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Show p THE SALT LAKE TIMES. MONDAY. MARCH 30. 1891. ' !j , . . : a - : i 'I A KING ad YANKEE, i DEALERS IX j Hardware, Stoves, Furnishing Goods, Carpenters' Tools, Bronze G;ods, Etc. 1 A Full Line Always in Stock, 213 Sta.e Streit, S It Lake City. ( F. E. Warren Jlcrcaniilo Are no-- v In their Spacious and Elepant NKW QTTAlTKk'B, Old Tribune i'nildin;, 78 W. 2ad So. PIANOS & ORGANS. Kest Cual.tI Largest V:ri:tyl LOWEST PRICES! Ca li tr Tut h.tn's at 2J irgnhii pestrat) e inftM''-- i i eT.'u lv furnle-.- : tli se vn.o c net-- ,a-e iMiti . an-(- r v.' 0 d bant r trta rorr,i, dens- - J'lOII ptl.V Ktivi ll t. V t T'MlAf Kcl i me. I'oioe t Ld c ni; e ti.t a e ui u. hii kkiunu rii in I. A :f t. Kill- I 1 a,, ki ll Ml I . blUlU A l A, .A. OuuA.fi. Ono rrioa to All ! Henry f.clark --THE TAILOR. 9 K First South St..' Spring Anflonncement or txiz: Saltern l'r''iii?i!'iiU.vr ns Salt Lake's louder of lasliiou. We have tust opens 1 several of N' h y e h lit Tiiilor ma e S :u Bill s i n To 'Out lilt st pittem-- . Tle-- cu nnt bed . In .he W est (or the mom y we oner th cm. CRESS SLITS F01 SALE 03 RENT. Health is Wealth Bn. E. 0. Wkst'r NSRvr no I'.raik Triat-Kikt- . trutrulwd p' Cifl'' tor Hysteria. DU-!H-iVdviiiiom. Mia Nnrvona Neuralgia. Headache, Nm'Toua Prostrat'om caused-b- y tin uau or alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness. Mental Depression, Siftentiig of thu Hr.Un rasultaig In inutility ami leading to ralaory, decay atul aeatli. IT'imut ire Old Age, Hsrrennee Lose u. 1'owt-- In cither seic. Involuntary Loee scrt Spcrmatorriiu-- can-a- d by over fxmt on f the brain. eelf abuse or L'tch hoi contains one nvuitha treatment Jl.Ou a boi. or six boxes lor s JO, aent by uiall p epald on receipt of price. WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received .y us f ir s x b'fxee, accompanied with $'.(). will send the purchaser our written guaraiit to refund tuo m n y tf the treatment does not fleet a cure, (iiiarantees Issued only by John-ton- , 1'ratt k (Jo., Druiurists, is Main tk, bail t vis" C. SELLS, !. TUCKER. H. W. SELLS. " U Sells & Coiripany, Wholesale and Retail Dealers In Lnmbet V lint South itrect, oppofllto 14th Ward Auemblj Roorai. F. 0. Hit 1078. Old ttoaeor ltN f Araitnif Bf!g. I E. J. SMITH, Frintlng House Court. I Job Printing, Bookbindinq and Lithographing. Bank Offict . I and County Supplies. Legal Blanks. y 24 W. 3rd South St Salt Lake City, Utah. ' I S, D. EVANS, 1 Successor to EVANS ROSS. u.i3rtahrMiiakr: j 214 Stale St.. Bait Lake. i SPECIAL ATTENTION GIYENIO SHIP- - , j KENT OF BODIES. j Open All N'ght. Telepto:e, 3B4. : rinw''irn'Tiif 'i rv'Tr L"jt j " ".iojI ll Tii JUST OPENED. THE 0.LY FIRST-CLAS- S HOTEL L THE CITY. Cor. Main ana ScnCi Templs Sts. I J fc? m w f L ! Beggs & Tracy, CONTHAITOHS roll Steam 4 Hot Water Eeatii Boilers, Fumps, Etc. mm FflOEPTLT ATTEK2E0 TO. ISM Slate "o"d. Branch: .Salt t.altr C.ty. &SU Kth rit., iieliTlT. C ol. T. R. JOMES & CO,, J61 UAfH STREET. BOYS ORES AND BULLION. John Green, Sanitary Contractor, Excavatintii of Eewer Connootioni a Speoialty. AtJ.'W. FtrreU Co., 137 South Matnl telephone XJ. Bit. HODGES," DENTISTI SI W. 1st Soath, - Malt Lake City TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIH1 Ej the Uea of Vitalized Air. ALL WORK WARRANTED t KELLY & CO. Printers, Stationers, Blank Book-Maker- s. So. Sfl W. Soocod So.tbJC Sat Lake City, - - Utah. Our tacilltlea fordoln? tlret-claa- a Job Pridt-ln- g are of the newest and beat. Hooks rtile l, jmnted and bound to ord'T. Samples of llad-roa- Mining, baak and Mercantile wont aiwuj on band. (Jompli te line of ufflce Suo-jllc-embracing the most approved Labor-bavin- i; and Economical Inventions. Prices Low ! Call on u Jtfs --&&,$ DIRECTORY. MAIN. IMPORTER. IN JAPANESE ) and Chinese c screens, bron-e-inbin sllkn ami idea ami curios, it.ind setiieie a novelties always on hand. ARCHITECT!. rBED A, HALE, (LATl 0 DINVIB.) ABmiTFCT OF COMMERCIAL BLOCK DO, Wasatch buildup. F. M. ULMER. RC'HITECT-H- fl I'KOUBKHS BUILDING C. H. La BELLE. ARCHITECT. 72 WEST SECOND SOUTH Lake City. I am prepared to rurnlKh all manner of plans In the most style of architecture, euch as churches, opera houses, hotels, banking houses, private residences and business blocks of any descrip-tion, beat of references given as to my stand-ing HONEY TO LOAN. 1 WATTERS, BROKER, SI F, FIRST SOUTH STREET Deneret National Hank. Salt Lake City. Makes loans on Watches. Diamonds and Jewelry; rents collected; railroad tloketa bought and Bold: business conddeutial. es-tablished 1WX). Ail unredeemed pledges sold at To. r low rates, BEAL E8TATC AND LOANS. BUBTON, GB0ESBE0K & 00., Screen doore and Wli-v- -J! stffT Jj A. r.alrlng promptly attedL" rw j w-w' . , ' fcuuth Temvl-qJ-r js r ' . TBEDO. LTHQBEBrj, P STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES, PRO-- ... Fruit, Vegetables, Poultry, Fish, , Game, etc M east Ftral South Street Tele-- V phoueM. , DfALER IN CHOICE FANCY GROCERIES 1 ay. Grain, Coal and Kindling Wood, corner Third Bouth aud Bute street. E0GEE3 4 COMPANY, THE LEADING UUOCJEKd, ifctAUT FIR3T street. i INBl'KANCB. L0UI3 HYAMS 4 00i I1 LIFE AND ACCIDENT. MUTUAL Lils of New York. M and at Prcairssa block. FLCMBINO, F. J. HOBAN, STEAM HEATING ENGINEER, 959 MAIN bait Lake City. , STENOGRAPHY, P. E. MoGUBBIIf, OFFICIAL STENOGRAPHER; ALL KINDS J aud Typewriting. Dealer in J Rumington Typewriter and supplies j Progress I uniting. 1 MU8IO I MAGNUS OLSON. TEACHER OF VIOLIN, GUITAR AND Olson'a orchestra and brasa UTAH Bool Stationery Co. SUCCESSORS TO A, ' CAI.IFOHXIA CRElffl OF PRUNES. A very pleasant Laxative, made from ho juice of Fresh Prunes combined villi a few harmless vegetable ingmdi-tut- s of well-know- n and hiirhlv niedi- - M. R. EVANS, 22-2- 4 W. 2nd South St Sporting Goods ! Guns, Revolvers and Ammunition. inal qualities, put up in the form cf C'ltKVM DIKII'S. Makii.V a very valuable preparation FOB INFANTS A Nil CIIII.DUKN, ssimilating the food and Regulating 4ie Stomach and liowels. IT PROMOTFS DIdF.STION. CHF.EKFl'L-NKS- S AN1 KF.ST. IT 13 A WONDERFUL REMEDY i'OU CONSIll'ATION, SOUK SlVIMAOII, L'ONVL'I.SieNS, Loss Of Sr.KKI'. W IllMS, FKVEillSllSE-8- , ETC. 1'HiCE CENTS, ('or Sale bj All liriiKglsts. BRGGS MEDICINE CO., Snu Francisco, California. IDREUHL & FRANKEN, j PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS S e cor. Main and Third South. We carry a complete line of Drugs, Chemlcala, Proprietary Remedies, Trusses, import-ported'ar- d demesne IVrfumes and Toilet Articles. The Compounding nr Ph slnlans' Prescrip-tions and Family H.oipes our Specialty. Also a tine line of Trusses. Prices and fvtcri. Special attention given tooruers by mail. Agency for Gunter's Fine Candies. Lave orders at any of th music stores, or at Sharp A Yuuuger's Plac drug aturo. WALKER . HOUSE, The Walker U Located in the Butrintm i Center of thit City and ha all th Modern Improvements k Convenience! ' I Pertaining to a strictly flrit-cla- st howm It Is managed as well as any hotel In th Watt and la atiictly the Business and TooT 1st Hotel of Salt Lake City. Passenger Elevator. The Walker & the Metropolitu Art the Two Leauin? Hotel! of Sail , Lake City. O-.S- . ERB .Fro-D-Bicycles, Tricycles & YelocWes Razors, Pocket Cutlery, Shears and Scissor Strops INDIAN CLUBS, BOXING CLOVES. DUMB BELLS' DOG COLLARS. THOMSON BOOTS AND SHOES. FIELD AND OPERA CLASSES- - Examine my Stock Before Purchasing I REAL ESTATE, NO. MAIN STREET Lake City, TJtaa. Notary la oinoe Telephone is. ' MONEY WANTED. IF YOU DESIRE A GOOD LOAN PLACED real estate, call on S. i Spencer. 1M7 Main atreet. TEE BYNDIOATE INYESTlfENT 00., REAL ESTATE, ROOM 1, OVER BANK OF Lake. Inreatraenta for non residents s specialty. " PH181C1ANJ. ' M& rBEEMAN ft BTJBB0W3, YE, EAR, NOSE, THROAT. SPBOTA J cles accurately fitted. Rooms 17 and id h building. ATTORNEYS. EHEPAED GEOVE ft BHEPAEDi IAWYEHS ROOMS 49 AND 60 WASATCH SaltLakeUlty, C.W. P0WEB3, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW- , OPPOSITE Second South atreet. PLATINO. NOVELTY MANDTAOTUEINO 03.. Ct OLD, SILVER AND NICKEL PLATINfJ by the Dynamo Process. All kinds of repairing done with neatness and dispatch. KltunsoN Bros, 01 E 3d South. RESTAURANTS. LUNCH COUNTER. riMIE NICF.ST LCNCH, SANDWICHES, i beef tea. fragrant coffee, Jersey milk, pas-try, hot soda, at Wasatch Elevator Lobby. Uusiuesa men try it FIRNITVKE. EANDBEEG TUENITUEE 00.. MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN School Desk. --4l WEST TmVhZ. ' . DR. J. E. COHN. Pliyskiita & Surgeon.! Removed Ofl.ce to Constitution UuiiUiu,;. Main St. OflW hours 10 to ll a m ;vA 'ito 4 p.m. Spe-cial altciuiun paid to JLUeeatte ol Wouua. BeaiitifalVoman fMILHS 8WEHT-- LV o' the thoutchl ,r'kaas"sJy-N- . oi her own luveli- ltVeZ'Cl netm. Kverywomar iSiV-t??- ! smiles sweetly whe wm! r ucs Wiwlum l Ro i yTy fsjvji'' bertine, for it gives a.yVW-- l to her aclear, trans- - Wi 'Txc--' t parent, bea ut it ul t. VrV km' A hrautiiul I s7 complexion alone ia L vr often sumcient to t'x' make a woman ijittW beautiful. Awosiaa r C Tt' who has a beautiful f .KsH. lfc complesion shouW 'tr preseive it ; the one y ii(lvC' 'ess lorlunate in ,7 flI.V'ls'tk& this possessioa VVW snould beautily it. 'If SW Wisdom'a Koher- - tine does just what k claimed for It It not only preserves and beau-Unc- s the complexion, bat repairs the dsmsgea oone by the use ot the muuy dangerous s now in the asmrket. by its tonic eflect, the skin la a natural, healthy sctioa, kcl the teatimooiaia tnm lamous artistes, ecla-ts aasl Uieauaui aad caaiacnt phy stuaaa, The Cullen, THE MODERN HOTEL OF SILT HVL S. C. EAVINO. - - PROPrt. Morrison, Merrill & Co. i Wholesale and Retail LUMBER All kinds of Material pertaining to th i Lumtier Yard bustneMa, and spe- - ; clal facilities for handling j GET THEIR PRICES, j Third West, Eetveea First and Second Narta. '"" WOMAN'S WOULD. WPiS. WHITNEY'S VIEWS ON THE SOCIAL CAREER OF ACTRESSE3. fleasant Cbaf with Mrs. Mpplnrott A Korwefilan School WniiH'n Should He Architects Th Only M'oilian C.'orra-- f fiumletit Camilla I'rso Harris. Mrs. William O. Whitney, tlio wifo of tlie of the niivy, tliscn.-.-- freely the question ret:ariliiii the H'jcial carer of mi net reus. ''l'lie quest inn IS Hut tltl e.'lsV OlIC to my rtnml to Hi.swer, fur it depends upim a great m.'i.iy eor. litions. 1 tin not know at tl.e ri 'lit tuie (f a niaurla instanea win re fi faslii'iti.iMo woman has (joim on t if si. !;; and has letJiined her social The fact is there uro very few f.v.' intinlilo women who have Kotnunto pvofeM-iiiiii- life, und tliose fie,vcan lmnl-l- y lit- - citeil us ood examples. In every ruse these women hiivo taken their choice beiwei n their friends in society und thu peojilc they have met on the Ktae, and in preferring thu latter havo lost all that they had wilhthe friends of their former lil'o. If n woman who p'es on tiia nt:w mirronnilH herself by a lirt-- t cliisf'.twm puny, iiml leadsajierfectly clenri life during her irofesional career, and continues her fri. ritlnliip for her social friends, it is quite likely that h1h would reUiiu whatever jooj position hIw had hi !'ora "1 think, however," continued Mrs. Whitney, "that our society, bcim? so rather slow, would prob-ably hesitate a long while before opening its arms to an actress. There is nothing against the profi-ssion- , and I know a great many lovely women who earn their living by it, but you know there is a Ken-er- a prejudice against it, aud it would be hard to overcome it. "In England the Prince of Wales is the leader of the social world, and an invita-tion extended by him to any member of the theatrical profession means, orcourse, social recognition all around. Iu thin country society ia founded upon t differ-ent basis entirely. Wo havo no l'rince cf Wales and uo leader to follow, and therefore there would be no ono to settle euch a question. Of courso Mrs. might invite ft prominent member of the profession to dine with her or to one cf her big entertainments, but it would be a question as to whether others would follow suit Miss Otis' Dolls. Miss Elita Proctor Otis, the youthful proprietor of The Saturday Review, who is now in Paris with her mother, has a curious and novel fad for dolls. When she lived at thu Chelsea, New York city, a whole room in her apartment was de-voted to them. Littlodollsand bit? dolls, old dolls and young dolls, dolls of high and of low degree, mid dolls of color in short, every variety of dolls known to the rising and the risen geiieratioiicotild be found there. Tor many months they have been (.tored away in large trunks, but wili soon be re .um'ctcd and their ranks by dainty marvels of Parisian manufacture, as Miss Otis to sail for New York this month. Epoch. New York's Latent Women's Club, Some of the most aggressive members of the Women's University club are a bit troubled that it should have taken a name apparently in imitation of a mas-culine organization long in existence. The club has modest quarters ill Barnard college, the Columbia annex, and it membership includes resident graduates of Yassar, Smith, Wellesley, Ann Arbor, Cornell and other colleges where women are educated. The club takes a deep in-terest in the college settlement of youiilf women dowu in Kivington street. Of course a club house is one of the proba-bilities of the early future. Now Yolk Star. "Aunt llurllny." Living in Washington in the home founded by W. W. Corcoran for elderly women of font hern birth is Miss Graham, better known as "Aunt Hartley." She has the refutation of being ono of the late tjeor(.e Iiancroft's especial friends, and few pleasant days passed without i heir meeting. Miss Orahamii a charm-ing talker, and enjoys relating incidents of her granduncle, Mark Catesby, the .nited naturalist of ho Eighteenth cent-ury. She has tho friendship of many Washington celebrities, and corresponds with Mrs. Jefferson Davis. Exchange. Miss Captain Clay! Miss Minnie T. Clay, a recent student i.t Abbott academy, Andover, lias re-ceived i.n appointment as captain of a Lteam vessel on Sebago lake, Maine. She lias studied navigation and passed a suc-cessful examination as pilot and naviga-tor; and, nit hough she is tho first lady to receive such an appointment iu Maine, she is : nsidered well qualified for her position. The steamer of which she is U owned bv her father. New Furry Comforls. They're almost Esquimau clad theso days, aren't they? these pretty fashion-able women that walk or drivo in the streets with fur at the hem of their clinging gowns and long coats or capes ' of fur, and with their fair faces peeping out from their high furry collars, for till the world like some wonderful sort of There never was such a season for furs of ull kinds, from tho long, silky, white fleece of the An-gora lamb that lilies the snowy opera cloak to the rich pelt of tho seal that goes into the serviceable street coat. Oik; would think a very arctic season wore upon the city, women are so clad about and wrapped to the curls of their foreheads in the ileece of fu.'S. And you really think, do you, most short sighted creatures, that women (tro suddenly finding themselves ill danger of sudden death from cold, and therefore they have taken to super-wrappin- g themselves in skins? Nay, not so. Women have just discovered that there is nothing in all tho world that make them look so well as that soft shag of fur about their necks and framing in their faces. It. softens sharp outlines, it brings out delicate colorings. It liils out hoiluws, it subtracts whole geologic periods from a woman's age. There's the secret of it all. It isn't a fear of pneumonia, it isn't a suddenly increased susceptibility to cold it's because it makes her look better. Aud surely that's reason enough. It is to you, good sir, if j you are any philosopher of affairs fem-inine, l'or anything that makes a woman look Utter makes her feel bet-ter, and anything that makes her feel better makes h r behave belter. And , you see, you're directly the gainer, aren't you? Philadelphia Times. Women Should He A rchltrcta. There is a great field open to women as draughtsmen. There is no more rea-son why they may not plan houses as well as paint pictures, but as yet there tire few disposed to undertake the work. Every woman sees faults in a house she rents or buys, and without doubt if women planned these abodes there would be a disposition of space now unknown, and there would be fewer lamentations in regard to corner cupboards and bare wall space. It is said that a woman is to plan the pavilion to be devoted to women's work at the World's fair. Un-til this report was circulated nobody thought there were any women archi-tects, but it turns out that there are several. York Ledger. The refreshments served at afternoon teas, that popular mode of entertaining, are of l!u most simple kind, firoad aud imttiTsar.dwiehcs of thinly sliced crust-lo- ss bread, brown and white, wafers or tea biscu.t, may any one of them be of-fered wilh a cup of tea, and for mors formal occasions pound cake or any solid cake, chocolate and coffee may boadded. Emma Abbott wears in her coffin a part of the liandnjmo veil sho mod to wear in her performances of Juliet. This veil die bought in Paris, and she was wont to call it her inaixot, because fortune favored her from the moment it came into her possession. At her death half of it was cut up into souvenir for tuo members of hor troupe. Tho widow of the late Vice President Ilcndricks will read a paper before tho National Council of Women, to meet in Washington on the 2M of February. The beautiful thought that a man and hia wife ate (die receives conc!uho tit mou-nt ral it u tiiniiiKli the public interest that ai ways follows .the widow of a prominent man. Mrs. Rk'tanl A. Proctor, tho astrono-itler'-s widu'A , prp. y.s i husband's n:ttuo by 'mil li:j,.f an bsorva twy on 'Mi-- : i jii heL ht .. at Sau Diego, CaL It isrsthnnto'l that tLe building, with the telescoiie, wili cost about if.),-00- and tho bulk of this sum Mrs. Proc-tor hopes to raise by lecturing. Tho university at Geneva has just made an M. D. of tho young Polish Countess Wanda von Szcawinska. Her graduation thesis was a remarkably learned paper concerning tho eyes of cnistaceims ani-mals and the effect of light and darkness ujiou tiiein. The Countess Wanda will ptactice in Poland. As a rule women are. better conversa-tionalists than men, being endowed with a readier talent for repartee, a quicker wit and a keener intuition of the fittteui of thud's. 'No," continued M rs. Whitney," Amer-ican society is not as lax in some respects as English society, for English society will tolerate a great deal that our society vill not. The sum and substance of the whole matter is that it is hardly probable for ru;uiy years to come that the fashion-able world will accept a woman who has been on the stage, unless sho bi longed to society before entering on her profession-al career, and even then, as I said before, it ull depcuds upon the manner of her ftjigo life and her stage friends." 1 'hilar delphia Times, i I'lraoant Chat nltli Mrs. Mpplnrntt. 1 wits greatly interested in listening to (dino of Mrs. Lippincolt's reminiscences the other afternoon. We were talking in ber pleasant apartment ou West Thirty fourth street, New York. She was showing mo a s rap book which her mother made of newspaper clippings Biiout Grace Greenwood. Tho personali- - ties of those days are very amusing to read now. With their stately language, thtir rhetoric, they are witirely different from the flippant and familiar paragraphs ci today. 'in those days," said Mis. Iipptncott, "it was an unusual thing for a woman to write. We were blue stockings then, llow often did people say to me, 'Well, my dear, thia writing may bo amusing to yon; you may enjoy it, but you know it will injure your chances of getting a husband.' That was the main object of woman's existence then. I was the first woman newspaper correspondent. No, I was not tho first woman journalist Margaret Fuller und Lydia Maria Child were before me but my Washington ' correspondence inaugurated a new do-- partnre." Mrs. Lippincott intends to make Wash- - j ington her home for the future, and j w hen once settled there to begin to make her recollections, which certainly will be instructive aud of great interest. The lady's hair is quite gray. She is stout and motherly looking. The quaint, old f.tshioned portrait of herself when a young woman shows a lovely face lighted by great hazel eyes, and many of the curious personalities and poems written to and about her speak of her beautiful hands and arms. Mrs. Lippincott's time j is almost entirely given over to charitable work, hunting out the poor aud needy and ministering to their wants. Iler daughter, who studied for the stage and who was forced to retire from it tempo- - rarily on account of ill health, lives with j ' Iter. She is a fair girl with a serious and delicate face. Edith Scabious Tupper Chicago Herald. I There is a very successful woman ar-chitect in lioston, one in Newport, and one in one of tho western cities. The latter lielotigs to a firm, her husband being the other partner. She works like a luau, and is the only woman, as yet, who uttendsthe convention of architects. There is an apartment house in Chicago designed by a woman, and tho rooms are paid to bo admirably arranged. The pantries are ext ra commodious, the bath-room contains a linen cupboard, aud the entrance hall a stationary hat rack, and various other conveniences leave nothing to bo desired. New York Sun. The Only Wonsau Correspondent. Women visitors to the Cap-to- l are al-ways much interested when they per-ceive one of their sex sitting iu the press giill'Ty, hard at work with pencil and paper. There are many women in Washington who write for the press, and some of them earn largo incomes too, but only one has entree to the press lery. This lady, Mrs. P.urke, is the regularly accredited and very iudnst.ii-- 1 oiis correspondent of u western paper, and she takes her place among the lar;'e iiiinijit'r of newspaper men and manage to gel till tho news in which her employ-ers are interested, but tho fact is she meets with no very cordial vvV.otne at the hands of her fellow worker. The newspaper Correspondents here l av al-ways been opHed to letting women into the gallery, and while they couldn't keep Mrs. liurke out under tho rule, they managed to exclude her name from the list of correspondents printed iu the con-gressional directory. Washington Cor. Augusta Chronicle. Camilla I'rso Harris. Miss Camilla Urso Harris, oldest daughter of Joel Chandler Harris, the Atlanta humorist, is about to go to Italy to pursue the study of art. Sho is now 20 years of age, and is a girl of remarka-ble beauty and talent. She paints with wondrous skill, and her gift at sculpture Is equally lutitusing. Clue of the figures execnted by her when only 13 years old has just been presented to the Atlanta Historical society; it represents Uncle Renins, the character her father lias so delightfully delineated. Miss Harris leaves unfinished a battle scene an epi-sode of the march to tho sea which Getu Sherman pronounces a masterpiece already; this work will not be completed until the artist has finished her course of study under Signor Marchesiui at Flor-ence. Chicago News. What to Do'Hefore the number Comes. A Norwegian School. j Norway boasts peveral practical insti- - tntions in the way of schools, and a little information about one of these may not be without interest. The school in ones-- tion is situated at some miles distance ' from Christiania, and looks, as ono ap-proaches it, like an ordinary farmstead, with dairy, etc. The iuterior is plainly but neatly and tastefully arranged. At present there are six pupils, who are divided into two sections, and every one cf them is occupied in accordance with a fixed plan. . Iu the forenoon tne section lias the work in the lioube, und luu.-- t do the work both L.f tho mistress and the servant. They each have a number; number one, j for instance, is busy in the kitchen, mini- - ; ber two is making the rooms tidy, and number three attends to the dairy. The other section is at the same timo engaged in weaving, sewing, cutting out, etc. As sections and numbers change every week all the girls get the different work in turn. At 12 o'clock dinner is served, and then follows some hours' instruction iu 'Norwegian, orthography, botany, nat-ural science, etc. The garden, which is always in beautiful order, is also entirely kept up by the pupils. The school is more particularly intend-- ed for jieasaut girls, and each course lasts a year; the pnpila must have com-pleted their eighteenth year before en-tering the school. The pay, including everything, is only fifteen kreutzers (about '$4) s month, and there are two pupils free. Similar schools will now le erected in various parts of Norway, at the instance of the Society for the Wel-fare of Norn ay. The number of repli-cants has been ten times greater tnan tho accoinmodatioa. New York Ledger. To Cud the water pipes leaking, frozen, or perhaps burst, no rare occurrence during the winter in the modern much plumbed houses. Nothing more thor-oughly demoralizes the domestic ma-chinery than such unlucky happenings. Floors are wet, ceilings leak, the water is shut off and the whole household is at a standstill, waiting for that vexatious the plumber. When-ever the leak is visible the housewife car, cure the ill beivir. at least tempi 'rarily. Shut off the water first, and then spread some white lead on a cloth, like a plaster. Tie this firmly over the lcaa, and the plaster will soon harden, fot the water cannot work its way out or prevent the plaster adhering. Unless the plumber will make thor-ough repairs when he does come, the lead plaster is more permanent than any puttied joint or weak solder. Let n pound of white lead stand a day or two until a skin has formed over it, and then cover it with water. It will be soft and ready for use at arty time, aud the house-wife can "snap her iingew at the pluml)-cr'- s ways," to paraphrase Sir Joseph Porter, as best suitfi a frosty morning. Strips of rubber rat from old rubber and bound tightly over tho leaks in hot water pipes will close the holes and Btop the dripping flood. When the water freezes in tho traps of the bathroom or tho kitchen sink, a quart of common salt thrown into them will thaw them out more rapidly than hot water. A lighted lamp placed under a frozen water pipe is more rapid and con-venient in its work than pouring on hot water. A lamp, the Hauio partly lower-ed, placed under an exposed bead or lengt h of pipe which is liable to freeze is a simple preventive of trouble in bit-ter weather. Harper's Bazar. I : --, 1 t L J |