The morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1887-1900, April 06, 1890, Page 11, Image 11
Aim TEMPERED WOMAN A3 STUDIED ON AN APRIL. DAY WITH GOLDEN SUN And Scurrying Clouds—ln Her Pulses Life Throbs Ever More and More Restlessly and Her “Sphere" is Growing Round and Coextensive With the World. (Copyrighted ) New York, April 5. —Leonora d’Este de clared her love by kissing her fan and throwing it to Tasso, and there is a fan owned by a New York lady which is said to have been bartered long years ago for a kiss, having come in the beginning from the imperial family of Russia. The fan col lection cf Senor Francisco Guiu de Gal haldn, of Barcelona, which was sold tu New York this week at big prices and exhibited before to break gentle hearts, contained many specimens which a woman might kiss or gladly buy with kisses, but which ail the passion and poetry in the world would hardly induce tier to throw away. The greater number of Senor de Gaiba:!a's fans dated from the first half of the present century, and were of Spanish or Italian style. Most of them had paper in;uitits painted in water colors, and the pierced and carved ivory sticks, enameled and gilded, and the incised carviugs re duced every woman who looked on them to abject admiration and despair. One which .lenny June seemed unable to separate her self from had guards and sticks of irides cent mother of pearl carved and fretted a.' ay until it looked as cobwebby and as l. agile as the mount of old Flemish lace, yellow with the coquetries of a century. Another beauty bad sticks of gold lacquer, p lard of ebony, inlaid with incredible pa - ; nee with patterns of mother of pearl, and mount of Spanish lace. A Chinese fan was i : the most curious and costly construction. ’1 lie sticks were of lacquered bamboo, the mount was painted in minute and intricate designs and the ligures walking in that breezy field were all iulaid, the heads in ivory, the dresses in many colored silks. The beautiful Kau Si. who took off her mask at the feast of lanterns aud fluttered it Lo and fro to cool hersoif and bide her charms from the idle gaze of the public, could but look with pleasure on such an evolutiou of the toy wnich Chinese legend says was her invention. file ‘ 'angry flutter, the timorous flutter, the confused flutter anil the merry flutter” could be expressed, oh! so eloquently by the fans with sticks of green stained and red stained ivory with mounts of lace inser tion, decorated witii bullion. Other fans with souls and well calculated to express all the varying sentiments that possess the h -art and mind of a luxurious modern maiden had ivory sticks with silver inlays and mounts of dcc'aesse lace with flower paintings iu water colors. A French la:i of the eighteenth century showed pierced ivory sticks with turquoise and jewel settings on the guards. The mount was in water colors on shagreen. Perhaps tho most striking of all was a fan ith sticks of mot t .ei shell, a guard of metal, covered with plush and ornamental with gold figures iu relief and tiny opal jeweled mirrors, and a mount in water colors. There was a master-work of tortoiseshell, inerusted w ith mother of pearl and tho leaf p tinted with Jacob’s dream, making a fan not unlike that of Ninon dei’Euclos, uo.v owned by the Countess of Chambord. There w<ire exquisite lace fans, and fans in the Min ii tsh style, and fans painted by the great pastel painters, and Directory fans with •arved figure work iu relief, and Watteau paintings on satin, and testifying to lho southern blood of him who owned it, a fierce bull fight iu colors racing on the edge of a fifteen inch semi-circle, behind which ono could well imagine an olive skin, h* avy hair, half hidden beneath the man tiiln, and langorous dark eves kindling into sudden lire over the real combat in the arena, t>uch a toy at a Delsarte matinee -tu ikes one with the sense of tho incongru ous, but lo such base uses must come even a Spanish fan. A DELSARTE MATINEE. Did you ever attend one ! The theater is p. sea of bobbing bonnets. There are women standing in the aisles and at the lenr. Down in front is a man ready to throw flowers. Thera is a bald bead sain ing somewhere among the parqnet chairs, a landmark in the midst of tiie waving rib bons and tossing plumes. Somebody is talk ing about “the speaking voice.” Her own voice cracks drearily. She holds in her hand something which appears to be a text boos ou rhetoricand occasionally she ajtmres the deep and dark blue ocean to roll on. or pretends to some occult knowledge of the i acent presence of Queen Mali iu our vicin ity, or hears sounds of revelry by night until our school days and our hacked desks, and "teacher, teacher, I know mice now,” come back with a sense of youth that is quite refreshing. By and by the curtain drops, and when it i ;-es again there apjieurs a tali and buxom figure with large hands and large feet, and ■ mil in a Greek gown of some thin white s: lift’ clasped on the shoulder, leaving the arms bare and clinging to the figure. Tho turoat is uncovered, and a long spray of I mster lilies is pinned from the waist to the I o-orn. There are sandals ou the feet, the hair is twisted in a Greek knot and filleted. The figure sways slowly into the pose of tho Venus Genetrix. The women catch tlieir 1 reath and applaud. Then it melts almost l i imsibly into tho attitude of Atalanta. Slowiy, as if man le were endowed with !' and power of action, it becomes a Vic tory; then a Diana, a Hebe, an Ariadne a word is spoken, but the aim st in - ’ slide yielding from breathing statue to statue goes on continuously. It is a pretty performance, aud wonderfully graceful. Then the man down in front begins to toss his flowers. There is a laurel w reath and s mebody starts a subdued murmur of “put it on.” Bbe doesn’t deck herself, but begins to speak. Sho tells us that wo need plastic bodies "in order that tho physical may bo > fit expression of the spiritual.” As an *• 1 toward the attainment, of plasticity she ‘‘lets tierself go” at the w rist, the elbow,the elder, the neck, the waist and shakes her different members ns if they were dish rags. Whilfj sho is in this relaxed condition she t rofesse* an gutire willingness to drop to kHiier in a heap cn the carpet "if it weren’t f, r soiling her gown.” This little feminine l ueh wins tho heart of the last unbeliever; somebody says enthusiastically, ‘‘She is so womanly,” and there are more flowers. I hen she "recomposes” herself and dances ['■'> minuet and a Spanish dance aud a Greek dance, and finally she shows how plastic she is by making her body say joy, grief, anger, v urprise, and a variety of other sentiments. Rer body speaks very eloqueutly, being more d< eilo than that commonly owned, u| d, she says, the correspondence between the physical and the spiritual being per •vid, she is prostrated hv her emotions. As n slago display a good Delsartean exposition II ns brotty as Carmencitas dancing, but hiMSL Delsartean disciples are fatiguing in private life, because they carry so much ‘ 1 the stage into the p .rlor. Sometimes, ’or . they seem to be “letting themselves go” 1 n Broadway. A LAW SCHOOL FOR WOMEN*, b. may surprise many people to know’ 1 *at tin re has arisen in Now York a demand a a law school for women. This demand .perhaps a natural consequence of the renter responsibilities thrown upon women I >' modern legislation, married women's 1 ' party acts, t'or example, which have led -cm lo feel the need of a better acquaint i co with the laws by which they are gov , ,K . ''''Judge Noah Davis suiil in oon ’ i ration the other day, that nothing had ) strongly impressed him since his return ■om t.ue bench to the bar, as the denßo ig oranco of women in all matters in which .eir legal rights were involved, and that " ou “ j e j‘d Ins name very cordially to a f ‘jr t ® aoh ‘ng woman the laws of the laws of wills*and inherit ances, the laws of guardianship, and other points calculated to be useful In the man agement of everyc ly affairs. An association has been formed for tho purpose of foanding a law school for women. The object of the school will not be to make women lawyers, though students i who wish to graduate as modern Portias ; will not be dissuaded: but the idea is rather ! to establish lecture courses for property j owning women, and to enable business I w °tneu, es pec .ally typewriters and steno graphers employed as clerks iu law offices, to increase tneir efficiency by the acquisi tion of practical legal knowledge. Dr. Emily Kempiu, the first woman grad uate from the University of Zurich ami tho only woman lawyer in New York, has been giving law lectures to a class of women since last October, but the new project is to get a basis of popular support wide enough to win the consent of the board of regents of the New York State University to the in corporation of a school with a full law faculty. There are already thirty-five ap plications on file from wome i who wish to lie received as students. Tile late Chancel lor Piersou supported the project, and Chancellor Curtis is said to be equally favorabie. At prevent it looks as if the plan would be carried through. David Dudley Field, Daniel G. Thompson and other prominent lawyers have committed themselves to it. Mrs. M. Louise Thomas, Dr. Marv Putnam Jacobi, Mrs. Jenny June Croly, Miss Mary F. Seymour, editor of the Business 11 Oman’s Journal; Mrs. Jennings Deuio rest and a great numlier of wome 1 are backing it. Clark Hell, the president of the Medico Legal Society aud ex-Judge Davis have expressed a willinguess to be come members of the faculty. Dr. Emily Kempin, who will be at the head of the school, should it be started, de livered a'parlor lecture the other day. She is a blonde witii blue eyes and light brown hair. She is a trifle above middle bight and of slender figure. Her face is one of sweetness aud intelligence, aud as her hearers bubbled over with amusement while she told them of the two bouquets that were sent round to Swiss neighbors ou the birth of a boy while one was enough to announce a girl’s entrance into this vuia of tears, it could be notice.! that her English vocabu lary was full thumb her accent was piquantly foreign. Mine. Kempin is the wife of a Presbyterian clergyman and has three bright children. WOMEN’S HEROES AND MEN’S HE KOINES. Over a cup of tea a book reviewer waxed confidential, and gave me what he regards as an infallible tost of an anonymous novel, whether it be tho work of a woman or a man. The cruci il point is tho treatment of a hero. Heroines count for less, because tiie woman lias become a sort of classic in fiction, and is handled according to much the same rules by writers, masculine and feminine. But the man who is describing a hero gets on terms of familiar friendship with hiru after the introduction, and calls him "Jones” or “Brown,” while a woman is apt to stand on ceremony and “Mr.” him from the first chapter to the conclusion. A woman's hero is nearly always a large man and she insists ou his virile qualities. A man can conceive a small hero and one who is not muscular, for it is necessary to his self-re ipeet to rec ognize in himself some heroic traits, though he bear not the faintest resemblance to the Vikings. But a woman revels iu bigness aud brawn, and the admiring touches with which she rounds out her portrait of a mmi'a physical perfections are almost invariably noticeable. MISS GRACE DODGE AND THE WORKING GIRLS’ CONVENTION. Miss Grace H. Dodge is just now one of the busiest women in New York, and her cozy study is strewn withevidences that the first convention of the associations of work ing girls’ societies is elo-e at hand. The New York, Boston and Brooklyn associa tions, aud the Philadelphia New Century Working Women’s Guild unite to hold tho convention whose sessions will begin on April 15, and will demonstrate the wonder ful growth among self-supporting girls of the club idea. Delegates are expec ed from many of the factory to ans of New Eng land, Pittsburg and Allegheny City, from New Brunswick and Baltimore. There are co-ordinated clubs in Chicago and other western cities, but the members cannot leave their tasks for so long a journey. There are seventeen working girls’ soeietiei in New York city, and tweve In Brooklvn. The membership" m the metropolitan dis trict is not less than 3,500. The doings of the clubs are easily stated, except that the whole list would be too long. They run evening classes in branches ranging from spelling and cooking to litera ture, accomplishments anil language; some of them keep up libraries, gymnasiums aud parlors; they have women to counsel them on health topics and two ‘‘holi day houses” on Long Island for summer va cations. They have H-solve clubs and Leni n-Hand bands which v ork lor others, and once a week in the Thirty-eighth Street Club are held practical talks which help the girls to make the most of themselves. These Tuesday evenings, when the girls meet in their own club house with Miss Dodge are wonderfully cheery occasions. The bright faced girls sing with shining eyes Still believing, hoping, loving, now from day to day, We together through life's shadows strive to find the way. We believe that living holds for us no good Greater than the glory of our womanhood. And it is a belief in the possibilities of womanhood that forms the club’s heart and soul. It would do a pessimist good to see how completely the working girls are leav ing behind them that phase of feminine his tory in which women were proud of being helpless in body aud mind; they have got pretty well through tho succeeding stage in which they have been used to lament such feebleness, but accept it as inevitable aud are coming rapidly to tho higher ideal, to the realization that it is not only as good but as graud a thing to be a womau as to be a man. You will nowhere find quicker wits than among the working girls. One evening re cently the question was asked, what is a club! One girl wrote instantly, her scrap of paper folded on her knee: "A club is a second home, a place to know yoJrself and others, ton.’' Again, the question was: “Toward what is onr club tending?’ And again came the quick answers, "Toward making bright homes aud brighter chil dren,” “Toward energy, culture, hope, pleasure, renewal of iuterest iu each other.” Sorosis and the other women’s clubs think themselves ton poor to maintain clubhouses, but the Thirty eighth Street Club has its own building, lets rooms to pay its rent, and iu the even ing the parlors fairly twinkle and sparkle and laugh with light, as the girls who have beea behind counters or at their looms at bread-winning tasks all day close one door to dull care and open another to hap piness and kno wit- Ige. In their convention, which will be the first of its sort ever called, the girls will demonstrate that oue of the finest products of nineteenth century evolution is the eager, earnest, in telligent working girl. ONE OF BEECHER’S SISTERS. Mrs. Isabella Beecher Hooker is always an interesting figure in a drawing-room. She is about toe only active member re maining of fur once brilliant Beecher family. Mrs. Honry Ward Beecher has quite given up society, aud Mkk. Harriet Beecher Stowe is broken mentally, though physically well. Mrs. Hooker look® like her brother. The outlives of tho face are the same, and there is a strong resemblance about the forehead and tho nose. Her eyes are her brother’s over again, anti her hair is now what his was before it began to shver. It is dark and quite heavy and she wears it in an old-fasaioned knot pinned up with n high shell comb. Sue is rather below medium bight, and wears rustling black silk and a lace collar. By her side hangs always a reticule. Bbe is kindly, brilliant, eccentric and aggressive. New York will not win forget how she ad vised it to appoint women letter carriers and p 'licenieu. fthe does not speak in pun lie this winter, out when 1 met her the THE MORNING NEWS: SUNDAY, APRIL (i, 18D0—TWELVE PAGES. other day on Broadway she was stepping as briskly as a girl of 17. TI.E EDITOR OF THE "CHURCH UNION.” E. B. Grannis is a name that the majority cf readers attribute to a grave and reverend editor with whiskers aud bushy eyebrow*. Instead, it belongs to a sweet, taoughtfui faced woman with blue eyes, madonna features and soft waviug light brown hair. Mr*. Grannis is one of the successful editors of New York, and is a quiet, retiring, sleu der-figured w omau who is one of the crime movqrs in the social purity rrusai* Her house is one of the most interesting in the city, with its high old-fashiuned rooms, and heavy luahogaiiy furniture. An antiquary would revel iu ttie old paintings and engrav ings, the cuckoo clock, theold fireplaces and antique carvings. In spite of these sur roundings Mrs. Grannis is a very modern woman, and in her editorial work is a good deal of a power. Many of the most inter esting men and women of New York are to t o met m her drawing rooms which are always bright with many flowers. ONE OF MRS. CLEVELAND’S HOBBIES. It is the proper thing nowadays to have a hobby, and there are these who profess to pity the man or woman who does not jioasess one. Bo necessary is it to ride a nag of this order that a friend of mine, a most estimable young man, spends nearly ail his leisure looking into the ladigrees and records of different hobby hordes iu the anxious hope of finding one that he may be able to desire to nossess as his own. Mrs. Cleveland acquired a hohbv on that famous southern trip with her husband; it was so simple a thing as relics of tho war. At Chattanooga they are fond of displaying bits of wood in which are lodged bullets from Lookout mountain. They take pieces of bark con taining bullets and work them up intj ink stands, paper weights and ail sorts of sou venirs. One enterprising dealer succeeded iu selling a considerable section of a tree trunk shot full of bullets to Mrs. Cleveland. It is several feet long and is quite the gem of her war collection. It is a promising road to the favor of the pretty ex-in istress of the white house if you show yourself familiar with the fact that the grooved bullets, which she assures you were picked up on battlefields, are yankee bullets, while the smooth ones fitted confederate rifles, and if you prove an expert in deciphering designs on buttons shot from old uniforms. PATTI AT TIFFANY’S. Patti never comes to New York without visiting Tiffany’s and it was there I had an opportunity to study that fatuous red hair at short range yesterday morning, it was pinned high on her head with little gold pins, and to be frank with you it was Hid eously unbecoming. She wore a large, brown wrap aud a pretty little hat of brown with white roses. Her figure is still grace ful and softly rounded, and her dark Span ish eyes have lost nothing of their fire," but the gray hairs must have been coming with marvelous rapidity before the great queen of song could have consented to look so ob viously dyed. But her face is beautiful, and it lit up with interest over the gems. 1 ex pect to hear it reported that La Diva is in vesting a good part of the profits of her tour in fine 3tones, of which she is passion ately fond. THE COLLEGIATE ALUMNAE. Half a hundred girls of tho Collegiate Alumnae sat the other day m a parlor hung about with etchings. A slender girl in black stood up in front of them aud told them how tne English girls at Lady Marga ret ball, in Oxford, go in for a “school”—as those curious transatlantic people call a written examination—for three hours iu the morning and for three or more in the after noon, tuen play tennis till dark and wish there was time for a “good loug walk to rest them up” for six to "eight hours more paper work next day. Then a brown haired girl from Cam bridge told about her life at Newnhamand Girton. Miss Clough, the sister of Arthur Hugh Cltiugh, the poet, is at the head of Newnhatu and was described as swarthy faced, with piercing dark eyes, snowy hair and “that manner, wnich is so Eng lish, of perfectly self-possessed embarrass ment.” Tho scene was thrilling when the senate of Cambridge was convoked to de bate the question of allowing the honors examinations formally to women. The girls’ friends were rallied from John O’Groat’s to Land’s End, aud when the vote was announced, 400 to 30, a great shout of laughter rose from the sturdy Englishmen, who had run post haste to catch trains, fear ing that every ballot would be needed to make up the slenderest majority. 'Die girls iiad scouts posted to tell them how went the day, and wueu the outposts came riding i.i on horseback, fluttering white handker chiefs in token of victory, they straightway cleared a floor and danced aud cheered for Cambridge and mnde ail who saw their merriment believe that the world need not stop wagging for fear of tho dread days coming When Ihe girls make Greek iambics And the boys make currant jam. When the good man sits serenely at the distaff or the loom And the good wife reads her I’lato in the quiet of her room. MARIE BASHKIRT.SEFF AND MME. LUMA IKE. A chance passage in Marie Bashkirtsetf’s curious book has considerably extended in this country the fame of Mme. Letnaire, the Parisian artist, and the recent exhibition in New York of her sketches for Paul He roieu’s novel, “Flirt,” attracted a corres ponding amount of attention. A clever woman artist of New York is Jennie Brownscombe, two of whose works were sold last week to good advantage at one of tha large art s lies. Oue of these, "The Welcome Caller,” is a particularly happy study of a girl in a lattice windowed room into which tho light pours broadly, rising in pretty confusion to welcome "a young man in ihe garb of years ago. Eliza Putnam Heaton. CRIMINALS HAVE VANITY. Their Conscience Rarely Developed Before They Are Caught. Front lie London Saturday Kntieir. Criminals are vain almost to a man, aud to use the revolver is to amount almost with a pound to the top of their ladder of fame. As to conscience, they develop it sometimes when caught, but very rarely before, the very possession of such u monitor warning the hesitating from a trade which nowadays involves so often murder as an incidental in strument of escape. Besides, the age in fluences criminals as it influences all other men, and “the age,” for reasons we do not pretend fully to comprehend, is losing some of its ancient and natural horror at murder, and has trail ferred its dangerous wrath to those cruelties which leave their victim alive. This phase of feeling will pass, the instinctive sense of right arm wrong coinclu" ing in this case with tho permanent deter mination of humanity to keep itself safe; but for the moment it is powerful, aud with criminals as with the rest. How can burglars think murder a worse crime than burglary, when educated men, incapable of hurting auv created thing,talk of parricides as victims of heredity, aud pity tlieir “blighted lives!” Or how can the fear of the gallows coerce them, when they see thit a capital sentence routes the whole nation to discussion, and great par ties, as in tho atrocious Llpskl case, to pro test, while the much more terrible, though less dreaded, sentence of penal servitude for life scarcely evokes a comment' In Texas, it is said, men of the ueiperad - class will commit any crime but ono with light hearts. It takes exceptional daring evo.i ttiero to steal a horse, for the penalty tor horse steal ing is instant death at tne hands of the democracy, which his no pardon for that supreme offense against its own safety and profits. “Is THERB anything green about a grass widow V “Certainly.” “O: vou think so. tVhat is it. please; 1 ' “The fellow that hangs around her.”— A*e- York Herald. ADVICE TO WOMEN. A Few Suggestions Tha; are Well Worth Heeding. Brooklyn, N. Y., April s.—lt does not seem credible, and 1 am reluctaut to make tho statement, hut there are some women, and apparently very liitell.gent women, if one may judge by tbeir use of English, that are not able to tell the difference between the processes of inflating and emptying the lung-. In other words, they do not know when they draw iu the breath and when they expel it. If these ladies bad not in each instance confessed to more or les physical suffering. I scarcely think 1 should lake the trouble of answering their appeals, for in that case the supposition would lie that they breathed naturally, and needed no instruction. Hrasit is out of I he quest >n to reply |>ersoaai! v to all the e >m municatiuns received.and taking into consid eration that if six of my readers inform me of their ignorance iu the above respect there must be many more in I lie same state, 1 thought it best to try aud elucidate a little it possible. If those who need the special instruction will stand with their heels moderately ami comfortably close to gether, their toes turned outward, with the weight of the largely upon the balls of the feet, the abdomen drawn iu and the head lifted, tuey will be in tho proper position for ex periment and iieulthful exercis-. Now with the mouth closed, slowly lift the chest. Tnis work is performed by tho lungs, or more properly speaking by the breath, and is the process of inflating or lllliug the lungs. If the puzzled ones desire to test the process, let them, afier they have lifted the chest as much as they can, hold ic as long as possible in that position. After a shore time the chest will begin to collapse and the breath to leak out. The lungs are emptying themselves preparatory to tilling and emptying again and again, until death stops in and puts a stop to tho whole business. < Hie correspondent tells me she cannot lift her chest a bit more than she has beau accustomed to in her ordinary breathing without great pain and a feeling of constriction at the Heart. 1 am all the tune laboring under the gravest apprehensions in reference to those all im portant exercises. How do I know tha’ those who suffer iri this way do not experi ment in their corsots and are iveanug snug dresses aud tight sleeves! 1 have no means of knowing, for not one in tea of my cor respondents ever tell mo anything of tlieir costumes. So let me soy here ouce for all, that evou these simple breathing exorcises are not only useless under such circum stances, as far as health aud physical de velopment are concerned, lint they are absolutely dangerous. And with this state ment I absolve myself from all responsi bility. An excellent time to practice these breathing exerc sos is iu the morniug after a bath, and while one may still wear the robe de nuit, and again at night after un dressing. 1 dislike to give even an easing prescription to the suffnrer from corsets and heavy skirts, because of my anxiety to see my sisters healthfully dressed, but the simpletons who will lace ami llirow tlieir bodies off equilibrium by liigh-heeled shoes, aud their internal orgaus out of place by dragging costumes, will c rtainlv live to suffer longer, and lace more, by taking the breathing exercises in their night-gowns and bare feet every morning and evening. I think they had better die, hut as they may differ from me iu opinion, here is tho hint. Many women seem to think that I am an advocate of the ugly in dre-s. This is by no means tbe case, iam on the contrary an ardent admirer of tbe beautiful. A dress to be beautiful must be artistic, and if any of my readers can show the figure of a woman with a pipe-stem waist and stiff, heavy looking drapery, painted by an artist of reputation, 1 should like to have them do so. The ideal figures of oar modern as w’ell as our ancient painters, are roomy as to waist, and the drapery is always loose and flow ing. a well-known New York society woman called at the studio of a Parisian portrait painter, anil after tiie business arrangements •Were made usked for a sit ting. “what, this morning—in that costumer’ the artist exclaimed iu undisguised horror. “Oh no, niadame,” he continued, “I could never pose you in black silk and passemeti lerie. “Ah,” with a shrug of his shoulders, "why wilt beautiful ladies cover themselves with those dreadful black beads, and theu, my dear madame, pardon me, your waist is too slight for beauty—in a picture.” Tho little hiatus and tiie accompanying bow and smile doubtles; saved the artist his customer. “But,” the lady replied, “if I have my portrait painted it must be my lacj and my figure that is represented. They may both bo very ugly, but they are what nature has given me.” “Pardon again,” said the artist. “That is true of your bea itiiul five, but it is M. Worth and not Mine. Nature that lias molded t.he figure. We will drape the last, and make it charming enough to match tho face.” The above story was told me by the lady herself, aud from that day to this she his hated the sight of passainouterie, and has never bine3 gloried in the possession of a small waist. This experience in a French studio was an object lesson iu art which she will never forget. Tho object was herself. It is refreshing to see that even the maga zines most hostile to reform iu dress, are now draping toe figures of their fashion plates in accordance with the demand of true art. The plea for I lie Corset is not *o common or so arbitrary as it has hem. Everybody with a particle of common sense knows that for the sake of comfort, as well as looks, there most be some garment which shall support the bu>t, and so cover the figure that a dress waist can be neatly and elegantly fitted. There are several so called corset waists which meet this de mand. They have no steels in front to bruise the abdomen and develop in ternal tumors. The best are without whale bones, for the si nple reason that whale bones are of no use, and bend almost as moil as worn. Some of my friends will perhaps think that I am drawing upon my imagina tion when 1 speak of the development of tumors by corset steels. Indeed, this is not so. Physicians have told me of numberless cases which they positively knew to have been induced by the constant pressure of this metcl upon tiie abdomen, if any of my readers, after thinking those matters over, are moved to dispense with these steels and to loosen the cornet strings, let them bathe the stomach and übdomen every moining and evening with alcohol and water, vigorously rubbing these parts, in order to induce a tteultby action. Eleanor Kirk. WHEN NIAGARA RAN DRY. 100 Dammed the River and No Water Got Through to the Falls. A New York pioneer says in the St, Louis Globe-Democrat that on March ‘2l>, ISIS, for a few hours scarce any water passed over Niagara Falls. Tho winter had bran an ex traordinarily severe one, and ice of unusual thickness had been formed on Lake Erie. The warm spring rains had the effect yf loosening the congealed nia-s, and during the day mentioned a stiff east wind drove the ice far up into the iake. About sun down the wind suddenly changed and blew a heavy gale from tbe west. This turned tiie ice in its co irse, bringing it down to the mouth of the Niagara rive.- aud piling ir up in a solid mass. The force of it was so great that soon the outlet of Lake Erie was so c nnpletelv choked up t hat little or no water could pass. Boon all tho water below the barrier luid passed over tho falls, and whe:i the inhab - itants aw.ikothe next morning a weird spec tacle met their gazo. The roaring, tum bling rapids above the falls were almost obliterated, and nothing but the cold black rock was visible everywhere. Crowds of spectators witnessed this sigh!, and the ba iks on either side of the river were fined with people all dav lo g until tho ice iu the lake was released from its position, aud tin wall of the waters returned to their usual course. A LOW - COST COTTAGE WITH SEVERAL FEASIBLE MODI FICATIONS. A Practical Suggestion for a Grand Crusade Against Rum Se.lera Who Destroy Thrltty Habits and Make It Impossible for Workmen to Acquire Homes By R. W. Shoppell, Archi tect. (Copyright by the Author.) Fair wages and thrifty habits enable thousands of mesdiauiis) aud laboring men to build pretty cottages, and other thou sands might be equally fortunate except for the rum seller. Every ruiu seller lays his heavy hand ou a crowd of victims and addresses them substantially iu this fashion: “No, you shall not build cottages; that part of your inoome or wages that you might save for such a purpose must be spent for the pleas ure of the society l afford you. 1 will build cottages aud rent them to you so long as you pay regularly, and patronize the bar liberally. But rememlier business is business; you can’t play any out-of employmeut or sickness fakes on me; when you can’t pav the rent, out you go like a pack of dogs. ” Jye \ 'M+UO' * • ‘,, PERSPECTIVE. If the people of this general ion are grow ing wiser and stronger, as acute observers declare. It must follow that many of these victims will extricate themselves from the toils, but bow are we to help the rest of them ! Oue of the host suggestions is to arouse the powerful laboring organizations. It is understood that Mr. Powderly lias already given the subject much considera tion. If tbe Knights of uabor and other organizations enforced temperance princi ples they would have a fight on hand that would give them all of their oid-time im portance. Temporarily tueir ranks would be decimated, but hotter men would take the plttces of seceders, and the best of seceders would return. Their old antago nist—capital—would join hands iu such a fight, the whole world would applaud and rum sellers would be doomed. Following will be found a brief descrip tion of the quaint and attractive cottage design that illustrates this article: General Dimensions—Width, 3" feet; depth, including veranda and porch, 4(1 feet li inches. Hights of Stories—Cellar, 0 feet ii inches; first story, 9 feet; second story, 8 feet. m Porch/ II 'K.'tckeft, & TaMi - h iY ;O*X ® r-- | i /*(/ - vjy c I p. - „ 1 D,-, IS-CIR - 2-dJ I ,2 ' oXl7 ° § I \ fc--™ ”i *2*o *vid: . tea “a—g FIRST FLOOR PLAN. Exterior Materials— Foundations, stone; first story, clapboards; second story, clap hoards mitered at corners to produce shing ling effect; gabies, clapboards; roofs and dormer, shingles. Interior Finish —Two-coat plaster, tinted to suit owner. Maple floor in first story, with diagonal under floor of hemlock cov ered witn tarre l paper. Second story floor, white pine. Interior trim, white j ine. Stairs, ash. Chair raii in kitchen. Interior wo si work finished with hard oil. Colors—All clapboards and body of panels in pediment, light brown. All trim and framing of panelsmpeuimeut, maroou. Outside doors, sashes, aud rain conductors, olive. Veranda floor, tan. Veranda ceil ing, Tuscan yellow. All shingles dipped a:id brush coated with slate-colored stain. Accommodations.—The principal rooms and their sizes, closds, etc., are shown by the floor plans. Cellar under kitchen only. Loft over second story floored for storage purposes. Fireplace and mantel in dining room and in reception hall included in esti mate. Large vera ida. Cost—sl,Boo, not including heater and range. The es’iumte is based oil New York prices for materials and labor. In many sections of tho country the cost should be less. '" |ni 1 a, j,u I kfE= l j Bod Roosi , jpjl 5: k B.d Boost. 1, ;] I IU i! 'i B.d Room I l/‘o’x i 2-0* G’ OX.S-O SECOND FLOOR PLAN. Feasible Modifications. Hights of stories, sizes of rooms, materials, and colors may be changed. Cellar may tie enlarged. Fireplaces and maniels may be omitted. One chimney will servo if heating annaratus he used. Staircase hall may be partitioned from the reception hall, anil tho stairway rearranged. Bathroom may tie introduced in .-ecoad story. Veranda may lie ex tended. To the Ladies. There are thousands of ladies throughout tho country whose systems are poisoned and whose blood isluan impure condition, from the absorption of impure matter, due to menstrual irregularities. This class are peculiarly h netttod by tho wonderful tonic and blood-cleansing properties of Trickly Ash, Poke Hoot anil Potassium—P. P. P. Rose* and hounding health take the place of the sickly look, the lost color and the general wreck of the system by the use of Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Potassium, as hosts of females will testify, and many certificates are m the possession of tbe com pany which they nave promised not to publish, anil all prove P. P. P. a blessing to womankind. —A dr. | (iIBIRBAX RAILWAYS. CUT AMI MBIRBIX BAILWAY. OX and after FRIDAY. Nor, !*, I** 4 **, the fol lowing sctieduli will be run on tbe uiitiklf line: LSAVC ARRIVE I.EAVE IJCA'I . C *TV- city. Mt .t or Hopr vo.vruoiXßi 10:25 am v |o£m KIS%R| ' Vum •iiOOjnn 3:oopm ]:*^pm t.vrry Monday there w.iiheatraiu for Mont goinery, leaving city at C ’O a. m. , Vt *ry Wednesday. Saturday and Sunday a tram will le run out, leaving city at 3:2> p. aj. „ <>n Wednesday returning, have Montgomery u: V) I*. vi. niui isle ,f Itopo 5:55 i*. M < hi Saturdax s nud Sundays leave those points at j:.*w) i*. >i. un 1 ti.ls p *. * Thu tram loaves half hour later on Satur day and will tm om runted on Kundav. <>KO. W. ALLEY Supt, Savannah, Nov. \ mS'J. Coast Line Railroad For t'athvdral <>n*terv, Bousveniure and Ihiiiiu-rtM.ii City Mint*. WKJ&K DAYS— Trains leave Savannah 7; 15 and 10 a. m.. 3, 4:30 ainl 6:A) i*. w. Leave TUimderbolt ban l sa. M., 3:45. 6 p a, Saturday uights last train out 7:15 p. *. SUNDAYS leave Savannah 8. 9, 10 au<l 11 A. M , 2. 3,4, 5. 6 an t 7 p. m 1/eave Thunder bolt 7:li>, H:3o. U:3u and 10:30 a m . 13:30.2:30, 3:30.4:30,5:30and 6:30 p. x. Trains for city leave IMnaventure ttve minutes after leaviug Thun* derbolt. Take Broughton at root cars twenty GW) inii utes before leaving time of trains. A. G. DKAKE, Supt* TYpI Savannah anil Atlantic Railway. SCHEDULE OK TRAINS (Standard TimaX Leave Kavauuau daily ‘.1:33 X:M Returning, leave Tybee U:<lu ... Ml Saturday train will leuvs at 7 r. u. Family excursions every Tuesday and Friday at reduced price. Xuti—Krmgiit must lie lUr paid b'lore it w ill be receipted for. No ex captious will bi made. Tickers on sale at J. 1! Fernandez cigar store and depot ticket olflea. Passengers are required to purchase tickets, who wish the benetlt of excursion rates D. U. PURSE. President and Manager. < OXXON ( n.\l i>Rm } MORSE COTTON COMPRESS, r pHIS most powerful and effective in I ho world. I exerts a pressure oa the bale of 6,000,000 pounds. LIGHTY of them liavely-on introduced in the Inst ten vears. which are now compressing over half the American crop. Several of those first erected have pressed over ONE AND A OUARTER MILLION BALES each. WITHOUT DEFECTOR APPRECIABLE WEAR. Their immense weight and strength have rendered them the ONLY DURABLE COMPRESS in use. Sole Owners and Patentees, S. B. STEERS & CO., LKJI' I )> (ioi.ll. Williams-. . \BIUIjU . Head a for Instant Use. WILLIAMS’ Lignil) GOLD insures the splendid effect of Solid Gold, no matter wiirre applied, and it can Ik? used by rim most, iuexpe neucvd amateur. It was employed to decorate the magnificent homes of W. FI.VANIiKKHJLI\ JAY GOULD, .JUDGE HILTON, and many other wealthy and .Ustinguiwlnd New Yorkers. It. Gilo* Framed, Wood, Sji.k, Metal, Paper, etc., ejual to Gold Leaf, and .1 iADIEM can find no more charming: Art Work than jfildin4 with Wilmamx' Gold. (‘aTiielH' Hair Brush in every box. PRICK sl. AvouL tra.i'ai imitations. Sent by mailoy rk CEtPT OP THE PRICK. Circular Saw York iikmical Mm i ’o., and K. 4th Kt., N.Y. Sold by PKIiGG! -TS and ART PKALKRB. HAItJmARK. HOSE. REELS. SPRINKLERS, STICKS, TROWELS, HOES AND RAKES. TILE. FOR SALE BY GARDEN Edward Lovell's Sons i~.~, j{i;otj(rira'(jjv sw. COTTON I ACTOKs. vTHoiiis r. SrtHUs. William 8. Tieos. STL : BBS 1 II SON. Cotton Factors, BAY STREET, SAVANNAH, - GEORGIA. Liberal advances made on consignments of cotton. CORN ICK>. CHAS, A. COX 4C BARNARD ST.. SAVANNAH. —MAJaFACTTRIR or— GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES and— UN ROOFING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES j Intimates for city or country work promptly furnished. Agent for the celebrated Swedish MetaUio Kant. Agent for Walter’s Patent Tin Shfnglec REAL ESTATE. J. Jd.^IILTO>; Real Estate and General Collecting Agent. DRAY TON STREET. SPECIAL attention iriven to the collection of j rente and the rare o£ real estate. Patron- I ago respectfully solicited. s j PLUMB£K. l a. McCarthy,| 4.4, H ARN’ARD STREET, (Under Knights of Pythla.' Hall), PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING, ! STEAM HEATING A SPECIALTY. I LOTTERY. UNPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION I OVER A MILLION DISTRIBUTED. 1 Louisiana State Lottery Company. Incorporated by the Legislature, for Educa tional and rhar.iable purposes. and its fran ohl*- made a part of the pres*nt State Coi*ti tution. in I*C.*. bv an overwhelming pooular rote. It. MAMMOH4 OK YU take place lme and December), And It* GUAM) MAGLK \I\IIIKK DR \H I AG* lake place Ici each of the other ten month* of ilie year, and are all drawn In public, al the Academy of Music, New Orleana, La. FAMED FOR TWENTY YEARS For Integrity of Its Drawings and Prompt Payment of Prices. Attested a. follows: * "It c do herein/ certify that me supervise the arronr/rments fa r all tU Monthly and Semn An moil lira wing, ~f The Ornish,na State Teot S'l Company, and in person manar/e and caa- Irol the Hrawings Ihennelces, and that the same are cpndwted with, hnnesty, fairness, and in (/nod faith Inward ail parties, and we author nr the Company to urn this rertifmat* 7uaJv7rt^nUr ,lr a in ///'s f o.timt*,lnner,. HV Me undersigned Hank* and Hankers miO. pa/l all Prizes drawn in The Ixiuuiana State lotteries which mag be presented at our coun ters. ft. 'f. tV ( LMSI.ItY. I'rri. Lutil.ii.na Nat. Bk. I'IKRKK I.AXAI'X, Prr. Slate Nai’l Bk. A. BALDWIN. Pro. V-w Orleana Nat'l Bk. ( AML KOH.\, l*rn. I nlun National Bank! Grand Monthly Drawing At the Academy of Music, New Orleans, Tuesday, April 15, 1890. Capital Prize 8300,000- 1 100,000 Ticket, at #-M> each: Halve. £10; Duartera tjt.S; Tenth* 2; Twentieths (ft I.IKT OF PRIZKS. 1 PRIZF. OK s3oo,Odd is KinoniMi 1 PRIZF OK 100,000 is loo'iwl 1 PRIZK OK 60,000 is soVwi'i ' I PRIZE OK Sf.OOO is . SSE f PRIZES OF 10,(Kk) are ’ 6 PRIZES OK 6,000 a™ S’oS) !5 PRIZES OF I.OOOare 100 PRIZES OF Ni aru Fanm W PRIZES OF 300 am . So non 600 PRIZES OF SOO ar I lntLooo APPIIIIXIMkTION PRIZES. 100 Prize* of s.'iimaro MOOTi 100 Prize* of :laro 30 nrvi 100 Prizes of SOOare '..".11 20 000 TEKHINAI. PRIZE*. 009 Prize* of 100 are . 99.1M0 Ok- . nze* of 100 are 00.900 8.1.14 Prizes, amountinjr to .$1,054 801 Note.—Ticket* urawmg Capital Prize* are uoc entitled to Terminal Prises. uot AGENTS WANTED. Ton < ‘r.ra H.itks, or anr further In formation desired, write legibly to the under signed, clearly stating your residence, with state. County, Street and Ntimlier. More rapid return mail delivery will he assured by your enclosing an Envelope bearing your full address IMPORTANT. Address Al. A. IIAU’HIA, New Orleana, La., or M. A. DAYHIIPr, * \\ ashington. I). (I. Ily ordinnry letter containing Money Order issued by all Express Companies, New York Ex. change, ltraft or Postal Note. Address Registered Letters Contain ing Currency to NKAV ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK. New Orleans, La. "fIKMEMRER, that the payment of Prlr.st Is Gl AItUYTKKI) IIY FOUR NATIONAL HAAfiti of New Orleans, and the Tickets are nitfned by the President of nn Institution whose chartered rights are recognized in the hisrhesfi Uourts: therefore. Ixtwaro of all imitations or anonymous scheme*” OAK DOLLAR is the price of the smallest part or fractiou of a Ticket !84ItKD IIY L t e4 In any i)rawing. Anything in our name offered for ics* than a Dollar is a swindle. GUNS AMMUNITION ETC* CALL AND SEE THE NEW WORLD TYPEWRITER, ONLY sls 00. CAN LEARN TO WRITE RAPIDLY IN A FEW DAYS g. s. mTalpin, -A-G-EHTT. 31 WHITAKER STREET. JKWKLRY . IF YOU WANT A fine Gold Watch or a Dia mond Earring or Ring, or any kind of good Jewelry, join the 10th club, now forming at A. L. esbouillonb’, who is also agent for the Auto matic Typewriter, the best made for its money. Price $65. A. L. DESBOI ILLONS, 21 Bull Street. MACHINERY . McDofloofl and Baliantyne, IRON FOUNDERS, .'lacliinisis, Boiler Maker? and Blacksmiths, M.tM-riCITRSBg OP stationary and portabij: evginta VKKTIC ALAND TOP RUNNING CORN MILLS-, SUGAR MILLS and PASS. V GENTS for Alert and Union Injectors, the simplest ana most, effective on the market; Gullett Light Draft Magnolia Cotton Giu, the best in the market, AU enters promptly attended to. Send for Price List. ftr ,T '" ls E*T for THE DAILY J |hIU<JItMNO NEWS one weok, delivered /. |to any part of the citr. Send your ad fa Vilmss with 113 cent, to the Easiness Office and have the paper delivered regularly. 11