Evening Star Newspaper, June 6, 1896, Page 18

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18 THE EVENING STAR, SATURDAY. JUNE 6, 1896-TWENTY-FOUR PAGES. COARSECRASHGOWNS | h Present Opportunities for the Display of Celor.. A GREEN GIRL AND HCW SHE LOOKED Commencement Toilets and Those Worn at Weddings. THE USE OF JEW is cver; when the relations of | en once more settled for all time an: is have given “Thi sities the place he never yet go0d have ountry; when the freed colts | hi or sea for their long puting, then I know a little miss | r ne—who will mos pi-uously sport g with a Ha ri on whe ard man Mc lue for her Yale cav- appear on succes Be Univer let and white, McGill's blue and wh lva- nia’s bine and red, Princeton’s scarlet and Kk: yes, who will wind up ing t church on The m week by Brown's 2 easy Ww he ¢ OF reverse, in the sober or | Haming tints ef a yachting tie. | ne h-water oiors thinnest sort. Be- silk foundation so liren that the rn of green, he trepi | of other coler wore she. | the ribbcns at her throat erecnish if paler was the coarse 4 hat, aid green the ribbons and ivpon it. The skirt was marked je crawn work and embroidery, wearer Was aureoled by beautiful hair, which never knew the dye, and heeks—w is a teautiful colo: n wears it. talking atout commencement yio-s. ‘The gcwns most worn ar extremely simple in hools_be- w nd collere if by he college colors have cheapness as well as! set to commend them, and I m adopted in taany giri te that comm 0 be the mon Prepared for in t eins so often at the be anything new in wed- ly to be expected. The atin and orange blos- |} Tom interference as the sses, but brocade n of yore, and in il the in- layed. Pink wedi! thi Is leas. generally i rayed in ture bats, brims Ww than the season's m averace, and in gowns of cut. entical material and similar Talle on Hats. And, speaking of bats, there never was @ season in recent years when so much tulle and net was used. About the brims| of the light summer hats rest ruche upon | ruche of fleecy lace or chiffon or tulle, two, three or four, in billows of gauze, softening the roughress of the straw and dis: oiving in mists of finest fabric at the upper edges. It is @ lace season all along the line. The fichu a la Marie Antoinette is fairly com- on, best proof of interest in laces And as for parasols! Plain silk, with cov ering of lece, used to be goo enough, but the swell parasols of the season now under consideraticn are brocades of pink er blue on white. and covered with rich figured lace falling far over the edges in heavy folds. Their handles are of ivory, inlaid or enameled in the colors that you wish. You an, for Instarce, match the colors of your | parasol ha belt, blue enamel | er, blue enamel on | the latter, and both set with y, the ve been in times e the girls are season wearing, but su ever pri er. There are capes in mauy- glace, cov. ered with accordion black chiffon and gar- nishings of cornflowers; with high coliar and edge8 of poppy retals; capes of fine | embroidered lawn worn over pale. shot reen or blue silk, with black and white PY Ornaments; capes in pale shot bite 1 green motre, with collars of vari-col- ed poppy petals; capes ornamented with pointed bands of black velvet, Jetted with Steel Little ag 7 the occasion for the wearing of capes, there is always a cold spell in June and another in August,while— y as th A Stylish Cape.| I do not think any sane woman would wait for the excuse of a cold spell to ap- pear in a beautiful cape of fine dark green QUAINT GOWNS AND ODD CAPES. cloth cut in long points, which fall over grass linen undercape. The undercape edged with wide applique lace, the points are embroidered in white and pink and ter green and dewdropped with silver spangles. White duck, white mohair, white canvas, are the scwns of the scason for general outing use, ily if ¢ within a mile ci the water. The coarse crash gowns are often made up w le larels, face 1 white, and with white stock collars. hite mohair may be made up with very g new sleeves, hell muzzied at the wrists 4 with overhanging draped as to epaulets and bodice with black applique lace. ‘Thore ts a fichu gown that's odd black or dark cloth, made plain, with a Wide spreading cravat bow of waite chi fon at the throat, fastened with a jeweled buckle and streaming in long ends away below the belt. There are other costumes employing the me quaint white bow, but | stor it shert at the wa: The use of jewels unblushingly false is ray inctecSing. Their use as mere o haments in dressmaking, I mean; of cour: no lady would wear felse jewels in her hair or at her throa' ere is a fat No ge this one.” BABY IN SUMMER. Some Guod Advice to ¥. About Care and Dt From Harj Now season is upon u the mother of the baby who is just enter- ing upon his “second summer’ feels her heart h dread. She is told on good authority that physicians have decided that the second summer is no more full of dan- | gers for baby than was th knews that the little one ctuel back teeth, and the wisdom of people whrse own the lamb is not, avails little to console her. Still, forewarned is forearmed, and she may by personal care guard against the dan; connected with this critical period. That it 1s criticai, and even fatal, to many children, is largely due to the fact that as soon as a baby cuts enough teeth to masticate, the enterprising mamma or nurse is fired with the desire to let the little one eat a little bit of everything, ¢ to experiment with his diet. The old adage. More forcible than elegant, that “it is a bad t to swap horses when ‘rossing 2 is one that ap: baby ‘just now. Let be as simple as possible heated term, and, so long as it agrees wit svations of any kind unt At the risk of being ton having baby and all the water he drinks e, thoroug! and milk toast will furnist ried menu for Master Baby uits and vegetables. He will do without them until he is two 2 arly on summe him have his warm-water and his breakfast, and then, the day ts damp, send him out of doors for his morning ride in his perambu- If the weather is hot, by _haif-p: Id be brought into the house morning nap and noonday dinner dis- posed of, he may be kept indoors or on the shaded veranda until the sun loses its fierceness. He may then take another out- ing, care being exercised to have him in th» house before the dew begins to fall. It may seem hard on the little fellow to put him to bed just as the evening dampness cools the air, but it must be remembered that while the night atmosphere and the ght are grateful to grown people, they are almost certain to make baby fil if he is exposed to them. In his crib, with the windows in his room open, he will get all of the outside air that is good for him. As he is wenerally the first one In the house to awake in the morning, he ought to go to bed early. Whatever the weatber, baby’s abdomen mus be protected by night and by day with a band of soft flannel. This is one of the most effectual preventives against the summer ills to which baby flesh is heir. To these directions let the mother add a heerful courage of her own, not taking fright every time the little one is a bit out of sorts. aby will have ups and downs in our variable climate, but he will probably come out on the right side if common sense and care attend him. Take the baby to the country, if po: If you cannot do this, let him have a day's outing often. Making From the Ladies’ Home Journal. To well-Lred people gossip is always un- pleasant; when retailed by an inferior it is not tolerated. And yet the fashion of gos- siping about one’s neighbors with one's servants is so prevalent and so much on the increase as to raise the question in the minds of thoughtful people: “Are thete no well-bred women left?” To the credit of the average housewife be it said that this habit fs much Jess prev- alent in her class than it is with the in- habitants of hotels, apartments, flats and boarding houses, where numerous families are brought together as residents of one building, and an almost unlimited field is offered for the speculation and curiosity of their more or less idle occupants. This idieness and curiosity in about equal parts are the causes of this undignified re- lation between mistress and maid. When a woman's time and life are well filled with home duties and with the social occupa- tions incident to her social position she has but lite time, and less desire, for any such undignified contidences. The woman, how- ever, wno has nothing to do but to dress and undress, walk the principal thorough- fares, stroll through the shops and spend the evenings in public parlors, where she may watch but not know her fellow lodg- ers, is the one with whom such a relaflon becomes in the beginning easy of accom- plishment and in the end a morbid neces- sity. Quite as frequently as the maid who is arranging the room drops a piece of in- formation concerning the bride in the next suite of apartments, her auditor will return a question, and thus the intimacy is formed on intimacy is what such confidences lead to. There is but one way and one tim fe check such contidences, and that is at the first appearing. The maid will appreciate the behavior of her superior, and her re- spect for her will {pcrease e thousand fold she will for the time ng, at least, havé recelyed @ wholes: yn, and hy - jf sire Foca wa Oe ess: med while, t er mistres: most istyin, ayy re aor in- tela whe autre eae lating to THE CARE OF INFANTS Hot Weather Precautions That Mothers Should Take. (QUANTITY AND QUALITY OF FCOD Overfeeding the Cause of Many Ai ments. ee NATURE’S ONLY SUBSTITUTE tten for The F bunch of nothingness dle of cusse j vet & child may be as ab: tis unpleas- | | will herself can hope to re the infant. [is taken off she Aature to hold as much as is rep alnut, is certainly not the child's faul r cent of the deaths that oc- cur among children under five years of age are directly due to errors of diet As Uhose in charg responsible for what it ta’ its stomach, it is, perhaps, to that the mite is not gifted with even great- er lung power, and, might protest nd be given at least a fight- for its own comfort, and, may- | are preventable. fective manner fhe greatest amount of evil that occ in this world comes undeultediy from ig | norance; but that we should know so Jit | cr rather refuse to kao most Vital subje ihe feeding of our kind | explained, certainiy most deeply to forty minutes. Broths with rice | i nore, Of th humaniiy— -is, if it is not to be A child's hold on life is naturally a tena- Were this not sv the mo among infants would be even grea young than to keep her aged. rk of life ft of extinguishinent? The yal so weak that ionless and still; the eye, dull and glaz | beneath tue transparent it hovering on the borde. over; then, a tremblin, to the poin 1—the littie and, and aimost g of tne tiny lips, a the world, the e int sigh, and a return to struggle to be resumed? Granting, however, after «1 some of these little half. . Will net they be handieanpor Illy fea, with starved nervous impaired equipment, will it if they enjoy the life that is ly forced upon them? The Amount and Q: ich a contest, not be strange thus practical- nlity of Food. The stomach of an infant will hold, in its ounces; that is, as much as will fill an or- teacup half full. the capacity of this organ !s cons: an idea as to the proper amount of food to be administered, at one time, iaay be gath- ered. The mother who deliz her offspring dispose of a lar ‘one sitting,” amounting, perhaps, to seven or eight ounces, to refill the container, out of kindne. heart, may be interested in learning t 1 of pushing the nourishment of h darling, she is stretching and distending its stomach to a point where a probable basis for gastritis is being created. But it is not the volume of food that must be guarded against. . 18 as nothin| | babies ats in seeing 2 botticful of nd who hastens That, while of importa: & when compar- ed to its quality. The process of digestion in ing ordirarily commences w tion of saliva. the human be- ith the secre- e is no saliva ho and but In infants the: formed before the third mo: Very little during the entire the digestion of what are t foods, such as bread, tatoes, oat meal, beans, peas, the presence of saliva is erwise food consist- of these substances condition and that organ. eding a babe e table, even in the be too strongly will invariably produce ermed starchy potatoes, sweet po- ioca and rice, solutely nece: ing in whole or in part enters the stomach in cause derangement of The practice, therefore, of fi with articles from th smallest quantities, condemned. stomachic trouble. Hunger is often as: an infant crying, signed as a cause of and from the fact that it ery when it ts fed, arises the pernicious practice of ‘stuffing’ it, so to speak. This 4; ful cause of trouble and one which ts hard A well-fed kitten will cry food, when its alr sticks out as if it and meow for eady congested stomach had swallowed a rubber A healthy infant will thriv: atively small amount of fo be pure and given at prope will sicken more quickly fr than from any other cause. that a half pint of milk per di, an adult alive for months. The amount of nourishm ministerei to a babe should together by the mother's in not by the infant’s outcry, much to do with the demands of If food be restricted at the start lar hours for feeding adopted a: out for the first month, there trouble in this respect, The Only Substitute, “While, of ccurse, the mother’s breast is, above all, the prcper source for the nour- ishment of her offspring, yet, in the ab- sence of a supply from that e on @ compar- od, 1f the food r intervals. ‘om overfeedin; It is a fact em will keep ent to be ad. be decided al- nd carried will be no quarter, na- @ pubstitute—but only ik 4g now recognized as the it take the ‘Brooure regular! one cow, {t is much to be desired, provided, of course, the coW 4s known to be healthy. ‘This because of the le:scred risk of dis- ease. It xces witEgut saying that there ts less probability of the milk obtained from a single cow golkg wrong than that se- cured indiscriminately from a herd of, say, twelve. With the fact considered that if ne day's supply ,pf milk be impure, the child will probably beccme 11, the tm- portance of this precaution will be real- ized. The milk sheuld be sterilized always. ‘That there will eventually be a law passed compelling the «sterilization of all mill used in familfes where ir fants are fed from the bottle is a ceviainty. Care During Hot Weather. Hot weether reduces the digestive power ef infants and enervates them generally to a much greater extent than adults, not- withstanding the fact that babes normally req a higher temperature of body fo: their comfort and well being. During a hot period they should he kept in a cool room, but away from draughts, with Nent flannel ecvering over them. ‘The long rub- ber tub: with the fecding bottle are extreme! gerous. They ere «ifficult to keep cl and when not flushed cut rey catedly coll a deposit which may be productive of mu evil, Their use should be abandoned alto- gether, and the ordinary rubber nipples employed. The nursing ott! thoroughly after it hould be cleaned has been used each time, and allowed to stand bottom up in | the sunlight. A half dozen bottles are not too many to be kept in service all the time. in this way the bottle which Is v the morning is again until evening. The should be white, and there alf dozen kept soaking in ad! vhich has previously been boiled. water should be changed twice a day. A Change of Air. If a babe should become Hl after the ebove directions have been apparently care- ful it is not neces be with medicine. It is sufficient that the quantity of food be re- duced and the child removed to another hborkood—this if only for a few days as never been explained why a sick child will from gastric trouble when taken perhaps only haif a mile fr its home, but it is nevertheless a fact. 7 ne conditions may apparently ob} the new location as in the old nced, a decided risk be run in the val of the infant. To the do with afficted children it of absolute knowledge that ipie removal ty another part of the has eften brought about a cure in ters of digestion, when ali other failed. generally HOLSEHOLD H A wise little woman store the gloss on mo: with wi ite of an egg. fidren are the hardest crop to they are pretty well grown y to tell whether the mothe: k00d gardener or not. It is non- talk about ch land the & s all rational tchfulness tha joyment, but with of steel in a vel- wve gullies x from faise, deceit- pleasures. No mother w properly unless she puts herself ina mey- Phorical straight jacket UM her little ones r power, woman who was in ¢ he only thing to dress the hot months was remedy for. gr: rs, which she von the garmer he grass-stained spot lear cold w Then she rv usiness. ng of that water treat- tll after the ¢ . A'soft, old tooth brush, might be used with effect Lay the wet goods'over the hand and brush gently while yetin the water. Try borax where you have been using Persian powder. It i tive, and its odor is unobjectionable, cause It has none. y the powdered ar- ticle, and use exactl Persian powder, The oil in your lamps gets rancid with | use this very warm wea am nigh heaven. There is no way to ome it except to threw the oil out You ca a cen for the old oil, a use it for cleaning purposes. There is noth x cer for an oiled floor than a rubbin well-Kerosened rag, after the mop- ping in clear, ¢: the dust. Furnit ways comes up shining and bright « Vigorous rubbing with a fla dampened with coal oil. There uses you can put the old oil to burners clean also, if you would have bright light and one frée from smok oiled or varnish ra Of course, you got soot all over the fioor took d n the stoves. Next orrid stuff put a lot of » salt over the soot and brush gently into a dust pan. You can do it with but little trouble then. “They will play in the dirtt exclatmed a horrified mother to her fine lady calle when two whitely dressed young hopef: Into the reception room, with mud- d hands and dresses a perfect sight from the dirt ground into them. “Ot course, they will,” responded the daintiest of the callers. “Mine have a mania for dirt that is appalling; but I followed M pveland’s plan, and had several loads o: clean white sand put in our scrap of a back yard, and the delight of it to my worth witnessing. I can put their pretty white dresses on them and send them to that sand pile. knowing that all I will have to do to make them presentabi is to shake them down a little and empt their shoes. Of course, they are not per mitted to have water after they are freshly dressed. . Just try my plan,” If the seat has vanished from a strong- framed chair worth retaining, make a cozy” chair out of it. Saw the legs a little shorter, then take a small cotton rope, and put It back and forth over the front and back round of the seat, then across the same way on the sides.’ Draw very, very tight, and fasten by tying on the ‘under side. Then make a pretty cushion of silk or velvet, with a deep frill of silk, or of close long fringe, to fall over all sides of the seat from the cushion. Make a sep- arate cushion for the back, and fasten each cushion at the corners with pretty ribbon bows. It will be the chair that everybody but your long-legged brother or husband will want to sit in. If company comes unexpectedly for lunch, and you are short on dessert, try this: Take the little baking powder biscuits left from breakfast and dip them in cold water; then put in a buttered pie pan, with an- other over them, in a hot oven. In ten minutes take the ‘bistults out, spread with butter after splitting them open, and, while they are hot lay.0n a pretty china plate, and heap each half biscuit with strawber- ries, over which spripkle powdered sugar plentifully. Make a Sirup of a dozen or two of the berries mashed with sugar and a tablespoonful or two of water, and pour over the “strawberry biscuit;” serve with cream, and they are deligious. The but- ter must not bé thet v thing known as “cooking butter,” but the very best, and the biscuit must be thin, “Whisper scandal and it will echo itself.” Some wise man said that, and it is true, so you needn’t be trying to make it sure, Of all the detestable treatures on the face of the green earth, 2 scandal monger is the vilest. It takes so litte to start a scandal and you might as’ well try to stop a lan slide with a piece of scantling as to stop ugly insinuations when once they are started on their rounds. If you can't say nice things about people, don’t talk about them at all. Always remember to hang your gasoling cleansed garments in the sun for an me ot two and the odor will all evaporate, 1 will hang round them, however, if you pul them away without sunning, In this season of fruit pies try this: Make the under crust a little thick with a nice twisted edge, Brush the crust with white of egg just before putting the fruit in, as it is less liable to let the julce through. Many housewives sprinkle the egg varnish with a thin coating of fiour, and then sprinkle the top of the fruit with & little more flour before putting on the top crust. 50 frequently used in connection | dan- ary that 1) however, | ois weak of | v her children | ‘ought | { ious, except in most | »seak. She leaves it! » brush, like an | 5 {a scheme of strict saving, its said to be quite as} as you would the | | weme water has taken up all | i al- | and “division of lahor,” and think in this way to silence, if not convin: SHE SEWS AT HOME Highest of ll in Leavening Power.—Lateat U.S. Gov't Report @ Makes Her Own Dresses and Takes Baki ng Issue With Pauline Pry. P, d ECONOMY AND FRUGALITY VFS Ow er eee ABSOLUTEEY PURE Domestic Work Always Legitimate put how far, © inte the employment in dres j lar work for themselves only, then, in. tht and Often Necessary. u yourself g relation betw apse and home dre eae rc ee you ever hear of confaur E profitable way" of : r with Are you quite sure many wome ol APPORTIONMENT OF LABOR | that you a furnish bere with | Ly which they t an interestung ‘ kind of | Jct-respecting ind 3 —— Sok boon ‘ing to your idea. | from earning your own living Ip YOU EVER (IN see ot only th r The Appertio: “= en- | OWN clothes, but =) even do ‘ad As work generally, I think Madam the opera of Lohen iy ainda r own food. | dibass va ink Ma grin, for instance) | why not? upon a time ry ine y » supposing - a knight in full < {his sex | 'ey in whic ultimate econe 1 improved is Not at all. Sim- | styety hiring fi ally found it to be | armor appear in di | fense of helpless wo- | man? If you didn’t their advautage io do as they do now. look at me. i ome erally fd at io the I can stand it to | adva © hire their dresses male i because men means at Ma one day's labor poor housemaid to work for six din the papers {Steud of making tasm do i da will take no particular ee eee And you m sure, to er housemaid’s labor € vulgar jokes in re- i Pere fers BO fe aan aearessiae gard to women, they" it. Witmess that to a | SPen a a eadhe an Whether the jokes be | Breat exient, just as far, in fact, aw it has | her weekly $20 for th " She ae mo, | PT AL enlace ee ve done j that she can afford just such upon a time | of time ex h week ast ther -in-daw and | gon cloth; they don't | wetting that parti young-witt cuit type cr of the more j do it n ixo once’ inade their | pCse, instead of hir modern girl-in-bloomers a:.d new-voman- | husbands’ and their little boys’ clothes; | Unis time indirectly, proposing sort; I can siand it to read silly | they don’t do it new except oceasionally | earted ir “é 3 n they have cloth en hand that they | in ber own labor. It i arguments against woman suffrage that | cannot otherwise advantagesusly dispose | be‘obliged to do her ho slander the sex under the guise of profess- | of. This grand principle of the division | work in ed regard fer it; I can even stand it to see | of Luly not a fetish that we must fail | s:at 1 before {ts use of extens facturing things i of that particular skill t branch of industry, thing: produced cheeper iy c selves, it is not only very name. When hy | be that s' y manu- | saving devi of | Wants in the mar | she'll invent it things m women themselves write stuff in the way | dé of attempted reasoning or philosophy that almost justifies the worst that can be said ?xainst them; all this I can stand and hold my peace. But when a woman who happens to know the a, b, c's of a subject, and nothing more. starts on that ground to call everyoedy names who differs from her, aitempis to drown the commen sense of | the sex generally in a flcod of 1alse osophy, and vauntingly challenges all com- ers to meet her “in as many 4 they fancy they would like.” then I feel | I'm called otherwise use for it Making. nds as esent, measured in expenditure of labor, the cost | rike. Here’s one | of and de at home any bson puts it. F for you, ry, look gre Rost ol ean do in one hour each aay, the In the ! to outnide producer has no Pie spas ign “a couple advantage from the us: what « of machinery be- may have in her setting forth “the bad eco art of sewing at home.” I re 0 ewing machine, no advantage from herself finds hi J dress by the dressmaker ‘must be cut | wctner. Be her ambition excited hy lof some | fitted individua very little ad- map oman tre Toulesour ntage from ni humien ae Pere cat ana : what similar rea : eee ivantage that lar skill of the | about cour | maker's ns ary better ividual taste and ly by her superior inte ure, plainly caused native poor judgment undertak ne dressmaking must be told su, just the same w y fail er suceeni to their own sat hem. As to washing his janced by A Limit to Specialty Work. There is al ther u good deal of quent k about incom EOE sone aeae all. except in the most spe nd techni and the advant i cal of professions, igence is almost Ives to one occupati and so forth, if ot prok An iallgenve 4s als p2 milecit dg: atranes: more important to success than trainine b what Gol pilben oe ab do & | seving woman didn't observe the dart” | Ready—™ | | in the dress of the friend who nd being disgusted, That in this we h. real philoso; of the time, br 5 with quite as goo: eanbags, and mak favorably with sv les being much 9 very much mi: Madam Pry, error” in your stot vas seeking to make" the accident of the fit- ness or unfituess of this work for her * rule cf the housewi onduet.” Any who goes to making bh own for no better reason than that The fact i the'r r b ther work not o: but for the mal jerstood and exaggerated think# she onght to, and because do it now ergy that has brought alon h th a he nice to do se, d made clothir eral progress of civiliza the necess! fortunztely such) w or a n ? suggested, of xist except in such stories as | the awzres ine Pry. And if they d'd they | ing custom would have nething to do with the ques- | benent tion of the economy of heme dressmak: f ficial unmeaning gymnastics to Dear little-girl-win waist, the ques m't swa {® whole a {is as much of fals he weakest vaporings critics. I wish I though, m1 at least | work and much con demand more {ty tailor-made garment | tpore and more on outside dress becomes Ss of individual fitti ¥ come more and more epend on ready nade Plain to what a great shirt waists and i sht this at u say “is | jority of women simple and | derwear. In the ou this we can see from the v« at there must be t § of labor and cost yout-own-shirt- home sewing is a Your economy $s not Pauline, i Madam ad Ume to explain it be sure, except for the quotation is put just where it should say it had nothing to do with Now, Madam Pry, I should advise you to lecide for yourself whether you want to do own dressmaking or not, but re with other people who pres e ends of human life." : have the fundame; however the term means to ends. And frugality y you pnomy, astm severe purp w is the ty is merely one app djustment am ore about what is s for them than you do. If, because I so beg nomy itis or is r leave to differ from you, it will give you form ol economy depends u any satisfaction to call me an old maid or a umstances, largely upon the one great perme], the women re | Hottentot, or wonder if I have any brats, circumstance | whethe Ea or not u ecnditicns any other form is possi! contend that dres. is poor eco! majority of ¢ n¢ away pith hy, go to I shall me by as stitute, sewtr, own instincts they don't know the or industrial mao. following the one Divine Guide oni b, c's of | they are | The Mont side: ut wh: 5 hat cannot | Pry, do you fail. | Prem the Augusta Oe al your definition of Legitimate and Necessary. | The most abseut-minded man is a Brewer eure it isn’t s Re ‘ rn But there is another phase of the ques- | man, i he ts ¢ aby Z who criticise othe: be particular on. Not only is home diess: 2 ‘ foll 7 | careful about the meaning of the words| getiy jegitimete and re ne ere | w is as follows: T you use. E to be sure, is a scheme | 'CUY legitimate and not in the least bar-) went sh. ani took his or a system ¢ I rather pre- | barous under our present term. But frugality? | division of labor: it i it your desire to force an exact | stund, even positive “n between the two terms that led | cases, It is of the | He visited four stores. He is a pleasant S matters now, man and a happy cor jonalist. At demanded in many | cach store some i opposit Story was start- a pecan ere 4 : . ough to talk about! ed, and nobody s 2 to notice that you to insert in your sesond dennition that | Hires ‘ A . 3 ; ae ong ng cooks and houxemaids to do your 2 bought a bi t eacl 7 Bele sacueme. tat Melonged only an 2he| Coie put ehere aa ceccon monk tii ered | he cere ee at cae pin rst? Or have you wargant for it in some | finily that in alee inipoenthe teh he never carried away more than one. He authority above that of Webster's In | deme. In the first place, a housekeeper | Visited the laundry, laid his from national Dictionary? "If youl are'very sure | nouschold @comminr or SHhNager Bs tec | the Aust gtare on Fie Goebln: chath that the simple custom of saving is not | Eee eo eces | Se cae oe . “ ser jer to be frugality The best one that money frugality, but th oy : ee } fe “schemed,” why, speak ay | C2" Hever assume all the responsibility nO an get | the cashier while he paid his bill, a eae m {out with only his laundry bund 1en, Seine aac taae Bea ieee ae eed ana naturally | falls on the head of the | with his wife, he went to his own place of pee AM Rare cuse. Even if you give up the whole; business to bring home a ha » fo Be ee Gee eT re nome OF | sirigpie alive in! durninbed Spore tet Tiree re mises Soomt Beer eke aly, Sister “women s 4 Sek and even relegate your babies from the day | the store, chatilag, while he went In, Vehen As to this economy of doing your own | of their birth to the care of a hired nurse, | he came out he whistling softly home- Works” Specietiy, Gressmaking) “Scing| the there is lable ep he momenice iM de- | ward with the nalter strap and without his Or EU aUL ARATE Rae coe ee | mabling the altentioa of the wita-anad One tena ee oe He only awoke Pe aes We nt EE | cote, Bat ceemt pone oven If in con | a series of mistakes when he reached barians exclusively, that’s another t | it morally permissth : , do are to as far as this. The majority of wom however little they may have to do ad of > com The habit of feeding one’s self inst | being fed Ii a baby is mon | among, barbarians, but that doesn't sept home anust at leact be where oe t por- ext day. e shops had clo: There are. we know, as an actual fact, 0 | impossible for them to ensage te are te No Need for Ac considerable numbe very 1 dcmestic cecupations, unie like Pauline | Prom Lit number—ot people in | Pry, they are fortunate enough to secu 7 land who do a eee iaeetas “I wish T knew how to act when I meet | werk that can be iargely done at home. : ; work, and the fact that ‘hese people | But the amount of work of this kind for} a baby. I always feel like a fool.” many of them bghly cultured, also that | which there is any demand te limite “AN you have to do is to act the way the custom ‘not only exists but ty ration-| iven wita @ most itberal estimate en the | you feel.” ally defended and advocated by those en-| occupations exclusive of housework pont gaging in it, is evidence enouga that it| ble for women at home, there are not v isn't entirely barbarous. ough to employ half the women actually When Women Will Chang restricted to home work by more or less | P™™ : eee lent | Censtant hcusehold demands. Let us sup- Why did Willie Westside break off his Fou talk sbent “specielization of talent: | Toor tat every, worst eke (on me engagement to Miss 1 aged in special work is so engaged. S$ “H the ob | women generally will find their only pos: | him. home and failed to find his wife. Ho found her, a little scared, however, in a few min- utes, but he did not get his other p ns k Time From the Th a Times, was afraid she woul want to marry = Ba Gays to come who will look after this boy ?—Life.

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