Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 9, 1888, Page 2

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B e o .| i o S o e Lt St . Sy - m—— THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, coures he called attention to the virtue of the 1 \ % ' beaten by her or Telp her to beat the | abiout the whart for two days until she | inflict serious injury upon themsolves, word “If,' in'the text, It was the eondition So.‘lE BOMIE ANXIE LALR]ES- companion, and thero fs always a prett found a ship bound to Ameri, When | Mr, Bailey devised an arrangement of of the promise. Religion s eomposea little tray broughl in before they leave, | that shipsailed she wasn't in Scotland, | bars and straps, attached to the bed- of the ohservance, by mortals, ” and over her teathe ancient party grows | and yet she dudn’t seem to be on the | stead, by means of whica the patient of heavenly conditions on the one hand and | Women Who Make Their Own'Way | garrulous of her’§oting daysand of all | «hip. Third day out up comes a white | can utilize the strength of his arms to promises and reward on the other hand. The —The Little Woman. the gre pvnvl“ pow dead, whom she | faced brat from the hold, ghastly with | 1ift himself up, A ‘vari of attach- sermon abounded in original expressions, one 3 known. Thaoge fwo women 111:15\- an huoger. The captain swore a little, | ments to this devise f\l‘rnhh a rest for of which waa! #One gioan of ‘prayeroutbids | * excollent living ouf their “profession.” | then laughed, and the women fed, | the leg, a table for modicines, or a hook {0 swoetness the best uttorance. of poctry.” | THE CHARM OF PEMININITY. | and are as happy and prosperous looking | clothed and eorseted the only girl stow- | or a curtain rod by means of ‘which the Af rvice Mr. Spurgeon was compelled to i J as possible. ) away they had ever scen. When the | light or a draft ms he shut out. The hold a sort of levee in his large retiring room | yay Gould's Sister—Pretty Girds at the - ship reached Now_York one of the wo- | invention hus been in use for_sometime b et iy prn s Jay Gonid's Sister. men took the child to mind her babies | at the Faxton hospital at Utica, and and undergo a spocimen of & President Cleve- - E i Lo land bandshaking. Attheclose he sald to | Cspital—Fair and Plucky—Inde s N 1 Chicago Tribunes. The mild-looking, | 4t home. She learned to read from the | physicians speak in high terms of its endent Giria—A el rather petite, bugdigniied woman just | children’s blocks and picture books.she | usefulness. ~ Mrs. Builey has scoured o me, in reply to my questions about his alleged P o L eee pussing must have Béen quite pretty in | loarned to write and figure from one of | patent upon it. controversy with the Baptists: “I would bo to American Womgn, er youth, though ghe never probably | tho older givls, who was going to pri- Withont W glad if you would cable that I have no plans could have heeq yealled handsom mary school and liked to have help in I‘l out ater whatever as to the Baptist union, but The Little Womas There is n certain, gomething, however, | hopJossons. At fifteen she behind | Rawling (Wyo.) Tribune: For the past await events. 1 desire to conserve both Mary C. Baries M about her—a sweatness in her looks and | 4 sounter in a store: at twenty she was :hsco .»« l\-!m the people of (mlfnn“lm’u: truth and peaco. I am & Baptist, s | Don't talk to me of Oisupus' maids, manner—that is more charming "" 8 | at the head of ‘her department. The | frequontly ‘w-'"r “."“.“]1‘“ B ever, but love the old gospel first and forc- | “Divinely tall and fair" - woman of her years than auy remaine | unclo.wag dead, the boys apprenticed | tWEBLYIIOUE W IOHLylel@in toute ot o most. The occasion at St. Margrot's was an | Of Cleopatras imperial forn, of physical beauty would be. She is|and the ‘mother almost alone; so sho | time. The well supplied by the railroac anniversary of the Soclal Purity allisnce | , OF Junos stately air. nalagous in oup rospect 1o what is known ju | TI0% MKty dames, with redoubted NAPOLEON THIRD'S REMAINS. His Body and His Son's to Be Re- moved To-day. “1We do hereby cortify that we aupervise rangements for All the monthiy &nd gua Drawings of The Loulsiaas State Lottery Com) And I peraon manage and control the drawings selves, and that the saine o irneas and in good Horize the Company o use this certific facsimiles of our signiature attached, in 114 ad . EVERYTHING READY FOR BURIAL Mitchell Confident of His Ability to Whip Sullivan—Spurgeon Agam at the Tabernacle — Canon Farrar on Purity, Reinterring the Remains, [Copyright 1588 by James Gordon Bennett.] Loxpox, Jan, 8 —[New York Herald Cable—Special to the Ber.|—The first in- terment of Nupoleon I11. at Chiselhurst will to-morrow be succeeded by Interment second very simply attired in black,andablack | gt for har and they ook two reoms. | company has been dry, and peoplo de- bonnet modestly covers hersilvery-gray | In five years more she was the head- nied the poor poor privilege of having COMMISSIONERS. names, hair. woman in the big shop and every twoor | €ven the most bountiful of nature's gift 2 at Farnborrough Berks, thirty-two miles | New York as the ‘Female Moral Reform | May erst have held thoir sway; Who is sho? et D ey Qo | —water, It isa frequent ocourrence in | poves e o s nanks and Bapkors will paral southwest {rom London. ‘The ninth of Jan- | society, byt dding the esreof the morals | "Tis the litie womun —bloas Lor eart: : three years hor salary increases, She 4 Ty be bresented B) et ovumters T owerie Wiioh uary is the fifteenth anniversary of the em- peror's death. The Empress Eugenie re- ; moved to the last place not from choice but necessity. She would always have remainod st Chiseliurst, except the impossibility of obtaining & suitable site at Chiselhurst for such a build- ing as the ex-empress designed to be the last resting place of her husband and son. The of young mon, One motto is:.*We ask in ho rules the world to-day. 1 the name of sisters, uhused womanhood and | with her wilful, witclitog, winsome wags, our own manhood.” Her artful, artless s DArchdeacon Farrar chose as his text Isaiah, | Her airy grace, and her fatry face=~ chap. xxiv, verse 16: “Yea, the treachorgus | Her wisdom, wit and wiles, dealers have dealt very treacherously.” | She mocks the pride and she sways tho While the cloquent preacher denounced | ghe bends the will of man, 3 drunkenness, gambling and betting, he dwelt | As only such o despotic elf— LG, most against impurity of thought and A little woman—can. J. H. OGLESRY, Pres. Loulsians National Bank. PIERRE 1 A BALDW CARL KON, Pres. Unfon National Bank. UNPBEGIDImD ATTRACTION. OVER HALF A MILLION DISTRIBUTED Louisiana State Lottery Company. Incorparated in 14, for 2 years. by the Logislatura for e o chy e po She is Jay Gould's sister. She has | |iyas woll, saves something each year, | Our neighborhoring cities to sce the come over from Hor home in Camden— | g un acéount in the savings bank and | denizens thereof running around with a a quiet little town across the river—to | j5 s plucky as ever, five or ten-pound lard bucket to borrow do some shopping, probably, One often of their more fortunate friends a little meets her in the busy streets, but as her Independent Chicago Girls. water to drink or for ordinary house- identity is known to few. she escapes InterOcean: ‘The highest type of | keeping purposes. Recently a hotel the ogling and comment that she other- | young womanhood, American-born and proprietor there announoced to his guests wise would be subjected to. She is not | American-bred, may be found in a high- | 8t breakfast that there was no water to rich, by any means. Indeed, aside from | grade city restaurant at noon any work | drink or to make tea or coffee with, and a moderate allowance that the specu- | day in the week. This beautiful, inde- that the thirsty must needs regule them- " f Iating Croesus makes her, she derives deut t not be looked for | Selves with beer or go dry. Tho most | £oF gy Mu CRrIabe b e . be* v ; f St L il fol o Ctur . pendeat creature must not be looked for ') o ) 1 c resorve fund of ove: ‘.’::;“-"-"“'r‘l"’m “ndM‘;:’li‘x::: mu’:::-t | Lt He drew }‘“f"‘"h":“:‘ P 1;:; N ,‘J’:r" Though her pathway wmay lead thro' the | her living from a school for girls that | in the ladies’ ordinary, nor even upin | Pathetic ocourrence growing out of this l~|“‘...1: s pince bronndded Lt e lta franchise vemmlfi»‘m.-‘.,v any h‘x‘ni in the vlrln‘l‘t' yuu_sg fi:h(err “1?“”““1’ ;v:)oo “r:l’cislomnl darkest ways, her daughters conduct. The school, it | the more aristocratic and exclusive din- "}?"i’ serious matter is the following: A Jhe made & part or tie prosont cousiltution adoped MAWIIEaBALnE the foyal and govermmental | B hep sl it ek She always finds a light: is snid, is an oxcellent one, and, Gould- | ing parlors off the ballroom, but down | Finlandor's child died in carbon u short | Dgsember b a; b, i P hrynes in London, 600,000 practical drunk- | Though her eyes be dazzled by fortune's ards, 6,000 public houses and 4,000 clubs fo; S|11‘r:§;}e 0880 AMENHbE tempting young men, all in London, appearc '8 sure to see A \ 0 oxcite much surprise in the audience. His | Thgush her sisdom bo of no. special achool, cncomium of virtue's pleasant ways and | The first has settled o kingdom's fate, paths of peace formed an eloquent perora- | The last has made its laws, tion. In the evening Bishop Bedford preached toa mammoth congregation that gathered amid the weird monumental shadows in St. Paul's cathedral. i TERRIFIU STORMS, Effect of Tuesday's Gale Along the Coast—Harding Snubbed. [ Copyright 158 by Jawmes Gordon Bennett.| QuEENSTOWS, Jan. 8, —[New York Herald Cable—Special to the Bee.]—The Umbri had among its passengers W. P. Carney, of Philadelphia, who has been in England av- ranging with pedestrians for a six duys' match at New York—W. E. Harding, Charles Johnston, J. Walkeley and P. Lynch. Hard- ing denied tho statement, copied here from a Boston pupor, that Kilrain, upon returning home, would retire. The throe other Ameri- cans had yisited Lord Mayor Sullivan aud O'Bricn at Tullamore jail, who entrusted them with messages for American and Cana- dian friends. A rather unpleasant incident occurred. Johnston and Lynch met Harding in the smokiug room of the Umbria while in the harbor. Harding approached them and cxtended his hand, but they refused and desired him to clear out and “The only r voted on and endorsed by the people of any atate. It naver soalos or postpones. its Single’ Number' Drawings ta Pl d Quarterly Drawings s (T, Jue. Beplembe like, it gets the cream of the business in | gtairs, on the main floor, in the busi- | time since, and there was not sufficient South Jersey. ness woman’s cafr, lunching on con- [ Water near at hand to prepare the re- The school house was erected at Jay | somme, roast becf, brend and butter, | mains of the dead for burial, but after Gould’s expense. Jay knew that hissis- | fruit and coffee. Sho is the kind of a | diligent scarch the distressed friends ter had not murried well from a_finan- | woman the man holdsthe door open for, | Were able to obtain from William Fisher cial point of view, and that her daugh- | and then raises his hat in acknowledg- | the water necessary for the puropses in ters were struggling for a living, but he | ment of her soft *“Thank you:”’ a woman | question. was too busy piling up his millions to | that he admires too much to flirt with, give the matter] much J)ersonal atten- | but whose acquaintance he would put a tion. But his wife had un_eye on the | genuing value on. girls, and she was su pleased with her |~ She always looks well, Hor dress is earnestnoss that she brnufht the mat- | all wool, simply but stylishly made; her ter to the attention of her husband, and | hat is moderately gay, but her boots are insisted on his building the girls a | bright as polish can make them; her school. Gould did not object, and now | gloves are beautiful in fit and texture; that his attention was directed to the | her handkerchief is real linen,so are matter he gave orders that no expense | her collar and cuffs, and all three aro should be spared in making the build- | as white as driven snow. Her jewolry ing u model one in every respect. He | is noticeably modest, the most extrava- himself takes as much pride in it andjin | gantitem being, as a rule, a_chatelaine the success of the nieces as any one | watch of plain or oxydized silver, which whenever he permits himself the luxury | sho keeps in sight for business reasons. of five minute’s thought on a s\llgoct 0 | That she has been schocted you know in fur romoved from stocks and bonds. His | an instant, and the way she holds her sister and the girls were spending part | head and shoulders, reads her bill of of the summer at Plattsburg, N. Y., | fare and gives her orderis indicative of with Jay Gould’s first love, who keeps a | culture. bourding house up there. She is elderly Who is she? and gray-haired now, and is Well, none of the habitues of the not strikingly handsome, but in | house know, She is always alone, and her day she wns blithesome | is always let alone. Occasionally a and pret/ She was the daughter of a | manager of an insurance or publishing country store-keeper, Jay Gould, after | company meets her in the corridor, but The importance of purifying the blood can. loaving his father's farm, went to work | neither his salute nor that of his young | mot be overestimated, for Without pure in the store, and promptly fell in love [ secretary could be more deferental. She Dblood you eannot enjoy good health. empress decided to remove to Fauborough and build 8 mausoleum there. The edifice, in caurse of construction of several years past, is now ready to admit the removal of theeofin. Up to a few weeks ago Napoleon I lay inside the chapel coffin, euclosed in a sarcophagus, the gift of Queen Victoria. The coftin of the prince was placed on the other side of the chureh in the outer sacristy, which was converted into a mortuary chapel, hung with black and having for canopy the union Jack. v the remains was violet velvet pall, adorned with gold and silver ornaments of Dees and violets and with imperial crown in silyer, The pall, suffered much from damp and moths, was worked by the Duchess de Cambuceres as a lnst offering to the prince to whom she was deeply attached. She had never allowed his birthday to pass without sending him & present of fruits, flowers and bonbons.. The duchess asked that this pall might be accopted as her last present to ner la- mented prince. The exterior of the prince imperial’s cofftn shows no sign of tarnishing, but that of the emperor, through having got slightly damp before being placed in the sarcophsgus, has a small portion of the pur- ple velvet slightly decayed, and the thickly studded brass’ nail heads are dis- colored, The wood, however, is perfectly \ | ’ pressure brought to bear. Consequently the iarly every three Aud’ Deceinber.) SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY, TO WIN A FOR- Y Insn A, In the Acad: TUNEK. “Kirat Grand Drawi Y gy ot Mutic, New or Tuesdny January 10, 212th Monthly Drawing: CAPITAL PRIZE, $150,000. Notice---Tickets are Ton Dollars Only. Halves, $5; Fifths, $2; Tenths, $1. ST OF PRIZES: 0.0, 'Tis the little womnn that goesahead When men would lay behind, The little woman who sees her chance, And always knows her mind-— ‘Who can slyly smile as she takes the oath To honor, love, obey, And mentally add the saving clause In a little woman's way! Would the diamond seem such a perfect gem If it measured one foot round? \Vould{ the rose-leaf yield such & sweet per- ume If it covered yards of ground? ‘Would the dew-drops seem so clear and pure If dew like rain should fall? Or the little woman seem half so great If she were six feet tall? i, APPROXIMATION Pl w o 100 Terminal 2,179 Prizes, amounting to Appitcation for rtes to clubs shuld be made only 1o the oMce of the company In New Orlenns. X n write elonrly, Wi . R0, Tis the hand s soft as the nestling bird That grips the grip of steel; 'Tis the voice as low as the summer wind ‘That rules without appeal. And the warrior, scholar, the saint and sage May fight and plan_and pray, The world will Wag tll the end of time In the little woman’s way. 7ing ful CXproas oy RAEs, OF itk Kxchinnge in_ondinary letter. Cutrency by exiroas (L our expouse) addre M. A, DA 1IN, NEW ORLEANS, LA, OrM. A. DAUPHIN, WASHINGTON, D. O, Address Registered Lotters to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK, NEW ORLRANS, LA, REMEMBER s ttyrasence ot gor; Early, who are in charge of the The Charm of Femininity, 8t, Louis Post-Dispatch. Be plain in dress, and sober in your diat: In short, my deary, kiss me! and be quiet. L “Yady W. Montaque, with the rosy-cheeked maiden. But the | is a business woman, but the mannish- At this season nearly every one needs & | antee’ of absoluto firness and n?-:'.'flfi: KT sound, and excopt " for the | called him some unmentionable names and | Aoy question f’ heansy ane gl- | 01d man had much highor views of his | ness poculiar to some of class is entirely | good medicino to purty, vitalize, ant enrich | Gihcen ot ol aqial mid Dt o an”eki pissbly trifling changes indicated. there ure no out- | things looked like 8 row. Harding subse- | g4y oluh man says that it used to ho | dtughter’s future than a young man in | wanting. Just how she manages to pre- | the blood, and Hood's Sarsaparilla Is worthy | 'REMEMBKR that the, v of all prises ward signs of the touch of time. Many of | quently told mo they blamed him for missing | § ‘coMimon thing to see peoplé—mon and | 1i# 0wn shop would reafize. = He not | serve that soft, swoet something, oallod | your confidence. It is peculiar fn that it | SLAANTERR ne rovs SATIOAT Ak v New wreaths still preserve their pristine freshness H 2 ! the fight but that when they reached New TIghis Are recog: York and read how he had, a few days ago, efore, beware of any only gave young Gould to understand | womanliness, 1s her own secret, and strengthens and builds up the system, creates women both—turni X 1 to look 4 § : h L Lhelub R R TR L Sl B marriage waa out of the question, | the fact that she so succeeds heightens [ an appetite, and tones the digestion, while institntton whioso givls on the streets, hut that such a o nized (n the highest oo T anony and would be intact but that relic hunters mitatios have occasionally succeeded covertly in explained their error through the Herald's | thing ravely happens nowadays. In | but dispensed with his services as well.’| her charm. 9 it eradleates disease. Give it a trial. T 3 T T moving a flower. Tho empress's wreath | London correspondent, they would, in fair- | France that used to be held as rare test | 78y took his rejection philosophically | What she does is done every day in Hood's Sarsaparilla i3 sold by all druggists. of preserved South African wild flow- | ness, apologize. of real beauty. A greas Pavisian holls | enough and gave, himself up to the | the week, only with less succoss, for, ny | Prepured by €. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. l E ers has suffered the most in this respect. Itook the opportunity yesterday to visit | said sadly after returning home from s work of making a fortune. ~ While he | respecting hevself respect is demanded Wals oA OO A Floher BNA pilc! | Fiom toths 100 Doses One Dollar ing million on million his old love was | statione Both cofins to-day were covered with a sheet of crape. The dismantled appearance Fasnet light house and rock. The former is now tuirty-four years old. The light house s. Sho keeps books in a walk ong morning: ““T am getting old; ¥ Songer house; keeps the cash for an the gamins on the street no longer stop are Kidney and Liver diseases, and saved, Many remedies have been tried, but none have been so suc- oessful as Ath-lo-ph Many un- solicited testimonials have proved that Ath-lo-pho-ros has cured these dises when physicians and all other remedies had failed. Baok- n in the side, dullness, , and headache, are often symptoms of these fearful diseases. ; " : aathie i i vninly trying to battle with misfortune. | fmporter of silverware; is an assistant i of the mortuary chapel, with the delapidated | keepers said that anything to cqual the fury of | to admive me. T am going homo toim. | YNy trying to b ) X L LY hangings falling to picces through rotten- | the storm of Tucsday night had not been | Prove my mind.” Another man at- | Her fathor, who had plumed himsclf so | in a law or commission firm, and has « ' no time to be lost if life s to be ness, gave the place an air of incxpressibly | known in their experience on that coast. The | U this partly to tailor-made | proudly on the ownership of his “‘gen- | position in a wholesale dry goods store eral store,” failed:'the husband whom | where she shorthands the manager’s she took after Jay Gould had gone away | correspondence at a salary of $1,800 a brought little to her, and so at the end | year. she endenvors to ekbbut an income by | © Aside from the clerical there is the opening her house to,summer boarders. | tall brunette who paints on china, and She has a wondrous: fumount of philoso- | the little piquant, darked-eyed beauty phy in her makeé-dp and very little | who paints heads on ivorine, and paints envy. She is bright; ggod-natured and | them so well that they have a market contented with “what fortune has | value of 3 a piece, and are not nearly brought—or ought one to say left—her. | go big as the palm of her own cunning Athlophoros, in conneotion with Some of Jay Gould's relatives spend a | hand. There is the young woman who | pess, its, Norvous Neuralgi Athlophoros Pills, will give speedy few weeks at her farm-house every | takes orders fora New York modiste; | Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the relief. If r druggist doesn't vs that severe style vobs ir feminine charms. 1t began in the plain habits for hunting in England, and on horseback it is ap- propriate and prettys once ina while it 18 very piguant to se¢ A wonian ih a masculine sort of ess, but now they have allowed plainness to creep into even their balt teilpts, and on the street a well dressed New York woman is as severe in her style of rai- ment as her brother. Hair must be as sombre mournfulness, especially when one's mind dwolls for & moment upon who and what they were who now lia here sido by side. In the isle of the chu itself were arranged a number of aige bl boxes, filled with artificial wreaths, to bo coiveyed to Furnborsugh, as nlso banners of severs) Lowns in France, which sent. repre- ‘@entatives to the funerals of the etperor and , His son. Notwithstanding the transfer ot the remains, this neighborhood will still seas, which battaied the rock so as to dis- lodge 2 considerable portion, were treuendous and as seen from the neavest headland by some of their friends rose up to the pihnacle of the light house and threatened to tumble it from off its foundation. They themselves expected every morment to share the fato of the former. Eddystone light house, during Wedesday, Thursday and Friday could have no commun- jcation and suffered for provisions. I found 9 ¢ hi | v el o shitects f alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental remain o conspiouous spot in Bonapavtist | a bit of rock which was fairly dashed away | smooth as silk, with ouly a stiff, rigid | year, but Jay himself never goes there. R AL R ,‘lfl:\'fl&” '}','I.},‘r’”',ffii.f;?fi‘;.‘.l.’.“fi',‘?'1.3‘1.}'1,.11."}.-..'."‘1,5..’?.. keep them, write to o ittle i ite 11 At business; and a round, y-c d : e T death, Bistory. Around it and the vicinity of | on the farther side from the light house. Its | little bang, a vim of white linen Pretty Girin at the Capital. SR R R S B e D10 A e Tharronmeie, fu of powes | THE ATHLOPNOROS CO., I2WALL ST., N. Y. St Marp's church will eling mueh sorrowful | foundations are bilieved Intact but the goy- | about the throat and wrists, and every | o FEOE Sr R S B Ge o0 e and. upholstever's | in either sex, Involintary Tosws and & intorest with the fate of the late Napoleon | ernment has ordered the inspector of light | Barment as neat and simple as it is pos- ow Yor Gpllilh AN O LU L ORI UL 0 G e il ¥ S | orrhoa cansed by over-exertion, of the brain elf. | = sible to make it. It muakes the New York girl a model of fresh cleanliness, but she doesn’t look as pretty as she used to when more flowing and gricious ines were allowed, and she mado no at- tempt to look anythifig but strietly feminine. A sociefy woman said at the Marble slabs are soon to mark in sacristy and side of the chapel the spots where the two cbffins lay so many vears. The emperor's carved oaken chair and priedicuxs used used by . the members of the imperial family (in St. Mary, togethor with many other articles, will remain to interest visitors to the little church, which nestles under the big trees of Ohiselhurs!, past which the trams of Paris tourists so often flash. To-morrow morning at 8 o’clock Monsiguor Goddard, formerly tutor to the prince, will say the customary monthly mass and offer up the usual prayer. About 11 o'clock the arrangemente will have all been completed for the removal. A detachment of royal artillery, with two gun cary s, have been ordered by the secretavy of to be at St. Mary's from Woolrich, when the cofiing will be borne from the the gun carriy; the eneh tri-color, e only official per. sonages who will attend and represent tho empress will be the Due del3assano, lus son, louses to visit it on Monday and make a full examination and report. The revolving light was, amid all the terrifc swaying of the pin- nacle, kept alight and moving. Mitchell Confident of Victory. [Copyright 1888 by James Gordon Bennett.) Dusniy, Jan. 8—[New York Herald Cable—Special to the Bek]—Ki and Mitchell left Kingstown for London this evening and were seen off by a crowd of friends. Mitehell, though slow to speak of his pending battle with Sullivan, expressed again his confidence of victory. “I think I can do him easily. Ho is no fighter, and, be- liove me, I'll ustonish tho public he has so gulled. I start into ning the first week in February. Kilrain will look after me as I looked cafter him, so uo one need fear 'l get licked for want of a good second. I will train at. Jake's old quarters and step into the ring something over tweive stone. People seem to think that Sullivan is sure to do me and they say Tam such a little N of the country have taken the capital. | studio, receives the rich, drives about | abuse or overindulgence, Fach box contains They walk by hundreds along Pennsyl- | in a rab, and after seeing tie big, just- ':’3;’;!—“31‘!,2..”.\“;";'.‘.{1{ § Ia box, A‘nlr'w'i\“lml\l'i THE vania avenue. You see their rosy faces | finished brown-stone, tries to earn her W GUAANTRE SIX BOX the galleries of the house and senate, | salary of # a day by tenching the unctu- | o S b ¥ : and their fashionable turnouts pass you | ous, utter madam what taste is. There | oy six boses: TILIE $5.00 wo W your country | is the young lady that teaches in an art ;e 1 the purchaser o N guarantae u;'n Irives, Wasl s roputation as | school; snother who manages adecora- | fund the money it the tre ] = - Y vome! ¢ ive sooie or fri ' he studio opera the other "night that Adele of homely women has | tive sosiety, her friends from t arm of pro-eminent beauty | passed away. With® the new adminis- | of etchings, and the little ceterie from femininity. “She always ac « | tration has come new biood, and I have | the Céntral Music hall who, as linguists, the fact that she a woman, and that { ne » soen at the opening of a new con- | musicians, doctoresfes, dentists, and she is proud of it, it o1y effeet- | gv many woll-dressed, bright- | ertists, earn a comfortable competence. ive pose which more womén would do | eyed. hécked, stylish girls as [ Suturday the crowd is swelled by the well to imitate. She first loarned the | there are now heve. . Tailor-made suits tty little M. Ds., D. D.. LL. Ds., LL. power of it when she was staying in | predominate. The Washington dress- and reachers of cverything n-m:. a Highest standard of Corset ever intro- duced info this market. They tmpart that graceful Agure and fine form which any well dressed lady would be justly proud, especially when obtainable without injur- ious tight lacing, ete. Indorsed as the Italy. w York girls try to approach [ maker of the past has been relegated to rd. in from E; the mezculine standard. and it’s a great | the rear. The walking-suits of these t .colleges to shop mistake. Rigidity of style is the cor- | young helles cost as much now as the | “special,” The teachers rect thing for men., but a little flufliness | evening costumes of their mothers, and | in the high and grammer, is much better in women.” from hat to toe modern art has been | industrial schools about the city S added to natural beauty. And yet the | in to discuss the institue and board Women Who Make Their Own Way. | jocial garden has not begun to bloom. | meeting over their salad, voils, and Brooklyn Eagle: The other day when | Its gutes will be thrown open on Janu- | green tea, and a happier, healthier, the workingwomen, who are trying to 1. when the president and Mrs.’[ more contented-looking set of workers organize met with some of the organized i men and one of the latter got up and rve- | when the diplomats will appear in the The lunch of the thriving z oung | sieoufd wear t u i ear themn, Manufa B the Marquis M. Petric, tho omperor's old sec. | fellow T take great: chances. Never mind, | marked with considerable severity that [ roy of their nations, when two | money-makers does not cost gyeuthi L= megg{f:fifiT;fi)&(_)ngflgflm@_c‘dv By/leading dressmakers of. Bakls) T.ondan 3 fotdvy and Monsignor Goddr when Sullivan licks me you'll see white | his sex had suffered from their gener- | hushels of gold shoulder-straps will be | five cents, and the dishes they ovder ave | 79K LI L and Now! Yoark and fon salo in|Omitiaby B company the bodies black birds in O’'Connell street. The money | ous admission of women into compe worn by the officers of characteristic of the P 05, | e SCIENTIFIC e where they will be deposited in will be all right and-P'll be all right as Sulli- | tion with themselves, he was sat upon. | and when a half-peck of solitaire dia- [ and puddings ha van will know.” Kilrain will reach London carriage placed at their disposal by the rail- to-morrow for he and Smith expect to begin A woman replied in that 1 small | monds will dangle from the ears of the | celery, lettuce, ka;-d apples way company. The remains will then bo voice with which she sometimes makes | noted ladies of Washington, as, in their | are move often ta sy, Wil i N. B. Falconer, = 1420 :n for the dessert. o 3 gh. whoro ¢ 4t the scquarlum there in the | homne unbearable to her spouse that if | prettiest dresses, they treat the Often a girl takes a mug of cider and g :nl:n to bl; ‘lvmlmmv|“fl \\‘hlr:“uunlln at- | sparring ) the men would support their wives and }, nds to ealkke and wine. Then thes sips 1t through a chapter of some new : 5 Bermon Ot Eoval. artllory will swolt, the s dnughters there would be no_competi- | fuiv, fresh young girls will burst forth. | book, and—don’t tell—but thexe hutfizhty 8 0 o vey C) a milar manner E LOAN. American nglivh Capitalists Outgencraled By a German, Cury or MExico, Jun. 8.—|Special Tele- gram to tne Bek.]—It is stated on very liable authority that the loan which Pr tion. Somehow the man couldn’t seem [ Dressed in‘white, they will make their | creatures of commerce sometimes order to think of anything to say. It was like | first appearance in this variegated g a whole glass of claret and drinlk it with one of those oceasions in the Spoopen- | den, the rosebuds of the capital, and | crackers and no veil. Only last Tuesday dyke family when it was so still Mr. S. | among them some of the prettiest hu- [ a young woman who has charge of the could hear 'the limburger cheese scramb- | man flowers in the great garden of hu- | forcign correspoudence in u Jackson ling round in the tin box on the shelf. | manity. The daughters of senators, of | street house ordered roast beef and fo the now mausoleum. It is not anticipated And athor Wsroluny that the empress will attend the reinterment at Farnborough. The burial sorvices und dead will be watched and prayed over by five préthien of the religions ovder expelled from France for whom tho empress hus erected a 1 3 » Women do make such silly speeches | statesmen and of millionair they | sweet potatoes, jelly, and ¢laret. When ? monystery. The removal will be no easy | 4°nt Dz was authorized by the Mexican | gometimes. come fresh from school to take theiv | the tiny glassof ruby wine was approach- {8 matter, for the coffin of the emperor alone | CONETCSS, at its last sossion, to negotiate has | But since the husbands and fathers | irst taste of society’s pleasure. ing fhe lips of the hungry lady a W. C. ! wolghs twelve aud @& half hun. | becn taken by Bleichroder, the great German | and brothe 't or won't support all e T. U. woman le‘R\pfl(} upand bégged her dred weight, and that of the prince | financicr aad banker. This loan 18 made for | tho women, some of them have been _ Pair and Plucky. o | not to dvink. *Madam, L am sorry to very nearly 08 much. No omblems will be | the burpose of taking up outstanding secur- | driven to queer shifts to carn their liv- New York World: Here is the life | scem churlish, but I decline your inter itics of Mexico and replacing them with new bonds. By an arrangement made some time ago with Eoglish holders of Mexican bonds, what is known as the in that country, will be paid off at the rate of 40 cents on the dollar. This settlement 1s re- garded as just, owing to the very small amount of money loaned in the first place as compared with the face value of the bonds, and also to the fact that thoe bondholders vio lated their cluims by giving thoiv support to Maxmillan's empire, and the contracts en- «d into with that princo. This arrange- ut would enabie the government to pay off Pplaced upon cither cofiin except the tri-color \ and on tho prinee’s a cushion bearing his or- | ders, including the star of the Legion of Honor. A Herald correspondent will be in | the suite of Duc de Bassano. Bonapartists 18 in America, regarding the gifference in elock time, will know that the ceremonios will pro- gress from the dawn of New York hours till early afternoon, ing. Two whom I know teach whist for | history of a woman who is well known to | est in my menu,” was the reply with a living, and they live very wel You | muny New York shoppers as the fore- | which she disputched both woman and wouldn't think ‘at first glance there | woman in the suit department. She is | wine. were enough folks in New York who | still quite young, on'the sunny side of o s played whist, or cared enough about it | thirty with a pléusant fuce, asweet, (nfmr v\Hl-leu :" bute. to take lessons in the art, but wait till | low voice and a manper that helps her Woman's World: Nothing in the you see these two, rosy handsome girls, | greatly in her profession. This may | United States struck me more than th Who are as busy as bees all day and a | not seem a very exalted position tosome | fact that the remarkable intellectua good many evenings, und you will come | people,but when the to the conclusion there is room enongh | steep road she has ¢l in New York for anything and anybody. | stand may appear an o Tt wasn 't their idea originally. A Bos- | all events her work is It haa stood tha Teet of Years, " all Diseases of the| 3 [o ¥ At 3 Honsider the long, | progress of that country is largely Citigin® 2] mbed her present | due to the efforts of Amcrican women o e prosent | due i the eltoteof Amerioui wonen | GHICAGO,AOGKISLANDBPUCTFIC RAILWAY d N reasor ral position. ¢ 0se relation to lines ght, though the | magazines and newspapers, take part in | Faa o Chicago, and sontisisns s st erminad o ——— TWO NOTABLE SERMONS, con Birl did i {53 e lyei inilitie v 3ho e » discussion of every question of pub- | points West, Northwast a: Spurgeon Back in His Pulpit--Arche elislh bondholders as venl T G | ron Bivl did it first. Then she got mar- | responsibilities are..heavy. She gets | the discussion ol € ! B s ¥ 2 .dmwul arrar on Purity. qu (‘x' :\ntcr{ur :l.‘m-, thus |Iil\'llllg but | ried, and being a hearty generous per- | very nearly #2500 agyear, and has a | lic interest, and exere important in- Thvites aud faciiltates travel and one set of bonds drawing w uniform interest. The news that the loan had een successtully negotiated cansed much pleasure in mercan- tile and finaneial cirles, - Americana are dis- wusted to think that Mexico was offered no cucouragement o place this loan in the Copyright 1558 by James Gordon Benuelt, ) Losuoy, Jan. 8.—(New York Hevald Cable—Special to the Brg.]—The chief m- gldents In London's Sunday were tho return of Spurgeon and & sermon to men only by son, remewbered on her wedding day | cheerful, pretty little flat of herown, | fluence upon the growth and tendencies A!'Itnllt od l’m‘u. that two of her friends had just heen | where she has bodkd and birds and | of literature and art. Indeed, the left pennitess by the death of their | flowers, and she considers herself an | women of America are the one class in fathe So when the ceremony was | individual greatly to be envied. This | the community that enjoys the ]1-15'\'!1"* done and she bad given the groom and | isthe story: Twenty-five years ago a | which is so necessary for culture. The o Clty. e Mol di 1y, lowa Oity, Dea Moines. In e, Knoxville, Auwdubom, Harlan. thith inister i a ¢ " ie ali id S vil- o rule, 5o absorbed in busi- Coancll Blufls, in 'Gallaiin, Tren . = ) Tuited States, while Englishmen are very | the minister both o kiss, she changed [ man died in a litle squulid Scoton vil- | men are, as a rule, bsor in. bust Dancll RisSpl , Archdeacon Farrar in St. Margrets' church, | United Btatos, whilo Eaglisomen e Ve | 3 00000 r Suvon her bonuet and ran | lage by the sea and ntl wilos from a | ness that the task of bringing some ele- | - saddichion Wiy iDers Tomimnonpol o directly adjoiniug | Westminter - abbey. | {51 "o better torms than their own | around to the houso of her aMMicted | port where the smallbe! sort of sailing | ment of form into tho chuos of daily lifc | - f® ilaaseots: Wetertows abd foux Failla ! Thore were fuliy 5,000 in the audience of the | nunev-ienders, It is also reported, but ole, and hundreds adia friends and gave them her ides as o | vessels cleared for harhors all over the | is left almost entively to the opposite sort of legacy from hue maiden- | world. There was 1othing uncommon | sex, and an eminent Bostonian once us- hood. Then she went home au concerning this man’s death, in fact, it | sured me that in the twentieth century was in _timc for the train | was the usual business, helpless widow, | th great tabernacle orator on his return from Mentone, He looked remarkably well-bot- ter than whea I iuterviewed him two months not on the most reliable authority, that Bleichroder will also furnish the neces- sary capital for the completion of a railroad * ara of stone and fron. whole culture of his country would a ago on hus departure. After a grand volun- | Fol 1o Acatwieand the DRl Al that carrisd hor away to her new homo | three erying orphans, —no money | be in peiticots, By that time, how- by - tary from the organ, during which the con- | thoro can be no doubt that this road witl soon | and Lappiuess. The two girls with the | and no prospect of any. ‘The | ever, it is probuble tha \ ".l ooy - - gregation silently studied the conntenance of | be Luilt, probably by an English company socond-hand idea worked hard to per- | eldest t was an elfish girl | two sexeswill be zf?nnl. uu’nl.l C e e e the great Baptist preachoer, he and the audi- | Whose ongineer has boen here for sony feet themselves in the scionce of whist, | with a sharp tongue that offended a ity of 1'4)?l\l!ll"a always followa siml and (hotwean Chicags an 3 l i ey ence standing, Psalm 103 wus suug, best | Meking an investigution succecded to their friend’s clients, and | close-fisted relative who offered to take | avity of pursuits. Kunuas cliy) ronitul Reciiolng oo e in musi bendic anima mea. The P e did well in Boston. Then they grew | the mother into his home as house- | — i E s et e gy o A Gorge Dresgn and Rune, ambitious nnd came to New York. Hero | keeper and the two boys to work on the A Woman's Uscful Ivention. e ¥ the assistant vead chapter Wl of the First | 1. Lovas, Mo, Jun. S—It is believed that | $hev hive Dretty little rooms where peo- | farm as soon as they wero ablo, but he |~ The theory that women never invent 5k Bxprots Tratnerun | Epistle of John, the first giving of w hich the gorge between here and Bushb has | plo‘come to them certain hours of every | wouldn't have the “girl at any price. | anything—anything of mechanical s "4 for touriste in Towa and Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. SRS pactae § RovOLy, $ha oviorts hoadut Tun out, but that the block at Grand Tower | day to play the game and be taught ajl | She heard his proposition and his ey nuture, that is-—is overturned by Mrs e A e T e e Y * summarizingthe contents of the chupter Lna'| giill holds. It sloeted here woat of the day | its mysteries, and certain other hours | flushed, She wouldn't stand in her | Bailey, wife of the cditor and vpml'“t‘ e snd Keokekes, the Roek Iu'e R sounding the key of its interest, After the | wud the mercury to1 degrecs | they o to the houses of those who do | mother’s way or in that of her little | tor of the Utica Observer. Hor close ements o traveiora betweo Tals T L tte and C Al Blule, B8 Joseph, choir, which is of high jepmte, sang a hymn, | below the freezing po sold imp picked | acquaintance with the hospitals of the *Kanias City, 8. Pau, and not wish to come to them. Oneevening | brothers, so the ten y When Baby was sick, we et in whigh a charming contvalto solo, Mr. The D in overy week they go and play whist | her one other dwl'.]-‘;unl Ia- fe } rfhild!i-l; city “h““rl‘li'()t'l :”h.-' n:]“:.;l[ ‘Wm‘l‘l’)“ :;:m;l ey S 4 festion. | When sho was & Clild, sbo for Castoria, 2 Bpurgeon preached from St. Johu's gospel, (pox. Jan. 8.—The de sunced | with an old ladyand her companion. | treasures in an old handkerchief, kissed | weans of ng paticnts ¢ DR e o Wastora Trall. o eried for Castos chapter xv, verse 7: “If ye abide in me and ofi;;:v\n\‘:\(l::\ l‘-‘n'llc:uh: ‘:;.:‘112.-:;”,‘;:‘:“:.3 he old lady kuows the game hetter | thethree tenderly, and when they were beds besides rlvhun'm:- on l!n‘s‘ main . o) 17':-‘55?: ffz&"fi.‘.‘»", When llxahou‘me Miss, she clung to Castoria, my word, yo shall ask what ye willand it | cconomy in Oxford university, He wus | thun they doand loves it better than | asleep stole away <o tho ngighboring strength of nurses, which is ;\.‘.. at lm AL, T otk T A, uoLoasox, | Whenahohad Childrea, she gave them Castoria, aball be giveu unto you." During the dis- | ¢ishty years old. life, but she pays them to come and be | town through the dasliess. She hung | great a disadvaniage us to fregueutly Pt S Bagrr. A Gon b iamagat. o TS Paan bt

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