Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 16, 1888, Page 14

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DECEMBER 16, 1888—S1XTEEN PAGES 14 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY. HEYMAN & DEICHES’ 15181520 Farnam St. The Liargest Cloak, Suit and Fur House in the West, s at the well-known prices ; 22-inch pure Silk 1 rood Corsct for Wrap or a Dress DRESS GOODS We are sole agents for All Wool Secamless Hose, OF < (S “ - {1 . ANy o l«-mr Corset Waists and [ Jack and colors, 5 pair for $1, Finest Alaska Seal Sacques, Jack- BITHER FOR Good Sense Corsets, 3 PRETIRE D(»‘\}'?r)l-‘:;!'.il‘!v ) A f-"\-'f;"?wn e have all been reduced. ‘ : Woielltlos i llle ket ets and NeWmaPkets; also seal Hats, GREAT CLOAK and SUIPSATLE THIS | o (P "'I'\I\[Ifi‘,lfi'\l\‘ll‘lI[\'"I(\I}"] .I\‘ll.?\'\i:‘.\‘\l(: i ¢1.20 Henrietta Cloth inall KID GLOVES. Ca'p.s’ Muffs and Gloves for Ladies’ and AS Wi OMPELLEL ¥ \'1'1:,\4\"1]:\:;1"(:,jz\q‘:,?i\:l_.'::‘»x : Off every dollars worth of e o P. DO Fee R et ozl PLUSH MODJESCA'S, PLUSH WRAPS AND | Trimmings purchased. ¢2.00 Broadcloth, reduced sliadlend All ki i IACKETS, WE CAN SAVE YOU g inds of Boas, Muffs, Stole's Col- 1?(‘)&1’:;:.00'Jx\)'smt it ! to §1.35 Corsets in all numbers and| HANDKERCHIEFS. . Misses' and Children’s Party [ Our immense stock must be | 1 (1 sizc ITIAI larsand Cuffs at greatly reduced prices. 3 o R e b e stnt o 3 An entirely new lot o der- i} Ll N ¥ i K Dresses of Nunn's veiling,lace, | closed at a sacrifice. Gold, ieh Silie An extra for 65e, Worth 81.00. Barg‘alns in Fur Trlmmings. silver, steel, copper, crochet, |’ 7 > . N HAND MADE WORSTED ‘We repair and renovate all kinds of 5. Furs. llie and albatross, surah, cha fine Trimming Silks, 4b cents. Full line of Jerseys. GOODS ALL STYLLE Extr; other materials suitable for|jet and cut crystal in-endle ete., cte. Open Evenings Until 9 O’clock, evening wear., ¢ each other out atens, publicly to m order advert n thr antic pa 1, and MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC, Hopper have be mber, west, The comed Ever your faith- | Barly in that year her motherdi aturday, the Hth of D : alled into the | | Mansficld’s American actors have gone | become end. God be my sta toulders, her stocking ful grandson. and on NDRINA VICTORIA, REG. | b e of Sdmmmnrie " Fha ks | 105t pors, with teies i her eyon 1 actor o ALEX ! is 1 y cording to the newspaper: hat | the prince consort was c was a kind man, and lovea his little | but calm and collected. — As sobn as | According to the newspapers of t il el (sl liosi TR0 e Ry DUty DIRUTE - tha IadVIe ConE geusee “Drina,” and returning one day from a | they had told their creand, the young |t -}n.»”u- :.rtrm.v?[nf.m,- )q.\ m“»l:‘!“l~t|‘:i presenc _(_-";:Iv.; 1 II’I.'“\(K‘: u||\ ce. TS Lt e s A T NON s U ANt e Oharacter of tho Queen of England | walk in which a storm had oertaken | queen turaed to the archbishop and | prinee wero four lect eight inchos, ane (Good little wife), were his last loving | “Takme” with signal success in Madrid are passed over tho footlizits of the theator t 3 him, he sat down to play with the little | said: e feet eleven inches. he queen is B AL ) g Qi NSy ea st g% in which Hopper is singing. in Public and Private. BRI AEEE R BV D EAGITS L BEf AR RARE S | ESHIG 001 G IIACH 7O BIIAY ROTLSIE i feet high and quite s o ’fml\n\.‘-‘.».fl:-.--:.‘f:l e hl":“.» y .”: ::: Switzerland and meeting with his customary - ing his elothing., and contracted a cold hon they all knelt togetier in | Their mavei i G IR R o st ausCess HGLOUS SKETCH OF HER YOUNGER DAYS, | from which he died. Thus, when buta | peaver. Soon after she called for | Ptable to the Iinglish peovle, and the FeETh T AR A e AR | An_Inglish dramatist is doing Wil Cq & 3 @ few months old, Vietorin was left fathe %o and indicted u letter of condol- | ¥oung people were well provided in be- | over him and snid: Kleins frau- 1o g wRotay and I Ave Out,” for one Tho M. . church of Washington b Tl s i pylp\l ‘flml'hlm“l(i\ll\”l“ .x"v ”lul n”:‘kli“ ginning housekeeping. The princ vh«»lnl. (itis little .lfv' 5 ‘llm- I|u-u|u-.» curtuin raiser. n{m i h(x;- locate :V\‘;Izlln rsity at ‘Tacon )- I as a king i onc e w v C ate Bl Revias P o 't speak owe s head i A wir 2 main buildinz, th cost $,000, Called to the Throne—Courtship and | daughter, few poople thought that the | which she addressed *“To the Queen of | G “:\““1‘\;\'“‘1‘:;.1‘u\v;:;‘}; R g (i 1l “;;I‘;”;‘"\“w:;,c"'_‘:'L; (Bl are out announcing tho advent i Lon- | it B ety Marriage—Death of the Princo little princess would ever be the queen | pngland.” Upon seeing this, her | ATePSE 8RS ot 830,000, HIPE to I eE B S I ca th AL Hims OISR AT GTOSSEMRIO (0T In New York 70,000 Ttalians and 30,000 of England., She had two uncles who aid i “Your mujesty, you | did her “pin money’ at %30, ' VLIS paniards are almost destitute of the Prote Consort—A Religious Queen— VOB BRI LT e daiily | Loy ont ks ok mous as this may seam to us it wa toria has never entirely thrown astde In W. J. Scanlan’s new drama of “Myles | DPaniards are almost destitute of the Protes- were older than herv father. both of | g the queen of England Y S N tant gospel and of means of fitting them- Royal Family. 4 : N s > . are e Jue O el trenchment upon the past. The salary her mourning. For twenty-seven years one of the important roles will be ves ric: y ¥ whom would heir the crown before him, | gjig replied, “but the widowed queen is | Hefepment upon the past. T AP LA D RO B M T etk et fl Ives for American citizenship. of the Georges w 5,100,000, and that | ¢ 3 C owe een, W W it “uther Grafton, who has had the reputa- sthern and the Ly wil reum theater suc. tion of being one of the highest of the High pnear in Wash 5 i But 4 3 ' Churchmen in - America, is invited to the po- life is that she has always | 18ton, D. €., this w sition of the bishop of Fona du Lae, @ Miss Minnie Dupree has been eng: d for LD Ll Fuged for hureh for deaf mutes hns just boen con- next season by M. Gillette, and - will create ated at Philadelphia. It Is the only ono O and is bound to_her people by muny | K. H. § and they would probably have childre But the crowning glory | cess, “Lord Chum Still the duke of Kent believed that h little danghter would one day_sit upon | her grandfather’s throne. He would not to be reminded of the fact first by | of Willinm [V. me.” No marvel that a young queen VICTORIA'S MARRIED LIFE common t beginning her reign in such & Spirit | was a nappy one, Albert was a kind | of Victo should become so gv Victoria | husband and a wise statesman, helping | been 90,000 per The Queen, For The Bee. No country has a better reason to re : hold in his arms s : ; : ; : spect and oxalt women than England, | hoil Ber up in hiswrm sy b0 DS | yeigned year and four days before her | the queen to bear the burden’s of the A GOD-FEARING SOVEREIGN. N S hIBt | ob e IR AR : for Elizabeth and Victoria have beon her | ba quean of Fnelandl” Hor mother had | Coronation, but she was publiely pro- | empire. Nine childven were born unto | | From a child she has heen tanght to R IINIE aR) Fovae o TRt bt of the kind in America, and_the only one in ¢ queen of Englund!” Her mother hud | ci B oL T Ol IO B e | o ey R s G Rappy | o A lnw suit this week revealod the fact that | the world entirely maniuged by the deaf. two most powerful rulers. Elizabeth [ her well educated in view of the possi- | Syt L AR f them—Drincess Alice nd nLiee ' 28 : Y HBPY | Sophie Eyre borrowed moncy at 60 per cent S Sl e o i P | e ventnoss that nwdtod Now. Axehg | Willinm IV, died, and from this time | Leopold (duke of Albany)—are dead. | happy arethe p2ople, and greatis the | o ki i e brit wiroer ph the s RRev. Dr. Boyd Nincent hos formally ac- as > daughter of Henr, . by his e gred s tha 0 er. Asshe ign is dated. R a F e L A e A e Ba s ruler whose s the 1 0. L0L L SR NCHLR S I cepted the stant bishopric for SR AGAs BelsyE T o hom L diz | grew older, and one after another died | Mot reign is dated e The living children are the cmpre rulor whose o 13 the Lord, “The Lottery of Love” continues to make | Proostant. Bniseannl dioesay of conthery queen Aune Boleyn, for whom he di- | E3PR 00 R B o and the throne The chief ruler of such a nation was | dowage of Germany, prince But Victor by no means_perfoct, | now friends und admirers at Daly's theater, | Ohio. . Fis conseeration will take placdun vorced his lawful queen, Catherine. | o/ B 00 Foh oo to boljeve | 0@ responsible and perilous position, [ of Wales, duke of _ Fdin- [ nor has she always been univesally | New York. Its success is unque R it i Elizaboth, the **Virgin Queen,” was a | (e Paoplo of Enaland began 1o helieve |, yone felt this more than the young | hurgh, Princess Christian, Prinecss | beloved. “From 1810 to 1843 she lived |~ Atiss wauny Davenport. has son- |\ “iie Ohifeso Fovorimont tireatons todilve half sister to **Bloody Mary,” whom she | duy be their q'wmh and puclismont | 9ugen hevself, [t was felt by her friends | Louise, Prince .\r(hnrv (duke of Con- | in great 7!'15'1"“"' i\{fll extr; ueo wtion in Boston with L Tosca,™ and the | all missionaries out of Pekin and Canton in Suoceeded in 1 Dickons says of | voted 850.000 per fnnum to fit her for | 414 counsclors that she should have a | naught), and Princess Beatrice. while many of her subjects » suffer- | biz Boston theater is crowded at each per- | yetalintion for the bill which has boeen no bl sa) e berd et oo | ood and wise husbund to give her such The n's permpnent dwelling [ ing from want. And this has been to a | fgrmance. adopted _excluding the Chinese from the Elizabeth: Her countenanc s | that 1‘1“7‘ RO 0D . ": j_":"l‘f walked | Gynnortin her imperial duties as no | place is udsor eustle, her winter | greaterorless extent teae ever since After an extended tour throuzh Mexico | United States. strongly marked, but, on the whole, [ & e BEC R SEERON 8 | mere minister of state could do. But | home is Osborne, in the Isle of Wright, | she ascended the throne. All her war, | and the far west, Prof. Hormann, tho magt | The ey, John Williams, a colored Baptist commanding and dignified; her haiv ot lo e rer Mand | who was the proper man for her to | and her simm s Balm t0o. can scarcely be justitiable upon | ¢in, retiras with new developmeats w the | preacher of Hopkinsville, Ky., last Sunday T o0 andiher nosals i would = come®. fto i sse SihorAand | Il ST O lifti- | in the highl nd. Besid Christian principles, but just how far | Vlack art. baptized 122 converts inonc hour and ten was red, and her nose something 00 | Jook at her with admiring eves. But | Mrn FNE TR CR UL i S e S e she has been responsible for them we Miss Rose Cozhlan's en nent at the | minutes. This is said to’ be the best record long and sharp for n woman’s. She was | she was wholly ignorant of the causo of | CUltto answer, About this time the | TR0 BUrkinsinm i ooon s churase | may not know. 2 Star theater will bazin on April 1, witen she | ever made in baptisms Sorvi srenture hor courtiors | their admiration, as her mother had | Queen was subjected to tho annoyances . s € queo shary Y R Date S o rolen hava | Will Preseat “docelyn® for the fiest time to a Pho “rocont Holio L congr 5 not the beantiful creature her courtiers « B e et o S eh Gy Al Ay BB ot e fity-ons fers of fer reign huve | Now'Vork widfonce: AT DIt e onklone, held gat © el apL Hale) G Mr. Willard s0on” e members decided to convoke a g w wonders. Indeod the world has about | company has just ret doubled its importance d-ing that | western tonr, and w ely kept the ‘wally everybody botween her and the throne had died but her uncle made out; but she was well enough, and no doubt looked all the better for mar| v her. Sometime such persons MERGFEUL. would stop her hov; » in Hyde park, and ly in her reizn a soldier was con- devotions; | demned to be shot for desertion, and ssful | assembty of Swiss Catholics next ye monti’s | the purpose of founding an associati i now play coming after the dark and gloomy | \\5p! (D O e O, g illiam IV., and as he was childless., and there pou o : ; i 3 Hisiwero s fow VoLl i AT Mary. She was well educated, but & | wus cortain that she would be the sometimes * thoy would find the when his d srant was presented | time. Butof this we caunoi. sk nov engagement in New York. fense of the church and the holy : was certain that she would be the qu T I ol e o o | Ho hor to be signod.‘ahe said to the dulke | 10 great men of every walk in lifo | The latest novelty in the way of an umus The methodist Episcopal church hus two round about ter, and rather a hard | When she was twelve years old hep | 1nto dindsor Castlo itsell und presen e FEpT e & i the reign has been prolifie. S ment is a banjo concert by all'the promiuent ies in Ttaly, twent swoarer and comrso falker. She was | mother thowzht 1t bust. that sho shouid | &written proposal. Butsoon the quoon's | of Wellington: " iluve you nothias to | S P UL “vems. gone A Ao Caerer s P LA T s v 3 . ced i Cngli eC § we Va o » a very s ? s S vhe! Victori o 9 he . rranged it. i J 1 clover but cunning and deceitful, and | kuow all. Soshe placed in her Buglish | 4rnc s HEHe O Ay G HIEEE TR has deserted thrés ‘times.” ““Think | When Victorin came to tho thron - rkincringod il et v i, Acholats 3 i history book a genealogical table givin, o g ¢ Wordsworth, Southey, Macaulay, Her- Messrs, Gilbe d Sullivan have received onaries, thir inherited much of her father’s violent ; € | sire of her grandmother that she should seing how car GOt Lo Hoya S aoti from America for royalties on “The Yeome the line of descent from g i ing how et | sehel, Faraday, Wellington, Peol and America for royalties on “The Yeomen | ¢ e »dded to her cousin, Prince Alhert duke repicd: | sehel, I VaWEllingionRee of the Guard” sinco it first production, the | bationer ,butthere | Darby lived deep into hor reign; handsome sum of $10,50 scholars. r.”? ide r y rener: temper.” But, considering the general T T **He is certainly a bad sold S A 0 Gy oy axe-Coburg. Albert and his brother EEanal feLe ;,}l‘ff”‘l:f;]‘ Gif ity "L‘“" conturics 40, | o yor own name. When Victoria camo | Tnst had » vited Vietorin at Kensing- | was somebody who spoke as to his good Aon ADowing Moy In Mr. Seanlan's new Irish dramu, “Mylos ilizabeth was in the main a good | j; and saw this list she smd to her gov- | ton when she was contoen, awd | character, and h ‘ bea g man uskin, DeQuiney, Froude, Aroon,” which will be prodaced in Philadel- IMPIETIES. y | Disraeli, Dickens, Thace phia on the 24th inst., one of the important for aught T know . thank you brethren, by tak- *“What is this? I never ) A | roles will be played by a child, You can't save asinn k was the same age. The cousins queen, and during her reign of fort, liot, It iot, Huxie, ernes Jerrold, George 1 four years England made great ad- | before.” “Tt was not thought ne were then well pleased with each other, | thousand times,” exclaimed the queen, f ¢ : a : ; v ; vanedment in material prosperity, liter- | that you should,”replied the gov and Albert id to have been in love | s with eag ndsheiwrotet:Rardontt (| Tyndal, SpurgeoN,Rarcar, sud iothe . Booth and Barrettive an espocial | 1€ Wiy his pinch of fine-cut. a S S ablishime When the princess read the list she | wivh “the 1iineoss from that time: bug | ACross the fatal page. Other incidents | Proverly belong to the Victorian reign. al of ““Julius Cwsar’ ap the fth Do mot draw funny pictures on the fiy- ature an the firm establishment | 0™ (100 0 i nearer the throne ith .the princess from that time; but § =Ives en, but space forbids: Yot In other parts of Furope and in Co- uue theater, New York eity, The scen- ; leaves of your neighbor's prayer book. of the Protestant religion. Be- I thought T was. I will be good; I | 1or love scems not to have been so posi- | (HEY Yistit 3 Jumbia there are so many more as good the preduction will be historically Sunday school teacher—\What is the frait than T thought T wa will be good; : 1 St TRt she has ; tive until the prince visited her when St G S G und great. of the tree of knowledge! Boston boy— A2 J Ny Anderson will shortly sign a | Beans! sides many great travelers, state: know now why you want me so much to I i LS e 80 much 10 | 4, wys queen, and he had grown into men and scholars, the Elizabethan | learn my lessons. and to take puins with | { T R S S S reign produced Bacon, Spenser, and | my [ _mhdl o "i“ ‘d“j; (Al A -“‘1 WSe | Both the young people were now tho 3 e. Elizabeth died March | YOu wished 1t, but Lunderstand all bet- | ouohly in‘love with each other, buthow | the aue Your correspondent has seen Vi toria on two oceasions. At sixty-nine she is a ros ced, contented and ied with her lot s. Abbey, Sch: 4 % Don't walk up the center aisle on your rau by which she will be under thei mau- | heels just because your shoes squeak. Lot agement next season for a tour of the | them Sque . United State tern and un very dignified n of 4 elding 1 ner duty, and . She is , and no! hec ar dignified Shakespear ; ; ow: Loy L mere - figurehead, and even her own { | 24,1602, in the 70th yenr of her ago,and T WILL BE GOOD.” . Albert way balow tho quoan iu station, | children must observe tho formalities | 414 aspires to no higher position, 4 Maria Tictjons, a nicce of the distinguished | eympor g% lolaran thatiprograsaive the 45th of her reign. To Englishmen the great aesire of Willism | And pauld a0t malce o herorask | of her court. ‘The prince of® Wales [ locks av 'though she might ve primadonua, ‘Thereso Tiotjons, is a rising s et that was not so long ngo, but to us it is o until Victoria becamo of age | her to. | ; It wis olenr | Must remuini ‘a subjoctiof ‘thel queen [ Anosherscore of yoars. Wivhi reglual lijoung concert siugr in London, and yis L Troee i —oighteen—so that she could at once | ghat while —she liv While the s B ureh wiiere a hum had been received in the fold, “I want to get a long time. feeble sott) abeth was learned and clever, but | th ive years before the f ; ment at Jamestown. Eliz- | assume the reins of government, ana SIE MUST MAKE TIE PROPOSAL, desire was granted. May 24, 1837, queen does not directly either ecute the laws, yet her spirit ster pervade everything, and ollie McHenry and her comedy ey successiul t ts both in New Orle Proctor's Work. Miss 2d, 100, ARHEA A make or ¢ which in our day might not be so se- | and ci company have bezu I nt Literature: According to Curry has now on exhibition the skin of ns son, haviag ma deceitful, crafty, and largely irrelig- | the princess was eighteen, and June 20, { ™ 1! A . 2 % % Rl 4 1 o fous,and’ was o whimsical old maid | ut 2 o'clock in the morning, King Wil- | ¥ere & task for many & young lady, but | her will is gencratly respecied. Legally | the Critie tho late Professor Proctor | iy SE I G Humaing Bird” and | the sorpent that. tempted Bve, Tho snaks without natural family affection. It | liam was gathered to his fath- | the queen was modest and “the ordeal | che can dono wroug and is subject to | Wus a litorary Poo Buh of the highest | Mired of u iind.” Was on'a visit to that city and went out of could hardly be known ono day what | ers. Immediately three carringes set | W43 trying. But duty and love tri- | o statutory luw. : rank. ~In every number of his journal, |y jmre Kiralfy has engaged Mile, Lile | business in disgust at findmg himself so far her mind would be the next, if, indeed, | out from Windsor to Kensington, con- | Umphed, and one day whon Albertand | “'Phe quecn and the princo consort | Knowleage, he used to appear in half 4 | and five other dancers from the Imperial | Dehind the times in all forms of, gilded her present intentions could be divined; | taining the archbishop of Canterbury, | his brother t’.““}"””“ drom "‘"‘l‘“(“-’- he | were very doron differens tolasit oo Ume. As | opora houso In Loritn for bis spogteelgof | vice. iy ; AYin0a d paining oh HiAh0] i serpurys | was he queen desired to see Sy - editor and R. A. Proctor, he wrote on | “Mazulm,” which will be revived inSaa | Leave business behind you. Don't insis and she thought but little of boxing the | the earle of Alhemarle, and Sir Henry v P (I, (06 O DOMESTIC IN THEIR ITABITS, astronomy and mathematics; as Edward | Francisco on the 24th ius:. upon closing up n wheat deal with humw“‘ v York Lyccum awquaintance who has the pew behind you ption card is rite a promise 1o yeurs on it over volu- | Mr. Palmer, of the N he criticised | theater has decided to restore to the story of | then and there. If asub SCaptain Sw t inal ending of the [ leftin your pew dow't w last st as it was played 1 the Loudon pro- | pay month for twen and ¢ discussed dr. Thomas Foste arried to its undoubted logical ears of a minister that displeased her. [ Halford, the royal physician. —They | Bim. : and had much personal oversight in the [ {500HOM She had more force of character than | reached’ Kensington about 5 in tho | Were spoken,and the young people were | {uining of thew children, While they | (101d, he Victoria, but the force she had was not | morning, their mission to inform Vic- | happily engaged. Writing that day to | oue indulged in every roal want. yet an old friend, Baron Stockmar, the : ! and ¢ 80 well bulanced. But it is of toria that she was queen. They knocked they were ju: giously brought : h Rt e L and thumpod and Fang o loni timo ho- | queen suys: “albert has complotely | ™ X Eipio of how the children conetusion Dickong’ unfinished | novel & quction, with the dedth of Captain Swift, | your cneamy’s nanue. gained my heart, and all was settlc were taugit to re 1 the feelings and ) ed and rofuted the said Mme. Albani will open here on January 1 Dakota minister (much excited, to county ously eriticis Thomas Foster. H chess editor, and m tor demanded by the occasion. and the same time he wi that I desive more especially to write in | fore they could arouse the porter at the this letter. Only two other English [ gate; they were again kept waiting in monarch have occupied the throne so | the courtyard, and then turned into long—Henry ILI, who reigned a little | of the lower rooms, and seemed forgot- over 56 years, and George LI, who oc- | ten by everybody. =~ They again rang sheriff) —Go up to the Two Orphins suloon, quick! 1 hear that Poler Smith just shot ations in_t ountry she will sing at Mon- | three mnen! Sheriff ~Can’t do_it. 1 am treal, whe coming 18 anx.ously ex- | KOig aftor o’ man that stolo two horaos astad Yy Minister—Oh, 1bog your pardon. I'll join i a8 5000 a8 T ean rin ap to the parsonage between us this morning. T feel ¢ }“{ “i‘l“ 'r“j‘"l“j Reeny “r“l"‘~ l,‘;“:"‘ the princesses when ve e eT har] o iy bost s, W8 | juto o room in which o sorvant appy, shu’l d Y . e day | oolishing a gra The g sted on of the wedding, Febr 10 1810, the fRM e e vl and on leaving New York will visit the chi towns in the union. Before beginning ope "tain {ehts of othe said that two of was whist edit y other sort of edi- nt cupied that august position nearly 60 | the bell and desived thai the attendant A Lelping guine A Raad] 32 s yeurs. of the Princess Victoria be sent to in- | Prince wrote ‘_‘l' '“"l F{"'l‘““"“”““" of | gasgion of ho brushes,they loft the grate | Z1108 and newspapers, Schonthan’s “Cornelius Voss,” lately pro- | i get my Winoh Alexandrina Victoria was born in | form her that they desired to see hep | Sxe-Coburg, who had long planned | 4,4 hlacked the woman's face. When 3 e duced o i Burg the ; ; Kensington Palace, May 21, 1819, She [ on important busincss, The attendany | this murviage botween hov grandehild- | 4o queen discovered this she made the No Ohrietnias Zable proy #Lh derk 1o thaea el olared biathos this sonsrgid is the duughter of the duke of Kent by | peturned and said the princess was in | FeD 404 the following is priucess first go and beg the servant’s | §hould be without a bo tle of ‘Angostura ‘“ e At :. £ in his chu ch in Alexandria Vulloy Lm’l uu-l wnd. out | Bitters, the world renowned appotizer o Ter n | of exquisite flavor. ond s i bistiop to preach. " If you 't send us bishop scad us o sliding L1 bo one of Dockstader's | older: if you can’t sond us o $hding will Lo entitled “If I | send us a stationary prenc if you and another will be a send him send us a cireas rider; if you can't And i ¢ s u locus predeher; Billy Sweats s preacher send us settied it, and he got a can audiences, “In the Soup” w stehies, anot a Millionauir burlesque of Miss 'Mary malion and Gilatea.’ M will impersonate G alates ames Brown Potter TUE LEITER, purdon, and then goto a s ndmama: In less than | of their pociet money, pur 5 new dre The princesses after fuits, the Princess-dow sister of Leopold king of Belgium. [ {o disturb her. Then the : The duke of Kont was theson of Georgo | come to the queen on business ot e, | three hours I will stand before the al III, hence Victoria is the grandchild of | und even her sleep must give way to | with my dear bride. In the suid that they rather enjoyed making It Ty e T him from whom we obtained our free- | that.” Soshe was awakened, and in a [ moments [ must once more usk your | presents to the womun, but asking her | {iiB s A LI FovERImER, SR 8 dom in fow minutes came down to them in a | blessing, which I am well assured I | pardon they cortainly did not like. | fist that the exertion scrionsly imjures tei THE REVOLUTION, loose, white, night-dvess and shawl, her | shall e, and which will be my [ The queen’ wasa devoted wife, and in | Health. Shortly after the birth of Victoin | night-cap thrown off, and her hair fall- | safeguard and my future joy. Imstu | the year 1861 was her first sorrow. HOSPE’S PIAN Special Sale of New Instruments. Mottled Walnut Hale Pianos for $300 only. ‘Mahogany Hale Pianos for $300 only. Rosewood uprigiht Pianos for $275 only. Emerson upright Pianos for $325 only. Upright Kimball Pianos, for $225 only. Grand Upright Hallet & Davis Pianos, For Cash or easy Payments. Greatly Reduced. THIS WHEHEK ONLY. A. HOSPERE, Jr., - = 156138 Douglas Street rer, of Leiningen, & | such asweet sleep that she did not w We “Dear ( um De Wolf

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