7 I NEW YORK i i . '- - - - p$ Designs For Costumes That Have Be j come Popular in the Metropolis. Nkw Yobk Crrr (Special). Those novelties have been observodat recent weddings: The abandonment of gloves by bride and bridegroom. The attachment of a court train T 7tk -K . WEDD1NO DRESS OF WIMTK SATIS. very long and fall to the wedding dress. The frequent substitution of nomo clinging fabric, like crepe lo cbiu or Tciling, for the classic whito satin. Tte addition of many tiuy frills to the wedding veil, unless this be of costly lace or an huirloom. The garbing of tho maid of honor precisely like the other bridesmaids, even to the color of her bouquet. The preference for ."white" wed dings. At one of tho largest weddings that Now York has seen this season both brido and bridegroom were of unusual height, the one being more than six feet tall, the other within an inch or two of that stature. There were six bridesmaids, all conspicuously petite, and, whether by design or accident, the effect was not uuliko that of n marriage of Brobdignagians attended by LiliputH. The dress of tho stately bride was of exquisite whito satiu, creamy and F Htm LACK Art A MODISH GARNITURE. soft, and with something of the uacro of a pearl. In out it was severe. The robe was arranged in a flat plait at tho back and desoonded in a full train. The bodice was pointed both in front and at the back; it was slightly draped across the bust and rose at the throat in a high collar. At one side was nr lauded a cascade of real lace, whioh foil, with increasing volume, to the horn of tho robe, interrupted here and there by sprays of orange blossoms. The veil was au immense afl'uir of beautiful point d'Alencon, fixed over the head with a wreath of orange (lowers. Two Drama Worth Cmeful Stmlr. The rage for lace is simply tremeu- dous. We can't get enough of it. The more wa invest in it, the more the makers strive to render it more at tractive, that we shall be driven to baying still greater quantities. The flounces, too, with their graoeful cir cular shapings, are well known, and owned by those who cau afford them, as are all the hundred aud one small devices in demand for neckwear. In the two dresses shown in the il lustration we see very fetohiug intro ductions of this cobwebby fabric In one the sleeves, revers, vest and bor der for the overskirt and Eton aro of creamy Renaissance. The material itself is of satin cloth in a pastel gray, the folds on the bodice being ot cream utonsseline. The oompanion figure is distinctly a dress-up affair. It is of old-rose orepe de chine, very delicate shade, and has a pleated skirt; the bodice, too, followH out this design until lost under the lace bolero. This bolero, gauntlet sleeves and the odd band whioh holds the skirt fullness in shape are all of ecru point de Venise laoe. Very graoofully laid folds of old-rose velvet make a most elective ground for the edge of the top of the lace bo lero, and also serve to show off the yoke and stook of finely shirred oream nousseline. Tho buckle catohing the folds is of rose gold set with garnets, A Hew Tenure, An effective material resentbl.v a (Shetland shawl of. the finest make. FASHIONS. woven by the yard, and most gossamer looking. Over satin it is employed for tea gowns, draping most beauti fully, and often intorlnoed with rib bon. This looks well in white and also in hortensin, the new red. Skirts mode in it fall in graceful folds at the back and nearly ulways display a sash or one long end. It is also nsod for boleros over vplvot vests, ros; velvet being the popular color, and mostly worn with a velvet hat of a slightly darker shado, closely stitched all over, raised on ono ni.'o with a largo red pansy. About Underwear. A change is coming over tho femi nino taste in the matt or of uudcrlinon. It is now no longer one mass of lace and frills. In fact, frills, even on the hem of the garments, are distinctly out of vogne, and now the whole at tention is given np to cnt. A siraplo real Valenciennes trimming round the neck, with a tiny baby ribbon and tho initial embroidered on tho loft shoulder, is tho latest smart thing to wear. But tho cut that is the diffi culty; for all the beauty of these de licate undergarments depends entirely on the fit. Combinations are dying out, except for bicycling and active sports. Cotton Fnr ('ndnrclnllilnc. Cotton is coming into favor for tin derclothiug. In fact, . many young women now choose percale or nain sook in preference to linen or lawn. Linen gives an impression of fresh ness whic.lt one cannot got with cot ton. The substance is about tho same and both will equally well boar orna menting. The one fact in regard to linen is a tendenoy to revert to whito petticoats. Hanriflome Tailor flown. Something quite now in a tailor gown is made of nut-brown cloth. The skirt is box-ploatod all around from the front breadth, which is plain, and trimmed with curved bauds of cloth covered with stitching. Tho blouse worn with this is of pink and brown plaid silk, aud the soat is ot the Eton variety with a belt of brown Hatin covered with stitching. Hlylldh Belt ltnrklen. Bolt buckles covored with suode in its natural color, and ornamented with steel, jet or turquoise are ono of the novelties. HrlilHl HouqneU. A olotid of filmy tullo envelops the latest bridal bouquets. Coat l or Tailor Suite. These two now little coit" show which way the wind is blowing in a number of respects. There are novel little revers for those who nre "tired to death" of the plain coat Rort, One, too, has a dip in the irout (and to most of uo it is "tho becoming cut), while the other suggests the cutaway. It, us you see, is made to fasten with a Hy, the oolinr nud revers being faced with velvet. Tho material is a semi-heavy tweed. Either rather heavy sei:;e or a mixed tweed is tho proper material for the one with jaunty di. The JAUNTT LITTLR COATS. finish is three rows of heavy stitching either the self color or white. Hix buttons serve dowu the front. The skirt shows a moderate dip iu the book. AGMCULTIML Foot Hot In Slieei. The following remedy for foot rot n sheep is suggested: Boil two pounds of arsenic, two ponnds of common soda iu one gallon of water for half an hour, To this solution add five gallons of water aud plaoo iu a long trough so that, the depth of tho solution is about tho Kruno as the leptk of the hoof. Scrape oft" the loose portions of the hoof and make tho sheep walk through tho trough. Repeat once a fortnight until a cure is effected. Two ov three treatments are usually sufficient. HiA4oiiliijr Fnnno 1'oRtn. . The proper way lo haudlo fcuoe posts is to cut in tho winter, peal all bark on and leave them m tho woods or some shady place to dry. If they nre taKcn out into tho sun they are practically sure to check badly. If they are not protected from the sun thoy will necessarily crack more or less. But when shaded, tho drying and seasoning nre less rapid, and con sequently the checking is less. Slow, even seasoning is tho only practical way of insuring the minimum of checking. Whilo drying, posts should be as much from the ground as possi ble so that tho nir can reach them freely. Heaping W.tll Witter I'nre. It used to bo au old-fashioned cus tom iu the country to put one or two trout iu a woll to insure tho water be ing pure and wholesome. If they did not keep it so it was supposed that they would give warning of its im purity by dying themselves. We ore reminded of this by seoing in an Eng- lsh paper that Professor Sobreto, of Turin, has laloly advised the use of eels in tho bouse cistern for the same purpose. Ho says two or throe not large but lively cols weuld devour anything in the water iu tho shape of animalcules, infusoria, bird dropping from the roof or vogetablo matter of any kind. Wo think they would also take any unimal matter liko toads or rats that might fall in nud drown. Poultry lloueo Addition. The cut bIiows a way to utilizo buildings already existing when con structing a poultry houso. A hay barn or other struoturo having a long A 1'OITLTRV I.EAN-TO. sido toward tho south, cau be used as in the case shown here, where the high sido of the poultry house has its boarding and framing already fur nished free of cost. There is another great advantage iu building poultry houses in this way: tho added warmth that is thus secured. Iu cold regions this is a matter of great importance, making this plan exceedingly useful. Having HotiKlt Fodder. A few years ago not many formors in the corn-growing States thought of saving their corn stover, though per haps thoy turned cattle in among it, to eat a litllo aud tramp it down. Where ma all gram was grown, the straw was thought to havo very littlo food value, though somo kept their tttock half starved on it. Eastern farmers, who were thought to bo very saving, seldom fed out beau straw or tioo straw. Now all thoso aro saved, nud while they need more grain with them than does clover or other good hay, it is thought economy to feed any Di' all of these, and by adding grain, keep the animals iu better condition it less cost than when hay is fed, aud it tho same time add to tho valu3 of '.he inuuure made on tLo farm. Many varieties of weeds also make good ough forage it mown down and cured before they have ripeued their seeds, aud to do so helps to keep the and clean, aud preservo tue fertility in it for more useful orops. rutting Out Onion Sell. In putting out oniou sets, do not think that there must be a hole made for each set, and that when it is placed in the ground the dirt must be pressed around it. Just open up a shallow trench and scatter the sets at the right distance apart; then cover up aud press tho dirt down firmly with the feot. Walk right over them back aud forth until the soil is well firmed. Sow onion seed vary early iu the spring on well prepared, rich ground. Sow in rows about eighteen inches apart, aud quite thick, if onion maggot is likely to bother, and about an inch deep. Several times beforo tho onions are up go over the ground with a garden rake thoroughly. If stones and sticks have been removed this raking cau be coutiuued until after the onions are up. This saves a great doal of weeding. After the onions begin to grow woll, run the garden rake between the rows fre quently, and always as soou after a shower as may be. Continue this cultivation till the onions are nearly ripe. Do not roll the tops down or break them over purposely. This does no good, but will allow the weeds to grow up, aud they cau not then be taken out so well. Protect the HllUlile. Improper treatment of the hillside often results iu putting the hillside fields in a condition where tillage is almost impossible. By nature our hills are, for the most part, covered with forests or growth of underbrush that protect the soil from the effects of running water. The soil is kept iu a porous condition aud the rain that falls, being oonduoted by a thousand brauohes and trunks, follows down the roots aud soaks away through the soil. But many of these hillsides have been cleared of all tree growth and been either converted into plowed fields or into pastures. Where con verted into grass fields and kept in a high state of fertility the damage has not been so great. But in the case of the plowed field the land has been pnt in tie very best condition to be washed and gullie.l. Where the pas turo has been kept close the land is hardly less subject to washing. Fre quently after a sudden and heavy downpour tho hem t of the farmer is made sick te seo the devastation that has oconrred on snob fields. The remedy is to use thoso fields and pastures for other purposes. Whero it is not thought advisable to attempt to cover them with a smalt forest, they may be used for orohard purposes, but will have to be kept covered with sod as a soil binder. They, however, have this disadvan tage for orchard purposes, that culti vation is not given except' at tho sac rifice of tho very conditions it is de sired to establish. Altogether, it is best to establish the wood lot or the timber belt on the hillsides that are subject to gullying, but whore this is not possible or profitable pnt the land into heavy grass and do not pasture it at any time of year. Enoourage the sod to thicken, and this will reduce the danger of gullying to a minimum. Farmers that are clearing hillsides for the first time must be careful not to leave the soil bare for a few months beforo putting it to use. A few heavy rains may do damage that it will take years to repair. Farm, Field and Fireside. Mee mill Fruit Ittolnomi. In the horticultural department ol tho Ohio State University they have beou watching closely the work of the bees among the fruit flowers for several years. The first trees that bloom there are tho apricots, and bees have been soon working on them as early as April 1. riums follows vory closely after, and the period of working on ono tree is seldom more than five or six days, and if two or thrco of these are windy tho chances of perfect pollenization is lesseued. Feaches and pears are in bloom soou after, aud then cherries, tho apple being the latest, but in bloom a longer time. When the weather is pleasant and bees numerous a large percentage of all the blooms on some fruit trees are visited once or more, and a large percentage of all the bees return to the hive with either honey or pollen. Classing the fruits according to tho frequency of the visits of the bees they place plums first, then iu tho following order: Cherries, apples, peaches and pears. They care but little for the. blossoms of the garden currant, but visit goose berries more aud raspberries and bluckborries freely, whilo they rarely light on the blossom of the strawberry even when they fly over it. S'fhey find them particularly fond of the blossoms of tho red raspberry, and place this as first among all fruit blossoms for bees, with others iu tho following order: Blackberry, plum, chorry, blackcap, raspberry, apple, gooseberry, peach, pear, curraut and strawberry. From our own observa tion we should say that the blueberry would, rauk closely after tho black berry if not ahead of it in attractive ness to bees, and the grape nearly or quite as highly. Is it possible that in a vory ncid fruit there is less honey iu tho flower than in the blossoms ot sweeter fruit? We do not remember that we ever saw the honey bee at work on tho blossom of the barberry or oranberry, but our attention was never called to it, so cannot say they do not. Wo do know that there is often a half dozen or more at work on tho broad blossom of the elderberry. American Cultivator. KnUrRlng tliu Barn, The cuts given herewith, show a very practical method of enlarging a barn whose capacity has become toe small. Fig. 1 shows the common form of barns, with the driveway length- FIU. 1. TUB OLD BAHN. wise, straight through the middle as extravagant use of space. Fig. 2 shows that two "shed-roof ' additions have been placed upon the cuds, the roofs fill. 2. THE ENLARGED BARJf. being made continuous with the newly constructed additions to the old roof. The feeding floor and driveway is thus changed to a crosswise position of the bnrii, taking less space and anording greater room on either side for stock aud fodder. If the barn has a second floor the new arrangemout will afford much greater space above, while the whole of this spuco above the main floor will be finely lighted from alt sides. Though the remodoled barn is chauged greatly iu appearauce, tho additions are of a nature to make the expense comparatively light. New England Homestead. Poultry Note. The natural food for poultry is grain. Do not feed one variety of grain all tho time. Old hens cannot be depended upon for winter eggs. Overfed bens will not furnish a regular supply of eggs. Keep your breeding fowls in good condition at all seasons. Hens should always have access to a good, clean dust bath. Do not conclude that you have rid your poultry ot vermin and lioe and become negligent. They are liko the poor ' 'al ways with us" and constant vigilance is the only remedy that is snre. While a great deal in management of poultry can be learned from books and story papors there is a great deal that cau only be aoquired by experi ence, and a part of this knowledge cau only be obtained by observation at fairs and ponltry shows at muoh less expense thau by cold experience in oue'a own poultry yard. There ore at present forty-five stars on the American flag. I. I III" ANN PUKKIN'S TRAGEDY. A WOMAN OF STRONG MENTALITY HELD DOWN BY ECCENTRICITY. An Ohio School Tesoher Wlionn Mind Wits Fnll of Ilrllllnnt Plane For Ite loriiilna tho World Sold PapeM Iu Urotenque Garb In Cleveland. WITH the brain of a Mine, de Stacl, the determina tion of a Charlotte Cor day and the luck of Cy rano de Bergcrnc, all twisted, may hap, but still so prononucod that they made their possessor almost a beggar instead of a queen. Ann Turkiu, sellor of newspapers and writer of poems and essays, diod in a bed of charity at St. Alexis Hospital, Clove land, Ohio, n few weeks ago, aged fifty years. For a score of years she bad been ho most picturesque figure of Cleveland streets from the fact that sho wore tho clothes that it pleased her to wear.' For most of thoso years sho has been hungry, at loast part of the days, simply becauso she would not use her wits as the world wished her to use them. She was a crauk, but a brilliant one. Her lovo of let ters was ideal, passionato aud unre quited she died for her opinions. Ann Purkin died with a trunk full of poems and essays, half of which aro no good that many writors of poetry and philosophy would havo been glad to have written them. But sho was not only a dress-reformer but a reformer of everything else almost. Years ago she addicted herself to spelling reform, nud, as in all things, she went to the utmost extreme of it. Sho would not allow a line sho had written to be printed otherwise thau she bad written it, both as to spoiling and punctuation. Sho would rather starve. This kept her out of print and made rubbish of what would havo been otherwise availablo matter, for in whatever sho wrote there was more or less of tho force and bril liancy of tho pen that has a right to write for print. She made ono excep tion to this last summer when, during the street-car strike,' sho used to take to the newspaper offices articles urg ing the cessation of violence in the fight against the compauy. With a tone iu her voice which a Hindu mother might have had when sho Bout her girl child to the husband that had bought her, she would say, "You may change it if you want to," for she had tfouo over the ground often enough to know no newspaper would print what she wrote as she wrote it. DnESHKD UKG A HOY. Ann Furkin's death was the only kind of a death her life could have brought her. All winter, when she was not ill, she was at her usual cor ner on the bnay square, selling tho afternoon papers. Her voice was u shrill squeak as she cried out the names of tho papers. To almost all the newspaper buyers she had ccasod to be a curio, they had known her so long. If those who did not know her stopped to gaze thoy saw that in her face which kept them from laughing at her clothes. Her di ess consisted of a boy's woolen Nhirt for she was a very little creature, less thau five feet a coat over it that looked as though it had boon made by the wearer with tho disregard for it that she showed for all the othor things that seemed to her uuessentials, and a pair of short trouHcrs-liko garments that reached to her knees, Tho breeches were mado of what looked liko pieces of horsoblaukot, uud were , shaped not uuliko an ordinary pair of trousers cut off nt tho knees. Her stockings wcro while aud her shoos heavy ones such as working boys wear. Any thing in the way of head covering would do, aud there was not in tho wholo of her costumo uj attempt at ornamentation or oaro. Funny as hor clothes wore, ono for got them iu lookiug into her face. The eyes wero clear, Buiall aud ox prcssivo and thero was in them, when one talked with her, tho look of the soul that thinks it has never been un derstood and has grown hopeless of ever being. But thoro was not a prouder spirit in the breast of any woman. It. is not known that sho ever had a ponuy that she did not earn. People who offered her charity were rebuked with n severity they never forgot. It one gave her a nickel for a paper and walked away sho ran alter him and made hiiu take his change. Once she was ill for a week or two and the city relief department sent her 'a ton of coal, piling it up iu the oue room whoro she lived, against her protests. It was in the dead of winter aud she was foroed to use about a quarter of the ton of coal. Then she carried what was loft of it down the stairs and threw it out into tho street, from where it was quickly taken by the less scrupulous women of the tene ment. Then she wout to tho city hall, made her way into the Mayor's otlice and handed hiiu a dollar, say ing: "That is for what I used out of that load of coal you sent to me. I thiew the rest of it into the street, but I waut to pay for all I used and I waut you to take the money so your thieving clorks can't say I didn't pay it." HZFUSBD CUAlim' FOOD. A week before she died tho other psople in the Dotroit street tenement in which Ann Purkin lived remem bered that she had not beon seen for some days. Sho never locked her door, and wheu they went into her room thoy found hor alone in tho cold, there biting neither fuel nor fire in the room, only her trunkful of manuscripts. There existed between her and tho poor people among whom she lived something of the feeling that mode the slums ot Pa.ris worship Verloine. The refusal of the world to give the poetess what she dosorved and them what they wanted mado a boud of sympathy. Thoy brought hor food, which she would not eat, and built her a firo, whioh she ooutd not prevent. For years she tas oaten nothing but fruit oud such other food os she could eat uncooked. That was a part of hor belief, that only un cooked vegetable food should be eaten. For yoars she ate nothing but fruit, raw oatmeal aud raw l'ioe soaked in water. She hated a doctor as she did correct spelling oud skirts, and was a hydroputh. When the other people iu the tenement called a doctor she rofused to even allow him to talk to her, and she was taken to the hospital against her violent pro tista. She was too small and weak and too nearly starved to resist par ticularly, ovon in words.. At tho hos pital she said she had not a friend in the world or a relative, and it was bore that sho displnyod the only thing thnt seemed at all like womanly weak ness that is known ' of her. She said she wanted to bo buried in the old comotery nt Berlin Hoights, a country village twenty-four miles from Clove land, whoro tho graves of hor father aud mother are. MAS AN tiniO HCUOOr.TKACHEII. Berlin Heights is a smnll country community. There was once a wave of free-thinkiug sentiment thero, and later tho "bloomer" crae. Ann Pur kiu had been a schoolteacher thoro and was tho star of the woman's club. Sho donned bloomers and wore them ever-after. It is told that sho was married at that timo and that her husband told her she could not bo bis wifo oud wear bloomers, too. She choso the bloomers; and they separated amicably. This tho dead newswomau denied, insisting that she had never been married. Sho Paid her family name was Perkins, bnt that was not the way to spell it, and as thero wa but oue of her, her name must be singular instead of plural. All her young lifo iu the country sho had boeu writing poems and es says, but tho editors always chauged them aud thereby harrowed hor soul. So, twenty years ago, she went to Cleveland. She was determined to make tho world hear hor. She leo lured on dress reform and wrote more poetry. The poetry aud some essays sho had printod iu a pamphlet aud sold it in tho stroets iu her bloomer oostumo. While tho novelty lasted she did fairly well, but Cleveland was not tlion large enough so that it offered a permanent market, and as soon as sho bad made money cuoucu out of one book she would -got out another. Sales dropped off, though, and she went to Chicago thif toon years ago to work on a woman-suffrago publication. After remaining iu Chicago six months, sometimes lecturing aud sometimes working ns a servant, sho camo back to tho Cleveland streets and newspapers, The newsboys camo to recognizing her as a judge for their differences and advisor for their troubles. Ono of hor principles was that when ono had made money enough for his necessities ho should stop and givoothors n chance. Whon Bhe had sold a certain number of pa pors and sho sold them rapidly be cause of tho attoutiou she attracted she would stop and go homo. .WANTED TO JIBITOKM THE WORLD. Hei'niiud was always full of brill iant plaus for reforming the world and making it a heaven. A lifelong veg tariuu of tho strictest sort, uot using milk or eggs, the scherao that rilled her mind during hor last days was n magazine to bo devoted to vegetarian ism. Tho simplicity of hor mind is shown in tho fact that she was going to call it "Tho Fig Leaf" and edit it horsclf. Iu her delirium iu the hos pital sho bemoaned her inability to ilud n backer for tho lnugazivio. She refused to take any mediciuo at tho hospital, refused food aud would not even allow the hospital doctor to tako her temperature. Wheu any ono approached her bodsido sho would ask "Are'yon a doctor?" mid if the answer was "l'os" sho would insist that he go ,oway from hor. Her attitude toward all humanity was hostile, savo that she took a motherly interest iu news boys, and toward reportors showed a disposition that was a quaint mixture of frioudliuess and adoration, so strong was her lovo of all that protoudod to tho guise of literature. At tho last, before sho diod, tho hospital doctors got to telling her that they wero re porters in ordor to do tho little that was poasiblo iu hor aid. Chica;p r.oeord. CURIOUS FACTS. The original idea of the Chinuinau's pigtail was that it formed a convenient haudlo by which, one day, he would bo lifted up to Pnradiso. TIuh onri ous bolicf is still to be found amon tho natives. Fruit i.i now being shipped from New South Wales packed iu tho bark of the ti treo, aud tho outer bark ot tho mclalcuca louoadoudron, whioh is shredded into n sort of coarse chaff. Theso barks seem to have somo pecu liar power ot preserving oranges dur ing carriage. Tho largest library in the world is that of Paris. It contains upward of 2,000,00(1 pi iutod books and 100,000 manuscripts. Tho British Museum contains about 1,500,000 volumes, nud the Imperiul Library nt St, Peters burg about tho same number, Theso are the largest libraries in tho world. The Fata Morgana, properly speak ing, is a sort of miragn that is seen most frequently between Calabria and Sicily. The ntmosphero must' be in proper condition to produce the phe nomena. Thou, tho rising of heated air and tho flowing in of cooler layers of the atmosphcro mako a most aston ishing display. Towns, buildiug.i, ships, hills, trcos, people, are seen moving along iu tho uir, but all of them upsido down. In tho middle of the fourteenth contury the city of Paris passed an ordinance cujoiuing tho cleans ing of the. streets aud the shut ting up of swiuo. It wax neglected, as usual, aud a terrible plague was tho consequence. Tho faculty of mediciuo, oallod upon for a remedy by the King, sent to inform him, after long discussion, that tho plague was the result of a hostile conjunction of the planets Mars and Jupiter. According to tho Auiorioau Consul at Chiugting, China, tho people aro not so far behind tho prooession au may bo thought. At least, Mr. Smithers gravely reports to tho Stato Department that; in the department oalled Yungpio, Chih-li Ting is found iu abundauoo by washing iu the val ley near the oity. Tho inhabitants of the neighborhood keep largo flooks of geese to work tho gold Holds for thorn. When the Reese are found to be very heavy they uro killed aud their craws omptied of tho gold contained therein. A flock of geese is sometimes worth a good deal of money, but geoso dressed ready for eating aro very cheup in deedfrom fifteen ta twenty cents each. MAKES WONoi A Secret of Teni'.n.' H Will . Don Stockton t'"" tempering steel ' to have been h$n " of tho mnkerii ol M"' lodo blades, kinson (Wis ) lt the Chicago ChIr!'"'t secrot will din jf.'r' ' not toll how li0(r,';"v his head and . f d ' work, but if h0 t "" toll bis process. fiHr' knives, not Kwotl.t" are of a quality t P'ak Toledo sword istl.""1 ' a fitting compari., f'"1'' in Chicago, Now J I1" k Milwankeo have which thoy wonlif the weight nfn,r" another could not L .1 tho knife is not lit - v" These carver, n' tempor is so t'.ne i ' a rniior edge for jti-6r. v a steel ns a slurp. J'J sour oo of constant tunnto enouuli tof ro perpetual florae: ',. in tho heaJ of th I does the carving, H, not on tho niRrkft A buy them. That ' not moke them fcjl' and Harry whocotiot i price and wants i('lu1' mokes them fur l'h, those who aro W:,,'"' a friend to interce',-,, Dan make them people ho chargfc whioh is not iu'uP r rate with the vain: Dan is nbont SC and has spent his -i waters. Ho is, who knocked around ft I " 1,1 was with the m-V "r Wur, acquiring ii 'frooii much rheumatism I"" low his trade, ttivt," it. He can tempt man can and lias ;r " pering tools to cf1' 1 great industry Le-r, work enough toir ing down on Kot. urday for two di j fiBhiug. Ho nili;S miles down to SiL has to pull n boi'Voti when he is there tlcti no matter what j fl year. ativo Dau has lcciKBe derfnl carviug-ki tfth years, aud ho eaijclne knife you may i': TO better than any k ';', try, but ho eunuot. it. He would no:" ing two knives to 'Con, time than lie t would disturb h: ( not mako any to i., yea, at once, lie has ryiii his work, and thei, ..flj bears "D. StodiL.j tu, on the blti'lo, ac Ln(j dainty aud artistic LUI.) enough to show Luijt I"-!'1- T, ,, reatc Dr. Franklyu :j,bm waukee, had a 0WP cinl design he dreU 0j envy of ull his lt--!rnfUI not got similnr oLy.'!sh not know Dau Sv he John A. CuiUs, fgut made all his clul't up showing tUotn off..Au knives, and Mr. I uer& Loudon fcjie, D do no the samo U j City, whilo Cieorg jjlnri of their womto t Marinette. L Dan takes pro; AU suoh knives as no) but if he should !-4e& j of his kcives lie in' trot IJu Not II Thoro ore ut Im'Wiw. this country who ftre t water. Dr. Johuicd man at Hawick, ho w states that then doing so if a stvic adhered to. "' "plenty of fluid ii fruit aud other ft great advantage,: traveling, to bo drinking either 'i well-known vew eases." The w drinking wotcr-i' wholesato jewele' says thero is ii',; doing without wa'' poses, and he si drunk auy watf visited Loudon, 1 how many years fifteen or twenty'' abstaiuor." Tit' Too D A lirodueo deal' snt live and dressed if all consiguoo of hisR whi ter intended forttjojt turkeys, as folio" 0 lt i gret to advise J f b: turkeyB iu yooi Jul , cember reached pt i.j make deduction I j'ouu correotod accoum iel. The poultry himself aud rep- the sir. Iam Bony!"- impossible to quested. I have et?o, quiring all custo- r dressed tnrnt'j" vanoe, so we o"" 1 nnr Tlll kOVS ' o.wl Inai.lai firO l' ' nuu ..j mil v- nhinnnil iu the 0' mortality anion? very lurgo thi J'iy,iUi Oreut if " " The export i the result oi ' fishing hove been eut ; parts of the 0'' on tue one ,j other. What ;) was is shown ' port was 100,000 f that of thoprfl number of liei season ot Yarw0 K t a T ahiICi . Xionaou I l-roM'"! Never lookf In the motor -i'i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers