A Toe Baty wt Scie A NEW GOWN TO GIVE STOUT WO- 3 EN A CHANCE. = — = ae were being worn larger in front’ | | vramed indignant that any southern wom- Oux All tlie Polson. . ‘every one Das Jeurd mere or a a fairy tai Hie fo Pm , 12 Gant 3 Fou ta 1 a iP in Bebutttotes For Arttiles of Household wInedr Bonnucis and Dressos—The ng Passion gi-ovg Bren In Adversity. Be Mothers wd Imidnns of the Bont. oad] {Bperislt ” 08 ii 3 Lermes.] Caspresios, April 20, Thisis C ra Memorial dav. sit B hes Yecnng govithorn june : apd wit] B® she: Sheek 3 forth 3 pe naity ot Wmteumitys vg Who wes o rir] j 3 si and whe | sussafros | ron ay & sa reine be of pand les | watir sual #1 ill ¥ 13 made from Pee of tnllow, vill cloths for wicks or sveamore pals eplit | bail and so skal i th drippings of 8 pork or hor 15 X 3. VX of bol pt spistamees; © Piz 2d, yeild hid 3 of | hats pn a6 of pakke fod © hi 9 ners sing di. lemons of in x 3c =k 1 HEY When Ad wie ban, th ° RYE mg was sappied wilh i¢ th cotae. With thei 1 Mh: ie ard he ent E. Samliy ot s tenes south; and Brats #4 monod Of vite ly their offers | hostyips af old ¥ FEET send oA cut from pA git down at a tin boild a vestibale to hes SE Eosily Flese: 1 “Rex hie cay fi ; Ye perio tbo ) bi i 1 boa vi mrant £7 cnfed- irets wore being worn Lorger pommel female med IYIy TRS Pe Hs og A ere CBR wudl prt as st - ERC RS ttm wh of tha oh and moss though tue © t Prosontly + breame 80 gondy Lan shenld do es frivolons an ach ad 10 It Bets the Figape OF (» A dvnntage— * Harper “Pates” omom ack © Make the Wald Loek itm ee Gen pao Trikes ghorens to heya “$n bonnet elaboration that | | oh, wink, “reak womn's natoyel- oven | I eat dw, and throngh floods of tears | theew ¢ 3b my | and covery 4 it with the as ery oogruitios. 4 At swe take a pathol Terato fashions! Yaoi, w z thin phantom in ber wa iady aver failed in bez 7 du 1 awonmded.. As] Bor ne far hk Fads SEO q mil- is gl pat foetus wor acer? 1 wel oy a She ast pe ne oe thd peried piney, Oe Riss soutien, wits thought «f ‘the it Wg 3 Fart Jane Ahn A aor in wiih Bo the vera folieats wildier. thers onto nw Your at | Yous, (od hr the Beith = en madd ons tho pouth and strew Ba with a wealthef | fowirs. FE. Gr, ped rb wr or HSL of CE KEN. ¥ “1 | 8 3 ; WAKING OVER A FONNET, the problem which presynted jtself | ps hoa, 10 obtain thaac il necessarics : —34e fuel and dress, Prices i tii stehdily Foon 1961 to In the fatter part 1900 foar wm gos tisroi, ten GACH per pound, coffer ; pep, ‘icon $1.25 per pound, s $3 por pound; bacco $4 per s@agar 52 per pond, soda $4 per , nails $1.54 per pound, whisky $10 gallon and later §100; kid glove por pair, which, when oiled or ink balls; calico a to 2 ho ¢ivily of coffee cet positoes and g pared Tey nsed roots| 2 Amadis. ig ym Aah 9 every - be} Wak or Liged i in order that the eis of the fair sex to be instyle| be The most aid not equal the discarded and weirts abbreviated. a number of sisters were in 8 fam- yo they concealea {heir by half worn dresses into one. | fue far the western © from the ro ry by ¥ antiquated | demand. Traine THE TIMBUKTU CDAY. The Paso Strongheta of | Savmbre fiom Apdin Promieest, g iszadink Corprepomtenon.) Fazusy April 18.—The coca ! $ African city of i aE by Frosch soldiery brings Sahnra Suionese ‘strougt u iene ‘rapes and ey proviiie) t- Ir tefore the world agmin. Timbeltn Chm alwirs been a peysterions place “Tho old time geographies used to de- ‘serite nen greatelty, Siliod with Zag nificent buildings and peopled by & race | ss strong and brave as they wer croel al exclusive. In truth, Timbokta was an important ‘gity in the fourteenth snd fifteenth cen- turies. It is eitnated on the left tank of the river Niger near the point of cor floence of its upper tri no:tn stretch the arid to the sonth the * ral So au the ates of Bahan, Jains and vales of | aidan It was captured Ages in the eleventh centn- Tunreg Berbers, und it steadily ono invimportancetit 1492, when it was by the warriors of the sur- rounding tribes. to have been a succession of and recaptures and bionings A nit dinies The population posed of Sourhads, of Timbuktn is com- oo & ar # , J Its history after that! litle wire arior in {rons i § o. | Wit th 5 bane green vatyer | gare g ii Pores Tas ow 5% 4 +E ha is a dig bia sik, w . festa Priil i REACT KE | dozet Ww and « ils waist Bis0 1 with oh Ye w . x E93 Yeavel mace wilh her waist Cangas B iy wh a aire’ 3.84 rh By A xr 0 and ber ah ror phoricaily STs 21 ne, hste for sixle or bear’ |ng Sitting DONT be Hifted ~ side or fe ri: large, rs Aho “hat Ee 1 he § ih PTS ars; 2 fhe ROWE 35 But what a tricmph for a dressmnaiser green is really y i% Tn f5 broke to. the face, and, ide cape and full | if she does jet a good fit! -% + x hat Tiles 1k Dy ad Leif RR Taxa Now, Beantifal. The drupe gathered yoke gives consequently softness as I said before, thn w sleeves make the wrist look trim ¥ the bottom of the walt elegant, and » black silk gown is comfort. tis always genteel and lou tike in any place or on any oerasion; after ali, 1 think, if offered a chide | should prefer the black «ilk, brtstill the other is very stylish sacha Foun: 5, Bk Berbish Arabs, Bambarahss Fulahs and | om small sprinkling of Jews | strong the Jews, and iy of bow the latter cbtained a foot tng there is a rather interesting one ‘Mordokhal A¥i-Serour, once 8 poor He- brew boy of Morocco, where his race is treated with great cruelty, was ‘the first Jow to reach Timbuktu. Feeling cer tain that he con)d get on in Morocco “while still little than a lad, he Aedes cod ‘his forture. France, Tar- He earned his way as he long in no place till be reached Jérpsalem. There ‘he tarried five y cars and studied with such fervor that he became a rabbi. Then for seven years Be was a schoolteacher in Syst Ea. They orrowed freely from each other tarps in staving at home. A ingle bridal veil served for bait a dozen | ¥ weddings. und axtebellam ill stockings ly unraveled and trans- not a fow of . wonderfu Ty wad. . articles employed in their manufacture were guinea hen and goose feathers, | straw Lat dyed and varnished, witha bit of gay or trituned with 8 ‘er equally catching gentleman's dressing gown, upust al afteraon. A Isdy writes that “once, by some odd ghavice, 8 an acquaintance Was £0 fortn- ate ns to have tnt ber a hat and a pair | of balmoral boots, with & skirt to corre- 3. These treasures were sent hy a blockade runner, and a reception was held to display them and allow others : the priviles re of {rying them on, I after ward often saw the balmoral skirt worn very guilelessly with simply an antique . velvet jucket.” Silke dresses were made from the covers of worn parasols or um- brellas, and a mosquito net often aid as lining. er .- fp our. ne little prayer meetings,” “writes another lady, “a lady began here and there to appenr in a novel shaped , unlike anything our Confeder- ever hal rested spon; with > aa palm leaf or some oth- design cut from a attracted no riibon twisted around the crown | mined or ep Af he could nol gain au en. trance and do natical city. god a Saravan, he started cross the c.cxt. At Arman, whore Laing was killed, they were stopped and told that | ‘they could go no farther. ‘Bet Mordo- khai had the Koran almost by heart, | and he succeeded in hammedan sheik who sought to Block | the way that the sacred book did not d believers to kill Jews, but to take tribute from them. An agreement was reached on that basis, and the two adventurous Hebrews traded for a year in Aruan. The next year he succeeded 4n entering Timbuktu, and there he nearly lost his life, but. again edge of the Koran served him. ‘When he repeated the words of the prophet, that the believer who kills a tributary may not enter paradise. the murderous hand was staid, and an ar- ent similiar to that at Aruvan as made with the reigning emir. In tee other Jews, all friends or relatives of Morokhai, ‘were admitted, and there fs now quite a colon Timbuktu. He left snd since his retirement {1 buktu trade has done exoce the service of the Paris € society. ao i. ’ Mohammedan in Timbukic against Christians is ise ! Tunis and Algeria | some business in the fa- So, with his brother Isaac | his knowl Tea caps have come to Stay. Every hous: now gives one 10 mak ho . gown. Bui some of them are larger thar, aaet the bonnets. Ome I saw waz mat with cherry ribbons Another; shaped just like a cock leshell, was of mazirin | Hue velvet, with a fall of lace in front and a Jong pices of lace } Landing in the | back. This was mace for a yozng lady | and leoked youthfnl and 'g awtally styl- i Lad There 153 po ond to th e number of | styles for hats this season. Some——and | the mest—-have flowers, but really the - peost satisfactory hats have feather trim- ming, generally quills, short ostrich | tufts or a grosp of pinions in irre sgralar | lengths. One such had Hee raw trim | bordered with jet spangles. For trina- | 3 i ming there was a Dune of bluish crow | pinions and a mass up in the front and back. Two rosettes of silver gray ribbon were crown, strings to tie under the chin. top were two mottled gray quills with tiny gilt spangles. Among the newest combinations In making up gowns I notice challie and | cashmere with lace and ribben trim- mings. China si and velutina, and granite camel's hair. One would think these too mear alike to form the contrast 1 of material necessary for a striking cos- | | tume, but curiously enough they are effective. OLive HarrEs To aclideve the brid pnd a i wot Gall Ie. ol, that Tiga ul fed t and | round, while the wrinkled surplice at | is extrema 5 il very ea | af i of that cream lace, Hike a flat aleatian bow, tie 1 i Yor i of bow loops. For a little girl there was a pretty “best A of silver gray straw, with a very wide brim bent down on the sides and 1 ‘set on the | one on each side, ending in long | Cm the | ik and nun's veiling | | make another combination, as do ¢repon Cheviot and o titen | to. CE Lun te cies. ig Sev Eh fer’ a paFsics 1 Any do i One malay SN fran hospi i put ap my ince and star It seca termibly slo tion, Thad frie nd hea 21 stofent in my oF He wis . 1iemeh only Cbd peard. A he oY one day ad § Teena, Fee Tit ie ois, VETY GTI Snips lemons wad 0 TOOTS vid In ad 5 bg woman ohdiod at. asked to neo the dottor, cered the supzmons 3nd said that he I walked into the recep- thom 1 Tae Jott, who wis 3 gtramery to th of ps, fooled at me ha patiently. 1 hid a very adolescent mits- tache at 2 feat time. > 3 wrant 10 08 iid doetor,” ghe (3 oad 1 vatker shary “1 Aon’ want to BoB a meical wemdeat ¥ wish to tee the geutleéman with the beard.” To save if the a tha: patizat I had and call ny sin ont back. csent, heard all shot was said, ~ author ¢f the prescniptica Yo to i howe wor, sad went 3 euy perfectly sot isfied I was simply an amusing ils tration of the prejudice, anjust enon, to boyish locking doctors, and incidents = kind oomr every x Sern ot a le seuihern Planters, i ipdted, has taken $0 aricnltare in the south. Before the waz whale southern aoeial syst rested i on 2 pias stor. Thers has bees an in | ddicows and soiscless indrstrial revila- tion sino: he planter Temaing the i iy LTTPC |e class among answers tO bis English eoaniry | generation whe i not BG to Ws. AH 2 | count She pla is the most Americen | all, baroly cxeepting the New England. er, who is disappearing every year. Hoe | furnishes a eTTRive, pative born | infinence of immense accoant. A dass | that still believes in God and women | { and honor, that may be | hotheaded prejudices, but con nDeither { be bought nor cownd, is a class to he | valued, since it is as true today 1s in | Guldsmith’s time that— | [11 fares the land, to hastening ills a pees. Where wealth scream tisbes and men deca —Octave Thanet in Scribner's Wisting Our Wealth. ; Provideno: stocked the earth, tho a ters and the air with a store of all tha was necessary for the use oF fur i benifit of man Hal we been content to | live upon what may be called the infax- est of this store - there Was amply sul cient to last forall time Bat we are the spendthrifts of cur race; we are o- hausting car capitid. & aa "y- | ery wild animal, Lliing ont with oor machinery ove ry Pain and raking the very ocean for 118 wealth What is to become of us whens we have exbinsed | our ser analiza), eshausted our cap. ital and State even our vital ty They call this fin de siecle 1 call it fin du monde. -—Truth: ep Ty Rrpemiy 1 a? o L0€ 55 mop] £ + aw . at wt of the taxes northern far ners that quite gentleman of 3 pas cumniry pent lemme: didi 22, 1 world wr ont of the go Ho farmer of them Tame an rT ——— ep ATT Se imo AR SO nsatio ; Your learning | Wear your learning like your watch | | in a private pocket, and do mob pasdl it | out and strike it merely to show that | you have one. If you xe ssked what | | o'clock itis, tell it, but do not proclaim | ! 4s hourly maid unasked like a wsinlump. —Chesterfield My student as. poner ‘been supposed. Bat the key had not vot cz, like Aladdin and his had not yet been aran oidn't know thet. day. — New Wo Baer nd ‘He reserzhles more the | nt do ty Ceiting cqiirh Bede evel Leas, nll 6 gh aati TE ISIE © abe the writh a was Gone 2 ss v hs | fein deel the pS rnin Farting cnn retiened Dear Pou Ftd. in HA vy aes ad dH wiih a of vi ah Sew mmd phintelly Hb te was the Riserhs stone, 8 the name of thé place where it found, bat they did pious sheir discovery would prove. And it was noi nutil abont 15 years’ had passed that even word a ted Dr foong in 1813 made out the wonl Pholemy, and he i% was | who disesvared thas the writing ic ard sat den HETAENC, as one its worl, T lamp, the Hdisan rongaered. | Dr. Youny, continuing his rosearch, the wond Berenice among the pictorial writings of the frescoes at deci phered Karuak But it mest of the wed the . finally his labars seers tory. The trans ation stone . far ay the si one part of i is broken off Tt was no tut ove will with honor will ever ridoond to the men andertook smd fhe broad feld ofl the is to Charnpolion iting. prone and vast achievements, and for ages baffled the wiseut. — Philadel piba Times. inp a Save SEA “There is nomore milk in the world, at his “It has said =n eld gourmet as he sat Juneheon at the Manhattan club and wot - 2, ~ - 1 iy phics or ploiny | v great research sain 1 oo 2 vr won ne strans = | Lor siriing of Srawinge. cailed from | not dream how pe erodit is doe, for be contin- of the Rosetta was onmupleted—that ia to say, SO we (elf is ccaplete, for { an easy task to conquer, the attempt, and succeeded in opening up the literature of the ¢, the fold that glows with glorions gone even a bulsbie of regret! seems to mark the spot where it sank abomt madety Hes and the wo as with wiih heya or fee 3 Wine o prea bE {sen|oy a mad oe. any reed 8) i wren ew bia do A ni whatis- + kr prove, a5 ; “ny pis eRe Hav + Lk of BONES yaks i i a : the pey or, wha yi So in 1 id roan | Yin go isans ca the poo iy Grmwn ot LY es cd AE my ri CSMED vas it. fas arm ih oon Wi i ng i] top on the : eo | had svolien ave | pytaral sie I fimd 1 fon | Lo sail hie 3 wiest exerci : 3 ans bad de Hh Be rant ant. dae doetur Iv Lang ths px ss ran recovered snd is wl ie sipecis as well ad Bb Can ik a aris thiek of wa getiable Lapin the sande is very FLO TECTAES = of ¢ the lody is and wits 3 gens dn din : B saan bd AZURE TEER Pheod comes, Ww wd few spot. Bob deCe wid 1 idinave {nase | fantely, and ity dzwwing gnalitics are 30 preat that is wil alma Lory itsdf in be flesh, emcting out tae polson until all the pores of the stone ars filled with the | Bendly virua, Whe stone then drops off hf its owen accord, and aller being thor- pgh’y clegasnd: with milk, warm water howd soap is sppled again, “This is kept p till the stone niduses to stick, thupeby wing hati {1 the foison has Leen con oat.” —-St Louis (Hlobe- Democrat. f etme a mt a nS So AEE wis eas had | LL Tie © lag of the Netile. The leaf and sem of a nettle are: lit othe with erect hollow hairs. cme of thse hairs i viewed anders ope, it will be seen that its free y d, after tapering to & very fine degree : {finishes as a little knobs, | becoming more robust, it on large bulb, a ih tbe poisons ghind of the adder. : The point of tle bar is very ‘brittle, nd contact with sur skin causes theend » smapoli, Jeavizg a hollow oe hich readily pierces our euticle, and tag apn thi: bulb at the other end ifr ad through’ the central The that and that Yenderng dati, U6 BE et past, Wier Veiianiien that . Hn they are foo i%out WW Words. Li “Built Dewan Everything! - The taste for short stories, ia place of the ancient threo volume novel: has been | cultivated even in cosservative England sidespread ) United States: that very few : horrid to the | only $3 a "Week — Dutroit Free Pro Milk the earliest staff of all generations, is now a thing unknown in polite circles. It's all cream now. It does pot matter whether [ dine here or {fn Texas or in California, everywhere the waiters ask: ‘Will you take cremn ‘in your coffee and ‘Will you have ? The good old staple, er called by name. Even call it cream. Milk is omt of sight. milk, is po longer in Chicago they’ tubooed. It has with the word “woman,” | dertaker,” the word ‘dress’ and a lot other noble terms Now it's ream. lady, funeral director and where TEF FOU iO even in Chicago. vet the ‘cream’ is often pale blue thin, and if it was not served as cream would spear it was nuilk, and d bad milk at that Pe Now York San.’ A ‘Rend Lake of Fire. The greatest natural wonder of Ha wari, if not in the entire word, is Bana, or Dana lake, a body of molten lava 19 miles in circumference. To th sightseer the surface of this wonderf lake apy pars as if it were a sea of redho water dishing against the cliffs whic gurroand it on all sides to a heighf = 100 tect. J. J. Williams ¢ Honelr who probably knows mone : about the voleanic curnlition of the iy i land than aay ather living man, sajs | that sophie rosiing, restioss, heaving of boiling fire never remains silent qr | ‘calm for a single instant. "'—S¢. Lon . Republic. : | : ot That Kind. Xe KYETAILY { Green Hukster—N " | and has buaccme so °F in the periodicals which deal in fiction at all are without their stories tegun and finished imo sine duce a in this narrow compass isa and while shire, are numerous awmber of ticles, too, nee in demand, and special cravings {or personal, gossip and lively sketches of notable living charactors are manifest, That pereniial interest which mankind and womaniisd evince nev ery individaul vise pame, for whatev- er reason, las become fam: lisr supplies a basis for as mexhanst ible series of Tight paragraphic articles. — New York Journal © en i i A ——- a + pass je Hreton. Mrs. Lamytry’s taiher, Dean lo Bra ton, was the leading digpitary of his church in Jersey, presiling es i over the picturesque church at St Sev- jour's. He was a man of superb phy- sique and strikingly handsoree. His beauty devimended th more members ok hie family tasn to his famous canghter, for the broth { whom there were wove, of several, all were spi wmdud okong, Apol lokike fiiliws, notably Mrs Langiry’s younges: spal favorite brother, who was killed fin tiger hemi In India. —New York Tims. n Didirt Pay- Saids—1 never had bus one quarrel with mw wife in ail ver married | ence. Heardiso—-How dil thes PO aul : Saeidsr—-She went mio hysterics, and | i cost 10d $10 for a ator: New York. i | World. successes. " Well writiea, descriptive ar we