-------- . »&-Wearyin' for ' amt iy o time a-fee Je . Frank Where have they gone to--the little girls, With bs love their dollies and like their toys, i " ~~ as 5 ere Weanyia' Fee Yea.- 1 - Jes' a-wearyin' for you-- All the.time a-feelin' blue; Wishin' for you--wonderin' when You'll be comin' home agen. . 6, don't. Know what to do-- Jea' a-Wearyin' for you Roy .* Room's so lonesome with Kmpty by the freplane Jes' can't stand the,sight of it ! » Go out doors an' roamabit; . But thé woods is lonésome, too-- Jes' a-wearyin' for you | Comes the wind, with soft Like the rustlin? of our does 5 fallin e Softly. like your footstep sound Hi Violeta like your Co iy blue-- ¢ clair . ~, ag Ges &-Wearyin' for Mornin' comes ; Use to SiDg BO for your sake! ' re's your absence, too-- n' for you! w n ou-- n' blue; Wiishin' for you--wonderin' when You'll be comin' home in; Kestless--don't know what to do-- :*. &Wearyin" for you! * L, Stanton, in Atlanta Constitution. Little Girls. natural manuer and natural curls } talk of something besides the boys ?, 'WOMAN'S STH SENSE. Has She a Faenlty- That the " " : (> SEA _., Stronger Sex Lacks ? WOMAN AS A WORK OF ART. Truth's" Rather Sarcastic Medel An- mouncements--Auat Bepzibah's Eectpe For Making Wafles. ' "EENERALLY woman is hing te the frend im the v lines of serious endeaver with a - pidity e and inoomprehen- rible. That whe a attain any- (bing more than a 3 erate success in b ousiness pursuite is fy altogéther iccom- peible with eur conception of the female capacity. We of the opposite tex hare been went to look upon woman asa phesical and intellectual weakling, as & reicg incapable of more than Lyttle old women in plenty I fin a semi-intereat tu the sterner questions of Matare in annery cua oid of , a . life, -- as one who, even in the milder and ttle old flirts who talk of their * beaus" seewingly more appropriate spheres of ar ' And vie WiLh each otner in stylish clothes, is usmclit satiatie i the gone I dilee * Once ip the beautiful long ag tantelam Son dear little children --Girle who were merry a3 lambs at play, And laughed and rollicked the livelong day. They thought not atall of the " style " of their clothe: eB, They never imagined that boys were " beaus "i "Other girls' brothers" and " mates " were they ; Splendid fc:lows to help them play. OA teaspoonfal of baking soda, dry, will cure hlocough. 1890 was $24 249 585 804 least profic ic selling alik hata, uolen men on govern nent works. oO, used to know : of ~*~ Carious Tondensations. England, has no silver mines. Alaine makes wodéden bottiss. Alexander had four kinds ef artillery. Portagal's royal crown is worth $6,500, - in th Tse asea-ened valuation of the States in A Pailadeipiia ost dealer says there is Germauy prohibiw the employment of The most extsavive mines are those of feminine intellect, says Roscoe, and. natarally. wrong, for they do The most ebvious obaracteristics of the are delicacy perceptive power acd rapidity ef move- ment. He asserts tha> woman sece « theus- and things which escape a man,-end. hab she fs quicker-sighted even physioally. Moreever, having far more varied, subtle and numer- ous inleta to knowledge, rely, wibtbout trying reason from does. The temale intellect "* walks directly and unosnsclensly ° that women differ from men in upen which they to remember and previels experience, as a man * BY MORE DELICATS INSIGHT and @ more refined and more trusted intul- tien to an end to which men's minds carefally and plod ingly along." . grope And itt affirms that women have more ef what is called good seasé than men-- less implicated in theorles, objecte mere from their and juigiog of immediate and oa the mind, and erefore, he contends, judgiag more traly "*They cannot reasen not reasen ab all." Frenoh proverb bide us take the first voluntary impression advice of awoman and not tho second, This proverb Archblabop Trench deemed one of grest wisdom. S.id he, the secend Counsals, againsh which we are warned, Saroay. 'he gaileries have 123 miles ol | Would spring from her reasoning, and in Iengtn. . this she ia much inferior te man ; bas fa Enigration from Earopean Rassla to | intuitions, 'in moral intaltions above all, houtes and Guck-sooeting facilities aleng the Chesapeake bay. , ype reports provf that there is ne oxygan in the atmo:phere of the sun. kingdom is Weatworth Wood House, which. ' belongs to Eart Fitzwtiliam of Washington between 6 p. m. on Satar- day and the ssme hear on Sunday. life of eoapbotle:s ef grind-stonemakera the lewest, in the Mark of Brandenburg; has found some old razords bearing the yeare 1562 and 1549, the first being a state- ment of mone-s due by the olty of Barlin bo the town ef Mitvenwalde, and the second ef fanés'advanced by that town to the iberin {a on the increase, and reached 100,000 tn 1892 ta More than $1,000,000 is invested in club | sa The observatory en Mont Blape already The large-t private-house in tke British Salmon fishing iv prohibited in the State in In msnufscturlug eccupations the average is the highest, and that oa The Magic of Compound Interest, women surpass us far," againet her, and atand on an if nob. outrival her earnest thought and must inevitably fail moulded to business haviag what Mon-s te her " lesprit prime- toe leepsrd's spring, which takes igne asoribes utier," {ts prey, if it be te take {bt at all, ab the first bound. * Ib may be said faa general way that, io Vecationsde nanding quickness and decisive- ness of theaght and action, woman with her impreved opportuaities must soon OVERCOME THB PREJUDICE equality with male competitor ; while large enterprises, demandiog deep and pare ratiocination, she shorp of the required pacity. Woman is adapted to business life only ee far as her intuitive faculty may be requiremenote. © Nor The Bargozaster of Mivtenwaide, a town | does this fact pet a mean limit te her espira- dates ef the tions. One ef the moat tlons one can possess in the work-a-day werld {is the abilisy to Caaraster of bronght finest eperations ef the feminins eadow- men valuable qualifioa- read instantly the thove with whom we are into centact, and thie is one of the thea relguing prince, the Elector Joachim: t ef Braadenburg. It is reckoned that, taking} '*I shall take your advice," sald Cole- compoucd iatereat into account, the denta ridge toa lady upon whow jadgment, from woald at present represent « sum of 3,500 millisrde of marks, and it is etiated thad the Bargomsster intends putting forward claims ea behalf of the tewn. meue opinion is, however, that he\ would be non-suited after thie lapse of the debts cou'd;be legally proved. 8,000,009 stamps of new design having} been recentiy given toan Eoglish firm. I is the practics among the Central Amsrican R pablics, under these clrcumstacces, te sell unused stamps *Ecrepsan Henduras making sa much as $25.000 in 1891 ever a deal of this kiad., that $25,000 represented a little more than half the nsttnal revenne fer the year mamed, the Minister of Finsnoe in Honduras fer foreign stamps which existe in European countrier, . the ills Schenck now maintains that what we call a ** oold " is When One enters a cold reom after being heated the bacteria in it fleck to bed akin. hypothesie, he ceems to have proved by perience that bacteria in the neighberhood ef a warm bedy moves towardit. The con- firmed smoker may dsrive seme comfort reg from the -faat that teoacoe is inimical to | them. fer vacancies in the Lt and dates and Messrs. Jas..McMullem, M. P J. Davis. M. P. P., A. F. Campbell, M. oo ao in on The nnani- A Snap for Honduras. The Kepubdlio of Uragnay is about to ue 8 new postage stamp, -an order for! in Soatnh and to collectors, the Republic of ' sh Seeing s no small reason to bless the craze Blamed om the Bacteria. Basterla are likely to be blamed for all that fiesh ts heir to. Professor due te the invisible pests. | an the warm ly and enter by the open pores of the P Whatever may be said of the is At Part Elgin on"Saturday nominations |}, Legisiatare were! J. Pierson by by the Conéervatives | the. Patrons ef In- as follows : J»ba +» EK. Ay - M.P.P., C. A, Maliery and time, even if} ont. season, follows : a meee Tecur. Her 'admirable, whilst dignity of cempesitien is » . th ps J ing. : 'work which {s in iteelf constant experience ef its rectitude, he uld rely almost as on an oracle, 'I shall ¢ pen your epinion, for I am sure you are the right. Bat as to your fors and be- unee, kindly leave them to me to find _ Weman asa Werk of art. Since the very commencement of the werld, writes "Linkman" in Londen' Truth, weman has'been treatd--and ill-treated-- & great variety of ways. . It ie my privilege to have been able te devise yed aaothar method. Ia view of "the excessive inoreaze of the: use of ceptiveembellizh nent, I propose that woman paint, paste, powders and otber de- all for the futurs be considered purely as a work ef art. Thue, in annsuncing that the Dachess of Babyien bas retarned to town for the the paragraph weuld be Arorded as ** Yesterday the Dachess of Babylen in- sugurated her ferty-third exhibition in Bel- grave Square, and itis no slight masert that she again malotains her former high average. if ab times audacious praise to Her curves are always bold, ; the FLESH TINTS ARE EXCELLENT, d the hair.éffeots clever, A------ contributes two daugh- whe cannot be arded to be regre 'we have before is new," ** Mrs. She is altegether out of draw- is, moreover, » mere rep of a t. her is lum Seeley she is abl E~---- everh & & Fy 4 fees seen in outlines are clever. The | but intelligentl is her coloring is brilliant, restrained, and she possesses a snblious béallam wick connos bab be' ap- pate-sur-pate ues after muoh merit. Poe crack," ! Aunt Hepzibah's Recipe. , Mies Helen i oolered cook and reparing te write)--New, aunty, abend Guene beautifal waffics yeu make. How many eggs ? ae Hepzibah--WelJ, Mise Helen, dat'pends pon wheddah de hens ie layin' pubty well er net. Ef dey ise I us'ally use free, an' ef dey isn't I use twe, er ebou ene, Misa Helen--And how siuch milk ? Aunt Hepzibsh--Well, I pute away de milk ober night in det der little pitohah fo' de'wefflos, and ef he oat doan' gstab ib an' drink as far down as she gite her haid inter de pitchsh I uses itall ; an' ef she de I uses a leetlc wahm wattah, 'oordin' t' whad she dond drank. * Miss Helen--And butter ? Aunt Hepzibah--Oh, yrs ; yo' has t' hab butteah fe' woffle, Po'k fat's good fo' fryin' hominy an' in died, an' it's geod fe' a buhn an' fo' 'eilin' de ba'r; but yo' bas t' hab buttah for woffles. Miss Helen--And salt ? Aunt Hepsibah--Oh, yea; yo' has t' bab salt. Cookin' 'd taste might funny *thout salt. 2 ' Miss Helen--And how mach baking- powder? 7 Avot Hepzibah--Well,- ef dar'a bin a thundsh-s in de night, er de weddsh's bery wahm, er yo's bin ceekin' pickles roun' de kitchen so's t' sowah de milk, yo' dean' use no bakin' powdsh 'b 'all; jes' a leetle sal'ratus--nob toe much se 's t' maik de wc files taste ob brimstone, like dey'd bin baked eber de 'ternal and look de cullah ob yo'ah uocle Ephram when he done gov de janders, but jes' a leetle bit. An' ef yo' does'use bakin powdah it's jss' accordin' t' de 'mount eb floush yo' uses. Miss Helen--And how much flour do sou use, auntie ? Aunt Hepzibah--Jes' enuf, honey ; jes' enuff, Just Like a Man! I once heard a man say that ho actually could not coojareup a happier exisense than that ef a pretty girl wita barrels of money to spend fer levely gowns and pic- tare hates and all those dear ilttle gewgaws that women adore. ' Now weuldn'd ib be jolly .no ff that ad- mirer of well-dressed temininity could be put inte women's clethes and sent down town in a rainsterm seme day? How nics and comfortable he'd deel with yarda of damp dress material fispping agains> his ankles, jeaving little round pies on his sxockings and making him wender if he )Were wading threugh four inches of water ! How he'd almost weep when he thought of the $10 worth of feathers on his bat that were ruined beyond repair! How mad he'd gsb and how .' HE'D GRIND HIS TEETH when he'd find his best Sunday gloves split through the palms because they were justa liotle Bib too tigh to wear when one wanted te-held up one's dress in ene hand and grasp an ambrella in the other! Whas a tiny atom of self-respech he'd have when bis carls unourled and made a straight fringe ever his eyes and sreund his ears! Ang weuldn't ho long for his seventeen peckets when his purse and handkerchief alid ou: from under his arm and fell with @ aplesn inte the very deepest mud puddle id the whole b'eck? He'd feel se p-rfeotly help- less and bate himeelf 20 vielensly that you aay te eure he'd slip iato his masculine garments with more thankfaloess than he ever befere experienced. The only time whea a girl enjays a rainy day is when it's in the olght and she can hear the raindreps play on the window panea béfore ehe gees to alaep. Sater in ta Hiclan's. Scens--Oolllery village in the north 'of Scotland. .Coliler (Lowlandor), employed in the mine near by, is discovered standing by the open-deor of his cottage, in converas- tion with the village .pellocman (of Hign- land origin). Pellooman--" Well, and box willshe do to-day, whateffer?" Collior-- '** Brawly, man, brawly." P.--*' And will she pe wor. ew. ta se far as this, where ta heosea will pe 1?" C.--" Tats, mah, ne. It's a' bore (empty) belew here, lavg syne." P.--"* Bose! My oh! And if she was bose, what for was she no fall io te-pe sure?" ©.--** Fa'>in? Ooh no, It'l} no fs' in, eae long an the water's below it, ye see." B.--** Water ?--water? Oh, dear, jf ta water was te try up! A pody would pe far safeptn ta Hielan's whateffer, forby." tiga | e ; Tablecloth of the Cape of Co@§ pope. A frequent atmospheric plienemenon at Cape of Goed Hops isa queer mist which everhangs Table Mountain, and is known as ** the taplecloth." {he mists which grada- ally collect over the mountain spread their surface ever the sides of the #, dropping over the 6 | towering pile of edges in fofds, exactly like a piece of fabric. Them the winds begin to roar and lash fragmenta the edges of the "' cloth," until it {é* fically tern to pieces. This singular atmospheric freak mgs | seen on the afternoons of very hot days.-- Worthington's Magazine. The Anstrian steamer Szenb Liszio, bound for Rouen, France, bss beer lost off the coast ef Permgsl. No details are given. She was a vessel of 960 tons. Ibis stated at the Foreign Office at Len- don that there is ne truth in the report that the Marquis of Dufferin would succeed Sir Jalian Pauncefote at Washington. ¢ Tho Queer Fond and Quoerer Casta '[plied. Mate is never served at meals, AT A. PARAGUAYAN DINNER H | of an Retancia, SOME .VERY ODD OATHS. Caphuyan "-- and cantering through the frend Tyrant feers] : i i se eal iy = ot Al . AGAIN PEPPERING RIO. [ coueteneiimeemereaael Mello, Oonfident of Bnocess, Pushing His Oampaign Actively, deer of the casa to ee lag $6 oushent inthe THE SUNKEN MAN OF WAR. patio, our ¢@ Hea fire dally. torlea were greeted | 0044 Villegsignen and Lage havé bee o supper, | The foreign diplomate censider it impes- ' aible to take further steps fer the upen thetable. Evi- of life and projerty, and the gaval dently we were ex- manders osacur in fel epinien whiel pected te sitdown to it at once, but gained |). letting beth preceed witheah satel ecctieg ef th donna ri fae afl any farther cory Admiral de outer cea o! e dus our outer st wd Than, nr | is inclined te the city after ferty pairicg hastily to comedor , x recently joined room) we found eur impatieatly-awaiting insurgents, oe ri of a entertainers already seated u week, saying that De Mello is disposed te arcund the festive beard. pine table} ait until the revolution and was neatly covered with white oil-cloth, then take a plebiscite of the countey.on the and at each place (plates-there were nene) Was an enermous weoden spoen, which would bold, perhaps, balfs pint; while in|... " prevines the centre & great dish of jerked Grande de Sa) aol' Cy na tests atm beef, with small apples, slices ef pam: bles. northwards. P t P. stowed with and piled arennd it. ° Small porn defence of fate do pene ae" ata gourtls of Chili sence, made from T1901 shes 'he intends figh te the last, and that tema' and small green wees when his ships arrive he expects vistory. wcat about ;' reas} mandicca rost} ll business ts suffering severely and every answered for bread, and a huge mug of cama {1.3 4, inatagnated. The financial pesliten rom ted Government is diffiouls, the treasury FROM MOUTH TO MOUTH. is exhausted, and the fact that Pernambace We made an excellent supper, omitting the rum, with less difficulty than might be imagined frem the a ef plates and cutlery, each filling his big spoen er twice frem the general supply W ualng| ef the central platter, occastonally hie bit ef mandioca roet as a sorb of chepstick, or his fingers im case ef emer- ® servant--who had been standing perfectly a brenzed statue in tat- msster's chair, his hands tered drapery--suddenly and breke into a lond yer or "' grace," with allthe gravity ef a bishop. Th manner ef* performing one's devotion by proxy, 80 to speak, was net unfamiliar te me, heving met with it, years ago, in the wilds of Costa Rica. _ It is generally om- sod always reminds ms of ens, © lL areemres ter gency. At the cenclusien of the repast|! motionless th hout the meal behind his | Coast like ployed in the rural districts of Paraguay, |; By Way of Centrast. epers that salt 'this weer remark made by the Chinese the United States when he attended his first Washington ball. It was so warm evening, and the mandarin loek«ed with astenishment apon the well-dressed meb, who were panting acd perspiring in the wal'z, and innocently inquired: " Why don't you have your servant de that? In my country we hire such hard werk done." FEW FOREIGN LUXURIES. Give the Paraguayan plenty of mate, beef ard mandioca, in the erder named as to their nec-asity, and his wants are well ne. the Chinese leaf with us, but always an after-accompaniment ef cigars, between meals, ab bedtime, amd immediately upon awakening inthe mening. Their forests yield s wild abundance ef ir, native pastures support thecattle with Httle care of their part, and mandieca is very easily cultivate Little else is grown bu» re a eern, Pamp- kins, eranges and melens--the latter, gh ataguayans | of fore!gn the deer ; and th an occasional dance and: the frequent fiestas -- rar igen ------ the hye they milfe away in tranga firmly themselves that here is the true elysium. : SOME ODD OATHS, We are yet within the limits ef Misienes, and the finest old church I have seen is within wal from the Casa Gaoru-Capbuyan.- Ite wood' work, neatly black with sge snd elaborately carved, is especially besutiful, fer the ex- quisite coler and fine texture ef the Para- guay woods render them invalusble for such equa! readiness, after vehement fashion of the fathers--* the Holy Trinity," "By the Immacula Conception," "By the entrails of Jesus Christ." Oocasienally one sees in the vil- lage » man from districts yet farther inland, dressed in the costumes of Francis' time-- shert vest and -jackeb hardiy covering the shsulder blades, skin-tight trousers «nd pointed hat, sixteen inches high. ' THE OX HIDE CaRkt ALL. : The universal basket ef the country is an ex hide, with {ts four cerners drawn te- gether and fas ; #e that it can b> slang upen a pole and 'two men, 'or, mere commonly, by . Every conceivable ty transported threugh the streets this way, even the snd cana:uam, in- evead ef In boxes or barrels, us iu ether parte of the werld. Thcugh the country abourd: in woed and iron, hide is still the favorite substibute for beth, as well as fer and bher things, N in osemmencement, Father-- Because these who graduate this if with him « party of guests, and it is easy fer any ene of imagination conjare up the. rlect = onl Fhe laxurteus party glide the bles waters of the Medi their casual thirsts with {ced wines, their recurrent hungers with viands and Hstenlog to music dsys ne ter rapture than 'the Mersre. Vanderbilt, B-Iment, Ratherford, wor ane py It weuld ence ' $ be extremely i . y : te en them their py! sagger or te hint for a mement that they not deserve steod and unselfishness, and new, deprivations oe sailing away to seas, rest, and 'the. osnguetelatinen wiskes of all msnkiod ge with Wat theughtfal and genereus of pere to describe to their , * . Ratberfers, Webb, Beach and Keyer.-- Opecs. ' New York Town T. Commencement, = - Fair Girl Graduate--Why do they call ft ¥.. ae jest what they con't Tie Pretty march all there ts te leara im eemmence to discover knew per hear. An experiment -with bars separated by a layer of charcoal jected te'a current of 56 ay fiti 5 F EF cH tit y F F iy 3 F E F Ls 4) i |