The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, March 24, 1892, Image 4

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MM M
7
How to Look PrettT
'keep the texture of the skin as
Mft and delicate a .possible there is
thing I think that equal the use of
almond meal, says Ella Wheeler Wil
ax. You mar ask whv almoud oil
wiB not answer the purpose the rub- j
Mag necessary with the meal is almost
m beneficial as the meal itself; with an
0, you do not use friction and conse- j
jentlylost half the benefit. I have,
wed almond meal for fifteen years. 1 1
spend five minutes at night and as
wmeh time in the morning, and wash
my face with warm water once a day-1
Most women wash their face too fre
ajwently. There is no fabric that would
tt become dingy, discolored, and
Toughened if soaked in water half a
dozen times during the day and then
exposed to the cold of winter or the
eat of summer. Just so it is with the
kuman skin. I consider au occasional
.Turkish hath a great beautilier of the
complexion. When 1 was a young
girl my face w as plentifully decorated
with freckles: these seldom appear
Mw, even if I have been exposed to
fee hot sun. It is partly the use of
almond meal, I thiuk, which has kept
hem at bay, and partly a preparation
ef rosewater and benzoin, a preparation
wed since the time of Cleopatra an
nnce of the latter to a quart of the
former. This should be daubed on the
faee with a soft cloth. This mixture
fti also a good tonic for the skin. As
to wrinkles, borrowing trouble is a
fruitful cause of these hated reminders
ef time's advance. AVhile a man may
fee unduly nervous and worrid about
kiatusiness and other affairs of im
port his wife will fret over trivial af
fairs. She worries about the dust on the
bric-a-brac, the chip on the new china
up, the style of her bonnet, and (it of
her gown, and these things make her old
as surely as do real troubles. A placid
temper will long keep wrinkles in
abeyance, and years of good humor
will leave a sweet mouth to old age.
Shakspenre makes Csesar say that cow
ards dii uany times before their deaths.
So they do, and so do thousands upon
thousands of people who grunt their
Byes away. They make themselves old
with imagined aches and pains. If is
mot good to give way to megrims. An
ticipation brings the misery that it
looks for. If we look for old age it
wiH run to meet us.
Every one can be in some way t leas
ing, and should be, for as Or. Holmes
ays in the "Philosopher at the Breakfast-Table,"
"the woman who does not
please is a false note in the harmonies
f nature." To stimulate those who
have been "cheated of features by dis
sembling nature" and who remain
agly in spite of science and art, but
who have commendable ambition to
attract and please, let me assure them
that they can be lovely and attractive
K they will cultivate their minds and
their hearts. Every one has noticed
that they are not all beauties who have
become brides, and one is at a loss to
anderstand how they lead their hus
bands captive. There is no mistery
about it they did it by being agree
able, kind, and bright. Milton's de
scription of Eve is worth nothing in
this connection:
Grmoe waa in her stepa, haT'n in her eye,
In all her geture dignity and Jove."
But this is not practical enough, pos
sibly, let me give you a few simple
and very practical rules.
Never plunge your face into very
old water when it feels hot and ary
irom exposure to trie wind; such an
imprudent act almost always perm a
aently yellows the skin.
If you want a face that looks like
leather then become a confirmed tea
and coffee drinker. If you like blotches
aad pimples revel in a bill of fare
which includes hot bread, gravies, fat
food, candies, and late suppers.
Lastly, don't worry about freckles,
Be fond of them, because mankind al
ways claim that the girl who freckles
It lovable.
Woman's Presence of Mind.
u.. unnipn in the face of sudden
WhyHelookTbelosult.
-There are times.' said OoL Metealf
U)en win suum
A
.v.. it ),i, h Itheotherdav. "when
danger, more oi -. - , - however outrageous.
. -i.-.t it means to
thines one , man wno na . .
is known as "presence ot mum u,"j
. . 4i,;..Tft (kirn m a
men? in the nature 01 u... j , , ,,VHr uuires a
StaiW Up oeioic a ir'-
davs in the seventies
, (luicklv ana so
might expect to hud thai we, ir. -r ------ wnen it
savs the " Woman About lowu 01 u- . . . h,Uasthe
e ability , is in auouiei man
...i ........ Ti.-wwa nothing m
nmi'k- r iji tmtcp ip a nun j - .
r II.. ..1.
inttaiitlv tn admit means tor meeting nn- ....
.h.if , mui.iiwl reparation so
it is onlv another maniiesiauoxi ""- . to
leaping of the feminine mind toward deiinitdy as an jgot
conclusions that we call w omans in- accept an insult wi ho
tuition-an instinct which is displayed Ukii, rvdress was "J
i .h. fmau ,.f .he ent,re animal I self the scorn of the enure ton ".unity.
kingdom as well as in woman,
t.:L : .-... .-I..-a1 1.1
, .u. . ' . a.n.r. : Wuhh when I think of the cirtum
lllg impulse IU Hie pi rsr.itf B
Two days ago something uappeueu wiuti
over ill liroomvn w men gjiramwi
A STKtET CAR RflSASCt
liere does he come from f 1
! When I thought it well over, ho
1
-Tickets- shouted U smart young ,vr , -ted lhat there had been and tl )tar v
nl" . ... i i,u . ..... -.ik of me. and. at the era of tL i,
l.... iih hp fllW - i i mra w . . "'Ol'io. i
h,L M-nrs standing m a 1Uie of iW Barnaxd, Mr
lu ' r. . a n.a.ittlll i. L ....U.- vorv wrll Who I W
car winch u W-ing "'"" , '
animal ' self the scorn of tiie enure
u,( and ! And yet I accepted the worst kind of
sav-l an insult once and even to thw day 1
. ... ... i.r.,ur,l Urn Carmac aflor tl,. i. . 1
iauieoi i - .'iuiyt
...oMknow very well whol waa. At .king of L)(h,
i. ieeiit. I determined to renew Ibe , penod ,.re B(Jt I
txut half-past five o'clock n S acquaintance, and so U following the ;rek ba,lkJ'
y afternoon that 1 found my- j j tlMtuay und n.e at the door of No. a cos)utrilU
...im,.j it. iimi return-' i.., l.t of bra.s nu.,.,., j
l aiiiornia street,
)t was a
a Ttiursdav
k in.iil a car filled with men return
from busmen, watu-red among
wliom asasprinauujj
the fairer sex, who incumbered ' j
hroutit tlie answer:
j ..1.1 nun-liases
ttieu JIlliUUjriw4w i
I'iUe .-treet.
1 must confer 1 did feel rather un-
t w.f-n my mquirv
n r i ... . ' -
' v - uul 'I a
Vlr. I'arman 'f" I J11 the art
Yes, sir; shall I j squired l, CJ
,.ut -!r- and I was pre- "" they J
. n ,1 onlf llir . . i ...,,4,..nula it uur. a
wramied up Hi cloaks, uo i ulU iinherwl lino a iiiuut. .".-j
apjar o r,m, where 1 .ro.Haea io puu ,
Remembers Men by Their Neck
ties. There is a ticket takc in one of the
large theatres in this citj who occas
ionally exercises his memory in a rather
curious way. Generally he gives each
man who goes out between the acts a
return check, but occasionally he omits
this and relies solely on his memory to
recognize those who wish to re-enter
the theatre. A friend who saw him
doing this the other night remarked
that he must have a wonderful memory
for faces to be able to perform the feat
without making a mistake. "No," an
wered the ticket taker. "I have a very
poor memory for faces. 1 do not rely
n their faces at all. Indeed I seldom
look at the men's faces. What I go by
to their neckties. If you will watch
the neckties you will observe that no
two are exactly aiike. They differ much
sno.e than the men's faces do and they
are easie. to remember. I might for
get a man's face, but his necktie, navs
I have followed this rule for years and
I have never made a mistake yet,"
Haw York Sun. ,
ernrn OU SUiry,
Dry Goods Chronicle: Bookkeeper
Excuse me, sir, but my nephew died
three days ago.
Employer (who is somewhat familiar
with the little game) All right, Mr.
Oipepptr, you may attend the funeral.
Csei, as usual, on first base, I suppose?
the claim that women are readier wit
ted in this particular than men. A
little girl, in attempting to light the
gas in the baby's sleeping room, set
tire to the lace curtains. Tliree young
women, who were walking in an ad
joining yard, heard the outcry of the
child, and snatching up some watering
pots which stood near by, rushed into
the house and up into the bedroom.
Tha fir V. j.I htr th'tn tirna Bnrp.'lli to the I
iilV Mi U U(iU Kl 1 lUlO l.mu u," . - ,,,, .
WU UI1 W 1I1UU LUC UrtUV - m r
I was in Hugo at the time and was
plaving billiards when a man came in
and began to make a disturbance. He
was a weil known desperado and no one
was anxious to get into trouble with
him. He became so obnoxious without
being checked that finally he picked up
one of the billiard balls and wnt it fly
ing through a window. He was just
reaching for another when 1 reserved
my cue and placing the butt end of it
in nit oi his stomach, pusiteu
poured the conteuts of their w atering
pots upon the bed, and then carried
both the children to a place of safety,
then turned to aid the mother in tear
ing down the draperies and extinguish
ing the flames. All this was planned
and executed so promptly that before
the fire engines could reach the spot
the fire was out and the young women
were receiving the congratulations of
some men who had stood in the street
looking on, and who had not enough
presence of mind in the face of danger
to offer assistance until all need for it
was past.
Another incident illustrative of the
same thing came to us a few days ago
from the west. A mail had caught his,
foot in some unexplained way at the
side of an elevator shaft. The elevator,
heavily loaded, was coming down from
above. While he was making every
possible effort to loosen his foot a little
girl employed in the establishment
hastily caught up a knife that lay near
by, cut his shoelaces, and pulled hitn
back just as the floor of the elevator
touched his shoe.
A last and pleasanter instance of the
ready wit of a woman, more instant
and efficient than all the w isdom of
two philosophers, is the one told with
great enjoyment by was it Edward or
Charles Emerson V concerning the dif
ficulties into which Ralph Waldo Emer
son and himself found themselves led
by a frisky calf, and the solution of
these difficulties by the ready wit of
their Irish maid
A young calf had got out flfto the
barnyard and the philosopher and his
brother were called upon to drive it
back into the barn. They pulled gently
at the rope about its neck, but it
wouldn't be led. Then they pulled
hard. So did the calf. The impelling
force was then applied from behind.
The calf lay down. The two wise men
drew to one side for a few moments and
applied their deepest philosopoy to the
solution of the problem. The result
was that they settled upon the "shooing"
process that is the favoring amuse
ment between women and hens. This
went on for some time, both men scam
pering hatiess and breathless about the
farm-yard, the elate calf bounding and
running in the wildest manner, and
leading every direction but toward the
barn-door. Then the Irish maid came
to the rescue! With a sniff of uncon
cealed contempt she stalked before the
outwitted sages up to the calf, thrust
two of her fingers into its mouth and
led it, eager and docile, into the barn.
Summer Camp for Boys.
This happy idea of assisting in the
amusement of the boys, while at the
same time they are trained and in
structed in useful arts, and taught some
elementary ideas of useful sciences, is
finding favor in the community, and the
boys of western New York will have
similar advantages afforded them.
Professor Arey of the Rochester acad
emy, assisted by a corps of instructors,
has established a camp on the west
side of Canandaigua lake, where a good
company of boys has been gathered and
enrolled. Here they will remain for a
month, or until the middle of August.
They will be under military discipline,
and their time will be mostly spent in
games and recreations, such as boat- with the intellectual brilliancy and (1
ing, sailing, fishing, swimming etc
hearing a lecture occasionally, making
excursion parties and collecting natural
history specimens, such as shells, plants,
etc, studying the geolygy of the sur
rounding region, at night receiving
lectures on astronomy with the use of a
him
mo-
1 was looking dow n the barrel oi a
Colt's revolver. The sensation in such
a case is simply overpowering. I was
perfectly helpless, for I had no revolver
mvself, and if I had beeu wearing one
he" could have killed me before my
hand could reach it. I thought he was
going to shoot me then and there, but
he chose not to do this from some whim.
l'm going to slap your face, Met
culf " he said, "so that you can tell peo
ple about it. Turn your cheek around j
here."
"I looked way down the barrel of that
six shooter so far that it seemed to me
that 1 could see a bullet in its chamber.
I set my teeth against Die insult I
knew that I was deadly pale.
"Turn it," he said. " )ue, two" and
I turned my cheek. 1 did not feel the
blow, but the name which scorched it
afterwa-d was like a furnace fire.
"Now," he said with a laugh, "give
m the other one." Again he counted
-'one, two' and 1 presented my other
cheek for a second dap.
"If ever I wanted to kill a man it was
that fellow, but 1 had no show at alL I
remember the sickening feeling which
ran over me at the thought that he
might insist upon breaking my nose.
Revolver or no revolver I do not believe
1 could have stood tm.t. lint I took
the insults, not from him, but from a
six shooter. A man can't argue against
a revolver. But for months and months
1 longed to meet that man on even
terms. I never saw him again." w
York Tribune.
Frenchwomen of the Early Sa.
lous.
The traits which strike us most forci
bly in the lives and characters of the
women of the early salons are delicacy
and sensibility; they colored their
minds, ran through their literary pas
times, and gave a distinctive flavor to
their conversation, says a writer In the
Century. It was these qualities, added
to a decided taste for pleasures of the
intellect, and an inate social genius,
that led them to revolt from the gross
sensualism of the court, and form, up
on a new basis, a society that has
given another complexion to the last
two centuries. The natural result was,
at first, a reign of sentiment that was
often overstrained, but which repre
sented on the whole a reaction of mor
ality and refinement. The wits and
beauties of the salon bleu may have
committed a thousand follies, but their
chivalrous codes of honor and of man
ners, their fastidious tastes, even their
prudish affectations, were open though
sometimes rathei bizarre tributes to
the virtues that lie at the very foun
dation of a well-ordered society. They
had exalted Ideas of the dignity of
womanhood, of purity, of loyalty, of
devotion. The heroines of Mile, de
Scudery, with their endless discourses
upon the metaphysics of love, were no
doubt tiresome sometimes to the blase
courtiers, as well as to the critics, but
their lofty and fine Hpun sentiments
charmed the Great Conde in his eel at
Vincennes, the eloquent Flechier, the
ascetic D'Andilly at Port Royal, as
well as the romantic maidens who
sighed over their fanciful dreams and
impossible adventures. They had their
originals in living women who reversed
the common tradition of a Gabritlle
and a Marion Delorme; who combined
ne
tips of their no- to appear o-i i
k,..jd fur r feathers. It asi
o-ie of those cold, foggy eveuings that
make pedestrians hurry along at top
speed: while the policemen at the
comers oi the streets trains P a
down to keep themselves warm. The
! seemed to havi great difficulty in
urnnig their purse, out from their
s:i:a I muffs or from their deep pockets,
and a continuous tring of pol"!,'s
was offered for involuntary elbowing,
caused by endeavors of their benumbed
hands to obtain hold of the nickels for
their fares.
You
ex-
was by pia.1),..
uftar . I - I .
upn whuli a
emblem
purse V
courtesy of the Greek Aspasia the
moral graces that give so poetic a fasci
nation to the Christian and medieval
types. Mine, de La Fayette painted
with rare delicacy the old struggle be
tween passion ann duty, but character
triumphs over passion, and duty ig the
telescope, looking at the invisible world j final victor. In spite of the low stand
through microscopes, and various other J rd of the age, the ideal woman of so
entertainments. The number in cam ciety, as of literature, was noble tender
is about sixty. We believe and ho e modest, cure, and loval ' ' '
mas rroiessor Arey will meet with the
Wgnest success in this enterprise,
Canandaigua lake, with its shores of
varied beauty and interest, is a fit selee.
tion for the camp. This gem of lakes
WMOIad fchaTold Him,
Boston Herald "William," said Mrs.
Bixby from the head of the stairs to
her husband, who had come home at
and attractive to tourists and sojourn
ers. v ick s Magazine for August.
When is a man iihliged to keep his
word 'i When no on will take it
What ship carrasBtot paMtngers?
Courtship. "
some angel cake in the pantry, a new
kind that I nrade today. Iputitwhera
you can easily get it .
"Ail light, dear," responded Mr
Hixby. "How considerate of you. f
might have eaten some of it without
thinking." And the grateful husband
Md Uinch on cold canned beef.
"Why, wher is my
ii:.vin't uot it. have vou Kinel?
damn d a weet voice ! lady "f middle
age, alter a hasty search in her muff
and a lengthy exploration of the mys
terious depths of her handsome gown.
"No, mamma.''
Then some one must have stolen it,
or, pi'ihapa. ihsve left it in some of
the shops -down at the white house,
probably." j
All eyes were turned in the directum
ol the lady who had spoken, and the
conductor began to look very knowing.
-Haven't you got any money?" he
demanded, in a grull tone.
"No; 1 have lost my purse, which
contained ail the money I have about
me. iiut my husband will pay for us
ia tlie morning, or I will send the
money to tlie ollice at once or returning
home."
"Can't do it ma'am," replied the
conducter; "you've got to pay or gel out
and walk."
"ilere, conductor," I said, tendering
him a dime; and then, turning to tlie
elder lady, 1 added: "It is the rule of
the company madam. The conductor
can not give credit to passengers. I
hope you will M-rmit me to spare yoii
tlie annoyance of having to get out at
this hour."
"I am very much obliged to you,
sir." replied the lady, "aud 1 accept
your kind offer willingly. Will you be
good enough to give ine your address
lhat 1 may discharge without delay
this small debt?"
"Oh, it is a mere nothing, madam.''
I said; 1 shall be very well satisiied if
you will give the sum to the first poor
person you meet."
"Oh, no, not at all, sir, I must in
sht "
Under such pressure, I could hardly
refuse, and as the car was now ap
proaching Hyde street where 1 trans
ferred to the cross towuliue, 1 look the
three transfers the conductor gave me
and confused by tlie deep interest of
the other passengers, now all eyeg and
ears, I hastily drew out a card and,
raising my hat, extended it, with two
translers to the lady. 15ut it was the
young girl who, blushing deeply, took
them.
The following day I had almost for-
gotten the incident, when among my
letters 1 found one in an unknown
nand writing bearing the city post
mark. I opened it and saw, attached
to the top corner of the visiting card
enclosed five two-cent postage stainpB
Ou the card w as printed.
MIt. AND Hits C. C A It MAN.
While underneath was written:
Mr. aud Mrs. Carman present their
compliments and thanks to Mr. Paul
liarnard for his kindness aud courtsey'
Tuesdays. No. -Pine htreet
J put the card aside on
under a verse of vioiets,
not till one morning, nearly a week
later, that I came across It again.
Now, every day you meet people in a
street car whom yon look at for an
instant with more or less attention; but
in my case I had hard.y had a glimpse
of the mother or the daughter, and had
not even the least id-a if they were
pretty or otherwise. From their
accent and manner, however there
could be no doubt they were of the
upper world-but, after all, of what
interest could they be to me?
Nevertheless, 1 did feel interested,
so why should I attempt to deny it?
Their address had been given to me,
and also their day at home. The
address was printed but the "day" was
written in a modern angular hand.
Not so the lines of thanks; the hand
writing there was the delicate, pre-Mse
kind that young misses were taught
thirty years ago. The mother had
certainly written them.
Hut who had written "the day ?"
I became curious. How could I find
out? Yes, there was a way.
Hut to call on people with whom Had
only exchanged a few words, almost on
the street, and who in a week, mi ght
have forgotten both by name and by
face was rather delicate matter. Then
1 sliould have to undergo the torture
of feeling myself an lutruder as the
servant would announce me in the
reception room, where perhaps, haif-a-dozen
ladies known to me, would look
me over from bead to foot as I advanced
'4
until good iapaj
iurj ru(i(.
"""eu a o.e 1ID. j
. ''1
electron - gold t
or a sacred Hmii
arii.l ...... ....
lions of the iiut, J
. . 11.
myself together while awaiing an
i aniian,
Mix-e then som months have passed
J'aul, what are you wntiug there?"
"A httie story, darling."
"Let me see."
"No, no not yet"
i!.,r .. iu.il l,x,l.Mi nver hit shoulder.
and a smidl hand soon covered my eye, i onlr il "thei Ul
while an arm slii.d round mr n-k ' ''uier. 1
and her soft lips pressed mine. 1 lie e'lrlll -rtJ
"Oh. you naughty boy! Hut just wait - ww u Lr
a minute."
Hie disapieared laughing, and caine
back quickly with a blue sachet, f rora
winch she drew out two pink street car
transfers.
"You see, I've kept thetn safely -you
did not think I had thrown thetn away,
dear? The tirsl Tuesday I cried all
night If you had not eorae the
second "
-Well what would you have done,
Fthel?"
"Shall I tell you ?"
Yes, do "
"You won't be crs? Weill would!
have sent you one by post"
"How jolly! And Mrs. Carman
knew "
"No, no, no! She was ever so sur
prised when you called. It was I who,
tfore closing the envelope secretly
wrote at the foot of the card Tuesday.'
Are you sorry?"
(Aud then there is the sound of kiss
ing.) The Argonaut
J.nllnf Mannrn In 1380.
In a description of a dinner in FtVi
there is no mention of the fork, and it
is not certain that there was a knife for
each person. Tlie guests were placed
in couples as far as posibe, on the
ground of their being mutually agree
able, which was the more i-essary,
as in certain cases the porringer a
bowl with ears for the soup had to
serve two persons.
If a person preferred not to use his
spoon, or if one had notjbeen supplied
him, he drank his soup from the por
ringer held by one of the ears. Those
present at the table hands Into the
common dish to lake such niece of
meat as they preferred, though it was
not expected they would explore the
mass too thoroughly. This will pass
for a description of the w ays a meal
was eaten In an aristocratic family in
Europe .fx) years before America was
iron?e, ikh,
orass, la ol vtrj toJ
nave mue or w
ancients got toiM
billty large quints
found in lue mem,!
find it now iu u, 3
u iiupenor la is
lake in Mbiria. Tj
required melting uf
pure melai. II totof
copper from iu nji
difficult to rwi.a
overcome such a i3
and we can only tfa&
sped, as in no iiiict
people of Euroj
cleverer than wt
believe. Chamben k
I'
Tarher of th tm
Tlie piano plujucj
tion has beea abi;
noble institution u
Paris, which was iu;
great revolution. 7
Abam, father oil
"Postilion de Loujj
Zimmerman!!, lung r
lug place in l am u" "
was at bis salotit
Tbalberg first iti.'
Parisian audteiia Lil
tinued the great tit J
hi rnnlemoorarfet i
, .' Ti
most glowing termiT
! pupil, -tamaty, had
j guiding tiie mural f "S
I chalk. Music. ,
(.'tint ry llnow ml" ,'f
There are a cert;: a -
whose object it mi-' "1
number of miiiitiaiVrf
country house of-
discovered by Columbus
mis elegance 01 appointment and ; t,e houseke i.iriv,r
manners was not found bower in the ! the hotel bilii awH' .
social scale. In families of less wealth j wjta the ex C
nanus were not always washed before country houses nrn
MUUKi upuui were uoi supplied, and owners and to tws - '
not only were meats taken with the The owners hare not r
lingers from the common dish but the 1 glle8U wjth food.1
soup was placed upon the table ina,welt. lnwr braioM-"
large vessel into which every one dipped1 amuse them butti- J
ms spoon anu conveyed me ilquid to : at h(!ftv? f(rtl dI ,J
his mouth. -San Francisco Chronicle. .1... .s
sportsmen by h'J s '
the accompanlm""1 .
provide. London IV
2lh
The UaviaKl
In the btiami ofrw;
oriue aresseu i' " ft
last of ail, for a ' 'j
I.
Hunting wltb Hloohound.
In lieu of genuine hunting, which is
temporarily 'at a standstill, the novel
idea of starting off a youth on foot and
sending two bloodhounds in pursuit of
him half an hour later lias commended
itself to certain sportsmen residing in
rAHIlllMT in IhA .... w.l. ...... t t . ! .
......-.. ... i,.vi 11, igiiuoi noiju 01 me uruig ner iuc. w
Ouorn as a capital way of k lling time, ! find romary in co' 4,4
Tiie ojiening run wa a great success both marriage and -
for after striking the line of a passinir ' acinth wm, ad P" jl
my desk, I and naturally very perturbed traveler ' the Oreeks. .t is iE'.fJ
O...I i I ho l.il. ..I .1... . - I - I.. ".
in rto , v... mo wii iuu, 100 uounus were wi tit the connection uj -
difficulty stopped an transferred to that
of the legitimate quarry.
Traveling at a tremu lous pace, and
with music almost equal in volume lo
the cry of a pack ot foxhounds, they
ran all around Quorn village, .their
owner regardless of snowdrifts. calluD.
ing in pursuit and taking the fj.nin. -.
just as Ihey carne. The end of the run lent lire daf
i0,.i smgmar, as directly the WR(er work8i m
bloodhounds got up to the fugitive i w . . Th. di4
"lltl""!"8" .b' r,m S,od. ;
came to have twowrt-l
AU the Year I'i.
l..iar.V'
In the swedith r-' K
I. a Dagaieue -TI.a.1.
nuiil a f
ii. ..r t irr
epsrtm
up Vj him and trying to lick his fa.
London Telegragh.
Vrtm Inatrurllua Cooking.
The project to throw the doors of the
cooking school annex of the public In
Btruction system open to the girU who
are not pupils of the public schools
deserves the support of tlie school
board. If free public instruction in
cooking is a good thing there is uo
reason why it should be withheld from
any who apply for it At least it should
not be withheld from any applicant of
school age.-Mllwauke Wisconsin.
More than two-thlrds of the agricul
tural Implements aggregating taOoftO
imported Into Natal south Africa, last
year, were from the United Suies.
Tliere are various kinds of "timid
men, but the oldest of that cbiss is the
chap who Is forever making dire pre
dictions as to the results of enterprises
evolved and carried forward by other
people,
a first cl.ssobjert.
Tribune.
As an inlm!'
proved of great
pneumonia, ph-urf y
and lung -altec"'
cough sprinkle a
chief and hold it , ..
nose for a few niin
viiior, and notet!" -" ,
Journal.
Hospital andrh't'
and children arc W .
the capital o,,e, Bf;,'
the mission tliere.
charge of MW i
f .1.; .ioi- " " -
diplomas. -"i'
Inoneoftl''irtS
othenncients.;-,!
the following: " .0
shem,wl.ow.-t'
he, lieliwig, " -the
ark."
i. .
j
.-.ii.