Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 30, 1887, Page 12

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DON'T GET EXCITEDI We are Still in the Ring and Have got the Best of all the Best Additions. =T1IPT1ON FLACES= We are not selling any outside additions or starling any young towns or establishing any railroads, but come to the front with Good Honest Down Town Real Estate. We have no grudge against the people here and intend to give them value received for their money. There are additions laid out all around Tipton Place, and sold last summer for $500 to $700 each, We don’t wear plug hats and blow about the advice we have given; our overcoats don’t button high enough for that. There is a fine, elegant, new $5,000 schoo! house on the ground, three stores just across the street, about 40 houses already built, and 47 already contracted to be kuilt by July Ist, and various other improvements. We Have Placed these Lots within reach of everybody, only $350t0$500 Each I-56 cash and I-6in six ronths, and the balanceinland 2 years at 8 per cen'. The boom is with us, and you will double your money ins'de of three months. Free carriages to show the property. - - > 0 m e e - e = — DEN_PICTD E N l N Y | Leo XIII, « reputation for avarice nh N tom ever gots through this . stratum, it ‘ i towever tragieal they may have been, | scope; he throws aside the stiff collar of PEN-PICTURE OF THE POPE, |k Xtthrrnuiatin oravagee e | YADAY ML LR MILITANT. | S ot o vanehin therwomen | IRLATRES THAT ARE T0MBS, ostits, nitth all, bACA modioum of HOL | Foutine, acd o1 GYOY. BarL be Satss 4 popé miven maro than LwoXI1L. accord: | who m i T S por | e v us moderns, The | brim full of squibs, flashes and sky- g to his resource He keeps nothing | bear the burden of life. play wasl it at the Odeon, where | rockets Any other house except tha Count Vasali Describes the Head of the {"fi "il"“"!'f- and his way of ‘-\‘1"'-’ 1smore | A Sensible \u»w an Du:rn War Agais An o i "l"!" of a !"‘"i' in | Declive of Drz'n.\.n }]xu-lhute in French | :’:‘»qulll:l“ is i ‘“unlwukl'u than at the 1"4; wter-Francais, where the spectators T Ol ike thatof a country curate than a pre- A ¥ E on, who is well known in high . necic B il Roman Catholic Ohurch. late. It is lucky that ctiquette makes the | tie Byils of Fashion. Ay, both in this country and in Authors and Actors. Prejudi < supreme at Moliere's CBRAVAY INSTEAD OF “BiAvO!" pope invariably cat g ; S - - | Evrope, who was favorably im- | — house in the Rue Richeliew. Tts patrons | woutd find such seting delizhtful; hut the SCHOLARLY, SINCERE, SAINTLY | would have but meagre chieer. His gar- | « pURDENS UPON THEIR BACKS." | pressud with the dr which PLAYERS' PREJUDICE AND PRIDE, | Ar¢ what in the seventeenth century were | roquenters of that rare old mummifiod U + | ments cost him not nuns make h Mrs. Miller wears them, very artistie. called “honest tolk i BOW | sanctuary would stigmatise it s vul robes for him, and m it a spe Ihe lady ealled upon Mrs. Miller one day, T |8 ociety.” The 1X goes 2 Wisdowm of His Words—1ossessed of a | honor and privileg the pious la 1fort and Neatness Without Dans | and after sit , she 1 1 | No More Trag Heroism—Love Ex- | ina body tothe Institute, and religiously Mrancere f; 160 ¥ f the whol 1 look to i [ | listens to the academical discotrses of Fheod srratgerol and sinco ithon Great Mind—His A ranc of e whole ook to it zer to Hes “The Di T ell, 1q t ressed by Clock-Work—Co- HLONBILC prathLy o0 SO0 i Theodora, and you will at once under- Gt 5 Saretan his wardrobe is never lacking in gox socHanlihIhoibissusted On Mrs. M I ause of her T A CE T M SiDhEs i “ oo Sey te With | stundhe diforence betwoen conventional gharityand:Mongroilnoome calotes of white silk, in velyet Washington Iady—Harvard disgrust, i o | quclinfthe Greatlrenon it consists in seeking none but average | w3 o weths i —Always Clerical, worked with gold thread, and in girdle Annex For Girls, | 7 Well, here I 1 st s cor- Stage Notes, imp lwon\ D uwlm-‘ has the right to | L TR, STy al s embroidered with his arms, None of = s, and in the most say of eve g that is wearisome: | SO, WL R ¥ & v : av which comoes inta Y ds | ti ide e ~ “[low beautiful!”" proyided of my own country, I think I may Pams, Jan. 9 —[Correspondence of the [f:f"":‘fi»‘],'i““‘lh v‘lvl‘l“‘."‘,,,\"',',,lv’w'm Ronds OO TNt a0 ot aanont oice ot e LIV CeC iRk o | Pamis, Jan. 14.—[Corresponddice of | D e ',”:m.,“"i majority” of thosc whio By ~The nimble pen of the mysterious | 1il"e nophow, Stha! hnndsome | the Bir—In these days of reform, | of the dross notice me.” | the BEE]—A careful merchant, at the | Author, artistes and public are all hand- | {onsyiite the Trench wation do not como diplomatist who hasanulyzed, in the Paris | Camille , seareely amounted 10 oo | women dringing themselves more ) nov Mrs. Miller, | end of each year, draws up an inventory, | in-glove in this mutnal understanding. | gt ST i of pomnte Nouvelle Revue, the society of several d franos, W 1']" fEsoenn 'S | and more into noti successful work- | Jausl ave o fear of | and the balance-sheet shows the amount | To such as se m\fm! in its Inluw(‘um «(1-111 shoes. Nor shall [ msidered oye - Enropean capitals, and who pro E X ) S with so little Jut ey g S b | being cons ||u|mu ' vere | siness done by his house. ay stirring manifestations, the Comedic bold o 1} > :M.‘ s .I'.w s Iumlurm' o the sars | Leo XIIL spends. liberally for re-cstab- | vd Tam inehned to give them most arbitrarily dr ) yisi- | l,“ bu llx;‘ lon .' ‘Ilt“w I.) m]_«l e ll(. mx._\ T T L SR e Fe ‘::“' “n‘v\“ o th this maujority, sk for Now ' York and Washmeton, | lishing the prestige of his~ court, for the | more eredit for their excrtions in the re- | plo change in you, Yo ; i bo weil for us to audit in a_like manner | oxprossion—is a mera ncoropolis. Lknow | fohiat Mo sketchios the pope in e bourse of b du. | free schools of Rome, for the 8 m of which L am about to write, than | & wowan as ever,” the French drama for the year 1886, and | full well that it is eustomary 1o speak of g ption of Rome and the Romans. [ ih Bernhardt as ‘. les for its exis ers, T ; and dies, even for the Catholic'press. The 1 us | ina certain other line of what 1e of TiE IIARVARD ANNEX ascertain what pre ave mi its company of actors is the first in the ]":I\"y‘!:‘:";’llll’lll ' fecl 4 if'fl i Or p 1} | i instit ( ) v le is 9 T ; . wvorl 5 "o 0 I fi |3 -~ L s LA, assages which will be ot "f':'“ ¥ ! day the | the dear women themselves would call institution about, which Nittle s | for in the dramp moro espe [Pronidessihlyimaydotizin |”1">‘ '”|”1“'” beings of flesh and ble nd not wooden ity of rar ey Sy e L 5 compared with other femalc ) admit the fac Sut Ishould pre- | 561" Bug the ' ANBAIA A A0 (x ey for churches, hospitals, 4-(u oy remain mal institutions of the & , hke 50 many more who d to say | lhullu:r.mlm tradition tends to Lo 0 3 als, ; o e 3 A S Y | that & work shall itself to psas il 2 of woman's dress s an old | One reason for this is oungr, | of our country, o comp: HF secont J | ¢ ilent only conc n subsidics 1 na ress 1s an reason for this is th L | the truth, o company of second rank it it | yyiionality of umiversal distinction. Do . o surdonical smil 1 irrever- eyt i : S which he néver refi c 4 - ts of labor in refc o ut its seventl 1y this po . “perhaps did | would only by 4 ',m h ve oven called 1t Voitairian, Tho | Which he never refus 5 10 jou un s whe ¢ of Tabor in reforming but venth yo | ut why this postul 4 I would only betray a little more of that | puople ever seream, r TN Gy editors he likes, and who serve his poli 1 5 v g but old. After much | v g B that no publi | lic At the risk of being ealled a pes rancese so long the glory of our | {20 0y mid; isnll well and priests who don’t belong to Rome s o o i I BF Min Y o fraadom. of tholr with docility, ostigation and many sensi- | D "‘ been made by it, by which the gencral | ist, and notwithstanding all the inte BRIOEAs i classes. The re as the Pope Voltnire. A Freneh writer IS INCOME 18 NOT VERY LARGE, St ity mtelligent talks upon this | PUPNE could learn its plans and pur | paylians take i their theaters, the < hoaristejofiithecBomadipnie ‘ pertory of ‘the ‘Theater-Francais i in consecrated Voltaive king. 1f it be true The funds have a triple origin. Pius ot Annie Jennees Miller has | ' e nnnaxors el an in | 10 denying the fact that the level of dra- | (50 D tended to sweeten tears, * soften rather divided the honors | IX. leftin the pontifical treasury acap- | mot with considerable encourazement | stitutic arrvied on under ‘the dire | matie works now produced is becoming | funetion: :\Uf:‘fl“lm’l\ ‘l'.. wl :[‘w 0. “u < olly fulse, in which alone a are ch hands still exhibit & certain expertne th Louis XV, or with | ital which yields an _annual income of | ; It oty for the eolieginte | pereeptibly lower, If “Chamilac” and a : ‘ truction of women, It is | “Parisian” jnsteause forapprehen- | clerks wid supcrnumor I'he whole ’ but one that, hanpily, is o dead letter f e t, it cunnot bo said | about threo millions of francs, ‘Lhis eap- |41 not 1 little success, It roquires 1 that he has yet heew clevated tothe honor | ital is pluced in- solid state bonds, It is | htthe observation toreverl the many ey 1 R vor rily i | o would be called g EioE ardow’s “Crocodile’ at | Mmachine works |ym]h(<!|]\ ,»‘unn-v.hl‘r" | the rising gencration, Sos what bocome 1ot Lion of the (L Irederick's | oyan of Richepin, +of the tiara. The photographs are de- | purcly for speculation that the holy | entailed upon woman and ner pro o), and young girls wh WHO OUT-HERODS HEROD 1IN AUDACITY, | perhaps did Jie, the best literary qualities | I 4 con e coptive. Leo X111 is not in the leastlike | father subseribes so Ly to Italian | by ymproper modes of dressings It is an | a college course to learn ow to dress, | the Porte-Suint Martin has put an end to | 4 rs, or 1 tho munner of those | Voltaire, and his broad smile has nothir loans. He resells the stocks as best he f » X (i i1all oy 1 w ow 1 that [ ] : - SN ant S5 < ks 1 © | acknowledged fuct that women-wear such | and to becowe accustomed 1o that sort of our hopes, and we now learn that a | i bullets wherein love is expressed hideous about it. Itis, ont the contrary, n, and puts the profits into English ) ril | y Emil i v Vs worl vl K i bj ¥ary benovolo B ond il : 0. vt s back as to bring untold | 11fe which 1s generally led by a dashing | new play by Emile Augier, which was lock-work gestu when he sinks toa subject like that of very benevolent, unctuous, and roya! consols, In an ave y St Peter’s S i “ s ) “ 5 N7 TR TR LE S SORsR RPN ATCEAER YeaR s "‘I'“'" iy syatem, and the only | Young ludy, choose Vassar or Lase | Jooked forward to with confidence, has ONE, TWO THREE+1-LOVE-YOL .\x'r,,.‘...\.. Seapin for s pl distil the honey of academic eloguence | duces n sum nearly equal to the meome | hope for their future and that of thoir ":'}If.“;\”l‘.';r‘-“.:"'\‘.‘[‘;“f\-.nwu [esishoplpstinemont dhocn® ndofinlialy lx”L""-'”'"f' pioy aihe Khosirediiaor “i A r'flfil B e somewhat slowly, a littlo Bounded, but’| from Pius IX.'s capital, ‘The six millions | postority s, to throw off the thraldom of | 15 looked upon s a standing joke by col- | Postponcd ; Whosls anl soeings. of whish aro of tho | &man of talont, s iwenty or mors | PARIII0G. by Daa o ot | Constitute the yegular budget of tho pon- | wuhealthtul and ungracoful dress, and the other sex, who, ar | The factis that we are seeking our | g e "escription: 10 work prop. | Dlays at the Paluis Royal and elsewhe noy, tho vinogar of rofined ‘malice, th | nuo 15 used for the extraordimuny mileny. I will allow the 1 cause to think that the w sa [ way, Are we likely to find itr Much | erly, the whole must fit niecly und run | Show aclose insight into character and 5 t 0.08 Hiea 10y tho extraordinary budgof, 8 5 4 ey v | rendezyvous for very e literary | depends on anthors and the pubhe; on the | along without jerk or friction Il o uble ati Ie took into 1 1 lik 1 1 1 ) I hons mots that sound like cannon shots. | 1t comes from the profits of the apostolic | Perfect freedom of all purts of the body, | AR ns only. v e i e e L o, writc ) The fi(‘:m‘u’«(l\;nln(rvulj lvlr»‘MlI \Hl“xvlh‘ illmull\ln\ and amounts to about two | Assuming that W drones at the annex Inttor nerhaps mozg: than.on the former | day ";u‘(';u; n.lw tukes m”“.‘\' fon l wisian Now, the Pari queer B 0! wose lively, biting, sprightly | and one-half mullions of fra mually THE LEADERS OF FASHION to fr Tar 3 Lo} oy ty i soulinr) fist 3 TR R AR R (R by . annually. 1 ¥ oEA i1y so vom Hary EOIIAl slips itinto n lock, twists itto | type, of a peculinrly dis nctive cluss Rinees, ol holgwvalod o ¢ AL AT 0ok 00. Utk i}}“‘u“”"‘“‘l‘v“““'“ -are to be blamed for many of the exist ge, although the instruction and worn out public attention vt 100, ] n o' vening wo set | The Pariian belrays o strange mixture of his public discourses, for an unexpeeted “Loo X1I I ing evils. Mrs. Miller has songht and given by the Harvard professors THE GREAT WORKS OF J1U( [ izl the same g me of '~" nd soft suwder in his antithes1s, an ingen1ous play upon words, 00 1L wishes to leave bohind the | obgained audience among this cl Her b Upilding of its own nonr the | and those of his imitators, by ing | at the same moment s on the da " position: he is as much of u gumin a3 A bright image. Al is measured, solemn, | Memory of a gr o' wishes || oot o Al £ 1 g o there ar ation rooms | povond measure the nerve of ay- | tay, smile at the cntic w0 in everyday life. The Parisian Ly N Rl e, 0! Spo in emedy 0 1C 1 disus Ol 0 agxr ane boratorie it 1 mst co 2 A 1 ( ) 8§ squanders three t s more tal I ovatorical, The political imitation whicli | that thi pontifci pont within | #linncn = 30 akrer | and lpborator Ruriy pust ool ve superinduced @ terror of th 1 walk up and down the st liandars 1hreo Unias moxe Fiialily thinp m"‘“”“_ Y S M the enclosure of a palace, this despoiled ation of long skirts so unive ly worp, | legiate year, thirty-ty and col e % ER @ an inch from i the averige man does, both y ours: dotricts aomewhat from. the | pontiicate, may survive in visible and | with an almost endless plication of | leges ha nt wom . making a ever befove, perhaps, was it | joaten path and intellectuall superior quality of his Latin style, is durable works, and transmit the name of | loops, pulls and vnneeessa weights uty & s this year | clearly felt how nearly the sublime bord 1 certainly astomsh a great many | and withal disere ol drawn from puce and tranquil ¢ the pontilt which the fashion of the day demands, | tiinst fifty-fy s J n otesque, and the spectator rsons when | say tbat the Comedie- | m-w‘ 8. bl :u\l- sioal sources. He has sought after fine TO THE ADMIRATION OF POSTERITY As an example of what onr women ou f l‘ o l'l'“”“'" I,\“‘“;' T 1'{;:””:\4 R wa himsalt to b oor A i‘; A 'H';‘I’v}‘\ Mhoaters to. | hum e i not for wit, Fl¢ bopo's Pri- | Tho ceiling of the hall of the Candel. [ 1 bo, Mrs, Miller points to the women of | 110 SUSIUEY il ! wd pro- | away by turgid sen wards the di e drinin i Erance, | 710 SO0AL PIENONENA OF TIE W : s speeches, | uhra tos Ih frosco the grent events of | sncient cee, whose exquisite beauty | MY ory and high sehg constantly | pompous language. The reaction which | /i Jove of licial, the affected and | | | v "'“.""_'«'l:;“‘;l;""ll" unetion, | the pontiticate; the apothaosis of Suint | 4 ulr‘-:y‘|(lruul.lr.:.l».‘».q\.‘i‘llg odels for » RSOy U rom the annex | has set in bogan with the operetts, and | tho precious which proéminently distine | Lferviment i iy, bl own 0 ’l:‘;m"m“{ i | Fliomas i Aquinias, over which Leo X1, e fvanpture which isacknowl ™ | 1o truin candidatos for its classes and for | yow finds its more suitable expression n | guishes that ' wnps out all spirit | pared w o manfostations in S are : 3ut, behind this ”l'l::‘\”pn«(i)“. .t':f;.\."l A:::lu‘ INJI‘III‘N Rt e A e |I‘l“,lf<;:w‘{’-l ox i “‘;m:,‘:“ T"I‘n‘v[lluhl‘ | the comie play. I do not say in comedy, | ”u_l deadens & catness. Who, among | rest of mankind; his wit, his spee seeming wediocrity, there is a policy. | ot mrentmone CAn At Stor. | beauty does not lie in the modern f: PEMOAT: A0 1R e W | for peoplo ‘st prosent care less | 110 YOUDRE Wrilers of our would of retort, 15 oftentinmes brut O TR R AR Len X1 [ pobe, 4 ustrian mas T 1 4 to take the positions offered; still, . " | think of offering for produc at the Ays (0 th tihe is devoted 1o b RPIEIUA €0 &1 Herr Scidl, has e ppointed thus to | 1on plate but in ‘[“ ideal dre which | | sohools 'of izl grade have beon | for o study of manners than for | fhomte Biuncnts by rioh i th pas | SoLays to the ) RURUIS Much s\angor 1o poliiles and in | glarity " flle sovercign pontil, -~ Alus! saeid dollow fe JUlerot tha. ody. and supplig with ek from the anues | complicated plot wherein & setof | sionuto outbirsis of wolirn' i R B P 1 Yl B THE POIE'S APPEARANCE alhough Loo X {“{ o suocessor, Ra- | G0 308 008 A A bhe requira: | durini the year ANz St | persons justly surprised to meet | thougit s it not, above all, necessary | Gompound of vil in & fra 3 W u chae. zelo have one! 0 08 e ol equire r o ] l \ s sho Cu i Il ” 5 not loss golemn than hus speech. His | 100N 11 Gntonde o artanl, picave BOne! | ents of health and fre it is neither S —— - each other are brought together, like | 11 it M ns should apj beto ous body jondinet portr form, which is 50 spare that he uppears | Victor work - than. that. e 2 & | Lrly nor monotonons but issusceptible to A Very Good Iusban | 50 many puppets in a show, and | footlig i | a Parisian for t \se or the Vaid talior than o veally s, disappears ‘en- | U0, WO P b 00 8 € o ondless variety of modifieations. 1t | Washington Critie and jostled in compuny. A per X | ¢ theaters ) tirely beneath rich stufls and in the folds | o¢"&"™& N ot (i | may be trimmed and draped in a thous- | £00d husbund to me e nd the wost imurobak 7 lanu £ of of his heavy red mantle; his long arms | Supicet of sonyoreat Aral. and s, and it will be beautiful, as [ Brown, several years HILJORH0 ARG VS ) ole for ML Fet tremulously v these oumbrous | 1 him than the reelial of tha o long as the exquisite, continuity of its | the worthless, “drunken fe liow i the | cidents provoke laughter, aud people ask ssume th druperics, and, from a_ habit wigeh bas, | (0t than the recital of the » proper lines are presorved. Artists could | Erave, for something to at. Has life, | or for the an during » course of hisalready long | {1 R S P S SIS, BUC | JeO8 | oxecute their costumes and make Ilu-m | o Why," exclaix ler - friend ' t hen, grown to be s in its sober | like the pret pontii ]hmm'\n 1.-.;.;\1 nature, the ¥ T P Ty s wueh more beautiful than the dre :wliy.v‘h-wlw(nl i ith you during | o1ty that the 1 phantoms must | Whose are always half extended for the bestows 4 which be Tist ten years of | Such a'tro the inguguration will bring him one of . ) Jhed | needs be called in to supply that fund of 1 of an ample benediction. It is pitiful to ) NOW GIVE OUR 8 s v, v That's why I say what I do,”* sighec to that ¢ ) ) the oh oys of his r NOW VE O TYLISH WOMEN J : g SR o . o seo the poor bloodloss hauds imprisoned | ¢ 10 & an appearance w is neither human | the widow, and went o to praise the | gaiety which N matter-of-fuck oxlalovow | whom 4 8 8 ! or al nty diilerent k wmittens uh‘u h o n‘. I\»lu ; Joachim Pecei has belonged to the | vor divine. Our fine modern fabries l,mmm..-“x 50 urgently needsy ) ‘ vedd i Hent in .“.‘ way, but the @ not fat replete hands | church from ids rlie rs. He | could be made into costnmes to which, - - AS FOR TRAGIC HERC nzel wha ! ind only type we had been led o ¢ like those of prelatos contented with | has never known the life of the world, as | for simple beauty and true grace, “the \\ 8. Ligon died the ther evening at just us the adorable Reichembery, those of Sixtus V must have | Pius IX. did be 3 red th fashionable dresses of to-day \\H\l' 1 bear gusta Ga, A idence is noticed 1n ) 2 of & soldier like Julius II; | orders Ho 3 has Lived | o comparizon. Mrs. Miller gradu [ m Conneotion which will congrm some T ) b udsof the writer | and remained cle ad witl die pope. | ate of the Monroe College of Oratory in | people in their superstit Mr. and artist, thinko! Th re nearly always | To his thinking, as for many Roman and this eity Her lecture in Wesle hall { Mrs. C. A, Doolittle e ained com i ©oid. voldor than the great sapphire gar- | other ~ecelesiustics, the order of this | on *“Ihe Principle of Correct z puny of visiting fricnds from upper Caro. | verse which | nished with brilliants which they offer to | world is founded upunlho predominance | was received with much enthusi insm. » | lina, and it was observed at the time that | gance and Racine in its ‘l.hlnn u-u‘\ and jokes go well witn the t jon, is" in real shipper s Kiss; they never respond | of a caste, that of the clergy: this is the | appeared in a dress made after hor own | thirteen people were at the table. Mr. | floridness, in vain would she gladly cateh | cont and opera hat. But you ‘would be | dramain France. However deeply to be )y friendly pressure to the respectful | gov 2 class: the other, the lay por- eas of correct dressing, and it was both | Ligon the thirteenth to titdown - He | our ear in favor of the Muccaboes; the mished to sce low road he regretted the fact may be, it is well to tonch of the visitor tion of ||u~ world, is the governed” elass; coming and momanly. 1t is the fash- | was in fine spirits all the eveming, and ,.m lic is justly of opinion thut the Mac ide aftected distinet 100 1 his_hol eall attention to it, in the hope that the . NONE MORE CHARITABLE p the one commands and mauipulates af- | ionable women who are trying to stir up | next morni \“., discovered dead in | cabees have long zone to thewr hon A when acting in provin thing way not go on foreyer *Phere. has been an effort to give | fairs the other obeys.” the matter of dress reform, If the cus- | bed. 0! A graves, and their udyentures, | His talent at once atlains & more .uu,.wl JULES LERMINA, LB e adopt those methods w It is evident that romanticism has tived sentiment couched in veason 1o hope that b the public will have none of it just eall ¢ of everythin remaing afailure on that account. In vain & | om : b SN Ardugions. and, 1l | estimable lady indited page u fter pag: | ni It ) loon « And thus it is that th Gutrivals Corneille in buskined e i rry qu being the object of

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