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Show resources; unlike the women of the old world, nhe has done her own thinkShe lives In an electrical ating. mosphere; she la a spoiled child; the finds herself a component part of a life that is ever changing, and changes with it; she has come to regard herself aB by far the most Important element In that life; she la a child of the hour, of the minute; she does not strike root. Her independence has begot an abnormal amount of Individuality. Is it a matter for wonder, that, finding the man ahe has married unsatisfactory, she tosses him aside? It is to be noticed that no morbid novel has, been written by any woman Neither is of the United States. serious criticism to be found In her work, for these women are rarely morbid and bitter;' never. It might be asserted, unless they are unhealthy or very young. They act rather than talk when it comes to crises. The past, when disposed of has no further concern for them. The present la theirs, the future a condition to be molded by their Imperial will It may be asserted broadly that there is no prejudice against divorce among the upper classes dwelling in the large cities of the United States, provided no scandal has preceded the suit" ITEMS OP INTEREST TO MAIDS AND MATRONS.' am Kew Thing far Lata Fall aud Winter Wear Suggestions f or Ilralilod Contrasts uu Uld Uvwui llodluee. tp-tvD- at Tima, Hope aad Memory. HEARD a gentle In the maiden, spring. Bet her aweet eight to muatc, and thua alnici Fly through the world, and I will follow thee. Only for looka may turn to me; Only for rosea that back that your chance may throw Though witherd I will wear them on my brow. To be a thoughtful fragrance to my brain; Warm'd with such love, that they will bloom again. Thy love before thee, I must tread behind, K lasing thy footprint, though to me unkind: But truat not all her fondneaa, though It seem, Leat thy true love should rest on a false dream. ' Even in sewers and playing A lloj'a liliul. MOUTH. houses women are employed. Some yeais ago, says Judge The London Daily News mentions going into the northern woods that Dutch women are getting restless NO ARMS BUT EDITb A NEWSif Michigan, bent on war with deer and that the men are beginning to rePAPER SUCCESSFULLY. ind bear, I was in advance of the rest sent their Intrusion Into masculine f the party, on foot, when I came to preserves. WrllM I cross road in the woods where was The fourteenth conference of the Expart With m Typewriter International board of Women's and Editorial with III Toath sail Ilia I little log house. 1 found a bright litWomen's Christian association! Tom Indomitable riurk of Aaron tle boy, nine or ten years old, standing Young it the corner of the fence, and I asked la now In session at Montreal and Smith. Him which road I should take to reach will continue until the 22d iiiBt. This I certain mill. With perfect good naboard represents over seventy associaHAT - ARE - WE ture, but with a continual stream of tions, formed for the specific work of Flanaaths Interlarding his words, he told helping women, especially women deJim me. Ho was a bright, "Cyclone gan, on d own their exertions for little pendent Davis and James 3. boy, and spoke good English, and with support. The first one was organized In 1S58; since that time associations Hogg are not the the utmost politeness. remarkable have been formed in many of the I began to remonstrate wllh him IS only men in Texas, says is kindly a way aa I could. I said; states, south, east and west, as well as in Canada and the British provinces. the St. Louis ReMy little hoy, you seem to havt These associations have many fine public. For anoth- been to school; you speak good lanbuildings and do a large and Imporer exxample, there guage, only you swear terribly. Why tant work. do you do that? It Is not gentlemanIs Aaron Smith, edand it is wicked. ly, itor and proprietor He looked up to me with perfect Hod leva. or the Mount Pleasant and. said: The newest importations from Par- who writes editorials with a pen held le would indicate that the horizontal In hia mouth or between hie toes "Squire, my father swears, and I bar will fast disappear from the win- writes them with ease, too, and says guess ho knows! And I was put down ters bodice. Horizontal tucka are no he does not think it very much of a at once. longer worn; neither is the bodice feat, at all events, not worth talking 1'rn.parliin' Map of t'tah. cloeed on the left side. Fine, lengthThe Passenger Department of the Rle wise tucks, however, still hold their about. Grando railway haa just ianuod an Editor Smith is compelled to resort own and are really too delicate and map allowing all mining district of pretty to be discarded easily. Those to this unusual method because nature record, together with au outline sketch of of lawn worn during the summer are neglected jto provide him with arm. tho older districts, and calling special atnow replaced by others of silk even His birthplace was in Miller county, tention to several partially develoixid r more dainty. Arkansas, and he was born July 23, giona which recently have shown import The crossed slightly bloused bodice 1868. Ills father, Alexander Smith, a int uncovering of gold and copper, now promises to be a general favorite, and native of North Carolina, was a wagon lltracting notice of prospectors, invasion la suitable for both maid and matron. and carrlago maker by trade, but in uid others. A charming example for a youthful later years a farmer. He was married For copies of this valuable map address matron Is of a light violet, slightly t) Martha E. Phillips, daughter of ths F. A Warlbiuii, G. 1 A., Salt Lake City speckled cloth. The bodice has Rev. Joseph E. Phillips, a leading Sometimes it is u little hard at this di B braided veBt, crossed with a low Methodist minister of Alabama. To to tell what the English are ftglfting lance blouse and finished around the waist them were born ten children, Aaron bein India, but that they light like ihout of Bands with a belt deep violet satin. the second. ioldier mid heroes then cun be uo quesing of the same adorn bodice and skirt. Aaron was born without arms, and tion. Nan Francisco Cull. The neck is finished with a Gladhe early acquired the remarkable gift A great commotion seems to have taken stone collar and a Jabot of black lacs of using his feet for hands, and as plan among railway circles, owing to a In front. The very newest neck trimaa other children learn to contemplated through car service between mlng, however, is scant around the naturally use their hands. It might be supposed tho Pacific coast and Chicago which is to front and back and falls in a full jabot on the left side, with a number of that one born without arms would lead Denilc one day each week. This is not a a solitary and lonely life, but be early uow departure by any means, as tho Densmall bows crossing the shoulder. Skirts grow scanter as the season learned to substitute his feet for hands ver St Kio Grande Railroad couiuny ami progresses, and everything presages aud engage heartily in games and pas- its connections havo been oic rating a women. times with his companions. When through car service between the Iueitto a season of tall, The Latest. quite small he learned to feed himself and Atlantic coasts, via Suit Lake, Pueblo, with his feet, and at the age of seven Denver, Kansus City aud Chicago for Barret. Woman Who Kapt had learned to write. About this time years, and throe days eacli week, vU: can a secret That women has he entered school, standing at the head every Wednesday, Thursday and Friday keep been proven in a case in court at Lath-ro- of his classes. He was no less at home evening. Tho cars for this through serKaa Some years ago a body of on the playground, where he engaged vice are of tho latest Pullman design, aud women destroyed a saloon, and a In games of marbles, croquet and ball, n v supplied witli new clean linen und bedis asA Pullman charge of malicious destruction of becoming an expert in marbles and ding throughout. car. These carsporter under are to eacli signed property was lodged against them. An croquet. As a matter of pastime. In the iiersonul aiijiorriaioii of a iqiecial excurexchange notes that as many as thirty youth he acquired some proficiency in sion agent, wlioso duty it is to see that were arrested; everybody present at performing on the guitar and piano. are given every comfort aiul passengers the time of the damage was summonAt a very early age he began to map attention. ed to court The prosecuting attorney out a course in life and to realize the For further Information, apply to any of the county strove for two years to Importance of a thorough education. igent, or to B. F. Ncvins, general agent, procure a conviction of somebody; re- Want of funds, however, prevented ir to II. M. Cushing, traveling passenger porters in numbers besieged everybody more than a education, but igent, D. St It. G. railroad, M West Second concerned, but not one of the women he afterward finished the courses of South street. Salt Lake CJItv, Utah. weakened or betrayed the secret. philosophy and logic and others at Twelve knew who was guilty of breakhome. To this fund of knowledge he YOUR LAST ing the first window of the saloon, but added, by extensive reading. CHANCE FOR A they covenanted with one another to Mr. Smith's boyhood days were spent keep the knowledge a secret and they in Cass I CURE county, Texas. He moved to have kept to their word. Mount Pleasant, Texas, in November, 1888, where he studied law and was Noted Woman. to the bar the following admitted The Baroness Burdett-Couthas the at the age of twenty. spring, absolute disposal of her property, with Success attended his efforts from the the exception of her share in Coutts He built up a good law practice first. house. This banking large slice of her fortune will ultimately pass to her and was particularly strong in his arguments before a jury. In September, nephew, Mr. Money. Woman's Work for Women (Pres- 1893, he formed the idea that the newsbyterian) is so successfully managed, paper business offered a more inviting financially, by women, that out of a field to one of his physical disabilities, surplus in its treasury $578 has been and, finding the Mount Pleasant for sale, purchased it. lie has paid for type f r the Bangkok press and $2,500 to help out the assembly's managed it wljth great success, making board on its deficit. It one of the best county papers in Miss Clara Nell Flynn, seventeen Texas. AU this time he has taken an r. years old, 1b a successful active Interest in politics. In 1894 he She makes the round trip from Parkwas the Democratic nominee for counersburg to Elizabeth, W. Va., daily, ty judge, and was a member from TiSundays excepted, delivering and retus county of the state Democratic conceiving mail from nins offices each vention In 1896, which elected deleway, and handling about fifteen sacks to the Chicago convention. He on each trip. She drives a pretty pair gates DR. G. W. SHORES, Is also a member of the Texas Press of Mexican ponies attached to a light (Strictly Reliable.) Association. spring wagon. Sept. 24, 1895, he was married to The Greatest Specialist in the World Miss Carrie P. Sweet, daughter of the in the Cure of Diseases of Men. llmld Trimming Much more important than the gown Rev. E. M. Sweet, a prominent memThousands of cured eases all over tha Itself Is the trimming thereof. One ber of the Northwest Texas conference United Ntalesnmny In foreign countries. The doctor's lias grown so large girl who has a gown of last season of the M. E. Church South, the wed- owin' to Ills practice marvellous cur ns that In a faw he It months to enter will its In improved appearance the fol- ding being the culmination of a happy upon any new eases. imonssible The Grand Offer lowing manner: romance of his boyhood days. To this to men. "NOT A DOLLAK NKKD HU WIl.L UK The bodice was black and had a marriage has been born a lovely little PAID UNTIL tTIIKI). WITHDRAWN AFTER DEi.HMHEK short yoke of pale yellow silk. To girl. 1. 1W. TAKE Dl'K NOTRE. If you tired the servin-- cut this out, conceal its shabbinens she covered the Mr. Smith is editor and business as ft will duclor's not appear again after that entire bodice with a diagonal lattice-wor- k manager of his paper. In writing he dnt. The Old Dortor gives every rasa hla e of velvet ribbon. The holds in his teeth, working perisinal attention and the pen guarantees absodiamonds rormed are four Inches privacy, strict confidence and a perHe also writes lute desk. an at ordinary cure. manent If across and the effect is remarkably you suffer from with his toes, either with pen or on stunning. While braid on black Is very fetch- the typewriter. By holding a leadpen-ci- l MAN in his teeth and striking the typeing. A novel gown from Redfern Is Is with enabled to it he HOOD trimmed with black braid, which. In writer keys turn, has a narrow piping of white write at a fair rate of speed. Mr. Smith has been so long accustomed to ftnmlnal satin under each edge. Varicocele. Hydrocele, Another a dark blue gown has a writing in these uuusual ways that he Ky phlllls. Weakness, Gonorrhoea, Stricture, small or shrunken premature old sue gold and black braid garniture, while wonders that people think it or any other organs, whether private disease, a third gown again a black is worn caused by Ignorsnce, excess or con- tAglnn, no matter liow severe with a short, loose jacket of bright DR. C. W. SHORES, red, lined with white and trimmed Tes, In Heaven. Lock Box 1585, with gold braid. Cornhill tells a story of an English Salt Lake City, Utah. More quiet, yet equally effective, Is a gray doth costume, with the entire woman of high station who bewailed CONSULTATION AND ADVICE FREE. skirt enciicled by folds of black vel- to a friend the Iosb by death of a somewhat Intervals. vet, put on at three-inc- h bpt extremely wealthy CU3E YOURSELF! I III e fnr aiinatural neighbor, who had been very liberal in diarhargta, t lid llilu.l lull., hla help to her country charities. "Mr. Tried III Fntlene irrilBtiuui or uUviaiiuiia of unices Bi.mtriiiM. Regy Why did Maud's father kick X. la dead, said she; "he was ao good nd nut I'nisIcM, me to in and all kind sorts of goat or pulMinou. and out the house? helpful Wert you you bold Mold by enough to ask him for his daughter? of ways; he was ao vulgar, dear felnr pest In plain wrapper, for In could hr hint know not we that PIprnra, the No, Cholly low, trouble. II .H). ur S hull Ira, W.7S, In we Circular meet shall heaven. va He got tired waiting for me to but rasuMv xul don; has been throws largely on her own ries. FOllWOMAN AXD1IOME What Woman An Doing, Charges of ballot box stuffing are s at being made against ten Her face Is smiling, and her voice la Chicago university and there are rumors of expulsions In consequence. aweet; But smiles betray, and music alnga de- At the beginning of each quarters ceit; And words speak false yet, If they wel- work It appears that the graduates come prove, meet to elect "counselors who act as I'D be their echo, and repeat their love. mediators between the faculty and the student body. At the meeting in divisOnly If wakend to sad truth, at last, The bitterness to come, and awcetneaa ion No. 4 of the Junior college It is claimed that eleven false votes were past; When thou art vext, then, turn again, given for the woman candidate and and see circumstantial evidence points to the Thou hast loved Hope, but Memory loved dozen young women who were among thee. Thomas Hood. "co-ed- WITH HIS Ed-nun- here-For- " blue-eye- I'p-to-D- Tlmea-Revle- te i sllm-looki- ng ' p, high-scho- ol ts Tlmes-Revie- w mail-carrie- - s inch-wid- LOST . THE FASHIONABLE FIVE 7 CLOCK Shes s "Mental Anarchist. , According to an English writer "the typical woman of the United States The today Is a mental anarchist reasons for this are several. She ie a if composite of all the races of earth, She view. of not In blood in points is a product of experimental democracy, and, like her country, blindly but fiercely "vlng for an ideal. She TEA GIRL OF 1S97-- 8. the voters. It is officially stated that there are in Germany three women employed as slatas chimney sweeps, thirty-fiv- e as as nineteen seven gunsmiths, ers, brass and bell founders! fifty as parlors, 147 ns coppersmiths, 379 as farriers and nailers, 309 (including girls) as masons, eight as stonecutters and 2,000 In marble stofie and slate quar Ill-br- ed 1 ris pri-pa- oy |