Evening Star Newspaper, March 3, 1883, Page 3

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SPHINGS FANEI0>> | been improved. Certainly they have a finer clothed, without betng consigned to fashionable] MINNIE CONWAWS TROUBLES, COLD WAVES. BRIGHT FANCIES OF THE POETS,| 7 ist OF LETTERS REMAINING IN ame richer finish than haa been the case for yexrs | Coeaietane Englishwomen wore stont sensible Sri 4 cer ries, Ls Pre TTERS REMAINING IN THR What the Manatacturers Have Done to | before the plain black silk was laid on the shelt— | shoes and wall ing boots long before French and | frying to Discover Whether She is Cor- They Travel rer ‘Themselves © Love, Come Back! SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1888. Make Wom: Beantitu!—Costumes | 4 fate due largely to the adulterations of the | American women could be induced to put them metist Levy's Wife or Not, Arounm im Silk—Costames in Wool-| erie | silk with materials which, while giviog in- | on, and it is mainly because ofthe walking ex- —— a a of | CTeased weight, soon imparted — ‘o.obtain any of L the = ° come backi—why 41d I let you call for “* AD at Home and Abrond—Getting and | ercises they have always taken and the freedom | 4 teteyram trom New York’ to the Philadel | gq M4 "aves; #0 called—a name for which we | 0 Love, “ tet you gor sifor “ADvERTing Lerreatt sig gpetigant mat How heavy streaked appearance, which destro; demanded for their feet that any considerable . are Indebted to recent meteorological science— | For empty day, and night of Superfiaities. beauty. But zures’ still large Bonet difference of size has been remarked between | Phla Times cays: The real .cause.of the eepare- | do not appear to move in most instances much | Bereft of flow'rs' perfume and song's retrain! wore Bho failed for within ouemonth they will be sunt — ane peome OF tne best of the early spring cos- | the feet of English and American women. The | tlon of Levy, the cornetist, am™Minnle Conway, | faster than a railroad express train. They Vary, | O pat pe eesican sarnom violets under snow? Brom Our Own Correspondent. tumes are made by eee handsome fig- | American girl of to-day can show a clean ave- | hisalleged wife, appears noW In proceedings be- however, in their rate of motion. And fre are | That warms, like wine, the wan veins’ ebbing flow! eM. New York, Feb. 28, | ured velvet with rich, plain silk of a high qual- | rage with her English cousin. fore Judge Donohue, in the supreme court. This ‘To breathe very “gay” | ity, or with satin-de-lyon, or ottoman silk. The iecatlaeed — — a Ceti 1 acanet the | last is undoubtedly the most. effective combina Geason. Ministers have preached against the | tion, but it is less eaitable for the young than told these other things about them in a timely Hife into passion by time slain— THE SUPERFLUITIES OF WOMEN. proceeding is virtually an effort to question the | article from the Times of Hartford: O Love, come back! The superfluous woman has received a great validity of the decision ty Judge Donohue in . Where do they come from? It is not easy to | To Know the purple splendor of Love's woe, rice Annie ain of dressing in the vain and costly manner | either of the others. Ottoman silk. however, | deal of attention, but the rapid rate at which | September last that Levy's Indiana @ivorce from | say. It might ba found. ifone could travel at | ADd Dot Racrets Taira Brown Aitvetta which marks “full” and fashionabie attire at balls | is very beautiful in itself when It is soft, rich | women are getting rid of their superfiuities | his first wife and his marriage with Miss Con- | express train speed from the mountains of Mon- | Above the Huien tie d-riding fane, peg and evening entertainments, and newspapers | @nd pure, and some elegant dresses have been scarcely excites remark. The reason is because way were valid. In her affidavit Miss Conway tana and the frozen region turther north, that | A¥a¥ — = friend and tender foe— es < have iterated descriptions of brilliant toilets ad | of Span et eee < yon ine uy it ie the Interest of the dealers to sell them, and | says she is led to. believe that the Indiana di- | the cold continectalt ewan cent iat back! ie ot Rauseam. Limited as the “‘society” area is, and | of white Mechlin. Soft pufie, not very full, are | "°Wspapers are habituated to writing up the i fede pp lured pean and on to Behring’s strait, with even a greater We Are Not Minecd. Brow jos A MEe confined to few persons, who are of no sort of | much used in the making of the skirts, and the | follies and extravagancies of women, not their Thdie Dittenhocfer with being a partyto the | dexree of intensity. In fact the coldest regton bart pitin ee consequence out of their little cirele, yet through | drapery is often cauzht up through one im-| economies or restrictions in the matter of ex- imposition. She has, she says, suffered much |!8 probably the wide expanse west, and es- If you or I Ingersoll WOM Mire the powerful medium of the press it represents | Mense buckle set a little to the left of the prin-| penditure. It is probably, however, a general from the imputation that she is not the legal | Peclally northwest, of Hudson's bay, in the To-iay suould dle, Hvale Manie the world they pine for to nine-tenths of the | ¢s8 bodice. tendency that operates in this instance rather | wife of Levy, and she wants to know by a just | Nelahborhood of the magnetic pole. A “cold ‘The birds would siug tue saute to-morrow, Leo Carrie 0 e outside of It, and | ¢ne moat popular oF tee ed aterms are AME | than an effort with a deliberate purpose to in- | decree whether ane ie mis wife or mor” Ghe seve | Wave” is @ wave of heavy. alr. following the je vernal Spring Tene carte ate eict sa tliton to tas aes tee Me showin oue-halt thelr ties he catsie | spire tt and furnish the motive. ‘The vell isa | she has no. desire to injure Levy, who has been | rarelied track of “low barometer,” and chanc- nd few would think of os ites Lynch La > Whose chief ambition is the desire to imitate | moons showing one-half their dises in one atyle | Spire of wetaatic an’ tecaal seclusion, and | kind to her. Judge Dittenhocier, who is and | ing the rarefied and-milder atmosphere (which few wou! 1 with sorrow. Hyneh Margaret entenbie than i feaite be There ie moehnne | of tial halt in another, and the centers rorm- | Tammats of monastic and feudal secinsion, and | kind to her. Judge Dittentoefer, wh ‘any im- | 1s usually also stormy) to one of clear, cold Yos, he is dead, Vawreuse ML desirable t it reailv is. There is nothing | ing a sort of mosaic of both. Silk brocades in half © tt Santee ae py leorun vere lone [croner hs tobring about the decision ing | Skies; a heavy air, full cf tonie power, and ex- 14 then be'satd; Louw’ Sante tuner the sun than the repetition | patterns of this description combine beautifully | half century. the thiok double orape veil ot the | Joreing te validitgrol the. Indians: ororcs, | nllarating, and hungerproducing, vo soundand | ‘Thecora wet ica th grass yleld has, tite Carrie, rtainments amons the same | with Kory fue ‘biack cashmere. and form very | Widow reached nearly down to the ground. | Mies Conway is singing at the Bijou Theater in | healtbly animai tife. ‘The eave low, n the sizht of their clothes | refined though by no means inexpensive tollets, Hue erie ser aes ‘smaller | “Heart and Hand, The estabiishment of the modern government aad tow woud coe cereale: an aiclepke sons [tte both fabrics should be handsome to be Wor | by'Gesrers and beautifully fees, until ladles, In. a Teather observation stations, with thelr appli sweet refreshment among the quantities of | thy of each other. a 7 id ances, inciuding the electric telegraph and the Mithiot Martha showy rubbich. Vor beads and tinselled gauze | NOVELTIES IN WOOL. eet oe Eaves ss retaien vat lees thac grata mee Oks Ae COLLEGE. Galty gress line anatled the souiiey vo sec land How few, alast Moutcomery ance or retinement. | They areciteus | a0. 46 nothin abne meniscal ates le ME thie ere. viingae een the Bet tuna =— compreherd something of the movements of Remember tvose who turn to mold; . splendor at the best, and need the yaslight and S 1K gent evott, | det enient el oy ese ee ee eens found | Some Cold Truth on the Subject. | {pm frequent cold wives. The movement is as Whose faces fade (ice Aap i ty Pageantry of the ring to make them pass | ful to sight and touch than some of the soft, | detrimental a Rabe ena swan Doe iea Tarkad Gui b-advunes ota volatile ecaeare: With Autumn’s shade shoe kane, op ey muster. “They are unworthy objects of einuia- | lovely, cracetully draping materials that appear | ®¢lVes the cherished yell has disappeared | i Ms rf Beneath the sodden churchyard cold! Dorvey Auna Releor Kate t and true hearted American | altogether except in gauze for tourist pur- | Bill Arp in the Atlanta Constitution, It Is one of the impressive facts of meteorolo- in all wool for spring costumes. Light as zephyr = Davis A Met Mrs O'Neil Kate ri oul . ses. The vell of the widow dies hard,| I see ina New York paper a grievous lamen- | gical phenomena. The telegraph heralds its Yes, tt ts so— Lowe A Osbin Miidred ‘Weetness should not be wasted | cloth, fine and supple in texture, rich or delleate | Poe, 2! freatly curtailed both In, length, | tation over the bad conduct of the boys in north | Start from the Rocky mountains (it always/ | We come 2a ee ee aes Coe Peta Pies Cee in tone, they bear the closest exam-| width and thickness. It has bezun to dawn colleges. This paper says they are growing into | S°e™sto bezin there, though in fact it rare AGS Orme . Donohue J O Mrs Peytou Leonora LINCERIG AT HOME AND ABROAD. the female mird that killing women with | ; does—having tts origin much farther north), ae Deni. Jeanie Paraiy' SJ hire 2 ination, and reveal new beauty with nearer | Upon the female mird that killing wot mobs at a fentful rate, They fight, and shoot | Coe, eayins tts oriain mach farther north), inter o'er, D Roane Annie There is no better evidence of the difference | a more intimate acquaintance. In fact, | lack of light and air behind folds of double ° he ie aay 13 Another takes our place instead. ne Jane which exists between the French and American are the opposite of showy, and their good | Engllsh crape is not ar from the folly and cruetty | Found, and rebel. and dictate terms to the pro- Fe an ee reece ee on muoaY — Rowe Josie . mode of dressing among women than the utter | qualities, to the superficial observer, seein to | Which offers widows as a sacrifice upon a funeral | fessor, and threaten to quit college if their de- | to 60, 7 3 To My Wife. r cost: | py 1 i usually it would seem about 50. Itrolls over thitare tn this country to naturalize theexijuisite | Vor rutuss rexstion fo thelr cat: but the | bytes and therefore crape. veils! are gradually Tae Dane ce paranted, and ihe jattor lays all | the country, a eal wave, af areal coterpart, en i which is so essential a part of the | appreciates them, and the traveled woman con | Obligatory—in fact, have gone to the bourne | Serine on ro 2 ee ican canly jon the Se convener, th He are oe ated ate pole love, Wardrobe of the French ¢legante. We use imita- | siders one or more indispensable to a spring | from which the widow’s cap never returned. } pes; ping ) ; the ocean; and its direction is usuaily from the “ ti at % eed “ly Your woe beyond the first few tears Strother Cami Wa, uaaernear hereto |outht, They do not der ‘much tam year to | Hut the vet lenot the only waperduty hat | $00 much development of muscle, Welle way | notthwent ta Ge soutieut. Tt aweepe slowly The world Will have Fou weeps Shane hana ble abroad. We | year, excepting that sometimes plaids make a | Seems to have become superfluous. Where are , be that theyhaye more of that sort of things bales et ne aa ita fide or the But say: “Tmake his heaven less! boyy hg hed undergarments, at | splutter among the quiet dark shades, the rich | the lace and linen cuffs, the spreading ties, the | than is necessary for good health, but Ite a very AER ORIEL in te Ate cie me oe Ey Opeth POG Ee Areanianne: Smith Katie & with vards of coarse | Wines and plum colors and the dainty ecrus; | bows at the throat, the scarfs, the fluttering poor reason for riots, and rows, and rumpusses, Aulgii Cee reese ecco te Ga And plant my violets, white and blue, Sonia n by the gross. But | but plaids, even when barred and blended in the | ends here, and the rosettes, buckles and orna- | and rebellion, and it is not the true reaso WOHUNER BEST Ce Cate alae cee ‘Above my place o: Test, ade French articles, sim- | rehest and most harmonious colorings, never | mentations there, which formerly made any | Those boys were not raised risht and most of | at reine ite chills Tesenée felt wavtee And tend them with those dear, kind‘hands ple in cut. flurable, and possessed of a | acquire genuine popularity; they always more | assemblage of woinen look more or less like @|’em have got too much money. That's what's | Clea Seana Tue bec Was wien le Thave so oit caressa; ny certain ref even in lowest _ grades, | or less hang fire and the real lovers of wool | Fag fair? Gone—very largely. The best-dressed the matter. Muscle don't ke anybody bellige- , fast ae (th e Guit ce Le tle 7 600 And say; “These flowers were his last will, CO nn is limited to atew American women of culti- | cling to their her mixtures, their soft | and best-bred young women are models of neat- | rent. On the contrary it isa law of nature that ere ee eae Fey se hn Uloies ie Ani for his sake I'watoh them sult jor Hannah vated intelligence, while the purehase ane tweeds, their twitled chuddahsand their speckled | ness; slightly young-mannish inthelr well-ftting | the most muscnlar men are the kindest in dis: | Miles almost due east of isha er Lottie x % ; And when the spring that I'si of the cost les of Ameri th rizoznes. Some large pal is in wine color and | Newmarket coats or redingotes, the close Derby | position. ‘They hardly ever get mad. T'ye seen fee secur a habe Tot cal ete Shall hush the bieh finer h lines of gold and bronze, shown | hats, and thick walking boots, and undressed | these puny fellows who could hardly knock a ny OURS: . vt I ne embroidery a play an imp with solid | kid or dog skin gloves. Round the neck is a | fly off a wall, get furiously mad_and buckle up | COT#! Islands, which can be reached by stea:ner Bui wot with feud ewer wite: Willams wescte re limited to trousseaux, to special | ts of the light tint in the plaid. | Narrow rim of collar, held by a gold or pearl | toa man twice his alze. One of them sort got Foe Oe cere n te eam Boe tt oud ake ae ene Does i biome aba ba, oeley enliits which few women atter marriage ever | dy the jacket is ot very dark wine | button; in front of this isa cravat or allk tie, } mad with Judge Hammond whilehe was making ward side of the Gulf Jose aia) Wat preaG a” a ‘Temple Bar. Weshingten Harriet find the means to duplicate. The fanlt is not pred plush or velvet, the vest is of ecru otto- | its knot or small bow fastened with a horseshoe | a speech against him in a justice court, and ‘tiermal current of ts oveal tomaver eaves them —_ am nen ae eee Restungton Howe their own. All ou k embroidered with a lisht vine in wine | Pin. The dress is simpler then that of young | danced up and down behind him and struck ftom tose, aad keeps thee in eine feliace ON ano a= Tey SE 0" and bronze, and fastened with small round | men, and only the skirts prevent it from being | him in the back as hard as he could drive. The i winter tak ahi teased ten ue aha tata ities m Man’s Soliloquy. Beughtman Mre Yeutinan Mary ship, and therefore not cheap buttons. ‘The skirt is kilted and the | more convenient and as well adapted to all | judge's back was two feet and a-haif wide, and the nowth wind. it-cxate cite cot Me Of ail te =, MISCELLANEOUS, superior manufactures, | tunic draped diagonally under the plaited skirt | emergencies. In the drawing-room the dress- | he simply looked around with a smile of lantrinalowehanccter ane ti mureealtin a 2eia0. 1 AM SEVENTY YEARS OLD TO-DAY.” | *"486 Pa. avenue” illed and trained labor from | of the jacket. maker still maintains her supremacy, so there | prise and said: “What you doing, Wilkins, wh: uO CUM ENCLeT 8 am I i - C rey m y bea i: £ NWS List, Kept af such rates that they areput |_| There are sine cloth suits in dark bronze and | Is as much useless frippery there as ever; butin | are yqu about?” “Ini afghtin,” sald Wilkins | {at may be at times cool, and frequently bois- ego niet end y at u i This road 1e1ds sure to death; Ashuhndo BW the reach of the ordinary pure myrtle green that are perfectly plain with veats | the strect the tailor has come to the front, and | with a hyena scream,and the Judie just went on TE a area ore anes nes tony rh bear the end; Addison Chas M 3 that the American woman abroad | of terracotta rhadames or ecru sicillenne; and | When he Js true to bis instincts, effects salutary | with his speech. lig coralseets Hava alll wistee aiteoane ae he suile-stones all are past— Avan Cone el ja the enjoyment of a ne others bh Which the reste mnteh the cloth in shane » or at least assists in bringing Geer Most of these college boys are the sons of rich | mate of spring. ‘That Is almost. ail that them, {* Istaried with a crowd. * jovely ie. bought color and only differ from it in being of pleated out. men—men who have been In a big hurry to pile ou = 4 Where are they now? es t adford to wear it. Hay- | surah or iadaien Long close fitting redin- | Headgear has recently been at y to p or the more southern islands of the ‘y % | Up money, too big a hurry to spare any time in e seg vinter “co! ravi T lost them on the road; . is known in London as a | gotes are made of cloth and faced with satin | cept in mere matters of detail. lookmg utter their children and raising them publ of one wines ceold arene a iknow nov how. thing being of the first qual- | rhadames over pleated silk skirts, whose up- | nothing picturesque to fall back upoi iy y right. These boys never know the want of a a, yones J ud ‘. chemisettes and | rizht folds form a simulated vest, the redinzote | cally—art and royalty have been alike drawn | Gollar, or what It costs to carn one n conse. Tee eee cau teess aa) wotent palimees ae Fey gphmedes sles that eost from $2. closing only at the waist. Spring pelisses and | upon untll they are exhausted. — ( orough | quently they feel uo concern on their own re- semble. zs . ‘They were not left behind; Vourine Henry B - seem to be all purchaseable at a | summer wraps are already being fashioned out | and Rembrandt, Van Dyke and Sir Joshua Rey- sponsibility, no fear of fature want, no necessity 2 — ‘They went before. , Lovg Jorn D unitorm rate of about three and sixpence In | of anovelty in pongee, containing a small ar-|nolds, Valasquez and Titian, Renbens and | of establic ng good moral character, no special oe 1D ME KNOW? ‘The way was full of hope, Poe ety pled and a few fran mure figure which relieves the deadness of the | Raphael. Henri Quatre and Marie Antoinette, | regard for the rights of other people, and so (nad eld a 01 Joy and bi road he underwear of Bi surface and renders it a most delightrul fabric for | Josephine and Mary Stuart, have stood with 2 iiss, lart, he .(1 | their evil passions zrow right along.and the good ‘Of pain, of woe and death— more subst: itis not finer, than tha, | this purpose. These are not cut close and plain | many others for “creations” as piaecoaly unlike | ones are Te thee and dle. Tiniepandence A Strange Story from Marshall Jewell’s And happiness, of much less burdened | like the cloth redingotes, but are shirred at the | the originals as Toussand’s wax figures Ike the | fs a good thing in a certain sense, but a feols Death Chamber. Lite’s journe: n ; ntation. The underwear of | back and held in at the waist and have linings | Persons they represent,and havebeen “revived” | ing of dependence is a ood thing, too. A boy Tatistoaye woman is tiner than either, and when | of thin plain or twilled silk. each season until now they are all in themarket | ought to be raised to know that he can’t run his | From the Hartford (Conn.) Times, February 22. ’Twas morning, noon and night— E for yeeasions it is exquisite. The |. Many walking dresses in preparation for | together, and ladies who pay their money can | Own machine that he will be obliged to have} On Friday morning before his death Mr. Jewell But one short day. satin corsets, waich with us are so rare. are | spring wear are destitute of drapery and hang | certainly make a choice. But the result is not | help of some sort, that his happiness and pros-| awoke froma sound sleep and inquired what ru Hook the record o'er with her an indispensable part of er wardrobe, | in straight folds at the back. ‘This Is certainly | 8 Yet order. It ischaos. Allthe manufacturers perity will depend upon his conduct—that he | Serle S404 eam color, heliotrope or pink, | Something to recognize and be thankful for. | Can do Is to “feel” the market by sending out } i naturally owes ity and consideration to his | W@8the matter at the residence of the Hon. The journey of a day— stor or tone of her costumi bunched-up walking dresses, with their | samples and watch which way the wind blows | feilo : h 8 | men, and if he don't pay it he will come | Wiltam BE. Dodge, (hisdaughter’s tather-in-law, 5 ees inky much less showy and / thick woolen folds, which earciess dressmakers for the currentseason. | For tire Nears past it | to grief. & poor boy leatus hisdependence very | the famous New York merchant.) Mr. Jewell’s My morn was spent in dreams; ee ie riety than that of the fashlona- | never fasten securely, have been a burden griev- | has specialized the large hat and the s - | s00n, but a rich one finds it out slowly. Those . el My noon was brizht; ‘tian ED, ebowel ; Smeriean, but her underwear is infinitely | ous to bear, and for a respite many women will | Net, With a penchant for the moderate poke on | S008. but coliege boys are most all rich, and now | eae ee Baader ais Heiter ad Ciouds quickly gathered round, Ghia iu'Geo Fo oy oad ‘ Wed that is, adapted to | be heartily thankful, | ‘The finish in other re- | the part ot the elderly and homely. or those who | they are setting ups sort ot blooded aristocracy | tHe sudden and unloo nde petra eee Gorcoran 3 J ister Ded FB . and to the simple. The narrow upright bands | heve net confidence in the correctness ot their | and assuming’a vast ainoune of hone but it was not deemed best to let him know that imine ts almost run; Camerm Sax NeMicol duo purposes for which they heck are retained, or are only diversified | faces and features. Asa protection to a little | musent be reproved, y rivi- , any such thing had happened. and he was, there- The hand that led me here MeHeary W R SILKS. Be ir etait 1 ars EDIE Td ae cee eet Yee yee, DORE. OE mouth, the poke is | lezes—lots of privileges. pre, told that all was well in Mr. Dodge’sfamily. Will lead me there. fae Soa cE > may rasistion: or} fe throat, and are duplicated in linen, with invaluable, and has besides a sort of quaintness | eontege for them to patronize it. v be; some- ierce E Be Nee ee ute OL EME | oCemnbenldery. ‘TholUNEHE Tine Golige ie ron | VinT HrecioMaToTTOeS SiO Cane longer hope | “Xow, we need to have some of those Kinds of | He *M! ne, that it could not possibly be; some Now let the time be short— Pre Jon ' Reizht that alwars appear with the hyacinth | more than an inch in depth, hias no corners, and | to be pieturesiue. | boys down south a long time ago—soung gen- | ting serious had happened; the family were tn Bias Pariunt J B Balbs in the florists wi is fastened with a gold button. Cutts are obse- | | The white bonnet, once so highly prized, haz | tlemen of blooded stock—punctillous and par- | gteat trouble, if not actually in affiction; ne Upon tists oe aoe ata doilar per dozen and the violets grown in | lete, the long gloves covering the close edges of | disappeared altogether. In ita place we have | ticular. and smelling around for an insult, but | Knew it Ina way which, if not explicable, was, Igo from whence I came, Queen P hot beds, and yet sold for ten cents a buach, | the sleeves, and the space, when the gloves are | beaded Bonne ctor ae pede Oct att gold | we haven't got ‘em now. Ancestors have played ; Nevertheless, as clear and certain asif he saw it, Lite’s journey o'er, Toner o 8 ach. ae 7 i = a ches s Ter These are the fonlards with solid brown, dark | 2°t i use. being flited with serpentine bangles. | braids or cords and attached to sott puffed’ or out, and money and nigger too, Even honor ! Insistine OF this, and refusing to accept his And be what Ihave been, : = gathered lace brims and tinted satin or velvet, aw ; : ib | family’s denials, he at length induced them to And notning iaore. Dine and wine colored grounds sprinkled over i erate Tined with satin and trinmed with softiy curt: | Heat guatinu neve.” Wace cree ee and BUR” | elezraph to New York to see what, wae the . DrakeJae Hnesell Thomas with little polka-dots, leaflets, tiny stariike | | The desizu tn pretty satteens are not so uni-| ine ostrich feathers, ‘The evening boanet ein Pt eee d Ae prec ake hl A Sea la Mey But Mrs. Jewell so worded the tele- My dust returns to dust, Beyan John Kaynond sev W@ da! U shaped designs. | They are cool |formls good this season as last. Some are | fact simply theafternoon visiting bonnet or re- | COUN HOW. except days 1 a Georgia college? | #ram as to instruct those who receivedit to an- My soul Will go to God. Dion Philip F Saat Drs and pleasant summer wear, and they look pretty | printed in great detached figures, which areugly | ception bonnet and has no special character of | Of course they don’t all behav: right jam up to | Wer that everything was all right. When that And be at rest. ‘ Bewitie aur Smith Geo M in contrast with dull heavy cloths and the thick | and unbecoming, and carnot be redeemed by | ts own at all. For summer wear in the country | ali the proprieties of ilfe, fur there are Some boys | answer came they told it to Mr. Jewell, who Tye outitved all my e: ee ey oe es Gee SG winter fabrics, of which the eye has become | fagitlne an TOU Jess | t fs sald that large black hats and black hose | horn with the devil in ent and they camt help | Fefased to belleve it, and at last asked them to My hopes, my tears: age Feed Stretjas’ t the fashion of them dees not rele cee Ie ctideeatign | Will be the correct thing with white walking and | ft butin the ena ‘our boys behave well. | let him see the message Itself. This request Thave no piace for mirth, Efrincheusen Geo Scion Jas r to year, and they are now | Cousplcuously bad. but have not the suggestive- | ‘arden costumes, and that when terra cotta red | [© 3 s being granted, and having the ocular proof And less for tears. pans, Bhaw Jus relezated to quiet elderly iadies who ; Ne# of garden and forest of last year. In other | Or crashed stawberry are preferred, hoee and | a before his eyes'in the shape of an unmistakable We a Freer Byron Beereett mann ore use for fashion, but prefer that | Words. they are stiffer and muré conventional, | hat must mateh In tiat a8 Well as color. PRISON PETS. v Bide Awee—Dinna Fret. onder CW Romer: Warrie which is gentle and familiar to the eyes and the | the flowers urally treated and detached | “There are many fancy materials for bonnets, | — Fiscuse Baw’ Salivan Win touch. . from the delicate leafaze and fibrous accessories | yat nothing, eo Good. #0 seful; Or that can be | Hew Iaw and jaice, Mirdv ana Cate 1 know there issomething Is the road very dreary? Poker sam M, 6 ey In very nearly the same cateory ec of last year. There are exceptions to this rule | made sobecoming aa fine straw aud Se Are Trained in Concord Cells. the matte ething ous has hap- Patient yet! Field WG ‘Thompson Edward are known distinctively as “summer” silks, the | 12 @ class of charming productions, in which chip. The old chalky white chips we | pened in Mr.Dodge's house in New York.” And | Rest will be sweeter If thou art aweary, Gordon Chas Trainor JO ir stripes in grays and | all the new pink. bronze, brown, leaf green. | but with the chalkint. the stu dress Fs | From the Boston Herald. that Impresston he retained until, so soon atter- | And after night cometh the morning cileery, rem gre qoenecnd ED nd lilaes and black. Quiet | Ad strawberry tints are blended most hiarmont- | disappeared and the eliip bonnet well lined soa | It Is somewhat surprising to what an extent | Ward. he too, ended his earthly life. He sui ‘Then bide‘awee and dinna fret Geddes E Yau Doren Howard gad unobtrusive are these alzo and famous for | Ously in flower clusters—small moss roses, car-| sarmitured has become & thing of beauty. | soi i eon will ean yived Mr. Dodge only about 28 hours. His feel- ‘The clouds have silver lint Grav Jno. Woodruff & Co Freartog qualities. but like the foulards, change | Nations. and others on solid srounds with a | ""\t'is quite common now with English tailor- | 2 Confined in a prison will succeed in domes- ing that ‘something serious had happened” was cpa mart ead Ganiee Wants littie from year t and for some years past | Solid plain fabric for combination. The dark | mage dresses to send close-titting hat or bon- | ticating different kinds of animals. This prac- | apparently as clear and strong as It would have | And, tho’ he’s hidaen, still the sun Is shining. Whitman br have been prin employed for children, |*hades of crushed strawberry and the softer | Det made of the material of the ‘dress in the | tice has, perhaps, never been more successtully | been had he personally witnessed the death of | Coufage! Instead of teats anid vain repining, Whitcomb ET Hittle girls and their sisters of fourteen and fir | OD€S of terra-cotta and shrimp-pink, the dark simpiest possible manner. These tweed or | developed than atthe state prison at Concord, | his relative. Just vide awee and dina fret, Walter Houston teen, who have not yet emerged trom the | bronze and the cream, present the most attract- | heather cloth bonnete possess a certain distinc- | where there are men, who, in ber of in- / —————-+-_____ a Her gchookroom. This season thecheck is preserved. | 'v¢ combinations aud make up into the most | tion which a very showy and much-trimmed | “et there are men, who, Ina number of in- The Ways.ef Boer! : With toil and cares unbending Wagner air Dut in some ft is very much enlarged and in | Revel and fresh looking costuizes. In making | bonnet may lack. “Tt shows knowledge and the | St#ICes, derive great comfort from the compan- oes eer ceed wire Gthers a moderate square is diversified with | these mater the plain goods are used for the habit of getting the best things at the best hip of different puccics of animals, and who ! From the New York Herald. Feb. 28. ia es Storms of heaven descend- mrp AR Mnes of eclor. garuet and bronze and gold. which | SPron and scarflike drapery; the flyured tor the | pinces, aswell as specializing thelr. objects and ipasg oly M ctaon dba eat ded diteunz | ‘The indictment at Washington of several de-| snap ME stim oak but spare the willow bending, | Hatbed O07 Yoreham duo a gives unite a new effect. The surahs also ap- | Principat pait of the dress; and lace as trim-| burposes. ‘This requires training and indicates | aE aes S tee ot tk i tectivea for theft and receiving stolen goods will ‘And bide awee and dinna fret. ver Nicholas jouer semen pear in solid grounds, checked with lines of | Ming if not required. cultivated antecedents. | tricks. he present time one of the most Mo surhites Anyons who like Shad Giana 4e 146 é-ainuel Witchel Jno 8 n and zold or shrimp pink and brown upon | , Embroidered pattern dresses for summer wear | "A very pretty reception bonnet, which may |"2ted convicts in the Institution has a_ pet B ; Griet sharper sting doth borrow eber JH wn oF ecru grounds. appear in almost Infinite variety. Plain ging-| be feet shee a novelty, and is’ suitable for | Mouse which he has caught and trained to | with the class of officers named. There are From regret! Wiliams MB Bar the novelties are more startling. The | reve cereale ee ee ane ctorla awns | early spring, las a crown Which Is made of satin | Whirl small wheel arranged on the same prin- | honest detectives in the world, and they often | But yesterday ts gon eae es sorrow Wiesn Seai Ainest sun:mer miksarethe China silkeand the In- pars Tete anes qyhich have | rhadames capitoned in a small shell pattern and Soles inlet care ie ed nea tis cat 9 | render valuable service, but as the business is | Unfit us ppd Hee ped Ware Thomas ian corahs and surahs. These have light, | © . is, whi e 2 sat Iberia and dark grounds, but. the tinted Ivores sat | Embroidery has been “run Into the ground,” Dey end eee ee ‘mebrim in close but | 804 $0 oonspletely domesticated that they wil | one vison waa ae 16 ae Thieees And over-anxious brooding x Ereams are the most effective for showing up | ud. though it cannot suffer eclipse, ince there | set with a double row of small silk pompons in | 8° through a tight rope performance in hig cell | count, and allows aman to hobno beaded ‘Doth beget, Johnson {tev Sam! the marvellous desigys. These are very large, | !8 00 other ornamentation which is so pretty or two or more shades of the color of the crown, when they are bidden to do so. Others have | without being arrested by the police, tt offers | 4 nost of fears and phantastes deluding; MISCELLANEOUS. and consist of tropical fruit, flowers, and foliage | 80 usetul for the price; still it seems a pity to which in the case referred to was a bronze | tained rats and mice which they carry in their | unequalled opportunities tor theft and for hand- ‘Then, brother, lest the torments be intruding, “‘9th and Sherman ave, Mt Pleasant” thrown upon the surface in a bold, original, and | Dave ft made so common that it has become brown, and strictly match the costume of otto- pockets to and fromthe workshops, and become ling stolen goods. Stealing for the sole purpose Just wee and dinna fret. striking manner; yet, with consummate art in | Commonplace before it has been enjoyed. man silk and plush. The fashionable use of greatly attached to them. The trained pet | of having the stolen property ransomed would Leisure Hour. TASTOR LET TEEe Bi iN GEORGB= the combining of forms and blending of colors | _ It 18 good news that the gathered and narrow EM, iG IN THE canury of Jesse Pomeroy, the boy flend, has just | never have reached its present enormous pro- N, D. C., POST OFFICE, and shades of color. thethree ziost successful de- [Med skirta, the open bodices pelted in, the | Pompons has actually Garicusa ter cies died.’ He wasa very fine singer, and Jesse | portions were it not that a great number of anewennas Sarunpar, Mancu 3, 1983, signs are the manyo. with reticulated and lanceo- | SUrplice waists, and deep belted basques are to grieves very much on account or the bird's | alleged detectives are nothing more or les than = LADIES’ LIsT. lated waves, in ochid, and the passion floes, | De employed in the making up of summer ma. | 2¢8e8 as for trimming bonnet: death, for, in solitary confinement, he has been | thieves’ agents, ‘The profitable occupation of Estes Mary Messick Mrs Dane L Greendsle Miss Norris Mire ; cl i terial this year and overskirts gotten rid of. = much cheered by the singing. He now expects | manufacturing evidence for married people who ‘ psoch es sings Anbar sr wabgeste thee | Overskirts can never be auything more than an animal caeiciTe. his mother will bring or send him another ea-| want excuses for divorce is almost mondpolived ce He he ae Baralot Fann ee Strength and freedom in drawing and tinting, | *Polozy for an inadequate first skirt, and apolo- a nary soon. The steward In the hospital depart- | by detectives, and the evidence, if well paid for. ay ES ntly GENTLEMEN'S LIST. and the faithfulness make them a most interest- | $!¢8 should be rare to be welcome or in good ee ment has several pet canaries, and one ot them | seldom fails to meet the demand. Any innocent As hand clasped hand again. Frenea J A. Johnson Geo W study. and one that can be tak ain | taste. Developed by the Late Ohio Floods. | hasbeen trained to a rematkable degree. | man may be hanged if hie enemy le rich evoogh Farewell! ‘The lips were smiling, Henderson Geo Behactor Geo F po agi =e and still find someting née teat: GLOVES AND SHOES. ‘ colored convict, formerly a well-known walter | to pay detectives to procure testimony that will ‘The tones had no recret, Lymore Arthur, Seicrist Mr mire. There is a musical motive, too, running | It 13 rather curious that the advent of the | “eves (0-) Letter. in one of the leading Boston hotels, who occu- | convict. If nine-tenths of all the detectives in Bi em ag ee List OF LATEFus REMAINING IN EAST . thronzh the whole, a charm of tone as distinct | Sarah Bernhardt glove has had a good effect in Mr. Stevens lives down near the mouth of the | pies a strong cell, has succeeded.in propagating | the land were in jail, the remainder could at- be SL SDATION, asif expressed in sound, and which reappears in | diminishing the desire { maak Miami. This gentleman was away from home ety ina peculiar manner, The window of | tend to all legitimate’ business, for many most ‘When alll around was sleeping— Satumpay. Mancu &, 1683, different degrees, and gives a depth and mean. the desire for very small (apparent) 18 cell opens into the prison yard, and on this | dangerous mischief makers would be where they ‘One restless heart alone Laban : “aud expression whlch Is dificult to contey | feet and In enlarging the size of the ordinary | Whenthe floods came. He had eight or nine | "8 cell ope placed bread crumbs until he trap- | could do no harm. Was tearful vigil keeping secon ipe = ao am whters iy cult to convey shoes, especially those with street dresses, | head of horses and mules. They were haltered | ped a pair of pigeons. He afterward caught pa ee ee Its coldness to atone. Perhaps this sounds hyperbolteal in regard to | Shoe dealers do not understand it; but those | In the stable, and all but one of them got | three more in the same way, clipped thelr wings, Cheek yi nd rahe GENTLEMEN'S LIST. 4 7 t x ¢ id they have become so thoroughly domesti- Zz wen —~ Arnold Geo W McKeever JB mere dress fabrics. but it ia not Intended to be | who kaye been long enough in the business to | drowned. The one that escaped aqueous death parse ‘i I Considering that it 1s often said that cheek Is None guessed the night of sorrow Sr Wricht Jno so. _ it Is from the purely artistic point of view | know the difference, acknowledge the fact, and | owes no mortal a nickel for his salvation, A Cone fore wale 8 nesvundemestt lls ReGen den Saat CP eetcaty al Glas Wo con Caused by that last good-by. shet to ine they are admirable: and one might | refer it to the influence of sanitary Ideas on the | kindly fortuitous tangle had aggregated a lot of | 0%: 90d at present have three young doves | better than wi ilies which they have reared. One of tiie old plyeons 1 Hawkeye IL PRN? 7. 1. TULLOCK, Postmaster Happose the wearer of them wonld have an art- ness, Dut their urgenee thee, uly thelr willing. | o1d timbers and boards together in such a man- | {s coal blagk; and thie one tes darky has named Se aoanae cst An | Temight have been. An! full o deep regret urally curling edes ot the fleshly pink sta-| their children should be made © large eageaa” ner that a reliable raft resulted. The horse | after his wife, and all the rest have names. He ‘We murmur thus o’er days long past eed “No, my son, cheek is not better ‘than | rrmightiats eo sn ae patandiee. IR ip BoNs. mens, the darkly veined and shaded leaves in | Doubtless these have had their effect also, for | took the hiut. He broke his halter and climbed | Pegularly feeds his flock from his own allow- a * . than modesty; it isnot | By mortal lips no sadder can be said. which death and tife struggle for mastery. and | the feet of school girls are no lon, on to the raft. There he stood like the monu- | ® he other convicts felt very much disap- | wisdom, 1s not better ~ the buivous roots trom whieh the fibrous ten- | Into hose snool girls ar IUuss Dosorin tinct | uleal of Patience. A favoring gale arose, and | Poluted because the large number of doves | better than anything. Don’t listen to the siren drils shoot out like antenve. There are other ments of torture ; and young women seem tobe | under its influence the raft drifted to Eltzabeth- | formerly kept at the prison were killed and the | who tells you to blow your own horn or it will | “an©graum of ave Gant comes out so fairs designs, one of which is ealled the “rose-gar- | far lesa aftaid of showings good-sized, useful | town, a distance of ‘three miles.” The horse | thatched dovecote removed. At one time a | never be tooted upon. The world 1s not to be | When skies, once cloudlecs, Slowly shaded o'er, | 1-000 ricoes Satin and Moire RIBPOX, Sinchee wide, all den” ani another “autumn leaves.” Both are | feet. An old-fashioned mother was shocked the | stood like a statue, never moving a musole till | Buber of domesticated skunks were kept in | deceived by cheek, and it does search for merit, | And Hope's bright future melted into air. the new colors, 25c. per yard, usually 50c. €xtraordinarlly bold and effective: but whocould | other day by finding that her big daughter, not | the raft struck solid land, when he quietly die. | the prision yard, and they were cared for by the | and when it does find it, merit ie rewarded. wear them, or where. excepting at a fancy | yet out of sch 1, required No. 4s ii embarked amid the gheers of a crowd on shore. P ies fancy yea ool, reqi No. 4s in walking a pallies There are now numerous cats in dit- “Cheek never deceives the world, my son; it | It it have been. Perchance ourselves let ‘i EMBROIDERIES. it would be bard to say. Imagine “Good heavens! What a foot for a| Atthe same place another incident occurred | ferent parts of the prison, and ifa person wishes | appears to do so to the cheeky man, but hels the word that brought us all the ill; 15 pieces Irish Point Embroiderica, from 4 . the xround thickly covered with the yellows of | young lady!” she ejaculated.“ Why, which sharply Hustrates the sagacity of dumb | 0 Gel the ill will of convict he only needs to | one who Is deceived. Do you know one cheeky | ihe tatal word th lifted to the lip, Pi neapeedy ae the maple, the reds of the sumach, The brown | Ite net oo very len e,” remarked the aie creatures under stress of urgentexigency. ‘Mr, | molest “his” cat. ‘These anlmale always disap- | man in all your acquaintance who is not To. Shattered to earth, Our hand no mor can fll pang steeeat Row Genigns, 30c., 70c., $1.68 par sud leaves, and seattered hereund there | ‘lots of girl in schol, wear fees, Miss Hock- | Tebow, who lives not more than 800 Pear from view when visitors come to the | viled for his cheek the moment his back Is Wond erful pale-yeilow roses, each large enough | helmer does.” Miss Hockhelmer belongite to | from Elizabethtown, owns an old bench-leg dog. | Prison, for they always know a atranger. turned? Is not the world continually drawing | It might have been, but for that cruel word NECKWEAR. Kar pacers ya Lalice, This the autumn | the most fashionable ‘set ina fashionaile | Ho also owns A kitten, The dog aod kitten A pinaYomGNS WoiSGate. ee atts _— Past aii 20w2%S 11 the LANGTRY RUCHE, ready for use, made from pattern. ‘¢ rose garden does not cover | school, the mother’s tears abated, and her| were bosom frien ant occup! the NX OF s' might have been, if had beard Point Alenoon @8c., usually T5c. Up the ground entirely. The roses are of im-| anxiety became less depressing. There same quarters in the barn. When the waters clety tires at the Ore eres voice, to save us trom despair, = mense size—that is, the yellow ones are—but|are some old ladies who still flourish | began to encroach upon them they gotaqnto a The Product of Metro Life Who | triumphs of cheek are only apparent. He bores softly shaded. Lying near them are red Jacque | in society whose feet are no larger than the de- | pile of straw, with the evident intention of re- spterend his way along through the worid and frequently HANDKEROHIEFS, coking “4 is Know 9 It might have beenit might have been. In vain . mit natu ise and > tren i toned Cate io ate eee fei there wa the foods should wubade mas a “Dude. better men ve w y vo him. = cece? ae: give | ‘The tortured heart may struggle vo get free; 0 dosen warranted pure China SILK HANDEER- that one can alm e thelr pertume. e | as were common among women thirty years | But as the straw got water-soal in to Letter Boston ;, my Bon, — pot in each — CHIEFS, extra size, 65c., usually 98c. foe — pieces ned tines pe bs sorit ago. They cannot walk a ‘any distance, noe only settle. Something radical had to be atone: pages epee sete. hand. Not because they respect the man with ignt ave besa much hke a cretonne, and Indeed some ot Late advices from your city announce that larly, but because they may feats saree ee eT WHITE DRESS GOODS. because their teet are almost useless from | This feline antipathy to natatory pastimes is my Ly & paint pot ‘ularly, but ; v Ras been sold for farniture covering. but it 1s a | compression and inactivity, but because their | only equaled, pethapa, by a cat's joalouay of the | You have no “dades” there. De you know what get some of the paint on thelr clothes.” marvel of natural effects In bright, dead, fall- ete es “ioe Loe pres et and Inadequate that they | other cation ite woodshed. | Five ners a “dude” is? The name was just given, I think, FES ‘The new fabric for White Dresses—10,000 yards, 3 -struck and urning leaves—ai lo ‘ect the feet from the pavement. | nesses, Mr. yw amon; em, saw the in one of our daily papers, speci- mess Secret. fs es mach a work of genius as if It had been | These women wear the daintiest of ida slippers swim ashore with the kitten perched on his 7” $08 conan x of the genus homo which has lately ap- | From the Burlington Hawkeye. pat with the brash upon canvas. with embroidered t the thinn of - | head. texte z » “ Wiseany to see that the favorite colors of the | Inge. ana cect coquet’ with thelr tee fanitiaey Se peared in New ork. Hes young, thin, pale,| |“ Are those cakes new maple sugar?” he aed will be bronze and shrimp-pink deepening | were bables in arms. The modern girl is active. | Killing Elis Wife with Bat Polson. | often hatchet-faced, almost always narrow- | asked, as he halted before @ stand on Wall softer shades of terra-cotta, for these appear the it cann chested and small-] extremel: street. au cae arene. cleared teen and though socicty does its best it ot} Ahorrible murder was perpetrated in Ches- limbed. His fight LINON DE DECCA ‘6c. per yard, usually 180, wholly suppress her. Shi learns trousers painfully accentuate - ” @ark but soft; there is nothing harsh or crude many things of witch bas mother’ never | ‘erfleld county, 8. C., last Saturday night. Hus Seat and long soos pape! Hindi vibasae ™ about them: and they are therefore untversally | dreamed, and one is the extent and stupidity of | About a year ago E. J. Terrey, a farmer, married | imitation of the Bond or inthe] ,, ne Becoming. One advantage of the large patterns | the sacrifice the American girl has been in the | worthy you woman, but has since fallen in| evening he wears a y “eover- Yes, air. re fm these delicate fabrics is that they will make habit of making to prettiness and the very low | love with another woman. As the divorce laws coat.” This a heeen use, has aj “‘ From the pure sap.’ up fn the simplest forma. Plain skirts with open | water mark mere prettiness occuples in compar- | in South Carolina have been abolished, Terrey | raison d'etre. It is worn at “cover” over the| ‘“‘ The pure sap, sir.” Bodiees: for square chemisettes have reap- | ison with character and a really true and noble | resorted to a surer and quicker plan to make | short red coat of the hunter, but the “dude” | “ and not adulterated?” %:; [mag and are taking the place largely of type of beauty in the minds of well informed | himself a free man. He purchased a box of ‘Wears it over evening dress, ‘an effect a 8 ~- and the open bodice or surplice waist | and intelligent persons, both men and Sieg ot ere genie Be mises wines gunn which is amusing to the minds of tl 7 may therefore be considered fore-ordained for women. The days of a 53¢ glove upon aj tity of whisky. Saturday night, his wife Ing | stracted. I saw @ “dude” at NK ss 7 the coming summer, and copacerrs 4 they will 6% hand for her are over. Even if no | unwell, he gave her a drink of the mixture, and | summer, at whom People were lA be as seasonable as they are graceful and attrac- | higher motive operates, she will both. | then fled. Sunday morning the neighbors found | much on account of thie same old: maple homes Se ee By a ye si tte ema tg |S et Ee ea | POH td dt ills cern, cue gl itunes i : = a le." loves must be a softness of the ground tints and the deilcacy of than not large enough,and the long “ Why don't make them ———- Bellght fllace surrounding the small flower | so easily adjusted and convenient ander ground?” a gentlones caked ‘Tus 3. u. snuxswick & BLaxs 00, @enigns in new fabrics. for cuffs, are indispensible. There of Philadeiphia, on Monday, the ‘The most extensive manufacturers of ad BLACK SILKS. tion between the shoss and the electric light ana wires along ’ Piain black silks are in better demand this Sothen fee teat, Sarg Chestnut st will ee He ome tine eet, and See 9 pleas | 1 cranes ace eee ay ant relief to the eye after the era ot drocades and the best evidence of the 1 not end figured designs. Perhaps it is, that in or- times in regard to clothes is the votoe d der to attractive the manufacture has | extremities may now be well and ‘Upon. '

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