Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 18, 1887, Page 13

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v t THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER I8, 1887.—~TWELVE PAGES. R e gt mee frt seromy sgews oot | FOUND AND LOST A FORTONE in Florence, Italy, by Mr. A. Schuyler Crosby, who was then United States con- face was constantly wreathed in smiles h which seemed to fill the gloomy ocourt- sul at that place, says the Indianapolis Journal. One day he was oonduotinf .l room. She was happy, bashfuliy, pal first wife of Mr. Pike was the daughter of ex-Mayor Savage by his first wife. The second wife of = Mr. Savage was the sister of Mr. Pike, The son married last week was INCIDENTS OF NATRINONY. An Every-Day Btory—Wedded ot puplls left school last weel In th some blacks had put in an a| noe. cabinet, divlomatic eorps, 'Freneh guests, Pproj in some towns 3 colored | clety of Cincinnati, Grand Army of the schools open by calling them hnnefi schools. | public, and Legion of tHonor are to _be President McCosh announcea that certain | Xited. A committee consisting af A fellowships recently established at Princeton | Starin. pon flmllnzlt‘h?t utumn of 1888, The prosident g s " Tough Struggle of the Discoverer of the Miller, J. A. Marvin, Edwi party of Americans through the princi born of the second marriage, and became | surreptitionsly happy—and she looked + Wempl gr 'g'u , and G W, Gounty Fair. places of interest in the city, and among | the husband of the daughter of Mr. Pike whlu,lfi Troth behind hor stalwart lover's New York 0il Fields. T S e R oren whe appointed 4o Taries the roqdest oF THE HOW S—— tAh'u x:Lnecou vitlited was ll‘e lnn;ne l!f:‘lul}lll. gy his first flnml?‘ke" ’l;’lmnh exiM-vor arm. e! wanted to b: dm!:fled- T;hfl — colleges. "This is in further. development ot w({vlnl)mv;‘r‘:l‘xl S R A (BN H. party was going thre t rother-in- Iaw; | divorce suit was suspended at once, for th oy alt Whitman's bust has been taken SCHILD WEDDING. | o e e of the fnmates of the Instithe | eR-Mavor SAvAGe'S daughts, Uy the court will stop unmaking marriages [ O+ P. TAYLOR'S RISE AND FALL. {he fiec'y Sohieme recsntly adopied OF | o, fil3 & Morse, of Hosion, afid nis n-Mgor sung; daughter, by marry- ing Mr. Pike, came sister-in-law to her own father: Young Joseph Snvnfie. being the son of Mr. Pike's sister, 18 his nephew; being the half-brother of Mr. Pike's first wife, he is also his brother-in- law, and by bls marriage last week to Mr. Pike's daughter, became his son-in- law, Thus Mr. Piks is uncle and brother- tion suddenly called outto Mr. Crosby: *'Oh, sir, you are an American, are you not? For God's sake come here and lis- ten to mf story,” Mr. Crosby went to the cell from whence the gl(eonu appeal came, and saw before the bars a woman much emaciated but apparently sane. He listened to her story, and, after mak- to mnka'one nt‘ an; ;lme. The cerclfiony — was performed. The young man drew outa # bl und_ placed it~ bofora the | HOW the Plucky Old Man Pashed For- jmlgeil W-tthlho brm(l:t:at ""l"}fi andls ward Over Obstacles and Died speech as gallant as a Chesterfield coul make ho presented it to the bride. The AL little lady accepted the money, and with coess. n quick, graceful movement she drew The Home Journal of September 7 con- | length portrait by young Herbert H. Gilehrisl tained & vory useful feature, a “School | of London. Thomas Eakins proposes Guide,” glving the “points’ of many leading | paint him also, and it has long been the in- | schools in New York and elsewhere. Lt tells | tention of Augustus St. Gaudens to of the different branches taught, the names Ikeness. So that, in addition to the en= of prmclrnum overy case, the terms, loca- | Rravings and photographs with which the tlon—-in fact, all particulars and information | 'g0od eegy poot" hias boen caruful to add which a parent or guardian would desire to | his publffied works, there will be a host know. The guide seems to have been pre- | likenesses of him as he appears in old age. Married and Imprisoned~An Actress’ Wedding — Love Trinmphant— Bashful Bridegrooms — Scenesat O1d Trinity. An Everyday Story. ing inquiries, set himself to work to pro- | to his son-in-law; and the recent bride, | the boquet of roses from her bosom and “ 3 pared with exceeding care, and, so far as we e George Weatherly. ctito her release, in which he_sucoocded | Mrs. Joseph W, Savage, is cousin and thodqn before the judge. With a bow | p, M‘ s’:“l‘!h"";“":*sl’fuho"t’?l agroes wlm are abla o Jadge, I8 tboroughly impartial and SINGULARITIES. Life was so humdrum 'neath vlllnfie trees, after a great deal of trouble. The | niece to her husband, and consequently | he received the rosebuds, and a few mo- At neither oll nor gas wi sl And a lassie was coy and hard to please, Miss Lucy Salmon, the new professor of Florida spiders are sala to capture larse So he .t'olullf the gold Tever and went o'er the o history at Vassar college, Is a woman with a [ Dumbers of suakes in their wel lumm’ Her book, ‘“I'he Appointing Power One of the rare productions of Jnehor of the Preiident,” 'Is the clearest monograph | county, Mich., 18 A white raitiesnake. It | that has appeared on that difticult_subject. | belongs to Richard Crouch,and is quite tame. Miss Salmon is a graduate of Michizan Mrs. James Ferguson, of Chester counf university and a foilow of Bryn Mawr col- | Pa., couldn’t imagine what was stealing lege. 1t (s curlous, by the way, that seven of | young chickens until she happenea to see the ten fellowships opened to competition in & frog from pond near tl rn yi that women's colleze are held by graduates of | cateh aclix d'jump into the water wil the co-educational school. Miss Salmon i8a | it. ments later he returned’ to the divorce | be found near Omaha,” remarked a suit, but the sweet odor pervaded thu | rather seedy looking individual who was dingy court-room all that day. standing at the corner of Fifteenth and e Farnam streets yesterday. *‘Well, I don't IMPIET1ES, believe a word that these professional ‘The devil will play his last card on judg- | geologists say. I'm an old driller my- ment day, but Gabriel will trumpet, self and I ! ¥ A man may scoff at religion and laugh at 0. P, Tayl itetd Lty Cenld” ub sl the pleadings of a revivalist, but it takes but | - b ‘Laylor. womnn’s story was as follows: She was born in Mobile, Ala., of wealthy parents, and being attractive in appearance she had a number of suitors for her hand in marriage. One day an Italian came to the city. He was hand- some and wrote the prefix count before his name. He soon got himself intro- duced into the best circles of Moblie so- ciety, ana by his pleasing and courte- her own aunt. Weddings in Old Trinity, New York Sun: Assistant Sexton Pat- terson was sitting comfortably tilted backward upon two legs of a stool, the | other morning, i:xsl inside the south door of Trinity church, *‘Speaking of wed- dings.” he said, “we get lots of them here, People like to get married in old Faraway then hesalled, to a lane that seemed alr, And the whole of his fortune he bore with him there, A nl;ol stron arms and a stress of brown alr. ‘Toll was all vanity, lite hard and stern, And he thought of the farm, lndsm‘;nullvery “Who i v idn’ ¥ face, g ! ol i o ey 4y “that | ® very slight cold to bring hiin to his sneeze. Who is O. P. Taylor? Didn't youever | fine-looking blonde, with a clear, open face, The left leg of Howard Williameon, & At 20 Bale 80 loved, and be onged fore. | RO 156 [adkes Of this ase, B e, | apeaks ni‘é‘x’a.n’."?.?.:'mrfivé’x”{'fl. Tharch, | , Sho~Treddie, ow otton havo L tld you | near of him¢ Why, ho was the man who | BA3iSaly, sad mentally heaithy andsiedd- | farmer of, Mount Sterling, Ky, bogui i@ turn, came a constant visitor at the house of | and folks like to tell their neighbors they | fia_—Ves, but wamma, this is 8 religious | discovered the New York oil fields, and . Miss —, the subject of this story, and intimacy began to ripen into love on the part of the girl. Her parents did not approve of the match, but the handsome Iltalian por- trayed in glowing terms the wealth of his affection for her and the beauties of the lovely Florentine home which he wished her to become the mistressof. At last his entreaties were successtul, and the young girl was marricd to the ‘‘count” secretly. When the girl’s parents heard of it they were enraged. Her father refused to have anything to do with her, and, in- stead of giving her the fortune he had intended to be hers, settled on her a sum of $2,000 a8 vear. The young couple started for Europe, but it soon became apparent to the wife that her husband was not only not in love with her, but that his only object in marrying her was to procure her fortune, and having failed in that through the anger of her father, he had no more use for her. Shortly after reaching Florence the were married hera. Why, bless you, when they get to be grandmams they will pat their children's children on the head and say, ‘Your grandpa and I were married in Trinity church.’ And then it's really the finest place in the worid to get married in, anyhow. Its so solemn and still here, every surround- ing is so beautiful, the very airis awe- some, the light comes through the win- dows softened and tinted, and the organ sounds so wonderful, interrupting the softened noises from the street. 1 don't wonder they like it. “‘We have two or threc weddings a day here sometimes. Then again, we have but two or three a week, and some weeks we don’t have any.| “‘All kinds of people get married here. Some come from way off on purpose for 1it. We had a couple from Philadelphin yesterday and not long ago an Knglish ady that was here visiting got married. She said she'd stay single but what she'd be married 1n Trinity, Her sister was married here, and she would be, too. A war. he was a dandy. He didn't believe 1n i Krml’l' ;‘:n mn‘her fl”mmlm{‘:ls“::ldafbecr"}“ any science, excepting such as he had e faile 0 8 degree of doctor of PIHO- | himself. He ran a cigar factory in sovhy. His philosophy was not developed to | ¢ ¢ &8 Y/ .'m’;z de,m«%. e A s Wellsyille, N. Y., for a good many years, Afir{.‘"" c.-e;:,,xeg.‘ lflmém"nm;‘.mcel. nnha had saved considerable stuff. Well, ment that the pastor of the Congregational | when the excitement over the big wells il t pre. P . ffi:{faxflufl,‘fl{;?fl'rl-f,“ura'fl b ki in the Bradford field began to die out, old “Little boy,” said & country minister, who | T#¥lor got it into his head that the coun- was on hlslv;;y to cmll;ch, "mmt d? ytm lqu;a- try needed more oil and that he was the se your fatber would say if he should fin 9 %“ Nate ‘tshiog on the Sabbath dny?? ile | MAn to discover it. So he started out to would ask me wot luck I was havin’,” look for a location and to lease lands. MA| cog:(rymflerg‘;ne& wu"nonzln of | Pretty soon he struck a site that suited ving been ucal at two colleges. *‘You remind me,” gaid an aged divine, “of an in- M,"," m,‘d he went to work and leased stance L know of a calf that sucked two | ©Very bit of land for miles around. He cows.” “‘What was the consequence?” asked | didn’t take any partners, but went it a third person. *“‘Why, sir,” replied the old | alone, and when he had got all the land gentloman very gravely, “tho consequence | that there was to be had he started to was tiat he was a very great calf drill his first well. He ealled it Triangle Captain Leroy, late leader of the salvation | No, 1, for he had an idea that if the first A , fol | Harry,” anda vigorous exhorter*and tam. | "Il didn't strike a good third sand, he bourine piayer, has given up evangelizing, | WOuld opcrate in triangles until he struck and now is a waiter ju a variety theatre in | the oil belt, which he was dead sure ran Chicago. He serves beer with great skill,and | somewhere in that neighborhood. PEFPERMINT DROPS. of sculptured marble. He sutfers from it folRrcferred creditor fs one who never asks | “yiiy” pabol Trupp, of Ovid, N. Y., was [ 'h surprised the other day, as she was Wanted—A fool who will go_through the | [k, g egge with which to make a cal Ningara whirlpool and not. five to fell the | Ureaking egge witn wh "’"&“".""'"'.“a ind as tale. serpent six inches lon arge 1t 'fl?f’"“k'{""l":“nkn”kwm "'{'.‘;'.“fif: .-mhsu.ed steel knlm:fu noodl, “ :’:fi:k‘l‘nn L 6F tako & soa A horse grazing on the bauk of (liggine® o1 wish was & pudding. mamma.” | lake Micl.,saw Mrs. Charles H. Pettit” and, s, L ner little daughter drowning, jumpod inte “Why? ‘“Cause I could have lots of SUgar | 1,6 jake, swi % ol to them, made thein g put into me.” derstand they wero to take his man We have notlced that the man who has his | then carried them safely to the nhoro.o’ nose on the grindstone generally gets his wits The Iargest carp on record was caught ow sharpened. of Little river,on Hon. John Q Xduu Kentucky has become 80 lawless that it 18 | place, Georeis, Inst Friday. It was caught by now no longer safe for aquiet citizen to steal | a negro with a hook and line, weighed fifteen a watermelon. unds and measured thirty-one inches in There is nothing consolatory for the pa- f the scaled were the size of & tient suffering from a severe cold in the head to be told that “‘colds attack the weakest The wite of a Nevada, Mo, man had ten spot.”’ young chickens. Oneday at noon a hawk The elerk, who was nearly worn out show- | pounced down upon themand carried one of ingthe yoing lady lavender gloves, was f butdid notgo farbatoro 1ot ut crows paralyed by the question: *Now, which pair | after him. "The next night at roosting time do you think is the lavenderest?’ the lost chicken eame homea. It still bears the A Missouri justice of the peace who was | marks of the hawk, but 13 otherwise all n s sweet English village, one glad sum- mer day, A fond mother’s heart is singin 3 And a dear little lassie no lo:nfu.n';nq'N ay.” ‘Wedded at the Fair. Cnlu’o Herald: The third day of the annual fair and exposition of the V"lscnn- sin Industrial association at Racine at- tracted the largest attendance seen at the fair grounds thisyear. The sensae tional feature of the day was the mar- ringe of Jabez Beresford and Mary Augusta Weeb, who were wedded at the fair grounds. The association offered a 460 set of furniture to any couple con- senting to be married at the fair, and Beresford and his bethrothed realized their opportunity to achieve fame and a furniture set, at the same time avoiding the customary fee to the parson. The marriage took place in l':ont of the rand stand at 11 o'clock in the morn- ng. A platform was erected, decorated with evergreens and surmounted by a gilded yoke, from which depended two » P count had three physicians called in and | southern congressman dropped in here | and says that there’s more money in that “Well, down went Triangle No. 1, and | burned out returned his law library as “com- | Fight. :,?3:;‘3 R‘:fy fi)‘f;g{fl‘im u'“":n ';;nl‘;\:l'x;‘s:g they made an examination: of tho young | once, and was married ofi-hand, just as [ Work than trying to cunvert folks. there were good Indications that it was | prising a bible, a spelling book, a” war his- | 0. G. Briggs, of Prairie du Chine, found ix girl, much to her surprise and terror. On the following day a covered wagon came to the door and she was told to get mside. She tainted, and when ,she re- covered she found herself in an insano asylum. There she remained for over two years, until she was found by Mr. Crosby. Meanwhile the husband, if it was nothing to him. They generall make arrangements before hand with ths head sexton. “What do they give the minister? Oh, 10 for the minister and sexton together. hat's the regular fee, but sometimes they give a great deal more. Dr. Dix marries folks sometimes here, but not tory and one volume of Mr. Blackstone.™ |‘l|sdll“(| an u;m whl.ch |cnnn!nu“ofh tl:o I S ectly formed oggs having a soft she u‘lil]rfm'n‘:"sgl,:w“{-?,,.:'n;“‘;h%:: mn““::,: small ends of the cegs are connected by a are several percons in and out of the country | tube halfan inch in length and three-oighths who are wifnng o be sent up for four years, | In diameter. One of the ekgs contained If tho embassy now in Philadelphia want nothing but the white, while the other was a design for payer ourrency, the wash tickets 1k from any Chinese laundry would furnish a “Now, children,” said the Sunday school | in the right spot. But when the well was teacher, who had bean impressing upon the | down to about the right depth, along minds of her pupils the terrors “of future | came some Standard Oil fellows and punishment, *if any of you have anything | ‘fixed' the dri S 5 0 to ask me about, I will gladly tell you a g dprildnn) N ) Lean.” There was no response for some ”'"’3, plugged up the hole so it only time. At length a little fellow on the oth showed up for two or three barrels. Great crowds had gathered around the grand stand in anticipation of the event. Shortly before 11 a brass band began to ;flny dolorous music of a funeral-march yle, and word was passed that the couple was en route. The crowd in- creased till nearly everybody on the Town Clerk Whittier, of Salem, IlL, has & . end of the bench raised his hand and said: | Then he started in on Triangle No. 2, basis. No attempts at counterfeiting | Young Leghorn rooster that has a fine ear to grounds was in the viciniey of tho grand | who had caused her incarceration, wrotd | the stray couples that I've been talking | ““Teacher I've got a question.” “Well, what | and had the same game plnyo‘fi on him. flm At yet been known, % | music. When Miss Whittler seats herselt tand, trying o got a view of the 980Dy | home to tho girl's parcnts that showas | about. No one hears of half the weddings | I8 it VEF you was me, aw had a stubbed | Triaugle No. 3 came out just the same. There i always s terrible far-reaching | 4% the blano to play he hurrice into the room fi.. ane a, :““":i"’“.?r n:n.hfig;nfgfl very sick and described the expense he | in this church.” toe, would ye tie it up in & rag with arniker “‘By this time Taylor's tobacco busi- ¥l\nclulllly and dire impetuosity about a | {REORERIS S00F OF Ao bt tho k“" \ was putting himself to in order to take proper care of the girl he loved so well. The father was too proud to allow him to bear the full expense of his daughter’s exvense under the circumstances, and the annual remittances continued to come along. The count puid $500 to the keeper of his wife,and lived in good style on the remaining #1,500. As soon as the news reached Mobile of the true state of affairs, however, the remittances sud- penly stopped and the young girl was received home with open arms. The count 18 still living in Florence, but he has to resort to other means of earning a living, CHellECE wuuki!uu»wo, riend whom we owe two dollars and & hfi"d for a short time, hops upon them and poun: as a fugitive Chicago boodler. = out notes that seem to ull him with delight. A lsmyer gives s o reason for ot goint | ararise hoaniih bt St Louie, cajiis o b the abroad this summer that a rich client of his | { i Bhoth fis by the I lias Just died, and e is afraid the heirs will | fifst to hve taken photoxraphs by the l{ht. et ihe property unless he stays at home and | yhree-ounce bottle, covering its mouth with T Mt o e v [ ISR VI o i fc - Rhode [sland was washed over into Connec- m: “‘.f.|:“|fi;l;;g;l(;'f|¢¢hz.:\nll:;“mnu&ou“ .bou“" ticut, but the governor hired a couple of Ital- | ene-eighth of an inch square. ‘The time of fan laborers for half a day and the state has | exposure was lifty flasiies. been shoyeled back to the old site. henomenal dog has been enjoying his Just think of it! Cider, doughnuts, | vacation at Oneida Lake,N. Y., this summer. rambo apoles, euchre or seven-up, and a rip- | The animal scems to have an abnormal appes roaring fire, and sitting nlnn.fslde your best | tite for fish, and whenever he wants any he irl1 The good old winter nights aré coming, | is1n the habit of catching them himselt. " He fioys‘ when a slice ot below zero i8 wortha | walks out into the Iake, and, after watchin, ;mss had gone l‘o thhn a;lozu and most all 2 G iis money was in holes in the und, MODES FOR M But he wasn’t discouraged. Ho startad Shaving mugs and complete toilat sets of | another well, mortgnging his business oxidized silver are very much in vogue and | and disposing of all the real estate he not easily tarnished, had. ‘I'nat well eame in_ just like the ‘The covert coat will be worn more or less. | others. Then he pawned his wife's jew- They will bo made of cloth a shade or two | clry and began to bore once more. low darker than last season's. he did cuss every time a well came in h/fl\n‘n}:]r'x;clm:s pin h‘)‘r a g(}nl{ellnan;.li“scz‘rl dry! He waslthn very worst cusser I s a miniature sword, perfect in all its de- | oy ow, and the ai talls, with a handsnmely jeweled hilt. Syor Micwianiitie ;(',f,l'(j':,’pl(’,{:‘f,‘;, e Umbrella handles are of silver deeply Stands il e e gralned with acid, and represent in ralier | LUck: ':‘,:‘;f,:"";‘,“l"“ Oil company and the ing a 'S . The; J :‘:;;t ;;’;,m‘,j';fn‘;fl;‘jh,ng.“lfie“‘m They are nally he ran out of funds and Bor nioPHIRG AHlts Vasts will L belout hitrids couldn't raise another dollar. Every- First Foreign Wedding in Corea. The Corean correspondent of the Japan Mail writes as follows from Seoul on the 8th of July: The first foreign wedding iu Seoul took place July 5, 1887. The parties forming the union were the Rev. D. A. Bunker, one of the teachers in the royal Corean college, established a year ago, and Miss Annie Ellers. physician to her majesty the queen. All the foreign residents of the capital were present,and some of the native officials. 'The pre- sents to the bride were many and various, the richly and beautifully embroidered screens sent by the queen attracting a great deal of attention. Augusta drove up 1n an open carriage. They were greeted with cheers, and with great self-possession passed in front of the grand stand to the platform, Jabez helped his bride up the steps, and both struck attitudes under the yoke. Miss Webb is a nice-looking young woman, about twenty years old. Sheis a blonde, and has o pleasant face and a neat fig- ure. She was quite prettily dressed in purple velvet and white silk, surmounted by a heliotrope bonnet. She comes from Antioch, [ll. Beresford is a farmer of Hickory, Lake county, Ill. He has a -humored face, and is prepossessing n appearance. His costume consisted but just reverse it, and he Is as hard o b A K higher, with ste sol- | body ealled him a crazv crank, afool and vi v e Y : r h such great hasto, re- o fi < = T \ v SHRBCINGN v hiolki8son)y aRE RPN G Rochester (N. Y.) Democrat: ne of | left fo ina_in such great hasto, front and have four buttons, the old man kept on, piugging nwnl_]reb{ THE FIRST TIME. mouth. This he devours, and rapeats the op- the most celebrated marriages of an | turned a short time ago with a few more The cutaway coat will be made of black or | himself. He couldn’t hire any dril eration till his appetite is satistied, tied the knot as well and quickly as if he actress in the United States was that of | ideas of reform. One of these is to dress n 3 blue-gray diaconal, and will have three but- | for he couldn’t pay. The world seemed ] otte e S had half a dozen. Jabez punctured the | Julia Dean. Sho was, about thirty years | the soldiers according to foreign style, | tons.” The edge will be flat-braided. Tie | dead set against him, and he couldn't vr{':fi.r;';‘;?,’ml],u&r|")vulfilmflu?‘ub{:{m[r‘;"{3’ X final sentence with a kiss ‘on his bride’s | ago, what Mary Anderson is to-day—the | and to do away with the rank of kulso. | vest will be of same material, and the | find a friend who would speak a kind | 1418, g s e cheek—a kiss that could be heard all | most popular of all women on the stage. | The kulso is a soldier one grade above | trousers ot striped or chack plaid. word for him. His lon, ‘The model of the first English stoam vessel over the grounds. The osculation was the signal for a burst of applause and loud cheers, amid which and the con- gratulations of many . well wishers Mr. and Mrs. Beresfora™ famped into their carriage aud were driven away. The set of furniture was sent after them, and Jabez and Mary Augusta have the satis- aikock conts will bo mado o sott, ino | {o'got gray, and o had's- eircau o will ba sl faced aud flat braidod, and will | St look. " His everlasting grit, though, lave four buttons. They will be madea | held out. / trifle lonzer than last season, possibly two Finally he wandered to the little town inches, but no more. of Richburg, away off the railroad, sur- The most popular overcoat will be the | rounded by the big hills of Allegany single-breasted l‘y front. They will be made | county, and there he talked some farmers of beavers, wide, wove diagonals and ker- | into believing that there was oil under the ordinary rank, and attached as a special guard of honor to native oflicials and foreign legations. There are 3,000 of these in the country, and the idea is to make them serviceable to the govern- ment, rather than to individuals, in case ot necessity. She married Dr. Paul Hayne, of South Carolina. He was a son of Senator Hayne, whose great debates with Web- ster nre renowned. But he was poor,and the stage career of his wife was not in- terrupted by marriage. They did not live huppily together. She made a Cal- ifornia tour with the most satisfactory yras lnid before tho board of admirality in AVoLL R CrC oDy 1780, ‘The first idea of electricity was given by the & i fretdea of cloctricity was civen by the | BOOTS and SHOES year 1647, For Ladios, Men and Children, The first house ever numbered in Londen DUT this aside for future reference when la. one abutting east of Northumberland dies', gents' and childrens’ shoes you want se, Strand. Wi ha to huy. g i o . V! o kindnoss ta 8 faction of knowing their wedding was | rosults. I 1906 she was divoroed,and i | & Mayor Wno Married Himsolf | Covg!"'fiio width 'of shouldors. has been in- | thoir Jands. He put in his experience, | The first lord masor's show was in 1453 and | L dic0red ateon. you'"fud ‘my prioes oog more largely attended than any ever | 1867 she married James Cuaperi She Galignani's Messenger: The tribunal | creased, as in all coats, 'They are made up they put in the money, and down went | Sir John Shaw was the first that held a feast not high. celebrated 'in Wisconsin, Beresford | died in the city of New York. Hayno is of Sarlat, Dordogne, has just annulled however, with no wadding. another well, During all these years | '0the Guildhall, 1501 N lndies’ and childrens' fing shocs T carry told the Herald reporter that he saw the | jn San Francisco, practicing medicine. | the marringe of the mayor of small com- hanales of walking sticks this fall will | TTavlor had learned & few things, and The first book containing musical charac- ";‘“f‘_-: A"lwllfl}-‘t:‘r;;llw‘l‘:;r:elfilrk ®oods and nssociation’s advertisement ina paper, | Mrs. John Hoey, known as Mrs, Russell, | mune in that ""‘"‘:fk A few Y"Bkfllflfl‘) l;g“:'l“n“;n:‘"w;*l‘l ll:;"l,“ £ Shan thoso of last | when the hole began to get down in thib g&:*’?&“,?{;‘yfl;g‘?fl f\"‘;"',’r‘d'g}’, press of the T,ADIES. vou oan send mo, or ‘leavo your or and thought it a good plan to make that | of forty years ago, was, before the official referred to gave notice of his st SEe iSO uunm’v’m Ellmfld\;s hor‘r{ neighborhood of third sand he neyer left 4 dors whether they are small or large. intention to marry his sister-in-law, a pretty brunette of twenty summers, and it was understood that the deputy mayor would preside at the ceremony. On ar- riving at the Mairie the bride and the bridegroom waited some time, but as the deputy mayor failed to be punctual and the prospectively happy couple had been threatened with™ hostile demonstrations, the mayor thought it would be as well to proceed with his own marriage in pro- pria persona. He got rather flurried,and forgot to go through some of the legal ‘T'he first advertisaments known of in Eng- GUARANTEE you courteous attendance and iangiweraiinicielshanie otismallibillsfafilaed TG oAyt nacds be, fros of onerge. ‘The first record of a judge's salary gives )AYING strictly onsh to the manufacturers £138 ’1.15, ‘u'fllsh"hfils" v;g otl 'l‘lluzn’r‘au Little- vgsr‘l’ ", ::y‘."tumng large discounts, I save ton, JuQge ot Bhelk R 8 boNL, [ 418, EAVING to my customers these discounts, The tirst 1talian lady who sang In public in 18 iny MmoRBs OF mAKing hhsiness Erow il England was Francesca Murgherita de A I'Eglae. who appeared in v.na.faéum in ALL 1solicit is & share of your patronage, as 1693, in fine boots & shoes, I have now on hamd ‘The first vlay bills issued from Druary No’l‘only-llme Ioldln!rrlda!. but the finest Lane theatre was on, l{\prfl 8, 1663, the plece “c'."' “l;:n -m.m;wnn all goods that cash E 5 n nd. reprasenied helnejiil DolLlim oTotsllasuten IVE that excolont band and machine make muck furniture easily, and as Mary was willing, they voluntee! The Rothsohild Wedding. Paris Correspondence: There have been a number of fashionable marriages in the course of the week, and among the number was one which dragged so long that every one said it was “‘high time when it was announced. [ mean the wedding of Mille. Helene de Roth- schild and the Belgian cavalry officer. He is rich in names, but until she be- Kingdon's marriage with Gould, perhaps the wealthiest lady who ever married from the stage. She married John Hoey, now the principal man of the Adams’ express company, the owner of Long Branch and the possessor of great wealth in New York. Love Triumphant. Louisville Courier-Journal: Thomas Lewis and Miss Ida Maupin, residing near Magnolia, 1n Larue county, eloped to Jeffersonville yesterday morning and heavily silvered, tho stick being of malacea, | the derrick. Lyery time the sand-pum and of lighter weight than heretofore. came up he was there to see what it had. The English Derby Grosvenor is the most | He used to make the drillers shut aown popular hat for fall.” It has a brim of 1% | nights, and he would screw on a cap over inches, and is b inches high, with a heavy | the hole and sleep with his head on it, roll. The silk haty are not quite so high as | even though there was snow on the last seasow’s; the brim, 13{ inches, has more | yround. He had made up his mind to - ,]:;‘i‘nué‘nflk‘lglfi’;;':" caps are rapidly in- | b,ve no ‘monkey-work,’ and there wasn't ‘Trousers of fanéy white and plaid cheviot | *"Y f will ‘bo. worn during the scason, with coat | ., - One day in March the drill got into and vest of black cheviot: coat shaped to the | third sand, and when the pump showed form, Trousers will not be creased, and the | up you ought to have seen O. P. dance came his wife helcould [ : 3 N 7 happy medium in size will be about t ty { ana’swear. [t was better than a circus 3, % t's sh 1, C Ye & Co.,of rich in worldl‘;‘c:‘;nr no"l")l?:s:t‘;(le ‘2:5 were married by Justico Lee at Strauss’ | formalities. Bt all's well that ends | [P oc‘and seyentean inch bottom. Kancy | and the happiest moment of his Iife, The | 1S3 Tages Wore first Inkodiosdfintoiog; Lt it LR L titles of the great heiress_in question ‘E:"’}‘ ‘F%‘nofiu '";'“ ‘l:“’ ‘g""‘;’{,‘};" well. }"“‘ ""’““"‘1"“ spouses are to be | vests in figures of entirely diferent material | news of the strike quickly spread, and | only for the'conveyance of the sick and - of SRR e ol are Baron Stephen van Nyevelt, van | (W18 10 f1E8 THARENE “I:uteglond:;; e T Will be worn with sack cots. when the well was ready to shoot the | ladfes. el 7488 Haar, van Zuylen, He 1s quite genuine. Belgians are g:nanlly what they look andset up to be. His wealthy bride worships him, and I dare say she will .&%‘;‘:fl.’x"fl;’:gfi%& d-rrsg‘\:m‘l;?.t‘s ll‘fm :g; “‘llue townTm}s filled v;it_ lthounnd- o‘g bound to come into popularity, and the more | Op MM%h. {AYIOF WAS falr'ly Grazy, an Drominent tailors on the avente nave ar. | fter the torvedo had exploded’ and ready recoived Iarge orders for them. For | 8hown up a gusher of seventy-five bar- Afternoon Weddings. Chicago Tribune: Afternoon weddings are now of far mere frequent occurrence in England than weddings in the fore- Aisplny. et ot g ot St e, | TR Gt sty o et ways was imne e reign of (WA o IIL, and was for u?urlnz the road between ON all occnsions are just as represented, per- St Giles and Temple Bar. feot in fit, grade and quality. Mr. Mauphin was called away from home on business to remain until yester- day. Strict orders were given the girl's mother to keep a close watch on her, remain satisfled with her bargain. Her A t only am ltra-fashionable | wear at a stag party nothing could be more | rels he was the hero of the occasion, The first English almanac was brought out VERY time you requirc Ladies’, Gents' relauves are furious, and find fault with ::d dm;{:# ?:d'g?“:tg: wénm:‘e‘:,p:‘;‘g "3331'.,“;’, SL‘,Z,,,‘}O,‘Z,“ :g nm::gl::f-f}etg desirable. Tngy are cuta trifle longer than | Everything mean that had been said | 8t Trinity 'eolle‘:‘(: mbridee, ln‘ll:m, Lamx Mm :':hl‘(;éil‘:ll:lahon.w repairlog done her for not having chosen & more intel- | t18 MOUIr JRC _CAMEELCE 0CEORIRE ML I general. ‘The advantages of this | 8lounze coat, aroof diagonal, and have a | about him was taken back, for the crazy | the titst printed almanac appeated In Lon- | CpNf) or'call at Phillp Lang's Old Reliable Jectual husband. They forget that she S8imo ulip.ped nv‘v'ny 0 !m“‘! norg wu% change are numerous, and Gonvenience, roll collar and are faced with corded silk. crank was now a millionaire and had y 3 Shoe Store, No. 1320 Farnain stroet. N S ‘The first striking clock was imported into | ~ Every pair of boots or shoes sold by Lang i F,uruge by the Persians abous the year A. D., | warranted to fit and to be as represented, or 800, 1t was brought ar a present io Charle- | the money will be refunded. Just boar thisin magne from Abdella, king of Persia, by two | mind. and go to Lang, 1320 Farnam, for any- ‘was shut out from most things which in- duce a taste for mental superiority. The men who had climbed to eminence by economy and sociability may be ranked among them, Under the head of conven- ience may tirst be mentioned the strain Dress coats will be made of fine diazonals, | made fortunes for land owners through- the diagonal scarcely percevtible. They will out the county. be cut a trifle longer than last season and “But O. P. was a millionaire only in mightly attached to the wrist of each. Lewis watched the house every night, but when Friday night dawned no op- v vill have the shawl collar. The dress vest . their talents, and whom she was allowed that is now taken off & bridal party as re- | will b cut U Shaped net quit °h, | expectation. After he had proved that | monks of Jerusalem. thing noedcd in irs Iine. to aco, were all of the fogy bgoand | BOrunty had boen offered for cloping | B tds the hour of arrival st the cnuroh. | Howeser, as tho pact scason, ‘ang. wil have | he was right about oil in Allegany —— BEATSHTOCK 13- 0MAHASTOSNUNE, patriarchs. her to intend church near by was con- | and when the disiance was considerable | four buitons close together. They will e | county, he had nothing further to keep THE WORLD OF ART. ) The marriage of the baron so rich in ‘‘vans” and of the lady so rich in gold did not take place with the accompani- ment of bell, music and candle hight, it made of spotted or embroidered “silk and | him up. Hard work had runed his white. ‘The trousers will be made of the | health, and before he had begun to real- same material as the coat and will have, in | 170 his good fortune he was taken with a some cases, a_stripo of embroidery down the | pemorrhage and died. ‘The whole county this strain was the more acutely felt, and the fear of not being in time was the up- permost thought in the minds of most brides when completing their bridal veyed by Miss Mauphin by a young lady friend. “The plan worked wel{ and after the services, or one pretext or another, Mrs. Mauphin was kept up until she was Starr King, the Unitarian preacher, is to have a monuinent in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco. A | Rl " * Brooklyn isto have a statue of Henry having been by "K"’flfll dispensation sol- | ¢ gleapy that when she retired she for- | toilets, a state of perturbation not caleu- m(&(:r“{:'m Jen, e drefslcoat wilibe ta00d. turned out to his funeral and the papers | ward Beecher in the small park at the head d 600 emnized—or, rather, got through—in | ooy o take the usual precaution Shortly | lated to engender an unrufiled demennor - printed tender obituary notices, but | of Orange street, not far from Plymouth Ludlulmn Full ol the dingy little sacristy of St. Honore | Sgvor' midnight the dash for liberty was | on this important occasion. BRIGHT LITTLE PEOPLE. merciless creditors swallowed up what | church, Lo hia Button Bioas. 6. . R widih d'Eylan.” This was because the bride | 1oq.™ 4o "Where Lewis was in waitin, KAk little the old man had left, and the for- | The Westchester Nows reports a painting | “Wovth oisowhore, §3 At .ol o 160 did not renounce Judaism and get bap- | w1 o buggy. An uneventful trip lofi Marriage of the ope’s Niece. “Johnny,” said the Sunday-school teacher, | tunes made in the New York oil field | in the handsof a Mr. Lower, Flourtown, | Ladios’ French Kid Button Shoos, D, B tized. A priest cannot marry a Jew or | |oweq to this city by train from the According to the Paris correspondent | «what is our duty to our neighbors?” “Tq | have gone into strangers’ pockets.” Montgomery county. which 18 supposed to be vorth o o, £5, at.. 4 Jewess to a christian before an altar, and il ¥ (! Pav od | of The Daily News, the pope’s third | ask 'em to tea soon as they get settled,” said o i by Jonathan Trumbull, ~It1sa view of Val- and _ Child, B : . nearest station. rom here they crossed 4 0 ct H 7 y ley Forge on a canvas 24x30 inches. worth from $1 to §2. 10 b can _ only join their hands | ¢ ) yoorsonville and were quickly mar- niece, Signorina Maria Pecci, is soon to | Johnny. EDUCA NAL Y BOrR Ladies’ Oporn Slippors. 50 h maimed rights in the sa- | 5 i be married to Count Maroni, a noble [ A Duluth four-vear-old hopeful who was | o naw 1aboratory at Yale.costing §75.000, The Free Masons of Philadelphla are busy | ¢ Shoen in Kid or [ cristy by special dispensation from | M€ receiving an apolication of the corrective rod he new laboratory at Yale. g 875,000, | in making a Masonic Art association, the at guard of his holiness. A considerable For low prices come to the Old Reliable, lmrt of the trousseau has been ordered in Paris, through a French lady who often winters in Rome. The pope give it, and also the dowry, which is not inconsider able—£4,000. ° His holiness has three nephews and nicces. The eldest nephew is a country gentleman at the family seat of Carpineti, The second is a mnoble guard. The third married a South Ameri- can lady of brilliant expectations. Two of the nieces are married to Italian noblemen of family and good fortune. Enriched by Marriages. Ocean Grove (N. J.), Corr. New York Herald: Among the familiar faces and figures that can be seen any day on the sands here is that of Rev. Dr. John T, Dobbins,the *‘Pastor Schneider” of Cam- den, J. Dr. Dobbins, like Pastor Schneider, “the Second avenue joiner, as he is sometimes called, has got rich by mnrrgmg people. For over two years Dr. Dobbins has averaged 175 marriages a mouth, Since settling in Camden it is estimated that he has joined in the holy bonds of matrimony no less than 5,000 couples. Most of them came from Penn- sylvania, Philadelphia contributing the greatest number. A friend of the doctor’s who oughtto know claims that the aver- age feo paid him vy the groom is more than ‘J He estimates Dr. Dobbin's earnings in marriage fees, however, at $25,000 since January, 1886, The lucky preacher is known to have reccived over $300 in one week for tying the matri- monial knot. He lives quietly, is a2 man of simple tastes, and is seemingly enjoy- ing his brief respite from marrying ana ;u ;‘l;ing young couples just starting out n life. Rosebudsin a Divorce Sult, Minneapolis Journal: The dreary mo- notony of a divorce case was draggin, its soiled length along in Judge Hick's court yesterday. The . woeful contest- ants were listening eagerly, when a hundsome, broadshouldered youth en- ! is nearly finished. 1t was designed by looked up to his offended mother, who had LENDd . o € t05a him ot his prehistoric whereabouts, ana | Kaht of New York city, 5 fnm: 0, mamma, I wish I'd staid in M)l‘:;;l:-l;;\”l" ‘;;mg'enfemgmw“ lwlr.:tgm:‘l{ heaven. 300 p g Little two-vear-old Robert at the breakfast | Smith colleze, Northampton, Mass. table the other day heard his father and | Miss Cate, of the Milwaukee Training mother ecxhange the compliments of the | school, cousiders the hewspaper more Im= morning with their guests until he could | portant in geographical work than any text stand it no longer, and interrupted them | book. with: 'apa, let me tell my ’tory now. I ‘T'he will of Miss Dorathea L. Dix leaves to want some hash.” Harvard college many valuable flags and A legal gentleman has two little boys who | Parchments given her by the United States have been visiting their grandfather’s plan- | government. tation in the south, and in boyish fashion Mrs. Jessie P. Barnes, of Brooklyn, has one day they were speculating on their fu- | been elected a ‘member ' of the faculty of ture fortunes. “I'm going to be & tarmer,” | Washington college, Irving, Cal., totake sald one, “and raise lots of cotton.” “Well,” | charge of the departinent of music, said the other, “'m going to bea lawyer, | The Nashville American expects great like papa, and steal it all away from you.” things of the gradual introduction of Indus- A wee maiden, as many other small chil- | trial education into the southern schools, The dren have done, had the misfortune to fall | system has already gainea a firm foothold in down stairs the other day, and, In landing at [ Vanderbilt university. the foot, that part of the anatomy commonly Ira Davenport has recently endowed a denominated the “funny bone” came in con- | geholarship in Hamilton college for the ben- tact with the wall with more force than was | efit ot worthy young men who are gradua caleulated to make a comfortable impression. | of the Haverling academy, the aeademic de- A littledot of Duluth's feminine humanity | rysh” with the sophomores has left behind a who has not yet learned to put all the cof- | jasson which ought not to be lost upon col- nerson the Enclish language. went ona | lego students or college facalties. unday school ienie exeursion up the this waek. At dinner she was given an adult gl thehousewurk of Waliesloy ooliage 1a piece of custard pie, and in her infantile ,,“ 0 l& o t'm': o o to lu\:rg gyrations succeeded in talling down and get- | ¥ WIBRIES, OLL 0% ble BROARCIOAE BOCKS, ting a plaster cast of ber hand. ~Rising with | 1eke 6 50 KIS B0 SAEY & O HER ruflied feelines and dishevelied locks, she [ 40 40 ond kind of work, £ dulokly lifted the unfortanate member to the attitude | 6 S RUOPRIRVAR SATOA & YaRY G0N O of invocation and exclaimed, *Mamma, take | tine and labor. ‘There is clever lad in town who will got | Flses at, praing: or, A his living in this world and no mistake. For | Supposed to do so. ', filie Brst bell rings at 5 playing truant maternal authority cut off his ‘1- e d '~-'s'w1 9,0 40 At z{n'nz MInG oue supper, Casting one fond look to the author- :&"‘1: i m“flu,},’j‘ o e T €53 of his existance, be paused at the door to | WEN WWENEL B8 (90T, FIEL, 8 T say: “Mother, I am 5olng to die, and when I | ¥ Y am no more, I wish the doetor to cut me open In every southern state agricull nd and look in' my stomach.”” The maternal | mechanical schools have been blished. neart was filled with awful forebodings, and | Louisiana has twenty-one industrial schools, the maternal voice asked what it meant. *I | in which 8,136 boys are Instructed in mechan- wish itto be known,” he answered, “that 1 | ical branches. There is a growing desire died of starvation. ‘Ihis was enough. ‘Kie | 8mODE the boys of the - south learn small boy retired to his little bed - gorged to | mechanical trades, repletion, At Oxford, Ohio, quite a number of white Bashful Briudegroom. Rochester, (N, Y.) Herald: A justice of the peace in Saratoga county recently joined a pair who were so emwbarrassed that they hardly knew what they were doing. 'he man wore a white straw hat, which he whirled on his finger before the ceremony begar. When told to stand up he illlnped before the justice with %rm\t alacrity, For a fow moments he did not know what to do with his hat, but finally found his way out of the dif- ficulty by putting it between his knees. ‘U'ns was too much for the bride. "With the handle of her parasol she caught the bat, Rull.d it from its position, and then, abashed at her audacity, dropped hat and parnsol to the floor. The same justice tells astory of another couple who came to be married. The man was dreadfully puzzled, and with- out realizing the act pulled a cigar from his pocket and began twirling it around. ‘When that portion of the ceremony was reached where bride and groom joi hands he happened to have ths cigar in his right hand. What to do with he cigar he apparently did not know. The jus- tice paused a minute, and then agam di- rected the pair to join hands. By this time the poor fellow's embarrassment was painful. He gave one agonizing look at the justice of the peace and stuck the cigar in his mouth. efore the cere- mony could be concluded the justice had ;g) take the cigar from between the man's ips. purpose of which is to purchase works of art ;‘.{;-Tr‘\g:fl:‘lle‘: character for the adornment ot '_’hl“fl L.nglggo Fll‘nlll s" Both banks of the Hudson,from the Liberty statue to Albany, have been photographea in detail. ‘The photographs are to be published in book form, and will greatly aid the eyes % who view the country from the ] orth river steamboat. Walter G. Robinson, of Auburn, N. Y., has modeled a standing fignre of Williamn H. Seward with one hand raisad in the attitude of oration and a scoll in the other. It is of heroie size. Citizens of Auburn are to be asked to contribute a fund tocast it in bronce HODGSON & SON, Architects and Brooke as a preface. ‘They include the Mor- gue, the seulptured monster of Notre Dame, and the apse of that cathedral, One of the illustrations in Mr. Samuel 26 |l'°|| Bank. Adams Drake’s *“I'he Making of the Great West,” gives an exceilent idea of a *publo,” as it existed in a complete condition. ‘The — “pueblo” was a unique specimen of architec- (l\lre, consuituting in itself a little wallea i the pope. The ecclesiastic who blessed the Belgian baron and the heiress on this occasion was Bishop Sis- son, Ilike to see a bride go from the vaternal home with all the triumphal ecircumstance of white satin and orange blossoms, and followed b{ a long train of brilliantly dressed and sympathizing friends. There was nothing of this at the triple “van’’ and Rothschild marri- nge. But there was that admirable thing—without which every tridal isa poor pair—a bride's face expressing the most entire confidence in the man she had resolved to take, for petter or for worse, aganst the long-kept-up opposi- tion of the powerful tribe to which she belonged by birth. ‘The position of the bridegroom at Brussels 18 a good one. Heis a brother- in-law of M, Van de Vetde de van Zuylen, whose name is familiar to every reader of the Independence Belge, or any cther Brussels paper. Viscomte Lounis de ‘Thury, one of the bride’s witnesses, be- longs to the most clerieal of the Faubourg St, Germain families. Mr. Sandford, the other witness, is an American, and was in diplomacy. 1 think, seeing that the newly married baroness is one of the Fraumut heiresses of the day, it is well hoth for her and the baron that she has taken her own course in getting mar- ried and broken with her tribe in doing s0. She will obstinately, if she has womanly pride, shut her eyesto his little faults and keep down her own whims and humors when indulgence in them might tend to weaken the bond which holds them together. The best wives are those who have made a choice against strenuous oppositiou from their own rel- atives, ‘Ihe reason is that they would not for the world expose themselves to be reminded of all the evil that was pre- dioted of their willfulness before they planged into the slavery of the ring. ried and Linp! ned by a “*Count' New York Jonrual: That was s strange Ly, fi’l’mw 1s said to have'a deleterious effect on marble, causing it to erumble. Sendtner, of Munich, claims that from analysis he has covered that snow absorbs from the phere sulphurous and sulphuric acids. which | may account for the deterioration of marble in towns. The American colony in Paris are talking about raising a fund by subscriptions smong themselves and their fellow-citizens at home for the erection in the French capital of col- i ossal statues of Washington and Lafayette, | by way of return for the magnificent gift of Bartholdi's “Liberty.” Felix Regamy,a Parislan artist,well known In Boston, has made tho interesting dis ery that & Erench plaster moulder ni Mubard bas in his possession a ful bronze copy of the marble statue of Wash ll:&l'un bp Houdon, which he will sell for 800, Mr.! lh-m‘u'n,vt r'«iuu;vmh "', |_I.‘l| l'n.m E&?L‘fi"&é‘?né'ifi’m{‘é stawoe s sreccnr i ts | & FOR SALE EVERYWHERE allery of the Louvre, ! The Saratoga monument is to be dedicated AU wed w .| Minneapolis, Branch Offices, l Hanneapals Very Mixed Kelationships. Baltimore American: A rare and cau- tious mixture by marrnage and inter- marriage between two well-known tam- ilies of Rahway and Plainfield, N. J. was further mixed last week by the union of Joseph W, Savage of hway, with Susan C. Piko, of Planfield. The groom is the son of ex-Mayor Josegh Savage. His father was married three times. Noah W. Pike, tho father of the bride of kst week, hus been twice married. The

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