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From Harper's Bazar. Ladies are taking a good deal of interest in women’s work nowadays, and women’erights are being eloquently defended by the sisters in silken attire who. know only by heresay of the wrongs that are goading many of the mere wo- men to clamor so loudiy for their rights. One of the most incontestable of these rights is the right to live, to labor for their bread, and to have a market where they may sell their wares. Now there is no better way of helping women to establish this right than by enlarging their market and patronizing woman’s work. We have ail of us been brought up to look with respect on the lace that trimmed our grandmothers’ caps. and to consider lace as the loveliest adornment of our lovely persons. as the poetry of our dress, the touch of Tefinement which stemps at once the dress Proposed Insurance Speculation on the Life of Guiteau. ‘BIS APPLICATION WANTED For 4 $100,000 PoL- IC¥—A READING, PENNSYLVANIA. AGE THE BOTTOM OF AN ArDACTO’ From the Washington Post. A sensational scheme has just come to Ti connection with the Guiteaa case, Par Reading, Pa., have obtained the consent of one of the leadin, veyard” insurance companies to insure the life of Guitean ifa siznatare to the application could be obtained, wav feal_ examination. . Gaitean mupanying | of the well-bred lady from the mere wo- the apy xplanation | man. The dentelles of her trousean were was » party whe f French girl's. antiefpated the ree’ op me was recognized by cere oii: with which sheshrouded s . , y: the heroine of story was rwarded to n in ig ed froma venerable auces- bringiag taste in every country and at every te years a heresy has sprung up vul-arity, under the name of has made a too success- Queen Dentetle fram her oe x é mt tion lace bean per “ ngee to be tolerated first on “petticoats, sneakin ve ce a ‘ may FO | the genuine articie outside, ti = : . small trimmings, till by degree was promoted to more important offices, and | last it Saunted its false, flippant web in floances lars and shawls. Ladies ceased to be of the imposition, and talked plausibly ued with Hewer< oS iesens | abont the folly of sinking such sums in re ld put Guit i sroueh teent{ye | when the imitation looked just as well; it than it is in | prejudice all, and one got so tired of le just Hike Bill Jones, i ie always wearing the same Ince, ete. ple) Meantime, thousands of women, young and i | old. we e waiching the Nght between Real and E arehbalonee naples with anxious hear | nanan eiort dete - remained with the false lace, macconeasier yh cg ont the land of lace that has not yet been si- graveyard risks: tenead aaa tec Rane I was passing through Bayeux last week, and ee eee ting the glorious oid cathedral, I went to see the great lace manufactory of the place, the Maison Lefebvre, which was opened to me wor. It is the most important house in and I was anxious to hear all about the : : ¢ makers from central witnesses. A te Wake ace oe Primespieh | ster of the establishment did us the honors, and wil prov 7 ‘ | her father being absent in Paris, where the great | depot of the manufactory is, on_ the Boulevard | Poissonniere—a bright young girl, tull of enthu- ON | siasin about the beantifal fabric, which she spok 4 cbtaln | of reverently as the pee acne De tole . senene me that there existed a sort of school in lace- eee eines OF | work as in painting, that it was only in ceria: tnal Aid | distriets they could find hands light enougi to | work at the finest kinds of lace. ‘We can tell at once,” she said, “where an ouvriere comes from when she gives us a specimen of her work.” Formerly ail the lace was made at Chantilly and Alencon, but gradually agriculture drew aw trom lace-making, and the trade avif Normandy. Jt was the great Col- ; bert who first brought the fabric into France. Ung information trow G. to enals He was vexed at seeing the courtiers and their Ln een rap peng! tir thee Be pm s wives send such sums to Venice every year for the ~< ti ‘Guiteauis | Tich point lace that adorned thelr suimptnous the rest we | Court dresses, and so he induced a group of Vene- jan dentelheres to come over to France and set = up the school of point de Venise and point Stitson Hutenins, Esq. I @’Alencon whieh in time became famous. The The application is made out on one of the! peculiar stitch of these delicate laces is still regular blanks of the “Reading Mutual Aid As- | called point Colbert. Sociation of Pennsylvania,” being an appl he women in and about Bayeux have the tion on the “life maturity plan.” The name and | lightest hands tor lace that are now to be found Tesidence are filled out to “Charles J. Guiteau, rope. M. Lefebvre hasa great house in Bel- inzton, D.C.” The second question is for . but they can not get the same lace made statement of “name ot the person or persons for | there as in Bayeux. Indeed, as I examined the whose beneiit membership is applied for.” This | exquisite gossamer web, with the cunning de- is filled out to “Arthur J. Bordner, Reading, | vices raised on it like ivory, so clear and firm and ” occupation “insurance azent:” relation- | diaphanous in its elaborate and delicate detail, “no relation.” The amount of member- | I wondered how it could have been made any- ship applied for is stated at “210,000.” At the | where out of fairy-land. bottom of the application iS the signature of| I saw a yo dentelliere at work on a de- the beneficiary, “Arthur J. Bordner,” which is | sign in point Colbert; it is all done with the followed by that of “Calvin T. Lessig, securing | needle, and with a bit ‘of cardboard with a hole agent.” Arthur J. Bordner is indorsed upon which she moves along, so as never to the back as the “person who pays all dues and | touch the lace except with the needle. I assessments.” As Mr. Stilson Hutchins, of the | watched for about ten minutes while her needle Pest, to whom the application and instructions | ran to and fro amidst. the innumerable threads, were sent, says he is not in the death-rattle in- | sliding, darting, turning this way and that, and surance business, the scheme to realize on the | with a rapidity that was bewildering to follow. corpus of Garfield's assassin will most assuredly } She told me it would take her an hour to fini miscarry. the little raised ring that she was just begin- What is Said About the Matter. nil And we think we pay dear for lace! The above publication in the Post caused con- |. The Maison Lefebyre employs about eight » talk about the court house this morn- | h¥ndred women, and keeps them on all through : the year, whatever the fall inthe lace market ugh if was generally agreed that the | maybe. “But they can not pay them as they elf bere evidence that it was not a to do. Formerly a first-class dentelliere genuine proposition. The geutleman connected c ne pe ales any Rnowiedee of | us atl tis ouly roe: tlie Maison Lefcueie: All aiong the villages on the coast where you 4 a 5 unk tia of Penasylvenia, whi out acvording to th ts i a, suc ht of it. over their cushions, they will tell you their day's of it before I saw it pub- | earnings varies from ten to fifteen sous! Mr. Guitean. “Of course. it | _ It is very pretty to watch them at work. They tions propos and the naines | use a couple of hundred bobbins at a time; and wubtless £ is marvelous to see the rapidity with which the little weapons fly in and out and round about : i yy the t the threads, fine as cobweb fivres, and regular insurance men on the co-operative asso- | that seldoin snap under the deft fingers.’ Ten r work like this, when we pay in ees hi rant: da half toa common seams- THE JEANNETTE DISASTER. tress who comes into turn our old petticoats upside down! ; Further Particulars—List of the Rescued | Spanish lace, as the silk blonde is called, has and ‘Those Still been in fashion the last couple of years, and the specimens T saw here were very beautiful. But the black Chantilly surpasses all the laces, to my Apart from its own beauty its special ‘on is to beautify its wearer. No other lace is so becoming, so flattering to face and ficar its transparent shadows soften theskin, making a clear complexion brilliant, and a dingy or taded one passable; its folds lends grace to the figur retreat to within fifty miles of ma iver, | Which you are cheated into attribating to the where the three boats were separated in a gale. | lines they drape. French ladies of olden times The whale boat in charge of Chief Engineer Mel- | (a? indeed the elderly ones of these times) knew Ville entered the east mouth of the Lena river | this well, and with that keen instinct about dress on September 17. It was stopped by ice in the | Which taught them how to make the most of it Fiver. We found a native village, and as soon | for ae beauty, they smothered themselves as the river closed I put myself in commrunica- | in Chantilly. tion with the commandant at Boloenza. On| The shaded leaf which has added so much to October 29 [ heard that the rst cutter, contain. | the picturesqueness of Chantilly was invented ing Lieut. De Long, Dr. Ambler and twelve | by the grandfather of the present M. Lefebvre. others had landed at the north mouth of the | The leaves are like painted shadows. The black ‘The commandant at Boloenza sent in | Chantilly is made of pure silk, the white, of stant relief to the whole boat party, who are al! | Wiread. | The white Is very pretty and leas ex- well. Ninaenean and Nora: arrived at Boloen a | Pensive than the black, but its beautiful rivals, on October 29 for relief for the men in the first | Point d’Alencon and point de Venise, eclipse it cutter. all of whom are in a sad condition and in | £9 completely that it falls into the shade near danger of starvation, and all badly frozen. The | them. commandant at Boloenga sent native scouts to | 1 had heard the dentellieres scattered about look for them and will urze a vizorous and con- | the sea-coast say that the marriage of the King stant search until they are found. The second | Of Spain had given an impetus to the lace trade, cutter has not yet been heard from. Telezraph eae ce Eure: etait Wi ee ee andl | made at Bayeux, Pe Fee ae se Ne eR mae Sa SGN OR F OC aecey Wad veer Gen GVO CN IE: Vie weal ue quite true, but partiy. They told me atthe Mai- The following dispatch dated Irkou ember Yist, has been received by the Herald : A LIST OF PEOPLE IN BOATS fs cabled. but the names are very much mixed: | gon Lefebrve that @ great lady of the Spanish As corrected by the Navy Departiwent records it | court had ordered a parare of point d'Alencon Feails as follows for the royal wedding, and it happened that one +—Lient. Com. DeLong, Dr. Amb-| on which the staff of the establishment had Myce (the Heraid correspondent.) | been engazed for nearly ten years, with a view rmano, L. P. Noros, H. H. Erieh- | to the exhibition ef 1878, Wi y finished, ck, Adoiph Dressler, A. C. Gortz, Walter Lee, Nelse Iverson, George Boyd, Chas. Tongsing. “Whaleboat—Engineer Melville, Lieut. Danen- hower, John Cole. James Bartlett. R. L. New- comb, Herbert W. Leach, John Lauterbach, F. E. Mynsea, and one other. cost eighty thousand francs—not so much when “The above are safe. we coue to think that perhaps a hundred IN THE MISSING BOAT. women gave ten years of their lives to making “The second cutter, which is still missing. con- | it. tained the following: Lient. C1 William | ‘The Spanish lady sent it back, atter the royal Dunbar, Alfred Sweetman. Henry Wilson, E. P. | wedding, to be shown at the Exhibition. The Johnson. Edward Star, Walter Sharreti, and | new point de Venise which I saw seemed to me Albert Kaihne.” almost to surpass the old. The raised ivory- LIEUT. DANENHOWER SAFE. work is as close es Neg ee Oe or Mr. W. W. Danenhower, of this city, last nignt | !ike gossamer stitches as delicate and vai ie! received a cablegram from his son, Lieut. John in the antique, with the superadded beauty of W. Danenhower, of the lost Jeannette. The | “yim nie royal Austrian marriage also gave an telegram announces the safe arrival of Lieut. | e/an to the dentellitres, as many ladies from Danenhower at the mouth of the Lena river. | Vienna sent large orders for the occasion. Per- It says: “Arrived safe and well; sent letters | haps this accounts for the peasant women in home via St. Petersburg.” Normanly being generally royalists. They have EFING THE DISCOVERY OF THE SURVIVORS a | & Strong belief in a court as a divine institution SECRET. pal pects ee lace ade i Bo rc ares dispat: Post | *#ked why wn slack, “ What ‘on A ch from Berlin to the London eetuae! E° * pois ps 2—there is no king now, says: “Attention is now directed to the circum. | dames have no court to got” rece to be stance that the Russian authorities kept the | the answer. “And then the machines have kmowledze of the discovery of the survivors of | killed us. Rich ladies now are not ashamed to the Jeannette secret for a long time, and much | e seen wearing imitation. astonishment is expressed at their action.” It is amusing to see the contempt ot the wo- oper men in wooden shoes and cotton night-caps for Seeuneers ose Se the women in silk and velvet who wear sham ‘The Heraid correspondent at St. Petersburg | jace. They speak of it as something not actu- telegraphs as follows: ‘The governor-general | ally immoral, but as an eeceriaty to be over- Of Eastern Siberia, who happens to be at pres- | looked or explained on the plea of lax principles ent in St. Petersburg, having received informa- | S°neFally. They class you at once as s “real tion of the arrival of tae shipwrecked crew of | Cvey shatibe soar dress aay be athens eee the Jeannette in the region under his command, | Jot it be ever so fine, and you sport imitation, Immeatately proceeded to Gatsehina and saw | they set you down asa parvent. the Ersperor, who personally ordered that all I was surprised to hear at Bayeux that Amer- that were necessary for food, clothing, | iea was now the great market for the finest supplies money and transportation shoul be’ placed at ‘The cran New York yesterday found id in dictenant for eubeatiement mzainst Charles formeriy editor of the Dramatic News. was found at the instance of Jos. The Italian senate has, by a larze majority, a making aus to read and ‘qualification for exereisins the right and this was sent to her. engraved patterns. There was a deep flounce, a front pieee, and trimming for the corsage. It was the most perfect piece of fairy-work in thread I ever beheld, a mixture of points de Venise and Alencon, chiefly the latter. The complete set {| France, and when. The honor has been as-| ean for the village market, burn; and. if you say so, I'll take you down to with lace that will serve for a generation of than with fringes and sort of work— that serve for only one “Never costume, fabrica- never » interrupted. tions Of jet and braid and beads, which add As Jeanie sat on the old meadow stile, in the | doctor; viwe'll hettie aul thet, hereafter; vel go to see her, if there's anything I can do, any with green hazel eves, the range of color may Se. — extended to some co ler tones. Usually the ‘The Mysteries of Artistic Costumes, | complexion becomes a little fawer with greener BY EMMA GARRISON JONES. From ‘‘Beauty in Dress,” by Mine Maria R. Oakey. hazel eyes. though the general toue is the sama, enormously to the weight of our clothes and the radiant splendor. of the September afternoon, | should have let me kni long ago. Come to The following are the colors for a cool blonde length of our bills, and so ttle to the grace of | She was thinking of a Sabbath morning, whes | the fire and warm yourself, you didwe walk | _ There are several types of the red-haired, and | j94 ty Gomi gr ¥ our persons, Dressmakers will always thrive ice threstelisto die ont ite oil ana anette: [ou hls Knees, teal the sacred word to hi reatens to die out. old and middie- ees, reading the we is | please, sir, if youu Ge ches Dagar aged dentellieres will go on weaving their dell- | family. It had been a bright summer morn, and | once" ” SOT EMEN SO ze cate tracery to the end ; but, as many of them | the very scent of the roses and lavender, and| “Yes, yes; my buggy will be around in ten ee nite ee chap wilt ao the gusy hum of the bees, seemed to come back | Minutes.” I was just coming over to see you. better in service, or helping ua in the fields.” | to her. Mite Jeanie I've got a letter for you.” each requires a different “treatment.” Red bair | Biue bi with blue eyes must be differently managed from | Cold iy = red hair with gray, or green, or brown eyes. The | Blue whit, following are the colors to be chosen for red 3 bair: The colors to be avouied are: White, of a creamy tone. Ottve-ereen, Wana violets Black. Gr rar Diues, Ambers, “a letter for me. doctor?” : And so we may live to see the lace made to-day | Tt was her father's custom to require Jeanie | «A letter tor Jeante Goodwin, It came in- | {Uvisible green. | win. sold in the bric-a-bac shops amongst curiosities | and her little sister Dot to repeat a verse, when | closed to me—from Marshland, One Rathburn, | Hoh beeen that are out of he iad finished reading. That morning Jeanie’s | 8 !@wyer, sent it. Here it is.” Plum coior. THE CHRISTMAS BIRD. Verse was, “Inasmuch as ye have done it unto | _ Jeanie received the letter, and looked at it 2 with wondering eyes. She could scarcely break Our National Turkey — Some Points | 26 0f the least of these, my brethren, ye have | the seal, her tingzers trembled 80. - over?” her father sat in the cottage with the great Bible “Yes, sir, I walked; but I'm not cold; and amber, prouching amber mn = Dr. Farnsworth busied himself with his sad- | About Him, con does this mean, papa?” Jeanie had die bags vhile she read it, a suppressed twinkle | The colors to be ay From the Philadelphia Star. ‘And said: in his Se ened of all's aades. Our national bird is not so much the eagie—| Why, my dear, it means this: Ifyou were to | Jue Stostance of the letter was as follows: A | Hive wits. ot man ni: Hiram Burns, dying 1 Pale grooa. g i which few of us ever see, except at the Zoo, or | see a poor beggar sitting by the roadside and | \arstland, hat lotta will begeetnine eetee | Searle eas L : of the warra rarer still, on the gold pieces—but the more | ftve him food and drink, or shelter, the great 3 : hing a prett The warn ’ cottage and ground and something over six | _ All pinks appre rooming! savory, the more festive turkey. The turkey | /0'd would regard your kindness just the same | thousand dollars in cash, to Jeanie Goodwin. a | ful with red hair, seoomine te as if bestowed upon Himself.” ii : roed © may not soar so high in a patriotic sense, but | ‘This wasthe memory that eame back to Jeanie | {tHe girl living at Hazelwood cottaze, some . tw re y id Ti ie Gi im he touches the national heart more tenderly, | as she sat on the old stile. “She repeated the | hnying given bin Geo dollars to hae hier especially at this Christmas time, when men are | Verse softly to herself, and then, with tear | \arshiand, some seven years before, when’ she so susceptible to the tenderest intluences of | Tising in her blue eyes, she glanced over her j found him sitting by the wayside, iil aud penn shoulder in the direction of the village church- | jess and he, Hiram Burns, desiring to repay the Be yard, where her father now slept. debt with interest. Some writers assert that turkeys were known | Childhood's sorrow, however. is short-lived. | ““« gui” exclaimed Jeanie, claspine | : ; te : ! . clasping her hands to the ancients; but a writer in the New York | She soon dried her tears, and began to jinzle | + Oni echoed the doctor, looking up. Now, Era tells us this isan error. It is a nice ques- oe Bue ailver solar lp bor pocket iaesdeane there's luck, young woman! You'll be able to i ef lars! Oh, v and patiently y my bil ee wi ok th- tion, too, who first introduced the turkey into | Tat worked for them, picking bortion i thietot | PAY my bill, you see. I've written back to Nath sarmonion® fi rose pink, ul woe GeMe ¢ of colors: and the co: that offen sccompad “il women of th. T tabl ST ear, ns, from dark! V Worm grays. | Fawos Brown, and yellowish may Venture fart wn and purpic cribed to Jaques Carur, the treasurer of Charles | | When they were earned, and she hold them in | Nai now a aerrs Ghee go renee Cueated VIL; but this is a mistake. According to Cham-| her little, brown hand, mamina had said: Jeanie could not speak: her heart wastoo full. pier the turkey was only known in France | ,, "They are ome deans: you shall do with | After many days, her childish act of self-sacrifice Just prior to 1560. Brillat Sayarin thinks | (ru, ** You Hike. Buy a now for yourself, | had bbeen rewarded. Anil Wepemed to come, t00, |that the turkey was introduced in Eu-| “Mamma, no, no, please,” Jeanie cried, | *2 sbecial Christmas gitt. 2 wpeathe Daeg Tope toward the end of the seventeenth cen-| breathlessly. ‘I will do without the hat; let | auietormate thee Theta her mother was | fi Gola er baa tury, and that It was brought from America by | me buy the dolly with the eyes that go to sleep sey i the Jesuits, who bred them on a farm near | and the darting little bed to put her in, for Dot, nOst Gifficult spe to dress is th _ green, or light matte” skin, ioe of colore— live in the pretty ¢ottage at Marshland; and. not | ments showld be amber, “or gold, ; any ‘marris Farn- | color can be as food with this type as black « Bourges. Men, says Savarian, who pretend to | the dear. Oh, mamma, she has wanted them so | Ways, mouths alter, Jeanie Ee Shite Witte ent and eee ne be wiser than their betters, have asserted that ; long.” ———_——_-e.—______ portunity needed for tie eff the turkey was known to the Romans, that it| ‘‘Do just as you please, Jeanie, love; you A Doleful Ballad of n Collar Stud. | and the wisite of a creamy was served up at the marriage of Charlemagne, | Worked hard for your money,” mamma said. pares cambric, tulle, or musiin, and that it is incorrect to attribute to the Jesuits | And now Jeanie was on her way to the vil- | From Harper's Bazar. variety of costume with the the honor of this savory importation. In many | lage to make her purchase.’ Dot was weakly ‘The dance be transparent xrenadine, or o nuere | | parts of France Jjesuite isa familiar name for | and somewhat deformed—poor little mite—and S a¢ half-past eight, And Charley’s late and tn a flutter; i | turkey. The very name in the French language | could not accompany Jeanie. But Jeanie had | . His toilet must be very sweil, would seem to attest its American origin, for | Kissed her when she set out and said: And quite to all extremely utter; | this country was formerly designated Indes Oc- ‘Now, sit here, and be patient, and watch for His very hurry makes him slow, | cidentals—hence dindon. Besides this is the | me, Dot; I'll hurry as fast as ever I can. and you Jecause he knows he mustn’t linger— | only country wiere the turkey is found wild. _ | shall have the big dolly in your arms the very | Warn Mgr peace et ang anger A turkey in prime condition, properly cooked, | minute I get back.” . is a dish of which few persons refuse to partak Jeanie thought of Dot, as she jingled the two It must have fallen on the floor; one of two mistake ‘he young hen turkey. plump and fat, is usually | silver dollars in her pocket; and springing from He stoops and hunts, but cannot find it: | in hopes of mit | preferred; though a young “Tom,” being larger, , the stile, hurried across the meadow. When she Perhaps it rolled beneath the bed, is to Wea . Which, however, fail to pro and weighing from ten to fifteen pounds, can | came close to the great elm that stood by the | Amd hides away secure behind it. either armony or contrast; the other isto dre | hardly be surpassed when well roasted. ‘Tie | Wayside she stopped short. Sitting beneath it in vain he creeps on hands and knees, i “2 5. » from dark te The jewels and orr | first and esse j thiysts. topa ) aan ents for this type are, then pals, ame se (the stone, ' ‘Around each bed. post feline, pecriags n colors and grays, as if hopin a | old turkey Is best for boning, and is excellent | Was a man with a bandage across his eyes, and The sud ohoWhee Oe eee etting to give color to th Tue Draru SexTeENcE.—At York, Pa. Tues | when boiled. Wild turkeys are always to be alittie dog at his feet. The dog had a forlorn And halt it eight is quickly nearing, All this is futile; fawns da y Wickes overruled the motion fer @ of John .. convicted. in Octover last of the murder of Emily Myera, | found in the markets during the winter season. | look. and the master was clad in rags. Jeanie acomplexion either b | Their flesh is darker than the tame, and have a | looked on in silence for some minutes; and then He searches every inch of floor, browns are out of the question; soft pin | gamey taste. A Capon turkey, however, is the | drew a little nearer. i GS RE ee | blues well coatrasted with white of a ct most delicious of all, being more tender, succu-| ‘Good man, are you blind 2” she asked. sD MeO edit oiee fe A Rea The death sentence was then passed npon the are you = a now @ ams “ rae one, or black, make the best « prisoner, wh played b " : ent and tiner flavored. A'turkey gobbler, two | _ ‘No; not entirely.” answered the man. “I've | mys nay amulet ROL for Joking. | eves are seen dark sere prisoner, who displayed but litte emotion, years and eight months old, was presented to | had a sunstroke, and the light hurts me. He cannot wait a find them green with ti | meeting of the stockholders of the Mr. Buchanan at his inauguration, says Colonel | _Jeanie’s tender heart was moved. She drew He rises to the crisis then, rs are to be choss devated Railway company, in New Devoe, which weighed thirty-four pounds. He | Still nearer and patted the little dog. Exclatming—happy thought—“Il pin it!” 9 bever dul, » terday, it was resolved to sanction and was not served up at the inauguration, but was | “What makes you sit here?” she asked at Creamy wht left to strut around the garden of the Presi-| last. ‘‘Why don’t you go home?” PY sof wear ontrn OO ad | Pale pink w. dential mansion, much to the terror of the| “I am trying to get there, but walking makes ‘Alast his collars pinned avtys a ‘The colors to be avoided small boys who ‘ventured into the enclosure. | my head hurt.” 12 His face shows traces of his worries; ; | He was doubtless looked upon as a member of | ‘‘How far is your home # He has suspicions of his hair, the kitchen cabinet. Another turkey sent to “Nearly a hundred miles.” And dreadful doubts about the parting— President Johnson for his New Year's table, | _ “Oh, oh! Yousurely don’t mean to walk that, Forgotten to consuit the glass January, 1806, although not quite two years | far?” cried Jeanie. In all the flurry of late starting. old, weighed forty-seven pounds. Every caller, | “I did, but I can’t make much headway making, with the exist~ f the capital stock of the : ital stock, $26,600,000, A MEDICINE FOR WOMAN. , | greens. All Tictt toues of claret, maroon, purple, ete. s He finds that all the prettiest girls Olive green. it is said, received a portion of it, and what | Now. i : i atlas they did not eat that day the cook hext morn-| “Why don’t you go on the cars? DESH aenel oan ie oe ice an ee SEER SE: MR ing fried. The man laughed scornfully; a sad, half des- ‘The object of derisive glances. Cnr Geta tie ee Not every one, however, knows how to fry | perate sort of a laugh. The row of Wallflowers round the room— isda ee ncmore ase turkey: Cut in neat pieces the remains of the} ‘‘Because I haven't got a cent,” little one. Fe ae ee ng nine mactly Redod; ensues turkey, make a batter of beaten eggs and fine | ‘‘Poor man,” sald Jeanie, “are you hungry?” | Neconsolatfon cam afford | eee ee PREPARED BY A WOMAY bread crumbs, seasoned with pepper, salt, and | {Not very; T got a bite on the road.” = sf ples = pounded mace or nutmeg, add afew sprigs of | “But you're tired and sick?” But yet, concealing his chagrin | parsley minted; dip the pieces of turkey into “Yes.” (For Chariey still was of the boldest), this and fry thema light brown. Take a good There was silence a minute or two. The He put a look of courage on, Blue 1G e gravy, thickened with flour and butter, and fla-| elm leaves rustled overhead, and the little And chose the thinnest and the oldest. Fawns, All Shades of blue, LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Vored with mushroom catsup, and pour over | dog watched Jeanie, with wistful, entreating | AS.gillantly he led her out Lilie and violet, them. Serve with sippets and sliced lemon. | eyes. DIME neteEe teen The colors to be avoided fre: Few breakfast dishes are more delicious. “How much would it take to carry you home, ret His heart in secret beat serener. Pale green, |All fade colors, too subtle “There is one thing to besaid about turkeys,” | poor man?” she asked, suddenly. i Old gold. 1 tones, like 8 4 Posrrive Ccne said a farmer on Market street yesterday toa | “Two dollars.” He took her out to supper, too, Perhaps no color surpasses the effec pe | Par att theme Poland Completa ont Woatmamsay . Star representative, “and that is they don’t | The child recoiled, as if froma blow. A hot ‘And gave her wine and Cake and tees, lieved biack with this type. J ‘ common to our best gemale population. touzhen in proportion to their age; like other | color rushed into her cheeks and her lips quiv- | Amd souzht to pass the thme away cashinere, or silk high i kinds of poultry. Some ladies come to me, and | ered. She put her hand into her pocket, and cheered common| vet ribbon, about are very particular to ask for young turkeys. | clutched the two silver dollars. ‘And one by one the guests departed, mond, or simply But no turkey will taste right fit is eaten soon | “I’m sorry for you,” she said, hurriedly, ‘but And to his chamber he returned or a ruby, or gari AYSt, oF chryso- | after itis killed. It ought to be kept some | I must go—indecd, I must, go.” n . As dull and wretched as he started. DD or emerald. j days, if the weather is cold enough.” She started off at a rapld pace, her hand still ck velvet should be avoided where the | Tt will cure entirety the worst form of Female Come Pisints, all Ovarion Troubles, Inflammation and Ulcers tion, Falling aud Displacements, and the Spinal Weakness, and is particularly adapted to the ‘Changes of Life, § : At will dissolve and expel Tamors from the Uterus im ge eee clutching the money in her pocket. Presently But later, sitting in h!s room, are too startling. With black hair and | ly stae of dew ‘The tendency of Cam- Removing and Transplanting Shrubs. | she stopped, however. and looked back; and, | In iueldncholy mood undressing, zit color the effee pA teats; | locrone ltmton be theedied sary avontinrae arena? Attention to the following simple rules will, | between her heavy respiration, she repeated the imiiat one woulk RATaLy caiba blessing; thouzh often excee dark | It removes Faintnem, Flatulency, dostroys all Ore- says Sylvia's Home Journal, insure success in | YeTS¢: “Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of ‘And as the cause of all his woes d be more hat ‘ i- | vings for Stimulants, and Relieves Weakness of the Popped tanocently from his stocking, sacolorthat should be yery sus- | Stomach. It cures Hicsting, Headache, Nervous Pros- anguage Was, I grieve to say, ched with black hair. It is very | tration, Genera! Debulity, Slecpiessuos, Depression and. ‘Too quite unutterly shocking! the removal and transplanting of ornamental | {least of these, my brethren, ye have done it shrubs, &c., work which can be better done Five minutes went by. Jeannie looked to- contrast, and needs much | Indigestion, the women sitting at the cottaze doors bent | duriug this month than at any other time. | wards the villaze, and then towards the nan be- +e | brown or yellow in the complexion to make it | The feeling of bearine down, causing pain, weight Never attempt transplanting in wet, sloppy | Heath the elm tree. A Generous Confidence Man, pleas | aud backache, is always permanently cured by its use, weather, and let holes be prepared in the new |... Jt is just as if the great Lord himself were | From the St. Louis Republican. 1 j Zround before the plants ae removed from the | Sitting thero,” she said at last in an awed tone. | ‘There was a look of sorrow on the face of a old. Be careful that these holes are wide | And then she retraced her steps. | certain man who stood up at the bar of the cen- F Gark | swim at all tines asl unter ll chouneenen ai! enough and deep enough, and that the bottom : ne ps were | tral police office yesterday morning. Capt. wn skin, with | +. harmony with the lawsthat govern the female age: soil is broken up and well soaked with water. t colorless, so terrible had been the strug- | : teeth o:ten | tum. . in taking up. any large shrub, bind the lowes | £!3 but in her Young eyes shone a stead Sepuchte BAe, Torah ala Wass tien Ok ta, i the cure of Kidney Complaints of ether sex this heudus tothe tan win Ge Dae to pre_ | Tesolute resolve. She put her hand in her pocket | cated, and taking up a bloex of paper he spoke Conipanced in waencpeeeth, vent injury, diga deep trench aronnd it, some | #24 drew forth the money. in kindly tones to the sorrowful gentleman, Hutte distance from the stem, release the surface | 55 jyure>Paun eanly Cane nese CWO dollars and roots as the work goes on, but do not cut them . : ixon more than necessary; reduce the ball of earth it| _ Te man pushed up the bandage from his eyes euoess and looked at he tant eh Cheer peppery ; rpms toll epread the root well out in layerscavoraing | Picking berries, Twas gotug to buy a big dolly; | raunoad ticket, and started me off for St. Louie, ian ie eg So all trampling or treading tit i not’ only. une | but—but—" her volee choking—T'd rather wive | Hat he did aot meet nie. ieee Laon terre re | elinded to melane tendea- 5 écdseary bat Injurions; anda coptons watering | fe rane to you. | We couldn't say our prayers | dead broke, and that man in Chicago has zot the teeth often | 3 1 g2owld be without LYDTA E. PENTTANOS aCA On Opeiatnmin nop: i; | to-night, Dot and I, if I left you sitting here.” | {y0. Bo leary hing for mer | 3 rhite, andthe niouth larze. Black | LIVER ViLLS. ‘They cure constipation, bilowmmem e operation is finished will settle the She forced the money into his hand. all my money. Can you do anything for me?’ ralloved with ianan t it ‘el aad torpidity of the liver. 25 cents per box. soil far better around the root of the newly| fWhets your mone?” hte aah ‘cWhere a Capt. Fruchte smiled a benign smile as he | Pelieve Susparent white, a deck warm | = planted shrub. Use stout stakes for suppot youre’ jouensiney “heaken here do | seratched his wend, and remarked that he | Eras ant erwsunal gesenaed ee Hull | gg S27 SOD wr att Davocters. at three, ifthe shrub be large and tall. If these | ¥°U 5 guessed he couldn't do anything in the premises, | ed, te best setting for this type. There | _* instructions be carefully attended to, no further | _ “Jeanie Goodwin's my name 1 live across | but he certainly admired the generosity of the | iS. Indeed, Very littie color in it, and no color is | . watering will be needed, but if the’ season is | Yonder, at Hazelwood Cottage. Good-byt 1g | Cltieago confidence nan and his skill in shipping | truly harmonious with it. Especially where the | JR. METTAUR'S likely to prove a dry oné, some litter or half-| ie pre Spe thine in ye B fob, and | his victim to the city of St. Louis before giving Steeda _ aye 0% “ can be done as to rotted dung may be placed round therootsupon | Tot keep back. the tears she could | him a chance to squeal to the Chicago author- Se iiieiane cae coe ase, HEADACHE PILLS the surface of the soll, | Perpetuals, and Indeed | °1 yeh vowon’t grieve, will we?” shewhispered | ties The vietim of the Chicago man, John | _,White lace, to cast soine I rnin ope ame roses of all sorts, whether on thelr own roots or | ,,.)ot wewon't bear they | Smith, departed, and when last’ seen he was | Phe, etwt is then of an i “ . oni November "Ifne would bane a acto or | nestled together inthe same bed, “-Only think, | Wendine, hia wa} to the, Union depot, hoping | Hack and waite a photozraph from the Dor. | Gory me wean Sue Be November. we would have fine flowers, this 9 2 * | against hope that ie Chicago man would re- - ’ ate ite te clean body of of removal ought to be carried out with all roses | Dot. ‘tis just the same as if the great Lord him- | Dent of hisdeed, and show up with, the money, | Hight and shade, and the expression of the iace, | i,.art form, cloning the Dory excomeof every fifth or sixth year. A change of soil is elt had been sitting there ander fhe elm tree, iis . are the points of interest. If the throat and | "A full size box of dese valunbie PULLS, with full a st ¥ e vel ef on © te cul or o address. ity Deneileal, and If this eannot be had by a about the Digdolly, Dec?” om” Wewon'tfret) 4 False Estimate of Womanhood. Sete aii a eagivent no pellegly iy Fre Hreyitit tine inercett otageeaaupes Bor sale bg change of uation must be gained by 8)" tay f course,” vered Dot, obli; ly, | From the Philadelphia Times. z= druggists at 25 cents. thorough renovation of the old spot. Roses a, OF cons, fase ot ceneingls, ; haired than that with pale skin and biue eyes. delight in a fresh, rich soll, and fine flowers can | “andthe rag dolly’s just as good after all. Judge Noah Davis, in sentencing Mrs. Cole- | jts possible range of color ia wide; Its most ja: _ only be obtained by a very liberal treatment. Years went by; years of patient and incessant | man for the shooting of her lover, took occa- | dicious range of color omits yellow and greens, bs jdt Sd Maral darting toil to the widow and her children at Hazelwood | sion to warn women against going into public | and. though it may wear purple, nothing will be TESTIMONY OF THE CLERGY: A Plea for Honest Industry. es ee wore foneng cares ae to | without an escort. In this he is upheld by such pte See ean Some rots; though the es eep want from their door. ot_was almost jue are the best lues of the sapphire shades, ? An honest artisan is inthis way as much to be | heipless, and the mother herself was frail, and at | Of the New York papers that have discussed the | 2.1 bines of the Chinese colors, suc Rev. Thomas Guan, one of the most eminent: respected as a physician or a lawyer. Only a| last fell ll ‘The heavy burden of care rested on | subject, The judge holds that a public thor- " plors, fut as come in| Pica itae cowtry fast OF Mowat Vernon Be the Canton crepes, cannot be improved upou for | Church, Baltimore, Md. ; pernicious pride can separate the man from his | Jeanie’s shoulders. oughfare or place of amusement is unsafe for | ¢) ‘type. The reds can pag though the | _ Thaveno hesitation in assuring you that Dr. women because they are brought in contact * TAUR's HEADACHE PILLs have proved most must De satisfied, either by his own labor oF by | and medical attention; poor little Dot's pale face | 18 but a poor estimate of American wouaniiood | jue “erase eae hie atl ee PANE: | eos. Tmoneas Gann, pastor M. E. Church, Hager the bounty of others. And each man may be betrayed her lack of strong, wholesome food, | that assigns them such a position as this. Nor whitevand black, both solid and transparent. Ee, the football of fortune, and pass through all de-| and a debt hung over the cottage, which would | 40 they deserve it. One of the characteristics of | " 1¢ jg useless to go beyond these celoss: ho great beneht. Iam vow seventy-nine years old, clensions of adversity. Amid all vicissitudes, | soon make them homeless. American women abroad, which surprises Euro- dj % —3 P ter effect can be gained for this type. For orna- | bave ber, subject t Constipation a number of however, independent bread may be won by the | _ Sudden'y she remembered that it was Christ- | Peans, Is the independence and dignity with = ‘or this type. | For orna- | Your Pills have acted eo pleasantly in my case, the LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND is prepared at 233 and 255 Western avenue, Lymn, | Mass, Price $1. Six bottles for #5. Sent by mail im the form of jills, also in the form of lozenges, on neoeipt saying: “How much have you lost, and how did you lose it?” . “I lost $200,” said the man with the longi- 248 = ments, pearls, sapphires, opals, diamonds, and | time 1 come t Baltimore | waut to thank you day. But, alas! there wasno Christmascheer | Which they travel about and keep in their place i oti % % Yours truly, THOMAS GAM. He HONS. it is therefore the plain duty of all | how she would have liked to buy some little | Judge Davis warns them. like the souvenir de Malmaison, white camelliasy| Juve Dr) Meryaun’s Hranacue Pris toa man who parents to train their boys industrially, untess | Wow Ste woul If American women are so weak that they | the wild frmed-ventian, lien white Lilacs*| watin be witha bod stack of blows Fever, and tn tow they have ample means to launch them into the | "Jeanie stood in the door, and looked out at | cannot be trusted to go to the theater alone, : , ze-bloasoins, sometimes violets, and the | ‘49 be was out attending to bis farm work. professions. With our ever-augmenting popu- 4 and of so little sense that they cannotrteach ill. | OTe" J Rexpectfally, LEWIS A. lation, lurize numbers of both nexes will contione | the fast-falling snow. A tall, slender girl, grac- y pare Ch purple pansies, and water lilies. Rev. 1. E. Perens, pastor M. urch, Urbana, aig . ful as ayoung willow, with a sweet, face, | mannered Intruders their place, then it must be |" Wherever there is red in the compossition of | 1 have ured one box of Dr. Mersat a ieabacm to e ata be mes oe Deniers | and tender, resolute ‘eyes. Tt was an inclement owned that our system isa failure. In England the hair, green (not a pale green, which should | P#-15, apd found them most beneficial. Please = a Me Meade ae oekes tee cpiblb afternoon; but Jeanie was determined to face | and Germany, where human nature is about the | pe only worn by blondes, or a bionde that has ‘Yours traty, LE. PETERS. ra toberving | otinnd nay have a pei | the storm. She had formed a purpose. same as it is in this country, women are not the | deepened with maturity toward the “chatain” | Bex. G. W- Hoses, pastor M. E. Church, - scien WE taking’ ane es he | , “Dot,” she whispered, approaching her sister's | slave of “escorts.” They go to the theaters, | color, when it should be a warm, pale green) | Thave given my wife, whoisa sufferer from “Pm going they visit the art galleries, they, in short, de- . finds enough to keep himself and family in com- | !W chair. “I'm going to see Dr. Farnsworth. y visit the leries, they, in shor will be becoming, and the dark shades of =| Dr. Merrave's Heapscne PILis, and one dowe Don't let mother know. T shall not be gone | pend upon themselves, and t] ig neither | will bring out the red in the hair, Light blue | Puls tas always cured her. fort. His lot is, indeed, a happy one compared ” palin of peanriet ce ri Pin a w. momna: with the struggling untrained man. It is time | !B¢: dear. question of pipislety nik Oanger snoatred may be very effectively worn with very dark — ga : ery She left ttage, and the fields | Boston and Philadelphia, too, women feel no ir in its col tis ally for parents to understand that the youth who is | with'a rapid step, the show bestlog In her face, | Insecurity In_depending ‘on themselves. They | Ha,that has red ao seth er ial eee) when the complexion is or very delicate. ing. Zod with ead fo minor. Te | a a a en Sage Nor wit tas | Hie vite Ina cne demands he iat |_.co SOL EROPRIETONS BALTT¥ORE a von is iant elm . Jeanie . rosy, or the com v 3 Reg § Seti Rent ae atte ote to | paused for breath a pi her eyes filling with | that American theaters or thoroughfares See brown, black, or zolden hair. ace! ery SURE CURE FOR MALARIA. Re rea i epee eoeee ie en fares tears. It saddens us sometimes, to see how | source of danger or annoyance to any a The brown-baired type, with warm brown tee place in human destiny in the past cen- | Song and changeless nature Is, when the dear- | haved woman. Birds of prey know Prat | Skin and brown eyes, seems often to have an ti bl e onl: duced theterintnewee ‘of effects | ©®t treasures of our hearts seem to be slipping | A modest woman can 50 comport herself instinct toward certain barbaric contrasts blue av the ingximum will fall upon those com. | &WaY from us. and red, black and yellow. Blue and red, and Ing upon the scene. ‘They will be welzhtea with | , Jeanle hurried on, under the snow laden aris blue and yellow are very fine with it ; but black, nlleg nsibili jes, thet will phe higher | branches of the elm trees, and along the self- blue white, and all and cold colors must tastes, more numerous appetites and desires. | me path her childish feet had trod on that ey woeee. be avoided.’ All the bin Gan tag ath be lee able to bear poverty and | Memorable day when she was on her way to rich. The follo despalr:” Order is heaven's frst law: ttm also | Butchase the big dolly. She did not recall the that of soclety. Parents neglecting tie business thoughts lcd he Pe ee training of their boys defy both divine and hu- Y ey man ordinances; and the suffering of the un- classed is the atonement for the of- fence.— Chambers’ Journal. ma. Bg Sores a getting to step into his father’s shoes, Fouxp Dgap iy A Cuair.—Reyv. Father Sax, ho aitiog ih é ate many years parish priest of Etchem in Church, eo eve Queded. whieh was beautifolly decorated at. his ee pouty, ingulring own expense, was t dead his chair, where he had been read! paper. Scene See SURE EER LanD Sa1.eg IN MARYLAND.—Dr. Chas. Golds- Lt ara his farm, tape acres, in the