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St. Paul daily globe. [volume] (Saint Paul, Minn.) 1884-1896, June 29, 1890, Image 14

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn90059522/1890-06-29/ed-1/seq-14/

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12
HOT WEATHER STYLES
A Bewitching Bit of Finery
for the Pretty Summer
Girl.
Redfern's New Breakfast
Jacket, op Matinee, Is
a Gem.
A Negligee Which Is Beauti
ful Enough for All Day
light Hours.
Outdoor Sports for Girls-
Lawn Billiards and
Croquet.
Bpecial Letter to the Globe.
■New lobk, June 26.— Here's another
of the varied and bewitching little bits
of finery with which that radiant being,
the summer girl, is going to dazzle us
during the next three or four months.
It is one of Redfern's new breakfast
jackets or matinees, which, though in
tended rather for a negligee, are beauti
ful and elaborate enough to be worn
through all the daylight hours, with
skirts of various sorts. The material of
this one is one of those lovely crepes de
chine in single tone, but with small
brocaded figures. It is a faint mauve,
and is trimmed with a band of royal
purple velvet upou the flaring cuffs,
around the bottom and down the fronts
below the wide-rolled revers. A wider
band of the velvet passes across the
neck beneath the rolled collar and back
of the revers, and is finished at the
waist line by a gold ornament and
pendants. The vest beneath is an art
fully arranged mass of softly folded
crepe in canary yellow, and the collar
and revers are faced with the same.
/ 1 r
Chles
From the array of separate and dis
tinct costumes which . are being pro
vided for all manner of different occu
pations, it would seem that there will
be no lack of amusements for young
women this summer, and that each in
dividual will be able to find a pursuit to
lier liking. If she be very agile and
fond of much movement, there is the
ever-alluiing tennis and its recently
arisen rivals, golf and cricket; if her
main object be merely to expand her
lungs by great drafts of pure air, she
may become a bicycler; a pedestrian, a
yachtswoman, or a wielder of rod and
fishing net, And again, if her fancy
inclines to quieter, near at hand amuse
ments, there are the resuscitated cro
quet, or as the English call it now, lawn
billiards; bowling, and under the more
attractive title of Badminton, the time
honored battledore and shuttlecock.
Each and all of these pursuits has its
distinctive costume, and not the least
pretty among them is the one intended
for Badminton, which Redfern has de
signed.
Mr-
A Badminton Costume.
i: It is a straight-skirted gown of palest
fcurpnoise etamine, with a wide, braided
border across the sides and front done
In gold and silver. A broad girdle
braided to match almost meets the band
{which simulates a yoke, and the collar
end sleeves are made in accordance
Vith the other decorations.
ASTOR-BEND.
< ———
tlumored Engagement of Jack
, Astor and Amy Bend, of New
York.
/ \i2/r
ACK ASTOR and
Amy Bend are in a
box together, and
this fact gives rise
to no end of com
ment, says the New
York World. Amy
Bend is George
Bend's daughter,
and is certainly a
very pretty girl.
Her engagement to
the heir of the sec
ond branch of . the
Astor family was
announced a year
or eighteen months
ago, and was
promptly denied
from what appeared to be an authori
ty lye source. The history of the Bend
family was hunted up by the gossips at
the time, and it was declared, that Mrs.
William Astor had, pronounced against
the match because the B§nds in the first
place are not rich enough, and because
George Bend's brother went West sev
eral years aeo under peculiar circum
stances. However that may be, the talk
of a matrimonial; alliance in this direc
tion very speedily died out and the
prospect of a domestic establishment for
the youthful Astor was not discussed
again until Alva Willing came up from-
Philadelphia to the Patriarch balls and
Mrs. Astor's son began to pay her
marked attention. Now that Alva Will-,
ing . has announced by cable from the
other side that she is , not engaged to
Jack Astor, and couches . the denial in
language smacking of indignation, it is
quite in order that storiea which couple
the names of young Astor and Amy
Bend should be at once revived. . So
ciety is pretty dull now and matters of
this kind furnish endless themes for
fascinating speculation.'
Women in society, who certainly have
means of knowing" what Mrs. Astor's
mind is in the matter, declare that her
son's marriage is something ardently
desired by her, and that she does not
propose to insist on a maiden with all
the virtues and accomplishments knowu.
to womankind, or stipulate that an in
dependent fortune shall accompany.
Young Astor is, of course, the only male
heir in that branch of the family, and
his mother is anxious - to see him
established in life with the prospect
of an heir to the fortune and the
belongings of his father and herself.
Tbere are, of course, family jewels and
family plate which she wants to
remain with her branch of the Astor
family and not- go to any of her
daughters or their husbands, although
her daughters have all married well
and she has been a good mother-in-law
to the men they have chosen. The
same people who attribute these matri
monial intentions to Mrs. Astor intimate
that many pretty eirls are not eager to
marry the son notwithstanding the
great wealth he has in prospect, and it
may be some time before a maiden will
come forward who is at once willing to
wed and is acceptable to the Astor
family. Young Astor is a good enough
fellow, but he is not a tower bf in
tellectual strength, and those who
know him express some surprise over
the fact that he was able finally to
make his way through college.'
CHERRY PIE MAKING.
Seasonable Things to Serve on the
Home Table.
il
c^^M^
O MAKE the cher
ry pie excellent
requires a good
deal of care. Pie
crust wants to be
fine, but not too
rich for cherry
pies, and it must
not be too thick.
Make about a
quart of flour into
pie crust, using
about the size of
an egg in fine lard,
which is rubbed
in. and the crust beaten up soft with
cold water. The pie crust should then
be rolled out to make the under crust of
the pies, the upper crust being rolled
out twice, and small bits of butter put
in it. Good cherries can be bought for
pie-making and these are 12 cents
a pound. The best come from
Staten Island. These should be stoned
if the pie is to be really nice. They
require but little water, as the juice of
the cherry conies out when it is cooked.
Cover these well with sugar and put on
the upper crust of the pie, dotting it
around near the edge with little slits
made with a knife, which will prevent
its bubbling up and being uneven.
Blackberries and huckleberries are
now in market, and they make the
most delicious pies. We should recom
mend pie-makers to waifr at least a
week longer before indulging in black
berries and huckleberries, however,
as these are now coming from the
South and are not as good as they, will
be a little later. Gooseberries are also in
market and cost from 12> 2 ' to 15 cents a
pound. These are made into a delight
ful pie and pudding.
WHAT TO WEAR BATHING.
Seersucker Is the Best Material
for Ladies' Dresses.
0 not permit the
summer to pass
without learning to
swim. It is ahealth
and useful accomp
lishment, and in the
age of swimming
schools both old and
young may, with lit
tle teaching, become
%4,*.$ (f 5 *^
good swimmers. It is dangerous to go
in the water unless two hours have
elapsed since eating, and -it is not
healthful to remain in too long. The
strongest person should not bathe long
er than half an hour. A linen sheet
for drying purposes and a fresh towel
for rubbing are the most serviceable.
Avery agreeable bathing suit can be
made of seersucker, lt blows out from
the figure when wet, and is not so
soggy as flannel. Bathing costumes
should be made large and loose, and for
ladies with Turkish trousers. If
dressed modestly ladies can't look
handsome when they go into the water.
For surf bating a waterproof cloak is
indispensable to wrap in after emerg
ing. "ii ' '" ""7
Several Summer Receipts.
ROILED Sal m o n
Steaks— Dry well
with a cloth and lay
them upon a well
buttered gridiron
over clear, hot
coals. Turn with a
broad-bladed knife
slipped beneath and
a flat wire egg
beater above, lest
the steak should
break. When done
toa light bi owe lay in a hot dish, butter
each steak and season with salt; gar
nish with slices of lemon.
Jellied Veal— Wash a knuckle of veal
and cut into three pieces. Boil slowly
until the meat slips from the bones.
Take out of the liquor. Remove the
bones and chop the meat fine. Season
with salt, pepper, two shallots chopped
as fine as possible, mace and thyme. Re
turn to the liquor and boil until it is al
most dry. Turn into a mould until next
day. Place on the table cold. Garnish
with parsley and cut in slices. The
juice of a lemon stirred in just before it
is taken from the fire is an improve
ment.
Roast a calf's liver; wash thoroughly
and wipe dry; but a long, deep hole in
the side; stuff with crumbs, onion and
bacon chopped; salt and pepper to
taste; a bit of butter and one egg; sew
or tie together the liver, lard it over
and bake in the oven, basting ten ;
serve with gravy and currant jelly. _
Clam Chowder— Brown some" porK
scraps and three onions together until
a light brown. Into a large pot put a
layer of sliced potato, then a layer of
soft clams, sprinkling a little salt, pep
per, mace, cloves and allspice; then an
other layer of potatoes, clams and sea
soning. When boiled, put on the back
part of the stove and let simmer ten
minutes. Before serving add a quart
of milk. Let it all boil. Then put in
the pork scraps and onions and half a
tumbler of sherry wine.
PASTURES GREEN.
Unto new fields and pastures green lead thou
Our wandering feet, sweet shepherdess,
where wells
Of living waters gush, and asphodels
Blow thick as stars, and every laden bough
Lettetli Avit-.t yn"->"a— aye, the pathway show
r"t_> x'p -1 citadels,
Wh"-- chorlste 3 i angels unto chiming
beih • „ -■--'.
Sv'' thems o: th < blessed. Even so •'
I. fid thou me iuto d rkness, where the light
shineth — d .ntuess comprehendeth not.
To so aid "aiid reamed of subterraneous spot
W -.i truth's pure, shining light hath
a_)iu before him. .
To tet. ibence issuing, some poor, palsied
wigbt __________
Drop on his knees and rise, thro' faith,
to adore him. \:-S^WW^i_PJBBWH
—Atlanta Constilution.
THE SAINT PAUL DAILY - GLOBE: SUNDAY^ MOIOTNG^- JUNE -29, ■ 1890. —SIXTEEN £AGEB.
TAKEN FROM LIFE.
Marvelous Tattooing Among
the Marquesans in the
South Pacific.
Masterpieces Punctured in
the Skin of Pretty -
Legs.
A Lady Whose Back Is a
• Wonderful Work of
Art.
How the Body Is Decorated
by Some of the Leading
HQB Artists.
A correspondent of Drake's Maga
zine, who has just returned from an
eight months' sojourn among the na
tives of the Marquesa islands in the
South Pacific, gives a detailed descrip
tion of the primitive method in which
the art is followed in this home of tat
tooers. He says that the art of personal
adornment, or disfigurement, as" you
choose, has reached its highest develop
ment among these people.
The captain of a Spanish vessel, which
put in at one of the islands for water,
reported when he got home that the na
tives wore next to the body a maguifi-
Tattooed Lei; of a South Sea Islam
Belle.
cent garment of silk wrought with the
most artistic designs, which fitted the
body like a glove. What he thought to
be a garment of fine cloth was. in real
ity, the garment of nature, and the in
tricate designs upon it were studies by
native artists in tattooing.
How Tattooing Is Done.
The Marquesas man does his work
with the simplest of implements. He
takes three shark teeth and binds them
together so that the points or cut
ting edges stand in a row. These
are lashed tightly to a small staff of
Tlie American Style of Tattoo.
wood. He has but one color in ink
blue. The ink is made from a small
round nut, not unlike the walnut, which
is called in native tongue kukua. The
nut, when burned, produces a powdry
The Native Method of Tattooing.
ash of deep blue color, ana this is
mixed to a proper consistency with salt
water. A small wooden mallet com
pletes the outfit.
When the artist is ready to begin his
work he places the subject in a reclin
ing position, and with a slender pencil
of charcoal traces upon the skin the fig
ures which he has selected. Then com
mences the delicate operation of prick
ing, the artist following the charcoal
lines with the shark-tooth needles, driv
ing the points into the flesh with the
mallet. The ordeal is very painful, so
much so that the stoical natives some
times scream out with agony, and the
women sometimes become unconscious
under the operation.
The first part of the body to be dec
orated is the face. A blue stripe reach
ing from the height of the eyebrows to
the bridge of the nose, and from ear to
ear, is pricked in. The forehead re
ceives a patch, and the cheeks a touch.
The neck next receives the artist's at
tention, and is set off with a curiously
designed necklace. From two to four
bracelets of blue are placed upon the
arm, and then comes the leg.
The leg of the Marquesan is always
exposed, and the artist's best efforts are
expended there ; there he puts all his
A Tattooed Back and Arm.
genius of design and execution. He
begins at a point a few inches below the
juncture of the leg with the body, and
extends his . work .-, clear down to the
toes, and when he announces the job
"pow" (finished) the owner of the leg
has a stocking . more varied in decora
tion, and the - wearer -: is prouder of :_ it,
than any little chorus girl of her first
pair of silk tights. v . '-'
:.,: The work of tattooing is not the thing
of a day. It sometimes requires as much
as two years, beginning usually when the
: children are fourteen or fifteen years of
.age.;. ■■xxXixxxxxyxxxxX'Xx; -■■- •".-■-,
r There is a code ; of , decorations with i
which bad characters . are ; marked. x Of
course, these signs are unintelligible to
the ordinary individual," but > the » native
reads them readily, and recognizes at: a
glance ■■ any • offender _ who lias ... trans
gressed the Marquesan law. The pecu
; liar .cutye of ; a new moon on the con
vict's cheek or the width of a stripe on
.; his leg may tell the . story. There j are
no civil or. martial records kept in the
island's achives, but a man convicted of
cowardice : or crime carries 1 the history
of his ruin in -unfading blue upon his
face. : ■:':-. .:-■■• Xpix: p.i-
What the reward will be in '. that ; dis
tant land beyond, the sunrise the Mar
quesan determines by the number _of
marks of merit a man carries upon his
skin. ■-. ■.--..
: Each one's life record is written upon
him •„■ in ..the : language _of his land, and
when he reaches the promised shore he
believes he will be judged by the show
ing he makes upon his cuticle. "_•".
OBESITY IN. HIGH LIFE.
Society Leaders Who Are Forced
to lave on a Most Abstemious
Diet. - -
• HERE are two
sides to the wom
an question, and
! while one-half the
. sex is actually
j starving for nour
ishment, the other
half is over-bur
dened with super
fluous flesh, the
■ result of rich' food
and pampered lux
ury." .-.'-.■-;
- The fashionable
is
woman who lives
in a city mansion
or makes her home
in an exclusive
apartment house
devotes her entire
time, her fortune
and energies to
society. She liter
ally lives in its pleasures. She has no
children, no time for study, and conse
quently no cares. Servants relieve her of
all household duties. A regularly em
ployed stenographer, who comes from
the typewriting institute for dictation,
makes light work of the heaviest mail,
and by the help of an almoner numer
ous charities are fostered and approved,
claims of poverty cancelled with liber
ality as well as despatch. Through the
medium of the telephone dressmakers,
milliners, shoe dealers and other agen
cies of supply can be communicated
with and goods are brought to the house
for inspection and purchase, thereby
doing away with shopping. Nights are
given up to the dissipation of the sea
son and the fashionable woman spends
her days in bed, recuperating from the
fatigue and excesses of the night. Exer
cise is taken via a carriage, a coach or a
yacht, and the result of all this is high
toned obesity— a disease that threatens
to become epidemic.uot only among the
exclusive sets but ; well-to-do persons
who live in hotels and flats.
. Here is a diet on which some of the
wealthiest and most massive women in
New York have been forced to live in
order to reduce their alarming propor
tions: ■rinaanaKm wmmt
Breakfast— in variety, raisins,
fresh fruits, without sugar or cream,
hot water.
Dinner— Soft-boiled eggs, fresh fruit,
vegetables, such as lettuce, asparagus,
heels, celery, tomatoes and cresses;
clear brow soup, hot water.
Thes two meals constitute the daily
diet. On retiring a cup of obesity tea
is taken. Immediately after rising the
patient drinks a pint of hot water and is
commanded to take two hours of exer
cise in the open air before breakfast.
Driving does not count. It is necessaay
to keep up this treatment for an entire
month before a reduction ;is no
ticed. As everybody knows who
has : ever . tried it, extra fat
is acquired more easily than it is got rid
of, and, although a woman may starve
down fifteen pounds by giving up tea,
coffee, wine, sweets, pastry, fat, well
done meat and farinaceous foods, she
generally ends by indulging her appe
tite r.nd* weighs" thirty pounds more
than she did at the beginning of the
treatment. ;Jgljagp
Society men, while as corpulent as
the women, are more -indiffei to ap
pearances and less willing to make the
sacrifice required for reducing their
weight. One specialist has on his books
the names of thirty women '■ prominent
in New York society, whose .wealth av
erage $300,000. All have fat they want
to be rid ot. Treatment is resisted to
the last, but when the lines of the chin
and figure begin to disappear, vanity
comes to the rescue and these society
queens take their fasts, hot water and
obesity tea with religious self-denial.
WHEAT AS A COSMETIC.
Whole Meal Bread Is Good for the
Complexion.
ED nose, face
or hands us
ually betray a
need of purga
tives or the
whole meal
bread, which is
in growing de
mand all over
the : Union.
The most skil
ful and best
informed toi
let specialists
of the cities
make the
coarse, whole
meal food an
md isnensable
part of their diet, as it aids : the work of
beauty so effectually. It makes fine
flesh; it feeds the nerve, and teeth that
have begun to crumble and decay re
new themselves on this food with sound
bone and enamel.
There is no need to write to me for
this bread. It is to be had wherever one
can grind good wheat between coarse
stones without bolting it, and bake such
flourcakes mixed with milk and water
in a very hot oven till thoroughly brown.
That is all. Such was the bread the
patriarchs ate when they lived hundreds
of years. It is good solely because it
contains the elements needed for the
body in the best and most eatable shape.
It is notable when living on sound food
how quickly the hair and nails grow,
and how the former renews its gloss.
I have ' lately heard on the testimony
of a very 1 creditable and conservative
medical man of hair which had turned
gray, regaining its color with health.
Testing Gold Coins.
Gold coins are worth their full face
value in gold, without counting the one
tenth part of "the copper -they contain.
The yellow metal, unlike the silver,
does not "segregate" in the'riiiddle ; of
the piece. Therefore, it is not neces
sary to perforate gold coins for testing
them. They are simply rolled out, each
strip cut into three pieces, and : little
pieces for chemical analysis are snipped
off the cut edges. There is a very small
amount of silver left in the gold pieces,
as they are made at the mints, and, for
the sake of arriving at perfect accuracy,
the assayer takes this out : by boiling in
nitric acid. '
Mrs. Harrison in Summer Attire.
;•■ Mrs. Harrison : looked i particularly
well in a summer gown of black India
silk, figured in an old-rose and dull red
flower : pattern. The skirt was - made
with side plaits and graceful drapery,
and the bodice had a soft frill ot . black
_ brusetts net, edged with tiny embroid
ered points in old pink silk, which r run
around the neck and formed a jabot in
front. ' She wore a : low hat of ; black j
tulle, trimmed with a white narcissus :
wreath and having long black lace
streamers.
To Nervous, Debilitated Men.
i If you will send us . your . address we
will send you Dr. Dye's celebrated Vol
taic Belt aud Appliances on trial. They
will quickly restore you to vigor, man
hood and health. . Pamphlet free.
: Voltaic Belt • Co.,- Marshall, Mich
, COQUETRY VERSUS BEAUTY. i
■ The Susceptibility of Mankind ta'
Simplicity and Frivftiity^v' 1 ■
iftrttl*"*-
BORN coquette is
more . dangerous
than a beauty. §he
inherits a; : better
legacy than wealth,
tor,: while : money :
gives life - its i cush
ion,- beauty ; gives
color, and coquetry
makes it -•" sparkle.
The ;■" coquette :: will ;
go on with her con
quests while there
is a man left in the
world with a heart
in his bosom. There
is a woman in New
York i who keeps a
big boarding school
„.„„Atf,,n a„A in.
-for the education or coquettes, aim in
stead of I walking on rose leaves she
treads on goldeu eagles. : Seats .at her
performances are secured two : years in.
.advance, and to make the application
you pay a handsome deposit. There are
no graded courses of " study, no exhaus
tive examinations, no tedious memory
lessons and no incessant eternal and
intolerable - smashing of . piano keys.
Aspirants for : degrees can go to the
Harvard annex. Would-be grenadiers
are directed to Holyoke and Columbia,
and blue stockings are advised to enter
local high schools and universities for
intellectual force. -7 Here coquetry is
fostered, and no secret is made about it
eif r. Square : shoulders are rounded
into De Milo grace; flat soles are raised
by judicious foot coverings; high fore
heads sheltered by kiss curls; harsh
voices lowered a whole tone; angular
elbows turned in; stiff joints loosened
and every symptom of a strong mind
rigidly suppressed. The pupil is sweet
ened, softened and curved. She is care
fully instructed to know nothing and to
do nothing that will rob a grace or mar
a smile.
And does she pay?
Doesn't she. . * .
Drop ber in the village lane or quiet
promenade of her native city, and see if
she is not gobbled up by the most prom
ising young lawyer or most prominent
bachelor in the town.
This is a serious, angular old world.
Men are sick and tired of shrewdness,
logic, argument and brains. They want
to be amused, distracted, diverted.
Good sense is tedious after the market
closes, and the woman who talks profit
and loss, supply and demand, premium
and discount, in evening dress, in the
moonlight or at a dinner-party is a
nightmare in petticoats to be eluded at
the first turn in - the lane. Change is
rest, and while we hate giggling, we
love gabble. There is where the co
quetry of woman wins.
I remember riding in an elevated
train behind a grizzly man of fifty and a
breezy,' chatty girl enveloped in flutter
ing ribbons, dreamy lace and the scent
of wild olives, who was pouring society
chat into her companion's ear. When a
lull came in her recital, do you think he
sighed restfully? Not a bit of it. Hii
only remark was: "Tell me some
more."
Coquetry is to the wine of life what
the sparkle is to champagne, and there
are women who can no more help being
coquetish than that delicious draught
.can help bubbling. • • X
A pretty lot of nonsense, too, brothers
preach against rice powder, curl papers,
lip rouge and sweet scent. It is a mat
ter of comment that tuese dear protect
ed sisters receive more than a liberal
allowance of home, while . the veriest
Dolly Vardeu in the set has her fill of
the play, the dance and the tennis court.
No, dear, straight-laced, rocked,
hair-brushed '- sisters, coquetry is the
very best investment a girl can make.
Tie coquette has a seat in the crowded
car, and receives the civilities that make
her glad that she is a woman.
The coquette is helped over danger
ous crossings; her packages are picked
up and brushed when she drops them.
The first place at a bank window and
the first consideration in the shops are
hers. The coquette gets the loveliest
flowers, the most delicious candies, the
newest books and the latest prints in
the market. The coquettes receive the
idolatry of - men, their hearts, their
hands/their names, and • finally their
worldly goods. - '
She need not make a showcase of her
self nor play r the - flower garden to be
captivating. A girl can be absolutely
irresistible in a 15-cent cambric. Inno
cence, youth, beauty, sentiment are as
sociated with a girl in a white dress.
Plenty of men shrink from brocade and
passementerie as fabrics beyond their
income, but the white cambric, the !
white mull, the white anything is a rai- ':
ment that blots out arithmetical calcula
tion. -
The coquette may be as wise as Maria
Mitchell. Susan B. Anthony or Abigail
Dodge, but she will never let a man
find it out. She knows too well how
they hate things didactic. And so she
smiles sweetly, talks gaily and lives to
please. Here's luck to the little co
quette. Long may she wave and never
waver.
APPLES AS MEDICINE-
They Have Phosphorus, Which Is
; Good For a Person's Brain.
HEMICALLY, the
apple is composed
of vegetable fibre,
albumen,sugar,gum,
malic acid, gallic
acid, lime and much
water. Furthermore,
the German analysts
say that the apple
contains a' larger
percentage of phos
phorus than any
other fruit or vege
table. This phos- j
phorus is admirably adapted for renew
ing the essential nervous matter of the
brain and spinal chord. It is, perhaps,
for the same reason rudely understood
that the old Scandinavian traditions re
present the apple as the food of the
gods, who, when they felt themselves
to be growing feeble and infirm, re
sorted to this fruit for renewing their
powers of mind and body. Also, the
acids of the apple are of signal use for
men of sedentary habits, whose livers
are sluggish in action; those acids serv
ing to eliminate from the body noxious
matters, which, if retained, would make
the brain heavy and dull, or bring
about jaundice or ; skin eruptions and
other allied troubles.
4 What New York Wears.
Tennis players of both sexes are wear
ing silk : shirts. They are worn with
skirts of any material. .,
\ Russet shoes are worn to a much
larger extent than ever before by both
ladies and gentlemen.
; Brown plaided surah over darker
Shades of brown surah, plain, makes a
nice dress for the races. .
: Short, curly locks are the style with
both elderly and young ladies. Tresses
ire freely sacrificed nowadays.
{ Yellow is in great favor this season.
A light bit of it on hat or gown bright
ens the toilet in a remarkable degree.
j The Fauntleroy blouse waists are the
newest They have a deep collar : and
come in white lawn, embroidered.
j The plain habutia cloth is attractive,
ft is a rich Japanese silk, very durable,
and comes in black, white and cream.
.MOITEY.
A pocket full of money amonnta to
little after health is gone. To enjoy
life, a good < appetite, , sound:diges
tion and elastic limbs, take Tiitt's
: Pills. Then, If you are - poor, you
■will be happy; If rich, you can en
joy your money. They dispel low
spirits and give buoyancy to mind
and body. jJssSEKj 'SfitSPSfflSSoS
Recommendation.
W. I. Blair, Danville, Va., says: .
"I have long suffered from Torpor
of the . Liver and Dyspepsia, • and
have : tried almost i everything, but
never derived half the benefit that I
have had from Tutt's Pills. . I rec
ommend them to ' all . that ', are af- .
flicted with • Dyspepsia and Sick
Headache."
TUTT'S LIVER PILLS
. v GIVE GOOD DIGESTION.
HfISCV RHPPIFQ I"
UHIJi DUfabiLJ!
■ saßanan beb ; ■■rb brbb______m ;
IMTHEM
uuUrlljLiJ DIM I uU.,
OF OVID, MICHIGAN,
MAKES THE FOLLOWING ANNOUNCEMENT
Concerning the
DAISY BUGGIES:
1. There is only one concern in the United States claiming to manu
facture "DAISY" BUGGIES. The Scofield Buggy Company, of Ovid, Michi
gan, is the sole manufacturer of "Daisy" Buggies, and the "Daisy" Buggies
which have been sold and used throughout the West and Northwest for four
or five years past, and have become known to the trade by that name, have
been manufactured by the Scofield Buggy Company alone.
2. Notwithstanding the great display made by The J. H. Mahler Car
riage Company in ad^ ertising that J. H. Mahler is the owner of the Regis
tered Trade Mark "Daisy," and warning us and all other persons against
using the name "Daisy," The Ssofield .Buggy Company is the only one
legally or otherwise entitled to use the name "Daisy" on vehicles, and will
continue to use it and protect not only itself, but its customers in the use of
the name.
3. For some time before it became insolvent The J. H. Mahler Com
pany did a jobbing business at St. Paul, Minnesota, and handled the "Daisy"
Buggy manufactured by The Scofield Buggy Company, and built up a very
large trade upon the demand for that buggy. After the failure of The J." H.
Mahler Company, The J. H. Mahler Carriage Company was organized, and is
now doing a jobbing business with its headquarters at St. Paul and J. H.
Mahler its manager.
The only complete "Daisy" Buggies that the J. H. Mahler Carriage Com
pany has handled since its organization is a lot of about twenty buggies
which The Scofield Buggy Company left with an agent for sale. The agent
was taken into the employ of The J. H. Mahler Carriage Company as sales
man, and a deal made with him by which The J. H. Mahler Carriage Company
got possession ot them. For that deal tjie agent now stands indicted by the
grand jury of Ramsey County, Minnesota, and The J. H. Mahler Carriage
Company is defending a suit for conversion and in replevin.
The excuse for making the deal, given by J. H. Mahler upon the wit
ness stand at the preliminary trial of the agent, was that his trade de
manded "Daisy" Buggies and that he HAD TO HAVE THEM. Finding that he
could not get them, he has adopted the expedient of registering a trade
mark for the name "Daisy" and having that name placed upon buggies man
ufactured by Eastern firms, hoping thus to impose upon the public and to in
jure this company by way of revenge. The "Daisy" Buggies which the J. H.
Mahler Carriage Company is advertising and selling are all of this class, and
it does not handle, and will not be permitted to handle, a single buggy manu
factured by The Scofield Buggy Company.
s J- JCTLJBji = .-
WlNllilill
Is the only authorized agent of the Scofield: Buggy Company for Minnesota
and Dakota, and the name Scofield Buggy Company will be found on every
vehicle manufactured by this company.
Parties Desiring prices and terms on "Daisy" Buggies can address .
Winona Wagon Company
WINONA, MINNESOTA, OR
SCOFIELD BUCCY COMPANY,
OVID, UUCiaHIGkA-ISL

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