Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
A PECUNIARY ATROCITY. Limiting the Pin. Money of a Gorgeouns Gotham Widow to $100,000 a Year. MONEY COUNTS IN SOCIETY. A Great Week For the Jewesses of New York—The Snares of a Great City—How the Crow Tracks of Age are Concealed. New Yonk, Dec. 16.—[Correspondence of the Bek. ]It is a shame to treata beautiful woman so. Her sufferings would be acute and cruel enough if she were commonplace in looks, and they would even be lamentable for a positively ugly person, but when I tell you that are inflicted upon the widow Ham mersley, whom 1 described only a few weeks ngo a8 the acknowledged loveliest belle in Astor socicty, you can realize their abhorrent atrociousness From what do they arise? From the fact that out of an mcome of three hundred thou- sand a year she 1s permitted to spend only $100,000. Her estate is somehow i the hands of horrid men trustecs who do not sympathetically feel for a lady just emerged brilliantly into the most pretentious sections of Ameri- can wealth and fashion, and they there- fore delay the tull payment of her annu- al allowance. Considering that she has already enthroned herself successfully as QUEEN OF BEAUTY THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, DECEMBER 19, 18%.—-TWELVE PAGES. day noon, travel. You can have your cholce of what is left at from $200 to $550. =LINWOOD PAR Consisting of 147 lots within six blocks of the po:toffice in South Omaha and 7 blocks from the depot and packing houses, was platted and placed on sale Thursday evening, and up to Satur- 31 LOTSHAVEBEEN SOLL This addition immediately adjoins the syndicate lands on the east and streets are all opened for THE FASHIONS IN FRANCE. Magnificent Costumes Worn on the Stage and in Drawing Rooms, THE LATEST IN HAIR DRESSING, Fred Douglass Introduced by the Newspapers of Europe—krench Notables and Their Doings, Pants, Dec., [Correspondence of the Bee.]-The dresses of Mme, Jeanne Granier, the actress, in the Cigale et la Fourmi now on the ards of the Gaite, have won the admiration of all coquet tish women. One of her httle Louis XV, costumes deserves special mention, The skirt is of rose colored satin covered with pleated crape skirt of the me color, trimmed with satin ribbon set off with gold tags. The tunie is of satin with Targe dark flower figures, looped up very high on the sides and’ geacefully ar vanged behind. Nothing s protiies than these short skirts well pufied out with hoops and petticoats. They are particularly becoming to young pretty faces, and we will have many occasions this winter to appreciate their grice, for we s promised on all sides vinuetsy pavans and gavots, THE FASHIONS, A Sunday or two ago, the minuet was danced at M. and Mme. Raphael's, their magnificent mansion on Aveuue Kleber. The sumptuous rooms were crowded with pretty women, and thg nd b perfect in their powdered hair, with theig st o | The wonderful growth and consequent boom in South Omaha property are leading investors iy i i il than ¢ that evening, und on Mlle. apex! Idlenessis the next requisitein | . . . . . Dinah Sourdis, the = sister of Mme, the case of anybody who pretends to im- Raphacl. Among the_partners of thosé i ense of bty who peends o i | i that direction as the one place to double the money invested in a very short time. All the lots | xuin - ot the partior ot tho countenance a woman who works for a and M. Ramon mandez, the sccon I now et ensier | in Linwood Park are beautifully situated with fine shade trees on every lot, and beingeast of the | oo Nosanminbicr i yioens no gentleman. Marks of toil on his hands are disgraceful, quite, “How soft your hands are,” whispered the bright maid servant of & girl friend of mine to a swell who coddled her in a dark corner, “Ah, yes,” he jocularly exclaimed; 1 sm a gambler, you see.” *Not u bitof it," she naively responded, and she rubbed his palm eritically across her cheek; *you are a barber. I could tell that right aw 1 THE MONTEFIORE FAIR This has been a great week for the Je ses, 1 mean it sincerely and ad- miringly. The Montefiore fair, for char- ity, has centered the wealth, refinement and beauty of New York Israelites packing houses, no smell of any kind is found, Now don't delay a minute, for if you want a lot you must come quick as they only need to be shown to be sold. You can buy them at 215 South Flifteenth Street fayorite in Parisian society—all attived jn wigs and flowing laces with tho sword af their side. The on-lookers were many shall mention only the famous Mme de Rute, the mother of Mile. Rattazzi,whosa brilliant_caveer is a part of Kuropea history, in a1 white satin robe embroidere with pearls of gold; the Countess de Kessler, who looked excessively pretty i rose-colored tulle toilet_trimmed wit utiful natural roses; Mme. Calzado, the wife of the Spanish deputy wit whom Castelar stayed during his visit in_ Paris, also “dressed in whi tin, with anish tortoise-shell com \d gardenias in her hair; Mme. Sourdis, in otter plush; and Mme. Magnin, wife of the director of the Bank of France, i yollow satin covercd with biack Ince, dnd under ond enormous roof. The most velioved by bows of yellow satin’ ribheuy lovely exhibit is not to bo sought in th Perhapsthe most aristic costume wug art gallery, or among the booths, where that of Mme, ( e black velvet im silk attire and_jewels and bric-a-brac are thostylo of the Empress Josophine. 'The displayed. It is in the centre of the hall, | ] [ ] B skir ht, swept back in & and sits in 1 great satin shoe in the mudst m: train. The only ornanient of, of a colony of dolls. The little old this superb robe was a white satin ribhony oman who lives inthe shoe, and has so it e L b b many wax and porcelain eluldren t cefully on the rizht. Mme. Gautre she doesn't known what to_ do, is lir, also arranged liko Joscphine's, Jewish maiden. A crowd is always L v crowned with a diadem of di; around - her, watching and admir- Ladics are now wearing their hajr verg ing. Men, women and _children high leaving the back of the neck baréj ! stop to gaze upon her beantiful face, " while the locks are loosely braided. The a & 50 winsome is her loveliness that no head ornaments are egrettes of tlow el shadow of envy, no thought of jealous or dizmonds, and feathers skilfully ar’ disparagenent, comes ucross tng mind of ranged. V-Shaped low-neek dresses ara any woman who looks at her. Hcr pee: ———— the favorites, with long pointed waists, lessness is acknowledged, and all do Ler | Tlive at No. — West street, and I hope | pearance. So it would if talking exer- | down at the art f{\llnry this morning, in oil.” [ cade has the front of the skirt veiled with pronounced, is left behind. It has not yet | worn over slender Leoty corsets which homage. She sits there all unconscious | you will call upon me often and give me | cised the right muscles. 1t will be ob- ood! I'm glad ot 1t the old lady has had | serpent gauze covered with garnet and been determined what it is that makes | soften down the kips, and bring out the of the murmurs of admiration, her long | Your counsel and advico.” Tneastounded | served that the most talkative women | me in lot water for the'last ten year pent fridescent pendants. ‘The side panels o{loking injurions: but this much appears | form in the nd_ seductive foshe f"m"" air loating in wavy masses over | pastor stummered “certainly,”’ or some- | have the most hollow checks, so there | . The sultan of Mornceo keeps his,000 wives | are el‘,su‘u{rid' b{wrllvflT}]"'”l‘; c‘i”.‘l'x‘-f{"lfio\“lli certain that it does not depend upon the | ion that szed the beautifud icr shoulders, and lier large bluc cyes, | thing of the kind, and the stage-struck | is no encouragement m this for cultivat. | M Fez That shows the advantages of being | ternatitig with plush, ' ho back Grabexy 18,1 ount of nicotiee which eigars may con- | marchionesses of the eizhteenth, centurys rich in color as peonies, mecting the gaze | lassic marched brimly out of the big | ing conversational powers, The r o heathen, I Do wore Christian zeutlc: | Tt bodioo. s _filled . in with brocatlo over | tain. are richer than "ever. They are of her worshippers with grave, frank in- | church. 1 don't know what visions of | why excessive talking brings with it | ™ he'dhave to keep them In bonnets. which tulle is draped. The sieeves are of | —— trimmed with the most costly and coquets nocence. kFor her beauty is not that of | hreach of promise suit troubles the shep- | pre r v of facial beauty is that | ; ‘}]"'ll;"},“t'lll“ 1',3‘?'9"{"‘.",",..“'vf,"".'."-'“{,"ff,’.‘\.‘l. brocade, draned with tille corresponding (o AT THE CROSS ROADS. tish furs, blue fox being especially used. the Semitie rae pical Jewess is | perd of that fashionable flock, but the King exercises almost exciusively th "{‘m‘;““‘r‘"‘fi‘i;{l0;,'};“‘;}“" " feh s been | thaton the front of the skirt and bodice,” ~} . Ll Sem s Act as Storo | Ve noticed one in G velvet with a dark, aquiline and has a rich ohve com- | Jittle innocent has waited in vain for the | orbicularis orms, the muscle that sery found which has eyes in the back of its head. | _Sealskin is this year made into French pa- WD & Keonors . TC a8 BLOre | golden ground adorned with beautifal plexion, with full red lips and flashing | pastoral call and the fatherly voice. as a mouth opener. The tongue | Itissaid that few ladies continue thely | 1tots which are very rich and handsome | : cepers, [ carnanon flowers, lined with red satin Many suen may be seen it HOW TO LOOK YOUNG. and throat museles are brought into play, | piano playing long after marriage. But it1s | 100king, and wonderfully warm, though = Baltimore American: Not the least in- | and trimmed with blue fox. Another the fair, but none of them is” comparable f ¢ g oV are o consid- elieved tha cement is made i somewhat weighty. ‘The disadvantage. of sting of the varied ph of exi: was of saphir plush trimmed with gre to the golden-haired daughter of tebeeen | “How young she looks! How does of course, but they are not to be consid- | believed that this announcement is made in | SANEERSG WHEIEC e FERGRARIEE ] I 3 gELOW you 133 Low ered in discussing what may haye an | orderto encourage young men to enter mat- aRpoL i AT, 2 once wealthy state of Virginia is 1t is saxt here that powdered hair will ing and chatting with visitors, and again | agez? Who hus not heard these phrases | opicyjaris ors, therefore, is exercised to | Strived and plaid curled plush is used with | afio made In seal lush, which are certainly er eross-ronds life, “I's term seems | the Duchess de Mouchy, the Countess de razing seriously far away ' and talk. | fitting about the auditorium of a theatre | ¢ "o \lugion of the mord distant portions | Plain velvet or plush in three combinations, | very elegant looking and, of course, far less | V prropriatefo this class, which is s | Pourtalos, the Priness do Sagan and ng to herself, all unconcerned | When some long popular actress is on the of the cheeks, it will be developed ab- tich and effective combinations are golden | expensive, \Wraps made of th bric have, | extended as the boundaries ot the state | others of our grand ladies mean to hring and carcless of the throng, There is not | boardst The questioners are not always | o p a5 G ohothy and when advane. | DFOWn on dark brown ground and serpent on | however, one advantaze over sealskin, They | itself, and will be met with in every s in again ear-rings with long pendanta, 50 much as a suggestion of coquetry in | ladics, but as u rule the ladies are most | ) o0% oo oy the deeay of the | ® darker ground. § never fade and turn yellow at the edges, and | tion, irrespective of its agricultural ad- | Mme. de Mouchy possesses some very her smile, or word or action; not a trace | Vitally interested in the problem sug- | (/5 8" FAES G I FOE Baris | | Short Enzlish housejjackets made double- | they wear for years without the least percen. | yancement or social status. The inevi costly turquoises, which she wishes to of self-consciousness about her. She is | gested. How ean one prevent age from ERIONDA.H, ‘f l"‘!‘ Wy 0‘1 oona "l‘ breasted, and trimmed with Astrakban, v tible change in their apnearance—thatis, seal | 1o jig(j, store, the representat take out of their easos, and. thore is tulk hore boctuse of hor rare beanty. but sha | sShowing itself in the face, and what is | OFis ns in its full vigor and size,and | vet or braiding in soutache,are used by many | plushes of the best quality woven and dyed | By (1€ S0FC, TIG FEDTES o 104 EOIONk dalacitses HANGREOOELING there beeause of her rare beauty, but she £ ™ : appear correspondingly so lieu of Jersey: oxt; a e Lond. class, nestles cozily and quictly 1n its | of an approaching dinner at the duchs does not know that sho has the most | the seeret of the actress's long enduring | LI WIWEES SPRERT COTOSRORTINEL, B0 | In Hew of Jorseys, as an oxtra waist to wear | In London. " midst. At every eorner the contracted | ess's, where these fine queens of fashion winsome face,perfect features and sweet- | Youth? As to the latter it is hardly worth There is no danger to anyone who in- The fashi ol b e B Dresses for midwinter wear are beingmade | catel - penny store sits complacently | will thscuss their jewels of former years. est rose-bud mouth in the world. Her | While to pay much atttention toit, 1 think, : el Lk 2 et o M e U n ) anonatser Jo | 0L heavy rowgh-surfaced serge. dellehtfully | \woiting the “tardy purehaser of its lim- | But it is also stated that some of th ; | b Tor the Art of making up for the stage is | dulges moderately in conycrsation, but, | high colls of hair arranged a Ia Japonaise, is | warm and clinging in its nature, and made | [ ar ¢ s also stated that some ¢ vory name is Mabel Merts, and she will be r the o fofin i up Hahe A!‘s. % | if anyone has any fears on the matter, | by no means decreasing in ponularity. ~ Or- | up with velvet of a deeper shade. Ver ited stock af wares, cousisting of a “little [ young ladics will refuse to follow their four years old next June. | quite n different matter from that of | ¢, /50 v'yosot'at” rest by o timely pr namentat pins of various devices take the | camfortable and protective are these heavy | of all,” as the merchant in charge would | elders in this new departure in ear-rings, IL i8 almost an universal hallucination | making up for the drawing room. In the | Y UEY D% strip of ther” And | Place of ordinary hair-pins. suits, but they must, like heavy furs. be y, while in_reality limited to a few | for they don’t like the idea of hiding cver that tact is something pecuharly feminine, | one case the artist can make use of | g 5o 0 rub” up: when you wash | “She did wrong to look back, didn’t she, | coutiously be put off for the lighter gowns | everyduy articles necessary to the coun- | so little the beauties « ¢ neck. The and that all women possess it.” Taet and | broad, suggestive touches; in the other | 3 G CrAnA BELL Bessie?” *Yes, mamma.” “And whatdo | which tnis season are so generally adonted | try folk around for whom “the ordinary | charming lobe of their little ears, with intaition are supvosed to work out, for ;5\I'I‘|Hhm\4: nfils‘t bear -luI lflflbt‘) \lli ) Sttt Al y.:"l 1:.\1:.:: lfl‘vll"l‘l)u'\‘u;: ‘1‘1 l\;‘],l,:n m.’-‘:‘u\' Mxm::f{ ;;1;1;.}:‘.'1‘:x;~.“ m-unlul er (“I,ur)i'll:t“lylln, n:;::l shopkeeper eaters, those adorable lines to whis uth adds the gentler sex, without conscious mental | finish. - So there —are two style ONEY F 3 L 3 Wife turned y lllar of salt? dol earing vy dress during the day- | *ipyese stores are in most instances kept | so_much grace, are far lovlier, the MIS ReDIIOr aex sttRNEhonseloua mental | Ch e 0 s teBt o i i balllahs HONEY FOR THE LADIES, know, mamma; 1'syiect e wondered where | time, and then changing it for one totally in- | FySE SEOFCS TR 1T AR0ACHE !”_“ln_x,{‘, R e T \\h.n.'; . f a L e R T ey arady T feroe, s are | he could get a fresh one,” adeqiiate in respect of warmth is declared by [ Dy Virgimia _ k, thanj R 5 g must toach through Inborious we ment as well as in pictorial art. Bu _The fashionable evening fereen shades are | he ¢ ; h : B i £ e e e mardous | Whs swept away by the war, and who | ever prie tear of gray cerebral matter. know something much better than paint- | lizard, serpent, frog and cabbage, S L N LB M With life. and_ health existing sinee | have calmly settled into u dormouse state FIED DOUGLASS IN EUROP smooths a the rough pls ing for preserving a youthful appear- | White velvet and white plush bonnets are | BOCHLE e e P woewns | the general and hearty abandonment of thin- | of slumber within the shadow ot the [ When in London last October, Froderick ance in the face, 1 e le and n in vague for ever vear first dim radiance of the dawn. is seem: 1€ n makes social interconrse easy and ple ance in the face, “1t1s very simple and in vacue for evening wear. to Indicate that Mr. Wileox won’t kindle the | soled shoes, and the habit of ti-ht lacing | ghostly old guide-postat the eross-roads, | Douglass was interviewed by the London ant; puts the awkward at_ ease, was suggested by the massage treatment | Black lace boas are worn at the overa and | fira iy the morning unless he is spoken to. once practiced by our grand-mothers, to drone out a bare existence—a life i$ | Daily News. In November, the Parig dispels the puinful self-consciousncs of removing superfluous tlesh, In_this | theatre and for dressy reception tollet. e T T (T T shadowy and unsatisfactory as though | Temps saw the long article of its Euglish the embarrassed noviee. Tact is a gr cnso tho objoct lo inin/monsuro to restoro | - Ostrich tinsand maraouts are e only | 1 erown of which'1s made. to look MgIeE MOKING AND HEART DISEASE. | APsorberd and lostinn Rip Van Winkle | contemporary and made wany estricla thing. At the Hebrow fair, one day, was | Wasted flesh or rather to prevent waste, | feathers correetly worn in the evening, | Bigh shisn oF WHCh 15 e 16 100K BIEICE | SMOKIN D HEART + | sleep. Itas somewhat amusing to see | from it. A few days later, the Potit A LITTLE SCENE Wrinkles, the surest mark of advancing | _ IHelleotrope plush trims and covers many | piusl or velvet covering the frame, while the % = with what address and elegance of man- | Parisien, a one cant” daily, devoted its in which the average amount of femin- | 8¢ and the hardest to eradicate or con- | very handsome high turbans or caftans. Tugh 1oops of plush or- velvet in' front in- | Influence of the Weed in Producing | ner these Virginia country merchants | whole fronk page to an iecount of M ine tact was displayed. Three ov four | el are due to the gradual wearing | Ahisworld lsbuta fleeting suow, and to | crease this eflect the Fatal Trouble. preside over their unpretentions establish- | Douglass' ®heckered existonce. The Ins girls met in' the middie of the hall, | 4way of flesh underneith the cuticle: | most of us all the cood scats are wken. | pya now evening bonnets of white plush | In a report by Dr. Frantzel, of Berlin, | ments, while with the broad 1, and other | dependanee Belge copied the story from grbeted each other offusively and kissed | Y hY docs it wear awaye Beeause the | 1t is usually unarried women who wiite | and white velvet are_enriched with exquisite | on immoderate smoking and its efleets | peeulivi of accent and expression, | the Temps, and by this time it hus probe auroitid, Ono of them, aftor the osen :! -l:xlrunwflswllm\f" cither mvh“vlvl'lllf or | ahd )9 BRRINOE B! WY MaTRKe: 8- 2insh: m.nlu.fi.l.-rvn.|.=|m.m-lmt,\ net work of pearls | upon the heart, it is stated that the latte | which they declyre to be purely Eliz | ably hoen feprinted - haif of the_jours 1 sritics at o a| ’ y he wrong Kind of exercise. ill be 2 2 and other mock jewels, ‘ew feathers ar 5| emselves chie v rapid, irregu- ot hi race buck for ce rie: « Is s Fure g 0] [ Jstiom looked eritically a a rathor pretty | i orvodiat wrinklos usually take s | | Short waisted artistie cowns tn art colors | aeain irimmini, Inons of biush an Jow: | S SEREINCR RS by AL KRR | pethun, thov traeg il for Bentiries to ) pudson the Buropean continent, | SoMle. Jewess, and said, , What downward course. ‘Lhis is due to the | #0d art designs are still worn by women in | eled-pin and comb-like ornaments taking | \F 0 i dd) 2 e A 02 ] LOURIOES INRT RO BONSI AR G NN you wear b | ieblre, S makes | webb b o oncrete.” What xorise? | bondon. 7 Mol gl | R e e i b you look like your oldest sister.’ DR HINGQLOROE0RP: T\ IR 5 any of the newest Moliere waistcoats aro | Mrs, Converse (to nei s nurse girl)— | languor, Slecplessness, ¢ ) and, later still, to a colonc o many, however,he was aiready kn When little Johnny saul Whytlio wasting: and sipin gt tio fac B, tho cich Land il by cosly buckle | 4 wish Thiad suel) a” polite, wel '"&{““'“ Iff?‘.[m"“”‘ i:] II”:.“':.I.I\‘h 8,0f n’u‘.““tv.my ship-nover the rankc of u piivate--in the | througli ' his autobiography, which hag ST T lanco of this salutary | °F Roman gold. wirl for wy ehildren, T notice that you always | Dl « 0, it is I confederate b 0 intimate rela- | been translated into French) if not in sense. e must have been a recent | Cate the discontnuance of this, salutary | *pjok Brussol nets are ffashionably used, | idress your eharges s *Miss and " Master; | found that the pationts ire great: smok- | tionship with sonlo leader "ot the ost | other forcizn * linguages, and s often witness to a striking display of feminine | 804 Wholesome exercise; 1simply suggest | jymed with Freneh and Spanishlaces, for | Nurse—"Yes, ma'an. I gets paid extra for | ers. They may not smoke cigars richin | canse.” seen on sale at the Parls bookstores taet, " a change in the method. Instead of rub- | Jaee costumes. that: the missus thinks ivlooks big to have | nicotine, * but full ored cigars In many of these stores is located the BREVITIES. I the way of yonng ladies who are | bing the fuc -.:_-ynl\I\.nIllv’xmul.'lg]mn:,l:‘\Ill Wine | A heliotrope caftan with a brim of fiiligree | Me use such termns i company. imported from the Havanas. Swiok- | country postoflice, the onco lord of the | The colebrated shop callgd th Bon strangers in town, 1 know & guileless | iD& alway ards s jet1s very becoming liat fora pretty 108y | Now that old yine diamonds are the | i s a rule, agrees with persons | manor becoming the duly qualfiecd and | Marche, in Paris s a “band” or girl from the Wostern reserve whose have the 4-|v..|lu1||-mm|u weting the in- | blonde young girl favorites of royalty, there will be a demand r many years, perhaps fortwenty years | recognized representative of one of the | orchestra composed of two hundred and INNOCENT BOLDNESS fluence of the flesh to depart ll-n}l under A favorite bisque fizure among holiday | for these stones that are so distingue, Ihe i longe though by degrees cigars of [ most extensive and most important de- | fifty of the men and women connected surpssas the nssuranco of the most pro- | ¢aticle and will keop the flesh froe from | goods represents Miss Lillian Tussell ws | areto many persons wore attmetive than'| u finer ffavor arc choscn. Hut all at or artments of the American government, | with the establishment, Tho other eyen- n0unood:=advonturess; Sho- lofy her | NEiuklos, I¢ievathar suawkword hebls | Bston peasant girl, thoso worl 1 vecent years, Aprominent | without any assignable’ cause, tronbles | Flie mails, in excaptional cises, are ve. | ing, they gave concert in the g halls country home, inspired with an ambition | 10 Aequire at first, bnt perseverance wi Jabots of lace are azain worn on the front | Wb t0WH Jewehion s BENE VNG SPeCHIONS | ype oxpericnced with the heart, which | ceived daily, at v more remote places | of the store, and cmment artists hhe M. B -4 5 ;| make it second nature, and the result is | of the corsage, being an appendage to the 1 ere originally e property o ie 1l srease and compel the suflerer ekl 4 - to make her own way in the world by | GES 0 B pains, This exercise is de- | dog collar or velvet khediy |an,\ I|||]r< | .]..,. « I|n| i ll 4 semi-weekly, tri-weekly, and at othiers e Faure, of the grand opera, were mong %“.”I{:{(v‘.lv“-l |I|mum-. .n.\h“ l-u'm\ ‘4;1 n\nw‘ signod partioularly for- the eycs and Jet bonnets are particularly stylish when A beige felt Lat §s trimmed with a fold of 'l'(“u-l ~:;‘I‘l”l‘\"'. 1.”;‘|”nl “I l‘l-irll:[“v‘(':|I|I~ll::ll;:::' fr u«v'm\d jl';l‘ et S (‘m“' !~ ‘n‘,"\ rs lllu e l-““lll no l} ss than ionul stage heroines and came to New | BEEEE BREERUREY, 0 C trimmed with pearl gray feathers and jet and | brown velvet around the crown. A great | It 15 strange that j ! 4 \e mode of earrying mails is in | scven tiousand people in widieneo York to study She never had been [ WPP 2 steel pins and combs, fold of brown velvet fastens up the brim on | cigars of ovdinary \’n lity, even if they | places as quaint and primitive as that of I'he city of Paris has ived an ime away from the farm before,and her men- For the lower and middle vortion, The capote is the married woman's bon- | theleft side and is carried in loose folds over | smoke them very larz ly, rarcly are | many other sections a century ago, em- | portant légacy from Mme horis, a tal condition was a curions mixture of [ where hollowness is often noted rather | pet, the small pointed brim poke being rele- | theside, where there is a fan of cashmere | attacked in that way The excessive use ploying carriages as uncient in uppear- | widow lady who is generous enougl to self-confidence and timidity when she | than wrinkles, but sometimes both, there | gated to young ladies, (nbroldery. A frill of thisis drawn wround | of cigavottes has not been known o give | ance as the old” chaise of Washington's | invest §160,000 for the benelit of the *Con- found herself in a great city, Having | is another plan. The facial muscles are | “Mies Tiberty can hold thirty-six wen in | fheton ol thecrown, OB the richt sideand | rise o similar troubles, althougl it 15 the | time; in some instances being carricd on | valescent Hospital,” one of the most no acquaintances in New York she was | subjected to very slight activity i the | her head, which brings her about up to the 2 wise of complaints of a different nature. | horses us dilapidated as therevolutionary | touching and intercsting churities of the obliged to seek a bonrding-house, and by | ordinary exestions of cating and talking, | average #irl of the period poittie Mabel, five years old is not so voung § “The age at which disturbunces of the | saddle npon which the notiess dilapidated | capital.” The object” of the lugaoy is to zood tortune found a good one. But | To till the cheeks out-ulump and round | An Indiau girl has been born without a | Dt that she bas picked up some knowledie | heart become pronounced “varies very | messenger vides, and indeed the United | provide twenty five francs for oach p v week she left it and went to a | it is necessary to develop the-wuse mouth. She will soon begin to realize that | Pt W NS oF the, worlth, BIo said 0 B | much. Tt s but rare that pationts are | States wail department is represcuted on | son who leaves the bospital to face the where they had no other boarders. | there. These museles are very slight z+-| £he has forgotten something. e Ry, thamming. Wi was papa befors | under thirty yearsof nge: they are mostly | foot world sgain, afler the convaleseence ikly told” e that her reason for | the best, and any spocial effort well di- | CTUtskatorty vards of lace for a lace boa. | e jyarried us, anyivay?” ~Who was pa vetweeg forty and sixty years old, Per A favorite expression and one which Albhonse Daudet is now i perfeet changing ‘was that she was ever con- | reeted will inerease them in capacity and | 80 says the Tiampar's Bazar, swhich is the best | \0hy he was the same man that he is now.” | sons who aré able to smoke full flavored rems 1o have a soothing ¢ficet upon the | health, after having been 1l nearly all the s thitt table manners were not | size. An excellent exercise for this pur- | 8uthority in the matter of’ aress. Y es: but what was he to you. Was he just | Havanas continue to do so up to their | dignified cross-road mevehant and post- | summer, and has promised to the director correet and she suflered the greatest em- | pose is this: Take a picee of soft feather, | Corsages are timmed, cut and decorated In | 3 man that you mashed?” death, If we look around among the | piitstor is “before the sar,” what he did | of the Odeon in Paris that be wi burrassment — when —eating in the | kid, or chamois skin, will do, and put the | Grery {'x‘n“fl';'.'Q'i”«‘f"". ) ".“" It does not ‘-»u.,.s you L:m]»l\“ n:luln.-. that Russian Tul-’ better classes of society, ‘\\"” it s well resence of the eity-hred boarders. [ end of it befween the teeth; [ estroy the lSIAC affeok diers were ot allowed to marry?” remarked | known, are the principal consumers of | wares and trader in eggs neral | and South--x new play—so that the first N5 ey AT e T e ntly upon it for [ Ahe velwt pockuts which now adomn the | a soung lieutenaid’s wife to horhusband, | guch cigars, it is astonishing o find how | country produce he spedks with a fecling | representation can tke plieo on the 25th struck that she would stride’ up and | several ‘minutes taking care not | FOW af Galaty tea gowhs wre wade in the | lookivg 1b from hey books | U bivge heard o, | many persons with advancing yours dis- | of rowintic pride, savored with regret, | of February, Tho picee is in five aets, down the halls, spouting her elocution | to raise the teeth from the Teather. 1f the | *'gEE 5 ) FoSE B BTl R 0o | Sy, Tove, positively, twk § presume the au- | cOntinue smoking. As a rale, affee: | of the superior stock and large sales “be” | two of which M. Daudet has quitelin- lessons after the reason-dethroning fash- | teeth are raised it will bring into play | spunish are made up for the evening wear as | thorities desire to nress With tho fact | tiom "ot = the © heart ' Lus preused | fore the war, but times have elianged wed; and the subject i taken from ion of eloeutionists, and confront the as- | only the ordinary museles of mastication, 1 this WInLer as in the summer, that they wight hve alotted &> th them to abjure the weed. In such | while, save the fins the merchant tounded boarders with outstretehed arm | whereas the purpose is to develop those | plush stripes, with ding design upon | Worse fafe than beingkilled in battle, cases the patient has found the | remains the same ¢ ush stripes, with a winding design upon | and stony stare, utterly unconscious of | that are seldoni used. One who tries | g satin ground, are bordered on either side | the wreteh hugged her, best enre without consulting the medical | Saturday night is the only time that | the absuraity of the thing. But hermost | this method will find the cheek going | by a faille stripe on a velyet ground, “The nigh princess collar, named after the | man, If ba makes w0 his mibd todiscon- | the average store throws ol its quiet aLPs admittanee o the press astonishing nchievement was in a very | through a queer netion that is anything | ~Amoug mechanieal toys comes a walking | Princess of Wales, is a fashionable finish to | tinue smoking 2t pnee, the complaint fre- | slecpy wavs of existence, The week's AP S R V1 e P fashionable up-town church. On Sun- | but graceful and pretty; nevertheless it | Santa Slaus, who steps nimbly around the | the bodiees of dinner gowns. = The corsage | Guently cease ol in other instances \\mL is finished and the colored pop concede is that & few of the load day, after services, she sent word to the | 1s immensely effective and will restore | room with a 1k full of toys on his back. :‘IA;‘AI‘“l[:ll'u"ll_'-["_ b :'I“IL'-E.:"I'.I' ’-.‘.’1’1": .‘n l:m it takes some time before the action of ) from far 1 near assemble at the | amd o dozen or more {heatrion winister that she wanted to see him. ‘The | to ite youthful plumpness even the most | “Pa, why isa girl called a belle?” asked | tUiroat, and above tuis the broad collar mieels, | 1,0 hart. is rostored Lo its norual stat ce of fanciful name Lo speud the re- | whose adviee is worth heeding, dignilied clergyman came down to the | hollow cheeks of the decrepit sexage- | Clara. ~*Oh, 1 guess it's because of her | 13007 a high frill of turned over its entire | 10 sueh cases, besides discontinuing | sults of their labors and pass much of | present, He s, BUDY A Dlece pew where she sat, g she said to him: | narian. Those in middle life or those | tongue, unfeelingly replied the old man. width all around the neck. A jewelled pin | sSmoking, relief must be sought also by night in social dance ) wd | b 1ed ‘I mm Miss Dashie Blank, of the West- | who are iust beginning to feel the ap Iliis is the happy season when the aver- urd.nnlf spray of flowers rests on the left | regulating the diet, taking only sily | joias. wuile the dignit personage of g 1o rehearsals snd ern resor and D've come here to stndy | proach of age. will tind this plan es u:ft")ymu.ll-«ll\ (mllw-h l:w : Iulhlnu\. Uun:‘ side of the ¢o digestible food, abjuring coflee, ns well | the dutler week day, in rush of busi- | t 1o the for the stage. Thayen't any triends herc, | pecially valuuble. Its beauty does not | S1¢ Fecenad fast year and gets thiew ready o | 4 yion costume of plum-colored velvet bas | as~ by short walks, residence among | ness,” becomes iolly thle, and and 1 know New York is tull of pmpta- | recommend i, but its simplicity does. '\“n““ A Tt e laited { panels of wauve satin richly embrojdered | mountains of moderate clevation, waits ubon the col rutheriood tions und snares for young girls, partic It occurs to me 1o enguire why talking | | SHOMHAAES P "‘l‘h{“‘vu’\{"n‘“‘ll ;““":';.‘“'““l‘(,m‘; with beads. ‘The front h!"} ~:ll|‘j‘» nd \‘\‘1' suitable interior treatment 1 with that ease and courtesy whi journey to Bordigh on ularly on the stage. The ways' of the | shonid otbe clluctive in keeping the | blish o ‘with velvet in corresponding cotor, | vinimid ju deep plais, the selvet Just dis- | By taking this course all symptoms dis- | gouthern genticmen possesses so v tiviora, is the precursor of city ‘are strange to me, and @] facial muscles fully developed here | 15 fo be had in ail the day colors. Tasan tace e dianed on either side. ‘The | appear in the course of a year, and do | R ’ sl 3 Wt fram sctive work. nught fali nto snare | are women who tilk incessantly and it | © A" Jiniata woman opened & bureau drawer | dointed velvet bodiee has etbroidered revers | DOt appear if the patient does not recow- { A FREE AND EASY EXPECTORA- T AVl rely worn hinge through ignorance. it vou to | might seem that uninterrupted activity of | aiid found a taree blacksiake cotled therein, | and opens over & toll lace vest. The high | mence smoking. in a tinrd category of | TION is produced by a few daoses of Dr ich close uttention to Jook after me, wateh over. me and help | the mouth in conversation would - be | It is supposed her husband kept his fish-bait | eollar is finished on either side by an.em- | cases the more acute disturbances leave | J, H. McLean's Tar Wine Lung Balu bts for the past ten o twelve e every way you can, <o that | may not be | enough.to eflect ali the enlarging of mus- | in that drawer and the cork came loos broidered ornament, the patient; he fecls well and bearty, but | all cases of hours " ireatencd with para 1 led aside frons the puth of Chiistinu duty. | cles desivable to sttain a youthful ap “iello, Blobbs! Isew your mother-in-law A diuper dress of serpent velvet aud bio- ! an irregularity of the heart, more or less | diffioulty of breathing. 20 conts a b Lic continucs to work PALISIAN, thio'same as boys, only long hair and no and how he lived, and of when a s rof | him the comulete manuwseript of Nortk | it Roumestan, A dyama very like Jh may be expeeted is strong Lginst allowing gossippers who nicee e had & chance tg