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PS - . 7 THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D.C, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1891-SIXTEEN PAGES. 11 VIGOROUS OLD MEN, [sstsusereemat ts |e seme lw aT MR BLAINEDOES Scaeuretgan Areas |ATTRACTIVE HOMES. So sa . When once fastened upon them they are Distinguished Octogenarians Tell | tuacice of iroe then tt ‘ar tines? spon - h Old ony he yer A — ¢ or a human nature, with How Reacl Age. his = an onic fterwar: lor e money in the Bank of England he would not | the di he hi that struggle. DR. SCOTT AT NINETY-ONE, | ket the young men remomber that the wet ts | mental An Almost Unprecedented Rush of Official Oorregpondence, SOME DUTIES OF A DIPLOMAT O11 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUR More Ingenuity Displayed in Conve oe meremaprepre ; hepa tr es ae Ea SSEAT. —_ fortune is to earn and save the first thousand BAMBOO AND WICKER SETS. Wiest temy a 4 iat dollars. Honest fortunes come in that way, 3 oe isonet beak - Neal Dow Says Any Young Man by Proper | of economy, will to theouethe teed wis How He Maintains Diplomatic Communice- j Airy Farnitare and Hew It Can Be Die. sate Sie ae Bs Living Can Reach Eighty—Early Rising | earning and saving the sum I name. If he has tion With 4ll Parts of the World—Nations salay Peced—Porch Cushions Very Cheap—They and Temperance—Cassius M. Clay Believes | * smell larger salary, save- Bead Each Other's Private Letters—Diplo- ho had a salary Can Bo Attractively Covered Mf Desired— 0 im Plenty of Sleep and Exercise. of $2,500 a yea The spent the whole of it as ‘macy the Science of Trifles, ‘Mammocks for Indoor Use, he — on, aod oe Ti of ae — _—___—. this —_—__— : years he re rt] ew ant igton, ferson from the house Written for The voting Star. Young man, who bys stroke of good fortune 00. 80, W222 WITH DISPUTED ALASKA SEALS, in nusband, if he Written for Tae Evening Star. gm teecper eg ace cork wu TER PANE FEW TEARS WAGE: |omes So te aati Seiaay Up to Set eee he lynchings in Italian secret society circles, val cot rpe l I ly! LOOKING THROUGH OUR SHOPS THE ariay ene . . wi , though indus ington has had « numberof distinguished | PP “nyt Po, eae int eergae cnd 3 aang fugitive Chilian vessels and other excitements, display of attractions especially suited to the nonogenarians. George Bancroft died when Now save; now you havea good chance | I © S8ram reporter finds that the Department of season is what is most noticeable. More and over ninety. Mr. Corcoran had reached his | to lay the foundation of afortune.” He heeded| Let us trust immortal aspirations | State is burdened just now with a very unusual ‘more thought is given to thecomforts for warm ninetieth birthday when he passed away, and | my advice, as he afterward told me, and today | founded on duty and the love of humanity IMPORTED BONNETS AND BATS New York Central by which ® score of ven alptenseae vhs weather lif, whether for sige Crprand | People lost their lives through the explosion of CEILDREN'S HATS AND MOURNING amount lomatio correspon: ce. Becre- » ther for or country, blasting powder freab justrat of the of the liveliest ol in Washington to-| be is a 'man of independent fortune, as our years. tary Blaine, when here, was kept busy eom+ jaded | each season sees more ingesuity brougat 10 heer d, monary pany rage gente 008 a SPEGIALTY. = liveliest old men in Washing | free now with his money, for good objects, as| Let us live as though we were todie tomorrow rrwdgsslierly aero i bear on the sahjecn het nnn rn = pe tions many Gay lives at the White House and he is known | nohad been careful and pradent. Itall came by | and leo live as if we were never to dle. Posing dispatches, special don't ki to jeutty de teers aor oreltionsa | the Ttalians live in this country. It will be re- teevery one as the father of Mrs. President | self-denial, by saving and by wise investment Fraxx G. Canrexten. | which placed him in communication, through | there, anyway. this tae’ paid to it, im | membered that some time ago an express —_ Harrison The Rev. Dr. Scott is now ninety-| of what he saved. The one man now gives — the Western Union Company, with all parts are appearing all the time, and diverse | train on the Erie railroad ran into a group of = one years of age., He was born before Wash- | > no ane instead of cash * of = FOR SUMMER WEATHER, of the world wae crowded from morning tastes can be gratified. Never before this yeat laborers and crushed many of them before ¥ OTREET, ington died, and he is today as firm on his legs | Pill fof his needs, with’ hundreds for per. | Styles for Ladies’ Costumes Designed by| till might Until recent years such mec found for furmiahing eo able scan arcs they could jumpaside. Then, as now, the] mh20Sm Opposite the Eom es President Harrison himself. He is conrid- | sons and objects worthy of help. Young man, Redfern. sages had to be sent by ship, using up much | reo nm summer houses or f0F | identity of several of the poor wretches could erably taller than the President, has a broad, | choose which path you will take, this or thet; | re ARRIVAL OF GENUINE SUMMER| time and rendering the settlement of in- }, Merry, because 801 Sting UP even one room in.iry fashion for hot Rot be established and they were simply | j TENG AO DION, PLATING, BERUCED ‘well-filled-out chest, a bright eye and is won- | wre are re Coon a* weather has brought about the retirement bosresimr heomerenars cagprtaasre! heaped ber 5 Sees lon papa lene There th Ge “ buried out of sight and vanished. era condi- ‘childres' . oad baie Setaliy wel premarvel mentally. Ibek A two) gS ere tae enabe teas teas cerreeed| Ob Wei fata eas OF ict: ‘bud 6ibte Weel ae reeripr sean me pi recy carded ee his regard | winkes roy terey arya acicigg erro tions under which these gangs of workmen aicand ups pinking, Beq.per = hours’ chat with him in his room in the second ings. Sufficient food and suitable, ficient stuffe and bas done away prime mi 4 bye ey been sete, with and table, with labor are very little better than those of slav- — —— Story of the White House the other day and I’| clothing adapted to one's needs; sufficient and with the necessity for | **® moment's notice with his agents in all the | Be: both Wi sofa, chairs 2 reed | ery or of machinery. The men are known found him full of life and good fellowship. He | comfortable shelter—in « word, a good home, t Bo the | Countries of the world, who are as immediately backs and in pretty shapes; a good variety is | simply b: ‘Bumber on a brass plate fastened | class conkragy sorbent bility and is | ith all its attachments and surroundings pone plc under his orders and control as if they occu-| desvoring to establish rules on the lines of | offered. In bamboo especially novelties | around their necke and exe merely so many Es man oF mate team: eetbaary OEM S68 © | angie Secuste pana med. nea ae Se ee | id os ney tants ae ‘office building are all the time appearing. Among them |°°S*ins great wheel. In-the present case Young enough to be interested in the prevent | 1 ghealthy and long life. All this—none of it with pretty summer coe- | P! 7 = smashed the whole sve | T' have just lately econ = retty eight. | ¢76? the catalogue of names to which the num- = FINE WHITE AB can one have without money, and this comes / fumes, whose every | °* the corner of 17th street and Pennsylvania ed, ulation, pursued to very pretty ders refer has been lost through the curious Lins Yaces demo Up tn Sgercices Porach, to the great majority of people by earning and 4 avenue. Conversations of this sort are not , that precedence should depend solely | Sided table, somewhat higher than | fact that the man who had the though not | White ana Satin Dresses. Lace Curtains 8 iajority of peop! ca 6 : beauty is revealed from dates of y coffee table, with matting top, and low shelf the , call at MADAMA the good of it comes by saving. Without that, M conducted in any ordinary however; e of the diplomat's credentials. | Co , Fant | Sccompanying the train, hap) to be pase- | Sina is ithe. mw wages go but a little way in promoting com- collar to hem, as arealso | for, if they w secrecy woul: out of | According to this method the representa-| the same size, also matting covered. Foot ing by just at the time of explosion and —__—_* fort. allmanner of curvesand | the question. "Nations tare nohonorable preja- broad of longest service here is | stools are also shown with bamboo frames and | was blown to atoms. ‘The obviour reflection ‘THE LIQUOR TRAFFIC. ‘RS. GEO. WAGR! Ime 14TH BT. g i 1 always dean of the corps at Washin matting tops, # small size, and another large, | comes to mind that it is a very great stretch of Mises to ainsee she has opened her new: some Teadii no ° fompiere : ot ‘Goods Dot alloted’ to mate | oficia telegram in Englas could coach's repr |theter be comes from Grant “ister fron | and high dabagh far «iow ‘nant inca | comente Rind aati ina ery great atric of | ME cic ngeectta fetus sarge mr tive of Uncle Sam anywhere abréad with- | Nicaragua, Baron Fava was dean and, unless | Very pretty and to use in @ room ciety men who do not even bear . tod Drew iter shorter time than one’s heart beat with | out having been already perused and copied by mero of Mexico will succeed hairs, Go from place to place, as their strength is | fxr tem Inineas, to winch she esp a delight. Many uncloaked | the government to which the reciptent was ac-| him. The Marquis di Imperiali is only a hired, as simply one number in a list. It can- gowns of thin Chinaand ited. The telegraphs of Europe are either | charge d'affaires and is not acoredited to unt ° not be eaid that this is very much of an im- P . FITTING AND FiNesT QUALITE ao are dalight- | O"nOG by the governtnent or ir | government, but merely to the Department of | frames, per! Bfovement over the Chinese labor which "|" LADIES’ BOOTS AND SHOES TO ORDER. influence and patronage, and, while private af- | State, according to Should the Italian ve shut out as dangerous to the state. fully cool, but for the | fairs are held Goved, @ seal’ covering them is | Mission to the United States be mithtnaws noc | high priced MERESY AXD SCHISM. 4. J. GRORGES & SON, morning walk or the exaeeey aot spplicable to eaters which beers Apr taepeetr earn peng = The faculty and directors of the Union Theo- Chiropodists and Artist Bootuiukers, ping ition oncern di 5 Minister Porter i eaten ly, in poin 6 " — Tani gyeebsgeanareroerg| peg prerme fl Sig arme Wasbing- | diplomatic recognition accorded her at this logieal Seminary are standing up bravely for | _Patiore. 1115 Penneyivantew The actual cost, loss and waste, direct and indirect, coming from the liquor traffic in this country is not less than twenty-two hundred million dollars annually. It is two-thirds of this enormous than fourteen hundred and fifty million dollars, is paidand lost by the wage earners of the coun- try. So much withheld from the necessaries and comforts of life. Poorer houses and fewer of them: less clothing and poorer; insufficient and unsuitable food; less fuel and more suffer- ANTERNS, ALL SIZES, OK ton in ordinary words, the Marquis di Rudini | capital, would take place below Nicaragua, Dr. Briggs and their courage has also the power- | |, ‘cents per 100. ing from cold; more disease and less chance of red not only the cor- | would read the dispatch before if was eent off; | Bolivia, Greece or any other two-penny power. ful help (of discretion. The categorical state- | sacks, to y; more and speedier deaths among all Tect but thesmart thing; | similarly Mr. Blaine’s reply of instruttion to NO UNIFORM FOR OUR DIPLOMATS. meade a Oe, riges, Views which they have | day Yancy work \oesuutan 7] and deservedly 10, for | Porter would be inspected by Di Rudini before | tn yee Congress passed a law forbidding | “cies than ever. One of the very latest nov- | made up this week will do mu: BUDS, STR : i DULD, 421 it was delivered. To avoid the inconvenience | « elties are the Japanese cushious for 2a | feeling in the church. It wasa very timely step, | =~ they have a crisp, fresh | of thus giving away secret information, ciphers | “®2Y diplomatic official to wear any uniform the those who furnish their share of the fourteen hundred i They cannot spend ti ear TE Use, or when there is none, as ts the in slew of the meeting of the gencral assembly. Dretne, beer and at the same time supply their families | look, which is eminently in keeping with spring | are always omployed by the powers in corre. oF costume not previously authorized by Con-| case in most Washington houses, these | This presentation shows that, es commonly DRY CLEANING, with comfortable and. abundant food, fuel, | 8%28i nd nature's verdant livery, and it is spondence of tapreaaee anes eit own envoys; | gress.” Cortain authorities have since held | 8T¢ equally suitable for the front steps, where bs “ang hed difference exists than nro i saeengtnd, suitable shelter from inclement | ere eal foe ee enand for such fabrics was | Dut even thusit is understood that many for-| that this implied that &: winttes fuse, Neda | peoplo are wont to, spond “the masters me beng torr tg weg newer 2 ANTON FISCHER & 89K, Skies. his coewere guar question nivcn snjicipated, for the manufacturers have pro-| eign governments, particularly on the conti- yught not to wear any clothes | Which are slowly but surely coming. These — fortunately for the peace of the or. uw. as well asin the past. Still his life has been | not prohibition would intrene tee a vided a generous variety of cottons to nent of Europe, support re lag bureaus for | at all unless authorized by act of the national | Found cushions are of woven rushes or straw | church, Dr. Briggs himself is feeling quite too F Yery hard one. He was for years s professor in | of life in the United States. ‘That this pro! tastes and purses. That old-time favorite, the | th je cipher codes of | legislature, but the bility of an envoy’s thing like @western college and preached at the same | wil] be solved elie a 4 FLANNEL SUITS AT REDUCED RaTES . arpoas ot keaceeen or some that, very light, rather thin | ill to conduct a controversy at Detroit and will | FLANNEL, 8017s some time in this country I Sting, is rather out of it this year, as a ‘new | other nations and render ing into the vernacu- | going around in his’ buff on foreign shoves See tolittsnd carry them, | leave ein & few days for Europe in search of tS elton of a canes, goods with silken sheen and moire ‘effects has | lar the most esoteric communications. Honor | upow the strength of this law has not thus far | They are cool, look well, cannot get deal : M ‘Muninery, |ppesred to capture the fickle feminine fancy, | may be found among thieves, but it is hardly | been realized. and if accidentally left out ina shower cannot | | But the personal contest is overshadowed for 1749 = Tarn eauty, Erench organdy, batiste and India | discoverable in recognizable quantities among | All dispatches of international Importance | alt ony eaicents for all this com, | the moment by the publication of the com- | ,,2°xtend tothe latins ot Mashing u — lawn have been revived and are selling well for Pea Goms. Themost accomplished chest is the | are written by Mr. Blaine with his own hand, | fort! Half «dozen will stock @ high flight of | mittes's reporton the revision of the standards. | {SH to wmpert my ator te Mitac tennis and other sports where cool materials best diplomat. Each communication of the sort he inditesin | **P8 and they are sure to be| This was given entire in the Tribune, which are requisite, Cambrics are also popular, =e ones the shape of a rough draft, which is apt to be |®PPreciated. Some people, however, like | got @ religious “beat” on its i though their ‘tendency to wrinkle is a great ENCE FLES. full of corrections and interlineations. ‘This |®°Me gay colog about porch cushions, and | that them to gnash their teeth. It is drawback, and all kinds of ginghams and| Diplomacy is the science of trifies. Ever since toa copyist, who reproduces it in fair and | it this case a clip cover of Turkey red, yellow, | not often that a statement of chambrais are also popular. 80 the summer | the Department of State was fret organized it | £022, pe time that he taught. Much of his preach: have nodoubt. Our people will by and by was done away from the town in which his | wake upto the enormous folly, the sin,shame and gollege was located, and he would often rise | crime, of giving sanction of law to a yetem before daybreak or ride half the night to get | whereby $22,000,000 annually are lost to the back to his classes. Hie tells me that he con-| nation, leaving nothing behind to show for it finned to mature until he was sixty and that he | but abounding poverty, pauperism, wretched- thinks he was in his prime at this time. He | ness, crime and premature death.’ There aro a ip haghins as = ay = He | More than 100,000 lives in this country short- fe and said it was care that killed the ca! | i = has not had any regular rule of dict or of | édannually from five to twenty-five years PIANOS AND ORGANS. 4 b ( BAKAUER PIANOS HAVE WON THE ADMIKA- ° tiful script on the big sheets of fine linen | ™&dras or what not could be made for these | becomes bone of contention in K lon of tue toners ot omy by tear eareent h by the drink it, the tof which | Sitl of °91 can indulge in no end of pretty, in-| has been tho ulation that all its letters t already desc! it is same cushions, but they look best as they are, | nalism, but this has been the case in the pres- end durabuity. | See them at ple of Music, etercise, and, while he believes in temperance, | would Tilreat ieee cei, mont of which | Seo cive irecke ‘| sioald be written on the same kind of peper--| Into the record ‘vook “efteranta’ ecintseP ee | and their foreign sppestance eth seeks favor, | ent instances Ther bene ese Pee |S i soakian setae nae he would*not advise young men tobe toocareful | Grink trafic now estatiihed tow Tinbication tigre: of what they eat, bnt he would say that they ot . fine, bl ite li it the size of fools- | State h: it in A pretty set of porch cushions has been | knowledged to be a compromise, and as such it fonts ® hyacinth biue tap. "Before beginning to write tae leftsnand telograph the pretiy cogs’ ga pesyety malo with railed cares of Turkey red, | falls to mect with the cordial approbation of | "Tux Leapixa Ixsrowexre. linen, to be worn with of each sheet must be folded over for one | omitted, the recond bak? Gai pees a | the frills being single and eight inches wide. | those who have made the issue in the church. shirt and tiny lawn tie. 4 inch and half, and the lines must not be per- | transcript of it for fature reference if, needed. | The pillows are of different sites, some square, | Dr. Parkhurst, for example, is quoted as saying ESTEY ORGANS. The bodice has plaited AY) mitted to encroach upon this margin, in order | A single wire connects the oftice with the West. | me round, some thin to sit on and some the report is an attempt to “rig out = 250,000 HAVE BEEN MADE AND sox, skirts over the hips and } that press copies may be taken to greater ad- | ern Union and on operator is alwa: hand | t tuck between backs and the unyielding nation coat with e gospel tail.” Probably is fastened below the dl ntage. In the British foreign office the style | to receive and transmit messages to all partsof |°f the piazza. The filling is light, | this is as well as any compromise could do, but BEAUTIFUL NEW STYLES FOR 1901. bust with small peari handwriting employed is required to be just | the world at cut government rates. When dis-|™0stly excelsior, with a layer of cotton fails, as a number of other attempts have failed, buttons and loops of fy the same always, and the particular affectation | patches arri they are handed over by the | °V€F it, or of cotton and furniture moss— to explain to ordinary comprehension the diffi DECKER BROS’, WEBER, ESTEY, FISORER braid. The sleeve is Seanmed in thie matter is s series of dashy | chief clerk to the officials for whom they are | R0thing so heating or so expensive as feathers. | culties in foreordination and free will. It will VERS & ornamented in the same sarliquenes with each pair of letters separated | properly intended, and such of them as require | These really furnish a porch or even merely | be remembered by those who used to scan a ee. jin Vopr i 4 from their immediats neighbors. It would be Hunslation e given for that purpose to Mr. steps quite attractively, though where the steps Se repel - peter eye LOW PRICES. EASY TERM : The interesting to ki hat individual, centuries mas, th lot are very near the sidewalk anything so gay dami hat is of shirred away i ago very likely, originated this peculiar hand | departere aie woot cthere tho eae in | eather Sonspicucca. Dinnay of this same problem. According to | PIANOS FOR RENT. TUNING AND REPAIRING, e color as the y Does any one ask when this deliverance wi swer on that day when the Ame: all arouse itself from its un- NEAL Dow o¥ LoNGEviry. y ‘olonged lethargy and take its There is no brighter mind in the country to- pg in the great = — = — * going on in country; a strugg! Gay than that of Neal Dow. He is more than | which Charles Buxton, momber ‘of the Briveh dighty years of age, but he is in bis prime | parliament, declared to be = warfare between eaven and hell. The church will wake up to ao Sieened “a beng Lise ms aaty by and by and will be no longer alse Ww to ol head : i and reeds: CASSIUS M. CLAY ON HOW TO KEEP YOUNG. You wish to know what the secret is, if any, ' &s to the method of reaching a long life. There | The Hon. Cassius M. Clay of Kentucky is should worry as little as possible, marry young, and get all they can out of life from day to day. for uation ever after. No such uniformity | in this work, but he is r ble for it all. NEW SUMMER FURNITURE COVERS. oan Se eae snd soneened. ae. gasht not to be any secret about it, for | another octogenarian whoveems to be endowed isch at brs fa Weaington, be oly obec , Bas he be eempenetl hviay eck sasa pncaaaboaed Soe anak $i,_ mised fale foe wil, foreknowiedge abso |S ANDERS & STAT MAR, tl relating to it are so| with perpetual youth. He writes conc soug! ing execution neatest Oy — a and so widely pub-| longevity and how to secure it as follows: and clearest script attainable. Before the 4 LITTLE MAGIC Prettier than heretofore in the way of material | lost.” ‘The revision committee seemed to have ae the world that no intelligent Wurresant, Kextvcry. Person should be ignorant of them. ‘There is| Dear Sir—Your letter upon long. life is re- days of the tele; yh it was customary to rm for summer ing or slip ture covers. h dispatch, for the sake of condense. | Which Really te Not Magic, bat It's Worth ees fornit many This week among other charming things are Bo other earthly good so precious as sound | ceived. Some curious statisticians aver that the | lustration is a cycling topics as were to be com- ‘Trying. eretounes, ome of them te exquisite coloring. | {Soy in vase it weclin ee Jee mheam «19 N. CHARLES 8T.. BatrrvonE. average life of fo is five times the age of ae —_s one Ges Pog eapr ap ps a pe i the aoe i From the Philadelphia Times. void with a ver: —_ design, is i conse - punpeleral i ae maturity. Taking that age in man to be twent; sm striking is ive to each subject a separate letter. In ticularly striking, tho: ie coloring is as ft supa! Test > he should live one hundved years. "The Je ish blue tweed, braided one O14 fineey when: war raked Pat esti molt | Select from the assembled company the per- 1 ‘Ss H savants truly said, “The fathers have eaten soar grapes and the children's teeth are on edge.” But fortunately for me: 1. I attribute my general good health through life mostly to inheritance, to exercise snd to open-air living. 2. Asto my daily habits of work and exer- diet, I have followed, generally, WOMEN'S PATENTS. e, : nd lovely as.can be. Such lo: fare acked following thé last fiasco in the ond has ® waistcoat of tan broadcloth, “This is | liable to search and captureon the high seas by | °0 least inclined to believe in table turning, | #24 lovely as.can be. Such low prices oar re shape A for all this class of goods this year that rooms attem: ngry enine cut in square tabs and extends below the jacket | one party to the conilict or another, all such | spirit rapping and the like and ask him to rest | should be prettier than ever before in their melee teed Borrelli bodice. A white linen shirt is worn with this | documents were sent in triplicate, & ‘copy on | his hand steadily on the table, holding a knife | summer at! Some of the colors are fast in oft “i mae costume and the tie is of the same color as the | each of three ships, so that one might be pure Stewart's efforts at building up «great cathe- ig! as shown in the illustration. light goods and some are not warranted | Gral with some of his gains by di braiding. ‘Tan leather gaiters almost cover the orem fe — tie. on winble, im | split a lucifer match at the non-phosphorized heli? au — per egy — {hay | SRother half million dollars for yin ils, no more than a single isever trans-| end. Trim the end of @ second one intos be without great expense. itied. ‘The old rule wes Geta miniren. cutting an eo in ot cutting and fitting of covers for large pieces of egm, “Ne nimis” (never to dressing a note to the government to which he stuffed furniture is expensive in the first Exercise is the normal law of all eni- | A List of Some Recently Granted to Ingeni- | was accredited must never under cre cireum- for it needs an experienced fitter to do it, but ional so moderate work ie always healthful. ous Ladies. stanees write more than four lines of the body if one has old covers to go by which can be cut chen surehnn es Garden Oty ver been an idler. leep nine hours HE RECENT PATENT CENTENNIAL HAS ie r on the first page, the rest of ‘Up as patterns a seamstress in a few days ought be made one of the points of interest in and could never do well on less. Of course the mi = to be taken up exclusively with titles and a to beable to make entire new covers at little | rayelers cine ra pate Re time required for sleep varies with constitu- ber ‘great impetus to the business of in-| chemtera marks, but this has become obsolete. expense. airs eteen ee tons and pursuits. My father never allowed vention. Women particularly have been in-| Even diplomacy’ pr. and the time may to make ofa trader's fortune, this b spired by the encouragement lately afforded | yet arrive when the typewriter will be put laty Whi fas eon Geshe “shaber chaks ‘neo ppt porertey fogs them in this field to more important efforts, | '¢quisition for such purposes. used the coolness is pleasant, but often the io snd itisevident that from this time on they] 4 A Scan Ps eight od tas bain ta Seid battle’ 60 hace ae Propose to contend with men for the palm of 1 popular notion ‘ren @ diplo- wedge shape and work the one into the other, | back of the neck as it reste a: ti u part 3 Recta of “Purchasers” mechanical achievement, notwithstanding the | ™atic language exclusively is a mistake. A to form a V, the exate the: ma 4A thle nothing to anne than the litte Feligious | “New Artistic Sryies.” 8 in, genurne hitherto recognized theory that their sex never | minister may always address Shi re ee - saddle bag pillows, hich "one can “aged | pd STDBOORA TE a8? “Foe originated anything that was useful. A special Pai ub iiee entitle on thd cheaply that it is nolonger worth while tomake publication is shortly to be issued by the pat- b vet on the edge | them. children or the sick to be aroused and I followed the same rule. In diet I am satisfied with a few good dishes and don’t thick that great variety at a single meal favors health. “A change of diet should be gradual, as I bold that the gastric juice must accustom itself to changes P : of food. I have faith in diet, sleep, rest and health, yet there is nothing of which people | time, and bold with some freat thinkers that gre so careless and to, prodigal. constantly vio-| every man of sense should be his own phy- lating in the most reckless manner the plainest, | sician. The lawyers and doctors say that such ! Inall the pretty silkolines, made up of the knife, requesting the skeptical gentle- simplest laws of life. ractice gives fools for clients and patients, | ent office, now only in manuscript, describing Mae kop a blade exactly reer ap and Pees ul meperdonnes of Cree nes ee ~ ‘As to myself, I came of astrong stock. My | but I retort this is one of the cases where it is | 550 inventions newly recorded in that bureau | written to. Communications to hold his hand that the two phosphorized ided, these are only 25 cents, and in silk | read i of them, paternal and maternal, | “folly to be wise. by females. They exhibit » remarkable va-| Pértment of State here to fore! ba ane i fringe, the pricg is not over much, as far back as I know anything of them, were! 3. I would advise young men having the above | OY di always in English. Italy, Holland, Belgium and | nds of the matches shall just touch the table though the plainer cotton coveringsare wd lous actives temperate life: the ble! of nen | cet ia, mind to be always comfortable if they aoe the women who contribute their | “ula employ French. Germany meee Gee-| ee a Talk er ihe caapaay eee ee able. ee ment, however hid under a bushel, must lave trious, active, temperate life, the blood of not | can. I think the highest development of animal | Among nm mn man and Spain Spanish, as do also the repub- 4 grea one of them poisoned by strong drink. | life isin temperate climes and/under favorable | thoughts to the list is Mary Sherwood of | lice of South America, except Brazil which, | Will be seen gradually to move along the binde. | - Instead of satin covers on the down pillows | Sattar watenct! The diocese of Long Island The Friends, from the origin of the denomi-| surroundings of fopd, clothing and shelter pod This unexpected effect is produced by uncon- | for sale there are now pretty airy looking ones | fs‘ itslf s ueigue cherie: Gasahess by GG tray wk anaine ns | Fectoyenee, 1s puould bs. Solasuet Wabes | tos moteunis on te Part of te person | of ilkline with tril all around, ae dainty and PRINITIVE STATE OF TER MLAED, providing managers instead with every con- | ByQy sende to his own government o ‘idis- | who holds the cate an eyecare: nPreP™ | ccicoline will be guod for Shia temmaraton ceivable kind of backgrounds and foregrounds Beetione To the petites eee ae When it is desired to give the a ee ~ be replaced by silk or em- of miles to the east, tapering off toward Mon- a dupe ” fanciful character dhtly break | Droidery in the autumn. A summer material | tauk Point in the most primeval kind of See deers nee Tilees pel tech match half’ way down, They wil then | Which can be used. for decorative purposes is| wilderness. The winter storms blow down the Sti tene ot cen Gee an, Fepresent the legs of @ cavslier, whose body, | the otton crepe, which drapes well and | trees, giving the surface of the poy caper ie|t os prcd yen oye ge cut out of a visiting card, may be stuck in «| is in several colorings,one,« shrimp pink, being | sis KR neging to cqunese tndicnte preciosly tee Oop peience. For instance, Mr. Blaine is allt made at the point of juncture of the two | specially ettrac! Putte pede dio} — are to be combined for each scence desired, ao | dressed diplomatically as Six" or matohes. - nation, were careful to avoid the univers | Sudden changes of all sorte shosld be aeetiec, habit of their time—the use of alcoholic liquors. | The noted Dr. Benjamin W. Dudley n This abstinence, together with that other rule | wore an. overcoat, and. Shelim wore ‘okeep themselves “unspotted | same clothes winter and summer. But in this —no doubt had much to do/ he went too far, for the other animals have t, asa body of menand women, | to some extent winter and summer clothing, as they were more free from disease than other | fur of winter is substituted by hair in summer, Ree’ of equal numbersand attained to longer | gc. J attribute the growing baldness of our = 3 times to malpractic 2 the poet, Ihave led an active life from early youth, | was noted for his fine othaiee” He always alway taining ase matter of health and | bathed hishead and hair in cold water. ways. S : “supe” but as “Mr. Secretary,” or “Mons Christian duty from strong drink and tobaceo; | natural oil of the skin gave vigor and gloss to be fovea oar met llr eigen @ io, ‘The Dude's Top-Coat TIDIES TOR COVERED FURNITURE. always svoiding any article of food from | his profuse locks. Sol followed his Practice, | ings of a drama or comic opera. When a new ‘be. I sing the top-coat of the dude, ANCIG, CARD AND TRANCE MED: which I had once ‘experienced any trouble; | and BBY hair ie almost ag profase now las in ‘ape is dectred cher tines Aistded an ne eg EIN large serviceable tidies already ate even, from crudie to eras, open youth. [never use cosmetics. Dandruff rr eo cuter cuticle of the eealp, pcre by os —- bev tpd al ee ousty Much of this diplomatic method borders on An’ ’twere a bag "twould not bag more; "1 childishness. In any communication addressed Between it and the wearer we “Agnes Harding of Ohio's the inventor of a | 04 foreign government the writer The cout in tune with publlc whim, combined sabinet,_ commode wardrobe and alwa; iagt nen first, care: om him. invalid chair, and Ella N. Gailiord of New York ot 7 ful avoidanc aloof fr taaviny cbc uel ke wales cigbimdep man obese has originated combined eal- | matter that any other nation of representative 0" mi endar ‘and musical watch, Gofnelis Me decuty flo" go aheed. ars ago I suspected thet | invisible perspirati. hich hardens in the coffee did not agree with me. Though fond of | gir Iti¢ an’ ation at yi ith. us heal! it I took no more. I have never had | Quacks, in destr reason to think tea in any way in-|@ pie a ind ba —— furious and I take that, one cup of it morning, noon and night Generally an s iis : rte ay For this great merlin ities early riser, in summer 5 o'clock, in winter 6:3), of New York has elaborated a re ent | signed, if the name of one country or its envoy For 2 % merit ee uke Ende or ee ieee Sakreees, vik beapeet oe mete raze mentioned in the paper before the desig- Since, When to ineastre for the aame Rover engaged in any form of dissipation. “in ful for laying. the ust in sweeping; Amalic|netions of the other country engaging in the i yy To regal early life an athlete and a good swimmer, but Scheffer icago has succeeded in produc- bo ty had’ hoon tahioweas i je yet eh down that way recently, I was never indulging in these exercises to excess; ing s window Se booing i ting on ofair of 1 oe Boston Oourier. of the by the of never but once to such an extent as to occasion fire escape, ands taken out | fore, in Gecanat ieee and ‘but evidently it is becoming fatally abnormal action of the heart. exelusire rights upon s musical skipping rope; | 80 t hs Beiasqreem Knee Ge tow. color around them The artists who have given East- Never suffering from an anticipated evil; re- eee ae hae ant ten oe 9 Pe | ienland ‘al broidered designs hampton and Amagunestt such « repui membering that sufficient unto the day are the rious descriptions have been patented by three ~" ils thereof, that people suffer a great deal Last Monday morning Magistrate Fulmer was| Another it sore from misfortunes thet never coms then otter gentiises in petticoats. from those which actually befall them. Trust in God is not only a Christian duty, but it tencs to temper the ills of life and makes even the sbarpest of them easier to bear. The thought comes to such aman: Who knows but this is Dest? And so he comes to accept it as best, be- qasse of his belief that God rules and God recently patented by women in this country | sso are a combined button hook and bracelet, s snow plow, « nig trough, « barrel rank, ealea- bor, idly reclining in his judicial chatr when a blush- ing and smiling couple entered the office and requested him to unite them at Hymen’s altar. | “27, The indissoluble band was forged and the mag- | en: isteate was about to write out the marriage certificate, when he broadly hinted at the pro- Ihave been always busy in some way; have always bad some leading ‘object in life whi | Rept and keeps me oecupied in body and mind, Bande, ‘A love et Seka fee ary, SPo2 MY | producing the hair. If a barber attempts to in life, so that my pocket money, even ia | Use Cosmetics I should eay, “Shoot him upon Sof ft went in, that direc: | the spot.” Use only water, the hair brash and tion, never to the expenditure even of « penny | the fine-tooth comb. teeth should be s wild oats or in the payment of nee, | cleaned by water, wooden or quill toothpicks wast Gupaanes, often very heavy, and in later | S24, the hair x th oom malig top Blea bat used fine flannel @ mote of books was miy only extravs- | Tien I put them off in the spri colds. So I have for long years ADVICE TO YOUNG we. but linen, washing mysel! Tam not sure that advice to young men, es-| with cold water and bel pecially if unasked, will be much valued, but | days It is also a itia very cheap, and since you wish it, I will | into cold water at say: Avoid strong drink in any form, as rigor- Sealy 0 Jews and Mohammedane avoid pork.| i rise carly, at © now, end am never (ile. Never good can possibly come from it - mA any one, while it has Beon te direct and indi. | Though my political views generally keep me ect cause of the failure in life of millions of | ina minority I still take interest in public men who bad no fear of it. Avoid tobacco as « | affairs, in agriculture and in scientific ae gee ee aM Py Er ney, eat he whe bas tobsceo habit is | forestry. agriculture, prebibition women eof not @ free man; he is like the Galley | frage, sibtfiems, be. Tam ed in but one save chained to the bench upon which he site| permanent work, the second volume of ‘my at bis forced labor. Let ‘oung man re- | “Memoirs, &e.” ButIam inyno haste about wt aaare eon gane ier finally ip into “ehend with & 4 lawn weeder, a corn cutter, a permalation lock, nity PSL hata is sid a nee nd sit, "The ot i arrangem cast a stealthy glance at the green ciao « bed capa’ of extent peck and found, to‘ls horror, that ita denom- ® “conflagra' arrester,” a ination le Le ale tor omelet! fe “This ain't enough!” exclaimed he, “unless ale rt ig: a, fo5 born, « pes: . you plauk down 4 more I won't fil out your ‘car starter, a disk a three kinds of pave- sf ekg i i fi i | | Hin | FE i & f Sesey a i i Ht if F HI & f iit I it the AN EARLY RISER. ~ Hi E 2 é i 5 [ ebildren are ep £ iH tf Hii i 4 i WE att we a i i i l i ’ Fs bY ii ei (3 1 f H if E i z H ti! = ; o 4. cover, clubs Ee 9 iy for him who | it, as I ma; live to be an hundred years ea ingrete snd recalled. is eect ‘Visite is that it can —. ng es the to. be at some time, per-| ola | AY 7** Mr. Banks—“‘Bee here, young man, gue of the largest consequence fa the preserve pom oot where the bey Rape often, an insufferable nuisance to many | 5. Do I believe in the use of spirituous | you said you wanted t0 avtend your tion of — ‘circumstances persons who are so unfortunate as to be in hie | liquors, ten and coffee? I favor the | lows fasieral?™ fomend ty here in y casually or otherwise. Let him re-| moderate use liquors, tea and coffee, but Bookkeeper—‘‘8o 1 do; but I've got ‘to find Member that to such » man it is also impossi- Spbose prohibition which would make « nation | to wait till she’s dead, baven’t I?" the ot: bie, always and everywhere, to be an honest, | of sneaks and which has been d potent factor upright, polished gen’ Somewhere, and | in catsing women to put on the rid- ers Se ing astride of the war horses of politics. ‘Iam air that others must breathe; which bas | with King James: Bo more right to than to water an: “Tobacco is a nasty weed, z food which they must drink and eat, oF om from hell they brought the seed; sly to take the purse from their pocket.| It fouls the mouth and.soils the clothes, Oue’s purse is no more his sight is makes a ‘of the nose.” his share of the pure atmosphere for respira-| 6. Does marriage lead life? I tion. The man with the tobacco habit has the| so. It is the natural law, nemal moral sense 00 blunted and stupefied that be favor long life, Buti wanta