Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, February 8, 1880, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 8 1886—SIXTEEN PAGES. i i i dustrious lads | declare that. what. i IL, bons; with melted rub- | acquaintances and friends, he is quite harm ion, or one of the steady, indu ‘ads | dec ever aid comes mu: NEW. YORK. Besrenba fant aa esis who & Paphthe ave been permitted to copy from Tess, and. should be fostered and encour jel CURSED TRELAND. diving cows ¢ pr ridin fa jo it goawite Berpl an in another: seer L: will eneavor . Tribune, and holds his old place still, was ‘A REPORT BY PROF. OGDEN DOREXMUS, ets quite as welcome -] ": k cand white cap, clas spall y tare at) the Is are to look at : « . in _dark-blue loak -ant » } the class of small tenantry may oneof the strongest men Vanity Fatr ever Professor of Chemistry in the College of the | Bair oy ie een Fe etareh or out. The Actual Condition of the: Irish Dearing. het, sesket oh Sanidens bape of Irish apcieuienae i. remain the batt 7 Constant ATTENDANT. fn their scarlet petticoats, under dark-brown | their number being unable to Tide Treen rsonnel, Twene | hd. You are going to call on him? Give | Gity of New York, who says: “I have sat- me yriele anit and To Hw eld ofa regards He fs one of the | trated various Bas, amare eam Farmers. black and laid shaw! over thi ‘ i vely sroorens.. * Teen plaid shaw! xcepti - er = i 3-ev" ately ij . r es as they carry “Do you think so?” asked Mr. Stephens, as of the guods;-evm the delicavere renderell | C1caco, Feb. 7,The trackof a hurricane |! Mud Cabins—Perpetnal Poverty—Des- pacin abt Sward oF Sones for water or | THE BIRTH OF MASONRY, eer ioate 7 took my leave: “4 Pb James Parton, in erfectly Waterrepellant. A piece of the | {s not more marked than are the streets |’ perate Struggle for Life: bring erate loads of turf to the house for Who Started “Vanity Fair” !—De- | his Historyo Gorleature in Zarper s, did not fight-colored silt was boiled in water twenty | through which a large wooden building re- |. firing. ae Does It Date from the Old Age or nials of Charles G. Le- eeehane the renders were eaqstieds But | minutes to ascedain whether the preparation | contly passed from Fourteenth to Eighteenth |’ ‘These people do work, men, women, and | Christopher Wren? — The Obs} os G. perhaps the readers were satis! with’which it hd been impregnated would ni ” 7 thanos vest Ik + . young persons alike; for, although ‘at this Foundations Again—Are th. lak? Jand’s Claim. I rode up, on the ‘Tribune elevator, and | sti! pe retained 'n its fibres, Lt was unaltered | streets, on Indiana avenue, thence west |'An Utterly Discouraging State of | YON09 Brite Sear, when the labors of tillage | ouncations Aza! e Higher found . | incolor by this freatment,.and retained per- | through Eighteenth toClark street, breaking |; Society. Are not onerous, both young men who have | j)°gresn mucentials or Are They Merge MR. CONGDON. fectly its wate:Tepellant anal ties. apese and crushing its way through the tae, arch: fl on Feturned from. England with their summer ly Or pene Aes facts demonstrae e chemic: out let and old men w! E 3 oe dinteenee at hiaeaovee aad er ay geen. to have leisure at their | _ The drift of opinion, as ascertained by thy The People Who Get Up “‘Puck”—| “Iimew that was a lie about, Leland start. | fx 1 n i he, ‘‘and I wish | excited in the coarse of the treatment of said + ; - 3 r : Keppler’s Career in This Be ety Aa ptint vcard’ Yes, 1 was ou | solutions have vesuited in, producing anew | OF hindrance, the house-mover being sup- |'Hury Cau Tt Bo Otherwise While the Landlords Drain | S¢, hom, may seam, To hove Oe vere and | Hératd in its inquiriesamong Maso Vanity Fat: an outside writer from first | eompound. Moreextended requirements are plied with a permit, which he claimed gave ¢ Practed Work in dig; ing, by farthe largest | to be on the side of th DS, Seems. Country. anty never knew Leland 83 an editor, at | nessary to determine what this new prod him the streets from curb to curband upward Away the Last Dollar? prot rusted work! in digging, by far the ee tobe on* the, side of hose “who. hold all. I saw his contributions from_weel ucts, . . . Chemists and inventors, have | tothe skies. Next to one’s own family in all a : gpade and fork; and: eve: Pnelish farmer ler Gorringe’s discover. An Important Inventio1 ‘A Solution That week, and trembled 2or-theresitt, He on mads strenuous ofr farts ‘to.geottrs # sointion ae Bakes home pleasant ala the, frees ane, Special Correspondence London Times. knows how Irishmen employed by them in me eve ‘when applie shrul ry plan! 5 5 e = Se hae Se ae ena Ti I think | goods, Should Teonfer on them water-re- | for till grown to shade an tractive propor- | CASTLERAE, Roscommon, Jan. 17.—This payand aaa fu ee re ies—whatever they may be—do not establish the existence of speculative Masonry Egypt at the time when the obelisk ‘Was set - fi ‘Id. In fac € 5 Renders Any Oloth Water- foray, ape in we and that killed Vanity | pellant‘voperlies without affecting their | tions. Hence the »g5 destruction in an | rustic market town, plain in buildings, un- i Proof ites ene ee Stand tains Ge fest and hat would be without hour, by he Housomore, under author. pretending in shopfronts, with a couple of inionier tocar asatry of the population Searaar alo aiid Hee i these “And, see here!” he broke out Hi a er il 03 19 obnoxious ordini banks as its best built houses, a comfortable Fo -dshi ‘ivations, ‘ure. is, just say that | senses. Nee with which I am acquainted, | the _ City. unpardonable. |: not their only virtue, Hardships, priv closely, especially if they have Fou, write anything about this, j ofall the tents 1 have read of and with.| ‘The fre ordinance ‘prodfbts the building of | #2, 8 small markethall in which corm and | insufticlent domestie aecommadtion the al the origin of the mystic craft, age woo! are pitched on Saturdays, a public steel- | most total Inck 0: ie comm that Masonry, as, we know it tates: Spectal Correspondence of ‘The Chicago Tribune, hi ‘were the very soul of honor, a I th New Yous, Feb. 6.—I need not tell you the Stephenses eer engagements. If they | which I havvexperimented, accomplish this | wooden buildings within the city, and yet, , ; be derstood by the how much the newspaper personnel of this | couldn't pay promptly, they paid when they | result, excepifr. D, M. Lamb’s; and, when | with consent of two-thirds of the lot-owners |: yard erected in the centre of what serves for | Provision, which will be uni oe 4 ened back only to the revival, so called. city has changed in twenty years; but you | could, 1 received Senate ‘ust Tee dl psimplictty of Oe process AS ppen any block of, grow "| an old! wooden asquare, some oatmeal-mills whose. wheels Se ener eae deseription, do. not | find the real birth of the Order as it fat may be too distant to observe that the change piter the paper sOPRss cability, fromthe most delicate tissues of | the fre ordinance ge yds the repairs of any | 27° siren By: ne sulcke Sowing stream which { necessarily lower morals, though they keep the ornamental degrees, as Mr. Hugh Garg in the type is quite as striking as thatin the | "“<\Winy cannot a comic paper live in this | silks, ‘satins, ind -velvets, to the coarser | wooden building inside the city, if a fire | Supplies the place with water, and close at | down the level of the neople’s taste. ag | er terms them, excepted—to have been af individuals. In the years just before the | country?” I asked. 5 cloths, blanket’ camp-equipage, and, in | shall destroy 51 per cent of its value, and no | hand the grounds and plantations surround- | ly-built tenements which I have visited and Sir Christopher Wren’s.age and ine ater, ‘War, the wits and poets of New York jour- | “Because,” he said, ‘all, the bapers ate fact all “epacrs nt Foods, its value to te fire-insurance gompany will pay more shan ing the mansion of a landowner, is in the heart qwnere hays ee I ET ena ueariehay | drew his attention from the duties of ee nalism were organized into ae ee: Jes oa ae aye aad the read- | ments having milang of ten ner aria OL. fiat par cent of loss) walle the building must | of a huge expanse of order in the arrangement of poor furniture | fice, and after the numbersof the breth et A SORT OF GUILD, ers of our newspapers do not resent it. In | land and sea, canns be computed.” ‘The fire ordinance and that for the removal | 200 aN ere ae COUNTRY. and in the display of plates and jugs and ten had become so far reduced that there wag ‘ou look in some directions over a plain of | services; I meet with civility and respec: danger of the total extinétion of operative without passwords, but with many signs of | England the combination of seriousness and Is the coming boo, to be the Lamb boom? | of wooden buildings clearly are inconsistent, | 3 ¢ ’ - ‘ei not much tolerated... So there they NX . JEROME, and the latter should either be repealed or | intermingled black bog and grass, unlike | ness in the behavior of These peasant, scot Masonry. Then it, was voted that Be pre Tee recognition. Half of them were intemper- | fun is 5; - i fa few acres, greatly modified. If the old buildings were | the fens of Cambridgeshirein being parceled ee of their “wives and. children. | leges of Masonry’ shonld no longer ; ic papers. How- | — ste; almost all of them were jolly good fel- | SUBPON There Puck a THE VOICE OFTHE PEOPLE. | Srdcred out of tne city simits, some satata , dof a song anda story; and many | evel, we,have J him; “Pm THE P. 2 | ordered out of the city limits, some satisfac- | ont by grass banks or stone walls with fewer i i t single apart- | stricted to operative Masons, but that elt east oe nL “Yes.” I said, interrupting * t tion would be had for the damages to trees drains, while towards other points ot the aa my night ond “lay. have thelr Owe should be extended fo men of variouse of them were in the habit of meeting ‘fre going down there,” Who Sucieqg; and pavements incident to their removal. 4 D Neds? s . : in ‘JUSTICE. compass lie undulating stretches'of country | ideas of what is decorous and what is‘ not proved aud initiated into the ona am quently at certain saloons and restaurants ive minutes [was 7 70 oa Eattor of The Chery ? I D s : and ‘testify that here neitherthe im- marked by thelr favor. ‘There were Morti- AT THE OFFICE OF “ PUCK, ; Cxrcaco, Feb. 7.—Will 0 } Ree NER Bri cut up into small inclosures by walls of on : i thi <- | after the Masons became a brotherh K: - oy ot Th ldge Question. luish- 1 y ti . | proper house accommodation nor the wor! bh a ig therhood of mer Thompson (“Doesticks”) Artemus | over on Warren street. The whole establish: ” ie e 2 1 ie bluish-gray limestone, or sometimes of sand- * tof doors | symbolic builders,—men who builded ¥ fh life and thrift, Itoccuples | aquestion for a subscriber. tn the event Fb ie Ese ok ape Onieape. Denies stone. But, with the exceptfon of plantations {ag OF Sits and ee ror a Senee ‘of { brains of men, and not in inanimate {athe Such is the conclusion reached, after ex. ed Cozzens (of “ Sparrawgrass Pa- | ment beams wi 7 : 4 n c ‘ Ward, Fr ( four fioors, and has a latee job-office: for | that the President and Vice-Pisigent of the | Cmtcaco, Feb. 4.—While the bridge ques- very far between, the district is bare of all | ene go a hia ess sh tise Held nacde ta é haustive research, by Mr. Godfrey W. Stein. pers”), Charles G. Leland (‘Hans Breit- | S00 1 United States were assasinater. ‘i tion i i le of Chi | i a printing in colors. a ho would | tion is agitating the people o: cago as al J it jand. I am informed b: Wii a-tt-0 1 Private Miles O’Reills22), R | proprietor, within the counter; “I wantto | the House of Representatives? Pe parison of ideas upon the subject should be | pore than half gap, which. appear on some pablianty of Roscommon and Bayo, inclas: with tho- compliments of a Breemeanerad has read with no little profit the discussion, H. Newell (“Orpheus ©. Kerr”), Charles | interview you.” : 5 Tuomas L. Mores, | made, in order that from the different plans | 4¢ tie banks may be entitled to the name. | } i i se with Dawson Shanley, George Arnold, Stedman, He B Skipped out and ‘introduced me tothe [The President of the Senate.) presented one can be perfected and put in | pron some pole -of view so subdivided the Can ane omulion % that has been evoked by the recent discoye “Stoddard, the Stephens brothers, Frank | P¥\'yoes’ Puck “prosper?” I asked him : . operation that will be broad enough to allow | i, the surface into. diminutive fields ARE AS WELL CONDUCTED eries in Egypt, ‘ iat apt foned e A Batch of Questions. the commerce of the city to be properly fi ior i , | ,diany readers will recall an interview, - Wood, and others who might be mentioned. | pluntly. "To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune * that more of stone wail than actual land | as their appearance and behavior indicate: | published in the Herald, wherein Mr. Steins ‘The favorit restaurant was Pfaff’s, up Broad- | _ “Does it?” he repeated, Taughing merrily. the Editor o: 1 ) handled, and at the same time accommodate | fills the eye. In some cases the | Notwithstanding the presence of 2 consider- js ner tossed anything but poder ane “It does! Two years ago the American | Cmicaco, Feb. 4.—Will you say (1) Wot | the demands of intramural transit far better | fields are cumbered with big heaps or { able number. a houses in Castlerea for the | more modern and higher degrees—re if the - rather stacks of stones, indicating the toil | sale of drink,-mainly Irish whisky, the grees, he styles them—of Masonry. fe : way -neer Houston street, Bnd perhaps Pee ee only 4,000 opi 4 and the German | was the surname of George IIL, King of 'a- | than at present. . those of the above-named who met there | pcx circulated 10,000. e bs by which the soil has been cleared for cult- | amount of intoxication is alleged to be much | red the brethren of the ornamental degrees es, ‘Now the German ie te G rx ee most seldom or never are the ones who are | puck has only about 12,000, butthe American ena ee) kgiaibe dt eee oer ener at.| q,2tmust be evident fo ‘all acquainted with ivation. Poor grass, for the most part, oc- | below that ‘observed in English A - a __ Enel rural st x same family name? (3) Also what is the su.! the business of Chicago that some plan must cupies the curtete with a minor Pe towns of similar size; it is only at pe most ae ne aad eae tl eee now alive aad active in shrrent [erates ? ue uis< shall tell yon ?—35,000." name of the present Prince of Wales? (4) pe adopted to relieve the press di "The men J have mentioned were the “ young “You are a German ? ni je adopted very soon to reliev: pressure, | of the prevailing black soil broken up for | fairs or festivals, sometimes at weddin; ‘f init men” of that day; half of them are now | _ “Ya!” he said; “but 1 yrag with Bran ita a the ele aad aes or fae be: or all branches of traffic will be terribly de- | arable, to bear potatoes in lazy beds, Mate that feasting and dancing occasionally end in mame and anidiate ol ne agent te pay the dead. Leslie fifteen years. I did editorial wor! Ks Ran Ei jayed. With the opening of spring will begin ss seeds, and rarely plots of turnips. | drunken turbulence. Otherwise the people gin. in the brains of some men who desired to i and had charge of the German department. oduced? jch an improvement in every direction as | Rushes, stems of weeds which have been | are most quiet and peaceful; anda social evil | make trade for_regalia-makers. Naturale city has never experienced before, I } left to seed, and evidences of slovenly treat- | which is the disgrace of some seaport, bar- | 4 oe 4 [aa My plan would be: ment appear in the pasture land, while the | rack, and other large towns has no existence ihe Fender looks into Mr. Btelnbrenner'sbod rst, abolish entirely river traffic for all | arable is foul with grass and weeds. Oc-| here. Withall sympathy for the good datt, that he gavein the Herald, but noth ot iti a in New Fark at tin present day. Wer tao? think: 1. Our method is a Tea exrauch beat id pass under the | casionally a decentlooking farm ie who live such placid and VE MOREHEGULAT: LIVES Well, two, 21, Qur im muzzled Dogs. such boats as-could pass under the } casionally a decent-loo m-house, two | ple who live such placid and apparent ci Ens than aid the a FOMAgTOr OSB of twentyyears | Original. We co tot try lowaite Hike is uetiels To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune. bres, have the large Shipping aceommo- | stories ish, with slated root, may Be in | uninteresting lives in isolated tuations, one Ate Hinds TQecorous Kistorical ae MS eH or make up like Punch. ur great secre Cc Feb. 7.—We understand that ‘with commodious outside dockage, | sight, accompanied by sheds represen a | must lament the almost complete absence of th 1 hi y of Mi: i There are stil: “Bohemians” of the] is Keppler. If Keppler should die, I don’t HICAGO, Fel G 6 and ‘ 7 upon the real history of Masonry, and does ago. J I eppler. ‘ppl there isan ordinance prohibiting dogs from | twe saystem of lighterage established be- | farmstead. ° ‘This is more particularly to the | gardening, of anything pretty in their homes, | not even mention the hi her,—well, . th worst type, living fron day to day, borrow- | know what we should do. 2 is dina Hi 1g the pa yur elevators and inside docks with | east and north, approaching some ‘of the | suchas pictures on the walls of their rooms, | taney degrees. ‘The author” says bat ing money everywhex, irregular in habit, | ,, 200d BETTER SER Leer i & running at large unmuzzled, still every day the cxtde harbor. ‘This would allow all of | largest pra farms of Roscommon, But | or even the humble chimney ornaments | j¢"Qiid y most Masons ‘who fy Pll go and find him,” and he si ou! brings news of some new case of hydropho- | Drecchy ive river dockage to be used as at | generally, and almost everywhere to the west | which are seen in the cottages of all English | spent time over their books: “ ‘Velled ie pre: ‘h no change. and northwest, extending for very many Inborers, and the nearly total want of books mystery, interwoven with idle fables and ical literature. In an English coun- } fantastic traditions, not infrequently pure I hoy it will mt hurt anybody’s feelings if | “hat is the secret of your success with | [(1) Guelph, (2) Yes. (3) Wettin. (4) I sar that the mos: prominent young writers | Pue’, when all humorous papers by Ameri- | No. (5) Less than a thousand years ago.] e living nowhere in paticular, creatures of | * 7,8? then Keppl al - rhe 1 g ppler came along by the door, | ;; r a W! to kn hy thi moods, brilliant and. ixesponsible. Irwin | and my hail brought himin. bia. What we want low 3s, why this |" Seconds wid ni i fe + d ae Ht i o new bridge—and change | milesinto the great County of Mayo and | or perio: Trussell, the dialect-poet otScribner’s, was a |“ Twant to sketch you,” said L i ordinance is not enforced. wi solieemien all old one soon as possible—unless wide | partly in Galway, the fandaea eis dotted in- tryt town of more than a thousand inhabit- | posely distorted by deception and fi fair specimen of these; Fichard Raelf was Very well,” he retorted; “‘I will sit here | patrolling the streets continually, it seems as | enoug! ‘oyeommodate tro car-tracks two terminably with white-walled and straw- | ants, like Castlerea, there is at least one | fr is only of late years that the hist ood, anotic: J could mentién tyo or three others | #8 you shall draw me. i; Rapplet if they ought to find time to clear the city of nee thet ‘and two walks for foot-passen- | thatched cottages and ~ bookseller supplying’ daily and weekiy news- | \;osonry has gained a sure foundation tad. whe ate yet alive. Bubtake a: majority of i draw you out, Joseph Keppler. You | ese pests. It is a matter which demands rs, in tat \y preventing the delay caused ou canms, ‘papers, magazines, heralds, journals, illus-| . ientific and historical basis, thr 4 y hs were born——? immediate attention, as any one is in danger | PY Crowding *} teams into the car-tracks a trated and non-illustrated Dublications and } Sun ‘i i _ =f ‘ough, the those who are doing, the best work,—Alden || “J was. In Vienna,” he shortly added. | Of being bitten by one of these curs; and | When crossing ® bridges. This, it appears | Sometimes clustering a few together, but | there are entertainments in some public room | *titical and impartial researches of zealous of the Times, J. Bratidér Matthéws.-Prentice | “I became. a comic actor. Then a comic since it has been shown that a dog need not to me, will es great improvement ‘over commonly scattered at intervals uf a quarter many times during, at dny rate, the winter and unprejudiced brethren. Yet, even at : Siuord David 16 Ponta (rc tei | atse Easy, some non ihe Via | Beau fo cause iutraniotia ty epic, | Meera TON Ng and accnmmotaie tas | ogc on mush i, ibe dvelings Of | Zon. But hee ies Se pee pt ae vce -) funny paper, Fit ! cl i sines o i eM com y ‘aweétt, Frank Saltus,-) fu: tae este % roper mean’ should at once be taken to ri ure. Yours, ete 208 8 long time in gig fut power been suddenly roped apart Peng NO PRINTER OR BOOKSELLER}; of the fraternity. In many instances- Ma- wright”), Eda ap Aaa " te Joel Bentom,, A. C. Wheeler (“Ny Crin- | e507 - jockadoodiedoo!” the rooster | he city of this nuisance, Every doz not tered with regularity over the face of the | no magazines are waited forby young people | sonic authors, blinded by foolish vanity an ‘ kle.” 10W editor of the Star, by-the-way), ioe this, I ob: properly secured should be killed. Hoping Stre bleak vee ‘Tinumerable spots occur | week eter week for continuations of serial | by a desire to prove the vast antiquity ee ad ‘ etorge Edgar Montgomery (dramatic critic ie he was telling me this, I observed, | this will call the attention of the proper au- eaning. Z floors of bog beside inky drains and pools, on | stories; books. do not enliven. the restin institution, have strenuously combated the of the Times and poetatiange), K. K. Mun. | septienaiesen ce petore, that he had an ex | thorities to the above-mentioned ordinance, 1 | iv ih Aer Oe Ohlago Tribune. the brink of which are piled black and brown | hours of the industrious adults or the ehif: | averment ‘that the fraternity was detived Kittrick, Rossiter Jolinson, Bunner,—these | hair, dark mustaches, seven inches long, | “™™%!™ aay eed f the Ci | the published pro- | clamps of dried peat for fuel. For itis char- | dren, who have now the vast advantage of | from.the operative Masons, or. have allowed eee rE 5 x aces x ‘ are nearly all bet ees | Waxed to anawl like those of Franz Joseph, |- Does Religion Pay? ceedings of the City Ctncil, among the esti- | acteristic of this part of the country that the | the near-at-hand national schools. If any | themselves to be deceived andled intoerror y all between 20 and 35; and they | onda narn ti ‘i imperial. covering ae Chicago mates submitted by the-ontrolter and heads | bog, instead of stretching for thousands of | papers are read they are only a few of an | by the peculiar symbolic representations and are all, as far as I remember, young men 6f | his chin. OW cones. Sha INDRA) Coverms 0 ths Patton of Tha: Ces gleikad of the different departm.t, of th . ¢ | ores together, as in many other localities, is | ultra-national and inflammatory character, | ceremonies of our present rituals‘and their : 00d habits, who have homes and live reg- | “then did this Br Cmicaco, Feb. 7%—I wish to ask yous | o¢ money that will bo Be sog pe one | distributed with considerable equality in the | and no local or strolling talent gives concerts | often’ striking resemblance to those of tha * ular lives. The new journalism is better in | Kep lea you come to country, Mr. | question, and, without taking up your time ‘unfeipal hine ‘the ‘nired to run our | qivision of parishes common. to ‘Trelamk or entertainments. ancient mysteries. . . . LetFreemasons, this respect than the old let us rejoice. Te i869. I went steaight to St Louis, | in useless excuses as to “having never be- | jpuucipa, machine img year, the | known as “townlands,” a townland embrac- | Lhave much to say respectin the agricult- | then, give up their vain boastines, which! * Thave been led to these refl “ qhered had frien eat tO ee eeued | fore written an editor,” etc., will at once to | e@ "For street cleaning repairs, 100 to 200 acres, usually, but not invaria- | ure practiced by the small Irish tenantry, its | norance has foisted into the Order, and re - ave been. ese reflections by the | } ay ain xe et aay $147,000,” which appears in“, . | ably, constituting an estate or the unbroken | position and prospects: but something more. linquish a fabulous antiquity rather than reception given t in a theatre,—as a comic actor at the Apollo. |} my work. In prayer-meeting a few evenings tah modest esti: u S : 13 Hh eee pen By-and-by Twas persuaded to become man- | since the discussion was as to wiether we | @At9 of the Commissioner of Libtie Works. tase pecsoe tard anes, Eee ee area reat ie a master tee te omitiae | Sagiiies common sense into a nate s : : ese_peasan wel planted around | good times it is a mystery how these ‘Having thus crammed his views into a nut suggests the query whether t, reputation | the fringes of the bog, procure all their house | persevering and. praiseworthy as they are, shell Mr. Steinbrenner goes on to prove their CHARLES G. LELAND, ager of the Washington Garden Theatre. Lost Es i i theother evening, by one of our most cele- | my moncy, and ‘ busted’—I think you call ik ligion paid.- One man said that Bob: Inger that Chi : is ones, and - : y soll was once an aspirant to the chair of Illi- hicago bas obtained ofsa, the | firing for warmth and for cooking their own | manage to subsist. But *hey do; and thou- | correctness, eri brated clubs, toinark his return from Eu- Bumy extremity then went: to au eaten, nois wherein the Governor rested, and would | dirtiest streetsof any city in thisoavy cies and heir pigs’ food by labor in dlirging wed sands’ of thrifty parenw seve money while tosay that retgit iden OY = gape howeret: Tope, where he has spent several years. I trate acomic paper, Det Vonnee (the Star- | Surely have occupied it had not the Commit- | country is well founded. An exatsation of | Catrying, and they also graze the bog with | bringing up healthy, rovust children upon | of Masonry with heathen antiquity in gen- Was astounded the next morning to read, in Chamber). After 4 year we could not agree, tee on its way. to Vashington been told by a | that subject develops the followindacts in.| #58¢S and goats, and, where the grassy and | farms ofsixtotenstatuteacres, andevenupon | eral is in reality nothing but an idle fancy,” Baptist clergyman, who happened to -be on | regard to other cities as well as our wn that xushy: surance’ is Hot too treacherou! with sul spmalicr holdings. ae se alst chiefly ans that all ctorts fg Eeace back tha history. cows or other cattle." Sometimes the bog is | consi , oatmeal, Indian corn, | of Masonry e-enrly ages have most stg- his speech: “TI-started Vanity Fatr- with | and, although the circulation wassteadily in= ry A Charles Browne (Artemus Ward) as an as- | creasing, 1 left. It “busted 1 think you | te same cat with these electoral ones, that | are interesting reading, if not actvitable le , eistauts and Trewmembur iow I used to call it. ‘Then started Puck, naughty. Bob was an infidel! There and | showing in the direction of cleanlinuy for | 9Pen as a common; but some proprietors, as, | meal, wheaten bread, potatoes, and other | nally failed.” He finds in the darkest and eeu and Eres ber s sug nee anise then they cast Bob out of their ranks. Is | our own municipality: # for example, Viscount Dillon, who holds §$,- | vegetables; on the smallest pit, with meat | most troubled period of the Middle Ages Rest the subjects to him, and how he used to o . “IS. ,, | thistrue? By answering this you will not |. 1n Boston, with 70 miles of pavement anyeo9 | 000 acres in Mayo, have with infinit trouble | only on high days and holidays, and on the | secret societies of men associated for pur- write out the series of articles which have I had forgotten that part of Puck’s | only confer a favor but settlo a dispute that | miles of mkcadam, the principal streets” and at great expense twenty or thirty acre holdings bacon orfowls | poses of either offense or defense, not only since become so widely known. The Revue | Cateet,” Lsaid. . has become almost unbearable. swept every morning before 8 o'clock, all othts | apPoRTiONI® THE BOGS AMONG THE Front | 00 Sundays, the people satisfy their ideas of | against enemies from without, but also des Mondes recently gave a detailed account Suse fan it twa years eed ar one: AX Oxp Sunscrimen. | byice a week, the macadam once a Week, aij 'AGERS, what tolerable breakfasts, dinners, and sup- |, against those within, and that these - efforts of the manner in which [brought out Arte- | With a few copiesin English. I didn't get | crete 1s no truth whatever in the state- | "\/Puiindelpnia, wich GW miles of pavement;| and by arrangement with thetenants allotted | Pe*s Should be. With prere Ldisested, - mialn|y onainst. the: gas z eae ci 0) g' ment.] the ‘principal ‘th; them rtional sh: f d and inf A SIMPLICITY OF WANTS landed proprietors; and among thesesecretso- mus Ward, in which by far too much credit along. well with my partner, and I left. And Principal joroughfares are cleaned six} hem proportional shares of goot ane e - = , rs My ra it busted SE think you call 2? times a week, and the secondary streets three. rior bog, now partitioned by grass banks,-| in household fittings, in dress and decora- | Cieties he includes the German stone masons, was given to me and too little to him. igus . : 7 ‘The Naval Academy. times a weels/and the whole thoroughly cleansed ywith the little farms in lengths abut- | tion, almost conformable tothe philosophy of | Whose. government and forms.seem.to have Ihad.no sort of doubt that the Revue des | «. Zee, that s,the classic of it,” I answered; To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune, once a week. {ing upon the. public_highways Sr ase {Diogenes buosell; they are abIG bo. Deeee been largely copied by the modern speculative Deux Mondes gave him too much credit, for | "Then Tame here and went into Frank | _ CuIcaGo, Feb. 7.—Can you inform me as to | aft New Yorks, with 250 miles of pavement, the | ads — made for the purpose. ‘To | necessaries and some comforts; and on the | Masons. The German operative Masons, the iknow very well that Leland did not start | Leslie’s_establishment. I was there three | the wecessary qualifications for admission to | three times a week, and her otter sttucts once | {ersect the country with a _ sufficient | extremely small occupations this livelihood puihor says, ‘had a personal. Knowledge of Vanity Fair by a good deal, and had Jess to | years. I did some work foremost of his | the Naval Academy at Annapolis, the min- | a week. % once | nukber of - good hard roads to | is rendered possible by the earnings obtained | the nature of the Church, and swell knew the do with itthan half-a-dozen oth { | Papers at different times. | I finally asked for-| imum of age, etc.? ¥ In London, with 1,410% miles of payement, | T€8*.the myriads of homesteads would | in annual pilgrimages to England. It except | @eseneracy of the clergy. .'. . | They had ad ae and alisabed ns ta | More salary, and, not getting it, left, And | Also, ‘how the appointments are appor- | 2VeXY Principal street is swept once in twenty- | COSt great part of the value of an estate; | the agricultural day laborers, who are acoin- | learned to practice toleration, and thelr lod dropped across Broadway, and climbed up to | Schwarzmann aud I ‘started the German | tioned’amone the Strics the best cna e ep | four hours, ‘secondary streets three times a | 27d thtapproach to an immense number of | paratively small class here, ‘Their living | became a sure place of refuge for those who Wiere HL. Stephens still plies his facile | Puck, five years azo, and, shortly aiterwards, | making an veplicctee aid ay one deo | Week all others at least twice. the farns is by a rough way of ruts, grass, | upon a wage of one shilling to two shillings | Were persecuted for the sake of opinion by & Dens and penctl,“recorutzed pales of the | the English gdition. ' O yes, I have a family, mation ‘you ay have’ ‘at hand. ee rope a els Hen ot pavement Uke En - ates called a 7 bobreen.” ‘whichiin. the | and thres penes.a day, end nothing found by reneous Reon mn dealt au a ow E reat | sts of this country, wi i fi reed. nglis! re the employ i ce umph ofthe Reformation dealt a severe bi ; Did Mr, Leland start Vanity Fair?” 1 PCE Roo ena £8 Gall ‘oa Bake APPLICANT. tn Manchester, with 500 miles of pravement, { always Wwide an oud Be a drove, but here not thom ahve won thos Hila ore shan ‘keep to thé Fraternity of German Steinmetzen. asked him,’ as he shoved his Bristol board | ney — m {The applicant must be 15 and not over 18 ee Frinotnny streets ponds, and dhorvughfares, Indeed, you tea getatmany of thefarmsonly | about,—made of milk and Indian corn-meal, | N° More churches were now erected, and. 8 ads and pated Ms tripod over to me, * H.C. BUNSER, sete of age; must be sound physically, | day, secondary streets trige a week all hoes by @ bridle. Fa. ora pathway. Gates, in- | the latter sometimes dried into acake. The pullders were thrown hee oF emplo} ae "said ie "9 ~ . and pass examination. in the rudii twice, are not always items for repair, little farmers here cannot a ‘owing the operative Masons down ‘Rory A aespin Are Bane? the editor, whom I hadn’t seen for months. Fs 2 ‘Engl i ihe rudimentary ep oeicia “ih 1876, with 270 miles of streets, paid yery numerous caeas onirnnces aaa pitas Bu cent wages to men -cunnoy afford to pay de- 1389, the author quotes English. ordinances : He is a young fellow,—born in 1855,—-unmar- | branches of English education; there is one + Pi throueh ett generations | thar hint ‘incipal sahgual, confidentially, “ desperate ? was | ried, witha fresh boyish face, bright gray | appointee for each Congressional District. for Siregt Sleaning sacinding removal erates Banke or breaks in’ fue sumbledown ee been bred to do little work upon inadequate objects of the Magne in eertea at thelt wi is vee it i iste 4 » $283,000, oY» Gi 4 . 3 er ore leuse eye, short curly hair and side whiskers, and | Appointments now are generally made upon | This is net, atter deducting $16,000 received from | many of the plot fields emaining perpetually But the exceptional year of disastrous sea- | Ch&Pters and congregations, was an oppose i tion to the laws of the realm, and for the put “Wave you seen Leland’s 5) eh 2 a pensive, persevering Iay-out of a mustache. “Yes, Lhave: and you will please say for | iio wene eye rins lay-out of a ny { | competitive examination by members of Con- | *#es of garbage. 5 walled round, atemporaty breach beingmade | sons has brought a crisis in the affairs of the f me that Charles G. Feland isa liar with a big | in the ‘tnlddie ike saiiue Geesar a eed gress, there being so many young men desir- saeladelphin, wita, 600 of ist sae pibeah ote Alien neceesaty for ete a cart to fetch formers; An crisis will soon reach a Brose Ee ene. $3 anon E me mse bie es! Gait Thal Vanity gate serie L | life in a merchant's office down-to’ ‘He | ing to enter this branch of the service, as | ing, including remaval of ashes and garbage, In vain you look for speciinen: of th d- Genre di te th Poor yield of Potatoes was sons he ‘finds. tp nave bean of one and the truel started Vantty Puir, in comuection | onyaike them, and they didn’t like him. | well as the military through West Point, | Sify 9,°gtep for ths year, at the same ratio, of | ranewiar straw-yard with surrounding busid: | eases s further loss of th of one-half by dis’ | Same fraternity, ‘Thelr main auierence be ". le did a little reporting on the TWorld, | Write to the C 000, or $550 per zalle. i rhich di: eet eave: lie then er loss of the crop was sutfered | ing t ship,—the- ‘o the Congressman from your dis- | " Now York, with 29) miles of payement, spent | ings which distinguishes most Englishfanms. | by the tenants being unuble in the brief in- Bg only in the’ fen OF apprenticeship, ae ish statutes requiring seven an with my brothers. We all had a little money, | worked on the Arcadian, and has Te ly and we Kk S35, pear = > fs i My cently | trict, and h Ut give in 1877 for street-cle: x Lusi g -. | Except on the few large holdi! e re + managing editors and Twas the: pimelpal | Seer egaazing, and four or ive plays . eat, ‘ S000 per nile, a into thirty-nine parishes, | JONG the small thatched houses potatoes and save their peat too; the oats | ,, 12 thegreat lezisiative reformsthat marked caticaturist, and in charge of its art. Frank | their first appearance. Among these may Assistance for the Needy. each of which conducts ts own coavencing and | <1 OR HOVELS, aye not tured gut well; 6 priée cf cows | Te ee oe oS oe eaeiening of and calves came down, and the consequence 8 ae “The Tower of Babel,” adapt- To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune. street-cleaning. It would be impossible to give | Which are here honored with the designation is that great numbers'are running short of | Masonry as itexists. Hesays: J. Thompson put in some money, too. He is | be mention \eces* now in Cincinnati, connected with the Zo- | ed from “ Fourchambault.” Cuicaco, Feb. 7.—I wi r: returns from I. Taking ti is of barns, cow-lou: — i wlogical Gardens. Frank Wood was the | wih very" little, oulslde assietance “ar | Kindshearted. people-tntough ee toner, | Goptse, Hanover squire, one of the most cen: | Joined on to the farmers dyeiingserey, | Means and Hire aellectaal ‘revolution musi. ig) your paper in | tral and important, as an example, we find that | with manure heaped just outside the doors. SHORT OF A STORE OF Foon, sarily hays exoretsed at important a * ta ternity 01 asons, and wt first working editor, under my brother Will- | Valentine, aclever gentleman in the office ‘ami i ‘Th ian, AVith him was a Dright staff, consisting | a 4 guclevel Heman office, | behalf of a family out in Western Nebraska. | it comprises forty-two miles -of streets. e " e x S ORG | sO Peon ad ddl | Hote asa, wife, wnt ve enturen | erage eett sea ipa stag ona | Haiti his ekeemat Oyeace | gta dn ond tone they showta | doubt ia pon to cent wis by a mation from an of Clapp, Shanley, FitzJames O’Brien, work, Bunner has a good deal of George Arnold, and Shepard.” Nersatility, industry, and viveeity, and the | Ue isawounded Union soldier who pre- | fiat isoamteqof from, tures to Aye miles | ment winich the mil this i “ A 5 i —i vi " i ie mildness of the climate ren- | should vi i itari a tees poe these ore dead le 8 soul of: a Poet. pie ‘has tone a good deal in emptied. some Jand out there, but finds it very 2,08 per groin, er £5200 pold Taking the erg bossible, though fhe: loss he the meat- | from ne pipnted in one Sruet, awonths universal, sp eculative, bumanttarian soe “ ‘ , I be ~ vay c the Americans, | hard to get along, and can ba: is | Stine averfke for the whole city. —which is cor~ papility of the country from this | tenants, of who % it s had the i ; ‘. : ; ‘ ‘ ey fami 3 j ta — ith hay, an i 2 ° i insti: tell'you confidentially. They wanted to run | triolet, chant royal, ete. Here, for instance, days Pus rE Of, hel " end’ have seer bearer aulatbs $1,774,500, or, in round numbers, $1,258 are. not An very. first-class “condition in the Eee a4 He au core ttes mie hat wos forclen tothe a. riginal ed spring when sold as yearlings to the large | these. Other small tenan ry are on the Jarze | societies at an earlier period To this elt the paperon Bohemian principles, and we | Imight give you a specimen of one of these: and have helped them heretofore. V Ha Liverpool, with her 255 miles of pavement, f rs. :T the ori: ID What grazing farmers. : The occupiers could make | estates of the O’Conor Don, M. P., Lord De | et ti we may, perhaps, ascribe enmstance a ib 3° DS, ‘es that wouldn’t have it. They threatened to re- 7 volt. We made a Gniek offer to R. H. Stod- Ag Hrench posts sang ‘Bator’ wish is to collect a supply of cast-off cloth- { paid for strect-cloaning in 1876, including the od use of catile-sheds and food-houses if | Frey dard and told him to be ready; and one day ashonotenons dane iG ing (either ladies’ or gents’) and some gro- emptying and cleansing of ali the privies of the |- ey had them in fact, improved heseses, i ¥ reyne, Mr. Sandford, und ‘other ‘landlords. in of certain symbols and ceremoni the old staff struck, stepped out on the side. filtrate rhyme edems to hang, Pep ee neh aul! add to them and ship then at | Wich sin Nes York distor trom ane aaa | i Toot Leeding and mahuremaking™thevery | much of the whence hee ea eee | Have MO connection “whatever with the old walk, ant us_ throu: app, their é the changeless “ Bang! bang!" ) % ‘s lel, at | tional to the cost of street-cleaning,—the sum of | basis of a-proper agriculture—is prevented | ties that whi Pee | Talernity of operative Masons.” n leader, that they wouldn't write another From the gun of the gunner; __ the Relief and Aid Society, No. 53 La Salle | {2 stret s a -is prevent ies that while probably half will be able to As arule ‘a yho are, found at line unless they could tun the thaching. Ta As French poots sang de 3 street, where such articles éan be left in his ees Os. dd. or $320,0% in gold, equivalent to by! fis plate apsence of ny Teseonable maintain themselves till summeremployment | salaried desk the ofiees of the Order are ° in bor ie method of Bunner. care, br, if a posial-card ts sent to me, I will sqcggnenester, with 0 iles of pavement, paid | puzzle how the tenants on hundreds of farms | called * snuee Ser ba also what is | inclined to reticence. ‘They seek no contro. WE HAD STODDARD IN CLAPP'S FLACE, | ugit not to eloce thle letier ornout tell- | Lhope to, get liberal response frou tha | S86 pet mallee ees SE A $1209, oF jmanage to shelter their live stock, including | bank, proba) ira tid, (some say ‘mote, oF | ecprece thet ee Ce 4 ae ne Fs vat | 1) a p , e active, well-fed ass, wl x e opinions upon eithe! Bu SSanan snd’ Charles Te Congo] ing you of a new invention here swhicliseems Hing ees Mo eat foe camene Food fn menicage has aboutninety-five miles of pave- pulls their little cart to market “with produce by extraneous held ae feast’ aepeorted Ra Cegndele ae antiguty of permit ime that 7 ‘ vr ome branches of in- |- 7 rs nity Wi Q which is susceptible of regular period- | or turf for sale. Many of the h - abl: ituti pic that has come to be up! Wet Tals Ame He Mec ieremid dustry, and greatly promote the comfort and | ®t@ in need of help, AN Otp Crrzey. | ical cleaning, and which last year were swept | ably one room high, are consimmcted aah ay ‘the. aul seston now | among Masons “since the agnounee Cleveland Plaindealcr for $10 a week, and health of the human race. Iattended an ex- {- A Plen for the «© 9 and cleaned from four times 2 month in the | stone walls and roofs thatched with straw. approaching others, pa je arty in they, FP Sa SI DN Hc gr doing all those funny sketches, ‘We offered | Hibition of it by the inventor last evening, at Ps 2 for the “ Masher. business centre of the city and the principal | with mortar floors, and diminutive glass | tract of count: about Ballyh amis. Chace, | of Jleutenant Commander Gorringe’s vai him Si5a_ week, and he jumped on to the | MS Doarding-house, 41 West Sixteenth street. fo the Editor of The Chicago Tribune, thoroughfares, to once 4 month on second- | windows, without opening casements.” In | morris, and Swineterd! © mich feet Clare- | covery. All," however, — say, Wal next train and came. By-the-way, 1 | ©*Secretary McCullough and twenty or thir- | | Catcaco, Feb. 3—“ Constant Reader,” in | t¥ and once during the season in other | yast numbers of cases the walls of agricultural rooke! + for te md a sort | until fhe stones | that upheld, ie police, tat the Plaindeater has ‘had | Mesgnized bs. your readers, were grecent | Toe, wumauRes complains bitterly becanse | for which the ety pint the santeastors te al ARE OF MUD; miles together, isso giievous as tobe" | be able ie deraiae tie saat a i: ‘i ‘3 I i ity paid ract + e le to determine for oursel e cgheek, to present his desk | to | The invention 3s 2 colorless solution, which | May well-dressed men stand at the entrance | about $20,000, arancage of Se25 per mile. bus he tater lors xe by no pines $0 destitute ‘6 hee ree axe AERAsTSG Henry C. Banks and others_“some OE eo a 5 perience of the great 5 cannot be published beca' the Ohio Historical Society, or Cleveland i eh i to Afusic-Hall, the | ety renders all fabrics to which itis applied ab- | Alusic-Hall, at the close of Prof. Swing’s | _ We have cheerful taxpayers, honest money 3 Fe yee eee Te eine, kallant. solutely water-proof. It does not change | Services, like the “Mashers” or “Matinee | in the treasury, Honestatiivials, and the “best | 18 a good roof, a ponnd floor, and a chimney | famine and fever. Like scenes of dire dis- | Rot consent—say of Mr. Steinbrenner’s col shalllever write on it’. Pram which T judge the appearance of cloth in the least, either | Brigade” at the theatres, “staring ladies | Yor Chicago ever had,” but, notwithstand- “howe + ae, out the smoke. Thave been in | tress, of wholesale deathis by starvation, per- | clusions that, as he is a gentleman of great that the proprietors who paid him $10 aweek | it Welght, texture, or Iustre; and it is | out of countenance as they leave the hall.” ing all these goodies, every man, woman, and | OUS0s Bayne a spaits root sufficiently lofty | haps of rebellious violence, are certain and |.eudition in a Masonic sense, they have great mere fala tat they mle be induced to | MBGSNE tl, by fase euch Sell oF | Thats tw tall substance of te complains, | uasijuce™ pevter, weenewer atc bing | 9 Ane aia nesrement ais with | ety cies at hand unless prompt asitance | ggplnic is coclunons although Ot i yer—| a to the 5 : loor locomotion, is compelle ‘or the hunery. i i jiffer im a allezed discoy ag Toayeepromenme However—what | Process and what has not 1 saw water | ANGIt Isavery weak one. Who is stared | either wade through mud or choke withairt, [700m for, sctting | milk,’ though the | in the district 1 fear thar celle! tyremeres | under the obelisk. Mee William S. Pater p incipat dairy operations are conducted | ment on public works will in some cases | S0n, of whom Masons speak as high author was I saying?” a ZI “Where ” . | poured upon broadcloth, silk dresses, velvets, | ut of countenance? Is it ‘Constant | the condition of our streets being determined be quired? "os Leland all this time?” I in- | jnces, ostrich-feathers, leather, without wet. | Reader”? Certainly not, for she item eh cae nines instead of by = Judleloys nse are nage IA avaal ts ome eats guustamoes come ge the seh iby, Hold thas the Masonte Order Is 2 eres o¢ e Means at the disposal of the officers } jonsed together, though they exist. ‘Nobody rtant andortaei eee eet abort ini fe area rae Mens ciehteenth a “Qyes! About this time we sent for ting them,—for it rolled off, or rather juinped-| doubtedly an old maid, whom no 1a | 2 lands and heeane a sent for Le- | of tike water from a red-hot stove. When t era one would | charged with that duty. 3 superseded Wood Sri illad elphis and | poured upon cloth thus treated, water forms earn the second time for beauty? sake! Is | ‘The attempt to bores. two-inch auger-hole Reels the) lntrusion, of the well-fed, wellbe- | Bor Teclamation, : wasteland culture, stob- | century, and Mr. Banks agrees with nim 6 with us six or eight months: but his wong into little flobules, and Tolls off as quickly as female pi iared ei people, male and | with a gimlet always fails. The cleaning of bevel 2 one his x each eal ins devold of any | land embanking, harbors and piers for fishery | these two points, but has no. doubt that the wasn’t up to’ the ‘Hans Breitman? level, by | Possible, lea no moisture whatever. |.jy not They are es cutis le? Certain- | our streets but oncea week does not secure tiation eine tke ine ures for lightand ven- }-and other shipping, the ‘cultivation of ‘river | Stones that are coming to New york st : astin six days o! o 8 - i “rail. im- | afrective + <ho. art A DREARY LOT OF WASH Te does not sender fabries fireproof or | Mother, 2 few grandfathers and grand- | or tweilty-se ont or the shanty days of cach | CVeWateriqg smoke of the peat ‘fire. One | out neglected. locating. ayer ORenInE | Eine beine ay cloubte ale, Basks and others | y single-roonted house, without any window, | men who cannot be lodged far fon ane say in general terms, without pointing oot for the inside; but it didn’t seem to be either " ;. | Mothers, and is inclined to be respectful t 5 y grease-proof; but it isrepresented as mak- | Oircuen’ Is it the Drescher they: ue ta to month. In addition to the pride we should | 775.0 to have been-newly lime-whited.in- | homes it hasbeen Propose! to make the earth- | individuals, that, those. who sneer at fish, flesh, or fowl, and we got rid of him,— | ing fabrics moth-proof. It absolutely have in maki r to visito! Banc rary OF fowl and we got rid of im — for? No, they. have just heard enought | the health of she cools enkos it the pore | Side, the floor washed clean, and the moder. | works f ‘ aa ither SETS ALL COLORS, of him. Is it the everlasting horde of mount. ante of the. parent te Tae ate stock of furniture and of cooking and to wides ant eo par henley, and -digtppotutad in thelr Seasonic ambiion or with William was the occasion of it Then ithi i and cloth that has been treated with it can be | homely, common place, and unpretentious | larger and Tespectable appropriation. for that | ‘able utensils in a trim, evidently the pride | But apprehend thet before much effectual | are not well versed in Masonic pe opetly Charles Dawson Shanley came in, and stood by us till the 7 |, Washed the same as before, and does not in people, male and female, whom noone would | sort ft , vi t wit Sthose merry children wei vorke is kind i i insi “What killed Vanity Fair ?” 1 asked. any way alter in appearance. I saw-a silk | look at twice, or. stare’ at. © ild | Sort of work, such a one as willcomport with | Of the housewile, whose by re | (ork of this kind is really in hand clamorous | Mrv Banks insists that the Order prope “The Wart think,” heanswered. “Other | Lat that had been worn through ‘all the rain | sake? No. Is it the male portigner thoes. fers metropolitan pretensions in other mat- fnent Sometines seen is ihe’ provision ofa rellet to starving areas aoe means Haus: a elm ey papers doubled thelr price, and the public | 224 snow storms of the past week unpro- | gregation they seek? Ono! ‘Then there | At the same is i niche in the wall, a little reeess with lean- r abil time it is in order to suggest With lean-to | the law which prohibits ¢ v = i roof, opdiiing into the house close to the fire, | Law relief to becuplers Pe yng of gor A Coming Advertisement. wouldn’t stand it in Vanity’Fatr. ‘The price | tected, and it was as smooth and glossy as if | are very few left for the “masher” to set his | that: - ithad never been worn. Imade a close ex- | heart or his eyes on. If “ Constant Reader” eratigs " Shoat f pone Peaire roneid: like a berth ina ship’s saloon. This, some- | gere may be waived, and the poor-house of- | .One of the coming advertisements i is = ‘John. Doe, tat of everything went up suddenly. It_cost us e $100 a week to publish that paper. It never | *wination of the inventfon, tested cloth my- | willput her little pearly ear down close to us | ie in } times closed by a straw. curtain, holds 'a 3 3 ca ey aaron 7 + a y Firls, there | propriated instead of hoarding. it up, as ¢ THE “coLLaten,” But supposing that th ladies’ and gentlemen's noses. in the m Stedman’s excellent society-poem appeared. | ‘ater over and over, and could not wet them. | any harm in it? Do the pretty girls object? | they doit, to b or old mother, i ‘tio SUPpo: ing that these home-loving, home- | cherché stele. Satisfnction warranted to all As I said, we sunk $25,000 in it. Among | TBeY came out dry, Ought they to object? Never, . If they. did | tempteton oe geo tae roo an in che moter, in position from which she |. worshiping people fail to carry ont their pre- | hoses, or the Mfanded. Liberal discount : i io: ria » be forever disqualified | millennium, but Id st The good die | could make here quite Hectic i aT FARMS, {10 Englisl xt, upon cle: the two ata dinner at Deimonico’s, at which I be- | &%™5 has lived in Chicago and Ohio; and has | to act theirpart as the charmers and bewiteh- | , but the old story. CE h a collection of pict- | and go as paupers to the poor-house, h specialty. Refers, by permission, to tht lieve Stoddard, Stedman, Congdon, and Fred spent $25,000 in perfect this solution. | ers of men, in the true and roper sense, and young. The officials who prevented v 8 peo uresque pone. oI la petite culture—alas! would such a proceeding answer ? Somes 8008 of the Prince of Wales.—Albany Jo Cozzens were’ present, ‘Commack said he | Phere is none on the market yet, and Mr. | would all die old maids." ‘Ther whet Trould | ple from gating their cake, and failed in help: | only In the rarest cases with any charm of | perpetual paupers would come out of the | ———— would put $50,000 more into Vanity Fair Le amb seems to be quite poor; but le is very | become of us and posterity? No. So lone as oty lem keep it, will be living monumen: o ‘gar or even fruit orchard. In union in three months’ time; and a cl: ie Miscegenation. ‘ tin five Years no man will buy a | man ora youth i @ as a | God’s mercy and man’s humanity; and, torn } my foregrounds would appear a stalwart | te i hays ta mg Mey been driven out of her IF COZZENS WOULD BE ITS EDITOR. iece of coat-cloth ayouth is a gentleman, and dresses | with remors aking sucha thing | Irish farmer in the tail rt | tenants only just above them, but saved from Jndian maiden has bean china- piece of coat-cloth, and no woman a piece { neatly, “carri 2 ex rye e ie, may be, for m: 4 1S -coat of the country, | havin; tribe, in 0: because she married aC Cozens had a binding contract with Bonner, | of dress-goods, that has not been treated with | ounce cana nae pace Sst, genceOt& S two- | possible by ‘an injudicious economy when | now no longer of the homespun blue trem’, | Payne entered the house, would have been | Tan’ “4 Qresom, because she Tm as Tost the and couldn't doit, That was a sad day for | his solution, “The base of the solution is | and co ug ones oso ns Once expressedit, | they were the people's authorized and re- | leading his tight little horse or shaaky mead | CCeeated by the extra rates (of which they Saeco e marrying 3 os B ashe speaks or nods only to his {spo P N. (the lensthy a? Ot shaggy ass in | pay--one-half) required for their support | TSPCtt Of, tls countrymen by mi e sponsible agents, A HEATEEX he lengthy truck-cart or “dray” of the re- | Brows what I observe’ here Iam pound to Marving @ woe woman. whipped a negz® S 2 & @ z 5 2 FA 8 |

Other pages from this issue: