Evening Star Newspaper, December 12, 1882, Page 3

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ENCER LEPORTED FOUND. MES. LANGTRYS TROUBLES. The Absent Star Houte Witness. An Explanation from irs. Labouchere —An Authorized Denial from Lang- tery. The New York Sun publishes what purports to be Mrs. Labouchere in re- gard to her misunderstanding with Mrs. Lang- try. As Mrs, Labouchere isto sail for Liver- | pool to-morrow on the Servia, she makes the | statement in justice to herself. According to | this statement of Mrs. Labouchere, ‘Mrs. Lang- M. BUT DON'T KS TO WASHINGTON ¢ tres THE RErC tT. A special dispateh from National Rep | try when she’ first weat to London eafoyed a | trigiaph and was received everywhere, and beauty giving her a passport into Her Seemed assured, when an un- candal caine into circulat position in the at the litti on, a few miles | ly affected her from WV Tt has | 1. Her husband hay Deen would | money she adopted arrest 1 be | not alon found, zl ity exy rica! ¢ lonesomeness of her lon: Mrs. Labouchere taken that now whe 2 1 only daring the latter hat ety had these attentio cerasto indus Just ber my di the New 1 heard n wh: Tbeen the 1 sending hi of which Mr. sj after th: per Bi etry and would be; elub in . he called he had very west whieh | New York, and it would y then tola | ests as well as comprom rishe pe clinnire i Vy udice hi r name should ry seeni unneces- s Brady | a that T the two friend, I said: 1 to Boston, weil.’ rep! discussion ended. yd Mrs. Lat rt detw He says eases w the ge uch transaction. about the interest to | An y th does not wonld be ment.” tinned, “and my plas surpr f the world, whese social expe- h ‘ded her from the errors vald gratify a caprice at the and reputation, and that her beauty has mar the promise of he adulation of a but- Mr. Bliss, when qu Pateh lest nicht, de meet him while he gton without to go was asked whether Mr. Langtry had taken Bliss, “in his own handwritin, dated Omaha, y steps toward precuring a divorcee Mrs. La- Neb., July last. which will prove that he lies in | bouchere repliec Oi. no; there ts no judicial this matter, and he will have opportunity, in | ly a tacit understanding that ve han iets ae art. The stage opened to her pee no cree ge COnTeR oencourt to urce of revenue, and, understanding the nper of the American people, and the gen erous manner in which they this count Her engazement in New York was ya financial success, and she has made hat he knows nothing about H at he never saw | t he told several | patation that he di ain questionable tra ad s- THE SCANDAL ALLUDED TO and | #bove is thus described in an alleged statement ns, and | ftom Mrs Labouchere. printed in the Cincin- y to make | Matt Conmercial:—“ Mr. Langtry squandered the fortune of his father in two or three 3 fast life in London, moving in the hight cial circles, his wife being the releni Soon the crash came, and the s him | Langtry was so complete that he was obliged He is' to make a trip to this country, where he re- | Cy te. | mained for two years. At the expiration of this | and that he bas | time he returned to London. Upon his arrival | : ith himself without money or 1 position he and his wife one. By a mutual under- |. he stating that she it find support as best she could, and he would do the same. It was at this time she Made the acquaintance of Sir Geo. Chetwynd, rt.. who is recognized in London as one of leading sporting men of England, alwa be found either upon the turt orat the club- house. The London papers soon bezan to notice the conduct of Sir George and the Jersey Lily and the two were for a time the subject of slp in and about London.” MRS. LANGTRY DENIES. A Boston dispatch to the Philadelphia Press says: “Mr. Chas. A. Mendum, Mrs. Langtry’s manager, stated on the lady’s authority that soon lents cone Spencer may be in | or he may not y that he was in nda gentleman who kn here on Sunday. bout in Ne had alw few di y eludec Wo. 312, Royal Areanum, for the ensuing yea took place last evening. and resulted in the Regent, guide, Hilton try, N. Burnham. The attended. and veneral sati: ‘ous condition of the o aths during the year ¢ Moorhead were feelin ing regent in his made to the pre ment by th the benefits in each case. The order now n bers about 40.000, and has had but ten assess- ments during the yea conduct, either in England or qualitiedly false. He added that it was impossi- | ble that the Chetwynd story could be true. If it as it must have been known in England, and in that case Mrs. Langtry would not have been | received and chaperoned by the Princess of | Wales as she had been. He admitted that she 1 been Indisereet in permitting Mr. Gebhart’s attentions, which was due to her ignorance of the difference in social customs in this country | from those of England, but that having been merica, was un- sary.—Mr. A. M.| set right on this point, she had promptly dis- ting committee of | missed Mr. Gebhart, who had returned to New Free dispensary, acknowl-| York.” erald. Dr. orge E. Ex-Senators’ Daughters Married. _, W. Walker, Mrs. G.W. Pope. Dr. | prom ths Louisville Courier-Journal, Dec. 7th. nalow, J. T. Lenman, Mre. J. T-| sss ‘Maud Balley, daughter of i Lenman. Mr. . Freeman, Mrs. Westcott. | Miss Maud 20h ROE Eee Mrs. Richard Bailey, and one of Tennessee's loveliest daugh- | son, Mrs. J. 0. Cle- phane, Mrs. Virgil Hilly J ens, Lansburgh & Bro ters. was married at the residence of her father, jin Clarksville, yesterday. at 4 o'clock, by the | hardt. Dr. Swamstedt, 3 S — | Rev. J. W. Lupton, to Mr. Henry C. Merritt, law wees = ee eee Ts. | partner of the Hon. John F. House, and presi- | ae jdent of the Clarksville National bank. The aoe bride and groom left last night on a bridal tour THE stTURLA TRAGEDY, | titough the northwest. — From the San Francisco Argonsut. Dec. 2d. 1 in some form reached) brogu Interesting Testimony of Mrs. Mary Mobinson, a Sister of Stiles’ Mother, The marriage of Master Howard S. Waring, y, and Miss Lutie Cole,-second dangh- nator and Mrs. Cole, of Los Ange | county, took place at the home of the brid | parents, at Cahuensa, seven miles from the c , of Los Angeles. on W A special froin Chieazo, December Ith, say: ‘The trial « heresa Sturla was resumed to-d: and the case for the state was completed. Th | 's ng, the | defendant. Th very cheerful, and for | 221 ult., in the presence of the ives and a! the first time le: forward frequently to | fe vate friends of the fan bride; | oe or consult witli hier atte ey | among whom were Mrs. Whitin, sister ot | Seis te fas sales he ee ae Mrs. Cole), Mr. and Mrs. James Meilus, Mr. and s 3 : ~ or | Mrs. James Howard, Judge Howard, Mr. and A. Reeves Jackson, on his previous examtna-| yrs. Brown, and others. tion, said that, taking both hypothetical | resident of this city, was a questions together, de now both accomplished ‘and be: | ring is at present an ofticer of the Rodgers, and | has been in t Ice fifteen years, hayins en- tered in June, 1 ut was medically wished to say that the ought not to . Taking the ques- state, the defendant w: thetieal question of the 1 ly, insane— irresponsible or inca- ng an impulse to do wrong. Mrs. m, a sister of Mrs. E. B. Stiles and aresident of Council Blutfs, was the next wit- ness. She came to Chi and bore a message ndant, at 371 Wabash avenue When I first met her, Gene, Charley's young brother announced m sence and brought her in. I said to her, the Enters bare tecucht «til xplain iy mission. Charley has decided to you and live with He insane. ‘The Way is The conventional girl has to bring her adapt- ability into play just as much when she selects | her style of walk as she does in deciding upon the style of her hat or the stuff for her gown, Congruity, too, plays an important train in her street appearance, and is an important factor in her success. The plump girl, who ts all rich, | ripe, round curves and massiveness, can bound | along with a quick, elastic step that would be iculously out of place in her lank and sweetly hetic sister. The first can travel with that | easy spring-away that fs as suzgestive of physi- cal luxury and solid comfort as. pineapple fiber, his mother. He wants © to take this | hammock under an apple tree: the other must fiat and keep boarders. You had_ better | glide—her very appearance suggests the frail- give him up peaceably and quietly. She was | ties of her structure and the possibilities of | very angry. and she aid if he attempted to lea her she would kill him. Ma ¢ited. She not only Dut she also said she would \ marble-hearted mother. I spoke to her of her voice and attainments, aivising her to devote ic, and assured her that Charies She said she did that she then had ‘o him, and that if he left her he would not get any of it. She took eat a large roll of money from her stocking, and gave her housekeeper a ten-dollar bill to buy | heathen goodness of gait that will mark the Some little things. I wanted to pick up Char-| evangelistic damsel ten blocks from a prayer Jes’s clothing, when she drew a revolver aud! meeting, and the “‘quadrupe-dante-putrem- said I should ‘not touch the clothing: that she | sonito-quartitungula-campum" steps of the would put a hole through any one who touched | jiterary woman has an onomatopaia about it it. Tasked why she did not devote herself to | that proctai it once.—Louisville Courier. music and give up her dissolute life, and she —see — = said she didn't. want to: that she could go to ‘The Contented Country Editer., Carrie Watson's and sell more wine than any Once upon a time an editor in search of food Woman in Chicago; thal she liked the life and | was compelled to pawn his diaraond shirt studs ot give it up: : : Gaon the was fifteen. and woutd not leave chi- | for aloaf of bread. While conveying the hum- rope with Charley. Dr. Hay | ble meal to his castle a hungry dog ran off with defendant was not Insane at | jt, and afew moments later robbers relieved her being out of shape in the bounding process. Every woman has a peculiasity of gait that is ; essentially her own. To one who watches the crowd it becomes a question whether a proper description of the steps and motions of the bo it would not be possible to classify each g | with a tolerable degree of accuracy. The mat- | ter-of-fact girl brings down her feet with such prosaic force that she is readily distinguished. So too Is the romantic young lady, whose step Is in itself suggestive of rops ladders and myste- rious moonlizht. There is a go-out-among-the- ill his Methodi: ime of the shooting. the editor of his gold watch and $80 in money. EER Se ee _ | Instead of being rattled by these nntoward las Pours Game ty MinwavKee.—The Mii- eldents the editor smilingly remarked: “I wauses Mepwhiican Sentinel publishes an expose thank the gods that I haye still my appetite ofthe extent of policy gambling tn that city. | Jeft.” We are taught by this fable that true about forty policy shops, all under the | contentment is the greatest of all Journalistic Gmvaton of a wna naned Dalsell. It-ts| coca dower Time, ] aimed that ex-Chief of Police Beck is a part bases 4 er of Dalzell, and that under his recent admin- ae ed tions | weaker, bo mind an y- iy he eaubisrenne Sarming. was celirious. ‘ SEEHING SERVICE, The Trial id Tribulations of Unem- joyed Servants. A GLANCE INTO BOSTON INTELLIGENCE OFFICES— THE WHIMS AND FANCIES OF EMPLOYED AND EMPLOYERS. From the Boston Herald. There are servants and servants, and yet, if we are to believe the plaints of housewives and | housekeepers, good servants are among. the world’s scarcest_ commodities. chiefly in the desire of womankind in gene The troubie lies iL to obtain servants that shall in every way fill the measure of their idea as to what a servant knowing how, wi ng withont in: ant is portray sorvility that and is only reli drawn, but it servi dent fet | gives every person a certain fudepende: | that prevents in a great measi of the same ret: esiployes common in count: jeal government sor newly ficiently imbued with the spi j ence to make the in: ful. There is thing. and th nd for French as hea 1 yon the part of nue or Murray Hi there are so 1 exacting mist strange that t small army of a what little money upon a third party endeavors to get t 1! anount of aay of tl enough to remain Manage to p are enabled’ to Ii employment. This servile rin helled to empios . by the addition of a neat eapandapre “in New York and Boston. His from the lips of thi nt payment of their employed hours, and ¢ pendent, to a great extent, for future work t by for nificant sum, and by re Amon oucht to be. With young housekeepers the | picture of the ideal servant is ve | taken trom novel 1, | Where servants are represented truthfully, too—as possessing the quality of | y frequently h home life, 1 more or less written of hen and where to do ev struction. The E ed, as nause shed by per undoubtedly, is often ov es to make many American wo- t, while being ess a Com= fon does not hor torward, that their p call for a cringing demeanor. In the a| United States the nature of our institutions es under monareh- This feeling is plainly shown either colored grants not sui- t of independ. servility distast landed imr nui inny,” fresh trom. Killarney, The hat of Rory O’More’ hy nob- ifth ave- fact that a story of contemy f many aresident 0 ill. Th view of th any requirements in the minds of | it cannot be regarded as ually among us a mployed persons living on they may have saved from the ywho, hem mone} r for a consideration” tuations. Despite the earned weekly by ser —particula » comfortably when out of other servants, and pa tieularly among the young women who loye and in days of ady their improvide ter during their id | finery, this habit of savin is not so common, ersity they suiler bitt me few of the wor ch they go and find le time, but the vast maic for are thrown on the world almost pennil and without re eof any kind. With the latter class, of course, the first thought is A NEW SITUATION, and at times they are willing to take tempo- rarily almost any wolf hunger, until ous presents its many cheap lod: the unfortunat: from their scanty obtain abed and day, if unable to pay the fee of an intelli: wer ady office, they a plyin inthe servants’ quarter which they are comp tent to fill. This rarely successful, driven to Jives ot n Capacitated: With the men it is diffe thing that will keep off the i something more adyantage- f. In large cities there are ing-houses, to which at night can repair, and, by the outlay store of ten or fifteen cents, breakfast. Throughout the aily ets, ap n hope se, there may be a vacan method of seer and many yc f shame, a ime work ne girls are weary days of to earn an “by nature to the endu of hardship and fatizue, less given to despondency, and witir ‘the ability employment to their liking is not obtain: any statement affecting her strict propriety of | perform manual labor, they in mind and body than the able to tide over bad thin tion is theirs, knowing what lack of work means, th to guard against stances that led to their first loss of emplo: In Boston ther offices, and of these the largest have branches in other large cities. ment. and, when a ne y bitter experience iy good care @ repetition of the cireum- are many intellige ni From the ent of this employment bureau many interesting facts con- cerning servants ai nd their employers, the char- acteristics, foibles and pecul of both have been gleaned. Applications for work are inade daily to fully four hundre women outnumbering the men three to oi are looking for we been employed. in come from Nova cents per week: Of the females who and have the city, the great Scotia, where they of nutionalit then Germans, and A certain fitness for the performance of one kind | of labor appe: nationality. to At I to hay oman, servant to fill a c jon the nationalit ill cases, the posit in tie applications is bent the tree's mand for ont ! hiidren ra n whieh poin per thing. for of religion enters matter of servant preference 1s show! emplo} the religious belie beyond the fact t not previou: OD For cookin, desideratum is a native of France. | ber work, a German is usually requ he laundry, an Irishwoman, the Boston office, he says, by ed_ unemployed persons, ‘the er numbe earn but but, once arrived in the Hub, they demand | for the same amount of wor! unless hard pressed for tunc The largest demand is for girls capable of pe forming housework, and the de1 y is first for Aimer tives of the United States —then and will not, accept less. ad in ords that is, ni ova Scotians, d then girls of other nations. pb leas common to girls of each a belief that this is the e ahold onthe mind of the r.in making a request for a rtain position, she will men- 'y she desires, and, in near! jon and_nationalit . The belief that “as the twig inclined” makes a large de- 1 American nursery maids, ple who consider the welfare ather than the dictates of a nts to French maids as the however, the great For cham- ted, and ‘The question to a great extent, into the hunting, A very decided n tor Protestants. “But many are alll 8, free from bigotry, do not care what eof of their servants may be, hat the presence of Catholic servants in the house sometimes disarranges THE Dé on “chureh” days. OMESTIC ROUTINE, A true Catholic must needs go to early mass, and, even if ata long distance from a church, wil I tramp through all kinds of weather rather than lose the service. The greatest evi i that employers haveto guard axainst is dishonesty. Servants habitually dis- honest keep away from intelligence bureaux where black lists are kept and each known thief is recorded. The experienced keeper of an office can easily tell the work bya few m character of an applicant tor inutes study of her face, and in this matter of character reading seldom makes mistakes. all applicants for p References are required from positions, and those who seek intelligence offices as a inedium for securing work are seldom dattons from some person or other. the slightest doub investigation foilo without written recommen- If there is bt as to their authenticity, an ows Immediately. Some few servants refer verbally to well known parties, and In this case inquiries are almost sure to be | t t | the Worki .. | and in vari the city of Boston 17,773 servants coming un the four heads—domestics, cooks, waiters and houseworkers. The fpbdees of the city is forel- bly shown by the fact that, inthe year 1880, under the single head of domestics. the statistics showed the number 17,156, within a few hundred of being as large as the number that represent the torce coming under the four heads in 1875, and larger by over 2.000 than the number representing the do- mesticsin that year. Of the 17.166 domestics employed In Boston in 1880, only 6,042 were na- | tives of the Unifed States. Ireland was repre- sented by 7.172 persons, British America by 2,358, | Germany by 194. England by 912 and indina- by 258.” In this list the females outnumbered the males by about 15 to 1. With rezard to the ages of those employed. it is shown that 339 were under 16 years of aze, 16,465 between the ages of 16 and 60 and 304 who had passed three- score years. Much WAGES are paid in this country for the same amount of | work than in England, where domestics receive but $125 per week for the performance of labor that brings $3 toa good worker in the United States. lish nursery maids receive Tess th: vepers about the same amount and cooks from $75 to #250. As in tie case of domestics, those engazed in the last-named serv in Ameriga are much better remunerated. The difference of wages is, to ne slight extent, counterbalanced by the di fereace in the cost of living in the two countries but this differ isnot great enough to pre- 8: mi excuse fur the disparity in wa ition to the large numler of servants rly employed, there is a class of day workers, who, having families dependent npon them for care and support, have little homes of their own out and perform any labor th tunate enough to, obt | laundry work forming their chief means of live- i Miood: These women are paid by the day, inmand better we are not always | obtaining work, the amounts of mon Ly both classes in the course of a_ mc about the same. Many of these da; ve small children, whom it is impos: attended, and for the. recepti received th are their little nd attention < shadow in ewhere relieved by a gleam of pne place, at Teast, that an nt girl can repair’ to with trance of a hearty welcome and sub- stance in the struvale for a situa- s Bower,” too well known to need | cexcription, is. perhaps, the pioncer institution or itskind ia the United States, The bower has done a grand work in th n of hu- M Jennie Collins, i Z woman, an founder, honor to the vod, pure Americ: re her birth. | The Yankee blood coursing in her veins asserted | its ale her the champiod of the poor To the claim of being a poor rking woman, no one lias a better right. arting in the Lowell mills at the age ot 14 he went through all the various exper- ofa working woman’s Jot, uutil by ier Attention y manner fevances of In 1869 she ap- e of the eiglt hour law, us Ways she manifested how deep an interest she took in the subject, until she | crowned her I by the founding of Boffin’s | Bower in the year 1870. Girls who #0 to Jen- in sickness, debt, discouragement, or in any into find a pa- ympathet and the best advice | and aid that can come from a warm heart and an ability to judge by bitter experience the feelings of othe ore dist |s iy was first drawn to her by of tr Cl | peared as an adve = 2 How to Cook for the Sick. From the Philad-iphia Ledver. The second of the course of New Century ing at the Fr | In these le: nce Sees | cooked, in the way approved by the latest au- | thorities, the dishes which are to tempt, as well | as nourish, the invalid. Beef Tea.—Chop very fine; remove every | | shred of skin and fat; a quicker way is to pound | it Ina mortar. To one pound eh j one pint of cold wate let it steep in thi least one hour—longer is better; then set it in a porcelain or zranite iron stew pot, ona part of th ‘tove where it cannot possibly boll; t» boil © spoilit, and if there Is any danger of this, the pot can be set ina pail of hot water, or in a | ttle. It should not rise above 180 de 3. To ensure its freedom from fat, it is lito cook it the day before needed; but if | this skim well, then lay a ing paper on the surface: this will remove very nearly all the 8 left, Don’t aim to have beef tea clear. strain it throuzh cloth or fi closer thi the nut! stir it before servi If you nnel, or anything r sieve, you take out much of r always BS vewetables of uy kind unless ordered by the doctor; but if the patient wants a change you may take a little celery seed. crush and tie in a thin bag, 1 take out before serving. To. warm up, secure it again from bolling by setting the yes- sel containing just the quantity needed in hot | water. it when you serve. | Beef Essence.—This is quite distinct from ftea and must be served in sinaller quan- |tities. Of the tea you can give, as a rule, a Wineulassful at a time; of essence, a table- spoonful. Chop or better pound as for beef tea: put into a bottle or jar, a fruit jar is con- venient, close tightly and ‘set ina kettle of hot | water; warm your jar first. ‘To one pound of ! meat add three tablespoonfuls soft water. Let | the water boil four hours around the jar; this does not allow the meat inside to boil, but only to simmer. Raw Meat for Diarrhora.—This is used mostly for infants, and is almost always liked by them. Take a piece of tender beef and with a dull knife scrape off all that will come, this leaves all the skinny part, and what you use will be soft as thick paste; rub into this one part gran- | ulated sugar to two parts of meat, and ask your | doctor what quantity to give. This has been i remarkably efficacious with infan' Juicy beef, the lean if you wish condensed make a soup thet pound quite soft; acd 3 quarts cold water, which should cook to 2 quarts. In all sick cooking use no iron vessels, yhich either discolor or give an unpleasant Let it stand back in the stove tor one | hour or more, then d aw ita little nearer and jjust simmer it half an hour. Skim, strain, and if allowed by the doctor, add a little cream. This should not be mixed with the whole quan- ity, but added with the salt when warmed and served. Mutton Broth.—This is not nearly so strong as the above. The nicest 1s made from the shoulder. 1b. meat, 3 quarts cold—always cold—water, 2 teblespoonfuls pearl barley. Skim carefully, strain, add salt to taste. Barley Water.—20oz. pearl barley; wash till the water is clear; put in stew pan with one pint boiling water; boil five minutes and throw the water away. This is to get rid of the dark look, which might be offensive to the invalid. Cover the barley again with one- half pint boiling water; boil down to one-half; strain, add a pinch of salt, to take off the insipidity; sweeten if the doctor Says so. Never use flavorings of any kind, eonecially alcohol, except. by physician’s order. Rice Water.—1 oz. Carolina rice; wash well, cover with 1!¢ pints cold water; either soak off the stove or stand on a very slow fire for about three hours; then boil one hour; strain; if al- lowed, sweeten and add the juice of halfa lemon. Imitation of Asses’ Milk.—¢ oz. gelatine; Just cover with cold water and let stand until aning and | LITEBATURE OF THE NOSE. CONGRESSMEN IN THE CITY. Their Places of Residence Here. THE SENATE. Alphabrtical list of Senators, with their resi- dences in Washington. David, Davis, President pro tem., TL, National Aldrich, N. W., Rhode Islind, Arlington hotel Allison, W. B., Iowa, 112t Vermont avenue. Barrow, Bayard, Beck, Noses and Nationality—The Character Indicated by the Nese—Shakspeare’s A jons to the Nese. York. , Indiana, 93 Kast Capitol st, mato, 804 9th St. now. wa, San Francisco psper. “Nihil me poenitet hutus nasi,” quoth Pam- phagus; that Is: “My nose has been the making of me.” “Nee est cur poen! teat,” replied Co- cles; that Is: “How the deuce should such a nose fail.” There was a time when there were no noses; that is. if we are to believe the evolutionists. Man was then very far down in the scale of crea- tion; In fact, a mere round or egg-like mass of structureless bioplasm; a traly “dezraded or- ganism,” as the biologists pleasantly tell us, | ¢ langutdly borne hitherand thither on the shores | of the pliocene sea. He had not even a mouth, and the mouth, we take it, naturally preceded | the nose in the order ot development, for no | matter how dezraded an organism is it must eat, while it is not absolutely necessary that it | should smell. The teachers of development find it ver lve the mouth. When the little of structureless bid felt hungry it could nat of its ow about in seareh ot food. was now and then Texas, 1213 F st. nw, A., Kentucky. m, io, Ebbttt house, McLane, Robert M. Maryland, 1607 Ist. n. ) MeMMUh, Benton, Tennesse, 19 13th st. im Money, H. D., Mississippt. Moore, W. R.) Tennessee, Morey, HL L.,"O4lo, 1327 Fst. now, Morrison, W . Litnots, Willant’s heteL Morse, L., Massachusetts, Wornal, y's hotel Mosgrove, James, Pennsy Ivani | Moulton, & W., Iitinots, 1013 15¢h st. now, Muldrow. TL 1. Mtssiscippt, Owen house. homp-on H., Maine, W., Pennsylvania, $26 11th st. mw. W.M., South Carolina, 1429 Corcoran a Hatutiton Louse. rk, J McKei 5 MeKinley. With ir, H. W., N. Hai Brown, Joseph E., Butler, M. C, nite Cs Call, Wiikinsoa, Fiorida, Camden, J. . West Virzi Cameron, J. D., Penns! Cameron, Ang Ww + 1082 ° Islan Vit, 1411 Massachusetts a tnw. pf, 133 Pennsylvania enue an, 4, 823 15th street Dow. a. Willan.” hotel, 10 Conneetieut ave. new. some ed permit t ous sides, and ha out at the othe brief move! ¢ of its gelatin | f ving retained it awhile to pass | e of time there ¢: One side of the mass rection of the food | pat was taken ane opening, which, from force of habit, ceased to be perma” nently closed. A fixed position of the mouth | created a well-defined channel for food, whence came a stomach and its appurtenances. Considering the ditculties that attend the evolution of the nose, we are not surprised that development theorists have fouzht shy of the subject. Smneils, of course, hey were caused then, as now, by tion from the odorous body. Let us supposition that when the lovely of bioplasm was se ch was Its food, the amu ht quiver of that port just above the new! process was rep When the smell period. was then exposed in the longer than another,and neuris! In several tlnes through the » Rennsylvan!s, AL. Massachusetts, WiLunpsitrs, 1501 Massachusetts ay, oy tha Flats. Soreet nw. nd B st. se. "s hotel. J. avenue nw 3 street. Por 12 6ih PUSEUS, John T, Miehtcan, 807 rdson, D. P.. New York, 1114 G st. naw, rdson, J. 8. South, st. Reh Ri noses eimana. % Vermont ave. ngton hotel, we 13 13ch St. maw. Nora’ a, We Tl mouth. feedinz tin a ropolitan hotel a ats, the agreeable object. making a projection of Dioplasm; when the odor was. disagreeable there was a shrinking back, causing a depres- sion. That the shri » back gradually d veloped into the n pertures, and th Jection in time hard into di and Roman curve, we may be at leas! to bel i .» Missi > perfumes pos- eC jolet ciub, there 8 of the evolu- ination, alone can es, T sesssed_ by the F Iker, awns a gulf which tie ge tionist, aided by a vivid ima; bridge. It has been the custom for people of all races to admire, or pretend to admire, their own hoses, and to sneer at those that differed fra them. The Semitic nose has never been thought by the world at large to correspond with any principle of beauty. Yet the Arabs and 5; tel. sota, 1601 Mass. avenue. . . A Mick ila ost | Sbeer, Ethery, Georgia, A. OFFICERS OF THE SENATE. souer, Henty 4, Rhode Island, J. J, Bullock, cha: w York avenue. isp W. M., Htinets, F. E. Shober, chic; 68 1: ana, Rhiegs house, RJ. 1 2 88 14th st. nw, 1 nw, puitt house, Sst. oD | speak contemptuot “the — flat-nosed TH | Franks,” and Disrae ken pleasure in re- | peating the phrase. fricans are proud of | sentattv H their broad, flat noses, andsoie tribes endeavor, | Ketter, J | by inserting artificial objects, to. increase their | aiken. Vi pet deform! and careful breedinz,which | Ainsli¢, Geone, Aldrich, Wiillam, 1 did so much for the ps of the Greeks and rson, J Romans, and have lielped and are helping to make those of the Teuton and L straight and beautiful, have done little to ify the prominent features of the Seri apt to be proud and boastful, argu- | rthat they are abstractly beautiful or |} indicate’ strength of char: inh York, Aclinzton hotel. Norado. 9:7 New York ave. rel Washbul Watson, Went re Bus spoken. Two hundred azo the nose was | jib rthan at present, if we can judge by oid portraits, and even the nasal organs of our revo- lutionai Ri ry W. at, 1739 IT. ave 1a, Rigi how " Bow Br: Willard’s hotel, 1115 G st. nv e, EDIT house, at Place. Metropolitan hovel, poutan Lotel, 50 B st. et Virginia, National hovel 1011 St. nw. + Behn ola. Waits, Jonn b., | wai w wilt c 1 TW nia, 510 13th st. n. Metropolitan hd —se2 HINTS TO BARBERS. Suggestions to the Professors of the Tonsorial Art Which They Will Not Meea. Mi Wilson, Benjamin, W Wise, G. D., Virgin’ Wise, Mongan i ‘an, National hotel. Mis-ourt. unin B.. Ohio. a, 04 1 “e w York, 1634 Ist. now. Young, Thomas L., Ohio, 1112 G st. now. OFFICERS OF THE MOUSE. Frederick D. Power, Chaplain, 1321 Corcoran st. dward McPaerson, Clerk, Mass, WH Mark Twain. It is safe to say that nine out of ten ot the men one meets on the streets in our cities shay. orrather are shaved. Some shave the mu: tache, some shave the chin, some the cheek: Indeed, one must go into mathematics to the tables of permutations and combinations to find how many varieties of shaving are possible. 4 house. ky, Riggs house, . S08 12th st. new. gressional hotel. Henry Sherwood, Postmaster, 1103 9th st. nw. OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES. t. NeW. rode Island, 1213 N st. mw, stssippt. ve oon “ a 5 SENATE. Venea Does . or Le = warty a fe a sand, Nattonal hotel D. F. Murphy, 84Cst now. piped accessor eae a Missouri, 211 North Capitol st. ASSISTANTS. the mirror, but, after all, man dozs his share a atiees houye. imben. ie nt. Teines hone, of it. Georgia, Metropolitan hotel. EAward V. Murphy, 41921 st. nw. is J.C. Cobb, T. R., In Golerick, W. G., I Gst. hw, Henry J. Gensler, 1318 13th st. nw. D. B. Lloyd, 120 € st. new. HOVSE. Jobn J. McEihone, Chtet of Corps, 1318 Vermontave Wi Blatr Lord, Riggs house. ‘Me Brown, 119 And {t is true that shaving is a very old custom, nor have we anything to say against it, except that it is unnatural, and is, and should be acknowledged to be, a concession to the looking-glass, and to vanity. But the point is that old as isthe art, it isa singular thing how few know how to shave. ‘Nearly all men shave In the passive voice.” This may be taken as the grammatical phrase or as an acknow- ledgment of the voice of the barber, which they have to endure. Each signification is true. And while nearly all mea consent to refer their K. Elwards, 339 € st. n ", Mass Joun H. Witte, 516 13th s Cravens, J. E.. Crowley, Ri sas, 407 G st. nw. ew York, 1205 18th st. now, exas, Some Facts Showing How the Senve of wa. Sight Deceives the Av Smoker. Darrell, C. ii., Louistana. erage r pes ce ; | Davidson, RH. M., Florida, National hotel . Te arfraction of those few understand their agts | Bivis, George i iilaols os F st mat SS There is a financial blunder at the bottom of | D2ViS, Lowndes H., Missourl, 1342 New York ave. “Now. do you know,” said the dealer, “that Dawes, R. R., Ohio, 621 13th st. now, it that makes trouble all through. The dogma | D-ring, Towa, Riggs house. you people who are always looking for strong that shave is a shave isa mistake. One man | p- Motee L., Indi: nas and dark cigars are the worst-fooled men in the with a stiff beard and full face will choose to | Deuster, Peter sconsin, 1213 K st. n.w. Do you know that there isn’t such have his whole expansive countenance clear | Dezendo1 incinta, Congressional hotel, 1 thing as a strong domestic clgar—that is, one that you would smoke?” The party all pooh- poohed the idea. “I tell you that a real strong cigar, such as are sold all over the town here, would be so rank you coulda’t smoke It. Now, here isa Colorado—a pale, rather light brown” cigar. Now, I'll bet drinks for the party 1 can | prove that this cigar is exactly the same as that dark one you are smoking. sir,” to the man who wanted one very dark. The bet was taken and the man stripped the wrapper off each cigar. The one in the dark wrapper was, If anything, the lightest of the two. pw you fee,” sald the dealer, “the ordinary dark cigar is a hum- bug, made simply to gratify the eve.” A Globe-Democrat wan hi In while all this was going on and became an interested lis- tener. After the bet had been settled and the party dispersed, he asked the cizar dealer about the little trick of the trade he had just exposed, “It is a little thing,” he said, “that is perfectly known to cigar men, but not, I think, to the general public. The popular idea is that every- body must smoke a strong, that is, a cigar. Fully nine-tenths of my customers want dark cigars, in the beliet that they are nen It is all nonsense. The body of all cigars ma in this city is the same in color and strength. ‘But why do manufacturers practice the de- _ ceit?” asked the reporter. Because they have to grati public taste, which is governed entirely by the eye. It only shows how the sense of sicht fools smok- el, South Carolina. ‘.» Tennesse *, Metropolitan hotel. Son, fr, M 2arolina, Metropolitan hotel, ew York, Willard’s hotel, «, 99 New York ave. » sinnesota, National hotel, = New Yor suis, John E, Loulstana, 1012 13th st. Ermentrout, D., Penns: Errett, Russell, Pent shorn; another will shave only his upper lip. To each it is ‘a sj and each is charged alike. One may reqtfire thirty minutes attention, the other ten minu' The first will dull arazor, the second not effect its edge. To each it is ten cents. Now, a barber's working day, we will assume is ten hours long. If he is occupied three- quarters of his time, he must be busier than usually appears. This gives him seven hours’ labor, and, if he struck a day of half-hour faces, his whole receipts would be $1.40. If his luck gave him te! inate cases, he would take in| F i 34.20. Even this would not pay were it not for | Fisher, If the seductive side issues—the hair-cuts and | js, shampoos of the trade—that bring in more per hour than the fundamental industry. Now, as the price and the circumstances of shaving go, it is a constant hurry to finish a man, as shaving scarcely pays at the best, and if he is one of the most important subjects—full L Louisiana, 1723 R Leave, shave and stiff beard—it is a loss to work upon Pennsylvania, 1822 G st. mw, lim. To shave him carefully costs too much | Grout, W: W., Vermont. time and costs the edge of the See 3 = Hi Seetesed ) eso 726 11th st. nw, over his face, cutting off sections of beat ere | Gunter, T. M., Ark: and there, and leaving odd oases of hair along | Hall. Joshua G-, Now Hampshire, | | the deserts of the cheek, saves the razor and | i; \ihmond, N. Georgia, Metropolitan hotel. spoils the person who pays for the operation, | Haracnourgh, A. A. New Jersey. 1339 F ot and who should not be entirely forgotten. The Ni scale of prices ought to be regulated by what Hardy, John, New York, Arlington hotel. Harmer, A. C., Pennsylvania, 623 13th st. nw. one gets, and barbers ought to have the courage to charge for what they do. Farwell, 8. S., Finley, J. J, ylvanta, 1405 G st. n.w. ew York, Wormley’s annex. Ford, Nicholas, Missouri, 915 G st. n.w. Forney, W. H., Alabama, 1116 @ st. now. Frost, Robert G., Missouri. Fulkerson, A., Virginia, Me.ropolitan hoteL Virginia, 21 Get nw, Geades, George W., Onto, 5: st nw, ee oregon, 613 13th st. nw. Harris, B. W., Massachusetts, 1229 G st. nw. Harris, H. 8., New Jersey. Haseltine, L'S., Missouri. Haskell, D. C., Kansas, 1311 H st. nw. Hateh, W. see--- How a Bad Husband Got Rid of His Wife. ‘A telegram from Buffalo, N.¥., last night says: Mrs. Collins, the wife of a prominent Brad- ford man, who has been for some months con- H., Missourl, Hamilton bouse, €., Wiscousin, Hetiman, Wm., Indiana, Ebbitt_ house. Henderson, T. J., Illinois, 211 North Capitol st. Hepburn, W. P., Towa, 1027 Vermont ave. Herbert, H. A., Alabama, Metropolitan hotel. Herndon, Thos. H., Al ers. folding aman and putting a lighted and an- lighted cigar in his mouth in quick succession? He can't for tie life of him tell which is which. soft; 3¢ pt. barley water made as above; when boiling, pour over the soaked gelatine; when this is all dissolved, add 1¢ pt. new milk and 1 02. new milk. Glycerine Bisucit.—Beat, together, till Night, he yelks and whites of two eggs; pour on made before the applicant is recommended to | them 1 pt. boiling milk; add a scant tablespoon- an employer. course. As has mand for America There are very few cases of manufactured credentials, experic taught the working classés the nee having folly of such a already been stated, the de- in girls for house and nursery work is yery great and not satisfled by the supply. There are thousands of native girls who are forced by circumstances to work, but they prefer labor in factories, stores and restau- rants, believing it possesses a certain gentility | ri not to be found in the drudgery of the domestic. This feeling, however, 18 more to be found among those born In the cities thanamong those | iver oil biscuits ful of butter (glycerine’ does not take the place of butter, but of sugar); let stand till luke- warm, then add whatever quantity of glycerine Is ordered by the doctor; we will say that in case he orders one teaspoonful to biscuit, that will be four ounces; mix with the above ingredients flour enough to make a stiff batter, set to rise till light, then add fiour enough for a soft dough. This willtake much longer to more difficult to make light. Bake in a mod- erate oven tht juarters ofan hour. Cod can be madeas above, only in of country birth. Girls working as above re- | that case use sugar and no fat. celye more money housework, but w! than those employed in en the expense of and oo Weattny Ber Insane.<A jury of inquisl- lodging, all of which is supplied to the domee- | tion, summoned by the sheriff of Washington tic, are deducted, the balan cases, be found to bler laborer. Hon. will, in most be In favor of the more hum- Carroll D. Wright, of the Massachusetts board of labor statistics, has kindly furnished some not uninteresting facts | com: concerning the number of servants in our midst, a8 well ag a comparison of their wages with | care for herself or manage her affairs, those received by workingmen and women in other countries, In the year 1875 there were in county, Md., commenced on Saturday,at Hagers- town, to inquire into the sanity of Mary Felgly, @ woman ponsessed ol property. and conilrmatory of her lunacy and inabil ty to © court will appoint a committee to manage her or less white sugar. Cool till about like | has never been insane. ise the second time than ordinary biscuit and is | sion of the Joseph Smith branch of the Mormon ‘Ann | scattering resident Mormons who remained be- i considerable | hindthelr brethren. It is anncunced that the | Latham, L. C., North Caroitna, Metropolitan hotel, Though the examination was not | annual Leedom, pleted, all the testimony was in supnoct held in the old temple April 6, 1883, and fined in the Buffalo state insane asylum, has been taken out on a writ of habeas corpus. and it was stated by her counsel and friends that she Hiscock, Frank, New 1] There is a scandal in | Hopiziil, ¥. Maryland, 103 Bot hw, connection with the case. A short time before | Hoge, J. Blair, West Virglbia, Willard’s hotel It’s a perfect Mlustration. Nobody—that no old smoker, if he cannot see the fire the er egy yen apd or is lighted ot. It is ‘80 wi wrappern. Bundfold a nbn +e could not tell the dif ference between a so-called ‘dark’ cigar and @ al Hill, John, New Jerse; He W. 8., Indiana, 1012 14th st. n.w. ‘od her arrest she was told that her husband was | Holian, W. S; Indiana, to12 14th st. lighter one.’ unfaithful, and she openly accused two Brad- | Hook re engin ford ladies of undue familiarity with him. | Horr, eek, Conprnemonal icken. She then came to Buffalo with a view to obtain- | House ‘Tennessee, Metropolt ted to the asylum. al ere was } Hul ando, Not TO] prooiceanese tn the manner of her commitment. | Humphrey, H. L., Wisconsin, 19 Grant Place, = Hutchins, Waldo, New York. ‘: 11s, Jt, New York, Con; Mormon Apostics He-Establishing a | 3300'S Fors. jr 3 Trani, 1218 Fat nw. . ‘emple in Ohio. Jones, G. W.,‘Texas, nw. kz a J. K., Arkansas, 1422 11th st. Dw. A special from Cleveland says:—A sub-divi- — 5, Eis, Jorgensen, J.. Virginia, 717 14th st. n.w. church are repairing the famous temple at Kirt- | Joyce, C. H., Vermont. 610 codes nw. land, Ohio, where the first stake of Zion was | Kasson. J. Do Pemiayivanta set, and which was abandoned when Smith's | Kenna, J. rest Vii wild-cat bank broke forty years ago. See ARS eS ee eas have been held regularly and strenuous efforts | Kiow, Robert, Pennsyivania. made to gain converts and augment the | Knott, J. P., peed 1827 Ist. ow. E. 8., Mich! G. W., Maine, conference of the Mormon church will be over 1,000 Mormons will attend. Jacl nde -angt eelea ps town is ofthe church

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