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Show THE LADIES. Votituj in M'i-oon-in p.v. around sJicfs ol'mUi'-a: when thoy iiavo no l'ruit. A yi.nniLr ;irt living no.ir Brighton, 111., ms i jvt ntllcnakc, whii'h she shelters in her Ixom. Olive IjC-mi doesn't hcliovr that one ni:rritl couple out of twenty hnvo any love lur each othor. A newUk lusiiL-t h. en puhlijieil "nder the title oY "The Way.- ot Woman," and it Ls only in ine volume. vol-ume. Indianapolis el.iinis fv nxlest sow-ing sow-ing girt, who hits livtl l'- ninntiw in one family, and h.tti only had one holiday . . A Boston sehoolma'aid has resimi-fl resimi-fl and gtmo to Europe lU-r thirty-six thirty-six years' servii'e in the nublie seliools. Fasti'ionahle niillineis Inform ns tliat tlie wiuUT kmiu't will lo tt "eharmin modification'' of the headgear head-gear now worn. Misa Wluto Cloud, dauphlerof the Indian chief, has eontidul her h pcs of earthly Mkstoft native of Ireland named Pat AlcCiuLrc. A Brooklyn woman says that if death really loves a shining mark it is singular that he has not nimcfi at her husband's nose helore this. A St. Paul womrm who used to keep three 'girls now tloes her own work cheerfully. .She found her husband hus-band throwing kisses at them. . Mrs. Gen. Pegram, once renowned as a beauty aiufa belle, is now at the head of ,a "fashionable young ladies' boarding-school in Baltimore. ! The umpiro who lately decided that Miss Blank wits the handsomest girl in La Crosse, is being looked after by the relatives of thirteen other young ladies. The editor of the Baltimore Gazette, after years of experience, says, "A woman is like tar ; only melt her and she will take any form you please." A Kewport belle of vivacious temperament, tem-perament, who appears in a bathing suit of alternate black nnd yellow stripes, has been named the "iitriped Hurricane." Miss Baxter, a pious old maid of Dundee, Scotland, has given 2,000 guineas toward sending a ship-load of missionaries to feat the starving heathen of JCew Guinea. Cane fans are one of the latest novelties. nov-elties. They arc of ebony, with knob handles, out of which springs a small silk fan edged with lace and handsomely hand-somely decorated. "I never was so thankful in my life !" exclaimed a Dover woman, when telling a coroner's jury how her husband dropped dead "Vc hadn't had a. fight all that day!" Detroit, not to be outdone in the way of wonderful woman, produces a matron aged twenty-live who hns lately married for the tilth time, all of her husbands being alive. Miss Lockwood. a ,lady lawyer in Washington, argued a caso against, two learned gentlemen the other day. The decision was reserved as the justice jus-tice retired with a headache. It is suggested that the New Jersey Jer-sey woman who has been weeping for the last ten days, and for whom the doctors can find no remedy, should be shown a new bonnet. The only article of female apparel worn by one of tho lady spiritualists at VLneland last Sunday was a fan. 1 We hasten to add, however, that she was liberally dressed in men's clothes, The onlv person on the coach recently re-cently robbed in Nevada who carried weapons was a lady, who now rejoices re-joices in the superiority of her eex and the possession of her moneybags. money-bags. ! Mary Gear, a servant in a hotel at St. Joseph, attempted to throw her existence out of gear because Woodford Wood-ford Childors, head pitchforkist in a livery stable, got too tipsy to marry her. The poison was pumped and she still lives. Feathers form the chief, and oftentimes often-times only, trimming on the hate now fashionable among ladies. Brown, black and purple are tho popular colors. A graceful curling and long drooping feather over the crown of the hat is very stylish. Ladies may be interested to know that over-skirts arc to be discarded for promenade costumes and indoor toilets, next winter. Skirts will be trimmed with pufhngs, etc., to simulate simu-late overskirts, and fur this purpose lace will le much used. |