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About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (March 24, 1893)
DALLAS, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1893. MAID AND MISTRESS. CONSTIPATION Is called the “ Father of Diseases.” It is caused by a Torpid Liver, and is generally accompanied with LOSS OF APPETITE, SICK HEADACHE, EAD BREATH, Etc. To treat constipation successfully B. H . M ® CALLON. M. T H E L A T E S T N O V E L T IE S IN CAP AND APRON. F oelilon 's D ecrees A re Constantly Vary ing Even w ith the Nursery M aid—Pretty Caps and A p ro n s—A Sim ple H ouse Dre fo r the Mistress. A f ashionuble nursery maid can't dress as bhe may choose. Think of wliat that is to a woman. Every woman, no mat ter what her station in life, lias some little hobby in dress. Just to gown herself in this hobby makes her look happy. The fashionable nursery maid D. Physician and Surgeon, PALLAS, no. J. D aly , J. K. S iblrt . It is a mild laxative and a tonic to the digestive organs. By tak. ing Simmons Liver Regulator you promote digestion, bring on a reg ular habit of body and prevent Biliousness and Indigestion. H. C, E akis . DALY, SISLEY & EAKIH, A t t o r n e j ’ N -»» t - 1 We bav, the only *ol o l al.»t(*ct loot« I" l' “ " ‘ c.unty KeUMbl.»li.tra.!M Mroi.he.l, ami «■•' «)' oan. No commission «harmed on loans. Booms * and 3 Wiuion’s block. Dallas. “ My wife was sorely distressed with Constipa tion and coughing, followed with Bleeding Piles. After four months use of Simmons Liver Regulator she i. almost entirely relieved, gaining strength and flesh."—W. B. L ebpkk , Delaware, Ohio. J . L. C O L L IN S . Shall 1 join tho mob’s wild fury And iicr faults the louder swell? Shall I blast the flickering hope Trembling on the verge o f hell? J I Phantoms damned and jealous furies Buck my brain while justice sleeps; Reason now is slave to passion; R Manhood groans, and pity weeps. Which has on the Wrapper the red 2 5 Trade mark and Signature of J . u . Z E l LIN A CO. S o lic it o r iu C h a n cery. Hoe been In practice ol hi. nrolwaion In till. plu:» 01 about thirty yen ., »»J «HI alM'«l to a n n u M t.. hi. ere . OlHue, orner Main and Lour« te. Dal ho*. Polk Co, Or GRASS and mum J. H . T o w n s b n d , S . L . B u ri.B R , SEEDS BITTLKK *<t TO W N SE N D , a t t o r n e y s - a t Office up- block. - law ir« in O ’ I frV v - * Highest Germinating Power. County. Compare > O B E i T O '*• PUREST STRAINS. SEND FOR CATALOGUE. Address' Gso. Starrett, PLASTERING! And THE - SettinS i J Por rudge — OF A L L K IN D S.— Prompt. U iiL iu m u D anil 0. H. COBB, PROF'R. P a la c i INSURANCE CO. D rÿ Q o ods a n d 5 ^ oc S ' ‘- o r ? * 307 COMMERCIAL STREET. SALEM. OREGON. Z Z a a id . O i f t c « : . » WA8HIN6TON KTHEKT, POH .'LAND, OR. W e are now prepared to show the best selected line of staple and fancy dry goods, challies, sateens, flannels, dress trimmings, etc. The newest styles in spring wraps. The Leading Home Company. WK MARK A SPECIALTY or INtUWANCI ON Ckvrh»s and Par«onag*f>. Dwelliuga and Household Gooda, School« and tther Public Buildings, Far* Biildinga and Farm Property. —DI REC ROUS:— J. McCRAKEN, F. K. ARNOLD, I). D. OLIPHANT H. L. PITTOCK, J. K. GILL, J. LOKWKNBKKG. F. EQGEKT, F. M. WARREN, J. 8. COOPER, | 8. K. rOUIG, E. P. McCORNACK. J. LOWENBERO, Presideat. New work made to order and all farm implement* or machinery repaired on chert notice. I All nui — At covered bridge, Dallas.— 'Yourselves. Popular. Progressive. h in m h Dallas V p„„ All work guaranteed Aratela»*, J. A. B A R K E R , wal L a asw ha l u H. II. GRANT. Secretai > and Manager ( Our ladies, misses and childrens* shoes arc all reliable goods, in handturn. etc., alto a com plete line of genuine pebble goat, calfskin and Milwaukee oil grain. PRICES T H E LOWEST. Agents for Standard Fashion C o’s patterns. and get the fashion sheet by mail free. H. 8. B E L L E , Ladies, send us your name R H. LE A BO. THE KENSINOTOS. has not this privilege. Her gowns, her cap and her apron must be made in the style which the lady of the house con siders correct. No thought is given to whether they are becoming to the wearer or not. So it often happens that the nursery maid with the small pinched face is forced to wear a cap of huge pro portions and an abundance of ruffles, while the bland, round faced young woman carries a cap not larger than a tumbler doily on her good sized head. Fashion does not always cater to the fitness of things. However, this year’s styles iu caps and aprons are pretty, and the variety is large enough to suit the various maids called upon to wear them. There is the apron of fine white cambric, with narrow yoke and shoulder straps, which the English call the Kensington. It is thirty-eight inches long and has five fine tucks. The strings are a quarter of a yard wide, each finished with narrow tucks. With this apron is worn a jaunty little cap, with long strings in the back. Another apron worn by the fashion able waitress is made i:i the same style, only with much wider tucks. Occa sionally the tucks are outlined with a colored thread, but the apron strictly correct this season boasts of no color Bands of embroidery are among the fa vorite modes of trimming. Deep ruffles of embroidery are also fashionable. It is possible that the average woman in looking at the pictures or reading de scriptions of house dresses is inclined to think that they are very elaborate, and she cannot compass the making of one. And it is just here she makes her mis take. The simplest of all designs, the princess, may. if it is properly fitted, have hanging lace sleeves added to it have knots of ribbon here and a bit of trimming there, until it rivals in mag nificence a house gown which is much more elaborate iu cut. It is in knowring how to put the decoration on, it is in giving an individuality to your house WHY NOT PATRONIZE HOME — Instead of sending east for things you can buy of— D. B. MCDONALD, TR U C K M A N , regon grown seed, O D a l l a s : Oregon A fair share of patronage solicited and all orders promptly filled. urown raising, J . M A R T I N , P A IN T E R , s niCKINSON are reliable and can be - * SIMPLE YET VERY NEAT, COIVI PAN Y I _ I O kkooh W IL S O N &, C O ., iigists 1 a js ik o . I of all kinds, garden, grass, timber, end for catalogue. ing, kalaoming and paper hanging. D allas , EED dress, that makes it becoming, and I do think that as it is the people we love whom we see at home it is more than worth while to pay due attention to tb** gown that is to be worn before them. S ER B Salem, C O M P Orge. \N V , om m crciiii Atre**!, W a n . B ro w n — D E A LE R & ,, IN— op iro w s i’a Supplies. iu tmg*. i u ; ia. whale oil s >ap, hop twine, sulphur, burlap. Sole agents for !l titerY impr »ved hydraulic pump horse power sprayer. F > * MEDlC, £ Î — (JO TO T , f L — W ol, mohair, hides, pelts, furs ami hops bought at mar- et [trice. Office, 231 Commercial street, Salem. Oregon. McCoy Drug Store. Bes ant! Poultry McCOY. 0?.S • D r T . S . '•Bart*-'. Dekler in drug», «rii», «aper, faney gond«. etc r .e y :l-t r . puin'*, .. PORTLAND SEED CO, F e r t iliz e r s Portland, Or. PERMRIPTIRN* CAREFULLY FILLED. ARCHIBALD A. M’LEOD. Archibald Angus McLeod is the new railroad king. Ho is president of the great Reading combine and of tho Bos- tou and Maine, which runs in combina tion with it. The two are practically one company, with 8,394 miles of road, 80,000 acres of land (largely coal land), about $300.000,000 in capital and 180,000 employees— five times the regular array of the United States. Mr. McLeod is of Scotch blood and American birth and is but forty-five years old. T h e J a il» and J erusalem R ailw ay. I can see how she has hungered For the love o f former days. How she tried to draw me io her By a thousand winsome ways. Have 1 been as kind and gentle As a husband ought to bo? Have I been as true and faithful A s my wife has been to me? Have I shielded her from danger— Guarded her from honeyed sin? Did I not unbar the gateway W here the wolf found entrance in? RAILWAY STATION AT JERUSALEM. The railroad from Jaffa to Jerusalem See her crouching, kneeling, weeping. is completed, and on Sept. 26 the comple From the curse that I should spare! tion and opening of traffic was cele Hear her pleading and beseeching brated with great enthusiasm at Jeru For tiie love that she should share! salem. All the great Turkish dignita Dry thine eyes. The scales have fallen riea of the province were present and And revealed our sinful life! many foreigners o f note. The station is Pardon grant! The fault was mine! Rise anti be my trusted wife. on the opposite side o f the valley of —J. M. Munyon. Hinnom from the city, and thence is an omnibus ride of half a mile or so to the T he Irony o f Greatness. A plain, grave man once grew quite celebrated. Jaffa gate o f the Holy City. How very Dame Grundy met him with her blandest odd it all sounds! There are good hotels smile. both at Jaffa and Jerusalem, and the And Mrs. Shoddy, finding him much feted. run is made in three hours and a half. Gave him a dinner in her swcllest style. Her dining table was a blaze of glory; Soft, light from many colored candles fell On young, the midtile aged and hoary— On beauty anti on those who "made up” welL Industrial C ollege for C olored Youth. The flowers were wonderful- I think that maybe Only another world had flowers more fair. Each rose was big enough to brain a baby, And there were several bushels o f them there. The serving was the acme o f perfection; Waiters were many, silent, deft and fleet; Their manner seemed a reverent affection, Aud, oh, w hat stacks o f things there were to eat! S LO W H E A R T. A medical authority defines the slow heart as a condition where the beats do not exceed forty or fifty a minute. A relation is traced between large bodies, having in many instances slowness or deliberation of motion and the slow heart. It is mentioned that the elephant and the horse have, re spectively, only twenty-eight and forty heats per minute. Dr. Taylor has found brachycardia, or slow heart, to be present in tall men, recording six cases where there was great muscular development, each man being over six feet iu height. It is more common in males thau females, in early thau advanced life. It has been found to bear some relation to the condition of the stomach, being occasionally present after eating and in persons who are dys peptic. A number of causes of brachycardia, in strictly diseased states, are cited. Among them it is found to be present where there is degeneration of the heart wall, pure and simple, or degeneration attendant upon valvular disease; in diseased coronary ar teries, causing an imperfect blood supply; in blood diseases; after fever, when the period of excitement has passed; as a result of certain drugs, as tobacco, cocaine, aco nite, nitrate of potash. Of cases of normally slow heart, one of the most celebrated is that of Napoleon Bonaparte, whose pulse rate, according to Corvisart, was under forty beats to the minute. A Sim ple W ater Test. I was blind to her entreaties; I was dumb to sighs itud tears; I was cold and proud and huughty— Filled her heart with doubts aud fears. Is my record free from sinuiug? Is the guilt on her alone? Shall I play the righteous judge And cast forth the killing stone? “ Transfixion.** A Som ew hat Hare C ondition, M ore Com m on in Men Than in W omen. I know not how she was tempted, Ilow she struggled to maintain A ll her saered vows aud lu.nor From the tempter’s gilded stain. MAIN COLLEOE BUILDING. The Georgia State Industrial College for Colored Youth has entered on its Joy second year wifh seventy pupils, a fac For one plain meal o f pork aud cabbage min ulty of six professors, a farm foreman gled. and pn>ctor—all < >lored. The property Cooked by his mother when he was a boy. consists of eighty-six acre«, fifty-six Night. nnder cultivation and the rest a beauti Come, though tear dimmed, thy dewy eyes ful grove and campus, the site being Lo, day is dead that did thee wrong! 4% miles from Savannah on a beautiful Unveil again thy starry skies. swell of land rising from the Thunder Deep drowned in garish light so long; bolt river. The yearly fund, consisting Unveil again each silver star. Nor fold about with clouds thy head. o f grant* by the stato and sales from the For day indeed, that did but mar truck farm, averages about $16,000. And yet the man for all this honor singled W ould have exchanged it w ith the greatest Come; fear not now the flaming sun That all too long has scorched the sky; His tyrant reign is dead and done; Resume of right thy throne on high. Bind, bind in orange bloom thy brow And crown our blushing love with bliss. Oh. give us thy good leave; till thou Be near we are afraid to kiss. end us a trial order. H ouse, sign and ornameli tal, grain TH E « « -R IN D TREES. FOR CATALOCUt. *RR F rench K nark In Dre**. The French woman excels all other women in her attention to the details of dress. She will live on one meal a «lay, if necessary, to save the money to always have neat shoes and gloves. Her dress may be of cheap material, but no dirt spots are allowed to stay on it, no but tons are left to dangle for want of a timely thread, and she never wears shab by shoes or gloves. A New Yorker, just home from abroad, attended a tea dressed in a Parisian gown and bonnet. She de stroyed the whole effect o f her costume by wearing a pair of shoes that looked as weather worn as a cobbler’s sign. She was not brilliant enough to distract at tention from her clothes. Any woman can ill afford to wear shabby shoes and glove« Even the interesting woman with thoughts more attractive than dress will not lie less charming if perfectly booted and gloved. I.aat Winter** G ow n Made New. The very little amount of velvet that tt require* to make ary o f the pretty Bn lero. Figaro or Eton jackets places them within the means o f the most modes! purse, and to richly complete a new simple dres3. or to modernize one of an other season at little outlay, there is nothing just like them. An equally ef fective and mc»derate investment is enough really good velvet tor the full sleeves, collar and girdle of your Inst winter's gowns. Come swiftly; all to late the lapse Of thine inconstant gliding moon; On earth if aught o f evil haps It is not in the nights o f June. Come softly; hold thy healing bands In deep, deep silence o ’er my brow; No balmy breeze from southern lands Is softer sandaled. Night, than thou. R em em bered. I need not be missed if another succeed me To reap down the fields that in spring 1 have — aowiu .. He who plowed and who sowed is not missed by the reaper; He is only remembered by what he has done. Not myself, but the truth that in life I have spoken: Not myself, but the seed that fcn life I have sown. Shall pass on to ages all about mi) forgotten. Save the truth I Lave spoken, the things I have done. So let my living be, so be my dying; So let my name be unblazoned, unknown; Unpraisedaud unmissed I shall yet be remem bered— Yes, but remembered by what I have done. —iloratius Bonar. Fntli roned. He sits enthroned who sirs supreme Above the passions o f bis » lay. Nor fears remorse nor feels the scourge Of conscience with the ended day. He has no greed for wealth that’s won By bargain in the marts o f sin. Nor lust for fame \\ hose pu-ans mock The hollow heart that wails within. Ills lips attuned to nature’s lyre, lie sings a* sang the early stars: Hi- clean hands suited to God’* plan. His handiwork no blemish mars. He gives to ail unselfish due. Nor claim* w hat others may not share. And every cry o f woe bespeaks His ready bounty with hi* prayer. Bo. doing God's will on the earth. W ith love inimitably zoned. Though waiting yet his higher birth. He sits enthroned. Samuel Hoyt. A H eaatlfnl M etaphor. Our lives are albums, written through W ith good or ill, with false or true. And as the blessed angels turn The pages o f our years God grant they read the good with smite* And blot the IU with tears. Whittle». IN3ÛMNIA Yon May Hypnotise Yourself to Sleep ky On* o f the technical word* need in sci entific description* o f the phenomenon o f hypnotism i* “ transfixion.” Thi* relate* to the position of the eye* just befor* hypnotic sleep come* on, and it is b * lieved. though not a* yet fully explained« that in adjusting the eyes to thi* posi tion some nerve center of the brain is affected, producing an effect like switch ing off electricity from a keyboard, and Unconsciousness follows almost in stantly. It is a common observation among nurses that babies 4‘get cross eyed jnst before they fall asleep,” and this can bs easily verified wherever there is a baby in the house by closely watching the eyes of the little one as they are closing in sleep. Almost invariably the eyes are directed inward and generally down ward, though sometimes upward. Trne hypnotic sleep, if undisturbed by sug gestion, soon turns into what we call “ natural” sleep, as is shown by the sleeper awakening refreshed, os from natural sleep. A writer who was formerly afflicted with chronic insomnia effected a perma nent cure by means of what he terms the hypnotic method, and gives his rec ipe, with illustrations, for the benefit o f the many sufferers from the tortures o f prolonged wakefulness. Its worth may be easily tested by any one with strong will power. That many eminent men— Napoleon, Horace Greeley, William H. Seward, for example—possessed the se cret of going to sleep at will is well known. In using the folio wring directions the only caution necessary is that before the hypnotic sleep merges into natural slum ber the sleeper is apt to answer uncon sciously any questions that may be gently asked and thereby reveal secrets that might perhaps cause domestic dis turbance. But the innocent need have no fears. Lie on your right side; close the eyes gently; forget that the lids are barriers to seeing, and turn your eyes inward and downward so that you can see your breath as if it were vapor leav ing the nostrils and curling off in the air. Then watch it return np the nos trils and then out again. Concentrate your powers of vision until you seem ac tually to see this—then you are asleep. Into a perfectly clean bottle having a stopper of ground glass put five ounces of the water to be tested. To the water add ten grains (by weight) of pure granu lated white sugar. Cork tight and set in a window exposed freely to light, but not to the direct rays of the sun. Do not dis turb the bottle and keep the temperature as near 70 degs. Fahrenheit as possible. If the water contains organic matter, within forty-eight hours an abundance of whitish specks will be seen floating about, and the more organic matter the more specks. In a week or ten days, if the wa ter is very bad, the odor of tancid butter will be noticed on removing the stopper. The little specks will settle to the bottom, where they will appear as white, flaky masses. Such water should not be used for drinking purposes, according to health H ow to Melee a String* H o ld e r fo r the authorities recommending the foregoing K itchen . simple test. Take a small Yeddo straw cuff, such as butchers wear, lace the small end o f T he Sensibility o f W o in «a» In a singular paper by PrcJn**r Lom- It together with fancy cord and nail it broso, of Turin, it is stated t h * the sensi inside the closet door by the larger end. bility of touch and pain is less acute in women than in men. This hypothesis is H ow W om en Should W a lk . maintained by recounting numerous ex As a rule women stride, shuffle, hob- periments and demonstrated by figures. ble or amble along in any way, regard Whether the conclusions arrived at will be generally received is somewhat doubtful. less o f how they look bo long as they get It is hardly true, in this country at least, there, and though they may be pos that girls have to undergo the tyranny of sessed of beauty or wit it is all spoiled their brothers and eudure the cruel pref by their ungainly walk. Any woman erence of the parents for their male chil can learn to walk if she will taka dren. or that women are the slaves of their pains and practice. She shonld throw husbands aud of social prejudices. her shoulders back, and holding tha body firm above the hipe give the glid Eyes o f Different Color. ing motion to the lower limbs, and at In exemplification of this curious and the same time avoid taking too long rare phenomenon a New York physician ■teps, which gives a girl a certain manly tells of the recently observed ease of a girl appearance that is not attractive. of about fourteen whose tyiswere a dis tinct contrast in color, the right eye being H ow to W ash Cut Glass. dark hazel and the left light blue. Both Wash it in very hot water without were perfect in their respective colorings soap. If not clean, then apply whiting and devoid of any delict in form or size. with a clean brush; then rub with soft p a p e r . __________________ W hen Tired ar.d C hilled. “ When you come home tired and chilled H ow to M ake a M irror Motto. heat your feet through and through, drink Take a strip o f ribbon long enough to a cup of scalded milk, wrap up warmly in bed, and we will warrant sound sleep and fasten slantwise across the mirror for refreshment,” is the comfortable if not which it is designed, and on it letter plainly in a dark color or black some strictly novel advice of an exchange. Bhort quotation. The ends are fringed or cut in points, and the motto is fast ened by two pins slipped under th* frame of the mirror. The quotation is designed to be a daily inspiration to whoever receives the motto, and should be short and full of meaning. Thy nightingale’s sweet notes, is dead. nion seed a specialty. upon. depended upon, A .. Oh, what conflicts rage wii.hiu me— Fires that tears cannot abate; W ounds that cry revenge, revenge; W rongs that know no la v but liatel HOW TO C U RE çoop «LTH T w o Idea* o f HuppiueM«. An old faruihoubo, with meadow« wide And sweet with clover on each side; A Bright eyed boy, who looks from out The door with woodbine wreathed about« Anti wishes his ouu thought all day: “ Oh, if I could but ily away From this dull spot, the world to see. How happy, happy, happy. How happy 1 should be!” * • • • • * Amid the city’s constant din, A man who round the world has been. W ho, mid the tumult and the throng. Is thinking, thinking, all day long: “ Oh. could I tread once more The field path to the farmhouse door. The old, green meadow could I see. How happy, happy, happy, How happy I should bel” Shall I touch the hand polluted By the libertine’s foul shame? Shall I hurl ray curses on her— Crush her with the guilt and blame? T a k e o n /// th e G e n u i n e , Attorney and Counselor at Law, VERSE W h o Is to B lam e? Shall I raise the brokeu vessel— Emblem of my light, my love— Now despoiled by man’s mad passion Like a soiled and wounded dove? HO. jy o fflc c ov«r Brown 4 Son’s store, An A b i« R ailroa d Prealdeut. GEMS I N a H ow to T e ll Iro n from Steel. Ituby R u th 's D oll. UN THE DRAWING ROOM. Let a drop o f dilated nitric acid fall on the metal, washing it off after a few minutes. If steel, a black spot; if Iron, a whitish gray one w ill be left. A doll with a national reputation is a novelty indeed, and such apparently is T h e Convenient “ A t H om e"—The A rt o f .Entertaining Successfully. the doll bought for Baby Ruth Cleve In times gone by the parlor was, as It Is land at a recent doll sale, doll’s fair and now, the best room in the house. But of H ow to R en ova te A rtificia l Flowers. children’« festival in New York city. l*tp years, according to English ideas, it The profits go to has been designated as the drawing room. Silk poppies that have lost their the Day Nursery j At the present day it is an apartment be crimped appearance can be crimped Fund, a worthy longing exclusively to the ladies of the freshly by squeezing their petals gath charity, and Mrs. household, tor the walls of which the best ered in a bnnch between the ports of a Cleveland was to authorities tell us that paper of a solid heated curling iron. Faded flowers that have been pres- 1 color or small pattern is decidedly prefer are not injured in shape can be touched ent and assist, able. Its color should be of a subdued I np with water color paints. Even tho** but finding that tint, forming a background for the etch from cheap paint boxes w ill do if ap ings, engravings and pictures that will impossible she adorn this particular room Nowadays plied with a fine brush. sent orders for a also, according to Good Housekeeping, H ow to Coro . B u k o Blto. fine doll. It was from which we quote, an “ At Horne” takes Mix lard and sulphur to a paste and dressed in pale the place of old fashioned parties, and al blue bengaline, though we have the 5 o’clock tea, the nib on the bitten place. Oniona and with a g i m p musicale and the luncheon, yet the “ At salt is a good remedy; also give as much waist, shoulder Home” meets the requirements of all so brandy or whisky as the patient can drink. cape of d r a b ciety people. The invitations should Ire sent a week in THE DOLL. c l o t h a n d a advance. When the evening arrives the H ow to M . k . a P u n ; p.nwfpor* Gainsborough hat of leghorn braid, hostess should be in readiness at the time A silk or velvet pansy can be bought, trimmed profusely with ostrich tips. It appointed, standing at the entrance of the sat on a little bamboo armchair, with its drawing room to greet her guests as they or one can be made from cloth, properly marked with paint or embroidery silk. feet sticking oat in the most unconven enter the room. A good hostess must have the bravery of It is laid on several pieces of flannel or tional manner, as if trying to show its blue silk stockings and bronze slippers. a general, the manners i f a diplomat and dark chamois skin ent the same shape The doll cost thirty-five dollars, and tho a perfect knowledge of human nature, and fastened there. A gilt cord pro besides knov lng how to bring ooagenial ceeds from between the pansy anil the fair cleared $1,700 for the charity. people together. The shy and diffident chamois, and to its end ia fastene a let should be made her special care, and peo ter opeoer. T he First Lady o f Illin ol*. ple of note should not Ire overlooked. Mrs. John P. Altgeld, who will be the When a collation is served, the servants H ow to H l . u h Y ellow Fl»an«L lady of the governor’s mansion of Illi should be taught their duties, and stats Flannel yellowed by nse shonld be pnt nois during 1 h* <■■»tiling term« is a lady should be obtained for those who are un able to stand. A clever story may Vie ren for fifteen minutes in a weak »olntion o f much culture dered, a poem recited or eome music be of bisulphide of soda, to which hi and some artistic given for a short time only. Conversation added a little hydrochloric acid. ability. She was Is the pleasure of ail good talker*, snd a born at Mans continual showing of talent Is a great bore How to R em ov e Small O tjM tt L field. O., and re in t h . W Indplpo. to every one present. Make every lady at ceived her higher your house a person of consequence, exjH-ct When a child has swallowed e d u c a t i o n at for yourself neither glory, admiration nor thing that chokes it, hold it, head down attention. Bring people together who ward. by the legs and strike several Oberlin. It is have like ideas and congenial tastes. Never sharp blows on the back, (jeuerally scarcely n e c e s converse more than a few moments with sary. therefore, any one person, be attentive to all, and this will dislodge what is in the wind- to add that she you will have at least acquired the great pi;*'. If not, send at once for the i has “ advanced and true secret- of the art of entertaining. physician. views” on the sphere o f woman and many other things. Fifteen 1