The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, July 29, 1903, Image 7
pppp "
MI EOBBfflfam
Cashier of State Bank of Cornwall
N. Y., a Defaulter.
JOSEPH W. CUMMINS CONFESSES
Arrested and in Jail?I>o\rnfall Attributed
to Speculation in Wall Street? Hank to
Be Closed, and Probably Will Not Be
f Kcopened?.Wrecker Mood High in the
Community.
^ Newbury, N. Y.?Je?pph W. Cummins,
cashier of the State Baisk of
Cornwall, sis miles from here, is iu the
aounty jail, charged with being a defaulter
to the extent of nearly $r?0,0<K>.
The State Bank Examiner discovered
the defalcation, and the cashier was a:
once put under arrest, he having, it is
understood, admitted his guilt.
The bank was capitalized at i?2.V?00,
and had about $00,000 in deposit?. It
will be closed and : robably permanently.
Its largest depositor has been
the Firth Carpet Company, of Firthcliff,
in the town of Cornwall, which
concern drew out $4000 recently. The
bank did a small business, and unless
its officers make good it will go hard
p with a number of small business men
in Cornwall.
The cause 6f Cummins' downfall is
attributed to Wall Street, where, it is
alleged, he had recently been taking
"flyers'' on different kinds of stock
and gradually getting deeper and deep
<*r until the end came. Ho was practically
the only one in the little hank
that had any previous banking experience.
He came to the institution
with the very best of recommendations.
and had heretofore liver] an ex-gl^^mplary
life. He is a son of the Suthe
Long Island Rai!children,
Tm^^HHHHUI^^^BMk'nwall in
good style.
Cummins is about hvcnt^ine years
old, and besides being a church inom ber
"was President of the Cornwall
Board of Trade and President of the
village Board of Education, lie 'was
, bonded for $7000, and it is understood
that he has turned over to the bank
all his real estate and personal property.
which with the bond is expected
to reimburse the bank to the extent of
between $15,000 and $20,000."
. It is said that a recent loss of $.3500
in Wall Street speculation made a
shortage that he could not well cover
up, and that is the direct cause of the
A&fWnmini' known
SHOT ON DOCTOR'S TABLE.
Fathor-in-LATC Killed Melvin Wolfe While
Latter Was Awaiting an Operation.
BlufTton. led..? John Terrell, a
wealthv farmer, living near Petroleum,
nine miles from here, killed his
son-in-law. Mflvin Wolfe, firing both
barrels of a shotgun into bis bead as
^^bemaii was lying on a doctor's operjgSHgftjfltouhle
to have a leg amputated.
from Mr.
time before.
Young Wolfe married Mr. Terrell's
daughter four years ago and deserted
the girl, it is said, leaving her with a
ehild. A suit was brought to compel
him to support Jiis wife.
It is ass^M^ tliat be had twice
driven by theTerrell home, shouting
insulting remarks and shaking bis list
at Mr. Terrell. The third titue ht*
t drove by Mr. Terrell jumped from
some bushes alone the roadside and
fired at his son-in-law, shattering Lis
right leg.
Wolfe was hurried to the office of
Dr. Saunders, in Petroleum, and
placed on an operatine table. While
a crowd stood around watching tbe
doctor Sir. Terrell drove up in a buggy,
^ broke in the doors of the doctor's ]
office, drove out the crowd at the point
of his gun and. with the remark, "I
am afler him and I am going to get
him.'' fired both barrels into his sonin-law's
head.
The farmer then got into hit; liTJCgjr.
loaded his shotgun, pointed it at the
mob that had hastily formed and
drove to the residence of Vae Sheriff,
who locked him up.
GIRL PREVENTS LYNCHINC.
(Sheriff** l)Anghter Drives Crowd I"rein
Jail at Point of KJtie.
jjoiumoia, y..?ueroeri sancicrs
and Seaborn Mooro quarrelled at u
dance near Barnwell. Sander? was
fatally shot. Mooro rode to Barnwell,
surrendered to Sheriff Creech and was
r locked in jail.
Sheriff Creech was out of town.
There was no one at Lome but his
daughter Mary, nineteen years old. and
he left the keys of the jail, which is
next to his residence, in the young
woman's charge. About midnight
twelve or fifteen masked men rode
into tho Sheriff's yard and demanded
the keys and the prisoner. Seeming to
consent, the r irl hastened to her latht*
er's room, returning a moment later
with a rifle, which she levelled at the
crowd. The men fled.
TEXAS OFFERS $50,COO REWARD.
k Will Give That Snm to Any One Who
Will Destroy Cotton Boll Weevil.
Dallas, Terns. ? Governor Lanbnm
issued a proclamation offering :t reward
of $50,000 "to any person or persons
who shall discover and furnish a
practical remedy for the destruction
of the cotton boll weevil in Texas."
The issuance of the proclamation
does not indicate that the boil weevil
1b doing serious harm to the cotton
crop, it was made necessary l>y law.
The fact is. there is comparatively
small harm from bell weevil in evidence
this year.
^ Poison. Candy KUIs Girl; Lavryer .Arrested
Miss Ida Weens, a society girl and
i daughter of one of the most prominent
? families in Georgia, is dead at her
home at Reidsville, in Tatnall County,
and her discarded lover, Roach Barnard,
a lawyer, is under arrest charged
with having caused her death by firing
her poisoned candy.
riootls Unprecedented.
Tlin-r> iinnpfcdlmtpil flnn<'c .in
tbe Colorado River. Thousands of
acres of land are under water, and the
property loss is heavy.
, Four Killed by a Train.
. A train about eight miles out of Cin^
cinnati, Ohio, at a crossing, ran into u
w barouche in which were nine persons,
t- and four of them were instantly killed,
I three probably fatally and two severely
injured. The killed were Robert
I Copenhagen, his four-year-old son, a
I - girl, name unknown, and William
L Poole.
I Poisoned Candy Kills Thiiiy-gix Children
A dispatch I'rom Cracow. Russian
FT* Poland, says tiiirty-six children there
have died after eating poisoned candies.
Three men have been arrested
as the Demetrators of the crime
H
*
FREEDOM FORT.G. BARKER
!
Husband Who Shot the Rev. John
Keller is Paroled.
Mr*>. Ilarkfr Accused tlie Clergyman of
Assaulting Her, and ISarkcr Waylaid
and AVoundfd Him.
Trenton. X. J.?Thomas G. Barker,
who was sentenced to live years in j
State Prison for shooting the Ilev. John i
Keller, of Arlington., was paroled by !
the Board of Pardons at a session held j
in Jersey City. He was convicted in |
Hudson County in June. 1901. after a j
sensational Tnai. u. nu-o sum, uui uu>
admitted as testimony, that Barker
Mil lieen prompted to shout the Rev.
Mr. Keller because tlie latter assaulted
Mrs. Barker.
The conviction was followed hy au
appeal to the Court of Errors, which
sustained the judgment of tlie trial
court and set aside the contention of
Barker's counsel that he was insane
During his incarceration Barker has
held the position of chief mechanic.
He was allowed, practically, the freedom
of the prison, going about the institution
almost at will.
The pardon was the result of a general
effort to save Barker, who had
the sympathy of many persons in the
northern part of the State.
The board refused to pardon Lizzie
Garrabrandr. the Paterson murderess,
who is serving a life sentence for killing
her paramour when she was a girl
of seventeen.
A parole was granted to the Rev.
Clarence Young, of Newark, who was
convicted of bigamy in Jaauary, 1901,
and sentenced to tive years. About a
year ago he attempted suicide by eating
glass.
Thomas G. Earker shot the Rev.
John Keller early on the morning of
Sunday. February S, 1901, in Arlington,
N. J. Barker was one of the town's
most respected citizens, and Keller was
vicar of Trinity Protestant Episcopal
Church in the same place and Secretary
of the Diocese of Newark.
The prominence oi' the two men. but
more particularly the reason given by
Barker and his friends for the murderous
attack cn the clergyman, made the
affair one of the most sensational and
widely discussed crimes in recent
years.
STORM DID 5500,000 DAMAGE.
Upper Stories of a Block of House e Carried
Away in Baltimore.
Baltimore, vld.?Two storms met in
Baltimore and broke over the northeastern
part of the city. For more
than an hour the rain came down in
sheets accompanied by a cyclonic wind
that carried off roofs, uprooted trees
and did other damage estimated in
round figures at $500,000. It was probably
the most destructive storm that
ever visited Baltimore. All of the damage
was confined within an area of
about two miles, the ihippiug in the
harbor being undisturbed.
In the region affected it was as black
as midnight before the storm broke,
and many of the residents were so
frightened that they took refuge in the
cellars, from which they were driven
soon afterward by the water forcing its
way underground. All the time the
air was filled with electricity, and terrific
peals of thunder ftllowed each
flash. Broadway and Eager street was
the storm centre. An entire block of
houses was denuded of its upper
stories. Brick walls with the roofs attached
were lifted out into the streets,
while in the immediate neighborhood
scores of buildings were unroofed.
OUR RIFLEMEN WIN.
American Team Regains llio Palma Trophy
at Kioley.
Bisiey. England.?The American rifle
team, competing against teams representative
of Great Britain. Canada,
Natal. Norway, France and Australia,
won the international match for the
Palmy trophy. The Americans' aggregate
score, out of a possible 1800 over
the 800, 900 and 1(KI0 yard ranges, was
1570. That of the British team, which
finished second, was 1555.
Th.-i Pnlm.q trnnhv i<5 pinh]prr>ntin of
the long range rifle shooting championship
of the world. It was tirst offered
in this country in 1S7"?. when an American
team won it in competition against
teams from Ireland. Scotland, Canada
and Australia. The trophy remained in
America till 15)03, when a Canadian
team won it, scoring 1522 points,
against 1491 scored by its American defenders.
Last year a selected team of
Americans contested for the trophy on
the Rockliffe Rifle Range. Ottawa. Canada.
The contest resulted: British
team. 1459; American team, 1447; Canadian
team, 1373.
BAN ON WORTHLESS NEGROES.
Leading Members of the Race In Indian*
apolifi Make War ou the SliiftleRB.
Indianapolis. Ind.?Leading members
of the nt^ro population of this city,
led by Our ley Brewer, editor of the
World, the organ of the colored people.
new a meeting: nuu discussed me necessity
for discouraging "worthless negroes
from coming to this city, owing
to the spirit -which has been manifested
by the organization of whites known as
the "Bungaloos."' It was the sense of
the meeting that a race war is inevitable,
unless something is clone to rid
the city of the worthless negroes.
The meeting decided to assist the police
in every way possible, and declared
that it is to the interest of the respectable
negroes to rid the city of the evil
element. Committees were appointed
to investigate and all negroes not having
some visible means of making a
living will be reported to the police,
with the recommendation that tlicy be
ordered to leave the city.
Girl, AVhippotl, Itllls Herself.
Miss Arabella Edens, sixteen years
old. living near Sissonville. W. Ya.. hi:
uiiiiiui u vmii a _ v ? \:i r:
Lor by Iier father. Philip Edetis, a hi;;btemnered
old soldier, put c. shotgun to
her mouth and by a slriu.*r attached to
the trigger and to her foot caused the
jruu's discharge, tearing .the top of he:head
off.
Roceivnl ?90,000 From America.
The Kisliineff Relief Committee has
received from America aud
$181,SoO from liussia.
Prominent People.
Secretary Shaw received the decrees
o? Doctor of Laws at Wesleyau University.
When the will of Paul 15. Du Chailiu,
A flMfto r* nvnl/)i*nn T?*on tlir* iiiftil*.
esting fact was revealed that it was a
disappointment in love that led the
wealthy and brilliant writer to turn
explorer.
As foreign representative of the St.
Louis Fair. .John Barrett, the newly
appointed Minister to Argentina, Liue
traveled 4o,000 miles in the past year.
He ha.s interviewed firteea kings and
emDerors. -
POLICE FIRE ON RIOTERS
A Fatal Clash in Chicaro Over the
| Teamst rs' Strike
fhroe C'liarj;:? llio I'olicr Ct twoill"
WagoitH Fri i?;t:i t.? :t
:ii:d Many Ar?- StracJ: Willi Clul?i?.
Chicago. ? lV.Jice lived cr. n r.:nb,
many persons r.cvi bun t.y rtyiug
bricks and sc., nil arrests wore madu
In the most spirited labor rici of the .
stock yards teamsters' strike. Shol'liy j
before ' > o'clock one r>f ;Lo Kolio51; t
Switchboard Company's wagon.; hove
in sight arounil the corner of West
Congress ancl Peoria streets. The
wagon was escorted by a single patrol
wagon, and when it encountered ibe
blockade which bad been arranged on
the corner two special policemen of
tii? emunanv disnlavtd revolver?. l|
The crowd began to hoot and jrer.
and some one throw a lirick. narrowly
missing a city uniformed policeman.
The policeman cave chase to the man
who shied the brick, but soon realized
that it was merely a ruse to decoy him
away from the plant and bring him under
the walls of a building near by iu
course of construction.
As soon as ihe fugitive reach fd the
shadow of the walls the laborers began
throwing bricks from the tiftli story of
the building to prevent the capture of
their ally. Meantime Lieutenant
O'Connor saw the predicament of his
policeman and hurried to his assistance
with several men. The workmen in
the building were defiant. and the police
were obliged to tiro about thirty
shots before the attack ceased. *
More shooting occurred when Ihe J
loaded wacon was started for the | ;
freight. sheds. Sergeant Madden and
ten policemen gave eha?e after a symt
Inzer who had thrown it Uriel; at the
police per2:0am, who was driving a
wagon the driver of which had been arrested
early on the trip. At the corner
of Cypress street and Orden avenue the
fugitive tripped and fell, but finally
succeeded 111 makins his escape. The
last volley dispersed the crowd. Fourteen
arrests-were made during the riot.
War 011 Mot) Ficlitcn?.
Indianapolis. ? Indignation was expressed
at a meeting of the last Business
Men's Association over the discharge
of five member of the militia
company by firms employing them because
of the killing and- wounding of
ihf rioters who attempted to storm the
jail in Evansville. Ever since the dispersion
of the mob members of the
labor unions have been bringing prrssnr/i
tn liuiiv v.nnn tlin 1 inninvpi's nf thf?
militiamen, and as a result live of the u
men were discharged. [
E
lodge Scores Riotcre. |
Middloboro. Mass. ? In sentencing ^
eight persons to the House of Correc- i
lion for participating- in tlie recent
riots, in ivbicli several persons were
hurt, Judge Kelly stated that the pn- :
lice would lmve been justified in 3
sprinkling the town house sieps with f
bodies. All those sentenced were ad- i
niitted to $500 bonds. ;
JAMES C. BLAINE'S WiDCW DIES. ]
Passep Away in Old Family Homestead i:i
Maine After Short IUntPR.
Augusta, Me.?Mrs. James G. Blaine
died at the Blaine homestead hero a
few days ago.
Mrs. Blaine was seventy-six years
old. From Washington. sitorr time
orin cl?? r.nr:a tn f|i?? rrltl 1';n;?ilv rCSl
ilecoo cu State street. Sh-> ut.s in an
enfeebled condition, and she Iind biiou
under almost constant medical attention
since that time. Her death wan
due to a general breakdown of the system.
Mrs. Blaine was a native of Augusta,
her maiden name being Harriet Stan-,
wood. Her long life here during Mr.
Blaine's public career made her one of
the most prominent women oi the city.
Sho leaves one sen. .Tamos <1. Blainn,
and two daughters?Mrs. Harriet Beale
and Mrs. Walter Damroscb. of New
York?who were at her bedside during
her last illness.
CUDCEL AND CAT ABOLISHED.
Czar Said to Have Put an F.ntl to Barbarous
Punishment*.
St. Petersburg, Russia. ? The Czar
has abolished the harshest remnants
of the barbaric punishments of former
times?namely, castigation with cudgels
and cat-o'-nine-tails, also chaining !
to the car and shaviug the head, which 1
were still indicted for certain offenses
on persons exiled to penal settlements
or to the mines. They say only the
most hardened prison administrators
could stand the terrible sight of the
death of human beings under the meas,- p
ured blows of the cat-o'-nine-tails.
The cudgel and the "cat'' are re- J
placed in the new statute by prolonga- I
1w . ./.'ifcrt' ..ATWInfltnfllH ?
liwii \ji ivui: i>i cr > i.vwiuviu\ui, j
up to 100 days, with bread and "water.
except every third day. when hot food ^
will be served at cue meal.
COTTON MILLS TO CLOSE. *
tTill Bay No Stork at the Price* Dictated 5
by Bull Clique.
Boston.?It was announced here that f
an agreement had been made anions t
New England cotton mill treasurers to (
curtail flic production of their mills .
sufficiently to enable them to get along
without buying any cotton until early '
In October, or until ihey can buy iude- '
puidently of those in control of the .'i
July, August and September options. <
No papers have been signed, but the 1
understanding Is definite and the mills a
will shut down for a time in August. ,
President Roosevelt Indorsed.
The Kentucky Ilcnu'ilican State Con* j
vent ion indorsed I 'resident Roosevelt '
tor nomination in KKM. >
. s
Tobacco Trrpi Throator.fi?.
"William II. liutier. i'lvsident of the
T'niversnl Tobaeeo (.'ompnuy. declared
that a suit ljcarmi lor a receivership
avhs inrpirctl by tin? Tobacco Trust and
llircatrnod 1u show up tin- connection
of United States Senators and other
Iiitrli officials with tin* trust.
Kcnrsarsre to Ituro Arross.
Captain Hemphill lias becu ordered
by the Navy I-Jepurtment to bring the*
Kearsargo across to Maine ou a speed ?
list for the purposes of the Bureau of j
Steam En^ineenring.
minor Mention. I '
One million live hundred thousand : ^
people in Russia are employed in fac j '
tories. I "
The steamer Humboldt is in al Ser.t- 5
tie. Wash., from Si;agway, with $10T?.- . r
000 in Klondike gold. I ii
Treasury bond refunding operations : *
have added about $3:1,000,000 to na- j n
tiounl baniiuou? cirouiauuu. j i,
Thirty lives have ecu lost in a flood t
wliich lias destroyed tifty houses i" v
Uraefcuherg, a village <if Austria.
George J. Co:sld said* rittsb::rg
that Ballimo.'p will he maJe the Atlantic
port of ihs Wo.bask system. *
New York City.?Yoke waists of nl
:orts are among the features of the sea
>011 and .ire made exceedingly atractive
with trim mine and eontrastin!
YOKE WAIST.
naterinl of various kinds. This stylisl
day Manton one is shown iu pale piul
repe de Chine with yoke and trimminj
nade of bands of pink silk held In
ancy stitches, but the design is suite*
o a variety of materials, silk and ligli
veight wools, and to the many cottoi
md linen fabrics. Lace insertion cai
)e substituted for the silk of the yoke
>r bunds of material feather stitched
>r any yoking material can be used
11 the case of the model the lining 1j
lsed aud cut a way beneath the yoke
?ut it can be entirely omitted "wher<
vashable materials are chosen. The
waist consists of a litted lininj
>u which the fronts and backs are ar
angea. iue }?ke js suimtruic am
oincd to the waist at its lower edge
Soth front and backs are tucked a
heir upper portions, but the backs an
irawn down smoothly, while the from
douses slightly over the belt. Th<
sleeves suggest the Hungarian styl*
md are made with snug fitting uppei
)ortions to which the full sleeves an
ittached. The upper portions of tbesi
ast are tucked for a few inches ant
lelow that point they fall in soft folds
it the wrists are straight cuffs.
Tlie quantity of material required foi
he medium size is four yard6 tweuty
ne inches wide, three and one-fourtl
ards twenty-seven inches wide, two
nd one-half yards thirty-two inches
t'ide or one and seven-eighth yards
orty-four inches wide, with sever
ards of banding to make as iliustrat
d, or five-eighth yards of materia!
TUCKEJ
eighteen inches wide for yoke and col
ar.
Woman'* Tacked Waist.
Tucks of all widths and arranged ii
til possible ways are greatly in vogm
ind are most effective in the soft fash
onable materials. The very charminj
day Manton waist, illustrated in th<
arge drawing, shows them arrangec
n pointed groups and combined with ;
ieepiy pointed yoke that is exceedingly
jecoming. The origiuul is niat\e o
vliite pongee stitched with corticell
;ilk, with a youe or cream iace. uu
iilk, wools, cottons and linens are nl
ippropriate to the design.
The waist consists of a fitted lining
ro.it, backs and yoke. The front is
ucked diagonally, and seamed at th<
entre and blouses slightly over tin
?elt. The backs are drawn down snug
y at the waist lino, and are tucked or
lorizontal ines. The yoke is separate
ind arranged over the whole. Wher
lesired the lining can be omitted h
10th waist and sleeves. The sleeves
ire made with the upper portion!
vbich are tucked at the lower edge
md the full parts that are gathered a
)Oth upper and lo-ver edge: and an
inisiied with straight cuffs at tli<
vrists. At the neck is a regulatioi
tock.
The quantity of material required foi
he medium size is four yards twenty
me inches wide, three and one-hall
aids twenty-seven inches wide, thm
ards thirty-two inches wide, or iwc
md one-fourth yards forty-four inches
vide, with three-fourth yards of all
?ver lace.
A XV irm Weather Collar.
In close, hot weather it is a decided
;rievance to be obliged to imprison
he throat in a stiff, high, starched col.
nr. It feels particularly oppressive
inder the chin, and it is to obviate this
liscomfort that a collar of a new patern
has been devised. Tbis is as high
s usual at the back, but the front
lopes away beneath the chin. It Is
eally stylish, and the drooping curve
n front nroves Generally becoming to
hose who try it'on. This coliur raensiros
two inches high In the back, but
q front Is only one inch high. beneath
lie chin. Tills is just the thing for
farm weather.
The Bottom Flnr*.
A well-cut '"runabout" is not awk
\" T
1 ward, however short, anil when i
- comes from the right tailor's hands i
is graceful and by no means resemble;
; a "drum." This is because of the spe
- cial cut. The breadths all show a de
/ uipri fl.iro toward the helm, and care
ful goring and fitting are required t<
attain the desired end. If this is <
lining this must also he flared t<
match. Featberbone or some othei
cording is introduced in the hem, an(
this keeps the slclrt, which Is short
from "falling In" around the ankles
and seera,s to improve the general ap
pearanee.
A Favored style.
The "bib and apron" style is one oi
the most favored amongst the dress
makers just now; that is, the bodic<
has a deep rounded piece which i:
shaped like a bib coming from the col
Inr. concealing all the" front of tin
bodice, almost to tbe waist, usuauj
edged with a quilling of ribbon or lace
while the front of the skirt has also ?'
rounded apron-like piece (sometime!
simulated only) bordered with a qui!
i ling, rounded off at the back, when
: long sash ends further help to carri
r out the idea of apron strings. It is, o
f course, a modification of the oli
1 tunique.
t
I Tufted Veiling'*.
1 Tufted veilings are in the market
, and very delightfully they are to vte^
, ?better still to possess. In fawn-color
. smoke-gray, banana-color and willow
s green the effect seems particular^
, good, and it becomes difficult to mak<
2 a choice. One can obtain tufted veil
ings in navy blue and black, tbe tint!
; desired by so many women who do no
- wear, light colors except in wasl
1 gowns. The tufted veilings are qult<
. novel, much more so than the smooth
t finished etamines, voiles and alpaca;
i of the mohair type.1
t
? > ? rent Wrinkle In Gloves.
21 A new glove that is attracting muct
r attention has a loose wrist, long enougl
? to extend a little more than one-thin
i way to the elbow, but this loose wris
1 is worn turned over toward the hanc
. to show a colored kid lining. Ii
white, with a red lining, it is smar
p with white gowns, with red accessor
- ie9, in tlie way of collars, girdles. :
1 bright note in the hat or the gay littlf
) red heels that are being worn.
5
Stole Collar Waist.
i Nothing escapes the stole colar. As s
- last resort it begins to make its ap
I pearanee on fancy silk, and crepe de
D BLOUSE.
- Chine waists. Used in this manner
it is probably shown to much advan
tage. The waist is creme crepe d<
Chine inade over liberty silk with i
i stole of ecru guipure and a wide sallo:
i collar. The sleeves and cuffs ar<
. trimmed with insertion to match. I
r makes an extremely attractive even
; Ing waist.
1
j DaUv and Wild Rose.
f The pretty design of a pin for fasten
f ing the back of a fancy collar is ai
i enameled daisy and a wild rose witl
t twisted gold stems. The flowers ari
1 realistically tinted, and in the centrt
of the daisy are three small diamond.'
and a single large one in the rose.
5
4 Womnn'i Shirred Skirt.
i Skirts that fall in full and fold!
draping the figure gracefully are mud
, liked for all the soft materials now ii
, fashion. This very pretty May Maotoi
, one Is made of flowered batiste and i:
j shirred at yoke depth from the wals
3 and again between that point and tli<
5 knees. Tbo shirrings are exceedinglj
fashionable and give a most satisfac
t tory effect while the lines produced bj
? their fulness are in every way desir
; a ble.
, The skirt consists of one portion
which is circular, and the belt. Th<
r shirrings are made on indicated lines
. and are drawn up to flt bands which
r are c'Jt hi the exact length required
suu:red skirt.
'iuc back is finished in habit style arid
the closing made invisibly.
The quantity of material required for
the medium size is ten yards twentyone
inches wide, seven and three-fourth
yards thirty-two inches wide, or five
yards forty-lour inches wide.
" SUFFERIN(
3 \ MERICA is
XJ nervous women. ?tvTt\S
s The ETeat majority of nervous , (
"m women are so because they are puf'
feting from some form of female dis;
ease. e
t Mrs. Emma Mitchell, 520 Louisiana p
street, Indianapolis, Ind., writes: e
3 "Peruna has certainly been a blessing c
- in disguise^ to me% for when I first began t
s taking it lor trouDies peculiar to iik sex i
" and a generally worn out system I bad lit- i
7 tie faith. t
' "For the pait five years I have
rarely been without pain, but Pe- j
runa has changed all this, and In f
a very short time. I think 1 had t
only taken two bottles before 1
began to recuperate very quickly, 1
7 and seven bottles made me well, j
I do not have headache or backache \
T any mere, atid have seme interest
f in life. 1 give all credit where it
- i* due, and that is to Peruna.,f-~
* Emma Mitchell. e
3 By far the greatest number of female T
t troubles are caused directly by catarrh. ?
l They are catarrh of the organ which is
3 affected. These women despair of recov-13
The Industrial Revolution.
3 They spun and knitted 1* the sun
I' the good old days, the good old ways;
And work with a homely Joy was done
I' the good old days, the good old ways.
t The needles clicked and the tale went
round. <
1 The spindle hummed and the laughter
1 runj.
t Ah, horn st work had' a merry sonni"
j W.ien the world was young!
1 They mind the threads of the whirring
t loom
In the latter days, th? weary days,
For the soul and Joy there is no room
1 In the latter days, the weary days.
i < They piece the snapp'd threads one by
one,
No song Is sung and no tale is told;
And there's little mirth beneath the sun
For the world Is old.
l ?Harrold Johnson ' in London Daily
News.
^ ... _
Another R.
"Well, talking about names," said
the oyster, I like May better than
Mary."
"You do?" replied the plain lobster.
"Of course. Now, if it was the*month
of Mary it would shorten my vacation
fearfully."
Strenuous Treatment.
Larry?"Did yez iver troy maissage
treatment, me bye?"
Denny?"Oi hod face steaming
once."
Larry?"Who gave ut to yez?"
"Tlonr?if <4T\yf o rmlH wnmnn nrf ri o Irlt.
I . J ??<- j
tie av hot wather."
NERVE WO?
j. ..n'd Kidney Pill* .
make freedom from kid
11 cy troablo possible. tf
They carry, a kind of iwf
medication to the kid- ? '/
neys that brings a bright R j B .
ray of hope to desperate |& 1 * I f
cases. W c
Aching backs are eased. Y2k fc%?wm
Hip, back, and loin pains
overcome. Swelling of the
limbs and dropsy signs NAME
vanish.
Lock Haven, Pa.? Mrs. p* ?*
L. W. Ammumen Tvrites: '
3 "A few weeks ago I sent for
, a trial box of Doon's Ki :n-^y _ J?f JnSf,,???i,bo7J
. ... ? a m i.i iti Foster-Milburn Co.i Di
Pills for myself, and they (lid spac0 t, lmufflclent, ?
all they are said to do. My rate slip.
J husband was kicked last fall
t ^Al
MP?? MR I
j rw m dhii run
l<a&cc
i IJApvVS
I blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, fc
3 H pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin an
t | regularly you are sick. Constipation kills mori
; 9 starto chronic ailments and long years of suffer
- B CASCARETS today, for you will never get we
I right, Take our advice, start with Cascarets
I money refunded. The genuine tablet stampei
Jtwokle^ireejAddres^terling^emedj^ompc
| Bilious?
\ Dizzy? Headache? Pain i
11 back of your eyes? It's your I
I liver! Use Ayer's Pills.
Gently laxative; all vegetable.
Sold for 60 years. LowolT, Maaa! I
. ?. i
Want your moustache or beard j(
a beautiful brown or rich black? Use 1
BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Ij
f Pim CTa. OP DHOGGI3T8 OR R. P DAXl k CO.. KSHtlV Ji.n. ?
' n? Vah 11/?m4* Vmir Mflnou s
UU iUU Wttlll I UUi IIIUIIQI c
TO EARN I t
7 % INTEREST 1
PKR ANNUM t i
Write mo for particulars of a safe, secure invent* I
merit paying seven per cent, on amounts of one .
hundred dollars or more. Bank rrfcrencts.
W. II. IIOIUC. York, Penna.
nDADQY NEW DISCOVERT;
| I f\ p C) I qaiok relief and caret wont
j mmi. boo* of tetlimoaiaU ?nd IUd?T>' trMiuivat
I Ftc*. Dr. ft. K. eUEM'SIONB. B.I S. AUaaia. < ?. I
CURES WHEIE ALL ELSE FAILS. Ed
B49t Coutfh Syrup. Tastes Good. Ueo P"l
In time. Sold by drujwUto. p|
I
. '3
s\ MM????V
' , *"/
i women
1 TT vniwn
!
Tired, Nervous, Aching
Trembling, Sleepless, Bloodless?
Pe-ru-na Renovates,
Regulates, Restores?Many
Prominent Women Endorse
Pe-ru-nsu ' ^
xy. Female trouble is so common, ?
irevalent, that they accept it as almost in .
.1 mi il
:vnaoie. ine greatest oosiauc m toe w?yi
if recovery is that they do not understand]
hat it is catarrh which is the source ofl
heir illness. In female complaint ninetyiine
cases out of one hundred are nothing!
>ut catarrh. Peruna cures catarrh wher^
sver located.
Chronic invalids who have langaiahedl
or years on/sick beds with some form ofl
emale disease begin to improve at once ?f-<
er beginning*Dr. Hartman's treatment.
Among the many prominent women who*
ecommend Peruna are: ? Belva Lock-|^
vood, of Washington, D. C.; Mrs. CoL.
Hamilton, of Columbus, Ohio; Mrs. F. KJ
Varren, wife of U. S. Senator W?rren, ofl
iVyoming.
If you do not derive prompt and tatisactory
results from the use of Perunavrite
at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full
tatement of your case, and ne will b?
ileased to give you his valuable advice!
gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of The<
Jartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. ^
No Resurrection of the Body. I
At a Methodist preachers' meeting
held in New York recently addresses
were made in memory of the late Bishop
R. S. Foster and the late Bishop , v! !
John F. Hurst. Dr. J. M. Buckley
made quite a stir among the ministers
by his address, in the course of which '
he said that in the life to come he
expected to meet and to know Bishop
Foster and Bishop Hurst, but he did
not expect to see an? bodily form
which he could recognize.
"How do you know?" quickly asked
a member, while the others looked expectant.
"From the New Testament," re
sponded Dr. Buckley. "I shall recognize
some manifestation of soul, but
[ shall not see their physical bodies '
resurrected."
A Fine Distinction.
Samuel Ellsworth Kiser. the poethumorist
of the Chicago Record-Her- '
aid, recently visited Baltimore in connection
with a gathering of humorists
in that city. During his visit he was
asked by one of the local newspaper
humorists to wrtte a piece of vetse for ,sv
his department. Kiser turned to his
friend with a bland air and asked:
"Poetry, or for publication?"?New
York Times.
Observe sjulem in all you io and
ln kidneys:
v- . %
I by a horse and badly hurt ^
I his hip was fractured?mat
loan's gm such misery that he oooU
rdnP\? hardly walk, and to (toop
caused him such distreas that
I//S EpRila he thought he would have to
,;ms, t5p||g3 quit work - also, it affecte*
*?*?* v???y lils bladder, and he waa n?.
"*w> mrrVST^y able to make his water without
eo much distress. I ?- *
sisted on his getting a box
of your pills and tryin^theo,
~ ? so I went to Masony Drug
. ~ Store and got a box, The
first box helped him so much
, n^^eoujxm to that I got the second and aJaa
xtfuJo. N. Y. If above .. .
rrite luidreu on scpa- the third, and now be i* e*.
tirely well"?Mrs. L.. W,
? '- Ammcvek, Lock Haven, Pa.
?
' , v .'CT
WE BOWELS A
vim. -
CANDY 'J
L CATHARTIC jSF
i, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad
>ul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples,
d dirziness. When your bowels don't move
: people than all other diseases together. It
ing. No matter what aila you, start tekin<
11 and stay well until you get your bowels
today under absolute guarantee to cure or
1 C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample ac4
my, Chicago or New York. 50a
KipunsTabuleeare
best dyspepsia
medicine ever made.
A. hundred mllllous
of tlie,n Lave ,,eea
? sold in toe United
States i:i a single
year. Every nines*
irising from a disordered stomach is
elieved or cured by their use. So
,'omraon is it that diseases originate
rom the stomach it may be safely asserted
there is no condition of iU
loaltli th'.t will not be benefited or
,'ured by the occasional use of Rlpans
rabules. Ph3'?icians know them and
;poak highly of them. All druggist#
;ell them. The live-cent package Is
>nough for au ordinary occasion, and
he Family Dottle, sixty cents, contains
i household sunnlv for a year. One
jenerally gives relief within twenty
ninutes.
VricKJy Heat
Cleanses the Storaacfr"It't
Coed for children fe**
*. u?rKr'T^:
S5ffS??"K T(i?mp?<Mt'6 ?y? W*hr .
* ' ^ J k- J .J v. -, : * ^