Evening Star Newspaper, August 3, 1889, Page 8

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2 pe . 8 THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D.C... SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1889—TWELVE PAGES, — - SUMMER HIONS. “ fp bearybutto hol stitch fa i a Written for Tax Evexmxe Stan. —— i fede -me a —_—. be an on THE GIANT OF ENGLISH POLITICS — an Ly a half wide, a wide bow with <a What ts Worn st One of the Gayest | thread, wit brown vem a litle intermixture | TOWN AIRS AND GRACES. | 24," : Pictures of the Everyday Life of Glad- mneltchieages Watering Plac o rose and vei icate foliage. This rand CARE OF YER HANDS. stone. —_ = dress was made by Worth and cost 8250, Haw to Wucntch Giemmer Cotenges itr | 2504 cs cclcrs ts topheaher anh sattord aoe A& WET JULY AT SARATOGA, BUT A FrvE avaust|_ Ladies who have visited the large shops of ply but Effectively. is anxious to take the freckles off her hands be- | SUCCESSFUL MEN AND BIG XOSES—A FIRST “E; in eS ee London, Paris an ‘ork during the past and solid though he chooses to disguise | #yyWo CHOICE SCHOOLS hn PREDICTED—DEAUTY BURIED IN WATERPROOFS yer = ped. ‘= ae by | 7#E CHANGE oF sTrixs Im VENETIAN LiNex | fore that time. She says she is seventeen and| GLIMPSE OF THE GRAND OLD MAN—THE BoU- | 1°) 0's * Lelty Ouse, et | Toe Lee RCORE BALL. FOR ” f extreme Girls and Yor Shorts Media Acad- punone—somr mason coreuan |i Yry td tbraased a so aors| apna Tor"netaee eter ic eee | Raneloo es Tha ee ee a anes ne | etter tyne Gages ory | TG AW a tat WMS LNDSO! is —! ° wel —_ 7 ees mine pae andi minate floral patterns, Many were tempted pe sr peaacice wptatcens thy linata 4 seventeen. She may spend more of her inval- is not given to the bestowal of compliments | GT joHN's OOLL ANN hE me Brom Our Own Correspondent to buy who afterward could think of no use to sree nc state eo ie art uable time washing her hands in cider vine- | correspondence of THE EVENINa Stan. with any pronounced degree of recklessness. | S Bigs Depertave } Cur Courses of Study. SanatTooa Srarxas, August 2, 1889, | which these fragile bits of worked gauze could she a i | ar, OF may take one-half pound ‘TH. " areto ool at ines Saly is past and Saratoge loake deerondent, | be put, unless ft were as lamp shades, But | , TR@ evolution of tasto in window shades af-|Suthing soda and the samenet tions Lonpox, July 25, 1889, 1E GRAND OLD MAN'S CALLELS. SPECIAL ATT ENTE i : 5 “ lo, About 9o'clock in the morning Mr. Glad- | THE PREPARATION 1 distes have found loyment for | fords the critic study. From the green paper | lime, dissolved in three quarts of boil: The friends of a big-nosed man should never orning oe A Few vigitors have as yet been booked at its | thm "abon summer evening dresses of soft silk | still seen well Preserved in old farm houses | water, and when cool enough ‘bath | despair. If it ie above the average of other stone begins to receive his callers, and from stalogues addres Premiient “ |po1 ng ii a THOMAS Fela, Lip. hotels, and their spacious piazzas show | and ivory muslin by twisting them up into | the next step was the buff holland, now sacred | the backs of her hands with the water, | noses there is always hope. I am a convert to | that time on there is not a minute left to him- | _ ~ ~ +P. dreary waste of chairs and but small evidence | short sleeves and bodice draperies, by making | to kitchen premises, the gray linen and the | "°t forgetting to rinse them with water with fs . . IFE-SIZE CRAYON PORTRAITS TAUGHT I F with | the belief that men with big moses have come | self till 1. This ordeal of receiving visitors and | J ji SIZE CANON ty ‘eromene some of that brilliant life of which so much is writ-| Mttle drawn bags of them for the handkerchiet | quzziing white roller blind, ghich still pute { RAE% CUD of Vinegar to the quart, "This will = < ements Ks yt delegations has arrived at an awful pitch of = or giving a directoire touch with just the half remove freckles, if anything will, and is sov- | © town to stay. The very largest nose I ever | U8nt i The British statesmen | _2¥20-Im rh tom by the imaginative paragrophist. Doubt-| oF fn ite square. Several Leal ‘owns re- | the eyes out with its high light ina glaring | ercign for taking out mildew from fabric. Also |#aw belongs to the otherwise insignificant | Poy ’cj'gn ip England. | The Britis politicians | WW EDICAL DEPARTMENT, ~ less the scarcity is due partly to the unusual | Ceived a touch in this way which imparted | noon, Next fashion in the metropolis took a | try common salt moistened with lemon juice to | countenance of Mr. Gladstone. It is not ®| know nothing of. On any and every con-| EOKGETOWN UNIVERSITY, exodus to Europe; but there are other causes, | character to their otherwise somewhat vague | daring flight, and red parlor blinds shone down | Paste, allowed to dry on the freckles in the drooping, sagacious nose like Evarts’, nor a| ceivable occasion the British voters will form pimgton, D. one of which is the continued rainfall, which | prettiness. will make July, as wellas June, memorable for WHAT THE GIRLS WEAR, and 1th sts. Cus mevical college will 5th avenue for a season and then vanished to | SUD; when dry five minutes wash off and apy cold cream. I hope Kate’s studies heavy, majestic organ like Blaine’s, Boulan- | * Committee or a delegation and send it to call | The forty-aret ‘i i % is thi: on the most noted man within reach, To re- | > prone rs m quarters impossible to polite acquaintance. | her hands credit. ger’s nose is thin all the way down the bridge ceive such a band of visitors by making 0 little wala tag — and chilliness in this year of our| | The gir oan, ppessl gis pear a ‘They suited too well the tastes of gambling dens Mdibvin ok came until it expands into a white and solid-looking | Speech and shaking wll their herds i the ne, | ee memmer clition, Por Fur Dow wa : . and fortune tellers, ‘The sober elegance of the | ugpoited Beauty.” Another wiso pretty- | bulb at the end, while Gould's begins bulkily | cepted idea of the uty of a public man, Now| _3720-3m Sib Vorwiont wre, “What ie the use of protty clothes,” re- | int in alk, wool oF, batiste, which is inAnitely | soft natural holland embroidered in Byzantine | neck has a number of little brown wale A | at the eycbrows but tapers off into a long sharp | todo it fille the voter with antesed and startiod JRE2 ERICK FEMALE staan, marked one disconsolate damsel, eyeing -_ meres pias ae sosedon st baat colors on the lower border was the best style, | friend advised the use of nitric acid, but the | Point. Gould gets money; Boulanger spends cen hee fe . call for Bo Rar | Bias lange corre of we « ve not, in two g iv if y y . > acid, Pang ws arpa —— I = sear ‘water. | alive to any attractions but their own. Still | “4 “lays will be good. This year the striped | moles came back, and when I tried it on my | it It would be interesting to know whether “yo r they arrived, but they keep on calling on emi- | tow 3 - : ae i the noses of financiers run to points and spend- = Perea a Lt pened, kor: | ta gttle mnaniga Sot uaheg Mle Gait af taal” linen blinds reflect foreign taste, and are very | faco it left a scar, an ugly pinkish raised place, Pp *P one im. etty for country houses in the leaf green and | which I tried to heal with salt and water and | thrifts to knobs, ee eee Basing ast " A ; ir for country in the le: whic! i wit and water an its, 5 i exer, that the wet July will be followed by #| time being spent in that attention to their | hie stripe, the cool, bright blue and white or | failed.” ‘The acids are unsafe spplications om @LADsTONE’s xosE agro r. Gladstone is particularly amena- — J . ¢ ; h € : ble to this form of political persecution on ac- ey. hot August, Ge @ late to Cap talaga tem inet soe ipo lps bodega hipenieh of) crimson and mixed white, besides the twilled | ordinary hands. The best way to remove moles | is like none of these, It is big all over. Its | count of the varied interests he represents, — ‘. tape stripes in unbleached gray and white. | is to draw them out between thumb and finger | pj is ii i i: : a1 Me takes eS Ry os | MERE eering water. Aes leave, after a few days’ stay, disgusted; some to | pears to devolve largely upon grown daugh- | Tihs colt stri eante eabdind Viveliness 46 6 ant ire Wilk thread rotiad the mock of uke | bigness is its salient point, and it is of thick le takes a light luncheon with his family et | “The at is deitentful, the senery Fetarn te their homes, some to seek quarters | ters. ness, breadth, and solidity throughout. Half | 10’clock and drives at once to the house. With | rountius cx zl, i _ te long, dim summer sitting room, or, as house-| mole. Cut the ends of silk close and leave it bags és : his doi it the world is familiar | be*l<bful. eres, ore There the drip, drip i lene vivid and ponetrat-| , Saratoga seers to bo pre-eminently a place | Koopers say, they dish » room well on for three davs or more, then tie again til the | way, in its length it has a wide and prominent | Gnough, "As a rule the ex-premierdines quietly | _y1s-ast pindorhiees —- "5% "Hieti i le wears off. A small blister will remove the 8, Mr. ne blows it, as at home at 7:30, His diet is carefully con ra i ale . ; ; through a lifetime the helpl: of child- SILK BINDING ON SHADES. pant : it. } f th; “ y EE MAR COLLEGE, WITH MUSIC AND ARB anne 7 robe Hbarspaand ee oF men over | hood. They take their walks and waters duti. | Instead of hemming the sides a narrow silk|'™0le sometimes when other means fail, | frequently does in ‘the course of his long | sacred’ He coo every bit of meat twent: atond ¢ toes speeches, it gives forth a resonant and might rend y | Sena for comlasee SO REDE Pee Boe, “not wisely, but too well.” ‘They are usually | fully. accept their orders from a tall daughter | binding is stitched on and pressed very flat, | jug wart ouin\or Innar eaustie aften oores, |r ; © {ater dunes be steak Sotto Reresarens [ea etn accompanied by their wives and a contingent | whom they Sinice tmmensely, bas of whom | which adds finish and runs better on the | mother's” mark or nature's for a mole, Let| ‘The close and critical observation of noses jg | unless an important division is expecied, he is | ("5 best of daughters, who, on bright mornings or upon | 126 Sf. little afraid, and dare not get an 8f-| rover, Plain hems for the lower edge aro pre- | the scar alone for a few months, only coating it | ® habit that grows ona man with incredible | home and in bed at 11 o'clock. Hip day is sim. ter the, afternoon drive, poaen a oe een borate wee, ate oce, the other | {erred to fringe, which curls ard looks shabby. | with vaseline or carbolic ointment if sore. | *Wiftness. Some inspired idiot once started | piy's routine of hard and persistent work, rei of Fine Arts, ROBINSON MORRELL ; ss ‘These heavy linen blinds are not suposed to | When the skin heals try lunar caustic, Five | Ut to find cab No. 1 among the 20,000 cabs of Braxery Hart, | 824 studied 15 ape, Portraite in proud. But the absence of sunshine spoils the | sfternoon, oe ete mad era a meee Onnemare | need washing or renewal under eight or ten | cents’ worth from the draggist’s will remove a | Paris, and wrote to the papers about it as he ————-+e0__—— = prast, meter and oll cx show, and that is all there is of asummer water. | et ire a close ike that “Nec wou | Years. A pair of unbleached linen which had | score of warts and moles. "Wet the end of the purjued his frantic search. Half of the people HOME MATTERS. , eve menday evenitgre, Call aiid see lac ovoking, for an > oe gle een hanging in windows for five years showed | pencil, in which shape it comes, and rub once | the French capital did nothing for weeks It is undoubtedly. pr nenday 3 serene Cf wtndente, ay6-Im* Bever were summer fashions pre’ ier than this | Wouldn’t, ma,” returned the young lady confi- ; young it,” | BO need of refreshing. Practically, with the | on the mole, which will turn black and lessen | *ftetward but look for low numbers on cabs. I'| spasowaBLe SUGGESTIONS FOR PRACTICAL HOUSE~ #10N CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC, SL Year; never more youthful or better adapted to | dently. “You wouldn't wear it if, You had it.” | attentive care due good furnishings,they never | in size. When the color wears off apply the prived in Paris when the fover was at its!" os ascrras wonte mewanneareen. | WY cite Dubling, rdf ates twen ttl set off the charm of youth and the delicate type | ei Nady, “At any rate,” che continued: pee, | call for renovating. A soiled curtain or chair | caustic again and again till the spot disappears, | height and watched every cab that passed me, - cp | advantages." . Ditestors” syd-te of American beauty. bole Ay Teaeatane Continued, per” |or broken furniture isa witness against the iota oniace Sek but the first day I found none that hada num-| BINTS FOR THE DINING Room, PANTRY aNp | Sivaut : ‘<a Gaeta eae : Sept anabolsened by Saratoga air and spring | breeding of a family. In English country | Ques a eens Gone as ber of less than fourteen or fifteen thou-| XITCHEN—SANITARY RECOMMENDATIONS, I A MY, ROCKVILLE, MD. ‘The secret lies in the absence of overdoing | exclaimed hee povicteig E tect at this may. | houses suites of furniture three,hundred years nestions still come about the toilet mask, |) sand. After six days I saw acab numbered as 4 = iy b f Location ish old are shown in good keeping,‘and pieces ex- | Which women seem persuaded will at once | low as 80. With the sensation of a man who| Two Teacups (teveL) ory GRANULATED Svcar | Balf-bour | f amt Anat the uniform refinement and simplicity of the | wonted expression of independent opinion. hibited at the centennial festival, quite as old, | transform wgliness to beauty, It is a mask of | had discovered the northwest passage I en- rom W i parties season’s designs and the picturesque touches | “Yes, Clara,” said her mother, “and I think ri manta bet Tins sactara cu ate nes | a hed and vel- | §used the huck for a day and took it around to | “ist One Pound. WAY. W. SSLEEM ANB : > ; ‘i cre in better case than modern sets after six | thin soft rubber, very finely finished and vel- “ 3 Pariey: cBBIN Fr im} 4 oSeLE ~ which give softness or color to otherwise quiet ——. lemaniacterw ee andi see ican Gndons.” | years’ use. Porbays,when we oan afced things vety, which ties closely tothe Tite by tapes | *how all my friends, none of whom had found ae alii am costumes. In this respect the styles of Sara- | | Welt }neven!” exe nipped the dane: oe in really good finish aud design, we will, per | passing around the head, It undoubtedly. is | 2¥thing under a himdred. From the univer- | ¥move paint from black silk or other material, | LAND SCHOOL FOR GIKIN REOPENS toga are this season exactly Vienese. There | Woy iphis little incident may berve as a warns | fF learn to preserve them, useful in certain cases, but not when there is a | *! interest taken in this particular form of hot-| Ir Quits ae Foupep om Routep tightly ;, thorourh trai bs are the seragy eg mage a _— oan = ing to daughters who do not wish their reign THE TASTE FOR TAPESTRY tendency of blood to the face, and is oppressive weather idiocy I am led to believe that all man- | after washing, then beaten with @ rolling-pin neck and throat, rutterily ; Glimpses of rich embroidery aud the wido hats | © be disturbed uot to bring their mammas to | and luxurious wall hangings is upon this coun- | for sleeping in hot weather. find loves @ bit of nonsense now and then. | or potato masher, it lightens up the cotton and caret ull) ; address MiNi M. (Vale), Sandy Spring, Md Let me suggest a comparison of noses to ob- == S00L SPRINGS. < Gcavandeliting Exar and Mowers’ nesting fa | reas try—extravagant and unsanitary and unsatisfac-] INTERNAL DISORDERS. servers of human nature who are anxious for « | "axes thom soft and new, TTT Acunncrictiati Sica tase L SSO lace. Very characteristic, too, and very THE MANY-SIDED GIRL. tory as such things are. In one of those artist ‘Mrs. J. F. J.” Liver spots arise from de- | midsummer diversion, MLUTED LavpaNnum 1s Excex.ent to apply | Co. Ma.” sit tion unsurpassed for Benth Ther effective is the use of the new red. the “ox-| But after all it must be admitted that it is| dens of the bric-a-brac shops which educate | T™sement of the liver, maladies of women or to sores or wounds to heal them, If the a tary courses ding washing, GREATNESS INDICATED BY THE NOSE. fuel and furnished i The first time Lever thought of noses particu- larly was ata dinner at the now defunct but blood” red as it is called in Paris, as distin- | the charming, many-sided girl who imparts, | people into this sort of bastard luxury I heard | internal piles, and the health must be set right guished from the equally dark but yellowish | next to the wine-like air, its chief attraction to | 42 ambitious lad, looking at the veivet-lined | before the disfigurementcan be cured, People pe pale ee ee Saratoga. She is always here in numbers, in | ¥#!/8, say to his mother, “Why can't wo have | would never know what a repulsive, half-dead jortunity here ui y ma 3 , wounds are fresh and of great extent care must be taken to not use it full strength nor too freely. + RIC teruvot te For further partic ER, Princtpal. oy a aaah : & KE DAME OF MARYLAND. Je . n t our house like this?” Why, indeed, can't peo- | condition they exist in if nature did not boldly | €Ttwhile hilarions Mohican club, A come-| Never Eten a Sick Room in astate of per- wiate lustitate for Louns Ladies and Prepa- it Over a straight dress of cream-colored papel ts vest nos in attendance | pio om $3,500 to $6,000 a year cover’ their walls | announces it “by “unsightly “afliches” of moth | dian I have forgotten now whether it was | spiration, as the moment you become cold your | 10°, Bhs cated ty the ? India silk is knotted wide scarf of red silk, | Pu sH0 pretty, graceful, and always well | With, green or purple ‘velvet at €13 a yard? | pimples and spots, A course of fruit juice—|Nat Godwin or Francis Wilson. made some | pores absorb, Do not approach contagious Send forcatalogue. jy pop rprospen Gar penn pope aay ‘Oh, I do hope we have got rid for- | ¥#t should they want it for if they could af-| the fresh-pressed juice from berries, | Sort of a happy but nevertheless slighting re- tee with an empty stomach nor sit be- e same scarf will be arrange: hu, s cap a. ford it? House decorators do not recommend | peaches or grapes—taken in quantity, | mark about the large, bulbous and bluish nose 6 ¢ . the ends falling in frout: or for the evening. in | Crer of out er sieniga aes Se atte | fabrics of auy kind for walls on any ground ex- | at least fou” Marzo lasses daily, -a¢ | Which appertained to the person of a fiery Vir- ice ine — re ey eee ener Biecteeaas of a inches, & will be draped scrent | oS cold come back, still an a camitod tna | cube that af expense and show. Velvetand| mosis and at nictt, ‘eill relieve’ tb | ginis colonel who sat wear me. The colonel | “y)." Gyahe the shoulders, the ends falling at the back, large as the tun at Heidleburg,she would mount | “Pstry harbor no end of dust, and dust in- | system remarkably, no matter what the inter. | blushed with embarrassment for amoment se all zor Cakes.—One cup of butter, three cups RED WOOLEN JACKETS "| | them without an instant’s delay or hesitation, | ie8 insects, Heavy fabric deadens sound s0 | nal disorders, and Liver spots will disappear in | eyes were turned on him, but before anything | Of sugar, five cups of flour, three eggs, beaten appear also, fitted at the back, loose in front,| But would she be as ebar if she were | tht it is next to impossible to have good music | time in many cases without other special | else was said the voice of Dr. Richmond was | light; one cup of sweet milk, one teaspoon of fastened only at the throat, not long, and with | more consistent or always sensible? Possibly | these padded rooms, and it makes the air | treatment, Now is the time to begin the fruit | heard at the other eftd of the table holding C. Kimear, “A neipals, Onsurpassed. $26 dt GE, SWAKTHMOE Tuarty iphia, r Ad of soda, two teaspoons of cream tartar, Drop in sleeves loose and a little pointed, so as to show | Rot. I confess myself willing to take her just | MY, dead, and depressing. juice cure, which is strengthening and purify- | forth to the man at his side on the subject of | tins and bake quickly, For molesses dcop and hold without came da full sleeve of the | #8 She is—even to yield obedience to ‘her COMMON HOUSES ing beyond medicine. The juice is more easily | Noses. cakes use two cups of molasses instead of sugar - . ‘ z bsorbed than when whole fruit is eaten, It ‘0 other feature of the face indicates great- | and add two te: . caprices. One thing she has done for me; she | are well nigh intolerable with their tureoman | ® ; , iss : ce great- | and add two teaspoons of ginger. Trae torte Ted hate have nearly disappeared. | has discarded the dreadful tan-colored shoes, | curtains and portieres, which hold stale air of | pr? Piss the ae andi Tats aceaded | phaticallg? Mand T dottye ene oe eccnt | Bax Toxava.—Get « amoked tongue (fresh near the face and are only becomin gin vot art erp iokeed boy insta os eae ae yesterday in their folds and forbid the free | for the cure of ‘debilities und consumption, | Seat man’ anywhere in the world whose nose | moked) from your butcher, Put on to cook shades to faces ve little col i . Bon Mm passage of fresh breath. Fashion, by way of | The American medical association at its late | 18 not above the average in size.” in cold water. When the water comes to a boil | ja poth #exos. own. Some rather tall and striking-looking | **mxful. nage ene TURE | Socupecantas; hangs’ iis\ walls with Darcie of | snacking spoke very strongly on this point, | | thought at the moment that the doctor said | pour off and put on more cold water. Boil | #uslttul HANLON, DD: Feccigent, sph @-eatkasee young married women wear large hats of DIGESTION AND LOVE. Bohemian tapestry, woven of dyed cotton in| Debouve, the great French physician, has | this to smooth down the southern colonel, and | until very tender. Set asideto cool when done. | car Babak ‘ = i i )DGEWORTH BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL ¢reamy white or black lace, with flowers for E VARDING, r si the panels of old designs—hawking parties, | shown that consumption and persons in’ wast- | it is quite likely that such was the case, for an | Then skin off the outside and pare off all the trimming, and dresses of India silk, with full, | ppe Former More Necessary to Exist- battles, or court scenes—very well represented | ing diseases, anemia and spinal ailments, can | €XPression of conscious rectitude and suavity | fat. Cut in thin slices and garnish with pargley. | 122 West Franklin street ‘Baltiniore, Md., Mra. H. P, pointed bodices and delicate mull draped at the ‘Than the Latt in rich dark coloring, which’ would drive a sen- | digest quantities of food far in excess of’ the | passed over the veteran’s vari-colored feature RemMovat axp Prevention or Danpnurr.—| LEEEBYRE Principal. Thisschool will reopen om neck and as a deep, full cuff at the wrists. One Se fitive person to suicide with itssomber effect, | needs of a henithy organism, and,what ismore, | But the subject of big noses was on top for |p 2 ast ¢ or) rE DAY, the 197M of UEPTERBE of these dresses has a black ground upon which | p45, yiacmittan's Magazine. however, after our cheerful home surroundings. | they must have it, even in advanced cases, if it | several hours, and when I went down town the | W° Ounces of pulverized borax, two ounces of are crescents in geld color; and another a dark | an things are not sood to all 1d all | The cotton tapestry is not prey to moths, does | must be given by a stomach tube, No such nu- | following morning I found myself looking crit- | 4m camphor, broken in small pieces, one tunia ground, with geometrical designs in| |“ e 8 the cn ant ah | not cost over #50 a panel, or require aman to | trition cau be found for many diseases as the | ically at every nose I met. When I encoun- | omer things are not always good to the same man. mm braces uch kulieh katucation, and th Languages are practically taught 8 quart of boiling water. Bottle and cork tightly. VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUTE, LEX- x BOO nn. | watch it all summer for fear of injury by damp, Suche Ob yeni main tered a great man in Europe after that I looked | Before each time of using strain a small quan- as ee Rm Donal Se Seen SUE FRUICESS ENGALITCHETY This was a point much insisted on by the wise | mold, or buffalo bug, as wool or velvet does, which is charged with tho acids used in meai- | ©*8*TY at his nose. Texcluded royalty, for that and dilute with an equal portion of water. or i damacighiaad, «ick (leis GE GAR Geece eepicially ecmatasnAa tha | 1nths lates Meaacaet Mee Sek eects nen d : has greatness thrust upon it, but I was pleased | Apply to the head with a flannel cloth or with —" — a tows anal hes aduiad 6d Giane (hi gh rs eh ewhat sarcasti- | from the upholsterer go the rounds every week, | Cite, together with gelatine and blood-produc- | to observe that the pink fuce of Bismarck was | the hands, Wash the head and bair afterward ves gathered indescribably w l galls] cbincvas Ot hice. NCE Ce ean cpen the rugs, curtains, and tapestry, and lift | ing agents, which need the slightest effort of | embellished by a big and beefy nose and that | with soft water. the of the arm and a light drapery of exquisite = chair covers to brush and beat for moth. | the system to turn directly into the purest | Pasteur’s probosis was far removed from in-| gory W. na te - Venetian Jace sbout her handsome neck. A/ well sea good physician), that “one of the | Your butler at #408 week and housekeeper at | blood. Cherries and poackes net most bene: | significance and conventionality. irut I never a a : . ing” . “ 7 tains too much limestone and that causes | ing hh as an average for the entire course, deal has been said about the diamonds of | great precepts of health and lasting” is “that | $30 can't be expected to look after such. mat-| ficially on the digestion by the small amount | 84W a really great nose until Lact Mr. Glad. .® as, O20 runt 2° om Sremnge, Sac the antine cvs Princess, but she makes no display of them. /@man do vary and interchange contraries.” | ‘rs or see that any of the twenty house | of prussic acid and other acid they contain and | stone. bread baked with it to soon dry out, If you | Sxichwen, ‘For catalacwe a grmattngaice expenses, For catalogue addre The only jewel of historic value and signifi- | qe man who confines his studies withi servants do it, the juice furnishes medicinal properties of the A GLIMPSE OF GLADSTONE’S NosR. use soft water to mix the dough you gta] |... =e ~~~» proven e frequently wears is a pin, with | The man aE pry merce eee {guit without the fiber, which may distress weak | Iwas traveling from Dublin to London one | ™uch better article of bread and one that | _3¥20-2aw8t —— Mesecaen tomar asta aa ver eeith cron Visstaal sonattion pooh fe tapedatontl Re tist jects th organs. If women will learn to resort to | day in midwinter, when I was laid up at Ch. Will retain its freshness. A good plan is to set | Mg USC. ART, EIOCETION. AND GENERAL longed to her mother and was the gift of an | lectual condition so light and nimble, so free ‘ Sect a isto Sha rejects these oor y oo Gladatepnts et Chester. | «cup of water in the oven when your bread is | Sa culture, Desirable Honittone open to prog infor emperor. e 4 invitati a. of play, so capable of giving and receiy- | TUS follies for simple homes, Tapestry woul ‘addressing On the occasion of a recen’ ion read-| ing as he who hes Ot nabling @ «raduate in the the fruit cure, season b; , they will not : ; ) ; varies them according | 4° for facing coarse brick and mortar walls in | gpota, ‘The fruit press ought to stand in every ; sat liberal | bread and only half as thick'a crust. ESR be Seaniehitiin terimin ing of her new lecture on “The domestic life | 1." nig mood, for the mind needs res| times when people of degree did not mind being | orchard town, and. owners would no longer te | leader went fake the London mail. I was} Fry axp Mosqurro Rewepres.—It is said that | —°™***"9=__. TOURJEE, Boston, Mare. eemetapeinaed meaeties ace cer eee | andi zoccanlicns wa lay an tha eam tack | cree ee ee eee a Sn tee | Ce eet sone cee ae waiting for ‘the tase ae To0m of the hotel, | a piece of cloth saturated with turpentine hung beau A . i ‘ adh Modern taste fills ita paaels with paipted tapes- | plums, nectarines, raspberries and the de-| ¥ " Te | in a closet where th th 98 UNIV Bete'andvntors in Sarsiogn” Among. ahem | One ned. unswerving epsom of et! without | "Heh cionry resembles the Wofen, andi | Lowoah arly pear. “Where a promis, noi | Cladnone walked in and stretched” outa pws | clone where there aro mothe or ina room| Jous sOPKINS USIVERSITY, dents and visitors in Saratoga. Among them regard to needs and seasons, or even to fancy, | {tee from its disabilities, The demand is for | available the fruit may be stewed in | of wrinl pace ans Schitaaet | willer Sod Dantas tke Mae Woaie marae Wasa white gauze made over white silk and Paani Gus ea bag ecient nCY; | washable surfaces on walls, if not lincrusta | close stone jars and the juice strained from | COU! . seen of his face sr mighty nose. ol a is] e re 'wenty drops o! BALTIMORE. powdered, as if by snow, with white dots of ir- | is not wise. han all men have the eamg | With its sprawly decorations, then the tile-fin- | it through cheese cloth for keeping. It should | His tall and weather-beaten hat rested on his | carbolic acid evaporated from a hot shovel Fegular size. The plaited bodice was outlined | Stomach any more than all men have the same | ¥ith <A er: be taken cold, with sugar if liked, and sipped | ¢T8, anda huge worsted scarf concealed his | Will go far to banish flies from a room, while a with braces of white watered ribbon and wider | #omach. What is grateful and nourishing at | #hed paper, which washes ¥ srith & ARODKS, OF | Oo therately ab moals vend whenever doen | neck and the lower part of his face, ‘The nose | bit o camphor gum the size of @ walnut held — ibbons formed a sash at the side. olesome at another. Withia the ver marked | gegue dengue of frit lowome,evedsand ding | Keep in all otis, Ugh corked, on ie or | profsted and hung majeticaly over the war, | ove lamp tl conetned wil do te tine A CHARMING DRESS Fs i birds, or at least wall paper of lity ch | in a very co! lace. Where ice is not attain- Ps » ¢ hs » . Tala ok seses plat tac whine dates dvips sil by experience Ey is swell ted the love of chai ae; | til Goat A ooas ot oki Weclhon® sara tine | ante wrap the bottle in a wet towel and set in a | More massive » than any eagle's beak I have ever| Ir Tuen Snoviy Occur acase of typhoid ee ; : iherence to a eestem | €8gshell finish. ‘The finest finish to any wall, | Pan of water ina shaded window where the | Se2. Away back from the bridge cf h fever or diphtheria near you during the sum- & dainty embroidery in front in shades of pink | full play. A too servile adherence to a system | 88" t ! fg 4 Lm D. twinkled a pair of eyes as bright and sharp as a ing and green. Some young girls wore very simple | which iss been found once beneficial in certain ee ie hereto aes his oh e688 in wind blows, __Surmurr Dang, | twinkled « pair of ‘eyes as br boy. He nodded | Mer Weather test the drinking water or have it : : i ; n nted their grea 3 dresses of white muslin in alternating tucks |CONditions may diminish or even destroy ite Announcements for the next academic your Are now ready and will be sent on application. inke: i done at once. A few cents will 2 usin in alternating value when these conditions reece, “err orcts | frescoes and found thelr own oggs when sopes The Romance of a Button, Syery one ptholOane thin eattcoe eat eten | ok auurstel Sdalunet SeemeerEne eee Sg ee Od athe ncanith initt | pecret of existence, after all, is’ to be the | 804 Princes were too stingy to pay for them.| Ho war soone to say adieu, he stepped aboard the train he was cheered to | hit achemist’s, If, when a drop. of ‘this = SCHEEL, TEACHER OF PIANO, ORGAN ‘waists tacked and mounted with straight collar | oi: and not the slave of both mini cna | The summer cottages aro falling out with tho Was thinking of somo word to flatter, ‘ie oka. solution is added to ‘a tumbler of 'water. ite | ux and Playite wt Suet. Particular atten~ and cuffs of needlework. The sashes of these body, and that is best done by giving both | tsselated hard-wood carpets, as they are When from his overcoat there flew z color changes to brown it is unfit to drink; if it | B0P *y Besters, as well as those wishing to be were wide, with Roman ends in delicate tints, | 900%: i “ai y giving called. In our dry, hot air the blocks shrink, A button, with a dismal shatter. I chanced to meet Herbert Gladstone, the » light! ; Sed qr teachers or performers, 734 andwere kstied oh the bank; no Bows. | cid sages were, Univeral: coreg itt | warp and in dog days ewell agin tll’ they ore oldest son of the exyreiniet, atu luntheun one | 50S e welaaivmnbing nas | ne rar A handsome dress was of gobelin blue, faille agreed, y INGALLS KING, TEACHER OF PIANO 4 He blushed, but she, with woman's tact, i: hour, it is, broadly speaking, safe. HEO with bretelles of wine-colored velvet, and vest | Must discover for himself. Happy aro the | Out Of Place. Then, Bridget enter The Ax if ato aw a ood Joke init, Se ne ee is aaron ane! “eee ea fy | aiid Organ tor the runatoer at J pry ype c Cried, ingly, “There, now, Pam ke aie mh 4 reds 3, 4:30 to A and deep cuffs of rich, real Mechlin lace, above | Words pier gag ah ee relishag | effect of grimy oakand butternut is depressing, | “Your tattoretyute tor juste metas ‘The history of aday in his life would not | take to suppose that because milk is aliquid that | das, Weuneeduy and Pedy. 8-30 0 10 sake el ee ce er mtn Urned UP, of the vel- | o¢'14, and caste a gloom over the whole face vf | #24 it is not alwayseasy to get & man fro make very exciting reading.” he said, “for in | it is at the seme time a drink capable of eatisty- | KE ; Hi 4 . Y YORK MILITARY ACADEMY, COKNWALL, oe e He doffed the coat and watched her thread. his mode of life he is the simplest man in the | ; = 400 ear. For circ h courses Inserted » gold-embroidered panel, was worn a ature, a2 it is impossible that wo should take See ite ee, “Tho noodle, with her head low bonding. world.” = tae A ae ae le windy, satene i jhe me ite y are every momen’ “Now, do you know,” he softly said, 8 er ! Supt. ; AIT, couid’t of Cadets." jel. ppc le ae ea plea eral afraid of losing.” One of the best methods of WELL LAID PAINTED FLOORS, “] ig an ‘awful lot of mending? A POLITICIAN IN THE HIGHER SENSE, after it remains some time in the stomach a ‘" . live and rose-pink silk. The sleeves were full | T0iding thet pitiful anaiety—that bloodthirsty | im oak-brown, chestnut, Vandyke brown, or | "A nacholor, we'll say, lke mo, and very large, but “wrinkled” above and over | clinging to life, which is, afterall, perhaps rot | terra cotta, done in oil, with a coating of thin Teat tho mercy of his tal the chow. = learn within what limits we may safely indulge | Sheliae after the last of paint for gloss. ‘This gern wery tanepaetry bree bees TOILETTES ON “THE DRIVE. our desire for change, and then freely indulge | 8ives 4 floor which will wear and look as well i . rae hi i ‘The driving to the lake is regular feature | it within them. “Ob, swee . as a waxed floor, unless special pains are taken My heart needs mending much, I fear, time is given up to his party. One morning ng gu , sweet Fancy,” sang the P * of the afternoon at Saratoga, and the spectacle | poet. . with the latter, The check matting, in tea ‘Do you suppose that you could do it?” ed after the Kensington victory Icalled at his nd This proved to be the case after a number of | its digestion has begun. It is thirst which | (@EL? inquiries, ‘The liberal leader is « politician | causes healthy, breast-nourshed infants to ery | egos first of all and forever, but he is a politician | fo" }ong periods of time, in many instances. | Piven {ire in the higher sense of the word. le entire | 1Bere wre many cases of indigestion due to | je1g-2m JNO. CALVIN RICE, A.M. Principal. weakness of the child’s gastric juice or insuffi. eee ciency, which would be greatly benefited or | "J BEMLITZ scHOOL OF LANGUAGES, ENHAM ACADEMY, OGONT! ied location and surround! i “Weil, I don't know,” she mused,"but, dear, ouse as early as 7 o'clock under the stress of | OVC". Ser h qealermag race oon Sn ote mes =e upon the road is varied by a succession of gay | “Ob. sweet Fancy! let her loose; colors and terra cottaor olive check,are favored Til give my whole'attention to it.” * la particular bit of news. Ifound Mr, Giad- | “ona! drink of water. nat] Summer, Also Sunuuer School et Asbury toi Everything is spoilt by use: ther than the large-figured matting, and —Ladies’ Wear Review. + 7 Huxts ror Suwmer.—An excessive amount of pat x" 3. ancy ilettes, and the brilliance which the beauti-| Where's the cheek that doth not fade, mboo, rattan, and splint, or rush furniture = = stone already up holding forth vigorously to a : . = < = ee — fal and brightening air gives to the eyes and | Too much aacd-att ‘Where's the may pupecsedoa all Star for pommer thorn roe +90 delegation of British tradesmen who had waited | fruit, or if eaten either in the unripe or over- | GPENCERIAN BUSINES COLLBGE, Con, complexion. A pretty woman never looks wong yer eb Facog ple acquire a liking for these springy, clean STENOGRAPHERS’ CHANCES, | on im for some absurd reason or other, The | ripe state, produces various disturbances in the | young men and women. have been trained inthe See — than in Saratoga, and the drive itself Where’ light chairs and lounges through the year. —_— eighty-year-old host was haranguing his visitors | system, chiefly so because of its tendency to | ceria: Colleges, Dayand night semeious. Six couteon: saved from monotony by the manifold at-| 0: y Place The gay Viennese tables and cabinets, |The Relative Demand for Men and| with extraordinary vigor. Nothing damps his | ferment and decompose within the e | Cpones Practical Resiin, TOeee ae tractions of private parks and park-like grounds d * in light color, painted with bonquets ‘Women Shorthand Writers. enthusiasm. The last speech that I heard him | tract and to produce stomach and bowel dis- Kapid Writing, Reading and Oratory, Delsarte which sro “taken in” on the way and quite| and so we end as we be; , by setting digest varnished’ like lacquer, go well pan deliver in the house was simply terrific in its | orders. If these disturbances are not too great equal some of the famous “grounds” belonging = . ‘ i 7 force and noise, He had loosened his collar, | or too prolonged they need occasion no special to great estates in England. This is certainly with rattan, for of all inconvenient, “wobbly” | From the New York Sun. P y pec Business men turtushed with traiwed empioyes, us trated free. SARA SPENCER, Vice 3 ; h Principal HENRY C. SPENCER, Li by Prauclpal, : ro F turned up his wristbands, unbuttoned all but | anxiety. A dose of castor oil, to which “a few | ae frue of “Woodlawn,” Judge Hilton's summer] ye staying Powers of Ameri Caer ee eA ele ek rey an etblos are | “There is a popular though mistaken idea| titioyc? tution of bie aire ae ae drops of laudanum have been added, is usually home; and measurably so of “Yaddo,” Mr. Prcepaie be seco Artem | or plain finish, is the material for cushions | that the supply of shorthand writers exceeds | thumping the table in front of hita like a pile. | suieiont to clean out the irritating’ “debris ARTIS CO AL, COLDEGE 313 Spencer Trask’s beautiful place; also of the | HDdon Letter to the San Francisco Argonaut. enriched with floss embroideries and short tas. | the demand,” said the principal of one of the | driver gone mad. His voice was like the roar of | and in a day or two the natural equilibrium is | M3 ar City Post-Ofhoe, Colored sudeate wot aw club hewssand groandoya mile beyond the | Of sll poopie the English people axe the lait | ST fringes of colors of the work Foedints| largest ahocthand sobpole 4a thle city to a| #lusty-lunged young backwoods stump speaker, | restored. if there is much griping and pain | Suitted. Call or seud for catalogue. uno lake, which have been reconstructed from an | to have put before them such an article as this | Oro of linen crash, gay with many-colored rey | ne iat ie Shaws 2 and he drove his points home with a force that | with the movements and these become too nu- | —— ae old manor house and farm and made into an | Iatest effort of the Blaikie brain, and Ameri-| stitches as» Bagded hanging, ead tector y | reporter the other day. There is no reason | Yay tremendous. merous to be comfortable the dose of ol} POTOMAC RIVER BOATS, 1 ae alle aed been bere entertain | cans have every reason to feel resentful to both | Spanish taste. Dut the bamboo fringe hang, | ¥BY# Person who can write one hundred words ‘THE LIFE OF THE RX-PREMIER should be followed by curtailing activity—by | = : = parties of friends, aided by an accomplished | writer and Publisher. For my own part, I do| ings are preferred for warm weather, ‘as they a minute should be out of employment. We is very simple, as his son said. He risesat6-g0, | Wiet and pe ogy: @ diet of meat ~agon | yy sam . [ie FOR FOTO. chef, not believe that American stamina is declining. | let theair through and make picturesque va-| are receiving applications from prominent | 9, haps a little later in the winter, and at | °°Rt#ining rice, barley or sago; by rice and | Sha'Friday at 7. ~y yt - AT AM ATTERNOON ENTERTAINMENT To the eye Ameritans certainly ‘may not show | riety. ‘Then, everswhere you turn in the new | business firms and. steamship companies every | OT Pe : a ‘The following recipe, known | ond-claen, So cents i given there the young ladies wore pretty batiste | such beefy and brawny exteriors, such red | cottages the new pierced, wood work confronts | day, andwe are unable to fill all of them. A ari olera mixturo, isa useful and and lawn dresses of gray, blue, pink, white and } necks, and such elephantine calves; but I be- | you, much to the benefit of free ventilation. |. ii ty dovoting two or three hours e dey ts | : to have about for F s EPA lieve they are generally better knit, have more | ‘Transoms over doors and windows, wroughi | Pupil by ng v a rte legen gray, with “touches” of white in the neck and wire in them, and can stand a draft on their| screens in hallways and pierced doors | the subject for six months, should be ccmpe- 8, — the like, but het Sy eH sleeves, and low sailor hats, trimmed with | powers of endurance under disadvantageous | into passages, or open ‘panels filled | tent to do ordinary work, and should command gor png, tigen acacia , : 2 typ — bands of white or striped ribbon. One pretty | circumstances better than can Englishmen, | with twisted wood work let the draught | a salary of from $10 to €15 a week.” rege palin thea. &, vd ‘ ‘tee St Siete ote apee ik Tie weet rae raidered | Give an Englishman his four regular “‘square® | between rooms in unexpected ways, By |” «ty tho demand greater for women or men | 22Y, %,Bew.clothes, like many other great men, 5 : white dots upon it’ The vest was white, em-| meals every day, his regular eight hours’ sleep | next year tho houses will, be pretty ‘mu axed or diplanchey Sa goku aon eae broidered in an open wheel pattern with blue | eve i and no thought tu disturb his | wood Aligree, to the relief of stained glass, | S# Stenographers?” asked the reporter as he | of diplomacy in getting new garments on the enffs to match. Jae Benak agente straw | equilibrium but what heshall do next to amuse | which really tinges one’s views of life, there is | glanced around the room and noticed that the | pare frame, of her liege cr has g | Saxrrany Svoczstioxs.—To keep the pores was trimmed with a blue band edged on each | himself, or whether he has # good appetite for | so much of it, and that is so droadful, ‘The | majority of pupils were brightlooking young | Vy busy day beforehim. fe ineeing arena | of the skin open there is nothing that will do side with white, dinner, and he will look veritable Hercules | portable Berlin iron fireplaces, which are al-| Women. Ail were intent on ‘their work, some | ¥ory busy day before him. He isalled late, his | of Be omy leet desta es white apo gett silky | in flesh. | What can he do? A good deal—any- | most as easy to move as tho old sheet-iron air- | receiving thelr dictation, others busily tran- | now clothes aro ieaat iramianices emer ; ihgont, 7th at. whart, Tied indy fore a scat? Bch of sal) gad crenaz, | thing almost requiring muscle--so long as he | tight stoves, are beautiful in their artistic | scribing their notes, and ‘still others manipu- | that there is the gloss of freshness on ther i i st Tied lady wore a scarf fichu of mall and a white | keeps up his conditions of food, sleep, exercise | modeling, in contrast to the glitter and nickel- | lating the typewriters with nimble fingers, teamastas Mat dram ie ae oe th the i RIVER LANDINGS. straw bonnet with only au Alsatian bow of rib- | and absence of thought. Interrupt one of these | plate of “‘parlor stoves,” and an open stove is |“ len are in much pron demand than | ©! eid ‘The care that is poeta Me | ints i th thahece watt ‘ou MONDAYS TBC ERD, eee bie, which was, Kned: wide earatat; | tources of his national strength, and where | part of every cottage equipment. For a week | women,” replied the teacher. | "You see, | comes home. ‘The caro that is exercised in CHDAY ES at’? 4 tm. Returuing EULSDAVE der the brim, which was lined with gathered | is he? and more fires been needed here, near | Women are naturally careless, and.hence mon | Hine Nake Of Te ea we & iediew it i y Po ty touching at iver erepe. Another married lady wore black fish- | Let any one try campaigning and roughing | the coast, id morning, and have been | sre preferred where accurate work is required. | tive of, the conti Bon Dg ogc ‘Aer ed i Mar Conmeces with’ ant Ook ed fun with narrow ribbon, over black surah, | with Englishmen and he will soon see what | cheerful all day sometimes, Boys are in great demand in large offices where Me ct Wile always ives for edule, JUHN B. PADGETT, a transparent bonnet of lace, surrounded | loss of sleep, want of regulor food, end “any squwans 20 cunasaroun: paois pecvapen com. be eeaployed 38 itis. Gochie | on Lo ‘with a small wreath of cowslips, natural color | trifling business anxiety will do for thems, “Ik ae sgl: capacity of amanuenses and office boys. They Fy TRANSPORTATION LINE end dee. short, they lack the enduring powers of Ameri- '418” writes of broken nose caused by «| can be employed in carrying information from - . saiattenids dein tended HOSIERY, OLOVES, AND HANDKERCHIEFS cans, the grit which carries an American over | fall in fainting from over study some years | one house to another, going to the bank, and a on eaephaaeiss SSeS aro ali very plain, but fine and of good colors just | *24 above ail obstacles, and enables him to do | since. As she is only fifteen now, what sort of | doing the numerous little office duties that an Sunday ot 4 om oot mb63m tae ion in the pl ! on one meal and afew hours’ sleep what an ji employer would hardly require of aman, and Row. There is nothing so fashionable in gloves | Englishman can only do when he's fed and | roo%22, Hae peuigh tates children not in their | much Joss of » female. stenographer, If boys ‘as the vory dull shades of fawn, light tan, and rested. I have had occasion to compare these | seid of @ convent aon a would look well to their interests they would stone color. The broad lines of ry, | staying qualities of the two countries, and I} whichy brought young peeing ees oraer | bogin their business careers with shorthand x youn; ; he s have seen the American's wiry toughness carry | Raustion as our «schools do. ‘without criticism) | instead of going into mercantile houses at sala fina slong where the Englishman's brawn gave | Two weeks after the accident it was found the | Ties Fenging from $6 to $12.6 month, and then wai veral before in on account of interrupted supplies, Bose had been broken. but it was thought too | Sauivalent to those, which bo! The Minister Hears a Louder Call. | tng and a cruel deformity ratlt, whisk eniy| Et the frst your of thelr em er and a cruel deformity results, w! ‘wiped his eyes; * 1415" should go to one of the good tals was fr tS ene we mater wt Fed erage tenn ak Te @ call to go to Blanktown to be their chosen | advice, A hospital is A callso loud to disobey, I fear, would grieve the H Ps aan # i i ES i i tte “4 it Z i 3 ij 1 the only place where one can a age the attention due any such disfigurement. The best doctors under- stand the value of unblemished features and not consider the removal of Replied the epokeaman of the flock: “Though loud t h their obi deformities Wenn alt por Jouder to remain; an X for every V re’ en " Thee “Bicnkwown people oller you well give We trust pad pty »® Yolce divine, our call's 80 g ef / Ea Lit ‘Wish sobbing volce the parson said: “My duty’s ‘with you, beloved ones; to Heaven's will I ‘To have your Furnace cleaned, your Range se Gvlet nemeg ‘Blest Be the Tie,’ and sing it clear ‘paired, your Tin Roof painted and repatred. Zi To leave you call so loud would be ox- ‘We do all these things to your satisfaction, y ‘Wrong!’ . ies ‘Then in his. he sat t

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