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NISS-TICKLE LORE I§ SLICES. The Modern Yonng Woman and Her Mad Passion for Bhow, WANTED, SENSIBLE WOMEN. College Life for Girls— Woman's Sav- ing Power—Easy Intimacies— The Women of the World, She Will Not Long be Missed. eirl who goes to coll Knows just what to do “The ' yet who With vegetable narrows, and cooky-lecky 00, Can muse on the digamma, or nu ephelkusti on, Yet never be unmindful that the porridge ot is on A maiden such as this—no “ley You put her on your list, But she will not long be *‘Miss-cd.” "The girl that's “up in” puddings and pies - and politics, Who can compound a gravy, or confound church heretics, Talk feelingly of " Legel, or knowingly on classicist,” nt And yet be with her cook'ry book as deeply conversant, A maiden such as this—e'en though *'suf- fragist, Youmay put her on your list. But she will not long be *Miss-ed.” “I'lie maiden who ean eharm you with Bach or _ Mendelssahn, Kuows when the moon's in quote Anacreon, And yet ean boil potatoes, knows when a turnin's done, Can mold the resttul doughinut and tive currant bun A malden sueh as this needs no apologis You way put her on your list, But she will not long be **Miss apo, can the fes- And the mathematic malden who ean eriti- el Or by a eliemical dexterity can analyze a zas: Who can also sew a button where a button ought to be, And, If needful, wield the duster and the broom stick sk 11fully— A maiden sucli as this, O iare ceonomist! You may put her on your list, But she will not long be *Miss-ed.” And she, the best and dearest, whose native Common senso Eschewethice-crenn blandishment : 1S expense; Who guoteth Dio Lewls, woes. sup I s eari less to {h in the morning with a ¢ nless head n osuch as this, [ with cmplasis insist, sensible sciolist, Youmay put her ou your list, But she witl not lon e Miss-ed.” The Modern Y ng Women, Toledo Blade: The newspaper wit aims his shafts of humor at 1o object with sueh keen pleasure and delight as when he di r and So and womanly ana rare a rects them at the modern young woman, her caprices and tendencies. And it must be acknowledged that he does so not without cause in many instane While there are thousands of young women who represent what is best and highest in young womanhood, whose purposes in 1if extend beyond the frivolities of dress and outward adornments, there is, on the otier hand, alarge percentage that look upon life “as a joke that's just begun,” 10 borrow \ expression from . popi opera. 2 These young women live under the de- lusion t distinction, beauty of person i of apparel make the woman. ©s to_custom 1d fashion und revel in xternal attraction: They ept the glitter for the gold, he! aldiy and trapping of the world for the riceless essence of woman’s worth, which exists within the mind, Their high- est attainment is not the possession of a true womanhood, but that their position in society may be a conspicuous one, and thercto they bend their ener B Hours are spent over the latest fashion- plates, win re given over to the making and perfecting of n w apparel They forget that a true woman exists in- dependent of outward embellishments, that dre regarced by many s only the ivy that encireles the oak, and isnever mistaken for the thing it adorns, It is not the queen of fashion that sways the seeptre of influcnceor authov- ity over men. 1t is i the hund ot the true, noble ble and virtuous women that authority is placed, and where she dwells there may retinement, culture, in- telligenee and moral power be found. The Influence of such a young woman upon society is that of the most salutary kind, But what s that of the reigning society belle?y Men may admire her for the mo- ment, when, inbrilliantly lighted parlor: her beauty and charms “dazzle the eye but what are the after conclusions? **Silly creature, wrapped up in hoerself and the world,” was the comment of an apparent admirer upon a young bolle after an y8 eventful social ocession in New York only n fow weeks since. Fashion and foliy never gained an ounce of respect worth the possession, and never will. Young women, alas! too often mistake adulation for respeet, only to tind at the end that it was but hollow mockery and, like a pyrotechnic display, prepared for the oceasion. A true young woman's ambitions stroteh beyond the ball-room and the milliner's establishment. She strives to make her life grand in womanly vir and h_}' her example inspir cure the same priceless crown of woman- hood. This is the woman that commands the respeet and admiration of the world, not temporarily, but permanently. L her friends recogmize a rich store of pi tieal good sense and a beautiful harmony about her characte: that at once inspire sincere respect, which soon warms into love. Woman's Saving Power, Lewiston Gazette: Womanu is the great conservator of the family life in health and honor. Let her influence extend to the business side of it, on which fannly health and honor depend, and we shafl have fewer heart-breaking, moral and financial wrecks of the Gould variety to mourn over, and less occasion for the exercise of that profound sorrow and sympathy with the suffering wife and fawily, thus suddenly called upon to tray the valley of the shadow of death—w ure enlisted all cousid- erate citizens in behalf of Mrs Gould of Portland and her unhuppy family. College Life For Girk Cassell’s Magazine: When a girl enters & college sho finds berself in a small world, full of pwople with all shudos of character and disposition. No ties of Deood bind her to them; she knows noth- ing o1 their various tastes, nor they of hers. Living closely together for several weeks, 8¢ has daily oppoxtunities of sce- ing this question rise before her fellows and herself, and she secs how 4 is, and ever musl wie; answered, if the ~orld is to jog on at all peacably. She sods how portectly dependent human ereaturOs sre on ong¢ gnother, however niuch they n’%Y protest to the contrary; how each one ust bear her neighbor’s burden, if there 5 to be comforl; and, lastly, how the world is really kept lo*enger by the great- est of all virtues—charity, = Thus she learns self-sacrilice, There is little more to say. No one can deny, if thoy know anything at all about 1t that “the social training of college life is very great Indéed, “The mixiug together of students of different ages has a wonderfully effect; the younger gaining by the experience of the lder, and the latter by the energy and srdor of the former. The jouing in the Lamasements of a_ colloge’ takes 8 1t of hersélf wnd gives her a confi and -ease most valuable when she legves college to enter into society In conclusion, let me say it h thus L university training for girls in suital I would, -of eourse, except 1t for those who hitve any pressng homt clhims. For them ¢ < oitt of the question and «houn tely laid aside, Dty —*'stern daughter of the voice of God ' Torbids them to take it up That Opulent Night "Twas the Tnght of t1 v wo ¢ 1 And quiet rrace alon, Where, pale as the lovers that ever swear by it The incon it gazed down as a god from the throne. We stand there enchanted. And oh, the de light of The sigl t of the stars, and the moon and the sea, And the infinite skies of that opulent night of Purple and gold and ivory! I'hie far away 11t of the waltz rippled to us, And through us the exquisite thrill of the nir: Like the seent of bruised,_bloom breath, and its dew was otlioneyer sweet than your was your warm Kkisses were, We st ther nehanted. And ol the de- OB SLELE of tie Atars, And the. moon and ASA S ahitebicton of that opntent wight Purple and gold and tvory! Wanted, Scnsible Women, Fortnightly Review: Speciahized edu eation does not necessarily ereate com panionable nor i sensible women:else, by parity of reasoning, would all profes sional men be personaily eharming and lightful, which nndoubtedly they all not. A girl may be sound Gr , A brilhiant mathmetician, o sharp eritie, funltless grammarian, yet be wantingin all that pers act and temper, eloar observation, y sympathy, and noble self-control which makes a companion able wife and a valuable mother or unprofession or unspecializod ruction necessavily i in- synonymous wiih idlencss andignoranee: while ngood ull vound education is likely to prove more servieeable in the home and i society than one or two supreme accomplish ments. Many of us make the mistake of confounding education with acqui ments, aud of running together nic deyelopment and intelleetual speciali tion. The women of whom we ud in our own history w rkable for special Intelleet ments so much as for genel and the harmonious working of ¢ Fanshawes rpenters , whose names are practically immorts > not noted learning, but were none the less women whose mark in- history indelible, and the good they did lives after them and will never” die. And taking one of the, at least, partially learned ladies of the past—is it her Lat- inity and her bookishn AL we admire 80 muchin I y¥or is it her modesty, he r saintly pa- tience, her devotion? —in a word, is it her education or he etery=-the intel- lectual philosopher or the sweet and lovely and noble woman® ¢ my not and Florene A Billet-Doux. She was i winsome country las; So William, on a bricf vacation More pleasantly the tine Essaved fl riatior And as they strc Whil2 near the time for parting drew, Asked it she'd like to 1 ave from him A billet-doux. Of Freneh this simple maid knew naught, But doubting not 'tw Upon its mean:ng qu Thenmat d she_turned her pretty head; ler rosy lips together drew! For purpcse pinin and coyly sald: Billy, do? Sequel—And William did. Easy Intimacies. A writer in a London paper di about the danger of e “intima that 1s, of giving the confidence to peo- ple of whom one knows nothing except that they are pleasant companions when . “The danger lies,” ith which com- Kind is mistaken for true intimacy, though it does not really imply anything to ic.”” A woman *‘wiil trust her life to the keeping of aman, of whose aims, of whose standard of right and wrong, of whose pow nd habit of living up to that standard she knows just as much and just as little as sho knows of the actors whom she 1 seen on th stage, though she is deceived into thin! ing she knows more, only bectuse she happens in this case to have been one of the actors and not merely a passive spec- tator,”’ There 1s mcre teuth than poct in this thought, for in ni cases out of ten the two persons who come together I marriage have no more concéption ench of the other's true character and real disposition than those of a dozen others in their circle of acquaintanc They are simply pleasant, social con pinions, and that is all "Phere are quite as many mistakes made in friendship through these “‘casy intima- " though the cousequences are not achi Women, especially, ar apt to giv sonfidence to those with whom the ve been familiarly associ ated when they have never proved their trustworthiness. It is one thing to have pleasant httle familiar conversations about every day matters; it is another to impart what perhaps touches the inner life, and, which made light of, or misr resented, would place one in an uncom- fortable position, or possibly even worse, injure the reputation or put it in the gos- sips’ hands to do with as they please. A real friend, a true triend, oneé who can be trusted to enter the holy of holics of your heart without desecrating it, is among the best gifts that life can offer, but they are found in small numbers, and are only proved by trial. A certain amount of reserve, even with familiar companions, is a good thing to employ, for itgives not only a sense of safety, bub of security. panionship of thi; Women of the World. The late Mrs. Ann 8. Stephens was the first woman to send & message by eable, The Baroness Burdett-Coutts advises young men who wish to economize to get married, Young George Gould seems to have drawn & prize, his wife knows ull about cooking and housekeeping A Boston temale lecturer claims that the revolt of the thirteen colonies was in- spired by Washington’s mother, Queen Victoria is still a woman. It is said that she is enthusiastic over the an- ticipation of the coming of a bran new royal baby. Mlle Beaury-Saurel is proclaimed as the successor of Ross Bonheur. She won the first prize ut the recent art exhibition 6t Vorsallles, Bgngalli, the leader of the ballet at the Parls gpera house, will dance no more. Blie ha# become, by marriage, the Baron- e Marcadle Saini-Pierre. A Meeting of southern newspaper women Wil tang Ql'wu at Greenboro, North Carolina, on Navember 3, for the purpose of orgapizing & Wowan's Press association Pown Topics has it that o dyorce 18 pending between Mme Gerstey “srdini and the dootor, her busband. The' 4P aud the lost voice rgcket are played o ™% Harriet Beecher Stowe denies the im- putation that her health is shattered, She declaves that she needs only rest to put e = [ hor o n et foet 1, de The New England woman who invent ed forty-seven nd p lishe okt ! Remorse and to self destruct enlar b r who han | of ‘ business froi | Wonien o ing the | 10w professional paper b dutin ey charge the same rate nen ex ployed in the same line Mre. Leland Stanfq is a womanof wide-spread plilanthe One of her latest benefactions is tie lishmer of n night-sehool for the joekies cmployed on the senator’s ranches ad racing-sta | bles. She has nlso four large kindergar- | tens in operation in Californin, Pablishers of newspapers ning t value and preciate pretty ger eptability of woman's work It is estimated that women are enployed on the stafls of over 200 pewspapers in the United States; and many of those who do not regularly pay for woman’s work regularly reprint hir articles from more enterprising journals Mrs, Lydia Caldwell invented a dryer for damp grains, su, alt and other sub. stanceg requiring evaporation, and also for rendering the blood and’ refuse of packing and slaughter-houses markcet able in the form of fertilizers or other commodities, The dryeris particuiarly viluable to by in drying the grains after the washing process in the manuf. ture of beer and in removing moisture from wet gram in elevator 1 gifted and energetic wom work on a smoke-consnmi and a device for purifying water supply. Princ tetternich of Vi y seribed by a Paris correspondent ordinary beauty, but supremely o g, ele wi and st fast in her to the down Paris for some years, in the Ruc cnne, but could never be induc of Chicago, has the treatment of d to re turn there since 1870 She w By the other day the marr Comtesse de Pourtales and Barou de reim. She is the most popular lady Vien and recently raised 160,000 ins for the poor of the city by i suratibg “The Feast of ¥ It municipal conneil of Vienna vote: 1go an adiress of thanks are 562 students in Wellesley L. Crosby of ¢ ind City, In as invented a burglar alaem, Robert Rrowning, the poet, is writing 4 poem in his highost dramatic style for M wes Brown Potter. 1tis not to e printed at all, and her recitation of it is expected to be a great feature of her camatic performanees this wint New Yor for whom it is said 4 8) amed, died recently na Patii wi Lake he in Rome. ke she was 1 singer, and w day consid- Al of Matibran, but her ex- corpulency forced her to the by one eritie at the time of he was a reaction in and the gzeneral rotundit 1t produced. People w tired of circu lar things. Being vertical she hit the popular esthetie fancy. It is said that Trglioni woe infuced t) marry the Count Gilbert des Voisins uy his representation to her that chole which was then epidemic in Paris, inv: i ttacked women who lived alon ver, she evidently found her hus- band worse than the cholera, for she soon ted from him. of of effect which crinoline . A. F. Newman, of Sult Luke Cit has 0 proposition to build an mdustrin home in Mormondom for women who It is desive to e de: pe from polygamy. imed to give Mormon~ wonmen who nt to break away a place to live and a nee to make a living This1s laying x at the root of the evil. Oue of the busiest women of the day Marion Harland. conduets a housy hold department for a syndic: f fifteen does the ceditorial work in Bubyhood; is completing a_companion volume to “Judeth™ to be called “'1n Old Virginia,” und a household wanual, to be entitled “Home-making and House- keeping. Itis a sad commentary on the pereep- tions of equity and justice of civilized man that the Chicl w Indians recog- nized the rights of married women to have and to hold property two years be- fore the law was passed securing the property rights of married women by Mississippi, the pioneer of the common law states in this partienlar. And it may be news to many people that in Missi sipp1_this reform was wrought in 1837, b the individual efforts of a woman, My Hadley, the danghter of Major d Smith, an old Indian fighter. e Kimberley Gold-Field A Brisbane special of Soptembe the New Zealand Herald says: “An oid miner named Webb, who has just re- turned to this city from Kimberley, gives a most disheartening account of the gold- fields. ays that when he left Wind- ham there were seven hundred men there waiting to take return passage by steam- er.” A Cooktown letter of the same day is as follows: ““The stemmer Catterthun, from Foochow (Aug. 22), Port Darwin (Sept. 8), which arrived here yesterday, brought nearly two hundred diggers from Kimberly. Of this forty are proceeding to Sydnby. me all give bad accounts of the gold-tields. A letter from a storekeeper n East Kimberly to his brother in Sidney gives the following details of the rush™ to the mines: “The route from Cambridge Gulf to the mines 18 fifty miles shorter than that from Derby, but it is not so good, be |gun|¥ traversible by pacl drays being uselesson account of th hilly and rocky nature of the countr: Thirty drays had to return lately, beitig unable to go by that route. Now, to give you an idea of the Derby Starting off from here daily with wheel- barrows. The road is like a bowling- fn-cn all the way. All the barrow wheels 8, in had in store have been sold, and now I have & hundredweight of yprovisions for the digging, upon ench. Just faney an array of men with barrows starting for a_journey of 850 miles! Twenty-six camels have' just arrived whicen we will uti or taking supplies to the fields. Iintend to form depots along the route at intervals of about 100 miles, * * * = The steamer, Triumph, which arnved here yesterd. hronght 280 dig- gors and 170 horses, with™ the heccssary €quipments. The men, 1s usual, are of all kinds of trades and callings. There are at present 1,000 men on the field and 1,000 more af Cambridge gulf and 800 at Derby ready to proceed there. -~ You love her better than lite! well L, why don't you do something the roses 1o her cheeks, and ber eyes! Don't yo n, to bring back the light to ee she is suffering from nervous debility, the result of female - weakness, a bottle of Dr. g, H MeLean’s Strengtheuing Cordinl = and Blood Purifier will brighten those pale “ugoks and send new life torough that Wi Sing form. If you love her take heed| THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUND | more elderly 3LDY OF A GLAKCE f ¢ the emix 1 spirit of | o A long walk was before him, but it was it s durmse his time o th nt W that & man of sedentary fo needed all possitle artificial exer wid Phitip Givard was o convert to tl theoty. The long walk from his place of business to his home was a a thing for a man to be as proud of as he may be of his old wine, or of his still linenge After Philip Girard had walked a I mile or sneh a matter, the eleetrie Tlamps, which had for somé tin sible points, but not as ories brightness, beeame th Under brillianey that would have he if it had not s of ht of the night, their witehery the eity g dispensa ned o 1 beautiful nd - artifi emed 80 cold cial. Common things were transfigured by the light, but the beholder knew that the transtiguration was of the same qual ity as the effect of tinsel on the of the royal people of the stage. The stout gentleman did not, however, stop to think of this. The electrie light had, like most otiier things, come to be to him mercly matter of fact, if not a matter of busine 1t was cheaper than gas—or not so cheap—this was the point of yiew from which he would have ob- served the great invention, if he 1ol arments served it with any thought whatever, On this particular evening, however, neither the Jight nor the erowd on the steeet, nox the e ed his play in the shop-windows attention. — His mind w lost in contemplation of the business the morrow, Having st 1his | the way of health and Phitip Girard's mind was satist had ts whole duty in the premises and returned with aluerity to the shop. Notwithsianding the power of the elec. trie hight, and the long experience which the legs of Mr. Philip Givard had gained leading their master thvough the 1 without mental assistance, on this sular eveni d himto a shp- pery place on the side-walk and were nearly guilty of upsetting him; but his mind, returning from the shop, discov- nd restored perpendicuiar. Howey orbit, and th ('UHN’I'Y‘\II‘H htened up with considerable rudencss arm of a woman who pass him. [mpatient at t turned, and, as he involuntar erly to the d left his that, as struck aunst the ttempted to e shock, she y did like- ered him he | wiis his shoulder eyes. I'he face that Philip ¢ all posible distinctness woman who had onca be 1 who, in « certain wayy was beautiful still But there was somothiyg more—or less- n beauty in the faes—something that made the man shudder: and the woman shrink as they confromted each otherin the crowded street. Na one, looking at that f. he waslooking at it then, could have eseaped ther terrible conclu- sion to which he . Among a thou 1 punishments with which God visits women who depart from the way antless and peace, no one w more easily or surcly bs discovered than the change of countenance which isat once a confession and an advertisement. Just for an instant Philip Girard and this woman looked “into e: other's eyes, The hurrying eroud wi ssing them lessly by, The aceident which had thrown them together w mon as the apparently Al glance which had followed it. On that thor- oughfare which men and women use, in meneral, as & means to reach an end which fully occupies their mind, there was rvant enough to discover I and of the yman who used, was something different from angzer or curiosity. No ono saw in the eyes of Philip Girard the lonk of startled” and horrified recogaition which was surely there, uor in those of the woman the sudden light of intoler- able ne and agony which threatened to burn them out. The woman gathered her heavy skirts deftly in her hand and swent on. ~ Philip Girard, pale, trembling and discomposed pursued s way. There was no word spoken The compact man of business, whose mind had sudden been diverted from aflairs of money, reached his home with- out further acecident. His mother met him at the door, as had been | P for man) TS and, after removing s gres dered her his arm and with mar! nity led her to the dining table. a custom which, adopted somewhat pl fully in his boyhood, was seriously clung to 1ow. I'he dinner progressed with little con- versution. The mother had doubtless become inured to the taciturn of son, for she made no effort to relieve it, although one nught see in her kind the capacity for good nawred talkutive- ness. The dinner ended, Philip Girard fol- lowed Ins mother to her pl i room, und after & mowent’s passed to his library where, with his pipe lit, his feet on tho fender of a fire- place, and his head lost in the elouds of smoke whichcurled aronnd it, he thonght of the woman he had met That glanee had taken him back nearly twenty years, to a little country town, ith 1ts white cottages, its surrounding s, its parity and cheerfulness and rood humanity.” He saw himself a strip fig, thonghtful, imnginative, ambitious and romantic. = He saw her, Louise, the tender gir) with whom he 'had gone to school,” whose books he had carried, whose trifling tasks he had assuaged, whom he had loved not only then, but all his life. Her blue eyes cgmie between him and the fire, and her fawr, carcless hair was tangled 'in the olonds of smoke by which he was surrounded: This child, the girk who had taught him what it might have been to live, whom he had followed many summe days across the meadows 1n a happy search for flowers, who Bad many time so aidly and with sweli heedless grace helped him to fill his dinher pail with the strawberries which by the brook, the girl with wlum’un the pleasant, sunny summer scends of his lite were so idissolubly connected ~this one of God’s creatures who for yeaws had represented to him all the romance and the greater art of the sentiment of earth—in the name of &ll misery and hopelessness, where and what was shete-nignt! The pipe grew cold, und hefore filling 1t woain Philip Gira alked dreamily fe his desk and took from a drawer therein a single letter. He then lit his lamp, drew the Jamp-stand close to the fire, refilled his pipe, touched a match to it, and, settling back in his arm-chair, 18 com- 1 Dean Purc: T am goin Away to-night to the city. Mother I8 bound that I shall muryy Goeo y but [ cannot. You inust not search for me, 1 have 0o thought of what Iam to do, but ghall find something, | know, Tuey say 36 protects the fatherloss-—I hope Ho will protect me. Do not think, Dear Phil, that I do not apvre clate bow you will feel. I know all aboutit. I know you love me, but 1 haye bad such trouble of late that it seems as though I could not care for you or anybody else ag I eught to, Ishould . OCTOBER 24 be o o e with his love lute, bu | and’pa | entered | ble, pai ceed, him m ¢ ture of tional w ich h his earl With his mind past wh withall bewitde man car ught s of rreeted the mea At las ler upor an msta nd the eas Iyine That years hi of Phili great m Taugh. men. Eng F ce London seventh tion, an good ti on y it themr be: digious tion. A set a) Soon as t aint habit. pany wi of a ch 1y ro ton, good man He has recreati rharo! Colonel under ti ually ru r th KAy public ornm city is g pleasure closed tl; them b in th present] Itimate filled wi electrici boule: line of only by burst the Tsy Latin in hour or faubour, tile, an ple, manly, practieal way he had loved Louise; losing her, there was to_him no poss bility of Josing another. The man ) who makes merehandise of his senti ment, who loves beauty in the abstract, 621 C whose heart sxpands sl the mention of e ts t bl stutiment or at the sight of 4 by 2 n N Giful woman, would lave found balm § whinre DIy, Giatd find tover tii £ inches awide and worth $1. These goods ave vevy styfish. e of Tookiiig oy i show them in all new and desivable eolorings, | ard sat long t at the fire of the sudden de and with asteady hand dropped the let seems to be and practics wd in (he oflic Should you of romance Ot all the nd is the most Sunda, in a letter to the Courier Journal. not think that the I bbath “to keen Sunday, drill, a military fete or maneuver, or a vicw of the grand armee it is fixed for Cor. 15th and Dodge sts. Sunday. Of course, the theaters ar open, and the picture galleries, and, for = matter, the shops. ~ Being the Lord’s | de Boulogne, returaing by way of Autenil | where somcone who knew what they In the forenoon the chu araitlive i fare. Kach vistain the bois disclosed a | thronghout the growing union. Sonx rovencial dunce and sunburnt | party of i dacper into the night, but verely devel- | 4nd the old, drinking the fresh SiEe Hard 1iu csibLTiawyarsh Oping Mo drimkenne-8 or rot. making the' wood noisy with their unre- | New York ‘Times: Ambitious young Paris is exceptionally siteated for popu- | strained glee. The French a veter- [ Americans in and out of college who are lar m making. It occunics an undu- gambiers, and if 1 passed one I | aiming at glory and fortune by way of a \ lating basin, through which the Seine nihnadradiwineshopeinwliohes [awiomaa il Lot entarti nihon Ao winds tortuously, syvrounded by a tier of nd windows open wide—games of | inspiration, out of this advertisement, hitls, which abound with every kind of ce were progressing. Upon the way- | published yesterday among the regulat resort from the palace of St. Cloud to the | side in the country groups of men and | advertisements ot the Daily Register— cafes of the Bows de Bounlogne and the | boys might continually be scen pitching | the New York lawyer's organ: Brasseries of the Bois de neennes. | coppers. Here none 1s too poor to enjoy “Any law oftice that desires the services of There is no end to the places of out-door | himself, and he does it in his own way, | an experienced attorney, at a salary of (5) amusemen hort, if thei wion, and the day set [ Eat, drink, and be merey, for to-morrow | torn this town at present, 5o a man Sunday. Itis, mdeed, the | ye die, has no terror for'the French, who | standing high at the bar avers. Ever) min the Latin countrie: In | follow the injunction and forget the | law oflice of conscquer in New Yor Mexico they assess xtra Sunday tax | warning, and would do so if they kuew | is overrun with applicants for work at on the gambling houses, not out of an the food and drink to be poisoned. That | any price. Hod-carriers are in better de- religious considerations, or for the pur- | they ure equally capable of suffering we | mand. hose of putting an obstruction upon vice, | know well enotgh, and that they do suf- g T hut simply to obtain inc nd nues | fer i in. But they make no unreal A Prince Wa Table. from the increase of patronage incident | sorrow for themselves, nor wreck their | Boston Record > Prince de Lusig- to the seventh day. In Spain Sunda) hearts upon ima nan is a waiter at a Milan hotel. The rtfor the bull-tigh an amusing story illust T walking one Sl T ol f b reat anthority e, | face. His health broke down completoly tligaiinoteiof tholCibyigtibuioo, Jating thele’ affwirs, Those who w and, after obtaining some shght ussisi- emitient and pious man. Passing the rear | brought up under the strict law of what | #nce from 4 public charity in Milan, ho carrying under his Ll doutbt thie ‘prioF g6 s duti- | Hon of mind, its lessons that hurt so | married the pretty Talian maid servat, ful and devout as any one of his order. | much in entering that they are never to cmpty title, Ho has said mass. His service is ended. | be forgotien. "No wandering life ment which s not r That is all very well, I big rooster whilst he was saying muss.” SWhy," suid conscious innocene In matters of as Komans do. ; Anyhow, Paris was never brighter or yet more destitute of e of the week to the perpetual carnival of continues unabated Champs Elyse open-air conee are crowded nightly sweetest of autumn weather rains down its sunshine and moonlight, whichever stranger ploases, money and may take his choice. nt the whole of lust Sunday out of doors making a tour 1884 --TWELVIE PAGES. Z Kelley, Stiger & Co's v vtansn ypecial Bargains for Next Week, et 0 700 YARDS OF BLACK GROS GRAIN SILK AT e o el | 87 Cents- He would not have worried her ) 1ot of silk ix by fay the best bavgain we have cvsr had to offer. ¥ oo Hl‘xl‘n “: ‘»‘ \‘\‘"‘:' ”‘|“I.“]‘;,:] 1 We clvim thatitis equal in WEIGHT, WIDTH AND FINISH toany sitic sold i this city for $1.2 ent, He moved to the eity and business, He was shrewdl, sensi & § nstaki nd Jucky, and he sue | 1tis probuble that none of bis | ] city acquaintances had ever thought of | g ronnection with romance; and yet | ’ 1 | LA AR b AR This quality of Rhadama is sold cveryuwhere for $1.50. We have wver reached the ity 'which is the . Inhis sim 300 yards to close newt week at the vemarkably low price of $1 per yard. i ho ty with his div <o of 1neonoc as the one neg ad held him e y manlooil. : the lotter open in lshand. Philip rht starving fixedly Silk and Wool Mixtures, 42 inches wide, 65c. English Cheviot, 40 inches wide, 65¢. Fren h Foula Cloth, 44 inches wide, 7%c. W hat thos 1, what tender recollections of a ieh he had ¢herished eame to him 1 " kel vhat ~ . l it aanyiecneed o French Sebastapol, 40 inches wide, 9Cc. b ) tel not dead! This French Serges, 42 inches wide, 80c. French Whip Cord, 42 Inches wide, $1. QUILTED LININGS 1N BLACK AYD COLORS VERY CHEAP | Striped Jersey Fiannels, in all Colors, at | 60 Cents. | time during the his idealism, would have been by him with great joy, was noy: sure of his saffering. t the man leaned for whiy any slowly, 1 the glowing coals. There w nt's hesitation, a moment's tlame ashes of the letter reposed in the the ashes of a love were the h sturdy combi dity, are true art of Philip Girard figure, that face which ion of shrewdness sten on the street which for many ce of busine: acquaintaned had been aught n their k the c d if ther 1sibe b in the composition of the i PLAID K erchant, the answer would bea | o 5 S g .- ot ) it So Il do we know our fellow- | 5 & § 8 § o & VELVE < $3kal i FNENRAREDS IN ek« SESA ————— JaRES SN R/ NRQE N RN W NN ALL ingd-f AN AW Sunday In Paris, NN X L. =} [ —‘7 Sl » countries of Christendom w s ®w COLORS. g ridden and st, says Henry Watterson 1 do maintain the or that the it. But, whiist ing village eve its weekly v s to t races is the Combination Suits in all Qualities from $4.50 t0 $40 in all the late novelties. A visit of in- spection solicited. KELLEY, STIGER & CO. rhs) it hol becomes dav, P d turns out en have Al the gre 1f n ne. there is to be s is given to the poor, who put on st attire, and t their onting. ch-zoing is pro- all the restraints and Passy. If T 1 been seeking solitude, as [ most eertainly was not, I should have found it nowhere. Every alley and lane, even every. ac, seemed a thorough- were in their hearts part of what is worthy in our institutions and our men in New England and New York, m Virginia and the Carolinas, and It made alarge icles of locomo- you anywhe: thing cheap in » other, and, in what his pref- ing company. dollars per week, please atdress, etc.” “Five dollars o week’” isn't an unusual salary, either, for the “‘experienced at- mission of 1o anee, no mat pretty sure of finc nor the vel few sous will e be erency father of the prince the direct de- scendant of the rulers of Cyprus and timed the high but hollow title of Kin he mat ado America. alue in this country, | ¢! Sunday i Sunday has more rowdod.cl .\I\lu.rllh‘(ll'w)l it says the Princeton Review, than merely | 0f Jerusatem, " Napolcon 111 high, low, et once the same division al d“’. of re It has been & power in ||||. in secret !l”h»‘l')llh to ricl Wharton used to tell | forming American cha It 1 eastern y and p: called w pause to men in whate suit. It has kept befor al er pu the omperor {61l Princo do Lusignan wis vays tho wtive of this Latin left with staryation staring him in the on He was walkin, dica of heart di His Trah i w a pricst emerge, | is ealled the pur sometimes na hospital. Tm an uncommon | look back from early manhcod with in- | Wife and two young children died soon soster, and ii.,'w '..v-". his hund w | tense dislike to its iron restraintsimposed | afterward M'}" clder 'l('.lh lllnim were “What do you think of | on the jubilant spirits of their youth, Bug | ¥ 4 in an orp! inpased Eho eldest son, cr Griftiny”™ sad Colonel Whar- | as they grow older thoughtful | tho princo, learned Frenoh, and whon ho othing whatoyer,” answered the | they recognize at least the priceless disci- | B1eW up wis given a place a8 waiter in the Cafe del Corso, where he has just its effect on the forn simply & custom of the | pline of the da vails to lead them away from the s of those days; nor are there among the sons of men in this world of labor and in any who look back with such in- yeurning for the home rest as those who, out from the anxieties and ag- and sins of mature life, howsoever nlded its surroundings, send longings of Fart to the old firesid the bible L right to his recreation, and his on i§ chicken-fighting, an smuse- sarded hero as eithe Please Call and Examine the Latest styles in Children's wool and cashmere- Hose. us or unchrist the Wharton rejomed, to know what he did Griflin,”" but I am with that her Griflin, with un- “he chucked him | was the only Sunday nd “The ic alter, 1 suppose.” Pilgrim’s Progress” was almost the only 1 J this sort the pracrice us- | week-day fic . corn it as may those ) ns with the maxim to do in Rome | who never knew what it was, the puritan Sunday made men, thinking men, strong ' N men, who in the world looked always to something beyond the approval of their fellows, felt always that there was some- HITCHCOCK'S ADDITION, On the Belt Railw t moment, nor nts on which terest can fasten itself. The gov- is largely out of town, and the iven over Sunday and all the rest eckers and lovers of The wicked gardens have heir summer season, but most of ave winter quarters where the the demi-monde he eafes chantauts still give th ts, but they, too, will ly move indoors. As for the leg- opera-houses and theaters, they The streets are th sightseers, and such a blaz y was never known before, ds being, as I said, an endless torchlight processions, e the squares an< pigces, which o bonfizcs, while over all the ian at the pre 1517 Douglas St. i, Lots $200 to $300, on very easy terms, vestmeri as the eity furnishes to-day. YATES and HEMPEL'S ADD, twern Saunders and 20th sts, $50) to $600; on easy tevms, Ore block from Sehool House. 2 blocks from Pelt Railway depot. We have also a largelist of choice business and 4 inside residence proverty. J. B. EVANS & COMPANY As good on in< - or 'he pays his of the Quartier the forenoon, taking a turu of an two about midday in the eastern beyond the old Place de la Bas closing the evening in the Bois o M ST i O R