J HOME, The prince rides up to the palace gates And his eyes with tears are dim, For he thinks of the beggar maiden sweet Who may never wed with him, For home is whers the heart is, In dwelling great or small, And there's many a splendid palace That's never a home at all, The yeoman comes to his little cot With a song when day is done, For his dearie is standing in the door And his children to meet him run. For home is where the heart is, In dwelling great or swall, And there's many a stately mansion That's never a home at all, Could I but live with my own sweetheart Iu a hut with sanded floor, I'd be richer far than a loveless man With fame and a golden store, For home is where the heart Is, In dwelling great or small, And a cottage lighted by love light Is the dearest home of all, ~George Horton, A ———————— Lc —— CUPID IN THE KITCHEN. BY MALY KLYE DALLAS. HE cook has given warning, and the chambermaid says that, where Susan goes she goes like- wise," said Mrs. Montgomery, in a tone of despair. “And as I have just paid their wages forlorn being in distress, ghaid or man-— it made no matter which. Now he ia- stantly bethought him what to de fer this poor ash eart driver, “Come slong," he said, taking the man by the arm and leading him into a drug store hard by. “I'll tell the doctor to see you, and empty the rest of the barrels for you—jolly fun for me, you know, and you'll keep your place, and all that.” The man, petrified with astonishment, could only lift his hands, and in a mo- ment more a still more astonished druy clerk had a patient—well paid for in advance—and was dropping cholera mix- ture into a glass, and applying mustard plasters, in the little back room behind the store. “Bix more houses,” said Jack, walk- ing beside the cart, *‘straight down, the man said.” He shouldered the first barrel and dumped it, A shower of ashes covered | him, but he only laughed. Next came a zinc can, quite elegant in appearance, but filled with decaying vegetables, and ornemented by the inanimate forms of three murdered kittens. Mr. Jack gasped, but he intended to finish his work of charity now that he | had begun it. Aad, with varied results, | new experiences to him, the young ath- | iete emptied five barrels. Ou the sixth pavement he found none. What an ashman’s duty was he did not know, but he had his invalid's interests | at stake, and must do his best for him, { so he descended the areaway and rang | the bell. In a moment a girl in a mob cap, s big apron, and rubber gloves, opened the door, they are packing to go. What wicked, wicked women, Not a word of warning," | i “Why, mamma! | Ne ame What is the reason of | ; this sudden deser- tion?” queried Emily, the only daughter | of the house, aged eighteen—and she | laughed. “Your papa found fault with the beef | last Sunday. Ah-——there is nothing to giggle over, I am sure,” said the matron, dropping inte a rocking chair+ “A week at the intelligence office for me, | while the house goes to wreck and ruin, | aod your papa loses his temper over the | dinners, for old Mrs. Chump, the only | person I can send for, always ruins every dish she touches.” “ i “And we Be a this time, mamma,” said Emil “We is in bed with rheumatism. Piet her little niece in the drug store buying | medicines and lotions for her, and she | said she was very bad.” “Then the end has come!" sighed | Mrs. Montgomery. “Don’t fret, mamma, I'll do the work,” said Emily. * think it might | be fun for awhile.” | “Do youl!” Mrs. Montgomery asked, sarcast “Ah!” i Emily laughed again. “It's the best you can do," she said, “and I'll give papa a high tea; with ome- | leste and chicken sandwich, and all the | little things he likes, and no doubt you | can find some one to come to-morrow.” “Oh, no doubt,” said Mrs. Montgom- ery, in still more sarcastic tones.” wish I bad your sanguine temperament, Emily.” “Good-bye, mum and miss,” said cook, looking in at the door. *‘Good-bye, | aod I wish you luck suiting yourself, I'm { sure. No doubt there is them that might | if they Lad the patience of Job, not | else.” *‘Goo 1-bye, ladies,” said the chamber- maid; “I'm sorry to leave you, but | Susan and me goes the two of us to- | gether, always, and if she is insulted, I am likewise,” ¢.Good-bye,” said Emily, calmly, | Mrs. Montgomery turned her back, | and muttered ‘Ungrateful wretches!” between ber teeth. “And I actually made over my navy | blue Bedford cord dress for that | toallv ICALLY. | i woman,” she said, after the door closed; | t'and never has she had to buy aa apron. There, I'll go and begin my martyrdom —and, Emily, if you do go into the kit- | it. chen, put on my rubber gloves and my mob cap, that I wear for dusting my room——coal ashes are the ruin of the | hair—and a big apron—your looks are my pride.” Emily kissed her mother, saw that she | bowing, *‘but do you wish your ash | { barrel emptied?” { free from marks of kitchen the re Tr liiiy pili eto place ues the front steps,” sai ally. “Beg pardon, I am sure,” said Jack, He spoke in the most elegant manner, but he was covered with ashes as with a garment; his mustache was whitened, kis hands begrimed, cinders adhered to his bair and his face was dirty, The maiden before him was not quite labor. It was Emily, who had been washing the pots and kettles for the first time in he { life. “What a beautiful manner has,” she thought; *‘he must be some one reduced circumstances.” And she smiled upon him: “You are the-—the ash gentleman, I suppose!” she queried. #4 call in that capacity,” said Jack. ““Thean if it is not too much trouble, he Jack, |! “I'll ‘No trouble whatever,” said diving into the place Indicated; bring it back when it is emptied.” **You are too kind,” said Emily, ua aware of the pot-black on her chin. “Not at all,” said Jack of the Cin. ders, and they bowed as if they were dancing the lanciers, #in a moment Jack had dumped the ashes, and returoed with the can. He was greeted with a great pull of smoke, and Emily, blushing and cough. ing, came out into the area for air. “Beg pardon,” smd Jack; *‘but the house is not on fire!” “I hope not,” said Emily; ‘the fire went out, and I'm trying to kindle it, but it smokes so.” “Perhaps it is the damper,” said Jack ; **I'll look, if you don't mind." “I shall be grateful,” gasped Emily. “It is the damper,” said Jack, *‘and these things in the ovens; now if I may have a bit of paper and some wood!” He found them himself, made a fire, opened the windows and waited until the smoke vanished from the kitchen, and then shut the windows, “What s wonderful ashwman,” Emily thought. “What an elegant girl to be a cook,” Jack said to himself, It is kind of you," said Emily; ‘so stupid of me. But 1 did not know about the dampers; I never made a fire before, but the servants have taken French leave.” “Oh!” said Jack to himself, “The young lady of the house doing amateur kitchen housework. I might have known And she thinks me the ashman,” and he sighed. ‘‘Good-daj,” he said, | bowing. Before Emily could reply a head was | thrust in at the window--that of the | original ashman, | *“An’' hero you air, sir?” he said, **An’, weat off comfortably, and then obedient sure, the medicine the doctor did be ly doaned cap, gloves and apron, and | givin’ me has made me a new man, an’ descended to the kitchen. * Cook, in her wrath, had left the kit chen in a state of chaos, Dishes piled high in the sink, toweis on the floor, pots and kettles in sore need of scouring, overflowing tubs, a pan of potato peelings, a kettle of ashes | ~all by the way of revenge for the in sulting criticism of last Sanday's vinner, The prospect was alarming, but Miss Emily went to work with a will, finding it rather more difficult than in ber inex- perience she had supposed, and wishing that her mother had not so carefully guarded her delicacy at the expense of her usefulness in kitchen aflairs, », Just as she took her pots and kettles in hand, Jack Spinner, the millionaires son, flying along upon his bicycle, came very near running into a young nian who sat upon a curbstono, moaning piteously, and at once alighted, “Good heavens! I haven't hart youi” he cried, + #No, sir," replied the person ad - dressed, who was enveloped in a mys. terious waterproof costume, sad covered from head to foot with ashes. '‘I was clane dead whon you came up. [I've got the choleray or the typhus, I danse whieh, and I'll loss my job, for I am able for it no longer, and there's no mercy on you If you neglect a thing, il it is ever so with you—no mercy.” i #¥That is very cruel,” said young Spin- mer, who had the tenderest heart in the world, ‘ls it that ash cart you are ” “41¢ in indeed,” said the unfortunate. “And there is six bar'ls to empty yit, and mo not able for it. I cowld drive back, but I couldn't lift the Lar'ls.” "At home they called Jack Don Quix aha S05 be wes always sucooring some | I'm forever obliged. And sorry I am you've spoiled the fine clothes you have [on ye. And you'll find your boy-suckle in the doctor's shop. [I've trounced the rascal that was goin' off wid it to a jelly. I'll drive down, sir, and never forget your kindness. May you be Mayor ol New York yet.” “Oh, you are welcome,” said Jack, and now Emily was stariag at him, “Not the askman |" she was saying un | der her breath, and Jack, laughing, an swered her glance, “My first ash-cart, as this was your | first fire,” ho sald, **The driver was ill, | and I took his place, It has been great | fun, though rather dirty work, May I introduce myself!” He took a card from his pocket and presented it, I am Miss Montgomery,” sald Emily; | | and I think my father must know yours | | very well, If you are Mr. William Spin. | | per's son. They are in the same busi. | ness,” Bo it proved. For # | oceasions | who can say what the etiquette may bel Emily said to herself that it would be tigly humane to help this martyr to his | kindly sympathies out of his coat of ashes, aod seut him to her brother's | room to flod clothes brosh and wash | basin, When he met her again she wore | neither mob nor , but was at. tired 1a a prs whe wimg Toad and her hair bewi y on her fore. - ypu nor to Jack, and these two were both young and liked sweet things, and Jack declared that he had never had so de. lightful a lunch before. It was a romance—which is different from a flirtation—that little episode, and it always remained in the memory of those two young people as the sweetest moment of their lives, When her mother returned, Emily wore cap, apron and gloves, The high tea was ready, and all the work accom- plished, after a fashion, and the girl looked so pretty, so happy. “Cooking must agree with you,” Mrs, Montgomery said. But Emily did not speak of the ama- teur ashman, or her lunch party of two, until long after——oh, long, long atter— | for it was some days before Mr. Spinner | called on the father, bringing his son | with him-some weeks before they were { asked to an afternoon tea—some months before Jack became an intimate friend of | the family——and quite a year before his | engagement to Miss Emily Montgomery | was announced to his friends. And it was cnly on the very eve of her | wedding that Emily told her mother that { Jack had fallen in love with her at first tight, and how and when and where. And Mrs. Montgomery declared that it would have been very, very shocking | ==frightfully imprudent—if it had been | any one but Jack; but that made all the { difference, Jack was such a nice fellow, SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Rose diamonds are liable to explode, Some of the stars move with 8 veloc: ity of nearly fifty miles a second. wix There are estimated to be over | hundred deposits of iron ore in the State of Missouri. The origin of the geysers at Sonoma, Cal., is supposed to be a volcanic crater filled by a landslide. The moon gives out heat enough to affect the thermometer and wake a dif ference of two or three degrees. If fish get beyond a certain depth in | the sea they die from the pressure of the water, which they are unable to support. The most important domestic sources 1 Are ashes, cotton seed dust and tobaceo of potas wood hull stems, ashes, tobacco Professor C Arboretum, Harvard turned [rom Japan, making a study of the bot 8. Sargent, of the Arnold University, has re. he has been | any of te | where It is trickinae, perature of zero for two hours they again became uctive when exposed to light and heat. After subjection to a tem A simple method of keeping iron snd | steel from rusting is to coat them with a solution of rubber 1a benzol, made about consistency of cream. It may be applied with a brush, and is casily rubbed off when desired. the In one of the Comstock mines a new water wheel is to be placed which is to | run 1150 revolutions a minute, and have a speed at its periphery of 10,805 feet A greater head of water than has ever before been applied to a wheel will be used. per minute. on the sense been made by H. other results be has found that Lasius flavs, while fond of Sugar, saccharine. The ants swarmed around sugar laid out for them, bat turned away from saccharine as soon as they bad tasted it. Even sugar be- came unpleasant to them when it was mixed with saccharine. It seems, there. fore, that sweetness is not the only quality which attracts them to sugar. It is very probable that, for health's sake, there will, after a time, be ual versal cremation of the dead in cities, Burying in the carth is said to be very inimical to the health of cities. Then there will be no ground to spare tor burial purposes in course of time, It is probable that the dead will be quickly and effectually reduced to ashes by means of electricity. The remains of a human body that has been cremated weigh only eight ounces—no matter how fleshy and heavy the corpse may have been. Interesting experiments of taste in ants have Devaux. Among dislikes A Kind-Hearted Giant's Embargo. A number of anecdotes have been told of late of the famous old Kennebeo lum- berman, Bodfish, whose stentorian voice resembled reverberating thunder and could be heard distinctly ‘from Kea. dall’s Mills bridge to Ticonio Falls,” & distance of two miles. An old-timer says Bodfish, who lived at Kendalls Mills, though a rough man in his ways, had a kind heart and gave aid to many poor people he thought deserving, Onoe a river driver was drowned at Kendall Mills and Bodfish having subscribed » handsome sum himself to aid his family, mounted a barrel beside the street, from which he barangued the people in aid of the sufferers, He laid down the rule that no man should pass that day uatil he had contributed, and in that way held up travelers all day long, securing a con- siderable amount by nightfall, w the odd embargo was raised, —Lowiston (Me,) Journal, Test For the Parity of Milk. Whether it is worth while to know exactly the degree to which one's milk seller is watering his milk isan open question which each rust decide for himself, For those who do not consider that ignorance is always bliss a simple way of setting at rest any doubts ta to the purity of the milkman's stook In trade is provided In 4 new or, The instruments ordinarily used for this pu consist of a glass tube with a i so scale of paper inside, and thelr record is not as a rule reliable. The new instrument is sald to be much more Po iw at both aa litle ball of blue % density of #0 instrument twenty-five degrees below | HOW CLAUS SPRECKELS EARNED THAT TITLE, He Introduced Irrigation, Steam Plows and Modern Machinery and Han Steamers to the Islands, UGAR planting was practiced in the islands on a small scale be- fore the reciprocity tresty with the United States (in 1875), but it was after that cvent that it took on the large proportions avd improved methods which characterize jt to-day. No small part of the improvement in methods and enlarged scope of the busi- ness is due to an American citizen of German birth of whom the American people have heard a good deal in one way or another, This is Claus Bpreck- les, the sugar king, who is drawing dividends on millions of Bugar stock. Bpreckles's work as a financial artist is drawn with & bold, free hand, which produces startling effects. He got his tirst foothold in the business world by land speculations in California. Having pursue further operations, he got control of the California Sugar Refloery. opened up an occupation most congenial tition in the refining industry, He paid many years to stand idle, well worth his own creased price he charged for the refined sugar, He succeeded in cornering the Ha- supply on the whole Pacific coast. The Hawaiian sugar supply was ample for the demands of the Pacific coast, even with only the most favored spots brought ander cultivation. The easy-going Ha. walian planters were long content to work these rich lands until Spreckels went into the planting business himself, reclaiming vast areas of what had been | considered waste lands, Previous to that time sugar planting | had been confined to areas within reach | of existing water courses. The cave re- | quires a great deal of and the { rainfall is not to be to | supply its needs. The resource is irri gation. There is a vast amount of land | in the Sandwich Islands which could be made productive by a water supply, either by digging wells or lengthy con duits.. Before Claus Spreckels’s time the plasters huddled about the mouths of the valleys and along the streams, water, depended on distances én rick Hawaiian sugar planters are Lhe bodiment of hospitality. | isolated from one another, and periods their only intercourse outside world is through the oo travelers who stop with them for snd food. So they welcome all comers, There are in this region a plantation and sugar mill run wholly by ( They are owned by Along, the wealthy Chinese merchant in Honolulu, whose son ir a graduate of Yale Cellege. The overseer is 4 Chisamag, The mill hands are Chinamen, and the fleld bands also. | The mill machinery was made in Honolulu. The cane requires thirteen months to mature. After the first crop is taken off, a second and sometimes a third, called They are much for long with the asionsl sheiter shinamen., all the first or second ratoon crop, is raised | | {from the same seed, each time with a di. | minishing quantity and quality of Then the cane is for further, but to use as seed in replanting. As this cane is cut in the fields and stripped, it is in most cases pitched into one of the rickety flumes used to carry | the water for irrigation and floated down sugar, nothing good to the mill, which is often rua by the | | same water, In other cases the cane is carried to the mill in ox carts. It is then run belween heavy rollers aad the juice pressed oul. | The juice is run first into clarifying | tanks with copper steam pipes in the | bottom. Upon being boiled the dirt and | foreign substances rise to the surface | and are skimmed off. Toe evaporating | pans are very similar, but shallower, and | are used to clear the water from the | juice. The pure juice is then sucked | up into the vacuum pan-—a gigautio in. closed tank, from which the air can be exhausted in order to save time in boil. ing the juice, SUGAR KING OF HAWAIL | achieved in this way the wherewithal to | This | to his mind in the shutting off of compe- | a rival reflnery a comfortable income for | and made it while by the in- | walian sugar crop year after year and en- | joyed a monopoly of the refined sugar | it, and it was noi long until his faith was justified, Beveral sugar mills, with American machinery and on a scale never before attempted on the islands, were erected, turning out in the aggregate several hundred tons a day. plows were introduced and patent de- vices of various sorts, was a unique railway running from one of these mills to the Supping place, the motive power ot whic wind, utilized by sails, Now there are locomotives to puil trains of ears along temporary tracks to various parts of the plantations and bring in the cane. It had always been the custom in the islands to take the sugar up w Honolulu and reship it from there to San Fran- cisco, owing to the lack of landing facilities on the other islands. But Spreckels built himself wharves and had vessels come to his plantation. This offended the Pacific Mail Steamship Company and their vessels stopped touching at the islands, whereupon Spreckels built steamers and put on a line of his own to run twice a moath be- tween Honolulu and San Francisco in- stead of once a month, as formerly, He lent King Kalakaua money and was made Sir Claus Bpreckels and had a voice { in all the affairs of thee kingdom, Spreckels is a rubicund German of no | very great education. He epeaks broken English. His wife is a hearty-looking, kind-hearted German woman, and he has several blonde children to succeed to his | wealth. —New York Advertiser, m= | How They Care for Horses in Japan. establishes for himself home, tained, founds clubs for # divers athletic sports; wre regular races in the spring aad fall. The care and management of the horses gives employment to a number of peo. ple in various capacities. The Japanese horse, a pony with short neck, busy mane, and thick hair, spends his youth, for the most part, in the mountains, where ba learas to climb and gets hardened to the weather and lack f care groomed fodder consists chiefly o is iaom and hi f and his n the tor ver grass and dry foliage in the the g summer, while entleman’s horse count upon His fodder, consisting beans —{or there is win saddle. good attention. of wheat Can no hay--is given to stable appointments ht i A great iron fur- him warmed, and no are complete without se for a fire, and a bath.tub; he gentleman refreshes himself {or after a WAr bath, so his horse is ented Wa similar lasaery, which he greets with i The giving animal of his bat +} vie n INOUus geighs, of a full warm bath to an size has some pragtical difficulties; a high stout wooden tub answers purpose. legs into nilows First the horse puts his fore tub of warm water, and himself to be patiently rubbed down by hand; then the tub is pushed back and he puts his hiod-legs in, and, finally, he is rubbed dry with a wisp of straw, The native horse-owner believes in an occasional bloodletting to keep his stock in condition, and in many provinces the farmer cups his livestock every year; the horse is cast and held fast by ropes a pole while each leg bled. —Demorest’s Family Magazine. The Pine Nat Crop. For the past three months Carson val- ley and vicinity has worn a deserted look, owing to the absence of the In- dians, who bave been in the mountains industriously gathering pine nuts, They are now flocking into their quarters loaded down with the f{ruits of their toil. The weather has been unusually favor. able, and the season a long one. Added to this the crop wags the heaviest since 1572. Having such aa enormous yield they were unable to pack them all down, and were compelled to call on the ranch. ers for assistance. Harrison Berry went to Harney Riley's with a four<horse team, and returned with 1800 pounds of pioe nuts. James Stuart, William Thornburg, of Markiee- ville, and J. E. Wells, of Diamond Val. | ley, all hauled big loads during the past | wook, while the Indian pouies have been kopt busy packing. I'he nuts, when roasted, are delicious, Lhe EEL fastened to is land, and to turn his water supply upon Bteam | i was the trade | In 1881 there | J Veils are highly colored. Tight shoes have had their dsy. Batin is coming again in great fav or, Novelty beugalines show electric of Big hands looks monstrous in white floves, Hats and bonnets for spring are things of beauty. Patent-leather tips are not the suy more. style All kinds of buds and berries are more ised than flowers. High heels are not worn on the street by sensible women, Wherever the Englishman settles, he | comfortable | and, naturaily, after that is at. | {| Brooklyn, 80 in Yokob=aig and I'okio there | except by the rain, | sidered and | as | Alter boiling down to a thick granu- A lar substance, it is tarced into the centri. | and are highly appreciated by the whites. fugal giroular iron Jars, which are set to To celebrate the close of the harvest sea- whirling at the rate of 1800 revolutions | %08, & grand pow-wow will take place in a minute, sad so separate the sparkling | the wigwam at Woodlord's, on which oc. sugar crystals from the Ouid. The su. | Casion Pete Mayo, the orator of the gar is then dumped, still hot, on a clean | Washoes, will ‘‘heap talk.” Genoa floor and from there shoveled into socks, Then it weed to be stowed away until Claus Spreckies came along sad offered his price for it, This was the tranquil and easy-going way of doing things which it struck Claus Spreckles ten years ago could be improved upon to his own advantage, The sland of Maui, next north of Hawaii in the group, Is made yp of two separate clusters of mountain peaks twouty or thirty miles apart and joined together by a low-lying strip of lande=io low-lying that it looks as though Maul had once been two islands, with the sea flowing over thisstrip, There are several hun. dred square miles of this lowland, and there are no ustural water courses flow. lag 2 h it. a nl on Maui had conse. quently never attempted to plant sugar in it, and had confloed themselves ta the mouths of the valleys on gither side of it, tit was good land could be brought to is, | (Nev.) Courier, An Alaska Snow Storm. “I have a passion for answering catoh- | peony advertisements,” sald a gentleman | yesterday, ‘aud I've been sold many times, Atone time I sent tweaty-five cents to & man who offered instructions | for making from five to three dollars in the afternoons without leaving home, The instractions returned were: ‘‘Fish for suckers likel do.” The worst sell [ | ever underwent, hawever, was the pur. | cise from a strolling street fakir a pack- age of powder, for which he claimed that, when dissolved in a glass of water, it would evolve a vivid picture of an Al- askan snow storm. I locked myself in my room and arranged the experiment, The water in the became eotly white and not untii 1 had into its unfathomable milkiness for several mo- Btrings are the color of the trimming, { sud full two inches wide. There is a prevalence of smooth, finely | woven surfaces in the spring woolens, Fans most seen are of feathers with shell sticks or of antique painted parch- nent, Well-dressed women no longer lay in a stock of boots, for the reason that styles are variable. The Princess of Wales has a new pair of gloves, They are long-wristed and ten buttons. Esch button is a diamond. At a wedding breakfast in Y., the bride made a witty speech in response to the toast in her honor. recent . N. The fastest typesetter in California ie said tobes yo woman who is em- ployed ia a newspaper office at Baata Barbara. George Du Maurier, the English ‘so. " artist, asserts that women are broader snd generally 5 FET ely growing taller, peg " {| healthier, Ihe horse used by the farmer | Colored lisle thread gloves are not con. ‘‘elegant” by the presumptive critics, but they look nice and they are leaner than black. ida remated Ou bas each of her favorite dogs upon its death, and hass little emetery” for them connected with ome in Floren e White and gray feather bons sre still worn with decollete dress, but with the new effects they are superfluous and must ost be . Mae, Ianttd da fig Lelinguished her intention to it 1 we her father fn Sicily, owing to her fear of possible capture by brigands, aer i shaw] Black kid is the most expensive glove in trade. Dust-gray dress kid is the best wearing. Brown is durable and makes the hand inconspicuous. The lady managers of the Columbian Expwmsition hope to collect for the library of the woman's building every book written by an American woman since 1630. Bands of velvet are being worn round the neck inside the collar of the gown, These are of any color to suit the dress, and are fastened with little fanciful stick pias. Natural flowers are again worn in the hair with dressy toilets, snd very sweet they look for the adoring of fair young girls sod women not too mature in charm. The severe, but to some faces most co. quettish, Empire poke comes in fine, colored chip, and is trimmed with vel- vet ribbon in severe lines, and erect os tmch feathers. Hairpins come now in sets of seven, two large and five small coves, cut from clear amber shell, with circular tips. Some of the finest ones are delicately tipped and inlaid with gold. Mrs. Moncure D. Conway knew Mrs. Thomas Carlyle very intimately, sod pays glowing tribute to her conversational abilities, but says that she was wholly destitute of housewifely gifts. Mrs. Blaine will spend the coming summer in Earope. Her youngest daugh- ter, Hattie, will accompany her, The residence at Augusta will be retained by the family and not be rented. Rip up your white China silk and send it to a cleaner’s. If the quality is good it is certain to clean well. Make it up in empire style, with sleeves of yellow velvet and a narrow belt of the same. The feminine law student in the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania is Miss Angeline Choynski. She joined the law school about a week ago, and is already spoken of as an especially bright student. Her brother students allude to her as thelr “sister -indaw.” Russian female convicts in Siberia are in future, if a proposal made by the Ministry of Justice to the
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers