tf DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD; DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. se INSULTS NOBLE GAME mim The Remodeled Dres FHENCHMAN ACTUALLY DARES TO RIDICULE GOLF. I i Philadelphia Has a Great Family of Foundlings PHILADELPHIA, PA. Tho city of Philadelphia Is Iho offlcial father and mother of thouennda of children, according to Mlsn Ella P. Harris, chll Urcn'A ngent of tho department of public health and charities. The city han selocted their names and religion and Is trying to bo tho best parent that an Impersonal city government can ho. In addition to supervising tho health, safety, 'entertainment am general wel faro of Its citizens, tho city also as sumes tho parental obligations of tho many nameless little strangers that aro each year found within Its limits. Tho foundling, tho orphan, tho de linquent, and tho child who for somo other reason has been cut off from Its i parents are very numerous In tho city. They are well taken cans of in tho City of Brotherly Lovo and but few know of tho presence of moro than twelvo thousand children In nearly sovonty-flvo Institutions within, tho city limits. A soclnl worker In touch with, tho facts has said that nearly $1,000,000 aro spent annually in tho caro of tho city's futuro citizens, who havo been doprlvcd of a homo training. Tho city cannot glvo Its namo to this vast army of adopted children. Tho system of naming tho municipal children has been along different lines, until tho present administration. A foundling was often named after tho street upon which it was found. Sometimes for tho store near whero It was found, or tho church whero Its mothor had loft It, or the policeman that brought It to the nearest hospital. Recently a policeman had occasion to bring a young colored boy to his atatlon house. When asked his namo by tho houso sergeant ho gave tho same namo as tho policeman. Investigation showed that this namo, oven to tho initial, was all that ho had ovor had. It lator developed that this samo pollco man had about soventoen years boforo picked up a small colored baby from an ash can and taken it to tho Women's Homeopathic hospital. Tho hospital authorities had taken tho offlccr's namo for their record and had also given It to tho baby who was tho samo that ho picked up again ovor soventeon ycarg afterward. At present thoro Is a regular system under which a baby Is given a namo whon It becomos a ward of tho city. Ono hundred of tho mo3t common names for boys aro plpkcd from tho tolephono directory and a similar number for girls. "When a boy is brought Into tho caro of tho city, a nurse thrusts her hand Into tho box full of names for boys and brings out tho namo under which tho baby Is later christened. :iaisfissJ &m iggS Many Chinese Farms Within the City of New York NEW" YORK. Ono who from a skyscraper window looks acrosB tho East river to tho Long Island part of Greator Now York commands a view of a patch of rural China thriving there, Its farmers using ancient methods of till ing, mostly by means of tho tools of Marco Polo's time, and cultivating tho very vegetation lmmemoiially culti vated along tho Slklang and tho levels of Quangjung. Using their natlyo In tonslvo methods, theso Cantoncso farmors average In profits about $500 per man per season. When tho grow ing season is over they como farther into tho city, tako Jobs as cooks and waiters in chop-ouoy restaurants or as helpers in laundries, returning to tho farm lands in tho spring. They pros per and aro healthy and penceable. Doubtless they could do something with tho cost of living problem If they took ovor moro nearby farms and "truck" gardens. But tho Chinese farmers ralso no moro than they and their Now York countrymen consume. They aro In competition with no ono outsldo their own pcoplo. Mon Foon Jung, editor of tho Chinese Dally News (Mon Je? Yat Bo), enumerates tho vegetables grown, as follows: Goy-choy a green plant, boiled for eating. Bak-choya whlto plant, bollod with rlco. Dungwaa molon, not sweet, weighing from ten to twenty pounds, boiled for eating. Tak-wa a green, bitter squash, usod In chop-suoy. Lunga-baktu a sort of elongated cabbago or Chlncso artichoke, used for soups, Doog-wa a boon with a pod ono to two foot long. Chineso cucumber as largo aB a squash, usod in chop-suey. American corn as fodder for tho mules on tho farms. Also a fow of tho American vegetables for Ingredients of tho chop-suey made for Americans. Dig Up Skulls on Site of Old Fort Pontchartrain DETROIT, MICH. Tho annual crop of skeletons is now being harvested on the slto of Fort Pontchartrain. Souvenir fiends aro dashing madly up and down and, across Jefferson avenue, carrying skulls, arrow heads, beads, wam pum, bayonets, musket locks, horse shoes, brass buttons and other me mentoes of a gory but historic past. Merchants along tho big thorough faro aro preparing to docorato their windows with grisly- remnants of an ancient burial ground. A workman digging in a trench in Jefferson avonuo.near Oris wold street, made tho first Important find. Ills spndo struck something hard, and In a fow seconds ho unearthed a skull of mugnlflcent proportions. In closo proximity ho found two others. Ho grow volublo and everybody quit work. Business men dashed out of their stores and shop3 and people got off street cars. Thcro was much comment. Tho Old Resldentor was among those pros wit. Ho said tho skulls wore resting on tho slto of tho gatoway to old Fort Pontchartrain. Ho said no doubt many moro skeletons will bo found beforo the trenches aro completed. A. mm in shlrtsleoves said tho skulls probably wero onco tho property of members of tho Iroquois trlbo of Indians. "You can tell that by the high chook bones, tho Ingrowing eyes nnd tho diminishing foreheads," ho said, Tho workmen were digging a sower aud tho excavations extend east in Jefforson avenue as far as ML Elliott avonuo. This serves to bring to light a collection of flno old ruins, as It Includes tho ground whero tho battle of Bloody Run was Btaged. THERE Is a lot of comfort to be had out of a romodoled dress. It seems, nnd Is, wasteful to discard a perfect ly good garment, that has nothing tho matter with It, oxcept that somo new Idea In outline has como In and dis placed that on which it was built. Tho sonso of bolng economical is sol acing, and when a remodeled gown has all the earmarks of a spick-and-span, up-to-tho hour now model, tho Joy of tho average woman is com plete Sho has achieved economy and style at tho samo time. This season tho incoming of the tunic, tho voguo for thin sleeves, the wide girdle and tho glrdlo mado of tho fabric of tho dreBS havo all played into tho hands of her who Is determined to romodol hor gowns Instead of discard ing them. Skirts set on tho yokes havo helped out, too, for tho skirt too narrow at tho bottom has been cut oft whero It began to narrow, and tho missing length provided for by a smoothly fitting yoke. Thanks to tho llcklo, but not .always unkind goddess of fashion, short skirts aro the prop er thing for tho street, nnd somo of tho bottom edge may bo trimmed away from those that show signs of wear. Then (hero is tho skirt with tho bat tloment edgq at tho bottom, that is, skirts slashed Into shallow, straight edged scallops about tho bottom edgo, sometimes bound with braid. This ono alteration gives an up-to-dato touch to last year's gown. A straight, plain underskirt of satin worn under a cloth tunic, has solved tho problem of changing many cloth and velvet dresses of last winter Into styles Introduced for the present sea son. Tho tunic of plaited cnlffon worn over the skirt of Inst year'B silt gown, and tho introduction of a wld glrdlo about tho waist havo helped out Immensely In nlteilng afternoon dresses, ' Nothing has been moro helpful to tho economically Inclined than the very fashionable band trimmings of fur and fur cloths. By means ol theso tunica have been lengthened, the fashionable collars nnd cuffs in troduced on jackets, pretty turbanj to match suits made possible. All thq pattern books ubound In suggestloiu for clever remodeling. An attractive dress shown in tha picture may be copied, using a lasl year's dress as a foundation If the owner had tho forethought to buy a Httlo extra length of goods with a view to remodeling her gown. Whera a provision of this kind has no) been mado, it is best to make an un derskirt of satin and convert tho cloth skirt into a tunic. Or If the cloth skirt Is very narrow tho underskirt may be finished with a panel or satin up the front and the cloth tunic set in at each sldo of this. Very wide silk braids aro fashion able for trimming, nnd, like the bandi of fur nnd fur cloth, havo been mos) useful In the remodeling of gowns. At the Ribbon Counter i I . . , VF if W'jjhw i ' " Dsvoteea of "Dllllards on the Green Turf' Must Think of Something In tho Nature of a Fitting Punishment. "Wo bco on tho green countryside during tho warm days of summer per spiring creatures, flushed and un kempt, armed with long-handled clubs, striking 'tho ground with frenzy, ns If they wished to discover rare stones or precious metals. It Is golfers at work." Thus writes a contributor to tho Paris Journal in giving what ho callB a "Guldo du Golf." He oxplalns somo of tho peculiarities of tho game. First, with regard to tho ground. "Any ground will do, sp long as it Is not level. Having found your ground, you then take great care to fill up all tho natural holes In It. Having dono sof you mako a number of artificial holes, which aro all of a fixed shape and dopth tho more theso holes resomblo natural holes tho hotter they aro. "Golf is the direct descendant of a now unfashionable sport known as stonebrcaklng, which consists of break ing tho stoneB on roads with tho aid of a long hammer. Tho essential dif ference is that tho golfers do not wear wlro spectacles Ilka their ancestors, tho stonobreakers. "Tho stones havo been replaced by a Email India rubber ball, which lasts much longer, being unbreakable. "The problem is to make this ball go Into tho holes on tho golf courso with-ou- touching it with tho hands. That would bo much too easy. To push it toward tho holes you use a wooden stick with nn Iron butt, very Incon veniently shaped so as to mako tho problem as complicated as possible. This stick is called a club, and Its num ber Is legion, slnpo It Is tho correct thing to change the club between each stroke, .'ust n3 you change "forks be tween each course. Tho collection of clubs, contained in nn umbrella case, Is carried behind the lino of fire by a' youngster known as a caddy. Tho player hnvlng choson with great caro from among hisclubs one which Is likely to mako a successful stroke, flourishes it with both hands, strikes and misses .he ball. There aro two ways of missing tho ball ono by using too much force and the other by not using enough Tho strode with too much force behind it is the easier; it consists in striking tho earth a fow feet behind the ball without touching it. Whon this stroke Is well dono It sends into the air a shower of earth and turf nfter tho stylo of a fireworks display, with very elegant effect. Tho hit which m!sbes Is moro delicate to nchleve. In this caso It Is necessary that your club, after a vigorous flour ish, should make straight for tho ball, pass it without touching it, and return by the Impetus given It to strike tho player on the back of Uie head. "This Is how I found golf played, and I have studied it a number of years. Women Need Exercise. Tho woman who does hor own housework (and that is the fortune of tho majority) Is usually worn out at the end of tho day. Sho 1b npt to conclude, therefore, that exercise is a word not Intended for her. She couldn't mako a greater mlBtake, writes Frances Frear In Leslie's. A woman needs a half hour's rest neat tho middle of tho day, It is true, but she needs also systematic and stimu lating exercise. One reason why wom en aro so fatigued at the end of tho day Is that thoy lack musclo tone. Half nn hour of brisk exorciso suited to the peculiar needs of each Individ ual, taken regularly, followed by a cold dash of wator will servo to keep tho whole muscular and norvous sys tem In tone nnd work wonders In keeping tho eyes bright and tho color good, something' that all women de sire. Tho housowlfo who takes both a brief rest and systematic exorcise dally will not find herself so much a prey to that tired out feeling at tho day's end, and will be able to do all of her work tho better. Chicago Has Produced a New Type of Irish Beauty CHICAGO. Chicago has evolved a now typo of lrlBh beauty. It tumbles down all tho old traditions of tho Irish race and stands forth as tho now ideal of Celtic pulchritude. Its solo exponent at least, as far us Is known is a girl of sixteen years Miss Agnes Daley of 4230 St. Lawrcnco avonue. Sho is blonde Instead of brunette, aud short and slender Instead of tall and statoly. Flvo Judges selected her at tho annual ball of tho Irish Counties So cial union as tho most beautiful col leen in Chicago, Theso aro tho charms which led tho Judgos unani mously to declaro her beauty supe rior to that of 400 other contestants: Hair, light blonde: oyos, deep Wue: lashes, Jot black; comploxion, "pink and whlto;" height, B foot C14 inches; weight, 128 pounds. That tho now typo is unique Is shown by tho fact that solotllonn of thJ j4geB for second and third prize wore girls of tho conventional typo of Irish beauty. John W, Rninoy, clork of tho circuit court, presontod tho prlzo to Mlaa Datey a largo sllvor "beauty sot," which boro the stamp of a manufactory ta Ireland. Applause which greeted the nnnouncoment of tho first prizewin ner teMtlfied to the fact that tho 800 guests heartily indorsed tho eolcctloi! U ihf new type pronounced superior by the Judges. IT Is hard to pass tho gay ribbon counters and tho show cnse3 full of thlB year's offerings for tho holidays. The; very first thing to catch tlo eye Is tho heaps of halt-opened roses, mado of satin ribbon sot in small mllllnory foliage. Thoy nro mostly In Amorlcan Beauty colors, but thoro aro somo pink and a few rich yellow oneB. Tho stomB nro wound with narrow green ribbon nnd a stream of silver halt-dollars flows Inward ns a stream of roses flows outwnrd us thoy change bands, Tho single roso pinned close up to tho neck or on tho shoulder Is bolng worn by smart women and many of them bought as gifts for friends. Next ono notices tho neckbands of volvot ribbon which havo a ruff of loco or mallno at tho back and fasten un der a roBO or two small buds, at ono sldo. Sometimes tho ruff Is In black and sometimes In whlto. Below In tho show cases are tho now bags mado of tho richest brocaded ribbons. Among them that ono shown in tho plcturo Is of whlto sntln fig ured with splondld American Beau ties in tho natural colorings. It Is moderate In slzr and plain nnd the roses could hardly bo moro llfollko on a painted canvas. This Is ono of many beautiful bngs brought out for holiday gifts. t. Puosy-Wlllow Underwear. It's tho thing. It Is delightful wear. It rivals cropo do chlno. Hemstitching Is tho llnlsh. Tho effect Is of rich simplicity. This undorwear is to bo had In sets. SetB Includo a chcmlso, pantaloon and petttcoaL Tho petticoats fit without a wrinkle, fastening with snaps. Evening petticoats aro altogether filmy for day wear thero'a nn accord ,loncid trill. Roman striped ribbons havo been used to mako the hnndsomo collar and cuff sots with which women brighten up their dark cloth tailored suits. Tho collar and ono cuff of a set Is shown in the picture. Pretty standing collars of these striped ribbons aro 'mado by folding tho ribbons longthwlso so that ono edge is about an Inch highor than tho other ana laying the folded edgo Into box plnlts. Tho plaits aro stitched down near tho bottom and in another line of stitching an inch or moro higher. Tho plaits do not extund across tho front but form a ruff nt tho sides and back. Tho ribbon is laid In folds across tho front nnd fastens at the left sldo undor a row of little, flat sllk-covercd buttons. The buttons aro repeated on tho right side. Many pretty ornaments for the dressing table in tho form of pincush ions graco tho holiday ribbon counter, and thoro aro tho usual beautiful girdles and sashes In grentor numbers than over. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. Event In American History. Novembor 24, 1758, mnrked the evacuation and destruction of Fort Duquesno. A short time previous to this tho British had Initiated the work of fortification. The French, coming down tho Allogheny river from their forts on and near Lake Erie, mado a sudden descent on tho small British garrison, and tho latter was forced to surrender unconditionally. Tho French and their Indian allies completed the fortification nnd called it Fort Du quesno. A British force commanded by General Forbes was sent from the cast to retake tho fortification, aud doubtlessly would have succeeded without tho loss of a man hud It not been for tho ImpetuouB Captain Grant. Tho fort was blown up whllo tho main forco was yet ten miles east of tho slto of tho futuro great city. Thoy heard a great explosion, saw volumes of smoke, and reallzod at onco that tho French and Indians had destroyed the little fortification and had taken to tho woods and tho rivers. Lace Is a very Important factor In tho costume of tho day. Not only does It form (louncos and frills ontlroly cov ering tho bodlco and skirt, but It makos modern or nnclont lappets and tunics. Measuro Knitting. Always mako a gaugo boforo bo ginning any Important pleco of knit ting. Cast on nbout twenty stltchoa with tho needleB nnd wool it ia in tondad to use. Knit nbout a dozen rowB, withdraw tho needles, nnd meas ure how many stltchos go to tho Inch; thou cnBt on accordingly fot tho ploco of work that Is to bo done. In follow lng directions that stato bo many stitches to tho Inch, chango tho needles- finer or coajuor -until tho right size Is found Farming In Pike County. Commenting on the railways' do mund for highor rates, President Ren of tho Pennsylvania told tho following story to a Washington Star roportor "You can't ralso much on these stony hills, I reckon?" said an anglor to a Pike county farmer. "Oh, yes, stranger, wo genorally get fine crops," tho farmer roplled. "But you don't ralso much grain?" "Sure wo do. Wo ralso a sight of barloy. I don't know what wo Plko county farmers would, do If It wasn't for our barloy crops." "What do you got for tho stuff?" "Oh, wo don't soil a grain of It." "Food it to your stock?" . "You don't catch us wasting barloy llko-that." "We'll, what do you do with It, then?" "Why, wo savo every grain of it for iced." The Old Companies. The Old Treat ment. The Old Care. They the best in all the land. I represent the Hartfoid, Phenix, Continental, Columbia, Royal, the really Strong Insurance Companies. I have a fine list of lands for sale-and wish Yours, wheu you sell. Write every kind of Insurance. Do Conveyancing, draw up Will, Deeds, Leases, Eu. RIGHT. Very much desire YOUR business, and will care for it well. H. JF. McKecvcr Jn&u Successor to Ed. T. Kearney. Insurance. - Real Estate. - Steamship Tickets. WJW "A Growing Business Built on Our Reputation" SHIP US YOUR Steele, Siman &, Co. RaySlninn, Cattle Salesman. Hundreds of Dakota County Farmers Ship Us. Ask them about us. Our Best Boosters. Write Us. 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