flannel skirt all good but tbo edging, so she raveled out soma superannuated stockings aud made some trimming from the yarn and put oa the sSdit she ripped off soma Hamburg from the underclothing and used it again she got quite a Mtppiy of stockings for herself and the cJiiMlm* by mending and cutting down oat of some of tfeel&rgs pieces she mad® pet* tkoata for the children. and out of tt» small pieces she m&df a dumber quilt to throw on UmhedcooS aijehta. What was kft didn't amount to much for rugs or carpets." "It is ufc* have rich rclatkms*1* we to rmn&tk."flagr.*** ma. S#uenah, for Hairnah^ bttsirasd om» a good they at* ©WIpsS to Mi :•»&' I «—Jda't -s surjswmHi If Avery co srtafcla ^.bcase bad gB®e iwlto their tag «ttg «Sr ia some such way, but eagat uot to tsanpiaio, far

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAT EVENING MAHf

Hannah gets some of it, and she's handy and knows how to use it. I always told your grandfather a man must ask bis wife to thrive. Tfrmnah was always like me. knew how to save"—Lewiston J01

•SI

Notes on Noising.

It should be kept in mind by all persons nursing weak patients that the lowest temperature of the body occurs at or about 4 o'clock in the morning. At this time the nurse should be watchful, the fire should be kept bright, and, if necessary, extra cover should be supplied A very sick patient should be carefully noted at this hour, and if he shows any signs of exhaustion a stimulant should be given.

There are many diseases where more depends upon the conscientious care of the nurse than the doctor's medicine. The idea that the fever in diseases was increased by food has long ago been abandoned by all intelligent practitioners. Life in such cases often depends upon the careful administration of gtimninting nourishment. Thus the strength of the patient is kept up. till the crisis of the disease is past.

Absolute cleanliness is now considered necessary in all sickness, and frequent changing of the bedclothes and the nightclothes used during sickness is apart of the duties prescribed to a trained nurse. The old idea that it was dangerous to put fresh clothing on a sick person is abandoned. All the clothing of the patient, and all the bedding of the bed, is changed twice in the twenty-four hours whenever it is possible to move the patient. The clothing and bedding of the night are thus aired during the day, and that of the day during the night. Unless there is a very short supply of bedding, the patient is not allowed to use the day or night clothes and sheets longer than twenty-four hours without replacing them with clean ones.—Exchange.

A Useful Husband.

A woman whose poems are "read and sung in two hemispheres" said to Alice Williams Brotherton, some ten years ago: "0,1 only write them. My husband attends to all the details of printing. He copies the poems in his clear hand, chooses the magazine or publisher, and attends to the editorial correspondence." Later in the same conversation she remarked: "He has an unerring Instinct as to the fitness of a story or poem for this or that editor's pages. When he says: 'This might suit The Century,' 'That is better fitted for The Atlantic,' 'Try Scribner's Magazine with that thing,' 'Lippincotfs will use this,' I never think of disputing his judgment. And again: I leave anything written during the day on his writing table, he reads it after dinner, and says it rests him. Criticise? O, yes, a word or a phrase. I weigh every suggestion and adopt only what I approVe."

Such a husband as this is a greater convenience than a letter file or scrap book. He not only knows the market like a book, but it actually "rests him" to read his wife's verses I It really seems as though this man must have been born to be a literary woman's husband.—Lounger in Critic.

Eugenie's English Residence. I see it is stated that the physicians who attend the Empress Eugenie have informed her that she would have "good health" if she should decide to leave England, writes a London correspondent. The fact is that the empress is just as well in England during half of each year as she would be in any other country but some of her relations, and the Bonapartist party generally, are excessively apprehensive that the empress will bequeath a large part of her fortune to Princess Beatrice, who is a great favorite, and there has, therefore, been an intriguao* foot for some time past to induce her to settle herself permanently in Italy. The empress, however, has much resented these attempt* to withdraw her from England, and probably foresees that, once a resident on the continent, she would be as much worried by her anxious and expectant relations as was Miss Crawley when she had Mrs. Bute attacking her on one side and Mr. Pitt and Lady Southdown on the other,

Mothers Strangely Equipped. The author of "King Solomon's Mines" and "Allan Quatermain" has had much laid to his charge—from plagiarism to downright lying—but as time goes on it becomes every day more apparent that the only South African romancist has a considerable modicum of truth at the bottom of his seemingly most bizarre conceptions.

Take, for instance, the Mapai, a small tribe of bush people living between the Kaveresri and Yankotoi, who, among a number of other curious habits, slit the skin over both shoulders in the form of a loop, and which, by being upheld, permits a second cuticle to grow beneath. A corresponding slit is made on each side of all the young ladies of this interesting people, the loops, when the girls develop into womanhood, forming four "natural" resting places for a child, either at the breast or back, the straps of flesh on the shoulders being for the hands or arms and tho others for each baby leg.—Johannesburg Standard.

A Lightning Change of Toilet. Visitors in the daytime appear in smart walking suits, the transparent overdress hrfrtg a particular feature of the costnme. They wear some sober tinted silk or! cloth dress, and over this a long doth redlngote which buttons to the chin, with gray mousquetaire gloves and a small bonnet of fine French chip, with a bird cruelly displayed on the summit When the dinner bell sounds lady gets into some stray corner, unbuttons the front of her redlngote and turns it down, showing the facing prettily embroidered with silver thread. In this way she displays an inner silk waistcoat, chemisette, and a ruff of smooth plaited crepe. Her mousquetoire gloves give way to a pair of light colored suede. She fingers her curly locks over brow, adjusts ho- bustle, waves the folds of her silken skirts, and comes out a! her improvised boudoir in full directoire style.—Paris Cor. Boston Transcript.

getfcer. Er»n at borne the inferiority of the girls is insisted on. The little girls have to invite playmates of their own but their garner are never lively ones. They generally prefer to sit by themselves under the shade of mulberry or pomegranate trees ic the ga~,®n which usually is laid out ia the court surrounded on all sides by bouses Or high walls, aad listen to fairy tales, which their mothers and nurse* can tell very interestingly indeed. While there is very little companionship or love between brothers and sisters, there is no quarreling and no fij.i.: log either between them and thai -thkikisg themselves above the girk, i~tow —an many little kindnesses.—Once a Wed,

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Her" Idea of »»ppt«w«x

A If^ary said the *£h-:.r tav tiu»p to around her were«

WHAT SHALL WE WEAR?

sail

STYLES THAT WORLD

FIND FAVOR IN THE OF FASHION.

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Graceful and Becoming Cloaks, JJealjrned Especially for Youthful Wearers—A Handsome and Striking House Toilet for Afternoon—Fashions in Flowers.

Many of the cloaks designed for children are but miniature copies of those made for their elder3, but these are by no means the prettiest for young folks and fortunately we see many others that were fashioned with more thought for their youthful wearers. Such, for instance, is the graceful and atr traetive cloak for a little girl in short dresses, shown in our cut *,

CLOAKS FOB YOUNG GIRLS.

This cloak is in heather mixture, trimmed round the neck and down the loose fronts with fancy gimp galon. It is close fitting at the back and loose in front, where it is confined to the waist by a belt under the independent fronts that simulate sleeves.

In the same cut appears an ulster fOra young miss. The material is drab diagonal cloth. Velvet in a shade to harmonize forms the stylish and becoming turn down collar and lapels and also the pockets. The trimming consists of scrolls of mixed cord.

Fillets, Aigrettes and Bandeaux. For full dressf fillets and other addenda of attire belonging to the Empire period seem for the time to have taken the placo of the little aigrette and Pompadour wreaths which gave to English girls and women a touch of the stateliness of the ladies of the reign of Louis XV. Yet there are some adornments of the fashion of the earlier period still in favor—among them miniature pompon wreaths of tinsel, with an osprey aigrettes entirely composed of curled osprey and the bewitching tiny half wreaths of wee roses, with three or four of the little blossoms and buds set in an upright cluster on one side. The newest devices, however, take the form of bandeaux of narrow curled feathers, the stem of the feather being followed by a line of gold, and either a cluster of feather buttons or an aigrette of small plumes set at one rida, after the mode in vogue at "the court of the Empress Josephine while another becoming headdress of the same period has narrow fillets of twisted ribbon.-'

Afternoon Costume.

Our cut depicts a handsome and striking house toilet for afternoon wear. The high pointed bodice and slashed panels are in carnation red Bengaline silk, strewn with flowers. The turned down collar and puffed epaulettes are of plain silk, to match in color. The velvet belt, finished off with a short bow in front and the bows on the sleeves, are al in plain color.

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AN AFTERNOON DRESS.

Children In Peril*. wouiu try ana uuu* w* T„ tHrla ™v*r nUv to- playing quaint old silver spoons an a costume never grows restless undwxt^ reraa ys ..H .5 *1-- ne "Rococo" that was being ordered for a

as winter fancy dress ball. We may live to them dexterously- placed as the centers of bows, or after the same stylo as the long narrow ornaments that one year became fashionable. Some pretty little slilver brooches were recently gives to bridesmaids in the form of a large hook and eye, connected, with the initials of the bride o&ons and those of lite bridegroom «o the other, with the dala. The two boys who acted as pages had smaller cues sKme&d on sleeve links.

Veiling Sight JDresses.

A mate: which is gaining favor for night-

pink or crearn behaf? with with fr.

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A1_L AROUND THE HOUSE. S#fcs m$. A Few Simple and Easily Made Decor*, tions for the Holidays.

Holly and mistletoe are the historic Christmas foliage, and they have established the colors for holiday decorations—green, white and red. Boughs and chains of cedar gracefully festooned over cornices are very generally used. Ground pine is exceedingly effective, when it can be obtained.

When holly berries for brightening up the green holiday trimmings are not procurable, a good substitute is rustic coral. Melt two drachms of Vermillion in au ounce of rosin and paint this over some pretty large twigs bold them over a stove, turning them round till the varnish gets smooth, aud you have an excellent substitute for the red berries.

To make festooning of evergreens, have the evergreens cut into small twigs and lay them on the floor where a stout cord is stretched out thread a packing needle with small twine, and with this bind the twigs to the cord, making all safe and strong by occasionally passing the twine through the cord. Work in your holly in patches, so that the effect of the ruddy berries shall not be lost by sparseness, but in trimming with these leaf chains after they are woven, you had better err on the side of thinness, if at alL Heaviness in such decoration is certain to be gloomy.

Spider's webs of gold or silver wire introduced among the gree* are novel and quite Dretty.

A little glass or diamond powder sprinkledin here and there gives a beautiful frosted effect, but should not be within reach of children.

Very much can be done with gold and silver paint in getting up tasteful decorations. Pine cones and acorns (the latter tied in bunches), gilded and silvered and used the same as berries and scarlet twigs, look welL

Devices associated with good luck and merriment are a bell, a wishbone, a horseshoe fashioned out of cardboard, covered with evergreen twigs and ornamented with clusters of scarlet immortelles.

Sugar Plums for the Holidays. For white cream candy, take one pint of boiling water and two cupfuls of granulated sugar. Boil all together for twenty minutes, adding two tablespoonfuls of cider vinegar when it is put over the fire. Try it in cold water if not brittle, boil a little longer. Flavor with vanilla. Let it cool in a buttered pan. Then pull and cut into sticks.

For French vanilla creams, add to any number of the whites of eggs the same bulk of cold water beat in confectioner's sugar until stiff enough to mold into shapes with wetted fingers. Flavor with vanilla. Shape as you please and lay on plates, with waxed paper, if possible.

For peppermints, turn half a cupful of boiling water upon two cupfuls of granulated sugar. Boil five minutes stir in a tablespoonful of essence of peppermint stir over the fire till thick, and then drop from a teaspoon upon buttered paper to harden.

For molasses candy, use one cupful of molasses to one of sugar and apiece of butter the size of an egg, with any flavor that is preferred.

Cold Plum Pudding.

The remains of Christmas plum pudding may be broiled in slices or converted into fritters. But a very appetizing way of disposing of them is furnished by an old English recipe. Butter a deep dish or basin well and line it with slices of cold plum pudding out so as to fit exactly together, and press them against the dish so they will adhere and not be floated off. Then fill the dish with a good custard (thickened and allowed to cool) or with any sweet pudding mixture that Ib preferred. One pint of boiling milk poured upon two ounces and a half of arrow root, mixed smooth with a little cold milk, with tho addition of four small eggs, a little grated lemon, two or three bitter almonds or any flavoring desired, makes a good mixture. Cover the pudding with slices of plum pudding, and bake nearly three-quarters of an hour iu a very moderate oven.

A Fine New Year's Cake.

One cupful or sugar, half a cupful of butter, half a enpful of milk, two cupfuls of pastry flour, two eggs, one coffee cupful of chopped raisins, one of chopped English walnuts, one teaspoonful of cream of tartar, half a teaspoonful of soda. Beat the butter to cream. Add the sugar, gradually, and when light, the eggs well beaten thgn the milk and the flour in which the soda and cream of tartar have been thoroughly mixed. Mix quickly and add the raisins and nuts. Bake in rather deep Bheets iu a moderate oven for thirty-flve minutes. If you use baking powder instead of cream of tartar and soda, take a teaspoonful and a half.

An Artistic Corner.

A corner of a room may bo filled in very artistically with four shelves, one above another, the fronts rounded. Make the lowest one just large enough to set a cup and saucer on the next must bo the largest of all, and should measure at least twelve inches on tho side made tho third a little smaller, and tho top one about six inches on the side. Fasten them to the wall by brass plates so that no supports are seen.

Grease Spots on Felt Goods. For grease spots on felt goods there are various remedies, all equally good. If only slight, place a piece of thin brown paper on the stain, press with a very hot Iron, and shift the paper directly it shows marks of grease, taking care not to let the stained part

The skirt is composed of plaited flounces of rest on the carpet. Again, a thin layer of cream colored pongee silk, over which the

fuller's

long panels, with, their bright hues, well brushed off in the morning, Is very effllook very effective. The chemisette of pongee cacious. is fashioned in keeping with tho skirt.

Silver Ornaments.

Silver ornaments for gowns seem to be becoming the rage. They are put on side pockets, revers and cuffs, or wherever they can be advantageously adjusted. One leading to make, and as one motuer says, Rntriiah dressmaker told a customer that rid slble and comfortable covering. would try and think out a fashion for dis- warmth without heaviness, aaa

earth left on the stain over night, and

A Sensible QnJlt for the Baby. The dainty and convenient quilt for baby carriage or crib is suggested as apt to be a welcome gift to the busy mother of the little ones. The little quilt shown in tho cut is easy te, and as one mother says, "It is a sensible and comfortable covering." You have child

P&BTTY BaSt QCJX.T.

Anmte-wmcaisgauiu.g«,or^ Take two yards, of cheesecloth.ikmbtofc

It is tho rery Sa oft and warm. 1'

.tcan timed

of the saute, asd sometimes •:ttam Vakocic *o ad-

rides. Baste carefully to hold it In plac*\ torn in tbt edges of the doth aud «$w tbetn together. Tack in ioiw. squares, ahd the following -.iu ch: Double A

dovrn

loops for the daisy, putting

anjdeii

ide of light

The World Moves!

Don't disgust every body with th fensive odor from your catarrh, jus cause some old fogy doctor, whcf not discovered and will not believe the world moves, tells you it canjjfwt cured. The manufacturers of Dr. aw, Catarrh Remedy have for many offered, in good faith, ?o00 reward case of nasal catarrh, 110 matter how 1 or of bow long standing, which ti cannot cure. They

are"

thoroughly

sponsible financially, as any one learn by proper euquiry through dr gists (who sell the medicine .at only cents aud they "mean business."

2so lady should live in perpetual"i\ and sutler from the most serious troui that sc often appear wheu Dr. lvilm Complete Female Kemedy is certain prevent tumor aud cancer thore. 1 sale by J. ifc C. Baur.

niicklen's Arnlfta Salve.

The Best Salve In the world for Cuts, Brui Sores, Ulcere. Salt Rheum Kever Sores, T. ter,Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corus, all skin erupt ions, and positively cures Pi or no pay required. It Is guaranteed to perfcct satisfaction, or ni..ney refunded. '. per box. For s».le by Can Krletensteliu S. Cor. 4th and Ohio.

"If pop had blanketed you iV the stable you would be fat, too/

FREE—

Get from your dealer free, th»

$4 Book. It has handsome pictures anc valuable information about horses. Two or three dollars for a

s/a

5IA

Horse

Blanket will make your horse worth mor. and eat less to keep warm.

Five Mile

m» 5/A Boss Stable *,k

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5/A Electric 5A Extra Test

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NONE GENUINE WITHQUTTHE 6'A LABEL Manufd by Wm. Avkks FC Sons. Phil ado., who makqthe famous Horse Brand Baker Ul^nkota.

SWAMP ROOT

UVERAHD

BLADDEBCIJRE.

UEtead Symptoms and Condition!

Ihli Specific will Relieve and Cure* II Vfin are threatened with, or already bava IT I OU Blight's disease, or Urinary troubled II Vmh have sediment in urine like brick durt IT I Oil frequent calls or retention, with distress or pressure In tho parts, limbs bloat, II

Vmh have Lamo Back. Rheumatism, atlngII I Ou lug, Aching Pains in aidt or hips, II Vau have Diabetes or Dropsy, body bloat, IT I OU or scanty or high colored urine, II Ynn have Malaria, Torpid Liver,Dyspepsia IT I OU Gall Stone, Fever and Ague or Gout, II Vmh have Irritation. Spasmodic Stricture* IT TOU or Catarrh of tho Bladder, II Vmi have BLOOD humors,Pimples, Ulcoit IT TOU Seminal Weakness or Syphilis, II Vmi have Stone in Kidney, Gravel in Blad IT OU der, Stoppage of urine or Dribbling-, have poor Appetite. Bad Tnste, Foui breath or internal Slime Fever. If You Builds

up quickly a run-down constitution Don't negle

neglect early symptoms.

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111 Genuine have Dr. Kilmer's likeness oi Mil outside and inside wrappers.

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