Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 21, 1886, Page 12

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, 12 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY., NOVEMBER 21, 1886~TWELVE PAGES. e e e st e s e S a—— i S et 1 S B e ot e St European aristocrat recognizes any | gaid to me, “Ordinary people have ave - | other on the evening after Thanksgiving, - v . S B AMCFIean AFISLOCTACY, even WO generi o 144 0 3 y nues for employmentdn which they nat ssiden Neveland" i he b | The seeond act of Semeramide will be | Abjeet Destitution of Tens of T1 The Banners of “American” Warblers Ha tions old, why should we trouble our- The Most Beautifal Woman in Rew Yotk | S0/ Tind work, but reduecd. indics are | L1enident Cleveland's Visit to the Hub | 2ivon on Wednesday ovening anid the Ge maa Matronolis on the Broadway Walls. sclves to'clain what we can never attain, | Fashionable Society. at a great disadvantaze in_ attempting to | and His Hearty Reception, gardon scotie from Faust on Friday, This he G 1 Motropolis, what is no way better than we already — earn a living and it ‘i o assist ",‘I'f" will be a rare musical treat and aithough . " N yossess; cspecially when we have every - latter that this society is established e 3 ~ ) , fl seats will cost £3, 21, and £5, crowded | THE SYSTEM OF RELIEF. THE CHANGES OF RECENT YEARS | FRICT0L AVl can’ make those whom | A BIG GATCH FOR SOME FELLOW. | Criter Had caliod to learn how the line | PRAMATIC KINGS AND QUEENS. | |55 a foregone conclusion we envy and imitate admit our equality was d n lu-l‘\u v‘l’ ladies"” or g-_»m.»' ' : - e . {1 ' Wealth an S For there is not an_aristoerat in Europe | 4 oma re Tk —O .| women in reduced cireumstances,” and | gy jlaon Barrett, Adonis Dixey, and the he first thing a stranger eritizises in early Fifty Thousan or The Display of Wealth and Shodiy | o 1 tss the power and wealth A Woman in Great Luck—Opera Ans | {00 ios," to make ngoof tho formla Gront I', ; . \“1 f it bt Boston, especially if he isa westerner is pendent unon Charity, W Aristocracy a Show in Itseil and luxury, and when they have seen it dicnces—High-Toned Charity - of logic. Apparently it had never oc gl A B LS i Bt sl the extreme erockedn 1 narrowness Quarter ofa Million By neral Adam Badeau's the breeding of the Ame i democeracy; For Ladies Only, curred to her that there might be a possi Liberality of Bostonians—-A of ourstrects. He innmediately coneludes css Than Thivey but they will not admit that we are arjs s bility, of l'vm’umldm;l(ln clnsscs; the Presidential Joke, that ul.. buildings were put up promis Oonte a Dag. tocrats. 1f we were wise, even ir " e question was <o altogether novel that it G cuonsly and the strects picked ot eft Wway. 16 American would ever, under any | Ciara Belle's Contribution to the Bee. | i 10 be put in several forms before she 1 : i g | wards, and indeed his conelusion is not eedmetancos, admit aristoeraey. 1t | NEW York, Nov. 18.—[Correspondence | comprehended its fundamental meaning Boston, Nov. 17.—[Correspondence of | far from correet. The names of streets [ Bruras, Nov. 8.--[Correspondence of Ieview of Music and Its Patrons, American fashionables would say to Eng- | of the Ber.]—It may seem a rashiy | Then it \\:Tx|lwm‘-n~|'|-.|oml-’lh:rl sorvants | the Brk|—Laying aside all party preju- | are ascapricions us - the strots them- | he Brk.]--1 was asked the other day if (Cotrespondence | lish and other aristocrats: We aze whitt | sweoping and conelusive ussertion, but T | were not Tydies, of eourse (nvigcible | dico and wncharitable narrowness, it | {lvie, For instance, o stioet GRS | there was much suffering among the onr institutions proclaim,” they wouid | " o golitg ko 1 argument); that “ordinary wome ould | x s Ykt ; Washington streetis eatled Summer stie 5 of the Bee. |- New York is hardly New :.‘t:l‘m I:\!(.”\‘v they x|.I :n \‘\‘n.‘h we stie_ unde am conseientiously going to make it. | L T e that 1s, women who had IRty be admitted 1l & President € on one side of Wash m and Winter | poor of our capital. The question re York without the opera. More even than | g0l Sratenses and borrowed elothes, The most beautiful woman in New York | joen accustomed to work for a living in land’s first visit to Boston was & most | ireot on the other, when in reality they | minded me of what 1 had heard Now in London or Paris the operais here the stolen conts of arms, For these ap: | fashionable society 18 chops and factories; that women who had asant one. That it was thoroughly | arve one and the saine street. 'The samo | York lady say recently: I have been ontward and visible sygn of fashion and | preciate reality and power, and suecess, THE WIDOW HAMMERSLEY. always been poor (born in reduced cir- | enjoyed by the people of Boston and vi- | is true of Elliott and Kneel, and - when it | papgicuiarly struck by one thing,” she but despise shams, as everybody else | All the other belles commonly men- | cumstances presumably), could not hove | einity there can be no doubt; and if the | crosses Aremont, near Seollay Squard e T M el e P { for aid in the exchange: from all of which | & ey s nrasilont and the buildings on one side of the s Lar et b g it scomed 1o follow that the roal distine: | SUMe is not true of the president and his | oy niont Row and on the other sideof { Journ i your groeat city: 1o not see has finally vanquished ats vivalythe ans | o000 ke, The old oper their physical equals could be easually | tign hetween “ladies™ and *not ladies™ | Prefty wiie, must indeed be very | (o sie street sire ealled on Court strect, | Y0 on the strect those ragged, hollow BNt wbotde of musioand socioty 18 de: | was Ttatien. this is Gerrman, The old v encountered in a half-mile stroll on | consisted im the respective habits of not | cleve Their reception here was | Add to all this the extremely barbarous | cheeked figures that attr ) many worted: the eldor temple is given over to | music, this b drama; the old was song, | Brondway. But Mrs, Louis C. Hammers. | earning and earning n living. “But,” 10 | such a one as only Boston people can | way of having door numbers inerease | Pitying glunces n London, Paris, hnml'i ! 1fist i slnmation: Hho v To% | oy has come forth at the opening of the | come at last to the language of the mana s whin thd "o ot aroused, which | on one side of a strcet anddecrense on the | #nd the large Amurican centers. So W ruined companies, | this isdeelimations the old was melody, | ley has come forth at the opening o lliine i G ddity ve when they onee get aroused, which n SONEiH LRE tor 1o, BAt.NEHO phvorty ] bl ; this is hinrniony; the old was.aet, this 18 | n e enosimon of perfect | £er: “the responsibility for determining | {70 MY Cldom that | other and you ean form some idea of the né ther : ) Not only the Italian opera s heard no | TS 19 e A wan, axquisite, SHlE 18 I Nt e asa sy oL ¥ Who are proper snbjcets (i. e.; ludies) for Y 8 X facility wiih which. & steanger finds his | here 1 hastened to mform my good more at Irying Place,but even the plueky | FEERE W _"(‘JM“\;“H‘I‘llll'l‘("'”‘l; et | loveliness. It is true that she is the pos- | yggistance, rests with the members and | @ real blue-blooded conservative evinees [ wie'iY the ity of enltare. that she was mistaken, ~ Sineo Mes. Thurber, at the head of the Ameri l', ;'_"-\,,,,;m. 1';,.,(. It was Gfisi, Mario, | S¢ssor of more than two millions ot dol- | managers of the exchange individ. | any enthusiasm, but when he is once A cortain member of the board of al- | Berlin has become a grand metropolis ann cohorts, hungs out her banner on the | BRIV Gringe, Bosio, Sontag, | 1ars in her own clear right, but 1 try to f ually, In_such an assosintion of | stirred up you may know that it means | dermen has beeome the objeet of mucly bl b s PG LS Broadway walls. Bt Matini. Patt human beinge, | prevent that from prejudicing me against | such ladies it may be granted, Lsuppose, | something. We take it that by this time | vidicule and a_corresponding amount of | £EEFR R e T The new house. is the representative of [ 0G50 Biood, persondlitios, not swans, | her. Nor do 1 perecive that on grand | that no mistakes in the way of perfect MR PRESIDENT pity since he concerved and made known [ 1hing i ermany, its indienoy has - o pemme Vit s diplay and its | e otk yr. And thoy tell | opera nights the beanx admire hot less | discrimination are made. “(Fhat ds | o0 o0 WG CIRIRIE L op [ the novelidea of takiniz out the show | SERSKE 1) UHD® Eiti TATG U8 118 toniths color. 1ts wrray of exclusive boxes filled | 1< we Tind no music in those days! The | or the other women hate her more lady may be depended on to recognize a | is foretty well used 1o the boomtis 0F | windows of shops and constructing side AT AL P UL Bl ity with peoplo of wealth and names known | bugniewho Jived and admired and lis- | account of her immense wealth, is | Indy instinctively) The system ie this :‘”'1'"3'1\":\"' 1o :""!"*‘;' "" ot | walks in their places along the front and | 6 judged l;.} il faet that there are 128 atJenet to the newspapers, its dinmonds | LEOE T Ft then in Burove and Amer- | practically a debutante. For five years | each manager bugs oncor more tickets e Ot o HhnE ittt o e | o0 the ground foor of buildings, The -;m’vl_lv-mv erlin with an annal ineomo and full dross, it makes a pageant quite | o Gere ignorant, nneultivated, stolid, | she was the wite of a highly cecentric | at & a picee, each ticket entitling thre ol 'I'I'{:'._ RGO |"'{' wa [ idea is vather Chinese and 1 fear that it | Biboai 000 to £1:15,000, - largo sums e showy 18 ahy on e stage, and aquite | g S R i parison with thoss | young Crovsus, who martied hor for her | herson to the privilege of consigning ar- | JOMR s e, | (must go.” The labyrinthiun streets, | i SHODS, however small they may seem 28 ofton receiving notice from erities and | o Wrorer the Queen of Sheba and the | Toveliness, adored her desperately, wrote | tieles to the exchange. The manager T ALAEE s T e e | HOWever are only to e found in- the old NS ass ot il g Piblic. As many in the parquet o to see | Mcistorsinger, ‘Vhere was no one before | verses incossantly in her praise, and | then disposes of the ticket as he sces fi hols Wiy 1L TGHEIL tite Mase oY exeit vartof the eity. The Back Bay distict | l‘l'\.l~|||n[.-<\ § .mnllrlwr and sinele in- the audicnce s the play. The lookers on Opera Yok "o thens | witled hor all his proporty. She was born | She may have among her nequaintances | their way throngh the mis of exeited | or fushionable part of the city is buauti- | {HITIAE cons to Berhin annuatly from are looking upward half the evening, e e neie, Nobotly was ol | nt Troy, N. Y., twenty-six years fgo, Her | one or nore reduced ladies to whom sho | humanity whivh throned Hatva o Sest | fully luid out in broad aventies and - las the country huping to find here bettor o e wriey s Tivedl out of New York | e W O "o educated until th | futhior was Commotlote Price,of thie United | bresents “tho ticket, or such gentie. | ot the morning of Bt Cloveland S LRl | o moro modern appearance, Shat! WP UL L for o quaster of 1 contuey the chiange in | Motioporitan opora_fouse was opened. | States navy, wnd although her family [ Women may boe recommended to her by | Bt ¥R LECAAE STCIEAE SN Wit | Commonwealth avenue s the richest | Tivered by cireumatan oo, Wi s the prople and the pluy. houses 15 very | AN Tt sreat and geracions of every alime, | had only his pay to live on, they did so | Dersons competent to judge whethor they | (ro bis CRiviss ORI, FUE, BT | and most aristoeratie. On this is situated partof theso delwded people fail T got striking. who hstened to Donizetti and Buliin 1 marked refitement, and were figures | Are worthy or not. 'The ‘final holder of | ®A¥ OF VI ¢ e auadrangle, enthust | i, ot noted of Boston's hostelries, the | O, and - thus increase cvery year the TTWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO ot and Verdi - and ; in the pretentious erreles of local socicty, | the ticket then has the privilege of - con- | 81 “",'"“_‘,"{'; l!"""' "I“"'_ Tho bells 0f | Vendone, “And this reminds e of | quintum of our 1 knew at least two out of every three of Sand, Thackeva ¢ i Tillie Price grew oarly into a beauty of | Signing goods to us for sale.” We have | th U(ll" i f’{"' . ells """','"j“‘- the | president Cloveland's joke while bre P o PAUPERISML | the people one wanted to- know in New stance—and their contempor the queenly type. She was tall, ereet, | Several departments, you know, needle. | eation tRIACEERCOR o IHARE EGRIIOR | fasting at the Vendome. (Pronounced hata stranger living inja hotelon the York. But the world has grown larger [ 1w nothing of music or passion of hife | with' resilar” features, sweet facial | WOrk of all kinds, patented work of all Wadnt :im no l‘w‘r ‘.\\ ::<l he duys d Vondome. French: vous saver.) .|l“u( the city .!mr not meet with and differeat since. Hundreis of my ac | g it Beethoven v Niy & pioncer, | expression, and positively regu- | Kinds, embroidery, brie a brac, old furni- | Washington, SRe SR Looking out upon the vich brown stone rs and misery, is very natural, for quaintances of other days are dead: and | Goctie and Gluck were notgeniuses be: | Iae - manners of urbane bt digni- | ture, coffee and eake, ete, bR RONE i ies tiniee Hbee miansions which adorn the avenue, and i B il w1 of those who survive some have @10Wn | ciuse they never heard Parsifal. Pshaw! | fied eourtesy. She disregarded the A REDUCED LADY e oty e O tucio [ being told thal its numo was Comm - | Sin, OUE police. « iulations are, vory sray OF grouty, or stout, or lame; some AL e L it Trafans, and 1t onmy to bo i | who has nny of thésa articles, or mikes | W% 1t an nspiration it must have buen 10 | waa(th, his excolloney romarked that s | strict, Mondicity ts prohibited, und any: Tost. fortnno or families; many of | /Phoro is o fine show, there is & great | derstood among het sequaintances that | any of them in the varions departments, [ Lhe 8EIBBBES BRIEEETREEE TS0 e | name was inappropriate since it was AT Lt Ly b course have murried, and the belles T ad- | qoqi'of magnificent sotnd and fury, there | nothing short of millionaireism would | and holds one ot our tickets, ean bring | G SEEITEE S ot ot il thig | very evident that none but the uncow- esteds 1f the unfortunate: wreteli can iirod 8o Tonge ngo o chaperones and [ f gront deal of harmony and stience; | recommend any man to her favorable | the goods to us. We mark i price and | Somolves B Bis BICEIEIS & abors | Monwealthy could afford to live there, | §IET ULl iy s, ss of his own nor dowagers now. [ asked the other night | bug fhere is no music_greater than we | consideration as a hushand. In the odd | display them, and when they are sold we principal American collozes, sbUsEIoN | This being a presidential joke must needs v :“j'{-"l"llmu.\ v, he is promptly com- who was thal charming woman [ D o iova | Lo, O Fhifrmorslsy sho fountl: shis | turh th monsy ovar: to' the consiguor, | {fom Eirope, and suchmicn us Olver | e laughed at by overy loyelAmerican, | 1pittod toithe workhoiws as & ratmb, aoross the house. “That is the mary subtle embodiment of human feeling, no | qualitication. He was” less ten per cent, whieh we retain to pay | oot HA I SEIES ot T | and will therefore be a good ane to elose [ JO0 41 '{“‘l_ DU to be troubled by beg. daughter of your old flame, Luey T—: | snder utteranee of human emotion, no A SINGULAR CHARACTER, for the ranning ¢ypensesof the exchange, | (COTEKe Baneratt, ane o eator | With. SR i T L don'k you vomember her wedding before | SIS of Buman hope, no | an object at once of respeot and ridicule. | In addition 1o the _reduced ladies who | JRiCRE SO (8 SN0 LT - FEILENL S LTS e the. waret Tho lnst timo 1 saw that | Aiver solen of haman suilering. than | His appearance was naturally singular, | hold tickets as gifts from the munagors | {2 SHeag ofe O cae mbst (REEREY G LITERARY NOT tthe main entranco 18’4 watchful a3 harming woman, she was in - 1ong | fhe other masters gave us in other ye and ho heightened it by quaint costum: | are many who purchase their own pri SRR IF e Tt Rel oIt s - : iR LA S othes, and | held her in my arms. — She | Syrely Wagner 18- great in his w. ing. He wasall the while doing quecr [ lege. I is to them a business in- | (A0S BRI kb Lo - haleTd \Fill WATi0s “From: Mendow Sweel to Mistietoc? is | S I."'“ s ‘\l\;'_ ~l:m|'( se, he will be an English peeress some day. the world 1s better for h things. Butin his behavior was ever- | vestment like the buying of space | WIEH SHGER T s the title of a beantiful volume by Miss M, | Fosi€ e Rt €on ',""',"‘ aetd Lwent o year or two ago 10 he has not made them aliogether things | polite, his morals excellent and_his dis- | at a fair or desk room n an oflice. D e R S T e e L s s el - i § iz ite, his | excollent. LIONS OF THE OCCASION. hbury, artist-author of the “Seven | “Members of the Society for the Sup- A BALL AT MRS, ASTOR'S; of the past. There are things he cannot | position kind. Did his bride love him [ Of “course we do not = sell sueb | o gra'to say that the crowd was as cu- ek s 2 N[ Mo Society for the Sup e AR MRS, ASTOR'S; IS U [ i Jaod b 4 It is safe to say that the crowd was as cu- | Little Maids,” “Ring-a-Round-a-Rosy,” | pression of Mendicity.”” This means it was my first party in New York in 2| qothat they have done. Does anybody | Nobody knows. She was a robust, faith- | tickets broadeast; the purchaser may be | 1500 to ot ew of the president’s | ot H 4 AT, decade and o half; and Tsaid to myself, | guppose that if Wagner could | ful_wife at all events. recommended and vouched for by some ( Housto gt & view of 1ho PRsGars | ete. Lt consists of 40 original designs (AL W Sy D Bl L sl “Now, I shall soe ull my ol friends; for | sitten melody he wonld not have given | The Widow Hammersley’s period of | manager or responsible Iady known to | Sofr e W i OF B CREC Y CHIC | printed in - photogravare, from the orig- | £5F i 7 BUIS & &) Tiowss Lo wiioh Gvory one zoos! | 11 1o st As-will tell me ihat Tennyson | conventional mourning badnow expired; | us: And thore is one fontiire of tha ex- | S0l ARG LIS CEOWC OF Y e, “hait | inal Sevin drawings; prilited on extra | 4id linding out whether this be n worthy Who is asked. T entered e pieture | womid ot have written Hamlet bl it | and she has appeared at the opera as the | chinge that perhaps ordinary people | Mt ool for o RS SEE B e, heavy drawing paper, with iliustra- | .',@‘,"’];"f"‘ L A allery where the cotillon was danced, | peen in his power. Then Wagner is not | acknowledged would not appreciate; she identity ot the | HPOUL the deors of tho thestet to Lalth b | G varses by the author, Inelosed i & | Fo o sonre anible ta holn all the Bt not one of the waltzers could Treeos” | of "o gréatest beeause 1t requires QUEEN OF BEAUTY. consignors is not diselosed to the cus- | SHNPSC G PR3 ol || MG s B0 R e i | [ netlcaansa aliidls, (09, Iy Gl o nize. Once | should have known nearly | Cayeation, culture, learning, 1o appre: | Even the most envious do not think of | tomers. ‘Even the elovkkand execative | 1 " e il TS T O D s | ot TN e o G CIILEL all. Finally I discovered two or three | gjgge him,” But the greatest things m art | questioning her supremacy. But she | officers deal with themn (through the in- e R R D G T IR o | RS L) TR whom I remembered, and was going up | o literature appeal to the unlearned as | does not let the general admiration de- | itials only. 8o a reduedd lady is com- | 3o o ovarbial Nothing is more unchar- | Worthmgton compan ow York, 'l"ll.'f«C::T-‘x':}]fi.f":ffi{:-'.:"~.-'v’.'((.'f"“|‘ eace: to renow the acquaintance; when £ sud- | welias the Jearned; the, greatest actors | pend alone on her perfection of face and | pelled to - suffer noneiof the itable, however, than to insinuate, as | Which continues to' maimtain its reputa’ | the eity, and requests for help are caie- New York papers are accustomed to'do, | tion for producing artistic and appro- | fuliy examined into before being granted. ““’"‘-"l"i'l";"'fi"' e ena || moveithe fealleries a3 woll“ns the boxws, | form. Her costumes are wonders of publicityto which lwupl"‘ ure subjct sincy haud met those buddi uties; | The hurdy gurdies are witness of | tistic construction, and she has not yet [ elsewhere in seeking employment or dis- AN $ i ore is seattered wiate American books for America ar 800101108 oxXist ih i O S how could they possibly 10k 50 young | wenius, amd yet it Is the commion re- | worn one of them twice. Her jewcls, | posing of work.” iDL e Ll G It PR Roasie bt s alLtle atter all this while. It was the daighter | Sronchi of tad older masters to-day, that | have thus far been changed every “night. THE EXCHANGE O e ARt i ShOLA roRBl AN o e leator e Who reealled 1o m6 the mother Thad once | the hurdy gurdies play thom and the com- | 1 4o not recall an mstance of eostlicr or | oceupies two floors of ‘ahe building on | 1 JONUIRH IR A6 MUTE SIOTN JERE | The I ity dbis, Uy poltaall 60 pam admired. 1 left the ballroom and strolled [ 1non peopls like them. The fine people | more elaborate toilet proparation for a | Fitth avenue. The firstfloor above the |y 5 GRS SEG ELTRE | Er reach the ear of the rich? Ty means of o Mo the other apariments whero the | Will get come back to melody and pus- | Social season in New York by any helle, | street i devoted to the rlisplay and sale | Wil QUATRES R G TG BV | Away of Mrs. Lycks and ‘Mrs. Aleshine,” pilisniuypRelyehicl bl st ite Ui ompany. ccmiroratad; and there | il JOUCOMIG bgk 10 0y . Tts | - it she airries " through " tho wint | of neadiy and arvworid, I 13 vory at. | Tushing New Yarkers for parsiinonr, ¢ | in'book torm. “Tho vecan:adventures of | Dot DRSS, T Lo andisntt Sab fore among the gray dames and cor- | fushion will have its day. fer’s suceession of balls, receptions and | tractive in appearance—-like a depart- | {8050 WA G EEIE T bital | Mr. Craig and his two rather clderly | Pish i completo anc ;"“, ul account of putent gentlemen by degrees 1 found my For fashions are common in literature | dinners the policy which 'she has thus far | ment in a church fair, where artistic ‘.;,"”.“,‘,..,,;.,,.;,,.\-..,,..n..‘- like in Pow | protezeesTis told with a simplicity, di- [ W ““’-I‘,‘ i l‘." S sate self at home. These were the fresh girls | and art as well as in dress, and Wagner | pursued at the opera, she will by spring | ladies have charge. Beiow is the room Ty oa] mon o ISoston man. he | Feetness and honest candor, that exhibits | BY SRS ‘;\'-"Ll“;‘,'_“”“" AEapiot ok and robust youths whom I had left be- | \will go down like bangs and high bon- | become the most celebrated woman in try, old furniture and bric-a-brae. | L1 T edi |.-|'~ Sdrop” to the faet | & Wost deticate and sympathetic humor, | L AL L PR ol hind. These faded s, these | pets’ to come up again and take his legit- | Ameri She has evidently gone in for | This is asattractive as antique mahogany, | Jou BEEE 0 C AN for a fish.” by the presentation of a trio that acted | BIVe recovid daring (ae past we matronly forms, ¢ d | fmate plico among, but not at the head | & great triumph. She is the owne anofent bltio ohalts, nuktt the . froshiest of R R LT A LD e i L prveet andiunconeornodysin: |(APRenls oBUNS kindiFEIVINL accoun shunks ~and grizaly of. the great musicians of the world. box, and its tiny parlor at the re nice cakes, pics, picklas-and preserves | CHTR L0 T B oty Small amonnt | time of danger. “Their Robinson Crasoe Ll R S the remains of the beduty As New York goe: i superbly furnished. The walls can make it. A coupleof lunch tables | WeRiiof vie Compattivily ST Ao ae: | existence as boarders on the lonely isle is ‘|"‘ Y bl ST olies '\ii“",'l'l'">’**f'** Fouth and girlliood of tiven) vears | morest chions. The richest stock- | hung with rare flowers,and an elubof are spread from noon until 3, this being | (o Gt ¢Ity sas EIVER 10 Cie T on | original and elever HounitasiesizrcHuGl sy tlioanfhco b sEAaiL fooked Irondured s snanognronnmcewIthontap poal i taisvell leouibiinationfol(sitibbosTd nd ice | the latest improvemont in the exchange, | ghat the charman of the Boston Toliof | “How o Win" 15 s book for_girls, | haiulcsomo sSrivendr who okos out. his changes they must have sce me; for s or art. 'The tinest diamonds 5 rucsts betwee is designed o make it a e S 5 1 Vi _ ook for girls, | hal 201! SRQUURLLS) ected me, and others quizzieally aftes ceds not to be said. Sho is the most - where they = may fe FUL0] [kl donitaitn ELASOK 1 Rose zabet eve- | others. ever, A se 8 Somo wore sad, nd somo would : : NOR GOUl fifr.-,..;,.,_,‘,..‘.’r:,tm.(','éi,. e 1 \tho mdst 1N | (o/sit down i tew rosnutes conversntion CGourtaniylofiburieston yhsand now: nd. The volume consists of talks to | § are found to be only too true on iovo it was §at all. To these per i oneloan nad oneenbit to!| canting the foramost BinEer on the! stage; | Among the articlesintheroom was an || SO MUYOE LORTEMGY SN SOUERE STl eirla on) by subects, With Lo yntent donind youRomtin they had lost in the inte rs 1| They may provide scencry and orchestrs CURIOUS SUBJECTS FOR STUDY. ing & complete se re blne china [ [PUGHEC 1S IRy nOURon IS [iscious ir plice y centering | that the pen [ s It is dfferent when we grow | superb mounting, admirable perform’ | Widow Hammersley on the sly, was that | that this might have a story back of it, | v viving, % ahy ventions of socioty. ldeals in woman. | poor houses, out hundreds of private 5t DOHICE thett th | Coamen. fastilone b, o atlienans, but all this | soneof the daughtars of wenjth, denied | somo unfortunate lady in reduced oir- | MERERIME 100 (0l oo oup [ Mlood and manliool 0k e ahintitAbiolinstitu NIt Ry SIS EOHS radual changes that time‘or disease or | doos not make Wagner greater than Mo- | beanty, were secking to eara by exertion | cumstances compelled to part with an | oy T i the way i which these ideals ¢ be | individu msgiving. Sl ortune or circumstance mark on form | yart. Give poor Lucia and Norma the | the distinetion wiich she got without | heirloom, perhaps, or presenting for sale CHR e "“. SR ”‘“ ahY realized is presented. Bread-w ng is 1 ke it « rule neve .I to give, wit '0“: T A L e T e or e TTha s oo saiy oy, b nd aava et | [onetofilinliuxuriastar ierjattorimusiael| by s o LeicoluonE FKasia ERLIDAUARYA lftonehedinn SLutlish v Rinsiboneils) iabl il uin Al i A0 Seiae nd us B e hamiyo Knowibofore || sume sl ot Tanien ot e iwond || by rrommiarity’ of . cosfnmeq or iiosyns || ST ‘donit:tkcnow.2 imusnd: “tha Jady| PEHLCSNE B4 S L, OYRISRRI [laublishod “hy Kunk s Wagnalls, was beginning my regular round of in- z T RO R are d he v VALK L \me, s LU dens 'Y | we feel stronger for our work by the eon- | York speetion, the other day, Finvited the New 1860, this ghost of other days in his trans- | would run after th aun as it did be- | erasy of demeanor, 1o fix masculine at- | Manage It may be; Ioften wonder | o) »ss thit we have Boston's symp paCt iLhe o 5 ¢ formation tells you of your own. If you | fore. I venture tc e i inibyarall fontion: OTientithby aucceniadt Tnionai|low Some lof i tite: oonslgnorat (ooina | SpioNanEss LIRLNE SLYE DR EORE B HOr Do & i o o ok Lnd il renlyimntonoiitlap Rt who have remained see all this in e e L | bt ta d g s By, (bl LlaxEa ke~ | (0 dinosseas ok of et artial s | e i RO SRR BN e v Aty o |ime Now, nothing is more diflicult, in a B oo o kie oo ik ey LGB LR D L i DR Y e ey B i i horosiTo M wonid < Rasetni £ comindibisrwyolinnoblaioty and inzosif iy YR LB, SEERLE A ileko ety dtlnitoniioutia o rulnnty turns and’finds the houses he once fro: | tnouieh to remeniber, had & profounder | th scare-wigs of the minstrels: in an- | strange that = poor people should | P1¢ Tronsh THHME, SuitoRbissiicl s LIt bEE llandishotnroindiiblanvangtamil yRehii: quented filled with other faces, the old | emotfon, more exquisite pleasure, an | other the theatrical poses of a Juliet lop- [ spend their hittle money for such thin THEATER GOERS Tt s amatoral ant ,l‘|,;|[i|‘_, toryinfahil: )"N;'l to ’"* ’“’:4' hy |l~ l\lnr u;u]l r .1 1o oncs changed, the young onés all un- | cqually refined appreciation when they | pinz over her balcony rail were prac- | hut there is a constant demand foran- | g, jovers of musie are beginning to have | dren in every-day life, and will amuse T IR o raibeane known. Wi heard Crisi il Mario in the | Hedd over the box’s front; in numeraus | tiqne goods, so perhaps the reduced “la- | G T son gocs on | and cheer all who read it, for 1t1s fuil of | eni R 4 But truce to sadness. Tbegan to writo | “Lucrctin Borgia” for instanee, or Bosio | eases audaciously vivacious conversation | dics bily them ata bargain as a business | “Upy Uy voo Shroper” theaters of the eity | humor, is intensely real, and will invari- WL T L mboyt the oporn; aud Salvi in- oven “Luciy di Served the purposs. Mr. Atuaust Bel- | investmont and “place them hero 10 be | g tho Glove, the Bostom and the Holifs | ably move the reater to langhter. 10is | show that 146,67 fubabitants in 1 BOENEY QLERA AND THE NEW | moor. or L Grameo and Forie mont s shrowd pbsorver and bumorous | selfataprotit” L E G L o | street. The Park and” the Bijou come | good book for every husband, wife, father | whose population is now about n million ell how it al kes ird net of the “flugnenots,’ tha ey | commentator of the enes. “Do women who are not ladies eves ety hilsithn e SRR TR s fille | OB ERODIL ALY 4 . a frequenter of other opera houses. This | Whgner wrote or the robust people atthe | meaning @ girl who was holding a group | W don’t take~consignments from | T8 000" Tittie Bijou has taken a very | there is m it a swéet undereurréntof | not reach 105, while 118,198 persons house is as fine in interior eflect as any in | Metropolitan performed. of fellows in her box parlor—the door of | such. . marked step downward within a year, hos that lends u speeial eharm to the | earned $105, which gave them about thirty the world: the women are as handsome | 1 went asa boy to the last periorm- | whieh gave an open view to all passers— But do they try to deceive yon At the Globe Mr. Wilson Barrett has [ Whole story. All should it Itis | eents u day for all their expenses, 13 Al s woll drossuds the show n (he - | e of by mixing drinks for thom in o protty RYarvisldpmiiheyiasamio kpoyothnt A N ot i orm byl Tk Holon | St e arasa (o b e b 5 s dience as good as any abro: No on NNY LIND IN AMERICA. travesty of barkeeping, ‘reminds me of wre striet, and they make fittle effor o alented actor, o, ¢ o abies,” price fifty centy, by ‘I, ster- | five . b and are ne could tell that all those temocrats who | 1 ad honrd Bt grent mune thoi, but T | & fomale gy Wi 1 once knew of. | to get the privilge society under | W jnd talopiad notors Soung cne ‘,|'\l T h;:..fl:."f'.(\]‘,'mi:. Lok ter Jrsiironilnodiomouh s ndiarenovon smell of the people from whom th:y | wecompanied an old aunt whose memories | Both won by strangely doing common > protences. ARA BELLE. | ifterent from Booth's and many like it : A1 s Moro unfortmato. boMgs re: -Kmnxln-fl year, or of the shop that was | went back to Mozart himself. |1 was of [ acts. ‘This one piques curlosity by pr ST e stter, He portrays Hamlet as a school- TR D e R the source of their jewels and brocade course enrapturcd with the Swedish | senting a barkecper i the form of PEPPERMINT DROY ¢ of cighteen instead of a man of e cnyitan) ot i nobody would know from looking that | nightingale, and as she dropped out the | dainty belle. e other was & younge AR e S DA L SR e MEMIONANLY, SOILOPIVEL SO EROUELID thoy were not roal aristocrats. Princes of | Jiquid notes ot **Caista Diva or the *Echo | cus performer. i sbligmpet oallve, T FLIN G G R BANORS I R Whola year - AgoiRs Lk JhIn L0 Mg the blood don't dress any finer or benaye | Song,” I could hardly speak m my young SHE THREW FLIP-FLAPS Burissqunenemiilibosenudeithiemimenili, fodiianhich iR B ARRIRBIRE O ey any better than those sons and wives and | ecataey; bat my old 2unt tned o me g | in the sawdnst ring, and dido’t command | (A hestaut bell=The telephone annuuel- | 5 30T YA ovica, although it is T i L LA daughtors of brokers and business men, [ 1 sat entranced, and said: Yo should | mueh notice. ‘Then she trausferred her- | "W ) o festLine in Amoric, aithongh IbI8 oeent jn Amerioan history, — Themution | FUES (il IMOKL, SR (o8 0 ed oditors and railrond prosidents: patent | havo hoard Malibran.'s I supposo my | Sel€ 1o thoutrical Stago, us 8 figave in i | it 15 the only thing that has its tows bo- KEFI 0 ors protty strongly of the | At 1atze has pretty much forgotten—if in- mesepioidolinh ot piLIAHIvRE da)les icines, steamboats, standard oil, Cal- | youthful readers will think I am like my | pantomimic struggle, B | s ghs Hive nannor, sivors Protty erongly Of L | qoed it_evor knew—tiiat it onow had a | 101080 it e et Hfornin anid isinglass, ‘grocories and the | qunt, and can only remember Grisi whei | fong-skirted _costum onably | o Phe obituary column is tull of the Tast sad | Joose Koman Baies, whioh f MopFesots: | great riot, n which more than’ fourteen | iy (haf L1y Conecnls this abjeet destis i Ubina trade il are voprosented; and 1 ey alks of Wi and Lelman, belle, she wrned the sume old Qip:lips, o s norlas L eie 10 L Oliloaxotus | IS AU LSS 0F T e hundrodimen werodiliabs e docs. nof o o you . tha. orowdail ave seen at more than one palace ut they v0 to-night and hear | but to tremendous applause and admi Pokends Hie ponnlae, o e At | LI0 ANOLLSROLERE. axoellent | polizo that o mob once contonded, | BN, §IMENLsIOW you tho LE the bluest blood and oldest name who | musie that 1 falk about is not a good | priety m it—for she was fully enveloped, roniimo Is rapidly Iearnlie ko nlay poker, | Gbi (8cYs Sas JsEG, 18 O O fon | for tho mastery of thu oty of Naw York, | R0 IR GE BN GGty en Torgotter earriod themselves no more proudly and | thing, The other things, Irepeaf, ave | while before she bad worn professional Ryl QSR SRR MIRLER S 0 % [ Tho quthor wils what wis known as g | She dumanes of Watesty acn forgotient boro their bodies no more scemly. For 50" good: e combimition of clothos | skirtlossness—but the oddity won. In | When an old mald_gets marsied tho eroom | - Mrs, Langtry i« playing at. the Boston olunteer Speciad,"—one of those citi- | G5 5% 80 oo whore mar s and UE AIVIN AROVEAisTockAcy | selenie elfect, tho dramatio result, | soeiety (oo, the fip-tlappers sometimes | swould ving the ehestin belle.”Cli's wo | as Pauline in “Ihe Lidy of Lyons,” Sue | 2ens who came to the aid of ‘the over- | oy yiren sleep on dan'pstraw and breatl @ should be exploded. 1t is simply what | above all the orchestral harmonies; but | succeed.™ Joke inomarey ing an old maid, Plays to big houses but she is received axced police authorities, and were as- o Tt THECL S dwell lonser or * those who were in once said to those who | “because thou art virtuous, dost thon e Cho Phrenological Journal says: *In | colily and with reserve and seems to owe | Si8ned to special duties as volunteers in | R I s I were out; what those who have still say | think there shall be no more cakes and INCONGRUOUS SOCIAL FIGUT CHOORIE 1 WTG Do #OVArNA DY Or hin.® | far Bopuiarity (o, the. a0t thit sl e s | the ranks of duw aud order during the [ 1R INESE G REBET, (0 WS I NS to those who have not. It is like theking | alew” A remarkably pre(ty young woman was [ A man isapt to be” xoverned by the same O D o i) gaal 810188 | sorious onthicak. Ho was an eye-witness | TR0*L00 AL DERIMITED recount how 3 the story who was told he wore n si- | A descendant of Canning onee told me | considerably admired at the charity balt | hing afterhe gets a wite REoabhuauiy sather iy & gooil actress. oty jonlof tho drondfulwork of ose!|/A08 Btato, HheTclias Wt Lie™ prixete perb garment wh'u-h no one could see tnat when the fushion of ry wine was | of 1881, She was . grac ful brimette, Il\\.Hlm pty no:\r!\'Il,l.llf—ll:hl eleven o'elock | go1jis Street as Adon s 1t is well known | doys ~.m_| nights, "‘,‘ speuks, therefore, | i wretched ness, how ,,\(fil,y mho was not nobly boru. Hu rode in the | fivst introduced mto England, her famous | with a good air, und she had & goict ¢ Athen e bezan Lo siwe SHaw Can [ Leave | (g Dixey is a prominent member of the | from personal knowledize pight homos for the friendless shelter troots stark naked, and evor so cold, but | grandfather asclared:™ “The man who | portment. This ball, as you doubtless | o aown st e e tound ont how bl | masonic order in this city, and hismason- | oo & Shepard, Boston, have published | those who have no bed nor roof and how -vcg'”l;.ylm;ll,.\l eriad out at the beanty of his | Nays he likes dry champugne, lies.” The | kiow, has long been'a distinetively mod- | it was, 43 | o brothers have conspired to do him | Tomnyson's “Doras in . vers artistic | everything possible 1s done to lift up the T el anoul b e, | mat ."',:.‘fynl";.!{l‘l:mn:rl!;fn R R T ish aflalr, wl"," “‘.‘l‘-;"f ado as o ity pxelu- | Frank James, the Missout! bandit, gave it | great honor. On Thursduy evening the | siyle.” ‘Che illustrations are masterpivees strugzaling begiar and make him an inde. I A s hoor king | Himsolt. w otk Bl ol ¥ :,'," 4.1:‘ e me, for | sive character, ‘herefore, when the ad- | gut some tine o that e was wolig entire house has been purchased by the | of art, both as to design and engraving. pendent man again. But what we try to 3 . Th ; o i y champagne is accepted; but it’ has | miration of the stranger led to enquiries, | form and lead the life of o sespectable citizen, | nobles of the mystie shrine, AleppoTem- | Phe volume is printed on heavy paper, | 4o in Berlin in tisdireetion is doubtless 3 m.m to suy diow ho shivered. Homight | not supplanted Hordeaux ot Burgundy, | and the dandies from the avenue learned | but a report has Just come i that e peddied | ple, and memburs of various masonie | and o handaomely. bound. in ol wol :h the samo ns that done i @ dose his crown. Finally alittle boy in the | cven in Bugland R i e o ey a1 tab pol a0 R clopon anses | Joduenland 1L asan s that o aq oo { and s handsomely, bound. 1n old gels | UGl ¢ e LR * steets. who had nothing to lose, eried | General Sherman, whom 1 met at the | longer sought her hand in the waltz, | Mo, " | be worn, A8 that o zod foz will | govors, Allogatlior 1b mukes &' bountul | SRS S ¥ ER S8 AGWIER: & S iHALE BIOH & out: “Why, the king is naked!” and then | Walkure on Wednesday, made me think | Before the night was over, a_detee A carpet trade paper tells a atory of a ) The afi: holiday book. Hakthiaiw ok Huly A & o) 'Mk L everybody ug Lum the little boy in | of Canning. When we talked abou | identified her as the ' wife spiring salesman who seemed to be unable WAL Bant i (ko Bontwpy | ARIIRy LK ROIINAGURIRIE: MOy e B Rircots. ] 1ol 'yon the kings are all | Wegnar: | siked tho kraat warsior it | Charls. Bullard, alias. Piano. C tosuita lady ufter unrolinz miles of 1iis ! ol dankige . BIGEIRE. 4he Hoah b By [ @Itk noveriy,: and. Dl de mars tian ) , & ) : ; ' ! stock, Whei the lady remarked (o hor com- s ,_ i y naked, and the aristoerats t00. I have | least he did not admire the seenein [loy, a professional thie ook, Whop tholad ked to her come | o paNQUET T W o[ o htie. S dho ARGk GOLILGL 10 40 | @aaigh o il @ Ll b ono later. © seen them. They are no better than you | which Siegmund draws the magic sword; | she was requested to go out. ' paniuns Mliahy kes to sea®ilinrall iivo), out BEY S SANGURE. G RALAON HARRETE, | e iRk (OIE RS IR IIOR AN o8 LA IOLGENIEN: 3 flndl» Wien ‘wo haye fine clothes wo | but the gieral seplied, think ing. L sup: | now come into notoriery us tho heiress audibenattinieto take HaiWain yeb” hie | SPSEEIE D FIGHION KENLAR M LR | Shout tho samo amount of inoldent and Ho Had to Got His Key in 7 “;‘:',::f(”’_:.",.",'"' Morulizing again }:m-‘;‘v of Alxllun};n gnl' hhlm..hl |l..m~\n_-|' :“-\l uulll_mn.f from Jucn Petro Ter A gent'eman stopping omeevening at a | sumptious feasts that has been given in | adventure as its predecessors in- the ser Topeka Comanonwealth: The night air Well, [ was struck with the beauty and kuor o Noldier 10 sing whe he ¢ rew his | Cuban b imh r;and 1 am not goingto | country hotel said to the maid servant who | the Hub for some time. It was the ocea- | ies; but they are events which forward | was somewhat foaded with his pughs distinction of ull these pov 0 kbiidad " Apaw Baveav. | rehearso the facts, for you have “already | waitelupon him, and whosemed nearly ox- | sion of @ banquet given by Mr. Dixey to | U action of the principal, sl illustrate el A 2 Matvimony Geographically Declined. had them in print; but What I wonder is | hausted \nvrhv!he fatiguing Mutdes of hersitu- | Mr. Wilson Barrett, the “great English [ his method of orming bad boys. The | cars bhad commenecd running, but he 1O0W BOUN ARISTOCRATS: R L | What she will do with her immense for- | 8tion, “I have no doubt,” said the, “but you | getor, whom we have ment in gl Lilw'1a negad. ood milos & sory gand | i AT et BAACH and 1 was proud of it. Why should we ob, where s the stute of matri i S e e laetad from thore Mte | enjoy your bad when you getinto it “In- or, whom we have mention this | Lily is rigged, and makes o very good | w not take 1e knew that h Bl oo a6 el e e | wony? @ being ejected from the charity | quid 10 5ir she replied, “foras soon as 1 letter. The marble columned nquet | record as a fast saile The prineipal, | had missed the lust ear long ago, and he enitian merchants who married mon- arehs: (the Medies were apothecaries); or the Duteh republicans who kept am- ) New Yor! sould wi i s - Py e . 0 e 'LH“ ey bt ame | Tts chief products are population, broc New York. I could walk into John | bed at all, one week ago sat President Cleveland and | kinds of vessels, elassed vy theiv vig, and | g'elock, snd 1t had been forty minutes D “ha sticks and staying out 0’ nights. was | dacob Astor’s parlor if I had five mil- - his by he observed of all observers,” | fully illustrates the system by which the | past twelve o'clock for hours. There :fl::'?,.‘.’.‘- sovprslims. w”l"-...:fm(‘h..“'('.'.'." v “)‘Mum Ryl fl‘,_‘,‘ lions.” " Well, she will soon have seven; [ Another Chance for That Gebhardt | were now arranged long tablos most ex- [ spars, vigging, and sails of a ship ur tbe some other vars. He was sur- L oo 1t miat hiive contof-arms o | o fiud the northwest passage out of Par aad of course she can’t buy entry into : _ Felow. fravagantly and sumptuously laden for | named, so that he makes quits an easy | prised L meet a good wany people com b Jflm.n T o entitiod. o™ ofurme £ | adise. ‘The climate is rather sultry tiil good society with it; butif she doesn’t | Kentucky State Journal: *‘2hwat the | the 107 tired actors who were 1o join Mr. | matter of it for the boys ing down town, and in trying to puzzie were, it should discards it will talk of old the tropies of housekeeping, show us some extraordinary things in | divil is ali this talk about that New York | Dixey in doing honor to the illustrious wPhe Book of Floquence,” published | @48 What was up e gvadially reached oses, It show s s il talk of ol | 3 Gally woather commonty sce 1 | Showy Tuxury then I shall” be disap- | givvul they calls the Goddess of Liberty+” | Briton. 3 by o Book of Faauence ™ i ies | iome. A stray policeian who had bean e e i momel | with sul .'W"(\,'m“w (},, keep all hands | pointed. . :xul\.‘;I‘Mr‘ O'Rafterty of her next door “\\«‘- an uuxu?w:lmn mention a [»Iw of u.“'\”,‘ fr m’.‘”m aabag, B8 & pae okl | luts au “.u night heard a 1o \.m‘.l‘. shot, 7 - AN peseenfed | ool as cucumbers 201 3 i Da s neighbor. he features of the evening such as ‘ Sy ud in detiance of dunger ran e found Arom bake ||»“.|ml which l.lt:lll n,.flk}"h“f‘ pads leading to this r\n..“:-'f.m';nr,?“sml'.{ HIGHTONED CHARITY. | T suppose it’s wan av those pertes | speeches from Mr. Dixey and Mr. Bar- | 10st famous oratorsand pocts, and 18 i | 650 chrigtea gentloman firing vmmwl‘ T e At Sas, wiia dre wsult the first puir of blue eyes you run | ;AN exquisitely fashionable thing he siona) beauties that's come over here, | rett and a voem by J. C. Goodwin, Mr, [ tended as excreises for declumation W4 i, own door, » . w;... well brod, just s highly educated itk in New York is a charity to the good | Mrs. O'Rafferty.” Dixey was most hospitably ived by (:",""T",';“‘“‘,‘_“{\ s Ak AR SREMIGLS Ry Hetlo! what are you doing®? i :I"_'" "u‘l‘-' R SN R ARLORNG FROM GO W ROWLIN. GREEN. | Siices which “ordinary people’” are not “Yis, an’ thoy makes her a goddess. [ Mr, Barrett in London, and the link of | (ha1ies Dudioy Bt Wi s e “Ligsh all right” You let me S@r tho atablo, th shop, or the servants’ | EROM GEO, W, NOWLIN, GREEN. | admitted, an justitution for the relief of | The first thing she knows that Gobi their fricndship has been welded in g | Cised carein making the seleetions Wit are yoi shooting gl (Genor oal, who wis second in LD, > Dr.J. H. MeLean's Tar | “ladies only' to the exclusion of women | felly will be after her the same as he w most weautiful and lasting manner. . 5 e T » doa Al Darnoat, ean't you sex 1 can't tind ;'n'j:‘h““‘v:;‘]!\m“:l-‘m;:l at, the tablo | Wine Laug Bl gives the highest satis- | who are not *Judies.” [thas openci el | afier that Langery womnn. "1 doclure to e polVhore duce the Duckbasrd® -adks the 1 o0 Lo viiold of this duor uad 14 shoating b o gentlemen with who or- | faction hiere. - Please ship us six dozen at | gent headquarters on Fifth avenue, near | gracious, scandal takes betther in this OUR THANKSGIVING Vo hare nover heard, althotiel tig question |18 & new ony AL HR6 2 1 MO {'urdlwdlnwu You may find those I | once, we are out and haye calls daily. The Astor residence. The words quoted | counthry than anythin’ ilse.” is to be surcounded, as it . were, by Patti | has been asked a nutiberof tiwes: - into this door somehow.?” i prosperity. locs that is worth anything, But i : ' . " does that is wo tioned as beanties are merely pretty, and HE NEW METROPOLITAN OPERA THE OPERA, THE OPERA! M t itinerant artists Century company has published nk R Stockton’s story, “The Casting rds, Howard & IHulbert, New York, ust published aninteresting volume, “The Voleano Under the City,” It is o Nistory of *he riots in the metropolis in 1863, "It is o long time sinee uny writer has opencd so strangely interesting ; wili be au_event of no little signifleance in theatrical cireles, as he struggled hom taylight. The “It1s one of the United States. It is | Pall as I am told by a committeemun, | {ieGagn at night 1 am ‘fast asteen. and as | hll of the Vendome had been changed | thoush the actual work to be doue by the | could not understand that yesterday was bounded by huggng and kissing on one she eried angrily: “If 1 had a million I'd | So0n as 1 wake in t morning [ ant obli_ed | into a perfeet paradise under the di students is only to rig a foreand-aft [ over and toaday had come. To him no side, and eradles and babies on the other, | ¢ Welcome at this ball, or any other ball | 1o get up, s 1 have uo enjoyment in my | tion of a skillful florist, and wiere but | schooner, explains to them the difficrent | eurs run alter forty minutes past twelve

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