Evening Star Newspaper, November 5, 1892, Page 9

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EE = Paar if eae bas THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON. D. C. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 5, 1892—SIXTEEN PAGES. 9 ees the average breadth of the river is ten miles S-iiae Seas wir acewsaie TAMING OF THESHREW |seeeeuei=saseeceeest| INA SCOTCH LOCH. aeciscerst eet pee j : we of endeavoring to live my life otherwise? t has not been under- right about face home again. j 1 have tried bard for and mainland) and its average depth is 150 feet, so | stood at the Comedie Francaise, where the *“Rather hard lines that,” agreed Riley, “but | today as I sat alone here on the deck (for I aid that at all times of the year vessels of 2,000 tons action of Petruchio bas beet pushed outrage- | burden can go as far as Manaos. Between — re ging _ : ; Fro mana at {iat hour, Whertos, you —_ pad inclined to go with the others) and : ‘ 7 ously direction of comedy.” From the Enciish Hiustrated Magazine, | We shou we been up to therm now at thom mountains, #0 galm. eo eternal Santarem end Obidos (the next stopping plac, Coquelin and Jane Hading Will Play sealed a’ Guat on cs : ore populous It in This Country. | that gien to crosa.” I felt I should never be than anywhere else, each little commanity of Jules Lemaitre compliments the transiator on RR ral prided ies é a the ant Tt was all that fool's fault ~ ¥, then, Gifford?” | for taking us down so near the water, and I de- | ‘With their triampbs and their glories and the civilized Indians having its palm-thatched the improvements he has made in Shakespeare. caid a fair young man, | Clare these Scotch loute need tohave's few tdess | rest dere ieee wd what doe Ti matter tf leenivg against the taff. | ™™med into their skulle. They won't listen to ening agai afellow who knows anything about it, with | rail of a yacht, as he | their -Awcel, eair, it'z no so alsy as ye would slanced critically at the | think’ in their confounded drawl, Ub! how I dark blue yachting suit | hate i tka cuspualion, ‘Cheer up, old chap, you can’t always bave “Not teday, old fel- | C8 mortal thing your own way, you know, sgersricteve id Paley, adding, With a twinkle in bis eyes, said the other, | ~perhapsa certain defection from the tall, dark-bearded man, that had the honor of conveying lunch to your leisurely proceeding to high mightiness may be someexcuse for the un- roll a cigarette between | US8ally disturbed condition of your feelings, houses set close to the water, its Sanding. place “Tread thi f Shel P he screened by an arbor-like arrangement of flow- is piece of Shakespeare long ago, vas) SHAKESPEARE IN FRENCH.| sys. “Ireceived from it an impression of ering vines trained over the trees. Montarias : (boats) are moored in front of them all, bam- something tossed together, odd. unpleatantand mocks swing from the trees, monkeys, paro- often tiresome, Besides being ferocious and in- quets, black pigs and naked children appear to | How the Comedy Has Been Received in human. Yet the other evening, from the sec- grow up together, and the women are consider- ond scene, I was conquered quite as much ag ably more than half nude. Each settlemcnt has} Yarie~The Critics Like Katharine, but | Katharina. Why? First, if you wish, because acleared space in the primative forest for the | Can’t Go Petruchio—How the Play Has | Coquelin isa grand comedian’ and Marey a re~ wing of cacao and mandiocs—the former} Been Changed in Translation. splendent beauty. The other reason is that Farnishing drink (for from the Hat sceds of its eul Delair has cut the disordered text of | pulpy fruit the chocolate of commerce is made) Peace Shakespeare with very sure intelligence, Taking | and ‘the roots of the latter being made into | Correspondence of The Even out here and adding’ there he-has thrown into but - farina, the Brazilian Indian's staff of life. reese ene rane, October 7, 1892, | beautiful light the ‘essential part of this ex-| his fingers, “Not to- | "stop that!” growled the other, turning red, | * little late in reaching the slip at the mole, ad THE TOWN OF OBIDOS. . MERICANSARESOON | Tberant buffoonery. In. this way it very | day, I'm going to try thove crags over there—| “none of your chaff now. | the passengers from three trains were waiting Obidos, the third important town on the to be presented with a| isi farce: feerfal and ecseung of the Shrew | good ecramble with my sketch book, you Hex could not help the bound that his heart when the doors were opened. ‘The man with river, stands on arocky bluff,500 miles above the curious theatrical nov-| against a solid background of good sense and | know,” and he pointed across the loch where = You'll 7 by Eo pened = phir whe puted lower deck, and, grasping ocean, with a background of hills and cacao elty—Shakespeare done | P*¥chological truth. | the mists curled about the jagged peaks of | So ihor conan pee Hagley ps pre t | a stair rail,tucked his faithful stick under . plantations. At this point the Amazon is not into French and acted |, ¥- Francisque Sager. in the Temps, was not | Biath Bhein. . further discussion. ; | palgrm and prepared to sscend. Half way up : more re ome bao = bea deep, and its by two Socemage Pacis bet tole ——s. drool gy pou reer ra ‘Oh! but it’s a shame to. waste a ripping day | Two ladies entered. The first was Mrs. Joe solueen: little parcel be held im his hand ° ‘rust t y 3 ; indeed, | |. D stooped top As be d '( mR Amazon is broken are themselves like ample | tree. Coquelin. It has been | and the greatest French comedian could have | book! of good breeding which became her | charming societ A fim “er > JA. rivers and are locally named as- such, while | Eight or nine days after leaving Para we find announced that Messra, | the power to give ita permauent success. “I ‘Waste the day!” repeated Gifford; i society belle of Oak | others are mere creeks. A second stop is made | ourselves rounding the large island (0 large THE MAN WITH A CANE. A Little of Mis Fine Work as Seen one Perry Boat. Trew the San Francisco Cal! He wasa portly and dignified business man of Oakland, and be crossed on the narrow gauge boat Encinal to San Francisco yeater: accompanied by a stalwart cane, The boat was low,’ ALONG THE AMAZO UNDER THE EQU fi coedi F. . pd. who wae admit that it has hadan enormons first suc- | tér of opinion, Frank, » matter of opinion. Sroootingl) wel. Bellowingdowty in her wae perenne beers , : 2 poms ey Soe Gircetty behind him. There was s feminine - t the village of Tajaparce, on the channel or | that it contains an extensive Jake) which line cess. And Tam convinced that this suecess,| ‘Well, you teem a bit out of sorts this morn- | “It 3 x | nda momentary backward movement . 3 river” of the <= me, which, though con- | jns junction of ‘he tite Pots with HRN made an engagement | without prolonging itself for any great length | ing: what's up?” it Bg wh ee o> ee of the crowd, which cansnd the man with the Some Glimpses of Life on an Amazo-| taining hardly a dozen huts, is of importance Wisk partion 6€ the Accenon vest With “Madame Jane / of time, will have a certain number of fine to-| Gifford did not answer, but smoked on | Kou, conmejcmiins to be considered beautiful. | eane to turn 5 the ax being one of the chief centers of the rubber | of this island is locally known as the Solimoens, Hading for two years. | morrows. Ihave taken a lively pleasure in it.| thoughtfully for a few minutes, and Rilev | TA too setere ‘tobe entitle (leering, ethers | AYePANE & sen pout hie rotund forts nian Steamer. trade. Here we find another crowd of nearly | gs near its source it is universally called the She is to play a four | But, Understand me, this pleasure comes—how | “took sights”'at the gulls witha boat hook | Thuy tne eacre of hee lips was dibdaintel, and vo | 22 bo moved. I-known polticiam naked blacks, with the same monkeys, paro-/ Maranon. Turning mto the “Dead river.” a: z i Hed |sball I eay? It is like the proverb, ‘The | which he picked up from a-sent near. | on: but no one vet had eyot ned eee aante | from the bay city d the ear, admin- ———— iets and pottery to sell, or more just like | the Indians cull the Rio Negro, in an hour or | @0Mths’ trip through American cit luring | sauce makes the fish go down.’ What pleased | Presently the latter remarked: ‘ ater deep gray Spesend woke take | istering a gentle tap eek of a leading > = - them: and it may beas well to say right here | two we find ourselves safely ashore at Manaos, | the coming season of 1893 in Delair’s adapta-| me in the piece was not of the piece itself.) “Lady Hélen Desbrooke said last might she She did not join the group by the fire, but | divine and captured the hi the head A REGION OF BEAUTY. | that this part of the scene is exactly duplicated the most important island town of Brazi tion of “The Taming of the Shrew,” witn Co- | They say it is from Shakespeare; sume think he | wanted to try and fish today. I suppose they'll e9 J }of a: indignant wor Faxste B, Wanp. |-quelin, who created last winter the part of | only had n hand init. What is certain is that | go and trawla bit. [heard old Macdonald say | M0ved over to the card table covered with | protect renched the race of ty js h : is | it is nothing but a primitive country fair farce | there were a lot of fish just round those rocks P&PETS, and began absently turning over the | fender, why eels ah ite Revaiet Beamon vices 2 | gt tua uta is eed Get extevaae tenialitg To | ues eed agen eee ae cece Bee ee eating Colander. Riz 4i8 meh | tod gene sand, mate anetber Samm (CHARGE. arrangement mutual advantages will accrue to | the Anglo-Saxon sense. Our own pieces of this | of the loch. “I've no doubt Wharton wouldat Sede of lo eee ately, but be pulled the | tock a downward course thin time, planting tte ‘Tramps May Get Them on the Rallways In- | thousands of play goers in America, to the or-| character were always full of gayety and good | mind going. too,” be added, “but he's booked rag prwagad carta bie heat seit q | TO" point gently bat firmly just above the inst Malf-Clad } tiles es pasting travelers are _lik sagngr a ata takeaiar Luoetive in ganizatian of the Comedie Francaise in Patis, | humor. The Anglo-Saxon taste, I confess, is | for the moors! He rather likes Lady Helen, I | Proceed to cotsblichs winch rake and | Nest button of a rising youngattornes, who hed Natives, Who Sell Monkeys and Parrots. [to buy, while the men are off in sas a and to the charming actress herself. too harsh for me.” believe.” And he lagghed carelessly. aanianenghe dre wemgal eg been re an fn on th the woods rubber hunting. Since monkey | ¢¢[)ID YOU EVER SEE A TRAMP TAKE In spite of all this professional criticism, | ‘Indeed?’ repiied Rex, and a curious ex- J vooife at every stopping place along the river's entire ————— length, with this Sifference only, that farthe: eee un-|up the venders are mostly women an Wleating Threagh Unexplored Forest ia Us- | children, who appear to devete their lives to known Extent— Magnificent Patme and Gor- | hilton, sho sppesr to devote their geous Flowers on Every Sid: a BATHS FREE OF ious to learn if th 4, 1 he executed an iy = As to Madame Hading, of whom America is ts P — > He would not watch ber, though; the time | Cnt . - - - keeping has become # fad among fashionable ‘a bath?” said the baggage master on the i . i | Which naturally enough will not have the same | pression came into his gray eves as he threw his : | untury obewmance, and, the wand of subjection - : : . t will | : <A . ‘ " 2 ‘ d." | #4 past for all that, and ho was soon engaged | passing seer} , ladies itis a great pity that most of those | « ional Limited” a short distance be- | "°t likely soon to grow tired, this contrac | weight in America that its writers were uble to | cigarette overboard. “Wharton be damned. passing over his bead, mg @ par: Brom The Star's Traveli=x Commisstoner. found along the Amazon will. not bear trans- | “CODBte# = enable her to enter the Comedie Francaise, the | give it in Paris, the piece ran with increasing | | “Breakfast ts ready, sir,” announced a | 0a {vin vhat justice he could to the exeetlomtly | that cut cl last distinction to which a French artiste can fuocess sntil last spring, when Coqoalin severed stoward coming up at, this moment, “and Sir | “°Ty noon was rising behind the mountains : - i ‘is connection with the Comedie Francaise in | Charles and the ladies is in.” | Tifton aad Monies the teat of occ at cr enatt02 | alagust at not ‘having ‘been granted the ribbon | “Tare eit be enty Wharton, Dedlay and rer Redcar ee of the Legion of Honor. myself, ther,” said Riley, as they turned to go 5 : if, tt y, an the waters of the loch looked deep and black as A WAR OF CORRESPONDENCE. eelow, _etaneiking vas ase Seek ES 60S 11k he coend ot veld ean ae ena Trenton. Maxaos, Baazit, Sept. 27, 1892. ting. Among the emaller ies, from | Fon’ the T 18 NOW JUST| fine oncs not longer than your fuger when fail| “I never = Ss Tax Stam reporter orty team | gtown to golden-armed “moss monkeys” | who was smoking on a box. ae ave | : sande Len on the | 8¥eraging a foot in length (not counting the |” Would you like to witness such a spectacle?” | it Bains the talent of a celebrity it has for some 7 -. two or three-foot-long tail), are many that on ni ‘ " Le ine. time desired to bring within its fold. Of late Amazon had its begin-| would make the most intelligent and affection- |, “Ttmight be interesting, Tehould imagine. | oo boon talk between 31. Jules Clarctio, through the cloud of semt-| profanity that was beginuing to impart a bl one parsenge | another and | the back hair of its original viet 5 : bringing lunch round to us. You'd far better | Torran came across the mater, the nedde etary, | Roknowing what devel = a e prettiest of pets, though all | But the tramp must be caught firs! ts a There novel impressions of Shakespeare in change your mind, old chap, and come along genres ter; the sudden bark | jowed the next turn had not L ing — = o— Fe Toga aap ae pees as ea anit etna ite director, and Madame Hading relative to Ss new Foonch pulse stared =p a. monty ont} po ae P. | of a dog: otherwise the night was very still. m her immediate entrance thereto. The Inst fly upward. Again and again Ihave tried the| “Where?” i : wake ea piss or 9 to the north those} «fp a trap.” difficulty is removed by this trip to the United 7 ait ‘The newspaper man looked around for some- | States, and the pleasure which Americans will | . = be it wan L | wenger reached up and wi of correspondence in the daily papers among | But Gifford did not change bis mind. “May | /Te*ently notes of mume feli on his ear.” Some | own the one was playing one of Strauss’ waltzes, and he Parisians and Parisiennes. One lady wrote | I borrow the dingy, Sir Charles!” be asked bis plas as r listened dreamily and watched the moonlight re that tho blows ‘and other brutalities” of | hott after breakfast. “I should like to get ®! onthe ripples. ‘Then the music ceased and | ‘Ue! a thing like a mouee trap on alarge scalo with a| be cate initrd ta te ero NE (will | Shakespenre onght to have been retained asa sketch or two here for my pictire, the fore | Si .Mp ightler . Then the music cease =~<ol oto ee mages sustained, : ‘ cenfe : sir | STOUnd is so good, and the effects are very fine | 3h". = riage “= 8 | and when the boat reached the whurf they were tramp in it; but there wis nothing to be seen | Madame Hading tas honored them. above al | tulutars example for French husbands by thelr | a. Scivee te ioe chet oe oe aa erat Seem | ctl debating whether. they should. pitch toe but boxes and trunks. other nations. with the task of pulling her |r ofuingafter her husband ‘had been at the| “Certainly, Gifford, certainly. So you don't evening, ford, however, remained andie- | © Lor point bim out “I don't see him,” chestnuts out of the fire. The difficulty in | Toms ‘ |mean to shoot? By-the-by,do you want a 3 oe oreue dadt 0 en aceounts for the re- T don’t see him," he eaid. the way of her immediate entrance to tho Paris | Comedic Fapcise: she asked bim for the | ety y y ’ turbed in the shadow of the deck bow ‘ Joved hearing pinged end would ; “He is on this car,” declared the bi well . reget | simplest thing in the world. He at once struck soot wut soon the music recommenced and this | 73 oe Mg : end worl markably slow growth 7 , malar A dies "Gee ys aterana Le raat Temple of aes ae a ae years’ cuRase> | the attiude of Coquelin in the third act, hand | q No, thanks; PU paddle myself and keep the | time in u very different strain, As Gifford tes re doe to the tlend+ executing that ‘of the richest region on the teide. ve % i nce fortelt voney. Thin the Comer | Ow hip and moustache in the air, and sguazely | boat if you don’t want her today ., | ognized the touch his dreamy, contempl: Prere . outside. No, rou can’t see him, because he is | 100.000 francs forfeit money. This the Come- | ip sees a | “Alone at 1 cxied Gilford. as Mis boat's : on eben —— Iving across’ the platform. caught sight of | dio Francaise refused to pay for ber, and the | Fetused her request. He continued this postu mood v d and be listened ‘with a keen cting point, wi the ships of all nations. Yet to this day ite na gation is practically under the Braziliin flag, and probably that comme obe. As far back as the year 1827 there was ere keel ran up on the seaweed-strewn grass, “Why : aargrooge ts : cn New. ‘an association formed in New York city called im just after we left Trenton. Helooked very | actress Uerself naturally enough hesitated to | 186 all day. "But she remarked, “It will do for | Keel ray up. on the venwee this trip? Sy good | Tests Passionately alive 10 every inflection, haat the South Americsn Steam Navication Com- ; comfortable, and be doosn't know that ansbody | fone te however much ‘rhe. wished to take-up | 8&8 ad he will yas mo out for 4." A third oncarih did Tome on, this tip’ iy goed cxery changing expression, It. wes Balto’ | whassin the Aunapsie Suatent to Rashter pany for the express purpose of promoting = : i ety bang tag — re ga with the new offer. At iast sho broke the | Hepes re: “ the matter m . hed out somebow and " ., : ont, “eason equently carry pavigation on the Amazon. having been incited thereto by suggestions from the Braz: e@rpmest mace through ite cha: Fesident in the United States. Were promised on the part of : B y to imitation: the not bs 5 ate and triumphant, and while in the firet part Than the West Pelsten, aut engagement and paid the 100,000 france | vrised if it ahould become ehic to admprognee la oF near nk Le PTO- ho heard again those voices that had talked with | From the Pittsburg Times eed American® be fold te ee ann eee ceeded to make the dingy secure, by fastening | hin. in the solitude of thehille, of stif eacrifce, | During the past week a wumbor of Unite tours are to furnish Madame Hading | traordinary production chds, with a ecene | tbe long rope to a rock high on the whore, and | Ot honot et through the | States naval cadets have passed through Pitta- piously expects. Being now com. | ¥bich ix not in Shakespeare. It is « duo of | With @ resolute look ou his handsome face | second breathed the 6} ictory, of a soul money and other valuables.” inn Ov “Why don’t you put him off?” d affaires :kD SHOOTING IN AMAZONIA. “Because we don't stop until we get to Phila- reat things | varieties that are never found for aale: but in | delphia, but he will have a nice bath before he majesty Dom | spite of the greatest care, in cages lined with | gets there. iddle-cl gine a started along the road leading to the head of ber) Nn ‘cm | CUrE Ov their way back to Annapolis Academy, Daratively free we may join the Comedie | Middleclace comedy, quite, lovable, though | at}ocy MMT ott font ise Inne on bs | Seat nd trumped, an wenn rome from | ater epending vacations at home. Leet wighh Pedro I (father of the late m: ulightened | cotton wool so as to exclude every breath of} ‘How do you mean?” Francaise at nearly any time, perhaps even be- | Rot exactly im keeping with what has gene be- | peje, farce dick Fouts hin Issn on Bie wl egret leea Sra eer ttn ts tines wpetie tet on © ertaining half emperor) who fas then the ruling potentate. | cold air, they invariably go to the monkey| “I'll show vou presently. You seo, we are | tore her first fiying trip to the United States, | £0. dee te nee Ge Cee Een | Mas chutch tel, sath the ender at on iv ges ee “ty Bem and a steamboat was fitted out at great expense | heaven at the first approach of winter. just behind the tender of the locomotive. Ihave | Americans will hardly refuse to play the bene- | Petruchio is now the lover an MOA cage. “The lonaly réture of te scene acconiel t om wee Wee {hour's chat at the Union station with Cadet by the company aforesaid and dispatched to MAGNIFICENCE OF THE FORESTS. | given a private signal to the engineer and he | factor at once to the Imperial Russian Theater | Sots prodtent cenuoe SULA Tan Coqaues | Well with bis mood. Mis brain was ia a whirl, | bee Te ee ee Ce, ieee, Shak Tay A bandsos ° Rercubranem tr once eons se Kcep'her | Tor days and days we steamed slowly along | KR0Ws What is expected of him. Only about a | Michel, the Comedie Francaise and the lady | £0 the great Taking Petruchio an eutively | iis heart on fire; he needed the stillness of the 3 jaunt wile reer aa rae eae over whom they have wrangled. Gents secaiee. hileabout him for hie mind to work fosety| ‘nd a sudden vision rose before bim of a | tion of admiral. Many a traveler paused tocas® ‘ay of the North American enterprise that the | ally alligator infested and always backed by a| full speed. It is a sort of ditch that runs along THE REAL TEEAT TO AMERICANO. After her tour with Coquelin Madame Had-) oo eee eae nid colle sag tadindir geri ‘up drawing room in Mayfair, with windows wide | 8 admiring, approving look at the trim little Yessel was compelied to return, and for along | dease wall of verdure aflame with gorgeous | fora considerable distance between the raily| Nevertheless, the real treat to Americans will |ing will reappear in America, in 189 ta tonp tora tockeighe es as introduced him | OP¢? to the soft, summer air; of a girl weated at | salt, attired in his perfect-fitting aniform, aa, fime afterward claims for indemnification to a | flowers. Most Amazonian travelers complain | filled with water. The locomotive takes up the | be the play itself, An English play turned into | potted by the great tragedian, Mounet-Sully, | 0 rudy Helen Deskrooke, the pinno.of the fluttering music leaves held in | with cap tossed bn: of wary hair, large amount was pending before the Brazilian | of the monotony of along voyage; but it has | water with a kind of scoop. Just watch!" in such classics as “Hernani, y Blas is -appearing lad never aspired to the posi- burned in on his brain. j Promises, bat placed so mary obstacles in the | between flat and mostly marshy banks, gener- ; D | their place by a strong hand; and the scent of ; French and acted before an English-speaking | '" ‘amelian” 'T bave ¢ little ances | “ci have lived in a dream since that evening.” | Se! 3 - brown eves sparkling and his every motion Government. never become #0 to us. Were there nothing to pnven ete Sie water trang was steak | dienes in Vieuch marereenoughoombiastion, [RUG nC tan Cone cat ee ord told her some weeks afterward, “‘oue | tse conic bs the cpaion bent of i as tnt | marked by the ceay grace of a periost eotting = canara! look at but the splendid palms it would be began flying ont of the top of the | #udiene 7 i! + | dote of this famous whom William F. | Gifford = spiiterward: “one | jistened again to the opening bars of one of the v. eaves rca 5 the Amazon, | ©R0ugh to keep us profoundly interested. | great iron tank. on the tender, the lid of it | fF being acted in French and bei g translated | Apthorp in last Januar; ner’s found not | !0vS, strange dream; or rather it woul most beautiful gongs ever written. It was! up, he talked about how he had event bis vace- this day the traveler upon mazon, y . i - {into French are two different things, as will | only terribly self-conscious, but weak and in_| tuer to say that I on re I met Amon; f chs | only terribly self-conscious, but weak an | dae immediately after leaving Para, finds bimself of the opie feat tae cosh petal ta ed iteel Fecha TA aul oe Cee a | presently appears and when the play. is one of | effective, although possesting “at moments an Se clam ln eek pg ome | im s wild, limitless, comparatively unoccupied | prominent, with its crown of plume-like leaves | than half a minute, at the end of which the en- Shakespeare's, and. above all, “The Taming of | air of innocence and purity that is, especially | 4nd how beautiful Rey Ie prvengp a region. to which the often misused term. | and pendent bunches of berry-like fruit. So | gineer should have pulled up the scoop. Tn: | Son euch hick hone rate it pecouice att | °2 the French, very winning and hard to | 0°"! 2 custmeral solitude,” ie, applicable. Having | compect ie the thicket that yon can seldom vee | stead of that, however, he permitted the tank | "OM such high London praise, ft becomes all | resist, Matty Tinta Saf tipen “aitsamtod ha audie ot Cee ere ee ee ee ree cae tow Suet, Put the variety of | to overflow in'a cataract, which was flung back- | {h2,0'0 tus traditional attitais of tetera | herself by the clever artist with the strange | see fifty houses within 500 miles, and they are | plant life is overwhelmingly great. However | ward like a miniature Niagara against the for- | tere ediebnaprranay F not Grieg’s “Ich liebe Dich.” She had sung it on | bis mates and jife at the academy that fatal afternoon in London the year before, | ‘There ¥ custome ¢ nd it had been as the last notes trembled away | academy that seem funny + | that he knelt before her and pleaded as for his | in particular ts the allowance of “grog w He had never heard it since. made to the cadets. The cade sel If you would like it,” she had said, “I will | strong drink or tobacco in any ts neverelY MOUNET-SULLY'S EXCITARILITY. : ~ sing that song again when I know you can | dealt with if found, and yet he is all o po th route toward Shakespeare, which gave last winter's| Not very long ago there was a considerable | gray eves. She had never met any one just pots! | conte a day for every day of the four > ; ‘ i a iar piquancy. ood actor who supported him. A re-| While at the same time the power of his per- | nod answered passionately; and she had gravely | time R. B. Ha: the imme of the hamlets scattered over the enormous area | these regions of romance, they have never ex- | delightedly. “Ain't he getting it, though’ own peculiar piquancy 6 PP | ag . se . ns P iy gravels ; _ Known as the Amazon valley lie hundreds of | aggerated concerning the magnificence of the | Intruth, the unfortusate tramp most have | TRE a nay, have never | porter managed to get behind the scenes just | 1 ao ee sper. | Dent ber ae 1a ae Se Fay miles apart on the tributary streams and canals | forest»—simply because it is beyond the power been getting it with a vengeance, for the tre- | times during the Inst conture ontia half racions | 88 the affair was over, and he foliowed the uctor | haps hardly guessed his devotion, for he’ did Gla ye Soebiger Len og Se ee Remeron _iasaripes or bayous, and | of mortal pen or tongue to do them jastice. Be-| mendous flood of water spouting from the top | {imes daring the last century and a half varions | Se vero into the dining room of the the Thester | BaP, bardly guesses haunts, or metaphorically | Ab. heaven! what did it all mean? ~ though steamers of any nationality may ascend | sides groves of towering palms that look like rast | of the tank continued to fing itself ngainst the | ‘ansiations of bim have French siage the fol- | Francaise, where, amid carved oak and shining | Sneaking, lay his mantle on the pavement of Stated forward. then drew back in great agit ‘ae far as Manaos, 1,000 miles or so, about all the | halls set with Egyptian columns, there are even | face of the baggage car for fuliy three-quarters | ein teal ions” bave ‘tesa hematin ‘The | China, he was seated between agenteel blonde piecadilly for her to walk over and for society to | 12%. 8? oS the beautiful words floated out over ———,: ok Be Feet that go beyond that point, some fifty in | taller trees, spreading over the rest a thick roof | of a minute, which must have been nearly aufi- laree wae smaglet ote 1769" Then came in| @ndalovely brunette of the compan ‘Ab, ‘She did not love him. she assured | B¢ loch there ewept over his soul such a wave ey gt eg ident. Bumber, are Brazilian, varying in size from | which looks like a vast green umbrella. There | cient to drown any human being on the front 173 “Homes and Juliet’ '& 1783. “King YOUare an interviewer,” he said in a tragic | but her soul was free no longer. | of Passionate love and longing, of golden, soul- | 0 —_ we Jess than twenty tons burden to 2.000 tons. | are leaves varying in color from the lightest to | platform. So copious was it that the water Deets in 1780, 4 eth;"'in 1792, “Othellow’ | Yoice, making gesture at the reporter. Then, | This man hed Crane out troubled the decp | String memories and maddening regret# as | passage y Congress of «law fore Remember that the majestic river drains nearly | the darkest shades of green, from pale yellow Flowea in beneath the door and threatened to | ¢°tgig “Othell ‘i ee foe’ the tle at | CoFdially: “Sit down and have aglassof curacoa | Ais man ha being. and. the cousciousness af | Made hin beart swell well nigh to bursting. Ah! — ne a two-thirds of South America’s 7,000,000 square | to binck; tranks smooth as glass, or ringed and | inundate the freigh' Th M I Venice’ ir 1832, a new vercion | 82d a cigarette, and I will tell you. Yes, I have this was gall to her proud spiri what was he not renouncing? What a prize _ ng thal ae ~ furrowed all up and down, or twined witha tan-| “If that fellow is still alive,” enid the bag- Po oaos ena Sullet and t 1856, “Ae You | insulted Silvan! When I play tragedy I'get an- | “a, Cee Ball ies alsanat potas blauk, eck with | was he not turning his back upon’ Soraieee suutiny ane 6 i gled network of vines, ranging Sn Breen to| gage master when the cataract had finally sns- Like It be G Sapernanae ‘Ausaee Dumas inated, become transtormed. Thore is 10 | look in her beautiful’ ores, at which he ed eo Pont hove cer nag mes aa lhesmoben tom wot gray. brown to black, white to dull red. But | pended its activity. “the has had enough to give | Msc awe 5 doubt that Silvan is an actor of much talent, ithot derstan: . . _ seo r Rove the great mass of forest, at least that close to | him a distaste for water for the rest af hielife rere oe comgrtere alto bronght out | irtuiligent and couscientions; but 1 ask of hin baa ed See is cate for many & |The cold drops gathered on his brow Congress provided that in place of the spitsts hore, is composed of tall slim stems crowded | There isn’t anvthing that will frighten a man | {hey adaptation of “Hamlet” a few years since snd sav other comrades « little more than all | 1908, Sinton Ser tice hed grown whitets the | Guam ee ee ee es ae ee so closely together as to resemble @ natural | like a do-e of that sort. according to our expe- | ®t the thie ad etetion ot “The Tae ir of the | that. I wish to lift them up to the height of | jips, but she remained firm. “l cannot—it is | ‘Be last verse shoul! ail, from aclu een picket fence. the whole completely covered | rience. Coming on him unawares it scares him | #0" Was this adaptation o} sdlppeine ys. d edema patecisty - ; to the youngest cadet, in seamen rs - ne | the t e visl ‘ ; arkatia = « Dein, Kann stets nur Detner denken, “ : Jith the most eplendid orchids and other bril-| ‘most to death, besidev half drowning im. | {uTer” last winter, when Marey and Coquelin, Sarg sly maaeoT Santi coca ati? kites caltae pain tae aoe ac ese tery See onl ef has bone pecs oe Auaonipaaeenie tie ay Theater Francaise. ‘The scenery and costumes | eMthusinsm which raptures me. I get out of | fhe would let him know of itin some way: but | off the train. 1 oduct them, ™yself. I am Nero, Hippolytus, Edipus! ra Fang wg nw Mod “But suppose he shor jump off an meg d el en eg a " -dinery but 3 rao the voices broke out again; gome one laughed. | pa: > the porit . e bat, oP should jump off and be | vin go to America with Coquelin and Hading’ | ce : Biss eas mary Mate, BSE) He, on the contrary, was hopeful. It was } ” , Rex leaned back against the Corner of the deck | money, there are many waterside huts, isolated or in ~ z .. | Too great praise cannot be given them. Edel, | Y something that he would see her again, that be jouse. deciare I must get away from this, groups, and after the first few days we cruise aueplesbiay Se eae | tie ie ee | Bag becca Teg sie the cna realises Tee not banithed forever, from her presence. | or I shall end by making a fool of myself after | cedat bias the best of it over the West Pointer so close to sore that we could almost talk with | | When the train slowed up an hour later near | find mode Poe ne ea | speak, or rather Lery, “Do this, come on, put | }eegU rue, the aceuptin toa oot passed | Hll;"he muttered, and he moved forward outof | in this particular. Sheis , inbabitants: in every case, the forest | Philadelphia the newspaper man saws figure | °f'=1a Fee gux Chesres’” has exemnted Edere | Yourself there!” ‘Then if my thought is not | “aay iclen’s precccapation hed m and for | ‘22 shadow. crores ths cass close to the water's edge, and | that looked more like drowned rat than like | Taccr color sketches, These’ origintl decigns | Understood at the moment, if it is not divined, | (ute Unuoticel but it knew nothing, aud for) tt might bave been ten mainutes, or one hour & description of one Amazonian home will a human being crawl off the front platform of | Water coun sketches. | T Salle dee Depecheror | Stasped as it flies, I lose patience, I become | to talk. And the months went by and took with | te anewer for all the rest. with the sole exception | the baggage car and steal sorrowfullyaway. It) De Sionry last December there a rconstant | Violent! Brutal terms escape my ips without | thom Rex Giffecde hopes. a4 that in those Places which are: cure to be sub-| was the tramp, who had had a bath as well as & | toronc/of visitors came to gaze on thems Tine | ™ knowing it—“Imbecile! idiot! cretin! | ‘bem Rex Gifford’s hopes. country honses, but Pr cole geen soled 2 ride at the expense of the railway aro thirty or more in number, and the dress of | Wtetch:”—all that means just one thing: “You | this act remained unaltered and. unalterable AN AMAZONIAN HOME. Though villages are few and far between ses akoak: hoc bead ob abn tarmen wees, | Then all was still. In the stern of the yacht | cruise as midshipmen, preparatory to being e shoo ead as + ned away. tee THE EIFFEL TOWER, he knew not which, when, as he leant against « coil of rope up in the bows, he sud- | One of Nature's Freaks Yound in a County denly became conscious of a figure beside bim. of Wyoming. He started violently. From the Portland Oregonian. AMAZONIAN CITIZEN AT HOME. Wiles and that its vast asin would easily hold fifty countries the size of England. with a trifle y : | tof my opinion.’ Nothing more, Ought | © me ‘Lady . ‘One of nature's strangest freaks, one of the of margin aly Dat é es the least fignrante worked out as | 8P€ nO! Beds the was Lady Gelen Desbrooke. a peers She 4 a =s gle too beac te be oe - ~ v ie Figare re natures bof wha ened to bea, | a ft incalculable mass of waters. Could the | elevated in the same manner. The frame is| Columbusand the District of Columbia. | pretty idea of the Figaro was to have attached |? P s artist. ‘The convietion was slowly forcing itself upon | his brain that “Lady Helen was not for him: their social xpheres were not the same. He began to realize that the verdict of socie! Yes,” she answered. I um not e ghost, | Tower, or.as the Sioux Indians call #t, the What have you been doing all the evening: Matee Tepee, or the Bear's Lodge, which Taken aback and much surprised, he stam- | stauds on the banks of the Belle Fourche river, mered, “I~ I have been doing nothing.” Then | in northeastern county of Wyoming. The s ‘is serious enough encounter shows as clear as any | Whole of the Mississippi river be poured in it | made of slender tree trunks, crossing each other | (Bespectfuliy inscribed to the citizens of the District.) | to each Br gacrraphe = nmall._ pieces of the | Gescription Hehe expected from this Fould not be raised six inches, and away off in | at right angles, with palm leaves woven in the | Like the stars on the sky are the states of this land, | ™4terial of which the actual costuine was com: | ae " i tragedian of the Comedie Francaise. His | Boitria and Pera it isin wore faces 170, fect | interstices aud spread on top for thatch. the | “In their union and glory today; posed. Kathayina’s wedding dress might be| ¢hffion on the theater realiste, ieee and wo ‘ith it branches and aftiuents it ords | overha: ing roof covering a wide open porch | To eact {ts own sphere; while together they stand, | W*eFibed as “a dream'—a eky-blue velvet 1 ok ; bracing bimself together with an effort, “Yes, "3 3 ‘ shirt. with an oid rose tunic, all embroidered | like is worth recalling: , | Would undoubtedly be against him if he mar-| P have heen listening to vous cine country for fifty miles around consists of high e 3 as deep as a good-si . ‘at No terror may fll w! E ; ralharing: i ct] wi | fo F or te len Ab, s t Pt , . : anchor under the shadows of the Andes. | most important part of the house, as it anewers |and'the more ker hair iss network of pei: | play pieces in which menlike ua appear, men | {Me Prgise OF blame of the diaall (cligue | and be found himself wondering why her volec | valleys—nothing to indicate A VARIETY OF Xaue: | for kitchen, dining aud sitting rooms, the in-| The stars are all bright, but yon sum where he Pe is rie | with our crochets, our vulg: our ‘little- | ye i title, yet Me unde a When first leaving Para for “up the river” it | terior being used only to sleep ‘in or for shelter shines reat eres ae gen ee inet ‘necorenrily mean ‘sno than | ae % itary day,” whe | 20° OF 88Y #tch freak of nature E > : : ou have a rather solitary day,” she sac naaunen? | tional Katharina to Americans, as she more | Resses, I Became angered and indignant. When must necessarily mean more to her than it |. 2% ‘The tower is a gigantic column, is impowible to believe that you are really on the | Uuring severest rains. The hard mud tloors| tn the glorious center above nearly approaches the strlo of Ads Heban. Pee nt pierce acheater. where a man is| could to him. But all the time he could not | vent for a ages A ‘the hile didn't you?’ Te | Obelisk of lava, which risos to a height of Amagon, for you experience all the sensations | pogcce nf dirt cad diseee hn te end eft! | Ta the brightest of ali; and the states iu their tines | "Wien the piece wax first presented in Paris | Poltrayed in bis lownes, in bis ridiculous and | forget the look that was in her eyes when be | Went for. walk up in the hills. di J should-like | feet, almost twice the height of the Eiffel of being out on the open sea—expecially after | housen of our oun poet ie bade ae bee | All point to the spot where tueir glory combines, | there was match shaking of the head among eA ugliness, it seems tome that I at look- | forkehue trace her presence the summer before. | Ty much to go up those lems! iene. Bb Ge hemsbhunsiie saainie ae moynn acd a ee ey of spell al onion par: Fe thot ‘That all may in harmony move. theatrical critics, The Figaro began with one | P& “fm pra Apps porl ogg be- So matters a frat —— a old |" “Yes—oh, ves, very indeed!” he replied | 326 fect through in one direction. Huge orys bo stig gaat of its “instantaneous pictures:” Shakespeare, ¥ nd Sir Charles Mackenzie one day in Inver- i vanicall) ‘onder reed hy cl ou 7 is ed 8 y sleeps ement. ke the altar of freedom’s glad home, Ttalian; never existed according to some, ex- | ve back te eautiful and tion'to come fora ten days’ yachting cruise. | that all th h } ogee same, realizing the Miltonie phrase of a ICTS OO Gi ulian; nover existed e ta | healthy grandeur which filled us with dear | * jn | be noticed sow that all the others had gone be- | unbroken to the top, giving to tie column ® and aiawaell . " ao Fa jewel below that reflects in its sphere, isted too much according to others; has often | healthy gra . sear emu- | “And why on earth he didn't tell me who his ) rt mverse with bit 3 - sight were f not for the big inland of Marajo, Tbe Xing has two mouths, and we pase | The glory above where the sunbeams appeat been transiated and sometimes adapted; has | lation. which transfigures us and makes us live | party were, and why I was sucha fool as not | 0%) Smply to eo with him about the | peculiar Sbrous appearance, even when viewed " i s for the moment the ideal. I wish them to give 5 ecenery. “i | from the table Innds forty miles awny half the size of Ireland, dividing the river in through its easterly and wider one and enter | Like a fountain of light in the dome. the misfortune to, be east in, bronze in the | Fai the thanter that wAiGN ia @iltecon ts caer = poctecreort Foc Pgtat iy juurtered es | A slight pause: she moved slightly and @rew | "How did it got there? How was it made? twain a = 7 Weare two Cam in | the undisputed Amazon by way of its narrow | nq where should the songs of rejoicing today, ~ i teat koe in ‘France aces thie Hog oer ae men really are-—better or worse.” All of which | tween bis teeth, “I shouldn't have come La | — wong ellen amyl ae oy a while IN ee age we = ne nd. for up-stream steamers leav- | but exceeding!y deep western branch. ‘e i ‘ “* * to show that the great French act. ¢ = “Do you kn harles means to stay | heerd Low portions of the bottom of ene of # |S Apgar a je Tix sheer | anes cae ute Progregp ogre igre | _ tu remembrance of history grand, him by M. Porel, director of the Qdeon (n | R08 to show & rench actor is in| had known she was on bez P i i ‘d—no, by Jove, I | nere tomorrow?” she asked. e es sympathy with Lord Bacon's idea of the office | yonld not! Any fool can see she doesn't want | _ ; | oceans have been pushed up by voleante forces, hereabout is never spoken of us the Amazouss. | u series of densely wooded bluffs, perhaps 400 | 50 5¥eeUy arise, and the memories play, chentse where Shakespeare did 106 syocted ) try in general. Stem ey oe , | He started, and turned his back hastily on | Gndevera new island added to the chaste Dut its waters at ¢ bear local | fect high, rising a short distance beck tren soy | With such magical touch to thrill and tosway, his works are found in all the libraries of peo- | Of Poetry in g* TERLING Heitia. | me. Tsay any fool can tell that. e- SaaenarEOe Her face | the mountains and looked out to where the sea ames, such as the Bay of Mar- | river. The captains Portugoose chart chan, | Shere in the heart of the land? ple of the word, but they are also to be found — : = , | Ages on ages ago similar voleanic forces started t sales in the state of uncut copies. Special Crowd Polson, Waits bites is hae ares say i ese began | HY, sleeping in the moonlit haze. “I don't | ajc: of lasa up from the bottom ofthe ancient Kio Aturia,”” &c.. until beyond the point | three other dietinet 1 roe | at eales state of . — ? here the Xingu river comes risking in. Dy | ree otber distinct groups of hills of siwilar | Columbus, the sailor, who signaled the way signs: Strongly dug at by Voltaire, but much | From the New York Times. protected by M. Bergerat.”” PARIS CRITICS DO NOT AGRE. | know—I—unfortunately, I must leave tomor- logical ocean kat covered all the norshwest to breathe harder. “No, as Tam a livg man, | hes =o san moet “Crowd poison’ is the way a physician desig- | her eyes do not repel me! ‘There is something | "pave had letters St that time. Thesquirt of molten rock evi- L i ‘Reaily,” she answered with apparent uncon- | dently did not break through it into the waters | nates the pecular fainting fits and illnesses to | in their depths I can't read. I don't under- | corn m sorry.” | shove, bul See. asen Geum tubes Sata Gee To this home in the glorious west; And Columbia, sweet name, Ifke an echo today, Or the sound of a bell in the ages away, im regard to the name Amazonas, | many believe it to have been tved from the | Indian word ~ ” applied to the won- | d it—but it isn't aversion. Stop—could it | °y;, eg i i | < i which persons often succumb in rooms crowded | #8?’ ‘Yes—and— Perhaps you will forgive me if | the bole it had made. slow cooling off, derful phenomenon of high tide which occurs To tel of some dream of the blest. Ecard red’ oc pot gle percha ak arch en a ee iu. | leave you now.as I shall have to be off at day- | the gradual loss of its fiery energr, provbly two davs be and after the full moon. and agree with regard to this production. Gener- | Apter cae | He sprang half up. out him was the still- | break, and—' lasted for many long years gave time for Gai to the very ecntiumnec ef the too And our <ity s0 fair, and so proud of thename | ally speaking they presented an unbroken front | packed with humanity. Some persons yield | ness of the mountains, the “sleep that je smong | ““-Yes—only—I want to tell you something,” | the purticies to arrange themuclves tn the, huge Being very destructive to small craf. thet ‘Of Washington, close by yon stream, against the traditional English and American much more readily than others to this com- | the lonely bills" like the silewce of a beautiful | gho geid suddenly, “but it # heed, Tee peed wig eetebeamee ego myer chee sd tives call this tide Amassona or “boat breaker” ‘Where the home of thehero shines bright with Bis | 1124,.¢né,, who seems to bea hard master, but | bined exhalation from many systems, and per- | dream, and through it, as some deep thought, | Tell me nothing,” he broke out; “I cannot | day. Concerning the female warriors which Friar | tai ip as tke @ tigat howsé of | a fine fello t | sons arc overcome by it, accor Miag ho Winladias sounded the murmur of the burns in the hills. | pear jt.” And the ‘thought flew like flame to| ~ Gaspar and estly monkish chroniclers de-| | ie his monument stands like @ ligat bo ad — — He pushed his cap back from his brows. “Can seribed, ‘though those autho fume, Bization Uy hie very rataitien | Ay Mise | authority, who can withiand the exhausted air | tbe the beloren me? Ab! God, what cond | Mebrain that, he was, going rreuttsed Your “Ade” Gpen the Clowts, thelr own vivid imaginings in lien of fact ve eban plays Katharina we have a high-stop- | of a room made close from other causes. Dur- i | creat « iti a 1 Gazeste, cere set tc oe ee tees er eee ping young animal waiting unconsciously for’ ing the recent Columbian pack in this city the | back in the heather, and fell again to thinking. | cr'zairben, te. was there with ber on the Last night (writes Mr. Sydney Hodges of at least so far ax sppearances go. for to this ‘See! yonder—in Baltimore—bright to appear, her master. “We feel no horror at hor | foul air of the crowded streets was noticeable. | For Rex Gifford lad made up bis mind to a is Ealing), for the first time on record, I #ue~ day the male warriors of the upper Ama- 20m wear feathered skirts and other toggery usually ascribed t» females, " ing in,” as the process cannot hurt so splendid i si i ‘The sallor’s wi & ig in, process ca E To such as gat slightly above the sidewalk | mighty sacrifice, even to re’ | ceeded in projecting a large luminous letter om Gaeuies ona paren me wennabe here— a creature, But this point of view the French | masses the bad air was easily perceptible. One | winning Lady Helen for his ife. Loving her the clouds by means of sn invention which I ‘The sailor would signal the hero #0 dear— critics could not adopt, nor indeed could the | realized that even in the open air good air is | witha he ion and intensity of which his friends |“ Ajoud, he said gently, “Forgive me: I was| provisionally protected some months pain omen. one Se schenotine Paton caches: | tbe pore cao citi of hat Dave | Such alent Stn sacs i eral | Kota ase Enh wa ha | ay encanta at Ys ik | Ther rans gh sed cringe tes Having passed the wide mouth of the To-| ee ‘Yes—here should the songs rise sweetest of all, | ber. They will help one in getting at the true | notably on close and foggy days. when the surprised himeelf, Ne could yet think of what but the aio Scincty visite, not wy 1g eantine river we come to anchor off the little | Sppearance, all within the first 2500 miles! “424 tne signals shine tri ntest today, Savor of the Hading-Coquelin presentation, at | thousands of car horses now occupying it will | might be best for her. Nat once, or twice, but gayeelt, Ameen Maree, of Breves, on Marajo, where the first | S0ve the Atlantic. Santarem. the second town . el ~ sight ie spent. Arriving an hour before night- we find the landing crowded with men, "o%en and children, clad in little but the Dlsewegt of skins with which nature provided them, gl] jabbering and gesticulating “like mad” 4 efforts to sell us their wares—long- necked gurds, carved and painted for water bottles, anil red pottery as ugly as curious, living monkeys, snakes and paroquets, and serpent sins from ten to twenty feet long, teased realy Sor the use to which Brazilian Ly put them, that of making boots and shoes. You kiow there is no twilight in the tr bat old Sol goes to bed as he gets up, with startling suddenness and no preliminary ceremonies of bivahing skies and gorgeous ap Apparentiy # the full glare of the day jum; ind the torizon, and in a moment dense falle—iarker at first than at midnight, for then the sters shine brighter than ae saw them at home. At ves we ¥e barely time to note tha: the village is not Worth noting. to barter a little with the mob of monkey and parrot venders am] take « look up and down shore, when darkness shuts off every- thing beyond our deck. AFLOAT AT DAYPREAK. Seon as the san jumps up again. with no “rosy blush of mo-n to herald thecomingof anew bora day,” we are again afloat, steaming slowly on the Amazon in size and commercial im- portance, is situated on the right bank at the mouth of the river Tapajoz, whose clear blue tide is in as sbarp contrast’ to the chocolate, hued water of the moin stream as the inky Rio Negro. The town, straggling along on the river's edge, contains a large church, some fine ublic buildings and a few bundred two-storied jouses, and is surrounded on three sides by ex- tensive campos (meadows), level as a floor, covered with the richest and greenest It would be well to ascend the Tapajoz river, if one bad time, for this section sends to market great quantities of rubber, sarsaparilla, farina, copaiba and Brazil nuts; ‘and the rich grazing lands near its upper waters were colon- ized by citizens from the southern portion of the United States soon after the civil war. While the majority of them long since went to heaven or other localities, ae Susans of some yet remain and have pre in the cultiva- tion of sugar cane and sugar making. AN INTRICATE NETWORK OF ISLAND@, Immediately after leaving Santarem we enter an intricate network of islands, sand banks, creeks and channels, some of the so-called igarapes being hardly wide enough to admit our steamer, bordered by thick woods, so that one standing on deck the Parisian sentiment which underlies the new | have been laced tricit cable | of the question presented itself Pdr the watchmen assemble in yonder fair Hall, | i499) For it is a new ideal. In this version of power. oe 2 a ae Detore hie! Weal a lage im bim be for the name of fair Freedom to stand and to call— | Deisir, Shakespeake has been doctored and al- this girl's ultimate happiness? He thrust the All's well! to the land far away. tered, and, as it were, brught up to date. Got the Best of Her. idea away at first, but it recurred again Sik an eliaeds te heroes who |, Albert Wolff, from whose ultra-Parisian pen i pred whe sail, and this criticiam came shortly before his death, said: work of Shak , a8 it stands, For the progress and march of the race, cannot be played before a nineteenth century ‘The forerunners of One who will kindle the light, | public. It is not necessary to imagine Coque- Far over the seas, of His own kingdom in sight, Fin lashing la belle Marey with a whiot One cry And the smile of His giorious face. of horror would escape from every breast—a —J.H. Cruse. | protestation from the fin de siecle man, who ——-+0--—__—_ will not allow that a woman is to be corrected Hie Brevet. like a recalcitrant beast.” This really acute ‘ioans ts tals Was critic wished to see in Katharina “the This time to be rid of this superftuity of titles | on of hima malice, resching to the stato. of in a democratic country. There is no harm, of wun vack o mecsler samabaye Comldaeare ts course, and no impropriety employing a man’s | Dr. Charcot!" legitimate title, his actual, living title, but the | _ It is thus the part is rendered in the Comedie efistom of tiling everybody has gone to seed | Francaise version: Katharina ie and has become a farce of the broadest kind. | f°) 6), -natured father It is not surprising that our southern country | they pony It is said sti and also to an assistant engineer. Mr. A. HL. Wood kindly granted facilities for my ments at the horticultural exhibition.

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