', ', +, ; ,7'.'. .' ....\, '" ...,... :,'. ... ,."' '-*- ,-', ",... ..,"':tI'-.. ', ,',"' ,. ;;:' p " "Y.f """ "' ,( < > ,' V' <<"' r.- 'i f'o", iM .. 'j" -t . } ki I < c. : )..\ .' 3i ':: ,' ," r I' .:' : c, , '. :. ," .i ,to : ( I .' , 'l P Y . ' - i r ::- > - " 2 I--continue;'J it a thy bate done for {her past j -LUMBER! CAMPS. one hem-it generally teed. j doe'end of 1 WOMANS'WORLD' I* to well,,known and really. scarcely, ''belong to*acedaeription a.:. ; .FJCORIDA'S"BODGET few days, a glut in the Jeadiog wholesale j L the log to be removed is fastened on a I corded weaves, though '*oft t "Jparatlvely T ... .. market of-the country will be inevitable. J 'crotch;" and the other'_end Wallowed: ATIIEE indistinct.; ( j 0'1Ic ' r. The fruit,wilt be damaged before it ,can, THE VOOOKM op SHE CANADIAN i to drag on therroiiad. A'crotch"Is! PLEASANT LIT FOR Satin has i satin J . Of Newsy Notes and, Pointed be put on the market. and the depressionwill PINEY :WOODS. a vehicle made from the fork of ft tree. FEMININE READERS. flatted regence Satm'duchesse surface. b Paragraphs. affect the prices ,of good ,and damaged J A beam Is fattened across it for the log .,._-- fared .trip.other satin effects'hat J resT j , fruit alike.Following to rest on. The point of the crotch i* PBAJIATMT., tnonj* L C.'u,.... A....'.....,.. Collecting the Gang* for the Winter1* trimmed in such''*! way that it _turns up WIDOW OF A FAMOUS the drama I. regence i Is very,,fashionable In Par ul'] .I I VoIusU county has eight newspapers are the appointments of.the'Htbodlet ,'Work-The Rude Forcnt Shanties Jik. the ,.runner of '* leigh It looks Mrs. TomTaylerwidowcf growing in f&or.hee. I h ] 11 anA Bret seventy schools.9engeter conference held' at Jfontlcello-" Breaking the Itosuls:-;Pictnresqae when completed like large> capital tilt, is one of the finest amateur pianists) distinct line and Is chiefly ued DOW f h] 1 & Citra have Bold Tallahassee very She is old, very small and handsome linings. Satin dl.trict-E. J. Holmes, P. Camp Scene be in London. marveiUemj A. A stick of log timber can their grove for $100,000. F.I J Tallahassn,William Poe e' Leon, L, 6na or crotch t lm-. quite feeble, but it is quite wonderful to also'belongs to the past, though one ; I .1 transported places . {' There are rumors In Gainesville of the W. Moore; Monticello, T.tJ. }Bradford t {:, Instead of Causing cessation to sleighs. tee her hobble across'a drswing-room to the best wearing .materials ever I tmel a passable establishment there of a largo factory. J e/fel'lOnL'/ G. W. Forrest; Jlodisori circuit in the Canadian provinces the of activity The skidways! and saw mills art almost the piano and a mbmmentaterr charm and Satin, pure and simple,' has bee 1ove tot lens The Methodist conference selected ,:' T. tt. ',Armlt d; Madison and Ella- approach bewitch everbo<< sweet and long in the trade not to be well i I| of winter gives it a invariably on the banks of streams or bOW villa new impetus, Her 'J G. D. Turner Mostly Hall timid melodies she will play., Penn de sole i soft ; a almost Tampa as the place of the next session: and for with the commencement of the cold small lakes, much tothe disgust of read sup gl The, annual meeting of ,the Florida lor Greenville Miss. B M. Williams; Tay season" lumbering is resumed, and gives fishermen, as the sawdust makes it impossible eves are .o weak that she could not she weave, having a dull finish, which .i ialways ' Waa- and s D. M. Tillmanj the rest so ; well in it taken Paris if on music was but the hu of Pre Association convened all Ocala I : keenah. I. R Patterson Waukuila !employment directly indirectly to the for fish to live In the water. , ? "Wednesday. ; greater of the The selected that plays from memory, or else improvises, a limited tale her; though ,the cheapo fou j J. 8. Barnett; Concord, H. A. II, part laboring population. skidways are so logs mood for the theme. 4r Bartow has new Irish potatoes and,will Crompton; Midway, W. J. Orau;Quincy, Almost every city, town and township in i. can readily be rolled from them into the taking her own : go' make excellent oldest linng. TsffeU fro Y ooa have all kinds of freshvcgetable, pi F. R. Bridge} Gadsden B.E. Ledbetfer; the Dominion,'fnrniahea a number of men water in the spring and formed into Chicago Pott. i of the and I J home growing.' Liberty J. W. Porter; Carrabelle. A. to the lumber camps-or shanties, as rafts. The logs are kept from drifting present ia only used as alining. Thii Z4SO There were heavy frost and Ice for White; Apalachicola, R. L. Honiker. they are popularly< called-each fall, but by booms made of pieces of timber MIS* DUBSrao's GOOD RIFLE SHOT. a perfectly smooth weave and of seven! ,' s five successive mornings at Branson last Live Oak: District-A. A. Barnett, P. the majority of the men who work in the fastened together by chains. ,On some Saturday at twUight. while a house- grades. Rhadamc*' and rzma bu soil week ,something very unusual for that' K. Live Oak, T. G Lang; Jasper, F. woods are from the rural districts. In of the inland lakes tugs have been builtto warming was in progress at Thomas 0. about disappeared' from Bik com- del to1' section Fix ton; White Springs. James Bolt on; the month of November and the early tow the rafts to the mills, and the McAdam's farm house on the Nooksack, ten.Florence thn ,"v 'Governor Fleming has appointed 1(. Welborne, T. B/ Reynolds; New Harmony part of December, when farm work has lumber barges from the mills to the railway a tremendous splashing was heard in the and Marceline silks van Urmi, 17 Seagrave Adams justice of the peace-for E; Wilson'; Branford, R. L. Wiggins dwindled to choring, many of the farm- stations. brook near by. All rushed to the stream, used yean ago for linings where then Sandford precinct in place 'of Justice ; LFayette.1. P. Abbott; Newnan- era' sons and the hired men go to the The bill of fare In the lumber shantiesis where a cougar was found eating a fino was po strai they being the softest of l'' Si.vine' ,-deceased.' vllle? I. Ryder; Columbia, W. H. Fro- woods to work for the timber dealers. not of a character to tempt the appetite salmon he had just caught. The men silk transparent. Brocades show Inth A shooting affray/ occurred at Pember bcrts; Lake Citr. R. II. Barnett: Lake They assemble at Three Rivers, Ottawa, of an epicure. Salt pork, potatoes without alarming the great cat, went for satin, faille, regence, velvet, armure aaj < ton, in whim John Rose (colored) shot 8.City Collier circuit, J. P. DePass; Corinth, J, and the varioas towns and villages on the beans, biscuits hot scones of bread, their guns, and when about to fire heard many other effects classed under th set, t; ..' and killed two negroes and seriously Lake ; Macclenny, W. & McMan; borders of the lumbering districts. They black-strap molasses, and tea or coffee, the crack of a rifle, and the cougar leaped general name of brocades. 0 wounded three others F. Sbands Butler- Ar M. Dalger; Starke, J., find no difficulty in securing employment form' the staple articles of food. The high in the air and fell in the brook The terms Pekin, shot glace, etc, La grippe has been'raglng for the past Waldo, J.,B.W.Davis; 8. Colt T. J supernumerary: Evans B. S.; and what they consider good wages. Indeed cook is not expected to be a chef, but if dead. A bullet had passed through the ply to different'effects produced I ia t ap th, , month in Bonifay,'and, while; it has been agent so great is the demand for men his dishes do not suit the tastes of the left ear into the neck and ruptured the weaving, qpt,the actual weave p'tb N*" of a most malignant type, It has proved Gainesville district.-J. 0. Leype that the agents Of the chief lumbermen to be mercilessly criticised.Matfried spinal cord. Miss Maud Durning had Chinese and Japanese silks form a department fatal ; frequently. organic their boiled cold is servedat done the deed from the second-story win. unto themselves .Ii 1 only In about one instance. Gainesville mission, J. M. Pike, and one gangs in the or numbering The hunters and trappers are meetingwith supplied by F. M. Hartman; Bronson .more. settled parts of the country long ,every meal. Many of the men are dow,' at a distance of 175 yards All many dozens. These are''the, chief ce success, and are bringing large quantities and Archer, W. Richardson; Levy,A. -before' the winter's work begins. accustomed to mix molasses with the joined hands and circled to the left, with weaves seen and read of, though others of furs and skins to the Eissimmee M. Mann; Cedar Key, K.!: Fley; Melrose, The'location of the camps is always decided pork gravy when dining; but this is an the lion and the lamb in the centre. It sometimes, like the mushrooms, "spring d., market One merchant bought $1,500 T. J. Phillips;,, Orange Springs, B. F. upon in the summer time. The acquired taste. The bill of fare varies is only a few days ago that Miss Durning up in a night." car a e, worth from them. Mason; Mlcanopy, J. P. Hilburn; Wildwood land, or the' timber on it, is. purchased but slightly from the beginning of the killed a huge bear that is now being 'e ; .The steamer new of tho Morgan, and mission, A. J. Rowland; from the Government, the shanties for season to the end, but as long ai the stuffed.-Vfhatcem KeteUU. JABON KOTKS.' w 't few Orleans and Texas Pacific' Railway Citra, E., L. T Rlake and E.J. Gates i the accommodation of the men and the men have plenty of good strong food to Fans with folding handles are Hud Steamship company has been secured Anthony,, W. F. Shoemaker; Ocala, ;J. tables for the horses are erected, and all eat they do not complain.The BEE'S A BTE.utBOAT.CAPTAIN. SOW.' times seen.Clasps some isai by Mr. H. B. Plant, president, for the B. Lay; Cotton Plant, O. W. Inman;.Ce' other necessary arrangements for the season laundry-work in the woods is of Mrs. Clara Locke, of Linwood, Delaware for are studded, aib, 4' Port Tampa and Jamaica trade. dar Grove, O. 8. Clariday; Wild wood, made long before it opens. the most primitive character, as mightbe County, Penn., has just been grant.adacaptain's I with stones. opera cloak f 'MrIgnatiusLopez, one of the 'oldest ,T.T. Bishop:M. White.' Buinter, ,8. Scott, Mann field, The shanties are usually large rectangular expected. Each man is usually Ms license, the first ever givento Feather is novel ICe dtizen ,,of St. Augustine, died a few Jacksonville buildings, one story high, built own washerwoman. Sunday, as a rule, a woman in that State. She went< plush a garniture of days ago at his home in that city. Th E. St. district-T. J. Nixon, P. of unhewn logs, and roughly chinked is washing and mending day. As the before the United States inspectors of the autumn. deceased ; Paul'.l. B. Anderson; La Villa, with slabs of wood moss and clothing is of the coarsest and There is a craze collectors Jot' b was 84 years of age,; and was F. Pasco and 0., F, Blackburn Riverside clay..They worn steam vessels at Philadelphia on Tuesday among , ,highly respected and greatly loved by the W. JT., Dowell Duval J. II.;, are seldom, if ,ever, divided Into rooms. strongest kind, the .mendin,''doelu't There was, says the Record, a flutter of: old tapestries. v of St. ; Rigg; As a rule, these rough structures finished amount to much and the i people Augustine Fernandina F. E. Shlpp Callahan C. are laundryworkis excitement. When the physician pro- Black broadcloth trimmed with gold t t The South Florida sanitarium located C. ; Ferry; and Hillinrd, with planks and boards, but in the equally light. Stockings and underclothing duced his apparatus for colorblindnesshe braid is striking.Decollete i \ Sanford is an lamer more remote localities the roofs are are about all that ever findtheit'waylnto discovered that the nautical aspirant enterprise, or institution N. 13. ; Mandarin, F. N. C. Ends ; bodices are edged with* nar . of which the people ofSanford are Green Cove and Middicburgh, II. F. made i of' bark *r clapboards, and ,the the wash-tubs, and their I before him'could distinguish even more row band of ostrich feathen. "' The proprietors have, at a Phillips 1 Palatka, J. A. Castelj West floors of rough slabs of wood.' ''When Immersions are by no means frequent.It delicate differences in shades of color 'I cost ofpnearly $20,000, erected and fur. Putnam, supplied by W. :A. Lower; St. completed, they are warm, but very deficient often happens that half a dozen than he himself, and found that he was VelTt calf i exceedingly popular' 10 J( nursed the building in perfect style., Augustine, A, D. Penny Moultrie, C. A. from a sanitary point of view. camps are under the control of one dealer. I playing the role of the hunter who was ladies' hand bags and purses. I The DeLand city council has decided Fullwood; Fruitland, 8.' S. Gasque; Vo- Ventilation i* never thought of, and, thedifficulty'of In such cases men and teams are employedIn hunted by the tiger; In a little while Styles are very picturesque and on-, io experiment in the DeLeon Spring shell, lusia, A..O. Iliscock; Halifax river, M. : placing windows in the log supplying his different shanties with ) .. Locke had the qualifying certificate tennis and trimmings very rich. and baa made a contract with the DeLeon II. Outland; Sanford, T. W. Tomkins; walls Is so great that the rough and provisions., Food,. for both, men and. in her pocket. She answered the questions Among the latest accessories to em- 1 1j j Spring company to lay sidewalks of shell TIt uvtllo, C. 8. Byrd;" Indian River, J. ready carpenters, are averse to putting in ores is transported from tile town to regarding the rules of navigation: lag dress are floral muffs and rufii. , in certain-portions of the city at ,a price L. Rost more than are absolutely nee essary. The the woods on sleighs and carioles through. so well that the inspectors declared that The most "English" riding boots are ,1 not ,to 'exceed 20 cents Orlando district W. F. beds bunks out the winter. The small dealers ; or constructed per running Norton. P. E. ; are along are they: never examined a man who answered made half to lace and half to button. foot. Orlando, J. F. Marshal, G. L. Taylor,, the walls, and in large shanties there are in the habit'of sending out for suppliesand them so correctly. Mrs. Locke's husband .' Oviedo and Geneva. twe tiers of them. the mail few weeks. Torchon lace is coming in again ass "The Tavares, Orlando and Atlantic supernumerary; They are usually rough every is a civil engineer employed by the railroad is'advertised for ,sale under''a E.'Penny; Maitland, E. K. Whidden; boxes made of planks or poles, and supported The gangs are made up of men of all Government, and has charge of the improvements trimg for sachets, toilet slips, etc. , foreclosure of mortgage, wherein W. Kissimmco, H. Hice; Osecola, J. R. Tay "by ,occasional posts and pins nationalities, and it is not unfrequently in the Delaware River and The most unique screen of the day it Bayard Cutting, trustee of the city of lor; Apopka, J. Ii.'D. McRae; Altoona, driven Into auger-holes' the walls. 'Income the cue that three or four languages are Bay. one that has the. cabinet ornamentation.Buttons ' JTew: York,.!* complainant. The sale I* W. A. Brown; Umatilla, W. H. Stein-- shanties ticks are supplied but in spoken In oce shanty. In the ,French large and and handsome .> . ,to t&luJJrace! on the first Monday in February meyer; Leesburg, II. E. Partridge; Lady many of them such luxuries are unknown, camps at Quebec, a priest visits the woodsat frogs more .mal for some Like HOW BURMAn WOMEN a ; thn W. C. Colliers Talaha, 8. G.Ieadow. DRESS. ; and the bunks are simply filled with regular intervals during the winter and time. V.,J. Sbipman, receiver of the land } .; Stewart' Chapel l, W, W. Law- loose straw, over which a coarse blanketor attends to the spiritual wants of the men; In Burnish the poorer classes ,usuallywear ' ler; Brooksville ,G W. Sellers; Floral but one garment consisting of Cunning little pta-euebione take. the office Gainesville, say there are over ( piece of canvas has been stretched to ,but among the English-speaking lumbermen a City W. B. Alexander Pasco of mussels and with chains at ; W. II. single piece of colored cotton cloth about for come 9,000,000 acre of land in the state yet protect the sleepers. A plentiful supply religious duties do not receive much ,subject to homestead, also that the past Per;Dada City and Lakeland, A. E. of heavy blankets and quilts completes attention. It is not unusual, however, yard and a half wide, of such a length tached. year hat been the-busiest the office has Householder; Lakeland mission'; T. II.81strunkHillsboro their equipment. in these camps to find a rough young that it can be wound around the chest or Costume of cloth for carriage wear ever' known. Over settler have ; ,.B. T. Pope; Clear waist and fall to the feet. The 'women of them a vest of white, 12,000 Wattr II. Mile D. In one end of each shanty the cook woodsman spending a couple of hours ofa 0 hoe, many , "proven up." nume'rary.vE. J. Rogers, super a most importAt,but much-abused Sunday afternoon spelling out the texts bind this strip of cloth tightly around with a lace jabot. Dry, Hayes, in his speech before the Florida .Conference cone e-T. W. )ndividual-has-.his quarters. number of the Bible that a pious mother placedin the bust under the arms (leaving the The handsomest trimmings used at the, Methodist conference on the relation of. Moore, president; T. Griffith, E. G. of packing boxes in which shelves have his.bag of necessities before he left shoulders and neck bare, and the! opening present moment are metallic. embroideriesheightened , the Methodist Episcopal church South been his home.-Harper't' folds of the dress are at the front. The Chandler, professors; Florida Chrittia arranged serve as pantry A WuklV.IF by jewels. ! to the work of evangelizing the negro Advocate. Josephu Anderson, editor. .tove,fitted to,bear a great deal of rough barefooted beauties have from infancy A novelty in trimming consists of\ paid a glowing tribute to. the fidelity of Tampa district-a F. Phillip, P. E.- usage, and to accommodate a large number been taught to walk in such a way thai yoke and sleeves to match of black velvet -;; ,the slave during the wa; showed the Inn Tampa and mission, J, C. Sale; R. E. of unattractive pots and kettles, is Boy Carpet .Wearers. they naturally kick the dress inward with studded with steel ban.Drnpings . portance,Of his elevation to this 'country Pierce; Plant City, L A. Vernon Aida, in the centre of his'aomaln, and aroundit The shawls. and; carpets of'India have the heels as they yo along, and thus avoid tiny a* well a* to the uplifting of his race in R. O. Weir', G. J. Kennelly, supernumerary are arranged his collection of pork long been famous for their"color.- 'Their' any exposure of person. The higher around the extreme' bottom Africa, and reminded the church of what ; Bartow B. K. Thrower;. Bartow and flour barrel., bean and potato bags popularity II partly due to the brilliancy classes of women have a short silk or cot. of the skirt and the top of the waist.characterize , it had done in the past for the slave mission, J. 8. \Vaten; Ft. Green, S. B. and the various supplies necessary to and permanence of the dyes ojiploy, and ton sacquo which covers the shouldersand some evening gowns. /The SnJ>.Troptcal, i* booming. Presi Black; Ft. Meade and Homeland, W. a members of big craft.' In some of the partly to the harmoninous tints into arms, and the better class wear tho Yokes of all imaginable varieties any dent'R. IT. Coleman of the J. T. & K. Jordan Arcadia. A. W. J. : brightest of silks. Some of the forth in ; French-Canadian shanties the cook has which the colors are blended. The figures ladies' put the ready i made corsage' W system who is always foremost in Beat Wauchula 'J. 3?. Jones Charlotte dresses consisting of this of ; ; an open fireplace, with a crane swingingover except when they are geometrical, single strip of garnitures passementerie and embroidery. matter Of public enterprise, has sent tho harbor, T, M. Strickland;' Man. it, instead of a Itove,bu such placesare are apt to be rudely drawn.It silk cost hundreds of dollars, and some . director his check for $ OO" and it ia tee, ,J, M. Sweat, E. F. Gatel, super very rare now.. Is a matter of surprise to learn that of the fine silks of the world are made inurmah. It is a matter of course that the Media hoped; that other wlll"do likewise nomerary; Palmetto, H. s. Miler; The first plentiful fall of snow is always work so artistic as the weaving of the The men are as gorgeous in collar appears upon every style of wrap. their mean will permit; The exposition Pine Level A. 0. Brown II. Meyers their costumes the ; as women. Their attended by a great deal of .activity wonderful fabrics which: cannot be shows considerable variation of out this year must be a magnificent success, and Indian mission, II. B. Frasee, one to gowns are wound about tho waist I it marks the'real of the in mills is done and and all must unite to make it one. There be supplied by G. W. Gatewood; Cnloosahatchee .. as opening equaled our every part tied in a big knot at the front. line.Wearing must be no holding bock no shuffling or and Chockoluskee, W. J. J. season. The roads are, then "broken,** on the rudest of looms, and by little boysof Most men a basque or jacket that I not wear a bright handkerchief the tlub Whidden and the "swamping out* commence less than twelve years of age. Mrs. tied around the required Louis XV.' length hesitation -Tropicsl season must ; Key West, first church, G, W< the head and inside of Itlmp be {he grandest ever known. So say the Mitchell; Sparks chapel l, D. A. Cole ;' The choppers and sawyers have already King, the writer, describes the work: as their bair. Both this is put up a having belonged to last director Memorial chapel, J. II. Vann; Key Largo, been in the woods for some time, preparing she saw it done in one the hill towns hair long and classes wear their robe. ' R. M. Evans to be W. a supply of logs to be hauled to the near the borders of Kashmir; ,,long earrings or earplugs._ At the recent meeting of the board of ; one supplied by f 2Vew Orleans Tilll *.Deanocrat.RArnDnEastxo Feathers are the newest rage, and are 'director of the National Bank of the W Rife; Key West and Cuba mission, skidways or saw-mills, as tho case may f'We passed through an archway into employed in all color and several kind State of Florida, the usual seml-annual II. B. Someillan, Camoya. be, but the teamsters Leon begin to press a largo, deserted-looking enclosure full -- though the ostrich leather,are first, dividend of five per cent was ,--declared.. Tran t"rred.-F. M. Moore to Indian on their heels: of rubbish heaps, and haying a deep col. WHIM3. course. mission conference M. to The of the roads is onade of mud bricks all round. In hairdressing there . This bank was organized May 5, 1883, A. Phillip task breaking an running are various new and baa paid in dividends to itastockholden South Georgia conference, D. V. Priceto exceedingly disagreeable one. It is done Under this were erected rude looms, of styles, but the one rule, without excep-- Pink fuha bl in enamel l, dangling the handsome sum of $ 7.000. It '. Ilolflon conference._ n" ___ by traveling over the route selected and which there must ,have been over fifty, lion; is that smooth hair is entirely out stalk ,compose chaia ba accumulated a surplus Lund of $25- ----' roughly cleared for the transportation of but at the present<< time only six are being of fashion. Ba it fair or dark and an interesting addition to queen bOO, the undivided profit now on hand IN COURT. logs, so as to pack the loose ,snow and worked, owing to trade being slack. whether stiff or soft by nature all la pendants.The amount to $31.603.00. making the total -- open the miry spots. ''Oxett ro preferred "The carpets were most beautiful in dies' hair' is now required to be onduler, big tags on some women's wraps earning since organization, $103,303.50. The Behring Sea Dispute To Be for thil'work; as they'aro less apt to color and design, all intended for the that is, to fall and ripple in large waves with name and address printed thereon, 'This is a magnificent showing. Judicially Determined. plunge wildly in the soft places; but London market. We saw one, measuring catching the varying lights and shades' make other women 'at receptions, smileat Mr. William Pickford, of London, 1 he sealeries controversycame horses attached to a rough sleigh calleda' : twelve feet by ten, which was nearly which give it. life and beauty Marcel, the precaution. of the Behring sea 'used. finished. Six little boys varying in the coiffeur a It; mode ha found A Parisian round one greatest phosphate experts in in the United States pang or' jumper are generally age out the authority states that the;world, as well a* one of the largest court up at Washington on Monday supreme on a When a road is properly' broken, it from eight to eleven years, were working secret of tendering soft and wavy the hats may '1 worn by ladies up to the age, ,owner and operator*of phosphate lands, motion which has in view the judicial dotermination freezes to a ,great depth, and becomes it, while one of them read out the pat. stiffest and straightest of chevelures, and of thirty.five-seventy-five would bar was in Sanford a few days ago II:* firm, of the dispute between tho firm enough to bear tho heaviest loads tern from a slip of paper. Their small, that without the help of either frizzing. been nearer right. Pickford & Wingfield, is tho European United States and Great Britain over the In each shanty.thero are usually from brown fingers worked so nimbly, knotting irons or crimping-pins, but the means he White satin is being used for sofa agent of the Sterling Phosphate and seal fisheries. Joseph II. Choate, in behalf fifteen to forty men under one head boss. on tne'various 'colored wools and employs to this end is his secret; he is cushions, of which, to, suit the present Mlnlpg company operating, near Dado of Thomas Henry Cooper, owner and This boss directs all the work, hires tho cutting off: the ends, with a knife, that the coiffeur en litre of all the leading there cannot be too of imaginable - City. Mr. Pickford baa examined this claimant of the British schooner W. P. men, and dismisses those whom he finds one could hardly ace what they were beauties of our aristocracy, as well as fa shapes and size*many. a. propertrl and while he doe not give to Sayward, which was seized: in the water incompetent The men are divided into doing. It seemed amazing that such that of all'our actresses in vogue. The 0 the result, enough i. knownto of the Behring sea by the revenue cutter small gangs, each of which is governedby small boys could have attained: such dex fashioaable style, therefore, is to have In England it I no longer the fashion . satisfy even the friend of tho owners.To Rush, petitioned the court for leave to a sub-boss, whose duty it is to see they terity. Their pay is from $3 to 3 a the hair waved all over the head, all to litter the room with hand painted show what can be done by those file a petition for a writ of prohibitionto do the work: allotted to them. The choppers month. light and fluffy, and a small chignon in gimcrk Japanese fans, etc. Drwngs - who make an eftort,we ,give the experience be directed to the judge of the district select the trees considered suitable, "We were told< that they could make a the neck, just under the edge of the bonnet are taking a more solid appeaancThe of Mr.' E. A. Harris, of Bonifay. court of the United States in and for the and "knocks" them. When a tree has carpet of the size they were then work fastened with a large diamon* pinor snowy cambric skirt no longer lie wy that after clearing ten acres of territory of Alaska, restraining him from been decided upon, they proceed to make ing in one month, so that the actual cost a Theodora brooch. For the evening extllor street wear. Luxurious ont land''' for his neighbor, he cleared five proceeding with the condemnation and a bed for it. This bed consists of brush cube muting! would ba about 913, andas I the hair is waved in the same way, buta J .i Ue with flannel when acres for himself, and with nine acre sale of the vessel. The object ia to have and small trees so disposed that the tree the carpet would sell fur over' $63: few curls are suffered to escape from warmth a requisite, and trimmed with already cleared, he ha made an ample the court take up and pass upon the to be used will fall upon it. The bed there must be a handsome p.ofitover and the jeweled cache-peigne at the back; pink ruffles, lace, etc apply hundred of bushel corn, rice, nething over one question of the jurisdiction of these helps to break the force of the trees fall above the cost of the wool and the inter or if the hair is very long and thick, it The newest wedding fad 1 the presenation - of syrup, seven of potatoes hundred ixty pound gallon of waters. ---,-- ---- and keeps it from splitting, and also pre. est on the capital sunk." is looped very low in the neck and fastened to the married couple' of a hand and vents it from sinking into the snow, so up with ribbons or Jewels._ some blank book, .Uvr fodder a half ton of bay, two bites clp PREACHERS AT OUTS. A'I" r/ri World. bearing the that the hewers as the case inscription. of cotton. This shows what the land. sawyers or GoJd-BeartaT jiurt. uO.U will do when tested.. maybe, can get at it readily. If the The book i afterward t se as a n... Y..r Fr.U. A Damage Suit Which Involve tees is to be used for lumber the sawyers The discovery of gold-bearing quartzin HAKES OF SlUt WEAVES.According family diary. . There i* going to be a big glut in the' $45,000. follow the choppers and cut it into the conglomerate rocks of the Ste. to the New York Dry Goods One of the fnorit materials for the orange market unless the shlpptrs up Declarations were filed in the circuit logs of the required length. The logs wiacke valley Colchester County,Nova Economist, to the ordinary person and to colored jackets heavy beaver I and ease the market off. For the past court at Chattanooga, on Tuesday, by are then marked, so that the owners will Scotia", and the reported discovery of a many out of town merchants the names This i made up with considerable co lV' I three or four days the fruit ban been going Rev. J. J. Hanker and Rev. J. J. Sampson be able to keep track of them at the skid- valuable nickel deposit in Queens County of the different silks do not convey the ity of outUe, the weight and color forward at a tremendous rate and Method minister; against ways railways they are sometimes called in the same province once more draws slightest idea of the appearance of the the clth mating as effect already the transportation compantes in Rev. T. C. Carter, editor of The -or mills. The camp's mark is usually attention to the extraordinary mineral goods, yet it is cf importance, especially a* mOt women audoQ a thi*state have some difficulty ia handling MeikodUt Advocate and one of the lead. a number of peculiar backs made on the wealth of Nova Scotia, the development: to the country merchant, to know what The newest cloak for babies are lathe it at bating and junctions! point Already ing spirit of Methodism In the couth. tide of each log with an axe. It the tree of which, with the exception of coal and regence, inure, etc., mean. I form of a short of white fox the fruit It accumulating at the Tho complainants seek to recover $45,000 b to be used for square timber the choppers gold, may almost be said to be in its infancy. Cords are now reviving, and are of' fur. The cape it made pelisse qf the entirely great distributing market in the North, damage, alleging defamation of character &1'$followed by the score-backers The exploration of the con. many sizes. Ottoman is the largest cord, fur, while the under of cashmere :East and West, and many-of the largest by the editor, who made his detente" and hewers. glomerate in the Steirfacke valley one of and the all-sllk Bengaline follows. Faille with flit bodice* covered wholesale houses have instructed their through his paper! against chuhea of immoral When the logs lave been trimmedand the finest farming districts in Nova Francaise also has a cord of various 'I with a skirt entirely deep of the agents in this state to top buying. Theyare conduct preferred against him by cut to the requited length or tho 'I Scotia, has been thorough enough to sizes but i* firmer than Ottoman. Oros douc fur. unable to get fair price for the fruit the present rcUtors of the bill in court. timber finished, the "...ampiag demonstrate tha richness of the deposit grain has a cord which is woven in I app for all classes of already hand, and leu. big glut. This suit i* the sequel to the recent out"square Swamping out" is the and it may be expected that enterprise thicknetces and close together sevortl wrap Its u prhap.the newest begins. Snow storms at the north have blocked church trial of the minister involved, the backed the requisite capital will be Armure and royale the i & of thin *. 1 the work of hauling by are the railroads ant I in which all the parties were exonerated, term applied to same weave, jacket it I faced and 41P all freight being the roads where they can be forthcoming to extract the wealth froa and this is a small figure of various I I with fur e wved before tbo Methodist conference logs to de < very slowly. It is a difficult mat- Rev Carter baa fur sleeve The mink IIeevea rock.-s .P aad.a signs, of wbiet tea ter to get the fruit distributed from the and Rev*. Manktr and Sampson loaded on the sleighs and takes to themills I the goU-seamei many resemble ti r'pots i! facing and great kupply markets. Price are in con. before ala eccle: .iatical council of the or aki4wiT For wampi z out I C$Mlis!... .. --- --- lilt/; the old bW' eye pattern. Surah lucking albeit a pretty dUl.eoW ...rjuence depressed" but if shipments Methodut church. a.b 'r , , ' ." 4 '" .. ., ,, _ > ' J& ;>o- ' --- ..... '-.-. ....,,;; ;;; _ .. ,1u.7 ','_" _$. _