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a a, ¢ PA 8 THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON. D.C., SATURDAY. Rermadatts 20, 1890-SIXTEEN PAGES, the soft breath and injnre the optic nerve. I! ABOUT FALL FASHIONS. |sie'sisaeelisee EAS? s.5 | FIGURESOF OUR WOME ner over again and makes the idea of taking an arette manufacturer acontract to supply se Some Things That Women Want to| you ices wovics vel a sausnine,”°" |How Curiously They Differ as One | aimee eit cute, and weneral WHITE AXD CREAM. and bought, chiefly through agents, every pew Know. “Would pure white or gream be mice, or Goes From North to South. = me Phudacs Seeman Baa Would sonie color be more proper and becom- Bends agen of astesmns, ballet Cones, pag ing in both cloak and head dross?" Pure white a yp gy ay ey ~ WHAT TO GET FOR OCTOBER. | is not only the most appropriate, but mostcon-| ALL SORTS OF NICE GIRLS, | Sut, Purpose and attract s hed, on huge Yenieut wear for babies under two yoars, as it cards, 100 or more on each. The card thut stands more changing and is less apt to spot pre; was placed in front of « camera and Suggestions Abent Colors and Mate- | than colors, nD takes the creams shnés soon The Boston Girl, the New Yerk Girl, a wy ay se _ bead — enough wits cleaning. The w! ing silks, 5 im this way wists” Advico tw Making Over @ Drews | 11,6 white camel's hart. add charmng thiags to | (ht Patindelphia Girl, the Washing- | Smelicr Mt might be # print a whole sheet of —A Characteristic French Costame—| the list of fabrics for baby wardsobes sand | SM Girt and the Sonthera Girl portraits, The sheets printed from the nega Proparing an Outfit for Baby. stand doing over better than cashmere. The | Artist Medels, Cigarette Pictures | tives were subsequently cu and the pic: camel's hair makes the prettiost cloak, withits | aad Padding» tures were separately mounted and delivered {lo wadded-silk lining fur cool weather. ‘The to the cigarette maker, who put one of them ix ‘Weltten tor Tax Evilewwe Grgn, fashion for these cloaks ordains a round waist —.—— each package he sent out i with big sloeves and a lohg skirt gathered on PADDING AS AN ART. ETWEEN daisies end chrysanthomams | this band orb odice. The German way of drees- PRESUME there never was awoman yet | «To go back to the subject of which I began there is not much of novelty that can be | ing a young vaby is droil, but has some- who did not believe that she had an onan female figure—I would depended on for lasting good style, | thing to be said for it as to health and excellent figure, even though she might = Pecetowtee ts = Women venture on their own fancies in} Cort. The tenderling is simply pat in « | not think her own facea pretty ” [my Catt ceacneeh enqubes Ge elas a ‘he 6 ft the season and | ¥&‘ded-siik bag, which ties around the neck. | ¥ one.” So | day to learn from a corsetiere on F street, who ress a! ime of the si leaving arms and legs free, but perfectly pro- | said a well-known amateur in photo- mmably knew what she was talking about, some happy designs result, A navy blue dress | tect vn the wind, which is more thun can | graphic art to awriter for Tw Stax the other | bow large a percentage of her customers wear with brick-red trimmings does uot sound en- | be said for our long cloaks with two widths of | day, aud added: “And yet your own observa. | P88 of one sort or another, What this per- chanting, yet it was the prettiest thing seen in | cuerous camel's hair in the skirt, ‘The 8pan- | tion will convince you, I think, that a good fig. | S¢B%s¢ Wax represented to be I am not going " ish state dress for infauts has the object laid . to tell, partly because her communication was caning Sky evidently worn by an artist, at on a pillow or small satin mattress, longer thaa | Ure is a much rarer thing to see than ®| canfideutial. But she astonished me by exhib- ig. who thought out her own | the child at each end, and the showy frontal | pretty face. Even in Washington ™y proposi- | iting for my edification a gowns. The bine was the very darkest clear | of embroidery and point lace is merely laid i eclor of cloth, the narrow blouse vest, the deep | Yer and tied with ribbons or basted to the together new to me. To begin with.she took from cuffs of the simple sleeve and the plaiting arent mine any beck to the robe at all. one of nonriae o ig drawers filled with such n ; east this ta ; articles of which showed in the slashed skirt were dull | Sonammaed to cemey Mesut off the creature Will notice that well-built and woll- | cucnions, which abe said anne falee poipe They red, which harmonized gravely and perfectly | “What color are his stockings to be?” The developed women are not were stuffed with curled hair and intended to with the marine hue. The combination of | touch of color on the bud is in the small foot- ous there. Too many of them have | b¢ sewn inside the lower of the corse! color is one which appears in the rich confused | i" of softest wool and silk combined, which a flat chests and narrew shoulders Then there were cusbions of various kinds plaids of shagzy tweed and flannel, whose nap should be white with pink or aky-biue soles and d exhibi —_ tof other more elaborate contrivances to fill out eile theeck (ily. ‘Thess plaid the | Sides, tied on with inch-wide soft ribbon, laced oi bit a general want of sym-| the bust. For €50, the proprietress snid, she leuds the colors softly. ese plaids are through open work above the ankle, ribbon metry. I once heard a lady in that | would make an entire suit, as one might call gowns going up to tho mountain houses where | the same color as the stovkings, of course, and city express the view that curves, | it, of padding. She described the case of one the elite linger, knowing the best of the year is | the first shoe is a Jittle moccasin cut ontof old in maidenhood, at all events, were | Sif!, with @. very pretty face, but ab- with them. Tho shape preferred by privato | lute kid gloves, cunningly lined with silk, something rather improper than|,o vty, BO. figure whatever, who came odistes who supply the most fastidious women | °! led and feather-stitched together. Littie . Te wi ; for treatment, because she =m ipply boots of 1 delaine, silk-lined and bound, otherwise. It must be owned that | wished to go on the burlesque opera stage and isthe long / follow, and with akid sole cross stitched on : they are avoided pretty gencrally | Was not able to get PLAIN FRENCH PELIGSE are more durable than all kid shoes, when the in the modern Athens, the frigid | Of her structural de le baby undertakes to wear them commonly in “4 and hollow, her arms and were notbi ss Sata GUM tas ater a eee moa wend atmosphere of which does not tend | bus bones, ‘and she had no hips et all worts aie . es = graceful and appropriate to the season. Plaids “m ger epermenceiat : peas in eeu ae pamiwen accep Lerretenerng for fg eer dnd STREET RAILWAY LINES BEYOND THE CITY. are made for drapery, or long folds, not for ould the dress be trimmed with embreid- way, Here, on the other hand, | Ment, thus setting down on paper the exact slender, tight-fitting dinner gowns or evening | TY or lace?” Heavy embroidery no longer is the Anacostia street railrond was in existence | trunk line in the new system of suburban rail- | Weer: Toques worn with plaid dresses are of | wasted on infants’ dressos, which are set off SUBURB AN R AILW. AYS. and it ran across the bridge to the flourishing | roads has been projected. This is the Rock gimp with folds of plaid for the brim and bows, | with delicate needle work and very fine, soft pluinpness and grace of outline aro | ®#P¢ of the ‘subject’ from top to tor, These measurements were com) with a scale w the rule, as you may observe for | posed to represent the ideal development fore 2 proj ters of plain ribbon in the roveral colors | torchon or valenciennos is the ‘exly cdet yourself any day on F street or | girl of the subject's height and age. ‘The dite tras built torun to Anacortin und as the grows | creck Failroad. , Unlike all the other railroads | of ‘the plaid: which has a good effect. ‘The | wel, witine hec ei y corn! Bil Pen teaae crtate At the oasce | Krpct the aublect’s height and age. The dite | ing needs of the country there have demanded | that have ever been constructed inthis vieinity, | most brilliant African bird wings are seen on | belts of baby waists only. Boftest nainsook time you will not find anywhere | Corresponding numbers in inches on the scale | it has lengthened out its lines and put down | this road is to be built along a fixed line that | Lats, a fashion set by London society in com-| makes tho day dresses in ordinary wear, which | fF Rearly so many good figures as | "ere Cerefully noted down and used ase guide Lines That Have Stretched Out From | new ones. exists only on paper and through a wild, un- | Piiment to Mr. Sta it is said, and the | area yard long from the neck, with high waists . in Woah by the workmen, who put together a sort of broken country. All other roads have been P against the cruelty of | aud long sleeves altogether. The little French Pretty faces, even in Washington. | stuffed suit, the thickness cf which at every the Ci imits. > THE PRESENT FACILITIES. ss built along existing roadways, with the single wearing the plumage which costs the lite of @| gown, which is the most sensible pattern, has | It is only just to say, however, that this is in| point was just sufficient to fill out the form to ty Limit 5 é This statement of what the suburbs enjoyed exception of the Glen Echo railroad, which, happy creature are silent. If the birds were | the fuliness of the neck and sleeves bound with | Part attributable to the fact that there are so | the requisite degree. This was fitted and in street car facilities two years ngo will enable | however, can follow in its course across the | CMY snared painlessly and killed instantly the | nainsook anda narrow lace edge sewed below | Wousually many pretty faces. modeled upon the customer until the genera} Tux Stan readers to appreciate the map which | country the route which the engineer selects as seeliy woud cob 68, Only that it is to put | it, not standing to chafe tender necks and FROM KORTH To soUTR. a er shoulders, bust, arms and hips THE WORK OF TWO YEARS. | shows the lines now in operation and those ac- | the most available. But the Rock Creek Com. | much innocenthappiness out of the world for | waista, Not a particle of starch should eve: be] «ag you travel through the United States | "#* made as nearly perfect as possible. ° | ; : Vanity’s sake, But the wreath of thirteen doli- | allowed in a baby's dress. They are more ‘When it was finished,’ said the corsetiere, tually being built. Ifthe routes of the ronds | Pany. Be pes ee AA a cate little wings round a hat, seen often, or the | chafed and worricd with Sinaaiogs Monee — prises south find surprising alter-| and she had put on a dress to fit she bad ae proposed to be built were also indicated the | one has never been 0) ened ‘and the lines of its | !u8, slender wing of some graceful, darting can guess, unless you remember how « muslin | *tions in female physical types. Going from | handsome a re as I ever saw in my life, New Limes Completed and Others ta | map would prevent a confusing labyrinth. ‘The | survey were never known until this company tropic bi d. always seems to have blood on it, | frill can saw your throat to redness andraw-| Boston to New York you discover in the | She got an engagement at one of the big New Course of Comstruction—Street Haile | map shows ouly the suburban lives beyond | began operations. ‘Iho ostimated cost of | *¥4 bear the rent, mangled, quivering flesh | ness, Drawn work and hemstitching, fine tuck | Metropolis a different manner of girl alto-| York theaters oon after, and I read fn the | the boundary and not the ramifications and which was attachod to it, feather-stitching and pearli the triumphs ; ge! She looks more robust, carries her- | papers that the dudes were going fairly wild read Facilities mm Many Directions— ing are the triumy iy = 7 | consestions of the lines feat make @ netucrk ota hee, Wits; tae ee a ‘A VERY DISTINGUE DnEss of noodle work shown in a baby's layette | self with a superior grace and has much’ more | over her lovely shape as she wppeared in bu Other Limes Projected. Nithin the city limits, There is uo feature of | District tue, where the new road will | made lately in Paris for ono of tho ladies of the | Beading, newer than hemstitehing, is a row of of that quality, itself largely a matter of bear- | lesque opera costum: ES ee the suburban development which demonstrates | strike Connecticut avenue, the distance is| French nobility suggests the lines which fash. | ®P9ll eylets worked just above ahem. Bib- week toeelio’ ‘signe, By tno time yen, THE NEW FIRST READER. tho growing importance of the suburbs more | about three miles, This company will open tl nobility suggests the lines whic! bons run in drawn work are favorite ornaments reached Philadelphia the young women ae a OB five cents « person can now enjoy | forcitly than the enterprise which hes been | avenue 180 fect in width and will construct a | 92 18 toadopt. A walking dress of suede gray | on long dresses, white ribbon for the first | ®re found to have diminished somewhat in the ee juite a long ride through the beautiful | *hown in the building of these roads. They | roadbed 06 feet wide for that distance, and | °loth is made with high plain bodice and four- | three months, afterward. pink for a boy and This should not surprise you, | From the Detrott Free Tress. burbs about the city. Incase this sum | Rate required large capital. They have been | after passing the District line the avenue will | T®U Or plain shoath skirt with lengthwise | blue for a girl—clover pink for blonde boy and | becal e New York women are notoriously HONEST HENRY, _ about the city. Incase this sum | yyiit in first-class siyle and in their coustruc- | be deflected und then be extended the same | bands of ottor-colored velvet tapering to the | very pale blue for a dark baby girl. the most stylish women in the world. They| This boy is named Henry Parker. His represenis his entire capital he would | tiou, equipment and their cost per mila, they | width for two miles further into Montgomery | Waist and trimming the bodice. The narrow ‘Surmtey Dang, | have better figures than the Philadelphia girls, i = chiefly, as I imagine, because ‘ey are Thore | Parents live in that bur: cottage at the foot equipment is to be built along this line, which | three inches wide—with pearled edge, was tied THE MONUMENT TO GRANT. — partly perhaps through their habits of be obliged to walk back. But still he is | are equal to any street railways in this\coun-| County, Md. An electric road with treeeriecs | sash of black moite ribbon—not more than ahsstn Guas better off than he was two years ago, for then he | try. That men have been willing to buildguch ‘ | roads to run through a territory that contains be is i in a loop that hung to the ki: ‘hile the ends Itis the fashion in New York for poor but honest. The Foal hare boon obliged to walk both ways. | large settlements is an evidence that they | files in tenia, epscen hasbeen as tied on the right | Design of a Structure to Be Built on the ‘to walk. But you must remember that father works in the saw- Asaglance at the map which scoompanics| have a faith im the future of the suburbs of | [yr May tho road will be opened to the public, The black robe adds tion to all | Installment Plan Adopted in New York. | these different peoples, though all of one mill, and the mother this article shows, the facilities for reaching | this city which finds expression in hard dollars. | The projector of this enverprise, Mr.’ F. G, | these light colors, ‘The same design would be Haicins come from different stocks originally, accord- oad po > the suburbs of the city are now quite complete, | sme oronozrowx Axp TexizYrow noap, | Newlands, intends to make this road an aux-|™OFe graceful in wide flat pleats, allowing | A view is herewith presented of the design of | ns tothe sources from which the varivus settle. ein vetegarrd paren’ end when the roads that are now being built} peginning for convenienco on the west side | !liary in carrying out other extensive pians | Plain velvet to eppear between the pleats. the Grant monument as made by Architect | ™C™t* of early times were derived. Further- ning . which he has iain for the development of the | _4 California lady writes for hints about “,. | more, the fact that New York women are so She bas worn the same ze finished it will be possible for the patrons | of the city the first railroad in that locality, as property owned by him all along the line of | 4res®, which will be of intorest to many others, | ohn H. Duncan and accepted by the commit- | incomparably dressed a that they know bonnet for twenty-two of street cars to make long jaunts in the | shown on the map, is the Georgetown and Ten- | tie roa She wife and mother, twenty years | teo of the Grant monument fund in New York. | how to make the best of ; # years, and she goes bare- country for tho moderate sum of ten cents. | jeytown road. This road has for ite motive aad ve catmeaeaiy- ski age and a half feet tall, rather slender, | In this view the monument is represented as it} ‘While the figures of the Philadelphia girls feted every summer 0 The lines shown on the map are those which | power electricity und is operated by overhead| ‘Tho next railrond ch the rasp ie the exten. | {Ai £4¢0d, light-brown hair and blue eyes, Has | will appear from the Hudson river, ‘The com. | &F@ NOt #0 Good us those of New Yorkers, the ae rae cuugleled ax ase new under comsiceation, : P e exten- | one dress made redingote at prevent; would |"! . young women of the quaker city have prettier ( . fasas aa ails posta — Nwaiting the ac. | viet: ,Jt taste on Water street in Georgetown | sion of the 14th street line, of which mention ; no sample inclosed; wishes to wwasioad beer aerpreee beet the pond faces, Curiously enough you will not find the she is indeed a true and runs along High street to the ‘Tenleytown i ress the five plans the; consider an 7 i i tion of Congress, ‘These new modes of commu-| road. and thence through Tenleytown to the | 2% been m Thon comes the railroad | purchase another dross rather nic; =e y | most beautiful young women of Philadelphia wife, end Mr. Parker tion between the city und ite suburbs are District line. Cars were'run over the rord for | Song the 7th strect road, which is known as Diack suitable for a young mother?” The days | formally recommended its acceptance by the | in what is called the ‘society’ of that town, oa = bur . ally often blossed the day he the first time this last spring. At present the | the Brightwood railroad. ‘This road rune from | {oF ,Weering black will come soon enough, | association, subject to whatever change or | The faces that attract your notice on the street recent i i i though a bl i Gents i " are mostly those of women of the middie class fornd her. quite recent, terminus of the road is ut a poiut just north of | Boundary, or neat the Boundary, to Bright- | more uso. then elaee tes he coe eases | modification the committee and the architect | SF¢ mostly thove of women of the mid through Henry is now twelve IX LESS THAN TWO TEARS. the former home of ex-President Cleveland, | wood, At prosent the motive power is horses, | for American society, If erouee oro eae | might agree on. Wanamaker's and the other big shops just to years old, One Gay last ‘The second anniversary of the running of the | but in a short time the rest of the road will be | but the Judoon system ta te be used. and fe is | binck is toast bee ry gay black, muchruf-| A description of the proposed monument | see the awfully pretty girls behind the counters, ears over the Eckington electric railroad has | completed and the cars will be run all the Way | hoped before long that eare will be whirled out | fled and trimmed. glitierieg. with fue wet wed wa eg pe peape la ve peony thr i by Architect: d Building ii fol- | When you getas far south as Washington or od 7 te to- pot yet been celebrated. That road was the | trough. to Brightwood In much the same style as the | lightened with good whito lace for neck and| tows: “The general shape providel for isa| ea Baltimore you strike the distinctively So ges Sp rd nay wenn of ploneer of the mew suburban railroad enter- THE GLEN ECHO LIxE, cable cars on 7th street, Brightwood is not | wrists, changing with blouse fronts of white | ote of eranite or ae eee Re ‘square ana | Southern type of young woman, Soecsihe nics benetiee, ook heuer intents ., It will be noticed that a line is dr: the | regarde Y any means as the terminal of | silk muslin, having collarand cuffs of the sam ‘ 4 > we prises, Prior to October, 1888, when the Eek-| os ch extends ine northwesterly diree, | ect car fecilitics in this vicinity. The thriv- | No limit ts made sto expense ee hog cats | ising 100 feot, whether as a cube or as a trun- reo sengecsger Let us surprise him with something now for ond wes opened to the public, the 3 aa tT: i cated pyramid could not be ascertained. On| “Now, what isthe most striking character- | supper.” . en dete caraaeratnte noice: | tien from: the terminus of thie tend. Mis | wercaeis ade eae tain of obi dpe nigoy ete dry se nies e that the ltop of it will be = dome 10 fect high, The | istic of the southern girl? She is plump and| "With all my heart!” exc':imed litte Henry, sbght that they hardly deserved the name of | marked Glen Echo railroad and indicates «| Urightwood a way station between the two | sary to make a good appearance on her frei | Bamentation will be simple and the architec- | puilt on a curvilinear plan, rather than put up | ** be lofe his play. | 1 What = accommodations, as far asthe public were con-| portion of the route that road will follow in | cities of ‘Takoma and Washington. visit home with baby, {95 the first place she on an ill-concealed and angular framework; | yrs ‘Thompson's and ark gorned. ‘There was, for instance, # solitary | passing through the Maryland territory to « THE EcKINaTOX LOVE, should not make the cloth dress over in com- but the most remarkable thing about her is | pow), three eggs, a cup of sugar anda piut of Dob-tail car that Pape —— ee point on the Conduit road about three miles} Farther east on the pais carte found the | Pinstion with black, as sho suggests, for com- ber complexion, which 1s apt to be purity | wii and 1 will make the custard.” ere ee rice bencver bee bees | distant. This road was projected by the om : bination suits are only seen in expensive cos- itectf.| ‘Take the train for Richmond and you ut, mamma, dou’t you already owe her two gradually, aud now it ism fact what | €' of the Glen Echo subdivision on the Con- pogidee route of the Eckington electric road. | tumes, Let her make will find there the type well represented by | pq, ouly in nam con i } k . Trels of sugar, a carload of eggs and a hoge- > = apr tone tinuation of | @tit road, and will be an electric road. is parent of the modern suburban railroad, THE GOWN INTO A FRENCH WalsT, th) examples of loveliness, with skins like new | head of milk the 14th sireet line of the Washington and | Although it is not marked on the map, there is | s#alrendy mentioned, is not quite two yearsold. | with trim skirt, gathered in the bec, ov if itis L Cream just showing s delicate vermeil tit in| “Probably more than thet, but when you railroad. Every other car is now | '2 be another road starting from the terminus | It is, however, a vigorous infant and is growing | a narrow gored ekirt, she may leave the soome the checks. as # blush rose might show through | have a good neighbor don't let go ; " . = fine-spun silk. The young women of Charles- ” a bt 1 an epee eee eee ee OE | ee oceae will uc andi Soon nor ae rapidly, Its main line bogie at New ork ave-| open five inches on the hem to show a bins : ton and Atlanta havea bosuty of a sort much | ,,hitte Henrs departed in buovant spirite, and evenue passenge: e. r i . nue and 7th street and ends at the entrance t 7 ii 4 ean see, ii jec yi « A somewhat similar service was enjoyed by | Will be what is known as the Yenleytown and | 1,5 grounds of the Catholio Unversity to | velvet flounce or silk knife-pleating under it, the same. Youcnn see, if you consider the | 9: object in the road. Going closcr be d " i | 7 Or the skirt may be laid is i oP westion from that point of view, that it is to ° ., Mh = Rovep an crane cae comme acne Rockville rye ee "Tarthent oct | eet i eae Lt ee ae leer silk showing between each to, at from “nd J BEA |S croat cx _— er of cima a viaes erent opened ‘trne'God that i con were run every once | after leaving New York avenue end them : f 3 “¢ ee oe ee . the day as far north as the Rock Creek Ceme- | ¢™ point of this road will be Bethesda, Md., | {in ytrect cat extended to the Cathelie Date | ieee Me rater ieee pues , po Se or ping Tae organ ae greeny lg Toye mw i H leated into a belt without fril rf 2 x orous the climate the fuller are the out- ;. . An evil voice tery road, If you happened to be at the starting | HOt Nitmatels, the Projectors of the road *0y" | versity. It has already one branch, as shown | Parrove aush fiktit Reet ake lous, Iises of the women aud the betier ‘their com, | SMU, De one bed soem him. An evil voice point in time you the chance of continuing last nemed roads are in course of construction, | ©? the map, which runs to Glenwood Cemetery | small pointed velvet belt, however, is advis- 2 =: plexions. You can trace the same argument | the wallet away. and for ® moment he wes your journey. Otherwise you could enjoy the but when completed it will be possible to ride | 924 now it is going to extend its line through | able with a baby to disarrange ribbon: even in its applications to manners and voices. tempted. But for « moment ouly. Then he scenery until another car put in an appearance by street car from Anacostia through the city | the city, passing along 5th street from New | gilk and velvet used should bea dark. fe ‘ Is it not in 44 south, not only in this country, | iirted up his head and said aloud or you could walk. Most people who went out | 17 Goon atown, thenee to Tenleytowu and thy | York avenue, thence to G and 15th streets. It | of the dress, or something harmonizing ver, but in other Jands. that the women have the | «not will not de it This boodie belongs to into the country a year or #0 ago, if they did not | ee ai ne and thonce either yo the Conduit | Will then have one terminal in what is practi- nicely with it, as chestnut with fawn, or red- . softest manners and the softest voices? The | Judge Gherkin, who lives in the bigeest honse have tho dollars necessary to vecure a carriage, | Og OF to Bethesda, cally the heart of the city and the other with | brown with terra cotta. As the wearer is es zs nasal pitch of the American intonation, at | jn town and lends money at 18 per cent. I will generally did waik. For these two lines of its outstretching branches reaching into a | short and slender, she should not try to : which foreigners laugh so much, is smoothed | carry it straight to his offic Street cars comprised all the suburban st THE ROCK CREE RAILROAD. section of country which is devoloping plain-fitting bodices or = down gradually as you go south, until there is| jo did so. The judge counted over the railroad facilities that theu existed. ‘lo be As be seen on 1! another grand | with great rapidi skirts, no matter if itis tl tf or r + really nothing of it left worth mentioning by | money to see if it was all right and then siniled ; Lee i uel eee and swallow-tailed | = : = = = a Y peabeegey Uaioe vad Bh gr senedl re Ak | upon the honest Ind and said: siaeeh MIGRATION OF TOADS. CLAY AND WEBSTER A REMARKABLE FAMILY. — | $9" hotiot for ter thay Seen ses Nould : grace, itaclf dependent upon physical struc: | yoci%s Sanne om and, thas, next fall Vil give Millions of Them Sturt on a Journey | The Bearing of the Two Men in Gen- Col. Manning’s Descendants Are the ir] fe ay y pee ad New ee ret aoed Ketan nares meet oa Toward the North, eral Society, Champion Elopers on Record. and short jacket, easy fitting in the back, fasten- = SS rom the Wilmington (Cal) Gazette An old ministerial friend of mine, says W. H. | Prom the New York Sun, Hesse witeh saitan ynerons, the silk or laine | surg severely Dorie. ‘The deme will be sur- | i 4 you “ i t 1 ad of Without « bugle call ore drum beat to sm- | Milburnin the Hartford Courant,who was much | _ Mise Stella Manning, aged sixteen, eloped on | doors, with a big soft eash or a silk belie ‘Tne | Mounted by sculptured figures, the uature of | south that the pirle grow ep mach son my nee, pen OS Oe So ee — : s rap- | Now rau along after those things aud if you are Bounce the arrival of the hour for # general | in Washington in those days and was one of the | Sunday with her second cousin, Geo. Burns, | blazer dross is utterly out of style on 6th ave. | Which will be determined by the committee, the | idly. In Boston s young woman of nineteen is | not back in three ticks of the clock I'll ware advance, the millions of little toads that | great Kentuckian’s most fervent admirers, but agedtwenty. They were married the same | Due, Which runs its fashions to death ia six |%¥lptor and the architect later on. In tho | gtijl at school aud is regarded as hardly out of your jacket till you can't holler!” ; ‘ ’ : design there are the statues of four of the gen- | the , while by the time you reach eee aed tae eceal dare nearted ane | Those modesty bad kept him from vecking his | day in Warren, ‘The girl is the youngest daugh- | Trina ees at oman were veering them | Ss ao'were on Clea, Grauts stale TINY | irene jo dak ty ame, 7ou reach the RE. ——— Pe im this city for several days started on | acquaintance, sew on Pennsylvania avenue one ter of Uri Manning, well-known tumber | Cowes im very pretty style. For instance, a | fet below the top of the dome there will be a! them, fully grown and marriageable women at “Bere isa boy. Hismame is James, Hote Journey north yesterday afternoon. Soon | day Mr.Clay approaching and noone else near. | dealer. The young man 1 the son of Benj. | white serge yacht drees with pink silk ohne for | Fow of windows, There will be four entrances | Stteca, aa, Waste tdisinirtantar tho aay efter “the bear, thower lad ‘coused the | Plucking up heart as they methe extended his Burns, a coal dealer, whoso wife is cousin of | ncharming young lady, a shite sarge Sackes | 2¢ De Dek. The sasin Sutcance wats 8 Wile gr sraqiny saa SrRie ne auieee sini abane bik bad F right by the hundreds, thousands and mil- “hard-tronted® | lee portico, an addition to the general de- iad , Portic “gy ing of the vamty wom: a 4} Ofatree eating plums, while bis father thinks hand, saying: ‘ Mr Clay, Iam the Rev. Mr. —, ; the girl's mother. There had been no objeo- | 804 skirt wil sign. In front of this ontranco there will| , ‘Speaking of the vanity women are disposed | # Nine Suen Pine the foundation to become Pastor of Wesley Chapel, and from my boyhood | tion to the marriage of the pair, but they ap-| shirt’ with’ block ‘satin ‘te fore eileen | be & colossal ‘equestrian statue. of Gen, | % indulge, according to my observation, as to | He iin school laring I have honored and loved you.” parently preferred to follow a long-established | society woman, not so young. One young girl | Grant. The crypt will be 85 feet by 75, open Instantly it was as if the sun had burst from | family precedent and elope. Geo, Manning | of the best possible family wore an entirely | * Al = eq eet a hundred reads ai figrenpy Bowe ptt Lemogyeeg ogg fi the direction of the north. The toads had} behinds cloud; my friend was bathed in »| (afterward Col, Manning) was one of the first simple, fresh costume of brown Holland linen | $04 thirty foot from the base. ik atose | Reape daon’ ust tox thoi samuaseee be wy poo Pace PO been keeping close to the river for several | stream of warmth and light as the kindling oye | Settlors 1n this part of the stato. He came from | With pink shirt—and why in goodnoss wasn't | immense gallery where visitors: ‘open on this | understood, but in order that their exquisite | pea days, and the number that covered the banks | and beaming face shone upon him, and Mr. | Steuben county, N.Y., in 1800,8 young man | ‘0M¢,*rtist wise enough to paint hor in thet ree ; : i gallery. ‘The main room in the crypt will be «| shapes may serve us models for Janos, Venusos, | “Site say not be bung for miles is beyond the power of calculation. | Cisy grasping his hand thrilled him with his | With a bride, who was the daughter of Gen. Reber eee se peely memorial hall where moro than « thousand | Psyches, aes ard gory ge ote One painter | for murder, but in less ‘The tiny creatures seemed gifted with intel-} voice, and then putting his arm into the| Wheeler of Steuben, The Wheelers wore an ee es eS ee ee yours past by a very stout’ person wi, | tan, five ‘minutes he ligence, and it was noticed that, unless headed | preacher's they walked toward the Capitel, the | aristocratic family and young Manning worked the choice may lie between » good American | aud an opening through the floor. In this a oe, 4: will be enjoying the ail- i ae ing wi i has approached him atleast twico a mouth | fredest whale et difident man completely at his ease and feel- | for the general. Miss Wheeler fell in love with | biack faille which will seo ton years’ service | Opening will be placed a granite sarc a8 : redest whaling « boy ing as if be had Ruown, the statesmen | ber father's young employe and cloped with | with care, if strict but gentille thrift isdosirea forthe bodies of piper pine hie] prea dopibenr prey Diese, iio “huntecen | STer ot, See’ The Minatee hcl Tol adem | eee ad eee ere ict, fa the lumber busi | or « dark brocade in dark heliotrope or dahlia | °or; oie staiceay will lent up tole Thee witt| He hes wished t0 avoid injaring the fect- mediewn Fn tes te ‘and became a colonel in the war o in ; eat preacher “to. Mr. Clay that “from thas| in 1819 his daughter Ella eloped with Silas cruz; | {0 Shese purples and purplish fire reds have | be another marble stairway inside tho errpt of the applicant and bas always ex i yg i d himself by saying that he had no orders or day forth he would have beon almost willing to | ti, who was a wawyor in one of her father's tothe gallery. This stairway winds | cused his te the, rosdwa lay down his life for him. Another of ‘my | mills und whose sult for his daughter's hand pout any. thi Pet a rg pe Deed penps ay pear bg forced angen Pntigagret py Arg Bena og crossings ts the Market gates Danial Webster eitting close oan 7 aaa tay Three wy ees pachsetaat easy Genie the golden bro can be occupiod no other way. There ure little | away He egnes | — = . _— oy 4 ome black with them and their lives | promenade deck of boat, and, after | @loped and married » young doctor, whose cron am, and {nooks and corners in the base of the orypt remarks to the ‘e! fect # it fe ry suc! Deneath the wheels of passing traina making several turns to summon resol: for | Practice was barely ient to pay for his where battle flags and trophies may be dis-| charms of outline as hers not ‘The railroad proved an almost insurmount- | the adventure, stopped in front of the great | OWN living. fle died only s year age, however, ive that they never weary, and-one recog. | Pave? Litowdiry —- aighe dey) a reper ag creer pended representative of Massachusetts and sald “Mr. | worth @ quarter of @ dollars. He was soft i ere are other unexpected circulation of certain very in- —— pvc Ahan ap suc. | Webster. oa Specialist, places i decorous photographs which two suciety girls po gt ‘over the first only | y, janet is my name,” sid the organ-toned been compelled to e pd ell . ‘th. 1 dome, o in that city ind whe fee ogre in satus to be made prisoners betwoen the rails, |"°“And Tam the Rev. Mr. Hagany, a Metho-| the men they hud choses, to wed be opie r pe laser pot lace Nenagh Tema bees 4 but imgdue course of time nc~ | dist preacher, who for many years have ad- | 0 their father’s commands. te eceded in getting out and mired and honored you almost more than any|, Col. Manning’s son Jason, at north. About dusk last living man.” twenty,fell in love with the sevent old the canal, where “My dear Mr. Hagany,” said the other, daughter of @ backwoodsman named ely. = & pipe sm “pray be seated,” pointing to a place by his The colonel a an eae ee side, og son to Philadelphia the sudden As the preacher obe: he felt as if he were | *° school. son went, but two days later it E t admitted to the fabled height of Oi us, but | W#8 learned that the backwoodsman's tty the divinity of his imagination Said ‘Rothing. | daughter had gone with him” Later on {i was Mr. Hagany sat with hands, twirling learned that the runaways had bis thumbs, hoping to the silence, whic! where they wore was most embarrassing, at last, with an effort, said: “We have a fine day, Mr. Web- ster. ‘A fine ” answered the a day, oro- seer ealS ETge, Sees i EF lt rit FFFF i | ij I i : ff a # in ip i i fe He i i becomi: bear the pushing “A very good morning to you, Mr, Hagany,” | 708, the girl's were at odds over busi- | cible mie are ‘there to other. ness matters, and be and MoCres were | mamma venlio con “i Mr. Webster bad been & candidate tor ns to any union of the families. | and Lavy od # paved | £9F ben ohier he tne I have de- Se Sean bat betere I ues Jed ti ryd this “little | Cistme of the opposing candidate, Net so| Miss McCrea and ‘er ‘The next | rove te genre valor mistake to aii | 2Y friend, who would havo voted for Mr. Clay | four Uri's sister, being then twenty, {areelt all | against the world. I better illus | AA7iDg also accepted lover a youth not Snoum fen | ‘rate the bearing of two men in| {the lking of father or mother, |. Now ineral society. You forgot Mr. | oped married him, His name | thing ‘Prom the near his jebster’s greatness. Mr. Clay at once bound rae eat aud be oma’ © salt “Lew ,, William, for the picked | You, to him by links steel, Mr, | Known Prosperous @awyer of northern ~ 6: eed Jebster’s speeches by pos. Pennsylvania, As yot there have been no first time since 7 widow, 4 Tamlly, Dob it ig ten yy i — ‘no standing ff ; ; i g H i rik i tt rh it u 7 tl 5 if 5 f i 5 t iF i | t 3 L ae 1 { wy. ak % - as ~ é se -%