3 y 5 Nos Me i i a Hd # ” WOMAN'S WORLD. A YOUNG PHILADELPHIA WOMAN ES TABLISHES A NEW INDUSTRY. Biggest of Women’s Colleges - Women Ste. sographerrs- Woman's Progréss In 1894. She Was Not a Club Woman - Pressing When You Are Sick. The waning of the ninetecnt ce ntury provides such indisputable proof of feminine ingenuity in finding. the Key to now doors of op portunity (that at “times it scoms that nom - malin to be anlocke : tot to a Ph pia gir! } IRS the ereait of £1300 wg. Tully establishing a profession for wom. en which still retains the favor of nov. elty. With traly feminine instinet for dis. cerning the golden opportunity Miss E V. Cornelins has started in to do the regular daily and wirkly market] ng for fashionable families of the eit Early in the morning, armed with yooh and pencil, the little market woman of | MISS EV. OOKXELIUS household necessities ail the way from a turkey to the proverbial ‘pinch of salt” Giving the order marks the extent of the taxation upon the nerves of my fash. ionable lady The ttle ! does the rest ny Profession Pinel ting is 2 new Sele in the rang of occupations for women, EC whrmnan bat one in which a snrecssful harvest awaits the ri Glen fo licatosson presided over by x va by this time fami! cinch 3 with all Jashionabie quarters of the city. Every | year the professional cook in lace trim- med cap and spron makes hor bow apon the lecture platform. She is alwavs sure | of a large andi lence. Cookirg classes are multiplying both ander private auspices and in the public schools, and the band | of professionnl caterers and interior | decorators is steadily increasing The | business of the little market woman is | something of a combination of all. of | these. Miss Cornelius has gone into this | new profession for women both as a science and an art The requirements and possibilities of the work have been | taken into consideration from the pur chase of a juicy tenderloin at the stall of the busy market to the composition | of a menu for the day and the initia ticn of the household Abigail into ar- tistio and rprotty ways of serving food | and decorating the table There is no poetic sentimentality about the littls market woman. Her 3 profession is a matter of bread and meat, of character sand self respect to} her. Whatever success she has com. adverse circumstances aro overcome by perseverance and persistent work. To quote her own words, “Since I was 14 évery peo nny of my support I have earn Er a The property, when free of debt, win! be worth several million dollars, and as : soctt 25 the estates are free of debt the income fun® of $300,000 designed. 4 Mr. Siznmons as a building fond will : accomuiate in a very short time, when tho trastees are required to erect suita- ble college buil dings at a + cost Dot to ex- ceed eaid sam The trastees say when the collegn is founded it will Rave one of the lar gest, if rit | indeed the largest regular Income behind it in the world .— Boston Advertiser Women Stenographers. Two years ago son eno grap ht rs and pity 15 tho hey are 1509 kiiown as the National Associa Women Stenographers and are porated. Within a few weeks the a ‘rangement’ and legal forms of a sick men oer of the benefit have been completed, sn that women who are alone in the world may connt in case of sickness opon three or FOR LITTL E FOL K8. THE CHAMPION soy HUNTER. He Stalks Deer Like an Old Sportsmen and Hits the Ballseye st Matobhes, - reasonably claim the distinction of ba. ing the champion boy marksman of the Pacific coast. He handled the regulation repeating winchester rifie jike a veteran 2 * & . Front 3, and Bis record at long dis tains a ‘arge. perambalstors and taken to the top. irs oom peti. not Ris 1 versed iy which wrd He bred, syiral Years past will Aer up in the mountains capped Mount months’ financial support and a woman- | . ly sympathy extending far beyond that | Philadelphia trips off to the house of | limitation. Meetings are. held every. cach patron, receives the order for any | taree months, and addresses have been | made by Mrs Charles Henrotin and | Mrs Henry Shepard It is their inten- | | tion to have lectures from time to time | from women who can inspire them to i broad and noble work. They have now | | began-—soma threescore of them—the | : ftudy of parliamentary law at Central Music ball, an earncst that the associa. tion is going to transact its business 1 vigor nnd legality : : whe Holds tha pold ipof the world Shasta. There he has learned the habits of the numerous wild anirais to be f found ia thar « hnnt and trap them for speed in typewriting 18 an honorary | nn, 8 Chi 5 Si will read a paper disensRion on "Woman ne a Modern Bosiness World. 1 was tho first preside ht of £ the 23 na Woman's Progress In 15854. In eonelnding a on the pr parts of Ie Sncad, pre “iden Woman's onion g the line in different tountries and in most diversa | | need be made on the score of sex. These | distinotions, gained without favor, place | the position of woman on an altogather | impregnable basis. No longer can it be | said that women ‘are inferior to men in | | brain power. Theorists of the type of - Dr. Crichton Brown may prove to deman- | | tration that women are unfit for severe | mental labor, but they cannot explain away the facts which directly contro | | vert such a view... Yet in spite of this | there ig po social earthgnake—the old, ‘manded is another proof of the fact that ed myself,” which is not the least credit | dune to this conrageous little market woman of Philadelphia —Philadelphia ‘Times Biggest of Women’ s Colleges. @ ¢ There is an endowment fund in the hands of the trostees in Boston for ths establishment ¢f one of the largest of free female colleges. - 15 is the bequest of John Bimmans, one of Boston's most successful merchants, who died in 1870. The original Simmons bequest con- sisted of this property: To his daughter Marion be gave the granite front store at the corner of Franklin and Arch ‘streets, the granite front store on Water and Devonshire streets and the land upon which it sat, and the old Simmons mansion on Tremont street and the land ‘belonging to it At the decesse of Mar- ion the estate, together with the accu- - mulations, was to be given in trust to the Simmons Female college. To his daughter Alvina was given the granite front store situated at the corner of Franklin and Hawley streets and the land belonging to it, the whole to be held in trust during the danghter’s life, and at her death the estates, exclusive of the accumulations thereon, were to | be given to tho college In addition | there was left $50,000 in money for the | of building a blosk as a nucleus | for the college fund, the {noome to be held in trust. The object of founding the Simmons | Female ocollége was for the purpose of | teaching medicine, music, drawing, de- | signing, Selograpty. SO and other branches of art, science and industry The SBinmimona college might today be a splendid reality but for the big fire of | 1878. All the fine business blocks given | | fully remember the chivalrons men i who stand by us alike through praise | old story is as sweet ns ever, homes are as well cared for, and baby worship has | "mot ceased. God forbid it should be i otherwise! . Even the jealously guarded | women of the éast are fecling the reflex | of western thought Lady doctors ara admitted in Tarkey soon practics in Persia, Miss Eddy in Syria and Dr Mary Scgana in Japan Their presi. Miss Yoseph will! till might P08 Crismes Last san by a » vory small; In the early part 3 Wve vie ETERS | ing match ar a was debarred oan me want of his reputa- | tion as a cracke rjac Little 7-year-old Leslie Halley can of it. do target in subjects. Snccess, moreover, has come | Quincey, Plumas oounty. Mr. Halley | in competition, so that no allowanos | Many of those who were enterad were | ren Air For Chttdren. An interesting test, which proved : that fresh air in winter was beneficial to even young and delicate children, was reported in The Journal of Hoasebold Economics - Jt was tried recently ina babies’ bospital in Boston. All the sickly babies that were suffer. ing from chrinie Indigwstion and Js of putrimeunt and who would net im. prove in spite of good food, perfoctiy ventilsted rooms and careful bathing, were wrapped as for the street, put in ward of the hospital, = dows wers wide of in this rooms from four’ Bb daily and soon showed a murked proYeme 4 § 8 The hers hong . they gained in i and appeati would offen fall asleer p and during the entire tie they wer air. Very delicate cnildren hal | bot water planed at their foot. It corded in foe aononnt of this experi that not one child tock cold as a result an Merdehipe of a Sealskin Cost. i © “It is bard,” observed a woman the | | other day, '‘to be raducad to a sealskin | | coat te “What do you mean” was the pns- ' zled query of the friend to whom she | spoke. “Why, Tam an sxampla of exactly what I mean - This jacket EL perfectly good and so handsome dan’t feel that I can aford to other oY pei wrap. If was three years ago, and the 5 evow iargs enc agh 5 sccommodata tha ¢ § oft raed hy 0 .t ne £nURty ie « 3 I have been consniting a farrier iia : 8 PLENTY OF POCKETS. How the Seven Oilered by New York Tes | ors Should Be Distributed. Put your money in your pocket,’ is | ‘a fygeestion Women bave only Gvert | | wodentiv and that since New York tai- i lors, throngh profonud and oneclish i thonght, have learned properly to dis. | tribute seven of thew capable, necessary ponchos at cng. ; and whaliv on venient points | euir Accordin of her ret ; band. That is meant to hold a handker- | chief only, since nowhere else can the | square of linen be deposited that it will | | | prmrueasis Basil is INKFPET XO. BE ~ 3 Phdindei pin Fun wf AP Wiadag Time Table. Traibhs moe Liat wal rioct tailor made ERA rim auth) ; - - " ng M~Tmin 1 4 te. Te » mis » ET THT aT me fin - Hh dies pile wow. 2 1 No Yoru WOE OhFY sno Wide me sh gay oe: Wmore, $0 & wm Weetiz .. Poiman our sid wees. lite rie and Willwmegert to #4) ve, BEIGE LN Sleeper Tor Haitineore ats ugLoh wil be iraneaBoreed wo Ww WACer a1 Harrsty ® Ps : fina Fore io Phriimded pti og Ww port to Baitiznore, : : WERTW 40 not throw ont of shape the perfect lines of a well made gown. | The second. pocket of importance is : Jocated in the skirt’s front and placed | { at the angle and depth of the right band | pocket in a man’s tronsers. The top of | this bottons over or not, just as the cus- | tomer prefers, aud it is made throogh- pat of stout rwiiled silesia, with donble seams Its special mission is to hold a lizard skin wallet or a Jittle purse of knitted gold or silver wire, bonches of -Eeys of one of the new pocket rings! women use rowadars, on whicl ely b Be begin ping of . 4 of wvirtges needed Bo ardnons and exacting is the work thas it finds few to enter it, and those wha do. and who fail, as Miss Dillingham did, while doing it, deserve the widest recognition | and appegriastion. — New yore Times skilled marksmen Noue of them paid | any attention fo their childish rival ex- | ope 2 lauds o 8% the absurdity of such a ; | Danvers, Mass, on the work of the trav- | elers’ ald department of the Young iy V ntering a shoot- ow mato ; Edt when the gare conminencad they focud a surprise in store Sar thers. The little chap, wilh (Ly sung froid worthy of a sucessful chariot a, k ‘bis torn { at the batts, and aiarity that i fairly astounded toa sthering of spectators and from his rivals in the center of tl At the econcls i bad a tia with shootoff made the trouay. In India many native ladies are stady. | po ing physic, there is a tiny ripple of progress on the dead sea of Zenana life, and the maharajah of Mysore has for bidden infant marriages. Everywhere | tho world moves, and whils recording | the triamphs of cur own sex we grate- { and blame | hostess steppod up and put to her the! by the Simmons bequest were left in ruins. The mutnal fire companies, far | from being able to pay the insurance on the Simmons blocks, assessed the trus | tees of the college fund Sinos 1872 the trustees have been using the income from these buildings to | ‘pay up the mortgage indebtedness on .them. The present trustees—H. G Nichols and Joseph Sawyer——are paying | _off the mortgages on the various estates as fast as the income from the estates will allow. Ew The trustees say that at the present rate of income the mortgage indebted ness will be cleared up in n few years She Was Not & Clad Woman. The attitnde assumed by some non- club women toward the woman's clab question, as a whole, is amusingly shown in a little incident related by Helen M. ‘1 Winslow in the Boston Transcript: “When the North Share club of Lyon .8av0 a reception the other day,’ says she, ‘‘they sent carriages to meet all visitors at the traina. On the arrival of the 8:80 train from Boston the balf dozen ladies who bad been delayed till then were met by a cordial little woman with the inquiry, ‘Are you for the North Shore club?” and when we replied in the affirmative she ‘asked us to come with her to the csrriage in waiting Naturally we fclt that every possible courtesy was being shown us and were eminently satisfied with our Jot and es pecially the cordial little lady's part in it Finally, just as we were going off to our carriages, she espied another woman who wus evidently waiting for scme- thing. She was a well dressed, middle aged woman and really looked as if she might be eligible for our party. (I beg ' her pardon.) And so our cordial little question, ‘Are you for the North Shore ciab? But now the stranger straightened { herself up, and the unutterable scorn | ahe looked! She did pot deign to answer by any words, but that look plainly said, 'I should hope not!" And she gazed at us as if we were a lot of freaks the | like of which she had never come across before. And we? Oh, we fled to our car: riages squelched. ": Dressing Whea You Are Sick. If only able to sit up in bed, a loose sack shaped garment called a nightin- gale is most handy for slipping over the | nightdress, writes Emma M. H ji The Ladies’ Home Journal It is indented | made of cashmere or flannel and usnal- ly has the edges hemmed and feather stitched All of the pattern houses i issue a pattern of it When able to sit ap for a time, a wrapper of striped flan- | nel having a princess back and loose front is comfortable, worn with or ! The Ferris Wheel I here 18 a Ow game, [great fair, and it redo *“*The Ferris Whes!, | more complex and ingenious and rose in the frmament of y outhful sponte, a star | of the first Raa during tha Co- inmbian exposition. When it will sig er was a Chicago lad. aye cast to decide who ia to lead off, and cast, hops into the diagram as far aa the | center, and then retraces his hope-—steps | would be inaccurate After this he places his initials in any part of the which appeals to his taste. The . follow in order. No one must touch the lines of the spiral, fail to keep | one {pos clear of the ground or step upon | any initials except his own. This is no easy matter, particularly after the dia- | gram ‘bas become an interlaced confu- sion of lettera The players score one for each suo- cesaful effort, the highest score natoral- ly winning. : The rapid spread of the game, it named in honor of! the exhibit which | probably im youthful visitors most deeply, trace an intended resemblance in the tremely interesting —3St Lovie Post. Dispatch. What He Sad. for the second time $0 ice cream and bad given him a very small amount. “Now, what do yom say?’ be asked as he placed the plate before the Nttle one. Harry hesitated for a moment as be noted how much had been given hin. then, grasping the dish in both chabby banda, be pushed it gently back toward his oncle and said sweetly, ‘More! '— Yonth's Companion. Realistic, “How did yom break yozr slate, Jack™" asked his mama “1 don't know," sand Jack, “I drew | a picture.cn it of a boy throwing a stone {mt a bird, and I guess maybe the stone DONE | hit the slate instead of the bind '' | Pbiladelphis Times. It is a kind of hose iy, § RAPE? Ct LO astronomer can predict. Its discover- | : : lots | : A great dosble spiral is draws, lots | sidering that to do so she must he in- then Master A. B.,, wbo has won the | telligent, good and brave encugh to which they could | curved lines of the diagram, ita curious | complexity, all make the new sport ex- | Uncle Will bad helped Baby Harry | dressed the Woman's sssocistion of Women's Christian association of Bos ton. Miss Blodgett or her assistant is at tha wharf cn the arrival of ali the steamers of the Yarmouth, Internation. al, Cunard and Allan lines, and helps , the unprotected girls coming to a strange country in finding friends and relatives Many of them are withoot money and zd] as to thelr destination. routed fromm fal lesigning po thus saved SLAAMIATS Wer vial py girls wer lors’ al d i al vikern a tellin (3anetts Assy read y want tie ballot. She savs that the roll Carolina Equal BRT Xe fassociztion contains signatures of © resentative women from 25 i localities, Beagfort leading in vhmbers and Greegvilie rognding op, every one. of them social leaders, ton, for [ avs | mean it as a great compliment when I ask a woman to join the FL. 8 A, oon- | bave the courage of her convictions, and | our list is something to be proud of. n w—— ise Mra. Livermore. Mra Livermore authorises ne to say | | from the lecture platform is a mistake. | She has merely determined to make wo more lecture engagements that wil { keep ber away from home over night, { Her many years of hard work have tad | pan her strength, and her physician | insists upon this limitation of her labars | at least for some time to coma Mm Livermare will continue to lecture in . Boston and vicinity, and she expects to be evem more active than before in te work of the Nah sa Woman's Suffrage associati president. — Woman's Journal. ary McGee Snell. Mrs. Mary Motiee Spell of Columbia, Miss, is recognized by the clersr os an evangelist of great ability. She! .. been holding meetings all winter in Missis- sippi and Louisiana and has just finish- od a series of ten meetings in the Sk | Charles Avenue Methodist church, New Orleans, at the invitation of its pastor, Rev. E W. (wborne. Mrs Suell has been engaged in active evangelical work in behalf of the W. OC. T. U. for the past two years. Bhe is a woman of mag- petic and charming personality and makes friends Wherever she gues, Miss Clara Frett Martin, the leading woman lawyer in Canada, has leen pominatéd for school trustee of Toron- to. She is indorsed by the woman's civic reform committes Mrs M HE McDonell, who is serving a second term as school trustee in another ward, bas been rencminated. — Toronto Corres Ta, r= a threadiike Miss Mary A. Blodgest recently ad- | that the report of ber intention to retire | of which she is | of the gowns tallor basque, 1s Set 8 ores. cent 8 ee 1 nrg ¢. lin with fine ela ofa skin and offered ax a revoptacia for a tiny watch— the sar of timekeeper shoppers wear hung about the neck hy gold chain. — Boston Her ald. ly SA Kansans snd Suffrage. Mra Susan M. Thurston. of Topeka has tabulated the returns from 71 donn- ties of Kansas, covering 714 precincts, from tally sheets showing the vote of the foor parties. They cover a vote for Republicans of 64,737; of Populists 48,585; of Demccrats, 10,878; of Pro bibitionists, 2,455; total, 134,453. Of votes cast for the amendment, Ropub- lienns gave 384, per cent of their num- ber; Populists, 34 per cent; Democrins, i4 per cent, and Prrobibitionists, 88 per Lewrrt Cf silent tof mot cast either WHY & Rep Piopulists, 93 Pel i. IT urge Gould, law Was very had fiw vigito Now hers is ane of th the Metropolitan pera giided youth guthe about her rather than around her young sister-in-law, Anna. She dresses super hy. 1s a hand- scine as ever, and her intimates say is still the dovited mother. It was as a devoted mother that she first won the cordial approval of her husband's fam- ily. —New York Letter St om snr 7 — old Chatrs and Tables. Freshen up the ald chairs and tables ; by the use of enamel paints or by farui- ture polish. White, with tooches of | gold, black or ebony, with gay cushions of cordurcy or linen, and a soft, gray green, with cushions of green and white cretonne or dark green corduroy, are all good colors to use. Whatever is painted should be well sandpapered before add. ing the first coat and varnished after- ward. To lock well in white and gold a piece of furniture shomld have good | lines and be rather simple than very , ornamensal ar Dumplings. Peel and core eight tart, juicy apples, ' filling the cavity left by the core with sugar and a pinch of cinnamon or cloves ' Make a soft crust as for baking powder biscuit, roll into a sheet about a guar- ter of an inch thick, cut in eight pieces and cover each apple separately, pinch. ing the edges of the crust together over the apple. Lay them side by side ina pudding dish, spread butter over them and nearly cover with boiling water. Cook moderately fast oaotil nicely browned. Serve hot with sugar and EE ) — Tabor. Oue of the first official acts of P. Morten as governor of New to appoint Miss Rebecca C. Brooklyn a notary public rs ago Miss Talbot was ap- pointed |lcommisciomer of deeds for Brooklyn, the first woman ever appoint- ed tn that city: he has conducted a large real estate buxinéss the past five years. She is an enthusiastic suffragist and an cfficer of the Kings County | league. i R. G. Mu 1hows, ten Rw, SHiiny or med L wer? imtee view $i! igwny at pp | wae AL I an iy A Ca : meine points , So Ppotn (8.27 jor nr Xa Tain H, Samy BE pn anGwy, THROUGH TRAINS rou DRIFT Ww FROM THE BEART AND OUT TRAIW 1} waves Phtledeiptits =. W id Bn Tw ms Haiti e «4 ieee, Wels 8 ma. dad ¥ v3 dy, ATTIVing al Lirifwowsd x1 fete P 4 . RUAN Drier oar fedn eg ap a Wiiiim past, Fale i vds be gry ph hk ddd, p wid at #50 a. m I VEG: : DLE sXe Mis, THAIN 19 waves Ridgws « Sanborn st $a. mL aris Whee s,m. TRAIN 90 'enves Clermont at » iy ring BY torino bo “Td AL [14% a Hidlewus AY 200 noe ‘ gE al pee AY AXIO Fou Ri k : : $m B " SRR ELEE x" se Van TRAINS Flawt = Hawi Train & mE, Twin : i 1:4 Pe Train & TES bow 8M PREVOST, i’ Woon Lorn Whe Ler wifi Tass Aw Aa Beeeh (‘reek | aiirocad. NYC AM &R Cn. Fi LAFN DEINS EY Rew! i } Exp Ma: Nal Ne, 3 3H PX “ =I ~ » 0 Sew posi #4 i 3 $s i 33 57 srl Hw wens 75 om 4B WEEE dea AG ae i 5 “8 is 43 50s Pim agar, A «10 85 . Tots liar Wiiamsport Lv + 8 8 Ss is W Love Philadephia... Arriz * 8 rie Ree. NY Vin TaigoArr Py ‘ T# Lye NY vig Pali'vAr 12 380 a Ww Wows of Lotwerty wi; rs » ——— *Dwaily Were Rays Sd Fou JHLIY a W. Sunitays, dare. Through Palimau Butt Sleeping Cur bo tween amrtield sod Phlasdeipiin, daly ex cept Sunday, Qonseetione— AL Willuuipor: with Phuoseiels phin and Kesding Reo.oowil’ AL Jersey wre wilds tae Mall Bool fa vagy at Mil Madi with Crates: Railroad al 4 IV gia At Phulipsbang with Pran « 0 Ko AL Tested with the Butuio, Roches f aba PIlebuerg aii- wad At MedwmSey aud dion with Css ria naiet Ohtmrtieda G0 Visto lhe Pennsylvania 3! part VI Maat Ase Pevasyiviaie 2 — North western ratjwus Fr HERRIMAN, AUPALMER, Ge inion Sub SHG-. © Pride or As oe re et th A mt, | MFFILS, ROCHESTER & ATTSHORS n mine. $0) 3 svaveastraes On and after Nov. 35th; 1894 passenger tral will arrive aod depart Grom DuBots an nian TRAINS ARRIVE. 5 a.m. Par ssa woe ¥ and Big Run, 1% Fads Ure KL a Puaxsatawoey and Qig Ran 328 Bradiond asd ody wey - Fo Cie rteid dad LC arwensviile i & p. Loe Pe HT aud Cc Trews ie Sleeper 43 gine wisi thy Rap I 7 ROoeTiead ed wd BR slain, 13 San BFW © TRRNDE SE “3 3 Crea rhe dd ne 4 TRAIN onl Asm, Fuds Jee x CO ried R00 8 ra fie ~ : Ry vad Livy aed Rurtimber, PI PRR Xsa tw ie 8 3 © Pa eset hs Llvmia band Xa Kiddy w 5 ETN Lo - NAGE Wie baa Ha » . 5, id oul Pla, ius J ine Rode ITasmewaitee ney aml Wy Kass, - PRasen gy ~ ale Penge telend hh i «- ekete teefore eniter ig Yipee 4 AP Beas wren of omnis will . a3 eaten sl By pe an hen Pores ane goyich ont of wk nw Theiss fh iv rts prot new Peck gia EN jr SRE DES WSR “ k I oonrmmtiop ni, Valo Te gn, wr dy ~ X Sitader Ra. per, Gen