Newspaper Page Text
tWi n WOMEN
LATEST DECREES
FOR COOL WEATHER.
Tailor-Made flown* and Coats—Hats
and Sleeve*—Black is Fash¬
ionable—Capes Are Pop¬
ular for Wraps.
T AILOR-MADE with cidedly ing, being much chic and smaller single-breasted gowns trim are revers look¬ de¬
than last winter, and buttons are
mill and quite dose together. These
coat bodices are either quite long or
abort, aa the wearer prefer*. The
skirts are round and full, very similar
in cut to those of last spring. A
stylish costume seen last week was a
.tweed mixed in color, but in effect s
rather peculiar shade of steel blue,
round skirt, short bodice, single
small revers, strap seams,
which almost ornamented the skirt,
white chemisette, steading collar with
turn down collars and four-in-hand
ttSL
The Real sketch is a new shade of
golden brown doth, long ooat single
bre a st e d, with collar and cuff* of black
velvet, the revers of doth, the small black
rimmed buttons. As season ad¬
vances, and it grows too cold for thin
one of black velvet full,
also collar, would make this costume
more rich-looking and more dressy.
The bat is of brown felt, with pon
pon, and band of black. These long
mats may be a sort of warning of the
•pproac h of redingotes, and there is a
whisper that embroidered polonaises
will be next i in order. Chemisettes of
s ..
fall soft materials, such as silk, surah,
erepon, and mousseline de soie, are in
make Ufa favor; the latter is also used to
\ ken* dog-collars, arranged in folds
— in place by bars of . jet pearl
elegant. •taw. They are considered very
Laoe _ bodices, with silk sleeves and
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PALL AND WINTNE PASSIONS FOB THE CHILDREN.
are very pretty; also ohiffon
is made fa the same style.
use of all kinds still continue in
Thav are mostly tightfitting,
aAe of very rich materials, for
ooa and evening wear. Mona¬
ds soie fa white, trimmed with
Is the most dainty for
taw fa to b# fashionable. Blaok
•roi&ered net make handsome even
dreesss, and oertainly the erepon*
vary hamlsoiae, a narrow border
of for to adge the skirt, and Jfull
it of blaok ohiffon trims the bodies
1 straps of jet to brighten and re¬
ft the dull affects of the erepon.
be fashion of sleeves of a different
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son to have provided for one and all,
and those who wish to look tall and
slander, can find an enaiess variety of
stripes, some so small as to seem only
a thread, others pin-head stripes,
while many silks have satin stripes of
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about half an inch, with shot effects
in oolors between.
Indications point to capes of all
kinds as the popular wrap, velvet, jet
and laoe for dressy occasions, cloth
trimmed with fnr, and the Ebglish
military cape, now called by various
names, Scotch, tourist and golf.
The second sketch is of dark blue
cloth, with lining of cape and hood
of plaid silk in dark blue black and
tan, crossed with red. Many are made
of reversible cloth, having one side in
dark colors, and the other in gay
plaids, some of rough cloths, others
tweeds in exceptionally fine quality,
reversible, and aro procurable in
many different colors, one of the most
successful having one side in oek
brown, and the other in a smart red
and tyue check. Very pretty also are
the combinations of fawn black and
white, with a cheok in pale tan color
crossed in red, aad cigar brown, with
a tan oheek crossed with pale blue.
Plaids of all descriptions, in fact, are
need for one side of these reversible
oloths. These new wraps are oomfort
ably long, and smartly out with stylish
hood, and most ingeniously arranged
with straps from the shoulder, which
QfCNNi oT<ir ths ch«nrt ^Al6u pus
around the waist, so that the eape osn
be thrown open to any width without
folding from the shoulders.
There is very little news in reference
to ooats. The sleeves of gowns are
still very fall, aad as long as hope, they
continue to be in vogue let ns to
wear something that will not ruin our
dispositions and sleeves at the same
time, both. and If oertainly the ooats fall sleeves aoeompljsh stay
vary
with us, neither will we have many
looped-up witb*!a0diug skirts tL. or of draperies, their not
appear
in ' ter, as
broad shoulder plsin
flaring skirts, with littta fullness at
the waist
m tat on.
sash
a dsapiisd and which has
figured aa 1 SO lartatyTn novels
it de
The
sudyk* with
of bright
plain or 1 fa
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writ
by J
of
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1
WORDS OF WISDOM.
The only cure for worry is faith.
\ Th<» ebeerful giver is the happiest
man on earth. (•
A little weed has no more righf to
grow than a big one.
The man who leans on life blessings
cannot walk straight.
The first lesson in djWeit is often
taken by going in debt.
The wrong-doer suffer^ but
who love him snffer more
A mistake is apt to attract more at
tention to us than a virtue.
It is not the bird with the brightest
plumage that sing?) the sweetest.
A soft answer has often been the
means of breaking a hard heart.
Good fortune sometimes come3 to
us in a very shabby looking carriage.
People who live alone themselves. never get
very well acquainted with
Lessons learned in the school of ex¬
perience are remembered the longest.
The world pays more attention to
what a man does than to what he says.
It would he hard to convince a
spider that there is any honey in a
rosebud.
Strip off all masks, and there is
hardly a man who would know his
next door neighbor.
There is more power in the influence
of a boy than there is in all the steam
in a locomotive boiler.
Believe what a coward says, and he
oan prove to your satisfaction that he
is the bravesbman in the world.
The reason it makes a liar mad to
call him one is because he doesn’t
jraut to look at himself. —Ram’s Horn.
The Bamboo.
. Although no production of China is
of so much importance to us as tea,
there are others of the equal or perhaps
superior value to Chinese them¬
selves. Among these may be classed
the bamboo.
The bamboo is a genus of grass, of
which most of the species attain a
great size, many of them being twenty
or thirty feet in height; some, says a
good authority, over seventy feet.
The species are namerons, and are
found in all tropical and subtropical
countries, both in the eastern and
western hemispheres. The stems of
the bamboo are jointed, very hard,
but light and elastic, hollow, contain¬
ing only a light spongy pith, exoept
at the joints, where they are divided
by strong partitions.
Although the bamboo is of great
servioe to the inhabitants of every
country in whiob it grows, it seems
doubtful whether any people put it to
as many different uses as the Chinese.
In their hands the bamboo may al¬
most be considered a universal ma¬
terial, for they perform with it opera¬
tions the most various and dissimilar
that oan well be imagined. it They
manufacture with stools, tables,
bedsteads and all other
srtioles of furniture. It supplies
scaffolding for building, masts and
yards for shipping, carts and wheel¬
barrows for husbandry, wheels laths and
tubes for irrigation. Split into all
and ropes, oords and twine for
purposes, to the wick from of the candle. rigging Woven, of a ship it
a
beoomes a sail-cloth or a sacking;
macerated into a palp, it is made into
paper, and mixed up with lime it is
used to oalk ships. By fastening to¬
gether four of these reeds, swimming
jackets are oonstrnoted capable of
supporting one or more persons, and
a machine is thus made which answers
to our more elaborate life preservers.
When young it affords a nutritions
article of diet; when growing it is a
fence for the gardens and fields, a pro¬
tection for cottages aud an ornament
for palaces. It is the weapon of
justice and the instrument of op¬
pression, supporting equally and the
authority of the mandarin the
arroganoe of the petty official.
So endless are its uses that it almost
aeems that without its help the ma¬
chinery of government would stand
still, and the Chinese want many of
those accessories to opmfort whioh
separate the civilized man from the
savage. —Atlanta Constitution.
Jailers of Christendom.
One of the most incongruous Turkish sights
at the Holy inside Sepuloher the is the
divan, just entramm, on
which a couple of indolent Moslems
recline, gazing with apparent indiffer
enoe ai the devout pilgrims who peas
through the gate, bat really scrutinis¬ soliciting
ing them with a view to
vr^mj r Kan gtjletl
the jailers of Christendom, and* for they
p nesses the Basilica right of This opening
ing the privilege
been hei editary fa two Camillas for
To one
right of ksepfag the key the of the i le gate, of
end to the other priv g e
any one of the
SI
a
After a i toe
Oriental ti
he "5.“
m presence of the two, the
eemasmmi*sm
Mmaai*K
E
FROM WASHINGTON.
NEWSY ITEMS TICKED VP AT
THE NATIONAL CAPITOL.
Sayings and Doings of pie Official
Heads of the Government.
;
j
xbe presidential party, including
the president and family, Mrs. Perrin,
Miss Rose Cleveland and the three de¬
tectives who have been at Buzzard’s
Bay, Mass., all summer, left that place
for New York Tuesday by special
train, with a director’s car attached
for their personal use.
The postmaster general Saturday
wired the Jackson, Miss., postmaster
that the “order against the Co-opera¬
tive Loan and Divestment Company,
of Mississippi covers only regis¬
tered matter and money orders.
You will deliver all ordinary matter
addressed to the company.”
While the Indian officials at one
time showed a desire to appoint civil
iana as Indian agents in place of army
officers, where army officers have been
relieved, it has now been determined
to fill such vacancies with army offi¬
cers. The war department has been
asked to designate army officers to fill
vacancies in each case.
An additional exchange of through
registered mail pouches has been and or¬
dered between Jacksonville, Fla.,
New York city. The pouches will
leave New York at 9 o’clock p. m. via
the New York and Washington railway
postoffice, and Jacksonville at 3:20
o’clock p. m. via the Charleston and
Jacksonville railway postoffice.
Secretary Herbert has modified the
orders which were issued to Com¬
mander Davis, of the Montgomery, to
leave Norfolk November 6th and visit
Mobile, Ala., not later than November
15th, on account of an exposition
which is to be held in Montgomery
November 19th. The departure of
the Montgomery will be postponed a
week. .
■ ’ Secretary Carlisle has asked Attor¬
ney General Olney for an opinion on
the constitutional question involved in
carrying out the dispensary law in
South Carolina, in cases where the
disputes occur between the United
States and the state officers of South
Carolina, on the occasion of liquor
being held in United States bonded
warehouse, being seized for violation
of state police ordinances.
Without issuing a direct order Sec¬
retary Smith has allowed it to be un¬
derstood that all employes of the inte¬
rior department may go home to vote
at the coming elections. There are a
number of employes in the interior de¬
partment who intend fo avail them¬
selves of this privilege. The superin¬
tendent of the railway mail service has
issued an order allowing all postal
clerks to go and vote who can get
away without serious detriment to the
service.
At the present ratio existing be¬
tween the treasury receipts and ex¬
penditures, the indications point to a
deficit for the month of October of
seven millions in ordinary expenses
and of five millions in interest or a
total of $12,000,000 for the month
over and above receipted expenditures This will
firing receipts the for excess the current of fiscal over to
year
about $18,000,000. For the same
period of last year the excess was
$29,000,000.
On motion by Calderon Carlisle,
counsel for Madalene Pollard in the
case of Pollard vs. W. C. P. Breckin¬
ridge, of Kentucky, the eonrt of ap¬
peals of the District of Columbia or¬
dered the appeal which had been ask¬
ed for in this case stricken from the
docket of the court on the ground that
it had not been entered within the
statutory time. This ends the litiga¬
tion as far as the courts of the District
of Columbia are concerned and leaves
the plaintiff free to collect her judg¬
ment of $16,000 and coats from the
colonel when and how she ean.
The plans at the government build
ing at the Atlanta exposition, are now
only waiting approval of the postmaster
general and secretary of the interior.
No material change from the The prepared
plana hi contemplated. plans
were drawn after foil consultation by
the architect with members of the gov¬
ernment board, who gave him details
of the ee each department
of tne board
with the division of
space. In the ntranoe extentions on
the two its will be the office# and
nfaelivltiee.
A comparison
number of rvmoi
under the first C . the Ham
Tram March 4,
1886, there were sp
;
1889,fa March 26,1890,
V to
* op a
i 41
y -
••tics. It 'rrill fcs Xou*ojiii»ered that,
not long since, an inquiry ms made
as to the right of the commissioners of
Floyd county, Ga., to issue a certain
amount o£ county bonds, 4 per ceflt
interest, in denominations of $5, §10
a ad $20, with a view of using the same
as local money. It was asked whether
such action would conflict in any way
with United States bankinfflaws. The
matter “was referred to Solicitor
Beeve. and he advised the secretary
that no statute of the United States
prohibits the issue of county bonds in
any denomination, and that a county
has the right to issue bonds when not
in contravention to the constitution of
the state. As to the state bank tax act
of 1875, Mr. Beeve held that the word
“county” is hot enumerated among
the taxable bodies, and that therefore
county bonds are not sul ject to the
ten per cent tax. According to infor¬
mation received at Washington, the
people of Floyd county have become
widly enthusiastic over this prepara-® opinion,
and are making elaborate
tions to have the bond issue au¬
thorized at the coming election, it be¬
ing one of the principal issues of the
campaign. Mass meetings have been
held and a committee appointed to
arrange for a big barbecue on election
day. The people may be doomed to
very great disappointment in this
matter, however, inasmuch as it is,
stated on the best authority that Sec¬
retary Carlisle does not agree with the
opinion of Solicitor Beeve, and will
not take any action in the matter un¬
til he has heard from Attorney-Gen¬ referred
eral Olney, to whom he has
Solicitor Beeve’s for review.
CHINA WANTS PEACE,
But.the Victorious Japs Refuse all
® Overtures.
The Central News (London) for claims the
to have the highest authority
statement that overtures looking to a
declaration of peace between China
and Japan were made a few days ago
but that Japan rejected the proposals,
considering them inadequate.
According to the Central News,
however, there is every reason to be¬
lieve that the proposals were eminently
satisfactory to China, and that her
representatives signified a willingness
of their governments to acquiesce in
them.
THE JAPANESE PARLIAMENT MEETS.
The Japanese parliament, which was
convoked tor a seven days’ session, to
consider war measures, met at Hiro¬
shima Monday. Count Kusumoto wai
elected president and M. Shimada vice
president.
THE PALACE DIVIDED.
The imperial palace at Pekin is said
to be divided by two factions, con¬
tending, the one for peace, the other
for war. The war party consists of
the Emperor, the Imperial Tutor Ung
Tungho, and Olobopu, director of the
board of war. On the side of peace
are tibe Empress Dowager, Prince
Kung and Li Hung Chang.
NEW YORK COPS INDICTED.
The Grand Jury Return True Bills
for Bribery.
The New York grand jury found in¬
dictments for bribery against ex-Police
Captain Michael Doherty, his formeT
wardmsn, John Hock and Bernard
Meehan, and ex-Sergeants of Police
George 0. Lieberg, Hugh Clark, Felix
McKennan, James W. Jordan and
Charles J. Parkerson, all of whom
were dismissed from the force several
weeks ago.
It can be stated with oertainty that
the case# of ex-Police Captains Grose,
Stephenson and Devery have not yet
been taken np, bat that they will be
considered without farther delay.
The case of Captain Schmittberger
is as yet undecided. It is a question
whether or not the grand jury will
consider it before action is taken by
the police commissioners. The fol¬
lowing prisoners hare been released on
b iil: Ex-Wardman Bernard Meehan,
ti-Wardman John. Hock, ex-Sergeant
Hugh Clark, ex-Sergeant Felix Mc¬
Kenna, ex-Sergeant Charles ParkersoD
and ex-Sergeant J. W. Jordan.
THE DECISION REVERSED, .
And O’Brien Can Be Tried for Em¬
bezzlement.
A Chattanooga dispatch says: Last
spring the county circuit eonrt
quashed the indictment against M. J.
O’Brien, ex-supreme eonrt chancellor
of the Catholic Knighte of America,
for the embezzlement of $75,000 from
that order. The decision of the eonrt
was baaed on the Tenneaaee statute
which denies legal redress to corpora¬
tions not having an abstract of charter
granted fa the state. Tuesday the
Tenneaaee supreme court, sitting
at Knoxville, reversed this daemon
and made O’Brien liable to criminal
p r ose cuti on pending the examination
of authorities cited by Mr. O’Brien’s
counsel.
THE DYING CZAR.
The lat e st dispatches received at
ihe ad London, state
is ex
critieaL The news of his
A st.
tinental eities. A dia
Paris says
red at the
■&£
irfV
Transit
Onr sun, with its train of
planetar ia twvefeBg
the unthinkable speed of eighteen
miles per second.
The System or Telegraphy
fe that established batweea the brai. and i 1
nerves, which tran-mii instantaneous!
me grant . r^an of sagfation and tnoc -
every shocks shock they vivi expeTfence. These di.-tarW ele, fr
when the are very l, painful and •
ach Hitters nerves strengthens, are weak. ITostetter’ - S-on.”
the tsaqql!. It soothes, indu and rend-rs
nerves es sl-ep. son.,,!
ousness, dige-tion malaria, and appetite, rheumatism and conquers and b'V
trou le. fcj y
“One bed for one person” is the be-t TO li
heal h and comfort.
Whole Family Helped
“ My husband
troubled wag
with RU PM
mafia,u go that he
«»ld hardly Uf t ^
, __ pfeFl _
hand to his head,'and
i A-wA « / J tu also his had Btomach severe paj ns
j \ r eating. after
' ^ Four bottles of
'***%/^L H completely ° ° d ’ 8 ^^Parma
cured
Aim. Our son was all
fun down and Hood's
VArs.H*-whnsn Sarsaparilla built him
up, and ha gained 15
lbs. Our little boy Leon has also been given
appetite,weight and strength cured by of the medicine. vine',
Hood’s which Sarsaparilla for 15 me Fry
lam, 1 have had years and which
is now entirely driven out of my system. Since
Hood’s 5 ^' 1 * Cures
ffifolgms. toSTc&ra'B’r’
Hood'* Pill* *re a mild cathartic.
W. $3 L. SHOE Douglas
IS THE BEST.
NO SQUEAKING
♦5. CORDOVAN. ’
k k FRENCH* ENAMELLED CALF
ian 1 *4. J i 5 -°FlNECALfmW
m $3.§P POLICE, 3 Soles.
1 •J erffiKSfa
% *2.H. 7 £ BoysSchoolShoe3»
‘LADIES*
|PPpW*I-‘DOUGLAS, Sfcfrk SEND FOR CATALOGUE *
BROCKTON, MASS.
You enn save money by wearing tbo
IV. L. Conglas 83.00 Shoe.
Became, we are the largrest manufacterern , f
Uil* grade or shoes in Cia world, and guarantee Uirlr
value by stamping the name and price on the
bottom, which protect you against high prices and
the middleman's profits. Our shoes equal custom
work In style, easy fitting and wearing qualities.
We hare them sold everywhere at lower prices for
the value given than any other make. Take no sub¬
stitute. It your dealer cannot supply you, wo ean.
CARRIAGES
Buggies & Harness.
Two Fair for highest Strength,Bewuty awards at World’s
“A" emu. and
. l 4 »*r Prim. Six years ago wo
$ discarded the Dealer and began
—f selling wholesale direct prices. to Consumers Result: at
ard of lod.aoo Vehicle* op
Khd w sold
and earth onr factory .dealing now the largest
TOflVJ on Send for direct mammoth wtttiecn
earners. onr
•A” ttUt 13S page illnstrat. free catalogue.
ALLIANCE CARRIAGE CO., CINCINNATI, 0.
POSTER’S litotes <«
I Practical SBSSST ffiSrLfiZ
Business ant* and court reporter* as
teachers. Terms libera!
Graduate* assisted to good
COLLEGE, portions. Write lor par¬
MACON, 01 ticular-*.
i. E, PORTEH. President.
K. s. CURTIS, Principal.
HALMSRSSg^Ms&uin
•MN***»****M**«(*M**«**«MM*H Prevent* lndlgeation, •!
V Cure* and Rheumatism,
T a Dyspepsia, Heartburn, Catarrn and AMbm*. §
A Useful in Malaria aad Pever*. Cleanse, tbe \ A
theBreeth. Teeth and Cars*theTobecooHeblt. Promotes the Appetite. Sweetens Endorsed V
V tor 23
*• fay the Medical Faculty. Send It', 15 or *•
9 A tent paekage. saver, Utamp* or ratal NoU.
SCO. R. HALM, 140 West 3Mh St., New York.
THK ELASTIC
ARTIFICIAL LIMBS.
v- with ball-bearlns knee and joints.
The latest improved best.
i Send for des riptire catalogue
and price list.
1 T. V. H ILLS,
iturcssaor to A. McDkhmott,
516 A 818 (o:d No.114. St.charie*
street.. New Orionn*. La.
PK LIVER
LPius -AND
g/Tonic Pellets..
st'ttg&ni&it TREATMENT ttS&ZZ
ttt'rW
FREE! CATALOG, giving'
a full description
of the cheapest and
belt IRON FENCE made for cemetery
nee. J, W. RICE, Atlanta, Ca.
* WORLD'S-FAIR ir
l HIGHEST AWARD I
•sgSaa
"GREAT
1 Cl 1SJ-AJL^
Hs> justjy acquired the reputation of being
_ The Salvator for
An ^The-Aged. JROonmANje Aunm the u
for
Grown and Ptoncnoa of WPJWTS sad
A in
m lagwtt .
Srtmtri
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