Newspapers / The Wilson Advance (Wilson, … / Feb. 27, 1896, edition 1 / Page 5
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THE WILSON ADVANCE: FEBRUARY . - - - r i . . . C!ii1)bi if Rate: ,t :u cend the ADVANClv and L fjlldwing publication's to ...k. moro tlnll 1T ,n4 til A "Jf VO'l Wai.li. I'""1 "Ilk. Kti IUV j t:.,tii ,ns ;- named ask ;fir hpcial i 51 i f AMERICAN A No jrfjROi'AN PERIOD CALS. : ..:.$i.65 .... 1.65 .... 1 65 .... 1 65 .... 3 00 3 25 3 25 3-50 McClures . Cosmopolitan Godey' fjppincoft's ........... Review-R-views.. Scribner's Century v 9 P-.OT Oi f 1 1' mom , ; s Quarto Papc3f f KeRCin)?:1 -".:' Kors Literacy Matter cy.d ! f Ilustra- , crv ct'-.er A'-iprazi io ia America. J ii Vcar. - .. ?:;.'', v.'liolf-some. JuvnUo Monthly. ; - k:',s-,;tt v.i. T'v! rkers for yomig . -If. ' ' T " ! 1 f t if- Jf ) .0i yVUJT. Th 3 Advance, iVi,sNv- t'i" .a' av b-ih lor o;ie u0 P.O. Hrir;;s; for. $!;50 iHijjM, rirlss ?ml tin Af--va:;.'k loth forone yt:ir for jUndofitBdlytlio Best Glub Offers lie's Publishing Hoye. L'l'J U usiraterl Frrttiium List, i ice. IBICI'S STAHDARO 'TUUBOOK. law aia ger ana i&etter Thaii Ever Before 7 1 - 1 .J S- iH .) 1,500 TOPICS; 'i uts 'vveryih ing; You Want : 1 ?0 Sl.'o;t'; Vzeii Foil . - . - . . FABLB CYCLOPEDIA r. r UP-TC-DATE FACTS. -A Snvafwablo. and Unrivallec Political and Popular Siand-Bock. ADY JANUARY m 1896. 5 (Postpaid by Mail. ) Pulitzer Building, WevYork. : ?t Co Without It This Presidential Year It wilt be U(l 'r o ,1 , ,.:.- !0riniRh course in Short-hand frse ''t Orrt-snnnrl m'l..r.,A 1.4. . u Miss M. KJ Kxitv!. . Q reen S pri ngs & 5th , A e., "AV - Baltimore, Md. . the a0' j is nyvt paid one year at the aKt to b?.mnrried. .Tho daughW and anv;1' , ; pnddauspters of Queoy Vicia c. j price staM.v - - ly bear a nrong lesemblance to-that" NOW IS V3Ci Mf THy'so i4 heartily for fed wks, but ! rhaD Literature. ,; ; j-thcy aflord litt ie amierrjeni to fashion- ' " ! i ab-0 fOoictV Or tbo pntvi-.-n., i .. .-i- -sJx --V'-i. i&ilh vi 6 1 :h rtni ins nTn 1 - PRINCESS MAUD OF WALES. A Royal r?cw Woman Who I ... V . ? Wed prince Karl of Denmark. ! Princess; Maud of Waes, IfcaWt .vi- ! vacious. and erigiual cf: all vomeuriu .tbev.Britnli px.yal .fc , She is tjie yocngett Jdanghlcr of the' "u x-riccess cr Wales r.id tho I second stil unmarried. i FTr olr'!"-. f 1 tcr, Priiicfss Louise, miirried the Dnko ! ccfs was born Kov. 18G9, arid isj Tlie brineo fore 20 years cf an?. was born SAug. 8. 1872: and is t'Xforo i only 553 years of age. .Tbe princes "has reached ap age much later than that at which most princesses ;are married, and has developed a we'll? (defined character of her own. The prince, however, is re ported to be ami ablo as well as youth -ful, and jit is to bo -hoped, ho will not give her much trouble- V - Tho prince and princess are first cous ins. The list of such marriages4 in the English royal family is already remarka bly longi The princess 'mother, the Princess of Wales, is a daughter of the king of Denmark. The young prince is ! tho second son cf Crown Prince Preder- i; ick of Denmark, whoso father is king of Tho young people! are said "to be in love with ono another; a statement;, com - nicnly tiade. by tho English newspapers mm mmm .RifA PltlKCK? MAUD when alroyal ennatreiiient is announced. Tho Time Fay 4' The - fact that it is 'a pure loyo match, free from all Fuspicion cf stat jo influence, will add immensely to its popularity yrijh the English poq ple. ', The tame thing was said when the Princess May cf jj Teck was engaged to Prince, Albert Victor cf Wales. 12 e died and fhe. immediately fell in love iwith and married hfs brother. ; The Princess M arid 13 short, da:k and vivacious. The prince is very big, blond and sedate. Both- are fond 6i athletic prOTtK. . : ' j ' Tbo princess is a favorite with the gayest jand most hospitable set in Eng lish society. Sho has no doubt inherited some of her father's liberal ideas, as many as axo good for a yonng womrm. She has not been overawed and reduced to respectable dullness by her augast grandmother. I 'Iu tbe family circle t -he is known as "Harry. V This is a very, interesting tact. . 4Jse name Harry sounds very suit apie icr a young woman and siorting inclinations of high spirits Besides bearing the nape of Harry in the : rqyal family the ; princess it also known as Miss Mills. Inorderto avoid the ceremony which must inevitably at tend the doings of a : princess she has made visits to country houses under this name jand insists that her. hosts and their visitors and servants should regard her as an; untitled woman. This was no doubt ipleasant for the princess, for aftBr a few (years' experience it must be rath er weari&orne to have''-' nobody, speak un-; til you start the conversation and no body do anything nntll yon give thein permission. As Miss Mills' she made manyjfriendships; imd it ia said that ni any i young Englishman have lost their heart 4 to- that lady the? made one visit of two weeks where her rank was not .Is"-.' " . il . i -" known" to" the. other visitors thejv.iujle time.-j-Chiccgo Tribune. A Sn.itXsPTC! Yell. It is the proud locust cf HadcliiTo col lege tliat it lias nof4'jells'r of any kind. It ln(ts not vT)T,xOi i hem. Never sinfce the hptitntion ya founuvd has it been responsible ' f or-any '.sort cf college., clacs or ecrietv wheoo. Its T:;te of rzm(l may therefc-e Le imagined jie:i it as rui more 1 that this , tin n " t "frer-iiman ch:t-s corste smplated a "yell, ". A mass nzcet- ii'g cf 4he otiierE classes was at-. once held, and it v":?s voted to crr.fih the freshman class wit2i an ii c:i haiid' should Mitg of- tho sort .be. so inuch .as -at- temp (d. UprDij -bcarii.-g this the frqsh- said that-- tlpey would se.o -abtlnt jut it is .KigniScaut '-that hrj. 1'ild- it.'"- cliffa campus . has :ot yet I; ecu prcfui.cd by tile reverberations cf a yell: Tli Theriv c.siH-tifr s Downward. IttvtSi. . Nfcfw Yoi:s, Fob. ) n.-r Thj ivii"i:eiif are iu thL-i city-iibouc ruidiiiht v. a.4 S nbDve zero, j The tempera6u.re.was reportytl from o'theif places ai fallows: Buffalo, 4 degs. below; .-Syracu-e, 13 beloiv; Rochester, 5 below; Albany, 0 below; Montreal, 10 be low; j Toronto, 15 b.ilow; St, John, N. B., 6 below; Worcester, Mass , 1 above; Bostoa lOabova. .. i W - . v4UA;ui4. il 1 1 1 I - ot Jriic. p. ho ether daughter,. Princril Victoria, is waiting for .an' ripnert unity to make spine eligible princa ixpp- j The future hrjsbaud cf Princess M;md ! h t v:-, --v - I - . . - ' PltlKCtf? MAUD. i . The Newest Skirt. . Tho latest skirt shown bv Frpnrdi de signers requires ten yards of . 22 inch silk for a skirt .40 inches long, write? Emma M. Hooper in Tho Ladies'. Homo Journal. It is, cut in nine gores, with the straight center of each breadth being in the center of the gore. Make the sides slightly bias, which will give them a handsome flare. Be sure that a bias seam comes at the center, back and that tho lining is cut just liko jhe outside. With wider goods two gores can come out of tho samo widthL The skirt. 13 Cvo yards wide and should be interlined j stidy ten inches deer) all around! Tho frpnt and sides should be siir-ihtlr gath ered! to . the belt and the buck laid in three narrow box j plaits at tho top. Stirts -should be made to open at tho lefft jcf the back rather than made to lap tile center cf the back. A pocket "can be pt Ion the right side, in the scaiii next td the back one. Ho dresses are interlin ed throughout now by any one - under standing skirtmaking. uTho flare effect, however, requires 1 the ''stiff interlining' from 10 to 15 inches deep all around. If a sk;rt is made with two double box plaits in the back, they must lap slight ly'ajt the top or all of the fullness will fall toward the sides instead of the cen ter back. Made over skirts may bo lengthened by a bias band of velvet, velveteen, silk, plaid, etc., but trim mings on skirts are only used when ne cessity requires, A broad braid bordered with loops oclrcf oils' of a narrower braid is somejimes seen on the edge of a skirt. Ivf SlltS Cf WoEBull. Should a woman ba a minister? Yes, if she can preach a helpful sermon and can put up with ihe wear and "tear cf a minister's life. SHculd a -woman bo a physician? Yes, if slie has the'skill nec escdry tp cliagno e a case and ihe con stitution to stand; the life." Should a wo man bo a lawyer? Yes,- if she has pre pared herself and can plead a case suc cessfully and can live the life of a law yer: fehculd a wonjan be a man? l?o neyer. -Qod has made seme differences be-, twecii tL'3 ijir;:i and woman physically, and we should lie'e d. them. Should wo mah vote? rYcs. iot because she is a woman. Thoribt to vote'is not inborn. It is the r.itt. ff -"our government. Worn-" ;en ' pay raxes, end for that reason they shcfuhi vtc, and hot because they are women. Kev. IL C. Peepies, Baptist, Rochester. j Xa,Iiitry So Horrible? Heinrieh von Trei'.schko, royal histo rian cf Prussia and . professor of history in Berlin universHy, is an enemy of the new woman, and despite the toleration of his superior, oilicials in the ministry of education will' not allow her to attend his lectures. Two weeks ago, in tho mid dle of this . morning lecture, he spied a girl in the crowded auditorium. He at orrco dropped his manuscript, rose from his seat and walked from, the platform to the young woman's seat. He induced her to rise by offering her his arm, and escorted her from the room. . Subse quently he remarked : "I dp not intend to have these' women folks at my lec tures. I will station the big. janitor at the door if they persist and have him throw them out. " , . . Encllslu VLady Journalists." The "lady journalist,"' as they call her in England, is finding considerable difficulty in ecnring a man's pay for a man's work. The suit of a Miss Taylor against her employer has brought out; some interesting testimony on this pojnt. She was engaged as editor of au-Edin- : burgh weekly paper at a salary of $200 a year, and subsequently when the office of the journal was removed to London her salary was advanced to $5 a week and eventually to $10. A Bnsy Queen. The queen of Italy is nowT studying the Hebrew language and. literature with diligence and is making great progress. Lately, when in Venice, she received in audience Rabbi Caen Porto, with whom she conversed in th an cient language of tlx Jews. iiiss Cor inn a Shartuck, the Afnerican lady who has shown great heroism at Ooifa during the recent Turkish massa cres, is a native of Louisville. Bo r?orlo buy Hood's .f?G ivi'Ia in prefe5-nea to any chcr, i ' fact aini to tlr j exslajion of nil others'? mm? 7 They 'kn"v f?om:anatjt!ce th'jt Hood's i?'l:.h3 cf , i; i:-.vcr v:hc--i c.ti;-r3 fall. IIpc-.i'.3 ,1??. rSrar-lla i ; r '-5 1 1-.-'. Trfi o ' undc r tho q ." tii j,cJualcd p:-:--;i,'v:; :cdr.- d:-ci 't i ' ivcr.c t .'-tocd's &3 the question of ) ;i r-?.'' - ' ')"'. An vi.'i.r-' lli'rr;: ."' Evrj'" advertisement ot JiJOap Qiiraapavilij. is 'true, is iioncst. m 3 u -Sarsap.aiilla IsilieOneTnielilood .Pur-Sr. All druggists. $1. FroWredonly by V I. Hw Lowell. JIass. i ti tii ' t-i-only :iJi to t.Te TlOOd 5 FlliS witlillood'sSarsaparilla. 1 I i KJ On n I 1 o lis C 3 I ! , s
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 27, 1896, edition 1
5
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