The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 9, 1891, Page 3

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| Bant mothers AMERICAN WOMEN ABROAD. Why The; Dress Much More Carelessly ‘Thao When at Home. HE wish that my countrywomen Wouldn't save all their old clothes to Heidel- Wear out on this side,” said berg student, surprised by a American cousins who had a suce to the tourist's inditferen to dress. “It's deucedly uncomfortable, you know, after boasting of the d and chic, and anticipating the action of atypical & to tind Bick Headache and relieve all the troubles ines ou ha a dent to a bilious atate of the system,such ap Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after sur han eating. eating, Pain in the Bide ka. as The He - ungallantry is s partly by its trathfaln v Ameri ped an occa a yet Carter's Little Liver Pills are peeetrpaon 'y val able in Constipation, curing and pre- ‘venting thisanno; they aleo sonra all disorders. jagged appearioe encountered “or the wir ous to observe how indif? fastic sveritable sla ion’s behests at home, become rsof dress abroad. Now ent, perhaps, is this fact so ap- parent as at the fountain head of fash- atryman It is curi- tthe most to Wo fissh- in mat- OF 1 liou nltttes ‘wonld bealmost pricelessto thosewha fer from this ae complaint; Leora does notend igillanee is the good dressing.” The wise tourist is naturally prone to sacrifice this price in the desire to make the most ofa for- eign outing. What manuai for travel- | ers does not advise women to wear their old clothes abroad? Then the Ameri- | confront a fashion-plate in every Paris- jan encountered doomed to disap- pointment; for beyond the Bois at 4 o'clock, the Grand (pera or Comedie Francaise on gala nights, or the shop windows, the tourist may look in vain for the flesh-and-blood counter parts of the models familiar to her through the French fashion journals. That dashing, flash-of-color, eccentri com bination vulgarly recognized as ‘‘Frenchy” rare- ly ventures beyond the stage or the | shop windows. It isa relic of the em- pire, the aftermath of Eugenie | plainer dresser than the modern French- woman may not be met in the streets of Paris. Upper-tendom rarely prom nades. Quiet elegance character the toilets of the French women seen atthe galleries and the ¢ only place in which the avera is liable them. Hence, finding littic in the toilets en- countered to rebu'so her passe habili- ments, the disappointed American con- soles hers-lf by feasting on the shop windows and mentally choosing the Every fdonth many women suffer from Excessive of Scant Menstruation; they don’t know who to confide in to get proper arvice. Don't confide in anybody but try Bradfield’s Female Regulator @ Specific tor PAINFUL, i pnoruse, SCANTY, SUPPRESSED and IRREGULAR MENSTRUATION. Book to ‘‘ WOMAN" matled free. BRADFIELS REGULATOR CO., vee Ga. Bold by all Dru; oases, the poses, the ge tourist to come into close coatact with Sold by F. M. CRUMLEY & Co .} Crry Drvestore, Buiter, treasures she will take home. After all, there is little pleasure in the wear- DOCTOR ing of a Worth creation if not one of your 500 dear friends may see you, and 9 what care Paris for the tourist! Thus fortitied, one soon learns —espec- | fally if one tarries long—to look upon the most tempting gowns with scarcely | a pang of envy ora desire of possession. With a complacency which would be in- tolerable at home, the tourist resigns herself to her old clothes, and does not hesitate, if opportunity offers, to ven- ture tothe most recherche affair in a toilet in which she would blush to be seen on her native heath This almost inevitable indifference to dress abroad has personal advantages, doubtless, but may not our deserved reputation there as the best-dressed women of the world eventually suTer by the license in which the Heidelberg student found such humiliation.—Kate Field’s Wash- ington. ENCLISH me. IF THE LITTLE ONES HAVE WHOOPING ae INFANTILE MINDS. Some ot the Queer da as Which They Evolv What curious associations of ideas arise in the minds of children; often never dreamed of by their parents or teachers until some incident perhaps reveals them, or later experience cor- con Erompt, Foaive | rects them. There was the Sunday- OZMANLIS of Manhood, Seminal |} school scholar who wondered for many “onmmebae Reuter ptnarg years over the structure and habits of OU EWP tose 07 wertory ae. wit | the “tinthimies.” He supposed it was ueabe you's STRONG, Vigor. some kind of asea creature, because SE XUAL Boxes, $8.00. * | every Sunday he had been taught to *Snebist Directions Mailed | repeat the prayer book lesson about the with each Box. Addr “seas and all that in them is.” He had rai '» | trasted only to his ears and for the first 8 “toute,” es uo. year or two had no idea whatever of : the correct text. I remember when a anh " boy always associating ex-President ue iL: Adams with ‘dried apples.” It came about in this way. At the home table 22 | there was a dish compounded of quinces and dried apples, the flavor of the ap- ples predominating. The apples being an abomination to my palate, the quinces always suggested the apples. About this time the town whereel lived was a good deal stirred up bya visit from John Quincy Adams. His middle name Order of Publication. TE OF MISSOURI, ) atonce attracted my attention, and to| BOA ay ctane tt this day I never hear it or read it with- Re it remebered, that heretofore, to-wit: at | OUt ad le sensation caused by a regular term nt ithe. Bate ‘ ants cireuit | my ear iried apples. Since | court begun aod held a we court house in the | x = zu city of Butler, county and state afuresaid, on of my own I have the first Monday in Novemper, is], and after- | More than c ward, to-wit: on the Ivth day of November, Inv, the same being the sixteenth judicial day of said term, the followieg among other pro- ceedings were had, to-wit: E, M. Wilson, plaintif®, va MF. Wilson, defendant Now at this dav comes the plaintiff herein | by his attorney, W.O Jackson, amd illes his | d these odd mis- conceptions misfit associations A few ago I was reading to one of | them Macaulay's ba allad of tius Kept the F came to any p seemed likely petition aad nitdavit, allezing, smong other! ty be obsear ee things tt Teadant, MF Wilgon isnot a} tbe obscure, I would questi him et Missourt: Whereupor aboutitand explain it if neceesary. eure that said defendant | Toward the close of the an ENE publication that plaintit has | | ; gu ue au & suit Acaines herin this court, t thor desi in which the petition and adidavic the general nature ar = would object of which is te obtain ac from tl stee of divorce putracted and | nvitt and le rm houses y would sit and di be e: heese defend and * be roast- sh welty of Ba ing t had not hea cooking, I ask ing term shall so lon the last i whet he f on the and then as red t ring to law B Weekly newsp Times Listed in Ba’ aticevssively fifteen days by term of the cir ear sir, there’s cellar.—Munsey’s id Cream cheese between bread and butter forms an excellent sandwich. Marion O.. fe on the; price of | | can who comes to Paris expecting to! “How Hora- | Whenever I] ¢ THEIR OWN EXECUTIONERS. The racl Way in Which In- | in Wolfekins th wolf- pretty t three | sup ce such nly cost 2 although the r is so 1 Prof. Otis F. Mason toa reporter of the Cour people knew, I fz would not buy ern indians, particularly in the Hudson iby the Eskimos. These | savages possess a fiendish ingenuity in their methods of capturing game, and | their way « apply ying for killing wolves iently “horrible to dis- | courage me with this particular sort of peltry. i “Itis beautifully simple. They take i foot or so long and | ne «sharpness at the y fasten to a wooden y drive into the ground | so as to leave the blade of flint above the surface. Then | they the blade all over witha sood-sized hunk of fat froma seal or other h animal, quickly freezes. Now the wolf-catching appa- ratus is complete. so that the person who sets the trap has only to come back in a day or two and gather in his prey without trouble. “The wolf has a mastering appetite for blood, and it is of this weakness thatthe hunter takes advantage. A little while after the trap described has been set along comes the wolf. He is hungry and he licks the hunk of frozen fat. Ah, it is good! So he licksitsome more, and as it is thawed by the warmth of his tongue it tastes better and better. Presently his tongue comes into contact with the sharp edge of the flint and iscut. He tastes the blood, not knowing that it is his own, and the | flavor sets him wild. Eagerly he licks it and licks it, lacerating his mouth and becoming more and more frenzied in his desire for his own life fluid. “Meanwhile other wolres have come upand hare begun to lick at the fat. cutting their own tongues and becom ing in their turn wild at the taste. So presently the bait is surrounded by a pack of ravenous and crasy ereatures, which soon turn upon one another and fall to devouring each other, until the merciless flint is the center of a strug- gling mass of ferocious combatants. It | is like the struggle that followed the planting of the dragon's teeth of old, only that none of those who participate lives long after the fight is over, the At his it is s | stake, firmly, which the | projecting cover suc which last survivor bleeding to death. leisure the hunter appears upon the scene and skins the de beasts for market. The pelts cost him nothing save the trouble of removing them and the value of the hunk of fat: the stake with the flint blade is ready to be set again for victims. That is the reason why gray wolf rugs only cost $3 each, with three skins to a rug. “But that is only one of the diabol- eal devices employed for such pur- poses by these natives The hunter takes along strip of whalebone from the head of a whale he has killed, just such as is used to stiffen corsets. He doubles it up in the shape of a letter M, | and fastens it compactly in that form | with bindings of sinew. This he in- closes with a wad of fat. and leaves it on the ice to freeze. Pretty soon along comes a white bear, sniffs at the deli- cate morsel so happily thrown in his way, and bolts it without further con- sideration. The fat quickly melts in his stomach, and the sinew bindings are consumed by the action of the digestive fluids, so that before long the strip of whalebone is released from its bent! shape and springs out at full length | across Mr. Bear's stomach, and he dies within a few hours of lockjaw in fright- ful agonies’ Next day the noble pot hunter comes along and possesses him- self of a big white robe, large enough to cover a small room and worth several dollars at first hand or two or three | gallons of bad whisky." —Buffalo Cour- jer. INGENIOUS MR. DECKER. Didn't Propose to Have His Wife Consid- ered the Abused Member of the Family. “Joseph.” she said severely, as he re- turned, leading one child by the hand and wheeling another in the baby ear- | riage. “where have you been with those children? “All around the neighborhood,” responded quiet he “Don't you know that I don't like to have you take both children out at Yes, my dear, but I thought I might ; TERMS | fashions, and its numerous illustrations, Par- | eXpense well do the whole thing at once?” “And what do think the neigh- | have say ay me go away with Mrs the afternoon.” “I presume they did. my dear. “Why. they'll begin to think I'ma s rights woman or something of sort, and that you're an abused band. How did the children behave? “First-rate. except when I pinchec them.” ‘Pine that for bors w must Bi seen | 1 them! What did you do ake attention ar them and attract then I'd tell them, loud nyone to hear, to be quiet a had gone to the conven- tion or was busy at the sewing circle. ‘O. you brute! You wasn't cry enough for that m knew it true.” “Of course Idid. But I want to tell I'm tired of hav- oor Mrs. De band stays eker, hts | up my out 4 attle on listie be- a stricken, ran one of the utthe other to massacre | tof ame panic ena into tow a women and child Harp.r’s | Great West | given to Dramatic Episodes of The Full Prospect Articles have been written expressly Camilla Urso. — Articles of Practical Advice Glimpses of Royalty. Railway Life and Adventure. qoo Large Pages “A Yard of Roses,” ROSE." The Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone. — Count Ferdinand de Le. The Marquis of Lorne. — Justin McCarthy, M.P.— Sir Lyon Playfair. — Frank R. Stockton. Henry Clews. — Vasili Verestchagin. — W. Clark Russell. — The Earl of Meath.—Dr. Lyman Abbe*t, The Volume for 1892 will Contain Nine Iustrated Serial Stories Five Double Holiday Numbers. FREE TO JAN. ecribers who will cut out and for a Full Year fromt GIVING, CHRISTMAS We will alse send a copy of a beautif Its predacti: Send Check, Post-ofice Order, or Registered Letter at our risk. ¢ Features for 1892 Brilliant Contributors. for the coming volume b pecimen Copies will be sent Free. y a host of eminent men and women, among whom are ps. — Andrew Carnegie. — Cyrus W. Field. Mrs. Henry M. Stanley, and One Hundred Others. \ 100 Stories of Adventure. Sketches of Travel. Popular Science Articles. Charming Children’s Page. The Best Short Stories. Hints on Self-Education. Houschold Articles. Natural History Papers. “TMlustrated | Weekly Supplements. 1892. d send this slip with name $1.75 we will send The Com: » 1892, This offer includes THANKS- Deuble Heliday Numbers. inting, entitled “A Y wee OF Nearly 1000 Illustrations. This Stip Se ae [al SIF bas cont TWE 189 2. Harper’s Youn eople. AN ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY The Thirteenth Volume of Hamper’s Young People began on November 3. 4 For the coming year this best and nist compre- hensive weekly in the world for yduthinl read- ere offers a varied and fascinating programme In serial fiction it will contain ‘*Diego Pin- zon,’’ a story of the first voyage of Columbus, by John RCorvell; ‘*Canoemates: A Sters of the Florida Reefs and Mvergiades,’’ by irk Monroe: another story by one of the best anown and most popularof American authors; and stories in three and four parts by Thomas Nelson Page. E H. House. Angeline Teal. Bl- in Rodman Church, and Mary S McCobb. More thantwe hundred sh@rt stories by authors, articles on travel. out-of-door door games, and all subjecte dear to the bearts of the young, besides hundreds of illus- trations by leading artists will combine to make Harper’a Young People for 18% and ir. resistatle repository of pleasure and informa- tion for bora and girls ‘ Tho best weekly publication for young peo- pleinexistence [tis edited wity scrupulone care and attention, and instraction aud enter- tainment are mingled in its pages in just the right proportions to captivate the mind- of the young and at the same time to depelop their thinking power —Ubserver, N. Y. Postage Prepad, $2 4 year. Volumes V., VIII. and Xil. of Harper’s Young People, bound in cloth, will be sent by mail postpaid, on receipt of $3.50 each. Th | other volumes are outof print ' Single bers, Five Cents exch. Speeimen copies sent on receipt of two-cent stamp Remittances shonl{ be made by postoftice money order or draft, to avoid chance of loss. EP-Newspapers are not to copy this advertise: Ment without the express order of Hynren & Brornens. Address HARPER & BROTHERS, 1892, New York. Harpe.’s Bazar. | ILLUSTRATED. Harper’s Bazar is a journal for the home. al ives the latest information with regard to the is designs. and pattern-sheet supplements are | indispensible alike to the heme-dressmaker and professional modi-te. No expense je spared to make its artistic attractiveness of the highestorder Its bright stories. amusing | comedies, and thoughtfal essays satisfy all | tastes, and its last page is famous as a budget of wit and humor. In its weekly issues every- thing is included which is of interest to wo- | men. The serials for ixv2 will be written by Walter Beasant and William Black Mrs. Oli- phant will become a contributor. Marion Har. and’s Timely Talks. ‘*Day In and Day Out’? e intended for matrons and Helen Marshal North will specially address girls. T. 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Dongola, + shoes cea from | Misses are the best fine Camtion.—See that W. L price are stamped on the bottom of ¥. L. DOUGLAS. Sivas Max Weiner Chicago, en.

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