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About Oregon City courier. (Oregon City, Or.) 1896-1898 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1897)
" UNCLE JOSH. OKI! hain't hen f K'nmI, I s'posc, mini orter In; Mont any friend 'lit I hev Hot Wiilllil any I In')' K.iilio er iiiv : -leil totality liiinl pi'gc f-CC er keep liiy nil clcun mi' friini nhiIh, urn 'iiiiii't iih ler hide 'em. jllHt liliini full u e it'ii uv lllolN. I'll hev ter ilo like nil tlier rMt turn ever it If" f 'ui' new; 1 A dug lil ilim't tuke ter Irli'kH, mi what ther good It'll do 7 Might full m well quit tryin' ter he any thin' er mure O'hnn I'nele JohIiiim Whltcoinb, 'lit keep the comer Mure. ... . i , it . ..I........ ht Ant runii u s Ii sin-as fer pleiiniro, but n. i. ulnemllv full: l.lkely ther acalea it. a leetle off- pliice iter Iher welaiita hev h pull: Tried my purtlet ter tlx 'em, hut ther hen' 'ut I could do Would tip llier brum wlirn'n pound wu ihort on'y a ounce or two; j 'Tatent somehow her a wuy uv rangln 'eniMivca an ter fixe, Naler fer tilings 'nt er big"'"' tc' wsntcr begin ter rite. Wimnien folkn any they never did aee . necli cn Inker afore Kx they it nv I'lule Joshua, 'at keep ther corner afore. Cliililmi all aeem ter like nie, fer my enn- dy l linrd ter heut: Ulieka nil striped with red an' pink noih- in" 'nt'a half o sweet: They Mime ler me 'Ith their pennlea an' ray "I'nele Jonb, now please, 1 want two slicks uv peppermint au' a liriiuy'a 'orth uv these." Looks so lirinlil an' happy, 'illi eheeka ao plump an' red, My oP heart swell Hp bigger an' I give Vni 1 1 ice sticks Instead: An' they smile hack thro' ther winder when they lilt outside th"r door, A-lhrowlu' kisses nt "I'nele Josh," 'at keeps I her corner atore. So n.nybe I'll get ter heaven If tlniea don't Krow too tight; I'll fix them pesky si-ales up sure afore another nitchl; I'll till n.y nieiiaurea rliibt up Hill uv hlgl na little, too; If tin r small mis will touch bottom, why, what kin a ikmic man do? Coin' ter Hi'iiil ol' (iriiiiny Hmwi u whole bi( mick uv Hoar An' linlr er barrel uv upplea 'ut's mixed 'ith tweet mid sour; Hie loit her hoy w ith fever nn' her he.irt I kinder aore. A kindly itiiH'tiiiK frmii lTncle .loxh, 'at keeps ther corner atore. BLOOD WILL TELL. iHR ocean wna ulorloualy blue ami beautiful, It being our third day nut. The great ateatner'a diH'ks were crowded w Ith her pnxxeuRors, whom the Hue weather had hrotiKhl out once more. No one nttrnct- "" - more general at tention than a tall, stalwart younit fel low, most severely KiikIIsIi In his dress nml milliner. Over six feet In height, of wonderfully perfect pli.vslipie, he trod the deck with a spriiixlness and ease of gait raiviy seen. "Most distinguished looking," wna the nulversal feminine verdict. Sev eral went so far us to believe him a lord In disguise, desplle the plain Charles Hlnke known to be his name on the passenger list, lie was oil n accompanied by a niliblle-aged man na unmistakably l'iligllsli na himself. "No mystery nt nil about him," aald the genial purser, the especial friend of the ladles, "lie and his father are Klmply two rich Kngllshinen who have bis-n spending some years In your big America, and are now retiming to Kiigland, where old Mr. Hlnke lias large estates In Yorkshire. Do not get excited, ladles, nnd try to Invent ro mances. Young Hlnke Is a line-looking, lather sober sort of fellow, but aa far na I ran ace nothing us wonderful nnd mysterious as you are trying to make out. He Is ho dark that If I did not know he was Kugllsh I should say that lie had some colored blood In his velna." In this case, however, the women hnd the beat of It, after all. There was a mystery concerning young Mr. Hlnke. He was, as baa been said correctly, MMhitoly, soberly IOngllsh In every way except, perhaps, a slightly unfamiliar cast of countenance. What was It that wua puzzling? There la nlwaya ao much Idle talk on a steamer. Not a great talker, but when warmed up on a subject, though thin happened rarely, aa he apin-ared to have eery emotion under supreme control, the bhstd mantled In hla dark cheeks, and his large, black, deep-act eyea glowed with nn intense though rather sombre, fire. Ills Kugliab wua singularly tin tic tiled for thla slang-loving genera tion. "Your aon doea not look much like you," aome one would say to ruddy, bright-faced senior Hlake, "No. he la like, his mother's people," Mr. Hlake would calmly reply, but not continuing the conversation further in that direction. "Like hla tnother'a people," aye, and like hla father's, too, for Chnrlea Blake only seven short yeara before had roamed, a scarce blanketed savage, over the far western wllda of North America. A war whoop had been far more natural to him then than the flue tenor aoloa he executed now without dlttlculty. lie bad been a brave among the braves. Eight years before this story begins f f H lN Mr, r.liilto, 8r was seized with the fever of exploration Unit no often takes Hid moneyed Englishman of today In Hh grasp, mill set n 11 for America a ml I Iii wllil mill woolly west. In due time Mr. Hlake foinnl himself In tin far went, iiiul, securing suitable glllllcS, plllllgCll IlltO till) Wllllcl'IICNS, wilderness iiinxt satisfactory, wilder ness fur beyond IiIm wildest Imagining. 1 1 en', wlili hi guides, ho spent ninny months In hunting iiiul Xiii'iitlm. KCVITIll tlllll'S experiencing till' ll)l( sensation of being tliu Mint while iiiul) to vIkIi. One liny the guides brought to tlii temporary cmup a young Imlliiii, who In cl fallen III wlillc on ii lone limit, ami wua uniilili) to Ket Imi'k to the home, from wlili-li he I in 1 wmulereil fur. The guides Iiiul gone to IiIh reHi-ne. For week Hie sick laty lny In the lllllii hIm-IIit of Ismgha erected liy the glllllcS. Mr. Illuke, a childless widower, be came greatly Interested In the youthful savage, iiml mm time went on much nt- . " 1-"'I ' Through a guide iih In- tcrpreter they talked much together. rcrhiipa Home drop of white blood mlngl"d In the young Ilidlan'H velna. Inherit i'i from aome far away ancestor, pave hint the longing lie now evinced lor civilization, the desire to try n white man's life; perhaps Mr. Make's arguments, representations, imtsUii alona nlone IiiIIiii'IicihI thu young, HH tinned heiirt. He that ax It may, Satucket, na he wna cnlleil, agreed to forxuke the home, the life of hla futhera, and to place himself mirexcrvcilly In the lunula of till new-foiiiiil friend. A certain light- ni'KH of the red brow of the ordinary Indian complexion In Satiicket'a case liiiidt) the plan proponed mid afterward adopted by Mr. Hlake fenslble. All that money, tutorx, Hiiniinary and entire laolntioii from the cenea of Ida youth, could do for the yotini; Indian, wna done, It wua not only ImioI; knowledge that he Iiiul to pa In. but ul nioHt evcij thill!; that cornea iiatiinilly to u white child of cultured parents, und there wua ao much to unlearn! Xow Mr. Hlnke Telt that the nelf-lin-poxed tnxk, InlereatliiK, ilellhtful withal, was most aatlxfactorlly com pleted. Voting Illuke had been takru on a tour throiteli many Iarxo clllea ,, fllH,ulllli,,. W1,terlnit plncea. mid everywhere hud received most Hiitter- lug attention from young and old. The necessary papers laid long been made out, and Charles was aa legally Mr. Klakc's aon as though of hla own tlesh and IiIimmI. A happier father and aon it would have beeu hard to find. With a heart overtlowlug with pride, triumph nnd thankfulness, Mr. Hlake set anil for hla native shores, imvlslted for the past eight years. That he was returning with an adopted aon hla( friends In the old country knew, they had bud to be told this, but to stran gers, the adoption, like the rest of his son's life before he wna Ida aon, Mr. Hlake kept a profound secret. Among the passengers was a young phi, a more perfect blonde, than is often seen In Hriialii, or even, except in (IiIIiIIiimhI, In America. A aweet young Kngllxh maiden, timid, modest, lovely In every way. A child who had never before been away from her mother's aide, from the protecting shadow of her wing, until now, returning from a A TAI.t., STAI.WAKT VOIINO KKI.I.OW. abort visit to America with her father. To her Charles was unhesltutlngly at tracted; the older men found many In terests In common, and the four spent many happy hours on this pleasautest of voyages on a summer's bcu. Amy's aweet face grew sweeter day by day, a faint rose tint glowed In the pure whiteness of her cheeks. Charles' dark face became really handsome, having an animation utterly unknown before. The result of this acquaintance can easily lie foreseen. Many were the promises exchanged by the young pair. The fathers parted with assurances of continued friendship. Charles Hlake was received In Kii gland ns cordially as he or Mr. Blake could possibly desire. Before a year bad gone by the marriage eminently pleasing to all concerned took place, and Charles and Amy settled dowu In Mr. Hlake' s handsome home, with ap parently every prospect of a loiirf and happy life therein. Mr. Hlako'a cup of happiness was now full and running over. For a time all went well, but there was au Influ ence at work busily undermining this fair fabric of happiness, which not even the nearest and dearest, most for tunately, suspected. Even before he left the ship, when away from Amy, Charles had had mo menta when the longing for freedom hnd been almost Insupportable. In all the yeara of his new niode of life, though ever more or less conscious of this desire, he had never felt It so strongly, for his had been a very busy life, but as he waa being takeu day by day further and further from hla na tive land, a wild Impulse often came over him to leap Into the sea, to breast MO 111 -5 the hl'licHt wavcx, to make tliu inof deapernte efforta Htaalbly to reu'iiln lilt loat freedom, to ace otico inoie lilx nut aaviij.'!' home, never na dear na now when It aeeined loxt to him forever. 'J'he excitement of xeltllni; in Ida new home, the daya crowded Willi cliKiiKe iiiciitx, hla inarrlai', hud all aerved to keep hla liiliid well occupied, llllt How, tifter the Imatle, the Kill', there wax coiupiil'iillve iiilel ui;iilii, and the old temptation reiurned' wlih redoubled power. How he hated hla line clolliea, only badlfea of Ida servitude, he bitterly thoiiKhl. lie IntlKed Willi .ill Ida n 11 aiilalued aavaite heart to throw the Kiir lueiita of civilization to the four Wiiuln of tlio earth, and loam once more the pal bless forests, clad at must In blanket mid niuecaslns. (I, for hla Im-I i of pine IhiiikIix, Ills (,'loiloiis nights! under the canopy of heaven, Huliled only by the moon or stars, (las, lamps electric lights were one and nil un speakably hateful to lilm. I'oor Sa tucket: There were duya when he could not eat; the dainty fiaal of u well-ordered: ADMIIIKO AMI IIKVnsna TlV AM HIS SAVAOE rol.l.OWKHS. house was absolutely loathsome to him. He saw again In his mind's eyi the luilf-cookcd slices of venison or is-ar's meat of his long-forsaken lioi.ie, be was starving for that food now. The end soon ciiuie, alas, poor human nature la very weak. Struggle na lie might, there came a time all too soon In the abort married life !hu' bud aeeined to promise so much happiness when poor Charles could no longer re alst the tempter. One morning Amy awoke to Mud her self alone, a deserted wife. A dim re' luembraucc of passionate kisses per vading her alumla-rs, u few hastily scrawled words on paper strangely blotted and tumbled, words that she never showed to anyone, were all that were left to her now. In one of the few tribes of hostile In dlaua atlll left In America, there Is ti young wnriior, a chieftain, ad in I nil and revered by all hla savage followers he Is their pride and glory. Kxcept for a finer form, a more lofty carriage, there Is little to distinguish 111 id from his wild brethren. Ills life, Ills language Is aa theirs. Only one difference, no squaw Uvea In bis wigwam, or ia ever bidden to outer there. No other woman will ever take the place, once hold, ever so briefly, by the sweet Kugllsh girl. Amy. I'tlcn (ilobe. Kneinlen of the Mosquito. There are two natural enemies of the ntiMqultn, the dragmi fly ami the spi der. The latter, us we know, wages constant warfare uion all Insect life, and where mosquitoes are plentiful they form the chief diet of their hairy foe. The dragon fly la a destroyer of mosquitoes in at least two stages of life. The larva dragon fly feed upou the larva mosquito, ami when fully de veloped the latter dines constantly upou the matured mosquito. The dra gon fly as a solution of the mosquito pest question Is not wholly satisfac tory, for while there Is no serious dltll culty to be encountered In the cultiva tion of dragon flies In large numbers, yet It Is manifestly impossible to Keep them In the dark woods where mos quitoes abound, the hunting ground of the "darning needle" being among the flowers and dry gardens where the sun shine prevails. For this very Impor tant reason the scheme of hunting one kind of Insect with another must be abandoned as Impracticable. Wash ington Star. The Moat Dlflicult Thing. "What Is the most dlflicult tblug about a bicycle?" This question was asked at a dlnlng tablo In the U. S. Nat'l Museum cafe by aa up-to-date gentleman. The question was put separately, and several an swers were given, as follows: "Push ing a long hill;" "raying for hie wheel," remarked another; "Cnrrylng It home on your shoulder," was an other, and so on. But the cilninx was reached when Professor Thomas Wil son, of ho Smithsonian Institution, re sponded, saying that the most difficult thing aud experience about a bicycle waa to "Keep from bilking and hearing others talk about them." L. A. V. .ui letln. Voices Altered. Dr. Sand was, a French physician, claltiK to have discovered a new sys tem for increasing the range of a sing er's voice as much as two full note in the upper or lower registers. He ob tains this change by inhalations of va rious aromatic vapors. Those of Cura cao liquor are said to add volume to the high register, while vapors of a dis tilled extract of pine needles will bene fit the lower note, t earn lug coffee and rum will stimulate the voic-j In general, strengthening the middle range particularly. Philadelphia Record. WHAT THE LAW DECIDES. Tim ncsllp'nce of u paxseiiKer In atop pine on n train when it la uoliift two or three miles mi hour la held, In Iilaller ra. . oiii; Ialmiil Itallroiid Coinpuny (N Y.) :i.'i L, It. A. 7IU, to be u ijuestluu for the Jury. A personal liability for pavements ax aessiiieilt la upheld, III Htorrli) vs. Ciirtea (Tex.) :ir I.. 1. A. MHI, where the city charter makes It a lieu on properly mid provides also for stilt axalnst the owner. The addition of the word "trustee" to the tiMiie of the payee of a note la held, in I'ox vs. Citizens' Hank and Trust Coiiipiiny (Tciiii.) I., II. A. (ITS, not to destroy Its negotiability. The other u- thorllies on thla question are reviewed In tin) annotation to the case. (eueriil reputation In a family aa to the death of a member, if not derived from difla rut Ions of any deceased member of the family, la held, In re Hnrlbiif. (Vt.) 85 I.. It. A. 7114. to be In admissible to allow the fact of hla den th prior 4o the death of hla father. A person at a flag station at which there la no ticket olllce, who has aig ullled an Intent to get upon a passenger train that bus udiinly atopped there, la held. In Weateru and A. Unllroiid Com pany va. Volla Mlu.) IB I.. It. A. i."3, to be entitled to the rlghta of a passenger. A corporate seal on a note which la negotiable In form la held. In Chase national bank va. Fatirot (N. Y.) 115 I.. It. A. Ui.". not to destroy the negotiabil ity ol the Instrument. A note to the case reviews the prevloila authorities on the effect of n mcii! on negotiability. A railroad coin puny selling couiam tickets over connecting roads ia iieli, In Chicago and Alton Itallroiid Company vs. Miilford till.) H5 L. K. A. .r!!, to be presumably a mere agent for the con necting company mid not liable for the failure of the latter to honor the tickets The measure of damages for fraud In a contract for the exchange of prop erty ia held, In Rockefeller vs. Merrltt '. C. A pp. 81 Ii C.) 35 I.. It. A. S33, to lie limited to the difference between the actual value of the property which the plaintiff parted with aud that which he received. CoiisequenUil da mages for changing the grade of a atreet after It una been opened ami used on the natural sur face as a grade Hue Is held, In Blair vs. Charleston (W. Va.) 35 L. It. A. 8,r)2, to be recoverable under a constitutional provision allowing compensation for property damaged. The annexation of territory to n coun ty la held. In State ex rel Chllds, vs. Crow Wing County (Minn.) 35 L. It. A. 745, to be subject to attack by quo war ranto, aud the findings of the commis sion In favor of the annexation, al though followed by the Governor's proclamation making the annexation, are not conclusive. Possession of hind under a parole promise of a gift la held, In Schafer vs. Hauser (Mich.) 35 L. It. A. 835, to be sutttcltut foundation for adverse pos session on the part of the donee, and this Is upheld na against a subsequent mortgage by the donor. The annota tion to this case reviews the authori ties on adverse possession under parole gift. The right of an alien corporation to acquire lauds "under mortgage" Is held. In Oregon Mortgage Company vs. Cnrsteus (Wash.) 35 L. It. A. 841, to In clude au acquisition of the land by deed from the mortgageor, where this was done In good faith to satisfy the mortgage debt, ami the original pur pose was to make a mortgage aud not to transfer the title. The bolder of a note who tukea It en tirely on the security of a policy of life Insurance, although it is technically de livered prior to maturity, is held, in Hays vs. I.apeyre (I-n.) 35 L. It. A. 047, to be entitled to bold the note only for the a mount advanced upon It, with In terest. The aunotatiou to this case considers the negotiability of a payable out of a particular fund. note Watch vs. I.o o motive. I'ery few of the millions of people who carry watches realize to what a wonderful extent lubrication Is devel oped aud what an extraordinary num ber of turns the balance wheel makes with otie oiling. A Chestnut s street watchmaker, whose knowledge of these wonderful pieces of mechanism is not exceeded by any mun in this city, has made up an Interesting table of com parison to show the perfection of lunrl catlou In u watch. A watch will run on one oiling from a year to a year nnd a half. Every minute the balance wheel turns on Its axis 450 times, and 27,000 times In au hour. Accepting the year as the time the ordinary watch will run with one oiling he finds that If the driver of a locomotive was as well oiled as the bal ance wheel of a watch It ought to run sixty miles an hour day and night for 048 days, or well on to two yeara with one oiling. In that time It would tra verse a distance equal to nearly four times the circumference of the earth. ' In view of the fact that In reality few locomotives will run one day without reolllng, he maintains that the watch maker lias developed his art to a far greater degree than the locomotive builder has yet been able to reach. Philadelphia Record. Largest Dry bock. There Is now In process of construc tion In Engianu, at me oraer or t& Spanish Government, for the port of Olougapo, In the Philippine Islands, the largest floatlug dock of its kind In the world. It is over 4.a feet long, ill feet wide, and 3 reet fleep. inia dock, the sides of which are of steel, will test on six iron pontoons, each fourteen feet deep. Powerful pump ing engines will lift a vessel weighing 12,000 tons in two hours. The dock will accommodate a vessel 500 feet long. Chicago Inter Ocean, AN IDEAL WIFE. C: IIAItLKS DICKIONS thus de scribed an Ideal wife: "She la a true and noble wife for whose ambition a liusband'a love and her chil dren's adoration lire suhiclent, who np plica her military Itiatlncta to the disci pline of her household, and whose leg islative Instincts exercise themselves lu making the laws for her nurse, whose Intellect baa Held enough for her In communion with her husband, mid whose heart aska for no other honors than bis love and admlratlon-a woman who does not think It a weakneaa to at tend to her toilet and who doea not dia dain to be beautiful, who believes In fp virtue of glossy hair and well-fitting gowns, and who eschews rents aud raveled edges, slipshod shoes and auda cious inake-iipa a woman who speaks low and doea not apeak much; who Is patient aud gentle, and Intellectual nud Industrious; who loves more than site reasons, and yet doea not love blindly; who never acoida and never argues, but adjusts with a smile such a woman Is the wife we have all dreamed of once In our lives, and is the mother we will worship lu the backward distance of the past." Three Women of the Weat. Miss Frances Cravens, queen of the Kansas City flower parade, Is a beauti ful young woman, well known In Kan sas City society. She Is the daughter of the late Judge J. K. Cravens, Is about 1!) years old, of medium height nnd queenly carriage. She was educated In New York and Is quite an accom plished musician. Miss Gertrude Dwyer of San Antonio, Tex., was selected "queen of Texas beauty" at a beauty carnival held at Waco, Tex. She has Just returned from a trip through Mexico, where her fame had preceded her, and she was given banquets nnd receptions. President and Mrs. Diaz Invited her to Chapulte pec. Miss Katherine May Wood of Omaha was admitted to the bnr a year ago. She Is a graduate of Harvard, aud has had wonderful success, having won a GERTRUDE DWYER. FRANCES number of cases she has carried to the Supreme Court of Nebraska. Her argu ments are clear and she is very famil iar with all the writers of standing on law subjects, and her text-book knowl edge Is declared by all practitioners to be marvelous. Her specialty Is divorce court business, but she refuses to take cases of this nature against the woman. The result Is that Miss Wood is receiv ing all the business of the women of Omaha who desire divorces. She boasts, however, that she settles more divorce cases out or court man uy guuiciai methods, claiming yfat she conceives it to be her duty to bring quarreling couples together'' when possible before resorting to the courts; The TJp-to-Dute Girl. This Is the way she wears her great Bernhardt bow. Sleeves of Wraps. Sleeves of outside wraps show little or no alteration. They are made with several shallow pleats at the top, which are clustered together at the shoulder, and do not extend to the sides of the armhole. Almost all the jackets have cuffs of some kind, either the material turned back a short way or some form of trimming adopted which has the ef fect of a cuff. The New Skirt. One of the distinctive features of the new skirt Is that It Is cnt very long la front The feet must be completely hidden, and the front breadth must be as narrow ns possible. Most aklrts made of 'double width material will have one narrow front breadth and a widely gored one at each aide, to give the requisite fullness at the buck. Plainly made aklrts will be favored, aucli trimmings as are used being al most exclusively flat ones, and applied either to the lower part or running up each" aide of the front breadth. Flounces will only be used for evening dresses and will not reach much above the knee. Adjustable Hand Mirror. No longer need madam crane and twist her neck to discover the coudltlou of her back hair. No longer need she pull the shoulder of a bodice out of shape trying jo determine with the aid FOR IV LAD Y S COMFORT. of a hnnd-ghiss how her wulstfits. The latest hand glass does not require to be held in the hand at. all. It clasps the back of a chair easily mid madam, seat ed before her dressing table, Is enabled to have one reflector before her and one behind her without the least wearylug of her wrist. Blind Woman Farmer. While women who farm are numer ous In all States of the Union, a blind woman farmer Is seldom seen. There lives in Oak Hill, Texas, a blind girl, who has from a few acres of land, cul- CRAVEN. KATHERIXB MAT WOOD. tlvnted by herself, cleared about 200 each season for several years by the growing and sale of vegetables. She began with no capital aud nn unfenced piece of uncultivated land. There Is now a neat fence about her domain, a well and pump In the center, and she has, in addition to purchasing these, paid for a piano nnd hack, to take her vegetables to the market, which la twenty miles from her home. Boss of a Section Gang. The novel sight of a woman bossing a gang of railroad men may be Been on the Dulutli and Winnipeg line. Since her husband died over a year ago Mrs. Mary Shannon has had charge of a section gang, Bhe taking the place of her husband. The rondmaster asserts that she is the best section boss he has on the line. This Is a description of her at work. Dressed in a pair of bloomer overalls, with the bottoms laced around the tops of cowhide boots and her head adorned by a broad brimmed slouch hat, the woman sec tion boss may be seen any day, except Sunday, In all kinds of weather, stand ing beside the track in the midst of a gang of laborers directing the work of surfacing, lining up and rail replacing. One Woman's Profession. Miss Lillian Small, nf Cape Cod, Mass., has a singular profession. She lives in a small cottage under the shadow of the big Highland Light, and here she spends her time looking through the telescope for passing ships and telegraphing to Boston, She learned to do this when only a child, her father occupying the post of sig nal master. When she returned from boarding school, where she was sent In due course of time, she became ber father's assistant She leads a lonely life, often for days seeing no one but the families of the lighthouse keepers. She has a wheel and a rifle for com panions. Bolero and Zouave Effect. Bolero and Zouave effects have lost none of their popularity, and will blos som out In new and odd surprises as the season advances. Many of them are designed for warmth, while the ma jority are made as an artistic decora tion for the fancy bodice where several materials are combined. Jeweled, tin seled and all-over braided effects will be much used In these dainty additions, wblch are affected alike by both old and young, and claim a place Id the foremost ranks of good style. Wom an's Home Companion,