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About Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1896-1898 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1896)
LADY BEATRICE BUTLER. LAr: Ell of ADV BBATKICE FUAMJis Elizabeth Butler Ib not only one tlio moKt beautiful girls n Great Britain, but in the matter of nil- restore she ran make pretty nearly any (want she likes and bnck It up with the records In Burke's peerage. Lady Heat rleo Ik Just passing out of her teens. She was horn on March 2(1, INTO. Her father In Marquis of Ormonde, Karl of Ormonde and Ossory and Viscount Thurles of Tliurles In the County Tip perary. Her mother was Lady Eliza heth Harriet Grovesnor, eldest daugh ter of the Duke of Westminster. The house of Butler of Ormonde Is one of the noblest In Ireland and the oldest In Irish history. The Butlers and Ger fildlues. rivals in power and equals In mm mom. m I.APV nEATRICE BUTLER. renown, have been at the head of the flue nobility of Ireland ever since the Anglo-Norman Invasion. The first of the. family to arrive on Irish soil and set up a castle was old Theobald Fitz Walter In the reign of Henry II. lie wan chief butler of Ireland, whence the Biirname. His father was llervey Wal ter, who married in llfid. That seems to have been the foundation of the house and the descent has been pretty clear since then. Little Lady Beatrice may, therefore, be truly said to be the daughter of a hundred enrls, hut she Is one that, may he admired. She lins a fa .... ' -f km -Tit' '. U. If MRS. Bill" AX AT HOME IN TIIK WATElt. very pretty little sister, Mary, who is Just 1(1. Constance HchiiIU of Open Air Life. Women will have to organize n new crusade against wrinkles and the lmth erllke, growing-old sort of look of the skin It' they pciMlst In following up nil thek open-nlr pursuits which belong to man's kingdom. l''rcsh air In all kinds of weather may be conducive to health, but It Is very trying to delicate skins. Women who row nnd ride bicycles should substitute oatmeal or boiled breud and milk for soap. The dry skin Is especially sensitive to the effects of sun uud air ami needs nil the precau tions! It Is possible to find to keep It smooth nnd white, l'otntoes boiled In milk are said to bo very effective In wliliciilng and softening the skin, nnd nlnioud meal should be on every toilet table. Get Their Slioen ninckencd. The spectacle of a woman availing herself i f Hie services of it bootblack on the streets has become so common ns to attract no more nttut ion than Hint of a woman rending a dally newspaper In a street car or "L" train, says the Chl cngo Chronicle. It was not so long ngo that a woman with n newspaper wns considered to he doing something very "mannish," and she wns stared at lu eouseipience. Women have dared to WOMBX IIAVB BKCOUB PATnOXS. brave pnbllc Inspection by sitting In the chair of the street corner bootblack and reading a paper while the Industrious bootblack gives them a "patent leather" or a "russet hi1IhIi." Women require the cleaning of their shoes as often and with as much reason as men do theirs, and the "Indies' boot blacking parlors" that have lecii opened lu the shopping district have proved decided successes. 1' It Is next to Impossible to polish a run set shoe unless the foot Is In It, as the friction of the cloths must be violent. It was because of this that the young women mustered up courage to put their dainty feet upon the box. The Remands of Hociety. Society demands that you should look well. Not that you should be a locality, but that you should, on oc casion, put on your best bit) nnd tucker and help up tlie picture that, all In nil, constitutes society. You speak of tho social world lis selfish; so It is, for It demands from all Us votaries absolute unselfishness. You must lenrn to have no Ill-feeling toward anybody. If n chatterbox tells you that .Madame Malice has made you the subject of her ridicule you must make yourself smile; go forward and meet Madame Malice with n pleasant word, a courteous bow. and you must entirely forget that she has ever said anything but Hint which, was pleasant. Society ceases to boj good when malicious sayings are recog-! ulssed. Ilutli Aslimore, In Lndies' Home Journal. Mr. Rrynit an Kxpert Rwlnimcr. Mrs. William Jennings Bryan, wife of the Democratic presidential candl- nnie, is up 10 nine m iimny wujs. r oi unc iiiiiik I hi in u linn iicucrr 111 im:. wheel, ult hough lis yet she is not nn ex . I ..I... I.. - ,! 1 II t., 41. pert rider. Being comparatively n novice, slie lias not yet reached tin stage of wearing n r.hort skirt, hut free ly acknowledges t lie advantages of such II (liilliiil t 111: i,ir.i-iiiinp, ,nj.m-iiv. n t. i... r.,..t ..i.it... i.t. H. .nil,. She is also a splendid swimmer nnd rather prides herself on her natatorial ability. She Is also proud of her mem bership lu the Sorosis of Lincoln, Neb. It does not belong to the federation clubs, but is In the Nebraska State Fed eration. The Lincoln Sorosis has n membership of twenty-live,, to which number It Is strictly limited. Three or four mimes lire always on the waiting list. No one Is ndmltted who Ii.h not some claim to membership through In terest in current events or some specinl excellence In other, directions. Mrs. Bryan lays no great stress on her ad mission to the bar. . She regards Is as an ordinary matter in view of the large number of women now practicing law. There Is no dress reform In her creed, only nn lden that sensible attention to the first laws of health should be con sidered; nlso that dress should be dis tinctly feminine, not extrnvngnnt, but as becoming us possible nnd suitable to the occasion She wears evening dress when the event requires It, but not decollete gowns. Evidently super stition doesn't count with her, for on the linger with the gold wedding band she wears n large opal. I'nrleaa Hrlc-n-Brnc. The folly of excessive accumulation In the way of brlc-a-brae, ornaments and the thousand and one trifles scat tered through the modern home Is never more forcibly impressed thiiu when packing away household goods and gods, previous to the summer ex odus. Each article has some associa tion that renders It lu n degree precious, and yet half of them disfigure rather than ndorn the apartment to which they belong. How much wiser Is the mistress of the Japnnese home, who, while keeping It exquisitely nent, never cumbers and litters It with cheap or excessive ornamentation. She under stands tho rest to eye and brain In frequent change of surroundings. To day she hangs up n piece of rare em broidery, and In front of it places n lit tlo table, with some one choice vase holding n few carefully arranged tlower sprays. Across the comer a screen with richly painted or embroid ered panels Is set, nnd everywhere the eye looks upon some object worthy of I suuij ami numirntion, and so few are; they ns to admit of genuine enjoyment j nnd appreciation. After a few weeks a complete change Is made, one set of ; art treasures removed and another put In their place, lty this method a suc cession of charming Interiors are se cured far more educating nnd refining In Influence than the crowded tables, cabinets and mantels found lu tho American dra wing-room. Announvlnu the Hoby's llirlli. In sending announcement cards of a baby's birth the baby's name Is prlme-l lu full on a small e-ird which Is inclosed with the parents' card. If deal ml It may be attached to the larger card hv a bow of very nam w white satin rib-t boil, or sliver cord. The date of birth Is added, but n t the weight of th baby, nr any other particulars of any sort wha'ewr ladles' Home Journal A man feels drowsy after a hearty dinner, Invause a large part of tin blood lu the system govs to the stomach to aid lu digvstioii, aud leaves the brain poorly supplied. TWO CUBAN NUISANCES. Venomous Crawler that Male Thing Unpleaaant. With the coming of the rnlns In the tropics, many of the Insects and smaller reptile which lire out of doors In the dry season seek shelter lu tho country houses and beneath stacks of cane and trash. While bites and stings from In lifts are rarely reported, still they are more frequent than one would believe, Of those which do not often trouble mankind much north of the latitude of a crnxx rBXTiPED. Havana ore the chigoe, or 'Jigger,' which burrows beneath one's toe-nails and lays eggs which develop festering sores; the scorpion and the ceutlped In Cuba the scorpion develops Into a pest, especially In the country districts; and, together with the ceutlped, U a foe with which the Spanish soldiery i are compelled to reckon. Both the centiped and scorpion hide beneath rot- ten wood, the "trash" of the yard and I cnnefield nnd fnllen leaves. The bite ' of neither Is suttlcient to cause dentil i In an adult, but many children have j been killed by them in every Island of : tho West Indies. i These two ore the worst, nnd It would seem as though they were endowed -,,. Blln,)I.,.iimnn Instincts, for ' 1 " ' they appear at times and lu plnces when and where least expected. The centiped moves with the rapidity of a streak of light, leaving behind it If it traverses the limb or body of a human being Its venomous track punctured In - alli. Its punctures are from the ) ' front pair of legs, which have poison ducts or glands; but Its bito Is worse tlinn these, and sufllclent to cause vlO' lent fever In a grown person. With Its flat, glistening body, its scores of legs twinkling like the mischief, and Its rapid motions. It seems the embodi ment of evil ns It is. The Island of Culm is almost as free A CUBA! SCORPIOX. from poisonous snakes as Is Ireland, and the only annoying pests are those mentioned. One might stay In the Island for months and years without being bitten, tho cities, as Havana and Santiago, not being Infested. ADOPTS AMERICAN MODES. Wife of New Japanese Minister Haa Discarded Native Dress. Among the recent additions to diplo matic circles In Washington are Min ister Hoshl of Japan and his wife. Mme. Hoshl is about 33 years of age and of the most pleasing personal ap pearance. She is short, probably 4 feet 10 inches in height. Her dark hair Is very abundant, her large brown eyes are soft, yet bright, and her com plexion Is clear and rosy. In dress, her costume is that of tho American woman, yet ns she has only recently laid nslde her native gowns, her ward robe of western robes Is limited. She has placed herself In the hands of a tutor, lu order to master the Intricacies of the English language, and by next winter will no doubt be able to pre side at a tea In the most approved style, as far ns conversational ability Is con cerned. Mme. Hoshl has been married ten years, but there Is only one child In tho family, a boy of 6 years of age. nis name Is Hoshl Kikaru, and he Is a bright little fellow, wandering about the house lu evident loneliness for his many playmates In the East. The wife 0f the miuister Is a fine musician and devotes much of her time to that art A Wise Word to Mothers. j When the school days are finished and the home-coming over, many girls i are more or less dlscontended In the ' home because there seems no special : place for them to fill. In school they j have had duties and occupations, and I have become accustomed to regular hours of employment. Wise Is the mother who at this try I Ing time Is willing to make a place In ! the house for the little would-be re ! former, or the enthusiast who would like to put Into practice some way her ldeas of notlse keeping and hon.e-mak- lng. Let the new ways and the new Ideas be tried, and show some hospi tality to them and some sympathy to other views than your own. A division of labors and responsibil ities Is a happier way of meeting the difficulty than a giving up and over of one's Ideas and domain to the per haps overzeatous young woman who should have gained tact and sympathy 0fe JAPANESE MINISTER AND FAMILY. and some knowledge of how to live happily with other- If her school days have been of any value. Encourage her to use her gifts, not only In her own home, but for others. The New York Evening Post says that the girl who has pleuty of room for expansion In her own home Is usually the least anxious to try homo-making under an other roof. WARNING TO WHISKY DRINKERS Crusade Against Ptrona: Potation In autftiratcd by a Kentucky I)rulU Trobably the bravest man in the Uni ted States Is a druggist doing business In Nlcholnsvlile, Ky. Ills unme Is Jus. W. iJordon, and he has fitted up lu tho front of his drug store what ho calls a poison window, and a hottlo of the corn Juice dear to the Kentucky lienrt Is there. The window Is n grewsome thing. It Is a whole-course of lessons to the inuu who wnuts to commit sui cide. In the middle, white and grin ning, Is n skull. Clulchod lu lt teeth Is the deadly cigarette, nn nsh clinging at Its til). At the right of the skull is the bottle filled with the good corn juice of the Kentucklan's daddies. At Its left Is n bottle of port wine. Scat tered about In the foreground are cards, dice oud poker chips. The rest of the window Is filled with iniall Jars containing liquid poisons nnd papers upon which are heaped powders WUISKVAMO.NO TIIK POISONS. enough of various sorts to end the trou bles of a regiment. Every article is' labeled, from the cigarette to tho prus-! sic acid, and to prevent an possible misunderstanding of his meaning Mr. ; Gordon has fronted the whole deadly j collection with a startling sign, which i reads: "Every article In this window: is poison." A PERILOUS FEAT. Three Wheelmen Perform Foolhardy Antics on the Starucca Viaduct. Three New York wheelmen, en route to Chicago, a few days since rode at a rapid pace across the coping of the great Starucca vlnduct at Lanesboro, Pa. When lu the center of the struc ture they waved their lints at a picnic party below, which watched their fool hardy antics with brenthless interest. The breaking of a portion of n wheel or the swerving of a few Inches and A FOOLHARDY FEAT. the rider would have been hurled down Into the fields below, a distance of over 100 feet. They were the first venture some riders to perform the hnre bralued exploit. Towed by a Deer. The shores of the great Lake Chelan, In Washington, one of the most pictur esque and remarkable bodies of water In America, abound In game. In some places the lake is so narrow that a deer may swim It. A paper published nt Chelan, at the foot of the lake, tells how a young man named Alan Itoyce recent ly made the capture of a deer lu the water. Royce saw the deer from the shore, swimming across the lake. Though the chase seemed hopeless, as he had no gun with him, Koyce got Into a Innit nnd rowed after the animal. He soon saw that the deer was milking lstter time than he was, hut. In the language of yachtsmen, if he could not outfoot the animal, he had some chance of "out pointing" It. So he rowed across the course of the doer, forcing the creature to waver. Then he rowed so ns to cut off the new I course; and after a while, by heading : first one way and then another, lie came alongside the frightened creature, I and with a ipilck movement seized It by the tall. Thoroughly frightened, the animal swam 'faster tlinn ever, and made straight for the shore. . Koyce got Into the bow of his boat and held fast to the tall; he wns drawu through the water much fastpr than he could have rowed. Meantime his pursuit of the deer had attracted the attention of Mr. J. A. I Green on the shore! Mr. Green got a rifle and came out in another boat tc , meet them. Coming quite near he fired at the deer and killed It. ending the spirited chase. It turned out to be a very large and fine buck. '- t Wild oats cot as much as ever. In shears by holding It under water. Fast sn'te of the fact that everything els, en thli piece of glass to the end of the has been greatlv reduceJ in price. tube by means of few small tacks CHILDREN'S COLUMN. DEPARTMENT FOR LITTLE BOYS AND GIRLS. Bomethlnu that Will Interest the Jo nlle Member of Every Household -Quaint Actions and Bright Sayings of Many Cats and Canning Children, She Pot Uloonier an Her Dolly. irginlu Montmureiu'l, you are looking like a fright; I'll put you in the closet, to cry the live long night; You are n naughty dolly, for you never comb your hair, I cannot take you walking or show you anywhere; Your hands are always dirty and yon never wash your face; You're iilwnyu sprawling on the ground, ii nd never know your place; You were a splendid dolly when I got you long ago, And everybody said you were as fair and white as snow, But now you're getting cureless as you walk along the street, And papn says you like to wear stone bruises on your fi-et. You are a horrid dolly, oh, Virginia, I do dure! i Aud I must spank yon soundly, though ! , y " lillk 1 a me play, I guess you'll have to go to Jit il to pass the time away. There are no buttons on your dress, your hands are never clean. And you must wear the bloomers now, the baggiest ever seen. Oh, yes, you must he punished, your be havior is. not right Arid when you wear the bloomers you will he n funny sight! James E. Kinsella. . Wanted to Go Home. The two smnll boys who wanted to fight Indians hnd gotten some distance from home. The romance had dwin dled and n discouragement which nei ther liked to confess hnd taken pos session. "Look here," snld one of them nt lust, "I've been plnyln' I'm Slerry Snm for two days now, haven't I?". "Yes," wns the reply. "Well, I'm kind o tired o' that game. I think I'll piny the prodigal son." a Point of Merit Throe mtle nmldt118 wero (il8(,0U!.s. flbout the baby brotliers wno !ltu! nkon .. thftlP rMi.i,,n,.B i the three families during the past year. "My little brother Ned's got a lovely silver mug Hint grandma sent him," said the first little girl; "it's Just a beauty; and he had a silver knife nnd fork from grandpa, too." "My little brother Walter's got a bee yutlful carved rattle that Uncle Hen ry sent him from China," snld the sec ond little girl; "mother's put it away In a drawer to keep till he's grown up." "My little brother Freddie's not half so big as your brotliers," said tho third child, with an air of one endeavoring to conceal a feeling of triumph, "but the doctor says he's hnd more spasms than any other bnby In this neighbor hood, so there!" Curious Stone Worth Thousands. One day several years ago n bare footed boy who was wandering down the shores of a little creek lu Georgia saw an odd stone lying lu the sand. His sister wns making n collection of carnellans and he thought it would be nice to take this pretty stone home to her. So he put It in his pocket, nnd when he got home his father and moth er nnd sister nil looked at It. They were certain It was not n carnelinn, nor could they tell what It was. So the boy kept it. One day a gentleman from Cincinnati, ,who had property interests In Georgia, came Into the town where the boy lived, nnd one afternoon he saw the peculiar stone and became In terested In It nt once. He asked per mission to take It with him and have It examined. And when he gave It to a lapidary he found out that It wns a beautiful opal, worth tens of thousands of dollars. And In two weeks' time the boy who found It knew that he was the richest boy in Georgia. Since that time ninny fine opnls hove been picked up In that part of the South, but few of them equal the one first found. Where Fishes Swim. If you go to the lakes or to the sea shore this summer you should take a waterscope along with you. A waterscope Is a device which will enable you to peer down to the bottom of a lake or stream and see the sea weeds, with the fish resting among them. Any boy can make one of them very easily, and he can have no end of fun using It. The waterscope consists of a long, narrow box, covered at one end with glass ordinary window glass. To make It get four pieces of smooth, straight-grained pine wood, one-quarter of an Inch In thickness. 20 or 24 Inches long and 2Vi Inches wide. Have these pieces made true and exact In measurement. Carefully tack them to- WATCHINO THE FISn. gether with brads In the form of a long ; box. It may be well before Joining them to daub on a little white-lead paint, o as to make the Joints water tight. Now cut a piece of glass the size of one end of the long box. You 1 can readily cut glass with in old pair of driven close to Its edges. Then pntty It carefully round, and, when the putty Is thoroughly dry, paint the box and putty, taking pains to fill all the cracks. This Is necessary to make the box water-tight. . In a day or two your waterscope will be dry enough for use. On some bright, sunny afternoon push your boat out on the hike or stream where you wish to experiment. Thrust the glass end oi' the waterscope well under the surface of the wuter and place you eye at the other end. You will find that you can see through the water with great dis tinctness, often to the hiding places of fish among those forests of the lnke bot toms, the sen weeds. The object of the waterscope Is to cut through the dls- i turbed surface of the lake where your boat stands, nnd nlso to protect your eyes from the reflection of the sun on the water. Of course It does not act like a telescope, and you cannot nee to the bottom where the water Is very muddy or where It Js very deep. ' Rut you will be astonished nt what a fairyland of beauty the waterscope will reveal along the edges of some of our clear lakes on a sunny day. Often you can see a big clam, with his mouth wide open, waiting for Ills dinner to drop Into it, or a la.y pickerel or a sun fish resting nenr the bottom, and some times you will see lost objects of vari ous kinds, including trolling hooks and lines nnd other things of n similar na ture. The writer once knew n ninn who found a watch which he had dropped Into the lnke by means of a water- scope. Obeyed Orders. "I once knew a iiiiin named Muggins who was a queer sort of a person," said Congressman Mondell of Wyoming, "nnd I always thought a good deal of him. Once he hired nu Englishman to work on his ranch. Hut when they gave him n trial It turned out that he couldn't ride nor rope. ' 'Johnny, said Muggins, 'kin yer dig post holes?' "Johnny thought he could, so Mug gins sets him to work making holes in the ground. He draws u straight lino for him nnd then he sits down at one end and tells Johhny to go ahead. " 'You just dig post holes, Johnny, along this line until I tells yer to stop. Ain't Just made up my mind how far I want yer to go. Hut I'll tell yer.' "Johnny digs post holes, and Muggins goes out every day to see how he Is get ting nlong. But In a few days he gets a call to attend court In Cheyenne nnd stays away two months. Wheu he comes bnck he asks: " 'Whnrabouts Is thnt'nre young Brit isher that was here wheu I left V" '"Oh, Is It Johnny you mean?' " 'That same critter,' says Muggins. " 'Oh, why, Johnny he left here about two months ngo with six months' pro visions aud a pack horse and said you told him to do something or other. He hasn't showed up since.' "Muggins threw his leg over the back of a cow pony, with n grim expression and a growl and begun to follow John ny's troll by the post holes. By night he catches up with him. There wns Johnny with his pack horse and his pro visions In camp. " 'What be yer dolii' hero?' said Mug gins. " 'Bless mo heyes. Mr. Muggins, but I'm glad to see you!' shouts the Eng lishman. "Ow long, sir, are ye goln' to keep me n-dlgglu' these bloody post 'oles?' " 'How long?' shouted Muggins. 'Ye plagued fool, you're three uillcw ucrost the county line now. Tack up and come home." Washington Post. In His Own Country, A novelist, like a prophet, sometimes suffers from lack of appreciation on the pnrt of his neighbors. "The folks hereabouts take him calm ly enough!" was the remark of one of Thomas Hardy's neighbors in Wessex, England. A recent article, "In Thomas Hardy's Country," In Temple Bar, fur nishes additional proof that the people of that locality are entertaining n great man unawares. Thy writer questioned the driver of a van over n road near Casterlirldge if he knew Hardy. "Hardy, the poet? Yes, I often sees 'en goen' nhirng in a volne noble study, with 'Is 'ead down an' n lot o' books under Ms orm. 'E never 'nve nobody with 'en. They tells I Ms books are wonderful deep, but I ain't read 'em, not I. I don't get tlnie for readin' notli en' but the labels on the parcels I carry an' the names of the public houses." Again the writer of the article en countered, In place of n stolid indiffer ence, mild envy of Hardy nnd open contempt for the region, rich lu associa tions, which the novelist has so fully described. The critic in this case was an old man who wns found nt a railway station near Egdon Heath. In response to the usual Inquiry about Hardy came this delicious bit of depreciation: "Oh, the writen' chap! I've read some of his works. They says 'tis a gift. Seems to me 'tis just writen'-- -Just sltten' down an' writen' and not doeu' nothen' at arl. What do 'e do, I ask 'ee? Here be I doeu' more proper work than Hardy ever did, nn' they don't tark about I, an' say. There's a great chap, like they do about 'e." Joke Was on Her. At a certain court function Lady Har rington was bedizened with diamonds and jewels, and looked like a stage queen of Indifferent character, and she bitterly complained to George Selwyn that she was to walk with Lady Ports mouth, who would have a wig and a stick. "Never mind." he said, "you will only look as If you were taken up by the constable." This sne repeated ev erywhere, under the Impression the re flection was on Lady Portsmouth. When a girl goe to stay all night with another girt, she always takes her favorite pills aio.i.