GUSSIP FOR THE FAIR SEX. ITEMS OF INTEREST ON FEMININE TOPICS. Saw Mill Run by Women---New Styles in Plaids---Girls Collect and Belts, Ete., Ete, Fares---Sashes SAW BY WOMEN In Grandin, Mo MILI: RUN whicl loys reason black in these Jays with any gown, eve Of appear eigowl ot Lae mel lower side or trimn i a tiny pulling of chiffon to med gown a belt and long ends be edged with a tiny jet gimp ned, edged vy gud JO On a ¥ A chiffon sash the color of costume with which it is worn is of the width of the being O14 the few not cut on the bias, and is edged with Such ends fail fom 4 rosette or knot which may bea; a fancy buckle or button, Surah sashes have the belt bias and ends eut only 5 inches wide at the top, widening to 20 inches at the low. ar end, which is rounded. These are the hot entire goods, of lace, fon. Belts are worn in easy folds an! shaped as best becomes the wearoe!. Some need a point back and pointed and narrower. erted the points, tifl in hav i lining, snug it 8 inches the width folded, and {to are and ttes or a K fis, plain form ros are tied in half-long loon and hang in the centre back; tne for tyl hang to the side of th the front two back over one hip or tow l wo-inch ribbons have long ends and loops tovard one si A neat belt wiists worn of 14 edition, on prove deci ria Wii if double skirts become g MIMInEs tif Among dress opened with a ve ean orate cord beaded re exhibit { 8i'k galloons pew colors ppiigque oe ogy i a vers hich imp gance to the gowe., charming comprising gird standing slcive points and Etons. There are fewise fine jetted garni. tutes, shaped as half bodices, braces, fled and standing epauieticd, revers oddly shaped vests and very novel or naments for the sleeves, arranged in modified sivies to their redlucad shapes. These decorations are in every variety of design, and certainly not J extravagant in price when oan rengembers the future use that can be mafic of them. collar extremely suid THE TOPICS. ter Cows Noed Letter Care. RNIPS AMONG CORN i5 HO Crop Eg ETOW good had cows as wWouig those he has n orate sips dil av 4 3 Y ) until they cached his tiregent i { 1 and of the ¥ iring her young, and pe standard. Care feading ¢ r while he gistent milking of her during this poe- riod, have as much to do making the with the calf a good mi has animal's pedigree gtock soon Ker a8 Serub reduces it of seraba, On better care of tho present for mes; to the condi other hand stock will 31 the increase mil and {ta capacity butter an Culti- a AMOUNT OF SEED PER ACRE. The oid rile for wheat seeding was bushels of secd wes when the grain hand, After farmera two per acre, was began to ks used have a breeders gpring du if you you to keep vig before you pet ones, The number of eggs will not be {n- well ghip all cockerels will apring chick. ena, except those you wish to use an or next spring BO YOU may £8 while they pass for winter Hens like a shade in hot weather egg production, ally decreased. Ono t of wheat drilled in and better stand than amount sown by hand, the Hut larger an tween ridges nade by the tubes, many i own selection of sun or shades, but do to choose the shade in a damp place. Just now {8s when yon shonld nol loose your interest in earing for the fowls, Keep the houses clean, have a give fresh water nt least twice & day and giva green fond 28 well as meat or ofl meal If the flock has not free range 5S AND ( NOTE ¥lorie more gars [or Italian gos consiruct mos. coal elaborate for tions ile vhere t} - y 3 i the Kingd ‘viol and in the This, It neither at Rome is there much the part of the anthori extension of the cxisting Pontebba, means on in the ry to adopt ng their domin jones one ancther. There are no fortifications of any kind along the frontier of Germany and Austria. Why should any on the Italian boundary 1 Mme F. the Face of of against there be Aguado FARSI O= “a? A. Steel, the author of "On the Waters,” says: "Our civilization is personal comfort--luxury, a thing absolutely unknown in native Indi There is scarcely any difference in the mode of living between the rich and the poor. If you go into the house of a rajah, there fs the same bare floor and only a gimple platier to eat from, such as put it crudely, there will probably not be even the Iuxury of a wash-basin and towel: for the rich man, like hia dries himself in the sup, Buch is the extreme simplicity of jife that wealth is still buried in Indian: a man may spend ix on jewels for Ws wile, but Jot ; ) years B. { 1a tomb of an Egyptian princess ago, in Southern Lgypt hermetically sealed were found, which, when opened, coniained the mod Giscovery of this Rose men- tioned by Homer in the “Iliad.” Romer and Solomon were nearly contempo Both the Greeks and He hiews probably borrowed the idea of manufacture from the Egyptian, and these, for aught anybody can teil may have had it from the Indians ar {erred a year several vials genuine attar roses, so that the iaims arn for jeliciong perfume are vain water. or the essence of roses. is ransous. £8 {or each of their discoveries and In rentions a most marvelons, not (0 say iseredible, antiquity. All wild roses are not of the sams kind, for there are over 1.000 species of the wild rose known to botanists, and the varieties are innumerable. Great Britain has seventeen m{les of rajiirond to each 100 square =ailes of territory. In the United States there gguare miles, In Great Britain there are 1.950 people to support every mile In thia country there are road. The United Kingdom had 21.277 miles of road at the end of 18506. There has been very little new railroad con- strociion in Great Britain in sorvaral
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