Chandler Daily Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 262, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 3, 1904 Page: 4 of 4
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1®M an(^ ® ®
<§> ® /^d Verdure.
. REAR 01.1M15KI * IN |io \T.
^tOK. HE first black bear i !lcd in
It*
'yto^r
tin* vicinity of Georgia. Vi
lu many years wan taken
by Ham Rogers. who fishes
up a ml down Lake Cham
plain when there I** ■» fish 10 In* caught.
-\i ot her I linos In- tin pw muskrats for
T lumpers of a mechanic. A abort Blue'
| ago a special train was chartered to
I make a fast inn down tin* country.
TIm* eng inner, in taking coal at u s t ;i •
I lion was delay oil by the coal-chute
apron becoming nil manageable. Tim
Ilian wlm sill in the rail ahead ham as
eool as an Iceberg, but no Hoonrr bail
the apron boon hoisted nut of the way
than In* opened up tin* valve and be*
gait a rare that for speed and smooth
ness was one of a thousand.
‘•Arriving at our destination.said
the conductor who had charge of the
train, “the engineer • found awaiting
the history of the hear wa> brought
into tin* limelight of publicity, Jie
then sought sudden seclusion.
In com pa n.v with a kindred spirit,
named Emu-otube Stout, who isn't, and
for that reason Is known as Skinny.'’
ilam came down from llurlington to
upeai pickerel by the aid of a Jack
light.
One night the men discovered a main
moth fish near the shore a mile below
eamp and. failing to spear it. decided
to try I he old trick of shooting near Its
head and stunning it. Ho the next
night they took Hum's rifle and the
Jacklight and rowed slowly ami noise
lesaly to the haunt of the big pickerel
and got ready to go into action. It was
agreed that "Skinny" should command
the boat and Ham the military innti-
euvres. The former, therefore, ad
Justed the light and with an oar for a
paddle,drove the boat along close to
the shore. Ilam stood hack of the
torch, rifle in hand, ready to shoot tin
moment the fish fas sighted.
Several small pickerel were seen and
Ham whh looking at one of them when
lie was atnrtled by a warning hiss from
"Skinny.” He turned quickly to see
bis pul’s eyes fairly bulging from their
sockets and his knees knocking togetli
«*r. He was holding his our motionless
ami bis staring eyes were riveted on
two small, round balls of greenish tire
that, burned steadily in tin Intense
darkness toward shore and Just beyond
tin* circle of light cast by the torch.
"Heer.” whispered "Skinny.’*
"Vo, (ain't; sets too low," whispered
Hum in reply, the cold chills beginning
to clmse themselves up and down his
spine.
The next Instant there was n soft
splash, and the glowing green eyes,
now almost on a level with the water,
begun to approach the boat.
"Swing the light oil Min; lie’s swim
mill' out," gasped Ilam. "Swing her
quick.”
"Skinny" swashed about with the oar
nml the prow came around with a Jerk
that nearly upset the boat.
"Holy smoke, it’s a b’ar!" gasped
Ham as the light fell on n long. lean
and shaggy animal making directly for
the craft.
lhe oarsmen were loo overpowered
for a moment to make an articulate oh.
servatlon. The bear was swimming
dog-fashion, and was approaching so
rapidly that he was up to tin* boat, be-
fore the terrified Ham bad enough
presence of mind to cock his rifle. Then
1 e stood as though muscle hottml and
let the animal place his forepaws on
the gunwale.
"Shoot, blame It, or well get ot!”
fthricked "Skinny.” at last getting coin
maud of his voice.
Ilam shot, but b.v this time the bear
had clambered half into the boat, and
.when tin* ball Struck him iu a vital
point he roansl and fell all the way iu.
Codnclclentally the other occupants
went Into the shallow water Just as
bruin in a death struggle upset the
boat. The light was dtfused and nil
three wrestled about in the water des-
perately. The men Anally got on their
feet and ran. swam and waded to
shore, and then legged it to the nearest
farm-house, a mile distant. Here they
aroused the entire family and ex-
plained matters. Some of the farm
bands took a 1-anlorn and the whole
parly went back to the lake, where
they found the bear dead and the boat,
bottom up, close to shore.
• Hum was so proud of his achieve
Went that lu* sat up nli night telling
the hands of his desperate battle, and
next morning reunited tin* story at
least, twenty times to open-mouthed
neighbors who had come in to see the
carcass. With each felling the fierce
ness of the bear was enlarged upon
more and more until the tale sounded
like a dragon story from fairyland.
Ham was in the middle of narrative
No. If 1 when a man burst through the
crowd and fell upon the carcass of the
bear.
He waved his anus, swore and then
1n broken English demanded to know
who killed his pet dancing, pole-climb
lug and toothless bear. When h** be-
came calmer it developed that tile man
had gone to sleep in a barn down i In-
road after tying the bear to a post. In
the night bruin became thirsty, and
ridding himself of his rope wont to the
lake for a drink. Seeing the men lie
kwh in out to the boat just to be socia-
ble. The Italian wanted a big price for
the animal, but the crowd decided lie
had no redress, and after hanging about
half the morning he went off vowing
vengeance - New York World.
,HOUSEHOLD
.AFFAIRS
" • iiiiim i -Miunu ;iwan
Hieir |>elt* or xnn s;iiul chops i ihiIwihmI |,|ni u 'lelck'i'iiui ........ tin- *.•........ m1|i
Ilam ws« very |irnti<1 of 1>I» f.-ut mull | ..rlntcml.m „r tli.- romt. wlm imlil him
Hie highest compliment that an official
could extend to an employe. The man
read the telegram and shoved it into I
the pocket of his blouse without
change of countenance. No one. from
looking under the peak of Ids «-np.
could tell what sort of a feeling bad
been wakened, even if it had alTccicd
him at all."
A fast runner being approached by
an outsider who wants to know some-
thing about the life of an engineer will
Invariably be asked to see so aud so.
who Is another engineer on the sanu
rim or division.
"He’s a mighty good engineer, and
can tell you more of what you want
to know than 1 can, and then he goes
aboul his puffing steed feeling for hot
place* and poking a long-spouted idler
under the machinery. It is ten to one
Unit Hie other man will get mil of it
in the same way.
Few engineers who have been found
out of fast runners will make any com
parison of their runs with those of
other engineers. There is one thing,
however, about which an engineer is
"touchy." Suppose he has made
fast run, but has been laid out or de-
layed for one cause or another. II
invariably wants tin* delay deducted
from the total time of the run.
Itallroad men say Hint tin* longer n
man runs on nil engine the longer be
wants, to. He Is iu love with Ids dan-
gerous calling, and lie is a verltabb
duck out of water when once lie real-
izes that In* is laid oft for all time.
Chicago Tribune.
2
TO HI .OHS LINEN.
To gloss linen beautifully add to one
pint of cold water two tablespoon/ills
of starch, one of borax and one of k»-r
oseiie oil. Mix well; put tin* dry linen
through this: wring aud Iron at once
\ cloth dampened in kerosene aud
rubbed over .the iron is an inipr »\ e
UK-lit.
£>he Funny
\f~ide o *
Life. ,
1)1 WKI)
\
owed the flnvt»t quite
v. *ne forgot.
bill.
Which, somehow.
I util lie sent no, not a dun,
4 Hut i *weel "l-’mgetme not."
Vi Philadelphia Ihdletili.
SAMA(TTY OF A WILDCAT.
"Wildcats.” says an old hunter, "of
icn show fox like cunning, and one.
1 remember, gave proof of more nerve
than 1 would have been capable of
myself under similar circumstances.
Six of us. with the dogs, were on the
trail of a particularly large and dan-
gerous one. We were crouching iu the
bushes when the dogs dialed it into
a small clearing. There was a faint
rustling in the leaves, a succession of
light, springing leaps, anil tin* great,
ferocious looking animal bounded into
the middle of the open. Furiosity kept
every Anger steady on the trigger For
an instant tin* eat glanced hack In tin*
direction of the hounds, then retraced
its trail a little distance and sprang to
tin* trunk of a leaning tree which had
been broken off about forty feet from
the ground. Instead of jumping from
It. however, as we expected, the cat
scrambled around on the underside and
crouched on a limb that projected two
or three feet, bis short ears thrown
back and ids great, yellow eyes glaring
with rage aud fear.
T p came the dogs In full cry on tlie
trail. When they readied the dou-
bled track they were puzzled, and scat-
tered about over the open, baying lus-
tily. Finally an old hound scented the
trail up the tree and rushed up the
leaning trunk, followed by the other
dogs. Motionless as a stone, except
for the movement of its terrible eyes
and an almost imperceptible motion of
tin* Up of its busby tail, crouched the
cat on the broken limb. It was a mag-
nificent exhibition of nerve and self-
control. Only the thickness of the
trunk was between it and tin* fore-
most hound. For a moment the dogs
paused, battled, then leaped to Hit*
ground and started again on the old
trail. The eat watched its enemies
out of sight, peered cautiously about
oil all sides for a moment or two, and
then sprang to ilie ground. In another
instant it would have disappeared
among the undergrowth, and for my
part I was quite willing to see it os
cape. But my companion, who ap-
parently did not share in ni.v admira-
tion of the brute’s pluck, tired from
behind me. With a yell the wildcat
leaped into the air. When it came
down it did not land, after the tradition
of tin* feline tribe, oil its feet, but in
a shaggy, yellow heap, stone dead.”—
New York Tribune.
• To CLEAN A MIRROR.
Try rubbing it with a ball of soft
paper slightly dampened with methy-
lated spirit, then with a dilute.* on
which a little whiting has neon
sprinkled, and finally polish with
clean paper or a wash leather. This
treatment will make Hie glass beau
tlfiilly bright.
AN IMPOSSIBLE THING.
Flipper "Why does In* object to his
wife going out alone iu her motor car?”
Flapper "Because he can’t see how
one unmanageable thing can manage
another." Modern Society.
IMPROVING i ‘H EKItLKSS BOOMS.
A room with a northern exposure
Unit is more or less cheerless uniy be
made more attractive by changing the
furnishings, llcuiovc the blue and
white carpel and white enameled bed-
room suit. Have Lhe walls done over
iu a paper of warm cream tint with
garlands of olive and gilt and a touch
of red ill the border. Such paper netjd
not be expensive. Cover the glaring
blue woodwork with a i-oat of cream
white paint and shade the electric
lights or the lamps with rich red silk
or crepe paper. Cover the floor with a
carpet iu shades of olive, tan. cream
and rich red and add a bedroom suit
in golden oak. Over the shades, which
should be of deep cream, hang cur-
tains of filmy white Inee. Place a .
pretty plant in the side window and
few books and magazines on a
small table. A room may lie furnished
as described at a low cost or more
expensively by having a better qual-
ity of the furnishings yet keeping to
tlio tones suggested. To improve
couch which is worn shabby buy n
couch cover in shades of color which
will harmonize with tin* furnishings
of the room and pile li with bright
pillows in glowing red, olive, cream,
etc. A few good pictures and pho
tographs prettily framed will add
greatly to tin- appearance of the room
and change your cheerless apartment
to a cheerful one. Mirror and Far
uier.
K.Vfll'flH TO SCAPE 11 Hi.
"They say that Henry was awfully
frightened when be reached the ul
tar."
"I don’t wonder. J)jd you see the
way lhe bride bad her hair dressed?”
- Cleveland Plain Dealer.
- ■ >adtk
1-ASS1NG JT ON.
Elslr "There'"* a man m the door,
pa. who says be wants to ‘see the boss
of the house.’ '*
Fattier- "Tell your mother.”
Mother (calling down stairs)—“’Jell
Bridget."—Philadelphia Press.
A SOCIAL lU'TY.
•lodge "You confess, do you, that
.von deliberately luted your wife to Hie
water’s edge and hurled her in?"
Prisoner--"Not at all. Your Honor,
1 merely went down to the wharf and
saw her ofT." Cincinnati Tribune.
IT KST IN HIS THOCOUTH.
'Tie tells me lie lias a hobby for au-
tograph letters."
**flullk There’s one lie’s very much
stuck on. at any rate."
"What’s that?"
"The letter ‘I.’Philadelphia Press.
de hired :i
I •li-
ne-* woman
u i
\
i
A WELCOME SFOHESTION.
is not easy to think of now and
A USELESS WASTE OF .MONEY.
There Is one detail iu which Amer-
icans sin against good taste and good
sense, and that is the overloading of
their houses with senseless orna-
ments and furniture, writes Julia
Ditto Young in Oood Housekeeping.
Bugs upon carpels, thirteen pillows to
a couch sash, lace and silk curtains all
at one window, these are some of the
household superfluities that chew up
the dollars. The present writer is con-
vinced that great good would follow
simplifying of domestic equipment.
Work would be easier for servants
and easier in their absence, while the
reposeful atmosphere of an unciil
til red house would soothe both master
and mistress. There has been some
reform along this line, but "Oh, re-
form it altogether!"
To every housekeeper reading these
words who has not an account iu the
savings bank, the writer would say:
Look over your crowded dining
room, where the chairs touch each
•ther and ai.k if you would not be
as well off without ihi* china cabi-
net and the fragile ware upon it—
ware intended to be washed only in
butlers’ pantries, not in the kitchen
sink. Sell some of these useless
trifles or give them for wedding pres-
ents and put the money you would
have spent iu the hank, md never
again buy anything for the house
which is not absolutely needed, but
each (line you are tempted to add
knieknacks and dust*catellers put the
money resolutely by. that some day
you may have enough to buy a house.
A TEARFUL OCCASION.
*T wonder if there’s been a funeral
in that house?"
"Why?”
•’Two women just came out cry-
ing.”
"Oh. it must he a wedding." Phil-
adelphia Ledger.
AN EARLY TRAINING.
The Bookkeeper—"That new mes-
senger spends all his time reading
m.eh hooks as the ‘Boy Bandits.’
The Priprietor—"I can see his tinish
The Bookkeeper— "Where?”
The Proprietor—"On Wall Street."
Cleveland Plain Dealer,
- i
now SHE ENJOYED IT.
Miss Sharpe—"She was telling me
how she enjoyed her dance with you
last night."
Mr. Klumsay "Why. the only one
we luid she insisted upon sitting out
Miss Sharpe—"Yes, that’s what she
told me." Philadelphia Press.
HALF AND HALF.
pleasing ways to entertain your guests.
Here is an idea that may help, it is
(*alled a picture evening.
Send with the invitation a request t<»
each guest to take a specified part of
a certain tableaux of some particular
picture. This brings all the guests in
costume. When they arrive cards and
pencils are distributed, and each per-
son writes down as many identifica-
tions of the parts personified by the
others as he can. Supper is served
early, and aftei it the guests are
grouped in a series of tableaux devel-
oping the picture they represent.
Some one must be stage manager,
and the stage will have to be made
ready in some other room.
A PLEASANT VOICE.
A pleasant voice is surely something
worth having, but how many girls
seem to think so? They will spend
hours over their clothes, complexion,
carriage, hair and teeth and never give
their voice a (bought. Those other
tilings should not, of course, be neg-
lected, but if any one of them was
wrong, how quickly a girl would try
to improve it, and why does she not
think of what is equally ns important.
An agreeable, cultivated voice can
be acquired, just as a pleasant expres-
sion can, if you take a little care and
trouble. Of course, a few lessons in
voice culture are a great help, but
you can do it quite as well yourself if
you persevere.
The pitch of the voice is most im-
portant and if this is high, the work
of lowering it should he the first thing
to do. Soon the right pitch will be-
come habitual and the great point is
gained.
T perieiiee."
I 111 .( reeel
quetP- of corn >pondence. "My busi-
ness." continued she. "necessitates lhe
writing of many letters. These l make
I ;|v concise as |H»ssible,« to save time,
and for certain information 1 send out
a t-imdar lower with blank to be tilled
oni and my name is affixed by liman*
I of the usual facsimile rubber stamp.
I Mine bears my full name. 1 used to
gel replies which opened and closed
with • umpliiiicntnrf phrases, and per-
haps meandered over a whole page;
mu' writ Hie**'* always forwarded at
tin- writers’ earliest convenience, as
1 requested * Sometimes the sender
would write again when the necessity
for a second letter did not exist One
day 1 happened to vary my signature.
1 wrote niv initials instead of my first
name aiid*midille initial, says tile ( hi-
eugo Inter-Ocean. To my surprise the
reply came in t the first mail next
morning. It consisted of my own let-
ter. with a stamped hand pointing to
my questions, and an inclosure about
six lines in length, beginning. Dear
Sir. In reply 1 would say,’ etc. This
is delightful, 1 said. and. looking the
papers over, noticed my signature.
That gave ino an idea. I signed all
my letters tlmi way that day, found
the result satisfactory, and have con-
tinued the practice ever since. 1 have
purchased a new stamp. When 1hese
people happen to see uie they are iur-
j prised, but by that time they are in
the habit of being businesslike with
me. and do .not fall into the* old way
of treating me like a lady.”
Here tin* question arises of lmw a
married woman should sign a business
letter. Should she use her own idttue,
with "Mrs. So and So" in the lower
left hand corner, and the address un-
derneath, or should she use her hus-
band's name as on her visiting card,
and put the address at the head of the
letter? "If sin* prefers to use her own
name, with her card name and address
in tlie corner of the letter," said an
English woman present, "by all mean*
I would say let her write her name
with the initials. For it seems to me
so awfully familiar and undignified to
give one’s Christian name to trades
persons! My idea is that it should be
reserved for the use of one’s family
and .dearest friends."- Mirror-Farmer.
RECIPES
1
IN TIIE ENGINEER’S CAB.
Of the men who sit in the cab of a
locomotive and turn the machine loose
in a race of 100 miles in 1(H) minutes, it
•is said they arc the most modest indi-
viduals of the human family.
This is a fact said to be clearly shown
by a talk with any of the Chicago en-
gineers who have any such record. H
is evidenced not so much from what
tJH-y say when questioned as from
;what they cannot be induced to say.
For not two men in a dozen of fast
runners are given to talking about
what they have accomplished. Much
less are they inclined to pass any opin-
ion on the capabilities of any other en-
gineer.
Take it all in nil. the men who ride
the Iron horses iu races that are appall-
ing are the oddest! characters iu the
HOW DEER GIVE INFORMATION
It is a beautiful sight to see a string
of deer pass over the rocky point and
one by one follow each other around
tin* bases of the big firs, jumping fnl
leu trees and walking the old moss-
covered logs, their mild eyes ami large
ears ever on the alert, and handsome
and graceful from the points of their
polished antlers io the tip of their
bushy black tails. Their very cau-
tiousness increases the enjoyment of
the hunt, and is no doubt the reason
that the deer appeals to the sportsman
as the finest of big game hunting, both
for pleasure and skill. For all there
are so many following the trail, do not
think that any inexperienced hunter
can kill as many as he wishes. When
one is alarmed the whole hand takes
warning. Over confidence often re-
sults in a bungling s mt, and then such
smashing and crashing over rocks aud
logs and underbrush, and no more
shooting on that trail for a while. Ten
or twenty deer st.impeding from a
trail leave evidence enough to turn all
tin* deer that might pass that way for
J everal days. If you drop one on the
trail, the result is as bad, unless you
wait until he steps out on the gravelly
bar by the stn-aifl, then when all is
over, carefully wash all scent from the
trail.- Sherman PoweJl, in Sunset Mag-
azine.
Baked Bananas—Strip the skins from
one side of the bananas and loosen
entirely the other side, letting the ba-
nana rest on the loosened side; lay
them in a pan. sprinkle thickly with
granulated sugar and bake until ten-
der; remove and pm one teaspoonful
id' lemon juice and sugar mixed over
each one.
Feach Pic—Line a deep pic plate
with good crust. Fill with pared and
stoned peaches cut in halves and be-
tween the halves fill in with slices.
Sprinkle with sugar according to the
sweetness of the peaches and pour on
half a cup of cream. Cover with a
rich paste anil bake. Horve the same
day that it is linked.
Tapioca Cream—Soak one scant cup
of tapioca over night in one pint of
milk; in the morning add three yolks
of eggs beaten well and one cup of
near: scald one quart of milk in dou-
ble boiler; add the tapioca mixture
to it and cook until creamy: remove
from the lire; when quite cot . stir In
Hit* well beaten white of egg; add out-
teaspoonful of vanilla extract.
Red Cabbage Fickle—To three quarts
o ' chopped red cabbage add one quart
of green tomatoes and six onions
chopped line. Pack tile mixture in a
large bowl in layers with salt sprinkled
generously between. Let it stand si:;,
hours, then drain for ten more hung
in it bag. Cover with cold vinegar
and add one cup of brown sugar to
each quart of vinegar. Add one rod
and two green peppers chopped fine
aud an ouuco of white mustard seed.
Lady Customer (in bookstore)—"Give
me a copy of 'Borneo and Juliet.' "
Clerk—"Yes, miss. A dollar and u
half, please."
Lady Customer—”J find I’ve only grot
seventy-five cents. Just give me Bo-
rneo.’ "
SOCIETY AND CAPRICE.
Edmonia -Ilow was Mrs. Von Push-
er’s reception?"
Kustaela—"Oh, horribly dull! No-
body was there.”
"And how was Mrs. Do Chic's tea?"
"Oh. dreadful! Everybody was
there." Life.
EX (’ITEM ENT LACK 1NG.
"Even if the airship were a success
do-you think it would become popular
with people who could afford it?”
“1 don’t know," answered the wild
automohilist; "there wouldn't he much
chance of running down pedestrians
with an airship."—Washington Star.
THE MORNING TUB.
Briggs—"Do you have tin* courage to
take a void bath on these wintei» morn-
ings?”
Griggs—"Indeed l do. But 1 missed
it tills morning."
Briggs What was the trouble?”
Griggs—"There was no hot water."—
Town Topics.
WHY HIS MARRIAGE WAS A
FAIL! UK.
He regarded children as a nuisance.
lie did a!! his courting before mar-
riage.
lie never talked over his affairs with
his wife. .
, He never had time to go anywhere
with his wife.
He doled out money to his wife as
if to a beggar.
lie looked down upon his wife as an
inferior being.
He never took time to get acquainted
with his family.
He thought of his wife only for
what she could bring to him.
He never dreamed that there were
two sides to marriage.
He never dreamed that a wile needs
praise or compliments.
He had one set of manners for home
and another for society.
Me paid no attention to his personal
appearance after marriage.
He married an ideal, and was disap-
pointed to find it had flaws.
He thought his wife should spend all
her time doing housework.
He treated his wife as lie would not
have dared to treat another woman.
He never dreamed that his wife
needed a vacation, recreation or
change.
He never made concessions to his
wife’s judgment, even in unimportant
matters. Success.-
OovdoiV
Chat
FEASIBLE.
Parke- "Business must be good. Did
you ever stop to count the number of
delivery wagons there are in town?"
Lane—"No. But it would be easy to
do it if 1 wanted to."
Parke—“How?"
Lane—"Why. I'd •simply stay home
the day after m> wife went shipping."
CARE OF THE BABES.
Unless great regard is paid to food
and the preservation of health from a
common sense point of view, the av-
erage child of delicately nurtured pa
rents is susceptible to numerous small
physical troubles which are liable to
result Seriously in after life.
It is the privilege for a healthy babe
to cry for what it wants. That is nat-
ural. But when the* cry is frequent
or more or less continuous, it may be
taken for granted that the cry comes
from distress and that unsuitable food
is the cause of it.
The importance of providing a child
with a diet which is iu every way suit-
ed to his individual requirements can-
not be overestimated. It should be
watched from day to day and changed
according to the* physical condition of
the little one. A» :-ie very outset of
Ids little life, if due attention is not
paid to his diet, it may result later in
an impaired digestion and a constitu-
tionally bad temper as well.
Fresh air and sunshine are just as
necessary to an infant as to the pa-
rents of the infant. A child must
have both to thrive. If possible the
rooms inhabited by children should
get the morning sun, and every child
should be taken for a drive or walk
while the sun is well in the sky. Day
and night the living apartments of
children should bo systematically aired
and nothing is worse for the health of
children than a room heated by the
means of gas.
It is not possible for a child to bo
good-tempered or well if he is so in-
sufficiently clothed as to feel cold. To
obtain the greatest benefit from the
clothing it should be equally distribut-
ed over the whole of the little body.
The extremities should be especially
shielded. The undergarments of chil-
dren should be of pure wool, suitable
to the season.—New York Evening
Journal.
WOMEN AND LETTERS.
"Few men can write business letters
to a woman—or at least that is my ex-
There was once a woman who never
possessed real serenity of mind, until
a great sorrow came into her life,
then she said: “I never knew until
now what a real trouble meant; it has
thrown all tin* sham worries and make,
believe unhappiness into llie back-
ground.'’
A walnut stain for the bail* is made
by boiling the bark, say an ounce, in
a pint of water, slowly, then add a
lump of alum the size of a thimble to
set the dye, and apply with a little
brush to the eyebrows, or for the hair,
use a sponge or large brush.
Mrs. Beau demonstrates her capaci-
ty for good service on* the school hoard
in what she says about school teach-
ers. Two-thirds of their value, accord-
ing to Mrs. Beau, depends upon their
personality, and one-third on tlieir
equipment. In other words, first-class
teachers are born, not made. That is
quite true, though the fact isn’t so
generally recognized by educators as
is ought: to be. Boston Herald.
We should make it a rule to go out
every day, rain or shine, even if it is
only to walk around the block, al-
though it is better to go out with some
definite aim, says • Good Housekeep-
ing-
In a city li is Impossible to keep lhe
complexion dear without the use «*f
soap, hot water, and a complexion
brush. Every night the face should
be thoroughly scrubbed, rinsed, and
dried, and then a good cream should
be used to supply a substitute for«ilm
natural oils that have been bathed
away.
Flowered crepe de chines suggest
hosts of dainty uses.
Tweeds arc very smart for walking
suits intended for hard wear.
Knitted blouses and coats are but
jerseys revived and amplified.
Some choose jacket suits—others buy
the jaunty jacket of light covert.
The day of the half length coal was
brief. New tuilorinndcs ill appear
with short wraps.
Mourning veils made of chiffon, wit li
a deep hem and about one and a half
yards long are fashionable.
Shawl shapes in pelerines, fichus
and berthas, and even in tunic efforts,
arc in high feather. The quaintest of
these draperies are finished with
netted fringes.
White not gowns with lace applique
ami white hu e gowns are always most
useful, as they can be made with two
waists, a high and a low one, and tln-u
can be worn for many different occa-
sions.
White bu-e stoles with their frills
edged with fur—moleskin, ermine or
s ibio—are the choice of women wlm
can afford but one neck piece for elab-
orate occasions. They are seen in the
choicest showings.
Jet and paillette fringe, or that of
chenille are more enthusiastically ac-
' opted than any others thus far. and
arc modishly embroidered or spangled
trimmings. Innumexpble galooris, no-
tifs, braids, laces and bands are to
be bad. and in almost startling beauty
of detail aud design.
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French, Mrs. W. H. Chandler Daily Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 262, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 3, 1904, newspaper, February 3, 1904; Chandler, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc912408/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.