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THE CABNESYILLE
ESTABLISHED ^1875.
&
C. W. BON'D, PROPRIETOR.
Do toe want anything; in tbe line of vegetables, candies, fancy
groceries, cider, milk shake, crockery, call ou me. I keep c »n
sUnily on hand everything that is usually kept in a well »t<v Led
grocery store and will give bargains.
C. Vf. BOND, Lavoma, Ga.
UCCER8 CAN BE
In Any Business by
Untiring Industry,
» Careful Economy,
--and
Th<( FJoad to Opuleijee Ites ^ee-Deep Jl^rou^
IF YOU WANT
FINE STOCK, FINE «»)
And Courteous attention to to T ths B«it
LIVERY & FEED STABL
N THIS SECTro : O^OOUNTRY.
If. C. m-U> >rn', Pr M '* c
ROYS!ON 00 rz.
Franklin Springs, from Ga. 1
i 5 j rT rooms, hros-1 y\****, c mvtrmn alien t ion naif*
Hrttnw. The taVilo i* supplifu with t o V;c-i tlAt the mvi l**•<;
of North Georgia affords. Daily :i .a from RojA’on. Every
thing tHst can contribute to your co ufort and pleasure at on; of
the most delightful summer resorts in Georgia, cn be f«ui i«* At
TDK
ilOYSTOX 1 » / I i M ?
j ft-, ,
FRANKLIN SPRINGS, GEORGIA
rikt pr
-'/-V m.
(s READ EftERY WEE!^ IN i 2P
w? i
THE BEST -RECrION M0/AE5 IN THIS I
, You Wi5H I 1
S 1
i
5S Tf D'/ERTIoE f
& ■a?
NYTM'.NG- a:
r, H Y TIME h
KEEP^THI^FACDIN'AU ND.
CARNESVILLE, FRANKLIN COUNTY GA . WEDNESDAY. JULY O r ' fO ;*f.
A WORD OF EXPLANATION
We never observe not even lesjal
holiday** We rarely *ver vacate
at Christmas, but we are compelled
j t o ask the indulgencj of our readers
fer a half sheet this week; with the
foreman in the bed sick, the “devil»
with his hand mashed up, the offie#
I boy incapacitat'd for w >rk, etc. etc.
j wa are iu a b .d way a ,mn getting
out a paper
AT HE COURT HOUSE.
R«v. G, X. Schadcwell, of Atlan¬
ta, a minister of the Catholic ebursh,
will ieelure in the court house at
8 p. m. Thursday night, 9th. The
people of Carnesvilie will give Fath
er £cha<lew*ll a large congregation,
i IV is one of the most learned Catho
U' ministers in Georgia. He will
not try to convert you, but has just
some among you to tell something of
Catholicism pure and simple. \W
hvg for Father Schadewell only -nhat
* e vvtuld ask for a learned and holy
1 man anywhere—a respectful healing*
Stranger* have never yet found our
people lacking in eourteey and cor—
'b 1 iy Let this not be the excep
r u «o this ad mi able rule.
Father Schadewell wall read Mass
at tbe court house on Fruiaj morn
ing 10th inst at 7:30. There are
prebablj a great many persons m
Carnesvilie who have eever witneis
e * the devotional exercises of th#
Citholic church Go out tomorrow
rn ni ig ai.d hear the Mass read and
the ceremonies of the Mass ex
t
p'Alned as will be done intelligently
sid forcibly by Father Schadewell.
V OT1CE TO DEBTORS AND
.
CKEDITOHS
All person* having rlewands ajaiuat
T. 11. Uathcock, dec’d are hereby notiflad to ren
*srm tJiwr demand* to tJie undersigned aecerd
■'-£ to liw, and all persons indebted to the estate
\re required to make immediate payment. Thi»
May. 3nth Is9I.
J. IT. Hathcoek,
F. F. Kirk,
A dmiaistratorr.
NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND
CREDITORS.
All ;ier*ous haring tlemsmls against tli* estafc*
>t -Vary | Stonecyphcr, deceased, ar* hereby
notified to render in their demands to th* un¬
dersigned according; to law, and all person* in¬
debted to said estate are required to make
immediate payment. This May, ‘ZOtb I*gl.
8amua! A. Porter,
Administrator
- - - -yca^ paB—
(-K')RGIA, Fianxiiu couary. — l i v
i .li-'-rs ap;■.«>!ut.ed upcu Rppl;«a«i.ct <»
Me*, M. E. Th m-on, widow of A B.
rhomiuon, f r iwelve menth* »n;>pe»i t
r i csclf and lour minor chiM-en, h*»
g file! their rtyu-n, all p»r»ons c>n
•eined art e*eby cit <1 :o •t ow cause!
•{ snv ihey have, at > f next .Ttilv termo
his to ; ri ahyanivl aopd- a ion sWoul*
>ot be RranUd. This Ma» 23i I, lssi.
Daniel MrK*DK ! e, orti ary.
lies Vrn. $3.33.
GFOR(;lA, Franklin county.
Oavlintrys Offioe of «aid eoanty.
Whereas Win. M. Rampley, administrator of
ino. W, McFarlsnrt, r*pres*nt* to the court in
»■» pviitiou, duly filed acd entered om record,
imt he Ins fully administered ou Jno. W. Me
Far’amb estate, this is, therefore, to cite all
persons concerned, heirs and creditors, to show
ause if any they can, why aaid adminlstrstor
•hould not be dis*liar;ed from his administra¬
tion and receire letters of adismistration, on the
he fust Monday in'October, lsi-1. This July 1st
IS31. DAX’L. MrKENZIE. Ordinary,
rcc month s, Pr* fc« paid._______
,To all Whom It may concern 8ally Murry
.»?ing in proper form applied to me for per
uan*ul l^tten; of Admiuietration on the
etatcofE. H. Murry, late of said *onnty, this
• to cite all and singular th* creditors and
‘j.v of kin of E. R. Murry to be anil appear
t m/offles within the time allowed by ixw,
•.ad show cause, if any they ran. why p*rmau
nt administration should not be granted to
>*liie Marry on E.B. Murry’s estate.
Witness my hand and official signature, this
June 36th, 1*91.
PAVI, McKEXZIE, Ordinary
5 tlm«« prs. fe* *3.36
GLOiiuIA. FR ; .-KL N CULA 1 1.
To ail whom in may cosher* ; J. ti.
anvi T\ . r. Da cao, Ex«*ut »r» t.-f J • .n
Uur.cvn, dec aseo, o&vf, m cue j© m
\ppllrd lo tne uu ler*.gu*d ior Itxys o
s-W he ian.i le oagiug to t;,e e a
sid deeeft**vi, and *Aid applicvta * wifi
oe hfard on the li e first Mondw ;n
Augns: u xt.
Tois June £8th, 1S91.
DAN L. MrKENZIE, Or lias j.
'1 im»A Prs. fe* f
u«,wu-Huim CQUM-f^
w Whereas i±. to. L jappelcar, Ex-catoi
of J. H. Cuap; elear, re;resents to iq c
Court iu Ik* petition duly fiieJ and
ent-red ou record, that he has fu ty
-dministered J. li. Chappeiear’a eJ
state;-This is. therefore to Clte a]J
treofis concerned, , heirs . - and , creditors,
j show cause, if any they can, why said
ixecutv r ihould not be discharged fro j,
ib Execatorsbip, and receive letie«- % oi
dismission, on the fiitt Monday in .Sep¬
tember, 1891.
3m. Prs. fee pd.
HISTORIC HOT SPELLS.
AFTER ALL, IT ISN’T SO HOT OF
LATE AS IT WAS MANY YEARS AGO.
Great Hirers Dried ftp In the Fonrteenth
Gent ary—Meat Cooked by the Sun in
France—Car Hails Twisted and Boards
Cracked.
H E remarkable
exhibition of so¬
-vr^vi lar energy wit¬
nessed in various
I ^ the Uni
S*-wmur Jrv>$&£ r D ar
ted States during
/ f/jx M/t Jr T&k tbe present not real- sea
ft son was
ly a phenomenal
event in our me¬
teorological his¬
tory. in fact,
compared with
the experiences of other years and other
countries, the broil was not an excessive
one.
It is not easy to get at the old records
on this subject, but from the few at
hand it appears that the people of the
Old World have suffered more from in¬
tense heat than those of the New. For
instance, in 1.*' 3 and 1304 the Rhine,
Loire and Seine ran dry. The beat in
several of the French provinces during
the summer of 1705 was equal to that of
a glass furnace. Meat could be prepared
for the table merely by exposing it to the
sun. Not a soul dare venture out be¬
tween noon and 4 p. m. In 1718 many
shops had to close. The theaters did not
open their doors for thr :e months. Not
a drop of water fell du ring six mouths.
In 1773 the thermometer rose to 118 degs.
In 1778 the heat of Bologna was so great
that numbers of people .vere stifled. In
July, 1793, the heat again became intol¬
erable. Vegetables were burned up and
fruit dried on the trees. The furniture
and woodwork in dwelling houses
cracked and split, and meat went bad in
an hour.
In 1800 Spain was visited by a swelter¬
ing temperature that is described as
fearful. Madrid and other cities were
deserted and the streets silent. Labor¬
ers died in the fields, and the vines were
scorched and blasted as if by a simoom.
Another disastrous hot wave swept
through Europe in June, 1851. The
thermometer in Hyde park, Loudon, in¬
dicated from 00 to 04 dega. in the shade.
In the Champs Des Mars during a re¬
view soldiers by the score fell victims to
sunstroke, and at Aldershot, England,
men dropped dead while at drill, com¬
pelling the officers to suspend the exer¬
cises.
Some of ns recall the terrible expe¬
riences of 1858 in New York and else¬
where. In that year New Orleans was
desolated by the yellow lover. It seemed
'
m
§hmk'
mmd
as if New York was on fire. The ther¬
mometer ranged from 95 to 97 degs. for
five or six days. In that summer we
opened the Crystal Palace in Reservoir
square, at Sixth avenue and Forty-sec¬
ond street. On the day of the inaugura¬
tion the mercury indicated 9-1 degs., and
people fainted iu the crowd and fell dead
in the streets. During the week £14 per¬
sons were lri lied in New Yo.'ic by sun¬
stroke.
The year 1872 was another fearful one
in the metropolis. One hundred and
fifty-five cases of sunstroke occurred on
July 4, of which seventy-two proved
fatal. The principal thoroughfares were
like fields of battle. Men fell by the
score and ambulances were in constant
requisition. Working people staggered
in sheer exhaustion, great globules of
perspiration flowing from their faces,
and laborers along tho docks and on
buildings in process of erection were
obliged to stop work or pay the dread
penalty. Dumb beast3 lay down by the
wayside and panted their lives away.
Sleep for two ot three of the hottest nights
was well nigh impossible, and in the
tenement districts women and children
were found dead on the roofs to which
they had clambered in the hope of getting
a breath of cool air. The scenes in the
morgue were appalling; dozens of bodies
on the stone slabs under the splashing
water awaiting the recognition of friends;
here a stalwart man who had been
stricken suddenly, there a comely wom
au with her face turned toward the light;
yonder the official photographer doing
his gluistly yet necessary work in pre¬
serving the pictures of the dead; eager
eyed relatives hunting among the corpses
for some missing loved one; a horrible
stench mingling with the oppressive heat
and lamentations filling the air. Over
2<30 deaths were recorded in three or four
days.
The next serious visitation took place
in 1HT6, and about July 9 began to make
its power felt throughout the middle and
southern states as well as in New York,
In Washington, the heat was partfcular
ly oppressive. General Sherman declares
that the ear rails became so expanded
by the action of tbe sun as to rise up in
curv.^d fines, drawingthe bolts. In one
instance the rails burst away entity. from the
^ and !eft the tracb The
thermometer marked 104 degs.
The summer of 1879 will long be re
membered for its torrid atmosphere,
1110 situation will be better understood
from the following record: Norwich,
t T&!!Z.
11, 101 degs.; on the same date. St. L mis,
100 deg?.. Koiville. Tenn., July 13,
103 degs., Charleston. July 1-1, Ill degs.
(sixteen deaths); Detroit, July 16, 103
degs.; New York, July 17, 101 degs.
In 1881 it is said the heat throughout
the United States was the greatest on
record, the thermometer in many places
registering 105 degs. in the shade. In
England the mercury ranged from 00 to
101, and in Paris it stood at 93. In trop¬
ical countries the heat often rises above
105, and at the Cape of Good Hope the
thermometer sometimes marks 109 with¬
out fatal results, but in America, es¬
pecially in the early part of July, be¬
fore the human system has become thor¬
oughly adapted to the hot season, the
poisonous effect of tenrperatures above
90. puts it in jeopardy. In London it
was the hottest season known in twenty
two years. The director of the Paris
observatory declared there was no rec¬
ord of such intense heat and its inter¬
ference with every department of trade.
July *21. 1881, is said to have been the
hottest day over known in Charleston
up to that time.
Another torrid wave c:ro in August
of that year and with a brief inter¬
mission continued until the middle of
September. In Richmond the ther¬
mometer registered 105 degs.; in Wash¬
ington, 104; iu Trenton, 101: in Baltimore,
_
ft 0k
JSpli ■i Ntiip Z3
m m
m
-rift- .. .
OX THE HOUSETOPS.
and elsewhere from 99 1 > 101; yet, on
Sept. 7 snow foil iu L)e:vl wood, S. D., to
the depth of five ru-he:-, ru.l at Bald
mountain tbe mow :•« 1 v. <> feet deep.
Nine years ego the i;u. .lth-s«>f June and
July, 1883, were uri i 1 y <>; r-essive in
their atmosphere. Ou t l v> 13'h of July
eighty-eight children iu New York died
from the offecta of the beat. Car horses
fell dead in their traces; drivers dropped
from their scuta on trucks and wagons
Broadway was like a great transparent
flame of firo.
Business was partially suspended and
many workshops were closed. Th*
crowded parts of New York on the ea-s*
and west sides wore filled with families
mourning for their dcrid. end under
takers went their bury i qrrd.i as if ar
epidemic pr.-v-v 1 no:i!-.ftoiKi wen
turned itCo n vet coin n id the piii
fill cries of .- !• ft ( ! ugh '<.1 wit!
the clir:’ ing > r ;.::c :<cs n i*ic i r-er mops
Seven luuv’r. i and •lit nine lifcMt
ones di:-1 Ur ing ri >l from dis
•;as&s fiurici 1«c- i b'’ x i
The Hwcid.-ring i. ■ ift •riir.rn of lns»
year anpcaiA-d lo lu-ft: i ■- 1 n - • f*st revel ii
the pt'ii.ivil cvl «•«.!:•• i poilions of th<
country and among li-e larger cities
Chicago id r- 'l nn.st severely
How ocoph* KbuM deport ihemselvesin
such weather is a matter for serious con
sideration. F r in«»ny <lf»c.n.ies it was the
commonest thft.g i-; i to world for per
sons whose tact«M i-j d • ; were unexcep
tionable to sti !<• thr;,.’ *i the hot term
in black fir- ■)r,t ■ j, ft/ivy hats and
black 1 h tof.S. >w. ’ -w; v.-r, fiongeesilk,
flannel and m ! c hi-1-.. with low russet
shoes, have income ifie rule. Suspend¬
ers have given way to the sash, and in
donning the light silk or iiannel coat and
discarding t ho waistcoat much has been
done to make the heat endurable. But
there is another point.. The art of keep¬
ing cool refers as much to the mind as
the body. The sun hss no more active
.
"tr-Vj 6
L -*a»—
M ^ ,,, ,.- ?%\t.
ipyty r .
.
mg;- ■! i H'ktmsk* /Jd£i
(,v ^ «*,
nrYTi.NO FOR VICTIMS,
agent in it? deadly work than alcoholic
stimulants, or even kre water, when the
latter is taken injudiciously. Nervons
anxiety and inordinate fear will tend to
prostrate the strongest physical system,
and modem*ion in all things pertaining
to the apxxtite is therefore avlvisa-ble.
We A-« Caftins 1Se:vltiller.
Nearly al! pbyricin-n and well In¬
formed peojd - generally now agree that
Americans :«v much more healthy than
they were fort v* * ear.-* ngrx. Part of the
gain i? due t<< ti;. improvement of the
country in th • way *.f drainage, more
to improve! i;-,i-m in city and vil¬
lage, but nn*“t of rfti u> improved habits.
Nearly ail our jxpular amusements now
are health! ui Baddy weakness is al¬
most a disgrace among men and is un
fashiomibie. at the least, among women.
In fact, th * athletic young woman begins
to bo sought after. Long may she wave.
Miss Nina Van Zandt. of Chicago,who
became well known the world over at the
time of the execution of the anarchirtB
juid had herself married to Angust Spies
by proxy, is now to be marrie<i in faetto
s. S. Malato, a Sicilian. The groom-has
only been in English. America six months and
cannot speak
VOLUME XVf —-Ho. K
STOTS ONHOWTO DRESS.
WILLIAM ADDISON CLARKE’S TIMELY
j SUGGESTIONS ABOUT MEN’S WEAR.
Ia * Renaissance of Masculine Attire Im¬
pending?—Fashion Framers’ Specula¬
tions—Fads in Overwear and Underwear,
foibles of Furnishings.
[Copyright, 1801, by American Press Assoeta
tion.1
Any observing chronicler of the fash¬
ions must have noted many changes in
the styles of men’s wear daring the past
few years.
While the introduction of new ideas
has been gradual, it has been none the
less widespread, and thus fixed notions
of the formalities of masculine dress
have been evolved.
The trend of the fashions has been pri¬
marily toward a lengthening of coats of
every kind. The sack coat of tod a}* comes
down below the middle line of the hips,
whereas two
years ago it was
three inches
shorter. The
\ same tendency is
to be noted in the
dressier cutaway
coats, and even
the tail of the
V full dress gar¬
I**?; ment has gained
: an inch or more
■ • of late. The top¬
& coats of light and
m y heavy weight are
m ’-ri perceptibly long¬
M er This, than formerly. however,
OltKSTERFIFLP TOPCOAT i3 bnt a 8ingle
(Front View), feature that is
noticeable in retrospecticm. And yet it
is a curious fact that the slightest change
in the apparel scheffie will affect the va¬
rious portions of it. When, for in
iustance, the coats were designed to
button lower down in the lapel, the neck¬
wear was made appreciably larger, and
in the increased showing thereby of the
bright textures the cloth fabrics became
more subdued in order that the average
in qnielude might be preserved. To be
rated aggressive in attire was deemed a
stigma above all things to be avoided by
well dressed men.
It was in this way that the climax of
conservatism in the belongings of men
was reached. It is an axiom in the an¬
nals of costume that a period of marked
decorative intention will always follow
an epoch of extreme somberness, and the
result of this subjugation of color
would eeem to justify belief that history
was about to repeat itself, for no sooner
had the quietude of the masculine dress
attained the superlative point than was
developed a feeling for effects in contra¬
distinction thereto, as illustrated in the
latest patterns of the current season
that distinctly echo such a tendency.
It is quite clear that the era of quie¬
tude had reached its limit in the winter
of 1890-1. There could be no going any
farther in that direction, and to go back
would be but to traverse some ol the
ideas that were yet fresh in the public
mind.
If, then, the gamut of variation had
been run upon the conservative basis,
there appeared to be but one thing to
do to stimulate the masculine consider¬
ation of personal appearance, and that
was to make a radical change.
It is this crisis in the career of the
ultra fashionable man that has produced
the most unsettled feeling that has pre¬
vailed in many years as to what form
the impending evolution will take. The
recent exploitation of those old school
types upon the stage, such as are seen in
“Beau Brmnmell,” and more particu¬
larly “Old Heads and Young Hearts,”
would make a Renaissance bordering
upon those models less startling, now
that all swaggerdom has become accus¬
tomed to them in the viewing.
The ready acceptance of the bell
crowned and wide, curl brimmed tall
hat—being h moderated copy of the
block of 1840—would moreover seem to
be a precursor for
other encroach¬
ments upon the
fashion plates of
that period. It i
is certainly the
most distinguish¬ f
ed and becoming
headgearthat has , ^ ’
been put out by ,
the tilemakers in IJ§I
many seasons. It JySji 1 i • &
is equally true 1
that it outclasses
in formality the
character of the
current attire. vogue With of it I
the long tailed
coats of “ye old- CHESTERFTT ! I ’ topcoat
cn time” would (Back Vip,xr).
be in better accord, and already the Lon¬
don swells have speculated with a frock
coat similar in design to those worn by
the dandies half a centnry ago. and are
persisting iu the eventuation until it
may be forced into fashionable usage.
In the nature of a sanction, indeed, of
this surtout-like tangent iu fashions for
men, is the new spring topcoat that has
already made its appearance upon the
pave of Gotham, for its unusual length,
coming, as it does, well below the calf,
would premise that a long coat was to
be worn beneath.
It is of light weight melton cloth, in
mouse and tan colors, with velvet col¬
lar. The lapel buttons well down in
sharp V shape to disclose an ample
scarfing. It is single breasted, fly front,
the buttons not showing, he front of
tbe coat hangs loose and int-um-. The
back, however, is ent int<< the figure,
and the suggestion of a frock coat is
given by plaits along the side seams
that are opened from the waist down to
the bottom of this entirely novel gar¬
ment. The two adventitious buttons
that usually surmount the waist line at
the back in a tail coat are omitted.
While in every special branch a for¬
ward move has been made in worieman
sbiD and onalitv of srooda. t hem Y***.
a most deplorable standstill roacixestea
in the construction of certain oTuvm more
essential article*. The undershirt, hi Ihl
present chrysalis i*t*f ?. from which it
will never emerge save at the wail ef a
long suffering people—which i s heiaby
instigated—baa a maddening tmsrmm/j
to rise without prorocation and e at w i n
itself under the armpits in a f ntQa
to get up around the victim’* »eok. TV*
undershirt, in its persmbokrtjoweiai of
the male torso, is n* respecter imsndicaat pawan wHh
It treats the monarch and
equal lack of consideration, fi
not if it is of silk, coarse texture, trr by 0
gienic fabric, it surmounts all ct*i forma¬
tions with impartial certainty and rises
superior to the occasion to its triumphant
perch encircling the shoulder blad re
The undershirts of royalty a **d raga¬
muffin are all built upon the same line*
Money will buy luxury iu finish and text¬
ure, but the much wished for boon «f
haviug it keep its place is yet a long felt
want.
The one Way of kenning the under¬
shirt, ns at present conceived, in the po¬
sition originally assumed is to construct
it of sufficient length so that its lower
end shall coine well below the hips. For
obvious reasons its upward i' udrncy
will Hereby
IV successfully
c h o v > : e A Bui
there is a still
> ia iu.' plan fol¬
lowed by 1 cer¬
-j* S' tain A, iu erica#
who
^ has j.-o! *iiiT **t i
H the fans* nu
,Vnsh!rt h ' r > n 'f'
« j:™ %T"' ruder
£ ** shirts made to at
mm Vse*-• fhf. for the rea*
. presumably,
Ym V .* WJj mat '• ctu.nni
\ * 'f'.T !: wants uy them tb'-m *>* „*»
S V mrde. lie
g. ready
ii:iH them made
COAT MADE UKDCU-iilCT of fine material,
and they button on ns »**ou’ 1 a j;. k*fc—
enugly about the figure, is ’U in¬
novation that will n .-*. • d * co-rnanu it¬
self as savoring of c . i *j w ..ring
and ease in getting 0*1 m l jT. i ufcaluj
as following the pr.-c- j\f 1 :t ti ll
worn and none too t' ’ *u \» ;d j.rov
erb, “Cleanliness is : > i ‘-odliueae.*'
The average man—t* i i ?*'•! < ot of the
boudoir—will uoglw-i hr- . u. >ruil ob
ligations from the r di.-c '■■•rt of
pulling his undershir* ?,'»?. lie.;, >n1
the dread of the urn- !•:e- . ..a of
donning one freshly l.v.tn-1 ■red and
shrunken.
The shirt—to speak »*u»r > Ib'rally. Ihc
outer shirt—isanotlu r «>f men's
wear in which there h- s U-.*u n dung
void so far as the introduction * l-t. v
ideas is concerned. V'bile pio.gr- uve
strides have b>*-u made m the geheral
wear of men I'.uriug the ]*nst dci'ad,-. ihe
shirt has not kept apaoo.
That the shirt of today is r.n awkward
and barbarous habiliment to g-t in sn<!
out of no one will deny It Ij.is been tol¬
erated by a civilized community merely
because the defects seemed inevitable.
Meanwhile the latter day song of the
shirt has developed into an every day
anathema of morning t ide. The a verage
man that fights his way through a barri¬
cade of mucilaginous laundry trork
will inveigh unconsciously upon the trib¬
ulations of life, and go down stairs i -
quarrel with his break f.>Tbe p--‘—4
tive profanity prov<>ki:»g print • ' prin¬
ciple of pulling it ov.-i- f.-.ie's he;; t rh-.iuhl
be obviated, and ir would orsi’- ne#-d a
little enterprise to l:r:u ; th»<* ab -t
As it is, of necesrl.y it i. .he *• :'r .»-r
metw that does not e. n ; . .*'.• (Ija
ure, for the mater- 1 *• ioa i -i .•'<g.
and the fullness th ir w.*.» ,*V’
body is essential in pUij.;;«.a \ tab
ing off the shirt in it s pr - 1 ii # *^**,
of development. I 1 vj« ; i
materials during i » p: t • - i' »n •
the traditions of n*;,kt v t- fir'—
strictly adhered to •. : :» i
dorstand lsow, w t ; *
were familiar with ; -
tern and fabric, th • •' fi
departure in ov D *1
been overlooked, •J.;* 2 *
significant of ease i w nf 5
cerLtinly a fact th :l i ( i pv >
as now pcifornie-:. ft; -e .•
made r.b. oieie.
It would seem that ; .;•• v rii'i
well as the un¬
dershirt, might -/
be made to go on
and off and fit
iike a coat. In¬ \
deed, the exia-ri
ment has been
trifsl, and suc¬
cessfully. as ex- t
einpiificd in the *»
new “King F'i
shirt, tliat opens i A
and buttons nil ti K l ! f
the tbe way front, d o and w n M 1
after may lx put iusir on ir ,, w
tiie i
dressed. Th«
shirt might !*>
made to open fir & %
hind in th«»
way. ami rx ruv/xr voATKJsittT
no rcav’i »v!iy *.»v* biitiou’j* !es should
not hr ‘■■■■ itr.t t ,rgc*r nu-i made hori-
4ont. ««■•«!{. l.i-g • ti ll i>oarl bnt
ton? i ;^i«;«l iu a way to facili
tate i - *:ui:g T u* public will be
alivv 1 L> i . fi-ei*!-fi;>-u* •• of any sneb for
ward policy the ? :v .r,r-t of s’r.rtdom may
duiose to adopt.
Therefore it i; to lx seen that there is
•■onif t hirg n<* 4 v under the snn even iti the
rrer.uncut of so well considered a sn!-ject
as men's wear in its most utilitarian
phases.
Tiie fashion frawer of Ihe day is hap
[lily not amenable to the influence of
the Wildes and Bussells. He is not a
devotee of the aesthetic and impractica¬
ble, but the ajrietle of common sense.
William Anoisou Clarks.
An Australian judge has made a novel
decision in relation to the obligations of
marriage. Ho holds that the service
binds a husband to [irovlde for his wife
onlv till death do them part, and th-t he
^ cou«equemly not compelled to d>fr»r
hu wile’s funeral expense.