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Girard Daily Press from Girard, Kansas • 4

Girard Daily Press from Girard, Kansas • 4

Location:
Girard, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE ItEALM OF STYIE bailed upwards large, straggling design M'KINLEY'S VICTORY. THE NEW WOMAN. I Jn Tor Women at the Urn Freeiaea tint Election, ut leaves, arabesques and broken flow. i var i aw .9 saw trs, ending Jo dots. All this was done LOVELY GOWNS, WRAPS, BONNETS PEOPLE WERE DISGUSTED WITH OEM ia old gold silk picked out with1, blaok.

Don'fBuvlbuRfeifeir AND TRIMMINGS. OCRATIC Another one had a. 10 -inoh pattern worked in block saddler silk around the very bottom of. a tan colored chuddab Dree a Exhibited at the New York Hons Sinoe the presidential election of 1892 women have much to be thankful for in the way of political progress. It Is true that, measured by results, the gains seem small in proportion to the truly herculean labors the brave workers for womon's political emancipation have BmdU of a Itattle UetwMB Protection and Free Trmde Foar Yean' Eiperlenoe wu a mo gown.

pattern represented guipure buvlho Show Tailor Elm pee The fblqultoui Bolero Outside, GarmeaU Faehlooabl iaoe, but aa though magnified. It -waa Teacher What Oar Future Tariff Pol' 11 i sr beautiful. Another bad a pattern like lejr Kmm laos embroidered upon it in apron shape. Skirt Copyright, IfSWfl, by the Author. performed.

But nono of these efforts are It was trout 90 Inches deep in front and lost. They will all tell at once one of AS? The victory for McKlnlcy and has been great viotory in every rounded up to the waist in the back un der a sash. There waa a row of pendenj sense of the word. It la not only vio jet trimming at the lower edge, tory of great majorities, bat it is vio The social swing ia now in full movement, and, oh, the lovely gowns, wrapt and bonnets one sees aa. the weareri pass by I Tbore are not enough ad jootlve in the English language.

to fitly describe A Quaker drab' cashmere sublime bad a- 12 iuch band of ivory cloth set tory for great principle. It la not a viotory for any partioular ration, but a three inches from the bottom and edged them. And every one is totally different from its noighbor. Tho horse show viotory for the whole country. It Is not a viotory for any particular olasa of men or for any party, but a viotory for the whole American people.

The viotory is with a biaa fold at top and bottom of the same stuff. Tho ivory cloth wag nearly covered with an applied desigu brought out some flue and tasteful suits, and they will ha. copied in every plaoo these days, and then results will come with a rush. This year the. women of three states, Wyoming, Colorado and Utah, voted fqr presidential electors.

One woman, Mrs. Uarah Malloy of Wyoming, was herself chosen a presidential elector on the Republican ticket. The Colorado house of representatives will this win tor have as members three strong and noble women. They were elected on the Populist fusion ticket, their names are Mrs, Evangeline Hearts, Mrs. Olive a Butler and Mrs.

M. A. B. Conine. These ladies all live in Denver, which has been described as the most beautiful city in the world, Perhaps that is because women have so much to do with its municipal affairs.

In the only what every one expected. In done in soft old rose velvet stitched on with black The vest and bolero to; square battle between protection and until it will be at. least three months before we shall have seen, the last of, them. There was one seal brown corded this exquisite gown were worked in free trade tbore could be but one result, and that result a triumph lor the Amer loan system of protection. It ia for this reason that William J.

Bryan and all bis free trade supporters have so straw ously endeavored to switch the issue of the campaign away from the question wool gown, sewed all around the skirt, With two rowa of thick soutache braid each an inoh wide la a shade lighter than the dress, The waist was. made into a basque by means of a row of loops of tho briti all Other loops, with two rows of gilt trimmed the Waist at the sbouldors, There a vest made cf. plaid bearing the colors of yellow, red, and hrown, and. this was edged with ruffloa of black chiffon, of the tariff. But with Mr.

Bryan's free trade roc new state of Utah Mrs. Martha Q. Cannon was sent to the state senate. She is a Democrat and a doctor, practicing ber profession. She was before polygamy was abolished tho fourth wife of Angus ord open, to the public, with the great "apostle of protection" as leader on the other side, with partial free trade al A fill AND COMPLCIE LINE FOB AllKINDS Cf ready casting its deadly blight upon our industrial life, with that product edged again with narrow valouoiennes.

if of ignorance and incompetency, of sec eS A II. il 5T Tho stock and collar were most fearfully and wonderfully made. The stock tional discrimination and individual toMiti mi arts mralt kind a- tf Cannon, but now lives with her son. and daughter in a noat home qf her own. The oddest part of her candidacy was that her, former husband, Angus Cannon, ran against her on the Republican ticket for the same office of state eonator and she beat him by a majority, of 4,000.

She is a woman of fine, strong favoritism, the debt producing, Indus was of tan with a full ruffle made of falling over, it, with two outstanding loops of braid on the fronts. Above this was a wide and stiff try destroying Gorman bill, as the law of the land, the dominant and decisive 6, box plaiting of the taffota. This gown Issue was bound to be the tariff. Much aa the free traders did to befog the issue, they could not change it That be it in vroc.it: nav EVENING BODICES. was very stylish.

similar manner. And these are not half Plaid in silks and in wools is in fash ing so, the result was a foregone con charaoter and an original mind, which she uses to do her own thinking. She emphatically goes in for women taking a share in running this world. To. sum up, in the three states in which wpmen of the new designs in the trimmings of ion this winter and is worn to an extent elusion.

There is none so blind as him who will not see, but there was i v. 0ENERAL tlARDVmZ? HOUSE rURNIStlING GOODS EIC, 13 rIOST COMPLETE AND SOL v. AT LOWER PRICES THAN As to the trimming of waists, one none so blind that be could not fore' must see the beautiful gowns at the opera to know the possibilities in that rarely, seen for really flpe costumes. There was oue much admired gown biade of immense plaid in. all the soft, warm browns crossed with deep myrtle green, There were light lines in tufted wool, whioh gave the whole a most soe the coming of the political tidal wave, which sweeps the country back 0 til line.

One faience blue velvet had a tight have full suffrage were tbore chosen at the November election one woman senator in Utah, three women representatives in Colorado and one woman presidential elector in Wyoming. "Therefore the sun do move. to prosperity, back to its prosperity of fnn vnnra nb-n1 1 G. H. BARKER, Girard, Kas basque corsage, with elbow sleeves.

There was a superb honiton point flat sumptuous and apparent The briefest actual trial of free trade, warmth. The waist was a simple point or of any approach to it, has always suf ed bodice at the left side. floed to turn the people back from any In an interview with Winifred Black This bodice was of mordore velvet The leanings toward that economic fallacy. sleeves were of the same, with bias plaid The disastrous experience of the last of the New York Journal, Mrs. Martha Q.

Cannon, state senator elect in Utah, says: "Now, I know that women who stay at home all the time have the most puffs at the top. Over it was worn a four years, under this free trade admin short jacket of heavy ottoman cloth bor latration, has thoroughly sickened the 'foT The largest line of Team and Buffffy Harness, American people of that policy. In unpleasant homes there are. 7ou give doredwith astrakhan and having a. wide collar of the same, BJack silk -cords made "frogs' and and these but 1892, after more than 80 years of pro me a woman who thinks about some tectiori, we Stood at the very pinnacle Blankets and BobOS ever carried in Crawford county.

Goods high grade, strictly first clasSj and at racket prices. toned to the left over-gold fastenings. thing besides cook stoves and wash tubs and baby flannels and I'll show yon nine times out of ten a successful home- of prosperity. The triumph of the free trade party in that year sent ns down A new and unusually handsome coat or cloak was displayed this It oollar with revers and a stiffened, flar-, ing one, besides the cuffs. The vest was of delft blue crepe lisse in plaits.

A i bodice for a young lady was of cherry satin draped into folds, whioh adjusted it-at the. bust and waist There were two fancy jeweled buttons. The sleeves short, puffs. Over the shoulders foil two cascades of white lace hold by two bunohea of cherry blossoms on the of the shoulders. Another dainty bodice was all in white chiffon ruffles, with a pale blue satin sash tied behind and.

two tiny revers worked in pansy oolors were made into shoulder knots. A blush rose taffeta bodice was made exactly in infant style, with a band of white ribbon embroidered in pink pearl beads. A belt with bows and ends had a large imitation emerald in a border of pearls for a clasp. Other fancy pieces -held the 'puffed sleeves, and a blush rose and buds placed upon the left side gave the finishing touch of beauty. Hknrikttb Rousbeac.

maker and a successful mother. Some day there will be a law limiting people was cut priuoess form in the back and loose in front From the back side seams to a certain number of children, and then the mothers of the land can live as they ought to live free, happy, healthy livea" Women who keep up with the fash ions waste a sinful lot of their waking hours over their clothes, and, after all, do not look nearly so handsome as the ones who follow an artistio simplicity in dress. With a good many women A A Ji ill clothes are not made for the use of the body. In their idea, the Creator made the human body only for the purpose of MRS. FLORENCE GREY.

showing off clothes. Charles Nordhoff'a daughter Ethel has become a bookbinder. She is wise. Bookbinding pays better than book writing, as a rule. Alice Stone Blackwell says in The Woman's Journal, "Aftor women had T.

I SI had full suffrage in Wyoming for ten NEW GOWNS. years the census reported that in all the territory there were only three lunatics, and those three were all men. The engineer of the sawmill at Por to the lowest depths of industrial depression: 'The four yenrs since 1892 have been one long history of bard times, of disaster and distress. No part of the country has been left unscathed: The south has suffered with the north and the east with the west. No man has been spared.

The farmer bus seen the value of his farm and of his stock decrease, bis market destroyed and his orops left unsold upon his hands. The merchant has seen his goods grow dusty on his shelves. The manufacturer has been forced to close bis mill. The wage earner, whose whole capital is in his power to labor, has bad the chauoe to labor taken from him. The capitalist has suffered with the rest.

There is not a person in this country who has not helped to pay, either by actual loss or by sacrifice of comfort, the tremendous cost of this trial of free trade. "Truth has to be taught Lies find their own way," said Speaker Reed. The free trade liar was abroad in 1892. The provisions of the McKinley law were grossly misrepresented, history was distorted, figures juggled and facts suppressed. The lies found their own way and won tho election of 1892 for free trade.

The viotory for protection won this fall ia not the result of a sudden whim, or of blind relianoe or unsubstantial claims, or from any desire to soe what the party of protection will do, but it is the result of deliberate conviction based on experience. All that this great viotory means wejiave not yet had time to appreciate, but something of its meaning we know and all the people of the country know. As to the past, it means that the American people have grown tired of keeping foreigners at work while American workmen sit in Idleness. It means that they have grown tired of letting1 the foreign pro-dnoer have the Amerioan market as a free gift It means that they have grown tired of closed workshops and silent machinery. It means that they have grown tired of a uationnl deficit that they have grown tired of bond issues.

It means that they have grown tired of business stagnation and industrial depression. It means that they have grown tired of hard times. It means that they have grown tired of free trade and of all its train of evils. It means that they have seen the folly and the bollownesa of all the free trade ter vi lie, is a woman, Mrs. Cherb-borne.

Penonality of the Jeanne Boule of the European Preaa. Mrs. Florence Grey (Joanne Boule), the commissioned correspondent of The Court Ciroulur of Loudon, is still in this country in the interest of that journul. The Court Circular is patronized by Queen Viotoria, who subscribes to 25 copies annually. Mrs.

Grey has had long experience in social and jourualistio life, having moved in all the court circles of four countries, and has worked industriously With her. pen for lit years. For the last ten years she. has divided her time in England, France and Italy. She has profoundly studied ail the educational systems of these countries and has qualified herself in five womanly handicrafts, so that in any case she can speak and write intelligently, on any subject' intrusted to Her profession is- journalism, but her favorite accomplishment is needlework, for whioh at the age of 6 she took a first Ja the, art of.

cooking this clever woman iaunrivaled. Being a chef not only for he own housohold, she has faithfully been a student of that homemade art She has given in her own country Miss Adelaide Basso hasentirecharge of the library of publio documents in Washington. She catalogued the cplloo- tion of books herself. It was finite rieht to abolish the law requiring that women should be employed only eight hours a day in fao-torv work in Illinois, leaving men to work as long as they pleased. It was abridging the right to tne pursuit oi a livins of a sex alreadv at a Croat disad vantage in the world of paying indus tries.

Miss Lillie Sullivan fills an impor Has stood up for Girard and Crawford county tant place in the agricultural depart from the day the first number was issued, in ment at Washington. She, examines mites, inseotsand parts of insects microscopically, and then makes colored Notiember, I860, and will, continue to work fort drawings of the magnified image. their advancement and prosperity. there was a rich, wide black moire ribbon which tied in one tight knot at the waist line and eL to the. entire garment was of black velvet Around the.

waa borde -of skunk. There was a medio! oollar starting from the waist This was of velvet on the outside and lined with sealskin. There was a vest also of sealskin and a muff matoh. There, was a delioiously quaint bonnet: ia-seal brown silk beaver, with -wide brown ribbon bows eaoh, side of a panache of black tips and aigret There-were strings of maise colored silk mall, each the whole width of the material. These started from under the bows and were held in rather tightly until they tied in a large bow under the chin, with ends forming a regular cravat Some there arq.who, like the tailor shapes, with their, severer outlines.

For suoh a oape may be modeled after one I saw today. It was of fine biscuit colored cloth, with, 14 rows of stitching all around AU around the shoulders there were of stitching, eight rows in eaoh, and-'sewed so that they resembled straps. The absolute accuracy of the yearns and finish make of this a most stylish garment when we take into consideration the rich drab satin lining and the flaring collar. old liking for (jthe soft reseda greens as a contrast for the biscuit colors holds good for this season, too, for the gown worn with this was of oloth of that shade, while the hat was a high black felt alpine, with dark green velvet ribbon and a blaok cock's plume. These four outfits are among, the, handsomest of all those shown or worn this past week, and, following one or the other of them, no one need go It so happens that none of those show either the bolero or the now fashionable skirts Among these last I may mention that folds set on the bottom or way up the skirt of the, dress are very stylish.

Rows of fur are sewed on quite high above the bottom, or on the edge, just as one prefers. One gown of purple cloth had six narrow plaited ruffles of black taffeta s-t around the skirt in sdgzags about six iupbes apart The same were sewed abound-the waist and sleeves. The effect was more stylish than grace If Mr. Robv. instead of Mrs.

Robr. had presented Wolf lake to Chioago university, would the newspapers have said Politically it is in favor of the RepubUtan Mrs. Roby had "allowed" Mr. Roby to Party, Sound Money, Protection and Reciprocity, make the gift? That ia what I should like to know. because it believes that those policies will benefit rant about "tariff taxation Personal beauty is something for "free raw matori- have found out that the laboring classes and everybody else.

It will more within a woman's own control than she supposes. In answer to a question of how a human being could reach earnestly advocate the restoration of a protective oertain desirable state, Swami Sara- tariff to take the place of a tariff for revenue only, dananda replied at Greenacre, "Think that way." Just so. The woman who would be beautiful must begin and and hopes that the debt-increasing policy of the nation will soon be changed to a debt-paying one. think that way. Indulgence in unpleasant emotions and brooding over disappointments are ruinous to good looks, especially as there is no disappointment worth brooding over one hour and no Ions that is irreparable.

First live as pure and true a life as you know bow to. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. WEEKLY TRESS. Cultivate kindly thoughts of all people. They are al good as you are.

Keep your lilts. FLORENCE GREY. many talks to the poor of that land, shewing them the best methods of economy in eooking and the practical accomplishments of it Grey is a member of several societies in Europe, some of whioh have requsted her to internationalise them. They are the Brotherhood of Love and Labor, the: British Ladies' Chess club, the Peace and Disarmament association, the Brotherhood of Poets, the Adelphi and the Ladies' Art association. Of the last she has been 13 years a member and is secretary for life.

Her work abroad has been under several pseudonyms, sometimes seven articles appearing in al" ia a snare and a delusion; that they have learned that "the markets of the world" is only a catch word to deceive the unthinking and the unwary. It means that they have 1 ear Sod the value of our home market It means that they have learned that the prosperity of the American people depends on the employment of Amerioan labor. It means that they have come to believe with William McKinley that nothing from abroad can be obeap to the American people which means idleness among ourselves. It means that they have learned that "a revenue tariff levels down" and that "a protective tariff levels up." Aa to the future, It means business. It means confidence.

It means an end to the idle capital and idle workmen. It means the American market for the American producer. It means work for America labor. It means better wages. It means prosperity for American homes.

It means that the American system of protection to American industries, the system which has never yet failed to bring prosperity and which never will fail to do so, I to be the permanent policy of the American people. Amerioan Eoonouiit One year Six months .50 Three months .25 self always in a cheerful, happy, hopeful frame of mind. Any girl can train herself to do this after awhile. This sunny, hopeful, aspiring mind is one of the secrets of perpetual youth. Then follow Swami's direction and think yourself into beauty.

If you have an objectionable nose or bad complexion, DAILY PRESS. ful. Ruffles of all aorta are put on in everyway. The handsomest skirt trim One year Six months 2.25 don't let your mind dwell on it On ming that I have seen this season is the hand embroidery on some of the skirts. One waa of smoke colored drnp d'ete.

the contrary think of yourself always Four months 1.50 having a lily and rose complexion out to fall in round plaits, and many of One monfli .40 one paper. i Mrs. Grey is of medium height, with a winsome manner and a faoe full of strong and nervous intellectuality, and is a brilliant conversationalist, with no end of charming anecdotes which, like pearls, seem to fall from her eloquent Up i O. B. B.

and a classio nose. Never lot yourself dwell on deformities of either body or, mind, either in yourself or oth- rs Think of goodness and beauty. One week .10 them, in the back, with four pannier plaits over each hip. There was a close wreath large flowers worked about two inches from the bottom. Front this H.

A. WASSER SON, Girard, Kans. Eliza Archard Conner..

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About Girard Daily Press Archive

Pages Available:
2,911
Years Available:
1894-1897