Evening Star Newspaper, May 23, 1891, Page 13

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» atl = ae: =n = "| ttaery. ‘The cousoe’s Sewers. ate being EARLY SUMMER STYLES 255.33" esis S52) SUMMER BOARDING. Rueeey Tapes Se ed aed ee « TEE GENTLEMAN RIDER. ‘Wetton for The Evening Stan HINTS TO ROSE GROWERS. Some of the Varieties That Thrive tm This | medicine chest, and the quack whe wants te Climate. get his money has only to go to him with a WEY AMATEURS 90 rasquEsTit == 5 tonic, a winter porous plaster, fall | | THE HOTEL WAITER. ‘Me te © Distinct Species and the Heed Waiter is a Marvel. 66(XIT OUT DE WaY, DAR! DONT YER eve de lndy's waitin’ for her Sch?” ‘The Love of Horses Not Incompatible With fone of the drawbacks, Most of the eeventiale’ ove bas'e High Professional Standing. tad theee may be mors or lees according tothe BETTER HORSES ARE THE RESULT 4XD IB contracting parties, / yo orry oF rms qi ARE BETTER mipEss| “I ain't in nobody's way. Git out yo'self!” FLORISTS’ EXPERIENCE NOT aLwaTs THE Est | ‘iver pad or an every-day cure for rhenmatiem. Weather Outing. an belong thes wheapareeuy belatesest| SA SET ove so nu socxn enur ot | “Yahi Whar Ge bed mer? Mo 70: | ren mu sou sar—vuaan to ment se | Tar atthe moment ine sett apr EAR ois bee inamemeget sare having agreed to pay a certain sun ‘weekly for | WAMEINOTOR. Move on, dar, I ay!” 20smrs, aa Rp Remerman = SOME CHARMING COSTUMES. | Ladies who wear front pieces of hair should their have Crash! oughs, colds, influenza, scoommortations they have sequired pos- — we session of the f farmer, the farmer' "ASHINGTON I8 BEGINNING TO HOLD sion ofthe farm the farmer, the 's| A YOUNG MAN WHO Is BOTH A LAWYER her annual rose show, for though be ful about pinning their bateon. Only eer tand bis maid ‘ > bec re servant, his ox end is ass and in abort every- |<" 824 "8 sport” publicly announced to his last Sunday I saw the daintiest, prettiest maiden sumption, torpid’ liver ve fatslency, jon, ver, fener decline, "yellow thee % suffered in for each one of Jane is popularly known as ‘the month of Pa ‘Sen bald- thing pertaining to him friends recently, just before the races came off, consequence, = ‘deck hereatt | © prenmonia ony The Advantages of the Tailor-Made Cos-| transformed at one fell breeze intos _ thal be ould Sed ota thee than | two quarreleome waiters bore in his hands a | roses,” the capital commences to York hospital could use ine month. H had pinned that fascinat Cooked Fare and Clean Beds Absolutely Ee-| People of this sort descend upon the farm ae rather win the steeplechase A tume—A Modern Kiding Habit—Some of the pole ga aineetey front piece ani 3 ma with © lordly air, troat their bost and bis havo a thorough knowledge of law. large tray of little china dishes more or less | With the queen of flowers in the latter partof | Mire. Bowser hasn't seen all thie stuff come Popular Colors This Year—Drapery end | jw.y they both went together. A women should sentinl-—Lacentes ae Cry ~ May. inte the house withont a protest. but protests pected—A Word to the Boarders. Strangers fortunate enough to visit here in b's vot been of the leas anil At the Bw word May and June always lavish praises on the lux- °! {“!)Tosch Mr. Bowser would tarn on her Uriant foliage shading ite broad avenues and Bowser, how mony dosteze ond drug the roses of avery hne impartially adorning the | stores are there in this country?” homes of the rich and poor. And year by year | “I don't know.” the residents of Washington show an increas- |, “Of course you don't. It isn't your business to know. I do know, , and IU tell ing disposition to cultivate this fairest of flow- | Yoh ty ny yup knO™, howerer, and ers, In May and early June one sees every- | to about every thirty of our population. Jusb where busy hands engaged in setting out new | think of that! There are also \y 2,000,000 bushes to take the places of those which have | rug stores, each one supported by about forty died daring the winter, or cutting beds in door yards. Alas! disappointment often follows. st follow that there is Amateur cultivators wonder why the roses so | little sense among average lavishly praised in florists’ catalogues refuse to | ductor eve: grow; why the “rich crimson” eloguently de- family with ‘a pairouizing condescension or| Now, what ® strange jumble of opposite | filled with food. en them altogether, produce hammcecks, things this is! Just lege it! Willitdoa| This scene was witnessed a few days ago bya ebm hated dey hed manner fh on gentleman rider on the rece treck any good if | writer for Tax Staz, who happened to be trar- Orchard: lela, pic sempgiomegy tet, the | he ise good lawyer? Note bitof it, What bas | cling in the south and was stopping at one ef Whole premises, in ‘fact, without ' the | Blackstone to do with raising a horse skillfully | the largest southern hotels, where, it is needless slightest reference to the farmez'’s own for the water leaf? On the other band, will it | to say, all the waiters are of Ethiopian descent. or lunches a6 ol heey eee Ter dot. milk | grail a lawyer in his office or the court room| There ares great many funny things to be find fault criticin nud Slalesie wlaseut Sey | aaything if be is's good rider? ‘What bas | Seem in theve big dining rooms if one keeps bie attempt at concealment. As for the enil- jockeying » horse on the quarter stretch to do | yes open, but sometimes there are happening dren—what don’t the children do? They | with pleadings or torte? Nevertheless, the law | Which approach the terrible. ‘The following is are in the country and all hitherto restraini: ‘an instance in it. Tawe, including tie nee ptberto restraining | and the race track sometimes run foul of one point ‘Materials—Fashion Notes. always be prepared for the happening of the unexpected. If there is one thing more sgnravating than Correspondence andther it is to have one's idea gi cae oot necletg ont original by the one to whom gon enrg New York, May 22, 1891. | you mention to your dressmaker that you think RETTY EQUESTRIENNES | the Bernhardt Cleopatra drapery ‘could be a P are getting their saddle | modernized with charming effect. Your dress- Nets ready for the sum- | Maker scoffs ai the notion. The next time you boar gberaiue cali she tells about her beautiful new idea of mer, and there will L| Cleopatra drapery. You have to hear her and many departures from the | be delighted or she will make a fright of you in ili i 1| your next dress. Se Teial pie | My drewstmaker tells me she has an awful costumes. The initial pic | tine with customers who bring « friend in, ture shows one of the new | Tho friend has such good taste. She stands off riding habits, with » cap | and criticises the dressmaker's folds be! em | the highsilk bat, | and hangings, or she gives secret nods an breragha ot enaprabon: | shakes when she thinks the dressmaker im't ‘Written for The Evening Star. SEASON IS NOW AT HAND WHEN city people are making their plans for pase- ing at least s part of the summer out of town and proprietors of summer resorts, from the big, fashionable hotel to the remote ferm house, are making ready to profit by this in- creasing rush in search of health, pleasure or Lriroe another—as, for instance, where there are laws ‘TRE LOFTY PERCE OF TEE TRAY. Feet, As the summer tourist, ‘made wise | {o\roign “TUS garden bode are eect ine | egainet pool selling and Look making and they | BY an unwritten law of the dining room the through experience, has become more exacting | flower beds ravaged, the unripe fruit snatched | are enforced. large tray upon which a guest's dinner is car- in bis demands, so the people who make from the trees: setting hens driven from their | The writer for Tux Stam marveled over this | Tied must be held as high up in the air as ca ® basi f ring to yablio have | nests, ttle tormented and the mem- | young man’s remark and made a further inves- | possible, and the waiter who beare it m' losenslise seapend Gotsees domnkt cok Grp bers of the farmer's family harassed with re- | Ligation, Mecting 4 well taown literary as re i i ebar- ly as possible, with quick, short steps. es on a muddy tint or showsa hue | |B looking. She will even change # bow, or take end driven wild with questions. Mean- » who ii orses: bas | Why this should always bedone itis hard tosay, | tany shades paler. — protested. snd ® generally casier| oat a pin, or "astily “cut away a litte under | Bas been a vast improvement in the quality | fuee'send ct? baby Looks on smilingly ‘and | boon preity successful in the race of Ufo bows | but it mst be dee ae ee es ae ee osnaee Tons prekent ane ee Qe aspect than the eribbed | the arm" when the dressmaker ye ae a | of entertainment offered.’ But there are stilf | thinks how for the little dears to be/in the tive riding of Pegasus and the | of this kind must be accepted without ule. Discouragement follows the eagerness with | look the stable'before the he yt 3 In and confined air of the old | moment. Sometimes it is the husband who | numbers of persons, particularly in farming | in the country. literal riding of thoroughbreds end hunters, | for the reason that inquiry never elicits a which the amateur gardener has planted, | other words, during the five yeare we here style. How often one hears [spin Toney mane rgb Aerepentlannt a ee districts, who are, no doubt, about starting out THE ROMPIXG CHILDREN. he put this question ¢o him: a Taithie Fagan, gd ~ weeded and watered. Novicesin rose culture— | been married I bave saved us from atleost fey that a woman looks never | either case. “Then there us the lady poop t] in the business of entertaining summer} This is no emggeration—the writer has seen TRIUMPH AND DISAPPOINTMENT. ee of cone abe pad ieaben onan Se even some Washingtonians who have | *t# of sickness, each one of which would have so well as when clad ip rid’ | her mother's brocade to be made over and | boarders without any very definite ides of what | all thisand much more. Yet a good deal of it| “What was the greatest triumph of your pic de manner in which they held their Eeenteconueeee soveral years—may posai- : oe ing habit. The physical | o~ Cpe athe irene wad 0 Sant 4 is expected of them, and it is these novices in | is the result rather of thoughtlessness and mis- | life?” <c Taetoee ean aout tok => to havea ocation of (at ? caked. “Tf cnt pon might on reason of this is that the | ™ for f Mould not have scissors in it for the | the buainess whom the writer hopes to benefit | conception than of real coarseness and want of ‘Without [the slightest hesitation the answer vppent soe tod te ea in cclving, | throw it out of the window, for : 14,” o » for we don't need SPhcricmcapecay no | soe etme to” Bromars ane pee, cups yuh log snd rae | ig, “me writer weber rly ae | came Waving epchse agen ws | Sn hen tm ep Sntng fom wer fl | same. Dror ened” sags: | 3°" BD PES ‘the form, especially those | their own trials, experience of summer boarding seems to justify. | first summer spent on a farm with her own | horses at Ivy City over the full course. Ghee te wallen eiee to the ‘who publish thom ond these os- Don't need it, Mra. Bowser—don't need it! apse ——_—_+es— @ “first requisite in @ country house is ® | small brood. y had looked forward to life | ‘What was the Freatest disappointment you a reset te headed the climate. Roses which | B® echoed, as be stood eect Se Man, Ragen By Oe ee aes | ‘aon on a Gaeta t and healthful situstion. If = farm|onafarm with intense eagerness, their ideas | ever experienced! Siem duties eet tens colt iaatener = he yp Neda mene lems acer og inine drapery. ae ee Se ne — ouse «damp hollow nothing can make | of what it would be like drawn principally in the man of letters answered Promptly, peer ty tain of dishes es oeer cok ful crimson hue lose their brilliant tints under ee tey Se Se seneiins corre S| nis: Sica pempeer as ise desirable place of residence, and the un- | from slong course of juvenile reading. The | as though he had not the slightest doubt on Down the sisle et ti) ian Gad Gurr |e claae tropical eu: af air oie, ead the gown, robbed of suggeetiveness, or val Tree te ae eee The *| fortunate owner will do well to give up all idee | first two of three days ‘hey mers cinely one | sation nena 2Ot the slightest doubt on 4 Or ty yg hy a) tall Climatic'con-| “Of course, it's spring.” y._ ihe ingeenion green by Sem = Acoma in New Mexico. of making w fortune im the summer boarding fgrernable in their delight and enthusissm, | mile n year ago at g ba = pete liye wh setae pow] fae Sau ieee < at Seen 1, what takes place in the spring?” er coliar eaves the ensemble. Ass From Pearson's Weekly. business. en, one after the other, they came with | “But how about your successes and failures ae Se dishes’ completely hid the | diminish in size and sometines fail'ts bien ot | “Various things.” fact, few women look well in The pueblo of Acoma, situated ninety miles SOME THINOS THAT SHOULD Nor Be, * | ddfeful tales of disappointment and disillusion. | fn Uterature, Didn't they make an impression | We,traye end the dish all in the fierce heat of our summers. tae eh tnd one of them is e sort of ‘is was c - rou?” 2 A vaical bm 7 bene woman whose fine shoulders baearte Repcscsan is one of the most re-| As » rule farm housesdo ocoupy pleasant and olas™ phy ‘be nae th was in, Me ic] ‘On ef.c08204, rel the esnesslon of planes ‘ACOLLISION AND A CRASH. ee eat aj pao x omen and long limbs give gruce and charm in ay + communities in the world. To reach | sightly spots and should be everything that| Wonia not let them play in the hay—the cattle | or Pan that they give is nothing compared They met with a velocity almost equai to | ciure besa thoy see suficiently bard evening gown is very likely to betray Sys ed | it you take the Atlantic and Pacific railroad to | can be desired as sanitariums, but too often | would not eat it if they did—nor hunt eggs for | with the trium feeling of man whe | that of two express trains in collision, and with with a little ‘such as strewini ed Erapert to nungect symmetry. Few. women | @¢Carthy's station, and then transfer 10 a| they are instead hot-beda of disease. Great | fear of frightening the hens olf thes nese, nor | passes freee, Wire, or, I may add, the | tay as much noise, and they and their trays,| aud straw over the brusches aed’ trang even, erry Theis hist wcll: Few women hava the | POO and ride eighteen miles, south by east. tree and langied shrubbery grow cows to the | chave the gobbier carte aoe tal Grane | Glee an ed nie a PIR STORY OBA | 5 cs eundiche Dtha Slahen wens, teteceoboh, | azo bowie eooeed. ae mean ae garve of beauty from the nape of the neck to | When near your journey's end you descend | Windows and overhang the mossy Wold be heameplen oe thon ieee mes lore you.’ Jupiter, what a clatter there was! Di Jatter only, will pass through our milder win-| ,, "Whit Neve Fou got there?” shee he becedent pertt thehipe: aa ae into. walag etx miles fa bemonn Plante apg tm {5 | Sut ois Sonia Roane ne Tide onthe re tener compatible | Betts, roneuable, frat all ment erase in | tore unharmed and show in spring « wealth | !"S.5.000 com Horeer Son ~ gp eG FOR SOT WEATHZR OUTIN idth, ie middle of which stands a huge breath of air is laden with noxious an of ba: use once a boy fel an rs d fusio ibove nished man licines needed when it ‘The summer will be upon us in week, and | mound, andon thetop of this is Acoma. Eight o— ing olers. “the opening ‘of the cellar | broke. his | , and 60 on end on, » whole pitiful | With © serious business man or professional | rose the — FA nao the Pager long ‘THE MARECHAL NIRL, caused roots to grow in the anme soll he treed O, how the fashionable wome are hustling at | hundred people are living ‘in this place, and | door allows the escape of pent-up gases from | jeremiad. r little things! It is sad = ae man’s character to be fond of horses. Thelate ooseey, fos ety “ety pecomagy neds wong for instance, one of the most desirable climb- | Here is burdoc! il thetr robes! How differently the two they and their ancestors have gathered their imal ani —- a rile sk Gnd — Hei decay, but was not George Bancroft used to be outon the road shif'lees 1 You done it! Te repo ‘you | £7 is useless for outdoor cultivation in New sexes get their clothes ready for s hot weather | possessions there for nearly three centuries. "long York, yet in Washington, by carefully covering With straw, it will survive five out of six win- struck | ters. The best ition to choose for it is = nigger on horseback up to within the last year of his | fon it Lae willing te ght Pot My dear little woman, mother of young ebil- | life, and he was «good rider and was fond of plied 2 Quting. I have tried to illustrate the result of | This mound is one of many that are the re- | uno simuated thet it receiv dren, half-grown boys and girls pr boys and | it." i a = . dar! Hie reranee "Here you bavoe hotband nl | mans of 9 range of hil wich haa boon worn Tha ie “the sort of country air and water| girls grows to fullivight, bat sbi to resch | takes an interest te ity and Henry Cabot Lodge, | a woey, spoke almost the wrecks aad itis iy | againat the oi fide of a house—not the D of rn which too often awaits the delicate mothers | the ago of discretion, stop in your career | who is both a literary man iticien: Nee datieche woes te | only in flat-topped elevations here and there. - fldren, the ‘out teach- |and remember that’ your country host ie not rar politician, | pro} that s most interesting prise southern, where many place The valleys beiwoen are fertile, and untold | ory or ether professional People wire have com. | entertaining vow itor oe ihe pleasure of | RUN foxee whenever he gots a chance. A Would have sesulted with the tacts of fhe | the belief deg hon eases, (iaicate roses in red i portion of the rich men in Washing- | hotel forming a ring, if the head waiter had not | is the warmest. the contrary, the warm St peal art decks ate teen them covered | fortable and generally healthful surroundings, | your society and has ‘some rights that even a | A A sigpiecer’ a ethen tne, | hot Ka ring, nm Fe | with grain and flocks of sheep. Some time in (. y, to bet- | summer bow ‘bot Be quired there eee ro Leics, whether they | interfered and sent the unfortunate men out of | sun sends the ap upward, makes the buds swell the ki the seventeenth century the Laguno or Velley ee ee ig lg i AI soquired their riches by business transactions | the and renders the bush more liable to injury Indians made war upon the Acomas for the | ‘*t.puy" the farmer, “I and my family | back-breaking labor. Reergreen ay nad | Or ot, Renfeastonal pursuits or inherited them. | "and what a magnificent fellow this head | when the next ~‘cold snap” comes. This is the ly strip from : fi possession of the country, and the latter, being our lives under these con- | other fruit you thoughtless te | bes teen ne a Hvely tat | Waiter of © big hotel always is. He is chosen, | reason that a so-called “warm winter,” when the weaker, occupied this mountain as « posi- ‘i i i boughs to hurl at i m4 y Go te seces and take a very lively usually, because of his size and pous ap- | there are only a few freezing days at rare in- a belicred to, be impregnable height | tons periencing ill effects from | boughs to hurl a jcach ofter ofa chipmunk | tereet in pon pearanse. Wheto mounneh be locks as bo] torvala, proves tar ware’ diactious te tom “Doctors! stores! Faugh! Ine week . It was one of these seen recent shes a rllsin several places excly. parpendiculas, | ,2t any be so, but we doubt it, ‘The dead tel | haps since the blowome dropped and represai | iting tots “owners. Wakes, seea recently | struts among the tables. Bocember una Mori nom constant cold from | trom now you won't know yourself? recent, Reatly perpendicular. | no tales, but the ill-health of farmers’ wives, | many adoliar in the farmer never overdiow- | using to bis before a race—instructions, by Sarg ypc mug sickin cacy de ared ‘A very successful rose grower in this city | After * couple of hours Mr. Bowser poured re two means of ascent, one by s who spend their lives indoors, and the epidem- | ing pocket. the way, which the son received rather im-| What 1s the most important individual on | i \*ty success! ‘ego that be was sometimes | tWo quarts of dark liquid which gave out an ea ae nn ca Thy 5 | ic of typhoid and other diseases of alike} Everything, indeed, on and about the place | patient! + being thoroughly convinced that he | earth? The big New York policeman is the | inclined to belivve that his bushes would do | 2% Similar to that of a ripe cucumber #ung feeute Ie tho eee Erete And the other by | nature that annually sweep over certain farm- | is the product of hard work and self denial | pretty there was to know on the subject— | size of an elephant in his own eyes. A ring- | better with no covering at all rather than with | “eeinet the smoke house’ d ei moun tk wate are beg ran | tt ln ad very logos | Srv tay a2 Tou wou propery tsk nye et rt unm [eget pant In Me crore, ig | Su ns cereege a air nn i oe 8, y fe abt rf ve | Ri Suman feet until the steps are hollowed out | “So'much has been written upon this subject |” Remember above all that nowhere in the | °?®? inontns barron! ume’ et sa SS SS oe eee ee nee uke shallow troughs. Either one is exceed-| that most intelligent farrace have, become | wide world are lofty aira and displays of caste WHY PEOPLE Go To RACES. << lower meg cegeg ancien ys _— and fo Aress & chcnus tn kits aah dane Geen a ——— pore be folerably ene: INS | wiser, and have instituted some much needed | feeling so entirel ly out of place as onan Amer-| The two things that people ought to go to | thinks he is sbout as important to the welfare ; ei jong 3 i a: P : the exceptionally cold winters, which at rare ; ha: the matter of drainage, but scores of | ican farm, for from the American farmii race fe of the world as any one else. But all of these danger and fatigue, it isa langhable sight to! Otho “are still doubtful une ‘contemptuous. | class have come most of the grandest men and | > hinterland Reelien Tian nce ot intervals chilling yt g the riders. The men who know nothing of | 7m 2'?, Cee peony as im see a person—some other—make the ascent. | x, m= wi ‘now not the head waiter s 10 ou Que hasto stride over the Assure, one foot on | Ee'this method of increncing bis income te; | duced, °F Say Other country bas pro-| 91 rand who go merely to bet might eenvall | eed alter of 0s ‘everybody looks sb| Questions relating to the varieties of roses | Tet! | the right-hand side and the other on the left, | member that the best paring ‘class of toarders tay at home and play cards. ‘There him during mesis. Whenever you raise your | Which thrive best is this climate have. been so cullses they will be cen at's rural retreat. The | 804 a6 the came time press the hands elte a Raa poe asa oy " are two will certainly go where they are sure of findin, opinions, of course, as to the sinfulness of bet- | eyes from yor man has made himself comfortable by means | ately against the rocks for support. An In-| the ‘beat asreagements for their health an SEB: 542K 50S UCR. d ting, but the man who has in horses | Youand you si ents, which is all right, but he has | dian will throw a live sheep around his neck | comfort, anda bad reputation is more easly Red interes i ‘who knows something about them and who | other guests, and Y Of himself, which i no uso at | Pd go up quite rapidiy without touching the | seguired than a good ohe, unfortunately. Mr, Chugwater Discovers What the Trouble | Rightens the natural interest he focle feng vn | to stare at, for be there he is standing near | frequent that a list of the climbers and buebes him, and 20.40 ail the | proved best by experience—our Iittle yard bas ‘2 general thing he is good | sometimes contained 200 bushes, obtained from finely formed and there is | florists in all parte of the country—may be of 0 : ; ‘doubt | 8i6n8 of collapse in your eyes ten t y wide-brimmed hat be | Tocks with either hand, but I am satisfied I in His Household Is. bys friendly bet shouldn't be mized up with | 2 air of patronizing ity about him that | service to those about purchasing and in and I may not be in time to save = on an eeelies against the sun? | could never doit. ‘They told us of a pathetic MAKE THE HOUSE ATTRACTIVE. From the Chicago Tribune. the men who know nothing about horses or the | COmmands admiration. He mustbora to com- | which of the hundreds so. lauded in the cate- ‘The ignorance and obstinacy of wer, he likes to feel alouchy, and so he incident that occurred ‘on the onter stairway | Make your house attractive. Cut away the “Samantha,” grumbled Mr. Chugwater, fum- | WaY they should be ridden and whohave no inter- | mand, too, since he has a small ‘of waiters | logues to choose. is amazing!" ‘ueatn ielsated.” Tock ob the pest Saune Eiaetatonsago. Several men started up, | beautiful but undesirable old trees and the| 5, S#manthe,” gram! ‘irawse “I'd like to | €8t Whatever in a race beyond a pecuniary one. | under him wbo must do bis bidding and for THE ROSE BED. x Bho was interested ine beck = ‘trast afforded by his wife. Her cool-looking | ¢4¢h with a sheep on his back. tangled shrubs that shut out light and air from | bling in one of the bureau draws, ‘© 0 | Tt is this species of individual that has it | Whove discipline he is responsible. ‘The small piece of land in front of the aver- ‘argument ‘noth- gown is just equally suggestive of comfort, but ‘to the top the those unused front rooms. Tear out the | know where, in the name of common sense, | the race track into disrepute with some peo) ple. - AN OLD-TIME DRILL. Otherwise there is no comparison. She looks | ™#n became r . and the shepherd in try-| black, poison-soaked flooring, shelving and | you keep my socks.” But the cure for the evil is not to be found in Fapriirvgenclln age twenty-foot-wide house usually looks best bed— = ; In former times at the old New York Hotel | with acirealar bed pare flee took s Bice enough to eat. He is unpalatable. [ing swept hic coanrenticns (oting, and in fall-| bins from the cellar, disinfect and whitewash | “What pair do you want, Josiah?” inquired | abolishing racing, butin abolishing the profee- | 1, _ eaae ——— ‘out : « er the ; : CHARM OF THE TAILOR-MADE COSTUME. and the? all fell om the rocks ‘in a lifeless ep | SO ‘Mrs. Chugwater. Wert a ee eter cut in the center of the square of turf. hb ead What shall be putin this bed? Its size will| * begin tomorrow morning. Lands! it twenty-three bushes set nine tonic! Ireally ‘year younger ches apart, is the smallest dose.” — spece that permits them the needful) “Ti qimount of gun snd air. IC the object of thie | kind. is merely to ornament the ly-| | “Probably not, but I peat antha roses are the best choice. They all | that “ir Jou want 10 collapes bloom profusely and are hardy. If the bi | tub after six weeks of di however, are to serve the double purpose of | lookout, but I propose to live as long es ‘pos. outside adornment and table or room sible and to have the company of our child.” tion select the following, which cannot failto| She had her revenge sooner that could be do well, let the amateur gardener be never 80 | hoped for: Mr. Bowser bad enored about ten hes % | times when bis tore began 0 crack. Ande 4 oop Lint. | minute later he was clawing around with bis First, “La France,” a hybrid. fea, blooming | legs. and when Mrs. Bowser b ‘Now, the gentl ide The drees which makes a woman appear ex- | The Indians have carvel a representation of Par ng trlenleay ory odaeaharert iy pine “‘Any pair, if they are only mates. Hore'san great ting atoonmenlae ere tee this to recommend it: clusive to herself hes iteown charm. Notably | the incident on a rock near where it occurred, | lurary be obteisable) fo coustruct s cyetem of | O44 gray sock and an odd black one, and down | people who go know both the horses and their is this instanced in the tailor-made gown and | which scarcely serves to steady the nerves of drainage that is not a disgrace to humanity, as Noctad Su cual | thoes who ge by thetrowte, hes here in the corner is an old pair of last sum- ee. ‘The; Pag ry: fee lenagecs gone riding habit. The round form locked in. stiff | those who go by that route. rl wer a name one a a Oe " agi . Pie ee tloth and close buttons, the white throat closed | _ The top of the elevatiou ialevel and contains | 2OUF old way of pouring everything on to perch nes Fo a eat ie ied iat"! 8” | formed some sort of opinion st theta Gad. behind stiff linen, the pretty wrists beyond | an area of sixty or seventy acres. At one side | und endanger life. y my things o pt in order, thesame | like to see them put on their mettle. Bui it Feach in the white circle of thecuff.gain added | stands the pucblo. a blunt paramid of adobe | ““Tyen en's the table. Now, no person of or- | s# other men'a: not every one who likes to see the rider put on Tickers, Of course the form mast be round, | and stone honeycombed with, rooms, at the | ainary intelligence expects ¢ city table ia the | “If you had only told me—" the conventional gentleman rider racing oe thi ite and the wrists dainty, or the | ¢ church and graveyard, and near the partic poteg oo] fume. te pers ight sbout eaoct vill be either painfully lank or anpleas- | center ® pond of pure water thirty feet. in baroepets i cinmmeret¢ ougmpien bey mente ty Told you! Have I got to run to you, Mrs. “agen “ ies pertaining to rural life which the ‘knees, and above that aa loose as the antly masculine. ‘The heavy gloves make one | depth and several rods in extent. The priest | hare cuerahse rok ce eer femnich they | Chugwater, for every little thing I want? Is loons ntaloons of an old-fashioned circus fancy the hand dainty, soft and white. There | was made acquainted with the object of our than make up for any unavoidable deficiencies. | ¥4t your idea about the way to carry on the | eapenly usually becoming, and when Nae ne a i a tbe Tinging of the church bell brought | Pow farmers’ wives understand this part of the | household business? If you'd just take | the rider is os wafetute anes a knock- sented in the gown, that could not oe Ope abt aeenants of the village around ws. AS | business. ‘They are apt to run into one ex-| trouble enough to pile things in here so Tcan | kneed the effect te be valk tefvce che grand | ington and in Washington itself, for that mat- See ee ee ena ee canta cached a number of the men who | treme or the other. Thereare farmers, though | find ‘em when I want em it would save mo lots | stand isanyiing batertacks aie jockey arranged. While the tailor-made suggests a | bad been at work in the valley came up. bring- nt y cap, | ter, are nearly always colored men. They are : to-arouse him from eeu; happily in the minority, who undertake to keep | of bother. too, pulled down over the ears, witha long viesr | an interesting lot aud are well worth consider. | Constantly, beautiful eens color and | up in bed and exclaimed: spicy seif-possession on the part of the wearer | ing delicious peaches and grapes, which we | their boarders on ordinary farmers’ fare, or on| ‘Josiah, if you wili let me——" infront, ismore curious than beautiful,and espe- | ation. exquisite in fragrance; “Bride,” snow white | “P.Vnas! but how queer I feel! the. smoothly folded muslin across the breast | were glad to accept. We slept m the church |, meager diet of sour beend, skimmed milk “Now, there's no uve of your Rotting excited | cially is it yy see when the wearer (tea); Duchess de Brabant, pink (tea); Etoile | over! Mrs. Bowser, are you awak Means an unconscious reserve that keeps its | rapped up in our Navajo blankets, and never | and salted meats. Such need never be sur- | sbout this thing. If you know there f can get | ie eprime dude and wears « single-barreled Too Much Feminine Politeness. de Lyon, yellow (tea); Madame Joseph es.” wearer atimirable. These things are the ethics | felt wore secure or happier in our li prised if they find themselves one day gas- | ® pair of half-way decent socks just say eo ahd | eye glass screwed into his left The ap- | From the St. Louis Giobe-Democrat. Schwartz, Pe Sere Van Houtte, yellow afraid I'm going to be awfully of dressing and should be thought over. When the dawn appeared through the little | frg'st not one but many vacant chairs TD hunt’em up, and if you don't know and will | pearance of this glass eye ing out from| A street car conductor says: “Young women | (tea); 's Scarlet, red (China); Malmaison, | sick. A SUMMER DRESS. mica window panes it revealed great root prapcups: Sap mt have the kindness to put the fact in plain En- | under the long visor cannot be appreci: ( . must always seem exclusive, | P&S more than a foot in diameter and thirty Bourbon); Marie Lambert, white onsense! That root tonie fixed you all (China); Coquette de Lyon, yellow (tea). "This | right” is far lees beeutiful “Ei but blooms reciated b ings labalgn in xeteulan aot or forty feet long, and a bell ‘that was cast in| DY far the larger class, however, err in the | ©Ir vouinaduts aaanbled hice ht! sit ous | ue Nbo has not wean i apni hrs wis ones which a ors cla re he ty ng, ane was * “If you in" ma it} whether the suggestion be conveyed by sleckly | 1710. How these immense timbers and this | opposite direction. In thelr desire to be liberal _ Ss ype tay dape Fee — ‘ jsemiceete 3 ‘than “Etoile,” I kpow it, but I'm getting an awful pain! ; , — man is now seldom worn, but the writer die~ . | Say! Polished and close-drawn hair and spotless | bell were got up to the top of this eliff no one | ud give ‘‘Tumbled them out of shape. have I? What's | tinetly remembers attending ® race meeting Tee oF cLimsens Se ee ee kerchief or by elose-| living knows. The Indians shake thi supertiuoui shes. Very few | a bureau drawer for, anyway? Is it to bide | of gentlemen riders where one of the jockeys cropped and precisely | and the priest shakes hi entul rural housel a | that decoction, Mr. Bowser.” the Nest hardy ones are the “Mateme Alfred! <.v05 Gon think oof” ‘Tm sure of it.” things in, madam? If I don't find what I want | wore one in «mile race and never dropped it combed, sile-parted |an opinion, The timbers are there, however, | go well” tone from being on top haven't I got to look down under, I'd | until the race was willing hair, crisp co! and | #8 witnessed, and morning and night, as the | to a ept new ideas, receive all friendly sug- | like to know? Any woman that will pack and ‘This is intended The former bears blossoms of a rich creamy ‘Then I'd better send for a chin-buttoned bodice. | Seasons come and go and generations pass | gestions with an ungracious air, when by a | jam a bureau drawer full of things and arran bgt apace scence Reg ol i i it ble fragrant thing of She may seem so to us | *wa5, the bell speaks for itecif in the silvery | Steke mnsehines efeer fh Ree ee | ame Daren ds Bot to dig and claw all through | Well, then, if tho gentleman rider's costume Ss beast erie Maes Be aes | ence cea Sn) ely ER because the lace is tones that pleased its founder in far-off Spain, | Jabor and money. Most adults who seek coun- | the whole business to get what you're after, | isso ungraceful why does he not change it? adeference to superior age. Now, no woman | vigorous growth. The latter, “Reine Marie | bottles and boxes of remedies in drawn so loosely over | when King George was on the throne. ‘The | try board are in more or less impaired health | and then don’t get it, hasn't got the right ides | Why does he not wear a high silk hat and re- likes to find trom that point of | Henriette,” « hybrid tea, bears beautiful red | down and take a specific for her shoulders ‘that a sdobes—or the earth of which they were made | and would certainly echo the writer's sug- | about arranging'a man's Rabesjedeees. If 0" | spectable pantaloons. There is » method in | view, Sad the weret of iris tant it is impossible | blossoma. | poison. Biases or been bx oh othe pie nua ald rat tsb oa | Sonor" og Oroct tal oven | eg" aah gon’ wt'in act. oETUae |e medate ‘The Tallon the ene xs | ler he tin of tan 8 nero toaas me meses [aa font tot, nga it, or because ber y, either white or brown, is vi refer- 80, sn r i i ring "aun'y cap sets | Ring. And the carth for the graves came the | able to the fresh loaves, hot auffins end cakes around like & stoughton bottle and doing noth. Eitg ben bis face showered with dirt trom the | S97 "Uet tne Mince metal at eee very Aeeegrsl cared oe ccumaie >a ae ty tg tte fol- ter "Now, here is's | ald, tocsmpiote ths goareyced ” '° etet | usually served. guaieesds wal Gad tauh 9s | te co ave Seon atest soe tks protection fos oes Sous rom as siaeety | moh section, Tmpelt"have froanently ~eerralag hag tagterrpadiaatn which | {ved him halfway. knowing what w —— Experie - ° : noticed women who bly | Bhe im clattering the around i dinners, in the country, must not be expected, | ute and saved you all this trouble if you had| brim to his cap. It is ina great measure a res Sicen pecbenty te 2 Pee aca | although unl Angered the Guest From Spokane, but oan card of froauscies, with aah or poultry, mea chance,” said Mrs. Ohugwater, as | necessity. As for the trousers’ they are’ seca | their first youth offering their seats to others vent pense y | two or three minutes and then, seeming to rt in ott BO we oteen, or to aime Corrier” and the “Reine Marie Henriet a > quite a who it ~ Ree seers we those have mentioned, | should always be provided. Seven or , | hold one in either bend, be muttered: [prin face peli prifeaelinay Li ble, too. A tight, smooth surface about tho | bardly older than themselves, vo that it might | through the summer and autumn. Some ef our J sl hae that wagyention | Kinds of vegetables, te T have seen snd bruit ey fom oof the bot | Kan naan cdot of ation in lapng the | off a ere 6 navel wy of animog ts | owt popu Sioned’ thet, ths bose prodes | Wunder fo whit Iss tee ect ‘tase toes eignratied end invion | Virginia aa aa Utah letbeee, amameaSiea ee | eee eee aes, nee 0G | NOEEN'S siden, and. the rest of the wonsens | 90, Zoane *S, tome one however old, | their most beautifal Blossoms in the Autumn, | needed any medicine in the ight, and new wearer. My readers | “Show the gentleman from Spokane 987 and | Somatoes as unl are. ample “and leave noces | joull feat let ioe Peo ‘ tne Prngfier Peeemenendl ay Hae gwen dowd Airs. Bowser ! ae = =e as s —— tell him the old-fashioned tall clock in the re. a Bons ae = eriea a nee Cy roag ‘conseq’ lop per- te, for it is @ good | room is not folding bed, so he won't try to lesserts, well, we all éry out et | Mr. Chugwates, o0 he ® from the old ladies.”* blooms| “Come down here. I'm dying! Lok thie }. of gown for the re- ” sf the A it of us eat them, so it id be of the pile and went off to one corner to A ms ore weason. Te | PUL Svar. worse than wsclegs fo strike, uham from the lin | pet them oe, vie thas you tak ter ase” | ook eee Tete reaper ap Bnd bin come. embodies, moreov “Tell the head waiter about him, so he can over and ‘over - ‘to cure these coli r | pudding, made ——+e-____ on a gra Stand at the track recently as one brilliant crimson. Madame . | Shing to cue these octichy pais a < © idea that the charm | watch the trailing arbutus on the tables. “He's | will of butter (ehlytone Kind et TIME: i iromer png Rnd gpa let bordering imson.. Baroness Hoths- | she said, and in balf an bour she hed him im of & woman's garb con- | liable to eat it for celery. a time) and all the berries and cream that one pte ation spoke really meant it. Mr.—— looked manl; id xq P bed and asleep again. Next morning be was as eessiotrslY im Me wag: | it was Col. Lasher of the Sherman House | can eat—that ought to satisfy the lover of | rhe Rete af Gen. Miguel Lopes, Who Betrayed | *" OP° Laid sere ete, women could . | blithe as if nothing bad eecurred, Sarfoct bee that impression sboaid never be lacking. Thus | MRE: spd he spoke cen eeeneet intel cagtegee CAR cue ome ooeucend ee the Emperor Maximilian, Pessetibgel aaeane et ore bate ee pink. tt ae on tee : : - ic of men of | on > , Madame rose tome, itis that some women in low-cut gowns look | Gecision and action Tat” Of man OF | Ce Hite ones, iantend of therraricts of risk, | Zrom the Atlante Constitution. not much that was lovely in his make deep 3 —s , naked. while others seem to rise from their | “« freshly made cakes and custards that thelib-| It is now fully a quarter of a century since | ceusity decreed his costume in stoukier straps clothed. with purity, and, : eral farmer's wife generally provider.” Iu|q merciful digpencition ot Providence eo | 824 th play They i Bi we eng through every absence of protection, quite un- ¥ business.” replied the colonel, | other words, more faretally selected and pre-| clouded the Empress Carlotta’s mind that she y's again!” semilable. Of course the effect they convey | “and to quote a song. "I beige because my | pared dishes and fewer of them. Plenty of te " “How?” has nothing te do with morality. sort | mother put me on. good milk, cream and eggs are, of course, the | ¥## spared © single pang of grief when her loons. “How! Am I blind? Can't I put 8 apd 2 to- of eee one romans drap-| “liad ‘any recent experiences with Spokane | absolute indispensables of a country table. Foyal husband was slaughtered in Mexico. rand make 67” 2, ipping from Ber, weemn io be uaworihy to ‘spoke up the drummer Every farmer should also lay in & large store| For nearly generation the widow of the dignit 1s of s = I don’ i we his own ve table garden imilian gown isplieg the half covering of what ts | been eee ne 3 Sic wmiy con teerenea —— bes remained in ignee- shame! omen e : ‘was & Senator of the United States; should study themselves pag snce of his tate. But slowly, and by almost | collector of revolutionary relics nog ores more than the store windows and think more An old chap from Spokane, with th tial point imperceptible degrees, her mind has become | of literary men; but in addition to this he of why they wear this and that than ney than most people have foulta, came | yor eny trod ‘pede Ne wakvtae id eee a | elaridied, and she is once moze in the enjoy. | ambition to own the finest of ‘they wear. aad asked for drst-class accommodations | boarders good beds. No mat your mat | iment of her faculties. Looking backward | 92 the track, and Picture of Tacoma: thar Cine {00k down the it be laid Shroagh the long years cf darkness, thed sod pie oma that was han, upor | sfexican business room and in its place put up an oil painting of wi f Pillows be plum; bog ate sled iyvstnyal-ageva sah aet Spokane, the magic city of this earth, sent up swee' ik mattresses, covered | of ® heroine r noarly dream. It raupols, | a lot of bric-e-brac for his parior,” had’ he fi the bed cover- | is well that it isso. Carlotta is not an old 7 engineer a@ue bath tub shined like s diamond and ordered ‘ings also, ‘be if le. woman. She is hardly forty-five, and some- pkey | the boys to all errs other minute and oath disma: thing in her future may yet compensate her for vornees ‘ asure. During ihe evening, while strolling ingy, her bitter about the rotunda, he looked on the ly hidden by the snowy sheets, an Z ~ o conte. wad saw bis same, which was recorded lise | drawing up 10 their ebine blankets and “eom- | , 29% 2? sie’ Sevag oo Dnten a, y anborted c f Bien hy Sy 4 this forts” whose value as is certainl: Gen. Miguel Lopez been bitten by a mad be chen Weakly. recommendation. No matter end was under the Pasteur treatment. will é otherwise, if the jis Lopez was the trusted officer who be- Maximilian to his bloodthirsty euemies wretch whose evil work cased Carlen y 1 insanity, After living all these long years de- but when he espied it he was wild. » spised “by even his own coun! “Gimme my bill!” be exclaimed. ‘by his wife for his tresson, he has, “Why this sudden move? I asked quite COLORED MATERIALS. 5 . THE DANGERS OF PARADE~IN CHICAGO. ‘From Packs Livny. ‘4 ES rH Hits te B Fe ¥ leaded. “I want to get out,” ‘are | this time. He 4 i eepeeeeEETEe Hie

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