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REAL ESTATE. Sale of the Clifton House’ and Lease of the Mattesony House. qrensactions at an Advance on Fifth Avenue and Else. where. a A Summer Hotel and an Iron Pier of the Coney Island Style on the Lake-Front. Purchases on State Street—Plans for a New Wabash Depot, New Building Enterprises-The Boulevards—Miscella~ neous. nie of the Clifton Hotel and Lease of the Matteson, The Clifton Louse, at the northwest corner ofMonroe street und Wabash ‘avenue, has teen sold to a capitalist associated with ‘Messrs. Woodcock & Luring, the present les- gees of the Macteson House. ‘The price paid yas $145,000 for a lot eizhty feet on Wabash aie and 171 feet on Monroe street, with a ‘six-story building.of brick with stone trim- mings. Messrs. Woodcock & Loring will take possession of the Clifton House by the middle of January. Munger Bros. will close the house bext “Toesday evening. They have leased the “Matteson House of the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company for tive years from May 1, at a rental reported to be 317,000 2 year, The Connecticut Mutual will spend geveral months in repairing and renoviting the house, at un expense of avout $75,000, and will give possession of it about May 1 to the new tenants. ‘An enterprise of considerable importance lies behind the purchase given the other day in Tur Trmuse of the Ayer mansion, No. 1 Park Row, by Mr. E. J. Lehmann. The lot basa frontage of fitty-five feet on Park row, and runs back 125 feet, with 125 feet of ri- parian rights in Lake Michigan. Mr.Lehmann has matured his plan for building up a first- class summer resort. The house will be re- modeled as a hotel and restaurant. Park yowisto be opened to the lake, and on the property Which gues with Mr. Letnnann’s pur- chase of the riparian rights will be built three handsome piers, after the Coney Island fashion. Here every facility for bathing, promenading, boating, and all the pleasures of such a resort will be furnished. The main pier will extend 300 feet into the jake from. the - railroad rignt of way. The piers will occupy | along the- shore the entire frontage of 125. feet, which Mr. Lehmann has purchased. At the farthest end the main vier will be thirty feet wide, Buildings of handsome design, lighted by electricity, will supply baths of Take water warmed to an agreeabl¢ temper- ature. Fountains, tanks with sea lions, and other attractions are promised. On the lake end of the pier there will be a promenade “140x30, with landings for boats. Part ot the plan isto make an arrangement with the Government to allow seats to be placed on the breakwater for the accommodation of those who cross the bay in boats. Mr. Leh- .,biann Las been offered $50,000 for the right “to build an observatory on the end of his pier., Mr. Lehmann has $150,000 of his own tw spend on this enterprise, and has at his command whatever additional motivy may be needed. Isham & Prentice: have sola 4334x153 with small brick building on Fifth avenue, be- tween Jackson and Van Buren,and Lot 7 and allof Lot 6, except the north G}f feet in the E.X of 91, School Section. The price was $H,000 and taxes of 1831; also, Lots 10 and 15 and north 23 feet of Lot 16, in Biock 112, on Clark street, south of Harrison, 123x103, for $1,000. Mr. Marshall Field has sold to Stephen Monroe, of Albion Mich., his new building ou Fifth avenue, just north of the new Shel- don building on the corner of Adams street, with lot 42x90, for $85,000. The building is Afirst-class brick and stone improvement five stories high, which looks out at the back onacourt of extra width. This gives the store as much light as if it stood on a cor- ner. Mr. Monroe sold for $65,000 his build- ing on the oppesit side of the street one block further north, with 40 feet of frontage. Ar. Nathan Corwith has sold a lot at the comer of Thirty-third street and South Park: avenue for $25 a foot.- This shows an ad- Vance of $25 a foot in this property. ‘The premises Nos. 199 and 201 Fifth avenue have been sold for $50,000. This is an in- crease of 100 per cent in value in a year. ‘The Wabash Railroad have determined to “build’a first-class passenger depot on State + Street, between Twelfth and Fourteenth streets, and are buying the property they need. at $400 a foot and the cost of the improve- Ments, Mr. C. HL. Ferry, who purchased in April, 1881, of Mr. Sherman, of Milwaukee, the premises 1529 to 1337 State street, 114x138, for $23,500, has beon offered $40,000 net for it, and has refused it. ‘The property is cov- with cheap wooden buildings. 1 A. Lovb & Bro. sold this week house and ot on Dearborn avenue, near Schiller street, at $10,000; ten lots in Sutherland’s Subdi- risen, Soltth Englewood. ut $3,500; four lots sselstreet, near Centre, at $4,000; house 24 lot on Bissel street, near Centre, at <Wacres north of Pullman at $6,000; ‘einer of Polk and De Kalb streets at $1,! lots on Emerald avenue and Fifty-first Steet at $3,000; lot on Lincoln avenue, near Garfield avenue, at $4,000. he “no: heast corner of State and Con- 100s Bs, ; with three-story brick house we cost $25,030), belonging to tke estate of remy Wheeler, has been sold by F. A. Siri 4 “Greece as bought 25e138 fect rage has bought 25x138 feet on Biae, hear isieently tore? ‘$210 a foot. fur sa Were not largé, There is a stronz nent demand for property that is im- inal and is yieldinga revenue. But as ‘Teal ale by Tue Tripune of last Sunday te of that description in the business sates hela by people living here, and who So strong financially that they are muci wilikely to be in the field as buyers than pone Those who are looking for real cht bite are not speculators’ in any sense, TyuNestors, and very particular ones They want nothing out inside business “Rove north of say Van Buren street, gl B preter tohaveit improved, and they at nothine that is not strictly iss ‘The result of their search is that wey ft find what they want they can it, because it is not for sale as was {ase with the Dore Block, for which last "The 000 was offered and refused. “Vga a eteimises No. 27 Lake street, a, four- . Bae basen stone-tront store with 7 00, has been sold for $30,090. arene rene Tents for $2,500 this year, and will ee age $2,000 a year for next three years. an, aN & A. Ulich reports the following sales: a feet on Cornell avenue, Hyde Park, rhs 350 feet south of Fifty-third street, lands large brick residence, to William V. franklin, N- ¥. $17,000; a twenty 3¢ See. 25, 37, nee eee ofseednd p. uh in Lake County, Li pare oe S175 per acre sand forty acres in N. .of SW. of Sec. 17, 37,10 in East s for $150 per acre. may ¥ Gross & Co.. sold to Charles Counsel- <8 fore 3 of the N. W. 4 of Sec. 15, 39, te ‘Bey acres on West Jackson street and Unig it Railroad. four blocks west of city terest Wit $10,000. As iflustrating the in- & i ee hich this new manufacturing district Offered pu% the purchaser has since been Wie? advance of $15,000. on lam Emmett, of the Avademy of Music, “Hegbarenased from the estate of Orange 5. ‘wang for $28,000 a lot 100x148 on Ashland i at the northeast corner of Harrison Its present lessees, the’ THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1881 TWENTY-FOUR PAGES. Street, west front, ‘This property ‘ftel Ward Sold by afr, MG Me: Donald tor Seah t. rr mined to Mrs. M. C. Me- artin MeNulty has purchased 109 feet, front on Rush street by 75 feet deep on “Mich de n street, on which he will erect, resi- ences and storey underneath at a cost of “"Tnelnded i in the sales of the week were 40x 90 teet on Fifth avenue, feet north of Mon- Toe street, by tephen Monroe to Mary. M. Hobbs: for St 75x96 on Fourth avenue, 391 feet south of ‘Taylor street, by Anna T. Swett et al. to A ra Lee, $8,650; 200 Van Buren street, lot 20x105, by ‘National Life-In- Surunee Company to James N. Young, $15,000; 33 34-100x71 on Fifth avenue, northeast corner of Couch place, by] Edward Taylor to Robert ‘Turney, $15,400; 295x125 on West ‘Twelfth street, 75 feet east of ‘Throop, by John Wal- Jace to Conrad Gies, $6,000; 1013¢x85 feet on Twelfth su wits northeast corner of Fourth avenue, $35,000, by Frederick Freiberg to Andrew Crawford; 100 feet to alley on Scott Street, 16S feet, east of State, by the National Life-Insurance’ Company’ to William. J. diawkes, $10,800; undivided half of 150 feet on Lumber street to the river, northeast cor- ner of Stewart avenue, $14,000, Robert Law to Thomas Dic! feet on Goethe Street, northwest corner of Astor, Hug Ritchie to Thomas S. $20,000; 270x734 feet on Cedar street. northwest corner of Lake Shore drive, by Augustus: Ganer to Potter Palmer, $17,550; 9$ feet on the southeast ‘corner of’ Cottage Grove avenue and ‘I'wenty-sixth street, run- ning to Igiehartavenue, by Charles Albee to the Conrad Seivp Brewing Company, $10,000; undivided half of 10. acres at the southeast corner of Ceutral Park avenue and West Twenty-sixth street, by F. E. g Phillips to Joseph J. Woods, 3 538x110 on North Wi ‘ells paertbereane of “Salineis, $2 105 on Fourth avenue, north, of Twelfth street, $14,000 Michigan street, northwest corner of Rush, by Sidney Sawyer to Mariin McNulty, $19,- 500; S}7 acres on Central Park avenue, south of ‘Sacramente square, to Erastus Foote, $27,402; 747¢ feet to alley on Clinton street, south of Carroll avenue, improved. by the Vulcan Iron Works to William A. Warring- ton, $25,000. Saturday's Transfers. The following instruments were filed for record Saturday, Dec. 1 City proventy. Pearce st, 100 ft w of Desplaines, n f, Sux{l0% it dated Dev 6 (Edward Hurvey, phraiin). 33° 1,600 ft, dated Dec. 16 (A. . Early 10 Lemuel Bald- ter Av NIG It dated Dee. 6 J. Fe Law- renee to Helen W. Barrett)... La Salle av, Ul ttn of North, It. dated ‘Nov. 18 Bunk to Christi: Deurbora av, 238 #1u tts of $ wt, Ix15535 ie “janproved, di Gtitam Barver Jr, to Aug Pat st, $ e cor of We TPO E ft, dated Dec. 10 (Willan A. Porter to Join Hurmett). Wate ft not Thirty 748 Nov. @ (Albert Sore to Benjamin D. Slocum). ge *) tte of Morgu 8,150 dated Dec. 16 William las W. Fullerton). Lake st, 4011¢ of Wabash avo E, duted Deg. (Nauey Laivrenee abeth H. ¥ . 30,000 ‘West Chicago av, 744-10 £ Sot osgiat te, dud Dee. 16 (a. and 'f. Vai Stayeren to Henry Klein) 1,200 34 ft 3 of Eighteenth s ft, dated Dee. 16 «William EL Hale wo Louisa P. G 8,000 The premises Nos. 67 und 6 Wanbansia av, dated Dec. 17 James C. Quinn to Bridget Lyneb). 5,000 Fifth av, 18) ft n of Adams st, ¢ £, 43 fr to nll d Dec. 15 (Marshall Field to en Munroe) 85,000 Depuyster st, 278 ft e of Hal: nf. Sul tt, dated Oct. 25 (Lewis capront to Edward Har 1,895 Larrabee st, 20 ft n of Chicago av, wf #1 tt, dated Nov. 7 (Advlph Olsen to Dorothea Jansen). 3,003 ‘West Polke st, 178 ft. of V a 12435 ft, dated Dee. 17 (Edward He ¥ ‘ebb to E. Johnson)... 2,000 , 42 fin w of Wood st, sw , 2X18 ft, dated Dee. 33. NORTH OF CITY LOTS, WITH SEVEN MILES OF ‘THE COURT-HOUSE, Noble avy between Shefield~av und “Tal> sted St, n t, 30 ft to :utey. dated Feb. (Robert K. Clark to Atbertou & Johnson. Ls 4,000 Liugvin uv, 31613 ftn wot Dunning sI NHB ft, with S5xo7 ft im the rr Wn Sith sim rrovements, dated Noy. 26 (Phoebe Wright to Marla B.. Heitu).: 2,200 SOUTH OF CITY LIMITS, WITHIN 4 RADITS OF SEVEN MILES OF THE COURT-NOUSE. Lafiin st, 249 fes of Fort; 24 ft, dated Sept. 15, 890 «C. “Counsel mut to C, Volz)... Wabash ay, 200 ft soutl a bxid “ft, dated Nov. Forty-se f, 24x12 ft, dated Nov. 10S. E.Gross) WEST OF CITY LIN SEVEN MILES OF THE COCRT-1OUSE. rth av, 2 -101te of Frederick st, 3 BixIei fe, dated Dec. 13 (M. EB. Green baum to Hichurd Buettner). Summary tor the Week. The following is the total amount of city and suburoan transfers, within a radius of seven iniles of the Court-ILouse, filed for record during the week ending Saturday, Dee. 17: Location. City...... » North of city Ti South of city limits | West of city limi New Building Enterprises. Work has been begun on the residence of ‘Mr. M. D. Wells at the northwest corner of iehigan avenue and Twenty-sixth streen It is to be 90x60 and 75 feet high, and will cust $150,000. It will nut be done till the middle of i833. The architects are Wheelock & Clay. Among the new enterprises to be located at Garfield are plow’ works representing a capital of $150,000. The stone for most of the foundations of the new locomotive works has been contracted for. During the year. so far, 4,114 building per- mits have been issued. Of this number 1,974 were permanent structures, the remaining 2,140 being for alterations, basements, ad- ditions, and sheds. The total estimated cost of these permanent structuees is shown to be 39,740,000, divided ast follows: South Side, $4,173,000; West Side, 38,623,000; North Side, $1,012,000; total, $9,740, vu. ‘A building permit was issued yesterday to A. Fisher for a four-story and_ basement ad- dition te mill, 29 by SO feet, Nos. 20 and 22 Desplaines street, to cost $3,000, Mr. Watler’s New Pavement Scheme. Ex-Cqmmissioner Waller, of the Depart- ment of Public Works, has_a patent pave- ment which he desires to introduce inte the streets of this city. _1ts.special feature is the use of wooden blocks which have. been sub- jected to a preservative application, Ex-Com- missioner Waller. must know perfectly well that no inatter how perfectly the blocks may be hardened to resist moisture and wear and tear, his pavement will xo to pieces if a good foundation is not Jaid under it, He will make n epteat mistuke if in his anxiety. to prove that bis pavement is cheap, he neglects to provide for a substantial under-basis. Where the now despised wood- en Nicolson blocks have been laid ia this city ona good foundation the pavement has worn admirably. The problem of getting a good pavement is simply to obtain the noise- lesness of wood with the durability of stone. If Chicagoans ever resort to a stone pave- iment, they will appreciate when too late the blessings of the noiselesness of wood. Lon- don is now extensively engaged in taking up stone pavements and replacing them by wood. What Chicago wants isa pavement of wood laid on & concrete foundation, - resting on a layer of sand. ‘The concrete should be so laid that all water percolating between the pieces of wood shouid at once be drained off. The-wood would not then rot, the firm foundation would keep the pave- ment in place, and Chicago strects would be from the ear-spfitting, nerve-des thet that tortures the denizens of New ¥ ork “and other stone-paved cities. West and. South Side—The Boulevards. Work on the Washington-street boulevard is progressing, but the progress is very slow. ‘There have been various causes assigned for the delay. ‘The weather, of course, has been ‘able weather then, the boulevard will be com- +] Twenty-seventh strect; and en the west side™ blamed, as it deserved; then’ the rail- road company that failed to deliver stono in season was blamed for such failure, and Jast of all the breaker that broke down came: in for its share of the blame for delay. Lit- ile or nothing has been done in the past week. All the limestone is laid as far as Union Park, and the boulevard is completed to May street. ‘The elm-trees are daily being placed in positions, and all are in on one side as far as May street. ‘The immense cotton- wood trees have been taken up by the roots, and their places will be taken by the elms. It is not intended to stspend work on the paving this winter, if possible, so that the work may be finished next summer. Amberg G Co. say they will make good progress on their granite work this week, there being plenty of stone now to work with. Some of the cross-streets are still in a very muddy condition, and vehicles crossing the boulevard often dis- figure it with the mud from these stree The boulevard itself has a very cleanly pearance, even after a heavy rain, and so far appears to be satisfactory to the West Park Commissioners, who regard the work as very well done. ‘There has been but little progress made in the improvement of. Michigan avenue voule- yard during the past few weel ‘The plant- ing spaces, curbing, flag-stones, and cateh- basins -havo wil been finished. ‘to ‘wenty- ninth street. ‘The roadbed is nearly tinished to thesame point, and, when completed, work will be suspended until spring. With favor- pleted by the lstofJune. ‘The iinprovementot Thirty-lifth street, from Michigan avenue to Grand boulevard is finished. ‘The pavement of Michigan avenue is of broken granit or trap-rock, used as a macadam, and is consid- ered an experimental measure. ‘Thirty-fitth street is paved on a cheaper plan, By the middie of next summer Michigan avenue will, it is said, be one of the finest streets m the country to dr @ on, and this fact will udd one more attraction to Chicago as a sum- mer resort, ‘Tho State Street Cable Road. The State street cable road appears to find favor in the eyes of Providence, and the pres- ent beautiful weather is being taken advan- tage of. by Superintendent Holmes and his men. The track is all down with the excep- tion of a gap of 600 feet in the east track near ‘Thirty-fifth street, and this gap would. have been closed up if the supply of iron had not given out, The Pittsburg men who are fur- nishing the supply of iron supposed they had shipped enough to finish up the work, but through an error of a shipping-clerk they are just eighty tons short. If this oversight had not occurred all of the iron work would be completed, but as it is. the iron needed can- not reach here before the middle of this week. Meantime the other departments of the work are in full blast. ‘The desired stone paving-blocks have been received and are being rapidly laid; and the end is now in sixht. ‘The down-town belt is very near comple- tion, ‘Che curve from State to Madison street has been finished, and the large and stall cable-wheels have been put in place. All of the conereting on the bolt has been completed, and the laying of a few pavings blocks will finish the work. ‘The excavation at Archer avenue has been conereted, aud the stone blocks are being laid. The concrete-mixer is-at work on the Twenty-tirst street excavation, which is be- ing rapidly filled, and when the work is done the inixer will be put on the Twenty-second street excavation, which is being idly roofed over. ‘The curves at Archer avenue and Twenty-second street haye been set. South of Twenty-second street the west track has been completed to Thirty-tourth street, and is ready for paving through to ‘Thirty-ninth street, ‘Theeasttrack has been completed from ‘Pwenty-second street to ‘Ywenty-eighth, and is ready for paving to Thirty-ninth street, with the exception | of the 600-foot gap mentioned. The slots in the tracks where there are no. stone blocks have been filled in with narrow boards to keep the dirt out of the cable-chamber. ‘Che street has been paved south to of the track to ‘Tw enty-ninth street. Gangs of men are at work to Thirty-first_ street ploughing up and leveling the strect for the pavers. Frown ‘Thirty-first street to Thirty- ninth the paying has been completed. At the engine-house the machinery is all’ in place, and the steam connections will be made this weel ne of the ingenious pieces of mechanism for keeping the cable tautisin place. It runs backward and for ward on a track, and weights ar it to keep it in the proper place, connection is to be made by‘a tive-inch pipe, made expressly for the purpose, with valves for instantly shutting off the steam from either or all of the engines. If one of the strands of the cable springs out, it rings a bell as it passes over one of the large whee! the engine-house, and by means of these valves the cugineer is enabled to stop the machinery instantly-and find the broken strand before it gues back on the road again. A machine for pumping water from. the ern, under the engine-house, iuto the boilers has also been set up. A gentleman representing the house that farnishes wire cables. to the San Francisco company was in the city durmg the weck, and said that with the machinery in the engine-house the Chicago road could not fail. ‘The company’s machine-shop, back of the engine-house, ismanufacturing the grips aud other connections. ‘The cable will rest_on pulleys faced with hard maple wood which will catch the cable every time it is thrown out of the grip. ‘The arrangement to hold the grip will be placed under ‘the curs, and it is so arranged that it will give on slight curves or defects in the slot. dn the work-room of the company are for- ty-two grip-cars in all stages of construction. ‘They will be open cars, having.a box in the centre for the engineer and seats on the sides for passengers. ‘Lhe ordinary passenger ears will be attached to the C2 Su- perintendent Holmes is mueh reised over, the proposed changing of the name of State street to “ Broadway,” as he hason hand a Jot of expensive rose-colored glass with “State street” ground in. He says he does not think Chicago ought to ape ‘New York in making this change. A correspondent asks what time the cable- cars will make ‘belween down-town and Thirty-ninth street. Superintendent Jlolmes that ultimately they expect to make the run in thirty minutes, but at first the cars pill be run slowly until the public gets used em. $$ IMPORTANT CHANGE OF TIME. The Fort Wayne Railroad announces im- portant changes in the arriyal and departure of trains to take place today. Leave Chica- goas follows: Day express, 9 a. m., except Sunday; sleeping cars to Pittsburg, Harris- burg. Philadelphia, and New York. Limited fast express (half-hour quicker than hereto- fore to New York), leaves at5 p. m. instead of3p.m., as it has been doing. This train is composed entirely of Pullman palace, ho- tel, and sleeping-cars to Pittsburg, Hartis- burg, Baltimore, Washington, Philadelphia, and New York. Philadelphia express, 6:1 p. m., sleeping-car to Pittsburg and all points on the Atlantic & Great Western and Erie Railways. Fast line, 9p. m., sleeping-cars w Piusburg, arrisburg, Philadelphia and New York, connecting at Pittsburg with through sleeper for Baltimore and Washington. Changes have been found necessary to accommodate more tully the business-men of Chicago, who, although they prefer the only limited fast express that runs trom Chicago to New Yor! we been obliged to take later trains er leave before the business of the day was fairly closed, and also that the Western lines running into Chicago inay with certainty_make connec- tions with the fast express. This train has established itself as the inust popular of all trains that have ever run between Chicago and the seaboard, the through hotel and din- ing car being not its least attraction. SMALL-POX AND DIPHTHERIA, Sewer-gas carries them into your houses through the water-traps. The Germicide i: warranted to prevent all contagious diseases entering from the sewer, by a constant flow of chloride of zinc into -the traps and soil- pipe; also vaporizes thymolene in the closet and bathroom, . Every house should haye it. Itis indorsed by the Health Commissioner and all scientists, Send order to ‘he Germi- cide Company of Lilinois, 205 Wabash avenue. seats uP POLARS eS A MERRY CHRISTMAS, ‘The best way to say it is to purchase some of those elegant odor cuses, handiome toilet bottles tiled with Dr. Price unique perfumes, which are otfered. tor sale‘at_ moderate prices at the per- fumatory of Steele & Price, 110 Randolph street. . M. H..F. Dolls: That Talk, Dolls That ‘Shriek, Dolls That ’ Eat. 4 Story of a Doll That Died, Was Resurrected, and ‘Then Cremated. Utter Failure of John McCul- lough’s New Play, “The Bondman.” Personal Experience of M. H. F. in a Theatre During a Panic. Special Correspondence of The Chicago Tribune. New Yorn, Dec. 15.—Each sueceeding year Increases the extent to which present~ making and Christmas-Keeping goes. The ancient knitted stocking that hung by the chimney-corner sufficed to hold all the lov- ing gifts in the carly ‘days of the present century, and, if so great a good as 2 Noah’s ark had to sit on the floor outside the stock- ing, immense was the joy of the recipient, Nowadays the infants havea royal-time of it; the toysof fairyland; the productof half- a-dozen couxtries; truly wonderful books, the efforts of the cleverest pens and pen- cils in the public service, are to be had in hundreds. Never before were things so tempting and bewildering. As 1 heard an old lady say at a.toy counter that fairly startled one with its radiant and ingenious load, “When I used to buy.things: for my children Iwent straight out and got the drum for John and the doll for Mary, but it’s a different thing to buy gifts for the children of John and Mary.” And sol thought as I gazed at the doll dis- 4 play alone; the dressed dolls coming from Paris by the thousand this year are particu- larly lovely; there is one sort of doll who carries with herself three different wigs—a curled one for company, a braided one for every day, and an elaborate white one to go with’ a Pompadour costume; there are three holes in the head into which the pins are driven, aud regret very: much that undue sensitiveness prevents that fashion from going 1 into effect on the human head, Then there is the talking doll that says:“ma ma? and “pa pa” like a phonograph, and has a still small voice like a retiring conscience; and the doll that shrieks when its stomach is punched; and the doll that walks, having a variety of cogs and wheels and a key-hole in the sinail of her back; but the latest addition to this tribe is the eating doll! Shecarries a basket of sugar-coated pills on her arm, and her mouth worn continually open. Into the mouth the - pills ‘go, and a slight shake takes them into the stomach, where they rattle about in a very nourishing way, butat this juncture art takes up the proces: digestion ina way to make nature wild with envy. ‘The “pills continua their musical career, tinkting down. the leg, and a trap in the sole of the doll’s foot opens and out drops the refreshment, ready to be served up fora hasty lunch or warned over for supper. 1 saw 2 dear old réd-nosed_ gentleman lost in admiring contemplation of this delightful arrangement. “‘Ah,” thought be. “ie” only nature did things this way! Oh to have my legs bored out hollow and a-cork in my, hecis—how- much more 1 would hold af rock and rye or blue-grass_whis The tears stood-in my-eyes-as 14 is agita- - tion. Alas! in this world we often discover pur feelings when it’s too late to remedy em. And: then the eating-doll revived in my memory the almost forgotton treasure of my hiithood =| Charlorte Elizabeth. Charlotte Wiled rag doll, stuffed with cotton id painted very much like a Cherokee stuaw, A wild desire seized me one day to feed Charlotte, and big chunks of cotton were pulled through a hole I dug in her poor old mouth and scraps of food caretully tucked in. Charlotte had taken sev- eral -hearty meals when she began to emit the odorsof a charnel house; the family held their noses and tore up the floor- ing in search of dead rats; finally it was dis- covered that wherever the subscriber sat nursing the dreadful Charlotte the smell was the strongest, and my bosum was torn with emotion when I beheld Charlotte in the finn grasp of a pair of kitchen tongs going forth to burial. Compulsory confinement prevented my at- tending the funeral, but a diligent search was rewarded; three Sundays’ my poor EA favorit, yested in her early. grave; the fourth saw _ her resurrection; the clergyinan . of. our parish — was just telling my family in their red-lined pew What miserable sinners they were, and advis- ing them to confess their inanifold wicked- nesses, When a flavor of A. ‘T. Stewart was wafted up the aisle; a smail girl in asun-bon- net, clasping the disinterred and dreadful Charlotte Elizabeth, presented herself toa distracted mother and demanded admittance guthe pew door she wasn’t big. enough to open. The congregation held their noses while a procession of mother, child, and Charlotte beat_a hasty retreat; that morning the oid al eating doll went. head-first into the kitchen fire, and no wonder. contemplating the newest thing in toys, my heart relived that sorrowful cremation when Charlotte Elizabeth was immolated. Weare given over and given up to present- buying, and it takes just as much time and trouble to buy $5 worth of presents as to purchase $5,000 worth. I stood for half an hour in the splendid store of Tiffany one day last week, aud saw one man select $4,000 worth of little things he carried off in his breast pocket, and that evening, over in Ave- nue A (the Deutsche Broadway), 1 listened with as much pleasure to the bargaining of a jolly frau who, in the same length of time, spent less than $5, and could hardly get out the store door so full were her arms. The Tiffany gentleman bought his Johnny a handsome watch and chain, and his little Mary Ann got a necklace witha diamond- studded medallion. ‘The Avenue A customer got her Johnny an express-wagon as big as himself and her Mary Ann a dollar-doll so big that as soon as it begins to shed its saw- dust she can contract to supply a circus. The Fifth avenue man will stow his gifts in a. drawer of his deak tiil tne blessed Christmas-Eve, and the A avenue woman will be vut to all sorts of trouble to hide the long stiff legs of that doll and the pole of.that wagon from. the paying eyes of the children in her humbte flat; but each parent will feel as happy over their gifts as the other—thank God for the dispensation: that_makes a .poor wift as rich as a costly one to-the giver as wellag te receiver when Jove prompts and gratitude responds. If any one ever doubted the friendship John McCullough’s noble heart. is capable of, they should have occupied aseat in the Fifth Ayenue ‘Theatre Monday night. in his walks abroad John met a Mr. Lewis Wingfield, who is fortunate enough to be the son of a Viscount and brother of #Lord—he also has literary longings, and used to con- tribute paragraphs to London journals over the nom de plume of “ Whyhte-tighe” (that intelligent effort of a great mind was tna key-uote of his whole performance.) In an evil hour Wingfield conceived « play, which in an evil hour dear John was induced to aéeept; if then and there the thing had stopped not much damage would have been done, but McCujlough produced it, worse luck, and a lotof us saw it, which was more worser, for us. ‘The house wastilled with John’s friends: ‘There was Osborne the banker, who loves. the tragedian like a brother;' theré was Col. E. A: Buck, of the Spirit, as warm a char-" pion of ‘McCullough in all his characters as an actor could desire, and versonally his stanchest ally; there was Willie Wiuter, of the Tribune, who takes an ‘unkind word of John as a personal injury; there was Stephen Fiske, of the Star ‘and the Spirit; who doesn’t want to see McCullough uo anything he can’t exhaust the English language. to praise, and there the whole of them had to sit and witness the baldest and most pretentious. lot of rubbish put on a metropolitan stage in a long while. It wasn’t bad enough to be fuuny; there was nothing to laugh ‘at; one could only sit and listen to the efforts Of excellent actors to lift into some prominence the flattest sort of dialog and dullest kind of action. ‘Che storm- ing of London Bridge, which was adver- tised as a stirring scene, such as we had not had-on the stage before, was so utterly un- equal to its booming description that it pro- yoked laughter instead of applause. Jolin was done up in lots of armor; he dashed hither and thitker, his stalwart_legs incased in -stove-pipes; the pudding-dishes on his knees clashed with excitement; the hod on his head stirred as the short irs stuck up underneath it with a wild de- sire todo soincthing. He had a tremendous sword, and a shirt made of curtain-rings, and acollar made of an iee-piteher; silver-plated waiters were hitched on his breast and plas- tered on his back; he would have broke up and made fifty prizes tor a_target-excur- sion—and he did struggle to make the storming of the bridge a -wild and tumultous scene—and if one wild and ‘tuinultous man surging up and down among a lot of tranquil and automatic supérs could. haye done it John McCullough was the lad. through five acts of turgid oratory his ice trumpeted with vigor and persistency. Miss Forsythe gave up the battle the first scene; she has to be crowned bya dozen rus as rural queen of some woodland and that operation always crushes a woman; the wreath is sure to be unbecom- ing: the man always puts iton as he would pitch a quoit. So when the rosy cruwn struck her on the teft eye she abandoned the struggle, and poor McCullough played the rest of the thing alone. Report has it that Mrs. Jessie Fremont has written another five-act play for this gzood- natured gentleman, Let us hope it may not in any way resemble “ne Boudinan” of Mr. Winztield. at Abbey’s Park, Mr. Sims, the author of the “Lights of London,” i is represented by his Mother-in-Law,” and ivs'a jolly, laugh- able play—not a great production, but an en- joyable one. Like “Baby” and** Pink Dom- inos,” domestic complications and awkward encounters makesmuch of the fun, but its tone isclean. It’s 2 play a girl can take her worker to see, and thatcun’t be said of all of en, ‘The London holiday papers come to us early this year, and they are - particularly splendid. The Graphic and London News give thirty-six pages each, and a huge col- ored chromo. The pictures are all capital, and Pear’s soap advertisements on the out- side sheets of the News qe really works of art. ‘Hl. §, Marks, a Royal Academician, is not above drawing a fine cartoon representing .two monks washing and shaving with the Pears’ manufactures. For this page the artist must certainly have been royally paid, as it looks rather odd to see so distinguished a name attached to au adver- tising picture, however. splendidly executed. Wallack’s Theatre opens next Wednesday night. The boxes will be sold at auction, and seats command fabulous prices even now. Mr. Wallack presents his company in “The School for Scandal.” Ue knows the public come the first night to sce the theatre; and then he: will put on his new play and the same people will crowd iu to see the piece. The late disaster in Vienna has incited New York managers to great precautions— lengths of hose are laid about on the floors of the lobbeys, and reassuring pails and big axes, that have a protecting glitter on tem, are hung on the walls." The great trouble is that in season of need the people to use these traps are'not on hand Itke the cheerful wart or the merry run-round. They had an iron curtain in the Ring Theatre, but it was not used, and if an attempt had been made to Jower it, two to one the blamed thing wouldn’t have worked; there would have been a screw loose or a screiv too tight; but always over the stage portion gt a theatre there should bea skylight that could be hauled off from ‘outside the building; then somebody safe in the street could open an outlet for flames and smoke; the audito- rium would act like the vent in the front of a stove, carrying everything away up the open- ing over the top of the stage. ts the smoke that atfrizhts people, and its, the affrighted people who do most of the’ damage, madly walking over their fellow- creatures, At the Park some time ago there was a smoky smeil blown in at the frout of. the house over an audience. In an instant the people were transformed into idiots; a mild and innocent-Ilke creature sat in tront of me —a woman in case of alarm for a wan to carry out like a damp handkerchief over his arm in adead faint. Behold the smoke was sinelled; the people rose; we were all sit- ting near. the ‘I wenty-second street en- trance; all that we needed to do to save our .precious lives, Jet alone our good clothes, was to — walk quietly out in the rear—the smoke came from the front—and to the front rushed the frightened fools. This one little woman rose; she dashed at me and carried away a piece of my ear and all the cuticle off one side of my neck; a bald-headed fat man went down before her like he was struck by a can- non-ball; she kept on her mad career; she walked up the backs of people; she spread dismay, like a mustard-plaster, over the ‘shoulders of that crowd.. And when the ex- citement was over and people went back to their places, that’ small, timid) woman de- clared she “thought she should have drop- ped; that she had never been so crushed; that'folks acted like brates,” ete—when sho could have filled award in a hospital with her wounded. Instead -of laying hose round the lobbies, Mr, Managers, have an air-trap in your roofs, and have some engine to play valerian or chloroform or some other calming drug in on the excited women, BR ————— MUSICAL GOODS. For fine musical goods, such’as violins, guitars, drums, banjos, flutes, flageolets, harmonicas, accordions, music folios in ‘finest leathor and cloth, music wrappers in velvet, Russia, moroc- co, and silk: volumes of the choicest music in elcyant bindings, of French, German, and Amer- ican publications; also will be found a rare as- sortment of fine stationery, put up in hand- painted velvet and silk cases. In fact if you are Jooking fora present you will find plenty from which to make a choice at Lewis & Newell's, the Chicugo Music Company, 152 State street. —————_— A SUGGESTION—HO LIDAY GIFTS, A eift that fs substantial is the best to make. And it is known by thousunds that the best work in every depattment of dentistry is done by MeChesney Bros. Their parlors, corner Ran- dolph. and Clark streets, are thronged daily by our best citizens. One price for the finest and best set $8. t A $3.00 LIVERMORE PEN FOR $1.75. Price reduced for the holidays for our cele- brated stylographic pen. Every one should take advantage of these cut rates, as it_ makes a very sensible present. Get the best—the Livermore. Every pen warranted. Stylograpbic Pen Com- , 88 Madison street, Chica; BUSINESS CARD3. Cc. P. THOMAS, ARCHITECT, Rooms 27 and 28 Kendall Block, Shicago, Architect nnd designer of the Booksellers’ Kow, State-st., the Dore Hiock. corner of State and Madi- fon-sts. the Irwin Building, corner Wubush-av. and Hurrison-st.. the, Musury Building, /stlenizan-ay near Van Kuren-st., etc., etc. ts now to prepare: pluns, etc. for wholesale snd retail stores orice buildings, residences, etc. and would call the. atteu- ‘un of capltalists to the French tit pulldines be fas recently erected for many of, the lutgest propertyé Owners in Chicago. Keferencés given to uny former clients. ELECTRO-MAGN: ET ISM. | Rheumatism. puralysis, nervous debility. Sc. posi- tively cured without the use of deus. Bicetrie "unt teriev and sppliances for sale or rent, and Instructog given for home treatment, at VALENTINE’S Electro Magnetic Institute, Nos. 91 fang #8 Base Wash ington-sb, Chicago. For the benefit of our future patrons throughout the Great Northe west we take pleasure in submitting the following list of the names of those who have purchased Pianos of us recently IN CHICAGO ALONE. The list explains itself, and gives. utterance to the following note. worthy fact:*That the people of Chicago, where every opportunity is offered for examining and selecting instruments, and where the live- liest competition renders the most meritorious wares ‘the only ones salable, are going to the ‘place which affords them the only standard manufacture on the most advantageous terms. It should be borne in mind that the list includes only our city patrons, no mention being made of .the enormous number of Pianos sold by us throughout the Great Northwest outside of Chicago. Pelton, Pomeroy & Cross, STATE STREET, ‘Mrs, Ruth Millard, 231 Biue Island-av., Gabler Up- E. W. Brooks, 317 Warren-av., Chickering Upright., Gen, “Anson Stager, Grand Pacitie Hotes Chickering POMEROY & co. ‘Oley no, 623 Throoy » 2 N, CHOSs “Beriant. Tale, SEEEOS Motzurd, 100 Indiana-av., Chickering Up- FS Mrs ‘ae Liljestrom, 169 Milwaukee-av., Gabler rea Smith, corner Thirty- Is-av. Chlekerine Uprurne, * i aa ey OM EGE: 5 9901 % m4 PELTON, a a, gunwor ‘ortland-av., PELT' Upright. Chickering Upright, ChOss. Shas. H, Baker. 2445 Calumet-av. Miry. M. Douglass, iz Wabash: jabler Grund Gpera-House, PELTON PoMinOY & CHOSS Wan Auur #3 a Aluribut-se.. Gabler Upriaht, Mrs, M. B. Spain, 20 South Peorlu-st. Chickering oe Gran ri 191 Warren-ar., x - HA: Hucris iat Warren-ar., PELTON, POM: ‘Miss Suna iteldy, 31 Eust Monroe-st, PEUTON, POM- ‘Oss. ate Neuder, cornér Sixty-third and Howard: Chickerinz Wm. ood, Sid brnirie-av. Chickering Uneleb, JS tanp Si) Wabnabeiv,, PELYOS, PUSEROY B.3f, Walker, 1B Twenty-ninth-et, PEELEON, POM- Bry, Lotia Werner. 09 South Halsted-st, Kurtzman pelgtie. Geo, Wilson, 311 Park-av., Chickering Upricht. i. Simorigon, 181 Union-si bler Upright. in ied North Luronsty Decker, bouts jekdent pi chlenio-av., ‘Gabler Unright. das: Sharpe, 1 Burtwn-piacé, Chlexering Up- i Kean, Halsted Street Church, Chirkering Grand. M. W. Robinsen, a0 Puli George LL. Smitut, 133 Ps cera Uptia Sits. Brancis Adams, @ Centré-av. Gabler Uprizat. Hi Indianacny., Chickering Upright. est, 41v West Washington-st, Chleker- ( as Uprisbt. James | Wleory West Washington-st., Chickering Uprig ¢, HL Adauis, 77 Rush-st. Chickering Upright. Louise S, Farrington, Carpenter-st, Gabler atrs, 8 oe West Washington-st., Chickering i0 Forquer-st., Bauer, rs nesta direnty secon jabler, peachorn-av., PELTON, POMEROY Gat Jackson-st.. Gabler Uprizht. |, &) Michizan-av., Gabler Upright. Gustoue Rrupke. gi Hubbard-st., PELTON, POSE ‘ROY & CHOSS Upright. M A. Williamson, 0 Dearborn-ay., Gabler Up- helder, £7 Monroc-at, PELTON, POME- ROY & Misy Gertrude Ridgeway, 100, Walnut-st, PELTON, POMEROY $ GROSS Us a setnieeyefen: ee Gabler © Tribe. Pi Chickérl Zuo minary-n bler Upright. Seunston, Chickering Gran ‘Archer-ay., PELTON, POMEROY ‘dyginr Wl House, PELTON, POMEROY & t Emil este forth La Satle-st., Chickering Up- 2 aire i tla 1¥, 2087 Michiean-av., Chickering. Te Pr scButler, West Mauison-st.. Gabler Opright. bler Up! cH Wallace Giisa Bstue Islunu, G Henry Benson, . ivi ‘nicsci-av., BELTON, POMEROY & CROSS Upricht. ara,E. V-Noyes, 4iSouth Sheldon-st, Gabler Up- Het ure, Catite G G. Boltam, 2558 Batterffeld-st., Gabter Up- Lonis Adums, 218 South Morzan-st., Chickerin: Emaline Borsatord, Ht trate piace, PELTON, POME- ROY & CHOSS Uprights. K. B. Ottson, 35 East Superion-at. Gavier Upriehe” Jacob Hetz, Musxezon. Mich. ng Uprixnt G. A; Situpsson, S2bs thodes-ava Gabler’ Upright, axe, f rinoston. Ti. Chiekering Uprizit, Wiiber Wale, S86 Forrest ickering Upriznt. - DJ, inven ial Gig. ik, PELTON, POMEROY & ROS: rt taymon. rt North Clark-st, PELTON, POM- OF-& CROSS Upright, ‘Mrs. Coryell, 245 Wabash-av,, Gabler Upright, Miss. Lanxstaft, bi? West Wasbinzton-st, Chicker- Sennett. Lagrence, 9 Fillmore:st PELTON, POM- BROY & CROSS. L. © Cooper, ‘Prugvect Park, Il, Chickering Up- q. I Schroeder, Oak Park, INL, Gabler Up: MWA tiovey 168 Wobashedr., Unlekering Uprizht, Walter ‘Meudowervft, Palmer House, Chickering Op- 9 J, 1 Lindgren, Evanston, Chickering Uoricht. Dire. Charies bf. Dodson, Geneva, Gabler Upriunt. Naperville College, Naperville, Chickering Uprixht. 1, Bauder, 09) West Higrrison-at, Gabler Uprizht irs. Horr, Hinsdale, Chickering C3 BIS; OEP Winchestdns 1s De Pussterst, Gabler Up- N55 Grubs, 192 Dearborn-a1 4 Hast 1inol: Chickering Upright. » Gadler Uprizht. av, Catekering Upright, bash-av., Chickering Uprizht. 244 Thirty-trst-st., PELTON, POM- a: Gaultn, 68 Contre-ay., *Gabler Boright. Naperville, Gabler Gorizh: Yr iolren, fo Mtiehzan-av. Gabler Upright, Wi ‘ita Hengeron gig South Hoyne-av., PELTON, JB. Sichers a 17 Harmon-court, Chickering square erand, nm, B. AL Turner, 405 St. Lawrence-nv.. PELTON, POMEROY & CROSS. A.M. Bergener, 217 Deering-st, PELTON, POM- EROY © CROSS. (Q* Srownmark, Evans-av., PELTON, POM- se ROL © Clues Upricht, Ic pric! J. F, Juckson, southeast corner Forty-frst-st. and Wabnsh-ay., Decker & Sons. Samuel Witkowsky, 155 South Peoria-st., Chickering plete. John Re Hoxle commer, Forty-Afth-st, and Michigan~ H sag, donee Wont Hubbard-st, PELTON, POM~ iF Gare Hidges PELTON, POMEROY & Salumet-ay.. PELTON, POMEROY ars, 345 Ena 8.213 North State-st, Gabler Up- SH Wentworth-av.,PELTON, FOM- by oc. itwssell. Punk Roos Unrluht, PE CHO: rich Chas S T Stocks Evartioe, Chickering Borin Sra tettauer ans Pratrie:ar Chickerine, Upright 5 Oberholzer, 2i0t Wabash-av., PELTON POMLIOE te os anston, PELTON, POMEROY, & bt tap Lovee HH Hurrleane-av. PELTOS, POM- y & a. SEOs ea iackson-st., Gabler Upright. . H. Stronk, wl West Te re iam fll, 231 Prairie-av., Chickering Up nt a Sfuilfes, 815 Micbigan-nv.. Chickering Upricht- Sirs Hastinie: 2c bn ke iprizht, Mes Tiastin i om 1 Chicanycareschickerine Square, Geer Kf snes, 20 Lucast-st. Gabler Uprisbe, : See Ni MB arker 64 Lexington-av PELTON, POMEROY, EGHOSs Upright: nk, #55 Mehizaa-av., Gabler Upright. Hiss tthe 2 diay Dillon tit “oyae- ‘Vy, PELTON, PO. right. Se EOF owa: Ser Western-ay., PELTON, POM- EL Aa A 3 jolpb-at Singtel, 0 Lowe-st, PELTON, POMEROY Set ork Heat secon, PELTON, POMEROY & C pris - silas 4 Tue Walnut-st, PELTON, POMEROY Miss 3 Gebes Conan of, bit West Fourteenth-at. PEL- ‘ton: a OMENOT & CROSS Uprign: arg, A; Poor, 2i) West Kandoiphest, PELTON, POM- EU OY x pri Vi es-av.. Gabler Upricht. fi arcler-at PELTON, POMEMOY & GHESS Tpeit SAL iis ere ‘Arnold-st. PELTON, POMEROY & OO ata Le Zallesst. Gabler Unright. ie Gaene Gotio Butterdeld-st.. BELTON, he ROSS nPOSEHOY eet ie ata. exz05, POM- Miss -Elieabath Kull, 3 Fulton-st, Chickering Up- Mrs. eliza O'Connor, 55 ‘Iwrenty-seventh-at, PEL- Fe ROY & CROSS U Feat almanac. PELTON, POMEROY Uprig! Poriun gt Denrborn-at. Gabler Upright, coat Warton-nv. Chickerine Upright, pt ndixna-wy. © ‘nickering Uprishe. fer Up nt rs. Bes South, Parker PELTON, toate SE fete FEETON, POMEROY & Prof. Caples riefesterberg, 17 Chteago-ny., Gabler Upricht .2u7 South Leuvitt-st, Gabler Upright, Sirs Sean “LBIERS- Arab its PELTON, POMEROY © UKO ‘Chickering Upricht. gt Daglen 3 aoe va Gubler Lprisht, me ‘buanisk- at, PELLON. LOM- Sirs. ie cpt ee estos Upenzht. 513 Wabuah-av. PELTON, POME- pright. $B, Condon. 211 Oak-st- Chickering, SL WV; Murphy, 2S 2 oe TELTON, POME- Denrborn-av., FELTON, Dekel ring Upright. ker ein ‘Upricht. aby Ngstera-ate PELTON, Sprit te Jno. ». Vollertson, ASL West Division-st., Gabler Up- Siste Notre Dame, Washing! soles echo 8 ‘ash ate PELTON, POyMEN PE SRE REGS Mens PELTON MET, es born-st.. PELTON, POMEROY v! Pnleny test-at, PELTON, POME- cae, p.thges 0 Wet Adams-rt., Chickering Upriz! Dinw Aearand Burton, ST La Sulle-av., Ua ag ars. Tose Papinheim, 480 Contro-av, PE Postion" Se CHOS tori ie ee neon 3. ity Todiuna-uv., PELTON, POME- Cees bh V Larrsblost., PELTON. POMEROY 4 iritebel, PEE South State-at, Chickering Up- at ‘Davis, oe Twomey st. Gabler Cprishe. Ge Gurdou-at. KELLUS, POME- Mrs at Guchunaie, es Ellis-av., Chickering Up- is..45 § Warren-av., PELTON, POME~ ie Gadeyat, PELTON, POMEROY & rishi pelt alurpby, bt Bunertelé-er, Gable Gabler. Upright, ate. a ie REOSEMOY & CitOSS Uo rise a pee rot iss | ny it Pulkest., P! N. <4 ROY & hea Open SIA Ok at Misct Hapbun, ulton-st,, PELTON, POMEROY 5 Sa) Mrs. Nina thang, Wf Sedewick-st, Hallet & Davis. Any, Ausunta Wooley, I Drexel-poulevard, Huzel~ jon Miss UG styl Be sort, 20 Denrborn-av., Gabler Upricht, a. Wvoodrur House, PELTON, POMEROY SX CROSS Uprizh Owen Kenting. ornr Sixtieth-s. and Wontworth nin -» Kurtz yar (Geo, tt ve, HO! Cottare Grove-ar., Kurtzman. Mrs, Patrick, ichivan-nv., ickering Uprizht. Mss Av Undachit, "iudlarwav, E. Gagier Up= tines, 2:Ontario-st., Gabler Upright. dustin, OL Stiehigan-av., Chicken Uprleht, ‘MeCarthy. ntworth-av., FELTON, POM- toy we CRUS: zt. dirs, D. SL Hyland, 2 ee Clark-st, Gabler Up- cepley, 2742 nee PELTON, POM- rie Le ring Upaente ier Upricae, ‘LON, POMEROY & US ulion-st. E. Gabler. a Barton, sé North La Salle-st, Chick- ~ irs. ‘Le Gran ering Upriche. L, Stukes, Sherman House, Gabler Upright. L uae K-place, PELTON, PUMBHOY © CHOSS Upright. Pa Wren. da West Van ‘neencat, Gabler Up= lg Bes Aust(n, 529 Wabash-av., Gabler. Mr. Tsba Smith, ‘ood, Haz. Upright. teary Saunt, sana aistcd-ste Be Uprizht Plane. Henry Jars, corner Furty-sareuth and. ELTON, POMEROY e Coss pret ee pe.de He Battu .. Gabler Upright. Mrs. Habbard, 18 South Yinltedeste Upright Miss Le Weed, 271 West Yuslor, PELTON, POMEROY GROSS Uprisnt, +B Hus ‘Stunton-av., PELTON, POMEROY ‘& CROSS Upright. xs Buell, 1 Wabush-av., Chickering Upright. ‘Miss Leon Stebbins, Hichiyan-av., PELTON, OMEROY ages 3 CR Ghvert, Stont ue, Si Forest-ay., Chickering Up- eI Iiie Sherman, 15% Wabash-ay., Chickering Up- Janies Ie, MeDonald, Highland Park, Gabler Uprigh! x mele ae ‘Englewoow, lus. Upright. on Ene David i Rebun, sis Suate-st~ SD BELTON, POMEROY ‘ Upriate. 2 Bis ‘Swusey. 30 Asblund-a7, Chickering Up- 4c) 2 Fonsdaie, 21 Eust Twenty-frst-st, Schubers i ys fa Palllips, 45{ South Paulina st. Gabler Uortzht. 4, anor, Ags Twenty-ninth-at., PELTON, POM= ¥ & CROSS Upright. Mrs, H.S. skinner, 477 West, Washingron-st., Gabler. Abs Finnie Fleetivood, 213 Micntmin-av., Ubteker= ne pri ‘Thomus Mabon, 19 Wabash-ay., PELTON, POM- RUY & CROSS Sauure. Mrs. &. 0. Lamphere, 342 Indiana-av., Gabler Upright, Gordon H, Quinn, 123 Loomis-st, Gabler Upright. ‘Mrs, Carubine, 31 Ogden-av., PELTON, POMEROY & CROSS. Mrs. J. B. Davis, Scott-at., Chickering Upright, in, Ges Lute-ny Chickeriny pra euian, Clarence ilou: pricht. fe E. Boyles, ait West Tuylorests Decker 3129 Indiana-av., PELTON, POM- EUUY S OkSs Upemhe, Mrs. E.G. Stewart, $5), West, Jnckson-st., Chickering. Bry UM Shiy-tirst and State-sts., PE. POMEROE & Ci di. corner SI Sisto jt. and Aventworth- PELTON, POMEROY © COS Fukins, Havenswood, PELTON, EUMENOY & 3 web. Be andsoat 1 West Wasbington-st, Gabler Up- CPurdee, 73 Oak-st.. Gabler Uprixht, Georse Hoxte, “iv Twenty-ninth-st, Fisher- Mi Pian Mrs, A: R. White, 16 Norwh Clark-st.,, Gabler Upri te UL Grmatey, Mz West Htundolph-at acon & Hea Raver ‘Miss Koza Kurzman, tty South State-st, Chickering. Janis Harned 26 Lilngiat, FELTON, EOMBROE lett ig West t Clybourn-pluce, PELTON, ith North Welisst, PELTON, POM- & CROSS Upright. ‘run, corner ‘Kucker and Huron-sts, Gabler ate ao ; Parks, 2558 PralriG-av.. Gabler: Bisigis uf St Joseph, 20 Peorta-st, FELTON, POM- EHOY © CROSS Uprial Mra, Victor F. Lawson, at Nonh State-st., Gabler. Uprisgh: Lieut Ny. Meta, 195 Third-av., PELTON, POM- TOv WCHUSS Upetan Mode 1 Chumeguro, ut rate ie-av., Chickering. Sorth Muncn-st, PELTON, voM- ub Vauiina-st,, PELTON, POM- LOSS Uprizht. ¢ Louse, Chickering Upright. Uwi Club, MeVicker's Theatre, Chickering Uprixht. er. 260 Indiana-ay.. Chickering Upricht, Blusidee-court, FELTOS, PUM- ‘Gold sty Gabler Uprtent. Aas South Purk-av., Urudiey Upright. jo East Indiana-st, PELTUN, PUM> r Upright, tobinson, «03 Munroe-st. Gabler ‘Portane, i S1-U-Greely, 215 Mlebian-a¥., New, England iho, mh W. Metzzer, St. Dens Hotel, Gabler Up- 2 Bralrie-av, PELTON, POM- RUSS Ups rishi ee Mins Lanzdon, ti ‘wenty-ifty-st., Kurtzman. 'S. Kidder, 4643 Vincennes-av., Gabler. Ee Brust: yscutt-st, Chiekerin. Sins Mary Jobney dawick-st~ Gabler Lorten. Finklec, seh Michivan-uv., PELTON, PUM- BROY x CllO3S Upricht. ALB. Gleason. 2 Bishop-court, Hazelton Bros. Cp- right Miss Stiga Glick, 208 Archer-nv., PELTON, PUM- CROSS Upright. ea Sr. “Tigoker | Tu Prvinte-ny.. Chlekértas. els North Peorianat, FEUTOS, Saat Qo andor. 3 Mis George Brown, My POMEROY & Cl priebt. Miss Ligue enipes tas Hubuard-st. cuixering. Jonn D. Jones, 7 Kacine-ay,. Gabler Upright, Miss Grace Sutthers, 15 ‘incennes-av., Chickering. Upri Mrs, oi Farrington, 25 Indiana-st., Decker Up- ari Cowell Smith, Millard-av., Lawndale, Chicker- atraFP. Coughlin, 25¢ North -Franklin-st, Chicker- ing. Mrz, SL, Duaham, Evanston, Chickoring Upright, We Garcia h Park Station. H. Gi te ao {ictkard: Eogtewoud, Hine. eos, Upright, Nelle G. Huyward. Enstewoud, Gabler Upright. is i. Gary, Wheato: iz Upright, rs. C oye, iit Winchester-av-. Gabler Upright. . SM atrie, 23 Warren-av., Chickering Upright. Judze Summettield, All South Yark-av., Gabler Up- right. aie 29 Bushnell-st, PELTON, POM- age Crean, Y & ‘CHOS: PW sire Est Willmore i Wert Falton-st., PELTON, POMELOY & CROSS Cpri ‘Mr. James Day, West Jacusonaes Chickering. CH Sarena wil Park-nv., Gabler Upright. F.C. Vierling, 2397 Michigan-av., Gabler Upright. Pelton, Pomeroy & ‘Cross, 152 STATE STREET...