The news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1877-1900, December 05, 1893, Image 1
i Iis
TRI-W EERLY ElITION. w INN BORO8. C.. DECMEBER 5 1893.
MILLINERY,
MILLINERY,
MILLINERY T
Always full in Hats
and Bonnets, Flow-j
ers, Feathers, Laces,
Nets, Veiling and la
test novelties of the
season. A competent s
and experienced mil
liner in this depart
ment fully posted in
Styles, Trimmings,
Etc. Special attention
-.given to- Mourning
and made up Hats
and Bonnets.
Renewing Crepe
Veils, Etc.
J. O BOAG.
Dry Goods,
Fancy Goods,
Notions ,
White Goods,
cupetings,
Oil Cloths,
Matting,
J. 0. B0AG'S
Pianos, Parlor and Chapei
Organs. Fifty new and im
proved light-ranuiing Family
Sewing Machines. vertical and
under-feed of th-t best makes, t
different styles and prices.1
Also, a lot of good second
hand Sewing Machines for
sale cheap, by 4. O, BOAG. t
Different Sizes,
CLOCKS,
CLOCKS.
Family Groceries
-* Confectioneries.
J. 0. BOAQ.
Always on Hand Single,
Open and Top Buggies and ~
Double-Seated Vehicles. One.
Horse Wagons. Singa and ~
double harness,.
Pianos, Organs, Sewing Md
thines, Cooking Stoves, Clocks. ~
Buggies anid Wagons, are all
shipped direct from their va
rious factories, therefore no ~
agents expenses or comnmis
sions to be paid for by pur
chaser: The best goods for the
Lowest prices for cash or goodj
paper,& at
J. 0. B0AB'8 OLD STAND.
Kext door to W. 0. Beaty's, is BAlld
with Bedroom Suits, Parlor Suits,
* Wardrobes, Side- boards, Mattresses,
* Chairs, Trables, Bed-steads, Cradles',
Pictu~re Frames, Chromos, Baby Car
uiages and other goods, Call and get
Mr eston 1 ion will always give you .
bis kmnd attention and treat you right. L
llfrniture bouhyt fo ta'h
.du slow astelowest l
3O_ BOAQ
SHE MADE HOME HAPPY.
ae mrde home happy!" These few words
read
Within a churchyard, written on a stone;
"o naci, nor date, the simple words alvna
ld me the story of an unknown dead.
marbie column lifted high its head,
"lose by, inscribed to one the world hls
known,
But ab! that lonely grave with moss o'ergrOw:
irilled me far more than his who arinic led.
he made home happy:" Through th loug, sa
Years
,he mother toiled, and never .tropped to reit
nil they cromsed her hands upon her bret,,
id closed her eyes, no longer dimu with tears.
rhe simple record that she left behind
Was grander than the soldier's, to uy mind.
-HENRpY Coyr, in New 1'oriSa..
WAS IT A SPECT RE?
He was naiting for her; he had beer
iiting an hour and a half in a dust
tburban lane, with a row of big trees o:
ie side and soine eligible buildin
tes on the other-and far away t
e southwest the twinkling yellol
hts of the city. It was not quit
:e a country lane, for it had a pave
ent and lamp-post; but it was not i
id place for a meeting all the same
id further up, towards the cemetery
was really quite rural, and almos
-etty, especially in twilight. But twi
ht had long deepened into night, an
ill lie waited. He loved her, and h,
as engaged to be married to her, wit]
e complete disapproval of ever
asonable person who had been coin
ited. And this half-clandestine meet
g was to-night to taike tue place 4
e grudgingly sanctioned weekly ill
rview-because a certain rich unel
its visiting at her house, and he
0th1er was not the woman to acknowl
ge to a moneyed uncle, who igh
,( off" any day, a match so deepl.
1ligible as hers with him.
. he waited for her, and the chil
ain uuitIsually severe evening enten
t0 hi6 bones.
Te policemnan passed himt with hi
SU'ly response to his '-good-uight.
e bicyclists Went by him like gra:
iusts with fog-horns; and it was neai
ten o'clock and she had not come.
lie shrugged his shoulders and turn
I toward his lodgings. His road le,
m by her house-desirable, comiod
us, suburban-and he walked slowl:
he neared it. She miiight, even non
coming out. But she was not
aere was no sign of movement abou
.e house, no sign of life, no light
-en in the windows. And her peop!
:re not early people.
He paused by the gte, wondering.
Then ihe noticed that the front-doo
is open-wide open-and the street
nip shone a little way into the *.ar]
dL!. There-was something about a
is that did not please him--that seat
him a little indeed. The house ha
gloomy and deserted air. It was in
issile that it harbored a rich uncle
e old man must have left early. 1i
aich case
He walked up the path and listened
D sign of fire. H e passed into th
dL. There was no light anywhere
'hre was everybody, and why wa
e front-door open? There was no on
the drawing-room, the dining rooa
A the study (nine feet by seven) wer
daly blank. Every one was out. evi
intly. But the unpleasant sense tha
Swas, perhaps, not the nrtst casual vi
;r to walk through that open dioo
ipeled him to look c:hrough the hou
fore he went away and closed itat
m. So he went upstairs, and at t[
or of the first bedroom he c.ame to fl
ruck a wax-match, as he had done il
e Sitting-rooms. Even as he did s,
felt that he was not alone. And Li
s prepred to see something; but fo
:at he saw he was not prepared
>r what he saw lay on bed in a white
ose gown--andl it was his sweetheart
ud its throat was cut from ear to ear
e does not know what happene'
en, nor how he got down-stairs amn
to the street; but he got out somnehow
id the policeman found him in a lit
ider the lamp-post at the corner o
e street. He could not speak whei
ey picked him up, and he passed th
ght in thse police-cells, because th
licemn had seen plenty of diruiken
eni before, but never one in a fit.
Te next morning he~ was bette
ough still v'ery white and shaky. 1E
e tale lie told the magistrate was cona
neing, and they sent a couple of con
ables with him to her house,
There was no crowd about it as he
d fanhcied there would be, and th,
ins ere not down.
As he stood. da.zei, in iront of thi
Ir, it opened. and Jhe camne *ut.
-Sesall iight. you see." si 6
ia'em?an. who ha&' found him uimbl
e lampj -I told you you was, drunk
t von would know best"
W~hen lie was alone with~ her, b,
d hetr--nio t all. for that wIould nio
r telin' -but how he had comle int'
e- colihini us tuourban~ house, an.
,w h.- had fotund the door op'a. :,im
e igt. out, and that he had bee;
to) that lon'ug back roo:m fac'in thil
,ir, and had Seen S'.mietiit
,e tri ?nc' to hint at whc he turo'n
k and Wrke down.
--But myi deseiCt.'' She Said.'.
rea the hsouse waS dark. tor wt
re dt tne theatre with my uncle, an.
douibt the door was open, for th,
wat will run out ii they arce left
it yo couiald not have been in th4t
ni, because I locked it when i eam'
asand the key. was put in miy
iet. I dressd ini a hurry and
myi5 odde aid endtS lying about.
'-I ko' v' "' he satid: -I saw a gr'eer
m. n a chair, anld some long brow.
a:sandl a lot of hair-pins and rib
'iS, nid it prayer-book. and a lac,
.lgreiiiie on the dressing table
y, I even noticed the calendar or
e i.atlpiec-October 21st. A
56,tc~la Lcr thati beause thit
is Ma, And vet it ws. 'iur cal
endairis at October 21t. isn't it'
I 'No, of course it isn't," she said.
smiling rather anxiously: '"but all tthe
other things were just as you say.
You must have had a dream. or a vns
ion, or something."
lie was a very ordinary. c Iom I n
place young nn, ,and be dhl not be
I lieve in vi-ion-, but Le neve lrested day
or night till he got his sweetheart and
her mother away from that commi
dious house and settled them i In a guite
distant suburb. In the cours! a the
removal, he incidentally mn iid .r,
and the mother wnti on livh witih
them.
His nerves must have he:-i : ILId. bit
shaken, because ie was very guetir for
a long time, and was alwa' s imimung
if any one l.d taken the desirali. sob
urban house; and when an old st, ok
broker w ith a fanmilv took it. lie wenat
the lenigth of callin in the oMl .l t
iman and imiploring h1iM. by '1i t:at ho
held dear, not to live inl th:it famt:1
house.
"Why?" said the stock brokt r, nct
unnaturally.
And then he got so vaguie- and c :1
fused between trying to tell wli an
t trying not to tell wl y, that the stirk.
broker showed him out. and thankt-;d
his God he was not such a fool as t,,
allow a lunatie to stand in the way of
his taking that really reinarkblv ch':ip
and desirable suburban residence.
Now the curious and quit- ini. li
cable part of this story is tha t when siw'1
.':ueit do.wn to breakfast .n tiii ni. ; ii
ilg of tie- twentv-seicond ofct
she founid hii looking like deiti h
the n i i' paper in i s b:i. Jil
caught heis-he cou!d not spak---:md
t 11-Iiinted Vt->the plr. Anld tiwrroh
re:id thit on the night of Ow two lit.%
first, a . oung lady, the stoel: br.tr
daughter, had been found w ith rli
throat (t, from r 0 tV31, 0;i [t
in tht liing back he!driii t:i, th
t staIr (If tha d:IIkesir1:1ihI!(, su ui t b Iwu..:
Ree Maaens of France.
Near the little town of La Fer,
- in France, there is an applet:ee
I which bears only iuiperfect lossns;
- and the fact, having long been dis
Suvered, has giveli ris to a vey
, tiful custoi aoing the laidenvas of
. the village.
t W1hen Spin1 iig-tu1nme ci:ies. ui the
i 1ple-tr1e hail the . to)n tunc vaith
.. ilad buLt or bl->ssUos, the niaid
:is of the village ara themiselves
A th gay ribb:..ns and perfelct blos
r oms fromi their fa1oite tree anid 9o
niingI to the linnely tree whi'h Las
prod uced only the imnperiert Mosns.
Each hil thin iiSSes a Chtr of tn
. imwperfect blossoms, -and in, sO Jn
: Justs the former with the pub'n irI
- the latter. She then ties a distj!i
guishing !ibi,.ua near to the cluier
I she had du Sted.
The tree looks very geiv whn Thin
decorated, with the puk limtas
smiling up at IleaxeCi:, and the d
ribbons rluttering in the perfutue
laden air: but the te t o1 it is
the petals fail like "sonmer nw,
and the little apples le'gir, t' sha)p.
Than the maidens plu:-k oI all but
tne best fruit. and let tnat take all
the strength or' the tree3. sa that ti.e
appies grow faously ai? cou tC
r erfection.
And now is seen the stra'ge j.ait
of the affair; the appies, inste:;d of
being all of ore kind, are a:: dridei t
as the biossomas that iis-ed ihieir Mk.
so:is, tile fact being thiaL thu nikh i;
expjectly lik~e the a pph: in the t re
somIs wa's taloni. Su tin 'ids 'ne tn:
r wVIll beC ,eeni rinand, (A'y-checked ap--u
malyI , apples, datinity littlhe api'S,0
moin trotus big"' appies. E~a'h ini
't has the apple she w ishelii.e ni et
jAsadvaritages ur an E'.e;- T< mpijer
It Is usual to enity the even torL
pered people. Those who ate n v
unduly elated oor east dIown, wh
"knit on1 plain" all the Limwe. It On.
likes that soi t of thiin.; iL wouldiI
equally nat.rail to envy the anhi'.s
co)ws and pigs , Jior in-tanec. wi .
serenity is seldutu di stuirbed. Fu:
myV Dart I thiGE those even1 tVinempere
pet ple lose ninie-teuths of the p~aa.
toe of existence. Toe dlepth <i.? .
grief and gloam into wh iih innaii,
sive pe'ople are thrown tueC pi e
made up for by the equally ut e-a:
able and unleasonhar . y.:... .r
the. =1pr~ inat the sliightt --ib
excue, ani the ,orr. .f a ar
with e .n:ai ad I fI : i a
- ery aut tr, impres .Ou theich iie
buht so far a- I can -et ec' .ee
ibit derived from it is an unwrinLeu
comnplexit'n.
Grarudr:?a W as Sh ockel-.
GrarInima hari not r~een t o t r
I2us 1(r [mati :e:tr, Lja the jeunt L
eieration prevailedi up.a hur. a.
,he wient to taiis One, uniich a'niI-t,
h'-r princi ples '.ra;.dma de a
approve of circus~e5 and 'he- i :ii h. I
the per for mn ce w* .h~ -1 . e .i
pe rtu bationr. Pre-en tl th-r a
bareback act whiuch mI ii t o -m I m
arid a wotuan who rode' to-gethe~r is
manyl and wondlerful posii. Th
act ernded in a burst ot ap'Alaus.a ci
"iab4ellIe turned to gondniiu
"Perhaps it was-' an-w~-u er1 2 iiI*l
aia. severely. "But all I i n ,
I hope they're rnarried. "- l.o4..,
Ludget. ________
THEdl la who waunt-d t-' N'...w
where they catch ai.,ek tni ileI is the'
same eilap who as ed if it Vwas a di!
t iult thing to shoot, "We.sh i abbits
Th'e wounds made by a trisud arc
SIGN TALK O i THE PL-AINS.
Lis U u~~kge W Who Lit V,' iard-4. N e, i t isb
tic'lnr for Ever), V'z. -l%
Garrison life ba . 1,1-vtlopt!J so-.
expects in lnil fo!, ior- li
Ii. L. Scott, of t"'e. Y even~h C. V..
Lieut. SCItt has 10;dte a si'v t)" Ihe
III the daYS Of 1:li.ill 61.ttireaiks
wars thure wa-; a pat.' i,:L-,e to
tLJ- Stud%~ b1) I.v thiat peaice Ip*(,
Vail's and tlt; e ar. 0.11yrs*va i
rewa rk alle ch L !!I lor thje s(!eucili
ittreAt whica al:nC to it.
Ijriw ay durinv~t ,'lloeCn :
LitcuL. ,icitt hir'~Y1d four India1
or '% ;riOuzt til l~e- omij ko t'Y 10 1;1i~
caiuis, and, Withl AliV SUChI L1acc-11al'
ai hie u-ed to expliii to Lhto cpaie,14T.
What tie wUa say;;. lith, carrlicd 01 :
ili,,, cOurversatLMun Sizi sc. Thei 11c.
diais~ wcrc ailit~i' ri Ilat Inri
Dea r.
The Lieutenan;'s hand moved nim
ly whea 'le asi, d I 'aintc'.10,t U
where he Lved. -The od lid:a
looke I hume~icl: lfor a moment, a,) L! a
theni lit iu..d , a usiLi-i W t[ l o
tu-e of a rc - M v. Lth tr~;on it.. 17
'bins i lidLe," i-rprezed Lieut.
P'ainted Horse, flaving fOwmd( h:,
hatid~, keot tiiN-Ilvon while h!:3
face rt-ima :ced ex- sodes el
>-Cot L adud
~iI . ~hi riC.ti vrs live ti I-I'o
-it'd tI. ha-; o'ae a luuiA way 1 nJt
??as aririved lit:rIe.
ijoe aftc:' tilt- -1t'er tilt Iccdl Li
jouitd Ili thilt-, ~ rLtoi . t
Riliafost. Thlev io-d th-ir nawe
adA wvhtere tilt'y 'veie froi anid to'
what tribesi th,-!cy elued. They un-b
dt-stoud Lt Likulenti- arid each
othri a, Nell. .I~teu P~ainted florse
-ci 1?,r'.-iocl.Lstwas a brick,
vvici.ed is- hazak~ to sla" thit wvas a
hcsa~e e wds ani OgaltlIa. I ay
Ii~i~citr~lt-lU0 1ii Unaf, -5im-1?C elt
-ht lie knew 'ieix. Miles, who was
iticg ear, acid the vanied the (ea
ei'al to) say -4 nie-iiirig, to him. G~en.
Mietold Lieot .ott el oss
(Jilile- last thal, Lei fUUJetubelrl hiim
very well as a:, fi.ldiau who had dociv
good service in vie Montauia cuni
l.a i u. Lieut. Soct interjrtedj
Last :-oiwd nis piea-;ure.
Lit;nt. -c;tt h:L ba 1--roe OCt:':
eviIicS th.1t UL, ; IridiULIS Of the
tnevl-- rl !t tor he sIign0 -.Ia gug. Wlie
Was priesent A .ifjusep'i f the
Ne/. Pkrcts d--s 'rcis-veralIi hu fd:e d
Ilidiatls. The- Chive told u1 hi iiiarchI
I jah. atid jUli Monitana tj L .e viia
ity -jr tihe Yeilox-tone Park, a iua-,
teidy Iliiitai'-V , It, WithoC.it a parallel
-ilC~e theP 'LtiCat Or N lcol.OiStenl
thousanid. IIIO hcnm ~d tu whiPh
the Cthier ~aethe u. uiatik 'were~
Tle) Nvci- the rc:i~rcn'r eO 0r K.
dj ffe Ie Ift sro 1.e c a 1) agV- Y l
- it. - -,tt c.ild -ea that th..i-e ,a'
,: n t i s i , r tha raI r
1n i tC:'. in :I sk 1 e:
I' xnri:. the- ugr"V rir e,
n m a arii it e eLUir
L,:a s of the .1 la eut of ti
.un-' ladian .'-'L Louijs (4.
e:-U at.
The time-hoiored in..un ini 1
t lip the dg- ol war" is i:eir
ro ided witl a new mnean; rin. ie
any. That coMn!Try is Gielerm:in
Oe )repared for the iecu Europ:ie
a r, anvd i-s leaving no -,to-w uitirn
render its military organki/ation
ective in every branch as I z-i oib
n onst tli-: pripariations in prgre
r the next caipair1 is a regtua
stsei of dog drilling. No t OLn; ai
ogs5 uSe'd by the almobulance cOri I
-elk (lt the w(ounded, bing tice
randy, water, and soup, letrh ti
iuhulance attndarits and help 1
raw the injured on little hand-cart
> the field hospital, all of whic
-rvi(es they perform with wonderfi
(curicy, intelligence an- skill, bi
hey are now attached to some of ti
liments as regular four-foote
,diers. In this capacity, the fir.
son they have to learn is silenci
'hey are tat ght to repress the ou
re ik of barking, by which the
uU.d announce their presence to a
iemily, and to replace this mode
gnalin1 by a low growl audible on.
c their friends. This is a dim1cu
sn. but a inore tedious ta-k is I
,1low. Tiiis is to teach tht war !
hat while ail does are dogs, men ai
ivided into friends and enerimies.an
he way to distinguish them is by tU
lor of their trousers. The way th
ne distinction is impressed on the
tellect is by dressing soldiers up i
,ussian and French uniforms, an
.aking them beat an ill-treat tf
ogs and abuse them in French at
lussian; whereas soldiers in Ge
jan Lluiform are told of to net ar
aress the caniue recruits, and rega
hiew on that delica.:y dear to a
eii;.s born in the fatherland-tL
ausage. At iight the dogs can re
er good service at the outposts, the
uic- seiise of hearing enabling thei
announce the approach of footste
>ng before they have been detecit
y duller human ears. The dogs ai
iso traineo to carry dispatches in
tle satchel, which is buckle.1 c
he light iron collar they wear. Gr
'oneianians make the best soldi
ogs, on account of their great mu
ular strength, their quickness i
arnng, and theif unobtrusive colo
or ambulance service, howeve
rof. Bungartz. tbe animal painte
he is mucii-interested in tTils-Ur;Uc
r the Ved Cross Society, and h:
iimself trained many dogs for it, d
lares that Scotch collies are the be
feed.
Friends Though Foes.
Lord Palmerston had a natur
oancy which his opponents call
udacity, tat which seldo failed
. k him over a dangerous rut in t)
ad, not always without a splas]
at generally without harm.
One crisis in his ministerial 11
lustrates the absolute good humi
-hich may prevail even when polit
.d enmity is at its worst. Loi
)erb;y had made an attack upon hi
a the Uipper House with such ener;
nd eloquence that the odds again
ia seemed overwhelming. But
efended himself and his policy fro
he dusk of one day to the dawn
nother with such tact, dexterity ai
oree(* or appeal to the national sen
ihonor that he wals acquitted
11 blarne by a majority of four-scor
^jNext day in passing through ~
oridor leading fronm an ante-room
he Upper House one swirig do
pened to his hand. and. at the sat
noment the other to that of Lo
)erby. They were opponents, t>
hey were also manly and swee
gatored men. Thley smiiled.
"I was just thinking," said Pi
nerston, ':what a clever fellow]
as who had so nearly put me in
-'Ahs was the rejoinder, "b
ithinig like the cleverness of the ti
ow who got you out of it'"
Hurry.
If the habiit of hurry is inimical
alilahle work, it is eq4ually so to
al us ble charac.te~r. . .beg on, as
siually i-. in the daily emplo~ymnen
i o~rn beCt'ai:5 a blatit ur life. I
ansi5i weV e Cu tol e0 at arni diink
, hury died 5t. ruin iuI diigcstion i
ans; to take our amusemecnts in
U iry, and~ so rinf their recreati
s et; to tilnk in a hurry, and so
iie at te conclusions; to convei
n a hurry, and so lose all the fi
lawr of other minds. Ilun y 15 11
m.nemy or self-control, of. manliine
f dignity. There never was a great
nitkhe than to imagilne that it at
SOne'S tiportakce by showing 1i
umerous and~ pressing one's dot.
rd responsibulities: are. It mere
hows that, whatever they may l
ne is not e~lit d to thin-thaton
ot iistir ot the situationl. Emnn
00Sn ' 0' coine. a ~nd: absenCe
-I. and ha te lid ii.at fille qualitie
i. giendnl ii;e ni o U n'iCe a la
-e ere The lv ol b.:aut"
ne. the loe o *r me-asure or prop.
.1 The per--n w ho -crearus
- A hale and healrtv-man, lI Jy var
a, wats airong a party of pilgrin- wi
rv.d at the T roitz'o Serg ievki aln
f-rv in St. PetrIbure re-centlyv.
rarfped thie v hole ditance fronm La
.nut cilhty-tive nies, and Thowed
*ariC.~ His a'-- wias properly
estd by~ the baptismal papers ha
j:1 with hia.
TRUMPET CALLS.
Eamuj Horn Sounds a Warning Note
the Unredeemed.
HRIST did r
come Into t
world to seek p
fection but
give it.
To HAVE
friend you mL
be one.
r- Go's tiru
\ will never gn
old or wear or
-T H E wick
man hates vi
in everybody but hiuxelr.
GooD looks, to be permanent, wmt
begin on the inside.
FtsHING for compliments Iz no1
L bit better than fishing on .unday.
TE devil gets lame as soon as
X comes in sight of a good man's hou:
THE man who sets out to be a i
S former will never get to rest a m;
ute.
THE older we become the more t
wheels of tlime seem to have be
oiled.
IF the devil ever takes off hi- 1;
to any man on earth it is to the hyl
crite.
THE man who expects to ontrl
a lie had better not start with lat
y feet.
It No GIFT Is precious in God's siv
A that does not carry with it all t
heart.
TiE music of heaven is alwt;
d being heard in a grateful Christ;at
l heart.
! GOD never turns a deaf ear to t
man who cries to Uimt out of a tig
n plase.
d THE devil has no quarrel with t
d man who never has any controvei
r- with himself.
AN archaugel would break dos
e under what some people expect of
II pastor's wife.
WHEN a preacher is cOn victed
. his ow sermou ie is preacing t
is gospel right.
Lu GOD gives every sower the privile
s of deciding just what kind of barvt
d he will have.
e GOD always has something sweet
say to those who seek Him with t
,n whole heart.
WHEN the devil gets a chance
plant a thorn in a Christian's flesh
Duts it in deep. -
TH1ERE is oftendis much venom
the point of a pea" as there is in t
r big end of a club.
-ne 1n7 e oIJudn't sggetirr
wear a preacher's clotne u in
e. never leave the pit.
si No MATTER where you find a m
of faith, you will dnd him muai
some one else rich.
g WHAT God means by a cheer
giver, Is one who gives until lie fe,
t. it ad yet en.oys it.
l DRIVE the devil's friends all out
the church and some preachers wo.
have a slim support.
fi THE preacher who does not prea
Di Christ hurts tne cause of God wb<
j-ever he goes into the pulpit.
dIT never makes any difference hi
nfl big the giants are who come C
against us when God is our defen
ae THE rich man in torment did i
ntry to comfort him-:eit by thinki
of how many hypocrites there were
nichurch.
-e THERE is no.thing th~e de':lil ii
O~ work any harder to bring about th
e- to kill the praise in a happy Chi
rtian's heart.
te HuMAN hanas rolled the stone fr<
othe grave of enzarus, but the to:
or Christ was opened without 1
utlelp of man.
Wages of Needlewomen in Pa'
0 Au inquiry recently made into1
be condition of' needllekomen in Pa
a shows that a work ingwomnan cant
count or earning more than .1,3.3
ut r ?44, a year. which is about ::.
i. a day. The designers and cutte
.out of patterus and the fit ters,
Icourse. are much ruore highly pa
receiving in sonme cases salaries
?600 to 2800, ;oid perhaps eve:
t shatte of the prolits. T~he aven~
a earnings of the ordinary seamstr
It may be put down at a little over
t, a day.
t- .M. Jules Simon in 1 51 rmade an
iii quiry into the atr dealine~ w
,i- I01.000 cases. and he calculated1
aaverage daily wages as about 1
V There were among~ the women c
ir- cerned about I:000 earning less ti
se 6d, a day, anid about 600 whose 't
ne ings were alout 3f. Ten years
Le the average earning of willions w
svalued by M4. d'Hlaussonvi lie att 0
er f.. a day, and those o1 o~dinary sea
'd St eases at between 2.5f. and 3f.
,w~If all trades were takeni into
escount the result was a little lower
Iv ome trades were cruelly unduerpa
especially sack making, at which mt
than id. a day could not be earl
even by, sixteen hoois' work, it
Ilar'e establishmuents like the Lcou
hairdly existed. -Lon d.n IDaily T,
Sad 31emories.
"1:adarm,." said the tramp, 't
haci.a yer loaf of bread. I return
unbrofien."
*What's the matter?"
"It brings back tooIiany sad nu
Or*.es. I carnt tech it."
* Does it," she asked gently, "
o.u thinig o~f the bread your miot
.ed to taker"
- Jom 'I makes rue think wl
I wu- doin' time on the roek-:Jle.
Washingtan star..
SPRINKLES OF SPI
* 4UMO!?OUS SELECTIONS FROM
OUR EXCHANGES.
ot
he
ir 'pokes of Preachers, Lawyers, Doctors, and
to Editars-Sono of Them Very Dry and
others Somewhat Juicy-They WiU Aid
a Digeetion if Perused After bleals.
The Voice of Sorrow.
h I"Donti you sometimes feel the need
Wef an outing?" said the affable old
gentleman to the base-ball player.
"Outing nothin'," replied the young
man, who was evidently chadng
unier recollections of recent events;
"we's lucky to .:et our innin's with
st uiupire."-Detroit Free Pres.
No Applauding. Perhaps.
Summer Girl (who had just con
be luded a performance on the hotel
e. p!ano)-Dear me! Hear the hand.
e-lappin on the Torch. Favious
Rnval-The mosqiuitces are so tLc I
had to come in. -Exchange.
A Dehcate Question.
at
-e(e-t -ats haelt- fcmay
UU!
'I'
t l lo y "I- d
Y Cfailely (book keper)-When we
.c are married, Ethel, thee deicatet
i and aill never now work. Ethe'
S.tyie 'wrte-Whose hands Judge.
IAn Apartments.
Country Child-People who live i
an city lats have lots of company. ,
59'pose. City Chid-N, indeed; it's
to -awful lonely. -I1 &nut see how."
ne sWhy, fofs won't ociate with the
familes above 'em cause they ise be
low 'em, and they can't 'suciate with
ul the families below 'em becauase t ue'.s
s eove em."--Good N ig
es An Irish Bull in Auatraha
utttmred in the course ot a scicn
cd lecture given by an Australiaa,
is worthy of a place in any collection
Uf "bulls" Irish or otherwise: -All
along the untrodden paths of the
lpast we discern the footprints of a
u.seen hand."-London Figarv.
o c t Cause f Death.
Id Perias one of the very oidet -
monuments is the tablet of Farria
Iotserhoa rs you ing toar o
.nonr-shortein hourte- at te tield
an ts n ~eis
r~ - e eryIwihvn oa
m a ater ourist-Wa tisereing:
tesai' isuto thre aumsion uthe hou-e
lotsCa-yoWnhae em asnt son as
tl: emrgenuts - hrough?1' ath 'iend
i- tey'ei ot ark cne an'te r
-Thsai'dc ~h'm---PcC
>n Laber-I an ctcWIr e rin? SiluU
onou hav gais ties.A Wctr-Esei
es at utan plumps iry t loo hause
2 ae oze kin h v eiberaa nvsoon ;s
Inr sti'einghot July nightkad see -New
:Maing it Eas.
yo hould 1:k tims kno wh':e is
are going toupa thatiai~ a t I a
com heuire evrylay ind:r t ohe we
ed '-tiiho Juayw uidit you bce. t.
- 'aurc~iv. eywl.te
-alevr atda.-L Febt I ct
coe icr er -di er~ thew~:
l- Vlashte--Thh, is a..t Sii-s Smiti:.
it? 33iss Lovely-\,. it isn' am
you kno'w it. M~nber-gL though:
such a charming er't ire cu dn:
ke l'ear such a c... *u ea nare --hv
Not to C.o ut. .
inl ay--is that lvel. Mr. Rivers -M.
a marnedl uijair.' A n. to tlm AI a
ike a.- v.i told re: Ad-- B" he 'a
der or ed matrj my dear; w e
. t he Tartars take a ..n by ttoe? -