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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (June 4, 1897)
EVILS OK OCR DRESS JULES LEMAITRE MAKES SOME REASONABLE STATEMENTS. The Feminine Body Bndly HI*torte«l— r>muui l>m***in:»ker» Retort Smnrtlj and Tell llow the Fashion* tlrow 1'liry Fo:low Natural l.aw.f L® nHE object of cloth thin g,” repl led Jules Lemaitre to a question asked by a Paris Journalist, quoted by the New York Herald, "Is to protect the body against cold and, afterward, to orna ment It. Its useful ness is desirable, Its convenience a matter of Importance, Its ideal that It may be a safe-guard without imposing any superfluous dis comforts. It should, therefore, com press no one part of the body. How much less then, should It deform It! • If, therefore, after having consid ered clothing as a necessity, we look upon it as an ornament, It Is evident that It can only beautify the body on condition that It respects Its contours and does not break the h'armonious unity of the whole. The materials em ployed for clothing are principally women fabrics, which are In them selves graceful. This must be respect ed also and In consequence these tis sues must not be wrapped around the body. These principles are carried out perfectly in ancient costume, as can be .seen by a study of the figures In tlreelan and Roman vases. “The costume was the same in its principle for both men and women. It did not dissimulate the difference of flip sexes, but It did not attempt to ac u,nnt nrite It 'P l. „ .. nUnnlrm 'stola.' The men's garment was draped ns profusely as the women's and was for both sexes floating and ornamental. “To turn now to the toilet of our contemporaries. “We see at once that it Is at variance with any known principle. Two things stand out prominently. First, the gar ment Is always more or less elaborate ly adjusted; second. It differs very raa tty-ially according to the sex, “Doubtless the adjusted garment might in the first instance be explain ed by the climate, against which It Is was necessary to take precautions. Bm It is certainly clear to the most casual observer that this utility Is at pre^nt only an accessory in the minds of our tailors and dressmakers. “None of the rules is observed today In feminine attire. The corset Is no longer worn as a protector; It com jrresses and deforms. The materials are stretched over a rigid framework, which notably modifies the form of the breast, and for the last ten years the skirts have been either too ample or too narrow, spreading out over ar tificial and proportlonless contours or displaying as much as possible of the real figure by their scantiness—two perfectly opposite fashions destined to •ohvey the same impression.” “What impression?” “The modern fashionmaker has taken pains to exaggerate all the parts which nature has made most promi nent. in the body. All the little arti fices of detail have been brought into play to complete this first artifice. “The curves of the body have been brought Into bolder relief by the cor set; and. following the fashion of the times, by paniers and bustles; the enormous sleeves have a tendency to accentuate the waist and the high Louis XV. heels throw the bust more prominently forward and impose on the movements of the body a restraint which reveals its formation more clearly. In a general way the femi nine figure is considerably amplified and cut in the middle. “You an see for yourself the effects of this division. The unity of form being broken, one glance no longer embraces it easily; our eyes are separ ately attracted by the two parts which compose x. ami in eacu pail uy Ilf jirotubcranccs. In fact, the waist at understood by our c antcmporariea b no tourer large anil supple, as it wai In women of ancient times, but It b a deformation of the body, and in th< disarrangement of the thoracic cagi divides the women In two to local ixe our attention "In a few words, the feminine dre* ha* be ome essentially expressive o sex. "The actual dress of women today t the Irreconcilable euemy to their list oral duties These are the sad hut tru fact* of the i a*e The publication of this Intervlei naturally made some seusaMon I Parts and *»n«e of the famous dresi ■takers sere interviewed upon Mi *ub|ret The greatest of them said ■ \h*re ts a great deal uf truth t • hat the*# critics say. but we are n< responsible for the fashions any moi than are the Isshiouahle women wb enjoy the credit of t reating them “ 'Hut who. then does set the fasl tons' ashed tbs interviewer No cl.e \elth*, niv*stf |ui a confreres Pash ton ta a thala of vat attoas which drag* along ta aa unre sowing logo- sad a fatal eajtrtsw whn ‘ ttcdaiiw that we should aareaetng boat h>i a change of aav kind hast P f*»bi»h a bleb was ta vogue jenierA. |gn ta want ludnv because tt was a WWtn veeterdav It Witt be worn te tcduonvw ten sites it te Wota so mo tief*- lb* sleeve te large today I rfcggg- loaoorow tt will be smaller t the same reason and will Anally dt ipgrtr eo«astber • "Agd alt tbts happen* iMperceprlbi nMbtwtt atm a thought in advance h . rn«M we follow «* rather (ut»« ** tt* Wide of pur euatomer# WHEN A LIE SEEMS EXCUSABLE Wtiat Are We to Do with Impertinent Questioners'.* Said a woman to me: “David re marks in one of his psalms. 'And I said in my haste, all men are liars.' If I had written that verse I should have added, 'And I have never had occasion to change my opinion.' ” “Why?" asked a writer in Harper’s Bazar. And then she told me that men (and women) were not truthful, that the best of them told falsehoods. Kor In stance. several months before this con versation she had asked a certain young man If he were engaged to Miss B-. He gave her to understand that he was not. Now, his engagement to Miss B--was announced, and it was acknowledged that it was an afTair of six months' standing. Had he not lied? I, who happened to know the facts of the case, was aware that It was the wish of the fiancee and her family that the fact of the engagement be kept quiet until they were ready to an nounce It. The man in question was In honor bound to keep the secret. "All the same," declared the indig nant woman, “If, according to the old definition of a falsehood, It is a ‘thing told with the Intention to deceive,’ he told a falsehood." The conversation recalled to my mind the speech made by a friend long ago. “If any one asks rip an Impertinent question which I cannot In honor an swer I do not hesitate to lie." All of us, it is to be hoped, love the truth, but wbat are we to do when a i.i iiLijiiii nunwri in a mrtti u ui uw ise? If one says "I decline to answer that question" he may cause offense, not to mention the fact that he virtu ally admits there is a confidence to be kept. And this admission is often un intentionally the first step to the be trayal of a secret. Since we cannot al ways answer truthfully and since we would not lie It would be well if a so ciety could be founded for the suppres sion of the Impertinent questioner. But pending the formation of that much needed organization what are those of us who would be honorable and truth ful to do? A FREE AND EASY JAIL. One Prisoner (Ian the .Jailor'* Wife fllcycle l.eaauna. The Nantucket Jail stories which have been current court room topics for the last century have been entirely eclipsed by recent stories concerning the convicts of the Barnstable jail, says the Nantucket Inquirer and Mir ror. Mr. 12. C. Knapp, who Is supposed to be serving a five years’ sentence for stealing national hank funds, was recently seen in the streets in prison garb, giving the wife of the Jailer, Mrs. G. 11. Cash, bicycle lessons. Mrs. Cash is 38 years old and has a daughter aged 18 years and the convict is said to oc cupy a place of congenital companion ship in the Jailer’s family. Another convict, named Lewis Rogers, was re cently allowed to take a cow to Yar mouth and back while the sun was bright and the air invigorating for a pleasant walk. There is another pris oner, a Portuguese named Joe, who is there on complaint of a Portuguese girl named Rosa and her story is that Joe promised to marry her while he was serving out a previous sentence in Jail, and that she often met Joe outside the jail. It is a pitiful story, because when Joe got out of Jail he married an other girl, after borrowing $30 from Rosa. And all this in Barnstable town, where the Jail is. The stories of Nan tucket’s easy-going Jail pale into insig nificance In comparison with our con tinental neighbor. A llyiiuotlr Pliiy. Rue—"Did you say Penman's latest effort is a hypnotic play?" Prompter “Apparently; it puts everybody to sleep.”—Philadelphia North American. GEMS OF THOUGHT. No pleasure is comparable to the stuudiug upon the vantage ground of truth.—Bacon. All virtue consists in having a will ing hand, if only you do not doubt, und are filled with love for Hint rather than ' fear for yourself.— Pension. The ill-natured mau gives himself a 1 large field to expatiate In, he exposes those fallings in human nature which t the others would cast a veil over. Ad I j diaon. I To he in compauy with those we love satisfies us; It does uot signify whether we speak to them or not, whether we think on them or different things, to be lit*iir thrill lift nil .Siiriinn ( The happlueea uf life depend* very |( ' mut h on Utile thing* aud uue t en be brave anti great ami guutl while malt _ | lug small *at rig.>•» amt doing small d«. , ties faithfully ami ■ heerfuily, u M. Alfott, No great truth who h has urn* been ' ! futind hae ever afterward* been lost; ; gut ha* anv Import *ut Mgghgggy been made ehtleta hat gut eventually | tarried everything Itefure It Henry 1 thorn** ltu< hie A man • generuatty of sraiimeat * should not merely ha a part of hie pulp Ilea, It ahuuld a leu be a part uf hie te ‘ itgion and indeed we autv he gnltt '* i sure that he ehu te without U te with !* ! utM lellgtoo 1‘rvwhet k* i life te wAt up nut uf great tart ' g*** or dtitle* put uf little thing*. It a huh *twil*a and hladneae and »m*l ** obi t get ton* given hab«t»tall« gre aha ** win and preanrv# the heart ami tnvr ** »*>M»o»t Sb II |v»» V m the gr*l law uf am km at iva day * a hea *m maw» thing* are • tarnttriag (w aiienlton la 'wmegtewtiun tu bend *i 1 the energies ug uge pm at art tu » » direstly tu that putat bmhtng aetthe e tu the right nut tu the left With** tie'> hewn ON (H R BIG BI G FARM INSECT HUNTERS CONFRONTED BV A PROBLEM. Kktermlrtntlitr Moth* wmt Brrtl*# — Mmik to Prerent Their Spread t'orn meal a Murh IlMlnd Moeklug Bird Mainly. OVERNMBNT bug hunters have been engaged re cently In the study of a new problem. They have organ ized a sort of In sert farm and are raising grulm and beetles of a number of Injurious kinds for experimental purposes, says a Washington corre spondent of the Boston Transcript. Each colony, representing a single spe cies, Is kept In a good-sized glass Jar or else in a wooden box and Is supplied with the food which It likes best. One Jar, for example, contains two ears of corn, and every Individual grain on these ears Is occupied by one or two unpleasant-looking little worms. Other receptacles are partly filled with oats, wheat, rice and various dietary prepa rations, such as housewives commonly keep on the pantry_shelves. They are simply alive with crawling depredators, which are busily engaged In feeding and breeding. Indeed, the conditions are the same as those frequently repro duced most disgustingly In the barrels and boxes of the household commis sariat. The appearance of such pests In eireals and other stored foods Is often so mysterious and their propaga tion is so enormously rapid that the no tion that they are generated spontane ously Is still widely entertained. Not very many years ago the theory that certain small animals under suitable conditions might be created literally out of nothing, us In manure or In de composing food substances, was in dorsed by science. Now. however. It Is known that an egg must be laid by a bug in the corn-starch or hominy ACROSS THE FUNGA The plain of Bogota Is sixty miles long from north to south and thirty miles from east to west. The river Fun ga, formed by numerous mountain streams which take their rise one hun dred miles north of the city, traverses the plain in a southwesterly direction to Tequendama, where, through a gap not over 36 feet in width, it leaps over » a rocky ledge upward of 600 feet high, forming one of the most magnificent cataracts on the globe, and thence rush es down to Join the Magdalena. The height of this precipice is so great that the Inhabitants of Bogota were terrified by the daring and audacious act of the Canadian equilibrist, Mr. Warner, who 5YAM0IHO OW *)rtS FOOT 500 F?.fr ita. 111 November crossed the abyss of the Tequenilam.i in Imitation of the net of UlonUln at Niugutu. This feat 1* shown in the gmimpauj'lng tuts, tv hi. It are reproductions of photographs taken on the spot by A. Ksperut. of the city uf llugota. front the remotest unttnutt. there have always been < qnllibrtsU. many ot w horn were entraordlnttrlly dat ing and skillful and have astounded tin spec tators hy their deeds uf prowess. His tory tells us that lit IHNu. upon the en trance of Isabel oi Havana into 1‘arta, a Helloes*1 allow.d himself to Slide, sutgiug. float the top# of the towers of Noire Ii.tno* to the f'tmt de Change, over * III. h tlte queen passed and wa tered through an opening In the blue taffeta sown with golden Hrur de Us, gllh which the bridge was covered yfter having plaitnl a crown on voting Isabel a head, the equillbilst continued his aerial Journey W hen It was ueartv night the tleuoese as* ended tu the low ers carry tng a lighted torch tu each hand which utoai have canoed a elagu lac appeal »n< e from a distan. w and grits before a slag hr Insect sab urcur In an* h hMI. lea uf diet In stoisg* lllvsa Just a few wgg* foe a gait, gad > anhia a few days there will he ih»*=» 1 •son* of ttveedlng inse> Is fur the dc .cwlasn >*f s stugis pair will t»»*t' i ti. • a great <**iw ta the coot»e uf «s* season I he Himpteei plan Wht. H the housewtfe .an ntigr tu proven, gysset I lea trots getting 'lively * la tu |.*s4 M I posing them uakwesM'ilv The gour i taitd fu* svample il. wlil t*e s»d* f tightly * o-e-l The Inserts tggt 4s the t .t*».tg» are sverralor* *»d war of | them a*e s. minute SI to we S an rh noticeable. They are constantly look ing for the foods in which they desire to lay their eggs. In order that their young may have plenty to >mt. and eter nal vigilance is the prices of safety from their depredations. Even so, the housekeeper cannot be snre that the cornmeal. the rice and the-flour bought at the grccer’s is not already Infested; in fact. It Is very likely to be so, and only quick use will prevent the hatch ing of the eggs. On his part the grocer has no guaranty that ttte cereals and other stuff which he buys have not be come Infested at the mills, and the miller has no Insurance against the In festation of the grain before It reaches him. even while It Is ripening In the fields. Not long ago » vessel arrived at San Francisco from Calcutta with a cargo of rice. When the hatches were taken off for the purpose of unloading winged Inserts In cloud" emerged; they were grain moths and the rloe was found to be literally alive with their larvae. Of such moths there are many kinds, the worst of them all being the angoomols moth, which gets Its name from a province of Franc*, where it appeared In It looks very much like an ordinary clothes moth. In this country It Is vulgarly known a* the "fly weevil,'*' having been Introduced In North Carolina and Virginia as early us 1728. Thence It spread all over the south, where It does vast damage. It attacks grain In the field, as well as In the bln. Infesting all the cereals. In si* months grain Infested by It loses 40 per <v*nt In weight and 75 per cent of starchy matter. The moth deposits her eggs In standing grain and In the bln. the minute grubs hatched from them feeding on the starch of the kernels. Into which they burrow. On attaining matority the little caterpillar spins within the kernel a silken cocoon, the moth emerging u few days later. The dreaded "rice weevil" Is derived from India, whence It has been diffused by commerce until now It Is established In most of the grain-growing countries of the world. It occurs In every state In the union and occasionally Invades Canada and Alaska. It Is a small snout beetle, closely resembling the granary weevil already described. It feeds on rice, wheat, corn, barley, rye, hulled ON A TIGHT ROPE. doubtless gave rise to more than one story of fantastic apparitions. If his tory has preserved for ns through llvo centuries the tradition of this descent from the towers of Notre Dame to the Pont de Change ns a marvelous feat, what can we say of Blondin and his im \ u wet'/f/y WARNU CROSSING THE. TSQUtMP^MA CATARACT, itators. especially of Warner, who has dared not only on a wire to cross the cataract of Niagara, but has just per formed the wonderful feat of crossing the terrible*abyss of Tequemlama on a rope. The crossing of Niagara gave lllondin a universal reputation, he being the first to try this daring act: tint if considered conscientiously, that Is nothing compared with the crossing of Tequendama. for the conditions of tlie two cataracts are quite different. \t Niuguta an acrobat who liecume dl> r.y und iost his equilibrium would fall Into waters tbut sre perfectly tranquil and very deep circumstance* which taken in connection with the fad that the fall would uot tie more than about one hundred feet, would give the equili brist the assurance of salvation, for he would not encounter risk*, uml If he knew soutethlna of swimming he would rise to the surface and swliu to one of the banks or to a bout which would pick hltu up and land him safely. At Tequendama sll the conditions of the abyss sre against the equilibrist who. In fS(* he esperlem e* the slightest du llness snd fstls. would be very certain of breaking his neck, for h» would fgll into a raging torrent from the isrrlhts height of t!» test’ What would tar the •tse of the largest ftagmeut of the m Mtbal that could he picked Up St the bottom of am h an abvsa* Mtentllt* American 1141a buckwheat. et> tl‘regueatly It ia«*'te* bnt*s of srs* kers, < skew snd other lueadstug* barrets of har snd hag* of meal tn insert shops Hidh the larvae snd the adult beetles feed on the grata or other food V West Mstf tSsv V tailor h e are at the ead of the bridge are av*‘ Itvoohl* site Not at alt Thin ta *sli where the tgre stop Hos>klVB Idle t ' g, grader the IWvtne Healer t* |w n |tm« museum in Allegheny T* SCHOOL APPORTIONS. TREASURER MESERVE'S PLAN SWELLS THE FUND.. Iiv(«t laci-sane la Derived Krone f'vHlee tlons of Interest on School Lands ■old—The Kacord . fee Sevan years. rails4n Money Each Month. The send-annnal state school appor tionment for June, amounting to $282, 228, la $101.81*1 more than the Jane apportionment of last year, and is a little larger than the \>ig apportion ment* made In 1882 and 18011. As the bulk of this school fund is derived from Interest on school lands sold and leased, the. state school tax and inter est on that part of the permanent school fund which is invested In county bonds, the Inference usually drawn is that the Increase id the fund appor tioned is due to the ability of farmers feu pay their debts ami the jwople gen erally to pay their tuxes. On the. other hand it has I wen said that tlie increase is due. to the man agement, of Ktata.ofllccr». Both causes are assigned. The. principal increase ia in interest on. school lands. The state tax collected and the Interest oai county bonds is less iu the present ap portionment than Inioneof' the appor tionments of last year. It is claimed that the state lias nailed' in money up to,date which heretofore has been left ill, tile hands of county treasurers for several months, and con sequently tbe next apportionment will be correspondingly reduced, State Treasurer Meserve admits that at/ least three months' collections were included ill the June apportionment,, which have heretofore gone over lie said: “The law provides that county trcusuneits shall turn over collections in February and October, or whenever required. These collections are for tiic June and Ocecmber apportion incuts. It lias ncen eiisiomury treasurers to turn, id for the June ap portionment only such collections as were on. hand in February. The same was true of the December apportion lueut, collections on. hand iu October being turned over; 1. decided to call for collections every month and shaJl so. continue to do its long as it is deeuu-d best. Some treasurers ob jected to. making monthly payments, hut i»H finally responded. The school a pi>oii ion men t will eontiiiue to in ereuse iu this stale until it reaches the maximum and then it will decline. When, the maximum will he reached1 I cannot say. When a majority of the school land sold is paid for, the fund will decline unless increased front some other source." The December apportiooirwut wilt be still larger Iteeause interest on. school lands is due annually on Jan. 1. As the Deecmlier apportionment is not realty made up until January, tlie state treasurer will avail himself of the January collections. Interest on school lands leaned, is due semi-an nually Jan. I and July t. These are among the collections v\ liich Treasurer Meserve culled in up to date aud in cluded iu the June apportionment. The pluu of the state t re usurer in call ing in collections monthly will dimin ish the amount of funds which county treasurers will find necessary to de posit in hunks. Capital National Hank 1'»ms Washington special: Judge Strode has tieen admitted to practice fiefore the supreme court on motion of A. 10. Har vey of Lincoln. He moved that the Capital National bank und Kent II. Hayden, receiver, vs. tin* Coldwater national hank of Michigan in; submited and affirmed of dismissed. Mr. Har vey asked for ninety days in which to tile supplemental briefs. The Capital national bank hud for collection or Ionl collected certain money of the (Odd water hank prior to its suspension or failure and the money was in the bank at the titne-of the failure. The case was tried before Judge Strode upon the district bench, when he decided that the Coldwater hank was entitled to a return of its money. The case was appealed to the supreme court of the state of Nebraska and the decision affirmed, when another appeal was made to the federal supreme court. The supreme court, without passage upon the request of Mr. Harvey, con tinued the ease until tin- October term. Maximum Kate Case Uom Over. Washington special: The Nebraska maximum rate opinion was not bunded down on the '.*4th in tile supreme court as buil been expected would la* the case. A large number of Nebraskans ill the cltv were in the court room at noon of tiiut date, when it mef for the lust time for the May term, antieipat lug a decision on this Importunt mut ter. Ml were disappointed \\ itile a liuiulier of opinions of high iuqiortuneo were rendered, the Nr bras kit case was not tout-tied. This curries it over until the second Moiidu.v III IH'lulier, wile* l!ic court next meets to remler decis ions. Iii spite of the delay, there is every reason to ladleve that I lie court by Its vote several weeks ago deckled uguinsl the stale and in favor of the railnatds and that .lusthi- llartun was assigned to write the derision. It Is jaissilde lha< premature ucwspniau' puldicutions inltueaerd Justice Harlan In delay ing his opinion I is laved far IMm ISO I he heaviug ill the rortt rate ease, which the lawrd of secretaries lias had under eon sole ration l»» sum, liu» has Is't-ll |s>st|auie«l for thirty days I lx Is air.I of secretaries has several eases w hi* h are readt to sutuuit to the lawrd r,>|a r when that taalv meats, wlm li it s.ip|»MM'd wilt he iu a few dar* I Ins unetiug wilt la' an important owe as several matters connected with the tint of fad ley to lie pursued hr the tawtsl Will he presented for settlement taliH Meats*ss mt t sstelesie, to Herat l*a*senger tg* ut I rslt. it ul the HAM has tu»i hot to* attention ended to Joseph a IVrnrlt of f amam Nehtusha who after tiring to a tool heating the thumps of his tswo taaea i i hr ilrt sad l<* Wight has hat . eon fesserl ttt hst ag itiiirti a vide oa a IturtiagtoW tram Mies a tears ago |lr ha* just wr It a to the i*aal ta*s*l ret. o Is* ttad out the amouat Ire •aid pat the • o.opuut to tdstaia hi* heart » uau.' on thr* matter * % da M»H lt« K«tt' l fee itnl Wsiti Iii*' ih **» Mm«4* % %■ - Poisoned Blood Then rome from por sonous miasms arising ' from 10 wm am by land and from decaying vegetable -matter,. which, breathed into the lungs?, enter and poiaoo the blood. 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