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i JUNION Scwi’l‘fg_flz_i_chine Sews Baskwards and Forwards Makinga Perfect Stitch Either Way, 1609 Howard St UNION Sewing Machine o ——— MAKESBUTTON HOLES UNION Sewing Machine e —— A Blind Man Can Thread It, A Child Can Operate It. 1609 Howard St 1609 Howard St. UNION Sewing Machine Easiest Running Sewing Ma- chine in Existence. : UNION Sewing Machine Does Embroidery in chgnille,SIlk Arasene, Kensington Stitch, etc. Equal to Hand Work, 1609 Howard St UNION Sewing Machine Simplest Machine Ever Manu- factured and Lasts a Lifetime UNION p’ ewing Machine Cusiomars Praise It, Competitors Curse It, Suppose You Try It 1609 Howard St 1609 Howard St 1609 Howard St NIN ing, and, at a fixed time, her in- | the man who built the first railroad in am asked o dine, and | and ability. is Mrs. Fanny Jack- | over, beads and beaded trimming are rapidly | hats, as woll as for accessories of the toiled, IN THE FEMININE DOMAIN Tonial - WiteH /bHe dies;ob turkien; K11i| TaketrsHs $41000,000; ,r,,m.;,.‘., s fiz{:},,k‘f\"“,l. fon Coppin, the lecturer, who. dovotos | beini driven to the background. e e o haasy of oty right to income lapses, and the money | Mps, Kate Terry is worth nearly $6.- is good for her. She ost of her timo to the institute for col- | _ Seventy-five thousand women an Now | axo or tore, but produced i groater variey ke puid in swells the endowment of the 000,000, ; ER 0 think ~ of my health. | ored youths there, and Mrs, Gertrude | Vork city earn their livings by docent ocet- | (il (rectivéness than over. What Makes & Lady—Lines to a Shy | 8ssociation. Her father may have paid | "3 Phomas A. Scott counts hor o professional woman. | Moselle, who used ‘to conduct_the | PHEONE ARATE N L0 Rt ronow | Dark Russian Groen, terracotta and for twen years, when, by marriage, | o, o 0 How often my heart has [ women's department on the New Ll Ld o) Dyl e siner | ®Olden brown appear to be the provailing Young Woman. ho forfeits all right of insurance. This | Weoith at $5,000,000. y A ) Al (DY iha A T | often cmployed, a favorito combination beiug | €0} e ghe forfeits all right of insuranc £ MuanJotn: Jacol Astor is worth about ached at this treatment. T know that | York Freeman, and who has | ) acade with roped silkand velvet. colors just now for promenade ¢ 5 advantago enubles tho compuny £ | ¢ 500 some professional women bring this | written for the Ph charge lower premiums and makes the | $8.000,000. KIEE upon themselves. But_ those of us who [ and the Philadelphia Pr WOMEN OF THE FRONTIER. |} den loss to the father insuring. He | Mrs. Fdwin Stevens, of New York, | Would like occasionally o fake i | for papers published in the has the pleasure of feeling that his | has $15,000,000. man's hand for some other purpose | the negro race. M small annual payments insure his daugh= | Mrs. Hetty Green. of New York, -is ling her pulse are staved atif | ber of the Womar ter's future and may give her acomfort- | worth abourt $40.000,000, we do it. sociation, the only member of her Broadeloth is the fabric par excellence fo! these suits, and in most cases there is a coal to match, stylishly braided and borde with a narrow band of silk astrakhau, ‘White aud black striped silk underskirts are worn with bodices and full overdresses of black light wool, foulard, surah and benga- lelphia THimes | “ypq06 of two kinds, one with long, fleecy as w as | pile, the other short and velvety, interest of | for many of the handsomest short . Mosclle is a mem- [ phereiis a peculiarity about the Irish serv- ional Pre ant girl which may have occurred to Her cousins are all of the masculine geude: 3 Maiden Assurance Society—Some Professional Women—Female able home after his death, Itisobvious [ Mrs. Robert Goelet, worth $3.000.000 o iR Rovin Frances B, Harper, the tempe The Little Rock Clipper chronicles a most [ Jine or polonaises of those fabrics, Then Violinists—Prominent Col- that the chances for marriage among a | owes her fortune to hardware. = and writer, has lived much in | astonishing fact. It says there are fourfirms | tho 1‘,(“,;,,“"“‘, slashing are so manngod a8 from Boston writes: to be the r winter. The coming of seve it- | who can’ make the catgut and power has stivved the our Toeal an en number of young women can be | - nrug caleulated as closely as'those of death. | 4 ddicine man, is worth $3.000.000. The pian has worked well for genera- | W0 G 3 3 tions in Copenhagen. :“':‘- :}‘n all 4.), obertsis the Wha of all our American philanth rop- | Millionaire widow of u mining king. Mrs. Martin Bates w delphia also. in that city which have women as silent part- | o show the striped underskirt in - panols and In Boston one of the best-known | BCrs: around the bottom in front and at thesides. Liomon g5 a modiste, whose ef- | . Oneof the very latest designs in brace: |~ ciray, which is so fashionable, is not.a be- feets in fabric, form and color have | lets isa series of golden knots, each Knot | coming color, but then it can becombined olbE Hiv6 THido HEE#EY being set either with a ruby, sapphire or dia- | \ith reds, browns, tans, pale blues, helio- T e o s o [ tropes nnd all the becomming shades of yol- ored Wome Jayne, the widow of the patent ng with skill ambitions of Cines to a Very Shy Young Woman. Margaret Deland. False Violet, I sought for thee ures,and the de : things ists will start such an association in thi also Violet, I sougl T Fo b et af nidans of aif | Which hior husband m &9 seshydaily Roingto andl (romy o] | /{08 tery O (i Ay OF iome) ot | pLbgamber ot women who walle for exee” | low audlrosewile gold lvce wad i (S 1f thou didst bend so low, classes of society. Mus. Jane Brown reecived from her | 100ms of their teachers with fiddle- | X oi0 Sotika, tho prima donna soprano, | yapidly that the doctors ure beginniug to | thread brighton it up as prettily and becoms Prompted by tender modesty, g husband’s estate about $4,000,000, which | Poxes in their hands. The banjo, that | o ol hom in Natchez and whose | complain. ingly as could be desired. Or show! Women of the Fronticr. was accumulated in banking. L l‘"l‘"‘l““'fl_.‘ B yer OF | yoice is of such sweotnes ity and | Sleoves aro gradually taking leave of the | For ovening wear at home aro protty Hon- 3 will disclose thy subtletys Mrs. O. O. Howard in Daughters of | Murs. Joscphine who gets her | LWO 080, has gone out of favor with the |, ngs that musical criti alled | theators and house dresses and the long | rietta cloths in light shades, the texture Ypols that o sy America: The wife of a recent governor | money from pn T | [ *]M""»‘l ;""“‘*‘_1.\\ ’"fil the v {!!lg is 5 t Jlika | gloves of tinted suede are made with threc | soft as silk and _beautifully "',“",T"E'Tl Thou know’st do win mine eye— of a far western state use to t nated to be worth $4.000.000 to £5.000. on the steady gain. Fine violinists ve in concert in | button sh great variety in the formation of tho dainty (This truth, fair maid, I challenge thee, | plankots and go cantionsly out (RIS ORTE 000000, Sl U 000 e By A e ures are rare, of O e e erowned | White watered silk dresses, but in clinging | gowns made of these fubrics, some boing fite Deny!) nightfall, to some sheltered nook, th “First Ladies" Now Living. Violin playing is hard work 1) ¥ princesse style and frequently aced down [ dshea”in simplo tailor fashion, with plath the back, are fashionable gowns for bri slirt, bratded across the frout, inda glove. ) maids’ wear. fitting bodice, its only ornament being & un with a mechanical turn | Ty, yito of Robert P. Porter is said to | braid collar and vest. heads of Furope. “Mme. Nelli ly. 1 Brown Mitchell is an- it becometh thee, to sleep with the stars forcompany. Her | Mrs. Grover Cleveland. and (b taxgéee girlsiplrength gr husband was obliged to make long trips | Mrs, Julin Gardiner Tyler. widow of | The musclos of a man ave needed, other mus Thou dost affect this ¢ ? 3 b T well as a s endurance. When you f R b il to some distant mining camp. She has sident Tyl ! ik y of mind. She hasinvented and patented [ yacl§ %0 000 Quring the past year writ- | There is no place where women show less WA recently presided in her husband'shome | Mrs. James K. Polk, widow of Presi- | 06 & Birh who has the physical | o or three applisnces now in common | g for the nowspapers, without neglocting | senso and discretion than in handling rich at the state capital while he filled the | dent Polk. B st T RULOUA S use by musical instructors. Equally | her home duties, either. furs. Succe nms a scason, when if theis ing she istapt to lack the del wy and? péfinement that go with stic efeciition upon the king of in- s s, wife of ex- | struments, There are plenty of girls ident Hayes, was there four years. | who ar ating to the very last de- Mrs. Julin Dent Grant, President | gree w olin in their hands, but Grant’s widow, lived eight years in the | the combiny of grace, physical & v, and soulful performance is very highest office in the state. And that Miss Rose capital has sprung from a few dugoutsto | (e 1 75,000 inhabitants since her daysand | 'y launching forth into societ nights of danger on the river bluff, and jden that a certain manner i sary [ her children, yet in_their teens, have if oue would be “good form.” Just as | been enjoying the educational advan the girl of the period haslearned tohold | ges of o st Another brave | Gra her shoulders squarely and_ straight, to | woman, afterward the wife of a county | White house. i e e dress in tailor-made gowns and cultivate | judge, wus scized by an Indian lover, [~ Mrs. James A. Garfield.widow of Pres- | ¥are. say those who have observed. a fondness for out-of-door sports, 8o she | who intended to place herupon his pony | ident Garfield, lived only six months in Peresiny Toa. the Italian damsel who seoms to think that her dignity is im- ey her away with him. She gave | the executive munsion. will PPOI bo here with her violin periled by being frank and gracious, | him a quick blow" with the rolling-pin [ Mrs. Harrict Lane Johnson, the niece | S1id to be:banutiful enough to » und above all kindly, in manner. She | thatshe wasusing, then pushed him with | of President Buchanan, wus for four expresses lu-ruuininus freely enough in | all her might out of the door and ags years the mistress of the executive mnan- 1 trimmings which havo | Scalskins reached tho ground tho wearers rts is Edmonia Lowis, the sculptor. ignored for_years are now in full favor | Were happy, cam the ra of, bobtall sncaucs She is an Afro-Indian, and was born in in. Passement 8 were never before so lf\lm_ HUULEY ulh visi ‘-]s.im “: u‘ el New York state, but now has her studio | varied and so effective. overhanging slaovers, and oloaks they. could in Rome, where she has plenty of com- | Mrs. Emma B, Ew! "“",""Td”{“‘ she ber | wear with comfort for years, and had whittled missions and has done some_fine work. }:'\:mg:x'."fi.ff'(:’gu::z‘;-'c“fiv"l‘fm ufi:"l::,‘;g{“’;;u out of their vast possessions some skimmy “The Old Arrowmaker and His Daugh- 3 ter? i e st kmown. produc. | wnd sale of home-made bread. LI (0 TR UPDRALD Fo er? iy one of her best known p 3 tions and is owned in England. Between the ages of thirteen and eightoon | “During the present scason pelorin & ¢ ng it for | yours a girl knows something. From eighteen | fur, plush or velvet are suficiently warm fo da B. Wells— lola ’—whose suit for | 15 gwenty-five she thinks she does. “After | the' promenade, ovor walking dresses of res under M‘““‘"-"‘!‘}“ laws for | that age she wishes she did. cloth. AllL tho ncwest of these, worn by being foreibly thrust out of a passenger | mpe latest in the way of millinery oddities | best-dressed women, fit as snug as possible, car in Memahis by three or four white | is s bonnet of “pinked” leather, much re- | and are devoid of the high or even slightly men brought her before the public a | sembling thoso of last year, made of em- | fulled shoulder, effects which are wholly out well known in another branch of the | mhe manufacture Jlizaheth € for fifteen month Rutherford B. Ha rveland had Harper's Baz: m the minds of most 1 rd her own “sot.” She can laugh and | his pony. Then she s not the equil s an artiste of several of ¢ g SRR MR B P10 bost | broldered kind or chamois skin. of date. Some’ of the new pelerines iave talk and smile and bow where she feels | took the cap-box from her pocket, where Pattorson, the duughter of Pres- | Lhe AmEICHLE !"\l.‘"“]"‘{{"}‘I‘;‘““r‘“j'i" { known of 2 women journalists,and | Only 8,000,000 women in this country have | long panel frouts, a style cortuin to obtain sure of her audience; but would she | she alws among the latter is Miss Belle Botsford, | {00 '\f bert. o Datroit. 38w | towork for money, andall the restof the | fashionable favor in many varieties of the ried it, and, fitting & cap | ident Johnson, did the honors of the sites and_other short wraps, the y turn to some less pros- | to her gun, aimed at the Indian’s heart. a B for nothing. What i King fort style proving becoming to many figurcs for ston girl who has had five voluntari of genius. The wife of Rov. | Women get their money white house while her father was pres porous sister to make her feel wel- | In the meantime he had mounted his | Jont. pinien Shtn M awhoinas honrd mville, Tla., | e s v ho fashion | Whicl tho biain round cape 18 unsuitabis. gomaand h}']"."‘ adiiahergeasotin andirey {']'". Lomas '““‘{' o the | Aus. Semple, step-daughter of Mrs. forme Miss Forton, of PhijadeiPhists | Muscovite drosses, Iyzantino galloons, gold e acompany of comparative strangers? snock. The cup snapped, frtus | 1ylciund now an Mmate of the Louiso isa young woman, but’ already widely | MU NN’ § tho arsenal P e Would she thiuk it worth her while, o /‘butisha pursued him, determiniod | 0o wod 0w A inmate of the Loulss | ool horlust viiter toWyon known. e pavalling ¢ylos ra arwat indeed even “proper,” to answer the him. She was a good ma AR et G $ UG R RiQLet LI LR i . 58 3 k 1 household. he will soon make her ap Ex-Senator Tabor's first wife, who laid the basalot banle s call th 1 atition: of a littlo stree v v . frequently killing elopes she will soon make her appe S T o ; 's first wite the | A pand of bunko-stecrers call themselyes 3 > g 5 N g A . 5 b e jois pspondents to g etly. Ne ghe thank the servant who rendered | her determined air, fled, Her husband sident Arthur's sister, was the lady responde streots. Colored Women. Rtk Borges! malie usetull| XOrk s ubout forty years old, and is worth $500,000. Speaking against long pra Would she | said that if she had killed him there | f the white house during —several Eromin her some passing s givo u word of sympathy here, a word | would have been no escapo for them | Monthsof each of the three yearsand a | Mr. T. Thomas Fortune is one of the : For walking-dress, and usofal In on | Talmsdgesavar CiWhon Leter wes ondoars of good cheer there?” Would she as | from the fury of the savages, who were | half while he was vresident! ablest and best known colored men in lie ascendant for evening wear | \oathors, nothing is better than_ dark blue | S 0 Nt on f00, WHCE b HRE IS hostess make her table or her drawing- | camping near in large numbers, his only S the eovsiry, £y 3 | s 3 smooth-ficed lady's cloth, made with & piain | gupbiichtion boon ns long asthe introduction room bright and happy for all her | conveyance being a slow ox-team. Professional Wo Tell me something,” Mr. Fortune * and mohair are the popu- | round skirt, a panel braided in black on the | g¢'comaof our modern prayers, before he pltalitis Chicago Mai guests, diffusing the charm of kindne; - sense | was asked a few days since, “ubout the cling suits. left side, and simple drapery. got half through ho would have been fifty ioh 1 i v S voma v o R 5 cour race wh e o th e A Eng) sy The new plaids bear but little resemblance | foot under water.” which is the root of all graciousne: Small Women in Style, woman, who puts ¥ after her name, | women of your race who have done the The census of England and Wales records The new plaids S 0 d % N or slightes itality rork Lettap: 2 , » thi 3 er night: Ve st for it g » themse: 7,678,000 women us wage earners, 10 the Scotch plaids of other scasons, Many | myq gmall child is to tho front again. He and make of lier, slightost hospltality | New York Letter: A rocent work on | {81 e this [he Sther, mabts e |t o rom hovve howdly Jiad op- | K, geat, brown. e green.in_softened | of thoso boini anly fno ines of phusiy: o val | 140" Bk sty W maughtinons of friends wore happior and better? And | Physical beauty asserts that the ten- [ woman—that is the poculiar estimation | portunity to do much that is sensa. shades are the popular colors for felt hats. "“'1“'}‘3"““"‘(;‘“u‘]‘.‘;"h““'\"{fi,“t‘fh':il'.‘,'ff&"fl}i youth and the naughtiness of age aro widely yet all of these things suggests the true 10y in women of the present day is | in which my own sex holds me. Iknow @ tional,” he replied. “They haven't had © The newest imported French hats and i fid ogien @ different. “If you do that nobody will love 3 thread. you,” the tender mother told him. *'Tain’t The jerscy in its reformed state grows con- | ko7 know one who'll like me," Lo answered. stantly in popularity, It comes in all shades | ¢Whot “/Satan, he likes thé bad ones." and divers shapes. T y ones have a yoke heavily embroidered with narrow, flat | o Sunday with hor mother, began to play purt of o lady—the lady as opposed to | toward smaliness of stature. Big women, | they don’t u the lower-bred woman, the woman with- | in fact, are going out of fashion. This | times until I have to turn my face to are promin out kindness, gracioustiess, or tact. being the case, by all means let us have ('mu'o]x\l the r'|u~h ‘nn my cheeks. Do and who have ; o s e DAy The true woman’s part in life is to | materials that present designs suitably | you know that the average society Take Washington, for instance, colored ' _*Did you eversce a stuttering Y L narr make those um\m(l‘ her happier and | adapted to the W figure asit actu- | Woman acts as though she thinks that women of the best class there don't take T\%B“mnuns‘fmm'f\"r_ll{‘*:"':1t""‘l;‘:gllfl\{:l; :)lrmdlm‘;;;nldgo and the same is repeatcd ou on m{, s, ‘f"\'w‘n‘.m ,"",I.,my mm‘mmd‘ better, and how is it to be done if there | ally exists, and not as it may appear in | one of her own sex who has a profession much to marrying. They get along The/c0sigo ot B IAsILONAN0 ] B . ho sloeves. 5y her chagrin. “Why can't I run on the lingers any prejudice against natural | the imagination of manufacturers, | has no social rights? This average so- better than the men and usually devote dress docsu’t como high, but she will have | e Jatest novelty in slippers consists of | mammai” she exclaimed. ‘“‘Because the po- san it, but T feel it some- time. Butstill there are several who bonnets have lower crowns and wider brims. among their own people | Plainness to severity is the rulo in the rned a solid reputation, newest and most approved models for skirts, | A little girl, walking in the_public garden kindliness and sympathy with one's fel- | Plnids of any description makea woman | ciety woman would not admit this, of themselves ecurnestly to their work e o o tyenty-five or more, | oenemor S white. temnodious L inanatens 1‘,‘33“;;',‘3.;”,,?,‘{23&,,3;,‘,‘&fl.fi“é,fu’,?,‘:"i’,'“.r‘{g,,, low-beings? look shorter than she actually is, in the | course. = And Pvl'h"\‘“ she doesn’t really and succeed well in it. The most e us well not to give her any birthday | These slippers come quite high up onthe in- | jtis Sunday, and God doesn’t want you o same manner that stripes, when they | mean it. I “would sometimes like prominent colored women in Washing- pigents, stop and have a big bow set across them in | play.» O, donr.” said the little girf, 4t it A Maiden Assurance Soclety. are narrow and elongated, produce an | to put on a dress from the dressmaker’s ton, in the best sense of the word, are " pijonaises with only a hint of looping will | the Louis XIV pattern. wasn't for the policomans and God what nico Washington Critic: The Maiden As- | appearance of slenderncss. A skirt | latest pattern. Butif I do my patient t such women asMiss M. B. o worn over velvet and antique broche | - 1n an autograph albnm Suzanne Brodan | times we could haye!” surance society of Denmark aims to pro- | made in imitation of a colossal chess- | looks at me in a sort of inquiring way. sor in English in Howard moire skirts. wrote: “There is nothing more difficult for It is not rare for children to take up the vide for ladies of well-to-do families; | board of variegated hues cannot be | I think sometimes if 1 should follow tho Y s most talented lady, or Bonnets show a decided tendency toward | 3 woman than to make upher mind to enter | political battles of their fathers and to feel shelters and cares for them, and fur- | either pretty or graceful. A very tall | style of Mrs. Dr. Mary Walker that Josephine J. Turpin, of the same school, —the poke shape, and in some this tendency is | into the thirties.”” And underneath it Aimee | more aggrioved over the defeats of thelr nishes necessary ‘‘pin money.” The | woman, or one slightly above medium | some of my otherwise "good patients who isa frequent contributor to papers, fully developed. Decelee said: **Yes, there is.” l\’l’nkmg up | clders than they do th(:m!wl\'cn. A oo noblemen—for the association “is pecu- | height, can woara plaid of moderately | would like it better. Why isit? Iam or Moulton, who is the efficient There is nothing so handsome and becom- | hermind to get out of the thirties. Minnsota gontloman who hud beon plod linrily for this class—as soon us o female | large checks, but if she bo short and | not railing against my own sex. Be- pal of a big training school, or ing in cold weather as a trimming of furon & | Ogtrich feather boas are among the taste. | &n offies by Goveror MeGil, and, & child’is born, enroll her name in a cer- [ dumpy, or even tall and fat, let her | lieve me,’T would not be a man if I had alle or Marion Shadd —all highly cloth or velvet dr ful novelties of the season, they are made of | by Ly }a ; , R ¢ P the * presence of ~ his five-year-ol tain ass tion of noble families, pay- | eschew such patternsastheabomination | the power to make the change. — But ' ed women, respected and es- ' The long-haired rayen-black monkey skins | the feathers in their mmlnjul(zh‘l;lfi,ar .Jn‘& e ID, his dm“mimmeug s ing a certain sum, and thereaftera fixed | of desolation. Nevertheless, soon our | Women are so cruel without intending = teemed by those who knew them. formuffs and Van Dyke collars will be in | black, or clse black and White loglre, [0 | his oplnion ~ of ~ the govarnor. annual amount to the society, streets will bo filled with perambulating | to be. A friend of mine asked me to | *In Philadelphia there is the skillful high favor this winter. }v-";:{(fil :umf(""m lie flat like fringe, or in | That’ night the mother, while putting the When the girl reaches the age of | checker boards and striped awnings; | attend the reception last Wednesday ' woman physician, Dr. Caroline V, An- | The old-fashioned watered silk is coming | £oWHT KNS (Gl boy to bed, took occasion to caution him twenty-one, she becomes entitled to a | for, of course, fashions are invented to | night at the Columbia theatre, and I derson. She is the daughter of Will* back into style, and is much richer in effect 4 o e R £ ;\umrns% using somo vory n_t?mlvzdwqrda’thfl fixed ‘income and to a suite of apart- [ be worn, and, consequently, women will | went. While I was there I was con- | iam Still, n wealthy colored merchant than the modern moire. A D D o I While: || Bia ray e the i et CpT e ments in a large building of the asso- [ adopt them whether they are suitable [ stantly veminded by his other lady 'and one of the directors of the unde: Shot cloths are new woolen stuffs woven in { tWEIVE 10, TOutie, SR 5 e the long | was always wicked to swear. She roplied ;‘mll_!:'"i l“‘lth gardens and parks, in- | or not. h‘luml‘n[l m‘_\' profession. Iwas (‘nnsl(:ln‘lly ;:rn\nl\d ll'uilrxn:uL of which he has writ- two :ulol'sv %o, 8 1o give the ‘‘changeable’ | 04, \c vorn at that age look much ,1,.,...,?, that shn thought there were times when God habited by other younger or olaer nobie . = I appealed to as to my opinion of the . ten the history. His daughter is a regu- effect now so fashionable. an they 1ly are. A short tunice simply | would forgive people for profane langus 1adies, who have, in like manner, bes | Women Worth Their Weight in Gold. | ft ! ; : tlanituoypee RO ! LN effect of an exposure which her own lar graduate of the medical m-]nwtnwm One reason why the homely girl takes the | looped behind with a jacket bodice is worn | when used under strong provocation. ‘Then come members. If her father should New York Mail and Express folly had created, and when we went of Howard university, and enjoys a big scholarship prize is because she looks into | or a scparate out-door jacket. e the child prayed: “Forgive m 10:311 my die during her youth, and she should Mrs. John Minturn is worth §2,000,000. | out'of the theater I had to go home ! practice. Philadelphia is the home of books more than into mirrors. The newest ribbons are the most hrilliant | sins, keep me while 1 slecp—and—d——n desire, sho has shelter in this build- ] Mrs. Joseph Harrison, the widow of with her and leave a perscription. numberlessother women of character — The reign of glitter in dress will soon be | and effcctive decorations for bonnets and Governor McGill, JACOB E. TROIEL. & COMPANY. 2709 Leavenworth street. Would like to call the attention of theipf\lblic to their full assortment of JEWEL STOVES and RANGES, manufactured by the Detroit Stove Works. Special Attention is Called to the Sovereign Jewell, the Best and Handsomest ; Heater'in the Market. A Philadelphia paper of Sept. 1, says: *To dwell upon the beauty. elegance and utility of the Sovereign Jewel, would find us without language tcl;’ do itjustice-ylt is g1:1'ul the world’s won- der, s stove has the spiral ventilating hot air flue aud a radia;ir(xig surface of 1984 square inches. By means of these improvements all the cold air of a room is drawn in and heated,thus insuring an equal temperature all over the room. These stoves are not higehrin %ice thanany ordinary heater, and the heating capacity is double that of any stove made. o guarantee any stove sent out to give entire satisfaction. we can refer you to more‘than fifty of the best fg.f{ggéieosnof 8211?.}1:.31}1%% :esi‘?sga?({a g &yve%l stoyves 1111_1 %ny c%se of which they are exging entire sat- : stoves, which are in price, appearance an onomic use of fuel, the suverior of any stove in the marke #5180 Ap = . JACOB E. TROIEL & CO0. 2709 Leavenworth Street