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Bomething Abont 12 [ — ¥ CENERAL BADEAU'S LETTER. ! | excellent “Quarzels of the Authore | THE BIOGRAPHY OF LINCOLN " are notende s 4 | WaS e L1 14 ;ul his intimate friends The Society Column.—A P Fea of Sunday Newspapers,— Reminiscence of a Society Event of the Long Ago. ninent o [Copyrighted, 1 New York,Nov. 11,—[Corresponden of the Bee. ]—1he “Quarrcls of Authe The “irritable race putation still. Low had a is worthy of its nd ne hav recalls the p ture. Lowell tells him, 11 be public property, he publishes them | without asking formal leave: and down comes the ex-minisier with his battle-uxe | on the son of his ancient friend, If Haw thorne erred in not making his intention known, surely he has displayed both taste and temper sin e s jothing about | “gonp suds” and “divty clot “he | neither storms, nor impugns, nor com- | plains, thongh he is personally and vio- | ioml\ attacked; but he steps from under the Blow and bowsto his adversary whom e disdaing to bespatter in return. Mr. Lowell does not seem to have learned th repose of Vere de Vere during his res dence at courts, But one thing he might have learned—that those who are set ona hill are to be seen of me It is the fashion in certain spherces to deery the raze for PERSONALITIES IN THE PRESS, and to declare that the present style of hlh'rvu swing and_of publishing social | ws Is vulg Mr, Lowcll pronounces | l\lr Hawthorne's publication a breech of | confidence, and apparently dislikes th circulation given to his opinions Tt is announced that there ean be no private intercourse if everything o man utters to his friend is repeated to the world. Even priviate memoirs are improper until everybody ad who might contradict or confirm them LINCOL AT, st bezun by hisse vies, Nico L would be put in_the Index f the sensitive souls 1 theie quipped authors have minuteness which some or relativ might, if they were foolish, dislike—the huard- | ships and roughness of his early car even the coarseness ) « while they prom- 18e revelations of his dealings with pub- lic men and seeret history which, when those details do not add to the received jden of the g tain pers: ceptable to the ers. But in the case character, torical wuh every one -\\lmils that nr Aml whims, y and ur- ibed with g of Lincoln's fri 1L\huul Lineoln th s can reveal: to Bee the statue umqu The story of the great civil war wust be told, no mat- ter who is pained or is disclosed and the count nk those who know so much and can tell it so well if they keep nothing back and do not allow blu{,rnpl ¢ to degenerate into adulati ory into indiseriminate eulogy But it is not only about ¢! Lincoln’s that the truth is made known. Mr. Lowell’s opi England are interesting to llu' world, the world listens eagerly to 1 account of them. Of cours m wants to be sure that the opinions are Mr. Lowell's, and of course Mr. Lowell wants to choose his own oceasion for uttering them. But a man who has been minister to England and 0 is no longer a pri wvate individual; a man who has lived and studied and written so weil as Mr. Lowell belongs to mankind, or at least to his country. His opinions on ]nullh themes are public in interest and ehar OTHER CEL through the same ordeal, General S Iu-nck once told me that while 3 he returned country. on y-fl ic business. On his arrival in New Y he was met by a reporter who wanted to learn the object of his visit. This was a diplomati gecret, but to say so would excite suspic- ion, and the general simply replied that he did not wish to be interviewed, T reporter persisted, but the minister was obstinate and would have nothing to s | Finally the representative of the press exclaimed: “‘General, you m well tell me something, for [ am ordered to interview you; and I shall revort a con- versation in any event. Now, will you have printed what yo ay, or what I think you ought to si he general was a Wise man and probably suceumbed, The queen of England has set the ex ample uf ting accounts of private life llulost unprecedented for their DISCLOSURES OF DOMESTICITY, She prattles about her court and family, her servants and her family. servants and her friends, tells stori their savings and doings as well as of her own, in a style that oversteps all the o dinary barriers of delicacy or reticenc The English, high and low, but ally the high, follow the pre Hardly a year clapses witkout " the pub- lication of a memoir by some person or n‘\mlny replete with gossip and some times seandal, about persons of 1mport- ance and unimportance which the sub- jeots never expected would be rey ‘0 say nothing ot the evceptional ( ville Memoirs, there are Lord Beacons field’s Letters, Lord Hou fmplw. Lord Macaulay's Bic Lord Malmesbur) Memo Minto's, Lady = Bloomfield’s, Clementina Davies's, nml last month Sir Francis Do ; all which peared within tea or Mn-nn ye erowded with incidents of so- wate life, repetitions of private cony ~ tions, revelations of private cha ~all wero largely read and a ever heard one of them critic | ¢ freedom of their disclosures in the | ~ wwelve years that I hived in Engl It is true that at CARLYLE'S 3 s edited by Froude, the Engl alt. The exposure of Carlyle's oy nmore com- le before, 1 sup- now and wthorne her MOTRS, alled a ons plete than any ever u pose, in literature, The undevelop thoughts of the man, hardly recogmized by lifmaself, the flactiag taucics that every one knows pass through the br - born children of the intellect, f; ‘wm erystallized judgments or delibe eelings—all were paraded within a vy of Carlyle's death; and an indign ery went up from those who w. ed to tho world in the half-sick \ll of & dyspeptic, Mrs. Proctor, Barry Cornwall, Aondon society as ‘OUR LADY OF BITTERN ly exeited, and published for pivate circuinue? & pamphlet of Car- yle's friendly and anoctionate letters lvnuuu to her husband’s famly at the vury time he was jotung down in mis the eaustic eriticisms that have in their author so profoundly. But ety exceptional ease. Ovdinarily | the Englisa world finds no fault with any secret mewoirs, if the only spiey | enough. I this instance it was the lite- | Epary and critical fraternity itsell that was | l‘llpu\i and it resented the liberty.. For THE ENGLISH BULL, Hko other bulls, never likgs Lo be gore enough s the widow known' herself | sometimes they w | as appl ‘ the pit | through them that we learn the w | social world were | Brooks, with | with my | | w THE_OM refers that the horn «hnum hl‘(urmll wother direction, and then the fun is The I ed theelder wihorne's ) d thought his n English socicty entirely too Iy beeause Hawthorne had | a very little rd Lorne wrote a | ad visited this country, in which he deseribed ev tprivate din- ner parties, giving the names of the hosts and criticizing the behavior of individual sts of distinction—an no Er nplained But not only do the E s throw réticence to they write their momoirs, they have in- vented Hy gtrictuy spe nts THE SOCIET JOURNAL, roduct of Engl n_when yrid.? Tt the ! livin founded the W ful that Labouc followed, and eclipse ing fr of sen were frowned upon a d_harshly by the r Jbut read unive in every drawing room ymmented on, declaimed and finally contributed to by the who at first derided them. the editors often went too far— ‘0t to jail; untraths ap ir columns: malicions invented, and libel suits were the consequence, but the journals were establis nd toduy they are recognized as features, even powers m the social and politieal systein of land. All this is NATURAL UNDER A Sreeat,’ as they eall themselves, | el to bring discussed, Prinees and | expect to be criticized as well | tded. They know that the pe alty of their position 18 publicity nd | they do not shivink from unveiling, any | relors who play Rosifand | Their eharacters and lives, appearances and manne have n the theme of comment sinee | the days of Phavoab’s daughter and | Helen of Tr md the talk of to-day is | the basis of historyto-morrow. The great | perform in a theatre where the whole | world is audience, and those who it in wye aright to pronounce on play players. In England this is recog- | The que lerself corrects | ily for th the people drives, who dined with her yesterday, and in what order her guest nt i to le. he arwstocracy in the same wa Hows its banquets and balls to be chronicled for the information of its inferior nd so it goes downward, tiil fashionable people in London pay a guinea a line to hay the accounts of their parties printed in the Morning Post, o ¢ great are so important thac the newsy ot | aftord to do without their daily history but there are many who can not afford i« do_without the notices, and these pay the price. In this count aristocraey, the the doings of and in lln li atest nardians I'hey were seen ainst i folk Donbtless peared in tl statenients were Hy even and nized, Hewspap when she v, thongh there i s A certain interest }wrwma of consequenc i the fortunate. People read with avidity the accounts of 1 and dinners which they cannot hope, often do not desire, to attend; and THE ETY COLUMN with its noti ddings, and ) and breakfasts, balls, has become withim a_few years a prominent featury of every fmportant newspaper. It is most recognized means of recording a rtaining the movements of ce inindividuals, The litte count pers have their accounts of whil is doing in the village regularly great i London or New York: aining to their r A p and personal talkare the most resting theme in-the world. Illlr orld. no in ts, It is through 1ndividual experience observation that character is formed. The interest in persons is eternal, Por- wities illustrate every trath; they teach tto aim at and what to avod, they reveal character; they are human na: ture; the, ife; they are history; and S R And those who pretend to condemn and despise them, in reality relish them as keenly as the rest of the world. It is twenty-six years since the prince .of Wales was in Amevica. The reporting of social events was taen almost anJw- known Nobody dreamed of giving the details cen inevery S y But there was a ball nee in New York, which ¢ most prominent in 11 supposed to 18 then the literary and d; of the Express, éditea by James whose family 1 was inti- mate. Mrs, Brooks was woman of fashion, and had a great deal of social cleverness, She proposed to me to get up A NOVEL ACCOUNT OF THE BALL. I was (o write the ordinary deseription late at night, and next morning she had fashionable women at her ing their brains to remem- ) sses of their acquaintane We worked all day to bave the ready for the evening edition, and a fine frolic we made of the task, Often, how ever, no one could remember the dr of some noted woman or budding belle whom we wished to deseribe. The honse was at the center of the fashianable par New York at that time, and Mvs. Brooks sent out eve antshe had with notes to her ¢ ntances, all up and down Fifth il on the cro streets, roas Gramerd park “Washington square, not a fine lady of theni all refused to They d bed their own luces and monds, and flounces and feathers, and the only trouble was to cut down their reporis. And this was in the most ex- clusive society of New York, I Wi nearly two pages of the Express devoted to the ball, but no columns we read like those that deseribed the gowns, The demand for the paper was prodig ous, and a gpecial edition wus reprinted, for these delicate ereawres all wanted extra copies; and doubtless some the belles, grandmothers now, have the re- port carefully put away that tells w they wore at the Prince’s ball. 1 wonder what else I have w long, 1 left off newspaper writing when I went into the army, and was wlupmmu in abstaining so long as 1 held a publ ofli Still. once 1 a while 1 allowe mys a little amusement, and in this way I discovered that human nature is the same in Washington us in New York. A year or two afte ar o fancy dress ball was given by a able woman at the eapital. OF this e little ao- count for i newspaper, giving no names, describing only a few of the dress trying to be very elegant and dignified in wy scrupulous regard for propr that no who was at the bui gnize the deseription of an individ- But the iadies found gre with the serupulosit id foreign ministers 1 blossoms, wanted to read their in full, and were not all satistied gingerly allusions to their elab- s toileties and fanciful costumes, As for those whom I loft out altogether the, wouldn’t speak to wme for months. 1am told, THE iven for the those who w i nd. ¥ crit av, wives, the ow LADIES L iests in advance Not long ago a story about hien be was connected sent o hittle irl with was for him, ) opening Night, to deseribe the dresses of the famous women as only woman could. ‘This, you will re wis not at a court ballin 1 -mln Elyseo in Paris, but at -the 3 overa honse in New Yo little thing was - shy and \\I||Il~m| to he trade. kuocked so timidly IND LISTS to the new famous crit i il with The editor writing of their Danors. 1 we [ as in England, or in France, | clusive. ten that has lived so | and | atthe 1l OMAHA DAILY BEE!: SUNDAY, doors flm no one_hea: :I her, uw! in gre istress she turned away, absolutely ¢ ing as she went to her important col league and declared she dared not ask the ladies ont their gowns, But he told her not to be afraid: the grandest dames only dressed to be admired; they all wanted to be in print and would cor- rect her notes themselves, if necess: l don’t know how many doors were opened, but the descriptions were mi- nute, and [ was told extremely accurate, and nobody found any fault. TIlE TIDE HAS SET IN FAVOR OF 1 The fashion has sway o TBLICITY s fully in Ameri where M dame Adam paints the P snlons bfully as the lords and ladies of Lon- be their own drawmg-roums. asign of the tim it is a ie fashion, though it originated narchy; for it takes all the world mto the life of the prominent and the ex It tells to everybody what onece was kept for the few, Sueh ialk and gos- sip and wit a8 are printed now hav ways been eurrent i important cir Wilpoie and de Gramont and Lord vey once did the work of the corre | dents who are so popular to-day. even royalty tells its story to the publie; queens ns well as actressos write their own lives, and cuctesy to the ero Domocracy may enter palases t i judgment on the manners of sc Apad Bapy AN INTERESTI {j(‘TEE.\HNISGENJS. Rns- now oa a is c-General Yakoviteh, of the one of the few men aw the 1t Napoleor general saw the oding. At that battle Yakoviteh, then awere boy, served with baitery in the l redonb t which was the center of the Russian line, He gives a vivid description of the battle, Whin mornng brok v of shut out the ficld from view. ny were heard, the s the rambling of aruillory wheels, Then came the thunder of innots, making the very rth tremble, ‘e times all the Russian guonars we and three times new men took their | Buliets flew thick as hail, and men dropped dead or man gled every moment, 1y, is living who battle_ficl I ch heard ing onw a sonnd distance, like vam patt d It w louder and lout ttilied the like the roar of a All af onee a gieat wave of It swords and helmets and 1s came surging up over the works. 1t was the Imperal g fore the shoek of that Russian center teved wreek. When his senses and opened hi arouna him the corpses of h comrades. Suddenty hoofs ealled his at eayly drossed oflicers, Sl came riding over young Russian peercd faces. In his graphic sribes them the hard nd broad-enc ansouty, with the cek, and the lo and bulldog jaw of vest of them all. h his wl e to he saw father and the tramping of sntion to 2 group of id Napoleon's the tield. The ixiously into anguige he cos of Rapp ted Sebastian, abre cear across broad forehead rim old Nap, the There, too, was plumés and his lark eurls riding ing down his his han then the group part was the man himse A\n'l 1suddenly and there 17 the midst of A immovable in those eold gray Moscow soime- but could see nothing glorious vietory? cried M waving s hand. “What o stir e be amowg the cood foiks in Paris wih y look eyes of his, as if he where up in the sk n. vy in doing it, | sy v, CHadn't we Dets 1 tttle and wait for rean- forcements? “Then Napotcon turned his head slowly, just as a statue might do, and lookingz him full in the fac “Thou advising a v That is something new, falling back now! L must date my bulle- tin from M As for the army, you can’t make an omelet without breaking a reat, Michnel! indeed! Not—no Koviteh this he knew that ) 3 past, for no man save one doomed to de the slanghter of thousands of brave men, In three months from that day the French emperor was flying for his life aeross the border, with the Cossacks at his heels like hungry wolves.™ COWBOY CHARACTERISTICS. A Creature Who Inhabits the Wilds v Use of Lasso and > Language. The cowboy is a man attached to a of gigantic spurs. He inhabits the ries” of Texas, and is s ssfully rd as far north as the thirteenth de gree of latitude, e in season all the Year ronnd, and is generally found on the back of a small mustang pony, “wild ind - savage a colt of the Ukraine,” This fuct has given rise to widely dif. tused belier that the cowboy eannot wallk, is often_eitea, as an instance —a ndous muanifestation, in f -of the eriul workings of nature in adapt- he tures to the circumstances rounding them. It is argoed that once the cowboy wits & human being bined with the “ordinary powers of lo: motion, but durl the course o becoming more and more attached t horse, and having gradually ceased to use his legs, th important adjuncts have become ineap:u o pedis vl thus the cowvboy and his v loped into a hybrid of inan anil , un inferior kind of Centaur Some scientists, howe dispute this, as several specimens of _cowboys have been from time to time discovered, who, { wandering into the busy haunis ot mon, have, under the influence of excitement | and whilo suffering from intense thirst, | been seen to detach themselves from their mustanges and disappear mto ce: tain busin D wilnts are attended to by n wearing a din mond breastpin and white apron. Yo though this was proved beyona doubt by several competent witnesses, and it wa acknowledged tiatthe specimens alluded ther staggered, with un- even and wavering steps, this does not disprove the development theory. Not atall. It might as reasonably be elaime | | that because the pieces of restaurant but- ter unalyzed last year in Chicago were ; found to be hairless that the ot goes to prove that the modern milkmaid is bald- headed. The reasoning in either ease is f: cious. The cowboy does not wesr & coat, His logs weatharboarded jwith gaotskin oyeralls to proteet them f llmnn of the mosgeite and e is roof sombrero, wide in the corner for and open at the top for ventilat on, In the use of the lasso and pr language he has no equal. He e a steer, throw the noose on either foot ot the anim it runs at full speed, at the sume time showing a choice in the mat- ter of select and appropriate anathemas (whieh he delivers equally well either in Mexiean or United States language, long primer type) that 18 po afectly amazing, considering his limited aequaintance with the drama and the refining influences of civilized lite. It shows, however, wl long practice and & steady devotion one pursuit will accomplish. A man once told us that he knew a cowboy who :nned and branded a cow without swear ing; bui iz man was ane of those ae- | connnodatin would rather tell a lie on sixty e than il the truth for ¢4 At to voice | neighmo of | o and agony, | ; struction could have spoken so lightly of | the CLARABELLE'S Pl(m PARTIES The Lamentations of Gotham's Grundies Over Theo Roosevelt's Departure, A FADING LITERARY GENIUS, A Prize Belle on Exhibition—The tow in Sorosis—A Study in Street Cars—The Troublesome M tache, and Other Notes, Nov. 11,—[Corr of the Ber.]-—He has sailed away. Who? The most desirable widower in New rw Yor spondence | York, 'Theodore Roosevelt, The girls of our fashionable world deplore his exceedingly. He was undes thirty; was handsome; he was distingnisned | in public life: he belonged to highly ap- | | he proved family, and he owned two or tnree million dollars. He had been a widower only two years, and had not yet shown symptoms of remarr Need it be said that the oyes of managing mothers and e ligible daughters were | fixed on him? But he has eseaped across the Atlantic, and we are stunned hy the news that he has gone to wed Miss Ldith Carroll<to throw him self Is she not good None I not pretty? Yes. Bofor 3 fro yed with pen and ink as hav- bewitchingly youthtul face and an of cant tness. Then why, otherwise than as an expression of envy, vhody sy that Widower Roose- velt is wasted on his chosen bride? Sim- becanse she is a daughter of Goy- | ernor Carroll, of Maryland, and alveady | ed of family exaltation, great | wealth and everything else socially that Roo. oIt conld confer on a poor, unin- fluential maiden. Bat we shall have to let him have his owa way, she 1s porty ing wing s POTTER i She said toes the public. The wonc in society is how the other Potters like the semi-the s which she has wequired. As 4 Jishop Potter was in hor party Litis faiv to presmme that his con- i wreatly shocked. M let the fair creature repose on In'r Inuvels. She is mentally s worn out. She dec getting up t usted he newspaype about wion. Ey while, ations had likely so,” to whom seusitive or- her shears got 1'on the pivot, or nicked themselves on the cdge, or broke off a point, it was distraction to an exauisitely poetie clip- per. Then, the b mucilage 1 b come sour, the finest paste ‘id, and the awful cockroach o the most exclusive Think how these hard exper literar enterprise must lave dey Mr Lean easily belleye that & is hl‘nkn n down BELLE FROM MEXICO is on view here. Nn- 15 on exhibitin Aztec fair. girls o l\ WPs l(l And very will | ceptacie. the in wtorial n s, her with then for th slexion an Her big droop: 3 N0 ]\ pts 1 out. An ex- | dness, or it may be discon- her mouth invests her with roman interest. She I te hands and a figure i whichi the promise of futave not so obvious as in Greaser muidens. A swarthy man, who plays & guiter, and | though he mizht have a re somewhere about his around in wn omit dark Ipoks discourag tveness on the part st unusual ||m~1 Mexican girls are apt to grow into is shown in the older women of the collection. They are fa nly and wrinkied. The swarth; oks leathery, and the dark senora of uneertai bout as romantic in appear 1 ol boot-leg. THE BEAUTY ON EXHIBITION is forgotten in the presence of a senorita 'n occasionally among th She has the dark skin and cc i hair of the Mexi and deli- cate, reguls Spanish, with no trace of the Hor blnck oyos arc sparkling e e figgitr is lithe and graceful, and all _her move ments are easy and composed. In dress she is Am shorough hat sefs oft her shy l]u- cad arustically, ‘D0 ot vy Wntx 1s drossed. Jow npon wer forenead. ‘The fair Spaniard strolls about the booths, stopping to talk with the Mexiean exhibitors now and then, and unconseiously attracting the ad miring attention of visitors, \\luu she 1s present, the nose of 1l beauty is out of jownt. The & Mexican beauty is o' velative of (h cun consui here, and we are to r her, | understand, into our exclusive | society. riten in Sorosis were to the society th dowmest It wus formed on prine p'v of | perfcet harmony, and is continned by tie | wdhesive power of the never-failing fenn- nine It has the oilicst, kissie iest outside possible, and 1ts membe determined that the harinony of Sorc shall be inviolable, of it takes all the salve in New York City, But on the side, known only to themselves, and a 1 nd et by their dear friends who don’t bappen to be members, W o I thewr frienas there are cracks and splits and yawning chasms. One, that even the determination to be harmonious ) not quite bridge over, is about the suffrage question. Some of the members rists, ana, with the al of that party to reform (s rn to see Sorosis asufirage mstitution iy At party will resist to the d any such movement, and will even s te the harmony of the sisterhood before cwill allow Jorosis to be made a poli 1 elub o the sufiragists do ) to compar She makes chocol: She s aclear cont aul\‘v.‘x visitors comps bine bout nary delic l\m. s | n, i by his nd the 1S A DREADEUL You wouldu't suppose, DISTURT ANCE i yrevailing harniony hus Harriett Webb, on the side and the members of the committee which gives the ae of the mectings to the newspa norters on the other. Mrs. Webb elocutionist spirits. She is a sn fasts, vither to read selvetions or to d liver poems or addresses written by other members. Mrs. Webb thinks | name ought to app in the newspaper counts of the meetings, But it never does. No man is permitted to bo present, unle: he is u waiter, and therefore the reporters ot their accounts from a commitie Mrs, Webb laughs, enti the interest of harmony, it is “very funny. give a breakfast to Genevieve Wu there Mrs. Webb vead the pocm of the day written by Miss i Palme ster of the theatricyl manager, A, M. Palmer, As she had requested the president to see that her nume was given to the press, sne wis surprised to see that no aceount of | pelsa | Wearied porson i adornment, b | tions during the pro | aweird, ber was published: - She says that the | samo (Inng has beon kept her first rance before Sorosis, five or six y ndso,” she concludes, it is evident there is a conspiracy against me, and I think IT 18 ALL VERY FUNNY " The members of the club, so Mr Webb says, call her “‘the adorable Webh and they address her s sweetheart,” ‘“you dear thing," itles, provo cative of harmony knownonly to women and Ic . ‘“So you can con tinues, “that itcan't he from any personal fecling against me. Whny, you ought me in theelub, You could ¢ once that there is no more p T e ber." Then she remembered to say that the names of other elocutionists who are members of Sorosis are men assents to the doc of a A partisan sittin that rew loose somewhere con in thatth videntiy a con and then comes back to her or crion that it is “all very funny s to whothor she woman who onght to martyr to envious h Kisses are plenty ever, there is something in the smack nisses spitefully. A STUDY IN STREET CARS I have to-day made - study in cars, clevated and surface. 1rise fend the men who keep their s knows that the man who sits and lady to stand not the in the whole ¢ So many women spend their ngth in a id ¢ [ wich unnees sary, and indulzéd in to gratify a love of secing pretty thi latset stvles They connt on sitting ¢ the home ward ride, and then it the car d od no seat relinquished for them they rramble ove sof men, and bewail the dearth of old time gallantry 1 hope, gentle when you are tived VoUW D your seats and teach us a use nceldlessly the last rem- ¢ a graceful act in in dehieate th enteved and took in the ng line of standecs. A respectably dressed Trish woman, in the row, put her arm about her and sai “Lane on mes it's a s of yez th be standin.’ Tho Iady gratefutl 1 theswrong arm of the womanly woman, whose homely face shone with kind feeling. [ 1giit the act equally graceful in both ter in the day an ol woman entered a » full she could only get the door and lean against the A young lady rose quickl ke my seat, madam refused, but she remained st 2, insisting with so much sweetn that she gratetully necepted the s The faces of these two women linge memory, and their courtcous actions brougiit something into wy life more helpful than me hiysieal rest, AN EPISODE OF A DIFFERENT KIND came to my notice soon after. I was sit- ting next a well dressed man whose hair and beard were quite g young girl, modest in lnok i came in and stood quietly near the door. s other side of the gray-haired ted and hie motioned ke it. She politely ined, e rather ofticiousty insisted, she declined. and another lady coming in took the seat. ~ Other changes oceurrmg L moved away, and the man cagarly ealled the gir np ever sinea wion by isc spiracy nal a Norosi notoriety-sec B8 pmraeecd; mal nd <o, tho or street to do- Who com- most 18 sl 1 Sixth e for the likes 10! thin frame stid: oty ing : youn, sy ay on from time to 1 oflered, until the girl’s as apparent to all. It ha pened that she. leti roat the sun time I did, and I vent toask why she ned she could have meto her mod- my liviny rs every 1 “1 have to wor have to ride on the ¢ orning. 1 have to f kindness from ntl found 1 must; they are no aud this one called me ‘m) A FRINGE O is admirable to the girl no gentl len like e on her own lip, atle; roots toward her. At e women begin to deteet ow th upon their an the paers advertisements of qu pre- parilions for removing super- ileous hair. Some of these nostrums are powerful acids, which certainly tike ofl the hair, but too often the skin goc. and leaves a disfiguring sear the loubted demand, some of the hai dressers make o speeialty of improving complexions by the old-fashioned means of luther and razor. In an up-town hair- dressing establishment is a private room deyoted to this work, and T was permit ted to intrude there while o French ludy was being shaved. ‘The operator custom were all branettes with cos black hair; that blondes never were i D WITH MOUST r number were I dear iR LI to have & mous st not with the tain some signs of hirsute g anu they for moustache was and laying her composed hex ‘lllnAM E aud ba L |||mu (Iu wtures for the on( There was n Nigh foot rest in front of the chair, but it did not appear to be required on - this oe- easion. A napkin was tucked under her chin, and the operator applied a quan tity of shaving eream or lather squeezed out ot tinfoil tube instead of being mixed up m a enp with a brush A little gentle rubbing with the end of the tingers softened the skin and the hair on th , the operator ref from remarks upon the wi sss, which imparte unnatural air to the whole per The barber then deftly stron ped asmall, thin, short-bladed razor with a pearl handle, seized the vietim gently by her prefty nose wind began to shave the Ip quick but delicate touch ' she remarked, formance, necessury 10 SCRAPING THE SKIN, s to ronghen the surinee, or cutting inst th rin, for that 1ses the hairs paw b under the surface ot curled and that produces pimples. 1f callow vouths would take the same their adolescent complexions would be better.” After the shave, the lather was carfully washed out of the pores with toiler water, and a pr tion was applied to iidé the bluish tinge at the too luxurious wrowth of bristies would otherwise g the upper lip. The patron was then per- miatted to escape without being told that she needed hampoo, or that the b getting thin on top of her head and she ought to use tonie. A lady with w ood heally growth of moustache re quires the atwention of her hairdresser onee or twice u week. CLARA BELLY ch Nellic Stage Mail Miss Nellie Stuger, zement to Lord Butler was announe 'w York yesterday, is one of the pretty girls in_Chicugo society She would be th AN Lype 1n any se lection of pretty wome which shoula .nt the beauty here. Her figure 1s tail nod willowy without being very slight. Her face clussisal and her style pure blonde has always dressed in the ultra English fashion, i s mple and as smooth dresses that we as Mathews, the tailor, could make them reabouts have always set Young wen | club parlance, #s a her down, in the prize winner. good-natured relative of the MeCormicks has been puying her a great deal of attention for several yeirs, and is now supposed to feel badly cut up. Nellie Stager has ‘a fortune of 1000, Her father and mother both d, and so her fortune is her own, She i the immense Stager homestead at the corner of Eigliteenth street and Mic n.avenue; wiere her sister, Mrs. Gor: S0 MADE IN EVERY C3OKIL Tho ahove Trd and BEWJRE OF ha‘ can Detroit, Mich. N‘!LTON ROGERS DEALERS E. Onr stoek includes repairs fc Next Drawing, This Month These honds are drawn 4 times 500,000, 200,000, 100,000, 50,000, et the whole prize that itm ments. Th 100 Franes € 3 will e sent free of charge. Money car For further Illlolll\.lllul\‘ call on or N. B.—These Bond the United State STVLE AND VA'fl(’TY KNOWN TO 1G AND HEATING STOVE io Mark ls a Suarantoo that Ever m'en',nu NS, COUNTERFEITED AS WELL The Michigan Stove Company, Ct LDflO.l” roR SALE BY & SONS AGENTS, The 01’."" ATA STOVE REPAIR W‘ORKS CLUSIVELY TN STOVE REPATRS. 1 stoves ever sold in Omaha and the west. 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STEWART'S ESTATE, Some Interesting Facts About the Lucky Heirs, Mr. Stewart’s Brother-in-Iaw the Pirst Legatee Mentioned inthe Will The New York Heral legatee mentioned in the Clineh, died several yes a brother of Mrs, Stew time was adeputy collector in the custom house. He had the reputation of being one of the best informed men about the tarifl in th ry, and, besides, w good abusiness man that AT, Stewart d him a greav inducement to enter ’y Miss Anna, Miss Emma, and Miss Julia Chineh are Mrs. Stewart’s half Theyarconly & few years younger than nd i together at No. 10 West ‘Thirty-ninth street. Mrs. Stewart b always been liberal with them. In ap pearance they are shortand inchned to be stont Surah N, Smith, is the wife of Smith, who belongs Island family, and is related to another, the Lawrenc In summer the family lives near Smithtown, L. 1, and in win ter at No. 537 Fiftn avenue. Mus, Cornelia 8. Butler 15 a daughter of Mrs. Smith and the wife of Prescot Hali But who is artner with Senator Willimm M, kvarts in the law firm of Ev Choate & Benman. Mr Butler’s father is Charles K. Butler, the well-known lawyer formerly sociuted with Mr. Evarts, andhis mother was a sister of Mrs. Stewart, In person Mr Butle about the medium hght, and his chevks are covered by black whisk s. He lives in the big brown-stone on the northeast corner of Fifth avenue and Tinrty-fourth street, opposit the St it mansion. The two mentioned in the will are schoolboys Kate A. Smith is a danghter of Mrs Smith. After Mr. Stewart’s death she lived with Mrs, Stewart till her marriag with the Rev. J. Bloomficld Wetherill s celebrated in Trininy church After that Mrs. Stewai Mr, and Mrs. Wetherill Live Av nue hotel, As aireany mention My Wetherill hed the Protestant Episc M chureh of the th Ward, a v ewar sted him Of the other daughic Lonise the « L Chicay named Osborne. Kl unmarrie Besaie the wife of Stanford son of Richard Grant W u bigr of the fivm of MeXou W architid says: The first will, Charles P e was i for a long IS (0. she Mrs. St ex-Judge J art’s nic Lawrenc to one old Long is he At the sof Mr ton, keeps up the establishueat. | James Luwre euce B s o0 of Mys 'SEND FOR CIRCULARS ! Smith "INGI.E, DCUBLE and LIGKT, 4 150 1hs, 87 1hs 8370 810, LA-:I, DURAB and CHEAP, Crated free on board cars, CHAS. T. ALLEN, Magager, tion Omuha Do Valeating’s Short fand & Type Wiiting lustitule N POSITION BUILDING, est short hand school We ki OMAHA, NEBRASVKA the west Studonts preparsd for good b ou e da fuitsup ly ot thort-hand s is o lawer, t building with an oflice in His midale name . The Long Istand proud of their accord Mr. Smith B! to Lawrence. This et had probably its effect in determin- ing his legacy, ds Mrs. Stewart, being o neh, was apt to think us highly of her maiden name as of Lawrence, Of the ehildren of Mr. Charl But- ler, mentioned in the will, Rosabie, Helen, nd Virginia are unmarried, and live with their father, Liilian is the wife of an English lawyer named Swann, Max- well, whose middle name is Evarts, has never done mueh of anythinge, Lastly, Charles J. Clinch, s nephew, who' is bequedtned of the estate, isa son of Charles P. Clineh, and about forty years old. At one tin'e he was United” States consul ag Bordeaux en he w the hend of Mr, St rt's Paris hous Sinee Mr, art’s death he has continued to Paris, where he has a magniticent hotel on the Avenue do Alma, and his presi- dent of the American elub, Mrs, Stewart allowed him a liveral income during In R life. e sailed for this country ls urdauy I the Stews wd of his ow 1 the Clineh Mrs. Stew- ive in erypt where Mrs buriea g 2, lar dint ly into the Stewar 1s in_torm, imn altur. Sunken ) wo deep gr one of which is supposed to cont thatis left of Mr, Stewart, and the holds his wife. Mrs. Stewart’s colll placed inn loaden casket, hermetically nd then ineased ' an outer box tnut, A heavy en rolled above the grave, and a urn of stone was placed ubove similur urn marks the ' tomb, A New York journul of social preten- sions says during Mr. Stewarts life but little of his vust fortune found its way into Mrs, Stewart's hands, All the greant stores 1 the city were dnstrueted to ive her unlimited eredit, but rady money she was permitted to enjoy only rarely and in economic sums, and people who appeared 1o her for charity were, the sawme authority s denied from sheer nec ity. dappier lives than hers it was not havd 1o dise cover, Caring little, if anything for vooks, without the resources of a well cquippe ety woman, she turned ta the oper her ehief amusement in the urs that could not but d She was veary of life long before” the curtain went down on_its final act, and f quently spoke of 1ts disappointing joys, When finally the death of her husband made her misiress of more thun she could well commaund, the power to enjoy i $lone been gone, and she was even 1ppy than vefore. So, at least, runs other nowas sealed, of ¢he e vd charmer on ¢ nearly 200 and walks s them with )= feeds thew on of them, i, is e nd Liou for ided alic