1
/—
TIIE WINDS OF THE WORLD.
Hetwem the M > iimooiis —l.ocnl
Hreeiea hn«l S««liie of I heir Ea’eets.
I I k I i I
Your Complexion
tn
Spring.
Mme. Millieent Marvin, the noted spe
cialist in beauty culture, gives some ex-
«•ellent advice In April Delineator to
women whose complexions are a source
of worry owing to the sun and weather
conditions prevalent In the spring
months. Among other valuable hints.
Mme. Marvin says:
"Rubbing the skin once or twice a
«lay with a ripe tomato Is said to be
most helpfill in clearing the complex
ion: lettu«-«1 Juice has also a beneficial
effect.”
While these simple remedies are ]ier-
lliips not generally known or used, they
are none the less valuable.
Probably the safest and most satis
factory thing for general use in keeping
the skin soft ami sm<«>th and the com
plexion dear and brilliant is a simple
wash, which can be easily prepared at
home. The r«*clja« is ns follows:
Take two ounces of rose water, one
ounei' of cologne spirits and four ounces
of eppotone. Put the eppotone in a pint
of hot water (not boiling), and after it
Is dissolved strain nnd let ««onl. Then
add the rose water and cologne spirits.
Apply this wash liberally every night
nnd morning to the face, neck and arms,
after thoroughly washing in Warm wa
ter. and you w ill soon have a «complex
ion that will be the envy and admira
tion of every woman you know.
Rebuke« for Rude Women.
Men often conf(iss to deliberate plans
for <-.hei*king feminine rudeness. When
women tread u | m > ii their heels and do
not take the trouble to a]>ologize, they
sometimes wait for an opportunity and
pay them kick in similar coin, adding
a polite word of n*gret meant to teach
them a lesson. When women refuse to
lift trailing skirts men walk njxm them
reganlless of damage, hut with apolo
gies wliiich can not I m * overlooked by
any woman with the least pretense to
good breeding. A woman who attempts
to crowd into seating space that will
x—.
1
sufficient material in front to meet
on the chest, the idea being to let
whole of the elalwirate front of
bodice be seen.
cost him less he might afford to.
snubs her younger brothers and ¡sisters.
Tliey do not dress well. She forgets
that their share of the good tilings lias
always been given to her because she
Is tlie oldest. We wish some one would
tell her that instead of snubbing her
family her family should really snub
her. She is a good-hearted girl and
we believe It would really do her good."
One of the most valued introductions
in a season of pretty and serviceable
modes Is the princess dress, with a coat
<»f the same material. The combination,
which is made in voiles and the lighter
c|oths, consists of a princess dress with
a gulmpe and a short hip length
'Elie Wedding Gown.
Jacket.
Exaggerat<*d simplicity is the keynote
Narrower skirts are undoubtedly the
<»f modem wedding gowns.
rage, and Paris sends word that some
Often the silk is embroidered in gold
skirts measure only two yards around.
or silver thread.
One skirt was arranged so that in front
Lace at n<*ck and sleeves is. however,
there were only two lacers to be* tied
all that is needed.
around the ankles. This sounds ver\
Ivory white satin continues to l>e the
ultra; such skimpy garments could be
favorite material.
becoming only to graceful and youthfib
Nevertheless. messaline, chiffon ami
figures.
olga ciotto are all used.
Satin crepe de chine makes an oeo-
nomical sehs-tion.
There lias ivoen a return recently to
the court train.
A high (‘oliar should be placed on
the yoke of t he gown.
Practically any length of sleeve Is
now permitted.
Whatever ttoeir length, they should
be extremely soft.
Ventilate Without
Drafts.
To properly ventilate a room at night,
at tlie same time shut out early morn
ing light, lower the shade and fixtures
eighteen Indies, then ns dose ns possi
ble nliove place another shade to roll
upward and away from the window
with a catch pulley In ceiling eighteen
Inches from th«» window. The window
Io Make a
may be dropped from the top any dia
To make a waist form fit a lining of tanee. allowing fr«M> passage of li lr,
unbleached muslin to your figure over which cannot blow directly on the
the corset. Let It extend below the child.
hlpi|. When snugly fitted and firmly
I.ov erm nnd Quarrel«.
stitched tack the lower edge to a board.
Many lovers’ quarrels, and even li ro-
cut the shape of the body around the
hips. Then fill the lining with fine ken engagements might be avoided,
cork, obtainable at any grocer's or fruit says an observer, if lovers would sim-
/
--------- ----------------------- :
REVIVAL OF THE CLASSIC GREEK TUNIC THE MOST CURIOUS FREAK OF MODERN FASHION.
Being credibly biformed the other
day by a queer old man of the seafar-
|H*rsuasioii that the southeast uioti-
i was still fighting the northeast
immsiHm to s«»i» which wouhl conquer,
and tlie Information being followed b.v
a dissertation on the failure of the Inst
sea sports owing to th«' same perversity
of a veteran lagging suist II uous on the
stage when hi' ought to have left the
IsKirds empty for the keen northeaster.
It is'eurreil to me that there was a con-
slderahle amount of information to be
obtalmsl aliout winds without discours
ing on wlndiness.
I’ntil one actually exixTleiices it
there is a lot of romance hanging
around the outskirts of the word mon
soon. We »[wak of the nii>n»«>ii being
Into or early, of the east coast byIng
practically closed, but unless we go
down to the s«-a in ships the wind af
fects ns hut little. lu the irreat conti-
nents of India and Australia, however,
the breaking of the rains Is a matter
of real moment, of general interest to
everyone, of painful and kismest anx
iety to many, and 111 such eases the
word Is fraught with a meaning which
Is greater than ever book conveyed to
fie mind of num.
Apart from the winds of regular
habit there uro the many bwnl winds
which occur In different parts of the
world nnd are generally unkind In
character. Of sm b may be mentioned
the Simoon. Slris-eo. Iliirmattnn. the
Puna of Peru, the bitter northeaster of
Britain, the Mistral of Marseilli's and
that coast, the Pampero of the Andes.
With nil these Io'al brecezs, though In
fact they are oftentimes gales of some
velocity, many curious effects are
coupled, nnd one of th«1 most noticeable
of these is that the blowing of the gen
uine nor’easter at home is always coin
cident with the greatest numlier of
deaths from consumption and bruin
disease.
There Is here opened up a wide field
of most Interesting research for the
curious in weather study and humanity
lore, for the effi*i't of wind on sentient
beings has never Is-en as iliH'pl.v consid
ered as It might lx». Thus In the lower
planes of life th«' animals are distinctly
affected by winds, and In particular
cats, as any one will reinenils'r If they
consider the peculiarities of cats when
high winds are blowing. Cattle, too.
ar<* susceptible to winds, and possibly
mor«' to the premonition of wind, while
the blowing of a nor’wester will ex
hilarate some temperaments in a man
ner not quite the same as anything else
will.—Singapore Free Press.
SIEGE OF BILLIARD HALL.
*
fftc. »»»»»»»ft»*
not nearly accommodate her fares well
enough witli the women who are ren
dered miserable, Init is likely to remem-
l>er the conduct of tin» men on either
Hide of her. Nobody lias the least sym
pathy for her; on the contrary, there is
considerable delight in the spectacle of
deserved punishment.
Women have
much to gain by being pleasant and
be
well-bred, but they can not all
brought to the point of believing it.
dealers. Fill the lining full.
a buckram collar, cut to tit the neck.
Fit cardboard pieces to armholes or cut
sleeves and till as preferred.
This
should be done before you start to till.
A paper pattern for the board may be
obtained by bending a wire around the
figure below the hips. Fasten the ends,
slip over the head. Mark the oval on
paper and cut out. For a Hi tie work
and less exjM»nse you have a model of
your own figure which will prove a
blessing for fitting purposes.
Keep
Skirt
hih I
Wai«t
Adjnmted.
Take a piece of tafie long enough to
go around the waist, stitch to the waist
line for about six Inches in the back,
leaving the ends to tie in the front.
Then sew on th reb good-sized brass
eyes, equal distance apart.
Sew on
the skirt band corresponding hooks.
Driving c«.ats generally have three- These can be sent to the laundry wltli-
quarter length skirts, high waists and out fear of rust, or In any way dam-
picture sleeves.
aging the finest lingerie waist.
For iqien front coats the waistcoat
Don't« for Health,
made of pique. linen «'rash, cretonne,
Don’t eat when fatigued or OVer-
pongee or antique broeiule is in high
heated.
favor.
Don’t bathe the body for nt least an
Durk red linen makes a girlish dross
that can la* worn with a coat or lin hour after eating.
I>on’t ent an excess of sugar, sweets
gerie waist. The material launders
an<l starchy ftssls.
nicely.
Don't eat foods that disagree with
Ruby, which wns predicted ns n pop
you.
pi
nee
to
ular color, 1» slowly giving
Don’t be gloomy nt meal time,
green, for, as the season advances. It
Don't eat too lunch of highly season-
will lie Impossible to wear such a warm
ed food.
color
Don’t eat between meals habitually,
From Paris comes the Pierrot ruche and learn to eat‘fruit before breakfr st.
—a tight-fitting niche of mallne or taf
feta. which ties either nt the back of
The Girl Who Rnnh«.
the neck or under the left ear with a
Says the Atchison Globe: "There I*
Idg bow of ribbon.
a girl of 24 In Atchison who snubs her
Pockets are again the fashion. One whole family. There may he more like
finds them In every possible position— her, but she Is the only one we know
on the flaps of embroidered vests. In of. She snutis her mother liecause she
the tails of the coats and tucked away thinks she knows more than her moth
er. She snubs her father became he
in the seams of Jackets and skirts.
Many of the new coats are without does not wear a dress suit and go to
collar, with short sleeves and with In parties, though probably If her clothes
Tlie death of Mr. Victor Boyle, one
of the heroes of the Se|H>y rebellion,
follows close upon th«> fiftieth annlver-
sary of the Mutiny, Mr. Boyle was
district engineer of the East India Ilall-
road Company when lie led th«' gaimut
defense of sixty-eight men against
three thousand mutineers nt Arrah. T.
It. Holmes givi'S an ms'otint of the sl«*ge
in his “History of the Indian Mutiny.”
Arrah was the chief town of the tur
bulent district.
When the European
residents were warmsl of danger. Boyle,
in spite of the jis'i'S of his friends, for-
tilieil nnd provisioned n small building
on his premises, used as a billiard
room.
ills house was about seventy
yards from this little hall, and he held
liimself ready to vneiite the house at
the first signs of the attack. which lie
thought imminent.
On the evening of July -■'i. 1S57,
Boyle and sixty eight other Europeans
...... . ...
««•nt
to the billiard room and bricked
ply refrain from seeing too much of ¡themselves up. Boyle was the leading
each other. No two people can he to spirit. When the mutineers advanced
gether all the time without boring each to wiiat seemed to them an assured vic
other, and when this point is reached tory, they were hurhsl back In aston
a shadow is cast upon love’s young ishment by a well-directed fire. After
dream, and the most trivial circum that they ventured to »hoot only from
stance may wreck it. If Romeo spends behind the cover of walls and tnvs.
an evening with his chums once in a
The assailants then attempted a suc-
while and Juliet s<*eks tin* society of cesslon of foul stratagems. They tried
her girl friends, both will enjoy each t > corrupt the faithful Sikhs, and to
other’s companionship all the more ! suffocate the garrison by setting fire to
tv hen they meet again.
the walls. Finally they began to hatter
the building with two guns, but as they
Or.one Indoor«.
had no round shot, and had to use the
SiKii’ssfiil <'X|H-rhn<>ntH have been
casters of piano and chairs taken from
minie at the Royal theater In Stuttirart
Boyle’s house», their projectiles were not
with a new iqiparatiis «hwlgnial to dis
effective.
tribute ozon«> nt fixed Interval* through
l>ay after day passed, provisions be
out the building. The ozone Is e«»n-
came short, and Boyle knew If re-cn-
duet«‘d by small tubes to all parts of
forcements did not come soon they
the house nml turmsl on. reguliit«*d ami
would I m * conquered.
turned off at will. The r«>siilr has be-n
One night, while the besiegers
excellent, the air being completely pur
n few Englishmen sallied out and cap
Itli'd within a few minutes.
tured four sheep, which furnished need-
( I final for the hungry little garrison.
< lenniiig < nnc I hnlr.,
Thirst assailed them, but one <»f the
To clean iiml restore flip elasticity
Sikhs dug a well In the little enclosure,
of enne liottom chairs, turn the chair
k 1 water was se-fuired In abundance.
and with hot water nml a s[>onge satu fl !
At last, on Aug. 3. re-enforcement»
rate the cane-work thoroughly. If the
sucerpded in breaking through the 1 m *-
chair is dirty, use soup. Afterward set
sifgers. and Boyle and his brave sup»
the chair to <lrv out of door* nnd the
porters
were sav«l.
seat will bp a* taught n* when new.
lint
Rnn<!«.
All
Her
Doliiic.
“Your husband," said Gaddle, “a|j-
!>o not throw away the silk hat bands
pears to be a man of great self control.”
on men's straw bats or soft felt lints,
’Yes," replle«l Mrs Peckham, "he Is.”
ns they make excellent bops to be used
“
I supisa««'," Gaddi«* went on. "he In-
In a buckle or take the place of Imltlng
h«rit«sl that quality from his father,
for skirtbnnds.
tlie Judge?”
"No," she replied, significantly, "it’s
Sashes In style Swain.
Wide sashes of hlnck satin, with long a virtue he n<'<pilr«'d sine«' his mar
fringed ends, are seen on exclusive moti- riage."—Philadelphia Press.
eia in cashmere visiting gowns. Tims«
III m Education.
are draped in high corselet fashion
"Have you a college diploma?”
and fit snugly to the figure.
"No. But I bave several mining wtock
certi flea tex that I might frame and
W tiO-Hiuk^l In Everr Room.
Try having a small waste basket In hang up hr evidence that I have boon
every room, and notice how much long; through the school of experience.”—*
Washington Star.
er your rooms will stay clean.
the rfyer has more than sixteen horse
power and few of them have over
ten. Mary of the engines used in th<
river craft are of light design, am
while the horse power Is small they
attain a speed of from .SOU to 1,000 rev
olutions jx»r minute.
•
Motor boating on the
Mississippi
(Jas poisoning from gas engines has has taken a remarkable advance in
become so conimon that German au- popularity In the last season.
Motor-
thorlties urge that cylinders >f oxygen boat clubs have been organized at all
I m * kept near, and that engineers be of the smaller towns along the river,
taught to apply inhalations to leauscl- as well as at the cities, and there Is
tate victims.
now a movement on between the clubs
Experiment has shown that an elec looking toward the organization of a
tric are «in lx* employed under water Mississippi River motor boat associa
for fusing metal. The intense heat tion. to include all of the smaller or
turns the water surrounding th»' arc ganizations.
into steam, thus forming an insulating
Where a couple of years ago there
cushion of vapor. It has been suggest were a dozen launches In LaCrosse
ed that with proper apparatus t'i* elec waters there are now more than 150,
tric arc could I m » employed by divers ranging from the sixteen foot hunting
for quickly cutting through large chain scow to the magnificent fifty-foot cruis
cables or Iron plates under water.
ers of the more wealthy boatmen.
The "axle-light" system Is In list* on
ABOUT THE TAMALE HUSKS.
the trains of tlie Atchison, Topeka nnd
Snnta Fe railroad on an extensive
s<'ale. Each car has Its own storage \ew Industry Developed by the De
mand for th« “Hot Thin»«.”
batteries supplied with electricity gen
"Do you know," said the tamale fiend
erated by the axles of the wheels, and
to a Kansas City 'I’lmes man, "that a
the locomotive headlights derive their
good part of the profit In the tamale
illumination from the same snur.'e. It
trade goes to the farmers of Johnson
Is estimated that each full train, ex
County, Kansas?”
clusive of the locomotive, develops near
"Oh, shucks!” returned the other.
ly 5iX) candle-power light. .
“Yes, that’s just It. Th^ farmers out
I Within the past few years the euca there suppl}’ the Kansas (’Ity market
lyptus lias been introduced in Florida, with tin* corn husks the tamales are
and Its kindly growth there is liellevetl wrapjied in, and It would surprise you
to indicate that it might l»e extensively to learn the extent of the business. Any
cultivated in the southern parts of that old corn husk won’t do for the business,
State. The eucalyptus is of very rapid either. If you’ll look at these you’ll
growth, but It cannot withstand frosts. see the texture Is very close, the sur
It was planted in California from Aus face smooth and that the lengths are
tralia many years ago, and now flour uniform. Only the Inner husk is used,
ishes so abundantly on the Prciflc tlie fine white covering that grows next
coast that Its vood Is extensively em to the ear. The proper length is aliout
ployed for fuel, 4>oRts and lumber.
nine inches, to allow for the ends be
The production of oxygen und hydro- ing folded over the tamale when it 1»
gen on an industrial scale by the de- steamed, as you see them now.”
composition of water with electrolytlc
“Why, who’d go to nil that bother
apparatus In Germany has led to the for a dinky little business like this?”
suggestion that hydrogen thus produc asked the listener Incredulously.
ed may find a wide field of employment
"Bother? Dinky? Say, do you know
as a lighting agent. It is now used these corn husks are shipped In here in
for Inflating military balloons. For light 500-pound bales? That’s quite a re
ing purposes it Is compressed In steel spectable sized industry, I take It. At
cylinders. With a proper burner It Is any rate, the Kansas farmers have
said to be a cheaper lllumlnant than found it profitable enough to go to the
acetylene, the relative cost for equal expense of buying presses to hale the
illuminating power being 25 for byd ro product and a large agricultural supply
gen to 50 for acetylene.
house In Kansas City finds it worth
Everybody who has used a micro while to carry it In stock nnd cater to
»cope has no doubt regretted the diffi the trade of the tamale men.”
culty of seeing »mall Insects, and other
"What Is the particular advantage
living objects not of mere microscopic of using corn husks for this purpose?”
dimensions, magnified while alive and asked the listener. "Isn’t there any
moving freely In the field of view. A thing else that would do?”
recently Invented English Instrument,
"Nothing that would answer as many
called the vitascope, is wild to supply a purposes. The corn husk holds
It Is tamale while It Is cooked and at
desideratum In tiri« respiwt.
shaped like a telescope, a foot long same time imparts n flavor to It.
when closed. and an inch nnd a half also holds the heat as nothing
In diameter. Tlie lenses are bo com- would.”
“Well, it beats me!" said the other
blned that an object 20 inches away
may be magnified 12 diameters. At a man, as they went on. "I never gave
distance of 5 Inches the magnification It much thought, but always supposed
the tamale men bought up all the old
Is 00 diameters.
niattresBes to get their corn husks.
BOAT HAS EXPRESS SPEED.
iVeitern
Designer«
Expert
Tliefr
Ne»v ( raft to Heat All Record».
A craft with the speed of an express
train has long been the dream of sev
eral motor-boat enthusiasts along the
upper Mississippi River and several de
signers have been working together
with the result that they have produced
a boat with which they expect to shat
ter all the present records, says the
New York World.
Frank Titus of Fountain City, WK.
formerly owned the fastest boat on the
river in the famous Bat, the small
craft which attained a speed of nearly
twenty miles an hour with a nine-liorse
power engine and for three seasons held
the speed record on the up|MT river.
The Bat has been sold to a physician
at Cassville, WIs., and her engines will
be used in another craft.
Until the advent of flu* Chief of Rec
ord, formerly owned by A. Gardner of
Winona, the Bat outclassed all boats
on the river, largo and small, nnd could
leave the fastest steamboats In the
stern waves. •
Gardner's boa*,
a nine-horse power engine and 4 -foot
beam, was, until the middle of the
season, the fastest boat In that terrl
tory. At Wabasha on July 4, In the
motor-boat races, the Chief of Record
outran the Bat and other boats en
tered and finished nearly a half-mile
In the load In a six mile course. The
Chief of Record attained a speed of
twenty miles an hour and for the
horse-power Installed was considered
the fastest iKiat between St. Ixiuls and
St. Paul.
Late In July the Skip. owned by
Eugene P. G lea sori, of LaCrosse, was
launched at Red Wing and clearly out
classed other water racers. The Skip
Is 32 feet long, with a 4-foot beam and
is equipped with a twelve-horse-power
motor in three cylinders. The flklp
has attained as high as twenty two
and a half miles an hour, but through
failure to provide a sufficient cooling
apparatus for the engine Is unable to
maintain this pace Indefinitely.
The Skip now holds the sisM-d
ord on that part of the river with
exception of a boat of the sa me
sign, which Is 35 feet long and
equipped with a sixteen- borne-jMiwor
three cylinder motor. The now boat,
however, has not entered Into compe
tition with the K|K*ed records. although
she Is said to run nearly a mile an
hour faster than the Skip.
A remarkable feature of motor boat
Ing on the Mississippi Is the speed at
tallied by boats with little horse ¡ m » w
er. While the crafts on the Atlantic
const am! the lakes require from fifty
to seventy five horse power before a
g|>ep(J of twenty miles an hour can be
strained, none of the fastest boats on
E«perniit<>
v«.
Volnpnk.
The primary cause of It« simvcrs un
doubtedly may I m * fomul in the
with whldh It can be acquired,
George Harvey of Eejieranto, In
North American Review. We are
vlnced by personal experience of the
Justice of the claim that application
of one hour a day, l>y a fairly well-
educated ¡K*rw»n, for a |M*rl<Ml of thr<*e
i nont Im, Is sufficient to Insure reason
nhlo proficiency. lndc(*d, with the aid
of a Mimple key, intelligible cominunl-
catlon may I m * Inni immediately with
a mvmlM-r of any other nationality
|H>NH4»Ksing like means
translation.
That the strength of Esperanto lies in
Its really amazing simplicity Is Indi
cated by the following comparison:
In English ’’The international lan
guage slwsild I m * comprehensible to the
wlfcolo educated world ; but no man on
earth, exisipt. tlw* Volapukist
would
comprehend even the word ‘Volapuk.’”
In Volnpnk- "Puk bevnnetlk ¡»akapn-
lorn fa vol lolik ¡»ekullvol; alm men
nonlk tala hphuiuu volajM-kels. kapalont
jmkl lekanlx, ‘Volapuk.’ ’’
In EH|M»ranto *‘lxi lingvo Interrm-
Ma eatas komprenlta de la tuta mondo
♦siuklta; wsl nenia homo sur la tero
eksklnslve la volapukIstoJ komprenay
In artan llngvon ‘Volapuk.’”
of the A mu ten r.
Wlfi'j- 1 womler why the gras«
«lis-sn’t colli«* up?
Hubby I’m sure I can’t tell. You
don’t suppos«' you planted the seeds
upside dow n, do you ?
(rl m I na I,
Th** religious editor was struggling
with the query, " Is It a sin to play
poker?”
After much prayerful con-
sidération he wrote the following re-
ply: “Yes ; th<; way some people piny
lt."- Philadelphia Press.
Ragtime, Alonzo, Isn't ue essarlly lh<|
time to chew the rag.