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About The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899 | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1883)
Published every Friday Morning BY M. S. WOOBCfiCK. ' 'I III . - SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ...... (Payable in Advance.) Per Year, Six Months ISO Three-Months. 1 Bingle Copies........ 10c Per Year (when not paid in advonce) S 00 AH notice and advertisement, intended for pub ation ahould be handed in by ncou on Wednesdays. Rates of advertising made known on application . Miscellaneous Business Cards. k s. "woodcock, . A.tt6riieV ; at - Law, Corvallis; - - Oregon. 8; R. f ABRA, 111. 0., Physician & Surgeon. OFFICK OYER GRAHAM, HAMILTON & COS Drug Store. COrvallisi Oregon 19:25yl t:V I EMBREE, M. D., I?h.ysio:iMnfe Surgeon. Office 2 doors south of H. E. Harris' sVore, Oorvalli", - - Oregon. . Residence on the southwest corner of block, north and west of the Methodist church. 18:zl-yrl. F. J. ROWLAND, " Black&nith & Wagonniaktii1, iPhllomath, Oregon. Mr Rowland is prepared to do all kinds of wagon making, repairing and blacksinithing to order. He uses the best of material every time and warrants his work. ia-32-Iyr W. d Crawford, J EWEIER - KEEPS CONSTANTLY CN HAND A LARGE assortment of Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, etc. A!l kinds of repairing done on short noticd, and all work warranted. 18:33-yl Eeal Estate Agency. . have some very desirable property on the Bay. for ale in lots from 10 to 237 acres. Some of this is ear the O P. R. R. terminus. Persons wishing to invest will do well to c"Ci! on me when prices are rea sociable. Address with stamps to pre pay postage. R. A. Bexsell New . Benton County Or., LADIES WISHING TO LEARN THE Rinker System of Dress Cutting will please call on me as ( am the only author t d agent in Corval . 20.11m3 Mrs. W. H. Huffman. L, J Hendrichson, Boot and Shoe Maker, Philomath, Oregon. t always keep on hand superior ma-: teriai ana. warrant my work. I ask art., examination of my goods before purchasing elsehere. , ... 19-32-1 yr F. J. Hendnchson. Klank FOR SA LE AT THIS OFFICE THE YAQTJINA HOUSE! Is now prepared I o accommodate travelers in first-class e,tyle at all hours. Meals Only 25 Cents. Horse feed constanilv on hand, at the :ioes liv ing rates. Situated on the Yaqulna Rdad, tlal way from CorvaU'utto Newport. 20:12yl. P. R ANT. KELSAY & HOLGATE, A-ttbjfneyeg - at - LaW. Col. Kelsay and myself have formed a copartner ship in the practice of the Jaw. The Col's ex perience at the Bar and on the Bench and his studious habits is a. sure guarantee that all business intrusted to us in the line of suits or actions in Court will be well attended .to. I will continue other business and give prompt attention to the same as. heretofore. Such as Collecting-. Being a Notary Pubiic will attend to convey mcing in all its branch!?, tecds. Mortgages, Heal and Chattel, Leases.' Beleases, Powers of attorney, Contracts, &q. Jkc. t, Buy sell and lease Heal Estate both farms acd to'wn property, collect rents, ne gotiate loans, search and examine titles, and a gen eral agency business., . , ;. .t , t Am now In brick biuMitYff and have Are . proof safe for the safe keeping of notes and other valuable papers left for collection fcc. ..f .A .lUtffctf in Burnett's new brick, first door at head of stairs. . 19:l7tf E. HOLGATE. I tt. TAfYLOil, Dentist the oldest established Dentist and the best outfit iti Corvallis. .Aill work keph in rep-iir free cf Charge and satisfac n (fuaranteed, i Teeth extracted without paiu by ne use of Nitrqus Oxide Gas., , ... . .. i V Rooms up-statfs over Jacobs & Neujass new rick Store. Corrailis, Oregon. lS:27yi GrOAt tfVOOL? fo the goat raisers, of the State of. Oregon: t fVm perfectins an arrangement .to handle all 65a Goat Wool in the State and w ill say to all who f. . have Goaj,Wool on hand . K PLE iSE SEND ME SAMPLES frcm several fleeces, aveiae) and I will seebat can be done with the same. fI 4 n't expect thW year to be able to only make a .start aiad the price will be nominal, but with increase the jp. price and grade fron year to year. State Hqw Much You Have. Address, M w. Srasield, 16tf AGENT. Boots (and) $hoesi Protzman & DeFrance . .. IWasdnie Temple, 3rd mi Alder Streets, PORTLAND, OR. THE LARCEST Retail Boot and Shoe House In Oregon. OCCUPYING TWO STORE BOOMS. Send for Catalogue and Price LlSt. 21-nr? Newport, Or, VOL; xx. CORVALLIS, OREGON, JUNE 1, 1883. NO. 2B. NEW FIRM! AGRICULTlRiL IMPLEMENTS , We have in stock the Deering Twine Binders, Deering and Standard Mowjrs, Minnesota Qhiet f hresherSj Morrison Plows, Minnesota piait and Stillwater Engines, Elwood mounted liwrse-Poweri Centenniet FahninK mill, cel ebrated Buckeye line of Seeders and Drills. . . We also keep the celebrated Whitewater and Ket'jhum wagons. ... ; june2yl W. H. MtELHOLLAND. HL. E. HAEEIS, One Door Scuth of Graham & Hamilton's, CORVALLIS, OREfiOfr. Groceries, Provisions, DRY GOODS. Cora .'His, Juns 24. 1882. 19-19yl PORTER, SLESSINGER & CO., Manufacturers and Jobbers of THE CELEBRATED IRON CLAD BOOT & SHOE. These Coods are Warrant ed not to rip. All Genuine ha'elhe trademark "IKON CLAD" stamped thtreon. 117 Battery Street, San Francisco, Cal. GOODS FOR SALE AT MAX FRIENDLY' S Corvallis, Oregon. WANTED 1 lOOO MenandBoys AT J. W. HANSON'S. CLOTHING m TAILORING EMPORIUM To fit. them out in the latest style o ready made Clothing. Also the finest lot of Pants Patterns and Suitings Everjjrought to Corvallis. Call and. Exa-mine G6ods. No trouble to show goods. Two doors South of Post OfHib, CORtALLIS; - - - - OREGOX. J THE ST. JOHN LAND & IMPROVEMENT CO, Directors : 1. P. THOMPSON, P. T. SMITH, L. A. BANKS, W. BYRON DANIELS, JASfES T. GRAY. OfPce corner First and WasKington Stat Portland. OrejfBH. Capital Stock - $375,000 Parties desiring a safe and profitable investment should call or write for information at .once. Messrs. B'uford & Waggrior are agents for the Company in fjbi'itMl and can give infonnation oh value to persona seeking Srst-class investments. 20-llm2 aV 3 H S3 6 pq r3 o 1 a o o CD bd CQ CD -I-H I CP CO CD CD o o CD 1 C3 UJ GO CO r o o CO E r f a E U E3 i o as: C E- I a S a - o 3?. mm . H AUGUST KNIGHT, CABINET MAKER, UNDERTAKER. Cor. Second and: Monro s Sts. , CORVALLIS, : ORECO, Keeps constantly on hand all kinds of FTJRNITUilE Coffins and. Caskets. Work done to order on short notice and at reasonable rates. Corvallis July 1, 1881. 19:27yl. WHAT THKY NEEDED. The father and mother together sat Their visa&res puckered with care Pondering what they should do with their girls, Their girls with the auburn hair. "They play .and they sing,and they dance," shesaid "And they sketch with pencil and pent They sjxsak the German and French and draw." "Oh, ves! but they don't draw men. And here they all stick," the old man growled, "With their gabble of French and Dutch!" And he cave the poodle beneath his chair A prod with the end of his crutch. "But what Can they do that is useful?"' he yelled. With an oath that really was shocking; "Can they sew, or sweep, or codft or clean. Or darn the hole in a stocking?" "Darn the hole in their stockings!" she cried. With a half hysterical shriek; "Ah, ho, indeed! what the poor girls need Is a thorough knowledge of Greek!" 1NGEBS0L ON DEATH. Remarkable Oration at the funeral of a )?ree Thinker. The remains of Joho Mills, a local agitator, latterly private secretary to ex-RepitsetitatiVe March of Maine, and who died at, Washington D. C. recently of pneitnloiiia, were forward ed 16 his home at Port Jar vis, N. Y., lately. Mills was a free thinker. At the funeral service, which was held at the latter place in the parlors of a residence on Franklin park, in the presence of a large company, in cluding Senator Van Wyckj Regis ter Bruce, ei-Senator Dorsey and ex Representative Murch, Robt. Gy In gersoll'delivered the oration. After & dirge Had been sting; Col. Ingersoll said: "Again we are face to face with the gret mystery ihat shrouds the world. We question, but there is no reply. Out on the wide waste of sea there drifts ho spar. Over the desert of death the Sphinx gazes for ever, but ttever speaks. In the very May of me another heart has fallen upon noon. But he lived, lie loved and was loved. Wife and child pressed their kisses On his lip's. This is enough. . The longest lite contains no more. This fills the vase of joy. He who lies here; clothed with the perfect peace of death, was a kind and loving husband and a good fa ther, a generous neighbor, an honest man. And these words build a mon unient of glory above the humblest grave. He was always, a child; sin cere and frank, as full of hope as spring. He divided all time into to day and to-morrow. To-morrow was withort't a cloud, an! of to-morrow he borrowed sunshine for to day. He was my friend: He will remain so. The living oft become estranged. The dead are true. He was not a Christian. In the Bdeh of his hope there did not crawl rthd coil the serpent of eternal pain. In many languages .H sought the thoughts of men, and for hifilselt. h'e -sol ved the problems of the worfd. He accepted the philosophy of Anguste Comte. Humanity was, and is, God the hu man race ihe Supreme Being. .In that Supreme Being he rested. We believe that we are indebted for what we enjoy to the labor, the self-denial the heroism of the human race, and that, as we have plucked the fruit of what others planied, we in tKankfal ness should. platVt for others yet to be. With him immortality was the eter nal consequences of his own good acts. Ha belieVed . that every good thought, every disinterested deed hastens the harvest of, Universal good. This is a religion that enrich es poverty; that enables us. to bear the sorrow of the saddest life; a reli gion born not of selfishness and fear, but of love and hope; that gladly bears the burdens of ll)e h'nborn; , In the. presence of death, how beliefs and dogmas wither ard decayf How loving words and deeds burst and blossom! Pluck from the tree of any life these ffowers, and there remains but the barren thorns of bigotry and creed. All wish for happiness be yond this life; and all hope to meet again the loved and lost. In every heart there grows tjiis Sacred ffower of eternal hope; Ithmoftanity is a word that hope, through all ages, has been whispering to love. The mira cle of thought we cannot understand; the mystery of death and hope we cannot comprehend;' this chaos called the world has never been explained; the golden bridge of life from gloom emerges, and our shadow rests. Be yond this we do not know. Fate is speechless, destiny s dumb and the secret of the future lias never yet been told. We love, we wait, we hope. The more we love, the more we fear; upon the tenderest heart the deepest shadows fall. All paths, whether filled' with thbrtrs flewers, end here. Here success and. failure are the same; the rags of wretchedness and the pilrjile robe of power lose difference and distinction in this democracy of death. Character alone survives; goodness alone lives; love alone is immortal. But to all there comes a time when the feVered lips of life long for the coo!, delicious kiss o! death. Tired of the dust and giafe of day, they hear with joy the rustling garments of the night. What can we say of the dead? Where they have golie reason cannot go, and frOm there revelation has not come. But let us believe that over the cradles nature bends and smiles, and Tovingly above the dead in ben edict ion holds her outstretched hands." The Society YevAg Man. The -'guilded youth" of to-day is the dandy of one hundred years ago; the "Swell young man" of the present time is only a reproduction ot the "beau" of the past, and only a mild reproduction at his best. In b'oth types of fashion the costume is the distinguishing feature, and how poor and dull seems the exquisite of this century in comparisdri with that of last. Now, a cravat and pin and a watch-chain are apt to be the only elements of gorgeousness; then, the whole attire was one dazzling glitter. In the old days we hear that the nice young men appeared in plush Satin waistcoats, silk coats, pink satin shoes, and plumb-colored stockings, their whole figure being adorned with lace and jewels. At the present time the effect of the costume is rather sombre than otherwise, an elegant unobtrnsiveness being the chief characteristic. Ih rtianner the earlier and late varieties of this genius rnain- rtain a similarity, each, however, pre serving the modifications caused by the peculiar state of society at the time. Then, as now, if we can trust the an?ient chronicles there was the fascinating etiniii ifi deportment, and the same, don't j'bu know distinguish ed air of hatihg diank the wine of life to the dregs, of having tasted all sweetness of the world, of Havirig gone to the depths of existence only to find nothing. It was quite the thing, one hundred years ago, so tfcey say, for the society young man to sc.irn the knowledge of books and to' pretend that "seeing the world" vfis the principal duty of & gentleman; now; atl expensive college education is bestowed upon the specimen under Consideration, and he graduates with the supreme satisfaction ot pbsSessihrf perhaps a little less information than before his. course. Everything noble in life is distasteful to the perfect ex ample of this c'.ass, everything that calls for active exertion contemptible. His most exciting occupation has al ways beefi "mashing," which was formerly carried on with innumerable gallentries and mannerisms; and is now pursued with a seeming disre gard of all mannerisms. Joseph Ad dison bfl'ce had the cruelty to dissect a beau's head for his own good fame, but hardly for the beriefit ,of the rep- utation ot ,ffe beau. He found a cavity filled with "ribbonSj Jace, em broidery, billet dotfi, and love let ters," another with "fiction,' flatteries, arfd falsehoods, vows, promises and protestations," and a great cavity filled with nonsense. Since th race seems not to be extinct,' we may sup pose that Such monstrous anatomical structures still exist among us, as the head pieces of figure that are often" very much admired, because of their "very pleasing wayS:' New Use for Electricity. A new cure has been discovered for balking and cribbing horses by the application of electricity A gen tleman of Baltimore county, who has a horse subject to balking ' placed an I. electric battery, with an induction coll, in his buggy, afld ran the wires to the horse's bit and crupper, and as soon as the horse came to a stand still the current was turned on, and alter the horse was , relieved ot his shock he proceeded without showing any disposition whatever to balk. The same application was successful ly made to a horse . which indulged in cribbing, whereof he was soon cured through the unpleasantness of the electric shock. The Bad Boy. "There, yoa drop that," said the grocery man to the bad boy, as he cane limping into the store and be gan to fumble around a box ot straw berries. "1 have never kicked ?.t your eating my codfish, and crackers and cheese, and herring and apples, but there has got to be a dividing line somewhere, and t make it at straw berries-at six shilling a box, and only two layers in a box. I only bought one box hoping some plumb er or gas than would come along and buy it; and by gum everybody that has been in the store has sampled a strawberry out of that box; slilvered, as thongh t was sour, aiid gone off without asking the price," and the grocery man looked mad, took a hatchet and knocked iu the head of a barrel of apples, and said "There, help yourself to dried apples." "0, 1 don't, want your strawberries or dried apples," said the btif t. as he leaned against a show case and look ed at a bar ot read transparent soap. "I was only trying to fool you. Say, that bar ot soap is old enough to vote. I remember seeing it in the show case when I was about a year old, and pa came over with me and held ed me up to trie show case to look at that tin tobacco box, and that round Bine looking-glass, and the yellow wooden pocket comb, and the soap looks just the same, only A little fad ed. If you would wdsh yourself once iu a while your soap wouldn't dry up on your hands," and ..the boy sat down Iti a chair without any back, feeling that he was even with the groceryman. "You never mirtd the soap; It ll paid for, and that is more than your father can say about the oap that has been used ih' his house the past month," said the groceryman as he split up a box to kindle the fire. "Bur we won't quarrel. What was it I heard about a band serenading your father; and his inviting them to lunch?' "Don't let tVat get out, of pa will kill me dead. It was a joke. " One of these Bohemian bands that goes abotlt town playing tunes, for pen nies; Was over on the next street; and I told pa I guessed some Of his' friends who had heard we had a baby at our house, had hired a band arid was coming in a few minutes to serenade him, and he had , better prepare to make a speech." Pa is proud of being a father at fi'is age and he thought it was no more than fight for the neigh bors to serenade him, and he went to work loading himself for a speech, in the library, and me and my chum went out and told the leader of the band that there was a family up there who wanted to have some i. J J" . ... i - V fnusic and thef didn't . care for ex penses, So they quit blowing where they was and came right along. Koffe of them understood English e-tcept the leader, and he only under stood enough to take a drink when he was invited. My chum steered the band tip tp our house ai;,d got them to play 'Babies on our Block,' and 'Baby, Mine,' and I stopped, (ill the men who were going home and told them to wait a minute and they would have fun, so when tlie band got through the second1 tUrie, and the Prussians were emptying the beer out of their horns, and pa stepped out Oh the porch; there was more fiof a hundred people in front of the house. You'd a dide to see pa when he put his hdnd in the breast of his cost, and stf u'ck an attitude. lie looked' like a congressman, 6r a iramp. rThe band was scared, cause they thought he Was mad, and some of them were goiipg to run, thinking he was going to throw pieces of brick houses at them, but mv churn and the Reader kept them. Then pa sailed iti. He commenced 'Fellow Citizens,' and then went back to Adam and Eve, and worked up to the present day; giving a history of the notable people who bad acquired children, and kept the crOwd interested. I felt Forry for pa, cause 1 knew how he would, feel when he oanie to find out ha ha'd been sold. The Bohemians in the band that couldn't understand Eng lish they looked at . each, other and, wondered what it was all about, and finally pa wound up by stating that it ws every citizen's duty to own children of his own,' and then he in- Ml tt. Real Estate Agency CORVALLIS OREGON Real Estate Agents, will buy, tell, or lease farms or farm property on commission. Having made arrangements for co-operf tion with agents m Portland, and beiu? fnlf 1 y acquainted , with : real property in Bentoa county, we feel assured of giving entire sat ipatrohage.all who may favor uawitQ tbeir G. AJ-Waggonek, 20-fiyl T. J. BuFORP, The Gazette Job Printing Office IS PREPARED TO DO ALL KIND OF WORK jSjjgjy; viied the band and the crowd in to take some refreshments. Well you ought to have seen the band come in to the house. They fell oyer each other getting in. and jtlie crovd went home, leaving pa and my chum and ma and the band. Eat? Well, I should smile. They just reached for things and talked Bohemian. Drink? O, no. I gUess they didn't pour it down. Pa opened a dozen bottles of.chattlpaigne, and they fairly bath ed in it, as though they had a fire inside. Pa tried to talk with them about the baby, but they couldn't understand and finally they got full and started out, and the leader asked pa for three dollars, and that broke him up. Pa told the leader that h supposed that the gentlemen who had got up the serenade had paid tor the music, and the leader pointed to me aud said I was the gentleman that got it tip. Pa paid htm but he had a wicked look in his eye, and me and my chum lit out, and the Bo hemians; c.ahie down the street bilin' full, with their horns on their arms, and they were talking Bohemian for all that was out. .They stopped in front of a vacant house and began to play, but ybu could not tell what tune it was, they were so full, and a policeman came along and drove tbfetri home. 1 1 guess I Vill sleep at ihe livery stable to-night, cause pa is offul unreasonable wheri anything costs him three dollars besides the champaigne. .. "Well, you have made a pretty mess of it." said the grocery man. "It's a wonder your pa does not kill you,; Btit what is it I hear about the trouble at the chtfrcb? They jay that foolishness to you." "It's all a lie; They lay every thing to the. It was some of them ducks that sing in the bhoir. I was just as much surprised as anybody when: it occurred; 1Fou see our min ister is laid up from the effects of the ride to the funeral, when he tried to run over a street car, and an old dea con who. had .symptoms of" being a minister in his youth was inyiled to take the ministers place and talk a little. He is an absent minded old party, Who don't ke?p up with the events of the day, ahd whoever play ed it oh him knew that he was too pious" even to read the daily papers. There as a not fee of a choir meet ing to be, read and I think the tenor smuggled1 ih the other notice, be tween that and the . one about the weekly prayer meeting. Aryway, it wasn't me, but it liked to Voke. p the meeting. .After the deacon read the choir meeting notice lie took up the other one and lead I am re quested to announce tLat the Y. M. C. Association will give- a friendly entertainment with soft glnves, W Tuesday evermg, to which all are invited. Srother John Sullivan the eminer.'c Boston revivalist,, will lead th.j) exercises, assisted by Bro. Slade, the Maori missionary from Austral lia. There will be no slugging, but a collection will be taken up at the door to defray expenses.' Well, I thought the people in church would sink through the floor. There was not a pbrsbn in the church, except the poor old deacon, but what under Stood that; some wicked wretch had deceived him, and I knew by the way the tenor tincklcd the soprano, that he did it. I may be mean, but everything I do is innocent, and I wouldn't be as mean as a choir singer for two dollars. I felt real sorry for the old deacon, but he never knew what he had done, and I think it would be real mean to tell hmi, He won't be at the slugging match. That remark about taking up a col lection settled the deacon. I must go down to the Stable now and help grease a back, so you will have to ex cuse me. If pa comes here looking for mej tell him you heard I was going t0; drive a picnic party out to Waukesha, ahd, may not be back in a week. By that time pa will get over the Bohenpian serenade," and the boy filled his pistol pocket with dried ap ples, and went out and hung a sign injfotit of the grocery, " Strawberries, (too shUlin a smell, atd one smell is enuf." -.,. Big buckles axe all the rage. Red in . moderate quantities give a fine dah of bright color to black, gray, pale "blit and ecru cb-essw. HOW TO TAKE JBXEB&UL The aim'of exercise; says, the Jjn-. don Lancet, is not solely ,to work the organism which Is thrown into aalltif ty, though that is one, and a .very important, part of the object in.vlew because as the living body works it feeds, and as it feeds it is replenished; but there is another purpose iti .exer cise and that is to call it into action and stimulate the faculty, qf recuper-r ation. Tha difference.between being accustomed to exercise and a'le: to work. 'witliOjUt feeling it," and being barely able to accomplish, a. special task, and hav ing it "taken out,'" of one by the exploit, whether, mentaf or physical, is ihe , difference. between possessing the power of rapid repair by nutrition, and not. having tjwt power f in working bfcier so. that some time must elapse before recov ery takes place, and during the inter, val there will be . "fatigue" and morp or less exhaustion. Exercise with a view, to recuperation should never sq much exceed the capacity of the re-? cuperative faculty as to prostrate .ih nervoils energy. The Work done; ought not to produce, any, great sensu of fatigue. If "exhaustion" be expe rienced, the exercise has been, exces sive in amount. The best plan to pursue, is to begin with a moderate amount ot work, continued during a brief period, and to make the, length of the interval between the , cessation of the exercise and the. recovery of a feeling of "freshness" the guide as to the increase of exercise. We do,not mean thatj fajse sense of revival which isjspmetirnes derived from the recourse to stimulants, but genuine recovery after a brief period of rest and the use of pla Iff, nutritious food, If this simple rule were carried into practice by those who , desire "to grow Strong,' there would ,be )em disappointment, and a generaijy bet ter result, than often atle.ncjs the en deavor to profit by exercise uriin'tolli gently employed. . ' . : ' : s, A Touching-rjvve letter. . Dearest Amelia: My love ia stronger than the smell of coffee patent-biut.e:- or the. kick of a young cow. Sensations rt exquisite. py go through .me, like cohorts, ot, and, through an army cracker and caper over my heart like young goa,ts ,on s stable roof, I feel as though I could lift myself by my boot straps to tho height of a church steeple,, or .like, an old stage horse in a green . pasture. As the mean ipiip.li'aiikera-after sweet milk, so do I after your presence; And as the gosiin swimmeth in, the; mud-puddle, so do I.swim in;a sea of delightiubiess when you are. nejj;iuig My, heart flopjip.-pfit! down like churn dasher, and my eyes stand .op at! Ii''e cellar doors-in a country .town; and if ray love is not , reciprocated will pine away and die like a poison ed bedbug, arid you, can come and catch a cold on my grave. Gaines ville Eagle; . , . , Fashion Notes. s. Leather fans are in high favor, . ,,;, Mourning fans are edged with crape. Even Mantles are made of. plaid staffe. j CahiEere is the popular spring drsM fabric. - :. '; v iV.fi) '- 'S Gay colors in costumes are worn only in the. house. v. .,. ... Bottle-green velvet trims ecru cashmere admirably. : ,,; i v..- y Flush boots foxed with kid are not a very pretty novelty.' ' ' Brides' dresses are made with elegant simplicity this season. .... ,., .j. Alicante brown, attd SoMat red are popu lar new shades oi these colors. ... -. Chicken down, ;the color, of the newly hatched, it the latest shade of yellow,; '?th Gold thistles and gold burrs are the latest millinery and hair ornaments. . , ... , . Amber, topaz and all, yellow stones are in vogue, for ornamental jewelry. ... ,, .,i ,,. Leather buckles appear among new orna ments for hats; bonnets and dresses. lipliK Sleeves for street costumes remain tigbti and plain, but. larger than last season. Plaid-skirts -.vorn under plain fabrics, polonaises and overdresses are in high favor. Both high arid low chignons are worn fashionable women, but they mast be arriaTl. " Long shell or metal hair pins take prece dence of all other ornaments for the caiffure. The bridal coiffure most in favor u wjvj in front and braided in a close toffy in the back. ,,, ; : ?.. : j Dressy matinees arc in blight iadjavf. red and bine and trimmed with laee B-t embroidery. , . -.,. Dark, brown, green, black, or bine Telvetf, is jtna most elegant trimming for light color ed cashmere dresses.