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THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, TUESDAY, ward upon his hot cakes; but not! does misplaced thread in their dress. Two blocks Mental Condition ef Guitsan. CONCERNING TRE APOTHEOSIS —_ good. Wimt would you do?” ene bac DOUGHNUTS. Theaters in Russia. Christuns Work, From the New York Herald. From the London Daily Telegraph. From the Qnee. = rea: came aa Cpe I foldea gegen yaaa set ar Expert testimony has been the most tmpor-| wi, o, areaeg tag Geoa | Russian theaters are, comparatively speaking, | Besides the snowball as a mode of went a-cal st week, and T have been at night. as I fol away my fancy hand- 7 tant feature jaitean case for several nous thoroaztly posied upon at’ teast one subject | Retief for a future occasion, Jack asked curt. | SY 88 fair as alabaster,” Hansom oS wo there wents, there ie the suggested. Old-Fashioned Cocke? ere Ree: | very juvenile institutions. A century aro presents, least “Now, my dear,” she retorted, “this is no | days now, and, indeed, has alone been worthy = py Dinnere—The Boiled Dinner ever since. Many thinzs had happened since 1|°""What on earth do you women talk about | time for compliments, Is there the least bit of | much attention, if we except the extremely a Sal-Fish D either of the two capitals. The first Italian | zar stall, aad a gypsy tent: all these are necoge Went last. My ftiend Theodosta had been bitten | when soa on ucrinee” ar ee » clear testimony by Reynolds of his visits to the | From the N. ¥. Times. opera produced on a grand scale in St. Peters: | nized m ans of preseut-sciving. We intreduced by the painting eraze. { found her smeared to| [answered nonchalantly: “Oh. I don't know, iy sotiae ae chastly.” Prisoner in Jafl, showing how Guitean reasoned | Of late, while sojourning in the west with a | burg was Paisiello's “ Barbiere de Sivic Ha.” and | snotier lest year, one of ke party dressed up as fhe exebrows like a pallet, and engaged in piae- | of courve, Herbert Spencer on education is 8fe- | Would you like to-blush a8 you go tn?" pon bis crime before he adopted the theory of | notable housewife of New England extraction, | n the -ame year an Enzlishman named i iad d Wontd stable, in front ing a very rakish-looking pair of Kate Greena- | Yorite topic. Then’ sometimes we have alittle | «yag™ inspiration; and the testimony of Shaw, which | some discussion arose concerning the relative | OPC , a palro *.and on either fly on the cradle of the Aryan race, or dip into a Catherine IL, who found her mania for E them two heapsof presenta, one intended way Infants upon a queer-shaped plaque. Theo- | pit “of transeendentalism. ‘Women are eo aw. |, He threw his arms around her. drew her to dosia has a cordial way of makinz indicated that a passion for notoriety had long | merits of the old and new methods of cookery. | customs, comforts, and dependents, and f you think that | fully cultured nowadays, that you know they | !!8 breast with the ape eer and kissed were scarcely any theatrical performances in | max basket, a lange omaibas full of gifts, a bee ° stirred the accused to do some act that would | One of the house-mothers, newly come from the | French fashions and philesophy, quite con ned recipient. the wizard placed her loud and long. He was through with it f 1 i she reaily is glad to see you. I was beaming un- | Would not interest you.” Just as the carriage door was opened by an | fill the world with his name. east, was good enough to indulge us with some | ible with an abiding love for a home-n Ss pach heap in the sea! der the warmth of her manner. when she sud-| td he believed me. ee wa ene nia siren within sett; | A ex ere tetany al Br a ea oat erienecences of Che times wen. our grand. | Sins eaune cranes aay Sed ee ily chill om ving, “WI etsy, = factory amount of pink in her cheeks. maining days he |, and as this, in 8 | mothers gave us atl nce a week the two _ ' hs or Dae ated paises chy bane e | CLARA BELLES BrmMAL story, | 901" Dridesuaids stood in a semi-circle | likely to be thereally decisive evidence in the ae — port to a company of Enzzlish aciors rth think it's in the climate,” she went on in anex-| Im Which the Heroine’s Fashionable | ack of the pai it whose right side stood the | case, since responsibility is the only open isaue, | *t@Ple dishes of the New England cuisine pure | management of a Mr isher; but after three i vill enumerate " bridegroom’s “best man,” while four ushers | it may not be amiss to take a glance at what | 80d simple,the“boiled dinner” and the “‘salt-fish | or four years the British comedians waxed fat gz secured 4x sieatony sort of ag: “They 46, any the: Cali_ | Coememts Reeccivo Burticuline Adteme (127 vonuad a littie fifties off on either and hanalveady een suoen tnahe fo by capable | dinner.” : and kicked: they weer eontiuail ito basher fornia climate gives men sottening of the brain | “m+ The bride's father was near the front, ready to | experts. ‘Those who have testified are Dr. For-| ‘Those good old days! Shall T be blamed for proms Seep ato chin alee Cathertr pg Slog d beeline * women a horrible obesity.” New York Cor. Cin. Enquirer. give her aw Allthe men wore buttoned-up | dyce Barker, Dr. A. McL. Hamilton, Dr. Noble, lingering regretfully over the picture whic! Leon aco ee Pati aubere ioral oy oe -_ pe — -Are all the men erazy and allthe women | The trouble with novelists is that they don’t | feck coats, dark trousers and no gloves, ac- | the prison puro, and Dr. Spitzka, who as—| stretches before my mind's eye? A large. low- | . } ith crane etiecy Sia ae _ — fat, Annt Theo? her niece from the east |, ce a their heroines fashionably. | Co'ing to the newest improved usage. Gloves | sumes, we lieve, the position of a specialist | ceiled kitchen, half girdled with well-scrubbed Frene her pocut “s Sane a ana then Loco lifting her amazed eyes fromared cactus ip | K2°W how to dress nl qpetesiss ong®>- | are no longer allowable on such occasions, and | in this field of medical inquiry. tables and small, square-paned windows, witere | Hench. tl lone and inches Urvad, r felt | When they do not rig the fair ereatures out in | light trousers are rarely seen. The bride walked | Dr. Spitzka’s testimony was not the most | luxuriant morning-glories disputed the ingress | G2¥S of c own ather al bound with braid, and view of them, they are,” | something that reads well in fiction, but would | in on her father’s arm, and was by him trans- | valuatfe, but it has attracted the most atten- | of sammer sunshine, and through which brisk | Bemboot. strated ws bottom in the ely. “By the way, | look abominable in fect, they dodge the subject | ferred tothe groom at the head of the aisle, the | tion, i : 5 use it is the only straightforward | spring winds drove showers of rosy snow from | at so T used to | | tip s i | Mbert. and ia ‘very conrad + atattnir > tha ii i | latter emerging with his best man from a side | deciaration of the prisoner’s insanity made | tie old apple trees overspreading them: and | . Fonds 3 at that itr the papers.” Uy statins Grvamty that they were Venomings |e ol fe ous ot strictly lum-tum, and altl- | by a person who can be supposed to have | opposite, the old chimney-place, where the iron Laie Astorl Cormnainn meee tee Hse mag lye ol vig yr thew 4 7 at the ni from | Clad—usually “in single white, with a bit of! tudinonsly succesefal. spectal knowledge on such subjects. It was | crane, overhanging a bed of glowing embers, | '®£1¢ Slee ee iia ea them “wh a lady who was | color at the throat,” though she may already yreciire Uecauony: striking for its positive tone, for it seemed the | and the brick oven, redolent with the concen, | SB0wR under Het maiden ut with narrow colored ribbons. You vk it until it gave | have been described as a tawny brunette, on — utterance of knowledge so clear that there was | trated sweets ot generations of pies of spicy | Dyed There was luncheon at the house for the bridal | Htteranee of difference of opinion. ‘This sort of | pumpkin, Inscions apple, and her ea Teal. | | party. Then the bride disappeared, returning testimony is admirable if the only purpose is to | ously crowded the “new-fangied” cook-stove | In an hour dressed for the travel, but not in the | convince a hesitating jury, sinee men in donbt | into’ an lgnominions corner’ Will eves the | 2 Fegulation traveling costume. The modern | are commonty determined by the unqualitied | daintiest plat give half the enjoyment to my | palace car, with its private state-rooms, has | declarations of one who pretends to know. | gustatory nerves that of old agitated | eyeanee tiny baskets, whieh, fill ar baile, suger toys should be ven chinahwaded hom white wouldn't do at all. Now, let me | instruct them how the thing ought to be done, taking the marriage of Miss Aurora White to Mr. Borealis Brown as the subject. Aurora had and felicity. och ¥ e. dames le Bras stars of the Fre ede’ Theo: “I quite aches about And yeu know you eannot able te i ‘ainly r R i | joyed by an operatic far f fairles tot the conversat | slept between fine cotton sheets. ver her was | ; " Dr. Spitzka certainly did pretend to know, | them at sight of the crisp amber dough- | /0¥¢d by an operatic fa a a and Breeztest. wi Sehr eterees Rie cupronishette. = Over ie quilt, | MAde it feasible for a bride to start becomingly | ana td-such an extent that Memon Wore nent nuts. which the dear old grandmother | tf —""The Sham Catalani, ne inte n ball costume py may have | Thus, while the room had been cold from an | m0 ordinary street~dress of as much richness | saluted as he left the stand with the Scriptural | lifted from. the smoking frying-kettle to the he nm. with open window, she had been warm without being | 88 She chooses. Aurora wore a pretty walking- | phrase, * ‘o doubt but ye are the people, and | earthern crock upon the nearest table. That die with you.” But the declara- | was the one I used to perch upon when I could gentieman that if any person said | just clamber up with the help of a chair, and etting out of | tal striped silk, which was canght up under the | Guiteau was not Insane that person was hot an pound. are so imp: three or four in her hand with slipped inte maid has reel of ued by heavy coverings. He at. He stopped | made a because it | Jatest head had | dress of a dark Prussian blue vigogne, the only | wisdom bolster, which is the | trimming being a wide Moorish scarf of orien- | tion of thi kA 5 | when a feast of said amber goudies was the one wegueiaaft SS . < of ten pounds a week.” bed, sh moved a perfectly plain uight- | Paniers on each side, brought around in front, | expert; or, if an expert, not honest, went 0 | object in life to be attamed—openly, if such end sete serena nencinen meget pee think of adienx, but the conyersa- | and put on squally, unornamented unde | and then tied. Her wrap was dling long | far as to be more offensive than scientific, and | were consistent with grandmother's ideas, but iboard should zh many fatty tortuities before | It is just now the proper thing torn Visite of black velvet, brocaded with fine gold | to throw lzhton the whole testimony by show- | to be attained at all hazards. Ah! the tharrows. guitars, good-by at the ¢ with sehew adornment in dimity. For leaves, and trimmed with broad bands of black | ing that this witness’ mind tended to extreme the apotheosis of doughnuts. Their glory is de- dine olwet assurance that she had crown as zillinette, sprinkled with tiny flecks of gold. | expressions. - MGhENGRC BE i | ‘very declaration that on mooted | parted. Did I not make a summer pilzrinaze thin as a shad fast summe shay iad eer te acti nae Small French capote, with the | points of inquiry ‘leaves no room for doubt is | throughout the Land of the. Pilsrims, vainly butter. she chose a rustler, so to speak, for she knew | outside entirely covered with soft. dark-shaded shallow, unphilosophical and untrustwort yearning for the doughnuts of my childhood > = with an uneomfurtable sense of massive. | that the bridesmaids and others would see her | ostrich tips, curled lightly one ‘over another. | In Dr, Spitz \in-allthat time once and onlyoiea aii odor t : 7 that | before the time for the ceremony. It was an | She was pretticr thus than in full dress, as | is one of “conzenital moral monstrosity,” but | of them was watted eres my ¥ nes ONO Tables an araoaae) Chien & ial looking , that Twas | ye, robe of the newest sort, being a flowing | Dineteen out of twenty women are. And she the Doctor held that as between moral monstro- | as I whirled bya logging hat ona mountain tent to £800, Russian player Valeria { pink satin, embroidered in stiver | NA absolutely charming next morning when | sity and total depravity, “standing by them- | road, wildly driving iw the fore of tueene | ingh the monn ad} OE a een eroldered in’ silver | the husband, after an hour of banishment. from | sclves,"he doubled it he could diseringm sthere- | thunder storm, my mountaiz aring down sine the Aourishts with foliage of the most delicate gre % 5 s 2. | their room in a Washinzton hotel to give her | fore, in order to make the arly one of {the sudden dips in tt eep, aud my The long skirt was full and undraped, being | maid a chance to array her, returned to find her | moral monstrosity. le cases: and wale | row nd and sil f. and tied but the baby was as vamentat on the tree, A ‘table forms for Uniwbhe jal theat ruth and} ir prodne S micht ¢ ale sunflower, ‘every or ved. so that the pins are put im 5 r und not | buckboard swaying at his expeditious heels. I board boxes of ie are, Cor {simply trimmed with a wide band of the em-| in an Indian broche dressing-zown. It was | of total depravity. as the pro: holds it to | could not stop just then: the pony did not want yee oh arpa tay tates ee since Ehave seen you.” she | broidery, whieh reached around the entire skirt, | trimmed down the front with sof ombre | be, he adduced various physical evidences and ; me to, and, besides, while the buekboatd would ns seem to have a iat Aohien, ant they ane, wabte ave been xrowing thin, haven't | Over tle hips were double puffs of pale-creen | plush. — Outside ts of xave the some less tangible bases of opinion to aid his | go down hill very well on an s four | tar love of disinterring dead bodies andy gps tines satin put on nearly straight. Around the waist | ot! : garment a relief from discrimination. His points of support are the | wheels, it would not halt. un cut ty murmured that I didnot know. _| was asilver girdle made of ancient medaie aire poky-lookin history, the history of tite individu | . the | So I fled and left the essence of iy | nS whee they We + Yes.” she sid, “you must have lost four | pin | thought behind. or five pounds. Your face then Tam an atin bodice was ent very low and square eS S looks smaller: but | in the bosom, and bordered with embroidered The Reck Tomb of Bradore. on fat. You mean old | flowers and ieaves in silver and green. The! 3G. wy, . bounding from her seat..| square openin: a tion, which puts all hi pund of assumptions that ape of his head, the countenance, parted, It is not long since ali that was mor- tal of the 1 we had doughnuts we had | mand boiled dinners, too, but [ was not in canbe trimmed upand sold Round ier in the Independent. r. Stewart, a suce n be trim nr collars; they was filled in with a chemisette a s mgne, tie manner, and the ge | them, and so T wasvlad wh man, was secretiy dug up and carried off, nor 2 peda ie ser phe scidaey oes paar lon’t you intend | of white Spanish rose-point insertion and |: Se ae ee i ne fon that al made upon. th - | cussion began, and T knew are we aware that the reli even now t ff Witi a piece of velvet or satin like a an?” sins being outlined with sil Mail never te SHORES ema ts | e is not one point in all this that stands | seraps of the culinary wisdom of old el anal ie idea cr at Se ee The once plump Green grass for the hunter's te \firm. In the timily history it has been shown | the readers of the \Houselold.” Shy bo uenot gly pond re ptaclés. She oernneah ats ‘all e sle ast snd deade that there are some accidental cases of insanity, | of what follows the grave and. reverend tn | hls be descents Scotshared set we doom tas ae fee Doan sae eee ped. shoulders, and into each opening were set larze y <0 |just_as in y other families there are ac- | told with a glint of the frosty sunshine of her | 22)" Caledonian patriots have combined to te- d'ettha cual torn in tach, dont thee bee st place. : eras pufls of the pale-green satins covered with Ang come With te ebb and flow | eidental wooden leg i hit er reserve now and then. When a * ¥ mall Sera te each, and ties F cot the Banting - and | silverembroidery. Just high old art itself was Rely RUeEE OF erauOre: : but no. such taint as | hills 1 | involves the n 'y inheritance ‘d ; | brain. In the individual's own hi Se eee Fevidence enough of “moral ved, subdued, jbut moral mons i knew it by heart. and then that was eatable from my and | come ornamental ‘yI-| Mustin chair backs, with cretonne flower the bones of Willlas | cummed on, are pretty for temporary use, and faulish grave to the State | can be quickly made by child: which Penn founded, and to bury them in the | They last a lone time eh midst of a city where it is supposed that their | good it will wash, and st | ‘nee willraise the moral tone of the pub-| azain with fresh applique. There is something of ancient Greek senti- | screens, ith narrow lace and covered a boiied dinner is the order of the day one must | bezin to get it as soon as breakfast is over, for jth any things to do about i = sity is this | the beef, five or six pounds from a nicely cc ) readfal solitude, | sense a mere phrase, for it only implies out- t be wasned in cold water to freshen “uring alone the cry pus departure from the common rule of | it a little, and put over the fire in a large pot sea-birds cLinging lite that controls everybody, and such depar- | with e er enough to reach two or thre ture is crime, unless it can be shown that the boil slowly while the . and Aurora surveyed it ad- y : eatal ngly in the mixror when it was all adjusted. Turank gailons of Friedrichshall and | Look here, Jane,” the sweet creature said i . 1 walked leacues and swam | to her maid. who touched her neck while ii ing F baths and steam baths till | the lace at that point, “if your hands continue Twas ihap as aribbon. In faet, I did everything | as cold as they've been for the past week, I'll T heard of till [heard the ecstatic sound of the | really be compelled to discharge you. 1 can't bearto be fumbled with hands that aren't nice vania a 1 isa vielin rather than an agent in the de P| peal. About the tiie of the | with pretty chintz, for keeping on a bedroom hatic form of speech.) and warm. Do take something for your blood, “Land of s parture. Dr. Spitzka’s reference to physic: must be allowed for cooking it. Four | dines wary _, | maiteishell, arenew. They have a bow of col- asked. which must be too thin.” Gow forsaken and cust’ indications does hot show this, | His 2 s must be Sashed without breaking the | #teracie commanded the Athenians to brine BAY er pa doped erponti tan ; Papp Sa BOREALIS ENTERED, Ee PR PGs GE tee ee weer Tu vie a aa the ibalves Of . and set to boil in salted fie tire, | Theseus, and to bury them in Athenian soll. | At bazare they are aeually charced 25, 6 each, ‘Twel y I go te ass an : Is Of the Tuscan 5 nium was a wild imazination. There is, per- | directly : | Thesens, " a Y y 2s. 6a. ek peel In raptuse. “No one Keowee aha | right from the cold weather outside, pulled the Read in tie realin of woe: at ere ix, per- | directly after the meat is put over the fire. \ on hire Sei y According to the tradition, Theseus died in and find most ready sale, Some pretty sachets eal ue haps, not a human creature whose head, meas- | ‘Then four white turnips and ane lates velng y 3 Tiss of shrinking till they have been called | cloves off Ins iey hands, crabbed Aurora by the Hope entereth not here ! i a Pi eb ured'by the most accurate Instruments) would | one tnust. be peeled, ahd the yellow ooesat ta | eAUe in Seros, and his. posthumous Testoration | can be made of canvas by working tue outside “that bi E wrists and neck and kissed her, with ice still! * Lo: at his feet there stood | be found precisely xymmetrical, and trom the four parsnips and four carrots must be | 1 Attica Se en rely per I i eee peta me that this was a desirable time to | on his moustache. She didn’t shiver, and even A block of siuooth larch wood j slightest to the greatest every degree of varia- ped: a firm head of white cabbaze must be | Dantefrom: ee ling with mechs” eee winkied nose of the conversation, and T | seemed to like it. Such is love god polter Beside a rock-closed cave tion is found; and there are even some patiio- | trimmed and well washed and thestalks cut out | e Uaing.. Kile Ss pecoladty tenes weoee can asked Valeria if she had been to see “‘Little % POMOY « By Nature fashioned for a grave, logical tacts which indicate that sanity may be | without breaking the leaves apart: a dozen white = ‘the tomb ee es peculiarly Denish work, lo.” How will it be when he puts his cold, cold feet Safe from the raventng bear j consistent with the ablation or destruction of potatoes must be pecled, and. all the veretables | od Setonsg a in the shade the effect is very good. For the white stara, Ab, yes. Poor little fellow! How charm-|on her, after the honeymoon is over? But eh ed alee half the brain. Crania are always uneven, be- | laid in cold water antil wanted for bo One|. a pines, i a ae “ Bosectbe,” ae Sominiog tingly Jenny Lee plays it. But, oh! how stout | we must not anticipate. That was what Au- EN twenty atone IoRET j cause the skull is a mere case that grows to tit | of the friends in council here sugyested that | to Florence would be a kind of dilatory amends oe et ae a she has crown! Rather a well fed looking J. rora said when Borealis kissed her too savagely. Whose blood had equal share its contents, the brain, and the halves of the | onions were nice with a boiled dinner, and after | made by that city to the memory of her most i nd rig ec Be pind 5 iri "ie eay ire atten she did not make her face up so well, isn’t she? | Besides, she wanted him to stand off and Of the Jands of vine and snow, brain are necessarily unequal. some discussion they were voted in, with the | lustrious exile. “The reinterment of N tlars are worked thas: Que double cross. titel However, I don't suppose her size shows so | give himself room to admire her in the Halt-French, half-Eskimo. i _Dr, Fordyce Barker testified directly and ex- ‘iso that they be boiled in a pot by thein- | in Paris was the most famous modern e | seeee canes iene te sagoriellage' yA apee t in Jo's rags’as it will later, when she | isthetic robe. He did it. Then he was chucked By Me aa ere | plicifly that the accused was san Another said that squash and pumpkin | of an honorable disturbance of the repoxe of the | three cross stitch in a line, then five, three put in her own clothes, m ‘The Colonel.’ | out, because she and the six bridesmaids pro- in the block were tra | good and cle: etresses have such skill at hidin size, tuching it aw he may not | ‘ly stated reasons ht enter into the composition of the dish, | dead. All these are examples of the rest ified that the prisoner was sane, | and either or both were admitted provided they | Of an exile to the country which reg man “as sou would meet ina | were mashed after boiling and dressed with but- | We can v heir | posed to raise merry Christmas for several somewhere out of sight, | hours dressing for the ceremony. But first she 80 badl vation | One again. The same space that a double cross ts him, | Stitch covers is left between each star in work- derstand the French sentiment about | ing down a line, and into this the end stitch of ad thus the legend rau n “We loved her I gave him her hand for a parting squeeze. It Word: : ae the centre line of the second row of stars is 3 This testiznon ter, peppe then arose as | Sepoleon: “Tam inelined to think she will look very | Wasa hand that had been carefully attended to. ; nis, from the opportu toilets - itire orinthick | “Though more than half the world was his, | yaTaud, £0 Hat they fit. in, completely hiding Uhazarded. “She was always a pretty | Nature had made it small and shapely, but it | Ne cee mplied in the witne slices; that point was considered iinmaterial, the He died without s rod his own, pcanwas. Tu tiztit . in claret wan and a most tasteful dresser. was a coating of cold cream and an old glove And culled her home to peace dud rest, at i roulal @oak! And borrowed froin his enemie: and gold, and in biack aud cherry this work is rE sp aleria, with clineh- | Wornat nignt that had softened it; and it waa Were ney: the Six L001 of ground to lie upy partic ety effective. Tea coy aud table cloth i si ci fat. A | the use ofa burnisher that had rendered the used * is 2 ki = a = ie G ae ogether always prove attractive. For exam Be KGS Retin ian Dabok ee was so soft and warm | bresvel teary ree Ue Yar ous Binds was’ cet as twollhours for /ay Thacker med. Aud it was naturai that | ple, a red salin cosy. with a spray of Jessamine TE mae ead oe [eC athe enti ips and lanse turaips; an hour for | the French should wish to transport their wero | Korked In alks, wel @ tae shat oe Sotntther a Baa! That is the k athe fashionsbie woul: Go Re Erea mint rion: Lon Eee ores in | {toma remote and hostile island to the capital | cloth, with band of red satin worked te It not only proves. that And if the flerce winds Llow the pat contd | Of the nation, which, for a moment of historie | narrow running pattern. A a living, but makes the hae Paks eo enee ene pynton Sos be gate Goren Taubes phason The | cosy of oatmeal cloth with sunflowers in the it feel : at 0 es “t, | Pennsylvanian desire to back the asi eis aoa oad \c who shakes it feel the never Ie x0. The ghostly levers walts, and all slowly | peu rania : ; ur corners and on each side. Table cloths of bg hands ts an art urueh eu Lin high Thy homes and heart Kin, but real iasauity does. : thi MN dark blue serge, with red serge border, havea | band of cross-stitch work of couventional de sign where the border joins, carried out in gold filoselie. The work is done on canvas. which is drawn away, leaving the design on the “we. 1c. n done. were to be sed with a little butter, . which would nee a ely | ht of hat the beet li | against the de testiniony is ed, y much | y enough to be cord withou e it from the mz he gi went: of more or less difficulty. Aurora at le ft e and man’ Stl where-ov'er ice | ee Dickens play withou | AN ECCENTiEtC Wore bglpipse rete Whe Sister ofa Weate inz a'r —— From the San Fran zeent-the-Girls Young Man. | 1 delphia Times, = Vv IRAQEBLLES. | 5 surround dren an say the trustees of Jordan's e a which Nn by themse t ' Take root in the et sth got into And bloom t DAL DRESS. | atin and silk, covered in front with | vernor Make | % four of the World. . 800 Exa A very eccentric char with the meat, wor of Se} ac Ri: A MEDICINE FOR WOMAN. t Jana oWaler ware iciennes lace searfs. These were so ar- ities of every large city ao Pa fat-mmad. aust ed that they could be taken off the dress | CRO AG ee tee ee cee “used to put all on one platter, have of your brain and | and used as fichus and turniques for summer | Rom Hie @arit oe [28 Very ole bat ons 8 ODEs ‘ how of their odie: ‘TED BY A WOMAN, turned x faint r. Be | costumes. Aurora, yon understand, wasn't > his business and the rapidit on OF youth, aud: except for’ her-queet | i, ‘ appy in yo | wholly certain about Borealis’ income, and, muitiplies. Th dress and strange actions, might be passed upon Worcester ¢ as reet withor This old lady is ima Amay be seen on the lead- | alor She is a lady ef eonside turned my footsteps to G 1 | therefore. felt’ precautionary as to finery for | identifying him. He ts hi knew J should hare call, for | NeXt season at Long Branch. The lower’ part | From shortly before noon until dui of whom peoplesay in | Of the satin skirt opened at regular intervals, | at-the-girls you. r ratel,)and im the az world | the hitehe: wealth and ; to° PREPARED BY A WOMAN e for washing dishes in,) | it la not. with 3 i rps . chfares ery pretty fi 4 pelos suid not s i f an peak: ahi he | with three narrow plaits in each space, placed | ing thorouzhfares. Every pretty face that comes | jet cultured, and is the sister of one of the | CU sions even 0 a i fem” Wins werple tone that cris wacn | one above another, and surmounted ty puit- | along claiins his attention and he at once pro- | ios distineuicieal hotable west. | Not stati of modern piokaxes at work above | io that way. I know she hasthe temper of the | img. These openings extended quite high on | ceeds to investigate its charms. He does not | ™0*t . but she caves nothing for home com- | sou att ng head of the king of men.— Phe Sal-| , or, PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE CONFOUND the skirt. and terminated with small’ satin | Hetly “and unobtrusively + note. | forts and lias little respect for feminine, f stood at tater of serving the 1. i i “a magnitic litude of | bows. The Louis XV turnique was of whnte | 1 ~at-the-girls you! Stock J orfeelings. She has mad throwzh As { ae ould wate ar INTL <a IS: . a Prat Geet ene suen weanling brocaled silk, bordered with lace, fastened | in trade is the power of gazing long and impu- Proje South Am ndles, tron pat one a very gait im cold water, and | Montana Idiomatic Eecentricities, Je a Posirive Cure i In the acenmulatinz years | down under a garland of oranze blossoms, | dently. : States, and is now about to vistall the South Sea | \ater! and not allowed fo. boil, but only to sie. | Montana Correspondent N. Y. Times. , dilate as and raised on the hips im panters, The back | | iven the gaze does not go alone. With every | istands and Australia’ before tackling Muda] ™™ Sey toe about a | Some of the idiomatic eccentricities of this | For all tose Painful Complaints and Weaknesses eo was draped over a long train of the same | gaze goes a smile, a peculiar smile, as lgascar and South Africa. $ vels aloue, s he Nate | pa country inay be of interest’ to eastern | rminon to our best female population. xoods. The tight fitting ‘sleeves were trimmed | cross between the lop-sided smirk of a ( but makes every one she meets tally mith tae, | Diaeed on @ large patter ands | Part of the country may be of Interest to centers mapas — with narrow ruffliaz, surmounted by bands of | and the esthetic simper of a Bunthon ; latest device, “the era: Lary: young sister in think | the goods, The eollarette was of lace. Down. | combination is bestowe pecled potitoes boiled nicely No introduction ‘is waited for, and woe to the | ! il hard-boiled | readers. The literary resourees of Miles City | is It will cure entirely the weret form of Female Com- The modest | carcless individual who attempts to disredird wilt oe cs fees over Cees | are not yet suit aitly advanced to enable me to | plaints, all Ovarian Troubles, Inflanimustion and Uleera- an” a { ii te e cheek ri a » apap : és t ihe plenty of drawn-butter sauce, rere = tet . inely se | tion, Falling and Displacements, and the consequent vi the front of the waist was a spray of | bl is brought to the cheek of virtue by the | her insatiate search for informacion, She" has | P°' plenty : refer to Bartlett. aud 1 am accordinzly some- p party dresses for the winter. | ae 8 insolent zi ¢ man. shes | ut RaviOws Das 15 t proper accompaniment | Speiiaty ‘Spinal Weukuess, and is particularly adapted to the { think you are a little tao scrawny for that | Oran pha toes wo oe pncecae: | eee eo ae aes man. | le brushes | penetrated the harems of the officers of the Sul- fey int nce and | What in doubt in 1 the subjoine ” she was s; as I came in. bed : fa hy The 4 1 a : : Chanzes of Life, ned_and dressed | sions. As nearlyas T can ascertain, however, | Tt will dissolve and expel Tumors from the Uterus im f the dinner | they are peculiarly in use in Montana, or prob- | en early stage of development. The secant dnesday, but my re- | ably ori: ed in this Tervitory, though their | Tous Humors is checked very speedily by ite use, rk met with the discouraging comment that | ly oriinate ae is ft auay have led to | 2 Removes Faintzes, Platuleuey, destroy all Ora such a papistical innovation had no place ina | CUPhony and tender sentiment may have led to | Jin for Stimulants, und Relieves Weakness of the New England dinner. The moral pressure was | their adoption in other communities: Stomuch. It cures Bloating, Headache, Nervous Pros that f did not think it prodent to say | Bap Lanps.—A generic name for the jazged, | tration, Gencral Debility, Sleeplesmes», Depression and: T thought to Hf, “have [| drops. Her’ hair was dressed plainly in the | their faces. ‘The gaze-at-the-airls young man tan and has pried into the Moslem mosques of | & ; usalem. She became the terror and annoy: stnmbled on the fatal subject ones m style. with a large bunch of orange | will stoop and look under a Gainsboro: 2 ones forthwith I bolted into a conversation far afield. pins placed perfectly flat against one side | in order to discover what kind of a face Wut the sours sinter would none of it. ofthe head. The long tulle veil reached in the | den beneath it. He has no hesitation in “E did'so hope all summer that arms and | back to the lower part of the train, and fell | all sorts of uncivil things in I theck would be & to look at thin 1 like | Guite low infront. Her feet were shod ir: white | girl-gazing, and that is why he is noted for im- party dresses with short sleeves and low in, and her stockings were untinted white | pudence, impoliteness and stupidity. aeek, but I really cannot go about all winter, | SK. She j police of St. Petersburg, into whose |“ ; [ofices and headquarters she insisted on mak- | \ ing her way. She won recognition from von Moltke and Bist le her way to the Queen's draw! on. It is vain to attempt to op; r if she makes up her mind reno jewelry—that is the latest The gaze-at-the ris young man is ordered to | ty wo anywhere. She has an utter contempt for | {tat the New England. dinner orisinally came | sterile, alkali hills which abouud west. of the | x : 3, % a Sager: ie Shee: 0 x sit ry ‘2 a i" . Miss: ¥ hrase relates t ‘The feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight eye.” liscrutrcnes Se ooeekdarab iequite often. It would be w Mit the san ts with haughty deflance. On | bac York, where [can say it.—Juliet | of espec rougi country. S@-PHYSICIANS USE IT AND PRESCRIBE IT “Talking of bones.” snapped Georgiana | Do™tet of choice flowers, and managed to shed | is quite often. It would be we ¢ her arrival in Califoraia, her first iuuportant | B&ck te ‘To grumble without good cause. | rEEee TES “have you seen Valeria lately? they Gall eens | solne tears when she was order were issued In other cities. A few * | visit was to the lunatic asylums at Stocktonand | “”*"" Employes ‘bellyache” at being overworked of | pi naapeiee rpesestor Bi Bern- | READY FOR THE ALTAI Deri the Wars sould da the sareat : She explalued her visit by saying she | nie seas rhien they fancy thenselves bein underfed, ‘e, | , 1¥%ll at alltimes and under all ciremmstances ae Kae grown 50 thin@pat she posce for Sarak Bern- iti: ergot young man good. He would be careful where | been’ thn @ tian in Sacramento’ Jewish Dietary Laws. 0 y theins rd | hardt, describes the sharpest angles, and Wears | The time appointed for the marriage cere- : 7 | rutis haifa yard deep at the neck.” ri | in harmony with the laws that govern the fenwle sys ) 5 — 1 e—to forcibly bind down | and how he gazed thereafter. | a er placed in the lunatic | Two articles trom the pen of Dr. Henry cao Sale y te | mony in church was three o’clock in the after- see tat he ‘would have her. placed Inthe lunatio | ehr- em. . 55 and overcome. Thus it is unfairly said that the | “For the eure of Kidney Complaints of either sex this Tacknowiedged to having seen Valeria not Tue Anvanrad jieylum stuply because she insisted on an | end, and reprinted from the Jewish Chronicle in | Northern Pacific Company intends to nclnehe | Coen ees Com wong before. and to having observed that she | 200M. Boreatis Brown, the bridegroom, and | gat erew up about si [interview with Governor Perkins relative | the form of a pamphlet, embody a great deal of | youre by exacting large prices for its lands. | Se realy had clown thinner. ; Aurora White, the bride, were in a close car-| onght to be westhetle, and that every one who nahips to SA | natter of the highest importance to the health | Query, from Latin, cengere? ia: peeseesd se S05 ual Se Wenees sacs Ries ty How lid she do it: spoke Georziana, eager- | riage, ten blocks away, at six minutes before followed certain recipes could be. s9 and gain | tthe asylum, the guest of | ofthe community. The revolution that has for | Co0LeY.—A sully. Every ravine short of an y and quickly three, ealthy enjoyment of art by merely living ina sdesinist) : sh ay asthe | Mase. Price $1. Six bottles for $5. Seat Uy mail im jnst to prove that she was some time past been going on in the ideas | oe ley Is called a *-evoley.” From | the form of pila, aleo in the foruraf loeeaszes, on receigt of price, $1 per box foreither. Mrs. Pinkbam frealy answers all letters of inquiry, Send for pamjhilet. Ad- | dress as above, Whereupon I gave the list of the baths, and | “Ws shall et there right on time,” said. hi , | certain atmosphere was one that would scarcely | the Su nd { z the waters, and the walks, aud the swims, and | joon, Hae en ES Bol eve uctica wiaeeten eas oa e | Reet Ne entinty Weer reeularities at the | which govern the treatment of various forms of s Ocr.—To subdue by overwelming sever- the diet. vow, it is dreadfully unfashionable to get to | uine expre though in an exaz: Sees ttracte te oa 7 | disease is, as most of our readers must be aware, | ity of tongue. “He cussed that fellow oul, “Ah, that’s all very well,” sneered iny hoste: promptly, and Aurora would have | form, of the reaction from the Philistinism of | determined to inv ne niht by this ram. Of most subyertive and radical nature. There | i. ¢., he annihilated him verbally. “but she hasn't told you a She “has some dropping through the floor, don’t | the earlier part of the century. At the bottom old lan aioe Ppethaee ‘Gining-toom, {14 now, we suppose, no sort of doubt in the |. GO DowN.—A cutting in the bank of a stream | ——e secret remedy.” ¢ she had walked up the aisle on | of the sham sentiment and fashionable foolish- IMDS TEP Retehel uniteclia’ cod cemcel | alnds ce competent authorities that the | fF enabling animals to cross or to get to water. | “Remedy,” I said; “yea, that is just the iness, which, as it were, armor-plated the Ee ee satchel, ee Senroelleeenen pe hat many of the | ““Ligur Ovr.—Same as “skin out,” g. ¥- j word. Obesity is an obstinate and insidious | Don’t you think, my dear, it would be bet- | zesthetic movement, there was a real « [a Bene Ce ed aed ae eeu tee most distressing and fatal diseases are common | Ocrert, (nenn.)—A comprehensive term, var- | LIV disease.” ter to be fen minutes late?” said she, leaning | a little more beauty in the surroundings | “visiting” the fuinity for a week. She staid, too, flv should be without LYDIA E. PINKHAWS ER PILLS. “They cure. conetipation,. bilowsnem 4 = rrr > «i torpidity of the liver. 25 cents per box. | 7 2 ws to men aud the lower animals, and Dr. | iously applied. An expedition of every ‘sort, | ™ T had read that sentence somewhere, and | against him in a kind of armless hug. | and 3 even a wish fora peud overcame Se enna eae the Warden Behrend has brought together a great many | large or small, 1s an “outtit.”. So also a hayin 597 SoLD wr aut Davoomrs._at —— it « rather ill-turned one, but never had | “--No; I pride myself on punctuality.” | of life itself. Possibly, the weakest stripling , by ordering a se up a chair and pro hoped for #0 sc x1 an occasion to use it. “Five minutes, then?” H * Disease. bosh!” snarled Georgiana, “it isa! “Now, my darling, don’t coax.” sign of good living and good temper. [ woulda’t ‘ust as you say.” lese a pound, not a single pound. i Y yide © e, saying: “This ery striking facts and scientific testimonials | or a lumbering party, &e. Likewisea i 53-c0 ‘who pored over a lily in 8 gi ee Iheea ul by ubicmoner ‘and the food is pad upon the subject. {t is not surprising that | a buggy or ote pening a whol a Hp its RON BITTERS. imable a spectacle as the “First Gentleman 2 . auld competes id intelligent Jews should be | ferently applied to a party as a whole, or to it in aoe Ji: oral 1 aN a rt “ eros | for out of the general fund, and I have a right et eae AME ean ee a" ly appli caieane ig I ae j father stron¢ in their convictions upon the | means of travel, its sul 5 are 2 i ‘ & to entertainment here.” She remained a guest e thi m " orb active.)—To outtit is to fit out she looks like a wrinkled old ha st meet and ten itt op slowly lowe down aves iene ESS SUS heres me jf, te, anion unt she one to, leave. He asin Soamee Bae ane thot fop any pan winter “We outtitted at St. = she got thin.” coat toa smail pocket set in at the walst-seamm, | the dim light of saze-green drawing-rooms | Si sojourned 1 the | Jewish communities enjoy a remarkable im- | Paul.” ieee sileere ‘ | th 3 public Institutions, incinding hospitals, “Mag- | 7°!s Bie y AN recent! nted fash x chauge or eet mae fee fut thea. | where it lingered afew seconds. Would have compared favorably in at ot ee ee isin ding hospitals, “Alaz- | niunity, comparatively speaking. from many of | PIUGRIM.—A person iy transpla “Ay “You have the ring where youcan find it | complexion with their prototypes of the Regeney, . svg, Mrs. Oates in The Maxcotie? readily,” she remarked, lying placidly back in | At all events, both the male and female wsthete | BAS tak the direst s rt itside their . | upon frontier soil, A new arrival. A green- Le divoge ginal that opbouse tila eto ee The deaths tore cone imption, for rere ae ner. About i betergeried tenderfoot. = bi at. * is nothh had some faint notion of an ideal—not wholly | ¥ < at poses Old | the opposite le of itechapel High street, UsTLE.—Grappling with circumstances. ie to fumble fo the Ying a ties coheed selilsh, nor wholly base—and, though the Ideal | Woman's entrance ; pgm eaah eid 0 Landok-obe gis oeing Inkabiied entirely by superior to all contingencies of “inck. “Oh, ve made sure on that point, as I told | wasas nebulous as the atmosphere of their | ™pidly on the head of the offender, and in sey- ng Jews, and the other by Gentiles—show a very | Cattle, in Winter, “rustle” for food by nosing kk 7 - Fiat tidy Mad, contidentially, “I slipped the | boudotrs, t was sufficient to prevent thelr being | (7A) gielaucen The old lady Maines yee way | starting disparity. Similar differences: have | throuzh the snow to the dried grass beneath. it by statistics | | RUsTLER.--One who never succumbs to cir- men at whose louses she had been refused ad- | Wain and axain been brought out by statist a “Oh, of course; although I don't suppose she | will be able to get in through the wings, poor little thing, trom what the newspaper men say about the “amplitude of her curves. Sach inn be pudenee! I suppose my friends ta ut the | ring ri ¥ a ’ ‘ ntemptible. Unlike Kingsiey’s maiden, amplitude of my curves That is the only trou- de pepe Se ee they fae “npble things,” but dreamed “then ‘bearing on various scrofulous disorders. Dr. | cumstances. This is about the highest compli- ble of being fat—people will make Jokes about | “What. Borealis sehat?” all long ;? and, though their dreams were irritat- | Mittance. | She will sometimes invade a house’ penrend, in common with many others, traces | ment that can be pald to @ man who, failing in you. But twoaidy't lose a pound —not asinzie | yy ring is lost.” “ _ | ing to ofhers—at least, when they Issued In ac- | By the back door when the front entrance ts; much of thelr difference to the communicability | one titing, finds something else available for hit Te ane ants: gave You scen Marion? | He thrust his fingers into the pocket madly, | tlon—they in the end’ worked a considerable fie rhea ting her way to the presence of | Sr'these dreadful disorders to man by the animals vell. tye sa Wight. | If I were as thin as she 1s | again and again, but the ring surely, was not | change. “It would be dieult now for any one, fhe frightened lady inmates, soundly scold them | je fends on, aud to the further fact that by the I would want to die every time I looked in the | there. He made wild conjectures, felt inrall nts | crew buying furniture or domestic uteusils of | for {helr bad jerottinent of “a highly distin- | sows the most rigorous sanitary precautions are glass.” other pockets, and concluded he had left it at | any sort, to avoid becoming possessed of a con- Ree veler.” She leaves this port for | taken against the sale of infected meat. it ina ma What did she do?” I asked, at last begin- | Aurora's residence. siderable number of objects which were really | Honolutu. and announces her intention of going startling and significant fuct.but it isonezenerally | comprises but one room, and is customarily ning to use the current phrase. to turn about. When they had gone back | good in form orcolor, and the importation of | 00 sailing vessel, where no other passengers | Sumitted, we believe, that th t researches socked sith earth supperted poles. -5 * Well, she went to the German spa, and took | almost to the house, @ public clock struck : ed Orr. —' at a distance, as ‘p.—To have “sand in a, whee To be determined and plucky. ivalent “grit.” SHACK.—A oe The average *shack” Jats mbroideries trom | 8T@ carried, merely to insure herself more atten- of science, in this direction have pointed unmis- the treatment. But the trouble about that Is, | three ey fet tae Ttis almost | tlon from the eaptain and crew. She converses | fu."yir'to'the Moatle rewulations with respect as soon as you leave there you bezinto fatten | What is that 2” sald Aurora, and pointed to | as common to seen bit ot Rhodian embroidery | 2 Rearly all the modern anges, including | to the official oversight of the supply of animal up again.” Georsiana said this with a curious | the bottomn of the carriage. in a drawing-room now as It was to sce a piece | Spanish, Russian, Turkish, Eagle food, if seme of the worst diseases known to | ‘st: ae. * air, as if she had just solved a problem. The ring lay gilttering in a corner. of Berlin wool-work @ dozen years ago, and the | German, and is evidently upward of sev humanity are to be avoided. The writer of the | SKIN Ovt.—To leave secretly and hastily, a “ Why, I thouzht —" | vezan. “I must have dropped it,” said Borealis, pick- | houses are few and far between, in London at | Years of age, Her health and appetite are eng | Pamphlet alluded to makes an assertion which | when pursued by an enemy. Sitting B j But dont dare to say it,” cried she. “I | ing it up, “but Ixwear! looked in that ‘very | least, who have not a bit of Japanase art, | and unless she meets with some accident Tay, perhaps, be too sweeping, but the truth of | “skinned out” from the Yellowstone Valiey and don’t ‘ant to ene singe Pound. But oo spot two minutes ago.” coe whether it be on Paper , lacquer, bronze, or silk, | Will accomplish her projected. trip. whic certaii ‘ate in Canada. Betsey,” she moaned. melting into a part ot He had looked there, as a matter o: , just | lighting up some odd corner. And good, too, truth. “I do wish “Harry would get a little | before Aurora threw the ring down, Medes done to painting, indirectly, by making | » THe bride and_ bridegroom of a wedding at stouter. There's no use talking, a fat woman | “Weil,” he remarked, looking at his wath | artists feel that the sympathy of a considerable | L nea oxi aa with a thin husbind is a funny sight. And | again, “you will have your way after all. We | mass ofthe public tg with them, and so en- | ¥4yY from church to the ice dems when I see his bones ali sticking out, it makes } can't zet to the churcli before ten minutes late courazing them to take heart of to work | The editor of London Truth calls Guiteau a me hate nim,” steadily The Bpectator: unyhow.” their own wa! *; rnicious fool, who, for the sake of the lives of “What do yon do?” [asked just once again. ‘To be sure.” 260 ture Presidents, ought not to have the benefit amule, chased bya committec. & I do everything,” she said. “I make | ss Some of the young ladies of Cleveland are de- | of insanity. io such direful import attaches tothe phrase in bin drink ‘whisky and cream at nicht, and’ beer Bar lo ocr puagertn: Mestad ‘ seem that in: i scribed as being skillful poker players. when he’s thirsty; and I give iis malt fora | !s characteristic of brides. They may biash, but | «1 am what T deserve,” was the |: tonic, and I load his bow! of soush siti tiles ; they know exaetly what they are about. Their | ast repark of i @ream in the morning, and | pile howsy a i cyes may be dim with tears bat they can see a} murderer, before 4 blew y-t heared