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l PART 11 ! THE OMAHA SuUNDAY BEE. >.El(ill'l‘]<ll<)‘\”l'}l YEAR. UNDAY Hl\li()li;\'lNG. h OVEMBER 25. 1888.—~SIXTEEN PAGES. NUMBER 164 BHRHOS These Prices are foroday and they are DOWIN TO BED ROCIE. Two Hundred ; Gents' Driving Gloves, Fine Opera Flannels, 1 case Ladies’ Fine Leather 25¢ a pair, worth g1, 22 yard; worth 45¢. Comforter Calico, Hand Bags; 4Yc yard; worth 7c, All Leather-Lined. Gents' heavy Knit Mittens, 100 picces All Silk R None worth less than g2, and calf-faced. Moire Ribbons, Red Twill Flannels up to $4.50. They are worth g1. all colors, all widths, 19c a yard, Your choice Monday, ¢1 each. On sale Monday, soc a pair. Monday, 11c a yard. Don't miss these Hand Bags. s Fine Dress Ginghams, Only once in a life-time can Gents' all-wool Scotch Gloves i Fancy stripe Velvets, 7Vc a yard, worth 124¢c you secure such a bargain, 39c a pair, worth 65c. still go at 33c yard. - = - Bleach Huck Toweling, And here is another: Gents' fine Silk Plushes, qVica yard, worth 8c. Forty-five fine white gnf]chhlns and Drawers, 39c yard; worth 75¢. — Swits Conde best goods, - =5 Wolf Rugs; Worth 3, Monday. Sdake -} Ladies' Flannel Skirts, 3 ay, $1.50 each. 3 On sale Monday, $2.98 each. 100 pieces Dress Goods, 69c¢ cach, worth $1. They are sold in Omaha at ¢8. Ladies’ Fancy Stripe : at special prices Monday. N We have a few left of these. VEtinon iioe % P ] Two Gross 15¢C a pair, worth 25c. Zephyrs still go Stamped Pillow Shams, 100 large si at 4% c skein, 20c a pair, worth 5oc. Feather Dusters, Children’s Fancy Stripe ST racarens 25c¢ each; not half price. Merino Hose Best imported 100 Beaver Shawls, : 10c a pair, Germantown Yarns, $1.39 cach, worth §3.50. Children’s Wool Mittens all sizes. 13¢ skein, ] 10c a pair, worth 25c. 75 Fine Double Shawls Ladjcg Fine All-Wool Wool Arrasene, $2.50, worth $5. Ladics’ Casl Gl Cashmere Hose, latacickeins _adies” Cashmere Gloves, e re b arge skeins, flcc'ce lined, 25¢ pair; worth 4oc. 15¢ skein; worth 6oc. Fawn Horse Blankets 10c a pair, cheap at 25¢c, ; At g3, worth §s. — i S 80 dozen Ladies’ Brocade i Our Special Prices i Ladies’ fine Kid Gloves Silk Handkerchiefs, on Cloaks 100 dozen with self embroidered backs, dark colors, still go Turkish Bath Towels, 68c a pair, worth $1.25. 19¢ each; worth 5o¢. - Anather Week. 1235 ¢ each; worth 25¢. M WATCH FOR OUR OPENING OF HOLIDAY GOODS! ®& . Ll[.‘E m“ YUM "UM A’[ HOME ¢, and as the buby staggered along | to the sume purpose. She is aboye all things tress, then the children in the order of their | chip. He appears i overy Jupancse | men and of moving in the good society of | For many years Harvard university con- g VIRL . it met a child of the same age who | friendly and good-natured and she will gig- | ages,'and then the servants. Nosoap is | marriage, and it would be entircly improper | Japan are by no means uncommon, ferred the “doctorate of laws upon every hud a baby tied on its back, and the two sat | KL and laugh at the same provocation. used in tho tub, but tne water is not ohang. | for either the bridegroom or the parents to | With the fallen Yum Yum, however, I | Massachusctts governor, including some whia i ¥ 3 THEY IAVE GOOD FORMS, ed. Cold baths are mot taken except for | arrange a match without him. He has | have nothing to do in this letter. After shie | probably knew less of Blackstone than Bis- e TR S downon their little heels and played to-| T Jupanese women—or rather the Jap- | penance or os a matter of o vow, | charged of everything relating o tho | i married she is us a rule u good aud a vir- | marck does of Calvin. en ctur y Girl gether in the mud. The babies did not seem anese young women—have very good forms. | and the bath tub is made so thata fire of | marriage. He brings the young people to: | tuous wife, and if my eyes are worth au —— Gay Japan. to mind it in the least, and the infant Yum | They are a full head shorter than the aver- | charcoal can be built under it, and 1 can say | gether, generally at i tea house, where both | thing, I think with all of the customs against S1) LAR Yums here cry less than do our little Awmeri- | 3¢ American woman, but they are plumper, | to my sorrow that it feels to the stranger hot- | families meet to have a party for the occa- | her she manages to rule her husband here as poz T and thelr non-uso of stays or Gorsets seems | tor than boiling lead. Upon my first intro- sion, and -1t i at tilg meeting that the two | sho docs the irorld over. = The Gvilsof the | P, L. Ames, of North Easton, Mass., owns (as have produced a better bust development. | duction to it I was attended by & maiden who | often sec cach other for the first time. If, | Japanese social system 1 may speak of here- | n whito orchard, the only specimen known of HOW SHE SLEEPS AND WALKS. HOW SHE DUESSES. i They lean slightly 1 the front as they walk, | poraisted in Lelping me andrees and who wis | as in the case of “The Mikado,” Yumn Yum | after. There are undoubtedly many stll. | fhut particular specie, ~ 9 e Asan infant, Yum Yum dresses like her | and in old age they become stooped. I be- | not satisfied until she saw me jump into the | falls in love with her Nanki-poo at first § The picture has, I believe, been overdrawn, A female blackbird has becn presented to o o gl¥ a d less | lieve that the women go quicker here than | steami ter. My blood rushed - | sight, it is all right. The two gigele and [ and the statement that there are no virtuous P , o M » at Tokio | mother, and the girls of Japan svend less | lic A quicke aming water. My blood rushed to iht, g : h thelmonaseroBPMCantral S PP T iw i The Opera of the Mikado™ at To upon clothes than do their American sisters, | With us. This is cspecially so in the lower | head as 1 sunk into the liquid fire and for a | lsugh and examine cach — other, | women in the land of the mikado is about as | tico o't stoamer Moruvia on her lust trip —How Yum Yum Dances and P et e et ||| olaasse: f time I gasped for breath. Icameoutasred | and & few days later, the mateh | trueas that all Americans chew tobacco, | fioit' o it e When nearly 1,000 miles from Flirts—Her Education and I TR RS Lo A woman married among the lower classes | asa boiled lobster, and an hour later going | being agreed upon, presents — pass | and that their chief amusement is in spitting | (. o"coast, 3 A womanhood here goes barcheaded. Skirts | n Japan is indced & woman spoiled as far as | past the same bath room T saw a whole beyy | between the two parties and the acceptance | on the carpet. FRANK G, CARPENTER, R Fr i Household Duties. they do not use, and the long stockings and | beauty is concernod, According .to the old | of girls enjoying themselves in and around it, | of these preseuts is understood s un ugree S cinies xu-/..r'l‘{:x'{'s:{;‘ul.‘r:‘"ri"..';‘f.-".‘.'.:"‘-]"?.'f..lf:.:,°..l}': seon 2 the high-heeled shoe never clasp their toes | Japanese custom, when a girl bas arrived at | They did not move to shut the door as I went | ment that the marriage is to tuke place. The L ——— urg, So strangoly da s the anil oaly The Japancse girl wears no | 010 maidenhood, when she no longer expects | by and like all Japauese girls were not in the | presents consist of - five tubs of suke or rice s e :I\jl'_x\ll::"ll”" n thero th :wtti“m. ‘{f,.,"."“‘” Kiora, Janan, Nov. 5—[Special Corres | %1 ¢ Al loses her shoo. | &husband, “or when she has gotone,sho. | least ashamed. Such’things are after all a | Wine, of five articlos of food, two rolls of S S L Soams toiliave baon docolved dnio balieving; pondence of Tik Bek. | —From this old ¢ £10Y00, 5 anC1IRNC. BRVSL, 0008 00 | shaves off her eyebrows and blacks her | mere matter of custom. These Japanesc | silk and a silken girdle. This is, of course. | ¢ is but a fisheruan, (alIptacouhistihaioRlstona ol Notombony ot Japan, whore the sun shines over | Puttener. Her shapely littlo foot clatter | teeth. This produces an effect whickiit is | with all of such actions are the most mod. | among the better classes. 'The lower and Sho an ovster-sellor; Near tho Ollo violets ure to bo found bioon- talfiofidapan, cyhoro tho sun shinco o over the stroets in wooden sandals two | impossible to understand without sceing. | est women 1 cver seen, and bold |'poorer send a less amount and a poorer | I-well il be, if 1 can, ng In lurge numbars, and willow treos have palace und cottage, where many of the no- | g Fhioh and she holds these on by a | MY stomach turned sick when the first Jap- | faces are fewer here than =in any | quality. heir trae fortune-teller, v ] u Cuves. blest men and most beautiful maidens of tne | I BT KU B0 R O atween | Bnese married woman 1 saw, a plump, rosy- | country Ishave ever visited. At some of, THE WEDDING CEREMO o el S A Py D Rov. . Kearuoy, of Lubee, and Rov. Mr. mikndo's realm live, I sing the song of Yum | JEE O B B L0 N0 T s | Checked il of about tweuty epemed hex | tho hot springs T suw both sexcs, youngund | The coremony proper is awado up of the ohhad loainisilioatbitos ons Hodgkins, of Porry, Mo, whilo guvaing on e S ¢ ocs, s the d mouth, you will paste a strip of biack | old, bathing together, and this promiscuous | drinking of sake and the cating of u dinner A apRthriliedth e 3 the shore of the s f e village, Oum, Tho glddy girls of gay Japan “:h“x“ fastened to the sandal at the heel. In place | court-plaster” over your tecth aud try to'| bathing was whiil & few years ago, common | together in the presence of the two families, | ARd for him er pulscs stir; Tucsday afternoon, discovercd what ape about me. ‘Their houses ave open and their | ¢ gy iy pg ghe has foot mittens, and these | laugh, you may upproach it. You cannot | even in the public bath. houses of the large | The bride comes to the groom's house to be %3000 1 poared to be & sca serpent. It was about almond eyes twinkle a welcomeas Ipass |05 lgl v for ner great toe, and they | €U the full ugliness of the custom witil | cities. Now there are still public baths, | married, and she brings along presents for | yo jg joalous as the South, fourteen feet long, and composed of - joints along the streets. ‘There is no Pooh Bah with [ 14V% 8 “/HEE o0 BoE BECE ot e | You have vour cyebrows shaved. It | but the women bathe on one side of 4 fence, | him and her prospective parents-in-law. She Bound with Love's] stern’ fetter about one inch in thickness connected by Mis dozen diffcrent ofces to clog my foot- | G0 MO come AlBlC B 1¢ | keems to take all of the life and beauty outof | ybout three feet high, while the men hayve | appears upon the scene in o dress of white, Sheell watch Ten tose-bud moth— | sinews, and on the underncath side is a fin, e o rotres of | 105 Abovo tula comes her dress, and if the | the face and to turn it iuto o thing of loath- | their buthing quariers mu the. other side. | Which, however, sho_changes beforo the cor’ il e and to all appearance it is o sca serpent, stops, and an ‘give you s ctures of | coather be wet, sho will think nothing of | ing. ‘The teeth look as though covered with | The two baths are in tho same room and ure, | emony for one of colors, which is a present 3 ¥ In front of the provision store of one Me- yum yum at home, She is as pretty hereas | pujiine it up to ber knees and in wabbling | black varnish, and 1am told that the prepar- | of course, under cover. to her from thé groom. The groom also gets 5 ) quarrel many Muhon, at Crescent beach, near Hoston, ever appeared on the American stage. I | ylong with her bare calves showing at the [ ation for coloring them is made of a mixture TIKEE LITTLE MAIDS, a present of a gown from her and put thison. Quarrel till the " numerous squashes were displayed the other like her rich cream-colored complexion. [ | ack. 3 < of iron and vinegar. _‘This custom prevails | o\ vostorday here at Kiota, a picture | AU the drinkingof the wine the bride kets | quen, like their own suuny clime, day. Rain drops falling upon them from tho have fallen in love with her jot black eycs [ This dress, however, is a curiosity. It has [ throughout the interior of Japan, ‘Tt tho [ [Xsaw vesterday here at Kiota, u picture | ihe firat cup und there is an almost incessant Joy will follow sorrow. clectric light wires so charged the vegetables hich, though they shine through lds not | 10 Dins nor hooks und eyes to keep it to- | cities it is falling into disfavor, and the court Vhlhbrongheibacks Sorpitly. sho e F i os | drinking throughout the ceremony. with electricity that McMalon, handling ;v Il'l l.tlu‘ux: l‘ny '.«lmu {”1\“1‘“1 '*"'“ gether, and as for buttons they are a foreign {.n!u's and (Ihmu- of the better cl; t Tokio h:’”g’:i;'l'u“m‘s‘f‘h;w“ ado. It was the three After marriage the bride nrl nu‘\ wife is ing, always loving still, one of the squash recoivod & 86vero shock, half as wide apart as those of Mrs, Langtry | jnvention. It consists of a long robe made | have entirely given it up. It is o very old [ Nite & ohool, i swallowed up, as it were, in the family of hey will pass together Other persous tried to piclc up the squashes, or of Mrs. Jumes Potter Brown, are quite as | of silk crepe or cotton, and this open at the | custom, and its origin is ascribed to aifferent | “‘”_'; BALAS 110 achiool Are we, her husband, M6 the! shore whers comes 1o il with the same result. full of soul and quiteas beautiful, I like the | front like a long jacket. When worn one | reasons. One reason is thit a Woman ‘upon | . -1-ulzm‘1T 'g"‘x'v"v’“l;‘“j, ;"." h“ Books on the duties o f women urge her to Strife or angry weather. Mollie Fancher, Brooklyn's fasting girl, is flowing drapery of her costume, and have | Side of it folds over ‘the other at the front, | her marriage shows by this that she has de- ',H “’] “t'f “v"‘ ‘{ Bix: {'“kl.,‘v be subsarvientto her parents at law, and in E again thought to be nearing her end. B OFHRBEY - R Y | nd itis held in place by a wide belt or obi. | voted herself entirely to her husband, und hree little maids from school. times past she was expeeted 1o com Simple tale you say this is, S Ror ora thanitwonty roara aho has DECR Dbecome accustomed to theabsence of the cor- | g hely s the fiuest part of Yum Yum's [ hus rendered it impossible for her to be | It was through the open walls of & well | with her own parents chiefly by sengel L it or elory; ally dying. For twenty-two years bal- set and to the decollette display of the bust. | gojlet, and it forms tempted by making herself unattractive. The | kept house, The girls were lookingovertwo | qyd not to visit them by any mea 'rue, but myriad tales like this flod scionco has stood by her bed and T adwire her modern taste in colors and the HER GIEDLE AND BUSTLE fact that sho must ulso become disgusting to | books togéther and ~their merry laughter | quently. The ehief book on woman training Make the wild world's story. watchod. . ighteon months 6go wise men of soft grays and hues of her dress seem to har- | ll i one. It s four yards loug and its mate- | her husband does not seem to nave enterdd | came rivgiug out o th strect s 1 passed, | in Japaneso literature is the Onua Daigaku, gt e ol tho profession salil that tho end had' come. monizo with her surroundings. The paint on | Fisl is as rich as her circumstances will war- | into the caleulation. A tea tray sat beside them and t which is taught to all Japanese girls, and on RELIGIOUS, Since thut time sho has been in better health 3 A raut. Somctimes it is made of magnificont NO BED JEADS OIt WIITE HORSES, Jupan-iike on their heels. They were in | whichIam told they buse their vonduct. It and spirits than at any tine sinco hor strangs her lower lip I can over approve of, and the | gie fabrics and loaded with embroide It Yumn Yum's hair is jet-black. A red- | short, Yum Yum, Peep-boo and Pitti-sing at | js founded on the principle that woman is S o - Lieut is | illness began structure of heroily jet black hair fills my | 1s tied in o big butterfly bow ut the back, o 71 i8 unknown, and so far | home and they bad the advantage of their [ much the inferior of man, and that sho is | The Catholic population of Comnecticut is | MGOGW 000 0L e | avo though nota pin is used it keeps its place ve hite horse in the empire, | American counterparts in that their activ | natnrally prone to evil. It says that nine “"”;‘““" 'I‘“""'r‘"”‘ “,"'"'""' e 1a e LR e L A Dl SRR and holds the dress back perfeetly. Yum | This is more ¢ illy cared for than | was perfectly natural, They were working | women out of ten ure suffering from mental he number of chapters of & Andrews | \woul for years, has become more involved 5 differe 0 Yum, however, does not want her dress muny colored locks of the American gir at their lessons, I doubt not, and the better | qigeases of intellect, anger and resentment, rothierhood is officially reported to be S0 und not only does the end seem inevitable, v is difforent from the | JEU, RN T tail of the peacock. She | and it tukes o professionl hair-drosser to 8 of Japancse women are by no means | eyil speaking, jealousy and lack of intellect ho Catholic Reyiew notes with rogret o ] b8.4 | fnovilabl SRy | [ | n 1y K but all about her realize that it will probably ULy Who brled 10 Fopres runs rather to the pull back and the loose | put it up in its wonderful shape of waterfall | uneducated. They receive, Iam told,n better | The wife should, therefore, depend upon her | decline in the practice of offering masses for | come very soon and very suddenly. She sces so heroine under that name in the | folis of the unstarched stuffs which wrap | and coil. She has combs of a dozen kinds | training than the women of uny other ori- | Kuahand's instructions in all things, and she | the dead. 1o one, save her physician and nursc, and is play of the “*Mikado.” One of the troupes | themselves about the form,showing its every she uses hair oil profuscly. Her oil is | ental nation, and they are. better treated | iy subservicnt to her father in like degree [ pne oldest Presbyterian preacher on the | exceedingly weak.” k brought’ he play to this country and it was | outline. They impede the walking of the la- | made of the sceds of the camelia and the tea | than those of any other Asiatic nation, The | yhefore marriage, Pacific coast is Rev. Dy, teusone - e e O L nls iMoot e e S T T result is that the Jap. | shrub, und her hair 18 so long that it often | Japauese girl can, as a. rule, read and write A WIFE'S RIGHTS AND WRONGS, ville count g The Bage ARy AR X UM Gy 50810, L. L totters along in @ half | reaches to her hecls. \When put up it is so | Japauese. She learns all about household | She has, says this book, no right to show | ypo. ago ang she liawyor, stock of the mikado's capital, and there were | ivagn toed fashion and when she tries to | stift that it stays in pluce and she expects | matters aud she takes the whole charge | jealousy, und if her husbaud is guilty of i Mho Jaanita nowlaboring initho m salons of A Lawyer who had a very Important u thousand and one things ein it which have | run she goes off ina gait like a cow. The (one good hairdressing to last for several | of ~the ~houschold. This is her sphere | jroprictics she shouid gently reprove him. | Hie Jesults now Jaboring n tho niss Case on Hund Went to o Sage and suid: 10 part with the social customs of this coun- | dress in the summer is open at the neck, and | days. ‘This she is able to do by being [ and she is knowa ‘@s the houorable | She should go no place without her hus- | 1Y order wmier SA7% wosorting o e st | “son preat and wise ‘man, tell mo A S SR Yum Yum does not know what a breastpin is. | carcful in the duytime sud by the use of | mistress of ~the houschold. Her hus-( hund's permission, and the husband has a 433 ar ELgIoUIOE: s hotv 1 shall Appenl b Tury try. The belle of Japan, for instauce, never by ) 8| Lmber 1,823 are priests, 599 teachers and 655 | me how I shall Appeal to the Jury in ¥ ) . £ lover's firat kigs, | MY Wife made a girl in the country, who had | the Japaneso pitlow at night. The Japaneso | band has no right o bé meddling with the | right to bring @ concubine into the house if | R L0 " e Canin O o et 4 3l 3 Eaawe. e apkiro- of &. lova Tt KISS. | e her a favor, a present of oneand pinaed | pillow s neither more nor ‘less than u | cooking stove. She paysthe servauts and | he will, The result of this is that concubin- | “OA0N'Y 3 " Hav A L % o, Kissing is not done in the empire of the real | 1'at her neck. The girt was delighted with | thin block of wood about two inches wide at | the market bilis. Juthecasc of the poorer | guo prevails here to & large extent and the [ The statistics of the Upper [owa Mothod- ‘Have you Fucts to Support you? wikado, and ‘such a thing as the shaking of | the present, but she at on moved it from | the top and about four inches high, On the | merchants she often s one of the clerks | men of Jupan have o low moral standard in | 18t conference show asked th e hauds s uncommon. ‘Tne marrirge and | ber neck und fastened it to her girdle in the | top of itis a wad of paper to make it suft, | in the sigres and takesithe place of the hu regard to women. The husbandihas almost | members, 125 local pre: shure *I have, but, alas! awcts don’t go rourting customs are eatirely different from | Tegion of the bustle. The Japunese girls | and yum yumw can fit this under Ler neck | band when he is not prégent. In the country | complete control over his wife by'se law of | valued ut 202 any more LOUIHNg QuAtoms neo Y never wear car-rings, snd their only orna- | and slecp ‘away without having her head | you will fiud hor often orking in the fields, | givorce and he can get rid of her if he will ou | ued at #161,065 “Tow is the Tnsanity Dodgo?” ours. Yum Yum can furnish no garden gate | pione are on this belt. The belt is the cost- | touching the bed. She sleeps you know, on | und at Nikko I saw grgat numbers of wou seven different grounds. According to_un article in the New York | ¢ plaved out.” for herloversto hang over, and she never | fiest purt of the dressand I have seen some | the floor and all of our poetry about dainty | who acted as the leadefs of pacic horses car- 1f his wife has reached the age of fifty Evening Post, there is a marked decadence SCan’t you work in Puthos?” knows tho pleasure of moonlight drives, She [ which I am told cost as high as $100 und up- | limbs touching the snow white sheets would | rying copper and goods up and down the | jg childless he can divorce her. Ifshe tal in the American branch of the Salvation _‘,““ \IY' l"“ a1t s no gate in the first place and no lover in | ward. The cheaper ones go as low vs a fow | not hold good here. Yum Yum docs not use | mountain. Seill, I thjtk the women here | 100 much the law allows nim to send her | Army, on account of the competition of ro has bgon too Much of ltin the second. Her family, it she be of nigh | dollars, and some can bo “bought which are | sheets and ber pillow needs neither pillow- | have an casiel timedhan those of the lower | gway: if she is guilty of theft, if she is ad- | cheap theatres and dime museums. the past, oh, Sage o A T A R T e made of cotton of bright colors, wud which | case at uight nor pillow shaw in the day | classes of Germanyor Holland, aud you see | dicted to jealousy, or if she is disobedient to | The Hebrew Journal looks with disap “How's Provious (€ Tr B8, A RAEEAARE I vt 3 cost only cents. time. Her night dress is a heavy woolen | fewer labor-hardenédl faces among the othor | ey parents-in-law, she is liable 1o divorce proval upon the decree of the Utah supreme “Alus! my Client has none, ofthe groom and the eourting, if thore is a WINTER COSTUMES, and well padded comforter under her and | 8ex here than you @ Wimuny of the coun- | ynd if she commits adultry she is of course | court Aissolving the Mornon ehurch and con “And Kleptoman is done after the wedding. The dress for winter is much the same, | anothier of the sume sizo und thickness on | tries of Europe, i divorced, Withsuch custows it is no wonder | fiscating its property, regarding it as a viola. N LT T T T T Y P oY T The Yum Yym of Japan thus leads a much | save thut the stuffs are wadded, and thut | top. A paper lantern stands beside her rost COUNTSIIPEAND MARKIAGE. that the number of divorces in Japan is | tion of the provisions of the United States | jng at Midnight, and must get a new less eventful life than the young girl of | Wmore underclothes of the same 'shape are | ing place on the foor, and she may have left | The wife is, howgver, after all, but little | larcer than those of India in its palnicst days | constitution. Dodge or he will be found gmilty.” R R e 2 e A AR A used. Thesloeves probably pinch the arins | ber box of charcoal and her pipe within easy | better than the servant of the husband, and | of liberal divorce suits, Mhotae0lth 00 ahunah mamnane e | AAMEARAE iird NR.20 Ll (it merica. She thinks she has fun because | 4, jiglo tighter than in the summer, and stiil | reach, the ties of marriaggsand divorce are hero so A NHAMELESS SOCIAL SYSTEM. United Stulos, a8 given in the census of 1859, Has thie prosocution any witneasos she knows no better, and her chiof employ- | they have the same bag-like appearance * T THE PIPE. loose that he can dispepse with her at pleus- | In connection with this comes the subject | CHE TN R0 EHE G eir contribu. *“They have the owner of the house, ment, if she bo one of the poorer classes, is | Yum Yum's siceves are ber pockets. In | And does Yum Yuwm smoke? ure. Marriage in Japan is ot atteuded with | of licensed prostitution and the selling of [ FORAES M BE SERAER (HORCIUERRS | who swears Positively to my client’s the totting of her baby brother and sister | them she keeps her lunch sud her paper Yes, indeed, she does, and she generally | the solemnity and religious ceremony of the | girls by their parents to a life of shame, | Jo700 oy ‘cont for every dollar, | identity.” a pocket buudkerchiels, and in theny, asa lit- | smokes a pipe. She likes the weed as well | American wedding. R is a civil contract | which has made Japan notorious the Chris 3 X 50 d “Then Prove to the jury that he h: upon her back. It is thus that her wother | FOEFEL B0 (e Aty RS e, 1 ' i '} g (i e 2 or one dollar in every 1,556, hen Prove ¥ s X care of hor, and the cradle for all the | te Kirl, she carrics her play things. They | s her husband, and like bim uses tae little | and the negotiationd for it goon, as & rule, | tian world over. The subject, bowever, s\ " GIESORRCH R0 Wy o eun Stone-blind for the pust ten yoars.” tool i hang fully @ yard down from the wrist, and | metal pipe of the country. She uses 1t { through the parents. e ~young man and | t00 large & one to be dealt with in & para- % thur J. 9, & n little Jupanese babies is the buman back. | they form onc of her most useful institu- | gracefully, too, und she always bands you @ | woman have no preflminary courtship, and | graph, sufice it to say that the evil, though | Michael's church, New York city, vicar gen i g MOItAL 2 ‘Almost as 800u as the baby is born it is tied | tions of Hirtation. She does et use the | charcoal box to light your pipe if you stop at | the sceing one auatber for one or two times | modified by foreign influcnces. still exists to | €rdi of that diocase, Las been raised by the The Lawyer Wou his Case, and the 10 the back of the children next in age and | fan to do this, but she Las a language of ges- | a tea house or mal 11, is the only chance they have of deciding | au alurming degree, and the Japanese girl of | Pope mllzw J!lenn.» of _m»nlu» 83 \uv“n': Prisoner was Apologized to when set ag he moment & mother bogins to expect the | tures which will tell a love story in her THE FAMILY BATH. ‘where there is any compatibility of temper- | the town cluss would consider it a fllial duty 3' “"K“_; 100 0 r“‘n»'“;- “l 'I" L, ‘m“{“w “:; Liberty. A ey . | wavos of tho hand, She uses her eyes, too, | The Japaness Yum Yum is very cleauly | ament. When Yum Yum ugs arrived at the Lier paronts in case they made such a | distinction entities Fat onuelly o 4 | ey ——— sdvent of a second baby she trains her littie | pyt never winks. The same meaning is con- | about her person. She takes a red-hot bath | age of fifteen or sixtoen her parents instruct t, and that instances of virtuous girls | ¥ank of right reverened monseigneur. Mr. Fred Ward and his company played daughter in proparation for it. At first o | veyed by the rolling of the eye-halls or the | every day, and does not object at_company | one of their frionds or a professional match | going into houses of ill-fame to make money | A good deal of amusement has been cre. | “Virginius” in Pittsburg lust week in theie ight doll is placed on the baby’s back, then | twiching of the left cornerof the mouth, | being present at the ceremony, The whole | maker to look about for a good Lusbaud for | to support their fathers, make up many of | ated by the report that the University of | traveling spits, their wardrobe having miw heavier one is {substituted, and thus the | She hasuo langusge of the hundkerchiof and | family bathes, in the interior districts, in the | her. If they have decided upon the youug | the most admired of the heroic stories of | Giessen lias conferred upon Prince Bismarck | o 1. The papers claim the audience weight is inercased uutil it approaches that does not shrug ner shoulders if disguste same bath tub. taking turns, and yum yum | man they mentign his name, and it'is the | Japanese literature. Such a thing in Japan | the title of docter of divinity. Yet, why | adapted itself to the circumstances bheter & She can turn up her nose, however, th | if she be ot the favored daughter, usually | duty of the fricngto speak to the parents of | is not respectable, but it is not dishouorable, | should it seem more sbsurd tomakea *D.D.7 | than the company, K lwin Booth played of & baby. I saw last woek a three-year-0ld | quite as much scorn as can a New York | gets in on the home stretch, The master of | the prospective bridegroom and arrange the | and the instances of girls leaving such ser- | of @ wan who is uo theologian than to make) | “Hamlet! under the sume conditions nok child carrylog a dog strapped 1o its back in | belle and she can curl ber 'ittle red upper lip | the bouse has the first bath, then the mis- | matter; This go-between is called o Nuku- lvu‘u and becoming the wives of regpectablo | an “LIL.D." of 8 weu woo s no lewyer | long ago iu Stumford, Coun, o e SR