,-. a w. A - The Sioux County Journal VOLUME VII. HAKKISOX, NEIJKASKA, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1895. NUMBER 3S. 9 The average woman does not kuow bow t walk. Tlii need not call forth an. indignant protest from the thou sands who think they know a thing or two attout pcdestriaulsm, lut It can Iw taken as au actual assertion of an ac tual fact. It seems that despite all the time and trouble that wonieu give to the acquirement of other accomplish ments the art of walking well la one that they seem to think unnecessary to cultivate, aud therefore we nee them wobbling, mincing or striding In any thing but graceful fashion, aud all oth er devices of attraction cultivated to the last degree. The woman who dunces as a rule ia the one who walks well. The woman who plays tennis canot be genuinely .awkward lu her walk, yet the move ments of a goddess are confined to the two or three that realize that to get along anyway Is not to Impress the other promcnaders with the possession of any particular charm. Even a plain woman becomes glori fied If she can walk well. She need not be stylish even, 1n ord -r to have her carriage attract attention. Health first of all shows forth In a graceful walk. Abounding, Joyous health and good spirits all take part In the perfect walk, therefore though the lackadalsacal, wind shaken reed may for a time prove fascinating In its utter Inability to withstand the rude caresses of Boreas, It Is the oak that stands erect and dell ant In the teeth of the storm that baa the most lasting popularity. Therefore, girls, whatever else you do, learn to walk well, and you can defy dressmak ers, for even the most ordinary cannot make you appear aught but graceful, and knowing how to walk you will be certain to know how to breathe, and the result will be one that adds much to the list of personal attractions you try so hard to achieve. I'hlladelphla Times. Pho Haa Yankee Orlt. "I am In the hospital again, but it will take an awful lot yet to use up my American grit" e This was the message of a recent let ter from Mrs. Florence Maybrlck to her mother. After more than five yenrs of rigorous Imprisonment the bplrlt of the woman remains unbroken, and k ber mother adds: "I believe that, In spite of her delicacy of physique, she will live, will be vindicated and re leased. Perhaps, who knows? this miscarriage of Justice in her case will be Instrumental In securing for En gland the great need of a court of criminal appeal, a thing which has been agitated again and agalu by the best legal Uilent." Of a truth, lsth mother and daughter have alike brave hearts; and these are comforted and cheered by the contin uous efforts that are being made by their friends. Lately a yet stronger wave of sympathy has seemed to be borne along on the current of public opinion, and fresh petitions have been drawn up and yet more strenuous en deavors put forth to Influence the Home Secretary of England to grant a new trial. The history of the case Is well known. Mrs. Maybrick, an American woman, married to an Englishman and living In Euglund, was accused of murdering her husband by administering arsenic. Mr. Maybrlck habitually dosed himself MHS. rl.OHKN('K MAYHllICK. with dangerous drugs, doubling the quantity prescribed and boasting of his knowledge of medicine. After his death great numbers of medicine bot tles were found In his house and office. In much of this medicine arsenic was an Ingredient. It had been shown that, j during his residence lu America prior to this time, lie had lieen a confirmed arsenic eater. Tbe results of the trial are well known tOwlhe American public a trial before a Tidge of unsound mind, who was shortly afterward retired because of his Infirmity, and who bad an aversion toward Americans amounting ' to a mania. Ills charge to tbe Jury was confusing, misleading and full of errors a fact, no doubt, that led to tbe re fusal of Uie Mom Hecretary to execute tb atones capital punlshmrnU-aed commute It to Imprisonment for life. Important new evidence has been ob tained which the Home Secretary, Hon. Mr. Asipilth, refuses to consider. In the meantime, a young and tenderly nurtured woman Is failing and fading within the cruel confines of a foreign prisou. Probably no recent case has at tracted more attention, but the home office fears to establish a precedent which may be abused to the suffering of many; therefore the one suffer. Rules for sunshiny girls: Do all the good you can; by all the means you can; In all the ways you can; In all tho places you can; at all the times you can; to all the people you can; as long as ever you can. Why should not a girl be taught book keeping anil some of the more common business forms? Men pity, or laugh at the business Incapacity of the vast majority of women. It is often only due to want of proper Instruction, and why should not this be supplied? It Is always to be regretted when love comes to a girl before she has attained her moral and Intellectual ma jority. The man whom she would love at 10 Is ofteu quite different from one to whom she could give her more ma ture affections, and there Is always the danger of seeing him at a disadvant age, when larger experience of other men will lead her to make comparisons. What a good mother looks for In the man of her daughter's choice are first high principle, and next, manliness. It is a protean word, but It needs no ex planation, as It conveys to every mind a clear conception of n type command ing universal approbation. He must be gentlemanly as well as manly. 80 clal life requires manners as well as principles, and few things kill love more quickly than Is-lng ashamed of its object. Ladles' Home Journal. . Don't Do It. Don't use pins where stitches would do. Don't wear a sailor hat with n silk dress. Don't sacrifice neatness to artistic effect Don't wear striped material If you are tall. Don't wear tan shoes if you have large feet Don't dress more fashionably than becomingly. Dou't wear big sleeves and big hats If you are short. Don't look a frump because you can not look a swell. Don't trim good material with com mon trimmings. Don't buy common 'boots they are not economical. Don't wear a bonnet with a costume that requires a hat Don't Jump into your clothes and ex pect to look dressed. Don't achieve the grotesque while attempting the original. Women Who Paint. Women who can list' the brush clev erly are painting the art denims for hangings and for mounting dining room, bedroom and piazza greens for country houses. The designs are large and showy, and show flowers, scrolls or feathers. Sometimes the edge of tho flowers are outlined with embroid ery silks or gold or silver, and tbe rest of the design is done In tapestry dyes. Sometimes the metal paints are used Instead of metal thread to brighten the outlines. A screen covered with old blue denim Is ornamented with peacock feathers, and one with a lat tice work over which masses of pale blue and purple morning glories trail. Sometimes heavy braids of metal threads two or three Inches wide are applied In crosswise or lengthwise bands to the denims when used for a hanging, and If draped, a large glid ed rope Is used for the purpose. Hang ings of this cloth, however, look best In straight folds. The New Woman. Edith Girls, I don't see why you want me In your musical club; you know 1 can't sing a note. Girls Oh bnt-ICdlth -those exquisite sympho nies you get off on the chafing dish. Billy When women get to preach ing, how are we ever going to Induce them to stop? Jimmy Lay low, old man; I'm getting up a folding pulpit that will turn Into a bargain counter when they've talked long enough. Boston woman What made all the Kentucky women leave tbe conven tion? Chicago woman Ob, they got mad because the Chairman kept for- getting to call them "Colonel." Louis- Till Courier-Journal. GOWNS AND GOWNING. WOMEN GIVE MUCH ATTENTION TO WHAT THEY WEAR. , Rrlef Glance at Fanrte Feminine, Frtvo loae, Majhap, and Set Offered In tha Hope that the Reading- May Trove Restful to Wearied Womankind. Guest p from Gay Gotham. New Tork Corretyoodence: LCH dainty elab oration Is found on new parasols that they tempt women of even quiet tastes, but these will be mis led by tbe adora ble flufferles un less there Is an elaborate dress to go with It It will be safe for wom en who buy a par asol to suit tbe dress, rather than the reverse, to purchase one of heavy corded cream-colored silk, with a handsome Ivory handle. This will go well with any light gown, and a bunch of reul flowers swung by a band of ribbon from the top of the parasol will give a touch of elaborateness. The flowers will hang free when the parasol Is closed, and when open will rest care lessly on the silk. A big bow of chiffon or real lace with knots of ribbon caught therein will be almost as ef fective and last longer. Passing from parasols to the girls be neath the one shown In the first pic ture, It should be said in the beginning that many street gowns are belngmade with tiny circular shoulder capes to AT OHCK PLAIDKD AND CHANGEABLE. match, the ornate cape being In the very worst taste for any but special wear. Tbls rule has developed during the spring, and on summer dresses there will be a further Interpretation of it In what may be called cape ef fects. This Is very prettily carried out In this first pictured costume, and a de scription of this model will suggest many otlier desirable ways In which a like effect can be attained. Starting with lavender batiste as the material, the blouse waist Is trimmed profusely with batiste ruffles threaded with lace Insertion, the latter underlaid with a strip of dark lavender silk.. A simpler way would be to sew a tiny ruffle to each side of a bank of silk and cover tbe middle with lace. Strips of suf ficient length could then le easily cut off. Above tills garniture appears a sailor collar entirely covered with lace. Standing collar and ribbon trimming are dark lavender satin, and tbesleeves are garnished to match the back and front of the blouse, of so unusual con struction as to be sure to be held In the observer's mind for closer Inspec tion, when the nature of the device will, of course, become apparent. The reason for also using the lace and ba tiste trimming on the skirt is to make clear that waist and skirt always go together, but so many skirts ire now entirely plain that tbls point will strike some as dearly attained. Tbe skirt will ba Just as dainty without ths a DETACHABLE VOKE. trimming, anyway, so individual taste can decide that matter. Hut the cape effect promises to be very fashionable. The market has overdone itself In the lovely crinkled stuffs, and the glossy, unruffled surface bas acquired a dis tinction thereby. In very elaborate weaves aud for extremely dressy and formal occasions, the crepon fabrics bold their own, but the expensive sorts are tbe ones for this purpose. For summer wear glace crepon will bave favor, and It Is a gown of this fabric that appears in the next illustration. Its taffeta lining shines through the A POKMMI.K SI CCERSOR TO THE GOIKT KKIKT. outer fabric, so a changeable plaid ef fect results. Beneath the arms the bodice Is full, the fulness being held down by pleat of silk. Hands of em broidery edge the cuffs of the sleeves, which are topped by box -pleated epau lettes of silk. The waist hooks Invisibly beneath tlr front pleat and the back Is plain of bias material. Wash dresses are not, of course, to be stiffened, but they will be cut Just like stiffened cloth skirts and will hang In dozens of flutes. At this the washer woman can rejoice, for starch Is sup posed to take the place of stiff linings. As to the pleats of the skirts that are lined with haircloth, there Is already an attempt at variation of the current mode, though why there should be such haste to modify a fashion that has bo much to recommend it Is hard to understand. It may be that the women who always try to be ahead of the fashions are disgruntled Because godet pleats have been promptly adopted by every one, not even the startling fluc tuations In the always high price of haircloth having scared economical ones off altogether. One of the attempts to beautify the beautiful Is presented in the artist's next contribution. Even the woman with a short memory for styles will recall this cut which, some how, Is linked with blue serge, and fairly raged three or four years ago. lllvals of a fashion are seldom success fully made after so short a time bas A BODICK BKCALMNO 1880 STYLES. elapsed, but this one bears the stamp of determined effort, for does not that baggy blouse front mark the whole as new? (iray mohair Is the material, the waist being alike back and front and fastenenlng Invisibly back and front. A deep lace yoke shows at the top aud tho loose lower part is sprinkled with big bright sequins. Tho final illustration shows a reviv al that Is more In accord with the usu al method of using former fashions, for the old-time style hinted nt by tho bodice decoration dates back to lk'W). Designed for young matrons, this costume Is very handsomely cur ried out In creped and striped grena dine, its beauty being greatly added to by the bright silken lining that shows through the transparent outer fabric. A rich luce yoke extends over the shoulders, Is banded with bright silk, and gathered fronts pass over a three-cornered lace plastron. Tho sleeves are of glace silk, with long luce cuffs, and the skirt Is severely plain. Copyright, 189ft. The coat-and-collar style of tailor made gown Is as popular as ever tbls spring, but In addition there art cloth gowns with closely fitting bodices and elaborately trimmed. A NEWSPAPER EPISOCE. The Kdltor, aa a Judge, biplomaticallr Cete 8nbecrilere to Pay Up. John M. Yamb, editor of the Deta mar, Idaho, Nugget got on a rampage the other day, unslung his gun and took tbe camp. When he sobered down and got bis senses he fined himself $50, he being a high mogul Justice of the peace. When be fined himself he told the constable to put tbe culprit in jail If the fine was not paid. The editor and justice of the peace bad to go to the damp Jail. His wife roared like a lioness and vowed she would burn the Jail down if ber precious consort were not liberated at once. The newspaper man and the Justice of the peace who stood behind the bar as a righteous act of his Justice, told the constable to stand firm and execute and respect tbe order of the court The woman faint ed, and by this time the community was aroused from center to circumfer ence, and there was llmburger cheese on the moon aud a graveyard Impres sion on the faces of a large throng of troubled people. The mob made a mad rush for the bastlle, and in their frenzy twisted the door off Its hinges and re quested Mr. Ijimb to walk out. He fused, unless the fine and costs were paid. The mob wanted to know what the tine and costs would be. He took a good look at the infuriated mob and told them $225. A paper was circulat ed and the money was raised In a Jiffy, and they handed the finance to the ec centric Justice of the peace and para doxical scribe. He paid the constable 1 10 for his fees and to have the door of the jail repaired. In the meantime the iiero of the escapade told the spec tators to he present the next morning at his temple of Justice. About 9 o'clock a. m. the Judge and bland editor opened court The first thing he did was to remit his own fine of $.10. The Journalist and peace offi cer then Informed the audience that he had $200 In cash that had been given for his freedom from durance vile on the previous day. He asked as a favor that every Individual who had pungled tip a cent towards his liberation from prison come forward and give his name and the amount he had subscribed. Just 112 men and a small boy arose and moved towards his Honor. It was a case whore each man put up $2 apiece and a boy $1. After considera ble bookkeeping and figuring on his books he vociferated In a baritone voice for the 112 men and a boy to march up In front of the railing. The man of judicial ermine and a Napoleon Bona parte eye for cute journalism stood be for his friendB and trembled for awhile with mute emotion. He then heaved a lovesick sigh and handed each man a $2 receipt for delinquent subscription to his newspaper right there on the spot. Everything was so still In the courtroom while this was going on that the sizzling hum of a little peanut roaster would have sounded like the thundering Intonation of Vesuvius when belching forth Its redhot lava. This is the only Instance in the history of the world where a newspaper man made $100 by fining It What One Woman Save. I read many things in the papers of to-day; do I believe them all? Let us see. I read from one authority that coffee and a fine complexion are never In company. Then I think of my dear mother, dead of an accident at 63, with a complexion to the last day of her life that a girl of 18 might envy; and I recall, too, that all the days that I knew her and I was 20 when she left me coffee was her constant solace, the morning cup her only breakfast I read, too, that gray hair Is a disease promoted by Indigestion. Then I think of my grandmother, hereditarily gray at 25. Dyspepsia, headache, Indi gestion, were unknown to her; yet for sixty years her hair was white. I read that potatoes, if eaten, add to one's flesh; and vice versa; then I think of my plump friend and schoolmate, who never tasted the tubers, and my slen der self, who have consumed them daily and generously. The papers tell me. too, that water at meals Is un wholesome, and the vision of a great t V,e wtl habitually drained his four goblets at every meal of his adult life, appears; he was hale at 70, but dead, alas! at 71 from a fall from his horse. Yes, I read many things In many prints, but I do not believe them all. Children of Nature. Among the Sioux Indians courtship by means of the flute is In vogue. The instrument Is made of willow or some other wood that has a bark easily de tached, and Is usually about a foot In length. It has several perforations through the bark, each of which rep resents a musical note. The Round pro duced, though somewhat shrill and life-like. Is not unpleasant to the ear. The Indian youth who desires a wife first mentally fixes his choice upon some maiden of the tribe. Then, some pleasant evening, he takes his flute and strolls through the village In the direc tion of the tepee of the maiden's fath er. He stations himself in a conveni ent spot about fifty or sixty yards from her abode, and then drawing the reed from beneath his blanket begins to play a plaintive strain. Tbe maid en shows none of tbe agitation gener ally evinced by her white sisterhood under similar circumstances. She lis tens to the serenade composedly, while her father issues forth and cautiously creeps behind the youth and ascertains who he Is. Then be returns to bla daughter and makes known bis wish-, es In the matter. The maiden, In oba dlence to her parent's wish, adrancea timidly toward her lover If he Is fa vored, or if the paternal Judgment con demn him, withdraws into the dark ra cess of the tepee, lu case tbe suit Is fa vored and the maiden has gone out to meet the warrior, the young man, upon seeing her approach, gives a triumph ant "toot" upon his Ante, and then, throwing down the Instrument rushe forward to greet her whom he has ao easily won. From Shore to Shore. If the Atlantic were lowered att thousand, five hundred and sixty-four feet the distance from shore to sUor would be only half as great, or fifteen hundred miles. If lowered a little mora than three miles say nineteen thon-. sand, six hundred and eighty feet there would be a road of dry sand from Newfoundland to Ireland. This Is tha ridge on which the great Atlantic can bles are laid. It Is a singular and pr haps somewhat humiliating fact that the most conspicuous and Indullbla record which man is making In tha strata now forming on the sea floor la written In bits of coal and ash whlcb are cast from our steamships as they pursue their way over the ocean. Tha quantity of this debris is very great, and, unlike the wrecks, it Is very even ly scattered along the paths followed by our great steamships. It Is likely that already, In the tracks of our trans atlantic commerce, not a square rod, would fall to give a trace of this waste from our coal-burning engines. Aa this material is not attacked by tha marine animals, and Is very little af fected by the other agents of decay,, it will doubtless be very perfectly pre served In the strata which are to bear the records of our time. No More Duels. Duelists will no longer be accommo dated on the Island of the Grand Jatta at Ne.uilly, where many historic en counters have taken place. The owner of the casino there, who catered to all the requirements of persons who wera thirsting for each other's blood, baa been forced, owing to slackness ot trade, and the interference of the po lice, to put up his shutters and offer his establishment and grounds for sale. The retiring landlord was eminently fit ted for his work of waiting on the duel ists, as he was an old soldier and had been master-at-arms In his regiment. He was well paid for his services by the combatants, and also received a fee from curious people who watched the duels from a coign of vantage, where they saw everything without be ing visible to the combatants or tha seconds. The casino had a great ran of luck during the Boulanglst and Pad ama periods, when a good deal of blood was spilled on the Grand Jatte. Soma years ago the establishment was sub jected to strict police supervision, and has declined ever since. Children's Falsehoods. A Chicago kindergarten teacher saya that she divides children's falsehoods into four classes. The first Is tbe Ha of excessive Imagination, and the treat ment Is "Inculcation of exactness ot observation, either by precept or In play." The second Is the lie of ego tism, the remedy for whlcb Is objective work that will take thought from self. A third class of lies Is evolved through fear of punishment, and sympathy la the cure. "In all such cases," the Itln dergartner adds, "the child must ba shown tbe justice of the punishment The fourth division Includes children addicted to the jealous He as saying that they have things which they have not, because the boy around the cor ner has them. The cure In this Instance Is love and appreciation, that the child may understand that he does not need these coveted possessions to gain or keep his friends. Modern Hairdresslng. Much of the plcturesqueness of mod ern halrdresslng Is due to the ex-Empress Eugenie. Before she became the wife of the French ruler, It was custo mary for women to plaster their hair down on their foreheads and to keep It in position by the application of hair oil, an abomination which Is now sel dom seen or heard of. The empress, however, turned back her lovely brown hair from the forehead over a small cushion, aud the coiffure a la Eugenie became generally adopted. It was then that the bonnet began to grow smaller, and Instead of being worn on the top of the head It was simply an ornamen tal addition to the back. Origin of a Word. The word doyley, now a familiar one, Is derived from the name of Rob ert D'Oyley, one of the followers of Willlntu the Norman. He received a grant of valuable lands on the condi tion of a yearly tender of a tablecloth of three shillings' value at the feast of Saint Michael. Agreeably to the fash Ion of the time the ladles of the D'Oy ley household were accustomed to em broider and ornament the qulttrent ta blecloths; hence these cloths, becoming curiosities and accumulating In tha course of years, were at length brought Into use as napkins at the royal tabla and called duelers. , 1 1 1 -