Newspaper Page Text
V
Z/J. L A KIBUIE.
SftJTABLISil-El) 1875 .
As Corbett Knocked Sullivan Out,
6o Do HOOD, ANDERSON and CO. Knock Prices Down
Our New Goods Are All in,
Prices and quality guaranteed. W« have a fine line of
Millinery, Dry Goods and Notions.
ff« <»n please anybody who will give ua a chance. Our line of SHOES and puces will fit any one.
HOOD ANDERSON & CO.
HARMONY GEOVE, GA.
“LITTLE JOE.”
(By Hole* Forroat a raves.)
~~
The _ flrat „ , sharpirost . of the
fed scarlet yeai
lefj its impress on tbs
Jteoded fladelra mountain vines that side; had the screened row of
kitchen window drooped black
*Tld ragged from sunshine. its strings in tn <3
Ttvld morning
Marv Eddail sighed softly as she
looked opened out the into kitchen tno blue door air. and
“I shan’t Beo many more sun,
rises on those lulls, said she to
herself. Well, I suppose its all
for tho best. Everything is for
the best, the minister says. But
1 cpiess if the minister was just
mere I am, ho d look at tilings
different.”
“Polly! ’
A trim, neatlv-clad figure had
eome out of tho "kitchen bedroom,
leaning linir cn crutches. Her soft
white was tucked away under
the frill of her cap; a her gingham
ripron was tied around waist,
■$td it was not until you were close
tb her that you discovered liow
toit old she was—nearly ninety—
Ijld wrinkled liko a piece of China
orape, with piercing hazel eyes,
fun. «ng teeth that were nearly perfect
“It’s a nice asked, morning, wistfully. Polly,
dfc’t it?’ Bhe “A
measant morning for mo to go to
Busan Willis’?”
Polly the set buttery down the shelf stone with cream- sud-
Jbt a*n on emphasis.
* , Mrs. Cameron,” she said, with
a sudden catch in her throat, “it
«n’t right. I—I can’t deceive you
UjiT Mrs. longer 1” opened her mild
Cameron
wos
“Eh?” said she. “I don’t un-
Wand git you, Polly.
1 'Tto all your things packed
la the little hair trunk up stairs,"
Aid Sck Polly. “You ain’t coming
here any more.”
•* I—ain't —coming—back—hero
►any—more?” slowly repeated tho
Id woman. “Why, Polly, I wag
torn in this house, I was married
gaaorjjsai
w-A Lfiln
“^he old farm is plaved out ”
said Pollv ‘‘ All these vears folks
monov out ° of it
Sn’t -n<1 navpr on P doim?that Hi no* a cent in ‘more Wo
ffo on settling anv
if TAnlrfft tho barn down
it« found-itions Look at the
and th© porch root’ leaks so that no
ono can walk there in a rain-
“But, Polly, Polly, only think!
l can’t go away from here!” wailed
a. -j t *
the old , woman.
“You can’ stay hero, Mrs.
eron.”
“Polly, what aro you going
do?”
“I’ve boon thinking it all over,
hitolyi Mrs. Cameron,” “! said Pollv, reso-
todof can’t cot any teach, weaving
or any school to and
nobody Sfrs. ^UU. wants hired h-K But
sav, Eg there’s house P&nte d of
room in her m.
mind to take some ot the Py =
feotorr girls to board, and that’U share
the money with her. And
make a home for you.’
work.”’ “But Pollv ■’ it’ll be ff awful ' hard “
Polly shrugged her shoulders.
“Yes,” she said, “it will. But
Pve got to work hard.”
Once more the poor woman
burst into tears.
n P ° 5 y/ '* £aid Sh ®' <<lf ° nly
And theolu curiosity ’
la look snop man
coming to-dsy to at the fur-
nlture,” Mrs. persisted breakfast Polly. is “Come, ready.
Ge’srgo Cameron, red
Yulis an,, tno 071
wanon will be hero for you m aolt
“m™ rnrs. y Cameron ameron „te«lf-nk a.. o . n a iik. like
T*** ° nC0 ‘°L ^
£ eelf f SKfS- to make sure ^t. , she as 1 ?"
ually awake. Had things come
CAIiNESVILLE FRANKLIN COUNTY GA. WEDNESDAY DECEMBER LI 1892 . VOL XVII— NO. oO
to this?
An hour or two later Polly stood
on tho steps watching tho big red
wagon rumble a way with old Mrs.
Cameron on the buffalo-robed seat
beside the driver, and tho little
hair trunk in the back>
“Poor thing!” murmured Polly,
“If it wasn't for her I could man-
-g 0 knost anv 1 way. But she took
| n when was town-poor, and
gave mo a good homo and brought
mo up a3 jf J wore her own, and I
won’ leave her now—no, # not if
we both starve together!”
*- M iff- q 10 Cameron farm?”
IV A started violently,
“Yes/'sho said, recoveringiier-
self in an instant. “But I don’t
know who you are.”
She was looking at a tall, grace-
f u j woman in deep black, who liad
evidently alighted from a carriage
at the foot of tho maple-shaded
kuiG .
“That is not strange,” said the
newcomer with a smile. “But I
think 1 recognize you, Mary L 1 -
dall, even though. I never have
seen you before. Ilush! I am
Joseph’s “Little wife!” Joe’s wife?” gasped
Polly. “But where is ho? Why
has he never—”
Once more the stranger lifted
her slim forefinger with a gesture
of warning. dead?” Polly recoiled.
“Is lie she whispered.
“You said his wife — not his
widow!”
The lady sat down in one of tho
old claw-footed chairs, holding her
hand over her heart.
“I am his wife,” said she. “I
have been his widow for fifteen
long years. Next month he comes
out.”
“Out? From where?” whispered
Polly.”
8
' Wh “ t! gasped Polly, roraem- tho
b . the roseate castles
?™.S m
au ' t ha t , P oor ° ld Mrs - Cameron
h , “ d 1 }>"** . . , ar°™d „ the recollections
of “Little Joe, the only surviving
descendant of toe family tree,
ob - lt must b “ ve booa a fraud -
ft mistake!”
tta-s&'arjs? "•
“And nff” you?” Xly gasped Polly. the
“For wout on
1 P a ^ e om .n, I should ha\ e gone
I foro ^ ^ ia< - 110L and scl lived n, purpose to be- it,
mo—aye, myself up
* to °- I have given no time
to think. I had always I turned a kffack
with my fingers, so art-
; ist > and m > r pictures became the
ra ^°* 1 hoarded the money like a
1 it where it
grow l*e Jonahs gourd
People cahed They m. the^ ureamed Woman tha- in
Black. no\er
thofM^onabie a^t in.herkura.n-
ous studio was one and the same with
t,® ftrwMilatnr who haunted
11 thfteff in l oveTaf business last hours i
Well Dg- | ve:'rv
f.ill ^ nfatthrewkw cont iff of the
’ Pf *g‘ 1 enou^htoft hand
lute prison, mid i T nave have enougii lei!
to settle all the that debts Joseph on this has place al-
-the heritage
ways sighed for and creamed ol-
Se ^ \ e “tcPte
world whence he has been sc
° x . bat!i . sw;ub3 hig ho;ni
| ; „ u ttI 5 ^“i-nnw i.'fe ie to
w it
j I dared not tell him until mj plaas .
- < 7 ? - 7 a” heroine.”'said she.
^T a
« . how much 1
Fo-u lC “\‘ w von \ 0 ;{ fo'' LvWher nocrJo fi--
i « t * vp o
1
| “Them the was an old lady,” timidlv. ques-
tionel newcomer,
i 0 ri *'^ on - > jf 0 k Q e f j r . v jjff "k
, “* * eha *' should '
; ^
| not dead!” cried Pollv.
[ lam so thankful for that!’
Stlffk , stnmaer, “Sho will
' and future
I husband’s life. For tiia
present, that has no part in the
j programme. F^m to It back was here always w*hcn Joe’s
com© we
l* s h 0 nid be rich and make 0111
- ^ ‘ '
----- “
uome wliere tlie old grandmother
was. And while he was dead to
the world, I have carried it out.”
Polly started up the fire, which
was to have died away forever on
the old hearthstone. She drew
back the closed paper shades, to
let in the yellow, October sun¬
shine; she made a cup of tea, and
unpacked tho thin old silver spoons
from her bag.
Polly sent away the brisk, busi¬
ness-faced agent of the city curios¬
ity shop, and sent for Mrs. Cam-
eron.
“Little Joe! he’s coming home
again!” peacefully crooned the old woman,
the rocking back and forth
before roaring log fire. “And
Joe’s wife is here, and the old
place is all fitted up, even down to
tho new carpets on the floor and
curtains to the windows, I
knew that little Joe hadn’t forgot¬
ten lfi .3 grandma!”
“He’s here now!” she said.
“Joe—little Joe!”
In the bowed and prematurely
white-haired man who stood before
her sho saw only tho curly-haired
lad who had left her thirty years
ago, waving his hat from the top
if the stage.
Was she not ninety years old
*ihat very day?
“Fvo come back to you, graii’
gy,” ho said, faintly head smiling, as
he drooped liis to lay it on
her shoulder. .
And for those two the past and
future were alike blotted out.
There remained only tho present.
Joo’s faithful wife stood by, hoi
eyes “I—I welling over with tears.
never dreamed it would
bo like this,” said she, closely
grasping of Polly’s his mind hand. “That the
pages would be a
blank as to all those dreadful
years. But perhaps it is better
so.
“Yes,” said Polly’’, in a choked
voice, “it is better so!”—“Satur¬
day Night."
More births occur in February
than the month in any of other fewest month. births. July is
Stuffed Tomatoes
•ss.t ar«st«:
chopped with salt fine; and simmer and Stir season
pepper. into
the pan^ cracker dust enough to
absorb the moistuie; Siiuf^ tae
tomatoes with this mass, sprinkle
dry* crumbs oyer the top; add a
a small piece of butter and bake
until slightly brown on top.
-
Jokea on Women-
„ Your cousin is wedad to
chai “Qh, ^ y? no; is hQ she n o has t ?” only promised .
to be a sister to it.”—Harper’s
Bazar.
Little Girl—hat . . does 3 . your
mamma do since tho dog was
stolon?
Little Boy-Oh, site sort o’com-
forte herself with th’baby.—Street
Smith’s Good News. ’
&
And 60 mvhttlo wife cooked
tms all herselt ? What does she
ca lit?
eluded I’d better put sauce on it
and call it pudding.” ! — Life,
A? , to , P lc . tor summer discussion
at the Eastern real watering places stand- is,
“YTiat is the artistic
nnl of a perfect female chin ? One
n .<mden<jy to reposeisa ^ good
J ; 0 : S. tiie < < ^ 1 ® stlc clr "
c ^ e ’ St. Faul Pioneer Press.
Mrs. Plankington (sorrowfully)
-If my husband would only stop
biaymg poker I couid have a new
bopiiot lmoO lIT 3 .
Mrs. Witnerby — li he had stop-
I >ed Paying began with the my last husband be-
fore they had this.—Life. time, you
might have
The Newly Wedded—Of course,
I don’t come to the club anv more.
Mv Remakes home perfectly de-
hghtful Bachelor-VJhy, to me. I thought she
was out of town
The Newly Yedded—Yes, she
is.—Chicago News Record.
TALKING OF WRITERS.
La. S. VTeir Mitchell, the rhiladct
phia specialist and author, is said to be
one of the foremost living authorities
on the subject of snake poisons.
Anthony Taoixorn was one of the
prefanest cf authors, and he was accus¬
tomed, it is alleged, to swear frequently
when in good society, lie was also care¬
less of his clothes.
Ix is said that Senator Mills has al¬
most completed a work on the tariff
which is to be entitled: “Protection and
Plutocracy.” It will contain about one
hundred thousand words and be di¬
vided into ten chapters.
A prominent lady novelist asserts
that she receives many sad letters from
husbands who claim that their domes¬
tic happiness is being undermined be¬
cause their wives devote their attention
to study instead of to housework.
Tim £rst negro novelist has appeared,
Miss Sarah E. Farro, of Chicago, a wom¬
an of good education, aged about twen¬
ty-six. The melancholy story: “True
Love,” is not a book of especial prom¬
ise, but the first edition is nearly
exhausted and the author is writing
another story.
Mr. Baring Gould, the well-known
novelist, is fifty-nine years of age. lie
belongs to an old Devonshire family and
is rector of Lew-Trenehard. Strangely
enough he wrote something like thirty
or forty kooks on religious subjects and
folk-lore before he won celebrity as> o
novelist.
A PROGRESSIVE AGE.
A New York firm is manufacturing s
self-winding clock.
A Sacramento toboggan slide, just
invented, is an iron flume circling a
post.
A NAiLLnss horse-shoe, that is fast¬
ened to the hoof with a clasp, is coming
into use in Paris.
A Frenchman, M. Brandelay, has
succeeded in making pearls by simply
boring holes in pearl oysters, dropping
in minute glass beads, and then her¬
metically sealing the holes.
A plan to force coal by pipe line from
the mines to the seaboard has been pro-
PPSed. The coal will be ground to pow-
&V, mixed with water, sent through tho
pipes, the water then removed, the coal
dried and pressed into bricks.
A LXFEROAT of aluminium has recently
been built at Straleund. It will bo a
matter of considerable interest to see
how this boat will answer, when thor¬
oughly tested, for it seems more than
likely that its obvious good points will
be counterbalanced by various disad¬
vantages.
ECHOES OF TOIL.
Minneapolis made 7,877,347 barrels
of flour in 1891.
One-half of the paper used in the
United States is manufactured at Hol¬
yoke, Mass.
New Zealand exported in 1S01 but¬
ter to the value of $730,000 and ehceso
to the value of §435,000.
IN Nicara-gna there are 23,000 acres
planted to coffee, producing 14 , 000,000
pounds yearly, tho bulk of which is ex¬
ported to Europe.
In India there are 339,000 acres undcT
tea cultivation, only 11,000 acres oi
which are within the tropics, the re¬
mainder being in northern India. There
are 200,000 acres planted to tea in Cey¬
lon.
Cape Elizabeth i3 tkc greatest calx
bago garden of the state of Maine.
Since November 25,000 tons of the vege¬
table have been shipped from the town,
and the average price received by the
farmers was S3 a ton. And there are
lots of cabbages left.
C N ENGLISH SO,.
sp re ^ °f -io grip.
diles to act as river scavengers.
London existed long before the Bo-
mans visited the island. Its name is do-
rived from Llyn-Din, “The Town on the
Lake.”
It is a curious but certain fact that
last winters scourge Of influenza ir
England was almost connned to waU-to-
London:‘still trade-nnecond-hana stinger
tombstones in
is the custom- of selling family vaults
partly filled.
iiOWIE hOffllLIES.
-
Koimso takes the soreness from
bnhses cod sprains qaickly os m-
Always use round-pomted ...... se;ssors u.
lr . r ::, 7 ’ “ lls “J toe a ?ll
Green vegetables will return their
color u cooaed m an uncovered vessel.
L sn flnest old imen, if linen at ah.for
t " ° ^ " otMasr “
poisoning ^ — g
ty tickling the throat or by warm water
nndmustaxi
For use as a disinfectant mix carbolic
acid with boiling water. This prompt-
ly overcomes the usual antagonism be-
tween the acid and water and converts
thejn into a pennant solution which
_
JOLLY THOUGHTS.
——
^ elastic stovepipe coupling wen d
T^Van^y ^ ^ ^ vea iCEg
is thoroughly profes-
siortal. never singing a note without
first presenting who^mortguged a bilL—Elmira Gazette,
A XAX his house re-
marked to a friend that he-had
“put up” another building.-Washingw
to J st ' ar *
Samons 01 . the navy must . expect .
0 pi--tih- ^^
DA triage.”' Fatber , j have hod an
oiler of Parent (who has
had experience with the nobility)—
“How much does he want?”—"Washing-
ton Star.
THE FAMILY CHICLE.
To Make Home Out of a
Household.
Peace of Mind the Standpoint of Ilax *
piness—No Place for the “Soured
or Ill-Tempered Individual—8tndj
Energy and Good-Will.
Ways viewed, and means of living ara
standpoint to be largely, from the
of peace of mind—of
happiness. 'No one can afford to
live in an uncongenial atmosphere,
If he can buy peace of mind it is a
good investment. Not that either
mental or spiritual market-place, peace but are still foi
role in the
th y depend to of a environment, very good degree
on in itters and
peace of-mind is a working, capita’.
of life. It has no representation
on the value ledger, beyond but all tho same it
lias computation.
The energy, good-will, interest
in affairs, and faith in one’s sell
and one associates—all of these ar
the factors that put one in a work¬
ing mood, and to most of us mu
working moods able are our capita!.
Wo may be to ; >rd many
losses, but we < mot afford to lose
this. Wii ve hikes it from us
ores that which, like' tho tra¬
: non and il good mime, not enriches
aJ.L i, leaves us “poor indeed.”
Juo’s most priceless possessions
•.re bis energy and his faith.
What right has tho despondent,
or individual the ill-tempered, bring his or discordant “’soured”
to
.hi m>soli to into th it of harmony,
ad swoo Loess, a a. 1 energy? It is
i c o glng, the even a paralyzing, is in
v i. i man who a
onk mood should bo denied ap-
) reach to his follow-creature until
“ ■* r m in the level of human-
A O ugh, of COii i* ;e, thcr are
anting instances where one
j in trotible, a despondent need tho mood, oi
.! 5 sweet
A ■ ;• of cheerfulness and
Then tho best possible
j | “working all capital” cheerfulness may
l , -of the
id that has been
J pmionary work,
~ J r ana the more subtle
for all of us tho work of life
j-L Is ail that is encouraging
hopeful and of good repute: live
' ieh and all who aim to
5 ff uioyl 1 regard faith and
*gy and good will as the host
i-.I working capital.—Boston
A Wife’s Little Trick
n > you know how to take your
\ ’ i (; OS' when you are
OU Wi your husband
wife ha ving im bite the head
you ey ffv minutes as he
■u.ur -’S h: it is going to to o you
if night, or ail day, as the case
v be, to get ready? Hero is one
,.o wife's trick: long “Having it possi¬ stood
nis thing as said, “I as determined was
ble,” she something’ keep him to
give John to
emp'oyed while I dressed. So
every time ho asks me when I’ll
be 1 L -l ly, I answer with confidence,
(T-. *J Lilt t as soon as you.’ Thep I slip
oil a nd hide his hat, cane or missing gloves,
and while he hunts the
articles in silence, not daring to
ask me their whereabouts after liis
repeated insinuations on ‘woman's
eaiff ssness,’ I take my time in
dressing without fear of a lecture ’
To Keep Shoo Lasss Tied,
ihe greatest objection lo tht
laced shoes, which doctors say T arc
healthful and fashion says are “the
thing,” is that the strings one’s are ankles us-
ually flapping about
in an unkempt and uncomfortable
f as hi oa . This mav tving. be prevented Make
b cert ain way 7 of
a >oose bowkn with uppet
stnpg .brought over tlie under.
1 urn one bow away from you
bring it back pull through both the smartly, central
hole and bows
It is secure
--
An An AM. 4 M- D-fem- Betas..
Tho following escellent defense
was made to .an action by a law-
“There are three points in
the case, may it please Your
Honor,” said the defendant’s conn-
so! tend . that .. In the the kettle first place, cracked we con-
was
“at nt was lie. when wo ic
nl^rhldit” liauio.
Ink for Lovers-
An article is said to bo sold in
Paris which consists of an aqueous
solution of iodide of starch and is
“specially intended for love-let-
ters.” In four weeks characters
wr itten with it disappear, prevent-
' ing all abuse of letters and doing
aH documentary evi-
police of kind m the bancis o,
the recipient.
----
Flowers That Will Last
Chrysanthemums are the only
flowers that will continue
icg by*W a f t ^. they have been disturbed
brought into the
from the garden in tne fall.
this fact were better understood by
amateur horticulturists, so many;
beautiful chrysanthemums the would
not be left to ravages of frost.
After they have finished blossom-
HOUSE AND HOME,
Jlllito and Mattara of Interest for
tho Domestic Circle.
The ITect'e. f Assuming Husband's
.unss—C-ar Laughters— Handsome
P -d Cluap Wadhanglngs—Care ci
the Fae? and Teeth.
The practice of tho wife auburn-
lug tho husband’s name at mar-
ringc, according to Dr. Brewer,
on mated from a Roman custom
no became tho common custom
a tier the j Ionian occupation. Thus
Julia and Oc-tavia, iH urried to
Pompey by and Cicoro, wore called
tho Romans Julia cf Pompey,
Octavia cf Cicero, and in latter
times married women in most
European countries signed their
names in tho same manner but
omitted the “of.” Against this
\ iow may be mentioned that dur-
beginning ing tho sixteenth and even at the
of tho seventeenth con-
turv tho usage seems doubtful.
since wo find Catharine Parr so
signing twice herself after she had been
married, and wo always
hear of Lady Juno Grey (not
Dudley), (Ssvmour), Arabella Stuart (not
etc. Some persons
think that the custom originated
from tho scriptural teaching that
husband and wife are ono." This
is the rule of law so far back as
V> XT cton (died 1268 ), and it was de¬
cided in tho case of Bon vs. Smith,
in tho reign of Elizabeth, that a
woman former by and marriage legally loses her
name receives
the name of her husband. Alto¬
gether, the custom is involved in
much obscurity.
Lur!a;>9 for Wall Hanginga.
A mod aesthetic hanging for
creami-brown .valla is plain liuo. burlap of the usual
A wall thus
decorated locks as if hung with
silk pongee One seen finished
with with a gilt picture in moulding, and
a wide frieze wall-paper of
green and gold leaves, gave a
touch cf res t i niness to the room
that everybody remarked upon
entering. In the same aparment
was a curious portiere which will
bear description r d imitation. It
is made of untwisted rope, each
length forming dyed different three strands,
which are colors;
these are knotted into a border
made,of several and lengths of rope
untwisted sewed together with
different colored yarns. The effect
iff charming for bedroom doers and
is something like that of the
Chinese bamboo curtains. To re¬
turn to the walls—if a more ex¬
pensive curtains hanging laid is desired, large
over a high color of
paint, with a frieze of plaited
cheese cloth or silk the shade of
the tempered hue, above tho gilt
moulding, make scheme. a very hand¬
some decorative
Our Daughters.
The household ble 30 1 with
noble daughters ^ C ; ighfc to bo a
however, happy one; imbue most B ireats forget,
to t a v vitli lc JVC
of nature, which is so invigorating
and healthful. Give them not
only teachers, noble and teachings, give but noble
them the help
which alone has sometimes done
more than all other influences—
the help of wild -and fair nature.
You cannot baptize them rightly
in inch-deep church fonts un. ;~
you baptize thorn in tho swo-y.
waters which tho great Lawgivei
strikes forth from the rock of you?
native land. You cannot Lad
them faithfully to t ll KITOV
axe-hewn altars while the azure
altars in heaven'remain, for you.
without inscription; but by altars not
built not to, an unkaowr
God.—Buskin,
To Clean White Gam :iA
Many women who Hi i_ fond oi
wearing white cloth gar.a ns are
not awire that they can be vertf
;i„ dy e.c.med wit.i p ye c > rn- iuo
e. . .
officers la tho British .. keep
the white in their u-iifov.us spot
lessly clean by rnbbcd tin use of pipe
c i ay . This is iiiorough.,
fcl ; 0 tho fabric then U
dusted out until all stains n
spot3 t are removed. In some i
s mces it is nee.-, ary bal to w. ; it.
stains are very it mo.,- L.
made into a eorfof ^te, 1 -id ....
and lafiowodto beoo,, .0 Iniost ci
tw-.enitwm r. •» -ad hruna.Ou. .....
very readily. White shoes of un¬
dressed kid and are easily this, cleaned in
this way, indeed, i
almost the only method by 7
they can be made to look weii.
inLcate ^ Copeimancn Ciuna.
Copenhagen china is the loveli
est of all china, with it . rJercec
borders and clear white ground*
scattered with violets or other
y ers. Dainty foc„ in rnp? ac
hcious when served on suc-n dishes
Few people stop to think that tin
appearance of food is great!]
changed by serving it in old Can
dainty French china. A
delicate^sprmg or summer ^rvete soup 11
-frenen enrna, wnne tmci
or broths mav as well be ir
tne old Canton as any other ware
A saLd plucee bffore ono on 1
plate the decorated dish wun when cobalt oiuo 15
not same ap it cornel
on in French china with a touch
of dull gold or pale green cr buff
for decorations.
Tarnished Teotli.
Women whoso teeth arc t r-
nished about tho edges from tho
u bo of medicino or tho effectual
well working « of dentifrice would <
to remember that po WOO,
pumioe-ston® is a harmless en 1
cator of such evils. It is en
applied by winding .
a shred of ft:
linen about a small stick, a wooden
toothpick fine or a match whittled to a
thorough point, and but two or three
in order applications are no-" dis¬ --
aary to romevo any
coloration from tho tooth where
the enamel is not oaten away.
Bathing: tho Facs-
Ono should never bathe the face
in hard water anyway, if a f: i
complexion should is desired. Tho a
bo softoned with a i
borax or a few drops of smmote
When the face is very hot it should
not bo bathed; wait until it corns
off a little. In traveling wte.
one knows nothing about the w. . .r
it is better not to use it for bath:
the face. If necessary, addahi-
tie alcohol, and then rub with a
little va aline. In this way a fair
complexion retained that may will be be obtained pride to nnj
a any
lovely woman,
“Bulky” Tea, KcU
A popular little china tray with
sunken places that hold a covered
tea or coffea cup, a littla sugar
bowl and a creamer, are now sold
in the shops for the early cup* of
tea Tho or coffee, taken in one's room.
that tray it is projects large at one ei \ so
slice of bi’cad enough to hold a
and butter or of
Beautiful toast, or oven a rack for the t«
the sets, and English in china is sec .21
the country v.. woo
the fashion and tho china c ima
they are called “sulky sets.”
Scented Table-Linen.
Fastidious hoHsckoopers are Lo¬
ginning with to lino their table-'" .J
drawers sachet pads, wnicn
are scented with violet, lavonffv,
clover or wild rose powder, or v.: ; i
the natural flowers, sun-drie l at
home. The doylies, tray cl Js
and napkins thus catch a whiff of
wood and meadow fragrance, but
they must avoid any perfume
which is in the least degree heavy.
A mere soupcon of sweetness is
permissable, and it must bo of the
most delicate kind.
For bean and corn soup take on □
pint each of boiled corn and ci . . r
boiled or baked beans, rub thro ;a
a colander, add a siico of onion,
three cup 3 of boiling water or
milk, and boil for ton mi at
Turn through the colander a :
ond time to remove the onion ; I
any lumps or skins that may' „ -
main. Season with salt and a lull
cu p of hot or butter cream.
To keep cakes crisp shut them
up in a tin biscut box in a thy
closet. To make ginger nuts : l
other small cakes soft, as sc IQ
people liko them, a stone jar, un-
covered, is the proper receptee: x
rood Tim t BsautiSos-
Tlie green salad in any sfiane,
from the long, curling lettuce 1 .11
to the crisp little watere, is a
this, constant boautifier, and, m n
regularly and eaten, ifcquk ir
nerves give 3 you a pi ri¬
sleep. But and if you flood it , i
vinegar powder it with s
you dish have will simply made yourself a
that have no effect upon
you whatever, unless it s! toted h 3
break by the force of tho vinegar to
the enamel of your teeth.
Tlie right way for you to eat this
most have beautifying it of dishes is to
ing, upon a good French dress¬
that is, ono formed of popper,
salt, a small portion of vinegar and
a If large portion of good, olive oil.
you do not care for this, then
eat salad as did tho hermits of old,
dipping having a leaf in some sc It an L
with it a piece of ’r* • ■ 1
and butter. All fre-li ve
.
OS dally asparagus, f.
prove the stem
ACADEf Hi V S'* *:
iliili f *v* fj n j 1
-; - - i
86 LO Y D -
AlLtKiA.
TLi ■ &i 'ill!
under the diree n 01 t
of our Lady of Mercy,
you a £ } ;> d ie 3 x:! ‘b 1 ■' -
a thorough Lag sn tnir
TERMS PER SESSION,
board, tuition snfl v.-sahiiq .
Mfisio, drawing and ph -
extrs. Stadie-; charges.
v* ail Le rosumed
in September.
For fut'li.c • •af-.rm i
JO 6 .
f% % m 1 ■ *»
l- In
TuCCUv, 5
D. E. C LEVEL * '
^
XJSri t.