The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 13, 1899, Image 2

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    NEWS FOR THE FAIR SEX.
ITEMS OF INTEREST ON NU-
MEROUS FEMININE TOPICS.
The Shirt Walsts of
Elaborate Mourning Parasols—=\% o-
men Bincksmiths, ete,
the Season
The Shirt Waists of the Season.
The conventional style of the shirt |
waist as we have seen it year after
year is this season frequently changed |
forms, including in- |
all-over embroidery,
or brilliant red.
with cuffs and
for nwre dressy
serted fronts of
fancy yokes of pink
dotted with white, ete,
belt to match. However, there is a
certain alr of trimness and severity |
lost in the change, and, while the more |
expensive models may find purchasers
among those who crave novelty, there
are yet many who will stiil prefer the |
old styles made of new fabrics,
Elaborate Mourning Parasols,
The mourning parasols this
following in the wake of all the modes, !
are very elaborate, They can be found
in shirred. tucked and frilled Br
net, mousseline de sole and India mull.
Richer and simpler parasols are cov-
ered with dull black silk, veiled with
chiffon and banded with a fine rich
fold of crape. Again, Inch bands of
crape are set on the plain parasol, of
silk, from top to bottom, in V's, Both
English and French crape is used. In
fact, English now quite as
much in vogue as English erape. It is
a finer weave and thinner. and lends
itself admirably various Kinds of
trimming
jeason,
ssels
rape is
fo
Women Blacksmiths,
There Is a blacksmith shop in South
Africa run by women. The place is
near King William's Town, Cape Col-
ony, aud the women are the Sisters of
St. Dominic. The Sisters, in their
sire to preach the Gospel in new lands,
emigrated to South Africa and estab
lished a settlement in Cape Colony.
Finding scarce, they were
obliged hands to the
plough other Kinds of
labor pot bargaioped
for.
They sent to
smithy's supply,
for a tutor, amd have
their own work, They
by ploug pruning
de
laborers
put their
do many
they had
to
and
which
Cape Town for a
secured a blacksmith
learns~l to do
surprise visit
graft
ors and
ing.
hing,
Metal Monograms Are Fashionable.
the cream of fash.
back again, bigger
Metal monograms,
ion years are
and brighter than ever. The newest
are in script. oki English, of
and heavily moulded. Some
and wiry and all have
ing. That is, letters are tall and
narrow, but deep enough to admit of
tile “scratching” or denting of the sil-
versmith. Some are set in jewels,
and silver letters are woven together
in designs that are remarkably Intri-
cate. Monograms are used on travel
ing bags suit and the
“pocket-bags” jong absent in tl
limbo of used-t
ago,
course,
thin
slender letter.
are
tiie
(iold
dress Css
Sey 45
y-hes
Woman's Progress in Germany.
The movement for the emancipation
of women is beginning nuke real
beadway in Germany. the West-
minster Gazette, In spite of the pro-
tests of the Halle students against the
lectures, Baden has pronounced in fa-
vor of admitting them to medical de
grees; Giessen already and it
is sald that other universities will soon
follow suit. Meanwhile a hot discus.
gion has been going on between the
Government department that controls
the railways and the League of Wom-
en of Berlin. Employment has been
offered women on the railways as
clerks dnd accountants at a salary in
ferior to that of men employed on simi
lar work, and this is what makes the
league so angry. A protest has been
sent to the Reichstag declaring the
equality of vomaicind and demanding
an equal salary for the women clerks
10
Bays
loess 80,
fright President of 8a Woman's Club,
Mrs. J. G. Hutchison, of Ottumwa,
the new president of the lowa Federa-
tion of Women's Clubs, is a foremost
club woman in Iowa. Her education,
talent, graceful manners and ener |
getie qualities eminently qualify her to |
fill the position with which she has
heen honored, She was born in Ottam-
. March 27, 1863, of Quaker parents,
a were pioneers In the city, Mrs,
Hutchison's maiden name was Mabel |
Vernon Dixon, and she was educated
in the puble schools of Ottumwa, at
Callahan College, Des Molopes, and at
the Wisconsin State University, Her
life in Ottumwa, where she has grown
from infancy to mature womanhood,
is an open book. Rhe is a leading mem.
ber of the Tuewlny and Tourist clubs.
She hag also been actively connected
with the city hospital, and has been
a leading spirit in the building op of
the public library. In 1865 she became
acquainted with the lowa Federation
of Women's Clubs as treasurer, hold.
fug the position for two terms, Mrs,
Hutchison was married June 23, 1808,
to J. G. Hutchison, one of Ottumwa’s
prominent business men and progres.
sive citizens, and who at one time was
a candidate for Governor-Chicago
Inter Ocean.
Holding Up the Skirt,
So apparently simple a thing as hold.
fng up the dress skirt in crossing a
muddy pavement is regulated by fash.
fon. Iu the days of the great hoop:
skirts the proper way of avolding the
mud and dust of the street was to
raise the skirt daintily about an Inch,
directly in front, using both hands and
taking the grentest care fest the space
between the gown “and pavement
should be more than an Inch. Our
grandmothers tripped dalotily about In
this Way with the mineiug salt that
the excessive modesty
and fashions of those days.
When the long, heavily trimmed
Princess gowns came into style a new
way of keeping them out of the dust
wis invented. It took women of great
physical strength to wear such clothes
as were then in vogue, and lifting the
clumsy long trains was equal to an
Iabor. The fashions of
probably never been equaled for ugli-
Every
line of grace in the figure was spoiled,
The waists were made short, the neck
was loaded with trimmings, and the
rihibon or velvet
Knife platings.
The skirts and overskiris were sim-
ply masses puffs and plaitings,
which also into the trains,
bows, lace frills and
of
extended
was a physical impossibility to take a
The heavy trains had
however, and a small ap-
called a skirtlifter was in-
vented to meet the emergency. The
skirtlifter bad two strong clasps and
by hitching one emd of It on the dress
skirt and the other to the train the
latter was raised from the ground and
the wearer could get along with con-
siderably decreased discomfort. The
skirtdifters were made in black enam.-
el, brass and silver. Silver ones were
thought very fine and distinctive,
After a few this fashion
modified. and when the skirts became
more rational lifters were aban-
donned, The skirts were then raised at
the side and brought forward toward
the front. In a Ladies’ Guide to Per
feet Decorum” of that time Is
forth the proper procedure in the case
years was
the
set
* says the guide, “should hesi-
tate upon reaching a crossing
“Then, carefully but lightly
should grasp a portion of her
well toward the back, vate it
to a distance of between one
one and one-half inches, draw it
fully to the right toward the front and
trip daintily across the street,” It was
altogether a grave and thoughtful oc-
casion.
With the
she
skirt
mod-
and
grace
ele
introduction of the untrim-
med skirts, which were at first cut
rather long In the back, came the fash-
ion of holding them up directly in the
back, and the woman with the longest
and best-developed arms was the most
successful in performing the feat.—
St. Louis Star,
Women Butlers Now,
Several smart houses in New York
City have instituted liveried women
butlers owing to so much trouble with
male The scheme of putting
women Into lyery originated in Eng-
land among some titled house keepers
for reason. At first the Idea
vas scorned and met with many jests,
a woman's cournge and a Regent
street taflor brought scoffing mankind
around in due time, An English girl
sas the first one to bring the fashion
to America. Seeking for fortune and
adventure, primed with that longing
known to every feminine breast
a ploneer in something,
persuaded a wealthy New
an who was in despair to
trial, and the result
body of first-floor
into Hvery.
One ian who has emplo ed the
iveried maid reasons for
advocacy: they are more faithful
than men; they are
conscientious and less
lastly, they possess
distinction and give an unmis.
takable tone to any establishment
The butler's livery consists of a black
coat and skirt of French face cloth and
a strap of black silk running from hip
to foot either side. The cont Is
Eton, ent in a point behind, turning
shirt and a low-cut white linen waist.
coat. A white collar and tie and cuffa
add a fine severity to the effect of the
costume, No cap is worn. The hair is
brushed straight back. pinned neatly
to the head.
The footman wears brown, blue or
green cloth, plain skirt, a close-fitting
with silver buttons and white
turndown collar and cuffs, The women
wear low shoes and are addressed by
thelr surnames. —New York Tribune,
BOrvants,
the same
but
to be
e and
York wom.
her a
entire
put
she eam
give
was the
servants was
won
i gives these
y
is
§ respectful
more
and,
oieaner,
expensive:
more
ou
basque
Gleanings From the Shops,
White gloves in silk, lisle and suede
with self or black stitching and four
Japanese kai kis and other wash
silks In a great variety of designs for
shirt waists,
Blue denim sailor snits trimmed with
braid and appropriate emblems for
small boys,
Spanish turban composed of gray
cream lace and whole birds
Sailor ties of soft white surah with
Faney novelty organdies with striped
An immense variety of crystal tie
chains, pendants, hatpins and other
forms of jewelry.
A great variety of ready-fashioned
and eream chantilly.
Summer evening wraps of fine biack
net covered with an effective design
carried out In black chenille, mounted
over a yellow satin foundation.
A remarkably large showing of
broad brimmed flat bats for children,
trimmed with tulle, lace, flowers and
foliage.
Pretty evening gowns for summer
wear made of India mull elaborately
trimmed with yellow lace and yellow
satin ribbon. ;
“Birchthirsty” Is’ a recent contribu.
tion to the English language by a wo.
man member of the London Rchool
Board, who objected to the board's at-
BILL NYPS CYCLONE,
He Was Dadly Injured. but His Ho-
mor Eased the Pain,
Fifteen years ago a cyclone came out
of the depths of Bt. Croix Lake, swept
over New Richmond and Clear Lake,
Wis, in the blistering heat of an
afternoon, anu after it had passed the
searchers found Bill ivye lu the wind
fall of a plue forest suffering from a
broken leg, He was conveyed to his
home in Hudson, where his humor
served to lighten the weary days of
waiting for the leg to heal.
When the storm came Nye was driv-
ieg through the forest with his broth-
er, a resident of Clear Lake, and had
fa very narrow escape from death, In
a path of some eighty miles in length,
amd ending with a clondburst that
flooded the towns of Eau Claire and
Chippewa Falls, the cyclone sacrificed
nearly 100 lives and removed one vil-
Inge temporarily from the face of the
map. 1 found Turtle Lake, eleven
miles from Clear Lake, a portion of
the church of the latter town, writes
H. I. Cleveland in the Chicago Times
Herald, New Richmond and
Clear Lake at a farmhbouse in a pine
clearing 1 saw the body of a little
girl through which had been driven by
electrical force a pine splinter as long
as a YHade of grass and as attenuated,
The first work that I did upon the
storm was to secure nn interview from
Nye, and the extracts given herewith
what he had of his experi
ence. He subsequently the
interview and incorporated it in his
permanent work, At the time of the
evelone it was far and wide.
and was regarded of the choice
bits of humor of the genial wi
“I never did he id.
a cvelope. There is no reason why a
should attack me. 1 never
said anything mean of a cyclone, never
critics of its relntives, never
made fun of its mother-in-law; in fact,
I always minded my own business in
regard to cyclones, and was vice
tim of a base assault,
“Why should a eyclone gle me
out? Why should a cyclone make me
a target for its low wit? If I had
ever given a cyclone reason for its at-
tack there would be some explanation
for my present condition, but 1 am an
innocent man. This shows that the
possesses many of the char
an Indian. It is not
wouldu't take the word
of a cyclone after my re experi
ence umler any circumstances.”
He sald further
“I have lost faith in
man ean believe in a coy-
clone after he betrayed. Had
the eye proper warning
had it and such a
time it visit
where 1 luxuriant
timber g Wisconsin
I wonld to do i
would have somewhere else and
engaged while the ey
clone its business on
gagement. I am no the
clone to be treated in this manner
Noth
past life couls
having warranted
umbrage at my pres.
Had I been
ght have
into
a ¥
aa
letween
ire to say
redressed
copied
ans one
anything.” “to
3 clone
any
the
sing
cyclone
acteristics of
be trusted. |
to
cont
cyclones, No
continue to
hins been
lone gi
wa id
intended
yen me
that at
to make a
was inspecting the
of beautiful
known
gang
such
io
owith
have what
n other pursiit
wax attending to
rival of Lh
didn’t even bear it a
that I have
be construed
cyclone in
when
grudge
done in my
ns
taking
t came
the matter 1 mi
to oven have
and
Ad have been of ad
Hs,
fnee alo ng
consulted in
Hing
th the
been wi Lone
business wi cevelone it
pointers which woul
vantage to both of
“But.” he il,
shown me, [
malici
hurled
upon,
of any
and square in
clones.”
One of the last things Nye sald of the
storm was:
“If I had wished to 1
sfruck back at fone, 1 might
have made myself disagreeable and
cansed a change in ts plans, But | re
frained I am not of a revengeful
spirit, and then I Know when I have
had enough of a good thing J
wouldn't ride a free horse to death nn.
der any clresmstances, [ just ac.
cepted things as they were and made
up my mind that hereafter the cyclone
could not travel in the same social set
that I did. If it attempted to 1 in.
tended to ent it dead”
Bill Nye speedily recovered from his
injury. and in a few years all traces
of the great Clear Lake storm were
effaced, but there are probably some
old residents of the region still living
who will remember the humor of the
man who refused to take even his own
narrow escape from death seriously.
ima —————
Animals Remember Musaie,
It is a well established fact that ani.
mals recognize muscal sounds, and a
traveler in an Indian city says that the
horses there would paw the ground
and tosh their heads whenever, during
their evening drives, they heard the
band playing “God Save the Queen”
That plece was the sigoal for going
home, and some skeptical persons in.
sisted that the horses recognized the
tune because it was always played last.
Ho the experiment was made of plag-
ing It in the middie of the programme,
but the horses recognized it immedi
ately, and pranced and tossed their
heads just as before,
given
fairness
from behind,
aproached, defenselessls
to the ground. trod and spat
and left to consider the futility
effort on my part t
my
“no was
was struck
onsly
to be upright
dealings with cy-
might have
the ¢
the ov
who recognized a horse as having once
belonged to a certain cirens, He went
up to the animal, patted him and whis.
fled a tune familiar to the circus. The
horse immediately forgot the cab he
was hitched to, and began to dance on
his fore legs just as he had used to
do when he too was an actor-—in the
circus. Detroit Free Press,
Innocent Diversion,
Thy Mother Children, you mustn't
ht.
Willle—We're playin’ jeweler, mam.
ma, and Tommy's a clock out of fix
and jes’ keeps right on strikin’ while
I'm tryin’ to twist his face edo,
elery’ Weekls.
How Animals Keep Cool,
“Wild animals oppressed by heat are
almost human in their actions” ob-
served a naturalist. “They seek shel
ter from the sup, thirst much for
water and fall down at last sunstruck.
The tigers of India and the Hons of
Africa seoks jungles that are nearly
impenetrable for man where io pools
they wallow for hours chin deep In the
water rather than endure the intense
heat of the sun driving through the
mass of foliage overhead, Further
than this, they may sometimes be sur-
prised lke deer in the water.
“In hot weather fishermen often
see along the shores of the Adirondack
and Maine lakes numbers of deer.
These animals make frequent visits
during theday to the water, where they
nibble at a lily pod now and again and
swim across to islands or to the op-
posite shore to cool off their overheated
bodies,
“Cattle seek the woods and shaded
when the sun begins to show
its fury, but they are often driven out
of such cool places by a more deadly
enemy, the armies of bloodthirsty and
keenly weanpened insects, and resort
to the hills. Curiously enough, many
insects prefer keeping in the shade to
quenching their thirst for blood. When
cattle seek the pools and streams fishes
gather around to snap up the flies
tilled by the tails of the beasts.
‘ie woodchuek retires to the moist
burrow, the squirrel to its
home The hare Hes in the long
grass beside the brook in an alder
bed.” Washington Star,
Se ————————— LL ——
Spots
depths of its
free
Story of a Parrot.
davard Taylor relates the following
about a parrot once owned by a lady
in hieago:
When the great fire
owner saw that she of
nothing except wh
in her hands,
an
risoie
raging,
maid
at she instantly
was
took
There were two objects
equally dear, the parrot and the old
family Bible, and she could take but
After a moment of hesitation she
the Bible, and was hastening
when the parrot cried out in a
loud and solemn volee, “Good Lord, de
liver us!” No human being could
have been deaf to such an appeal; the
precious Bible was sacrified and the
Hird saved. He was otherwise a cley
or bird. In the bome to which he was
taken there were among other visitors
a gentleman rather noted for volubil
ity. When the parrot first heard him it
listened in silence for some time,
to the amazement of all present, it said
very emphatically, “You talk
much!” The gentleman, at first
barrassed, presently resumed his inter
rupt Thereupon the par.
rot lald his head upon one side, gave
an indescribably comical and coon
“H'm * and added,
gain’
2OPR AS
one
seized
away,
then,
too
“1m
od discourse,
femptuous
“There be
A Word ™ Season.
Hugh father
owns a large ranch in the fertile San
Joaquin Valley up to town the
other week and paid a brief visit at
the house of a
Je
Montgomery, wi
came
clerical uncle
best
follows
sie divine, who ix one of the
trios hospitable of men,
of having
in copned tion with thi
the famil
a verse of
Custom Braver before
meaklast
» pach wr of ¥
is OX Hn ted to
ture Hugh,
very healthy
iy sharp set
When his turn came
he significantly
words
“How hired servants
father's have bread enough
spare, while 1 perish of hunger
The reverend uncle listened with
twinkling eyes and there was a speedy
adjournment to a wellapread table. —
Kan Franeciseo News Letter.
recite
has
appetite, Toone
who habitually
ame decided
the amen was said,
to »
Pe
before
ite a
the
YOrse
repeated familiar
of
and
ow
many my
to
The Cattle Queen of Sanorn,
A woman known as the cattle queen
of Samora is now in Tuscan, Arizona
completing a deal for the sale of 5.000)
head of the fine stock cattle to a local
broker for shipment to Kansas, The
deal will bring her £75,000, but is only
of the many she will make this
season. Nhe is Senora RM. Serrano, a
handsome and talented widow, with §
fluent knowledge of French, as well ag
of her native Spanish. She has a
home ranch in Senora forty miles
square, stocked with a myriad of eat
tle and horses, She does her own sel
ling as shrewdly as any stock yard
professional, and states she only asks
ten days’ notice at any time to deliver
5.000 head of cattle at the border. She
owns the largest mercantile house in
Altar. Sonora, doing an immense job
bing business,
failding Stepped for Pigeons,
Although London is popularly sup
posed to consist exclusively of stones,
bricks and mortar, it still contains
many students of natural history who
also hold strongly pronounced human.
tarian views. In one of the most re.
tired spots close by Mark Lane, a pair
of wood-pigeons are now making a
home, and =o solicitons about their fu.
ture comfort is an occupier of an adja
cent building that, in order that the
prospective parents may not be dis
turbed in bringing into the world credi-
table offspring. he has decided to sus.
pend for n while sundry building oper-
ations which hie had Intended to com:
mence last week.—-London Telegraph.
ane
The Mistake of His Life.
“1 ghali not marry,” he declared, “be.
cause If 1 were ‘0 be shipwrecked a
wife would be rip in the way!”
But he never wai shipwrecked. In:
stead, he was pursued by wolves in
Russia,
Now at once he became aware of the
unwisdom of his choice,
“Alas!” he erfed. “If I had a wife
i ig theo het out 10 the wolves
IMITATIVE FILIPINOS.
I'he American Saeal Paper Says They
Exeeed All Other People in Imitation,
Of all the races peopling this mun-
dane sphere not one hag such an extra.
ordinary spirit of imitation as that
which inhabitants the Philippine Isl
ands, This race of people, of Malay
origin, which occupies all the archipel-
ago of the Celebas Sea, lacks the
aesthetic taste necessary for the prop-
er combination of colors, constructive
ability, uniformity in architectural de-
signs, and the good taste which Is re.
quired for tLe culfore and advance
ment of a people. They have no ideas
of this kind of thelr own, and in all
matters of taste do nothing more than
what they see in races of the West,
Any one who has observed the Fill
pluos will anve noticed that they have
no ideas at all in regard to the proper
combination of colors in their wearing
apparel, in spite of thelr dusky
complexions, they select in their cloth-
ing the colors which are least suitable
to them. Youn will Indinn girls
and half-breeds as brown as berries
psing in their dresses and scarfs such
colors as blue, green, yellow, brown
and black. A woman of Com-
plexion with a dress of any of these
colors presents an appearan~e that is
hideous in the extreme, It is not un
common to dark-skinn« indian
girls dressed in such bright greens
that if they should encounter a cara
bao they are lable to be eaten by that
festive animal on account of thelr sim
farit Yyioa bureh of
The reason why these people ent this
ridicunious figure is that they see
fix,
wee
dusky
Hee
ny.
these
and,
which
COIN
) produce,
bright colors on Europenn
without thinking of
on nt of
plexion such hues are lial
readily
selves the most elezant [ y ole
women,
effect
different
ihile
the
fHeeon their
hem and consider them.
gant
adept
No gooner does a new
from Parig, Vienna
trousers, hats, shir
matter how extravagant,
and the half-breed mimes
them.
The
Manila
trovn
on ar
Indian
adopt
the
lintels
had Leen In
their
stores on
Am. rican troops
only a few days with
before the
were ged by
half -breeds buying al
tainnble,
a few days
suits of the same col
by of
noticed the hats of straw
blue pe lka dot band, and
all the Indizns and ha
wearing the tame Kind
Americans,
I believe that
but little
their usages,
as to that end
tation which predomls
tive race will be a powerful
The Manilla Freedom,
Ruits
natives ¢
the brown cloth
Fascolin besie
and in
syed on
worn
They
or felt with a
or silk
arrs
or as th
oocupation
ob wool, cotton
they were all
pla
the army
in a few
if-treeds
of hats
davs
were
ax the
Americans will
introducing
customs lan-
the
have trouble in
here
gFnnge
and
it of
find
10
the pir !
the na-
factor.
ites in
Factas About Olives,
knows
olives,
Every there is such
article as most
eaten them, but few are aware
mture, properties and chs
to say nothing of their
cultivati _prep aration,
The ial home of the
was and Palestine, thon
to Greece, where
ished In the time of Homer,
makes mention of the tree and
fruit. The origin of the olive is lost
in antiquity, but there is little t
that it is many older
the Greek poets.
The olive a small
erally from 1 to 3 feet in diameter and
15 to 35 in height. Old speci are
found which have attained larger pro
portions, exceptional
italy is the most prolific couniry at
the present time in the production of
and Spain being second
in the order named, Olives are also
produced in many other countries
They were planted in California by the
Epanish missionaries somewhere
about 1765, and to this day “Mission”
olives are considerad best in the
state.
The value of the olive as a roJish is
of considerable importance, but iis
oll is of more importance, commercial.
ly speaking
one an
fins
# sheant
Of thar
eye ry bods
Of,
origi olive
in Syria
was carried
wh
is
3
l
5
GOuL
centuries than
free is one, gen
nens
but these are
olives, France
the
a
Men's Feet.
The man buving a pair of shoes
found the right one perfectly comfort
able and easy, the left one rather snug
“1t'« usually =o,” said the salesman;
“the left foot Is commonly a little big-
gor than the right foot”
“Why don’t you make the left shoe
a little bigger, then?” asked the cus.
tomer,
“Well,” said the salesman,” the dif.
ference ix usually not great, and it
might not be enough so that it would
be noticed in trying on shoes, And
then it is not so great but what the dif.
ference in feeling of the two shoes dis-
appears very soon. And then, too, in
some cases the man's right foot is the
larger, the man being right-footed in
this respect as men are sometimes left
handed, the reverse of the common
habit in the use of their hands. If
shoes were commonly made with the
feft a little bigger than the right, to
fit the majorly of cases, they'd be
worse than ever when you hit a right.
footed man. Ro the shoes are made
slike in size, 8a man gets a pair that fit
him comfortably fo start with, and
they adapt themselves quickly to any
slight differences In the feet.” New
York Sun.
Lond Interruption,
“1 declare, Maria, this is too irritat-
ing to be endured. 1 told you I didn t
want to be disturbed, and bere some-
body has suddenly sprung a most in.
fernal clatter on me. What does It
mean?”
wYhere wasn't any Siar, my dear.”
JOKERS’ BUDGET.
The Step Upon the Stair.
I beard a footstep on the stair;
My heart stood still a space,
And 1 could feel the hot blood mount
In waves unto my face,
“Tis she, my love” 1 told myself;
I rose to meet the dear,
And met her slippered
growled:
“Well, what do you want here?”
Chicago News,
Giving Him No Epcoursgement
Mr. Spooner "Do you
think your father would object to my
marrying sou?’
Miss Bharpe
anvthing
dad, who
{seriouslyi—
“1 don’t know; If he's
Hke me he would"
A Treaty of Peace,
“Have Beribbler, the
wife made
“Oh, yes!
writes, and
Jewish C
author, and his
up?’
She ha
COOKS,
now reads what
he eatx what she
Aninent.
Protecting Himself,
that man ravelling ogni
Don t speak of itl"
in dange a
11 Whisper It
Chicago
“Sa-hi! Yen
“Why? I= he
In great dan
He is the
Post.
ger. Nes
weather man”
flis Excuse,
She wember how you
nd my waist
years ago?.
Po
used to put
when we were engaged,
You never
He—~No; my
longer. Indianapolis
You is
Your arin arou
ten
do so now,
hing not
Journal.
arm grown any
In an Hurry,
He (apxiously)—“What did
father say?’
Bhe (sweetly)
he would
had enough
He—~"Um
to-night?’
your
“Nothing. except that
look you up and see if you
port a wife.”
my dear, hadn't we better
New York Weekly.
10 sup
elope
Surprising Information.
The Cook-—-Who's that sawed-off fel.
low I saw in the hall, just now?
The Butler—That's the master's bar-
ber,
The Cook—What! That little
Yonkers Statesman,
shav-
er?
A Sign of Forethought. =
“Such an insult!” she exclaimed.
“What? he asked.
“Why, you know
Brown, who married
day, hgs bad
“Of course.”
“Well, just before
dict be bad it cut short
of the natural oference.” A
Post.
hair
to
what long
Miss Smith
always
a bene.
think
aicage
he became
J ust
His One Chance.
Mother (co: wiftly)
lie! Strikin little
Willie Aunt
made me,
Aunt Frostface
if youn did strike
kiss you again.
Willie (still dogged)
jet a like that slip
Journal,
The
The
gwered
“How
whispers the
sulle
“Yes,
kind to us!” er
the car window had sabmitte
being opened by him with little
resistance. — Detroit Journal
Why, Wilk
sister?
doggedly) Frostface
1 said
never
Why, Willie!
her 1 would
Well, I couldn't
~ Boston
cuaance
Complacency of Things.
ctor of the train had an-
civilly.
kind everybody is
brid with
condu
them
finan
iLike
mate
bird deg
even
jos 1
just
or 1
The Glamour of Wealth,
Hicks—I wonder what Grogan could
pee in Miss McMidas?
Wicks—They say she is wortl
a million in her own right.
Hicks—Although. as I wax about Ww
gay, she i& by po means a bad-Jooking
girl, and everybody must admit that
she has a very engaging way with
her.—Boston Transcript.
Theory Falled Him.
“Yes, he had it bad. Went ‘round
arguing that there was no such thing
as disease, and speerin’ at death.”
“What's he doin’ now?”
“I'he last seen of him he was drive
in’ a hearse.”—Cleveland Plam Dealer.
half
Devoted to Arr,
“How are you getting on in
clay-modelling, Kittie?”
“Oh--just lovely: I'm devoted to it.”
“This i= a fine head: who is it?”
“Goodness—don't ask me: isn't he
sweet? It is either Martin Luther or
Benjamin Franklin” Detroit Free
Press,
your
He Had His Doubs,
“Asx 1 understand it an X ray will
go straight through a man's head.
There is nothing quite so penetrating.
is there?”
“Oh, 1 der't know. Did you ever
hear my danghter sing?" -Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
Domestic Economy,
The young wife was ready to ery
with vexation.
“It's the most disappointing box of
strawberries I ever bought!” she pro-
tested. “Why, there wasn't enough
wood in the bottom of it to cook dia-
ner with!”
Khe was tempted to believe the
whole commercial world in league to
take advantage of her inexperience.
Detroit Journal,
fer Little Dog Kept un Cougar on.
hat hee 10 archbors 4 mle away