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Champion Butter Cow.
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* A USEFUL AND DISTINGUISHED CITIZEN OF MASSACHUSETTS.
Since 1904 she has been the champion butter‘cow of the weozld. Last
January she gave 2954 Ibs. of milk in 30 days, Once, in 7 days, she pro
duced 34.32 Ibs. of butter. —From Collier's Weelkly.
Life-Preserving Chair.
One of the principal causes of great
loss of life in accidents or disasters
occurring on the water by reason of
the collisions of vessels or from simi
lar &ircumstances results from the
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fact that the life-preservers provided§
for the use of the passengers are us
ually placed in some inaccessible po
sition where they cannot be obtained
quickly by the excited persons. This
is especially true on the usually
crowded excursion steamers that ply
between coast resorts. Instances are
known where many lives would have
undoubtedly been saved if each pas
senger had had at hand a life-preserv
er at the time of the accident. It is
manifestly inconvenient for each pas
senhger to carry a life-preserver. Real
izing the above conditions, a New
York man has designed and patented
a combined steamer chair and life
preserver, shown here. The steamer
chair is in all practical respects simi
lar to the ordinary camp stool, but it
is constructed to serve as a life-pre
server as well. The party using the
chair will have always at hand a
buoyant support in the event that it
is necessary to thrust himself in the
water. The chair is light and can be
folded and readily carried frqm place
to place, while as a life-preserver it
is always at hand for use whenever
the emergency requires.—Washing
ton Star.
Boiling It Down.
The Atheneum says of the follow
ing Howells paragraph that it is the
best English sentence, perhaps, in
any recent English book. Describing
a certain ancient edifice Mr. Howells
writes and the Atheneum quotes:
‘“What, in.the heart of all this
blossoming, was the great Cathedral
itself, when we came in sight of it,‘
but a vast efflorescence of the age of
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The Coquette—“ Really, Mr. Bagg, I was so dreadfully bored that I
- - » 2t: ”
simply had to yawn; but, of course, 1 hid my mouth with my hand. :
Mr. Bagg—“No! You don’t mean to say that such a dear, sweet, tiny
i 1 or ——— i e y
little hand could hide such a—er—such a great—that is, of course—lovely
iy e W
weather, isn’t it?"—=Sketch.
faith, mysticaily beautifully in form,
and gray as some pale etxhalation
from the mould of the ever-cloistered,
the deeply re-forested past!”
Very fine, all must admit. But
wouldn’t that paragraph have been
meat and drink to the man who used
to mark up Mr. Howells' newspaper
copy back in Bucyrus, Ohio! If How
ells the reporter had written theot fer
the Bucyrus Blade he would have
found it in the paper the next day
about like this:*
“The cathedral, with flowers all
around it, looks fine. It is four hun
dred years old and needs paint.”’—
Galveston News.
Novel Garment Holder.
A New York inventor thinks it
would be advisable for every man to
carry a coat and hat hook in his
pocket. If thus equipped he need
never worry whether or not he will
find all the available hooks in the res
taurant occupied when he goes to
dine. This novel folding pocket coat
and hat hook is shown in the accom
panying illustration. When not in
use it can be quickly folded up and
carried in the pocket, without incon
venience to the owner. When emér
‘gency demands it can be as readily
brought into commission and attached
‘to the molding or wall or any other
)
convenient object close to the owner.
In addition, being a private hook,
the owner is saved the nuisance of
having half a dozen other patrons of
the establishment piling their hats
and coats on top of his.—Washington
Star.
Electric haulage has supplanted
animal power in the Comstock lode
and twelve of the mules which were
brought to the surface had not seen
daylight for twenty years.
wi.
What is a presentiment im distinction from similar modes of
perception ? Are nresentiments of frequent occurrence, and
are there some authentic cases of fulfilled presentiments?
Why are there no presentiments of good as well as
of evil? Is it possible, with any known principle
of the human mindy to offer any satisfactory
explanation of thiqii!iysteriuus phenomenon?
From the New York Tribune
A presentiment (from the, K Latin}
praesentire, feel or perceive hefipm‘
hand) in the broadest sense ig a di- |
rect, though vague, perception of a
future event or a feeling which seems
to be such a perception. Spectfically,
it is an antecedent impression or con
viction, produced instinctively -and
without any known cause, of some
thing about to happen. Though pre
sentiments of good are common and
often fulfilled, as their results are
not tragical they are seldom remem
bered or confounded with hope, and
for this reason the word presenti
ment is confined almost exclusively
to the anticipation of impending evil,
and is practically the equivalent of
foreboding. Dreams often afford
similar materials for erroneous reas
onings, but as they originate in the
mind, they are sometimes so si:%:&gr
to presentiments that it is impossible
to decide whether a presentiment
caused the dream or the dream the
presentiment. Lk
Novelists, poets, and even histori
ans, have so often told us of present
iments, have so often attributed them
to their real or fictitious personages,
that we have come to regard this sert
of obscure vision of the future as a
common and natural phenomenon.
The historian tells us of Captain So
and-So, who, overwhelmed on the eve
of battle with the fatal -presentm@ggt
that he should, not survive the com
bat, actually met his death; the nov
elist attributes to his heroine the pre
sentiment of a catastrophe impend
ing over her soldier lover, whichirha.'-
pens in realization of her gmg_;g)y
forebodings, and they speak of these
things as constantly recurring, well
established facts of which there are
numerous examples that could not
well be disputed. Even animals are
said to be gifted with a presentl;%@t
of danger. Thus, according to Buf
fon, birds of passage have been ob
served to stay away from their. nests
at the approach of an earthquake;
according to Raynal, dogs by contin
ual long howling. manifested thelr
presentiment of an approaching:
earthquake, and it is a generally pre
vailing belief that rats will, a few
days hefore the occurrence, leave a
house that is about to fall down or a
ship that is about to sink. &
But, while in animals this phe
nomenon admits of an explanatio:
by the assumption of instinet, which
seems to be given them by nat,m"gi,_ or
their preservation, this convenient
apology for our ignorance fi_:a_; rt be
Badety ey -. ~man, becd \dnde
"*fifl"”gx""é’é’s”b“n, ‘3’3‘36*@"o nstinet,’ for'
his guide. Yet it has been contend
ed, and by persons of no mean under
standing, that fatal presentimentsare
conveyed to the mind by means, if
not supernatural, at all events mys
terious and wonderful, and numerous
ezamples, as we shall presently see,
have been adduced in proof of the
certainty of the warning, as well as
of its mysterious occurrence.
Plutarch, in his tragic account of
Julius Caesar’s assassination, men
tions the foreboding dream of Cae
sar’'s wife, Calpurnia, in the night
preceding the fatal event. In her
dream she first saw blood flowing
from her husband's statue, and then
she dreamed °"that the roof of her
house was falling down and that Cae
sar, his body all covered with blood,
expired in her arms. Terrified by
these dreams she related them to
Caesar, imploring him not to go out
on that day. Caesar, however,
laughed at her fears, went to the Sen
ate, and was stabbed to death by his
assassins, It is related that not only
did Henry IV himself have a present
iment of his death, but also Maria de
Medicis was forewarned in a dream
of the danger threatening the king.
One night she started from her sleep
with a shriek and her eyes bathed in
tears.~ Asked by Henry IV for the
cause ol her terror, she replied, “I
dreamed you were murdered!” ' To
remove her fears the king said smil
ing: ‘“‘Fortunately, dreams, accord
ing to the saying, are but fumes of
the stomach.” A few days later the
dagger of a fanatic robbed France of
the best of her kings, It must, how
ever, be added that to-day the queen
is much suspected of having plotted
with d’Epernon the king's assassina
tion, or at least of having had some
knowledge of the plot; her vague
terror, therefore, only expressed her
own part in the matter, Mozart’s
premonition of his death is even
more wonderful. A stranger having
called on him to order a requiem, he
at once felt the presentiment that
this requiem was destined to serve
for his own funeral, contracted an
incurable disease and died immedi
ately after composing it. President
Lincoln, as is well known, had a pre
sentiment of impending death, As
numerous, mostly amplified, versions
exist of this incident, we give it here
as published by Gideon Welles in an
article printed in The Galaxy for
April, 1872: “In the last cabinet:|
meeting in the Executive Mansion of |
Friday, April 14, which was also at- |
tended by Mr. Welles, General Grant |
expressed his anxiety as to the news!
from Sherman. The President re-]
marked that the news would come !
soon and come favorably, he had no!
doubt, for he had last night his usual
dream which had preceded nearly ev
ery event of the war. Welles in-i
quired the particulars of this remavk- :
able dream. The President said it
was in Welles' department—it relat
ed to water; that he seemed to be in
a sipgular and indescribable vessel,
but always the same, and that he was
moving with great rapidity toward a
dark and indefinite shore; that he
had had this singular dream preced
ing the firing on Sumter, the battles
of Bull Run, Antietam, Gettysburg,
Stone River, Vicksburg, etc. General
Grant answered with some emphasis
and asperity that Stone River was no
victory—that a few such victories
would have ruined the country, and
he knew of no important results
from it. The President said that per
haps he should not altogether agree
with him, but whatever might be the
facts his singular dream preceded
that fight. Victory did not always
follow the dream, but the event and
results were very important. Great
events did indeed follow, Within a
few hours the man who narrated his
dream was assassinated, and the
‘murder which closed forever his
earthly career affected for years, and,
perhaps forever, the welfare of the
i’ country.
. In this example it is not difficult
to account for the modus operandi of
the presentiment. From the very be
ginning of his Presidency Mr. Lin
coln had been constantly subjected
to the threats of his enemies and the
lwarnings of his friends. The threats
came in every form; his mail was in
fested with brutal and vulgar men
"aces, most anonymous. The warn
ings were not less numerous. He
knew, indeed, tiat incitements to
murder him were not uncommon.
What wonder, then, that his dreams
should be haunted by gloomy pic
tures, generally interpreted as fore
bodings of death.
There are also presentiments of
good, but we hear less of them, be
cause, as a rule; they are disappoint
ed. The reader will find no difficulty
to charge the memory with abundant
‘proofs of the prevalence but also the
unreliability of such presentiments.
| Who has not some time in hig life
felt, without any -apparent cause,
arise in his heart a hope bordering
on conviction of getting rich by one
‘of those sudden fortunes that aston
ish the world, or of obtaining the po
sition craved for, or having his salary
raised by his employer, or similar
foolish hopes, to be doomed to disap
pointment? To give only one histor
ical example of a good though unful
filled presentiment: The great Tu
enne exclaimed: “I do not mean to
be killed to-day,” but a few moments
‘afterward he was struck down by a
cannon ball.
~ Supposing, then the occurrence of
presentiments be firmly established
and the cases as adduced by the au
thors proven beyond doubt, we can
still discount by a good deal the part
played by divination and the super
‘natural in the phemomenon. Thus,
‘with regard to the extraordinary
‘tales told of presentiments on the eve
‘of battle, it is not wonderful at all
that soldiers and sailors, proverbially
superstitious, should sometimes in
moments of depression conclude that
they would die in the next battle,
and that wunder the given circum
stances their presentiment should
sometimes also happen to come true.
Nor does the explanation of numer
ous other fatal presentiments require
the intervention of some so far un
discovered mysterious power and fac
ulty: of the mind. The human mind
is a strange machine, and when ex
cited by intense anxiety and wound
up to its highest pitch by despair or
fear it is no hard matter to conjure
up those ‘signs and tokens” which
are now considered as syre and fatal
prognostications of the worst human
calamities. In such a state the or
dering of a _requiem by a stranger
may easily become to a Mozart an
omen of sufficient magnitude to cause
his dissolution, And as evil over
takes the majority of mankind, such
general forebodings are pretty cer
tain of fulfilment., And it may also
bg urged that a person thus fatally
possessed may bhecome so careless of
exifence as thereby to insure his de
struction,
However this be, the divination ofg
future events, in one's own or anoth
er's life, that makes some presenti
ments so remarkable is ultimately
nothing but the result of instinctive
reagsoning applied to probable events,
a dedluctlon drawn from known facts,
from™ the motives to be feared or
hoped for. Some temperaments, es- ‘
pecially among women, are capable ‘
of discerning the slightest indications
that would pass unnoticed by others.
Thus, in a great number of cases the
presentiment is but a foresight based
upon a nice intuition of the circum
stances; what is taken for an internal
volce is but a well done calculation.
The other cases must be ranged
among the superstitions, The great
est calamities which have befallen
mogt persons have come without any
warning whatever, etcept such as
could be inferred from existing situa
tions, All mankind has had to rely '
upon experience, foresight and guid
ance by ordinary sagacity. The oc
casional fulfilment of dreams, pre
monitions, visions and so-calied inner
volces are at best coincidences, and
the only inner voice which, when foi
lowed, will aiways lead us right ig—-
the voice of reason,
B IR OO 2
New York City.—Every style of
blouse that gives the continuous linel
over the shoulders is in vogue and a
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great many charming effects are the
result. This one, designed for young
girls, is exceedingly attractive and be
coming, while the result is obtained
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by very simple ‘means, as the trim
ming portion, whicn g? ses the contin
uous line, is cut all in one and ar
ranged over the blouse after it is
made. In this instance sheer white
batiste is combined with embroidery.
The blouse is made with the tucked
fronts and backs, which are joined to
the yoke portions, and is trimmed be
tween the groups of tucks. The
sleeves are inserted in the armholes,
after which the garniture is arranged
over the whole. The lower edge is
joined to a belt, and in this instance
the belt ig of lace insertion.
The quantity of material required
for the sixteen-year gize is three and
one-eighth yards twenty-four, two
yards thirty-two or one and one-half
yvards forty-four inches wide, with one
and one-half yards eighteen inches
wide for the garniture, eight and one
half yards of banding.
The New Shoe,
The tip is more pointed,
The vamp is shorter,
The wing tip is übiquitous.
The Cuban heel is seen most fre
quently.
Tan is the most popular for young
people.
Gun metal is the selection of older
ones,
Ooze is the newest leather,
As its name suggests, it is porous
looking.
Dull gray suede holds its own,
The Slender Figure,
Some one has discovered that the
slender figure of fashion swathed
with clothes that outline it does not
harmonize perfectly with the rosy
cheek; that the woman without hips
must have a pale face in order to be
fashionable.
Coat Front Finishing,
The front of the coat is finished
with a rose-shaped chou of velvet of a
darker red than tle costume,
Meteor Silk.
Meteor silk makes some of the
prettiest robes for evening wear.
The fabric is soft, clinging and the
colorix_lg is wonderful. .
Parasol in New Design.
One of the newest parasols to finish
a charming summer costume is of
white china silk embroidered all
around the edge with sprays of thistle
done in lightest mauve and rpalest
greens. i
. Dressing Jacket,
Such a pretty little dressing jacket
as this one cannot fail to find its wel
come. It is dainty and attractive, it
is absolutely simple and it is peculiar
ly well adapted to the incoming sea
son. In the illustration it is made of
white batiste trimmed with embroid
ery, but it would be charming if the
material chosen were flowered lawn,
cross-barred dimity or anything sim
ilar, and if something a little hand
somer is wanted, Japanese silks will
be found desirable.
The jacket i 3 made with the fronts,
the back and the centre-front. The
sleeves are cut in one with the front
and back portions and are joined over
the shoulders. The centre-front is
tucked and the back is laid in a box
pleat at the centre. The closing is
made invisibly at the left of the front.
The quantity of material required
for the medium size 13 three and
three-fourth yards twenty-one or
jtwenty-tour, two and one-fourth yards
}thlrty-two or one and one-half yards
| RGN
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forty-four inches wide, with seven #and
one-eighth yards of banding, three
and one-eighth yards of edging.
Hatpin Trimmings Are New.
Hatpin trimmings figure promi
nently among the modish eccentrici
ties of French women. The fad has
grown to such an extent that the hat
pin outfit is a real necessity to the
wardrobe. This consists of cardboarl
boxes in which repose rows of hatpins
as stolid as dead soldiers.
Linen Hats, :
Linen hats will be worn as much ag
ever this summer.