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Show 'RTICOLT0RE Corset a toe to HANDSOME ACTRESS SHOT AGRICULTURE DEAD BY JEALOUS LOVER ON PHILADELPHIA STREET Writer Claims It Is Not Only Vnsanitary Wear But Disfiguring At Best Its Constant Produces an Inartistic and Artificial propagating from Bearing Trees. Review: The editdesires reasons why propagate only orserymen should of known fruit-lo- t from bearing tree, ability. A careful study of a bud to proga-Mtin- g fiU show that the objection through a long series of years untested buds from from young and is well founded. A bud janery rows attains the life germ and a perfect the same vascembryo tree possessing ular system of the tree or plant upon fhlch it grows, and before modern investigation proved the contrary It was thought no variation ever took place. But we new know that a tree changes and becomes weak In Itj organism lome parts and strong in other parts, nd that when these changes are effected they are as permanent as any of its characteristics. When a tree becomes unfruitful. Its organism Is fruit producing or seed veak in its buds, and the tree growing out of these buds will possess these weaknesses, as repeated experiments Take buds from a have shown. and very fruitful tree and another from the nursery row, where it has been propagated through a dozer or more years from the young nonbearing wood. In the first case you will see a marked difference in the wood growth. The tree will not look ao smooth and straight as the other, but under good treatment it will come into bearing much earlier and be much more fruitful afterwards. The second tree will grow smooth and straight and look much nicer, hut its growth will be wood until late In its life or until something is done to bring it into bearing. Many nurserymen have experimented and proven the correctness of the principle, but people want prom Farmers or of the Review Permanent Pastures. practically all American farm. the 18 This lsmmorntfPa8tUre the west even than of the east It is rather V1 tFUe ,n a11 thf neaneref W6 ,gllt Ited surpris- - of our dairy expect t0 pafture fuly appreci-Wh,- f A effort is made p ,U t0 often stops at putting on manure and some clover hy fe6d r turnIn the sod ovfr and sowing to blue grass. Timothy can hardly be considered a good grass for pastures, unless very the pasture is to be used largely for horses, and the cloyer generally dies out In a few years. The blue grass proves good pasturage under only favorabie conditions and with proper handling. Generally It does not prove to be a first-clas- s pasture the whole year. It is desiredthrough to have a pasture that matures its grass at different seasons. Our mistake seems to have been In great too few sowing varieties of grasses. This mistake is accentuated when we sow two or three varieties of grasses that mature at the same time. These begin to grow at the same time and during' the flush of the season the animals revel In a superabundance of good things. But when the grasses have reached their maturity they begin to decline at once. No new varieties are coming on to take the place of the varieties that are In decadence, and the stock at pasturage begin to feel the difference. The farmer then must begin feeding or he will have to face a shrinkage In flesh of his fat cattle and a shrinkage of milk In his dairy cattle. The proper way would be to select grasses that mature at different times and that have their growth In different seasons and cheap, large, straight, smooth-barke- d at different times. This can be done trees and insist on having them and by sowing some very early and some are so grounded in prejudice that very late grasses. Among the sales cannot be effected at a price that It will be well to sow for grasses the early which will justify the additional exgrowing we mention the fescues, orpense of maintaining an orchard unchard grass and timothy. For those der conditions to furnish the that have a late growing season w grafts. name crested dog tail, alsike clover, So long as the man who furnishes red clover and meadow foxtail. To the big, smooth tree at the smallest these may be added other valuable price gets the order there is no inducegrasses that have been found to be ment to make the change. The change, good in different localities. Farmers Review. however, is coming, and In the not distant future every nurseryman will have to give evidence that hia trees Teoslnte. are not all wood, but that have Bulletin 102 of the Kansas station they a fruit producing organism developed says: This is a native of Mexico, and in them, so we shall not have to wait thought by many botanists to be the ten years longer than necessary In or- original of our Indian corn. It is an der that we may get returns for labor annual plant, resembling corn' or sorand care. Next week we will point out ghum in general appearance, but, insome instances specific of such stead of producing an ear, there are changes. R. M. Kellogg, Michigan. in the leaf-axil-s several slender jointed spikes which are separate frorp each other Instead of being united into Handling a Peach Crop. R. Morrill: I think s of an ear. However, In the United States the peaches In our state and a good many from Illinois are picked either too soon or too late and not at the right time. A peach f s or grown is and If picked will go on and take out the color, but never matures, never gets flavor and never has size. The last forty-eighours in the development of the peach is what gives it the size, and it is a very important factor in selling. A peach should be picked as the greater portion of it turns to yellow or cream white, depending upon the variety. It should be picked Immediately. It happens that you should go over an orchard every day, every tree, and take out every ripe peach. A great many people gather their crop at two or three pickings, amLihey find their fruit coming into market in bad order and the commission man perhaps makiteosint ng a bad report on it, and they do not like the commission seldom the flowers, and never men, while the plant fault is with them, and as our markets produces seed except In south Florida re getting better and better supplied or near the gulf coast It is cultivated each year by competent men, the men In the' southern states, where it Is conwho cannot understand this, who can- sidered a valuable forage plant, and not understand what the customer under favorable conditions produces wants, must be the sufferer. He has an Immense amount of forage. For exnobody to find fault with but himself. ample, It Is reported to have produced 1 see a great lack everywhere I go in Louisiana over fifty tons of green of proper preparation for handling forage per acre. It requires a long season and considerable moisture, for crops, even among large orchard growers. They are not well equipped as a which reason it is not well suited to rule, and not prepared to handle a crop Kansas conditions. It gives a fair when they get it, and then after workiamount of fodder in Kansas, but there ng for years and years to get a crop is nothing to recommend it above corn, they lose a large percentage of it from sorghum or Kafir corn for the same their inability to care for It purpose. rightly Farmers Review. Red Polls. Do Many Trees Die at the Roots? George 1. Pommel : The Red Polled In a discussion on Is one of the youngest of the breeds. hardy stocks at nn Illinois 1846 that the convention, H. Augustine It was not until the year declared that few trees died at the union of the Norfolk and Suffolk breeders gave the breed its name, and foots. J. L. Hartwell replied as My impression is that Mr. Au- from that time the real history of the gustine does not understand this case, breed may he said to date, though for two from the fact that he does not know many years before this the the conditions that Mr. Thompson In branches had" preserved their individnorthern Illinois has to combat I had uality in their respective districts. WOO apple grafts in the ground, rangi- From the start this breed has been ng from a year old to three, in that famous as one valuable alike for dairyfcnrd winter. ing and for beef production. On the The following spring did not have a of England, the Norfolk cattle markets single live root Not one. I suppose that my scions came take high rank, often selling for prices from stocks came from seed which as good as the Scotch" beef, which Is came from France. I do not know. . considered the best the l rket affords. bought them in Iowa from a seedling They were first brought to America rower; apparently there was not a in 1873, and since have grown steadily dead top to those trees. When qualities the In favor. Their frost came out of the ground in the have been neglected some, but they spring every one of the tops began to have figured Btrongly as valuable anirow, without a single exception. Now, mals for the small farmer. Neglect to 1 had hardy varieties of tops; the trou- show them n high condition has also ble with them was that the roots were tended to obscure their killed under conditions that the tops powers In time past, but recent exould not have been if the roots had hibitions have been highly creditable. been correspondingly as hardy as the As their name indicates, cattle of top. are without horns no appearance of them being tolerated. In color Cheap Plants. they are a rich, deep red, with white From Farmers Review: As a rule allowed on the udder and underline, ony cheap and you get cheap. This Inside the flanks, and on the, switch hne prinviple, I think, holds true In of the tall. The head is quite charhe nursery business. We often see acteristic, of medium size,, clean-cu- t trawnerry plants quoted at a very low with a sharp poll, which carries a good "lure, and if purchased from these tuft of hair. The neck is of medium Parties are generally of a low grade, length; body of good size and shape; Prefer direct to a specialist legs of medium length. Red Polls are sending la the growing of strawberry plants very uniform, prepotenL and hardy, nd paying a good price than to the uney have a great many advocates, a whose are way below being good milkers, as well as good t average.quotations Plants that are true to feeders. ame strong, healthy, carefully dug, trimmed and With the increasing price for land It cannot be sent out at a low figure will pay to tile much of the land that be profitable to the :r. J. L. has hitherto lain waste on account of grHwK Wlssewin. being too wet to work. d nine-tenth- one-hal- two-third- semi-colore- d fol-tow- s: beef-makin- g flesh-bearin- g this-bree- well-roote- well-pack-- d Paris fashions, the empress. On jfeJ It w concernms th Napoleon said in taste, vival of tight lacing bomof of wear, &ivu children, roacv ernment control of the which murders and taste writer lous He sale of corsets. 4 a -stay made it a misdemeanor ing decadence. y or of for any woman under of that period, Btws, thirty years of age to not composedofwha but broad, and wear one. Imposing a penalty of three j hardened leather to four Inch8 eighteen months in prison or a fine of $200. from three not less than them of many manufacturer He planned to have the In length." ,rn(!ucd Into and dealer submit reports to the au- Inches The corset was iatr ntury, and thorities of all persons purchasing in the twelft harmless. them, on pain of having their prop- England was comparaUr first evt at erty confiscated. Dr. Marechale exclusive us c The body dently was fully aware of the opposl- Its of Queen Eli would reform and both reign tion this attempted armm. a stiff arouse among women, and he framed was Incased In gar- the law so stringently that no one waists and sweuea ments below. darl$ court This age of literature B far a?1t w dresa age of morality The i was concerned. necjj was unlimited. The ruffs reg and metM were stiffened by were so These lon by colored starch. frt . safely- immense that a spoon t0 c0TfJw colored. The &e In divers hues or was colors. , var comodate wigs of warfare The Puritans made Jbltrar puritan on devilish fashions, wlUl t conscience banished thew and i the our the Immoralities of . ancestors our Puritan stiff shores without the tbe , get my mlnd When Prof. Nixon and Dr. Learn-- 1 might, I couldnt utterances. For th - upon him or his exhausthad ington, the Englishman, flOOTStCP, on seen my I had woman ed" their stories of mental suggestion, who had disappeared the same hypnosis and telepathy, Dr. Thatcher, - and time that Dudley moved, was In the mere a as provinwho was regarded At first she sat in a dark church. cial, and who had listened attentively toward the door, but to the most extraordinary yarns pew well backmiddle of the sermon, in the a once, relate singular asked if he might aisle and promthe out into came she experience of his own. Being urged the chanto the recital and quite aware that enaded slowly down toward across platform the as in carpeted cel, be regarded would his disclosures into the vestry confidential, he related the following and out of sight Thorn-Bu- t details of an experience which, he he the within culminated vouched, had service When - hadnt noticed her. Kanin a past two years of his life .... I was over I meant to inquire further sas town. into the identity of the stranger who About the same time that the pas- seemed to be following Mr. Dudley, tor of the Bethesda church left to ac- but that was the morning of the cept a better and more remunerative wreck on the O. G. and N., and for mission in fexas, he 6aid, I got a let- two weeks afteward I was busy. ter from Rev. Payne Dudley of ManI was quite fagged out when I got chester, asking me 4f I knew of any home and I didnt attend services for a opening in our western country forat- two or three Sundays, but one evenyoung preacher of his faith and about half an hour after the overAs Dudley had been a ing, tainments. limited passed through town, land no classmate of mine, and as I had the station agent, came high Floyd King, particular reason to doubt theattainwith a small boy who, house to my up qualities of his character and been sent to me, all had said King, ments, I immediately thought of the the way from Boston. I asked the Beth- the without the steely armour possibility of securing him for his name. He was about 7, and child a was I how- - waist other reputed In As not esda church, of which did It pass, could escape. j o0'jnOI,oas he replied quickly enough, Ralph women who are wedded to j passing of simplicity member, though, I must say, neither and from a took letter he Then 0j Beo,' an active servitor nor a very edifying Dudley. In , It was addressed to me, their corsets will not be divorced industry marked the1 his pocket. com a That very evening Support. to come from them unless It should he decreed Bibie dress, and in 0f It purported but unsigned. fnittee of church members called, at from friends of Mr. Dudleys In Paris by the makers of fashion Boston describes , the late curves house and asked whether I could and said that the boy Ralph that suppleness, grace, natural Kate Hassett, leading woman in the opened up a rapid fire from a revol- my for thfe vacant pastor- wife, the be anyone should deamong suggest health and to have was his, that he seemed stock company at Keiths Eighth ver. The first shot must have pierced ate. unless the requisites of a fashionable woman inand child the that, serted Street Theater in Philadelphia, was Miss Hassetts heart, and almost withWithout stopping to consider the crampfather could be induced to care lor stead of the stilted, artificial, shot through the heart and instantly out a sound she sank to the sidewalk, awkward predicaments that might ed deformities which the fashionable to an sent must be orphange. it killed by Barry Johnstone, late of dead. She was a remarkably handIt, if Dudley proved to be a failure or I now turns upon society some and clever woman. Richard Mansfields company. brought the little fellow in, and in modiste I at once mentioned a allowed to reach maturity are disappointment, In were Boys we Dudleys hour half an When Johnstone shot himself he his Johnstone then turned the pistol name, described him as a hand- rooms. without being made over, but girls the almost sidewalk to fell the upon upon himself and lodged two bullets some, eloquent and earnest young He seemed glad enough to get his are not above his heart that will probably womans dead body. Education in the line of physical clergyman, said that he had been a boy, insisted that he had intended to cause his death. The motive for the intimated that Kate Hassett was one of the most classmate of mine, and soon as his financial culture, however, Is widening the as him for send crime was jealousy. recent recruits to the stage, appear- If properly approached be might affairs took shape, and Invited me to horizon , of American women, and to come to us. A correspondJohnstone lost his position with' ing prominently for the first time last many are adopting a healthful mode Mansfield a few days ago and went season in Leo Detrichsteins The ence was begun between the vestryof dress and many more would if He lay in Last Appeal. direct to Philadelphia. She was cast for the men and Rev. Mr. Dudley, and the they could adjust their clothing prop wait for Miss Hassett at the stage leading role, and though she did net quick result of the whole business erly. Discarding the corset is only If the heavy door of the theater and followed her score a hit it was agreed that her was that he came West, called first half of the battle. a block after she left. dramatic talent was unmistakable &t my house and, being hospitably inskirts hang from the waist and the residence bands are tight the discomfort Is Suddenly he sprung upon her as she and experience alone was needed to vited, took up his temporary I need not go Into the me. with an more of actress her than make and an electric under light, passed greater than the corset and the injury particulars of his instant success with ordinary ability. shouting You are not true to me, nearly as great The muscles which During the his new parishioners. have been weakened by the corset three or four weeks of his stay at must be strengthened by systematic RECALLED FROM A THE CAPITAL. LEADER. MRS. BESANT STILL my house, I will not say that he practice so that they evaded my inquiries about his career body erect and Colombian Its Government to Withdraws Listen Audiences Monster Disciple since we left college, but I gradually firm and perof Theosophy. Washington Representative. became Impressed with the notion form the office Senor Jose VIncentI Concha, who that he preferred to keep his own Mrs. Besant left England a few of the steel and days ago, on her way to India, where has been recalled by his government counsel about his past. He had been w haiebone. matters connected with the school for In an obscure mission In Vermont, Then, with unat Benares' mutual had lost track of all our natives, which she founded derclothing and several years ago, claim her attenfriends in a word, we had nothing In dress made to common. tion. She is going by way of the con. to correspond tinent, and will hold tbeosophlcal I think it must have been about law of beaumeetings in Germany, Switzerland the fourth day after his arrival and ty ami -- natural and Italy eventually sailing from a Installation in my house, that I got form, the emi-.- . southern port. i a late call from a patient in one of cipated woman ' Mrs. Besant will return to England the near by villages. It was my bab will grow strong, happy'and 'httrac: wearing the Corset day and when dor lying In June and persue her calling as a it to go out the back door and get tive. tlghteaifigit Into my buggy in front of the barn, latter day Blavatsky in the vicinity of The degree of lacing In every counagain IntKeSlaB. The corset of' London. driving thence out the side road, try Is like a barometer, indicating the which led past my porch to the artistic and moral condition of the more flexible and les A few years ago it was prophesied 1 Street. It was a very bright night, epoch. The earliest mention of gird- yet It Is still a relic fully that Annie Besant was about and as I glanced toward my front to he ignored by the world at large ing was made by that first dress re- wrltes Mabel Stillman lr theTCfflwaa door I saw a young woman sitting former, the prophet Isaiah. Israel, kee Sentinel. The cheapness of It and England in particular. But this While Dn the top step of the porch stairs, fulfilled. not been has grown proud in prosperity, was given puts It within the reacVof . ever prophecy with her head upon her knees. I over to idolatry, social degradation class, and the yearly output, not inIn England Mrs. Besant held many and anarchy. stopped and called to her, asking, Did cluding those which are imported, ; lectures and it was only a few days ' ou wish to see the doctor. Miss? amounts to 60,000,000. of waist the artificial An shape before her departure that she spoke tJsJh euaa VSnamt Cantu accomut she rose quickly to her feet, women the to a monster audience who listened among Egyptian and wrent walked down the steps An Involuntary Dance. from his post of minister from Coto her with rapt attention. panied an age of extravagance. in across lawn the the oppoa and to had Rousseau has a To have Swiftly to others, lombia indlvldhkl charm Washington, According marvelous She retains that site direction to that in which I was compression of the body was not prac- burdened with, a cumbersome pact! of hers and while she does bo she will short stay In the American capital, all about ticed by the Spartans. Women were oscillate on a crowded pavement wW not cease to affect multitudes visibly, owing to his persistent tactics a3 an bent. I must have forgotten next Incident the this for when, to day considered part of the state and were one is in a hurry, and make tilfiH obstructionist the disnegotiations and while she pursues her present educational the isthmian canal. Concha arrived about noon, taking a turn in my aris not an I placed under training scarcely less veritable jumping-jack- , creet and Intelligent I- there last spring, and was well re- bor, I saw the same young woman vigorous than the men; nor Is there common experience. in the stricture of ceived. He came with a good record Standing under a poplar tree across evidence waist John the Dues, bandmaster, in the Opposite Directhe street, watching me. As I knew "Went Swiftly as a diplomat and master of Internasucceeding period, that of the wor- made such a favorable impression tion. and as in this town, particutional law. He had been attorney everyone ship of the beautiful; but in the days New York during the summer, K, of the such an experience. He was general and minister of war in the lar stranger showed an uncommon have dinner with him. I tried to preceding the destruction hurryiJ cabinet of the United States of Co- fascination for my place, I at once ttike, the whole affair a3 a matter of Greek republics, when patriotism and along when his spee4rarfinpjs3 somewell was had and meal decided the that her presence course, pretty a man carrying a large harp. He w lombia, and is also said to have been thing to do witn the presence of Rev. over and the tired cnlld nodding in an excellent soldier. to this side of the walk and thea e his chair when I ventured: "I didnt Payne Dudley. that. So did Duss. The man witf I even went so far as to ask him know you had been married, Dudley. Real Hard Work. the harp managed to retard the musit He looked askance at me a moment While down in Oklahoma not long whether he had noticed a pale, brownman with the dexterity of a trained ago Senator Beveridge of Indiana met haired young woman, in a dark dress, and then, I never was, doctor, he football player.' . 1 would have been, I should Delegate McGuire of that territory, loitering about, but he answered said. What does all this mean He got have been if she had lived. She whom he complimented on his fine frankly that he had not. Duss? asked an acquaintance rt thj Oh, yes, hard work made rooms of his own soon after that, go- died, he pointed at the boy, with physique. pirouetting bandmaster. me a strong man, said McGuire. The ing Into the flat over Thornburgs him. Simply this," said the We sat very still and silent for a indict Indiana man replied with a touch of book store. There was no presbymusician, as he pointed to thaiw r and not I to what with few the moments, Dudley, delighted knowing scorn: If you had toiled in a sawmill, tery, Ive been dtocinr lug harp, as I had to do, you would have had a generosity of his new congregation, say, he buried in his own reflections. mans music when I ought "You was apparently very proud and very Then he got up, walked over to the right to talk of hard work. been dancing on it. much new in I interested a his home. took down and mantel shelf, picture never earned your bread as a section hand and pumped a handcar, did you? confess I didnt half like him, but as handed it to me with: The Crown of Roumanil't I I was now regarded as his sponsor, There she is, doctor. I loved her No, nor you never did any steamboatThe crown of as and a seven had of word everyone years ago. h praise well, but she died ing. More than that, you have not unique place In for him, 1 was obliged to smother my It was the picture of the young punched cattle for four or five years, as archies IvnL the only cm and, senator, when you have had a antipathies, and encourage him as far woman I had seen on my porch, and been refused as I could. With this purpose in in the street and in the church. I will these at whack you occupations and son. When, WttiJL methods In India, she will not cease work in a sawmill as a box at view I attended service on the Sun- never Baw her afterward. John H. of the present seneas of his first sermon, but, try as I Raftery In Chicago Record-Heralto win the approbation of a large por- regard r,-becamday the opera. , a kingd pT people. of the English tion the elder r? TO to SAVE ELECTRICITY VICTIMS heat and cold the region of the Corean Comes for Education. declared official heiTACarlel American Railroad Lines. Mme. Chang, a Corean woman ol heart, will sometimes start respirasurrendered his righSy r Manual, of Poors sheets Advance caste, has arrived In California on Even Severe Shocks Are by No tion. high Prince on railroads, William, the renunctM.Tl the great authority a mission for her people. Her object ii Means Necessarily Fatal. formally registered In shows that on June 30, 1902, there to learn American ways, having done a The Trick Failed. ' Accidental electric shocks seldom years ago. For eight were 198,000 miles of railways In this which she will return and introduce One of the members of was a certain is victim unless to heir the line new th? of the produce death, throne nd country, about 4,500 miles them in her native country. It took left unaided too long. In rendering suburban phctographicsociety recent1888 the prince, having been built last year. The treading,, kls before her two delivered. a persuasion years lecture, Illustrated by er s steps, gave up his aid, the first step is to remove the ly total receipts from all roads were just rights In be convinced that a body from the circuit. A dry stick of lantern views, on America and the could husband of his net brother, and the earnings ?1 612,000,000, and the Into the world and a bit of occi- wood may be used to roll the body Chicago Exhibition. Ferdinand, is heir to King oui were almost $600,000,000. There are peep not his ruin would Another education to have dental member, thinking away, or to brush aside a wire. The over 27,00 engines, 36,000 mail and wife. Mme. Chang is the first high-clas- s victim may be seized by the Coat- a joke at the expense of the lecturer, morals were 1.400,000 and freight cars forgotten,' courtesans passenger woman of her race to cross the tails, or with any dry piece of cloth. slipped in among the slides a lantern 11 in this lowest order of originating cars in use. If these were put Into a seas for an American education. - ' of himself. He,p' After that the body should he placed portrait was This women of society by country continuous train they would reach adopted raised The joke would come In, of course, about a 1 on its back. A coat should be rolled dividend rank. The Romans in their turn took ?Ua" 14,000 miles. The average value on the President. i by the Honor To appearing his shoulder. portrait under Retiring up and placed ' stock is 2.62 per bowels of the earth last out 1 np the fashion. . paid on railroad year The faculty and instructing corps Artificial respiration should follow, screen Immediately after the lecturer During the early middle ages the considerably less than ls cent. of the College of New York are to lifting the arms above the head at had announced the appearing of some' custom was not practiced, but about the will but It all different. mehelps quite thing bronze a times a erect minute. least sixteen portrait , University Daily Papers. Fate and chance were unluckily the eleventh century the power of ity along. . of their president, dallion retiring same with a At handkerthe American time, fashion began to be felt and extravaThe Increasing wealth of humorist, for when his ten Gen. Webb, in commemoration of his chief, the tongue should be grasped against the gant dress and tight bandaging inDry Enough, 8Ureiw I was colleges enables no fewer than the presented of administration portrait successful and lecturer, creasing. A when the armB are above the head, without 11 of A Connecticut librarian portrait Henry of them to publish daily newspapers. long what was on knowing the son of Catherine de Medici har the affairs of the college. and allowed to recede when the chest shows using bound volumes of This luxury is Indulged in by 1 ale. screen, gravely read from his list: the C This should be Is also compressed. was that Brown, also Princeton, Record sional tight lacing Cornell, lieu 0f the i The next slide, ladies and gentle-men- , Harvard, Mississippi Honors Lincoln. least sixteen times a minute. ' practiced lacked. - He saysIn they is the picture of a refractory by men. Lincoln will done at Stanford, Tuiane, and the universities President of A are flry portrait natural Unless s.nd respiration begins After Napoleons elevation to ImWisconsin burn well. of Pennsylvania, be placed in the Mississippi hall of sooner, the process should be con- donkey!" " he " power perial adopted the most Michigan. fame at Jackson. The picture was tinued for an hour. Cold water rigorous system of court etiquette. ChariO T. Lincoln, In Robert furnished by The on difference Ice rubbed In the Metal. between face. the a mole and An attempt to resurrect the Medici dashed The Hardest Known Make not thyself jf will be and a to placed request, a beauty spot Is purely sexual. spine, and altenate applications of conet was made by the ladies of Iridium, which costs $780 a pownd, Longfellow. beside that of Robert E. Dee. metal known, I I I l "rjjter en-su- i slow-movin- g r 5 W Vi lla e g 1 ieV bas-reli- ' it the hardest vr 4 |