Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 26, 1886, Page 9

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Pt e PO, THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1836-~TWELVE PAGES. v ————— BADEAU ON BIG DINNERS, | s vmimaue o ingtand: | the satonniys ke vt wae neves - | REFORM IN CETY GOVERNMENT | il e | BRILLIANT NATIVES ABROAD. : \ the old fashioned Christmas that | mitted in conversation with the safferer. | What has been said above can be more | . ngton Irving teils of in the Sketeh | But ali felt that_the shadow hung over . learly illustrated by the followin | ' Obristmas Feasts in Martial Oamy I mger eclebrated in England, | the house. 1 think the attempt to keep | Improvements in Municipal Machinery in | gram. Especl atténtion ¢ | Distingnished Americans Colonized Guarded Palace H ) I intry some traces of the | up a cheerful tone was more distressing | the wanner in which the general powers, | delig val stiil Tinger here and | fhan the reality of despair when it came. | the Bast, Iegislative and finaneial of & city council French Oapital. 1 have been asked to Christmas | But there \‘w- Christmas dinner; the - are mw!l“d and delegated mlm.h nendent ~ . v 6Us o | parties at great houses where a hunt | little grand children had their Christmas | BEAUTIES OF ONE-MAN POWER isible departments: and ow N | EMPRESS EUGENIE'S PROTECTOR 3LUB AND COUNTRY cUSTOMS. | [ETLT &' SH W nt ball and 4 meet. of presents, and came to the table at lunch rests of particulsr wrads are protected - the hounds d part of the entertain- | time. Every one tried to be gay and to = a distinet ward body, the board of ment; b there are only family | forcet what was impending a8 well as | Responsibilities Centered in the | aldermen. Again, an innovatic 1 Minister MeLane and the Socialists reunions and children’s merry-making | what had already occurred. The MayoraThe Apnointing Power municipal government will be noticed in The Catroll Family, Constl € Smiles in Cuba—Grant's Last on these oceasions now laughed with the babies, thongh 1 doubt h = the board of civil service, whose partien SHET WaTkts ikl T Chrlstmas on Farth 1 lived, however, for several years in & | not his heart felt the holfowness,and Mrs business, to destroy the present sys a L an e Yule-l Fu box near London, a dower house in an ant, who was very vrave, pretended to Charier Builders, ) of favoritism and patronage among dore Tilton ule-Loz Fuu, ancient park, where I had my own little hapny. e g public servants, and to secure eiliciency establishment and pleased myself with At that same terrible Christmas time i N 1 | s sufliciently set forth m the dingram TR o ) St New Yonrk, Dec, 28.--[Correspondence | keeping up on a reduced seale the | came the news that ereditors were alou JCasuings, Mass, Dee, 21.-To the 1. Heads of Departments—to be clect Pams, Dee. 10.-[Correspondence of R A gt e Christmas customs that vot enrvive The | to seize the trophics of which General | Editor of the Bre: While Omaha is pre- | by the people—to be mdependent of eacl |- The passage throngh Pavis of of the Beg.]-Christmas ties together | o Sood fivays hung with holly and | Grant and his family were o proud, and | paring a scheme for teform in municipal | other and yot connected—to be respe e ex-Empress Engenie, seekit rvents and characters and scencd and ; wine misletc servants had a pres. | the correspondence with Mr, Vanderbilt | ¢ qcarnment wonld it not be an aid to the | ble to tie yu‘u‘n + (or to may | climate m the hop obtaining ears that often have no other boud; for | et a picee all around: the children of | followed, so ereditable to the great mil : h vhat | their aets or the acts of their respecti \ ” b A project to take into consideration what | JortoY e twinges of thenmat aemory is a thread on which a man m the gardener, and ere was a host of | lionaire, who saved at least to the nation subordinates and s¢ i ’ » nation's | other eities are doing in the matter? 1 §i:l utive=Mayor with W the other night aring hi experiences at his will, | thenn, were all brought in to see the | what had_been earned in the nation's 1 ng xeeuti wyor with ] & g LB A UL R M| Clltisimas treo. Alwiys tomy extremo | sorvieo. But all that season was one of | refer more especialiy to New Yotk city | appointing ehiof of poliee, chier of firo | whether t FuHits: WoHtaH, WitH rave spent Christmas in camp and | G000 50 Gl the waifs long after mid- | bitter mortifieation and suffering to the | and Boston, where reforms in eity goy- | depsrtment, inspector of publics works | within our walls, over easts a thought on Christmas in English country houses, | 0kt and in the morning I was awak- | man who had won the trophies. The ap- | qinment have woon carriedout | and the iko—to have general adyisory 540, HATO AN W, BAE Christmas — in captured town, | ened by the children Christng proaching close of his carthly glories, the examining and veto powers in all depart i wistmas in a palace at Havana, | carols deprivations of fortune, the anxicty asto [ 19 Tiain with good | 45 0nte ated American dentist, wh Christmas at th white he it Onee I had a_sorvants’ party at Christ- | the future of his family, for his book was | results v:wl e future improye B. Financial—Board of finance to con « ‘m‘! who conveyed her in Wastitneton, . Cliniat g London, | Mas. Mg coachiman married the house- | still incomplete and (s success a atter | ment is anticipated Therefore, at | sist of comptroller- auditorand treast y g when flecing for her ehingion, Chnstmas - - London, |Gl 1 went to the ceremony.. They | of uncertainty, the humtlation of having | this opportunc time of public diseussion | =-¢ach independent of the other in his tli6 Mormy diivs: 6T Sentonibor dining with ambassadors; Christmas at | wero married in the parish chureh, just his circumstances ehronicled o the | §¢ would not he out of place to embody | Spretive sub-department—to be aceon T At I it THIN. walllelt: esld the Century Club in New York, Christ- | Jike Lord Thomas and Lady Jane. [re- [ world,even the xvl|}~.|'||.\u|\1|\ caused bY | 41,0 fundamerital principles of municipal lo for all finaneinl rocolnts and e peoci q oetio novor siowed lioy @oierous mas in hospital wounded: Chiristmas at | memoer that the groom had forgot the | his ~disease, all “made — Grant's last Ll ) icipal | hyrament—to audit the aceounts of the # Del bo'; Chifate L t's I ring, but they ot along without 1t. 1 | Christmas one never to be forgotten by | government as eoner ived by sneh men as | other deportments on proper prosenta- | Protector one-half the gratitude that he cimonico's, Christmas at Grant's house | ks W JEE, §imed off one of her own | me who shared this as T had witnessod 80 | ex-Mayor Grace, Mayor Lowe, Hon. | tion of vouchers, signed by proper | had the right to expect for the risks that and handed it to the ministe The wed- [ many of lus trinmphant ones, David Dudley Field, Hon. Theodor nlulm(lul_\ Iln)vn'»y]nn' a ].l publish scm he ran and the fatigues that he under ding breakfast was laid 1n the house- [ Before another Christmas his sorrows [ poocecert. ton. Mayor Ab owitt, | mnnual budget of Tevys, loans, vesourees, | ot on this oconsion, On Dr. Evans A . stmmon from the past keepers foont, for my uslablisiment was | and triimplis were all prst, nnd the | Loosevelt, Hon. Mayor Abtam Howitt, | {c0q honds and vublie expenditures of | V¢ e et e ] Cotner & Avclior's addition s ) s | o C | Rev. Dr. Edward Everett Hale, ex-Mayor | o5 iids Wha sl e comine | library table is a large volume, that has FAMGUS HOLIDAY 113 : not grand | enough to boast | friend and hero and statesman had ex- [ B ! WOr | q) kinds—to muke estimates for coming 1ean recall at the Century clubin New | corvant’s holl ©as 1 bl farns | ehanged the vicissitudes of mortality for | Prinee, Mayor O'Bricn and others. The | half year resources and expenditures- o | 1oL yet been given to the public, contain to South Omaha York inomy eariior days, The erowd of ST " he wedding | the spot on the banks of the Hudson | recommendations of these eminent gen- | colleet taxes, ronts, interests, ete., ete ing nis recollections of the second em ished the en nd the wedding | the € n th i ; g uwl‘l-v mising_nion that “:ulh'lul gown I was asked to a glass of wine! | where, under the snow and blasts of | tlemen on reforms in eity goycrnment board of Public Works—Cnairman, | pire, in which Napoleon's consort is of 104 of the tinest Jots ever there when Richard dunt and Launt | Wien 1 entered the room the whole | winter', the revered ashes will repose on o e summed wp & following prop. | SCCretary, survovor (city enginecr) to act | e Gl S OB A A = Tk sl U b party rose, and 1 felt for & moment quite | every future Christmas that this world | * ':‘l.l, nmmed up in the olowing prop- | coung for'and take charge of all niatinel TTTRVET ]‘ l"‘ l:y‘““ sl l:"\ ‘l“m R footh and Stoddard were rollicking | fike'an arisioerat among my retainers, [ will ever se ostticha of publie improvement sanetioned by the | Clievous pa ab she played g youny fellows, scems to me in the retro- | pope must have been haif & dozen of Nothing can touch him further, 1. The government of a city is essen- | vote of the ity or by vote of the depart- | long and disustrous tragi-comoedy. Pers gpect more brilliant than_any 1 have | {hom. besides the guests. But 1 fear the Avan Babeat tally & busmess corporation. A city s | ment with approval of the mayor; to | haps Eugenie has heard of this book, this known on the sume spot in later years. | pateh was not a happy one for all this - government coneerns itself al t wholly | tike care of st 8, their grading, ex- | sword of Damocles, and beeanse of it Iremewber, more than once, that thirty | qplondor, 1 used to hear that the bride- | RAILROADS THAT WRECK TOWNS | (it the | or forty of us determined to see the old Iy ; tension, cleaning, Jighting, ete., ote: to | g yusiness of re hygien b frowns to day on him who was onee her ! groom beat the bride, though she never — Sl AL RS HTb L eity's wov. | HAVE powers of contr g publie | e ehintes year ont, and the lone board was | £ 0 g, The Experience of Nebraska Settlers | bolice and fire vrot | Acity's gov- ] works, toeontrol, in_conjunction with B Aol i g stretened ‘neross the double room, and | “FUE St AV 16 VIS FOVABH 16 MGV ermuent is entrusted with the laying out | the mayor, the granting or sale of fran understand that D, Evans is now the vory good punch was brewed and’ very CHRISTSAS IN €1y “ had my pile invested in the town of [ Of streets, their paving, their lght | chises o the highest bidders to control [ owner of the Morning News, the little / '!“'[" SO L, nd -‘I“ ; told 1 Ope Christ eve 1 passed with an | Arpordale down here, and it was about | ing, their sewerage and thew eleanliness, "‘»‘,‘,"]""_“_";‘- Vi i e, | American daily published here, which is Tose ahd s, AW Lang Sync e and | Amoriean lady married to 2 Spanisher, | the finest layont for n' eity that. 1 ever | Acliy’s government must. provido suni- [ A Boatd of Alermenivo sehrer| il edited by Albert €. Ives, formerly “here’s whand and there's a band,” were | CGHR dinmerwith s wrotehod attond- | S but whon the vailroud camo through | cient fire and police protection o prop- | ward interests: to control potty e on the staftof the New York Times, and Can be seen and the entirve iven and exchanged. ‘The handsome | gy e Sits coarse bt not altogether unin- | fhiouieh thetown and announced that they | €1y and to persons. I these vespects | tion not includod in_ other departmients; [ the son-fuciaw of Francis B. Carpenter, s wlowed and e lithe forms were | yiting menn, its high-flavored fish and | would W Tour miles wost of | the administration of a ity is analagous [ o be a petitioning and consuling hody | the artist. The Ameviean Registor al surronnding country is visi- TG UL ';;l"'l-|=" et artists | high-scasoned soup, its mosses of gilic ; ; townclot speeuator | o the administration of & business eor- | FCeuing petitjons from cliizans st i | eady belonged to e, Evans, <o that_he bl QAL AR orators pledged - cach |y qyineed meats, its lucious fruits and | 1 4 correspondent of the New Y ork S Joratio erri ¢ petitions to roper de > | eI w le. GHIBEd Il teprd ennd icayery ot YOl | ko en it A manning. HosHIALILI| s e D O o R, |[borationt : RETONES hias now a duily and weekly organ. But ¥ \ ou see, they had ought a farm down 2. Siuce the administration of ity L. of Education—Presidont and | *Galig ni Mossenger which seems spreing all the antanliar and sometmes | giore and they were gome to have « R g dent : ; Plum Podding in England and Creol City Blections—Facta for when he knew he was doomed to die. 1 hardly know which ghost or picture to consisting laid out. Kvery lot is a beauty, 11 is located and genius and Christmns time-—nearly thirty years ago. Alas! How many of | (istastoful viand ted at Christinas : e Wike Nt of | coneernsatself prineipally with the pro- [ members at larie to control educational [ 1]y tohave taken @ new lease of life \ ey toso forms e benty o mayhav, | 30 ong saioon, comdar they all i O e arl Of | toction to tho property iterests, roalant intorests of the eity. o : hias exowdlud tho Mornigge Nows out of it crumbling now; how many of those T sl e e il AR A Sitiohna. b e tions stiats oard of Libravies—President and | old home with the Matin, the bright smilos linve faded, how many facos aro | Tiih duors and witdows ull thrown o wonstrated. 1 told them that Avbordal f citizens, the taxpayer stands | B BOAEE OF Freneh « 4 4 1 doors e ws il throw ‘ dod. ol ] d i Lo : - o eontrol libraties uly, both of which hupers wer wrinkled if not forever chop-falleny [ 10 10t in & broeath of frosh air: the pulms S TR lation to the city as the stockholder | =540 04 o™ Pablie: Chavities—Pres. | founded by S, S, Chiamberlain, the New Where be your gibes now? your gambols? | yhore: the black servants all m white | Weuld bing tain to e eftizons ! | stands in relation to w business eorpora | ident and members at_large to_eontrol | York journalist, whose Paris career was your songs? your flashes "ot merrment | RiGoe for their own comfort aswoll Lo ol tion; therefore, the taxpayer ought to | city hospitals, city ehavitable institutions, | as shortas brilliant. “The Matin,which is me me that were wont to st the table in a roar? [ 0 Gisfaction; the powdered Spanish | Wantud to' know &hont how imch e | control (1) the clection of oflicizis who | eté., ete. e g firmly established, 1s modeled in'so far s |l|li‘|‘|:\v“m ny, now, to mock yourown grin- | uties helping onc if hestumbled i his | would pay to h the station loeated | shall disburse the city’s menies; and (2, 1. Board of Pablic Health--City phy- | possible, after the American newspaper, T T R ek 3 A D Nt s i S0 1 sicians to examin commend to | and offers the only instanee, perhaps, of I heeame a soldier, and there was an end | coremonions—It could hardly HAvoRIt s nte = nlR I Gl thumEwall s the government of acity’s interests. | e S i A mark on French journalism. ¢ 0 to elubs and elub dinners for a while. My | that 1 was® keeping the hotiday | wouldn t give them s blamed cents wod | 5 Oficials 1o whom such duties are en- | £ Judicial ~City — attorne police | Speakinz of dhe: newspapers veminds next Christmas was passed in- South | of my childhood, or of more temperate, their old road thrown into bankruy trusted should be chosen for their busi- | judges, judges of city courts, ¢ P me that o only the Parisian bat the Carolina. 1 necompanied Sherman on | that is, more frigid zoncs. first. T threatencd them with the loss of | ness qualifications and for thew honoesty, | - Board of Civil Serviee -Chairman, | Continental press generally has com his expedition to Port Royal, and in | After dinner “one or two Americans [ il the business of Arbordale, and asked | and should he held responsible for their | SCOTetiries, to examine public servants, | mented, and commented favorably, on December went with a reconnoitering | strolled out to see how the people eel them it they knew what a risk they we o) R Rk e e [ ke charge of mumicipal clections MINISTER MCLANE 8 REPLY _ party to the interior. Returning to our | hrated Christmas, The cets were | ranming in‘ignoring the best town in that ACIS AN 0SS LNCRONE! Yy to be de- | and registrations. to the request of the Paris mumeipal camp at Hilton tead, 1 found one of my | brilliantly lighted and full of men, mostly | goction. But they only laughe fined by aporopriate laws. Not™ The clection of heads of depart. | couneilors tor the pardon of the Ciicago . messmates il with ' the fever of the | of the middis sort, but ms D U i ket 4. Butasystem of responsibility can be | ments to be by the city atlarge, except | anarehists. These -~ sentimenal vusy- | 5 Minutes Walk from country. His other comrades on Sher- | and nsed evidently to certain restrains of | yot make some arramgement with me. [t cted only by the ereation of distin (D) the board of aldermen, who are to be | bodies afforded our shrewd representa man's stall were absent on other duties, | manner; students and shop-keapers, even | wasa rule of modern. railroading to put | responsible trists in cach branch of the Wil By L GRil] G B MGRI IRgdd n iLe od it but Lwas only . volunteer aid-de-camp | younge merchants and. hiwyors, thotgh | 1 daie of fnodern LA ORI Cicl el sof e i, then hewdsof departments should | and he naturally didn’tlet it go by unim the New Brewery. then, without rank or pav, und coulil | fior perhaps the more distinguished of | Arborinie s oot i e s | ewy’s serviee. Such responsible trusts ided Into two groups. Thus A, | proved. Ilis néot little speech, which re command my own time. I remained with | their elass. Blacks and Chin, mingled railrond townit would have to move up are board of public works; hoard of public | D, F[ I' should constitute group 1; B, C, | veals the clever politician and the prac my new friend and nursed him until he | with the throng, and negresses and mul- | dut of the wet finances; board of public charitics; board LJ shouldconstitute zroup 20 The | ticed diplomat in about equal propor recovered, and that wus the beginning of | atto girls not a few; but_hardly a white DWellEsiiilo: yonbelicye it thatrond of civil serviees board of edneations board | clection of gronp 1 and group 2 to take | tionsi will read well on both sides of the an intiniiey of moro than (Wonly Years. | wontat eould b seen. 1f hore and theve | iy g 00, Fou betieve it, that road | o1 “feaith; the clief_executive and the llernate years : : Atlantic. It especially pleases the bulk ’]I hat nl.l’n wils Hnl':u'n)‘ l'nrl«I :»ilhlwhollu you encountered one, she was_evidently 1 Arbordale began to move. Everything Illz\"ul lln( :l,l\!r‘l (‘, l!n" g:;:lu»m‘\u:‘:,’n ‘I !_. ;;‘ll\ I uh]':" M»)i\ nts 7 l/rr\ 1|m1l , () fir i of n‘h.‘ l-r:‘ll\]n;l'l’ r.-|]n\||;|u :'m‘ p;ulli l:n.v mod 1 1 l assed many a night on Tybee nd, + poorest sor rnsiye ; 5. Tho hotel went fivst, and | Should consist of “one centr: e, [ men, (¢) teachers, () clerks, (¢) civi s, con Yy pusterell by tlicse rov g wiKIOr tho Bama DIteEes uring Lo sl | or e ROOTsL sort, bl not gifensiye it | was on wheels. T hotel went fiest, and | 51y “Ui” exoeutive, or mayor, -sur ks, (1) Seeretativs, (1 marsen, ohie | olutioniets, these yadionie af the e v, | 211 on & perfectlylevel of Fort Pulaski; who shared my tent, or e LA LT '"v‘a'.‘,’.,.-l.ln'" pratoons and conert hadls | rounded by the various boards or depart- | ety to b chosen for thér fitness by thi | who have received this rathe 1 his cabin, all through the Wilderness 3 x s p o] KL Ly IBCOTIEEI0, 8OO0 " | ments: cach department should have its Is of vespective departments or sub- | back of their own inviting. ; 5 compaign,’ and the Tong voar at. City | S Thore was at least o hundred | wont. and then tho private houses, to, e | Gidtingt responsibio. heads the. exequtive ST TR L (T | T Lo o R (T Piece of Land. Point; with whom under Grant,| marched | it groups, with s bundred men - in | followed Jast of all by the churel. e | and aepartuents should_absorh all’ the | examinations governed by civil, servies | and half-centemptuous exprossion of th to Appomattox; with whom Limessed for | HiEd vl fliows. Some wild etra: | remaimed (hat conld bo moved, and the | fnetions of munieipal goyernment. The | rules as drawn by the board of civit ser- | firm mouth, s Minist four years after tho war, in Washington; | I YRR IO o0 e | iy thins that whs Toft to mdicato the | Protoiype for suel w sysiem of boards or | vice: tenure of office to depend on good | these blatan't Utopists ti and Who, at another Christmas (in 8¢ e ey T | e iy Jogieate the | departnients exists only in the cabinet | hehaviors salaries and wages to be pro- | =~ Mr. MeLune is an ex- norof Mary invited me (o become his groomsman, 1 with which W entirely un mihar, | existenc of the plaece o 2 lot o e v i « Wi ence s W (of holes | oo of the president. wortional to Jike roward for like service | land.In fact, he left the Annapolis a0 i fap! was wounded ut the time: and nnable to | 18 played, and adram wasalways beat; | in the ground. My corner lots wers all | 58y “odleet to a city's official, a | I the open market. . Noto-—this does | eapitol for the Paris jegatien. " jelons ]Qv (”(l ml“ (]" “\ J (" (\ travel to Albuny, where tho marriage | Lnodancors throw oft their jackotsand in } there, you bet, but e thoy are not worth [ proad distinction must bemade betweon [ not provont o metropolitan police | vory ttiing, ihcrotoro. that e showld b) - took placo, My wound was in tho foot, | yueir frilled shirts and sometines fanci- | moro than #5 an acre L thought Twould | thyse who are (1) heads of departments | Systens o the organization of anetrapoli. | takd s prominent pare i the. weddinge and when 1 mado my oxcuses, Portor, | 10l ond oven spangled trousers per- | not bother with them. Now, that trick | yq'(2)those wio are more properly pub- | tan five System fndor «ireot eontrol of oy of (1o daghise. 0f another e ith i flash of the wit that s known at 4 | formed with wonderful grace and untir- boon, played on mo sovoral tmos, | jjogervants—us clorks, policemon, fire- | the chiof of palice or chiof of fire de: | formor chief maglstrate of Marylind, ox. with u flash of the wit that is known at n Al Often negroes danced with the [ That isn't th only town that has moved | 1 3Vaniswas elerhs, pofisomen, five- | the ¥ ; s Aryiant, hundred dinner tables—declared he could . < ) e ! men, teachers, ete,, ete. (1) Heads of de- | partment. Goy voll. Phis Tl behos ST e vith | JWhite men—huge burbarinns who looked | right away from me under the influence | 4 rinents shonld be clected, responsible | | It i3 not the place in this connection to GLLIANT MABIAGE B 0ot Lonb Ll a ot My TTon il | dikeR Afeican Heniefakwith Epetticontsof | of tliofrallrondore: Uliayjiure: probinbly 1 E D A0 IO s S0 TG Uhe eniineros | armml sy o e Ll o el e onlol G ANT SAIIAGE, i o ing loabitie uso ol bis foot ot hers and variegated elothes, and head | the dandy town-site men.” Lused to think | 7IEEE 10 R BENAE T W TUECRS TR I jerament. All that is Intended by | plaiu old Cathiolie chureh in the. Rue de S T s S sses like those in the picture books. | that I was some in that line but not now. | o ganee’ in - oft ) Public servants | the above vlan is to point out the line of | Chaitlot. The groom was Count do Ker- S e 1 o T Re R L mod to be umateh wnich should | And the worst of it is thut ordinarily you | g6yl Lo appointed by the heads of re. | development wineh hromices 10 golye the | £otiny. an oMoat ja the Fromen oo Ker s T L N s the other. The performers were | can't reason with themat all. Theyknow | Goetive departments from lists of com cult problem of purity In' mum Fhat th present bride, like her (w0 wiafors By Mail Christnias dinner I remember with him, | the objeet of intense mterest, and were | tha have got the call on - you, and | poiive examinations governed by eivil | a And the method which experience | hefore her has allied herself with the hnstias dinner 1 remember with him, | joudly hipplanded at their finest fe a | they work the thing torail it is worth, s i o Y s Detieny e Rk e atthe house of General Gallatin Law- | iy jump, a longer leap, a more adroit | Thay want the whole hog, as I found | feryice rules, and should “be responsible aughit to be the most feasible is to | French aristoeracy. Perhaps the most rence, and once, 1 think we went to a o Y ¥ g (! ! E 3 4 to the heads of respective departments e independent distmetitrusts, and to | noticeable feature of the oceasion was I childéen’s party given by Mr. Corrati, tho [ O thietie twistor turn. - @ o | e on, Oukapolis some time | hese arein goneral the broad canons | il those trases by competent men. o | the presencs of the “papal inieio, who elegraph, Jalianminister. Aonyu Christushare | o, enthodral, for tho™ erowing of tho | aftar “Arbordale went by tho boards 1 | il SOV (BY, Folariters, e mubiowal { havon plnco for evory man, and tohave | ofliciatid. Monsclnour_ il Rondo s a 4 X 3 (sl atlairs. A glanee at the history of every | every man in his place. To entrust an | great favorite with the ladics, his Na London; sometimes it was General | (00K, or the early mass, The greatbuild- | found the people there 'in a desperate | jypgo gity, even our own, clearly shows A with distinet, adequate « I b d i owers, [ poleonie faee, sleck person and rieh garb ; : ing was crowded, mostly with inferior | condition because the rond was deter- | (¢ 01 T e L d : LRI IR I 1300 Koo nomanianiniol g r 1elephone :[uih-l»L -\».. Iirn.l-"‘uu:.;-‘l_\)ll.l-l Welsh, andonee | worshippers, thongh there were many | mined to buili a town seven miles away, that the creation of responsible depart- | and to make the ofliccholder feel that né | rendering him a very attractive object p wolieve Mr. Pierropont, h s | ments has resulted satisfactorily. As | is under a constant sense of responsi- | 1tis no disparagement to Miss Carroll’ omen of the better sort under the pro- | o was not going to put ti 15 within v . g y f 2 ¥ ¥ 2 0 Miss Carroll's MGt alol L liowes byt toakimy Romone e DetRnas e nasioliTo; f»’.’.‘»}».-“.'m.-i’."\’n‘.T\n]m‘J'- e yals WL | wimess, our own board of public’ works | bility. pretty face, nor to Worlh's artistie cos e PLUM 'UDDING IN ENGLAND out bonnets, only the mantilla, and often | that the managers = had sugested to ma ;Iu_ul ‘}ru:n'll \nf hw:ll!mn,» : m;mi ‘u) Itis mn’ r-uvxll whether the depart- | tume, to say (’h it the priest divided the with Thomas Huglies, the author of | not even that, for head g "There are | that they wera willing to ne Y ALD 0|yt AL OB S wiministration has | ments are known by t es given in | honors with the bric ry = +“Tom Brown's School Days.” He' and | no chairs, except those The worshippers | thought 1 mieht perhaps buy them of, | ollowed with the ere o orsnch . o ‘,” alsionprheiod itlanmbaiFUNeS >0 DEHOAUNE In 1di Do not wait for every his wife were among my carliest and | take with them, in the eathedral, and all | and €0 I told the leading eitizens that f | SYCHSIPIE BOGIES - AnE e reasons are | corresponds to the number of dxpart- | has also been participating in « wedding, . Iatest English frions; thuy had two boys | the” women were knceling on'the pave. | they wouli sve me ton oty case © wa | Pt el n selecting ahead 1o} montsshown abave, Tange chics with | ot as one of the contracting paries, | 10t will be sold by Jan, only fouror five years old when I fitst [ yent. They made up the mass of | suceessful 1'would undertake to get the | fi /0% 01 PIRC WOURS, S0l instanee, | veds and _great complications | however, simply us_hostes ier went to London, Types of English chil- [ {he congregation at the centre and | railroaders to change their minds, This :l‘ihl un I});:l]:n[. ;v! Hv\!hlllr‘nl\‘_\r ‘|".M-"“ \\....IA}.-I. u lvh:x\« arge number of | cousin’s nuptials. The fair songstress is 1St- drens one with long golden red hair, the devoutly attentiv but u | was agreod to and T'sat ‘about tha job, | (TORESRGORS B INDE LABEL (e 18, & | departments, ' Tho system' s sulliciontly | atill, L helieve, ather with golden yeillow; both far and er throng in the outer uisles | At first the 1. ad fellows said 1 ax-payer e will use more than ordin- | flexible to ailow the creation of new de- In waiden meditation, taney free, fat, o g visi niry A ar) Antiol choie TER K ho artn the needs of a city inerea sha N fat, and_beautiful ‘as o vision ot fairy | was incessently moving, talking, laughe | they would listen . fo any v ary caution in thoohoice of tho man who | pn § y incrense. | A{ Jenst thro is no change in._hor swaet 1T in blue, with the shortest of skirts | jec: only gazing at the Lights or the peo- | Feeling encouraged, 1 told R y ting N enin e ol o D b As there are no poor lots, you can cither buy them Ao e ool b e e B AR | LT ! 4 i de= | (e other might by Mr. Campheli Clarke, and sleoves, 50 a5 to show their logs | plo, or ouce in o while at the eeremomes | thatas a represengutive of the business | L§¥onsible awd capable men to positions | partments with inereascd vesponsibility. | gy “Paris - correspondent of the Diily 5 3 4 t f responsibility when the man and the | © ‘Then, too, if corruption should vitiate | o spond 0 and necks and arms, and were called [ or the vestments when the procession or | interests of the town 1 had been dep- | oy ™ . Hha il | iption Id vitiate | Pelegraph, Miss Thursby rendered sev 1 suppose, but I never heard them; and tractive than usual, The priests and | and, with a wink, two lots to each of the - . 10 NG sadIInIsTRtion - as< IR tho : : cacy and charm D) Tt N3y BT B 5 " 0 i ; A system of departments, therefore, is | to-day with acoreupt eity council, the | €Y and chi S e ;‘_l‘ »;ml,]_llmml_ "-"1" 1 woro doy ““Ill' colytes wero vory numerons, and the | gentlemen ropresenting the road. “Ihe | yorgorious sinee the whole administia: | fonn s head of o oty CONSUL GENERAL WALKER piends. Thore wis always o pian family | eelebration very Tong, and the boys bear- | blamed scoundrel Iaughed alittle when [ ot oot =is GF BIe SMIEARS | fonntam head of a city, =0 has also been entertaining some fricwds dinnor for them at Christinas, and u frolio the huge candles . They [ he heard “this, and after blowing the | O can it his Hngter on a e oty aiteror evslom of awunielnnl | with music. Am e 1o st wore M. afte rds. i was ys welcome V. 30,0 A 3 is N Eath 8 i I a 18 Zov ent is ade gotothe | Mrs, Frederiok ugrliss. 5 i fo “hoth. | /Lhere | waro mord SR, | X e eirest ordipors | when (he | G betier b e smpans (. that, | (FACE ILITOm (e moment of it futr dogs, mowmatter hotk “earofully’ ramud, | S0 Q0 donail onerid s e vory Or you will be left older—a whole brood of them, boys and | priests’ backs were turned, and some of | Down here seven miles L own 250 acres, [ HO7 21 its proper department to- the mo- fif honest men and tax piyers shirk ) tentive to Mr. Douglass, but our demo . girls bt wo throo wore e ospecial | them almost fell asleep o thir knees | and besides giving ‘the company fifty of | 11 EPTIE Bl dpesal, S easive | esponsibilitics of ezonship, The citi- | i ministor s bien somewhat shy of mates, Sie Witham Hareourt was my [ once or twice they enme near setting the | them, © will have severai lots left for my- 0 g Tan uncolves HneoIL iwlion Shoioontonis ORI e i e ] nim, although Mr.Douglass is u native of then, and ho came, tao, at Chiristimas, and | the most devout of all. Some of them | trade to-day.’ That ended the matter. T [ JIANS KHIGHINS fo Gnheriith 4 elts's | ounce gf mistule than to lose a”pound of | governor, But the’ distmguished ox- prought presents and lay on the floor and | erawled very ¢lose to the railing of the | reported pre s and the Oakopolis folks 3 4 nany | gain. For the day will come when s 1 of the District D i BRNEYI ARG RN Liere ) 1y | when marsh of Columbin hus gambolled with the boys. altar, and aé thoy knelt or_luy” on the | mado ready @ pull up stakes. Tho nest [ b Noles fo excpe dutootion tn wrong | pound of gain will b sweptaway by the | gt oo noglected hore socially, Soni: PIPAND PLUMP stepy scemod to guzo in a sort of religious | weels they wero buying corner lots from “Rit Sty A WL thawn inte, tho ser. | 70 Ofmirle. HGLTIER: ) o Schllior, the grent Fronoh aboli always returned my visit on Boxing day | trance; but for the rest the celebration | the rvailroad sharks at figures about twice joe of the city as the dig of tho 8 O, a by e N = tionist, hus had him at akfust; i after Cliristmas, and of late | was more of a feast than a solemnity. | as high as they themselyes had asked for \‘,f.'.,,,:;,". t:l,l‘,”‘,‘:l m|,\‘,',.\”:‘:‘ ,',,{.,l.h“ fuste | cOL "',‘“ AND COLDS COME UNI? THEODORE TILTON PER CENT years almost a greater festival in England | Not & 1ew were eating nuts or bon-bons, | the Jots which they had tried to bribe atomit to stand an eloction whoraitiaie | FAEED, bupyou'e 1uickl, s given a little party in his honor than Chiristmias itself, We had a Junciy | and Lsaw wore thun one man-on the | tiose infernal robbers with.” deliciency to control o responsible do. | Jaw Wik ifew doses af b : M. Fredorle Dacay, Uio political, ocong: and suandragon afterward, and o Cheist. | outskitts of the crowd with o lighte Nt TR L T T iy s T o Lung Baln | mist and deputy his. entertained him at | : 5 mas tree, and they stayed titl dark, which [ ¢lzar. The music did not scem 10 me Betrayed by a Button, TP e it ~;~u“|‘.1 ko - dinnor; Pere Hyacintho bas lovited him Madeon money invest comes very soon in England n De- | any better than usual; and at last somo [ o o p 0 0 B L SE Qenrtments. destroys the' power. and to tea; und the other night u certain i in ¢ Sember, mid then we werk 1o % nante. | ont in the organ loft imitated the erow. | St- Louis Republican: “One of the bes i A PRINCE IN GREENLAND. well-todo lady of the Ameriean colony | €4 in these lots in 3 L 6 8 0 okt imital o s S 4 prominenc y council; that mod X H g s mime. Forat all the London theatres, [ i of w cock.” Then the bells rang i tho | laid schemes to do murder,” says Mr. A, | Prominenco of a city wouncily that ol wo u large recention” to Mr. and Mrys AL A T aonmsi Vhiel | waldemar's Summer Ceaise Among | Donglass. Phis rather origingl hostess, 4 duck the Giunt Killer, or some other | cannon wore fired i the siroots, the | b, merest chiance in the Kellog-Hess | nite qualifications as finaneiors and s | When the Bulgariansofiored the throne and play s Galle Niop Gagk, '8 RogTOSK A 9 (‘l‘\«h"l:.l(ll‘l.x;' :-'ll.lr'.-“,'.'.?\li.:i.‘!.fi:»'r"p % X‘_""'" People walked home through the strects | Opera company, years . when Mr, | legislitors, and yet who have supreme | of their principahity to Prince Wildem “:::““: Jurlor, and I\l\uflm;:l.;u;:uit:;] Price $250 to $500. and even opera, give why to this en- | to supper, and the boys who- helded the | Carlcton was the baritone of that organi- | COBirol of “a eity ann, g rhoab: | of Duniuarl, the howspupers. repartod | molodios, This wis & puro cuss of nican: ainment, ostensibly provided for tho [ candles were doubtless glad it was overs | zation. A certain artist playing promi- | 1117 1L\ e, Bowers "holitios | selves at Cannes, but. the el was not | i€ well. But what a luck of taste. It T E children, but which the elders find it [ not o say some of the priests, for a few | nene roles was suspe member of | and of machine polities that the tepart: | meationed (hat the prince had et v | WS much as if one asked Garibaldi, in | 1 €TMS Lasy, necessary to superyise in very large num- [ scemed to me very nervous and tired the chorus_ with paving altogether 100 | ment system overthrows ; turned from a visit to Greenland, He | Sombany.his opinion on the manufacture bers. 1 confess that Linvited half the [ On Christmas day, 1 dined with the | much attention to the chorister’s wife,and [ " /The cauens, the. political clubs, would | sailed north of the Arctie cialein e | of “tallow dis, " or Louis Philippe,when ) ohildren of my acquaintance in turn, sad | Governor-General, “His wife, the artist was duly warned by his friends | no longer fix slates for the clection of an | last as the third oflicer on the steamer, | K& whether he found giving' Frenel Title Perfect. thus went the round of the pantomie. A SUMPIUOUS BEAUTY, to keep u close wateh on tha movements | ldernian or councilman whoi . city | sent ont by the Danish (Govermmt lessons harder than ruling the Freneh I taught Pipand Plump' to hang up [ and thorough womnn of the world, pre- | of the husband, ' One evening, as he was | council o longer. holds the kess of it | o stientific medion. Zonloets mad™om | men. JOSEPIINE, shelr stockings for the delizntful _legend | sided; there were one or two other Span- | pussing across the stage o fiis drossin | Fonnge and of disponing oiie iy | Baciontific mission, Zoologists and botc e For sale by of St. Nicholas is unknown to Enghsh | ish ladics present, but none of the Cuban | room, Tie chanced to” hear one of thic | councitman would no. lotger bo @ bone | alons the west 6onst of (iroen il toueh A Now Way to Pay Old Debs. children. To many a little friend have 1 | party in polities, for feelin n high aud | wardrobe women suy to another that | of contention wmong politicians when | ing at all the little settlements, collecting Lsee that the mail car along with reeited the exquisite lines. the Creoles retused to enter officiul so- | there were buttons oft all the soldier uni- [ his hands are taken out of the taxpay- | many specimens of the yarions forms 65 | 8everal passenger eonches was burned up CTwas the night before Christmas, | ciety. The palace is a stately building | forms. ers’ pocket, Bribe-givers would not seck | life in the const waters, and also of the | the other night on the Milw 1 at when all through the house,” and always | with large marble walls, all opening on w, as the hu d was to be o t & out the aldermen for yaluable franchises | flora and fauna of the great island, whicn | # little stution called Rio and all the mail to rapt and attentive listencrs. In return | tie strect or the inuer courts, und balws | a file of Soldiers whose duty it was to tive | when he no longer has the power of vot- | is not 56 desolate us sore people injaging. | destroyed.” “You don't tell me! Where they explained to me the mysteries of [ and huge shrubs placed around; the | a volley of shots at the ? ein, l’C EI . . ’ there is @ pantomine at Christmas, | ehoir, triangles jingled, all sorts of noisy | H. Canby, of the Carleton Opern com- founded on Aladin, or Cinderella, of | demonstrations "called’ musie followed, AT rtist as he made | e them awnbge! soen o gy i hed Upernavik the st | was it bound#” “Going north to Minne snupdragon, and darkened the room | rooms were rather bare in furniture, but | his cscape up a roc g, (10 abaonce | inpod ol 1. Itk A et | agrier seanhed, Uncsnavik, ihe mash | M oodRs O aaias after luneh and came in with sheets and | not unhandsome in efieet; the windows | of the buttons—little balls of steel—soon pensing powers, a ety council would | middle of July, just as the Arctic sum. | Good! good!” od! what on earth is Wwhitered faces to terrify me. while the | wide open for coolness; the lights blaz- | awakened suspicion in hismind, Before v e . J blue flames of the brandy were blazing. | ing; the people stff and and i1l st ease, | the gurtain went up on the net in which At one of these frolics I had excent the host and hostess and one or | this incident occurred, he went to the the family of departments settlement, thriving in the perpetual day- | 1've promised to send it to him till he MIiS. NELLIE GRANT SAKTORIS two of their inmates. But the company | property man and isisted on having the [ A blow would be strick. at the prosent | Hght of the s soncmcrPptialdays | Gonl tako promises any longer.s and her eldest child, then achubby boy [ Was interesting, and 1 spent many a | eharges in the chorister’s gun examined. | system of district or ®ard clections since | depths of the sea fronting Upernavik their | What's that got to do with it “Every U n e[ [ [] ) purge itself and take its place as are- | mer was opening. They found many | theregood about it “Why,you sce [ owe spectable exponent of ward interests in | flowers on the rocky hills about the littie | & man i Minneapolisa little amount,and of three years old, to meet my English | pleasant hour with the Governor-General | The lirenrnr was taken from the hus- | peads of departments would be electoc drag nets brough! ) 4 i rie of | thing, everything. TI'li go right ofl now R e AR . e of Cuba wnd tho Marquesi de Vittoria de | band's'finds, sgd whon the load wa fleacs of doparimants would be ol olod | dehe nol hougUb up & sieh sariaty of |2 AIRTERINE | ol K. HUGE GEAaN dressed in white, with white furand white | las a Tuus, drawn oue of the buttons was found | resentatives would be eleeted by their re- | algae, o species of sea plant. Early shoes; his hair was long and flaxen, and MY LAST IMPORTANT CHRISTMAS rammed down undera wad. One button | spective wards September the party were home again in | that Isent him last-last- what day did we christened him “Father Christmas,” | was a sad one indeed. In 1884 I was | bad been cut from every umform so asto By the method of devartments and | Copenbugen d b you say that mail car was burned " ashe stood under my green tree and | staying at General Grant’s house to help | coneeal the positive proof that the missile | cleation at lavge, no longer would « few As a rule the scions ot royalty prefer - 1509 FARN M TREET picked off' the bon-bos and oranges, und | him iu the preparation of his memoirs, | eame from the husband's g Had that | hundred, or at most & few thousand experiences than a eraise in Aretic CROUPY SUFFOCATIONS, NIGHT blew out the candles. When I tirst saw [ I went ' af to him in- October, but befora | been fired and proved fatal, no evidence | voters of a ward b eut off from. the reet | wators. and Wallen bel - H I 5 ote a ward be eut of 0 sters aldemar is believed to b COUGHS wnd all the common - affections his mother, a little girl of eight or nine, | Christmas it was certain that ve could [ but the thinnest of circumstantial tesn Ma & P of the city to elect its spéciul representa- | the first representative of any of the royai | of the thro ungs quickl . playing in front of Tier fatier's tont ai | not recover from the' cancer which had [ mony could haye conneeted the true mor- [ ive to a ity coutet] i which imeomme. | fouilioe ) fantative of |.‘.,‘l Rl f g i KN o8 I|‘. i e L‘i,.‘{ Room 9, Redick’s Blook ity Poiut, Llittle th ught Lshouid ever | doveloped itself: Suili the fumily bavdly | derer with the tragedy,” it aud disbohest men 0o uftvn are | north of the Aretic cirelo, J Buim. 46 cents u botle, » Zund F¥Floor. in | docsn't send a receint for that money

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